GEORGIA—THE NEXT NIGHT
In the early stages of the war against terrorism, the U.S. had sent ten UH-1 Hueys to Georgia to help fight against Islamic rebels. Ferguson thought one of the Hueys would be coming for them now, so when the helicopter descended low enough for him to see clearly with his NOD that it wasn’t a Huey, he hesitated before blinking his flashlight. The chopper descending toward the patch of dirt across from the mountain stream had large struts extending from its cabin to giant wheels at the side. Its massive engines groaned and wheezed as the seventy-foot rotor above lowered it precariously close to the streambed.
A crewman jumped out and blinked a flashlight several times. Ferguson blinked his in response.
“Corrigan sent us,” yelled the crewman.
Actually, the words sounded more like “Car came sent blues.”
“And us,” said Ferguson, stepping forward.
“Fregunski?” said the crewman.
“Close enough,” Ferg told him. He waved the others forward from the copse where they’d been hiding.
“Quickly,” said the crewman. “It’s not safe. The rebels are everywhere.”
The man turned out to be the pilot, and the only man aboard. Ferg slipped into the unoccupied copilot’s seat. The pilot smiled, then concentrated on getting the helicopter launched. The old Mi-8 shuddered, then groaned upward, passing so close to the cliff at the left that Ferguson closed his eyes.
“Ten minute,” said the pilot cheerfully.
“Ten minutes to where?” asked Ferguson. The airport at the capital was close to a half hour away, if not longer given their plodding pace.
“Pandori,” he said, practically signing the name of the mountain village.
“We’re going to Tbilisi,” said Ferg.
The pilot turned toward him. “Nynah,” he said, drawing out the no.
“Tbilisi, yeah,” said Ferguson.
The man began speaking in Georgian. Ferguson told him in English and then in Russian that he couldn’t speak Georgian, but that didn’t stop the tirade.
“We need to go to Tbilisi,” Ferg told him. He put his hand on the man’s right arm.
The helicopter pitched forward sharply. Ferguson, who hadn’t belted himself in, slammed against the dashboard. He threw himself around and took out his gun.
“No more of that,” he told the pilot.
“Tbilisi, no,” said the pilot.
“What’s going on?” asked Guns, poking his head between them.
“Our friend doesn’t want to go to the capital,” said Ferg. “How’s your Georgian?”
Guns shook his head, but between them they puzzled out some information. The pilot had been challenged at the airport before taking off and had been buzzed by a Russian fighter just before finding them. He was afraid of being arrested if he returned to the capital. The closest he would take them was Micheta, a town about five miles north of Tbilisi.
Ferguson called Corrigan and told him to get a car up there.
“That’s not as easy as you think,” said the desk man.
“We’re not walking,” said Ferguson. “Why the hell didn’t you get us a real helicopter?”
“It is a real helicopter.”
“Corrigan, you and I are going to have a serious talk when I get back. You’re supposed to facilitate my mission, not make it harder.”
“I’m sorry. The embassy made the arrangements.”
“They know we’re on the same side, right?”
“Hold on the line while I talk to them,” said Corrigan.
“Good idea.”
“The embassy’ll send a car,” Corrigan told Ferguson finally. “It’s on the way now. Plainclothes Marines.”
“Guns’ll be overjoyed,” said Ferguson, snapping off the phone.
The pilot had apparently been to the small town before, barely hesitating as he angled in between a set of power lines to land in a small field behind a school building. He stayed in his seat, with the rotors moving.
“It’s been real,” Ferg told the pilot in English.
The man gave him a thumbs-up and a wide smile, as if they’d had the time of their lives. Ferguson barely got the door up and closed before the helicopter whipped back upward.
“Starting to rain,” said Guns.
“Figures,” said Rankin.
“We have to move up to the road,” said Ferguson, checking his watch. The Marines were due in ten minutes.
“‘All the money that ever I spent, I spent it in good company,’” started Conners, singing an Irish folk tune, as he picked up Kiro and slung him over his back. The prisoner groaned; Conners sang louder.
“All the comrades that ever I had, they’re sorry for my going away,” he sang. “All the sweethearts that I once had, they wish me one more day to stay. But since it falls unto my lot,
for me to rise and them to not, I’ll gently rise and softly call, good night and joy be with you all.”
“See, the guy’s dying,” Conners explained to the others. “It’s that kind of song.”
“Yeah, no shit,” said Rankin.
“You got a good voice, Dad,” said Guns.
“And you’re fuckin’ crazy,” said Rankin.
“And the rest of you aren’t?” said Conners, spotting a pair of headlights approaching.
The Marines took them to a house in the southeast quadrant of the capital, bringing them in through an alley, which made Kiro a little less obvious. Fully conscious, the prisoner had either reconciled himself to the fact that he wasn’t going to escape or had decided to conserve his energy. He meekly allowed himself to be carried from the car into the house.
Ferg left the others to work out shifts for showering and sleeping while he went over to the embassy. He was met not by one of the resident CIA spooks he’d expected but the chargé d’affaires—a young woman in a black silk miniskirt who could have stepped out of any one of two dozen wet dreams he’d had as teenager.
And any number of others since.
“You need a shower,” said the chargé. Two buttons of her mauve shirt were unbuttoned, giving a hint of lace beneath.
“I need a plane,” said Ferguson.
“We’re working on it.” She brushed back her curly blond hair. Obviously she’d been woken up a short while before—Ferguson wondered what she’d look like if she had time to prepare.
“You really do need a shower,” she said.
She must be right, he reasoned. Despite all of his innate animal magnetism and the powerful ESP messages he was beaming into her brain, she remained across the room.
“First I need to talk to the, uh, consul security coordinator,” said Ferguson, using a euphemism for the CIA chief.
“I’m her. Really, Mr. Ferguson—you need a big-time shower.”
“Really?”
“If I had a fire hose, I’d hose you down myself.”
Ferguson spread his arms. “Take me, I’m yours.”
“Up the steps, to the right.”
“You really are getting me a plane, right?”
“We’re working on it. We were told that you were to be picked up by your own people in Chechnya in a few days.” She looked at him accusingly, as if he’d been boogied out of a date.
“Didn’t make too much sense to hang around there,” Ferguson said. “Russians were beefing up their patrols, and the Chechens were kicking them in the face.”
“I’ll find you some clothes.”
“Why don’t you help me in the shower instead?”
“I doubt I’d make it without passing out.”
“I have first-aid training.”
“I’ll bet.”
Ferguson used half the hot water in Tbilisi washing Chechnya out of his skin. He found a fresh set of clothes—but no chargé—in the room outside the shower.
The outfit included polyester boxers—not his style, but at least his size. The rest of the outfit was so preppy it came complete with tasseled loafers.
Miss Miniskirt was waiting downstairs.
“You missed a great shower,” he told her.
“Sounded like it. You were singing.”
“If I’d known you were close, I would have taken requests.”
“I heard you down here.” She held out her hand. “I’m Amanda Scott.”
“Pretty name,” said Ferg. “Goes with your eyes.”
“I think you’ve been on assignment too long.”
“Ain’t that the truth,” said Ferguson. “You going to offer me a drink?”
He followed her into a reception room, then through a side panel to a smaller, book-lined study.
“What are you drinking?” she asked.
“Whiskey. Pour yourself one.”
“No thank you.”
Ferg watched her pour out two fingers into the tumbler. He touched her hand as he took the glass; it was warm, as if her internal thermostat was set several degrees higher than his.
“So I hate to ask—Why the hell didn’t you get us a real helicopter up to make the pickup?” he asked after a sip.
“We tried. It was sabotaged.”
“By who?”
“Take your pick—drug runners, arms smugglers, Muslim crazies, Russians. Place is out of control.”
She gave a weak shrug. Her breasts heaved up in a way that made it difficult to question her further.
“We’ll have an airplane ready no later than tomorrow afternoon,” she told him. “The Marines will stay with you until then.”
“I could stay here.”
“I’m afraid the ambassador wouldn’t approve.”
“I’ll go to your place then.”
“My boyfriend wouldn’t approve.”
“He’s an idiot anyway,” said Ferguson.
“True,” said the woman. “But since he’s standing out in the hall with a gun, maybe we’d better not talk too loud. He’s the Marine who drove you here.”