William Prochnau - Trinity's Child

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Kazaklis and Moreau had flown countless missions together aboard their B-52, simulating nuclear bombing runs in anticipation of the doomsday command that somehow never came.
There had been false alarms, of course: computer malfunctions, straying airliners, even flocks of geese showing up on radar as inbound waves of missiles. But by a miracle no-one had taken that final, irrevocable step. Until now.

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“The world’s the only barnyard we’ve got, sir. I can’t believe you would risk it. Are you saying that’s your decision?”

The man reached over and picked up the Seal. “Nope,” he said, smiling enigmatically. “I’m sayin’ I finally got me some options. I also have a few minutes. I’m going to think on it.”

With that, he stood and began to leave for his quarters, pausing briefly to ask: “Would you like to join me, Colonel?”

Beneath him, tugging perversely, Kazakhs could feel the strong drag of the bomb-bay doors. The shifting winds of the low Arctic mountain ridge buffeted at the open panels, swirling up inside the cavernous hold and changing the aerodynamic flow in ways he had not felt before. No practice-run radio chatter interrupted his concentration. Just the quiet drone of Tyler’s drained voice. They were past the thirty-second mark— ready… ready… now —heading directly at the hastily determined drop point— on the racetrack— just over the top of the next and last ridge.

In front of the pilot new lights glimmered. The Master Caution light, reacting to the buffeting, flickered on and off, Moreau punching it with a gloved forefinger each time it warned them of what they already knew. The other lights remained on, three yellow squares in a sequence of four, only the third still dark. Bomb Doors Not Latched. Bomb Doors Open. Bomb Doors Not Closed and Locked. On the red screen, computer-scrambled, Kazaklis could see the last ridge racing at him. Significant terrain, twelve o’clock… .Not so low this time, pal, no belly-scraping, no spine-snapping on this one.

“Bandits five-point-five miles and closing,” Tyler radioed. Kazaklis reached for the red lever, pulled it in sequence with two of his four crewmates, releasing the last safety mechanism.

Briefly the pilot wondered if the Russians could see the looming doors, spot them somehow in the glimmering white starlight, pick up a minuscule distortion on their radar screens. The thought faded, the commitment made. The ridge filled the screen, the groundtracking thermometer plummeting as the frozen slope raced up at them. Two hundred feet, one hundred, seventy-five. That’s it. Ka-whack! The plane shuddered again, less agonizingly this time. The ridge disappeared, the red screen opening to the flat panorama of the river flats. Kazaklis nosed the aircraft over slightly, taking it down the far side, where it would disappear briefly from the eyes of his pursuers. He counted down the last seconds, a fireproofed thumb poised on the release button. Briefly he and Moreau arched the B-52’s nose to give the weapon one small lift before gravity caught it. The pilot depressed his thumb.

A split second of unholy silence pervaded the airplane, blotting out the engine roar. Then the five crewmen felt a slight lurch, sensed an eerie weightlessness, imagined the low groan of the bomb rack rotating to move the next weapon into place.

“Bomb away,” Kazaklis said. The fourth yellow light glared at him from the flight panel. Bombs Released. No duds, Kazakhs prayed silently. Oh, God, no duds.

Briefly, as her mind’s eye had seen on the mission drill, Moreau saw the bomb lift heavenward, hover, and then roll over for its short descent, the drogue parachute popping to slow its fall. She began the turning, lifting escape maneuver and felt the controls tugging back at her, a hand on her arm. She turned toward the pilot.

“Not this time,” Kazaklis said. “Straight at the river mouth. Low.”

Moreau stared at him. Then she understood and her skin crawled. The Russian pilots, suspecting or unsuspecting, still had almost thirty seconds to launch their missiles. Kazaklis wanted no telltale escape maneuvers to tip them off. She drew in her breath. The winds from a one-megaton explosion would whip unimpeded across the open flats, tailing off from more than five hundred miles an hour at the ridge to better than one hundred miles an hour five miles away. The blast wave—a moving wall of crushing pressure—would be worse, far worse. Kazaklis was playing the odds on outrunning the effects rather than outrunning more missiles. Percentage baseball. Moreau accepted that.

In the back, Halupalai sat alone, feeling helpless and useless. And empty. Downstairs, Radnor alternately watched his screen and his crewmate. Since the flailing outburst with the broken pencil, followed by the tearful threat, Tyler had lapsed into a near-catatonic state. He said nothing to Radnor, his only words coming in mechanical and scrupulously precise instructions to the cockpit. Radnor felt no fear, either. Just a deep and pervasive sadness he found impossible to shake. On his screen he saw the four Foxbats racing relentlessly toward the ridge, following their path. “Plus fifteen seconds,” the wooden voice said. “Bandits five miles and closing.” Radnor watched Tyler’s eyes move quickly to the little Kodak print above his console, seeming to see nothing, and then dart back to his screen. “Plus twenty seconds…” Radnor also turned back to his screen.

In the cockpit both Kazaklis and Moreau were counting silently. Tyler’s voice synchronizing perfectly. “Plus twenty-five…” No launches, Moreau pleaded under her breath. No duds, Kazaklis beseeched. “Plus thirty seconds…” Kazaklis shuddered. Come on, baby, come on. “Plus thirty-five…”

“Goddammit!” Kazaklis shouted. “Blow, damn you, blow!”

“Detonation,” Tyler droned.

Kazaklis and Moreau jerked simultaneously. “Climb! Climb! Climb!” Kazaklis yelled, but Moreau had already begun, the two of them pulling together.

“Launches?” Kazaklis demanded of the crew downstairs.

“Plus forty seconds…”

“Bandits?” Kazaklis asked.

“Plus forty-five…”

“Tyler!” Kazaklis thundered. “Damn you! Bandits?” The pilot looked at the altimeter. Five hundred feet, six hundred.

“Plus fifty seconds…”

Kazaklis groaned in frustration.

“It’s not Tyler, sir.” The awestruck voice of Radnor came on. “Oh, God in heaven…” His voice faded briefly. Then he murmured, “There’s nothing to see, commander.”

In the navigation compartment, Radnor’s eyes were glued to his screen. In the center half a white ball expanded furiously, like a malignant brain. The fireball was almost two miles wide and seemed burned into the screen, for Radnor’s senses knew it had expanded and disappeared already. A ghostly plume began emerging from the top, almost as wide, rising a thousand feet a second. The remainder of the screen warped in dancing lines like heat rivulets in the desert. Radnor knew the rivulets were the blast wave, rolling at them just beyond the speed of sound, and also just beyond the speed of aircraft. “Plus sixty seconds…” It was going to be now. Radnor braced himself.

Kazakhs and Moreau held the craft at twelve hundred feet, their knuckles aching. Suddenly they seemed weightless again. A feather wafting in splendid silence. Then the thunder crack snapped at them. The feather lifted high, sank, and lifted again. Kazakhs could hear the rivets groaning. Then it was past. “Friendly little kick in the rump, huh?” he asked, jauntily trying to cover the crack in his voice. Moreau said nothing. “Bandits?” Kazakhs asked again.

“Nothing came through that, commander,” Radnor said very quietly. “Nothing.”

The admiral sat alone in the briefing room, the maps blank now. He picked up the yellow phone. A thousand miles north, the Looking Glass general picked up his black phone instantly in response.

“Alice? Harpoon.”

The line was remarkably clear. Harpoon thought he could hear the general’s sigh of relief.

“You made the snatch?”

“Condor’s nested and fed.”

“You had our dongs shriveling, Harpoon. Rough down there?”

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