Excerpt From "Ghost Fleet" by PW Singer and August Cole.
Excerpt From "Ghost Fleet" by PW Singer and August Cole.
Excerpt From "Ghost Fleet" by PW Singer and August Cole.
they viewed their monitors. They would think, but not say aloud, How could he fail
us, when he knew the consequences for us all?
Zhu had not failed.
The discovery itself was anticlimactic. A screen near Zhus right hand flashed a
brief message in blue and then flipped into a map mode. There had been indicators of
a gas field here, but as the data streamed in, he now knew why his gut had guided
him to this spot. He nudged the submersible on, sorting the deployments of the subs
disposable autonomous underwater vehicles, which would allow the team to map the
full extent of the discovery. Each vessel was, in effect, a mini-torpedo whose sonic
explosion afforded the submersibles imaging-by-sound sensors a deeper
understanding of the riches beneath the sea floor. The sound waves allowed the
computer to see the entirety of the field buried kilometers below the crust. The
mini-torpedo technology came from the latest submarine-hunting systems of the U.S.
Navy; the resource-mapping software had originated with the dissertation research of
a PhD student at Boston University. They would never know their roles in making
history.
After thirty-five minutes of mapping, it was done.
Enough time in the dark, Zhu thought. The transition between the deep and the
surface, he once confided to Liu, was the worst. To die there would be his hell,
trapped in the void between the light of day and the marvels of the abyss. But this
time it was his joy; the void filled with the sense of anticipation at sharing the news.
When he opened the submarines hatch, he saw the entire crew peering over the
port rail, staring down at him. Even the cook, with his scarred forearms and missing
pointer finger on his left hand, had come to gape at the Jiaolong-3 bobbing on the
surface.
He squinted against the bright Pacific sun, careful to keep his face expressionless.
He searched for Liu among the crew gathered at the ships railings. At the crowds
edge, Lieutenant Commander Lo stood staring at him with a sour face, an unspoken
question in his eyes. Zhu locked eyes with his wife, and when he couldnt contain his
discovery anymore, he smiled. She shouted uncharacteristically, leaping with both
hands in the air.
The rest of the crew turned to stare at her and then began cheering. Just beyond
them, a faint sea breeze lifted the Directorate flag hanging by the ships stern; the
yellow banner with red stars fluttered slightly. To Zhu, it seemed like perfection,
fitting for the moment. When he looked back to the rail, he noticed that Lieutenant
Commander Lo was gone, already on his way inside to report the mission results
back to Hainan.
Excerpted from GHOST FLEET: A Novel of the Next World War by P.W. Singer
and August Cole. Copyright 2015 by P.W. Singer and August Cole. Used by
permission of Eamon Dolan Books / Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Publishing
Company. All rights reserved.