I glanced back at Skeeter, who was now closing the distance between us. How would it be, to have grown up in his times? How much difference did it make in the way we saw the world ? the Russians, in particular? I resolved to have a quiet word with him again about the need for a little respectable paranoia while we were on the ground in Arkhangelsk.
It probably wasn't necessary. Commander 'Lab Rat' Busby, the senior intelligence officer onboard Jefferson, had briefed us extensively on our visit. In particular, he'd pointed out that it was important for us to watch everything we could, make note of anything that seemed new or different from what we already knew about Russian aviation. He gave us two solid capabilities briefings, complete with quizzes, getting us up to speed on the very latest U.S. information on Russian systems and technologies so that we'd know what to look for.
Like most nasty games, intelligence collection works both ways. The birds we were flying into Russia were specially configured, stripped of some of the very latest toys and technologies we didn't think they knew about yet. Most of the avionics were useless without the Zip drive cassette plugged into the instrument panel in front of me ? Lab Rat made sure we understood that. We were to take our Zip cassettes with us everywhere we went, keeping them on our persons at all times. Without them, the Russians could learn nothing of use from the bare carcass of our airframes. And there were other telltales as well. The most sensitive avionics compartments were wired with small devices intended to keep anything but a charred black box from falling into their hands. Lab Rat assured me that the fires were too localized to do any permanent damage to the airframe, and that even if one were triggered, we'd be able to safely fly the aircraft out. I was not reassured.
'What happens if we lose one of these super-secret Zip drives? Or damage it?' Skeeter had asked. An eminently sensible question, I'd thought.
'Your Tomcats will still fly without them, if that's what you mean,' Lab Rat had answered. 'You'll lose most of your advanced decision aids as well as some resolution on your targeting packages, but that's about it.
The techs on the COD will take some diagnostic software with them, a few replacement parts, but not replacement disks.'
'Can they make anything out of them without the Tomcat's gut?' I'd followed up.
Lab Rat looked thoughtful. 'Honestly, I don't know. The guys at NSA ? National Security Agency ? don't think so, but I wouldn't want to bet on it. It's supposed to require the same crypto load that's in your communications circuitry, but you know how that is. With computers they've pirated from the West, they might be able to get something out of the tapes. That's why there won't be any duplicates on the COD.'
'Sounds risky, putting us in over there,' Skeeter said.
Lab Rat nodded. 'I think so, too. But evidently this is important to somebody with a hell of a lot more firepower than I have. So we do what we can to minimize the risks. Really, though, I don't think there'll be any problems. Not if you're careful with the Zips. The Russians need us for friends right now a lot more than we need them.'
And that was the truth. With a resurgent China prowling Russia's borders, massing and moving divisions of armored troops every couple of weeks for supposed routine exercises, Russia had good reason to want to be on good terms with the United States. We'd faced China down before, in the Spratly Islands and in other hot spots around the globe, something Russia couldn't do on her own right now.
Finally, we reached the end of the apron and a yellow-shirted handler stepped out from the crowd to replace the follow-me truck. Confidently and with stunning precision, the yellow shirt began flashing the standard hand and arm signals used on the flight deck of a carrier to signal to us. 'You believe this fellow?' Skeeter said, his amusement clear over our private coordination circuit. 'Man, they been practicing or what?'
'Get that out of your system before we shut down,' I ordered.
'They've put some effort into it and the last thing we need to do is start off by pissing them off laughing at their personnel.'
'Yes, sir, Admiral. I kind of figured that out, sir, and there ain't a trace of a smile showing on this young black man's face.' Skeeter sometimes fell back into a sort of uneducated slang whenever I made the very dangerous mistake of underestimating him. This time, I figured I deserved it.
'I'm talking to myself as much as you, Lieutenant. We're all on new ground here ? you see something that looks like an opportunity to step on our dicks, I hope you'll be pointing it out real quick. Got that?' I said.
'Yes, Admiral.' This time, Skeeter's voice was back to normal. 'You hear that, Gib? No dick stepping.'
'Kind of you to worry,' Sheila answered angrily.
I laughed in spite of myself. If the KGB or GRU or whatever weird collection of initials that was Russia's current intelligence agency was listening in, they were going to have fun figuring that one out. Skeeter's RIO was markedly short of the required equipment.
The Russians have always done ceremonies well. Massive, forbidding shows of force imbued with the ancient dignity of a grim warrior society.
Ahead of us, at the edge of the airfield, Army troops were massed in formation, almost a brigade's worth I estimated. Twenty tanks flanked the formation, each with its barrel elevated only slightly above the arc that would put a missile directly on our assigned parking spot. Officers and dignitaries were festooned in the drab olive-green- accented-with-red Army uniforms, the darker, more traditional blue-black of the Navy, and a few uniforms I couldn't recognize right off. No doubt they'd changed some since the days of the Soviet Union's breakup ? at least in name.
Many brass, as befitted the historic nature of this occasion. For just a moment, I wondered whether or not we'd made an error in not following suit and ferrying in an aircraft load of dignitaries of our own.
Just for balance, if nothing else. How did the Russians see that lack? As a sign of disrespect, an American insult in the refusal to take these games seriously? Or would they take it as a sign of weakness, this deploying of two advanced fighter aircraft to Russia's own soil without the appropriate formalities and dignitaries?
It all seemed too trivial, given what my real mission was. For a moment I felt the fury again, but I was no longer certain whether it was directed at the Russians for taking my father or at my own country for letting it happen. Two betrayals ? my father's trust that the U.S. would come and get him, and my own for believing what I'd been told for so many years.
I taxied in, stopping neatly on the spot indicated by the technician.
Skeeter pulled in behind, slightly aft and to my right just as he was in flight. I twisted around, trying to catch a glimpse of the COD, but it was still too far out.
We ran through the postflight and preshutdown checklists quickly, not wanting to keep our hosts waiting. Finally, our engines spooled down, and I popped my canopy. I could see the COD now, barely visible on the horizon.
The rush of air was bitterly cold, condensing immediately into clouds as I breathed out. It bit hard into my exposed skin, and I jammed the fingers of my gloves down a bit more securely. The icy air found a thin exposed strip of skin between the glove and the sleeve of my flight suit, burrowed into it, and tried to race up my arm.
'Let's get the hell out of here, Boss,' Gator said. 'Colder than a-'
I cut him off with a gesture. 'Remember, we're in Russia now.
Anything you say can and will be used against you. And not in a court of law either, buddy. Quiet, now ? here they come.'
A rickety ladder was pushed forward to our Tomcat. I motioned it away after I noted that the edges were not coated with any padding to prevent it from scraping the fuselage. The technicians paused, uncertain, and I beat them to the punch by popping out the footholds on the Tomcat, the boarding ladder, and clambering down myself. I jumped lightly off the last step, flexed my knees as I hit, and felt the shock of the cold concrete start to seep into my boots. My RIO hit the deck a few seconds after me.
There were three officers approaching me, flanked by what looked to be a translator. I recognized the two in front from the intelligence briefings Field Marshal Gorklov and Admiral Ilanovich. I snapped up a formal, correct salute, holding it until they'd returned it. Then I held out my hand. 'Vice Admiral Magruder, General. An impressive reception ? thank you.'
I saw that both Gorklov and Ilanovich understood, but they waited until the translator finished. Then Gorklov held out his hand and said, 'Welcome,' in heavily accented English. 'Field Marshal Gorklov. And this,' he continued, gesturing to his right, 'is Admiral of the Fleet Gregorio Ilanovich.'
I tendered another salute, then a handshake to the admiral. In the scheme of things, he technically outranked me, but I was certain that a three-star admiral in the United States Navy had far more firepower under his control