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Juan returned to his central seat and called up the specifications for the Libyan vessel. She was a modified Russian frigate, purchased in 1999, weighing in at fourteen hundred tons. She was two-thirds the length of the Oregon—three hundred and thirteen feet—and the Corporation’s ship outclassed the Libyan when it came to weapons systems. But the frigate Khalij Surt still packed a powerful punch, with four three-inch deck guns, multiple launchers for the SS-N-2c Styx ship-to-ship missiles, as well as an umbrella of Gecko rockets and rapid-fire 30mm ca
Juan studied a picture of the vessel from Jane’s Defence Review’s website. She was a lethal-looking craft, with a tall, flaring bow, and a radio mast festooned with ante
Cabrillo had no doubt he could take her in an engagement. The Oregon’s ship-to-ship missiles had twice the range of the Sidra’s Styx system, but blowing the Libyan frigate out of the water with a missile shot from over the horizon wasn’t the point.
He needed to board the Sidra, rescue Fiona Katamora if his hunch was right, and get her to safety.
“That her?” Max asked. He’d moved to Juan’s side silently and was pointing at the computer monitor.
“Yup. What do you think?”
“Judging by the radar specs, they’ll see a chopper coming fifty miles off. And it looks like she’s loaded for bear, with triple-A and SAMs.”
“Which means we’re going to have to lay in alongside her and do this old-school.”
“You mean go toe to toe with her, don’t you?”
“We’ll need a distraction to get in close, but, yeah, that’s what I’m thinking.”
Max was silent for a moment. Naval war-fighting doctrine had changed dramatically in the years since missiles had been perfected. No longer did heavily armored battleships pound at each other with their big guns, hoping for a hit. Sea battles now oftentimes were fought with the combatants hundreds of miles apart. The power of high-explosive-tipped missiles made thick plates of protective steel superfluous, so modern navies rarely bothered.
The Oregon had built-in protection, but not against the Sidra’s three-inch ca
“When was the last time two capital ships dueled it out like this?” Hanley finally asked.
“I’m thinking March ninth, 1862, at Hampton Roads, Virginia.”
“The Monitor and the Merrimack?” Juan nodded. Max added, “They fought to a draw. We don’t have that option. And you do realize that unless we sink her as soon as we have the Secretary, we’re going to have just as tough a time getting clear again. We might get lucky sneaking up on their ship, but don’t think the Libyans are go
“Already thought about that.”
“You have an idea?”
“No,” Juan said airily. “But I have thought about it.”
“And your distraction? Any ideas on that front?”
“Don’t have the foggiest. But since we’ll attack under the cover of darkness, we’ve got until dusk to come up with one. One thing, though . . .”
“Yeah?”
“A ship the size of the Sidra is going to take twenty minutes or more to sink, no matter how we do it. That’s more than enough time to give the Oregon a missile enema.”
Max put on a long-suffering expression. “Oh, you are just full of cheery news, aren’t you?”
“I’ll add insult to injury. Before we face the Sidra, we’re loading our new Libyan friends into our lifeboats. I don’t want them aboard when we go into battle. So if something goes wrong, we’ve got no way off the Oregon.”
“Why did I ever take that first phone call from you all those years ago?” Max cried theatrically to the ceiling.
“Chairman,” the comm officer said, “you have another call coming through.”
“Linc?”
“No, sir. Langston Overholt.”
“Thanks, Monica.” Juan do
“How are you feeling?”
“Good. Tired, but good.”
“And your guests?”
“Grateful and ravenous. They’ve gone through half our stores in a single day.”
“I’m calling for an update and to give you some news.”
“Tariq Assad just showed up near where my people are looking for Suleiman’s tomb.”
“He’s the official who Qaddafi’s government said is Al-Jama?”
“And it would appear they were right, and we helped him escape and nearly lost a man doing so.”
“Lost someone. Who?”
“Hali Kasim, my head communications officer, was shot in the chest. Eddie Seng got him to a hospital, but we have no idea yet on his condition.”
“I’ll get word to Ambassador Moon so he’ll look into it.”
“I’d appreciate that, thank you.”
“Does this clear Minister Ghami from your list of suspects?”
“Not in the slightest. Terrorists might have taken down the Secretary’s plane without government help, but there was a cover-up afterward. It could have easily been orchestrated from the top or manipulated from the shadows. If Al-Jama’s people have infiltrated the Libyan government the way we suspect, then the tangos could have been tipped off early enough to put the cover-up in place.”
“Or Ghami is high in Al-Jama’s organization, and he ordered the destruction of the plane’s wreckage as well as the convenient timing of its discovery.”
“Exactly. And let’s not forget that the person who Ghami replaced, plus most of his senior staff, were arrested and left to rot. That could have come from Ghami, or Qaddafi himself could have ordered a purge.”
“What a mess.” The CIA veteran sighed. “Despite our warnings, the Vice President is insisting on going to a scheduled reception tonight at Ghami’s home for many of the conference’s senior attendees.”
“Bad idea,” Juan snapped.
“I concur, but there isn’t anything I can do about it. The Secret Service detail has been informed there may be an assault, but the VP is adamant he attend.”
“The guy’s a moron.”
“I concur with that, too. However, it doesn’t change the facts. On the plus side, Ghami’s house is totally isolated, and the security perso
“Really? Why?”
“Would you stage a massive attack on your own home? Especially when you’ll have the same people gathered together the next day with the world’s press watching every move they make. You must remember the impact of Anwar Sadat’s assassination being broadcast nearly live. If there’s going to be an attack—”
“Not if, Lang,” Juan said.
“If there’s going to be an attack,” Overholt persisted, “it’ll be tomorrow, or sometime during the conference.”
“I don’t like this.”
“Nobody does, but there isn’t any other way. All of these leaders know they’re putting their lives at risk by attending the conference, either there in Tripoli or back home when their own fundamentalists rouse themselves into a frenzy. In these troubled times, being the president of a Middle Eastern country is a dangerous occupation, especially for those willing to work on a peace deal. They all know it and are still willing to go ahead. That says something.” Overholt then changed tack as his way of saying that was the end of the discussion, and he asked, “How are you coming with finding Secretary Katamora?”