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The Savage Horde

Page 7

by neetha Napew

"Aye, Captain," a voice sang back.

  There was a muted humming, Rourke feeling nothing in the way of movement.

  "Periscope depth, sir," the same voice called out.

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  "Good, Charlie—let's take a look here. Sonar give me a readout on anything that

  gets near us."

  "Aye, sir," another voice called,

  The periscope tube raised, Gundersen flipping out the handles on its sides.

  "Always like to take a look at the pack before we go under—wanna look yourself,

  Doctor?"

  Rourke stepped toward the periscope—noticing now it was the largest of several.

  He stepped nearer as Gundersen stepped back and turned the periscope handles

  toward him.

  Rourke pressed his eyes to the subjective lenses, his nose crinkling at the

  faint but distinctive smell of the rubber eye cups. "Makes you want to say

  'Torpedo Los,' doesn't it?" Rourke said, studying the white rim at the far edge

  of his vision—the icecap.

  He heard Gundersen laugh. "First civilian I've ever met with the guts to say

  that—it does make you want to say that the first time. Crank her around back and

  forth a little and take a look at the world before we go under."

  Rourke only nodded, turning the periscope slowly. Massive blocks of ice floated

  everywhere in the open water leading in the distance to the edge of the icepack.

  Small waves—wind whipped Rourke judged—would momentarily splash the objective

  lens. Without looking away, he asked, "Has there been as much change in the

  icepack as you'd suppose?"

  "Another good remark, Dr. Rourke. Apparently a great deal of change."

  Rourke stepped back from the periscope, looking at Gundersen. "Spreading?"

  "Rapidly—I mean we can't really measure with any sophistication now because all

  the satellites are gone. But as best we can judge the icepack is advancing."

  "That's just marvelous," Rourke nodded. He leaned back on the side of an

  instrument console.

  "Down periscope," Gundersen ordered, flipping the

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  handles up. "Ed—you've got the con. I'd say take her down a little more than we

  normally do and ride herd on the ice machine—split the shifts so the operators

  will keep on their toes."

  ' 'Prepare to blow,'' a man standing opposite Gundersen ordered. "Rig for full

  negative."

  "Aye, sir," a crewmen called back.

  Gundersen stepped up to Rourke. "Doctor—like to join me in my cabin—talk a bit?"

  "Fine," and Rourke followed Gundersen out. They walked the way Rourke and the

  lieutenant JG had come, turning off into a cabin with a wooden door, the

  lettering there reading, "Commander Robert Gundersen, Captain."

  "Got my name on the door and everything," Gundersen smiled, holding the door for

  Rourke. As Rourke entered the cabin he realized it was actually two

  cabins—Gundersen's office with a decent-sized desk comprised the main cabin and

  there was a door off to Rourke's left as he faced the desk—sleeping quarters?

  Rourke decided that they were.

  "Sit down, Doctor," Gundersen said, nodding toward a couch on the far interior

  wall.

  Rourke said nothing, but started toward the couch.

  "Coffee?" Gundersen asked, pouring into a large mug from a hotplate on the

  bookcase behind his desk.

  "Sure," Rourke answered. "Mind if I smoke?"

  "No—we can scrub the air. Go ahead."

  Rourke took one of his small, dark tobacco cigars from the pocket of his blue

  chambray shirt, found the Zippo in the pocket of his jeans and rolled the

  striking wheel under his thumb.

  "Where do you find lighter fluid?"

  "Gasoline, usually—lighter fluid currently."

  "Thought I recognized a survivor in you. Here," and Gundersen handed Rourke a

  truck-stop sized white mug,

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  the coffee steaming hot and smelling good as Rourke sipped at it. "So,"

  Gundersen sighed, sitting down opposite Rourke in a small leather chair. "You're

  the mar everybody was so hot to find. Ex-CIA, I understand."

  "Yeah," Rourke nodded, inhaling on his cigar, ther exhaling a cloud of gray

  smoke. He watched as the ventilation system caught it, the smoke dissipating

  rapidly.

  "And the president needed you."

  "That's what Cole tells me," Rourke nodded.

  "That's what he tells me too."

  *'Where'd you bump into Cole?" Rourke asked suddenly.

  "We'd been surfacing at nights, trying to make contacl with a U.S. base—stumbled

  onto the U.S. II frequenc} after threading our way through a lot of Russian, if

  you know what I mean. With the satellites gone, the laser communication network

  was out. Just luck I guess."

  "Did you talk with President Chambers?"

  "Spoke with a guy named Colonel Reed—all in code. Never really spoke at all. You

  know. But he was named on the communiques—all Reed under orders from Chambers.

  Said they were sending out a man named Cole and a smal] patrol for an urgent

  mission we could help with." Gundersen laughed. "Didn't have anything else to

  do, Fired all our missiles. All we had left were torpedoes—nc enemy submarines

  around to shoot 'em at. I think most ol the Soviet Fleet that wasn't destroyed

  is fighting in the Mediterranean."

  "Used to be a beautiful part of the world," Rourke nodded.

  "Used to be—not now. It's a bloodbath ovei there—and a lot of radiation, I

  understand. You know, being a submarine commander and having a nuclear war—I

  feel like that guy in the book."

  "But this isn't Australia," Rourke smiled.

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  "No—but I wonder. The icepack advancing— understand the weather up above," and

  he jerked his thumb upward., "has been pretty screwy. End of the world?"

  "Maybe," Rourke shrugged.

  "You said that awful casually," Gundersen said, lighting a cigarette.

  "Yeah—maybe I did. If it is, I can't stop it. Just try to survive it after I

  find my family."

  "Wife and two children, right?"

  "Right," Rourke answered. "What are Cole's orders?"

  "Pretty much like I imagine he told you. Find this air base if it is still

  there—supposed to be. We get you in as close as we can, then shanks mare all the

  way and Cole uses whatever available transportation there is to get the warheads

  out and back to the submarine. Then we deliver them to U.S. II Headquarters or

  wherever—that last part hasn't been spelled out yet. I guess it will be."

  "What do you do after that?"

  "I don't know. Keep going. We can run for a long time yet—a long time.

  Provisions should hold up for a long time as well. Then I guess we'll die like

  everybody else if the world ends. I don't know. Can't plan too far in advance

  these days."

  "What do you think about Cole?"

  "He's a prick—but he's got the President's signature on his written orders. I

  can't argue with that."

  "Do you trust him?"

  "No—but he's got orders and I'm supposed to help him carry them out. I disarmed

  you and your Mr. Rubenstein simply to keep the peace. We get topside, regardless

  of what Cole says, I'll re-arm you both. Can't have you guys shooting holes in

  my submarine, though—my engineer complains like an old lady about it. See,"
and

  Gundersen jerked his thumb upward again, smiling, "the roof leaks."

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  "Ohh," Rourke nodded. "Wouldn't have suspected that."

  Gundersen laughed, leaning forward, gesturing with his cigarette. "To answer

  your question before you ask—I've got no plans at all for Major Tiemerovna.

  She's a pretty woman—I think the guys giving blood and everything to keep her

  alive pretty much caused my crew to look at her that way, not as a Communist

  agent. She minds her manners once she's up and around and as far as I'm

  concerned, she's free as a bird. I understand she was pretty heroic herself

  when—the Florida thing. Jesus—" and Gundersen inhaled hard on the cigarette, the

  tip glowing brightly near the flesh of his yellowed first finger and thumb.

  "Yeah—she was. Saved a lot of American lives. Saved a lot of lives period."

  "I'm not planning to rearm Major Tiemerovna, though—I realize she's a loyal

  Russian and I guess that's just as it should be. And I'm not inviting her

  unescorted onto the bridge, into the torpedo rooms, the reactor room—anywhere

  sensitive. Couldn't risk her opening a torpedo tube on us and sending us to the

  bottom. Not that I'm saying necessarily that she would."

  "She would if she had to," Rourke smiled.

  "Exactly—but beyond that, I don't care what Cole wants. She stays on my ship, my

  word's-lhe law here, not his."

  "Thank you," Rourke nodded.

  "I got a present for you—figured you might use it—I can't anymore."

  Gundersen got up, walked across his room to his desk and sat down behind it.

  Rourke stood up, following him, stopping then in front of the desk. From a large

  locked drawer, Gundersen produced a black leather pouch, snapped closed with a

  brass fitting. He opened the pouch—inside it were six Detonics stainless

  magazines, the

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  magazines empty as Rourke looked more closely, the magazines ranked side by

  side, floorplates up.

  "I've seen these," Rourke commented, shifting the cigar along his teeth into the

  left corner of his mouth.

  "It's called a 'Six Pack'—Milt Sparks made 'em before the Night of The War.

  Mostly for Government Models, but I had him make one for my Detonics. But then I

  lost the gun—it fell out of my belt and went overboard. Without the gun, the

  magazines are useless. So, unless I can trade you out of one of yours, you may

  as well have it."

  "Thank you," Rourke nodded, turning the heavy black leather Six Pack over in his

  hands. "You can't trade me out of one of my Detonics pistols."

  "Sort of figured that—use it in good health—ha," and Gundersen laughed.

  Rourke got the joke.

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  Chapter 19

  John Rourke sat quietly, listening. What he listened to was the regular sound of

  Natalia's breathing. She was still sleeping. He had sat beside the bed for

  nearly an hour, ever since leaving Gundersen. Paul was being shown about the

  submarine—Rourke had postponed the grand tour until later. He had wanted to

  think, and the quiet of Natalia's room in sick bay had been the best place, he'd

  thought.

  What would happen when he found Sarah and the children?

  He had not thought of an answer—for over the weeks since the Night of The War

  and his meeting with Natalia he had formed new bonds, in some ways stronger

  bonds than he had ever had. There was Paul Rubenstein—once a man who could do

  nothing for himself, now a man who could do most things—and most things well.

  There was Natalia herself—Rourke looked at her, her eyelids fluttering. She was

  awakening.

  He stood up, walked to beside her bed and touched her, reaching out his left

  hand to her left shoulder.

  Her eyes opened, the brilliance of the blue somehow deeper in the gray light of

  the room.

  A smile tracked on her lips, her voice odd sounding. She whispered, "I love

  you," then closed her eyes.

  John Rourke stood beside the bed for a time, watching her as she slept.

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  Chapter 20

  Sarah Rourke rammed the fresh thirty-round magazine into the M-16—for one of the

  thousands of times since she'd acquired the gun, she was grateful the previous

  owner (a brigand) had somehow gotten hold of the selective fire weapon. She

  pumped the trigger, making a professional three-round-burst—she was a

  professional by now, she realized. The nearest brigand biker fell back. But

  there were more coming.

  The first attack in the early morning had waned quickly, and since then there

  had been sporadic gunfire from the other side of the field, but the distance too

  great. Then had come the second attack—a dead-on assault across the field. Her

  own weapon firing, Mary Mulliner firing the AR-15 and the hired hand—old Tim

  Beachwood—firing his own rifle—they had repelled the attack.

  Beachwood was in the front of the house now, his rifle booming and audible over

  the roar of gunfire. "Michael!" Sarah shouted. "Go up and see if Tim needs

  anything—hurry but stay low."

  "Right," the boy called out, then—as she looked back—he was gone. Annie, just

  six, sat under the heavy kitchen table, chairs stacked between the open wall

  side and herself just visible as Sarah looked for her. She was loading magazines

  for the Colt rifles. Her counting wasn't perfect yet, and as Sarah had fired

  through some of the

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  magazines counting her shots with the bursts, she'd found magazines with thirty

  rounds, twenty-seven rounds, twenty-eight and even one that somehow the child

  had forced an extra round into—thirty-one,

  Sarah pumped another burst, missing the brigand firing from the back of a fast

  moving pickup truck. "Annie—keep those magazines coming," Sarah called out.

  "I'm hurrying, Mommie!"

  "Good girl," Sarah called back. She was the unofficial leader—she realized that.

  Old Tim Beachwood had said it right after the shooting started. "I never fought

  no war," he'd said. "Too old for the last one—way too old for this one. But I

  hunted all my life—you point me the right winder and I'll start a killin'!"

  She had shown him the right "winder" then. The gun—he had told her what it

  was—was something she'd already recognized. It was a lever action Winchester,

  the caliber .30-30. She had watched cowboy heroes using them in every Western

  film she'd ever seen.

  Another brigand truck—the truck cut a sharp curve through the back yard, across

  Mary MuUiner's vegetable garden, a man in the truck bed waving—it wasn't a

  rifle, but a torch. Sarah snapped off a three-round burst, the man's body

  crumpling, the torch falling from his hands and to the ground, the body doubling

  forward and rolling off the truck bed, bouncing once as it hit the ground. Sarah

  tucked down, a stream of automatic weapons fire hammering through the shot out

  windows and into the cupboards on the far wall. "Stay down, Annie," Sarah

  screamed. She could hear the cups shattering in the cabinets, the glasses

  breaking.

  "They mean to burn us," Mary Mulliner gasped, sucking in her breath audibly.

  "Yes—they mean to burn us," Sarah nodded.

  When this third attack had
begun, Sarah had resigned

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  herself to the fact that there was no hope of victory. She had told Mary to

  shoot as little as possible. There had been three hundred and seventy-nine

  rounds of .223 ammo available when the battle had begun. There was less than

  half of that remaining, firepower the only means of holding the superior brigand

  numbers away from the house. Old Tim had had one hundred and three rounds of

  ammo for the .30-30. How much he had remaining she couldn't guess. There was an

  even hundred rounds of .45 ACP, only one pistol available to handle it—hers. She

  would save that until the rifle ammo was nearly gone, then use it to repel as

  many brigands as long as she could. She had decided—she would save at least four

  rounds—one for the Jenkins girl, hiding with Tim, helping him, Sarah hoped. One

  for Mary Mulliner. Two for her own children. She had seen what brigands could do

  to children—young boys, little girls. She had seen them do things to older

  women. She shivered—she had seen what they did to women like herself. Gang

 

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