There’s an old saying: be careful of the man — or woman — who owns only one gun. They’ll really know how to use it.
Two empty speedloaders were in the box with a carton of plus-Ps. She took them back to the kitchen and loaded them while she watched the news.
Nothing really new. Her husband was suspended in time and space, his three-fingered hand held out to the camera, trotting toward risk.
She worried. About him. About her mother. She didn’t even like her mother; what was she worrying about? Her father, whom she loved, and the effect on him? Or was the link to her mother too strong for “liking” to even matter?
She worried.
She wanted to talk to her husband. She wanted to hear his voice. To know he was alive.
She went back to the television.
Captain Beluscio’s voice sounded strangled with tension. “Now what?”
The comm officer had just been handed a message slip and was reading quickly. “A message from the Harker. ‘Mob action in city and at dock gates. Local fireboat hit by shoulder-fired missile or grenade. Recommend send no air or surface help until situation resolved. Signed Craik.’ ”
The captain stared. “Who the hell is that?”
“Unh, the O-in-C of the S-3 det is named Craik. The guy they had to fly out of Pakistan a few weeks back, he lost part of his—”
Beluscio made an angry sound. Friend of Rafehausen’s. The chief of staff and Rafehausen were cat and dog — too close to each other in rank, with Rafehausen having only days of seniority; too different in temperament, the CoS tense, quick, Rafehausen laid-back. And the two men too often treated as opposites by the admiral, who liked competition among his officers.
“Craik,” the chief of staff growled now. “I remember. What the hell is he doing in Mombasa?”
The other man dared to grin. “You can watch him on CNN, sir.”
Alan duckwalked along a line of wounded men, six in all. White, the cook, had patched them up, but there was blood on the deck, and one man was pumping blood from an almost severed leg despite a tourniquet.
“I got to get medical help!” White was saying.
“Nothing’s going in or out of the docks.” He looked down at the blood that was spreading slowly over the chipped gray paint of the deck. “Anyway, we can’t use local blood. Navy policy.”
The black man stared at him. What Alan had said didn’t register. “They could send in a rescue chopper!”
“Yeah, they could, if people weren’t shooting at us.” He glanced back toward the dock, but the tilt of the deck hid everything; he saw only thin, gray cloud.
“This man gonna die if he don’t get help!”
Alan gripped his big upper arm. “Save the ones you can save.” That was the moment when he realized that they all might die there. It hadn’t occurred to him before — but here they were, cut off from the city, easy targets, with Alan the only shooter. He was carrying the sniper rifle himself now, because Jagiello, it turned out, had panicked and forgotten to take his safety off when the shooting started.
Alan looked up at the blown-out windows of the starboard wing of the bridge.
“Patel!”
The dark head of the lookout appeared. “Sir!”
“What’re the Kenyans up to?”
“Very active in aid of finding the missile launcher! Twenty or more guys running about! Some shooting!”
Hansen had got on to the Kenyans twenty-five minutes before. Now, two hundred feet beyond where the Harker’s sloping deck met the water, the crippled fireboat, its radars shorn off and its deck littered with metal fragments, had stopped pumping water on the Harker but had stabilized itself. Alan had to be grateful for the hit on the fireboat, because, without it, the Kenyan Navy wouldn’t have come out.
Beyond the fireboat, a Kenyan Nyayo-class Thornycroft cruised slowly between the docks; beyond it, eighty yards from where he stood, he could see the tiny figures of Kenyan sailors swarming over an anchored dhow. He guessed that they were searching the ships there — too late — for more snipers and missile launchers.
It occurred to Alan that the hundred-foot Kenyan patrol boat carried a potent surface-to-surface missile that he hoped they wouldn’t decide to use in these close quarters. As if in answer, the boat could be heard to back its engines, bringing it to a stop, and at once a 20mm repeating cannon opened up. Instinctively, Alan ducked, but he heard the rounds hit behind him and knew that the Kenyans had solved the problem of the sniper in the warehouse: they had taken out what was left of every window in the wall — and the wall, as well. (And collateral damage beyond? he was thinking as he ran to a ladder and started for the bridge.)
It had turned out that the Kenyan Navy had a facility two docks down from where the Harker lay. They had gone on full alert when the explosion had gone off, putting their three boats to sea and hunkering down for some kind of assault, but they never explained why they had not at least sent somebody to gather intelligence on what had happened. Alan suspected some sort of wrangle between the Navy, a minor part of the Kenyan establishment, and the Army, with the GSU thrown in on the Army’s side. More to the point, perhaps, was the huge fuel depot that sat behind where he now knew the Navy installation was: they were guarding that, they said, because if the explosion that destroyed the Harker was repeated there, all of Kilindini, maybe all of Mombasa, could be afire. At least that was the explanation the government would give later, although by then there were rumors that somebody had ordered the Navy to stay in barracks to keep them from helping the Harker.
Alan ducked as he came out on the bridge’s wing. He glanced aside, saw the shattered roofline of the warehouse.
“Done nicely,” Patel said from the windowless bridge.
“Very nicely.”
Alan went up one level to the communications space, where Hansen was still trying to patch in a secure transmission unit.
“How you doing?”
Hansen had established a radio link to the Jefferson, but it wasn’t yet secure. Until he had secure communications, Alan couldn’t tell the CV anything but the bare bones of what was happening. He had been trying to raise LantFleet, Norfolk, on his cell phone again, but as soon as he got somebody on the line, he’d lose the connection. He tried once more, waited two minutes, then gave it up. He laid the cell phone on Hansen’s table. “If they call back, tell them I tried.”
There was firing far up the dock. Presumably, the Kenyan sailors had found the missile launcher.
If they could secure the area—if, the Big If — and if the Kenyans would stay with them, he could call the Jefferson and tell them to fly in Marines and medics. It was an irony of the situation, of course, that when he could do that, they would already be more or less secure.
Twenty minutes later, Alan was heading below to check on damage control when a snappy-looking black man in a pale blue uniform shirt and body armor came striding over the deck toward him. He was smiling, but he was clearly not going to kiss any white man’s butt.
“Ngiri, Maiko, lieutenant, Kenyan Navy.” He gave a partial salute. “You are in charge?”
Alan nodded.
“You are civilian?”
“Craik, Alan, lieutenant-commander, United States Navy.”