Karin frowned. “Baby?”
“It’s American for sweetheart. Or love. Is that how they say it where you come from? I dun’t ‘ave th’ answer yet, luv.”
Karin punched him on the shoulder. “You’re a right tit, you know that? Look, we’re here now. Better scrub up, soldier boy.”
“Yes, ma’am.”
Little by little the team drifted out into the night. Hawaiian music backed hula dancers as they swayed on stage. Flickering, smoking torches lined the walls that circled their private courtyard. Everyone either took a seat or stood grazing around the buffet, content in each other’s company, bonded by shared experiences of action and blood. A girl wearing a grass skirt threaded flowers through each guest’s hair or placed them behind ears as each person stepped out. A long table bore the best of a “mainstream” Hawaiian buffet: fresh pineapple, coconut, seafood, pork and spam. Tropical cocktails were placed into every eager hand except Drake’s. Pineapple cake, fresh fruit slices and a sweet dipping sauce made dessert.
Hula girls swayed their hips. A fire-knife dance took even Mai’s breath away, the men gaining appreciative whistles from Alicia. It was the longest any of them had relaxed with no operation looming that they could remember.
Drake sat alone for a time, drinking in the ambience and watching each and every one of his colleagues in turn. Ben Blake, the rock-singing computer geek, who had started this journey with nothing, gained so much along the way and then ended it with even less than he started. Karin, his sister, who had somehow acquired a purpose and no longer wished to waste her life away. Komodo, the rough-looking Delta team leader who talked to Karin in such a respectful, loving way it made Drake double-take every time he heard the man’s voice. Mano Kinimaka, sitting comfortably astride a makeshift bed, so happy that everyone had joined him for his Hawaiian party, now surrounded by Hula dancers, but still making sure Hayden noticed he wasn’t interested in even the prettiest of them. And Hayden herself, so worn and wounded, so weary. She had fought the greatest battles of her life and had lived to fight another day. Her eyes might be red-rimmed, but her face was a determined mix of expectation and hope. He passed over Jonathan Gates, not knowing how the politician worked his clever magic, but finding his faith a little restored in the elective system. If someone like Gates could emerge as a future potential presidential candidate, then the world was not lost.
And then to Mai and Alicia — two of the most complex, crazy and ultimately capable people he had ever known. Mai was still a mystery to him, and he had known her the longest. There was no doubt she might hold the key to his future, but he could not hope to commit in one night. No way could he make that decision now. Too many variables were still juggling in the air.
Then he glimpsed Alicia, the girl who wore her heart on her sleeve, never at a loss for words, her harsh tongue her defense mechanism, but still a loyal, if misled, friend.
Finally, he glanced at Torsten Dahl and saw the Swede staring right back at him. Dahl was solid gold in every way. No more needed to be said.
Dahl wandered over. “When I first met you, Drake, back in that cavern where the World Tree grows, I thought at best you were a major prick.”
“Likewise.”
“I may have been a little off the mark.”
Drake smiled, sweeping aside the few unresolved issues and old memories that threatened to spoil the rest of his night. “Likewise.”
Dahl held a hand out. “Thanks for the help.”
Drake shook it firmly. “Anytime, mate.”
The evening wore on. Beyond the low torch-lit walls, the surf pounded against the beach where revelers walked, dipping their toes in the warm, foamy surf. The luau ended and the sound-system began to crank out a few old, mellow tunes as Gates clinked a spoon against a glass and asked for everyone’s attention.
“Your countries thank you,” he said once everyone acknowledged him. “Though they might never show it. That’s my official spiel, and the only time you will ever hear it.” He paused. “We’re all friends here, right? So fuck that.”
Drake’s eyebrows arched. Gates was becoming more popular by the minute.
“I’m here to say thank you, from the bottom of my heart. If it wasn’t for you — all of you — I’d be dead right now. Never mind the state of the rest of the world. So here’s to you. For all our sins — we still won.” He raised a glass. Everyone drank.
Then he turned to Ben Blake. “Do you remember where all this started?”
Ben nodded. “For you? Yeah, back at the Library of Congress.”
“You got it. And it was there, right then, that I first saw the potential for a great team. I watched you all work together and smoothed the road to see how far you could take it.”
“You paved the way to keep us in the operational loop.” Drake nodded. “We could never have trailed the Blood King without your help.”
“I did what was required,” Gates said with steel in his voice. “And, thank God, it all paid off. My decisions back then have helped my career now.” He paused. “And now the time has come to try something different.”
“Never a problem for me,” Alicia assured him, sounding more than a little inebriated.
“I want to pitch an idea to you. But of course it’s not something you aren’t already doing.”
“Pitch away,” Mai said quietly. “Anything’s better than my tomorrow.”
Gates spread his arms. “Just this — I’ve been given the go ahead to assemble a team of specialists — that is military and IT specialists, and foreign, local agency and governmental liaisons, all of which we have assembled here tonight. I’m planning to head up an unmatched new covert agency, a first-class, extreme-team, and I’m offering you all a job.”
For a moment there was utter silence, then the questions started firing off.
Drake was first. “A job doing what exactly?”
“Did you not hear the words extreme team?” Alicia slurred.
“We write our own charter,” Gates told him. “That’s just one of the beauties of it. We will choose our own assignments.”
“All of us?” Komodo was asking with unrestrained excitement. “Me too? And Karin?”
“Count me in.” Hayden was already nodding at her boss. “If Mano will join me?”
Kinimaka’s head nodded so vigorously it threatened to roll off. “Sure.”
Drake paused only to study Mai’s reaction. He could tell immediately that she liked this idea more than the thought of returning to Japan and being put through the wringer once again by her superiors. For him it was a no brainer, with or without her. The difference between action and inaction for him was much more than two letters; it was a good life or a slow death.
That left just a few stragglers. Gates spoke up when he noticed Dahl’s deep hesitation. “For you, Dahl, and for anyone else in the future, I propose a working package far better than the one you currently enjoy, which in English means that you’ll get to see your family more often.”
“How?” The Swede was no pushover.
“Look around you.” Gates grinned. “At the caliber of these people and others you could recommend. Everyone will get time off to recuperate or be with their families because we will take fewer jobs than other agencies. We won’t overstretch ourselves. I want my people at the top of their game. And one way to ensure that is to extend their happy time.”
Dahl visibly wavered.
“But think on it,” Gates said forcibly. “I’ll take only those who wish to play a major role in this new initiative. I want only the best, for I will have to fight tooth and nail with some of your bosses to retain you. But know this — the funding is already in place.”