“Has anything changed since we got here?”
“Look, we have everything under control. Relax and leave this to us. We’ve been through this a hundred times,” she said and started to turn back to the Mayor.
“Then why are three soldiers wearing full body suits carrying M4s with grenade launchers headed our way?”
Capt. Martinez took a moment to process the information. “Perimeter security carries M16s and civilian security personnel carry M9 Berettas. How do you know what these guys are carrying?”
“I have someone stationed outside,” Drake said.
“Shit. I’ll alert security,” Capt. Martinez said and rushed off.
Drake angled toward the corner of the main set of doors and called Mike.
“Sitrep, Mike,” he said.
“Twenty yards from the emergency center and headed straight toward the two guards at the main doors. What do you want me to do?” Mike asked.
“If they start shooting, take them out. I’m just inside the main doors, north side. There’s a room full of people in here, so be careful,” Drake said.
Before Drake could say anything to alert the security guards at the main doors, full-auto gunfire erupted outside. The sound of M4s being fired in bursts was unmistakable to his ears.
Drake moved closer to the main doors and was five yards from the center of the two doors when three men burst through.
In their protective suits, the men stood boldly with the hoods thrown back over their shoulders. Drake saw the two security personnel slumped against the outside of the main doors.
Before they could start spraying deadly bursts at their captives, Drake pulled his.45 and shot the terrorist closest to him in the left temple. Just as swiftly, he was moving toward the second man when the man’s head exploded in a pink burst of blood and brain. Mike could still hit a target.
The last man turned to his left, toward the sound of Drake’s.45 in time to see his executioner before a bullet entered his forehead.
For a long moment, the screaming from the startled guests echoed in the vast room along with the reverberation of Drake’s shots. Then a silence settled, broken only by the sobs of grateful survivors.
Drake checked each man on the floor and made sure they were dead before he holstered his.45. He turned and saw his father-in-law and the Secretary standing safely at the rear of the room.
“Drake, you okay in there? Any wounded?” Mike asked.
“I have three dead terrorists, no wounded.”
“Then you should get out here. There are plenty of soldiers headed your way. Remember the helicopter ambulance we saw at the airport? It landed when those three guys started shooting. There’s a guy standing next to it, watching everything with binoculars. I think this is the ride the shooters were expecting.”
“What does he look like?”
“Just a second. Black guy, tall, maybe six seven or eight, wearing a paramedic’s uniform. Wait a sec, looks like he saw me looking at him. He’s signaling the pilot to take off. He’s not waiting around to help any wounded,” Mike said.
“Get the numbers on that helicopter, it sounds like Kaamil. I’m on my way.”
Drake ran to where Capt. Martinez stood, giving orders to a group of soldiers. The look on her face when she saw him said, sorry, I should have listened.
“It wasn’t your fault,” Drake preempted the conversation. “It was an inside job. You couldn’t have seen it coming. I think the helicopter ambulance that landed just as the shooting started is part of it. It’s taking off. Is there anything here I can use to follow him?”
“Commander Hollingsworth has a Black Hawk, but I don’t know where his pilot is.”
“That’s okay, I brought my own, a former Night Stalker. Tell me where it’s parked, then call ahead and authorize the flight.”
Capt. Martinez nodded a quick acknowledgement. “Landing pad’s that way,” she said, pointing. Drake turned and ran through the main doors of the emergency center just as Mike pulled up.
“Mike, we’re going to borrow the commander’s Black Hawk. You remember how to fly a Black Hawk?” Drake asked as he jumped in. Mike accelerated in the direction he indicated toward the landing pad a hundred yards south of the headquarters building. “If this is Kaamil, he’s headed for the ranch or their warehouse in Hood River. Can we catch him?”
“Assuming the Black Hawk is ready to fly, he’ll be at least ten minutes ahead of us. Good news, the Bell 407 will only do 130 knots or so at, figure 4,000 feet. We should be able to do 160 knots if they keep this bird in good shape. We’ll catch him. Are we following or intercepting?”
“Depends,” Drake said. “If he has a plane at the ranch, we’ll have to make sure he doesn’t leave. If he’s headed to Hood River, I’m not sure.”
The UH-60 Black Hawk had four soldiers standing with their M4s at the ready when Mike slid to a stop in front of them. The sergeant in charge of the detail saluted and reported to Drake that Capt. Martinez had called and cleared them for takeoff.
Mike ran ahead and jumped into the pilot’s seat to run through an abbreviated pre-flight check. Drake called Capt. Martinez on the radio in the sergeant’s Humvee.
“Captain, we’re ready to take off. I think the guy we’re after is headed for Hood River, or a ranch just south of there. Notify the police in Hood River we’re pursuing a Bell 407, probably hijacked from the hospital in Hermiston. Tell them to stay away if it lands until we ask for help. This is the second time I’ve run into these guys. I’d like an opportunity to talk a bit before they’re arrested, if possible.”
Drake could hear her smile over the radio.
“Roger that, a little chat time if possible. Secretary Rallings and the Senator asked me to tell you thanks. They’re heading back to Portland. We’ll get them to the airport safely. Lt. Col. Hollingsworth said to tell you he’ll authorize whatever you need to catch these guys. Just call and let him know.”
“Tell the Colonel thanks,” Drake said. Then he ran to the Black Hawk and signaled Mike to take off.
As the Black Hawk nosed down on liftoff, Drake searched ahead, hoping to see the Bell 407 on the horizon. Nothing but empty blue sky.
Kaamil sat in the left cockpit seat of the Bell 407, his Glock 9mm pointed at the pilot’s head.
“Fly directly to Hood River,” he commanded. “I’ll tell you where to land. Then you can join your family as I promised.”
Kaamil called Roberto Valencia.
“It’s me. We failed. Go out through the tunnel and make sure my boat’s ready. Then go to the ranch and take the jet Malik has waiting for me. I have a job to do in Portland, then I’ll join you in Mexico.”
“Are you being followed?”
“No, but I want you out of there. No one knows you had anything to do with this.”
Miles behind, Drake searched the horizon for the smaller helicopter.
“How soon before we see him?” Drake asked again.
“This sounds like a road trip with my kids. We’ll see ’em when we see ’em.”
“There was a time when you were the Man, professional and all.”
“Nothing unprofessional about what I said. Can’t give you a better estimate than that. You have a plan?”
Mike’s question caused him to think. They weren’t Delta Force. They were civilians acting with the blessing of the government.
“We have to stop Kaamil. That’s all I know. We capture or kill him. How this ends depends on him.”
“I just wanted to know if you want me to veer toward the ranch or head straight to Hood River. Of course we’re going to kill him if we get the chance.”
Drake nodded. “Head toward Hood River. Kaamil probably doesn’t know we’re following him. My guess is he’ll try to slip back to Portland, pretend he wasn’t a part of this. If we catch up to him and he heads toward the ranch, we’ll figure something out.”
Flying at one hundred eighty-four miles per hour, they spotted the Bell helicopter thirty miles from Hood River. It was flying low, a tiny white dot in the distance. The superior speed of the Black Hawk had allowed them to close the distance.