“Do you have Signal on your phone?” Clark asked, meaning the encrypted texting app. It wasn’t as sexy as most of the other SMS services — no puppy-nose photo edits, no poop emojis. It was plain vanilla encrypted text from end to end. Perfect for Clark’s needs and personality.
“I do,” Li said.
“Okay, then,” Clark said. “Send me your location, and anything else you remember via Signal.”
“Very well,” Li said. “Should I call the police?”
“Let me make a couple of calls. If you’re still doing the same job, then there’s a good chance that what you’re working on and what I’m working on are related — actors from the same part of the world, at any rate. I’ll explain it more in a text. I’ll get back with you in the next ten minutes and we’ll make a plan. In the meantime, I’m heading your way on the next flight, but I’m a good twenty-four hours out. I hate to leave you twisting in the wind until I get there, but I can’t get there any quicker. Are you good to go?”
“Good to go,” Li said. “But, John, there’s one other thing. It’s sensitive.”
“Put it in the text,” Clark said. “Location first, then details. Talk to you in ten…”
And they had talked at great length, coming up with a plan to lure Kang into the open. It had worked, partly, at least.
Clark retrieved the cameras from above the Riverwalk. Now it was time to go hunting.
Twenty nautical miles from the LHD — a little over two minutes after Skeet’s F-35 left the deck — he turned to look to his left, utilizing his helmet display and the six cameras mounted outside the jet to look “through” the skin of his airplane and get a visual on his wingman. The helmet itself cost the Marine Corps an astonishing four hundred thousand dollars per unit. It was an insane amount, but considering all the tech crammed into one of the things, it seemed to Skeet to be worth every penny.
Three minutes ago he overflew the mocked-up Chinese destroyer, making sure all personnel who’d removed the covers and camouflage from the superstructure were long gone. He’d been given the all-clear but wanted to take the extra few seconds to put eyes on himself before he pulled any triggers.
Schmidt’s voice crackled over the radio.
“Come again?” Skeet said.
“Everything check out?”
Skeet added throttle, making a wide four-minute turn that took him thirty miles northwest of the target vessel. He didn’t want to shoot with the
Sensors and cameras on board the mocked-up destroyer would record impact data and send it back to the
Skeet used his index finger on the glass panel to access his weapons stores and highlight the LRASM. He opened the bay doors.
Admiral Peck gave the command to fire.
Missile selected, Skeet said, “Pickle,” and pulled the trigger. “Weapon awa—”
His plane hit the same sort of downdraft Schmidt had experienced earlier, shuddered momentarily, then resumed straight and level flight. “Three minutes—”
The jet shuddered again. The glass panel with all his instruments went dark. The visor display in his helmet clicked off, leaving him virtually blind.
In cases like this, altitude was your friend. He pulled back on the stick, only to have the aircraft pitch violently, nose-down, entering the beginning of a spin. Compensating, he pushed the stick forward. The airplane did exactly the opposite of what it was supposed to do. He pulled back again, applying enough rudder to come out of the spin, going against all his training to push the stick forward and climb. He fought the urge to call for help. Aviate, navigate, communicate. There was nothing Schmidt could do for him, anyway. The ship would have him on radar, so if he went down — which was becoming more and more likely — they’d know where to come looking for him.