Re: The Vaults of Heaven (AU)
Posted: Fri Mar 24, 2023 4:07 am
8 February 1989
DIA Headquarters
King of Prussia, PA
Mantell finished his presentation, then asked, "Are there any questions at this time, ladies and gentlemen?"
Major General Kevin Bueller stuck his hand up.
"Yes, sir?"
"Is there any point to this OPLAN if that division's still laagered down just south of Mexicali?"
Mantell said, "Sir, this OPLAN is not going to happen unless that division's gone. That said, I expect that division equivalent to start looming larger and larger in TVD Amerika's calculations as spring approaches. I know we're making the big push to the Rio Grande--anyone who can read a map knows that, and I assume my adversary is at least as smart as I am. A division down in Mexicali is just eating rations and doing nothing useful."
Bueller considered this, then shot Lodge a glance.
* * *
"Chief Mantell, could you step into my office for a moment?"
Inside, Lodge shut the door and gestured Mantell to the couch.
"Good analysis in that briefing. That said . . . General Bueller and I both picked up on your frustration. You feel you're eating rations and contributing nothing."
"Yes, sir."
"Well, part of the nature of war is that you get assignments you don't want. There's an unwritten policy in the DoD that anyone who's been publicly awarded the Medal doesn't go forward. It is what it is. Politics enters into these things, as you should damn well know tomcatting around with someone from the Canyon family of Ventura--"
"Sir."
Mantell's tone was . . . soft.
Lodge shut up.
There was a long, chilly silence.
After three minutes or so, Mantell said, "Kathy and I exchanged salacious details about our antics. She was of the attitude that neither of us had a claim on the other until the war ended and one or the other of us proposed."
Lodge nodded, then said, "Chief . . . Joshua . . . what I said was completely beyond the paie. Please accept my apologies."
"Apology accepted, sir . . . we're good." Mantell sighed. "I think three-plus years of war has stressed us beyond what any reasonable person could handle."
Lodge mugged at Mantell and asked, "Gee, ya think?"
They shared a tired chuckle.
"It's just . . . sir, somewhere out there, some kid fresh out of School of Infantry at Pendleton is dying in his first firefight. And I'm . . . hobnobbing with the great and near-great, polishing a chair with my ass, and generally doing everything BUT my damn job partly because of this damn gong, and partly because I came up with the Ultra Secret of World War III." Mantell sighed. "It is what it is . . . but that doesn't make it any easier to deal with."
Lodge nodded, then asked, "You haven't taken any leave since we gave you two weeks to recover from losing Kathy, right?"
"Yes, sir."
"Well, there's part of the problem. You need to take better care of yourself--didn't Doc Tulloch impress that on you? Look for an opportunity to take some time off, and I think you should avoid doing so alone. You strike me as the type who can become depressed if you're not with friends regularly. And don't let work get in your way. It'll still be there when you get back."
* * *
11 February 1989
Sixth Army HQ (Rear Detachment)
Canyon picked up the phone, desperate for break from reviewing the ammunition LOGREP summary before her. "Unsecure line, Theater Logistics Department, Major Canyon speaking, may I help you?"
"Major, this is Major General Lodge at DIA HQ. Let's go secure, please."
Canyon inserted the crypto key into the phone and waited for the beep that indicated the two phones had negotiated a session key.
"Good afternoon sir, how may I help you?"
"I understand you're friends with Josh Mantell."
"Yes, sir."
"I also understand--and please don't ask how--that you're planning to visit your folks next month, and your friends are coming with you."
"Yes, sir. Um, it's mostly a round of planning for my wedding."
"Ah, yes. To Captain MacAllaster, right?"
"Yes, sir."
After a moment, Lodge asked, "Do you have a date?"
"As soon as possible after the ceasefire. I just want to be ready to go, sir."
"As you have no doubt learned by now in the theater logistics business, chance favors the well-prepared mind, Major. Will Josh have any role in the wedding?"
"He'll be giving Debs--Captain MacAllaster--away." She paused, then said, "Her parents don't approve."
Lodge sighed, then said, "As General LeMay is fond of saying, 'times change, and we have to change with them.' It'd be a lot easier on all of us if everyone recognized that simple truth. Well, you have your excuse for inviting him."
"Ah. Sir, Roberta is his ex-"
"I know that--I knew it before I recruited him into AFSOC. And I know he's a 'friend with benefits' for both of you, Major. Again, times change. I'm asking you because he very desperately needs to take a rest. Rancho Cañon up in Ojai is very conducive to rest and relaxation--your Uncle Michael had me out there as a guest after the Saigon evacuation in 1975, when I desperately needed to get my head straight."
"Wait . . . sir, are you the guy Uncle Michael took horseback riding and hunting? I was the tall, gangly girl with braces wondering why everything was so hush-hush--Dad told me to not mention you being there to anyone at school."
"That's me."
"For the record, you looked pretty good on a horse. You've been taught."
"So has Josh, by the way. His father, God rest his soul, was very old school."
"Well, sir, I'll invite him. I take it I'm not going to accept 'no' for an answer, right?"
"Use whatever persuasion is necessary, Major."
"Understood, sir."
"Thank you. This really does mean a lot to me."
* * *
12 March 1989
Rancho Cañon
Ojai Valley, CA
There were hugs all around with Jeanna, Debs, Roberta, and Helen. Finally, they got to Josh, whereupon Avery Canyon extended his hand and said, "Welcome to our home, sir. It's a privilege to be your host."
"Thank you, sir, it's a privilege to be here."
Melissa Canyon then proceeded to give him a hug. "Welcome."
"Thank you, ma'am."
They received a ten-dollar rubberneck tour of the mansion house which led to their assigned bedrooms. Avery said, "Dinner starts with cocktails at 6:00 PM, formal attire--not black or white tie, just formal."
Mantell took the opportunity to ensure his Combo One was ready to go, then sat down and began cleaning his M12 service pistol.
There was a knock at the door, and Josh said, "Come in."
It was Jeanna. "All right, I told Mom & Dad that you're going to be armed."
"How'd they take it?"
"They're good with it. Mom figures that you're an expert, Dad understands this." She paused, then said, "General Lodge asked me to bring you out here."
Josh nodded. "I understand."
"Do you?"
Josh raised an eyebrow.
"Josh . . . my mother is the kid sister of someone named Michael Briggs--"
"The Third?"
"You know?"
"Runs the CIA's quieter sibling, known informally as 'The Firm.' Remember my little misadventure last year? How do you think I got all the way to Philadelphia in the midst of the biggest manhunt in US history without getting caught? Michael the Archangel and General Lodge looking out for me."
"Oh."
"Yeah, I get it, you guys have crazy money, and you're tied into the American Establishment. The Briggs family has crazy money, going all the way back to when they helped Roger Williams set up Providence Plantations in 1636, and they've also contributed about half a dozen general and flag officers, a dozen or so ambassadors, a like number of special envoys, and a plethora of intelligence officers from the days of the Culper Ring to the present."
Jeanna's eyes widened.
"And I know about your role in the melee outside Douglas."
"How?"
"You know how Phase Line PATRIOT got its name, right? The Class of 1985 gave the last full measure of devotion. They aren't just names on a list to me. Many of them were my friends. And you and your logistics company raced forward to deliver ammo at the height of the battle. You should have gotten the Medal."
Jeanna shook her head.
"Josh . . . I shot a couple of deserters from First Brigade."
Mantell looked at her.
"Without trial."
"Were they attempting to continue fleeing the battlefield?"
Jeanna nodded.
"I don't see the problem."
"Army politics. And one of the guys I shot had parents who donate the max to their Congressman to make sure they have a friend in Philly--the family's involved in pretty shady stuff." She sighed. "If the Army had tried to recognize it, it would've turned into spoiled rich girl shoots poor kid from wrong side of railroad tracks."
"You did the right thing."
"It won't ever be recognized as such. And I'm OK with that. My family has never been one for public honors for ourselves. We remember our ancestors or deserving persons when we do philanthropy, all the way back to when we were granted Rancho Cañon by His Most Catholic Majesty, Charles the Fourth." She gave him one her most dazzling smiles. "Yes, you're talking to a genuine piece of history, a no-kidding Californio, a daughter of conquistadores!"
Mantell bent to her ear and whispered, "Usually us Mantells end up getting screwed by history, not the other way around."
Jeanna wagged her finger at him and said, "Naughty, naughty!"
* * *
Mantell was downstairs a few minutes early in Combo Ones, with full ribbons and trousers bloused into spit-shined jump boots.
Avery Canyon smiled pleasantly. "Ordinarily, I'd offer you a margarita, but the good tequila was expended in 1987. How does a Mai Tai sound?"
"Sounds perfect, sir."
* * *
Dinner was somewhat more formal than it had been in Mantell's home growing up, but far less formal than at a dining-in or mess night. Also in attendance was Avery's brother, Thomas, and his family
Conversation was light, and stayed away from news of the war or current business; Mantell learned a fair amount about the Canyon family, and about life in the Upper Ojai Valley. In turn, Mantell talked about growing up in San Diego, being a Navy brat, and becoming a special operator.
Josh savored the excellent food and pleasant company.
Avery Canyon was explaining how the family's name changed. "So, there was Great-Great-Grandpa Enrique Cañon, with what was by all accounts a most refined Oxbridge accent, and he decides he's going to get in on this transcontinental rail thingamajig. So he goes up to San Francisco via private stage--which was a pretty big journey back then--and introduces himself as Henry Canyon, who owned a ranch in Santa Barbara, and he'd like to buy in on the Central Pacific. His shares in hand, he goes back home, and tells Doña Catalina that she's about to be Katherine Canyon." Avery grinned. "Doña Catalina was less than thrilled about this turn of events, and made sure to let him know. And then the railroad paid off, he's one of the few people who hadn't pledged his shares as collateral against a mortgage, and he ends up making crazy amounts of money. Doña Catalina decided that, well, if mangling the spelling of her name was the price of this good fortune, she could tolerate it--but the Rancho would retain its correct name. Don Henry was agreeable, and here we are."
* * *
The next two weeks were spent in horseback riding, swimming, sightseeing in Ojai, shopping at Bart's Outdoor Bookstore, and generally relaxing.
The night before he was scheduled to return to Williams, Avery Canyon took him aside.
"Josh . . . if I didn't know better, I'd say my daughter and her friends all love you."
Josh nodded. "It's something of a running joke."
"That is most certainly not a joke." Avery paused, then said, "Josh . . . I suspect that my daughter will want to have children, and she's going to want you to be the father."
"Well, sir, if that comes, I'll have a talk with her--"
Avery chuckled, then said, "Josh."
Josh looked at him and waited.
"If you haven't figured it out yet, arguing with my daughter simply does not work. I don't care how tough special operations training made you, she's tougher. Oh, she'll never throw a tantrum. But I'm pretty sure she's leaned on you more than once, and you ended up being reasonable and doing what she wanted, right?"
Josh chuckled ruefully. "Yes, sir."
"I know you've lost the woman you love, and I understand you and Roberta have a past, and my daughter is committing to another relationship. All I ask is that . . . if you end up fathering a child with Jeanna and/or Debs, that you will be a father, and not merely a sperm donor."
"I couldn't have it any other way, sir."
Avery nodded. "I figured as much. Come, let's have some brandy."
* * *
21 April 1989
TVD Amerika HQ
Fort Sam Houston, TX
Marshal Kribov looked at the map again.
Damn it all.
Nothing had changed.
"Pavel Leonidovich, I don't know where else we could come up with anothet division."
General Alekseyev tapped the map by Mexicali. "We've got a division equivalent sitting there, doing nothing. The Americans are focused here--where the war will be won. We need to do likewise."
"Pavel Leonidovich, I don't disagree. But could the Americans take advantage of us doing that?"
"In 1986, yes. Not today. They've shut down their new division training at Fort Irwin, everything's up in North Dakota, at Sacajawea Maneuver Area."
Kribov nodded. "Very well. We will need to make sure the Americans don't figure out that we left Baja California unguarded."
"The staff is drawing up a maskirovka plan now.[/i]
* * *
TVD Amerika
Radio-Electronic Combat Staff
Colonel Dmitri Safronov consulted a book of prime numbers and came up with 262,807.
"All right, I need 262,807 seconds of garbage traffic on tape."
Major Yevgeni Larubin nodded, and went to a table to begin drawing chits with smaller prime numbers from a box, writing out rows of thirteen numbers, and adding them together at the end, keeping a running total.
Four hours later, he had a stack of tapes ready to go.
Safronov nodded. "Well, Yevgeni Antonovich, that was the easy part. But our piece is done. Excellent work."
DIA Headquarters
King of Prussia, PA
Mantell finished his presentation, then asked, "Are there any questions at this time, ladies and gentlemen?"
Major General Kevin Bueller stuck his hand up.
"Yes, sir?"
"Is there any point to this OPLAN if that division's still laagered down just south of Mexicali?"
Mantell said, "Sir, this OPLAN is not going to happen unless that division's gone. That said, I expect that division equivalent to start looming larger and larger in TVD Amerika's calculations as spring approaches. I know we're making the big push to the Rio Grande--anyone who can read a map knows that, and I assume my adversary is at least as smart as I am. A division down in Mexicali is just eating rations and doing nothing useful."
Bueller considered this, then shot Lodge a glance.
* * *
"Chief Mantell, could you step into my office for a moment?"
Inside, Lodge shut the door and gestured Mantell to the couch.
"Good analysis in that briefing. That said . . . General Bueller and I both picked up on your frustration. You feel you're eating rations and contributing nothing."
"Yes, sir."
"Well, part of the nature of war is that you get assignments you don't want. There's an unwritten policy in the DoD that anyone who's been publicly awarded the Medal doesn't go forward. It is what it is. Politics enters into these things, as you should damn well know tomcatting around with someone from the Canyon family of Ventura--"
"Sir."
Mantell's tone was . . . soft.
Lodge shut up.
There was a long, chilly silence.
After three minutes or so, Mantell said, "Kathy and I exchanged salacious details about our antics. She was of the attitude that neither of us had a claim on the other until the war ended and one or the other of us proposed."
Lodge nodded, then said, "Chief . . . Joshua . . . what I said was completely beyond the paie. Please accept my apologies."
"Apology accepted, sir . . . we're good." Mantell sighed. "I think three-plus years of war has stressed us beyond what any reasonable person could handle."
Lodge mugged at Mantell and asked, "Gee, ya think?"
They shared a tired chuckle.
"It's just . . . sir, somewhere out there, some kid fresh out of School of Infantry at Pendleton is dying in his first firefight. And I'm . . . hobnobbing with the great and near-great, polishing a chair with my ass, and generally doing everything BUT my damn job partly because of this damn gong, and partly because I came up with the Ultra Secret of World War III." Mantell sighed. "It is what it is . . . but that doesn't make it any easier to deal with."
Lodge nodded, then asked, "You haven't taken any leave since we gave you two weeks to recover from losing Kathy, right?"
"Yes, sir."
"Well, there's part of the problem. You need to take better care of yourself--didn't Doc Tulloch impress that on you? Look for an opportunity to take some time off, and I think you should avoid doing so alone. You strike me as the type who can become depressed if you're not with friends regularly. And don't let work get in your way. It'll still be there when you get back."
* * *
11 February 1989
Sixth Army HQ (Rear Detachment)
Canyon picked up the phone, desperate for break from reviewing the ammunition LOGREP summary before her. "Unsecure line, Theater Logistics Department, Major Canyon speaking, may I help you?"
"Major, this is Major General Lodge at DIA HQ. Let's go secure, please."
Canyon inserted the crypto key into the phone and waited for the beep that indicated the two phones had negotiated a session key.
"Good afternoon sir, how may I help you?"
"I understand you're friends with Josh Mantell."
"Yes, sir."
"I also understand--and please don't ask how--that you're planning to visit your folks next month, and your friends are coming with you."
"Yes, sir. Um, it's mostly a round of planning for my wedding."
"Ah, yes. To Captain MacAllaster, right?"
"Yes, sir."
After a moment, Lodge asked, "Do you have a date?"
"As soon as possible after the ceasefire. I just want to be ready to go, sir."
"As you have no doubt learned by now in the theater logistics business, chance favors the well-prepared mind, Major. Will Josh have any role in the wedding?"
"He'll be giving Debs--Captain MacAllaster--away." She paused, then said, "Her parents don't approve."
Lodge sighed, then said, "As General LeMay is fond of saying, 'times change, and we have to change with them.' It'd be a lot easier on all of us if everyone recognized that simple truth. Well, you have your excuse for inviting him."
"Ah. Sir, Roberta is his ex-"
"I know that--I knew it before I recruited him into AFSOC. And I know he's a 'friend with benefits' for both of you, Major. Again, times change. I'm asking you because he very desperately needs to take a rest. Rancho Cañon up in Ojai is very conducive to rest and relaxation--your Uncle Michael had me out there as a guest after the Saigon evacuation in 1975, when I desperately needed to get my head straight."
"Wait . . . sir, are you the guy Uncle Michael took horseback riding and hunting? I was the tall, gangly girl with braces wondering why everything was so hush-hush--Dad told me to not mention you being there to anyone at school."
"That's me."
"For the record, you looked pretty good on a horse. You've been taught."
"So has Josh, by the way. His father, God rest his soul, was very old school."
"Well, sir, I'll invite him. I take it I'm not going to accept 'no' for an answer, right?"
"Use whatever persuasion is necessary, Major."
"Understood, sir."
"Thank you. This really does mean a lot to me."
* * *
12 March 1989
Rancho Cañon
Ojai Valley, CA
There were hugs all around with Jeanna, Debs, Roberta, and Helen. Finally, they got to Josh, whereupon Avery Canyon extended his hand and said, "Welcome to our home, sir. It's a privilege to be your host."
"Thank you, sir, it's a privilege to be here."
Melissa Canyon then proceeded to give him a hug. "Welcome."
"Thank you, ma'am."
They received a ten-dollar rubberneck tour of the mansion house which led to their assigned bedrooms. Avery said, "Dinner starts with cocktails at 6:00 PM, formal attire--not black or white tie, just formal."
Mantell took the opportunity to ensure his Combo One was ready to go, then sat down and began cleaning his M12 service pistol.
There was a knock at the door, and Josh said, "Come in."
It was Jeanna. "All right, I told Mom & Dad that you're going to be armed."
"How'd they take it?"
"They're good with it. Mom figures that you're an expert, Dad understands this." She paused, then said, "General Lodge asked me to bring you out here."
Josh nodded. "I understand."
"Do you?"
Josh raised an eyebrow.
"Josh . . . my mother is the kid sister of someone named Michael Briggs--"
"The Third?"
"You know?"
"Runs the CIA's quieter sibling, known informally as 'The Firm.' Remember my little misadventure last year? How do you think I got all the way to Philadelphia in the midst of the biggest manhunt in US history without getting caught? Michael the Archangel and General Lodge looking out for me."
"Oh."
"Yeah, I get it, you guys have crazy money, and you're tied into the American Establishment. The Briggs family has crazy money, going all the way back to when they helped Roger Williams set up Providence Plantations in 1636, and they've also contributed about half a dozen general and flag officers, a dozen or so ambassadors, a like number of special envoys, and a plethora of intelligence officers from the days of the Culper Ring to the present."
Jeanna's eyes widened.
"And I know about your role in the melee outside Douglas."
"How?"
"You know how Phase Line PATRIOT got its name, right? The Class of 1985 gave the last full measure of devotion. They aren't just names on a list to me. Many of them were my friends. And you and your logistics company raced forward to deliver ammo at the height of the battle. You should have gotten the Medal."
Jeanna shook her head.
"Josh . . . I shot a couple of deserters from First Brigade."
Mantell looked at her.
"Without trial."
"Were they attempting to continue fleeing the battlefield?"
Jeanna nodded.
"I don't see the problem."
"Army politics. And one of the guys I shot had parents who donate the max to their Congressman to make sure they have a friend in Philly--the family's involved in pretty shady stuff." She sighed. "If the Army had tried to recognize it, it would've turned into spoiled rich girl shoots poor kid from wrong side of railroad tracks."
"You did the right thing."
"It won't ever be recognized as such. And I'm OK with that. My family has never been one for public honors for ourselves. We remember our ancestors or deserving persons when we do philanthropy, all the way back to when we were granted Rancho Cañon by His Most Catholic Majesty, Charles the Fourth." She gave him one her most dazzling smiles. "Yes, you're talking to a genuine piece of history, a no-kidding Californio, a daughter of conquistadores!"
Mantell bent to her ear and whispered, "Usually us Mantells end up getting screwed by history, not the other way around."
Jeanna wagged her finger at him and said, "Naughty, naughty!"
* * *
Mantell was downstairs a few minutes early in Combo Ones, with full ribbons and trousers bloused into spit-shined jump boots.
Avery Canyon smiled pleasantly. "Ordinarily, I'd offer you a margarita, but the good tequila was expended in 1987. How does a Mai Tai sound?"
"Sounds perfect, sir."
* * *
Dinner was somewhat more formal than it had been in Mantell's home growing up, but far less formal than at a dining-in or mess night. Also in attendance was Avery's brother, Thomas, and his family
Conversation was light, and stayed away from news of the war or current business; Mantell learned a fair amount about the Canyon family, and about life in the Upper Ojai Valley. In turn, Mantell talked about growing up in San Diego, being a Navy brat, and becoming a special operator.
Josh savored the excellent food and pleasant company.
Avery Canyon was explaining how the family's name changed. "So, there was Great-Great-Grandpa Enrique Cañon, with what was by all accounts a most refined Oxbridge accent, and he decides he's going to get in on this transcontinental rail thingamajig. So he goes up to San Francisco via private stage--which was a pretty big journey back then--and introduces himself as Henry Canyon, who owned a ranch in Santa Barbara, and he'd like to buy in on the Central Pacific. His shares in hand, he goes back home, and tells Doña Catalina that she's about to be Katherine Canyon." Avery grinned. "Doña Catalina was less than thrilled about this turn of events, and made sure to let him know. And then the railroad paid off, he's one of the few people who hadn't pledged his shares as collateral against a mortgage, and he ends up making crazy amounts of money. Doña Catalina decided that, well, if mangling the spelling of her name was the price of this good fortune, she could tolerate it--but the Rancho would retain its correct name. Don Henry was agreeable, and here we are."
* * *
The next two weeks were spent in horseback riding, swimming, sightseeing in Ojai, shopping at Bart's Outdoor Bookstore, and generally relaxing.
The night before he was scheduled to return to Williams, Avery Canyon took him aside.
"Josh . . . if I didn't know better, I'd say my daughter and her friends all love you."
Josh nodded. "It's something of a running joke."
"That is most certainly not a joke." Avery paused, then said, "Josh . . . I suspect that my daughter will want to have children, and she's going to want you to be the father."
"Well, sir, if that comes, I'll have a talk with her--"
Avery chuckled, then said, "Josh."
Josh looked at him and waited.
"If you haven't figured it out yet, arguing with my daughter simply does not work. I don't care how tough special operations training made you, she's tougher. Oh, she'll never throw a tantrum. But I'm pretty sure she's leaned on you more than once, and you ended up being reasonable and doing what she wanted, right?"
Josh chuckled ruefully. "Yes, sir."
"I know you've lost the woman you love, and I understand you and Roberta have a past, and my daughter is committing to another relationship. All I ask is that . . . if you end up fathering a child with Jeanna and/or Debs, that you will be a father, and not merely a sperm donor."
"I couldn't have it any other way, sir."
Avery nodded. "I figured as much. Come, let's have some brandy."
* * *
21 April 1989
TVD Amerika HQ
Fort Sam Houston, TX
Marshal Kribov looked at the map again.
Damn it all.
Nothing had changed.
"Pavel Leonidovich, I don't know where else we could come up with anothet division."
General Alekseyev tapped the map by Mexicali. "We've got a division equivalent sitting there, doing nothing. The Americans are focused here--where the war will be won. We need to do likewise."
"Pavel Leonidovich, I don't disagree. But could the Americans take advantage of us doing that?"
"In 1986, yes. Not today. They've shut down their new division training at Fort Irwin, everything's up in North Dakota, at Sacajawea Maneuver Area."
Kribov nodded. "Very well. We will need to make sure the Americans don't figure out that we left Baja California unguarded."
"The staff is drawing up a maskirovka plan now.[/i]
* * *
TVD Amerika
Radio-Electronic Combat Staff
Colonel Dmitri Safronov consulted a book of prime numbers and came up with 262,807.
"All right, I need 262,807 seconds of garbage traffic on tape."
Major Yevgeni Larubin nodded, and went to a table to begin drawing chits with smaller prime numbers from a box, writing out rows of thirteen numbers, and adding them together at the end, keeping a running total.
Four hours later, he had a stack of tapes ready to go.
Safronov nodded. "Well, Yevgeni Antonovich, that was the easy part. But our piece is done. Excellent work."