The chartered flight to Kazbekistan wouldn’t land for several hours.
Helga Rosen Shuler sat, wondering what he looked like.
Stanley Wolchonok. Marte’s son.
In all likelihood, she wouldn’t be able to meet him right away. He was going to be in K-stan as part of the team of men who would launch an assault on the hijacked plane, gain entry, and kill the terrorists before they had time to kill any of the innocents on board.
Yes, he was going to be very busy. But after it was over, she would request some time with him.
Did he look like Marte, with light brown hair and blue-green eyes? Or did he take after the elder Gunvald sister, Annebet?
Annebet had been a goddess. Tall and blond and voluptuous, she took after her Viking ancestors, with flashing blue eyes and a strong hatred of the occupying Germans.
Like Helga’s brother, Hershel, she had been studying to become a doctor before the Nazis came to Denmark.
She’d still kept studying, like Hershel, but it was harder to do with her frequent trips home to check on her family. Hershel was home more often, too.
Helga often went with Marte after school. Although the Gunvalds’ house was much smaller, it was a far happier place, particularly after three years of Nazi occupation.
Marte’s mother, Inger, would give them bread and butter as a snack, and they’d take it into the yard to eat.
And sooner or later Wilhelm Gruber, in his German army uniform, would show up as they played there. Mooning over Annebet, waiting for her to come home, hoping for a glimpse of her.
Helga closed her eyes, remembering the day he’d brought them Swiss chocolate. It was late in the spring of 1943, she had just turned ten, and Marte was twelve. Tensions were rising, food was scarce, and Annebet had moved back home from Copenhagen for good.
“How do we know it’s not poisoned?” Marte had asked suspiciously, giving the German soldier on the other side of the fence her darkest scowl and most deadly evil eye.
“I’m in love with your sister,” Gruber proclaimed. “What good would it do me to upset her by poisoning you?”
He really wasn’t that bad looking a fellow, Helga had to admit. A little stout from too much of that chocolate he always had in such quantities, he had a broad, friendly face, with blue eyes that were made larger by his wire-rimmed glasses.
From the terrible stories she’d heard of Nazis tearing Jewish babies in two, she’d expected him to have horns and a tail.
“Come on,” Gruber encouraged with a smile, holding out the chocolate to the two girls. “What harm can it do to take it?”
Helga never would have considered taking anything from a German. She always ran to the other side of her own yard when German troops marched past. But Marte was Marte, afraid of no one and nothing. And her poppi didn’t have extra money to buy things like sweets. For her, Gruber’s chocolate was tempting.
Marte looked at Helga. And reached for it.
“What are you doing?” Annebet descended upon them from inside the house like an avenging angel. But it was Gruber she was angry at, not Marte and Helga. “Stay away from my sister, Nazi! Stay away from my house! I will never go out with you. I’m not a collaborator—I’d never fraternize with the enemy!”
She grabbed Marte with one hand and Helga with the other, and dragged them with her toward the barn.
“I’m not the enemy,” Gruber protested, following them along the outside of the fence. “This occupation is a friendly one. Your king Christian still sits on his throne. The Danish government still meets. There was no fighting when we arrived.”
“There was, too,” Annebet spun back to fire at him. “Lars Johansen was killed defending the king’s palace!”
Marte looked at Helga and rolled her eyes. This was an argument Annebet and Gruber had had many times before. Now he would make a crack about Lars having been killed by the faulty backfire of his own inferior Danish gun.
But he didn’t this time. He just sighed. “Sooner or later, Annebet, you will understand that the Germans and the Danes are friends. You are one of us—you have many freedoms here that you take for granted, that you would not have if you were our enemy. Even your Jews are not required to wear the yellow star—”
“Oh, yes, Herr Gruber,” Annebet interrupted. “Let’s discuss what you Germans—you Germans, not we Danes, and no, we are not one of you—” She said the word as if she were saying pig shit. “Let’s talk about what you are doing to your citizens who happen to be Jewish. Have you heard of the death camps your Herr Himmler has built? I have. I’ve heard stories from people who were there, who saw it with their own eyes. Railroad cars of people—women and children—being gassed, simply because they are not Aryan.”
Gruber tried to smile. “But you are. You Danes don’t have to worry about—”
Annebet thrust both Marte and Helga in front of her. “One of these two little Danish girls is Jewish. Which one?”
Helga stared up at Gruber, up at the complete surprise on his face, and tried not to be terrified. She was too big to tear in two. Wasn’t she? Marte reached for her hand.
“You can’t tell from looking, can you? So what will you do, try to take them both?” Annebet pushed the two girls behind her. “I would die before I let you take either of these two children. You would have to shoot me right there, right in the street, like a dog.”
Gruber was shaking his head. “Look, I don’t know, I’m not a Nazi. I’m simply a good German. And lucky to be serving my country here instead of Russia.”
“Your good German leaders are murderers and thieves.”
Helga tugged on Annebet’s arm, trying to pull her the rest of the way to the barn. This conversation was getting much too dangerous, and Gruber was starting to get angry.
“It’s treasonous words like that that will force us to take away some of the freedoms you Danes enjoy. If you don’t watch out ...”
“What will you do?” Annebet’s voice was suddenly very soft. But it was filled with an intensity that made Helga want to cry. “Will you round up all our Jews? Will you take away the rest of our communists? I know—maybe this time you’ll arrest all of us who’ve ever had a single communistic thought. You’d have to take me, Herr Gruber. I still work one day a week at the free medical clinic in Copenhagen for no pay. Quick, call the Gestapo.”
A vein stood out on his forehead. “Don’t make jokes about that!”
“I’m not joking, Nazi. I don’t joke about a Reich that wants to rule the world by oppression.”
She was magnificent, standing there like that, all but shaking her fist at Gruber, but Helga was terrified that he would take his gun and shoot her. Shoot them all.
“Too bad, because it’s our world now,” he taunted.
“Yes,” she said. “That is too bad.”
With a regal sweep of her skirt, she turned and followed Helga and Marte into the relative safety of the barn.
She closed the door behind them and instantly turned to Marte. “If I ever catch you talking to him again ... !”
“He comes to the gate and calls to me,” Marte defended herself. “Am I supposed to ignore him?”
“Yes.”
“No.” They all looked up in surprise. Helga’s brother stood just inside the door. “There’s no point in making him angry.”
Annebet straightened up, her eyes flashing. “I suppose you’ll next recommend I have dinner with him.”
It was funny. Helga had never seen Hershel like this, so stern, so ... strange. Something about him was different. And he was looking at Annebet as if Helga and Marte had ceased to exist.
“I would never recommend that,” he countered softly.
Annebet had a flush of pink on her cheeks now, as if ...
Helga looked at her brother. Really looked.
He wasn’t handsome. Not like Jorgen Lund who sometimes came by the Gunvalds’ to take Annebet to a concert or for a walk in the park. Hershel’s hair was a plain shade of brown and his nose was big and his face was just a face. Not ugly, but nothing special either.
He was tall and skinny. Except as Helga looked at him, she realized he wasn’t so skinny anymore. His shoulders were broad, and with his shirtsleeves rolled up, she could see that his arms were strong—muscular, even.
But that wasn’t the thing that was so different about him today. No, the difference was in his eyes.
Helga had always thought that her brother had pretty eyes behind his wire-rimmed glasses. A rich shade of hazel and usually warm and brimming with good humor, they truly seemed to be the window to his good-natured soul.
But as he looked at Annebet, his eyes were intense, as if his soul had suddenly become heated to an extreme temperature and was about to explode.
“It’s good to be friendly, even just polite,” Hershel said to Annebet. “The Germans will relax and never suspect ... anything. I’m Hershel Rosen, by the way. I’m here to fetch Helga home.”
How did he even know she was here? He hadn’t looked away from Annebet, not even once, since he’d entered the barn.
“I know who you are,” Annebet told him. She was looking at Hershel in the same way. As if Helga and Marte had vanished off the face of the earth. “I’ve seen you at university.”
“Really? I mean, well, I’ve seen you, of course, but I didn’t realize you were Inger Gunvald’s daughter.”
Marte leaned close, cupping her hands around Helga’s ear. “Look at them. They want to kiss.”
Hershel and Annebet? Helga looked at her brother. At Marte’s sister.
She tried to imagine them kissing. Not the way her mother and poppi kissed—as if they didn’t want any part of them but the very tips of their lips to touch—but instead the way people kissed in the movies. As if they wanted to swallow each other whole and wrap themselves around each other until they turned inside out.
She wasn’t sure Hershel would know how to kiss like that. He had always been so polite.
Annebet smiled at him. “I’m hard to miss, huh? Always ranting about the Germans.”
“You should be more careful,” Hershel warned her.
“Helga and I are going out to play,” Marte announced, dragging Helga with her to the back door, behind the horse stall, past where Frita had just had her litter of puppies.
She banged the door, but didn’t go outside. Instead she held her finger to her lips and led the way up the stairs to the loft.
Marte loved playing spy, and Helga, too, had learned how to move soundlessly out of necessity, to keep up with her friend. But it didn’t seem right to spy on Hershel and Annebet.
“It seems funny that you should warn me to be careful,” Helga heard Annebet say to her brother.
She tugged on Marte’s shirt, shaking her head no when Marte turned to look at her.
Yes. Marte shook her head the other way.
“No,” Helga whispered fiercely.
“I’m not sure why your family hasn’t gone to Sweden,” Annebet continued. “I worry about Helga. Sometimes I just want to get on a boat and take her there myself.”
Marte pulled her close, cupped her hands around her ear, and breathed, “If they get married, you and I really will be sisters. Forever.”
Marte as a sister. Annebet as a sister-in-law. It was a wonderful dream.
Marte continued almost silently into her ear, “But how will we know if they’re going to get married unless we watch to see if they’re going to kiss, huh?”
It made sense in a Marte kind of way, and despite her misgivings, Helga found herself following her friend silently up the stairs.
“My father won’t leave his house, his shop,” Hershel was saying. “He says what’s happened in the rest of Europe won’t happen here—not in Denmark. He doesn’t let himself truly believe the news we hear of the ghettos and camps.”
“I’ve seen postcards,” Annebet said. “With messages written in invisible ink. No one could make up those stories. The camps are real.”
From their perch in the loft, Helga saw that Annebet had sat down on the edge of the Gunwalds’ wooden wagon. Hershel had come farther into the room, but he still stood with his hat in his hands.
“I don’t know how to make my father believe that.”
“If there’s any way I could help ...” Annebet slipped down off the wagon and moved toward Hershel.
“Here it comes,” Marte breathed.
But Annebet stopped an arm’s length from Hershel.
“Thank you,” he said. “But ...” He shook his head. Looked away from her, looked at her again with a laugh. “You know, our sisters are such friends, I can’t believe we haven’t met before this.”
“But we have,” Annebet said. “I’ve been to your house many times.”
He shook his head again, incredulous. “I can’t believe that—”
“I’ve helped my mother serve food at your parents’ parties,” Annebet explained. “At least twice while you were home for the New Year. As a servant, I made sure I was properly invisible.” She smiled at him. “No diatribes against the Germans with the creamed herring. No impassioned pleas for my Jewish friends to get themselves to safety as soon as possible with the dessert course.”
Hershel laughed. “You could never be invisible.”
“Yes, I could. In fact, your parents are having a party for your mother’s birthday next week. I’ll be there, but you won’t even see me.”
“Except now I’ll be looking for you,” Hershel countered.
Annebet smiled up at him, almost shyly.
Somehow they’d moved so that they stood closer together. Close enough now to kiss.
“Come on, Hershel,” Marte whispered almost silently from their perch in the loft. “She wants you to, so kiss her... .”
But Hershel was too polite.
“I have to go,” he told Annebet. “It was a pleasure meeting you.”
And so it started.
It wasn’t more than a few days later that Annebet and Marte came by Poppi’s store on the pretense of looking for Helga, but really so that Annebet could see Hershel again.
Helga’s parents had seen the way Hershel looked at her, the way she smiled at him, and that night at home, all hell had broken loose.
Helga had sat on the stairs and listened.
“She’s after your money!”
“How could you say that?” Hershel’s voice was thick with disbelief, with indignation. Hershel, who never raised his voice to anyone, was as close to getting loud as Helga had ever heard him. “Money is the last thing she cares about. If anything, she’s a communist, all right? She’s becoming a doctor so she can set up a free children’s clinic. She’s as beautiful inside as she is out!”
“Don’t fight,” Helga whispered, closing her eyes, wishing Marte were there beside her. “Please don’t fight.”
“Who’s fighting?”
“Poppi and Hershel,” she said. “Make them stop.”
“Okay, how’s this—it’s 2001. Their fight’s been over for years. Come on, Helga. Look at where you are, who you’re with.”
An airplane. She was on an airplane and Des was sitting beside her. Her heart pounded and her mouth was dry. She had no clue why she was here or where she was going. She wouldn’t let herself panic. Instead she reached for her purse.
“We’re getting ready to land,” Des told her. “I should fill you in on some additional details that came in while you were resting.”
Details. Merde, she needed far more than details.
“Can you get me something to drink?” she asked. “Please? Some tea?”
He looked at her. Then pulled himself to his feet. “With lemon?”
“Perfect.” She smiled, and then, finally, thank God, he was gone.
Helga dug into her purse and found her memo pad. She flipped it open.
“Hijacked plane in Kazabek, Kazbekistani terrorists, Americans on board,” she read, “including Senator Crawford’s daughter Karen, age twenty-four. Demanding release of two prisoners, one in Israel, one in America. U.S. Navy SEAL Team Sixteen, Senior Chief Stanley Wolchonok is Marte Gunvald’s son!”
Okay. Okay. Breathe.
She remembered. It made sense again, and she could even recall getting onto the plane. But, dear God, what was going to happen when she couldn’t remember? When she looked at her list and read her own handwriting, yet couldn’t recall putting her pen to the page?
Desmond came back down the aisle, carrying a hot cup with a cover. She flipped her memo pad closed and forced a smile as he handed the cup to her.
“Thank you—aren’t you nice and quick; She took a sip as he sat down and laughed. “Oh, that’s odd. I was expecting coffee and it’s tea. You know how strange that can be... .”
Des looked at her. “You asked for tea.”
She had? “Sorry, I was ... groggy.” And focusing so much on trying to remember what she was here for, on getting a look at her memo pad ...
He cleared his throat. “Okay. You ready for details?”
“I am.”
“The SEALs landed in Kazbekistan about five hours ago. They’ve already constructed a wooden mock-up of a 747 at a former military airfield just south of Kazabek, and they’ve begun using it to practice boarding the hijacked aircraft.
“The man in charge of the takedown is Lieutenant junior grade Roger Starrett. Your guy, Senior Chief Stan Wolchonok, will be working closely with him. One Lieutenant junior grade Casper Jacquette, the executive officer—XO—of the SEAL team, is in charge of surveillance, and he’s already got a rotation of men surrounding the hijacked plane, looking in the windows, trying to get a sense of the situation inside.
“Lieutenant Tom Paoletti is the team’s CO, and he’s the man in charge of the entire operation. He’s the one who’ll say go when it’s time to kick down the doors.
“FBI negotiator Max Bhagat will handle all communications with the terrorists—he’s in place, but they’ve been silent aside from their initial demands. We’ve both worked with Bhagat before. Many times.”
“Yes, of course,” Helga told Des. “I know Max quite well.”
He looked at her, but she couldn’t read the expression in his eyes. “Last but not least, there are believed to be only five terrorists on board, all heavily armed.”
Helga nodded.
“Starrett, Jacquette, Paoletti, and Bhagat,” Des repeated. He lowered his voice, leaned closer. “You might want to write those names down in your little pad so you’ll know who they are the next time you come up blank.”
Helga didn’t know what to say.
Des reached over and took her memo pad. He opened it to a blank page, looking at her the whole time.
He took a pen from his inside jacket pocket and, finally looking away from her, started to write.
When he was done, he recapped his pen, put it back into his pocket. He stood up, handed her the memo pad, and walked to another seat at the front of the plane.
Still shocked, Helga looked at her pad. He’d listed the names, titles, and positions of the men about whom he’d just briefed her. And underneath he’d written in his clear block printing, “I know your secret.”
“Who is Karen Crawford?”
Gina held tightly to Casey as two of the gunmen moved to the back of the plane, both shouting in heavily accented English, “Who is Karen Crawford?”
It was terrifyingly bizarre, like the answer to some twisted round of Jeopardy! with machine-gun toting contestants.
The blond stewardess dared to intercede. “Americans,” she called out. “They are looking for an American woman named Karen Crawford.”
Not too surprisingly, no one stood up.
“Please,” the stewardess said. “Miss Karen Crawford!”
Oh, yeah, like if she were Karen Crawford, she’d step forward right about now. No, thank you very much.
One of the gunmen waited. He was about Gina’s age, with long, dark hair pulled back into a tight ponytail and a face that could have made him a fortune had he joined a boy band instead of choosing a career in international terrorism. He looked at them—in particular at the obviously American group of students sitting around her.
The sound of crying played like an annoying soundtrack to the fear. There were babies on the plane. They’d no doubt picked up on the tension and were inconsolable.
As was Casey.
Gina’s own eyes were dry, but inside she was quaking and ready to be sick. She couldn’t remember ever being this frightened of anything. Silence of the Lambs had scared the crap out of her, but it wasn’t anything like this.
This was real.
Those guns held real bullets. This wasn’t some make-believe game, some movie where the director could call out “cut” and they’d all go home after the day was done.
Slight pressure from one finger and a sweep of one arm, and they would all be dead or dying.
Gina had never given it much thought before, but right now she knew. She didn’t want to die.
And for the first time since she was eleven, she wanted her mother.
The other terrorist on the Find Karen Crawford Team paced, a dangerous panther of a man. Smaller than the Backstreet Boy, the expression on his face was even more frightening than those enormous guns.
He was angry and getting angrier by the minute. He spoke in a language that wasn’t English, and Backstreet translated.
“We know United States Senator Crawford’s daughter Karen is on this plane.” Backstreet’s English was very good, his smooth voice a gentle, soothing baritone, as pretty as his face. “We realize she most likely travels under a different name, so checking passports is a waste of our time. We can do this nicely. Or not.”
Nicely. This was nicely? With guns and threats and fear souring all of their mouths?
Why couldn’t the university jazz band have decided to tour Ohio?
Backstreet waited, watching them, but still no one moved.
Except for the snarly pantherman, who turned and brought the butt of his gun smashing down on trombonist Ray Hernandez’s head.
Oh, God!
Ray slumped in his seat as Casey cried even harder.
“Oh, my God,” she sobbed. “Is he dead?”
“I don’t know.” Gina’s voice shook. Okay, now it was time to step forward. Other people were getting hurt. Come on, Karen—
Gina’s world tilted.
Karen.
Was it possible ... ? Could it be ... ?
Gina reached for the piece of paper with her luggage tags, the one upon which the perfect-nosed girl in the airport had scribbled her sister’s name and phone number in Vienna. Karen. That girl’s name was Karen and her sister was Emily Something... .
Gina unfolded the paper.
Emily Crawford.
Dear, sweet baby Jesus. Karen Crawford couldn’t step forward. Her boarding pass had been stolen and she wasn’t on this flight.
Alyssa Locke was in Kazbekistan.
She was here—right here—at this run-down military airstrip south of Kazabek, where they’d just spent the past few hours constructing a wooden mock-up of the hijacked plane.
Sam Starrett concentrated on breathing, on keeping the air going into and out of his lungs, on keeping his heart pumping blood through his body.
Having the SEAL lieutenant in charge of the planned takedown of the hijacked plane faint would not be cool. Especially not in front of the parade of dignitaries who’d come to check them out.
And especially not in front of Alyssa Locke.
She was actually here. This wasn’t a dream.
She had all her clothes on. A dark pantsuit with a blouse that buttoned right up to her chin. Dark sunglasses that covered her eyes.
God, he wanted to see her eyes.
He could hear Lieutenant Paoletti making introductions, Nils beside him—called in because of his ability to speak the language—repeating the lieutenant’s words in the local dialect for a swarm of K-stani officials.
As Sam shook hands, he tried to bring himself back, to pay attention. All the major players had gathered, and it would be useful to remember their names.
He met Israeli envoy Helga Shuler and her assistant, Desmond Nyland, an older black man who was a former operator. Had to be. He was probably in his fifties, but he still moved as if he’d spent years in Special Forces.
Senator Andrew Crawford, whose daughter was on that flight, was also there, his million dollar campaign smile nowhere in sight, poor bastard.
FBI negotiator Max Bhagat had his usual cool on, but Sam knew Bhagat was as impatient as he was to get these introductions over with and get back to work. Alyssa and what’s his name—her funky little fruitcake of a partner—were with Bhagat, no doubt to sit on the sidelines and watch the man work.
Good. Lock Alyssa in the negotiators’ room that was being set up twenty miles away, over at the Kazabek airport, within visual range of the hijacked 747. If Sam was lucky, he wouldn’t have to see her again for the rest of this op.
But then it was Alyssa’s turn to be introduced. She took off her sunglasses as she shook hands with Mrs. Shuler, with Lieutenant Paoletti, and ...
Sam took her hand. He had to. There was no way he could avoid it.
“Ma’am,” he said, looking into her eyes for the first time in five months, three weeks and three very long days.
Her fingers were cool, fingers she’d once wrapped around his—
She jerked her hand free, as if she could read his mind.
“... from the FBI. They’ll be observing Lieutenant Starrett’s preparations for the takedown of the hijacked plane,” Tom Paoletti was saying as Sam briefly shook her partner’s hand. Jules Cassidy. That was the little fruit’s name.
And then Paoletti’s words sunk in. Observing. Takedown. No. No.
But yes. Shit, yes. Alyssa Locke was here to watch him.
She wouldn’t look at him. She was purposely looking over at the mock-up of the plane, out to where the senior chief and the other men assigned to his squad for this op were walking through their relatively simple insertion plan.
She was going to be watching as his team popped the doors as quietly as possible. They would enter with a bang and a flash of light, with detailed information from the surveillance team as to the five tangos’ exact locations inside the plane. Once inside, they’d make head shots and take out the terrorists. Swift and deadly.
After they got the doors open, the entire operation would take a matter of seconds and run like a well-oiled clock.
But the reason it would run so smoothly was because Starrett and his men would practice. They would run the drill over and over and over, for as many days as the negotiators could give them, until they could do it in their sleep.
That kind of practice required complete concentration. And Sam was going to have to run the whole show here in Distraction City, with Alyssa Locke watching him.
He wanted her to look at him now, god damn it. Come on, look at him.
She finally glanced over.
He made a motion with his head and, what do you know? she actually followed as he stepped slightly back, away from the rest of the group.
“How are you, Lieutenant?” she asked coolly, not even trying to pretend that she really wanted him to answer that, not trying to pretend she actually gave a flying fuck.
He tried to ungrit his teeth. “As fine as I can be knowing that the lives of one hundred twenty people on board that World Airlines 747 depend on what my team and I do over the next few days or even hours.”
She gazed at him, so pristine and well put together in her neat little suit, hair pulled back, makeup perfect.
Hours ago, Sam had stripped down to a pair of shorts and a T-shirt he’d since caught on a nail and torn. He was sweaty and dusty and he needed a shave.
“This is going to be hard enough,” Sam continued, his voice lowered, “without the added stress of—”
She lifted an eyebrow. “Does Lieutenant Paoletti know that you have doubts about your ability to—”
Fuck that! “Excuse me, I don’t have doubts.” Jesus.
There was nothing in her eyes, not even the slightest flash of memories from that night. Not the least little sliver of shared intimacies. “Then there should be no problem.”
They’d have to forget about it, to pretend it just never happened, she’d said—the fact that she’d come to his hotel room and they’d made love not once but four times. Four. All night long, and then once in the morning, even. In the shower.
She’d been furious with him at the time, until her anger had shifted to passion. But now ... Now she obviously felt nothing at all.
Sam turned away, unwilling to let her see the anger he couldn’t hide in his face, his eyes. But then—screw that—he looked at her. Right into her eyes.
And he let himself remember.
The expression on her perfect face as he’d made her come. The way she’d smiled as she’d touched him, first with the tip of her tongue and then with her lips and then ...
He smiled at her, remembering it all and letting her see it in his face, but she didn’t blink, didn’t flinch, didn’t blush. She just put her sunglasses on, gazed back at him coolly through the slightly purple-tinted lenses, and then turned away.
Well, shit.
Apparently she wasn’t haunted by dreams of him at night.
Apparently she’d successfully exorcised him. Of course that was assuming he’d ever possessed her in the first place.
Sam managed to catch Paoletti’s eye and got a nod of dismissal. Striding back to the wooden mock-up, he tried to focus his anger at her—and at himself for caring so goddamn much—into a more helpful form of energy.
Determination.
“Okay,” he said grimly to his squad. “Let’s do this right.”