Authors: Matthew Reilly
âOne for yes, two for no. Are you in that Axon chopper I just saw?'
Single cough.
âAre you wounded badly?'
Single cough.
âReally badly?'
Single cough.
Shit
, Schofield thought.
âIs Knight with you?'
Single cough.
âAre they taking you back to the castle?'
Single cough.
âHang in there, Libby. I'm coming for you.'
Schofield looked around himself and was about to start swimming for the shore when abruptly he saw the French destroyer surging to a halt 200 yards away from him off the coast.
On the side of the great ship, he saw a small patrol boat being lowered into the water, with at least a dozen men on board it.
The patrol boat dropped into the ocean and immediately zipped away from the destroyer, heading directly for him.
Schofield could do nothing except watch the French patrol boat approach him.
âI'm sure the French have forgotten about that thing in Antarctica,' he muttered to himself.
Then his earpiece burst to life.
â
Scarecrow! It's Book! Come in! I've got some big news for you.
'
âHey, Book, I'm here.'
â
Can you talk?
'
Schofield rose and fell with the waves of the Atlantic. âYeah, sure, why not.' He eyed the patrol boat, now only 150 yards away. âAlthough I have to warn you, I think I'm about to die.'
â
Yes, but I know why
,' Book II said.
âBook, patch Gant and Knight in on this transmission,' Schofield said. âThey can't talk, but I want them to hear this, too.'
Book did so.
Then he told them all about the Kormoran âsupertankers' and the Chameleon clone missiles, and Majestic-12's plan to start a new Cold Warâon Terrorâby firing those missiles on the major cities of the world. He also told them about the CincLock VII security system which only Schofield and those on the list could disarm, and the incorporation by Ronson Weitzman of the US Universal Disarm Code into it, a code which Rosenthal had described as âa yet-to-be-determined Mersenne Prime'.
Schofield frowned.
âA Mersenne Prime . . .' he said. âA Mersenne prime number. It's a
number
 . . .'
The image of General Ronson Weitzman in the Hercules flashed across his mind, babbling incoherently under the influence of the British truth drug: âIt wasn't just Kormoran. It was Chameleon, too . . . oh God, Kormoran and Chameleon together. Boats and missiles. All disguised.
Christ
 . . . But the Universal Disarm Code, it changes every week. At the moment, it's . . . the sixth . . . oh my God, the sixth m . . . m . . . mercen . . . mercenâ'
Mercen . . .
Mersenne.
At the time, Schofield had thought Weitzman was just mixing up his sentences, trying to say the word âmercenary'.
But he wasn't.
Under the influence of the drug, Weitzman had been telling the truth. He had been naming the code.
The Universal Disarm Code was the sixth Mersenne prime number.
As Book relayed his tale to Schofield and the others, behind him Scott Moseley was busy inserting the GPS co-ordinates from the launch list into the plotting program.
âI've got the first three boats,' Moseley said. âThe first co-ordinate must be the location of the Kormoran launch boat, the second is the target.'
He handed Book the document: now with place names added to it and highlighted:
Moseley plotted the points on a map. âThe first boat is in the English Channelâoff Cherbourg, France, up near the Normandy beaches.'
Book relayed this to Schofield, âThe first boat is in the English Channel, near Cherbourg, off the Normandy beaches. It'll fire on London, Paris and Berlin. The next two boats are in New York and San Francisco, each set to take out multiple cities.'
âChrist,' Schofield said as he hovered in the water.
The patrol boat was 50 yards away, almost on him now.
âOkay, Book. Listen,' he said, just as a low wave smacked him in the face. He spat out a mouthful of salt water. âSubmarine interdiction. Those missile boats can't launch if they're on the bottom of the ocean. Decode the GPS locations of all the Kormoran supertankers and contact any attack subs we have nearby. 688Is, boomers, I don't care. Anything with a torpedo on board. Then send them to take out those Kormoran launch boats.'
â
That might work for some of the tankers, Scarecrow, but it won't work for all of them.
'
âI know,' Schofield said. âI know. If we can't destroy a launch vessel, then we'll have to board it and disarm the missiles in their silos.
âThe thing is, a light-signal response unit would require the disarmerâmeâto be reacting to a disarm program on the unit's screen. Which means I'd have to be sitting within sixty feet of
each missile's control console
to disarm them, but I can't be everywhere around the world at the same time. Which means I'll need people on each launch boat connecting me via satellite to that boat's missiles.'
â
You need people on each boat?
'
âThat's right, Book. If there are no subs in the area, someone's going to have get on board each Kormoran boat, get within sixty feet of its missile console, attach a satellite uplink to that console and then patch me in via satellite. Only then can I use a CincLock unit to personally stop
all
the missile launches.'
â
Holy shit
,' Book said. â
So what do you want me to do?
'
Another wave splashed over Schofield's head. âLet's tackle the first three boats first. Get yourself to New York, Book. And call David Fairfax. Send him to San Francisco. I want people I know on those tankers. If I get out of this alive, I'll try for the tanker in the English Channel. Oh, and ask Fairfax what the sixth Mersenne prime number is. If he doesn't know, tell him to find out.
âAnd last, send that Department of Defense inspection team in earlyâthe one that was going to visit Axon's missile-construction plant in Norfolk, Virginia, at 12 noon. I want to know what's happened at that plant.'
â
Already done that
,' Book II said.
âNice work.'
â
What about you?
' Book said.
At that exact moment, the French patrol boat swung to a halt above Schofield. Angry-looking sailors on its deck eyed him down the barrels of FAMAS assault rifles.
âThey haven't killed me yet,' Schofield said. âWhich means someone wants to talk with me. It also means I'm still in the game. Scarecrow, out.'
And with that Schofield was hauled out of the water at gunpoint.
Â
THE WHITE HOUSE, |
The White House Situation Room buzzed with activity.
Aides hustled left and right. Generals and Admirals spoke into secure phones. The words on everyone's lips were âKormoran', âChameleon' and âShane Schofield'.
The President strode into the room just as one of the Navy men, an Admiral named Gaines, pressed his phone to his shoulder.
âMr President,' Gaines said, âI've got Moseley in London on the line. He's saying that this Schofield character wants me to deploy attack submarines against various surface targets around the world. Sir, please, I'm not seriously supposed to let a thirty-year-old Marine
captain
control the entire United States Navy, am I?'
âYou'll do exactly as Captain Schofield says, Admiral,' the President said. âWhatever he wants, he gets. If he says deploy our subs, you deploy the subs. If he says blockade North Korea, you blockade North Korea. People! I thought I was clear about this! I don't want you coming to me to check on everything Schofield asks for. The fate of the world could be resting on that man's shoulders. I know him and I trust him. Hell, I'd trust him with my life. Anything short of a nuclear strike, you do it and advise me later. Now do as the man says and dispatch those subs!'
Â
OFFICES OF THE DEFENSE INTELLIGENCE AGENCY, |
A battered and bruised David Fairfax trudged back into his office on the bottom floor of the Pentagon, flanked by a pair of policemen.
Wendel Hogg was waiting for him, with Audrey by his side.
âFairfax!' Hogg roared. âWhere in all hell and damnation have you been!'
âI'm going home for the day,' Fairfax said wearily.
âBull
shit
you are,' Hogg said. âYou are going on report! Then you are going upstairs to face a disciplinary hearing under Pentagon Security Regulations 402 and 403 . . .'
Too tired to care, Fairfax could only stand there and take it.
â. . . and then,
then
, you're going to be outta here for good, you little wise-ass. And you're finally gonna learn that you ain't special, that you ain't untouchable, andâ' Hogg shot a look at Audreyââthat this country's security is best left to men like me, men who can fight, men who are prepared to hold a weapon and put their lives on theâ'
He never finished his sentence.
For at that moment a squad of twelve Force Reconnaissance Marines stomped into the doorway behind Fairfax. They wore full battle dress uniforms and were
heavily
armedâColt Commando assault rifles, MP-7s, deadly eyes.
Fairfax's eyes widened in surprise.
The Marine leader stepped forward. âGentlemen. My name is Captain Andrew Trent, United States Marine Corps. I'm looking for Mr David Fairfax.'
Fairfax swallowed.
Audrey gasped.
Hogg just went bug-eyed. âWhat in cotton-pickin' hell is going on here?'
The Marine named Trent stepped forward. He was a big guy, all muscle, and in his full battle dress uniform, a seriously imposing figure.
âYou must be Hogg,' Trent said. âMr Hogg, my orders come direct from the President of the United States. There is a serious international incident afoot and at this critical time, Mr Fairfax is perhaps the fourth most important person in the country. My orders state that I am to escort him on a mission of the highest importance and guard him with my life. So if you don't mind, Mr Hogg,
get out of the man's way
.'
Hogg just stood there, stunned.
Audrey just gazed at Fairfax, amazed.
Fairfax himself hesitated. After this morning's events, he didn't know who to trust.
âMr Fairfax,' Trent said. âI've been sent by Shane Schofield. He says he needs your help again. If you still don't believe me, here . . .'
Trent held out his radio. Fairfax took it.
At the other end was Book II.
Within twenty-two minutes, Dave Fairfax was sitting on board a chartered Concorde jet, heading west across the country at supersonic speed, his destination: San Francisco.