The admiral’s stateroom was so much larger than her cabin back on the Trident that Halabi felt lost in it. She’d tried to convince Kolhammer she could just as easily act as task force commander from her own ship, but he’d insisted she work from the Clinton during his absence. He wanted the locals to give her the respect she was due, and nothing demanded respect like 130,000 tonnes of fusion-powered supercarrier. Even if it was a little scratched and dented.
She’d enjoyed the luxurious surrounds for about thirty seconds, until she realized how close she was to the flight deck and how poorly insulated were Kolhammer’s quarters; not that she was going to get a lot of sleep while he was away. The giant flatscreen on his desk was completely blocked out with files flagged for her immediate attention. Until she muted the speakers, a tone announced the arrival of a new “highest priority” e-mail every few seconds, and her schedule apparently contained more meetings than the day had minutes. Her paternal grandmother had a saying that seemed appropriate.
“Let’s not try and eat the elephant in one whole bite,” Halabi muttered to herself.
She was about to open a report detailing distribution of the fleet’s remaining war stocks when a window opened on the screen, displaying the rather drawn features of Captain Margie Francois.
Halabi was on site, grimly shaking hands with the combat surgeon twenty-five minutes later.
The scene looked chaotic from the air, with helicopters, Humvees, Honolulu PD cars, old-fashioned jeeps, and at least a hundred or more individuals all buzzing around the victims. When she touched down and exited the chopper, Halabi got an even stronger sense of barely controlled mayhem. A small group of Colonel Jones’s marines was butting heads with the local police and MPs, trying to keep them from stomping all over the crime scene. Jones himself stood as still and silent as a black granite obelisk while a heavyset white man in a bad suit turned beet red, screaming and gesticulating at him.
“What the hell is going on?” the acting task force commander asked.
“Nothing good,” said Francois. She took Halabi by the arm and walked her away a little. “One of our platoons was out on a run this morning when they found the bodies, and they called us before the locals. Well, of course, Honolulu PD’s tear-assing around with an atomic wedgie over that and . . .”
Halabi’s puzzlement must have been written all over her face, because Francois backed and filled for the Englishwoman.
“They’ve got their knickers in a twist,” she explained.
“Oh right. Thanks.”
It was going to be a scorching hot day. Halabi noticed that even at so early an hour she didn’t cast much of a shadow. She could hear another siren approaching, possibly two, as the marine went on. Francois didn’t seem to care who overheard her.
“We can’t have these dumbass crackers all over our crime scene,” she complained, sweeping a hand in the general direction of the local authorities. “Granted we’re not a homicide squad, but we’ve got a lot of expertise in war crimes investigation and we sure as hell got better procedures and equipment. These guys don’t even know what DNA is. You gotta get them to step back, Captain. Let us take care of our people.”
Halabi ran her eyes over the beach again. A hundred meters away Jones was still doing his stone face. The suit was still screeching at him and flapping his arms like a giant flightless bird. The marines and the cops and military police were getting even more muscular with each other.
And the corpses of Captain Daytona Anderson and Sub-Lieutenant Maseo Miyazaki had begun to stiffen with rigor mortis.
“What were they doing out here?” the British officer asked.
Francois squinted at the bodies. She shrugged.
“We don’t even know they got whacked out here. Could have been hit in town and dumped. There’s a team from the War Crimes Unit coming over to work the grid.”
“Was it working out, having Anderson and her people on the Siranui?”
Francois shrugged again. It seemed to be a compulsive gesture with her this morning.
“Far as I know, but I couldn’t tell you for sure. I wasn’t there. But I didn’t hear anything. Why? Did you?”
Halabi shook her head. “No. Just wondering.”
“Well, they had good reason to be together,” said Francois. “It can’t have been easy, integrating the two crews. Language difficulties and so on. If I had to take a guess, I’d say they were having a drink at the Moana, probably just sorting some shit that was better handled through back channels. Maybe they went for a walk. I doubt they’d have strayed too far, though. We’re not encouraging any of our people to mix it up with the locals yet.”
“Looks like they did,” said Halabi.
“Maybe,” the marine surgeon agreed. “But it’s all guesswork and that’s all it’s ever going to be if we don’t quarantine this site and let the CSI team go to work.”
Halabi nodded. She checked her watch.
“Okay. I’ll call Nimitz. I’m sure he can sort out the turf war. And then I’d better see if I can raise Kolhammer, but I’ll be buggered if we can contact him so far. I’ll tell you what, Captain, I’d sell my arse for just one little satellite.”
20
GORMON FIELD, LOS ANGELES COUNTY, 0406 HOURS, 9 JUNE 1942
A cold, unseasonable wind blew down off the California mountains, across the howling wastes of saltbush and hardscrabble. Outside the corrugated iron arch of the Quonset hut, grit hissed through the air and dead leaves spattered against windows covered with heavy blackout curtains. Dust devils swirled across the new concrete tarmac. A single oil lamp lit the knot of men gathered in the Spartan setting.
A rifle squad stood at ease at the rear of the room, separated from two loose knots of men in uniform and civilian clothes at the other end. The two groups coalesced around a frail figure in a wheelchair. He had a blanket draped over his legs and was forced to shoo off a young officer who unwisely attempted to wrap another around his shoulders. An older man, one of the civilians, detached himself from the conversation he’d been caught up in and wandered over to the wheelchair. He sported a shock of white hair, and his deeply lined face had worn a perpetually harassed and haunted expression for years. His wife had died not long ago, but that wasn’t what lay behind his melancholy. He hadn’t laughed freely since fleeing from Germany in 1933.
He affected a cheeky smile now, however, and offered up a book of matches.
“Mr. President. Do you need a light?”
“Why, thank you, Professor. I wouldn’t have thought it would take a genius to work that out,” said Franklin Delano Roosevelt, throwing a severe glance at his disapproving aide, the one with the blanket.
As Albert Einstein struck a match and leaned in to light the Camel at the end of FDR’s long black holder, a distant roar reached them, like a single bass note from a thunderstorm, drawn out for an impossible length of time.
“They’re here,” said Einstein, as the tobacco caught light and the president took in a deep draft of smoke.
“I want to see this,” FDR declared.
His aide hurried forward.
“Mr. President, I don’t think—”
“Just push me to the door,” snapped Roosevelt. “I want to see these rocket planes.”
He stubbed out his cigarette with a show of annoyance.
“There! You can wrap me up like a granny, if that makes you feel better. But I’m going to see these things with my own two eyes.”
He clamped the cigarette holder back between his teeth. The broken, stubbed-out butt, still stuck in the end, lent him a slightly crazed air as he gripped the wheels of his chair and began to push himself toward the flimsy wooden door of the hut. Half a dozen military men moved to help, but Einstein was closer than any of them. He took the handles of the chair and leaned into it.
“Let’s go see what the future brings, Mr. President.”
A few of the civilians, scientific advisers for the most part, managed to scramble out into the biting wind before Ei
nstein parked the president’s chair in the doorway, effectively bottling up everyone behind them. An undignified scramble for position took place, with Brigadier General Eisenhower and Admiral King grabbing the best spots on either side of Einstein. The rest either gathered at two small windows or tried to see over the shoulders of the men jammed in the entryway.
Shivering slightly under his blankets, but determined not to show it, the president leaned forward until he could make out the end of the runway. An Army Air Force colonel had briefed him about the rush job to prepare the landing strip. It was three times longer than the main runway at Muroc, he’d said. It seemed a hell of a wasteful thing to Roosevelt, all that extra cement and hard work for a couple of planes. But it surely wasn’t the craziest thing he’d heard in the last week.
No, that had to have been the moment when an ashen-faced navy commander had appeared to tell him what had happened at Midway. Roosevelt shook his head at the memory as he spotted flashing red-and-white lights descending from the northwest.
“Hell’s bells, Turtletaub,” he’d yelled out at the unfortunate officer just a week earlier. “What madness is this? Next you’ll be telling me space lizards have landed.”
Well, he’d had to apologize to the young man later, hadn’t he? It turned out the world had flipped completely off-balance, and now here he was, stuck out in the California desert, waiting to meet men from the future.
Damn it all but he needed a cigarette.
“Interesting,” said Einstein as twin spikes of blue-white flame speared from the tail of the dartlike craft as it roared down out of the night sky and past the hut at a seemingly breakneck speed. “Those are the jets they told us of, Mr. President.”
The aircraft seemed like death incarnate to Roosevelt. Every line seemed to threaten violence. More than a few of the onlookers gasped like children at a fireworks display, awed by the screaming passage of the sleek, lethal craft.
As the president wondered whether they’d built a long enough runway, parachutes unfurled behind the monster.
Another plane just like the first descended from the night sky. Its very appearance suggested something deadly, like a flashing blade or a bullet. Blinking lights gave away the position of yet another two aircraft banked up behind them. A familiar drone gradually emerged from beneath the monstrous thunder of the rocket planes.
“Prop-driven,” said Admiral King. “I guess they don’t—”
He never finished the sentence, stunned as he was by the appearance of the third aircraft. It looked a lot more conventional than the first two, a bit like a Grumman Goose, or even a Catalina, at a stretch. But in contrast with the windswept lines of the rocket planes, this lumbering barge sat underneath something that looked like a giant cigar welded to a couple of struts sticking out of the fuselage. It droned past without deploying chutes, and then the last plane touched down. It was the least prepossessing of the three.
“Looks like a transporter,” said someone behind Roosevelt. He didn’t recognize the voice.
One of the civilians huddled in the small group out in front of the hut turned around with his hands jammed deep in his duffel coat.
“That’d be their tanker, I bet. They can refuel while they’re in the air. You’d have to figure those rocket planes burn gas like a bastard . . . Uhm, sorry, Mr. President.”
Roosevelt waved away the apology.
For the first time since he’d been told of the disaster at Midway he didn’t feel as if he was falling helplessly down a bottomless well. No, now he was intrigued.
Kolhammer hit a switch to crack the seal on the Raptor’s bubble canopy. It opened with a slight hiss as he stripped off his mask and flipped up the helmet visor. He lost night vision, but his eyes soon adjusted from the artificial jade green of low-light amplification to the soft silver tones of moon and starlight. Any initial pleasure he’d felt at the chance to fly a fast-mover again had been lost in the sickening whirl of emotions stirred up at crossing the West Coast. They’d come in well to the north of Los Angeles, not wanting to start a panic. He’d still seen the heat dome of the city on infrared, however. It seemed impossibly small and feeble, but of course LA was nearly twelve times bigger in his day.
It was a jarring episode. He was used to looking down on that coastline, whether in daylight or darkness, and searching for his own home; not the exact house of course, but the general area, in the center of the bay, at the edge of the city’s apparently unbounded sprawl. It was one of the few safe mooring points of his life, the knowledge that Marie was down there, waiting for him. Except that she hadn’t even been born yet, and if he couldn’t get back to her, he’d most likely die before she was. Then their son, Jed, would never be, which seemed even more upsetting than having lost him off Taiwan. The sorrows and consequence of this fucking insanity twisted in on themselves like a snake devouring its tail.
“Admiral Kolhammer? Sir? They’re coming.”
Kolhammer shook his head and consciously pulled out of the dark well of self-absorption. He reminded himself that the woman in the rear seat had left behind two daughters, aged three and five. The Raptor was named for her firstborn, Condi.
“Sorry, Lieutenant,” he said. “I think I’m getting too old for this.”
“We all are, sir. Little kids and make-believe, that’s what this reminds me of.”
The drumming of boots across the tarmac wasn’t make-believe. A six-man squad was double-timing in their direction with rifles at the ready. They pounded to a halt about twenty meters away. A sergeant called out, “Which one of you is Kolhammer?”
“Over here,” he yelled back, waving a small torch.
The sergeant spoke to a couple of his men, who trotted away into the darkness at the edge of the tarmac. Kolhammer heard the sound of an iron door swinging open and being dropped with a clang. He peered into the gloom and saw the soldiers haul a stepladder out of a pit in the ground beneath the trapdoor.
“Five-star service,” he muttered to Lieutenant Torres.
The noncom waved the men with the wooden ladder over to a spot just below the fighter’s cockpit. It bumped against the fuselage with a dull thud. For some reason the noise sealed the deal for Kolhammer. They were lost forever—of that he was certain.
“Age before beauty, sir,” said Flight Lieutenant Anna Torres with a tired smile in her voice.
Kolhammer swung himself out and over the side. He could see men and women dropping to the ground from the AWAC bird and the refueler.
He took the ladder in three steps, and landed back on the U.S. of A.
It didn’t feel like home.
Nevertheless, Kolhammer was surprised to feel his heart beating faster as they approached the hut. A small cluster of men in dark coats and hats stood in the malarial glow of a yellow lamp at the foot of a set of steps leading up to . . .
President Franklin Delano Roosevelt.
His heart gave a real lurch.
And there, standing behind Roosevelt, was the unmistakable figure of Albert Einstein. The unruly explosion of gray-white hair was as recognizable as Elvis in a jumpsuit or Marilyn Monroe standing over a grate with hot air blowing up her dress. Kolhammer stiffened his back, an impulse that seemed to run through the other fliers at the exact same moment. They finished the last few yards in lockstep and snapped out a salute in perfect unison to the thirty-second president of the United States of America.
Roosevelt found himself in an electric moment. He could feel the charge running through the men around him. Even Einstein seemed to flinch, or shiver. He sensed powerful currents of antipathy and fear from some of the military officers gathered around his chair. Admiral Ernest J. King, in particular, appeared to be struggling with his volcanic temperament. The man’s knuckles were white, he’d clenched his fists so tightly. Even Eisenhower seemed incredibly tense.
Roosevelt returned the salute, fumbling with his cigarette holder as he did so.
He saw their commander, Kolhammer, hesitate momentarily as he took in the si
ght of Eisenhower. He saluted uncertainly. The brigadier returned the gesture after a very obvious pause.
A few seconds of uncomfortable silence enveloped the small tableau, during which the only sound was the faint moan of the desert winds.
Roosevelt realized that he was absorbed by the sight of these men and women, generations removed from his own. They all wore flight suits of some kind and carried rocketeer helmets, probably because they flew so high. About half of them looked to be cut from the same cloth as his own officers, educated, middle-class white men. But there was no avoiding or denying the stone-cold fact that the rest were a lucky dip of sorts. Men and women. Some white. Some black. Some Mexican and even Asiatic. And some? He honestly had no idea. The awe and amazement he’d felt at the sight of their arrival remained. But he was a politician, and in his gut, political instincts were also engaged.
Whatever the military consequences of these people’s arrival, the politics were going to be diabolical.
“Well, Admiral Kolhammer,” he said as pleasantly as he could manage, “you’d best come in out of the cold.”
The room wasn’t set up for a meeting. Kolhammer had been told that Roosevelt and his advisers would be at the Ambassador Hotel in LA. Curiosity must have gotten the better of them. There were only a handful of chairs and two desks, one of which was missing a leg. A stack of books propped up one corner. There didn’t even appear to be a reliable power supply. Three naked bulbs hung from wires, but a single gas lamp was the sole source of light inside the hut.
Actually, that was untrue, he thought, as he stepped through the door. At least half of those present, including the president, seemed to be smoking cigarettes. Clouds of smoke drifted from their glowing tips, burning his eyes and throat.
The locals backed away toward the rear of the room as Kolhammer’s people surged in quietly, nodding and smiling uncertainly. They took up positions, standing at ease, in the corner to his left.
“I’m sorry we can’t offer more in the way of hospitality, Admiral Kolhammer,” said Roosevelt, “but I’m afraid that’s my fault. I insisted on coming out here to meet you. Couldn’t stand to wait in that hotel.”
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