by Larry Bond
Maybe there’s something about me that makes men go catatonic, she thought to herself.
~ * ~
S
he was about an hour out of Seoul when the sat phone rang. It was Corrine Alston.
“Can you talk?” asked Corrine.
“It depends,” said Thera. “What’s up?”
“We want you to get Park,” said Corrine. “Arrest him, offer him protection…whatever it takes.”
“Protection? He’s behind the whole thing.”
“Tell him whatever you want, just get him. We don’t want the South Koreans dealing with him on their own; they may have been in on it, and will simply use him as a scapegoat. You have to get him before they do.”
“I don’t know, Corrine.”
“It’s not a matter for debate.”
Right, thought Thera. Dumb ideas never are.
“Do you know where he is?” Thera asked.
“That’s your department. Colonel Van Buren is detailing you a Special Forces team.”
“I don’t think it’ll work.”
“You have to make it work. It’s what the president wants.”
Thera glanced at her passenger, still catatonic.
“You don’t really know what you’re asking,” she told Corrine. “It’s not going to work.”
“Well, try, damn it.”
~ * ~
26
SOUTHWEST OF KUSŎNG, NORTH KOREA
The pilots were even the same height.
General Namgung studied Ri Jong-Duk and Lee Ryung, looking first at one, then at the other. The harsh overhead lights in the small underground training room turned each man’s face a fiery red.
Ryung, on the right.
Yes. That was it.
“You will take the plane,” he told the pilot. “Go.”
A broad smile spread across Ryung’s face, though he tried to keep it in check. The thirty-three-year-old turned into a teenager again, practically skipping from the room.
Ri Jong-Duk stood stoically, staring straight ahead.
“You, too, have done your duty as a Korean,” Namgung said to the pilot. He put his hand on the man’s shoulder, feeling sincere compassion. The pilot had done nothing wrong; he had in fact been as brave and courageous as his fellow.
Ri Jong-Duk remained silent.
“You will be accorded a hero’s funeral,” said the general.
He stared into Ri Jong-Duk’s eyes. They began to swell.
General Namgung nodded, then turned away. The pilot’s stoicism inspired him. It was a propitious omen, a sign that they would succeed.
Very good. He would see the plane off, then drive to P’yŏngyang to begin things.
Namgung was six or seven steps from the flight room when he heard the gunshot signaling that Ri Jong-Dak had done his duty. He quickened his pace, determined to honor the young man’s courage with his own actions.
~ * ~
27
SOUTHWEST OF KUSŎNG, NORTH KOREA
Ferguson’s lungs felt as if they were collapsing in his chest, compressed by the hard strokes of his legs as he ran across the field. The truck was moving, going off on the road to his right. There were two men near the jet, working on it, illuminated by work lights that made the aircraft seem like a bird of prey hiding in the night. A fat cylinder sat beneath its belly.
Ferguson kept his eyes fixed on the cylinder, which looked more like a fuel tank than the bomb he guessed it must be.
He had the Russian PSM pistol in his left hand; his right couldn’t close around the trigger.
He had to get close with that gun, real close. Right next to them.
Shoot them, grab their weapons, screw up the plane somehow.
Step by step.
Go, he told himself. Go, go, go, go!
~ * ~
F
erguson was less than thirty yards from the aircraft when he tripped the first time. He felt himself falling and managed to roll onto his left shoulder, curling around and getting back to his feet. The men at the aircraft, consumed by their work, didn’t notice.
Go, go, go!
The second time he tripped he was twenty yards away. This time he hit his elbow and lost his pistol.
He couldn’t find it at first. The men at the aircraft began shouting.
Ferguson spotted the gun and scooped it up. He was on both knees. He steadied his left hand with his right as best he could and fired.
He missed high, the bullet not even close enough to scare the men pointing at him.
Nothing to do now but go, he told himself, jumping to his feet.
Go!
~ * ~
G
eneral Namgung was still in the tunnel from the flight room when he heard the screams.
“An intruder!” he yelled, repeating what the others had said. “Quickly!”
He drew his pistol and began racing toward the airstrip.
~ * ~
T
he AK-47 sounded like a tin toy to Ferguson, the patter of its bullets the sound a child’s mechanical toy made when winding down. He saw the tracers spinning wildly to his left, the soldier’s aim thrown off by the shadows from the work lights.
The aircraft’s canopy was open and a ladder propped against its side. Two men were racing to the ladder.
Ferguson brought the pistol up and fired at the figures. His bullets missed both.
I’m not that bad a shot, damn it, he thought to himself. He aimed at the lights, got both, and continued running forward.
~ * ~
P
ilot Lee Ryung was not sure what was happening, but he knew that he had to do his duty, and his duty now was to board the aircraft. He put his hands on the orange rail of the ladder, pushing away from the crewman trying to help him.
A bullet crashed through the metal hull of the jet a few inches from his head. A soldier ran from the hangar ramp on the other side of the aircraft. The pilot froze for a second as the man began to fire, mistakenly thinking the soldier was shooting at him.
~ * ~
H
e was so close now there was no way he could miss. Ferguson fired two shots into the face of the man at the base of the ladder and watched him peel off to the side. He leapt past him, raising his gun at the figure descending into the cockpit. He squared his aim and fired.
Nothing happened. The PSM was out of bullets.
~ * ~
G
eneral Namgung saw the soldier pull up his rifle as the pilot climbed up the aircraft boarding ladder.
“Don’t hit Lee Ryung!” he yelled. “Don’t shoot the pilot!”
The soldier stopped. Namgung yelled to the pilot. “Go, go!”
Then he realized the man on the ladder wasn’t dressed in flight gear and wasn’t in fact the pilot at all.
~ * ~
L
ee Ryung slapped the controls, desperate to start the MiG and move it from danger. Then he realized it was too late for that; there was someone on the ladder. He grabbed at his holster, pulling out his service revolver.
Ferguson screamed as he climbed the ladder, pain, anger, and frustration boiling together. He lost his balance, and as he started to slip he threw the last bit of momentum he controlled toward the figure in the cockpit, grabbing at the pilot’s helmet.
Something exploded on his left.
A pistol, a big pistol.
Ferguson grabbed for it with his left hand, grappling for the barrel.
It felt like a hot pipe, a hot iron pipe on fire. He pulled it toward the other man, pushing it into his chest as it exploded again.
~ * ~
28
IN THE AIR OVER NORTH KOREA
“They’ve lost contact with Ferguson,” Van Buren told Rankin over the radio.
Before Rankin could reply, the helo pilot pointed at the front of the windscreen.
“Airstrip dead ahead. There’s a plane at the far end.”
A thin line of tracers arced toward them from the
right.
“We’re going in!” shouted Rankin. He meant to tell the rest of the team, but in his excitement left the radio channel on the control frequency with Van. “It’s hot! LZ is hot!”
“Godspeed,” said the colonel.
~ * ~
29
SOUTHWEST OF KUSŎNG, NORTH KOREA
The man on the ladder dove into the cockpit.
Namgung cursed himself for being a fool. He took out his pistol and fired.
It had been so long since he used the weapon that the nose shot up and the bullet flew far from its mark. He fired again, with the same result.
Cursing, he ran toward the ladder, shouting for help.
~ * ~
F
erguson pulled the gun from the pilot’s hand, bashing the side of the man’s head with it, once, twice, a third time before realizing the man was already dead. The bullet the pilot had fired had gone up through his neck and into his brain.
There were more shouts, screams, gunfire. Ferguson was at the center of a roiling tempest, but all he could see was a small circle around him.
Someone was climbing the ladder. Ferguson leaned over and fired the revolver, felt it jerk up in his hand, the bullet sailing far from its intended target.
The plane’s the important thing, he told himself.
He put the pistol’s nose flat against the biggest screen and fired, then put the rest of the bullets through the panel on the right.
~ * ~
D
ucking as the bullet flew past, Namgung lost his balance and slipped down the ladder. He struggled to get his boots back on the rungs, then clambered upward. As he did, the intruder flew over the side of the cockpit.
Namgung reached the cockpit, where the pilot sat upright in his seat.
“Go!” he commanded him. “Start the aircraft and take off! Go!”
Then he saw the blood covering the front of his vest, and realized all was lost.
~ * ~
F
erguson dropped from the MiG’s forward cowling, landing on his legs as he planned but immediately pitching forward, rolling in a summersault underneath the plane. He saw two boots in front of him, and grabbed at them, pushing a surprised North Korean soldier to the ground.
The man’s assault rifle skittered away. Ferguson dove at it, pulling it to his chest as the Korean recovered and grappled him, a fisherman reeling in an immense catch. But this catch slipped its hook: Ferguson rolled and mashed his mangled right hand onto the trigger of the AK-47.
The gun jerked wildly as the bullets spewed from its nose. Only two or three of the dozen bullets Ferguson fired found their target, but they laced across the North Korean’s head, killing him instantly.
There was a second of stillness, of no sound, as if a vacuum had been created beneath Ferguson’s body. He felt nothing, not cold or pain, certainly not triumph, nor even despair.
And then the tumult resumed: Helicopter blades whirled in the distance. Guns fired. Someone screamed.
It was Ferguson. He pushed himself out of the dead man’s grasp and ran back the way he had come.
~ * ~
D
espair overwhelmed General Namgung. His future—Korea’s future—sat stone upright in his hands, empty.
“He’s escaping!” yelled one of the soldiers.
“Helicopters!” yelled another.
Namgung started down the ladder, moving deliberately. He felt nothing, not anger nor revenge.
The soldier he had stopped from shooting earlier lay on the tarmac a few feet away. Two other soldiers were crouched nearby, firing into the field.
Namgung went to them. He could tell they were firing blind, without a target. «
“Bring up more lights so you can see him,” he said calmly. He checked his own pistol, making sure it was ready to fire.
~ * ~
F
erguson threw himself down about thirty yards from the strip. He crawled forward, deeper into the darkness. All he had to do was crawl away, just crawl. Rankin and the rest of Van’s guys were here now, above, right here, on their way. They’d get the plane and then rescue him.
Or would it be better to die now?
He could stop, stand up, and burn the rest of the magazine, make himself an easy target.
Go out in a blaze of glory.
There was a certain romance in that, a fittingness. People would say he went out the way he wanted to. But the truth was, he didn’t want to go out like that. Not now, at least, not here.
There were many things to do, people to see, to talk to.
His dad. Always his dad.
He hunkered down as a fresh wave of bullets flew by, pushing deeper into the darkness.
~ * ~
H
e’s there!” yelled one of the soldiers, pointing at the shadow about forty yards away.
General Namgung grabbed the rifle from the nearby soldier. He would take care of the man himself.
~ * ~
30
IN THE AIR OVER NORTH KOREA
Rankin saw the figures running from the airstrip toward the field.
They must be after Ferguson.
“There,” he shouted at the pilot. “I want to go there.”
“I thought you wanted the plane.”
“There’s no one in the cockpit. We get my guy first.”
The pilot started to answer, but Rankin didn’t hear. He’d already pivoted toward the open door of the helo and put his Uzi on his hip. He steadied the weapon as the aircraft swooped low and began to fire.
~ * ~
31
SOUTHWEST OF KUSŎNG, NORTH KOREA
General Namgung stopped and lowered the nose of his rifle, aiming at the man crawling away.
He showed great courage in attacking us, but now runs like a coward, thought the general.
As he pushed the trigger to fire, he felt the hot wind of hell swirling around him. He glanced up, realizing it was a helicopter.
In the next instant, a half-dozen 9 mm parabellum bullets riddled his neck and chest.
~ * ~
R
ankin leapt out of the Little Bird as it touched down, running toward the body to the left of the chopper. At first glance, he thought he’d made a mistake; it looked like a Korean.
At second glance, it looked dead.
Ferguson pitched himself onto his back, trying to bring up the AK-47.
Rankin stepped on the gun. Ferguson was so weak he lost his grip on the weapon. He blinked, then realized who was standing there.
“About fuckin’ time, Skippy,” Ferguson croaked. “You missed all the fun.”
~ * ~
32
CIA BUILDING 24-442
Corrigan looked up from the console.
“They’ve got him!” he yelled. “Ferguson is alive! They’ve got him!”
Tears began to stream from Corrine’s eyes.
“Aircraft is under their control,” added Corrigan, almost as an afterthought. “We have the bomb. The Marines are inbound!”
Corrine looked down at the communications panel controlling her headset and pushed the button to connect with Slott.
“You heard that, Dan?”
“Yes.”
“I think you should be the one to tell the president.”
“We should both tell him,” he said. “Corrigan?”
There was a light pop in the headphones.
“You’re on the line with the White House situation room,” said Corrigan.