Authors: Peter Tonkin
Richard's next port of call was the afterdeck where he checked that the Changhe was being refuelled and that Fatfist was doing a good enough job of keeping
Neptune
safely in place three metres below
Poseidon
's screws, thirty more behind her square stern. He rested his hand on the thrumming tow rope and looked narrow-eyed into the water it was cutting like a cheese wire. Then he returned to the bridge and joined Nic and Chang watching narrow-eyed as the red dots on Straightline's display converged, and the vessels they represented began to come together.
Both
Flint
and
Katapult
were on the radio now that range was short and line-of-sight signals easily received; Liberty and Robin offered running commentaries on progress as they made their final tacks and began their closing runs in across the suddenly sporadic northerly from the north-east and the south-west, both fiercely fixated still on being the first to recover the bottle, neither of them welcoming the distraction of incoming contact. Richard and Nic talked to them when permitted, but their advice like their eyes focused on the looming bulk of
Dagupan Maru
. The nearer it came, the more threatening it seemed. Richard had taken for granted that the massive freighter could run over
Katapult
or
Flint
with ease, but now he was beginning to wonder whether those brutal bows could smash even
Poseidon
to kindling.
As he wondered, so Nature began to take a hand in the already tense situation. The clouds thinned and the sky began to clear with unsettling rapidity while the wind, already fitful, became sporadic, falling through three on the Beaufort scale disturbingly quickly. Then two. Amid howls of frustration from both Liberty and Robin, an almost dead calm descended. Air stilled. Clouds vanished. The sun came out hot and heavy.
The yachts were slowed to a dead stop, their sails drooping emptily, flapping fitfully as the wind deserted both of them. But, while they lost their forward motion and settled to a standstill like two more bits of flotsam in the huge Sargasso of plastic, the powered vessels continued to surge ahead.
Dagupan Maru
and
Poseidon
began to close together on the central dot that gave the position of Tanaka's Cheerio bottle.
Robin broke first, but only by moments â probably because she had
Dagupan Maru
closing relentlessly from the north and
Poseidon
powering in from the west while the wind had utterly abandoned her. â
Katapult
's in motion,' observed Straightline suddenly and Richard crossed to the console. âShe's started her motor,' he deduced. âAnd there goes
Flint
.'
âYou can hardly blame them,' said Nic defensively. âThey've come so far and now . . .' His voice trailed off and he looked out of the clearview at the burnished blue sky, the white disc of the sun, the utter calm of the littered water â stirred now only by the long deep-ocean rollers and the relentless approach of the two motor vessels. Beginning to steam a little in the humid heat. âI'd fire up the on-board motor and cruise for the last couple of miles.'
âMe too,' admitted Richard. âWhat's the old saying? “If at first you don't succeed,
cheat
!” That's one of my favourites. Captain Chang, can you swing
Poseidon
to the south? It looks as though there's clearer water there; we can maybe push our speed up a notch or two. Then we've maybe got enough sea room to swing round on to a northerly bearing. I'd rather be head to head with Sittart than have him coming at my beam like a Roman galley at ramming speed.'
â
Shi
,' nodded Chang. âIt is so.'
Poseidon
swept south, accelerating into an area of clear water and racing up towards her at full speed then swung on to a northerly bearing, so that the disposition of the five dots on Straightline's schematic looked roughly cruciform.
Dagupan Maru
and
Poseidon
were facing each other and closing on a north-south heading. The two yachts were coming in north and south of the east-west axis, depending on the last tack they had taken before the wind deserted them. And the red dot of Reona Tanaka's bottle sat squarely in the middle.
âNic,' said Richard, âcome with me. It's time we got an overview of this situation. Bring the binoculars.'
Side by side they hurried along the length of the adapted frigate until they were standing on the afterdeck between the helicopter and the line holding
Neptune
in place. âYou go up and I go down,' said Richard. âOne way or another we need to know every move they make from here on in. Whether they know it or not â whether they like it or not â the girls are depending on us now.'
Nic nodded decisively and climbed aboard the Changhe holding the binoculars in one white-knuckled hand. He pulled on the headset and settled the stalk of the mic. âReady,' he said and his voice echoed through the loud-hailing system, then he cinched his seat belt tight and raised his empty fist.
As Nic went up in the chopper with the binoculars to take the high ground, Richard went below. He first checked on Ironwrist in the control room, then he returned to the bridge where he could watch what was going on. No sooner had he arrived than Straightline said, â
Dagupan Maru
's slowing . . .'
Richard could see that the telltale white line of the freighter's bow wave was thinning. âHe's up to something,' he said.
And Nic's voice came through on the radio. âHe's dropping lifeboats. I count three. All packed with men and they all look armed to the teeth!'
âThat's one for
Katapult
, one for
Flint
and one to recover the bottle,' snapped Richard. âWarn the women, Nic.'
He clapped his hands and rubbed the palms together.
âLet's get busy,' he muttered, speaking almost exclusively to himself. âI'm off below,' he said more loudly to Straightline. âI'll want pretty precise bearings that will get me to the lifeboat that's after
Flint
first,' he ordered brusquely. âThen we'll take it from there.'
A couple of moments later he settled in beside Ironwrist. âI think I'd better do this bit,' he said. âIt could get nasty and it could get legal later.'
âOK,' said Ironwrist, as though he knew exactly what the mad gwailo giant was talking about. But to be fair, he had been one of the first to call him the
Goodluck Giant
â and he had never had any cause to change the nickname.
Neptune
was three metres below the littered surface of the battleground, powering forward at her full ten knots. With Straightline calling course and bearings from a combination of GPS readings, red-dot sightings and simple observation, the remote submersible headed unerringly towards the becalmed and helpless
Flint
. Nic supplemented Straightline's directions because, from the high ground of the chopper, he could see what those on the water could not â and he got occasional glimpses of the daffodil-yellow vessel as she raced though the water ten feet beneath the thick-piled garbage. Richard was surprised by how quickly the GPS showed his remote vehicle was close to Liberty's command. Then, again taking his directions from Straightline and Nic, he headed towards the nearest lifeboat. As he pushed
Neptune
towards her limit he caught himself wondering whether he should get Nic to call some kind of warning on the chopper's loud hailer. But then the distraught father made up his mind for him. â
Richard!
They've opened fire! Shit, Richard, they're shooting! At both Liberty and me! The bastards didn't even give a warning . . .'
âYou OK?' asked Richard, his focus exclusively on what
Neptune
could see.
âYeah. And the girls seem OK too. But
Jesus
 . . .'
âHardball it is, then,' said Richard. âTell them to forget the bottle, Nic. Head for
Poseidon
now! No argument. No excuses! And tell
Katapult
the same.'
Even as Nic's orders to
Flint
came through on Richard's headset, the picture on
Neptune
's screen showed the keel of the lifeboat coming into view, punching through a solid ceiling of rubbish that looked thick enough to conceal the submersible from above. Richard angled the vessel down a little, then swung her round until she was following just behind the lifeboat's propeller. Holding his breath with the tension he unfolded one of
Neptune
's mechanical arms and pulled out one of the magnetic explosive charges she used for deep-water demolition work. It took less than a moment to attach it to the metal blade of the lifeboat's rudder. Then he said to Ironwrist, âDive, dive, dive!' and hit the remote detonator button.
The explosion was supposed to disable the vessel but instead it blew the entire stern off the lifeboat and sent the warlike crewmen straight into the water. âMy God! That was more than I expected!' said Richard. âStill, with any luck it should distract their mates for as long as it takes to pick them up . . .'
âI don't think so,' came Nic's distant voice. âNeither of the other boats has turned off course. Liberty! For heaven's sake do what I say. Head straight for
Poseidon
! Now!'
â
A friend in need is a friend indeed
,' observed Richard cynically. âIs
Katapult
coming in?'
âNo,' said Nic. âShe's still going for the bloody bottle.'
âYes,' confirmed Captain Chang. âCaptain Mariner says if you watch her back for five more minutes . . .'
âIt won't be as easy this time. They'll know I'm out here somewhere . . . I'll bet they're keeping careful watch now. Anything else I should know?'
âWind's picking up again,' Straightline said. âIt's from the south this time.'
âThat'll slow
Katapult
big time,' said Richard grimly. âEspecially if it picks up. She must be heading directly into it. She can't start sailing and tacking across it again. She'll just have to go full throttle, hell for leather, and hope . . .'
âThe other lifeboats are closing up with her though,' warned Nic. âWith those three hulls of hers she's got three times more exposure to the rubbish than the lifeboats have. I'd say at least one lifeboat's going to catch her before she gets to the bottle, let alone before she gets to
Poseidon
.'
â
Bloody woman
!' swore Richard. âStraightline! Get me to the nearest lifeboat and I'll try kicking ass again . . .'
âYou'd better hurry,' warned Nic. âThey've opened fire again . . .'
â
Christ!
' blasphemed Richard. âHow's
Flint
?'
âComing in pretty quickly now, thank God. She'll be alongside
Poseidon
in five minutes,' Nic called.
âRight. So, where's the nearest lifeboat to
Katapult
?'
âDead ahead, Captain Mariner,' answered Straightline. âIf you keep going on that course . . .'
Richard could see the turbulence generated by the lifeboat's propeller in the distance. He pushed
Neptune
to maximum revs and was pulling up towards it in a matter of minutes. He checked all around him on the remote vehicle's sensors. The ceiling above him was still thick with plastic debris and even though the lifeboat was making enough way to create a considerable wake, he calculated that, as with the first, he would be able to sneak up behind it and blow the stern off. âUpdate me, Straightline,' he ordered as he came closer.
â
Flint
is almost alongside
Poseidon
,' Straightline answered. â
Katapult
is still after the bottle and the two lifeboats are closing with her.'
âI have one in my sights,' said Richard. âClosing now.' He brought
Neptune
up under the stern of the second lifeboat and placed the second mine. Mildly surprised at getting away with the same trick twice, he detonated the charge. A moment later, the second lifeboat was sinking like the first and all of its crew were in the water. Then, emboldened by the success of his strategy so far, he went after the third boat. The one still relentlessly closing in on
Katapult
.
Using Straightline's directions, he swept beneath
Katapult
's triple hull and closed with the last lifeboat, swinging under her stern. But this time, as he reached out with his last charge,
Neptune
's articulated arm was roughly caught by a brutal hook. The whole vessel was jerked up to the surface and Richard found himself looking at a face familiar from the mugshots Jim Bourne had sent of
Dagupan Maru's
officers. This one was called Sakai Inazo. He was first officer. Even as Richard recognized him, Sakai started shooting at
Neptune
, point-blank. Richard lurched back in his seat as though the bullets could hurt him. And then he leaped to his feet with shock. The screen before him exploded into dazzling brightness and for an instant he thought the shots must have smashed
Neptune
's video. Then he saw the figures from her onboard temperature gauges and realized the truth, even before he recognized that Sakai's burly figure was wreathed in red and yellow flames. He was halfway out of the door when the alarms started and Chang's voice bellowed, âCaptain Mariner to the bridge! Captain Mariner to the bridge!'
On A deck he met Nic and Liberty, also rushing upwards. The gaping bulkhead door behind them showed
Flint
etched against a wall of fire. âEveryone off
Flint
?' he gasped.
Liberty nodded, her eyes huge. âJust . . .'
âThen it's
Katapult
next . . .' he grated. And realized they couldn't hear him; he could hardly hear himself because of the simply appalling noise coming in from outside.