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of trust in him." Michael felt Kate's gaze snap toward him with that.

Barbara continued to smile at him. "I'd also remind you, DB, that you're here because you specifically requested this mission. John told me to tell you that if you've changed your mind, he'll arrange to fly in another Committee ace to take your place. Should I tell him to make that call?"

Michael had no good answer for that. They were all staring at him. His fingers tapped his chest involuntarily and the sound of sticks on a hi-hat reverberated in the room. "No," he told Barbara, not daring to look at Kate. "I haven't."

"Good, then," she said. Smiling. "Then we're in agreement. Now, if you'll open your notebooks, we'll look over the initial attack plan . . . ."

I know you hate me,

I know seeing me gives you pain

I don't care, but

You better not try to stop me again

Michael tugged on the cord to pull the earbuds from his ears. The current studio mix of "Stop Me Again" and The Voice's acid voice went to shrill, insectlike piping, to be replaced by the thrup-thrup-thrup of the CH-47 Chinooks' rotors and the shriller whine of fighter jets and attack helicopters farther overhead. Each of the aces had been placed on a separate chopper - Michael declined to consider the obvious logic behind that. He glanced down through the smeared windows and saw the buildings of Kuwait City's southern outskirts below them. His stomach churned; at any moment, he expected to see the bloom of antiaircraft fire, or fighter jets with the insignia of the Caliphate on their wings diving on them, or the fiery stem of an RPG arcing up toward their Chinook from the houses below to bloom in death and fire. He leaned toward Lieutenant Bedeau, with thick earphones over his blue helmet. "Anything?" he half shouted.

Lieutenant Bedeau - in command of the troops in Michael's chopper - shook his head and gave a thumbs-up. It did nothing to reassure him.

Taking Kuwait International couldn't be easy. At any second, it was all going to go to hell. Michael knew it. He could feel it. Any second now, he was going to hear the chatter of machine guns and the sinister thrump of mortars. Helicopters would be pinwheeling down to crash to the tarmac. There were going to be explosions and smoke choking the air, and blood. Too much blood.

They dipped and turned sharply, and Michael's eyes widened. Below, he could see the concrete lines of the airport, coming up fast toward them. A couple of the flotilla of choppers had already landed alongside the main terminal, and he felt their own craft touch down. No chatter of guns. No explosions. The rear door of the Chinook slammed open, letting in a wash of harsh light and swirling sand. "Go! Go! Go!" Lieutenant Bedeau shouted in French-accented English, waving his arms. The cord of the headphones jiggled heavily. "Move!"

It's gonna happen now. Now.

The troopers from his Chinook piled out from the rear ramp in a quick, nervous double line, fingers caressing the triggers of FAMAS G2 automatic weapons. There was no answering gunfire. There was no resistance at all: no Caliphate soldiers eager to defend the airport, no tanks clanking toward them, no fighter jets dropping bombs, no RPGs streaking red death. No Islamic aces. Nothing.

Yet, DB reminded himself. He was lugging two M-16 rifles himself, one in each set of his four lowest arms. A custom-made armored vest was pulled tight around his heavily muscled, tattooed body, and he wore one of the blue helmets over his shaved head. He was the last one out, hitting the ground under the wash of chopper blades and blinking at the gritty sand that still managed to get past the plastic goggles.

The landscape was dun dotted with green, pinned under a vicious, relentless sun. Back in the desert. Fucking lovely.

Around the tarmac, the rest of the Chinooks had also landed, UN troops spilling out like blue-capped coffee beans from broken bags, the aces of the Committee team - one to each chopper - following them: Lohengrin and Rusty, who like Michael might also be having flashbacks to Egypt; Barbara Baden; Tinker.

And Kate. Michael waved to her - a hundred yards away. She waved back perfunctorily. The dry air felt cloying, as if somehow, impossibly, a thunderstorm was about to break. He hoped not too many people were going to die when that happened.

"DB!" Lieutenant Bedeau was gesturing at him. "Let's

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