Authors: Matthew Reilly
FIRST PROTOCOL (PROXIMITY): SATISFIED.
INITIATE SECOND PROTOCOL.
The red and white circles from the New York launch ship's missile control console appeared on Schofield's screen.
And with the mighty hull of the
Talbot
thundering down through the great blue void above him, Schofield started the disarm sequence.
The supertanker was gathering speed.
Falling, falling . . .
Schofield's moves became faster.
The supertanker was eighty feet above him.
A red circle blinked, Schofield punched it.
Sixty feet . . .
Fifty feet . . .
The noise of the falling supertanker grew louderâ
rrmmmmmm.
Forty feet
 . . .
Thirty feet
 . . .
Schofield hit the last red circle. The display blinked:
Â
SECOND PROTOCOL (RESPONSE PATTERN): SATISFIED.
THIRD PROTOCOL (CODE ENTRY): ACTIVE.
PLEASE ENTER AUTHORIZED DISARM CODE.
Twenty feet
 . . .
The water all around his little submarine darkened dramatically, consumed by the shadow of the supertanker.
Schofield entered the Universal Disarm Code: 131071.
Fifteen feet
 . . .
The screen beeped:
Â
THIRD PROTOCOL (CODE ENTRY): SATISFIED.
AUTHORIZED DISARM CODE ENTERED.
MISSILE LAUNCH ABORTED.
And as he waited for the endâthe true end; the end that he physically could not escapeâSchofield closed his eyes and thought about his life and people who had been in it:
He saw Libby Gant smiling that thousand-watt smile, saw her kissing him tenderlyâsaw Mother Newman shooting hoops on her garage basketball court, saw her big wide grin on her big wide faceâand tears welled in his eyes.
That there were still missiles to disarm somehow didn't bother Schofield. Someone else would have to solve that this time.
When it came, the end came swiftly.
Ten seconds later, the supertanker MV
Talbot
hit the bottom of the English Channel with an earth-shaking, earth-shuddering
boom
.
It landed right on top of Schofield's stricken ASDS and crushed it in a single pulverising instant.
Â
The thing was, Schofield wasn't in the sub when it happened.
Seconds before the
Talbot
hit the bottomâwhen it was barely twelve feet off the seabed, its shadow looming over the mini-sub, and Schofield was lost in his thoughtsâa dull metallic
clunk
was heard hitting the outside of his ASDS.
Schofield snapped to look out the windows and saw a
Maghook
attached to the metal exterior of his little submarine, its rope stretching away across the ocean floor, disappearing into the darkness to the side of the falling supertanker.
Knight's voice exploded in his ear: â
Schofield! Come on! Move! Move! Move!
'
Schofield was electrified into action.
He took a breath and hit the â
HATCH
' button.
The hatch irised open and water
gushed
into the sunken mini-submarine. It took barely two seconds for it to completely fill the sub, and suddenly Schofield was outside, moving fast, grabbing the Maghook attached to the sub's flank.
No sooner had he clutched it than Knightâat the other end of the ropeâhit the hook's demagnetise switch and the Maghook's rope began to reel itself in quickly.
Schofield was yanked across the ocean floor at phenomenal speedâthe falling supertanker looming above him, its great endless hull hovering over his body like the underside of a planet, while a foot below him, the sandy ocean floor zoomed by at dizzying speed.
And then abruptly Schofield emerged from beneath the supertanker, his feet sliding out from under it just as the gigantic vessel hit the bottom of the English Channel with a singular reverberating
boom
that sent sand and silt billowing out in every direction, consuming Schofield in a dense underwater cloud.
And waiting for him in that cloudâsitting atop the second ASDS, breathing from a new Pony Bottle and holding Gant's Maghook in his handsâwas Aloysius Knight.
He handed Schofield the Pony Bottle and Schofield breathed its air in deeply.
Within a minute, the two of them were inside Knight's mini-sub. Knight repressurised the sub, expunged it of seawater.
And then the two warriors rose through the depths of the English Channel, a short silent journey that ended with their little yellow sub breaching the storm-riddled surfaceâwhere it was assaulted by crashing waves and the blinding glare of brilliant halogen spotlights: spotlights that belonged to the
Black Raven
hovering low over the water, waiting for them.
Â
AIRSPACE ABOVE THE ENGLISH CHANNEL |
The
Black Raven
shot through the sky, heading south over the English Channel.
A dripping-wet Aloysius Knight dropped into his gunner's chair. The equally-soaked Schofield, however, never stopped moving.
Inside the
Raven
's rear holding cell, he pulled out his modified Palm Pilot. There was unfinished business to attend to.
He pulled up the missile-firing listâthe one that was different to Book's earlier list. He compared the two lists.
Okay
, he thought,
the first three entries are the same as on Book's list
.
But not the last three: the missiles are different. And there's that extra entry at the end
.
To those last three entries, he added the GPS locations that he'd got from Book. The first two of them read:
And suddenly this list took on a whole new dimension.
The cloned missiles being fired on Beijing and Hong Kong from the MV
Hopewell
were clones of the Taiwanese Sky Horse ICBM. They were also armed with
American
warheads.
While the missiles firing from the MV
Whale
on New Delhi were clones of the Pakistani Ghauri-IIâand the ones being fired on Islamabad were replicas of the Indian Agni-II.
âHot damn . . .' Schofield breathed.
How would China react to Taiwanese nuclear strikes?
Badly
.
And how would Pakistan and India react to mutual nuclear bombardment?
Very badly
.
Schofield frowned.
He couldn't understand why his list differed from Book's.
Okay, think. Where did Book get his original list from?
From the Mossad agent, Rosenthal, who had acquired it during his many months shadowing Majestic-12.
So where did I get mine from?
Schofield thought back.
âOh, Jesus . . .' he said, remembering.
He'd received it on his Palm Pilot when he and Gant had been sitting in the stone ante-room in the Forteresse de Valois, waiting while Aloysius Knight had been in Monsieur Delacroix's office, hacking wirelessly into Delacroix's standalone computer.
Schofield turned to Knight. âWhen you were with Delacroix at the castle, did he say anything about whose office you were in?'
Knight shrugged. âYeah. He said something about it not being his office. Said it belonged to the man who owned the castle.'
âKillian,' Schofield said.
âWhy?'
But now Schofield understood.
âThere must have been another computer in that office. In a drawer or on a side table,' he said. âYou said it yourself. Your Pilot would retrieve documents from
any computer
in the room. When you initiated the wireless hack, you picked up documents from
another
computer in that office. Killian's computer.'
âYeah, so?'
Schofield held up the new list. âThis isn't Majestic-12's plan.
Their
plan involves starting a global Cold War on Terror. M-12 wants
terrorist
missiles striking major centresâShahabs and Taep'o-Dongs. Which was why they left the bodies of the Global Jihad guys at the Axon plant and on the supertankers: to make the world think that terrorists stole the Kormoran ships.
âBut this list shows something else entirely. It shows that Killian's company installed
different
Chameleon missiles on the Kormoran shipsânot the ones Majestic-12 was expecting. Killian is planning something much worse than a global war on terrorism. He's set it up so that each of the world's major powers is
seemingly
hit by its most-hated enemy.
âThe West is hit by terrorist strikes. India and Pakistan are hit by each other. China is hit by what appear to be Taiwanese missiles.'
Schofield's eyes widened at the realisation.
âIt's Killian's extra step. This isn't M-12's plan at all. This is Killian's own plan. And it won't produce any kind of Cold War at all. It'll produce something much much worse. It'll produce total global warfare. It'll produce
total global anarchy
.'
Rufus said, âYou're saying that Killian has been deceiving his rich buddies on Majestic-12?'
âExactly,' Schofield said.
But then, again, he remembered Killian's words from the Forteresse de Valois: âAlthough many don't know it yet, the future of the world lies in Africa.'
âThe future of the world lies in Africa,' Schofield said. âThere were African guard squads on each of the boats. Eritreans. Nigerians. Oh, shit.
Shit!
Why didn't I see it before . . .'
Schofield brought up one of the other documents on his Palm Pilot:
Â
This was the itinerary of Killian's tour of Africa the previous year.
Asmara: the capital of Eritrea.
Luanda: the capital of Angola.
Abuja: Nigeria.
N'djamena: Chad.
And Tobruk: the site of Libya's largest Air Force base.
Killian hadn't been opening factoriesâhe had been forging alliances with five key African nations.
But why?
Schofield spoke: âWhat would happen if the major powers of the world descended into anarchic warfare? What would happen elsewhere in the world?'
âYou'd see some old scores settled, that's for sure,' Knight said. âEthnic wars would reignite. The Serbs would go after the Croats, the Russians would wipe out the Chechens, and that's not even mentioning everybody who wants to nail the Kurds. Then there'd be the opportunists, like the Japanese in WWII. Countries seizing the opportunity to grab resources or territory: Indonesia would snatch East Timor back . . .'
âWhat about Africa?' Schofield said. âI'm thinking of National Security Council Planning Paper Q-309.'
â
Whoa,
' Knight said.
Schofield remembered the policy word for word. âIn the event of a conflict involving the major global powers, it is highly likely that the poverty-stricken populations of Africa, the Middle East and Central Americaâsome of which outnumber the populations of their Western neighbours by a ratio of 100-to-1âwill flood over Western borders and overwhelm Western city centres.'