Charles Taylor - Boomer

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Boomer: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Twenty years ago, the KGB planted an agent in the American Navy. Today he is the commander of an American nuclear attack submarine!
Wayne Newell is all-Navy, all-American, all-traitor. A graduate of the Soviet "Charm School," Newell is captain of the nuclear attack submarine USS Pasadena, now patrolling beneath the Pacific. He's convinced his crew that the world is at war — and that the Russians have a deadly masking device that makes Soviet submarines sound exactly like the most crucial ships in the American fleet: the nuclear-powered ballistic missile submarines known as Boomers. The subs that Pasadena detects may sound American — but they're the enemy and must be destroyed. The deception has begun…
In a world of darkness, super-sensitive listening devices and nerve-wracking tension, Newell's crew is being driven to the breaking point, cut off from communications, forced to destroy "enemy" subs in a war they can't confirm. And while the U.S. Pacific Command scrambles to find out who is attacking their fleet, two American submarines must go to war — against an aggressor who knows their every move, and is rapidly destroying America's sea-based strategic nuclear defense.

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On this evening he was having a great deal of trouble escaping from the shell of the man who ran the USSR. The General Secretary of the…. No, that wasn’t quite right. Too long to get to the punch line. They all might have been immolated before then.

Since this may be the only time in your life to witness the detonation of a series of American multiple reentry vehicles over the ancient capital city of the Soviet Union, the Genera! Secretary…. Yes, that was more like it. Get in the punch line before you lose your audience. Why had the absurd become so amusing this evening?

He poured one more glass of pertsovka. Then, being a man of some discipline, he took the bottle out to the kitchen himself and stuck it back in the freezer. Out of sight, out of mind.

Seated once again in the comfortable, threadbare easy chair that had followed him from one apartment to another, he raised the final glass to the light and swirled the liquid until it coated the inside of the frosty glass like the inside of a fragile, pale ball hung on a New Year’s tree. It seemed almost too pretty to drink. But it wasn’t really — it disappeared in a single gulp, followed by the internal explosives that appealed to him so much.

“My pet …” he began.

She jumped in surprise. Perhaps it had been the assumption in the back of her mind, as she delighted in the easy grace of the ice dancing on television, that his hand slipping over her shoulder would be the first sign. She turned and looked back at him with eyebrows raised in question.

“What would you think if …” He paused with a slight grin that she knew meant he had drunk more than he realized. “… if the Americans announced that we had pushed them to the edge and … no, that’s not really what I mean. What I mean to say is that they had good reason to release their missiles — what would you think about the leaders of our country?”

“Do you think that it would be a good reason?” she asked calmly.

“If it were I in their White House, I think … yes,” he concluded after a slight pause.

“And would there be something you could do to prevent it?”

“I’m not sure,” he answered softly.

“Then I wouldn’t be very happy with the man I trusted to lead the country. Most everything I see on television indicates that it’s the Americans who are providing all these challenges to peace. Of course, I don’t believe all that after what you’ve told me.” Both of them knew that not a word of anything said between the two of them would be repeated outside the apartment. “Is that why you’ve had a couple of extra glasses?”

He snickered aloud. “You wouldn’t believe me if I told you what had been running through my mind the past few minutes.” He rose and walked over to her side, kissing her on the cheek and patting her hand. “An invitation to watch the fireworks,” he sighed, “for all those who refuse to step back an inch.” His hand began to slide down the front of her dress….

They were interrupted by the phone that sat on a desk in the back of the room. It was the Minister of Defense. “I have just received word that a number of American naval officials cannot be located in Washington.” The minister’s voice was high and excited.

“And they are important enough to call at this hour?”

“The Chief of Naval Operations, his deputy for Undersea Warfare, and Admiral Newman, the one who builds their submarines — is that important enough for you?”

“Where are they?”

“No one knows, but they could be—”

“I’ll be in my office in twenty minutes. Make sure the others are there.”

He pushed the button that would bring his bodyguard and alert his driver. Whatever surprise his wife had planned for dinner would have to wait. He wished he hadn’t drunk so much of the pertsovka. But, on second thought, perhaps it would improve the situation.

* * *

Mark Bennett had few loves other than his wife, Judy. There just wasn’t enough time, not when you were senior officer in charge of Undersea Warfare. But there remained a special place in his heart for Hawaiian sunsets. Whenever he was away from Washington, and there was a chance — and there’d been very few such opportunities in the past few years — he made sure that he reserved an evening for that specific purpose.

Promotion to flag rank was a wonderful, heady thing, but it also meant more time in the Pentagon, a place he could still get lost in, or at sub bases, buried behind a desk in an office with no windows. A man really had to hate sunsets, he often said to himself, to avoid them in Hawaii.

That same evening, troubled by the discussion at pool-side, he’d taken the car by himself and driven out near Fort Kamehameha. There was a point reaching out into the Pacific, rarely visited by others, that he and Judy had chosen as their own years before.

Such self-indulgence was rarely enjoyed in their earlier days together. But once their children had grown old enough to take care of themselves for a few hours, Judy Bennett might glance out the window late in an afternoon and marvel at the clear air. That was reason enough to call Mark at his office and let him know that he could work a bit later that evening.

Her timing would be superb. About the time he’d step out the office door, she’d pull up in front with the top down and a basket of fresh fruit and cheese in the backseat. A bottle of wine would be chilling in the cooler beside it. They’d drive off together like a couple of teenagers, the sunset a focal point for those rare times by themselves. Years later, Judy was quickly bored by the Washington social circle and often remarked how nice it would be to be junior and back in Hawaii again.

This time there was no wine, nor fruit or cheese for Mack Bennett. But there was a glorious display of color. Ewa Beach, across the water, and Barbers Point, a low headland in the distance, brought a flood of memories. One that had settled in the back of his mind today now returned to trouble him even more while the sun settled into the Pacific in a boiling, pastel blaze — Buck and Cindy Nelson loved this view as much as the Bennetts. Now, Buck was C.O. of Florida.

The Nelsons were probably the best friends the Bennetts had. With the constant change of duty stations in the Navy, it wasn’t easy to stay close to other couples. And few of the old friendships remained as strong once a family went back to Washington with admiral’s stars. But their wives had kept the men as close as they could possibly be. Judy Bennett corresponded with Cindy at least once a month, and it had been Judy who insisted they call and surprise Buck Nelson when he was given Florida. Now, as the southwestern sky modulated to a deep purple, Mark Bennett was sure Florida was the next target.

He selected a flat stone in the sand and skipped it across the smooth surface of the water, remembering how he and Judy would challenge each other with the number of skips into a particular sunset. The cheese and fruit would have tasted wonderful at that moment, the wine even better. It was time for a walk, time to dig into his subconscious for the answer that was escaping him.

A warm, gentle breeze ruffled Bennett’s hair as he wandered down the beach digging his bare feet into the sand. The sea was calm, its quiet broken only by little wavelets that brushed against the sand like the steady breath of a sleeping child. The smell of the ocean was so much different than the waters in Pearl Harbor, no oil, no garbage, no sewage, none of the detritus that compounds man’s waste. He scanned the horizon. As far as he could see, there was nothing out to that disappearing line to indicate what was taking place below the surface.

Mark Bennett struggled to blot out the sweet smell of the sea, trying to remember what the air was like in those nuclear boats silently hunting each other in the inky darkness hundreds of feet beneath the waves. It seemed so long since his last command, Stonewall Jackson, a James Madison-class SSBN that had prowled the depths of the Atlantic. He shivered when he remembered how cold even Charleston could be in the winter — no wonder he loved Pearl.

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