“For everyone, I suspect. Have you come to offer moral support, or just drop off a going away present?” Wexler could not keep the bitterness out of her voice.
Hemingway yawned and looked suspiciously, like she wanted to stretch out on the couch for nap. “Neither, really. Actually, you may consider me the cavalry.”
“Want to explain that?”
Hemingway shook her head. “Nope. I mean, no, Madam Ambassador.” Hemingway opened her briefcase, fumbling with the security latch for a moment and then extracting a sealed brown envelope. She raised it to her lips, kissed the seal, and passed it to Wexler.
Wexler felt an unreasoning flick of hope. She took the envelope, broke the security seal, and extracted the contents.
“Just read. Get all the way through it, and then I can answer any questions.” Hemingway yawned again.
“Go ahead,” Wexler murmured, already running her finger down the front page. “Crash out. I will wake you when I need you.” Before she turned to the second page, Hemingway was asleep.
The first two sentences were sufficient to flush every trace of fatigue out of her body. It was the section entitled “Executive Summary,” a quick overview intended to convince the reader to probe into the details.
Analysis of the electromagnetic spectrum during the attack on the
Wexler started to ask, “They can really prove this?” Instead, she glanced at the sleeping Navy captain and began to read the supporting documentation.
Minutes later, Brad reappeared with a fresh pot of tea. He took in the situation at a glance, quietly poured both women large mugs, avoiding the delicate teacups that Wexler favored, slipped a cozy over the pot, and withdrew without comment. Five minutes after that, Wexler said, “Jane.”
Hemingway’s eyes snapped opened. There was a microsecond of disorientation and then she was alert. She sat up, moving smoothly, and picked up the mug of tea. The fifteen-minute nap appeared to have worked magic.
“Cavalry, indeed,” Wexler said. She tapped the sheaf of documents. “Since when did the cavalry carry dynamite?”
“There’s more,” Hemingway said. She yawned, then took another large gulp of the tea. “Don’t ask me where I got this information from, okay? Just don’t.”
“Provisionally, I agree,” Wexler said cautiously. “As long as there’s nothing criminal about it.”
Hemmingway shrugged. “Define criminal for me and I’ll tell you. Just listen first, though.”
She took a deep breath and shook off the last vestiges of sleep. “Has it occurred to you that damn little has been said about what started all this. That the Russians tested their TBMD system by taking out an American satellite? Doesn’t it seem odd to you that nobody’s screaming bloody murder about that, but they’re up in arms about a fire control radar?”
“Yes, it does,” Wexler said.
“What if I told you that the president told them they could take it out?”
“Impossible. What in the world would he gain by doing something like that?” Wexler asked.
“This.” Hemmingway passed her another folder, this one containing a single sheet of paper.
Wexler looked at it, then felt her face turn pale. She stared at the information, just two short paragraphs and a photo. “He traded the satellite for this information,” she said slowly. It made complete sense to her now.
“Yeah. That’s the way it looks. And I think we got the better end of the deal, don’t you?”
Wexler snapped the folder shut. “I know who needs to see this.”
“You can’t tell them where you got it.”
“I won’t. They won’t care. And,” Wexler continued, her voice now grim, “it’s going outside of the usual channels. It’s going straight to the man who ought to have seen it first.”
Lab Rat ran his fingers over the folder again, feeling the rough surface of the coarse brown paper. It was an ordinary file folder, of the sort used in every part of the Navy for every conceivable purpose. Nothing at all to distinguish this one from those that contained everything from personnel transfers to plans for World War III.
Except there was something special about this particular folder. For the man who would eventually see it, it would be devastating.
But now Lab Rat had to find a way to approach the subject. It couldn’t be gone into in front of everyone, no. That wouldn’t be fair.
Tombstone strode into CVIC as though he were still in command of the battle group. It was as though he’d never left. How many times had Lab Rat seen him come in this way, wearing the same flight suit, or even occasionally khakis or a dress uniform?
Lab Rat winced at the nickname. Of course he knew that’s what everyone called him. It was even on his flight how much.
“I’m well, sir,” he replied, silently swearing at himself for using such a formal tone of voice. Why couldn’t he relax around Tombstone like everyone else? “And you?”
Tombstone shrugged his shoulders, his gun metal gray stare elsewhere. “Okay, I guess. You know what’s up with all this?”
Lab Rat nodded. “Yes, sir. There are some changes in the composition of forces that you ought to know about.” He extracted the first photograph from the folder and passed it to Tombstone. The former admiral glanced at it, then gave it to Jeremy Greene. Lab Rat fought to keep a look of concern off his face.
“So what are these?” Greene asked, his curiosity getting the better of his mood. “It looks like a landing craft.”
“That’s exactly what it is,” Lab Rat said. “The latest and greatest in Russian landing craft. They’re built like hydrofoils, but these guys have ours beat six ways to Sunday. Larger carrying capacity, more power, better sea- keeping ability. There’s a retractable keel that stabilizes them up to sea state five. They’re completely enclosed and carry a lot more firepower — they’re armed, not just transports.”
“That wouldn’t be hard to do,” Tombstone observed. “That’s long been a problem with our landing forces.”
Green tossed the photo back on the table. “Sea state five is pretty impressive.”
Lab Rat nodded. “And look at this.” He turned the picture so it was right side up to the two men. “Quad canisters. This may be a version of an anti-ship and anti-air missile they’re testing. It’s like a Stinger, we think. Range, probably ten miles. A rudimentary guidance system, and maybe — just maybe — a seeker head in the missile itself. Primary purpose self-defense but that covers a lot of offensive operations as well.”
“Ten miles doesn’t buy you much,” Tombstone said.
“It might when I tell you the rest of it,” Lab Rat countered. “Intelligence shows that the top speed of these babies is around sixty knots.