The earphones. ‘AirBox 10, AirBox 10, acknowledge. This is Sword One.’
‘Hank…’
‘Fuck them all…’ he said.
Suddenly bright lights flared in front of them…flanking them, reaching out ahead of them.
Tracer fire, from the F-15s’ cannon.
‘AirBox 10, this is Sword One. You will level off immediately. You will climb back to altitude. You will continue to hold.’
‘Or what!’ Hank shouted.
‘Sir, we are authorized to engage. Don’t force us to shoot you down!’
‘Fuck you! You don’t have the balls to shoot down a civilian aircraft! Go ahead, Air Force!’
Helen watched in horror as the altimeter unwound as the jet descended. Twelve thousand feet and lowering…She thought of the anthrax in the belly of her jet. She thought of her husband Tony, her two kids, thought about the Air Force pilots back there, knowing what they had to do… knowing that after 9/11 so many of the rules had been rewritten or tossed out.
‘Hank, pull up! C’mon, they’re going to shoot us down!’
Hank yelled back. ‘Shut up! They don’t have the balls. They’re not gonna do it!’
‘How do you know that? Hank! Pull up.’
‘Shut up!’
Ten thousand feet.
‘AirBox 10, Sword One. Your last warning. We are weapons hot, repeat, we are weapons hot.’
Eight thousand.
What to do, what to do — a fight in the cockpit? Helen remembered that Egypt Air flight years back, when the
Seven thousand.
‘AirBox 10! Last warning!’
Six thousand feet.
‘AirBox 10!’
Five thousand, five hundred.
Helen rotated in her seat, reached up back against her seat restraints…reached out, fingertips barely touching, Hank busy with flying…
There. Grabbed it.
‘Sweet Jesus, forgive me,’ she breathed. Then she bashed in the back of Hank’s head with the emergency crash ax.
And bashed him again.
And again.
She dropped the ax, grabbed the controls so she was now in command of the aircraft, started pulling back on the control yoke and adding power.
Helen keyed the microphone switch, saying, breathing heavily, ‘This is AirBox 10… AirBox 10… we’re climbing… we’re climbing back to altitude…’
There seemed to be relief in the F-15 pilot’s voice. ‘Roger, AirBox 10. Good job. We’ll get through this together. This is Sword One.’
She looked over, at the slumped figure of Hank, at the blood on his shirt, blood on the panel, blood on the windscreen.
‘Sword One — to hell with you. I’ve just killed my pilot — and you’re going to land and be alive today… which is more than I can be sure of for myself.’
Sword One didn’t answer.
Monty looked at the flushed face of Victor, at the other faces of Brian and the General and Randy, the machinist. He said, ‘General, what will those pilots do when they get low on fuel?’
Bocks said, ‘What do you think they’ll do? What any one of us would do in the same spot. They’re going to try to land. They’re going to try to dodge their fighter escorts, fruitless as that’ll be.’
Land… of course they’ll try to land, Monty thought. What else would they do?
Land.
At an airbase.
Lots of airbases he’d been at over the years, busy ones like Offut and Eglin and Wright-Patterson. And, of course, lots of empty and quiet ones like—
Shit.
Empty ones.
Lots of empty ones.
‘Doc!’
‘Yes, Monty?’
‘The anthrax — how long does it stay in the atmosphere?’
‘A few hours — maybe four or five.’
‘And where does it go after that?’
Victor said, ‘Then it comes to rest on the ground.’
‘Still dangerous on the ground?’
‘Sure,’ the doctor said. ‘But in the air is where it’s most dangerous. When it’s on the ground you can protect yourself through normal decontamination efforts.’
‘How far can the anthrax spores travel when it’s airborne?’
‘All depends on the wind. Several miles…less, if there’s no breeze.’
Monty felt a little flicker of excitement kindle inside him. Maybe. Just fucking maybe.
‘C’mon,’ he said. ‘We’re going for a quick walk.’
He stood up and opened the conference-room door, stepped outside to the Operations Center. There was a low roar made up of phones ringing, people talking, keyboards being tapped, men and women, delivering and picking up messages as they moved back and forth. Monty gestured to the large display screen, depicting North America and parts of the Caribbean. Up on the screen, the triangular icons marking the orbiting AirBox flights were highlighted.
‘Look, I see at least two AirBox flights out in northern Texas. Am I right.’
The General said, ‘Yeah, you’re right. So what?’
‘General, the so-what is where those two aircraft can go. They fly an hour west, they can hit a base I’ve trained at when I was detached to Air Force Special Ops. Tyler, used to be an Army Air Corps base back in the 1940s. Nothing there now except tumbleweed, coyotes, and a runway.’
In the span of those few seconds, Victor’s color improved and it looked like he was standing taller.
‘Good Christ — they could land there, let the anthrax get released…’