Authors: J.F. Kirwan
âGet a grip, Nad, for Katya's sake.'
Sammy was right. Her sister.
Focus on the living
. She pocketed the Beretta.
âTell me what to do.'
Sammy hauled open the trapdoor. A couple of metres below, the sea splashed against concrete pillars. The tang of sea water and seaweed helped clear her head.
Sammy searched Janssen's corpse. âYour passport,' he said, tossing it to her.
She caught it, but her fingers were numb. She watched as Sammy methodically wrapped chains around the three men's legs and shoved them one by one into the water below. He siphoned most of the petrol from his Suzuki's tank and scattered it around the inside of the warehouse. Then he rigged a crude fuse to set the place on fire half an hour after they'd left. He let the iron trapdoor fall back down with a loud clank. Like a metal coffin lid snapping shut.
âGive me your gun,' he said.
She took a step back, shook her head. The Beretta was all she had left from her father.
âOkay, just don't get caught with it. At least one of the bullets in Janssen's corpse will match. Lie low for a week,' he advised. âYou'll never get that device through customs, X-ray machines everywhere. I'll get word back to Kadinsky. He'll extract you.'
Nadia nodded. But the Rose was a death magnet. Five dead already on its account. Those who knew what it could do would happily ramp up the body count to get hold of it. She'd be
lucky if she survived a week. Sammy told her to get out of Penzance, get off the mainland â the remote Isles of Scilly off Land's End might be a good bet. She said nothing. The less they knew of each other's plans, the better.
âDon't worry,' he said, âKadinsky will get his package, and you'll get your sister back. This is so big he'll let you both go for good this time.'
She stared at him till he broke their gaze.
Outside on the deserted dock, the weather was clearing up. She watched him disappear on his Suzuki.
I hope you make it, Sammy
. She turned and walked in the opposite direction, slowly, as if drugged. She clung to Sammy's words. Get the device back to Kadinsky. Then leave with Katya. If he'd let them go. Or at least be alive, with her. She picked up her pace.
When she heard fire engines far behind her thirty minutes later, she didn't turn around, just kept walking, clutching the bag holding the Rose. She tried to erase the image of Janssen's shattered face. But she couldn't. It was all she saw. She found a public lavatory on the seafront, went straight to an empty stall, locked herself inside, and threw up.
The cold hit the nape of Jake's neck as he rolled backwards, holding mask and regulator in place with one hand, torch in the other. Cool fjord water seeped into his hood and gloves. A single droplet defeated his drysuit neck seal and ran down his spine as he righted himself. Finning to the back of the boat in the moonless night, he shone his torch onto his left hand to give Andreas the âOK' signal. In that brief moment he caught the concerned look on the skipper's face while he lowered the green nightlight into the water to help them find the boat later.
Jake turned to the others, gave them time to get adjusted. Their torches, dangling from lanyards attached to their wrists, shone downwards, two cones illuminating the depths below, sharp halogen light diffusing into shadows. A few silver fish scurried away from the searchlight beams, unwilling to be lit up as tonight's main course for larger fish. Beneath them the abyss of the fjord sucked downwards. Jake knew the lure of the deep only too well. He lifted his mouth out of the water.
âFin to the wall. We need a frame of reference as we descend, it'll help to stop narcosis setting in.'
Jan Erik and Bjorn turned and finned towards the shore. Jake put his head underwater again and shone the beam down until it caught the green, orange and red fauna of the underwater cliff face. He lifted up his head. âThis will do.' He angled his torch upwards, still underwater, just enough so he could see their faces clearly, the water refracting the light through the thin layer of glacier run-off hovering near the surface, turning their faces a ghostly green. He searched their eyes. Anticipation had taken over concern. Good. Jan Erik grinned behind his mouthpiece, and Bjorn's eyes adopted the look usually reserved for sharking blondes at discos.
They were both hungry for this, like he'd been two years ago when he first dived this deep. The adrenaline rush caught him, too.
This is why I dive
. He replaced his regulator, gave them the âOK', then the thumb-down signal. They returned both signals, and the trio slipped below the surface.
Jake dumped air out of his stab jacket and sank backwards, breathing out a little through his nose into his mask to prevent redeye, and watched them do the same. He pinched his nose between forefinger and thumb and equalised the pressure in his ears. At six metres he gave them another OK signal, and they returned it. He did his trademark reverse pirouette and dove down head first, arms folded in front so he could see both dive computers, equalising his ears every five metres. Like free-falling, like flying, like surfing, like â diving. All his problems, petty concerns, worries and unsatisfied desires, condensed into the trail of bubbles behind him, cascading up to the real world where they belonged. He didn't fin, and every ten metres he jetted
a little more air into his stab jacket, compensating for the rising water pressure.
Bjorn shot down in front of him, finning hard. In Jake's headlight Bjorn looked like a fireball. Clearly he wanted to be first. Jake had told him not to do this, warned him that it rammed nitrogen into the brain and could trigger narcosis, the drunkenness that sometimes occurred below thirty metres when diving on air, and was far more likely at their target of fifty. He turned to Jan Erik to stop him from following suit, shaking a flat hand horizontally. Jan Erik rolled his eyes inside his mask.
Jake looked down again but could only see the glow of his light below in a stream of rising bubbles growing larger as they ascended. Bjorn had disappeared. Dammit! Fatality scenarios swirled into his mind. Blocking them off, he followed the stream of Bjorn's bubbles, and checked his computer. He dolphin-kicked once to arrive faster, but not so fast as to unleash nitrogen narcosis on himself. Out of the grey the cliff-face appeared again, a seventy degree slope, and there was Bjorn, propped on it with his fins. Jake sighed through his mouthpiece, and relaxed.
Jake realised he hadn't been breathing much, and took three slow breaths. As he neared Bjorn he checked his own air gauge: two hundred bar. Plenty. He and Jan Erik touched the silt with their fins, a couple of metres from Bjorn. Jake checked both his computers. Fifty metres. Exactly. This was a bounce dive. Touch fifty, then ascend to decompress, to let the nitrogen flush back out of their bloodstreams, at nine metres, then six metres. He took a few more measured breaths. He didn't bother to look around â mainly silt anyway â his job now was to get them back up to safer depth. He signalled to Jan Erik âOK', then âUp'. Jan Erik pretended to wipe a tear from his mask with a gloved finger â he wanted to stay longer. Jake shook his head, and Jan Erik nodded, returning the âUp' signal. Jake turned to Bjorn, who was still balanced on the tail edge of his fins, staring down into the abyss. Jake gave him the âOK' signal, then Jan Erik's torchlight lit up Bjorn's eyes. They were bloodshot, glazed, half-closed, as if he was drunk. Narcosis.
Shit
. At the same time that Jake reached out for him, Bjorn gave the âDown' signal, and did a pretty good impression of Jake's reverse pirouette. He dove deeper into the fjord.
Jake's fingers just missed Bjorn's trailing fin and he watched, unbelieving, as Bjorn spirited downwards. In the two seconds that followed, he calculated the odds of catching Bjorn before they went too deep, and whether he should focus on stopping a single fatality turning into a three-diver fatality, then traded that risk against trying to explain to Bjorn's sister Vibeke and the authorities how he'd stood by and done nothing while watching Bjorn plunge to his death. He flicked his wrist to Jan Erik, gave the âDown' signal and dolphin-kicked hard after Bjorn.
Jake finned fast down the escarpment, exhaling steadily. Depth and time were the dual enemies. The faster he caught Bjorn, the better. One of his computers, the Aladin, beeped an alarm. Sixty metres. The rising partial pressure of oxygen would begin killing them soon. Breathing hard, with Jan Erik close behind, Jake raced for Bjorn's red fins. The second computer, the Suunto, beeped. At last he grabbed one fin and then a leg, and yanked Bjorn around to face him. Both he and Bjorn were still sinking. They bumped into the sludge-covered escarpment like two drunken men falling down a hill in slow motion. Jake had to let go of his torch. It spun around wildly, strobing like a disco light as he gripped Bjorn's harness with one
hand and inflated his stab jacket full of air with the other. Bjorn's eyes were nearly closed. Nitrogen narcosis had taken him elsewhere. Jake checked his second computer, the Suunto â the Aladin had stopped working â sixty-eight metres. His fins found purchase on the slope. He flexed his knees and with both hands shoved Bjorn's body upwards.
Jan Erik arrived.
Jake could hear his own heart pounding. But there was another, stranger, pulsing white noise, growing louder. The beginnings of oxygen poisoning. He pointed to his inflate button, and he and Jan Erik both pumped air into their jackets. Jake had just given the âUp' signal when Jan Erik's eyes went wide, seeing something behind Jake. Jake turned just in time to see a snowstorm of descending silt they must have kicked up whilst chasing Bjorn. In the next second it enveloped them like thick soup. He couldn't see his outstretched hand. He reached for Jan Erik but he was already gone, hopefully upwards. The white noise was now a din in Jake's head. He knew what it meant. He was going to black out. Then he would sink. And then it would all be over.
He finned hard, worked his thighs almost into cramp. He had to get up above fifty. Once he was moving upwards, the air in his jacket would carry on expanding and propel him to the surface. If he blacked out and didn't wake up till he reached the surface, it would be a nasty decompression incident, but that was preferable to the alternative. It grew more difficult to concentrate. The porridge-like silt meant he could barely read the Suunto, even when he held it right in front of his mask.
He suddenly didn't know which way was up, or where his torch was. All around him a sea of clay and bubbling blackness. White noise roared in his ears like a jet engine. Then he remembered â
follow the bubbles
. Watching their direction in front of his face, he righted himself, and kicked hard. Jake felt himself lifting. He dared to hope, and read the Suunto, counting down the metres. Fifty-nine, fifty-eight⦠He was going to make it. His eyes watered inside his mask. The crushing noise pressed inside his skull.
Concentrate!
Fifty-three ⦠fifty-two ⦠fifty-one ⦠fifty-two ⦠fifty-threeâ¦
No!
That wasn't possible! How the hell could he be going down? There were no currents in the fjord. Numbness crept over him. Unable to fin any more. His legs not responding.
Fuck. Not like this!
Seconds, seconds⦠Then he remembered. He reached down to his right side and cracked open his emergency cylinder. It blasted air into his jacket, squeezed it tight around his chest and shoulders like an airbag. The white noise wailed like a hurricane in his head.
He blacked out.
It was like tuning-in on an old style wireless, trying to find a station in a forest of static. Mexican deep divers called it the
wah-wah
. The sound your brain makes when it has too much oxygen under pressure. But if you rise, the partial pressure of oxygen drops. The wah-wah goes away, and in theory you wake up. That's what Jake was thinking when he came to.
He was peaceful. Then he recalled where he was. Still ascending. He dumped air out of his jacket fast, and checked his computers again. The Aladin said âErr'. The Suunto was flashing, but at least gave depth. Twenty-nine metres. Twisting around, he found the other two with him. They were conscious, hanging there in mid-water. Bjorn looked confused. Jan Erik's grin was gone, but he did that Norwegian wink with both eyes blinking instead of just one. Jake swam up to each of them and read their air gauges, checked his compass, then led them towards the cliff. They trawled the edge one way then the other till they saw the green strobe under the boat. Jake checked his watch. Twenty minutes. They shone their lights under the boat so Andreas would know they were there.
They hung around for a further twenty minutes at nine metres, Jake checking their air every now and again. Occasionally one of the others would try an âUp' signal. Jake shook his head each time. They ascended to five metres and waited. Andreas gunned the engine once or twice. Jake knew he was worried. They were late, but at least Andreas could see them beneath the boat. But they were way off the decompression tables, so Jake kept them there, five metres under the boat, until their air supply was down to twenty bar. At last he gave the âUp' signal.
As Jake clambered last into the boat, Andreas was fussing. âWhere the hell have you been for the past hour? I was having kittens!'
Bjorn's eyebrows were knitted together, a deep frown puckering his face. Jan Erik's grin resurfaced as he showed Andreas his depth gauge. Andreas laughed. âSure. You moved the needle with your dive knife.' The ensuing silence caused him to check Bjorn's depth gauge, then Jake's expression. âHoly mother of God! You're all crazy. You should be dead!'
After that, nobody said much.
As the boat sputtered its way home, Jake inevitably found himself thinking about Sean, lost to the depths three years ago.
Almost joined you
.
The boat neared the jetty, a single streetlight casting harsh light over them. Jake never imagined he'd be pleased to smell Sarpsborg's soap factory.