“Shit,” Kiawak swore and spat on the ground, “Herman’s probably dead. I see someone else driving his Ford. Now the sons of bitches have another airplane and two choppers, besides the one they flew in and they’re heavily armed.”
He counted up to fifty silhouettes, mostly in winter fatigues, each brandishing an assault rifle. He tossed his binoculars on the passenger’s seat of his Toyota and plodded for the truck box. Their small convoy of five vehicles was parked next to a small ice hill, which seemed to provide them sufficient cover from the airstrip.
“What are you doing?” Joe followed him.
“I’m out for revenge, what do you think I’m doing?” Kiawak lifted the black tarpaulin cover, pulling out one of the Let Støttevåben machine guns.
“You’re gonna just run down there and kill everyone?”
“Save it, Joe. I’m not gonna stay here and wait.”
He slammed a 100-round C-Mag drum into the receiver and pulled back the bolt. His action slid a round from the magazine into the gun’s chamber. The weapon was ready. All Kiawak had to do was tap the safety switch, which he did with a flick of his finger.
“We need a plan.” Joe blocked Kiawak’s path, who sidestepped around him and went through a tall heap of snow. “We need a strategy.”
“We don’t have time for that.” Kiawak turned around. “We planned our defenses at the inlet and see what happened?”
“That’s because we had the wrong place. Now we know where the enemy is.”
“I’m going downhill,” Kiawak shouted at the other eight men, who were standing quietly around their vehicles. “Who’s coming with me?”
“Kiawak, you’re a hunter. Think like a hunter,” Joe said. “This is like chasing a polar bear.”
“Yes, kind of. Here we have our chase dogs, our snowmobiles, and then hunters surround the polar bear. Oh, wait, we can’t really surround these sons of bitches because they completely outnumber us.” Kiawak raised his voice as he spurted out his last words.
“My point is that you need hunters, you need many people for a successful kill. We’ve got to wait for Justin and the rest of our men.”
“How far are they?” Kiawak asked after a deep sigh.
“Can you check how long until they’re here?” Joe called at one of the men.
“We can stop their advancement. We can do this.” Kiawak took his binoculars and glanced at the airstrip. Then, he spat on the ground.
“What now?” Joe asked.
“More black flies scattering around the runway. I’d love to swat the bastards.” Kiawak pointed his weapon at one of the Danes and gently stroked its metallic trigger.
“Even if everyone was here, they’re still out of range for our guns,” Joe replied, looking thought his own rifle sight. “They’re probably a thousand yards away, maybe even a little more than—”
A metallic bang cut off his words. It sounded like a heavy hammer striking a steel barrel. Joe glanced to the right side of Kiawak’s truck, less than four feet away from his position, and noticed a bullet hole the size of his fist. Before he could say another word, the window glass shattered, spraying a storm of slivers around him.
“Hell,” Joe yelled, dropping into a snowbank. “They may be out of our range, but we’re getting hammered by their snipers.”
“Justin says they’re about two miles and a half south,” a man shouted, while crawling for shelter behind one of the Suburbans.
“That’s maybe five minutes,” Joe said.
“Where’s Carrie?” Kiawak raised his head from the pool of slush where the sniper shots had sent him and ran his eyes over the horizon.
“She’s behind the ice ridge.” Joe pointed to his left. “I guess she anticipated sniper fire.”
“Well, when’s she coming out to fight, ‘cause we—”
He was interrupted by a deafening blast, as the Seahawk arrowed through the sky, a few feet above ground. As it descended over the runway, rapid reports of machine gun fire from the Seahawk began mowing down the Danish vanguard that had begun climbing the hills.
Kiawak saw a few silhouettes falling to the ground. His men shouted battle cries with every rattle of the Seahawk’s weapons.
The air assault lasted for a few seconds and then, as suddenly as it had appeared, the helicopter vanished, taking cover behind the ice hills, a few hundred yards away from the trucks.
“There you go girl,” Kiawak yelled. “Give ‘em hell.”
“What’s the casualty count?” Gunter stomped out of the airport terminal. Yuliya followed two steps behind him.
“We’re still checking, but we’ve confirmed four dead,” Valgerda replied over the radio. She was crouched behind the Hercules’s nose wheels, clutching her assault rifle. “The attack was uncoordinated and—”
“I saw the attack,” Gunter interrupted her, “and how it was or it wasn’t carried out. But how come these idiots have Seahawk choppers? And how the hell do they know of our change of plans?”
Valgerda knew better than to offer a guess.
“We’re setting up positions, sir,” Magnus replied. He was digging up a small trench in the snowbanks by the runway. His men, the foremost unit of the Danish troops, had suffered two casualties, both recruits. “There will be no more surprises.”
“Support sniper fire with machine guns from one of the Bells,” Gunter commanded.
“I’ve got it,” Yuliya said. “Yuri, Alexei, come with me,” she called at two of the guards. They left Gunter’s side and began to jog toward the hangar.
“We’ve got to take that hill. Now!” Gunter said. “I don’t want to get pinned down here while they call in reinforcements.”
“We’ll take the hill, sir,” Magnus replied. “It won’t take long.”
The machine gun rattle greeted Justin even before his convoy took the last couple of turns snaking down the airport road. As soon as they stopped, about thirty yards behind Kiawak’s truck, two bullets struck the hood of their Land Rover.
“Crap,” Justin ducked instinctively. “What the…”
A Bell 204 helicopter was hovering in the sky, to the east of the runway.
“Get out of the car, quick,” Anna shouted.
Justin shoved open his door and crawled behind the Land Rover’s front wheel. He held his M4 carbine with his right hand. Anna sat next to him.
“You’re OK?” Justin asked.
“Yes. I’m good,” she replied.
They stared at the rest of the convoy in front and behind them. People had dismounted their vehicles and were scrambling for cover, alongside their vehicles, in snowbanks or behind the ice hills.
“Ned. Ned,” Justin yelled, as the hammering continued from the Bell’s gunners.
There was no answer.
“I don’t think he can hear you,” Anna replied.
Ned was less than fifty feet away, but the gun blasts made their communication impossible.
Justin’s walkie-talkie chirped. “Yes,” he answered it.
“Hey, Justin,” Kiawak said quickly in a loud voice. “We’re getting slammed here. Your men have any long range guns?”
“No. All we’ve got are assault rifles,” Justin replied. “M4s and the like.”
“Too far. The chopper’s too far away.”
“Half a mile?”
“Yeah, I think so.”
“Has Carrie tried an assault?”
“Yeah, she did. A few minutes ago,” Kiawak said, “but we’re saving her Seahawk for a rainy day.”
“This is a rainy day. It’s hailing bullets.” Justin pressed his back against the Land Rover’s tire.
More rounds clang against his truck and the other vehicles.
Kiawak said, “Yeah, I know Justin, but the battle has just begun.”
“OK, so what do we do now?” Kiawak asked.
Their small group was huddled behind the ice ridge, next to the Seahawk helicopter. Though they had managed to gather together, they had done little to deal with the enemy’s air advantage in the air.
“Well, there are no reinforcements,” Justin said. “So, whatever we plan, it’s entirely up to us to do it.”
“Their strongest points of attack are the snipers and the Bell chopper,” Carrie noted. “Our defenses aren’t gonna hold forever if we don’t eliminate them.”
“Their sniper attacks came from only two positions.” Justin began to draw on a patch of snow. “Here and here.” He stabbed the snow at two points. “One by the terminal and the other to the left of the plane. The chopper usually strikes from the right, with two gunners. But everyone’s beyond our gunfire range.”
“So, we’ve got to get closer,” Anna said.
“That’s easy to say,” Joe replied. “Their snipers have us in their crosshairs at all times. If we attempt to advance, it’s certain death.”
“There’s got to be another way,” Justin said.
Carrie shook her head. “There isn’t. I have to agree with Anna. We need to push forward.”
“But how?” Kiawak asked.
“We need to move at the same time and at the same pace. The Danes have no idea how many men we have. But we know they have no more than two hundred of them. It’s impossible to squeeze more troops in that plane. I propose we begin a slow, motorized attack, one man driving a vehicle, with another one forcing their way in through constant shooting. I’ll cover from the air.”
“Wait a second,” Kiawak said. “The sloped terrain is very difficult for our vehicles, especially SUVs with no rear-wheel drive.”