Dale Brown's Dreamland: Retribution
By Dale Brown and Jim DeFelice
3.5/5
()
Military Operations
International Conflict
War
Technology
Military
Hero's Journey
Reluctant Hero
Mentor
High-Tech Warfare
Damsel in Distress
Sacrifice
Enemy Within
Ticking Time Bomb
Military Thriller
Techno-Thriller
Aviation
Leadership
Search & Rescue Mission
Adventure
Teamwork
About this ebook
Dreamland, a top-secret military facility in the Nevada desert, is where high-tech innovations are developed to keep America safe from its enemies. After defusing threats across the globe, the team must now use its stealth, raw nerve, and technology to stop a terror from striking at home.
With more than two dozen nuclear devices unaccounted for, the global masters of terror have set a catastrophe in motion: a surprise attack more deadly than Pearl Harbor and 9/11 combined. If the nation is to survive, Lieutenant Colonel Tecumseh “Dog” Bastian and his crew will have to reach deep into their cutting-edge arsenal. And they’ll have to do it short-handed—because two of Dreamland’s best and bravest have been lost at sea.
Dale Brown
Dale Brown is the New York Times bestselling author of numerous books, from Flight of the Old Dog (1987) to, most recently, Eagle Station (2020). A former U.S. Air Force captain, he can often be found flying his own plane in the skies of the United States. He lives near Lake Tahoe, Nevada.
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Reviews for Dale Brown's Dreamland
197 ratings21 reviews
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Jocko Vance was an Olympic athlete and a popular TV presenter; now he's a serial killer, maybe he always has been. Years and years ago Vance was tried and sent to jail by a cop named Carol Jordan and a profiler named Tony Hill. Now Vance has escaped from prison, looking for payback. Just for kicks, there's another serial killer targeting prostitutes in Worcester. Although the plot seems implausible, Val McDermid uses her prodigious talent to make this book one to be read on the edge of your seat.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Retribution by Val McDermid is the 7th book in her police procedural series that features DCI Carol Jordan and Criminal Profiler Tony Hill. In this outing they are up against an old nemesis, Jacko Vance, a serial killer that they put behind bars twelve years ago. Jacko has escaped from prison and is hell bent on revenge against those that he blames for his downfall, with Carol and Tony at the head of the list. While Carol and her team are working on case of a killer who is murdering prostitutes, they are also having to watch their backs for Jacko not realizing how twisted his revenges are going to be. I always enjoy reading about this duo even though I find Carol a little too full on, but I found I had to overlook a number of implausible details in this one, beginning with Jacko’s escape. I also found it difficult to believe that Jacko would delay leaving the country in order to wreak his revenge. I have been reading this series for years and will certainly be continuing on as the books are solid, well crafted police procedurals. Also as this book has brought about an enormous change in Tony and Carol’s relationship I need to read on to see what happens next.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Retribution. Tony Hill/Carol Jordan Book 7. Val McDermid. 2011. Yet another series that I have not read in years. Hill is a psychologist, a criminal profiler who works for the police. For years he and Carol, a police inspector, have worked on grisly serial murders. They work well together and their history is hinted at but not explained in this title. Carol has left the police force and she and Tony are not on the same friendly terms they were in previous books in the series. However Carol is persuaded to return to work to head a super police group that will work on major crimes independent of local departments. Tony will work with her. They start looking into the mysterious suicides of two prominent women who have been hounded to death by vicious anonymous attackers on various social media outlets. Needless to say these are not suicides
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5McDermid keeps this series fresh (considering the number of sociopath serial killers Tony & Carol deal with) - this book brings back one of the worst of the lot.
If you've not read any of the series, it'll work alone, but I recommend starting with "The Mermaids Singing".
Or try some of the stand-alones like "The Vanishing Point". - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Found this in the building’s laundry room. Entertaining read but not a keeper; it will go back to the room’s free books shelf. Haven’t read McDermid since the early 2000s. One of those was Wire in the Blood for which this is apparently a sequel; stopped reading her stuff after a while. Based on this one & the fact I can’t remember any of the others (including the Jaco Vance character), probably a good decision. Notes so I don’t completely forget this one. Bad parenting the source of all our troubles. The lunch lady tidbit on the shaping of Tony Hill’s character may have been taken from the life of the Victorian reformer Lord Shaftesbury. Noticed some complaints about the resolution, but it seems poetic justice that Vance goes down to the only other character who is meaner than he is. Where McDermid seems to most ring true is in her quick portraits of insensitive cops and the boneheaded prison bureaucracy. It’s disappointing but realistic that none of the nitwits is offed by Jaco in some appropriately gruesome fashion; this isn’t Silence of the Lambs.Having similar problems with alcohol and sexism, Tennison in the Prime Suspect TV series is more richly characterized than Carol Jordan. The prosthetic arm was a red herring. I thought McDermid was going to or could have used it in tripping up the killer. Would have been great if Vance was able to escape the crime units but goes down when he tries to get through airport security and is finally recognized because the prosthesis trips the electronic detector, followed by an airport shootout like the climax of Bullit. As noted in the book, he was imprisoned prior to 9/11, but given the lax prison security and Vance’s obsessive planning, it’s possible that he would have anticipated the problem and come up with some ingenious workaround.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Disappointing ending that didn't keep up to the standard of the rest of the series, otherwise enjoyable book. Be interested to seeing the relationship develops between Tony and Carol in the next book when it's published.
Enjoyed this even more second time around (September 2014) and gave it 4.5 Stars. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In the most recent of the Tony Hill novels, McDermid again takes us into the dark recesses of the psychotic mind of not one but two criminals. One is a throwback to earlier work that Dr. Hill, a
law enforcement profiler, assisted Detective Inspector Carol Jordan with, the imprisoning of Jacko Vance. On the eve of D.I. Jordan’s murder, the investigative team having broken up and reassigned,
news comes that Vance has escaped from jail. Not only was there a murderer on the loose but he was looking for retribution on all and sundry who helped put him away.
While aiding in his capture and ducking his advances against them, family and their friends, Jordan’s team is asked to assist in solving what appears to be a serial killer that is attacking hookers, the regular street girls. Three have died so far and Hill has to try to get inside of the murderer’s head before the fourth one is found, bearing the tattoo, MINE, on one of their wrists. The deaths have all been so dissimilar in patterns: a drowning, crucifixion,and dismemberment, that without the tattoo they may never have been linked. When Hill finds the common link, the murder team heads in to arrest the suspect, but will they be too late.
Meanwhile Vance is playing havoc at his ex-wife’s home and is off on his own killing spree as Jordan and Hill stay close on his heels. When the deaths hit home, Jordan snaps, blaming Hill, and the eggshell membrane of their potential relationship is ripped, possibly beyond repair. Never before have I found two such unlikable protagonists as the uptight Jordan and the needy, clinging mess that Hill has become, actually mesh so finely that throughout all the flaws of their stuttering lives, the story still flows well.
Hats off to McDermid. Her storytelling ability is outstanding and “Retribution” is a top-drawer tale. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Love all of Val McDermid's books. Love the character of Tony Hill although not so keen on Carol Jordan.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The Retribution is a suspenseful, gripping thriller. The serial killer Jacko Vance was one scary villain. His ruthlessness, his methodical approach to his vengeance, and how well he knew those he sought to take vengeance on came together to create a truly scary killer.However, there were a lot of characters minor characters I found easily blended together. Or rather, they didn't distinguish themselves from each other much. They were generally one of the crime investigation team members. Occasionally, the author would try to hint who the killer was after by describing them or where he was, but I couldn't tell by the description who they were talking about. I'm not sure if this was because it took me a while to read (only because of time constraints and not because of the book) or because of a lack of connection with the characters.The other thing that bothered me was the tendency of the author to head-hop. Sometimes it would only happen at the very end of the scene. Other times, the narration would slip into another character's head midway through, then return to the original character's point of view. Head-hopping never fails to be annoying and confusing. With those two problems, this potential four-star story dropped down to a three-star. And yet, it left me wanting to know more about the main characters. And if the author can create such a suspenseful story and gripping villain, I'd read others in this series.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Have you ever found yourself reading a book that you thought was only "OK" just so you could the resolution and then been so disappointed in the ending it soured the whole experience? This book is one of those experiences. Between some of the completely forgettable secondary characters, over reactionary hostility of one the primary ones, poorly written villain (making a return engagement to the series, no less), and a horribly underwritten ending, I can not recommend this book. It reads like in the last quarter of the book even the author got tired of the story and just decided to wrap it up. It's that flat. As a newcomer to the series, I can only hope the prior entries were better.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Came to this after having read two or three in the series and been not so impressed by the last I'd read (not necessarily in sequence which may not help). I galloped through this and enjoyed the ride.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The RetributionBy Val McDermidA copy of this book was received from the Amazon Vine Program. This is the seventh installment of the Tony Hill/Carol Jordan series written by Val McDermid. The combination of the psychology professor and police inspection is a strange pairing but together they have formed an unusual friendship as well as a successful crime solving relationship that is exciting to read.The serial killer Jacko Vance, a psychopath, who they had sent away to prison ten years ago (in a previous book), through careful and meticulous planning has made his escape from prison by swapping places with another prisoner who is about to begin a work-release program.Now he wants his “retribution”…and begins immediately to wreak havoc on everyone who had a hand in putting him behind bars. Vance’s way of seeking revenge has also a sarcastic twist.Another interesting part of the book is that we also follow the crime solving of an additional serial killer who is murdering prostitutes. Just like in life, the team is working on more than one case at a time.McDermid is a superb writer who uses suspense and tension to keep the reader fully engrossed throughout the fast paced action of this book but at the same time continues to show the continued development of her characters in this series.I recommend The Retribution to fellow readers who like a fast paced ride with lots of action. Keep an eye out for the next in the Tony Hill & Carol Jordan series…I believe you will not be disappointed.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Psychologist Tony Hill and Detective Carol Jordan have had a long, dysfunctional relationship but join together again when Jacko Vance, a psychopath and serial killer, escapes from prison. He was a celebrity and hero prior to his incarceration. He is highly intelligent and has spent his time in prison planning his retribution against those he feels are responsible for his imprisonment. Tony and Carol head his list. At the same time, there have been a series of murders of prostitutes occurring. Each one is murdered in a different way but the murderer leaves the word "mine" on each of them.There were a lot of twists and turns in this book. It was interesting to see when and where Jacko was going to strike next. He was always one step ahead of those hunting him. The prostitution murders could have been developed more, and in fact could have been developed into a great book on its own. I almost enjoyed that part more than the story of Jacko, although it seemed rushed and held too small a part in this book. Overall, it was an enjoyable read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In The Retribution , Jacko Vance, who had murdered 17 teenaged girls in an earlier book, has broken out of prison and is seeking retribution against the people who put him there. His main targets are psychologist and profiler Tony Hill and Carol Jordan, who led the police unit who captured Vance. Tony and Carol are two damaged souls who have a long-standing but troubled relationship.At the same time that the team are trying to recapture Vance, they are investigating a string of prostitute murders. Each murder is different but the killer marks each victim with the word 'mine'.Overall, although I am not a huge fan of thrillers, I enjoyed The Retribution. I have only two criticisms: I would have liked a little more story about the prostitute murders as it got somewhat shortchanged against the Vance narrative and, second, the end of both plots seemed a bit rushed and, in the case of Vance, it seemed to come, well, a little out of left field.Still, I would highly recommend this book to fans of McDermid and to readers of mysteries and thrillers in general. Author McDermid is a real wordsmith and knows how to keep a plot moving while introducing new characters and storylines. If you have never read any of the other books in the series (this is the seventh), don't worry, even though The Retribution revives an old villain, it can be read as a standalone.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A great read that made me want to turn the page long afte bedtime. Jacko Vance a master criminal who Tony and Carol helped put behind bars, has manipulated the world of prisons to escape. His aim is to bring down the people who jailed him in the most personal and intense way. He brutally murders members of Carol's family as a start. Tony fails to profile Jacko leaving Carol to question his friendship stripping away the most intense relationship which potentially shatters Tony. The story races to a rather unsatisfactory conclusion with Tony's mother putting in an unlikely appearance. leaves you wanting the next in the series to see if Carol and Tony's relationship is beyond repair and whether the team solving crimes is indeed to be dispearsed
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5I’ve read more of Val McDermids Kate Brannigan series than this series featuring Tony Hill and Carol Jordan but I have also watched a dozen episodes of Wire in The Blood which is based on the pair and it is the book of the same name that first introduces the terrifying killer who is seeking revenge in The Retribution.Jacko Vance, celebrity and hero was incarcerated for just a single murder of a teenage girl despite the police being convinced he was responsible for at least seventeen, as well as the brutal killing of a colleague who got too close. For the last ten years Jacko has focused his considerable resources of intelligence, patience and money, towards escaping jail and making everyone responsible pay before fleeing the country. His escape leaves clinical psychologist, Tony Hill and DCI Carol Jordan, who have just managed to find some sort of equilibrium in their difficult lives, reeling, especially when it becomes obvious Vance isn’t targeting them directly, but the ones they love.The Retribution is a gritty crime novel that delves into the darkness of human nature. While the main plot involves the sadistic behaviour of Vance and the desperate desire to recapture him, DCI Jordan’s team is also searching for a serial killer murdering young street prostitutes – a last case before the Major Incident Team is disbanded due to budget cuts. McDermid doesn’t spare us the details of the depravity committed by these two very different killers but it is the psychological tension that is so engrossing.The murdered prostitutes are slow to be linked, changes in the method used by the killer confusing the team until the manner of deaths are attributed to a cancelled television show.Vance is playing a cat and mouse game with Carol, Tony and Vance’s ex wife, wounding them in ways certain to inflict psychological suffering. That his brilliant plan is eventually thwarted can be no surprise, but exactly who takes down Vance and how is a twist you won’t see coming.McDermid’s protagonists, Hill and Jordan, are almost as tortured and flawed as the criminals they hunt. Their relationship is complicated, both carry unimaginable burdens that they have struggled to share. Vance shatters their fragile connection and for fans of the series this might be a blow.Though the seventh of the series, The Retribution can be read as a stand alone but readers would benefit from having gotten to know the characters in previous books. The Retribution is a page turning psychological thriller with plenty of twists and turns by Scottish author, Val McDermid.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Wow...Val McDermid's latest book, The Retribution, was literally a non-stop read for me. Picked it up in the morning and finished late that night.Now, I don't know if you're familiar with this fantastic Scottish author, but if you love crime novels, she's an author you want to read. She has written three series, but my favourites are the Tony Hill/Carol Jordan books. A television series - Wire in the Blood - is also based on these characters.In The Retribution, Hill, a psychological profiler and Jordan, a Detective Inspector with the MIT - major incident team - are stunned to learn that Jacko Vance, a charismatic serial killer they imprisoned, has escaped. Jacko - "killer of seventeen teenage girls, murderer of a serving police officer and a man once voted the sexiest man on British TV", promised he would seek retribution against those who put him away. At the same time, the MIT is working to solve the gruesome murders of local prostitutes. All this while the higher ups have decided to dismantle the crack team Carol has put together, due to budget constraints.These two characters have always fascinated me. Neither one of them completely 'fits' into society, especially Tony. "When he interviewed the psychopaths that became his patients, he heard so many echoes of his own empty childhood. It was, he thought, the reason he was so good at what he did. He understood them because he had come within a hair's breadth of being them." The tenuous building of the relationship between Carol and Tony has been building over the course of the series. We get to know more of what makes Tony tick in this offering. My opinion of Carol changes from book to book - still no final opinion. The MIT team is filled with interesting support characters with their own stories.Vance is a diabolical character. We are privy to his plans and thoughts and they are truly disturbing. The second case involving the prostitutes was good but had a bit of a 'filler' feel to it. That being said, McDermid's plotlines are always ingenious, complex and gritty. I was caught a bit off guard by the ending of the book, but then again, I like it when an author can keep me on my toes.Definitely recommended.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Val McDermid is the mother of the British serial killer novel. These are not American serial killers with the typical plot, Mr. Big Handsome and Damaged Sherriff/Police Officer driving around in fast cars to save the heroine at the last minute with everyone scarred, but deeper for their experience. Not even close.Val McDermid can write and has a bountiful imagination. She writes fully fleshed characters, including evildoers who do evil that you wouldn't imagine in your wildest nightmares. Her stand-alones are excellent, as are her series, my favorite of which are the Tony and Carol Jordan books. Beginning with The Mermaids Singing, there are seven in the series. My favorite is The Wire in the Blood (which is also a pretty good British TV series), but they're all excellent.These books will shock you to your core, will keep you up reading late, and might give you nightmares.The Retribution is the latest in the Tony Hill/Carol Jordan series and it is well worth the read. Everything between everyone in the series has gained a deep level of complexity and the return of one of McDermid's scariest villains - Jacko Vance - makes for a whopping good read. If you haven't read the series and you love this kind of fiction, I highly recommend you start at the beginning and work your way through - you won't regret it. If you're already a fan, this one won't disappoint.As a sidenote for anyone interested in reading LGBT books, Ms. McDermid is an out lesbian and treats things like sexual preference as normal within the working environment. Shocking, no? It just makes me love her more.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Dark, disturbing, psychologically damaged and graphic can be used in various degrees to describe this novel and most of its charaacters. The return of the killer, Jacko Vance, who once had it all but holds many responsible for his imprisonment and downfall vows to get even. Carol Jordan and Tony Hill, the policewoman and the profiler, who will do anything to stop him and put him away again. The characters of Jordan and Hill are unique, they are both damaged for different reasons themselves, but are finally working toward having a relationship together which is put in jeopardy because of Vance's escape and need for revenge. The reader learns quite a bit about the inside workings of the profiler and McDermid does a wondereful job making the point that there was only one person and one beginning act of kindness that kept Tony Hill from being just like Vance. There is even a present day prostitute murder that gives Jordan's team the chance to work together one last time. I did feel that the present case was not very prominent and was only in the book for the aforementioned reason. Finally in what I feel is a ironic turn of fate, Vance is stopped and Hill and Jordan are left to pick up the pieces, trying to have something left from the damage left by Vance. Look forward to the next book to see if they are able to do this. This review is based on an ARC from the publisher.
- Rating: 1 out of 5 stars1/5Too violent.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Jacko Vance, the villain from the second Carol Jordan and Tony Hill book, has escaped from prison and wants revenge. The way he takes it might change their relationship forever. Meanwhile another serial killer stalks Bradfield, murdering prostitutes in unlikely ways.The second killer almost seems like an afterthought, something to distract the characters and to some extent the reader. That mystery isn't quite as developed as it could be, particularly the villains. For Vance's revenge, though, it's full-out terrifying. This book made me repeatedly check that my doors were locked--not that it would have helped. It takes the relationship between Carol & Tony to another level, and not in a happy way. The story was so compelling I had a hard time putting it down (and I'm not exaggerating.) I wish there had been more to the end, though. It was too abrupt. I wanted more.The back of the book says it's a good introduction for people new to the series, but I'm not convinced. I think this one is for the fans.
Book preview
Dale Brown's Dreamland - Dale Brown
I
Downed Airmen
Aboard the Wisconsin,
over the northern Arabian Sea
0725
WIND WHIPPED THROUGH THE MEGAFORTRESS COCKPIT AS Colonel Tecumseh Dog
Bastian leaned the plane as gently as he could onto her left wing, aiming to take a slow circle north of the Chinese aircraft carrier Khan and its escorts. He’d ordered his five crew members to eject when it looked as if he’d have to crash the Megafortress into the Khan to prevent it from launching its nuke-laden bomber against the Indians’ capital. Now that the Chinese had stood down, he turned his attention to his people in the water.
Ordinarily, the Megafortress’s flight computer would have recorded the plane’s position when the crew bailed, and then computed their likely landing area. Slapped into Search and Rescue mode, the computer would have projected a likely search area on the windscreen, along with convenient markers showing Dog where to look. He could have switched the Megafortress’s sensor inputs over to infrared and in a few moments picked out the bobbing bodies of his crew.
That wasn’t going to work now. Pressed into service to prevent a world war, Wisconsin had not been shielded against the T-Rays. Its brains had been fried over northern India; the only electronic device still working was a satellite radio that had been kept in a shielded box until after the explosions. Dog knew he would have to find them the old-fashioned way, with a pair of Mark 1 human eyeballs, now seriously derated due to fatigue.
Flying the EB-52 without a copilot was generally not difficult, but flying it without its computer was an entirely different story. Add the fact that his joystick, pedals and throttle were now connected to hydraulic backups, and the plane demanded every bit of his considerable piloting skills. The fuselage, ordinarily a slick, carefully streamlined airfoil, had five holes in it where the ejection seats had gone out. Dog had to alternately wrestle and baby the aircraft to get it to do what he wanted.
He found a patch of air around 2,500 feet that the Megafortress seemed to like, and rode it around in an elongated circle, looking for the orange life rafts that should have inflated as his crew descended.
"Dreamland EB-52 Wisconsin to crew—Mack, Dish, Cantor, where are you guys?" he asked over the shielded radio.
There was no answer. The survival radios the crew members carried had been in cases shielded against the T-Rays, but the otherwise stock devices had relatively limited ranges, and it was likely they were having trouble picking up Wisconsin’s transmission.
At least Dog hoped that was the case. He didn’t like the alternatives.
He pushed the plane lower and slower, trying for a better view. Displeased, the Wisconsin responded by literally flapping its wings—the flexible carbon-composite extensions at the very ends of the slicked-back wings began to oscillate.
The effect felt like a stutter in the stick. After a few hairy seconds, Dog realized that the shudder wasn’t a prelude to a nose dive; the Wisconsin chugged away at a hair under 200 knots, level as a laser beam and precisely 753 feet over the waves, according to the old-style analog altimeter.
A test pilot undoubtedly would have made a note of the phenomenon so he could discuss it with the engineers when he got home. Dog, a fighter pilot by training and inclination, did what most fast-jet jocks would do—he pushed the plane another notch, taking her down to five hundred feet and slowing her to 160 knots.
He trimmed the control surfaces like a yachtsman tacking into the final leg of the America’s Cup. The plane bucked, but then smoothed out as he reached five hundred feet. He found he had to keep a good deal of pressure on the stick to keep the nose up, but the plane felt stable. The ocean spread out before him like a smooth blue carpet, with the faint pattern of dark blue seashells arrayed shoulder-to-shoulder, uninterrupted as far as the eye could sight.
Not what he wanted to see.
He broadcast again on the emergency channel.
Still nothing.
He reached across the console, inadvertently changing his pressure on the stick. Immediately the Megafortress dipped to its left. He quickly added power and began to climb.
Something glinted to his left as he went to back the throttle off.
"Dreamland Wisconsin to crew—Mack? Anybody?"
We’re all here, Colonel,
answered Major Mack Smith.
What’s your situation?
Treading water.
Where are your life rafts?
Mack explained that the men had purposely sunk their chutes and rafts to make it harder for the Chinese to find them. They had two backup, uninflated rafts in reserve.
The Chinese stood down,
said Dog. They’re not going to use their nuke.
We’d still rather not be eating dinner with chopsticks tonight, Colonel,
said Mack.
Go ahead and inflate the rafts,
Dog told him. "I’ll get the Abner Read to come north to pick you up."
The Abner Read, an American littoral destroyer, had been shadowing the Chinese fleet during the conflict. They were roughly fifty miles away when Dog last checked; it might take them two hours or more to get there.
You sure the Chinese aren’t going to interfere?
Mack asked.
They took several hits during the conflict. It looks like they’re spending all their energy just keeping the ship afloat,
said Dog. "If the Abner Read can’t come, I’ll ask the Pakistanis to send one of their ships. They have some patrol vessels to the northeast."
No way—they’ll just hand us over to the Chinese.
They’re our allies,
said Dog, though he wasn’t sure how far to trust them—the Pakistanis were allied with the Chinese as well, and during the conflict the two forces had worked together against the Indians.
I still think I’d rather swim,
said Mack.
Careful what you wish for, Major.
Northern Arabian Sea
0730
COLONEL SAYS THE PAKISTANIS MAY RESCUE US,
MACK told the others.
The Paks?
said Sergeant Peter Dish
Mallack. Fuck that. They were just trying to blow us out of the air.
They’ll turn us over to the Chinese,
said Technical Sergeant Thomas T-Bone
Boone. I ain’t wearing no Asian pajamas for the rest of my life.
Yeah, I’m with you there,
said Mack.
Dish and T-Bone were radar systems operators; aboard the Wisconsin they’d kept track of hundreds of contacts—Indian, Pakistani, Chinese, and American—as war threatened. Now they were just swimmers, and not particularly good ones.
Two other men had gone out with Mack—Lieutenant Sergio Jazz
Jackson, the Megafortress’s copilot, and Lieutenant Evan Cantor, who along with Mack had been piloting the Flighthawk remote control aircraft from the Megafortress’s lower deck. Cantor had hit something on the way out of the aircraft and broken his arm; his face was deeply bruised and he seemed to have a concussion. Dish, the best swimmer of the bunch, had lashed himself to the lieutenant, helping to keep the younger man awake. Fortunately, all of their horseshoe-style life preservers had inflated; Mack couldn’t imagine staying afloat without them.
Mack turned to look to the south. He could see the mast of one of the Khan’s escort vessels, a destroyer, he thought, though he was far from an expert on ships. Behind it two thick curlicues of black smoke jutted from the water. The smoke came from ships damaged by the Indians; the Khan was farther east, marked on the horizon by a plume of white smoke—mostly water vapor rising from the hoses the crew was spraying on the parts of the ship damaged by missiles.
American missiles, for the record.
If they pick us up, Major,
said Dish, they’ll have a hell of a lot of questions about our plane. There’s no way they’re going to just let us go.
We’re not going to be picked up by the Pakistanis, or the Chinese,
Mack told them. "We’re going to get over to the Abner Read."
Hey, guys, I’m starting to get a little cold,
said Cantor.
Mack looked over at Cantor. His teeth were chattering.
All right. We open one life raft,
said Mack. We use that to get the hell out of here. Jazz, do the raft. Hang in there, Cantor. Dish’ll start a fire for you as soon as we get it open.
Aboard the Abner Read,
northern Arabian Sea
0736
CAPTAIN HAROLD STORM
GALE PUT HIS HANDS AGAINST the sides of his head, trying to stop the ringing in his ears. He’d been slapped against the deck and bulkhead several times by salvos from attacking aircraft and missiles. His head hurt, but he decided arbitrarily that it wasn’t a concussion, and that even if it was, it wasn’t worth going to sickbay for.
The jagged cut in his leg from exploding shrapnel might deserve attention, but since the bleeding seemed to have slowed to an ooze, he’d deal with that later.
The ship herself was in good shape. The holographic damage control display on the deck of the Abner Read showed that she had sustained only minor damage despite the onslaught of missiles fired at her over the past hour.
What bothered Storm—what truly pissed him off—was the fact that his nemesis also remained afloat despite his own attack. The Chinese aircraft carrier Khan had taken three missiles from the Abner Read, and possibly a fourth from one of the destroyer’s smaller escorts, known as a Sharkboat, and the S.O.B. was still sailing.
Unlike the Indian carrier he had sunk some hours before.
Captain, communication coming in from Fleet.
Give it to me.
Storm, Storm, Storm!
exclaimed Admiral Jonathon Tex
Woods. What the hell are you up to now?
Admiral.
"You sunk the Shiva?"
I believe that’s correct, sir. The Indian carrier is gone.
Great going, Storm.
The admiral’s voice swelled with pride, as if he were Storm’s greatest fan and biggest admirer. In fact just the opposite was true. "And you disabled the Khan?"
I’m not sure of the damage to the Chinese, Admiral. The Dreamland people helped—they were invaluable.
You’re being uncharacteristically modest, Storm—a welcome development! Even if you are complimenting Lieutenant Colonel Bastian and his crew.
Storm scowled. He didn’t like Bastian very much, but the colonel and his people had done an excellent job—and helped save his ship.
"The Abe is steaming north to take up a patrol off the Indian coast," said the admiral, referring to the USS Abraham Lincoln, one of the Seventh Fleet’s attack aircraft carriers and Woods’s temporary flagship. "Once the Abe is on station, you’ll receive new orders. In the meantime, get no closer than five miles to another warship—Chinese, Indian, Pakistani, or Croatian, for that matter."
Storm had no intention of getting involved in another firefight; he was out of Harpoon antiship missiles, and Standard antiair missiles as well. But the order angered him.
Why am I being ordered to withdraw?
You’re not being ordered to withdraw. All combatants have agreed to stay five miles apart. You have a problem with that, Captain?
Woods’s belligerent tone was somehow more welcome than the phony proud-father routine he’d started with.
I don’t have a problem, Admiral.
Good,
snapped Woods. There’ll be a bottle of scotch with my compliments when you reach port.
Woods signed off. Storm called up the navigational charts on the holographic display at the center of the bridge and had his navigator plot a course south. As he was about to relay their new orders to his exec and the rest of the ship, the communications specialist buzzed in with a new call.
"Cap, we have Dreamland Wisconsin on the Dreamland channel. It’s Colonel Bastian. The signal’s not the greatest; he’s using a backup radio."
Storm fumbled with the control unit on his belt. Squelch blared into his headset before he clicked into the right frequency.
The funny thing was, it seemed to clear the ringing in his ears.
"Dreamland Wisconsin to Abner Read. Can you hear me?"
This is Storm. Dog, are you there?
I thought I’d lost you,
said the Dreamland commander.
I’m here,
Storm told him. We’ve sustained light damage. We’re rendezvousing with one of our Sharkboats and then sailing south.
"Five of my people parachuted into the water near the Khan, said Dog.
I need to arrange a search."
Give me the coordinates,
said Storm.
"I’m afraid I can’t. My locator gear was wiped out by the T-Rays. They’re roughly twenty miles due north of the Khan."
Storm bent over the holographic chart, where the computer marked the ships’ positions with three-dimensional images. He was about sixty nautical miles away; cutting a straight line at top speed would get him there in two hours.
Except he couldn’t cut a straight line and stay five miles from the Chinese ships.
See if you can get me a better location, Bastian,
said Storm. I’ll get there as soon as I can.
Aboard the Wisconsin,
over the northern Arabian Sea
0738
DOG BLEW A FRUSTRATED WAD OF AIR INTO HIS MASK AND turned his attention back to the sea.
"Dreamland Wisconsin to Mack Smith. Mack, the Abner Read is on its way. We need to find your precise coordinates for them."
Not sure how I can help, Colonel,
snapped Mack. Looks like they forgot to put lines on this part of the ocean.
Can you break out a signal mirror and flash my cockpit?
There was no answer.
Mack?
A beam of light flashed on the port side of his aircraft.
Keep flashing me,
said Dog. He gently nudged the aircraft in the direction of the light, then turned the radio to the Dreamland frequency. Dreamland Command, this is Colonel Bastian. You reading me?
Spotty but we have you,
responded Major Natalie Catsman. Second in command at the base, Catsman was manning Dreamland’s situation and control room.
Can you get my precise location from the sat radio?
Affirmative, Colonel,
she said after checking with one of the techs in the background. The scientists tell me we can triangulate using your transmission.
Dog heard Ray Rubeo objecting in the background that her explanation wasn’t precisely correct and the procedure would yield an error margin of plus-or-minus three meters.
I’m going to overfly a spot and give you a mark,
Dog told her. "I’ll try it a couple of times and we can average out the location. I need it for the Abner Read."
Roger that.
Dog lined up the Megafortress for a run over the splotches of light. He got his nose directly on one of the beams and ran it down.
Now,
he told Catsman.
He took the computed position and passed it on to Storm. The navy captain grunted and told Dog it would take a while
to get up there.
How long’s a while?
A while is a while,
said Storm. It may depend on the Chinese. They don’t appear to be in a particularly good mood.
True enough, thought Dog. He switched back to the emergency frequency.
Mack, can you hear me?
Just barely,
said Mack.
"Abner Read is on its way. It may take a couple of hours."
Tell those fuckers to get the lead out,
Mack replied. The water’s starting to get cold. And that ship on the horizon looks like it’s getting closer.
Roger that,
said Dog. The ship was a Chinese frigate, and it had in fact turned in the direction of the downed airmen.
Dog banked too aggressively and the Megafortress sent a rumble through her frame.
Sorry about that,
he told the plane. I don’t mean to take you for granted.
Aboard the Abner Read,
northern Arabian Sea
0743
LIEUTENANT KIRK STARSHIP
ANDREWS FINISHED THE survey of the water around the Sharkboat and turned the Werewolf back toward the Abner Read.
Sharkboat, Werewolf survey confirms no mines in the area,
he told the crew aboard the small vessel. Roughly the size of a PT boat, the Sharkboat looked like a miniature version of the Abner Read and was designed to work with the littoral destroyer. Lacking the bigger ship’s comprehensive sensors, the small vessels had proven susceptible to mines earlier in the deployment.
Thanks much, Werewolf. We are proceeding toward rendezvous.
Starship plotted the course back and let the computer take over the robot helicopter. Developed by Dreamland and originally intended to fight tanks and protected land positions, the Werewolf had been pressed into service as a naval helicopter gunship aboard the Abner Read. It proved remarkably adept at the job, so much so that Starship was now practically a regular member of the crew. The Navy people called him Airforce
because of his service affiliation; the nickname at first had a ring of derision to it, but had come to be a compliment.
Starship rose halfway in the seat and turned around, trying to twist some of the knots out of his neck and back. His station was at one end of the destroyer’s high-tech Tactical Warfare Center.
Lieutenant Commander Jack Eyes
Eisenberg gave Starship a thumbs-up. Eyes was the Abner Read’s executive officer, second in command of the ship and the majordomo of Tac, as the Tactical Warfare Center was generally known. Starship gave him a grin and turned back to his computer display.
Object in water,
blurped the Werewolf computer.
Identify,
Starship told the computer. He pointed at the touchscreen, obtaining a precise GPS reading as well as the Werewolf ’s approximation of its size.
Unknown. Believed to be human,
said the computer.
Tac—I have an object in the water. Could be a man overboard,
said Starship. He took control from the computer and pushed the Werewolf lower, slowing so he could focus the forward video camera better on the object.
The Werewolf looked like a baby Russian Hokum helicopter. Propelled by a pair of counterrotating blades above, the unmanned aerial vehicle had a stubby set of wings and jet engines whose thrust could be tapped to help push its top speed out to nearly 400 knots—roughly twice what a normal
helicopter could do. It was quite happy to hover as well, though the transition from top speed to a dead stop could be bumpy. In this case, Starship rode the chopper into a wide arc, descending gradually around his target.
Could be a pilot,
he said, studying the screen. I think it might be one of the Chinese fliers.
Location,
said Eyes calmly.
Starship read the coordinates off. Smile for your closeup, dude,
he told the stricken man, pushing the freeze-frame on the videocam.
Airforce, what’s your status?
barked Storm.
Downed flier, approximately, uh, let’s say ten miles southwest of us, Captain.
Starship was used to Storm’s gruff way of communicating, and his habit of interrupting after Eyes had already given an order. The captain could be a genuine, class one jackass, but he was a good leader when the shit hit the fan.
Not as good as Colonel Bastian, but few men were.
How far is that Sharkboat from him?
Take them almost an hour to get to him, Captain,
Starship told him. We’re a lot closer, just about ten miles, and—
Here’s what we’re going to do, Airforce,
Storm told him. The Sharkboat is going to take flyboy. You’re going to hover over him and make sure they find him.
Storm snapped off the circuit. Starship, confused about why a vessel farther away was being tasked to make the pickup, turned around and saw Eyes looking over his shoulder at the Werewolf ’s video feed. Because of the ad hoc nature of the arrangement, the Werewolf ’s video and other sensor data was not available at the executive officer’s own station.
Looks scared,
said Eyes, bending down.
Probably in shock,
said Starship. Punching out of an aircraft at a few hundred knots took a lot out of the body. And while the Arabian Sea was relatively warm—the surface temperature was no lower than 68 degrees—it was still cooler than a human body. Sir, you mind if I ask you a question?
Fire away.
How come the Sharkboat is taking him?
We’re heading north,
said Eyes. Some of your Dreamland guys bailed and we’re going to pick them up, assuming we can get around the Chinese.
Indian Ocean,
off the Indian coast
Time unknown
TIME PAST MIXED WITH TIME FUTURE, THE PRESENT A TANGLE unrecognizable, bizarrely shaped and shot through with pain.
Time lost meaning, and there was no meaning, there was no present or past, nothing solid, nothing reliable except confusion.
Major Jeffrey Zen
Stockard lay on his back in the ocean, floating not on water but rocks, black rocks tinged with orange. Flames lapped at his face and his legs were packed solid in ice. When he breathed, his lungs filled with the perfumed air of lilacs.
What happened to me?
The voice came from the sky.
Am I out of the plane?
Zen tried to shake his head and regain consciousness. Instead of his head, his chest shook.
Where is Breanna? Where’s my wife?
A black blanket covered his head. He clawed at it, pulled and poked and prodded, but it would not yield. He gave up.
When he did, the blackness lifted to reveal a golden red sun no more than a foot from his head.
The voice spoke again.
I’m out of the plane, but where is Breanna?
Zen blinked his eyes, trying to shield them from the sun. His brain began to sort things out, reconstituting his memory like a computer rebuilding its hard drive. It moved sequentially, from the very beginning, everything rushing together: He was in high school, he was in the Air Force, he had just qualified as a fighter pilot, in the Gulf War.
Good shot, Captain, that MiG never had a chance.
Selected as test pilot, assigned to Dreamland, in love.
Well, you’re too pretty to be a bomber pilot, why’d you slap me?
I do, I do, I do the happiest day of my life and no, the damn Flighthawk is going to hit my tail pain just pain just dark blank nothing who cares no one cares never and I will walk damn you all damn everyone because I will walk and I won’t walk I won’t won’t won’t will not give up will come back and who I am who I am?
Where is Breanna? Where is my wife?
Bree?
The voice called louder, pleading. Finally, he recognized that it was his voice, that he was calling for his wife, that he wanted her more than he wanted anything, more than he cared for his own life, certainly.
And then time asserted itself, and he was aware of the present. Zen fell into it, consumed by the swirling ocean of gray.
White House Situation Room,
Washington, D.C.
2145, 14 January 1998
(0745, 15 January, Karachi)
THERE’S AN OPPORTUNITY HERE THAT WE HADN’T ANTICIPATED.
National Security Advisor Philip Freeman’s face was beet red as he pleaded his cause. It’s been thrown in our lap.
Freeman glanced at Secretary of State Jeffrey Hartman, then at President Kevin Martindale. Jed Barclay couldn’t remember his boss arguing this passionately before.
Of course there’s risk, but it’s not as great as it seems,
continued Freeman. "The T-Rays have been much more effective than we hoped. It will be days before power is restored. The Lincoln is within a day’s sail, and we still have the Dreamland assets in the region. If we recover those warheads ourselves, neither country will be in a position to challenge the other for years—years."
We need to know definitively where the warheads are before we give the go ahead for an operation,
insisted Secretary of Defense Arthur Chastain, speaking over the closed circuit communications system from the Pentagon War Room. Without that, Mr. President, I can’t guarantee success. I’m not even sure I can with it.
Jed?
said Martindale.
Space Command is working on the p-p-projections,
said Jed, referring to the Air Force agency responsible for monitoring satellite intelligence. They say they’ll have something in twenty-four hours.
Twenty-four hours!
Martindale never shouted, but his voice was as loud as Jed had ever heard it.
Mr. President,
said Chastain, it’s going to take time to get the area under full surveillance. The satellites we couldn’t reposition were lost. Remember, we had to rush the operation before all the assets we wanted were in place, and even if they had been—
I don’t want excuses,
said Martindale. Jed, tell Dreamland to find the warheads.
Begging your pardon, Mr. President, but besides Space Command, the National Reconnaissance Office is working on it, and so is Navy Intelligence,
said Admiral Balboa, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs. I’m sure we can cut the time down considerably. We’ll have something in twelve hours, maybe less. And the Dreamland people have done enough.
See what Dreamland can do,
Martindale told Jed. He was calmer now, his voice softer, though it still had an edge to it. Those scientists can figure it out. They always have some sort of high-tech trick up their sleeves.
Yes, sir.
I don’t think it’s worth the risk,
said Chastain. "The Lincoln doesn’t have ground forces that could make the pickups."
We have a Marine Expeditionary Force near Somalia,
said Freeman. We can put them into action. And the Dreamland people.
The Marines are two days away,
said Chastain. At least.
"Not if they stage out to the Lincoln and then go ashore, countered Freeman.
What do you think, Admiral Balboa?"
Admiral George Balboa, also speaking from the Pentagon, cleared his throat. While he and Freeman had often found themselves at odds, Jed noted that the two men had been meeting together a lot recently. If Balboa’s tone was any indication, they had come to some sort of understanding.
It might be possible,
said the admiral. "The Marine Ospreys can fly to the Lincoln, then operate from there or even somewhere onshore until their assault ship arrives. Of course, we need to know where the warheads are. That’s the key."
What about the Dreamland people?
asked Martindale. Can they recover the weapons?
There are too many warheads for them to do it,
said Chastain. And three of their planes have been shot down.
Jed?
Um, their ground unit is intact, but, um, it’s not big enough to do it on its own.
I meant, what’s the status of the airplanes?
There were three planes on the mission. Two were shot down,
said Jed. The third was the plane flown by Colonel Bastian. He was preparing to crash it into the Chinese aircraft carrier when the Chinese sent their nuclear-loaded bomber back to the hangar deck. So six crews are in the water.
Have our people been picked up?
We’re still working on it. This has only happened within the last hour, sir. Thirty minutes.
Martindale took a step toward the video conference screens. Admiral, I want those people recovered.
I’m sure they’re working on it, sir,
said Balboa.
Work harder.
Martindale turned around. I’ll decide what we’re doing when I see the data on where the warheads are. But I agree with Philip. This is an historic opportunity. It’s worth considerable risk. Now you’ll have to excuse me. I have to tell the world what we’ve done.
Aboard the Wisconsin,
over the northern Arabian Sea
0745
DOG TACKED TO THE EAST, WIDENING HIS ORBIT. IT WAS VERY possible the destroyer had noticed him circling the area and was coming over to investigate. In that case, he thought he might be able to throw them off by circling around an empty patch of water.
On the other hand, they might be pulling themselves close enough to fire short-range antiair weapons at him. He had no radar warning device, so he couldn’t even tell if he was being tracked.
"Dreamland Wisconsin, this is the Abner Read."
Wisconsin.
Dog, we’re under way toward your men,
reported Eyes, the Abner Read’s executive officer. It’s going to take us a little more than two hours to get up there. There are some Chinese ships between us and the fliers. It’s possible they may try to interfere, despite the cease-fire. I’ll keep you advised.
Understood,
said Dog.
The Wisconsin had a little more than two hours’ worth of fuel left in her tanks. He’d need to go south and refuel before the Abner Read arrived. The question was, when.
Something flashed from the deck of the Chinese frigate—a missile.
The Chinese had just cast their vote in favor of sooner rather than later.
Aboard the Abner Read,
northern Arabian Sea
0747
AS STARSHIP SPUN THE WEREWOLF TO THE SOUTH, THE Chinese pilot’s head disappeared beneath a swell of water.
Tac, this guy’s not going to make it much longer,
said Starship. He watched as the man bobbed back to the surface. The Chinese pilot shook his head and rubbed his eyes. Starship winced—the saltwater probably stung like hell—but at least the man was alive.
Sharkboat is doing the best it can,
replied Eyes.
If the Werewolf were a real
helicopter, it could have dropped a line from its belly and picked the poor sucker up. But the Werewolf didn’t have a line. Its winch pack, used for transporting objects in combat, was aboard the Abner Read, but would take at least ninety minutes to install and test.
Then again, they didn’t need a winch, just a line.
Starship suggested that he return to the Abner Read, where a sailor could tie a rope to one of the Werewolf ’s skids. He could then lift the pilot back to the ship.
Why do you think he’ll grab onto the line?
Eyes asked.
We’ll tie one of those rescue collars on it,
said Starship. I think he’ll grab it if it’s in front of his face.
Let’s give it a shot,
said the lieutenant commander. Head back here. I’ll have a sailor standing by.
Aboard the Wisconsin,
over the northern Arabian Sea
0748
THE MEGAFORTRESS DIDN’T SEEM ANY HAPPIER TO GO FAST than it had slowing down. Dog slicked the aircraft’s control surfaces back, rigging her for speed as he prodded the engines. Ordinarily, the aircraft would have responded instantaneously, jumping forward with a burst of speed. But the holes at the top and bottom of her fuselage where the crew had punched out created strong currents of air that fought against her wings’ ability to provide lift. She was unbalanced, and moved sluggishly, drifting sideways rather than straight ahead.
Come on now,
said Dog. He tried to correct by adjusting his engines, but was only partly successful; even as he picked up speed, he felt as if he was fighting a stiff crosswind.
The missiles the Chinese ship had launched were HQ-7s, a Chinese version of the French Crotale. Guided by radar from the launch ship, the missiles used an infrared sensor to detonate once they were near their target. Ordinarily the Megafortress would have no trouble confusing the missiles, jamming both the destroyer’s radar and the guidance frequency. The aircraft’s stealthy radar profile would have helped, reducing the target the enemy had to home in on. But Dog didn’t have electronic countermeasures, and the holes in the Megafortress’s hull negated the stealthy effects of the plane’s skin.
The one thing he knew he did have going for him was the missile’s range. Though it was capable of hitting a Mach 2 target at 13,000 meters—roughly eight miles—its practical range was much closer to 8,000 meters. The Wisconsin was about 10,000 away.
Dog locked his eyes on the blue sky in front of the windscreen, fighting to hold the Wisconsin steady.
Go,
he told the plane. Go!
Northern Arabian Sea0750
FROM MACK SMITH’S VANTAGE POINT IN THE WATER, THE missile looked like a white finger jetting across the sky, spewing a trail of cotton after it. The Megafortress seemed to hang in the air, completely unaware that it was in the crosshairs.
Hit the gas, Colonel,
yelled Mack. Get the fuzz buster going. Jink. Do something, for chrissakes.
He doesn’t have countermeasures,
said Jazz, next to him in the water.
Yeah. Shit.
The missile stopped spewing cotton from its rear. It continued forward another mile or so, then disappeared. The Megafortress continued northward.
Mack turned back to the others. All of them, including the injured Cantor, were staring in the direction of the ship that had fired the missile. Its bow was turning in their direction.
All right, guys, here’s what we’re going to do,
Mack said. "Number one, we get the other raft inflated and lash it to this one. Number two, we find the Abner Read. She’s to the southwest."
Major, that ship has to be fifty or sixty miles from us,
said Dish, glancing at Cantor. I don’t know.
"I do know, said Mack forcefully.
Let’s get this fucking done. And no more bullshit defeat talk."
I’m not—
No more bullshit, period,
said Mack, fishing for the uninflated raft kit.
Aboard the Wisconsin,
over the northern Arabian Sea
0752
DOG COUNTED OFF SIXTY MORE SECONDS BEFORE ALLOWING himself to believe the missile had missed. He turned the Megafortress to the west, now well north of the Chinese and his men.
"Dreamland Command, this is Wisconsin. I’ve just been fired on by the Chinese frigate. I’m all right, he added, almost as an afterthought.
What happened to the cease-fire?"
We copy, Colonel,
said Major Catsman. We’re alerting U.S. forces in the area. We’re on the line with the White House,
she told him, pausing. They’re assuring us a cease-fire has been worked out.
Well assure them a missile just flew by my windshield.
Yes, sir.
Catsman paused once more, apparently relaying the information. There’s a possibility not all Chinese units got the message,
she told Dog. It’s being reissued.
A handy excuse, thought Dog—and one typically employed by the Chinese.
I’m going to go east and circle. Hopefully he’ll think I’m over our guys and he’ll change direction,
said Dog. I’m not sure what else I can do.
"Colonel, be advised that our