by Steve Berry
Overhead, near the top of the caged enclosure, she spotted the solution to the problem. A closed-circuit television camera that angled its lens toward them. “Someone in security is surely watching. We simply have to gain their attention.”
“I’m afraid it’s not going to be that easy,” Thorvaldsen said.
She faced him, afraid of what he might say, but knowing what was coming.
“Whatever Lord Ashby planned,” he said, “he surely took that into account, along with the fact that some of us would be carrying our own phones. It will take a few minutes for someone to get here. So whatever is going to happen, will happen soon.”
Malone felt the plane descend. His gaze locked on the altimeter.
7,000 feet and falling.
“What the—”
The drop halted at 5,600 feet.
“I suggest that fighter be sent this way,” he said into the headset. “This plane may need to be blown out of the sky.” He glanced down at the buildings, roads, and people. “I’m going to do what I can to change course.”
“I’m told you’ll have a fighter escort in less than three minutes,” Daniels said.
“Thought you said that wasn’t an option over populated areas?”
“The French are a bit partial to the Eiffel Tower. And they don’t really care—”
“About me?”
“You said it. I didn’t.”
He reached over to the passenger seat, grabbed the gray box, and studied its exterior. Some sort of electronic device, like a laptop that didn’t open. No control switches were visible. He yanked on a cable leading out, but it would not release. He tossed the box down and, with both hands, wrenched the connection free of the instrument panel. An electrical spark was followed by a violent buck as the plane rocked right, then left.
He threw the cable aside and reached for the yoke.
His feet went to the pedals and he tried to regain control, but the aileron trim and rudder were sluggish and the Skyhawk continued on a northwest vector.
“What happened?” Stephanie asked.
“I killed the brain, or at least one of them, but this thing is still on course and the controls don’t seem to work.”
He grabbed the column again and tried to veer left.
The plane buffeted as it fought his command. He heard a noticeable change in the prop’s timbre. He’d flown enough single-engines to know that an altered pitch signaled trouble.
Suddenly the nose jerked and the Skyhawk started to climb.
He reached for the throttle and tried to close it down, but the plane continued to rise. The altimeter read 8,000 feet when the nose finally came down. He didn’t like what was happening. Airspeed was shifting at unpredictable rates. Control surfaces were erratic. He could easily stall, and that was the last thing he needed with a cabinful of explosives over Paris.
He stared ahead.
On present course and speed, he was two minutes, at most, from the tower.
“Where’s that fighter?” he asked either of his listeners.
“Look to your right,” Stephanie said.
A Tornado air interceptor, its wings swept back, was just beyond his wing, two air-to-air missiles nestled to its underside.
“You in communication with him?” he asked.
“He’s at our beck and call.”
“Tell him to fall off and stand ready.”
The Tornado dropped back and he returned his attention to the possessed plane.
“Get that chopper out of here,” he said to Stephanie.
He grabbed the yoke.
“Okay, darling,” he whispered, “this is going to hurt you far more than me.”
Thorvaldsen searched the Parisian sky. Graham Ashby had gone to a lot of trouble to trap the entire Paris Club. To the east, police and firefighters still battled the flames at the Invalides.
He walked around the platform, toward the west and south.
And saw them.
A single-engine plane, followed by a military helicopter, in close proximity, and a fighter jet veering off and climbing.
All three aircraft were close enough to signal trouble.
The helicopter drifted away, giving the single-engine plane room as it rocked on its wings.
He heard the others approach from behind him, Larocque included.
He pointed. “Our fate arrives.”
She gazed out into the clear sky. The plane was descending, its prop pointed straight for the deck upon which they stood. He caught a shimmer of sunshine off metal, above and behind the chopper and plane.
The military jet.
“Seems somebody is dealing with the problem,” he calmly noted.
But he realized that shooting down the plane was not a viable option.
So he wondered.
How was their fate to be determined?
Malone wrenched the column hard left and held it in position against a surprisingly intense force compelling a return to center. He’d thought the gray box was flying the plane, but apparently the Skyhawk had been extensively altered. Somewhere there was another brain controlling things, since no matter what he did the plane stayed on course.
He worked the rudder pedals and tried to regain some measure of control, but the plane refused to respond.
He was now clearly on course for the Eiffel Tower. He assumed another homing device had been secreted there, just as in the Invalides, the signal irresistible to the Skyhawk.
“Tell the Tornado to arm his missile,” he said. “And back that damn chopper farther off.”
“I’m not going to destroy that plane with you in it,” Stephanie said.
“Didn’t know you cared so much.”
“There are a lot of people below you.”
He smiled, knowing better. Then a thought occurred to him. If the electronics controlling the plane couldn’t be physically overcome, maybe they could be fooled into releasing their hold.
He reached for the engine cutoff and killed the prop.
The propeller spun to a standstill.
“What the hell happened?” Stephanie asked in his ear.
“I decided to cut blood to the brain.”
“You think the computers might disengage?”
“If they don’t, we have a serious problem.”
He gazed below at the brown-gray Seine. He was losing altitude. Without the engine powering the controls, the column was looser, but still tight. The altimeter registered 5,000 feet.
“This is going to be close.”
Sam raced off the elevator at the top of the tower. No one was inside the enclosed observation platform. He decided to slow down, be cautious. If he was wrong about Ashby, he’d have some impossible explaining to do. He was risking exposure. But something told him that the risk needed to be taken.
He scanned outside, past the windows, first east, then north, and finally south.
And saw a plane.
Closing fast.
Along with a military chopper.
To hell with caution.
He bolted up one of two metal stairways that led to the uppermost observation deck. A glass door at the top was closed and locked. He spied the bolt at the bottom. No way to release it without a key. He leaped down metal grates three at a time, ran across the room, and tried the other route up.
Same thing.
He banged a closed fist on the thick glass door.
Henrik was out there.
And there was nothing he could do.
Eliza watched as the prop stopped turning and the plane lost altitude. The craft was less than a kilometer away and still closing on a direct path.
“The pilot is a maniac,” one of the club members said.
“That remains to be seen,” Thorvaldsen calmly said.
She was impressed by the Dane’s nerve. He seemed totally at ease, despite the seriousness of the situation.
“What’s happening here?” Robert Mastroianni asked her. “This is not what I joined to experience.”
Thorvaldsen turned to face the Italian. “Apparently, we’re meant to die.”
Malone fought the controls.
“Get that engine back online,” Stephanie said over the radio.
“I’m trying.”
He reached for the switch. The motor sputtered, but did not catch. He tried again and was rewarded with a backfire.
He was descending, the summit of the Eiffel Tower less than a mile away.
One more time and, with a bang, the engine roared to life, the spinning prop quickly generating airspeed. He did not give the electronics time to react, quickly ramming the throttle to full speed. He banked the wings, angled the plane into the wind, and flew past the tower, spotting people standing at the top, pointing his way.
FIFTY-SEVEN
Sam watched as a small plane approached. He fled the locked glass door and leaped down the stairs, then rushed across to the southern observation windows. The plane roared past, a helicopter in close pursuit.
Elevator doors opened and uniformed men rushed out.
One was the head of security he’d met earlier.
“The doors leading upstairs are locked,” he told them. “We need a key.”
Thorvaldsen focused on the cockpit of the Cessna that skirted past, within a few hundred meters. Only an instant was needed for him to spot the face of the pilot.
Cotton Malone.
“I have control,” Malone said.
His altitude was climbing. He decided to level off at 3,000 feet.
“That was close,” he said.
“An understatement,” Stephanie said. “Is it responding?”
“I need an airport.”
“We’re looking.”
He didn’t want to risk landing at Orly or Charles de Gaulle. “Find a smaller field somewhere. What’s ahead of me?”
“Once past the city, which is only a few more miles, I’m told there’s a wood and a marsh. There’s a field at Créteil, another at Lagney, and one at Tournan.”
“How far to open pastureland?”
“Twenty miles.”
He checked his fuel. The gauge showed fifty liters, the tanks nearly full. Apparently, whoever planned this wanted a load of gasoline to aid the C-83.
“Find me a runway,” he told Stephanie. “We need this plane on the ground.”
“There’s a private strip thirty miles ahead at Evry. Isolated, nothing there. We’re alerting them to clear the area. How’s the plane?”
“Like a woman tamed.”
“You wish.”
The prop suddenly sputtered.
He focused out the windshield, beyond the engine cowling, and watched as the propeller wound to a stop.
The engine, on its own, refired and started again.
The control column wrenched from his grip as the plane banked hard right. The engine roared to nearly full throttle and flaps deployed. Something, or somebody, was trying to regain control.
“What’s happening?” Stephanie asked.
“I assume this thing didn’t like my derogatory remark. It has a mind of its own.”
He twisted in the seat as the cockpit leveled, then the plane hooked left. Perhaps its electronics were confused, the transceiver searching for the signal it had previously been following to the Eiffel Tower.
The Skyhawk sought altitude and started a climb, but just as quickly stopped. The airframe bucked like a horse. The yoke vibrated hard. Rudder pedals pounded in and out.
“This isn’t going to work. Tell that fighter to stand ready to fire. I’m going to take this thing as high as I can then bail out. Tell him to give me a little clearance, then let loose.”
For once Stephanie did not argue.
He angled the nose straight up. He forced the flaps to retract and held on tight, compelling the Skyhawk to climb against its will. The engine started to labor, like a car struggling up a steep incline.
His eyes focused on the altimeter.
4,000 feet. 5,000. 6,000.
His ears popped.
He decided 8,000 should be enough and, when the gauge passed that mark, he released his grip. While he waited for the plane to level, he yanked off the headset and slipped the wool cap back over his face. He wasn’t looking forward to the next few minutes.
He reached for the latch and opened the door.
Cold air rushed in as he forced the panel open. Not giving himself time to be scared, he rolled out, making sure to push off with his feet so momentum would send him clear of the fuselage.
He’d only jumped from a plane twice, once in flight school, and a second time last year over the Sinai, but he remembered what the navy taught him about a punch-out. Arch the back. Spread the arms and legs. Don’t let the body roll out of control. He carried no altimeter and decided to estimate his free fall by counting. He needed to open the chute around 5,000 feet. His right hand reached to his chest and searched for the rip cord. Never wait, his flight instructor had always cautioned, and for one frightening moment he could not find the handle, but then his fingers wrapped around the D-ring.
He glanced up and watched the Skyhawk continue its erratic journey, searching for its target, engine sputtering, altitude ever changing.
Time seemed to slow as he fell through the winter air.
A collage of fields and forest extended below. He caught sight of the helicopter to his right as it kept him in view.
He reached ten in his count and yanked the rip cord.
Eliza heard footsteps and turned to see security men rushing their way from around the deck’s corner.
“Everyone here okay?’” the lead man asked in French.
She nodded. “We’re fine. What is happening?”
“We’re not sure. It appears that someone locked the doors to this upper platform and that a small plane almost crashed into this location.”
Everything she heard simply confirmed what Thorvaldsen had already made clear.
She stared over at the Dane.
But he was not paying any attention. Instead, the older man simply stood at the platform’s edge, hands inside his coat pockets, and gazed past the enclosure, toward the south, where the plane had exploded in the sky. The pilot had bailed out just prior, and was now descending on a chute, a helicopter keeping a watchful eye, circling.
Something was wrong here.
Way beyond Graham Ashby’s treachery
The chute exploded outward and Malone’s gaze went up to the cords hoping none tangled. A mad rush of wind was instantly replaced by the flap of cloth as the chute grabbed air. He was still high, probably above 5,000 feet, but he didn’t care, the thing opened and he was now gently falling toward the ground.
About a quarter mile away he spied a rocket trail and followed the missile on its trajectory. A moment later a huge fireball ignited in the sky, like a star going supernova, as the C-83 obliterated the Skyhawk.
The greater explosion confirmed what he’d suspected.
This plane was the problem.
The Tornado streaked by overhead, the helicopter remaining about half a mile away, following him down.
He tried to decide on the best place to land. He gripped the toggles and forced the rectangular canopy downward, like flaps closing on wings, which spiraled his descent and increased speed.
Thirty seconds later his feet found a plowed field and he folded to the ground. His nostrils filled with the musty smell of turned earth.
But the stench didn’t matter.
He was alive.
Thorvaldsen stared at the distant parachute. No need to continue appearances any longer. Graham Ashby had shown his true colors. But so had Malone. What just happened involved governments. Which meant Malone was working with either Stephanie, the French, or both.
And that betrayal would not go unanswered.
FIFTY-EIGHT
Ashby hustled down the stairs toward ground level. He’d timed his escape closely, knowing that he’d have only a precious few minutes. The plan was to cross the Avenue Gustave Eiffel and ma
ke his way through the Champ de Mars, toward the Place Jacques Rueff, the nucleus of the former parade ground. Just east, a car with Caroline inside was waiting on the Avenue J. Bouvard. He’d have to finally explain a few things, considering what she was about to see, but his lies were ready.
He kept descending the stairs.
His deal with Peter Lyon had been clear. Never had Lyon been contracted to do what Larocque had wanted—crash a plane into the Church of the Dome and carry out two other simultaneous attacks in Avignon and Bordeaux. Instead, Ashby had confined their arrangement to Paris only, modifying the target to the Eiffel Tower. He’d never understood what Larocque intended, though after listening to her presentation earlier he now appreciated at least some of it.
Terror apparently could be profitable.
He came to the last flight of stairs. He was winded, but glad to be on solid earth. He told himself to calm down and walk slow. Several virile-looking males dressed in camouflage fatigues and toting automatic rifles patrolled the pavement. Beneath the iron base hundreds of people, in long lines, awaited the elevators opening at one PM.
Unfortunately, that would not happen today.
The Eiffel Tower was about to be no more.
In his altered version of Eliza Larocque’s plan, he’d arranged with Lyon for the Invalides to be a diversion, a way to create as much confusion as possible. Lyon had always been told the tower was his primary target. He didn’t need to know that he’d be killing the entire Paris Club—Larocque included. Not important. And what would Lyon care? He only provided the services a client requested. And to Lyon, Ashby was the client. It should be an easy matter to blame Lyon for everything that was about to happen. His explanation to the Americans as to why he hadn’t been with the others on the summit was simple. Larocque had excused him from the rest of the day’s gathering. Sent him on a mission.
Who would contradict him?
He passed beneath the southeast arch and cleared the tower. He kept walking, ticking off the seconds in his head. He checked his watch. Noon.