Read Peacekeepers (1988) Online
Authors: Ben Bova
The two young men rushed toward the hatch, bumping each other in their eagerness to follow their commander's orders. Hazard almost smiled at the Laurel and Hardy aspect of it. Lieutenant Yang pushed herself to the comm console and anchored her softboots on the Velcro strip fastened to the deck there.
"Miss Stromsen, you are the duty officer. I am depending on you to keep me informed of the status of all systems."
"Yessir!"
Keep them busy. Hazard told himself. Make them concentrate on doing their jobs and they won't have time to be frightened.
"Encountering interference, sir," reported Yang, her eyes on the comm displays. "Switching to emergency frequency."
Jamming, thought Hazard.
"Main comm antenna overheating," Stromsen said. She glanced down at her console keyboard, then up at the displays again. "I think they're attacking the antennas with lasers, sir. Main antenna out. Secondaries ..." she shrugged and gestured toward the baleful red lights strung across her keyboard. "They're all out, sir."
"Set up a laser link," Hazard commanded. "They can't jam that. We've got to let Geneva know what's happening."
"Sir," said Yang, "Geneva will not be within our horizon for another forty-six minutes."
"Try signaling the commsats. Topmost priority."
"Yes, sir."
Got to let Geneva know. Hazard repeated to himself. If anybody can help us, they can. If Buckbee's pals haven't put one of their own people into the comm center down there. Or staged a coup. Or already knocked out the commsats. They've been planning this for a long time.
They've got it all timed down to the microsecond.
He remembered the dinner two months earlier, the night before he left to take command of the Hunter. I've known about it since then. Hazard said to himself. Known about it but didn't want to believe it. Known about it and done nothing. Buckbee was right. I killed those six kids. I should have seen that the bastards would strike without warning.
It had been in the equatorial city of Belem, where the Brazilians had set up their space launching facility. The IPF was obligated to spread its launches among all its space-capable member nations, so Hazard had been ordered to assemble his crew at Belem for their lift into orbit.
The night before they left, Hazard had been invited to dinner by an old Navy acquaintance who had already put in a three month hitch in orbit with the Peacekeepers and was now on Earthside duty.
His name was Cardillo. Hazard had known him, somewhat distantly, as a fellow submariner, commander of attack boats rather than the missile carriers Hazard himself had captained. Vince Cardillo had a reputation for being a hard nose who ran an efficient boat, if not a particularly happy one. He had never been really close to Hazard: their chemistries were too different. But this specific sweltering evening in a poorly air-conditioned restaurant in downtown Belem, Cardillo acted as if they shared some old fraternal secret between them.
Hazard had worn his IPF summer-weight uniform: pale blue with gold insignia bordered by space black. Cardillo came in casual civilian slacks and a beautifully tailored Italian silk jacket. Through drinks and the first part of the dinner their conversation was light, inconsequential. Mostly reminiscences by two gray-haired submariners about men they had known, women they had chased, sea tales that grew with each retelling. But then:
"Damn shame," Cardillo muttered halfway through his entree of grilled eel.
The restaurant, one of the hundreds that had sprung up in Belem since the Brazilians had made the city their major spaceport, was on the waterfront. Outside the floor-to-ceiling windows, the muddy Para River widened into the huge bay that eventually fed into the Atlantic. Hazard had spent his last day on Earth touring around the tropical jungle on a riverboat. The makeshift shanties that stood on stilts along the twisting mud-brown creeks were giving way to industrial parks and cinder-block housing developments.
Air-conditioning was transforming the region from rubber plantations to computerized information services.
The smell of cement dust blotted out the fragrance of tropical flowers. Bulldozers clattered in raw clearings slashed from the forest where stark steel frameworks of new buildings rose above the jungle growth. Children who had splashed naked in the brown jungle streams were being rounded up and sent to air-conditioned schools.
"What's a shame?" Hazard asked. "Seems to me these people are starting to do all right for the first time in their lives. The space business is making a lot of jobs around here."
Cardillo took a forkful of eel from his plate. It never got to his mouth.
"I don't mean them, Johnny. I mean us. It's a damn shame about us."
Hazard had never liked being called Johnny. His family had addressed him as Jon. His Navy associates knew him as Hazard and nothing else. A few very close friends used J.W.
"What do you mean?" he asked. His own plate was already wiped clean. The fish and its dark spicy sauce had been marvelous. So had the crisp-crusted bread.
"Don't you feel nervous about this whole IPF thing?"
Cardillo asked, trying to look earnest. "I mean, I can see Washington deciding to put boomers like your boats in mothballs, and the silo missiles, too. But the attack subs? Decommission our conventional weapons systems? Leave us disarmed?"
Hazard had not been in command of a missile submarine in more than three years. He had been allowed, even encouraged, to resign his commission after the hostage mess in Brussels.
"If you're not in favor of what the American government is doing, then why did you agree to serve in the Peacekeepers?"
Cardillo shrugged and smiled slightly. It was not a pleasant smile. He had a thin, almost triangular face with a low, creased brow tapering down to a pointed chin. His once-dark hair, now peppered with gray, was thick and wavy. He had allowed it to grow down to his collar. His deep brown eyes were always narrowed, crafty, focused so intently he seemed to be trying to penetrate through you.
There was no joy in his face, even though he was smiling; no pleasure. It was the smile of a gambler, a con artist, a used-car salesman.
"Well-1," he said slowly, putting his fork back down on the plate and leaning back in his chair, "you know the old saying, 'If you can't beat 'em, join 'em.'"
Hazard nodded, although he felt puzzled. He groped for Cardillo's meaning. "Yeah, I guess playing space cadet up there will be better than rusting away on the beach."
"Playing?" Cardillo's dark brows rose slightly. "We're not playing, Johnny. We're in this for keeps."
"I didn't mean to imply that I don't take my duty to the IPF seriously," Hazard answered.
For an instant Cardillo seemed stunned with surprise.
Then he threw his head back and burst into laughter.
"Jesus Christ, Johnny," he gasped. "You're so straight-arrow it's hysterical."
Hazard frowned but said nothing. Cardillo guffawed and banged the table with one hand. Some of the diners glanced their way. They seemed to be mostly Americans or Europeans, a few Asians. Some Brazilians, too, Hazard noticed as he waited for Cardillo's amusement to subside.
Probably from the capital or Rio.
"Let me in on the joke," Hazard said at last.
Cardillo wiped at his eyes. Then, leaning forward across the table, his grin fading into an intense, penetrating stare, he whispered slyly, "I already told you, Johnny. If we can't avoid being members of the IPF—if Washington's so fucking weak that we've got to disband practically all our defenses—then what we've got to do is take over the Peacekeepers ourselves."
"Take over the Peacekeepers?" Hazard felt stunned at the thought of it.
"Damn right! Men like you and me, Johnny. It's our duty to our country."
"Our country," Hazard reminded him, "has decided to join the International Peacekeeping Force and has encouraged its military officers to obtain commissions in the IPF."
Cardillo shook his head. "That's our stupid goddamn government, Johnny. Not the country. Not the people who really want to defend America instead of selling her out to a bunch of fucking foreigners."
"That government," Hazard reminded him, "won a big majority last November."
Cardillo made a sour face. "Ahh, the people. What the fuck do they know?"
Hazard said nothing.
"I'm telling you, Johnny, the only way to do it is to take over the IPF."
"That's crazy."
"You mean if and when the time comes, you won't go along with us?"
"I mean," Hazard said, forcing his voice to remain calm, "that I took an oath to be loyal to the IPF. So did you."
"Yeah, yeah, sure. And what about the oath we took way back when—the one to preserve and protect the United States of America?"
"The United States of America wants us to serve in the Peacekeepers," Hazard insisted.
Cardillo shook his head again mournfully. Not a trace of anger. Not even disappointment. As if he had expected this reaction from Hazard. His expression was that of a salesman who could not convince his stubborn customer of the bargain he was offering.
"Your son doesn't feel the same way you do," Cardillo said.
Hazard immediately clamped down on the rush of emotions that surged through him. Instead of reaching across the table and dragging Cardillo to his feet and punching in his smirking face. Hazard forced a thin smile and kept his fists clenched on his lap.
"Jon Jr. is a grown man. He has the right to make his own decisions."
"He's serving under me, you know." Cardillo's eyes searched Hazard's face intently, probing for weakness.
"Yes," Hazard said tightly. "He told me."
Which was an outright lie.
* * *
"Missiles approaching, sir!"
Stromsen's tense warning snapped Hazard out of his reverie. He riveted his attention to the main CIC display screen. Six angry red dots were worming their way from the periphery of the screen toward the center, which marked the location of the Hunter, "Now we'll see if the ABM satellites are working or not,"
Hazard muttered.
"Links with the ABM sats are still good, sir," Yang reported from her station, a shoulder's width away from Stromsen. "The integral antennas weren't knocked out when they hit the comm dishes."
Hazard gave her a nod of acknowledgment. The two young women could not have looked more different: Yang was small, wiry, dark, her straight black hair cut like a military helmet; Stromsen was willowy yet broad in the beam and deep in the bosom, as blond as butter.
"Lasers on 124 and 125 autofiring," the Norwegian reported.
Hazard saw the display lights. On the main screen the six red dots flickered orange momentarily, then winked out altogether.
Stromsen pecked at her keyboard. Alphanumerics sprang up on a side screen. "Got them all while they were still in first-stage bum. They'll never reach us." She smiled with relief. "They're tumbling into the atmosphere. Burn-up within seven minutes."
Hazard allowed himself a small grin. "Don't break out the champagne yet. That's just their first salvo. They're testing to see if we actually have control of the lasers."
It's all a question of time. Hazard knew. But how much time? What are they planning? How long before they start slicing us up with laser beams? We don't have the shielding to protect against lasers. The stupid politicians wouldn't allow us to armor these stations. We're like a sitting duck up here.
"What are they trying to accomplish, sir?" asked Yang.
"Why are they doing this?"
"They want to take over the whole defense network. They want to seize control of the entire IPF."
"That's impossible!" Stromsen blurted.
"The Russians won't allow them to do that," Yang said.
"The Chinese and the other members of the IPF will stop them."
"Maybe," said Hazard. "Maybe." He felt a slight hint of nausea rippling in his stomach. Reaching up, he touched the slippery plastic of the medicine patch behind his ear.
"Do you think they could succeed?" Stromsen asked.
"What's important is, do they think they can succeed? There are still thousands of ballistic missiles on Earth. Tens of thousands of hydrogen-bomb warheads. Buckbee and his cohorts apparently believe that if they can take control of a portion of the ABM network, they can threaten a nuclear strike against the nations that won't go along with them."
"But the other nations will strike back and order their people in the IPF not to intercept their strikes," said Yang.
"It will be nuclear war," Stromsen said. "Just as if the IPF never existed."
"Worse," Yang pointed out, "because first there'll be a shoot-out on each one of these battle stations."
"That's madness!" said Stromsen.
"That's what we've got to prevent," Hazard said grimly.
An orange light began to blink on the comm console.
Yang snapped her attention to it. "Incoming message from the Graham, sir."
Hazard nodded. "Put it on the main screen."
Cardillo's crafty features appeared on the screen. He should have been on duty back on Earth, but instead he was smiling crookedly at Hazard.
"Well, Johnny, I guess by now you've figured out that we mean business."
"And so do we. Give it up, Vince. It's not going to work."
With a small shake of his head Cardillo answered, "It's already working, Johnny boy. Two of the Russian battle stations are with us. So's the Wood. The Chinks and Indians are holding out but the European station is going along with us."
Hazard said, "So you've got six of the nine stations."
"So far."
"Then you don't really need Hunter. You can leave us alone."
Pursing his lips for a moment, Cardillo replied, "I'm afraid it doesn't work that way, Johnny. We want Hunter. We can't afford to have you rolling around like a loose cannon. You're either with us or against us."
"I'm not with you," Hazard said flatly.
Cardillo sighed theatrically. "John, there are twenty other officers and crew on your station ..."
"Fourteen now," Hazard corrected.
"Don't you think you ought to give them a chance to make a decision about their own lives?"