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Dan glanced at him, looked around: the same gray sky, the same featureless sea. “Okay, but what’s this? The SBC system?”

Almarshadi brightened. “That’s the space-based calibration system. See, we use Aegis to track space junk to calibrate the sensors.”

“And it’s down?”

“Not completely, but the signal rate return isn’t up to par. They’re checking it out.”

“And how about this … this flow rate sensor in the chill water system? I didn’t see that under engineering. It’s under Aegis too.”

“Yessir, that part of the chill water system cools the signal processor.”

Dan hitched himself erect in the chair. “Another cooling problem? I thought we checked all those systems out.”

“The hose connections, yes sir, we did. This is a flow sensor. Different issue.”

“Have we got people on it?”

“Yessir, the HTs. I’ll go down right after this, check on progress.”

Dan went down the list, not really reassured. Between software problems, the less-than-great Aegis team performance against their benchmarks, and the reduced redundancy because of the fire, he was less than confident Savo Island was fit for her mission, if called on to execute. No skipper wanted to fumble the ball. But failure in this case wouldn’t be like blowing an exercise. If he couldn’t goalie, civilians would die. “Have you talked to Dr. Noblos about our intercept team performance?”

“Uh, no sir. I know he’s been under the weather—”

“For how long now? I’d like to get our heads together. How about 09? In the unit commander’s cabin. I’d like the FCs and strike team there too. Let’s take this whole thing through the cleaners.”

Almarshadi said he’d set it up. Dan hesitated, still looking off to where he’d thought for a moment he’d seen a dash of white, like a periscope feather, breaking the surface. The sonar was still crying out every few seconds, but after their performance in the exercise he had less confidence in their ability to detect any subsurface threat. Still — and this lifted his spirits — having Pittsburgh around would give them more protection. Yeah, whoever had organized that, he was grateful.

“Okay, let’s get to it,” he told Almarshadi. He looked around one more time; at a gray sea, a spatter of rain that crackled across the windows. The boatswain went around turning on the wipers.

With a last glance at the lowering sky, he went below.

* * *

He winced. The earsplitting shrill of the boatswain’s whistle had caught him in his cabin, logging on to high-side chat. “Now set the BMD watch,” the 1MC crackled. “Now set the BMD watch.” He hesitated, then closed the log-in and powered his terminal down. Pulled his foul-weather jacket off the hook where he’d hung it after coming down from the bridge. Stuck his pisscutter cap in the pocket, slid down two ladders, and cranked open the door to Combat.

All four large-screen displays were lit. The icy-aired, darkened space creaked as it pitched. Voices murmured as the first watch section took their seats.

Cheryl Staurulakis had drawn up a rubric for how they’d view graphic information for the antiballistic-missile mission. The surface plot, surrounding the ship close in, was up on the leftmost display. The air picture glowed in the center, reaching out three hundred miles into Syria, western Iraq, Jordan, Israel, Saudi Arabia, and Egypt. Cyprus, that queerly shrunken simulacrum of the continental U.S., glittered to the north. A glance told him commercial air traffic was way down. “Business as usual” was coming to an end.

The rightmost display reproduced the outputs on the Aegis consoles. He watched the by now familiar above-the-horizon search beams clicking around. They passed over the flat sea without return, probed a clearly delineated coastline, then etched an eldritch green strewing of mountains. The elongated, depressed shadow of the Dead Sea curled like a fava bean. Past that glowed more mountains. Then the splotches disappeared; the beams flew straight, searching out over the featureless desert. An abyss from whence nothing returned, not even the strobing blips of commercial aircraft. Mordor.

He ran his attention over the displays, checking weapons inventory, combat systems summary, surface summary. On the far right, the summary of summaries, the System Availability. It was green across the board: SM-2s up, guns up, VLS, TLAM, Harpoon up, Phalanx up. A pip throbbed on the leftmost screen. Red Wolf 202, on its way back from the task force. “ETA on the helo, Matt?” he asked Mills, in the TAO’s seat.

“Estimate feet dry time five-zero.”

About twenty minutes. Dan sat watching for a few seconds more, then logged in to the high-side chat room for the task force. Most of the chatter seemed to be coming from the screen units. Only now and then did the carrier come up.

DCK CIC: showers coming your way

DYO CIC: haul over all hatch hoods

DCK CIC:;)

PBG TAO: DYO pls lk at track 8934—see anything suspicious about that

DYO TAO: no looks like com air. Do you not have squawk??

TMN AO: let us know if you want a cap vector

A far cry from the clatter of signal lamps, the flutter of flags as they went up a hoist. He toggled among rooms; the task force, Sixth Fleet, then found what looked very much like the strike groups for Iraq. How different this was from the previous isolation at sea. Oddly enough, though, neither CentCom nor EuCom seemed to be up on chat.

Mills leaned over. “Permission to go into mode, sir.”

“Do it.”

Terranova’s all-too-youthful voice in his headphones. “All stations, Aegis control. Stand by for BMD mode … shift to BMD mode.”

Dan sucked air and sat up.

Wenck and Noblos and Staurulakis had all told him, and it made sense in terms of system resources. But seeing it suddenly bottleneck down on-screen was much more sobering.

Although the left two screens stayed the same, in a blink-fraction of a second the rightmost — Aegis’s view of the world — suddenly keyholed. From 360 degrees, they now had a cone of awareness maybe 5 degrees in width. Brawny as the SPY-1 was, the theater ballistic defense mission sucked down so much power that over 90 percent of the screen had just gone blank. Only a shade still echoed from the north-south mountain chain, fading as distance increased from the searchlight beam. He felt as if he’d been struck blind. “I don’t like this,” he murmured to Mills. “We’re losing all our long-range surveillance.”

“Yes sir. But we still have the gunlaying radar, and our surface search radar.”

Great, they were back to 1945. If a swarm of kamikazes attacked, they’d be peachy. A Syrian MiG-29 or Su-24, though … he could be clobbered from behind before they knew what hit them. He fidgeted in his seat, then got up and went over to Chief Wenck, at the console. “Donnie, there’s no middle ground? We’re just about totally fucking blind everywhere but where you’re looking.”

Wenck blew a lock of too-long blond hair off his forehead. He didn’t look disturbed. “Wussywug.”

“What?”

“What you see is what you get, sir. Only so much wattage to go out, so much processing power in the blades. We got Sea Whiz looking, right?”

“Yeah. And the gun. But everything else is shut down.”

“What you see,” the tech said again, a shrug in his voice.

Big help. Dan took another deep breath and sighed it out. Shit, oh dear.

“Flight quarters, flight quarters,” the 1MC announced as he was pulling on his jacket. Followed a moment later by the air-side controller calling out, “Helo control reports: Red Wolf 202 inbound, four souls onboard.”

It took a moment before this registered. He swung on his heel and stalked to the far side of the space, where the air picture consoles kept track of, among other things, their own helicopter. “I heard four souls,” he asked the petty officer, who removed one of his headphones politely.