Jack Ryan 8 - Debt of Honor (54 page)

BOOK: Jack Ryan 8 - Debt of Honor
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“Computer industry, several things really. I have a masters in EE. My real specialty area is communications, how computers talk to each other. I've done a little government work. My company does plenty, but mostly on another side of the house.” Burroughs looked around the kitchen. Mrs. Oreza had prepared a light dinner, a good one, it appeared, though it was growing cold.

“You were worried about having people track in on your phone.”

“Maybe just being paranoid, but my company makes the chips for scanners that the Army uses for just that purpose.”

Oreza sat down and started shoveling some of the stir-fry onto his plate. “I don't think anything's paranoid anymore, man.”

“I hear ya, Skipper.” Burroughs decided to do the same, and looked at the food with approval. “Y'all trying to lose weight?”

Oreza grunted. “We both need to, Izzy and me. She's been taking classes in low-fat stuff.”

Burroughs looked around. Though the home had a dining room, like most retired couples (that's how he thought of them, even though they clearly were not), they ate at a small table in their kitchen. The sink and counter were neatly laid out, and the engineer saw the steel mixing and serving bowls. The stainless steel gleamed. Isabel Oreza, too, ran a tight ship, and it was plain enough who was the skipper at home.

“Do I go to work tomorrow?” she asked, her mind drilling, trying to come to terms with the change in local affairs.

“I don't know, honey,” her husband replied, his own thoughts stopped cold by the question. What would he do? Go fishing again as though nothing at all had happened?

“Wait a minute,” Pete said, still looking at the mixing bowls. He stood, took the two steps needed to reach the kitchen counter, and lifted the largest bowl. It was sixteen inches in diameter and a good five or six inches deep. The bottom was flat, perhaps a three-inch circle, but the rest of it was spherical, almost parabolic in shape. He pulled his sat-phone out of his shirt pocket. He'd never measured the antenna, but now, extending it, he saw it was less than four inches in length. Burroughs looked over at Oreza. “You have a drill?”

“Yeah, why?”

“DF, hell. I got it!”

“You lost me, Pete.”

“We drill a hole in the bottom, put the antenna through it. The bowl's made out of steel. It reflects radio waves just like a microwave antenna. Everything goes up. Hell, it might even make the transmitter more efficient.”

“You mean like, E.T. phone home?”

“Close enough, Cap'n. What if nobody's phoned home on this one?” Burroughs was still trying to think it through, coming to terms slowly with a very frightening situation. “Invasion” meant “war.” War, in this case, was between
America
and
Japan
, and however bizarre that possibility was, it was also the only explanation for the things he'd seen that day. If it was a war, then he was an enemy alien. So were his hosts. But he'd seen Oreza do some very fancy footwork at the marina.

“Let me get my drill. How big a hole you need?” Burroughs handed over the sat-phone. He'd been tempted to toss it through the air, but stopped himself on the realization that it was perhaps his most valuable possession. Oreza checked the diameter of the little button at the end of the slim metal whip and went for his tool kit.

 

 

“Hello?”

“Rachel? It's Dad.”

“You sure you're okay? Can I call you guys now?”

“Honey, we're fine, but there's a problem here.” How the hell to explain this? he wondered. Rachel Oreza Chandler was a prosecuting attorney in
Boston
, actually looking forward to leaving government service and becoming a criminal lawyer in private practice, where the job satisfaction was rarer, but the pay and hours were far better. Approaching thirty, she was now at the stage where she worried about her parents in much the same way they'd once worried about her. There was no sense in worrying Rachel now, he decided. “Could you get a phone number for me?”

“Sure, what number?”

“Coast Guard Headquarters. It's in D.C., at Buzzard's Point. I want the watch center. I'll wait,” he told her.

The attorney put one line on hold and dialed D.C. information. In a minute she relayed the number, hearing her father repeat it word for word back to her. “That's right. You sure things are okay? You sound a little tense.”

“Mom and I are just fine, honest, baby.” She hated it when he called her that, but it was probably too late to change him. Poppa would just never be PC.

“Okay, you say so. I hear that storm was really bad. You have electricity back yet?” she asked, forgetting that there hadn't been a storm at all.

“Not yet, honey, but soon, probably,” he lied. “Later, baby.”

 

 


Coast
Guard
Watch
Center
, Chief Petty Officer Obrecki, this is a nonsecure line,” the man said, just as rapidly as possible to prevent the person on the other end from understanding a single word.

“Are you telling me that that fuzzy-cheeked infant who sailed on Panache with me made chief?” It was good enough to startle the man at the other end, and the reply was comprehensible.

“This is Chief Obrecki. Who's this?”

“Master Chief Oreza,” was the answer.

“Well, how the hell are you, Portagee? I heard you retired.” The chief of the watch leaned back in his chair. Now that he was a chief himself, he could refer to the man at the other end by his nickname.

“I'm on
Saipan
. Okay, kid, listen up: put your watch officer on right now.”

“What's the matter, Master Chief?”

“No time, okay? Let's do it.”

“Fair enough.” Obrecki put the call on hold. “Commander, could you pick up on one, ma'am?”

 

 

“NMCC, this is Rear Admiral Jackson,” Robby said, tired and in a very foul mood. Only reluctantly did he lift the phone, on the recommendation of a youngish Air Force major.

“Admiral, this is Lieutenant Commander Powers, Coast Guard, over at Buzzard's Point. I have a call on the line from
Saipan
. The caller is a retired Command Master Chief. One of ours.”

Damn it, I have a broke carrier division out there, his mind grumbled. “That's nice, Commander. You want to clue me in fast? It's busy here.”

“Sir, he reports a whole lot of Japanese troops on the island at
Saipan
.”

Jackson
's eyes came up off the dispatches on his desk. “What?”

“I can patch him over now, sir.”

“Okay,” Robby said guardedly.

“Who's this?” another voice asked, old and gruff. He sounded like a chief, Robby thought.

“I'm Rear Admiral Jackson, in the
National
Military
Command
Center
.” He didn't have to order a tape on the line. They were all taped.

“Sir, this is Master Chief Quartermaster Manuel Oreza, U.S. Coast Guard, retired, serial number three-two-eight-six-one-four-zero-three-zero. I retired five years ago and moved to
Saipan
. I operate a fishing boat here. Sir, there are a lot—and I mean a whole goddamned pisspot full—of Japanese troops, uniformed and carrying arms, on this-here rock, right now, sir.”

Jackson
adjusted his hand on the phone, gesturing for another officer to pick up. “Master Chief, I hope you understand that I find that a little bit hard to believe, okay?”

“Shit, sir, you oughta see it from my side. I am looking out my window right now. I can see down on the airport and Kobler Field. I count a total of six jumbo-jet aircraft, four at the airport and two at Kobler. I observed a pair of F-15 Eagle fighters with meatball markings circling over the island a few hours ago. Question, sir, is there any sort of joint exercise under way at this time?” the voice asked. It was stone sober,
Jackson
thought. It sure as hell sounded like a command master chief.

The Air Force major listening fifteen feet away was scribbling notes, though an invitation to
Jurassic
Park
would have seemed somewhat more realistic.

“We just concluded a joint exercise, but
Saipan
didn't have anything to do with it.”

“Sir, then this ain't no fuckin' exercise. There are three car-carrier-type merchant ships tied alongside the dock up the coast from me. One of 'em's named Orchid Ace. I have personally observed military-type vehicles, I think MLRS-Mike Lima Romeo Sierra-six of those sitting in the parking lot at the commercial dock area. Admiral, you check with the Coast Guard and pull my package. I did thirty years in CG blue. I ain't dickin' around, sir. Check for yourself, the phone lines to the rock are out. The story is supposedly that we had a big windstorm, took lines down and stuff. Ain't been no windstorm, Admiral. I was out fishing all day, okay? Check with your weather pukes to confirm that one, too. There are Japanese troops on this island, wearing fatigue uniforms and under arms.”

“You got a count, Master Chief?”

The best confirmation of this insane tale, Robby thought, was the embarrassed tone of the answer to that question. “No, sir, sorry, I didn't think to count the airplanes. I'd guess three to six arrivals per hour, over the last six hours at least, probably more, but that's just a guess, sir. Wait…Kobler, one of the birds is moving, like to take off. It's a 747, but I can't make out the markings.”

“Wait. If the phones are out, how are you talking to me?” Oreza explained, giving
Jackson
a conventional number to call back on. “Okay, Master Chief. I'm going to do some checking here. I'll be back to you in less than an hour. Fair enough?”

“Yes, sir, I figure we done our part.” The line went dead.

“Major!”
Jackson
shouted without looking up. When he did that, he saw the man was there.

“Sir, I know he sounded normal and all, but—”

“But call Andersen Air Force Base right now.”

“Roger.” The young pilot went back to his desk and flipped open his Autovon directory. Thirty seconds later he looked up and shook his head, a curious look on his face.

“Is someone telling me,”
Jackson
asked the ceiling, “that a U.S. Air Force base dropped off the net today and nobody noticed?”

“Admiral, CINCPAC on your STU, sir, it's coded as C
RITIC
traffic.” C
RITIC
was a classification of priority even higher than F
LASH
, and not a prefix often used, even by a Theater Commander in Chief. What the hell,
Jackson
thought. Why not ask?

“Admiral Seaton, this is Robby Jackson. Are we at war, sir?”

 

 

His part in the exercise seemed easy enough, Zhang Han San thought. Just one flight to one place, to talk first with one person, then another, and it had gone even more easily than he'd expected.

Well, he shouldn't have been surprised, he thought, returning to the airport in the back of the embassy car.
Korea
would be cut off, certainly for a period of months, and perhaps indefinitely. To do anything else would have carried with it great dangers for a country whose military had been downsized and whose next-door neighbor was the nation with the world's largest standing army, and an historical enemy at that. Han hadn't even been forced to bring up that unseemly thought. He'd simply delivered an observation. There seemed to be difficulties between
America
and
Japan
. Those difficulties did not pertain directly to the
Republic
of
Korea
. Nor would it appear that the Republic had any immediate ability to ameliorate those differences, except perhaps as an honest broker of influence when diplomatic negotiations were undertaken, at which time the good offices of the
Republic
of
Korea
would be most welcome indeed by all sides in the dispute, certainly by
Japan
.

He'd taken no particular pleasure at the discomfort his mild words had given to his hosts. There was much to admire in the Koreans, a fact lost on
Japan
in their blind racism, Zhang thought. With luck, he might firm up the trading relationship between the PRC and the ROK, and they, too, would profit from the ultimate objective—and why not? The ROKs had no reason to love the Russians, and even less to love the Japanese. They simply had to get over their regrettable friendship with
America
and become part of a new reality. It was sufficient to the moment that they had indeed seen things his way, and that
America
's one remaining ally in this part of the world was off the playing field, their president and foreign minister having seen the light of reason. And with luck, the war, such as it was, might already be over for all intents and purposes.

 

 

“Ladies and gentlemen.” The voice came from the living room, where Mrs. Oreza had left the TV on. “In ten minutes there will be a special announcement. Please stay tuned.”

“Manni?”

“I heard it, honey.”

“You have a blank tape for your VCR?” Burroughs asked.

 

23

 

Catching Up

 

 

 

 

Robby
Jackson
's day had started off badly enough. He'd had bad ones before, including a day as a lieutenant commander at
Naval
Air
Test
Center
,
Patuxent River
,
Maryland
, in which a jet trainer had decided without any prompting at all to send him and his ejection seat flying through the canopy, breaking his leg in the process and taking him off flight status for months. He'd seen friends die in crashes of one sort or another, and even more often had participated in searches for men whom he'd rarely found alive, more often locating a slick of jet fuel and perhaps a little debris. As a squadron commander and later as a CAG, he'd been the one who'd written the letters to parents and wives, telling them that their man, and most recently, their little girl, had died in the service of their country, each time asking himself what he might have done differently to prevent the necessity of the exercise. The life of a naval aviator was filled with such days.

But this was worse, and the only consolation was that he was deputy J-3, responsible to develop operations and plans for his country's military. Had he been part of J-2, the intelligence boys, his sense of failure would have been complete indeed.

“That's it, sir, Yakota, Misawa, and Kadena are all off the net. Nobody's picking up.”

“How many people?”
Jackson
asked.

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