Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
take it off the ground. To fly it is sabotage, a
crime against the state. If you attempt to fly it,
I will shoot you.”…The colonel pulled out his pistol
and showed Corrado the business end.
Corrado ignored the gun. “You are a
traitorea”…he roared, “who wants the Americans
to win. Defeatist! Coward!”
“I will shoot anyone who helps you defect in this
airplaneea”…the colonel screamed. He
pointed the pistol at the troops closing the servicing
doors on the MiGo-29.
“Counterrevolutionaries! Saboteurs!”
Corrado used his fist on the colonel. The
second punch, in the ear, did the trick. The man
went to his knees, then onto his face. He
didn’t get up. One of the linemen picked up the
pistol while the major massaged his knuckles.
His hand hurt like hell but didn’t seem to be
broken.
In truth Corrado wasn’t much of a man. He
abandoned a wife and child years ago and hadn’t heard
from them sincedidn’t want to hear from them, because they would
probably want money. What money he got his
hands on he drank up; he even sold military
equipment on the black market to pay for alcohol.
His ability to fly a fighter plane was his sole
skill, his only worthwhile accomplishment in
thirty-six years of life. Now, unexpectedly,
miraculously, he had a chance to use that skill
to defend something larger than himself, to make his miserable
life mean something and no strutting Havana rooster
was going to cheat him out of it.
Carlos Corrado gestured at the men. “Get the
missiles loaded, you lazy bastardsea”…he
shouted. “There’s a war on.”
Richard Merriweather rode his parachute into a
cornfield. At least, he thought it was cornlong,
stiff stalks, head-
high. He checked himself over; he was sore, but
nothing broken. He stood and wrestled the chute
toward him, then began scooping out a hole to bury
it. He was finishing the job when he heard someone coming
toward him.
“Sergeant?”
“Yo. You okay?”
“Yeahea”…sd Kirb Handy.
“Set up the GPS. Figure out where we are.”
With the parachute disposed of, Merriweather put on his
night-vision goggles and took a careful look
around. He was well out in the center of this field,
near as he could tell.
Merriweather sat down hi the dirt beside Handy, who
was also wearing night-vision goggles. Handy punched
buttons on the GPS.
“This thing says we are a mile and a half
southwest.”
“I’ll buy that.”
“Missed the landing zone by a half mile.”
“Not bad at all.”…Merriweather unslung his
weapon and checked it over. Then he got to his
feet.
“The other two guys should be aroundea”…Handy muttered.
.
“They’d better be. We don’t have much time.”
After a careful check of the GPS unit, the two men
started walking northeast toward missile silo
number six. They had gone only about a hundred
meters when they came to the bank of a stream, a
fairly wide stream.
“What the hell is this”…”…Merriweather demanded; and
got out his map. He and Handy huddled disbbh a tree
studying the thing.
“Holy shitea”…Handy said. “We’re in the wrong
place. We’re at least four miles from the damned
silo. Look here.”…He pointed to the stream. “That
has gotta be this thing in front of us.”
“So where’s the other half of our team”…”…v
“Gotta be over there, near the silo.”
“Let’s get on the phone, give ‘em the bad
news.”"…Oh, manea”…Handy moaned softly. “This
ain’t good.”
approached the barn via a large seasonal
drainage ditch that ran more or less in the right
direction. Fortunately the sides were relatively
dry, though the ditch contained a few inches of water
arid the bottom felt soft.
They stopped moving when they were about fifty meters from
the barn where they believed the silo to be. They were
completely surrounded by Cuban Army troops.
Two tanks stood outside the barn, trucks were
parked in a nearby grove of trees, and troops were
setting up aeacooking tent near the farmhouse’s
well. Other soldiers were down in the woods to the
left, presumably digging latrines.
“Must be a couple hundred of ‘emea”…Asel
Tyvek whispered to Janiail Ali, who was lying in
the ditch beside him.
“Sure as hell we can’t stay hereea”…Ali
whispered. “It’s just a matter of time before somebody
inspects this damn ditch with a flashlight.”
“The silo must be in that barn. Gotta be. If we
crawl down this ditch, we should get within thirty
yards of the thing. When the shit hits the fan, maybe
we can get in there.”
“Let’s spread out, man, fifty yards
apartea”…Jamail Ali suggested. “If they find one
of us, the others will have a chance.”…Tyvek
nodded and Ali whispered to the other two men, and
pointed. They disappeared into the darkness.
Tyvek keyed the mike on his helmet-mounted
radio. In seconds he was talking to a controller
aboard USS
United States,
telling her what he saw around the missile silo.
‘Twelve minutesea”…the female voice from
United States
said in his ear. “Twelve minutes.”
“Roger that, Battlestar. Twelve minutes.”
Nojman Tillman and the three men of his recon
team were up TO THEIR knees in cow shit. They waded
through the barn-
yard and shoved the mooing dairy cattle out of the way
so that they could get to the door of the barn, a possible
biological weapons manufacturing site.
“I thought there weren’t any damn cows around
hereea”…Tillman’s number two muttered
unpleasantly.
Tillman took off his night-vision goggles, got
his flashlight in hand, and took a firm grip on his
rifle. He nodded at his number two, who
carefully opened the barn door, which creaked on its
rusty hinges anyway. Tillman launched
himself through the. door opening. He slipped on something,
fell, and slid for several feet on his chest. Much
to his disgust, he could identify the substance he was
lying in by its smell.
Tillman stood, used the flashlight. He was standing
in a conventional wooden barn that had not been mucked out
in several weeks. Two cows turned and stared at the
light. They looked nervous, as if they wanted
to run, then began bawling. Cursing under his breath,
Norman Tillman went on through the building,
checking it out.
Five minutes later he stepped outside and keyed
his helmet radio. “Battlestar, this is Team
One. Negative results. Nothing here but cows.”
“Roger, Team One. Stand by for a pickup.”
“Team One standing by. Ou.”
“I thought there weren’t any cows at these sitesea”…one
of the men said.
“Yeah, but the cows didn’t know they were supposed
to be on vacation.”
“Maybe we landed at the wrong dairy farm.”
Tillman thought that over. Naw. That would be quite a
screwup. More likely, the cows were being held in a
nearby field when the recon photos were taken.
“Sarge, somebody coming.”
The men dove facedown into the dirt-and-manure mix
at their feet. The person coming turned out to be a
farmhand in civilian clothes. The marines made him
sit with his
back against the barn wall where they could watch him, but
they didn’t tie his hands.
At first the man was frightened. He got over it when
one of the troops offered him a cigarette and lit it
for him.
Tillman crawled over a fence out of the muck and
sat down under a tree to wait for the helicopter.
One man watched the farmer while the other two posted
themselves as sentinels.
“There are several hundred troops and three or
four tanks around silos one and two, Admiral,
and at least two tanks and a squad of soldiers
around three. Four and five appear to be unguarded.
The recon team checking out silo six seems to have
been dropped in the wrong placeonly two of the four
have reported in; they estimate they are three
miles from the silo. We haven’t been able to contact
the other two men.”
The briefer was an Air Intelligence officer who
zapped the map with a laser flashlight pointer whenever
he mentioned a silo.
Jake Grafton wasn’t paying much attention to the
map, which he had memorized. He glanced at his
watch, compared it with a clock on the bulkhead.
“Lab site Alpha is a dairy farm. The
recon team checking out Bravo reports
jackpot, but not many troopsno more than a dozen.
The Osprey will be there in less than ten minutes.”
The admiral got up from his chair, stretched, rubbed
the back of his neck. So far it was going better than
he expected it would. So far. Nobody shot down
yet, only one recon team lost…
“Is someone monitoring Cuban radio and
television?”
“Yes, sir. The National Security Agency.
They will keep us advised.”
“Ummm.”
“What are we going to do about silo six,
Admiral”…”…Gil Pascal asked.
“Nothing we can do. The assault team will have to go into the
landing zone blind.”
“The Cuban Army may be waiting.”
“They mightea”…Jake Grafton agreed.
He put on his headset and switched between radio
channels. By simply flipping switches he could
monitor the aircraft tactical
channels. In addition, with the new tactical com
units, he and his staff could hear everything that was said
on the helmet radios worn by marine officers and
NCO’S.
Since the signals were rebroadcast and
ultimately picked up by the satellite, they were
also being monitored in the war room of the White
House. One of Jake’s concerns was that the
politicians or senior officers would be tempted
to step into the middle of the operation. Although the Washington
kibitzers could not communicate on the nets, they could
quickly get in touch with someone who could, and an order was
an order, even if ill-considered.
He would worry about the politicians when the meddling
started, he decided, not before.
Doll Hanna was the recon team leader at dairy
Bravo. He was sitting on a biological
warhead assembly plant and he knew it. There
wasn’t a cow hi sight, two clean, modern
dairy trucks sat near the entrance to the barn, and
Hanna could hear air conditioners running. And the
Cuban Army was guarding the place.
From where he lay he could see two soldiers in
cloth hats with rifles in their arms standing in front
of the main entrance. He knew that there were men
on the door in the rear of the building and in the old
thatch-roofed farmhouse nearby.
Doll Hanna touched the transmit button on his
radio. “Willie, you take the two guys on the
north side. Fred, you got the farmhouse.
Goose, these two on the main entrance.”
All three men acknowledged.
Doll was wearing his night-vision goggles so he could
see Goose crawling behind the milk trucks, then
under them, working his way toward the entrance. It was eerie
watching Goose sneak along, knowing the guards
couldn’t see him.
Taking out two men was a challenge. Either one could
raise the alarm.
Goose moved like he had all night.
He didn’t, Doll Hanna well knew. The
Osprey was out there now circling, but it wouldn’t come in
until he called the area clear. Still, the plane
only had so much fuel and the Cubans wouldn’t stay
quiet forever.
In fact, a truckload of soldiers could come
rolling in here any minute. The troops in the
Osprey, when they arrived, would set up a
perimeter to keep the Cuban military
away.
“Doll, this is Fred. I’m going to make some
noise over here.”
“Okay.”
No doubt Goose and Willie heard that
transmission. Noise would cause the guards to do
something. If necessary, Goose and Willie could just
shoot them down.
Hanna heard the faint sound of a slamming door come
from the direction of the farmhouse.
The guards near the main door to the dairy got to their
feet, looked at each other, then started toward the
house. One stopped, told the other to stay, then went
on with his weapon at the ready. As he went around the
truck out of sight of the guard at the door, Goose
got him with a knife.
Then Goose waited.
The man at the door called out to his friend.
Nothing.
The guard looked worried. He called again, got
no answer, then walked forward twenty feet or so.
He stopped, cocked his head, stood looking into the
darkness and trying to hear over the hum of the big air
conditioners.
He was standing like that when Goose stepped out from
behind the truck and threw a knife. The guard
dropped his rifle and pitched forward on his face.
Hanna got up, trotted for the door of the barn.
He passed Goose, who was bending over the second
guard checking to make sure he was dead. Carefully
Doll eased the door open and looked inside.
There were people inside, all right, behind transparent
plastic curtains that formed biological seals.
They were wearing full body-and-head CBW suits,
so they looked like spacemen walking around in there between
trays of cultures and rows of worktables.
They had apparently heard nothing above the noise of the
air-ventilation system, which was a loud, steady hum.
Doll eased his head back. The people in there would have
to wait until the experts arrived.
Major Carlos Corrado walked onto the
runway of the Cienfuegos Air Base. The
runway lights were off and the night was fairly dark
considering that two hangars and at least five
aircraft were ablaze. He could hear people shouting, about
fire, about water, about missiles, about staying under
cover. Straining hard he could hear several cruise
missiles ‘and airplanesup there in the
darksamerican airplanes, because in order to save
money, the Cuban Air Force, the
Fuerza Aerea Revolucionaria,
did not fly at night.
What was happening? Where was the war?
Carlos Corrado had no illusions about the
difficulties involved in engaging the American
military. His MiGo-29, a stripped Soviet
export version, had only the most rudimentary of
electronic detection equipment and lacked any
active countermeasures. And his GCI site was
probably in the same condition as the burning hangars
behind him.
If he left his radar off he would not beacon on the
Americans” detection equipment. And he would be
electronically blind.
Perhaps if he stayed low …
Another cruise missile roared overhead and dove
into the last undamaged hangar. The 750-pound
warhead rocked
the base, then the hangar collapsed outward, its
walls silhouetted black against the yellowish white
fireball caused by the warhead.
Well, if the Americans were pounding Cienfuegos,
they must be pulverizing Jose Marti International in
Havana.
Havana. The war would be in Havana, so
that was where he would go.
The V-22 Osprey twin-engine tiltrotor
assault transport was the ultimate flying
machine, or so Rita Moravia liked to tell her
husband, Toad Tarkington. It hovered like a
helicopter and flew like an airplane, operated from
the deck of an airborne assault ship, and was at
its best after the sun went down.
So here she was, in the pilot’s seat of a V-22
on her way to a ballistic-missile silo in the
Matanzas Province of central Cuba with 24
combat-ready marines, loaded for bear. She had
made a vertical takeoff from
Kearsarge
and was now thundering along at two thousand feet over the
Cuban countryside at 250 knots, navigating
by GPS and monitoring the forward-looking infrared
display (Flir), which revealed the countryside
ahead as if the sun were shining down from a cloudless
sky.
Rita’s copilot was Captain Crash Wade,
USMC, who earned his nickname in an unfortunate
series of ski adventures, not flying accidents.
Wade paid careful attention to the multi-function
displays (Mfd’s), computer presentations
of everything the pilots needed to know, on the instrument
panel in front of him.
Rita was paying careful attention to the voice on the
radio, which was that of Asel Ty vek, NCO in
charge of the marine recon team at silo number