Page 28 of The Red Line


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The sabotage of the American strategic communication system was over for the moment. But the Russians weren’t finished yet.

General Yovanovich’s plan called for four initial targets—the three largest military communication facilities in Germany and one of the smallest. Langerkopf, where the site had been destroyed. Donnersberg, where a shift of hungry soldiers had survived. Feldberg, second only in size to Donnersberg. And on the top of the Zugspitz, the highest mountain in the German Alps, a tiny relay that served as the only American communication link with Italy. If all of the sappers had succeeded, communication between America and her field commanders would’ve nearly disappeared. In Germany, communication between the air bases and the ground forces the fighter aircraft were intended to protect would be severely handicapped. America would fight this war almost blind.

As it was, the loss of Langerkopf and the two satellite ground stations destroyed significant portions of the communication system, crippling the Americans. Langerkopf served as one of only two facilities connecting Germany and England. And it also tied together the majority of communications west of the Rhine River. The American fighter bases at Ramstein and Spangdahlem received most of their communication services through the destroyed site.

Even with their losses, the sabotage hadn’t caused the crushing defeat of American command and control General Yovanovich had envisioned. The Americans had been staggered by the swiftness and intensity of the Russian attacks. They had to do something to restore their ability to strategically control the war or face certain defeat against the superior armored forces pouring through the border.

Precious time was passing. There was no more of it to waste if the Americans were going to have any chance of winning the war. They had to overcome the saboteurs’ destruction.

And they had to do it now.

CHAPTER 18

January 29—12:58 a.m.

NCO Housing Area, United States European Command Headquarters

Patch Barracks, Stuttgart

In his warm two-bedroom apartment, Army Staff Sergeant George O’Neill fell asleep next to his wife, Kathy. The twenty-eight-year-old O’Neill had decided to stop studying at about 11:30, when the couple’s nineteen-month-old son, Christopher, awoke and started his nightly screaming. It had taken George forty-five minutes to calm the child and return him to his dreams. Christopher quieted, O’Neill slid into bed next to his wife. Snuggling next to her on the brutally cold night, George decided that a prolonged bout of lovemaking just might be in order. But when his amorous advances didn’t awaken Kathy, he gave up and rolled over. In a short while, he fell asleep.

As he drifted off, O’Neill should have been more concerned than he was. He was aware that an evacuation of dependents had begun. Even so, he believed it would be another two weeks before the Stuttgart area, well to the west of the border, would be affected by the order.

With the Warsaw Pact’s war games scheduled to end in a few days, O’Neill was confident the evacuation order would be rescinded long before it would threaten to separate him from Kathy and Christopher.

The gangly George O’Neill wasn’t a handsome man. And he wasn’t very comfortable around people. Unlike her husband, the irresistible Kathy O’Neill was quite attractive. Petite, with shoulder-length blond hair and a pixie smile, she was a real charmer. Everyone who met smiling Kathy took to her immediately. Her zest for life was obvious to those with whom she came into contact. Many times, as she stood in the bathroom watching George shave, a silly grin would come over her sweet face. For as she stared at him, she would realize there was no doubt she’d married Ichabod Crane. Nevertheless, she loved her Ichabod. And she knew her Ichabod loved her. To Kathy’s credit, when she’d met George, she’d taken the time to look beyond his features. What she found hidden there was a man of substance. Now, four years into a wonderful marriage, she knew her instincts had been correct. For her, he was the perfect husband. And for George, there couldn’t have been a better wife.

They were truly soul mates. Fortunately for both, the bond between them was immutable. For like many marriages, theirs had suffered tragedy. Within days of arriving in Germany, the couple’s firstborn child, Emily—a four-month-old, bright-eyed baby girl—had died of sudden infant death syndrome.

It was Kathy who’d found her. And it was Kathy who’d borne the brunt of the grief and guilt that followed. Alone all day and most evenings while George went to work or attended college classes, she’d suffered in silence. Luckily, within three months of Emily’s death, Kathy had become pregnant with Christopher. And while she’d never fully recover from the taking of her first child, Christopher’s arrival had eased the pain. With Christopher in her arms, her boundless love for life had returned.

A classic underachiever, O’Neill had enlisted in the Army eight years earlier because he couldn’t figure out anything better to do with his life. It was Kathy who’d given him the direction he needed. Despite an extremely challenging job, since his arrival in Germany O’Neill had attended the University of Maryland’s on-base college program. For thirty months he’d carried more than a full load of classes. He’d given up his lunch hours, his evenings, and his Saturday mornings to sit at uncomfortable wooden desks in the base education center.

As the couple’s last six months in Germany neared, O’Neill was three months away from completing his bachelor’s degree in business administration. Four courses to finish, and he would be a college graduate. He took great pride in the fact that if he received an A in these final classes, he would graduate summa cum laude. Or as he’d told Kathy after a particularly demanding week, “thank the laude.”

After a full day’s work, he would devour a hasty meal. A quick kiss for mother and child, and he would hustle off to class until nine. Afterward, he’d study until late into the night. He slept little. On the weekends, he’d have a firm grip on a textbook from the moment he awoke until well after dark. Without someone as supportive as Kathy, O’Neill would never have been able to maintain the torrid pace he set for himself. Even the patient Kathy had expressed how nice it would be when she finally got her husband back. Yet each believed the sacrifices they were making would be worth it.

During the past year, he had received well-paying management offers from a handful of America’s leading telecommunication companies. And while the couple’s decision wasn’t yet firm, it appeared that when they left Germany, they’d also leave the Army behind.

He’d been asleep for scarcely fifteen minutes when the phone in the living room began to ring, shattering his brief peace. He glanced over at Kathy. His soundly sleeping wife was just beginning to stir. In a fog, he stumbled out of bed and headed for the living room. Christopher’s renewed screams were added to the unexpected clamor. O’Neill grabbed the phone and was surprised to find Navy Petty Officer First Class Mike Gallagher on the other end of the line. George did his best to clear away the cobwebs and overcome his confusion at the unexpected call. In thirty months, no one from his unit had ever disturbed him at home.

“What’s up, Mike?” O’Neill asked.

“Sorry to bother you, George, but Defcon One was called an hour ago. They’ve got me calling all the guys who live on the base. Report to the office as soon as you can. I’ve still got to notify Benning and Whitehall. See you when you get here.”

Without waiting for a response, Gallagher hung up. O’Neill stood in the middle of

the living room, telephone still in his hand, while his addled brain tried to accept what he’d just heard. He couldn’t shake his disbelief. This had to be a dream. Defcon One could only mean one thing—his country was at war.

Christopher continued to wail. Kathy hurried into the child’s room. O’Neill returned to the bedroom and started putting on his uniform. While he finished lacing his boots, Kathy wandered in holding the now-contented toddler to her breast.

“What’s going on, George?” she said.

O’Neill figured that until he found out what was happening, the less he said the better.

“Don’t know, Kath. That was Mike Gallagher on the phone. He said they need me to come back to the office for something.”

“How long are you going to be gone?”

“He didn’t say, but it might be all night.”

O’Neill threw on his field jacket, wrapped an olive-green scarf around his neck, shoved his hands into his gloves, and put on his cap. With a kiss for mama and baby, he hurried from the second-floor apartment. He raced down the cold steps and out the front door. The moment he stepped through the doorway, the fearsome blizzard smacked him across the face. Any cobwebs lingering in his brain instantly disappeared.

The couple’s car was buried beneath two feet of snow and ice. Rather than fighting to free it, O’Neill decided to walk the half mile to his office. He pulled the scarf up around his ears and started down the cobblestone street. With every step he took, the snow and ice crunched beneath his feet. The iridescent glow of the base’s ancient streetlamps surrounded him. There were other shadowy figures in the narrow streets purposely heading in different directions. But he never noticed. His mind was far too preoccupied with the implications of what Gallagher had told him.

Near the small base’s western fence, O’Neill bounced up the steps of a single-story office building. He swung open the glass door. He stopped to pull out the identification badge hanging from a chain around his neck. A quick flash of the badge for the MP sitting at the desk just inside the doorway, and he continued on his way.

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