Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
to arrive punctually. If he was already there, Chance,
Carmellini, and die SEAL’S could leave now. If
die sub wasn’t at die rendezvous, die two
boats would have to spend die afternoon and evening rolling hi
die swell, hoping and praying die Cuban Navy
didn’t come over die horizon.
We’ll wait,
Chance decided, glancing at his watch again, though
Lord knows die waiting was difficult.
It would be a serious mistake to underestimate
Alejo Vargas. The Cuban secret police
had over forty years of practice finding and arresting
people who sneaked onto die islandone had to assume they
were reasonably good at it.
Chance didn’t want to get into a
firefight with die Cuban military or secret
police. Leaving a body behind would be bad, and leaving
a live person to be captured and tortured would be
absolute disaster.
If die Cubans came riding over die
hill, Chance and his entourage were leaving as quickly as
possible. They could take their chances on die open
sea. That decision made, Chance turned his attention
back to die computer screen hi front of him.
Two months ago when he and Carmellini were handed
this mission, William Henry Chance would not have bet
a plugged nickel they could pull it off. Polish
die Spanish hi
over a hundred hours of classes, be in the right
place at the right time when the power went off, break
into Alejo Vargas’s safe in secret-police
headquarters, carry out the files that Vargas had
spent twenty years accumulating, the files he could
trade for political support after Castro’s
death.
Amazingly, they had pulled it off. Every file that
went into the flames was one Vargas would never use.
Chance glanced at Carmellini, who was using a stick
to stir the fire, keep the paper burning.
Yep, they had pulled it off. And stumbled
upon a biological weapons program and
Fidel’s collection of old Soviet ballistic
missiles.
Six missiles. No locations.
The locations must be well camouflaged or the
satellite reconnaissance people would have seen them long
ago. On the other hand, if they knew what they were
looking for…
Chance went to the door, called softly to the SEAL
lieutenant. dis”…Mr. Fitzgerald, would you set
up die satellite telephone again?”
“Of course. Take about five minutes.”
“Thank you.”
While the lieutenant was getting the set turned on
and acquiring the corn satellite, Chance continued
to check the computer. When he hit a file labeled
“Trajectories”…he sensed he was onto something
important.
The file was a series of mathematical
calculations, complex formulas. Hmmm…
Let’s see, if one could figure out where the
warheads were aimed, then one could use the known
trajectory to work back to the launch site. That’s
right, isn’t it?
“Mr. Chance, they’re on.”…The
lieutenant handed him the satellite phone.
In Washington, D.c., the director of the CIA
and the national security adviser listened without comment as
the voice of the agent in Cuba came over the speaker
phone. He gave them the news as quickly and
succinctly as he
could. They had the secret-police files, were
burning them now though the task would take several more
hours, they had a computer containing a file of what
appeared to be missile-trajectory calculations,
and there were at least six ballistic missiles in
Cuba, maybe more. Chance gave the men in
Washington the names of the missiles.
“Well doneea”…the director said, high praise from
that taciturn public servant.
When the connection was broken, the national security
adviser and the CIA director sat silently,
lost in thought. The spymaster was thinking about Alejo
Vargas and the possibility he might seize control
of the government in Cuba upon the death of Castro. The
other man was thinking about ballistic missiles and
microscopic viruses of poliomyelitis.
“Another Cuban missile crisisea”…muttered the
adviser disgustedly.
The CIA director grinned. “Why
don’t you look at the silver lining of this cloud for a
change? Fate has just presented us with a rare
opportunity to clean out a local cesspool. We
ought to be down on our knees giving thanks.”
The adviser didn’t see it that way. He knew the
president regarded the upcoming death of Castro as
a political opportunity, a chance to change the
relationship between Cuba and the United States and
escape the bitter past. Perhaps the president would
decide to just ignore the weapons, pretend they
didn’t exist. Then he could hold out the olive
branch to the Cubans, get what he wanted from them,
get credit for progressive leadership from the
American electorate, and negotiate about the
weapons later.
Tommy Carmellini was burning the last of the files
when William Henry Chance noticed that two of the
fishing boats were no longer in sight. “When did they
leave”…”…he asked the naval officer, Lieutenant
Fitzgerald.
“Several hours ago, sir. I noticed one of them
going west
under sail then, but I confess I haven’t been
paying much attention to the others.”
Carmellini checked his watch5:30
P.m. Still three or four hours of daylight
left.
“Anything stirring out here”…”…Chance asked.
“No, sir. Pretty quiet. An old man and a
girl walked along the road toward the monastery about
three P.m., then turned and went back the way
they had come.”
“Did they see your men?”
“No, sir.” -
“Well…”…In truth, Chance was nervous. He
felt trapped, completely at the mercy of forces
beyond his control. He took a deep breath, tried
to relax as Carmellini stirred the ashes of the fire
to ensure that all the paper he had thrown in was totally
consumed.
“Would you like some MRE’S, sir”…”…the navy officer
asked. “My men and I are getting hungry.”
Surprised at himself for not noticing his hunger
sooner, Chance said, “Why not”…”…He hadn’t had a
bite since last night.
They were munching at the rations when a helicopter
came roaring down the coast from the west. The craft was
doing about eighty knots, Chance guessed, when it
went Over the old monastery. It continued west for a
half mile or so, then laid into a turn.
“Shitea”…sd Tommy Carmellini.
“Lieutenant, I think he’s onto usea”…Chance
told the SEAL officer.
“If he is, his friends can’t be far awayea”…the SEAL
said. Standing in the center of the room so he was hidden in
shadow, he used the binoculars to look at the
chopper.
“Two men, one looking at us with binoculars.”
“Maybe it’s time we set sailea”…Chance said as he
folded the laptop and zipped it into its soft carrying
bag. Then he put the whole thing in a waterproof
plastic bag, which he carefully sealed.
“Stay down, stay clear of the windowsea”…the
lieutenant
said, and darted out the door away from the chopper.
Chance and Carmellini sat on the floor with their
backs to the window. The chopper noise came closer
and closer, then seemed to stop. It sounded as if the
craft were hovering about a hundred feet to the east of the
crumbling building. The rotor wash was stirring the
remnants of the roof thatch that Chance could see.
Then he heard the sharp crack of a rifle. Two
more reports in quick succession. The tone of the
chopper’s engine changed, then he heard the sound of the
crash.
He risked a peek out the window. The wreckage
of the helicopter lay on the rocks by the water’s
edge. Amazingly, one of the rotor blades was still
attached to the head and turning slowly. A wisp of
smoke rose from the twisted metal and Plexiglas.
Chance could see the bodies of the two men slumped
motionless in what remained of the cockpit. As he
watched the wreckage broke into flames.
“Sorry about thatea”…the lieutenant said as he burst
into the room, “but the copilot was holding a radio
mike hi his hand. I think it’s time we bid Cuba
a fond farewell.”
“Let’s goea”…Chance agreed.
The boats were fast, at least thirty knots. In
the swell of the open sea beyond the peninsula they bucked
viciously. Salt spray came back over the men
huddled behind the tiny windscreen every time the boat
buried its bow.
Chance settled back, wedged himself into place with the
computer on his lap.
They were well out to sea, heading due south, when a
Cuban gunboat rounded the eastern promontory and
gave chase. A puff of smoke came from the forward
deck gun and was swept away by the wind.
The splash was several hundred yards
short.
The lieutenant at the helm altered course
to put the gunboat dead astern. The Cuban
captain fired twice more; both rounds fell short.
Then he apparently decided to save his ammunition.
The boats ran on to the southwest.
Tommy Carmellini caught Chance’s eye and gave
him a huge grin.
Yeah, baby!
The distance between the speedboats and the gunboat slowly
widened over the next hour. After a while the
gunboat was only visible as
a.
black spot on the horizon when the boat topped
a swell. As the rim of the sun touched the sea, the
Americans realized the crew of the gunboat had
given up and turned back toward-the north.
Then they heard the jets. Two swept-wing fighters
dropping down astern, spreading out as they came racing
hi, one after each boat.
“MiGo-19’sea”…the lieutenant shouted. “Hang
on tight.”
The shells hit the sea behind the boat and marched toward
it as quick as thought. Lieutenant Fitzgerald spun
the helm, the boat tilted crazily, and the
impact splashes from the strafing run missed
to starboard.
The jet that strafed Chance’s boat pulled out right
over the boat, no more than fifty feet up. The
thunder of the engines was deafening.
The jet made a climbing turn to the left, a
long, lazy loop that took it back for another
strafing run. His wingman stayed hi trail behind him.
“Turn west, into the sunea”…Chance shouted
to Fitzgerald, who complied. The other boat did the
same. The boats came out of their turns with the
sun’s orb dead ahead, a ball of fire touching the
ocean.
The jets behind overshot the run-in line, so they
made a turn away from the boats, letting the distance
lengthen, as they worked back to the dead astern position.
Fitzgerald handed Chance his M-16. “As he
pulls out overhead, give him the whole magazine
full automatic.”
Chance nodded and lay down in the boat.
As the jets thundered down, Fitzgerald turned the
boat ninety degrees left, then straightened. The
MiGo’s left wing dropped as he swung the nose
out to lead the crossing boat. He steepened his dive.
As the muzzle flashes appeared on
his wing root, Fitzgerald spun the helm like a
man possessed to bring the boat back hard east,
into the attacker.
The shell splashes missed left this time: Chance
let go with the M-16 pointing straight up, in the
hope the MiGo would fly through the barrage.
Whether any of his bullets hit the jet as it
slashed overhead, he couldn’t tell. The plane
pulled out with its left wing down about thirty
degrees, but its nose never came above the
horizon. Perhaps the sun dead ahead on the
horizon disoriented the pilot. The left roll
continued as the plane descended toward the sea, then it
hit with a surprisingly small splash. Just like that, it
was gone.
The other jet was climbing nicely. The pilot had
found his target: the other speedboat was upside down
in the sea.
Fitzgerald turned toward the upset boat, kept
his speed up.
The wingman took his timehe must realize this would be the
last strafing run because the light was failing, and perhaps
he was running low on fuel.
He came off the juice, kept the power back, so
on this pass he was doing no more than 250
knots, a pleasant maneuvering speed.
Fitzgerald turned his boat so that he was heading
disstraight for the jet. He had the throttle wide
open. The jet steepened his dive.
The pilot held his fire and fed in forward stick.
Fitzgerald spun the helm as far as it would go and the
boat laid over on its beam in a turn.
The jet didn’t shoot, but began pulling out.
William Henry Chance let go with a whole
magazine.
Clbser and closer the plane dropped toward the
sea, the nose still coming up, contrails swirling off the
wingtips from the G-loads. The belly of the MiGo
almost kissed the water, came within a hair’s
breadth, and then the jet was climbing into the sky