Revolution

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Revolution Page 9

by Dale Brown


  “With two soldiers.”

  “I needed guides over the border. I don’t speak the language. I left them here—if I was going to ambush you, I would have.”

  “I don’t know.”

  “Your people killed two Americans,” added Stoner. “Maybe you killed them yourself.”

  “We haven’t killed any Americans. Not even spies. It is the Russians. They have taken over the movement.”

  Stoner stared at the barrel of the AK-47. The moonlight turned the rifle’s black metal silver, as if it were a ghost’s gun, as if he were imagining everything happening.

  “You didn’t patch me up to shoot me now,” he said.

  “How do you know?”

  “You’ve already made your decision to help,” Stoner told her. “They’re after you. It’s all you can do.”

  “I can do many things.”

  “You have to trust me.”

  “I trust no one.”

  Stoner nodded. “But you take chances.”

  “Like you?”

  “Like me.”

  She lowered her weapon. “I will go,” she told him. “But I will talk only to you, not the army, or to the government. They are all corrupt.”

  Stoner rose slowly. “What about them?”

  She shook her head.

  “You want to just leave them on the ground?”

  “Of course.”

  “Even your man?”

  “Very possibly he was the one who betrayed me.”

  Dreamland

  22 January 1998

  1700

  ALL THAT REMAINED WAS TO TEST THE MESSKIT THE WAY it was meant to be used—from an airplane.

  A C-130 configured for airborne training and recertification was used as the test plane. Danny joked that they ought to requisition an office chair with casters and use it to launch Zen into the air: They’d push him off the plane’s ramp and see what happened.

  Zen didn’t think the joke was particularly funny, but the actual jump was nearly that informal: He put one arm around Danny and the other around Boston, and the next thing he knew, he was flying through the air, propelled with the others as they leaped off the ramp.

  Within seconds he was free. It didn’t feel as if he was falling, exactly, nor with the MESSKIT not yet deployed could he say that he was flying. He was skydiving, something he’d never really done, even before he lost the use of his legs. His head seemed to be moving through a wind tunnel, with his arms and the rest of his body playing catch-up.

  His heart was bringing up the rear, pumping furiously to keep pace.

  A small light blinked at the left-hand side of his helmet’s visor. Activated by the abrupt change in altitude, the MESSKIT’s system monitor was sensing the external conditions. Zen had ten seconds to take control either by voice or manually, or the system would assume that its pilot had been knocked unconscious by the force of the ejection and would then automatically fly him to the ground.

  “Zen zero one, MESSKIT override to manual,” he said.

  The light stopped blinking. In its place, a ghosted grid appeared in front of his eyes. Numbers floated at the left, a compass and GPS coordinate points appeared on the right.

  He was at 21,135 feet, and falling.

  “Deploy wing kit at two-zero angels,” Zen said.

  The computer had to calculate whether this was practical before answering. It was another safety measure to prevent the MESSKIT from opening in unsafe conditions. Zen was also wearing a reserve parachute with an automated activation device set to open if his rate of fall exceeded eighty-three feet per second. deployment in 17.39 seconds flashed on the screen.

  Zen pushed forward, doing his best to get into the traditional frog posture used by a skydiver. He spread his arms, as if trying to fly.

  Unlike a parachute, the MESSKIT’s wing deployment did not jerk him up by the shoulders or torso. Instead of a tug, he felt as if the wind had suddenly filled in below him, holding him up. He reached his hands up, the handlelike holders springing open below his wrists.

  And now he was a bird—a very, very high flying one, but a bird nonetheless. He could steer by shifting his weight, or by pushing hard against the tabs at the ends of each handle.

  At first, he didn’t think either method did very much. Then he realized that the compass in his visor was moving madly. He eased up, leveling into straight flight.

  The view was spectacular, many times more impressive than anything he’d seen from the cockpit of an F-15, let alone the video the Flighthawks fed him. All of Dreamland spread before him; beyond it, all of Nevada, all the way to the Sierra Nevada Mountains. Las Vegas was to his left; to his right…well, from this vantage point, it looked like Canada. The sun hung low over the desert, casting a pinkish light against the mountains, a beautiful shade that any painter would trade his soul to recreate.

  The normal rate of fall in a modern parachute was in the vicinity of eighteen feet per second. But because it was more glider than parachute, the MESSKIT could descend very slowly—he was currently gliding downward at a rate of just over nine feet per second. Of course, that meant trading descent for linear progress, as Annie had put it—or flying. He soon found that by shifting his weight forward slightly, the pressure from his arms directed the MESSKIT’s airfoil to slow his descent even further.

  “Hey, Zen, you’re headed toward the end of the range,” said Danny over the radio. Both he and Boston were using traditional parachute rigs. They’d waited to deploy them until after Zen’s wings had expanded and it was clear he was under control. Now they were falling off to his right, well below him.

  “I forgot you guys were here,” said Zen.

  “Don’t forget to come down,” said Danny. “And somewhere in Nevada, all right? I have some things to do tonight, and I don’t want to fish you out of the Pacific.”

  “Oh, I’ll come down,” said Zen, starting a turn to stay inside the test area. “I know one thing.”

  “What’s that?”

  “I’m going again. And again after that. I can’t wait to see a full sunset from up here.”

  Northeastern Romania

  23 January 1998

  0550

  AMONG THE ITEMS STONER HAD STOCKPILED IN THE TRUNK of his rented Nexia was a medical kit. He pulled out a bottle of hydrocodone and chased five pills with his bottled water. Then, to counteract the effects of the synthetic codeine—the dose was two and half times a full-strength prescription—he took two capsules of Adderall, an amphetamine.

  He pulled on a spare shirt and jacket, holding his breath against the pain. It was going to take a while for the codeine to kick in. Even then, all it would do was take the edge off.

  “Can you drive?” he asked Sorina Viorica. “I can if I have to, but probably we’d be better if you did.”

  “I can drive,” she said.

  “We have to go south. To Bucharest.”

  She frowned. “I’m not going to your embassy.”

  “I wasn’t going to take you there. I have an apartment. You’ll be safe. The GPS unit—”

  “I know the way,” she said.

  Stoner slipped the seat to the rear, adjusting it so he could lean his head back and get a more comfortable. The seat belt sat right over his wound, but he managed to bunch his jacket to the side and relieve most of the pressure on it. The drugs didn’t seem to have much of an effect at first, but after twenty minutes or so he realized his mouth was hanging open and his upper body was starting to feel numb. He pushed back up in the seat, wincing at the pain yet grateful that it helped wake him up.

  A few minutes later, Sorina braked hard to avoid rear-ending a car stopped around a curve. There was a checkpoint ahead, soldiers checking IDs.

  She started to put the car into reverse.

  “Don’t,” said Stoner, putting his hand on the shifter. He fought against the shock of pain. “They already see us.”

  “I don’t have identification.”

  “I’ll deal with it.”


  “No.”

  “You’re going to have to trust me,” he told her.

  “This isn’t a question of trust.”

  Stoner reached beneath his belt to the small pouch where he kept his ID and took out his diplomatic passport, along with a folded letter. He considered taking out money as well, but decided against it—better to play the arrogant American with nothing to hide, impatient at the delay.

  “You’re my interpreter. You work for the embassy.”

  “My name?”

  “Pick something you’ll remember. And I can pronounce.”

  “Jon. It was my father’s name.”

  “That’s a last name?”

  “Yes. Call me Ms. Jon.”

  Stoner undid his seat belt and brought his seat back up to horizontal. The line moved slowly. They were three cars from the front.

  “You are sure of this?” said Sorina Viorica.

  “We have no choice. If you get out, they’ll probably start shooting. They’ll hunt you down.”

  She frowned, probably thinking it wouldn’t be that hard to get away.

  Stoner noticed a bloodstain on his pants as they pulled near the soldiers, but it was too late to do anything. He folded his hands down against it and put an annoyed look on his face as the two soldiers peered into the car.

  The sun was just rising, and it was dark inside the vehicle; the man on Stoner’s side shone a flashlight around, hitting Stoner’s eyes. He had to fight the reflex to cover his eyes with his hands.

  The man on the driver’s side rapped on the window. When Sorina Viorica opened it, he told her in Romanian that they must hand over their IDs.

  Stoner didn’t wait for the translation.

  “Here,” he told Sorina, giving her the passport with his left hand. “Tell him we’re in a hurry. If I’m late, you’re going to be fired.”

  Something flickered in the man’s face. Stoner realized he spoke English.

  So did Sorina Viorica, though she pretended she didn’t.

  “You have to be patient,” she said to Stoner. “They are just doing their job. Things are different in our country. You cannot be an arrogant American. It is an insult.”

  “I don’t care. If I’m not in Bucharest by seven, the ambassador will have a fit.”

  “I told you, we’re not going to make it.”

  “Then you’ll be finding another way to feed your kid, whether your husband was killed by the guerrillas or not. I didn’t hire you for charity.”

  Sorina Viorica began explaining to the soldier that her boss was an American on official business and due in the capital.

  The soldier grabbed his passport and the letter from the defense ministry saying that Stoner was to be given free passage and professional courtesies. The letterhead impressed the soldier, though he tried not to show it.

  “You work for a jerk,” the soldier told Sorina.

  “My boy is only three. I work where I can,” she said. “What’s going on?”

  “The rebels attacked the pipeline last night.”

  “No!”

  “They did some damage. Not much.” He flipped through the passport. “And your identity—”

  “Get the damn flashlight out of my face,” Stoner snarled, rolling down the window and leaning out. “I’ll have you busted down to private!” he shouted. “And if you are a private, I’ll get you into a latrine!”

  “I’m sorry,” Sorina told the soldier near her. “These Americans.”

  She turned to Stoner. “Please. Just relax. Please relax. There’s no sense getting angry. He’s doing his job. Please. He probably has a family.”

  “What’s his name? Get his goddamn name. I want to have him on report. I’m going to tell the ambassador this is why I was late. Get his name.”

  Sorina pushed back in the seat, glancing toward heaven and muttering something Romanian.

  “Get his name!”

  “You can go,” said the soldier at her window, handing back Stoner’s passport. “I’m sorry for you.”

  “Get his name!” demanded Stoner.

  Sorina Viorica stepped on the gas.

  Neither of them spoke for a full minute.

  “That checkpoint was not normal,” she said finally. “There was an attack last night, on the pipeline.”

  “I see.”

  “But there couldn’t have been.”

  “Why not?”

  “We decided six months ago that we wouldn’t. That is not what we want. It must have been the Russians.”

  “Right.”

  “It’s true,” she said sharply. “And besides, I know.”

  “If your friends tried to kill you, what makes you think they’d tell you what they were doing?”

  “My friends didn’t try to kill me. It was the Russians. The movement itself—it’s dwindled. Those who remain are misfits.”

  “How do you know they were Russians who attacked us?” asked Stoner.

  “Their boots were new. None of our people have new boots. Not even a year ago. And now—the only ones left are misfits.”

  An interesting point, thought Stoner. A very interesting point.

  College Hospital, Nevada

  22 January 1998

  1950

  “I DON’T KNOW WHY I TOLD THE KID THAT. I DON’T KNOW why I said anything.”

  Breanna watched as Zen wheeled himself backward across the room. It had been a long time since she’d seen him so agitated, so angry with himself.

  “God, Bree. Why couldn’t I keep my mouth shut? What if he doesn’t walk?”

  “I don’t think it’s going to be that bad, Zen,” she told him. “I’m sure the doctors will be able to do something.”

  Zen shook his head. “I saw the looks on their faces when we brought him into the base. I’ve seen that look. God, I’ve seen that look.”

  “Jeff, you can’t get so down on yourself. It’s not up to you whether he walks or not. God, if anyone would understand—”

  “He’s not going to understand.”

  “I mean, if anyone could understand what he’s going through, it would be you. It is you. Jeff?”

  But Zen had already rolled out of her room.

  Northeastern Romania

  23 January 1998

  0900

  BY 9:00 A.M., GENERAL LOCUSTA HAD PROVIDED BUCHAREST with a full report of the bombing of the gas pipeline. Two rebels had been killed, he claimed—not exactly a lie, since he did have two bodies to present, though Locusta knew that the men had been left by the Russian special forces troops that launched the attack.

  He downplayed his own losses, though he had already ordered full military honors for both men killed.

  The damage to the pipeline was minimal, Locusta assured Bucharest; it would be repaired within days and there would be minimal disruption of the gas supplies.

  Locusta was playing a dangerous game. The attack was part of a payoff for Russian cooperation in the coming coup, cooperation that would include the use of an assassin against the defense minister when the time came. It was also meant to convince the government to send the last units he felt he needed to assure himself victory when he moved against the president.

  But it could also backfire and encourage Bucharest to sack him. Even though he’d been warning for weeks that an attack might be imminent, and even though he’d claimed that he didn’t have the necessary troops for the growing threat, there was still a possibility that he could be blamed for failing to stop the attack, and be replaced by someone else.

  If that happened, all of his preparations would be lost. At the very best, he’d be back where he was two years before: commander of a single division, not the leader of an army corps three times the size. All of the connections he had carefully cultivated among the old-timers—the hard-liners shut out by the new government—would be lost. Those men valued strength, and the scent of weakness and failure would send them running.

  So when the phone didn’t ring at precisely 9:00 a.m.—the time set for Locusta
to speak to the president about the incident—the general began to grow nervous. He fidgeted with his feet, a habit he’d had since he was a boy. Pushing them together under the desk, he began jerking his legs up and down, tapping his soles lightly together. At 9:05 he rose from his desk and walked around the office, trying to remain nonchalant and work off his growing anxiety.

  By 9:10, he was worried, wondering if he should place the call himself.

  He decided not to. President Voda’s office had made the appointment, and made it clear that the president would call him. To short-circuit the process would be a concession, however subtle, to a man he despised.

  The phone finally rang at 9:17. Locusta waited until the third ring before answering.

  “General Locusta.”

  “Please hold for the president.”

  Another three minutes passed before President Voda came on the line.

  “Tomma, tell me what is going on,” said Voda abruptly.

  “The pipeline is secure—for now. We have shot two guerrillas. With more men, I can prevent future problems.”

  “More men—you always ask for more men.”

  “Unfortunately, last night proves I am right.”

  “I see estimates that the guerrillas are faltering.”

  Locusta sighed. He knew that the guerrillas’ movement was in fact growing smaller, partly because of his efforts, but also because the leftists were naturally weaklings. But it did him absolutely no good to admit this.

  “Yes, yes, I suppose the events of last night are proof of what the situation is,” said Voda finally. “I will get you your men. But—no operations over the border. Not at this time.”

  Though he had made suggestions in the past, Locusta had no plans to launch any operations now. He would, though, soon. When he was in full command.

  “Did you hear me, General?”

  “If we have a specific target, Mr. President, I think you might reconsider.”

  “When you have a target, you will review it with me. I will decide.”

  “Yes, Mr. President. But if we have to stay on defense, the additional men will be critical.”

  “You’ll have them. You’ll get whatever you need.”

  The president continued to speak. He was concerned about the situation. He didn’t want news of it to get out; he didn’t want Romania to appear weak. Locusta agreed—though he knew that the Russians would already be leaking it.

 

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