FIFTY-THREE
M
ALONE LISTENED AS THE
R
OLLS
-R
OYCE TURBOSHAFTS DROVE
the blades of the Westland Lynx. The navy had taught him how to fly fighters and he’d logged a respectable amount of time in jets, but he’d never flown a helicopter. He settled back in the rear compartment as the chopper arched up into a cold midday sky.
Stephanie sat beside him.
A rap from the cockpit door window caught his attention. The pilot was pointing to his headset and motioning to two sets that hung on the wall. A corpsman handed the earphones over to both he and Stephanie.
“There’s an encrypted communication coming in for you,” the pilot’s voice said in his ears.
He twisted the microphone close to his mouth. “Let’s hear it.”
A few clicks and a voice said, “I’m back.”
“Care to tell us what’s going on?” Malone asked Danny Daniels.
“The plane deviated off course. First it headed north, away from the city, and now it’s turned back south. No radio contact can be made. I want you two to check it out before we blow it from the sky. I have the French president on the other line. He’s scrambled a fighter. Right now the target’s not over any populated areas, so we can take it down. But we don’t want to do that, obviously, unless absolutely necessary. Too much explaining to do.”
“You sure this threat is real?” he asked.
“Hell, Cotton, I’m not sure of crap. But Lyon had a plane at Heathrow. You found it. Which, I might add, seems like he wanted us to find—”
“So you know what happened last night?”
“Every detail. I want this son of a bitch. I had friends die when he bombed our embassy in Greece, and they are only a few of the many he’s killed. We’re going to punch this guy’s ticket.”
One of the pilots slid the panel door to the cockpit open and motioned ahead. Malone searched the sky. Clouds lay like tracks above the French landscape. The outskirts of Paris rolled past beneath the chopper’s undercarriage. He spotted a blue-and-yellow-striped fuselage in the distance—another Cessna Skyhawk, identical to the one seen last night—cruising at about five thousand feet.
“Close the gap,” he told the pilot through his headset.
“You see it?” Daniels asked.
He felt power seep from the rotors as the helicopter knifed its way forward.
The plane’s metal sheeting sparkled in the sunshine.
“Stay behind him, out of his vision field,” Malone told the pilot.
He spied red identification numbers on the tail that matched the ones from last night.
“That plane’s ID is the same as the one in Heathrow,” he said into the headset.
“You think Lyon is in the plane?” Daniels asked.
“I’d be surprised,” Malone answered. “He’s more the conductor than a member of the orchestra.”
“It’s turning,” the pilot said.
He stared out the window and saw the Skyhawk bank east.
“Where are we?” he asked the pilot.
“North of Paris, maybe four miles. With that vector the plane has turned away from the city center, which will take us beyond the town proper.”
He was trying to make sense of all that he knew. Scattered pieces. Random, yet connected.
“It’s turning again,” the pilot said. “Now on a westerly course. That’s completely away from Paris, toward Versailles.”
He wrenched the earphones off. “Did he spot us?”
“Not likely,” the pilot said. “His maneuver was casual.”
“Can we approach from above?”
The pilot nodded. “As long as he doesn’t decide to climb.”
“Do it.”
The rudder control angled forward and the chopper’s airspeed increased. The gap to the Skyhawk began to close.
The copilot motioned to the headset. “That same bloke again on the radio.”
He snapped the headphones back on. “What is it?”
“The French want to take that plane down,” Daniels said. “What do I tell them?”
He felt Stephanie’s grip on his right arm. She was motioning forward, out the windshield. He turned just as the cabin door on the Skyhawk’s left side sprang fully open.
“What the—”
The pilot jumped from the plane.
A
SHBY WAS THE LAST TO CLIMB ABOARD THE ELEVATOR
. T
HE
eight members of the Paris Club filled three glass-walled cars that rose from the second platform another 175 meters to the Eiffel Tower’s summit. The giddy ascent, within the open ironwork, was a bit harrowing.
A bright sun set the world below glittering. He spied the Seine and thought its name apt—it meant “winding,” and that was exactly what the river did through central Paris with three sharp curves. Usually car-jammed avenues that paralleled and crisscrossed the waterway were short on traffic for Christmas. In the distance rose the hulk of Notre Dame, engulfed by more church domes, zinc roofs, and a forest of chimney thickets. He caught a quick glimpse of La Défense and its avenues of high-rise towers. He also noticed lights affixed to the Eiffel Tower’s girders—the source, he surmised, of the electric shimmy that illuminated the thing each night.
He checked his watch.
11:43
AM
.
Not long now.
M
ALONE WATCHED AS A PARACHUTE SPRANG OPEN AND THE
canopy caught air. The Skyhawk continued its westerly course, holding altitude and speed. Below was a vast expanse of field, forest, villages, and roads that dotted the rural landscape outside Paris.
He pointed to the plane and told the pilot, “Head in for a closer look.”
The chopper eased forward and approached the Skyhawk. Malone shifted his position to the port side of the helicopter and stared out at the single-engine plane.
“No one inside,” he said into the microphone.
He didn’t like any of this. He turned to the corpsman. “Do you have binoculars?”
The young man quickly produced a pair. Malone focused across the bright sky at the Skyhawk.
“Ease forward some,” he told the pilot.
Their parallel course changed, the chopper now slightly ahead of the plane. Through the binoculars he zeroed his gaze past the tinted windshield into the cockpit. The two seats were empty, yet the steering column moved in calculated jerks. Something lay on the copilot’s seat, but a glare made it difficult to make out. Beyond, the aft seat was packed with packages wrapped in newspaper.
He lowered the binoculars.
“That plane’s carrying something,” he said. “I can’t tell what, but there’s an awful lot of it.”
The Skyhawk’s wings dipped and the plane banked south. The turn was controlled, as if someone was flying.
“Cotton,” Daniels said in his ear. “What’s your assessment?”
He wasn’t sure. They were being led—no question—and he’d thought this plane to be the end. But—
“This is not our problem,” he said into the microphone.
“Do you agree, Stephanie?” Daniels asked.
“I do.”
Good to see that she still trusted his judgment, since her expression contradicted her words.
“Then where’s our problem?” the president asked.
He played a hunch. “Have French air traffic control scan the area. We need to know about every plane in the sky.”
“Hold on.”
E
LIZA STEPPED FROM THE ELEVATOR INTO THE EMPTY SUMMIT
-level observation area, seventy-five stories above the ground. “A bit unnerving to be here with no one else,” she said to the group. “This platform is usually packed.”
She pointed to metal stairs that led up through the ceiling, outside, to the uppermost deck.
“Shall we?” she said.
She watched as the group climbed the stairs. Ashby stood with her. When the last of them exited through the doorway at the top, she turned to him and asked, “Will it happen?”
He nodded. “In exactly fifteen minutes.”
FIFTY-FOUR
M
ALONE KEPT HIS EYES ON THE
S
KYHAWK AND SAW THE PLANE
alter course once again. More southerly, as if seeking something.
“Is that fighter here?” he asked into the headset, wondering if anybody was still there.
“It’s in position,” Daniels said.
He made a decision. “Take it down while we still can. Nothing but fields below, but the city is coming up fast.”
He banged on the window and told the pilot, “Back us off, and fast.”
The Skyhawk accelerated away as the helicopter slowed.
“The order’s been given,” Daniels said.
T
HORVALDSEN STEPPED OUT INTO COLD
D
ECEMBER AIR
H
E’D
never visited the top of the Eiffel Tower. No particular reason why he hadn’t. Lisette had wanted to come once years ago, but business had prevented the trip.
We’ll go next summer
, he’d told her. But next summer had come and gone, and more summers thereafter, until Lisette lay dying and there were no more. Cai had visited several times and liked to tell him about the view—which, he had to admit, was stunning. A placard affixed to the railing, beneath a cage that encased the observation deck, noted that on a clear day the view extended for sixty kilometers.
And today certainly qualified as clear. One of those sparkling winter days, capped by a cloudless, azure sky. He was glad he’d wore his thickest wool coat, gloves, and scarf, but French winters had nothing on their Danish counterpart.
Paris had always mystified him. He’d never been impressed. He actually liked a line from
Pulp Fiction
, one John Travolta’s character had casually uttered.
Things are the same there as here, just a little bit different
. He and Jesper had watched the movie a few years ago, intrigued by its premise, but ultimately repulsed by the violence. Until a couple of days ago, he’d never considered violence except in self-defense. But he’d gunned down Amando Cabral and his armed accomplice with not a single speck of remorse.
And that worried him.
Malone was right.
He couldn’t just murder people.
But staring across the chilly observation deck at Graham Ashby, who stood near Larocque, gazing out at Paris, he realized that murdering this man would be a pleasure. Interesting how his world had become so defined by hate. He told himself to think pleasant thoughts. His face and mood must not reveal what he was thinking.
He’d come this far.
Now finish.
A
SHBY KNEW WHAT
E
LIZA
L
AROCQUE EXPECTED
. S
HE WANTED
a small plane, loaded with explosives, to crash into the Church of the Dome at the south end of the Invalides.
A grand spectacle.
The particular fanatics who’d volunteered to accept complete responsibility loved the idea. The gesture had a ghoulish 9/11 feel, albeit on a smaller scale, with no loss of life. That was why Christmas Day had been chosen: The Invalides and the church both were closed.
Simultaneous with the attack in Paris, two other national monuments, the Musée d’Aquitaine in Bordeaux, and the Palais des Papes in Avignon, would be bombed. Both closed, too.
Each act purely symbolic.
As they’d circled the observation platform, taking in the sights, he’d noticed a vehicle burning, smoke drifting into the cold air, from the front of the church at the Invalides. Police, fire, and emergency vehicles seemed abundant. Some of the others saw it, too. He caught a few comments, but nothing of dire concern. The situation seemed in hand. Surely the flames were related to Lyon, but he had no idea what the South African had actually planned. No details had been shared, nor had he wanted to know.
The only requirement was that it happen at noon.
He glanced at his watch.
Time to go.
He’d purposely drifted away from the others as Larocque led them on a visual tour. He’d noticed that she’d started with the view facing north, then walked to the west platform. As the group rounded to the south, he quickly stepped through the exit doorway that led down to the enclosed observation room. Slowly, he slid the glass panel shut, engaging the keyed lock at its bottom. Mr. Guildhall had thoroughly reconnoitered the summit platform and discovered that the two doors that lead up from the enclosed portion were equipped with bolts that engaged with a simple push and opened with a key that only security people carried.
But not today.
Larocque had bargained for the club to have an hour alone at the top, ending around twelve forty
PM,
twenty minutes before ticket booths opened 275 meters below and visitors flooded upward.
Quickly, he descended fourteen metal risers and crossed to the east side. Larocque and the others were still on the south side, taking in the sights. He climbed the metal stairs to the second door and quietly slid the thick glass panel closed, engaging its lock.
The Paris Club was trapped at the top.
He descended the stairs, entered one of the elevators that waited, and sent the car downward.
“I
HAVE THE INFORMATION,”
D
ANIELS SAID IN
M
ALONE’S HEADPHONES
. “Six planes currently in Parisian airspace. Four are commercial jetliners on approach to Orly and Charles de Gaulle. Two are private.” The president paused. “Both acting strange.”
“Define that,” Stephanie asked.
“One is not responding to radio commands. The other responded then did something different than was indicated.”
“And they’re both headed this way,” Malone guessed, knowing the answer.
“One from the southeast, the other from southwest. We have a visual on the one from the southwest. It’s a Beechcraft.”
Malone banged on the cockpit window. “Head southeast,” he ordered the pilot, who’d been listening to the exchange.
“You sure?” Daniels said.
“He’s sure,” Stephanie answered.
He caught an aerial explosion off to their right, maybe five miles away.
The Skyhawk had been destroyed.
“I’m just told that the first plane is gone,” Daniels said.
“And I’m betting there’s another Skyhawk,” Malone said. “To the southeast, headed this way.”
“You’re right, Cotton,” Daniels said. “Just received a visual. Same colors and insignia as the one we just took down.”
“That’s the target,” he said. “The one Lyon’s protecting.”
“And you have one more problem,” the president said.
“I already know,” Malone said. “We can’t blow this one up. It’s well over the city.”
He heard Daniels sigh. “Seems the son of a bitch plans well.”
E
LIZA HEARD A BOOM IN THE DISTANCE, FROM THE TOWER’S
opposite side. She stood on the south portion of the observation deck, gazing out toward the Champ de Mars. Private houses and blocks of luxury flats lined both sides of the former parade ground, wide avenues paralleling both sides.
A quick glance to her left and she saw the Invalides, the gilded dome of the church still intact. She wondered about the noise, knowing that what she’d planned for so long was still a few minutes away. Ashby had told her that the plane would come from the north, swooping in over the Seine, following a locator beacon that had been hidden inside the dome a few days ago.
The plane would be loaded with explosives and, combined with its nearly full tanks of fuel, the resulting explosion promised to be quite a spectacle. She and the others would have an unobstructed view from nearly three hundred meters in the air.
“Shall we move to the east side for a final look before heading down?” she said.
They all rounded a corner.
She’d purposefully orchestrated their route around the platform, slowly gazing at the sights and the delightful day, so that they would end facing east, toward the Invalides.
She glanced around. “Has anyone seen Lord Ashby?”
A few shook their heads.
“I’ll take a look,” Thorvaldsen said.
T
HE
W
ESTLAND
L
YNX SLICED ITS WAY THROUGH THE AIR HEADING
toward the Skyhawk. Malone kept his eyes locked outside the windows and spotted the plane.
“Eleven o’clock,” he told the pilot. “Swing in close.”
The chopper swooped around and quickly overcame the single-engine plane. Malone spied the cockpit through binoculars and saw that the two seats were empty, the steering column moving, as in the other plane, with calculated strokes. Just as before, something lay on the copilot’s seat. Beyond, the aft area was packed tight with more packages wrapped in newspaper.
“It’s just like the other one,” he said, lowering the binoculars. “Flying automatically. But this one’s for real. Lyon timed it so that there’d be little opportunity to deal with the problem.” He glanced toward the ground. Nothing but streets and buildings stretched for miles. “And few options.”
“So much for him telegraphing messages to us,” Stephanie said.
“He didn’t make it easy.”
Outside the helicopter’s window he spied a rescue hoist with steel cable.
What had to be done was clear, but he wasn’t looking forward to it. He turned to the corpsman. “You have a body harness for that winch?”