Winter Hawk (78 page)

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Authors: Craig Thomas

Tags: #Mi-24 (Attack Helicopter), #Adventure Stories

BOOK: Winter Hawk
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The repair work had been in progress for more than three hours. On the screen, the bloated form of one of the cosmonauts hung m the blackness alongside the laser weapon. The faulty payload
assist
module had been detached and returned to the
Raketoplaris
cargo bay in order to affect the necessary repairs. Now, as he
watched, a
second cosmonaut—only the shuttle's pilot had remained
aboard
Kutuzov
—hovered into view, propelling slowly ahead of him module's bulk. It was one third of the battle station's size
and cit'
cular, except where its single rocket motor narrowed into a
funne •

The cosmonauts, even wearing their backpacks, seemed dwarfed by the two machines they now had to reunite. It was perhaps a matter of less than two hours, then a further two hours, and—

Rodin—where was Rodin? He looked up toward the windows of the command room. Figures behind glass. Yes, there he was, arms moving in emphasis, the mad conductor of this mad orchestral score. Unable to settle or remain still. Moving between
Lightning
and Gant. Shaped by the progress of the repairs, which had gone well, and the hunt for the invisible Gant.

On the screen, the payload assist module was nudged toward the laser weapon, approaching it with the caution of a servant bearing bad news. The two cosmonauts, using their backpacks and yet still moving with almost stonelike slowness, closed on one another, handling the inertia of the PAM, slowing it, directing its bulk beneath the waiting battle station. Time was elephantine, yet it hurried, making him want to shriek. This was all the time there was. Four hours—and when they had passed, the world would have changed.

He rubbed his hand through his hair. Then drank cold coffee. The guard, on the other side of the foldaway table on which breakfast had been served—with a sense of mockery clearly emanating from Rodin, who must have organized the meal—belched softly, then picked his back teeth with a used matchstick. Priabin had eaten as if on holiday—or like the proverbial condemned man, he corrected himself.

On the giant screen, the two cosmonauts danced with heavy, slow movements around the PAM, maneuvering it into position. Their dialogue and the replies and instructions of mission control were no more than a background noise, like Muzak.

The hours of Gant's continuing escape had been like a mounting fever, maddening Rodin. His figure had vanished from the windows of the command section. Priabin, itching with a renewed assault of tension, watched the door below the line of windows. As if waiting for an actor to enter, stage right. Hearing a babble of sound that could not submerge itself into the dialogue with
Kutuzov
, he turned his head.

At the map table, someone was looking up toward the door into the main room, other officers were bending closer to the table. The
e
*citement was unignorable. They'd found him, he'd been sighted . . .

Rodin strode across the room toward the table. Priabin stood up. The guard seemed indifferent to his movement. Rodin's voice was peremptory with inquiry, but bearing an undercurrent of congratulation in it, too. His staff officers crowded around, peering, gesticulating. There was no doubt about it. The dialogue with the shuttle and the images on the giant screen were peripheral, almost subliminal. The center of the room was the map table.

Priabin felt physically sick with utter weariness. He tasted the fat in which his breakfast had been cooked; the coffee seemed lodged at the back of his throat. He tasted too many cigarettes. He understood why he had watched the passage of slow time only on the screen and not looked at any of the numerous clocks in mission control. Subconsciously, he had known the exact moment dawn had broken over the border and seeped through the Caucasus mountains. And every minute since then had wound him like a watch spring, tighter and tighter. His hand gripped the edge of the rickety table. He felt dizzy. Words leaked like the chants of a distant but approaching mob. . . hit . . . confirmed hit, on fire ..."

"Head-on . . . can't get away." Voices from headphones, tinny and stridently unreal, from remote microphones, repeated and emphasized by the group around the table. Hands tracing shapes and courses, heads bent to peer at the culmination. ". . . is it, sir?"

"... there."

". . . contact lost. Gunship has visual ..."

"What of—?"

"Here, just here."

"... destroyed ..."

Priabin was less than halfway across the room to the table. Peripherally, he saw the two cosmonauts like great white grubs on the screen. The battle station and its PAM seemed one single
object
now. And that was it, all of it. Then he heard:

"Fireball—completely destroyed."

Cheering, congratulation—nausea returning, on which he gagged. Looking up after a moment, he saw Rodin staring in his direction. The general's smile was one of cold, certain satisfaction. His right hand, slightly extended, was closed in a firm grip.

". . . chute opening—there's a parachute opening,
comrade
General."

Rodin seemed to falter, as if ill or dizzy.

Priabin felt his limbs unfreeze. He hurried to the table. A statt officer moved as if to interpose his body between the general and some attack. Rodin glared into Priabin's eyes like a hard,
explosi
ve
light.

"What—" Priabin began.

". . . devil's luck," he heard Rodin exclaim in a pinched, cheated voice before the old man turned to the map table. His knuckles whitened on the table edge.

. . gunship may get there," someone said breathlessly. The atmosphere around the table was choking and airless. "Two more aircraft closing quickly." The tone was that of someone repeating an unviable alternative to a set of facts. "Down—he's down."

"Kill him," Rodin managed to say. "Kill him."

"The gunship's going in—tricky, they've spotted him, the chute's dropping over him, marking the spot. Rocket and cannon, sir—they're using everything ..."

Rodin lurched rather than walked away from the table. His hand waved the others away from him. The subliminal noises of the dialogue with the shuttle impinged on Priabin's hearing. It was as if he had lowered the volume of voices around the map, not wishing to hear.

". . . can't see anything now . .

"He can't survive that, surely?"

"Let the gunship take care of it. How many more in the immediate area—what? Let them wait until the snow's cleared—•"

Someone had taken command for the moment. Priabin heard no more, squeezing the voices from his head like water from a sponge. Rodin was beside him, his eyes filled with apprehensions and blame.

"You," he said.

Rodin seemed to have aged. When a lieutenant appeared beside him and saluted, it was some moments before his presence seemed to register.

"What—"

"Sir, Stavka, sir." He held out a message form, hastily scribbled upon. "Coded signal. They're awaiting—" Rodin waved the man away, snatching at the flimsy sheet and tearing it. The lieutenant subsided to attention some yards away. The noise at the map table had subsided, too, into a concentrated murmur. Time had dragged free of the images on the screen and raced now. Moments only before Gant was obliterated like the old aircraft in which he had escaped.

Not quite escaped.

Rodin waved the message form beneath Priabin s nose.

"Decision postponed," he said. "Decision postponed." That's

Stavka
's position." He turned, glanced at the table, then faced Priabin once more. "One man, and they're afraid of him. I shall acknowledge." He smiled, very faintly and with evident cunning. "I shall inform Stavka that no proof exists, that the American has no proof."

"You can't—"

"I will. At once."

Priabin's frame quivered. He felt a chill of fear. It was as he had suspected. Rodin was beyond logic. As if in explanation, Rodin added:

"My wife died an hour ago. She never recovered consciousness."

It was like a bulletin rather than an expression of loss. The indifferent voice of printed lines in a column of newspaper deaths. All restraint had gone. His face displayed no signs of grief, and little shock. The man had been hollowed out like a rotten tooth. There was nothing left inside him. Only the uniform and what he believed was his duty were left.

Mad. Dangerously, frighteningly mad. To himself, Rodin was sane and certain.

Priabin whirled around to the table behind them.

"The gunships spotted him," someone called out. "Where's the closest backup aircraft?"

"It's twenty miles to the border—fifteen at least."

"Not in a million years—no chance."

Priabin turned away. Rodin was smiling, almost sympathetically. Yes, his emptiness was justified. They'd kill Gant, recover the cassettes, and no one would ever know. No one. Gant was a dead man.

"OK, Dick—what can we do?"

Shock, hope, deep anxiety all fought against the clinging of the Valium he had taken in order to assure himself of sleep. He struggled to a more erect position against the padded headboard of the bed. Gunther was still leaning over him like a doctor.

"What can we do?" he repeated, looking at his hands. They quivered to the register of a distant earthquake. The signal from Gant had shocked with its sudden glimpse of the impossible, and he felt he had not caught his breath since then.

Gunther's briefing continued to assail him, like the effect of successive waves against an old, crumbling seawall. He wanted to gi
ve
in to hope, and was terrified of its illusory beauty. Gant, alive—

"We can't go in, Mr. President," Gunther offered, as if replying to some wild suggestion already voiced. "That's not possible. Their activity in the air, and now on the ground, is—well, sir, it's frantic."

"Then they'll—?"

Danielle had slipped out of bed as soon as Gunther's knock had awakened her. Calvin smelled coffee, heard the plopping of the percolator. She moved against subdued lighting like an illusion. He rubbed the puttylike contours of his face with both hands.

"Sir, I don't know. We don't know whether he has Cactus Plant with him, we only know that he transmitted the Mayday signal, he used his code ID, and he said mission accomplished. Their response confirms he has something, some proof, but we can't even begin to guess what it is. His aircraft was shot down, whatever it was, but he has to be alive."

"You're certain?"

"They're not looking for a body, not with those forces. Sure, they're putting out a smokescreen—searching for a crashed transport airplane is the story—but they're using
spetsnaz
codes and channels and paratroops—just to look for bodies?" Gunther raised his hands. "There are Desantnye Vojska units [parachute troops] in the area—they've just been parachuted in and there are more on the way. Sir, he's alive and in big trouble. He must have the proof we need!"

"And they're terrified he's going to get it out—to us," Calvin murmured. Then he looked up into Gunther's shadowed face. "But how in hell can we?" He raised his hands in a gesture of defeat and surrender, but slapped them impatiently back on the bedclothes. "Hell, what can we do?"

"John," he heard Danielle say, her voice strangely pained. He looked up. Her dark hair clouded around her small face. "He's alive. It doesn't matter. ..." Her voice trailed away into the empty shadows of the room. He nodded, as if she had been his spokesperson and voiced exactly what he had intended to say.

Gunther stepped back as Calvin swung his legs out of bed, stood up, and put on his robe. One of his jokes. Donald Duck across the shoulders of the toweling material. And a NASA shuttle badge sewn on the breast pocket. But as if he had donned a uniform, his movements became at once crisper, more alert. He rubbed his hair to tidiness.

"You'll come down?" Gunther began.

"Yes. At
once."
He
thrust his feet into his slippers, and held Danielle's wrists briefly as she handed him coffee.
The
presidential
seal minutely painted on the white china. He nodded reassuringly at his wife. Her face seemed a mirror of his own. Hope fading, the anxiety mounting. "Yes, I'll come down to the code room. What monitoring do they have down there?"

"Full links with the Pentagon, the NSA, Langley."

"Good. What have we—?"

"There's a KH-11 satellite over the Caucasus. Full daylight and little cloud cover. Good transmission situation. Washington can see quite a lot of the activity. Gunships, fighters, troop transports. And now troops on the ground in numbers."

"Terrain?"

"Mountainous, all the way to the border. Difficult for him."

"And for them."

"How far inside is he?"

"Between ten and fifteen miles, their best estimate."

"That little?"

"That little. Maybe that's as bad as a hundred, even a thousand. They have crack troops swarming all over the place."

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