Scanned & Semi-Proofed by Cozette
(Scanner/Proofer’s Note to readers: “Yes, you ARE seeing this correctly.
There are NO numbered chapters in this novel. ;)
VULCAN'S
FORGE
It begins deep beneath the Pacific Ocean, where a nuclear bomb strikes
at the fiery hot heart of the earth. Churning, spewing boiling lava, a volcano
rises with unnatural speed from the ocean floor-the source of a new mineral
that promises clean, limitless nuclear power.
It continues in hot spots around the globe: Hawaii, where a
secessionist movement is about to turn violent and the American Army may be
asked to fire on U.S. citizens; Washington, D.C., where the subway system
becomes the site of a running gun battle; the Far East, where disrupted
diplomatic negotiations jeopardize world peace; a rogue Russian submarine,
circling the infant volcano.
Caught in the middle is Philip Mercer, a geologist and a one-time
commando with shady contacts in all the right (or is it wrong?) places. When
Mercer learns that the daughter of an old friend is being kept under armed
guard in a local hospital, he vows to rescue her, not knowing that this is the
first step in unraveling the fantastic secrets of...
"Romance, violence, technology are superbly
blended by a master storyteller. Du Brul creates
a fast-moving odyssey that is second to none."
-Clive Cussler
"Cliffhangers more wonderfully outrageous than
you'll find in Clive Cussler or Ian Fleming. "
-Kirkus Reviews
'' Vulcan's Forge is a fast-paced story well told by an
upcoming new talent in the spy thriller genre."
—The Cape Coral Daily Breeze
"Mercer [is] a combination of Dirk Pitt and James Bond. A fun
thriller."
—Oklahoman
"Du Brul has created a high-tempo action place. The reader is
constantly intrigued. Vulcan's Forge is an action-packed and intriguing
thriller."
—The Mystery Review
VULCAN'S
FORGE
JACK B. DU BRUL
A TOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES
BOOK NEW YORK
This novel is
thankfully
dedicated to
those poor souls
who suffered
through
the first
drafts.
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed
in this book are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously.
VULCAN'S FORGE
Copyright © 1998 by Jack B. Du Brul
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book,
or portions thereof, in any form.
A Forge Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
Forge® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, Inc.
ISBN: 0-812-56461-8
Library of Congress Card Catalog Number: 97-34382
First edition: March 1998
First mass market edition: January 1999
- ,
Printed in the United States of America 0 98765432 1
Because this is my first novel, it is safe to say that I owe
thanks to everyone who has ever influenced me, for a little of all of them is
within these pages, from family and friends to casual acquaintances who may
have imparted some piece of wisdom. A few notables are Elizabeth Ash for her
scientific acumen and Dick Flynn for his firsthand account of a heart attack. I
wish now I'd taken the time over the years to list all the others.
Actually writing this book was pretty much a
one-person affair; however I've learned that publishing is very definitely a
group activity. For that I must thank Todd Murphy and the other Jack Du Brul
for proving it's not what you know but who you know, and Bob Diforio, my agent,
for being that "who." At Forge I especially want to thank Melissa Ann
Singer, my editor. If ever there was someone who knows how to hand-hold, it is
she. I also want to thank you, the reader, for giving me a chance.
Author's note: For security reasons, the government forbids
vehicle traffic on Pennsylvania Avenue in front of the White House. For reasons
of continuity, I've left it open.
The moon was a millimetric sliver hanging in the night sky like an
ironic smile. A gentle easterly breeze smeared the acrid feather of smoke that
coiled from the single funnel of the ore carrier Grandam Phoenix. The
Pacific swells rolled the ponderous ship as easily as a lazy hammock on a
summer afternoon as she cruised two hundred miles north of the Hawaiian
Islands. The tranquility of the night was about to be shattered.
The Grandam
Phoenix was on her maiden voyage, having slipped down the ways in Kobe,
Japan, just two months earlier. Her final fitting and sea trials had been
rushed so that she could begin paying off the massive debts incurred by the
company during her construction. Built with the latest technological advances
in safety and speed, she was an example of the new breed of specialized cargo
ship. The Second World War had taught that the efficiency of a specialized
vessel far outweighed the cost in its design and construction. The owners
maintained that their newest ship would prove that these principles worked as
well for civilian craft as they did for the military. The 442-foot-long ore
carrier was to become the flagship of the line as the shipping business
greedily expanded into the booming Pacific markets.
Soon after taking
command of the Grandam Phoenix, Captain Ralph Line learned that the
owners had a very different fate in store for their newest ship from the one
proposed to her underwriters.
Not long after the
development of maritime insurance, unscrupulous owners and crews intentionally
began scuttling their vessels in order to collect often substantial claims. The
underwriters had no recourse but to pay out unless someone, usually a crew
member feeling twinges of guilt, came forward with the truth. For sinking the
ore carrier, the crew of the Grandam Phoenix would receive bonuses large
enough to ensure their silence. If the swindle worked, and there seemed no
reason it wouldn't, the owners were looking at a settlement not only for the
twenty-million-dollar value of the vessel, but also that of her cargo, listed
as bauxite ore from Malaysia, but in reality worthless yellow gravel.
Captain Line held
true to his genre, a tough man with a whiskey- and cigarette-tortured voice and
far-gazing eyes. Standing squarely as his ship rolled with the seas, he ground
out his Lucky Strike. And lit another.
Line had served in
the U.S. Merchant Marine all through World War II. With losses rivaled only by
the Marine Corps, the Merchant Marine seemed to be the service for maniacs or
suicides. Yet Line had managed not only to survive but flourish. By 1943 he had
his own command, running troops and material to the hellfires of the Pacific
theater. Unlike most of his contemporaries, he never once lost a vessel to the
enemy.
At war's end, he,
like many others, found that there were too many men and too few ships. During
the late forties and early fifties, Line became just another Yankee prowling
the Far East, taking nearly any command offered to him. He ran questionable
cargoes for shadowy companies and
learned to keep his mouth shut.
When first approached
by the Phoenix's owners, Line had thought he was being offered the
opportunity of a lifetime. No longer would he have to scrounge for a ship,
prostituting his integrity to remain at sea. They were giving him a chance once
again to be the proud captain, the master of their flagship. It wasn't until
after the contracts had been signed that the company told Line about the
predestined fate of his vessel. It took two days and a sizable bonus for his
bitterness to give way to acceptance.
Now stationed on the
bridge, a cup of cooling coffee in a weathered hand, Line stared at the dark
sea and cursed. He hated the corporate people who could arbitrarily decide to
scuttle such a great ship. They didn't understand the bond between captain and
vessel. For the sake of profit, they were about to destroy a beautiful living
thing. The idea sickened Line to the bone. He hated himself for accepting, for
allowing himself to be part of such a loathsome act.
"Position,"
Ralph Line barked.
Before the position
could be given, a crewman stooped over the radar repeater and said in a remote
voice, "Contact, twelve miles dead ahead."
Line glanced at the
chronometer on the bulkhead to his left. The contact would be the rendezvous
vessel that would pick up the crew after the Phoenix was gone. They were
right on time and in position. "Good work, men."
He had been given
very specific and somewhat strange orders concerning the location, course, and
time that he was to sink his ship. He assumed the North Pacific had been chosen
because of her unpredictable weather patterns. The weather here could turn
deadly without a moment's notice, building waves that could swamp a battleship
and whipping up winds that literally tore the surface from the ocean. When the
time came for the insurance inquiry, the rendezvous
vessel would corroborate any story they manufactured.
"You know the
drill, gentlemen," Line growled, lighting a cigarette from the glowing tip
of his last. "Engines All Stop, helm bring us to ninety-seven-point-five
degrees magnetic."
This precise but
inexplicable positioning of the vessel complied exactly with Line's final
orders from the head office. They had given no reason for this action and Line
knew enough not to pry. The engine speed was reduced, the rhythmic throb
diminished until it was almost imperceptible. The ship's wheel blurred as the
young seaman cranked it around.
"Helm?"
"We're coming up
on ninety-seven degrees, sir, as ordered."
"Range?"
"Eleven miles."
Line picked up the
radio hand mike and dialed in the shipboard channel. "Now hear this: we've
reached position; all crew not on duty report to the lifeboats. Engineering,
emergency shut-down of the boilers and open the sea cocks on my mark. Prepare
to abandon ship."
He looked around the
bridge slowly, his eyes burning every detail of her into his brain. "I'm
sorry, sweetheart," he mumbled.
"Ten
miles," The radar man called.
"Open the
seacocks, abandon ship." Line replaced the mike and pressed a button on
the radio. A klaxon began to wail.
The cry of a dying
woman, Line thought.
Line waited on the
bridge while the crew filed out to the boat deck. He had to spend a little time
alone with the ship before he left her. He grasped the rung of the oaken wheel.
The wood was so new that he felt slivers pricking at his skin. Never would this
wheel achieve the smooth patina of use; instead it would become so much rot on
the bottom of the ocean.
"Goddamn
it," Line said aloud, then strode from the bridge.
Gone were the days of
men scampering down cargo netting into boats bobbing on the surface of the sea.
Ocean Freight and Cargo had spared no expense in outfitting their flagship with
every modern safety device. One lifeboat was already full of men and up on the
davits. The winchman waited for a curt nod from Line before lowering the boat
to the sea below.
The warm night breeze
blew smoke from Line's cigarette into his eyes as he climbed into the second
lifeboat. The other men in the boat with him were subdued, ashen. They didn't
talk or look each other in the eye as Line nodded to the winchman.
The winchman threw a
toggle switch and the pulleys that lowered the lifeboat began to whine. The
boat hit the calm surface with a white-frothed splash. Instantly two men stood
up to detach the cables that secured them to the sinking ore carrier.
Captain Line took
charge of the lifeboat, grasping the tiller in his right hand while applying
power to the idling engine. The boat motored away from the Grandam Phoenix, the
crew craning their necks to watch their sinking ship. The klaxon echoed emptily
across the waves.
It took fifteen
minutes for the ship's list to become noticeable, but after that, she went
quickly. The stern lifted from the water; her two ferro-bronze propellers
gleaming in the low light. The watching men heard her boilers let go of their
mounts and slam through the engine room bulkheads. The screeching hiss that
followed was the sound of thousands of tons of gravel pouring across the
vessel's gunwales into the ocean.
Line refused to watch
his ship die. He kept his eyes trained ahead, steering toward the dim lights of
the distant rendezvous ship. Yet every time he heard a new sound from the Grandam
Phoenix's death throes, he cringed.
The rendezvous ship
was not large, a ninety-foot general cargo freighter, the type referred to as a
"stick ship" by seamen because her decks were studded with a forest
of cranes and derricks. Her boxy superstructure stood amidships, her straight
funnel atop it. As the two lifeboats approached, Line could make out about a
dozen men on her port rail. He guided his boat toward them.
"Captain Line, I
presume?" a voice called down cheerily.
"I'm Line."
The reply was the rapid fire of ten
Soviet-made PPSH submachine guns. The snail drums of the weapons could hold
fifty rounds and the gunmen emptied them all into the lifeboats. The cacophony
of shouts and screams, shots and ricochets, was deafening. Blood pooled on the
floorboards of the boats, its sweet smell mingling with the cloud of cordite
smoke.
Line looked up at the
ship, bloodied and dazed, astounded that he was still alive. Anger, fear, and
pain boiled in his mind but the emotions and sensations were being driven back
by darkness.
The gunmen lowered their weapons one by one as the bolts slammed
into empty chambers. The lifeboat was a charnel scene of blood and mutilation,
the water pouring in through the holed floor sloshed in a pink froth. In
moments, both lifeboats capsized, spilling corpses into the ocean. Packs of
sharks circled eagerly.
The lone unarmed man
on deck had watched the massacre with flat appraising eyes. Though not yet
thirty, he carried an air of authority held by only a few even twice his age.
When the lifeboats capsized, he nodded to the commander of the gunmen and went
into the freighter's superstructure.
Minutes later, he
ducked into the ship's hold. The lights of the computing and sonar equipment
packed into the cramped hold gave his skin an alien pallor.
"Depth of the
target ship?" he snapped at one of the technicians bent over a sonar
scope.
The target ship was
of course the Grandam Phoenix as she plunged to the distant bottom.
The sonarman didn't
look up from his equipment. "Six thousand feet, sinking at a thousand feet
every seven minutes."
The man glanced at
his watch and jotted down some numbers on a pad. After a brief pause he looked
at his watch again. "Two minutes from my mark."
The hold was noisy.
The sound of the ship's diesel generators filtered in through the steel walls
and the air conditioners necessary to cool the computers sounded like aircraft
propellers. Yet the seven men in the room could have sworn that during those
two minutes there was not a sound in the world. They were too focused on their
jobs to notice any distractions.
"Mark," the
young man said with a casualness that was not forced.
Another crewman
flipped several switches. Nothing happened.
The civilian counted down under his breath. ''Four . . .
three. . . two. . . one."
The shock wave
started nearly seven thousand feet below the surface and had to travel a
further ten miles to reach the ship, yet it struck only five seconds after
detonation. Billions of gallons of water had been vaporized in a fireball with
temperatures reaching 100,000 degrees. The main wave rushed to the surface at
150 miles per hour and threw up a dome of water half a mile across. The dome
hung in the air for a full ten seconds, gravity fighting inertia, then
collapsed, thunderously filling the six-thousand-foot deep hole in the Pacific
Ocean.
Caught in a man-made
Charybdis, the freighter tossed and pitched as if she were in a hurricane, her
hull nearly out of the water one moment and almost swamped the next. The young
man, the architect of such destruction, feared for a moment that he had cut the
margin too thin, placed his ship too close to the epicenter. Before his concern
could crack the glacial facade of his face, the sea began to calm. The huge waves leveled out and the gale wind
created when the ocean fell back on itself, dissipated.
It took the young man
a few minutes to reach the deck of the freighter, for she still rolled
dangerously. On the horizon, a blanket of steam clung to the sea and glowed
luminously in the weak moonlight.
"I have laid the
foundation of Vulcan's Forge."
PRESENT DAY
The only thing that the President really enjoyed about his new job
was his chair in the Oval Office. It had a high back and a soft seat and was
made of the most supple leather he had ever felt. Often he would sit in that
chair after all of the staff had gone home and remember his simpler youth. He
had achieved the most powerful office on the planet, fulfilling his lifelong
ambition but sometimes he thought the price had been too high. The college
sweetheart he had married had been turned into an emotionless automaton by the
pressures of her husband's career. The vast network of friends he had built
during the years had become sycophants groveling for favors and his once
perfect health had deteriorated so he felt ten years older than his sixty-two.
He would sit
some nights with all the lights off so the network watchdogs across the street
wouldn't think the President was burning the midnight oil, and he would think
about his younger days growing up outside of Cincinnati. He missed guzzling
beer with his hot-rodding friends, shooting trick pool to impress overly
made-up, plump girls, and saying whatever came to mind when someone pissed him
off.
A perfect example of
why he longed for that puerile freedom was seated opposite him in full African
splendor, robes and headband and sandals. He was the ambassador to one of the
new central African nations. A tall man with sarcastic eyes and a complacent
attitude about nearly everything that they had discussed.
The ambassador was
saying, with a dismissive wave of his hand, that the intelligence gathered by
the Red Cross, the United Nations and the CIA was all false; that his
government was not involved in any type of tribal genocide through starvation
or the intentional spread of disease. He insisted that his government was
committed to all tribes under their care and all the people suffered, not just
the smaller, less politically influential tribes.
Bullshit, the
President wanted to shout and slap the smug smile off the ambassador's face.
But convention stopped him.
Instead he would have
to spout some platitude such as, "We haven't seen your situation in just
that fashion, but it bears further investigation."
A glow under the lip
of his desk caught the President's eye—the situation light, a signal from his
chief of staff. In the six months of his term, this was the only time other
than routine weekly tests that the light had been switched on. The last time
the light had been used officially was during the Soviet coup in August of
1991.
The President stood
up quickly, his professional smile masking his consternation. He extended his
right hand and the ambassador knew that he was being dismissed.
"We haven't seen
your situation in just that fashion, but it bears further investigation. Thank
you, Mr. Ambassador."
"Thank you, Mr.
President, for being so generous with
your time," the ambassador replied sourly. He'd been promised another half
hour.
They shook hands
briefly. The ambassador turned in a whirl of robes and left the Oval Office.
The President sat
back down and had time to rub his temples for a second before the other door to
the Oval Office opened. Expecting the angular figure of his chief of staff,
Catherine Smith, the president was surprised to see Richard Henna.
Dick Henna was the
new director of the FBI, one of the only important presidential appointees that
Congress had so far approved. As always, self-serving political squabbling in
the House was holding up the work of the federal government and costing the
taxpayers tens of millions of dollars.
Henna was a career
snoop who had managed never to step on the wrong toes. He had plodded his way
through thirty years in the bureau, never grabbing headlines but always
garnering respect. He had an exemplary family life, a modest slice of suburbia
to call home, and absolutely no skeletons in any closet. Knowing of his
reputation, the opposition party in Congress had not bothered with any serious
investigation into his past.
The President, who
liked Henna for his unshakable integrity, smiled when he saw the director enter
his office. The smile faded when he realized that Henna, never a neat man,
looked terrible. His eyes were puffy and bloodshot. The jowled lines of his
face were blurred behind thick stubble. His suit was rumpled, his shirt looked
as if it had been slept in, and his tie was cocked off and stained.
"You look like
you could use some coffee, Dick." The President tried to put cheer into
his voice, to penetrate the air of gloom that had permeated his office. His
effort was as effective as a candle in a dark forest.
"I could use
something a bit stronger, sir."
The President nodded
toward the Regency table which acted as a bar, and
Henna helped himself to a triple Scotch.
Henna slumped into
the seat opposite the President, the one formerly occupied by the African
ambassador. Settling his attache case on his lap, Henna opened it and withdrew
a thin, violet file. The file was stamped PEO. President's Eyes Only.
"What's going
on, Dick?" The President had never seen Henna so morose.
"Sir,"
Henna started shakily, "this morning, just after midnight, the National
Oceanographic and Atmospheric Administration ship Ocean Seeker was
reported missing about two hundred miles north of Hawaii. Search planes have
been dispatched and found only debris in the water. A nearby freighter is
assisting in the search, but so far it doesn't look promising."
The President had
gone slightly pale; his fingers clenched. He had not obtained this office by
being overly emotional and his mind was clear and sharp. "That's a
terrible tragedy, Dick, but I don't see how it concerns you or the FBI."
Henna would have been
surprised had the President not asked that question. He handed the file across
the desk and took a sip of Scotch. "Please read the top sheet."
The President opened
the file and began to read. Seconds later, the blood drained from his
patrician's face and the tension lines around his eyes tightened so that he
squinted at the paper.
Before he finished
reading, Henna spoke. "That was brought to my attention two days ago,
after it was proven to be Ohnishi's handwriting and not written under duress.
When I received it, I checked with the coast guard and the navy. They didn't
have any scheduled traffic to or from the islands, so I figured we had a little
breathing room." Henna's voice broke. "I didn't check with NOAA, I
forgot all about them. I had been warned that any government ship steaming
outward from Hawaii would be destroyed.
I had a goddamn warning. Those people didn't have to die."
The President looked
up. Pain and guilt and failure were etched into Henna's face. "Take it
easy, Dick. How many people know about this?"
''Three besides the
two of us—a mailroom clerk; my deputy director, Marge Doyle; and a handwriting
analyst."
The President glanced
at his watch. "I've got lunch with the speaker of the house and if I
cancel it. . . I don't want to think about the consequences. The rest of my day
is booked solid. We'll keep things normal here in Washington, but I'll have all
naval traffic to and from Hawaii suspended, just like this letter demands. I'm
not about to give in to Ohnishi, but we need the time. I'm also going to put
the military at Pearl Harbor on full alert. They've been on standby ever since
the rioting started two weeks ago, but I think it prudent to up their readiness
status. Let's meet tonight at nine in the Situation Room to discuss the
situation and our possible responses. Use the tunnel from the Treasury Building
so you don't arouse suspicion."
"Yes, sir. Is
there anything you want me to do in the meantime?" Henna was regaining his
composure.
"I assume you've
already started a full background check on Takahiro Ohnishi." Henna
nodded. "Find out what he's all about. We're all well aware of his racial
views, but this is an outrage. Also, I want to know where he got the capability
to destroy one of our ships. Someone is supplying him with arms and I want it
stopped."
"Yes, sir,"
Henna replied, and left the office.
The President touched
the intercom button on his desk. Joy Craig, his personal secretary, answered
instantly.
''Joy, set up a
meeting in the Situation Room for nine o'clock tonight. Call in the chairman of
the joint chiefs; the directors of the CIA, NSA, and NOAA; the secretary of
state and the secretary of defense."
Most of those men
were only acting heads, until their confirmation, but this crisis warranted
trusting them as if they were already sworn into their respected offices.
The President sank
back into his chair, his face blank, and stared at the gold braid-trimmed
American flag near the office door. In his Jap, his hands trembled.
__________
__________
__________
The rain looked like Christmas tinsel in the headlights of the taxi
parked outside an Arlington, Virginia, brownstone. The passenger gave the
driver a crisp fifty and told him to keep the change. The back door opened, and
in the glow of the domelight, the man grabbed the handles of his two soft
leather bags and exited the cab.
Philip
Mercer had always believed that international airports were a type of stateless
limbo, sovereign nations allied only to each other with no allegiance to their
host countries. His flight had touched down at Dulles an hour and a half
earlier, yet he only now felt that he'd returned to the United States. Although
the cool rain soothed his dried sinuses, Mercer still groaned as he inevitably
tried the wrong key on the Baldwin lock of the front door. He no longer
wondered why he always tried the wrong key when his arms were full, yet choose
the right one when they were empty.
Home at last,
Mercer thought, as he stepped into the foyer
of his house, then chuckled. In the five years he had lived here, this was the
first time that he had ever thought of the brownstone as home.
"Must be
settling down," he chided himself mildly.
From the outside,
the brownstone was as innocuous as the fifteen others on his side of the block.
Yet once through the door, any similarity to the other 1940s-constructed row
houses ended. Mercer had gutted the three-story building and completely
redesigned the interior. From a thirty-foot-high entry that took up the front
third of the seventy-five-foot-deep building, Mercer could see up to the
second-floor library, and further up to his master bedroom. An ornate curved
staircase salvaged from a nineteenth-century rectory connected the three
levels.
All of the
furniture was in place, yet the house still lacked many of the personal items
that would make it a home. Tables and shelves were empty of mementos and the
walls were barren of pictures. The design of the house showed much of the
character of its sole occupant, but many of his subtleties lay hidden in
cardboard boxes.
Mercer dropped his
bags near the front door and walked across the little used formal living room
toward the back of the house. Passing an oak-paneled billiard room and the
kitchen, he went into his home office and slid his slim briefcase across the
wide leather-topped desk.
He used the back
stairs to climb to the second floor and on the landing he swore under his
breath. The television in the rec room was on, the volume barely a mutter. The
lights around the mahogany bar had been muted to an amber glow. Snores rose
from a blanketed lump on the couch. Mercer walked behind the bar and placed a
Clapton disc into the player. With a wicked smile, he pressed play and turned
the stereo to maximum volume.
The Carver
speakers rattled the bottles and glasses behind the bar. Harry White woke with
a sudden jerk.
Mercer turned off
the stereo and laughed.
"I said you
could use my house when I was away, you bastard, not move in."
Harry looked at
Mercer with owl eyes, his withered face still scrunched up with sleep. He
peered around at the overflowing ashtray on the coffee table, the plates of
congealed food, and the two empty Jack Daniel's bottles.
"Welcome
back, Mercer. I didn't expect you till tomorrow." Harry's voice sounded
like a rock crusher with a thrown gear.
"Obviously
not." Mercer smirked. "Nice party?"
Harry ran his
fingers through his gray crew cut. "I don't really remember."
Mercer laughed
again, an infectious laugh that, despite what must have been a powerful
hangover, made Harry smile.
Mercer pulled two
Heinekens from the circa-1950 lock-levered refrigerator next to the stereo rack
and opened them with the brass puller tucked under the ornately carved backbar.
He drained one in four long gulps and started to sip the second.
"How was the
trip?" Harry asked, lighting a cigarette.
"Good, but
exhausting. I did seven lectures in six days all over South Africa, plus met
with a couple of top engineers from one of the Rand mining firms." Rain
rattled the darkened windows.
Philip Mercer was
a mine engineer and consultant. According to those in the industry, he was the
best in the world. His ideas and advice were sought by nearly every corporation
in the business. The fees he charged were astronomical, but the companies never
balked at the bills because their return on his input always paid off.
Over the years,
dozens of firms had tried to hire Mercer exclusively, but he respectfully
declined, always replying the same way: "My answer is also my reason, no
thank you." He liked the freedom to say "no" whenever he wished.
His abilities and independent status gave him
the latitude to live his life by his own eccentric standards and to tell the
occasional executive to shove it when the need arose.
Of course that
freedom had been hard won. He had started out working for the United States
Geological Survey just after receiving his Ph.D. For two years, he did mostly
routine inspections of mining facilities which were cooperating with the USGS
as seismic centers. The work was dull, repetitive and pointless. Mercer began
to feel that his sharp intellect was being blunted by the ponderous weight of
the federal bureaucracy. Fearing some kind of brain atrophy, he quit.
Recognizing that
the independent streak which more or less dominated his personality would never
allow him to work for any one organization for an extended period, Mercer
decided to go into business for himself. He saw himself as a hired gun to help
out in difficult situations but many others in the industry saw him as an unwanted
interloper. It took seven months and countless phone calls to former
instructors at Penn State and the Colorado School of Mines before he landed his
first consulting job, confirming assay reports on a sizable Alaskan gold strike
for a Swiss investment consortium. The three-month job paid twice what his
annual government salary had been, and he never looked back from that point.
The next job had been in Namibia and the mine had been for uranium. Within a
few years he had built up the reputation he now enjoyed and commanded the fees
to which he had grown accustomed.
Ironically, he had
just accepted a temporary position at the USGS as a private sector consultant
to liaise with major American mining concerns for the smooth implementation of
the President's new environmental bill and discuss this plan for possible
adoption by some foreign companies. His career was coming full circle in a way,
but this time through the government's grist mill, he'd be walking away in two
months with no strings attached. "You look like shit," Harry
observed.
Mercer glanced
down at his wrinkled Hugo Boss suit and clammy-feeling shirt. Two days of dark
beard shadowed the decisive line of his jaw. "You spend twenty hours on an
airliner and see how you look."
Harry swung his
leg off the couch and grabbed a flesh-colored piece of plastic from the floor.
With three deft movements that his nearly eighty-year-old hands didn't seem
capable of, he strapped the prosthetic leg on just below his knee and flexed
the articulating ankle.
"Much
better." He tugged down the cuff of his pants, stood and walked casually
over to the bar without the slightest trace of a limp.
Mercer poured him
a whiskey. "I've seen you do that a hundred times and it still gives me
the creeps."
"You have no
respect for the 'physically challenged'—I think that is the new politically
correct term."
"You're a
decrepit old man who probably had his leg shot off by a jealous husband as you
leapt from his wife's boudoir."
The two men had
met the night Mercer moved into the area. Harry was a fixture at the
neighborhood bar, Tiny's, a place Mercer discovered to be a sublime distraction
from unpacking ten years of eclectic junk collected from all over the world.
The unlikely pair became best friends that night. In the five subsequent years,
Harry, no matter how drunk, had never told Mercer how he'd lost the leg and
Mercer had enough respect to never pry.
"You're just
jealous that your body doesn't make a good conversation piece in bed."
"Harry, I
don't pick up women at the exit to circus freak tents," Mercer retorted.
Harry conceded the
point and asked for another drink.
If anyone had been
listening, the next hour's conversation would have seemed as if it were between
bitter enemies. The sarcastic remarks and biting jokes sometimes got downright
vicious, but both men enjoyed this verbal
jousting, which was often the main source of entertainment at Tiny's.
A little after
midnight, age and whiskey forced Harry to a tactful retreat to the couch, where
he promptly fell asleep. Mercer, despite the jet lag and beer, still felt
refreshed and knew any attempt to sleep would be futile. He decided to get some
office work done.
His home office
was all rich leather and oiled woods, forest green carpet and polished brass.
Other than the bar it was the only truly finished room in the brown-stone. He
knew that the decor was somewhat cliché, but he liked it just the same. The
numerous prints on the walls were of heavy mining equipment: walking draglines,
huge dump trucks, and skeletal drilling derricks that towered eight stories.
Each print was signed with a thanks from the president or owner of some company
that Mercer had helped. On the credenza, discreetly lighted from below, was a
large chunk of opaque blue stone. Mercer's hand caressed it as he walked to his
desk.
He had phoned his
secretary at the USGS from Jan Smuts Airport in Johannesburg and had asked her
to fax all of his memos and messages to his house, knowing that insomnia always
followed an international flight. There were at least fifty sheets of paper in
the tray of the fax machine.
The majority could
be ignored for at least a few days; only a couple had any urgency at all.
Working through the pile quickly, he almost missed the significance of one
sheet, from the deputy director of operations at the National Oceanographic and
Atmospheric Administration. It was an invitation, dated six days earlier, to
work aboard the NOAA research vessel Ocean Seeker in an investigation of
an unknown geologic phenomenon off the coast of Hawaii. The deputy director had
requested Mercer's presence because of the paper he had written two years
earlier on the use of geothermic vents as possible energy sources and rich
mining areas.
Mercer had heard
of the tragic loss of the ship with all hands. It had made the newspapers even
in South Africa.
The invitation
itself was not the cause of his racing heart or shallow breathing. At the
bottom of the invitation was a list of the specialists already assigned to the
survey. The first name was Dr. Tish Talbot, marine biologist.
Mercer had never
met Tish, but her father was a good friend, a man to whom Mercer owed his life
following a plane crash in the Alaska Range. Mercer had been returning from his
first private consulting job when his plane had suddenly lost power. The pilot
had been killed landing in a rock-strewn field and Mercer had broken a leg, a
wrist, and a bunch of ribs. Jack Talbot, a grizzled tool pusher on the North
Slope fields at Prudhoe Bay, had been camping near the crash site on a one-week
leave. Talbot had reached Mercer within ten minutes of the crash and tended him
overnight until he could signal a rescue copter with a flare salvaged from the
wrecked plane.
The two men had
seen each other infrequently in the years since then, but their friendship
lasted. And now, Jack's only daughter was dead, a victim of a terrible
accident. Mercer empathized with his friend, feeling hollow inside when he
imagined the pain that Jack must now be facing. Mercer had known such pain,
losing his parents when he was only a boy, but no parent ever thinks that they
will outlast their child. Many say that that is the worst kind of agony.
Mercer turned off his
desk lamp. He left Harry on the couch in the rec room, not wanting to kick his
friend out at two in the morning. Mercer's huge bed didn't really look
inviting, but he made the effort anyway. His sleep was fitful.
__________
__________
__________
Jill Tzu eased on the brake of her Honda Prelude and slipped the
transmission into neutral. Her car slowed to a stop about twenty yards away
from the main gates of Takahiro Ohnishi's estate. She tilted the rearview
mirror downward until her mouth was in sight and deftly applied another slick
layer of lipstick. She pursed her lips, flashed a professional smile to herself
then opened her mouth wide. Satisfied that the makeup was perfect, she canted
the mirror back.
As a female
reporter, she knew the necessity of a glamorous appearance on camera. Despite
her abhorrence of such sexism, she was pragmatic enough to know that she alone
wasn't about to change the custom.
Yet it wasn't her
stunning beauty or her dancer's legs that got her this interview today, it was
her heritage.
Takahiro Ohnishi
was easily the wealthiest man in Hawaii. In fact, he was the twelfth richest
man in the world, with interests as diverse as real estate, medical research,
shipping, and mining. He had offices on six continents,
seven palatial homes, and nearly thirty thousand employees. Despite the global
aspects of his holdings, he remained rooted in one tradition, that of Japan. He
had built his empire on an ethnic pyramid with himself, a native born Japanese
on top and his key managers at least pure Japanese regardless of their country
of birth. The next level down had to be three-quarters' Japanese or more, and
so on until only the lowliest of workers had no Japanese blood at all. Ohnishi
employed two entire law firms to battle the hundreds of cases of discrimination
filed against his companies. To date they had not lost a single case.
His obsession with
his Japanese heritage consumed his personal life as well. Ohnishi had never
married, but the numerous mistresses who had come and gone during his seventy
years were all Japanese. If he found even the slightest trace of any other
heritage the affair would end on the spot. All the servants in all his homes
were Japanese, and even his rare press interviews had to be conducted by
reporters who were at least half Japanese.
And that brings us
to me, thought Jill Tzu, the daughter of a Hong Kong Chinese banker and a
Japanese interpreter.
She eased her car
into gear and approached the wrought iron gates of Ohnishi's principal American
residence. The house, twenty miles northwest of Honolulu, was isolated by acres
of sugarcane fields and pineapple plantations.
Once, asked why he
remained so secluded, Ohnishi responded honestly, "Everyone I need is brought
to me; why should I scurry around?"
A lean guard
approached her car. Jill lowered the window, getting a delightful mixture of
cool auto air conditioning and hot lush air.
The first thing
she noticed was the automatic pistol slung from the guard's hip and the quality
and cut of his uniform. This was no simple rent-a-cop.
"Yes?"
he said courteously.
"Jill Tzu
from KHNA; I'm here to interview Mr.
Ohnishi."
"Of
course," the guard replied. He pressed a button on one of the pillars
supporting the gates and they slid open silently.
Jill accelerated,
surprised that she hadn't been asked for identification.
The crushed
limestone drive leading to the house was a pristine white trail through a vast
emerald lawn. The drive curved around stands of trees and shrubs, artfully
placed so the house was hidden until she rounded the last bend. When she saw
the building, she was stunned.
Jill had expected
traditional Japanese architecture on a grand scale, yet what was before her was
unlike anything she had ever seen before. Takahiro Ohnishi lived in a glass
house, modeled somewhat like the entrance to the Louvre designed by I. M. Pei,
but much, much larger. Tubular steel
struts supported small panels of glass in a framework that could only be
described as obtuse. Spheres, cones, and slab-sided rectangles melded together
in a multisided building that was not displeasing to view. Jill could see
completely through the home to the shallow valley which stretched beyond.
Still not over her
initial shock, Jill drove up to the porte-cochere and slid out. Her heels
clicked against the white inlaid marble as she walked toward the glass front
doors. Just as she reached them, they were opened by a servant.
"Miss Tzu,
Mr. Ohnishi is waiting for you in the breakfast garden. Would you please follow
me?" The butler was Japanese, of course, wearing a somber black livery
reminiscent of the early part of the century.
"Thank
you," she replied, slinging her purse over her shoulder.
The interior
spaces of the house were broken by stark geometrical walls. The structures were
not bound by any normal parameters of construction. Some hung ten feet or more
in the air, and others were mere ripples across the floor. The foyer was a massive open space, domed by a delicate
lattice of steel and glass that cast a spider-web shadow on the white marble
floor. Stairs, landings, and balconies cantilevered into the foyer as if
defying gravity. Having no basis of comparison, Jill simply assumed that the
decidedly Oriental watercolors and paintings on the walls were priceless.
The butler led her
through several rooms, some traditional Japanese and some Western in style. At
the open doors of an elevator, the butler indicated that Jill was to proceed
alone.
"Mr. Ohnishi
is waiting to the right as you exit the elevator."
There was a
discreet chime and the doors slid closed. Feeling like an ant in the bottom of
a kitchen sink, Jill smoothed her cream skirt against her legs as the brushed
stainless steel elevator sedately ascended. When it stopped, Jill stepped onto
a breezy loggia, forty feet above the ground. She turned to her right and saw a
table set for two people, the silver glinting in the early Pacific light.
''I am delighted
to be able to share my breakfast with you, Miss Tzu," Takahiro Ohnishi
said as he stood.
"I am
delighted that you invited me," Jill replied, walking toward the table.
She extended her
hand, which Ohnishi ignored. Pissed at herself, Jill remembered whom she was
dealing with and bowed deeply. Ohnishi replied with the barest nod of his head.
"Won't you sit down?"
Ohnishi did not
look like an industrialist. He was thin and frail, with a voice made tenuous by
the years. His snowy hair was sparse, revealing red blotches of scalp. His face
was cadaverous, sallow and drawn. His hands were darkly liver-spotted and bony,
like the claws of a small bird.
''Miss Tzu, I did
not invite you, I merely caved in to your persistence. One, hundred and
fourteen calls and seventy-eight letters are enough to make any man
capitulate." Jill believed the comment was meant to be charming, but his
flat delivery made her uncomfortable. In fact, Ohnishi made her uncomfortable.
He looked like a corpse that refused to stop moving.
She smiled her
best reporter's smile. "I'm glad you did. Any longer and the station was
going to make me pay for the stamps I was using."
A servant appeared
and poured coffee into her cup, adding one spoonful of sugar. Jill looked at
him queerly, wondered how he knew she took her coffee this way.
"I know much
more than that, Miss Tzu, otherwise I would have never let you on the
grounds," Ohnishi said, reading her expression, possibly her mind, for all
she knew.
''Is that why no
one asked to see my ID or search me when I came here?" She meant the
question to be friendly, but it sounded almost defensive.
''I had you
followed from your home at 1123 Blossom Tree Court in the Muani Condominium
development. In fact, I've had you followed every day since granting this
interview," Ohnishi said so casually that Jill could not respond for a
moment.
"Did you
learn anything interesting?" she said sarcastically, her anger now
beginning to rise.
"Yes, a
lovely successful woman like you needs to get out more."
Jill's anger
evaporated at his reply. "That's the same thing my mother tells me."
Much later, Jill
realized his use of her mother's exact words was no coincidence.
"I am sorry
if my actions make you uncomfortable, but a man in my position must be
cautious."
"I
understand. I don't particularly like it, but I understand."
The servant
reappeared and placed a bowl of fruit in front of Jill. Again he gave nothing
to Ohnishi.
"As my aide
Kenji told you on the phone, I do not allow
cameras on my property nor is this conversation to be recorded."
"It won't be,
I assure you," Jill said, setting her coffee cup into its saucer, fearful
of spilling anything on the crisp linen cloth or cracking the translucent
porcelain. She did not realize that she had been x-rayed twice since entering
Ohnishi's home, once at the front door and again in the elevator. Her verbal
assurances were superfluous.
"I must say
this is an amazing home," Jill remarked to break the silence.
''Believe it or
not, this structure was designed in 1867 by an obscure Tokyo architect, long
before the technology was available for its construction. He took his own life
only a few months after completing the drawings, knowing that his genius would
never be appreciated in his time. It is supposition on my part, but I believe
he thought his suicide would give his work the immortality it would never
receive through construction."
''I did not know
that you were such a student of history."
"Everything
we know, Miss Tzu, is history. Just because it is not taught in schools from
dusty texts does not lessen any information's importance."
"I don't
think I understand."
"Allow me to
explain. The latest piece of information, no matter how current, is already
history. I can look at a stock ticker as the trading goes on and already the
information I'm seeing is history. Maybe it's only a second old, but the events
have already happened and nothing in my power can change them. If I decide to
buy or sell based on that information, I would be basing that choice on
history. All knowledge is like that and all decisions are made that way."
"What if I
decide to do something on a whim?"
"Such
as?"
"I don't know, say, quit my
job."
''In that case,
you would have a history of job dissatisfaction, a knowledge based on past
performance that you could find another job, and confidence that you have put
sufficient money in a bank to ensure security until you begin working again.
All of these factors make your decision not whimsical at all, but rather
calculating in fact."
"I never
thought about it in that way," Jill said, intrigued.
"That is why
you are not worth eight billion dollars and I am," Ohnishi remarked, not
boastful, just stating the truth.
''I asked your
assistant if there were any taboo subjects for this interview and he assured me
that you would be candid about anything I asked."
"That is
true." The servant cleared Jill's fruit plate and brought a silver salver
of raw fish and thinly sliced beef. He placed some on her plate along with rice
and several varieties of seaweed.
"Aren't you
eating, Mr. Ohnishi?" Jill asked after the servant vanished, again leaving
his plate empty.
"My stomach
and some of my small intestine were removed several years ago after I was
diagnosed with cancer, Miss Tzu. I'm afraid I must eat intravenously. I may
sample some of these dishes later, but I can't swallow them. It is an
unpleasant sight I assure you."
Jill was thankful
he did not get more graphic.
"I know your
basic biography, Mr. Ohnishi," Jill began the formal interview, a Waterman
pen poised over her notebook. "You were born in Osaka, but your parents
immigrated to the United States with your two older sisters when you were an
infant. Your father was a chemical engineer working for UC at San Diego."
"Correct,"
Ohnishi interrupted. "My family all died during World War II when
Roosevelt imprisoned all Japanese nationals. My sisters died of typhus; they
were barely into their teens. My mother died soon afterward of the same
disease. The day he took his own life, my father
told me to never forget them. I was seventeen years old."
"You had an
uncle who became your legal ward?"
"Yes, his
name was Chuichi Genda."
"If I read
this correctly," Jill said looking through her notes, ''he was released
from an internment camp in January 1943, arrested one week later, released
again at the end of the war and spent the remainder of his life in and out of
prisons on various charges."
"Yes, my
uncle had very strong beliefs about America and her treatment of our people
both during the war and after. He often led violent campaigns against various
policies. He was charged with inciting riots three times and convicted twice.
He was, without a doubt, the most influential person in my life."
"In what
way?"
"His ideas on
race, principally."
''And what are
those?'' Jill asked, uncrossing her long legs. She knew that this was the most
important part of her interview.
''You are a
journalist—surely you are aware of my views."
"I know
you've been called a racist by nearly every social group in the United States
and that your hiring policies resemble Nazi purity laws."
Ohnishi laughed, a
high thin note that startled Jill. ''For lack of a better word, Miss Tzu, you
are very naive. There is no such thing as racism." Before Jill could voice
a protest, Ohnishi continued. "According to anthropologists, there are
only four races on this planet: Asian, negro, caucasian, and aboriginal. Yet
there is tension and fighting between hundreds of different groups.
Correct?"
He did not wait
for a reply. "If race is the motivating factor as you in the press imply,
why is there so much fighting in the nations of Africa, why do the English and
Irish bomb each other on a regular basis, why did the Nazis gas six million Jews? The answer is
not racism, it's tribalism.
''There may be
only four races, but there are hundreds of different tribes, maybe thousands.
Many groups still maintain a tribal name, such as the Apache or Zulu. But
numerous groups no longer have distinct names, the white Anglo-Saxon here in
America, the Northern Irish Protestants, or the upper class of Brazil.
"Each group
is fighting to maintain the integrity of their tribe. The French and Germans
are two separate tribes of people, culturally and religiously different, yet
each falling into the Caucasian race. There is only one way to account for the
four wars they have fought since the middle of the last century: tribalism. The
need to protect and ensure the security in perpetuity of one's immediate group.
"Just because
interracial strife makes good press does not make it the most common form. I
will deny until my death that I am a racist. I care nothing for race. I am a
tribalist. And my tribe, the Japanese, is all that I care for.
"Tribes are
basically extended families, so when I give a top position to a fellow
Japanese, I am merely helping one of my kin. That is no different than a man
turning over his business to his son, a common practice all over the world. I
have fought nearly three hundred court cases defending my right to hire and
promote who I wish, and to date no one has been able to deny me."
"If you have
such a pro-Japanese view of the world, why is it you recently took up residence
in the United States?" Jill asked, trying to remain calm and professional
despite her revulsion.
"I had this
home built six years ago," Ohnishi pointed out.
"Yet you only
moved here three months ago," Jill retorted.
''I feel that I am
most needed here. As you know, the Japanese are now the largest ethnic group in
Hawaii, and if you'll pardon my arrogance, I believe
that they need my help."
"Your
help?"
"I wish to
see Japanese prosper wherever their work takes them. While the media focuses on
material trade imbalances, they completely ignore the amount of brain power
that Japan exports each year. We send only our brightest people to work in
foreign countries, strengthening our position overseas year by year. Let
America send wide-eyed college students to build huts in Africa. We send CEOs
to build corporations. I just want to do my part and ensure the success of this
program."
"And do you
see your help extending to Hawaii's native population?"
''They have
suffered under the yoke of a white government far longer than we, so of course
I wish to see them gain more power here on the islands. After all, tribally
speaking, they are closer to us Japanese than to their current white
overlords."
"Surely you
exaggerate when you use a term such as overlord to describe the state
government," Jill said a little nervously.
"On the
contrary. How else would you describe a governing body that does not speak your
language, does not understand your culture or religion, and has done nothing to
bridge the socioeconomic gap? If the true Hawaiians are so satisfied with the
current system, why do you think the island of Niihau, with its strict language
and culture laws, is attracting so many natives to their traditional way of
life? But primarily, my assistance is to those who are of Japanese descent,
Miss Tzu."
"Does your
help include aiding Mayor Takamora? Some consider his acts treasonous."
''I have not
hidden my support of Mayor Takamora. I believe in his programs for ensuring the
prosperity of Hawaii. It is time that the true owners of this state come forth
and claim what is theirs without paying undue taxes to Washington."
Ohnishi was referring to the Takamora-sponsored referendum now
being discussed in the State House that would make foreign owners of Honolulu
real estate exempt from paying most taxes if they agreed to place the money in
social programs solely beneficial to Japanese and Japanese-American residents.
If passed, the law would put tens of millions of tax dollars into the hands of
the Japanese residents of the island. Some political analysts called it vote-buying,
while others saw something deeper, state-buying.
The campaigning for Referendum 324 was at a crucial stage, with
the vote only a week away. As with any controversial law, emotions across the
state ran high and already had turned violent. The number of attacks against
tourists and white residents had skyrocketed in the past few weeks. Roving
gangs of Japanese youths prowled the city streets at night like modern-day
ninjas, striking fear by their very presence.
"What about the increase in violence?"
"Miss Tzu, of course I don't condone those people who use
violence to achieve their aims, but I do understand their commitment. Hawaii
has special needs and considerations that only we understand and it is
paramount that we gain more control over our lives."
"Some people see this as an attempt at secession," Jill
said, referring to the vice president's speech of the night before.
"Some people would." Ohnishi smiled, but his dark eyes
remained impassive. "The interview is over, Miss Tzu. You must
leave."
Jill was startled at her abrupt dismissal, but she knew better
than to protest. She tossed her pen and pad into her bag and stood.
"Thank you for your time, Mr. Ohnishi," Jill said
formally.
"I wonder, Miss Tzu," Ohnishi remarked absently, ''which
part of your racial heritage makes you the most uncomfortable with yourself,
your Chinese half, or your Japanese which allows the Chinese to have any influence?"
Later, Jill was amazed how easily her reply had rolled off her
tongue. "The Chinese, it's given me the patience to put up with all the
freaks I meet on the job."
Her only memory of leaving the house was the echo of her heels
against the marble foyer as she strode to the front door.
"Apart from her physical charms, what do you think of Miss
Tzu?" Ohnishi asked after the elevator doors had closed behind her.
A dark shape split from the shadows of the loggia as if by
mitosis. It padded across the terrace silently and eased into the recently vacated
chair with the ease of a predatory cat.
"I believe that she is dangerous," the shadow replied.
"Kenji, you are a worrier. She is nothing more than a voice
in the wind. She will report what every other journalist writes, some diatribe
full of half-truths and hyperbole that will be lost among the juicy murder
stories and baseball scores."
"Yet."
"Yet nothing. The people, I mean the real people of this
state, the ones who matter, won't care what she says. The mayor and I have been
whipping them into such a frenzy that her little report won't make a bit of
difference."
"You and David Takamora may be creating a situation that you
cannot control and one I am sure has no bearing on our true objective."
"You sound like Ivan Kerikov's lackey," Ohnishi accused.
Kenji's black eyes went flat. "That is not what I meant. But
we have a responsibility to him that you may be jeopardizing by financing the
youth gangs and talking to reporters like Jill Tzu."
"You have been in my employ since you were a boy, Kenji. You
have only known the simplicity of one master. I, on the other hand,
have known many, my conscience first and foremost and now that pig Kerikov. I
know how to serve both. Kerikov will get his precious concession, but only at
the price I dictate."
"This
uprising is proceeding too quickly. That is not part of your bargain with
him."
"But it is
part of my plan, Kenji, and that is all you need to know and
believe." Ohnishi's tone of finality subdued his aide. "I am
wondering about your loyalty, Kenji. You no longer act like my Hachiko."
Ohnishi was
referring to a much-beloved Japanese dog from the 1920s who waited each
afternoon at a train station for his master to return from work. One day, the
master did not return, for he had died at his desk at Tokyo University. The
faithful dog returned every day to the very train platform for ten years,
waiting for a master who would never come. The name Hachiko is still synonymous
with loyalty in Japan.
"Two days ago
you disappeared for the night without telling me," Ohnishi continued,
"and now you are questioning my orders. Forget about Jill Tzu and
concentrate on your other duties. Tonight we shall begin the bombings. Nothing
serious, just a small show of force directed at those who oppose the
referendum."
Kenji stood, his
body flowing from the chair as if made of quicksilver, yet tensed as only a
martial arts expert can be. "I will see to it personally."
He glided off the
terrace, his tabi-shod feet merely brushing the tile. Once out of sight of
Ohnishi, any trace of subserviance evaporated and his handsome face took on an
even keener edge. He mumbled, "You feebleminded old fool; you have no idea
who or what you're dealing with."
He went back to
his private office to ensure that Jill Tzu never filed her interview with
Takahiro Ohnishi.
__________
__________
__________
Jill raked her fingers through her thick hair in utter frustration.
She pursed her full lips, forming a seductive kiss, then blew a loud raspberry.
Her feet were up on the control console of the studio's editing room, her long
legs stretched almost to the bank of monitors. She swung them down, ignoring
the fact that her culotte shorts had just given her technician a view he'd brag
about for a week.
"This isn't
working, Ken," she muttered darkly.
"Give me a
break will ya, Jill? We've been at this for six hours. It's not like you're
going to get a Pulitzer for this," the scraggly-bearded techie said in his
defense.
"Yea, but
just maybe it'll be my ticket to the network. Just think about it, Ken, if I
leave, you won't have anyone bitching at you at all hours of the day or
night."
"Keep wearing
those shorts and you can piss and moan all you want," Ken teased.
"Watch it, I
know a good sexual harassment lawyer." Jill smiled for the first time in an hour.
"All right, let's go through this one more time."
This day in the
editing room was the culmination of three months' work on Takahiro Ohnishi.
Jill had begun hunting down her story shortly after the reclusive billionaire
had moved to Hawaii and Referendum 324 had first been proposed. At thirty-two,
she was already too cynical to believe in coincidences and she'd begun looking
for a connection between Ohnishi and Honolulu's controversial mayor, David
Takamora and his even more polemic actions.
She'd found, just
through her own television station's financial and scheduling records, that
Takamora had purchased more advertising space during his campaign than his
public files showed he'd had the money for. At just her station, there was a
discrepancy of nearly one hundred thousand dollars, and she knew he'd
campaigned just as heavily on the other channels. Where had the secret funds
come from?
Jill lacked any
concrete evidence that Ohnishi had privately funded the majority of Takamora's
campaign, but she was damned sure that was what had happened. Ohnishi, with his
billions, had bought himself a city.
A journalism
professor had once told her that only prosecutors in courtrooms needed proof. A
reporter never needed to prove anything, all she had to do was implicate and
wait for the self- incriminating defense. A few years later an aging editor
said at his drunken retirement party that news never happened, it was created.
Jill's piece on
Ohnishi was nearly ready. In fact this morning's interview had really been
unnecessary; she'd just wanted to meet the man, to get a better sense of what
made him tick.
She and Ken watched in silence as the first half of the piece ran.
Stock footage of Ohnishi, David Takamora, and the violent street gangs
currently preying on white tourists in the city were interspersed with close-up
shots of Jill doing commentary in front of city hall. As the scenes began focusing more on the gangs,
especially one violent image of four Asian youths beating an elderly white
woman, Jill reached for the goose-necked microphone and began laying in a new
voice-over, one not from the contrived script she had written, but one from her
heart.
"Hawaii is
the Aloha State. The word means love as well as good-bye in the native tongue,
and in these times it means both simultaneously. Good-bye to love. Goodbye to
everything that our island paradise has stood for since Captain Cook first came
here two hundred years ago, and good-bye to the traditions that reigned on the
islands since the first inhabitants 1,500 years before that.
"Where once
we melded and blended into one people, neither all Caucasian nor all Polynesian
nor all Asian, today we stand divided from our neighbors and friends. Now all
it takes is having eyes a little too round or skin a little too light and
anyone on the street can become a target. Racial hatred has grown here like
some cancer, some dread disease without cause whose cure seems equally elusive.
Fostered by men like Takahiro Ohnishi, with his well-publicized views of racial
purity, and van-guarded by youth gangs bent on violent expression, the state
has been galvanized into two intractable camps: those who want Referendum 324
and those who fear it as many have feared tyranny before.
"Last night,
the vice president called Referendum 324 the beginning of a secessionist
movement, and perhaps he's right. The last time America faced a crisis like this,
the Southern states withdrew from the Union because they believed in their way
of life, one built on the conviction that people of other races are inferior.
Today a segment of Hawaii's population believes they have a mandate to control
everyone's lives because there is a little more Japanese blood flowing in their
veins. They say that their Samurai ways are superior, that they can calm the
streets once again if we agree to live under a system that stifles freedom of
expression and the belief that every one is
created equal. In this reporter's opinion, that sounds an awful lot like
extortion.
''As the ronin scour
the streets for white faces to victimize, their emperor sits inside his glass
and steel home, safe behind a wall of hatred and bigotry. Since his arrival a
darkness has descended, a black veil that no one seems able or willing to lift.
Today, the hotels along the beaches, the condos near Diamond Head, and the
cruise liners are all empty. People are afraid to come to Hawaii. I spoke with one
hotel manager yesterday who told me that tourists are already canceling
reservations for next year.
"A
self-generating downward spiral has been created by the actions of those who
now seem to control our streets. As more tourists are frightened away, more
people will lose their jobs and seek the security and fraternity represented by
the gangs, thus increasing their ability to terrorize. Only this morning the
President placed the troops stationed at Pearl Harbor on full alert in order to
protect the federal government's interest on the islands.
"Who is going
to protect our interests?
"Mayor
Takamora's police force does not act to control the gangs. Will he ever ask for
the National Guard to step in and take control of a situation he can no longer
handle? For surely we face a crisis as dire as any these islands have faced
since the first time a Japanese force descended in 1941."
Jill angrily
pushed the microphone aside as she watched a monitor displaying David
Takamora's announcement four weeks earlier that he wanted to run in the
gubernatorial elections in the fall.
Ken was too
stunned to speak for an instant, and when he caught his voice, he stammered.
"Jesus, Jill, you can't run that."
"Of course I
can't. It's the truth, and right now we're not allowed to report the
truth," she said bitterly.
The in-house phone
rang. The unit was built into the console
next to where Jill's feet were propped back up against the complicated machine.
She snatched it up, tucking her hair behind her right ear as she swung the
receiver to her head.
"I know, I
know, forty-five minutes to air." Only her producer would disturb her in
the editing room. "You've got five."
"What in the
hell are you talking about, Hank? We don't air for an hour."
''You know the
rules, Jill, every piece that chronicles the violence must be cleared by
Hiroshi." Hiroshi Kyato was the station's news director.
"That's
bullshit and you know it. You can shove your five-minute deadline. I'm not some
second-class citizen."
"Wait, I
didn't mean anything by it, I mean I don't mean any disrespect for who you are.
It's just, well, you know . . ." His voice trailed off.
The producer
backpedaled so fast that it truly stunned Jill. Race was polarizing the
station, too. Jill was half-Japanese, and Hank was a Caucasian from New Jersey,
and he was now deadly afraid that he'd offended her.
"Hold on,
Hank," Jill said quickly. "What I mean to say is that I’m not a cub
reporter on her first assignment. I know what the boundaries are. I don't need
Hiro and his thought police telling me what to say on the air."
"I'm sorry,
Jill," Hank said tiredly. "I've been on edge ever since Hiro agreed
to help Mayor Takamora reduce tensions in the city by running tamer pieces on
the situation. So far you are about the only reporter who hasn't called me a
graduate of the Josef Goebbels School of Broadcast Journalism."
"Haven't you
talked to Hiro about this?"
"Sure did. He
told me to hand over every segment about the violence or hand in my
resignation."
"All right,
listen, my piece isn't done yet, or, well, it is, but I'm not going to let that
son of a bitch cut it up. I'm going to take it home tonight, tone it some. If
anyone is going to censor my work, it'll be me. I won't be the person to cost
you your job."
"Jill, you
can't do that, your story belongs to the station, it's not your private
property."
"Try and stop
me, Hank."
Jill set the phone
back in the cradle and popped the tape from the editing machine, slipping it in
her handbag slung across the back of her chair. She stood.
"What are you
going to do?" Ken asked from behind his thick glasses.
"I don't know
yet." She left the darkened room.
THE subtle chirping of cicadas was a rhythmic accompaniment to the
moon-drenched night. The air was warm, but charged with the humidity of a
recently passed thunderstorm. Jill sat on the lanai of her condo, her bare feet
propped against a patio table and a glass of zinfandel idly twirling between
her long fingers.
She'd been home
for a couple of hours, but the long bath and half bottle of wine had done
little to calm her frayed nerves. Three months she'd been working on the
Ohnishi piece, three fucking months, and it would be chopped up into tiny
pieces on the cutting room floor and run as a human interest story, no doubt.
If she'd ever questioned the connection between Ohnishi and Takamora, she had
her proof now—and the links ran even deeper, to her own news director. Was no
one immune to this racial factionalism other than her?
She was really
wondering if it was all worth it. All the sacrifices she'd made in her life,
all the thought she'd put into her career, and here she was, about to have her
accomplishments hacked apart because they cut too close to the truth.
"Son of a
bitch." Despite herself, she was almost in tears.
Everything in her
life had been built around journalism. She'd let almost everything else go in
order to reach the upper echelons of her profession. Few boyfriends lasted more than a month or so of her
eighty-hour work weeks. She'd spent her last vacation working as a temporary
secretary at a sewage treatment plant, tracking down allegations of groundwater
contamination.
Her infrequent
talks with her mother invariably turned to Jill's lack of a husband and
children. Every time Jill bragged about a breaking story, her mother would ask
where her grandbabies were. Jill would always end the conversation angrily
defending her career, but would always be racked with guilt, knowing that her
mother was partly right.
Jill did want a
husband and children, but she also wanted to be a journalist. There was a
balance between the two that she just couldn't seem to find. How much of her
career should she give up for a family? How much family should she forego for a
career?
And now her career
might be about over. She could refuse to hand in her story and face probable
dismissal, or she could cut the piece herself, destroying every shred of her
integrity.
She wondered if
she should send the story directly to New York. She had a few friends in the
network— maybe she could get someone to watch it, see if it was worth running
on the national feed. Lord knew nothing like it had been sent from Hawaii in a
long time.
Her phone rang.
Jill got up from the lanai to answer it, but as soon as she put the receiver to
her ear, the line went dead. Crank call or wrong number, she didn't care.
She finished the
last bit of wine in a heavy swallow and put the empty glass in the dishwasher,
leaning against the tiled counter. She'd exhausted two of the three traditional
female relaxation techniques, the bath and the wine, and there weren't any
stores open this late, so she couldn't go shopping. She decided on a masculine
diversion—she'd go out. Sitting at home and brooding wasn't her style anyway.
She could do the voice-over in the morning, but tonight she wanted a diversion,
something to get her mind off her job, off her parents, off everything.
There would be a
vast assortment of eligible bachelors at the tourist hotels near the beach.
Before heading into her bedroom, she put an Aerosmith CD into the player and
cranked the volume to seven. The heavy bass and pounding tempo immediately made
her feel better. Defiantly bad-girl music for a bad-girl-type night.
She spent over an
hour choosing her outfit and makeup. Finally she was dressed to kill, from
black tap panties to a hip-hugging Nina Ricci dress. Six hours a week in a gym
ensured that she had a body that would turn even a blind man's head.
Just as she was
resettling her breasts in the strapless dress, there was a crash of breaking
glass. She whirled toward the sliding glass bedroom doors as a darkly dressed
figure burst through the gauzy curtains. The first man was quickly followed by
two more, their booted feet crushing the shards against the teal carpet.
Jill screamed
shrilly. For an instant her panic overcame the natural urge to flee, and that
hesitation cost her.
Two of the men
raced toward her, guns clamped in their gloved fists. Jill began backing away,
but a pistol whipped out and caught her on the jaw, snapping her head around
and knocking her to the floor. She was unconscious before her diamond pendant
necklace settled in her cleavage.
The man who had
struck her peeled off his black ski mask. It was Takahiro Ohnishi's assistant,
Kenji.
"Tie
her," he ordered.
He searched the
house until he found the room Jill used as an office. Two walls were lined with
expensive video equipment, the type used for high-quality editing work. More
than likely her piece on Ohnishi was here. Kenji rifled the filing cabinet and
desk with professional adroitness, but turned up nothing.
In disgust he went
back out to the living room. On a small
geometric lucite table near the front door rested a thick manila envelope. He
tore it open and a videocassette slid into his hand. He returned to the office
and slid the tape into a VCR.
Jill Tzu's story
ran for the first and only time. As Kenji had suspected, it documented his
employer's known violations of civil employment laws and Ohnishi's support of
Honolulu Mayor David Takamora's gubernatorial election bid for the fall. Jill
had also managed to slip in several references to the escalating violence
surrounding the campaign and the possibility that Ohnishi was financing that as
well. Popping the tape from the VCR, Kenji slid it into the inside pocket of
his dark windbreaker.
He returned to the
bedroom where Jill was laid across the bed, hands cuffed behind her and a gag
stuffed into her lipsticked mouth. She was still unconscious.
Nevertheless,
Kenji whispered into her ear, "An excellent piece of reporting, Miss Tzu.
You are correct on all charges. Mr. Ohnishi is financing the violence in
Honolulu. Though not for much longer, I assure you." He turned to his
henchmen. "Let's go."
They bundled Jill
into the bedspread and carried her from her home as if she were a rolled-up
carpet. The cicadas paused as the party ducked through the bushes toward their
hidden vehicle.
TWENTY miles away, thunderous applause swept across the Honolulu
Convention Center as Mayor David Taka-mora took the stage, sending a palpable
compression wave echoing through the cavernous hall. Twelve thousand people
filled the room, many waving placards in support of Honolulu's controversial
mayor. The air was charged with the energy of the massed throng as their hero
raised his arms over his head in recognition of the crowd's adoration.
Under the glare of
the television crew's kleig lights, Takamora appeared much more handsome than
he did in person. The lights and makeup hid the
pocks of adolescent acne on his face and darkened the thin strands of silver
that wove through his thick hair. He held his body erect and confident, showing
off a lean stomach that was nothing more than a girdle and a continual holding
of his breath. The effort would inevitably cause severe back pain after the
speech.
Such small hoaxes
can be forgiven in most men in their fifties if they did not go deeper than the
surface. In Takamora's case, it would take more than a little makeup to hide
the flaws in his personality and morals.
Pathologically
ambitious, Takamora had turned to the darker side of politics to gain his
current office. From the very beginning of his career as a board member of the
city's building commission, he had made it clear to any developer who cared to
listen that he would almost joyfully take bribes to help a project gain quick
approval.
He amassed several
hundred thousand dollars in just a few years and used that money as a war chest
to battle for the mayor's office. Some said that he cut so many deals to get on
the ballot that he kept a knife on his desk rather than a pen. He waged one of
the ugliest campaigns for mayor of any American city in history. His main
opponent, a councilwoman of excellent standing, withdrew from the race when her
daughter was brutally raped after leaving a Honolulu nightclub. Takamora didn't
know if the rape was coincidence or the act of an over-zealous assistant.
Now he stood poised to go far beyond his own ambition. He was the
last of the speakers at this pro-Referendum 324 rally, and the crowd was
already roused to a fever pitch,
"Ladies and gentlemen," Takamora said, quieting the
crowd with hand gestures. He spoke in Japanese. "Ladies and gentlemen, a
little over a year ago you gave me a mandate when you elected me to help this
city prosper, to create new jobs and security for our way of life. Since then I have done everything in my power to
make this happen. But I've found myself limited by the very office with which
you entrusted me.
"While we've
been able to attract Japanese companies to our city, state and federal regulators
have stalled our efforts. When Ohnishi Heavy Industries wanted to build a
computer assembly plant in Honolulu, the government in Washington refused to
allow import permits for the machinery needed to set up the plant. When I
wanted to privatize our police force, with the blessing of you, the voters, the
Supreme Court called that an unconstitutional act because it might be construed
as a private militia.
"Now I want
to see our tax dollars stay here on Hawaii father than disappear into the
federal cesspit, and I'm being called a secessionist. Referendum 324 does not
equal secession, it means parity. Our state is now wholly self-sufficient. We
trade more with Japan than we do with California, so why shouldn't we be
entitled to keep the tax revenue from our own labor? I no longer see any
benefits from Washington, just inept meddling. I see us helping to prop up a
system that has simply gotten away from itself, and I say: Don't take us with
you.
"While the
mainland sinks into a bottomless pit of crime and drug abuse, where drive-by
shootings no longer make the news, where teenage pregnancy accounts for thirty
percent of the children born, where welfare assistance has turned into a crutch
for those too lazy to work, we have prospered.
"Do you think
it fair we should pay for their corruption?"
The frenzied crowd
shouted a defiant, "No!"
"Is it right
that we must pay for their excesses?"
Again, with one
hate-filled voice the crowd screamed, "No!"
"Last night,
the vice president of the United States branded me a secessionist." The
crowd was transmuting into a mindless mob,
barely kept in check by Takamora's voice. "I say, Don't tempt me."
Takamora's last
words were spoken in a low hiss, then he ducked from the stage, wearing the
adulation of the crowd like a cloak. An aide handed him a bottle of beer and a
towel. He took a quick swig and wiped the greasy makeup from his face.
"Listen to
them," he said to the assembled aides, "they're fucking ready for
anything."
As Takamora leaned
into the sound of the crowd beyond the maroon curtain, an aide slid a ringing
cellular phone from his pocket, listened for an instant, then handed it to
Takamora. "Yes."
"Congratulations,
David, a rousing speech." "Thank you, Mr. Ohnishi, I'm pleased you
were able to hear it." The microphones in the convention center had been
wired into a transceiver and the signals sent to Ohnishi's house. "Can you
still hear the crowd, sir?"
"Yes, you are
certainly the man of the hour."
"Only with
your help, Mr. Ohnishi," Takamora replied honestly, acknowledging the
massive support given to him by the aging industrialist.
"I think now
is the time to step up our campaign, don't you?" Ohnishi's comment was not
really a question, it was a command.
"I agree,
sir," Takamora replied, keeping the pretense of a free will. "What do
you have in mind?"
"A few
bombings, better arms for the youth gangs, and a little more selectivity to
their targets. Our day is rapidly approaching, so we must be more organized.
Kenji will contact you in the morning with all the particulars."
"But the vote
for Referendum 324 is still a week away—aren't we jumping the gun
slightly?"
"Some
unforeseen contingencies have arisen that may force me to abandon the
subterfuge of Referendum 324. Who cares if the people won't be allowed their
vote? We will give them what they want anyway.
What I want to know is if your National Guard troops will maintain their
loyalty throughout our campaign."
''You can count on
them, sir, at least those units that I've personally built up since taking
office. As you know, the crack units here in Honolulu are made up of
Japanese-Americans, young men and women who feel the same as we do. It is only
a matter of time until the governor calls them out, unwittingly putting more of
our people on the streets. I guarantee that they will not interfere with your
gangs."
"And if the
President calls out federal troops?"
Takamora hesitated
for an instant. "The guardsmen will be willing to take them on. Remember,
the military presence on the island represents the greatest source of
antagonism among our people. It is the same here as it was on Okinawa following
the rape of that little girl in 1996."
"Good, and
David, never question me again." Ohnishi's tone was saccharine, but hard
edged.
Takamora shut off
the phone with a snap, angered that his euphoria of a few moments ago had been
chilled by Ohnishi. He tried to look composed as he handed the phone back to
his assistant, but failed miserably.
__________
__________
__________
The
faint chime of the Tiffany alarm clock woke Mercer instantly. His hand snaked
out from under the tangle of sheets and blankets and silenced the antique
piece. He pushed aside the bed coverings and swung his legs to the floor. His
deep gray eyes were already bright and clear. Mercer's eyes reacted to light
much quicker than the average person's. He barely squinted at bright lights and
adjusted to darkness with the speed of a cat. It was an ability he fully
exploited in the subterranean world of hard-rock mining.
He shaved and took
a quick shower before heading down the circular stairs to the rec room, passing
through the library on the way. The built-in dark oak shelves were full of
plain beige boxes containing his vast collection of reference books. For the
thousandth time, Mercer promised himself he'd unpack the books and place them
properly on the shelves. He also wanted to hang the dozens of pictures and
paintings he had collected over the years,
which currently lay crated in one of the brownstone's two spare bedrooms.
Cup of coffee in
hand, he went to the front door and grabbed the morning Washington Post. He
was just turning to the stories beneath the fold as he made his way to the bar
in the rec room.
A story on the
left corner riveted him to the stool.
Dr. Tish Talbot, a
specialist on the ill-fated NOAA research vessel Ocean Seeker, was
rescued
by a Finnish
freighter at 12:30 local time this morning. She is so far the only survivor of
the
ship which sank
three days ago. The Ocean Seeker was investigating the mysterious deaths
of
twelve gray whales
found beached last month on Hawaii's north coast. Dr. Talbot is said to be
in stable
condition, suffering from dehydration and exposure. She is being flown to
George
Washington
University Hospital this morning for observation. The rescue ship, SS September
Laurel, had been assisting the coast guard and
navy search for survivors since the mysterious
sinking.
The article went
on, but Mercer really didn't see the rest of the words; he was stunned. The
sense of loss that he felt the night before slipped away, replaced by joy and
relief.
"Harry, wake
up." Mercer had to share the news.
Harry came awake
slowly, groans and yawns followed by scratches and stretches. "What time
is it?"
"Quarter of
six," Mercer replied, glancing at his Tag Heuer watch.
''Christ, my mouth
feels as if I just French-kissed an Angora sweater."
Mercer poured him
a cup of coffee. Harry moved from the couch to the bar and slouched onto one of
the stools, a cigarette already smoldering between his lips.
''Remember me
telling you about Jack Talbot, the guy who saved my life in Alaska?"
Mercer didn't wait for Harry to answer. "Last night I found out that his
daughter was on board that NOAA ship that sank in the Pacific."
"Christ, Mercer,
sorry to hear it," Harry said seriously. "I was meaning to ask you
last night if you had heard about that."
Mercer held up the
front page of the paper and Harry read it through still-bleary eyes.
"Well, I'll be goddamned. How about that for luck."
"No
shit."
''I wonder if your
friend knows yet?''
"He probably
didn't even know about the accident— last I knew he was working aboard an oil
rig off the coast of Indonesia."
Harry looked at
Mercer for a second, then stood up. "I better get home." Harry was
through the door before Mercer could say another word. Mercer puzzled about his
friend's abrupt exit for a moment, then went back to reading his paper.
At 8:30, Mercer
strode into his office at the U.S. Geological Survey. His secretary, Jennifer
Woodridge, tried to smile and say hi with a mouth full of cherry danish. Mercer
marveled at her ability to eat. Her desk was nearly always covered with
half-eaten junk food, mangled bags of chips, and at least three empty soft drink
cans. Yet she weighed around one hundred pounds and had a figure that made him
wish half the rumors in the office were true.
"Morning,
Jen. I see nothing's changed in my absence."
She swallowed hard
and took a sip of coffee. ''Welcome back. I was so relieved that you were in
South Africa and not aboard that NOAA ship, you
have no idea."
"Trust me,
you're not half as relieved as I am."
Jen Woodridge had
not always cared so much for her temporary boss. Two months earlier, when
Mercer had started consulting at the USGS, Jen had prepared an extensive list
of the things she would and wouldn't do in the course of her job. She read
through the list at a staccato pace about two seconds after their introduction.
Mercer had listened to her calmly, without comment. When she had finished all
Mercer said was, "Okay."
"What do you
want me to do now?" she asked, thinking she had the upper hand with him.
"Go back and
sit at your desk."
"And?"
"And nothing.
Just sit at your desk. Don't answer the phone, don't fill out any papers, don't
do anything."
It took only forty
fidgety minutes before Jen caved in and returned to Mercer's office, her blue
eyes glazed with boredom. "Point taken and I'm sorry. Usually the
consultants around here treat the staff like slaves."
"Since you
are the first secretary, excuse me, assistant, I've ever had, I really don't
know how to treat you." Mercer's honesty had begun a great working
relationship. Now he asked, "Did you read about that woman rescued last
night?"
"Yes, isn't
that fantastic?"
"Strange
thing is, I know her, or rather, I know her father," Mercer said, heading
for his office. "Come on and fill me in on what's been happening while
I've been gone."
Mercer struggled
out of his jacket and threw it carelessly over the leather sofa. He laid his
briefcase on the desk and settled into his chair. Jen hung up his jacket with a
maternal scowl and sat in the chair in front of the desk to help him pore
through the mountain of papers.
Around noon,
Jennifer went to lunch; Mercer stayed in his office, catching up on the
paperwork treadmill. A security guard
knocked quietly at his office door a few minutes after Jen left. "Are you
Dr. Philip Mercer?" the guard asked, confirming the name from the slip of
paper in his hand.
Mercer winced
inwardly—he hated to be called doctor. He grinned at the security officer.
"So you boys finally caught me stealing toilet paper from the men's
room.''
The guard looked
at him, puzzled, then realized that Mercer wasn't serious.
So much for a
sense of humor, thought Mercer.
"Sir, Western
Union delivered this telegram to the front office; it's addressed to you."
The guard handed Mercer the envelope and left without another word.
The telegram had
been sent from Jakarta. Mercer knew instinctively that it was from Jack Talbot.
For some reason he felt a sense of foreboding as he unfolded the paper.
"Tish in
mortal danger. Help her. Ocean Seeker intentionally destroyed. Will try
to get to D.C. soonest."
It was signed Jack.
Mercer spent no
more than ten seconds making up his mind. The Jack Talbot he knew was not prone
to fantasy or hysteria. If Jack said that his daughter was in danger and that
the NOAA ship had been purposely destroyed, Mercer believed him unequivocally.
Mercer stood
quickly, his gray eyes hard and set, his lean body already slightly tensed for
the unknown. He grabbed his jacket and strode to the elevators. Within six
minutes of reading the telegram his black Jaguar XJS convertible was bulling
its way through downtown traffic toward the GWU hospital.
The nurse at the
hospital's front desk informed him that Tish was in room 404, but that no
visitors were allowed. The nurse also told Mercer that the room was being
guarded by the FBI.
The fact that the
sole survivor of a shipwreck was under guard gave some credence to Jack's
warning that his daughter was in danger and that the
sinking of the Ocean Seeker had ominous overtones.
"Well, that
takes care of that," Mercer said, and gave the nurse a smile that made her
blush. "Where can I find a cup of coffee?"
"To the right
and up the stairs, sir," she responded, patting her mousy hair. "The
cafeteria is on the second floor."
Mercer thanked
her, but once in the stairwell he climbed quickly to the fourth floor. The
fluorescent lights, yellow-painted walls, and hospital smell were enough to
cause nausea in the most healthy person. After a few minutes he found the wing
which contained room 404. The two beefy no-necked men sitting at an impromptu
security desk eyed him like sharks looking at a wounded mullet.
"Dr. Mercer
to see Tish Talbot," Mercer said casually, flashing an ID card.
One guard looked
him up and down, noting the stethoscope protruding from his coat pocket. Mercer
had picked it up at an empty nurse's station. The other guard saw the GWU logo
on the card and noted that the photo of Dr. Mercer matched the man in front of
him.
"What's your
business, Dr. Mercer?" The man's voice was flat and lifeless.
"I'm a
urologist," Mercer replied, and stifled a small yawn. "I need to
check for renal damage due to extended dehydration."
The guard waved
him through without a second thought. The ID that Mercer flashed had in fact
been issued by GWU hospital, but it merely signified that he was a recipient of
the hospital's health coverage. Anything more than a cursory examination would
have gotten him a quick trip to the J. Edgar Hoover Building.
So much for the vigilance of the FBI.
Mercer looked over
his shoulder and saw one of the guards bury his face in a near-empty bag of
corn chips and pour the remainder in his mouth. Since Tish was in possible trouble, there was no way that he
would let these two idiots look out for her.
Tish was sitting
up in bed, a magazine resting on her bent knees. Though she looked fatigued
from her ordeal she was a beautiful woman on the easy side of thirty with
short-cropped dark hair, arresting red lips, and high cheekbones. Her skin was
burned dark by the sun but did not appear permanently damaged. She looked up at
him with her father's eyes, impossibly clear blue and impish.
"Miss Talbot,
I'm Philip Mercer. I'm a friend of your father's. In fact I owe him my
life—maybe he told you the story?"
Her smile was warm
and open. "I've heard that story about a million times, Dr. Mercer, and I
must say it's good to have a friend here."
"Better than
you know," Mercer said under his breath. "How do you feel?"
"Tired and
sore but okay. I really don't know why I'm being kept here." There was
annoyance in her voice.
"Believe it
or not, you're a pretty hot item right now. Do you know that you're under
guard?"
"I wasn't
aware of that. What the hell for?" She was plain speaking, just like her
father.
"I was hoping
you could tell me. I received a telegram about an hour ago from your father in
Jakarta. He asked me to look after you."
Tish stared at
him.
"He felt that
the Ocean Seeker was intentionally destroyed, and if that's true, I
don't think that you're safe here. I was in South Africa when all of this
happened, so I don't know any details, but for now I'll trust your father and
assume that your life may be in danger,'' Tish continued to regard him blankly.
''Does any of this make sense to you? Do you remember something or did you see
something that could cause this stir?"
"In the first
place, Dr. Mercer. . ." Before she could continue a man opened the door. A lab coat covered his suit.
"Good
afternoon, I'm Dr. Alfred Rosenburg, your urologist." His smile was
crooked and his teeth stained tobacco yellow.
Mercer took one
look at the man's shoes and reacted instantly. The punch was powered with a
full twist of his body. The instant before his fist smashed into the man's
face, Mercer bent his arm, and his elbow connected solidly with Rosenburg's
cheek. Tish muffled a scream in her hands as the doctor's head whipped around
and he slammed into the wall.
Mercer turned to her. "Get dressed now, I'm getting you out
of here."
Rosenburg was
already regaining his feet, a six-inch stiletto in his hand. Mercer bent at the
knees and torqued his body around, extending one leg in a sweep. The man fell
back, his body shaking the wall when he hit. Mercer planted a foot squarely in
his stomach, then kicked up into his face as he doubled over. Rosenburg's head
snapped back and crashed into the wall. He slumped over, unconscious.
Mercer looked at
Tish, who was still in bed. "He won't be alone, now get dressed."
She flew from the
bed and was dressed in jeans and a T-shirt within moments, though not before
Mercer stole a glimpse of exquisitely long legs and a white silk-pantied
backside.
Mercer opened the
door slowly and looked toward the, guard station. The pool of blood under the
desk told him that both FBI agents were dead.
"Oh,
Jesus," Tish moaned as Mercer led her past the desk. Pausing for an
instant, he found an automatic pistol and a spare clip inside one of the dead
men's jackets. He held the weapon discreetly under his own coat and slipped the
clip into a pocket.
Mercer took Tish's
hand as they went down the stairs to the lobby. A quick scan of the faces there
confirmed that the killer upstairs was indeed not
alone. Three men stood just outside the automatic door while another trio
peered at a glass-covered bulletin board, their eyes watching the room in its
reflection.
The fugitives
turned away from the lobby. Mercer led Tish through a set of doors marked no admittance and out onto a loading
dock. The man standing on the dock looked at Tish just a bit too critically, so
Mercer smashed his knee into the man's groin. If he was an innocent bystander,
where better to get treated for his injuries, and if he was an assistant to the
assassin upstairs, fuck him. Mercer and Tish ran to his car.
The Jaguar V12
burst into life instantly. Mercer had hoped to get away without being seen, but
two men were already running toward them from the loading dock. Mercer jammed
the gearbox into drive and smoked the Pirelli tires pulling out onto the
street. A few cars pounded their horns in anger and a pair of nurses jumped
back to the sidewalk for safety. Three identical BMWs were already in pursuit
as Mercer turned onto 23rd Street heading toward Washington Circle.
Mercer took the
car around the circle twice, trying to snarl his pursuers in traffic before
tearing off down K Street. The maneuver gained him only a second or two. Mercer
put the borrowed pistol, a Heckler and Koch VP-70, on his lap as he jinked
around a Metrobus. The deadly 9mm German-made gun had eighteen rounds inside
its wide grip.
He clicked off the
safety, then pressed the button that lowered his window. The sounds of the city
whipped into the car. Mercer wished that he had taken the top down to give him
better visibility, but there was nothing that he could do about that now.
The first chase
car was pulling up on Mercer's left. The driver was intent on the road ahead,
but the passenger had his eyes glued on Mercer. He threw a sardonic wave and
pulled a Beretta model 12 into view. The little Italian submachine gun could
fire a blanket of 9mm bullets at a rate of 550 a minute. Just as the man
brought his weapon to bear, Mercer lifted his pistol over the winowsill and let
loose.
He fired as fast
as he could. The first five rounds tore up the body of the gunman; his torso
and head jumped at every impact. As he slumped over, the next five rounds
pulverized the head of the driver. The BMW slowed and began to veer off the
road. It careened off one of the huge trees that lined K Street and shot back
into traffic. In the rearview mirror, Mercer saw the BMW fly into the other
lane and slam into the front of a parked garbage truck. The windshield exploded
outward as the two bodies smashed through it.
Tish had turned
almost white and kept biting her lower lip. Mercer took one hand off the wheel
to grasp her reassuringly on the shoulder. He wished he could do more, but
there were still two cars chasing them.
Mercer ignored a
red light as K Street turned onto Pennsylvania Avenue and so did the pursuers.
They had just passed the World Bank Building when the first bullets smashed
into the Jaguar. Tish slid to the floor and Mercer began weaving the car, but
the bullets continued to find their mark.
Traffic was
getting thicker. Once Mercer was forced to stop completely but luckily the two
BMWs were stuck several cars back. As they approached the busy intersection at
17th Street, with the Jag doing about forty mph, the light turned yellow.
Mercer jammed the transmission into second ignoring the tachometer needle as it
arced across the gauge, and mashed the gas pedal to the black-carpeted floor
boards. The engine revs peaked with an earsplitting whine before Mercer eased
the car back into drive. They passed the point of no return as the light
changed to red and the mass of cars started down 17th Street like a steel
avalanche.
Mercer cut the car
wide to the right, the tires squealing on the asphalt. Pedestrians dove out of
the way as he took the car up onto the sidewalk for a few yards before veering back onto the road nearly in front
of the White House. One BMW had tried to follow him, but had smashed into the
thick concrete antitank barricades that protected the presidential residence.
The other was stuck in traffic.
Mercer stopped the
Jag at the corner of Penn and 16th. "Take my wallet," he said,
handing it to Tish. "My address is on the license and there's enough money
for a cab." He yanked the house key from the ring dangling in the ignition
and handed it to her. "There's a security panel to the right of the door.
36-22-34 will deactivate it. I'll be there as soon as I can."
"Will you be
okay?" Tish's eyes were huge with fear.
"Don't worry,
just go." She nodded, then leapt out of the car and immediately blended
with the flow of people on their lunch breaks.
The moment the
door slammed shut, Mercer took off down 16th Street, past the Hotel Washington.
He cut back onto Pennsylvania in front of the Department of Commerce Building.
He glimpsed the BMW in the rear-view mirror. They were still following him, so
he figured Tish was safe for now.
The Willard Hotel
and the Post Office Pavilion blurred past as Mercer used the power and control
of the Jaguar to snake throughout the thick traffic. Suddenly he heard the
unmistakable sound of automatic fire again. The first fusillade mangled the
coachwork of the Jag and punctured the rear windscreen about a dozen times. The
next burst blew out the left rear tire.
The car flew out
of control, the steering wheel like a slippery, living creature in Mercer's
hands. He knew the Jaguar was doomed. The car's mad lurching had cleared the
road quickly, and Mercer exploited this by driving into the oncoming lane,
bouncing off stationary cars like a billiard ball. He finally came to a stop at
the entrance of the Archive Metro station. In the relative silence following
the crash, he could hear the fast approach of police sirens racing from all
across downtown.
Mercer jammed a
fresh clip into the pistol and leapt from the car. He flew down the escalator,
shouldering people aside as he raced toward the city's modern subway system.
Commuters gasped or complained as he pushed through the crowd and jumped the
turnstile. The Metro guard in the glass booth was the last of his worries. As
he reached the platform. Mercer was dismayed to see that the two sets of
parallel tracks were empty and that there was not enough of a crowd to conceal
him. He whirled around to see three men running toward him, weapons barely
concealed under their jackets.
The floor lights
lining the near track began to flash, indicating that a train was about to
arrive. The station began to rumble as the train approached, pushing a wall of
air ahead of it. The far track was still clear. Mercer knew that if he boarded
the train he would be cut down instantly—these men obviously had no
compunctions about a public murder.
The noise in the
station reached a tactile level as the train burst from the tunnel in a whoosh
of air and a squeal of brakes. Mercer's pursuers were only twenty yards away
and already one was reaching into his jacket for his weapon. Mercer had only
one chance for escape and he took it without thought. He ran for the edge of
the track and leapt, barely two yards in front of the oncoming train.
The engineer
blasted his horn and jammed on the brakes, but Mercer didn't even notice. He
was too intent on the ten-foot jump. If he overshot, he could fly into the next
track, land on the current rail, electrocute himself and save his attackers the
trouble.
He landed safely
on the low platform between the two tracks. As his body rocked forward from the
momentum, he was stunned to see another train rushing toward him from the
opposite direction. He windmilled his arms, trying to regain his balance, and
almost succeeded.
The oncoming train
glanced into his shoulder, sending him flying back so that he bounced off the
first train, which had ground to a halt. Mercer lay
between the now-stationary trains for a moment or two, recovering his senses.
Finally he stood and, ignoring the shocked faces of passengers on both trains,
levered his back against one of the trains and his legs against the other to
shinny up to the roof of the far carriage. Over the shouts and police whistles
that echoed through the station, he heard the quiet double ping that indicated
the train doors were closing.
A shot rang out
and the roof next to Mercer's head exploded. He flipped onto his back,
extending the H&K toward the assassin who stood on the pedestrian bridge
which spanned the tracks. Mercer fired just as the train lurched forward; his
shot shattered concrete far to the left of his target. The assassin lined up
another careful shot. Mercer rolled across the roof until he nearly slipped
off, dodging the bullet.
An instant later,
the Metro car slid under the bridge and Mercer rolled back across the roof,
holding the pistol by his head, arms tucked close to his body. There was a
four-foot gap between the bridge and the entrance to the subway tunnel. As
Mercer passed through the gap, he spotted the assassin. Mercer pulled the
trigger and saw the gunman fall back just before the Metro plunged into the
darkened tunnel.
The ride through
the tunnel was a nightmare. Though the train's speed was nearly forty miles per
hour, in the dark it felt like four hundred. The rattling car threatened to
shake Mercer off the roof and he had the constant fear of being smeared against
the low ceiling. The noise and vibration were maddening, but he grimly held on,
jaw clenched tightly to keep his teeth from jarring loose.
After a couple of
minutes that seemed like an eternity, the train thundered into L'Enfant Plaza,
the next station on the yellow line. Mercer moved forward until he was under
the pedestrian bridge. No doubt that there would be a backup team in this
station by now and probably in all the stations
on the line. They had him boxed in. Whoever "they" were.
The wait in the
station dragged on as passengers left and entered the train in the confused
ballet called commuting. Mercer feared that the train would be held because of
the body he had left in the Archive station. But a moment later the bell chimed
and the pneumatic doors hissed closed. The train began to inch along and in a
second, Mercer was exposed to another gunman standing on the bridge.
Mercer raised the
VP-70 to take aim just as the other man swung the barrel of a Beretta toward
him. Neither man had time to fire before Mercer disappeared into the blackness
of the tunnel. Mercer's raised hand, the one grasping the pistol, smashed into
the concrete wall. Instantly numbed fingers sprang open and the weapon slid
from his grasp. It bounced against the roof, once, twice, then slipped over the
edge, lost forever.
Mercer flipped
back onto his stomach, cursing the pain and his own stupidity. He was now
unarmed and facing an unimaginable number of enemies.
As the Metro climbed above ground just south of the Jefferson
Memorial, Mercer realized that he had a chance to escape while the train was
crossing the Potomac River. He swore at himself for even thinking it, but knew
he had no other option. As soon as the train reached daylight, he sat up and
kicked off his shoes. The train sped onto the truss bridge that spanned the
sluggish river, rattling and clanging like an old steam locomotive. Mercer
stood, the wind whipping his jacket around his body. He shed it quickly and
peered at the river below. It was a sapphire blur.
Mercer jumped.
The jarring
vibration of the Metro vanished as he arrowed toward the water, and for a
moment all was quiet except for the wind in his ears. The impact as he hit the choppy
water nearly knocked him unconscious, but the cold brought him back quickly. He
was deep under the river's surface. With lungs
emptied by the blow, the swim upward was agonizing.
He finally broke
the surface and coughed the water from his lungs. He looked up at the bridge,
but the train had already vanished from sight.
Twenty
excruciating minutes later, he dragged himself onto the shore.
"Welcome to
Virginia," he gasped.
__________
__________
__________
By
its very nature a modern nuclear submarine makes an optimal platform for
sensitive intelligence gathering. With its ability to remain submerged for
extended periods and its absolute silence, a sub can maintain station near an
unfriendly coast for weeks or even months with relative impunity.
The sub now lying
in wait two hundred miles northwest of Hawaii had been there for seven months
and apart from one minor incident had not once come close to detection. There
was only about another week or two left of this patrol, so morale, which had
been dismal, was finally picking up.
The crew, mostly
northerners, no longer snickered at the captain's thick Georgian accent. The
bickering, which had become an almost daily occurrence even among this highly
disciplined crew, had ceased. The men knew that very soon they would feel the
warm sun, breathe unrecirculated air, and have the company of their families
once again.
The captain, an
unlaughing, hawk-faced man in his midfifties, scanned the control room slowly.
The red lights of battle stations, which had glowed continuously since the
beginning of the mission, stained the faces of his men and hid every corner of
the room in shadow. He too was looking forward to going home. Though he had
lost his wife years before, he did have a daughter. A daughter who would have
given birth to his first grandchild in his absence.
A boy or a girl?
he mused. And if it was a boy will she name him after me or that idiot husband
of hers?
"Captain,
contact bearing two-oh-five degrees range fifteen miles," the sonar
operator barked.
The bridge was
galvanized with anticipation, each pair of
eyes riveted on the captain. He checked his watch and decided that this might be the ship they
were expecting.
"Sonar, scrub
the target's signature please," the Old Man
said calmly.
"Range too
far, sir, we have to wait. Range thirteen miles. Single screw turning thirteen
knots."
The captain picked
up a hand mike. ''Fire control, plot a solution to target and give me a lock.
Torpedo room, flood tubes one and two but do not open outer doors." Even
on the bridge, thirty yards from the torpedo room, the captain could hear the
water flooding into the tubes. He just hoped that there was no one else out
there to hear as well.
"Sonar, can
you scrub the signature yet?"
"Affirmative,
sir, working now." The boat's multimillion-dollar acoustical computer was
analyzing the sounds coming from the approaching ship, digitally washing out
the grinding rotation of her screw, the liquid friction of her hull cutting
through the waves, and the omnipresent background noise of the living sea,
until. . .
"We have our
target, her signal is coming in strong. Repeat, she is our ship." Amid the
ambient noise of the vessel, an ultrasonic generator pulsed a signal through the water to be picked up by only those
listening for it. It was this signal for which the computer searched and the
captain waited.
The captain picked
up the microphone again. "Torpedo room, stand down."
"Shit!" the sonarman screamed
and ripped off his headphones.
''What is it?''
the captain demanded.
There was a thin
trickle of blood from the man's ears. He spoke unnaturally loudly.
"Another underwater explosion, sir. Much more powerful than any
other."
"You are
relieved," the captain said.
The sensitive
sonar gear was designed with a fail-safe acoustical buffer to shield the
hearing of the men who listened in, yet his four top operators now suffered
permanent hearing damage due to the buffer's inability to screen out the nearby
subsurface explosions. The equipment simply wasn't designed for this kind of
abuse. And neither were the men.
__________
__________
__________
Mercer tapped the cabdriver on his shoulder and handed the young
African immigrant a twenty. "Keep the change and I'm sorry about
the seat."
The cloth-backed
seat of the yellow Ford Taurus was soaking wet, just like Mercer's suit. He
walked toward his house in stocking feet, his socks making an obscene sound
against the concrete with every step.
The front door of
the house was unlocked. Mercer breathed a heavy sigh once the door was closed
behind him. It had taken him nearly an hour and a half to get home after he'd
pulled himself from the river near the Pentagon. His first act, after wringing
the water from his clothes behind a derelict bus, was to phone a friend with
the metro police.
The friend
promised that Mercer's shot-up Jaguar would be towed to an auxiliary lot in
Anacostia, not to the city's main impound. He also assured Mercer that the
paperwork on the car would be ''lost'' for at least a couple of days. It would take some time to
trace him through his destroyed car.
He now had a
little breathing space to figure out what in the hell had just happened and
why.
Mercer heard the sound of the television and knew that Tish Talbot
had made it here safely. He walked through the house, not caring about the
water he was getting on the tile or the antique stairs. Tish was asleep in the
bar, stretched out on the couch under a steamer rug that Mercer had bought in
an auction of ocean liner memorabilia. The name SS Normandie was
embroidered in gold silk on the thick dark wool.
Tish woke slowly,
extending her hands over her head in a decidedly feline gesture.
"How do you
feel?" Mercer asked. Making a quick decision between keeping his floor dry
and his need for a drink, he gingerly stepped behind the bar.
"I'm not
sure," Tish responded, then noticed his appearance. "My God, are you
okay?"
"Let's just
say, I'm not ready to do that again." Mercer pulled two beers from the
antique fridge and popped the lids.
"No,
thanks," Tish said. "I took the liberty of opening a bottle of
wine." She indicated the half-filled glass on the coffee table.
"I wasn't
offering," Mercer replied as he tilted the first bottle to his lips. The
beer vanished in seven heavy swallows. "I need a shower and a change. I'll
be back in a few minutes." He left the empty on the bar.
Ten minutes later,
Mercer returned wearing jeans and a Pittsburgh Penguins jersey. Tish had folded
the blanket and was sitting at the bar. "Your home is beautiful. I made
the mistake of going for cute rather than practical when I bought my condo in
San Diego. My whole unit is smaller than this room."
"One of these
days I'll finally admit that I live here and decorate some of it."
"I did notice
a definite lack of decorating skills." Tish smiled warmly. "Oh, my
God, your hand!"
Mercer looked down at the back of his right hand, where the skin
had been scraped off by the rough subway tunnel. In the bathroom, he’d
awkwardly wound a bandage around it, but the self-ministrations had come apart
and the angry cuts had opened again. They were painful and still bled freely,
but weren't serious. He grabbed for a clean bar towel, but Tish snatched it
from him.
"Let me do
that," she said, and began wiping the blood from his skin.
As soon as her
hand touched his, she gasped as if she'd touched something hot. She turned
Mercer's hand over slowly, inspecting it like the scientist she was.
His hands were
exactingly sculpted by labor and pain. His palms were horny callused pads and
the backs were criss-crossed with the raised white ridges of old scar tissue.
The nails, though neatly tended, were scored and pitted and one nail, on his
pinkie, was cracked all the way to the cuticle. Despite the damage, they were
beautiful hands, rugged like a new mountain chain yet with a tapered masculine
elegance.
Tish released his
hand and looked into his eyes searchingly.
"I work for a
living," he grinned, "and these are my tools."
"Then I guess
this scrape doesn't bother you much?"
"Hell, yes, I
just won't admit it."
Tish looked away and when she spoke, her voice had a serious
timbre. "I want to thank you for saving my life today." She chuckled.
"Christ, does that sound like a cliché."
Mercer smiled at
her. "It's the least I can do since your father once saved my life. How is
Jack?" .
"My father
died about a year ago. You didn't know?" Mercer's face went ashen. "I
tried to tell you back at the hospital, but that man came in."
Mercer managed to
croak, "How?"
"He was
killed on an oil platform near Indonesia. It capsized in a freak typhoon."
A numbness started
at the base of his skull and raced through his body in seconds. He almost had
to hold onto the bar for support. Without a word, Mercer ran up to his bedroom
and returned a moment latter holding a soggy scrap of paper, the telegram sent
by Jack Talbot. He held it out to Tish, but she seemed reluctant for a moment,
fearful of even touching the page. Finally, she took it and read it quickly.
Bewildered, she
looked up at him. "I don't understand."
"Neither do
I," Mercer said slowly, "neither do I. But someone wants me involved
in this, whatever 'this' is. And they were right about you being in
danger." He finished the beer and pulled another from the fridge.
"You said at the hospital that you had no idea why you were under guard or
why your father or whoever sent this telegram might think you're in
danger?"
"That's
right. Listen, I'm just a marine biologist. Who would want to kill me? And by
the way, how did you know that man in my hospital room wasn't a real
doctor?"
''For one thing,
he said he was a urologist, which was the same line I used to get past the FBI
guards. One of them would have come to recheck my credentials. Also, no doctor
making rounds would wear shoes as uncomfortable-looking as his." Mercer
shrugged. "As to why someone is trying to kill you, that is what we have
to find out. It's obvious that it has to do with the last voyage of the Ocean
Seeker. Why don't you tell me about it?"
Tish was almost at
the point of tears and had to slow her breathing before she could speak. ''Do
you think all those people were killed because of me?'' She sobbed once.
Mercer came around
the bar and took her into his arms. She sagged
into him gratefully. Her hair smelled like hospital soap, and was smooth and
slippery against his skin. He let thirty seconds go by before straightening up.
Looking deeply into her eyes, he spoke softly. "I don't think anyone was
supposed to survive that trip. Now tell me about the last voyage."
Tish took a moment
to compose herself.
"A few weeks
ago, seven gray whales, were found beached just west of Hana on Maui. They were
all dead. A biologist from the University of Hawaii performed a necropsy."
"A
what?" Mercer interrupted.
"Necropsy—an
animal autopsy," Tish replied as if everyone should know the word. ''He
found that their digestive tracts were clogged with minerals. About fifty-five
percent silica, with some magnesium, calcium, and iron, plus traces of gold."
"You're
describing lava."
"That's what
the biologist thought as well. His theory was the whales had been attracted to
the huge schools of plankton that would surround a new undersea volcano for its
warmth. The whales, while feeding, would also ingest the particles of lava
suspended in the water. Eventually, their digestive tracts would fill with the
minerals and they could no longer feed."
"So what
happened then?"
"Well, NOAA
was called in to investigate. An aerial search of the waters north of Maui
showed nothing. No new island, no clouds of ash or even steam. Then some sonar
buoys were dropped, and within twelve hours we had found our new volcano, about
two hundred miles from the Hawaiian islands.
"The Ocean
Seeker was sent out late last Thursday night." Tish stopped speaking
for several seconds. "Twenty-four hours later, the ship exploded. When I
was first rescued, I just assumed that it had been some sort of accident, but
now I don't know what to think."
Mercer poured her
another glass of wine and opened another
beer for himself. The adrenaline rush from a few hours ago was wearing off,
leaving him thirsty.
"Why are all
those pins in that map?" Tish said, changing the subject and referring to
the map of the world hung behind the bar. It was studded with numerous pushpins
in several different colors.
Mercer felt that
the distraction would let Tish calm down enough to answer the dozens of
questions he still had for her. "It's a map of places I've been. The different
colors indicate why I was there. Green is for pleasure, like most of the
Caribbean islands. Red is for work overseas for the U.S. Geological Survey,
mostly meetings in Europe and Africa. And blue is for private consulting work
that I've done for various mining companies."
Tish noted that
this last category included some pretty exotic places—Thailand, Namibia, South
Africa, Alaska, New Guinea and at least fifteen others. "Why is there a
clear pin in central Africa? I can't tell which country."
Mercer looked
pained as he replied, "The pin's in Rwanda. I was there for six months in
1994 when the world looked on as 800,000 Tutsi tribesmen were slaughtered by
the Hutu majority. I was on a consulting job when the violence erupted, and
rather than run away, I joined a band of soldiers trying to defend fleeing
villagers."
"My God, why
would you do something like that? I heard that the fighting was absolutely
savage."
''I was born in
that part of the world. My parents and I lived in Rwanda during the early days
of independence. I was too young to remember the massacre of 1964, but I've
never lost my sense of loyalty to the Tutsi friends I had growing up."
Tish knew he was
keeping something from her, but she didn't press. "And what about the
clear pin in Iraq?"
Mercer smiled. ''I
was never there—and even if I was, I can't talk about it."
She threw him a
cheeky grin. "Real James Bond, hush hush."
"Sort
of." Mercer still carried scars from that mission. The information he had
brought back had been the trigger for Operation Desert Storm. "Now tell me
about your rescue."
Tish spoke
quietly. "The ship exploded late Friday night. I was on the fantail,
rigging some acoustical gear. I didn't hear or even see the explosion. One
second, I was standing there, and the next I was in the water. There were a lot
of flames. I remember that I couldn't hear anything. I think I had gone deaf
for a moment."
"The
concussion stunned your ears—it's common. Go on."
"There was an
inflatable raft near me and I swam to it."
Mercer interrupted
again, "It was already inflated?"
"Yes, it was.
Come to think of it, that's awfully strange. They're usually stowed in big
plastic cylinders. Maybe the explosion released the CO2 used to
inflate it." That sounded a little far-fetched to Mercer, and he made a
mental note to come back to it later. "I was in the raft all of the next
day until the September Laurel rescued me,"
"That's the
freighter?"
''Yes. A couple
hours later, a helicopter from the navy came to pick me up. The doctor on board
gave me a shot, and when I came to, I was in D.C."
"Can you
describe the freighter?"
"I don't
know, it was just a ship. I don't know the length or anything like that. It had
a bunch of cranes and booms. There was a black circle with a yellow dot on the
funnel which was near the back of the ship."
"What else
can you tell me?"
Tish paused, her smooth forehead furrowed. There was something she
wanted to say, Mercer could tell, but he didn't think she was sure of the facts
herself.
"I heard
Russian," she blurted out.
"Russian? Are
you sure?"
"Well, no,
not really."
"When did you
hear it?"
"When I was
being pulled aboard the freighter. The crew were shouting orders to each other
in Russian."
"How can you
be sure it was Russian? Some of the Scandinavian languages sound similar."
"A year ago I
was part of a research team in Mozambique, investigating the ruin that the
government there has made of the prawn beds just off the coast. It was a joint
venture between NOAA, Woods Hole, the Mozambique government, and a team of
Soviets. I, well, I became involved with one of the Soviets. When we were alone
together, he would always speak to me in Russian. I don't think I'll ever
forget the sound of that language."
She looked at
Mercer, as if defying him to judge her.
"Okay, so you
heard Russian, could be they had some expatriate Russian crewman or something
like that. What happened when you were in the life raft?''
"Nothing. I
was unconscious until just before I was rescued."
"You don't
remember anything?"
''I had just been
blown off a ship, what the hell am I supposed to remember?" Fatigue was
taking its toll on her.
"I'm sorry,
you must still be exhausted." Mercer glanced at his watch. It was
four-thirty in the afternoon. "Why don't you get some sleep? I'll wake you
at seven. I'm sure you're dying for a non-hospital meal."
"Yes, that
would be wonderful."
Mercer led her to one of the two guest rooms. He showed her the
bath and gave her several towels. He heard the water running even before he
returned to the rec room.
Mercer pulled two
more beers from the fridge and went to his home office. He switched on the desk
lamp and grabbed the phone.
A moment later a
female voice chirped, "Berkowitz, Saulman, and Little."
"David
Saulman please, tell him it's Philip Mercer."
Of the dozens of
lawyers that Mercer had dealt with in his life, David Saulman was the only one
he liked. Saulman had been a ship's officer during the late 1950s and early
sixties, but an engine room accident had scalded his left hand so badly that it
had to be amputated. Forced out of the Merchant Marine, he put himself through
law school and within just a few years he was the man to talk to about maritime
law.
Thirty years
later, his office in Miami had over one hundred associate attorneys and his
counsel rated five hundred dollars an hour. At seventy-five, Saulman was still
sharp and his knowledge of ships and shipping was voluminous.
"Mercer, how
are you? I haven't heard your sorry voice in months. Tell me you're in Miami
and ready to get into trouble."
"Sorry, Dave,
I'm in D.C. and I'm already in trouble."
"Don't tell
me the cops finally picked you up for flashing the tourists in front of the
White House?"
"Hell, no one
even notices when I do it. Dave, what do you know about a ship called the September
Laurel?”
"An official
call, is it?"
"Yeah, charge
it to NOAA."
"NOAA, huh?
Do they know?"
"Not yet, but
if I'm right, they won't mind."
"The September
Laurel was the ship that rescued that woman from the NOAA research vessel
last night, right?"
"That's the
one."
"The Laurel's
owned by Ocean Freight and Cargo, head office in New York, but all of their
ships are registered in Panama and have Italian crews. She's just a tramp
freighter, usually runs the north Pacific. Let me think, about four hundred
feet, thirty thousand gross tons. Only notable
thing about her is this rescue."
"Dave, I want
you to check her out—normal cargoes, big contracts—also I want the lowdown on
her parent company. Dig deep. Also, could you get me any information on all the
ships that have sunk in the same waters as the Ocean Seeker?''
"What's going
on in that paranoid mind of yours?"
"I'm not sure
yet, and I can't really talk about what I suspect. Do you happen to know the
design on her stack?"
"Yeah, a
bunch of laurels."
"You
sure?"
"Yes, its
OF&C's trademark. Their ship August Rose has a bunch of roses on the
stack and the December Iris has irises on hers."
"So there's
no way that her stack could be painted with a black circle surrounding a yellow
dot?"
"Not unless
the company has changed a forty-year tradition."
"Thanks Dave,
I owe you. Just fax the info to my home and I'll take it from there."
"Are you up
for a trivia challenge?" Saulman asked. This had been a tradition since
they'd first met in 1983, at a reception honoring the few remaining Titanic
survivors.
"Fire
away."
"Who was the
last person to own the Queen Elizabeth and what did he change her name
to?"
"C. Y. Tung,
and he called her Seawise University."
Mercer just barely
heard Saulman call him a bastard before he hung up.
Mercer flipped
through his Rolodex for a second, searching for a number at Woods Hole
Oceanographic institute.
"Time to call
in another favor," he muttered as the phone began ringing.
"Yo,"
answered a familiar deep baritone.
Mercer instantly
recognized the easy negligence of the greeting.
The voice was pure Harlem. "Spook, whatever happened to hello?"
"Only one man
dare call me that. Is that you, Mercer?"
"No, this is
the Massachusetts chapter of the KKK soliciting donations."
"So it is the
Rock Jock, how the hell are you?"
Three years
earlier, Mercer had been contacted by a Pennsylvania mining firm about a piece
of property they had just purchased in upstate New York. The company was hoping
to reopen a hard-rock anthracite mine first excavated in the 1890s. While doing
the first exploratory trips into the half-submerged mine, Mercer and a small
team from the mining company had come across a school of swift but blind fish.
Not recognizing them as a normal subterranean species, Mercer had called in
Woods Hole to investigate the mutated specimens. They sent over two marine
biologists and several assistants. The mine was never reopened, but the
research had given a young grad student named Charles Washington his Ph.D.
thesis and a guaranteed tenure at Woods Hole. Mercer had given Washington the
nickname Spook, not because of his black skin and inner-city manner, but
because of his love of Stephen King novels and the frightening stories he'd
tell to keep the crew entertained while working in the dark mine tunnels.
"Another day
older and deeper in debt."
"Shit, man,
you ain't seen debt until you see the payments on my new BMW."
"Whatever
happened to scientists with leather-elbowed jackets, untrimmed beards, and
beat-up Saabs?"
"That's for
old white farts, not us lean and mean black brothers. 'Sides which, last I knew
you was drivin' a Jag."
"Just to
prove I'm not an old white fart, that's all."
"Bullshit,
but I love ya anyway. This ain't no social call, what up?"
''A year ago,
Woods Hole sent a team to Mozambique to look at shrimp beds. You know anything
about it?"
"No, but hold
on, I know someone who does."
Mercer could hear
him shout to someone else in the room. A few moments later a frail female voice
came on the line. "Hello, this is Dr. Baker."
"Good
afternoon, Doctor, my name is Philip Mercer, I'm a geologist with the
USGS." Mercer thought it best to sound formal. "I'm trying to get
some information about an expedition to Mozambique that Woods Hole was involved
with last year."
"That's what
Charley said. I was on that expedition as lab director."
"Do you
happen to remember any of the Russian scientists? A youngish man in particular.
I'm sorry, I don't have his name."
"Probably
you're referring to Valery Borodin. Supposedly he was a biologist, but he knew
more about geology than anything else. He spent most of his time with one of
the women from NOAA, lucky girl."
"Why's
that?"
"I may be
sixty-six years old, Mr. Mercer, and have four delightful grandchildren, but
these old eyes can still appreciate a handsome man. And Valery Borodin was a
very handsome man."
"So you say
he knew more about geology than anything else, huh?"
"That's
right. If you want to know more about him, I suggest you contact the woman from
NOAA. I can't think of her name right off the top of my head, but if you give
me a second I can get it."
"That's okay,
Dr. Baker, you've been more than kind. Thank you, and please thank Dr.
Washington." Mercer hung up and leaned far back into his seat.
He reviewed the
information he'd gathered. A bunch of dead whales. An explosion on a research
vessel. An assassination attempt on the only survivor. A telegram from a dead
friend. One freighter with two different designs on its stack. An Italian crew
that speaks Russian. A Russian biologist that doesn't know biology and probably
has nothing to do with what's going on, and, Mercer looked ruefully at the
empty beer bottles on his desk, the beginning of a good buzz.
"In other
words, I've got nothing," he said aloud, and switched off the desk lamp.
__________
__________
__________
While many of the Pacific islands are described as sparkling jewels
by those who visit them, anyone seeing the Spratly Islands would agree that
they are nothing more than a handful of gravel tossed haphazardly into the
center of the South China Sea. The Spratlys are spread across an area the size
of New England, yet comprise a total land area of less than two square miles.
The more than one hundred islets, coral outcrop-pings, and atolls are
completely unremarkable—except that they are claimed as sovereign territory by
no less than six nations.
These countries,
in a bid to legitimize their claims, have gone so far as to set up gun
emplacements on some of the larger islands and garrisons on the smaller ones,
islands so small that high tide obliterates them and leaves the troops standing
thigh high in the sea. Vietnam, has occupied twenty-five of the islands while
China claims seven, the Philippines eight, Malaysia three, and Taiwan one. The
sultan of Brunei wants to claim one island
in particular, but that tiny speck is underwater for more than six months of
the year.
At first, many
Western observers scoffed at the conflicting claims, calling them a poor man's
imperialism. A naval engagement between China and Vietnam in March 1988, which
claimed the lives of seventy-seven Vietnamese and an undisclosed number of
Chinese, changed their attitudes.
These two
vehemently Communist countries did not come to blows for merely territorial
reasons nor national pride. The motivation for the battle was the basest of
interests: greed. Since oil was discovered off the coast of southern Vietnam in
the mid-1980s, the nations ringing the South China Sea have shown a keen
interest in what other natural resources might lie beneath the warm waters.
Hydrocarbons, huge fishing banks, and the Spratlys' location, in the middle of
the shipping lanes between the Pacific and Indian Oceans, have made them one of
the most contested spots on the globe.
To open a dialogue
between the disputing parties, the government of Indonesia invited them all to
Bandung, about sixty miles east of Jakarta, in 1992. For several weeks,
ministers met to discuss their aims. China promised to consider joint economic
development of the Spratlys, provided that all other claimants relinquished
their territorial interests. In response, Malaysia purchased two guided missile
corvettes from Great Britain.
The meeting broke
up with nothing resolved.
Since then, the
situation had continued to deteriorate. Vietnam began shelling vessels that
strayed too close to the island of Amboyna Cay and Malaysia further solidified
her position by building an airfield on Terumba Layang-Layang. Taiwan grabbed
two more islands, setting up manned outposts. The Taiwanese also faced down a
threat from a Chinese gunboat, an act that almost brought the two nations to
war.
Taiwan's new
aggressiveness, coupled with a massive infusion of money from American and
European oil companies prompted the government of
Thailand to make a new attempt to bring about a peaceful settlement. Thus,
ministers from the six rival nations, plus binding representatives from the
United States and Russia, were meeting in Bangkok at the invitation of the Thai
foreign minister.
The meetings were
held at the Shangri-la Hotel just off Sathon Road along the banks of the Chao
Phraya River, the river which runs through the sprawling city of Bangkok the
way the aorta runs through the human body. Behind closed teak doors in the
hotel's new convention center, the eight representatives, plus their coterie of
aides and translators, had been hard at work for six straight weeks, meeting
ten hours a day, and it was beginning to look like the conference would be a
success.
The Chinese
representative, Minister Lujian, was willing to forgo total sovereignty of the
islands if his nation was granted a continuation of Most Favored Nation status
from the United States. In return, the United States representative,
Undersecretary of Commerce Kenneth Donnelly, received guarantees that several
American oil companies would be allowed exploratory rights to a couple of areas
in the Spratlys.
All of the
assembled delegates agreed to this, yet the Taiwanese and Russian
representatives continued to bring up fine points of law that served only as
delaying tactics. The Bangkok Accords, as they were to be known, were ready,
yet Minister Tren and Ambassador Gennady Perchenko continued to delay the final
signing.
Ambassador
Perchenko had been mostly silent during the preceding weeks of negotiations,
yet a week earlier he had taken his customary place at the round table in the
richly tapestried room with a new set to his shoulders. He had begun to speak,
and had rarely stopped since. At first, Minister Lujian thought Perchenko and
Tren were buying time for a Taiwanese military buildup, but satellite images
and hard data from spies around the naval bases at Kao-hsiung and Chi-lung
showed no increase in activity. Kenneth Donnelly
finally assumed that these tactics were a way for the Russians to gain some
sort of economic interest in the Spratlys in exchange for a timely settlement.
Drawing on his
twenty-five years of adroit statecraft experience, Perchenko had changed his
role from observer to dominator, ready to dictate terms.
With a discreet
click, a member of the king's personal bodyguard closed the heavy doors to the
conference room and took up station just to their left, a gleaming M-16 hanging
from his thin shoulder. The Thai foreign minister, Prem Vivarya, paused for a
few moments to let the men in the room settle down before opening the morning
session. Set before the Asian delegates were cups of delicate porcelain
decorated with ermine lotus blossoms, filled with steaming tea. The Americans
and the Russians drank thick coffee from institutional white cups, the type
found in hotels all over the world.
Through the
partially shaded plate-glass window, Minister Prem could see the gleaming
concrete tower of the hotel. Beyond it, the green torpid river was choked with
power boats, barges, water taxis, and long-tailed skiffs caught in the midst of
the city's rush hour. He hoped that this day would not become as deadlocked as
the river traffic.
"Gentlemen,
at yesterday's meeting," Prem intoned, and the assembled translators began
whispering to their charges, "the representative from the Russian
Federation, Ambassador Perchenko, was beginning to outline several concerns
that his government had for the treaty that we are all considering."
Even through the
cumbersome translations, Prem's annoyance at the Russian was plain. Perchenko,
a heavy rumpled man in his late fifties, smiled tightly.
As an aide,
Perchenko had attended the landmark 1982 United Nations Convention on the Law
of the Sea in Caracas. With more than 150 nations represented it was the
largest gathering of its type in history, a truly global event. It took nine grueling months to write the final
document. It pertained to every aspect of the oceans, from environmental
protection to the harvesting of their bounty, from the free passage of vessels
to undersea mining. In the end, every representative signed it, yet the
convention was killed soon after its birth because the United States Congress
refused to enact it into law.
Though UNCLOS had
miscarried, it had given Gennady Perchenko one of the finest educations
possible on maritime law. Now he was using that knowledge for the Bangkok
Accords. Or, more precisely, to stall the Bangkok Accords.
After Minister
Prem's opening remarks, Perchenko launched into a ten-hour-long monologue,
interrupted only by a one-hour pause for lunch. This speech, though informed,
was entirely irrelevant. Perchenko chronicled sovereignty issues dating back
more than a century and, although the conflict over the Spratlys was based on
such historical clashes, they had been reviewed ad nauseam during earlier
meetings. There was no logical reason for the wily Russian to bring them up
again. As soon as the other delegates realized that Perchenko was stalling once
again, they quickly tuned out the voices of their translators and blankly
watched the shadows progress around the room as the hours passed.
This was the third
straight day of Perchenko's monologues, and this one was as pointless as the
preceeding two.
At six in the
evening, Minister Prem politely interrupted Perchenko. "Ambassador
Perchenko, the hour once again grows late. The hotel's chef informed me earlier
that his dishes cannot be held long, so it is in our best interest if we pause
here and resume again in the morning."
"Of course,
Minister." Perchenko smiled mirthlessly. His voice was still controlled
and level after hours of speaking, and unlike the other men in the room he
showed not the slightest trace of discomfort or boredom.
The delegates
stood quickly and shuffled from the room. Perchenko remained seated and made a
show of lighting a thin Dutch cigar. Undersecretary of Commerce Donnelly
clapped Perchenko on the shoulder in a friendly gesture, but the big Texan's
hand dug deeply into the Russian's soft muscles. "See ya' at dinner,
pardner."
Perchenko waited
until the room was empty before wincing at the pain in his shoulder and
attempting to massage it away.
"Fucking
cowboy," he muttered.
Perchenko left the
hotel quickly, forgoing the dinner, as he had most evenings. Exiting the
gleaming concrete tower on the river side, he called over one of the hotel's
river taxis. Perchenko told the bellman his destination and he, in turn,
informed the liveried boat driver. The Russian stepped lightly onto the taxi, a
Riva twenty-four footer, and settled himself into the wide backseat just
forward of the craft's idling engine.
The driver eased
the boat into the teaming river traffic, heading north and passing the classic
Victorian elegance that was the Oriental Hotel. Like its brethren, Shepherds in
Cairo, or the Mount Nelson in Cape Town, the Oriental stood as a reminder of
the once mighty and far-flung British Empire.
The Riva drove
north, cutting a quick stroke through the river, dodging other boats with the
agility of a thoroughbred.. Bangkok tumbled down to the edge of the river in
urban sprawl. Barges sat tied to the banks four and five deep, forming
cluttered neighborhoods of their own. The numerous canals that once sliced off
into the city and earned Bangkok the title "Venice of the East" were
all but gone, turned into automobile choked streets, but all of Bangkok's
diversity could still be seen from the river; the wealth stacked up in glittering
high-rises and the abject poverty living in stick and sheet metal shacks
crammed between warehouses.
On the river, the
sharp water smell almost masked the
reeking cloud of pollution which shrouds the city, ejected from
sweatshops and cars in a pall that rivals Los Angeles or Mexico City.
The boat sped
along, under the Memorial Bridge, where cars and the three-wheeled jitneys
called tuk-tuks were strung like beads. They shot past the Arun Wat, the Temple
of Dawn, a squashed cone that typified Thai religious architecture. The dying
rays of the sun shone hard against its gilded facade.
The taxi passed
the royal palace, the Temple of the Emerald Buddha, and Wat Po. As they pounded
northward, the city became older, the buildings more tumbled, the Western
influence not nearly as strong. The houses and tenements were so jammed
together that they leaned against one another. It seemed as though if one were
torn down, whole neighborhoods would tumble like dominos.
Finally they came
to the Royal River Hotel, the only major hotel on the western bank of the
river. A new hotel, it was immensely popular with European and Australian tour
groups. Tourists clustered around white tables on the hotel's landing, their
shorts and open-necked shirts garish splashes of color that clashed sharply
with their sunburnt skin.
Gennady Perchenko
stood and shuffled to the Riva's gunwale. Ignoring the proffered hand of a
bellman, he stumbled to the dock and told the driver to wait, in both English
and mangled Thai. He approached the waterside bar's host, a tuxedoed man with a
deeply pocked face and slicked back hair. As the maitre d' led Perchenko to the
only unoccupied table, he spoke quietly from the side of his mouth, his thin
lips barely moving.
"There is no word
yet, you should wait."
Perchenko bristled
at the order from this man who was no more than a cutout in the spy trade, a
disposable piece of garbage whose worth was so small it was uncountable, yet he
knew the man was right. He must wait.
As a slim waitress
set a Rum Collins on his table, Perchenko thought, as he had every night since
coming to Bangkok, about how he had gotten into
his current situation.
He had been a
successful diplomat under the old Soviet regime, a functionary of some standing
who might have one day reached a cabinet position. The coup, the collapse of
the Soviet government, and the subsequent formation of the Russian Federation
had all but crushed his career. In the sweeping changes that washed across his
homeland like a tsunami wave, Perchenko had found himself tumbling in the
swirling back eddies. Former allies in the Politburo vanished, others switched
loyalties so fast that even they had no idea in what they believed. Gennady
watched assignment after assignment pass him by. The old cronyism had been
replaced by a tougher but more subtle system of political patronage that left
him idle while other men flourished.
It was at that
time that a hand reached out and dragged him back onto the crest of the wave.
Later he realized that that hand belonged to the very devil himself: Colonel
Ivan Kerikov, Director of Department 7, KGB Scientific Operations. Kerikov was
a shadowy figure in the stygian world of espionage, a man no one claimed to
know yet the list of those who feared him was lengthy.
A full month
before the Bangkok Accords were announced, Kerikov had invited Perchenko to his
offices in a nondescript building near the Moskva Hotel, far from KGB
headquarters. He was told about the upcoming meetings and given a choice—attend
as Kerikov's agent or never receive another posting in the foreign service.
Perchenko did not
question how Kerikov knew of the impending meetings, nor did he question the
meaning of the word "agent," he simply accepted and began making
preparations.
Five weeks later,
Gennady was told by his superior in the Foreign Office that he would represent
the federation in Thailand. Gennady innocently asked if Kerikov had any final
orders. His superior shot him a scathing look, then sharply denied that he'd ever heard of Kerikov.
The full extent of
Kerikov's power became apparent in Bangkok when the Taiwanese ambassador took
Gennady aside and explained that he too was working for Kerikov and would
follow Perchenko's orders. At that moment, Perchenko began to fear for his
life. Engineering his posting to the conference was one thing, but Kerikov
seemed to control people outside of the Russian Federation. Perchenko couldn't,
nor did he wish to, understand that level of dominion.
At first,
Perchenko simply had to attend the rounds of meetings and pay attention, but a
week ago, the situation changed. Kerikov contacted Gennady through the maitre
d' at the Royal River and instructed him to delay the final signing of the
Accords. No explanation was given and the fear that Gennady had built of
Kerikov had prevented him from ever asking for one. If Ivan Kerikov wanted the
Bangkok Accords stalled, that was exactly what Gennady would do.
So Gennady
stalled—and waited for some sort of inquiry from his superiors in the Foreign
Office. Their silence, he assumed, was another sign of Kerikov's influence.
Perchenko could easily handle the pressure put on him by the other delegates,
and the assistance given by the Taiwanese ambassador made the situation even
easier. Still, he wanted some sense of Kerikov's final plan. How long would he
have to delay the meetings and what was the ultimate goal?
As Perchenko
watched the maitre d' wend his way through the crowded tables to seat a group
of Dutch tourists, he knew the answers wouldn't be found here.
"Yes,"
he muttered, "I must wait."
__________
__________
__________
Colonel Ivan Kerikov dragged his hard, flat gaze from the face of
the man across his desk and lined up the glowing tip of a nearly spent
cigarette to the fresh one pressed between his thin lips. As soon as the smoke
filled his lungs, he ground the old cigarette into an overflowing ashtray and
stared again at his guest. The man seemed to shrink under Kerikov's scrutiny.
Through the cloud
of acrid smoke Kerikov continued his assessment of his guest. Though he had
never met the man before, he was cut from the same mold as so many other
bureaucrat accountants that Kerikov seemed to know the man intimately. The accountant
wore the uniform of a KGB major, but the tailoring was poor so it hung loosely
across his thin shoulders and sunken chest. The few decorations seemed to be
more apology than a statement of valor. His skin was pasty white and, had
Soviet doctors not perfected cheap ocular surgery, Kerikov was sure that this
man would sport thick-lensed glasses. Kerikov remembered with distaste that the
auditor's handshake was limp, like squeezing a plastic bag of entrails.
Kerikov had not
been surprised when this man had presented himself to his secretary an hour
earlier. In fact, he had been expecting a general audit from the KGB's Central
Bureau, of which this man was the vanguard, here merely to pave the way for the
dozen or so other little ferrets who would tear through Kerikov's budgetary
reports with the anticipation of hounds tracking a fresh scent.
This audit was a
long time coming. After the collapse of the old Soviet Union, every sector of
the government had been reevaluated. The budgets, once lavish under Brezhnev
and Andropov, had dwindled under Gorbachev and Yeltsin, and accountability had
risen. Every ruble and kopek now had to be tracked and disbursed. Financial
discrepancy was unacceptable. It was an indication of the power of the KGB that
they were the last of the major organizations to fall victim to the auditors'
slashing pens.
Kerikov had known
a full six months earlier that the auditing teams were interested in the
affairs of his particular division of the KGB, Department 7, Scientific
Operations. It was only a cruel quirk of fate that this interest coincided with
a massive amount of new spending, which he was now forced to justify to the
thin major sitting on the other side of his oak desk.
As the auditor
busied himself in his imitation leather expandable briefcase, Kerikov reflected
on the easier times Scientific Operations had once enjoyed.
Born in the tumult
of the Great Patriotic War against the Nazis, Department 7 had been established
by Stalin himself to help assimilate captured enemy technology into the Soviet
army. As the Russian forces advanced into Germany and liberated various
factories and laboratories, members of the newly formed Scientific Operations
were there to see that secret works were preserved and brought back to a huge facility near
the Black Sea port of Odessa.
If a site was
deemed important to the members of Department 7, they gave the order and whole
buildings were dismantled, packed up and shipped back to Russia, oftentimes
with the original staffs kept as virtual slave labor. In this fashion, a
deuterium plant was taken from outside Berlin and reestablished, giving Russia
her first source of heavy water, a critical component in the building of
fission bombs. A factory outside of Warsaw that produced Zyklon-B, the nerve
agent used in the death camps, was shipped to a remote site in the Ural
Mountains and began stockpiling gas weapons by the summer of 1945. Officers of
Department 7 seized a Heinkle workshop just as the staff were destroying their
accumulated research. The papers and models captured from that raid led to the
development of the MIG-15, the Soviet's first jet fighter.
Since the
strategic rocket site at Penemunde was liberated by the Western Allies,
Department 7 lost out on that windfall of missile technology, yet still managed
to secure many top scientists and designs for their homeland". By far,
their greatest boon came during the occupation of Berlin.
While the Western
Allies busied themselves searching the city for war criminals, the Soviets
searched for secrets. A safe in the home of a Messerschmitt engineer yielded
the formula for a synthetic oil necessary for turbine engines. The diary of a
Krupp manager held the key to the metallurgy of the exhaust nozzle of the V-2
rocket
In this fashion,
Department 7 brought secrets home to Russia and gave Soviet scientists the
facilities they needed to adapt them to the Red Army.
By the summer of
1952, all of the captured German technology had been evaluated, much incorporated,
and some abandoned. With its primary mission complete, the head of Department 7, Boris Ulinev,
decided to change the objective of his section.
Scientific
Operations had been a passive agency; it had no agents in the popular sense,
nor did it create anything original. Ulinev set out to change all that. Because
Scientific Operations had always dealt with technology that was ahead of its
time, Ulinev began setting up operations that would only come to fruition far
into the future. Spending millions of rubles supplied by the Soviet government,
Ulinev directed the eight hundred scientists on his staff to concentrate their
efforts leapfrogging current technology and developing devices far more
advanced than anything on any drawing board in the world.
Like Kelly
Johnson's "Skunk Works" at Lockheed, which developed the SR-71 spy
plane long before the materials were available to build it, Scientific
Operations began designing and testing rudimentary multiwarhead ballistic
missiles even before Sputnik was conceived. A Department 7 theoretician came
just a couple of molecules away from discovering carbon fiber. And a team of
experts began working on circuit boards for computers while the rest of the
world still marveled at the power of the vacuum tube.
One project in
particular became the pet of Boris Ulinev and subsequently the potential
triumph of Ivan Ker-ikov. Presented to Ulinev by an intense young geologist
named Pytor Borodin, the project was as audacious as anything yet attempted by
Department 7. In fact, it might rival the greatest feats of mankind.
The undertaking,
code-named "Vulcan's Forge," had its genesis on Bikini Atoll on July
25, 1946, when the United States conducted the first underwater nuclear test as
part of Operation Crossroads. It took four years, until 1950, for the data from
that test to reach Department 7, stolen by a female agent who seduced a lab
technician at the White Sands Testing Grounds in New Mexico, where the volumes
of information and tons of samples were
warehoused. Pytor Borodin became involved due to a happenstance comment from a
colleague, who mentioned that a hitherto unknown alloy had been created by the
Bikini explosion. Borodin quickly became obsessed, going so far as to request a
clandestine submarine reconnaissance to Bikini in late 1951 in order to collect
additional samples of sand, water, and debris from the seventy-four ships the
U.S. intentionally sank as part of the test.
For eighteen
additional months, Borodin labored at his task until he was able to present a
far-reaching plan to Boris Ulinev. It seemed tailor-made for the new direction
Scientific Operations was to take.
The opening phase
of Vulcan's Forge called for the detonation of a nuclear weapon deep under the
Pacific Ocean. Because all atomic materials were under the direct control of
the army, Ulinev had his team secretly build one. This alone took more than a
year. Department 7 also established a large dummy corporation and secreted
money in various accounts in Europe and Asia. All in all, Vulcan's Forge wasn't
ready to commence until the spring of 1954.
Once the opening
gambit had been played, the only thing left to do was wait for nature to take
her course. For forty years the waiting dragged by, through the height of the
Cold War, through the opening of Eastern Europe, and through the collapse of
the Soviet Union herself. During this time, Boris Ulinev died and was replaced,
and his replacement was himself replaced, and so on, until Ivan Kerikov reigned
as the head of a much diminished department. Of all the plots and projects
launched by Ulinev in the 1950s, only Vulcan's Forge remained viable.
Unfortunately, its
raison d'etre had vanished. The mighty struggle between communism and
capitalism was all but over. The massive arms race during the 1980s had brought
the Soviet Union to her economic knees. Though gamely trying to keep pace in
conventional and nuclear forces, Reagan's gamble on Star Wars technology had
chimed the death knell for Russia. The Soviet Union had no response to SDI but
capitulation. America paid for the arms buildup with a four-year recession, but
Russia paid with her very existence.
Bit by bit, Russia
began withdrawing into herself. Aid to Cuba was slowed to a trickle, then shut
off completely. Troops were pulled from the fifty-year occupation of Berlin.
Aeroflot suspended most international flights. Within Russia, programs and
departments began to vanish. The state-run diamond mines at Aikhal in central
Siberia were surreptitiously sold to a London consortium-linked to the
Consolidated Selling System. The Blackjack bomber, the MIG-29 Fulcrum, and
Russia's aircraft carrier program were all shelved. Officers began committing
suicide because they were worth more to their families dead than alive. The
staff of the KGB was cut by more than fifty percent.
Bold projects like
Vulcan's Forge had no place in the New World Order. During his first four years
as head of Scientific Operations, before the collapse of the Soviet Union,
Kerikov had guarded and nurtured Vulcan's Forge for pure patriotism and duty.
But now, the very fabric of what he believed had torn through, and Kerikov
started to protect the project from the auditors for simple greed. He planned
to steal Vulcan's Forge for himself in a coup as brilliant as the original plan
laid down by Pytor Borodin forty years before.
Time, once so
abundant, had run incredibly short for Kerikov. The Bangkok Accords had seemed
a providential gift when first proposed, but now it had become necessary to
delay them at a substantial cost in bribe money paid to the ambassador of
Taiwan and to Gennady Perchenko and Perchenko's superior in the Foreign Office.
Department 7 could
ill afford the huge payoffs. Kerikov had been able to dodge the auditors for
months, but now they were here, in his office, asking questions that he was
unwilling to answer.
"Ah, here we are," the ferret said, pulling a sheaf of
notes from his briefcase. "It seems that your department paid for the
refitting of a refrigeration ship called the August Rose four years ago
at a cost of twenty-seven million dollars. An affidavit from a shipyard foreman
in Vladivostok states that the sonar system installed on the ship is far
superior to anything he'd seen on our strategic submarines. Would you care to
comment on that?"
Kerikov felt a pressure building behind his eyes, a force that
threatened to blow apart his entire head. Security concerning the refit of the August
Rose had been airtight, yet here was the entire story being laid out before
him. The constraint of time he'd felt a moment ago had just tightened with the
relentlessness of a garrote.
Kerikov opened the top right-hand drawer of his desk. ''I happen
to have something here that is very pertinent to that."
The accountant leaned forward in his chair, eyes bright with
anticipation.
There was only one round in the Makarov semiautomatic pistol, the
one round Kerikov had planned to use on himself if the need ever arose. It blew
a perfectly round hole through the accountant's forehead, then splattered the
contents of his skull onto the wall and door behind his slumping body.
Kerikov rummaged through his desk until he found a flimsy
cardboard box of ammunition. He loaded one round into the pistol and slipped it
back into the drawer. He pressed the intercom button on his black telephone.
"Yes, Mr. Kerikov," his secretary answered.
"There has been a slight change in my plans, Anna."
Kerikov lit another cigarette. ''Inform Evad Lurbud that I want him in Cairo as
soon as possible; I believe he is still at my dacha. Also, I want you to get me
the earliest flight to Bangkok. I'll travel on the Johann Kreiger
passport."
"What about the KGB accountant?" Anna asked.
Kerikov assumed from her tone that she had heard the shot.
"He'll be resting here for a while. As soon as you've reached
Lurbud and booked my flight, leave the building. When you're questioned, tell
them that you took an early lunch and know nothing. Good luck, Anna. And
good-bye."
"I understand." If she was disappointed that their
four-year affair was ending, she gave no indication.
Kerikov took some time going through the secure files in his wall
safe, pulling out a select few that might one day prove useful or profitable.
He knew after he boarded the flight to Bangkok, he'd never again return to
Russia.
__________
__________
__________
Valery Borodin bolted upright in his bed, a muffled gasp clutched
in the base of his throat. His lean body was slick with nervous sweat, his dark
hair plastered to his neat head. His chest heaved and his heart pounded as he
fought to regain control of himself.
It took nearly two
minutes to realize he was no longer the frightened six-year-old boy of his
dream, being told by faceless uniformed men that his father had died in a
laboratory accident. He was a man now, a respected scientist in his own right.
Yet the haunting sobs of his mother still lingered in the quiet of his cabin
aboard the motor ship August Rose.
That dream had
tortured him since the day those events actually occurred. It woke him most
nights, but he had always remained silent, because his mother was grieving in
the room next to his in the small Kiev apartment that the Department of
Scientific Operations had allowed them to retain as recompense after the
accident.
To Valery, that
had been the worst, stifling the scream that
always rushed through him, suppressing it, crushing it so he would not disturb
his mother. To Russians, grief was something to be worn openly, passionately,
yet he could not express it. He did not believe that his pain was worth
encroaching on his mother's. Years later, retelling this story always evoked
sympathy from the listener, but never understanding. Somehow he got the feeling
that people thought there was something wrong with him, some flaw.
It wasn't until
last year, in Mozambique, that Valery found someone who finally understood, an
American girl who was herself a victim of losing a parent young.
He swung his legs
off the narrow bunk of his private cabin. Had the Soviet government not
developed a keen interest in his mind, Valery surely would have found a career
in the ballet. There was not an ounce of extra flesh on his frame; muscled
plane blended with supple joint in the perfect symmetry that comes not from
hours spent in gyms, but the blessing of genetic inheritance.
He raked his
fingers through his hair, pulling it back from his forehead, and at once a
thick cowlick sprang up and hung over his right eye.
The dream which
had haunted his childhood had returned just last year in the office of Ivan
Kerikov, a man whom Valery had never heard of, but who seemed to know
everything about him. Valery learned that this man was the current head of the
department that had employed his late father. Kerikov calmly explained that
Scientific Operations had watched Valery with interest over the years and in
fact helped him along at times. As Valery incredulously tried to digest this piece
of information, Kerikov dropped another bombshell.
He pressed a
signal buzzer on his desk and a man walked into the room. Valery barely heard
Kerikov introduce Dr. Pytor Borodin. Thirty years had aged his father, filling
out his body and silvering his wild hair and beard, but he was still the man
who stared from the photograph hanging over the dinner table in his mother's
apartment.
That night Valery had the dream for the first time since his early
teens.
It wasn't until their next meeting that Valery had recovered
enough to actually listen to the things his father and Kerikov were discussing.
The elder Borodin had faked his own death so many years ago as a
security precaution. His work at the time had been so secret that only such
drastic measures would ensure protection. After most of Borodin's coworkers
were summarily executed in the summer of 1963, Borodin had worked alone
monitoring his secret project, nurturing it along to its now fast approaching
conclusion.
Kerikov explained that they needed a new staff of scientists to
see the project concluded. Would Valery be interested in joining as
second-in-command?
At the time Valery was working for the State Energy Bureau,
investigating the potential of Russia's tremendous methane hydrate reserves,
which were locked in the permafrost of western and central Siberia. His
background in geology was as strong as any of the new breed of Russian
scientists, men and women whose worth was valued by results rather than the
ability to regurgitate party dogma.
Valery only agreed to join after being assured that his
consideration was based on his merits, not on the family connection. Pytor
Borodin's casual dismissal of such a notion was terribly painful, as if Borodin
wasn't even acknowledging his own son.
Two weeks after those early meetings, Valery was given a holiday
in Mozambique under the cover of a marine biology mission, a chance to defrost
his body after so many months in Siberia and prepare himself for the work
ahead.
Since then, the work had been nothing short of incredible. Kerikov
had managed to assemble some of the sharpest minds in the Russian Federation
and place at their disposal
the latest cutting edge technology.
Valery pulled on a pair of American denim jeans and a military
green T-shirt. It was just past midnight, but he knew trying to go back to
sleep would be futile.
The ship's galley, one deck below his cabin, was deserted, but a
large urn of coffee was kept warm on a side table. Valery filled a white mug
and took a cautious sip of the strong, bitter brew. He nodded to the kitchen
hand noisily cleaning pans in the scullery before leaving for the nerve center
of the August Rose.
Built as a bulk carrier designated UT-20 by Hitachi-Zosen in 1979,
she had been converted to a refrigeration ship in 1983 when she had been bought
by Ocean Freight and Cargo, The 1.13 million cubic feet of bulk storage area
had been reduced by nearly thirty percent to make room for massive Carrier
refrigeration units and the special cargo-handling equipment needed to
transport frozen goods.
That refitting was well documented by the Japanese shipyard that
carried out the work, by Continental Insurance, and by the Finnish bank which
floated most of the loans held by Ocean Freight and Cargo. The August Rose's
next refit was kept much more secret.
She spent seven weeks in a secure drydock in Vladivostok in the
spring of 1990. Cosmetically she still resembled the vessel she had always
been: 20,000 deadweight tons and 497 feet long, with a sharply raked bow and an
aft-positioned superstructure that resembled a four-story steel box. But within
her steel-plated hull she was transformed into the most unique scientific
vessel ever built.
The cavernous main hold was turned into a geophysics laboratory
augmented by smaller labs, offices, and data storage rooms. The refrigeration
units were left in place, but now they worked to keep the sophisticated
computer system at a constant temperature.
The computers themselves were huge, taking up nearly two thousand
square feet of space for the main-frames and half again as much for the peripherals. There was more
computing power aboard the August Rose than at Baikanor, Russia's
equivalent of Cape Kennedy. Enough cargo space remained for the August Rose to
operate under the cover of a refrigerator ship, though she could no longer haul
enough frozen goods to ever turn a profit, yet the ruse allowed her to sail the
Pacific unimpeded.
Valery reached the
main laboratory through a torturous maze of bulkhead doors and narrow
companion-ways. The final door was secured by a magnetic keycard lock. A guard
noted his time of entry on a log sheet and took custody of his card, which
would have been erased by the magnetic fields created by the equipment in the
lab.
It was past
midnight, but nearly a dozen scientists, technicians, and assistants were at
work, monitoring the numerous sensors that hung from two towed arrays beneath
the vessel's keel. A large metal plotting table dominated the center of the
room. Above it, on an articulating arm, a holographic laser projector hung down
like some monstrous dentist's drill. Bundles of fiberoptic cables ran from the
projector to the mainframe computer and to the table itself.
Pytor Borodin was
seated at the console nearest the projection table, his slim body hidden under
a voluminous white lab coat. Valery took a deep breath of the filtered,
sterilized air and strode across the rubber-tiled floor.
"Working late
again, Father?"
He might have been
the oldest member of the scientific team by twenty years, but Pytor Borodin
kept a pace that far surpassed that of all of his staff, including his
second-in-command. He usually spent thirty-six hours in the computer room
before taking a grudging six-hour break for sleep. His crumpled appearance
alarmed his son.
"Father, have
you been taking your medication?"
"No,"
the elder scientist fired back irritably. "That Coumadin is nothing more
than rat poison and Vasotec, the beta blocker, affects my breathing because of
the air-conditioning. Now don't bother me again about my heart. Have a look at
this; we've gotten the cameras back on line."
Valery glanced at
the monitor and saw a close approximation of hell on earth. Dangling from a
Kevlar cable and encased in carbon fiber with a thick artificial sapphire lens
cover, the camera hung directly above the central vent of the fastest growing
volcano in the world. Molten rock, forced upward by the tremendous heat engine
of the earth's core, poured through the narrow rent in the crust in a
never-ending stream, amid billowing clouds of noxious gas and dissolved
minerals. There was no microphone attached to the camera, but Valery could
almost hear the protesting moans as the earth vomited up her guts.
"The rate has
increased again," Valery remarked.
"And?"
"The flow is
forming more westerly now."
"Right, it's
caught in the North Equatorial Gyre, just as I'd predicted."
"But that
current only moves maybe three miles per day. Surely that can't cause a shift
in the formation of the cone."
"It wouldn't
normally, no, but the rate of ejection from the volcano is so great that the
two forces create a skew in the lava flow. It's a simple matter of vectors. I'm
glad you're here, Valery, the computer is about finished with the past day's
data and is ready for a growth projection."
Because of the
massive amount of raw data gathered by the sensors and the inherently chaotic
movement of anything within nature's realm, the August Rose needed huge
computers in order to create a reasonable prediction of the volcano's future
growth. Even with the gigabytes of power, the computers needed a full
twenty-four hours
to
remap, down to the millimeter, the thrusting cone below the ship and then to
predict where the cone would broach the surface of the Pacific Ocean.
The countdown clock on one computer screen indicated that the
holographic projection would be complete in one minute and twenty seconds. Valery
and his father waited in silence, both preferring to stare at the camera images
than fake inane conversation. Pytor Borodin didn't seem to notice the tension
between them, but Valery was well aware.
Finally the counter ran down to zero, and Pytor Borodin activated
the holographic imager. The model projected against the plotting table began as
just a hazy conical outline, but quickly sharpened. Crags, radiating dikes, and
smaller vents were easily distinguished. The projection looked as solid as a
plaster cast but was composed entirely of laser beams.
"Activating the extrapolation logarithms."
The computer had already done the tens of billions of calculations
necessary to predict the growth of the volcano, so the image began to change
immediately. A shimmering blue plane representing the ocean's surface appeared
and the volcano quickly rose through it, tiny simulated waves pounding against
the bleak basalt shores.
Borodin pressed several more buttons on his console and longitude and
latitude lines were added to the projection, accurate to the second of a
degree.
With a note of satisfaction, Pytor Borodin remarked, "This is
the third straight test where the summit has broached more than a thousand
meters outside of Hawaii's two-hundred-mile exclusionary limit. I think it is
now time to inform Kerikov." He turned to a female assistant. "Tell
the captain that I wish us to remain on the site for an additional twenty-four
hours."
She nearly bowed as she left the lab. Borodin strode back to his
console and called to the room at large, ''Reset the sensors and the computers.
I want to run another simulation immediately."
Just as Valery turned to go, his father grabbed him lightly by the
arm. "You have yet to see the latest from the gas spectrometry lab."
The two left the lab together, Borodin's hand still on his son's
arm, as if he expected him to bolt at any moment.
The spectrometry lab was crammed with gleaming stainless steel
equipment and several computer monitors slaved to the mainframe. The gas
spectrometer itself was as large as an automobile, but infinitely more complex.
It used the spectrum of light given off by vaporized material to decode its
chemical composition. The system was also paired with a seismic wave echo
sounder as a back up.
"Vassily, show our second-in-command what you showed me
earlier this evening." Borodin never called Valery his son.
The sheets of paper the scientist thrust into Valery's hands were
covered in bands of rainbow hues broken up by black lines of varying
thicknesses. The lines corresponded to the wavelengths of light absorbed by the
vaporized materials.
As easily as a geographer deciphering the myriad lines on a
topographical map, Valery leafed through pages, noting no deviations from the
normal composition of asthenospheric magma, until he came to the last set of
spectrographic images.
He recognized the lines denoting basalt,
silica, and ferro-magnesium, but there was also a series of conspicuous lines
indicating the presence of vanadium, and next to that, a jumble of alternating
thick and thin lines that he had never seen before.
''The earliest writings on alchemy date from the mid-fifth century
and have been found in Arab and Chinese codices as well as European,"
Pytor Borodin said softly, looking over his son's shoulder at the printout.
"For the following twelve
centuries, alchemists represented the best scientific minds of their time and
gave rise to modern chemistry and pharmacology, yet they all failed at their
self-appointed task. Not one was ever able to transmute lead into gold.
"Now, in the age of supercomputers, satellites, and atom
smashers, we have returned to the very roots of science. We have done what
thousands of people have wasted generations trying to accomplish. At the time
of the great alchemists, gold represented the true power of the world. Today,
power in the literal sense is what drives the planet. We have done something
that mankind had given up as hopeless—we have turned base earth into the most
precious substance in the universe. Not some gaudy metal with only limited use,
but a power source that can recreate itself even as we use it up. With that
kind of strength, Valery, no one will ever have the strength to challenge us."
Uncomfortable with his father's words, Valery silently let the
papers slide to the desk and walked out of the lab. He was reminded of a quote
from Hindu mythology, in which Shiva announced, "I am become death, the
destroyer of worlds." They were the same words used by Robert Oppenheimer
after his creation vaporized a portion of the New Mexico desert.
__________
__________
__________
Mercer woke just before six in the
morning, the jet lag he'd expected burned away by the previous day's adrenaline
overdose. He rose stiffly, gently fingering the livid bruises on both
shoulders. He shaved and showered before descending to the rec room. With a cup
of thick black coffee in hand, he tried unsuccessfully to concentrate on the
morning papers. Throughout the night, his sleep had been interrupted with new
questions about Tish's story, but there were no answers. He resigned himself to
waiting for the information from David Saulman in Miami.
By quarter of seven, his coffee cold in the cup, Mercer
impatiently folded the newspapers and slid them down the length of the bar.
Behind the bar, between a bottle of Remy Martin and one of Glenfiddich, lay a
one-foot section of railroad track. Half of it was rust-colored and pitted, the
other burnished to an almost mirror finish.
Mercer retrieved the heavy rail and set it on a towel on the bar.
Beside it he placed a shoe box containing a metal
polishing kit, usually stored next to the antique fridge. He began polishing
the rail with a remarkable amount of concentration, as if when the steel was
beneath his fingers, nothing else in the world mattered. As the rust and grime
slowly dissolved under the chemical and physical onslaught, he silently thanked
Winston Churchill for giving him the idea for such a meditative device. When
the British prime minister found himself under even greater stress than his
legendary constitution could handle, he would build brick walls in the
courtyard behind Number 10 Downing Street. The repetitive act of mortaring,
setting, and pointing allowed his mind to disengage from the frantic pace of
the Second World War and focus on one particular problem. When a solution was
thrashed out in this fashion, an aide would tear down the wall, chip the mortar
from the bricks, and stack them neatly for the next crisis.
Emulating this
idea, but adapting it for apartment life, Mercer had begun polishing railroad
track while attending the Colorado School of Mines. He would polish a section
for an hour or so before a big exam, clearing his mind and focusing his energy
on the upcoming challenge. He graduated eleventh in his class and swore that
this ritual was the key.
Of course, he
chuckled as he worked on the rail, a near photographic memory didn't hurt.
Since school, Mercer estimated that he'd polished nearly sixty yards of track.
He was still
polishing when Tish entered the rec room a little past nine.
"Good
morning," she said.
Mercer laid his
polish-soaked rag in the shoe box, feeling no need to explain his actions.
"Good morning to you. I see they fit."
Tish pirouetted in
front of him, the thin black skirt twirling around her beautiful calves. Her
top was a simple white T-shirt from Armani. Mercer had bought the clothes for her at a local mall while she
had slept through the previous afternoon.
"I assumed
that you're not a transvestite and these were for me." Tish grinned,
smoothing the skirt against her thighs.
"No, I gave
up drag years ago. Are the sizes all right?"
"Right down
to 34C cup, thank you for noticing." She threw him another saucy grin.
"Is that coffee I smell?"
"Yes, but let
me make a new pot, this is my own blend, brewed especially to wake the
dead."
"Sounds fine
to me." She took a tentative sip and winced. Mercer started a fresh pot.
"Why didn't you wake me last night for dinner?''
"I figured
you needed sleep more than you needed my cooking."
"I've found
that most bachelors are excellent chefs."
"Not this
one, I'm afraid. I travel so much that I never took the time to learn how to
cook. I live by the principle that if it can't be nuked, it can't be
edible."
Mercer saw Tish's
eyes dart to the map behind the bar. "I've only been on a few field trips.
Most of my time is spent in a lab in San Diego. It must be exciting, all that
travel, I mean."
"At first it
was, now it's cramped airline seats, cardboard food, and dull meetings."
Tish scoffed but
didn't press. "Do you have any new clues as to what's going on?"
Before answering,
Mercer glanced at his watch. It was well past his personal cutoff limit of
9:30. He strode around the bar and pulled a beer from the fridge. "I
placed some calls yesterday, after you went to bed. We should be hearing
something soon. Until then, I think it best that you stay here. Is there anyone
you need to contact? Boyfriend, anything like that?"
"No."
"Good. I hope
by this afternoon we'll know something that will lead us in a direction. But
right now, all we can do is wait."
"Don't you
have to go to work?"
Mercer laughed.
"I'm consulting for the USGS, they expect me to be irresponsible."
They talked for
the next hour or so, Mercer deftly turning the conversation away from himself
so that Tish spoke most of the time. She had an infectious laugh and, Mercer
noticed, several charming freckles high on her cheeks. She had never been
married, just engaged once, when she was younger. She was a Democrat and a
conservationist, but she didn't trust her party's candidates or the mainstream
environmental groups. She never knew her mother, which Mercer already knew, and
idolized her late father, which he'd guessed. She enjoyed her work for NOAA and
wasn't ready to settle down into a teaching job just yet. Her last serious
relationship had ended seven months before so right now the only thing she
needed to worry about were several house plants that her neighbor promised to
look after when she had gone away to Hawaii.
Around eleven, a
phone rang in Mercer's office. He made no move to answer it. A few seconds
later, the fax machine attached to that phone line began to whirr. When it
finally stopped, Mercer excused himself and retrieved the dozen sheets from the
tray.
He walked slowly
back to the bar, eyes glued to the first page. As he finished each page, he
handed it to Tish. They read for twenty minutes; occasionally Mercer would
grunt at some piece of information, or Tish would gasp.
"I don't
understand that question at the end of the report."
"It's a
trivia challenge between Dave and me. Goes back years. I have to admit he has
me stumped."
Tish read the
question aloud. " 'Who was the captain of the Amoco Cadizo? I've never even heard of that
ship."
"She was a
fully loaded supertanker that ran aground in the English Channel in March of
'78. I'll be damned if I can remember her captain's name."
Tish regarded him
strangely, but changed the subject. "What do you make of this
information?"
"I'm not too
sure yet." Mercer opened another beer.
Ocean Freight and
Cargo, the company whose ship rescued Tish, was headquartered in New York City
but the corporate money came from a Finnish consortium headed by a company once
suspected of being a KGB front. "Slicker than Air America," was David
Saulman's assessment. Their ships sailed mostly in the Pacific, running fairly
standard cargos to established ports of call. Saulman did find that OF&C
had a "Weasel Clause"—his words—written into all of their contracts
concerning the August Rose. The clause allowed the five-hundred-foot
refrigerator ship to break contract with only twelve hours' notice, provided,
that cargo had not already been onloaded. In all of Saulman's years of maritime
law, he had never seen such a stipulation and couldn't even guess its purpose.
Since 1989, OF&C had evoked this clause several times, refusing to load
cargo onto the August Rose in the States. The clause was odd, Saulman
concluded, but certainly not nefarious.
Her present
position was north of Hawaii, hove-to because of engine difficulties. Saulman's
sources said that she would be underway within fifteen hours and that the
company had not requested outside help for their idle ship. Her cargo of beef,
scheduled to be picked up in Seattle, was currently being loaded onto a Lykes
Brothers' vessel.
Mercer's request
for information about vessels sunk in the same waters as the NOAA ship Ocean
Seeker had opened quite a Pandora's box. No less than forty ships had sunk
in that area in the past fifty years, although sinkings had been less frequent
since the 1970s. Mercer assumed this was because of new weather-tracking
technology. He noted that most of the vessels lost were charter fishing
boats, pleasure craft, or day sailors. He checked off the notable exceptions
with a black Waterman fountain pen.
Ocean Seeker, NOAA research vessel, June this year.
One survivor.
Oshabi Mam, Japanese long-line trawler, December 1990.
No survivors.
Philipe Santos, Chilean weather ship, April 1982.
No
survivors.
Western Passage, American freighter converted to cable layer, May
1977.
No survivors.
Curie, French oceanography research ship, October 1975.
No survivors.
Colombo Princess, Sri Lankan container ship, March 1972.
Thirty-one survivors.
Baltimore, American tanker, February 1968.
Twenty-four survivors.
Between the loss of the Baltimore in 1968 and the sinking
of an ore carrier named Grandam Phoenix in 1954, no large ships had sunk
north of Hawaii. Any large vessel lost before 1954 could be attributed to World
War II.
"I don't know what to make of it either," Tish added.
"Well, if the ship that rescued you is somehow connected to
the KGB, that would explain why you heard Russian as you were being
rescued."
Mercer scanned the pages again, but kept returning to the list of
sunken ships, noting that the Grandam Phoenix had been lost with all
hands. There was something . . .
"Jesus."
"What?" Tish said.
He hadn't realized he'd spoken aloud. "I have to go to my
office."
"What for?"
"I have a hunch." Mercer reached for the phone. A second
after dialing, Harry White's bleary voice rasped, "Hello."
"Harry, Mercer. I need you over here to keep an eye on a
friend of mine. . . No, don't bring a guest and yes, I do still have some Jack
Daniel's . . . Right, see you in a few."
Mercer hung up and turned to Tish. ''A friend of mine will be here
in a few minutes. I want you to stay here with him; I can't trust you out on
the streets just yet. Not until I know more."
There was a pleading look in Tish's eyes. Mercer couldn't tell if
she wanted reassurance or more information. "I'll be back in a few hours.
If what I suspect is true, we'll have this cleared up by tonight and you'll be
on a plane home in the morning. Besides, Harry is better company than I
am."
Ten minutes later the doorbell rang and Harry let himself in. When
he entered the rec room, a few millimeters of unfiltered cigarette dangled from
his lips.
"Christ, Mercer, no wonder you called me over. This girl is
too pretty to be here of her own free will. You must have kidnapped her."
"Actually, I did. Tish Talbot, this pathetic creature is
Harry White. Harry, Tish."
Harry ran a hand through his hair. ''If I were twenty years
younger, I'd still be old enough to be your father, but it's good to meet you
anyway."
Mercer could see that Tish was immediately charmed. The old lecher
still had it, he admitted. She would be in good hands while he was away.
"I'll be back in an hour or two."
"Take your time," Harry responded. "I'm free all
day and I'm sure that the lovely lady is eager for some good company."
"Harry, you're a paragon. Tish, I won't be too long. Try not
to encourage him, bad heart, you know."
"Leave us," Harry barked, and turned to stare into
Tish's eyes.
Mercer heard Tish's rich laughter before the front door had closed
behind him.
JENNIFER Woodridge looked up in shock as Mercer entered his outer
office.
"And where
have you been since yesterday?"
"I took a
long lunch, Jen, and just lost track of the time."
"Right. Next
time you do that, let me know first so I can cover for you. Richard has been
frantic trying to reach you."
As if by mystic
perception the phone rang. It was Richard Harris Howell, the corpulent, whiney
deputy director of the USGS, Mercer's immediate boss.
"Dr. Mercer,
I need to see you in my office right away. I have a list of travel vouchers in
front of me that we need to discuss." Howell was more accountant now than
scientist. "It seems that you abused government money on that South Africa
trip.''
Mercer held the
receiver away from his ear while Howell continued in this vein for another
minute. "You're right, Rich." Mercer knew that Howell hated that
nickname. "Listen, I've got some stuff to clear up here. I'll be in your
office in ten minutes."
Mercer hung up the
phone, forestalling any complaint. "I'm sure he'll waddle right over. Tell
him I went to the bathroom."
"Where are
you really going?"
Mercer sat on the
corner of her desk and affected a mock serious tone. "Jen, I can't
implicate you in this. What if Howell resorts to torture?" She giggled.
"As soon as the little toad leaves, take the rest of the day off. Ah,
hell, take the week off, I don't think I'll be around much."
"Is there
anything I can help you with?"
"Just keep
Howell off my back."
He grabbed his
briefcase from his inner office and descended to the basement of the USGS
building, where the extensive data archives were stored.
Although Mercer
had not met the USGS chief archivist, Chuck Lowry, he had heard about him. Most
people who fought in the Vietnam War agreed that their tour had changed them in
some profound way. The staff at the USGS believed that two tours in 'Nam had
perhaps made Chuck Lowry a little more sane, but by no stretch of the
imagination was Lowry a normal man. He wore eight-hundred-dollar sports coats
and tattered jeans. His face was hidden behind a beautifully manicured beard,
but his hair was a gnarled mess. The black eyeglass frames perched on his squat
nose had no lenses, and he swore like a truck driver but possessed an amazing
vocabulary.
When Mercer
entered the computer room of the USGS archive, Lowry was seated behind his
desk, a trashy romance novel in his hand. A brass plaque next to the telephone
read, "Eschew Obfuscation."
"I purchased
this yesterday," Lowry said, holding up the garishly covered book,
"along with a packet of condoms and an economy-size jar of Vaseline.
Fucking cashier didn't even bat an eye. The times are fecundating a truly
preternatural disinterest between people. The book, though, is delightful.
Except the authoress constantly describes the heroine's breasts as supple and
the hero's torso as glistening under a sheen of manly sweat. If she does it
once more, I will track her down and truncate her. Who are you?"
"Philip
Mercer. I'm a temporary consultant."
"Oh, Jen
Woodridge works with you."
"You know
her?"
"Just as a
potential stalking victim." Mercer hoped Lowry was joking, "You're
the guy that's busting Howell's balls, right?"
"Let's just
say he and I don't get along."
"That's been
his problem since he first darkened our door. He doesn't play well with others.
He's also a vexatious little dilettante with a permanent fecal ring environing
his mouth from so much ass-kissing. What brings you to my Dante-esque
nook?"
Mercer ignored the fact that he understood only about a quarter of
Lowry's words. "I need to see the seismic records of Hawaii during May of
1954."
"Somewhat obtuse request, but I can oblige. Come back
tomorrow, I'll have everything you need."
"Sorry, Chuck, this can't wait. I've got Howell breathing
down my neck again, so I have to get out of here ASAP."
"In any way will this research piss off that
cock-in-the-mouth?"
"Only to the effect that it has absolutely nothing to do with
my contract with him."
"Good enough, walk this way." Lowry hopped off his chair
and shuffled into a back room, doing a perfect impression of Lon Chaney's
"Igor."
Lowry seated himself in front of a computer terminal that was
hooked into the data retrieval mainframe and lifted a heavy data reference book
from the drawer beneath the keyboard. He thumbed through it slowly, whistling
the theme from Gilligan's Island. Several minutes passed before he put
the book aside and began hammering at the keys.
"I always type fortissimo rather than pianissimo—lets the
fucking machine know who is Maestro around here."
Mercer could not suppress a grin at Lowry's antics. After a few
minutes at the keys, the computer chirping, whirring, and beeping, Lowry pushed
himself away from the terminal. "There, seismic records of the Hawaiian
Islands for May of 1954. Why the fuck you want it, I'll never fathom. Now I'll
return to Bimbo St. Trollop and her hero, the redoubtable Major Tough
Roughman."
Lowry left the room and Mercer took his seat at the computer.
Because of the tremendous volcanic activity in and around Hawaii, the records,
even for a single month, would take days to assimilate, but he had a specific
date in mind.
Twenty minutes later, Mercer shut off the computer and thanked
Lowry for his help.
Lowry's response was a quote from the romance novel. "Tough
tore the bodice from her young flesh, exposing her supple breasts to the pirate
crew." Lowry looked up. "This bitch writer is going to die."
Mercer chuckled and closed the door to the archive. He took the
stairs directly to the street. Because the Jaguar, or what was left of it, was
still impounded, he was forced to take a cab back to his house.
Tish and Harry were not home, but a note taped to the television
screen in the rec room, stated they had gone to Tiny's bar. Mercer was furious
for a moment, but realized that Tish would be just about as safe there as at
the house. Before he could join them at Tiny's he had to place a call to New
York City, to set up what he hoped was the beginning of a plan.
Ocean Freight and Cargo, the KGB, or whoever was behind all of
this had gotten Mercer into the fight. Now it was time to return the favor.
__________
__________
__________
Our man's name is Mercer. Dr. Philip
Mercer," Dick Henna announced as he entered the Oval Office.
"About fucking time," Paul Barnes, the acting head of
the CIA, said. There was no love lost between the two men.
Also in the office with the President was Admiral C. Thomas
Morrison, the second African-American to be chairman of the joint chiefs in
U.S. history and a man who didn't play coy about possible political
aspirations.
"Who is he, Dick?" the President asked.
"He's a mining consultant, currently working for the USGS.
The reason it took so long to ID Mercer was that a cop friend of his impounded
his Jaguar at the Anacostia auxiliary lot. If I hadn't put extra men on the
case, we never would have found him." Henna took a seat. "I can only
assume the woman is with him."
"Why does that name sound familiar to me?" the President said
more to himself than the men seated around him.
"Sir," Barnes spoke up, "he was involved in a CIA
operation just prior to the Gulf War. I'm sure his name was mentioned during a
briefing by my predecessor."
"That's right. I was serving on the Senate Armed Service
Committee then."
"Yes, sir. Dr. Mercer accompanied a small team of Delta Force
soldiers into Iraq to investigate their capabilities of mining weapon's-grade
uranium. The International Atomic Energy Agency confirmed that the Iraqis
hadn't obtained any from foreign sources, but we needed to know if the uranium
ore mined near Mosul was pure enough to be enriched into plutonium 239. The
data Mercer's team brought back guaranteed that our troops would not face a
nuclear threat. That was the last piece of intelligence President Bush needed
before commencing Operation Desert Storm."
"As I recall, there were some losses during that
mission," the President commented.
"Yes, there were. Four of the commandos were killed in an
ambush at the mine site. In the debriefing afterward we learned that Dr. Mercer
took charge of the remaining force and led them safely out of Iraq."
"He seems to be a capable
man," the President remarked.
"That's true, but we're still left with the question, why did
he kidnap Tish Talbot, killing a half-dozen men in the process, including two
agents of the FBI sent to protect her."
"He did not kill my men." Henna snorted. "The man
found dead in the hospital room had blood under his fingernails. It matched the
blood of my men on guard down the hall."
"Then who the hell was the man in the hospital room?"
Admiral Morrison asked.
"He's not
in our files," Henna replied. "But INTERPOL thinks they have a match. They also
might be able to identify the bodies found on the street and in the metro. I
should know in an hour or so."
"We still
don't have a why yet, gentlemen," Barnes said acidly, his scalp an angry
red.
"We'll have
Mercer in custody shortly," Henna snapped. "We just missed him at his
office, but I have agents planted around his house in Arlington as of ten
minutes ago. When we have him, we will get our why. Oh, there is one more
thing. NOAA received a bill from a maritime law firm in Miami—for information
that was faxed to Philip Mercer's house."
"What was the
information?" asked the President.
"We don't
know, sir. We got the runaround from the law office. A court order is being
rushed through right now to search their files. We should know what Mercer
wanted by late today.''
"I must say
that, so far, Dr. Mercer has been a lot smarter than any of us." The
President spoke softly, a sure sign that he was keeping his temper in check.
''And if Dr. Talbot is with him, she is probably in more capable hands than
ours. So far he has saved her life at least once and managed to elude our best
efforts to find him. Now he's launched an investigation of his own— which seems
to have more direction than ours. Am I right?"
The President's
accusation was met by silence. "When Dr. Mercer is found, I want him
brought to me. There will be no charges filed against him. Perhaps he can shed
more light on what's happening in the Pacific. Does anyone have anything else
to add?"
"Since our
briefing yesterday," Admiral Morrison said, "I have put our Pacific
Fleet on standby alert. Two carrier groups are steaming toward Hawaii from the
Coral Sea. The Kitty Hawk is in position right now, along with the
amphibious assault ship Inchon. Both vessels and their support ships are
three hundred miles south of Hawaii."
"I don't know
if they'll be needed, but it's a good idea to have some firepower standing
by." The President rubbed his hands against his temples. "Gentlemen,
we are right now facing a puzzle with no clues. If Ohnishi is behind the
sinking of the Ocean Seeker, Dr. Talbot may be the only person who can
provide any evidence against him. We must find out what she knows. Until then,
we're playing blindman's bluff with an enemy who has surfaced twice, but has
yet to be seen. That is all."
The President
asked Dick Henna to stay and dismissed Barnes and Morrison. "Dick, since
this whole episode is taking place within our borders, you are the man in
charge. I want to know, right now, what your opinion is."
Henna took a few
moments to think, then said, truthfully, "I don't know."
He let the
statement hang in the air for several seconds.
"That note we
received a couple days ago wasn't any different from hundreds of crank letters
sent to us every week: Until the Ocean Seeker went down, that is. Then
we stood up and took notice. Two days later the only survivor was kidnapped by
a man who I think is a patriot. He leaves a trail of bodies across the city,
requests some type of maritime information from Miami, and requests the seismic
records of Hawaii during May of 1954 from the USGS archives. Please don't ask
me why, my top people can't even come close to figuring that one out. He's onto
something, I have no doubt."
"Why, though?
Why is he even involved?"
"His
motivation may be revenge. He was asked to join the NOAA survey crew aboard the
Ocean Seeker, but he was out of the country. I asked Paul Barnes for the
background check the CIA did on him before the mission to Iraq. Maybe there's
something there that'll help."
"And what
about the letter from Takahiro Ohnishi?"
"Look at any
newspaper today and it seems that every small
ethnic group in the world is declaring their independence, no matter how long
they have coexisted with their neighbors. Africa, Europe, even Asia. Who's to
say we're immune? The majority of the people of Hawaii are of Japanese
ancestry, most of whom have never seen the continental states. Maybe we don't
have the right to govern them with our Western ideas. I don't know."
"Dick, do you
know what you're saying?"
"I do, Mr.
President. I don't like it, but I do know what I'm saying. You might be confronted
with a situation only once before faced by a President." Henna stood to
go. "But sir, that situation started a war that lasted five years and
caused more deaths than all the wars in American history combined. Lincoln
walked away a hero, but maybe only because he was martyred.''
__________
__________
__________
Takahiro Ohnishi scraped a Frank Lloyd Wright-designed stainless
fork across the Limoges plate, piling rich Bernaise sauce around a cut of Kobe
beef. He brought the food to his mouth -and chewed thoughtfully. Honolulu's
mayor, David Takamora, watched the elderly industrialist with well-hidden
distaste.
Ohnishi chewed for
several more seconds, then leaned over and spit the thick mass of meat into a
silver wine bucket, already a quarter filled with his chewed but indigestible
meal. Ohnishi patted his lips delicately and waved a butler over to clear the
plates.
"Tell the
chef that the asparagus was a bit wilted and the next time it happens, he'll be
fired." There was no malice in his withered voice, but a man of his
position needed none to ensure that his orders were carried out. "I can't
believe you didn't eat more, David. That beef was flown in this morning from my
farm in Japan."
"My appetite
isn't what it used to be." Takamora shrugged.
"I hope my
condition doesn't upset you."
"Not at
all," the mayor denied too quickly. "It's just the pressure I'm under
right now. Planning a silent coup isn't all that simple, you know."
At home, Ohnishi
usually used an electric wheelchair to get around easier. Now he wheeled away
from the mahogany table. Takamora tossed his napkin onto the table and
followed, silently cursing the revolting spectacle of Ohnishi's eating
practices.
Though still in
his fifties, Takamora's face was developing the languid cast common to many
elderly Japanese men. His eyes had begun to retreat behind permanent bags. His
body, once slender and toned from years of exercise, had paunched and bowed, so
his trunk now appeared too large for his thin legs to support.
Warm light glinted
off the frames of the paintings and brought out the beautiful burnish of the
cherry wood paneling of Ohnishi's private study. Takamora took the leather
winged-back chair as Ohnishi wheeled behind his broad ormolu-topped desk.
"Smoke if you
wish," Ohnishi invited.
Takamora wasted no
time lighting a Marlboro with a gaily colored disposable lighter.
''What have you to
report?''
From behind a
blue-gray cloud of smoke, Takamora spoke slowly to mask the tension he felt
whenever he was in Ohnishi's presence. "We are nearly ready to send the
ultimatum to the President. I have two full divisions of loyal National Guards
ready to blockade Pearl Harbor and the airport. The governor will return from
the mainland next week; we will detain him as soon as he lands. Our senators
and representatives can be called back from Washington with only a moment's
notice. If they resist our plans, they too will be detained—however, Senator
Namura has already expressed an interest in joining us.
"I have full
assurances from all the civic organizations involved that they are prepared to
do their part with the strikes and marches. The press, too, is ready. There will be a full blackout for forty-eight
hours after the start date. The news will be broadcast as usual, but will make
no references to the coup.
"I have
here," Takamora reached into his jacket pocket and removed a sheet of
paper, ''the names of the satellite technicians on the islands who could
broadcast unauthorized stories. I will have them detained or their equipment
destroyed, whichever is necessary."
"And the
phone service?"
"The main
microwave transmission towers and the mainland cable junction will be taken and
controlled by our troops. It's inevitable that some news of the coup will
escape before we're ready for our own broadcasts, but it will be largely
unconfirmable."
"You have
done well, David. All seems to be in order, but there is a slight
problem."
"What is that?"
Takamora asked, leaning forward in his chair.
The study door
opened and the menacing form of Kenji, Ohnishi's assistant/bodyguard, moved to
stand behind the mayor's chair, his steel-hard hands held at his sides.
"And what is
that problem?" Takamora repeated, a bit more nervously, after a glance at
the newcomer.
"The letter I
had written as an ultimatum to the President has been removed from my office. I
can only assume it has been sent to Washington."
Takamora couldn't
hide his surprise. "We still need more time, why did you send it?"
"I did not
say, David, that I sent the letter. I said that it had been removed from my
office. The only person to know of this letter and to have spent time in my
office alone is you. Therefore, I must ask if you sent the letter to the
President without my authorization?"
"I have only
seen that letter once, I swear." Takamora quickly realized the danger he
was in. ''I would never take it from you."
"I want to
believe you, David. I really do, but I find that
I can't. I don't know what you wished to gain from your action, but I assure
you that I know its results."
"I swear I
didn't take the letter." Sweat beaded against Takamora's waxen skin.
"You are the
only person to have any access to this room and to know the location of my
safe. I must congratulate you on your safecracking abilities. Most
impressive." There was no admiration in Ohnishi's voice. "If you
think your act will cripple my efforts in any way, you are very wrong.
"As we speak,
arms are being readied for transit here. I have made arrangements for a highly
motivated mercenary army. Of course, it would be easier to use your National
Guard troops, but I will manage without them.
"David, you
could have been the President of the newest and possibly most wealthy nation on
the planet if you hadn't become greedy and crossed me."
"I
didn't." Desperation edged Takamora's voice up an octave.
"I find it
admirable that you retain your innocence even to the end," Ohnishi said
sadly.
With those words,
Kenji struck.
He whipped a thin
nylon cord around David Takamora's neck in a lightning-quick maneuver. With
amazing strength, he torqued the cord into the mayor's throat. Takamora clawed
at the garrote as it bit, deeper and deeper, his tongue thickening as it thrust
between his tobacco-stained teeth. His chokes came as thin reedy gaps as the
life was pulled from him.
Ohnishi sat
neutrally as the grisly murder took place, his wrinkled fingers laced perfectly
on the cool desktop.
Kenji pulled
tighter as Takamora's struggles diminished. After a few more moments all
movement ceased. Mayor David Takamora was dead.
Kenji slipped the
cord from around the corpse's neck, revealing a razor-thin line of blood where
the skin had parted under relentless pressure. He cleaned his garrote on
Takamora's suit coat, coiled the weapon, and slipped it into the pocket of his baggy black
pants.
"I'm relieved
that his bowels didn't void," Ohnishi remarked, sniffing delicately.
"Feed the body to the dogs and return to me."
Kenji returned
from his gruesome task after nearly thirty minutes. Despite a change of
clothing, Ohnishi noted that the stench of death still clung to his assistant,
as always.
"It is
done," Kenji said.
"What is
it?" Ohnishi asked, knowing something was bothering this man whom he
considered a son. "Don't let Takamora's ambition upset you."
"It is not
his ambition that upset me. It is yours."
"Don't start
that again, Kenji," Ohnishi warned, but his assistant continued.
"I have
followed your orders concerning this operation, but I do not agree with them.
What you planned with Takamora was only a sideshow for our true aims, yet you
treat it with your full attention. Our priority lies elsewhere. Takamora's
betrayal should be a sign to stop this foolish coup, which was meant as a
contingency plan in the first place. It cannot succeed; you must realize that.
And it puts into jeopardy what we are really working for."
"Has our
Russian friend so intimidated you, Kenji, that you no longer trust in me?"
"No,
Ohnishi-San," Kenji replied. "But we must first concentrate on our
obligations to him."
"Let me tell
you something about our Russian ally. He will cross us just as quickly as we do
him. We are merely tools to him. Our first loyalty must be with the people of
Hawaii, not some white taskmaster bent on our control."
"But we made
promises . . ."
"They mean
nothing now. Takamora's ambition has changed everything. When I first wrote
that letter declaring our independence, I knew that it would be sent whether
Kerikov ordered it or not. What we are doing must
proceed. Takamora's betrayal has merely pushed up our deadline. I'm certain that
the President is planning some sort of reprisal. That is why we must strike
now. The coup can be successful without Takamora. We can control his
people."
Kenji was silent
for a moment, his dark eyes downcast. "And the arms you spoke of?"
"I dealt
directly with an old friend for those, an Egyptian named Suleiman el-aziz
Suleiman."
"And the
mercenary army?"
"Suleiman is
also arranging for them. Hard currency is a powerful tool in such matters. The
mercenaries will augment Takamora's National Guard troops—or replace them if
they refuse to follow me."
"I did not
realize," Kenji said dejectedly.
"You are like
my son, but even a father must do things without his son's awareness. It
changes nothing between us, Kenji. Do not be hurt."
"I am
not."
"Good,"
Ohnishi said with a thin smile. "I wish to celebrate tonight. Are you in
the mood?"
"Yes, of
course," Kenji answered the rhetorical question.
Ohnishi wheeled
out from behind the desk and toward his bedroom on the top floor of the glass
mansion. Once there, Kenji helped him undress and reclothe himself for bed.
Kenji easily lifted his frail form into the wide four-poster, propping several
pillows behind his back. Ohnishi laid a withered hand on Kenji's cheek and
thanked him with a smile, his eyes shining as if in fever.
"You are like
a son to me, you must know that."
"I do,"
Kenji replied, stroking the old hand gently. "Please allow me a few
minutes to prepare."
As Kenji strode
from the room, Ohnishi turned to a control panel near his bed and pressed
several buttons in quick succession. The electrochromic panels in the glass
ceiling of his bedroom darkened, blocking out the rich tropical moonlight.
Throughout the house, the walls and roof also
darkened, enclosing the mansion in a blackened cocoon.
On the far wall,
past the foot of the bed, heavy velvet drapes parted, revealing a two-way glass
wall and a small bedroom beyond. A nude woman lay supine on the bedspread, her
small breasts peaked with long erect nipples.
Because of his
age, Takahiro Ohnishi could no longer enjoy intercourse, but his sexual drive
had diminished little over the years. Rather than give in to his body's
inability to respond, he had devised a method of voyeurism that partly slaked
his still healthy urges. He was incapable of erections let alone emission, but
he could still enjoy the act in his own way.
He patiently
waited for Kenji to make his entrance, enjoying the lithe body of the sleeping
girl. When Kenji finally entered the room, his muscled body was bare and his
arousal was plainly evident. He crossed to the sleeping woman—girl, really,
since she was not yet fifteen— and woke her by rubbing his erection against her
parted lips. She had been well schooled in her responses according to the
script that Ohnishi had provided.
Pretending to be
still asleep, she took Kenji into her mouth and began a gentle fellatio.
Ohnishi pressed a button on the console and the sensitive microphones in the
other room broadcast the subtle noises of the girl's lips and mouth. She moved
a hand up from her side and began massaging one of her nipples softly, quickly
picking up the rhythm as if coming awake.
Ohnishi leaned
forward in his bed as the Japanese girl's eyes fluttered open and she began
sucking in earnest. He could feel a slight tightening near his prostate muscles
and smiled. Kenji reached down and toyed roughly, with her other breast, and
the speakers in Ohnishi's bedroom sounded with her moans of building passion.
Ohnishi resisted the temptation to touch himself, knowing he would be
disappointed at his body's lack of response.
Kenji spread the
girl's legs, revealing her still hairless mons. Slipping one thick finger into
her body, he thrust through her virginity so that blood slicked his hand and
her inner thighs. The girl winced but did not cry out. He crawled onto the bed
and positioned her so Ohnishi would have the best possible view before he
entered her. He mounted her roughly, thrusting sharply into her still
undeveloped pelvis. Despite the pain she must have felt, the girl writhed and
moaned, clenching Kenji's torso with her coltish legs and lifting her firm
buttocks from the bed, arching her back higher and higher. Ohnishi could not
resist the temptation; his hand snaked under his blankets to find himself
semi-erect. He grasped it and began pumping in time with Kenji.
His erection
lasted only a few moments and there was no emission, but it was more than he'd
had in years. As soon as he lost it, he lost all interest in the performance
still being played out behind the glass. He pressed the button to close the
curtains and lay back on his bed. The sounds of Kenji's lovemaking still filled
the room. He made a mental note, as he settled into sleep, to use this girl
again.
SHE had been in the room for only twenty-four hours, but
already Jill felt as if she'd been imprisoned for a year. She had gone through
the classic steps taken by nearly every person who is locked up against their
will. First she had raged at her captors, screaming and pounding against the
solid steel door that kept her from freedom. When she had exhausted herself,
she spent the next several hours going over her cell in minute detail,
exploring the cement block walls, the ceiling that was too far over her head to
reach, the empty pegboard rack with the outlines of tools still painted on its
brown glossy surface. The twenty-square-foot room smelled of fertilizer, old
gasoline, and oil—Jill assumed it had once been a gardener's supply shed.
After she'd paced
her cell for another hour, Jill had finally
settled on the concrete floor next to the dripping spigot. She'd watched dully
as the tiny drops pooled, then snaked to the rusted drain in the middle of the
room. Eventually she slept, her body overriding her mind's racing questions.
When she woke a
tray of food rested next to the door. There were a couple of oranges, half a
loaf of crusty french bread, and a quarter stick of butter, along with a waxed
paper cup of cool coffee. Jill noticed immediately that nothing on the tray
could provide her with a weapon, no glass or tin cans, no utensils that could
be sharpened by scraping them against the floor.
The waste bucket
in the far corner of the room had been removed during the night and replaced
with a fresh one, much to her relief.
Now Jill sat
quietly, stoically, like a twenty-year veteran of prison, taking the time as it
came, with neither expectations nor hope. For a while she'd tried to understand
why someone had kidnapped her, but she realized that knowing the truth wouldn't
do her any good. She suspected that Takahiro Ohnishi was behind her abduction,
but the knowledge was worthless to her in her present circumstances. Her only
interests were in survival.
Since Ohnishi had gone through the trouble of snatching her from
her home, he must not want to kill her. He wanted something from her, something
that only she could give.
It had to be her
credibility as a reporter. If she was correct about Ohnishi and Mayor
Takamora's attempt to break Hawaii away from the rest of the Union, then they
would need the legitimacy that only the media could give, the soothing voice
and face on the television assuring the people that everything was all right
and under control. It would be simple to coerce her into giving false reports
and no one who'd placed their trust in her as a reporter would ever know that
they were being deceived.
It was the same
question of ethics and integrity that she'd
faced before storming out of the studio, but this time the stakes were much
higher. Yesterday it had been a question about her job, her career. Today it
was her life at risk. Jill had thought about all of this throughout the long
morning, but by late afternoon and into the evening her mind dulled and lost
focus. She had settled into a torpor. She was just thinking about falling back
asleep, her back was already pressed against the wall, her head held only
limply by her slender neck.
The door opened
without warning. Jill jerked out of her lethargy, edging along the wall to gain
distance between herself and the dark figure that entered her cell. She noted
idly that night had fallen once again, though she didn't know the time since
she'd been stripped of her watch and shoes when she'd been left in the cell.
"I did not
mean to startle you, Miss Tzu, my apologies." The man's voice was fiat and
lifeless, echoing inside him like a distant whisper.
"I know you,
don't I?" Jill had gotten to her feet.
"We have not formally
met, but we have spoken on the phone several times. I am Kenji."
"I knew
Ohnishi was behind this." There was little triumph in her voice.
Kenji slid further
into the room, his feet gliding on the floor with the ease of quicksilver: There
was a dangerous elegance about him. It was the charm of the serpent, slow,
seductive, evil. He eased himself to the floor, hunching down in the very place
where Jill had been a moment earlier.
"You are a
very perceptive woman and an excellent reporter. I watched your latest piece,
and I must say you made a bold and accurate assessment of my employer and his
involvement with Mayor Takamora. You are correct in assuming that they both
want Hawaii to be an independent nation, albeit one with strong ties to Japan.
However, you are wrong in guessing that Ohnishi is behind your abduction."
"You?"
Kenji nodded. "Why?"
"You are
intelligent enough to know why you were kidnapped."
"You want me
to report some sort of propaganda," Jill said accusingly.
"Correct. In
fact, the propaganda, as you call it, will not be that far from the truth. You
can even air that piece you just finished."
Jill was startled
and confused. ''Why would you want that? It fully exposes your little
plot."
"Not my plot, Miss Tzu, Ohnishi's plot."
"I don't
understand." Despite herself, Jill couldn't help slipping back into her
comfortable role as a reporter, digging for facts.
Kenji gazed off
into the middle distance for a moment as if he could see the words he was
thinking, watch them ricochet around like billiard balls after a strong break.
''I have worked for Takahiro Ohnishi almost my entire life. I owe him
everything. He is my master and I am his slave. I have killed for him and I
have raped little girls for him. In fact, I did both again tonight. There is
nothing I would not do if he asked.
"But there is
something about me that he does not know, something that I myself didn't
acknowledge for many years." He paused for a moment, then chuckled
quietly. "Given his concept of honor, I actually believe he would
understand my betrayal.
"My parents
met only twice in their lives. The first time was when my father raped my
mother, when he was stationed in Korea during the Second World War. She was a
comfort girl, an unwilling prostitute like so many other young women who had
the misfortune of being poor and attractive during the Japanese occupation. Her
own father had sold her into prostitution so the family could survive.
''The second time
my parents met was six years later, when my father returned to Korea to buy me
from her. An injury during the war had left him impotent so I was to be his
legacy, his only chance at immortality. Until his death, he worked for Ohnishi-San. I inherited his position.
''For most of my
life, I saw myself as pure Japanese. I hid my Korean side in shame. But
something has happened in the last few months—something that has given me
reason to feel proud of my Korean heritage. Surely you understand this. You are
half Japanese and half Chinese."
"I am an
American," Jill stated firmly.
Kenji turned to
her, his face both handsome and cruel. "Let us hope that you can see
beyond that, or our relationship and your life will end very quickly. Very soon
it will become necessary for Ohnishi's coup attempt to fail. Mayor Takamora is
dead and soon Ohnishi will follow him. When this happens, we will need you to
use your influence to calm the people and put an end to the violence."
"I'm a
reporter. I report the news, I don't make it." Even as Jill spoke she
remembered the words of her former colleague.
Kenji said, ''A
journalist can sway more opinion and change more policies than every politician
alive today. You have a power that most people don't even recognize they have
given to you. When the time comes, a few days from now, a week at most, you
will divulge everything you know about Ohnishi and Takamora! Since they will be
dead, whatever you say will not be refuted. I will provide you with many more
details. People must be focused on the coup attempt; it must remain the top
story for several weeks."
At Jill's
questioning look, Kenji shook his head. "The reasons for this do not
concern you. Once this is done, I promise that you will never be bothered
again, and your complicity never revealed."
"And if I
refuse?" Jill asked with more bravery than she felt.
"Refuse now
and I will kill you immediately," Kenji said
matter of factly. "But I don't need an answer yet. I want you to think
about it."
As he left, he
added, ''I chose you because I believe you will actually have a hard time
making your decision. Do not disappoint me."
__________
__________
__________
Tiny's Bar was, of course, named after its owner. On his first
visit to the pub four blocks from his house, Mercer had expected to see a huge
man behind the bar. Yet Tiny, Paul Gordon, was tiny, no more than four foot
eight, about ninety pounds with his pockets full of bricks.
The bar was small,
only eight stools and six four-person booths. The linoleum floor looked as
though it hadn't been swept in years. The walls were decorated with horse
racing pictures and trophies from Saratoga, Belmont Park, and Yonkers Raceway,
just a few of the tracks where Paul had raced as a professional jockey. He had
never reached the status of Willy Shoemaker, but he was a consistent rider with
proven ability. But he gambled, and went on a particularly long losing streak.
To pay back the debt, his loan shark ordered him to throw a certain race.
Explaining it once
to Mercer, Tiny had said that the horse was too much of a true winner to allow
any other to beat her. He didn't have the heart to
rein her back and come in second. That night he was treated to a sumptuous victory
banquet by the horse's owner. The next morning the loan shark's enforcers broke
both of Tiny's kneecaps with a steel wrecking bar. During the following months
of painful rehabilitation, Tiny cursed the stupid nag for being so swift. He
finally forgave Dandy Maid only after he opened a bar in his native Washington.
When Mercer
entered the bar, Tiny waved one small arm and immediately poured a vodka
gimlet, easy on the Rose's lime.
"Thanks, I
need this." Mercer took his drink to the red leatherette booth occupied by
Tish and Harry White. Apart from two workers from the industrial laundry around
the block, the bar was empty.
"Sorry I had
to take Tish out of your house, Mercer, but you ran out of Jack Daniel's."
"I have a
fresh bottle under the back bar."
"Had, Mercer.
You had a fresh bottle under the back bar. Besides, who the hell would look for
her in this hole in the wall?
"I agree, no
harm done." Mercer turned to Tish. "How are you doing?"
"I'm
fine." She giggled, slightly drunk. "But I must say I'm not used to
drinking in the afternoon."
"Stick with
Harry and me, we'll show you the ropes." Mercer smiled warmly. Perhaps a
little buzz would be good for her. Brace her for what he was going to ask her
to do.
"What did you find in your
office?"
"More clues,
I think. There's one more thing I want to check tonight and then I'll turn us
both over to the authorities."
"What do you
mean 'turn us over'?"
''Tish, you were
under the protection of the FBI when I nabbed you, and I'm sure they want you
back. Also, I have to answer for the corpses I left in
the gutters downtown."
"Oh."
"Hey, Harry,
I see two suits coming in," Tiny said, peering out the filthy front
window.
Mercer turned to
Harry, one eyebrow cocked in question.
''Tish told me the
story about yesterday, so I took the precaution of having Tiny keep an eye
out.''
"Good
thinking." Mercer held out his hand to Tish. "Come on."
He led her out of
the barroom and into the small kitchen in the back. They paused in front of a
pane of glass set into the tiled wall, and Tish realized that the mirror behind
the bar was a two-way mirror. She looked over Tiny's shoulder as two beefy men
strode through the front door and flashed badges. FBI, not local cops, was
Mercer's guess.
"Philip
Mercer?" Tiny responded to their question. "Yeah, I know him. I
haven't seen him in a week or more. He travels a lot." Tiny's thin voice
raised a notch. "If I had seen him, he wouldn't owe me eighty bucks in old
bar tabs."
Tiny thrust a wad
of chits under one agent's face. Mercer winced, hoping the agent didn't look
too closely. Those tabs all belonged to Harry.
Harry stood up and
staggered one step, steadying himself on the back of the booth. Mercer wondered
if his friend was acting.
"I seen
Mercer," Harry nearly shouted, spit spraying from his lips. Acting, for
sure.
''Where?'' one of
the agents asked eagerly.
"It was 1943;
he was a cook for my battalion. Couldn't cook worth a damn; gave us all food
poisoning on Tarawa, or maybe it was Iwo Jima." Harry downed a heavy slug
of bourbon. ''If it was on Iwo, that must have been '45. Poor Frank Merker
bought it on Okinawa."
"No, it's
Philip Mercer were looking for."
"Don't recall
any Philbert Mercy," Harry said slowly. His eyes glazed over and he
slumped into his seat. "I once knew a stripper named Phyllis mmmm . .
." His head hit the table with the sound of a fallen coconut, snores
following a moment later.
The two agents
left after warning Tiny to call if Philip Mercer showed up. Tiny and Harry
played their roles for a few minutes more, until they were satisfied that the
FBI men had moved on. As Mercer led Tish out of the kitchen, he noted that he
had not let go of her hand during the whole episode. The simple touch was
comforting.
"Harry, you
should get an Oscar for that."
Harry sat up and
smiled brightly. "I did once know a stripper named Phyllis. Phyllis
Withluv she called herself; hot little redhead I met in Baltimore."
"What are we
going to do now?" Tish interrupted before Harry could begin some lurid
story.
"We can't go
back to my place, that's for damned sure," Mercer said, sipping a fresh
gimlet.
"If you need
to, you can stay with me," Harry volunteered.
"No, I'm
allergic to roaches. Seriously, I have other plans. We're going to New
York."
Tish looked at him
sharply. "What?"
"Tiny, call
us a cab, have him meet us at the Safeway." The giant grocery store was a
couple of blocks away. "Harry, thanks for your acting job." Mercer
pulled a hundred dollar bill out of his wallet and slapped it on the bar.
"This should clear your tabs."
He led Tish
through the deserted kitchen and out the back door.
"Why are we
going to New York?" Tish asked as they walked up the street.
''When we read
those faxes, you must have seen that David Saulman suspects that Ocean Freight
and Cargo may be a Soviet front. If that's true—and I believe it is because you heard Russian—then checking
out their offices is our next logical step."
"You mean we
just waltz in there and make accusations?"
"Not at
all." Mercer laughed. "We're going to break in tonight."
Tish stopped to
look at him; his gray eyes were hard as flint and just as sharp. "You're
serious?"
His voice was soft
when he responded, but his conviction stung the air. "Deadly."
YOUSE guys sure you'se want to do dis?" the Hat asked.
"Yeah. Hat,
we're sure," Mercer said evenly.
They were sitting
in a late-model Plymouth, on lower Fifth Avenue, about ten blocks from the
brownstone that was the OF&C headquarters.
''My scags could
hit it no time, lift any swag you want and be out before nobody knew nottin'.
Youse don't need ta go in a'tall."
"That's the
whole point, Hat. We do need to go in, and I want them to know that they were
hit."
For the first time
Mercer had a vent for the anger that had begun the moment Tish entered his
life. Until now, he had been simply reacting to the actions of his unknown
enemy. Now he was about to act, to take the fight to them, as he had promised.
"Babes in da
woods," Hat said with a wave of his hand. The ember of his cigarette was
like a comet in the dark car.
Danny "The
Hat" Spezhattori was a professional thief. His gang of burglars were
responsible for making New York City's wealthiest denizens several million
dollars poorer over the years. The Hat's fourteen-year-old son had once made
the mistake of trying to pick Mercer's pocket in front of the United Nations
Building. Rather than turn the boy over to the police, Mercer had forced him to tell him who his father was.
Mercer and the Hat met an hour later.
In a world where
more business is done through people owing each other favors, Mercer had
decided that a favor owed to him by a man in the Hat's position might someday
be worthwhile. He was right. Tonight, that three-year-old debt would be paid
off.
"Hat, give us
an hour to get in position and then send your boys in, all right?"
"Mercer, once
we hit da doors and d'alarms trip, dey will station a guard in da
building."
"I'm counting
on that."
"Youse ain't
gonna murder no one, are you? Cause if ya do, I'll have nottin ta do wit
it."
"Hat, we had a deal." Mercer's voice was like ice.
"No questions asked. Your boys do what they're told" and they will be
in their pajamas in no time. No risk to any of them."
''I just gots ta
say dis, Mercer. What kinda swag can be worth it, man? Youse got money; we bote
knows it. It's a fuckin' shippin office; even their payroll will be shit."
"It's none of
your business, Hat. Just do your job and we're square." Adrenaline sang in
Mercer's veins like the heroin injection of a career junkie. "I know what
I'm after."
Mercer looked at
Tish in the backseat. Her face was very white, framed by shimmering black hair.
Her blue eyes were wide but trusting. Mercer looked into them, searching for a
sign of weakness, but saw none. "Ready?"
"Yes."
Her voice was a whisper, but her eyes were hard.
They left the car.
The dome light had been broken so there was only the soft click of the door
latches to give away their exit. In seconds, they had both blended into the
shadows of the steamy New York night.
One hour later, a
little before one in the morning, a Camaro, its body work covered with more Bondo than paint,
streaked down Eleventh Street, just off Fifth Avenue. A dog barked at the noise
of the racing engine on the quiet street.
The driver was intent on the road. A
slight drizzle had made it slick, but his passenger was enjoying and savoring
the moment. The shotgun in his hand was cool and heavy. The wind blowing
through the open window was hot and humid but fresh in his nostrils. The
adrenaline in his body had heightened all of his senses.
Hat owed Mercer a great debt. The driving he could trust to a
lieutenant in his organization, but he would do the shooting himself. Four
doors away from the target, the driver pounded his hand against the horn and
shouted like a Comanche.
Hat thrust the barrel of the Remington pump-action 12-gauge out
the window. He had loaded the ammo himself and was pleased with the result when
he fired. The first shot obliterated the window of one ground floor apartment,
the explosion of the cartridge and the shattering glass one continuous sound.
The second shot blew in the door of another brown-stone. The thick
oak splintered under the charge of lead. Another shot and another window vaporized.
The driver was still yelling and the horn continued to blare, but Hat heard
none of it. His eyes were locked onto his next target.
He fired, pumped the gun, and pushed his body nearly out the
window to fire again. The door of the Ocean Freight and Cargo Building was much
stouter than others on the street, but it couldn't withstand the shock of the
double blast. The door, as if mauled by a predatory animal, dangled from its
top hinge; the hardened lead shot had shredded the wood completely.
Immediately an alarm began to shriek
within the brownstone, piercing the night even above the din of the Camaro's
horn. Hat shot out one more window before lowering his weapon. The driver
released the horn and the car raced out of the area, anonymous after only a couple of
blocks.
Two police cars reached the scene within six minutes. The officers
made a cursory search of the area and began taking statements from
panic-stricken residents. Already the cops had figured that the shooting was
just a joy ride by a couple of kids. Random violence in a city that was
renowned for it.
Greg Russo knew that nothing that happened to OF&C was random.
He arrived as soon as possible after the alarm company had phoned him.
According to company records, he was the vice president in charge of the head
office in New York, but Ocean Freight and Cargo had no company president. The
Swedish group named as the directors of the corporation was nothing more than a
Stockholm post office box. The only person above Russo was Ivan Kerikov, the
head of Department 7, Scientific Operations, KGB.
Russo spoke to the police officers for several minutes, getting
the details of the incident but not really listening to their explanations.
Twenty years in the KGB had taught him to take nothing at face value.
"Again, Mr. Russo," one of the cops was saying, "I
don't think you have anything to worry about. This is like no break-in I've
ever seen. It's just kids, out for a night of terror. I'll make sure that this
area is heavily patrolled tonight. There won't be any more disturbances."
"Our company pays a great deal in city taxes, Sergeant. I
expect that you will provide ample protection." Russo spoke in a flat,
accentless English.
"I'm sorry, but I cannot place men here to guard your office.
If you want the name of a private security firm, I can give it to you. They
could have men here in ten minutes." The sergeant moonlighted for them on
Saturdays when his wife visited her mother in Trenton.
"That is all right." Russo acted mollified. "I'm
sure that it's just my imagination. Whoever hit this street didn't seem to be targeting our offices.
You are probably right that it was just kids."
"Just to make
you feel better, Mr. Russo, I called in a helicopter. It should be here in
about a half hour. They'll hit the back of your building with a spotlight and
make sure nothing is goofy back there."
"You did go
back there yourselves, didn't you?"
"Yes, sir, we
did. Nothing in that courtyard but a couple of winos and a heap of trash."
"Well, having
that helicopter coming is a relief."
A few minutes
later both cop cars left. The few people out on the street, the type attracted
to all police activity, slowly made their way back to their apartments, the
excitement over for the night. Russo, whose real name was Gregory Brezhnicov,
waited until the street was deserted before giving a signal to the driver of
the van that had arrived only moments after him.
Two men dressed in
black leapt from the back of the van. They marched toward Brezhnicov, thick
arms held stiffly by their sides, chests puffed as if on parade. Their eyes
continuously scanned the street, never resting on one object for more than a
fraction of a second, but seemingly missing nothing.
No matter how long
they remain in the West, Brezhnicov thought, a KGB assassination team never
loses the discipline drilled into them during years of training. They were some
of the best trained men in the world, capable of killing with nearly every
weapon conceived as well as with their bare hands.
They stopped in
front of Brezhnicov, grim-faced men with lifeless eyes.
"Search the
entire building, look for anything out of place, then take up guard duties.
Also check the Courtyard out back. There are two derelicts there, get them out.
No one enters the building until after nine in the morning. I will be the first
here." There was no reason for Brezhnicov to stay; these men were more
than capable of handling any situation.
THERE was a slight squeak in Mercer's miniaturized earphone before
a voice came through. ''Mercer, two of the baddest dudes I've ever seen just
entered the building. Seems the bossman is heading back home."
Mercer clicked the
button on the transmitter, acknowledging the information from Hat's son, called
Cap, standing on a roof across the street.
"Get
ready," he whispered to Tish, who was lying next to him. "They should
come back here first."
A minute later,
the two assassins eased out the back door of the OF&C building, pistols
held competently. Their eyes searched the dark courtyard, checking the back
windows of the buildings opposite, penetrating the shadows created by the
single street lamp before resting on the two winos lying next to an overflowing
Dumpster.
One guard came
across the courtyard, hugging the shadows. Mercer, watching, knew this man was
a true professional. The other man stayed hidden near the doorway, his gun
covering his partner. Mercer tensed.
The first man
approached a wino and, without warning, jerked the derelict to his feet.
Mercer winced as if physically struck. He could only imagine the
strength it took to pull a man from the ground and onto his feet and make the
action look effortless.
Hat's decoy stood
limply in the man's grasp, babbling incoherently. The other wino, also part of
Hat's team, slowly started to waken, as if from a lifelong binge.
"Get out of
here now," the guard hissed, shaking Hat's man in his grasp. He kicked at
the other wino. "You, too. Get out of here, before I break your fucking
necks."
Mercer noted from
his vantage in the Dumpster that the man's English was thickened by a heavy
accent.
"We ain't
done nothing," the wino on the ground said
as he rubbed his mouth with a filth-stained hand. "We got rights."
"Out,
now." The assassin dropped the first of Hat's crew and took his pistol
from a holster behind his back. At the sight of the gun, the two winos
retreated hastily from the courtyard, nearly falling over each other as they
ran toward the alley that led to Sixth Avenue.
When Hat's men had
gone, the guard kicked at the pile of rubbish next to the Dumpster until
satisfied that there was nothing hidden within. He turned his attention to the
Dumpster. Inside, Mercer crouched lower.
The guard lifted
the plastic lid and recoiled in disgust. The Dumpster reeked of human feces,
rotted food, and decay. He let the lid drop, gagging slightly.
Mercer groped
through the filth until he felt Tish's hand, then gave it a reassuring squeeze.
He couldn't feel her skin through the thin rubberized protection suit, but he
knew that it had to be as sweaty as his. He adjusted the oxygen mask over his
nose and mouth and took a deep breath. The oxygen from the small tank at his
side was crisp and cool. The suits and oxygen tanks, the same type worn by
sewer workers, had been provided by Hat, who asked Mercer if he could use them
to take an art gallery that he knew backed against a Chinese restaurant. The
restaurant produced some particularly pungent rubbish.
The two
guards, fooled into believing that the two "winos" were the only
humans in the courtyard, cut short their search and reentered the OF&C
building.
Ten minutes later
Mercer opened the lid of the Dumpster and climbed out. He helped Tish to the
ground and both peeled off the protection suits. They threw the suits into the
Dumpster and gratefully closed the lid.
"This is one
side of New York I never thought I'd see on a first date." Tish grinned.
Mercer would have
cautioned her about silence, but he knew that she needed to speak in order to
relieve some of the tension.
"Only the
finest for you. Next time we'll go for a moonlight dip in the East River near
an industrial vent I know. Very romantic this time of year."
"You are a
charmer."
Mercer pulled a
duffel bag from beneath a pile of garbage and unzipped it. He retrieved a pair
of night-vision goggles, purchased from the Hat, and scanned the back of the
OF&C building.
It was a typical New York brownstone, five stories high with a
flat roof speared by chimneys and TV antennas. Firewalls separated it from its
neighbors. There were four windows on each floor except for the ground floor,
which had no opening other than a thick steel door. Wrought-iron grilles
covered the windows on the second and third floors, making it impregnable from
the ground. The upper windows were unguarded, but Mercer knew that a
sophisticated security system protected the whole building.
When Mercer had
outlined his plan to Hat, the professional thief's opinion was, "You're
fucked if da system's zoned." If the brownstone's security system lacked
individual secure zones, then the destroyed front door would have crippled the
entire system. But if individual zones could be compromised without effecting
other areas of the building, then Mercer's attempt to breach the back of the
offices would trip further alarms.
Mercer didn't see
movement in any of the darkened windows, but knew that a watcher would not give
himself away so easily. He had to take a chance. From under a urine-soaked
tarpaulin that Hat had placed in the courtyard hours before, Mercer took four
lengths of ten-foot pipe, each with rungs protruding at regular intervals.
Joined, the sections became a crude forty-foot ladder.
Mercer carried the
ladder to the base of the building and set it up with minimal effort, resting
the top between the building and a rusted drain pipe. Then he drew his gun, a Browning
Hi-Power, a souvenir from Iraq. The 9 mm pistol could not carry as many rounds
as the H&K he had lost in Washington, but its
stopping power was fearsome. The gun and the spare clip were loaded with
mercury-filled hollow point bullets that would break up on contact. If a man
were hit, nearly anywhere on his body, the shock alone would kill him.
He cocked the
pistol and thumbed off the safety, the silencer attached to the barrel made it
slow for a quick draw, but he needed both hands for the next few minutes. He
reholstered the weapon and climbed the ladder.
On the train ride
to New York, Mercer had explained his plan to Tish. At first she had balked at
his intentions, but as he spoke, he could see the trust growing in her eyes. He
outlined the four weeks of CIA training he had received prior to his insertion
into Iraq, and that seemed to alleviate most of her fears. Though his training
had focused on weapon tactics, he had learned the basics of breaking and
entering and felt confident in his abilities.
At the top of the
ladder, just level with the fourth-floor window, Mercer paused and scanned the
darkened room. He saw nothing. From a pocket in his black pants, he withdrew a
three-quarter carat cubic zirconia engagement ring he'd bought that afternoon
while shopping for clothing for Tish. The retailer at the jewelry store had
scoffed at Mercer's poor choice, but he didn't know that the ring would never
be used as a betrothal gift.
At 8.5 on the
Mohs' hardness scale, the zirconia easily etched the glass. Mercer traced one
of the panes of the window. The protesting squeal of the cutting glass was loud
in his ears. Judging that three times around had weakened the glass
sufficiently, Mercer paused for a deep breath. He was about to find out if the
system was zoned. If the alarm sounded, neither he nor Tish would have enough
time to escape the courtyard before the guards rushed out to investigate. He
took another deep breath, his pulse pounding.
"Fuck
it," he said as he gave the weakened pane a slight tap with the heel of
his hand.
The tiny filament
wires of the security system parted and
the glass fell softly to the carpeted floor of the building. An alarm screamed
in Mercer's head, but the building itself remained silent.
He could hear his heart pounding a furious tattoo in the eerie
gloom of the courtyard. Then he realized that the noise wasn't his heart.
Searching the square of visible sky above his head, Mercer saw the lights of an
approaching police helicopter. The chopper was no more than ten blocks away and
already the powerful halogen spotlight mounted in the nose was piercing the
dark streets.
He tried to open
the window, but countless coats of paint applied to the frame had glued it
solidly shut.
"Shit,"
Mercer cursed under his breath, and hammered at the underside of the open pane.
The small amount of glass left in the windowframe sliced painfully into his
hand.
After several hard
blows, the window sprang up, slamming into its upper stop. Mercer didn't worry
about noise being heard inside—the sound of the police helicopter would easily
drown it out. He wriggled through the window as the downblast of the chopper's
rotors whipped up a maelstrom in the small courtyard. Dust and debris choked
the air. The sound was deafening.
"Tish, come
on," Mercer called, trying to be heard above the din.
Tish scrambled up
the ladder as the searchlight beam blasted into the courtyard, probing into the
darkest corners, seeking its prey.
Mercer grabbed
Tish by the wrists when she reached the top of the ladder. The searchlight was
systematically spotlighting every window of the OF&C building, and it was
only seconds before her form would be in the beam. He yanked her into the room.
She yelped as her breasts scraped over the hard wooden sill. Mercer lunged up
and slammed the window closed just as the searchlight probed into the office.
He thought for a moment that the cops above had seen his face, but quickly the light passed on. He could see its beam forming
bizarre shadows in the hallway beyond the room. From the helicopter, the ladder
would look like any of the wiring conduits that clung to the building like ivy.
"Jesus, that
hurt," Tish said, massaging her chest.
"I'd do that
for you, but you'd probably slap me."
The grin she gave
told him that she would be all right. Mercer pulled a flashlight from his
jacket and switched it on. A red lens diffused the light, but he could see
easily enough. Before beginning the search, Mercer pulled the Browning from its
holster.
He didn't know how
long they would be in the offices, so he had to eliminate the pair of guards.
He couldn't chance being discovered unexpectedly. Mercer had no illusions about
taking on two professional assassins in a fair fight, but he had no intention
of being fair.
"Do you have
any doubts about what we are going to do?" Mercer asked Tish, perhaps more
for his own benefit.
''If these people
have anything to do with the destruction of the Ocean Seeker, then they
deserve to be punished." The steel in her voice was chilling.
"All right
then, I want you to wait here until it's over. I'll come back to get you."
Her eyes were fearful in the dim light, but there was a determined set to her
jaw. When he took her hand for an instant, the trembling he felt was mild.
All the lights on
the top floor were off, but dim light spilled up the stairway. Mercer handed
Tish the flashlight and began his search, the night-vision goggles over his
face giving the building an eerie green glow.
The rooms on the
top floor, storerooms mostly, were all empty, dust coated, and neglected.
Mercer padded silently down the stairs. On the third floor, a single wall
sconce illuminated the narrow carpeted hallway. The doors which led off the
hall were all locked and there was no one in sight. Mercer licked his fingers
and unscrewed the bare bulb, plunging the hallway into darkness.
The old wooden
stairs creaked as Mercer eased himself down one more flight. The entire second
floor was one huge room, divided into small cubicles each containing a desk,
chair, and computer. There were plenty of lights in the large work area, so
Mercer removed the goggles and left them on a desk. He was thankful to have his
peripheral vision restored.
He slid down to
the floor and scanned the room. He saw only the legs of desks and chairs and
not those of a guard. Like a snake, he slithered through the room, every sense
tuned to perfection.
An instructor at
the CIA facility had said: More often than not, you will find your enemy with
your nose or ears before you will ever see him. When the wisp of tobacco smoke
tickled Mercer's nostrils, he silently thanked that instructor. The room was so
quiet he could even hear the sizzle of tobacco as the guard drew on the
cigarette. The man was no more than ten feet away, on Mercer's right, shielded
by a thin cubicle wall.
Mercer glanced at
his watch. He had left Tish more than fifteen minutes ago, so he had to hurry.
Panic would begin to overwhelm her soon.
He decided to be
bold. He removed his black leather jacket, figuring that the black pants and
shirt he wore were similar enough to the guard's to confuse him for a second.
He stood and began to whistle cheerfully. Immediately, he heard the unseen
guard spring from a chair and begin moving toward him.
The guard turned a
corner directly in front of Mercer, a machine pistol held at the ready. In the
millisecond it took him to realize that Mercer wasn't his partner, Mercer
brought the Hi-Power to bear. The guard died an instant before his own trigger
finger could squeeze. His body crumpled against a steel desk, his arm sweeping
a pile of papers to the floor. The massive tissue damage caused by the Hi-Power
sickened Mercer; a hole had been punched almost
completely through the guard's body.
Reclaiming his
jacket, Mercer retraced his steps to the stairway and cautiously made his way
to the ground floor.
The lobby of the
building also occupied an entire floor. The waiting area was furnished with
several tasteful couches, a large Turkish carpet, and an expansive reception
desk. The walls were painted a calming salmon color and the prints which lined
them were all of ships. A few dim lights kept the room more in shadow than light.
A figure leaned
against the front doorframe, a holster cocked off one hip. For a moment, Mercer
wondered if he could kill a man from behind, without warning.
As if alerted by
some primal instinct, the guard whirled around, drawing his pistol and firing
in one continuous motion. The bullet grazed Mercer's pantleg as he dove out of
the way. Mercer hit the floor rolling as bullets gouged the marble floor near
his head and torso. He managed to duck behind the reception counter, and when
he looked back to see where the guard had gone, another round slammed into the
wood, driving splinters deep into his jaw and right cheek.
"Son of a
bitch," he muttered, wiping blood from his face.
Suddenly, the
lights went out in the lobby.
Mercer rolled
silently from behind the counter, hugging one of the walls. His plan was to
crawl to the light switch and flip it back on, hopefully using the surprise to
target his opponent. Halfway to the switch, he bumped into the guard's leg.
Neither man had
anticipated the contact, so neither had an advantage. Mercer reared back, then
sprang forward like an all-pro lineman playing in the Super Bowl, his shoulder
connecting with the guard's knee. The joint failed and the guard fell forward,
but he still had time to whip his pistol at Mercer's head, shearing skin from his already bleeding cheek. Mercer smashed
a fist into the guard's thigh, paralyzing the leg momentarily and giving
himself time to bring up the Hi-Power.
The guard kicked
out with his good leg and sent Mercer's pistol skittering across the marbled
floor. Mercer twisted away from the guard who was already trying to regain his
feet. The room was too dark to see where the pistol wound up, so Mercer ignored
it and concentrated on his opponent. He leapt to his feet and charged again,
catching the guard low in the stomach and forcing the breath out of him in a
loud whoosh. The guard back-pedaled as Mercer continued to push him but twisted
aside just before they hit the sofas. Mercer flew over one of them and crashed
to the floor, wrenching his shoulder painfully.
There was a brief
spark of muzzle flash as the guard fired his silenced pistol at Mercer, but the
shot was several feet off target. Mercer used the flash to locate the other man
in the darkness and leapt at him, but missed. The guard had moved. Mercer hit
the floor and rolled twice, coming up hard against another wall. It was cat and
mouse again. Neither man could see the other in the gloom and neither could
hear the other over his own labored breathing. Mercer edged forward, feeling
along the floor, and found his pistol. The cool steel was a needed reassurance.
Just then the
lights snapped back on in full brilliance. The nerves and muscles that
controlled Mercer's pupils reacted just the barest fraction of a second faster
than the assassin's. While the other man was squinting through nearly closed
eyes, disoriented by the glare, Mercer's gaze was sweeping the room. Tish stood
next to the bank of light switches, one hand still on the reostat, the other
holding the bulky night-vision goggles. The guard was twenty feet away, peering
off to Mercer's left. Mercer didn't take the time to properly aim. He fired
from the hip, his first two shots going wide but his next six catching the guard squarely, pounding
his torso into an unrecognizable mess.
Mercer moved over
to Tish and took the goggles from her slack hand. "Tish." Her eyes
swiveled to his. "I told you to wait upstairs. Please, from now on, never
listen to me again, okay?"
He slid his arms
around her and her body eased into his embrace. He calmly stroked her hair for
a moment. "Now we're even. I saved your life and you just saved mine.
Thank you."
"I waited
until you had your gun and he was turned away from you," she replied after
a moment.
They went back up
to the third floor, dousing all the lights again and relying on Mercer's
goggles to get them to the executive offices. Quickly scanning the names on the
doors, they found the locked door of the highest ranking employee, a vice
president. Mercer smirked at the man's name: Russo.
"Nice
touch," he commented.
"If they are
Russian," Tish replied.
"To have
guards like those two, they're something."
It took Mercer
five frustrating minutes to pick the lock. Although he remembered the technique
from his CIA training, theory and practice were two entirely different things.
One of Hat's men could have done it in ten seconds.
The office was
paneled in rich oak, the carpet was soft under their feet. A window behind the
broad desk looked out onto Eleventh Avenue. Mercer shut the thick drapes and
turned on the desk lamp. Pictures of the OF&C fleet adorned the walls.
David Saulman in Miami had been right. Each ship had a different bunch of
flowers painted on the funnels: April Lilac, September Laurel, December
Iris, and a score of others. There was a fish tank against one wall, and
though it was large it only contained a single fish.
Mercer turned to
the four squat filing cabinets and opened
a drawer at random. He started leafing through the folders within.
"Pick a
drawer, any drawer," he said lightly.
"What are we
looking for?"
"Anything
that might jog your memory. There could be something here that you may remember
from when you were rescued, a name, anything."
Tish pointed to a
picture on the wall. "That's the ship that rescued me, I think."
Mercer looked at
the picture and recognized the September Laurel as she calmly plied some
distant sea.
"That may be
the ship that reported finding you, but I don't think it's the ship that pulled
you from the water. You remembered a black circle and a yellow dot on the
funnel, not a bunch of flowers. Besides, Dave Saulman told me that her crew are
mostly Italians, not Russians."
"I could have
been wrong about hearing Russian."
"Even if you
are, it's obvious that something is going on here. Let's just go through the
files and see if anything turns up."
For the next half
hour, Mercer and Tish pored through the files without turning up anything
conclusive. The only odd thing was a loose file tab labeled "John
Dory" lying on the bottom of the drawer containing the ownership papers of
the OF&C ships. There was no file to go along with the tiny scrap of paper.
Because all OF&C vessels were named after a month and a flower, Mercer
guessed that John Dory was the name of a captain or ship's officer employed by
OF&C.
"This has
been a complete waste of time, hasn't it?" There was hopelessness in Tish's
voice.
"I know I'm
right. There has to be something here that we haven't seen," Mercer
persisted. "But we have to get out of here."
"Did you kill
those guards without a reason?"
Mercer looked up
from the file. It was a question he did not want to address. Was there a chance
he was wrong about OF&C's involvement?
"No, we
didn't, and I'll tell you why. Look around this office. There's nothing
personal anywhere, no photos, no diplomas, nothing. This may be a legitimate
shipping line to some, but to the man who occupies this office, shipping is not
his career." Mercer walked to the desk and scanned the address file.
"There isn't one ship broker's number in here, not one chandler. Christ,
he doesn't even have the private numbers of his captains."
"He could be
just a figurehead."
"He is, don't
you get it? Most shipping lines are built by individuals and based on personal
contacts. I'm willing to bet this Greg Russo wouldn't know a hawsepipe from a
hole in the wall. Whoever occupies this office has a job to do, but it has
nothing to do with shipping."
"Hold it
right there," a male voice commanded.
Mercer froze, his
pulse pounding. Hat's son had said only two men had entered the building, and
they had already been eliminated. Whose was the voice behind them?
"Step away
from the desk and turn around slowly." The command was punctuated with the
cocking of a revolver.
An overweight
security guard stood in the doorway. He was a frightened rent-a-cop with a
pale, jowled face and a trembling grip on his weapon.
''You got a lot to
answer for. Keep your hands where I can see them. Move toward the fish
tank."
Mercer backed away
from the desk, Tish right beside him. She hadn't screamed when the guard entered
and seemed in control. Mercer wished that he felt as calm as she appeared. The
guard had scared the hell out of him. Greg Russo must have called in additional
security after Cap had left his post across the street. Mercer had no way of
knowing if more men were scouring the building. The guard crossed to the desk,
his eyes and gun never straying from Mercer. With his free hand he fumbled for
the telephone. Mercer's chance was coming.
The instant the
guard glanced down at the phone, Mercer launched himself.
Time slowed to a
crawl. Mercer's senses were heightened so that he could see the individual
hairs on the guard's face, smell the nervous sweat of the man, and hear his
labored breathing. Mercer flew across the room, focusing on the hand holding
the revolver, the rings of fat around the man's wrist, the knuckles tightening
around the trigger. The hammer began to drop and Mercer's fingers were still
inches away from their mark.
The gun discharged
just as Mercer grabbed the guard's wrist. The sound was like a burst of thunder
in the small office. Cordite smoke burned Mercer's eyes, blinding him. Next to
Tish, the large fish tank exploded, water, gravel, and the fish cascading to
the carpet in a frothing wave.
The recoil lifted
the gun high over the guard's head so that Mercer's shoulder barreled into the
guard's unprotected flank. Mercer could feel the man's ribs snap as he smashed
into them. The guard was thrown across the desk, the gun spinning from his
hand. He fell against a wall, moaning.
Mercer recovered
the revolver, aiming it at the fallen guard, but did not pull the trigger.
"You're not with those others, you don't have to die." Mercer lowered
the revolver and turned to Tish. ''Are you all right?''
"Shaken, but
not stirred."
"We've got to
get out of here—someone must have heard this gun go off."
Mercer held out
his hand and Tish came toward him and took it in hers. He stared at the dying
fish for a moment as it flopped on the soaked carpet and the sight triggered a
vague memory. "Benoit Charleteaux," he mumbled.
''What?'' Tish
asked as they started cautiously back to the fourth floor and the ladder
outside.
"Another
clue." Mercer's muted voice sounded triumphant.
__________
__________
__________
Richard Henna was just getting back into bed after a late-night
foray into the kitchen when the bedside phone rang. He grabbed the handset
before the second ring. His wife, a twenty-five-year veteran of
middle-of-the-night calls, didn't even stir.
"Henna."
"Dick, it's
Marge." Margaret Doyle was a deputy director of the bureau and Dick
Henna's oldest and best friend. She didn't bother apologizing for waking him.
"Philip Mercer has left the Washington area."
''How?'' Henna
snapped.
"By train.
The agents we had watching Union Station never saw him because he boarded the
Metroliner at New Carolton. We just found out through his credit card. He
purchased two one-way tickets for New York from the conductor on the train."
"Christ."
"What is it,
dear?" Fay mumbled in her sleep. He covered the mouthpiece with his hand.
"Nothing, hon," then spoke softly but clearly
into the phone. "All right Marge, call the New York office, have them put
a few men at Penn Station in case he tries to return by train. Fax them the
picture of Mercer we got from the U.S. Geological Survey."
"I've already
made the calls."
"If they pick
him up, I want to be notified right away. Then I want him and Tish Talbot flown
immediately to Andrews Air Force Base."
"Should we
cancel the surveillance on his house?"
"No, I'm
willing to bet he'll get by us again. Call me back if there are any new
developments."
"Sorry about
this fuck-up, Dick."
"Not your
fault. I think we've all underestimated Mercer."
Henna hung up the
phone and slipped into a bathrobe. He knew he would get no more sleep this
night. He went downstairs, made a cup of coffee, and sipped it in the darkened
kitchen for a few minutes before crossing through the large federal-style house
to his study. He turned on his desk lamp, groaning as the light flashed into
his eyes.
He dialed the
combination of the Chubb safe behind his desk and removed a single file. The
file, headed "Antebellum," recorded Henna's personal observations
about events since the letter from Ohnishi came to his attention.
He read his own
handwriting slowly, mostly because it was too sloppy to scan. The first page
was a bare chronology. Henna now added Mercer and Talbot's trip to New York at
the bottom of the list.
On a clean sheet
of paper, he began drawing flow charts, tying events into each other. In
minutes, he had created an indecipherable series of lines, circles, and swirls.
The only thing he knew for certain was that Mercer had gone to New York in
response to the information he had received from the law offices of David
Saulman.
He reread the
information that Mercer had requested from Saulman, obtained by the FBI through a Dade County
judge's court order. Saulman's office had grudgingly turned over a few lists of
ship's names and some basic information on Ocean Freight and Cargo.
This time he saw it—the ship that rescued Tish Talbot was owned by
OF&C, whose offices were in Manhattan. Henna spilled his coffee as he
grabbed for the phone. Ignoring the mess, he dialed the New York FBI office.
"Federal Bureau of Investigations," a tired voice
answered the phone.
Without preamble, Henna gave his personal recognition code to the
night duty officer, establishing his identity without question. In situations
like this, the code numbers saved valuable minutes needed when a person high up
in the organization wanted to speak with someone out in the field. Henna had
heard a similar system was used by many of the crime syndicates the FBI fought.
Henna asked to speak with Special Agent Frank Little.
"I'm sorry, Agent Little is on the day shift, may I be of
assistance? This is Agent Scofield."
"Who else is there now?" Henna needed to speak with
someone he knew personally, someone who wouldn't want to use this phone call
for some favor in the future
"I'm sure, sir, that I can be of some . . ." I
Henna cut the man off, ''Just tell me who else is there."
"Agent Morton is here and so is—" Pete Morton had been a
rookie agent when Henna was station chief in New York six years earlier.
"Great, let me talk to him.
A moment later, "Morton."
"Pete, this is Dick Henna in Washington."
"Jesus." Henna could almost hear the man spring to his
feet.
"Relax. I need a favor."
"Yes, sure, anything Mr. Henna."
"Get on the horn to one of your contacts in the NYPD. I want
to know if there was any trouble near Eleventh Street tonight."
"I don't see how—"
"Pete, just do it, all right." Henna remembered that
Morton used to ask a million questions about everything. "Call me at this
number when you're done," Henna gave him his home number, "and then
lose the number." He hung up.
He skipped through the file in front of him until he came to
Philip Mercer's dossier, compiled by the CIA in 1990. Mercer had been born in
the Belgian Congo. His father was an American mining engineer employed by Mines
Belgique, a firm mining diamonds from the rich Katanga province. His mother was
a Belgian fashion model. They had met during a photo shoot in Leopoldville, the
capital of the Congo. Philip was their only child. Both parents had been killed
during an insurrection in Rwanda in 1964; the details of their deaths were
sketchy.
Mercer was raised by his paternal grandparents in Barre, Vermont.
His grandfather worked in a granite quarry and his grandmother was a homemaker.
He graduated top of his class in high school and cum laude from Penn State with
a degree in geology. He then went to the Colorado School of Mines in Golden,
again graduating near the top of his class. After four additional years of
schooling at Penn State while doing contract work for various coal mines around
western Pennsylvania, he received his Ph.D. in geology. His thesis on
metamorphic rock dynamics as it pertains to quarry mining was still
supplemental reading for graduate students at Penn State.
After completing his doctorate he went to work for the U.S.
Geological Survey, but lasted there only two years. Interviews with coworkers
from that time showed that Mercer was simply unchallenged by the work the USGS
had given him.
Henna noted that Mercer's case was another example of the government's inability to retain
top minds in whatever field. He couldn't count the number of agents he had
known who left to work for private security firms. It wasn't just the pay or
the benefits that caused people to leave, government work simply drained people
of their spirit.
After the USGS,
Mercer went into business for himself assaying mining properties for investment
firms eager to know potential returns before committing huge amounts of money.
He built a reputation quickly within the industry. After just a few years, two
weeks of his time cost up to fifty thousand dollars plus, in some cases,
bonuses in the form of stock if he believed the property to be extremely
valuable. The year that the CIA did the background check, Mercer's income, as
reported to the IRS, was slightly over three quarters of a million dollars. The
CIA had also contacted the U.S. Customs Service, who listed thirty overseas
trips since his latest passport was issued.
The next section
of the report detailed his involvement with the CIA and the mission to Iraq. When
the plan to infiltrate Iraq was first conceived, forty-eight candidates were
considered for the position of on-site expert on mining practices and geology.
Mercer was the eighth candidate to be interviewed, and after his first series
of tests, all the other interviews were canceled. He scored just above genius
level on the IQ test and did perfectly on all the memory tests. One of the
testers noted that Mercer was able to recall a forty-digit number twenty-four
hours after seeing it. After agreeing to join the team, he was sent to a
training facility in rural Virginia, where he had excelled in marksmanship and
the grueling obstacle course, but fared just average in communications and what
was termed "basic trade craft."
The attached
psychological report documented an acute fixation on self-reliance and a deeply
rooted fear of abandonment, probably due to his being orphaned. He was a
natural leader but had chosen not to develop those skills. The staff psychiatrist summed up
his report by stating that Mercer's motivation for joining the infiltration
team was simply his need for continual challenge. The doctor feared that this
would lead to reckless behavior, but recommended Mercer's approval.
In mid-January
1991, Mercer and eight Delta Force commandos parachuted into northern Iraq near
the city of Mosul. The site was chosen by Mercer and a team of satellite
analysts as the most likely spot for uranium mining.
Mercer had quickly
confirmed that the mining facility there was not even close to production and
the uranium ore was too poor a quality to make nuclear weapons. They were
attacked by the mine's security detachment as they were sneaking out through
the perimeter fence. Two commando officers were killed during the opening gun
battle and another fell shortly afterward as they retreated through the
mountainous desert.
The extraction
helicopter they had depended on couldn't pick them up because of the heavy
weapons fire from Iraqi scout cars. Mercer led the remaining troops through a
scree field that the pursuing scout cars couldn't pass and managed to lead them
to Mosul. There, they stole a produce truck and made a mad dash to the Turkish
border. The Delta commandos all agreed that Mercer was the person most
responsible for their success, and that without him, none of them would have
survived.
Two days after
their debriefing, President Bush ordered the beginning of Operation Desert
Storm.
Henna stood and
began pacing, his chin buried against his chest. He knew from the dossier that
Mercer was acquainted with Tish Talbot's late father, which would explain why
he had gone to the hospital. But his actions since then defied explanation. How
had he known the other man in her room was not part of the hospital staff or
another FBI agent? Why hadn't he contacted the FBI as soon as he had gotten
Talbot safely away? Why had he pursued the matter on his own? And if he had
gone to New York to
investigate the shipping company, what had he found?
"Christ, there are too damn many questions and not enough
answers," Henna said aloud.
The phone rang shrilly and Henna
snatched at it.
"Henna."
"Mr. Henna, Pete Morton in New York, sir."
"Yeah, Pete, what've you got?"
"How did you know there was something up on Eleventh Street?"
"Skip the questions and tell me what happened." Henna's
heart was racing and his palms were sweaty.
"At 12:53 this morning a gunman drove down Eleventh Street
and fired a shotgun five times, blowing out several windows and doors. He then raced
away. There are no suspects or clues."
"Was one of the buildings hit owned by a company called Ocean
Freight and Cargo?"
"Yes, how did you—"
"Never mind that. Get some men down there right away, take
into custody anyone they see. Call me back as soon as you're done."
"I'll take care of it myself, sir."
Henna set the phone down and slumped back into his chair.
"What the hell is Mercer playing at now?"
__________
__________
__________
The Scotch in Ivan Kerikov's glass was
quickly diluting as the ice melted under the onslaught of the Asian heat. The
tumbler was jeweled with condensation and the small napkin on the Royal River
Hotel's table was sodden. Kerikov took another heavy swallow of the questionable
Scotch, mindful of water dripping from the napkin that clung to the glass.
He had been in Bangkok now for two uneventful days, basking in the
delights of his hotel, the venerable Oriental, where he had taken a suite in
the original Author's' Wing, and indulging in carnal vices on Pat Pong Road,
Bangkok's famous red light district. He had also spent some of that time
contemplating his hurried escape from Moscow, wondering if he had been too rash
in executing the KGB auditor in his office. Hindsight said that he should have
suffered through the little man's investigation and left afterward, but killing
him had given Kerikov the sense of completion that he needed before he fled his
homeland.
His leaving Russia
was never in doubt, but the abruptness of his departure left a few loose ends
that he now could never tie up. "So be it," he mused lightly, and
ordered another Scotch from the attractive waitress. He had reason to be in a
good spirit and regrets for the past would not be allowed to dampen it.
Last night he had
been contacted by Dr. Borodin from aboard the August Rose. Borodin
reported that he had a definite location for the volcano's summit and it was
nearly a thousand meters beyond Hawaii's two-hundred-mile limit. The news was
like a yoke removed from Kerikov's shoulders.
When Dr. Borodin
had first proposed Vulcan's Forge forty years before, his selection for the
most optimal geologic site did not take into account any political
considerations. The area he chose had the right combination of natural
volcanism, ocean depth, temperature, salinity, and currents as well as some
native minerals that were necessary. Unfortunately this spot was forty miles
from Oahu. Because this site was obviously unusable, Borodin had cut his margin
as fine as possible, detonating his device as far from the Hawaiian Islands as
he could without jeopardizing the results of his work.
At the time,
Hawaii's entrance into the United States was a foregone conclusion, giving her
the territorial rights afforded a sovereign nation rather then those of a
colony or protectorate. Yet Borodin's calculations demanded that the explosion
had to take place within that two-hundred-mile demarcation if Vulcan's Forge
was to succeed. Boris Ulinev trusted Borodin's assertion that oceanic currents
would skew the volcano enough so that it would surface outside the limit, yet
the wily head of Scientific Operations hedged his bet by initiating an
audacious contingency plan.
He selected a
young Japanese-born American, an adolescent with a tortured background but an
incredible mind. He surreptitiously groomed him, guiding him from afar through
university and into business. Using the massive support of the KGB, Ulinev
shepherded wealth and power to this young man for many years, all the while
introducing him to people who shaped his personality and goals. This shaping
was done subtly over many years and continued even after Ulinev had died and
left Department 7 in the care of others.
The end result was
the fanatical racist and megalomaniac, Takahiro Ohnishi. He had become a global
industrialist with a far-flung empire and had unwittingly been programmed his
entire life to attempt to break Hawaii away from the United States if
Scientific Operations ever decided that was necessary for the success of
Vulcan's Forge.
Kerikov, when he
took over Department 7, had read about Ulinev's original contingency plan and
inwardly cringed. He knew from experience that humans were easy to program,
especially considering the extraordinary depth given in Ohnishi's case. Yet
experience also showed that controlling those who had been so programmed was
difficult at best. They often became active without authority, or not activate
at all when called upon. The idea of a "Manchurian Candidate" worked
well for fiction writers but not for true spy masters.
Kerikov was
relieved now that this phase of Ulinev's original plan was no longer needed.
Borodin's call confirmed that a revolution in Hawaii was no longer necessary to
ensure they would be able to control the volcano. And although the KGB had
spent millions of dollars creating Ohnishi, Kerikov really didn't care about
the write-off. The volcano was outside American influence and within his
personal grasp.
Eight months earlier,
Borodin, on a regular pass-by of the burgeoning volcano aboard the August
Rose, had reported that it would most likely crest outside the
two-hundred-mile line yet he would not have conclusive proof for some time.
Kerikov seized that moment to enact a contingency plan of his own. .
With one million
dollars in cash and a promissory note
of an additional five million dollars, Kerikov bought someone high up in
Ohnishi's personal staff to report on all of the eccentric billionaire's
activities. If the coup in Hawaii was unnecessary, Kerikov wanted to ensure
that Ohnishi would not continue his end of the plan. The mole was his insurance
that Ohnishi could be controlled. Permanently, if necessary.
At the same time,
Kerikov set into motion a plot to steal the wealth of the volcano for himself.
Had the Soviet Union remained the world power that it had been when Dr. Borodin
launched Vulcan's Forge, Kerikov would have been proud to turn over the
marvelous achievement to his superiors. But the decades since then had seen
Russia degenerate into a Third World country, a nation whose very survival
depended on loan guarantees from America and Western Europe.
After quietly
capitulating the Cold War in 1989, Russia had suffered a cruel peace. She was
turning into a market for goods and a source of raw materials, much the way
Europe had once treated the backwaters of Asia and Africa. In just a few years,
the Soviet Union had toppled from superpower to colony, and the decline was far
from over.
Watching
dispassionately as his nation rotted, Kerikov decided that if he could not save
the Rodina, then perhaps the Motherland could save him. Since Russia no
longer possessed neither the political clout nor the financial resources to
develop Vulcan's Forge, Kerikov opened negotiations with a group of men who
could.
The nine members
of Hydra Consolidated, a Korean-based holding company representing billions of
dollars of real estate, manufacturing, and electronics, recognized the value of
Vulcan's Forge when Kerikov approached them. They did not balk at the
one-hundred-million-dollar price tag that he attached to the volcano and its
unusual riches, for the strategic element being produced in the charnel guts of
the volcano would make its possessor the most powerful force on earth, in both
the literal arid figurative sense.
Just a week after
initiating talks with the Koreans, Kerikov learned of the proposed meetings in
Thailand to discuss the Spratly Island situation. Sensing that the Bangkok
Accords could aid his plan, Kerikov pulled in some favors and employed a little
bribery and blackmail to get Gennady Perchenko assigned as the Russian delegate
to the meeting. He also managed to get the Taiwanese ambassador to act on his
behalf in return for some information that would ensure Minister Tren the prime
minister's office whenever he wanted it.
Even before the
accord meetings began, Kerikov knew how he would use his two agents-in-place to
solidify possession of the volcano when it crested through the Pacific swells.
When his second
Scotch arrived, he glanced at the Piaget watch on his wrist. Perchenko would
arrive at any moment. Kerikov looked at the maitre d'. It was his first night
here at the Royal River, yet he seemed comfortable in his job.
The regular man
hadn't arrived for work this afternoon. His body was secured to several cement
blocks in a canal about ten miles from the city.
An hour after
receiving the confirmation from Borodin, Kerikov had killed the maitre d' as
the ultimate insurance that he would never discuss his dealings with the
Russian delegate to the Bangkok Accords. After dispatching the young Thai,
Kerikov phoned his sociopathic assistant, Evad Lurbud, in Cairo and ordered him
to commence his housekeeping. This would mean killing an Egyptian arms merchant
and then flying to Hawaii to take care of Takahiro Ohnishi and Kerikov's mole.
Kerikov might have
left behind some loose ends when he fled Russia, but he'd be damned if there
would be any from the final gambit of Vulcan's Forge. In just a few days, he'd
be spending the one hundred million dollars from the Koreans and there wouldn't
be a soul left alive who would know how he got it.
Kerikov spotted Gennady Perchenko leaping from a Riva River taxi
onto the quay of the Royal River. In a moment, the new maitre d' would guide
the diplomat to his final briefing.
__________
__________
__________
WASHINGTON, D.C.
The big Greyhound over-the-road bus
hissed to a stop just outside the city's main terminal, near the convention
center. Mercer was stiff legged as he trailed Tish down the three steps of the
bus to the already sizzling pavement. His whole body ached, not only from his
ordeal in New York but from the torturous seats that all transportation manufacturers
seem intent on using. He tried, without success, to knuckle the kinks from his
lower back as he and Tish ambled into the bus terminal. Announcements echoed
off the tiled walls, mixing with the din of the passengers arriving and
departing. The terminal stank of the homeless who spent their nights on the
steel benches.
"I still don't understand why we had to take the bus back to
Washington," Tish complained, swiveling her head to stretch her tense neck
muscles. They had cabbed to Newark and caught the bus there.
Mercer grimaced as he stroked the new beard that stubbled his
face. "Because by now the FBI will have the
train stations staked out and I needed time to think before we turn ourselves
in." He strode to a bank of telephones and dialed an international
operator. "After I make this call, we'll give up."
Mercer waited a
full five minutes for the connection to be made, then spoke in French. Tish,
not understanding the language, walked over to a bench and sat down. Mercer
joined her after a few minutes.
"All
set," he announced.
"What was
that all about?"
"I had to
call an old fishing buddy in the Ruhr Valley."
Tish had learned
not to be surprised by any of Mercer's actions. "Did he tell you what you
needed?"
"He sure did." There was a sense of triumph in Mercer's
voice that cut through the exhaustion etched around his eyes.
They grabbed a
taxi in front of the terminal and Mercer gave the driver his home address.
"Why don't we
go straight to the FBI?" Tish said, and leaned her head against his
shoulder as she had for much of the six-hour ride from New York.
"If we showed
up at the Hoover Building, it would take them hours to verify who we are and
direct us to the person who was in charge of your protection at the hospital.
This way, the agents at my house will take us straight to him."
"Clever."
The cab ride took
nearly forty-five minutes in the snarled downtown traffic. The driver refused
to use the car's air-conditioning, so great blasts of hot air blew into the
taxi, plastering Tish's hair around her face.
"Since you
fell asleep as soon as we got on the bus this morning, I just want to thank you
for the way you handled yourself in New York. You came through like a true professional."
Tish smiled at
him, her beautiful lips framing dazzling teeth.
"Jack Talbot didn't raise a daughter who couldn't take care of
herself."
Mercer laughed.
"No doubt about that."
"Mercer,
what's going to happen to us once the FBI pick us up?"
"I don't
know, Tish. I think the information we've gotten in the past couple of days
points to the people responsible for the Ocean Seeker disaster. Once we
deliver it to the FBI, we should be out of it."
"What if they
don't believe us?" she persisted.
"We just have
to make sure they do. The story I have to tell is too chilling to be
ignored."
The cab stopped in
front of Mercer's house. He paid the driver, unlocked the door of the house,
and keyed off the security system. He almost had the door closed when a voice
from behind interrupted him.
''Dr. Mercer,
please step away from the door and place your hands over your head. This is the
FBI."
Mercer backed away
and turned to the FBI agent, his smile ironic. "The last person who told
me that was left tied up in an office in New York and he already had his gun
drawn."
The agent, not
catching Mercer's graveyard humor, sensed a threat and pulled his service
weapon. "I said, place your hands on your head. You too, Dr. Talbot."
The agent stepped
forward. He was Mercer's age, but had a baby face under a mop of light blond
hair. Mercer noted that his gun hand was very steady. Another agent joined the
first.
"I've been
instructed to take you downtown. You're not under arrest, so please go
easily."
"I don't
think so. You'd better make this official," Mercer replied with a slow
smile. He turned around and lowered his hands behind his back. As if by
programming, the second agent came forward and slapped on a pair of handcuffs.
"Think of how good you'll look to your friends when they see you captured
us in irons."
When they were in
the agents' brown sedan heading back into the city,
Tish whispered, "Why in the hell did you do that?"
"I want to
see the reaction of whoever has summoned us. It might tell me a lot."
The car ducked
into the city via Route 66, and exited just North of the Lincoln Memorial, then
streaked down Constitution Avenue, parallel to the Mall, where countless
tourists sweated in the Washington heat while viewing the monuments. They
turned left onto 15th Street as Mercer expected. He was certain they were
headed for. the J. Edgar Hoover Building, FBI headquarters, but just before
reaching the Treasury Building, the car slowed and made another left onto East
Executive Avenue. A moment later they entered the White House grounds through a
back gate. Mercer and Tish glanced at each other, speechless.
The car pulled
into an underground garage just behind the White House. The agents escorted
Tish and Mercer to an already waiting elevator. Two more agents joined them
there. Mercer noticed, just as the elevator doors closed, that the garage
didn't smell of oil and was absolutely spotless. He suspected that the garage
was washed every day to prevent a stray spark from lighting any spilled oil.
The elevator took
them up to the ground floor and disgorged them into a blue-carpeted hallway.
Young staffers rushed past, reports and faxes clutched in their fists as if
their jobs meant the safety of the free world. Which, in reality, they did.
Only a few stopped to notice the cuffs that secured Mercer's hands behind his
back. He wondered if they thought he was a fellow staffer sacrificed to some as
yet unknown scandal.
"I won't give
any of you away," he called over the din of the countless ringing phones.
The agents pushed
him roughly down the hall past numerous cramped offices until they reached a
cluttered desk just outside a wide door. The presidential seal hung from the
wall behind the desk.
"Miss Craig,
this is Philip Mercer and Tish Talbot. Is everything set inside?"
"Yes, it
is," the plump woman said. She looked up at Tish and smiled sweetly.
"You poor dear, I've heard about what you've been through. Come with me.
I'm sure you'd love to freshen up a bit."
Tish looked at
Mercer, stricken.
"It's all
right. I'm sure you'll be fine." Tish allowed the President's personal
secretary to lead her away.
Mercer turned to
the agents flanking him. ''Well, gentlemen, let's get on with it."
They opened the
door and Mercer stepped into the Oval Office.
Mercer's first
impression was that the office was much smaller than he had imagined. He
envisioned the president governing the country from a much larger room. He
stepped over the seal embroidered into the pale blue carpet and studied the
people in the room. He recognized most of them. Seated were Admiral C. Thomas
Morrison, Richard Henna of the FBI, and Catherine Smith, the President's chief of
staff. Mercer guessed that the bald man standing against the far wall was the
director of the CIA. The President sat behind his desk, his large hands resting
on the leather top. Ms. Smith wore a conservative suit, white blouse, and a
muted bow at her throat, and the assembled men were all wearing the customary
Washington uniform—conservative suit, white shirt, and muted tie. Only Admiral
Morrison, in his summer whites, and Mercer still in the black clothing from the
break-in, were dressed any differently.
"Mr.
President, I wish to congratulate you."
The President
looked at Mercer quizzically. "I saw in the paper a couple days ago that
your wife's dog just had puppies.''
"We are not
here to discuss dogs, Dr. Mercer," Paul Barnes, the head of the CIA, said
sharply, clipping each word.
"We're not
going to discuss anything until I know why
Tish Talbot was brought to Washington and why she was placed under FBI
protection."
"She is no
longer a concern of yours," Barnes snapped.
"I'm beginning not to like you, friend." There was no
malice in Mercer's voice, but his gray eyes hardened.
''Dr. Mercer, we
will answer all of your questions in turn. Rest assured that Dr. Talbot's
ordeal, as you put it, is at an end. She is upstairs right now with my wife and
the puppies you just mentioned. She will be looked after." The President
cut through the mounting tension.
"Christ,"
Henna exclaimed as he realized that Mercer was cuffed. "Get those damn
things off him and leave us."
The two agents
removed the handcuffs and skulked from the room. Mercer helped himself to a cup
of coffee from the silver urn next to the fireplace and took the last available
chair.
"So you
wanted to see me," Mercer said innocently, taking a sip of coffee.
"Dr. Mercer,
you have a lot of explaining to do," Henna replied. "But first we all
want to express our gratitude to you for saving Dr. Talbot's life in the
hospital. How did you know that the man in the room was an impostor?"
"Lucky
guess," Mercer demurred. "We both used the same cover to get into her
room. I figured your watchdogs might let in one urologist, but not two. I also
noticed that his shoes were too uncomfortable looking for a doctor making his
rounds. It was a calculated risk, but at worst I was risking an assault charge
from an irate citizen. It turned out I was right. Who was he, anyway?"
''Josef Skadra, a
Czech-born agent who used to freelance for the KGB."
"Do you have
any idea who he was working for when he went after Dr. Talbot?"
"We're not
certain," Henna admitted. "Remember, you didn't leave him or any of his team in the position to answer
questions."
"Dr. Mercer,
you are here to answer questions, not ask them." Barnes spoke again.
"Paul, take
it easy," the president cautioned. "Dr. Mercer is a guest here, not a
prisoner."
"Before you
start asking questions, why don't I fill you in on what I know," Mercer
said, and the president nodded.
"On the night
of May 23, 1954, an ore carrier named Grandam Phoenix sank about two
hundred miles north of Hawaii in the middle of the Musicians Seamounts, a
five-hundred-mile-long string of undersea volcanoes. Whether she was destroyed
by the nuclear blast that occurred that night or she was already sinking, I
don't know. The bomb was under about seven thousand feet of water when it went
off." Mercer's audience was too dumbstruck to speak, so he continued, ''I
pinpointed the epicenter by triangulating time delays and Richter scale differences
from six different stations in Asia and the United States. The sharp spike
recorded on the seismograph tapes that night is identical to ones measured
after underground nuclear tests. There is no natural occurrence that even
remotely resembles it.
"Since that
time, seven large vessels have sunk in a fifty-mile radius of the explosion's
epicenter, including, most recently, the NOAA research ship, Ocean
Seeker."
"What are you
talking about?" Henna finally found his voice.
"Let me
finish and you'll see. That many ships sinking in such a relatively small area
is strange enough, but there is a connection between them that defies random
mishap. Of the seven ships that went down, only three had survivors—a tanker in
1968, a container ship in 1972, and the Ocean Seeker. The four other
vessels, the ones where no one survived, all had something in common, very
accurate bottom-scanning sonar. The trawlers lost since 1954 use them for
finding shoals of fish, a cable layer sunk in
1977 would use it for locating a smooth path on the ocean floor, and a Chilean
survey ship was mapping the Pacific basin in 1982 when it vanished without a
trace."
"Is that from
the list of vessels you received from that law office in Miami?" asked
Henna.
"Yes. I stared
at it for quite a while until I saw a connection between all the ships that
sank with no survivors. Once I saw that they all had bottom-scanning
technology, I pieced together what it was they may have seen. I believe they
were all sunk so they wouldn't report a new volcano building its way to the
surface."
"Is this
volcano connected to the nuclear detonation?" the President asked.
"I'm certain
that it is. I believe that the explosion was the trigger that started the
volcanoes eruption. The area around Hawaii, including the Musicians Seamounts,
contains an intraplate hot spot. Put simply, a hot spot is a localized area of
intense heat deep in the earth's mantle that punches holes through the crust as
a tectonic plate slide across it, forming chains of volcanoes that are
progressively older the further from the spot they are.
"By
detonating a nuclear bomb over a hot spot, weakening the crust further, magma
from the lithosphere was given a new, artificial outlet."
"Why would
somebody want to do that?'.'
"I have no
idea, but it's proved to be worth killing for."
"Let's get
back to more recent history," Henna prompted.
"The Ocean
Seeker was sent out on an unscheduled survey to find the cause of some
whale deaths. The whales had been found beached on Hawaii about a month ago
with their digestive tracts filled with lava particles. Tish Talbot was an
invited guest on the expedition. Twenty-four hours after leaving port, the ship
exploded and Tish was thrown into the sea. After her rescue, she was
transferred to George Washington University Hospital for observation. I
received a telegram the day after she was admitted to the hospital saying she
was in grave danger."
"Who sent the
telegram?"
"It was
signed by her father, but I later found out her father has been dead for a
year, so I don't know who sent it. It's obvious that someone wanted me to get
involved."
"Why?"
"Mr.
President, that is the million-dollar question."
"This is a
waste of time," Paul Barnes snorted. "He's got more questions than
answers."
"You're
right, I do have a lot of questions. Why was Tish Talbot purposely saved when
the Ocean Seeker was destroyed? The Seeker has the most
sophisticated sonar systems found outside the U.S. Navy, so Tish being found
alive breaks a well-established pattern. Why was she held prisoner for a few
days before her official 'rescue' by a
freighter called the September Laurel? And then why did someone try to
have her killed?"
"Are these
all things she told you?"
"No, I've
figured it out myself. When the ship exploded she was thrown clear by the blast
and suddenly there was an inflatable raft right next to her."
"The raft
could have been dislodged by the explosion," Admiral Morrison pointed out.
''Impossible. The
raft would have been shredded, not inflated. She also told me she swam to it,
but admitted that she could barely hear anything. How could she have swam in
the turbulent water around a sinking vessel if the blast had stunned her so
badly? I'm certain there was someone aboard who was forewarned about the ship's
destruction and whose job it was to save her life."
The men in the
room all exchanged glances. Mercer felt that they knew something he didn't.
''To get back to
your question about why Dr. Talbot was brought to Washington and placed under
the protection of the FBI, you must know that we received a warning a couple of days before the Ocean
Seeker disaster." The President spoke slowly. "We felt putting
her at George Washington University Hospital would raise less suspicion than
bringing her to Walter Reed. You see, she is the only living witness to a
terrorist act directed at the heart of America." He pulled out the letter
sent from Takahiro Ohnishi and read it aloud.
" 'To the
President of the United States. After World War II, Europe, faced with economic
necessity,
released her long-held colonies and let them struggle through the arduous
process of
independence. Some
made the transition smoothly, while others continue to struggle internally
and with their
former masters. It is a painful chapter of human history that is still being
inked
in blood.
'' 'It is
time now that the United States, too, face economic realities. The colonies
that
America maintains
must be released, and that is how we on Hawaii feel we've been treated by
you. The
four-trillion-dollar debt that you carry is a burden too heavy to maintain. The
stopgap efforts
that you and your predecessors have attempted have done little but stave off
the complete
collapse of your system.
"
'While U.S. tax dollars flood the coffers of foreign nations and banks and
bloat already
engorged
government contractors, the American people slide deeper into an unquestioning
torpor spawned by
inane rhetoric and slick presentations.
" 'Mr.
President, this cannot be allowed to continue for Hawaii. The people of Hawaii
are
by origin not
white Europeans nor should they be governed by them. We are a separate people
with different
beliefs and a different set of values, and it is wrong that we too should be
bankrupted by the
dying system to which you cling.
" 'You
must realize by now that mankind does not thrive with cultural diversity. We
are a
tribalist species,
one most comfortable within well-defined groups, and it is wrong to deny
this. The idea of
a 'melting pot' is as outdated as the 'white man's burden.'
" 'I fear that soon the United States
will join that growing list of nations torn by factional
fighting and I do
not wish to see this come to pass for my people. Hawaii's transition to
independence must
be made peaceably, but it must be made. Already plans are being
implemented to
draw us away from the United States and establish ourselves as a sovereign
nation. Do not
attempt to resist this action. I can promise peace, but only if you do not
interfere.
" 'As a
demonstration of the seriousness of my concern and conviction, I have at my
disposal the means
to destroy any American government vessel within two hundred miles of
these islands. If
I detect any such vessel in the coming weeks of transition, I will not hesitate
to sink it.
'' 'Please
do not test my resolve or the resolve of the people of these islands. We are
united
in purpose and our
goal will ultimately benefit all.'
It is signed,
Takahiro Ohnishi."
The President placed the pages facedown on his desk and looked up
at Mercer.
Mercer remained
expressionless while his mind churned through what the President had just read.
He knew the eccentric billionaire's views; in fact, he'd read one of Ohnishi's
books about the need for racial integrity. But he'd never believed the
industrialist capable of this. Race relations between Hawaii's Japanese
majority and the island's white population were strained, but what the
President had just read was tantamount to a declaration of independence. He
said as much.
"As it turns
out, there were no naval vessels scheduled to arrive or depart Pearl Harbor at
the time that we received this letter, but NOAA did have the Ocean Seeker heading
northward. Dick brought the letter to my attention only after she'd had been
lost. Before that, he had assumed it was just a crank. Since then, I've
suspended all activity within the two-hundred-mile limit Ohnishi outlined in
this letter. Dr. Mercer, you are the first person outside this group to know
the situation.
"We believed
that this was a recent plot by Ohnishi, but the information you've brought us
indicates that it goes back forty years."
"Mr.
President, I'm not even finished yet. This goes even further than some crackpot
billionaire with a decidedly Hitleresque mien," Mercer stated.
The men in the
room turned to him intently.
"You see, the
Ocean Seeker was sunk by a Soviet submarine called John Dory, not
by Takahiro Ohnishi."
__________
__________
__________
The sun was still a sizzling torture over the crowded city streets
despite the onset of evening. The Arabs in their long white galabias seemed
immune to the hundred plus heat, but the Westerners in the city suffered. Evad
Lurbud bought a cup of warm date juice from a passing vendor who had a huge
pewter urn strapped to his back. The juice tasted awful, but his body needed
the fluids.
Lurbud stood on
Shari al-Muizz Le-din Allah, the main road in the Khan el-Khalili, a huge
sprawling bazaar located three miles and about a thousand years from modern
Tahrir Square at the center of Cairo. A rabbit warren of twisting alleys choked
with people, the Khan is the true shopping center for the locals. Harried,
red-faced tourists make it an obligatory stop after the pyramids, the
necropolis at Memphis, and the crowded Cairo Museum.
Founded by Sultan
Barquq's Master of Horse, Garkas el-Khalili in 1382 as a way station for camel
caravans, the Khan had grown enormously over time. By
the Ottoman conquest of Egypt in 1517, items from as far away as England were
being traded in the sprawling bazaar. The Ottoman sense of order established a
guild system within the bazaar that is still evident today. Perfume sellers
congregate just south of the Khan's main crossroads. Gold and silver are sold
in specific areas, while carpet merchants are found in another. The heady
aromas from spice merchants and food sellers compete throughout the Khan while
tourist curio shops cling to the Khan's perimeter.
There were no cars
in the Khan, but the din of the pedestrian traffic more than made up for the
lack of engine noises. Hawkers touted their wares and the Arab tradition of
haggling reached a great cacophony. The loudspeakers of the two mosques just
outside the bazaar throbbed with cries of "Allah Akbar" with
pious regularity.
Soon, Lurbud knew,
the Muslims would close up their shops and head to the mosques for sundown
prayer. He scoffed at the notion of a God, especially one that demanded prayer
five times a day, yet he respected their fealty. As a veteran of the Afghani
campaign, he knew full well the strength the rebels derived from their
religion. The Mujahideen called their resistance a "Holy War," and
whipped the tribes into an amazing, cohesive force that possessed the power to
resist the largest army ever maintained.
Lurbud had spent
his first tour of the war as an intelligence operative for the KGB, spending
weeks and sometimes months away from the relative security of Kabul on deep
cover insertions. Because of his swarthy complexion and knack for languages, he
could ingratiate himself with a rebel band and act as one of their own while
gathering data on their strengths and weaknesses, assessing the future plans of
other groups of resistance fighters. When his task was complete, he would call
in the feared helicopter gunships. The craft would thunder into an encampment where he was a trusted
member and kill every man, woman, and child in sight. Lurbud would conveniently
be on patrol during these massacres. During the two years he spent on this
duty, Lurbud's Afghani compatriots never once suspected that he was the cause
Of the devastation.
His amazing nerve
caught the eye of the KGB hierarchy, especially Ivan Kerikov. After one
helicopter attack, when Lurbud couldn't extricate himself from a rebel village
yet managed to survive the scathing fire from the Hind-D gunships, Kerikov
pulled him from the ranks of field operatives and seconded him to his personal
staff in Kabul.
There, Lurbud's chief function was breaking captured rebels in the
dank prisons the Soviets had established. Lurbud learned that the binding force
that held the Mujahideen together was also a major weapon in the interrogation
rooms. The Muslim faith forbade the devout from coming into contact with swine,
and even the threat of such contact was enough to break the hardest rebels
Lurbud faced. It amazed him how the most solid fighter would panic when
threatened to be placed inside the decayed carcass of a pig.
What kind of God
made men fear hogs, considering so many of them lived just like them? Lurbud
wondered idly.
The voice of the
Muezzin blared from speakers high above the streets in the minarets, calling
the faithful to prayer. Lurbud crouched deeper in an alley, shrinking into the
shadows of stacked spice bags as the streets began to empty. The smell of
saffron was nauseating. Glancing at his feet, he saw that he'd stepped into a
pile of dog shit. He muttered in disgust and smeared the filth against one of
the bags.
Looking up, Lurbud
recognized his quarry as the man left his shop across the Khan's main road. The
sign above the shop's door stated that Suleiman el-aziz Suleiman was a jeweler,
and the size of his shop indicated that
he was prosperous. Evad Lurbud knew differently.
Suleiman was one
of the richest arms merchants in the Middle East. Not having the notoriety and
ostentation of other death merchants, Suleiman had been able to practice his
trade unmolested by the United States or Western Europe. Although his arms were
used to fight in Beirut, Italy, Ireland, Germany, the drug-choked cities of
America, and countless other places, he had never once been, questioned by the
authorities.
The obese Arab
waddled down the street to the Mosque of Sayyada al-Hussein, his body waggling
with every step as huge sacks of extra flesh slid against each other. His face
was round with an almost childlike openness.
According to his
KGB dossier, Suleiman was far from the fool whose image he projected. He had
distinguished himself in two of the wars against Israel and in the subsequent
years had established a relationship with nearly every terrorist organization
on the planet. The KGB figured that Suleiman's personal wealth was somewhere in
the neighborhood of two hundred million dollars.
Too nice a
neighborhood for a stinking Arab, thought Lurbud as he crossed the now empty
street.
Lurbud paused by
the door. The streets were now eerie. He had been watching Suleiman's shop since
noon from various vantage points, and during that entire time the streets had
been crowded and loud. There was no one about now; even the countless cats that
skulked through the alleys had vanished. Since crime is nearly nonexistent in
the Khan, there was no need for elaborate security systems. Lurbud expertly
picked the frail lock to Suleiman's shop.
He knew from the
dossier that the Arab always returned to his shop for a few minutes after
prayer before leaving the Khan for his home on Shari El Haram, the road which
leads to the Great Pyramids at Giza. Lurbud closed and locked the door after
once again checking the empty street.
Inside the shop,
Lurbud passed display cases that gleamed with gold in the dusty light that
streamed in through the transomed windows. The setting sun cast long shadows
across the room. Lurbud eased a Takarov pistol from its holster under his
jacket and parted the beaded curtain that led to Suleiman's back office.
A battered wooden
desk, covered with stacks of books and a gold measuring scale, occupied the
center of the small office. A coffee urn, tarnished and pitted, sat on a low
settee against one wall. The room smelled of dust mingled with the sweet odor
of hashish. Lurbud sat behind the desk, the pistol in his lap. For twenty
minutes, until Suleiman returned from prayer, the only movement in the room was
the occasional blinking of Lurbud's dark eyes. He waited with the same patience
as the Sphinx just outside the city.
Lurbud's entrance
had disturbed the room, its air pattern, its volume, its feel. As he remained,
motionless, the room had calmed, accepting his presence. This was a skill he
had learned at a training camp on the shores of the Black Sea, where students
were put into a completely dark maze. The one who walked out alive, graduated.
He remained
motionless even when he heard the front door of the shop open and close. An
instant later Suleiman's immense bulk parted the curtain separating his shop
from his office.
Suleiman had grabbed
a demitasse of coffee and was almost upon Lurbud before he noticed the
intruder. The thimble-sized cup fell from his pudgy finger, shattering on the
stone floor. Behind his beard, Suleiman's face drained of color and he
staggered back several paces.
"I read in your dossier that you are never guarded here in
the Khan." Lurbud spoke fluent, unaccented Arabic. "You believed that
your standing in the bazaar would protect you, yes?"
"Who are
you?" Suleiman demanded, recovering from his initial shock.
"My name
means nothing to you, Suleiman el-aziz,"
Lurbud spoke
without emotion. "You were hired to supply and ship nearly a thousand tons
of arms, ammunition, and material to
Hawaii. Is this not true?"
"I know not
what you talk about."
''I believe that
you do. The order was placed by Takahiro Ohnishi possibly several weeks or
months ago."
"I am a
simple jeweler. I don't understand."
Lurbud continued
as if Suleiman had not spoken. ''I represent a group that does not wish to see
this order filled. We don't want those arms shipped to Hawaii. In fact, we
don't want you to have any further involvement with Ohnishi at all."
"Who are you
to tell me how to run my business?" Suleiman retorted with a sneer.
"Ah, so no
longer are you a simple jeweler." Lurbud's smile was devoid of amusement.
"I know your
type," Suleiman said, his tone scornful. "You're some soldier of
fortune who happened on that piece of information. Do you think you can
blackmail Suleiman el-aziz Suleiman?"
"I am not
here to blackmail you. I'm here to tell you that the order is canceled."
"You are too
late, mercenary. Those arms are on a freighter halfway to Hawaii." Sweat
had beaded on Suleiman's creased forehead.
The Arab was
lying. Suleiman hadn't even purchased the arms yet. He was currently using
Ohnishi's deposit money to push up the bond prices of a hydroelectric project
in Sri Lanka. Because of his contacts in the terrorist underworld, Suleiman
knew that Tamil separatists were going to bomb the huge network of dams within
two weeks. By pushing up the bond price and then selling at a slight discount
just prior to the attack, Suleiman stood to quadruple the money. Only then
would he put together Ohnishi's order for weapons.
"I believe
that you're lying, Suleiman." Lurbud brought the Takarov into view for the
first time. "But to be honest, I don't really care what the truth
is."
For such a large
man, Suleiman's reaction time was incredibly fast. He dove across the room, his
body sailing through the air like a giant zeppelin.
Lurbud swung
his" pistol in an arc matching Suleiman's leap, but his first shot
amazingly missed the huge target. Suleiman crashed against the wall near the
settee, one arm sweeping the coffee urn to the floor. Coffee flooded across the
floor in a thick black tide. Suleiman's hands, made dexterous through years of
precision jewelry making, tore at a pistol which had been taped to the back of
the old urn.
Evad caught a look
of murderous rage in the Arab's eyes as Suleiman torqued his huge body to bring
the gun to bear. Lurbud fired an instant before the muzzle of Suleiman's
automatic caught a bead on him. The shot tore into the arms merchant's body,
the fat rippling in shock waves around the impact.
Suleiman's arm was
thrown up by the shot, the tiny Beretta spinning from his hand. Lurbud fired
again, and again. The killing light in Suleiman's eyes began to fade. Lurbud
came around the desk, his pistol aimed directly at the Arab's head.
With his free hand
the Russian pulled a flask from inside his jacket. He unscrewed the lid from
the pewter flask and knelt next to the dying Muslim.
"As a final
thought, Suleiman el-aziz Suleiman," Lurbud began, pouring the viscous red
liquid from the flask onto Suleiman, "you will meet Allah with your body
covered in pig's blood."
Suleiman opened
his mouth to scream at this ultimate desecration, and Lurbud fired one more
round down the gaping throat. The blood of the dead Muslim mingled with that of
the unclean pig on the hard floor of the office.
Lurbud reholstered
his gun, noting for the first time the thick pall of cordite smoke that hung in
the air. The room reeked of smoke, but beneath that odor he detected the smell of
blood and Suleiman's voided bowels.
At the front door
of the shop, he paused. There were a few people on the street, mostly old men
heading back to the coffee houses and their hookahs. The thick stone walls of
the shop had muffled any sound from the silenced Takarov. Lurbud eased out of
the shop and mingled with the crowd as best he could. Ten minutes later he was
out of the bazaar, searching for a cab. He had two hours to dispose of the
pistol and get to the airport before his flight to Hawaii.
__________
__________
__________
There was a stunned silence in the Oval Office after Mercer made
his revelation. He watched as everyone's expressions turned from surprise to
confusion and finally to doubt.
"What makes
you think Russia has anything to do with this?" Paul Barnes broke the
silence. "Just because the assassin who went after Dr. Talbot once worked
for the KGB doesn't mean anything."
Mercer realized
that he had just stepped on the toes of the director of the CIA.
"Tish Talbot
told me that after her rescue from the Ocean Seeker, she heard some of
her saviors speaking Russian."
"Christ,"
Barnes said, glancing around the room. "You said she was blown from the
ship, stunned. Who knows what she heard—she was half dead at the time."
"I doubt that
St. Peter speaks Russian during his interview at the Pearly Gates, Mr.
Barnes," Mercer said evenly. "But that's not the fact I'm relying on.
''A friend of mine
in Miami is an expert in maritime law. I had him research Ocean Freight and
Cargo, the owners of the September Laurel. He found that the company is
a front for the KGB."
''I had a court
order demanding Saulman turn over all the information that you requested,"
Henna said incredulously. "He withheld that from the FBI?"
"If you knew
Dave Saulman, you wouldn't be surprised. He's as crusty as a Paris bakery. But
he is a walking encyclopedia concerning maritime commerce and his word is
gospel truth."
"If we take
his word about the KGB for the time being," Paul Barnes said suspiciously,
"what about this submarine idea of yours?"
"The first
piece of evidence is really just simple reasoning. According to the news
reports there was a combined naval and Coast Guard search of the area, using,
I'm sure, the most sophisticated hardware in the world. Yet they failed to find
any survivors. The Ocean Seeker's last known position was well
documented by her Loran transmissions, yet the search turned up nothing except
an oil slick and a few pieces of debris.
''Then, two days
later, the September Laurel happens along, 'aiding' in the search, and
miraculously they find Tish. That freighter, which was a hundred miles away
from the Ocean Seeker when she blew up, managed to accomplish something
the coast guard and navy couldn't do. I don't buy it. There were no weather
problems during that time, no storms, no fog."
"You're wrong
there, Dr. Mercer," Admiral Morrison interrupted. ''There was a tremendous
amount of surface fog, and because of the President's order not to send out
surface ships, we were confined to an aerial search only."
''Admiral, tell me
honestly, is there any logical reason why your planes would have missed her,
even with the fog?"
The chairman of
the Joint Chiefs ran a hand across the
tight whorls of hair on his large head before answering. "If she had been
out there, my boys would have found her."
"Since there
is no logical reason why she wasn't found by the coast guard or navy, I looked
for an illogical one. The only one that fits, gentlemen, is a submarine."
Morrison turned to
the President. ''It makes sense, sir. There could have been a sub out there and
we never would have known it. None of the search aircraft used sonar buoys or
acoustical gear in the search for survivors. That sub could have sat just under
the surface and listened to us flounder around."
The President
nodded. "What other proof do you have, Dr. Mercer?"
"Since I
couldn't learn anything more about Ocean Freight and Cargo from Dave Saulman, I
knew I needed a firsthand investigation, so Tish and I broke into their offices
in New York."
"What did you
find?" asked Dick Henna.
"For one I
found a fish tank in the vice president's office, a large tank that contained only
a single fish."
"So?"
"Well,
OF&C has a practice of naming their ships after months and flowers and
painting those flowers on the stack of the vessels. Tish remembers seeing the
design on the stack of the ship that rescued her. It was a yellow circle
surrounding a black dot, yet the September Laurel is marked with a bunch
of laurels. The distinctive pattern that Tish remembered matches that of a
European game fish I once caught in France."
"What's the
connection?"
"The name of
the fish is John Dory and that tank at the OF&C office contained a prime
specimen."
"That's the
thinnest connection I've ever heard," Barnes remarked.
"I'd agree
with you, if I hadn't found a base file tab in the drawer with the ownership
papers for the company's vessels. The tab read 'John Dory.' At the time I
thought the reference was simply a misfile, but it makes more sense that they
own a ship by that name but don't keep any paperwork on her. When I got back to
D.C., I called the friend I went fishing with and he confirmed the name of the
fish. The design on the stack pins down the source of the name, and the only
ships ever named after fish are submarines."
"You've got
to be joking." Barnes chuckled indolently.
Mercer stood up.
"Mr. President, you said I was a guest and not a prisoner. If that's true,
I want to leave. If you don't want to listen to what I have to say, then I see
no reason to stay here and try to explain. In the past few days I've been shot
at a dozen times, and not because I have a bad standing in the community. I've
stumbled on something, and if you gentlemen are not interested in what I have
to say, I'm going."
"Dr. Mercer,
please wait," Henna said. "Tell us what happened in New York."
Mercer told them
about the break-in, the armed soldiers guarding the building, and his
impressions about the office.
"There is
something nefarious behind Ocean Freight and Cargo, and so far all indications
point to the Russians," Mercer concluded. "I just don't know
why."
"Mr.
President," Henna said, turning in his seat, "I had some agents go to
the OF&C offices soon after Dr. Mercer and Dr. Talbot had left. The scene
had been sanitized—no corpses or blood. My men could tell that a gun had been
discharged in the building. The air fresheners couldn't mask the smell of the
cordite. I can't confirm what Dr. Mercer reported, but I certainly can't deny
it either."
"I just
remembered something." Paul Barnes rejoined the conversation with a more
accepting tone. "I can't remember any details, but a report crossed my
desk a few years ago from a metallurgist in Pennsylvania. It sounds similar to the conditions Dr.
Mercer described about the explosion in 1954. He had obtained a sample of some
element; I can't remember what it was called, but it had something to do with
radiation and seawater."
"Do you
remember anything else?" Admiral Morrison prompted after Barnes had lapsed
into silence.
"Abraham
Jacobs," Barnes finally replied. "The scientist's name was Abraham
Jacobs. I'm sure he knew something about what we're discussing."
"Can you find
him?"
"Yes,
sir."
"I want him
in my office by this afternoon." The force in the President's voice
galvanized the room. "We now have a more grave situation in Hawaii than we
first estimated. If Dr. Mercer is right and this does go beyond Ohnishi's
personal coup and in some way involves the Russians, I don't even want to think
of the consequences."
''It seems too
far-fetched to me that Takahiro Ohnishi and the Russians have been planning
this since the 1950s. Too much has changed in the world to make a plot of this
type viable." This from Henna.
"This could
be an alliance of convenience," hazarded Mercer. "Something that was
formed recently, as new situations developed."
"That makes
sense," the President agreed. "But we have to get in touch with this
Dr. Jacobs. Hopefully he can tell us exactly what's at stake here."
''You mean over
and above the possible secession of Hawaii?" Henna said caustically. The
President shot him a scathing look.
"Mr.
President, may I make a request?" asked Mercer.
"Yes, Dr.
Mercer, what is it?"
"I have a
feeling that we're working under a time limit.
Ohnishi or the Russians must know we're on to them in some respect. They are probably being forced to push up their deadlines because of my
action in New York. I have a feeling that the situation
in Hawaii is going to get critical real soon."
"I know what
you are going to ask and it's already been taken care of. The carrier Kitty
Hawk and the amphibious assault ship Inchon are already on alert
three hundred miles from Hawaii."
"A good idea,
sir, but not what I wanted. I think to better understand what we're up against,
a series of infrared photos should be taken of the area where the Ocean
Seeker was sunk."
The President
looked toward Barnes, who rummaged through a briefcase at his feet. "Let's
see, there's a KH-11 flyby of the north Pacific in thirteen hours. That bird
has the right cameras and it wouldn't take much to change her orbit to pass
north of Hawaii."
"Thirteen
hours, that's too late." Mercer said.
"What do you
suggest?"
"Either an
SR-71 Blackbird or one of the air force's superspy planes that no one is
supposed to know about."
"Paul?"
"There's an
SR-1 Wraith at Edwards, but I need your authorization to get her
airborne."
"Do it. How
long before we get some pictures back?"
"At mach six
the Wraith will be there and back in about an hour and a half. Say a half hour
for film processing and transmission here."
"Dr. Mercer,
I needn't remind you that you have not heard any of this, correct?'' the
President cautioned.
"I'm sorry,
sir." Mercer smiled. "I haven't been listening. Did you say
something?"
"Very good,
gentlemen, we all have jobs to do."
The group started
for the door. "I want everyone to meet back here in two hours. Dr. Mercer,
ask my secretary for a temporary pass if you plan to leave the grounds."
"I'll do that."
Mercer spoke with
Miss Craig and learned that Tish was asleep in one of the White House guest
rooms. He scribbled a quick note for her in case she
woke up while he was gone and then hailed a cab near Pennsylvania Avenue. He
was home twenty minutes later. After a quick shower and an even quicker beer,
he went to his study, touched the large bluish stone that was his good luck
piece, and sat behind his desk.
He dialed a number
and two rings later the phone was answered. "Geology department,
Carnegie-Mellon University."
"I'd like to
speak to Dr. Jacobs, please."
"One
moment." After about a dozen moments the same voice came back on the line.
"I'm sorry, Dr. Jacobs is with a class."
"My name is
Vince Andrews from the Hiller Foundation, the group that supports Dr. Jacobs's
research," Mercer said putting as much bluff into his voice as he could.
"Dr. Jacobs is in serious trouble and will probably lose his grant. It's
imperative that I speak to him now."
"I understand,
please hold the line."
A minute later a
more mature voice spoke. "I don't know who this is since my grant comes
from Cochran Steel, but you've piqued my interest."
"Hi, Abe,
it's Philip Mercer."
"I should
have known." Abraham Jacobs laughed. "Mercer, give me a second to get
into my office. I don't want my assistant realizing the low caliber of some of
my friends."
A few seconds
later, Abe Jacobs was back and the assistant had hung up the antechamber
extension. "So, to what do I owe the honor of this call, and by the way
thank you for getting me away from that class. They're an even bigger group of
idiots than you and your class when I taught at Penn State."
Abe Jacobs had
been Mercer's academic advisor during his graduate work at Penn State, and
Mercer had continued to seek his former professor's advice in the years since
school. They rarely saw each other now, but the
tight bond between master teacher and star student had not dimmed.
''Abe, I was just
in a meeting where your name came up."
"Don't tell
me you're on Carnegie-Mellon's ethics board?"
"Abe, we both
know your wife's leash on you is just long enough for you to roam to your
classes and your lab."
"Too
true."
"Well, she
might be in for a surprise tonight, because you won't be home for dinner. A
couple of years ago you apparently sent a research paper to the CIA."
''Hold it right
there, Mercer. How did you know that? That information was top secret."
"I was told
by Paul Barnes, the head of the CIA."
"Ah."
"The CIA is
tracking you down right now, but it'll probably take them a few hours to find
you. They think you're a metallurgist, not a geologist. I thought I'd beat them
to the punch and teach Paul Barnes a lesson in humility at the same time. They
want you in Washington as soon as possible with any relevant material about
your paper."
"What's this
all about? It was basically a theoretical paper. Without twenty years of
development, what I found would be unfeasible."
"Let's just
say someone may have already put in the development effort. Get to the
Pittsburgh airport general aviation counter. I'll have a charter plane ready to
bring you down here."
"I don't
understand. How could—"
Mercer interrupted.
"Abe, I'll explain on the way to the White House this evening."
He cut the
connection, then called general aviation at the airport. Securing a plane and
pilot for Abe maxed out two of his credit cards, but Mercer shrugged off the expense. He was keeping a running tally of
what the government owed him, and the price of the chartered Lear jet wasn't
even close to the repair bill for his shot-up Jaguar.
__________
__________
__________
Minister Lujian, the Chinese representative, scratched his name
into the heavy book slid to him by Minister Tren of Taiwan. Lujian finished his
signature with a flourish and slid the book across the burnished mahogany table
to the person at his left, Ambassador Marco Quirino, the representative from
the Philippines. ;
With each
successive signature, the oppressive air in the meeting room lightened. There
were murmurs from the small gallery of spectators allowed to see the
ambassadors pledge their nations' consent to the document. Those in the gallery
had not been privy to the weeks of frustrating delays that had plagued the
Bangkok summit, but still they sensed the great accomplishment these diplomats
had achieved.
The official signature
book was passed to the Russian ambassador, Gennady Perchenko. A close observer
could easily detect a slight rise in tension among the delegates. The wily
Russian had been the reason for the past
weeks of utter frustration. Then, inexplicably, this morning he announced to
the delegates that he had no further comments. Because the symbolic documents
for the representative's signatures had been prepared at the start of the
accords, Thailand's ambassador Prem motioned that the delegates commence with
the signing and the others nearly fell over themselves seconding him.
U.S.
undersecretary of commerce Kenneth Donnelly leaned over toward Perchenko and
whispered out of the corner of his mouth, ''I sure hope you know what you've
been playing at, pardner."
"Mr.
Secretary, I'm not playing at anything, I simply wanted to ensure all nations'
rights were explored here."
Perchenko heard
America's delegate mutter, "Bullshit," under his breath, but let the
comment pass. No sooner had he signed the document than a wave of applause
rippled through the room. Perchenko acknowledged the ovation with a smug smile
and slid the book to Donnelly.
Donnelly signed
with a tight smile focused on Perchenko and closed the book with a resounding
snap.
A pounding rain
lashed the night, the drone of the water interrupted only by the booming
thunder that echoed across the city. The storm did little to cool the
overpowering heat, and Perchenko found himself nearly panting as he raced from
the courtyard of the Arun Wat toward the protection of the temple itself.
Kerikov's orders
had been explicit; that he wait by the low stone wall that separated the Temple
of Dawn from the Phraya River at eight PM, but the spy had said nothing about
drowning in a torrential downpour.
Gennady dashed
into the shadow of one of the four ceramic-tiled towers which surround the
conical two-hundred-and-sixty-foot spire of the Wat. His suit was soaked
through and his sparse hair hung limply against his pale face, a face once tight
and healthy looking, but now worn by exhaustion so that bags drooped under his eyes and slabs of skin hung down his
cheeks and throat. He could hear the faint chanting of monks within the huge
temple, but the storm drowned out all other sounds save his labored breathing.
"What the
hell am I doing here?" he wheezed aloud.
"Not
following instructions, Gennady Perchenko," Ivan Kerikov replied from the
deep shadows to Perchenko's right.
Kerikov stepped
into the light given off by the temple's numerous floods and spots. He seemed
unaffected by the rain; his shoulders were squared against the deluge and his
eyes remained open and alert. In contrast, Gennady hunched miserably, and he
squinted at Kerikov as if he were a spectral apparition.
"I told you
to wait by the wall." Kerikov gestured with his arm, then smiled warmly.
"But under the circumstances, I understand."
Gennady relaxed a
bit and smiled, but still regarded Kerikov with a wary, nervous eye.
"I assume
that all went well?" Kerikov moved toward Gennady so that he stood in the
protection of the temple's massive portal.
"Yes,"
Gennady mattered. His fear of Kerikov, oppressive yesterday in the open crowd
of the Royal River Hotel's bar, was crippling now that the two were alone. He
had been terrified of Kerikov since learning of the KGB man's unlimited
influence so when he had shown up the day before, Kerikov had dismissed
Gennady's concerns over the missing maitre d' and assured him that the time had
come to wind up the Bangkok Accords. Gennady wanted to ask why the delay had
been necessary in the first place, but fear froze the question in his throat.
Even in the relaxed atmosphere of the open-air bar, Kerikov was the most
malevolent man Gennady had ever seen.
"Relax, Gennady, it is done "and you have
triumphed." Kerikov slipped a sterling hip flask from his jacket pocket.
"Vodka from home."
Gennady took a
long pull from the flask. Even warm, the vodka went down his throat with the
smoothness of silk. Kerikov motioned for Gennady to take another drink, and he
did so gratefully.
"Tell me,
were you able to insert my amendment into the accords?"
"Yes, that
was done weeks ago. It was simple, really. I've had more difficulty in actually
delaying the signing ceremony. I've made some promises to the Taiwanese
ambassador that may be out of my bounds."
"Yes,
yes," Kerikov said dismissively. "You had no trouble with my
amendment, though?"
"The wording
had to be changed some to accommodate the American, Donnelly, but they all
agreed to it."
"Changed?"
There was no panic in Kerikov's voice, but its pitch had raised slightly.
"How?"
"I thought
you'd ask, so I brought that section of the accords with me." Perchenko
pulled a sheet of paper from within his jacket and read aloud:
No sovereign
nation has the right to claim additional land created through volcanism or
coral
buildup or any
other natural process, i.e. not created by man, not within a two-hundred-mile
line radiating
from that sovereign nation's territory. Any land created in this fashion is
open
to exploration
and exploitation by any nation or other party which lays upon it first rights
as
laid down in
Article 231 of this treaty. All contentions for said lands are to be settled by
the
World Court in
The Hague.
"Donnelly
wanted that last bit about the World Court in Holland." Gennady took
another swallow of vodka, waiting for a reaction from Kerikov.
Kerikov thought
for a few seconds, letting Perchenko's words soak in, then decided that the
diplomat had followed close enough to the original wording. Thanks to that single amendment, Kerikov could
turn over the volcano to the Korean consortium without any fear of
international recriminations. The United States and Russia had just signed away
any title to the volcano and its unimaginable wealth.
Kerikov did not
betray his emotions to Perchenko when he spoke. ''This is acceptable. Come, I
have a boat waiting in the river; we will celebrate your success."
Kerikov hurried
Gennady away from the towering temple. They nearly sprinted through the driving
rain toward the stone wall and the river beyond. Despite the water streaming
into Gennady's eyes, he could see enough to realize that there was no boat
waiting at the quay. He had just turned to question the KGB man when Kerikov
struck.
Kerikov moved with
the speed of a mamba, smashing a short truncheon over Gennady's head. Blood
sprang from the wound over his left eye, mingled with the falling rain, and ran
down Perchenko's face in a pink sheet. The diplomat crumpled to the ground in
an untidy heap. Kerikov easily dragged Gennady to the low stone wall; the river
beyond was as black as an oil slick. Hidden in some shrubs near the wall was a
large plastic ice chest. Beside it were two large cement blocks connected by a
chain. The chain was wrapped in soft cloth and its two ends were joined not by
a padlock, but rather by the thick chunk of ice that nestled in the cooler.
Kerikov rubbed the falling water from his eyes. On a night like
this he didn't have to fear discovery by a casual stroller, but there was
always a chance that a monk might come to the river to make an offering. He
hoisted Gennady's still unconscious body onto the low wall; the diplomat's
breathing was shallow but even. Good.
After lifting the
two cement blocks and the ice chest onto the wall, Kerikov slung the chain
around Perchenko's neck. He had to hurry—the ice was melting faster than he'd
anticipated. Kerikov heaved the loyal ambassador into the turgid water. The
dark river swallowed Perchenko with a minimal splash, the cement blocks
dragging him quickly toward the bottom.
Kerikov threw the
cooler in also and watched as it was washed away by the river's subtle current,
then started back to his hotel, shoulders hunched against the biting rain. He
could imagine the police report when the body was finally discovered. Perchenko
had been out celebrating the conclusion of his meetings; the alcohol in his
system would show he wasn't drunk but certainly tipsy. He had slipped in the
rain near the river, smashed his head against the stone wall, and fallen in.
There would be no
indication of foul play because the padding around the chain would leave no
marks around his throat and the chain that anchored him to the muddy bottom
while he drowned would have vanished. The ice that held it together would melt
in about ten minutes and then Perchenko's lifeless body would simply float
free.
An hour later,
Kerikov was seated in the living room of his hotel suite, showered and dressed
in a conservative suit with a Scotch in his hand. He could hear the rain
pelting the patio just outside the curtained French doors. The lighting in the
elegant room was muted except for the lamp over the couch, which shone brightly
on the papers spread across the coffee table. Kerikov had gone over them a
dozen times in the past few days and felt he could recite them by heart. They
were his ticket to a future outside Russia, a future that he had barely dreamed
of.
The ice in the
glass tinkled delicately as he took a sip. He placed the glass exactly onto its
condensation ring on the glass-topped table and picked up a sheet of paper at
random. It was the assay values of the mineral compiled by Dr. Borodin in his
survey runs over the past few months. The figures were staggering. In one ton
of mined volcanic material, eight pounds of usable ore were present. Processed,
those eight pounds would produce about one pound of high-grade metal with all
its extraordinary properties. By
comparison, Borodin had explained that in open-pit diamond mining, 250 tons of
overburden had to be removed per carat of diamond recovered, a ratio of one
billion to one.
Kerikov selected
another sheet of paper. This one was Borodin's plan for the actual mining of
the mineral. A ship fitted with a huge cycloidal pump would be stationed near a
less active vent of the volcano. A tungsten steel tube would be lowered into
the vent and the pump turned on. Lava would be drawn directly from the volcano
into the ship, where it would be cooled and systematically broken up into
workable chunks, which would be off-loaded onto waiting ore carriers for
refinement at a land-based smelter. The only real cost in the mining operation
was the pump ship and since selling the idea to the Koreans, they had already
had the ship built in Pusan.
There was a knock
at the door. Kerikov stacked the papers neatly, took another sip of Scotch, and
went to answer it. Two young Orientals stood there, each holding a bulky
suitcase. He let them in without a word.
The Koreans opened
the suitcases, revealing a daunting mass of electronics. They hurriedly set up
the equipment: camera, monitor, and computerized transceiver. One man placed a
small collapsible dish antenna on the teak railing of the patio. From the
street seventy feet below, the steel mesh dish was invisible.
Once the equipment
was set up, one of the young men began typing commands. The machines beeped and
whirred and a test pattern appeared on the color monitor. The other man held a
cardboard card in front of the camera. In Pusan, the image of that second test
pattern rilled the screen of a huge wall-mounted high-definition television.
The two technicians nodded to each other and retreated from the room. An
instant later the test pattern vanished from the monitor and was replaced by a
view of a beautiful room.
Kerikov sat on the
couch in front of the cyclops eye of the minicam. On the monitor, nine aged
gentlemen were seated around a black lacquer table.
None of them was under seventy years of age, yet their dark eyes were all alert
and steady. Each man's face was deeply lined and there was not a single dark
hair to be seen. Behind the men hung a red tapestry chronicling Genghis Khan's
conquest of Asia, flanked by two huge terra-cotta vases.
Kerikov nodded
slightly to show respect to the nine heads of Hydra Consolidated. In turn, the
men merely dipped their eyes for a moment. That piece of Eastern nonsense
complete, Kerikov spoke. "Good evening, gentlemen."
"Good evening
to you, Mr. Kerikov." The satellite feed scrambled their voices and
automatically translated from Korean into Russian and vice versa. The system
worked well enough, as long as their sentences were not filled with enigmatic
phrases. Way Hue Dong spoke for the syndicate, as he had during all their
earlier negotiations. "I trust that this method of meeting is
agreeable."
"I am ready
now to commit to our agreed-upon proposal."
"We would
like to know why the delay was necessary?" The electronics masked the
annoyance in Way's voice, but the question made his emotions clear.
"It was
needed, I assure you, gentlemen." Kerikov knew that a placating smile
would be lost on these men, so he refrained. ''When you see the location of the
mineral deposit, you will understand that significant steps were needed to
ensure its safety."
"I trust that
our future activities will not be disturbed?"
"No, they
will not," Kerikov responded hurriedly. With the Americans and Russians'
hands tied by the Bangkok Accords, only Takahiro Ohnishi presented any
obstacle, and by the time the Koreans reached the volcano, Ohnishi would be
eliminated.
Dealing with the
race-crazed billionaire was a necessary hazard during the final play of
Vulcan's Forge. Ohnishi had been programmed to attempt his break away from the United States, and up until the
last possible moment, Kerikov had needed him. But now the mineral wealth lay
beyond America's control—and beyond Ohnishi's, if he ever succeeded in his bid
for independence.
"Then all is
in order?" Way asked, snapping Kerikov's attention back to the present.
"Yes, I am
ready to transmit the final data to you now." Kerikov hid the tension that
tightened his stomach.
"And we are
ready to give you the account number." Kerikov could see Way's lips moving
long before the computer's sterilized voice could be heard. "As a sign of
good faith we will transmit first."
Way nodded to an
off-camera assistant. An instant later the teletype attached to the transceiver
began to pound away. Kerikov made it a point to keep his eyes glued to the
camera. To look toward the teletype would be a major loss of face.
When it stopped,
Kerikov fed several sheets of paper into a portable fax machine attached to the
satellite uplink. These pages included the latest assay and elevation reports
and gave the exact location of Dr. Borodin's island.
Kerikov saw that
Way's eyes were locked on someone outside the camera's field of vision, so he
took a moment to scan the teletype. One hundred million American dollars had
just been transferred to the National Cayman Bank in the Caribbean. The
transfer number and the account number were at the bottom of the page.
Way Hue Dong
received an acknowledgment from some technician out of view and turned back to
the camera. "The information seems legitimate, Mr. Kerikov. I believe now
I know why there was a delay and I applaud your audacity.
"You must
forgive me, sir," Way continued, "but there is a restraint order on
the money. You cannot touch it until I send the bank another set of code
numbers."
Way displayed no
emotion as he revealed his double-cross. "Once my engineers are on-station
and prove what you have told us, the money will be released into your
care."
Kerikov listened
and could barely contain his rage.
Way added,
"I'm sure you understand that we must protect this large amount of money
from fraud. Not that you are suspect. Once the value of this new mineral is
established I will send the new code and the money will be yours. Good evening,
Mr. Kerikov."
The monitor went
blank. In Kerikov's. hotel suite, the camera continued to record and transmit,
so the nine Koreans saw Kerikov pound his foot through the monitor screen and
then begin attacking the video transceiver. The image faded when Kerikov fired
a roundhouse kick at the camera and sent it slamming into a wall.
"Those
motherfucking bastards," Kerikov ranted once he could control himself
enough to speak. "Those piss-drinking shit eaters."
Kerikov fumed for
about ten minutes, dredging up curses he hadn't used since Afghanistan. When he
finally calmed, he finished the diluted Scotch in his glass and then drank
right from the bottle, the raw spirit singeing his stomach when it hit.
Somehow the
Koreans had figured out that he was acting outside his own government's
authority, that the hundred million dollars was destined for Kerikov himself
and not the Russian State Treasury. Knowing that they wouldn't garner any
government wrath, they could delay the transfer of money indefinitely while
they reaped the benefits of Borodin's volcano. Without an armed force to back
him, Kerikov would be powerless to stop them.
He laughed to
himself amid the wreckage of the computer equipment. He admitted that he had
been out-smarted. Once his laughter subsided, Kerikov's eyes gleamed with an
unholy fire. There was no way that he would allow those Korean bastards to
double-cross him when he still had an ace up his sleeve.
__________
__________
__________
Paul Barnes, nearly cowered in his chair in front of the President,
as if the supple leather would shield him from the chief executive’s scathing
censure. The President, usually a level-headed man, was furious. The CIA
director had failed to find Dr. Jacobs.
"Sir, that
report came across my desk years ago," Barnes said lamely.
"You are the
head of the most powerful spy network in the world and you can't find a man who
is no more than two hundred miles from Washington."
The President's
intercom chimed. "Yes?" he responded.
"Sir, the
others are back."
"Thanks, Joy.
Send them in." The President turned back to Barnes. "We'll continue
this conversation later."
Dick Henna and
Admiral Morrison filed into the Oval Office. They were subdued, their faces
drawn and ashen. Henna helped himself to a slug of Scotch.
"Where's Dr.
Mercer?" the President asked.
"He'll
probably be along in a few minutes," Henna said. "Should we wait for
him?"
"No, we can't
afford the time," the President replied slowly. "Dick, what's the
latest from Hawaii?"
"I'm afraid I
don't have much to report, sir. There's been no further communication from
Ohnishi. I've got some agents keeping his estate under long-range surveillance,
but they haven't reported anything suspicious. Our phone taps have turned up
nothing, but I doubt that any sensitive conversations would go over unscrambled
land lines."
"Have you
found a tie-in between Ohnishi and Mayor Takamora?"
"Takamora
went to Ohnishi's mansion last night, but has not left as of an hour ago. We
assume that they are working together on this coup attempt. As near as we can figure,
Takamora will be the front man, given his popularity in the islands, while
Ohnishi plays the role of kingmaker."
"What have
you got, Tom?"
Morrison cleared
his throat. "Well, sir, I've been in contact with the base commander at
Pearl. He reports that there's a fairly good-sized mob, maybe three hundred or
so, on MacAurthur Boulevard, just outside the base's main entrance. They don't
appear to be armed, but he also reports that the National Guard, which was
called out a few hours ago, seems to be part of the mob.
"I had some
records pulled from the Pentagon files on Hawaiian National Guard enlistments.
In the past couple of years a disproportionate number of applications have been
rejected, nearly all white, black, and hispanic. In the past three years,
eighty-six percent of the new members of the National Guard are of Japanese
ancestry. Given the situation, I'd say Takamora has built himself a private
army right under our noses."
"Have you
been working on some options in case they do try to pull this off?" The
President's cool blue eyes scanned the
room, waiting for responses.
"Well,"
Admiral Morrison started after a pause, "we have the carrier Kitty Hawk
and the amphibious assault ship Inchon on station, well within striking
distance of Hawaii. Pearl Harbor is on full alert, although they're bottled up
per your order. If Ohnishi tries to take the islands by force, we can just as
easily take them back again. His mobs and guard troops can't stand up to what
we can throw at them."
"Ordering our
troops to fire on American citizens is not an option." Anguish etched the
President's handsome features. "Goddamn it. I control the best trained and
best equipped fighting machine ever built and it's fucking useless to me."
The men seated
around the office watched the President's pain stoically, each man thankful
that they did not sit behind that desk.
Admiral Morrison
cleared his throat again. "A precise surgical air strike against Ohnishi's
house would neutralize the problem. Cut off the head and the snake dies, so to
speak."
"How do I
explain that to the people of Hawaii? They revere him. Christ, he donates
something like twenty million dollars a year to Hawaiian charities. If we
killed him, we'd touch off a grassroots revolution."
"What about a
commando raid of some sort?" Paul Barnes suggested. "And then tell
the people about the Russian involvement. Make a clean breast of it and put
Ohnishi on trial."
Henna gave the
answer to that. "Our intelligence reports Ohnishi's house is heavily
guarded. A raid would turn into a pitched battle. The furor over something like
that would be ten times worse than the Waco fiasco back in 1993. I doubt the
administration could survive, given the current polls. No offense, sir."
"None
taken," the President said gloomily.
For the next hour,
the men in the Oval Office batted around ideas, but each option they debated
was rejected.
All of them ended
with the same result, the end of the administration.
"Maybe that is the only way," the President mused.
The intercom
buzzed and Joy Craig announced that Mercer had finally arrived, with a guest.
When Mercer
introduced the stooped Dr. Abraham Jacobs, the President shot a brutal glare at
Barnes, and Henna laughed delightedly.
"Dr. Mercer,
when your contract's up at the USGS, the FBI would love to have you."
"I just can't
see myself as one of your fair-haired boys, Mr. Henna. I don't take orders very
well."
"Dr. Jacobs,
have you been told anything?" the President interrupted.
Jacobs, still a
little stunned by the men in the room, merely nodded.
Seeing his old
teacher's discomfort, Mercer came to the rescue. ''I told him that he was
needed here because of the paper he presented to the CIA a few years ago."
"Yes, that is
correct." Jacobs had found his voice, but sweat still gleamed on his wide
bald head.
"Would you
care to elaborate on that paper?" the President prompted.
After a preamble
of coughs, throat clearing, and mumbles, Jacobs began. "Eight years ago, I
was invited by the White Sands Testing Center to do some analysis on mineral
samples from their 1946 Bikini tests. The samples had lain neglected in an old
storage shed that was being demolished, so the White Sands people contacted a
number of independent researchers across the country. They had something like
eighteen thousand mineral samples in that shed, dating back to the early
1940s." Jacobs's voice was now sure and firm, confident of his subject.
''Of the groups of
samples I agreed to assay for them, one was a collection of rocks, about twelve
pounds worth, recovered from the seafloor around Bikini Atoll after the second
test, the one where the bomb was detonated underwater. After some initial work,
my interest was piqued and I requested all the data from the original tests
conducted on soil, rock, and water samples collected from Bikini in 1946. For
the next few months I researched twelve thousand pages of documents.
"After this,
I realized only one small sample had any potential value, a two-pound chunk of
rock taken directly from the epicenter of the explosion. It had been a ballast
stone from the LSM-60, the ship under which the bomb was suspended. It was
truly a miracle that the rock wasn't atomized by the blast. Or so I
thought."
That phrase made
the men in the room lean a little further forward in their seats.
"The ballast
rock consisted mostly of vanadium ore, a surprising fact since vanadium is
mainly found in North and South America and in parts of Africa. How it got to
be ballast on a ship in the Pacific is one of those bizarre quirks of war, I
suppose.
"Anyway, for
those who don't know, vanadium is used to strengthen steel for use in precision
machine tools and other high-stress jobs, so it is very tough. That might have
explained why it hadn't vaporized, but it didn't seem likely. I crushed the
sample and ran it through a spectrometer to see what other elements occurred in
the rock.
"The standard
stuff, like mica, I discounted, but I found something interesting. Bonded to
the vanadium were traces of a metal alloy. At first, I thought the metal was
pure vanadium, extracted from the ore because of the heat of the explosion. But
when I tested my theory, I found I couldn't have been more wrong.
"The metal
was something completely new. Something I couldn't explain. I crushed the rest
of the samples given to me by White Sands and found even more of this new
metal, about twenty grams in all. Not very much, but enough to continue my
research.
"Have any of
you gentlemen ever heard of invar?"
Mercer was the
only person in the room not to reply with
a blank stare. "Yes, it's an alloy of thirty-six percent nickel, traces of
manganese, silicon, and carbon, and the rest is iron."
''A-plus to my
star student. It was developed by Nobel Prize-winner Charles Guillaume. Its
principle characteristic is a minimal heat expansion, about seven
ten-millionths of an inch per degree Fahrenheit of temperature increase. The
incredible temperature of the blast, one hundred thousand degrees or more made
me think of invar during my tests, and I wondered if the two metals had similar
properties. I heated my samples. At seven thousand degrees the metal didn't expand
at all, and at twelve thousand the change was measured in angstroms."
The technical
language was beginning to lose Jacobs's audience, but he seemed not to notice.
''I continued
applying heat, but I never could find the metal's melting point."
Mercer had a sly
smile on his face; he thought he knew where the scientist's discussion was
heading. Yet his expression changed to one of astonishment when Jacobs made his
next revelation.
''My next test was
with electricity. I ran one millijoule of electricity through the sample and
created an unidirectional magnetic field of about six thousand gauss."
"Jesus,"
Mercer exclaimed.
"I don't
understand." The President voiced the incomprehension on everyone's face.
''Mr. President,
had I been wearing a steel watch, that magnetic field would have stripped it
from my wrist at a distance of ten feet." Now everyone looked astonished.
"After that
experiment, I reconfigured the sample so it would create a closed loop field
and then I put the power to it, so to speak. I was able to sustain a field of
eighty million kilogauss for seventeen seconds before an equipment short shut
me down."
"The
equipment failed, not the sample," said Mercer, again the only one to grasp Jacobs' dissertation.
"Heat buildup
melted the conductor wires despite the liquid oxygen cooling, but I hadn't
reached the magnetic saturation or Curie points of the sample. The Curie point
is where heat arrests magnetism. The Curie point of cobalt is around sixteen
hundred degrees centigrade, the highest known until my work. My experiment
failed when the wires melted, at about seven thousand degrees centigrade. At
the time, the magnetic pressure within the field was in the neighborhood of
forty thousand tons per square inch.
"You must
remember that this really wasn't my area of expertise, so I didn't have the
proper equipment to continue experimenting, but I'm sure that this new element
could generate a strong enough field to create a magnetic well."
"A magnetic well?"
"It's
something like a black hole, but using magnetism rather than gravity. The field
within the well is strong enough to bend light, and time would slow as you
neared its event horizon."
"Are you
saying that this stuff can be used to make some sort of time machine?''
''Eventually, yes,
Admiral Morrison, though it would take years to develop that. But bikinium has
many applications in the here and now. When I discovered its strategic
importance I immediately contacted the government. I'd done some consulting for
the Pentagon, so I turned over my findings to the same people I'd dealt with
before. A few months later I was told to drop the whole thing and have barely
thought about it since then."
"Bikinium?"
"That is what
I called the new metal. I considered naming it after myself, but calling it
jacobinium just sounded too ridiculous." Jacobs smiled at his little joke.
"What are
some of those uses?" the President prompted.
"Mr.
President, the metal I have just described has more uses in defense, aerospace, and power production than I could
possibly name."
"I don't
understand."
"The greatest
challenges currently facing many leading high-tech corporations are the
limitations placed upon them by the materials with which they work. They have
the ideas and techniques to produce wondrous inventions. Unfortunately, they
have nothing to build them with. Technological leaps must wait for materials to
catch up.
''Think about the
weight savings in automobiles when ceramic engines become a reality. These
engines have already been designed, yet the ceramic itself cannot meet the
strength requirements for internal combustion. Do you understand?"
"I think
so."
"I'll give
you some of bikinium's more exotic applications to existing ideas: thermal and
magnetic containment for fusion reactors, a way to channel nuclear blasts for
propulsion of deep-space vehicles, desktop supercolliders, endless charge
electric cars or supersonic mag-lev trains that don't need superconductivity.
Anything that uses magnetic power or is limited by thermal friction could be
made thousands of times more efficient."
"I see your
point."
"I've saved
the best for last, Mr. President" Jacobs's dark eyes shone with feverish
excitement. "The free lunch."
"Excuse
me."
"It's a term
used by physicists to describe a system that creates more energy than it
requires. Einsteinian theory says that it's impossible due to conservation of
mass and energy, but man has been searching for one anyway. Sort of a
physicist's Holy Grail."
"A modern
power-producing plant burns coal or oil or splits atoms to release the energy
stored within, correct?"
The men in the
room nodded attentively.
"Bikinium, used
in the dynamos of an electric generator, would create a much stronger
electrical field than the amount of power put into it."
"I'm sorry,
you've lost me again."
"An electric
motor and an electric generator are basically the same machine. Add electricity
to a motor and it spins around. Add spin to a generator and it creates
electricity. Each machine transforms energy from mechanical to electrical or
vice versa."
"Yes."
"Because of
bikinium's abnormal magnetic properties, during that transformation more energy
would be released than was first introduced."
"You're
neglecting the energy put into the system by the initial nuclear blast,"
Mercer pointed out. "In fact, you would still remain within the laws of
the conservation of mass and energy."
"Don't be a
smart ass," Abe chided as if they were back in the classroom.
Dick Henna put
into words what the rest of the men in the room were thinking.
"Dr. Jacobs,
you're describing an unlimited power source."
"Yes, that's
right." Jacobs looked smug.
"Dr.
Jacobs," the President's tone was respectful, "how would you go about
creating bikinium in useful amounts?"
"Well, to
answer that, you have to know how bikinium was formed in the first place and
even my findings are only theory. I researched all the mineral samples taken
from nuclear detonations in New Mexico, going back to the original Los Alamos
test, and found no trace of it, so the effect must have something to do with
water, that much I am certain. I began to search for other dissimilarities
between the land tests and the one conducted underwater.
"I found no
traces of vanadium ore at any test site other than the 1946 Bikini test. I
could conclude that the vanadium must act as
a catalyst or possibly a host in the formation of this new metal. Furthermore,
it is known that the neutrons released after a nuclear blast can be absorbed by
any sodium in the area. It is my belief that all of the neutrons from the
Bikini test were absorbed by the sodium in the surrounding seawater.
"Another
dissimilarity between the two is the period of cooling. The seawater at Bikini
cooled the test site much faster than those tests conducted on land. There is a
strong possibility that rapid cooling also aids in the formation of bikinium. I
also theorize that pressure may be a factor in its creation. Of course, there
is no way to test any of my assumptions.
"But to
create it again, I would detonate an atomic bomb in the seas near a vanadium
deposit."
"Abe,"
Mercer turned to Jacobs, "is there anyone who might have stumbled onto
this before you?"
"No one at
all," Jacobs replied with confidence. "Though there were some ore
samples missing from White Sands, I don't think anyone in the world could have come
up with this."
''Are you sure?''
Mercer persisted.
"Yes, quite.
Only the Soviet Union and China have done the kind of test we conducted at
Bikini. The Chinese don't have scientists of high enough caliber to find
bikinium, and the only one in the Soviet Union that I've heard about testing
exotic metals like this died years ago."
"When?"
Mercer snapped.
"In the
1960s, I believe. He had published some brilliant articles about the changes in
metals after nuclear tests, but his work centered mostly on the effects on the
armor of tanks and ships. His name was Borodin, Pytor Borodin."
"Oh,
Jesus," Mercer moaned. "Do we have those photos yet from the spy
plane?"
Paul Barnes slid
the 8 X 10s from a thin envelope and placed them on the President's desk. Their
colors were phantasmagorical: fuchsia, teal,
blinding white, indigo blue, vibrant yellow. They created a concentric pattern
on the photos, each color ringing another so that the image looked like a
distorted bull's-eye. At the bottom of each photograph was printed the time,
location, and altitude of each shot. Mercer couldn't help but notice the shots
were taken above one hundred and fifty thousand feet, miles above the earth's
atmosphere. He was very impressed with the new SR-1 Wraith.
He wondered idly,
as he waited his turn to closely study the photos, why all the men crowded
around the desk to see them. Apart from Barnes, he doubted any of them had ever
seen an infrared photo of this type. He passed it off as the same kind of
curiosity that caused people to stare into construction pits.
Mercer looked at
the near identical photos until his eyes found the one he wanted. Longitude and
latitude lines had been etched onto the film by the computer that controlled
the camera.
Mercer muttered something under his breath. "What was
that?"
"The Bangkok
Accords," his voice barely a whisper in the quiet room. "I said, the
Bangkok Accords."
"What is. .
."
"Meetings
taking place right now that may just give away the greatest discovery of this
or any century," Mercer said, anticipating the question. "Abe, did
this Dr. Borodin have any children?"
"I can't see
how that—"
"Answer me,
goddamn it." The vehemence in Mercer's voice made Jacobs pale. "Yes,
one son."
"We've been
had." Mercer leaned away from the photographs, his eyes betraying respect
for the master of the plan.
"What do you
mean?"
"Dr. Borodin
is alive and well, gentlemen, and he beat us to the punch by forty years."
Mercer spoke slowly as his brain began unraveling the
four-decade-old mystery. "Bear with me for a few minutes.
"Let's assume
that this Borodin somehow discovers the existence of bikinium back in the early
fifties and wants to create his own. He persuades the Russians to give him an
atomic bomb. Remember, those things were in short supply back then, so his
project must have gotten a high priority.
"Then he
fills an ore carrier with high-grade vanadium ore, sails her to a predetermined
location near volcanic activity, and sinks her, along with the bomb. Once she
settles on the ocean floor he touches off the nuke. Later, he fakes his own
death, so there wouldn't ever be any connection to him."
"Is there any
record of a lost ore carrier?" Abe asked.
"Grandam
Phoenix, missing since
May 23, 1954," Mercer replied sharply. "She was listed as running
ballast from Kobe, Japan, to the States, but Christ only knew what she
carried."
Mercer's voice
trailed off, his eyes glazed for a second and then snapped back into focus. His
voice was firm, commanding. "I need a phone, now."
In a moment that
Mercer would remember for the rest of his life, the President of the United
States obeyed and handed him the receiver to one of the telephones on his desk.
Mercer gave the White House operator a number and waited patiently for the
connection, oblivious of the stares.
"Berkowitz,
Saulman. . ."
Mercer cut off the
secretary. "Skip it, give me Dave Saulman right away; this is an
emergency."
The secretary was used to emergencies in the uncontrollable world
of ocean commerce and cut in on Saulman while he was on another line.
"Saulman
here," the old lawyer answered quickly.
"Dave, it's
Mercer."
"Oh, you
finally have an answer for me?"
Mercer knew that
Saulman was asking about the trivia question
at the bottom of the faxes he had received two days earlier. Without thinking,
Mercer replied, "The captain of the Amoco Cadiz was Pasquale
Bardari."
"You son of a
bitch."
"Dave, I need
to know who owned the Grandam Phoenix."
"Never heard
of her."
"She was on
the list you sent me of the vessels that disappeared north of Hawaii."
"Oh,
right." Recognition lightened Saulman's voice. "Might take me a couple
days to find. I'm swamped in work right now on a towing contract for an Exxon
tanker that's drifting off Namibia. The fucking Dutch tugs are holding out for.
Lloyd's Open and the value of that tanker and cargo is somewhere around one
hundred and thirty million dollars."
"Not to name drop," Mercer said with a fiendish smile,
"but I'm sitting with the President, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs, and
the heads of the FBI and CIA, and we're all waiting for your answer."
There was a
moment's silence from the other end of the phone. Mercer marveled that there
was no static on the President's phone line. Must be nice, he thought.
"You're not
kidding, are you?"
"Want to talk
to one of them?"
"No. It'll
take a few minutes to get the info. Do you want me to call back?"
"I don't
think AT&T cares how long the President is on the phone, I'll hold."
"What's this
all about?" the President asked, not really caring that Mercer was now
sitting on the corner of his desk.
"Conclusive
evidence," replied Mercer enigmatically.
The President
exchanged glances with the men around the room, but none of them spoke. They
waited five long minutes, clearing throats, shuffling feet, and rattling
papers, but their gaze never left Mercer.
"I've got
it." Saulman was breathless. "The Grandam Phoenix was owned by
Ocean Freight and Cargo." Saulman continued to speak, but Mercer was
already hanging up the phone.
"The ore
carrier that sank in 1954 and the ship that rescued Tish Talbot have the same
owners, Ocean Freight and Cargo, the same company I broke into last
night."
"The ones
suspected of being a front for the KGB?"
"Right."
"You said
something about the ore carrier being sunk over a volcanic area, why?"
Henna asked.
"Correct me
if I'm wrong, Abe, but the deeper the explosion and the more water pressure,
the purer the bikinium."
Abe Jacobs nodded,
then added, "That's just my theory, though."
"Well, in
1954, there was no way to mine any minerals from even a few hundred feet
underwater and we're talking depths in the thousands. Even today, the Frasch
process of using superheated water for mining can't work any deeper than two
hundred feet.
"Dr. Borodin
borrowed a line from the Koran and, like Muhammad, had the mountain come to
him. By setting off the blast over a volcanic area, he would trigger an
eruption, and the lava would transport the bikinium to the surface."
"Jesus, that
would work," Jacobs said, respect lowering his voice. "I never would
have even considered it."
"But
volcanoes take millions of years to grow," the President pointed out.
"Normal
geologic processes are that slow," Mercer agreed. "But volcanoes,
like earthquakes, are very dynamic. A volcano in Paricutin, Mexico, grew out of
a farmer's field beginning in the summer of 1943. After the first week, the
field was a five-hundred-foot-tall mountain and growing by the second.
Borodin's volcano
has had more than enough time
to reach the surface."
"What do we
do now?" The President locked eyes with each man in the room.
"The first
step is to stop the Bangkok Accords," Mercer replied.
"What does
that have—"
"Mr. Henna,
if you look at this photo, you'll see that the center of Borodin's volcano lies
directly atop Hawaii's two-hundred-mile limit. I'm willing to bet that
Borodin's there now, studying the epicenter of the volcano. As soon as he knows
it'll surface outside that limit, he'll contact the Russian ambassador at the
meeting in Thailand and have him sign the treaty."
"That would
make the volcano anyone's property, right?" Admiral Morrison asked.
"The first
one to spot it, gets it."
"What happens
if the volcano is within that line?"
No one had an
answer for Dr. Jacobs. Actually they all knew the answer, but no one was brave
enough to put it into words. Mercer looked at the doctor and saw that his old
teacher had asked the question because he really didn't know.
"Then we go
to war, Abe."
As soon as the
word was said everyone in the room started speaking at once, clamoring to be
heard. The President snapped them to silence by slapping his palm against his
desk, though when he spoke, his voice was calm.
"Dr. Mercer
is right. We can't allow such a priceless commodity to belong to anyone but the
United States. Now that we know the stakes, Takahiro Ohnishi's threats take on
a much more ominous dimension. We now know why he's doing it. If the volcano
does crest within Hawaii's two-hundred-mile limit, and his coup is successful,
he can sell off possibly the most valuable commodity on earth. I just can't
believe that the Soviets are still mixed up in this. Our relations with them
have never been better."
Mercer noted the
President was now calling the old foe by their old name. No longer were they
the Commonwealth of Independent States. Once again they were the Soviets.
"Paul, use
everything at your disposal to find out about Pytor Borodin—who he used to work
for before he disappeared, and what happened to his old bosses. Dick, keep
digging at Ohnishi. I want to know why he turned traitor."
"I've got
something on that already." Henna fumbled through his briefcase. "Ah,
here it is. Both his parents were born in Japan and immigrated to the States in
the 1930s. During the Second World War they were sent to one of the interment
camps in California, and both died there, his mother on June 13, 1942, and his
father just six months afterward. Ohnishi was raised by an aunt and uncle who
also spent the war in the camps. His uncle was on file at the bureau for
anti-American protests and petitions. He had two arrests: one for trying to
break into Pearl Harbor and the other for assaulting a police officer at a
pro-Japanese rally in Hawaii during the summer of 1958. Seems he didn't like
the idea of statehood.
"I saw a copy
of one of the pamphlets he printed. It's full of anti-American propaganda and
urged Hawaii's Japanese residents, then and now the majority on the islands, to
fight the statehood referendum and become an independent nation loyal to Japan.
"Ohnishi's
uncle committed suicide right after Hawaii was admitted into the Union in March
of 1959. There is no record that Ohnishi shared his uncle's radical politics,
but there's no record that he didn't, either." Henna looked up from his
notes.
"Thanks,
Dick. I think that's our answer." Knowing the answer did not alleviate the
problem. The President straightened his shoulders and when he spoke his voice
was like steel. "I don't know what Ohnishi's next move will be, but I want
a detailed battle plan drawn up, not only for Hawaii but also for this new
volcano. I don't
know what legal right, if
any, we will have to this new island, but there's no way we're not going to
win. If need be, I'll have the goddamn thing nuked. Now, if you gentlemen will
excuse me, I have to call our diplomats in Bangkok and stop them from signing
that treaty." The men got up to leave. "I want hourly reports from
all of you. Dr. Mercer, please make yourself available in case you're needed
again. Dr. Jacobs, thank you. We'll see that you have a safe trip home."
Mercer said
farewell to Jacobs, gave his home number to Joy Craig, and collected Tish. On
the cab ride home, she pumped him for information, but Mercer remained silent.
He wondered, as the cityscape passed outside the cab's filthy windows, how the
President would react if he knew that his wife had just spent the afternoon
with a Russian spy.
__________
__________
__________
JAL Flight 217, a 747 jumbo jet from Tokyo, was the last plane
given permission to land at Honolulu's international airport. Employees loyal
to Ohnishi and Takamora had followed their instructions and sabotaged the IFR
equipment and the computers that controlled the other sophisticated systems.
Only those planes without enough fuel to be rerouted were allowed to land.
Hawaii was now completely isolated from the outside world.
Flight 217 touched
down with an acrid puff of smoke and a bark of tires. Because of the danger in
landing without electronic assistance from the tower, the pilot gave himself
plenty of room to make sure the craft returned to earth safely. The Pratt and
Whitney turbo fans shrieked as the pilot applied reverse thrust, the tremendous
airframe shuddering with their awesome power.
The three hundred
and sixty passengers had no idea of the danger they had just been through.
Those controlling the airport had ordered the pilot to keep his charges ignorant of any problems during
the landing, in direct violation of standard safety practices.
"Welcome to
Honolulu, ladies and gentlemen," the flight attendant said in Japanese.
"The temperature is seventy-eight degrees and the local time is one-thirty
on a cloudless afternoon. Please remain seated until the aircraft has come to a
complete stop and the pilot has turned off the seatbelt sign."
Evad Lurbud had
absolutely no idea what the diminutive attendant said until she repeated her
announcement in English.
He was the only
Westerner on the jumbo jet; the rest were Japanese tourists or businessmen,
lured to the islands by the increased trade promoted by Ohnishi and Takamora
during the past months.
Though Lurbud had
flown across eleven time zones since leaving Egypt and had endured hours'-long
layovers, one in Hong Kong and the other in Tokyo, he felt relaxed and
refreshed. This last flight had lasted nearly seven hours and he had slept
through six and a half Of them. Before each leg of his trip, he had taken a
timed sleeping pill developed by the KGB. By calibrating the doses, he could
sleep a specific number of hours. The only drawback to the medication was a
slight nausea, which lasted about an hour after waking.
The 747, so
graceful in the sky, lumbered to the terminal like a hippopotamus, her huge
wings flexing with each bump in the tarmac. Lurbud remained seated and buckled
as requested rather than draw attention to himself by standing as several
hurried businessmen had done. The aircraft taxied to its hardstand, the huge
engines spooling down to silence. The truck-mounted stairs eased to the exits
and passengers began shuffling off the Boeing.
Deplaning, Lurbud
was staggered by the amount of security within the airport's customs area.
Armed National Guard troops, all Orientals he noted, patrolled the area, their M-16 assault rifles slung low,
their eyes never lingering on one person too long.
At the customs
counter, the bored agent gave Lurbud's forged German passport a cursory glance
and didn't bother with his briefcase. Lurbud relaxed once he passed customs,
but became wary when two suited Orientals strode toward him through the throng
of passengers.
"Passport,
please," one of the two men demanded, his hand thrust out waiting for the
slim booklet.
"I'm already
cleared by customs," Lurbud replied politely, staining his flawless
English with a German accent.
The other Oriental
flashed a silver badge in a cheap vinyl covering. "Airport security. Your
passport."
Lurbud fished it
from inside his suit coat and handed it over. "What's this all
about?"
"Routine, Mr.
Schmidt," one agent said, reading through the passport. "Would you
come with us?"
Lurbud followed
the two security men through a set of double doors and down a well-lit flight
of stairs. They passed a couple of airport employees plodding upward as Lurbud
and his two minders made their way down. At the base of the stairs they turned
down a long hallway to the last doorway on the left.
As he stepped over
the threshold, Lurbud’s instincts told him that this was an interrogation room
and his being here was far from routine. In the stark room, two chairs stood
behind a Unitarian trestle table, with a third chair set in the center of the
neutral beige carpet. The room smelled of stale cigarettes and fear.
The moment the
door closed, one of the men shoved Lurbud, propelling him across the room. He
exaggerated his momentum and slammed himself against the far wall, sliding to
the floor with a moan.
One of the
security agents walked over to Lurbud, probably intending to throw him into the
chair and begin the formal interrogation of this Gai-Jin, foreigner. The instant the man's hand touched Lurbud's
shoulder, the Russian uncoiled himself from the floor, clutching an
undetectable Teflon knife in his fist. He buried the knife between the
Oriental's ribs, piercing his heart.
Lurbud pulled the
knife from the dying man's chest, ignoring the fountain of blood that pumped
from the obscene wound, and dove across the room.
The other agent
was just going for his shoulder-holstered pistol when Lurbud reached him. The
impetus of Lurbud's charge threw them both against the table, the Russian's
body pinning the other man. Lurbud raised the knife over his head and stabbed
down viciously, slicing into skin and cartilage, severing the carotid artery of
the shocked security man.
The man died hard,
gasping and choking and clutching at his punctured throat. His writhing body
smeared blood across the table and onto the carpet and white walls.
After the man had
stilled, Lurbud cleaned his knife against his victim's suit and stashed it back
in its ankle sheath. He checked himself quickly. A few red splashes of blood
were invisible against the dark tropical wool of his suit. He opened the door
and, seeing that the hall was empty, made his escape. At the opposite end of
the hall Lurbud reentered the public part of the airport just off the main
concourse.
Outside, he passed
banks of beautiful tropical flowers and ponds loaded with huge goldfish. He
hailed a cab and gave the driver an address in downtown Honolulu, confident
that he wouldn't be followed.
Ten minutes into
the cab ride his hands began to quiver and his stomach knotted up. He wished he
could pass it off as a reaction to the sleeping pill he'd taken during the
flight, but knew in his heart that his close brush with the authorities had
shaken him. He'd been living on adrenaline his entire adult life and, like any
addict, his drug of choice was beginning to wear him away.
At the Cairo
airport, Lurbud had been given a sealed envelope by an embassy courier. It had
contained a briefing from Ivan Kerikov. The top sheet had outlined the current
situation in Hawaii, so Lurbud knew that Honolulu was under martial law, with a
strictly enforced eight pm curfew.
It had been a calculated risk bringing the packet into the state, but there was
too much information to memorize. He read through some of it in the taxi to
distract himself from the disturbing cityscape outside the Ford's windows. The
envelope contained Lurbud's final orders, names of the critical, targets,
opposition strength, and codes for contacting the John Dory. Lurbud
assumed that Kerikov had an agent in place near Ohnishi because the orders
contained a detailed map of Ohnishi's house, and also stated that Mayor James
Takamora was already dead. Yet the KGB master made no provisions for sparing
his agent's life. Lurbud furtively wondered if he too would be considered a
loose end after Ohnishi and the mole had been eliminated.
Although it was
just midafternoon, the city seemed nearly deserted. Only groups of National
Guard troops and armed cadres of students wandered the streets. The citizens
were hidden in their homes, fearful or expectant, depending on their loyalty.
The scene outside the cab's windows reminded Lurbud of the time he'd spent in
war-ravaged Beirut, where religion-intoxicated youths systematically ripped the
Mediterranean's most beautiful city into minute strips of terror.
Columns of smoke lifted
from numerous fires to mingle in a murky haze over the city. The rocky outcrop
of Diamond Head was invisible in the gloom. Near the commercial port, thick
black smoke belched from two burning oil storage tanks, their noxious fumes
reaching Lurbud's cab many miles away. Buildings had been riddled with
small-arms fire and the cab passed numerous husks of burned-out cars and buses.
The area over Pearl Harbor resembled a bee's nest, angry helicopters buzzing in frenzied flight as federal and National
Guard choppers performed a dizzying Danse Macabre.
After the uneasy
forty-minute drive, Lurbud paid off the driver and left the taxi in one of
Honolulu's worst neighborhoods. His destination was a flat-fronted, three-story
edifice with a liquor store on the ground floor and apartments on the other
two. The building had been bought by Department 7 when they had brought
Takahiro Ohnishi into. Vulcan's Forge in case they ever needed a safehouse to
monitor the local situation. This was the first time that members of the
operation had ever used the building.
Lurbud surveyed
the decayed neighborhood, the vacant, rubble strewn lots, the peeling paint,
the empty looks in the eyes of few passersby, and knew that this location had
never been compromised. In the humid air, his jacket was already beginning to
stick to his body.
On the top floor,
he knocked twice on the stout metal door at the head of the stairs, paused,
then knocked once more.
"Yes?" a
voice called from within.
''United Parcel Service,
I have a package for Charles Haines," Lurbud replied, beginning a
recognition code he'd learned from Kerikov's packet.
"Who's it
from?" The voice behind the door responded suspiciously.
"Kyle
Leblanc," Lurbud finished the code, and the bolts were thrown open.
The man who'd
opened the door kept his automatic pistol in view as Lurbud entered the
safehouse. Only after Sergeant Dimitri Demanov spoke from across the vast room
did he reholster it. ''So, what have you been doing since you can no longer
rape boys with heated pokers?" Demanov was referring to one of Lurbud's
more effective interrogation techniques from his time working for Kerikov in
Afghanistan.
"Cutting off
the testicles of disrespectful sergeants," Lurbud retorted. The two men
crashed together in the center of the room
like sea lions, pounding each other's backs in reunion.
"How have you
been, Dimitri?" Lurbud asked, smiling for the first time since killing
Suleiman.
"Bored in
Minsk until I got a call to meet you here," replied Demanov, kissing
Lurbud in the traditional Russian way. "It is good to see you again,
Evad."
"And you too,
old friend."
Lurbud and Demanov
had fought side by side in Afghanistan. They had shared more freezing nights
and narrow escapes than either could remember.
Demanov had stayed
in the field after Lurbud's promotion and ended the war as the Soviet Union's
third most decorated soldier. Since that time, he had gone on to be an
instructor of the Spetnez, Russia's special forces, but had recently retired to
a deteriorating existence. The stout, grizzled sergeant was a warrior in the
truest sense of the word.
The safe room took
up the entire top floor of the building and was designed to be used as a
hideout for several weeks if necessary. There were beds for a dozen people. The
kitchen shelves were crammed with canned food. Several huge drums were filled
with water in case the building's supply was ever cut off. Light streamed
through the multiple windows, but was diffused by the layers of caked dust that
made it impossible to see into the room from the street.
''I trust everyone
got past customs without incident?'' Lurbud asked.
"There were
no problems, we all arrived before the airport was shut down," Demanov
responded.
Lurbud took a
moment to scrutinize the troops Demanov had brought with him. They were all
former Spetnez, men more loyal to Demanov than to their Motherland. Without
exception, they were the finest trained commandos the Russian army had ever
produced—their instruction went much further than Gregory Brezhnicov's KGB
guards in New York, who had been murdered the
day before by an unknown assailant. None of the men were especially large or
hulking, but there was an air of competence about them which was chilling.
Their minds and bodies had been sharpened to a rapier's edge by endless
training and actual combat experience.
Though they never
admitted it, both the United States and Russia "lent" some of their
Special Forces troops to various war-ravaged nations so the men could gain
practical understanding of battlefield operations. It wouldn't shock Lurbud to
learn that these men had faced an American Ranger battalion on the hills above
Sarajevo just a few years earlier.
"How did you
assemble such a large force so quickly?"
"Army pay
isn't what it used to be, Evad. As you know, the country's full of out of work
soldiers. Finding commandos in Russia is easier than finding syphilis in a
whorehouse."
"Did you have
time to brief them in Minsk?"
"I told them
that they would be fighting with you. That was all they needed to hear."
"Do you have
any doubts about them, Dimitri?"
Demanov lit a
cigarette and enjoyed the first few drags before answering. "In my career,
I've trained Egyptians to fight Israelis, Angolans to fight South Africans,
Nicaraguans to fight Salvadorans, and a dozen other groups to fight another
dozen. I knew from the beginning that I was training a surrogate Russian army
to fight a surrogate American one. Each time, I'd run across an American or
two, 'advisors,' toting the most sophisticated weapons in their arsenal. But
those contacts were fleeting. Just once I want to face the Americans in an open
fight and prove once and for all who's been pumped full of propaganda and who
is the best. Now that I'm finally getting my chance, I can't think of a better
group of men to back me up—and that includes you, sir."
Lurbud was
impressed with Demanov's speech and his old friend's conviction. "It seems
that since the last time I saw you, you've become a philosopher."
"I haven't
met a soldier who wasn't one," Demanov said seriously. "So why is it
that the shadowy Kerikov has paid us so handsomely to be here?"
"What were
you told by him?"
"That he
needed a trained commando team ready to fight in the United States as the last
part of a very old operation."
"Yes and
no," Lurbud said, taking a seat on one of the cots. "You are needed,
but your presence here is a deviation from a very old operation. The current
unrest on the islands is a direct result of Department Seven's most ambitious
plan, one which almost worked. Hawaii would have become a Soviet puppet if
things had gone according to plan. We're here to mop up and cut our losses."
Demanov could not
hide his astonishment. "I don't understand, Evad."
"Several
months ago, Department Seven approached a very wealthy and eccentric local
billionaire named Takahiro Ohnishi and asked him to assist us in an operation
called Vulcan's Forge. In return for his help, Kerikov promised to use Russian
resources to back a coup attempt that would split Hawaii away from the rest of
the United States. Of course Kerikov never planned to aid Ohnishi in any way,
but his involvement was necessary. Two different options had to be left open
until certain scientific data was obtained concerning a volcanic island forming
north of here. Now that we have this information the coup is no longer
necessary and neither, is Ohnishi. Unfortunately, Ohnishi has already started
his rebellion. He must be stopped."
"That's where
we come in," Demanov interrupted.
"Yes. We're
here to eliminate Ohnishi. For now we wait until Kerikov gets in touch. There
is another aspect of this mission I didn't tell you about, a submarine
monitoring the volcano to the north. Kerikov is waiting for word from them
before we put our plan into action." He lied to his friend. In fact, the John
Dory was waiting for word from him. "I'm sorry to disappoint you,
Dimitri, but you won't get the chance to take on the American army, only the
guards around Ohnishi's mansion."
"They're
still Americans, Evad. It'll be close enough."
__________
__________
__________
As soon as Tish entered the rec room of Mercer's house, she threw
herself onto the leather couch with an exhausted sigh.
"You didn't
talk much on the way back from the White House," she said, not looking at
Mercer. "You must be exhausted. I've been asleep for most of the day, but
you haven't slept in thirty-six hours.
"Closer to
forty," replied Mercer from behind the bar. He was making a pot of his
barely potable coffee. "Want some coffee?"
"Are you
crazy?" Tish sat up and looked at him. "Go to bed; you're dead on
your feet."
Mercer let the
coffeemaker drip directly into a mug before sliding the glass pot under the
nozzle. He was about to take a sip, thought for a moment, then poured a dram of
Scotch into the cup. The first taste was sublime.
"I'm afraid
it'll be a while before I sleep. We have to talk."
The tone of
Mercer's voice made Tish swing her long legs from the couch and stand up. She
crossed to the bar and took one of the six dark cane stools. "Is something
wrong?"
"Tell me
about Valery Borodin," Mercer invited nonchalantly.
"I don't know
any . . ." He saw that Tish was flustered by the question.
"Tish, right
now I could have you detained by the FBI for your involvement in this plot. I
haven't because you're Jack Talbot's daughter, but I'm not taking bets on how
long I remain silent."
"Tell me
first how you know about Valery?"
"I spoke with
Dr. Baker at Woods Hole."
"I remember
that old busybody from Mozambique. She wanted to be everyone's den mother.
Figures she would talk." Tish settled down and turned her deep blue eyes
to Mercer. "What do you want to know?"
"Let me make
some assumptions first. You know he was a geologist, not a marine biologist,
and that he was in Mozambique for a vacation, right?"
"Yes. He swore me to secrecy about
that, though. He told me he would be starting a new project soon and that his
superiors had allowed him some time off before his reassignment."
"Did he tell
you who his father is?"
Tish was startled
by Mercer's unsettling question. "Not at first."
"Did he
mention that his father had faked his own death when Valery was a boy?"
"How do you
know about that?"
Mercer wasn't
about to admit that he'd been guessing about Valery's candor with Tish so he
covered his relief with a gruff reply. "I can't tell you that, just answer
my questions."
"Valery told
me that his father had supposedly died in a lab explosion when he was still a
baby. Then, about a month before we met, Valery's father reentered his life, acting as if all those years had never
passed.
"His father
was also a brilliant geologist, like Val, and needed his son's help on some
secret government project. Valery both hated his father for vanishing and loved
him for returning; he was hurting bad. He would cry some nights until I thought
his heart would break. He was so alone and vulnerable."
"What else
did he tell you about his father or his upcoming project?"
"Not much,
really. He said they would be working together, he and his father, and that he
was excited and frightened."
"Did he tell
you he planned to leave Russia?"
Mercer's question
made Tish blanch. "How did you . . ."
"Did he tell
you?"
"Yes, but he
couldn't do it until the project with his father was completed."
Mercer rubbed his
knuckles into his eyes, trying to push away the sleep which threatened to
overwhelm him. He poured another cup of strong coffee, this time omitting the
Scotch.
"Tell me what
really happened the night the Ocean Seeker exploded."
Tish said, acting
confused, "I already told you about it."
Fury edged
Mercer's voice. "Let me put some things into perspective here, Tish, so
you know where I'm coming from, okay?"
She had never
experienced such naked anger in her life. Mercer's voice, though not raised,
drilled into her, forcing her back in her bar stool.
"Your
boyfriend and his father are the architects of a plot that could tear apart the
very fabric of this country. It started in May of 1954 when Pytor Borodin
detonated a nuclear device, triggering a volcanic chain reaction that created a
new metal whose value is incalculable. Since that
time, he's ruthlessly murdered everyone who came close to discovering his
secret.
"Do you
remember the list of ships that Dave Saulman sent me from Miami?"
Tish looked like
she was going to be ill as she nodded.
''That is actually
a list of Pytor Borodin's victims. I hope you take note that the Ocean
Seeker, the ship that blew up around you, headed that list. Borodin is also
connected with a possible coup in Hawaii that could lead to race riots in every
city in America.
"Valery
Borodin and his father have masterminded a plot that could leave this country
wallowing in economic and social chaos while the rest of the world
prospers." Mercer's mouth was twisted into a disgusted rictus, but his
eyes were slate hard. "I'm not some ultra-patriot who salutes every time I
see a flag, but I don't want to see our government brought to its knees either.
You have a choice. Tell me what I need to know, or I call the FBI and you spend
the next century or two in a penitentiary with a cellmate named Leather."
Tish was sobbing
now. Mercer wanted to take her into his arms, brush the tears away, and say he
was sorry, but he couldn't. He had to be cruel.
"This is
fucking useless," he said disgustedly, and reached for the portable phone
lying on the bar.
"Wait,"
Tish said meekly. "Please wait."
Mercer poured a
shot of brandy into a balloon snifter and placed it in front of Tish. She
sniffed back her tears and sipped the amber liquor.
''What happened
the night the Ocean Seeker was destroyed?" he repeated harshly.
"Around
midnight a man came to my cabin. I'd never seen him before. He wasn't part of
the scientific team or a member of the crew."
"A
stowaway?"
"He must have
been. He told me that Valery had sent him."
Mercer interrupted
again. "What was he—white, Oriental, black?"
"He was Oriental. Maybe thirty-five or forty years old, about
your size but amazingly strong. He told me that I was in danger and had to go
with him. I tried to question him, but he said there was no time, just tossed
me over his shoulder and carried me up to the deck. There was an inflatable
raft tied to the stern of the Seeker. He threw me in and jumped after
me.
"About five
minutes after he started rowing us away, the Seeker exploded. I swear I
don't remember anything after that. I think he knocked me out."
"Then you
never heard Russian or saw the design on the stack of the ship that rescued
you?''
"That part I
do remember. I must have come to as we were pulled aboard that freighter."
"Why didn't
you tell me about this before?"
"I didn't
want anything to spoil Valery's chances of escape, so I stayed quiet. You see,
the group he was going to work for, the one headed by his father, was
incredibly ruthless. He told me that everyone involved with the project was
sworn to lifelong secrecy and anyone who tried to leave the group before Val's
father said they could would be hunted down and killed. He told me he knew his
father would never let him leave. He was bound to the old man forever, he
said.. But he was still determined to get away. He said his father was completely
insane and what they were working on could upset the balance of power all over
the world. Valery told me before he left Mozambique that he would contact me
just before he escaped. I assumed that this rescue was that contact."
"That may be,
but he's made contact since then too."
"When,
how?" Tish asked, a trace of excitement creeping into her trembling voice.
"The telegram
I received, the one I thought was from your father, must have been sent from
him. Christ knows how he made the connection between us." Mercer spoke slowly at first, but as ideas correlated
in his brain, he talked faster. "I was suspicious about your rescue from
the Ocean Seeker, it seemed too pat, but now it makes sense. Valery must
have ordered an agent to board the ship and save your life when he learned that
the Seeker was headed toward the volcano with you as a member of the
research staff."
Mercer stood
silently behind the bar, both hands cupped around his coffee mug. His eyes had
lost their focus as he stared beyond Tish at a Ken Marschall lithograph of the
Hindenburg, just before she exploded over Lakehurst, New Jersey. It was one of
the only pictures that Mercer had gotten around to hanging apart from those in
his study.
"He plans to
steal his father's work when he leaves, doesn't he? That's why he just didn't
run away with you in Mozambique."
"How did you
figure that out?"
''It fits with his
actions so far and with the brief description you gave of his psychological
state. He would want to bring something of value with him so that he could
provide for the two of you. At the same time, stealing his father's work would
fulfill his need for revenge against his father for abandoning him."
"You can't
know that." Tish was uncomfortable by Mercer's accuracy and covered it
with an accusation.
"The first
reason is obvious. He's going to want to be a provider for you and a possible
family, unlike his father had been to him, and that data could make the two of
you quite comfortable for the rest of your lives. I'm even more familiar with
the second reason.
"Remember I
said that I used to live in Africa when I was younger, that I was actually born
in the Congo? Well, I left there as an orphan. My parents moved to Rwanda so my
father could work on opening a copper mine. They were killed during an
insurrection in 1964, ambushed going to a party on the first night of the
fighting. Both of them were burned alive. My nanny, a Tutsi woman, took me back to her village the
next day. I lived there for a couple of months until the fighting died down,
then she turned me over to a World Health Organization team, who eventually
contacted my father's parents in Vermont.
''Even though my
grandparents were kind and loving people, I hated being with them and I hated
my real parents even more for abandoning me. I felt utterly betrayed. I
remember winter nights when I'd go crosscountry skiing. I'd stop in some
meadow, miles away from the nearest house, and scream at them, cursing them,
accusing them of leaving me on purpose. It was the loneliest time in my life.
"If I could
foster that much hate against my parents who actually died, I can only imagine
the hate Valery must feel toward his father for leaving him for some government
project and then just as casually returning."
"How did you
ever get over your parents' death?" Tish asked quietly. Mercer's story had
touched her deeply.
"An old
farmer overheard me one night when I was about sixteen and we talked. He was
the only person I ever opened up to. When I'd finished my story, he told me I
was acting stupid and if I kept it up he'd slap me around because I was
upsetting his dairy cows. I guess I'd received so much sympathy before that, I
saw myself as a perpetual victim. By callously saying I was stupid, he made me realize that, in fact, I was. My
parents' deaths were beyond their control—it was never their choice to abandon
me. Finally I could accept that." Mercer poured a shot of Scotch into his
coffee, then drained the cup in three deep swallows.
Tish didn't say
anything, but the tension had eased from her neck and shoulders and her blue
eyes were misted and soft.
"I owe you an
apology," Mercer said softly. "I thought you were part of this
operation. I thought you knew all about it."
"No,"
Tish said quietly, "I didn't."
"Do you still
love him?"
"I don't
know," Tish replied haltingly. "The time Valery and I had together
was the most precious in my life, but it was so long ago. Is that shallow of me?''
"That's not
for me to decide," he dodged the question adroitly. He took the bar stool
next to her and held her slim hands in his.
"I was in
love once." Mercer spoke slowly, deliberately. "I was twenty-five
years old, taking summer classes at a mining school in England. She was four
years older than me, a police psychologist just getting her start in the London
constabulary. We spent every moment together that we could. I would commute a
hundred miles to see her in the city, and she took the maximum number of sick
days she could without being kicked off the force.
"One weekend
toward the end of the summer, she was seeing me off at Paddington Station. We
had just talked about marriage for the first time." Mercer's voice was
barely a whisper, but the force of his words carried to the far corners of the
room. "My train was just pulling out from the station. Suddenly there was
gunfire. A man had burst into the station and opened up with a machine pistol.
I watched from the window of the accelerating train as he emptied the clip,
then dropped the weapon and pulled a revolver. By then the police had begun to
swarm into the station. The gunman grabbed a woman and used her a shield, the
revolver screwed into her ear. It was a standoff.
"Then the
woman, my possible fiancée, started talking to the gunman, trying to calm him
down, get him to surrender. It was her job. Later they found that the man, an
IRA terrorist, had taken so much heroin that he probably never heard a word she
said. She spoke for a only a few seconds before the gunman simply pulled the
trigger and then turned the gun on himself.
"I saw their
bodies fall across each other just as my car
pulled out of the station. I was too numb to try to get off the train. I just
sat there as we sped north. I never returned to London. I didn't even go to her
funeral. . . ." Mercer's voice trailed off.
"What was her
name?"
"Tory
Wilks," Mercer replied evenly. "You're the first person who's ever
heard that story. I finished my classes in England and came home as if nothing
ever happened."
"I'm
sorry."
Mercer looked at
her squarely. "We never had a chance to start a life together. I told you
about Tory and what I lost because you at least deserve a chance. You once loved
Valery Borodin and lost him because of circumstances out of your control."
Mercer's voice firmed. "I'm going to make sure you have a fair shot at
making it work."
"I don't
understand."
"It's
simple." Mercer smiled warmly, the wrenching emotions of a few moments
earlier safely tucked back where they belonged. Again he was his normal
sardonic self. "I'm going to help him escape."
"How? You
don't know where he is."
"Don't I,
though?" Mercer raised a mocking eyebrow. "I happen to know down to
the inch where he is at this very moment."
"Where?"
Excitement raised Tish's voice an octave.
"All in good
time," Mercer replied vaguely. "I've got some things to figure out
first. Why don't you take that nap you wanted?"
Tish saw that she
could get nothing further out of him, so she went to the couch. She looked over
at Mercer and saw he was already scratching away at a note pad with a fountain
pen. She tucked the Normandie lap robe up around her chin, and for the
first time in a long time, started considering a real life with Valery.
Ten minutes later,
Tish sat up suddenly. "Mercer?"
He looked up from
the pad. His normally dark complexion was drained and his wide set eyes were
narrowed by exhaustion.
"I was thinking—Valery
took a risk to have me rescued from the Ocean Seeker and put you in
contact with me, right? Well, who tried to kill me in the hospital?''
Mercer stared at
her for a moment, his weary mind grinding away at her question. He tore the top
sheet of paper from the pad, crumpled it up, and tossed it into the plastic
trash can behind the bar. "Back to the drawing board."
Several hours
later, as the sun ambered the room with its dying rays, Mercer finally put down
his pen, drank the last sip of his second pot of coffee and stood for a
stretch. He had written twelve pages of notes and made eighteen phone calls.
Tish was still asleep on the couch.
Mercer knuckled
the kinks out of his lower back and squeezed his eyes tight, trying to clear his
sleep-deprived brain. The caffeine he had drunk left him feeling weak and with
a pounding headache. He pulled Dick Henna's card from his wallet and dialed his
office number. Henna himself answered the phone.
"Mr. Henna,
it's Philip Mercer."
"Do you have anything new?"
Mercer liked the squat director for his bluntness.
"I need to
get to Hawaii," Mercer stated flatly.
"I'm afraid
that's impossible. Two hours ago all communications from the islands stopped,
no telephones, radio, or television. All aircraft that could be routed to other
destinations were turned back. Our reports from Pearl Harbor say the mob has
started taking potshots at soldiers. I've gotten unconfirmed reports from ham
radio operators that Honolulu is under martial law by authority of Mayor
Takamora and that National Guard troops are shooting any white face they
see."
"Oh,
Jesus," Mercer breathed. "The fucking lunatic has started it."
"It appears
so. There's no way to get you out there even if I wanted to."
"Listen, I
have some theories that, if true, can clear this up in twenty-four hours, but I
have to get to Hawaii." Mercer wouldn't allow his horror at Henna's news
to dissuade him.
"Dr.
Mercer—"
"I prefer
Mister, or just plain Mercer."
"Really, most
Ph.Ds I know flaunt their titles."
"I only use
mine when I'm trying to get dinner reservations."
Henna chuckled.
"I can respect that. Anyway, the President has authorized a covert action
against Ohnishi in light of his involvement with this coup."
"Jesus."
Mercer was shocked. "That's a stupid mistake. Ohnishi's just a pawn in
this whole thing. Taking him out won't accomplish anything." .
"You know
something we don't?" Henna asked tiredly.
"Yes, I do,
but it's going to cost you at least a ticket to that amphibious assault ship
stationed near Hawaii."
"That's
extortion."
''Extortion is
such a genteel word, Mr. Henna. I prefer blackmail. What if I said I can hand
over the mastermind of the entire operation?''
"I'm
listening."
"I won't talk
until you guarantee transport to that ship."
"Christ."
Mercer could almost see Henna throw his hands up in exasperation. "All
right, I'll get you out there. Now, what have you got?"
For the next
twenty minutes Mercer spoke without pause and Henna listened. Hard.
''You got proof
for any of this?'' Henna asked when Mercer finished.
"Not one
single shred. But it all fits together."
"I said it
before, Mercer, if you ever want another job, the bureau would love to have
you."
"Do you think
the American Civil Liberties Union would stand to have an FBI agent making
accusations like I just made? Shit, they'd skin us
both alive."
Henna chuckled
again. "You're right. I've got a meeting with the President in an hour.
I'll take your proposal to him. The only way I can get you out there is as an
observer, nothing more."
"That'll be
fine," lied Mercer smoothly. "I really can't ask for more. Call me
back when you're finished with the President."
A minute after
hanging up the phone, Mercer was between the sheets of his bed. Despite his
battered body's need for sleep, he tossed and turned for twenty minutes before
drifting into unconsciousness.
__________
__________
__________
Unlike most conventional helicopters, the Kamov Ka-26 lacked a
stabilizing rotor in the stern; rather, it had two main rotors stacked on top
of each other. Their counter-rotating blades kept the tiny copter from gyrating
through the skies. The craft was much noisier than normal helicopters because
of this arrangement, though the rotor noise couldn't drown out her two radial
engines mounted in pods outside the cramped cabin.
The Ka-26,
code-named "Hoodlum" by NATO, pounded through the clear skies at one
hundred knots, near her maximum cruising speed. The sea below was an azure
plane which rolled into infinity. The August Rose, mother ship to the
small chopper, was nearly two hundred miles astern and steaming hard for
Taipei, a gift to the Taiwanese ambassador. Dr. Borodin had ascertained the
precise location of his island's birth, so the sophisticated gear on board the
freighter was no longer needed.
The Hoodlum had
been stored inside a huge packing crate on the deck of the refrigerator ship,
her double set of rotor blades folded back along the twin booms of her tail.
The chopper had remained hidden long after the freighter had started her long
journey westward, away from the volcano, which was now no more than a few days
from broaching the surface. Already dense, sulfur-laden steam clouds clung to
the surface of the sea, marking the eruption.
With an
operational range of 380 miles in her unitarian configuration, the Hoodlum
remained on the August Rose until she was nearly two-thirds that
distance away from the rising volcano. Only then had the pilot lifted from the
deck with his two passengers.
Now, three hours
after takeoff, the pilot was beginning to sweat, not from the humid air that
whipped through the tiny cabin, but from fear. The antiquated radar on the
twenty-five-year-old craft could no longer detect the August Rose, not
that they had fuel to reach her in any case. They were alone, five thousand
feet above an empty sea. The pilot looked back at his two passengers. The older
one apparently slept while the younger one watched the ocean far below. The
earphones ,over his head kept his fine hair from blowing about, but the wind
worried at his olive drab flight suit. The pilot turned back to his
instruments, scanning fuel, altitude, speed, and course in a quick glance
before he gazed again at the endless horizon.
Valery Borodin
turned away from the open door. He touched his father on the shoulder and
Pytor's eyes cleared instantly. "We should be only about ten kilometers
away."
The pilot
overheard the comment through the intercom and replied, "Ten kilos away
from what? We're at least three hundred kilometers away from Hawaii and running
out of fuel. Do you mind telling me what this is all about?"
''Of course. Take us down to about two hundred meters first."
The pilot shrugged
and complied. He doubted these two men were planning their suicides, so they
must have a plan. Relieved, the pilot put the Ka-26 in a gut-wrenching dive.
The rotors clawed at the air as they drove the chopper toward the surface of
the sea. In an expert maneuver, the pilot pulled back on the collective pitch
and leveled the craft at exactly two hundred meters. He looked back and was
disappointed to see that his passengers appeared bored at his antics and
expertise. "Two hundred meters, sir."
The elder Borodin
pulled a cylinder from the pocket of his flight suit. The yellow plastic case
was no more than three inches in diameter and about a foot long. He pressed a
red button at the top of the cylinder and casually threw it out the open door
of the helicopter. "What was that?" the pilot asked. "A
high-frequency transponder," Valery answered for his father. "Fly a
one-kilometer box pattern and in a moment you'll see what we're up to."
The chopper banked
sharply to starboard as the pilot began running his boxes. He had completed two
kilometer-long legs when he saw a disturbance in the sea. The limpid blue water
was frothing as if Leviathan itself was surfacing. The pilot brought the
chopper to a hover near the boiling water.
The maddened sea
grew more turgid until the bow of a ship burst from the waves, water streaming
off her black hull. She rose swiftly, revealing her forward deck, studded with
cranes; a boxy superstructure crowned with a single funnel; her aft deck; and
finally her jack staff, sporting a limp Panamanian flag. It was like watching
the death throes of a sinking ship, only in reverse. Water poured through her
scuppers with the force of fire hoses as the ship wallowed in the frenzied
swells of her own creation. After a minute the ship settled to an even keel,
the waves dispersing quickly.
"Jesus,"
the pilot muttered.
"That,"
Borodin said with triumph, "is the watch dog of Ocean Freight and Cargo
and our destination, the steamer John Dory."
If the pilot had
had time to notice the decoration on the ship's funnel as he brought the
Hoodlum toward the landing pad aft deck of this extraordinary vessel, he would
have seen a black circle surrounding a yellow dot.
The Hoodlum
settled on the rolling deck with deceptive ease. The pilot was truly a
professional. The deckhands tossed chains around the four wheels of the copter
and signaled him to cut power. An instant later the blades slowed to a stop,
sagging like palm fronds.
Valery Borodin
jumped from the craft, followed a moment later by his wheezing father. The
elder scientist's skin had gone a chalky gray and his breath was short. Both
men paused, waiting for the pilot to join them.
"What in the
hell is this?" the pilot nearly shouted, his ears still ringing from the
long flight.
"One moment
and I'll let the captain explain." Borodin turned to the crew chief and
made a cutting motion across his throat.
The chief waved
his acknowledgment and signaled his crew. They quickly unshackled the landing
gear and unceremoniously pushed the Hoodlum into the sea. The chopper bobbed in
the water for a few minutes, her rotor blades scratching at the paintwork of
the John Dory before she filled with water and vanished. The pilot gave
the tired little craft an ironic salute as he watched her go under. If he was
bothered by the intentional destruction of his helicopter, it didn't show.
"You won't be
leaving me that way, Valery," Borodin remarked casually as he turned away.
Valery stood as if
he'd just witnessed a horrible accident, his eyes wide and his mouth hanging
slackly. How had he guessed? Valery questioned himself. How could he know I
wanted to escape using the helicopter?
Pytor answered his
son's silent question. "Kerikov contacted
me after you tried to pressure him into rescuing that girl from the American
research vessel."
The plight of the
beached whales weeks before and the effort to find out the cause of their
deaths had been given a great deal of media attention that was picked up aboard
the August Rose as she was monitoring the volcano. The radio reports
about the NOAA mission had been very thorough, including interviews with some
of the key scientific personnel. Valery recalled with pride that Tish had been
brilliant during hers. Only he and his father knew that the Ocean Seeker was
sailing toward her destruction as she embarked on her survey. In a gamble born
of desperation, Valery had told Kerikov that if Tish Talbot wasn't rescued, he
would destroy the volcano with the seismic charges stored aboard the August
Rose.
"Kerikov
wasn't impressed with your threat, Valery, and quite frankly neither was I. But
I knew if she wasn't saved you would try to sabotage our mission, so he had her
rescued at my request. You looked so smug when we heard on the radio that she
was rescued." Borodin laughed shortly and looked over the still-wet rail
of the John Dory at the small patch of bubbles that marked the grave of
the chopper. "You won't be leaving anytime soon. I still need you. Russia
still needs you."
That was the
longest speech Pytor had Addressed to Valery in the year since their reunion.
It left Valery with such a cold, blinding hatred that his mouth felt the
searing acids of the bile roiling in his knotted stomach. His fingers had gone
white and bloodless as they curled into fists so tight that his bones seemed
ready to tear through his skin.
Pytor Borodin saw
none of his son's reaction; he had turned to greet the captain of the John
Dory. Valery ambled toward them, his shoulders hunched and his trembling
hands thrust deeply into the pockets of his flight suit.
"Welcome
aboard, Dr. Borodin," Captain Nikolai Zwenkov
said, extending a hand. "I'm sorry I couldn't meet you on the landing pad,
but I had to see that the ship was trimmed properly."
Borodin shook the
proffered hand and introduced his son and the chopper pilot. Zwenkov was an
ethnic Georgian and spoke Russian with an oafish accent, but he had the look of
a stern, uncompromising professional.
"We must
hurry and submerge once again. I don't want to give the American spy satellites
a chance to spot us."
The captain led the three men into the ship's superstructure. There
were no bulkheads or companionways, no cabins or bridge. The boxy structure was
only a facade bolted to struts protruding from the rounded conning tower of a
submarine. The sides and main deck of the John Dory were also just
plates of steel welded to the hull of the sub, the cargo cranes, winches, and
booms merely props. On the surface, from any range over two hundred yards, the
freighter looked legitimate, giving no indication of her deadly secret within.
"It's like a
K-boat," the helicopter pilot remarked, his eyes roaming the dank interior
of the John Dory's superstructure, referring to vessels used by Germany
during World War I. They resembled freighters, but, in fact, were disguised
gunboats. They would lure their victims within range with bogus distress calls,
then reveal their large cannons hidden behind secret plates in their hulls.
Thousands of Allied tonnage paid the ultimate price for falling into their
traps.
"I like to
think that this ship is a little more sophisticated," Borodin replied,
rubbing the insides of his arms, "but the principle is the same."
"Come, Pytor,
you look tired from your journey." The captain led them through a hatch
and into the working part of the vessel, an old 285-foot Victor Class nuclear
attack submarine.
Zwenkov moved through the maze of pipes, narrow hatches, and
equipment with the agility of a child.
Twenty years in
the Soviet Submarine Service had taught him how to avoid banging himself aboard
these cramped vessels. He led Borodin and his son straight to his cabin after
dropping the chopper pilot off with a subordinate.
Valery sat
silently while the captain and his father chatted. Zwenkov would have killed
his beloved Tish Talbot had Kerikov not been able to sneak an agent onboard the
Ocean Seeker to save her. He wanted to beat Zwenkov for his anonymous
barbarity. Yet Valery couldn't fully blame Zwenkov, for he was just a soldier
doing his duty, following orders. The man behind those orders was his father.
A cramp seized
Valery's gut as he thought how close he had been to escaping. The Hoodlum would
have been the perfect way out of the demented world he found himself in. Valery
was a man of science, dedicated to reason and thought. Yet his father had
corrupted that pure world into a perverse dimension of murder and betrayal and
unfathomable cruelty. Hatred boiled within him, hatred for his father's almost
murdering the woman he loved, hatred for the untold murders in the past, hatred
for abandoning a frightened little boy all those years before. Only a few more
days and it would all be over. If he didn't manage to escape, to rejoin the
woman who'd been the source of his strength since his father had reen-tered his
life, then his only other option was suicide. Valery promised himself that he
would not die alone.
That decided, he
found that his head had cleared. His mind was sharp and focused as he leaned
forward to listen to the captain and his father.
"All I know
is Kerikov radioed and said to suspend all activity until further orders. We
are to remain on station, submerged, but with the antennae array extended,
until we are contacted."
"But why? It
makes no sense. We should make preparations to claim our prize." Dr.
Borodin was speaking more to himself than the others. He rubbed his neck and throat absently. "I radioed Kerikov
from the August Rose. He knows that the volcano falls outside America's
two-hundred-mile limit. It belongs to the first nation that discovers it. By
rights it belongs to us!"
"There is one
more thing." Zwenkov's rumbling voice sounded almost apologetic.
"Kerikov told me not to reveal this to you, but I've known you too long
for secrets. He ordered me to load a thirty-kiloton nuclear warhead onto an
SS-N-9 Siren missile and make it ready to launch."
Borodin took this
news without emotion. It was as if his mind had turned in on itself, probing
within to find answers. The hum of the sub's air-conditioning was the only
sound in the spartan cabin for many long seconds. Finally Borodin looked first
at Zwenkov and then at his son.
"He must mean
to destroy the volcano—but why?" Borodin appeared more concerned with
Kerikov's motives than with the fact that his life's work might be destroyed in
a nuclear fireball. "There must be a leak somewhere in our security. He
would have to destroy the entire project to maintain secrecy."
"Don't you
understand that Kerikov has double-crossed you?" Anger made Valery's voice
sound like a hiss. "He never had any intention of turning over the volcano
to the government. He's used you since taking over Department Seven, hoping one
day to sell your work right out from under you.
"The old
regime is gone for good. The Russia you threw your life away for no longer
exists. The world has changed since the 1950s, but you never took the time to
notice. Vulcan's Forge would have only worked under a Stalinist regime, and
that has been gone for decades. This whole operation was doomed the moment
Gorbachev started glasnost and perestroika. Give up your old man's dreams and
start living in reality.
''The Russian
government would never attempt to occupy an island so close to American soil
with one hand while the other was begging for economic
aid. Kerikov knows this and he's made some sort of contingency plan."
"How can you.
be so sure, Valery? You are only my assistant; you've not been told
everything." Borodin dismissed the truth so easily because he really
didn't understand it.
''Give it up,
Father, there is nothing more and we both know it," Valery said sadly.
He saw, for the
first time, how frail and weak his father looked. His eyes were rheumy behind
his glasses and his once stocky frame had withered to a skeletal apparition.
Borodin's skin had the pallor and texture of modeling clay.
"It will work out," Borodin said
so softly that his lips barely moved.
Suddenly his body
went rigid; his eyes snapped open as if they were ready to burst from their
sockets. His lips pulled back, revealing his chipped and stained teeth in a
death's head smile. He convulsed once, gasping for a quick breath before once
again being grasped by the immense pain that tore through his body. His fingers
crawled up his torso as if grasping his chest to calm the faltering heart
within.
Pytor convulsed
again, his heels kicking up from the floor as he made one last struggle, and
then he was gone.
Borodin's prostate
muscle had relaxed in death. The smell of urine hung heavily in the cramped
office.
Zwenkov had seen
enough death in his career to know that Borodin was beyond resuscitation. He
crossed himself and leaned forward to close the old man's staring eyes.
"I am
sorry," he said quietly to Valery.
Valery looked at
his father for a long time before reaching out to touch the wrinkled hand.
"It's funny, so am I."
Death had cut
through all of his hatred at the end, leaving him clean inside, as if reborn.
His bitterness had
vanished with his father's
dying gasp and he knew it could not have been any other way. Even if he'd escaped
with the data from the August Rose, he would've been forever plagued
with this inner demon. But not anymore. The demon was put to rest, forever.
__________
__________
__________
The insistent ringing of the phone dragged Mercer from a deep,
deathlike sleep. His hand groped across the nightstand, knocking the Tiffany
clock to the floor, then found the phone and swung the receiver to his head.
"H'lo."
His tongue was cemented to the roof of his mouth with congealed saliva.
"Mercer, Dick
Henna."
Mercer came a
little more awake, opening his eyes. He was startled to see that night had
descended—the twin skylights above his bed were black rectangles in the
ceiling. He glanced across his balconied bedroom and saw that his whole house
was dark. Tish, too, must have gone to sleep.
"Yes, Mr.
Henna, what's up?" Mercer ran his tongue around his mouth and grimaced at
the taste.
"The
President accepted your proposal and, believe it or not, Paul Barnes from the
CIA backed you up."
"That's
surprising. I got the impression I was at the bottom of his Christmas card
list."
"Kind of
surprised me, too, but when it comes to the job, Barnes puts his personal
feelings second. The commando assault that the President ordered will be
postponed for at least twelve hours."
"So what
happens now?" Mercer realized that his body was bathed in sweat. His
sheets were a damp tangle around his legs.
"A jet will
be ready for you at Andrews Air Force Base in about an hour and a half. You
should be aboard the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk by five tomorrow
morning."
Mercer glanced at
his scarred and scratched Tag Heuer chronometer. 9:15.
"Okay, I'll
be at Andrews in about an hour." Mercer swung his legs off the bed, the
cool air evaporating the sweat, making the dark, coarse hair on his chest and
legs tingle.
"I'll meet
you at the main gate with the recon photos you requested."
"Thanks,
Dick." Mercer used the director's given name for the first time.
He cut the
connection and dialed Harry White's number. After twenty rings, he hung up and
dialed Tiny's. Tiny told him to hold for a second while Harry came back from
the restroom.
"Harry, are
you up for a little more baby-sitting?"
"That you, Mercer?"
"Yeah, Harry,
can you come over and watch Tish again?"
"Why, what's
she doing?"
"Sleeping in
the nude."
"Yea, I'd
love to watch that," Harry said with mock lasciviousness. "I'll be
there in about fifteen minutes.''
Mercer hung up,
plucked the clock from the floor, and straightened the silver framed photograph
of his mother that was the only other item on the
nightstand. He flipped a bedside switch and light from three round Japanese
lanterns bathed the room in a milky glow.
He stood up and
moaned. The punishment his body had taken in the past few days was taking its
toll. His shoulders were bruised a rich purple from his scrape against the
metro train, and his feet and lower legs still stung from his leap into the
Potomac. The cuts on his face had scabbed over, but they pulled every time
Mercer moved his jaw. There was a livid red weal on his calf where the bullet
had grazed him in New York.
"Jesus
Christ," he muttered as he headed for the bathroom.
He took a steaming
shower, popped a handful of Tylenol, and dressed quickly in baggy black pants
and a long-sleeved black T-shirt. His socks and desert boots were also black.
Feeling slightly more refreshed but by no means normal, he spun down the old
rectory spiral stairs to the ground floor, his feet gliding over the steps.
Because his
cooking skills fell far short of gourmet, his kitchen cabinets were nearly
barren. It took him a ten frustrating minutes to make a mangled, runny omelet
using his last three eggs, a slice of American cheese, a couple of cocktail
onions pilfered from the bar and half a can of tunafish.
He carried the
plate of food into his office, letting his hand brush against the large bluish
stone on the credenza near the door as he entered. Setting the plate on his
desk, he turned on the green shaded lamp. With a huge chunk of the omelet
stuffed in his mouth he took a key from under a reference volume of mineralogy
in the shelf behind his desk.
The key slid into
the oiled lock of the closet adjacent to the office's entrance and the oak
doors opened smoothly. In the closet were a fire retardant safe, a twisted and
blackened piece of duraluminum that had once been a support girder in the
airship Hindenburg, and a multidrawer cabinet which housed over a
hundred valuable geologic samples he had collected
through the years. On the floor of the closet sat an antique steamer trunk
filled with souvenirs from his mission into Iraq.
Mercer dragged the
heavy trunk out of the closet and propped open the lid. A Heckjer^anu Koch
MP-5A3 sat on top of the pile of equipment. The West German-manufactured
machine pistol was a vicious weapon, capable of firing 9mm ammunition at over
six hundred rounds per minute. Mercer lifted the nasty little gun and cleared
the breach to ensure the action was still smooth, then set it aside and
retrieved a Beretta automatic pistol. Since replacing the venerable Colt .45 as
the primary sidearm of the U.S. Army, the Beretta had more than proved its
worth in combat conditions. The pistol was in pristine condition like the
H&K.
The next item
Mercer pulled from the trunk was the heaviest by far—a nylon combat harness, a
thick belt supported by suspender straps. The holster for the Beretta was attached
to the suspenders so it would rest under his left shoulder for a quick draw and
several nylon pouches full of clips for the machine pistol hung from the belt.
A six-inch-long Gerber knife hung inverted from the suspenders. The final
touches were a basic first aid kit and field compass in a slim padded case.
Mercer slid the
Beretta into its holster and stuffed the combat rig into a light nylon duffel
along with the machine pistol, then added a few other pieces of equipment. He
zipped the bag, shoved the nearly empty trunk back into the closet, and locked
the doors. He stashed the key back under the thick book and took one last
weapon from his desk, first making sure it was loaded. Taking another big bite
of his eggs, Mercer promised himself he'd never make another tuna omelet again.
"Mercer?"
Tish called from the kitchen.
"I'm back
here."
Tish entered the
study wearing one of Mercer's Penn State sweatshirts. It came down to the
midpoint of her smooth thighs and thrust up proudly over her unrestrained
breasts. With her tousled hair and sleepy eyes, she looked vulnerable and
incredibly sexy.
"That
sweatshirt looks a hell of a lot better on you than it does me," Mercer
remarked with a grin.
"Don't even
look at me; I'm a mess." Tish ran a hand through her hair to get it away
from her face. She noticed the duffel bag. "I heard you get up; what's
going on?"
"I'm leaving
for a couple of days. I think I can finally put an end to everything and with a
little luck bring back Valery Borodin for you."
Tish's eyes
brightened. "I was thinking earlier and couldn't believe how badly I want
to see him again."
"Give me a
couple of days and he's yours." Mercer was genuinely happy for her.
"Let's go up to the bar; I need some of my famous coffee."
"What's
that?" Tish asked as she turned to leave the study. Her gaze had fallen on
the large stone near the door.
"My good luck
piece," Mercer remarked, caressing the rippled surface. "It's a piece
of kimberlite given to me by a director of DeBeers as thanks for saving his
life after a cave-in in South Africa. Kimberlite is the most common type of
matrix stone found in diamond mines." He explained, "By itself it's
worthless, but nearly every diamond mined in the past hundred years has been
found within a volcanic kimberlite pipe."
Mercer didn't tell
her that this piece of kimberlite was far from worthless. Embedded in the
underside of the stone was an approximately eight-carat diamond of startling
blue-white color. Uncut, it was worth about a quarter of a million dollars, and
if he ever had the stone finished, who could tell its value?
The door bells
chimed, announcing Harry's arrival, while Mercer was making coffee. Harry let
himself in and entered the bar through the library. He needed the doorjamb for
support.
"Where are
you going, a costume party as a ninja?" Mercer looked down at his black
attire and shrugged.
"Actually,
the theme is your favorite environmental catastrophe. I'm an oil spill. What do
you think?"
"I think
you're full of shit," Harry replied, seating himself at the bar. The
cigarette in his mouth jumped with each word.
"Hi,
Harry." Tish greeted the old man with a kiss on his gray stubbled cheek.
"You lied to
me, Mercer. You said she'd be naked." Tish didn't understand the comment,
but already knew Harry and Mercer well enough to not be offended. "Give me
a drink, will ya'."
Mercer deftly
poured Jack Daniel's and ginger ale. "Actually, I'm going to put another
pin in my map." He jerked his thumb at the pin-studded map behind the bar.
"What
color?"
"Clear,"
Mercer replied.
Harry knew that
the clear pin in Iraq had been some sort of covert government mission and that
the one in Rwanda denoted a violent episode in his friend's life. His
whiskey-dulled eyes became a little sharper. "Where you heading?"
"I'm not
supposed to tell you Hawaii," Mercer smiled, "so I won't."
"So I guess
the whole thing comes full circle," Harry said softly, looking at Tish.
Mercer glanced at
his watch and hoisted the nylon bag over his shoulder. "I've got to go.
Give me your truck keys."
Harry fished the
keys to his battered Ford pickup from his pocket and tossed them to Mercer.
Mercer snatched them from the air. "I'll be back in a few
days; keep an eye on things." He gave Tish a light kiss and told her,
"You be good and don't excite old Harry here."
On his way out of
the house, Mercer paused in the library and smiled wickedly at the stack of
framed pictures on the floor. The top photo, an 8 X10, showed Mercer and
another man standing on the crawler track of a huge Caterpillar D-l IN
bulldozer. The handwritten caption read, "Mercer, you did it again; this
time I really owe you one." It was signed Daniel Tanaka. The
logo stenciled on the engine cowling of
the 107-ton dozer was the stylized hard hat and dragline of Ohnishi Minerals.
"Debt paid, Danny boy."
IN the black night, the sentry post at Andrews Air Force Base in
Morningside, Maryland, looked like a highway toll booth. Several small glass
buildings supported a metal roof that stretched across the entire road and
bathed it in fluorescent lights. Mercer brought Harry's pickup to a stop, the
ancient brakes squealing like nails drawn across a blackboard. The guard, an
African-American barely out of his teens, regarded the decrepit truck with
suspicion until Dick Henna, standing behind him, placed a hand on his shoulder.
Through the open window of the truck, Mercer heard Henna reassure the young
corporal.
Henna exited the
small armored-glass guardhouse, walked to the passenger side of the pickup,
opened the door, and slid in without comment. Mercer started rolling forward.
"I know that
until recently you drove a Jaguar convertible," Henna said at length, his
voice nearly drowned by the blasting exhaust. "I expected your second car
to be a little better than this."
Mercer coughed as
the Ford backfired and an acrid cloud of exhaust was blown into the truck's
cab. He grinned. "Something old, something new . . ."
"Something
borrowed, something blue," Henna finished the rhyme. "Got ya."
"But I think,
under all the rust, this truck is brown. I'm not sure." Mercer looked at
the large manila envelope in Henna's hand. "Is that for me?"
"Yes."
Henna set it on the seat between them. "Two of the infrared photos from
the spy plane, and contractor's drawings of the homes of Takahiro Ohnishi and
his assistant Kenji. What the hell do you want this stuff for? You know you're
only going as an advisor and observer."
"Absolutely,"
Mercer agreed quickly. "But when the assault occurs, I need some material
to advise with, right?"
"Turn left
here," Henna directed as they drove further into the sprawling complex.
"You're one of the most ingenious men I've ever met, Mercer, but I've yet
to figure out how you're going to get off the Inchon and onto
Hawaii."
Mercer looked at
him with mock astonishment, his face the picture of cherubic innocence.
"Perish the thought, a cruise on an assault ship has always been a dream
of mine. I have no intention of leaving the watchful eye of the navy.
Seriously, Dick, you need someone out there who knows the whole situation and
also understands something about bikinium. I don't think Abe Jacobs is up to
it. Besides, I found out about this whole mess and I just want to see it
finished."
Henna did not
respond.
"Are you
buying any of this?"
"No, I'm
not." Henna grunted
"Good,
because that's about the worst line of bull I've ever thrown." Mercer
looked at Henna, the streetlights casting his face in either blinding light or
impenetrable shadow. "If you know I'm planning to get off the Inchon as
soon as I can and get to the islands, why are you letting me go?"
"Simple, I
know you've withheld information from me." There was no anger in Henna's
voice. "And that information is the key to ending this whole affair.
You're the only person who knows what the hell is going on and suicidal enough
to try and stop it."
"I appreciate
your honesty and confidence," replied Mercer sardonically. "But dying
isn't on my agenda of things to do and see on my Hawaiian vacation."
"Turn
left."
Mercer swung the
pickup and drove parallel to one of the base's steel-reinforced concrete
runways. The blue lights which bordered the tarmac flashed by in a solid blur.
In the distance, a jet roared off into the night.
They approached
several massive hangars, the powerful lights around the buildings reflecting
against their corrugated metal sides. Men in blue overalls walked purposely in
and around the hangars, carrying tools, binders, and other paraphernalia.
"Swing into
the first hangar," Henna directed. Mercer slowed, passing several mobile
generators used to jump-start the jet fighters. He pulled the truck into the
hangar and stopped in a spot indicated by a grizzled chief master sergeant. The
hash marks on his uniform sleeve, denoting years in the service, ran from his
wrist to his shoulder.
Henna shook the
chief's hand. "Everything all set?"
"Yes,
sir."
The chief said
"sir" the way most men say "impotent"—either not at all or
never above a bare whisper.
"There's an
extra flight suit in the office and a KC-135 stratotanker's ready to take off
in Omaha. Another is standing by near San Francisco. Why the air force is
paying for the transfer of a civilian to a navy aircraft I'll never know."
Mercer had seen
4he jet when he first drove into the hangar, but now took a moment to study his
ride to the Pacific. The McDonnell Douglas F/A-18 Hornet rested lightly on her
landing gear as if ready to pounce. She was like a leopard seated on its
haunches, immeasurable power coiled up like a spring. The hard points under her
razor-edged wings were bare of weapons, though two drop tanks clung there like
fat leeches. Mercer took in her clean lines, the sharp needle nose, the twin
outward-canted tails, the six stubby barrels of her General Electric gatling
gun tucked under the canopy. She had two seats, which meant she was a training
version.
''Ever been in a
fighter before?'' the chief asked with a patronizing smile.
"No,"
replied Mercer.
"Oh, Bubba's
going to love you."
Mercer looked down
at the chief. He was a good foot taller than the air force man, but the chief's
wide shoulders and hard, thick gut made them appear physically equal.
"Bubba?"
"Howdy,"
said a voice that came straight from a dirt farm in southern Georgia.
Mercer whirled
around. The speaker stood near an office tucked against one wall of the
cavernous hangar. The man's high-tech flight suit bulged where pads and air
bladders would squeeze his body to keep him from passing out in the High-g
world of the modern dog fighter. The pilot had a baby face and thin, mangled
hair, and when he smiled, Mercer could see that a front tooth was missing. The
helmet in his hand had ' 'Bubba'' stenciled between stripes of red, white, and
blue.
The man looked
nothing like Mercer's mental picture of the pilot.
"Billy Ray
Young." The pilot extended a bony hand. "Jist call me Bubba." He
grinned around the plug of tobacco firmly held in one cheek.
"Mercer."
They shook hands. Henna couldn't help but chuckle at the pallor that had crept
into Mercer's face.
"Kinda glad
to have me some company on the flight," Bubba said. "I been to the
stockade fer a spell and didn't talk to many folks there."
Mercer looked over
at Henna. The FBI director said nothing, but his eyes sparkled with amusement.
"Come with
me—ay'll git ya geared up."
Mercer followed
the pilot to the office. Billy Ray kept up a solid monologue about his term in
the stockade for flying his Hornet under the Golden Gate Bridge. His accent was
so thick that Mercer understood maybe a third of the pilot's speech. Billy Ray
showed Mercer how to fit into the constricting flight
suit and, cinch up the various harnesses. Mercer felt like the Michelin Man
strapping on a girdle.
Back out in the
hangar, Dick Henna hefted Mercer's nylon duffel bag. "Bit heavy for a
change of underwear."
"My toilet
case is lead lined.".Mercer grabbed the bag from him.
A mechanic took
the duffel from Mercer and stored it in the area meant for the 1,350 rounds of
30mm gatling gun ammunition. He closed the hatch to the ammo bay and secured it
with a special screwdriver, patting the fuselage affectionately before walking
away.
"Giddyup
there, Mr. Mercer, we's got a schedule to keep." Billy Ray Young was
already in the Hornet's front seat.
"Mercer, don't
worry about him," Henna said. "He's one of the best pilots in the
navy. His record during the Gulf War was unparalleled."
"Is that
supposed to make me feel better?" Mercer asked.
"No, not
really." Henna smiled and extended his right hand. "Once you get to
the carrier, a helicopter will transfer you to the Inchon. I'll get in
touch with you there. Good luck."
"Thanks,
Dick." Mercer walked over to the aircraft and mounted the metal steps to
the cockpit.
The chief
personally strapped Mercer into the ejector seat, briefly outlining the fifty
things Mercer shouldn't do or touch while in the aircraft.
"Any parting
thoughts, Chief?"
"Yeah, you
puke in here and I'll have the deck officer on the Kitty Hawk make you
clean it up." The chief slapped Mercer on the top of the helmet and
scrambled down the mobile ladder.
"Y'awl
set?" Billy Ray asked over the intercom.
"Let's do it,
Bubba," Mercer said tiredly. Suddenly the five hours of sleep he had
gotten earlier didn't seem like enough, but he
doubted he would sleep much on this flight.
Billy Ray closed
the canopy and fired up the two GE F404 turbofans. The sixteen-thousand-pound
thrust engines sounded like banshees as he brought them to full power for an
instant and then throttled them back again.
A tow tractor came
out of the night's gloom and a lineman attached the tow bar to the front
landing gear. With a slight jerk, the tractor edged the Hornet out onto the
base's apron. Over the helmet intercom, Mercer listened to the chatter between
the tower and several aircraft in the area. When Billy Ray finally spoke to
ground traffic control, his accent nearly vanished. His voice was crisp and
professional and Mercer began to feel a little better about the flight and the
pilot.
"You barf
easy on carnival rides, Mr. Mercer?" But not much better.
"Don't worry
about me, Bubba."
The tractor
stopped just short of the runway and the driver leapt from the vehicle and
unhooked the tow bar. Billy Ray eased open the throttles and the
twenty-five-ton aircraft began to shudder under the massive power of her own
engines. They taxied to the end of the runway and paused, waiting for clearance
from the tower. The runway was a two-mile-long ribbon racing off into the
night, edged by Wue lights which seemed to converge at the distant horizon.
When they got
clearance, Billy Ray let out an ear-splitting rebel yell and jammed the twin
throttles to their stops, simultaneously engaging the afterburners.
Thirty-foot cones
of blue-white flame knifed from the two turbofans as raw fuel was dumped into
their exhaust. The Hornet reared back on her pneumatic landing gear as she
started to rocket down the runway. Mercer was forced back into his seat as the
aircraft accelerated.
At two hundred
knots, Billy Ray yanked back on the stick and the plane arrowed into the black
sky. Mercer's pressure suit automatically squeezed his chest, ensuring that blood didn't drain from his head and
cause,a blackout. He held onto the seat arms as he watched the altimeter needle
wind around like a hyperactive clock.
Billy Ray didn't
level out until they reached thirty-two thousand feet, and it took several
minutes for Mercer's stomach to catch up to the hurtling Hornet. Sixty seconds
later there was a jarring explosion and the thunderous roar of the engines died
abruptly. Mercer thought for sure that Billy Ray had torn the guts out of her
but then realized they had just broken the sound barrier.
"What ya
think of her?" Billy Ray asked in the eerie silence.
"I can't wait
until United uses these for their shuttle service," Mercer retorted.
"Does she have a name?"
"Sure
does," Billy Ray said with pride. "Mabel."
"Your
mother?"
"No, my
pappy's prize heifer," the pilot replied matter-of-factly.
Mercer slumped
into his seat as much as he could and rested his head against the canopy. He
closed his eyes for a moment and realized that sleeping would be a lot easier
than he had first imagined. The only irritation was Billy Ray's off-key humming
of "Dixie."
He was jolted
awake once during the trip between Washington and the West Coast. That waking
was the worst moment of sheer terror he had ever Experienced. It was still dark
outside and he could clearly make out the running lights of another aircraft
that was so close he couldn't see the tips of its wings. Billy Ray seemed bent
on ramming it. They were at subsonic speed, but the other plane was rapidly
filling the Hornet's canopy. Mercer braced himself for the impending collision,
but Billy Ray tucked his F-18 under the other lumbering plane with maybe
twenty-five feet to spare.
Rapt, Mercer
watched in fascination as a spectral boom came out of the murky night and into
the halo of light around the fighter. Only when the boom attached itself to the
tube just foreward and right of the Hornet's cockpit
did he realize that the fighter was being refueled in flight. It took several
minutes for the KC-135 tanker to fill the F-18's tanks. As the hose retracted
toward the tanker, residual drops of fuel froze in the rarefied atmosphere and
flashed past the cockpit like tracer fire.
"Thanks for
the nipple; this baby was hungry," Billy Ray said to the crew of the
stratotanker.
He waggled the
wings of the nimble fighter, dipped below the slow-moving KC-135, and eased the
throttles forward. An instant later, the tanker was miles behind them and the
Hornet was approaching the speed of sound. Once the F-18 began flying faster
than the roar of her engines and again the cockpit was silent, Mercer rested
his head against the Plexiglas canopy. It took another few minutes for his
heart to slow enough for him to fall asleep.
__________
__________
__________
MV JOHN DORY
The radio operator tossed his earphones onto his gray steel desk
under the massed banks of communications equipment. He nodded to his assistant,
and hurried from the cramped room, a hastily scrawled page in his hand. The John
Dory was running under the ruddy glow of battle lights as she had for most
of this patrol but his little world was bright because of the lights on the
sophisticated electronic radio gear. It took5 a few moments for his
eyes to adjust to the gloom in the rest of the transformed submarine.
He passed through
the small aperture of a watertight door and into the sub's control center. The
two planes-men sat to the left in airline-style seats; the yokes controlling
the rudders, and dive planes completed the aircraft cockpit facsimile. Behind
them, the three men who monitored the ballast controls stood in front of a
panel studded with two dozen valves and pressure gauges. The system was
archaic, dating back to the earliest type of subs from the First World War, but
still effective. Only the very latest Soviet
subs utilized the modern ballast control computers that the Americans had been
using since the 1960s.
The fire control
station was to the left. It was the most modern piece of equipment on the boat,
a twelve-year-old computer copied from the American UYK-7 command and control
computer. The UYK-7 was the first type of C&C computer utilized on the
American Los Angeles class attack subs. The Russian copy had been
installed during the refitting of the John Dory in Vladivostok.
At the back of the
control center, four engineers monitored the ancient reactor at the stern of
the boat, their eyes and fingers never leaving the confusing mass of lights,
dials, and switches. An identical panel was located in the reactor room and the
two stations were electronically linked. This way there were actually eight
pairs of eyes watching for any danger from the radioactive furnace burning away
under its decaying shield of lead and concrete. The boat's periscope hung from
the low ceiling like a steel stalactite. It acted as the only visible means to
ensure the outside still existed once the sub dove beneath the waves, the
passive and active sonars only reported the echoes of the real world.
"Captain,
message from Matruskha." The code name for Ivan Kerikov referred to the
intricate nesting dolls so popular with generations of Russian children. It was
a fitting code for such a secretive and multitiered man.
Captain Zwenkov
was hunched over the weapons officer's console, reviewing firing solutions for
the sub's Siren missile in case it was needed against the volcano not more than
twenty miles distant.
"This is
good, Boris," the captain praised his weapon's officer and slapped him on
the shoulder before turning to the lanky radio man. "What have you
got?"
"Message from
Matruskha, Comrade Captain," the radio operator repeated, handing over the
sheet of paper. He stood at attention, waiting for the captain's response.
Zwenkov held the
flimsy paper to one of the steel-caged battle lights and squinted to make out the
writing. He grunted several times as he read it through. He then folded the
paper carefully and slid it into a pocket of his stiff-necked tunic.
"Bowman, take
us to periscope depth." Zwenkov's orders were quiet but clear. ''But do
not use the ballast. Take us up with engines alone, turning for two knots.
We're not in any hurry. Sonar, secure the active systems. I don't want an
accidental ping."
Zwenkov looked
around the dim bridge as the men went about their jobs. Satisfied with their
performance, he picked up a hand mike and dialed in the ship's intercom.
"This is the
captain speaking." His voice was barely above a whisper. Crewmen not
directly near a speaker had to strain to hear him. "I know we've been
rigged for silent running for a long time, but the need for this precaution is
almost over. We will be leaving station within twenty-four hours and heading
for home. We cannot afford to be lax during these crucial hours; now is the
time to redouble our efforts. There is an American carrier in the area as well
as an amphibious assault ship. I don't need to remind you that there will be a
fast-attack sub protecting the carrier and their sonar can hear a hammer drop
two hundred miles away. They do not know we're here, and I don't want to give
them a chance to find us. All conversations are to be in whispers. There will
be no music in the mess rooms and any necessary repairs must first be cleared
by me personally. All scheduled maintenance is suspended until further orders.
That is all."
He hung the mike back in its cradle. The men on the bridge looked
at him with a mixture of anticipation and excitement. Apart from sinking the
NOAA ship a week ago, the cruise had been long and monotonous. The tension of
remaining as quiet as possible for weeks at a time could destroy the nerves of
even the best submariner, and they'd been at it for seven long months.
Now the captain
was promising the men that they would be going home soon, and the anticipation
creased their faces into smiles. The threat of an American hunter/ killer sub
in the area only served to spice that anticipation. After all, they were
sailors in the Russian Navy and their job was fighting, not waiting.
Captain Zwenkov
turned to the young radio operator. "Preset your system to alternate
channel B. Every two hours starting at midnight you will receive a flash
message. The message will be the word 'green' repeated for five seconds.
Sometime tomorrow night the code word will be 'red.' It may not come during the
two-hour cycle, so be prepared at all times. Every time you receive the
message, tell me. Understood?"
"Yes, Comrade
Captain." The radio operator saluted smartly and turned away.
"Captain,
periscope depth," the dive officer reported quietly.
"All stop."
"All stop, aye."
"Extend the
ultra-low-frequency antenna but don't let it broach the surface."
"ULF
extending . . . ULF antenna depth one meter." "Engineer, disengage
reactor, bring her down to five percent power."
"Five
percent, aye."
Although a nuclear
reactor operates much more quietly than diesel electric propulsion, the
powerful pumps used to keep the containment vessel cooled emitted a distinct
whirling sound that a trained sonarman could distinguish over the noisy clutter
of the open sea. By reducing power to the barest minimum, Zwenkov lowered his
chances of detection by the lurking American sub and its very-well-trained
sonarmen.
"Anton,"
Zwenkov said as he ran a hand through his short gray hair. In response, his executive
officer stepped away from his station near the glass-topped plotting table just aft of the periscope. ''Find young
Dr. Borodin and send him to my cabin."
"Yes,
Captain." The exec left the bridge, heading aft to the ward room, where he
felt sure he would to find the scientist.
Zwenkov went to
his cabin, just forward of the bridge. From the locked drawer of his
plastic-veneered desk, he removed a half-full bottle of vodka and a cheap glass
tumbler emblazoned with a picture of the immense television tower in East
Berlin. The glass reminded him of his one vacation outside the Soviet
Republics, to a city as bleak and depressing as his native Tbilisi in Georgia.
He poured a half inch of the liquor into the glass, shot it down in one fiery
swallow, and returned glass and bottle to the drawer.
Of course, alcohol
was strictly forbidden on all Russian vessels, especially on submarines, but he
figured a captain should have some privileges. A single shot, once a week, was
all he usually allowed himself, though this week he'd taken three. The second
drink he had taken soon after two seamen carried the corpse of Pytor Borodin to
the sub's nearly empty freezer.
"Come,"
he barked after a knock on his door.
Valery entered,
wearing a borrowed officer's utility uniform. He looked like a recruitment
poster, dark handsome features, trim athletic body held erect ^with just a
trace of tragedy around him that lent an air of mystery. Understandably,
Zwenkov had not seen much of him since his father's death.
"Sit down,
please," Zwenkov invited. "Would you care for some tea?"
Valery demurred
with a hand gesture as he swung himself into a chair next to where his father
had died. He eyed the other chair for a moment before turning to the captain.
"You wanted to see me?"
Zwenkov knew that
the direct approach was always best. "I just received word from Kerikov.
He's ordered the destruction of the volcano."
Valery took the
news without changing expression, he didn't even blink. He had expected
something like this, but now that it came he felt nothing. Part of him was
vindicated—the father who had abandoned him so young had wasted his entire life
on a dream that would never be fulfilled—and part of him felt pain for the old
man's failure. The conflicting emotions turned his face into a stony mask.
Zwenkov
continued. "I'm waiting to hear
from a commando team in Hawaii. Once I receive word, I'll fire the missile and
obliterate the volcano. We then head toward Hawaii to extract the commando
team." "Did he give a reason?" Valery asked softly "I'm
sorry, Dr. Borodin, what was that?" Valery cleared his throat, but his
voice was still a whisper. "I asked if Kerikov gave you a reason."
"I'm a member
of the Russian armed forces attached to the KGB, Dr. Borodin. When I receive
orders I don't ask for explanations."
"You know
it's a mistake, don't you?" "That is not my concern," Zwenkov
replied caustically.
"I heard what
you said to the crew about the American submarines in the area. When you launch
that missile they'll find us instantly."
"You may know
geology, Borodin, but I know American tactics. When that warhead goes off,
they'll rush to the area to investigate and we'll slip quietly away. The
acoustics of the explosion will hide our underwater signature even at flank
speed."
He had told Valery
about the missile strike out of courtesy, since the young scientist and his
father had put so much effort into the volcano's creation, but that didn't mean
he liked Borodin nor wanted to have his orders questioned.
Since his father's
death, Valery had abandoned any thoughts of suicide, admitting that he had been
tempted in a moment of weakness. Now he realized that he would never be able to
dissuade Zwenkov from destroying the volcano—but
he still had a chance of escaping with his father's briefcase.
When the John
Dory rendezvoused with the commando team, Valery would find a way to get
off the boat, even if it meant swimming to Hawaii. He would escape. The volcano
would be gone by then, but Pytor's notes would certainly be worth something to
the Americans.
"Because our
boat is about to enter a potential combat situation," Zwenkov said,
interrupting Valery's thoughts, "you will be confined to your quarters. You
are not under arrest, but a guard will be posted to ensure that you do not
interfere with the operation of this vessel."
Zwenkov pressed
the intercom button on his desk. The XO answered instantly from the bridge.
"Yes, Captain."
"Send the security
officer here to escort Dr. Borodin back to his cabin and have a guard posted
there. There is no need for a sidearm."
A moment later,
the security man entered the cabin and escorted a silent Valery Borodin away. A
beefy guard already stood outside Valery's cabin when they reached it.
Valery threw
himself onto his bunk after the guard closed the door with exaggerated
courtesy. Waves of frustration pounded against the top of his head like a
crashing winter surf.
He had been so
close. The John Dory would have picked up the commando team near the
Hawaiian coast under the cover of darkness and he could have easily slipped
into the sea unnoticed.
Gone. His chances
were gone. He would never be able to overpower the guard outside his door and
make his way off the submarine.
He had lost.
He pounded his
fists into his thin mattress, trying not to imagine how close he'd been to
being with Tish again. The ache was strong enough to make him moan and toss
about on the narrow bunk. Those beautiful weeks when they'd been together in Mozambique played
through his mind like a romance film. Himself and Tish swimming and laughing
and loving, carefree arid gay. He could almost feel her thinking about him at
this very moment, feel the connection they shared, the bond that wouldn't ever
let them be truly apart. Valery closed his eyes tightly in a vain attempt to
block out his loss.
"Goddamn
it," he seethed, teeth clenched so tightly they were almost in danger of
shattering, "Goddamn it."
__________
__________
__________
The roar of the turbo jets woke Mercer and he knew the F/A-18
Hornet had just slowed to subsonic speeds. He blinked his eyes hard and rotated
his stiff neck. The constricting flight suit dug painfully into his groin and
had bunched up under his arms, but there was no way he could stretch out in the
cockpit. Night still held the earth in its grip. The moon was big and fat
overhead. Mercer was sure he could read by its pale glow.
"Where are
we?" he asked Billy Ray.
"About fifty
miles out from the Kitty Hawk; they're trackin' us now."
Ask any commercial
or private pilot to name the most dangerous thing they could do with an
aircraft and they will invariably say landing without power on rough terrain.
Ask any naval aviator and the response would be landing on a carrier at night
in rough seas. Knowing this, Mercer thought it prudent to keep quiet and let
Billy Ray do his job.
Billy Ray
"Bubba" Young had other ideas. He kept up a running dialogue of inane
observations about farming, flying, and anything else that came into his head.
Mercer could see his hands gesturing wildly as he talked. Only when they were
ten miles out did the pilot regain his calm professionalism and get down to business.
"Control,
this is Ferryman One-One-Three." Bubba gave the flight designation.
"I have you in sight."
Mercer peered into
the gloom ahead of the hurtling aircraft but it took him nearly twenty seconds
to find the dim lights of the aircraft carrier which were just faint pinpricks
of light like a constellation on the black surface of the sea. There was no
doubt that Billy Ray possessed exceptional eyesight.
The Hornet was
descending steadily, her powerful engines throttled back, her airspeed no more
than two hundred knots. As they drew closer to the huge carrier, Mercer could
see the lights on her stern; running lights, VASSI system lights to show the
pilot his glide path, and the "ball" light that indicated the ship's
roll. They meant nothing to him, but he trusted Billy Ray to know what he was
doing.
"One mile
out," the voice of the flight controller
called.
"Confirmed,"
Billy Ray replied casually. There was a mechanical whine as the landing gear
sank from the fuselage.
The few lights on the carrier made the sea
look even darker and more ominous. By watching the ship's bow, Mercer saw she
was pitching wildly. It looked impossible to land the Hornet on her deck.
"Call the
ball," the radio buzzed.
Billy Ray slewed
his aircraft through the sky to match the great ship's ponderous roll. When he
felt they were aligned, he keyed the mike and said, "Bubba has the ball."
The flight was in
his hands now, the carrier closing by the second, the Hornet still flying over
one hundred and fifty knots, the controlled sway of
the aircraft matching the flight deck's movement.
Three hundred
yards out, the stall warning wailed— the wings were losing lift at the slow
speed. Two hundred yards out, Billy Ray pitched the needle nose up at an even
steeper angle, the aircraft was barely hanging in the sky. At one hundred yards
the aircraft began to shudder, but Billy Ray held her up with a deft touch on
the throttle. The deck was just a murky shadow ahead.
The entire situation
seemed out of control. It was definitely unlike anything Mercer had ever
experienced before—the wailing alarms, the mad movements of the fighter, and
Billy Ray's rebel yell.
The wheels touched
with a squeal of burned rubber; Billy Ray slammed the throttles to their
forward stops and activated the afterburners, but the massive power of the
engines could not pull the Hornet from the arrester cable that stretched across
the Kitty Hawk's, deck. He shut down the engines as the plane's nose
dropped to the deck. The instant deceleration from 150 knots to zero slammed
Mercer into his harness, bruising both shoulders painfully.
As the turbofans
whined into silence, Mercer exhaled the breath he was sure he'd held for the
past two minutes.
"Ay should'a
warned you about hittin' max-power when we touch down. Gotta do that in case we
missed the cable and need'd to take off again."
"No
problem," Mercer said, too relieved to complain.
"Control,"
Billy Ray spoke into the radio, "give me the wire."
"You snagged
two, Ferryman One-One-Three," the controller replied.
Billy Ray shouted
triumphantly. "Ah haven't landed on a carrier in two months and Ah can
still lay her down on the center wire."
To maintain flight
status, naval pilots must consistently hook into the middle of the three
arrester cables
that stretch across a
carrier's deck. Hitting on number one or three meant they came in too high or
too low, and if they do either too often, they're taken off active status and
sent to the mainland for additional training. Billy Ray had executed a perfect
nighttime landing.
As the F-18
was towed to one of the aircraft lifts by a small utility tractor, the canopy
opened and Mercer breathed in the rich Pacific air. The smell of aviation fuel
and the smoke from the carrier's eight Forest-Wheeler boilers could not dampen
the tanginess of the ocean. Mercer was amazed at the activity on the flight
deck; men scurried from task to task, aircraft jockeyed around. An F-14 Tomcat streaked
into the darkened sky, a huge helicopter warmed up nearby.
Deck crews swarmed
up to the Hornet. One pushed a mobile ladder to the cockpit. Two men scrambled
up the ladder and helped Mercer and Billy Ray extricate themselves from the
cramped seats.
"Good to have
you back, Bubba," one of the men said. "Your squadron leader wants to
see you in the briefing room right away."
"Fine,"
Billy Ray drawled. "Well, Mr. Mercer, been a pleasure."
Mercer shook his
hand and grinned. ''If you say so. I'm sorry I wasn't much company on the
flight. I guess I needed the sleep."
"Shoot, you
were asleep the whole time? No wonder you didn't answer none of my
questions." Billy Ray laughed.
Someone handed
Mercer his nylon bag recovered from the ammo well. The asphalt deck felt good
under his feet as he stretched his tired muscles. He realized that the ship was
barely pitching, it had just seemed violent as the Hornet had screamed in on
its approach.
''Dr. Mercer,
Commander Quintana wants to see you," said a crewman. "I'll lead the
way. Please stay behind me, sir, the flight deck is a pretty dangerous
place."
No sooner had they
stepped away from the aircraft than the huge square of the deck elevator
vanished, carrying the Hornet to the hangar below. Mercer followed the crewman
to the seven-story island, the only part of the carrier to rise above the
flight deck. He could make out the bridge windows and the mass of antennae that
shot up into the sky. Since the Kitty Hawk wasn't nuclear powered, she
had a single funnel that cantilevered out over the starboard rail.
The wind that
swept the deck pushed Mercer and his escort aft, toward the island. As they
approached, Mercer saw a figure silhouetted in a doorway. When they were close
enough, the Hispanic features and dark hair allowed him to correctly identify
Commander Quintana. He was dressed in starched khakis, and though he seemed
relaxed he held himself erect. Typical ramrod navy man, Mercer thought.
"Welcome to
the CV63 Kitty Hawk. I'm Commander Juan Quintana. Why don't we step
inside out of the wind?" Quintana made no offer to shake hands and spoke
as if every word was capitalized and punctuated with a period.
Mercer followed
him into the ship. The Unitarian gray walls and stark lighting reminded Mercer
of the basement of his grandparents' house in Vermont. The steel corridors were
spotlessly clean but smelled of fuel oil and saltwater. Quintana led him up
three decks and through a maze of corridors, to his office. Had Mercer not been
used to the three-dimensional labyrinths of underground mines, he would have
been thoroughly lost.
Quintana's office
was small, but on a ship which housed more than 5000 men, space was at a
premium. The walls were covered in cheap paneling and the carpet on the floor
was thin but a definite upgrade from the steel passageways. Quintana's desk was
wooden, standard government issue. In fact, it reminded Mercer of his own desk
at the USGS. Since he believed that a clean desk was the sign of a sick mind,
he assumed Quintana was indeed touched.
The only items on the desk were a lamp, bolted to its surface, and a black,
three-line telephone.
"The head is
through that curtain," Quintana pointed. "You can leave your flight
suit in there."
"Thanks."
Mercer smiled his gratitude and headed for the bathroom.
A few minutes
later he was seated in front of the commander sipping the coffee that Quintana
had thoughtfully poured.
"The captain
would have met you himself, Dr. Mercer, but he really doesn't like you boys in
the CIA. Quite frankly, I don't like you, either." The distaste in
Quintana's voice was hard edged.
"I'm glad we
have that cleared up," Mercer replied with a grin, "I don't like
spies either."
"I don't
understand. I thought you're with . . ."
"The
CIA," Mercer finished his thought. "No, I'm with the USGS."
"I've never
heard of it," Quintana said cautiously.
"The United
States Geological Survey, Commander Quintana," Mercer said with a smile.
"I'm a mining engineer."
"It's bad
enough using a navy jet to transport civilians, but this is ridiculous,"
Quintana said acidly. "You're just an engineer. What the hell is this all
about, Dr. Mercer?"
The commander's
arrogant attitude triggered Mercer's temper. "Don't act as if you had to
pay for that flight yourself, Quintana, all right? I'm on a mission so far over
your head, the people involved read like a who's who, and I don't recall any of
them giving you permission to act like some simpering prima donna. As far as
I'm concerned, your ship is just an airport where I'm changing planes, so stuff
your holier-than-thou attitude, I'm really not in the mood." Mercer
wouldn't normally have been that short with Quintana, but the tension was
building within him and he needed an outlet. Besides, the commander was acting like a prick.
"Your job is to get me to the assault ship Inchon, nothing
more."
Quintana's eyes
narrowed in rancor as Mercer spoke. "Fine, Dr. Mercer. It's 0430 now, first
light in another two hours or so. A helicopter will transfer you over to Inchon
then."
"That'll be
fine. In the meantime where can I get something to eat?"
Quintana stood,
his anger locked behind clenched teeth. "I'll take you to the officer's
mess."
"By the way,
tell the captain that Admiral Morrison sends his regards," Mercer said
lightly as they left the office. The casual remark about the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs was puerile, he knew, but the bulging veins on Quintana's forehead
gave him a fiendish pleasure.
__________
__________
__________
Evad Lurbud always woke angry, even after a short nap. Anger was an
integral part of him as much as his dark eyes or his powerful arms. It was an
unfocused emotion, wild, yet so very important to him. It was the only thing
that gave his life any meaning. If he could somehow vent just a little of that
anger every day, then he knew he was alive.
As he swung his
legs off the cot, he wondered what he would be like if he ever woke and found
all the anger had finally left him. It had been his constant companion since
the days of brutal beatings by his father and the intimate touches of his
mother and aunt. He guessed if he ever woke without it he would put a bullet
into his forehead.
The other bunks in
the dim safehouse were occupied by his team. The bed above Lurbud sagged under
the weight of Sergeant Demanov. Their snores were almost deafening.
Because the team
had arrived only a day before Lurbud, he knew it was prudent to give the men a
chance to acclimate to the Hawaiian time zone. The men had to be fresh this
evening when it was time to move out. He glanced at his watch—6:30 p.m. He had been in Hawaii a little
over twenty-four hours and now, as he stretched his muscles, he knew he was
ready.
In one corner of
the safehouse, two members of the team were playing endless hands of gin,
trying in vain to alleviate the boredom between their scheduled two-hour
reports to the John Dory. When they saw Lurbud looking at them, they
came to immediate attention. Lurbud smiled and waved them back to their seats.
He turned back to the bunks of sleeping soldiers.
"Gentlemen,"
he said softly.
With fluid grace,
the men woke and slid out of their beds, coming to attention automatically.
Their response was so instantaneous that even Lurbud was impressed. Sergeant
Demanov broke rank and strode across the room to Evad. He was naked, yet showed
no self-consciousness. His chunky body was covered in a thick pelt of hair.
"Not bad, eh?" Demanov asked, grabbing a cigarette and
lighter from a table. .
''Are you talking
about your troops or your shriveled manhood?''
Demanov let out a
deep belly laugh, smoke shooting from his nostrils in twin jets. "Best
fucking troops in the world, they are."
Lurbud smiled,
"I think this time even you are not exaggerating, Dimitri. I want them
ready to move out by 1930 hours. It will take us at least an hour after that to
get into position around Ohnishi's house."
"Have you
given any thought to my plan?"
"Yes, this
afternoon when the rest of you were sleeping. I don't think it would be a good
idea to split our forces. We don't have the communications gear to coordinate a
simultaneous attack against Ohnishi and Kenji. We will hit them in turn. With
luck, Kenji will
be with his master and the
second operation won't be necessary. It is critical that we maintain our
scheduled contact with the John Dory. If she's not waiting for us when
we reach the coast, well, you know the consequences."
While Sergeant
Demanov and his team checked the equipment and weapons that had been smuggled
into the safehouse months earlier through the Russian embassy's diplomatic
pouch, Lurbud scanned the reports given to him in Cairo.
Ohnishi's mansion was protected by twenty guards, all of whom had
military or police training and had attended numerous professional defense
schools. These guards were better trained than most nation's elite defense
forces. Lurbud had no doubt that his troops could handle them, but there he
would certainly lose men. Ohnishi was old, wheelchair bound, and frail. He
would pose no difficulty once the guards had been eliminated.
Kenji, on the
other hand, was different. Lurbud had no plan of his house, no details of his
security arrangements; even his personal details were sketchy. He was
fifty-four years old, but the attached blurry photograph, though taken only a
year earlier, showed a man who appeared twenty years younger. Kenji was a
master of kendo, tae kwan do, and several martial arts that Lurbud had never
even heard of.
A note from the
KGB compiler who had put the dossier together stated that Kenji had mastered
the art of nonweapons. He could use simple household items to kill or maim. The
note explained that a similarly trained assassin had once slit the throat of a
Hungarian dissident with a sheet of paper torn from a London phone book.
Lurbud sincerely
hoped that they would catch Kenji at Ohnishi's. Heading into an assassin's lair
without any tactical intelligence was tantamount to suicide.
At 7:30, Lurbud
and his men left the safe house after checking that they had left no
incriminating items behind. Despite the curfew, they left the city unmolested in a van that had been stored in a garage
nearby. If Honolulu survived the crisis, the only evidence that they had ever
been there was an empty barracks-like room and an abandoned van, both rented by
Ocean Freight and Cargo months earlier. And since the break-in at the New York
offices, OF&C had ceased to exist.
FORTY-FIVE miles away, the cooling breeze of evening was washing
across Takahiro Ohnishi's glass-and-steel mansion. Ohnishi, seated in his
wheelchair on the open balcony high above the rolling lawns, nodded solemnly as
Kenji explained the current situation throughout Hawaii.
"Though it
has been four days since he was killed, many of the National Guard units still
believe that their orders are still coming from David Takamora; they don't know
that Honolulu's mayor is now dead. MacArthur Drive leading to Pearl Harbor is
blockaded by students armed with hunting rifles and fully equipped guardsmen.
The airport is now closed to all traffic and the buildings have been evacuated
except for mercenary guards I hired. The runways are blocked with airport
maintenance vehicles that won't be moved without orders from either you or me.
"The
microwave relay stations are also closed and guarded and the main phone cables
have been seized. Hawaii is essentially isolated."
"Has there
been any resistance from the media?"
"Yes,"
Kenji replied glancing at his watch. "The local heads of the networks are
demanding some sort of interview with Takamora, preferably live, to calm the
fears of the general population. One has threatened to start broadcasting
reports about the violence to the mainland if Takamora doesn't appear
soon."
"How do you
plan to deal with him?" Ohnishi did not sound too concerned.
"As soon as
he leaves his studio, I have an agent ready to take him out."
"Good. How
violent are the streets right now?"
"From my men
stationed in the hospitals, it seems maybe two hundred dead, around five
hundred injured so far. Most of these are random acts like the ones seen in Los
Angeles in 1992. Gangs of youths beating innocent people, vendetta retributions
between gang members, that sort of thing. Some of the victims are those we've
specifically targeted. Of our list of three hundred possible threats,
eighty-six are confirmed dead, but many more have probably been eliminated. I
don't have confirmation from our agents yet."
"It disturbs
me that we have not heard from Suleiman about our arms shipment," Ohnishi
said suddenly.
Kenji did not
reply, but his gaze darted furtively to the face of his Rolex.
"Those arms
are supposed to be here in a few hours, and we don't know what type of planes
will be flying them in or the recognition codes the pilots will transmit. If we
don't get those codes, we can't clear the runways.
"We are
approaching a critical point. Soon people will begin to lose their fervor and
want the violence to end. We must get those weapons and the rest of our
mercenaries. The President of the United States will respond soon, I'm sure.
The forces at Pearl may be bottled up for now, but they can be unleashed very
quickly indeed."
"The
President wouldn't dare order those troops to open fire. He'd be risking a
sympathetic revolt on the mainland. Every ethnic minority in America would be
behind us. Anarchy would reign in every town and street."
"He has other
options, Kenji, an attack against me, for example. He knows of my involvement
in this coup. He could target me alone and wait for the violence to die with
me. Mobs like this only stay active with someone to control them. If we don't
stay in contact with our lieutenants around the islands, they will quickly lose
their fire."
"True,"
Kenji agreed, "and we must also think of Kerikov's response."
"I don't
worry about him. His powers are severely limited."
"But the coup was his idea and was only supposed to happen on
his orders. Surely he has a plan to stop it. We are jeopardizing his control of
the volcano. He must have a way of protecting it in such a contingency."
Ohnishi smiled
paternally. "You have always only thought of my protection, Kenji, and
that is most admirable, but I believe that we are quite secure. There is no way
Kerikov can stop us."
Kenji seemed
relieved to hear his master's confident tone. "What will we do when we
can't produce Takamora to lead the people?"
"Senator
Namura is currently hiding outside Washington, D.C. He was my choice to lead
the coup if Takamora had refused, so he will become the new leader. He has
already accepted the honor. One of my private jets will fly him here as soon as
it's safe for him to move."
"And
Takamora's death?"
"We'll blame
the U.S. military. Don't worry so, Kenji, all is working out well. Suleiman's
weapons will arrive along with mercenaries to augment your forces. Namura will
probably be here within twenty-four hours to place a stamp of legitimacy on
what we've started. Neither the President nor Kerikov will have the time or
fortitude to launch any major opposition."
From the corner of
one eye, Kenji noticed a dark figure dart across the lawn toward the main
house. The first man was quickly followed by two more racing from the shadowed
protection of the jungle. Kenji crossed his legs casually, belying the
instinctive tightening of his muscles. His hand rested naturally against his
ankle.
"Maybe all
contingencies have been thought of," he remarked. "I never thought we
would actually get this far. Just a few
months ago, a coup in Hawaii seemed like such a far-fetched idea."
"It really
wasn't so outrageous even then. The state was ripe for it, racism and tension
was building. We only heightened it with our acts and now orchestrate its
crescendo."
The explosion
wasn't strong enough to shatter the thick glass skin of the mansion, but it did
rattle the balcony and startle a flock of dark pelicans into flight across the
vast lawn. Ohnishi whirled around in his wheelchair, scanning his surroundings
for a frightened moment. When he turned to his faithful assistant, Kenji had
already sprung to his feet. The snub-nosed revolver from his ankle holster was
held firmly in his hand.
The barrel was
pointed directly between Ohnishi's wide staring eyes. "Don't move, old
man," Kenji sneered.
Takahiro Ohnishi's
age-weakened bladder released into his trademark black Armani suit.
__________
__________
__________
Staff Sergeant Harold Tompkins was as about as nervous as a human
being could get. He was on duty in the Situation Room when the video images
from Pearl Harbor faded from the high-definition screen. He fiddled with the
satellite feeds under the combined stares of the President, the chairman of the
Joint Chiefs, the secretaries of State and Defense, and the directors of the
CIA, NSA, and FBI.
One moment the
image of Pearl Harbor was crisp and vivid and the next, the screen had gone
blank. Had this been a commercial transmission, a "Please stand by"
sign would have flashed and those assembled gone off for snacks or to use the
bathroom. But this was not a commercial transmission; Pearl Harbor had just
come under attack when the image had faded and these men expected Tompkins to
get the video feed back on line.
"Anything?"
Admiral C. Thomas Morrison asked.
"No, sir, not
yet," Tompkins managed to squeak.
"Jesus
Christ."
The air was thick
in the twenty-by-twenty-foot vault buried four floors below the White House. A
blue pall of smoke swirled from the cigarettes that these men would never admit
to in public. Even the President, where he sat hunched at the head of the large
refractory table, had a Marlboro hanging from the corner of his pensive mouth.
"If my wife
sees me like this, she's going to kill me," he said to lighten the mood.
The answering laughter had a nervous edge.
Despite the
cigarettes, the hands made twitchy by endless cups of coffee and the grizzled
stubble that covered their faces, these men were still as sharp as they'd been
when called to the situation room twelve hours earlier. An aide entered from
the single elevator and walked straight to Sam Becker, the head of the National
Security Agency.
"Sir, here's
the latest from the KH-11 flyby." He handed over a sheaf of infrared
photographs taken by an orbiting spy satellite. "Just like the photos
taken from the SR-1 Wraith, I'm afraid the analysts couldn't make much out of
them. The heat signature from the volcano makes it impossible to locate any
other thermal images."
"Damn,"
Becker said, leafing through the photos. "If my men didn't see a Russian
nuclear sub, I don't see how Mercer could have. The NSA has the best photo
interp people in the world. I hope you're right about him, Dick."
Henna looked up
from the fan of papers spread before him. "I've got no guarantees, but so
far the man hasn't disappointed. He told me over the phone that he had the John
Dory pinpointed at the volcano site.""
"If that's
true, why didn't we just order him to tell us where that was?" asked Paul
Barnes.
"Christ,
Paul, you met him. Do you think he would have told us anything?"
"I agree with
Dick on this one," the President remarked, rubbing his bloodshot eyes.
"The deft touch is what's needed here, not a heavy hand."
"I think I
have it, sirs," Tompkins interrupted. The men turned to the screen.
An image came into
focus, a handsome Oriental man dressed in jungle camouflage. Behind him,
marines were firing at an unseen enemy from the protection of sandbag bunkers.
Two Abrams tanks sat squarely on a wide expanse of asphalt, their turrets
pointed toward the main gates of Pearl Harbor. Their 120mm cannons were silent,
but machine-gun fire spat from their coaxially mounted Brownings. It was a
macabre scene because there was no audio.
Tompkins pressed a
few more buttons on his console and the clamor of battle assaulted the room.
The ferocity was stunning.
"Repeat your
message, Colonel, we lost your transmission for a few minutes," Morrison
said.
Over the sound of the battle, words matched the officer's moving
lips. ". . . about ten minutes ago, sir."
''Colonel Shinzo,
this is Admiral Morrison, please repeat," the admiral asked a second time.
"Sir, about ten minutes ago all hell broke loose. Without
warning, the guardsmen and locals outside the gate opened fire. Small arms
mostly, but the guardsmen do have rocket launchers and TOW antitank missiles.
They are not making any move for an assault yet, but it's only a matter of
time, sir."
Colonel Shinzo
shouted something incomprehensible and ducked behind a sandbag wall. The camera
must have been mounted on a tripod because it remained steady as a grenade
detonated no more than twenty yards away. The image faded for a moment, then
returned. Shinzo was again standing in view.
"What are you
doing to hold them, Shinzo?"
"As ordered,
we're firing over their heads, but my boys are taking too many casualties to
remain passive much longer, sir."
''Colonel Shinzo,
do you recognize my voice?'' the President asked clearly, hiding his
exhaustion.
"I believe
so, Mr. President." The statement was more of a question.
"Colonel,
you're doing a fine job there, but I want civilian and National Guard
casualties at a minimum. Do you understand?"
"Yes, Mr.
President," Shinzo said resignedly, knowing this meant losing a lot of his
men.
The noise of the
battle increased dramatically. Shinzo turned away quickly as the transmission
broke off again.
The assembled men
all turned to Tompkins, who was frustratingly twisting dials and knobs.
"I'm sorry, but the transmission was broken at the other end. There's
nothing I can do."
"That's
fine," Admiral Morrison said dryly. "You're dismissed."
Tompkins
gratefully hurried from the room.
"Can we trust
him?" Paul Barnes asked. "I mean, he's a Jap after all."
"Shut your
fucking mouth, you racist son of a bitch." Morrison was on his feet the
instant Barnes finished speaking. "Shinzo wears the uniform of the United
States Marine Corps. You question the integrity of one of my boys again, and so
help me Christ I'm going to tear you a new asshole."
"Let's calm
down here, gentlemen," Dick Henna said soothingly. "But Admiral
Morrison has a point. We start second-guessing the motivations of our own
people and we might as well go home and wait for Armageddon."
"I guess it's
started," the President said slowly. Every man knew he meant a civil war.
"The great melting pot has been simmering for two hundred-plus years and
it's about to boil over. Unless this situation ends within a few hours, the
news from Hawaii will light a powder keg in every big city in America. It'll
make the Los Angeles riots of 1992 look like Mardi Gras."
The President was
silent for five long minutes. His most
trusted advisors knew he was making a decision that might very well condemn the
United States to the bloodiest war ever fought in the Western Hemisphere. The
compassion they felt for him could not make the decision any easier.
His shaggy head was bowed over the table and his lips moved
silently. Was he praying, or asking advice of the ghost of Abraham Lincoln, who
was said to wander the White House? He raised his head, his shoulders squaring.
"Tom."
Admiral Morrison looked the President square in the eye, awaiting his orders.
"I want a Tomahawk cruise missile armed with a nuclear warhead launched at
the volcano. If there is a Russian sub out there guarding it, it'll be
destroyed by the blast."
So it was war. The
United States was going to fight and perhaps lose everything democracy had
created. Once again race would plunge America into a civil war, but this time
there would be no North and South, no Mason-Dixon Line. The boundaries had
blurred in the decades since then. Now the battles would be fought in every
state and every town.
"Then order
the Kitty Hawk and the Inchon to stand off, suspend all flights,
and steam out of the area. I don't want them anywhere near Hawaii, is that
clear? Tell the commander at Pearl to throw down their weapons and surrender
the base."
A sigh ran through
the room.
"I would
rather sacrifice Hawaii than risk a war. Maybe their seccession will start a
chain reaction and this country will disintegrate, but I'm willing to take that
risk. I can't order our troops to kill Americans no matter what the
consequences!"
Tears ran
unashamedly down his cheeks.
"Sir."
Dick Henna was the first person to speak. "What about Mercer? We haven't
even given him a chance."
"Dick, he's
only one man. We're talking about a massive revolution supported by God knows
how many peo-pie."
"Mr.
President," Henna persisted, "What if he's right that this revolution
is being masterminded by an outside influence? If he can cut that off, there
will be no revolt."
"I spoke to
the Russian President no more than two hours ago, Dick. He had no idea what I
was talking about. Mercer was wrong about the Russians being involved. This
whole thing was strictly Takahiro Ohnishi's."
''And what if this
is something the Russian government didn't sanction?"
"That's a bit
too far-fetched for me to believe. This is a massive operation. There's no way
the head of the country wouldn't know about it."
"Ask your
predecessors about Iran-Contra sometime," Henna retorted sarcastically.
The President
ignored the remark.
''About the
Russian government not sanctioning this operation, it may not be that
far-fetched," Paul Barnes said, polishing his glasses.
"What do you
mean?"
''This afternoon,
the body of Gennady Perchenko was fished from a river in Bangkok. If you
recall, Perchenko was the Russian ambassador to the Bangkok Accords, the one
who outfoxed us into signing away any legal rights to that new volcano."
"Was there
any indication of foul play?"
"In my
business, there's never any indication, but I'd stake my career that he was
murdered. Also, an informer reported seeing Ivan Kerikov flying into Thailand a
few days before Perchenko's death."
"Who's Ivan
Kerikov?"
"A real cagey
KGB operator, sir. My contacts in Moscow tell me that there is a massive
manhunt on for him even as we speak. It seems he has a record of working
outside the fold and right now he's under arrest for misappropriation of
government funds, equipment, and personnel,
and a dozen other charges, including murder. "He's come to the attention
of the CIA a few times over the years. He ran a team of assassins and torturers
in Afghanistan during the early 1980s and he was somehow connected to the
Korean Air jumbo jet shot down in September of 1983. Most recently he took over
Department Seven of the KGB.
"Department Seven is one of those groups we know very little
about. They don't seem to have any active agents or any real goals. They just
act as a sort of think tank as far as we can figure. Now, if Perchenko's death
can be linked to Kerikov then we have a definite connection between that
volcano and this Department Seven."
Sam Becker had
been reading the file handed to him earlier, with the photos, and now he looked
up sharply. "We have that connection."
"What do you
have, Sam?" The President caught the strength behind Becker's voice and
drew from it.
"On Paul's
request last evening, I had the archive sections at Fort Meade pull anything
they had on Soviet geologists from the fifties and sixties. The records were
sketchy, but we just got lucky."
Since its
inception, the National Security Agency at Fort Meade was the repository for
every scrap of intelligence gathered from around the world. There was more
computer power in the sprawling complex than anywhere else on the planet, and
it was used to decipher even the most oblique reference or cryptic message from
enemy and ally alike. If something had ever been put in print, spoken about
over a phone line, or bounced off a satellite, NSA had a record of it. From the
personal advertisements in the Johannesburg Star to mundane
conversations between two sisters in Madrid to the dying gasps of three
cosmonauts who secretly suffocated aboard the Soyuz space station in 1974, it
was all stored on the magnetic tapes in NSA's archives.
Becker held up his
slim file. "This is from the archive director,
Oliver Lee. According to Lee, personnel records from a research laboratory near
Odessa show that an Olga Borodin has been drawing a decent pension from the
state since an accident claimed her husband on June 20, 1963. Given the
parameters of the search, her name caught Lee's attention, and after a bit more
research he found that the laboratory was part of an agency called Department
Seven. It seems, the CIA knows more about Department Seven than we do but the
connection is obvious. Olga Borodin is the widow of a geologist named Pytor
Borodin."
"You mean the
Russian specialist on bikinium?" Henna interrupted.
"So, Dr.
Mercer was right, the Russians are involved, just not their government."
The President was truly shocked. "Kerikov must be the mastermind and
Ohnishi merely a pawn. The man's got balls, I'll say that much, but knowing
this doesn't help us any. We still have a coup taking place in Hawaii and a
valuable resource about to fall to this Ivan Kerikov." The President
swiveled to face Henna. "What do you propose?"
"Give Mercer
until dawn," Henna said. "If he has a plan, at least give him that
much time. You saw from that last transmission that it's almost dark in Hawaii.
Tonight should be relatively calm. The guardsmen don't have the right equipment
for night fighting. If we don't hear anything by sunrise, continue with your
plan, blow up the volcano and surrender the islands to Ohnishi."
The President
leaned back in his chair for a moment, staring at the soundproofed ceiling
tiles, fingers laced behind his head. He made his decision quickly. "All
right, I'll give Mercer until seven a.m.
local time, then I want that fucking volcano obliterated."
Henna stood to
leave the room. Mercer had arrived on the Inchon ten hours earlier and
Henna had promised to get in touch with any final news. "Dick?"
"Yes, Mr.
President."
"Why do you
trust Mercer so much?"
Henna paused by
the elevator door, his arms full of papers and files. "I'm basically a
cop, sir, and cops learn to trust their instincts."
DESPITE the sophistication of the equipment in the White
House Communications Room, Henna spent twenty frustrating minutes waiting for a
connection to the Inchon and another ten for Mercer to be tracked down
aboard the 778-foot assault ship and brought to the radio.
"About time
you called."
"You've got
until seven tomorrow morning your time," Henna said without preamble.
"So you better have one hell of a plan in that Machiavellian mind of
yours."
"What happens
at seven?" Mercer asked airily.
"A cruise
missile blows up Borodin's volcano and the President surrenders the Hawaiian
Islands without a fight."
"Talk about
your serious deadlines." Mercer paused, absorbing this latest piece of
information. "Well, I'd best be off, then. Any parting advice?''
"Yeah. Right
now Pearl Harbor is a war zone and we can only assume the rest of the islands
are equally inflamed."
"I'm
surprised it's stayed calm as long as it has. What else?"
"We've found
a definite link between the coup and a Russian KGB director named Ivan Kerikov.
He's the mastermind. He was last seen in Thailand but may be on Hawaii by now.
Oh, yeah. I've had a team monitoring ham radio operators from Hawaii for the
past couple of days. A guy there named Ken Peters, who works for one of the
television stations, got hold of one of my people in California. He suspects
that one of their reporters, Jill Tzu, may have been kidnapped by Ohnishi. She
was doing a real in-depth expose on him when
she vanished."
"Dudley
DoRight to the rescue. What else?"
"Just that
Ohnishi's mansion is heavily guarded by some real fanatics, so be
careful."
"Don't worry,
Dick. I have no interest in Ohnishi's house. He's just a willing accomplice,
not the linchpin."
The signal from
the Inchon faded. Henna knew that Mercer had cut him off.
He settled the
phone back into its cradle. If Mercer wasn't going to Ohnishi's mansion, then
where was he going? And if Ohnishi wasn't the principal in this affair, who
was?
__________
__________
__________
Evad Lurbud's senses were so highly tuned that the explosion which
echoed across the lawns from the main house rocked him back against his heels
as if he had been physically struck. Sergeant Demanov placed a steadying hand
on his shoulder.
"What in the
hell was that?" the burly sergeant asked in a whisper.
"Don't
know," Lurbud replied curtly, straining his eyes through the night-vision
binoculars at the front of Ohnishi's glass mansion. "I can't see anything
out of the ordinary."
Demanov, Lurbud,
and two commandos were crouched behind a small stand of flowering rhododendrons
placed like an island on the wide front lawn of the estate. The rest of the
squad was similarly hidden behind other natural cover.
They had reached
Ohnishi's as the shadows of twilight began smearing the beautiful grounds.
Lurbud's team had made use of the jungle which surrounded the estate to approach to within two hundred yards of
the house, then had dashed across the lawn in a leapfrog technique, moving from
small grove to small grove.
Lurbud and Demanov
were no more than forty yards from the marble porte cochere when the explosion
occurred. The sound was accompanied by a flash of brilliant light at the side
of the darkened house.
"I don't see
anyone within the building," Lurbud said.
The night-vision
glasses allowed Lurbud to see into the glass-walled house, but the main foyer
entrance, curving staircase, and the rooms immediately to its left and right
were all empty. He was about to signal the men behind him to move forward when
a tiny movement within the mansion made him pause.
Someone was moving
across the foyer toward the staircase. The figure was walking cautiously,
twisting his body and neck as he peered around. When the man reached the base
of the stairs, Lurbud clearly saw the assault rifle tucked under his arm.
"We've got
company," he said tensely
Lurbud watched
closely as another figure swept into the entrance foyer and scurried up the
stairs. "Two so far," he remarked. "But something's not right.
They look as if they aren't familiar with the house. It seems strange for
Ohnishi's security to act like that."
"Could be
standard practice after that explosion," Demanov suggested.
"I don't
think so. I think I know why we haven't seen any of Ohnishi's personal
bodyguards anywhere on the estate."
"American
commandos beat us here?"
"That's my
guess."
"Good,"
Demanov grunted, and quietly cocked his machine pistol.
KENJI, what's going on?" Ohnishi wailed.
"There was
one contingency you never anticipated." The
revolver in Kenji's hand was steady. "Just as Kerikov sold you out and you
sold out Kerikov, I have done the same to both of you."
"I don't
understand, Kenji," Ohnishi pleaded.
"It's really
quite simple. Ivan Kerikov hired me eight months ago to act as his watchdog, to
report your activities to him."
Ohnishi slouched
deeper in his wheelchair, his frail neck vanishing into his shoulders as he
bowed in defeat. He already knew the rest of what Kenji would say, and the
weight of truth was heavy on his wasted body.
"Kerikov had
to maintain absolute command of every aspect of his operation. You were the
only player that he did not directly control. That is why he enlisted me, to
make sure that he knew what you were plotting."
''But I have known
you all your life; you are like my son. How? How could you do such a
thing?" Ohnishi might have accepted the betrayal, but he still had to know
the reason.
"You know
nothing about me except that which I've told you. It is true that at the
beginning I saw you as my father, as my master, but like any son, I outgrew
you. I searched for my own path. Which I found."
"Through
Kerikov?"
Kenji's laugh was
without feeling, so mocking that it sounded more like the bark of a rabid dog.
"Kerikov is as much a fool as you were, old man. Soon after he approached
me with his lucrative offer, I was approached by a group of men that gave me
even more." Kenji related the story of his mother's enslavement as a
"Comfort Girl" to the occupying Japanese army in Korea, his
subsequent birth and his sale to his natural father.
"I am half
Korean, Ohnishi, a heritage that my father tried to bury, but a fact I could
never ignore.
"In the years
since Kerikov first approached you, he had to change his plans due to the
collapse of his government. Not long ago, but before you began actively
pursuing this doomed dream of yours, he sold you out to a group of investors. This group bought
the volcano that Kerikov promised would make Hawaii a viable nation. What he
did not know, or couldn't know, is that this group of Korean investors then
contacted me. I don't know how they found out about my heritage, but they gave
me the opportunity to prove who I really am. From then on, not only was I a spy
for Kerikov against you, but also a spy against the both of you for my new
Korean benefactors.
"You had no
chance at all. Every move you made was counteracted by one of my allies. You
bought weapons from Suleiman el-aziz Suleiman—I betrayed the Egyptian to
Kerikov. The weapons that you so hoped for will not arrive. Nor will there be
any additional mercenaries. Kerikov asked me to rescue a certain woman from the
NOAA ship—I told my allies to have her killed in Washington D.C. Kerikov forced
you to write that letter to the President, intending to hold it over your head,
I sent it to the White House, knowing that would lead to the anarchy that now
holds these islands."
"You sent the
letter?" Ohnishi did nothing to hide his astonishment.
"Oh, yes.
Mayor Takamora made a convenient scapegoat, but I was responsible for sending
the letter. The volcano was too close to the surface to risk any detection and
it was agreed that your letter would act as the best possible deterrent against
the American forces finding it. The Ocean Seeker almost foiled these
plans, but Kerikov dealt with it with a typical Russian reaction. After he had
the NOAA ship destroyed, I knew that the American focus would be on to you and
perhaps the Russians if they got smart, but we, that is the Koreans, would
never be suspect. The volcano would be ours without ever having created or
defended it.
"It was the
perfect triple-cross. While you and Kerikov and the United States quarreled
over the Hawaiian islands and the volcano, Hydra Consolidated would take the
prize and no one would be the wiser."
Kenji was
chuckling at the frail old man before him when an armed figure burst onto the
balcony, his assault rifle covering both Kenji and Ohnishi. Kenji spoke to him
in Korean.
"It's all
right. This is Ohnishi; he won't give us any difficulties. All went well?"
"Yes,"
the Korean commando replied crisply. "Ohnishi's guards were taken out
smoothly. The diversionary explosion worked perfectly; none of my men were even
wounded."
"Good. We'll
leave here for my house in just a few minutes. Make sure the remainder of the
explosives are in place." The Korean soldier began speaking into a
walkie-talkie. "You see, Ohnishi, this is where my true loyalties lie.
When I told the Koreans about your coup, they thought it was the perfect cover under
which they could claim the volcano. The United States and Ivan Kerikov would be
too busy trying to quell the violence and silence you to notice us."
The sound of an
automatic weapon ripped through the mansion like the tearing of a piece of canvas.
Kenji rolled to the floor, shifting his aim from Ohnishi to the doorway leading
to the balcony. The Korean soldier swung around so that he too covered the
entrance. Silence hung in the air for a long moment.
"It came from
downstairs. You must have missed one of Ohnishi's guards. Go check it
out." Kenji waited until the Korean left before jerking Ohnishi to his
feet and half dragging him toward his bedroom.
LURBUD gave the trigger of his machine pistol another tap as a
figure lunged from the front door for the bushes just to its left. He knew he'd
missed, but it would keep his opponent pinned for a few crucial seconds.
Sergeant Demanov
followed Lurbud and two other troopers in the last dash across the lawn to the
house. As they approached the thick slabs of glass of one wing, Lurbud tossed a
grenade. The grenade cracked the glass as
it hit, but did not penetrate. A second later, it exploded, shattering three
panels in a plume of crystal and fire. Lurbud led his men through the resulting
six-foot-wide hole. Their boots crunched across the fine glass chips spread out
over the woven reed mat within. One of Kenji's men lay smeared against the far
wall of the Japanese-style room, his body shredded by the razor-sharp glass.
The remainder of
Lurbud's team had used similar techniques, blowing four other holes in the
structure. What followed was nothing short of an all-out war, with both sides
falsely assuming their enemy was an American commando team.
Cordite smoke hung
heavily in the entrance foyer as Lurbud cautiously edged himself into the lofty
room near one wall. In the whirling air, it was difficult to tell who was part
of his force and who was not. A figure leapt from behind a huge terra-cotta
vase, leveling his weapon at Lurbud. Sergeant Demanov dispatched the attacker
with a quick burst.
Lurbud
acknowledged Demanov with a nod and continued his sweep of the house. Gunfire
echoed throughout the cavernous home and streaks of tracer fire, like cornet
tails, could be seen through some of the transparent walls. Halfway up the
stairs, Lurbud came under a scathing fire, bullets ripping up the thick marble
banister only inches from his body.
Lurbud leapt up
and over the railing, exposing himself for a moment to the hidden gunman before
dropping back to the first floor. He hit the hard marble and rolled once as
more bullets sliced the air around him. More than one gunman had targeted him.
He continued to roll, directing fire from his machine pistol at the vague
outline of a man far across the foyer. The rounds caught the man low in the
gut, the kinetic energy of the impacts lifting him bodily and tossing him
through a bullet-riddled glass wall.
A grenade rumbled
somewhere within the mansion, shaking the entire
building. It was immediately followed by the sound of huge chunks of glass
shattering against the hard floor.
Up and running, Lurbud changed clips for his weapon with expert
hands. Someone loomed out from the reeking smoke and Lurbud almost tore him
apart, but stopped in time as he realized it was Demanov.
"What's your
estimate?" Lurbud panted.
"Ten to
fifteen, maybe as many as twenty. It's hard to tell because this place is so
fucking big."
Bullets flew over
their heads as they both dove behind a sofa in what must have been the formal
living room. Demanov returned fire quickly. Another fusillade pinned them back
to the white-carpeted floor.
As soon as the
firing stopped, Lurbud sprang to his feet and ran across the room. Bullets
tracked his progress, edging closer and closer to his racing form. Waterford
crystal sculpture nearly seven feet tall exploded just behind him. He dove for
the floor between two leather ottomans, breath jamming into his throat with the
impact.
The firing stopped
for a moment and he lifted himself. The gunman was in plain view. Lurbud opened
up, stitching rounds across a massive Roy Lichtenstein painting before finding
his mark. The gunman went down with three slugs buried deep in his torso.
Lurbud slithered
across the room to the fallen assailant. Expecting to see a Caucasian or
Japanese from Ohnishi's security detachment, he was shocked to find that the
gunman was Chinese or possibly Korean.
"What the
fuck is going on?" he wondered.
Lurbud heard the
distinctive crack of a pistol shot just as a bullet slammed into the corpse's
chest inches from his hand. He lifted his machine pistol and fired
instinctively, but his bullets hit nothing but more glass. The attacker had
nimbly ducked behind a glass-cased suit of Japanese armor guarding a curve in
the hallway leading to some of the guest suites.
Lurbud lurched to
his feet and started down the hall, back pressed tight to the wall, hands
steady on his weapon. He fired a burst at the priceless armor, which disintegrated
under the hail of 9mm rounds. There was no one behind it. He continued on,
passing the body of one of his own men further down the hallway. The Russian
soldier's head had been completely twisted around.
"Jesus,"
Lurbud muttered, remembering that Ohnishi's assistant Kenji was a black belt of
the eight don, a master virtually without peer. The dead Russian had to be his
handiwork.
Lurbud tightened
the grip on his machine pistol now that he knew the power of his quarry. He
searched each of the opulent guest suites quickly but calmly, mentally blocking
out the firefight still raging within the building. The door at the far end of
the hallway did not lead to a room, but rather opened onto a stark concrete and
steel service staircase.
He ascended cautiously, the rancid sweat
of fear snaking down his flanks. It was impossible to hear anything in the
echoing stairway because of the cacophonous battle.
After a few
minutes, Lurbud reached the top of the stairs but there was no sign of Kenji,
just a dimly lit landing and a fire retardant door. Lurbud jerked open the
door, keeping his body safely out of the way.
When the gunfire
he expected didn't occur, he ducked his head around the corner quickly. The
room beyond was small, maybe twelve feet square, but tastefully furnished with
a low bed, an antique dresser, and damascene wall coverings. A huge built-in
mirror dominated the far wall. Lurbud knew it was one-way glass from the plans
provided to his team.
Rather than waste
time looking for the secret exit that Kenji must have used, Lurbud pumped a few
rounds into the mirror and watched it tumble to the floor in a glittering
cascade. Beyond lay Ohnishi's private bedroom and on the beautiful four-poster bed lay Ohnishi himself, naked.
His head had been
severed from his torso, as had his arms and legs. Each appendage lay neatly in
its proper anatomical position, but about two inches separated each from the
trunk of the billionaire's body.
Evad Lurbud had
been witness to and had in fact carried out some of the most vicious torture
yet devised by mankind, but what lay before him brought vomit shooting out of
his mouth. Ohnishi's withered genitalia had (been cut off and placed a few
inches from his groin. Lurbud knew from the amount of blood in this region that
this had been the first member carved off.
Trying to regain
his composure, Lurbud thought for a moment and realized that such a death took
more time than he'd given the fleeing Kenji. Either someone else had been here
first, or Kenji had done this prior to Lurbud's assault on the mansion.
If the presence of
Korean guards was baffling, then Ohnishi's death was truly confusing. Kenji was
Ohnishi's assistant of many years, by all accounts incredibly loyal. Why had he
suddenly turned? Why had he killed his employer? Lurbud let these questions
sink into the back of his mind as he continued his search.
Beyond the bedroom
lay a dayroom as large as most suburban homes. The decor was very modern,
including geometric and freeform art pieces and a glossy white pine floor. The
pyramidal top of the mansion soared over Lurbud's head, supporting a huge
primary-colored mobile by Calder, a smaller version of the one hanging in the
east wing of the National Gallery in Washington D.C.
Lurbud dashed from
the dayroom through the nine-foot-tall French doors at the far end and onto an
open balcony that overlooked the back of Ohnishi's estate. He took a few deep
breaths of the humid air, glad to be out of the smoke-filled house. Amazingly,
he could make out the sounds of night insects over the
din of battle below.
Kenji stood on the
back lawn, a lean shadowy form in the rich moonlight. The instant Lurbud saw
him, he raised his machine pistol, but Kenji was too far out of range. A glance
to his left showed Lurbud the rope ladder, hanging over the side of the balcony
that Kenji must have used to escape.
Below, Kenji
stretched his arms over his head, and Lurbud swore he heard laughter. When
Kenji's hands met, though Lurbud could not see the gesture, his finger touched
the detonation button on a small radio transmitter.
A deep rumbling
shook the building, buckling the entire structure. Some of the few still intact
glass plates popped from their supports and flew onto the lawn. The rumbling
deepened and the house began to shiver as the chain of small explosives planted
around the foundation by Kenji's soldiers went off in a predetermined sequence.
The timing of the
blasts corresponded with the harmonic resonance of the entire structure so that
the rumbling deepened even as the sound of the small explosions diminished.
Lurbud clutched at the railing as the building shook faster and faster. Huge
rents appeared in the main support columns, those that took most of the strain
of the massive glass roof.
The columns
collapsed all at once and the roof shattered in a glittering explosion. The
slab-sided glass walls toppled as the entire building turned into an endless a
shower of glass. Tons of it poured down, killing all those beneath, slicing
through flesh and bone without check. One moment the Koreans and Russians had
been fighting a desperate battle and the next they were torn apart by an
unimaginable force.
Lurbud had felt
the balcony sway as the support columns let go. The lighted, almost crystalline
pyramid above him shattered as if a bomb had gone off directly beneath it. He
ducked under Ohnishi's breakfast table an instant before the shards sliced
through the air like hypervelocity bullets. His left hand was caught in the
hail of glass and he quickly pulled it to his chest. Three fingers were missing
and a seven-inch-long fragment of glass was thrust halfway through his hand.
He had just started to scream when the whole cantilevered balcony
let go. His last sensation, even before the pain of his mutilated hand had time
to fully course through his nervous system, was of falling indefinitely.
__________
__________
__________
USS INCHON
Mercer thanked the radio operator
politely after hanging up on Henna and left the cryptlike Communications Room.
His expression was neutral, and only a trained observer would notice the slight
tenseness in his stride. His gray eyes were hard, devoid of emotion.
A woman he had dated several years earlier had said, the day their
relationship ended, that the only way to tell what he was thinking was to ask
him. His expressions, she complained, would never give him away, and his eyes,
which are supposed to be windows into the soul, were really one-way glass that
only he could see through.
He had scoffed at the notion, but any navy personnel that he
passed would have agreed with her.
Because he had been sent to the Inchon for an undetermined
number of days, Mercer had been assigned a cabin. It had the luxurious
appointments of a cheap highway motel, but it was his own. He locked the door
and stripped. After a cold shower to help wake him up, he dressed again, secreting equipment brought
from his home.
When he was
dressed, he did some quick shadow-boxing to ensure that nothing would fly free
and that his equipment was unconstricting. His moves were fast and efficient,
his mind focused to a pinpoint. Satisfied, he took several deep, calming
breaths. He tucked his Beretta pistol into the waistband of his pants, the
tails of his black shirt over it. Grabbing the nylon duffel containing his
combat harness and machine pistol, he left the small cabin.
He passed a few
dozen of the nineteen hundred marines on board as he headed for the flight
deck. He could tell by their grim faces that the men didn't relish the idea of
invading their own country.
Neither do I, he
thought.
The flight deck of
the amphibious assault ship was nearly three hundred feet shorter than the Kitty
Hawk's, but equally as pandemonious. An AV-8B Harrier jump jet thundered
into the sky just as he walked onto the deck. Thanks to her ducted fans, the
attack aircraft utilized only a tiny portion of the deck to achieve flight. The
wind kicked up by her Rolls Royce Pegasus engines whipped the air furiously,
sending grit into Mercer's eyes.
Several Sea
Stallion and Sea King helicopters sat on the deck, their huge rotors hanging
limply. Mechanics and other personnel were buzzing around, dodging small
vehicles and each other in preparation for a possible battle. It was obvious
that the President hadn't ordered the standdown yet. Mercer guessed that the
commander-in-chief would wait until the last moment.
He shielded his
eyes against the thirty-knot wind and surveyed the twilit deck until he saw the
helicopter that had brought him from the Kitty Hawk early that morning.
A Sikorsky Sea
King. Lieutenant Edward Rice, USMC, pilot.
The huge chopper
sat just forward of the ship's superstructure. Mercer could see movement in the
cockpit.
Eddie Rice had
told him on the flight from the carrier that he w5uld be ferrying some
equipment back to the Kitty Hawk just after sunset. Mercer was thankful
that Henna had called before the chopper returned to its ship. The hijacking
would be a little easier since he knew the pilot.
No sense ruining a
stranger's day, thought Mercer as he walked to the big helicopter. He
approached the chopper from the port side and noticed with satisfaction that
the crew door was open. He pulled the Beretta 9mm from under his shirt and
threw his duffel bag onto the small platform below the chopper's flight deck.
He kept the gun
hidden when he poked his head into the cockpit.
"Come to see
me off, Mercer?" Eddie Rice smiled.
Without a doubt, he had the worst teeth for a black man that
Mercer had ever seen. So much for stereotypes, he thought.
"I loved your
flying so much, the navy decided I should go back with you," Mercer
replied.
"They sent
you to the Inchon just to bring you back to the Kitty Hawk?" Rice
shook his head. "I've heard of the government paper shuffle, but this is
nuts. Come on up; I'm just about cleared for takeoff."
Mercer tucked the
pistol away without ever displaying it and slipped into the empty copilot's
seat. As he had earlier that day, he felt like he was in a cocoon of dials and
switches. He sat anxiously as Rice continued his preflight check. Waiting for
the takeoff was agonizing and he kept glancing at his watch. He had eleven and a
half hours until the nuclear strike.
"You got a
date or something?" Rice asked, noting Mercer's agitation.
"Something
like that," Mercer said grimly.
"Two more
minutes and we're out of here." Rice tugged the microphone to his lips and
began talking to
the flight controller. A
moment later, the two turboshaft engines began to whine. Needles on the
instrument panel quivered and then started to climb as the General Electric
motors warmed. Rice watched the instruments intently, his gaze darting from one
gauge to the next.
When he engaged
the gearbox, the engines' whine dulled for a moment as they fought the inertia
of the stationary rotors, then picked up as the five great blades began to
turn. The noise in the cockpit increased dramatically, forcing Mercer to don a
helmet. Eddie continued to add power and the blades beat the air fervently. He
eased back on the collective pitch and the 20,000-pound helicopter lifted into
the dim Pacific sky.
"Piece of
cake." Rice grinned as the Inchon vanished behind them. He turned
to Mercer expecting a return smile, but was greeted by the gaping barrel of the
Beretta. The grin melted from his face.
"Sorry,
Eddie," Mercer said, his voice sounding tinny through the chopper's
intercom. "But we're not heading for the Kitty Hawk."
"I guess
we're not."
Mercer reversed
his grip on the pistol and smashed it into the Sea King's radio, cutting the
chopper off from the outside, then turned the weapon back on Rice.
"Listen, I'm
on a secret mission. Hijacking a helicopter at the last moment was the only way
to maintain security."
"Right,"
Rice said suspiciously.
"You know why
the navy moved these ships to Hawaii." It was a statement, not a question.
"You may be forced to invade your own country and kill your own people.
Well, there's a chance I can stop it. I have to get to Hawaii and you're my
best shot. It doesn't matter if you believe me or not, but you are going to
take me to Hawaii."
"There's no
way you work for the CIA. The few agents I've known would've just pulled the
gun and given the orders. They don't like to
explain shit. So who in the hell are you?"
"I don't work
for the CIA, Eddie. I didn't lie this morning when I told you I was a
geologist, but I'm also the only guy who can pull this off."
"You know
there's nothing I can do to you; I've got to keep both hands on the sticks to
keep this eggbeater in the sky. So don't you worry about me. But my passengers
might not like a sight-seeing tour."
"Passengers?
I thought you were carrying cargo."
"When you see
them, you'll know why I call 'em cargo."
Knowing Rice couldn't leave his seat or contact any other aircraft
or ship, Mercer ducked down until he could look into the cargo hold of the Sea
King. There were five men in the 160-square-foot hold.
They were Navy
SEALs, the best trained commandos in the American military, perhaps in the
world. They sat in stony silence, oblivious to the noise of the chopper or the
wind buffeting them from the open hatch. Like a computer that only works in a
binary system of ones and zeros, the commander of the SEALs regarded Mercer as
threat or nonthreat. His fathomless eyes were the bright blue of glacial ice.
They held Mercer's for the fraction of a second it took him to categorize
Mercer as nonthreat and turned away indifferently.
Mercer had never
felt such an aura of utter malignance in his life than that surrounding these
men. Rice was right to call them cargo. To call them passengers would be admitting
they retained a trace of humanity.
He went back up to
the flight deck and took his seat, donning his headset.
"See what I
mean?" Eddie grinned. "Me, I've got no problems with Hawaii, in fact
I'd love a Mai Tai, just give me a target destination and I'll get us there.
Oh, you didn't need to smash up our radio, you know."
"Yeah, why's
that?"
Rice smiled
crookedly. "The call I received about two minutes before you boarded. Seems my commander was contacted by
the director of the FBI. Said he thought you'd pull a stunt like this and the
SEALs would be a compromise between your plan and the president's. Those SEALs
back there are under orders to follow you. He told me they might come in handy
tonight."
Mercer laughed so
hard his guts ached. "That son of a bitch," he said admiringly.
"No wonder he's the director of the FBI. My first hijacking and the
victims turn out to be willing accomplices. Sorry about pulling the gun on
you."
"Ain't
nothing. I was born in South Central. Wasn't the first time it's ever happened.
Probably not the last, either." ,
An hour and a half
later, the Sea King blasted along the northern coasts of the Hawaiian islands,
her watertight hull no more than fifty feet above the crashing surf, her
sixty-five-foot rotor blades less than one hundred yards from the towering
cliffs. Mercer had spent much of the flight in the cargo hold with the SEALs,
poring over the plans to Kenji's estate and forming a battle plan. By the time
the Sea King cleared the coast, all of them were satisfied that the assault
could be pulled off successfully.
Back in the
cockpit, Mercer could see lights, the concentration on Rice's face, but he also
saw a slight trace of enjoyment too.
Maui and Molokai
and the Big Island were behind them and now they skirted the northern coast of
Oahu. Mercer thought about the dead whales found there only a month ago—the
start of this whole chain reaction. Amazing how such an inane event sparked one
of the greatest crises America might ever face.
"Do you have
the coordinates?" Rice asked, his eyes never leaving the moon-bathed waves
below.
Mercer read the
coordinates of Kenji's estate from the map provided by Dick Henna. Eddie Rice
punched them into the navigational computer, waited as the machine processed them, then glanced at the
readout. Banking the helicopter, he lifted her over the cliffs and headed
inland. The moonlit scenery below them was a gray blur, the Sea King beating
through the sky at nearly 140 knots, at times below tree top level.
Mercer trusted
Rice's flying implicitly. He had no choice.
They rocketed over
mountains only to plunge down the other side, the helicopter never more than a
hundred feet from the ground.
"Ever done
flying like this before?" Mercer asked, trying to act casual though his
knuckles were white as he gripped his seat.
"Sure,"
Rice replied. " 'Course that was in Iraq, where there weren't as many
mountains or trees or buildings to smear against."
Mercer tightened
his grip.
"You ever
done anything like this before?" asked Rice.
"Sure,"
Mercer mimicked Rice's deep baritone. " 'Course that was in Iraq, where
there weren't any wise-ass pilots."
Rice laughed, then
yanked the helicopter skyward to avoid a tall stand of trees thrusting up from
the jungle.
As the terrain
flattened out, Rice began to whistle. Mercer recognized the song as Wagner's
"Ride of the Valkyries." He knew exactly how Eddie felt.
"We're about
ten miles from your coordinates," Rice announced a few minutes later.
"Okay, the
target is a compound in the middle of an old pineapple plantation. There will
be a clearing about two miles north. It used to be an equipment storage area
when the plantation was operational. There's an abandoned shed on its southern
edge. We'll land there."
Rice didn't reply.
He was watching the ground below. The low jungle canopy retained a semblance of
regimentation from when it had been planted fields. He slowed the chopper to
thirty knots.
"There,"
he said, spotting the clearing as he crabbed the helicopter to starboard.
Mercer saw the
open ground a moment later, an area of about an acre; the abandoned metal
building stood at its far end, the corrugated roof sagging in the middle.
"Ugly country
in thirty seconds," Mercer said into his microphone, informing the SEALs
in the cargo hold.
Rice used the last
scrap of jungle cover before bursting into the clearing. The rotors kicked up a
cloud of fine dust, cutting visibility down to nothing. He landed the big
chopper by feel alone, settling her as close to the building as possible. Had
there been paint on the huge storage garage, the Teflon rotors would have
scraped it off.
By the time Mercer
jumped from the chopper, the SEALs had already secured the building and the
surrounding area. There was no one else in the vicinity.
The air was hot
and incredibly humid; Mercer's clothing stuck to his body like a clammy film
and the chirping of insects sounded unnaturally loud after his hours in the
chopper. He buckled his combat harness around his lean waist, cinching the
shoulder straps so they were snug but not binding. After pulling his MP-5 from
the duffel, he threw the empty bag back into the chopper and turned to Rice.
"You know
what to do?"
"I'll wait
here until you contact me." Rice held up a miniature walkie-talkie given
to him by one of the SEALs. "If I don't hear anything by five a.m., I'm outta here."
"Right."
Mercer looked at
his watch, 9:35. In nine and a half hours the President would unleash the
nuclear warhead and destroy the volcano two hundred miles north. A few minutes
after that, Hawaii would become an independent country.
__________
__________
__________
MV JOHN DORY
Although she was forty feet under the surface, the John Dory still
felt the turbulence above that rolled her about fifteen degrees port and
starboard. The radio operator clutched at a ceiling mounted support as he
waited to gain Captain Zwenkov's attention. Zwenkov was once again in muted
conference with the weapons officer, going over the firing solutions for the
vessel's bow-mounted Siren missile for the tenth time.
"Captain,"
the radio man interrupted, "flash message received from the
mainland."
Zwenkov turned,
cocking one bushy eyebrow in question.
"The message
read 'green,' repeated for five seconds, sir."
"Very
well." Zwenkov glanced at his watch. 2200 hours.
This was the eleventh
such message he'd received. He'd expected the "red" code by now,
authorizing him to launch his missile, but it had not come. If it didn't come until the next scheduled contact in
two hours, he would barely make it to the Hawaiian coast before dawn to extract
the commandos.
"All right,
Weapons Officer, one more time if you please." And they ran another plot
for the nuclear missile.
EVAD Lurbud collapsed the portable antenna and powered down his
radio. Using his mangled left hand had caused a bright wave of blood to seep
out from under his hastily applied bandage. He let the pain wash over him,
gritting his teeth to keep from screaming.
That he had
survived four hours since the attack on Ohnishi's house was due mainly to his
extensive KGB training. That he had survived the destruction of the house
itself was little short of a miracle.
Once the bombs had
detonated and the glass house had begun to shatter, Lurbud's dive under the
table on Ohnishi's breakfast balcony had saved his life. The table had
protected him from the exploding glass. When the main structure of the house
tumbled, the balcony had fallen outward, carrying Lurbud with it. He landed on
the lawn forty feet below, astonished to find himself alive. But by no means
had he escaped unscathed.
His right shoulder
joint had dislocated and his legs, torso, and face were severely lacerated by
shards of glass. His right eye had been punctured so that the clear fluid
within leaked down his face and dripped into the collar of his battle jacket.
With such massive
injuries, the body's main defense is to go into shock. But there are many forms
of shock, depending on the strength of the person. As endorphins and adrenaline
coursed through him, Lurbud struggled to remain conscious and focused. After
nearly twenty minutes, Lurbud began to move. Slowly at first, he raised himself
onto his hands and knees, then to his feet. All that remained of Takahiro
Ohnishi's palatial home were heaped piles of shattered glass and an empty skeleton
of tubular struts. Lurbud staggered into the
debris to search for the radio that would link him to the John Dory.
Where the scything
weight of the falling building had sliced through a victim, the mound of glass
was stained crimson by gallons of blood. In the dim moonlight, the blood looked
black, but Lurbud could tell that dozens of such bloody piles dotted the
charnel ruin.
Systematically he
checked each body, scraping off the accumulated glass with the butt of his
weapon to expose a recognizable portion. Korean and Russian alike had been
diced so finely by the shards that easy identification was impossible.
With only fifteen
minutes to spare before his next scheduled contact with the submarine, he found
the bloody mass that had once been his radio carrier. Of the man, there was
little more than strips of flesh, but the radio, in its armored plastic pack,
had survived the cascade undamaged.
Propped against
the sanguine heap, Lurbud made his first broadcast, repeating the word
"green" for five seconds. Finished, he fell back against the pile,
shards and chips digging into his flesh unnoticed.
Fighting the
exhaustion brought on by the battle and loss of blood, Lurbud tended his
wounds, winding a bandage around his mangled hand and gently mopping his
sightless eye socket. To dull the ache growing in his skull, he shot a full
syringe of morphine into his arm from the medical kit the radio man had also
carried.
He recognized
immediately how one could become addicted to the drug. Despite the pain clawing
at his tortured body his spirits had never been better. He felt buoyed and knew
that he would survive to have his revenge against Kenji. All else faded in
importance to him; the submarine, the volcano, even his own condition, as long
as he could have his revenge. The van that the Russians had used to get to
Ohnishi's estate was only a mile or so away. He could drive to Kenji's house
and make him pay dearly for the suffering he'd caused.
Lurbud was lucid
enough to know that he had to continue to make regular calls to the John
Dory. Their action, if he failed to report, would surely jeopardize his
chance at revenge on Ohnishi's former assistant.
It had taken him
nearly two hours to stagger and crawl to where the van was hidden, his mangled
body leaving a vivid trail of blood across Ohnishi's estate. The fifteen-mile
drive north had taken another hour and a half; he had to stop about every ten
minutes to allow his graying vision to return to normal.
Now he lay in a shallow
ditch no more than one hundred yards from Kenji's home, peering at it through
night-vision binoculars. The view dimmed and blurred from pain and effects of
the morphine as he strained to focus his one functioning eye.
The sprawling
two-story house was not nearly as grand as Ohnishi's, but it was very
impressive. Constructed of dressed stones coated in beige stucco, the two main
wings of the house spread from the central entrance like the blades of a
boomerang. Each second floor window was a pair of French doors that opened onto
narrow wrought-iron balconies. The fire-baked barrel tile roof and the
expansive lawns betrayed the home as a former plantation from a bygone era.
A separate guest
house sat on the other side of an olympic-sized pool from the main structure.
After making his latest report, Lurbud knew that he had two hours to
concentrate on Kenji. He was professional enough to realize that in his
condition, he was no match for the Japanese killer. He had to plan carefully.
Kenji's martial arts skill would render anything less than a long-range rifle
shot useless. Therefore a diversion was needed to bring the Oriental out of his
home and within range.
Lurbud slithered
further into the ditch to get a better view into the rooms and hoped that
something would present itself.
__________
__________
__________
Way Hue Dong was the head of Hydra Consolidated, the Korean
consortium that had bought the volcano from Ivan Kerikov. His grandson,
Chin-Huy, sat at Kenji's desk smoking a fragrant Romeo y Julietta cigar. He was
young, not much past twenty, but he possessed the eyes of an old man, eyes that
had seen many things in the service of his family. When his grandfather had
ordered him to lead the fifty-man contingent of troops to Hawaii, Chin-Huy had
not questioned, merely obeyed.
His family had
sent him or his older brothers to some of the most dangerous places on earth in
search of profit. Whether it was poached ivory from war-torn Angola or stolen
artifacts from the ravaged jungles of Central America, the younger members of
the family had responded with vigor and initiative.
This mission,
though potentially dangerous, had proved quite easy for young Chin. His local
contact, Kenji, had done much of the work necessary to ensure that the family would not be bothered when
they seized the volcano. Chin's men held the airport under the auspices of
Hawaii's more fervent national guardsmen and few had had to be used at Pearl
Harbor to incite the assembled students to open fire at the military compound.
The only difficulties had been at Ohnishi's house, where more than twenty of
his men had been cut down by a failed commando strike, presumably American.
All in all, Chin's
role had been minor. All that remained now was confirmation from the mining
ship en route to the volcano that its target was in sight. That would not take
place for another ten hours or so. Once his family had possession of the
volcano, Chin would recall his troops, making sure that their withdrawal would
bring a swift end to the state's unrest. The violence now gripping Hawaii
served only a limited purpose. Once the volcano was secure, it was best that
the islands quieted.
"Your rewards
will be great, Kenji. What do you plan to do with them?"
Kenji did not like the young man sitting
languidly in his chair. Chin was brash, uncouth, and obnoxious.
"Do not speak
too quickly; everything is yet to be settled."
"That
commando team fell for your ruse perfectly— they attacked the wrong house, just
as you planned." Chin waved his cigar in a dismissive gesture. ''The
volcano is within our grasp, surely you no longer worry."
"Ivan Kerikov
believed that the volcano was within his grasp and Takahiro Ohnishi believed
that Hawaii was within his, too. Both men were wrong. I will not believe that
we are successful until the mining vessel anchors at the volcano site."
"Ach,"
Chin said, then launched into another story of his own bravery in the face of
adversity.
He had told Kenji nearly a dozen such stories earlier in the
afternoon, before Kenji had set out to murder Ohnishi. Chin's tales of bravado
had a whining tone to them, as if daring Kenji
to doubt them. Since Chin had not volunteered to lead his troops in the assault
of Ohnishi's mansion, Kenji needed no proof of the boy's true character. Kenji
had grown weary of the stories and the boy, yet listened as if rapt. It was
expected of him.
Chin summed up,
"If I could survive that and still keep the diamonds with me the whole time,
surely I will get us out of this."
Kenji tightened
his fists at his sides. He could disembowel Chin with his bare hands without
raising a sweat and the idea was a
pleasurable one, but he had to maintain his composure. His grandfather held
Kenji's fate after he escaped Hawaii and he wouldn't jeopardize that for the
mere pleasure of killing the boy.
"All
operations are different, surely you know this. Because you survived many in
the past does not mean you are protected in the present."
Though not
chastened by Kenji's comment, Chin remained silent.
Kenji was content
to lean against the paneled wall of his study, arms now crossed over his chest,
watching Chin smoke his cigar. His years of training had taught Kenji to remain
impassive no matter what the situation around him. The tension within him would
make a weaker man pace, but Kenji simply stood, quiet and dangerous.
"What of the
woman," Chin said, breaking the minutes long silence, "the reporter
you have in the gardener's shed?"
"What about
her?"
"She has
refused to help us; surely it is time for her to die."
"Yes, maybe
it is," Kenji said sadly.
"I will do
it," Chin volunteered. "I want her first."
"Take
her," Kenji replied casually, masking a sense of hurt.
At first, Kenji
had entertained thoughts of taking Jill Tzu with him. There was something in
the defiant beauty
of the woman that made Kenji
want to dominate her. Maybe it was because she knew of his Korean birth? He
knew that she would never willingly be with him. Of course she could be
drugged, like that American woman he'd rescued a week ago.
But Kenji knew
that that was not a solution. Jill had to be eliminated, yet he had not been
able to bring himself to do it. Chin's lurid request was the perfect
opportunity. Jill would die, but her blood would not be on his hands.
Chin pulled his
small feet from the desk and slammed them against the carpeted floor. Kenji
expected him to skip from the room like a spoiled child granted his favorite
wish. Instead, Chin swaggered out, eyeing Kenji in an adolescent attempt at
domination.
JILL wasn't sure, but it felt as if night had descended once
again, making this the fifth she'd spent locked up inside the maintenance shed.
She could hear the incessant buzz of insects if she pressed her ear against the
tiny crack under the door. The slit was too narrow for her to look through, not
that it really mattered to her anymore. What was another night after all?
She'd entertained
the thought of marking the floor by scratching the concrete with a sharp pebble
to track the passage of time, but decided that it wouldn't do her any good. She
knew she'd be dead before there were even a few gouges. She'd asked herself
over and over why she was willing to be killed rather than report the
propaganda Kenji had presented her with. Was her journalistic integrity worth
more than her life? Were her priorities that messed up?
No, she decided.
She could have done it, spouted off whatever he told her. She could have
guaranteed her survival, but afterward, her life wouldn't really be worth
living. Not because she would have helped that monster Kenji and not because
she would have deceived the public. She would have disappointed herself and
that was something she just couldn't do.
All her life she
had faced the world according to her personal set of standards and not once had
she ever broken her own rules. If she had, she would have been lying to
herself. Jill remembered doing a report once on heroin use among teens in
Honolulu. One junkie, a sixteen-year-old girl who supported her habit by
hooking, refused to admit she was addicted to drugs. She accused Jill of faking
a photograph of her shooting up behind a sleazy hotel. The girl had lied to
herself so much that she couldn't even acknowledge the physical evidence of her
problem. She'd told Jill that the needle tracks on her arms were tattoos.
Jill was afraid
that if she broke her personal code, she would end up as self-delusioned as
that junkie. Helping Kenji, even in an oblique way, would be a violation of
that code. She couldn't do it, wouldn't do it, and would die for it.
Her mind had
sharpened during the solitude of the past few days, driven by the same
instincts which had kept man's ancient ancestors alive on the plains of
prehistoric Africa. Like any animal, the human being can sense danger long
before the threat is seen or heard. Jill knew that there was a new danger
around her; she could feel a malignancy in the air as surely as if it were a
physical sensation.
She had first
noticed it about an hour earlier, primarily as a tightening of the atmosphere,
an almost electric sensation. Soon she noted more tangible evidence of a
change.
There was an
audible increase in the numbers of guards pacing around Kenji's estate, more
pairs of footfalls on the raked gravel walk next to the shed that was her
prison. These new guards walked with a tighter cadence, more vigilant than
Kenji's usual security. But in the past half hour or so, she had heard fewer
and fewer people walking around, as if the new guards were vanishing into the
night. She heard them walk past the building as if headed for the jungle's
edge, but they never returned.
Now she heard new
footsteps; there was an urgency in the strides. Jill knew instinctively where
this man was headed.
The footsteps
stopped outside the door and she heard keys jingling as merrily as a Christmas
chime. The man thrust a key into the lock, turned it violently, and threw open
the door. Jill had gotten to her feet and backed as far away from the door as
possible.
The intruder was
young, no more than a boy, but he carried himself with the negligent attitude
of a world weary soldier, cocky eyes and a leering slit of a mouth. There was a
pistol in a holster hanging from one bony hip.
He will rape me
and then kill me, she thought as if reporting an incident that happened to
someone else. I will be dead soon.
Chin-Huy
approached, his small hands flexing in nervous anticipation. His eyes were dark
spots on his face, like those drawn by a cartoonist. In them, she saw no depth.
He drew closer, massaging his crotch languidly, his leer deepening by the
moment.
Jill's attacker
was small, no more than fifteen or twenty pounds heavier than she. She might
have a chance fighting him off, if only he left his pistol in its holster.
Incredulous, she watched as he undid the web belt and let it fall to the floor,
the pistol landing heavily against the concrete.
The door was open behind
him, beckoning her into the warm embrace of the night. Maybe she could duck
past him before he could retrieve his weapon. Jill's eyes shifted past his
shoulder to look at the rectangle of open country beyond her prison, and in
that split second, Chin-Huy covered the last few feet between them. He struck
her with a vicious roundhouse punch that drove
her to the floor as if she'd been hit by a baseball bat.
Her connection to
consciousness was just a thin strand. A quick hand darted out and kneaded one
of her breasts painfully.
This is not
happening to me, Jill thought. This is not me that's being touched.
Chin-Huy twisted
her nipple viciously and she gasped, the pain bringing her back from the dark
realm that draped her mind. She looked up into his face. His teeth were crooked
and stained, his breath on her skin was hot and fast. His eyes had narrowed to
pinpoints and lust had suffused his face with dark blood.
In the millisecond
it took her to blink away some of the tears flooding her eyes, an arm had
whipped around his neck and yanked him up, off his feet.
By the time Chin
sensed something was wrong, his windpipe had nearly been crushed. He tried to
whirl around and break the grip, but the arm clung as tenaciously as a remora.
His body began to jerk and twitch as if controlled by a manic puppeteer. He
slammed back with one elbow, but the blow lacked power and the man killing him
didn't so much as grunt. The arm tightened even more, completely cutting off
his air. Chin-Huy's tongue snaked from between his lips, tearing against his
teeth so that his saliva was stained pink. With one final tug, Chin's neck
snapped with a nauseating crackle.
Jill watched the
man fall. Then her eyes scanned upward along the legs that stood behind the
body of her would-be rapist. When she reached the face of the man who saved her
life, she was greeted by a lazy smile and a pair of the most charming gray eyes
she had ever seen. ''If he's my only competition for your affection, I bet
you're free for dinner tomorrow night." Mercer grinned, then bent down and
checked the livid bruise spreading across Jill's cheek. It was ugly and would
last for a couple of weeks, but wasn't serious. Her eyes were brightening, so
he wasn't too concerned about a concussion.
They were
stunning, deep and black with such a trusting expression that Mercer looked
into them much longer than absolutely necessary. The emotions she'd bottled up
for five days poured out as Jill ducked her head against his shoulder and cried.
He murmured to her reassuringly, stroking her thick black hair. "You're
safe now, Jill."
"How do you
know my name?" she asked meekly, her cheeks slick with tears.
"You're an
unwitting victim in something much larger that I'm here to stop."
"You know
about Takahiro Ohnishi and his coup?" she said urgently. Her resiliency
marveled him.
"I know all
about it." Mercer untangled her long arms from around his neck.
"Jill, I have to leave you here for a while, but I'm sure that nobody will
bother you again." He pointed to the dead soldier. "He was probably
going to kill you, so now everybody thinks you're dead. When Kenji's
eliminated, I'll come back for you and we'll all get out of here together. I
have a helicopter waiting about two miles away."
"I
understand," she said calmly. "What's your name?"
"Most damsels
call me Lance A. Lot but you can call me Mercer." He smiled and was
rewarded with one of Jill's. Christ, even in her condition, she was beautiful.
The corpse of the
soldier was dragged out of the maintenance shed by one of the SEALs. Mercer
closed the door but didn't relock it, then regarded the body.
"He's
Korean," Mercer exclaimed, studying the mottled face. "I wonder who
the fuck he was." The SEALs simply stared flatly, not commenting. On their
approach to the shed, Mercer and his team had taken out eight Asian guards,
some wearing fatigues like the figure at his feet and some wearing street
clothing. In the jungle they had not taken the time to closely examine their
victims, assuming that they were Kenji's personal
guards. The discovery that the dead men were Korean put a new twist on the
situation.
"I don't know
who these guys belong to, but we'll assume they're not allies. That means we
still have Kenji's guards plus these Koreans." Mercer spoke more for his
benefit than the SEALs. "I doubt they know we're coming, so we have the
element of surprise, but how effective is that against an unknown force?"
Mercer led them
closer to Kenji's compound using whatever natural cover they could find until
they were tucked safely behind the guest house. Near them, the azure pool
shimmered with muted underwater lights. Kenji's house waited quietly twenty
yards beyond the pool. Mercer surveyed the back of the two-story sprawling home
through the night-vision goggles lent to him by one of the SEALs. Only a few
rooms were illuminated, but the glasses easily probed the darkened rooms as
well. Through the greenish hue, he saw at least fifteen armed men in the house,
slowly pacing through the rooms, scanning the extensive grounds.
After about five
minutes of studying the mansion, he gave the commandos their orders. They
obeyed without question and left, blending into the night.
Waiting while the
SEALs got into position was agonizing. Thoughts of fear and failure tried to
weaken Mercer's resolve, but he crushed them down mercilessly. He had come too
far to be afraid now, he told himself. Yet even as he mentally prepared himself
for the assault, his mind drifted to a vision of Jill Tzu. He chuckled at
himself. Of all the times to be thinking about sex. When the first crackling report of automatic fire rippled the
silent sky, he shook his head quickly and moved.
As ordered, the
SEAL team had crept around to the front of the house and opened fire, raking
the edifice with a scathing barrage. Mercer ran across the open back lawn,
praying that human nature would cause the men inside to turn toward the sounds,
leaving him undetected. As his booted feet pounded across the grass, he
crouched in anticipation of a killing shot from the
second-story guards.
He covered the
twenty yards to the house in record time.
Mercer leapt onto
an immature palm and shimmied up like a monkey, feet and hands working in
perfect harmony. Near its top, his weight bowed the tree inward and he dropped
easily onto an unguarded second-floor balcony. The sound of gunfire intensified
at the front of the house as the SEALs and the guards traded ammunition at a
staggering pace.
Mercer kicked in
one of the French doors and rolled across the room's carpet in case there was
an unseen guard stationed inside. He came up onto his knees, the MP-5 tucked
hard against his shoulder, and scanned the room quickly. Empty.
He stripped off
his goggles and took a few calming breaths. The sounds of the fight below were
barely muted by the thick walls of the plantation house. He had just turned to
reach for the door when he noticed a shadow bisect the sliver of light at the
floor. Mercer rested his hand lightly on the polished brass knob and felt it
twist beneath his fingers. As the latch fully retracted, he yanked on the
handle and brought up his machine pistol. The guard was caught unaware; Mercer
pulled him into the room and jammed the barrel of the MP-5 into his belly. Just
as Mercer felt himself being pushed backward by the man's weight, he pulled the
trigger. The 9mm rounds tunneled through the guard, boring a cone-shaped wedge
of flesh from his body that smeared against the wall behind him.
Mercer yanked his
bloodied weapon from the falling corpse and turned down the wide hall. A
fatigue-dressed Korean ducked out of one of the other rooms and Mercer managed
to snap off a burst that caught the man high in the back. A quick check showed
that one of the rounds had been fatal, while the rest had just mangled the
ornate millwork of the door frame.
He did a sweep of
the rest of the upstairs. The remainder of the elegant guest rooms in both
wings of the mansion were deserted. One floor below, machine guns and grenades
pummeled the masonry and shook the walls of the old plantation house. Mercer
paused at the head of the stairs, the acrid tang of cordite smoke searing his
nostrils.
A stab of fear
lanced through his body. The battle below was like nothing he'd ever heard
before, the ugly sounds of death echoing up the stairs. His experiences in Iraq
and Washington were nothing like this. Those times, he'd been ambushed and
hadn't had time to think. In the OF&C offices in New York, he had felt more
in control. But this—this hell—was something different. He was about to
voluntarily walk into carnage, and that terrified him. Grimly, he descended the
ornate mahogany stairs, one finger squeezed firmly around the trigger of his MP-5.
Just an ounce more pressure would unleash a hail of bullets.
In the mezzanine,
two bodies lay sprawled in the rubble of the blown-out windows, one dressed in
fatigues, the other, one of Kenji's men, in a dark suit. Cloying smoke layered
the air, burning Mercer's eyes as he crouched just above the bottom of the
staircase; bullets and shrapnel whizzed by like angered wasps. Obviously the
SEALs' assault had lost none of its fervor. In an adjoining room, someone
screamed in pain. Mercer knew, thanks to the plans provided by Dick Henna, that
the wailing originated in a formal reception area.
Mercer didn't
realize someone had spotted him until a stream of bullets tore into the railing
and banister near him, shredding the wood like a chain saw. He tumbled down the
remaining steps, ducking his head and hunching his shoulders. As he landed on
the marble floor, he glimpsed the assassin, silhouetted in the doorway to the
dining room. Mercer fired, but only one round went off before his clip emptied.
The shot caught the Korean in the shoulder and
spun him nearly completely around, but left him very much alive.
He started to turn
back toward Mercer, Uzi clutched in his hands. Mercer launched himself from the
floor, diving across a rich Turkish carpet while reaching for his holstered
Beretta as he flew. The move threw off the guard's aim, giving Mercer time to
torque himself as he landed and pump four or five rounds into him.
Mercer reholstered
the Beretta and jammed a fresh clip .into his machine pistol. He ducked around
the doorway leading to the reception area, taking out three guards who were
crouched under the shattered windows.
From the plans, he
knew Kenji's study was on the other side of the entrance foyer, several rooms
past the dining room.
Another guard
spotted him as he raced back across the foyer and bullets tore up the marble at
his heels. Mercer jinked once, then dove into the dining room, landing on a
table large enough to seat twenty. The table had been beautifully set—Mercer's
momentum shattered the ornate Royal Doulton china, turning it into a very
expensive pile of trash on the polished wood floor. He tumbled over the far
side of the. table, knocking three chairs onto their backs.
He knelt up,
steadying his H&K on the table. Shards of china dug deeply into the
toughened skin of his knees through his black pants.
An explosion
ripped through the foyer as the SEALs blew out the solid front door. A pall of
smoke roiled into the dining room, and the Korean who Had just fired at Mercer
staggered into the room. Obviously he'd been standing near the door when it
shattered and the wood splinters had torn through his body. Mercer's
dispatching shot was a relief to the pitiable figure.
Mercer smashed
through the door to the kitchen. There was more blood on the floor than in an
abattoir; crimson smears streaked the walls and pooled under the two bodies
crumpled below a blown-out window. The SEALs
certainly knew their business. Mercer returned to the dining room and cautiously
nudged open the other exit door. The room beyond reeked of smoke. Flames licked
at the ceiling from a destroyed television set a few yards beyond a large
leather sectional couch.
One of Kenji's
guards feebly tried to lift his weapon from where he lay, but he was missing a
massive chunk of his left shoulder. Blood streamed from the wound.
Dispassionately,
Mercer fired a short burst between the man's hate-filled eyes. The other guard
in the informal living room, a uniformed Korean, was already dead.
Mercer took a few
deep breaths as he changed clips. Glancing at his watch, he noted with surprise
that only six minutes had elapsed since he had started running for the palm
tree in the backyard. The adrenaline fizzing in his veins had made it seem more
like six hours, yet each moment was etched into his brain like frames of film.
Outside, the battle was dying down. Either the ranks of SEALs or guards had
dwindled to nothing. He had no way of knowing.
Beyond the living
room, a wide, window-lined gallery stretched the length of the northern wing of
the house. The SEALs had shot out the tall transomed windows to his right, so
the air was free of smoke. Opposite the windows, French doors opened into other
rooms—a book-lined library, a silk-draped billiards room, a small cinema that
had probably been the music room when the house was built at the turn of the
century. The last door of the gallery led to Kenji's study.
Mercer stealthily
made his way along the promenade, quickly checking each room he passed. The
door just before the study was open, and as Mercer approached, a foot kicked
out with incredible strength. The MP-5 flew from his grip, tearing some meat
off his right index finger where it had caught on the trigger guard. Before he
had time to react, a fist pounded into him, catching him just below the heart.
Mercer's breath exploded in a wheezing gasp.
He staggered back
a few paces, massaging his ribs. Kenji stepped into the corridor, wearing a
black gi and no shoes. His dark eyes blazed with pure hatred as he gazed at the
Occidental interloper.
"I do not
know who you are, but I will take great pleasure in killing you for what you've
done." His voice echoed from someplace deep within, an empty chasm which
contains normal men's souls. Kenji had none.
Mercer struggled
to draw his pistol, but Kenji paced forward cutting the distance between them
in the blink of an eye. His foot flicked out with the speed of a viper's tongue
and the Beretta spun away as Mercer's right hand went numb. Though Kenji was
nearly twenty years his senior, Mercer had no hope of defeating him. Even if
Mercer hadn't been battered so much in the past week, Kenji would still be able
to take him apart at a leisurely pace.
"Are you
another of Kerikov's errand boys?" Kenji asked mildly, cracking a hardened
foot against Mercer's ribs.
Mercer fell
against the wall, clutching at the rough stucco to keep himself on his feet.
His chest felt as if it had been worked over with a baseball bat.
"What are you
talking about?" he gasped.
A fist slammed
into Mercer's stomach, doubling him over into Kenji's knee, which shot upward
into his face. Kenji spun away as Mercer went sprawling onto the flagstone
floor. "Did Kerikov send you with those assassins at Ohnishi's
house?"
Mercer retched
painfully, a trace of blood in the rancid bile that shot from his mouth and
nose. Kenji's questions had thrown him off as much as the brutal hits he'd
taken. Dazed by the punches and kicks, he wasn't sure he had heard correctly.
"I'm not with your Russian allies."
Kenji kicked
again, but Mercer managed to block the shot with his arm. Kenji was thrown off
balance by the move, giving Mercer precious seconds to regain his feet.
"Where are
your Russian sponsors, anyway?" Mercer asked
through gritted teeth as Kenji stalked around him. Kenji gave a derisive laugh.
"As dead as Ohnishi." He threw a combination punch at Mercer, the
first blow knocking against Mercer's skull and the other cracking two more
ribs. Despite the pain, Mercer managed a counterpunch, but his fist felt like
it merely bounced off the muscled cords of Kenji's throat.
"Like
Ohnishi, the Russians were pawns to be used and discarded by myself and my true
allies."
"The Koreans?"
Mercer wheezed, understanding a bit.
"They have
backed me for months in a double-cross against both Ivan Kerikov and
Ohnishi." Kenji wasn't even breathing hard while Mercer was sucking in
great draughts of air. "We triggered Ohnishi and Kerikov's pathetic coup
and shifted American interest away from the volcano and its mineral wealth. To
Kerikov, the coup was a means to an end; for Ohnishi, it represents a lifelong
dream. To us, it was simply a diversion."
"You
piggybacked onto Kerikov's plan, took his idea and his agents for yourselves.
Then it was you who rescued Tish Talbot from the Ocean Seeker? Mercer
had to keep Kenji talking in a vain hope that a SEAL was still alive to save
him.
"As ordered
by Kerikov for the benefit of Valery Borodin, I believe. But she has no use in
my plan, so my allies hired some assassins to execute her in Washington."
"Not
quite." Mercer managed a wry smile. "She is very much alive and
well."
"You?"
"Yes."
"No matter,
I'll have her killed later on."
"The fuck you
will," Mercer said, hatred giving him a reckless courage.
He dove at Kenji,
slamming a shoulder into his chest. Both men flew backward, pounding into the
wall hard enough to break away some of the plaster. Mercer recovered an instant
before Kenji and fired three heavy punches into the older man's muscled torso.
Kenji grunted with each blow, but still had the strength to pick Mercer off his
feet and toss him away. Mercer scrambled up as quickly as he could, his cracked
ribs keeping him slightly doubled over.
''I thought
killing Ohnishi would give me the greatest pleasure, but now I realize your
death will be even better," Kenji said menacingly as he came for Mercer.
Kenji's kick
contained every ounce of strength in his body. It was a killing blow. Mercer
bent backward the instant Kenji's foot rose, ignoring the pain that exploded in
his chest with the movement. As he straightened back up, his hand reached for
the Gerber knife suspended from his harness.
The steel pommel
of the knife cracked against Kenji's foot with all the strength Mercer had
left. The blow shattered the delicate bones as though they were glass, checking
Kenji's attack. Mercer whipped the knife upward in a last desperate lunge. The
tempered steel parted Kenji's abdominal muscles, sliced through the tough
membrane of his diaphragm, and punctured his left lung.
Kenji reeled back,
yanking the knife from Mercer's fingers. He stared down at the blade sticking
from his chest with crazed and panicked eyes.
"You,"
he sputtered, blood spraying with his word.
Mercer had fallen
to the floor after his attack. He was too weak to rise, so when Kenji pulled
the knife from his body and turned the bloody blade at him, he had no defense.
The savagery was draining from Kenji as fast as his life's blood, but he still
had enough time to kill his last victim. Mercer lay sprawled like a temple
sacrifice, arms at his sides, legs slightly parted. He could not avoid the
blade plunging toward his chest.
The kinetic energy
of the first bullet arrested Kenji's downward thrust and nearly stood him
upright. The second shot tore another hole through his chest, shredding his heart and damaged lung. The final shot
blew out the back of his skull.
Mercer twisted
around in time to see one of the SEALs, bloody and battered, fall to the floor.
A full sixty seconds passed before Mercer recovered enough to get up and check
on the wounded SEAL. When he turned him onto his back, Mercer was staggered.
The man who had saved his life wasn't a SEAL at all.
Through a mask of
dried and caked blood the unknown man opened his one undamaged eye. "Spesivo."
The use of Russian
shocked Mercer for a second, then he understood.
"Kerikov."
"No." The man coughed up a bloody ball of phlegm and
spat it on the floor. "I am Evad Lurbud, major in the KGB, Department
Seven, and Ivan Kerikov's assistant. Thank you for allowing me to kill that
pig."
"Where is
Kerikov?" Mercer demanded sharply.
"Last I knew,
he was headed toward Europe. Now, who knows? You are a member of the American
Special Forces, yes?"
"I'm the guy
who blew your entire operation."
Lurbud chuckled
painfully, "I doubt that. No man could stop every contingency we laid
down."
"I bet your
men in New York wouldn't agree with you."
"That was
you?"
Mercer smiled
modestly. "It was nothing really. But it did lead to all sorts of
interesting things, little things like disguised submarines named John Dory,
man-made volcanoes, and long-dead scientists who do great Lazarus
impressions."
Mercer could tell
that Lurbud was truly shocked to see how much he knew.
''You guys made
just enough small errors for me to figure out your little caper." Mercer
ticked off each item on a finger. "When Tish Talbot was pulled aboard the John
Dory, she saw the design on her stack and heard her crew speaking Russian. Then you used
an OF&C ship for her official rescue, which made it easy to find the
connection to the Grandam Phoenix, the ship you bastards started the
whole operation with. And you didn't watch Valery Borodin closely enough, since
he managed to send off the telegram that got me involved. I guess you can
ultimately blame him for your failure. Without that telegram, no one would have
ever suspected a thing.
"Too bad that
your agents here in Hawaii turned on you. It's wise, when picking allies, to be
certain of their true motivations. Ohnishi wanted an independent country more
than he wanted the volcano, and Kenji, he must have had his reasons for
bringing in those Koreans." Mercer had retrieved his weapons and now had
the MP-5 pointed at Lurbud's chest.
"You can't
kill me."
"Why in the
hell not?" Mercer replied casually.
"If I don't
radio the John Dory in an hour and a half, she will launch a nuclear
missile at the volcano."
Mercer noticed the
black radio pack wedged under Lurbud's body. He jerked it out by its nylon
strap and held it at arm's length. Letting the Hechler & Koch dangle by its
sling, he drew the Beretta, then calmly fired two rounds through the armored
plastic shell. The radio sparked and smoked for a moment as it shorted
completely.
He dropped the
radio next to Lurbud's head. "Any other bargaining chips?"
"I am a major
in the KGB. I am worth much to the CIA."
"Assuming I
work for the CIA must be an infectious disease. You're the third or fourth
person to think that. Too bad." Mercer aimed his pistol. "I'm a
geologist," he said as he fired the last round from the Beretta. ''Not a
spy."
Mercer wearily
started back down the gallery toward the main entrance of the house. He
believed Lurbud
about the nuclear threat from
the John Dory. If Kenji and his Korean allies had somehow double-crossed
Kerikov, he had no doubt that the Russian spymaster would reap some form of
revenge. Destroying the volcano and the bikinium made the best sense. The hour
and a half time limit would make things extremely tight.
He was just
passing the last transomed window before the living room when a figure crashed
through the remaining glass and fragile mullions. Mercer dove to the side,
twisting in the air to bring the MP-5 up to bear. The attacker hit the floor,
rolled, and came to his knees in an instant, his gun aimed at Mercer's head.
Mercer was a fraction of a second too slow-—the man had him pinned.
"I'm sorry if
I scared you, Dr. Mercer, I wasn't sure who you were from outside," the
leader of the SEALs apologized and lowered his weapon.
"Jesus,"
Mercer breathed, his heart slamming against his rib cage. "I was too
petrified to be scared."
The SEAL'S uniform
was so tattered it was nearly unrecognizable. A wound in his shoulder bled
freely. His face was streaked with dirt and dried blood. Despite the pain he
must have felt, his eyes were impassive.
"What's the
situation?" Mercer asked.
"All the
guards are dead, the building is secure, but I lost my entire squad."
"I'm sorry
about that," Mercer said, getting to his feet.
"It's our
duty, sir."
"Radio the
chopper and have the pilot land in the backyard. I've got some more work
tonight."
While the SEAL
made the call, Mercer wandered through the dining room and into the kitchen.
Ignoring the two bodies on the floor, he searched through the three large
refrigerators until he found something decent to drink. Though Kirin beer was
far from his favorite, he gulped two bottles in record time. A minute later he
was in the backyard, skirting the edge of the pool.
Jill Tzu had left
the shed when the firing had stopped and was hiding near the guest house when
she saw Mercer striding across the back lawn. Behind him, the main house burned
in several places, the fiery light making his features appear sharp and
uncompromising.
The Sea King
thundered in over the grounds, its blinding searchlight playing across the
estate as Eddie Rice searched for a clear place to set her down.
Reaching Jill,
Mercer took her into his arms. She clung to him tightly, unaware that Mercer's
ribs grated against each other as she squeezed. "Everything is all right
now. You're safe. Kenji's dead." She nuzzled her head into his shoulder as
if she were a small creature burrowing into the earth for protection.
"Jill, I have to leave you here with one of my men for a while."
Jill looked up
into his face with beautiful but frightened eyes. "Can't you take me with
you?"
"I can't.
There's still a lot for me to finish," Mercer said, then kissed her
tenderly. "That's to let you know I would if I could—and that I'm coming
back."
Mercer untangled
her arms from around his body and nodded to the SEAL. "Try to contact the Inchon
somehow, maybe through Pearl Harbor, and have another team sent here. Don't
trust any local authorities. Also, guard her with your life."
He jogged to the
waiting chopper and vaulted into its hold. Eddie lifted off immediately,
sweeping the chopper over the dark jungle.
In the cockpit,
Mercer threw on a helmet, keying the mike immediately. "Head north as fast
as this bitch can move."
Eddie banked the
chopper, then turned to Mercer, grinning, "I don't think you're gay, so
that must have been a woman you were kissing just then. Where the hell did you
find a woman in the middle of that fight?''
"You just gotta know where to
look." Mercer chuckled in the murky light of the cockpit. He opened the
last two beers he'd taken from the kitchen and
handed one to Eddie.
"Not when I'm
flying," the pilot demurred.
"I'm not with
the FAA or the navy; don't worry about it."
"Good
point," Eddie replied, and took a long swallow.
"Did those
SEALs have any dive equipment on board?"
"Yeah. Like
you asked, I went through their stuff while I was waiting. There's air tanks,
regulators, masks, the works."
"Good."
Mercer pulled a slip of paper from his pants pocket and handed it to Rice.
"What's
this?"
"The Loran
numbers of a Russian submarine about to start a nuclear war." Mercer had
mentally calculated the position of the John Dory from the infrared
pictures provided by the National Security Agency. "Punch them in and
follow them."
"Problem,"
Eddie said after keying the Loran numbers into the Sea King's navigational
computer. "We have enough fuel to get out there, but not enough for the
return flight."
"There's a
good chance there won't be a return flight."
"Why'd I know
you'd say that?" Eddie muttered.
AN hour later the chopper was thundering over the ocean swells, a
driving rain pelting the windscreen of the Sea King like grenade fragments. The
wipers were all but useless. Occasionally, a bolt of lightning arced through
sky, casting a brilliant incandescence into the cockpit.
Mercer sat quietly
in a borrowed navy wet suit, content to let Eddie Rice do his job. It had been
torture getting himself into the constricting neoprene, but now the tightness
around his chest eased the pain from his cracked ribs. Unconsciously, his hand
polished the barrel of his machine
pistol as if he were at home working on a piece of railroad track. Hundreds of
questions roiled in his mind, questions about Kenji, the Koreans, Kerikov, and
Lurbud, but he could not allow himself to become distracted by them. He had to
remain completely focused on the present and let the past sort itself out
later.
He and Eddie were
racing against an imminent nuclear launch. Failing meant not only their deaths
but also the loss of one of man's greatest discoveries. The benefits of the
bikinium were too great to let slip away now and on a personal level, Mercer
wouldn't allow himself to fail, he'd suffered too much in the past week to not
see this completed successfully.
"What's our
ETA?"
"About
another ten minutes."
Mercer glanced at
the luminous dial of his Tag Heuer. "According to Lurbud's threat, the John
Dory launches in thirty."
"I'm already
ten knots over the safety limits of this bird in these conditions."
"Make it
twenty knots over and that Mai Tai you wanted will be on me."
"Christ, I
could use it now," Eddie replied miserably as he torqued more power out of
the turbofans.
The chopper rocked
and jerked in the storm as Rice fought to keep her below the John Dory's radar.
Her rounded nose nearly skimmed the white spume atop the waves.
"Bingo,"
Eddie nearly shouted a minute later, "target dead ahead."
"What's the
range?"
"One
mile," Eddie said, glancing again at the neon blue radar screen.
"That's got
to be her. Take us down. I'll swim the rest of the way. When I jump out, take
off again, but be ready to pick me up when that ship blows. Approach from the
stern and make sure no one else gets aboard except
me and the man I'll have with me."
"I told you,
we don't have enough fuel to get back to Hawaii."
"That doesn't
matter. Someone will figure out we're here eventually." Mercer didn't want
to tell Eddie that if the SEAL failed to get through to Pearl Harbor, the
President would launch his own nuclear strike against the volcano in just three
hours.
"You're crazy,
you know that?"
"It's the
main reason I can't get life insurance."
The Sea King's
engines wound down and the rotors whipped the sea into a salty mist as Rice
brought her in for a water landing. Mercer waited at the open doorway of the
chopper, sweating in the wet suit, the two large air tanks bowing his back.
Around his waist he wore a leaded belt and a waterproof bag containing some
other items borrowed from the SEALs. A razor-sharp dive knife was strapped to
his right calf. The whole time Mercer had struggled into the gear, he had
wracked his brain trying to recall everything that Spook had taught him about
diving all those years ago in that flooded New York mine.
As soon as the
rounded underhull of the Sea King touched the churned-up water, Mercer bit down
on his mouthpiece, sucked in a breath of cool air, and launched himself out of
the chopper.
The water was
warmer than he expected. At first Mercer sank below the surface, then he
adjusted his buoyancy by detaching one of the lead weights. He took a bearing
from the compass on his wrist and, still underwater, started swimming toward
the John Dory. Mercer had made two potentially fatal assumptions when he
launched himself from the Sea King. One was the that the ship they had picked
up on radar was, in fact, the John Dory. There was a definite
possibility that the craft ahead of him was an entirely different ship, one
innocently steaming through the area. The second assumption concerned the hull
of the Soviet submarine/freighter. If there was no gap between the submarine's
hull and the fake sides of the freighter, he would have no way of gaining
access to the vessel. If he was wrong about either guess, he would be dead long
before the Russian missile detonated.
After a few minutes
of swimming, Mercer felt a vibration through the water—the pounding engines of
a large ship.
Adding a little
air to the compensator, he surfaced on the crest of a swell. Through the
rain-lashed night, he made out the running lights of a large freighter about
two hundred yards ahead of him. His breath hissed through the regulator, rain
and spume splattered against his mask.
He ducked back
under the surface and continued to doggedly swim toward the John Dory. The
backs of his legs were beginning to ache and his breathing was labored.
The sound of the
ship's props filled the silence of the sea, but the vessel itself was still
hidden in the gloom. Mercer was hesitant to turn on his dive light for fear of
being detected by a lookout on deck, but at last he took the chance.
The knife edge bow
of the John Dory was no more than ten feet away and bearing down on rum
at eight knots. Mercer dove hard, but his reaction came an instant too late.
The steel plates of the ship's bow scraped along his body, shredding the thick
rubber of his wet suit. The thick crust of barnacles grated against Mercer's
skin like a thousand tiny paring knives.
Mercer screamed
into his mouthpiece as pain shot through his system, racing through his body to
explode against the top of his skull. He felt the gray blanket of
unconsciousness falling over his mind, but managed to push it aside by sheer
force of will. He wouldn't allow pain to stop him now. He had only a few
seconds in which to find a handhold of some sort before the vessel
passed him. And if that happened, he had no chance of ever
catching her.
Training the dive
light upward, Mercer recognized the smooth curve of a submarine's hull. At
least he had the right ship. He flashed the light to starboard and saw a space
between the freighter silhouette and the sub's hull. He swam into the gap.
When his head
broached the surface, he spat out his mouthpiece and gulped down the warm humid
air trapped between the steel plating and the sub. The water in the
four-foot-wide gap was churned in a vortex that carried Mercer along with the
ship.
Since he did not
have the luxury of time, he didn't bother glancing at his watch. He was certain
that the sub was getting into position to fire the missile. He immediately set
to work. The magnetic limpet mines he'd pilfered from the SEALs' stores stuck
to the hull with a quiet snap; the timers had all been set, and as each one
made contact with the sub's hull, it went active.
As soon as the
explosive charges were planted, Mercer began climbing the spiderweb of steel
girders that locked the bogus freighter hull to the submarine. Because of his
injured ribs and the scuba gear hanging from his back the climb was exhausting.
He wished he could dump the dive equipment, but if he hoped to escape with
Valery Borodin, he needed it. At the top of the girders, he paused to look at
his watch. Four minutes until launch.
Shit.
The sharp steel
struts had ripped into his hands; blood poured from the wounds and dripped onto
the deck where Mercer stood, just forward of the submarine's conning tower. The
empty superstructure of the freighter soared thirty feet above his head. The
cavernous space echoed with the hiss of water sliding across her hull and the
beat of her props. The nearly total darkness smelled of diesel oil and
saltwater. As quietly as possible, Mercer stashed his scuba gear and dive fins
in a corner.
Two minutes.
He crept up the
ladder of the rounded conning tower. As he neared the top, he made out muted
voices. The language was unmistakably Russian.
He popped his head
over the top of the conning tower and gave a friendly smile to the two shocked
officers standing at the open hatch.
"Take me to
your leader," Mercer grinned. Exhaustion and the adrenaline he was using
as a substitute for real courage had made him giddy.
The two officers
produced pistols in record time, leveling them at Mercer's head. One of them
shouted down into the sub. Though Mercer did not speak Russian, he assumed that
the captain had just been informed that they had a prisoner. Prompted by curt
gestures from a pistol barrel, Mercer went down the hatchway and into the
Soviet submarine.
At the base of the
ladder, Mercer casually glanced around the vessel's control room. By the
slack-jawed looks and the lack of movement, he rightly guessed that the launch
had been suspended for the moment.
"Hi, my
name's Barney Cull." Mercer stuck out his hand but no one made a move to
shake it. "I'm offering a sale on hull scraping and wondered if you needed
my services."
Captain Zwenkov
stepped forward, his face set in a deep scowl. "Who are you?" His
English was thick but understandable.
"Actually I'm
Sam O. Var, your local Coffee Wagon Company representative. How are you guys
fixed for blinis?"
Zwenkov said
something that in any language would have sounded like, "Get him out of
here and lock him up."
Mercer was hustled
from the control room by two armed sailors. He called over his shoulder,
"Don't think strong-arm tactics will get me to lower my prices."
He would have
continued with the jokes but the pistol stabbing
into his kidney jammed the air in his throat. He was led through the sub toward
the stern, thankfully away from where he had planted the charges.
He was stripped of
his wet suit and after a rather extensive body search, one of his guards
undogged a hatch and thrust Mercer into a small cabin. The hatch was closed
behind him but not locked.
In the spartan
room, a man a few years younger than Mercer sat on one of the bunks. He was
handsome in that Connecticut shore, hair blowing in the wind, sweater knotted
around the throat kind of way. Mercer assumed, correctly, that this was Valery
Borodin. Borodin said something to Mercer in Russian.
"Sorry, I
don't speak it."
Mercer's use of
English drained the color from Valery's face. "I said, you're not a member
of the boat's crew. Who are you?"
"I'm Philip
Mercer, the guy you sent the telegram to."
"Who?" Valery's eyes narrowed in
confusion.
"Philip
Mercer. You sent a telegram to me in Washington, warning me about the danger to
Tish Talbot."
"Tish sent
you?" Valery stood, his voice brightening.
"No, you sent
me." Mercer was getting confused himself.
"I don't know
who you are, but you know Tish?"
"You didn't
send a telegram to me in Tish's father's name?"
"No."
"Just after
you had her rescued from the Ocean Seeker?”
"No."
"If you
didn't, then who the hell did?" Mercer muttered. "Well, anyway, I'm
here to help you get off this tin can."
"Did Tish ask
you to come?"
"Not exactly,
but she's safe and waiting for you right now in Washington, D.C."
"There's no
way to escape. We're hundreds of miles from Hawaii."
"Listen, in
thirty seconds this sub is going to have more holes in it than the golf course
at Pebble Beach. I've got a helicopter waiting for us, so don't worry about it.
Where's your father?"
"He died two
days ago. Heart attack."
"For the pain
he's caused, don't expect my condolences."
Mercer glanced at
his watch and held up his right hand with fingers splayed. As each second
ticked by, he curled one finger downward. With two fingers to go, several
explosions rocked the John Dory. Immediately klaxons sounded throughout
the sub. The dim battle lights blinked once, then shut off completely; a single
white bulb lit as the emergency system took over. Above the wail of the sirens
and the shouts of men, Mercer could hear the sound of water pouring into the
vessel, signaling her impending death. Mercer thrust his hand down the front of
his pants, ignoring Valery's startled look.
Few body searches
ever explore the area between the scrotum and anus. As Mercer's fingers grasped
the four-barrel pepperbox Derringer pistol held there by his jock strap, he was
thankful that homophobia struck Russians, too. The gun, a favorite of
nineteenth-century riverboat gamblers because of its small size, had been a
gift from his grandfather years before and had remained in Mercer's desk at
home since then.
He yanked the tiny
pistol from his pants, mindful of the stray hairs caught in the gun's hammer.
Although the Derringer was only twenty-two caliber, it was loaded with bored-out
hollow-points filled with mercury. At a range more than ten feet the gun was
useless. Closer, a hit would be fatal.
"Are you
coming?" The sub was already, listing.
Valery grabbed a
cheap briefcase from the bunk. "Yes, I'm with you."
They stepped into the boat's central
passageway, Valery clutching the briefcase to his chest like a mother
protecting her baby. Panicked sailors and officers ran down the narrow
corridor, ignoring everything except their own safety. Mercer and Valery blended
into the stream of men rushing to the nearest hatch.
Bursting into the
control room, Mercer saw Captain Zwenkov leaning over the weapon's officer.
They were still going to launch the nuclear missile. Instinct made Zwenkov turn
around and face his executioner.
The report from
the Derringer was lost in the sounds of the dying vessel and her crew, but the
bullet tore through the captain's head cleanly. His cap flew through the air,
carried by the top section of his skull. The blood-splattered weapons officer
whirled in his seat, but before he could move, a round caught him in the
throat, ripping out his carotid artery and jugular vein, sending a fountain of
blood across the ballistic control computer.
A crewman grabbed
Mercer from behind. Mercer whipped around, smashing his elbow into the man's
jaw. Blood and broken teeth sprayed from the Russian's lips. Another man, this
one wearing the coveralls of an engineer, charged forward, and Mercer shot him
point blank in the heart.
The little
four-barreled pistol had only one round left, and Mercer didn't have any spare
ammunition. "Valery, come on." With Valery close behind, Mercer
shouldered his way to the hatch, shoving, kicking, and punching his way to the
bottom of the ladder.
On deck, the list
of the submarine was much more noticeable, at least twenty degrees. Mercer
guessed that the vessel would flip onto her back in moments. The confused mass
of men on the deck were too busy trying to launch an inadequate number of life
rafts to notice Mercer as he led Valery to the cache of scuba equipment. The
din of the klaxons echoed across the storm chopped sea.
"There's only
one set of tanks," Valery pointed out.
"We'll buddy
dive," Mercer said, slipping the heavy tanks over his shoulders.
"But I've
never dived before."
"That's okay,
this is only my second time, so we're almost even." Mercer shoved Valery
into the gap between the sub and the outer plating and leapt after him, losing
his mask in the plunge.
In the water,
Mercer slipped Valery's hand through the straps of the scuba tank so they would
not get separated in the confusion. Explosions rumbled within the sub's hull
and burning oil filled the narrow gap with reeking smoke. Mercer worried
fleetingly about the very real danger that the nuclear power plant would
meltdown from the shock of cool seawater washing over its five-hundred-degree
shielding.
"There will
be a helicopter a few hundred yards directly astern. If we stay underwater, we
won't be spotted."
A bullet plowed
into the sea a few inches from Mercer's head, throwing up a tiny fountain of
water. Mercer fired the last round from the Derringer into the gloom above
them, grasped Valery's free arm, and ducked beneath the waves. He kicked downward,
breathing as slowly as possible. About fifteen feet below the surface, he felt
Valery tug the regulator from his mouth. The Russian took a few breaths, then
thrust the rubber piece back between his lips. The John Dory was
mortally wounded but her engines still pounded out eight knots. Mercer and
Valery hung below the surface as the 285-foot hull glided over their heads. The
concussion from the blasts that were wrenching her apart assaulted their ears
painfully, but they had no time to worry about its effects. They began swimming
away from the stricken vessel. Their progress was impeded by the turbid swells
and their need to trade the life-giving mouthpiece.
After five
minutes, Mercer brought them to the surface. The John Dory was a few
hundred yards away and it was easy to see she was sinking. Her bow rode deep and her props thrashed the water into a
white froth as they were pulled from the ocean. Only two of the lifeboats had
been launched and the crew seemed too occupied, picking up survivors and
corpses, to care about the huge helicopter that swooped in overhead.
Eddie Rice settled
the Sea King into the water and let the rotors idle. Mercer could see the pilot
scramble to the cargo door of the Sikorsky machine. Rice popped open a large
drum of oil and spilled it onto the water. The churned-up sea settled
immediately under the weight of the fluid.
Mercer and Valery
swam toward the helicopter, their heads repeatedly swamped by the storm. Both
men retched seawater regularly. They were only twenty yards from the machine
when one of the lifeboats began motoring their way.
"Eddie,"
Mercer screamed into the night, "get ready to take off."
The pilot must
have heard Mercer because he vanished from the hatch. The last fifteen yards of
the swim were the most agonizing moments in Mercer's life. The pain in his body
was unbearable. His lungs burned, his arms felt like lead, and saltwater had
closed his eyes to slits. He dug deep within himself, searching for any last
reserves of stamina to keep him going. There wasn't much left but still he swam
on with Valery right beside him.
The outboard motor
of the life raft was getting louder as the small craft drew near. Neither man
dared look back.
Suddenly they
burst into the calmed pool of oil that Eddie Rice had laid down. The chopper's
rotors were beginning to beat harder. Mercer and Valery swam the last few yards
on will alone. Valery tossed his father's briefcase into the open door and
clung desperately to the side of the chopper, his lungs pumping for air.
Mercer shoved him
into the craft and stole a glance over his shoulder. The John Dory's life
raft was only about twenty yards behind and closing
fast. Mercer knew he'd never clamber into the chopper before the Soviets were upon
them.
"Tell the
pilot to take off," he shouted, and let go of the Sea King.
Valery was nowhere
to be seen. Mercer assumed that the Russian had passed out as soon as he was
inside. He was wrong.
Valery reappeared
in the doorway, a machine pistol held firmly to his flank. He fired a long,
devastating burst at the life raft, bullets and screams piercing the night.
When the clip was empty, he held the weapon out to Mercer.
Mercer grasped the
proffered gun barrel and hauled himself to the chopper. He hooked an arm
through Valery's and the younger man hoisted him aboard. Mercer didn't even
take time to catch his breath, he grabbed a headset and wheezed into the
microphone, "Go, Eddie, goddamn it, go."
Only after the Sea
King lifted from the water toward Hawaii did Mercer collapse to the deck, his
eyes glazed over, his lungs nearly in convulsions. Valery sat down next to him,
drained by exhaustion and an adrenaline overdose.
"My father
told me that years ago he had stood by and watched as a lifeboat full of men
was machine-gunned like that. He said that the men died for Russia's greater
glory even though they weren't Russian. Now I have done the same. For
what?"
''For the best
reason of all,'' Mercer gasped. ''To save your own ass."
He got to his feet
and staggered to the open cargo door, wind and rain whipping around his body.
He closed the door and returned to Valery's side. "Tell me, are you sure
you didn't send that telegram?"
"Positive."
''I wonder?''
Mercer mused, and then passed out.
__________
__________
__________
Mercer sat at the back corner booth of Tiny's and slowly swirled
his vodka gimlet so the cubes of ice clicked discreetly. He took a swallow and
placed the glass back on the scarred tabletop. His movements were slow,
deliberate. It had been three weeks since Eddie Rice had ditched his Sea King
into the Pacific nearly a hundred miles from Hawaii and his body was still
stiff and battered. Mercer fractured a leg during the impact and Eddie had
given himself a severe concussion and turned his face into a vermilion
patchwork of bruises and lacerations. The chopper pilot was still bedridden at
the Pearl Harbor Naval Hospital. Valery Borodin wasn't so much as scratched during
the crash.
He swiveled his
head and surveyed the room. Tiny was out of sight behind the bar, searching for
something or other. There were four or five other patrons, workers from the
local trucking firm. Looking at them, Mercer felt vaguely conspicuous not
sporting a baseball cap or at least a cigarette. Umber light slashed through
the windows as the sun dropped beneath the smoggy horizon.
Mercer had been
back in Washington just long enough to jam a clear pin into Hawaii on the map
at home, call Dick Henna to set up this meeting at Tiny's, and give himself a
decent buzz.
He drained the
last of his drink and called to Tiny for another. The three gimlets already
wending their way through his body were dulling the pain in his bruised joints.
Richard Henna came
through the front door just as Tiny set the new drink in front of Mercer. Henna
wore a dark suit and tie, his eyes hidden by the dark glasses seen on all FBI
agents in the movies. Mercer stood slowly, supporting himself with one hand on
the table, as Henna crossed the room to his booth.
"I see you're
alive if not well." Henna shook his hand and the two men sat.
Henna removed his
glasses and glanced around the dingy room. His expression matched one Mercer
had made once in a public toilet in Istanbul.
"Lovely place
you have here," Henna said sarcastically.
"It has its
charms." Mercer grinned. "They water down the beer with
bourbon."
"I'll stick
to Scotch."
"Tiny, Scotch
and . . ." He looked at Henna, cocking an eyebrow.
"Neat."
"Scotch and
Scotch."
"So where
have you been since the navy fished you out?"
The explosions
that sunk the John Dory had been heard by the sonar aboard the USS Jacksonville,
the Los Angeles-class attack submarine attached to the Kitty Hawk battle
group. She was the vessel poised to launch a nuclear-tipped Tomahawk cruise
missile at the rising volcano. The sub raced to investigate the blasts and in
the process found the sinking Sea King and three passengers. After an hour of
argument with the captain, radio communication with the commander of the
Pacific fleet, and finally intervention by Admiral Morrison, the Jacksonville
abandoned her mission and headed for Hawaii.
"I stayed in
Hawaii until just this afternoon."
"A little
rest and relaxation?"
"More like
recovery and research."
Henna thought
better than to press for Mercer's meaning. "How are you feeling?"
"Not bad. The
cast on my leg came off yesterday and my ribs are okay as long as I don't try
to sing opera."
Henna smiled, then
thanked Tiny as his drink came. "I see how this place gets its name."
"He used to
be a jockey," Mercer pointed out. "So what's been happening in
Hawaii?"
"You were
there, you should know better than me."
"No, I was up
north on Kauai near a town called Hanalei, cut off from just about everybody
and everything. The only news I heard was on the flight from L.A. to
Washington, and even then I wasn't really paying attention."
"Well, let me fill you in a little
bit." Henna shrugged out of his jacket and laid it next to him on the
booth. "The state, hell the whole nation, was stunned when we told them
exactly what had happened. The President decided to come clean on the whole
affair from Ohnishi to Kerikov to the bikinium. Valery Borodin was at the press
conference at Pearl Harbor to back him up. The CIA found some old photographs
of Evad Lurbud to match his corpse found at Kenji's estate. Of course we needed
two undertakers to make his body look human again after what he'd been through.
"The Russians
deny all knowledge of the operation code named Vulcan's Forge, but admitted
that Ivan Kerikov was known for operating outside government sanction."
"You said
'was known.' Is he dead?"
"No, he's
vanished. He was in Thailand, then went to Switzerland, but from there, no one
knows. He simply disappeared. The Russians are looking for him now, as well as
the CIA and INTERPOL. He'll turn up."
"Don't count
on it. If he's cagey enough to nearly succeed with an operation like this, he
can easily stay lost too."
"Maybe you're
right, I don't know." Henna nodded slowly. "Remember, though, there's
also a group of very pissed-off Koreans after him."
"Have you been
able to find out who was behind the Korean angle?"
"We got
nothing from the bodies at Ohnishi's house, but the guy found near the
gardener's shed at Kenji's was the grandson of Way Hue Dong, one of the seven
richest men in the world. To further link him to what happened, the day after
you were rescued, a small flotilla of ships, one of them specially designed for
high-temperature dredging and all owned by one of Way's companies, arrived at
the volcano site. You better believe they were surprised to see the U.S. Navy
already there with a carrier and a half-dozen support ships. Way's already
lodged a formal complaint with the World Court at The Hague, but he doesn't
stand a chance of taking the bikinium from us.
"As for
Hawaii itself—there was one more night of rioting after your raid, but that was
it. Without the Koreans or Ohnishi to act as agitators, the mobs lost their
will to fight and pretty much just went home. Hawaii's senators have both
resigned, claiming health problems, but it was either that or face prosecution
for treason. The President has pardoned all others involved, and a special task
force has been set up to deal with any legitimate claims by the Hawaiians. He
felt it best to sweep the violence under the rug rather than make the nation
relive it for months in the courts. In all, about three hundred people died
during the riots.
"The President's
going to ramrod
some funding through Congress to try to end a lot of
the racial tension in this country—education programs, urban aid, that sort of
thing. The Los Angeles riots and now this recent crisis have finally brought
people to their senses. The old adage, 'United we stand, divided we fall,'
almost came true, and it's scared enough people who want to really do something
about it. With the current conciliatory mood in Congress, he'll get all the
funding he needs."
Mercer
interrupted. "You can't change people's opinions with new laws and federal
spending."
''Thirty years ago
doctors were advertising the health benefits of cigarettes," Henna
countered.
"Touché."
"It will take
some time but at least we are finally on the right track. No one wants the type
of ethnic strife that's tearing apart central Europe and the old Soviet
republics. We've maintained racial diversity for two hundred years and we're
not going to let it slip away now. America is famous for pulling through a
crisis just as things reach bottom, and we'll do it again."
"I hope
you're right."
Henna took a swig of his drink. "Valery Borodin is with our
own people at the volcano, assaying the parts of it now above the surface to
see where to begin mining the bikinium. I believe Dr. Talbot is with him."
"She is. As a
favor to me, the president had her flown out there two weeks ago. I spoke to
her on the phone yesterday, just before my flight back to Washington. She and
Valery have rekindled the passion they once felt. Already they're talking
marriage."
Henna smirked.
"Kind of funny, you were the hero in all of this. I thought it was
customary for the hero to get the girl at the end."
"When they
make the television mini-series, I'll make sure they change the ending,"
Mercer replied offhandedly.
"Well, don't
think you're going to come out of this completely empty-handed." Henna
fished a set of keys from his pocket and
tossed them to Mercer. .
"What are
these?"
"The keys to
a new, black SJX Jaguar convertible with tan interior, cellular phone, CD
player, and an aftermarket turbo charger. It was the least we could do."
Mercer looked at
the keys and gave Henna a sardonic smile. "After getting me shot at a few
dozen times, nearly smeared against a train, almost drowned, beaten up more
than once, crashed into the ocean, and within a few minutes of being nuked,
you're right, buying me a new car is the very least you could do."
Henna knew by
Mercer's tone that he wasn't really angry and gave a low chuckle. "The
car's parked in front of your house. There are two things I want to know: how
did you know to go to Kenji's house rather than Ohnishi's? And how in the hell
did you pinpoint the John Dory when the experts at NSA couldn't find a
damn thing?"
Mercer smiled
slyly. "Finding the John Dory was easy. Those infrared photos
showed a classic shield volcano, a number of small vents surrounding a central
magma outlet. Normally those smaller vents are located on the side of the
volcano and therefore under deeper water. Well, on all of the photos, there was
a white hot signature nearly a mile from the central vent. At that distance,
the thermal image would be yellow or orange, cooler because of the water depth.
That white dot couldn't have been a natural vent; it had to be something
man-made, like the nuclear reactor aboard the John Dory as she rode near
the surface."
Henna was
impressed. "And what about Kenji?"
"That was a
hunch really, but I felt confident. I worked for Ohnishi as a consultant a few
years ago in Tennessee. Ohnishi Minerals was interested in buying the second
mining rights to some disused property owned by the Tennessee Valley Authority.
Second mining is when the coal pillars that support the mine tunnels are ripped
down to their very weakest tolerances. It's dangerous
work and cave-ins occur frequently, but the profit margin is astronomical if
the mines can be bought cheap enough.
"The TVA
didn't want the old mines stripped the usual way, citing all sorts of possible
insurance liabilities. I was brought in at the TVA's request because there had
never been a cave-in on any of the second mining operations I'd worked on. TVA
was still reluctant to sell after they read my geomechanic report, but Ohnishi
Minerals managed to end run them. Ohnishi bought off officials, paid hundreds
of thousands of dollars to some high-power lawyers, and in the end opened his
own bogus insurance company to underwrite TVA's liability.
"What he did
was illegal to a degree, but American mining laws are gray enough that he got
away with it. At the time the vice president in charge of Ohnishi Minerals was
a guy I'd gone through the doctoral program at Penn State with, Daniel Tanaka.
When his crew was reopening the mine, I met with him and explained that I had
faked some of the figures, underestimating the strength of the coal pillars. I
had rightly guessed that Ohnishi would order him to pull out more coal than I
said could be safely removed. We both knew that I'd saved the lives of his men,
so he owed me a favor. I called him just before I went to Hawaii and he told me
confidentially that Ohnishi himself had no knowledge of the details of the
transaction when they had acquired the mining rights. Anything that could be
construed as illegal or corrupt was handled by his aide, Kenji.
"I assumed
that when Ohnishi was approached by Ivan Kerikov concerning the bikinium, he'd
ordered Kenji to handle any of the details. Therefore Kenji was the real
linchpin, not his boss. It wasn't until I reached Kenji's estate that I found
out the Koreans had gotten to Kenji too. He was the perfect agent-provocateur,
working all sides. Koreans and Ohnishi against the middle, Ivan Kerikov.
"As near as I
can figure the cycle of double-cross, Kenji
screwed Ohnishi with the help of the Koreans while Ohnishi screwed Kerikov,
who'd already sold him out to the same Koreans. Meanwhile those Koreans are
screwing Kerikov right back by forming a partnership with Kenji. I think I have
that right, but I'm not sure. The only thing that matters is that Ohnishi and
Kenji are dead, Kerikov's in hiding, and the wily Koreans have nothing to show
for their effort."
"That sounds
about the same way we figured it, too," Henna agreed.
Harry White
staggered into the bar, a nearly spent cigarette clinging to his lower lip. He
sat at the bar, hunching over in what he and Mercer referred to as ''the bar
slouch," and took a swig of the Jack and Ginger Tiny had already poured
for him.
"It's hard to
believe this all started over forty years ago with something as insignificant
as the sinking of an ore carrier."
"Not so
insignificant if you were on that ship," Mercer replied, still staring at
Harry.
"You know
what I mean. The crew of the Grandam Phoenix died without ever knowing
that they were the beginning of a conspiracy that nearly tore this nation
apart."
"Don't be so
sure," Mercer said quietly, then called to Harry, "What, I come back
from a trip and no sarcasm from you?"
Harry heaved
himself from his stool and started toward the booth. "I see you talking to
a guy in a suit, I figure the IRS has finally nailed you for tax fraud. I
thought it best to stay away."
Mercer laughed as
Harry slid into the booth next to Henna.
"Richard
Henna, director of the Federal Bureau of Investigations,'' Mercer said, drawing
out each syllable, "I would like you to meet Ralph Michael Line, former
captain of the ore carrier Grandam Pheonix."
For the rest of
his life, Mercer would never again see such
a look of incredulity as those on the faces of Henna and Harry. Their jaws had
both dropped noticably and they regarded Mercer with blank, expressionless
eyes. Had he said he was the second coming of Jesus Christ, the reaction would
have been more mundane.
Before either man
could speak, Mercer explained. "After I got out of the hospital at Pearl
Harbor, I went to Kauai because it's the closest big island to the new volcano.
I went there hoping to find out if there had been any survivors from that night
in 1954.1 found a spry old lady, Mae Turner, who remembered a sea captain named
Ralph Line who washed up on shore four days after the Phoenix went down.
He had lost a leg to a shark." Unconsciously Harry rubbed his good foot
against the prosthesis strapped below his knee. "She nursed him back to
health, but never heard from him again."
"How did you
guess it was me?" Harry asked calmly.
"It was the
telegram that started this whole mess for me, the telegram from Tish's dead
father. At first I had no idea who sent it, but when I learned that Valery
Borodin had been involved with Tish, I figured it must have been him, but he
denied having sent it. I wondered who else would want me involved and knew that
Jack Talbot was a friend of mine.
"Then I
remembered talking to you the night before the telegram arrived from Jakarta. I
remembered telling you that I thought he was working in Indonesia and wondered
if he knew his daughter had been hurt. You were the only person who could have
known I thought he was there. I started thinking about motive, about why you
would want to get me involved and I came up with revenge so I figured you had
to be a member of the Grandam Phoenix's crew. Mae Turner confirmed my
suspicion. I never did figure out how you got the telegram sent from
Jakarta."
"Easy,
really. I haven't been to sea since '54, but I still know mariners all over the
globe. I just phoned a friend who knew
someone in Indonesia and had him send the wire."
"Why?"
Henna asked softly.
"We had a
deal with those fuckers to scuttle the Phoenix for the insurance money.
They were supposed to pick us up. Instead, they gunned us down in the lifeboats.
They killed my entire crew. I caught two slugs myself.
"I blacked
out after I got hit, and when I came to I was holding onto an overturned
lifeboat, with a Great White using me as an after-dinner mint.
"I pulled
myself up onto the boat, hatred keeping me alive, and eventually landed on
Hawaii. After Mae nursed me, I went looking for those bastards. That's when I
changed my name to Harry White, so they wouldn't ever know that one man managed
to slip away. I searched for twenty fucking years and didn't get anywhere.
"Every time a
ship vanished near Hawaii, I checked it out. Some were legitimate, sailboats
found capsized, storms, that sort of thing, but I knew some were caused by the
same people who killed my boys. But I never could find a connection between
those ships and mine.
"After twenty
years, I finally gave up hope and moved here to Washington. I felt like a
failure. Then they hit that NOAA ship, and I thought maybe after all these
years I'd have a chance at revenge. Surely the government would investigate and
find some pattern to the disappearances. I even thought I might be able to help
in some way, but, Christ, I'm crowding eighty now; who the fuck would listen to
me anymore?"
He turned to
Mercer. "When you told me that your friend's daughter had been rescued
from that ship, I understood how fate really works. I called my friend and had
his buddy in Indonesia send that telegram to your office, hoping that I could
avenge my crew through you. Listen, Mercer, I was wrong to involve you, but I just
couldn't stop myself. I am sorry."
Mercer looked at
his old friend for a long moment, his
face a mask, his eyes neutral. "Do I call you Harry or Ralph?"
"I've been
Harry White longer than I was Ralph Line," he replied sullenly.
"Well, Harry,
from now on if you want Jack Daniel's at my house, you bring it yourself,
because I never drink the stuff." Mercer grinned and reached across the
table to slap Harry on the shoulder.
Harry was nearly
in tears. "Thanks, Mercer. Thanks for finally avenging the boys who died
that night and thanks for understanding."
"Next time I
fight one of your battles," Mercer admonished mockingly, "make sure
it's not the goddamn KGB I'm up against, all right?" Mercer slid out of
the booth and stood. "Now, if you gentlemen will excuse me, I have to pick
up my private nurse from the airport. She couldn't get a seat on the same
flight as me."
"Private
nurse?" Harry and Dick said in unison.
"Well, not
nurse, really, more like physical therapist. Her producer gave her one more
week off, and I plan to spend it at a little bed and breakfast I know near
Annapolis. It seems you're wrong, Dick, the hero does get the girl at the
end."
Mercer left the
bar before either man could speak. He only had thirty minutes to get to the airport
and pick up Jill Tzu. It would be another hour's drive to the hotel, and a
certain part of his anatomy was telling him he would need her type of therapy
by then.
__________
__________
__________
Once an outpost of the mighty Venetian trading empire, the seaside
town of Khania retains much of the influence of its renaissance benefactor.
Though lacking the trademark canals of Venice, Khania can still fool even the
most seasoned traveler into thinking he or she is on the Italian peninsula
rather than the largest of the Greek islands. The calm Aegean spices the air of
the resort town as breezes blow into the protected bay, past the stone
lighthouse and domed mosque left over from the Turkish occupation. The cramped
architecture of the port itself gives a person seated in one of the many
quayside restaurants a feeling of contentment and belonging even as multitudes
of tourists promenade by in arm-linked droves.
Khania sits nearly
forty miles west of Crete's capital, connected to it by a stretch of new
highway dotted with beautiful beaches and luxury condominium developments
catering to Germans and Scandinavians wishing to hide from winter's fury.
Because of the transitory nature of the population, no one paid heed to
Khania's newest arrival as he sipped a Scotch at an outdoor cafe, watching the
tourists load themselves up like pack animals with souvenirs and mementos of
their stay on Crete.
He was dressed in
creamy linen pants and a silk polo shirt, his feet shod in soft leather
moccasins. If tourists had taken the time to notice him, they would have
assumed that he was just another rich German "getting away from it
all." They would have been dead wrong. Ivan Kerikov had selected Khania
with much care and deliberation. He knew that he was being hunted by the KGB,
the CIA, and more importantly, Way Dong's security forces, so any hiding place
must have several avenues of escape. Khania's transitory population almost
guaranteed anonymity, while the island's rugged interior offered thousands of
hiding places. If things became desperate, Libya was only a ten-hour boat ride
away.
Kerikov signaled
his waiter for another drink and sat back contentedly in the cloth and steel
tubing chair. He could think of no better place to sit and wait without fear of
detection while still enjoying the amenities of civilization.
Before leaving
Zurich, he'd manage to empty several KGB accounts held there for agents
operating in the West. He had enough money to live on for at least a year.
The waiter brought
his drink and Kerikov thanked him with
a grunt.
A year would be
all the time he needed to utilize the information locked away in a bank's safe
deposit box near Sygtagma Square in Athens. That information, stolen from the
archives of Department 7, would be worth millions to the right buyer, one eager
for the power to bring America to her economic knees.
Jack B. Du Brul works as a
carpenter in Burlington, Vermont. He is a graduate of the Westminster School
and of George Washington University, where he earned a B.A. in International
Relations. He is a member of the Vermont Fencing Alliance and the United States
Fencing Association (foil), and reports that he once insulted Alfredo
Christiani, the then-President of El Salvador, in the presence of Jack Kemp.
Vulcan's Forge is Du Brul's
first novel.