by Peter Cave
Contents
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1
Samos, Greece, June 1984
‘Bit bloody different to South Georgia, ain’t it?’ said Colin Graham, swigging his ice-cold bottle of Fix beer as he relaxed in the warm Greek sunshine.
‘Too damn right,’ Bill ‘Sooty’ Sweep readily agreed. The mere mention of the Falklands sparked off his all too recent memories, triggering an involuntary shiver as he remembered the biting cold and wind-driven rain of the bleak islands that he and his fellow British servicemen had nicknamed the ‘Costa Hypothermia’.
Now, almost two years later to the day, the two Marines sat at one of the tables of a harbourside taverna on the island of Samos, enjoying the dry heat of early summer. But it was not a holiday. It was just another island, another year – and another mission.
‘So what do you reckon they’ve cooked up for us this time?’ Graham murmured. ‘You can bet your bloody life we ain’t here just to guzzle beer and eye up the birds for a couple of months.’
Sooty, who had been doing exactly that, managed to tear his attention away from a particularly striking pair of Nordic blondes for just long enough to consider the matter. Theorizing about the exact nature and purpose of their current military mission had probably been a popular pastime of every professional soldier since the days of Alexander the Great. But to members of the élite Special Boat Squadron, such reflections invariably had a special edge, for few assignments were ever simple, and most turned out to be highly dangerous. Here, though, in the relaxed setting of a popular holiday paradise, it was not easy to imagine where that danger might lie.
Sooty chose not to try. He took another gulp of beer and shrugged philosophically. ‘I guess we’ll know soon enough,’ he muttered, returning his eyes to the undulating and beautiful pear-shaped arses of the two departing blondes.
Graham let it pass, indulging his own thoughts and not sharing his colleague’s enthusiasm. He was strictly a tit man, and anyway he preferred redheads. In the absence of any in the immediate vicinity, his memories drifted back to the location of his original observation.
The Falkland Islands, 14 June 1982. He was on his first ever mission with 41 Commando SBS, having completed his specialist training at Royal Marines, Poole, only three months previously. Even those gruelling months had hardly prepared the tough cockney for the bloody baptism of real war.
A ‘special hazard operation’, they had called it – something of a euphemism for what was virtually a suicide mission. Joining forces with troopers of 22 SAS, they had set out to divert Argentinian attention from an attack by 2 Para on Wireless Ridge. Just a handful of men in four Rigid Raider boats against an estimated enemy force of 11,000. Slipping under cover of night into Stanley Harbour, they had orders to lay down a blanket of fire which would help fool the Argies into believing that a full-scale offensive was taking place.
Miraculously, and against all odds, the crazy plan had succeeded, despite the unexpected discovery of the small raiding force by the crew of an enemy hospital ship. Forced to retreat under a withering hail of small-arms fire, the joint force was lucky enough to suffer only four non-lethal injuries, although all four of the Rigid Raiders were so badly damaged that they later had to be scrapped.
But the daring ruse had achieved its objective. By first light, the Argentinian garrison was confused and preparing to retreat, convinced that the night raiders had been merely the first wave of a concerted British attack. Only a few hours later, Lieutenant-Colonel Mike Rose bluffed the enemy commander-in-chief, General Menéndez, into an unconditional surrender of all Argentinian forces.
It was all a far cry from his situation now, Graham reflected, sharing Sooty Sweep’s view that it was difficult to imagine any kind of danger in their present idyllic surroundings. It was his first visit to the Greek islands, and although he had been there only three days he was already captivated by the serene beauty of the landscape, bathed in that wondrous light which is peculiar to the Aegean. For a first visit, Samos was a particularly fortunate destination – although he had been given no choice in the matter. Largest of the Dodecanese group, and closest to the Turkish mainland, Samos, the legendary island home of the goddess Hera, was an emerald mounted in a bed of sapphires. Among the most verdant of all the Greek islands, its rolling hills and mountains were covered in the rich foliage of countless pine and olive trees, vineyards and aromatic shrubs, all set against the incredibly translucent blue of the surrounding sea.
A place of peace, Graham mused idly. Apart from the voracious mosquitoes, and the bold feral cats which seemed to be everywhere, a place in which any form of attack or predation seemed almost unthinkable.
Yet back at base, a mere nine kilometres along the southern coast and within sight of Turkey, Lieutenant-Colonel Gerald Martin had already established a full-scale arsenal of weapons and what amounted to an operational fortress.
It had to be for something, Graham reflected. And if the SBS were involved, it was unlikely to be anything pleasant.
2
Khania Harbour, Crete
Banners and flags fluttered everywhere, every one of them appearing to bear out the simple message that they proclaimed: ‘The Wind is Free!’
But while that might have been true of the wind, it most certainly was not echoed by the hectic commercial activity which had transformed the usually quiet harbourside, Mike Bright reflected cynically. As far as the eye could see, on land and in the water, everything was very much for sale – from simple balloons and colourful kites to racing dinghies and luxury six-berth sloops.
Not that he had any argument with that. He had a strong vested interest in the proceedings, and indeed had been a prime mover in the organization of the international event which had virtually taken over the island for the past two weeks. As one of Europe’s leading designers of both mass-produced and custom-built surfboards and sailboards, he had been one of the first people to realize the commercial potential of a major festival which would celebrate and promote the remarkable 1980s boom in wind sports. Tie such an event in with an equally booming holiday destination for British and mainland European tourists, and you were guaranteed a winner, Bright and his colleagues had figured.
So the First International Wind Festival had been conceived. Set against the magnificent backdrop of the Greek islands and using Crete as its base, it was a three-week showcase for every conceivable kind of leisure and pleasure activity involving wind-power. Exhibitions, demonstrations and displays of such diverse sports as windsurfing, hang-gliding, stunt kiting and sky-surfing were combined with championship contests for both prestige and big money prizes.
The festival had proved a huge success, surpassing the wildest hopes of its organizers. It had attracted manufacturers and potential buyers from all over Europe and beyond, along with hundreds of serious enthusiasts and thousands of tourists who had come along just to enjoy the spectacle. Not surprisingly, the event had also attracted the beautiful people – the young jet set and their inevitable hangers-on. The rich and overprivileged mingled with the package-tour holidaymakers and the penniless designers and prospective manufacturers hoping to make that vital personal contact or land the o
ne big order which would set them up for life.
Not so different from his own situation only a few years ago, Bright reminded himself wistfully, remembering the bad old days when he had nothing to his name except a lease on a small fibre-glass moulding shop in Perranporth, Cornwall. His own big break had come when a chance meeting at a windsurfing qualifying round championship in Bude had brought Randy Havilland into his life. At that time merely a hopeful for the British championship title, Randy had outlined his own vague design for a really fast ‘sinker’ board and rig which would leave current sailboards standing in anything over eight knots of wind.
The rest, as they say, had been history. Bright’s expertise, funded by Randy’s lavish personal allowance from his wealthy merchant banker father, had resulted in the development of the prototype for what would become the Bright Barracuda, now one of the best-selling mass-produced sailboarding rigs in Europe. The original innovative design had given Randy Havilland the edge he needed to win the British Championship within three months, and its successors had carried him to his current status as reigning European Champion.
The partnership had endured, even if more by reason of mutual advantage than any real friendship between the two young men. Mature beyond his thirty-two years, and basically serious-minded, Bright had never been able to bring himself to actually like Randy, who, five years his junior, was essentially just a spoilt, vain playboy. But he was realistic enough to recognize and appreciate the joint benefits that the relationship brought with it. Randy gained the advantage of a personal and highly talented sailboard designer and Bright enjoyed the reputation and commercial advantage of equipping a champion. It had paid handsome dividends. Besides franchising his designs out to other manufacturers, Bright could now sell his own custom-made boards for upwards of £1500, and there was no lack of customers. But it was a tough, highly competitive business. To stay on top, you had to stay in the public eye by coming up with new ideas and fresh designs as well as keep tabs on the opposition.
Either of these reasons would have been more than enough to justify Bright’s presence at the International Wind Festival. But there was another: Mike Bright thrived on challenge as much as Randy Havilland lived for publicity and public adulation. The Crete festival had offered them both a chance to indulge these individual needs fully in the form of the ultimate contest.
The Greek Islands Sailboard Marathon had been intended as the final highlight of the three-week event and something which would launch the sport of windsurfing into a new and more serious era. Starting out from Crete, contestants would have to make the 100-mile hop to the island of Naxos in one go, then complete a roughly circular course via Mikonos, Andros, Skiros, Chios and Ikaria before returning to Crete. It was a deliberately tough and demanding course of roughly 400 miles which would test both contestants and their equipment to the very limits. A contest strictly for fanatics – or fools.
Randy had been the hot favourite to win and Mike had held every confidence in taking home the designer’s trophy for the event. Neither man had expected any problems.
But there was a problem – and it was a big one. Just two hours out from his second island checkpoint, Randy Havilland and his rig had disappeared without trace.
3
‘Mr Mallory?’
The polite enquiry jolted Jim Mallory back to earth. His mind had been up in the sky above his head, along with the three graceful Bennett Seagull hang-gliders wheeling effortlessly on the updrafts of wind coming in from the sea and rolling up over the coastline.
Mallory turned to face the man who had addressed him, appraising him briefly before giving a nod of confirmation.
‘Yeah, I’m Jim Mallory. What can I do for you?’
The man did not answer immediately. Instead he raised his eyes to the three kites, which were already beginning to lose height in long, lazy spirals.
‘Beautiful, aren’t they?’ he said. ‘And so quiet, too.’
Mallory shrugged. ‘Yeah, they’re beautiful all right,’ he agreed almost grudgingly. ‘But that’s part of their trouble. They’re designed far too much to look pretty than for sheer performance.’ He pointed up at the sky. ‘You see that angle of descent? Far too steep. Improve that by only two or three degrees and you’ll have increased your soaring time by fifteen, maybe twenty per cent.’
‘A problem you’ve already cracked, I take it?’ The question was more like a statement, and totally devoid of any sarcasm.
Mallory studied the stranger more closely, his curiosity aroused. That the man was English was clear from his clipped, precise tone, yet there was something oddly stiff about his bearing which went beyond Mallory’s image of the average uptight Brit. A military man, whispered the small voice of intuition. With this sudden hunch came the faint sound of warning bells inside his head.
Mallory looked at the man guardedly. ‘So what’s your interest? You don’t look like a flyer.’
The man smiled thinly, hunching his shoulders in a faint shrug. ‘Well, not hang-gliders, anyway. But you’re right, of course – I do have an interest. Particularly in you, Mr Mallory.’
It was all becoming far too mysterious for Mallory’s liking. His guardedness hardened to open suspicion. ‘You know me?’ he asked, making it sound almost like a challenge.
The man shook his head. ‘No, but I know about you, Mr Mallory. James Clinton Mallory. Born Aubery, California, 1952. Probably one of the world’s most innovative designers of hang-gliders and microlight aircraft.’
The warning bells in Mallory’s head were ringing ever louder now, but he was already hooked. ‘Look – what the hell is this all about?’ he demanded.
Abruptly, the man offered his hand. ‘You can call me Gerald Martin,’ he said quietly. ‘And for the time being let’s just say that I might have a commission for you.’
Mallory shook the man’s hand warily, his suspicions in no way allayed by the formality of the introduction. Indeed, if anything, it caused further misgivings. ‘You can call me Gerald Martin,’ the man had said. It implied an alias, deepening the mystery. But for now, it seemed the name would have to do, for the man was obviously in no hurry to give further details.
‘But before we get down to specifics, I’d like to talk about microlights in general,’ Martin went on. He gestured towards the three Seagulls, which were all just coming in to land some three hundred yards further up the beach. ‘For instance, just how much radical design change can those things take before it affects their basic aerodynamics?’
It was essentially a very simple question, with a simple answer. Mallory shrugged faintly. ‘Not a great deal,’ he admitted. ‘There’s reasonable room for modification, certainly – but the fundamental design is more or less fixed.’
The American broke off, his mind wandering back to the early seventies, when he had first become hooked on the fledgling sport of hang-gliding – jumping off the cliffs above Big Sur, or hopping over the sands of Santa Monica beach. The early craft had been crude, dangerous and strictly limited to short and strictly downhill glides. No more than oversized kites, many of the first hang-gliders had been built from nothing more substantial than bamboo poles and plastic sheeting. Things had changed a lot in the past twelve years or so, of course. The new generation of machines were more like proper aircraft, capable of soaring and aerobatic manoeuvres rather than merely gliding – but they were still essentially Rogallo deltas.
Mallory snapped back to the present. ‘How much do you know about the history and background of these things?’ he asked Martin.
The man hunched his shoulders. ‘Let’s just assume that I’m totally ignorant,’ he suggested.
It was an open invitation to launch into a potted history. Mallory drew a deep breath. ‘OK,’ he muttered, then nodded down the beach to where the trio of Seagulls were now parked, nose down, in the sand. ‘Those three machines there are all second-generation designs,’ he started out. ‘They’re fairly high performance, curved-boom craft, owing virtually all their design
characteristics to the original triangular or delta wind-sail concept. That principle traces back to Francis Rogallo, a design engineer with NASA during the sixties. He came up with the idea originally as a possible land re-entry device for returning space capsules, but it was considered far more risky than the conventional parachute and wet splashdown techniques and eventually dropped.’
‘So are you saying that Rogallo’s original design is inviolate?’ Martin wanted to know, interrupting. ‘That there’s nowhere else to go?’
Mallory shook his head. ‘Not at all. What I am saying is that we’re more or less stuck with the basic principle until something fairly radical comes along. Put it this way, Mr Martin – the Montgolfier brothers could no more have started out by designing a Zeppelin than Wilbur Wright could have flown a Boeing 737. Leonardo da Vinci designed an aerodynamically sound helicopter, but he was centuries too early for a suitable power source to make it fly.’
‘So it’s a matter of time?’ Martin prompted.
Mallory shrugged. ‘That, and a sufficiently strong incentive for a designer to approach the problem from a different angle.’
‘Cold cash, for instance?’ Martin suggested.
Mallory’s eyes narrowed. ‘What exactly are you after, Mr Martin?’
Martin spread his hands in a gesture which suggested openness. ‘Suppose I asked you to design and build such a radically different flying machine?’ he said flatly. ‘Would you be interested in the challenge for $100,000 – cash in hand and no questions asked?’ Martin paused briefly, the ghost of a twinkle dancing in his grey eyes. ‘A down payment of $10,000 now, and the balance to be deposited in an American small-town savings bank of your choice – safe from the prying eyes of the IRS.’
Mallory allowed himself a thin, somewhat rueful smile. The Brit had obviously done his homework thoroughly. He knew more about Jim Mallory than just his birthplace and designing skills. For the moment, however, he played down his initial enthusiasm, using Martin’s ploy of talking hypothetically.
‘Just supposing I was interested in this proposition? Just what sort of a flying machine are we talking about? And, for that matter, what’s it for?’