The Arctic Event - By Robert Ludlum Page 0,58

tall brunette regarded Smith and smiled, without humor but with empathy. "Driving the bloody train isn't the easiest of jobs, is it, Colonel?"

Smith forced the last hint of expression from his face. "I've been told it's good for me, Professor."
Chapter Twenty-one
Washington, DC

It was an ordered and lonely upper-middle-class man's bedroom in an unobtrusive town house in a quietly respectable Washington suburb. Totally unexceptional save for the bank of color-coded telephones on the Danish modern bedside table.

The piercing squall of the gray agency phone blasted Fred Klein awake, the integral lighting circuit kicking on the golden-shaded bedside lamp at the first ring. Klein had the phone in hand before he was technically awake.

"Klein here."

The voice at the other end of the line was hollow with distance and laced with static. "This is Jon Smith, sir, aboard the Haley. We have a situation."

Sitting on the edge of the bed, Klein listened without speaking as Smith brought him up to speed in a few terse sentences.

"From what I can see, sir, somebody else has gotten there first and is moving to secure the Misha's payload."

"If they have, they must have come in by air or by submarine, and they are very good at maintaining a low profile," Klein replied. "The last NSA reconsat pass over the Queen Elizabeth Archipelago indicates there are no other surface ships within five hundred miles of Wednesday and no visible activity on the island itself."

"Understood, sir. The second possibility is that we are seeing some aspect of the Russians 'alternative agenda' coming into play."

"Do you have any idea what it could be yet?" Klein questioned. "We're not showing anything from this end."

"I'm not sure, sir, but I'm getting odd vibes off Major Smyslov," Smith replied. "I suspect he's either lying about something or he's not giving us the full story."

"Do you consider Smyslov a mission risk, Jon?"

There was a space of dead air. "Potentially, yes. However I'm also keeping him with the team. He seems like a good officer and decent guy, and to date he has been an asset. He also seems to be giving off mixed signals. If we do have an alternate game plan in play, I don't think he's happy about it. Properly managed, he may continue to be an asset."

"Watch your back with him, Jon. The decent guys are the ones who can kill you the easiest."

"Understood, sir. I am taking appropriate precautions."

Klein rubbed the last of the sleep grit from his eyes and fumbled for his glasses on the lamp table. "What are your intentions at this time?"

"To continue the operation as projected, sir. We will be landing on Wednesday at first light tomorrow."

"Under the circumstances, do you consider that prudent, Jon? We've currently got that arctic ranger platoon and a RAID biowar containment team standing by at Eielson Air Force Base, along with a couple of Air Commando Ospreys and an MC-130 tanker to lift them in with. We can commit them in support."

"No, sir, not at this time." The reply was decisive. "I'm not ready for them. If the intent of this mission is to prevent an international incident, we can't go completely overt yet. We don't know enough to make the call.

"Maybe the anthrax is still aboard the Misha 124 or maybe it isn't," Smith continued. "Maybe we have hostiles on Wednesday or maybe the search party is just stuck on a glacier with a busted radio waiting for daylight to extract themselves. We don't know. But there is one thing we can say for certain. If we go in with foot, horse, and artillery now, the operation will be blown beyond all recall. Any potential for controlling the situation will be gone. It will become almost impossible to keep this from going public."

In spite of himself Klein chuckled dryly. "I'm supposed to be making that speech, Jon. But what happens if you land on Wednesday and we do have hostiles present, and in force?"

"Well, sir, we'll drop off the scope and then you'll know for certain." Klein could see the faint, wry smile that would go with the words. "Mission accomplished."

"Carry on, Jon, and good luck."

"We'll keep you advised, sir."

The link broke. Klein returned the gray phone to its cradle and picked up the yellow one next to it, the direct link to the armed men in the small security and communications center in the town house basement.

"Please have my car and the launch standing by. I will be moving to headquarters. Then give me five minutes and

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