Hatcherly Consolidated
Terminal Balboa, Panama
Captain Wong Hui watched critically as deckhands
secured heavy manila ropes to his ship. The other end of the lines
were wound around diesel-powered capstans at the far end of the dry
dock. Powerful lamps attached to the enormous shedlike building
spread a glare of white light across his ship and the black waters
that lapped against the newly built structure. The massive doors
were open and in moments the four-hundred-foot refrigerator ship
Korvald would be drawn into the enclosed
dock and her long trip from Shanghai would be finished.
He muttered a few terse words to the helmsman as he
felt his ship move against the sluggish tidal surge. Athwartship
thrusters adjusted her heading, lining her up perfectly with the
narrow, concrete-lined berth. His walkie-talkie crackled and an
operator at the far side of the building indicated he was ready to
engage the winches.
Wong knew that his ship had been chosen by COSTIND,
China’s military-industrial combine, because she carried a
sophisticated cooling system that usually kept her cargoes of meat
frozen, but also because her superstructure was low enough to fit
into the dry-dock chamber. Still he kept a wary eye on the roof of
the building as the capstans slowly drew the ship past the doors
and into the dry dock. From where he stood, forty feet off the
water, the span of the ceiling trusses were another fifty feet
above him.
Even with fifteen feet of clearance on each side of
the Korvald, Wong paced from wing bridge to
wing bridge watching to see that his vessel stayed in the exact
center of the dry dock. He looked aft in time to see her fantail
clear the steel doors and the heavy gates begin to close. She was
in. The winches hauled the reefer ship another one hundred feet to
the front of the building until her graceful bows loomed over the
quay and a pair of forward ropes dropped almost vertically to
mushroomlike bollards.
The veteran seaman gave no outward sign that
reaching Panama had reduced the tension that had robbed him of
sleep since leaving China. He remained erect and aloof, fitting a
cigarette between his lips and lighting it from a match. Just
because he’d delivered his cargo didn’t mean the danger was past,
thanks to the coded orders he’d received en route from General Yu.
It would be at least another day before the large overhead crane,
normally used to pull heavy machinery from disabled ships, would
haul away the Korvald ’s load of eight
DF-31 medium-range missiles.
The solid rocket boosters were fifty feet long and
weighed nearly nine tons without their nuclear payload. The
Korvald had undergone modifications to her
hatches while in Shanghai so the missiles could be removed safely.
He recalled that when the train carrying the rockets had arrived in
Shanghai from the Wuzhai Missile and Space Center near Beijing, it
had taken six hours for the workers to settle the boosters into the
special cradles deep in the hold. Without the distraction of so
many hawkish politburo members watching the work, he was sure the
men here could cut that time in half. Once the canal was disabled,
he wanted his ship out of Panamanian waters as soon as
possible.
Had General Yu not ordered he wait, he would have
liked to see the rockets unloaded tonight, but that was not to
be.
Wong pitched the stub of his cigarette into the
oily waters separating the Korvald from the
dock and watched as Liu Yousheng strode down the length of the pier
to where the ship’s gangway had been lowered. With him were two
armed soldiers and an ancient figure who moved with bird-like steps
that covered the ground deceptively fast. Wong supposed he owed Liu
the deference of meeting the executive when he came aboard, but he
couldn’t bring himself to do it. Instead he sent his first officer
to the deck to escort Liu and his party to the captain’s day cabin
directly behind the bridge.
A steward brought in tea just as Liu Yousheng
reached the cabin. He nearly toppled the young servant as he pushed
past. The two guards stayed outside the spartan room while the
elderly man in the dark suit stood mutely at Liu’s side. Wong
struggled to hide his distaste at the man’s pallid
appearance.
“Wong?” Liu made no move to formally greet the
captain or introduce his guest.
“I am Captain Wong, master of the Korvald.” Wong bowed, sensing the fury already
radiating off Liu.
“Your first officer just told me that you won’t
allow the missiles to be unloaded.” Liu’s voice was a low
snarl.
Wong wasn’t about to be intimidated aboard his own
ship and his tone rose to match Liu’s. “By order of General Yu.” He
handed over a decrypted transcript of Yu’s recent orders. “We are
not to remove the rockets from this ship until after the canal has
been sealed. As you can see there in the second paragraph, the
general still harbors reservations about your plan and is unwilling
to risk the DF-31s in case you fail. My orders are to keep all
officers and crew aboard the Korvald and to
be prepared to leave this facility at a moment’s notice.”
Liu scanned the orders and then read them again
slowly, his anger subsiding as he saw the wisdom in Yu’s
instructions. This wasn’t an attempt to double-cross him or
undermine his authority. Yu just wanted to maintain the security of
the rockets. There were a total of twelve DF-31s currently in
China’s arsenal and two-thirds of them were on the Korvald . They represented an investment far beyond
the gold bullion that had been spent on Operation Red Island, and
unlike the gold, they could not be quickly replaced. Still, the
orders felt like a mild rebuke.
Wong continued. “I intend to raise the gangplank as
soon as you are off my ship and I expect that you will post workers
in the control room to open the dry-dock gates if I need to leave
quickly.”
“The general is so concerned about his precious
rockets,” Liu said sarcastically. “Did he say what is to be done
with the mobile launchers in case I fail? They are a rather
expensive investment and would create quite an incident if the
Americans discovered them here.”
Wong shrugged. “I don’t know anything about that.
Perhaps General Yu believes you know your duty regarding
them.”
Liu took a calming breath, realizing that he’d gain
nothing by goading the captain further. Wong was under the same
kind of control as he himself felt. And he knew that mechanics here
at the terminal could disassemble the monstrous trucks in a couple
of hours and load the parts into shipping containers. His voice
returned to the silken tones he used so effectively in board
meetings and business negotiations. “What do you know about the
warheads themselves?”
“Before leaving China, General Yu told me to report
that they have already been loaded aboard a submarine for transit
directly to this facility. The sub is diesel-electric and will need
to be refueled en route. An oiler has been dispatched to the
rendezvous point north of the Society Islands. Because the at-sea
refueling must take place when there is no satellite coverage, I
can’t give an exact arrival time, but it should be approximately
three weeks after departing China.”
Liu nodded. “Very well, Captain. You have your
orders and apparently I have mine. If tomorrow’s schedule is
maintained, the submersible carrying the men off Gemini should
reach Gamboa at about ten forty-five in the morning, which means
the canal should be rendered inoperable at eleven.”
“Then we will commence the unloading a short time
later,” Wong said, warily eyeing the old man, who watched him like
an undertaker looks at a fresh corpse.
“Sergeant Huai,” Liu barked.
The noncom stepped into the cabin and snapped a
salute. “Sir?”
“You and Mr. Sun are to remain on board this vessel
until I return tomorrow to supervise her unloading. Captain Wong
has the authority to leave the dock under certain circumstances.
Mr. Sun knows what they are. If Sun deems the captain is attempting
to leave without those conditions being met, it is your duty to
prevent it. Do you understand?”
“Yes, sir.” Huai saluted again.
Liu expected Wong to report this back to General
Yu. He was counting on it. Yu had to understand that he didn’t like
being told a change in his plans by a mere ship’s captain and that
he was still in charge of Red Island. He
leveled his gaze at Wong, just so there was no misunderstanding.
“This isn’t personal, Captain.”
Wong gave a short laugh. “I know it isn’t. What
games you and General Yu wish to play are no concern of mine. I do
as ordered and leave politics to others.”
“Sergeant Huai, how many men do you need to carry
out my orders?”
“What is this ship’s complement?”
“Eight officers and twenty-two crewmen,” Wong
answered.
“I will need four men, sir.”
“Very well. Captain, I will see you in the
morning.”
Liu left the men awkwardly regarding each other in
Wong’s cabin and made his way down the utilitarian companionway to
the main deck. A foreman waited for him at the gangway.
“Sir?”
“Tell your men to stand down for the night. We
won’t be unloading the ship until tomorrow.” Liu barely broke
stride as he gave his orders.
He checked his watch. Midnight. He had to hold
everything together for another eleven hours. His stomach remained
calm even if he felt a headache growing behind his eyes. Yu had
known when they spoke at El Mirador that he
wasn’t unloading the rockets until after the canal was sealed, and
had deliberately withheld that information. It was a petty trick, a
small bit of intimidation that rankled the more Liu thought about
it. Red Island was about to push Yu one step higher in the
government and he chose to humiliate the man who was giving him the
boost.
Wong had been right. Politics. It was his nation’s
curse. Take away just half of the government infighting and Red
Island would have been unnecessary because China would already
control all of the Pacific basin.
Well, Liu thought with a touch of pride, thanks to
me and despite themselves, the government’s going to get their wish
anyway.
“Merrcerrrr, Merrcerrrr.”
The voice dragged him back from the deepest sleep he’d enjoyed for
weeks.
Mercer opened his eyes. Hovering in front of him
was a face as wrinkled and gray as a balled-up piece of newsprint.
Harry. “Ugh!” he groaned. “Waking to you makes my nightmares seem
pleasant.”
“It’s five-thirty, Romeo. Shag your ass.”
Mercer remembered he hadn’t gone to bed alone and
felt across the sheets. Lauren was gone.
“She’s already in the bathroom,” Harry informed
him. “Judging by how rested she looked, you couldn’t have been
much.”
“Not only are you a depraved bastard, but I suspect
you’re deprived as well.” Mercer swung his legs out of the bed. He
was surprised that other than a twinge of apprehension deep in his
gut, he was feeling reasonably well. “Besides,” he added to stifle
Harry’s leer, “nothing happened.”
Harry tossed a bundle of dark clothes into his lap.
“Compliments of Foch. This is a spare uniform from the guy injured
yesterday picking up Maria.”
“How is he? Do you know?”
“The driver’s still in the pokey. He managed to
call Foch’s room late last night. The guy who was hit is going to
be all right.”
“You’ve seen Foch. How long have you been
awake?”
Harry rubbed the stubble on his chin. “When you’re
as handsome as I am you don’t need much beauty rest.”
“Funny.” Mercer drew on the black fatigue pants and
T-shirt.
“I woke up at five, went down to their room and
heard they were all awake. When I came back up, Lauren was in the
bathroom. Seems you’re the only one who wants to sleep through the
fun.”
“I would if I could.” The clothes fit well enough
so Mercer laced up his boots and followed Harry into the sitting
room. A coffee service waited on a credenza. The aromatic steam was
strong enough to start reviving Mercer even before he started on
his first cup. “Any word about the Special Forces guys?”
Harry shrugged. “I don’t know if Lauren’s called
her father yet.”
She entered from the bathroom, dressed in clothes
that matched Mercer’s. “Morning, boys. Who do I thank for the
fatigues?”
“Me,” Harry answered quickly. “Sewed ’em
myself.”
“You got the length right, but if you really think
I have a thirty-six-inch waist I’m going to hurt you.”
Mercer suspected that she wouldn’t give any
acknowledgment to how they’d spent the night even though they
hadn’t so much as kissed. He was wrong. She stepped to him and
pressed her lips to his. “How’d you sleep?”
He smiled into her eyes. “Never better.”
“Me too.”
“Break it up,” Harry growled. “You’re going to make
me gag.”
When Bruneseau, Foch, and the four remaining
Legionnaires entered the suite, Mercer was on his third cup of
coffee and Roddy had already arrived with Miguel. The boy
understood something important was about to happen and wanted to be
with his two heroes for as long as possible. Considering his recent
loss, neither man begrudged his clinging presence. It was a little
after six in the morning. The Mario
diCastorelli would be entering the canal in less than an hour,
while the Special Forces were still more than two hours out.
The twinge in Mercer’s gut tightened a
degree.
Sitting around the coffee table eating breakfast,
he led them through their plan once again. Lauren would drive the
van to pick up the American commandos. She would take them straight
to the Balboa Yacht Club where Mercer, Roddy, and the Legionnaires
would be waiting with the boat. No amount of argument could keep
Harry White from also joining them at the marina. It was then up to
the Special Forces to assault the Mario
diCastorelli. If they failed, however, Mercer wanted to be
ready to lead an attack of his own. He had no illusions about
taking on a potential force that had just defeated an elite
American unit, but he figured the initial raid would sorely deplete
the number of defenders on the ship and give them a chance.
The faces confronting him were grim and set.
Everyone knew and accepted the risks. The French wanted a chance to
avenge the comrades felled by Liu Yousheng and Hatcherly
Consolidated. Roddy was defending his very home, hoping to keep it
from slipping back into the kind of tyranny not seen since
Noriega’s day. Lauren had a sworn duty to defend the United States
and never in her career had her mission been clearer. If they
failed, America would face a Cold War-style nuclear confrontation
with an adversary possessing a frightening strategic
advantage.
What about Harry? Mercer wondered. Why did he want
to be a part of this? Like so many of his generation, Harry hadn’t
waited for the draft. He’d signed up to do his part during World
War II and rightly placed himself among those called the Greatest
Generation. It could be that he thought this fight was worth the
same kind of sacrifice. Or maybe, Mercer chuckled to himself, the
stubborn fool had never backed away from anything in his life and
was too set in his ways to stop now.
And his own reason for accepting the risks? Mercer
knew it was a combination of them all—with one more addition. He
made no distinction between the carbon dioxide gas that had wiped
out Gary’s camp and the squad of soldiers Liu had dispatched to the
river to kill them. To him the Chinese were as responsible for
those deaths as the geologic anomaly. Mercer looked at Miguel. For
no reason other than greed and ambition, this innocent had been
orphaned by Liu Yousheng. It was a burden the boy would carry for
the rest of his life.
Mercer had always been haunted by the idea that the
terrorists who murdered his parents had probably been congratulated
for their barbarity. In a thousand dreams he’d seen them
celebrating the ambush that had cost him everything and gained them
nothing. It made him hate the killers all the more, a deep and
primal emotion that he’d carry to his grave. He wasn’t sure if
punishing Liu would give Miguel any comfort as he grew into
adulthood, but Mercer understood too well how the boy’s soul could
be corroded if the Chinese mastermind succeeded.
“I think we’re set,” Lauren said when the briefing
was over. “When I talked to my father this morning he said the
commandos made their flight okay. They managed to bring extra
communications gear so we can all stay in contact during the
assault.”
“What about your missile cruiser?” Foch
asked.
“The destroyer USS McCampbell is already within Tomahawk range and will
be able to bring her VGAS cannon to bear in another two hours. They
will keep the ship out of Panama’s territorial waters but will be
overflying an experimental spotter drone based on the Predator
aircraft.”
“If Liu has moved SAM batteries here to protect his
nuclear rockets, your drone won’t last five minutes,” Rene
Bruneseau interjected.
Lauren gave him a smug look. “The spotter drone has
the radar cross-section of a hummingbird. No worries.”
One of the Legion soldiers leaned forward. Named
Rabidoux, he was the dark-complected son of an Algerian mother and
a French father. He more than any of them had been stunned that
Rene was a fellow Muslim. “I have been on NATO exercises with the
American Green Berets. We won’t need the destroyer, its gun or
missiles. I think we won’t even need us.”
Mercer nodded to him. “Hope you’re right.” He
looked at the Timex Harry had lent him. “It’s seven o’clock now. I
know it won’t take us that long to get into position, but I suggest
we get going.”
All the weapons had been bundled in cheap nylon
bags so they aroused little interest on the way to the elevator.
While the majority of the group continued to the lobby, Miguel
insisted that Mercer and Roddy escort him back to the Herraras’
room.
“Are you sure I can’t come with you?” he asked.
He’d already asked that same question a dozen times.
“You have to stay here to take care of my
children,” Roddy answered. “When I am gone, they look up to
you.”
“But you might need me,” the boy insisted with a
touch of petulance, then continued his appeal in Spanish.
Mercer admired Roddy’s patience with Miguel.
Working past his own apprehension and fears, he was able to speak
in reassuring tones. Mercer didn’t know the words but could follow
the conversation, recognizing the exact moment of capitulation by
the tears that formed in Miguel’s eyes. Roddy spoke to him some
more, and like a magician managed to turn the tears into a weak
smile and then a small giggle.
Not a magician, Mercer realized. A parent.
Miguel hugged both men and made Mercer promise to
look out for Mr. Harry.
“You should know by now,” Mercer teased, “that with
Harry on our side it’s the other guys who have to look out.” He
pantomimed how Harry had shown Miguel the sword secreted in his
walking stick. “He’s bloodthirstier than old Captain Morgan when he
sacked Panama City.”
Roddy whispered to Mercer, “Then shouldn’t he drink
his namesake’s rum?”
“Poetic license,” Mercer retorted. “Besides, I
don’t know if Jack Daniel was bloodthirsty.”
Mercer retreated down the hallway to give Roddy and
Carmen some privacy to say good-bye. Even if her husband wasn’t
going to be in danger, she worried for him, for them all
really.
A pounding rain had erupted in the few minutes it
took to get to the parking lot. It stung Mercer’s face as he looked
up to judge how long the foul weather would be with them. The sky
was an arc of bruised gray clouds that obscured the tops of the
tallest buildings. It appeared that the storm would last for
hours.
Roddy had borrowed his brother-in-law’s pickup
truck to drive the Legionnaires and the weapons to the Balboa Yacht
Club. Victor had just finished the night shift at Hatcherly’s
container port, and he and Roddy spoke quietly while the arms were
loaded into the truck’s enclosed bed. It would be a tight fit for
the soldiers in back, but they only had to drive fifteen miles or
so. Lauren was already behind the wheel of the idling van.
Mercer climbed into the pickup’s cab to get out of
the rain. Harry sat next to him and was squeezed in when Roddy
jumped behind the wheel once Victor marched off for a bus
stop.
“Victor says that last night Hatcherly moved a ship
out of its dry dock. It had been there for weeks, although he’s
sure no work was ever done to it. The freighter that took its place
is about four hundred feet long. He thinks it’s a refrigerator ship
but didn’t see the name.”
“Sounds like the Korvald.”
Roddy nodded, rainwater dripping from his nose. “I
think it must be. The dry dock is fully enclosed, allowing the
Chinese to unload their rockets without being detected.”
“That’s probably how they brought in the
missile-launcher trucks.”
“Makes sense,” Roddy agreed.
“Once we hook up with the Special Forces we can
alert the USS McCampbell. Taking out the
Korvald sounds like something the navy
should handle.”
Roddy started the truck and maneuvered so Mercer’s
window came abreast of Lauren’s. “You all set?” Mercer called to
her.
She rolled down her window a couple of inches.
“This is gonna be a milk run.” She grinned. “We should be at the
Balboa Yacht Club around ten. It all depends on customs at the
airport.”
“And we’ll have the boat ready to go. See you when
we see you.”
Lauren blew him a kiss and put the van in gear.
Roddy waited until she had pulled into the early-morning traffic
before turning around in the parking lot and leaving the hotel in
the opposite direction.
Twenty minutes after reaching the Gamboa Highway
they pulled into the Balboa Yacht Club, a grandiose title for a
rather run-down establishment located immediately below the Pedro
Miguel Lock. From the parking lot they could see a PANAMAX
container ship in one lane of the lock and a cruise liner about to
enter the other.
As Roddy had predicted there were no other vehicles
at the club. It was a Tuesday morning and the weather only helped
keep sailors away. Rain hitting the tin roof of the two-story
clubhouse sounded like hail. There were a dozen sailboats in the
marina and an equal number of powerboats tied to the wooden
jetties. Like most small boatyards, there were watercraft resting
on wooden trestles and a battered crane to hoist them into or out
of the water. A lone gasoline pump stood like a sentinel on one of
the piers.
Beyond the marina lay the mile-long Miraflores
Lake. Like forgotten castles on a mist-shrouded moor, several cargo
ships floated eerily on the water, their running lights barely
cutting into the storm and the smoke from their funnels blending
with the murky clouds. A single horn blast echoed across the
artificial lake.
The three men sat in the quiet truck for a second
until Harry broke the spell the haunting scene had cast over them.
“What a shitty day.”
Mercer threw open his door at the same time Foch
and Rene emerged from the rear of the pickup. His men swarmed out
after him with the bags of weapons. Only Harry and Roddy had rain
jackets with them, but the storm didn’t faze the soldiers. If
anything they knew the weather would help the American commandos
when they staged their assault.
Roddy led them around the clubhouse and across the
lawn to the marina. Wind whistled through the rigging on the
sailboats and waves slapped against their hulls. The boat he had
borrowed was a thirty footer with a tuna tower that rose fifteen
feet and a cabin accessible through a sliding glass door. He leapt
onto the craft and jammed the key into the lock. The men piled into
the cabin, water dripping from their clothes onto the faded
indoor/outdoor carpet. The soldiers were more intent on the weapons
than the fact they were all soaked to the skin.
“They okay?” Mercer asked.
“Oui,” Rabidoux said and
handed over one of the .45-caliber pistols.
Mercer checked the action once, then popped the
magazine so he could replace the round he’d chambered. With two
more hours to wait, there was no need to charge the weapons yet.
Roddy had gone forward and returned with a handful of towels. He
passed them around and turned to start the gas stove to make
coffee.
“Anyone bring a deck of cards?” Harry asked from
the settee. He played idly with the spring mechanism on his
cane.
At ten minutes past nine, Lauren called from the
airport to tell Mercer that the jet from Miami had just arrived. No
sooner had Mercer cut the cell connection than Roddy’s phone rang
again. It was Victor. From the hotel, he had taken a bus to the
viewing area at the Miraflores Lock to wait for the Mario diCastorelli. Mercer handed over the phone and
listened as Roddy spoke in Spanish with his brother-in-law.
“The ship is already in the upper of the two
western locks,” Roddy reported after hanging up. The western lock
was on the opposite side of the canal from the marina. “The doors
just closed behind it and they are beginning to flood the
chamber.”
“It takes an hour to cross the lake, right?” Mercer
asked.
Roddy nodded. “A little longer with the
rain.”
“Man, this is going to be tight.” Mercer and Foch
exchanged a look. “What do you think?”
“I think that if the Green Berets don’t arrive in
forty-five minutes we should do this ourselves.”
Mercer looked out into the storm. He could just see
the darker shadow of a cargo ship approaching the locks. “I agree.”
He dialed Lauren. “It’s me. Victor just called. Our friend is
already at the Miraflores Lock.”
“Passengers are beginning to come through now. No
sign of the guys in the green hats yet.”
“We might not be able to wait for them,” Mercer
told her.
“I hear you, but I don’t like it.”
“Neither do we.”
“As soon as we’re on the road, I’ll call.”
“Roger. And Lauren, be careful.”
“You too.”
Her call came fifteen minutes later. “We’re coming.
Should be with you in twenty minutes. The storm’s keeping traffic
down to a dull snarl.”
“Good. Hey, let me talk with the commanding
officer.”
“This is Jim Patke.” The voice was mild, not the
nail-eating fire-spitter Mercer expected. “You’re Mercer?”
“Yeah. Listen, I just wanted to go over some
details about the assault.”
“Forget it. The plan you discussed with General
Vanik isn’t going to happen. Delta Force and SEALs go for those
kinds of attacks. Not us. I’ve seen pictures of the lock area. What
you’re going to do is take us by boat to the other side of the
canal. We’ll make our way onto the retaining wall and jump to the
target while it’s in the chamber.”
“Doesn’t give much time to secure the ship,” Mercer
said.
“Won’t know ’til we get there since no one has
intel on the target’s complement.” Patke’s voice was filled with
bitter complaint.
Mercer could understand the commando’s frustration.
He was leading his team against an unknown force without any time
to properly plan or train for the attack. For all Patke knew there
were a hundred Chinese soldiers on the Mario
diCastorelli. “I hear you,” Mercer replied at last. “If you
think you’ll need it, there are seven of us ready to help.” He
counted Lauren in his tally but not Roddy or Harry. Roddy’s orders
were to drive the boat for the Special Forces and remain out of the
way until events had been played out. Mercer could not risk the
family man.
“No way,” Patke answered. “It’ll be hairy enough
without having to worry about civilians.”
There was no point explaining that the Foreign
Legion veterans weren’t civilians or that he himself had probably
seen more combat than Patke or any of his men. Besides which Mercer
had already determined a fallback position he wanted to use while
the Green Berets took over the bomb ship. Roddy had mentioned it
when they’d arrived at the marina.
“Okay,” Mercer said. “We’ll be waiting.” He clicked
off the cell phone.
Bruneseau cleared his throat. “Well?”
“They’re going to take the ship in the lock. Roddy
will take them to the other side of the canal in the boat. I think
the rest of us should move to where the pilot boats are stored on
the upper end of the lock chamber.” There was a small marina used
exclusively by the Canal Authority a half mile up the road from the
Balboa Yacht Club. It was this boatyard where the launch that had
chased Mercer from the Pedro Miguel Lock came from after Lauren’s
ill-fated dive. If necessary Mercer and his team could commandeer
one of the thirty-foot pilot boats and stage their own last-ditch
attack on the Mario diCastorelli.
“We’ll leave now,” Foch announced. “Monsieur
Herrara, are you certain that they won’t question us if we park the
truck near that marina?”
“Just as long as you park in the lot reserved for
tourists who watch ships going through the lock. There’s a
chain-link fence separating it from the employee lot. The pickup
can smash through it no problem.”
Harry slid open the door and stepped into the
salon. His coat was shiny with rain, and when he pulled off his
hood, water cascaded to the floor. He’d been up on the flying
bridge keeping watch for the Mario
diCastorelli. “I think I saw her.” He set down a pair of
binoculars and dried his hands on his pants so he could pull a
cigarette from its crumpled pack. “I also saw a couple other
freighters behind her and a ship with a huge white superstructure
just coming out of the Miraflores Locks. Must be a PANAMAX cruise
ship.”
Roddy consulted the manifest he’d gotten from Essie
Vega. “The freighters will be the Robert T.
Change, the Englander Rose and the
Sultana. The cruise ship is the Rylander Sea.”
Harry seemed to lose focus for a moment when he
heard the names. He said nothing, just silently smoked his
Chesterfield.
Roddy added, “The Rylander
Sea carries about five thousand passengers and crew. Transit
cruises are some of the most popular so she’ll be full. Also, she’s
considered to be a luxury ship with cabin prices about twice most
other liners. Her passengers are going to be elderly since they
have the money and the time to take a twenty-five-day cruise from
Alaska to Puerto Rico.”
Mercer’s brow furrowed as he absorbed this
information. “Unless the Green Berets need you to wait at the lock,
I want you to go across the lake and be prepared to warn that ship
off if it looks like we won’t stop the explosion.”
“With any luck I’ll know the pilot.”
Foch got to his feet. “We should leave.”
“Take the truck. I’ll join you when Lauren
arrives,” Mercer said.
“D’accord.”
“Harry, I think you should stay with Roddy.”
“I’m sure you do,” the octogenarian replied. “And I
would, except for one small problem. None of you know how to handle
a ship the size of the diCastorelli. If
Patke or you run into trouble, you’re going to need me. I’ve got
twenty-some years of experience on freighters, many of them as
master. I’m the only one here who can maneuver her if the Chinese
attach that submersible to her hull and try to crash her in the
Gaillard Cut.”
Mercer watched Harry’s blue eyes, struggling with
his feelings of loyalty and duty. “Can you walk me through the
procedures over the radio?” he asked.
“No. I need to be on her to feel how she responds.”
They continued to study each other. “Hey, don’t think I wouldn’t
rather be on my bar stool at Tiny’s,” Harry added.
Mercer finally broke eye contact and glanced at
Foch. His meaning was clear.
“Do not worry, my friend,” the Legionnaire said in
French. “My debt to you for saving my life will be protecting his
at all cost.”
“All right. Lauren and I will be with you in a few
minutes.”
The men tucked their weapons back in their bags and
climbed over the gunwale for the dock. Bruneseau led them and Foch
stayed at Harry’s side. Harry didn’t bother using his walking stick
and as far as Mercer could tell his gait was even. His prosthesis
wasn’t bothering him because he was in the grip of the same
adrenaline surge coursing through Mercer’s veins.
Ten minutes later, multiple pairs of feet leapt to
the deck of the fishing boat. Lauren opened the door and twisted
rain from her hair when she stepped inside. Behind her were the six
Green Berets. Mercer stood to shake Patke’s hand. “Philip
Mercer.”
“Captain Jim Patke.” The soldier was about thirty,
with blue eyes and blondish hair kept longer than army regulations.
He was a bit shorter than Mercer but appeared well proportioned.
His grip was firm. His stance bespoke a selfassuredness that came
from years of training. Mercer introduced Roddy Herrara. “For
operational security,” the team leader said, “forgive me if I don’t
present my men.”
The five other soldiers were cut from a similar
mold—athletic without the steroid bulk of movie heroes. Mercer
could see intelligence in their eyes and just a hint that being
called into action, no matter how ill-planned, gave them a
thrill.
They set their luggage on the floor and quickly
began to change into black fatigues. Patke spoke as he stripped out
of jeans and a button-down shirt. “A spare radio is in my bag
there.” He pointed with his chin. Lauren retrieved it from its
hiding place. “You’re familiar with it, Captain?”
She flicked it on and settled the earpiece and
throat mike. “Affirmative.”
“Pre-select channels one through four are me and my
guys.” Patke showed no self-consciousness about stripping to his
underwear in front of her. “We’ll call out as we change them. Your
code name’s Angel. We’re Devil One through Six. The McCampbell’s Heaven. She’ll be on channels five,
six, and seven. Give ’em a call and see if they’re
listening.”
“Heaven, Heaven, this is Angel. Radio check.
Over.”
“Angel, this is Heaven, reading you five by five.
Over.” The comm officer aboard the McCampbell was a woman. “Sit rep?”
“Devils and Angel are ready to go. Target is—” she
looked at Mercer, who told her “—fifteen minutes from entering the
lock. It will take about thirty minutes for her to clear the
chamber and proceed to the cut.”
“Understood, Angel. The UAV is flying just low
enough to see through the overcast. We’ve got her under
surveillance. Heaven is standing by with all the wrath you might
need.”
Lauren knew that meant her VGAS cannon had already
locked onto the Mario diCastorelli and that
her Seahawk helicopter was ready to go. “Roger that, Heaven. Angel
out.”
“Let’s see the weapons,” Patke said when he’d
finished dressing. Mercer lifted the second nylon bag onto the
table. The commandos descended on the guns. In seconds each had an
M-16 stripped down to its component parts. After one of them
checked the assault rifles thoroughly, they gave the pistols the
same attention. “You haven’t fired these yourself?” Patke asked
Lauren.
She shook her head. “I only got them last
night.”
Patke made a disgusted face. “This just gets better
and better.” He looked to the armorer who’d inspected the weapons.
“How about it?”
“Can’t promise accuracy but they’re all in good
shape, sir.” He looked at Lauren. “Government issue?”
She wasn’t surprised the soldier could deduce that
from his brief examination. These men were all experts on the tools
of their trade. “I got them from a contact in the police.”
“Good enough for me,” the armorer announced, and
his teammates, though unhappy about going into combat with
unfamiliar arms, seemed satisfied.
“Oh, there’s one more thing. We’re gonna need Mr.
Herrara to stay with us,” Patke said absently.
“No way,” Mercer snapped. “He’s more of a civilian
than any of us.”
“That may be, but he’s also the only one who can
maneuver that ship. None of my guys have experience with anything
over a thirty-foot assault boat. We can take the ship, but unless
we can get her out of the way, the Chinese will likely just take it
back again with a superior force.”
Mercer wanted to protest again, maybe volunteer
himself. That’s what his instincts told him to do, but he had no
idea how to control a ship the size of the Mario diCastorelli. Roddy was the only logical
choice. Goddamnit.
Roddy forestalled any further argument. “I will do
it.”
There was no need to mention what he was risking by
going with the Americans. The love he felt for his family was
reflected in his eyes and the proud set to his shoulders.
“Right.” Patke checked over his team. “Once we get
control of her, we’ll determine how the explosives are triggered
and render them inoperable. Two of my men are demolition experts.
Mr. Herrara will keep the ship moving so the Chinese can’t board
her from a launch.”
“We’ll be waiting at the upper side of the lock
complex,” Mercer told him.
Roddy was at the window, looking through the storm
for the Mario diCastorelli. “Gentlemen, I
think it’s time. She’s just about at the lock.”
The others joined him. Through the woolly curtain
of rain, the bulk carrier loomed over the waters like a
rust-streaked cathedral. Her four-story superstructure was located
at her stern, and was painted a murky blue, with a single funnel
that belched black smoke. Three cranes rose from her low deck on
spindly stalks, like enormous insects whose arms could pick at the
carcass they were poised over. Her bows flared upward, and where
her anchor dangled on a massive chain her name was stenciled in
faded letters.
Nothing about her dilapidated appearance gave a
hint to the deadly cargo in her holds.
“We’ve got to go,” Roddy said.
Patke fitted his earpiece and told Lauren they were
starting on channel one. All the team members checked the comm link
with each other and with the guided-missile destroyer standing off
the coast.
Mercer shook Roddy’s hand and that of Captain
Patke. Lauren gave Roddy a quick hug and saluted the Special Forces
officer. “Good luck, Captain.”
Nothing further needed to be said. Roddy climbed up
to the bridge and keyed the engines to life. Mercer and Lauren
began jogging off the pier. In a minute they heard the timbre of
the fishing boat’s engine change as Roddy pulled from the marina.
It would take only a couple of minutes to dash across the shipping
lines and deposit the commandos on the far bank of the canal. From
there, Mercer estimated Patke would wait until the last minute
before rushing the lock chamber and boarding the bomb ship. After
that he had no idea how it would go.
He looked at Lauren as she ran at his side through
the deluge. Her jaw was relaxed as her breathing came deep and
even. Her hands were formed into loose fists. When she felt his
stare upon her she turned to him, her eyes undiminished in the
washed-out light.
He put aside his growing feelings toward her and
turned his gaze back into the storm, his eyes slitted, his stomach
a churning mess.