Hancock nodded his acknowledgement, glancing over at one of his aides. “Get a message to CINCLANTFLT…have the Truman’s CO ready his fighters.”
General Nealen walked back into the Situation Room at that moment, tension showing on his face.
“We have a problem, Mr. President,” he announced, handing a clipboard to Hancock. “Just received this CRITIC from Fort Meade.”
The President removed the cover sheet and glanced down the message, feeling a strange fear creep over him. “How can this be?” he asked, looking up at the general.
“What is it, Roger?” Cahill demanded, forgetting himself for a moment.
“Voice-print analysis from the NSA,” Hancock replied slowly, as if not quite believing his own words. “The man in the theatre — the man we’ve been negotiating with…is not Tarik Abdul Muhammad.”
Kranemeyer swore an oath as he replaced the phone in its cradle. “They’re going to let it land,” he announced, glancing across the workstation at Lasker. Something was wrong about this, so very wrong.
The comm chief’s eyes lit up suddenly. “We’re getting this streamed to us live from ECHELON…the pilot of the Antonov is getting a call — from Vegas.”
“Turn it up,” Kranemeyer ordered, hearing the voice of a man in Arabic coming over the speakers.
It had been years since Iraq, but he could still remember the language, ingrained upon his memory. He could feel the blood drain from his face, the haunting realization of their mistake.
“He’s saying good-bye…”
He could hear the voice of the tower’s controller in his ear as the Antonov came in hot, low over the Leeward Point Airfield — less than a hundred feet off the deck — the four massive turboprop engines churning the night air, flaps raised.
“There is no god but God,” he whispered, tears streaming down his face as he remembered the words of the shaikh. The indescribable feeling of honor…that he had been chosen to play a role in this holy struggle.
And there was water beneath him once more as the transport swept out over the Bay of Guantanamo. Lights glistening off the waves.
His hands were sweaty as he gripped the controls, aiming the plane toward the large white building standing on the windward shore of the bay.
The Naval Hospital.
There was no time for anyone on the military base to react. No time to counter the sudden threat.
The Soviet-built cargo plane slammed into the western wall of the hospital just above the second floor and burst into flames — the explosives lining the cargo hold going off in a sympathetic detonation mere moments later, an explosion that shook the entire base with the force of an earthquake, sending one of the Antonov’s engines spinning through the floor to fall into a dining area below.
Death. Chaos. Fire…
Samir closed the phone, whispering a prayer. The charade was over — the show they had performed for the Americans. Time to ring down the curtain.
The lawyer drew his Glock from its holster on the belt of his jeans as he approached the group of hostages once more, slamming a fresh magazine into the butt of the pistol. No more games, no more deception. Five years living in this land, going to work every day, living among them — living a lie. No more.
“When do I see your face, coward?” His head came around at the sound of the woman’s voice, eyes falling on Laura Gilpin’s face. A purplish bruise was discoloring the flesh around her right cheekbone, from where he had struck her before. It did nothing to mask the look of defiance in her eyes.
“What type of man hides behind a mask and a gun?”
Marika Altmann moved toward the screen in the security center, the congresswoman’s voice coming through the speakers. “What does she think she’s doing?”
Russ shook his head, a look of pain coming into his eyes. This wasn’t the way it was supposed to happen. As a hostage, you wanted to blend in — become the gray man…the one your captors didn’t even notice. Gilpin was doing the opposite.
Carol came through the door in that moment, returning from the catwalk. She had the radio in her hands.
“It’s guilt,” the negotiator whispered, glancing up at the screen as he watched the terrorist close in on the congresswoman, shoving his pistol into her face. “She’s blaming herself — trying to focus their attention on her. Away from her supporters.”
“And it’s going to get her killed,” Marika observed grimly. “Nichols, I need your sitrep.”
Nothing but silence greeted her query. The moments to death ticking down. “LONGBOW,” she began, addressing the Agency sniper, “you are weapons-free.”
He felt exposed, light filtering down through the fifteen feet of water above him. Harry reached out a foot, kicking away from the underwater portal at the back of the O’s tank. Twisting in the water, he gazed upward at the massive machinery of the underwater set, gears intertwining, winches aiding in the raising and lowering of platforms. The bottom of the aquarium was painted black, helping to mask his movements from anyone looking down.
Behind him, a pair of swimmers emerged from the lock, legs kicking against the water. Richards and Han.
Harry sucked in a breath of oxygen from the tank on his back, holding his H&K close to his body as he motioned upward. Toward the light. The surface.
“Shut up, whore,” Samir snarled, realizing suddenly that she was baiting him into focusing on her. Distraction.
He drew back his arm, slamming the butt of the Glock into Gilpin’s cheek, drawing blood. She dies last, the cell leader thought, remembering the instructions of the shaikh.
Turning away, he keyed his radio, in that moment aware that he had missed his schedule of communication by several minutes. “Patrol One, report in.”
“All clear.”
“Patrol Two?”
“Clear, my brother.”
Samir nearly went on, but something seemed to grab hold of him, pulling him back.They were the exact same words from before.
He swore in a mixture of fear and anger, toggling the radio’s mike once more. “Patrol Two, are you okay?”
Gilad saw the leader turn, his angry curse attracting the attention of his men. Now or never. Waiting would only secure their deaths.
He sprang to his feet, hurling himself up the stairs toward the corpse of his team member. A shout behind him, his foot slipping on the blood-dampened carpet.
He went down, yanking the Sig-Sauer out of the man’s holster. A burst of slugs slammed into his leg, splintering bone and ripping through flesh. Fiery pain filled his veins, the sound of a Kalashnikov on full-automatic resounding through the theatre.
The Sig recoiled into his hand as he squeezed off two shots and he saw one of the terrorists stagger, then go down as if pole-axed — the air split with the report of a heavy rifle.
Harry could hear the shots as he kicked his way to the surface, reverberating like summer thunder through the water.
Punctuated by the lightning crack of Thomas’s Remington.
It hadn’t been supposed to end this way. With the death of more innocents.
He burst from the water, reaching out a hand against the side of the aquarium to steady himself as he brought the submachine gun up.