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While Scott tended to Maritza, Jackie kept the helo’s forward speed up and maintained a shallow climb.

“Uh-oh,” Sullivan said to herself when the helicopter started a steady series of vibrations. Subtle at first, the vibrations grew more intense as the helicopter ascended. She gently nursed the cyclic, collective, and tail-rotor pedals. When the tail-rotor controls didn’t respond normally, she knew that something was on the verge of failing. “Just stay together,” she pleaded out loud as she gently reduced power.

“What’s wrong?” Scott shouted from the wind-whipped cabin.

“We have a problem.”

Dalton covered Maritza with a thin blanket and tucked the edges under her shoulders and legs. “How bad is it?”

“I don’t think we can stay in the air much longer,” she said in a resigned voice, then keyed the radio. “Umpire, Charlie Tango.”

“Go,” Greg O’Donnell shot back.

“I have a major problem,” Jackie said tersely. “I’m going to try for the dirt strip between the power plant and the south end of Lake Qaraaoun. We need assistance ASAP.”

“Site Delta?” O’Donnell asked.

“That’s affirm.”

“I’m on my way.”

Greg adjusted the dim light above his kneeboard, then flipped the selector switch to the number-two radio. “Transco Twenty-seven is on fire! Transco Two-Seven is on fire!” he said in a panicked voice as he pulled the power and rolled the big Cessna into a step turn, allowing the nose to drop straight toward the ground.

O’Donnell kept the transmit switch keyed. “Transco Twenty-seven is going down. Mayday! Mayday! Mayday!” he continued as he flicked the external lights off.

“Transco Twenty-seven is on fire! Going down, out of control! We’re going in,” he shouted, switching back to the number-one radio while he turned off the transponder.

From what the air traffic controllers saw on their scopes, Transco 27 had vanished from radar over the peaks of the Anti-Lebanon Mountains.

Pulling out of the steep dive east of Dahr al Ahmar, Greg steered a direct course for the emergency landing strip at Site Delta.

Jackie’s cautious expression dissolved when the Long-Ranger suddenly started vibrating violently laterally and vertically. She was instantly afraid that the main rotor blades would disintegrate, causing a catastrophic failure that would send them plunging to their deaths.

Wide-eyed with fear, Sullivan concentrated on stabilizing the ship and turned to Scott. “I have to put it down!”

“You’re the pilot.”

“Umpire,” Jackie said over the radio, “I have to set it down here.” She looked at the GPS and gave O’Donnell the coordinates.

“I’ve got it fire walled,” he assured her, and read back her position. “Keep me informed.”

Before Jackie could reply, there was a resounding vibration and banging that shook the helo so hard that she couldn’t read the instruments. Reacting to the terrifying crisis, Jackie eased off the power at the same time something snapped in the tail-rotor gearbox. The LongRanger immediately began oscillating from side to side as she desperately fought the controls.

“Tail-rotor failure!” she cried out as she frantically lowered the collective and rolled off the throttle to keep the ship from rotating out of control under the main rotors. Jackie entered an autorotation and, before she thought about it, hit the switch for the searchlight.

Nothing happened.

“Great,” she said as she stared down at the black hole they were descending into. “Brace yourselves,” she shouted to Maritza and Scott.

“Umpire,” Jackie said urgently, “we’ve had a tail-rotor failure. I’m autorotating near the south end of the lake.”

“Roger that,” Greg advised. “I’m hurrying.”

Without the powerful searchlight, Jackie was having a difficult time seeing the edge of the shoreline.

“Scott, are you and Maritza strapped in?”

“We’re all set,” he said as he covered Maritza’s head with a pair of folded blankets. “It’s too late for me to strap her into a seat.”

“This is gonna be a rough landing,” Jackie warned as she fought to control the plummeting helicopter.

“It couldn’t be as bad as my last one,” Maritza dead-panned.

Watching the radar altimeter, Jackie was about to begin a flare over the edge of the reservoir when the helo hit an unseen electric power line. A bomb burst of blue-white sparks flew in every direction as one of the wire strike cable cutters snagged the high-voltage power line.

The LongRanger entered a violently pitching, spinning, disorienting, out-of-control maneuver. The spinning created a centrifugal force that pulled Jackie forward toward the shattered windshield.

For a few seconds the helicopter hesitated precariously in midair and then crashed into the shallow lake. The megavolt power line separated and dropped into the reservoir as the LongRanger rolled over on its right side.

Dazed and gasping for a breath of air, Scott could feel electrical shocks coursing through his body. He struggled with his restraining straps while the helicopter sank below the surface of the reservoir. The cool water was pitch-black and he was feeling light-headed. Finally, after what seemed like minutes, Dalton cleared his head enough to snap the quick-release buckle open and free himself from his restraints. He tried to move, but something was holding him back.

From a distance of seven miles, Greg O’Donnell saw the pyrotechnic display from the power-line strike. He glanced at his chart. Sure enough, the high-voltage lines exiting the power plant ran along the southern edge of the lake. His heart sank to the pit of his stomach as he selected 121.5, the emergency frequency, on his number-two communications radio.

“Charlie Tango,” Greg radioed as he began a high-speed descent, “this is umpire on guard. Do you copy?”

The radio remained silent.

“Charlie Tango, come up guard.”

Stay calm, Scott told himself as he shoved the shoulder straps aside. He attempted to move again, then realized that the sleeve of his jumpsuit was caught on a twisted edge of his seat. His mind, disciplined by years of conditioning and training, began to flash a warning. Panic in the water is an irreversible behavior. With his lungs aching in searing pain, he reached for Maritza. She wasn’t there.

Scott kicked at his bent door and finally forced it open. He swam free of the cockpit and bashed against one of the twisted main rotor blades, then shoved off into the inky blackness. Near the surface of the lake, the water seemed to glow as Scott saw an array of minuscule organisms drift lazily in front of his eyes. A split second later he surfaced as his oxygen-starved mind screamed for air.

With his lungs heaving, Scott treaded water and frantically looked around the floating debris. The steady surge of electrical shocks continued as he noticed waves of blue electricity shimmering across the water. The pungent smell of jet fuel permeated the air and made breathing difficult.

He was about to call out when someone yanked on his leg. Instantly, Jackie broke the surface of the water and thrashed about as she sucked in the foul-smelling air.

“Where’s Maritza?” Scott sputtered.

“I don’t know,” she gasped, then recoiled from the electric shocks and the sight of the blue light undulating across the water. “We have to find her!” she said on the verge of panic.

“Stay where you are,” Scott ordered. Feeling his pulse racing, he took a deep breath and dove eight feet, grazing his head against the crushed nose of the LongRanger. Rapidly feeling his way around the cockpit to the fuselage, he suddenly bumped into something soft. He was immediately clutched around the neck by Maritza. The panic-stricken woman’s broken ankle was trapped in the twisted side door.