Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
front of the television station and Mercedes stepped out.
Ocho waved as it lifted off, leaving her standing there with
her hair and skirt blowing wildly, clutching the
videotape.
El Ocho, alive and well! It seemed like a
miracle. Truly, she had thought he was dead, lost
at sea.
“I have seen the tapeea”…Ocho had shouted over the
noise of the helicopter as they rode above the lights
of Havana. “Fidel wanted Hector to lead
Cuba. His opinion will sway many people.”
Yes, she nodded, fighting baok tears.
“Why did you give the tape to the Americans?”
“Vargas would have taken it from meea”…she replied.
Ocho accepted that because he knew it was true. That
tape would destroy Alejo Vargas.
“Make them show it on televisionea”…Ocho had
shouted. “We will get Hector out of prison.”…He
grinned broadly, showing all his teeth. The future
was arriving all at once.
She watched the helicopter disappear into the night
sky, then turned and walked into the television station.
One of the most horrifying threats any soldier can
face is being in the bull’s-eye of a modern guided
weapon. The stealth fighters were out tonight,
dropping their weapons with extraordinary precision.
The bombs came in too fast for the human eye
to follow, especially in the light conditions
prevailing in Havana this night. For the Cuban
troops surrounding the old prison, it was as if a
giant invisible sharpshooter were somewhere in the clouds
hurling bombs. The two bombs on the
antiaircraft guns frightened the soldiers and made
the crowd nervous. Watching from the Osprey, Jake
Grafton thought for a moment the crowd might stampede:
with this many people jamming the streets
that would be a human disaster. Still, he could not take the
risk the guns or tanks would open fire on the
inbound helicopter or the Osprey, both of which he
wanted to land on the prison’s roof.
Through the infrared viewer Jake could see the
soldiers instinctively moving away from the tanks.
He could see men getting out of the hatch, jumping to the
ground, walking away.
On the street the crowd was also pushing back, crowding
away from the old fortress.
Minutes passed and nothing happened. The packed
rows of humanity on the street seemed to relax,
to thin as the ‘p instinctively sought their own space.
Jake heard the first bomb tone come on.
An officer Jake assumed he was”…an
officerclimbed up on one of the tanks, waved his
arms at his men. his
The bomb tone ceased: the weapon was in the air.
Now the officer standing on the tank put his hands on his
hipsRita had the Osprey down to a thousand feet,
only a mile from the building, set up to begin her
transition to helicopter flight, so the activity in
the prison courtyard was as clear to Jake as if he
had been watching it on television.
“Angel One, this is Battlestar One. Come on
in.”
“Roger that, Battlestar.”
The Cuban officer was still standing on the tank when it
disappeared in a flash as the bomb hit it.
When the cloud of smoke and debris cleared, no one
was moving within a hundred feet of the blasted tank, of
which only tiny pieces remained. The bomb must have
penetrated the armor in front of or behind the
turret, Jake thought.
Now the second bomb tone ended. Cuban troops
were running out of the prison complex through the main gate,
which Jake belatedly realized was open. The men were
dropping their weapons, throwing away their helmets and
running as fast as their legs could carry them.
The five-hundred-pound bomb from Night Owl Four
Four exploded in the gate and the running men
disappeared in a flash.
“Put it on the roofea”…Jake Grafton told
Rita Moravia.
“Okay, I got this guyea”…Sailor Karnow told
Stiff Hardwick. “He’s bogey one.”
The symbol was right there in front of Stiff on the
headsup display.
“About thirty miles or soea”…Sailor said
matter-of-factly.” She would sound bored if they
were giving her an Academy Award. That was another
thing about her Stiff didn’t like. Well, the truth
was, he hated her guts, but he knew better
than to say so in the new modern politically
correct genderneutral navy to which they both
belonged. A few off-thecuff remarks like that to the
boys could torpedo a promising career.
“Lock the son of a bitch upea”…Stiff told his
RIO.
“You can’t shoot this dudeea”…Sailor said, still bored
as hell. “There are four stealth fighters flapping
around down there, three Ospreys and a helicopter,
or did you sleep through the brief? You can’t shoot
without the blessing of Battlestar Strike, which
you ain’t likely to get.”
Twenty-five miles now. Stiff had the F-14
coming down like a lawyer on his way to hell, showing
Mach 1.7 on the meter. He was fast crawling up
this MiGo’s ass.
“Don’t just sit there with your thumb up your heinie,
honey. Get on the goddamn horn.”
“Battlestar Strikeea”…Sailor drawled on the
radio. “This is Showtime One Oh Two. We
got us a situation developing out here.”
Rita didn’t use her landing light until the last
possible moment, snapping it on just in time to judge the
final few seconds of her approach. As it was,
only one of the demoralized snipers on the roof
took a shot at the plane, a wild, unaimed
shot that punched a hole in the fuselage near
the port gear and spent itself against a structural
member. Then the marines charging out of the back of the beast
fired a shot over his head and the sniper threw down his
rifle. The other snipers had already done so.
In seconds thfc chopper from
United States
came out of the darkness and set down alongside the
V-22. Tommy Carmellini and Ocho Sedano
came scrambling out.
All this was new to Ocho. With wide eyes he
looked at the Osprey, at the marines, at the
skyline of Havana, at the bonfires in the
street and the tens of thousands of people.
Toad Tarkington appeared at Jake’s elbow.
“I think I know how to get off this roofea”…Toad
said.
“Lead onea”…Jake told him.
“Uh, Showtime One Oh Two, negative on the
permission to shoot. That’s negatory, weapons red,
over.”
“Strike, goddamn itea”…Stiff Hardwick roared,
“We’re sitting right on the tail of a goddamn
MiGo on his way to Havana to kill some of our people.
I got the son of a bitch boresighted.”
“Showtime, there are too many friendlies over Havana.
Weapons red, weapons red, over.”
“How about I pop this guy with my gun? Request
weapons free for a gunshot. Over.”
“Wait.”
Stiff was off the power, idling along at about 400
knots’, five miles behind the bogey. Of course,
the bogey didn’t know he was there. The Cuban
MiGo-29’s had very primitive electronic
detection equipment, which consisted of a light
and an auditory signal in the pilot’s ear. These
devices told Carlos Corrado he was being
looked at by an American fighter radar but failed
to tell him where or how close the thing was, the two
pieces of information that he needed the most.
As he closed on Havana and listened to the tone and
watched the light, which didn’t even flicker,
Carlos Corrado pondered on the irony of knowing
American fighters were
out there somewhere and not being able to do anything about it. If
he turned on his radar, he would beacon to the
Americans, who would then come at him like moths to a
flame. His only chance was to keep the radar off.
If the Americans launched a weapon at him, he
had a few flares he could punch off, of course, and
some chaff. It was not much, but it might be enough. If
it wasn’t, well, he had had a good life.
Carlos began looking right and left as he crossed
the suburbs of the city. Amid all the lights he
spotted some fires, and the center of the city was dark,
without power, but all in all, Havana looked
pretty normal. Amazing, that!
“Battlestar Strike, this is Showtime. Still waiting
on that permission. This MiGo is posing right here in
front of me, begging for it. Do I zap it
or what?”
“We are still checking with the air forceea”…Battlestar
told Stiff, “trying to find out exactly where
everyone is. Don’t want any accidents out there,
do we?”
Stiff keyed the intercom. “Assholesea”…he roared
at Sailor Karnow. “They are all stupid
fucking assholes.”
“I hear thatea”…sd Sailor, sighing. “I’ve known
it for years. I should have joined the WNBA.”
Toad Tarkington led the procession along the dark
corridor of La Cabana prison. Apparently
the power had not yet been restored after the
high-voltage towers fell. Everyone following
Toad had a flashlight.
The corridors were alive with echoing sound, shouts,
curses, doors clanging, screams, shots.
“Hurryea”…Grafton shouted, and ran toward the
shouts.
As he suspected, the mob was in the building. As
he and Toad rounded-* a corner, their flashlights
fell on a solid wall of humanity dragging two
uniformed officers. Carmellini shouted. The human
wall halted.
“This is Ocho Sedanoea”…Carmellini
shouted, “Hector’s brother. He is here to free
Hector.”
The man dragging a fat officer by the collar of his
uniform demanded, “Who are you”…”…Obviously drunk,
this man had the commandante’s pistol in his hand, but he
didn’t raise it or point it. The flashlights were
partially blinding him, but he could still see the front end
of Toad’s M-16.
“We are here at El Ocho’s
request.”…Carmellini proclaimed loudly. “He
has asked for our help to free his brother
Hector.”
The mob moved forward, probably in response to a
surging push from the people behind.
“Give us the officersea”…Jake said to Carmellini,
“and we will bring Hector from his cell.”…Carmellini
shouted the message in Spanish.
The members of the mob didn’t like it, but they were facing
six rifles in a narrow stone corridor. The people
at the head of the mob released the officers and turned
to shout at those behind them.
The marines grabbed the two officers and pushed them
away along the corridor.
Carmellini talked earnestly to the officers. “They
will lead us thereea”…he told Jake.
“Colonel Santana arrived an hour ago. He
was with the commandante until just a few minutes ago.”
“Hurryea”…Jake Grafton urged. “The mob is
out of control.”…He had drawn the .357 Magnum
he wore in a holster around his waist and now had it
hi his right hand.
“Showtime One Oh Two, Strike, the air force
is having trouble confirming the location of all their
machines.”
“Strike, this guy is hanging it out, begging for it,
trolling right over the damn city looking for some white
hats to zap. Are you gonna cry at the funeral
after he kills some of our people?”
This comment was of course grossly out of line: Stiff
Hardwick was a mere lieutenantan O-3and the
decisions in Strike were being made by an officer with the
rank
of commanderO-5or even captainO-6. He was
going to be in big trouble when he got back to the
ship, but he didn’t care. The primary object of
war was to kill the enemy, and by God, the son of a
bitch was right there. He’d deal with the peckerheads
later.
Another minute passed. They were over the heart of
Havana now. The oily black slash of
Havana Harbor was quite prominent, as were the dozens
of fires that now surrounded the walls of the old La
Cabana fortress.
“This guy is starting a turnea”…Sailor told
Stiff, referring of course to the bogey.
Carlos Corrado should have been searching the night
sky over Havana for the planes he knew were here,
but he wasn’t. He was only human. He was
looking at the red warning light and listening to the buzz
that told him that a hostile fighter’s radar was
illuminating his aircraft.
The light and tone had been on for five minutes
now. The miracle was that Carlos Corrado was still
alive. Five minutes in front of an
aggressive American fighter pilot was about six
lifetimes … and
still
the American hadn’t pulled the trigger!
Carlos didn’t know why, but he suspected the
reason had something to do with the fact they were tooling over
the rooftops of Havana.
Ocho Sedano and the Americans ran through the
corridors of La Cabana Prison until they
came to a massive steel gate. It was closed but
unlocked; they used the commandante’s keys
to lock it behind them. Then they entered a cellblock
full of men screaming to be” freed. Hundreds of
arms reached through the bars, trying to reach the