Джанет Моррис - The 40-Minute War

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After Washington, D.C. is vaporized by a nuclear surface blast, Marc Beck, wonder boy of the American foreign service, prevails on Ashmead, cover action chief, to help him fly two batches of anticancer serum from Israel to the Houston White House. From the moment the establish their gritty relationship, life is filled with treachery and terror for Beck (who) must deal with one cliffhanger after another during the desperate days that follow. This novel shocks us with a sudden, satisfying ending. cite — Dr. Jerry Pournelle, author of The Mote in God’s Eye and Mercenary cite — David Drake, author of Hammer’s Slammers

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When Ashmead had finished, Beck added nothing to his briefing, uncertain as to what Nye’s warning could mean. There was a possibility that any negative assessment of the surviving fact-finding party’s motives or attitudes given in the tense mood of this room could lead to the loss of the five dignitaries left from “natural causes.” Until Beck was sure that wasn’t what Nye was trying to tell him, he would keep his own counsel.

He had a good excuse: he’d been a working flight controller for the entire trip, and his agent had been refused accreditation. He used it and Watkins grew livid.

That didn’t bother Beck; he’d cut his teeth on paper wars.

Beggs was impatient with the whole process: “Commander McGrath, will you give us the intinerary you’ve prepared and fill us in on your security preparations? I’ve got a breakfast meeting with those dips and I’d prefer not to be late.”

As McGrath got up, telescoping a pointer to its full length and stepping toward a screen where he punched up prepared computer maps filling half of one wall, on which “clear” zones comprising about forty percent of the nation and “survivable zones” comprising another forty were clearly marked, Beggs said: “Mister Beck, this baby’s your brainchild and you’ve said almost nothing during this entire meeting. Would you like to tell me why that is, or make some relevant comments?”

“Mister President, I’ve been the flight controller on the P-3B for the last twenty-odd hours. Before that, I had the work of ten people to do. I can’t remember when I last had a good night’s sleep. It seems to me that you’re pretty well informed as it is.”

Beggs leaned forward: “Watkins, here, can be a little prickly, but I want to thank you personally for bringing that serum home where it belongs.” Beggs patted his left arm and winced slightly. “A job well done. With Ashmead’s team members aboard that 727, no one can accuse us of a cover-up or suspect a sacrifice play. We’ve got the P-3B’s tape and picture verification that the 727 was shot down by Soviet aircraft and, believe me, those Russkies are going to pay through the nose for it—it wasn’t just Americans they murdered: this is a crime of international proportions. So, by and large, we’re very grateful. Grateful enough that when Ashmead proposed we take the second helicopter we aren’t going to need for diplomatic taxi service and use it to try to find your family, we agreed that, under the circumstances, we ought to make it a national priority.”

President Beggs sat back, beaming as if he’d just kissed three orphans and opened an old-folks’ home.

Beck’s gut had tensed when Beggs started talking about retaliation. He’d known that Beggs was dangerous. He stared at the President, wanting to demand reassurances that Beggs wasn’t about to touch off a second nuclear exchange—the new Commander in Chief was capable of it, in Beck’s estimation, and so was America: the second-strike capability would have been the first thing to be put back on line, no matter how much damage the country’s war-fighting hardware had taken.

But Beck’s training wouldn’t let him say any of that. He said, “Thank you, Sir; that’s very kind of you. But I have to stay with my diplomats. Maybe when they’re—”

“Don’t argue with me, Beck,” said the President. “I’m not Watkins. You and your teammates are going to go find your family while Miss Patrick and her multinational buddies get the guided tour of what sights are fit for them to see. Capiche?”

Beck did, and he didn’t like the sound of it one bit.

Just then Slick came back and squeezed his arm as he slid into his seat: “She’s a good guy, Beck. She knows just what to do.”

He sat bleary-eyed and dry-mouthed through McGrath’s detailed briefing, listening with one ear to mileage stats and radiation-hardness estimates for the Black Hawk helicopters, each of which could carry eleven people and had been modified to burn methane and brought up to helicopter-gunship specs.

When the meeting finally adjourned, he said casually to Nye, “I can’t face any more bureaucratese on an empty stomach and with all these honchos to coddle those dips, they don’t need me. Let’s get some breakfast, Sam, and talk over old times.”

“I’d like that, Marc,” said Nye heartily. “Just hold on a minute while I clear it with the Chief.”

Nye went not to Watkins but to Beggs himself and came away with a clap on the back: “All set. We’re excused from the breakfast.” Then, without moving his lips: “Just you and me, nobody else.”

So when Ashmead, with a quizzical smile, asked them if they wanted company, Beck begged off: “Not unless you’re up for a nice long talk about such scintillating subjects as spacetime manifolds, electron slip, and geochronometry. Us eggheads have got to relax every once in a while, and we like to do it with numbers. It’s been too long since I’ve been around somebody else who speaks math.”

Nye, when Beck turned back, had a sour look on his face that said Beck had chosen his words badly, but Beck didn’t understand why until they were alone in a lived-in looking suite that Nye had been occupying, he said, “for the past three weeks.”

“So long? You were here before the Forty-Minute War?”

Nye was stretched out on his leather couch, jacket off, tie off, shoes off. “Sure was. And this room is absolutely secure, though I can’t vouch for anyplace else in the building. Punch up a 6-5-7-3-9-K there by the door and watch what happens.”

Beck walked over to the normal-looking computer-lock panel and did as he was told. An LCD screen appeared beside the lock-plate and started checking the security system, which consisted of six components. When it had run through every wavelength its electro-optics could scan, it hummed and winked green, then went blank.

“Okay,” Beck sighed, “I’m impressed, Sam, but I wasn’t kidding—I’m dead tired.”

“I know. So tired you didn’t even notice when they slipped figures by you that normally you’d have questioned. It’s worse than they’re telling you, Marc—all that intelligence is E-5.”

E-5: Information the accuracy of which was improbable, from an unreliable source —in this case, the United States Government.

“I know that. But you didn’t bring me here to cry in our beer.”

“Do you know that those maps were bogus—that we’ve got maybe nineteen per cent clear zones and forty-seven per cent survivable— if you’re willing to accept the new definition of survivable, which knocks twenty years off the average lifespan of American citizens? Do you know that plenty of our citizens aren’t willing to accept it—that a significant portion of the population has decided the hell with the funny suits and masks and are just running around in their street clothes—not to mention the loonies cavorting jaybird naked except for their “Impeach Beggs” placards? Or that the good old Communist Party USA is having a field day, so much so that Beggs is scared to death that there won’t be an American government by the time his term’s complete—that he’ll be the guy who goes down in the history books as the man who killed democracy? Do you know that the red zones include not only Seattle, the Colorado Space Defense Command, NORAD, Groton and Newport News, but Langley—all our bases?”

“What are you worried about, Sam? Where to spend your next vacation? Try Kansas City or Denton.”

“I’m worried that Beggs is going to do something stupid. Lord knows he’s capable of it. I’m not the only one, either—the Agency’s trying to keep him in line, but everybody’s nervous about him—whatever else he is, he’s still our President.” Nye sighed glumly and shook his head. “Coffee. Come on, let’s make some.”

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