This sort of notification had happened maybe five or ten thousand times before, most frequently in the six months following the installation of the monitoring system. With the alarm ringing now, though-long after they’d made the changes in sensitivity-Gibson knew that whatever had breached the perimeter had to be, at a minimum, the approximate size of a whale. Examining the stat line on his monitor, Gibson saw that the object that had just slipped into the cavern was a great deal larger than that. The object, according to his monitor, was big enough to land a plane on, and was already surfacing inside the outer cove.
When this type of object had arrived in the past, Gibson had at least been given suitable advance notice. Today, though, there had been no such notification. No matter: he knew what-and who-had come. Playing back the relevant footage, Gibson confirmed his surmise: there, floating behind the usual canvas of teeming fish, was a colossal, cigar-shaped vessel of some five hundred feet in length.
The Eagle, he thought, has landed.
Considering that the next twenty-four hours represented the culmination of approximately fifteen years of meticulous planning, it occurred to Gibson that even a man so bold and vain as General Deng-Premier Deng-would be unlikely to commit so vain and foolhardy an act as to make an appearance now. At least not without something up his sleeve.
Gibson had already been giving a great deal of thought to the question Deng had asked him on his last visit. It had been a simple question, loaded with any number of meanings-And your other projects?-but Gibson figured he could translate the intended message with ease.
Deng had not previously referred to any facets of Operation Blunt Fist as Gibson’s “projects”-in fact, Gibson hadn’t heard Deng use that term for any purpose. Upon hearing Deng’s question, Gibson had shut down his harvest operation for a couple days. He examined each of the archived closed-circuit feeds from the last couple of months to see whether something Deng had seen might have given him away; he examined everything else he could think of that could possibly have brought his “project” to Deng’s attention. He found nothing.
Mildly uneasy, Gibson restarted the extraction sessions, and it wasn’t until now, with Deng slipping his PLN submarine into the docking station of the main missile cavern, that Gibson admitted he’d been outfoxed.
Deng knew.
Gibson walked downstairs, jumped aboard his golf cart, and started up the trail to Admiral Li’s bungalow. He figured the admiral would want to join him for whatever it was Premier Deng had up his sleeve.
51
Crawling down the ladder built into the submarine’s hull, Deng stepped gingerly onto the missile cavern’s narrow pier and turned to face his welcoming committee. Gibson, Li, Hiram, and four mercenaries stood watching him from their place on the dock; Li offered a deep bow, then, after a time, Gibson too lowered his head. Hiram and the soldiers made no gesture or expression, about what Deng expected, since none of these men was worthy of greeting him anyway.
“I’ve come,” Deng said, “to conduct a prelaunch missile test.” He had to shout to be heard over the sound of water cascading from the reactor’s runoff pipe. “I am also here to announce an acceleration of the launch plans.”
Gibson’s face stiffened almost imperceptibly.
“We will now launch at noon, or eighteen hours ahead of schedule,” Deng said, checking his watch, “and precisely five hours, seven minutes, and thirty seconds from now.”
A second hatch on the deck made an unlocking noise, and the panel opened to emit the figure of an emaciated Chinese man wearing a white lab coat. It was hard to tell given his ill health, but the man looked to be seventy or so. He climbed from the hole, established his own footing on the deck, and bowed, first to Deng, then to the others.
Deng said, “I’m sure you remember Dr. Chu. This morning he will select four missiles at random and perform readiness tests on each. Mr. Gibson?”
Gibson raised his eyebrows.
“Lead the way.”
Popeye had provided Cooper and Laramie with a pair of sea-to-land assault knapsacks, called “Silks,” based on their commonly used, incomplete acronym of SLK. Strapped into each of the forty-pound knapsacks, Cooper and Laramie had found a hybrid assault pistol called a UR-14, twelve clips of ammunition, a suit of lightweight body armor, a change of civilian clothes, disposable military boots, a series of explosives, rations, and a sonar-based homing device. At Laramie’s request, Cooper had stuffed his Nikon into his.
Equipped with a tutorial given by Popeye back in the Hole, Cooper and Laramie were able to remove their wet suits and pull on the body armor, clothes, and boots by the time Deng emerged from his sub.
With Cooper and Laramie watching from their hiding place, Deng and his entourage ambled through a massive set of cargo doors into the bigger internal cavern. The bigger cavern, Cooper observed, was the source of the ballpark-genre floodlighting they’d seen by way of the UUV.
“That,” Laramie said, “would be Premier Deng Jiang of the People’s Republic of China.”
Cooper nodded. “Who would seem to be in charge, in fact.”
“You have your camera?”
“I do.”
“Please get CNN some shots.”
Cooper snapped a few. When Deng’s entourage was no longer visible, Cooper pulled Laramie from the nook and led her to the doorway the others had just passed through. They stuck to the walls but still needed to walk a good seventy yards completely exposed-crossing, in the process, the dock, a lava walkway beside the vacated guard station, and finally the broad gap beneath the arch of the doorway.
Coming inside the bigger internal cavern, Cooper stood still for an instant, gawking at the sight of the cavern and its contents. He nudged Laramie along the wall opposite the doorway; they ducked behind a section of piping wide enough to obscure them. Cooper could feel the heat popping off the pipe from a few feet away. From this hiding place, they could see the forest of white-and-black missiles in its full glory; there was also an odd, hourglass-shaped structure of ceramic, somewhere around twenty-five feet high, connected to the pipe beside them.
Seeing these things, Cooper considered that Julie Laramie had turned out to be one of three things: either she was the best SATINT analyst ever to set foot in the Langley headquarters building, the world’s greatest organic lie detector machine, or simply psychic.
“Forty-two,” he heard her say.
“I’d like to take back what I said before,” Cooper said. “Your theory was ludicrous after all. Correct, but ludicrous.”
“They’re Tridents, by the way. They’re supposed to be found in U.S. Navy Ohio-class and Los Angeles-class submarines.”
Cooper looked around at the towering missiles, each touting an eight-digit identification code painted beneath a checkerboard stripe and an American flag about two-thirds of the way up its bulk.
“I’m no professor,” he said, “but I’ll hazard a layman’s guess these particular Trident missiles weren’t put here by the navy.”
“At least not the American one.”
Deng came to the base of the missile with the numeral 6 painted on the cavern floor beside it. The rest of the group gathered behind him in a loose semicircle, the mercenaries distributing themselves in a way that allowed them to keep an eye on Li, Deng, and Dr. Chu. By Chu’s order, Hiram had gathered two boxes of tools from a maintenance cubicle.
Standing beside Deng, Gibson watched the leader of the most populous nation on earth examine the painted 6 on the ground beneath them and incline his head to take in the sight of the missile above. This, Gibson knew, was where Hiram and his just-keeled slave had most recently pillaged a W-76 warhead.
Deng lowered his gaze until it settled on Gibson. The premier eyed him in the same manner as when he’d asked the question, pre-tour, out by the pool, about Gibson’s other projects.