Jack Ryan 7 - The Sum of All Fears (107 page)

BOOK: Jack Ryan 7 - The Sum of All Fears
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“The infra-red emissions are remarkable,” the photo-analyst thought aloud. It was his first nuclear detonation. “I have damage and secondary fires up to a mile from the stadium. Not much of the stadium itself. Too much smoke and IR interference. Next pass, if we're lucky, we ought to have some visible-light imagery.”

“What can you tell us about casualty count?” Ryan asked.

“What I have is inconclusive. Mainly the visible-light shots show smoke that's obscuring everything. Infra-red levels are very impressive. Lots of fires immediately around the stadium itself. Cars, I guess, gas tanks cooking off.”

Jack turned to the senior Science and Technology officer. “Who do we have up in the photo section?”

“Nobody,” S&T replied. “Weekend, remember? We let NPIC handle weekend work unless we expect something hot.”

“Who's the best guy?”

“Andy Davis, but he lives in
Manassas
. He'll never make it in.”

“Goddamn it.” Ryan picked up the phone again. “Send us the best ten photos you have,” he told NPIC.

“You'll have them in two or three minutes.”

“How about someone to evaluate the bomb effects?”

“I can do that,” S&T said. “Ex-Air Force. I Used to work intel for SAC.”

“Run with it.”

 

The nine Abrams tanks had by now accounted for nearly thirty of the Russian T-8os. The Soviets had pulled south to find cover of their own. Their return fire had killed three more of the M1A1s, but now the odds were a lot more even. The captain commanding the tank detachment sent his Bradleys east to conduct reconnaissance. As with their first dash, there were people watching them, but for the most part they did this from windows now unlit. The street lights worried one Bradley commander, who took a rifle and began shooting them out, to the horror of Berliners who had the courage to watch.

 

“Was nun?” Keitel asked. What now?

“Now we get the devil away from here and disappear. Our work is done,” Bock replied, turning the wheel to the left. A northerly escape route seemed best. They'd dump the car and truck, change their clothes, and vanish. They might even survive all this, Bock thought. Wouldn't that be something? But his main thought was that he'd avenged his
Petra
. It had been the Americans and Russians who'd brought her death about. Germans had only been the pawns of the great players, and the great players were paying now, Bock told himself, were paying now and would pay more. Revenge wasn't so cold a dish after all, was it?

 

“Russian staff car,” the gunner said, “and a GAZ truck.”

“Chain gun.” The track commander took his time identifying the inbound targets. “Wait.”

“I love killin' officers. . . .” The gunner centered the sight for his 25mm cannon. “On target, Sarge.”

 

For all his experience as a terrorist, Bock was not a soldier. He took the dark, square shape two blocks away for a large truck. His plan had worked. The American alert, so perfectly timed, could only mean that Qati and Ghosn had done their job exactly as he'd envisioned five months earlier. His eyes shifted as he saw what looked like a flashbulb and a streak of light that went over his head.

 

“Fire, hose 'em!”

The gunner had his selector switch on rapid fire. The 25-millimeter chain gun was wonderfully accurate, and the tracers allowed you to walk fire right into the target. The first long burst hit the truck. There might be armed soldiers in the truck, he reasoned. The initial rounds went into the engine block, shattering it into fragments, then, as the vehicle surged forward, the next burst swept through the cab and cargo area. The truck collapsed on two flattened front tires and ground to a halt, the wheel rims digging grooves in the asphalt. By that time, the gunner had shifted fire and put a short burst through the staff car. This target merely lost control and slammed into a parked BMW. Just to make sure, the gunner hit the car again, and then the truck. Someone actually got out of the truck, probably wounded already from the way he moved. Two more 25 mm rounds fixed that.

The track commander moved immediately. One does not linger where one has killed. Two minutes later, they found another surveillance spot. Police cars were racing down the streets, their blue lights flashing. One of them stopped a few hundred meters from the Bradley, backed up and raced off, the track commander saw. Well, he'd always known German cops were smart.

Five minutes after the Bradley departed for another block, the first Berliner, an exceedingly courageous physician, came out his front door and went to the staff car. Both men were dead, each torso ripped to shreds by the cannon shells, though both faces were intact except for the splashed blood. The truck was an even greater mess. One of the men there might have survived for a few minutes, but by the time the doctor got there, it was far too late. He found it odd that they all wore Russian officers' uniforms. Not knowing what else to do, he called the police. Only later did he realize how disproportionate his understanding of the events outside his home had been.

 

“They weren't kidding about the infra-red signature. This must have been some bomb,” the S&T guy observed. “Damage is a little funny, though . . . hmph.”

“What do you mean, Ted?” Ryan asked.

“I mean the ground damage ought to be worse than this . . . must be shadows and reflections.” He looked up. “Sorry. Shock waves don't go through things—like a hill, I mean. There must have been reflections and shadows here, that's all. These houses here ought not to be there anymore.”

“I still don't know what you mean,” Ryan said.

“There are always anomalies in cases like this. I'll get back to you when I have this figured out, okay?” Ted Ayres asked.

 

*     *     *

 

Walter Hoskins sat in his office because he didn't know what else to do, and as most senior man present, he had to answer the phones. All he needed to do was turn to see what the stadium was. The pall of smoke was only five miles away through his windows, one of which was cracked. Part of him wondered if he should send a team down there, but he had no such orders. He turned his chair to look that way again, amazed that the window was almost intact. After all, it was supposed to have been a nuclear bomb, and it was only five miles. The remains of the cloud were now over the front range of the
Rockies
, still intact enough that you could tell what it had been, and behind it like a wake was another black plume of fires from the bomb area. The destruction must be . . .

. . . not enough. Not enough? What a crazy thought. With nothing else to do, Hoskins lifted the phone and dialed up
Washington
. “Give me
Murray
.”

“Yeah, Walt.”

“How busy are you?”

“Not very, as a matter of fact. How is it at your end?”

“We have the TV stations and phones shut down. I hope the President will be there when I have to explain that one to the judge.”

“Walt, this isn't the time—”

“Not why I called.”

“Well, then you want to tell me?”

“I can see it from here, Dan,” Hoskins said, in a voice that was almost dreamy.

“How bad is it?”

“All I see is the smoke, really. The mushroom cloud is over the mountains now, all orange, like. Sunset, it's high enough to catch the sunset, I guess. I can see lots of little fires. They're lighting up the smoke from the stadium area. Dan?”

“Yeah, Walt?” Dan responded. The man seemed to be in shock,
Murray
thought.

“Something odd.”

“What's that?”

“My windows aren't broken. I'm only five miles from there, and only one of my windows is cracked, even. Odd, isn't it?” Hoskins paused. “I have some stuff here that you said you wanted, pictures and stuff.” Hoskins leafed through the documents that had been set in his In basket. “Marvin Russell sure picked a busy day to die. Anyway, I have the passport stuff you wanted. Important?”

“It can wait.”

“Okay.” Hoskins hung up.

 

“Walt's losing it, Pat,”
Murray
observed.

“You blame him?” O'Day asked.

Dan shook his head. “No.”

“If this gets worse . . .” Pat observed.

“How far out is your family?”

“Not far enough.”

“Five miles,”
Murray
said quietly.

“What?”

“Walt said that his office is just five miles away, he can see it from there. His windows aren't broken, even.”

“Bullshit,” O'Day replied. “He must really be out of it. Five miles, that's less than nine thousand yards.”

“What do you mean?”

“NORAD said the bomb was a hundred-kiloton range. That'll break windows over a hell of a long distance. Only takes half a pound or so of overpressure to do a window.”

“How do you know?”

“Used to be in the Navy—intelligence, remember? I had to evaluate the damage distances for Russian tactical nukes once. A hundred-kiloton bomb at nine thousand yards won't sink you, but it'll wreck everything topside, scorch paint, start small fires. Bad news, man.”

“Curtains, like?”

“Ought to,” O'Day thought aloud. “Yeah, regular curtains would light up, especially if they're dark ones.”

“Walt's not so far out of it that he'd miss a fire in his office . . .”
Murray
lifted his phone to
Langley
.

 

“Yeah, what is it, Dan?” Jack said into the speaker.

“What number do you have on the size of the explosion?”

“According to NORAD, one-fifty, maybe two hundred kilotons, size of a big tactical weapon or a small strategic one,” Ryan said. “Why?” On the other side of the table, the S&.T officer looked up from the photos.

“I just talked to my ASAC Denver. He can see the stadium area from his office—five miles, Jack. He's only got one cracked window.”

“Bull,” S&T noted.

“What do you mean?” Ryan asked.

“Five miles, that's eight thousand meters,” Ted Ayres pointed out. “The thermal pulse alone should fry the place, and the shock wave would sure as hell blow a plate-glass window out.”

Murray
heard that. “Yeah, that's what a guy here just said. Hey, my guy might be a little out of it—shock, I mean—but he'd notice a fire next to his desk, don't you think?”

“Do we have anything from people on the scene yet?” Jack asked Ayres.

“No, the NEST team is on the way, but the imagery tells us a lot, Jack.”

“Dan, how quick can you get somebody to the scene?” Ryan asked.

“I'll find out.”

 

“Hoskins.”

“Dan Murray, Walt. Get some people down there fast as you can. You stay put to coordinate.”

“Okay.”

Hoskins gave the proper orders, wondering just how badly he might be endangering his people. Then, with nothing else to do, he looked over the file on his desk. Marvin Russell, he thought, yet another criminal who died of dumb. Drug dealers. Didn't they ever learn?

 

Roger Durling was grateful when the Kneecap aircraft disengaged from the tanker. The converted 747 had the usual pussycat ride, but not when in close proximity to a KC-10 tanker. It was something only his son enjoyed. Aboard in the conference room were an Air Force brigadier, a Navy captain, a Marine major, and four other field- and staff-grade officers. All the data the President got came to Kneecap automatically, including the Hot Line transcripts.

“You know, what they're saying is okay, but it sure as hell would be nice to know what everyone's thinking.”

“What if this really is a Russian attack?” the General asked.

“Why would they do it?”

“You've heard the chatter between the President and CIA, sir.”

“Yeah, but that Ryan guy's right,” Durling said. “None of this makes any sense.”

“So, who ever said the world had to make sense? What about the contact in the Med and
Berlin
?”

“Forward-deployed forces. We go on alert, and they go on alert, and they're close to each other, and someone goofs. You know, like Gavrilio Prinzip shooting the Archduke. An accident happens and then things just slide down the chute.”

That's why we have the Hot Line, Mr. Vice President."

“True,” Durling conceded. “And so far it seems to be working.”

 

They made the first fifty yards easily, but then it got harder, and soon it went from hard to impossible. Callaghan had a total of fifty firefighters trying to fight their way on, with a hundred more in support. On reflection, he had a continuous water spray over every man and woman. If nothing else, he reasoned, he would wash whatever fallout or dust or whatever the hell was out here off his people and into the sewer drains—that which didn't freeze first, that is. The men in front were coated with ice that made a translucent layer on their turn-out coats.

The biggest problem was the cars. They'd been tossed about like toys, laying on their sides or tops, leaking gasoline that collected into burning puddles that were being supplied faster than they burned off. Callaghan ordered a truck in. One at a time, his men ran cables to the frames of the wrecked cars, and the truck dragged them clear, but this was horribly time-consuming. It would take forever to get in to the stadium. And there were people in there. He was sure of it. There had to be. Callaghan just stood there, out of the water spray, guilty that he was warmer than his people. He turned when he heard the roar of a large diesel engine.

“Hello.” It was a man wearing the uniform of a U.S. Army colonel. The nametag on his parka read Lyle. “I hear you need heavy equipment.”

“What you got?”

“I have three engineer tanks, M728s, just rolling in now. Got something else, too.”

“What's that?”

“A hundred MOPP suits, you know, chemical warfare gear. It ain't perfect, but it's better than what your people got on. Warmer, too. Why don't you pull your people off and get them outfitted. Truck's over there.” The colonel pointed.

Callaghan hesitated for a moment, but decided that he couldn't turn this offer down. He called his people off and pulled them back to don the military gear. Colonel Lyle tossed him an outfit.

The water fog's a good idea, ought to keep dust and stuff down. So, what do you want us to do?"

“You can't tell from here, but there's still some structure in there. I think there might be survivors. I have to find out. Can you help us get through these cars?”

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