“How come you wouldn’t let us help you when you opened it? And don’t give me that bullshit about security and state secrets. It doesn’t wash.”
He smirked. “I thought perhaps there might be something else in the cache. Something that I’d heard about back in the service. It was a rumor, really. Nothing substantial. But those rumors and whispers seem to take on a life of their own when you’re suddenly confronted by a changing reality.”
“What was the rumor?”
He frowned. “That we’d stored small ADMs down here.”
“What’s an ADM?”
“Stands for ‘Atomic Demolition Munitions’.”
“Atomic?”
“As in nuclear. Yeah. They were originally designed to be small suitcase nukes capable of punching a big hole in an urban area. Or a ship. SEALs used to carry them on specialized missions. They never used them, but they did enough training that in the event of war, they could slap on to the hull of a ship and it would go bang and sink pretty damned fast.”
“And you thought we had them down here?”
“When that cache was established back in the early 80s, we had a cowboy for president, remember? Some people thought the Cold War was going to freeze over it got so bad. We were storing crap like that all over the world. Hell, the NATO storage facilities outside of military bases had the things.”
“I don’t get it.”
“NATO didn’t just use military bases for their weapons storage. They had secret places all over western Europe designated hides. Old farmhouses, empty fields, you name it and they were used. The idea being that in case of a massive Soviet attack, the resistance fighters would have a ready store of arms from which to draw and fight from. We stowed a mess of pocket nukes all over the place.”
“Wonderful.”
“Trouble is, some of them went missing.”
Julia swallowed. “I’m thinking there was almost no security on those secret hides?”
Mick nodded. “How could there be? They were supposed to be secret. A security force would have tipped people off to the presence of something besides a farmhouse or shit-strewn field.”
“So we stow nukes all over the place with absolutely no one to watch over them?” Julia shook her head. “Our capacity for stupidity amazes me sometimes.”
“Again, it was deemed necessary to ward off the growing Soviet menace. I’m not pretending to defend it, because I think the whole thing sucks, too. But you need to be able to view it from their position in order to make a fair judgment.”
“If you say so.” She glanced around the tunnel. “Do you think this area is good enough to camp in?”
Mick laid a hand on the rough ground. “It’s not going to be fun sleeping here, but it will do.” He pointed out some larger boulders. “See there? We can hide down behind them. Anything comes down the tunnel, we can pick it off pretty easily.”
“We’ll have to stay quiet.”
He nodded. “Definitely.”
“And tomorrow you want to go and see if there’s really something behind those rocks up ahead?”
“That’d be my plan if I was in charge.” He grinned. “But I’m not. You’re making the decisions here, Julia. Not me. I’m just a dumb soldier who unfortunately has some knowledge you and the others need right now in order to stay alive.”
“I appreciate your input.” Julia tried to smile. “Did you hear any other rumors while you were in the service?”
“Like what?”
“Like whatever might be hunting us right now?”
“Nah.” He shrugged. “I guess we have to remember that any new frontier has within it, the potential to also contain untold perils.”
“I just didn’t expect such a place like this to be one of them.”
“Down here we all expect the weather to be the big killer — the biggest danger we need to always be aware of. And that’s true.”
“But now we’ve got something else to deal with as well.”
“Yeah.”
She smiled at him. “I’m glad you’re here.”
“Glad to be here. Wish things were a bit different, though.”
“How so?”
“Well, normally, I like taking a woman to dinner and getting to know her over a fine bottle of Pinot Grigio. I don’t usually consider barren icefields and strange creatures a good prescription for budding romance.”
“Are we budding?”
He smiled. His teeth gleamed in the strange light. “I’d sure like us to be.”
She leaned forward and kissed him lightly on the mouth. She found no resistance. He kissed her back and for a moment, everything disappeared. No more snow. No more ice. No more cold.
Just the warmth that spreads from the heart when you experience that first kiss. Julia caught her breath and wished the rest of her life could be like that tiny microscopic moment in time. So perfect. So peaceful.
Mick broke away suddenly.
Julia frowned. “What’s wrong?”
He searched behind her. “Rest of the team’s coming.”
She looked back. How had he heard anything. Julia searched the darkness but couldn’t detect the slightest noise at all.
“The air shifted,” said Mick in her ear. “That’s how I could tell.”
“I didn’t feel anything.”
He smiled again, but this smile was the kind that an expert reserves for those who don’t know any better. Julia saw it come across his face and got the message to trust him.
She did.
And three minutes later, Wilkins came into the ambient light followed by the rest of the team. They’d lugged the survival kits up with them.
Again, using hand signals, Mick directed them behind the rocks close by. Once they got settled, he moved back up next to Julia’s ear. “Okay, we’re all situated.”
“Have you given anyone their sentry duties yet?”
“Thought I’d clear it with you first.”
She smiled at him. “I guess we shouldn’t stand watch together, huh?”
“We might get distracted.”
“It happens.”
“We can’t take the risk.”
“Yeah.”
Mick took a deep breath. “Okay, so me and Darren will take first watch. You and Wilkins have second. Nung and Kendall can take 3rd and Havel and Me will take four. That sound okay?”
“Reluctantly. But yes.”
“You should get some food and water into you and then get your head down. Sleep’s not going to be the most exciting thing tonight.”
“At least I can dream happy thoughts,” said Julia. Mick moved off and Nung started breaking out the survival kits. Julia watched the cardboard box ration kits start going around. She grimaced. The high carbohydrate and protein meals always made her stomach cramp up.
She sighed and got to her feet. She couldn’t really afford to be picky about this. At least tomorrow they could presumably head back to the station and she could get some fresh vegetables from the greenhouse.
She got a bottle of water and cracked it. The ice cold liquid trickled down her neck and she sighed, realizing it had been hours since she’d taken a drink. Even in the snow and ice, they all had to be careful about dehydration. It could kill as easily here as it did in the jungle or desert.
Kendall scampered over to her. “Are we seriously staying here tonight?”
She looked at him. “You saw the weather. You think we ought to try back for the station?”
“It’s just that these rocks are so absolutely uncomfortable. I don’t know how anyone could even sleep here.”
Julia grinned and pointed at Havel. “He’s already dozing over there.”
Kendall frowned. “I think he’s narcoleptic anyway.”
“I doubt that. The point, Kendall, is that the human body can do amazing things if it wants to badly enough.” She hefted her cardboard ration box. “Take this ham stew for example. I despise this stuff. But I’m eating it because I know I have to. So despite the fact that I will probably be a cranky constipated bitch after, I am eating and adapting to the conditions we’ve got here. I’d suggest you do the same.”
“If I must.”
“Remember, Darwin got it wrong. It’s not survival of the fittest, it’s survival of those who can adapt the best.”
Kendall sighed. “Such a cheerful thought that is. Fancy me being seconded to someone who rewrites evolution when she’s not leading expeditions that get people killed.”