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Authors: J. T. Brannan

BOOK: Beyond all Limits
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7

‘What?’ General Wu cried out, furious. ‘Tell me that again! What did you say?’

‘The Politburo members are alive and well,’ came the voice from Captain Ling Sushan, the commander of the
Liaoning
which had already appeared on the helicopter’s radar screen. ‘They are in contact with the American government, and have ordered the invasion to be called off.’

‘But surely nobody is listening to them?’ Wu asked, unable to believe what he was hearing, a feeling of terrible impotence coming over him.

‘The Zhongnonhai has been captured,’ Ling continued, ‘and most of our leadership has been arrested.’

‘This is preposterous!’ Wu screamed. ‘When I land there, have no fear – the operation will be going ahead as planned.’

‘I am afraid the Politburo has passed the command codes to the people now in control of the Zhongnonhai central command center, they have shut down satellite surveillance, and the air defenses over the Chinese mainland.’

‘No!’ Wu cried out, almost as if in physical pain, all of his hopes and dreams shattering to dust before him.

‘Can you give the order from there to hit the USS
Ford
?’ he asked, desperate to gain some measure of satisfaction.

‘No,’ Ling responded, ‘I am afraid not; the location of all our ballistic missile launchers has been transmitted to the Americans, and they’re under threat of destruction if used. US forces are flying over the area again, and building up a full surveillance picture.’

Wu shook his head to himself. When he got aboard the
Liaoning
, he could get things back on track – he would lead the battle himself, with Zhou beside him.

The helicopter navigator gestured to his screen – two small blips had detached from the aircraft carrier and were headed towards him.

‘Gunships,’ the man said.

‘What is the meaning of this, Captain Ling?’ Wu asked, although he was afraid he already knew. ‘And where is Admiral Meng Linxian? Let me speak to him!’

‘Admiral Meng is under arrest,’ Ling said evenly, ‘and we have received orders from the Politburo to arrest you too, general,’ Ling said evenly. ‘Those aircraft will just accompany you safely down to the carrier.’

‘You little son of a bitch!’ Wu screamed, all his worst fears confirmed. He spun back to the pilot, pulling him round, eyes fierce. ‘Take us back to the mainland! Immediately!’

He calculated times in his head, working things through; with the distance between them, the gunships wouldn’t reach him in time.

And if the mainland’s air defenses had been disabled to allow the Americans safe passage, then there would be nothing to stop him either.

‘Where are we going?’ Zhou asked.

‘The Taihang Mountains,’ Wu spat bitterly. ‘The Great Wall.’

It was the only thing left to do.

8

‘He’s done what?’ Cole asked in sudden concern.

Several hours had passed now, and the situation had looked as if it was coming together nicely; with the generals of the Central Military Commission safely in the custody of the US-backed special operations teams, the rest of the military had ultimately surrendered too, accepting the rule of the Politburo’s government-in-exile. And it wouldn’t be in exile for long either – when the situation had calmed down some more, they would be repatriated to Beijing, flown in on aircraft from the USS
John C. Stennis
.

The invasion of Japan had been halted in its tracks, the East Sea Fleet just a few short kilometers from Japan’s front gates.

General Wu – flying out to meet the Chinese carrier battle group – was supposed to have been arrested upon landing, and that would essentially have been the end of it.

Except that General Wu hadn’t been arrested.

‘He avoided the escort from the carrier group,’ Liu explained, translating the messages he was receiving from Beijing’s air surveillance batteries, ‘and he’s flown straight back over the mainland. We’ve lowered our defenses to open us up to military counterstrikes from the US if the invasion went ahead, but he used that window, flew straight through those open defenses.’

‘When did he pass through?’ Cole asked, and Liu relayed the question.

‘An hour ago,’ Liu translated. ‘With all the chaos, everything that’s going on, his chopper was missed, the information wasn’t relayed to us directly.’

‘And where was he headed?’ Cole asked, scared that he already knew.

When the answer came, Cole was already moving.

9

The Chinese military transport helicopters travelled fast, taking a combined assault force of Cole’s men and Liu’s special operations soldiers across the rugged countryside beyond Beijing.

It wasn’t long before they were in the foothills of the Taihang Mountains, following dips, crests and valleys towards one of the Great Wall Project’s concealed entrances.

They had used US satellite photography to check the route taken by Wu’s own helicopter, and the coordinates of the landing point had been transmitted back to the incoming pilots.

Back on the USS
Stennis
, Minister of National Defense Kang Xing – the only general to have remained loyal to the Politburo – confirmed the location of a hidden entrance into the Great Wall Project near the helicopter’s landing point, and this was where Cole and the assault team were headed.

The fear everyone was experiencing was all too real – if Wu had enough time, he would be able to fuel and ready the missiles for flight. He had the codes, and he had the knowledge of how the entire base worked; after all, he had helped build it in the first place.

And if he released the missiles, that would be it for whichever country he’d decided to target – utter annihilation, complete destruction.

Millions dead, tens of millions to die in the years to come from the results of radiation.

Wu had to be stopped, and they had tried contacting the secret base – again, Kang Xing providing the details – but it was apparent that communications links had been severed at the location itself, and nobody could be raised.

So it was down to the assault team and – as they landed – Cole said a prayer.

They were going to need it.

10

They interior of the subterranean missile base was incredible – an engineering marvel that defied the imagination.

It was gigantic, and Cole was left speechless by the size of the cavernous tunnels, the sheer ingenuity and will, the thousands of years of individual manpower which had been necessary to carve the incredible structure out of the mountains.

Although it was true that the tunnel network had been built at a length of some five thousand kilometers, there was a main control room, with several minor substations along its length. The tunnels themselves were just meant to hide the weapons, to keep China’s enemies from guessing where they would be launched from – there were hundreds of platforms along the underground route, and it would be impossible for a foreign power to take out all of them.

But Kang Xing, on Chang Wubei’s initiative, had informed them of the location of the main control center, the place where – if communications were ceased with Beijing – the order for the launch would have to be given, the center which housed the terminals for the secret codes to be inputted.

The gunships flew down, loudspeakers demanding that the soldiers inside the compound lay down their weapons and give themselves up, that the orders being given by General Wu were illegal and not to be followed.

By the time they landed, there was a large group of soldiers gathered in the narrow valley between two steep, rising mountains, having emerged from their hidden command center to give themselves up as demanded.

While some of Liu’s men stayed behind to secure them, Cole and the rest of the team swept through the covert entrance – a raised concrete platform hidden within a stand of tall pines – and worked their way steadily through to the command center.

Resistance was weak, the only soldiers who remained putting up a token effort before surrendering like their colleagues before them; and then Cole was there, breaching the door to the main control room, assault rifle at the ready.

There were computers and monitors everywhere, technicians hard at work, and Cole let go a burst of automatic fire at the ceiling, getting everyone’s attention immediately.

Liu followed him, screaming in Mandarin at the technicians as the other troops spread out through the command center.

Cole scanned the room, looking for Wu, for Zhou, not seeing either one of them. Were they hiding?

A man with major’s rank slides barked out orders to the technicians, obviously exhorting them to carry on, and then a single shot rang out – Liu had shot the major in the leg.

He moaned and screamed, and the technicians held their hands in the air, terrified.

Liu spoke to them again, and they returned to work.

‘What’s happening?’ Cole asked.

‘They were fuelling the birds, entering target coordinates.’

‘Where to?’

Liu looked scared. ‘Everywhere – Japan, South Korea, the US, Britain, you name it, Wu was going to hit it.’ Liu wiped his brow. ‘He was going for total Armageddon.’

‘You’ve rescinded the orders?’

‘Of course. I’ve explained the situation, they’re spinning everything back down. I think they’re as terrified as us. But they’re soldiers, and they do as they’re told.’

Cole nodded, then pointed at the major, screaming on the floor. ‘Him?’ Cole asked, as Liu’s men spread out through the hi-tech chamber, making sure everyone was doing what they said they were doing, and shutting things down.

‘Major Wang Lijun,’ Liu said. ‘A lackey of General Wu and Zhou Shihuang.’

At the mention of those two men, Cole shouted across to his colleagues, who were checking the room for potential hiding places. ‘Any luck?’

They shook their heads in unison.

‘Nowhere to hide in here,’ Navarone said. ‘Who knows where the hell they’ve gone.’

Cole looked at Liu, then down to the injured, screaming figure of Major Wang.

‘I bet he knows,’ Cole said. ‘You need to get him to talk.’

Liu nodded, smiling. ‘No problem,’ he said as he knelt down to get to work.

11

General Wu smiled at Zhou as they parked the truck in the clearing, the engineer jumping down to quickly check the ground for its suitability.

Wu was operating with a skeleton crew, but the mobile launcher he had stolen from the Great Wall had a fully-prepared and mission-capable DF31 long range ballistic missile tipped with a nuclear warhead.

It was quite capable of reaching the west coast of America and taking out, say, Los Angeles, or perhaps San Francisco; and Wu had genuinely considered these targets, a way to take his revenge on those meddling American bastards.

But there was only one target Wu was interested in, and he knew there was no point in denying it.

As the engineer checked the ground and the missile crew readied the weapon, Wu told the head technician to input the coordinates for Tokyo.

He would wipe that damned, hateful Japanese city off the face of world maps forever. He owed it to his family, and it would be his last gesture; even if he was captured, even if he was killed, he would go down in the annals of history as the man who finally destroyed the Japanese nation.

The one-megaton nuclear warhead yielded a destructive force of one million tons of conventional TNT explosive, fifty times more powerful than the Fat Man atomic bomb that had fallen on Nagasaki back in 1945, and over sixty times more powerful than the Little Boy which had laid waste to Hiroshima.

Japan, Wu considered, hadn’t had a lot of luck with nuclear weapons over the years; and it was only going to get worse.

One of the most densely populated metropolises in the world, an average of more than six thousand people lived in every square kilometer of the city; and Wu knew that the downtown area was even more densely packed, with up to
twenty
thousand citizens per square kilometer.

A one-megaton warhead set to explode two and an half thousand meters above the city in order to maximize blast effects would have a lethality rate of nearly one hundred percent out to a radius of three kilometers – over half a million people would die instantly.

Out to eight kilometers, lethality would be fifty percent, leaving another million and half dead.

So within only a small area, just over two hundred square kilometers of central Tokyo, fatalities would be over two million, and that was purely from the blast. How many more people would perish from the burns, the collapsing buildings, the traffic accidents, the inevitable panicked stampede as people fled the city, the hurricane-force winds, the firestorms, the radiation?

Wu could only hazard a guess, but it would be many millions more, he was sure; and all from the little
Dong Feng
missile that sat behind him, launch tube ratcheting into position, elevated to point skywards.

Such a small weapon – almost the same as the medium-range missile which had hit the USS
Ford
and started this whole thing in the first place – but capable of creating so much death.

He couldn’t wait.

Like the missile which had hit the
Ford
, this variant was equipped with the WU-14 hypersonic glide vehicle; even with prior warning, at a speed of Mach Ten, there would be no chance of anyone stopping it.

Yes
, he thought happily,
I will have my revenge
.

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