the weapon here for future use. Its precision would allow it to be used for many things — including, Luksha thought, targeting the North Korean army. Why they would do that from here rather than a normal base, he could not say.
“Five minutes,” said the man at the wheel.
As Luksha fine-tuned his focus on the island, a small pinpoint of light flared on the right. It burst brighter and larger, streaking from right to left, then climbing.
“Hold!” he said. “Hold all the boats!”
Luksha nearly lost his balance as the helmsman threw down the power. In the distance, the aircraft that was taking off continued to climb, its exhaust circles shaping into long ovals.
It was turning.
Luksha put his glasses down and waited. They could all hear the aircraft now.
The men knew of the weapon’s capabilities and knew that its heat could burn a hole in the boat, even though it was on the surface of the ocean.
Or it could explode the gas tank or melt the metal rivets. Death had many possibilities.
They waited, listening to the roar of the jet as it overwhelmed the sound of the water knocking against the gun-wales of the slightly overloaded vessels.
“Low-power surface radar,” said one of his men, monitoring the warning receiver. “Northeast side of the island, probably mounted on or near the derrick.”
Luksha nodded. The aircraft was still nearby, though the sound of its engines was receding. They weren’t to be targeted after all.
The most critical part of his mission had just been accomplished; he was sure now that their guesses were correct.
He would go ahead, take care of the small contingent on the island, wait for the plane to return. It would be easier once it landed; it would be out of fuel, vulnerable. He could hide his forces on the island, have the helicopters rush in.
Luksha would take the weapon. He would be honored beyond his imagination.
Unless it was now headed on a mission over Russia. In that case, he would be considered a bungler who arrived ten minutes too late.
“Signal that we are going ahead,” Luksha told his communications man. “Tell the helicopters to remain as reserves. We may not need them until the plane returns. The less attention we draw now, the better chance we will have for surprise afterwards.”
He pointed his finger toward the island for the helmsman and leaned toward the spray as they picked up speed.
Chapter 6
Howe and Timmy launched at precisely 0400 local time, the two F/22Es rocketing into the blue twilight with the studied precision of a pair of synchronized swimmers. They climbed out to twenty thousand feet as they arced westward, drawing a sweeping semicircle over the Bering Sea. The Aleutian islands spread out to their left as they flew; the Fox Islands, a small group about midway in the chain, marked the launch point for the test.
The test area was already being patrolled. Howe exchanged pleasantries with a pair of Navy jocks as they pushed south, riding a wide curve that had them roughly parallel to the northern Kuril Islands, a thousand miles off their right wings. The Velociraptors hit the southernmost point of their patrol area, then swept back toward the rendezvous with a tanker. They’d just topped off when the RC-135 with the monitoring gear came on station. There were still two hours left before the first test launch; Jolice’s turn was scheduled for two hours after that.
Howe believed there were two possibilities for detecting a plane. The most likely was with the RC-135 equipment, which presumably would catch the laser shot during the test. But he also thought they might find the aircraft prior to the test as it moved into position. Since they knew Cyclops’s range and capabilities, they also knew where the plane would have to position itself to fire. The “box”—more like a long rhomboid with rounded edges — ranged nearly a thousand miles, depending on the altitude the laser plane flew and the altitude it engaged its target at. But they thought the position of the Navy ships cordoning off the test area probably narrowed it a great deal — they couldn’t be sure, since they didn’t know the details of the radar profile — and so the long box was only a hundred miles wide.
Still a lot of area to cover, but not an impossible haystack.
The Navy had two Hawker E-2C radar aircraft covering the southwestern portion of the test zone; an Aegis- equipped cruiser with its powerful SPY-1B phased-array radar and associated systems complemented the airborne radar planes and their carrier group, tracking through an arc of roughly 250 miles. An array of smaller ships, aircraft, and drones formed a thick picket around the area.
Howe answered a query from one of the Hawkeye controllers. Timmy exchanged a few good-natured insults with the Navy jocks. Otherwise their flight south and then back north was almost eerily quiet.
Driving the entire circuit in supercruise took just over an hour, the finely tuned P&Ws humming. A Russian monitoring ship had taken up station at the southwest corner of the test area under the shadow of an American destroyer. Two monitoring aircraft, also Russian, were flying out from Siberia. These were tentatively ID’d by the AWACS as Myasishchev M-55 Geofizia twin-boom spy planes. Known as Mystic Bs in the West, the planes were advertised as high-altitude “environmental research” aircraft and could fly somewhere over 65,000 feet for four or five hours. Odd-looking creatures with swept-back wings and tails vaguely reminiscent of North American Broncos, their capabilities were somewhat comparable to early-model U-2s.
Two F-15s were tasked to shadow the Mystics—
“Just about an hour to go,” said Timmy as they spun back to the south.
“How’s the hangover?”
“How do you know I have a hangover?”
“Maybe the fact that you’ve said three words the whole flight.”
Fisher unfolded the large chart on his lap, studying the red
None of it was worth very much, though it seemed to impress the Air Force people flying the C-17. Fisher had been granted a seat on the flight deck, which, he gathered, was considered an honor. It was not only padded but swiveled, and if you didn’t get too anal about restraints and watched what you were doing, you could stretch your feet against the back of the copilot’s seat and a panel on the far right, making for a position nearly as comfortable as the back of a Honda Civic flattened in a rear-end collision.
His headset was not only plugged into the plane’s intercom, or “interphone,” system but had what looked like an old-fashioned transistor radio wired in that could select any of the myriad frequencies, though it wasn’t clear to Fisher what combination of buttons he had to push to actually communicate with anyone.
Fisher looked at his watch. There was now just over a half hour before the test.
He didn’t know what was going to happen, but whatever it was, he figured it should have happened by now.
So he was wrong again. Bitch of a losing streak.
Howe listened as a controller in one of the Hawkeyes exchanged a few choice words with a crewman aboard the cruiser about a contact flying out of the south toward the aircraft carrier and test area. The airplane — it appeared to be a civilian airliner, but its Ident gear wasn’t working properly — didn’t answer hails but finally took a sharp turn southward away from the test area. Howe broke in to request the Hawkeye to detail an aircraft to visually inspect the airliner: It was, after all, at least theoretically large enough to house the Cyclops weapon. The