Somebody must have tipped off the ragheads, because they were wailing up a storm. Long ululating cries of
Having given up on the computers in frustration, Tusk Musso leaned over the old map table, gripping the back of a swivel chair, biting down hard on the urge to pick it up and throw it through the window. He was so angry – and, just quietly, so weirded out-that there was a fair chance he could have heaved that sucker all the way down to the water’s edge. The bay was deep cerulean blue, almost perfectly still, and the chair would have made a satisfying splash. Unfortunately, Musso was the ranking officer on the base today and everybody was looking to him for answers. Guantanamo’s naval commandant, Captain Cimines, was missing, apparently along with about three hundred million of his countrymen, and a whole heap of Mexicans and Canucks into the bargain. And Cubans too, Musso reminded himself.
‘What are the locals up to, Georgie?’ he rumbled.
His aide, Lieutenant Colonel George Stavros, delivered one brief shake of the head. ‘Still hopping around, sir. Looks like someone really kicked over their anthill. Our guys have counted at least two hundred of them bugging out.’
‘But nothing coming our way yet?’
‘No sir. Santiago and Baracoa are still quiet. A few crowds building, but nothing too big.’
Musso nodded slowly. He was a huge man, with what looked like a solid block of white granite for a head, resting atop a tree trunk of a neck. Even that one simple gesture spoke of enormous reserves of power. He shifted his gaze from the antique, analogue reality of the map table with its little wooden and plastic markers, across to the banks of flat screens, which even now were refusing to tell him anything about what was going on a short distance to the north. The faces of the men and women around him were a study in barely constrained anxiety. They were a mixed service group about two dozen strong, representing all the arms of the US military that had a stake in Guantanamo, mostly Navy and Marines, but with a few Army and Air Force types thrown in. There was even one lone Coast Guard rep, mournfully staring at the map table, wondering where his little boat could possibly have gone. The cutter had dropped out of contact. It was easily found on radar, but would not respond to hail.
Musso had no permanent connection to Guantanamo. He’d been sent down to review operations at X-ray, the first task of a new job, a
‘Okay. Let’s take an inventory. What do we know for certain?’ he asked, and began ticking the answers off on his fingers. ‘Thirty-three minutes ago, we lost contact with CONUS for two minutes. We had nothing but static on the phones, sat links, the net, broadcast TV, radio – everything. Then, all of our comm links started functioning again, but we get no response to anything we send home. All our other links are fine – Pearl, NATO, ANZUS, CENTCOM in Qatar – but