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Red Storm Rising Part 54

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"When this all over, what will you do?" Her eyes held a great deal of interest now.

"One thing at a time." He was thinking in terms of hours, not days or weeks. If we do survive, then what? Put that one aside. First comes survival. You think about "after the war," and there won't be any. "I'm too tired to think about that. Let's get some sleep."

She fought it. He knew that she wanted to know things he hadn't consciously considered, but she was more fatigued than she'd admitted, and ten minutes later she was asleep. She snored. Mike hadn't noticed before. This was no china doll. She had strengths and weaknesses, good points and bad. She had the face of an angel, but she'd gotten herself pregnant-so what! Edwards thought. She's braver than she's beautiful. She saved my life when that chopper came in on us. A man could do far worse.

Edwards commanded himself to lie down and sleep. He couldn't think about this. First he had to survive.

SCOTLAND.



"If the area checks out?" the major asked. He had never really expected Edwards and his party to make it this far, not with eight thousand Russian troops on the island. Every time he thought about those five people trekking over bare, rocky ground and Soviet helicopters circling overhead, his skin crawled.

"Around midnight, I think," the man from Special Operations Executive said. You could see the smile crinkling the skin around his eyepatch. "You chaps had better decorate this young man. I've been in his boots myself. You cannot imagine how difficult it is to do what these people have done. And having a b.l.o.o.d.y Hind helicopter sit right on top of them! I've always said it's the quiet little b.a.s.t.a.r.ds that you have to watch out for."

"In any case, it's time we got some professionals in to back them up," p.r.o.nounced the captain of Royal Marines.

"Make sure they take in some food," suggested the USAF major.

LANGLEY AIR FORCE BASE, VIRGINIA.

"So, what's the problem?" Nakamura asked.

"There are irregularities in some of the rocket motor casings," the engineer explained.

" 'Irregularities' meaning they go boom?"

"Possibly," the engineer admitted.

"Super," said Major Nakamura. "I'm supposed to carry that monster seventeen miles straight the h.e.l.l up and then find out who goes into orbit, me or it!"

"When this sort of rocket explodes, it doesn't do much. It just breaks into a couple of pieces that burn out by themselves."

"I imagine from seventeen miles off it doesn't look like much-what about when the sucker ignites twenty feet from my F-15?" A long way to skydive, Buns thought.

"I'm sorry, Major. This rocket motor is nearly ten years old. n.o.body checked our spec sheet on proper storage after it was mated with the ASAT warhead. We've checked it out with X rays and ultrasound. I think it's okay, but I might be wrong," the man from Lockheed said. Of the six remaining ASAT missiles, three had been decertified by the man for cracks in the solid-fuel propellant. The other three were question marks. "You want the truth or you want a song and dance?"

"You gotta fly it, Major," the deputy commander of Tactical Air Command said. "It's your decision."

"Can we rig it so the bird doesn't ignite until I'm clear?"

"How long will you need?" the engineer asked. Buns thought about her speed and maneuverability at that alt.i.tude.

"Say ten or fifteen seconds."

"I'll have to make a small change in the programming software, but that shouldn't be much of a problem. We'll have to make sure that the missile will retain enough forward velocity to keep its launch att.i.tude, though. You sure that's enough time?"

"No. We'll have to check that out on the simulator, too. How long we got?"

"Minimum two days, maximum six days. Depends on the Navy," replied the General.

"Great."

STORNOWAY, SCOTLAND.

"Here's some good news," Toland announced. "An Air Force F-15 Eagle fighter was flying over a fast convoy north of the Azores. Two Bears came looking for the s.h.i.+ps and the Eagle got 'em both. That makes three in the past four days. The Backfire raid appears to have aborted."

"What's their position?" the group captain asked.

Toland ran his hand along the chart, checking lat.i.tude and longitude against the numbers on the dispatch form. "Looks like right about here, and that datum is twenty minutes old."

"That puts them over Iceland in just under two hours."

"What about tankers?" the Navy fighter commander asked.

"Not on such short notice."

"We can stretch that far with two fighters, using another two for buddy stores, but it only gives them about twenty minutes on station, under five on burner, and a ten-minute reserve when they get back here." The fighter boss whistled. "Close. Too close. We have to wave off on this."

A phone rang. The British base commander grabbed.

"Group Captain Mallory. Yes . . . very well, scramble." He hung up. Klaxons went off at the ready shack half a mile away. Fighter pilots raced to their aircraft. "Ivan's settled the argument in any case, Commander. Your radar aircraft report heavy jamming activity inbound from the north."

The commander raced out the door and jumped into a jeep.

NORFOLK, VIRGINIA.

The drive from SACLANT headquarters took ten minutes. The Marines at the main gate were checking everyone and everything carefully, even a Chevy with a three-star flag. They drove to the waterfront amid an unending flurry of activity. Trains rolled down the tracks set in the streets, repair shops and testing facilities worked around the clock. Even the McDonald's on the road immediately outside was working a twenty-four-hour day, feeding hamburgers and fries to the men who took a few minutes for nourishment. For sailors spending a day or so on land it was an important, if seemingly trivial, touchstone. The car turned right as it reached the docks, past the submarine piers to the ones that held destroyers.

"She's brand new, only a month in commission, just about long enough to calibrate the electronics, and they must have shaved some time on that," the Admiral said. "Captain Wilkens did continuous workups on the transit from San Diego, but nothing with helicopters yet. PACFLT kept hers, and I can't give you a regular helo complement either. All we have left is one Seahawk-F variant, a prototype helo they were evaluating down at Jacksonville."

"The one with the dipping sonar?" Ed Morris asked. "I can live with that. How aboat a driver who knows how to use it?"

"It's covered. Lieutenant Commander O'Malley. We pulled him out of a training billet at Jax."

"I've heard the name. He was doing systems qualifications on Moosbrugger when I was tactical action officer on John Rodgers. Yeah, he knows the job."

"Have to drop you off here. I'll be back in an hour, after I have a look at what's left of the Kidd."

Reuben James. Her raked clipper bow marked with hull number 57 hung over the dock like a guillotine blade. His weariness momentarily forgotten, Morris stepped out of the Chevy to examine his new command with all the quiet enthusiasm of a man with his newborn child.

He'd seen FFG-7-cla.s.s frigates, but never been aboard one. Her severe hull lines reminded him of a Cigarette racing yacht. Six five-inch mooring lines secured her to the pier, but the sleek form already seemed to be straining at them. At only 3900 tons full load, not a large s.h.i.+p but manifestly a fast one to go in harm's way.

Her superstructure was an aesthetic embarra.s.sment, with all the grace of a brick garage, topped with antenna whips and radar masts that looked like they had been built by a child's erector set, but Morris saw the functional simplicity of the design. The frigate's forty missiles were tucked away in circular racks forward. Her boxy after deckhouse contained enough room for a pair of deadly ASW helicopters. Her hull was sleek because speed required it. Her superstructure was boxy because it had to be. This was a wars.h.i.+p, and whatever beauty Reuben James might have had was accidental.

Sailors wearing blue s.h.i.+rts and jeans moved rapidly across three gangways, bringing supplies aboard for an immediate sailing. Morris walked briskly to the after gangway. A Marine guard saluted him at the foot of the brow and an officer on the frigate's deck frantically ordered preparations to receive his new CO. The s.h.i.+p's bell was struck four times, and Commander Ed Morris a.s.sumed his new ident.i.ty.

"Reuben James, arriving."

Morris saluted the colors, then the officer of the deck.

"Sir, we didn't expect you for another-" the lieutenant blurted.

"How's the work going?" Morris cut him off.

"Two more hours, tops, sir."

"Fine." Morris smiled. "We can worry about the Mickey Mouse later. Get back to work, Mister-"

"Lyles, sir. s.h.i.+p control officer."

And what the h.e.l.l is that? Morris wondered. "Okay, Mr. Lyles. Where's the XO?"

"Right here, skipper." The executive officer had grease on his s.h.i.+rt and a smudge on his cheek. "I was in the generator room. Pardon the way I look."

"What kind of shape are we in?"

"It'll do. Full load of fuel and weapons. The tail's fully calibrated-"

"How'd you do that so fast?"

"It wasn't easy, sir, but we got it done. How's Captain Wilkens?"

"The docs say he'll be all right, but-well, he's out of the business for a while. I'm Ed Morris." Captain and executive officer shook hands.

"Frank Ernst. First time I've operated in the Atlantic Fleet." The lieutenant commander smiled crookedly. "Picked a great time for it. Anyway, we're in good shape, skipper. Everything works. Our helo pilot's up in the Combat Information Center with the tactical guys. We got Jerry the Hammer. I played ball with him at Annapolis, he's good people. We got three real good chiefs. One's a qualified officer of the deck. The crew's on the young side, but I'd say we're about as ready as you could ask. Ready to sail in two, three hours, tops. Where's your personal gear, sir?"

"It ought to be here in half an hour. What was the problem below?"

"No sweat. An oil line let go on number-three diesel generator. Yard goof, wasn't welded right. It's fixed. You'll love the engine room, skipper. On builder's trials in five-foot seas we topped out at thirty-one-and-a-half knots." Ernst raised his eyebrows. "Fast enough?"

"And the stabilizers?" Morris asked.

"They work just fine, skipper."

"What about the ASW troops?"

"Let's meet 'em."

Morris followed his XO into the superstructure. They proceeded forward between the two helicopter hangars, then to the left past officers' country and up a ladder. The Combat Information Center was located one level below and just aft of the bridge, adjoining the commanding officer's stateroom. Dark as a cave, it was newer than Pharris's and larger, but no less crammed. Twenty or more people were at work running a simulation.

"No, G.o.ddammit!" howled a loud voice. "You have to react faster. This here's a Victor, and he ain't gonna wait for you to make up your d.a.m.n mind!"

"Attention on deck! Captain in Combat," called Ernst.

"As you were," called Morris. "Who's that loud sunuvab.i.t.c.h?"

A barrel-chested man emerged from the shadows. His eyes were surrounded by crinkles from looking into too many low suns. So this was Jerry the Hammer O'Malley. He knew him only by a crackling voice on a UHF radio, and by his reputation as a sub-hunter who cared more for his trade than promotion boards.

"I guess you mean me, Captain. O'Malley. I'm supposed to drive your Seahawk-Foxtrot."

"You're right about the Victor. One of those b.a.s.t.a.r.ds blew my first s.h.i.+p near in half."

"Sorry to hear that, but you oughta know that Ivan's putting his best skippers in the Victors. She handles better than anything else they got, and that rewards a smart driver. So you were up against the varsity. Did you have him outside?"

Morris shook his head. "We were late picking him up, just coming off a sprint, and acoustical conditions weren't all that great, but we detected him, he couldn't have been more than five miles out. We had the helo after him, just about had him localized, then he broke contact neat as you please and got inside on us."

"Yeah, the Victor's good at that. Pump-fake, I call it. He starts going one way, then turns hard the other, leaves a knuckle in the water, and probably a noisemaker, too, right in the middle of it. Then he dives down under the layer and makes a quick sprint in. They've been refining that tactic for the past few years, and we've had trouble programming a reliable counter for it. You need a sharp crew in the helo, and you need good teamwork with these guys here."

"Unless you read my report, my friend, you must be a mind reader."

"Right, Captain. But all the minds I read think in Russian. The pump-fake's what the Victor is best at, and you have to pay attention, what with his ability to accelerate and turn so quick. What I've been trying to teach people is when he shows turn to port, you start thinkin' he's really going to starboard, and you slide over maybe two thousand yards and wait a minute or two, then you hammer the b.a.s.t.a.r.d hard and pickle off the fish before he can react."

"And if you're wrong?"

"Then you're wrong, skipper. Mostly, though, Ivan's predictable-if you think like a submariner and you look at his tactical situation instead of your own. You can't keep him from running away, but his mission is to close on the target, and you can make life real hard for him if he does."

Morris looked O'Malley hard in the eyes. He didn't like having the loss of his first command a.n.a.lyzed so glibly. But there was no time for these thoughts. O'Malley was a pro, and if there was a man to handle another Victor, this might be the one. "You all ready?"

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Red Storm Rising Part 54 summary

You're reading Red Storm Rising. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Tom Clancy. Already has 258 views.

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