Deep Ice (17 page)

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Authors: Karl Kofoed

Tags: #Fiction, #Fantasy, #Epic, #Thrillers

BOOK: Deep Ice
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Like the chain of command, insomnia spread down the pecking order. Aboard the
Enterprise
a hastily summoned late-night meeting was being conducted in the captain’s staff room. Present were Schumacher, Hayes, several senior officers, and Grimes.

“I wasn’t surprised to find you all awake,” said the admiral to the group as he poured himself a cup of black coffee. “I doubt if anyone at the Pentagon is asleep either.”

Hayes, like everyone else, was growing impatient with the frequent meetings. “Have we gotten any orders yet, Milborne?” he asked.

“ ’Fraid not, Tony,” said Schumacher ruefully. “I just wanted to get together to see if anyone had had any bright ideas while they were tossing red-eyed in their bunks.”

Around the table went an impatient sigh. People moved nervously in their seats.

“I know that’s not what you wanted to hear,” continued the admiral. “But that’s all I’ve got for you. I can tell you that I’ve talked to President Kerry, President Frei and Captain Halsey within the past hour, and they’re suffering the same. In fact, very few in any coastal cities are sleeping. Word is that people are evacuating the coastlines.”

Grimes nodded. “I was on deck when you paged us. The lights are on in Valparaiso. There seems to be a lot of traffic moving around for three in the morning.”

“It’s the same everywhere, Kai,” said Schumacher.

“From Hong Kong to Frisco. India – the southern provinces, at least, are a mess. You can imagine the traffic jams – or maybe none of us can.”

“And we just sit here,” said Hayes.

“Well, Tony, if you have any suggestions. . .?”

“I have an ‘X’ carved on every bullet head in my Beretta,” said Grimes. “After I kill that fuck I’m going to have his heart started so I can kill him again.”

“If we knew who and where that, er, fuck
was
, Commander, we’d be sending you on your merry way to him.”

The admiral turned to Hayes. “Any comments from the Chief of intelligence?”

“I wish,” said Hayes. “I’ve been in touch with the Joint Chiefs myself during the night. We think Kai has targeted the right guy.”

“Suarez,” confirmed Grimes. “Yeah, Rudolfo Suarez has been on the top of the list for some time. He usual y hangs out in Munich or Frankfurt, but at the moment he’s in Chile somewhere.”

“Any luck in locating him?” said Schumacher.

“Captain Halsey and President Frei say they have their police out looking,” said Grimes. “But we don’t want to spook the guy if we find him.”

“And of course it might not be him at all,” said the general morosely. “He’s the only one with the travel patterns and the financial connections to pul it off, but even so the Pentagon stat boys are only sixty per cent sure it’s him.”

“That’s grounds enough for me,” said Grimes.

“For what? An arrest?” asked the admiral.

“Something like that,” replied Grimes with a sardonic smile.

“Two unverified communications to the UN General Assembly don’t warrant a random EP mission,” said Hayes, giving the SEAL a harsh look. “Let’s keep it in our pants for the time being.”

Grimes returned the general’s gaze with an unapologetic stare.

“ ‘EP’?” asked the admiral.

“Extreme prejudice,” explained Hayes. “We need Gibbs to verify that Suarez is definitely the man who shot him before we can act.”

“Then I think we should sit tight for a while,” said the admiral. “I guess you can tell Halsey we might be in the area for a week at least. Oh, well, guess I was hoping for miracles when I called this meeting. Unless anyone has something more, you can all go and try to get some sleep.”

Silence followed his statement. He finished their gathering with a word. “Dismissed.”

Grimes and the general left together, following an unspoken directive to continue looking for an answer. They walked the halls of the
Enterprise
towards the rec hall, which was located several decks beneath the conning tower.

Hayes took a small cel phone from his shirt pocket and punched in a few numbers. Soon a beep told him he was connected to the
Big E
’s com centre.

“Call the hotel and leave a message for Gibbs and French. We’ll be at harbour longer than expected – a week, anyway. Have them phone me back in the morning.”

“Not bad for Henry,” Grimes commented. “A little vacation in the middle of a world crisis.”

“Opinions?” said Hayes.

“I wonder if he’ll ever be any help to us. We know who we’re looking for.”

“Gibbs hasn’t confirmed Suarez is our man,” replied the general. “Until that happens we – the admiral and the President – want him on the team.”

Grimes grunted a response.

“You want to get rid of him?” asked Hayes, eyeing the SEAL.

“Just sayin’. I kind of like the guy, tell you the truth. I was just thinking that nonessentials like Gibbs and the woman might be sent home. You know, to be with their families.”

Hayes smiled and patted the SEAL on the back.

“Well, you’re a big softy after all, aren’t you?”

Grimes raised an eyebrow. “Naw. I was just tryin’ to keep the dogshit off the deck.”

When the two men entered the rec room Hayes was surprised to hear the voice of Jo Stafford singing “Long Ago And Far Away”. He paused in the doorway as if he’d hit a wall, and stood there staring at the speaker in the ceiling.

Grimes, who’d entered first, continued towards the bar, where a coffee machine sat unattended. He turned when he realized Hayes wasn’t with him, and saw the general standing motionless, listening to the music. He wasn’t sure, but he thought he saw a glint of a tear on the man’s cheek. The rec room was empty except for the two of them, and most of the galley lights had been dimmed. The general turned and left the room without comment.

Grimes poured himself a cup of coffee and sat down on a stool. He sipped the strong, hot liquid and waited until the song was finished, and then he too went back to his quarters.

#

That night the twin Gadfly Stealth helicopters rose from the deck of the
Enterprise
for the second time. With only two SEALs on each, they headed in a dead straight line towards the distant Andes. Grimes and Rob Walters took the lead in G-1; Tom Jabiel piloted G-2 with Dan Hoy, special weapons expert, in the copilot’s seat. They left the
Big E
at midnight and flew without lights over the busy streets of Valparaiso.

Jabiel and Hoy watched their instruments as they trailed their boss’s chopper by a half a kilometre. Hoy closely monitored the ghost of a signature on the ruby-lit screen in front of him – all they had with which to track their leader. The system, which utilized low ELF radiation, had been special y engineered for Gadfly squadrons to track one another.

Watched the flickering green dot, Hoy yawned, confident his boredom wouldn’t be noticed behind his black helmet and visor. But Jabiel heard the slight sigh through the intercom and chuckled. “Are we keepin’ you up, Hoy? I guess you’d rather be locking a TOW onto G-1, eh?”

Hoy didn’t defend his boredom. “What’s the point of this, anyway?”

“You know the mission as well as anyone,” replied Jabiel. “Logistical, tactical planning. We’re testing the new fuel mix and the Gadfly’s stealth, and also seeing how far we can get up those mountains. Just ’cause we’re not shooting something. . .”

“Shit,” said Hoy. “What do you think, I’m an idiot? I know all that. I mean, what’s the
point
? Do you really think we’re going to locate that sonofabitch Suarez by flying around at night?”

“That’s not our job,” said Jabiel. “At least, not right now. When I was in the Israeli corps we did this shit all the time. One intelligence mission after another.”

“Yeah,” said Hoy. “I know that. But I’ll tell you this. I don’t think any of this will help when it comes to dealing with the terrorists. Suarez, whoever – they’ve been on top of it from the get-go.”

“I don’t get you,” said Jabiel.

“Well, look at it. Look at what they did.” Hoy’s voice resonated inside his closed helmet. “They sneaked in and planted nukes in the ice without detection. Then they found a way to get out without anyone having a clue.”

“What’s your point?”

“They’ve planned this well. Too well. They’re fucking smart, and I don’t think they’ll get caught. Not by us – not by anyone.”

“Maybe,” said Jabiel after a pause to bank the chopper to the right, following the lead helicopter’s movements. “But we gotta try. Besides, what do we care anyway? It’s work.”

In the distance the lights of Santiago cast a glow into the night. The two helicopters manoeuvred to avoid a large commercial jet on a landing approach.

Hoy fixed his ordnance systems on the jet and feigned firing a Hel fire missile at the airplane. “Bang!

You’re toast.”

A computer tracked the simulated missile to its target and displayed a yellow flash on the screen.

Jabiel looked at it and laughed. “Feel better now?”

“A bit,” said Hoy.

#

Gadfly 1, with Gadfly 2 behind, flew north of the city. Below them there was noticeably less traffic than had been moving along the highways of Valparaiso. Grimes leaned to the side and watched the city pass below him.

“Want a better look?” asked Rob Walters. “I can tip a little to the side if you want. Hel, I can fly this mother upside-down. Just say the word.”

“That won’t be necessary, Rob. Steady as she goes. I don’t want to waste any fuel.” Grimes flipped up his helmet and looked all around, watching the city. “It’s like I thought.”

“What’s that, Kai?” asked Walters.

“People are abandoning the coastlines. Did you see all the traffic moving along the highway?”

The pilot shook his head. “I hadn’t noticed, to be honest.”

“More now than a few days ago,” said Grimes. “A shitload more.”

The lights below them grew sparser as the two helicopters moved into the foothills of the Andes. Eventually there were only a few pinpoint gleams beneath to indicate the chopper’s altitude.

“Switch on the IR lights,” ordered Grimes, “and send a ELF call to G-2. Are they still with us?”

“That’s a roger, sir,” said Walters. “We’ve been shot down about five times, according to my sensors.”

Grimes laughed. “Isn’t that nice?”

“Oh yeah. I feel fuckin’ warm all over, sir.”

Grimes pushed a button on the dash. “You can stop killing us now, fellas.”

“Party pooper!” said Hoy from G-2.

Soon the choppers were beginning their climb up the Andean range. They deployed the propellers’ vane extensions for additional lift, and brought both craft into a tighter formation so they could keep an eye on each other. The SEALs shifted to breathing oxygen. After another twenty minutes Grimes was satisfied the improvements they’d made in the choppers’ abilities to handle the mountain range were effective. He ordered the pilots to cut off the climb at 22,000 feet. This time, rather than turn back directly to the
Enterprise
, they were to land at a secret base set up in the Andean foothills, near a railroad pass. There they’d refuel and give the mountain another try before a second refuelling and, final y, the return to the carrier.

G-1 was the first to land on the artificial gridwork laid out to form a landing strip. Grimes flipped the toggle that sealed the canopy, and the cockpit opened with a slight hiss. He stepped out, removed his helmet and looked around. Two men were trotting towards the chopper. He recognized one of them as Captain Halsey, from the
Big E
. The other, a stranger, was wearing a dark flight suit and carrying a helmet like the one Grimes had just removed.

Behind him, Gadfly 2 settled to ground, shutting down its humming engine almost immediately. Halsey and the stranger paused a moment to watch the second chopper land, then continued towards Grimes.

Grimes came to attention and saluted Halsey.

“Commander Grimes, I want to introduce you to President Frei of Chile.”

Grimes was dumbfounded. The last person he’d have expected to find at this base was a foreign national. But, as his mind raced over the possibilities, he realized his own illogicality: he was, after all, in a foreign country, and their mission was international in scope.

Still, the US military weren’t even letting their own noncoms see the Gadfly series of helicopters. He felt like he’d been caught with his pants down.

“Honoured to meet you, sir,” he said, concealing his thoughts behind a mask of formality.

“Most pleased to meet you as well, Commander Grimes,” said the President. “These are most unusual helicopters. I have never seen anything like them.”

“They’re brand-new, sir,” replied Grimes, still at attention.

Halsey smiled. “You can relax, Commander. I’ve explained the nature of the Gadfly mission to President Frei.” He turned to the President. “Commander Grimes is one of our best anti-terrorist agents. He is natural y sensitive about our secret aircraft.”

Grimes was a quick study, but it didn’t take a genius to see that the President was suited up ready to take a ride. He was even holding one of the prototype IR helmets that only the crews of the Gadfly wore.

“I see you’re planning a flight, sir,” he said. “Quite unexpected, if I may say so.”

“I’m sure it is, Commander Grimes,” said Halsey, “but I think this is the best way to show our friend our mission is truly one of friendship.”

“Yes, sir.”

Rob Walters had been standing mutely nearby.

Grimes turned to him. “This is the pilot of Gadfly 1. Lieutenant Robert Walters, from Pennsylvania. You can just call him Rob.”

The President shook Walters’s hand. “Most pleased to meet you, Rob.”

The pilot nodded and smiled. Somewhat shorter than Grimes, he had the stocky look of a man that couldn’t be readily pushed around. Grimes respected him for his loyalty and, more importantly, his directness. Rob was no yes-man; he could always be relied upon for a straight and honest answer, even if it hurt. Also, he was bright – he was known to his friends as The Walking Encyclopedia. Once he’d learned something it was in there permanently, and easily retrieved. If Grimes had any complaint about Walters at all it was that he was almost too indispensable. Grimes didn’t like having to rely on anyone. But Walters had become the single member of Grimes’s Dogs he absolutely depended upon.

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