Skate.

“I was specifically told by Washington,” the ferry captain told his mate, “not to allow anyone on board other than the NR-1B’s scientific party and Ms. Price’s assistants, and she is only permitted a camera interview with them for later broadcast, subject to the military censors and—”

“We’re coming aboard! Stand by to assist!”

Admiral Jensen, watching through his binoculars from the Keystone ramp, was as perplexed by the boarding party as Marte Price aboard the ferry. But to the Marines, there was nothing perplexing about it — it was FUBAR, situation normal, fucked up beyond all recognition, a classic case, the age of electronic wizardry notwithstanding, of one branch of the government not knowing what another was doing. In this case, someone, somewhere, had failed to notify the admiral that the military airlift flight scheduled to deliver NR-1B’s two scientists and their crew from the east coast to NAS Whidbey had been canceled due to anonymous but “credible” bomb threats. Instead of having the NR-1B’s personnel from out of Newport en route to Keystone, the new delivery point selected was Port Townsend.

As the Skate’s RIB approached, the bellicose ferry captain, reverting to his high school macho in front of Marte Price, was about to call up the four heavily armed military police who had been assigned to guard the NR-1B team on the cafeteria deck.

Marte, quick to see the possibility of tragedy and brushing her hair back, its sheen enhanced by the early morning sun, said, “Captain, you’re handling this superbly. I wonder, though, if it wouldn’t be just as well to lend them a hand. You know, everyone’s so jittery these days. Besides, I was wondering if I could get a shot of you welcoming the Navy aboard. Brothers in arms, you know. I think the American people need to see that sort of thing. What d’you think?” Her smile could have launched a thousand RIBs.

“Er, well—” began the captain.

Marte was hurrying the cameraman. “You think you could put on your cap?” she asked the ferry skipper. “I think that would give us just the right air of authority.”

“What — my cap?”

“Yes.”

“Huh — I guess, if you think—”

The Skate’s mate snapped him a salute from the RIB. That did it. Marte heard an intake of air, the captain’s chest visibly expanding, his waist morphing from a generous 44 to an alarmingly fit 36, possibly even a 34. The captain barked at a deckhand, “Look lively!” and brusquely indicated that the RIB party be given prompt assistance up the rope ladder. Another deckhand, hastily unfurling the wooden-slatted ladder against the ferry’s side, all but knocked the Skate’s mate out of the RIB.

“Steady on, man!” barked the captain with the authority of a Royal Navy chief.

“They’re aboard, sir,” the Skate’s OOD informed the gunship’s captain via his walkie-talkie.

“I can see that, Rolston! Who’s he got on board?”

Freeman’s RIB was taking punishment, Alvaro, at the console, doing all he could to cross the ocean swells that had rolled in through the choke point between Vancouver Island and the Olympic peninsula. Because of the rain that periodically poured down on the Olympic peninsula — up to twelve feet a year on Mount Olympus itself — hundreds of waterfalls cascaded here and there over rock cliffs into the sea, new falls born overnight as the Pacific-bred storms caused fresh erosion of the peninsula. To the bitter disappointment of Freeman’s six-man recon team, when they reached the position, the isotope anomaly had disappeared.

“Probably sucked out in the high tide’s drain-off from the strait,” said Sal, his voice all but drowned out.

“Either that,” shouted Aussie over the crashing of the nearby surf against the rugged sea-stack shoreline, “or the spill’s faded because the sub’s turned into some supply cove or something.”

No one else commented. Everyone, including Aussie and Sal, were gripping hard on the handrails midships of the inflatable, its fiberglass keel smacking hard into swells, over unbroken crests, then sliding fast into the troughs. Had it not been for Alvaro’s seamanship, the RIB would have capsized in a backflip several times over. The Mexican-American saw that one of the SpecFor warriors, the Welsh-American they called Choir Williams, was turning a faint yet distinct shade of green, made even more sickly looking by the drizzle of rain that continuously leaked from the gray status along the coast and the dreary mist, which, unlike the cloud cover sixty miles to the east, around Whidbey, had not yet been burned off by the pale disk of autumn sun.

“We’ll go in the quieter water, wait till this rain passes,” Alvaro assured Choir, indicating a natural rock- strewn, crescent-shaped harbor off to their left on the port quarter. The harbor, about a half mile across and several hundred yards deep, was fed by a massive, flood-controlled waterfall, about fifty feet high and three hundred feet wide, plunging precipitously from the hundred-foot-high cliffs that ran the whole curve of the beach, forming a vine- and bush-covered amphitheater. It looked as if the side of a volcanic seamount had been blown out eons before.

Choir raised one hand in thanks to Alvaro as the RIB passed through the pummeling surf, his other hand still white from gripping the roll bar. The rough forty-three-mile trip out from Port Angeles had convinced Freeman even more how difficult and, frankly, how useless David Brentwood would have been in the rough weather.

In less than four minutes the RIB’s shallow draft keel passed over a sandbar covered in a foot or so of water, and the six men immediately felt the change, their grips on the hold bars relaxing, the roar of the cataracts plunging all along the cliffs a welcome sound after the constant, bullying roar and buffeting of the open sea. Aussie became excited for a moment, pointing to something man-sized in one of the many channels that ran out from under the heavily vegetated cliffs in the area. A second later he saw the figure reappearing from behind the curtain of the waterfall into one of the water channels.

“Seal!” said Salvini.

“Sea lion,” Aussie corrected him.

Freeman took his cell phone from its double Ziploc bag and called Admiral Jensen at Keystone, the much- relieved COMSUBPAC-GRU-9 commander telling the general that the NR-1B’s two scientists, two officers, and three enlisted men had just arrived at Keystone. Jensen didn’t bother to bore the general with the “screw-up,” as the Marine CO had succinctly described the fracas between the Navy’s Skate and the Washington Ferry Corporation’s captain.

Now that he’d found nothing after having put a “rush” on the NR-1B, Freeman felt a rare of case of embarrassment. For his part, Jensen was annoyed, to put it mildly — after all the trouble he’d gone to get the research sub to the West Coast. Then again, Freeman had been the only one who’d offered to help him when he was getting flak from everyone for not having assured a “mine free” strait. And it was Freeman, Jensen knew, who’d given him credit, via CNN, for the fifty-seven-mile coast rerun by Darkstar. So the admiral said nothing, other than to tell Freeman that the NR-1B would be ready if and when Freeman found anything. Besides, there was still a lot the NR-1B could do, the consensus in the Pentagon being that it was the craft best suited to hunt down another small sub.

Freeman glimpsed the sparkle of light beyond the lacy edge of the mammoth waterfall. The nanosecond of recognition was followed by his shouted warning to the other five on the RIB. Whether Aussie, Choir, Salvini, and the diver, Peter Dixon, like the general himself, had reacted more quickly than coxswain Alvaro because of their long combat experience was impossible to discern. Perhaps it was because Alvaro was the most visible, standing up at the RIB’s steering console. In any event, it was Jorge who took the full burst of machine-gun fire, its sparkle of one-in-four tracer now long white darts shattering the console’s Perspex and knocking the young man overboard, the bloody cavity that a second before had been his chest, awash in the wake of the RIB.

The inflatable, with no one at its console, spun out of control, slicing through the smaller but still powerful chop in the bay at such an acute angle that it teetered and would have capsized had Choir not quickly moved from his hunkered-down position behind the roll bar and grabbed the wheel. He brought the sixteen-footer about smartly, cutting through the RIB’s earlier wake and, with his comrades gripping the two hold bars, shoved the throttle to full power, enabling the RIB to surge well away from the waterfall. Choir then just as quickly cut power at the water curtain’s halfway point, where the waterfall was so voluminous that whoever had fired the burst at the RIB would no longer be able to see it.

“Rocky island, one o’clock!” Freeman shouted at Choir. “Take us there. Aussie, Dixon, grab your Draeger, recon beyond the falls. See what we’re up against. Sal and I will man the island with the M-60 and A.T. anchor.”

Вы читаете Choke Point
Добавить отзыв
ВСЕ ОТЗЫВЫ О КНИГЕ В ИЗБРАННОЕ

0

Вы можете отметить интересные вам фрагменты текста, которые будут доступны по уникальной ссылке в адресной строке браузера.

Отметить Добавить цитату