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The man shouted orders in Tibetan. The Dungkarsoldiers lined up in rows. He explained what Seng had relayed, then ordered six sergeants to the forefront. Then one group led by a sergeant went off to round up the prisoners. Another split off to the helicopter Kasim had left.

“Hali,” Seng shouted, “take these men and wire the other hangars to blow if we need to.”

Kasim motioned to the troops and raced back to the helicopter.

The Bell that had carried Seng and King to the airfield was now unloaded. King motioned for it to lift off. The pilot ascended to one thousand feet over the field and then began to fly in large lazy circles. Two more touched down, and Crabtree and Gannon climbed out.

“What’s your name?” Seng shouted to the leader of the Dungkar.

“Rimpoche, Pache Rimpoche.”

Gannon and Crabtree raced over.

“Carl,” Seng said, “this is General Rimpoche. Tell him what you need.”

Gannon walked a few feet away to where they could hear better and explained. Rimpoche summoned a sergeant and a dozen men raced off.

“I need the supplies unloaded and taken inside,” Crabtree said to Seng, who pointed to Rimpoche.

“General Rimpoche,” he said, motioning to the man, “will take care of it.”

Seng unclipped a portable radio from his belt and switched it on, then spoke.

“Airport is under our control,” he said to Hanley on the Oregon. “What do you see?”

Hanley studied the satellite image on the screen before answering. “No troop movement yet—but if they do come, it will be from the road that enters from the east. There is what looks like a bridge about three-quarters of a mile toward Lhasa. Control that, and you’ll be able to make a stand if necessary.”

“No planes or helicopter activity?” Seng asked.

“None,” Hanley said. “Anything not on the ground there is far to the north. Even if they called them back now, you have an hour or so.”

“Good,” Seng said as Meadows walked up. “Reach me by portable if the situation changes.”

“We’re on full alert,” Hanley said. “It all comes down to the next few hours.”

Seng clipped the radio back on his belt and turned to Meadows. “Bob, take fifty troops and your weaponry down that road,” he said, pointing. “There’s a bridge we need to control.”

“Who’s in charge from their side?” Meadows asked.

“General Rimpoche,” Seng said, pointing to the man.

At that instant, three trucks slowly drove in front of the terminal and were motioned to stop by Gannon. At the same time, Tom Reyes walked over.

“General?” Seng shouted.

Rimpoche approached. “Yes?”

“I need four of your best men, crack shots and fearless.”

Rimpoche turned and shouted out names to the cluster of troops. Four men emerged from the crowd. Not one of the men was over five feet six. Dripping wet, not one of them could have weighed over 150 pounds.

“Do any of them speak English?” Seng asked.

“All of them do a little,” Rimpoche said.

“Tell them this,” Seng said. “They will be going into Lhasa with two of my men to capture a very important man. They need to do exactlywhat my men tell them—without hesitation.”

Rimpoche translated.

As soon as he had finished, the four men shouted “Huh” and stomped one foot on the tarmac.

“You have your file?” Seng asked Reyes.

“Yes, sir,” Reyes said.

King was a short distance away, removing a long black case from a crate. “Okay, Larry,” Seng shouted, “you and Tom can go do your thing.”

Holding a set of night-vision goggles, King walked over. “Let’s do it,” he said.

Reyes motioned to the four Tibetans, who were eagerly waiting. “We’re going to grab someone, and we’re going to do it with a minimum of shooting—do you men understand?”

“I speak fair English,” one of the soldiers said. “I’ll translate.”

He reiterated what Reyes had said, then turned. “Which helicopter?”

“This way,” Reyes said, leading them back to the helicopter he had just climbed off. King followed the four Tibetans, and once they were seated inside, the helicopter lifted off and headed into the center of town.

“Who are they after?” Rimpoche asked.

“The chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region, Legchog Zhuren.”

The last helicopter was on the ground, and Huxley walked over.

“This is our medical officer,” Seng said to Rimpoche. “Poll your troops and see if any of your men have any experience as doctors or nurses—if so, we need them to work with Julia here. Right now, however, we need that helicopter unloaded and the contents carried inside the terminal. Ms. Huxley will be setting up a field hospital immediately. If any of your men were injured or wounded, she’ll treat them shortly.”

Rimpoche shouted orders and men raced to the helicopter to unload. Adams and Gunderson were standing to the side, waiting for Seng to finish. He turned and smiled.

“You two go see what the Chinese have that we can use,” Seng said. “I need to interrogate a prisoner.”

The two pilots ambled off toward the hangars. Seng walked inside to where a Chinese air force lieutenant was sitting in a chair in the middle of the terminal with four fierce-looking Tibetan soldiers surrounding him.

41

“DAMN nice scenery,” Murphy noted, glancing out the window. “Like Alaska on steroids.”

Gurt was watching the altitude gauge as they climbed higher toward the imposing ridge of mountains just ahead. The sun had yet to peek over the horizon, but her coming was heralded by the pink glow being cast over the rugged terrain.

“We could probably claim the helicopter altitude record,” Gurt said.

“I don’t think so,” Murphy said. “Some guy went to twenty-four thousand feet a couple of years ago to perform a Himalayan rescue.”

“I read about that,” Gurt said, “but that was in a Bell 206. And it had special rotor blades.”

“You sound a little worried,” Murphy said.

“Not worried,” Gurt said, “just apprehensive.”

He pointed out the front windshield at the wall approaching. The trees were petering out as they drew nearer. Now there was only the black and gray of rocks streaked with tendrils of snow and ice that dripped down the sides of the imposing mountain like rivulets of ice cream on a child’s hand. A gust of wind buffeted the helicopter, blowing it sideways. Clouds started to appear around the Bell. Gurt stared at the gauge again.

It read eighteen thousand feet and climbing.

THE helicopter carrying Reyes, King and the Dungkarforces came in twenty feet above the ground and approached Lhasa from the south. The sound from the Lhasa River helped cover the noise as the pilot landed on a small spit of sand in the river just east of what the Chinese referred to as Dream Island, formerly an idyllic picnic spot now replaced by tacky Chinese shops and karaoke bars.

“Unload the crates,” Reyes shouted to the Dungkar.

As soon as the crates were unloaded and King had exited, they all raced a short distance away and crouched down to avoid the blast of sand from the rotor wash as the helicopter quickly lifted off and raced downriver. Once the helicopter was out of sound and sight, Reyes opened a small satchel and removed a parabolic dish for listening. Quickly switching it on, he listened for the sound of alarms in the city. He heard only the sound of the river.

Nodding, he whispered to one of the Tibetans, “Look.”

Prying a crate open, he pointed. It was a box of Tibetan flags, which had long ago been banned by the Chinese oppressors. The flags featured a snow lion with red and blue rays. The man bent down and touched the pile gingerly, and when he rose to look at Reyes, his eyes were filled with tears.