122103.fb2 Designated targets - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 40

Designated targets - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 40

HMS TRIDENT, THE ENGLISH CHANNEL

It wasn't the first time the ship had played host to royalty. King William and his new wife had toured the stealth destroyer shortly after the ship was commissioned, but that had been an occasion of state, with pomp and circumstance as the order of the day.

The monarch's younger brother was much less disruptive, although word of his arrival still flew belowdecks with the speed of laser-linked gossip. He arrived with a Special Air Service squad and their Norwegian counterparts. Halabi, who knew the mood of her ship as well as she knew her own feelings, sensed that the excitement had more to do with having a Special Forces component on board again than it did with any celebrity aura that hung around Prince Harry.

The SAS and their commando guides pretty much kept to the Air Div hangars at the stern, where they laid out their equipment, checking and rechecking everything. Major Windsor appeared in Planning once, to request permission to load mission prep software into the Trident's Combat Intelligence. The CI could render the mock-up of the heavy water plant with much greater detail than the field server they'd brought with them.

He was most amused to discover that the voice of the ship was a synthetic facsimile of Lady Beckham.

"I met them at the investiture," he told Halabi, smiling broadly at the memory. "She still looked smashing, but I thought poor old David had gone to seed quite badly. He never got over it when supercoach Johnny Warde dropped him from West Brom, did he?"

Halabi was almost unique in twenty-first century Britain, having zero interest in pop music, soccer, or celebrity gossip, so it took her a moment to catch up. "I suppose not," she conceded, without knowing exactly what he was talking about.

Harry quickly returned to the hangar to boot up the V3D mission sim, sparing her any further embarrassment, although she could tell the junior ratings thought she was a bit of a knob for not wanting to talk Posh and Becks with Harry.

When she'd first taken command of the Trident, she would probably have retreated into stiff dignity, but three years of constant action had loosened her corset strings, and she let a wry smile play over her features instead. "I'm sure His Royal Highness would like nothing more than to spend the whole day with you lot, plonking on about gormless rejects from the Hello! magazine celebrity Deathstar. But he's busy, and so are you. So get your heads down and your arses up, where I can kick them a little more easily."

The sailors returned to their workstations with only pro forma grumbles. They were busily plotting a course that would take them to their insertion point in the Skagerrak, when Halabi's intel boss pinged her on shipnet.

"Better come up to the CIC, Captain. We've got all sorts of things going on here. The birds are picking up indications of massive troop movements on the continent, and comms has detected an encrypted burst. Unscheduled, unauthorized. Completely outside parameters for any of the deep-cover skin jobs we're tracking."

"Sounds like we're game-on, then, Mr. Howard. I'll be there right away. Better set up a laser link connecting us to the Admiralty."

She acknowledged the message and left her ops coordinator to carry on with the mission plot, although she suspected that circumstances might have just cut short their cruise to the Norwegian Sea.

It was a short walk to the CIC, which sat in the Trident's central hull. Sailors and officers bustled through the companionway, already alerted to the possibility of action. Footsteps padded along the composite decking at double time. The rude, northern brogue of her boat chief Dave Waddington could be heard all the way over in the portside hull as he rousted a couple of slackers. The ship herself thrummed as the engine room spooled up in readiness. Halabi listened with approval to the whirr of Metal Storm pods and laser packs deploying from their recessed silos.

Unfortunately the increased tempo also served to remind her of how naked the ship felt. Her offensive capabilities were almost played out. She reminded herself again that she had only six ship-killers and four antisub missiles left. Every station was occupied in the cool blue cavern of the CIC when she arrived. The huge battlespace monitors on the wall at the far side of the room told her that the waiting was over, even before her executive officer arrived to confirm it. Dozens of e-tags on the computer map of Europe were in motion now. Data notes affixed to each tag scrolled through unit designations, capabilities, and the presumed role that unit would play in the coming invasion.

"They're surging," said the XO. "There's a lot of activity on the coast, in the ports, but mostly it's still inland, at least for now, as they're moving into position for the jump-off."

"Thank you, Mr. McTeale. Are we feeding this back to Admiralty?"

"Live and in color, without commercial breaks, ma'am."

"Whom do we have there interpreting for them?"

"Lieutenant Williams, Captain. He just got into London this morning, but he's had a few sessions up there already. They'll listen to him."

"Of course they will," she said. "He took a blue in beer drinking at Eton. Speaking of which, best ping Major Windsor and get him up here. I suspect his little jaunt is about to go wobbly."

"Aye, ma'am," said McTeale. "About that, there's this business of the data burst. I suggest you have a shufti in your ready room, Captain. It might be hot."

Halabi knew better than to second-guess her exec. "Okay. I'll make it quick.

"Mr. Howard," she called out to her intel chief. "You're with me. McTeale, I'll leave you here to keep an eye on all this. Ping me if any more nasty surprises develop. Have Major Windsor join me in the ready room."

"Aye, ma'am."

She spun out of the CIC with Lieutenant Howard in tow. They found the SAS officer waiting at her door with Lieutenant Poulsson, the Norwegian commando.

"What is happening, Captain?" asked Poulsson. "Has the invasion begun?"

"Pretty much so, Lieutenant. You'd best join us, too, I suppose. Is that all right, Mr. Howard?"

"Actually, I think Lieutenant Poulsson needs to see this, ma'am. It partly concerns his mission."

They squeezed into the small space, where a flat screen was already displaying some of the data burst that had arrived without warning. Halabi closed the sliding door behind them.

"So what am I looking at, Marc?"

"A rare bounty or a giant con, Skipper. It's a file dump. A big one. There are hundreds of subpackets I still haven't decompressed and decoded. Mostly they're in German, but there was one attachment in English. Here."

The intel boss brought up a simple text message:

Attention Trident. Attached you will find information detailing accelerated weapons programs of the Reich Armaments Ministry. Also, some details of Operation Sea Dragon, the early phases of which you will have now detected. Do not contact me. I shall contact you when possible.

"I see," said Halabi. "What's your first reaction Marc? Is it for real?"

Lieutenant Howard chewed his lip. "My gut feeling is yes, it's real. It's come in via a secure Fleetnet channel the Germans probably wouldn't know about. I haven't had time to check, but I think it's one of the subroutines we authorized for the Sutanto."

"Which the Japanese got."

"Right. And they stripped her. This guy has access to a pad, too. He's figured out how to use the secure links, or somebody's told him. There's no indication of who he is or why he'd do this, but anything's possible. Maybe he was a Rommel fan."

"They're all dead," said Harry.

"I am sorry," Poulsson interjected, "but where do we come in? You said there was something of relevance to our mission."

"My German isn't up to much beyond getting into trouble at Oktoberfest," said Howard, "but one of the highlighted files was this."

A new window jumped to the front of the screen.

"Holy shit," said Harry.

They all turned to him.

"My German is fine," he said, "And that's a document about the heavy water plant. Do you mind?"

He took a seat in front of the flatscreen and began to read, and then to scroll down.

"Oh, dear," he said after a minute.

"Major, would you like to share with the other children?" asked Halabi.

Harry turned around on the swivel chair. "If this is good," he said. "Telemark is a no-show. It's sitting there to distract us from a fast-fission program they've set up with the Japs."

"What does that mean?" asked Poulsson.

"Nothing good," said Captain Halabi.

A chime sounded from the monitor, and McTeale appeared in a pop-up window.

"We've got incoming, Captain. Jets again. About twelve of them, this time."

"Sound to general quarters," she ordered before turning to Harry and Poulsson. "Gentlemen, you should continue with your preparation, but I'm afraid I'm going to have to talk to London. I think everything just turned to shit."

Alarms began to blare throughout the ship.