Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
two. Rita didn’t know his real name, just his call
sign, Blue One.
“Old Rover, this is Blue One. I want you
to hold four minutes out while we get some ordnance
on this LZ. It’s sizzling hot.”
“Old Rover, Roger.”…Rita keyed the intercom.
“Okay, Crash, do a holding pattern.”
“How come we got the hot LZ”…”…CRASH wanted
to know.
“Just lucky, I guessea”…Rita replied, and
selected an intercom button that would allow her
to talk to the lieutenant in the cargo bay with his
troops.
Asel Tyvek and Jamail Ali were side by side
in the ditch, just thirty yards or so from the barn. The
other two members of the team were also in the ditch, but
well left and right.
“We ought to get in the barnea”…Ali whispered, “in
case the Cubans want to get in there too.”
“Man, those little boards ain’t gonna
protect anybody from anything. You just be ready in
case the Cubans start diving into this damned ditch with
us.”
“Listen, I can hear our guys coming.”
Tyvek strained his ears. Yep, he could just detect
the distinctive beat of chopper rotors. “Snake
One, Blue Oneea”…he whispered into his radio.
“Cuban troops all around the barn. At least
two tanks, eight or nine trucks, a couple
hundred men. We’re in a ditch near the barn.”
“Got your head down?”
“Yeah.”
Tyvek could hear the choppers distinctly now. He
eased his weapon up, put his finger on the safety.
The Cubans were going to be looking for cover very
shortly, and he didn’t want to share the ditch.
The SuperCobras eased up over the tree line,
barely moving. Tyvek knew what was going to happen
next, and it did. He heard the roar as
Hellfire antiarmor missiles screamed toward
the tanks, and he heard the explosions as they hit.
He lifted his head above the ditch line for a quick
peek. The tanks were smoking hulks. Even as he
watched, more missiles tore into the trucks.
377
Not a standing figure could be seen. Everyone was on the
ground, crawling or lying still.
The two SuperCobras came closer. The noise
of their engines was quite plain now. The flex
three-barreled 20mm cannons opened up and
rockets shot forward from the pylons under the stubby
wings.
The men in the yard realized they couldn’t stay where they
werethe area was a killing zone. Some jumped up and
ran for the ditch. Fortunately few of them seemed
to have weapons in their handsthe attack had caught them
by surprise.
“Here they comeea”…Tyvek shouted, and opened up on the
men closest to the ditch. He couldn’t shoot them fast
enough. Men dashed for the cover of the ditch as he and
Ali and the other two poured fire into them and the
SuperCobras lashed the area with ordnance.
Tyvek spoke into the voice-activated mike on
his helmet-mounted radio. “We’re gonna need
some help, Old Rover. Whenever you can get here.”
Something heavy fell across Tyvek’s legs. He
spun and fired at the same time, but the man was already
dead: Ali had shot him.
“They’re going into the barnff”…Ali shouted. He fired
a whole magazine at three men trying
to get through the front door. One of the men disappeared
inside.
Jamail Ali scrambled over the edge of the ditch and
ran for the barn while Tyvek screamed at the
SuperCobra gunners not to shoot him.
“Snake One Four, this is Orange
One.”…Richard Merriweather let go of the mike and
waited for an answer from the SuperCobra inbound
to silo six.
“Orange One, Snake One Four.”
“Man, we’re on the wrong side of this river or
How about seeing if you can find us.”
“Are you standing up?”
“In plain sight.”
Merriweather and his partner, Kirb Handy, stepped
away from the trees. With their night-vision goggles,
the SuperCobra crewmen should have no trouble seeing
two men standing in an open field, and they didn’t.
Both the helicopters settled to earth and the marines
on the ground ran to them.
The pilot of the lead chopper opened his canopy as
Merriweather ran over. “Where are the other guys?”
“Haven’t seen them or talked to them. Don’t
know.”
“Seen any bad guys?”
“Nope. How about a ride over toward the barn?”
“Sit on the skid and grab hold. We run
into trouble, you gotta get off if we drop down
low.”
Merriweather gave the pilot a thumbs-up and
arranged himself on the skid. Handy was clinging to the
skid on the other side.
The chopper came slowly into a hover, then dipped
its nose and began moving forward. Merriweather held
on for dear life as the rotor downwash and
slipstream tore at his clothing, helmet, and gear,
and threatened to rip the night vision goggles from his
head.
What a stupid idea this was! How in hell had
they ended up four miles south of the goddamned landing
zone? If he ever again laid eyes on that son of a
bitch who flew the Here, he was going to stomp his
ass.
Bryne and McCormickthose two were missing.
If they were okay surely they would have checked in on
the radio. Maybe their parachutes didn’t open.
Maybe they fell into that river. Maybe the
Cubans captured them as soon as they hit the
ground. Maybe, maybe, maybe…
He could see the barn now. The chopper was just a few
feet above the trees, making an approach to the area
right in front of the damn thing. The other chopper was
flying over the trees, three or four hundred
yards awayclose, but not too close.
Nobody in sight around the barn. Not a soul.
Merriweather jumped when the chopper was three feet
off the ground, and fell on his face. He got up,
staggered out from under the rotor blast.
Handy appeared at his elbow.
The glow of a cigarette tip showed in the door.
Someone sitting there!
Merriweather froze, his M-16 at the ready.
A marine sat in the open door smoking d
cigarette. His face and neck were coated with green
and brown camo grease. His helmet and night-vision
goggles lay in the dirt beside him.
Merriweather walked over to the man, who said, “No
one around.”
“Where’s Bryne?”
McCormick nodded toward the east. “Over there about
a hundred yards. Parachute streamed, backup
didn’t open.”
“Your radio?”
“Broke. Bryne’s got smashed.”…McCormick
stood, took a last drag on the cigarette, and
tossed it away. “Been sitting here waiting for you.
The place is deserted, quiet as a graveyard.”
“Too bad about Bryne.”
“Left two little kids. Too fucking bad.”
The interior of the barn was large, empty, and dark.
Merriweather used a flashlight, looked in eve
caret you corner, inspected the ceiling, the floor,
the nooks and crannys.
Then he spoke into his boom microphone.
“Let’s get the Osprey into the LZ, set up a
perimeter.”
Through her night-vision goggles, Rita Moravia
could see the silo two landing zone and the hovering
SuperCobras plain as day as she made her
approach in the Osprey. She saw bodies lying
everywhere, still-warm bodies radiating heat, and she
saw living men. She transitioned to hovering flight
and lowered the Osprey toward the ground between the
choppers. A cloud of dirt and dust rose up,
obscuring everything. She went on instruments.
On the intercom she told the lieutenant to get
ready.
As soon as the wheels hit, the marines in
back charged out the door of the Osprey and kept right
on going for fifty yards, when they went down on their
stomachs with their rifles at the ready.
Rita didn’t wait to see what was going to happen
next. As soon as her crew chief said the last
marine was out, she lifted the Osprey into the air,
climbed straight up out of the dust cloud and only then
began the transition to winged flight.
The lieutenant was named Charlie Herron, and he
had his orders. His primary responsibility was
to ensure that the missile in that silo never left the
ground. As his feet hit the ground, he flopped on
his belly and waited while the roaring Osprey
climbed away. When the dust began to clear, he
spotted the barn and went for it on a run.
Bodies and body parts lay scattered everywhere. The
living men he passed sat in the dirt with empty
hands reaching for the sky. Herron shouted over the
radio, “Cease-fire, cease-fire. They are
surrendering.”
Inside the barn he found Asel Tyvek standing over
a dead Cuban.
“Over here, Lieutenant. I think this wooden thing
is a door.”
Tyvek and Herron opened the wooden
door, which revealed a steel door with built-in
combination lock. “Think there’s anybody in
there”…”…Herron asked. After all, Tyvek had been
here longer than he had.
“I don’t know, sir.”
“Well, we gotta get in there. Let’s blow the
door.”
A charge of C-4 took less than a minute
to rig. The two men took cover behind a wooden
stall.
The explosion was sharp, a metallic wham that rang
their ears.
The demolition charge cut the lock clean out of the
door and warped it. The two men pried the door
open. A stairway lit by naked light bulbs led
away downward. Herron
and Tyvek took off their night-vision goggles and
let them dangle around their necks. With Herron in
the lead with his pistol in his hand, the two of them
descended the stairway.
Aboard
United States
Jake Grafton was getting the blowby-blow
update. Air Intelligence officers annotated
the maps and briefers told him of every
report from the silos. “Heavy firefight around
silos one and two.”"…ationo opposition at sites
four, five and six.”"…Ospreys on the ground at
sites two, three, and four.”"…SeaCobra hit and
in trouble at site one.”"Team leader into silo
two.”…”…Recon leader into silo six.”
Each report was entered on a checklist: there were
eight of them, one for each silo and dairy site.
First Lieutenant Charlie Herron and Asel
Tyvek found the control room of silo two
empty. A series of stairs and more steel doors
led downward to the bottom of the concrete structure.
The doors weren’t locked. When he opened the last
door, there was the missile towering upward. The shiny,
painted fuselage reflected pinpoints of light from
the naked bulbs arranged around the top and sides of the
concrete silo.
Under the missile was a steel grate over a black
hole. That was the flame pit, to exhaust the flame
and gases when the missile was launched.
A circular steel stairway led up to a
catwalk. From the catwalk it appeared a person
could reach over and gain access to the missile’s
warhead and control panel.
Herron bolstered his pistol and turned
to Sergeant Tyvek. “See if you can figure out a
way to safety this bottle rocket so they can’t
fire it from Havana while I’m working on it.”
“Lieutenant, I’ve got bad news for you. I
don’t know shit about guided missiles.”
“Well, you sure as hell don’t want to be standing
here
with your thumb up your butt if they light this thing off.
Now go look for a switch or something.”
“Yes,
sir”
Tyvek said, and disappeared back up the stairway.
Herron took the steps two at a time. He hoped
he would find what he expected when he got to the
catwalk, although he thought a lot of the old
Russian engineer’s explanation had been pure
bullshit. Somebody had found an engineer in
Russia who said he helped design these
missilesthe guy was hi his eighties. They had him
on television for an hour explaining how the business
end of the missile was put together. The engineer spoke
not a word of English so a translator did the
talking. The man had a hell of a memory or was
lying through his teeth. Herron was about to find out which was the
case.
“If it’s typical Russian stuffea”…the
American briefer said, “you’ll be able to work on it
with pliers and screwdrivers. American designers
could learn a lot from Russian engineers, who
design for ease of maintenance.” They gave each
officer and NCO who might get near a missile
a small tool pouch.
Herron examined the access panel, which was only about
six inches long by six inches high, and curved, a
part of the missile’s skin. The screws holding it
hi place looked like Dzus fasteners. They
weren’t, though: they were plain old screws. Careful
not to drop mem, he unscrewed them one by one and put
the screws hi a shirt pocket. There were a dozen
screws, just like the Russian engineer said. Okay!
So far so good.
Sweat dripped down his nose, ran into his eyes.
He wiped the palms of his hands on his camo pants
and used his sleeve to swab his face, then went back
to twisting the screwdriver. He worked as quickly as he
could. comFinally he took out the last screw.
Carefully, ever so carefully, Herron pulled off
the access panel and laid it on the catwalk by his
feet. He dug a small flashlight from his
pocket. Looking through the access
panel, he could see lots of wires. And a
stainless-steel sphere about the size of a
basketball. That, he concluded, must be the
biological warhead. The missile had been
designed for a nuclear warhead, which would have been round,
so the biological warhead had to go into the same
space. Yet the warhead was too large to come out this
little six-inch access hole.
Charlie Herron reached through the hole to his elbow,
felt upward with his ear against the skin of the missile.
Yes, he could feel the latch. He opened it. Now
down … one there too. Right, then left.
With the last latch open, he pulled at the panel he
had his arm in. It came out in his hand, making a
hole at least twenty inches across. So the engineer
had been telling the truth.
Herron turned to put the panel on the
catwalk… and dropped it.
It fell, striking the side of the missile, finally
landing on the grate at the bottom with a tinny sound,
much like the lid of a garbage can.
Charlie Herron grabbed the rails of the catwalk and
held on to keep from falling.
He wiped his face on his sleeves, the palms of
his hands on his trousers.
Using a pair of wire snips, the lieutenant
began clipping wires, then pulling the ends out of the
way so he could see how the warhead was held in
place.
William Henry Chance and Tommy Carmellini
stepped from their Osprey transport wearing their
CBW suits. Two marines similarly clad
followed them. Each marine carried a cylinder about
six feet long and five inches in diameter
balanced on his shoulder.
Doll Hanna was waiting for them as they approached
the main entrance. “I count five people in the clean
areaea”…he said. “They don’t know we’re here yet.
The aircirculation system is pretty loud.”
Chance went to the partially open door and eased his head
around for a peek. He counted the people inside. Five.
He had been thinking about this moment ever since Jake
Grafton asked him to take out this facility. If
the integrity of the sealed area was broken before the fire
got hot enough to destroy the virus, some of the virus
might escape. If there were any free viruses in
the air inside there, or if one of the culture
trays was broken, intentionally or unintentionally …
How much was some? Who could say?
He pulled his head back, looked at
Doll Hanna, looked at the marines carrying the
cylinders on their shoulders.
Well, it was a hell of a risk. A
hell
of a risk.
Just then William Henry Chance wished he were back
in New York City, eating dinner at a nice
restaurant or preparing a case for trial or
sitting at home with the woman who had shared his life
for the past ten years. Anywhere but here.
“Give me your rifleea”…he said to Hanna, who
handed him. his M-16.
“Is it loaded?”
“Full. Selector is on single shot. This is
the safety.”…Hanna touched it.
“Okayea”…sd William Henry Chance.
He turned to Carmellini. “If worse comes
to worst, you know what to do.”
Carmellini didn’t say anything.
The dumb shit is probably wishing he was safe and
snug in a federal pen,
Chance thought.