Ignoring him, Tucker radioed the pilot. “Keep on this bearing!”
The doctor turned to him. “Does that mean they already boarded one of the cargo ships?”
“Most likely.”
Nick called out, “Cargo ship dead ahead!”
“I need her name,” Tucker replied. “Can you get us close to—?”
“Yep, hold on. Descending.”
“But don’t crowd her!” Tucker warned.
If Felice was aboard that ship, he didn’t want her spooked—at least not yet.
“I understand. I’ll keep us a half mile out.”
Tucker picked up a set of binoculars and focused on the boat.
Off in the distance, the gray bulk cut slowly through the storm, led by a tall well-lit wheelhouse, flanked by flying bridges. He imagined the pilot and crew inside there navigating the ship through the growing weather. At the stern rose a three-level superstructure, less bright. Between the two castles spread a flat deck interrupted by cranes and a line of five giant square cargo hatches. He adjusted his view down and read the name painted on the cargo ship’s hull.
He radioed it to Harper. “I think we’ve got her. Motor Vessel Macoma. I need whatever you can get on her. Especially her cargo.”
“Stand by.” She was back in two minutes: “Motor Vessel Macoma. Capacity is 420 deadweight tons. It’s bound for Chicago carrying fertilizer-enhanced topsoil and compost for agricultural use.”
Tucker turned. “Doctor, would that fit the bill?”
“Yes . . .” Bukolov confirmed. “Such material would make the perfect incubation bed for LUCA.”
Harper remained more cautious. “Tucker, are you sure this is the ship?”
“We spotted an abandoned speedboat, adrift a few miles astern of the Macoma. Listen, Harper, we’re not going to find a neon sign guiding us. We have to roll the dice.”
“I hear you. You’re on scene. It’s your call.”
“How soon can we expect any help?” Tucker asked.
“The closest team to you is still forty minutes out. I’m working on the Coast Guard.”
“Then I guess we’re going in. If Felice is smart, and I know she is, she’ll be rigging that ship with explosives. So the sooner we can intercede, the better.”
“Then good luck to the both of you.”
Tucker switched channels. “Nick, we need to get aboard that ship. Can you do it?”
“Watch me,” he said, with the confidence of the very young and very foolish.
Nick descended again, a stomach-lurching drop to thirty feet. He banked until the chopper was dead astern to the Macoma. The dark ship filled the world ahead of them. He moved slower, closing the gap, buffeted by the storm’s crosswind. The Bell’s nose now lingered mere feet from the ship’s rear railing.
Nick radioed his plan from here. “I’m gonna pop us higher, bring us to hover over the roof of that aft superstructure. You’ll have to jump from there.”
Tucker studied the towering castle rising from the ship’s stern. The superstructure climbed three levels, its lights glowing through the snow.
“Go for it,” he said.
“Hang on.”
Nick worked the cyclic and throttle, and the Bell shot straight up. Fighting the winds, the helicopter glided forward, bobbling, struggling.
Oh, God . . .
Bukolov agreed. “Oh, God . . .”
The landing skids bumped over a top railing—then came the sound of steel grinding on steel as the skids scraped across the roof. Crosswinds skittered the craft.
Crack . . . crack . . .
From the shattering blasts, Tucker thought something had broken on the helicopter.
Nick corrected him. “Pulling out! Somebody out there with a gun, taking potshots at us.”
The helicopter lifted, rising fast.
Tucker unbuckled and leaned forward, searching through the cockpit’s Plexiglas bubble. A man, cloaked in storm gear, stood on the roof deck below. He slung his rifle, picked up another weapon, and rested it atop his shoulder, something larger and longer.
A grenade launcher.
Tucker yelled, “Hard left, nose down!”
Nick worked the controls, pitching the nose and leaning into a bank.
Too late.
Below, a flash of fire, a trailing blast of smoke—
—and the rocket-propelled grenade slammed into the Bell’s tail rotor, sending the bird into a hellish spin.
Tucker got pitched left and landed in a heap in the cockpit’s passenger seat.
Nick screamed next to him, fighting for control, “Tail strike, tail strike . . . Ah, Jesus!”
Tucker shouted and pointed to the cargo ship’s main deck. “Cut the engines! Crash us! We’re going down anyway. Do it!”
“Okay . . . !”
“Doctor, grab Kane!”
“I have him.”
Nick worked the cyclic, bringing the nose level, then took his hand off the throttle and flipped switches. “Engines off! Hold on!”
As the roaring died around them, the Bell dropped, falling crookedly out of the sky. Suddenly a tall davit crane loomed before the windscreen. Nick jerked the cyclic sideways, and the Bell pivoted. The tail section swung and slammed against the davit tower, whipping the helicopter around as it plummeted to the deck.
With a bone-numbing thud, the helicopter hit, bounced once on its skids, then slammed its side into the aft superstructure. The still-spinning rotor blades chopped against the steel, shearing off and zipping across the deck like shrapnel, severing cables and slicing off rails.
Then all went silent, save the spooling down of the Bell’s engine.
44
March 28, 7:49 P.M.
Lake Michigan
“Who’s hurt?” Tucker called out as he regained his senses after the wild plummet and crash.
“Bleeding,” Nick mumbled, dazed. “My head. Not bad.”
“Doc?”
“We’re okay, Kane and I . . . I think.”
Tucker untangled himself from his spot on the floor and crawled back to the passenger compartment. He checked on Kane, who jumped up and greeted him.
Bukolov gasped, aghast. “Dear God, man, the blood . . . your ear . . .”
Tucker carefully probed the injury. The upper part of his left ear hung down like a flap.
“Grab that first-aid kit behind—”
Nick shouted from the cockpit, “Another guy with a gun!”
“Where?”
“Left side! On the port side! Coming up the deck by the railing!”
Means I have to be on the starboard side . . .