Invasion: Alaska

Home > Other > Invasion: Alaska > Page 35
Invasion: Alaska Page 35

by Vaughn Heppner


  “Is that a fact?” Paul said.

  Several of the Special Forces guards raised their assault guns a trifle higher as they eyed Paul with greater hostility.

  The master sergeant nodded. He was about Paul’s size. “You don’t like that. I can understand. The truth is you did good, as good as any of us could have done.”

  “I’m Marine Recon and I did better than any of you could have done.”

  “You’re ex-Marine Recon,” the master sergeant said. “They discharged you and I can see why. We checked your files, but we believe you two anyway.”

  “Wonderful,” Paul said. “Now if those snowmobiles aren’t for us and you’re not giving us a ride back, why are you here?”

  “To hear your story,” the master sergeant said.

  “That’s it, huh?” asked Paul. “Ask us for intel and then leave us stranded out here?”

  “Don’t be bitter, pal. There’s a war on and we’re getting our butts kicked. So we’re starting to play hardball again.” The master sergeant unhooked a walkie-talkie, handing it to Paul. “Use this after we’re gone, say—” the man checked his watch. “In thirty minutes. There’s a bush plane on the way for you. They’ll pick you up and take you back to Dead Horse. But be warned, the people in Dead Horse will want you to help them fight.”

  “That suits me,” Paul said. “I have some payback coming for the White Tigers.”

  “I thought it might be like that. You two did good, both of you. Now we’re going to give these Chinese a bloody nose—thanks to you. Sorry if I have to do it this way, but I have my orders.”

  “Yeah,” Paul said. “And good luck to whatever it is you guys are doing.”

  “You’ve given us our first bearing on them. They’ve used and keep using some fancy EW on us and some hard-to-spot planes. Now we’re going to teach them we Americans play for keeps.” The master sergeant leaned near, whispering, “Don’t look back no matter what you hear. You might even want to cover your eyes then.”

  “You aren’t talking nuclear, are you?” asked Paul.

  “We’re not, but I hear somebody is.” The master sergeant brushed his nose. “If I were you, I’d get out of here fast.”

  Paul nodded. “Maybe we’ll start heading south now then.”

  The master sergeant eyed him and Red Cloud. “I’m supposed to detain you until the sub is ready to dive, but you two have been through enough. Go on, start walking.”

  Semper Fi,” Paul said, holding out his hand.

  “Same to you, Marine,” the master sergeant said, shaking hands. He had a strong grip. Then he shook Red Cloud’s hand. “If I were you two, I’d hurry.”

  Paul and Red Cloud took his advice, stumping to their skis, hooking them back to their boots. The master sergeant waved as they skied away. His men waved. Paul and Red Cloud waved back. Then the two of them concentrated on putting as much distance between the others as they could.

  WASHINGTON, D.C.

  “That’s the full extent of what we have, sir,” General Alan told the President.

  Anna Chen sat underground in White House Bunker Number Five. This was an emergency session. Everyone sitting at the circular conference table looked worn and tired. Some were groggy.

  Everyday there was more bad news. The President took it the hardest. His shoulders had slumped and the bags around his eyes had become discolored. Whenever U.S. resistance grew toughest along the Number One Highway, the Chinese called for the tri-turreted tanks. The T-66s always smashed through or chased away the defenders, and the Chinese advance continued. General Alan had explained how enemy minesweepers were busy at work in Cook Inlet. Once the Chinese Navy cleared the inlet and took Anchorage, then South Central Alaska was lost. Once South Central Alaska was lost, the State was as good as gone. The consensus in the chamber was that Anchorage’s fate would decide the war.

  “We need a decision, sir,” General Alan said.

  The President compressed his lips.

  Anna’s heart went out to Clark. The conflict had aged him. This decision…it was likely the hardest of his life.

  General Alan had just explained that if the U.S. military could save Alaska, America could still lose the oil war. The fate of the North Slope oilfields was critical to the national economy. It was the lifeblood giving America time as they switched to heavy coal use and various forms of solar-power. The general had been telling them about the Chinese threatening to attack the oilfields with their ice-mobile formations.

  “We have too few men on the ground in and around the North Slope to win any fight,” General Alan now added. “I’m amazed and surprised at their feat. The Chinese have moved tanks and hovers almost all the way across the polar ice.”

  “What about air?” the President asked.

  “They’ve used special air-transports,” General Alan said.

  “I mean our air,” the President said. “Let us hit them with air strikes.”

  Thin General Alan shook his head. “The constant air battles over the Kenai Front have decimated our Air Force, sir. The Chinese have better planes, missiles and electronics, but we have some tough pilots willing to dogfight with them. That means losses. You know how the Air Force generals kept begging for more reinforcements. Then Sims demands more air cover. As the Chinese gained air superiority in south Alaska, they hunted down our supply columns. Do you remember giving your okay, sir, for the transfer of winterized fighters from the North Slope to Anchorage?”

  President Clark wearily shook his head.

  “We’ve stripped the North Front, sir,” General Alan said. “We hardly have anything left near the Prudhoe Bay oilfields or ANWR.”

  The President looked stricken.

  Maybe it compelled General Alan to add, “Because of that, sir, we haven’t completely lost the air war on the Southern Front. Our pilots are tough, and as long as they have planes to fly, they’re willing to engage the enemy.”

  The President bent at the waist as he put his hands on the table and rested his forehead on his hands. The moment lasted several seconds. Abruptly, he sat up and glanced at Anna.

  “You know the Chairman better than anyone else,” Clark said. “What do you think his response will be?”

  Anna blinked in amazement as she realized what he asked her. The President of the United States was passing the decision to her. If she told Clark the Chairman would go nuclear, the President would decide against the Navy plan. In that moment, Anna felt a tremendous weight settle onto her heart. It was galling. She found it difficult to breathe. She had an inkling then what it meant being the President at a time like this.

  Anna felt the eyes on her. Everyone waited on her words. In a strange way, it reminded her of long ago in the Teenage Beauty Pageant. Then everyone had watched and weighed her. Anna Chen frowned, concentrating. She wanted a sip of water, but she was afraid to reach for it. She didn’t want to see her hand tremble. She didn’t want anyone else to see that.

  Anna looked at President Clark. “Sir,” she said, “this situation seems different from the previous discussion to use nuclear weapons. This time our military would do it away from prying eyes and in a hidden manner. And you’re leaving the Chairman his primary military forces. For him, that might make all the difference.”

  Clark’s mouth moved, but no words came.

  “Do you understand what you’re saying?” asked the Secretary of State.

  Anna nodded. She knew. They were talking about using one nuclear weapon to hit the Chinese now on the pack ice and scare them. Afterward, the Joint Chiefs would use a different plan to hinder the Arctic Chinese.

  The President licked his lips. “This strike won’t unleash a nuclear holocaust?”

  “I’m not a military expert,” Anna said. “I’m only considering the Chairman’s psychology. The critical factor as far I can see is that the attack is hidden from the world’s eyes. More than anything else, the Chairman abhors public humiliation. As I said before, this leaves the Chairman’s military units intact. He ha
s an inordinate attachment to the military and hates high Chinese losses. He believes such losses confirm old stereotypes concerning China. What you’re planning in the Arctic, it seems to me it prevents the Chairman from achieving his goal. But without doing it in a single devastating attack that obliterates all Chinese polar forces. It allows the Chairman to retreat and therefore he is not pushed into a corner where he feels he must hit back tit-for-tat.”

  The President stared at her. He nodded then, and he turned to General Alan. “Tell them yes, I approve of the plan.”

  ARCTIC OCEAN

  Paul turned and lightly punched Red Cloud on the shoulder. “Can you believe it?”

  Red Cloud shook his head.

  A plane taxied down the ice toward them. Its propeller twirled and the engine idled. Finally, the small bush plane came to a stop on the ice, its lights bright in the polar darkness.

  Red Cloud unhooked the harness from his shoulders, leaving the toboggan where it lay. Paul shook off his backpack, listening to it thump on the ice. Then he kicked off his skis and ran toward the plane. Both men kept their assault rifles.

  Paul beat Red Cloud to the bush plane. He ducked under the wing, yanked open the door and shouted, “You Pilot Pete?”

  “That’s me, mate,” a small bearded man said. He wore heavy clothing as heat billowed out of the cramped interior.

  Paul slid off his assault rifle and stowed in within. Next, he shoved in the Chinese radio. Then he hoisted himself up and slid toward the back. Red Cloud followed his example and soon slammed the door shut. The Algonquin sat up front with the pilot.

  “I know you,” Pete told Red Cloud.

  The Algonquin nodded.

  “So it’s really true?” asked Pete. “The Chinese murdered everyone at Platform P-53?”

  “It is true,” Red Cloud said in a grave voice.

  “Let’s get out of here!” Paul shouted from the back. “I think the Navy is about to trigger a nuke against the Chinese.”

  “What the heck are you talking about?” shouted Pete.

  “Go, go,” Paul said, “and don’t look back. In fact, if it looks like the sun is coming up or starting to shine, it means the Navy ignited a nuke.”

  “He is right,” Red Cloud said. “We must hurry.”

  Pete turned to his joystick. “Hang on.” He pushed the stick forward as the engine began to roar.

  Paul sat back in his seat. This felt glorious. He had a heavy growth of beard and mustache, and it had been a long time since he’d felt anything but the warmth of his own breath held under a sleeping bag. Now warmth flooded the cramped cabin. He settled back and enjoyed the thrill of the bush plane bumping over the ice. He looked outside, amazed at how fast they were going.

  There was an extra roar of noise, and the bush plane lifted. Paul let out a war whoop. It caused Pete to jerk around.

  “Don’t do that,” Pete said. “It freaks me out.”

  “Sorry,” Paul said. “You just have no idea how I feel.”

  “I sure do. I’ve been lost before in the wilds. Yep, it’s good to get back to civilization. Right now, this plane is civilization to you.”

  Paul nodded, and his eyelids grew heavy. It felt so good just to relax. He was going home. He’d see Cheri and Mikey again. He could hardly believe it. As he thought these beautiful things, the bush plane continued to climb into the night sky.

  USS ATLANTA

  The USS Atlanta was a Los Angles-class nuclear attack submarine. It had waited in the ice as the two Blacksand mercenaries skied away. The submarine waited as the Special Forces team had roared away on the snowmobiles.

  That had been many hours ago. Now finally, a signal arrived from Dead Horse. It had traveled all the way from the White House. The captain was asleep in his bunk when the chief knocked on wood paneling.

  “I’m up, Chief,” the captain said from his bunk.

  Without disturbing the curtain guarding the captain’s privacy, the chief relayed the radio message.

  Soon, the captain swept the curtain aside. He wore his officer’s hat and he had buttoned on his uniform. Solemnly, he strode to his place near the periscope. Per his orders, the USS Atlanta eased out of the pack ice and sank into the frigid waters. The submarine headed onto a new bearing.

  “Prepare the torpedo,” the captain said.

  The members of the bridge crew stared at him.

  “This is not a drill,” the captain said quietly.

  That began a flurry of motion aboard the USS Atlanta. Sixteen minutes and thirty-two seconds later, a blast of air expelled the nuclear-tipped torpedo from its tube. Then the electric motor engaged. The big torpedo headed toward a precise heading under the ice.

  “Turn her around, Chief,” the captain said, “and take us down. We don’t want to be anywhere near here once it goes off.”

  “Aye, aye, sir,” the chief said, an old man and gray-haired. In a hollow voice, he gave the needed orders.

  All the while, the nuclear-tipped torpedo headed toward its preset coordinates. Those were the same coordinates as the forward Chinese supply dump. Destiny awaited their meeting.

  ARCTIC OCEAN

  Paul was almost asleep when an immensely bright light illuminated the darkness. The bush plane’s engine roared, the only sound any of them had heard for some time.

  “What is that?” shouted Pete. The small pilot began to turn around.

  Paul bolted upright and shouted in the pilot’s ear. “That’s a nuke, friend.”

  The intensity of the light grew, and it hurt their eyes.

  Red Cloud groaned in his seat.

  “I didn’t sign up for this,” said Pete.

  “Ditto,” Paul said, as he gripped his seat belt.

  Pete bobbed his head, finally turning forward again. “It’s bad. I wouldn’t want to be closer than we are now. But I think it’s too far to hurt my plane.”

  Paul glanced back then too. We’re using nuclear weapons. He shook his head. Nuclear weapons in the Arctic—war couldn’t get any dirtier than this.

  “Hang on!” shouted Pete. “Just in case, I want put more distance between us.” The small bush plane roared through the Arctic night, racing the bright light shining in the pack ice.

  AMBARCHIK BASE, SIBERIA

  As he rubbed his aching eyes, Jian Shihong settled himself before a screen. One of his bodyguards had shaken him awake and told him grim news. The Chairman was calling an emergency meeting of the Ruling Committee. The Americans had used a nuclear weapon on the pack ice. Hearing that, Jian had bolted out of bed.

  Now he sipped hot tea, trying to focus his thoughts. Bojing had already left for the Arctic Front to find General Nung. What if I had boarded that plane? Now I would be traveling onto a nuclear battlefield.

  Jian shook his head. He would never willingly tour a battle-zone. One trained soldiers for such a task, hotheaded fools eager to become heroes.

  Jian read the report for the fifth time. The Americans had launched a nuclear-tipped torpedo! They’d destroyed a forward supply depot, one meant to replenish stocks of advancing hovers and snowtanks.

  His screen changed from its holding pattern. Instinctively, Jian sat up, sliding his tea out of view. He saw the members of the Ruling Committee: the Chairman was at the head of the table. On one side of him were the admiral and the Police Minister. On the other side sat Deng Fong and the Army Marshal.

  I should be there. I am at a disadvantage speaking through a screen. I am like a ghost, haunting the meeting.

  Jian knew that his features would be on the large computer-scroll at the other end of the table as the Chairman. Each of his gestures and features were being recorded. He’d have to remember that.

  “The Americans have broken an unspoken accord between us,” the Chairman was saying.

  “They have an affinity for using nuclear weapons on peoples of Asian descent,” the Police Minister said.

  “Is that really true?” Deng asked.

  “They once dropped two nuclear bombs on
Japan,” the Police Minister said. “Now they are attacking us. Yes, it is true.”

  “I don’t think you’re aware of all the facts,” Deng said. “You must understand that Japan was a uniquely dangerous opponent for the Americans. Militarily, no one has ever been able to strike such devastating blows against modern America as the Japanese. They attacked Pearl Harbor and drove the Americans out of the Philippines.”

  “What is your point?” the Chairman asked.

  “Sir,” Deng said, “I do not believe the nuclear attack was racially motivated as our illustrious Police Minister has implied. I think our invasion has frightened the Americans into using nuclear weapons.”

  “The point is they’ve used them on Chinese soldiers,” Jian said.

  No one in Beijing appeared to hear his words.

  “I will not tolerate this use of nuclear weapons against us,” the Chairman said. He sat rigidly in his wheelchair, with pain creased across his features. “Do the Americans think Greater China is a secondary power? A power they can indiscriminately attack with nuclear weapons?”

  “I have studied the attack,” Deng said. “I do not believe it was indiscriminate.”

  “Explain that,” the Chairman said.

  “They used a torpedo to explode pack-ice,” Deng said.

  “That is completely immaterial,” the Chairman said.

  “Respectfully, sir, why didn’t they attack our forces in the Kenai Peninsula with nuclear weapons? It would have proven much more effective there toward the defense of Alaska.”

  “Your question reveals a lack of knowledge concerning the present battlefield,” Admiral Qingshan said. “We have laser batteries and anti-missile rockets whose primary purpose is shooting down tactical and theater-level nuclear weapons. That is why the Americans haven’t attacked there. They cannot.”

  “Have the Americans used nuclear-tipped torpedoes against our fleet?” Deng asked.

  “It’s only a matter of time now before they will,” the Chairman said.

 

‹ Prev