Brandt’s jaw clenched into a knot. “Den, we have no contact either. Do you have a satellite feed of the area?” The tension in his face increased exponentially. “You’re sure there are no other heat signatures? Roger that. Have the plane hold while Raven Flight investigates. Raven out.”
The sergeant turned to Davidson. “Do what you do best.” The younger man went to move off, but Brandt continued, “Take her inside.”
Rebecca stood her ground. “But I—”
“
No questions,” Brandt hissed as he hefted his weapon into firing position. Lopez and Svengurd were already flanking the car. “Get inside.”
Rebecca believed in women’s lib and all that, but when the guy with the really big gun looked worried and told you to take cover, you did.
Hurrying to catch up with Davidson, she asked, “What’s going on?”
The friendly smile so easily flashed now held a steady frown. The younger man seemed much older suddenly, his face lined with grooves too deep for one so junior. “Don’t fall behind.”
* * *
The Mercedes’ hood was still warm, but the engine was off as Brandt aimed his gun into the car. Lopez approached the driver’s side as Svengurd took the passenger’s. With a nod from Brandt, the two men opened their respective doors. His finger tightened on the trigger as his men scrambled back, positioning for a better shot.
Nothing.
“
Empty, boss.”
Still, Brandt kept the bead on the driver’s side. “Check the backseat.”
Lopez and Svengurd repeated the maneuver. “All clear.”
“
Trunk.”
This time the corporal took up a side position as Lopez popped the lid. Brandt never wavered in his gaze to the driver’s side.
“
No blood, no signs of a struggle, Sarge.”
Brandt flexed his trigger finger. Where was the goddamn driver?
As if reading his mind, Lopez nodded toward the hangar. “Maybe he had to take a leak.”
There was something wrong. Very wrong. Far more wrong than a nervous bladder. Command had confirmed that the driver had radioed his arrival at the airstrip over a half an hour ago.
Sweat poured down Brandt’s back as Lopez and Svengurd looked at him. He hated the pit that had formed in his stomach. Especially when there was so little evidence that it should be there.
Except for the missing driver.
“
Keys?” he asked.
“
In the ignition, sir.”
Okay, not even a French driver would be that stupid. “Davidson, are you in position yet?”
* * *
“
Just about,” the private replied to a question Rebecca couldn’t hear.
She knelt next to him on the rough steel grating. Davidson had moved them swiftly through the hangar past a lonely, half-assembled biplane and up to the second floor office. The place didn’t look like it had seen any business since World War II.
Dust clung to dust as Davidson struggled to open the window overlooking the Tarmac. Rebecca glanced around the room. Papers were scattered across the tiny desk as though someone had been trying to balance his or her checkbook, then suddenly disappeared. A 1950s-era radio adorned the otherwise barren shelf.
In the closed office, the heat grew oppressive, and that sweet smell of chocolate was replaced by a foul odor of mold and very old gym socks. With a heave, Davidson jerked the window open, creating a plume of cracked paint and dirt. Choking on the dusty cloud, Rebecca began to stand.
“
Stay down,” he intoned in a voice that had gotten two octaves deeper since their playful banter on the plane.
Rebecca knelt beside him as Davidson shoved the barrel of his rifle through the open window. In quick order, he checked the Tarmac.
“
Everything’s quiet, sir.” The private listened intently to the response. “Roger that, Sarge, but if anyone is out there, they’re dug in.”
Rebecca waited to make sure Davidson’s conversation was over before speaking. “So you’re a sniper?”
The private didn’t interrupt his surveillance, but his tone lightened. “We prefer to be called perimeter specialists.”
She let out a snort. If the kid was relaxed enough to joke, their situation couldn’t be that bad. Brandt was just overreacting.
A nervous Nelly.
But Rebecca found she was biting her lip. When Brandt had charged into that rain forest clearing at a breakneck speed, firing with precision, heedless of the fierce warriors, the sergeant had looked anything but nervous. And certainly not a Nelly.
“
How long do you think we’ll be up here?”
Davidson squinted through the large telescopic sight and doubled back to check something, then moved on before answering. “Don’t know.”
Which probably meant a long time. Rebecca plunked down and opened the laptop atop her folded legs. Adjusting her seat, she got nice and comfy. At the very least she could get some work done.
That’s about the time the first missile hit their parked jet.
* * *
Fuck. Fuck. Fuck.
Brandt shielded his eyes as the second missile hit the plane. The cockpit was nothing more than a cauldron of smoke and fire. Scrambling behind the SUV, he cursed his hesitation. He had known something was wrong. He should have bolted as soon as the driver turned up missing. Smattering
pops
of gunfire came from overhead.
“
Davidson, status.”
Before the kid could respond, another missile hit, but this time struck the hangar. Specifically, the second floor, right where Davidson and Monroe were holed up.
“
Davidson! Report!”
Nothing but static. Another missile hit the same target.
“
Lopez, start the car and—”
But the telltale whistle of an incoming RPG filled the air.
“
Hangar. Now!”
They fell back just as the missile hit the SUV. The explosion flipped the car into the air and crashed it back down in their last position. Brandt laid down cover fire, although he knew it was worthless. Whoever was aiming the missiles was far outside the range of his weapon, but still he let off controlled bursts. It gave his anger a tangible form.
Once inside, the sergeant wanted nothing more than to charge up those steps to the second floor, but he planted his boots. Don’t react. Act.
“
Lopez. Svengurd. Clear the hangar.”
As they rushed to fulfill his order, Brandt took inventory of their assets.
It didn’t take long.
Not much here except for a decrepit biplane and several engine parts. Above them hung chains attached to pulley mechanisms. Neither provided much help against a well-armed contingent.
He tapped his earpiece. “Badger Den?” But static answered. Someone was jamming their radio communications. No big surprise.
“
Clear,” Svengurd announced.
Brandt turned his attention to the second floor. Or at least what used to be the second floor. The mangled metal glowed a dull red, and the entire level was held up by only two twisted supports. He was worried that their added weight alone would collapse the entire structure.
But it was a risk he had to take, so he motioned Lopez to cover their fallback position and Svengurd to take point. They would mount the stairs. They would find Davidson and Monroe, hale and hearty. They would reassemble the biplane and fly the fuck out of here.
It was a great plan until a missile hit the second floor. This impact shredded the tenuous scaffolding. They dove out of the way as the metal screamed as its joists were torqued beyond their capacity, then shattered. The second floor and anyone on it came crashing onto the cement floor.
Fuck, fuck, fuck.
Smoke obscured the tangled wreckage. Then a cough, faint, weak—then another, stronger.
“
Rebecca! Sam!” Slinging his gun, Brandt dug through the rubble.
“
Hang tough!” Lopez yelled as Svengurd joined in.
But as hard as they tried, they couldn’t make headway. The metal supports had been superheated by the third blast and fused together. Unless they found an arc welder lying around, they weren’t getting through.
“
I’m checking the back.”
Sure enough, toward the east wall, Brandt found an opening in the wreckage large enough for him to crawl through. As he tested the entrance, the metal haystack groaned but held.
“
Davidson? Monroe?” Brandt shouted over the sound of his men desperately digging and his own ringing ears.
Climbing over the twisted remains of a desk, Brandt coughed. The deeper he penetrated, the more grime-clogged his lungs became. Vision hazy, he squinted. Was there a figure ahead
“
Davidson?”
Carefully climbing over a girder that precariously held up a large piece of ceiling, Brandt became even more certain that there was someone ahead. Were they saying something?
Slipping between a series of beams, Brandt found the figure. Only it wasn’t Davidson. It was the doctor, pointing Davidson’s rifle at him.
“
Monroe, what—”
He finally could hear her. “Get down!”
* * *
As Brandt dropped, Rebecca fired. She had expected a kick from the rifle, but still landed on her butt. She also missed the bastard, but Brandt was all over it, firing like a maniac.
“
Nice shot,” the private commented.
She might have taken Davidson’s criticism a little harder if he wasn’t sprawled behind a bent girder. “Shut up, or next time I won’t use my own body to shield you from falling debris.”
Rebecca got a flash of a grin from Davidson as she helped him up, before the mask of pain returned. Using her sleeve, she dabbed blood from the younger man’s temple until her own cut started dripping down his cheek.
“
Sorry.” Rebecca used her other sleeve to wipe the stain.
For all their injuries, they were lucky. If the private hadn’t gotten them on the move right after the plane was attacked, they would have been killed by that first strike on the hangar. Instead, the missile attack had just knocked them off their feet. She had banged up her knee. He had bounced off his head. Rebecca could not imagine the damage that would have been done if he had not been wearing his helmet.
Brandt’s gunfire died abruptly. They both held their breath. Davidson tried to raise his rifle, but gasped in pain. Rebecca scrambled to pick it up, but need not have worried. The sergeant came back into view, dragging the body of their pursuer.
“
Where the hell did he come from?” Brandt asked.
Rebecca went back to the weakened private, but the young man waved her off. Davidson had accepted her ministrations before, but now, in front of his commanding officer? No way.
“
He came in under the cover of the second missile attack,” Davidson reported, sounding far stronger than she knew he was.
Free of his burden, Brandt strode forward. “Why didn’t you sound off?”
Davidson tried to rise but fell into Rebecca’s supporting arms. She chimed in as the private regrouped. “After the first firefight, we went into hiding. I don’t think he wanted to give away our location.”
The private pushed away from Rebecca. “He was on our six when the deck came down.”
“
Did you get a fix on any other hostiles?” Brandt asked.
The private tried to answer, but another wave of pain crossed his face.
“
Well?” the sergeant asked impatiently.
Jesus, couldn’t Brandt see the kid was struggling? They both were.
After her latest jungle adventure, Rebecca honestly did not believe that her body had any more adrenaline. How could it? Then, that first missile hit, and she felt that electric jolt of hormones cover the pain from her knee and convince her that she could run. And run they did. Then fall. Then hide, holding their breath for fear the assailant would find them before Brandt did.
But now the hormonal high was wearing off, and she could feel her hands start to shake. Tears threatened to spill for no other reason that they had actually survived when they had no right to. And now the sergeant thought he could give Davidson shit?
Rebecca met the sergeant’s gaze. “Avoiding a painful, explosive death was kind of foremost on our minds, Brandt.”
He opened his mouth to retort, but abruptly closed it again.
Instead, Brandt turned to the private. “You good to go?”
Davidson nodded vigorously, except this motion caused him to sway and catch himself on a girder. Rebecca helped him into a sitting position.
“
He’s got a dislocated shoulder and at the very least a mild concussion.”
Brandt knelt beside them. “I can take care of the shoulder.”
Rebecca backed away and pulled out her laptop.
Adrenaline. Danger. Fear.
Sick of all three, she retreated into her world of science.
“
This is going to hurt like a mo’,” Brandt said matter-of-factly.