by Trevor Scott
“Anna,” Jake said, shaking her.
Her eyes opened. “Yeah?”
“Got a little polar bear problem.”
With those words Kjersti woke also and sat up, her sleeping bag falling from her shoulders. She was completely naked, or at least from the top to the waist. Jake looked away as Kjersti put on her thermal underwear top.
“Don’t shoot them,” Kjersti said. “Just scare them away. Here, use my handgun.” She handed Jake her .44 magnum revolver.
He slid the door open slightly, put his entire arm outside to keep down the noise inside, and fired off a round into a snow bank. The huge sow swiveled around and ran off, the cub at her tail. Jake closed the door and handed her gun back to her.
“Nice piece,” Jake said.
Anna smiled at him.
They got dressed and Anna checked over the helo to make sure it was ready for flight, while Jake put a backpack over his shoulders and the 30.06 rifle over his right shoulder. He needed to take care of one more thing before they left.
“I’m going to hike back up to Steve,” Jake said.
“Need some company?” Anna asked.
“No. Stay here and watch for those polar bear.”
“Your loss,” she mumbled.
Jake came closer to her. “What’d you have in mind?” he whispered.
“Thought you might be a little excited after seeing Kjersti’s breasts.”
“They were all right.”
“Come on,” she said. “They turned me on. She stripped down in front of me last night before getting into her sleeping bag. What a body.”
Jesus. Why was she doing this to him? His body still felt like shit, although not as bad as the previous morning. He had a feeling things were moving in the right direction for him.
“Let’s hold that thought until we reach the hotel tonight,” he said.
She pouted her lips. “All right.”
Jake reluctantly walked away toward the ridge where Steve’s body remained, and would probably remain forever. When he reached the top he programmed in the location on his GPS. Looking around, the sun was rising. No wind. He could see the sow polar bear and her cub nearly a mile away already. See the clarity of the morning and that the GPS had picked up a number of satellites, Jake tried the SAT phone. A perfect signal.
Punching in the number, he waited.
“Jake, you there?” It was Kurt Jenkins.
“Yeah, we’re fine. I tried calling last night but the Boreal activity must have been messing with the SAT comm.”
“That’s what my comm guy said here also.” Pause and static. “What’s your current situation?”
“Found the MiG yesterday. It’s actually a MiG thirty-one, not a twenty-five. Initially we found five bodies and two snowmobiles. All looked like gunshot but with animal predation.”
“Any sign as to what they were trying to find?”
Jake wondered how much he should tell Jenkins. He was the Agency director and should already know the answer to this. But maybe the Russians had not been as forthcoming as they initially seemed.
“Jake?”
“Yeah. No sign of weapons configuration on the aircraft. No external drop tanks, as far as I could tell, but those could have been jettisoned as the plane was going down.”
“Anything else remarkable about the MiG?”
“Well, in eighty-six we knew just about as much about the MiG thirty-one as we did about the MiG twenty-five. As you know, they were very similar. The newer model had some upgrades in avionics and engines. Both were screamers, yet far less capable as our initial fears. Most of what we knew came from that plane that landed in Japan. The one we flew to Wright-Patt, tore apart, and sent back to the Soviets in pieces. That was brilliant, by the way. I’d like to know who came up with that plan.”
“That would have been former President George Bush, the senior, when he was director of the CIA.”
What was his old friend not asking? “Anything else you need me to find out before I leave here?”
Quiet and hesitation. “You said five bodies? Could you identify them?”
“Initially we found five bodies at the crash site, four Soviets, I’m guessing KGB or GRU, but no identification. We also found the former Oslo man, John Korkala.”
“Wow. He took out all four of them?”
“Well, he probably had help from our friend the Air Force captain.”
“You found Steve Olson.” A statement.
“Yes. He was a couple of hundred yards away, on the highest ridge in the area. I’m guessing he was wounded and went there to try to get a satellite signal. You know how the coverage was at that time?”
Jenkins laughed. “It’s not great now, and they were using an ancient system back then, compared to today’s equipment. Our own use back then was tracking the Soviet sub fleet. What about the MiG pilot?”
“Right, that would officially make seven,” Jake said. He glanced down the hill toward the helo and saw Anna and Kjersti standing in conversation. Looked like they were laughing about something.
“What’s your bottom line assessment, Jake?”
“Once you tell me the true mission of the MiG pilot, then I’ll let you know for sure.” His statement came across more callous than he wanted.
“As I said, we were told the pilot had defected.”
“Right. Last time we talked you told me to be careful. Be careful of what?”
Silence.
“Well?”
“We heard about a possible plot to take out Reagan and Gorbachav during the summit. The hard-liners in the old Soviet government didn’t want anything to do with Glasnost and Perestroika.”
That was true, but also well known. “They would have been quickly cut down if they had done that. That would have been an act of war, and they knew it.”
“That’s what our analysts are telling us also,” Jenkins said. “You sure you don’t want to come back and work for us?”
Considering the times they had asked for his help over the years, it seemed like he had never left. “I hate D.C. And, no offense, but field officers don’t make shit.”
Jenkins laughed and then said, “Offer’s always open. Anyway, back to this case. What was the mission?”
Did Jake tell him what he knew? What did he know for sure? There was a strange metal box with no visible way to open it, with the international symbol for ‘biohazard’ plastered on four sides. If there was anyone Jake could trust, it was Kurt Jenkins. He told him what he had found near Steve Olson’s body, buried in the snow.
“Wow,” Jenkins said. “Maybe it was true, then. Maybe they had planned on using some bio-agent to kill the two leaders. You say they had been carrying it in the fuselage somewhere?”
“Yeah, they had foamed an area inside an avionics bay, which saved it during the crash.”
Silence on the other end. “Any way of telling if they had modified the bay to run cold air into the cube? Something to keep the biological agent cold?”
Jake hadn’t thought of that. “That wouldn’t have been necessary unless they landed for any extended period of time. And the way they have whatever they have in this cube sealed, I’m not even sure hot or cold would do anything to it. Also, assuming the MiG flew above twenty thousand feet, the cube would have remained at temps below freezing.”
“You could have an active agent in that cube.”
Jake knew that. It’s one of the reasons he had left it in the snow all night instead of bringing it into the helo. “Should I leave it here or bring it out with me?”
“I would bring it out, Jake.” No hesitation.
“That’s easy for you to say, Kurt. You don’t have to sleep with the damn thing.”
“You said there was no visible point of entry.”
“True. But a biological can seep through some gas masks. All it would take is a damn pin-hole and I’m fucked.”
“It’s a risk.”
“Why don’t I just stick it out a couple hundred yards and blo
w the damn thing all to hell with my rifle?”
“You don’t know what’s in there, Jake. It could get into the environment, some bird gets it and we have a pandemic.”
“The Butterfly Effect.”
“Exactly. Or you could kill off some polar bears.”
“I might have to do that anyway. Had to scare two away from the camp this morning.”
“Is there much left of the bodies?”
“A little. From what I understand, until recently the area has been pretty much frozen since eighty-six. But it looks like all but Steve Olson had been chewed on a long time ago.”
“Probably right after they died.”
“Right,” Jake said. “A polar bear can smell blood twenty miles away.”
“You know this how?”
“Discovery channel.”
Silence as Jake glanced down the ridge toward Anna and Kjersti, who still seemed to be laughing about something. Maybe they were talking about him. Anna telling stories.
“Anyway, Jake. Get the box out of there and we’ll check it out. I’ll have a jet sent from England to Oslo.”
Jake agreed, ostensibly, with a grunt, and then he hung up. He thought about his next call to Colonel Reed. What did he want to tell his old commander? Since Kurt Jenkins had not even mentioned the colonel, Jake began to wonder if his old friend was even sanctioned on this mission. Or was something else going on? In the end, he decided the call to Colonel Reed could wait.
He went into the cave overhang where his old friend, Captain Olson still lay, frozen and nearly indistinguishable. Finding the box, Jake shoved it deep into his backpack and surrounded it with his spare clothes.
It was then that he heard the helo approaching from the west.
9
Jake had a choice to make. He could either stay put and see who had come to them, or head down to the helo to be with Anna and Kjersti. In the end, time required him to stay put. From the west, flying in hot and fast, the green camo Bell 412 helicopter swept over a rise, banked hard right circling around their own helo, blowing snow in all directions, and hovered to a stop fifty feet above the MiG-31 crash site.
Confusion below as Anna and Kjersti scrambled into their helo.
Having no choice, Jake had hit the hard snowy surface, his 30.06 rifle propped onto his backpack. Now he aimed the scope at the hovering helo, trying to find out who was inside and what they wanted. When he noticed the side door open and what appeared to be a barrel pointing out, Jake shifted his focus to their helo. But he couldn’t see either Anna or Kjersti inside.
It looked like a Norwegian Air Force Bell 412SP like those that had conducted training with some of Jake’s units in NATO exercises. Yet, he was sure something wasn’t right.
Suddenly the rotors started turning on their Bell 407, first slowly and then picking up speed with each revolution.
Jake saw the flashes and then heard the sound of gunfire echoing up the ridge toward him. He trained the scope on the military helo and had to make a split-second decision. He centered the crosshairs toward the middle of the cockpit and fired once, the bullet penetrating the windscreen and settling somewhere inside the cockpit.
The shot made the pilot immediately shove the stick to the left, sending the craft in a wide circle toward the east.
Jake popped open the magazine, shoved another round to replace the one he had fired, and then chambered a new round. He had five shots, plus five more left in his pocket. The rest he had left in the passenger compartment of their helo.
But Jake was stuck. It would take him too long to run the two hundred yards to jump inside their helo. But if they came to him. . . .
Just has he thought it, Kjersti lifted off the glacier and headed in his direction.
By now the green helo had circled around and was coming right after Kjersti and Anna.
Jake raised the rifle and prepared to shoot again. He needed to turn them around long enough for Jake to jump inside. This time Jake aimed to the second seat of the green helo and squeezed off a round. Whatever he hit, it worked, since the green Bell 412SP immediately broke right and swung around in a wide loop.
Now, Kjersti slowed and dropped down to the glacier just feet from Jake. Simultaneously, Anna shoved the door open, Jake threw his backpack inside and then slid his body and rifle after it.
The door slammed.
“Go, go, go,” Anna yelled.
Seconds later they were airborne and picking up speed.
Jake made his way to the cockpit, leaning in toward Kjersti. “Who the hell are those guys?”
“I don’t know,” she said. “But I can’t outrun them. Even fully loaded, they’ve got about five knots on me.”
She had pulled the helo to a couple hundred feet above the jagged surface, heading west southwest.
“How many shooters did you see?” Jake asked her.
“Isn’t one enough?” The controls jerked around in her hands. “Two for sure. Maybe more.”
“It almost looked like a Norwegian Air Force Bell four-twelve SP,” Jake said, glancing back and seeing the other helicopter right behind them. “Tell me I’m wrong.”
“It’s a four-twelve all right, but not our air force version. It’s private. Hang onto your pants.”
She went maximum power and pulled back on the yoke, rising to four thousand feet in just a few seconds.
Before Jake could ask why, Kjersti said, “I gain a few miles per hour at four thousand feet. Plus, look what’s ahead.”
Approaching fast was a bank of clouds much like the day before when they had taken off from Longyearbyen.
“I hope you know the terrain ahead,” Jake said.
Kjersti smiled. “Absolutely.” Her smile turned grave as she checked her six. “They’re moving up on us.”
Jake turned and saw the other helo nearly even with them on the port side. He went to the back and found his rifle.
“What’s her plan?” Anna asked, concern in her eyes.
“Gonna try to lose them,” he said. “Strap yourself to that harness.”
Without hesitation, she stepped into a harness that was clipped to the bulkhead. Jake got into a sitting position, the rifle aimed at the door.
By now the other craft was alongside them.
“Slide that door open a foot,” Jake ordered.
As she did what Jake asked, the first salvo of bullets struck the side windows, shattering glass into the compartment. Anna screamed and hit the deck.
Jake took aim at the front man with the rifle and squeezed off a round. He saw the bullet strike the man’s right shoulder, knocking him onto his back.
He cycled a round and fired.
Miss.
Another round.
Miss.
Two rounds left.
He aimed a little to the right and squeezed off another round. Hit. Dead center in the chest. The man dropped straight down and then rolled out of the helo, his body free-falling helter-skelter. The Bell 412 backed off slightly, but Jake had a feeling they’d be back.
Now, Kjersti had hit the fog bank. With the obscurity of the fog, they also had more turbulence, the craft bouncing up and down. Jake reached over and slid the side door shut. Then he sat down and reloaded the rifle.
“How you doing back there?” Kjersti yelled over her shoulder.
“I hit two of them,” Jake screamed back. “One took a dive out the side.” He put a hand on Anna’s back and said to her, “You all right?”
She turned her head up to him. “Just a little queasy from the flight.”
“Stay right there. I’m gonna have Kjersti make a call.”
He made his way to the cockpit and sat in the spare seat. Looking out the windscreen, he couldn’t see anything but swirling fog.
“Hope you know where you’re going,” Jake said to her.
“We’re out over water,” she said. “I can smell the sea air.”
“Great. A pilot who flies by smell.”
She laughed. “Hold on.” Pushing forwa
rd on the yoke, they quickly descended. When they hit only three hundred feet on the altimeter, she pulled back and Jake could see the water below.
“I believe you.”
“I didn’t do it to prove a point,” Kjersti said. “Did I lose them?”
Jake looked back. “Seems so.”
For the next half hour, she quickly changed altitude from five hundred feet to four thousand feet and nearly everything in between, at all times maintaining maximum speed.
“How’s our fuel?” Jake asked her.
“Should be all right. We added fuel in Pyramiden, which was two hundred K from Longyearbyen. We have a six hundred K range. I was planning on giving you a scenic tour along some of the beautiful fjords, so even at max speed we should be fine.”
“We’ve got less than half a tank,” Jake told her.
“What?” She looked at the fuel gauge and tapped it. “That’s not right.”
“They must have nicked a fuel line,” Jake said. “Will we make it?”
She hesitated, in deep thought, running the calculations in her head. “I don’t know.”
Seconds later she had made up her mind, shoving the yoke forward.
“We’re going down.”
10
Victor Petrova, aka Oberon, shuffled along the wet cobblestone sidewalk of Stockholm’s old town, his footing maintained from his low center of gravity, while he talked on his cell phone. He had just gotten a call from one of his associates on his satellite phone.
“What you mean you lost them? How many damn choppers are flying around Spitsbergen at any given time?”
Oberon stopped and casually glanced behind him, as if he were lost, which he was surely not. He had a photographic memory and had never been lost in his life—not in the forests of the Ural Mountains, and definitely not in a damn city. No, he was checking for a tail. But all he saw was a dead rat that had been run over the night before. Not fast enough, he thought.
The man on the other end of the phone said, “Oberon, we’ll find them.” He stopped, collecting his words. “There was some gunfire.”