Debt of Honor - Tom Clancy [338]
"Dutch? What's your materiel condition?" Bart Mancuso asked without preamble.
"Everything works, sir. We even had our ORSE two weeks ago, and we maxed it." Claggett referred to the Operational Reactor Safeguards Examination, still the Holy Grail of the Nuclear Navy, even for razor-blade fodder.
"I know. How soon?" Mancuso asked. The bluntness of the question was like something from the past.
"I need to load food and torps, and I need thirty people."
"Where are you weak?"
Claggett thought for a moment. His officers were on the young side, but he didn't mind that, and he had a good collection of senior chiefs. "Nowhere, really. I'm working these people hard."
"Okay, good. Dutch, I'm cutting orders to get you ready to sail ASAP. Group is getting into gear now. I want you moving just as fast as you can. Mission orders are on the way. Be prepared to stay at sea for ninety days."
"Aye aye, sir." Claggett heard the line go dead. A moment later he lifted his phone and called for his department heads and chiefs to meet in the wardroom. The meeting had not yet started when the phone rang again. It was a call from Group asking for Claggett's precise manpower needs.
"Your house has a fine view. Is it for sale?"
Oreza shook his head. "No, it's not," he told the man at the door.
"Perhaps you would think about it. You are a fisherman, yes?"
"Yes, sir, I am. I have a charter boat—"
"Yes, I know." The man looked around, clearly admiring the size and location of what was really a fairly ordinary tract house by American standards. Manuel and Isabel Oreza had bought it five years earlier, just barely beating the real-estate boom on Saipan. "I would pay much for this," the man said.
"But then where would I live?" Portagee asked.
"Over a million American dollars," the man persisted.
Strangely enough, Oreza felt a flash of anger at the offer. He still had a mortgage, after all, and paid the bill every month—actually his wife did, but that was beside the point. The typical American monthly ritual of pulling the ticket out of the book, filling out the check, tucking both in the preprinted envelope, and dropping it in the mail on the first day of the month-the entire procedure was proof to them that they did indeed own their first house after thirty-plus years of being government-service tumbleweeds. The house was theirs.
"Sir, this house is mine, okay? I live here. I like it here."
The man was as friendly and polite as he could be, in addition to being a pushy son of a bitch. He handed over a card. "I know. Please excuse my intrusion. I would like to hear from you after you have had a chance to consider my offer." And with that he walked to the next house in the development.
"What the hell?" Oreza whispered, closing the door.
"What was that all about?" Pete Burroughs asked.
"He wants to pay me a million bucks for the house."
"Nice view," Burroughs observed. "On the California coast this would go for a nice price. But not that much. You wouldn't believe what Japanese real-estate prices are."
"A million bucks?" And that was just his opening offer, Oreza reminded himself. The man had his Toyota Land Cruiser parked in the cul-de-sac, and was clearly walking from one house to another, seeing what he could buy.
"Oh, he'd turn it over for a lot more, or maybe if he was smart, just rent it."
"But then where would we live?"
"You wouldn't," Burroughs replied. "How much you want to bet they give you a first-class ticket stateside at the settlement. Think about it," the engineer suggested.
"Well, that's interesting," Robby Jackson thought. "Anything else happening?"
"The 'cans we saw before are gone now. Things are settling back down to-hell, they are normal now except for all the soldiers around."
"Any trouble?"
"No, sir, nothing. Same food ships coming in, same tankers, same everything. Air traffic has slowed down a lot. The soldiers are sort of dug in, but they're being careful