Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TJUPLE
Dickstein smiled. 'Vell, I do, and it's my life, and besides, rm the
senior officer here and it's my decision, so to hell with all of YOU."
So he had dressed and armed himself, and the captain had abown him how
to operate the launcYs radio and how to maintain an interception course
with the Karla, and they had lowered the launch, and he had climbed down
into it and pulled away.
And he was terrified.
It was impossible for him to overcome a whole boatload of KGB all on his
own. However, he was not planning that. He would not fight with any of
them if he could help it. He would get aboard, hide himself until Suza!s
diversion began, and then look for her; and when he had found her, he
would get off the Karla with her and flee. He had a small magnetic mine
with him that he would fix to the Karla's side before boarding. Then,
whether he managed to escape or not, whether the whole thing was a trap
or genuine, the Karla would have a -hole blown in her side big enough to
keep her from catching the Coparelli.
He was sure it was not a trap. He knew she was.there, he knew that
somehow she had been in their power and had been forced to help them, he
knew she had risked her life to save his. He knew that she loved him.
And that was why he was terrified.
Suddenly he wanted to live. The blood-lust was gone: he was no longer
interested in killing his enemies, defeating Rostov, frustrating the
schemes of the Fedayeen or outwitting Egyptian Intelligence. He wanted
to find Suza, and take her hom4,% and spend the rest of his life with
her. He was afraid to die.
He concentrated on steering his boat. Finding the Karla at night was not
easy. He could keep a steady course but he bad to-estimate and make
allowance for how much the wind and the waves were carrying him sideways.
After fifteen minutes he knew he should have reached her, but she was
nowhere to be seen. He began to zigzag in a search pattern, wondering
desperately how far off course he was.
He was contemplating radioing the Coparelli for a new fix when suddenly
the Karla appeared out of the night alongside him. She was moving fast,
faster than his launch could go, and he had to reach the ladder at her
bows before she was
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past, and at the same time avoid a collision. He gunned the launch
forward, swerved away as the Karla rolled toward him, then turned back,
homing in, while she rolled the other way.
He had the rope tied around his waist ready. The ladder came within
reach. He flipped the engine of his launch into idle, stepped on the
gunwale, and jumped. The Karla began to pitch forward as he landed on the
ladder. He clung on while her prow went down into the waves. The sea came
up to his waist, up to his shoulders. He took a deep breath as his head
went under. He seemed to be under water forever. The Karla just kept on
going down. When he felt his lungs would burst she hesitated, and at last
began to come up; and that seemed to take even longer. At last he broke
surface and gulped lungfuls of air. He went up the ladder a few steps,
untied the rope around his waist and made it fast to the ladder, securing
the boat to the Karla for his escape. ne magnetic mine was hanging from
a rope across his shoulders. He took it off and slapped it on to the
Karlds hull.
The uranium was safe.
He shed his oilskin and climbed up the ladder.
The sound of the launch engine was inaudible in the noise of the wind,
the sea, and the Karld's own engines, but something must have attracted
the attention of the man who looked over the rail just as Dickstein came
up level with the deck. For a moment the man stared at Dickstein, his
face registering amazement. Then Dickstein reached out his hand for a
pull as he climbed over the rail. Autornatica.11y, with a natural
instinct to help someone trying to get aboard out of the raging sea, the
other man grabbed his arm. Dickstein got one leg over the rail, used his
other hand to grab the outstretched arm, and threw the other man
overboard and into the sea. His cry was lost in the wind. Dickstein
brought the other leg over the, rail and crouched down on the deck.
It seemed nobody had wen the incident.
The Karla was a small ship, much smaller than the Coparelli. There was
only one superstructure, located amidships, two decks high. There were
no cranes. The foredeck had a big hatch over the foeard hold, but there
was no aft hold: the crew accommodations and the engine room must occupy
all the below-deck space aft, Dickstein concluded.
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He looked at his watch. It was five-twenty-five. - Suza!s diversion
should begin any moment, if she could do it.
He began to walk along the deck. There was some light from the ship's
lamps, but one of the crew would have to look twice at him before being
sure he was not one of them. He took his knife out of the sheath at his
belt: he did not want to use his gun unless he had to, for the noise
would start a hue and cry.
As he drew level with the superstructure a door opened, throwing a wedge
of yellow light on the rain-spattered deck. He dodged around the comer,
flattening himself against the foeard bulkhead. He heard two voices
speaking Russian. The door slammed, and the voices receded as the men
walked aft in the rain.
In the lee of the superstructure he crossed to the port side and
continued toward the stem. He stopped at the corner and, looking
cautiously around it, saw the two men cross the afterdeck and speak to
a third man in the stem. He was tempted to take all three out with a
burst from his submachine gun-three men was probably one fifth of the op-
position-but decided not to: it was too early, Suza!s diversion had not
started and he had no idea where she was.
The two men came back along the starboard deck and went inside. Dickstein
walked up to the remaining man in the stem, who seemed to be on guard.
The man spoke to him in Russian. Dickstein grunted something
unintelligible, the man replied with a question, then Dickstein was close
enough and be jumped forward and cut the man's throat.
He threw the body overboard and retraced his steps. Two dead, and still
they did not know he was on board. He looked at his watch. The luminous
hands showed five~thirty. It was time to go inside.
He opened a door and saw an empty gangway and a companionway leading up,
presumably to the bridge. He climbed the ladder.
Loud voices came from the bridge. As he emerged through the companionhead
he saw three men-the captain, the first officer and the second
sublieutenant, he guessed. The first officer was shouting into the
voice-pipe. A strange noise was coming back. As Dickstein brought his gun
level, the captain pulled a lever and an alarm began to sound all over
the ship. Dickstein pulled the trigger. The loud chatter of the gun was
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partly smothered by the wailing Maxon of the fire alarm. The three men
were killed where they stood.
Dickstein hurried back down the ladder. The alarm must mean that Suza's
diversion had started. Now all he had to do was stay alive until he found
her.
The companionway from the bridge met the deck at a junction of two
gangways-a lateral one, which Dickstein had used, and another running the
length of the superstructure. In response to the alarm, doors were
opening and men emerging all down both gangways. None of them seemed to
be armed: this was a fire alarm, not a call to battle stations. Dickstein
decided to run a bluff, and shoot only if it failed. He proceeded briskly
along the central gangway, pushing his way through the milling men,
shouting, "Get out of the way" in German. They stared at him, not knowing
who he was or what he was doing, except that he seemed to be in authority
and there was a fire. One or two spoke to him. He ignored them. There was
a rasping order from somewhere, and the men began to move purposefully.
Dickstein reached the end of the gangway and was about to go down the
ladder when the officer who had given the order came into sight and
pointed at him, shouting a question.
Dickstein dropped down.
On the lower deck things were better organized. The men were running in
one direction, toward the stem, and a group of three hands under the
supervision of an officer was breaking out fire-fighting gear. There, in
a place where the gangway widened for access to hoses, Dickstein saw
something which made him temporarily unhinged, and brought a red mist of
hatred to his eyes.
Sm was on the floor, her back to the bulkhead. Her legs were stretched
out in front of her, her trousers torn. He could see her scorched and
blackened skin through the tatters. He heard Rostov's voice, shouting at
her over the sound of the alarm: "What did you tell Dickstein?"
Dickstein jumped from the ladder onto the deck. One of the hands moved
in front of him. Dickstein knocked him to the deck with an elbow blow to
the face, and jumped on Rostov.
Even in his rage, he realized that he could not use the gun in this
confined space while Rostov was so close to Suza. Besides, he wanted to
kill the man with his hands.
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He grabbed Rostov's shoulder and spun him around. Rostov saw his face.
"You!" Dickstein hit him in the stomach first, a pile-driving blow that
buckled him at the waist and made him gasp for air. As his head came down
Dickstein brought a knee up fast and hard, snapping Rostov's chin up and
breaking his jaw; then, continuing the motion, he put all his
strength.behind a kick into the throat that smashed Rostov's neck and drove
him backward into the bulkhead.
Before Rostov had completed his fall Dickstein turned quickly around, went
down on one knee to bring his machine gun off his shoulder, and with Suza
behind him and to one side opened fire on three hands who appeared in the
gangway.
He turned again, picking Suza up in a fireman's lift, trying not to touch
her charred flesh. He had a moment to think, now. Clearly the fire was in
the stern, the direction in which all the men had been running. If he went
forward now he was less likely to be seen.
He ran the length of the gangway, then carried her up the ladder. He could
tell by the feel of her body on his shoulder -that she was still conscious.
He came off the top of the ladder to the main deck level, found a door and
stepped out.
There was some confusion out on deck. A man ran past him, heading for the
stem; another ran off in the opposite direction. Somebody was in the prow.
Down in the stem a man lay on the deck with two others bending over him;
presumably he had been injured in the fire.
Dickstein ran forward to the ladder that he had used to board. He eased.
his gtm on to his shoulder, shifted Suza a little on the other shoulder,
and stepped over the rail.
Looking about the deck as he started to go down, he knew that they had seen
him.
It was one thing tp see a strange face on board ship, wonder who he was,
and delay asking questions until later because there was a fire alarm: but
it was quite another to see someone leaving the ship with a body over his
shoulder.
He was not quite halfway down the ladder when they began to shoot at him.
A bullet pinged off the hull beside his head. He looked Up to see three men
leaning over the rail, two of them with pistols. Holding on to the ladder
with his left hand, he put his
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