The Bear & The Dragon by Clancey, Tom

“Really? Why?”

“There appears to have been some sort of riot in Beijing. Reports are very sketchy, but it seems that their government has fallen. Minister Fang Gan seems to be the interim Leader. That’s all I know, Jack, but it looks like a decent beginning. With your permission, and with the con­currence of the Russians, I think we ought to agree to this.”

“Approved,” the President said, without much in the way of con­sideration. Hell, he told himself, you don’t have to dwell too much on ending a war, do you? “Now what?”

“Well, I want to talk to the Russians to make sure they’ll go along.

I think they will. Then we tan negotiate the details. As a practical mat­ter, we hold all the cards, Jack. The other side is folding.”

“Just like that? We end it all just like that?” Ryan asked.

“It doesn’t have to be Michelangelo and the Sistine Chapel, Jack. It just has to work.”

“Will it work?”

“Yes, Jack, it ought to.”

“Okay, get hold of the Russians,” Ryan said, setting his glass down.

Maybe this was the end of the last war, Jack thought. If so, no, it didn’t have to be pretty.

It was a good dawn for General Bondarenko, and was about to get bet­ter. Colonel Tolkunov came running into his command center hold­ing a sheet of paper.

“We just copied this off the Chinese radio, military and civilian. They are ordering their forces to cease fire in place and to prepare to withdraw from our territory.”

“Oh? What makes them think we will let them go?” the Russian commander asked.

“It’s a beginning, Comrade General. If this is accompanied by a diplomatic approach to Moscow, then the war will soon be over. You have won,” the colonel added.

“Have I?” Gennady Iosifovich asked. He stretched. It felt good this morning, looking at his maps, seeing the deployments, and knowing that he held the upper hand. If this was the end of the war, and he was the winner, then that was sufficient to the moment, wasn’t it? “Very well. Confirm this with Moscow.”

It wasn’t that easy, of course. Units in contact continued to trade shots for some hours, until the orders reached them, but then the firing died down, and the invading troops withdrew away from their enemies, and the Russians, with orders of their own, didn’t follow. By sunset, the shooting and the killing had stopped, pending final disposition. Church bells rang all over Russia.

Golovko took note of the bells and the people in the streets, swigging their vodka and celebrating their country’s victory. Russia felt like a great power again, and that was good for the morale of the people. Better yet, in another few years they’d start reaping the harvest of their resources—and before that would come bridge loans of enormous size . . . and maybe, just maybe, Russia would turn the corner, finally, and begin a new century well, after wasting most of the previous one.

It was nightfall before the word got out from Beijing to the rest of China. The end of the war so recently started came as a shock to those who’d never really understood the reasons or the facts in the first place. Then came word that the government had changed, and that was also a puzzling development for which explanations would have to wait. The interim Premier was Fang Gan, a name known from pictures rather than words or deeds, but he looked old and wise, and China was a country of great momentum rather than great thoughts, and though the course of the country would change, it would change slowly so far as its people were concerned. People shrugged, and discussed the puzzling new developments in quiet and measured words.

For one particular person in Beijing, the changes meant that her job would change somewhat in importance if not in actual duties. Ming went out to dinner—the restaurants hadn’t closed—with her foreign lover, gushing over drinks and noodles with the extraordinary events of the day, then walked off to his apartment for a dessert of Japanese sausage.

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