Part 31 (1/2)
And just beyond the bars, about twenty meters away, was the final barrier between them and all that gold: a circular door three meters in diameter and framed in gleaming steel. It reminded the Snow Maiden of a hatch to one of the bomb shelters beneath a few of the military bases in Siberia.
Chen Yi rushed up to the Snow Maiden. ”Two soldiers moving down the tunnel. I want to lock the doors.”
”We can't,” she told him. ”We'd need the old man to get them back open. Everything has to stay open and remain open.”
”Then we must move quickly.”
”I will tell my men to suit up.”
”You do that.” She took hold of Chopra's arm. ”We're almost finished, old man,” she rea.s.sured him as they carried him up to the next panel.
He put his hand on the scanner, but then his head lolled to one side and his eyes rolled back in his head.
”Medic!” screamed the Snow Maiden. ”Medic!”
Lakota turned sharply down Jumeirah Beach Road, a thoroughfare running parallel to the wider highway and leading toward the remaining bridge's on-ramp. A pair of residential towers known as the Jewel loomed over them, the sky still flickering from explosions across the ca.n.a.l.
The roar of helicopters had Brent looking up, just as Lakota turned sharply, nearly tossing him out of the Jeep because the vehicle had no doors and wearing a seat belt was the last thing on his mind.
”The Cheetahs are back,” she sang, her tone dark and sarcastic.
No one needed the warning, and that was her nerves talking, he understood. He wanted to scream himself.
Cannon fire from one chopper tore a jagged line across their hood- And that's when he and Lakota simultaneously bailed out, hitting the asphalt and rolling, as the Jeep glided on and crashed into the concrete guard wall.
Behind them, Juma's SUV, a dust-covered Cadillac with more dents than a carnival b.u.mper car and whose rear hatch had been removed, veered out of the cannon fire and came to a screeching halt beside them.
A back door swung open, and there was Juma, waving a hand and shouting, ”Get in!”
Meanwhile, one of his men had hopped down from the tailgate and shouldered a Javelin missile launcher, a newer surface-to-air model developed by the Brits.
Brent did a double take. ”Where'd you get that?” he shouted as he climbed into the SUV.
”We have a few toys,” answered the warlord.
The militiaman fired the missile, which arrowed skyward and locked on to one of the choppers. He wasted no time lugging the heavy launcher back to the SUV.
Brent peered up past the open window and held his breath.
The Cheetah's tail rotor took the brunt of the impact, and once the flash and fire had subsided, the chopper began to rotate violently, its tail rotor sheared off, hydraulic and fuel lines hanging down like leaking veins.
The bird sailed over their heads, and Brent turned back to watch as the Cheetah collided with one of the towers in a spectacular explosion of fireb.a.l.l.s filled with showering gla.s.s.
”Holy-”
Lakota's curse was drowned out as the main rotor sliced away at the building before snapping, one blade whipping end over end across the road not three meters behind them.
As they swung right, turning up toward the bridge proper, the man behind the wheel hit the brakes so hard that Brent, Juma, and Lakota all collided with the front seats.
Before Brent could look up to see what h.e.l.l was happening, Daugherty was hailing him. ”Ghost Lead, two Badgers have pushed through and are setting up a barricade on the other side of the bridge. They're cutting you off, sir!”
”Ghost Lead, it's Schleck. Riggs and I are down in the tunnel. We found Schoolie, sir.”
”I can see that,” Brent answered, checking their camera broadcasts in his HUD.
”She was here, all right. They've set up some cameras, so we're being watched right now. Voeckler called me, and he's already on his way. He'll jam the cameras and clear the path, sir.”
”Roger that, get him on it. In the meantime, I need some fire on those Badgers blocking my way. Daugherty? Copeland? Talk to me.”
The boy was at Chopra's side, holding his hand now, as the medic tried to bring the old man back to consciousness. Chopra lay on his back, still unmoving, his chest barely rising and falling.
Unable to stand the frustration any longer, the Snow Maiden grabbed the boy's wrist and dragged him up and away, moving toward the scanner. ”If you're a living key, then open the gate.”
She slapped the boy's palm on the reader.
”Ident.i.ty not recognized,” came the computer's voice.
She glowered at him. ”Were you lying?”
The boy repositioned his palm on the reader. ”No,” he said. ”But I told you, I don't have access to the vault, only to the computers inside. Chopra's the only one who can get us in there. I told you that!”
With a pair of keystrokes on the touchpad, the Snow Maiden reset the reader. ”Try it one more time.”
He did. Nothing.
She cursed, then s.h.i.+fted away from him back toward the medic. ”Lift him up. I need his hand on that scanner right now!”
”Not good to move him!”
”Lift him up!”
Chen Yi rushed over to the soldier monitoring the surveillance cameras, then came back to the Snow Maiden. ”They've jammed the cameras. They're coming.”
They propped the unconscious Chopra up and dragged him to the scanner, and the Snow Maiden worked his palm.