younger, which enhanced his image to adults. The biggest members of the troop, Joey Cameron and Tom Schell, accepted Wayne's intellectual leadership without qualm and, because they could look down on the top of his head, without fear. Among themselves, the smaller boys called him 'Torquemada'.
Ray was already shrugging his backpack into place when the last of the others eased past on the narrow trail and Atkinson got within jostling distance. Lazily, self-assured: 'If your ass is on the trail at sundown, I get to kick it.' He followed this promise with a push and Ray, stumbling, trotted forward.
Atkinson reached toward Ted Quantrill with a glance, let his arm drop again, motioned Ted ahead. Ted moved off, trotting after Ray, leaving Atkinson to ponder the moment. Quantrill's part-time job at the swimming pool had toned his body, added some muscle, subtracted some humility. Sooner or later that kind of insolence could infect others, even little twits like Ray Kenney, unless stern measures were taken. Wayne considered the possibilities, pleased with his position, able to see the others ahead who could not see him. It would be necessary to enlist Joey and Tom, just to be sure; and they could provoke the Quantrill kid by using his little pal Kenney as bait. All this required isolation from Purvis Little, who would sooner accept the word of his Eagle scout than that of God Almighty. Wayne's roles at award ceremonies reflected glory on his scoutmaster, and God had never seen fit to do much of that.
To give Little his due, he took his duties seriously and imagined that he was wise. He called rest stops whenever Thad Young faltered. The spindly Thad, long on courage but short on wind, made every march a metaphor of the public education system: everyone proceeded at the pace of the slowest.
The summer sun had disappeared below Thunderhead Mountain, far to their west, before Little reached their campsite near a sparkling creek. The National Park Service still kept some areas pristine; no plumbing, no cabins. The more experienced youths erected their igloo tents quickly to escape the cutting edge of an evening breeze, then emerged again, grumbling, in aid of the fumble-fingered.
Tom Schell slapped good-naturedly at Ted's hand. “Take it easy with that stiffener rod,' he said, helping guide it through a tube in the tent fabric. “It's carbon filament. Bust it and it's hell to repair.'
'Thanks. It's brand-new; an advance birthday present,' Ted replied, imitating Schell's deft handiwork.
The Schell hands were still for a moment. “If you have a birthday up here, I don't wanta know about it.'
Ted thought about that. 'Aw, birthday hazing is kind of fun.'
'Not if Wayne's got it in for you. Look: you've got your friends and I have mine, Teddy. If you're smart, you won't talk about birthdays until we're back in Raleigh.'
'How do I get outa this chickenshit outfit,' Ted grinned as they pulled the tent fabric taut. No answer beyond a smile. Tom Schell flipped his version of the scout salute from one buttock and wandered off to help elsewhere, leaving Ted to pound anchor stakes. Ray had forgotten the stakes, sidling toward the big campfire site where Little was talking with the strangers.
When he finished, Ted fluffed his mummybag into the sheltering hemisphere of fabric. He found Ray with the others, who by now had abandoned their weiner roast to listen to the tall stranger and to gawk wistfully at his two stalwart daughters. “We'll sleep on the trail if we have to,' the man was saying. 'We're taking the first ride back toward Huntsville, Mr. Little. I hope it's still there tomorrow.'
'We've got a radio too. “Purvis Little did not try to hide his irritation. 'I heard all about that tanker. I'm sure it has nothing to do with that mess in India and even if it did, you're only scaring the boys.'
A murmur of denial swelled around him; no young male liked to let his visceral butterflies flutter before young females. The stranger said, “
'Good luck on the trail,' Little replied, his hands urging the man and his silent daughters toward the path. Then he added, with insight rare for him: 'If there's another war, those families would be better off here than in Huntsville, or any other big city.'
The older scouts were plainly disappointed to see the girls striding from sight in the afterlight. “What the heck was that all about,' Ted asked.
'Beats me,' said Thad Young. 'What's an escalation syndrome?'
'It's when one government tries to hit back at another one,' Ray said, 'and hits too hard.'
'Like Torquemada Atkinson,' Thad guessed.
Ray, following Ted back to their tent: 'Naw. That's annihilation.” Pleased with his definitions, Ray Kenney did not realize that the first was genesis of the second.
Chapter Seven
The RUS vessel
The
Chapter Eight
Eight o'clock in the morning, or almost any other time, off Novaya Zemlya was broad daylight in August. Transmuted to a campsite near Clingman's Dome in the Smoky Mountains, that same instant was illuminated only by dying embers of a showy, wasteful Friday night campfire. While Wayne Atkinson outlined the sport he proposed the following day with the help of Joey and Tom, a 'Bulgarian' radioman's assistant on the P.
Wayne did not bother to tell his confederates that hazing Ray Kenney might bring on violence with Ted Quantrill. The radioman's assistant had not told anyone his secrets, either. One, that he had been raised an Albanian, scornful of Russians; two, that he had emplaced explosives with remote detonators on every communication device he could find aboard ship, including sonar; and three, that he was one of Peking's many agents in place. The Albanian mole had been in place for over a year. Wayne Atkinson had been enjoying the sleep of the innocent for only a few minutes when, a continent and an ocean beyond, the Albanian paused at his breakfast in the ship's mess.
After a moment the man checked his watch, decided against filling his belly because of the icy water he expected to feel soon, sought his exposure gear, then paid attention to his receiver again. He encoded a signal on his watch while standing in the shadow of the broad fo'c'sle, estimating his chances of surviving the wake of 50,000 horsepower screws after a free leap of ten meters from deck to salt water.
From widely-spaced points down the length of the four-block-long tanker came sounds, hardly more than echoes, of muffled detonations. The Albanian eased himself over the rail, inhaled deeply, and leaped out as far as adrenaline could carry him.
The Albanian heard faint alarm hoots over the splash of his own struggle and the hissing passage of the P.
In itself, the ship's wake would not have been fatal. The Albanian resurfaced, pulled the 'D' ring on his flotation device, then felt it ripped from his benumbed hands by an enormous eddy — the kind of eddy that might accompany the sudden sinking of four square city blocks. The inflating raft fled in the direction of the P.