Red Glare

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Red Glare Page 10

by Thomas Greanias


  She felt Koz put a consoling arm around her shoulders and let him help her up before she pushed back and brushed her hair from her angry eyes. "Captain Li had better sure as hell traced that call, Colonel.”

  "I'm sure we'll be hearing from her any second with a location, ma'am."

  On cue, the door slid open and Captain Li entered with her tablet displaying a map of suburban New York. “She called from somewhere inside the Bedford Country Club, Madame President.”

  Sachs could only wonder how Jennifer ended up there. “The photo.” She opened her email. There was nothing but old messages that had stopped when the nuke had gone off that morning—a lifetime ago. “I didn't get it.”

  "We got it, ma’am,” Li said. “We grabbed it from her outgoing email server. This is the man.” Li tapped the display, and a blurred image of a Green Beret lunging toward the camera came into view.

  “Oh, my God!” Sachs said, unable to mask her fear. “That monster is after my baby?”

  “Yes, ma’am. We’re trying facial recognition, but between the face paint and blurred picture, we haven’t found anything yet. This guy is low-ranking.”

  “But he’s one of Kyle’s Green Berets who tried to kill me. How hard can it be to ID him?”

  “He’s not fitting the profile for anybody on Kyle’s unit.”

  “It’s the same guys who tried to kill me, Colonel,” Sachs said, turning to Koz. “These are Kyle’s Green Berets, I know it. And you still haven't told me who he might have been taking orders from."

  “I was going to tell you, but more pressing matters, specifically this imminent nuclear strike, got in the way,” he began. “The short answer is everybody.”

  “Everybody?”

  “I mean everybody, ma’am. It’s not like Kyle was some cipher who had some doctored or classified record anybody was trying to hide. He’s been everywhere in Iraq and Afghanistan and Pakistan and Iran, you name it. And he’s crisscrossed with just about every senior officer in all branches of the armed forces. He even saved Marshall once when Marshall was a major and his bomber went down in Iraq during Desert Storm and the Republican Guards were closing in on him.”

  “That’s something, Colonel.”

  “But it was Block who sent Kyle’s team to find Marshall in the first place, ma’am, and Carver who got Navy SEAL support for extraction. Like I said, Kyle was the go-to guy for impossible missions.”

  “No wonder they all looked at me like I was crazy when I said Kyle was trying to kill me.”

  “They just figured you—or your Secret Service detail—confused his tough-guy tactics to save you with a threat on your life, and that’s what may have inadvertently started a firefight aboard your chopper.”

  “So that’s how it’s going down?” she said, angrier than ever. “How are they going to explain Jennifer?”

  “They’re not, ma’am, because we’re going to get her first,” Kozlowski said. “I have just the team to reach her in less than 80 minutes. I would trust them with my life. Captain Li, please see if you can reach the RATS.”

  Li paused. “The blast, sir.”

  “If anyone survived it, they did,” Koz said. “I want them moving the second after impact and any EMP.”

  “Yes, sir,” she said and left Sachs alone with Koz.

  Sachs put her hands over her face. “Oh, my baby, Jennifer. I couldn’t even tell her that she saved my life. She’s the reason I’m alive. If it wasn’t for her, I would have been in Washington this morning when...”

  Kozlowski handed her a handkerchief. She dabbed her eyes, embarrassed by her emotion.

  “Thanks,” she told him, and tried to hand back the handkerchief.

  Koz refused. “Keep it. It’s yours.”

  She then noticed the presidential seal in the pattern and managed a weak smile. “I never expected any of this when I woke up this morning.”

  “None of us did.”

  Sachs shook her head. “Oh, I think somebody did, Colonel. And we’re going to find out who that somebody is, for the sake of our families and our country.”

  “You can call me Koz, ma’am. Everybody else does.”

  Sachs took a breath, then looked at him differently. He had succeeded in breaking her emotional state, which she realized was not in a good place for the commander-in-chief. “So, Koz, where’s your family?”

  “Only a brother in Wyoming now. His backyard abuts a missile field. He knew the risks. Hell, we all did.”

  Sachs asked gently, “Nobody else?”

  He shrugged and smiled. “Don’t meet a lot of women up here.”

  “Captain Li sure is a fan.”

  Koz dropped the smile, not allowing a hint of ambiguity. “Strictly professional, ma’am.”

  Sachs felt strangely relieved. “I’m sure it is, Koz. And you can call me Deb,” she said when suddenly the plane pitched and rolled, slamming her against the bulkhead and knocking her out.

  35

  1501 Hours

  Looking Glass

  Marshall felt the shockwave too from his general’s quarters aboard the Looking Glass plane. He had escaped there a few minutes earlier to collect his thoughts and run through his checklists away from the crew. Now an alarm was sounding and there was an expected knock on his door.

  “General Marshall, sir!” It was Quinn’s quivering voice.

  Marshall said, “Enter.”

  Quinn walked in, EAM printout in hand. “We lost STRATCOM, sir. Our home base!”

  “Then the day has finally come, Colonel,” Marshall said calmly. “Launch authority transfers to us here aboard Looking Glass. Shut the door.”

  Quinn, not quite understanding, turned to close the door. When he again faced Marshall, there was an open bottle of Jack Daniels on the desk. Marshall poured two glasses and handed one to Quinn, who didn’t look like much of a drinker.

  “Courage, Colonel, before the storm,” Marshall said and raised his glass in a toast and gulped it down.

  Quinn took a sip and coughed. “Sir, we have to get to our posts.”

  “We are at our posts.” Marshall set down his glass. “Remember when I asked you for your launch key and told you to shoot me next time?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “This is next time.” In one fluid movement, Marshall drew out his M9 sidearm and shot Quinn between the eyes.

  The officer crumpled to the floor. With the ease of a weightlifter, Marshall grabbed Quinn’s body by the leg with one hand and dragged it into his open closet. Then, before he closed the door, he bent over and removed the launch key from Quinn’s neck and put it around his own.

  36

  1502

  Air Force One

  Sachs was on the floor groaning when the emergency lights kicked on and Kozlowski rushed over. She thought she heard him say, “Are you OK, Madame President?” But she wasn’t sure. Her ears were ringing. “What was that?” she asked as she let him help her to her feet. She felt wobbly.

  He told her, “Omaha, I think.”

  She heard more ringing, but it was her desk phone beeping. Captain Li came through on the speaker. “NORAD has confirmed another nuclear detonation in the continental United States. General Block at Northern Command is onscreen in the conference center.”

  She felt Koz reach over her shoulder to the button and say, “The president is on her way.”

  The ringing had faded for the most part by the time she entered the conference room. Block’s sour face was already on the big screen when she sat at the end of the table. Koz stood by her side. This was going to be ugly.

  Sachs asked, “How many hits did we take, General Block?”

  “Two,” Block growled. “They took out our Tier-One Defender anti-ballistic missile site in Alaska and,” he paused, glaring at her, “and STRATCOM.”

  Sachs swallowed. “General Carver?”

  “That’s right, Madame President,” Block said, holding his stare. “This country has lost yet another great leader today, this time because of your in
decision.”

  Sachs felt herself shaking. She desperately wanted to hold her voice steady. “Unleashing our Minutemen III missiles wouldn’t have saved Carver.”

  “No, but he would have died like a soldier in the line of fire and not like a sitting duck,” Block shot back. “And with our puny excuse for what was supposed to be a full, four-tier Defender system taken out, we have no way of intercepting the next wave.”

  She exhaled and paused. “General Block, what happened to all those other missiles the early warning systems said were supposed to hit?”

  Block grew quiet. “Ghosts, ma’am. They were ghosts.”

  Sachs blinked. “How can several independent warning systems project so many false radar images?”

  “At this point, ma’am, we have to assume it’s the work of Red Glare, like you suggested.”

  “But why would they do this, knowing we might have launched?”

  Block said, “I believe they did this to prove they knew you didn’t have the political will to act, ma’am, and to prove their cyber superiority. If they can do this, they own our defense networks.”

  Sachs was bewildered. “Maybe. But what’s the point of destroying the Strategic Command in Omaha if all its planes and nukes were already in the air?”

  “Hard to say, ma’am,” Block said. “Because Marshall can still launch our land-based ICBMs from Looking Glass.”

  Sachs started. “Pardon me?”

  “The Post Attack Command Control System, ma’am,” Block explained. “If nukes destroy STRATCOM or other command centers on the ground, Looking Glass can command American forces from the air and launch our ICBMs by remote control.”

  “Let me guess,” Sachs said. “The man who designed this brilliant Post Attack Command Control System is Brad Marshall?”

  Block paused. “Uh, yes.”

  37

  1503 Hours

  Looking Glass

  Marshall had assumed his command post in the battle staff compartment and was reviewing his NSTL targets in China on his digital tablet when Major Thompson beeped him.

  He ignored the interruption. That he could reprioritize targets with a simple drag and drop on a handheld touch-screen display was something he never would have imagined even five years ago. Harney and Wilson, meanwhile, were establishing the SIOP operations plan with 50 ground-based launch control centers that controlled more than 300 Minuteman III nuclear missiles.

  Thompson beeped him again. He saved his screen and spoke into the comm. “You’re patching me to our B-21s with the Mavericks, Major?”

  His hope was that President Sachs would finally use the simplest strategy he had gift-wrapped for her: the decapitation of the Chinese high command with the Maverick bunker-busters, followed by the swift threat of nuclear annihilation to any successors.

  “I’ve got AF1 on line,” she said instead, her voice hard and edgy. “Colonel Kozlowski is asking for Colonel Quinn.”

  Marshall noted several of the battle staffers, not part of his team, exchange glances before they got back to their work. He was playing for two audiences now. “Put him through on speaker.”

  “Here he is, sir.”

  Marshall pressed the button. “Marshall here. Has the president assessed the damage yet from the Alaska and Omaha hits, Colonel Kozlowski?”

  “She’s reviewing them now, sir.”

  Marshall nodded. “Then why are we talking?”

  “The president would like to speak with your second, sir. Colonel Quinn. The roster says he holds the second launch key.”

  “Quinn is busy,” Marshall said. “So am I. We’re trying to re-establish links with several launch control sites that lost contact with Strategic Command. Those boys are in the dark and might launch if we can’t reach them.”

  “That is a grave situation, General Marshall, and I will report it to the president. Nevertheless, launch authority for ground missiles has been transferred to Looking Glass. We must ensure procedures—”

  Marshall said, “The Chinese have nuked Washington and STRATCOM. Now you want to quote regulations to me?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  Marshall said, “Listen to me, Colonel. We have a commander-in-chief who can’t pull the trigger. I need you. America needs you. The people of China, the real Chinese, need you. Are you on board?”

  “Of course, sir.”

  Marshall said, “Then quit clogging secure channels. I’ll reconvene with the president at the attack conference in six minutes. Over.”

  Marshall disconnected Kozlowski and hit his comm. “You catch that, Major?”

  Thompson’ voice said, “Yes, sir.”

  “Clear skies,” Marshall said. He looked at Harney and Wilson, who had already drawn their M18 sidearms with silencers and began firing, taking out half the battle staffers while the others scrambled, too stunned to figure out what was going on. Thompson got them on her way in and then sealed the compartment shut behind her, breathless.

  Marshall, disturbed that a bullet ricochet had nicked his forearm with a red skid burn, hit the comm again. “Cockpit now,” he said, and another communications tech upstairs put him through to Captain Delaney.

  Delaney said, “General Marshall, sir.”

  Marshall knew he couldn’t hide everything from the Looking Glass crew, but he could spin it just enough to give him the time he needed. He had trained them all at one time or another, but he couldn’t include them all in his plans. He was counting on personal loyalty and the cloud of war to bridge whatever cognitive dissonance was going through their minds.

  “I want you and Rogers to seal off the cockpit, Captain,” Marshall said. “Launch control from Offutt has been transferred to Looking Glass, and we’ve had gunfire here in the battle staff compartment. You know the procedures. Take us down to 18,000 feet and extend the VLF antenna. We need to establish links with both our underground launch centers and our submarines. No line-of-sight communications, not even AF1 for the time being. We can’t reveal our location to enemy aircraft. If we are engaged, prepare to deploy all countermeasures at my orders.”

  “Copy that,” the pilot said. “Over.”

  Marshall stared at the only three officers still standing in the compartment—Thompson, Wilson and Harney. Only Thompson had broken a sweat.

  “A bit early, sir?” she asked.

  “Sachs is on to us,” he said and removed the two keys around his neck.

  38

  1504 Hours

  Air Force One

  Koz was still processing his bizarre and disturbing exchange with Marshall when he walked up to Captain Li on the communications deck. “Marshall blew me off,” he told her. “Something’s wrong.”

  “Way wrong, sir,” Li said. “I have something the president needs to see.”

  Koz had them meet in Sachs’ suite, where Li showed the president satellite surveillance video over Washington, D.C., before the nuke attack. She zoomed in on a railyard not far from Union Station.

  “According to the last communications between the Pentagon and White House, it seems the nuclear device was delivered by rail on a Metro subway train right beneath the Pentagon,” Li explained. “So I crosschecked D.C. police dispatch records, what’s left of their remote backups, and learned that a Metro security guard was found slain this morning at this railyard.”

  Sachs remembered seeing the story that morning in the Post. “That’s where the Chinese must have hitched the nuke to the train.”

  “Now watch this,” Li said and zoomed in until two Chevy Suburbans popped out of the pixels. “Those are military plates, ma’am. And they’re assigned to this man.”

  The picture on the screen changed and an ugly, familiar face filled the screen.

  Sachs said, “That’s Colonel Kyle, the Green Beret.”

  “And you’ll recognize this other man, too,” said Li. “He’s the one after your daughter.”

  Sure enough, the next picture that came up matched the one Jennifer had sent.

  Sachs leane
d closer to the image, fear and rage swirling inside her. “You’re telling me that these men—our men—may actually have betrayed America and helped the Chinese perpetrate this attack on our capital?”

  Li said, “We think it’s more likely they and the ones they report to are in fact behind these attacks and not the Chinese.”

  “Proof, Captain,” Sachs demanded. “We don’t have a lot of time here.”

  Captain Li nodded. “You can thank your daughter Jennifer.”

  “What?”

  “I found this on her USB flash drive from school.” Li pulled up Jennifer’s PowerPoint presentation for school. The top slide of the deck was Brad Marshall waving to reporters aboard an aircraft carrier. As the slides flashed, Sachs was embarrassed at Jennifer’s obvious hero worship—or more—for Marshall.

  Li said, “This is a Time magazine photo of Marshall after he escaped Iraqi capture during the first Persian Gulf War in 1991. Kyle led the team that rescued Marshall when his plane was shot down.”

  There was Colonel Kyle, an arm around a beaming Marshall.

  Koz said, “So Marshall and Kyle have a history. I’ve been through this with the president. It’s not enough.”

  Li said, “How about this?”

  Next up came a recent picture of Marshall inspecting the Tier-One Defender ABM complex in Alaska, and then a haunting longshot of him crossing the tarmac at Offutt AFB. Both came from a Time Magazine “Man of the Year” cover story titled “An American Hero: Forgotten But Not Gone.”

  Sachs said, “I still don’t get it. You’d expect Marshall to be at these places. They’re all he has left.”

  “Had left,” Li said. “Both have been blown to bits. Before they were, each was visited by Colonel Kyle and other men from Marshall’s past for base parties. Swipe card records place them all in highly sensitive areas at both bases.”

  Koz said it out loud. “One stolen SS-20 nuke. Three warheads. Each planted at a strategic location to make it look like a Chinese attack and force us to respond.”

 

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