Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
who would probably refer it to the politicians.
‘The
Wonsan
is turning northeastea”…Rita observed. “She’ll
probably go between Cat Island and San
Salvador.”
“Let’s go downea”…Jake Grafton said, “hover
in front of this guy, see if he’ll stop.”…He was
sitting on the flight engineer’s seat just aft of the
pilots.
Five minutes later the Osprey was in
helicopter flight with the rotors tilted up,
descending gently hi front of the
Wonsan,
which was up to five or six knots now. Jake
Grafton could see four people on the bridge, standing
close together and gesturing at the Osprey. The
copilot was watching the clearance, telling Rita how
much maneuvering room she had.
“Closerea”…Jake said.
Rita Moravia kept the Osprey moving in.
Luckily the wind was from the west, so she could keep the
twin-rotor machine on the starboard side of the
freighter, yet pointed right at the bridge. This
kept the wind on her starboard quarter.
She stopped when the distance between her cockpit and the
bridge glass was about fifty yards. The right
rotor was still well above the top of the freighter’s
crane, which was mounted amidships.
“Closerea”…Jake said again, “but watch your
clearance.”
The copilot glanced nervously at Jake.
“Give me clearanceea”…Rita snapped at him, which
brought him back to the job at hand.
She maneuvered the Osprey until it was
completely on
the starboard side of the
Wonsan,
then she dropped it until she could see the length of the
bridge.
The captainhe might have been the captain, wearing a
dirty, white bridge capstepped through the door of the
bridge onto the wing and stood looking into the
cockpit, fifteen feet away. He had his hands
pressed against his ears, trying to deaden the mighty roar
of the two big engines. The downwash from the rotors
raised a storm of sea spray, which was soaking him,
and now it carried away his hat.
“Closerea”…Jake said one more time.
“The air is sorta bumpy coming around this
superstructure.”
“Yeahea”…the admiral said.
Ten feet separated the nose of the V-22 from the
rail of the bridge wing. Rita eased the Osprey
forward a foot at a time, until the refueling
probe and three barrels of the turreted
fifty-caliber machine gun dist protruded from the
nose were no more than eighteen inches from the rail.
“Aim the gun at the captainea”…Jake said.
The copilot flipped a switch, then looked at the
captain’s head, and the machine gun
faithfully tracked, following the aiming commands sent
to it from the gunsight mounted on the copilot’s
helrriet.
The captain’s face was nowiess than ten feet from
Jake Grafton’s. He was balding, a bit
overweight, in his late fifties. The rotor wash
lashed at him and tore at his sodden clothes, making
it difficult for him to keep his footing. Groping for a
rail to steady himself against the fierce wind, he looked
at the three-barreled machine gun, which tracked him
like a living thing, then at Jake Grafton on the
seat behind the Osprey pilots.
The captain turned and shouted something over his left
shoulder; he held on with both hands as he went through
the door onto the enclosed bridge.
“Watch itea”…Jake muttered into his lip mike.
“This guy may be fool enough to turn into you.”
Rita was the first to realize what was happening. She
felt the need to turn left to hold position. “The
ship is slowbigea”…she said. “I think he’s stopped
his engines.”
In a few seconds it became obvious that she was
correct. Rita backed away until the distance
between the cockpit and ship was about fifty
feet.
“I think he lost his nerve, Admiral.”
“Look at the stuff on his deckea”…the copilot
said, pointing. “Looks like he pulled up a bunch
of warheads.”
The freighter was drifting when the destroyer arrived a
half hour later and coasted to a stop several
hundred yards away. In minutes the destroyer had
a boat hi the water.
When armed Americans were standing on the
Wonsan’s
deck, Jake tapped Rita on the shoulder.
“Let’s go home.”
“I listened to the tape from Alejo Vargas’s
office this afternoonea”…Carmellini said to Chance. They were
walking the Prado looking for a place to eat dinner.
To have a decent selection and palatable food, the
restaurant would have to be a hard-currency place.
Although the best restaurants were in ramshackle
houses hi Old Havana, tonight Chance wanted
music, laughter, people.
“Someone told Vargas all about the break-in at the
university lab, the contamination, the dead lab worker.
They spent most of the day running the fans at the
lab, trying to lower the count of the stuff in the
air before they went in.”
“What did they say about the dead man, why he
died?”
“That had them stumped. He was vaccinated. They
called hi a Professor Svenson.”
“Olaf Svenson?”
“No one used a first name.”
“It must be him. I’ve heard of him. Damned
potty old fool. He was at Cal Tech for
years. Thought he was at Colorado now. A
genius, almost won a Nobel Prize.”…He
snapped his fingers. “That photo we gave
Bouchardthat must have been Svenson.”
“Well, he is their main man down at the lab,
to hear the conversation at Vargas’s office.”
“So why did the lab worker die? Wasn’t he
vaccinated?”
“The stuff mutated, according to the professor.
Mutated again, he said.”
“Well, what the hell is it? Did they say that?”
“Some kind of polio.”
“Polio doesn’t kill that quicklyea”…Chance
objected.
“This kind does. The lab worker wasn’t the first,
apparently. The professor wanted
to dissect him like the others but Vargas ordered the body
burned immediately.”
They paused on a corner, watched the people who filled
the sidewalks under the crumbling buildings. Just down
the walk to the left a Cuban was trying to sell
trinkets to a pah* of Germans and having no
luck. To the right a tall young white guy,
American or Canadian probably, was locked
in a passionate embrace with a local girl.
“Sun, sex, and socialismea”…Carmellini
muttered. “Makes you wonder why there aren’t more
Cubans.”
Chance closed his eyes, enjoyed the caress of the
breeze on bis face and hair. He could hear
snatches of music amid the honk of car horns and
traffic sounds. Havana was very much alive this
evening, as it was every evening.
Finally he opened his eyes, looked again at the
Cubans and tourists swirling about him. And
Carmellini standing there, quite nonchalant, looking
bored.
“Do they have any ideas about who broke in?”
“Americans. CIA scum. No evidence, but
they’re sure.”
Chance nodded.
‘There was talkea”…Carmellini continued, “of rounding
up likely suspects, doing some thorough
interrogations, just to see what might turn up. That was
Colonel Santana’s suggestion: apparently he
is a rare piece of work. Vargas overruled him.
Said they couldn’t torture tourists every time the CIA
did something they didn’t like or soon they wouldn’t have
any tourists.”
“Anything else?”
Carmellini shrugged, scratched his chin. “I listened
to almost three hours” worth of that stuff, and you know,
they didn’t mention Fidel Castro even once.”
“Didn’t say his name?”
“Nope. And the technician said he hadn’t heard
them mention Castro all day.”
“Curious.”
“It’s odd. I would have thought”
After a bit Chance said, “The lab is just the tip
of the iceberg. There must be machinery for drying out the
cultures, for packing the microorganisms
into warheads or mixing them into some sort of chemical
stew to be sprayed from planes. There must be trucks
that transport this stuff from place to place. And then
there are the weapons: where the hell are they?”
They went into one of the nightclubs and found
an empty table. Six whores were sitting around the
table beside them. The girls were drinking daiquiris and
having a fine, comloud time. One of the girls looked
the two men over while the band tuned up just a few
feet away.
“Washington wants more informationea”…Carmellini said,
ignoring the whores.
“They would.”…Chance chewed on his lip for a bit, then
picked up the wine list. “Tonight’s the night we go
into Vargas’s safe. Are you comfortable with that?”
Carmellini took his time answering. Chance was about
to repeat the question when he said, “If the alarms are
off.”
‘They’ll be off.”
“Sure.”
‘Trust, me.”
When the waiter came they ordered dinner.
“So tell me again alxwt the Ministry of
Interiorea”…Carmellini said. “Everything you can
recall. Everything.”
Chance leaned back, closed his eyes, tried
to visualize how the building looked when he had
stepped from the taxi
out front on his way to his meeting with Alejo
Vargas.
“There is a guard kiosk out front on the
sidewalk. You then walk through the front entrance to the
guard station inside. They check your credentials
again, call whoever you say you want to see. This
person comes to get you, leads you through the halls to the
office you are to visit.”
“Cameras?”
“Security cameras mounted high in corners,
monitored by the main guard station. There are two
separate systems, at least, with pictures playing
on separate monitors.”
“Infrared sensors?”
“I think so….”…The fact is he should have paid more
attention. Looked more carefully, consciously noted
what he was seeing. “Yes, I remember seeing
one.”
“Motion detectors?”
“No.”
“Laser alarms?”
“Yes, mounted at ankle height.”…Presumably
these were only on when the building was not occupied.
“Alarms on the windows?”
“Yes.”
“Vibrators on the glass?”
“No.”…If there had been vibrators, the
computer would have had a much more difficult job sorting
out the voices from the electronic noise of the
vibrators when it tried to read the light refracted
by the crystals.
“Were there internal security doors, doors that
might be closed when the building is not occupied?”
“Yes. Every hall had them, but I doubt they were ever
used.”
“And internal security stations?”
“I saw none.”
Carmellini thought about it. Closed security doors
made a burglar’s access more difficult, but they
provided a peaceful, quiet place for a burglar
to work once he had gained entry.
“Do they have backup power when the power goes
off”…”…Carmellini mused.
“They mustea”…Chance replied thoughtfully. “A backup
generator of some type. I’m going to walk in
assuming that they do, but I’ll be improvising as I
go.”
“We’ll sure as hell find out soon enough,
won’t we”…”…Carmellini said, and grinned. That was the
first grin he had managed all afternoon. The death of the
lab worker had hit him hard, but the cool execution
of the guard at the front door by William
Henry Chance had hit him like a punch to the solar
plexus. Chance just gunned the man down and kept on
trucking, as if killing another human being were something
he did every morning before lunch.
All evening Carmellini had studied the older man,
watched him for a sign that the murder of the guard was
anything more than absolutely routine. And he had
seen nothing. Nothing at all. Chance looked as if
he might be having dinner in a restaurant in the
Bronx with a Yankees game from a kitchen radio
as background noise.
Carmellini stared at the food on the plate that the
waiter put in front of him. He didn’t want
a mournful. But what he wouldn’t give for a stiff
drink! He sipped at a glass of water, felt
his stomach knot up.
“Order a drinkea”…Chance said as he used his knife
and fork. “One. Something on the rocks. You need it
We have a long night ahead.”
Carmellini looked around for the waiter, and found himself
staring at one of the whores at the next table, who
gave him a big grin. He grinned back. A
man just has to keep things in perspective.
The sun had been down for several hours when
Enrique Poveda and Arquimidez
Cabrera drove up to the fourth EHV tower they
hoped to blow. After a quick look around, they unlocked
the padlock on the gate and put bn their tool
belts. Each of the men picked a tower leg and started
up. About ten feet above the ground they found the shaped
charges of C-4 plastique still firmly taped to the
steel legs. Working in the darkness by feel, each man