Tucker s Last Stand
171 pages
English

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171 pages
English

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Description

The year is 1964. Lyndon Baines Johnson and Barry Goldwater are vying for the presidency, and CIA master spy Blackford Oakes has been sent to South Vietnam to halt its infiltration by men and materiel coming down the Ho Chi Minh Trail. Working out of Saigon with Tucker Montana, a shadowy Texan who designs a brilliant system for breaking the North's supply route, Blackford Oakes is caught up in the ambiguity and confusion generated as America's involvement in the conflict escalates. As Tucker's murky past, his torrid romance with the seductive Lao Dai, and the growing menace of global war come into focus, Oakes—and Tucker—find their loyalty called into question. Both men are forced to make a decisive move that will have consequences neither man can foresee.

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Publié par
Date de parution 01 mars 1998
Nombre de lectures 0
EAN13 9781620453636
Langue English

Informations légales : prix de location à la page 0,0798€. Cette information est donnée uniquement à titre indicatif conformément à la législation en vigueur.

Extrait

Other novels by William F. Buckley, Jr.
The Story of Henri Tod
Marco Polo, If You Can
Who’s on First
Stained Glass
Saving the Queen
See You Later Alligator
High Jinx
Mongoose, R.I.R
A Very Private Plot

This is a work of fiction. Some of the figures who appear, however, do so under their own names.
 
Copyright © 1990 by William F. Buckley Jr.
 
All rights reserved. Written permission must be secured from the publisher to use or reproduce any part of this work, except for brief quotations in critical reviews or articles.
 
Published by Cumberland House Publishing, Inc., 431 Harding Industrial Drive, Nashville, Tennessee, 37211.
 
Cover design by Bruce Gore, Gore Studio, Inc., Nashville, Tennessee.
 
 
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
 
Buckley, William F. (William Frank), 1925-
Tucker’s last stand: a Blackford Oakes novel / William F. Buckley, Jr.
p. cm.
9781620453636
1. Oakes, Blackford (Fictitious character)—Fiction. 2. United States. Central Intelligence Agency —Fiction. 3. Vietnamese Conflict, 1961-1975- Fiction. I. Title.
[PS3552.U344T8 1998] 813’.54—dc21
97-47691 CIP
 
 
Printed in the United States of America 1 2 3 4 5 6 7—03 02 03 01 00 99 98
Table of Contents
Other novels by William F. Buckley, Jr. Title Page Copyright Page Dedication Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Chapter 22 Chapter 23 Chapter 24 Chapter 25 Chapter 26 Chapter 27 Chapter 28 Chapter 29 Chapter 30 Chapter 31 Chapter 32 Chapter 33 Chapter 34 Chapter 35 Chapter 36 Chapter 37 Chapter 38 Chapter 39 Chapter 40 Re. Tucker’s Last Stand Acknowledgments
For
James P. McFadden
devotedly (and with apologies)
Chapter 1
FEBRUARY 2, 1964 LAOS
 
 
B LACKFORD OAKES TRIED to remember: Had he ever been hotter?
There had been that stifling cottage on the beach in Havana where he spent those miserable weeks waiting on the caprices of Che Guevara. How hot had it got there? He tried to remember, on one of the endless summer afternoons. One of his professors at Yale in the mechanical engineering school had said airily to his class that engineers always know the temperature of the air, even as pilots always know in which direction north is, and navigators can tell you within millibars what the barometer is reading: part instinct, part the need, every little while, to consult the thermometer, the compass, the glass. . . . Yes, Professor Schmidt, the students would nod, mutely. God, what an iceberg; you always knew what his temperature was. He’d have sunk the Titanic in tropical waters.
Blackford brightened, as he stepped around the manure on the ground. A wonderful, creative thought had just occurred. Only a few years ago, when in October 1957 the Soviets had launched their dazzling satellite, striking dumb the great superpower of the West with this display of advanced technology, President Eisenhower had rushed through Congress a bill to help pay the college tuition of engineers and scientists, citing the critical scarcity of them. Could it be that Professor Schmidt had something to do with generating that shortage? Had the deadly word gone out from Yale to the whole of the Ivy League, to the state colleges, reaching even to California? Study engineering and you’ll spend four years with the likes of Professor Schmidt. Well, Blackford could not remember exactly what the temperature had been in Havana, but it couldn’t have been this bad—or was he suffering the normal biological decomposition of the thirty-eight-year-old?
“Shit,” said Tucker Montana, as he removed from his massive left forearm what looked like a baby tarantula. Using thumbs and forefingers, he spread the little creature apart and examined it. “It’s only a Tarantulus virgo,” he said, tossing it at Blackford, who stepped deftly to one side, letting it fall into the steaming bush-nettle that reached up toward them, sometimes a foot high, sometimes three feet and more.
“If you want to make pets out of your tarantulas, make pets out of them. I don’t collect them.”
He realized suddenly that he had sounded more acidulous than he intended. He was feeling the heat, and now he was making Montana feel the heat—not a good idea at all; very unprofessional in tight, oppressive circumstances. He hadn’t worked with Montana before, knew about him only that he came from a purposefully obscure unit in the Army, designed to take on special projects. And Montana knew only that Blackford was CIA. Blackford permitted himself to reflect that, really, Major Montana didn’t know him quite well enough to toss tarantulas his way.
He forced himself to smile. “On the other hand, I might save it and send one to Mother. She loves nature.”
Montana grinned and with his long ferule beat the bush directly ahead of him, calling out to Ma Van Binh, their sun-grizzled Laotian guide. “Binh, we getting a little too high? Yes? I mean, the trail is now a couple of hundred meters over”—he pointed to his right. Ma Van Binh said it was necessary to watch for “bayno”—booby traps—planted close to the trail. Montana interrupted. He knew all about booby traps. Hell, he even knew the specialist who had gone over to Hanoi to teach them the latest models. “I almost got the son of a bitch one time.” He opened up to Blackford as he continued beating his way behind Ma Van Binh toward Point Easy, where the helicopter would meet them. “Former Huk. His name, I kid you not, is Jesus Joseph Sacred—Jesús José Sagrado, graduate of a fine little Catholic school in Luzon. Far as I can make out, all they graduated was Huks.” With his hand he swatted the mosquito on his nose.
“I’m exaggerating, obviously; sure there were a couple of others besides Jesus the Boobytrapper came out of the missionary school. The Huks gave ol’ Jesús a little portable laboratory all his own, and didn’t like it if he didn’t come up with a new trick every day. He got a chicken to swallow explosives before we walked into Miramar: that chicken stayed alive until one of the Huks turned him over to the cook for dinner—one less cook in the Philippines. Then there was the case of beer—not a trace of rust, no holes, nothing. Beer came out like a TV commercial, only when you drank it you had about three minutes to live, three unpleasant minutes.
“Jesús liked most of all gravity, though. Some of those trails, hunting down those man-eating bastards, some of those trails got so you didn’t want to walk over any surface of any kind, didn’t matter what it looked like, didn’t matter if it was a slab of concrete, because old Jesus Sagrado had a way of covering his boobies so no geologist could tell that it wasn’t a good solid stretch ahead of you. But every now and then it was just a wafer-thin layer of earth, and just under that a nice deep hole with maybe three punji stakes, almost always got their guy right in the crotch. One of those boobies was worth a hundred casualties, if you counted the morale; got so you couldn’t get the Filipinos to tread over freshly laid concrete.”
Blackford confessed he had never heard about Jesus Sagrado.
“We never caught the bastard, but after the surrender in 1954 Colonel Lansdale’s scouts discovered he had been scooted out to Hanoi and given some medal or other by the great Ho himself, and reestablished with a new and better laboratory so he could do something to diminish the frog population.”
The conversation had the effect of sharpening Blackford’s vision. Granted, he was walking directly behind Montana, who was walking directly behind Binh: he had, in effect, without planning or even desiring it, two forward scouts to step into any of Jesús’s booby traps, plenty of warning. Still, the heat and the fetid air seemed to magnify all ugly possibilities, including the bizarre possibility that either man could walk safely right over a booby trap without setting it off, yet it would go off under Blackford. Time for a drink of water. And yet one more photograph.
He gave word to stop the column of five men and snapped what must have been’ his five-hundredth picture, yet another view of the jungly bramble that all but covered the trail that was serving the North Vietnamese as the vital, if narrow, difficult, and treacherous supply line into the southern part of the country they were determined to conquer. It was Blackford’s responsibility to specify, and then design, with his own engineering background and especially with the help of the wizards at Aberdeen Proving Ground, means by which traffic on the Ho Chi Minh Trail could be detected, so that something might be done to interdict the materiel and men beginning to travel over it in greater and greater volume. Down the Trail they came: guerrillas, of course—members of the North Vietnamese army—and weapons, weapons, weapons, everything from .22 pistols to bazookas, the latest kind, made in the Soviet Union.
They had walked almost eight miles that day, the fifth day of Blackford’s exploration, and he was habituated now to the redundancy of the Trail’s surrounding features—the hanging Spanish-moss-like vegetation, the sprouts of sharp underbrush, the varicose little ditches engraved by the spring floods. He was to isolate one hundred miles of the Trail, in pursuit of the Grand Design to block it, and he needed to come up with specifications for whatever mechanisms might transform this otherwise unseeable, impenetrable bush-jungle “road” into a highway as visible as a stretch of highway laid over Arizona desert.
A hell of an assignment, but then President Johnson was a big man and he thought big and the word to the CIA was: Find out a way to block the trail those mothers are using, what the hell we got all that technological know-how for, if we cain’t stop a few half-armed yellow savages from supplyin’ a major revolution in South Vietnam? When the Director calle

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