Authors: Matthew Reilly
Book II and Clark did the same, diving in amongst the Delta bodies on the ground as a rain of bullets sparked against the floor all around them.
The fourth Marine, Rooster, wasn't so lucky. Perhaps it was the reflective glasses he woreâmaking him look like Schofieldâor perhaps he was just unlucky. Nevertheless, a hailstorm of rounds pummelled his body, cut it to ribbons, making him dance even though he was dead.
âInto the pit! Now!' Schofield yelled, practically crash-tackling Clark and Book II out of the line of fire and rolling the three of them off the edge of the dry-dock pit just as it was assaulted by a thousand bullet sparks.
As Schofield and the others dropped down into the dry-dock pit, they did so under the watchful eye of the commander of the heavily-armed force surrounding them.
The commander's name was WexleyâCedric K. Wexleyâand in a previous life he had been a major in the elite South African Reconnaissance Commandos.
So this is the famous Scarecrow
, Wexley thought, watching Schofield move.
The man who defeated Gunther Botha in Utah. Well, if nothing else, his reflexes are good.
Before his own fall from grace, Wexley had been a shining star in the Reccondos, chiefly because he had been a devoted follower of apartheid. Somehow, he had survived the transition to democracy, his racist tendencies going unnoticed. And then he had killed a black soldier in boot camp, beat him to death during hand-to-hand training. He had done it before, but this time it was noticed.
And when soldiers like Cedric Wexleyâpsychopaths, sociopaths, thugsâwere discharged from the legitimate armed forces, they invariably ended up in the illegitimate ones.
Which was how Wexley came to be in command of this unit: a Special Ops team belonging to one of the world's pre-eminent mercenary organisationsâthe highly corporate, South African-based âExecutive Solutions' or âExSol'.
While ExSol specialised in Third World security missionsâlike propping up African dictatorships in exchange for diamond-mining royaltiesâit also, when the logistics allowed, engaged in the more lucrative international bounty hunts that occasionally arose.
At nearly $19 million per head, this was the most lucrative bounty hunt ever, and thanks to a well-placed friend on the Council, Executive Solutions had been given the inside running to claim three of those heads.
Wexley's radio operator came up beside him. âSir. Blue Team has engaged the Marines in the office tower.'
Wexley nodded. âTell them to return to the dry-dock via the bridge when they're done.'
âSir, there's another thing,' the radio man said.
âYes?'
âNeidricht up on the roof says he's picked up two incoming signals on the external radar.' There was a pause. âJudging by the signatures, he thinks it's the Hungarian and the Black Knight.'
âHow far out are they?'
âThe Hungarian's about fifteen minutes away. The Knight is further, maybe twenty-five.'
Wexley bit his lip.
Bounty hunters
, he thought.
Fucking bounty hunters.
Wexley hated bounty hunt missions precisely because he hated bounty hunters. If they didn't beat you to the target, the little fuckers would let you do all the dirty work, stalk you all the way back to the proof-station,
steal
the target out from under you and then claim the money for themselves.
In an up-front military exchange, the winner was the last man standing. Not so in a bounty hunt. In a bounty hunt, the winner was the one who presented the prize back at baseâ
however
he might have obtained it.
Wexley growled. âThe Hungarian I can handle, he's a brute. But the Black Knight . . . he'll almost certainly be a problem.'
The ExSol commander looked down at the submarine pit. âWhich means we'd better make this quick. Get this Schofield asshole, and bring me his fucking head.'
Schofield, Book II and Clark dropped down the wall of the dry-dock pit.
They fell for a full thirty feet, beforeâ
whump
âthey landed heavily on the two Delta bodies slumped at the bottom.
âCome on, move! Move! Move!' Schofield pulled the other two underneath the big black Typhoon sub, mounted on its blocks in the pit.
Each block was about the size of a small car and made of solid concrete. Four long rows of the blocks supported the massive submarine, creating a series of narrow right-angled alleyways underneath the Typhoon's black steel hull.
Schofield spoke into his throat-mike as he zig-zagged through the dark alleyways: âBull! Bull Simcox! Do you copy!'
Bull's voice, fast and desperate: â
Scarecrow, shit! We're under heavy fire over here! All of the others are down and I'm . . . I'm hit bad! I can'tâoh, fuckâno!
â'
There was a brief crack of gunfire at the other end and then the signal cut to hash.
âShit,' Schofield said.
Then, abruptly, there came several soft whumps from somewhere behind him.
He spunâMP-7 upâand through the forest of fat concrete blocks, saw the first set of enemy troops drop into the pit on ropes.
With Book II and Clark behind him, Schofield weaved his way through the shadowy alleyways under the Typhoon, ducking enemy fire.
Their pursuers had now entered the dark concrete maze as wellâmaybe ten men in totalâand they were systematically moving forward, covering the long alleyways with heavy fire, herding Schofield and his men toward the sea-gate-end of the dry-dock.
Schofield watched his enemies as they moved, analysed their tactics, eyed their weapons. Their tactics were standard. Basic flushing stuff. But their weapons . . .
Their weapons.
âWho are these guys?' Book II said.
Schofield said, âI have an idea, but you're not going to like it.'
âTry me.'
âCheck out their guns.'
Book II took a quick look. Some of the white-masked men held MP-5s while others carried French-made FAMAS assault rifles or American Colt Commandos. Others still held old AK-47s, or AK-47 variants like the Chinese Type 56.
âSee the guns?' Schofield said as they moved. âThey've all got different kinds of weapons.'
âDamn it,' Book II said. âMercenaries.'
âThat's what I'm thinking.'
âBut why?'
âDon't know. At least not yet.'
âWhat are we going to do?' Clark asked desperately.
âI'm working on it,' Schofield said, gazing up at the thick steel hull above them, looking for escape options.
With his back pressed against a concrete block, he poked his head around one of the outer corners and looked all the way down the dry-dock pitâand saw the high steel sea gate that separated the pit from the ice-covered pool of water at the eastern end of the hall.
The mechanics of the dry-dock leapt into his mind.
To get an enormous Typhoon into the dock, you lowered the sea gate, flooded the dry-dock, and sailed your sub into it. Then you
raised
the sea gate again and drained the dry-dock, lowering the sub onto the concrete blocks in the process and giving yourself a clean and dry environment to work on the submarine.
The sea gate . . .
Schofield eyed it closely, thought of all the water being held back behind it. Looked the other way: toward the bow of the sub, and saw it.
It was their only shot.
He turned to the others. âYou guys got Maghooks on you?'
âEr, yeah.'
âYes.'
âGet ready to use 'em,' Schofield said, looking down at the great steel sea gate, three storeys high and 90 feet wide. He drew his own Maghook from his back-mounted holster.
âWe going that way, sir?' Clark asked.
âNope. We're going in the other direction, but to do that we need to blow open that sea gate.'
â
Blow open
the sea gate?' Clark gasped, looking at Book.
Book II shrugged. âThis is standard. He destroys thingsâ'
Just then, an unexpected volley of bullets raked the concrete blocks all around them. It had come from the direction of the sea gate.
Schofield ducked for cover, peered out, and saw that ten more mercenary soldiers had dropped into the pit at that end.
Christ, he thought, now they were stuck in the pit between two sets of bad guys.
The new group of mercenaries began to advance.
âScrew this,' he said.
Cedric Wexley watched the dry-dock pit from high above.
He saw his two squads of mercenaries closing in on Schofield and his men from both sides.
A cold smile cracked his face.
This was too easy.
Schofield grabbed two Thermite-Amatol demolition charges from his combat webbing. âGentlemen. Maghooks.'
They all pulled out their Maghooks.
âNow do this,' Schofield moved to the port-side edge of the Typhoon, raised his Maghook and fired it at close range up into the hull of the sub.
Clangggggg!
Clark and Book II did the same.
Clangggggg! Clangggggg!
Schofield peered down the length of the submarine. âWhen the wave hits, let your Maghook ropes play out, so we can move along the outside of the sub.'
âWave?' Clark said. âWhat wave . . . ?'
But Schofield didn't answer him.
He simply took the two demolition charges in his hands and selected the timer switch he wanted.
Timer switches on Thermite-Amatol charges come in three colours: red, green and blue. Depressing the red switch gives you five seconds. Green gives you thirty seconds. Blue: one minute.
Schofield chose red.
Then he hurled the two charges down the length of the dry-dock pit, over the heads of the advancing mercenary team, sending the two high-powered explosives bouncing into the plate-steel sea gate like a pair of tennis balls. They came to rest at the gate's weakest point, at the spot where it met the pit's concrete right-side wall.
Five seconds. Four . . .
âThis is going to hurt . . .' Book II said, wrapping the rope of his Maghook around his forearm. Clark did the same.
Three . . . two . . .
âOne,' Schofield whispered, eyeing the dam. âNow.'
Boom.
Â
The twin blasts of the Thermite-Amatol demolition charges shook the walls of the entire dry-dock building.
A blinding-white flash of light lit up the sea gate. Smoke rushed up the length of the pit, filling the alleyways between the giant concrete blocks as it roared forward, consuming the nearest group of assassins, enveloping everything in its path, including Schofield's team.
There was a moment of eerie silence . . .
And then came the crackâan almighty, ear-splitting
craaaack
âas the wounded sea gate broke under the weight of the water pressing against it, and 100 million litres of water rushed into the pit,
bursting
through the smoke.
A wall of water.
The immense body of liquid created an incredible soundâit
roared
down the length of the dry-dock pit: foaming, roiling, bounding forward.
The nearest group of mercenaries were simply blasted off their feet by the wall of water, and hurled westward.
Schofield, Book II and Clark were next in line.
The wall of water just collected them where they stoodâone second they were there, the next they were gone. It lifted them instantly off their feet, flinging them like rag dolls toward the bow-end of the Typhoon, bouncing them along the side of its hull.
The other team of mercenaries was also taken by the rushing wall of water. They were smashed into the solid concrete wall at the far end of the dry-dock, many of them going under as the waves of roiling water crashed against the edge of the 200-metre-long pit.
Schofield and his men, however, didn't hit the end of the pit.
As the roaring body of water had collected them, they'd held grimly onto their Maghook launchers as the ropes connected to their magnetic hooks unspooled at a phenomenal rate.
When they came alongside the bow of the Typhoon, Schofield had yelled, âClamp now!'
He had then jammed his finger down on a button on his Maghook's grip, initiating a clamping mechanism inside it that stopped the unspooling of its rope.
Book II and Clark did the same . . . and the three of them jolted to simultaneous halts right next to the bow of the Typhoon, the rushing water kicking up blast-sprays all around their bodies.
Next to them, exactly where Schofield had seen it before, was the yawning opening of the Typhoon's port-side torpedo tubesâthe tubes which had evidently been undergoing repairs when Krask-8 had been abandoned.
At the moment, the torpedo tubes lay a foot above the surface of the inrushing water.
âGet into the tubes!' Schofield yelled into his mike. âInto the sub!'
Book and Clark did as they were told, and squirming and struggling against the rushing water, entered the submarine.
Sudden silence.
Schofield wriggled out of the torpedo tube last of all and found himself standing inside a Soviet Typhoon-class ballistic missile submarine.
It was a world of cold steel. Racks that had once contained torpedoes occupied the centre of the room. Rows of pipes lined the ceiling. The stench of body odourâthe smell of fear, the smell of submarinersâfilled the air.
Two fat waterfalls of seawater now gushed in through the sub's open torpedo tubes, rapidly filling the cramped room.
It was largely dark in here: the only light, the grey daylight that crept in through the now-flooding torpedo tubes. Schofield and the others flicked on their barrel-mounted flashlights.
âThis way,' Schofield said, charging out of the torpedo room, his legs sloshing through the rising water.
The three Marines bolted through the Typhoon's imposing silo hall nextâa long high-ceilinged chamber that contained twenty gigantic missile silos; tall tubular structures that rose from floor to ceiling, dwarfing them.