"The Americans have discovered our intentions in the Middle East," Sun Tao said while slowly drawing on a cigarette.
"How can you be so sure," the Chinese prime minister asked, "that they discovered China is involved?"
"The latest from our intelligence sources suggests their naval battle groups have begun to leave the Middle East and are steaming through the Indian Ocean."
"They could simply be returning to their bases in Okinawa and the Philippines," the prime minister said as he sipped from a glass of Coca-Cola. "The English-speaking news organizations report a truce has been obtained in the Middle East."
"Don't you find it odd there is no mention in the news media about the terms of the truce or the cause of the unrest?"
"There was some attention given to that topic today," the prime minister said. "The Western media reported on both the Islamic Sword and the Front for Jewish Recognition. News reports today mention the police in both countries will be trying to find the ringleaders of both groups. That leads me to believe our cover story is still holding."
The room was silent as both men thought.
"You may be right, sir," Tao said. "But whatever the case may be, the distance the United States Navy needs to travel to provide any measurable help to Taiwan is great. Our experts estimate they cannot reach Taiwan until the 2nd or 3rd of October even if they continue to run at flank speed."
"And the Einstein papers, the key to our future power — are they safely in our grasp?" the prime minister asked.
"The Carondelet, the ship transporting the papers, finally left the Chesapeake Bay yesterday. All efforts to contact the ship by radio have been for naught. We believe the ship simply has communications problems. If their radios are out, the only way to reach them would be to air-drop them a new radio."
"Is the Carondelet headed south toward Cuba as planned?"
"Yes, they appear to be on a direct course. In addition the Carondelet is following the original plan precisely. We have had Chinese agents positioned in a fishing trawler offshore of Norfolk. They reported that when the Carondelet passed their trawler it was flying the Chinese flag."
"That was our signal the mission was a success, was it not?" the prime minister said loudly.
"Yes. Still, the lack of radio contact bothers me," Tao said. "I would think the electricians or the radio technicians on the Carondelet would have the skills to repair at least one radio by now."
"The problem could be one of a hundred things, from an electrical glitch to a shipboard fire," the prime minister said confidently. "If the Americans had recovered the papers, we would have heard something about it by now. We have spies everywhere."
"Then it is your wish for us to proceed with the attack on Taiwan?"
"When is the Carondelet due to reach Cuba?" the prime minister asked, temporarily deflecting the question.
"The morning of October 1st," Tao answered.
"That means if we fly the papers here by fast jet we would have them in our hands by the second day of the battle for the liberation of Taiwan."
"If all goes according to plan, yes," Tao agreed.
"Then we proceed with the attack on Taiwan as planned. The U.S. Navy was the one element that could have stopped the attack cold. It appears they will not be able to reach Taiwan in time to stop us. Later, if they decide to interfere with our plans after the initial day of battle, we will explain to their president that we have the Einstein papers and have built a weapon based on its formula."
"As a threat?" Tao asked.
"A threat with some teeth in it. Particularly once we explain the powers the formula can unleash."
"But we still aren't sure what the formula can be used for," Tao said logically.
"Neither are the Americans," the prime minister said quietly. "Neither are the Americans."
Tao sipped from a cup of green tea. "Then everything is falling perfectly into place."
"Yes," the prime minister said, smiling. "Once again we have outwitted the capitalists. To the rise of a new dynasty. One that will last ten thousand years." Tao touched his tea cup to the prime ministers glass of cola and smiled. Twelve miles off Cape Hatteras in the Atlantic Ocean an early fall storm was blackening the sky. Commander Oakes turned to Chief Petty Officer Chutetski.
"Have all the Chinese electronics been safely jettisoned?"
"Packed in watertight crates with locaters attached."
"Another SEAL team will retrieve them from the ocean floor within the hour. Once they are taken to the intelligence experts and analyzed, they should provide a treasure trove of information," Oakes noted.
"What will the intelligence boys be looking for?" Chutetski asked.
"Codes, how their scramblers work, communications frequencies, stuff like that," Oakes explained.
"The rest of our team seems to be handling the ship without problem. What do you want me to do?" Chutetski said.
"Start rigging the fuel lines for a fire. Once the Carondelet is within fifty miles of Cuba our orders are to torch it."
"Sounds like fun," Chutetski said as he began to climb down the ladder, then stopped.
"Commander?"
"What, Chutes?"
"Slow burn or fast?"
"Make it medium," Oakes said.
Jeff Scaramelli slurped from a cold cup of stale coffee, then tossed his pencil in the air, sticking it in a ceiling tile. After glancing at Choi, who shrugged his shoulders, he turned in his chair.
"We've got nothing," Scaramelli said in a voice tinged by disgust. Benson stared directly into Scaramelli s eyes. "You're sure?" Scaramelli glanced at Choi, then slowly nodded. "I hate to be the one to tell you this, General Benson, but the formula you brought us is like a giant jigsaw puzzle of the Lincoln Memorial."
"Only with Abraham Lincoln's beard missing," Choi added.
"Son of a bitch," Benson muttered.
For two days now Benson had been patiently waiting in Boulder for the physicists to finish their work. The waiting was taking its toll on the general. "Damnit," he said bitterly. "Do you have some idea of what the formula contains? I would like to tell the president something."
Choi glanced at Scaramelli, who nodded. "We think if we could solve the equation we might be able to explain most of the worlds natural phenomena, sir."
"Could you be more specific?" Benson asked.
"Not really," Scaramelli said, staring at Choi.
"How do whales find their way underwater, why migrating birds don't become lost, maybe why mineral deposits are where they are, heck, it's still all up in the air," Choi said quietly.
"If you could understand this formula," Benson asked, "could you build a weapon that would stop an invading army?"
"General," Scaramelli said, "if we had the solution to these equations, I could make a waterfall flow uphill."
"You men keep working," Benson said. "Maybe something will break. I want you to understand something. The solution to these equations is the most important thing you will probably ever work on. The lives of hundreds of thousands of people hang in the balance."
Scaramelli and Choi nodded slowly, then started working again. It had been two days since either man had slept.
The relentless heat of an Indian summer gripped Washington, D.C. The sun seemed to burn with a vengeance brought about by the knowledge that winter would soon be here. In the District of Columbia ordinary citizens went about their daily rituals never suspecting a war that could envelop the world was only days away.
At a coffee shop less than a mile from the White House a clerk from the Department of Veterans Affairs dipped a toast point into his over-easy eggs, then chewed. In front of the reflecting pond on the Washington Mall a retired schoolteacher from New Zealand took a photograph of his wife for their travel album. Edging forward in thick traffic on the road from Silver Springs to the District, an accountant from the General Services Administration listened to a Spanish language tape and repeated the phrases he heard. Special Agent John Taft awoke in his hospital bed in Bethesda. Raising the top of the bed with the electric lift, he stared out the window at the sunny day. As he waited for the nurse to arrive he took stock of his body. He was still tired and sore but his color had improved, and his appetite had returned with a vengeance.
With a little luck this would be the morning he would be returning home for the first time in what seemed like years. He had enjoyed reading the biography of Albert Einstein that Martinez had brought, but he felt strangely removed from the case at this point. Taft had been injured before in the line of duty. Once he was crushed by a truck and had nearly died. He had broken his ankle parachuting into Pakistan with a heavy pack on his back. His arm had been broken while he was being tortured in Vienna, Austria. He had even been shot once before, a round that glanced off the side of his head, opening up his scalp but causing little damage.
Each time he was badly injured he became reflective.
He felt that at his age he should already be a father. He wondered if he should return to school and make a career change. He was good at his job — one of the best in his profession — but he wondered if it was just a matter of time before fate caught up with him and he was killed in some backwater country performing a mission he doubted would hold much value for the world. Sometimes he dreamed of giving it all up — maybe returning to school for his doctorate and becoming a professor in political science—
something where his experience could be used for good. Or maybe just buying a fishing boat and making his living outdoors every day trying to farm the ocean. He wondered if he shouldn't find someone to marry, then opt for an NIA office job and leave the field operations to those younger and more eager.
He was deep in thought when the nurse walked into the room.
"You rang?"
"Have you considered my offer?" Taft asked.
"Yes I have," the nurse said, smiling. "And as interesting as your offer of a full-body massage might seem, I'm afraid I have to work Friday night"
"I'd just break your heart anyway," Taft said in jest. "In that case, who do I have to kill to get breakfast around here?"
The nurse glanced at her clipboard. "This shows you filled out an order for breakfast but not for lunch."
"That's because I'm going home."
The nurse glanced at her clipboard again. "I don't see that anywhere."
"Maybe that's because I haven't told them yet," Taft said. The nurse poked her head out the door. "The food cart is two rooms down, so your food will be here shortly. Do you want me to call the doctor for you to see about releasing you?"
"Sure, give him a call," Taft said. "But bring me my clothes just in case. If I have to escape I don't want my ass hanging out of this gown as I run out the front door."
"I don't know why, John," the nurse said, "but I think I'm going to miss having you as a patient."
"It was the sponge bath we shared," Taft said as the nurse walked out. Twenty minutes later Taft was fully clothed and sitting in a chair in his room, finishing up the last of his breakfast.
"You really should stay here a few more days," Dr. Gundersen advised.
"Appreciate the offer, but I think I'd be happier at home."
"Let me just note on the form that I asked you to stay," Gundersen said. "Then I'll have a nurse bring up a wheelchair."
Martinez entered the room just as Taft finished slipping on his shoes.
"Will you explain to your partner he needs to ride downstairs in a wheelchair?" Gundersen said.
"Don't look at me for help. He never listens to me," Martinez said easily. After thanking the nurses and shaking Gundersen's hand, Taft followed Martinez to the elevator and rode down. Following Martinez across the parking lot, he climbed in the passenger seat of an NIA sedan.
As they pulled out of the parking lot Taft spoke.
"I've been cooped up inside for way too long," he said easily. "Let's stop and let me get some fresh air before you take me home."
"Do you want to go downtown?"
"That's fine," Taft said, rolling down his window.
Taft was quiet as Martinez steered the sedan through light traffic and drove toward the Washington Mall. Taft watched the scene through the open window. The tourists visiting the capital in the fall were mainly older couples, seniors visiting in the off-peak season to save money. The lads who flocked to the nation's capital in summer were already back in school. Most of the citizens of the District were at work, so the area around the mall was not crowded. Taft saw a shadow pass over his arm, which was resting on the edge of the car door. He glanced up at the sky and watched a flock of birds pass overhead. Unlike ducks and geese, which attempt to maintain a formation when they fly, these birds were common wrens and then-flock fluttered about as if their leader was indecisive as to direction. Taft glanced back through the windshield as Martinez slowed the sedan and turned.
Martinez pulled into a parking lot and parked the car. Walking over toward the passenger door, Martinez glanced at Taft.
"I can handle it Larry, thanks," Taft said as he swiveled to the edge of the seat, then pushed himself to standing with his good arm.
Without any words being spoken, the two men walked to the Vietnam Memorial. Stopping at the nearest end, they looked at the black marble wall of the memorial. The names of the dead were etched deeply into the stone, a silent but visible reminder of the cost of freedom. Walking a short distance away from the slab, the pair sat on a park bench and breathed in the scenery.
"You want one of these beers?" Martinez said, reaching into his jacket pocket.
"I didn't think you'd remembered my request," Taft said.
"I figured Gundersen would be pissed if I gave you one in the hospital. But I didn't forget. Ask and you shall receive — that's my motto," Martinez said, smiling. Together the men sipped the lukewarm beer in silence.
"You okay, John? You seem a little quiet," Martinez asked.
"Ah, you know," Taft said, "just wondering about my place in all this."
"If it helps any, Jeff Scaramelli, the physicist at the Advanced Physics Lab who's been working with Choi on the Einstein papers, said to say thank you. It turns out his father was one of Einstein's drivers in college and Jeff grew up in awe of the man. He calls the papers the greatest scientific discovery of the twentieth century," Martinez said as he finished the beer and tossed the empty into a trash can next to the bench.
"Then my labors were not in vain."
"Not completely, anyway, but there is a snag. It seems that Scaramelli and Choi still can't understand what the theory is all about," Martinez said slowly. "Apparently, the last and final key to the equation was not among the papers we recovered. That was according to the last report I received, which was just before I left the office to pick you up at the hospital."
Taft sipped his beer quietly, then shook his head as if disgusted. Martinez stared at his friend. "I'll say it again, are you all right? You've been acting strange since we left the hospital."
"Just thinking," Taft said as he straightened up on the bench. "So you're telling me we chased someone halfway across the country, plus I was nearly killed recovering these papers, and now the physicists can't figure out what the equations mean?"
"Sucks, doesn't it?" Martinez said quietly.
"I'll say," Taft said as he took another sip. "Are they going to work on the equations some more?"
"That's the word, but apparently they can already tell they won't be able to solve the final equation as it stands. The physicists all agree some important part is missing." Taft closed his eyes and rubbed his forehead. He still felt tired and sore, and now the stitches in his shoulder were itching. And now this. Everything he had done was a giant waste of time.
Some say don't sweat the little things and the big things will take care of themselves; others believe it's all in the details. One little thing was nagging Taft. What little thing was he missing? In his mind he ran through all that had happened.
And then it hit him.
Taft's disgust gradually gave way to a thin smile and finally rolling laughter. Martinez stared at his partner in concern. "Maybe we ought to take you home. You look like you could use some rest."
Taft shook his head at his partner. "Not quite yet," he said confidently. "We need to go back to the car now and call the general."
"What the hell are you talking about?" Martinez said as he rose and began to follow Taft toward the parking lot.
"The final equation," Taft said, smiling. "I know where to find it."