Gant turned to the pilot, who was on loan from the 160th Special Operations Aviation Regiment (SOAR) out of Hunter, Georgia, and said, "Okay, Nightstalker, I need to get to the map coordinate designated ‘Catcher’s Mitt’ A-SAP. Punch it."
The nose of the MH-6 dipped as it gained momentum and sliced through the night a few feet above the tallest cypress trees.
Franco, Pearson, and Moss jumped from the helicopter dressed in black BDUs and caps with an assortment of thigh rigs and utility belts carrying additional weapons, ammunition, and supplies. Each man brandished a Heckler and Koch MP5 submachine gun, and each man instantly broke into a sweat from the oppressive heat and drenching humidity.
Bravo team jogged across the open, muddy terrain. Behind them the Blackhawk ascended and moved into a holding pattern where it would await further orders, leaving behind a gust of foul-smelling exhaust that contrasted sharply with the natural aromas of moist grass and drying mud.
Ahead of them was an impressive sight: Five hundred yards of burned out trench with water from the swamp pooling inside. At the end of that trench was an even more impressive find: a cone-shaped object made of a black alloy. Damaged, but still intact.
"Well just fuck-me," Franco muttered over his tactical headset. "Be home you little bastard and let’s end this right here and now."
Bravo team, their MP5s raised, surrounded the capsule.
On one side was an opening that appeared to be a blown hatch. Franco pulled a small cylinder from his assault vest and tossed it inside.
"Fire in the hole!"
The team turned away and covered their ears as the flash-bang grenade went off like an oversized firecracker, illuminating everything within twenty yards of the hatch for one brief second.
Franco lunged forward and stuck his shoulders and head in the open compartment.
"Shit. Nothing."
Gant’s ride circled around an abandoned shack surrounded by fields of saw grass. The "Little Bird" found a spot to hover and then deposited its human cargo.
Before Gant exited, he said to Van Buren, "Get the infrared online. Even with the moonlight it’s going to be tough to find anything out here."
Gant threw off his headset and jumped from the helicopter. He joined Twiste and Galati, the latter carrying a metallic container resembling an oversized tuba case.
The MH-6 gained altitude fast and swung east. Van Buren hurried to get his gear online and interfacing with the helicopter’s infrared camera pod beneath the cockpit nose.
On the ground, meanwhile, the three men entered the rear of the cabin and were nearly overcome by a musty odor so intense it seemed to actually have mass. The floorboards felt soft and mushy. Several small animals scurried away as the trio walked through the rickety structure and out the front door onto what was left of a porch. Only three of the four roof-support posts remained, and the front stairs had long ago sagged and snapped.
"Set up shop, Sal. Get hot in a hurry."
"Yes, sir."
Galati opened the case, and Twiste helped him assemble the contents. While they worked, Gant eyed the horizon, where he saw the first rays of a new day's sun reach for the sky like zombie fingers digging out of a grave.
Tyr and Phobos flanked Campion as he led his patrol forward with his attention split between his surroundings and his wrist computer.
The two shepherds sniffed the ground and the air vigorously, periodically stopping to absorb their environment with their ears, no doubt sifting through the noise of chirping insects and the songs of the morning's first birds in search of something not quite right. The rest of the soldiers crept along in a loose skirmish line, their eyes and flashlights searching the wall of saw grass to their right.
Overhead, Campion spied a strange-looking craft. It was small, only about sixteen feet long, with an even smaller wingspan, and used two rotors to stay aloft. Campion quickly identified the object as a Bell Eagle Eye, an unmanned aerial vehicle. Campion figured that somewhere — perhaps far away in a smoke-filled back room at the Pentagon — some high-tech nerd sat at a desk watching a real-time video feed with a remote control in one hand and a cappuccino in the other.
The Eagle Eye did more, however, than just search for the target. The fugitive had almost certainly been slowed by the presence of the flying machine, probably seeking cover and hiding every time the Eagle Eye came within earshot.
Of course, as luck would have it, the reconnaissance craft had lost sight of the target, otherwise Campion would have exact coordinates. All that high-tech hardware flying around and the success of the mission still depended on a pair of K9 noses and good old-fashioned tracking.
Just the way Campion liked it.
The captain’s earpiece crackled. It was Bravo team’s element leader, Sergeant Franco.
"We’re at the crash site, no sign of tango. This looks like a one-man vehicle."
Campion chimed in, "Any prints or markings? Give me a clue what to look for."
After a moment Franco relayed, "Shit, yeah, um, there are tracks leading west — the ground is all mushy here. Looks like a slim print, kind of like a bear track, but thinner, with three toes. Jesus, are you telling me that some E.T. came halfway across the galaxy in a spaceship but doesn't have shoes?"
"Roger that, Bravo."
High overhead, above even the Bell Eagle, circled the MH-6.
The soft glow of the monitor was the only light in the rear of the helicopter. It radiated off Van Buren’s pock-marked face while he, in turn, glared at the screen in frustration.
"Goddamn technology crap. I’m a soldier, not a freakin' computer geek." Van Buren carefully covered his microphone so as to not broadcast his tirade.
He glanced out the side window as the helicopter banked, looking nearly straight down at the dark field.
"Major, I’m not getting nothing on this infrared. What was wrong with the old unit? This new shit is too buggy. I can’t make heads or tails of it."
Major Gant radioed, "Trust the icon, soldier. Let the high-tech stuff do its work. You’re in the modern army now."
Van Buren's reply was to smack the monitor. The display flickered and then cleared.
"Well I’ll be damned …"
Gant pulled his eyes from his wrist computer and looked over at Galati. The soldier had already attached the stock to the weapon and, with Twiste's help, fit two rectangular batteries to either side of the big barrel.
Thom watched Galati work and found it ironic that the best sniper on the team actually wore glasses.
He overheard Galati say something to Twiste about some other weapon he had once tested that was far cooler than the net Taser. He was, after all, the unit's best bullshitter. But of all his stories, it was the one true one that Gant remembered most. Galati had plugged a man between the eyes at four hundred yards moments before the target planned to open a briefcase full of anthrax spores.
Gant shook away his thoughts. He was on the job and he needed to concentrate.
"How we doing?"
Twiste answered, "We're almost done. But Thom, remember, this thing isn't exactly battle tested. We're sort of taking a bit of a WAG as to whether or not it's going to work as advertised."
"If it doesn't work," Gant said, pulling a cylinder from his utility belt and flicking his wrist to extend a steel baton, "we will do things the old-fashioned way."
Campion eyed the shepherds. There was something out here and they were starting to get a taste of it. But the wind blew east northeast; if their prey was in the wrong spot they could miss it, if only due to a poorly timed breeze.
Roberts and Wells were off to Campion’s left — to the south — creeping between bent and twisted cypress trees as they scanned the rim of a bog. To his right, Sawicki moved along the perimeter of the tall saw grass, careful to avoid the sharp edges — like teeth — on the blades. The stuff made Campion think of the legendary boscage in northern France that had tied down the allied breakout from Normandy in 1944.