Killer Elite (previously published as the Feather Men) (20 page)

BOOK: Killer Elite (previously published as the Feather Men)
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“Have you told the police?”

Mason hesitated. “I have no proof … but I know you are in danger. We must meet so I can explain the situation.”

Bailey was impatient now. “Look, I have a very busy day today and it does not include any flying. Quite honestly, I think this is a police matter and you should contact them at once. The earliest I can see you is tomorrow morning and then I’m afraid it must be brief. This is a very busy time of the year for us.”

Mason agreed to meet the police chief at 8:30 a.m. on the Sunday. He spent Saturday morning developing the film shot in the Sumail. Davies was back and using room service for all his meals. Mason was forced to curb his curiosity as to whether the hornets had altered the man’s appearance.

Davies had in fact been lucky: saved only by plunging into a subterranean pool and staying there until the hornets had gone. The Clinic members had split up as soon as Mason went underground. Davies had followed him down the
falaj
but the others had remained above in case their quarry reemerged. Davies had eventually crawled from the pool, but could not see through his swollen eyelids. Hearing his cries, the others had descended and hauled him up on the rope.

They had left Karim Bux’s body in the gravel wastes of the Wadi Umayri, off the Fahud road, for the wolves and vultures. Then they had driven to the Gulf Hotel and helped Davies to his room, where the in-house medic had removed two dozen hornet stings from his face and hands. He would be of no further use to the operation.

Meier had passed a good deal of time in idle conversation with the European ROP aircraft engineers. Milling, he learned, was highly regarded and nearly always nominated as pilot-instructor to the police cadets on their first helicopter flights. Meier had decided therefore to go ahead with the operation that night since three cadet flights were planned for the following morning.

Meier and two Joannou and Pariskavides contract
workers spent the morning installing ducting for a new intercom system within the ROP hangar. All normal duty personnel left by 1:30 p.m. Only three people would remain: the Operations officer who left at 6 p.m., and two engineers, one fixed-wing and the other a helicopter specialist, who covered the afternoon shift. They would spend their time continuing tasks left over from the morning shift and preparing the aircraft for the following day’s flying program, including, that day, twenty minutes checking the Bell to be flown by Milling. Just a standard inspection of oil levels and control integrity.

Meier and his two J&P colleagues worked on during the afternoon, concentrating on the intercom installation and leaving the two engineers to do their work. There was no flying that afternoon, and by 4 p.m. the engineers had completed the daily inspections and preparing the aircraft for the next day’s program and left. Meier was relieved to see them go. He had delegated the relatively simple task of fixing the ducting to his two Indian coworkers while he worked separately, sorting out some wiring in another room. Soon after the Air Wing engineers had left he suggested to the two J&P workers that they might wrap it up, but he would stay on for another half hour or so to finish what he was doing. Meier told them to take the J&P pickup and said that he would get a lift with the Ops officer to the airport roundabout and hitch from there.

By 4:30 p.m. he had let the Operations officer know that the J&P workers were leaving. After making sure they were off the premises, he went down to the general workshop underneath the Operations Room, laid a mat on the floor, closed the door and fell asleep. His wristwatch alarm was set for 7 p.m.

At 5:30 p.m. Meier was woken by a metallic clanking. At the far side of the well-lit workshop a tall man was checking through an engineer’s toolbox. Meier recognized
Brendan O’Brien, one of the aerobatic aces of the Rothmans flying team, on a visit from England. Their four Pitt Special biplanes were parked inside the hangar and O’Brien was probably carrying out some repair to his machine.

Meier remained motionless, uncertain whether he had been seen. He was worried on two counts. Chief Superintendent Bailey was holding a buffet supper party that evening, to which the Rothmans people had been invited. If O’Brien had seen him, he might well mention the fact to Chief Bailey. If, on the other hand, O’Brien intended to work overnight on his biplane, Meier’s own plans would be scuppered.

After an hour or so Meier heard O’Brien laughing with the Duty Operations Officer and then the sounds of their leaving the hangar. He double-checked that he was alone in the building, then climbed the stairs to the executive corridor and the Operations Room, where he checked the daily roster board. For the following day, March 20, the main duty was marked up as “Police Cadet Helicopter Familiarization Flights,” with Milling’s name entered as pilot-instructor. The first take-off of three separate flights by that machine was scheduled for 8 a.m., but he knew the flight engineers would arrive at least an hour earlier to check and prepare the machine. Meier had twelve hours to himself. A single armed guard patrolled the compound at night, but he would only enter the hangar if given reason for suspicion.

Meier stripped off his clothes and donned an ROP set of engineer’s blue overalls with tactile gloves and flip-flops. He then placed his tools and instruments on a trolley and wheeled it to the machine with the correct tail number. His plan was simple enough. He would create a mechanical defect, and Milling would crash, but the event would be blamed on pilot error, not sabotage.

Meier eased himself upward from the hangar floor
and into the innards of the machine by way of the heavy rubberized ring that protects the helicopter from the pendulum motions of the swinging cargo hook. The hook itself was not fitted. If it had been, Meier would have had to work on top of the helicopter’s roof by removing the gear box cowling in full view of any surprise visitor to the hangar.

Once inside the area known to most helicopter aficionados as the “hellhole,” Meier used the rubberized bumper as a conveniently placed seat. He carefully positioned himself in the rear left-hand side of the hellhole with his back against the apex of that corner. Reaching upward, he hooked a fluorescent inspection lamp over a hydraulic ingress pipe and strapped his ready tool bag around his waist.

Oman is relatively cool in mid-March, and the hangar, despite the lack of air-conditioning, would remain around sixty-four degrees most of the night. Inside the hellhole, Meier worked in a cramped position and was soon smeared with grease impregnated with grit and dirt.

The hydraulic system of the Augusta Bell 205 A-1, a civilian version of the Vietnam-famed Huey, has two oil reservoirs feeding three hydraulic actuators or “jacks.” Each of these cylinders is attached to the gear box and to the nonrotating star that is situated on the mast and beneath the rotor head.

The jack that Meier intended to doctor was the one that assisted the pilot’s collective control level, the function of which was to lift the aircraft in its vertical plane.

The Bell maintenance manual made it clear that the relevant cylinder was situated to the rear and left-hand side of the static gear-box body. Meier located the hydraulic input pipe where it entered the collective jack and, using two open-jaw 5/8 AF spanners, disconnected the mating union and blocked off both pipe ends with
blanking caps. There was a slight seepage of MIL-H-5606 hydraulic fluid from the jack, which Meier mopped up with a rag.

After resting his arms for a while and adjusting his spectacles Meier began the search for a lee-plug. In the casing of each cylinder there were four or five steel bungs, or lee-plugs, originally drilled so that the manufacturers could carry out interior fitments. Each hole was only 3mm in diameter, and since the head of each bolt had been chamfered flush with the cylinder wall and then sprayed with a light green paint, Meier realized that he might not find a lee-plug by touch alone. If unsuccessful he would sound-tap, but that was a time-consuming process.

After a number of false alarms he got lucky, locating a bung almost opposite his position and fairly low down the face of the cylinder. Between the lee-plug and the inner side of the hellhole’s bulkhead there was a gap of some nine inches in which Meier had to work; a challenge of the sort he loved best. Manipulating a right-angled drill head with a 3mm-diameter tungsten-steel bit, he removed the plug with total precision. This task alone took him two hours, for he had to ensure that no metal detritus entered the jack.

With painstaking care he tapped a thread into the wall of the hole he had exposed, greased it and screwed in his own homemade lee-plug. This steel bolt was a mere quarter millimeter longer than a standard 4mm-long lee-plug and, to the eye, no different in size or shape.

Meier’s substitute lee-plug had at this stage two important ancillary features: an alloy male thread welded around its entire length, like a coil around a magnetic bar, and a 2mm-square steel nut with a hole drilled through its center. The threaded lee-plug screwed into the hole in the nut for a distance of 0.25mm, the limit of
the nut’s female threading. The nut was 1.5mm in depth and two small holes had been drilled into two of its opposing outer sides.

The skin of the hydraulic cylinder was itself 4mm thick. Meier tightened his two-part lee-plug into place using a torque spanner to avoid wrenching the alloy thread loose from its steel core. Then, producing his second homemade device, he placed it over the square nut so that male plungers in its base slotted home into the small holes drilled in the nut’s outer sides. The end of an open steel tube protruding from the base of the device entered the hole in the top of the nut with precision.

The apparatus was a miniature explosive hammer with just enough power to focus a 3,000 psi blow directly onto the cuckoo lee-plug, sheering its alloy thread and forcing it down into the oil-filled cylinder. The device measured four inches square and three inches deep. Its explosive unit contained a hollow ring primed with a fraction of an ounce of treated PE4 and a Kaynor .008 detonator no bigger than a grease nipple. Slightly raised on the unit’s upper surface was a Seiko micro timerswitch. Meier had preset its twenty-four-hour alarm trigger, using the end of his ballpoint pen, for 1005 hours, at which time the helicopter was scheduled to be in flight with its load of police cadets.

With the device locked onto the bolt head, Meier positioned his third and last contrivance, a six-inch-square, two-inch-deep, pad of bulletproof Kevlar that clipped over the rest of his appliance. This would minimize damage to the inner wall of the bulkhead and help ensure that, once blown, all traces of the apparatus and the steel nut would fall down the hellhole and hit the ground well away from the subsequent crash site. The only item left behind by Meier would be the lee-plug, and that would be
inside
the punctured cylinder.

Meier knew by listening to the ROP engineers that
Milling was a well-respected pilot and one who believed student-training flights should be realistic, low-flying “events to remember.” He estimated that some four or five seconds after the induced hydraulic leak, the helicopter would become accident-prone. The very next time the pilot attempted to pull out of a hedge-hopping routine he would find the collective control no longer gave the required instant response to gentle pressure. Suddenly there would be severe handling problems, not insuperable under normal high-flying conditions, but lethal in the wrong circumstances.

Meier spent another two hours recoupling the input pipe and cleaning up every sign of his presence. Very little hydraulic fluid had been lost, perhaps a quarter of a pint, and this would not be noticed. No topping up would be required. There would, Meier knew, be air in the pipelines, but the system would self-bleed as soon as the steering column was moved during preflight checks.

There was no shortage of rags and kerosene in the workshop, and by 4 a.m. Meier was scrubbed clean and dozing in the lavatory with a dozen greasy copies of
Flight International
magazine for company.

18

Cha Cha brought tea and gently woke John Milling.

“Six o’clock, sah’b.”

“Thank you, Cha Cha.” John smiled at the thought of the day ahead. “We go to beach today. Okay? You make us picnic. We take Oliver. You have free afternoon. Okay?”

The Kashmiri spoke little Arabic and even less English. “Okay, fine, sah’b. Excellent picnic but not today.”

“Not today?” John’s eyebrows rose.

“Not today.” The albino’s thin eyebrows mimicked John’s. “Today you fly helicopter. Telephone call from headquarters … so I bring you early cha.”

Milling’s heart sank. The bloody office had changed the duty roster again.

In deference to the Kashmiri he flung his
wizaar
about his middle and stomped to the telephone. A few angry words with the Duty Operations Officer confirmed his worst fears. Richard Shuttleworth or one of the others had been taken off cadet training and now his Sunday was ruined. Bridgie was surprisingly mild in her reaction. After they were all dressed and breakfasted he drove her and Oliver the short distance to the Royal Flight swimming pool and told her he hoped to be back for lunch. They were both disappointed by the dashing of their plans. John suspected a last-minute request by the Cadet
Training Major that Milling, and only Milling, be in charge of the familiarization flights purely because he spoke fluent Arabic, whereas his brother pilots spoke little or none.

He drove to Air Wing HQ deep in thought. While still adamant that no word should reach Bridgie of the attempt on his life, if that is what it was, he was distinctly worried lest the two nutters show up again when she and Oliver were at home during the four or five days that remained before their leave in Europe. He made up his mind to see a discreet friend of his, a major in the local Criminal Investigation Department. Maybe some unobtrusive surveillance of his house could be arranged just for these four days. Yes, he would fix it first thing tomorrow.

At 7:20 a.m. Meier called Davies. Local anesthetic cream had eased his discomfort but he was relieved to hear de Villiers’s instructions, since he was bored stiff with the confines of the Gulf Hotel. He was to arrange three separate bookings for the earliest available flights, De Villiers to Amsterdam and the two of them to Paris.

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