Grace felt adrenaline flood into her bloodstream. She wanted to run, to escape through the door and to the safety of the crowded sun deck. But she knew that wouldn’t be possible. The tattooed arm came back around her, joined by its twin. She felt them both grip her tightly, and then she was lifted off her feet. The leering face of the skinny man was the last thing she remembered seeing.
• • •
Russell Vardy arrived on the bridge at the same time as Lucya. He made small talk with McNair — who still had the helm — while she and Jake had a moment together.
“How was she?” Jake’s expression gave away the concern he was trying to hide.
“Okay, really. She heard some of the gunfire, but she thought it was a bad dream and went back to sleep. I told her what had happened on the way down to the classrooms. Just the…how do you say? The broad strokes.”
Jake nodded. “It’s as well. She’ll hear it from others.”
“That’s what I thought. She wanted to know when we can meet the new people. I said she’d have to wait a bit longer. We saw the Lance through the window on the way. She jumped for joy when she saw it was blue. I mean, really, jumped. Anyway, they’re going to talk about it in class today, and then Miss Linders said they would do some drawings or make a scrapbook to welcome the new survivors.”
“Great, that’s great. I hope the rest of the people on this ship will be as welcoming. Somehow, I doubt it.”
“So, Captain Noah.” Lucya stood up straighter and gave a half-salute, smirking as she did so. “Where are we heading?”
“Back to France. Lay in a course for Ile Longue, Crozon peninsula, please. It makes me nervous hanging around in the ocean like this. I’ve no particular desire to see the inside of another submarine base, but some land to fill the windows would be nice.”
“Aye, Captain!”
“Shut up!”
Vardy cleared his throat loudly, and wandered over to the captain’s chair. He looked out to the calm sea. The sky looked a little clearer than before; the sunlight shone brighter. There was a sense of optimism in the air, and Jake felt it too. They’d caught the bad guys, who were now being held in a secure storage room on deck one, and they were getting back on course, with a new ship in tow. A ship that was an eight-hundred-tonne symbol of the fact there may be more survivors out there, that the world didn’t necessarily end at the hull of the Spirit of Arcadia.
“How are they, Russell?” Jake asked.
“Some better than others. The captain is the worst. He had been physically beaten, repeatedly. I’ve had to sedate him, so we won’t get anything from him for a while. The others are better, but not much. They’d already been sedated, I think. It’s hard to tell. They’re all suffering from malnutrition. They must have been stuck down there for weeks. One or two are hallucinating. Most are sleeping. Apart from the lack of food, they’re going to need to build up muscle mass. I’m worried about infection too. They were held in extremely insanitary conditions. I’m keeping them off limits. Only the nurses and myself are to go into cabin 845 for the time being, and only with breathing masks, until I can screen blood samples from the lot of them.”
Jake nodded slowly. “Yes, makes sense. So you haven’t been able to find out anything? About the—” He looked around to make sure nobody was listening, “— the North Koreans?”
“There were mumbled accounts of the monster from the sea attacking them. I don’t know if that’s a metaphor, part of a hallucination, or simply a language problem.”
Jake shivered. “When I saw the Ambush rear up out of that fjord, my first thought was that it was monster-like. You don’t suppose…”
“No. That’s impossible. The North Koreans don’t possess any submarines that could get anywhere near this far north. Their navy is like their air force: it’s built from antiquated Cold War equipment; hand-me-downs from the Chinese, whose own machinery is usually a poor copy of old Russian models. They have a few tin cans that can patrol their territorial waters, but to come this far? Impossible.”
“Well they came from somewhere, didn’t they? And we haven’t seen any other ships.”
“Doesn’t mean there aren’t any. My money is on another Arctic research ship. Or rather, an Antarctic research ship that was somewhere it shouldn’t have been.”
“North Koreans checking out the North Pole?” Jake scratched his head.
“There have been rumours. Anyway, it doesn’t really matter. They’re safely locked up down below. We’ll find out more once the Lance crew are fit to talk, and we’ll interrogate the men in your new brig. Until then, it’s back to business as usual.”
“How’s Coote?”
“No change. He’s still under and I’m keeping him that way.”
“Thanks, Russell.”
The doctor nodded, and headed for the door, patting McNair on the shoulder on the way.
Jake reclined in his chair. He was looking forward to an uneventful day. A calm, quiet voyage to the western tip of France.
It wasn’t to be.
Lucya began to speak: “I’ve plotted a course, we should arrive by…hang on, HMS Ambush is calling.”
Vardy stopped short of the door, interested to hear of the communication from his submarine. Jake sighed and swivelled his chair round to look back across the banks of consoles at Lucya. “What do they want now?”
All colour had drained from her face. “It’s Ralf, he’s shouting something… Wait, I missed it. He’s gone. Hang on, I’ll replay it. It will still be in the buffer.”
Jake’s eyes widened. Ralf shouting couldn’t be good news. “Put it on speaker.”
Lucya flicked a button and fiddled with some dials. Suddenly Ralf’s voice sounded throughout the bridge.
He was indeed shouting. The increased volume distorted the message, but replayed through the speaker it was still clear enough.
“…we have incoming torpedo. Taking evasive action. Repeat, incoming tor—”
The message stopped, because at that instant the power went off throughout the ship.
Eighteen
JAKE DIDN’T REACT immediately. Nobody on the bridge did. Everyone was trying to process the words they had just heard, and the implications of those words.
Vardy was the first to move. Instinct, training, or both, propelled him from his position near the bridge door all the way to the port windows from which, under normal circumstances, it was possible to see at least the conning tower of the Ambush as she rode alongside, and very often a large part of the top section. He gasped loudly. Jake sprinted to join the doctor.
The Ambush had gone.
There was a tell-tale trail of bubbles and wash showing where she had dived whilst at the same time accelerating away. The umbilical cord that connected the Royal Navy nuclear submarine to the cruise liner, supplying power and enabling communications and shared navigation, dangled uselessly from the side of the ship.
None of this was, in itself, of grave concern. What struck fear into the heart of the two men was what they saw approaching at high speed. Below the surface of the sea, just about visible with the naked eye, something dark was streaking towards them.
“Torpedo,” Vardy whispered. He was transfixed by the shadow, staring open-mouthed at it.
Unlike Vardy, Lucya, and McNair, Jake had no experience of the military. He hadn’t undertaken war-game exercises, nor had he ever been sent into any theatre of war. His only experience of sea battles came from what he had seen in the movies. The few films he had watched that featured torpedo attacks had all been accompanied by impressive, pounding, menacing orchestral scores. The bass line of the music, and the discordant, incessant percussion had always rammed home the intensity and the despair of the situation. So watching this real underwater missile hurtling towards them in complete silence seemed quite unreal. It was less menacing, and somehow that made it all the more terrifying.