Read Tom Clancy's Jack Ryan Books 7-12 Online
Authors: Tom Clancy
“Jack, we are professionals, are we not? I know this. How I know it is my concern.”
“I don’t know what cards you’re holding, my friend, but before you go any further, we need to decide if this is a friendly game or not.”
“As you know, the real Japanese counterintelligence agency is the Public Safety Investigation Division of their Justice Ministry.” The expositional statement was as clear as it had to be, and was probably truthful. It also defined the terms of the discourse. This was a friendly game. Golovko had just revealed a secret of his own, though not a surprising one.
You had to admire the Russians. Their expertise in the espionage business was world-class. No, Ryan corrected himself. They
were
the class of the world. What better way to run agents in any foreign country than first to establish a network within the country’s counterintelligence services? There was still the lingering suspicion that they had in fact controlled MI-5, Britain’s Security Service, for some years, and their deep and thorough penetration of CIA’s own internal-security arm was still an embarrassment to America.
“Make your play,” Ryan said.
Check to the dealer ...
“You have two field officers in Japan covered as Russian journalists. They are reactivating the network. They are very good, and very careful, but one of their contacts is compromised by PSID. That can happen to anyone,” Golovko observed fairly. He didn’t even gloat, Jack saw. Well, he was too professional for that, and it was a fairly friendly game by most standards. The other side of the statement was as clear as it could be: with a simple gesture Sergey was in a position to burn Clark and Chavez, creating yet another international incident between two countries that had enough problems to settle. That was why Golovko didn’t gloat. He didn’t have to.
Ryan nodded. “Okay, pal. I just folded. Tell me what you want.”
“We would like to know why Japan is lying to us, and anything else that in Mrs. Foley’s opinion might be of interest to us. In return we are in a position to protect the network for you.” He didn’t add,
for the time being.
“How much do they know?” Jack asked, considering the spoken offer. Golovko was suggesting that Russia cover an American intelligence operation. It was something new, totally unprecedented. They put a very high value on the information that might be developed. High as hell, Jack thought.
Why?
“Enough to expel them from the country, no more.” Golovko opened a drawer and handed over a sheet of paper. “This is all Foleyeva needs to know.”
Jack read and pocketed it. “My country has no desire to see any sort of conflict between Russia and Japan.”
“Then we are agreed?”
“Yes, Sergey. I will recommend approval of your suggestion.”
“As always, Ivan Emmetovich, a pleasure to do business with you.”
“Why didn’t you activate it yourself?” Ryan asked, wondering how badly rolled he’d been that day.
“Lyalin held out on the information. Clever of him. We didn’t have enough time to—persuade? Yes, persuade him to give it over—before we gave him to your custody.”
Such a nice turn of phrase, Jack thought.
Persuade.
Well, Golovko had come up under the old system. It was too much to expect that he would have been entirely divorced from it. Jack managed a grin.
“You know, you were great enemies.” And with Golovko’s single suggestion, Jack thought behind clinically impassive eyes, perhaps now there would be the beginning of something else. Damn, how much crazier would this world get?
It was six hours later in Tokyo, and eight hours earlier in New York. The fourteen-hour differential and the International Dateline created many opportunities for confusion. It was Saturday the fourteenth in some places and Friday in others.
At three in the morning, Chuck Searls left his home for the last time. He’d rented a car the previous day—like many New Yorkers, he had never troubled himself to purchase one—for the drive to La Guardia. The Delta terminal was surprisingly full for the first flight of the day to Atlanta. He’d booked a ticket through one of the city’s many travel agencies, and paid cash for the assumed name he would hereafter be using from time to time, which was not the same as the one on the passport he had also acquired a few months ago. Sitting in 2-A, a first-class seat whose wide expanse allowed him to turn slightly and lean his head back, he slept most of the way to Atlanta, where his baggage was transferred to a flight to Miami. There wasn’t much, really. Two lightweight suits, some shirts, and other immediate necessities, plus his laptop computer. In Miami he’d board another flight under another name and head southeast to paradise.
George Winston, former head of the Columbus Group, was not a happy man despite the plush surroundings of his home in Aspen. A wrenched knee saw to that. Though he now had the time to indulge his newly discovered passion for skiing, he was a little too inexperienced and perhaps a little too old to use the expert slopes. It hurt like a sonuvabitch. He rose from his bed at three in the morning and limped into the bathroom for another dose of the painkiller the doctor had prescribed. Once there he found that the combination of wakefulness and lingering pain offered little hope of returning to sleep. It was just after five in New York, he thought, about the time he usually got up, always early to get a jump on the late-risers, checking his computer and the
Journal
and other sources of information so that he could be fully prepared for his opening moves on the market.
He missed it, Winston admitted to himself. It was a hell of a thing to say to the face in the mirror. Okay, so he’d worked too hard, alienated himself from his own family, driven himself into a state little different from drug addiction, but getting out was a ... mistake?
Well, no, not exactly that, he thought, hobbling into his den as quietly as he could manage. It was just that you couldn’t empty something and then attempt to fill it with nothing, could you? He couldn’t sail his
Cristobol
all the time, not with kids in school. In fact there was only one thing in his life that he’d been able to do all the time, and that had damned near killed him, hadn’t it?
Even so ...
Damn,
you couldn’t even get the
Journal
out here at a decent hour. And this was civilization? Fortunately, they did have phone lines. Just for old times’ sake, he switched on his computer. Winston was wired into nearly every news and financial service there was, and he selected his personal favorite. It was good to do it early in the morning. His wife would yell again if she saw him up to his old tricks, which meant that he was nowhere near as current on the Street as he liked to be, player or not. Well, okay, he had a few hours, and it wasn’t as though he’d be riding a helicopter to the top of the mountain at dawn, was it? No skiing at all, the doc had told him firmly. Not for at least a week, and then he’d confine himself to the bunny slopes. It wouldn’t look that bad, would it? He’d pretend to be teaching his kids ... damn!
He’d gotten out too soon. No way he could have known, of course, but in the last few weeks the market had begged aloud for a person with his talents to swoop down and make his moves. He would have moved on steel three weeks ago, made his killing, and then moved on to ... Silicon Alchemy. Yeah, that was one he would have snapped up in one big hurry. They had invented a new sort of screen for laptop computers, and now with Japan’s products under a cloud, the issue had exploded. Who was it who’d quarterbacked the IPO? That Ryan guy, good instincts for the business, pissing away his time in government service now.
What a waste of talent,
Winston told himself, feeling the ache in his leg and trying not to add that he was pissing away his time in the middle of the night at a ski resort he couldn’t use for the next week at best.
Everything on the Street seemed so unnecessarily shaky, he thought, checking trend lines on stocks he considered good if stealthy bellwethers. That was one of the tricks, spotting trends and indicators before the others did. One of the tricks? Hell, the
only
trick. How he did it was surprisingly hard to teach. He supposed that it was the same in any field. Some people just did it, and he was one of them. Others tried to do the same by cheating, seeking out information in underhanded ways, or by falsely creating trends that they could then exploit. But that was ... cheating, wasn’t it? And what was the point of making money that way? Beating the others fairly and at their own game,
that
was the real art of trading, and at the end of the day what he liked to hear was the way others would come up and say, “You son of a bitch!” The tone of the comment made all the difference.
There was no reason for the market to be so unsteady, he thought. People hadn’t thought the things through, that was all.
The Hornets went off behind the first wave of Tomcats. Sanchez taxied his fighter to the starboard-side bow cat, feeling the towbar that formed part of his nosewheel gear slip into the proper slot on the shuttle. His heavily loaded fighter shuddered at full power as the deck crewmen gave the aircraft a last visual check. Satisfied, the catapult officer made the ready signal, and Sanchez fired off a salute and set his head back on the back of his ejection seat. A moment later, steam power flung him off the bow and into the air. The Hornet settled a bit, a feeling that was never entirely routine, and he climbed into the sky, retracting his landing gear and heading toward the rendezvous point, his wings heavy with fuel tanks and blue practice missiles.
They were trying to be clever, and almost succeeding, but “almost” didn’t really count in this game. Satellite photos had revealed the presence of the three inbound surface groups. Sanchez would lead the Alpha Strike against the big one, eight ships, all tin cans. Two separated pairs of Tomcats would deal with the P-3s they had out; for the first time they’d hunt actively with their search radars instead of being under EMCOM. It would be a single rapier thrust—no, more the descending blow of a big and heavy club. Intermittent sweeps of an E-2C Hawkeye radar aircraft determined that the Japanese had not deployed fighters to Marcus, which would have been clever if difficult for them, and in any case they would not have been able to surge enough of them to matter, not against two full carrier air wings. Marcus just wasn’t a big enough island, as Saipan or Guam was. That was his last abstract thought for a while. On Bud’s command via a low-power radio circuit, the formation began to disperse according to its carefully structured plan.
“Hai.”
Sato lifted the growler phone on
Mutsu’s
bridge.
“We just detected low-power radio voice traffic. Two signals, bearing one-five-seven, and one-nine-five, respectively. ”
“It’s about time,” Sato told his group-operations officer.
I thought they’d never get around to their attack.
In a real-war situation he would do one thing. In this particular case, he’d do another. There was little point in letting the Americans know the sensitivity of his ELINT gear. “Continue as before.”
“Very well. We still have the two airborne radars. They appear to be flying racetrack patterns, no change.”
“Thank you.” Sato replaced the phone and reached for his tea. His best technicians were working the electronic-intelligence listening gear, and they had tapes collecting the information taken down by every sensor for later study. That was really the important part of this phase of the exercise, to learn all they could about how the U.S. Navy made its deliberate attacks.
“Action stations?”
Mutsu’s
captain asked quietly.
“No need,” the Admiral replied, staring thoughtfully at the horizon, as he supposed a fighting sailor did.
Aboard Snoopy One, an EA-6B Prowler, the flight crew monitored all radar and radio frequencies. They found and identified six commercial-type search radars, none of them close to the known location of the Japanese formation. They weren’t making it much of a contest, everyone thought. Normally these games were a lot more fun.
The captain of the port at Tanapag harbor looked out from his office to see a large car-carrier working her way around the southern tip of Managaha Island. That was a surprise. He ruffled through the papers on his desk to see where the telex was to warn him of her arrival. Oh, yes, there. It must have come in during the night. MV
Orchid Ace
out of Yokohama. Cargo of Toyota Land Cruisers diverted for sale to the local Japanese landowners. Probably a ship that had been scheduled for transit to America. So now the cars would come here and clog the local roads some more. He grumped and lifted his binoculars to give her a look and saw to his surprise another lump on the horizon, large and boxy. Another car carrier? That was odd.
Snoopy One held position and altitude, just under the visual horizon from the “enemy” formation, about one hundred miles away. The electronic warriors in the two backseats had their hands ready on the power switches for the onboard jammers, but the Japanese didn’t have any of their radars up, and there was nothing to jam. The pilot allowed herself a look to the southeast and saw a few flashes, yellow glints off the gold-impregnated canopies of the inbound Alpha Strike, which was now angling down to the deck to stay out of radar coverage as long as possible before popping up to loose their first “salvo” of administrative missiles.
“Tango, tango, tango,” Commander Steve Kennedy said into the gertrude, giving the code word for a theoretical or “administrative” torpedo launch. He’d held contact with the Harushio-class for nine hours, taking the time to get acquainted with the contact, and to get his crew used to something more demanding than getting heartbeats on a pregnant humpback. Finally bored with the game, it was time to light up the underwater telephone and, he was sure, scare the bejeebers out of Sierra-One after giving him ample time to counterdetect. He didn’t want anyone to say later that he hadn’t given the other guy a fair break. Not that this sort of thing was supposed to be fair, but Japan and America were friends, despite the news stuff they’d been getting on the radio for the past few weeks.