Debt of Honor - Tom Clancy [217]
"Jack, something bad. We have a SuBMiss/SusSuNK in Pac Fleet."
"What's that?"
"USS Asheville, that's a new 688, her BST-3 just started howling. Stennis has launched a bird to check it out, and a 'can's heading up there, too. This ain't good."
"What's the crew? Like a hundred?"
"More, one-twenty, one-thirty. Oh, damn. Last time this happened, I was a mid."
"We had an exercise going with them, didn't we?"
"DATELINE PARTNERS, yes, just ended yesterday. Until a couple hours ago, looked like a good exercise. Things went in the shitter in a hurry Jackson's voice trailed off. "Another signal. First report, Stennis launched a Hoover—"
"What?"
"S-3 Viking, ASW bird. Four-man crew. They report no survivors from the sub. Shit," Jackson added, even though it wasn't exactly a surprise.
"Jack, I need to do some work here, okay?"
"Understood. Keep me posted."
"Will do. Out." The line went dead.
Ryan finished off his coffee and dropped the plastic cup into a basket bolted to the floor of the aircraft. There was no point in waking the President just yet. Durling would need his sleep. He was coming home to a financial crisis, a political mess, maybe a brewing war, in the Indian Ocean, and now the situation with Japan would only get worse after this damned-fool accident in the Pacific. Durling was entitled to a little good luck, wasn't he?
By coincidence Oreza's personal car was a white Toyota Land Cruiser, a popular vehicle on the island. He and his charter were walking toward it when two more just like it pulled into the marina's parking lot. Six people got out and walked straight toward them. The former Command Master Chief stopped dead in his tracks. He'd left Saipan just before dawn, having picked Burroughs up at the hotel himself, the better to catch the tuna chasing their own food in the early morning. Though traffic on the way in to the dock had been…well, a little busier than usual, the world had held its normal shape.
But not now. Now there were Japanese fighters circling over the island, and now six men in fatigues and pistol belts were walking toward him and his charter. It was like something from a movie, he thought, one of those crazy TV mini-things from when the Russians were real.
"Hello, how was the fishing?" the man asked. He had O-3 rank, Oreza saw, and a parachutist's badge on the left breast pocket. Smiling, just as pleasant and friendly as he could be.
"I bagged one hell of an albacore tuna," Pete Burroughs said, his pride amplified by the four beers he'd drunk on the way in.
A wider smile. "Ah! Can I see it?"
"Sure!" Burroughs reversed his path and led them back to the dock, where the fish was still hanging head-down from the hoist.
"This is your boat, Captain Oreza?" the soldier asked. Only one other man had followed their captain down. The others stayed behind, watching closely, as though under orders not to be too…something, Portagee thought. He also took note of the fact that this officer had troubled himself to learn his name.
"That's right, sir. Interested in a little fishing?" he asked with an innocent smile.
"My grandfather was a fisherman," the ishii told them.
Portagee nodded and smiled. "So was mine. Family tradition."
"Long tradition?"
Oreza nodded as they got to Springer. "More than a hundred years."
"Ah, a fine boat you have. May I look at it?"
"Sure, jump aboard." Portagee went first and waved him over. The sergeant who'd walked down with his captain, he saw, stayed on the dock withMr. Burroughs, keeping about six feet away from him. There was a pistol in the man's holster, a SIG P22O, the standard sidearm of the Japanese military. By this time all kinds of alarm were lighting off in Oreza's brain.
"What does 'Springer' denote?"
"It's a kind of hunting dog."
"Ah, yes, very good." The officer looked around. "What sort of radios do you need for a boat like this. Expensive?"
"I'll show you." Oreza led him into the salon. "Your people make it, sir, NEC, a standard marine VHP and a backup. Here's my GPS nav system, depth