Authors: Hammond Innes
I stayed there by the beacon, watching through the glasses, waiting to see what would happen now. They were on board exactly seventeen and a half minutes by my watch and it was Gareth himself who escorted Fuxá and his two companions to the head of the ladder, saluting perfunctorily, then turning away. The Army officer did not salute and there were no handshakes, the three of them hurrying down the ladder to the waiting launch without looking back.
I watched them all the time through the glasses, and all the way through the narrows they stood silent and grim-faced, none of them saying a word.
Nothing happened after the launch had returned to the inner harbour. Nobody else came out to the frigate, so I presumed the deadline had been extended. It was siesta time anyway. The day dragged on, no sign of Petra or Lennie, with the result that I was marooned in the midst of what now seemed something of a non-event, everything so quiet, so peaceful it was almost unbelievable, and only the absence of any movement in or out of the harbour to convince me of the reality of it.
I had time then to think about myself â my own life and
how sailing, and a fascination for the precision of target shooting, had given me the means to live by my wits in a world that seemed to be getting everlastingly richer as more and more successful businessmen decided to make the Mediterranean their playpen. It had seemed so easy. Exciting too. Then I had met Soo and the urge to build something solid, a business of my own, a family, had brought me here.
And now?
I went over it all in my mind, sitting in the blazing sun beside the half-cleared outline of that fallen taula â the night of that Red Cross barbecue in the Quarries, the cave and the loss of the child, the murder of Jorge Martinez, that big beautiful catamaran and the blind stupidity of my desire to own it.
And Soo. My mind kept coming back to Soo. The only sheet anchor I had ever had. And I had lost her.
Give my love to Soo,
he had said with that funny little smile. And he was there, on that frigate, and she could see the ship from her bedroom window.
Pray for me,
he had said.
Hell! It was I who needed praying for, sitting alone beside a religious monument fashioned by Bronze Age men some three thousand years ago, and wanted by the police.
Shortly after four, with Mahon active again after the three-hour break, a convoy of over half a dozen yachts left. There was activity in the port area now. But still no sign of either Petra or Lennie, and no means of crossing the water to Mahon. The narrows on the north side of Bloody Island are barely three hundred metres wide and I was greatly tempted to swim across, but it would undoubtedly be under observation, and apart from the Naval Base, I was certain the whole peninsula that formed the northern arm of the harbour was in the hands of the new regime. How much of Menorca they held, outside of the Mahon area, I had no means of knowing. Not all of it probably. Several times I thought I heard firing away to the south-west, in
the direction of the airport. Then suddenly there was the sound of engines, a distant rumble from the far end of the port, by the new cargo quay.
It was the Libyan freighter getting under way, the harbour tug pulling her bows clear and swinging them round, so that they were pointed straight towards me. At the same time, the harbour master's launch left the Estacion Maritima, accompanied by two other launches. I was standing by the red-flashing beacon again when they passed through the narrows, but I couldn't see who was on board the harbour launch. It was flanked by what looked like a harbour police launch and a customs launch. Only the harbour master's launch went alongside
Medusa's
ladder, and though somebody attempted to go on board, his way was blocked by a burly petty officer standing immovably halfway up it.
The little tableau remained motionless for some time, the man on the grating gesticulating very energetically and an officer, Sykes probably, on the deck above. I watched them arguing through the glasses until my attention was distracted by the increasing rumble of ships' engines. The freighter, with the tug leading it, was approaching the narrows. It was low in the water, not yet unloaded, so it could hardly be intending to leave port. And behind me, just visible beyond the rocks above Petra's landing place, I could see the bows of the small oil tanker lying in Cala Figuera beginning to swing as she fetched her anchor.
The tug was through the narrows by then and headed direct for
Medusa
. The beat of the freighter's engines slowed as she passed so close to me I could see that the Arabic letters of her name had been painted over some earlier name, the outline of which suggested that she had originally been Greek, possibly Russian, for the faint lettering appeared to be Cyrillic. The rusty plates slid by, the bridge housing at the stern seeming to tower over me.
In the distance I could just hear the tug exchanging
words with the harbour launch over loudhailers, and at the same time Gareth appeared on the frigate's bridge wing. He had his hand to his mouth, holding a mike I think, because even at that distance I could hear his voice quite clearly, it was so powerfully amplified. He spoke in English, very simply: â
I have to warn you that any ship coming within two hundred metres of my anchorage will be regarded as having committed a hostile act
.'
He turned then and I think he must have given an order, for as Lieutenant Sykes hurried to his side and began repeating what he had said in Spanish, the turret of the two 4.5-inch guns slowly swivelled, the barrels no longer aimed at the heights above Cala Llonga, but being lowered, slowly and menacingly, to point directly at the freighter.
It flashed through my mind then what a chance he was taking â or was he bluffing? For a British warship to open fire on the ship of a country we were not at war with, however unfriendly that country might be, and to do it while anchored in the harbour of a Nato ally ⦠It didn't bear thinking about and I almost held my breath as I waited to see what the freighter would do, wondering whether Gareth was acting on his own initiative or whether he was covered by explicit orders. I hoped, for his sake, that it was the latter.
Everything now was in slow motion. The launch had pulled away from
Medusa's
side to join the others, the three of them in a close huddle as though the vessels themselves were discussing the situation. The frigate's guns stayed implacably levelled at the approaching superstructure of the freighter, which was now barely moving. A sudden swirl of water at her stern and she was stationary, everything held motionless as in a still picture.
The sun had begun to set, a lovely golden glow lighting up the grey slab-plated side of the frigate. Time passed, nothing happening, but the tension seeming steadily to increase as the sunset glow deepened to red so that the
villas above Cala Llonga and Cala Lladró were all aflame, the bare scrubland above taking fire.
The police launch was the first to break away, ploughing back through the narrows at full speed. At the same time the harbour launch went alongside the tug. It was there for several minutes, then it made across to the freighter, going alongside on the port hand where I couldn't see it. Meanwhile, the customs launch had passed astern of
Medusa
and disappeared in the direction of Cala Llonga, or perhaps further along the peninsula, by Lazareto Island. I couldn't follow its movements because it was hidden from me by the frigate.
By now lights had begun to appear along the Mahon waterfront and in the town above. The clouds had thickened, darkness closing in early. I could still just see the harbour launch. It paused briefly to turn and run parallel with the tanker, which was already approaching the narrows. Then, when it had resumed course for the Estación Maritima, the tanker changed direction to pass out of my sight to the south of Bloody Island. At that moment
Medusa
leapt suddenly into fairy-like outline, her deck, upperworks and mast all picked out by strings of light bulbs â Gareth Lloyd Jones cocking a snook at the waiting ships and the shore. It was as if he was saying, âHere I am, still anchored here and my guns ready. What are you going to do about it?'
After that I didn't stay much longer by the beacon. There was no point. It was already too dark to see what was going on ashore. The tug and the freighter had been joined by the tanker, all three of them anchored astern of the frigate and well beyond the two-hundred-metre protection zone Gareth had declared for himself. Stiff and tired, I went back to the camp, where I lit the pressure lamp, raided Petra's drink cupboard for a glass of brandy, and got the paraffin stove going to heat up one of her packets of instant food.
The sound of an engine sent me tumbling back to my
lookout point by the red-flashing beacon. It was the harbour launch, back again, and I watched as the dim shape of it passed through the narrows, making straight for
Medusa
. The frigate had swung with the slight movement of the tide, so that through the glasses I had an even clearer view of the launch as it went alongside the ladder. One man only got off and was escorted to the bridge. It wasn't Romacho, and it certainly wasn't Fuxa. This was a much taller man wearing a seaman's cap and dark jersey.
A stone clinked behind me and I swung round as a voice spoke out of the darkness â âYour grub's boiling over, mate.'
It was Lennie. He had rowed across in a borrowed dinghy from the little gut in the cliffs below Villa Carlos known as Cala Corb. âI turned the stove off. Better eat it now, then if you wanter go ashore I'll take yer.' He was staggering off towards the dark bulk of the hospital ruins. âThey've kicked most of the prisoners out of the jail and locked up half a dozen senior officers of the
Guardia
and the national police instead, including your friends Menendez and Molina. You'll be safe enough.' His voice was slurred and he moved with care for he had spent most of the day in the waterfront cafe-bars. No, he didn't know where Petra was, and he hadn't been near the chandlery nor seen anything of Soo. âWouldn't go near âer, mate. I told yer. She fired me. Just like that. She can go to hell.' He was very drunk, holding himself stiff and erect.
His news, gathered at second hand in the waterfront cafe-bars, was that as yet the new regime controlled barely half the island. But they had the key points â La Mola and Punta de Santo Carlos to the south of the Mahon entrance, both airports, the radio and radar station on El Toro, also the town of Alayor. But in the country south and west of Alayor there were rumours of fighting between local factions. âThey say the Russians are coming.' But he admitted that was just bar talk. âThey're full of talk over in the port, wild talk.'
He waved away my suggestion that he joined me and get some food into himself. âDon't wan' food â ânuther drink.' He had found the cupboard with the Soberano in it. âTheir own bloody fault, yer know. Didn't think it through.'
âHow do you mean?'
But his mind had switched to something else. âPinched my boat.' He slopped the brandy into the glass, the bottle clinking on the rim, then slumped into a chair. âLeft it at the Club pontoon, only gone an hour â well, mebbe two. Bloody bastards!' His eyes focused on me with difficulty. âWhat was that you asked? Oh yes. Didn't cotton on, the fools â all that bombing. Two nights ago. An' next day, orders of the Military Governor over in Palma they say, all them raw young conscripts spread around the island to protect the
urbanizacións
and foreign property. Clever! Did the job, yer see. One night's bombing and it got them La Mola. Hardly any military left in the barracks there.' And he added after a moment's thought, âBut there's talk of some regulars over to Ciudadela that could act as a rally â a rallying point. Talk, talk, talk ⦠In one bar â yer know, the one by the commercial quay â there was a trucker came in said he'd seen military vehicles moving towards Alayor, told us Fuxá wouldn't be able to hold the airport for long. Then some silly bastard starts talking about the Russians. Snow on their boots!' He snickered. âThat was a long time ago.' His voice trailed away, the hiss of the pressure lamp making him sleepy. âDidn't think it through,' he said again. âAll part of the plan an' they fell for it. Clever!' His head was lolling. âAn' now that Navy ship, boxed in with a Libby bloody freighter sitting on âer tail.'
He didn't seem to have anything more to tell me, so I asked him why he had slipped away from the petty officers' mess that morning. âYou left me stranded.'
He nodded, mumbling something about, âIt's all right for you'.
âYou should have checked the chandlery, had a word with my wife and made certain Petra was all right.' His head was sinking into his arms. I reached out across the table and shook him. âIt wasn't the Australian Navy you deserted from, was it? It was the Royal Navy.'
âWot if it was?'
âAnd that's why you got pissed.'
âWell, wouldn't you, mate?' There was a note of belligerence in his voice now. âI do'n want ter think back to them days. And those petty officers â Chris'sakes! They could've picked me up jus' like that.'
I told him he was a bloody fool. All those years ago ⦠But he was fast asleep, his head fallen sideways on to his arm. I finished my meal, then put what clothes I had on, turned the pressure lamp off and went down to the landing point. It was a plastic dinghy, and though he had been drunk, he had still hauled it out on to the rocks, stowed the oars neatly and made fast the painter.
The water looked inky black as I floated it off and stepped in, Mahon a blaze of light as though nothing had happened and it was just a normal evening. Fortunately there was no wind, for the boat was no better than a plastic skimming dish. Clear of Bloody Island the brightly lit shape of the frigate blazed like a jewel, the tug and the freighter in black silhouette, the tanker barely visible and no sign of the launches. I made straight for Cala Figuera and our own quay. My car was there, but nothing else, no sign of Petra's Beetle. No lights on in the windows of the house either and when I crossed the road I found the door to the chandlery standing half-open.