Jake was transfixed. He knew he should be running, should be getting as far from the impending explosion as possible, but he stood glued to the spot.
The torpedo moved at incredible speed. As it got closer, he realised it was much faster than any dolphin he had ever seen. Faster than any jet ski or speedboat or indeed any powered vessel he’d seen too. Fast, and silent.
It reached the raft.
There was a microsecond between the torpedo disappearing out of view under the slowly deflating rubber, and anything happening. It was enough time for Jake’s brain to offer up a worrying scenario: what if it doesn’t blow up? What if it blasts right through the thick material of the life raft and keeps on going? Does it have to impact on a hard hull to detonate? As he reached the conclusion that it didn’t really matter either way, the torpedo exploded.
If the view from the bridge of the first torpedo blowing up had been spectacular, the view from the Lance of the second device going off was downright terrifying. For one thing, the noise was deafening. The wave of sound knocked him back on his feet, and when it bounced off the high side of the cruise ship, the second wave hit him almost as hard.
The column of water seemed to shoot even higher into the sky, though Jake understood at once that this was just an effect of his being so much lower. Unlike the first explosion though, this column was blown towards the Lance. The first drops of water splashed down on his nose, then more hit him in the face with considerably more force, spurring him into action at last. Turning away from the spectacle, he began to run towards the stern. It was far too late. A curtain of icy water hit the Lance full on, slamming into Jake’s back and sending him sprawling across the deck. The tidal wave caused by the underwater eruption reached the ship moments later, sending her riding high into the air, and dowsing Jake for a second time in the falling spire of seawater.
The Lance rolled over the crest of the wave and came crashing down the other side. Pitched at such a steep angle, Jake couldn’t prevent himself from rolling down the deck towards the bow and the handrail. The ocean was below him, threatening to swallow him up. He thrust out a hand and grabbed onto the foot of the harpoon launcher. The deck seemed to fall away from him, and he was briefly suspended in the air. Then as the vessel reached the very bottom of the wall, the floor came up once more to meet him, knocking the air from his lungs as they collided.
She rolled some more, but the worst had passed. The tower of water thrown into the air by the torpedo was now no more than a cloud, evaporating as it retreated behind them.
Jake coughed noisily, spluttering as water he didn’t even know he had swallowed ejected itself from his lungs. He hauled himself onto his hands and knees, wheezing and gasping. Through the handrail in front of him he saw a plume of smoke wind its way lazily into the sky.
The raft was gone. Beyond where it had been, a new movement. Another form stirring beneath the waves. Bigger than the torpedo, and slower too.
Jake pushed himself up onto his knees, shuffled forwards until he could grab the rail, and tugged, getting to his feet.
The ocean swelled, water pushing upwards, not into a column this time, just a bulge; a giant bubble which finally burst to reveal an array of antennae. The water appeared to turn black, it became shallow, and then fell away as first the fin, then the belly of the great beast forced its way through and out into the open.
Jake stared at it. He’d seen this sight once before, in the icy waters of Longyearbyen. But this was different. This wasn’t the familiar form of the Royal Navy’s finest nuclear submarine. This menacing monster wasn’t home to his friends and colleagues. This was not the Ambush, but something quite different. Angular, grey, bizarre, like a deformed whale.
Jake stood, panting, and stared at the enemy submarine. “Mission accomplished,” he muttered to himself. “Ambush…wherever you are: have at ’em!”
• • •
She lay on the floor, a shivering wreck. Behind her, she was vaguely aware of someone clanging around in the ventilation pipe, no doubt checking to see if anyone else was trying to intrude into their stronghold.
The sound of Erica’s voice pulled her some way to her senses.
“Lucya! Are you alright?”
The girl was silenced with a brutal slap to the face. Lucya felt an immediate and powerful surge of rage. She tried to hit out, to do something — anything — to draw attention away from the child, but her arms dangled uselessly by her side.
Her eyes were adjusting to the brightness of the room, so intense after being entombed in the tube. A figure stood over her.
The leader.
“Up,” he snarled.
“I can’t.”
“Up!”
“I can’t move.”
He shouted at his men. One came to his aid, pulling Lucya up into a kneeling position.
From her new perspective, and with her eyes getting used to the light, she could more fully take in her surroundings. The virus had progressed faster than she had thought. Of the seventeen men in the room, eleven were on the floor, their legs apparently paralysed. She looked up at the leader. His face was covered in red sores, and clumps of his hair had fallen out. She could even see a drip of blood running from his ear. He didn’t know it, but he had little time left.
“What plan?” he grunted at her.
“I don’t understand.”
“You plan what? You come here, you poison us?”
“No! I came to observe, that’s all. You’re very sick. You need to see the doctor.”
“No doctor.”
The man checking the ventilation shaft hobbled over to the leader. His legs may not have been entirely paralysed, but he was having great trouble walking. He handed something to his superior and muttered into his ear.
The leader held up the item, pushing it under Lucya’s nose. “No poison? This, poison!”
She squinted at the empty plastic vial.
“If that’s poison,” she said, “how am I supposed to have poisoned you? Look at it, it’s tiny!”
“You put in air!”
“Well then I’d be infected too, wouldn’t I? And I’m not.”
From outside came the unmistakable sound of an explosion. The children shrieked and covered their ears. The leader’s head spun around and he barked commands at his men. The two who were able to walk checked the door, peering out of the window and reporting back.
“Sounds like your submarine just blew up the Lance. What are you going to do now?”
“No. Submarine not destroy Lance.”
“Perhaps they were aiming for us? In which case, we’ll all be dead soon.”
“No. Submarine not sink cruise ship. Not before—” He stopped dead, as if realising he was giving away too much information. Instead, he walked towards the door. One of the others took his place, standing guard over Lucya.
The leader addressed the window in the door. “Your time up. Lance, now, or we kill.”
She couldn’t hear the other side of the conversation, but she didn’t need to. She knew what the answer would be. More time. They would always ask for more time, while they waited for the virus to finish them off.
“You send girl with poison, you no find Lance. Now, we kill.”
He turned and spoke in his own language. Lucya heard a scuffle behind her, then a cry of protest.
Erica.
The girl was dragged, kicking and scratching, and was dropped right next to her. Lucya wanted to hold her, to comfort her, but a guard was behind her now, holding her hands tightly behind her back. All she could do was look into her adopted daughter’s eyes and speak. “It’s okay, Erica. It’s okay, my darling. We’re getting out of here. Trust me, alright? Be a brave girl and trust me.”
“I trust you,” Erica said brightly, defiantly. “You came to help me. I know you’ll save us, Lucya.”
“Enough!”
The leader was back. He stood over them, his back to the door so the guards outside couldn’t see what he was doing. He held the gun, but he didn’t point it at them. Not yet. Instead, he looked at it, turning it in his hand, studying it. Then he handed it to one of his colleagues. “Too noisy,” he said calmly, before muttering something to the man by his side in their own tongue. The man nodded, and turned away from his leader so as to face the door. Lucya watched as he held the weapon aloft, pointing it at the small window. His position and proximity to the doorway meant that whatever the leader did next would be blocked from the view of those outside. The security men and women wouldn’t risk entering as long as the pistol was pointed at them, and neither would they have any reason to do so. As long as they were looking at the wrong end of the gun, it meant it wasn’t being pointed at any children. This didn’t give Lucya any hope, and her worst fears were confirmed when the leader walked to the front of the room, bent over with difficulty, and picked up what looked to be a steel pole. As he brought it back, Lucya realised it was a table leg. She could see more of them by the wall. The men had ripped them from a desk in order to provide themselves with additional crude arms.
The Korean held the pole in one hand, running his eyes up and down it. He slapped the palm of his free hand with it. It sounded heavy. Dangerous. He turned his attention back to Lucya and Erica, side by side, on their knees.
“Who first?” he asked.
Without waiting for an answer, he lifted the metal leg to shoulder height and swung it backwards, ready to strike a fatal blow.