“That’s it. Now I want you to take the McCain up there and put yourself between those two. Our other carrier groups, as you know, have their hands full at the moment.”
“Exactly,” said Crowley sternly. Was there an implicit criticism of the White House’s failure to push Congress for more naval appropriations in his tone? It was difficult to tell — he was normally gruff.
“Yes,” said the President noncommittally. “Well, Admiral, we’re already fighting World War Three against terrorists around the globe. The last thing we need is war on another front. We have to be extraordinarily careful.”
“I know the drill, Mr. President. Fire only in self-defense. No preemptive strikes.”
“You’ve got it, Admiral. Beijing’s terrified of any revolt that might spread. That’s why they’re so down on these Falun Gong groups, et cetera. They’re afraid of a chain reaction — a repetition of Tiananmen Square — spreading through China like wildfire, particularly now after Beijing’s had to loosen its grip somewhat and allow some budding capitalism. They’re afraid they won’t be able to keep control of it.”
“I’ve got the picture, Mr. President,” Crowley assured him, somewhat impatiently. Crowley, like Freeman, had a distinguished combat record, and their bluntness belonged more to the tradition of Admiral Bill Halsey and George Patton than to the kind of diplomatic expertise required in a multinuclear-power age where the intemperate remarks of Indian and Pakistani politicians about each other, for example, had taken everyone to the brink.
High up in the McCain’s island that overlooked the carrier’s four and half acres of deck, the diminutive Crowley, who at just over five feet had barely made it into the Navy, put down the phone. The admiral was under no illusion that the President had been prompted — by an aide, probably — about his son’s expectations for top gun. Still, it was nice. The admiral would never ask for special favors from the President — that was strictly against his code — but hell, it didn’t do any harm that the Commander in Chief of the most powerful nation on earth knew your son’s name and where he wanted to go.
The sun was losing altitude in the South China Sea, a grand illusion as the world turned, the six thousand men and women who crewed the McCain and her air wing hearing the pipe sounding, “Now darken ship.”
Hundreds of miles to the north of the McCain, in Shihmen on the northern tip of Taiwan, Moh Pan bent low against the advance force eight winds of what had now been officially tagged as Typhoon Jane. Inside the Civil Defense office, Moh waited patiently for his turn to speak to the female clerk, a knockout from Taipei, her ash-black hair pulled back tightly, passing through a silver clasp. Her smile revealed the most beautiful teeth Moh had ever seen in a woman, and her figure was so magnificently proportioned, like the singer Chyi Yu, that he welcomed the wait. In fact, he insisted an elderly woman from his village go before him. He knew his wife would have insisted he demand instant service — his sighting of possible enemy ships or aircraft off the north shore possibly signs of yet another mainland Chinese incursion into Taiwanese sea and air space. Of course, Moh told himself, they could have been Taiwanese ships or aircraft, but it was wonderful standing here, just watching the young clerk breathe.
When his turn came to report, it would be important, he advised himself, to be thorough, not to rush. Perhaps, in the interests of Taiwan’s national security, he should show her on a map approximately where it was off the coast he had seen these “glints”—ask to see a high-scale map of the region, a pictorial accompaniment to his verbal report. A chance to demonstrate what everyone had always said about him — that he should have been an illustrator for the law courts in Taipei, where photographs of the accused were forbidden and readers had to rely on still-life sketches of the accused or victim. Perhaps she would like him to do a sketch of her. In a few strokes he could capture the essential aspects of the face. Moh felt himself becoming aroused.
He noticed a young couple in from his neighboring village sniggering at him, the girl cupping her hand in front of her mouth, whispering to her boyfriend, then trying unsuccessfully to stop her giggling. Moh saw the boyfriend staring at him, saying something, which sent the girl into another fit of giggles, the boyfriend sniffing the air as if there was something malodorous in the room. Moh realized they were probably laughing at the smell of the fungi fertilizer, the couple looking down on him in his overalls as if he was a pig farmer. The two idiots didn’t deserve defending, he thought. He had a good mind to forget it, to walk out. But he stayed, and not just to enjoy the sight of the pretty clerk. He’d do it for his son stationed on Kinmen and for all the other young men and women who were worth defending and who were putting their lives on the line. Still, it irked him — the couple were the kind of college-educated yuppies whom Mao had sent out to the countryside during the Cultural Revolution and made work, the communes puncturing their arrogant self-assurance with real labor so they’d respect those who’d built the Revolution. Moh didn’t like the Communists, but sometimes …
Anger had overtaken his normal passivity, but now the loyal mushroom grower concentrated on the girl’s breathing again, his eyes closed from fatigue and the fantasy of having her in the dark, cool shed. From outside, a gust of gale-force wind rattled the office door. She would cling to him, frightened of the storm, the howling winds, the electric-blue lightning crashing around them, and he’d hold her, comforting her, telling her all would be well.
By the time Moh Pan reached the Civil Defense counter, his fantasies about the beautiful clerk had been sabotaged by the young couple sniggering at the smell of his work clothes. When he reported to the clerk that he’d seen some kind of aircraft or ships off the north cape, any confidence he might have had that they were Chinese Communists evaporated. She thanked him for the information and gave him a smile, but there was nothing remotely sexual in it, merely a young woman’s courtesy toward an older man. He was old enough to be her father, his son Ahmao on Kinmen young enough to be her husband. Moh felt dejected — immeasurably old — exacerbated by the feeling that the world had passed him by. Outside, a gust hit him with such force it blew him back against the glass, rattling its frame. Now he wanted to go back to the mushroom sheds for refuge. He saw his wife coming out of the market crowd, counting her money, the red currency startlingly vibrant against the nondescript gray of the town square.
“Did you tell them?” she asked perfunctorily, without looking up from the bunch of hundreds.
“Yes.”
“What did they say?”
“Nothing.”
“You have to recharge your cell.”
“Yes,” Moh Pan agreed obediently. If his cell had been charged, he wouldn’t have had to walk all the way into town and get a chance to see the young beauty.
“They were probably ours anyway,” said his wife, stuffing the money into her purse, the sea wind billowing her scarf.
“Yes,” agreed Moh Pan. “A big waste of time trudging into town.”
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
After helping his deckhands extract what had been Albinski’s dry suit, now looking like a black, flattened toothpaste tube, oceanographer Frank Hall decided he had to take a core from the sea bottom — see if a hot vent’s plume of superheated water was responsible for the kind of turbulence that would have fatally loosened the two divers’ air hoses and twisted the kelp around the umbilicals.
Young Peter Dixon, whey-faced, being sick in one of the dry lab buckets, didn’t hear the ex-SEAL-cum-oceanographer approaching the bright island of the stern’s deck lights, seeing only Frank’s shadow looming over him.