“The change in altitude isn’t what we had in mind November-three-niner-zero-alpha-tango. Adjust to heading two-eight-niner immediately.”
Storm leveled out at roughly twenty feet above the water. He had to adjust course a few times to make sure he missed the masts of some of the sailboats.
“Sorry, fellas,” Storm said. “I’ve got a terrorist to stop. You can either join me or not. I could use your help.”
“November-three-niner-zero-alpha-tango, be advised we have been given the order to fire. Change course immediately or we’ll have no choice.”
Storm banked hard toward land, now just a few hundred yards off his starboard side. The F-16s mirrored his move, but well above him. If anything, Storm thought they had increased altitude. It’s not like they needed to be terribly close to him to shoot him down. Their missiles probably had a range of tens — if not hundreds — of miles, not to mention guidance systems that could deliver their warheads between the “N” and the “3” on his tail numbers, if they chose to.
He was over land now, flying just above the rooftops of the houses that dotted the shoreline. He hated using them for cover. But he also knew that, for whatever the pilots were saying to him, there was likely an air force commander somewhere telling them not to take a shot unless they were sure the falling helicopter wouldn’t crash into a civilian’s house.
“November-three-niner-zero-alpha-tango, we have achieved target lock. Change course now.”
Storm saw the town of Crisfield in the distance. But he was now over what looked like wetlands or some kind of wildlife preserve. There were no houses. No cover.
“November-three-niner-zero-alpha-tango, this is your last warn—”
And then nothing. The line in Storm’s helmet went dead.
Expecting a missile was now on its way, Storm veered toward a stretch of forest, desperately hoping he could get the warhead to detonate on a tree instead of his fuselage. He was nearing a stand of pine trees when he heard it.
It came from not far behind him.
A tremendous explosion.
Then another.
It sounded like planes crashing.
Storm craned his neck left, then right, trying to get a glimpse of whatever happened, but he couldn’t see anything. Unlike fighter jets, which gave pilots a near-360-degree view of their surroundings, a chopper only let its flier see ahead and a limited amount to the side. He brought the helicopter up to a hundred feet, then set it into a hover. He slowly rotated its nose in a circle so he could survey everything around him.
Sure enough, there were two smoldering wrecks of airplanes, separated by no more than a few hundred feet.
Something had shot down the F-16s.
And in one sickening second, Storm knew exactly what had done it.
STORM RIPPED OFF HIS HELMET, reached into his pocket, hit the number for the cubby.
“I got Derrick,” Storm heard Rodriguez yelling, before he returned to a more normal tone to say, “Hang on, bro.”
Storm consciously brought his breathing back under control, knowing it would help steady his heart rate. He was figuring it out fast: the lunatic manning the laser had seen the F-16s coming and decided they were either a threat or they made for good target practice.
And, thinking like a terrorist, there was no reason not to shoot them down. One of the advantages of a laser over, say, a missile was that the laser had essentially unlimited ammunition. As long as its power source was good, it could keep firing as often as it acquired a new target.
The only thing that had likely saved Storm was that he was flying low enough that the laser couldn’t target him.
Which meant it had to be close by.
“Storm,” the husky voice of Jedediah Jones filled his ear. “Do you see a water tower with a large red crab painted on it to your right?”
Storm’s eyes went to a gray tower that loomed above the low-slung buildings of the town around it. To the right there was a cove filled with boats, their naked masts reaching upward like a series of white sticks that had been jammed into the water. “Yeah, I see it.”
“Head straight for it. But stay low. Repeat: you must stay as low as possible.”
“I copy.”
“You’ll be looking for a white truck that is currently located in a marina parking lot just short of the water tower as you approach it. Our techs have been studying satellite images of it. It is designed as a surface-to-air weapon, and based on their early estimates, its lowest angle of fire is thirty-five degrees. It effectively creates a blind spot that lowers the closer you get to it. Even staying as low as a hundred feet in the air, you can’t get any closer than one hundred and sixty-three feet or you will be within the weapon’s range.”
“I don’t exactly have a tape measure up here with me. I’d appreciate some help on ideas where to land this thing. I see some streets but they look too narrow. I’m not real keen to mess with those power lines alongside them, either,” Storm said. He pushed the stick gingerly forward, not wanting to tempt the 163-foot circle of death.
Jones’s voice again came into his ear. “Do you see a ferry dock? Should be dead ahead of you.”
Storm’s eyes focused on a slab of concrete jutting out into the water just to the left of the harbor inlet. “Yeah, I got it.”
“Put her down there. Mockingbird is coming into the laser’s range any moment. The terrorists will probably take their shot and make a run for it. But if you can get the chopper down and get on foot, you might be able to catch them.”
“Will do,” Storm said. He pushed the helicopter ahead. He was again over water. The down draft from the chopper’s whirring rotors flattened the water as he passed over it, confusing the wave patterns.
He reached the ferry loading dock — empty, thankfully — and hovered over it for a moment, until he was sure his skids were parallel with the ground. Then he went hard for the concrete surface, not caring that his landing would have failed to impress an experienced pilot. At this point, he was all about speed, not style.
Storm cut the power to the rotors but did not wait for them to stop spinning. He unbuckled himself and spun toward the cargo door, throwing it open and hopping out. He began sprinting in the direction of the water tower, down the middle of Crisfield’s main drag, a wide, four-lane road with a divider down the middle.
“Is the weapon still there?” Storm asked into his cell phone.
“Yes,” Jones said.
“Guide me to it.”
“You are currently on Main Street. Did you see Eleventh Street? You just passed a sign for it.”
“Yes.”
“Good. Go to Ninth Street, then take a right.”
Storm did not bother to take stock of the houses and buildings that blurred in his peripheral vision as he ran. His eyes focused on the street signs: Tenth Street, Spruce Street, then Ninth. He rounded the corner at full speed, his arms and legs pumping.
“Slow down, slow down,” Jones said. “As soon as you reach the end of that building on your left, the parking lot should be in view. The truck is on the far side of it. We have not seen any combatants yet so we assume they’re inside. We also assume they’re armed. Approach with caution.”
Storm slowed as the parking lot came into view. It had space for well more than a hundred cars, although only a smattering of the spots were being used. At the far end, without any other cars around it, Storm spied his target.
It was not just any truck. It was an ice cream truck, painted stark white, complete with decals of various tasty treats on the side. Storm could see a Nutty Buddy, a Strawberry Shortcake, a Chipwich. It could have fooled anyone. The only thing marring its authenticity was a retractable turret that had emerged from a split in the roof. On top of it, there was a metal cylinder with a glass-enclosed end pointed toward the sky. It looked a lot like one of the high-powered spotlights used to strafe the sky at a Hollywood movie premiere.