down. We were intercepted over the Passages by a light plane equipped with a military-grade radio jammer and a machine gun. If it weren't for a bright idea by Major Smyslov and some brilliant flying by Ms. Russell, you'd be sailing to search for a downed helicopter."
"But..."
"I don't know, Captain," Smith repeated patiently. "But someone is obviously trying to prevent my team from reaching Wednesday Island. Accordingly, I think it behooves us to get the hell up there just as fast as we can."
"We'll take care of it, sir." Jorganson nodded, his professional composure returning. "The same for your helo. Whatever needs to be done will get done."
The captain turned to his waiting first officer. "Mr. Grundig, recall all hands and make all preparations for getting under way. Expedite! Set your sea and anchor details and advise Chief Wilkerson that he will be ready to turn shafts in forty-five minutes!"
"Aye, sir!" The exec disappeared through a watertight door in the white-painted deckhouse.
The Coast Guard commander looked back to Smith. "Do you have any instructions about Dr. Trowbridge, Colonel?"
"Trowbridge?" Smith groped mentally for the name.
"Yes, sir, he's the off-site director of the university research program on Wednesday. He's up at the Kodiak Inn now. He was scheduled to ride up with us for the recovery of the expedition."
Smith recalled the name now, and he considered his options. Dr. Rosen Trowbridge was listed as the chairman of the organizing committee for the Wednesday Island science program, a fund-raiser and an academic administrator, not an explorer. On the one hand, he would be another complication in a situation that was already growing increasingly complex.
On the other, he might prove a useful information source on the personnel, assets, and environment on Wednesday.
"If he can make it down here by the time we're ready to sail, he can come."
Chapter Fifteen
Off the Alaskan Peninsula
With bright ice crystal stars overhead and an occasional distant shore light to starboard, the USS Alex Haley swept through the deepening autumn night, her engines rumbling at a steady fast cruise. The big ice cutter had a four-hundred-mile run to the southwest along the Alaskan coast before she could make her turn north at Unimak Island for the true long haul up through the Bering Sea.
Her cramped radio room smelled of ozone and cigarette smoke and was sultry with the waste heat radiating from the equipment chassis. The use-worn gray steel chair creaked with Smith's weight and the roll of the ship, and the handset of the scrambled satellite phone was slick with perspiration. Smith had the radio shack to himself, the regular radio watch having been evicted in the face of security.
"How did they spot us?" Smith demanded.
"It's not difficult to guess," Fred Klein's distant voice replied. "Pole Star Aero-leasing provides helicopters and light transport aircraft for a number of survey and science operations in the Canadian and Alaskan Arctic, including the Wednesday Island project. When the press release about your expedition to the Misha crash site hit the media, the hostiles must have staked out the most likely equipment sources. You were caught in an airborne version of a drive-by shooting."
"Then somebody else must know about the anthrax aboard the Misha 124."
"That's a distinct possibility, Jon." Director Klein's voice remained controlled. "We've known from the start that the Misha warload would be a major prize for any terrorist group or rogue nation. That could explain the attack on your aircraft. But that's only one possible explanation. We don't know nearly enough to close out any options on this incident."
Smith ran a hand through his sweat-dampened dark hair. "I'll concede that point. But how did it get out? Where did it leak?"
"I don't know, but I'd suspect it's on the Russian side. We've been holding all the information on the Misha 124 tightly compartmentalized. Literally the only people stateside who know the whole story are the President, myself, Maggie, and the members of your team."
"And as my people were the ones damn near killed in this intercept incident, I think we can safely eliminate them as a sellout source."
Klein's voice grew emotionless. "I said we can't close out any possibilities, Jon."
Smith caught the caution. Smyslov...Professor Metrace...Randi. He fought back the instinctive denial. Klein was right: "It's inconceivable!" made a wonderful set of famous last words.
The director continued. "The other remaining option is that we had a leak on site, through one of the members of the Wednesday Island team itself. We have been assured that none of the expedition members have