The electromagnetic pulse! Deng’s heart accelerated-the EMP had killed the instrumentation in the vehicle, wiping clean any active electronic activity. The W-76 had gone off.
As the vehicle slowed, Deng saw it first against the treetops a mile ahead of them on the highway, then felt it strike suddenly against the front of the limousine-a wind blast, powerful enough to rock the convoy, lifting the limo’s wheels three inches from the surface of the highway yet too weak to overturn the vehicles. This, Deng knew, represented approximately, if not precisely, the forecasted effect of a one-hundred-kiloton nuclear detonation seventy miles from ground zero-the closest point, his chief scientist had told him, at which one could be positioned without sustaining fatal or near-fatal effects from the blast.
As panic struck among the soldiers, his loyal driver, and the security detail in the convoy, Deng savored a moment of pride-of utter satisfaction. He had judged correctly, and, based on the series of events he’d just witnessed, the first step of his master plan had advanced without a hitch.
Tomorrow, he thought, is upon us. Today.
37
When the phone chortled its usual two rings and the machine picked up, Laramie came awake with the sense that something was out of place. Asleep in the same position in which she’d passed out, she wasn’t sure what it was that bothered her while Eddie Rothgeb’s voice blasted from the answering machine and banged around her aching head.
“Laramie, where the hell are you? Pick up! Are you seeing this?”
She knocked the phone off the hook, fumbled for it, picked it up, said, “Enough,” and heard a click. Then nothing.
“Eddie?”
There was no answer. No noise at all-just dead air.
Maybe she had disconnected the call with her butterfingers maneuver, but Laramie doubted it. She hung up, clicked back on, and got no dial tone. She tried this a few times with the same result before her headache began to reassault her. Groaning, she leaned her forehead against a palm, and in so doing, caught an angle on the open pizza box. Sprawled on the floor, it contained only the lone remaining slice. She noticed that she had even consumed the crusts of the missing pieces.
Last night, there hadn’t been a single message on the answering machine. Not even any she had previously saved. She usually had four or five waiting for her at the end of each day and knew for a fact she’d had at least fifteen saved on the chip, so she was confident they hadn’t been letting any calls through.
Meaning this morning, they would have kept the intercept going. The call from Rothgeb, cut short though it had been, didn’t make sense.
She crossed to the front window and peered outside; it was still dark. She checked her watch, which they’d let her wear for the length of the interrogation, probably just to annoy her further. It was 5:15 A.M.
Two of the sedans appeared to have abandoned the assignment. There remained only one black sedan and the van. She thought of Eddie’s words.
Are you seeing this?
Laramie found the remote. The BREAKING NEWS headline registered before the full screen image came up on the tube:
NUKE BLAST AT CHINA SUMMIT
She kicked up the volume. It appeared she’d clicked on to the Fox News Channel. Brit Hume had the desk.
“…acted immediately. In an emergency vote of the surviving leaders, former vice premier and military general Deng Jiang has been appointed premier.
“The high-intensity detonation had initially been confirmed by a U.S. intelligence source, and has now been officially characterized by China’s ambassador to the U.S., as a nuclear explosion. Our American intelligence source is also referring to the size of the detonation as, quote, ‘significant.’ The Chinese Ambassador in Washington states that China’s own intelligence wing has ruled out accidental detonation, and suspects terrorism as the cause. Tens of thousands are suspected dead, including eight of the State Council members, the ruling body of the People’s Republic of China. Among the confirmed dead at this hour is China’s president and premier. We’ll go again to a statement made by the PRC moments after news of this tragedy was confirmed.”
Laramie now had a pretty good idea why her personal surveillance detachment had been depleted by fifty percent: half-assed treason investigation notwithstanding, she figured she’d be safe in placing herself a little lower on the global-crisis pecking order than the world’s first act of nuclear terror.
Crap.
She knew China with the same familiarity she had with the tiny birth-mark on the side of her neck. The territory, the tendencies of every key leader, the way they reacted in a time of crisis. All of it. She could have predicted to the second-in her sleep-the process and result of the immediate-succession vote installing General Deng Jiang as premier. She would have been able to predict who it was who called the vote, who voted, who voted for whom, what actions would be taken, what the State Council and the CPC’s public statements would be, and who would issue the statements in the wake of the bombing.
And here I am in my living room. The morning of the worst terrorist act ever to hit the PRC-the worst terrorist act ever-and I’m stuck here under house arrest.
Hung over, no less.
Hume was back on her television screen.
“Interim Premier Deng Jiang issued a written statement to the global news media minutes after the ambassador’s press conference.” Hume read from a prepared statement while its text appeared over a map of China.
“ ‘The most horrible of tragedies has been wrought upon the People’s Republic of China. The destruction was not accidental-this atrocity is almost positively an act of international terror. And while the terrorists did not use a Chinese weapon, I assure you that China possesses suitable weapons to combat this act of war. I can tell you that we are in possession of strong intelligence indicating the presence of a well-funded international terrorist organization hostile to the interests of the People’s Republic of China, which was fully capable of perpetrating this murderous act. If and when we determine this organization’s responsibility, China will strike defiantly and supremely. The People’s Republic of China is now at war, and we will vanquish our mortal enemy with furor, vengeance, and haste.’ ”
Hume came back onscreen, looked up from the page he’d been reading, and held the gaze of the camera for a long moment of reflection.
“Eerily reminiscent,” he said, “of a day in September, not long ago.”
Laramie returned to her couch. She sat cross-legged on its cushions and stared blankly at the images on the television for a long time. The phone rang once. The answering machine did not pick up. It rang again, this time as a clipped half-ring.
After a while she went into the bedroom, changed into a sweater, jeans, and running shoes, packed her preferred travel bag with a couple days of things, found the vial of Advil and downed a trio of tablets. She turned on the lights in the bathroom, kitchen, and bedroom, and turned up the volume on the television. Then she grabbed her purse and bag, returned to the garage, and, working in the dark, used a key to open the door normally reserved for the egress of her garbage bin.
Outside, she found herself face-to-face with the purple plastic monstrosity the city required its residents to use for refuse. Behind it lay the condo village’s service road and the fairly ugly rear view of a dozen town-homes backed up against the road.
Crouching, she slid sideways into a bed of bark chips and periwinkle. From this unobstructed, crappy hiding place she listened and watched. Somebody’s alarm clock wailed; a local morning news show blared; a phone rang. The tendrils of dawn had not yet reached into the predawn sky. As her eyes adjusted, she tried to see into the cavities at the rear of each townhome-see whether one of her house-arrest squad was out here keeping an eye on the back of her unit. The light from her bathroom window was bright up above her; maybe, she thought, if one of them is watching and is too incompetent to have spotted me already, his eyes would be drawn to that window.