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Black Cobra aq-2

Page 17

by John Avery


  “There’s something I’ve been meaning to tell you as well, Jason,” she said. “You’ll never be half the man your brother was.”

  Jason faked a smile and then turned and left the room.

  Brandy tried to sit up and call for help, but she was far too weak and only managed a feeble moan.

  Chapter 61

  Aaron held Katya tightly, not knowing how to comfort a girl who just witnessed her own father’s suicide.

  He turned to look at Brandy, who’d been standing by the open hatch where they had come in, but she was gone.

  “Keep Katya here with you,” he said to his mother, handing Ekatarina to her, and then he ducked through the hatch into Compartment Two.

  * * *

  Aaron splashed down the corridor, quickly checking each of the rooms, and when he checked the Captain’s Cabin he saw Brandy lying on the bunk with a wound to the stomach, blood soaking her dress and the blanket on which she lay.

  Of all the people on earth, there was no one she would rather have seen walk through that door. She managed a weak smile and held out her hand, speaking just above a whisper.

  “Aaron…”

  Aaron squeezed her hand, and then he pulled off his shirt and used it to help stop the bleeding, but Brandy’s face was pale; she had clearly lost a lot of blood already. All he could think to do was make her as comfortable as possible. He sat next to her on the bunk and took her hand. “Lie still, Brandy. You’re going to be all right.”

  She looked up at him and spoke in the calm voice. “People used to ask me why I was always attracted to the weird ones,” she said. “I never really knew how to answer that question.”

  Jason did this, Aaron thought, and a rage unlike any he had ever known swelled in his breast.

  She squeezed his hand. “I love you Aaron,” she said.

  He looked at her for a long moment. “I love you, too, Brandy.”

  “Katya told me about your ordeal with Johnny Souther,” she said, “and that answers a lot of my questions about you. But there’s something you need to know about me.” She turned and coughed into the blanket. “My name’s not really Brandy Fine. I-it’s Barbara Fischer. Johnny renamed me after we first met.”

  “You know Johnny Souther?” Aaron said.

  “We were lovers,” Brandy said, gritting her teeth in pain. “We lived together until the day he died.”

  Aaron was suddenly outside Sally’s Diner again as he and Willy pulled the triggers on their assault rifles and watched Johnny Souther die in a shower of glass.

  “Th-there’s one more thing,” Brandy said. “Jason told me his last name isn’t Beckham. It’s Souther. He’s Johnny’s brother.”

  Aaron’s brain nearly shut down. All the time he had spent with Jason, the weeks at sea, the bars, the cafés — the camaraderie. How could he have been so stupid?

  “Jason told me Johnny was dead when he found him,” Brandy said, “but I think he’s the one who killed him.”

  What? No, Aaron thought. I’m the one who killed him.

  Then, with a rush, it all dawned on him: Jason was the one driving the black Hummer!

  Brandy took hold of Aaron’s arm and looked him in the eye. “Promise me, Aaron,” she said. “If it’s the last thing you do on this earth…”

  But then she was gone.

  Rest easy my dear friend, he thought, touching her shoulder. That’s exactly what I’m planning to do.

  He stood and went in search of Jason Souther.

  Chapter 62

  The water was thigh high as Aaron splashed through the hatch into the Control Room. More icy water sprayed in on him from every direction, and footing was difficult and progress slow due to the now steeply sloping deck.

  For a brief, terrifying moment, the lights went out, and when they blinked on again, Aaron saw, to his horror, that Jason had somehow gotten past him and was standing near the helm controls holding Ashley and Katya at gunpoint.

  Jason’s back was turned, and with his free hand he was trying desperately to restart the electric motors. Aaron wanted to blow Jason’s brains out, but Ashley and Katya were too near to his line of fire.

  The girls saw him and wanted to call out to him, but he shook his head and held a finger to his lips, and then moved slowly over and pointed his pistol at the back of Jason’s head.

  “You and your brother are the reason I have no family!” Aaron said.

  Jason froze for a long moment, and then suddenly he jerked to the side, grabbing Katya and backing off with his gun to her head. “What are you talking about?” he said. “Johnny’s dead.”

  “I’m the one who killed him,” Aaron said.

  Jason looked carefully at Aaron. “Wait a minute,” he said. “You were at Sally’s Diner that night. You left in an Aston Martin DBS.”

  “And you’re the one that hit us and ran!” Aaron cried.

  “What? I may have saved your life!” Jason said. “We were halfway to the hospital before the cops came and fucked everything up!”

  Ashley Quinn’s hand went to her mouth and she stared at Aaron in disbelief. Tears filled her eyes as a flood of memories rocked her senses and she was overwhelmed with both sorrow and joy. She had wanted so badly to remember… She had wanted so badly to know who the young man named Aaron really was.

  Aaron glanced at her and his heart stopped. Through her tears he could see the clear light of understanding in her eyes.

  His mother was back.

  * * *

  Suddenly the submarine’s pressure hull thumped and squealed as another rusted bulkhead weld gave way to the pressure.

  Jason shoved Katya aside and fired. Ashley screamed as the bullet grazed the thin flesh covering Aaron’s ribs. He staggered back and fired just as Jason ducked through the watertight hatch to Compartment Four.

  “Head for the Forward Torpedo Room,” he told the girls. “I’ll meet you there.”

  He went after Jason.

  * * *

  Ashley felt a rush of adrenaline as her motherly instincts returned with a vengeance. She spotted a large pipe wrench on a shelf and picked it up. It had a good weight to it.

  “I’m going with him,” she said.

  Katya hefted her own heavy piece of iron. “So am I. If we’re going to die tonight… it may as well be in a fight!”

  * * *

  Jason ran through Compartments 4, 5 and 6, all the way to the stern of the boat, Compartment Seven, the Aft Torpedo Room.

  He climbed to the top of the compartment, frantically trying to get out through the escape hatch. But, to his dismay, instead of repairing it, the workmen had simply welded it shut.

  Just then Aaron peered in through the watertight hatch.

  Jason saw him and fired, the bullet ricocheting off the steel ring, inches from Aaron’s face.

  Aaron fired back and missed.

  Suddenly a large pressure valve blew, spraying water like a fireman’s hose, knocking Jason off his feet.

  Aaron saw him go down and stepped inside the room with him. The water was waist deep now and spraying everywhere, making it difficult to move.

  The lights blinked out again and then flickered back on.

  Jason found his feet and spotted Aaron. He fired and missed.

  Aaron had a clear shot and pulled the trigger, but his gun just clicked.

  Jason knew it immediately and turned to fire.

  Aaron dove underwater and came up catching him from behind. They tumbled into the water and Jason grabbed Aaron by the hair and held him down, leaning hard, using his full weight to shove him deeper underwater. Aaron kicked and twisted, unable to catch a breath, hair tearing from his scalp, but his opponent was too powerful.

  Suddenly something struck Jason on the back of his skull, shattering his vision with a burst of blinding white light. Dazed, he lost his grip on Aaron and turned in time to see Katya taking another arcing swing at him with her heavy pipe. He caught the blow with his hand and wrenched the pipe from her grip, knocking her backward i
nto the black, swirling water.

  Aaron surfaced, sputtering and coughing, while behind him Jason raised the pipe high.

  “AARON!” Ashley shouted through the din.

  Aaron looked up just as his mother tossed the pipe wrench, catching it with one hand, while Jason’s blow glanced painfully off his shoulder. He spun around with all the force he could muster, smashing Jason high in the throat. Blood spewed from between Jason’s clenched teeth as reflex sent his hand to his crushed larynx. In disbelief he looked squarely at Aaron, then his eyes rolled up, and he fell face first into the rising water.

  Chapter 63

  Katya and Ashley stood dazed, waist deep in bloody seawater, being hit from all sides by the relentless, freezing spray. Aaron gathered them into his arms and held them for a long moment.

  Just then the lights went out. Katya screamed, cowering back in disgusted horror. Something in the dark water had bumped into her hip.

  The lights blinked on again, and Aaron saw that it was Fagan’s dead body, its flesh gray and swollen. He tried to turn Katya away, but she saw it and screamed again, causing Ashley to scream as well.

  “Let’s get the hell out of here,” Aaron shouted through the deafening spray, and at last they headed out of the Aft Torpedo Room.

  * * *

  Aaron swung the watertight hatch cover closed, sealing them off from the massive flow of water, but the Electric Motor Room was flooding as well now. Sparks arced and spit from the huge motors and control panels, and Aaron was concerned that they would all be electrocuted.

  They moved on, passing through the Engine Room and Machinery Control Room before climbing the short stairway into Compartment Four, where they were out of the deepest water for a moment. Boxes of rice and other food items floated in the water near the Galley, as they moved along the tilted corridor.

  * * *

  They stepped through the watertight hatch into Compartment Three, and Aaron closed and sealed that hatch as well.

  For a moment he just stood there, looking around the Control Room, casting desperately about for an idea — any idea. There had to be a way out of this. The air was thick and heavy, smelling of diesel oil and burnt wiring, becoming more and more difficult to breathe.

  He looked up into the conning tower, but he knew that with the weight of half the bay sitting on top of it, he’d never be able to get the fin hatch open without first flooding the submarine to equalize the pressure.

  Just then the boat shuddered as its bow rose slightly. The stern was filling with water, leaving an air pocket toward the bow. Aaron knew they would have air as long as they kept moving toward the front of the ship.

  He saw a coil of rope hanging near the chart table, and suddenly an idea came to him. It was crazy, and extremely risky, but it was all he had.

  He steeled himself and grabbed the rope, draping it over his shoulder. Then he looked at the shivering girls.

  “I think I have a plan,” he said, sounding as confident as he could. “Are you guys ready to get out of here?”

  There was a light in Aaron’s eyes they hadn’t seen in a while, and they nodded hopefully.

  “All right,” he said. “Follow me.”

  Chapter 64

  The second their flight touched down at San Diego International, Harness placed a call to Naval Command in Point Loma.

  “Who did you say this was?” the receptionist asked, her tone arrogant and patronizing.

  “I’m Detective James Harness,” he repeated, slower this time. “I work in a small precinct on the East Coast.”

  “And what’s this regarding?” she said.

  “I’d rather speak to someone higher up. This is a matter of national security.”

  “I’m sorry, but I can’t transfer you till I know what this is regarding.”

  “It’s about a possible assassination attempt on the President,” Harness said impatiently. “We’re wasting precious time here. It’s happening as we speak!”

  “Hold please,” the receptionist said, and she was gone.

  Harness waited for what felt like an hour. He was just about to hang up when the receptionist returned to the line, sounding like a digital recording. Harness could not get a word in edgewise.

  “We appreciate your concern,” she said. “However, I’ve been instructed to assure you that sufficient security has been arranged for the President’s visit. If you have any further questions or concerns you may try our website at…” She gave Harness a complicated website address and hung up.

  “Damn it,” Harness mumbled to himself. “I’m an officer of the law… and they couldn’t care less.”

  He briefly considered calling the SDPD, but he knew that dealing with another bureaucracy and another patronizing receptionist would cost him valuable time. And he’d lost too much time already.

  * * *

  Darkness had settled on the city when Harness and Holt took a cab from the airport to the Maritime Museum of San Diego, and when they jumped out and ran down to where b-39 should have been, they were surprised to see nothing but a huge, white plastic tarp.

  “What the hell is this all about?” Harness said.

  They crossed the wooden gangplank, and when they pulled back the flap they discovered that the entire submarine was missing.

  Very clever, Harness thought, admiring the ingenuity. Enclose the sub in a weathertight shelter, and no one will ever know you’re gone.

  He spotted the Zodiac tied up to the dock and threw a glance at Holt.

  Holt gave him a look that said, No way, Detective. I’m not going out on that huge bay in the dark in that thing!

  “If you’ve got a better idea, I’m all ears,” Harness said.

  Holt didn’t.

  “After you,” Harness said.

  They stepped into the Zodiac and headed off across the black waters of San Diego Bay.

  Chapter 65

  The ship continued to tilt upward and to the side, and as Aaron, Ashley, and Katya moved toward the bow they faced a steep, awkward incline. The sub was almost totally flooded now, and it seemed that no matter how high they climbed they were always waist deep in seawater.

  At last they reached the bow of the ship, and the hatch leading to Compartment One, the Forward Torpedo Room. They ducked inside and Aaron cranked the hatch cover closed.

  * * *

  The water was only knee deep there, and at first Aaron thought it wasn’t rising, but he was wrong. It was rising faster than ever.

  Aaron found it harder to breathe in there, as well, as if all of the bad air from the entire submarine had been compressed into the small space they were in. He tried to breath only through his mouth, but it didn’t work. We’re running out of oxygen, he thought, panic teasing his insides.

  He looked around and found the Submerged Escape Apparatus hanging where he and Uri had seen it earlier. He removed it from its hook and turned to the girls.

  “Here’s the plan,” he said. “This is a rescue breather — a lung for breathing underwater. We’re going to use it to swim out through the torpedo tube.”

  The girls looked at him as if he’d gone completely insane.

  “Can we do that?” Ashley asked.

  “To be honest, I’m not really sure,” Aaron said quickly. “All I know is, I read about a guy who did it once and lived to talk about it.”

  The freezing seawater had risen to waist deep, and the girls huddled together in a vain attempt to keep warm.

  The lights continued to flicker dangerously, threatening to cut out once and for all. Aaron knew that if he and the girls were plunged into total darkness before he was ready, they were done for.

  He checked the lung; the gauge indicated that it still had a small amount of oxygen in it. “This lung is very old, and won’t be very effective,” he said. “So we’ll have to move fast.”

  “Th-that’s the only one?” Katya said, shivering uncontrollably now.

  “Yes,” Aaron said. “You two will have to share.”

 
“But what about you?” Ashley said.

  “I’ll be fine,” Aaron said quickly, and he could only pray that that was true.

  He gave the girls a quick demonstration on the use of the lung. “Just breathe into this mouthpiece. The air will come automatically.”

  The girls looked at the device doubtfully.

  “And no matter what happens,” he said, “don’t follow me into the tube until I signal you, okay?”

  The girls nodded.

  * * *

  Aaron showed Katya the button that would open the torpedo tube’s outer door. “Remember, don’t open the door until the seawater level reaches the top of the tube,” he said. “We have to fill this compartment enough to flood the entire tube, if we’re going to have any chance of equalizing the pressure.”

  “Understood,” Katya said.

  The water level was rapidly rising, and the lights continued to blink off and on, making it nearly impossible for Aaron to concentrate. He handed one end of the rope to Ashley, tying the other end around his waist, and then, saying a quick prayer, crawled into the tube.

  * * *

  Space was tight there in the tube. The only thing Aaron could get a grip on were the thin lands, raised strips of steel running the length of the tube. He muscled his way to the muzzle end and grabbed hold of the crossbar that stiffened the tube’s outer door.

  At last the water in the torpedo room reached the level of the tube. Aaron felt the change in pressure in his ears, and what little light he had was pushed out as the cold bay water rushed in, filled the tube, chilling him to the bone.

  He took one last breath and held on to the crossbar as the water swirled in over his head. The darkness was complete.

  Press the button, he thought. Come on Katya, the tube is full, girl… I need for you to press the button.

 

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