Buku Bacaan Prabowo Bicara Indonesia Bubar 2030 #HALAMAN7

for the moment. The Navy wasn’t giving him a break; it was just that no one
had figured out yet if the chips would interfere with sensitive avionics or ship
systems. At some point, though, tradition would lose out to technology.
Someone tapped a glass, and the noise in the room hushed to a murmur.
Links looked at his vodka martini and eyed the lemon twist. The question
wasn’t whether it was a recording device, but whose.



“Together, let us raise our glasses on this occasion to acknowledge our
common interests and objectives,” said General Wu Liao, a Directorate air
force commander who Links knew was about to announce another wave of
corruption purges. Links even knew the names of the men who would be
executed in three days, all because Wu’s driver had left a window cracked
open to smoke. That’s how good the collection was.
“It is in a navy officer’s honor I toast. That is not something you often hear
from an air force officer of any country’s military.”

Polite laughter from fifteen different nationalities followed the joke.
“The joint China-U.S. exercises to help bring order to the waters around
the former Republic of Indonesia are a sign our future together will be a
strong one,” said General Wu. “As for our neighbors to the north, I cannot
say the same.”

Wu’s angry glance at a Russian officer standing in the corner shifted the
guests’ gaze and cut off any remaining laughter. The Russian nodded
indifferently and casually moved a highball glass from one hand to the other,
as if he cared more about the temperature of his vodka than the speech.
After the toast, Links walked over to the Russian. Major General Sergei
Sechin was a regular on the party circuit. He walked with the confidence of
someone who’d been in uniform for most of his life, and he always smiled
like he had just been told a bawdy joke. Sechin had been in Beijing for over a
decade, so he must have been very good at his job if he was able to keep his
own bosses happy while also riding out the Directorate’s rise to power.
Besides the violent purges of the old Communist Party leadership, there had
been more than a few deadly traffic “accidents” involving the foreign
intelligence community.

“Sorry about that,” said Links. “Poorly done by Wu.”
“The Directorate new guard, especially the core, like Wu, say they don’t
care what anyone thinks. But it makes them think only of their own plan,”

said Sechin. “The Communist Party had theirs too, and you can see how it
ended for them . . .”
“I am going to miss our uplifting conversations, Sergei,” said Links. “And
the smog, and the winter.”
A waiter passed with a tray of drinks, and Sechin deposited his and Links’s
empty glasses and snatched two more frosty vodkas.
“One day, we will all get past this unpleasantness,” said Sechin, handing a
glass to Links, downing his own vodka, and nodding for Links to do the
same.

“Za vas,” said Links. The waiter reappeared and paused, timing his return
perfectly, likely another espionage professional at work collecting.
“Perhaps you will play a role in that . . .” Sechin focused on his glass. “Do
you know what is America’s greatest export?”
Links’s eyes narrowed. “Biggest, or greatest? Sometimes they’re not the
same thing. Biggest by the numbers? Oil and gas. Greatest? Democracy,”
said Links.

“No, no, no,” said Sechin. “It is an idea, really. A dream: Star Trek.”
He locked eyes with Links.
“If you say so.” Links wondered what the computer analytics that parsed
the transcripts would make of this conversation. Staring at his now empty
glass, Sechin continued in a serious tone. “Star Trek was a television show
watched by Americans during a time when my country and yours held each
other, as you like to say in your nation’s defense strategy, ‘at risk.’ ” “Can’t
say I ever watched it,” said Links. “At least not the old ones. My dad took me
to a couple of the newer movies.”

“The vision was so positive, a crew from all nations sent out by a world
federation. An American, Captain Kirk, was their leader. With him was a
crew from around the world, from Europe, from Africa — notable in that
time of racial tension in your country. Also, and perhaps relevant here, there
was Mr. Sulu. He represented all of Asia, which, because of America’s war in
Vietnam, made this very capable man a symbol of the peace to come.”
“Peaceful? Nobody like that here,” said Links, tipping his glass at Wu.
“I give you that. But that is not what I want you to remember. Most
important, just like you, an American officer, and I are friends,” said Sechin,
“the navigator was Pavel Andreievich Chekov, a Russian! Now, this Chekov
was not a real man, of course,” said Sechin. “But many believe that the

character was named after a brilliant Russian scientist of the time, Pavel
Alekseyevich Cherenkov. Do you know of him? He won a Nobel Prize in
1958, when my country was as sure of its destiny as Wu is of China’s.”
Sechin waved his glass to indicate the coterie around Wu. “My point is that
without Chekov, what really could Captain Kirk have done out there in
space? Our Cherenkov was the key to the future!”

Links caught the eye of the waiter, who brought another tray of vodka.
“It’s coming back to me,” said Links. “But in the story, didn’t the
Federation begin only after World War Three?”
“Yes, yes, I allow you this,” said Sechin. “In any case, you should know
that though we work for different sides, we are not all bad.”
“There’s work,” said Links, placing their empty glasses on the waiter’s
tray, taking two full ones, and holding one out to Sechin. “And there’s
friends. You’re a friend.”

“Yes, please remember that. In a few months’ time, when you are back in
your warm office in the Pentagon, fourth corridor, D ring . . . Don’t look
surprised, we know these things. When you return to your friends in Naval
Intelligence, think of me and think of Chekov. Promise me that.”
USS Coronado, Strait of Malacca

Simmons sat at the small desk in his stateroom and watched the daily
good-morning vid from his twins. While the Coronado sailed under a night
sky, Claire and Martin, six years old, complained about school between bites
of waffle. Their voices made his stomach tighten with sadness.
“Good luck today with Riley,” said his wife. “It won’t be easy, I know it.
We love you and can’t wait to get you back.”
His wife signed off, as she did every morning, with a kiss sent from around
the corner after the kids said goodbye. Then he was alone again inside the
ship’s gray hull.

He pulled himself up and walked down the hallway to the bridge wing.
Riley was there, smoking a real cigar. The bridge wing was not the officially
designated smoking area, but the ship’s captain could smoke where he damn
well pleased.
“Freighter, Directorate, freighter, freighter, Directorate,” said Riley,

Buku Bacaan Prabowo Bicara Indonesia Bubar 2030 #HALAMAN8

Contact Form

Name

Email *

Message *