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‘There is no love lost between China and Russia,’ said Stephanie. ‘The deep mistrust is exactly what Nixon exploited in his 1974 visit. If we get China onside—’

‘Screw the Chinese. They let that damn missile across into North Korea,’ said Holland. ‘We used nuclear weapons on Japan in 1945 to save lives and bring peace. That is what we will be doing here.’

Power was shifting away from Swain. In a few hours, Swain, Prusak, Pacolli, and others would be gone. At some stage, Stephanie would have to speak to Slater, mid-Atlantic on his way to London, but not yet. She had another idea. It wasn’t that it would work, or even change things. But it bought time and offered an alternative to the world’s first nuclear strike since 1945. ‘Why don’t we comply with Vitruk’s wishes?’ she said.

‘Are you crazy, Ambassador?’ said Holland.

‘The troops are on standby anyway. We can’t contact Ozenna. We can comply and do nothing. We call him. Keep up the conversation.’

The common sense of Stephanie’s suggestion rippled through the room. ‘Do it,’ said Swain. Stephanie flipped her phone over in her hand and dialed Vitruk again.

THIRTY-FIVE

Big Diomede, Chukotka, the Russian Far East

On a small table lay the phone on which Carrie had spoken to Stephanie Lucas. It was ringing, but Carrie couldn’t reach it. Her left hand was cuffed to a vertical metal rail, on the chair where Joan had sat. Vitruk was by the doorway, headset on, deep in conversation. When Vitruk had brought her in, she noticed a strained and concentrated atmosphere, and fewer than half a dozen men who had now left. In the hour she had been here, she had counted four helicopters taking off and three coming in. She guessed Vitruk was emptying the base because he expected a strike as soon as Holland was sworn in. Rake was somewhere out there, but she couldn’t imagine what he was doing, what he was thinking. She couldn’t place her fiancé in her mind because she wasn’t sure any more who he really was.

The soldier who had been shot in the legs lay awake, staring, eyes wide open at the ceiling, occasionally mumbling to himself. The other man was silent and still. Akna slept. The corpse was gone from the bed across the ward. The pediatric surgeon had gone, too, and he had done a bad, rushed job. In the incubator, the baby wriggled, awake, mouth open, crying, but no sound came out. Iyaroak was badly positioned with the weight of her head on the wound. Blood clotted the bandage that needed changing. Bacterial meningitis and encephalitis were a real risk, and Carrie had no idea which antibiotics they were using, if any.

Hailstones pounded loudly on the military canvas. She heard the slow throbbing of another helicopter starting up, ferrying men out of the base. It took off. The fifth. The phone ringing stopped, then the keyboard flashed with an incoming message. Vitruk could see it, but kept talking. Carrie stared at him, the cuff cold on her wrist.

* * *

Vitruk listened to the measured argument of President Lagutov over the phone while watching Carrie, her expression thoughtful and angry. He had ordered an evacuation of the base and had only a skeleton of highly trusted men left.

‘The Americans are calling us constantly and we are stalling,’ said Lagutov, sounding resigned but determined. ‘Sergey Grizlov tells me to negotiate, but my faith remains in you, Alexander, to make this work for the Motherland.’ There was barely a cigarette paper between the success and failure of any military operation and Lagutov was giving Vitruk that one last high-risk shot.

‘Thank you,’ said Vitruk. ‘Sergey would make us Western puppets again.’

‘I have authorized you for Kavkaz,’ said Lagutov, referring to the Russian military communications system used for a nuclear-missile launch. ‘You will receive unlocked codes in the next five minutes. You are the only one with these.’

As the line was disconnected, Vitruk looked across to the ring tone coming from the phone just out of Carrie’s reach. He would deal with it, but only after he had one more piece of information. An hour ago, General Dmitri Alverov was still thirty minutes out from North Korea’s Toksong missile-launch site. He had assured Vitruk that if the North Korean engineers had followed orders, they would be able to launch within an hour of his arrival. Vitruk called through again. Alverov had arrived and the team was at work. ‘It needs to be just after the inauguration,’ said Vitruk.

‘Without a warhead, we can,’ said Alverov. ‘The missile would be more accurate without it.’

‘The first from the silo will be unarmed,’ said Vitruk. ‘The second mobile launch will be armed.’

‘Armed?’ It wasn’t a question, more an exclamation of excitement, a departure from his usual scientific detachment. ‘That will be a great pleasure, sir.’

‘Is your team united?’

‘We cannot let the past years of humiliation go unpunished.’

Vitruk was convinced that Alverov’s mood was being reflected throughout Russia. Once the Americans had hit this base, the Russian people would fall in behind him and Vitruk could push through a decisive victory. He had already decided that Pearl Harbor would be the most symbolic target. America could beat Japan, but never Russia.

On the ice between the Diomede islands

Driving pellets of hail smashed against Rake’s goggles as he stood between two men in the last stages of exhaustion. The power of the ice storm cut visibility to just a few feet. He couldn’t see Henry because of the swirl in front of him. But he could hear his voice, and Henry’s fury carried on the wind. When Rake cupped his hands protectively around his goggles, he could make out Don Ondola, silent, passive, a giant of a man, whom Henry would kill if he had the chance, but whom they all needed to stay alive.

Henry was a level-headed man, except on the issue of Ondola. Henry had raised him like a son and saw his crimes as a personal betrayal. He had given evidence at the murder trial, framed in a way that would cause Ondola to be locked away for life without parole. Ondola had said he was sorry. He broke down in tears, but had meant it only because he was sober. As soon as he touched drink the monster in him would return. Henry had pledged that if his adopted son ever became a free man again, he would kill him.

Rake and Ondola had found Henry in the cover of the ice wall, watching Joan walk out from the coastline. He had escaped the base with the barest of protection and was rigid with cold, scarcely able to move. They gave him a hide and warmed him. Ondola climbed the wall and set up his firing position with the aim of killing Vitruk. Only then did Henry reveal himself by running towards Joan. Rake and Henry brought Joan to safety as Ondola killed two Russian marksmen, but failed to hit Vitruk. He escaped after a field of lethal machine-gun fire cut the ice around him and left his polar-bear skin as a calling card not to mess with the Eskimos. Now, in the shelter of the wall, Joan brewed coffee and prepared military self-heating meals that Rake had taken from the Russians.

Despite where they were, all they were up against, Henry stubbornly stuck to his pledge, even though Ondola had just saved his life, even though he knew he could never beat Ondola in a fight. Ondola had arrived back as the weather turned bad again, and Henry confronted him. Rake stepped in between them. The environment was at least as lethal as a human enemy, he said, and if they fought between themselves, the weather and the ice would take them all.

Ondola beckoned Rake, who took a step towards him just as a whistling gust roared through. He almost slipped, but steadied himself in time. ‘You and Henry go to the base,’ shouted Ondola. ‘I’ll watch your back, keep Joan safe. I’ll handle Tuuq if he comes.’

Rake pointed to Little Diomede. ‘Joan wants to go home. Can she make it alone?’