The move from the Park Tower to the tea shop had bought a few minutes’ reprieve, at best. The hotel was on fire, but if enemy troops were still in there, still searching, they’d soon find the hole Roth had blown through the wall. After that, Paulius had only minutes before the Converted swarmed in.
There was only one option: he had to punch an opening in one of the enemy lines. That opening wouldn’t come cheap, and they had very little ammo left with which to make it.
He turned and crawled across the cold floor, his fatigues sc.r.a.ping against broken gla.s.s. He moved behind the shop’s main counter to join the others: Feely, Cooper Mitch.e.l.l, Bosh, Harrison, Katanski and Ramierez. Clarence and Margaret were tucked into an alcove near the bathrooms, out of sight of the windows. Margaret had a gag in her mouth, which Clarence had put there on Paulius’s insistence.
If she made any noise, she died; Clarence and Margaret both knew that.
Feelygood was the only reason Paulius had let Margaret live. If they could turn that murdering b.i.t.c.h into a weapon against her own kind, that held a certain poetic justice.
Paulius waved his men close. Such brave soldiers, all that remained of SEAL Team Two. Clarence joined them, as did Tim and Cooper.
“We need to figure out a way past their lines,” Paulius said. “We’re outgunned. They’ve got excellent coverage on our positions. As soon as we show our heads, they’ll start firing and it won’t last long.”
Ramierez tugged at his fatigues, drawing attention to them. “How about we lose these? Try to look like the enemy, get close enough to make something happen?”
“They’re killing anything that comes close, including their own,” Paulius said. He looked at the surrounding faces. “I need other ideas.”
Bosh shrugged. “It sucks, but we’re going to have to make a distraction. Shoot out the streetlights. We hit them up with grenades from here, then me and another guy head west on Pearson, try to draw their fire. Few minutes later, Commander, you and the others take the package north on Rush.”
A suicide mission, but D-Day was perfectly willing to do it.
“Too many of them for that,” Paulius said. He looked at Roth. “Any luck raising the Coronado, see if they have any ideas?”
Roth shook his head. “Negative, Commander. Short-range communication still works — not that there’s anyone answering — but we lost all long-range communication in the a.s.sault. I’m trying to get through on the MBITR, but I need to find a line of sight to a satellite. That’s hard to do from in here. I might be able to reach the Coronado from the roof of this building. If I can, we could request air support.”
Tim raised a hand. “MBITR?”
“Satellite radio,” Paulius said. “And our air support is gone — we saw both of the Apaches destroyed. We can’t risk bringing in the Coronado’s Seahawks, not when the Converted might have more Stingers. That means the only way out of here is on foot, so we can get Mitch.e.l.l to a place the Seahawks can land safely. We need something to blow a hole in those lines.”
Ramierez shook his head. “Too bad we can’t just drop some big-a.s.s bombs on them. Not just on the blockade, but on all those f.u.c.kers packed in nice and tight around here. We’d kill a s.h.i.tload of them.”
A big-a.s.s bomb … Paulius had forgotten about the mission’s last element of air support.
“The B2 might still be up there,” he said. “If we can contact it, maybe it can drop a JDAM on the north line, let us escape, then hammer all around the hotel.”
Bosh laughed, a sound of frustration. He shook his head. “A JDAM to break us out? I’ve seen one of those take the top off a f.u.c.king mountain. The B2 crew would need pinpoint accuracy, Commander. If they’re off-target to the south by even a few hundred feet, it’ll kill us.”
Bosh was right. A B2 strike was risky, d.a.m.n near suicidal, but they were out of options and almost out of time.
“Roth, you’re on,” Paulius said. “You and Ram head up to the roof. Try to reach the Coronado, have them task the B2 to strike a hundred meters north of our location.”
Roth let out a low whistle. “In bomb-speak, Commander, that’s right on top of us.”
“It is, and it’s going to work. There might be enemy units on the roof of this building, so kill anything you see. Stay alive long enough to contact the Coronado.”
“Wait,” Clarence said.
Paulius glared at the man. He was the last person he wanted to hear from right now.
Clarence dug into his pocket. He pulled out a cell phone, held it up like a kid at show and tell.
“This gives me a direct line to DST director Murray Longworth. I’m pretty sure he’s at the White House, sitting in the Situation Room with the Joint Chiefs.”
Paulius stared at the bulky phone, then started laughing. The guy who refused to see reality had a direct line to the Joint Chiefs? Like this night needed to get any stranger.
“Well then, Agent Otto,” Paulius said, “why don’t you just go ahead and give the White House a call?”
REACH OUT AND TOUCH SOMEONE
Murray Longworth watched the world burn.
The Park Tower mission had ended in disaster. SEAL Team Two and the Ranger company, wiped out. Clarence, Margaret and Feely, undoubtedly dead.
And if all of those people were gone, then Cooper Mitch.e.l.l was gone as well.
Vogel hadn’t found any other survivors of the HAC trial. Mitch.e.l.l had been the last hope of cultivating hydras.