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Collateral Damage
  • Текст добавлен: 15 октября 2016, 06:54

Текст книги "Collateral Damage"


Автор книги: Dale Brown



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Текущая страница: 19 (всего у книги 25 страниц)





11


Tripoli

The machine called Arachne stood barely half a foot tall with its six legs fully extended, and could easily hide behind a crumpled piece of newspaper. The work module on top was smaller than a watch face, but its interchangeable sensors were more powerful than even the most advanced timepiece. One provided a 360-degree IR image, another an optical image in 10-4 lux.

In the rarefied world of advanced robots, Arachne was a superstar—or would have been, had anyone been allowed to boast of her prowess. The “bot,” as Rubeo and his people referred to her, was a hand-built terrestrial spy, able to do things that human spies could only dream of. Developed privately, she was still undergoing testing before being offered for sale to the CIA.

Where better to give her a realistic test than in Libya?

Rubeo finished the bench calibration on the third and final sensor, more critical in this application than the others—a magnetometer that mapped currents. The device had to be carefully calibrated, then gingerly handled until it was locked on the unit. The procedure was relatively straightforward for the techies who worked with it routinely, but unusual enough that the man who invented the device had to proceed extremely slowly.

Rubeo finished his checks, locked out the options panel, and then killed the power to the unit. He unscrewed it gingerly and brought it over to the bot, which was sitting on the bench in the hangar across from the larger transport bot, Diomedes.

Also invented by Rubeo’s company, a version of Diomedes was already in operation with Whiplash and the U.S. military. The Greek name was used only by Rubeo; the versions delivered to the military had extremely mundane designations like “gun bot 34MRU” and “WGR46TransportAssist,” which alluded to their ultimate use.

Diomedes was about half the size of a gas-powered lawn mower, with a squat, rounded hull that featured a flat payload area about twelve by eighteen inches in the back, and a broad mast area that looked a bit like the bridge superstructure from a modern destroyer. The skin was made of a thick, webbed resin composite, sturdy yet light. The motor, powered by hydrogen fuel cells, was extremely quiet. Diomedes could operate at full speed for sixteen hours without being refueled; in combat under normal operation, it might last a good week before needing a new fuel cell.

Unlike the smaller bot, Diomedes had two tanklike treads on either side of its rectangular body. Fore and aft of the tread systems were wheels that extended from large shafts. Ordinarily, the wheels remained retracted next to the transport bot’s hull, but when meeting an obstruction or if needed for balance or quick maneuvering, the bot extended them. This helped get the machine over small obstacles or balance on very difficult terrain. There were two armlike extensions at the front, and a miniature arm with a crane hook in the flat rear compartment.

Rubeo slid the sensor atop to the plastic holder, making sure the metal shielding was properly in place. The system was designed to ignore the fields generated by the bot, but he considered the shielding an important safeguard nonetheless.

Lawson was hovering nearby, watching. He was excited about the bots, which he called “little creatures.” He wasn’t actually in the way, but his lurking presence would have been annoying if he hadn’t been so enthusiastic.

Actually, it was annoying, but Rubeo let him stay anyway. The others were seeing to last minute details or guarding the area outside. Uncharacteristically, Rubeo felt the need for human company tonight.

He glanced at his watch as he snapped the last prong in place on Arachne. Clearly, they wouldn’t be able to get south before dawn—it was almost 5:00 P.M. now. The process had taken far longer than he thought it would.

His fault, really. He should have had more of his people here to help. He needn’t have done all the prep work himself.

Should he go to the hotel rooms they’d rented and get some sleep? Or sleep in the desert?

He’d ask Jons what he thought.

“So the spider creature walks right in to where we want it to go?” asked Lawson.

“When told to.” Rubeo went to the bench and took the control unit—a modified laptop—and brought it over to finish orienting Arachne. The unit had to be told what sensors it was carrying; once that was done, the process was fully automated and quick.

“How does it get in?”

“It will depend. If necessary, Diomedes will cut a hole through the wall,” said Rubeo. “Or do whatever is necessary.”

“Oh. I thought maybe it would, like, crawl up the drain spout or something.”

“It could, if there was a drain spout,” said Rubeo. “We haven’t seen an easy access. Diomedes will check the external perimeter, and if there is an easy access, we’ll use it. Cutting into the building is the last resort.”

“Because of the noise?”

“The saw is relatively quiet,” said Rubeo. “But because of that it works very slowly.”

“Are you a better weaver than Minerva?” Lawson asked the bot.

“I’m impressed,” said Rubeo. In Roman myth, Arachne was a weaver who was turned into a spider after her work outshone Minerva’s in a contest. Jealous, Minerva took revenge by changing her into a spider. “I didn’t know you knew the story.”

“Oh, I know my myths. That of course is the Latin version. There’s a parallel in Greek. Minerva would be Athena. Of course, this is all coming from Ovid, so who the hell knows what the real myth was.”

“You don’t trust Ovid?”

“Do I trust any poet? Hell, they lie for a living, right? For all I know, he was working for an extermination company when he came up with the tale.”

Rubeo laughed, unexpectedly amused by the mercenary soldier. He finished his work, unhooked the laptop, and placed the small robot inside a delivery compartment at the base of Diomedes. Then he keyed his access code into the larger computer, waking it up.

“Follow me,” he told the machine.

It did so, moving out to the pickups. One of the Filipinos had set up a ramp; Rubeo directed the machine to drive up it, into the back. Once there, he deactivated it and covered it with a tarp. Lawson helped tie it down.

Jons was in a parking area about three hundred yards away, talking with their helicopter pilot. Rubeo called him, telling him they were ready to leave. They discussed whether to go right away or not. For Jons, it was a no-brainer—better to move out as quickly as possible.

Lawson gathered the Filipinos. Halit had been dismissed. Abas was to stay with Kimmy, the helicopter pilot, in case they needed backup.

Jons suggested they tell the alliance what they were up to. Rubeo rejected the idea out of hand.

“They’ll only tell us not to,” he said.

Rubeo went to the front seat of the truck, brooding. He was fairly sure now that the Sabres hadn’t been interfered with from the ground, so why even bother going back?

Was the risk worth it for fifteen percent of doubt?

If that wasn’t the cause, though, what was? The sabotage theory seemed even more improbable.

His sat phone rang. Rubeo looked at the number, and at first he didn’t recognize it. But then the last name came up.

It was Kharon.

“This is Rubeo.”

“Ray, hi, say, um, I kind of need a little help.”

“What is it, Neil? What can I do?”

“Well . . . I kind of flew in to Tripoli and I got into a little problem at the airport. I was wondering if you could call one of your connections and maybe talk to them to get me sprung.”

“You’re in Tripoli?”

“Actually, I’m at passport control in the airport. I should be able to just go—it’s an open city, right? But they’re questioning my stamp from Italy. I guess the guy who stamped it there didn’t stamp it right.”

“Where are you?” asked Rubeo, still not quite believing what he had heard.

“Passport control. In the terminal. Tripoli. Maybe if, like, you could get one of the officials or somebody you work with—”

“Wait there. I’ll be there in a few minutes.”

“You? Here?”

“Just sit tight.”

Kharon hung up the phone. It had been easier than he thought.

“He’s on his way,” he told the passport officer. “You know what to say?”

“Of course.”

Kharon held up the one hundred euro note. The man eyed it greedily.

“Soon,” promised Kharon. “When you release me, I slip you the passport to stamp. It’ll be between the back pages.”

The man nodded. Bribing your way through customs was a time-honored practice in Tripoli.

A few minutes later Kharon spotted a dark-haired American strutting through the hallway as if he owned the place. He stopped and asked someone near the lobby for directions. The man pointed toward the small desk where Kharon and the customs agent were standing.

He sent one of his people, rather than coming himself. I should have known that.

“You Neil?” asked the man, spotting him. His voice was very loud, as he was shouting across the hall.

“It’s me,” said Kharon.

The man walked over, grinning. “Name’s Lawson. What’s the trouble?”

“Passport, this not correct,” said the customs agent quickly. His English was actually quite good, as Kharon had learned earlier; he used fractured grammar for effect.

“Well we can fix that, can’t we?” asked Lawson. He winked at Kharon. He switched to Arabic. It was a little stiff, but grammatically correct. “I have heard that the paperwork can be corrected on the spot by the proper authority,” Lawson said. “Naturally, there are fees involved.”

“This is true,” said the passport officer softly.

“Perhaps we could do that in this situation.”

“Very well.”

“What is the fee?” asked Lawson.

“One hundred euro.”

Lawson didn’t bother trying to talk the man down. He reached into his pocket and pulled out two fifties. The customs man’s face fell—he realized he could have gotten more.

The rest of the transaction was completed swiftly. Kharon handed over his passport, and got it back stamped—and a hundred euros lighter.

“Not that I think he’ll change his mind,” Lawson said, starting away. “But let’s not give him a chance.”

“Is Dr. Rubeo in Tripoli?”

“He’s waiting for us outside.”

Rubeo saw the young man trailing along after Lawson, looking a bit sheepish. He was smart, undoubtedly, but a bit naive. Surely a simple bribe would have gotten him out of trouble immediately.

But perhaps he didn’t have the money.

“Neil, I didn’t think you were coming to Africa,” said Rubeo, opening his window as he approached. “What brings you here?”

“I thought, since I was so close, I should see what was going on,” said Kharon. “You actually inspired me.”

“How is that?”

“I thought if a famous scientist like you was going to visit the country, then I should, too. An adventure.”

“This is hardly the place for an adventure. We’ll take you into town. Do you have a hotel?” Rubeo asked.

“The Majesty, in the old section.”

“I’m sure we can do a little better than that,” said Rubeo. He turned to Jons. “What about the Citadel?”

“Yeah, something along those lines.” The foreign hotels in the new sections had much better security.

“I, uh, really can’t afford that—”

“You’re my guest. Think of it as part of the interview travel. Unfortunately, I have to do some more traveling, but I’ll be back by tomorrow, and then we can talk. Some of my men will come with us and you can see the city, and have your little adventure.”

Kharon slid into the truck. A dark-skinned Filipino sat next to him. The man was silent, but had an AR–15 between his legs, pointed at the floor.

The closed space of the unfamiliar SUV began to bother him. He felt the first tingle of fear rising along the back of his neck. He turned toward the window.

“I need some fresh air,” he told the others, and opened the window.

They weren’t paying attention. In front of him, Rubeo adjusted his ear set and told the men in the second car that they would meet them on the highway south. The driver, Jons, was clearly unhappy.

“I’d rather they rode behind us.”

“I don’t want the bots exposed,” said Rubeo. “The less they’re seen, the better.”

“They’re tarped. It just looks like equipment in the back.”

“And that won’t raise questions?”

Jons didn’t argue. Rubeo was the boss.

They drove away from the terminal, heading toward the Al Amrus Highway.

“I don’t want the truck driving all through the city,” Rubeo told Jon as they reached the highway.

“I don’t like splitting up.”

“It’s only for a few minutes. The bots are safer at the airport.”

The traffic was light. The truck sped around the circle and onto the highway.

Kharon sat back, waiting.

Rubeo realized he was getting testy, and that was affecting his judgment. He ought to let Jons do his job.

“I’m sorry,” he told him. “Call them to catch up.”

“Good,” said the driver. He took his foot off the gas and reached for the mike button on his ear set.

A moment later there was a sharp pop at the front of the truck. Jons gripped the wheel tightly, holding the truck steady as it jerked to the right.

“Blowout,” muttered someone.

There was a flash. Rubeo felt himself lifted into the air, then spinning.

“Damn,” he said, cursing for one of the very few times in his life. Then everything went black.





PRISONER OF CONSCIENCE






1


Tripoli

T his isn’t the way it’s supposed to go!

The voice screaming in Kharon’s head refused to be quiet. He pressed his arms over his head, trying to run away, even though he was held tight in his seat as the SUV tumbled over.

It was the closet, cramped and dark, the hiding place he had run to years before.

No. I’m not a child anymore!

The truck’s engine revved. There was another explosion nearby.

Time to get out! Get out! Go!

He was upside down. Kharon managed to undo his seat belt and push to the right. His window was still open and he half fell, half crawled out.

This isn’t the way it’s supposed to go!

The fresh air relieved his claustrophobia and his head began to clear. He went back to the SUV and struggled with the front door, finally pulling it open. Rubeo dropped out of the truck. The scientist was coughing, only semiconscious. Kharon took hold of him under his arms and pulled him away from the wreck.

For a few seconds his animosity disappeared. In the confusion and chaos, Kharon sought to get them both to safety.

Guns were firing. Cars screeched. Something had gone wrong, completely wrong—the kidnapping was supposed to take place after he gave the signal at the hotel.

Why the hell had they tried to blow them up?

Rubeo crawled up the side of the road, away from the SUV. He tried to fight through the mental fog, focusing his thoughts on what he saw before him.

Dirt. Sky.

Kharon pulling him away.

Rubeo coughed. Jons was back by the vehicle, firing his weapon.

Rubeo pushed at Kharon. The young man released him and Rubeo got to his feet, pulling his gun out from under his jacket. Two men were running toward him. They had rifles.

On his side?

They were wearing brown fatigues. His men wore Western clothes.

Rubeo pointed and fired twice. Both fell.

“Neil—Neil stay with me!” Rubeo shouted. He rose to his feet. A dozen men swarmed from the other side of the road. Jons was firing ferociously.

Rubeo spun around. There was no one nearby. He could see a wall with houses behind it some forty or fifty yards away.

“We can retreat to cover!” he yelled to Jons. “Let’s go!”

A fusillade of bullets sent him diving for cover. Kharon crawled next to him.

“Stay near me,” said Rubeo. He began to run. He sensed Kharon near him, but temporarily lost track of Jons. He threw himself down as he reached the wall.

Jons ran to him. “Over the wall, over the wall!” yelled the bodyguard. As he yelled, he picked Rubeo up and boosted him over the wall. Rubeo tried to land on his feet but stumbled, his legs giving way. He fell onto his back, momentarily stunned.

Kharon scrambled over the wall next to him.

“Guns!” yelled Kharon.

Rubeo pushed over, trying to get up. He couldn’t see what Kharon was pointing at, but raised his weapon anyway. Then he turned back to see Jons jumping over the wall.

“Our other SUV is coming,” yelled the bodyguard. “Go right.”

Rubeo started in that direction, then realized that Kharon was still behind him. “Come on.”

They began running toward a dirt alleyway twenty yards away. They cut up it to the left, Jons trailing behind to watch their backs. Rubeo ran toward a cemetery filled with mausoleums and surrounded by a low wall. Winded, he collapsed against the wall.

Kharon helped him to his feet. Clambering over the wall, Rubeo steadied himself against a nearby tomb, taking stock.

I’m a scientist, not a soldier. Can I do this?

You can do anything you need to, to survive.

Jons came over after them.

“If we go up this way there’s another street,” he told them. “Our other truck will meet us there. I have the helicopter coming in case.”

“Who attacked us?” asked Rubeo.

“I don’t know.”

“Were we hit by a missile?”

“May have been a grenade. Or maybe an IED,” said Jons. “God damn place is going all to shit.”

“What about Joker?” asked Rubeo. The Filipino had been in the back with Kharon.

Jons shook his head. “Can you run?” he asked Rubeo.

“Yes.”

Jons turned to Kharon. “You?”

“Yup.”

They sprinted for a hundred yards or so, running up the hill to the knoll at the center of the cemetery. But once more Rubeo began to tire, and after another ten yards his pace was nearly a walk.

“The helo is coming,” Jons told him. “Come on. We’ll wait out by the street.”

They ran under a row of trees and stopped at the edge of a walled yard. Rubeo dropped to his knees, holding the gun. Kharon moved back next to him. He wore an angry expression.

“It’s all right,” Rubeo told him.

“Truck is coming up,” said Jons. “Let’s move to it. Helo can shadow us.”

They rose together and began running toward the road. As they did, there was more gunfire. Rubeo ducked back and turned. A gunman wielding a pistol jumped over a low wall in the alley behind them. Rubeo zeroed his pistol and fired.

The man fell. Kharon took off, running to him despite Rubeo’s shout. The young man scooped up the gun and returned. Rubeo pushed his legs in the direction of the helicopter’s heavy beat. After he’d gone about twenty yards, he looked behind him, but couldn’t see Jons.

Kharon caught up. He pointed his gun at Rubeo.

“Careful where you’re pointing that,” Rubeo told him. He took a step back against the wall. There was a flash above—Rubeo glanced toward the sky in time to see a red fireball flash and turn into a black fist above him. Then metal began raining down.

The helicopter had just been shot down.

“You’re mine,” Kharon said, jumping on him.

Stunned, Rubeo raised his gun. Kharon hit him in the temple, then stepped on his wrist. Rubeo squirmed to get away, but Kharon hit him again. This time Rubeo’s eyes closed for a moment.

When they opened, two men were next to him, AK–47s in their hands.






2


Sicily

Being a senator had a number of advantages, and one of them was immediate access to any military officer who had even the faintest dream of making general—by law and long tradition, promotion to the star rank required approval by the Senate.

Colonels tended to be very aware of this. So when Ginella’s aide in the outer office told Zen that he didn’t think the colonel was available, Zen told him to pick up the phone and try anyway.

The colonel appeared so quickly Zen wondered if she had even bothered to hang up.

“Senator, I’m pleased that you’re interested in our squadron,” she told him. “Won’t you come in?”

“Glad to.”

Zen couldn’t remember meeting Ginella when he was in the service, but he nodded agreeably as she mentioned several generals he knew, deciding he had nothing to lose by letting her drop names.

“Would you like to see the aircraft?” she said finally, running out of names.

“I’d like to, but unfortunately I’m pressed for time tonight,” said Zen. “I have to catch a flight in ten minutes.”

“I see.”

“I’m interested in the incident yesterday, when your squadron was covering the retrieval of the allied commando unit.”

“Yes, the SAS troops. We were up for quite a while,” said Ginella.

“And then you lost one of your planes.”

Ginella’s face clouded. “I did.”

“Why was Captain Mako flying in your squadron?”

“Captain Mako? He was a substitute pilot,” she said defensively. “He . . . came to the squadron at my request.”

“That’s a little unusual, isn’t it?”

“Not if you’re undermanned. I think he was an excellent pilot. He had experience in the A–10E before any of my pilots, or myself. And I think he’s clearly a good combat pilot.”

“So do I,” said Zen. “So what happened on the mission?”

“Are you here in an official capacity, Senator? Your tone seems a little formal.”

“I’m interested in knowing what happened,” said Zen. “I’m interested in making sure that Captain Mako gets a fair shake.”

“He’s not in any trouble that I know of,” said Ginella.

“Good.”

“I assume you’re referring to the fact that he passed over the area the missile was fired from just prior to the shoot-down,” said Ginella.

“I understand he did.”

“He missed the missile launcher. Whether he would have seen it in time or not, I don’t know.”

“You’re sure he missed it?”

“I have to tell you, Senator, it’s difficult to believe the missile wasn’t launched from that point. So by definition, if he didn’t see it—”

“What do the reconnaissance videos show?”

“Unfortunately, the closest UAV was not in a position to capture that portion of the battlefield. The others show just the general area. And the images from his plane are inclusive as well.”

“I think any account of the incident should indicate that,” said Zen. “But it should also indicate what he said.”

“I’m sure it will.”

“None of your other pilots saw the missile.”

“We weren’t close enough.”

Zen nodded. “As for personal feelings, I hope none will enter into any of your reports, or actions. One way or another.”

Ginella stared at him but said nothing.

“Great,” said Zen finally. “I’m glad that will be the case.”

He started to wheel away.

“Personal feelings have no place in battle,” said Ginella.

“Agreed, Colonel,” said Zen, not bothering to look back. “Though in my experience, they often seem to intrude.”


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