Gilligan leaned over the map and put his fists on the table. "Okay, their forces are deploying. We’ve got six, eight, it looks like about ten squadrons of dragons moving into range of Charlie."
"What is Dushmann doing?" asked Kuznetsov.
Gilligan looked puzzled.
"The enemy," the Russian explained. " ’Dushmann’ means the Enemy."
"In the air over the city, not much. There are only scattered indications from the City of Night. It looks as if they only have a few sentries up." He looked over at Bal-Simba. "I’d bet he’s got forces still on the ground and ready to launch. But the ones that are homing in on Charlie are probably out, of the battle. They can’t get back in time."
Moira thrust her scaly head between Gilligan and Kuznetsov. "Has Charlie been warned?"
"He knows they’re there," the American said dryly.
Everyone watched silently as the waves of red acts swept toward the lone green diamond.
"Six o’clock high," Tailgunner Joe sang out over the intercom. "Bogies. Multiple. They’re going for a beam pass."
"I got "em," Sparks shouted. "Here they come."
Charlie twisted in the seat to catch sight of the attackers. The undead dragons weren’t as smooth as the ones he had seen at the castle. Their formation was ragged, they tended to slew in the turn and their flight was stiff. But all that only made them more menacing. He counted at least six as they swept around in a flat turn to come in on the Colt broadside. On they came, rising and falling slightly in the air currents, growing larger and more sinister as they bored in for the kill. Charlie saw the skeletal riders rise in their saddles to draw their great iron bows.
Just when it seemed they were too close to matter, Sparks opened up with the waist gun. The undead riders and their zombie mounts were immune to death arrows and hard to stop with dragon fire. They would have laughed at .50 caliber machine gun bullets. Energy bolts were another matter.
Lances of lightning stabbed toward the attackers. The afterimage burned purple in Charlie’s vision of a dragon arcing its neck back almost on top of its rider in a lambent nimbus of brilliance. Then Tex joined in from the top turret and the brightness became too much to bear. Charlie blinked and shook his head, trying to see. The instrument panel was lost in the dark spots swirling across his vision. He drew a gasping breath and nearly choked on the ozone. The flat crack-crack-crack of the lightning bolts told him Sparks was still firing. Suddenly it was quiet again. "Eight in, eight down," Sparks yelled into the intercom. Charlie looked out the side window and saw two splashes in the ocean below. One of them had a burnt relic that might once have been a wine disappearing at its center.
Back in the cockpit Gerry O’Demon, his copilot, was holding the controls straight and level as if nothing had happened.
"Good work, son," Charlie said into the mike.
"Don’t get cocky," came Joe’s growl from the tail position. "We got two more groups on our six."
Gerry leaned forward and squinted out the windshield. Twelve o’clock high!" the demon called. "Multiples. Three squadrons at least. I think more behind those." Charlie’s eyes weren’t as good as the demon’s but when he looked hard he saw them too. He craned his neck left and right seeking more bogies. He didn’t see any but there was an ugly looking thunderhead boiling up a couple of miles off to the left.
Normally Charlie would have avoided a storm cell like a temperance lecture. But the three squadrons of zombies were coming straight at them. He heard the crack-crack-crack as the squadrons behind them came within range of Tailgunner Joe’s weapon.
"Really sporty, huh?" chirped his co-pilot.
Tu madre," Charlie muttered. Then he kicked the rudder hard, shoved the throttle to the firewall and ran for the clouds for all he was worth.
Far above, the watching demons scanned everything that came within their purview. They were without emotion or even intelligence. They simply collected sense impressions and transmitted the information through intermediary demons back to the Wizards’ Keep, where it was processed and displayed on the magic map in the war room.
Moira thrust her scaly head over Gilligan’s shoulders. "It appears that Charlie has destroyed some of his attackers."
"He’s got firepower in that plane," Jerry said.
"Every one he takes out is one less we have to worry about," Kuznetsov added. Gilligan peered deeper into the tank. There were a lot of red dots closing in on the lone green diamond. "From the looks of it I’d say we’re going to have plenty to worry about anyway."
"Are we ready for the next phase?" asked Bal-Simba.
Gilligan looked at Kuznetsov and both men shook their heads. "We want them committed as fully as possible before we spring our next little surprise on them."
"A while more," Kuznetsov said.
Gilligan watched the battle develop and tried not to think about Karin and what she was doing.
TWENTY-SIX
THE EXECUTIONER
No sea birds, Karin thought, scanning the gray sky above the gray-green sea. She spared a glance down at the crag. No nests and no signs of them. Not even the deposits of whitewash left by birds using the rocks for fishing lookouts. The place probably smelled better for the lack, but it did not make it any less forbidding.
The Executioner’s attraction was its geography and topography, not natural beauty. There were several reefs and bars within a two-hour dragon flight of the ruined City of Night, none of them big enough or high enough above water to be called islands. But the Executioner had one thing the others lacked: Hiding places. The volcanic rock was laced with crevices, blowholes, fissures and pumice caves that could keep a dragon or two and their riders safe from eyes in the sky.
Karin and her partner had been here for almost two days now, keeping concealed and waiting for the signal. Karin hugged the jagged rock and stared out over the sullen ocean, scanning from horizon to horizon and back again for any speck that might be an approaching dragon. But the sky was as empty as the sea. Finally satisfied, she twisted on the narrow ledge and waved to her companion below. Senta was a small, dark woman who was unusual in being both a skilled magician and a dragon rider. Karin was with her as her wingman and to use her scouting skills to keep them undetected and out of trouble until they had done what they came for.
I wonder where Mick: But she pushed the thought from her mind and concentrated on the business at hand.
Down below, back under a lava overhang, Stigi and Senta’s dragons were restive. They didn’t like being on the ground when there were enemies about, and the undead dragons made them nervous besides. Well, that was fine with Karin. She was nervous too. As soon as they completed their job here she would be only too glad to be back in the air and winging her way home.
Back in the Wizards’ Keep, the command group around the tank watched in satisfaction. The diversion had worked perfectly. The Enemy had thrown almost all his forces north, out over the Freshened Sea. Now those forces were fully committed and it would take time for the Enemy to recall them. Too much time. Of course that also meant that one lone biplane was the focus for every undead dragon and rider the Enemy had in his first wave, and he had a lot of them. Gilligan looked at the clocks on the walls. "Okay, initiate phase two." He stared into the tank to watch the aerial ballet he had choreographed unfold. He tried not to think of Karin.