She was looking into his eyes -- and he could see fear lurking in the shadows of her mind, then he watched as the medic came up from behind and slipped the syringe into her deltoid muscle. Her eyes fluttered moments later and she fell into his lap; by then Tate and Woodward were back in the room, looking at her, then at the ninja's on the floor -- there remains splattered all over the room.
Woodward came over to Acheson, put a finger on Rutherford's carotid as he bent over her. "We got that co-pilot at the airport; her name isn't Beecham, by the way. Her ID is in the FAA database, but the image doesn't match what's on file. First run of fingerprints comes up dry too."
"She's polished on 777 procedures," Ben said, "so work through foreign pilot registries, look for women with the appropriate type ratings." Acheson ran his hands through Rutherford's hair, and he wondered why he felt such a strong attraction to this woman...then, "where did you pick her up?"
"International departures," Tate said, walking into the room.
"Surprise, surprise," Acheson added, then he looked at this new man: "Do I know you?"
"He's my partner," Woodward said. "Richard Tate, retired from CID, Seattle PD; he's working under a private ticket now. Dick, this is Ben Acheson."
"Anders told me about you," he said, shaking Acheson's hand. "Good work on that stuff last summer." Tate looked at the woman on Ben's lap and grinned. "Is it just me, or does it look like that dame's giving you a blowjob?"
Acheson looked at Tate, then Rutherford. He shook his head, tried to hide from his feelings again. "Can we get her off now?" Ben said.
"Poor choice of words, Amigo," Woodward said, and everyone laughed. Everyone, that is, but Acheson.
+++++
Acheson rode in a caravan to de Gaulle with Tate and Woodward and several FBI agents; they walked into Terminal 2E and were instantly overwhelmed by a sudden, massive increase in security. The group passed a bank of television monitors tuned to news outlets from around the world, and images of a wide debris field, floating in the sea off Iceland's west coast, filled the screens one minute, then switched to images of the US Capitol Building the next. Flames and black smoke were pouring out of shattered windows, then the camera shook, the cameraman trying his best to keep his footing as he wheeled around, trying to frame the source of the explosion in his viewfinder. A huge fireball was rising from the White House, and another, across the Potomac -- over the Pentagon...
And Acheson stopped, stared as an image of the new President of France filled the screen. The woman was giving a fiery speech, had just declared a new order was beginning when she turned and screamed as troops stormed the studio. She turned, tried to run and was gunned down, several cameras capturing her horrendous death on live feeds.
"What the hell is going on?" Acheson said as the screen switched to surveillance feeds coming from a subway platform. A large explosion could be seen lighting up a distant subway tunnel, then flames filled the platform. Another feed flickered to life, smoke pouring out of subway entries all around the Kremlin filled the screens, then as quickly changed to images from Beijing and Tokyo, then Aukland and Sydney -- the images always the same. Political landmarks, and politicians, exploding or being gunned down. Globally. In real time.
"There's no way any one network could have these feeds," Acheson said. "Someone's taken control of television networks, globally. They know where the next strike is, and are tying into the feeds..."
One of the FBI agent's phones started chirping, and several of the men took out phones and began reading out the text message. "The Vice-President is dead," one said. "Major blasts at the Capital Building, the Pentagon, FBI Headquarters, the Supreme Court Building..."
"No shit, Sherlock," Acheson said, pointing at the live feeds. Airport control towers around the world were next on the list. Video feeds from Los Angeles to Lagos began showing the exact same thing: large detonations toppling control towers, streaming live on-screen...then the fact registered...
"Oh, fuck!" Acheson said. "Everybody! Get down...!"
A concussive series of explosions rippled through the terminal; he heard glass breaking and then screams filled the air, walls falling in every direction -- then Acheson felt himself flying through the air, thudding off a far wall, coming to rest on a pile of steel beams and shattered glass.
"Got to out of here..." Acheson said as he climbed to his feet. He ran to the dispatch office, tried to open the door -- but there was no power -- and the electric security lock had tripped -- then gone offline. He banged on the door with his fist, heard someone trying to open the door from inside. It opened and a dispatcher stood there, her scalp bleeding, blood coming from her ears, then she fell back and landed on the floor, gasping for breath.
Acheson went to her, helped her into a chair, then went to the dispatch board and looked at gate assignments and fueling status; he grabbed the crew's clipboard and memory cards for the flight to DFW, then made his way through the terminal to his gate. The ramp chief was talking to gate agents, and they turned to Acheson as he walked up.
"What's the status of the aircraft?" he said to the ramp chief.
"Fueled, ready to go, but no bags yet."
"Fuck the baggage. Get everyone onboard, now."
He pushed through the crowded departure lounge, walked down the Jetway, heard people running up from behind and turned, saw Woodward and Tate, and two girls running beside Woodward, holding him up.
"Get on, now," he yelled, then he ran past the flight attendants gathered by the main door, ran straight for the cockpit. He slammed the door shut, engaged the locks then turned around.
He saw Sandy Beecham, or whoever the hell she was, sitting in the FOs seat -- turning to look at him, and two ninjas standing behind her seat, little Sig pistols pointed at his gut. He heard moaning, looked down and saw Rutherford on the floor behind his seat, blood coming from a scalp wound, debris all over her clothes.
"Did you just get here?" he asked Beecham.
"Yes."
"Anyone done a walk-around?"
She shook her head.
"Go!" he commanded. "We've got a full fuel load out, and no squawks on the cheat sheet, but check the holds are locked and crossed."
She looked at him, not sure what to do.
"Look, either you do it, or I do. This way one of your girls can keep an eye on me. Got it?"
"Yes, Captain," 'Beecham' said. As she left the flight deck he turned to the ninja: "There's a First Aid kit in there. Get it, please." One of the girls holstered her weapon and opened the closet, handed the kit to him and he opened it, took out some gauze pads and a little bottle of saline. "Give me a hand, would you? Pour the saline in her hair," he said as he picked little bits of glass from her scalp with tweezers. "Good, now take a fresh gauze pad and tamp it dry." He taped a fresh gauze over the wound, then took out a penlight and shined it in her eyes, saw little pinpoint pupils, but they were equally reactive.
"Help me sit her up, then go out and get some water, a couple of bottles at least."
One of the girls bent to help him lift her, then left for the galley -- just as Beecham came back in.
"I think she's okay," he said to her. "Are they ready for us to start two?"
"Da...I mean, yes."
"Okay, Comrade. Let's get to work on the checklist, shall we?"
"Yes, Captain."
"So, tell me...how'd you get roped into this little caper?"
"Excuse me?"
"They chose you, how?"
"I am captain rated on this model. Apparently they could not recruit any US pilots."
"Oh. So not simply because you're a world class fuck?"
"I did not know this would be asked of me."
"Odd."
"Why odd?"
"Seemed like you enjoyed yourself, I guess."
She looked at the ninja, then looked ahead. "I did," she whispered, "very much, yes."
"Well, just so you know where we stand, I enjoyed you, too. Very much, yes."
She looked at him and smiled. "Ready for push-back?" she said as she climbed in her seat.
He put on his headset as he climbed in, then he called for the ramp chief.
"Oui?"
"We're about ready to go up here."
"Oui, capitain, but we have no authority from ground control."
"I really don't care, chief. Push us back and get us away from this building, and I mean right now. There are fires in there, and they're spreading!"