Читаем Designated Targets полностью

Chief Rollins was yelling at him to get the prisoners’ hands tied up. Mr. Kennedy was yelling at Miss Lohrey that this was the dumbest fucking idea anyone ever had. Some dripping-wet Chinese guy was trying to hug Moose as he tried to cuff some Japanese guy who’d had all the fight shot out of him. And then someone else was calling out that the planes would be here any minute, and then one of the ships they’d torpedoed went up in this gigantic fucking bang that lit up the whole ocean and guys were screaming and crying and the next thing he knew there was a real long burst of machine-gun fire and then a long, long second of quiet, before someone said, “Holy shit.”

And Moose looked over and saw Miss Lohrey standing at the edge of the boat with one arm in a sling. In the other, she had an old tommy gun, with a drum mag just like the ones his dad said Capone’s men used to have, and goddamn if she hadn’t just emptied the whole fucking thing over the edge of the boat and into the guys swimming below. Well, maybe she hadn’t. Maybe she’d shot it into the air or something. But then maybe not, because the Chinese were swimming away from the boat now, ’cept for a whole bunch of bodies that just bobbed up and down on the water leaking blood everywhere in the warm orange light of the oil fires.

SOUTHWEST PACIFIC AREA HEADQUARTERS

“Jesus Christ. She killed them.”

Rachel Nguyen’s stuffy little room had become unbearably hot and close. They’d watched the relayed vision of the pickup with mounting concern as more and more survivors crowded around the PT boat. As they formed a thick carpet of thrashing limbs and bobbing heads, the men around her murmured that it was all going wrong, that they couldn’t possibly get away before the planes turned up and spotted them. MacArthur himself had just told everyone to pipe down when the female officer from Willet’s submarine grabbed a gun off a sailor, walked over to the edge, and opened up on the densely packed mass of floating men.

On the screen, the 101 was now moving again, motoring slowly through the disbursed survivors, but nobody said anything until MacArthur spoke up.

“What the hell just happened, Commander?” he asked, turning away from the screen to offer Rachel his full, glowering visage.

She looked at him quizzically. “From what I could see, the mission was in danger of failing, General,” she said. “Lieutenant Lohrey acted to regain the initiative.”

MacArthur’s face was a dead mask. He gave away nothing of what he was thinking. But the men around him weren’t so well controlled. Rachel caught some of them staring at her like she had suddenly grown a second head.

“I can see,” she said quietly, “that you disapprove.”

10

PEARL HARBOR, HAWAII

The old girl was a ghost ship, or she felt that way to her new skipper.

Captain Mike Judge squinted against the glare of the midday sun and tried to feel the heartbeat of the USS Hillary Clinton. Dozens of screens functioned around him, constantly updating the reports on the state of the great warship. But Judge had spent nigh on six years of his life aboard this vessel, in one role or another, and he fancied that he could still feel something that the circuits and plasma screens couldn’t tell him.

His darlin’ was lonesome.

She’d lost a quarter of her complement to the tragedy at Midway. Another two thousand had transferred Stateside, into the research and training facilities that Kolhammer was building in the Zone and at Fleet in San Diego. Pilots without planes to fly now found that their engineering studies were a national asset of such value that they were banned from frontline combat. Systems operators and engineers, programmers and flight technicians had ceased to perform any duties at the sharp end of conflict. They, too, had been reclassified out of harm’s way and into hundreds of lecture rooms and laboratories.

The Clinton echoed to their absence.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги