Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
one-megaton nuclear device.
Of course, Jake Grafton reflected,
anthrax was merely one of over one hundred and
sixty known biological warfare agents. There were
others far deadlier but equally cheap to manufacture
and disperse. Still, obtaining a culture was merely a
first step; the journey from culture dishes
to
a reliable weapon that could be safely stored and
accurately employedanything other than a spray
tankwas long, expensive, and fraught with engineering
challenges.
Jake Grafton had had a few classified
briefings about CBW-WHICH stood for chemical and
biological warfare but he knew little more than diswas
available in the public press. These weren’t the
kinds of secrets that rank-and-file naval
officers had a need to know. Since the Kennedy
administration insisted on developing other military
response capabilities besides nuclear warfare,
the United States had researched, developed, and
manufactured large stores of nerve gas, mustard
gas, incapacitants, and defoliants. Research
on biological agents went forward in tandem at
Fort Detrick, Maryland, and ultimately led to the
manufacture of weapons at Pine Bluff
Arsenal in Arkansas. These highly classified
programs were undertaken with little debate and almost no
publicity. Of course the Soviets had their own
classified programs. Only when accidents
occurredlike the accidental slaughter of 6,000
sheep thirty miles from the Dugway
Proving Ground in Utah during the late
1960’s, or the deaths of sixty-six people at
Sverdlovsk in 1979 did the public get a
glimpse into this secret world.
Nerve gases were loaded into missile and rocket
warheads, bombs, land mines, and artillery shells.
Biological agents were loaded into missile
warheads, cluster bombs, and spray tanks and
dispensers mounted on aircraft.
Historically nations used chemical or
biological weapons against an enemy only when the
enemy lacked the means to retaliate in kind. The
threat of massive American retaliation had
deterred Saddam Hussein from the use of chemical
and biological weapons in the 1991 Gulf War,
yet these days deterrence was politically incorrect.
In 1993 the United States signed the
Chemical Weapons Convention, thereby agreeing
to remove chemical and biological weapons from its
stockpiles.
The U.s. military had been in no hurry
to comply with the treaty, of course, because without the threat of
retalia-
STEPHEN COONTS
tion there was no way to prevent these weapons
being used against American troops and civilians.
The waiting was over, apparently. The politicians
in Washington were getting their way: the United
States would not retaliate against an enemy with
chemical or biological weapons even if
similar weapons were used to slaughter Americans.
When Jake Grafton finished his push-ups and
stood, the staff operations officer, Commander Toad
Tarkington, was there with a towel. Toad was slightly
above medium height, deeply tanned, and had a
mouthful of perfect white teeth that were visible when he
smiled or laughed, which he often did. The admiral
wiped his face on the towel, then picked up the
binoculars and once again focused them on the cargo
ships.
“Glad the decision to destroy those things wasn’t one
I had to makeea”…Toad Tarkington said.
“There are a lot of things in this world that I’m glad
I’m not responsible forea”…Jake replied.
“Why now, Admiral? And why does the ordnance
crowd need a battle group to guard them?”
“What I’d like to knowea”…Jake Grafton mused,
“is why those damned things were stored here in the first
place. If we knew that, then maybe we would know
why the brass sent us here to stand guard.”
“Think Castro has chemical or biological
weapons, sir?”
“I suspect he does, or someone with a lot of
stars once thought he might. If so, our weapons were
probably put here to discourage friend Castro from
waving his about. But what is the threat to removing them?”
“Got to be terrorists, sirea”…Toad said.
“Castro would be delighted to see them go. An
attack from the Cuban Army is the last thing on
earth I would expect. But terrorists maybe they
plan to do a raid into here, steal some of the darn things.”
“Maybeea”…Jake said, sighing.
“I guess I don’t understand why we are taking them
home for destructionea”…Toad added. “The
administration got
the political credit for signing the Chemical
Weapons Treaty. If we keep our weapons,
we can still credibly threaten massive retaliation if
someone threatens us.”
“Pretty hard to agree to destroy the things, not do
it, and then fulminate against other countries who
don’t destroy theirs.”
“Hypocrisy never slowed down a
politicianea”…Toad said sourly. “I guess I
just never liked the idea of getting naked when
everyone else at the party is fully dressed.”
“Who in Washington would ever authorize the use of
CBW weapons”…”…Jake muttered. “Can you see a
buttoneddown, blow-dried, politically correct
American politician ever signing such an
order?”
Both men stood with their elbows on the railing looking
at the cargo ships. After a bit the admiral
passed Toad the binoculars.
“Wonder if the National Security Agency is
keeping this area under surveillance with
satellites”…”…Toad mused.
“No one in Washington is going to tell
us,”
the admiral said matter-of-factly. He pointed
to one of the two Aegis cruisers anchored nearby.
“Leave that cruiser anchored here for the next few
days. She can cover the base perimeter with her guns
if push comes to shove. Have the cruiser keep her
gun crews on five-minute alert, ammo on the
trays, no liberty. After three days she can pull
the hook and join us, and another cruiser can come
anchor here.”
- “Yes, sir.”
“There’s a marine battalion landing team
aboard
Kearsarge,
which is supposed to rendezvous with us tomorrow. I want
Kearsarge
to stay with
United States.
We’ll put both ships in a race-track
pattern about fifty miles south of here, outside
Cuban territorial waters, and get on with our
exercises. But we’ll keep a weather eye peeled
on this base.”
“What about the base commander, sir? He may know more
about this than we do.”
“Get on the ship-to-shore net and invite him to have
dinner with me tonight. Send a helo in to pick him
up.”
STEPHEN COONTS
“Sir, your instructions specifically directed that
you maintain a business-as-usual security
posture.”
“I rememberea”…Jake said dryly.
“Of course, “business as usual” is an
ambiguous phraseea”…Toad mused. “If anything
goes wrong you can be blamed for not doing enough or doing
too much, whichever way the wind blows.”
Jake Grafton snorted. “If a bunch of
wild-eyed terrorists lay hands on those warheads,
Tarkington, you and I will be fried, screwed, and
tattooed regardless of what we did or didn’t
do. We’ll have to will our bodies to science.”
“What about the CO ef the cruiser, Admiral?
What do we tell him?”
“Draft a top-secret message directing him
to keep his people ready to shoot.”
“Aye, aye, sir.”
“Nuestra Senora de Colon
is sailing this evening for Norfolk. Have a destroyer
accompany her until she is well out of Cuban
waters.”
“Yo.”…Toad was making notes on a small memo
pad he kept in his hip pocket.
“And have the weather people give me a cloud-cover
prediction for the next five days, or as far out as
they can. I want to try to figure out what, if
anything, the satellites might be seeing.”
“You mean, are they keeping an eye on the Cuban
military?”
“Or terrorists. Whoever.”
“I’ll take care of it, sir.”
“I’m going to run a couple laps around the
deckea”…Jake Grafton added.
“May I suggest putting a company of marines
ashore to do a security survey of the base
perimeter? Strictly routine.”
“That sounds feasibleea”…Jake Grafton said. “Tonight
let’s ask the base commander what he thinks.”
backslash
CUBA 17
“Terrorists or the Cuban Armywanna bet ten
bucks? Take your pick.”
“I only bet on sure things, sir, like
prizefights and Super Bowls, occasionally a
cockroach race.”
“You’re wise beyond your years, Toadea”…the admiral
tossed over his shoulder as he headed for the hatch.
“That’s what I tell Ritaea”…Toad shot back.
Rita Moravia was his wife.
Jake Grafton didn’t hear the rest of
Toad’s comment. “And wisdom is a heavy burden,
let me tell you. Real heavy. Sorta like
biological warheads.”…He put the binoculars
to his eyes and carefully studied the naval base.
The night was hot and sultry, with lightning playing
on the horizon. From his seat on”…the top row of the
stadium bleachers Hector Juan de
Dios Sedano kept an eye on the lightning, but
the storms seemed to be moving north.
Everyone else in the stadium was watching the game.
Hector’s younger brother, Juan Manuel
“Ocho”…Sedano, was the local team’s star pitcher.
The eighth child of his parents, the Cuban fans had
long ago dubbed him El Ocho. The family
reduced the name to “Ocho.”
Tonight his fastball seemed on fire and his curve
exceptional. The crowd cheered with every pitch. Twice
the umpire called for the ball to examine it. Each
time he handed it back to the catcher, who tossed it
back to the mound as the fans hooted delightedly.
At the middle of the seventh inning Ocho had faced just
twenty-two batters. Only one man had gotten
to first base, and that on a bloop single just beyond the
fingertips of the second baseman. The local team
had scored four runs.
Hector Sedano leaned against the board fence behind him
and applauded his brother as he walked from the mound.
Ocho looked happy, relaxedthe confident, honest
gaze of a star athlete who knows what he can do.
As Hector clapped, he spotted a woman coming
through the crowd toward him. She smiled as she met his
eyes, then took a seat beside him.
Here on the back bench Hector was about ten feet
fro’m the nearest fans. The board fence behind him was
the wall of the stadium, fifteen feet aboveeathe
ground.
“Did your friends come with you”…”…he asked, scanning the
crowd.
“Oh, yes, the usual twoea”…she said, but didn’t
bother to point to them.
Sedano found one of the men settling into a seat five
rows down and over ab* thirty feet. A few
seconds later he saw the other standing near the
entrance where the woman had entered the stadium. These
two were her bodyguards.
Her name was Mercedes. She was the widow of one of
Hector’s brothers and the current mistress of
Fidel Castro.
“How is
MimaThat’
Tomorrow was Hector’s mother’s birthday, and the clan was
gathering.
“Fine. Looking forward to seeing everyone.”
“I used the birthday as an excuse. They don’t
want me to leave the residence these days.”
“How bad is he?”
“Estd tojodio.
He’s done in. One doctor said two weeks,
one three. The cancer is spreading rapidly.”
“What do you think?”
“I think he will live a while longer, but every night
is more difficult. I sit with him. When he is
sleeping he stops breathing for as much as half a
minute before he resumes. I watch the clock,
counting the seconds, wondering if he will breathe again.”
The.home team’s center fielder stepped up to the
plate. Ocho was the second batter. Standing in the
warm-up circle with a bat in his hands, he scanned
the faces in the crowd. Finally he made eye
contact with Hector, nodded his head just enough to be seen,
then concentrated on his warm-up swings.
“Who knows about this”…”…Hector asked Merc”…des.
“Only a few people. Alejo is holding the lid
on. The doctors are with him around the
clock.”…Alejo Vargas was the minister of the
ulterior. His ministry’s Department of
STEPHEN COONTS
State Securitythe secret policeinvestigated
and suppressed opposition and dissent.
“We have waited a long timeea”…Hector mused.
“Ese cabron,
we should have killed Vargas
years”…agoea”…Mercedes said, and smiled at a woman
who turned around to look at her. *
“We cannot win with his blood on our hands.”
“Alejo suspects you, I think.”
“I am just a Jesuit priest, a teacher.”
Mercedes snorted.
“He suspects everyoneea”…Hector added.
“Don’t be a fool.”
El Ocho stepped into the batter’s box to the roar of the