Выбрать главу

“How long will take to fill it up?” Jonathan asked.

“Kinda depends on how empty the tank is and how fast the pump pumps.” Boxers’ tone said that he thought it was a stupid question.

For good reason, Jonathan thought. “Okay, here’s what we’ll do,” he said. “We’ll stay in the weeds until we’re even with the aircraft, and then we’ll move in.”

“Do you want me to stay here?” Tristan asked.

“No,” Jonathan said. “I want you to stick to me like a shadow. You should be able to see well enough in the moonlight.”

“Is your safety on?” Boxers asked. Jonathan heard the teasing in his voice, but Tristan evidently did not.

“Yes!” the kid hissed. “I’ve got the freaking safety on. I’ve never taken it off.”

“Just checkin’,” the Big Guy said.

Jonathan led them forward more quietly now. Clearly, they were in somebody’s yard, and the last thing he needed now was a blown cover. Whatever complication the bright moon threw at them was compensated for by the white light in the pole barn. The light was bright enough, in fact, that Jonathan pulled his NVGs out of the way to surveil the scene unassisted. The area beneath the pole barn looked like any other mechanics’ workshop. Chests of tools served as a surrogate wall on the far side-the western side-and there appeared to be a waste oil drum in the far southwest corner. The gas pump looked like something for a 1980s gas station, but with a long hose to accommodate the fill spout on the upper surface of the wing.

Jonathan’s stomach fell when he saw that the engine cowling was open. He pressed his mike button. This close, he was less likely to be overheard whispering loudly enough to be picked up by his ear mike than he was whispering loudly enough to be heard through the air. “Looks like they’re in the middle of a repair.”

“Movement,” Boxers said.

As the announcement registered in Jonathan’s brain, the Big Guy brought his weapon to his shoulder. Jonathan followed the line of sight and saw a twentysomething young man wandering through the night back toward the pole barn from the direction of the outhouse on the far side. He wore the uniform of kids the world over: T-shirt, shorts, and flip-flops.

“I can take him,” Boxers whispered.

“Negative.”

The Big Guy’s rifle didn’t move as he turned his head to look at the boss. “Negative?” he said through the air. “Really?”

Left to his own devices, Boxers would cut a much wider path of destruction than Jonathan. You don’t kill an unarmed mechanic just because you need his airplane.

“What are we going to do, then?” Boxers asked.

“We’re going to negotiate.”

The Big Guy’s shoulders sagged. “Ah, shit. Talk is how little wars get big.”

Tristan asked, “Suppose he has a gun or something?”

“Yeah,” Boxers said. “Or something.”

Jonathan thought it through for a few seconds just to make sure his plan wasn’t stupid, and then he said, “Keep an eye out, and keep your sights on the mechanic. If a weapon appears in his hand, take him out.”

Tristan raised his own rifle to his shoulder.

“Put that down,” Boxers said. “And check the safety.”

“You stay with the Big Guy,” Jonathan instructed. “If there’s any shooting, hide behind him. He’s thicker than any tree.”

Boxers flipped him off.

Jonathan stood to his full height and started walking. He kept his NVGs on his head, but tilted up out of the way, and he kept his strides long and even. In a few seconds, the mechanic was going to see him coming, and if Jonathan kept his bearing just so, the kid would know that any aggressive move would be fatal. Those were the kinds of revelations that kept kids like him alive. He also took care to stay out of Boxers’ firing lane. It made no sense to have someone cover you from behind if you put yourself in the way of the covering fire.

The mechanic had a stepladder in his hand, and as he crossed under the propeller, Jonathan thought for sure that he’d looked right at him. Then he saw the earbud cords hanging down the sides of the kid’s face, and he got it. Apparently the music or podcast or whatever he was listening to was far more relevant to his world than the armed man who approached from the shadows.

The mechanic placed the ladder on the ground near the nose of the aircraft on the starboard side-the near side-and then climbed four steps to see into the open cowling.

As Jonathan got closer, he swung a wide arc to the kid’s left, approaching him from the side. As he closed to within ten feet, he became worried that the kid would be so startled when he finally saw Jonathan that he’d fall off the ladder and hurt himself.

“Excuse me,” Jonathan said.

Boxers’ voice said in his ear, “Tell me you’re joking. ‘Excuse me’?”

Jonathan chuckled. As tactical approaches went, this was definitely one of a kind. More loudly this time: “Excuse me!”

Still nothing.

“Okay, fine,” Jonathan said. He walked up to the ladder and touched the mechanic’s leg with a gloved hand.

The kid jumped as if he’d been hit with fifty kilovolts, dropping something into the engine-it sounded like a wrench-and overbalancing the ladder. As the ladder and the mechanic tumbled directly toward him, Jonathan reached out and caught the kid under his arms, breaking his fall before he could hit the ground.

“God damn it,” the kid said in English. Then he saw Jonathan’s cammies and the weapons, and he switched to Spanish. “Who are you?” He got his feet under him and adjusted his skewed clothing.

Jonathan stayed with English. “Are you American?”

The kid’s eyes grew wide as they took in everything. The rifle, the sidearm, the holstered MP7, the sheathed KA-BAR knife. “Holy shit.”

“Focus, son,” Jonathan said. “What’s your name?”

“Oscar,” he said. “Who the hell are you?”

“I’m hoping I’m a friend,” Jonathan said.

“Dude, with that many guns, I’ll be your friggin’ brother.”

Jonathan touched the transmit button on his chest. “Okay, come on in.”

For a second or two, Oscar looked confused. Then he winced. “Aw shit, there’s a bunch of you? Look, man, I just work here. I don’t know anything.”

Jonathan thought that was an odd reaction. “In my experience,” he said, “people who say they don’t know anything in fact know quite a lot. They at least know enough to lead with the fact that they don’t know anything.”

Oscar’s features folded into confusion. “Dude, I bet that actually made sense to you. What are you, FBI? CI-holy shit, you brought Sasquatch.” He pointed over Jonathan’s shoulder to his approaching colleagues.

He leaned in closer to Oscar and affected a conspiratorial tone. “I really wouldn’t make fun of him. He’s cranky on a good day. Today, he’s hungry and tired. I already stopped him from shooting you.”

The kid recoiled a step, and then glanced back at Boxers. “Um. Thanks?”

Jonathan winked. “Don’t mention it. Does your airplane work?”

“Huh?” The world clearly was not yet making sense to Oscar. “Oh, the plane. This plane?”

“Have you got another one?”

“Sure, it works. I don’t know how to fly it, though, so if you’re thinking I can-”

Boxers and Tristan arrived.

“What the hell kind of army are you?” Oscar said. He seemed particularly amused by the skinny soldier in the shorts and flip-flops.

“Do you want me to show you?” Boxers menaced.

Some color drained from Oscar’s face. “Actually, no.” He looked back to Jonathan. “But like I said, I can’t fly you anywhere.”

“I don’t need you to fly me,” Jonathan said. “I just want to buy the plane from you.”