further guidance.” Bolshovick paused for a moment as though considering his options.

Gorshenko swore quietly. “And nothing further? Just one radar sweep, no more? No additional aircraft in the air, no signs of targeting or manuevering?”

“None of that, General,” the lieutenant answered, steadying visibly in response to the general’s calm, no- nonsense tone.

“Irrelevant,” the navy captain said, clearly annoyed at the general’s interference. “Weapons officer, weapons release authority. One round, targeting the carrier.”

Before Bolshovich could foul things up further with his infernal grandstanding, Gorshenko reached his decision. “No.” His voice carried the unconscious assumption that he would be obeyed. The lieutenant froze. “There is no evidence they are attacking.”

“Captain?” the lieutenant asked. Gorshenko could hear the uncertainty in his voice, and it was reflected in the faces of the rest of the men in Combat. The warrant officers and petty officers stared at the captain, aghast.

“If I wait until the missile is visible to our radar, it will be too late,” the captain said.

“They are not attacking,” the general said. “You, weapons person — do not fire.”

“We destroyed their satellite! Of course they are attacking!”

The lieutenant held his finger still poised over the button. He kept his gaze locked on his captain, ignoring the general except for the fact he had not yet fired. It was clear that if the captain so much as nodded, he would depress the button.

The damned fool. The Americans are not attacking, not unless something has gone terribly wrong. If Bolshovich only knew — no, I cannot tell him. He would not believe me now.

“There is much you do not know,” Gorshenko said, crossing the compartment in a few steps to stand beside the lieutenant’s console. “Captain, you must not shoot. I forbid it.”

“I am in command here,” the captain snapped, moving to Rotenyo’s other side. “Lieutenant, you will obey my orders.”

Gorshenko saw in the lieutenant’s face that the young officer had reached a decision. Before Rotenyo’s finger could twitch, the general slammed into him, smashing him out of the chair. By reflex, Rotenyo’s finger jabbed down at the fire control button, even as the general’s palm slapped down on the console keyboard in an effort to abort the attack.

When the laser had fired, there had been no indication inside the ship of its operation — no warning buzzer, no vibration, no sound, nothing. With the anti-ship missile, however, it was different. All personnel had been recalled inside the skin of the ship for the laser exercise and for general quarters. The entire forward part of the ship rumbled, and exhaust from the rocket billowed from the launch canister, sweeping across the deck. The rumble built for two seconds, then white fire ignited inside the cloud. The missile emerged from the fire, a thin, white pole, and seemed to hang in the air for a few moments, before it shot off toward the horizon.

USS Lake Champlain 2216 local (GMT-9)

On board the cruiser, Lieutenant Commander Alan Simms, the tactical action officer, or TAO, was double- checking a closest-point-of-approach solution showing his ship would pass well aft of the Montego Bay. He’d had the operations specialists work out the solution manually as well, figuring any opportunity for real live training shouldn’t be missed. All in all, it was a quiet night watch, and Simms figured they’d have plenty of time to work out the final preparations for the Kernel Blitz evolutions scheduled for the next day.

All that changed in an instant. As TAO, Simms had weapons release authority and full responsibility for protecting the ship when the captain was not in Combat. With the ships so close together there was no time to think, no time to call the captain or ask for a second opinion. The reflexes implanted by hours of training and countless drills kicked in.

At the very moment that Gorshenko was first realizing what Bolshovich had done, Simms flipped his fire control key to the launch position and sounded general quarters. As Gorshenko attempted to abort the launch, Simms ordered weapons free, and the chief manning the weapons console manually designated the launch cell from the vertical launch system. By the time the Russian general knocked the sailor out of his chair, the Lake Champlain had fired two anti-air missiles at the Russian missile already in the air. Once clear of the ship, the Champlain’s missiles locked on to the Russian missile and began boring in on it.

Admiral Kurashov 2217 local (GMT-9)

“You fool,” Gorshenko raged. “I did not authorize you to fire. Abort the missile — do it now!”

You are the fool,” the captain responded. “I’m authorized to take such action to preserve the safety of the ship, even if you are in tactical command.”

“Captain!” Rotenyo stared at the screen in horror. “Sir, the missile is off course!”

Both the captain and the general spun around to check the large screen in the front of the compartment. The symbol for the missile, which had been inching toward the carrier, had changed direction. As they watched, the symbol for a hostile missile launch appeared next to the American cruiser, the arrowhead of the speed leader aimed directly for the Kurashov.

“You’re responsible for that,” the captain said, his voice soft and menacing. “When you hit the keyboard, you disrupted the programmed launch order. God knows where it’s going — and what it will hit.”

On the screen, the Russian missile changed course again. The American missile changed course also, tracking it. As they both veered north, Gorshenko saw that their trajectories put them directly overhead the SS Montego Bay.

Gorshenko stared at the screen in horror, his mind in turmoil. What had he done? What had he done?

FOUR

SS Montego Bay 2215 local (GMT-9)

Most of the passengers were on the main deck or weatherdecks. A good portion had exercised their option of eating at the casual grill on the fantail, and even more lounged around the small jewel of a pool with hamburgers, club sandwiches, and a large selection of alcoholic beverages. Many of the passengers had been drinking steadily all day. On each cruise there were a couple of people who could not decide when it was time to quit.

John and Erica Cabot were on their second honeymoon, hoping desperately to patch up their differences. Erica, whose tolerance for alcohol was significantly lower than John’s, was not in a mood to try particularly hard.

“We should have gone to the dining room,” she said for the seventh time. “I like the people at our table. That’s why you don’t want to go, isn’t it? I was having too much fun.”

“That’s not it at all, as I told you. I just thought that since it’s such a nice night, we might—”

“Sit by the pool and watch half-naked women?” Erica sneered. “Well, two can play that game.” She bounced away to the other side of the pool, sat down on an empty deck seat in the middle of three men, and started talking to them.

John started after her, and stopped. What was the use? She was right. What would it have hurt for him to go along with the dining room routine? Just because he didn’t like dressing up didn’t mean he shouldn’t compromise from time to time.

Emboldened by the alcohol, he rounded the pool and sat down on Erica’s chair. The three men who had been chatting with her immediately backed off. Erica shot him a scornful look.

“You’re right,” he said rapidly, trying to get it all out before he changed his mind. “It was selfish of me to insist on coming to the pool. Come on, if we hurry, we can get dressed and still make it for dessert.”

Amazement followed by love dashed across her face. “Thank you,” she said. “Oh, John, thank you.”

She left her hamburger sitting on the table as she rose to join him. Hand in hand, hips and elbows touching,

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