Brothers In Arms (Matt Drake 5)

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Brothers In Arms (Matt Drake 5) Page 3

by Leadbeater, David


  “I’ve been doin’ this a long time,” Alicia shouted as she ran. “But I just saw some of the craziest shit ever go down. You’d best prepare for a storm.”

  CHAPTER FIVE

  Hell and high water besieged their every horizon.

  First panic and then rage consumed Drake as he struggled to make any progress. Darkness pounded at him, rolled at him, and assaulted his consciousness with waves of disbelief and amazement. Every inch of his body cried out with pain. Water splashed and dragged at him until he learned to see through the salty sting. A continual swell sent him up and down like a nightmare elevator that never stops. His gaze swept the menacing seas.

  Where were the others? Where are the Zodiacs?

  Dark clouds obscured any faint light that might have shone down from the skies above. Lightning flickered in the distance, marching across the waves like old gods. Thunder rumbled threateningly. His heart sank as he studied the blackness, seeing nothing to raise his spirits.

  Kept buoyant by his life jacket, Drake attempted to move. The Zodiacs wouldn’t come to him. He remembered to switch on the shoulder light, but it was like a pinprick trying to illuminate the solar system. With a huge effort, he surged forward, plowing through the gloomy waters. At first, he made progress, but each successive, mountainous wave dumped him back where he started. It was all he could do to keep his head above water.

  Then, a shout came, “Move!” desperate and plaintive, barely heard above the sea’s menacing roar. Drake paddled around to see his salvation. A Zodiac, manned by Romero and Smyth, aiming straight for him. The Recon guys had come through. They reached him in seconds, skillfully guiding the light-framed boat through chop and wave crests and a hard, driving rain. The terrible sea clung to him as hard as it could, but Romero and Smyth, anchored by their guide ropes, hauled him out of the water.

  Drake collapsed, breathing heavily, feeling utmost relief for about half a second. Then he sat up.

  “Have you seen Mai?”

  Romero shook his head. “Shit, man, do you know how lucky we were to find you?”

  “We can’t leave her.” Drake secured himself through a set of guide ropes and rested his back against the side of the craft.

  “We ain’t going anyplace, bro,” Romero told him. “That these goddamn waters don’t want us to. Since you don’t seem to get it, let me explain—this ain’t no rescue mission.”

  Drake nodded. Spray showered over the sides of the boat, then a torrent of water poured over him. They crested another wave and plummeted off its back side into an abyss. Drake gripped the ropes until blood began to seep through his fingers, but he couldn’t relax his hold. A cold rain struck at their exposed faces so hard it constantly made them flinch.

  Lightning struck the seas a hundred feet from their position, boiling along the waves, drenching the whole scene with an eerie glow. The roar of thunder and water made it impossible to even think clearly.

  More peaks and more troughs as the waves rose even higher, five and then six meter summits. And even the wind lent the weight of its fury against them, caterwauling among the peaks and troughs, gusting hard when the boat dropped to its lowest, whipping at them when they topped out.

  The Zodiac struggled resolutely onward. Its occupants never stopped twisting and turning in their harnesses, always vigilant, always searching for their lost companion. The minutes passed like hours, and the hours like days.

  “Stupid question!” Drake yelled once. “Anyone still got comms? Did you manage to get a message out to Hayden?”

  “Shit, just a snatch.” Romero shouted back. “After impact. Smyth?”

  “Yeah. Just we’re ok and then the lights went out. Not sure it even transmitted.”

  “Sounds about right,” Drake muttered in broad Yorkshire. “If summat can go wrong, summat will.”

  As if to emphasize his point, a torrent of water deluged the boat. Drake stopped breathing as the inundation crashed into his face. A few seconds passed and then he lay there panting, exhausted.

  It was good they were strapped in. As the onslaught continued, their muscles grew weary and their brains foggy. There were other dangers here, including hypothermia. When a surge of water flooded the boat, the colliding forces came together in a white fizzing froth, relentless and merciless. They braced themselves against each other, against the boat, and closed their eyes as the sky became the mountainous sea and the sea suddenly crashed away to reveal the turbulent sky.

  Drake wished he knew what had happened to Mai. If this hell was to be his final resting place, he wanted to go down knowing the truth. But he had no intention of going down at all. He was stronger than that. With Mai fixed firmly at the forefront of his mind, he found the strength to ignore the peril by peering inward. Whilst not avoiding the Japanese agent recently, he had ensured that their relationship didn’t develop.

  Might have been a mistake. The thought came a little grudgingly, but it came straight from his soul. If a man gave up the chances that came his way, he would regret it for the rest of his life.

  Drake opened his eyes and watched the other two men in the boat. Romero sat easily, a reserved calm smoothing out his features. It took moments like this to find a man you could truly rely on in any given moment of danger, and the Force Recon team leader was one of them. Smyth looked a little scared, a little green, but gazed hard into the tumult as if trying to find the paths of his future.

  They were good men. Hard men. And if they survived this battle, brothers for life.

  At last the skies began to lighten to the east, easing their torment if only a little. The great seas quieted, the enormous waves gradually flattening out. An hour passed and the sun began to rise, an orange ball of fire that burned off any last vestiges of the storm. Overcome with exhaustion, the trio fell into a deep sleep, waking later as the sun blasted down from high overhead.

  Without a word, Drake unhooked himself from the ropes, every muscle burning, and tried to crawl across the bottom of the boat. His tongue was glued to the roof of his mouth, his skin burning from exposure to the sun. Every nerve and every sinew screamed in protest, but he forced his body to inch its way to the sealed storage bag that nestled in the front of the boat. It would hold tools, an inflator and patches, and also water.

  He lifted his head. Sunlight blasted off the sea, dazzling his eyes and setting off a pounding pain. The marines would have reflectors in their packs.

  Later. For now, he unbuckled the storage bag and opened it. Then he took three bottles of water out and passed them around. Never had water tasted so good.

  Romero fished out the anti-glare glasses, groaning as he moved. “Damnit, man, feel like I went nine rounds with the Hulk.”

  He carefully fixed the glasses around his eyes and gazed out to sea for a while. Judging from the expression on his face, Drake guessed he didn’t see a whole lot.

  “We don’t know where we landed, where we drifted, or where we are.” Smyth was also surveying the area.

  “No, but we do know east and west,” Drake pointed out. “Maybe we didn’t drift so far. And, if we head due north we should hit land.” He didn’t add the requisite eventually.

  “That’s the plan.” Romero said, staying upbeat. Drake thought that being stranded with the marine wasn’t half as stressful as it might have been with Alicia. He sat up, trying to avoid the raging sun and the glaring sea. Salt granules stuck to his skin. Scrapes and bruises stood out harshly on his arms.

  “We need to cover up too,” Drake said. “You guys have anything we can use?” The question was rhetorical as Drake searched the storage bag and came up empty. “Guess it’ll have to be our vests.”

  Slowly, Drake stripped out of his Kevlar jacket and shirt. He wrapped the vest tightly around his head and tied an end. Makeshift, but effective for now. “So,” he said, “we gonna start paddling?”

  Romero sighed. “Fuck.”

  The trio of battered men unstrapped the paddles and started to dig at the sea. As one they groaned. Due
north looked no different than due south, but once they had it pinpointed, they kept the horizon in their sights and put their backs into it.

  After a half hour, Romero spoke up. “You guys think we’ll be rescued?”

  “Bugger all chance of that.” Drake snorted. “Hayden thinks we’re ok. No one else knows we’re here.”

  “Rations are exactly that. Rations.” Smyth shook his webbing, letting the few packets of food rattle. “A day or two tops.”

  The sun beat down. The men grew tired, and rested as the heat passed its midday peak and waned into late afternoon. They drank water and laid back to conserve energy. A couple of rogue waves sent them scaling liquid cliffs again only to plummet once more to impossible depths. Sea creatures bumped the boat, investigating, some just curious, others questing for food. When the dirty white fin of a shark broke the surface, Romero sat up angrily. “Now that’s an ice cold mother of a threat.”

  Smyth stared at the fin as it cut its way back and forth. “We used to take bets back in training as to how we might die. Could’ve got a cool hundred to one on becoming shark food.”

  “But who would’ve collected the winnings?” Drake smirked.

  Smyth shrugged. “Didn’t think that far.”

  They waited until the fin vanished and then started paddling again, but there wasn’t a single pair of eyes that didn’t constantly keep a lookout for that chilling, telltale sign.

  But as night began to encroach, the men became quiet. The ocean grew still. A thin sliver of moon rose steadily, casting its stark glow across the undulating, mirror-like surface of the sea. Drake found himself dwelling on Mai, and the ordeals she might be enduring. He couldn’t bring himself to think she might already have died. Couldn’t even imagine it.

  His heart froze when a shadow loomed ahead, gliding silently toward them across the gentle swells of the sea.

  CHAPTER SIX

  “The gunman missed Senator Turner,” Hayden said aloud. “But killed his aide—a Miss Audrey Smalls—and two bodyguards.” She hung her head. “Senseless slaughter.”

  Ben tapped his monitor. “That woman from the Washington Post has vanished,” he said with some relief. “Finally.”

  A reporter from DCs biggest newspaper had been hanging around the new facility for days now, sensing a meaty story, haranguing them every time they stepped out.

  “Sarah Moxley?” Hayden said. “Oh, she’ll be back.”

  Alicia paced the room. “What do we know? That some all-American kid tried to assassinate a US Senator. That the kid’s being dissected to give us a clue as to why the hell he did it. The video feed—” She paused, glancing again at the TV screen they’d all been watching. “Showed his face. Did he look sane to you?”

  In a corner of the room, Gates was attempting to find out what had happened to Drake and Mai. The secretary’s voice rose. Whoever was on the other end of the line wasn’t doing himself any favors. “Then fetch him.” Gates almost yelled. “I’ll wait.”

  “We’re contacting all the agencies,” Karin spoke up. “Trying to find a connection between Senator Turner and the Koreans. Failing that. . .it could be anything.” The blond girl shot a quick glance at Komodo. The big soldier nodded back at her without smiling. Karin knew him well enough by now to see the distress in his eyes. The wait for news was as traumatic as an operation in the Middle East.

  Kinimaka moved to Hayden’s side. The big Hawaiian was moving much easier now, the deep bruising caused by gunshot subsiding. “This proves that Mai’s agency friend was on the level, boss.”

  “Sure.” Hayden was distracted, studying the video of yesterday’s event yet again. “Look at his eyes, Mano. His eyes.”

  Kinimaka looked. He’d already looked a hundred times, but he looked again because Hayden asked him too. The shooter, now identified as Michael Markel, from the DC area, had been a thirty-five-year-old teacher. He was a loner, but nothing about him stood out as wrong. His house had already been turned inside out—but whatever Markel’s reasons were for his act, they still remained a mystery. So far, the man stood out as the perfect citizen.

  “Look deeper,” Hayden told both Ben and Karin. “This man has a skeleton hidden away somewhere.”

  Hayden felt her thoughts being knocked awry. The new job came with some already deep-rooted problems—one namely Ben Blake. The pair had treated each other cordially so far, but there was no getting away from the coolness that existed. Hayden found herself not wanting to ask too much of her ex-boyfriend, whilst he clearly found it hard acknowledging the new arrangement.

  And something had changed Ben back at that third tomb of the gods. When the soldier died in his arms, when Ben’s hands dripped with the man’s blood, a revolution had begun in his brain. Maybe its purpose was to bring out the man and discard the boy forever. Or perhaps it was just another ordeal, a trauma that would twist his psyche.

  Hayden knew his pain. She almost wished he had endured an ordeal of that kind before she’d made her decision. The boy needed help, but it wasn’t right for her to step up.

  The man at her side was the biggest reason—in more ways than one. She was finding it increasingly hard to maintain a strictly professional relationship with him, especially since their relentless days and months of crazy exploits had ended. What she needed was a distraction. Something that would focus her mind on work.

  Of course it didn’t help with Karin and Komodo making constant lame excuses to disappear together. Or with Torsten Dahl’s brooding. The Swede was already having second thoughts about switching jobs, but kept them mostly to himself.

  Gates put the phone down at last. Every eye in the room turned to him.

  “Drake’s plane was shot down by the Koreans. Not officially, of course. But the bastards claim they were protecting their territory from an unidentified attack. There’s a lot of tiptoeing around to be done before we decide what to do.”

  Dahl slammed a desk with his fist. Hayden butted in quickly before the Swede could say anything stupid. “The Koreans aren’t supposed to have anything that would detect that plane flying at that height, Mr. Secretary.”

  Gates shrugged. “Dai Hibiki’s message warned of ‘futuristic arms,’ I believe.”

  “What can we do?” Ben spoke up, fingers hovering over his keyboard.

  “Nothing with that thing.” Dahl growled. “We need to send a team in. Now. Our brothers are in danger.”

  “Politically—” Gates emphasized the word. “We must wait. Besides, Drake and Mai are pretty capable. And we didn’t send ’em along with a bunch of cheerleaders. Those were Force Recon marines.”

  Alicia had listened to it all perched on the end of a desk. Now she pushed off. “Drake would lead a team,” she said. “He’d do it for you. For any of us.”

  Gates’s eyes were hollow. “The old Drake might have. The new Drake seems a little different. I may not be a soldier, but I do share some experience with him. I think he’d never again make that promise to save anyone.”

  Alicia paused. She didn’t remind anyone that she’d also lost someone recently. It wouldn’t help anything. Besides, the American had a point. Drake was a changed man.

  “So let’s help him another way,” Hayden said whilst the argument paused. “How does a squeaky-clean American man with no previous convictions end up attempting to assassinate a senator? Riddle me that.”

  “And how does it all link to the North Koreans and Dai Hibiki’s transmission?” Kinimaka added.

  Hayden started the video of the shooting yet again. “Let’s get to work.”

  “I think we need take-out.” Karin looked around innocently at Komodo. “Wanna drive me round the corner?”

  The Delta man had the grace to look slightly embarrassed as he whispered, “I’ll do my best.”

  CHAPTER SEVEN

  Drake shouted a warning. Romero and Smyth shot up, staring wildly around. The bulk drifted closer, on a collision course, and now Drake recognized it as a piece of smashed wing.

  “Paddl
e!” Drake cried

  The marines suddenly remembered their oars and dug them hard into the calm waters. The light craft responded immediately, shifting its course sharply, but the wing loomed over them, a dark, dead force that could capsize them without malice or concern.

  Drake ducked. Part of the wing, angled out of the water, grazed the top of his head. The Zodiac skimmed out of its shadow a second before the two masses collided.

  The three soldiers sat in silence, watching the remains of their plane float away. Romero finally took a swig of water, chewed on some remaining rations and motioned at Smyth.

  “Keep paddling. No one else is gonna save our asses.”

  Drake forced himself to stay alert. It was too easy to let the unending vastness lull him and drain him of all hope and motivation. If they kept busy, they had a better chance at survival. Lethargy, after all, helps kill the brain. He occupied himself studying the constellations, inventorying their meager possessions, and checking the Zodiac for bumps and scrapes. When full light came, he would dive overboard to check the bottom. Silently, he knew they all hoped and prayed there wouldn’t be another storm. This part of the world was renowned for its cyclones, a weather anomaly that would truly wipe them off the face of the earth.

  Daylight came quickly. The soldiers and Drake did their best to keep the craft heading north where, they’d reasoned, lay the nearest body of land and their only chance of ever stepping foot on terra firma again. More visitors began to glide around them, visitors from the pitiless deep. Long white shapes cruised underneath the boat, triangular fins occasionally cleaving at the surface.

  Drake was the first to overcome his fear and wonder aloud, “Anyone know how to fish?”

  Romero shrugged. “I fished a little. You would need a lure, a line and a hook. You got a hook?”

  “We sure have line,” Drake told him, indicating the guide ropes. “And we could use your blood as a lure.”

  “My blood?”

  “Why not? My Yorkshire blood’s tainted, y’ know. Too many fish and chips. The scent would put ’em off.”

 

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