
"Thank you, Yvette," Mr. Phillips said. "Your timing, as usual, is impeccable." Nonchalantly she wiped
the blood from her blade on the wide, glossy leaf of a rubber plant and glided the stiletto back into her belt.
Rusty paid no attention to the encounter, still staring toward the white rocket on the launchpad. "We
should've just had Mory use one of his Stinger missiles, like we did in China. We could be back on the
beach by now, having a swim. Definitely." He gave a short, high laugh.
Mr. Phillips spoke to him the way a patient father would. Unlike the other members of the team, Rusty
was not a professional, and Mr. Phillips had to cut him some slack. "Different goals, Rusty. We proved in
China that we can slip into a highly restricted area. Here, we must demonstrate that we can plant an
explosive surreptitiously and detonate it at our convenience."
"But why not blow it up now, while the rocket's still on the pad? Why wait until it launches?" Rusty
swatted at another bug.
Mr. Phillips shook his head. "By waiting, we control the situation. Much greater impact. . . much more
exhilarating."
"Yeah, sure," Rusty said, obviously not understanding the nuances—but then, the redhead wasn't paid to
think. "I just want to hear the ka-boom."
As blond as Jacques, Yvette strode on her long legs over to meet him by the Jeep. Two sets of
water-blue eyes, the color of ice melting in the heat, locked together. The pair spoke quietly in French;
Yvette ran a hand up and down Jacques's arm. They then kissed each other long and hard, oblivious to the
rest of the team. Breathing quickly, their mouths opened as they deepened the kiss with lingering tongues.
Jacques let his fingers drift in a tightening circle around the swell of her right breast.
Mr. Phillips clapped his hands. "Time enough for that later!"
The two broke apart, glazed with perspiration and breathing shallowly.
"Let's keep an eye on the clocks, everybody," Mr. Phillips said. "Less than a minute to go."
The Toucan VIP Observation Site at the Kourou launch facility was designed to accommodate
dignitaries, but Colonel Adam "Iceberg" Friese didn't see it as anything more than a set of bleachers shaded
by a canvas awning. Dust, humidity, and glaring sun made sitting on the aluminum bleachers almost
unbearable.
It didn't matter to him, though—he had been through far greater hardships as an astronaut. Now, he
was more interested in seeing the spectacular launch of the Ariane 44L.
But what made him far more uncomfortable than the heat or the rustic conditions was the petite woman
sitting next to him—a powerhouse inside a pretty, trim exterior. Her short brown-gold hair, though tinged
with perspiration in the thick humidity, was still styled just so, her makeup perfect. In his memories of her,
she rarely wore makeup. Now she looked every bit the administrator, working her way up the professional
ladder.
"At least you're managing to keep a smile on your face, Iceberg," Nicole Hunter said quietly out of the
corner of her mouth.
"I'm here representing my fellow astronauts," he answered, his voice cold. Like an iceberg. She herself
had been one of those astronauts, and a Naval aviator, to boot—until her recent change of heart. "It's my
obligation as a professional."
"Yeah, we're both such professionals." She wore a colorful but conservative cotton blouse and skirt,
panty hose that must have been hot as hell in the Tropics—with earrings and a delicate gold necklace, for
God's sake.
In the years he had known her, even in their most intimate moments, Iceberg had never thought of
buying her jewelry. That had never been "Panther" 's style.
No, he pictured her in sweats, jogging with him for their morning workout... or dressed in an astronaut
jumpsuit in the simulators at Johnson Space Center, her dark eyes squinting at the controls, mechanically
reacting as problem after problem was tossed at her in the sims. She and Iceberg had been the best: part of
a team, confident of being selected for a shuttle mission . . . soon. It had been enough of a shock when she
had resigned her Navy commission to become a civilian astronaut.
But then Nicole had changed her mind and gone "VFR direct"— visual flight rules—into NASA
management, returning from a six-month special MBA program, and at Harvard, of all places! A new
golden girl on a fast track to become Launch Director for an upcoming flight. And Iceberg had been picked
to command the shuttle crew without her.
A staticky announcement in garbled French came over bullhorns mounted on towers near the
bleachers. Iceberg couldn't understand a word of it, but he could watch the blinking numbers of the
countdown clock as well as anyone. Not long now.
He fidgeted on the uncomfortable bleacher, sweating in his suit, but vowing not to let it show. At least