“Son,"—General Saunders leaned forward—"don't do this. Don't do it to your country. Logan is just a man. Not much of one,” he grimaced, “but still a man. He's not going to dismantle the nation. We'll weather it.”
“No, General. No, we won't. This country's had it.” His eyes were sad, his voice low when he spoke. “We've had eight years of conservatism, but everything Fayers has pushed through has been a battle. People aren't interested in the long run; they're only interested, concerned, with
“And what of America, Colonel?” General Crowe asked.
“Oh, we'll take casualties,” he admitted. “Somewhere in the seventy-five to ninety-million range; you all know the stats. But we'll come out far better than any other major power. And when we're back on top again, this time, by God, we'll stay there.”
“You're crazy!” Sergeant Major Parley blurted. “My God, man—think of all the innocent people you're killing. You people are fucking nuts!”
Rogers came back into the room. “I used the mobile phone in the car, General, just in case the phone here has a long-range bug on it. The phone company in D.C. got a disconnect order on the number he gave us. Got it about two hours ago. What's happening here?”
“Holocaust,” a buddy informed him.
Driskill looked at the colonel. “I believe the colonel is about to give us all the details, aren't you, superpatriot?”
The Air Force man laughed in his face. “Sure, I'll tell you. Why not? There isn't a damned thing any of you can do about it.”
Only blow your fucking head off when you're through flapping your gums, General Crowe thought, his hand tightening on the butt of the .38.
“There won't be any elections,” the colonel said. “Not for a long time—a very long time. The military is going to be forced into taking over the country: suspending the Constitution and declaring martial law. That's all we wanted, all along. All we were doing, once we learned Brady was onto us, was buying time. Getting set. We're five days from launch.”
The men in the room, to a man, sucked in their guts. One hundred and twenty hours to hell.
“I should have gone to the president when my intelligence people first stumbled onto this ... treason!” General Saunders said.
The Air Force colonel laughed. He lit a cigarette. His last one. “Well, General, I'll salve your conscience a bit. It wouldn't have made any difference. You couldn't have stopped us. You didn't really know what was going down until today. You couldn't have gone to the Chinese to tell them the Russians were going to launch against them. No proof. Big international stink would be all you could have accomplished. Same if you'd gone to the Russians. It all boils down to this: an American sub will launch the missiles—
“What type of missiles are you using?” a master chief asked.
“Supersnoop missiles,” Admiral Mullens answered the question. “Thunder-strikes. We started building them on the QT when we realized SALT 5 was becoming a reality. Yes, the Russians knew we were going to build them—before SALT was signed. That's the main reason Russia agreed to SALT 5.”
“The president and/or Congress know of them?” he was asked.
“No,” he said tersely.
“The lid is being slowly nailed on our coffins,” a Navy officer said. He looked at the Air Force colonel. “What about him?”
General Crowe jacked back the hammer on the .38 and shot the colonel between the eyes, knocking him backward, out of the chair.
“Good shot, Turner,” General Driskill observed.
THREE
Saturday—five days to launch
General C.H. Travee, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, sat quietly in his office. He sat for a long, speculative time, drumming his fingertips on the polished wood of the desk top.
Too many rumors being whispered in this city. Entirely too many to ignore. Whispered rumors of a power play. Among the military? Too incredible to believe. Still ...
Travee had tried to reach his old friend, Vern Saunders, just that morning—couple of hours ago, after Vern failed to show for their regular Saturday morning golf game. Travee had tried to track down his friend, but had hit a stone wall in every direction he turned.
Odd.