Ten miles short of Unimak Pass, something went wrong with the engine. Their best speed was cut in half, with a nasty front squeezing through the narrow gap between Unimak Island and the Krenitzin Islands at fifty knots an hour, pushing them relentlessly back in the direction from which they had come.
They knew this because Smith was watching their progress on a handheld GPS. Before that, he’d been talking a lot on the satellite phone. Then calls had suddenly ceased. He gave no explanation as to why, but he looked cold with fury.
Fang was just cold.
He looked around the container in the half-light provided by the gas lanterns. Most of the men looked numb with discomfort. They’d stopped playing mah-jongg when the ship began pitching so heavily that the tiles would no longer stay on the board. Mostly they just stayed in their hammocks now, rolling out only to pee. Fang had to force them to eat.
They were well trained and disciplined and they had been ready to hold out until the time came. Now the schedule was delayed and they would have to remain in their hammocks for however long it took the ship’s crew to fix the problem and get the ship back on course. Fang didn’t like some of the looks he was getting, and halfway to seasick himself he didn’t like the extra effort he had to put into keeping them in line. It didn’t help when they could listen in on the crew’s shouted conversations on deck. They were speaking Tagalog, of which none of Fang’s men knew more than a few words, but it wasn’t hard to identify the trace of panic.
The draft through the soft top was constant and bitter cold. Ice was forming on the insides of the container and the outsides of their sleeping bags. The irregular thudding sounds they heard from the deck, thuds followed by crunches and splintering cracks, was outside their experience and therefore more cause for alarm. It had started two days before, had continued almost without stop, and was interfering with everyone’s sleep. Because of the continual activity on deck, they hadn’t been able to reconnoiter to discover what the sounds were.
The problem was that when something went wrong here there was nowhere to go and no one to ask for help, even if they could have without fear of immediate arrest and imprisonment. If they had been in Singapore Strait there were a hundred little bays and inlets and islands they could hide in, living off the coastal fishermen in their tiny villages until the problem was fixed.
Fang wanted to go back to those tiny villages, to the Malacca Strait, to the South China Sea. He wanted to seek out that plump little woman upon whom he would father many sons, he wanted that snug little house in a Shanghai suburb. He had decided on a house instead of an apartment because it was his intention to take up gardening, exotic flowers in incandescent colors to brighten the view as he looked through the windows. And his children-he would father only sons, naturally, but a tiny daughter would not be unwelcome, someone he could spoil, because of course his sons would be raised to be hardworking and self-sufficient, just like their father.
Something intruded on this rosy picture of his future life. For a moment he couldn’t identify it, and then his head jerked up. The dull rumble of the freighter’s engine had changed. It was running very roughly, missing beats, almost clacking out its distress.
Smith noticed. “What is it?”
Fang held up his hand, palm out. “Can’t you hear it?”
“Hear what?”
At that moment the freighter’s engine coughed, spluttered, and died.
JANUARY
“YOU SHOULDN’T HAVE LET me sleep so long, Ops,” Sara said.
“No, ma’am,” Ops said, not looking at Hugh.
Truth was, Sara felt immeasurably more alert after four unbroken hours of sleep. She’d been wakened by the pipe telling the crew that dinner was being served in the galley and had been made very aware that it was well past time to pee. She staggered down the hall to the head, and when she got up again, she looked down and saw that blood had dried all down the front of her uniform. Captain Lowe’s blood.
The deck lurched beneath her feet and she thought she was going to throw up. Instead she went back to her room for clean clothes and returned to the head, where she took a long, hot shower, bracing herself against the rolling of the ship so she could stay beneath the showerhead. At least the terrorists hadn’t taken out the hot-water heater.
Half an hour later, wearing clean clothes, she felt like a new woman. “Did I miss dinner?” she said, surveying the empty serving dishes on the wardroom dining table, the half-empty dining plates before each officer. Looked like country-fried steak. Her mouth watered.
“Wooster!”
Wooster’s pale face peered out of the wardroom pantry. “Yes, sir?”
“The XO needs food,” Ops said. “Go down to the crew’s mess and go through the serving line for her, will you? A little of everything.”
“Coming right up, sir.” Wooster vanished.
“Ops,” she said, “you’re sitting in my chair.”
He met her eyes and said evenly, “No, ma’am. I’m not.”
The only empty chair was the captain’s chair at the head of the table. Her eyes traveled around the table and she saw nothing on any face but expectation, acceptance, and approval.
She swallowed hard and sat down, and was instantly aware of the feeling of relief emanating from the other officers. The U.S. Coast Guard was the closest thing the U.S. military had to an egalitarian service, but when all was said and done, Hugh was right. They wanted to be led. With that expectation came the added burden of the appearance of leadership.
“You would have woke me up if communications had come back on line,” she said to Ops, “so I’m guessing it hasn’t.”
He shook his head. “No, ma’am. We finally got Sparks up the mast to the communications array. The sat dish is literally in pieces, it’s going to have to be replaced. The antennas-you’d think they’d been aiming straight for them, because they’re wrecked, too. We managed to raise a fishing vessel south of St. George on the VHF, but we lost ‘em again before we could yell for help. And,” he said, looking at Hugh, “someone made the suggestion that it might not be wise to broadcast our location over a channel everyone in the Bering Sea stands by on.”
Which would very probably include the Star of Bali. “Good point. How are the wounded?”
“Maintaining. Doc’s shot them full of antibiotics and anti-inflammatories and I forget what else, and he says they should hold until we get to port. Well.” He looked at her. “Depending.”
“Depending,” she said, nodding. She didn’t ask about the helo because there was no way they could have received word. She wondered if the aviators had been able to raise anyone on their radios before they reached Cape Navarin. If they had reached Cape Navarin. “What about damage to the ship other than the fatal injuries to communications?”
“The portside small boat got torn up. We’re patching it up.”
“EO?”
Nate McDonald pushed his glasses up his nose and blinked owlishly at Sara. “The generators and the engines are good for another thousand miles, if we need them, ma’am. Nothing came anywhere near them.”
Lucky for the pirates, Sara thought, because if anything had happened to the engines or the EO’s best beloved Caterpillar generators, the EO would have swum to the Agafia under his own steam and slit all their throats. Which reminded her. “How is Ryan holding up?”
“He said fine, until the Agafia dropped out of range of the handhelds.”
“No working radios on board the Agafia, I suppose.”