Jack Ryan 8 - Debt of Honor (57 page)

“We look that bad?” Mancuso asked.

“Sure as hell, sir. Okay, we took it in the ass from these bastards. Time to start thinking about catchup. We're the varsity, aren't we? Who's better suited to it than we are?”

“Jones, you always did have a big mouth,” Chambers said. Then he looked back at the chart. “But I guess maybe it is time to go to work.”

A chief petty officer stuck his head in the door. “Sir,
Pasadena
just checked in from down the hill. Ready in all respects to get under way, the CO requests orders.”

“How's he loaded?” Mancuso replied, knowing that if he'd really done his job right over the past few days the question would have been unnecessary.

“Twenty-two ADCAPs, six Harpoons, and twelve TLAM-Cs. They're all warshots,” the chief replied. “He's ready to rock, sir.”

ComSubPac nodded. “Tell him to stand by for mission orders.”

“Aye aye, sir.”

“Good skipper?” Jones asked.

“He got the Battle-E last year,” Chamber said. “Tim Parry. He was my XO on
Key West
. He'll do.”

“So now all he needs is a job.”

Mancuso lifted the secure phone for CINCPAC. “Yeah.”

 

•     •     •

 

“Signal from State Department,” the Air Force communications officer said, entering the room. “The Japanese Ambassador requests an urgent meeting with the President.”

“Brett?”

“We see what he has to say,” SecState said. Ryan nodded agreement.

“Any chance at all that this is some kind of mistake?” Durling asked.

“We expect some hard intelligence anytime now from a satellite pass over the
Marianas
. It's dark there, but that won't matter much.” Ryan had finished his briefing, and on completion the data he'd managed to deliver seemed very thin. The baseline truth here was that what had evidently taken place was so wildly beyond the limits of reason that he himself would not be fully satisfied until he saw the overheads himself.

“If it's real, then what?”

“That will take a little time,” Ryan admitted. “We want to hear what their ambassador has to say.”

“What are they really up to?” Treasury Secretary Fiedler asked.

“Unknown, sir. Just pissing us off, it isn't worth the trouble. We have nukes. They don't. It's all crazy…” Ryan said quietly. “It doesn't make any sense at all.” Then he remembered that in 1939,
Germany
's biggest trading partner had been…
France
. History's most often repeated lesson was that logic was not a constant in the behavior of nations. The study of history was not always bilateral. And the lessons learned from history depended on the quality of the student. Worth remembering, Jack thought, because the other guy might forget.

“It's got to be some kind of mistake,” Hanson announced. “A couple of accidents. Maybe our two subs collided under the water and maybe we have some excitable people on
Saipan
. I mean it doesn't make any sense at all.”

“I agree, the data does not form any clear picture, but the individual pieces—damn it, I know Robby Jackson. I know Bart Mancuso.”

“Who's that?”

“ComSubPac. He owns all our subs out there. I sailed with him once.
Jackson
is deputy J-3, and we've been friends since we were both teaching at
Annapolis
.” Lo, these many years ago.

“Okay,” Durling said. “You've told us everything you know?”

“Yes, Mr. President. Every word, without any analysis.”

“Meaning you don't really have any?” The question stung some, but this was not a time for embroidering. Ryan nodded.

“Correct, Mr. President.”

“So for now, we wait. How long to Andrews?”

Fiedler looked out a window. “That's the
Chesapeake Bay
below us now. We can't be too far out.”

“Press at the airport?” he asked Arnie van Damm.

“Just the ones in the back of the plane, sir.”

“Ryan?”

“We firm up our information as fast as we can. The services are all on alert.”

“What are those fighters doing out there?” Fiedler asked. They were now flying abeam Air Force One, in a tight two-ship element about a mile away, their pilots wondering what this was all about. Ryan wondered it the press would take note of it. Well, how long could this affair remain a secret?

“My idea, Buzz,” Ryan said. Might as well take responsibility for it.

“A little dramatic, don't you think?” SecState inquired.

“We didn't expect to have our fleet attacked either, sir.”

“Ladies and gentlemen, this is Colonel Evans. We're now approaching Andrews Air Force Base. We all hope you've enjoyed the flight. Please bring your seats back to the upright position and…” In the back, the junior White House aides ostentatiously refused to fasten their seat belts. The cabin crew did what they were supposed to do, of course.

Ryan felt the main gear thump down on runway Zero-One Right. For the majority of the people aboard, the press, it was the end. For him it was just the beginning. The first sign was the larger than normal complement of security police waiting at the terminal building, and some especially nervous Secret Service agents. In a way it was a relief to the National Security Advisor. Not everyone thought it was some sort of mistake, but it would be so much better, Ryan thought, if he were wrong, just this once. Otherwise they faced the most complex crisis in his country's history.

 

24

 

Running in Place

 

 

 

 

If there was a worse feeling than this one,
Clark
didn't know what it might be. Their mission in
Japan
was supposed to have been easy: evacuate an American citizen who had gotten herself into a tight spot and ascertain the possibility of reactivating an old and somewhat dusty intelligence network.

Well, that was the idea, the officer told himself, heading to his room. Chavez was parking the car. They'd decided to rent a new one, and again the clerk at the counter had changed his expression on learning that their credit card was printed in both Roman and Cyrillic characters. It was an experience so new as to have no precedent at all. Even at the height (or depths) of the Cold War, Russians had treated American citizens with greater deference than their own countrymen, and whether that had resulted from curiosity or not, the privilege of being American had been an important touchstone for a lonely stranger in a foreign and hostile land. Never had
Clark
felt so frightened, and it was little consolation that Ding Chavez didn't have the experience to realize just how unusual and dangerous their position was.

It was therefore something of a relief to feel the piece of tape on the underside doorknob. Maybe Nomuri could give him some useful information.
Clark
went in the room only long enough to use the bathroom before heading right back out. He saw Chavez in the lobby and made the appropriate gesture: Stay put.
Clark
noticed with a smile that his junior partner had stopped at a bookstore and purchased a copy of a Russian-language newspaper, which he carried ostentatiously as a kind of defensive measure. Two minutes later,
Clark
was looking in the window of the camera shop again. There wasn't much street traffic, but enough that he wasn't the only one around. As he stood looking at the latest automated wonder from Nikon, he felt someone bump into him.

“Watch where you're going,” a gruff voice said in English and moved on.
Clark
took a few seconds before heading in the other direction, leaving the corner and heading down an alley. A minute later he found a shadowy place and waited. Nomuri was there quickly.

“This is dangerous, kid.”

“Why do you think I hit you with that signal?” Nomuri's voice was low and shaky. It was fieldcraft from a TV series, about as realistic and professional as two kids sneaking a smoke in the boys' room of their junior high. The odd part was that, important as it was, Nomuri's message occupied about one minute. The rest of the time was concerned with procedural matters.

“Okay, number one, no contact at all with your normal rat-line. Even if they're allowed out on the street, you don't know them. You don't go near them. Your contact points are gone, kid, you understand?”
Clark
's mind was going at light-speed toward nowhere at the moment, but the most immediate priority was survival. You had to be alive in order to accomplish something, and Nomuri, like Chavez and himself, were “illegals,” unlikely to receive any sort of clemency after arrest and totally separated from any support from their parent agency.

Chet Nomuri nodded. “That leaves you, sir.”

“That's right, and if you lose us, you return to your cover and you don't do anything. Got that? Nothing at all. You're a loyal Japanese citizen, and you stay in your hole.”

“But—”

“But nothing, kid. You are under my orders now, and if you violate them, you answer to me!”
Clark
softened his voice. “Your first priority is always survival. We don't issue suicide pills and we don't expect movie-type bullshit. A dead officer is a dumb officer.” Damn,
Clark
thought, had the mission been different from the very beginning, they would have had a routine established—dead-drops, a whole collection of signals, a selection of cutouts—but there wasn't time to do that now, and every second they talked here in the shadows there was the chance that some Tokyoite would let his cat out, see a Japanese national talking to a gaijin, and make note of it. The paranoia curve had risen fast, and would only get steeper.

“Okay, you say so, man.”

“And don't forget it. Stick to your regular routine. Don't change anything except maybe to back off some. Fit in. Act like everybody else does. A nail that sticks up gets hammered down. Hammers hurt, boy. Now, here's what I want you to do.”
Clark
went on for a minute. “Got it?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Get lost.”
Clark
headed down the alley, and entered his hotel through the delivery entrance, thankfully unwatched at this time of night. Thank God, he thought, that
Tokyo
had so little crime. The American equivalent would be locked, or have an alarm, or be patrolled by an armed guard. Even at war,
Tokyo
was a safer place than
Washington
,
D.C.

“Why don't you just buy a bottle instead of going out to drink?” “Chekov” asked, not for the first time, when he came back into the room.

“Maybe I should.” Which reply made the younger officer's eyes jerk up from his paper and his Russian practice.
Clark
pointed to the TV, turned it on, and found CNN Headline News, in English.

Now for my next trick. How the hell do I get the word in? he wondered. He didn't dare use the fax machine to
America
. Even the Washington Interfax office was far too grave a risk, the one in
Moscow
didn't have the encryption gear needed, and he couldn't go through the Embassy's CIA connection either. There was one set of rules for operating in a friendly country, and another for a hostile one, and nobody had expected the rules that made the rules to change without warning. That he and other CIA officers should have provided forewarning of the event was just one more thing to anger the experienced spy; the congressional hearings on that one were sure to be entertaining if he lived long enough to enjoy them. The only good news was that he had the name of a probable suspect in the murder of Kimberly Norton. That, at least, gave him something to fantasize about, and his mind had little other useful activity to undertake at the moment. At the half-hour it was clear that even CNN didn't know what was going on, and if CNN didn't know, then nobody did. Wasn't that just great,
Clark
thought. It was like the legend of Cassandra, the daughter of King Priam of
Troy
who always knew what was happening, and who was always ignored. But
Clark
didn't even have a way of getting the word out…did he?

I wonder if . . . ? No. He shook his head. That was too crazy.

 

 

“All ahead full,” the Commanding Officer of Eisenhower said.

“All ahead full, aye,” the quartermaster on the enunciator pushed the handles forward. A moment later the inner arrow rotated to the same position. “Sir, engine room answers all ahead full.”

“Very well.” The CO looked over at Admiral Dubro. “Care to lay any bets, sir?”

The best information, oddly enough, came from sonar. Two of the battle group's escorts had their towed-array sonars, called “tails,” streamed, and their data, combined with that of two nuclear submarines to the formation's starboard, indicated that the Indian formation was a good way off to the south. It was one of those odd instances, more common than one might expect, where sonar far outperformed radar, whose electronic waves were limited by the curve of the earth, while sound waves found their own deep channels. The Indian fleet was over a hundred fifty miles away, and though that was spitting distance for jet attack aircraft, the Indians were looking to their south, not the north, and it further appeared that Admiral Chandraskatta didn't relish night-flight operations and the risks they entailed for his limited collection of Harriers. Well, both men thought, night landings on a carrier weren't exactly fun.

“Better than even,” Admiral Dubro replied after a moment's analysis.

“I think you're right.”

The formation was blacked out, not an unusual circumstance for warships, all its radars turned off, and the only radios in use were line-of-sight units with burst-transmission capability, which broadcast for hundredths of seconds only. Even satellite sets generated side-lobes that could betray their position, and their covert passage south of
Sri Lanka
was essential.

“World War Two was like this,” the CO went on, giving voice to his nerves. They were depending on the most human of fundamentals. Extra lookouts had been posted, who used both regular binoculars and “night-eye” electronic devices to sweep the horizon for silhouettes and mast-tops, while others on lower decks looked closer in for the telltale “feather” of a submarine periscope. The Indians had two submarines out on which Dubro did not have even an approximate location. They were probably probing south, too, but if Chandraskatta was really as smart as he feared, he would have left one close in, just as insurance. Maybe. Dubro's deception operation had been a skillful one.

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