Payback sts-17

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Payback sts-17 Page 13

by Keith Douglass


  Murdock set his jaw. “Doctor, I promise you we won’t leave you any wounded Koreans to tend to.” He turned and walked out with his men. Verbort followed.

  “I have no idea where either of the two captains are, Lieutenant,” Verbort said.

  “We’ll find them eventually.” He used the Motorola. “Engine room, any report?”

  “Cap, we’ve got a situation here. There are four crew in there working on the machinery, doing something. There are six armed Koreans watching them. They’re all too close together to get off good shots. They don’t know we’re here yet.”

  Murdock recognized Mahanani’s voice.

  “You have access through a door?”

  “Affirmative.”

  “How many flashbangs with your team?”

  There was a pause.

  “Yeah, Cap. Good thinking. We have four. I’d say we put two in the bunch, let them play out, then do it again. We have a go?”

  “Just don’t hurt any of the crew. Single shot on the Fives when you get through the door. How many men you have?”

  “We picked up a couple from First. Now we have five.”

  “Get them all in as fast as you can after the last flashbangs go off. Nail the bad guys with gun butts, or kicks to the head. Try not to shoot while the crew is mixed in.”

  “That’s a roger, Cap. We’re working on it. Report in about ten.”

  “Cap, you still got your ears on?” another voice asked.

  “Yes, Canzoneri, what’s happening?”

  “That frigate is lit up like a spring dance. You heard the explosions. I think our boys used some claymores on it. She’s dipping her stern rail in the briny deep. Must be down eight feet at least. Her screws must be off, but she could still shoot. Don’t know if she could depress those big guns enough, but she’s got quad-fifties that could do the job. Suggest we call in some air before they start mowing us down with the fifties.”

  Verbort was looking pale. “They could do it, Lieutenant. How can you call in an air strike?”

  “We can’t, unless you can use your radio to contact the fighters overhead.”

  “They did it this afternoon when the fighters first flew over. I used to do the radio. I’ll run up to communications and see if we can contact them. Are the fighters still up there?”

  “I haven’t heard them lately, but I’d guess they are flying CAP on us. Let’s get to communications.”

  They ran to the door and rushed to the elevators. A few minutes later they came into the communications room. No crewman was there. Verbort started turning on equipment, and soon he made a call.

  “F-18’s, this is the Royal Princess calling. We could use some help. Are you still with us?”

  “Royal, this is High Fly Leader. Just cruising around up above you.”

  Murdock took the mike. “High Fly Leader. This is Murdock. Can you get weapons free on the frigate? She’s down in the stern from some mines. We think she may fire on the cruise ship with her quad-fifties. Can you ask your field for guns free?”

  “This is Home Base. Murdock. The admiral called us. We understand your situation. If you think more gunfire is imminent from the frigate, I can give High Fly guns free.”

  “Home Base, this is Murdock. I’d say the frigate is past due to fire on us with his three-inchers and his quads. The frigate is now almost a hundred yards from the liner. If the eighteens make their runs from south to north, any debris should not hit the liner. Yes, please, guns free.”

  “Splash one frigate, High Fly. You have guns free on the frigate. The south-to-north run might be a good idea.”

  “Roger that, Home Base. Going around now to make a south-to-north run. A forty-five-degree angle to target would be best. We’ll use that heading. High Fly One and Two, you have guns free on the frigate. Use the Harpoon missiles. Make the run now. High Fly Two, make the first run. I’ll be right behind you.”

  Murdock looked at Jaybird.

  “Cap, the Harpoon is an air-to-ship missile. A five-hundred-pound warhead that will put down a good-sized ship. Two of them will blow it right out of the water and all the way to San Bernardino.”

  “Let’s go watch.”

  The men all ran to the rail, then toward the stern. Two Koreans lifted up from around a lifeboat and fired. One round clipped Murdock in the left arm, and Jaybird nailed both the shooters with two bursts of three rounds. Murdock and his men moved back farther, and saw the frigate behind them a hundred yards. Jaybird saw blood on Murdock’s arm, and made him stop while he examined it.

  “It’s an in-and-out, but it might have grazed the bone. We’ll check later.” He tied up the wound to stop the bleeding as they all watched the planes.

  “Hope they target the right ship,” Jaybird said. “One of those Harpoon missiles would put this luxury liner on the bottom of the mother-loving Pacific.”

  They watched. They knew there wouldn’t be any warning. Jaybird explained: “A jet coming straight at you doesn’t make any sound out front. It’s when it slams overhead and goes away that the sound comes. By then you’re either dead or they missed you.”

  Jaybird saw a touch of exhaust out the back of the first jet, and pointed. A moment later the big bird screamed overhead, and they saw a burst of smoke as the sea-skimming missile angled straight for the Korean frigate. The fourteen-hundred-pound missile hit the frigate just off mid-ship, and blasted ten feet into the craft before the five hundred pounds of explosives detonated. The 334-foot-long Korean frigate jolted upward twenty feet when the missile exploded. Then it heeled over to port, and smoke poured from a massive fire that had ruptured the ship’s fuel tanks.

  The fire outlined the ship at once. A creaking and groaning came from the massive steel structure of the ship, and then a ripping and tearing as the stern broke off and sank immediately. The bow and most of the middle of the ship floated, held in place by the anchor line. The fires grew and explosions racked the ship as one after another blossomed into the dark sky.

  Less than two minutes after the missile hit the ship, it slipped under the water, the anchor still holding, bringing it straight down to the bottom.

  A siren sounded on board the Royal Princess.

  Then the public-address system came on. “This is Captain Van Derhorn speaking. All available crew members are to report to the lifeboats. Man boats and launch at once to search for survivors of the frigate. There were a hundred and thirty men on board. Search now and continue searching. I repeat, all available crew members trained in lifeboat launching report to the davits now for launching.”

  Verbort ran back toward the lifeboats and began lowering the nearest to the water. Three crewmen stepped into the boat, and it pulled away toward the stern of the big ship and the place where the frigate had sunk.

  Crewmen came out of their bunks, dressed quickly, and ran to the lifeboats. Soon they had twenty in the water, scouring the area that now showed as black as death, as they worked through the few items that had floated from the sinking frigate. Many of the passengers were awake and watching from the rails.

  The PA system came on again. “Is there anyone on board who speaks Korean? We need to inform all the Korean sailors on board that they should turn in their weapons and give themselves up. They will not be harmed and will be turned over to representatives of their government when we reach port.”

  Murdock called on his radio net. “All SEALs report in the usual rotation. First Platoon go first.”

  He listened as the men checked in and told where they were and what they were doing. When the reports were done, Murdock knew that they had captured all of the vital control areas of the big ship. They had put down an estimated fourteen of the Koreans and captured six more. That still left at least thirty on the ship, including the frigate captain, Kim.

  Five minutes later the PA system came on again with a woman speaking Korean. She pleaded with the men in their own language to lay down their arms and turn themselves in. Murdock headed for the bridge. The last he knew, the luxury-
ship captain had been a prisoner of Captain Kim. Evidently he’d escaped. He might know where the Korean was.

  On the bridge, Captain Van Derhorn shook his head. “I don’t know what happened to him. Three of us overpowered Kim, and took his weapon away from him, but he ran down a corridor and vanished.”

  “He still has at least thirty armed men on board and could do a lot of damage. Could you get all passengers back in their cabins?”

  The captain said he could, and made the announcement.

  “All passengers are requested to return to their cabins and lock the doors. There are still hijackers on board who are armed and dangerous. Please return to your cabins at once.”

  Murdock, Jaybird, and Ching huddled on the bridge.

  “Where the hell can he be?” Ching asked.

  “He’s lost his power base, no frigate,” Jaybird said. “So he’s on his own with his remaining troops. If he can find them. He could always swim to shore and fade into Korean Town in San Francisco or Los Angeles.”

  “Or jump a South Korean flagship out of San Pedro and get back to Korea,” Murdock said. “More likely he’ll try fighting to the end on the ship. How do we find him?”

  “Call him out for a one-on-one shoot-out on the fantail, like the old Westerns,” Ching said.

  “Maybe not exactly that, but that’s an idea. We use the PA system for sure.”

  The Motorolas sounded and the three listened. “Skipper, Jefferson. We’ve got a situation down here on the promenade deck that you need to be in on. Some wild-eyed Korean with a sub gun has six passengers in nightclothes pasted against a bulkhead and is threatening to shoot them. Too damn many civvies around for Donegan or me to get off a good shot.”

  “Hold the fort, Jefferson. We’re on our way,” Murdock said, and the three SEALs took off running.

  12

  Murdock, Ching, and Jaybird darted out of the bridge, flew down two flights of steps, and came to the promenade deck. Standing in front of them were three North Koreans with their hands in the air. Their submachine guns lay on the deck at their feet.

  “Tie them,” Murdock called to Ching, and he and Jaybird ran on to the center of the long and mostly dark promenade where they say a group of people. The SEALs slowed and came up behind a dozen middle-aged men and women in pajamas and robes. Murdock slouched so he wouldn’t tower over the others, and stared between them. Six men and women in their robes were lined up against the bulkhead. A man stood in front of them wearing the off-blue uniform of the North Korean Navy. Then Murdock saw the submachine gun he carried and aimed at the six. The Korean shouted something in English, but Murdock couldn’t understand it. He worked through the crowd to get closer.

  “I told you once,” the Korean shouted. “I want a motor launch out the dockside hatch and I want guaranteed free passage to the boat and on to shore. Otherwise these six die here and right now.”

  There was no ship’s officer there. The man talked to the crowd. He turned looking at the people behind him.

  “I’ll shoot them down, believe it,” he shouted. “I am Captain Kim, and I’m used to being obeyed. Who can speak for the boat captain?”

  A small woman with a long robe stepped from the group of people ten feet behind Kim.

  “I can help you,” she said.

  He turned to look at her. “Little woman of Korea, I remember you from before. Don’t bother me. I spoke with you already and you were not polite. Go away.” He shrugged and turned from her. Before Murdock could make a move, the small Korean woman lifted a heavy .45 pistol from the folds of her dress.

  “This is for killing my husband,” she shouted, and at once fired the heavy gun. It kicked high. The bullet slammed into Kim’s right shoulder and spun him around. Before he could bring up the submachine gun, she brought the pistol down and fired again. This round jolted into his chest just over his heart and knocked him down, the sub gun skittering away from him on the deck.

  The small Korean woman stepped up near him. Murdock pushed people aside and rushed toward the woman.

  “You’re not dead yet, Kim,” the woman screamed. “You should be.” Before Murdock got to her, she fired four times more from point-blank range above where he lay on the deck. All the rounds hit him in the chest.

  Murdock lunged the last three feet and grabbed the weapon before she could fire again. “He’s dead,” Murdock said.

  Susie Jamison nodded, stepped closer to the body, and kicked it three times. “May your soul wander for all eternity in the nether regions of the unforgiven and may your ancestors deride you and scream at you for a thousand centuries for disgracing them and making them lose face.” Mrs. Jamison turned and walked away through the gawking vacationers.

  Murdock used his drill-field command voice. “All of you passengers. This has been a shocking sight. Now please clear this area. Return to your cabins and lock the doors. There are still more than two dozen armed and dangerous North Korean Navy killers on board who could strike at any time. Go now and stay in your cabins until Captain Van Derhorn gives you an all-clear.” He watched as the people took a last look at the dead man, then slowly filtered into the inside of the ship. The six people against the wall surged out and gathered around Murdock, thanking him, glancing with fright at the man who had almost killed them. Murdock urged the six to hurry to their cabins.

  Murdock and Jaybird went back to the bridge. The captain reported that fifteen of the hostiles had surrendered.

  “We’re getting survivors from the frigate at the dockside hatch. So far we’ve brought twenty on board. I’ve called the nearest Coast Guard station to send out two rescue choppers to transport some of our most seriously injured passengers and crew to a hospital. They say twenty minutes. They also will send three cutters to come and take the North Koreans off our hands. They can have the wounded ones too. Not sure how many survived the sinking.”

  “Good work, Captain. The Coast Guard should take the bodies too. As soon as we get the ship cleared of all the Korean live ones, we’ll gather up the corpses and take them down to the hatch level. The North Korean government will want the bodies returned, I’m sure.”

  Murdock talked to the Motorola. “Okay, team. Maintain one guard at each of the vital areas. The rest of you report to the top deck and we’ll start a sweep of the decks to find any reluctant North Koreans. May be some trouble, may not.”

  They made the sweep. On the top deck they found no one. Two Koreans came out of a closet-type room on the second level and surrendered. Then it went faster, and they found only six more Koreans, and none offered any resistance.

  When they finished the last passenger-area sweep, Murdock checked his watch. Almost 0300. He didn’t think it had taken that long to cleanse the big ship.

  His Motorola sounded in his earpiece.

  “Murdock, this is Socha. The dockside hatch wasn’t open when we finished our exercise, so we swam for shore. We’re all present and accounted for. How is the job there moving?”

  Murdock told him. “About ready to call in our Forty-Sixes. You want a pickup?”

  “Roger that, Murdock. Let us know when our chopper is coming and we’ll use some red flares to mark our beach. We’re almost due east of the ship. Nice and quiet over here. Understand that frigate is bottomed out somewhere out there.”

  “Affirmative, Socha. An F-86 christened it with a Harpoon missile. The old tub broke in half and went down.”

  “Good. Let me know when our pickup is.”

  At 0420 the Coast Guard choppers arrived and transported the six critical passengers to the closest hospital. Cutters came soon after that and swallowed up sixty-nine North Koreans, alive and dead. The cutters would transport them to shore to be turned over to the county sheriff to be jailed awaiting possible prosecution, or pickup by federal authorities. The other two cutters began a systematic search of the still-dark waters for survivors. They estimated there could be as many as fifty or sixty more North Korean sailors out there in the water.

  Murdock asked
Verbort to contact the fly guys again. The plan had been for the two Forty-Six choppers to wait at the ballpark until they were needed. They set up an 0530 pickup off the fantail of the big luxury liner. The captain was anxious to get under way. He pulled in his sea anchor, and had been instructed by his company to return to San Diego, where the passengers would be released and given vouchers good for another trip. The ship would go in for repairs, which the captain estimated would take at least four months.

  At 0530 one Forty-Six landed on the golf tee on the stern of the Royal Princess, and the other one stopped by at the beach. The chopper crews were refreshed after four hours of sleep, and turned their craft toward San Diego and Coronado.

  They had just passed Oceanside, and it was daylight, when the chopper pilot called Murdock up front.

  “Not sure what is going on, Commander. Suddenly my radio reception went dead. Now I’m getting one transmission from a SATCOM my CO is using outside his office. He told me that the whole base and San Diego is blacked out. It’s not a rolling blackout. The whole county is black. My CO said he’s getting SATCOM traffic from Los Angeles and San Francisco. From what they say, the whole damn West Coast is running without the aid of electrical power. Everything electrical except battery power is shut down.”

  “Terrorists or a nuke explosion in the atmosphere that blanked out all electrical?” Murdock asked.

  “Can’t be the nuke, or my whole electrical system would be down regardless of the battery.

  “Sounds like a power grid went down. That would flash through huge surges on the rest of the West Coast power grids and they all could blow. Remember when five or six of them went down in Northern California and Oregon when a transformer island blew up a few years ago?”

  “Heard about it. So far nobody is reporting any enemy action.”

  “We just might not have heard of it yet. I’d guess the satellites are still up if we can talk through them. At least the SATCOM satellite is still there.”

 

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