Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
They closed the door behind them and climbed the totally
dark staircase, feeling their way. They ended up in
a stuffy, black attic. Chance used the
flashlight. Furniture, desks, chairs,
stacked everywhere. In the middle of the attic was another
stairway up.
The door to the roof was also locked, this time with a
padlock, which was on the interior side of the door.
“What if there is a padlock on the other
side”…”…Chance asked.
“Then we’re screwed. Unless you want to kick this
thing down.”
“No.”
“Let’s try to get this lock open, then the door.”
“Okay.”
The lock was rusty, corroded. After several
minutes” effort Carmellini admitted his defeat
and used a wire saw to cut through the metal loop of the
lock. That took two minutes of intense effort but
didn’t make much noise, considering.
With the lock off and hasp pulled back, they pushed
at the door. It refused to open. With both men
heaving, the
door slowly opened with great resistance, and groaned
terribly.
“That’ll wake the deadea”…Chance muttered, and wiped the
sweat from his face as Carmellini slipped out onto
the roof.
Chance followed along.
The metal roof sloped away steeply in several
different planes. Moving on hands and knees they
worked themselves over toward the edge that faced the science
building.
“Let me do thisea”…Carmellini whispered, and
extracted the rope from his backpack. “Get out of the
way, up by the door.”
Chance went.
The glare of the city and the streetlights below
illuminated the roof quite well, too well in fact.
While it was easy to see where to walk, anyone below
who bothered to look could probably see the black
shapes silhouetted against the glare of the sky.
Chance huddled against the dormer that formed the staircase
up from the attic. He watched Carmellini on the
edge of the roof, shaking out the rope, checking the
grappling hook. Now he began to twirl the hook
above his head, letting out more and more line to make the
hook swing an ever-larger circle. Just as it seemed
the ckcle was impossibly wide, he cast the line
and hook across the chasm separating the buildings at a
metal vent sticking up out of the roof.
The hook made an audible metallic sound as it
hit the far roof, then it began sliding off.
Carmellini quickly pulled in line in huge coils,
but too late to stop the grappling hook from sliding
off the roof.
He kept pulling on the line. In seconds he
had the hook in his hand and bent down against the roof.
Someone was down below. Even back here Chance could hear
voices. He scanned the surrounding roofs, the
streets that he could see, the blank windows looking
at him from other buildings.
Minutes ticked by, the voices below
faded.
Now Carmellini was standing, swinging the rope and hook,
now casting it… and it caught! He tugged at it,
worked his way back up the roof to where Chance was
kneeling.
Carmellini put the disend of the rope around the dormer,
pulled it as taut as possible, then tied it off.
“Well, there is our way acrossea”…the younger man said.
“You want to go first, or should I?”
“Anchored solid, is it?”
“You bet.”
“Age before beautyea”…Chance said, and tugged on leather
gloves, wrapped his hands around the rope. He worked
out hand over hand, then draped his lower legs over the
rope. His backpack dangled from his shoulders.
Hanging from the rope like this took a surprising amount
of physical strength. The rope sagged dangerously
with his weight, becoming a vee with him at the bottom,
which made it more difficult to move along it.
Gritting his teeth, trying to keep his breathing even,
William Henry Chance worked his way along the
rope, taking care not to look down. At one point
he knew he was over the chasm but it didn’t
matter: if he slipped off the rope the fall would
kill him, whether he hit the roof and slid
off or missed it clean.
He kept going, doggedly, straining every muscle,
until he felt the bag dragging along the roof of the
science building. Only then did he unhook his
legs from the rope and let them down to the roof. Still
pulling on the rope, he heaved himself up by the vent and
grabbed it.
The grappling hook was holding by one tong. He
wrapped the rope around the vent and set the hook, then
tugged several times to make sure it would hold.
Wiping his forehead, he breathed heavily three or
four times. He had one hand on the rope, so he
felt the tension increase with Carmellini’s weight.
He peered at the other
building. Carmellini came scurrying along the
rope like a goddamn chimpanzee.
The younger man was over the gap between the buildings when the
rope broke, apparently where it was anchored atop
the lecture hall. Carmellini’s body fell
downward in an arc and disappeared from view. An
audible thud reached Chance as Carmellini’s body
smacked against the side of the science building.
“Our Lady of Coldn
was under this storm system; out of sight of the
satellites passing over, for six
hours,” Toad Tarkuigton explained to Jake
Grafton. They were bent over a table in Mission
Planning, studying satellite radar images.
“When next it reappeared, it was steaming for Bahia
de Nipe at twelve knots, yet its average
speed of advance while it was out of sight was two
knots.”
“Two?”
‘Two.”…Toad showed him the positions and
measurements.
“So it was stopped somewhere.”
“Or made a detour.”
“What if the ship rendezvoused with another ship and the
warheads were transferred?”
“Possible, but if you look at these other ship
tracks, it doesn’t seem very likely. All these
other tracks were going somewhere, with speed-of-advance
averages that seem plausible.”
“Okay. What if the ship stopped and the crew
dumped some of the weapons in the water? Maybe all
of them. Dumped them in shallow water for someone
to pick up later. How deep is the water in that
area?”
“That area is the Bahamas, Admiral. Pretty
shallow in a lot of places in there.”
“Have NSA put that area under intense surveillance.
Have them study every satellite image since that storm
passed. If those warheads were dumped overboard from the
Colon,
someone is going to come along to pick them up.
We have to get there before that somebody gets them
aboard.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Ask Atlantic Fleet to get a P-3 out
to that area as soon as possible, have the crew search for
anchored or stationary ships. Any ships not actually
under way. Understand?”
“Yes, sir.”
Jake Grafton rubbed his forehead, trying
to decide if there was anything else he should be doing.
“Uh, Admiral…”…Toad began, his voice
low. “I want to thank you for saving my assets
last night. I about had a heart attack after we
jumped over that rail, everything behind us blowing up,
wondering if we were going to go into the water or
splatter ourselves on a rock pile. That was truly
a religious experience.”
A wry grin crossed Jake Grafton’s face.
“Wish I had paid more attention to where those rocks were
before crunch time arrived. Talk about jumping
out of the frying pan into the fire! For a few seconds
mere I thought we had had the stroke.”
“You didn’t know”…”…Toad was aghast.
“What say we don’t mention this to Rita or
Callie”…”…Jake said, and walked away. He had
another meeting to attend.
William Henry Chance grabbed the rope, which
extended over the side on the science building roof
into the darkness. The rope was still taut. Tommy
Carmellini must be hanging on the end of it!
Chance braced himself and began pulling, hand over hand,
and almost ruptured himself.
He got no more than six feet of rope up when
he realized he wasn’t in the right position. Moving
carefully, he braced himself against the vent pipe and
got the rope over his shoulders. Now he used his
whole body to help raise it.
Two more feet. , Four.
A dark spot, a head, coining above the eave,
struggling to climb.
Chance held the rope steady as Carmellini heaved
himself over the edge of the roof and began crawling up the
slope, still holding onto the rope.
“Man, I thought I had bit the big
oneea”…Carmellini said between gasps. Leaning
against the chimney, Chance blew equally hard.
“I’m getting too old for this shitea”…Carmellini
muttered.
“Next time get a desk job.”
“Why in hell do you think I went to law school?”
Chance coiled the rope and inspected it. It had
frayed through where it was wrapped around the dormer on the
other building. He showed the place to Carmellini,
then put the rope in his knapsack.
“Let’s go.”
Carmellini used a glass cutter on a pane of a
dormer window, then they went in.
Chance took a chance and used the flashlight. This
attic was stacked with laboratory equipment:
dishes, warmers, mixing units, microscopes, a
spectrometer, a bunch of equipment large and
small that he couldn’t identify.
“Let’s put on our masksea”…Chance said, “just
in
case.”
They donned the gas masks, made sure the filter
elements were on tight. The mask could provide
only filtered air: it had an inhalation and
exhalation valve and a black faceplate with two
large clear lens to see through. The mask was
attached to a hood that went over the head and shoulders
of the user. Pull strings sealed the hood so air could
not get in around the user’s neck. When they had the
mask on, both men removed the leather gloves they
had been wearing and donned a pair of latex
gloves. They stuffed their trousers inside their
socks.
With Carmellini in the lead, the two men stealthily
descended the stairs.
STEPHEN COONTS
The laboratory was in the basement, so Chance and
Carmellini had to pass through the main floor to get
there.
The elevator would be the best way from the top of the
building to the bottom, but it might be monitored from
the guards” station at the main entrance. Certainly it
should be: nothing could be simpler than to have a warning
light come on when the electric motor that ran the
elevator engaged. Chance and Carmellini took the
stairs.
Carmellini was leading the way now. Using’the
flashlight, he examined the door to the staircase for
alarms, then opened the door a crack and examined the
stairwell. Fortunately the stairwell was lit.
If this building were hi the States it would be
festooned with infrared sensors, motion detectors,
microphones, and remote cameras controlled from a
central station. However, this was Cubit
At each landing, Carmellini extended a small
periscope and looked around the corner.
On the second floor his inspection of the stairs
leading down revealed a camera mounted on a wall
above the landing, focused on the door in from the main
floor. There was probably a camera mounted above the
door to the main floor, a camera that looked back
toward this camera.
Carmellini studied the camera through the periscope,
twisted the magnification to the maximum and
refocused. He kept the instrument steady by bracing
himself against the wall.
The security camera was fifteen or twenty years
old if it was a day. No doubt there were ten or
twelve cameras on a sequential switch, so the
video from each one was shown in turn on a monitor
at the guard’s station. The guard was probably reading
something, eating, talking to another guard, if he was
paying any attention at all.
From his backpack Carmellini removed a strobe
unit and battery. He plugged the thing together,
switched on the battery, and waited for the
capacitor to charge. The bulb had a set of
silver metal feathers around it so that the light could be
focused. Carmellini tightened the feathers around the
bulb as much as they would go. When the capacitor’s
green light came on, he eased the light around the
comer, exposing his head for the first time. One quick squint
to line up the light, then holding the thing tightly against
the wall to steady it, he retracted his head, closed
his eyes and buried his head in the crook of his arm.
William Henry Chance did likewise. The
short, intense burst of light should burn out the
camera’s light-level sensor, rendering it
inoperative.
The flash was so bright Carmellini saw it through his
closed eyelids.
The two men slipped down the stairs. Standing just under
the camera that had just been disabled, Carmellini used the