“Thanks!” Skarda called out to him.
But the man had no time for gratitude. He was already running aft. “We got one lifeboat away!” he shouted. “Hurry!”
As a torrent of water eddied over the submerging deck they raced after him.
FORTY-THREE
Airspace Over Norway
THE roar of the Eurocopter Puma’s engine and the machine-gun stutter of the rotor blades were muffled in the luxurious cabin as Skarda settled down in a leather chair and took a grateful sip of hot coffee. He looked across the aisle at Flinders. She was sitting by herself at the farthest end of the cabin, staring out a porthole. In her hands the steam from an untouched mug of coffee fogged her glasses.
They’d landed the lifeboats on a desolate rocky beach near Laponiahalvoya, Svalbard, an ice-bound archipelago north of the coast of Norway. Skarda had arranged for transport and flights for the scientists and crew to the airport at Longyearbyen, where the petty officer would get medical care, while the Norwegian Eurocopter picked them up and flew them south.
He was worried about Flinders. She’d barely said a word since they’d escaped from the icebreaker. A cold detachment had encased her like a suit of armor. Not that he blamed her: what she’d experienced at Jaz’s hands was too horrific to imagine.
He caught April’s eye. Getting up, she crossed to Flinders’ side, lowering herself easily down next to her. Flinders didn’t turn her head, but her shoulders hunched as if she were expecting a physical attack.
“When I was in the Army,” April said in a soft voice, “my commanding officer called me into his office one afternoon and tried to rape me at gunpoint. I broke his jaw and his left arm. It cost me my career. He lied at the court martial trial and his fellow officers, who weren’t even there, backed up his story. They swore I attacked him without provocation. I was dishonorably dishcharged and he wound up getting a promotion.”
Flinders’ head snapped around, her eyes blazing with a sudden rush of anger. Then red spots bloomed on her cheeks and her head dropped. “At least you stopped him.” Her eyes lifted, brimming with tears.
April gave a little shake to her head. “I had the skills. You don’t. You can’t blame yourself for what happened. And you can’t change it.” A smile touched her lips and some of the natural ferocity went out of her black eyes. “What you can do is deal with it here—“ she touched her head—“and here.” She flattened her palm against her chest.
“That’s easy for you. You’re a much stronger person than I am.”
“Maybe yes, maybe no. But we all have a choice. Either deal with your problems, or let them deal with you. Now we’re counting on you to help us stop these people, so I’m going to ask you to put your emotions aside for the time being and concentrate on what we have to do. Can you do it?”
Flinders lifted her head, meeting her gaze. She nodded.
Getting up, April laid a hand on her shoulder. “Good girl.” Flinders didn’t flinch. “Now let’s figure out what our next step is.”
She moved away toward Skarda.
“April—” Flinders called out behind her.
She stopped and swung around.
“Thanks.”
Nodding solemnly, April crossed to a chair next to Skarda and sat down. Flinders followed, carrying her mug. When she sat, she glanced at Skarda and showed him a weak smile.
“So what now?” he asked, smiling back. He could tell she was embarrassed, knowing that he knew what had happened, so he let nothing show in his eyes.
“We know Jaz is going to set that bomb off,” April started off. “But we don’t know if it’s made out of orichalcum.”
“Whether it is or not, I’m going to inform OSR. But the problem is, the situation is too volatile. If we send our subs down there, the Russians will see it as an act of war. And if the Russians are behind this, they’ll just sit on their hands and let it happen. So it’s up to us to stop Jaz before she sets it off.”
“She knew about the ice cavern. Which means she’s looking for the Nazi isomer bars, too. Which could mean that whoever she’s working for needs more bars to put their plan into action.”
“At least that buys us a little time.” He turned to Flinders and grinned. “You’re the one who comes up with the leads. Any ideas?”
Flinders pressed her lips against her coffee cup, but didn’t take a sip. “Well...judging from the stamps on those crates in the ice cavern, the bars were transported there on a U-boat, and they were probably taken away the same way at the end of the war and maybe hidden somewhere. So if we can get access to Kriegsmarine records, and maybe a log from the right boat, then we can find out where they were finally delivered.”
“Do those records exist?” Skarda asked.
Flinders nodded. “Yes. There’s a U-boat archive in Stuttgart. If they’re anywhere, they’d be there.”
FORTY-FOUR
Stuttgart, Germany
THE Kriegsmarine U-Boot Archiv smelled of old, yellowing paper. An elderly attendant, obviously pleased that Flinders could speak fluent German, had helped them locate U-boat records for 1945 and now Flinders was hunched over a thick, leather-bound volume, the lenses of her glasses an inch away from the tiny print.
She glanced up, her eyes shining. “I think this is it.” She ran her finger under a handwritten entry. “The U-3531 sailed from Ostrov Gukera Island with two officers and a skeleton crew on January 29, 1945, made port at Gdynia, Poland in the Baltic Sea, then into the Mediterranean and finally into the Black Sea, where it was scuttled.”
Skarda sat up straight. “Scuttled…”
Flinders gave a sober nod. “That was at the end of the war. It’s possible that the Nazis deliberately sank the U-boat with the isomer bars on board to keep them hidden from the Allies. So it’s quite possible they’re still down there.”
Staring out a rain-fogged window, April had been listening. “So all we have to do now is get to the bottom of the Black Sea and get inside a sunken World War Two German submarine.”
FORTY-FIVE
Black Sea
A mile-and-a-half south of the coast of Odessa, the sea was a flat sheet stirred by small wavelets running towards the coast. In Odessa Skarda had leased a forty-two-foot retro-fitted diving support vessel and a mini ROV to explore the sunken U-boat. The records from the U-boat archive had provided the exact latitude and longitude of the sunken submarine.
Now, as he leaned against the rail under a dome of dazzling blue sky, the events of the past few days seemed far away, unreal. He glanced toward the bow, where Flinders was walking from starboard to port, looking for signs of dolphins. Her resiliency took him by surprise—and impressed him. After her experience with Jaz, he’d at first expected her to bail out. And he certainly wouldn’t have blamed her. But now some of the old determination had crept back into her dark blue eyes.
“We’re here!” April called out from the pilot house. She’d centered the ship’s marine GPS system on the U-boat’s recorded latitude and longitude. At this point the bottom lay approximately five hundred feet down, well within the anoxic zone layer. This meant that whatever was entombed inside the scuttled German submarine would exist in a state of perfect preservation.
Making his way to the stern, Skarda lowered the two aft anchors while April did the same at the bow. The anchors would keep the vessel moored in place while they worked.
The two women walked toward Skarda, who was attaching the umbilical cable to the scaled-down ROV that was swinging from a deck crane in rhythm with the slight pitch of the boat. Although it was no bigger than a small dog, the bright yellow ROV was equipped with two ultra-bright LED lights, a color digital still camera and video camera connected to a DVD recorder, a micro sonar, and a three-axis manipulator arm. Horizontal and vertical thrusters allowed the unit to be moved in all directions.
The crane made a low grinding noise as Skarda lowered the ROV into the sea. Although the device weighed barely forty-five pounds and they could easily have pitched it over
the side with their hands, Skarda had decided to take no chances and was treating it very gingerly. It splashed down easily, foaming out a small wake. Detaching it from the crane, he opened the case of the control console, manipulating the joystick to send the device into a dive. Water swirled over the bright lights of the LED’s, fracturing them into jagged scales as the ROV slowly dropped into the dark void of the sea. Skarda kept an eye on the console monitor as the ROV sank, while April and Flinders clustered around him. The descent to five hundred feet was surprisingly fast, where the LEDs, piercing at most twelve feet through the darkness, shone across a seabed that looked like a vast carpet of undulating colorless silt.
“Okay,” he announced. “We’re on the bottom. Four hundred and eighty-nine feet.” He maneuvered the thrusters to pivot the ROV in a half-circle.
At first all they could see was a black curtain of darkness. Then the light shifted and a shape materialized out of the gloom: the unmistakable contour of a submarine’s conning tower.
But pointed in the wrong direction.
Skarda pushed the ROV closer. Now they could see the reason for the strange alignment. As it sank the U-boat had come to rest on a massive hump of silted clay, so that the bow was tilting at almost a forty-five degree angle toward the surface.
Steering with the joystick, Skarda moved the ROV nearer the hull. On the side of the conning tower the number “3531” crawled across the screen.
“This is it!” Flinders exclaimed. Then her voice sank. “I wish my parents were here.”
Skarda studied the monitor. In the oxygen-starved water, the submarine’s paint had been perfectly preserved, as were the pine planks of the decking, stained dark brown with wood tar. All the deck hatches were open to the sea.
“They really did scuttle her,” he said in a solemn voice.
Consulting a schematic Candy Man had forwarded, Skarda maneuvered the LED’s to better illuminate the bow deck. They’d decided to enter the U-boat by cutting an opening large enough to accommodate their bulky diving suits. The lamps illuminated the dark hole of an open hatch.
“This should be right behind the torpedo room,” he said. “It should lead to the bunk area.” Since the sub carried only a skeleton crew, the forward accommodation sleeping quarters might be a logical place to store the crates of bars in the cramped quarters aboard.
___
Cocooned in his atmospheric diving suit, Skarda felt like a trimmed-down version of the Michelin Man as he descended through the ever-blackening depths of the sea. The ADS itself was like a man-sized submarine, an articulated, self-contained, aluminum alloy diving suit that could withstand crush depth up to two thousand feet. Inside its glass-reinforced plastic helmet, a diver would breathe a nitrogen-oxygen mix maintained at one atmosphere so that he could easily shoot to the surface without fear of the bends or nitrogen narcosis that plagued saturation divers. Dual thrusters, mounted on each side of a pack on his back, allowed the diver to “fly” through the water in any direction he wanted.
Strangely, his usual claustrophobia wasn’t bothering him inside the suit. In fact, sinking down through the depths, he was experiencing a heady sense of freedom, as if he were flying.
Manipulating the thruster pads with his feet, he angled himself toward the bottom, glancing down to see April ahead and to the right of his position, heading toward the sub. Although he’d leased an ADS for Flinders, in the end she’d been too worried about her ability to adapt quickly to the suit’s controls, so they’d left her aboard the ship.
Through the gloom, he saw the cone of April’s halogen lamp farther in front of him now, its beam sweeping over the hull of the U-boat. Giving more power to his thrusters, he swam up next to her and together they moved toward the bow, looming in the darkness like a giant finger pointing toward the surface. Hovering above the open hatch, he used his hand manipulator to unclip the cutting torch from his suit, then ignited the oxygen-fuel mixture and trained the nozzle on the wood planks. Below this, he knew, the deck plating was less than an inch thick, no match for the powerful torch. Within thirty seconds a black line appeared in the deck, widening into a ragged gap as the flame bit through the pine and cut into the steel plating in a boil of bubbles.
At last Skarda completed a large rectangle. Using her thrusters at full power, April jumped down on the deck with both feet. The steel rectangle broke away, turning on edge and falling into the blackness of the sub’s interior.
She hovered, manipulating her thrusters to angle her helmet toward the hole, so that she could shine her lamp into the interior of the sub.
“It’s empty,” she said. In Skarda’s ear her voice, filtered by the suit’s communicator, sounded tinny. “But there’s a door on the bulkhead.”
Switching on his shoulder-mounted video camera, he followed her feet-first into the opening. Immediately pitch darkness closed around him, the lights of his lamp and camera carving out long tunnels of illumination below his feet. His halogen swept across April, who was already turning the dog latches on the bulkhead door. Earlier she had explained to him that with the interior of the sub flooded and the pressure equalized, the hatches would open as normally as if they were on dry land, but he was still surprised when the door swung open easily to her touch. Following her lead, he entered the forward accommodation quarters, where the men of higher rank had kept their bunks. Skarda’s ADS was bulky enough to make the squeeze a tight fit. Now he was glad they’d decided to leave the hard-wired communications umbilicals unattached to the ship above. In this tightly-confined space, the cables could too easily become entangled.
He darted his lamp around the room, seeing only empty bunks. In one corner, a woolen blanket floated like a gray ghost. Then he froze. His beam had swept across the corpse of a man, eerily floating face-down as if he were flying, his hands and arms extended straight out in front of him. He was wearing a dark-brown leather jacket with a stand-up collar lined with black wool, and matching over-trousers held up by suspenders. His clothing displayed no officer’s insignia.
April had seen the corpse, too. Together they thrusted closer. Clearly the German sailor had endured a traumatic event: his perfectly-preserved young face was contorted with what looked like an abrupt shock.
She inspected his chest, hidden by the shadows of the jacket. “Two 9mm rounds to the heart. Luger.”
“They killed their own men?”
“Probably the officers had orders. Dead men tell no tales.”
“I’d say that pretty much proves the bars are here.”
But panning his lamp around the compartment, Skarda saw no evidence of the orichalcum.
They pushed on ahead into a confined passageway, glancing into a tiny cubicle that contained a toilet and sink. Past this, they entered another small compartment containing four bunks. Ahead the door to a flimsy-looking bulkhead stood open. Floating at eye-level just inside the dark opening were a pair of booted legs.
Activating her thrusters, April propelled herself forward to examine the second dead man. “This one’s been shot, too.”
Skarda’s lamp cut through the darkness. Past April’s shoulder he could see a larger room, filled with furnishings. Ducking under the corpse, he followed her into the compartment. He recognized it immediately as an officer’s private stateroom, most likely belonging to the captain. Wood paneling lined the bulkheads and against the starboard wall an oak hutch had been bolted down next to an antique writing desk. Framed photographs which had once adorned the walls floated freely, as did an ornately carved chair. Moving forward, he pulled open several drawers, seeing nothing. Clearly the Nazi submariners had prepared in advance to scuttle the U-boat.
But stacked against the walls and in the middle of the cabin were metal cases, etched with swastikas and the “KM” initials of the Kriegsmarine.
Maneuvering to the nearest case, April grasped the single padlock with her manipulator claws and wrenched it off. She threw back the lid.
Inside rows of silver-gray isomer bars reflected dull
reddish glints in the light of her lamp.
Skarda thrusted to her side, giving out a low whistle in his microphone. He dipped his shoulder, aiming the lens of the video camera at the interior of the case, while she wrested the lock off the next case. It, too, was packed with isomer bars.
Inside her helmet bubble, her head turned toward him and she grinned.
___
Manipulating his thrusters, Skarda slowly rose from the black depths toward the sunlit surface, a smile curving his lips. At last they’d finally been dealt a good hand of cards. They had what the opposition wanted, what clearly the Bad Guys were willing to kill to get. Which meant only one thing: however much of the isomer was in the titanium case at the bottom of the Arctic Ocean, it wasn’t enough to completely melt the ice.
In a burst of spray, his helmet broke through the surface, the transparent plastic flooding with sunshine. He glanced over at April.
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