“You’re telling me the skeleton in the aircraft was missing a boot and a thumb?”
Vixen 03 I 49
Pitt merely nodded an affirmative.
At half past nine Giordino was ready. He started by lecturing Pitt and Steiger as he would a class of high-school chemistry students. “As you can see, after more than three decades of submersion, the vinyl cover, because it’s organic, is virtually as good as new, but the paper inside has nearly returned to pulp. Originally the contents were mimeographed-a common process prior to the miracle of Xerox. The ink, I’m sorry to say, has all but disappeared, and no laboratory on earth can bring it back, even under supermagnification. Three of the sheets are hopeless cases. Nothing vaguely legible remains. The fourth looks like it might have contained weather information. A few words here and there refer to winds, altitudes, and atmospheric temperatures. The only sentence I can partially decipher says ‘Skies clearing beyond Western slopes.’ “
” ‘Western slopes’ indicating the Colorado Rockies,” said Pitt.
Steiger’s hands gripped the edge of the table. “Christ, do you have any idea what that means?”
“It means O3’s flight didn’t originate from California, as stated in the report,” said Pitt. “Her departure point must have been east of here if the crew was concerned about weather conditions over the Continental Divide.”
“So much for data sheet number four,” said Giordino. “Now then, compared to the rest, sheet five is a veritable treasure trove of information. Here we can faintly make out several word combinations, including the names of two crew members. Many of the letters are missing, but with a bit of elementary deduction we can figure the meanings. Look here, for instance.”
Giordino pointed to the sheet of paper, and the other two leaned in closer.
A re ft omm nd r: Ma ay on VI nde
“Now, we fill in the blanks,” Giordino continued, “and we come up with ‘Aircraft commander: Major Raymond Vylander.’ “
“And here’s the combination,” said Pitt, pointing. “This spells out the name and rank of the flight engineer.”
“Joseph Burns,” Giordino acknowledged. “In the lines that follow, the missing characters are too numerous to guess their intent. Then, this.” Giordino pointed farther down on the paper.
ode n me: ix n 03
50
VIXEN 03p>
“Classified call sign,” injected Pitt. “Every aircraft on a security flight is given one. Usually a noun followed by the last two digits of the aircraft’s number.”
Steiger fixed Pitt with a look of genuine respect. “How would you know that?”
“Picked it up somewhere,” Pitt said, shrugging it off.
Giordino traced over the blank areas. “So now we have ‘Code name: something 03.’ “
“What nouns have ‘ix’ in the middle of them?” Steiger mused.
“Chances are, the missing letter after* is e or o.”
“How about ‘Nixon’?” Giordino suggested.
“I seriously doubt that a mere transport plane would be named after a vice-president,” Pitt said. ” ‘Vixen 03’ seems closer to the mark.”
“Vixen 03,” Steiger repeated softly. “That’s as good a shot as any.”
“Moving right along,” said Giordino. “Our final decipherable scrap on the fifth sheet is ‘E-blank-A, Rongelo 060 blank.’ “
” ‘Estimated time of arrival, six in the morning at Rongelo,’ ” Steiger translated, his expression still incredulous. “Where in hell is that? Vixen 03 was scheduled to land in Hawaii.”
“I only calls ‘em the way I sees ‘em,” said Giordino.
“What about the sixth sheet?” Pitt asked.
“Pretty slim pickings. All gibberish except for a date and a security classification near the bottom. See for yourself.”
rders d te anu ry 2 , 954 Aut or z d y: r It r B s TO SE R T COD 1A
Steiger hovered over the indefinite wording. “First line reads ‘Orders dated January, sometime between the twentieth and twenty-ninth, 1954.’ “
Pitt said, “The second line looks like ‘Authorized by,’ but the officer’s name is lost. The rank of general fits, though.”
“Then comes ‘Top-secret code one-A,’ ” said Giordino. “You can’t get a classified rating any higher than that.”
“I think it safe to assume,” said Pitt, “that someone in the upper echelons of either the Pentagon or the White House, or both, released a misleading accident report on Vixen 03 as a cover-up.”
“In my years with the Air Force I’ve never heard of such an act. Why instigate a flagrant lie over an ordinary aircraft on a routine flight?”
Vixen 03 I 51
“Face facts, Colonel. Vixen 03 was no ordinary aircraft. The report states the flight originated at Travis Air Force Base, near San Francisco and was scheduled to land at Hickam Field, in Hawaii. We now know the crew was heading for a destination named Rongelo.”
Giordino scratched his head. “I can’t recall ever hearing of a place ; called Rongelo.”
“Nor I,” said Pitt. “But we can settle that mystery as soon as we lay ?our hands on a world atlas.”
“So what have we got?” asked Steiger.
“Not much,” admitted Pitt. “Only that during the latter part of January, 1954, a C-ninety-seven took off from a point either in the eastern or midwestern section of the United States on a top-secret flight. But something went wrong over Colorado. A mechanical malfunction that forced the crew to ditch the plane in the worst terrain imaginable. They got lucky, or so they thought. Miraculously avoiding smashing into a mountainside, Vylander found an open clearing and lined up the Stratocruiser for an emergency landing. But what they couldn’t see-remember, it was January, and the ground was undoubtedly covered with snow-was in grim reality a lake frozen over with ice.”
“So when the aircraft’s momentum slowed and its weight settled,” said Steiger vacantly, “the ice parted and she fell through.”
“Exactly. The tidal surge of water into the broken ship and the staggering shock of the cold overwhelmed the crew before they had a chance to react, and they drowned in their seats. No one witnessed the crash, the water refroze over the grave, and all traces of the tragedy were neatly erased. The ensuing search discovered nothing and Vixen 03 was later concealed behind a phony accident report and conveniently forgotten.”
“You’ve written an interesting plot,” said Giordino, “and it plays well. But where does Charlie Smith come into the story?”
“He must have hooked the oxygen tank while fishing. Possessing an inquisitive mind, he probably dragged the area and wrenched the already broken nose gear loose from the wreckage.”
“The expression on his face must have been priceless when the gear popped to the surface,” Giordino said, smiling.
“Even if I accept Smith’s murder,” said Steiger, “I fail to see a motive.”
Pitt raised his eyes and looked at Steiger. “There is always a motive for taking a man’s life.”
52
p>
VIXEN 03
“The cargo,” Giordino blurted, incredulous at his own realization. “It was a highly classified flight. It stands to reason that whatever Vixen 03 was transporting was worth a great deal to somebody. Worth enough to kill for.”
Steiger shook his head. “If the cargo is so valuable, why wasn’t it salvaged by Smith or his supposed killer? According to Pitt here, it’s still down there.”
“And sealed tight,” Pitt added. “As near as I could tell, the canisters have never been opened.”
Giordino cleared his throat. “Next question.”
“Shoot.”
“What’s inside the canisters?”
“You had to ask,” said Pitt. “Well, one conjecture bears consideration. Take an aircraft carrying cylindrical canisters on a secret mission somewhere in the Pacific Ocean in January of 1954-“
“Of course,” interrupted Giordino. “Nuclear-bomb tests were being held at Bikini at that time.”
Steiger rose to his feet and stood motionlessly. “Are you implying that Vixen 03 was transporting nuclear warheads?”
“I am not implying anything,” Pitt said casually. “I am merely offering a possibility, and an intriguing one at that. Why else would the Air Force put the lid on a missing plane and throw up a smoke screen of misleading information to cloud the disappearance? Why else would a flight crew risk almost certain death to ride down a crippled aircraft in the mountains instead of taking to their parachutes and allowing it to crash, perhaps in or near a populated area?”
“There’s one vital point that sinks your theory: the government would have never given up searching for a lost cargo of nuclear warheads.”
“I admit you have me there. It does seem odd that enough destruction to obliterate half the country would be left to litter the environment.”
Suddenly Steiger wrinkled his nose. “What is that godawful stench?”
Giordino hurriedly rose and moved over to the stove. “I think the metal tag is done.”
“What are you boiling it in?”
“A combination of vinegar and baking soda. They’re all I could find that would do the trick.”
“Are you sure it will bring out the etching?”
“Couldn’t say. I’m not a chemist. Won’t hurt it, though.”
Steiger threw up his hands in exasperation and turned to Pitt. “I knew
Vixen 03 I 53
I should have saved this stuff for professional lab technicians.”
Giordino calmly ignored Steiger’s remark and delicately lifted the plate out of the boiling water with two forks and patted it dry with a dish towel. Then he held it up to the light, turning it at different angles.
“What do you see?” Pitt asked.
Giordino set the small aluminum plate down on the table in front of them. He inhaled deeply, his features taking on a grave expression.
“A symbol,” he said tensely. “The symbol for radioactivity.”
Operation Wild Rose
Natal, South Africa-October 1988
To the casual eye the great trunk of the dead baobab tree looked like one of a thousand others spread about the northeast coastal plain of Natal Province, South Africa. There was no way of telling why it had died or how long ago. It stood in a kind of grotesque beauty, its leafless branches clutching at an azure sky with gnarled, woody fingers while its rotting bark crumbled into a medicinal-smelling humus on the ground. There was, however, one startling difference that set this dead baobab tree apart from the others: its trunk was hollowed out and a man crouched inside, intently peering through a small aperture with a pair of binoculars.
It was an ideal hiding place, blueprinted from some long-forgotten manual on guerrilla warfare. Marcus Somala, section leader of the African Army of Revolution, was proud of his handiwork. Two hours was all it had taken him the previous night to scoop out the spongy core of the tree and stealthily scatter the debris deep within the encircling brush. Once comfortably settled inside, he did not have to wait long for his concealment to pass its first test.
Shortly after dawn a black field-worker from the farm that Somala was
58
VIXEN 03p>
observing wandered by, hesitated, and then relieved himself against the baobab. Somala watched, smiling inwardly. He felt an impulse to slip the blade of his long curved Moroccan knife out the sight hole and slice off the worker’s penis. The impulse was to Somala an amusing one, nothing more. He did not indulge himself with stupid actions. He was a professional soldier and a dedicated revolutionist, a seasoned veteran of nearly a hundred raids. He was proud to serve in the front line of the crusade to eradicate the last vestige of the Anglo cancer from the African continent.
Ten days had passed since he led his ten-man section team from their base camp in Mozambique over the border into Natal. They had moved only at night, skirting the known paths of the police security patrols and hiding in the bushveld from the helicopters of the South African Defence Force. It had been a grueling trek. The October spring in the Southern Hemisphere was unusually cool, and the underbrush seemed eternally clammy from constant rains.
When at last they had reached the small farming township of Umkono, Somala stationed his men according to the plan given him by his Vietnamese adviser. Each man was to scout a farm or military facility for five days, gathering information for future raids. Somala had assigned the Fawkes farm to himself.
After the field-worker had ambled off to begin his day’s labor, Somala refocused his binoculars and scanned the Fawkes spread. The majority of the cleared acreage, waging a constant battle against the encroaching sea of surrounding bush and grassland, was planted in sugarcane. The remainder was mostly pasture for small herds of beef and dairy cattle with a bit of tea and tobacco thrown in. There was also a garden plot behind the main house, containing vegetables for the personal consumption of the Fawkes family.
A stone barn was used to store the cattle feed and crop fertilizers. It stood apart from a huge shed that covered the trucks and farm equipment. A quarter of a mile beyond, situated beside a meandering stream, was a compound that housed a community of what Somala guessed to be nearly fifty workers and their families, along with their cattle and goats.
The Fawkes house-more of an estate, actually-dominated the crest of a hill and was neatly landscaped by rows of gladiola and fire lilies edging a closely cropped lawn. The picturesque scene was spoiled by a ten-foot chain-link fence topped by several strands of barbed wire that guarded the house on all four sides.
Somala studied the barrier closely. It was a stout fence. The support
Operation Wild Rose I 59
poles were thick and were no doubt buried deep in encased concrete. Nothing short of a tank could penetrate that mesh, he calculated. He shifted his glasses until a solidly muscled man with a repeating rifle strapped to a shoulder came into view. The guard leaned casually against a small wooden shelter that stood next to a gate. Guards could be surprised and easily disposed of, Somala mused, but it was the thin lines leading from the fence to the basement of the house that diluted his confidence. He didn’t require the presence of an electrical engineer to tell him the fence was connected to a generator. He could only speculate as to the strength of the voltage that surged invisibly through the chain link. He noted also that one of the wires led into the guard’s shelter. That meant a switch had to be thrown by a guard whenever the gate was opened, and this was the Achilles’ heel of the Fawkes defense.