by Larsen, Ward
Davis hesitated, looked back for Sorensen. He didn't see her anywhere. But he saw Fatima Adara. She was sweeping the gun across the place, keeping the rest of the clientele at bay as she moved for the door Davis had just flown through. He searched desperately for Sorensen one last time. Nothing. He was on his own.
Davis ran.
The crowds were thick. He bolted down the sidewalk, running through the pain. Davis weaved between people, his feet slipping constantly on the slick sidewalk. At the first corner, he looked back and saw Fatima trundling after him. She stood out like a Hummer in a sea of Volkswagens. Her gun hand was tucked against her side, and judging from the lack of panic around her, Davis decided she must have buried the weapon in her pocket.
He turned onto a side street that looked even more crowded, lined by nightclubs and theaters. The street was washed in an ethereal glow from banks of colored neon, an illusionist's scene that sparkled in gust-driven swirls of ice and snow. Davis kept moving. One block, then two. Even with his handicap he was making good time. He knew he could outrun Fatima -- and that was all he had to do. As he ran he dug down into his jacket pocket. An instant later, Davis skidded to a stop on the frozen sidewalk.
His cell phone was gone.
The White House Situation Room was madness. Truett Townsend counted at least a dozen people on phones, all jabbering and yelling. He hated chaos, but right now it was the only way.
Darlene Graham announced, "The latest count is one hundred and six C-500s in the air. Over half are domestic, here in the States."
Someone yelled, "Does anybody speak Chinese?"
There was actually a "yes" from the crowd, and two staffers linked up on one handset.
If there could be a lone symbol of the sense of desperation, it was Herman Coyle. As the leaders of the world's technology superpower governed their crisis, the most accomplished scientist in the room was rushing around with a legal pad and number two pencil striking tally marks as he kept count of aircraft. Supercomputers were no longer any help.
Martin Spector said, "The Secret Service wants you to evacuate the White House, sir. They're afraid these airplanes might be aimed at political targets."
"Mr. Davis says the jets are headed for oil refineries," Townsend argued.
"But, sir--"
"No, Martin! I'll take responsibility."
Townsend took a seat behind his desk. He had learned a lot in the last five minutes. He had learned about a system called ACARS, or Aircraft Communication Addressing and Reporting System. It was the communications data link used by most airlines to track their airplanes, download maintenance and operational information, and -- most important right now -- to send messages to the crews. He had also learned about cargo hubs. At this moment, most of the C-500s in the world were airborne, either on their way to a late-night sorting facility in Europe or America, or headed for a second-day sort in the Far East. Whoever had planned this unnatural disaster had done a damned good job of maximizing the potential.
"We have a map," someone shouted. A large screen at one end of the room came to life and a Mercator projection of the world was presented. "It's a hybrid view," the same voice said, "combined data from our own FAA, European Control, and two commercial flight tracking Web sites."
"Are they all displayed?" Townsend asked.
"Yes, all that we know about."
Townsend didn't like the caveat. But what could he do? He watched one hundred and six tiny crosses floating across the globe. The representation seemed feeble, inadequate given the threat that was posed.
"One hundred and two," Graham said. "Four more have landed."
"How many can we communicate with?" the president inquired.
"All except--" Herman Coyle tapped out a count on his legal pad, "seventeen."
Townsend checked the clocks on the wall that registered both Eastern time and Zulu. They had nine minutes. "All right," he said, "keep working it -- those are the top priority. We have to transmit instructions somehow. Let's get Davis back on the line."
His leg felt like it was on fire.
Davis was limping mightily as he navigated back to the Internet cafe -- his phone had to be there. As he walked, he kept searching for Fatima. He suspected he'd lost her, figured she would give up the chase knowing she could never keep pace. That's what they called it in rugby -- pace. Davis had always had it for a guy his size. Right now he was clocking in at far less than full speed, but he was still covering ground.
He checked his watch.
How long did he have until the president returned his call? Two minutes? Three? He hoped like hell he could find his phone. His stride quickened when he saw the cafe in the distance. But then he spotted an unmistakable shape on the sidewalk ahead.
Davis whipped his head left and right, desperate to get out of sight. Taking what had to be a page from Sorensen's book, he shot left and ducked into the nearest alcove. He peered through the corner of the shop window and found her. Fatima was fifty feet ahead, walking briskly. Closing fast. She had both hands in her pockets -- to have only one hidden might look threatening. Her head was tilted down, but her eyes were quick and alert. The eyes of a hunter.
Her quarry suddenly realized his mistake -- there was no way out of the recessed entryway. He should have just turned and run. Even with his bad leg he could outdistance Fatima Adara. But now he was trapped -- glass on three sides, and soon a killer with a gun at the fourth. A killer who was looking for him.
Davis took a closer look at the store. It was an old music shop, at this hour locked down tight with a ferme sign posted in the window.
Inside, row after row of ancient vinyl relics sat waiting for some audiophile purist to come rescue them. A rescue that would almost certainly never come.
I know just how it is, he thought.
Davis backed against the side window. It would buy him an extra second, maybe two. Nothing more. All Fatima had to do was look -- and he knew she would. An old newspaper swirled in an eddy at his feet. If she would only pass by, he could still get to the cafe and find his phone in time. Or find Sorensen and get the headquarters number, use another phone. Davis would make it work. He just had to stay alive for the next thirty seconds. And to do that, he needed to become invisible.
He took a step back and heard a hollow clink.
Fatima cursed the pain in her hip.
The American had been lucky, moving at the very moment she'd taken her first shot. And even luckier that some idiot had tried to wrestle her gun away, keeping her from taking a follow-up shot. But then the American had been stupid, misidentifying his threat. Not for the first time, Fatima had been saved by her appearance. Still, it had hurt when she'd crashed against the big table. Grimacing, she scanned the frozen street, looking for the bastard. He was big -- but the size that had sent her flying minutes earlier might soon be his downfall.
She kept her hands in the pockets of her jacket, the right having a firm grip on the Glock. Handguns were not Fatima's preferred weapon, but if she could find the American again she would not miss. As she walked, she didn't bother to look at faces. Fatima would find him by his shape, just as he would attempt to find her. Yet she had to be careful. She'd noticed blood outside the cafe entrance, and Fatima reasoned she must have struck home with at least one round. He might still be close, and a wounded animal was always a dangerous one. She only had to see him first, not get too close.
She looked across the street and eyed every group for a man who didn't belong, a large figure trying to look small. To her right was a line of shops, but most were closed. She approached the recessed entry of a record store, a tattered poster in the window depicting an old black man wailing on a trumpet. Fatima edged away from the entrance, sensing a presence there. Then she saw him, curled into a ball -- a drunk passed out on the cold concrete. The miserable wretch was using a newspaper for a blanket, and an empty bottle lay tipped on its side, near where his head had to be. Then a glimmer of motion came from above. The hand in her pocket tensed and
Fatima s eyes were drawn higher.
For a moment she thought she had seen movement inside the store. But then Fatima realized it was only her reflection in the window, her profile taking the light at just the right angle. She stood still for an instant and looked at herself. The image transformed as Fatima again imagined what the surgeon might accomplish. The shape, the textures. She might be able to affect some changes herself, adjustments to her carriage and posture. She stood more erect, straighter, and taller.
Then Fatima chided herself.
She pushed the thought away. Now was not the time. Again she began to move up the sidewalk, her eyes studying an intersection ahead. She was nearly to the side street when she felt a vibration. It came to her knuckles, the same hand that was curled around the weapon in her pocket.
She had found the cell phone right where the big American had fallen, and so she'd picked it up. Fatima suspected it was the one he had been using as she'd maneuvered into position. Just before she'd missed the most simple of shots. Why had he moved at that moment? Fatima let go of the gun and pulled the phone from her pocket. It buzzed again. She stood still, staring at the thing, wondering if she should answer.
Curiosity got the better of her. She used her masculine voice, the one she had mimicked so many times before to become Caliph. "Hello."
The reply came in a squealing pitch, "Daddy, I have to talk to you!"
Fatima stood dumbstruck. Her thoughts stumbled. She muttered, "No, not now."
"Daddy! This is so, so important--"
Chapter FORTY-THREE
Davis was almost in the clear.
Fatima had gone for his ruse, taking him for a drunk. When she was ten steps past the alcove, he silently edged to his feet, ready to make a move for the cafe. Everything outside seemed fuzzy now, the thickening snowfall churning and spinning like a million tiny mirrors in the floodlit street. Davis checked the sidewalk, hoping for a group to blend into. Hoping for a nice rugby squad, drunk and loud, headed for the next bar. He saw no one within a hundred feet. A couple were shuffling arm-in-arm across the street, and in front of Fatima a cabbie was getting in his taxi. No help.
When Davis stepped out on the sidewalk his boots crunched over the icy mix. It sounded like thunder. Might as well have been an alarm going off. He looked over his shoulder and saw Fatima stop abruptly, saw her digging into her jacket pocket.
Davis froze.
He was caught in the open, twenty feet away. Fatima s hand came smoothly out of her pocket. He expected to see the gun, expected her to whip around and take shooter's choice -- head shot or center of mass. But then he saw it wasn't a gun at all. Fatima was standing on the sidewalk staring at a cell phone. Staring at his cell phone. Probably because it was ringing. Probably because the president of the United States was calling.
Just what else could freaking go wrong?
Fatima put the phone to her ear and began talking. She half turned. For Davis, there was no one else nearby, no cover except for a dead-end alcove. He might as well have been standing there naked.
Fatima stood facing him, not twenty feet away, yet by some minor miracle she didn't see him. She was lost in a cellular fog, that hazy mental limbo where people engaged distant callers as they drove their cars over embankments. Fatima s eyes were locked straight on him, but they were a blank. No alarm, no recognition.
Davis considered his options. It didn't take long -- there weren't any. The gun was in her pocket. She was twenty feet away. He needed that phone right now and there was only one way.
Davis broke into a run, his first two steps skidding on the slick sidewalk. It hadn't been bad when he was just walking, but now that he was trying to move fast, Davis felt like he was ice skating, or maybe ice dancing, two hundred forty pounds of unconserved momentum in boat shoes. It didn't matter. He was committed now, no turning back -- because his quick movement had drawn Fatima's attention.
Her focus came sharp as she recognized Davis. She dropped the phone, dug into her pocket. Davis kept moving, legs pumping, gaining speed. His bad thigh felt like it was shredding. Halfway there she had the gun swinging level, slow and controlled. Or maybe it just seemed that way, the world slowing down. She had it pointed right at him, and Davis heard an animalistic scream. He wasn't going to make it.
He raised his hands to cover his face, hoping his headway would carry him through the first shot. The first two. He lunged, threw himself airborne in a desperation tackle. He waited for the bullet, ready to keep fighting. Then the shot came, a deafening blast at close range. Davis screamed as he flew through the air. He heard another shot, and another, all in what seemed like an instant. Then he made contact. But not firm contact -- a glancing hit. Fatima had somehow slipped beneath him. She'd ducked low at the last moment, and Davis had gone right over the top.
He came down hard, sprawling across the cement. Davis never stopped moving. He was slipping and sliding again. As he moved he questioned his body, searched for the hits. Everything seemed strangely intact, still functional. He whirled his head and spotted Fatima on the ground. Davis blindly launched himself again, his feet spinning out from under him on the ice rink that was the sidewalk. But he kept going, kept moving.
Get the gun--go for the gun!
"Jammer!"
It came out of nowhere. Sorensen's voice.
Davis stopped, fell still. He allowed his gaze to settle, tried to make sense of what he saw. Fatima was lying in a heap on the sidewalk. She was completely motionless. Sorensen closed in, both arms extended with her gun trained fast. She hovered over Fatima for a moment, then kicked away a gun lying on the sidewalk. Sorensen bent down cautiously and checked for signs of life. Apparently there were none. She pointed her weapon toward the sky and backed closer to Davis.
"Are you okay?" she asked.
Davis had ended up on his knees. He eased back, grimaced as the pressure came off his ravaged thigh. "Yeah, Honeywell," he said, his breath coming in massive gulps. "Yeah, I'm just great."
Then Davis heard a faint sound, distant but undeniably familiar. It seemed like something from a dream and brought a thousand emotions at once. He spotted the source -- his phone lying on the ground next to Fatima s body, half buried in a grainy footprint of slush.
Davis scrambled over and swiped it up. "Jen? Is that you?"
"Dad! What's going on? What's all that noise?"
The voice of his daughter hit him like a train, dragged his head to another place. A place he couldn't be right now. Noise? Nothing, sweetheart. Just a friend shooting the terrorist who was about to kill me. How was school today? The phone beeped. He had another call waiting. Sorry, the president of the United States is on line two. He's waiting for me to save a hundred airplanes from crashing. Davis forced himself back.
Jen was saying, "I have to talk to you about Bobby--"
"Sweetheart . . ." he stammered, "not now! I'm in the middle of something really important. I will call you back as soon as I can." He was about to hang up when he added, "But I'm glad you called, Jen. Really glad." "Dad--"
He cut her off and picked up the other call. "Davis here."
"Where the hell have you been?"
He recognized the voice. "Sorry, Mr. President." There was a very brief pause as decorum and apologies ran their course. Davis ended it by saying, "Have you got those communication links established?"
"Yes. There are--" the president paused and Davis heard chatter in the background, "ninety-six airplanes still in the air. I think we have some kind of channel to all of them."
"Think isn't good enough, sir. If you fail to connect to one aircraft, we've lost two lives and probably more on the ground."
"I know, I know. We're doing our best, Davis."
"Okay, here's how I believe this works. At the top of the hour, in five minutes, every one of those airplanes is going to have its flight control computers take over, like an autopilot you can't disengage. The aircraft will run a course to the nearest target -- that is, the nearest oil refinery -- then go
into a dive and strike it."
Davis saw a police car pull up. Bystanders were pointing at him and Sorensen. He pulled away from the phone and said to her, "Quick! Go run some interference. I can't be interrupted."
She nodded and hustled off.
Townsend's worried voice dueled with the approaching sirens. "Davis? Are you still there?"
"Yes. Now write this part down. Tell the crew of every airplane that the sequence is initiated by the airplane clock. They can defeat the takeover by resetting it. Move it back a few hours, even a day -- whatever it takes to get on the ground. If they can't get that done before the top of the hour, the software is going to take over. But control can still be regained -- all the crew has to do is turn off both battery switches on the overhead panel. Have you got that?"