Lab Rat nodded. “Good.”
“Admiral?” Bird Dog said.
Batman looked at him.
“If you’re increasing Combat Air Patrol, I’d like to request some air time. I’m getting rusty, if you know what I mean.”
“Do I ever,” Batman said. Then he remembered something. “No offense, Bird Dog, but I understand you’ve had a little trouble finding an RIO who wants to fly with you.”
Bird Dog’s eyes widened. “That’s not true at all, sir. Hell, before this trip I had the same RIO for longer than anyone else in the Navy. Gator Cummings. And my RIO, Catwoman — she loves to fly with me.”
Batman debated calling the young aviator on his rather freeform interpretation of events. Surely the aviator knew that everyone on Jefferson was aware of the circumstances of his split with “the same RIO” he’d had for so long. According to scuttlebutt, the RIO, Gator, had finally demanded transfer — not just to another pilot, but to an entirely different ship. “Back in Cuba, he put me into the water,” Gator had said. “Then I turned around and flew with him again in Turkey. After that, I started wondering if maybe I had a death wish. I decided to get as far away from that maniac as I possibly can.”
Gator was now flying with VF-91 off the USS Eisenhower.
Maybe Bird Dog had learned something from that whole experience — certainly, the youngster was trying hard to do well in his new position as advisor. Finally, Batman nodded. “Talk to CAG. Tell him I said it was all right.”
Bird Dog grinned with the palpable relief of any Naval aviator who hadn’t been in the air for a while. It made Batman long, more than ever, for the feel of a Tomcat strapped around his own body.
Across the hangar bay, in the entrance to the aft elevator, sparks showered down from welding arcs.
FIVE
Sunday, 3 August
0800 local (-8 GMT)
PLA Destroyer Juhai
Victoria Harbor
The Juhai, a Luda III class destroyer, steamed slowly into the West Lamma Channel and turned toward the open sea. Her orders were to join her PLA Navy sister ships in the area where the American aircraft carrier battle group was currently operating, and take up a flanking position. With her four twin C801 missile launchers, new twin 37mm guns and brand-new electronics, Juhai was more than formidable enough to cause the Americans concern.
Of course, these days a “flanking position” did not imply close proximity. Juhai’s commander, Kung Choug, had been warned to exhibit special care not to appear hostile in any way. It had something to do with an American yacht that sank in the South China Sea a couple of days earlier. The Americans had apparently accused the PLA of involvement.
Standing on the bridge, Kung surveyed the busy waters ahead of his ship. Navigation was no problem; despite the 200-plus small islands that made the Hong Kong vicinity a spiders’s web of channels and tributaries, the routes in and out had been charted for centuries. However, these waters perpetually swarmed with boats: fishing craft, pleasure boats, sailboats, commercial steamers, cruise ships, and visiting military craft from innumerable nations. They made maneuvering a headache. Despite his recent pleasant leave in Hong Kong, Kung looked forward to seeing the open sea once more. Weather predictions warned of scattered squalls over the next week, but nothing too heavy.
One good thing about moving a large ship in and out of Hong Kong: Here was one of the greatest deep-water harbors in the world, so there was little danger of going aground. Which was ironic, really, considering that the South China Sea was itself comparatively shallow.
In the distance, he saw a small military vessel chugging slowly across the channel. Even before he focused his glasses on it, he had a feeling he knew what kind of boat it was: a CDF patrol boat.
He scowled. Say what you wished about the British, they had known how to control the harbor. But Major General Chin, commander of the Coastal Defense Force, was a fool. His boats were always tangling with the wrong vessels, halting and searching steamers loaded with New Zealand wool while tankers full of opium sailed right past. And so far, there had been at least three reported collisions between CDF craft and civilian vessels cruising in the bay. Such incompetence could only be the product of leadership selected for political clout rather than military competence.
So Kung kept his gaze warily on the craft dead ahead. It was stern-on to him, and too far away for him to read any of its markings, but sure enough, he recognized the CDF uniforms of the men scurrying over her fantail. Kung sighed. Probably the boat had fouled her screws on a piece of flotsam in the water, a nylon rope or a wayward fish pot. It was an embarrassment.
He was about to direct the destroyer’s radioman to contact the patrol boat when he saw the small craft’s stern dig into the water, foam billowing out behind her. The patrol boat tore off across the Channel at high speed. Kung was startled. Her skipper might be incompetent, but that was one well-maintained boat.
He returned his gaze to the water ahead, searching for other obstacles.
The one obstacle he couldn’t see, and wasn’t even thinking about, lay dead ahead at a depth of eight meters. It was an American-made MK65 Quickstrike mine, essentially a 2,390 pound bomb sheathed in a thin-walled casing, tethered to the bottom of the channel by a long cable.
As the Juhai approached, her 3,700 ton bulk pushed before her a pressure wave that registered on the preset triggering device of the mine. Acoustic sensors analyzed the sound saturating the seawater, broke the signal into its component parts, and arrived at a decision. Critical arming circuits clicked shut.
Kung felt a sharp jolt through the bottoms of his feet. His immediate thought was that his ship had, somehow, impossibly, run aground. Then — even worse — that she had struck some unseen civilian or commercial vessel. After what had happened to that yacht the other night, no one — least of all Major General Po Yu Li — would believe there had been an accident.
But even as these thoughts raced through his mind, a huge column of water and foam shot up from the port bow. Kung felt the deck rear up under his feet, and the next thing he knew he had stumbled back into the wall. Then he was stumbling forward again, catching himself on the console. Through the windshield he saw metal plates buckled back on the weatherdeck, which was almost underwater. Then it reared up again, even as the column of water crashed back down, much of it exploding across Juhai’s bridge windscreen, making Kung blind.
Even so, he knew instantly that his ship had been severely holed. Its movement was abruptly all wrong, a heavy corkscrewing as the bow settled deeper into the water, pushed there by the still-churning screws.
Kung began shouting orders to reduce speed and get damage-control crews to the bow. Then he let the Officer of the Deck take command of the immediate emergency while he got on the radio to contact Hong Kong.
Saturday, 2 August
0900 local (+5 GMT)
Briefing Room
The Pentagon, Washington, D.C.
There were advantages to being the nephew of the chief of naval operations. For one, you got to sit in a plush chair in a nice meeting room while being grilled. For another, they served better-than-average coffee.
That was about it.
Besides Tombstone, four men sat around the conference table. They must have been chosen from Pentagon Central Casting: There was the Air Force rep, perhaps forty years old, with a cleft chin punctuating a square, Dudley Doright jaw. There was the Navy rep, older, appropriately bright of eye and ruddy of complexion, with clipped white hair and steely gaze. There was the colorless guy in the gray suit, who had introduced himself as “a consultant on advanced aviation technology.” And finally there was the kid representing DARPA, the Defense Advanced Research Projects Administration. He couldn’t be more than twenty-five years old and was not actually in the military himself, a fact he emphasized by wearing a Hawaiian shirt over baggy chinos and tennis shoes.
Tombstone wished he were on the Jefferson. Things were escalating out there; the latest word was tha
t a PLA destroyer had been damaged by an explosion in Victoria Harbor, and the Chinese immediately accused the United States of planting a mine. It was a messy situation, and getting messier.
But at least you knew who your enemies were.
Tombstone had been grilled for a half hour now — or, rather, been warmed up for grilling by being asked to clarify a few points from his preliminary report.
There was a moment of silence, then the man in the suit leaned across the table. “Tell me, Admiral,” he said. “Who do you think might want to shoot you down that way? Not in combat, but over American soil?”
“Shoot me down?” Tombstone raised one eyebrow. “Well, let’s see. The North Koreans, the Chinese, the Russians, the Ukrainians, the Indians, the Cubans, the — ”
The man in the suit held up a hand and smiled blandly. Everything about him was bland. “You miss my point. This wasn’t a normal terrorist-style attack, or even a military assault. There are conventional surface-to-air missiles that could have done the job.”
“Not to mention car bombs,” the DARPA kid said. He had his tennis shoes propped on the armrest of a vacant seat. “Or a bullet in the back of the head while you’re asleep in your bed.”
Tombstone looked at him, then back at the suit. “Maybe the wreckage from the bogey will tell you something. There must be something left. I assume you’ve found it.”
“That’s being taken care of,” the Air Force rep said.
The Navy rep scowled. “Don’t be coy, Foster. He’ll figure it out soon enough on his own; plus we owe him as much information as we can spare. It was his ass on the line yesterday. Could happen again tomorrow.” He transferred his blue gaze to Tombstone. “We found the impact site, yes. We’re in the process of recovering the wreckage now, but it’s a hell of a job working in that muck. Especially with environmental groups screaming to high heaven in the background. Could take a while.”
Tombstone nodded. “Thank you.” He looked back at the suit. “Surely there aren’t that many governments capable of building an RPV like that. Maybe the CIA could narrow down our list of suspects for us.”
The suit shrugged. “I wouldn’t know. Now, what about markings? Did this vehicle have any kind of national or manufacturer emblems on it? Words? Symbols?”
“It was moving a little fast to be sure, but no, I didn’t notice anything like that. Just marine camo paint.”
“And it didn’t resemble any aircraft or missile you’re familiar with, is that right? You’re sure of that?”
“Absolutely. It not only didn’t look like anything I’m familiar with, it didn’t fly like anything I’m familiar with. You’ve got a drawing of it right in front of you; what’s it look like to you?”
“A paper airplane with another paper airplane stuck up its ass,” the DARPA kid said. He poked at his copy of the drawing. “My question is, what makes you so sure this was a Remotely Piloted Vehicle in the first place?”
Tombstone frowned. “Do you see a cockpit there? Or any room for one? Also, I repeat: This bogey’s flight characteristics were well outside the envelope of survivability for a human pilot.”
“Unless the pilot were prone,” the Air Force rep said. “The human body can take a lot of extra g’s that way. Jack Northrop once developed a flying wing fighter like that.”
“Which crashed during a test flight,” the DARPA kid said, still poking at his drawing.
Tombstone shook his head. “This aircraft was unmanned, gentlemen. Based on the way it was flying, I assume it was remotely piloted as well.”
“Piloted from where?” the kid asked. “An RPV isn’t like a radio-controlled model, you know; you’d have to have some kind of command post, a power supply…”
Tombstone frowned at him. Two years ago this kid was probably building plastic model airplanes; now he worked for DARPA, the government agency responsible for dreaming up the military’s most exotic hardware: the SR-71 spy plane, the F-117 Stealth Fighter and the B-2 Bomber, not to mention fiascos like Star Wars. And who knew what else? A vast slurry of DARPA’s funding came out of the “black budget,” money protected from Congressional oversight.
“Maybe the command post was on a boat,” he said. “How’s that? There were plenty of large pleasure and fishing craft around. Or didn’t you read my report?”
“Not really. Not enough pictures.”
Tombstone leaned forward. “Tell me something, young man. Do you fly airplanes?”
“Not the kind I have to actually get into.”
“Then I suggest you keep your smart-ass comments to yourself, you little twerp.”
“Whoa.” The kid sat up. “Whoa. Whoa.”
“You want to be flippant,” Tombstone said coldly, “that’s fine. After you’ve flown against an unidentified aircraft that’s trying to knock you out of the sky, shoot off your mouth all you want. Until then, if you don’t have something constructive to say, shut up.”
The kid looked around the table. No one came to his defense. He sat there blinking behind his glasses, then slumped deeper in his chair and picked up his pencil. Started doodling on the bogey drawing. “Whatever,” he muttered.
“This brings us back to what’s supposed to be the main point of this briefing,” the Navy rep said. “Admiral Magruder, even if we’re able to reconstruct something useful from the vehicle’s wreckage, we’ll still need your impressions about how the thing actually flew.”
“And how you got away from it.” The Air Force rep picked up his copy of Tombstone’s report. “It says here you started turning snap rolls. Are you sure you don’t mean barrel rolls?”
“I know the difference, Colonel. No, it was snap rolls. They seemed to disorient it.”
“Disorient it?” the Air Force rep said.
“That’s right. It would be tracking me, I’d start snap-rolling, and the bogey would miss. Then it would start circling and come back at me again.”
The Air Force rep glanced at the DARPA kid, who just kept doodling on his drawing of the bogey without looking up.
“Perhaps I should be asking these questions,” the Navy rep said. “The Admiral and I are both Naval aviators. We speak the same language.”
“I’m sure you do,” the Air Force rep said. “But since the Navy doesn’t have an RPV program, I think I’m better qualified to determine the flight characteristics of — ”
“Nothing!” the DARPA kid shouted. He raised his face, lips curled in scorn. “Remember the Mig-29? Remember how American military intelligence, that famous oxymoron, didn’t believe the Soviets could possibly produce a truly competitive all-weather fighter? Oops! What a big surprise.” He fixed his gaze on Tombstone’s face. “Admiral, you want some advice? Here’s some advice: Don’t go flying again until I examine what’s left of your bogey. And one other thing.”
“What’s that?” Tombstone asked in a flat voice.
The kid smiled. “I’d carry a gun if I were you. Somebody’s got it out for you real bad.”
Sunday, 3 August
0110 local (-8 GMT)
Mongkok District
Kowloon
Sung Fei was watching CNN when the phone rang. His tiny flat in the Mongkok District of Kowloon was far from overfurnished, but by local standards he lived in luxury: He had no roommates, and his television was the latest Japanese model, with a satellite dish that picked up over two hundred stations from all over the world. In the last two days nearly half those stations had been broadcasting continuous “updates” on the so-called “Lady of Leisure attack.”
How symptomatic. In a world where millions starved to death every year, and hundreds of thousands more were ground into poverty by wealthy industrialists, what story was deemed worthy of round-the-clock dissection? Only the one where a handful of wealthy, worthless socialites and mega-capitalists died at sea in the middle of one of their debauched, high-profile soirees. Even the retaliatory attack on a PLA military ship in Victoria Harbor was referred to in the briefest of sidebars.
Anoth
er staple part of most broadcasts was an appearance by a so-called “expert” who dissected events in the South China Sea and speculated as to motivations and possible outcomes. While admitting that solid evidence about exactly what had occurred in the South China Sea was scanty, these experts seemed remarkably certain about what the events meant, what had caused them, and what would happen next. None of them seemed to question the U.S. Navy’s policy of keeping all shipping and aircraft out of the area of the supposed “attack.”
So much for experts. The truth was, not one of those talking heads knew as much about what was happening in the Hong Kong area as did Sung Fei. Not nearly as much.
He had been waiting for the phone to ring all day and night, so when it happened, he was not startled. Instead, a shimmer of excitement played down his backbone.
He picked up the receiver. “Sung,” he said calmly.
As always, Mr. Blossom’s voice was weird, changeable, obviously run through a distorter. “You’ve been watching the news?” the voice asked in Cantonese.
“I always watch the news,” Sung said, reciting the words he’d memorized, knowing his voice and its point of origin were also being scrambled. “But I’ve never seen anything like this before.”
That concluded the password exchange. The voice said, “It is time.”
“I thought it might be, Comrade. I regret the loss of life aboard Suhai, but my heart is full of joy that the moment of freedom has arrived at last. I am honored to be participating.”
“You did an excellent job of filling Victoria Square with anti-China protestors this morning.”
“Students are easy to convince of anything. After what the Americans did in the harbor, I can guarantee hundreds more.”
“Both pro- and anti-American? This is very important.”
“I understand, but trust me. The Hong Kongese love a demonstration.”
“Not for long,” the voice on the other end said.
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