Sentinel (24 page)

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Authors: Matthew Dunn

Will waited.

“The cruise missiles have a maximum range of fifteen hundred miles.”

Will’s stomach knotted. “They’re entering Russian waters to bring them within range of Moscow.”

Korina nodded.

“This has to be the trigger.” Will’s mind raced. “But it doesn’t prove that Moscow is Razin’s target. The
Ohio
’s deployment is a test sortie, I’m certain. It’s unlikely that a first strike against Moscow would be made by a cruise missile submarine—more likely a ballistic submarine from somewhere out in the Atlantic.”

Roger interrupted. “I agree.” The former sailor also seemed to be thinking fast. “But if war had already started, the Americans might use
Ohio
subs in the second or third strikes if they felt confident that Russia’s missile interception capability had been diminished. I think it’s a training exercise, just to see if they can get close enough if there ever is a need to hit Moscow.”

Will felt frustration. “Moscow’s not Razin’s target, because a detonation there will not convince Russian high command that it was an
Ohio
missile strike. While Russian air defenses are at peak performance, it just wouldn’t ring true to them. That means Razin’s target could be anywhere much closer to the subs. But that still leaves a vast range of possible targets.” He punched a fist on his leg. “Damn it!”

Laith said, “Maybe this isn’t the trigger.” He looked at Korina. “Could be something else that you’ve not been cleared to read.”

Korina shook her head. “No. This is the trigger. Without a doubt.”

Will looked sharply at her. “How can you be certain?”

Korina blew out smoke. “Because the intelligence report was written by Taras Khmelnytsky.”

Will went cold. “Who was his source?”

Korina seemed hesitant.

“I have to know!”

She looked incredulous. “You can’t expect me to reveal the identity of an agent.”

“Under the circumstances, yes, I bloody well can.”

She puffed on her cigarette. “He’s a low-level American sailor, but he works for an admiral and therefore has a higher security status than others of his rank. Razin’s his case officer. Beyond that, I’d have to check my database to get extra details.”

“Can you get his identity and naval facility?”

“I can, but not until morning. If I log on now, it might look suspicious to GRU HQ.”

“Okay.” Will clapped his hands together. “There’s still a chance. The Americans can put the squeeze on the sailor—get him to send a message to Khmelnytsky saying that the subs are deploying on a different date, that they have to meet in person so he can give him the details. That’ll grab Khmelnytsky’s attention. Then”—he smiled—“we grab the bastard.”

Roger frowned. “Why don’t we just get the submarines to turn around so that the incident is avoided?”

“No. If we do that, Razin will strike another target and we’d have no idea when or where that would be.”

“He might, but unless he’s lucky it would be unlikely to spark war.”

“I can’t take that chance.”

Roger looked incredulous. “And yet you’re willing to take a gamble on something that certainly
will
lead to war if we fail.”

Will thought about this. “If we’ve not got him by the time the subs are drawing close to Russia, I’ll call it in.”

Korina said, “You’ll have to move quickly because the submarines will be entering Russian waters in four days’ time.”

Will’s smile vanished.

Four days.

One explosion.

War.

Part IV

Chapter Thirty-two

C
olonel General Platonov walked through the grounds of his estate. It was late evening and dark, though the driveway’s lamps and discreetly positioned halogen lights gave him glimpses of the large garden’s brook, oak trees, ornate stone bridges, and special forces men with AEK-919K “Kashtan” submachine guns slung by their sides.

He hated having the bodyguards in his family home, but he was the highest-ranking military officer in the Russian armed forces and protection came with the job.

The man by his side was silent. That was understandable. The Russian president had a lot on his mind.

They stopped on a large rectangular area of concrete, where snow had recently been brushed away to reveal a symmetrical pattern of squares. At opposite ends of the yard were tall plastic chess pieces. On the edge of each corner of the yard, overlooking the giant chessboard, were man-sized stone statues of knights, their bodies and heads cloaked and hooded, their faces solemn, their hands clasped over the hilts of downward-facing broadswords.

Platonov looked at his house. The curtains were still open, all of the rooms illuminated. He could see the premier’s wife and his wife talking, smiling, glasses of wine in their hands. Upstairs, the young pajama-dressed children of Russia’s most powerful general were bouncing on beds with the children of Russia’s supreme leader. They were having a sleepover tonight. Their excitement was palpable.

The two men lit Montecristo cigars. Platonov could still feel the pleasant burn of his postdinner cognac in his throat. The evening had gone well. His wife was an excellent cook and a very intelligent hostess. As he looked at her now, he knew that he loved her as much as when he’d first met her. Then he’d been a muscular, blond-haired, idealistic lieutenant. Now he was a slim, ramrod-backed, gray-haired general with wisdom and a scar that ran from a blue eye down to the corner of his mouth.

A memento from Afghanistan.

A mujahideen knife.

He looked at his premier and spoke quietly. “What are your orders?”

The president blew out smoke. “You’d accept them?”

“It depends on whether they’re right.”

The president smiled. “Perhaps you forget your status.”

“Perhaps you forget whose fucking house you’re in.”

The premier laughed, then frowned. “I’m tempted to expel the American ambassador.”

“Go ahead. But you’ll make a fool of yourself.”

“I don’t need your blessing.”

“No, but you’ll need my army if it all goes wrong.”


My
army.”

“Your army, if you like.” He kept his eyes on his children before turning to his commander in chief. “We’re not seven years old. Your army. I don’t care.”

The president was silent for a while. “Why are you angry with me?”

“Not you. I’m angry with history. Every Russian president has made his general into a psychopath.”

“I think you’ve had too much Hennessy.”

“No, I’m stone-cold sober.” Platonov looked sternly at his leader. “Don’t bait the Americans. They can slaughter us.”

“I’ve no intention of baiting them. On the contrary, they’re the ones who’re being provocative.”

“Then sort it out. Politically.”

The president blew out more smoke; it hung in the icy air. “With you in charge, there’d be no slaughter.”

“Rubbish.” Platonov looked at his wife moving across the kitchen. It marveled him that she’d not lost her effect on him. He looked at the children and felt a chill run through his body. “If you fuck up, I’ll send every Russian soldier to meet an American invasion force. They’ll all die, but that’s what we do and that’s how we fight. And I’ll just be another psychopath.”

“I don’t want a fight.”

“But you’ll have one at the drop of a hat.”

“You read me wrong.”

“I read you fine.”

The president moved closer to Platonov. “How is the nuclear training exercise progressing?”

The question lightened Platonov’s mood. “It’s going very well. But Colonel Khmelnytsky still has more work to do. In particular, we need to test the feasibility of deploying the devices from sea. The final phase of the exercise will be focused on targeting naval installations.”

“Good.” The president was keen to get back into the warmth of the house. “Should we be concerned about the three American submarines?”

Platonov laughed. “They’re just playing games. But one of our new stealth destroyers will be waiting for them in the Barents Sea. It will make them turn around.”

The premier flicked his cigar onto the chessboard. “Come on, let’s get another drink.” He stepped forward, then stopped. “I’m not going to fuck up, and I hope the Americans don’t either. I’m sure it will be fine, but—” He shivered. “My orders. If anything does happen, make sure our entire military is battle-ready.”

Chapter Thirty-three

M
orning broke to reveal a sky filled with gray clouds pouring snow over the city of Vladivostok.

The lounge in Korina’s house was thick with the smoke from cigarettes and steam from mugs of coffee. Korina had been out of the room for thirty minutes, and when she reemerged she was showered and had changed into smart charcoal gray pants, a white blouse, and a box jacket. Her body lotions and perfume brought a welcome fresh scent into the musty room.

She looked directly at Will. “I’ll need an hour in my office to go through GRU databases.”

“All right. Can we wait for you here?”

“Sure. Just don’t go through my things.” Korina smiled, donned her outer garments, and walked out of her home.

Will glanced at his watch, waited a few seconds, looked at Laith, and spoke with a stern voice. “Get on foot and tail her. Roger, I want you in one of our vehicles. I’ll parallel Laith’s route. All cells dialed into my number. Listen to my commands, because if she does anything stupid we’ll have to move
very
quickly.”

T
hirty minutes later, Will was standing close to the quayside of Vladivostok’s naval port. Snow pelted his face, and he pulled up the collar of his overcoat to further shield him from the bitter weather. Placing his hands back into his coat pockets, his fingers caressed his QSZ-92 handgun. He heard Laith’s voice in his bluetooth earpiece.

“She’s been in the base for ten minutes. Four soldiers are guarding the main entrance. So far, all looks quiet.”

It seemed that the GRU offices were not in the Pacific Fleet HQ building, as Korina had entered one of the nearby militarized and restricted naval zones of the port. Will imagined that the naval GRU probably had only a few offices in the zone, the rest of the buildings being used by hundreds of navy sailors and administrators. Laith was barely a hundred and fifty feet away from the entrance to the base. Roger and Will were farther east, with Roger covering the northern flank of their surveillance box in the Audi A8 and Will covering the south. Only Laith had visibility of the militarized zone.

Will heard a loud horn from behind him. Turning, he saw a huge aircraft carrier, fully laden with MiG-29Ks and Su-33s, cruise slowly close to the port. Sailors were on deck, moving quickly, clearly tasked with numerous jobs. The horn boomed again before the massive vessel turned and began sailing away.

Will shivered, but not from the cold. “Anything unusual at the base?”

Laith responded, “You’ll be the first to know if there is.”

Roger said, “Nothing where I am except a few crazy pedestrians who think today’s a good day to go shopping.”

Will wrapped his arms around his chest, shivered again, and saw his breath steam into the icy air. Wind blasted him from the sea, carrying with it even more snow. He looked at the other destroyers and frigates moored in the port. All of them were illuminated and had signs of activity. Some were taking on fresh provisions from four-ton trucks parked on the big piers adjacent to the vessels. They were clearly making ready to sail.

Forty minutes later Laith said, “Unmarked SUV stops at the entrance to the base, two men inside, ID cards are shown to the guards, the barrier is lifted, the SUV drives into the base.”

Will immediately pressed his hand against his earpiece. “Were the men uniformed?”

Laith muttered, “Couldn’t see from my position.”

Roger added, “Uniforms or no uniforms, these militarized zones will contain as many civilian workers as sailors. The vehicle’s probably normal.”

Will let his hand fall to his side. He knew Roger was most likely right. But he felt unusually tense and, despite his attempts to try to relax, could not help feeling that right now everything was out of his control.

A further twenty minutes passed before Laith spoke again. “The barrier’s being lifted; something’s obviously coming out, as there’s nothing in front of the base.” The line went quiet. “Okay, I can see the same SUV.”

Will and Roger said nothing as they waited for their ex–Delta Force colleague to speak again.

“Two men in the SUV I saw earlier . . . yes, same two men in the front, but . . . something else in the back, can’t see yet.”

Static sounded in Will’s earpiece.

“Vehicle approaches barrier, front male passenger waves a hand at guard, who is at attention and saluting, vehicle slows, then indicates right, then accelerates.” There was nothing for several seconds before Laith shouted, “Korina’s in the back. She’s called it in and betrayed us!”

Will shouted, “Direction?”

“Quayside, heading right toward you.”

Will’s heart pounded. “Roger, I want you east by a quarter mile, then south by five hundred feet. That will put you on the quayside road, ahead of the SUV.”

“On my way.” Roger gunned his Audi.

Laith shouted in near-breathless words, “I’m moving east as well. Running parallel to the SUV. Catching glimpses of it, but they’re not looking my way. They’re about two hundred feet to my right. Speed approximately twenty miles per hour.”

Laith was at full sprint and so far was matching the speed of the SUV.

Will scrutinized the quayside road adjacent to him. Three hundred yards away, one of the four-ton trucks pulled onto the route from a pier and started driving slowly toward him. “I can’t see the SUV. Four tonner is blocking my view.”

“It’s right behind the truck!” Laith was clearly still sprinting. “Get out of sight, Will.”

Will dashed across the road and into a side street and took the next right turn. As he did so, Laith nearly crashed into him. Will immediately sprinted alongside his colleague so that they were running parallel to the quayside road. “Roger, where are you?”

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