Maas, Turner said.
Sure Conroy killed the engines. Chance you take, he said in the abrupt silence Maybe they missed it. Our guy in the tanker sat there and bitched to his dispatcher in Tucson on the CB, all about his shit-eating heat exchanger and how long it was going to take to fix it. Figure they picked that up. You think of a better way to do it?
No. Given that the client wants the thing on the site. But were sitting here now in the middle of their recon foot-print...
Sweetheart -and Conroy snorted maybe we just stopped for a screw Break up our trip to Tucson, right? Its that kind of place People stop here to piss, you know? He checked his black Porsche watch. Im due there in an hour, get a copter back to the coast.
The rig?
No. Your fucking jet. Figured I handle that myself.
Good.
Id go for a Dornier System ground-effect plane myself. Have it wait down the road until we see Mitchell heading in. It could get here by the time the medics clean him up; we toss him in and take off for the Sonora border...
At subsonic speeds, Turner said.
No way. Youre on your way to California to buy me that jump jet. Our boys going out of here in a multimission combat aircraft thats barely even obsolete.
You got a pilot in mind?
Me, Turner said, and tapped the socket behind his ear. Its a fully integrated interactive system. Theyll sell you the interface software and Ill jack straight in.
Didnt know you could fly.
I cant. You dont need hands-on to haul ass for Mexico City.
Still the wild boy, Turner? You know the rumors that somebody blew your dick off, back there in New Delhi? Conroy swung around to face him, his grin cold and clean.
Turner dug the parka from behind the seat and took out the pistol and the box of ammunition. He was stuffing the parka back again when Conroy said, Keep it. It gets cold as hell here, at night.
Turner reached for the canopy latch, and Conroy revved the engines. The hovercraft rose a few centimeters, swaying slightly as Turner popped the canopy and climbed out. White-out sun and air like hot velvet. He took his Mexican sun-glasses from the pocket of the blue work shirt and put them on. He wore white deck shoes and a pair of tropical combat fatigues. The box of explosive shells went into one of the thigh pockets on the fatigues. He kept the gun in his right hand, the parka bundled under his left arm. Head for the long building, Conroy said, over the engine. Theyre expecting you.
He jumped down into the furnace glow of desert noon as Conroy revved the Fokker again and edged it back to the highway. He watched as it sped east, its receding image distorted through wrinkles of rising heat.
When it was gone, there was no sound at all, no movement. He turned, facing the ruin. Something small and stone-gray darted between two rocks.
Perhaps eighty meters from the highway the jagged walls began. The expanse between had once been a parking lot.
Five steps forward and he stopped. He heard the sea, surf pounding, soft explosions as breakers fell. The gun was in his hand, too large, too real, its metal warming in the sun.
No sea, no sea, he told himself, cant hear it He walked on, the deck shoes slipping in drifts of ancient window glass seasoned with brown and green shards of bottle. There were rusted discs that had been bottle caps, flattened rectangles that had been aluminum cans. Insects whirred up from low clumps of dry brush.
Over. Done with. This place. No time.
He stopped again, straining forward, as though he sought something that would help him name the thing that was rising in him. Something hollow.
The mall was doubly dead. The beach hotel in Mexico had lived once, at least for a season
Beyond the parking lot, the sunlit cinderblock, cheap and soulless, waiting.
He found them crouched in the narrow strip of shade provided by a length of gray wall. Three of them; he smelled the coffee before he saw them, the fire-blackened enamel pot balanced precariously on the tiny Primus cooker. He was meant to smell it, of course; they were expecting him Otherwise, hed have found the ruin empty, and then, somehow, very quietly and almost naturally, he would have died.
Two men, a woman; cracked, dusty boots out of Texas, denim so shiny with grease that it would probably be water-proof. The men were bearded, their uncut hair bound up in sun-bleached topknots with lengths of rawhide, the womans hair center-parted and pulled back tight from a seamed, wind-burnt face. An ancient BMW motorcycle was propped against the wall, flecked chrome and battered paintwork daubed with airbrush blobs of tan and gray desert camo.
He released the Smith & Wessons grip, letting it pivot around his index finger, so that the barrel pointed up and back.
Turner, one of the men said, rising, cheap metal flashing from his teeth. Sutcliffe. Trace of an accent, probably Australian.
Point team? He looked at the other two. Point, Sutcliffe said, and probed his mouth with a tanned thumb and forefinger, coming away with a yellowed, steel-capped prostho. His own teeth were white and perfectly even. You took Chauvet from IBM for Mitsu, he said, and they say you took Semenov out of Tomsk.