Treasure dp-9

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Treasure dp-9 Page 40

by Clive Cussler


  "We've got no power at all?"

  "Sorry, Colonel. Here we are, and here we sit. These engines aren't taking us anywhere. They also wrecked the generators, including the auxiliaries."

  ... Then we'll have to take the crew and passengers off by lifeboat, using the manual winches."

  "No go, Colonel. We're dealing with genuine sadists. They also trashed the lifeboats. Bashed the bottoms out."

  Dillenger's dire report was punctuated by a deep growling noise that emanated from the glacier and traveled through the ship like a drum.

  There was no vibration this time, only the growl that turned into a heart-stopping rumble. It lasted nearly a minute before it finally faded and died.

  Hollis and Collins were both brave men-no one would ever doubt it-but each read fear in the other's eyes.

  "The glacier is ready to calve," said Collins grimly. "Our only hope is to cut away the anchor chains and pray the tide carries us out into the fjord."

  "Believe me, you won't see ebb tide for another eight hours," said Hollis. "You're talking to a man who knows."

  "You're just full of cheery news, aren't you, Colonel."

  "Doesn't look encouraging, does it?"

  "Doesn't look encouraging," Collins repeated. "Is that all you have to say? There are nearly two hundred people on board the Lady Flamborough.

  They must be evacuated immediately."

  "I can't wave a wand and make the glacier go away," Hollis explained calmly. "I can take a few out in inflatable boats and call in our helicopters to airlift the rest. But we're talking a good hour."

  Collins's voice came edged with impatience. "Then I suggest you get on with it while we're all still alive-" He halted as Hollis abruptly swung up a hand for silence.

  Hollis's eyes narrowed in bewilderment as a strange voice suddenly burst over his earphone.

  "Colonel Hollis, am I on your frequency? Over."

  "Who the hell is this!" Hollis snapped.

  "Captain Frank Stewart of the NUMA ship Sounder at your service. Can I give you a lift somewhere?"

  "Stewart!" the Colonel burst out. "Where are you?"

  "If you could see through all that crap hanging on your superstructure, you'd find me cruising up the fjord about half a kilometer off your port side."

  Hollis exhaled a great sigh and nodded at Collins. "A ship is bearing down on us. any instructions?"

  Collins stared at him, numb with disbelief. Then he blurted, "Good God, yes, man! Tell him to take us under tow."

  Working feverishly, Collins's crew slipped the bow and stern anchor chains and made ready with the mooring hawsers.

  In a feat of superb seamanship, Stewart swung the Sounder's stern under the Lady Flamborough's bow in one pass. Two heavy rope mooring lines were dropped by the crewmen of the cruise ship and immediately made fast to the survey ship's deck bitts. It was not the most perfect tow arrangement, but the ships were not going for distance across stormy seas, and the temporary expedient was accomplished in a matter of minutes.

  Stewart gave the command for "slow ahead" until the slack was taken up from the tow lines. Then he slowly increased speed to "full ahead"

  while he looked over his shoulder, one eye on the glacier, one on the cruise liner. The Sounder's two cycloidal propellers, one forward and one aft, thrashed the water as her great diesel engine strained under the load.

  She was half the Lady Flamborough's tonnage and never meant for tug duty, but she dug in and drove like a draft horse in a pulling contest, black exhaust pouring from her stack.

  At first nothing seemed to happen, and then slowly, imperceptibly, a small bit of froth appeared around the Sounder's bow. She was moving, hauling the reluctant cruise liner from under the shadow of the glacier.

  Despite the danger, the passengers, crew and Special Forces fighters all tore away the plastic sheeting and stood on the decks, watching and willing the struggling Sounder forward. Ten meters, then twenty, a hundred, the gap between ship and ice widened with agonizing slowness.

  Then at last the Lady was clear.

  Everyone on both ships gave a rousing cheer that echoed up and down the fiord. Later, Captain Collins would humorously call it the cheer that broke the camel's back.

  A loud cracking sound shattered the celebrating voices and grew into a great booming rumble. To those watching, it seemed as if the air was electrified. Then the whole forward face of the ice cliff toppled forward and pounded into the fjord like a huge oil tanker being launched on its side. The water seethed and boiled and rose in a ten-foot wave that surged down the fjord and lifted the two ships like corks before heading out toward the open sea.

  The monstrous, newly calved iceberg settled into the deeply carved channel of the fjord, its ice glinting like a field of orange diamonds under the new sun. Then the rumble rolled down from the mountainside and echoed in the ears of the stunned onlookers, who couldn't believe they were somehow alive.

  At first there was complete confusion, with much shouting and wild shooting. The Egyptians had no idea of the size of the force that fired on them in the dining hall during the passage of the . They snuffed the lights and shot at the earlymoming shadows until they realized the shadows weren't shooting back.

  The dirt roads between the wooden buildings took on an eerie silence.

  for several minutes the Egyptian hijackers made no effort to leave the dining hall.

  Then, suddenly, a half-dozen men-two from the front and four at the rear of the building-broke from the doors, scrambling, crouching, and diving headlong behind predetermined shelter. Once in position, they laid down a circle of fire to cover the rest of the men, who then followed on their heels.

  Their leader, a tall man wearing a black turban, directed the men's movements by blowing sharp biceps on a whistle.

  After a rocky start, the Egyptian terrorist team was everything Pitt was afraid of-highly ed, practiced and tough. When it came to house-to-house street fighting, they were the best in the world. They were even well led. The leader in the black turban was competent and methodical.

  They searched building by building, working toward the crushing Mill until they half-circled it like a crescent. No haphazard assault by Animar's hand-picked killers. They moved with stealth and purpose.

  Their leader caned out in Arabic. When there was no reply, another terrorist shouted from a different location. They were hailing the guard and mechanics inside the crushing mill, Pitt guessed correctly.

  They were too close now for Pitt to risk revealing himself at the window. He removed the terrorist's ski mask and clothing and threw it in a pile on the floor, then rummaged through a pocket of his ski jacket and retrieved a small mirror attached to a narrow stretch handle. He eased the mirror above the window sill and extended the handle, twisting it like a periscope.

  He found the target he was looking for, 90 percent concealed, but enough showing for a killing shot.

  Pitt turned the fire-select lever from FULL AUTO to SINGLE. Then he swiftly raised up, aimed and squeezed the trigger.

  The deadly old Thompson spat. Black Turban took two or three steps, his face blank and uncomprehending; then he sagged, fell forward and pitched to the ground.

  Pitt dropped down, lowered his gun and peered into the mirror again. The terrorists had disappeared. To a man, they had dodged behind buildings or crawled furiously under abandoned and rusting mining equipment. Pitt knew they weren't about to quit. They were still out there, dangerous as ever, waiting for instructions from their second-m-command.

  Gunn took his cue and pumped a ten-round burst through a wooden door on a shed across the road. Very slowly the door swung open, pushed by a body that twisted and dropped.

  Still there was no return fire. They were nobody's fools, thought Pitt.

  Now that they realized they were not up against a superior force but by a small group, they took their time to regroup and consider options.

  They also realized now that their unknown oponents had captured their helico
pter and were holed up in the crushing Mill.

  Pitt ducked, scurried over and crouched beside Gunn. "How's it look on your side?"

  "Quiet. They're playing it nice and easy. They don't want to dent their helicopter."

  "I think they're going to create a diversion at the front door and then make a rush through the side office."

  Gunn nodded. "Sounds logical. About time we found better cover away from these windows anyway. Where do you want me?"

  Pitt looked up at the catwalk above. He pointed at a row of small skylights encircling a small winch tower. "Climb up and keep watch.

  Yell when they launch the attack and welcome them with a concentrated burst through the front door. Then get your ass back down here. They won't have any scruples about peppering the walls above the chopper."

  "On my way."

  Pitt moved around to the side office, paused at the threshold and turned to Giordino and Findley.

  "How's it coming?" he asked.

  Giordino looked up from shoveling a pile of leftover ore for a barricade. "Fort Giordino will be finished on schedule."

  Findley stopped work and stared at him. "F before G, Fort Findley. "

  Giordino looked at Findley morosely for a second before returning to his work. "Fort Findley if we lose, Giordino if we win."

  Shaking his head in awe, Pitt wondered why he was blessed with such incredible friends. He wanted to say something to them, express his feelings of gratitude for risking their lives to stop a band of scum when they could have bolted for the boondocks and hid out until Hollis and his team arrived. But they knew: men like this needed no words of appreciation or encouragement. There they'd stay, and there they'd fight it out. Pitt hoped to God none would die uselessly.

  "Argue about it later," he ordered, "and ready a reception committee if they get past me."

  He turned and entered the damp and musty-smelling office He checked his Thompson and set it aside. After quickly building a barrier with two overturned desks, a steel filing cabinet and a heavy iron potbellied stove, he lay down on the floor and waited.

  He didn't wait long. One minute later he came to unmoving attention as he thought he heard the faint crunch of gravel outside. The sound stopped and then came again, soft but unmistakable. He raised the Thompson and propped the grips on the filing cabinet.

  Too late, Gunn gave a yell of warning, when suddenly an object crashed through the window above the door and fell, rolling across the floor. A second came right behind. Pitt dropped low and tried to burrow into the steel cabinet, cursing his lack of forethought.

  Both grenades went off with an ear-bursting blast. The office erupted in a great roar of shattered furniture and flying wood and yellowed paper. The outer wall was blown outward and most of the ceiling caved in.

  Pitt was dazed by the concussion and the deafening clap of the twill blast. He'd never experienced an explosion in a close proximity before, and he was stunned right down to his toes.

  The potbellied stove had taken the main force of the shrapnel, yet held its shape, the rounded sides perforated with jagged holes. The file cabinet was bent and twisted and the desks badly mutilated, but the only apparent injuries Pitt could find on himself were a thin but deep cut in his left thigh and a five-centimeter gash on his cheek.

  The office had vanished and left in its place a pile of smoldering debris, and for one apprehensive moment Pitt had a vision of being trapped in a blazing fire. But only for a moment-the rain-soaked old wood of the building sizzled a bit in several places but refused to ignite.

  With a conscious effort of will Pitt switched the Thompson to FULL AUTO, and aimed the barrel at the splintered remains of the front door. Blood was streaming down the side of his face and under his collar. His eyes never flickered as a barrage of automatic fire came pouring over his head from the guns of four men who charged through the shattered openings in the outer wall.

  Pitt felt neither remorse nor fear as he fired a long burst that blew away his attackers like trees before a tornado. They threw up their weapons, arms flailing in the manner of ftenzied dancers on a stage, and spun crazily to the debris-piled floor.

  Three more terrorist fighters followed the first wave and were as ruthlessly stopped by Pitt-all except one, who reacted with incredible swiftness and flung himself behind a smoking, shredded leather sofa.

  Cannonlike blasts went off in Pin's ear as Findley dropped to his knees behind him and pumped loads from his shotgun into the lower base of the sofa. Leather, burlap padding and wood sprayed the air. A moment of quiet, and then one of the terrorist's arms flopped lifelessly beyond the sofa's carved feet.

  Giordino appeared through the smoke and gunpowder fumes, grasping Pitt under the arms and dragging him back

  "Must you always make a mess?" he said, grinning. Then into the crushing-mill area and behind an old ore car.

  his face softened with concern. "You hurt bad?"

  Pitt wiped the blood away from his cheek and stared down at the crimson stain spreading through the fabric covering his leg. "Damn!

  A perfectly good pair of pants. Now that really pisses me off."

  Findley knelt down, cut away the pants leg and began bandaging the wound. "You were lucky to survive the blast with only a couple of cuts."

  "Dumb of me not to figure on grenades," Pitt said bitterly. 'I should have guessed."

  "No sense in blaming yourself." Giordino shrugged. "This isn't our line of work."

  Pitt looked up. "We better get smart real fast if we want to be around when the SOF guys arrive."

  "They won't try another assault from this direction," Findley said. "The blast knocked down the stairway outside.

  They'd be sitting ducks if they tried scrambling up ten feet of broken timber."

  "Now might be a ripe oportunity to burn the helicopter and get the hell out of here," Findley said unhappily.

  "The news gets worse, and it gets better," Gunn said, dropping from a ladder to the floor. "I saw another twenty of them charging up the railroad track like a prairie fire. They should be here in another seven or eight minutes."

  Giordino looked at Gunn suspiciously. "How many?"

  "I stopped counting at fifteen."

  "The opportunity to flee the coop gets even riper," muttered Findley.

  "Hollis and his men?" asked Pitt.

  Gunn shook his head wearily. "No sign of them." He paused to draw a deep breath and turned to stare at Pitt.

  terrorist reinforcements, they were ed by four hostages with two guards. I could just recognize them through my binoculars. One was your Dad. He and a woman were helping two other men along the tracks."

  "Hala Kamil, bless her," Pitt said with vast relief. "Thank God, the old man is alive."

  "The other two?" asked Giordino.

  "Most likely Presidents Hasan and De Lorenzo."

  "So much for early retirement," said Findley gloomily as he placed the final piece of tape over Pitts bandage.

  "The terrorists are only keeping the Senator and the others alive to ensure a safe escape," said Pitt.

  "And won't hesitate to murder them one by one until we hand over their helicopter," predicted Gunn.

  Pitt nodded. "Without a doubt, but if we surrendered, there's no guarantee they wouldn't murder them anywayThey've already tried to assassinate Hala twice and most certainly want Hasan dead too."

  "They'll call a truce and negotiate."

  Pitt looked at his watch. "They won't haggle for very long. They know their time is running out. But we might gain a few extra minutes."

  "So what's the plan?" asked Giordino.

  "We stall and fight for as long as it takes." Pitt looked at Gunn. "Were the hostages surrounded by the hijackers?"

  "No, they were a good two hundred meters in the rear, trailing the main party up the rail-bed," Gunn replied. "They were herded by only two terrorists." He stared back into Pitts green eyes, and then nodded in slow understanding. "You want me to take out the guards and protect the Senator and the
rest until Hollis shows?"

  "You're the smallest and the fastest, Rudi. If anybody can get clear of the building undetected and circle around behind those two guards while we distract them, you can."

  Gunn threw out his hands and dropped them to his sides. "I'm grateful for the trust. I only hope I can pull it off."

  "You can."

  "That leaves only three of you to hold the fort."

  "We'll have to make do." Pitt awkwardly rose to his feet and limped over to the pile of terrorists' clothing he'd tossed on the floor. He returned and held it out to Gunn. "Wear this.

  They'll think you're one of them."

  Gunn stood there rooted, reluctant to desert his friends.

  Giordino came to his rescue by laying a beefy hand on the smaller man's shoulder and steering him to a maintenance passage that dropped beneath the floor and ran around the giant crushing mill.

  "You can get out through here," he said smiling. "Wait until things heat up before you make your break."

  Gunn found himself half under the floor in the passage before he could protest. He took one last look at Pitt, the incredibly durable, indestructible Dirk Pitt, who gave him a jaunty wave. Peerrd at Giordino, old steady and reliable, whose concern was masked by a lighthearted expression. And finally Findley, who flashed a sparkling smile and held up both thumbs. They were all part of him and he was heartsick at leaving, not knowing if he would see any of them alive again.

  "You guys be here when I get back," he said. "You hear?"

  Then he ducked under the flooring and was gone.

  Hollis paced beside the postage-stamp-sized landing pad that the Lady Flamborough's crew had hurriedly fabricated over the swimming pool. A Carrier Pigeon helicopter settled onto the pad as a small team of men waited to board.

  Hollis stopped when he heard a fresh outburst of gunfire from the direction of the mine, his face reflecting concern.

  "Load and get 'em airborne," he shouted impatiently to Dillenger.

  "Somebody's alive up there and fighting our battle."

 

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