Fire Hawk

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Fire Hawk Page 14

by Geoffrey Archer


  ‘You have tonight, understand? Just tonight. Everything has to be finished by morning. Clear?’

  ‘You have the equipment ready?’ one of the men asked.

  ‘Of course we do.’

  ‘Then we’ll do what we can, tovarich. Just keep off our backs, okay?’

  ‘I’ll keep off your backs all right. But I advise you not to fail me.’

  ‘Fuck off, tovarich. We won’t fail.’

  12

  The same evening

  Cherbourg, France

  THE WARM HUE of the hardwood cabin fittings and the firm bulk of the foam-filled seat squabs in Backgammon’s cramped interior fitted Sam like a womb. He was meant to be on a sailing boat. This was his element. From the moment he’d slid back the hatch and breathed in the resinous smell from below, he’d known this escape to Normandy was a good idea.

  He sat now with his knees wedged under the cabin table enjoying the food they’d rustled up from stores Tom Wallace had left in the locker beneath the bunk. Tinned curry, peas and boil-in-the-bag rice. Sitting opposite him was a man some twenty years older than himself.

  ‘Cheers, Nat,’ he said raising his glass of Côtes du Rhône. ‘Good to have you aboard.’

  ‘Bloody good of you to give an old sailor an airing,’ the man replied bibulously.

  Nat Gibbon was not an old sailor, but had spent years trying to look like one. He wore a moth-eaten Guernsey sweater and a sun-faded yachting cap. The ruddy face and watery eyes were natural, but the blue bags and boating shoes were what he put on when going to Sam’s local riverside pub in Barnes. And it was there that he’d found him yesterday evening.

  Gibbon was a regular occupant of the stool at one end of the bar. Sam had often chatted with him about sailing, Nat claiming to have spent a year crewing on board a charter yacht in the Caribbean. Sam had some doubts about the story, but no firm evidence it wasn’t true. When they set sail tomorrow, the man’s experience or lack of it would become instantly obvious.

  His decision to invite Nat along had been very much an afterthought. He’d gone for a quick pint last night before bed. Still feeling dead tired after his ordeal, he’d become increasingly conscious of the pain in his back and legs whenever he moved and realised that a second pair of hands on board to do some of the heavy work might be wise.

  Gibbon had leapt at the chance.

  The man was a writer of sorts. Screenplays for television had been his forte. But the programmes he mentioned when asked about his career seemed to have been aired more than a decade ago. He talked darkly of having been in the big money once, but from what Sam could tell, all he did now was spend it on drink.

  The drive down to the Hamble that morning had been mostly conducted in silence. Neither man had been talkative, each a little shy of the other without the hubbub of the pub to cocoon them. Indeed, one reason Sam thought Gibbon a suitable companion for the next few days was that he never talked much. He also showed little interest in other people’s lives. For much of his time in the bar Nat would sit on his own, staring rheumy-eyed through the windows that overlooked the river, smiling occasionally at the regulars.

  They’d left the car in the marina car park to have it waiting for them when they sailed the boat back to the Hamble, then they’d slung their gear into a minicab for the twenty-minute ride to the cross-channel terminal at Portsmouth.

  Once in Cherbourg and on board the Backgammon, they’d opened up the hatches to freshen the boat and Sam had shown Nat the forepeak cabin where he could sleep. To his relief, Gibbon did seem at home in a yacht. They’d checked fuel and water levels, then Sam had run the engine to charge the batteries and chill the fridge. The water leak Tom Wallace had told him about hadn’t been hard to trace. A hose beginning to split, which he’d done a temporary fix on with tape and a tightening of the jubilee clip which secured it. It irked him that Tom was so useless with things mechanical.

  Now it was nine in the evening.

  Sam finished eating and pushed his plate away. The wine bottle was almost empty, Gibbon having gulped down the larger part of its contents. Sam had the feeling he was expecting to tackle another, but he himself would soon be ready to get his head down.

  ‘What’s the plan tomorrow, skipper?’ Nat asked, a trifle uneasily.

  Sam suspected the sailing his companion had done in the past had had more to do with sun and alcohol than handling a boat in strong winds and heavy seas.

  ‘There’s a nice force five forecast and I’m taking you down the Alderney Race.’

  ‘Oh God, what’s that?’ Gibbon reached for the bottle again, forgetting it was empty.

  ‘If we clear this stuff away, I’ll show you.’

  ‘Oh. Right.’

  They moved the plates to the sink, then Sam turned to the navigator’s table, picking up the chart for the Channel Islands and a Macmillan Almanac. As he spread them on the table he noticed Gibbon’s hands shaking.

  ‘Now . . .’ Sam indicated where they were on the chart. ‘The waters around here are hellishly tidal. Not only a big rise and fall but the tides create strong currents which have a mind all of their own. Particularly now we’re at Springs.’ He opened the almanac at the page showing Channel Island tidal streams. ‘Yes. At about the time we’ll be going down through the gap between Cap de la Hague and Alderney, the water rips south-west at over seven knots.’

  ‘Bloody hell,’ Gibbon gulped. ‘Hope you know what you’re doing with this tub. I mean I’ll pull on the sheets and all that, but I’m a bit rusty on the finer points.’

  ‘Don’t worry. I’ve handled her alone in a force eight before now. Just do as I say and we’ll be fine.’

  ‘No problem. Just give me orders.’

  ‘Tomorrow the wind should be from the north, so wind and tide will be behind us. We’ll be zipping along at around fourteen knots. If you get wind against tide doing the race is impossible.’

  ‘And why exactly are we taking this particular route?’ Gibbon queried, his tone suggesting it was a daft idea.

  ‘Because with the conditions as they are tomorrow it’s the only course that makes sense. We’ll need to be away from here by six, up at half-five for a bite of breakfast. Should easily make Sark by lunch-time. There’s a nice little bay halfway down the eastern side that’s sheltered from the northerlies. With luck the water might even be warm enough to swim in.’

  ‘No chance. I prefer looking at the sea from above.’

  Sam turned to the sink and began washing up the plates. Nat condescended to dry.

  ‘Got any more of that plonk?’ he asked when they were finished. ‘It was slipping down rather nicely.’

  ‘Try in the locker in the middle of the table.’

  ‘Splendid.’

  Sam decided to join him in a glass before turning in.

  ‘Can’t remember what it is you do for a living, skipper,’ Gibbon asked after a silence had dragged on for a while.

  ‘Exhibitions. Setting them up at overseas trade fairs.’

  ‘Oh. Interesting?’

  ‘At times.’

  ‘You just back from somewhere?’

  ‘Jordan. But didn’t get to see much. Just the inside of buildings mostly.’

  It was what he always said when friends asked. Tended to deter further questions.

  ‘I went to Jordan once,’ Gibbon ruminated. ‘Remember The Adventurers? A thirteen-weeker back in the eighties. I did three of the scripts. Bloody hot and the place was full of Arabs.’ He chuckled at his little witticism.

  ‘Still is,’ Sam answered.

  He drained his glass and said he was going to bed.

  ‘What are you like at early mornings?’

  ‘No idea, skipper,’ Gibbon chuckled, holding a brimfull glass. ‘Never tried one.’

  Sam had forgotten to snub the halyards. During the night the wind got up, setting off a relentless pinging of taut rope against alloy mast.

  In the quarter-berth cabin Sam turned restlessly, deeply asleep. Suddenly his body b
egan to twitch and tremble, a vivid nightmare flashing though his brain. In his dream he was in darkness, clawing up a slope to escape the shit-filled whirlpool in the centre of his cell. He sensed someone there, someone watching but not helping. His nails broke on the concrete and his shins burned as some unseen force dragged him back towards the pit. He was naked, the poisonous filth in which he lay leaching into his body through his open wounds.

  There was something banging. A rhythmic tapping against metal, like the radiator pipe he’d been chained to. Then he was on his feet, running, his breath sawing in his ears. Running and getting nowhere. And still close by, watching and not helping, was that same someone . . . He knew who it was now. Knew it from her smell.

  Suddenly something jammed against his gullet, hard and rough like a rope, stopping him in his tracks, stopping his breath. His arms flailed. He knew it was the end. Knew, too, he wasn’t ready for it. Why wouldn’t she help him, this creature whose scent was so comforting? He twisted his head to see her, this woman he knew so well. He pleaded with his eyes. Pleaded for his life.

  Sorry, she mouthed. I’m so very sorry.

  Then the beatings began again. His back, his head. He knew her and yet there she stood doing nothing. Just watching him die. He filled his lungs and screamed her name.

  ‘Chrisssiiiee!’

  Suddenly he was awake. He sat up and banged his head. A coffin! They’d put him in a damned coffin but he wasn’t dead.

  ‘Shi-it!’

  His shins felt as if they’d been scraped with a rasp. Then it came to him. This wasn’t a coffin at all. He was on Backgammon. He reached out and pushed. The cabin door swung open.

  Suddenly a light clicked on in the main cabin, startling him. He’d forgotten he had company. He shielded his eyes and looked across the saloon. Gibbon stood by the door to the forward cabin, bare-chested but struggling into his baggy blue trousers.

  ‘Whatsup?’

  Sam didn’t answer. In his head he still saw Chrissie, her grey smudges of eyes full of a regret which he somehow knew she didn’t feel.

  ‘Bloody hell!’ Gibbon pointed. ‘What’ve you done to your legs?’

  Sam looked down. The dressings on his shins were hanging off and scarlet with blood.

  ‘Shit!’

  He stood there confused, unable to move. He blinked at Nat.

  ‘Don’t know what happened there,’ he mumbled. ‘I’m okay. Really. Look, sorry about this. You go back to bed.’

  ‘Dreaming, was it? You put the fear of God into me with that scream.’

  ‘Sorry.’

  Sam hobbled to the bunk next to the saloon table and sat down, still staring at his shins. He looked at the clock above the chart table. Nearly half-past four in the morning. The chill of the nightmare was still with him.

  ‘I’d do something about those legs if I were you,’ Gibbon suggested helpfully. He’d found his shirt and was buttoning it up.

  ‘I will. You go back to bed.’

  ‘Fat chance. Wide awake now. What you need is some water. Clean yourself up a bit.’

  Realising Gibbon had no intention of helping him, Sam stood up again and opened the locker beneath the sink. He found a fresh pack of J cloths and a plastic bowl which he half-filled from the tap. He dabbed at his shins and eased off the saturated dressings. Must have banged them against something in his sleep.

  ‘Best let the air get at them,’ Gibbon suggested, showing no interest in how the injuries had been acquired. He squeezed past to get to the galley. ‘Fancy a cup of tea?’

  ‘Yes.’

  Sam finished dabbing at his legs, then stared blankly through the hatch at the lightening sky visible through the gap they’d left open for ventilation.

  Hell, he thought. Nightmares he could do without. And why that one? Chrissie hadn’t left him to rot. She’d saved his life.

  And was probably carrying a part of it inside her.

  13

  Wednesday, 2 October, 08.45 hrs

  Baghdad Monitoring and Verification Centre, Iraq

  DEAN BURGESS STOOD in front of one of the split-screen computer terminals watching a technician hop between the outputs of the hundreds of remote cameras that were live-linked back to the BMVC operations room.

  ‘How the heck do you keep track of all this stuff?’ he asked, baffled by the plethora of images.

  ‘The computer helps,’ the technician explained. ‘The system alerts us whenever there’s a change in the image. Then we take a look at it. The pictures are all time-lapse recorded.’

  ‘Oh yeah. Sure,’ shrugged Burgess. Should have thought of that himself. Always a reluctant member of the silicon generation. He turned away from the screens.

  The startling discovery of a man’s body yesterday morning had brought UNSCOM’s excavation of the desert site to an abrupt halt. The red-bereted Special Republican Guard had taken control of the site and ejected the inspection team from it, accusing them of interfering with a grave.

  That action had convinced Burgess that something very odd indeed was going on. The Special Republican Guard had direct lines to the President, he reasoned; if this burial ground in the desert was connected to the biological weapons programme, then surely the presence of a human corpse among the animal carcasses would have been known to the Guards. So why not prevent the inspectors finding such a damning piece of evidence by stopping the dig earlier? Why wait until the stiff came to light? In his own mind it argued for the site being connected with some local mishap rather than anything of international interest.

  Burgess had argued the point with Hardcastle, who’d told him in a tone which he’d found unnecessarily dismissive that he was overlooking the muddle factor and the paranoia factor. What they in the West would call a normal cascading of information from the administration downwards simply didn’t apply in Iraq.

  The inspectors had returned to Baghdad angry and frustrated, praying that the tissue samples which Martha Cok had taken from the lungs of a cow and a goat and hermetically sealed in two specimen boxes would provide the evidence they needed. A lab technician had been working on them overnight.

  Burgess drifted over to a corner of the room where there was a small refrigerator. On top of it an electric kettle fought for space with packs of coffee, tea and whitener. He picked it up to check there was water in it, then clicked the switch and put a spoon of Maxwell House into a plastic cup.

  Despite Hardcastle’s words of caution, the conclusion Burgess had drawn from yesterday’s events was that the Iraqi security people had not known what was buried in the desert, and therefore the men at the top hadn’t either. His expectation of what would emerge from the analysis of the animal samples was low, therefore. He suspected that the cause of the creatures’ death would prove to be something rather less dramatic than pulmonary anthrax or poisoning by botulinum toxin.

  ‘Do me a coffee too, would you?’ Hardcastle had appeared beside him. ‘Frustrating, this hanging around.’

  ‘Like waiting for fish to bite in a swimming pool.’

  For Burgess the wait had had the added disadvantage of setting him thinking about Carole again. Just before leaving home in the Hudson River Valley to catch the flights to Europe and Bahrain she’d told him he was on notice. That if he didn’t buck up and become a proper husband and father again, they’d be heading for divorce. The injustice which he perceived in the situation had gotten his investigative mind scouring through their ten years of marriage trying to find the point where it went sour.

  They’d begun dating at sixteen as high-school sweethearts, kept the romance going through college, then married a couple of months after graduation. To the best of his knowledge he was the only man she’d ever had sex with, and, apart from a couple of misguided and embarrassing one-night stands, she was the only woman he himself had had. The church had played a big part in their lives both as kids and in the early years of their marriage, but in the past couple of years Carole had mostly taken Patty and Dean Jr to the Sunday service on her own.<
br />
  Their sexual relationship had all but ceased in recent months and he knew it was his fault. When he’d been around at a suitable time to initiate it, he’d wanted it so bad it had been over almost as soon as it began, leaving her wound up and dissatisfied; whenever she’d tried to get things started he was usually too preoccupied to perform.

  The whole framework of their relationship was going to have to change if they were to get their balance back, she’d told him. And she was right – if the marriage was to survive as anything more than an umbrella for the kids to grow up under, they would need somehow to find space and time for each other. But the way she seemed to think it could be achieved was for him a non-runner. Pledge for the Family, the renewal movement she was pressing him to join, aimed ‘to get America’s pops back into the pews’. Even if he went along with that, he knew the fundamental problem would remain. The job was demanding more from him than ever before and he had no inclination to change it.

  ‘Ah, at last,’ Hardcastle breathed, clutching the coffee Burgess had made for him. ‘News!’

  Martha Cok had entered the room. After hours in the lab she looked weary but triumphant.

  ‘Well?’ Hardcastle demanded, hungry for the confirmation he needed.

  ‘Here,’ she replied, handing him a sheet of paper.

  Hardcastle read her note and smiled with satisfaction. ‘Excellent, Martha. Excellent.’ Then he passed it to Burgess.

  Cause of death of the cow and goat examined on site and at BMVC lab – internal haemorrhaging due to inhalation of anthrax spores. Live organisms were found in the lung tissue. Animals had almost certainly been used in an experiment to test biological weapons material.

  ‘Excellent,’ Hardcastle repeated, burning with excitement. ‘We’ll nail Saddam to the wall with this one.’

  Burgess swallowed hard. He’d judged it wrong. Totally wrong. But the key question in his head remained. Who among the Iraqi hierarchy had known about it?

  He detected a new glint in Hardcastle’s eyes. St George had his dragon in sight.

 

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