group generally known as the Islands of Four Mountains, which thrust out of the sea three hundred miles west of Unalaska’s Dutch Harbor.
“A Bogey?” suggested Lana, surprised at her ready use of the preflight lingo she’d picked up at the base.
The commander shook his head. “Nothing on our radar. Nothing at all.”
“But,” interjected Lana, “our radar at Shemya Island and Adak should have picked up anything coming our way. I mean—”
“Exactly,” said Morin, mildly irritated that she knew enough to ask the question. “Shemya’s phased radar and Adak Naval Station
“Then how,” pressed Lana, “would a missile—”
“That’s why I’ve asked you here,” said Morin. “To check out Alen. If they’d goofed up, accidentally fired off a flare or whatever, it might have been what Mr. Bering believes—”
“It wasn’t a flare, Colonel. I’d bet old
“Oh.”
“It was going way too fast for a flare, Commander,” continued Bering. “I’ve seen enough of those from Search and Rescue to know the difference.” Without taking his hands out of his pockets, Bering indicated the map. “Looked to be coming
Now Lana realized precisely what it was that the commander was worried about. If a missile had been fired at the Hercules from a submarine, then it most likely had advance notice of the aircraft’s destination and so its probable flight path. Lana was about to assure the commander that she certainly hadn’t told anyone, but—”I–I did mention it to Nurse Reilley when I found out I couldn’t go for the ride.”
“The nurse who went instead of you?” asked Morin.
“Yes. She took my place. But she would hardly have had time to tell anyone—”
“I’m not saying she did,” responded the commander. “But all it takes is for someone to send a millisecond burst signal to the sub. At least a dozen or so people on the base knew the plane was doing a supply run to Adak.”
“But wouldn’t we pick up a signal like that?” asked Lana.
“Yes, and I’ve checked all signals as well as fighter patrol times — and I’ve had the reports from Adak and Shemya cross-referenced on that day. Nothing. They don’t show any sub intercept.”
Lana thought he’d snap the pencil in half as he sought an explanation.
“I don’t think you’ve got a security leak,” said Bering. “Plane just happened to be there. Too much damn coincidence otherwise.”
The pencil was still, Morin clearly relieved by Bering’s implied conclusion — that no one in Morin’s command was an agent, that it was simply coincidence, that the downing of the Hercules had occurred in Dutch Harbor’s area of responsibility.
But the commander’s satisfaction was short-lived as he reminded himself how the military was loath to believe in coincidence. It was too often a cover-up for incompetence. And God knew there were enough dissatisfied people posted to the Aleutians that he couldn’t dismiss the possibility his command had a leak. In any event, it was a case of cover your ass, which meant checking out the Four Mountains as well as requesting a security sweep of any civilians on the island, many of them of Aleut-Russian heritage from the days when Dutch Harbor was used as the main base for Russian fur sealers. The Aleuts had been poorly treated during World War II, many interned in run-down fish canneries on the Alaskan mainland. It was quite possible the Russians had infiltrated at least a few of them. On the one hand, if he sent any of his men to do a search of the four small islands, it would raise the question of a possible spy or spies, and it wasn’t a smart move careerwise to stir anything up if you couldn’t deliver. On the other hand, if an aircraft could be brought down anywhere over the thousand-mile arc, America’s back door was open.
Perhaps it had nothing to do with anyone on the island-perhaps a missile was fired from a sub. After all, in the Second World War Japanese subs — the big I boats — had shelled Oregon and California. But then, how could Morin explain how the noise of an enemy sub had gone undetected, given the extensive network of sonar arrays around the Aleutians? A sub story just wouldn’t stand up. But if Bering was right, if a missile
Morin asked Bering if, seeing he knew the island so well, he would be prepared to act as scout for a search- and-destroy mission to the Four Islands.
Bering thought about it and said he would — on one condition.
“Which is?” pressed the commander anxiously.
Bering replied that as an “independent fisherman,” he didn’t have the benefits of any group medical insurance, especially as he was separated from his wife, and that now his two teenagers were in “braces,” the cost of dental treatment was keeping him broke.
“Leave it to me,” said Morin. “From here on in, you’re covered. I’ll get the paperwork done this afternoon. Don’t worry about it.” The commander’s gaze shifted to Lana, then back to Bering. “I’ll organize a platoon and transport. But I want this whole operation kept under wraps.”
“Then we should use my trawler,” put in Bering. “If there is anyone on the islands up to no good, there’s no point in advertising we’re coming.”
“But you’ll have to land somewhere. They’ll see your trawler coming whether they suspect anything or not.”
“Not if I go in fog, they won’t. And that’s the forecast for the next week.”
“All right,” said Morin, smiling appreciatively. “Sounds good to me.”
“Okay,” said Bering enthusiastically. “Would you like to come along, Miss Brentwood?”
She blushed despite herself. Was he serious? “I’ll stay here with the commander.”
“Lucky commander,” said Bering mischievously. Morin was decidedly embarrassed.
As she and Bering left the Quonset hut, the sky above them was studded with stars, but even now wisps of fog could be seen sneaking into the harbor, and for want of anything better to say, Lana noted the obvious. “Think we’ve seen the end of the good weather for a while.”
“I’ll be back,” said Bering. “I’d like to take you out when I get back. Okay with you?”
“Why — yes, I suppose—”
“Great.”
The next minute he was gone, into the night, heading back toward the docks of Dutch Harbor, his fisherman’s wet-weather coat draped over his arm — like a helpless slave, Lana thought, and she felt a stirring in her.
“Heard the scuttlebutt?” asked her roommate almost the moment she returned to barracks.
“What?” asked Lana.
“They think there’s some Commie missile base down on one of those islands. We’re probably going to see some action around here shortly.”
Lana didn’t know what shocked her most — news of the search-and-destroy mission having already leaked or that her roommate seemed so eager to see “action”—which meant broken bodies for the Waves.
“After this gig,” the girl told Lana, “in Civvy Street they’ll be begging us to work in OR.”
“If,” said Lana, “there’ll be any ORs left.”
“Ah — we’ll win, honey.”
“Like we did in Vietnam,” said Lana.
“You’re a gloom cloud all of a sudden. Morin chew your ass out?”
“No.”
“Cheer up then. Nobody’s going to push the big button. They’re not crazy, lady.”