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Kilmara made a face.  "I've no ambitions to be a dead hero or to be kissed as I lie there dying," he said into the intercom.

"But Nelson won the battle," said the pilot.

Kilmara raised his eyebrows and went back to looking at cows.  On previous operations they had always had the reassuring backup of the regular army.  This time it looked as if they'd be on their own.

The black silhouettes of the hills of Connemara showed up on the horizon, and there was the glint of moonlight off a lake below.  "ETA twenty-two minutes, Colonel."

The colonel had his eyes closed.  "Too many cows," he said.

The pilot checked the firing circuits of the Optica's electronically controlled machine guns and rocket pods.  The aircraft had been designed for observation and endurance, but with lightweight armaments it had proved possible to give it some punch.

The firing circuit check light glowed green.  All was in order.  The Rangers flew on.

*    *          *          *          *

Fitzduane's Island — 2220 hours

All preparations had been completed more than twenty minutes earlier, but a glow had lingered longer than expected in the sky, and Kadar wanted the maximum benefit from the cover of darkness.  The night still wasn't jet black, but given the near-perfect day and the half-moon, it was as dark now as it was going to get within his time frame, and the increase in cloud cover should provide the needed protection.

Fitzduane's castle had been well enough sited to cope with medieval warfare and even conventional musketry, but it had disadvantages when longer-range weapons were brought into play.  Kadar had found several random jumbles of boulders in a semicircle about a thousand meters from the castle, and there he had constructed three sangars, rock-fortified emplacements, to hold his heavy machine guns and the SAM-7 missile.  He was out of normal rifle range but well within the distance appropriate for a heavy sustained-fire weapon.  The Russian 12.7 mm DShK 38/46 was effective up to two thousand meters.

Kadar regretted he hadn't brought any specialist night-vision equipment, but he doubted it would prove essential.  Firing parameters had been constructed while there was still adequate light, and the basic structure of the castle was clearly outlined against the night sky.  His covering fire might not be as accurate as he would have liked, but the volume would make up for it.

Another dull explosion sounded from within the castle courtyard — what the plans he had found in the DrakerCollege library called a bawn — and he again failed to identify its source.  It was too loud and resonant for a rifle or shotgun but lacked the acoustic power of a heavier weapon.  Perhaps it wasn't an explosion at all but some kind of pile-driving or hammering or attempt to signal.  A signal — that was probably it.  He smiled to himself.  It was a brave attempt, but there was nobody to hear.

He had brought two Powerchutes on the Sabine for the primary purpose of providing an escape vehicle in an extreme emergency.  A Powerchute would get him off the island to a place where a vehicle, money, and other emergency supplies were concealed.  The second unit was a backup.

He knew that in committing the Powerchutes to the battle ahead, he was cutting off his own last retreat, but that didn't matter anymore.  This was a fight he was going to win.  He didn't want the second-class option.  He wanted the exhilaration that makes men the world over attempt the impossible, the thrill that comes from taking the maximum risk:  of committing everything or dying.

He gave the signal.  The Powerchutes started their engines and moved forward.  Each powered parachute consisted of a tricycle framework with a propeller mounted at the rear.  Forward momentum and the slipstream from the propeller inflated the parachute canopy.  Within a few yards the Powerchutes were airborne and climbing rapidly.  The Powerchute was a parachute that could go up as well as down; it could be maneuvered much like a powered hang glider, reach a height of ten thousand feet, fly at fifty kilometers per hour — or descend slightly with the engine cut off.  Each Powerchute had a maximum payload of 350 pounds, and in this case it was being used to the absolute limit.  Each was fully laden with pilot, weapons, grenades, satchel charge, and homemade incendiaries.

Kadar turned to his final surprise.  The welders of Malabar Unit had done an excellent job.  The big German tractor and the trailer they had found at DrakerCollege had been armored with steel plate — front, back, and sides — thick enough to stop high-velocity rifle bullets.  Firing ports had been cut at regular intervals for the crew's automatic rifles, and an explosive charge protruded from a girder at the front.

Kadar had made himself a tank.  He spoke into one of the Russian field radios and the tank's-tractor's engines burst into life.

"Geranium force," he ordered.  "Attack!  Attack!  Attack!"

The darkness around the castle was rent with streams of fire.

28

Fitzduane's Castle — 2228 hours

The sandbags covering the arrow slits shook under a burst of heavy-machine-gun fire that raked across the front of the gatehouse.  Fitzduane had stipulated that the sandy earth used to fill the bags be well dampened.  The sweating students had groaned because the earth was noticeably heavier when wet, but the merit of this precaution now became obvious:  the damp earth absorbed even the heavy machine-gun rounds, and though the sacks themselves were becoming bullet-torn, their contents stayed more or less in place.  Their defenses against direct gunfire and the more dangerous problem within the stone confines of the castle — ricochets — were holding.  Noble's mental image of the sandbags leaking their contents like a row of egg timers did not seem likely to materialize for some time.

Noble was just thinking that thanks to the castle's thick stone walls, the noise of the gunfire was almost bearable when a double blast sent tremors through the whole structure and temporarily deafened him.  He removed a sandbag and peered through a murder hole overlooking the main gate.  Two rocket-propelled grenades had blown huge gaps in the wooden gates.  As he watched, two more grenades impacted.  He hugged the floor while further explosions rent the air only a few meters away from where he lay.  Blasts of hot air and red-hot grenade fragments seared through the open murder hole.  When the clatter of shrapnel falling to the floor had died down, he snatched a look at the gateway again.  The second set of explosions had finished the destruction of the wooden gates and blown the splintered remnants off their hinges.  Burning pieces of the gates cast flickers of orange light into the darkness, and the familiar smell of woodsmoke blended with the acrid fumes from the explosives.  His initial shock at seeing their defenses torn away so quickly turned to relief when he noticed that the portcullis still stood more or less intact, its rigid structure absorbing the shock waves and presenting a difficult target for the hollow-charge missiles.

A camouflaged figure darted out of the darkness and dropped to the ground.  A few feet from Noble, Andreas was watching the perimeter through the night sight on his SA-80.  The man was clutching a satchel charge.  He lay in a slight dip, thinking he was concealed by the darkness while he regained his breath.  He was still over a hundred meters away.

Andreas fought the desire to shoot when the green-gray image of the terrorist showed clear against the orange reticule of the sight.  It would be so easy.  The temptation was nearly overwhelming, but Fitzduane had given strict orders that the night-vision equipment was to be used only for observation until he gave the word.  He wanted the attackers to get cocky, to come closer thinking they were concealed by the darkness.  To enter the killing ground.