NOTE
TO THE READER: This is the
uncorrected first-draft of a James Bond story. Unabridged and
unashamed, with not the slightest attempt at grammaticals. I s'pose
you'll expect a copyright bit, so here, have one – its on the
house.
Mark
Sohn reserves the right to be recognised as the author of this work,
but certain characters are Ian Fleming's, as far as I am dimly aware
the wonderful folk at Eon Productions own 007. For a better
explanation of copyright, open a book.
Here
goes then; Part Three – Chapters 18 to 21. James Bond is a prisoner
of the Machiavellian Maximilian – but I couldn't leave him there,
alone with the beauteous Paige... well, not for that long
anyway...
CHAPTER
18
M TAKES
A HAND
The RAF
Shackleton MR.3 lumbered across the vast gulf of ocean. From its
base on Ascension the Maritime Patrol aircraft with its crew of ten
was flying at the absolute edge of its fuel endurance, the area they
were tasked to reconnoitre being some four thousand miles distant.
The Captain, a Flight Officer Benson was a veteran with eight
thousand hours on the type under his belt, so he knew they were
taking a calculated risk with the mission. The four Rolls Royce
Griffon piston engines produced 2,455 horsepower, but at a cost –
rather than the maximum speed of three hundred-plus, they would have
to fly at two hundred miles per hour, worse, under two thousand feet.
If they were lucky, the long - range wing tanks might enable them to
reach the planned landing at Ladyville in Belize. The mission tasking
from the Ministry had been the usual curt missive, the larger part of
it full of the jargon that is the lingua-fraca of flyers
everywhere. If the weather reports held true, there would be clear
sky over the target area, some islands adjacent to the Cuban
Republic. The briefing from the Operations Officer had been an
eye-opener, Benson thought. He was given strict instructions on
procedure, including a rather unconventional order to keep his mouth
shut about the whole thing. Instead, he was told, if questioned about
the nature of the mission, he was to stick to a pre-arranged cover
story; the aircraft was on routine patrol over the Atlantic when a
storm blew up. Disorientated, with instrument failure and dwindling
fuel reserves, he then decided to make for the nearest airbase. Not
much of a cover, Benson thought. A 'hot-box' – a portable
asbestos-lined strongbox containing a miniature thermite charge was
to be used to store the incriminating film canisters after exposure.
At the first sign of trouble, Benson was told, he would personally
activate the box, pulling the arming handle to melt the film before
jettisoning the box.
A keen amateur himself,
Benson had handed over to the second pilot and gone aft to join the
photographic specialist, who was busy changing lenses on a K24 Kodak
‘Long Tom’ camera.
'Ready to take some
beach shots, Tim?.'
'Yes Sir, with this
baby you can get a clear image of a girl sunbathing in her bikini at
fifteen-hundred feet, clear as you like.'
'Not sure about the
bikinis where we're headed, more likely some old girl doing her
washing. Anyway, I'm famished, time to see what Mother's packed for
our tea.' With that, Benson made his way to the small galley, little
more than an electric hotplate, to open his lunch.
'Ravenous, James,
simply ravenous. Shall we call the chef?.' Dreamily, Paige reached
for an imaginary phone, careless that her magnificent breasts were
proudly exposed.
Both she and Bond were
exhausted after several hours lovemaking. The first, desperate
urgency of animal coupling had given way to the luxuriant rhapsody of
slow, sensual and prolonged sex, the sensations washing over their
bodies until both seemed adrift on tingling waves of pleasure,
scaling peaks and sliding into troughs.
Lazily, smoke curled
upwards from the bed as both lovers enjoyed a welcome cigarette.
'I really should try to
find a way out of here, “England expects” and all that.'
Rolling over, she
extinguished her cigarette with a pout. 'So soon, James? I thought a
gentleman never left before dawn?, what would your headquarters say?
- I shall write to my M.P.'
'Yes – I was meaning
to ask you about that.' Bond put out his own, rolling back over to
face those disarming eyes. 'Do you really have M.P.s in Russia?.'
'In Rus...James!, what
are you saying?.'
His face was hard,
angry. Gone the tender lover now, only a cold ruthlessness.
'Spare me; the
routine's wearing thin. You knew Max had betrayed your Father, now
why?, was it your Control?, who, Paige? - and where did you get that
Model 27?, hardly standard-issue, even for the KGB. Well?.'
Furiously, she snatched
up her gown, throwing the blue Chinese silk around herself as if
ashamed of her nakedness, at having been such a fool for giving
herself to this brute of a man. She slumped onto a chair, running her
hands through her hair, in doing so missing Bond flushing with guilt
and sudden self-loathing that had threatened to choke him briefly.
Tying the cord on his dressing gown, he was standing in front of her.
Eyes brimming with tears, she looked up, the moisture lending her
eyes even more lustre.
'Damn you James Bond.
Damn you, as I shall be damned for loving you.' Weary, she held a
hand up to fend him off. 'No, there's no need. I'll tell you. I'll
tell you everything, even if they kill me for talking. Have you ever
heard the name SMERSH?'
'Dear God, this gets
worse. I thought we'd heard the last of them.' M picked up the
innocuous looking report from his desk.
'Yes, I'm afraid it
looks bad.' The Head of Records had made the rare effort to leave his
precious files to visit M in person. 'Its all been confirmed,
naturally; the girl went over to the Reds after her Father's death.
We knew nothing; only that we think she was approached in Paris,
worked in one of those ridiculous up-market dress firms they have
there.'
'Is there a point to
this?.'
'Eventually. The girl
was involved with an under-secretary at the American Embassy, the
Russians got wind of it and made the approach. Apparently she was
devoted to her father, given his views on atomic weapons it seemed a
good bet she would come across, which she did.'
'The usual?.'
'Blackmail?, what else?
- the note threatening disclosure, the unsuspecting wife and family,
promising career and threat of ruin, plus some very
interesting photographs; let's just say the man had unusual tastes.
The girl disappeared from the scene for some time with the plans for
the new American Early Warning System in Europe. We only know any of
this because the Deuxieme Bureau uncovered that smuggling ring in
Marseilles, one of them had been in Paris working as a double agent
for the French; he helped set up the safe house the girl's contact
was renting, sang like a canary when the Bureau held twelve years
over him.'
M had lit his pipe as
he listened. Puffing away, he stood, walking around his desk to the
large sash window overlooking the Park.
'We know, at least we
think we know that SMERSH was wound up in fifty-eight, if we have our
dates right she would have already have received her basic training
by then. Supposing she joined the Special Executive Department at the
MWD?, they took over all SMERSH operations and duties; perhaps she
was sent after Double-O-Seven...'
'Not very likely. Given
SMERSH's reputation it's doubtful Bond would have lived to make the
request regarding her. Cross-reference it all, what are you left
with?.'
'Well, there's that
blasted super-yacht Bond went gallivanting around on, the suicide of
the girl's father, the Early Warning System – I'd discount that,
probably unconnected. Then she is listed as a SMERSH operative and
finally Bond's Red Castle message and the request to the Americans
regarding the girl. It doesn't make much sense, but it looks to me as
if the threat to the Russians may have triggered an operation of some
kind, but why send a girl with so little experience?.'
'We may never know.
That's all we have for now, I'll be in records if you need me.'
'Thanks, Hugh. I'll see
you and Margaret for drinks, sometime soon.'
M went back to his
desk, a worried man. His hopes now rested on an aircrew and a
Double-O man who may not even be among the living.
'To us, James.'
'To life.' They clinked
glasses and drank. Bond had found the bar while examining the room
for any signs of a way out, pushing and pulling at the curved walls,
which alternated between sections of rough natural rock and smoothly
worked masonry blocks, these last with glyphic carvings of
long-forgotten idols. Twisting at what looked like a feathered fish
of some kind, 007 had been rewarded with the sudden appearance of a
bar, as completely equipped and stocked as any he had seen in London
or New York. Two of the blocks had pushed outwards, to become stools,
while a large section of the wall had folded back and away. The whole
affair had soft lighting – even a small sink at one end.
'So, that's it?. You
just typed out an order and left it on your Colonel's desk?, no
questions, no verification of any kind?.'
'None.' Paige shrugged,
a smile of self-satisfaction on her lips. She drank the Cuba Libre
Bond had mixed for her, enjoying the refreshing fizz-tingle from the
cola bubbles bursting in the white rum. He had plumped for a Vodka
and Tonic with a squeeze of lime for a change.
'I was living in
Leningrad, my sponsor took me in until I was granted citizenship.
After my clearance came through I had been assigned to Department III
of Smersh, in Administration. I was watched like a hawk at all times,
I wasn't trusted by the Russian staff. There was a routine inquiry
about an agent of SMERSH, known by the Codename CAROUSEL. Well, I
found the relevant files and was taking them to the Captain who asked
for them, when I dropped them. Silly, but these things can be I
suppose. I saw my father's name, then CAROUSEL's details. He was to
have picked us up that awful night. I knew then that I was going to
kill him for what he had done to my father.'
'So why didn't you?.
Kill him, I mean – first chance you got, bring out the gun and
BANG! - Max sports a third eye.'
'My plans changed when
the MWD men came. SMERSH was out of control, they said, time for
reform. Kruschev's public image called for a new approach, so the
Special Executive Department was given the task of running all SMERSH
business. Suddenly they needed new people – there were a lot of
empty desks all of a sudden.' Bond could well imagine where the
occupants had ended up, but said nothing.
'I was promoted quickly
to the rank of Junior Sergeant, they sent me on intensive courses to
learn various things – I think they wanted me to return to England,
but they never said. I was transferred to the Embassy in Paris, with
the cover of a pool driver, though my actual duties were with the
communications section. That's where I was when I first heard about
CORMORANT.'
'Cormorant?, as in the
bird?.' 'It's the operation to set up an atomic reactor in this
region. It's the most carefully guarded secret in the Soviet Union,
well, outside the Union. The signal I received mentioned CAROUSEL, I
knew Maximilian's habits from his files, meeting him at the Consulate
was my idea, but I had no idea he was going to invite me on a cruise.
I would have killed him the other day, but now I can see why you
stopped me.'
Bond finished his
drink.
'Oh, don't mind me; now
I've seen what I came to see you can shoot him all you like. Now I've
seen CORMORANT for myself I can see Max's importance to the Kremlin.
He's setting Castro up with atomic energy, a limitless power source
that makes a joke of any embargo the Americans can get the UN to
agree to. Blockading Cuba won't make a blind bit of difference. And
then, there's the atomic bomb...'.
Bond outlined the
A-Bomb threat while he began work, examining every inch of their
quarters for something, anything that he could use. He rifled through
drawers and looked through the bar, collecting a few things he hoped
would be of use. The bathroom was as impressive as the rest of
Maximilian's apartments, a large sunken bath set into a marble and
slate floor with another idol in the form of a gargoyle jutting from
the wall above. This time the carving looked human, with a jug of
some kind held over its head. Experimentally, he pushed at one of two
bronzed studs below the gargoyle, at which a gout of water issued
from the jug into the bath. Despondently, Bond found the lever to
operate the plug, emptying the water with a curiously hollow echoing
sound. He cocked an ear, certain he had heard something. Yes, there
it was – someone was singing, and that someone sounded distinctly
American!.
Urgently he went back
to the main chamber, over to the sofa on which their belongings had
been left by the guards, going through his things to find a slim case
which Paige had bought for him.
'Thanks for this –
mind if I mis-use it?.'
Unzipping the case Bond
revealed a small men's grooming set of the kind gentlemen take on
their holidays. He took out the metal shaving mirror, waving it at
her. Thoroughly puzzled, she followed him back into the bathroom,
curious to see what he had in mind.
He angled the mirror
into the stone jug over the gargoyle, called out.
'Hey!, Felix!.'
After a pause the
reply; echoing and distorted.
'Hey yourself –
what's new your end?.'
'Not much. We should
meet, I'll come to you.'
'I've got nothing but
time on my hand.'
It took most of the
night, Paige keeping watch on the doors to the apartment. Bond,
stripped to the waist worked like a navvy, levering away with the
makeshift tools to pry the gargoyle from its mountings. He had a
close shave at dinner-time, the guards bringing them a trolley piled
with a cold meat buffet and a selection of fruit. Casually, he
sauntered from the bathroom at Paige's call, toweling his soaking
hair as if fresh from the bath rather than drenched with sweat. After
a light dinner, he resumed work, chipping and hacking away at the
rock to enlarge the opening. The pipework for the bath had been laid
down an original shaft, probably part of a primitive drainage system.
Bond could now see it went both up and down and was probably three
feet across by perhaps slightly less deep. What was worrying him was
the iron grilles that he could now see – several of them had been
fixed to cover the shaft at intervals of about twenty feet. These
looked new, but while their purpose wasn't clear, it was obvious Bond
wouldn't get past them. Without a reasonable alternative, he
persevered. He called a halt around two, exhausted. There was a pile
of rubble in a corner of the bathroom and the bath itself, which he
swept out using a towel. Pulling the pipes for the bath through the
hole, he turned the water on for a soak.
Eyes closed, he was
laying back, a hot towel over his face. He felt the hands at his
neck, fingers probing his aching muscles, massaging the day away.
'Mmm, Paradise...'
'Yes, here we are in
paradise and we can't wait to get out.' Paige lifted the damp towel,
leaning over to find Bond's lips with hers.
'Really Darling, we
should have called a plumber, just look at the mess you've
ma-JAMES!.' Bond hauled her off her feet into the over-sized bath,
pulling her to him.
The Shackleton rolled
to a halt by the tower at Ladyville, the ladder already down as the
specialist jumped down clutching the film canister. In the cockpit,
Flight Officer Benson wiped his brow, relieved to put the strain of
the mission behind him. The fuel indicator dials were resting on
their stops.
The RAF photographic
interpreter rushed the film through, cracking the canister open in
the dark room and setting to work. Fewer than twenty minutes later
and the resident intelligence specialist was poring over the prints
with an eyepiece. With infinite patience he set to his task, his keen
eye alert for anything out of the ordinary. The Shackleton's
navigational track, a red line on the map on the wall, was his
principal guide. The prints were all numbered, each corresponding to
an area on the chart. Even the smallest island had several
photographs taken, the result laid before the interpreter was a black
and white haystack. If there was a needle, this man would find it.
Forty-five minutes
passed before the door to the communications room banged open, the
RAF man waving the prints and his report in victorious fashion.
'Danny, get on the box
to London, call up the Ministry and quick about it! - we've got
something!.'
His colleague rolled
his eyes at the theatrics, no doubt the photo-squinter had turned a
manta ray into a submarine again. Nevertheless, he calmly took the
report and began tapping out the morse on his key.
It was an old trick,
but Bond knew the old tricks were often the best. He gave the section
of pipe another turn, the wet towel around it now taut, twisted
around two of the bars of the grille. The ironwork was certainly
sturdy, the bars must have been an inch thick. Now it took all his
strength in the confined space, an uncomfortably loud creaking
announcing the metal was surrendering to the immense strain. Basic
physics; Cotton fibres can bend iron, the water swelling the fibres
to lock them together, forming a bond of incredible strength. Leiter
had been busy too, using the threaded bar on which his hand was
normally screwed as a lever to remove the bath fitting in his
apartment. Squeezing through the gap in the bars, Bond stuck his head
through into the bathroom.
'Well, this is cozy.
You'd best keep watch while I chip away at this, once it's big enough
we can move.'
Leiter shook his head,
tapping it with his plastic hand.
'James I hate to remind
you, but we're still prisoners – in a cockeyed pyramid full of
armed goons and Christ knows how many Russians – and that same
pyramid happens to be in an island brimming with hardware just off
the coast of Red Cuba.'
'Oh Felix, such a drama
queen. Where's your sense of adventure?.'
There was no mistaking
those lines. M finished studying the images from the wirephoto
machine that Moneypenny had brought in. The images were less than
perfect, but the Bayamo was easily identified in one, her wake
lending the image the impression of speed. The problem was, there was
no telling where the yacht had come from – a reverse bearing took
her to somewhere in a group of islands South of Cuba, several of
which showed signs of recent activity. It had been a terrific gamble
sending the Shackleton, but all M could say for certain was the yacht
had been there, 007 and the American agent were still unaccounted
for. The warning from the Deputy Director of the CIA couldn't have
been clearer; no rescue attempts. Grimly, he folded the images into a
funnel shape, lighting the top with a match. He let the paper burn
down, brushing the last of it into the bin before heading out of his
office, past an unconvincingly un - intrigued Moneypenny and down the
hallway to the communications section. Ten minutes later and
Moneypenny was typing up the day's notes when M walked into her
office, hands deep in his pockets. She had never seen the old man
like this, and it was killing her not to be able to say anything.
'Penny, be a dear and drop that – I need you to take down a letter,
won't take long.' Moneypenny didn't like the sound of this one bit,
but, always the professional she set a new sheet of foolscap into her
Adler.
'To the Prime Minister
of Her Majesty's Government,
Please accept my
resignation from the Secret Intelligence Service, effective on
appointment of replacement.'
Immediately,
Moneypenny's hands were over her mouth, but she composed herself to
avoid embarrassing the 'Old Man' further. Clearly, he must have been
under intolerable strain over this Cuba nonsense.
'Send that off
Immediate, would you?.' Turning back to the leather doors M seemed
smaller, somehow bowed. She had a spark of hope when the man she had
worked for these long years paused.
'Actually, Miss –
Penny, would you care to take a drink with me?.'
'Yes, Sir. Yes, I
bloody well would!.'
Miss Moneypenny
followed M into his office for the first and only drink they would
ever have as old friends rather than colleagues.
'Fire!, hey – FUEGO!,
FIRE!.' Felix stole a swig of whiskey from his tumbler before
throwing the rest on the burning sofa, the flame erupting outwards
satisfyingly.
Unlocking the door, the
young guard on duty was struck dumb, unsure of what to do.
His companion, an older
man, pulled him out of the doorway to go in to tackle the fire,
tackled by 007 who cracked a wine bottle over the unfortunate man's
head, kicking him over and launching himself at the first guard. By
the time the younger man had thought to use his Sub-machine gun, Bond
had grabbed his lapels and swung his forehead into the bridge of his
nose with all of his power. Groaning, the elder guard was felled
again, put out for the count by Felix's solid right hand.
Quickly they went over
the guards, Bond realizing that neither of their uniforms would fit –
unless...
The guard posted to
cover the lift area was bored and hungry, hungry and bored, bored
and...he blinked as the girl marched smartly up to him. He hadn't
seen her before, though some of the Russians could have been called
women. Not like this, though, certainly not buttoned as low as this
girl. Her boot was unlaced, which he pointed out, eager to be
helpful. She started to bend, then, as if suddenly conscious of her
alarmingly-revealed chest, she straightened up, a hand thrown across
that mesmerising cleavage.
'Por favor?.'
'Oh, Si.' Returning her
smile, the idiot bent down to tie her laces for her, her right hand
smashing down onto his exposed neck, the pistol she had been hiding
in her pocket a nasty cosh.
'Come on!.' She
beckoned her companions over to the lift.
'Going up. Stand clear
of the doors.' Leiter grinned, punching the ↑
button.
'Sorry old man, going
down.' Both his companions gave a start as Bond pressed the button
marked with ↓. Taking
stock they now had three weapons, a PPS43 Russian Sub-Machine Gun and
two pistols, of the Tokarev type favoured by the Eastern Bloc and
Revolutionaries everywhere. The girl was in uniform, so she carried
the PPS.
Morning Star was
clearly in the later stages of construction. Neither of the three
interlopers was expert in their analysis, but they were agreed it had
the look of something nearly finished. Bond hoped there was no actual
nuclear materiel on site, but had no way of telling. He
outlined the 'plan' such as it was; split up, attempt to gather some
evidence and get out alive. As the gigantic chamber welcomed the tiny
cage into it's presence Leiter smoked his Chesterfield with the air
of the condemned enjoying the final smoke.
Paige was amused, now
her true identity of SMERSH cum MWD agent was in the open, her
demeanour had changed noticeably. Bond had managed to tell Leiter the
basics about the girl – basically she was not to be trusted beyond
the current sphere of events.
While alone in the
tunnel above, Leiter had whispered his misgivings about the Soviet
agent; wouldn't she just betray them to protect Morning Star?. Bond
had been adamant; her father had thrown his reputation, his life away
to prevent the West gaining an advantage in the Nuclear Scramble.
On the ground level,
Leiter and the girl made for the nearest of several accommodation
blocks in search of something for Felix to wear that wasn't a
tropical suit. Bond opted for the bold approach, simply walking along
as if he owned the place. Spotting what looked like an administration
block, 007 took the decision to take a look. There was a guardroom,
but it was unfurnished, clearly not operational, so he walked past
the open gate to the steps leading to the main entrance of the two -
storey building. Presented with a corridor leading into the building
and another criss-crossing it Bond turned left on a whim, finding
himself in a hallway full of offices. Almost immediately he was
challenged – and this was no Cuban, but a massive Russian in a
cheap suit. The man stank of KGB security, all cheap cologne and
sweat.
'Ostanavlivatʹsya
na dostignutom. Dokumentov.' Damn it!, Bond frantically searched
his memory for the Russian. 'Dokumentov' was obvious though.
'Khm , izvinite. U
menya net ikh so mnoĭ.' (Erm, Sorry, I haven't them with me.)
'Chto? , Gde vy
izuchatʹ russkiĭ yazyk ? DOKUMENTY!' (What?, where did you learn
Russian? PAPERS!)
Bond had a moment's
inspiration, drawing himself up he became belligerent, poking the
broad chest to emphasize his words.
'Teperʹ slushaĭ
menya! . Eto ne na Lubyanke ! Vy ne mozhete otnositʹsya k uchenym ,
kak prestupniki zdesʹ! zhdatʹ, poka ya govoryu vashemu nachalʹstvu
vy obrashchalisʹ doktor Flyeĭshman eto moda!' (Now listen to me!.
This isn't the Lubyanka! you cannot treat scientists like criminals
here! wait till I tell your superiors you treated Doctor Fleischmann
this fashion!)
Instantly the man's
attitude changed, doubt then deference spreading across the broad
Slavic features. Bond's ploy seemed to have worked, the Russian
slave-mentality and the naturally second-rate Russian of the 'German
Scientist' in his favour. He was waved off with a grunt for an
apology and a note to himself to take the first refresher course
available.
The offices themselves
were either bare or in the process of being furnished – nothing for
Bond here. He pushed further along, coming to a stairwell. It was a
risk, but he could see cheap-suit lurking at the entrance to the
corridor he had just come through. The second floor opened into an
identical arrangement, but after the first row of empty rooms a left
turn took Bond into a canteen. He was just turning to leave when he
caught sight of cheap-suit lumbering along urgently – clearly the
dolt had discovered Doctor Fleischmann was a fraud. Ducking behind
the counter Bond automatically snatched up a container marked PERETS,
dodging around the dixies full of bubbling soup and stew, past a cook
who clearly couldn't care less and into a staff restroom. The KGB-man
blundered in to get a face-full of pepper and a groin-full of shoe
leather. Bond finished it with a japanese palm strike, delivered with
the fingers curled back and a guaranteed knock-out when used against
the jaw.
He was dusting his
fingers free of pepper when he noticed the cook's coats hanging from
the rail; to a casual observer they might easily pass for the white
coats worn by scientists.
Time was against Bond
now, he needed to get something and get out, quickly relieving the
man of his identity pass and the thick rubber cosh that was, oddly
the man's only weapon. Doubtless the man had not been issued a
side-arm for disciplinary reasons or drunkenness. Fortune smiles upon
the brave and today was to be no exception. The section to the rear
was a laboratory area, with heavy metal doors and thick red-rubber
seals around them. Clearly this was an area intended for either
hazardous material or one designed to protect the occupants. As
Professor Bond strolled into the laboratory proper he knew he had
come up trumps. The air of controlled chaos pervading the area made
it a spy's dream, with scientific staff and technicians bumping into
each other in their haste to get the whole place up and running.
Obviously a deadline had been imposed, the possible reasons for which
Bond didn't concern himself with. He found what he wanted in a
side-room, filing cabinets stuffed with paperwork. Casually, he shut
the door behind him, setting to work quickly, going through a drawer
at a time for anything that looked like useful intelligence material.
Finally he had amassed a small pile, perhaps fifteen pages of likely
stuff; mainly technical diagrams, cost projections and operating
procedures for the reactor. As a bonus, he swiped the radiation
dosage guide he found fixed to the inside of the door; it looked the
part, which Bond knew was as likely to impress the politicians as the
technical stuff was to keep the boffins interested. It all went into
his waistband at the back, covered with the white coat.
Bond decided to go out
the front, but his plan changed when the alarm went off – a
nerve-jangler of a klaxon that had to have been stolen from a U-boat.
Suddenly there were boots everywhere, with Bond opting for a hasty
withdrawal back past the canteen to what might have been intended as
a dormitory – whatever, there was a window, which overlooked some
large objects covered in dull green tarpaulins on the concrete
outside the building. Bouncing heavily off the middle tarpaulin, 007
was flung off into the fence at the back of the building, finishing
up sprawled underneath the whatever-they-weres just in time to see a
Soviet military jeep pull screeching up to the guardroom. Noting that
the mystery objects were, in fact empty trailers, Bond climbed into
the nearest one, out of ideas and out of places to go. He drew the
Tokarev, silently checking chamber to ensure there was one 'up the
spout'. He had eight shots, but had already counted thirty of the
opposition. That made seven, plus one for himself. 007 closed his
eyes for a moment, taking a series of deep breaths to steel himself
for what had to come. Strangely enough, there was no attempt to enter
the building, just what looked like a parade. As the Klaxon's last
echo slapped off the rock the impression was heightened by the call
of men to attention.
This was something Bond could resist no longer, his curiosity peaking
as a file of white coated scientists, men and women, began filing out
in pairs to form two ranks opposite what now looked to be a company
of elite Soviet Guards Airborne troops, high boots spit and polished
to a shine that would have a British Guards Drill Sergeant – Major
weak at the knees. Bond seized the chance, easing the hammer forward
and clicking the safety before hurriedly dusting himself off and
joining the file of scientists, standing next to last on the back
row.
The arrival of the lift
could now be heard across the cavern, the work gangs at a temporary
standstill. Resisting the impulse to crane his neck around Bond stood
loosely at attention. A Sergeant-Major of Guards swaggered out in
front of the assemblage, hands on hips and chest out, of all things a
cavalry sword at his hip. The man gave a short nod to his men before
turning to the scientists and nodding more deeply. Bond got the
message; they were simple civilians, so ignorant, but god help them
if they so much as blinked...
The VIPs arrived, a
pair of motorcycle outriders roaring up impressively before three
jeeps came to a sliding halt, the last two disgorging what had to be
Cuban troops to form a slightly less-impressive Guard of Honour. This
time Bond risked it, getting the shock of a lifetime before locking
his eyes forward again as the Sergeant-Major brought the parade to
attention, goose-stepping forward three paces and stamping to
attention as if it were May Day on the Square itself. The sword came
out and up in salute, which was returned with a wave of the cigar
before the muscular bearded figure wrapped his arms round the
Guardsman and kissed both cheeks in comradely fashion. Recovering his
composure admirably, the Sergeant-Major led Fidel Castro first past
the scientists and then his men. James Bond was genuinely at a loss –
as he saw the Cuban supremo's approach he knew he had the chance in a
million. Two shots to the head, plus a few at the next targets of
importance (The senior scientists were easily distinguishable from
their greying and balding heads and their position in the front
rank); his housekeeper could have done it, let alone a Double – O.
The famous pillbox hat was level with Bond, those famous brown eyes
made contact with his for a heartbeat, Bond returning the gaze with a
smile, his hand inside his coat ready for a fast draw from the hip.
Bond knew it was suicide, plus he had no orders regarding Castro –
the moment had passed, the hand relaxed and, he had to admit, the man
he had nearly killed seemed genuinely likable, laughing and joking,
handing out cigars from a box a flunky carried and even trying a
guardsman's cap on before playfully punching the nervous young man in
the arm and slapping him on the back. Bond knew this would not be in
his report, but his feeling of contented satisfaction over his
inaction washed away through his shoes at the commotion that had
started up in the building behind. Cheap-suit was clearly awake. The
Parade was dismissed as the motorcade sped off to the main reactor
building, Bond letting the flock of white coats disperse enough to
cover his exit towards the lift, his nerve holding as he could hear
shouts behind him, the wrong man indignantly vocal in outrage at
being accosted.
Bond caught up with the
Motorcade as it stood idly outside the reactor building, waiting for
the Cuban leader to finish his tour. Ducking out of sight beneath an
external metal fire-escape Bond whipped round, pistol drawn – to
find a grinning Leiter already concealed there, in a dirty blue
boiler suit and hard hat.
'Relax James, don't say
you're getting jumpy on the trigger.'
'Okay I won't say it,
then. Where's the girl?.'
'My guess is up there
with Comrade Fidel selling us out – yes, I've seen him. She went
ahead to take a look inside. Turns out our girl learned more than
hoodwinking Double-O men at spy school; she's a bona fide expert on
nuclear stuff like this get-up.'
'Yes, I rather thought she was too good to be true. How do we get out
of here anyway?, that lift is getting busier by the minute.'
'Beats me, James.
Here's our girl.'
Out of breath, Paige
joined them.
'Here's the bad news –
don't ask, there isn't any good. Despite appearances, the reactor
itself is ready to go hot, all the structural work is complete and
todays visit was the official commissioning ceremony – they start
generating power sometime this week, with the undersea cable ready
for connection to Cuba as soon as a cable laying craft gets here. I
had to get out when extra guards started being posted. Bond looked
down, embarrassed, but Leiter was intrigued. 'So, you've taken the
advanced course on all this Atomic stuff; what's the deal with this
Morning Star?.'
'Morning Star is a
water-cooled graphite-moderated reactor. It's a military design using
uranium fuel – not the standard enriched-uranium either, this stuff
comes out of the ground in the Belgian Congo by the bucket-load.
Extremely simple design. Once it's built it only needs a handful of
specialist technicians and staff – the rest can be trained in a day
or less.'
Bond was getting lost.
'Could it be used to
make a bomb?.'
'No – not in the
Hiroshima sense of the word at least. Its primary purpose is to
provide power, which is probably worse.'
It was Leiter's turn
for confusion.
'Worse than mushroom
clouds and instant sunshine?.'
'Yes, worse. Uranium
decays, becomes inefficient. The spent material remains highly
dangerous to humans, which is why Maximilian is the last person who
should have access to so much of it. Put simply; pack a suitcase half
full of TNT, thats the ordinary dynamite used in quarries everywhere,
pack the remainder full of uranium and set the lot off with a timer.'
'Go on.' Bond had that
feeling again.
'It needs to be
somewhere high, say the Empire State. New York, Manhatten and a large
part of the surrounding area would be desolate for five hundred to a
thousand years. Manhatten, New York City. No life of any kind for
five centuries. Worse enough for you Mr. Leiter?.'
Bond 'What if the
reactor blew up?, wouldn't the blast be contained under all this
rock?.'
Felix snapped his
finger, 'Hey, yeah, like our tests out in Nevada – don't tell me
the Reds haven't got their own stretch of desert full of new craters
and melted rock. Well?, what about it?.'
Paige sat back, taking
her head in her hands before answering.
'You're confusing
Atomic bombs with Atomic power – this reactor simply cannot be made
to explode. Well, not in the conventional sense of things.'
This raised the
eyebrows of both men.
'There is one way. If
the fuel rods come into contact with air, they oxidise violently,
releasing large amounts of hydrogen in proximity to the biggest heat
source on Earth. The only problem is, the person operating the rods
would be among the first to be killed in the explosion. A suicide
mission, in short.'
'Well, I'm seeing this
gal from Houston...' Leiter's joke fell flat, Bond knew they had to
find another way. They had out-stayed their welcome as it was, to
judge from the increased Jeep patrols and squads of soldiers that now
sealed every entrance. 'Great.' Leiter wasn't optimistic. 'There's no
way out.' Bond ducked back into cover as a couple of trucks whined
past. Looking up at the steel stairs a thought occurred to him. 'How
does the electricity get out – where does it go after the reactor,
I mean?.'
CHAPTER
19
THE
BEACH PARTY
The guards at
the steel mesh gate were becoming bored. It was nearly time for
dinner and their relief was overdue, nearly ten minutes now. Had the
men been more alert, they might have paid closer attention to the
driver of the truck that pulled up at the gate, waving his pass
impatiently. Another arrogant Russian, no doubt. They had been on
duty in this godforsaken hole for a whole month now and not once had
one of these foreigners deigned to treat them as equals. So much for
the global Comradeship of Socialism. They would show him!; the two
Cubans went over the truck as carefully as if they were thinking of
buying it. The search took a full three minutes, one guard climbing
up onto the jump-step to look inside the cab, while his counterpart
climbed into the back; they even looked underneath. Finally, tiring
of their sport, they waved the driver through, waiting until the
truck had disappeared down the access tunnel before bursting into
laughter. Inside the cab of the truck, Paige had to fight off a fit
of the giggles, partly because of the absurdity of the situation, but
mainly because her seat kept tickling her.
The truck pulled over
into a parking area, joining a row of identical trucks. Identical,
that its, except that they hadn't had their driver's seat removed and
replaced by two spies crouching down and covered in an old
oil-stained blanket. Glad to be free of their burden, the two men
jumped down behind Paige to stand in awe at the scene before them. If
the cavern containing Morning Star was large, this one was long; not
the same height, perhaps, but much longer, with the impression of a
natural gallery that had been widened and elongated. There were no
stalactites here, whatever had created this chamber had done so
mechanically and recently. Nor was it empty; the monstrous concrete
box running the full length was easily a hundred feet tall and five
times that in length; probably more.
'Gentlemen – the
Morning Star Turbine Hall – inside there are two Super –
Generators, powered by the steam piped through from the reactor at
extremely high pressure, each one could provide enough power to run a
medium-sized city... at half normal operating conditions. Easily
enough for the whole of Cuba, with plenty left to spare.'
Bond was starting to
lose patience. 'What's beyond that?.'
'Just the outlet
channels; assuming the high-voltage switching gear is in the end of
the main building, if they are planning an undersea cable there'll be
a set of outlet channels of some kind, where the cable will connect
to the transformer stage.'
'And we can get out of
these channels?.'
'I hope so.'
Bond grabbed her by the
shoulders.
'You hope so?.
You knew about this place from the very start – don't try to deny
it I'm not in the mood, and I doubt Felix is either.'
'You got that right
Jim. Keep going, I'm finding this all rather fascinating.'
Angrily, Paige pulled
herself free of Bond's grasp.
'Vengeance is a
powerful source of motivation, I could believe you were after Max
because of your father, but that's not it, is it?, why are you here?,
how do you know so much about Morning Star?. Dropped another file?, I
doubt it.' Her defiance required Bond to go further. Deciding against
striking her, he drew the Tokarev, cocked it and stood with his legs
firmly planted, the pistol at his side. His eyes blazed into hers,
and she knew she was seeing in them her own death. Of the man she had
lain with there was nothing, just darkness, empty and void. It was a
truly frightening glimpse of what this man would become when a life
was to be taken.
'All right. I told the
truth, but only about giving myself this assignment. It had been
given to another agent, I just changed the name. The mission was to
get close to Max, keep a close eye on him and report on the progress
of Morning Star.'
'Report?, how?.'
'There's a radio hidden
on the island. There's more; I was to eliminate him if required. I
was also given the name of several potential traitors among the
scientists, those classed as politically unreliable, also to be
watched and eliminated if necessary.'
'One more question,
then we get out of here to that radio of yours. Why did Max leave
your father on that beach?.'
'It took me years to
find the answer to that same question. Not much of an answer, two
words; Blue Steel. From what I read in those files, my father was
taking the plans with us, but Max stole them and left us behind. He
still has half the plans; he was paid $100,000 in gold bars for them,
but raised the price at the last minute. I intend to find the second
half of those plans and destroy them.'
'Destroy them?, surely
your father wanted the Soviets to get those plans.'
'He was an idealist, he
believed no one side should have an advantage. If you know anything
about Blue Steel you'll know what it means. It's simply too dangerous
for either side to have such a weapon. I can't do anything about the
West having it, but I don't believe that the way to peace will be
found through having more weapons.'
Bond admired the
sentiment, yet felt sick at being used this way. Love!, the thought
of it; a slushy word for a slushy sentiment. So!, that's how it
felt!, to be used by another... The bile rising in his gorge was
quenched by the overpowering bitterness of cynicism, a cruel smile of
irony on Bond's face. She was a professional after all.
'Okay, no hard
feelings. Just business, right?.'
The tear at the corner
of her eye might have passed unnoticed, but the gleam in Leiter's
told her otherwise.
'Yes James. As you say.
Just business.'
'Speaking of business,
don't you two think it's time to get going?.' Bond couldn't have
agreed more, shaking his head as he followed his companions towards
the building. Once more it seemed life certainly liked to play tricks
on 007; all along he'd wanted the Blue Steel job, but this was the
last place he'd have thought to have stumbled upon it.
The locker room was
busy when Leiter breezed in, which made for good cover as he set
about stealing two boiler suits to go with his. The work crews in
this area seemed to either be in blue or white, so he took a chance
on the blue, hoping that would get them through un-challenged.
Returning to the storage bins where he had left them he handed them
over, waiting while they changed. The main engineering spaces were as
impressive as the size of the building had suggested, gantries to the
centre and either side of the great hall with a gantry crane running
along below the ceiling. An operating crew was at work on the crane,
lending scale to the proceedings by appearing to be insect sized as
it slid along regally in the rafters.
The Super –
Generators themselves defied description, each like some massive
metal city – overall they were pipe shaped as expected, but the
inhuman scale of the machines was un-nerving, even to a Texan,
Leiter's low whistle was expression enough.
The klaxon sounded,
startling them, but this turned out to be a shift change, all the
blue boiler suits clambering down gantries and out from under
machinery, grateful to have another long stint behind them. The three
kept moving, ever deeper into the bowels of the monster. 'Do you see
what I see?.' Bond answered Leiter's question with a noncommittal
grunt. Paige was the last to see it; the shift coming onto the floor
were all in white.
'Ahh crap. Trust
old Felix to pick the wrong shirt.'
'Keep walking – I
can't see the end yet, but that gantry - ' Bond pointed a finger –
'That looks like it leads somewhere. When the balloon goes up, run
like hell.'
Paige had left the PPS
back at the truck, which left the two pistols. Bond and Leiter were
ready to shoot their way out if they had to.
'Hey!, Consiga el
culo en movimiento!' At the bottom of the gantry a confused
supervisor emerged, looking around for the cause of the shouts, on
seeing the three blue figures he started to berate them for their
laziness, but fell silent as Felix shoved the barrel of his Tokarev
into his chest.
'Hi there. Which way to
the outlet channels?.' Bond tried Spanish; 'Canales de salida',
at which the dumbstruck figure pointed towards a stairway leading up
the side of the building, where it connected with a catwalk leading
out over the hall to a large central metal room suspended from a
series of pipes leading all the way up from the ground level to exit
through the ceiling at an angle.
'Doesn't look like a
way out.' Bond might have agreed with Felix's doubts, but Paige had
already set off at a trot to the stairs.
'We'll soon find out.
Go, go!' Bond waved Leiter on after the girl, smiling at the
supervisor, then whipping his pistol up to fire two quick shots.
By the time the man had
opened his eyes again Bond had gone, leaving him alone with the badly
wounded guard behind him, two bullet holes through his arm and
shoulder. This time the Klaxon blasts sounded in alarm as the new
shift evacuated the floor, to be replaced by squads of heavily-armed
guards.
It took a full minute
to reach the catwalk, all three gasping for breath as they
jog-shuffled along the span. A sudden whining howl and a spark from
one of the supports announced the outbreak of hostilities, the shot
soon followed by another. Bond saw a group of tiny Lilliputian
soldiers directly below, a flash from one becoming a zzup!
As the bullet flashed by his leg. From up here the whole building
stretched away dizzily below and around the alarmingly narrow
metalwork. Paige in particular seemed to be fighting an attack of
nerves, but a reassuring hand on her shoulder from Felix lent her
courage.
The room ahead was
occupied, shapes visible through the windows, the bulk of a huge man
appearing in the opening door ahead, a large spanner clutched
menacingly in one hand and a toothless grin on the broad features.
'Down!, Paige get
down!.' Cursing, Felix couldn't get a shot off at the advancing bulk,
the girl was frozen on the spot. Seeing the danger, Bond grasped both
rails, pistol still in hand, kicking up to get his feet onto the thin
bars. Forcing himself to stand, with a brief moment's loss of balance
– and the clattering, dismaying loss of his pistol – he flailed
his arms once, yelling down to Leiter.
'Felix!, pistol!.' The
Texan understood, tossing the pistol up for Bond to catch as the
spanner was poised to smash down onto Paige's skull.
Heart-stoppingly, Bond fumbled the catch, the Tokarev slipping from
his right hand... into his left. The shot took the man in the bicep,
the spanner tumbling down from the rafters to smash the rifle from
the hands of the soldier as he was about to shoot Bond.
Felix ducked back
between 007's legs, allowing him to shuffle forward over Paige and
drop down next to the prostrate Russian.
'Get up. Up! Bystro!'
Using the wounded giant as a shield, Bond entered the room. It was a
large space filled with rows of electrical control panels and an
observation gallery. There were upwards of people inside, including
two women, all standing or in the process of doing so having heard
the shots and commotion. Pushing the injured man into a chair Bond
directed the nearest woman to attend to his wound, waving his
companions past to the hatchway at the far end.
Standing on the roof of
the building the outlet channels were either side of the hatchway,
each with its own access hatch in the side of the gigantic steel
pipes, the diameter of these easily over two metres. Opening the
nearest hatch Bond could see the high-tension cable at the core of
the channel, a rubber coated beast as thick as a man's thigh. These
stretched away, both down and up, being held central by sets of
springs mounted at intervals along the pipe. The angle was steep, but
he reckoned they could make it – assuming no-one thought to start
shooting up the pipe – or switched the reactor on, the heat from
the cables probably fatal to a human.
'These things, they
must go up to the surface, right?.' Leiter seemed dubious.
'Well, we've only got
five shots left, so we'll be finding out soon enough, won't we
Paige?.' Bond's sickly-sweet smile was not returned. Leaning back
into the roof hatch, he called out for the workers to get out of the
way and cover their ears, firing the remaining five shots rapid fire
into the electrical control panels. He hoped it would be enough.
Jamming the empty pistol into the roof hatch lever, Bond reckoned
they had bought a little time, going over to the outlet channel pipe.
'Ladies first, Texans
second.' Paige paused for a second, going into the pipe cautiously,
stepping onto the springs and reaching upwards. With his one good
hand, Felix was naturally worried about the climb.
'Well?, how is it in
there?.'
'Come on, Felix, its
easy. Just don't look down.'
It certainly wasn't
easy, but they managed, clambering up the steep incline with no more
than the odd slip or slide into each other. Several sweat-soaked
minutes later and they emerged into a concrete box room, the hatchway
for which was dogged – from the outside. Bond slumped onto the
floor, beaten.
'Now what?, knock and
say Open Sesame?.' Felix wasn't used to seeing his friend give up.
'Sure, James, why
not?.' Banging on the hatch with his plastic hand, he shook his head.
It was a shock when the hatch was opened, a tanned face peering in.
'Que pasa?.'
Anyone watching the
Cuban would have seen his head jerk back, then his body suddenly
being dragged from sight into the open hatchway. No-one was watching.
Headphones to his ear,
Bond tapped out the morse on the Russian set.
BARRACUDA STOP
URGENT STOP BARRACUDA STOP URGENT ANY STATION STOP ANY STATION –
The signal was kept to the bare minimum, just co-ordinates and a
coded reference to Morning Star. He waited for the reply, taking a
deep pull at the water bottle Paige handed to him. The reply came in
typically terse style; a brief acknowledgement plus a set of
instructions. Felix was busy preparing a snack – of sorts, from the
food supply. Bond finished listening to the reply, making sure he had
memorized the details before signing off gratefully. Suddenly things
had changed, withdrawal now far from his thoughts.
'Well, that changes
things. Felix, I'll need a word when we've got a moment.' Paige said
nothing, but Bond could feel the annoyance from where he now sat.
'You said you had a
radio, not an armoury and food. Standard MWD issue I take it?.'
'Something like that,
yes.' She accepted a saltine cracker and beef paste sandwich from
Leiter. Bond sniffed his suspiciously, taking an experimental bite.
Paige couldn't help laughing at the face he pulled.
'Now I can see why
Soviet agents are so tough. If you can survive the food, you'd be
indestructible.'
The cache was contained
in three boxes, each waterproofed, buried in the loose topsoil and
camouflaged. The first had contained the radio and batteries, the
second food and water, as well as a rubberised sheet for shelter and
a set of canvas jungle boots and camouflage overalls in Paige's size.
Several handy items had been thoughtfully included, such as a belt
with water bottles and pouches containing the boy scout stuff that
soldiers all over the world actually rely on for their survival; a
torch, knife and so forth. It was the contents of the third box that
Bond and Leiter were busying themselves with, however. As well as an
AK-47 there was a Makharov pistol with silencer, a bag of grenades
and two satchel demolition charges, plastic explosive type. The most
interest had been reserved for the rocket launcher – a new type
neither of the male agents had seen before. Paige had given them a
quick run-through; the launch tube was fixed to the ground by a
folding bipod, then a sighting arrangement was slotted on before
aiming. The tube was then loaded with the rocket – a high-explosive
warhead with a massive punch, launched by a mechanical timer that
could be selected manually or by a booby-trapped wire. When fired,
the tube and sight arrangement were melted into unrecognisable scrap
by the rocket flame.
Felix handed Bond one
of the last of his precious Chesterfields, lighting another for
himself.
'So, what's the news
from the outside world?.'
'Theres going to be a
beach party – and we're the hosts.'
The Shackleton lumbered
off into the pale blue dawn at Ladyville, just over two hours flying
time distant. Unknown to all on the island, M's last official act as
Chief had been to send a signal authorising the rescue mission, but
until Bond had called in with his location, the aircraft had remained
at a state of instant readiness. The hold of the Shackleton contained
an unusual cargo; a small force of Elite Royal Marines. Just twelve
in number, the men crammed into the back were drawn from the highly
secretive Special Boat Squadron, itself descended from the legendary
Cockleshell Heroes that wreaked havoc in many daring missions behind
enemy lines. Each man knew Sergeant Thewlett personally, inevitable
in such a close-knit unit, and this was a matter of honour. With
blackened faces they sat, each lost in his own thoughts. Some smoked,
despite the prominent STRICTLY NO SMOKING signs, others checked their
equipment and weapons. They wore the new experimental camouflage
pattern tropical weight shirts and olive green trousers over canvas
and rubber jungle boots. On the ground personal choice dictated the
choice of headgear from bush hats and sweat bands, only one man,
'Sandy' Carew wearing the distinctive Australian 'digger' hat, a nod
to his roots with the Australian Commandos. Jumping with the Mark Two
parachute, it would be – unusually – a day-time operation. The
Royal Navy was to make the pickup later that day, the details were
sketchy due to the covert and last-minute nature of it all, but the
Submarine HMS Trafalgar was operating in the Caribbean and the
current betting was on a rendezvous at sea and a ride back to Belize,
where the men had been on a jungle training course.
Bond checked the time
again, holding the torch carefully so as to shield the light from
prying eyes. On the way to the isolated beach they had already had to
dodge two patrols and it was certain there would be more now the
whole island knew of their escape. The torch, with red signal filter
attached, was a nifty East German type based on the German wartime
model used by the infamous Brandenburger Kommando units. He
sent three flashes, waited thirty seconds then repeated the signal.
There! Flash – flash – flash, a tiny pinprick of red light
out to sea. Thirty seconds then another three came, followed by the
sound of waves gently slapping against rubber then a vagueness that
slowly resolved into a boat, several dark figures dimly visible.
'Commander Bond?, that
better be you – Godammit Pancho, keep the lousy boat steady!. Where
is that Goddamn limey anyhow?.'
'Benny?, well I'll
be... what the hey?.'
'Well, you said you
needed an Army. I brought one.'
Benny the Breeze
finished his hurried explanation, shrugging and gesturing wildly to
emphasise the trouble he had gone to to help the stranded party.
'So then you missed the
Midnight show, great act by the way, Carmen Roxana, best singer we
had in months... Anyway, I gets a call from a guy, can't say who,
says he's looking to get his friend Bond out of a nook, thats what we
call a hole in Brooklyn, so I says sure, where is this Bond?. Anyway,
he says he's on some island, but its all sewn up tight with Cubans
and Russians and theres no way. So, I figured the odds and called in
some favours, which is to say every favour I was ever owed...'
'Benny, I hate to
interrupt a pal, but we're kinda out on a limb here if you get my
drift.'
'Okay, sure, I get it.
Benny always comes through – I brought some guys, actually bought
'em is more correct. They're all ex-Cubans, like you wanted, all keen
to take back the old Motherland.'
Leaning closer, the
flamboyant Mafioso lowered his voice.
'Just don't tell 'em
this ain't Cuba. They all think we're on Cuban soil – I didn't want
them to lose interest. Speaking of which, this all adds up to, well
it won't be cheap Felix, so I gotta tell ya, this job don't pay there
would be unpleasantness.'
Leiter was incredulous.
'Why you lou... are you
threatening the CIA?.'
'Just business Felix,
nuttin' personal. Anyway, I figure your credit's good. Okay, Pancho,
better bring the boys in.'
At a signal from
Benny's man Pancho, first one, then two, then four boats began
emerging from the black waters. As each made the shore, it was
quickly dragged up into the treeline. After nearly half an hour, the
group was complete. Bond took a rough count , coming up with an
estimate of around sixty men – Benny had claimed there were a
hundred, but when Bond confronted him over the discrepancy the New
Yorker had just shrugged and smiled coyly. They would have to do;
sixty men, armed with a motley collection of weaponry that ranged
from rusty shotguns to what looked to be brand new Thompsons, the
'Tommy Gun' of gangster notoriety.
The group had appointed
several men as Lieutenants, Bond grouping these men around a hasty
plan of the base he had drawn in the sand, seashells standing in for
artillery pieces and machine-gun posts.
'Now, listen carefully.
This is where we are, this arrow is North and these are the
directions we will attack from. There are two main areas of defence,
judging from what we've seen an inner and outer ring...'
Briefing the irregular
troops took just ten minutes; Bond estimated they only had ammunition
for that long, besides which he was sure that after that time they
would either be dead or have forgotten the plan anyway. With a last
look round, he made the AK ready, cocking the weapon and making sure
the fire selector was in the 'Safe' position. Felix cocked the Colt
.45 he had borrowed from Benny and Paige, in her camouflaged overalls
followed suit with the Makharov.
'Gentlemen. For Cuba.'
'Por Cuba!, Por
Cuba!.' The shout went up into the trees, taken up by sixty
voices.
Benny's army was going
to war.
CHAPTER
20
A
CONQUEROR REBORN
The military
Headquarters building for the island was concealed in the stone of a
ruined temple adjacent to the main pyramid. On duty in the radio room
Corporal Gonzales of the Cuban military was losing hand over fist,
throwing his hand away angrily. Sergeant Perez gloated as he made
twenty-one for the third time in a row, as well he might since the
cards they used were his specially marked deck. The buzzer from the
radio console saved him from discovery as he pocketed his winnings
and the cards. Reluctantly, Gonzales answered the call, getting a
screech of static and an unintelligible babble through the
loudspeaker. Pressing the 'transmit' button he realised that the fool
at the other end was holding theirs down, so couldn't hear him
anyway.
"Sargento, yo
no puedo conseguir a través de - ¿Cuáles son sus órdenes? '.
('Sergeant, I can't get
through – what are your orders?.')
'What do you think?,
some drunken idiot is keying the mike. Call the stations on the
emergency channel, channel twelve – a radio check, find out which
moron doesn't answer and I'll go kick their ass.' Unconcerned, the
Sergeant looked over the map on the wall, which showed the island
divided into sectors, each with its own radio post.
There was no need for
the emergency channel – at that second a massive explosion blasted
up into the sky from the area designated as Sector G. Knocking the
stunned Corporal aside, Perez stabbed at the button, yelling into the
microphone.
'Attencion!,
attencion!, informe de todos los sectores!, guardias para el Sector
G!'. While he waited for the sectors to report in, he cuffed his
subordinate round the ears, ordering him to sound the General Alert
on the air-raid siren outside.
The sounds of gunfire
and the distinctive crump of grenades exploding came from several
directions, while on the ground Benny's men were making steady
progress towards the main pyramid. Felix had taken command of a group
of twenty Cubans, with the aim of hitting the outer ring of defences
around the island as a diversion for the main attack.
Bond had taken up
position opposite a pair of heavy anti-aircraft guns, the ominous
shape of a tracked vehicle behind, a communications and headquarters
vehicle. He scanned the greenery intently, hardly blinking,
concentrating on his surroundings. Jungle warfare is one of the most
demanding kinds, the shadows and greenery natural camouflage for
those deadly little tricks and traps; miss an exposed equipment pouch
and you miss the sniper, miss the tripwire and be certain the
shrapnel won't miss you. Seeing nothing, it was time to move closer.
'Now what the?... well,
somebody sure has good friends in the Kremlin. Felix ducked back down
behind the earth bank, careful not to be seen. If there had been any
doubt about the Soviet commitment to this Atomic plant, Felix now had
none. He knew about the Davina missile, of course, the latest
Russian anti-aircraft missile got a mention in every briefing now,
the man who got hold of one intact would be an Agency legend.
Officially, NATO called the rocket the SA-2 Guideline ,
although details were sketchy it was estimated to have an operational
height exceeding fifty thousand feet, with a separate radar guidance
system. Felix was glad they had no planes over the island. Such
as the Shackleton which was ten minutes out to sea.
On the other side of
the island, Bond had crawled to within a few feet of the nearest gun
position, the four barrels pointing lazily skyward, the gunner
carelessly smoking. The fighting was yet to reach this sector, so
there was no need for alarm. The man was a veteran of the revolution,
and knew better than to panic at the first sign of trouble. He died
smoking, Bond's knife cutting his windpipe, left arm tightly holding
the Cuban as he kicked, Bond making sure of death before releasing
the body. Taking the man's bush hat and cigar, 007 climbed into the
gunner's seat.
The men manning the
second gun were jumpy, neither had been in the military long and they
were unsure of themselves. The gunner was staring into the jungle,
eyes wide at the sound of gunfire. His mate was crouched alongside
the gun carriage, equally tense. A glance over at the first gun gave
him hope; look at Alfredo!, smoking coolly without a care!. He waved,
getting a laconic wave of the hand back in reply. His gunner was
about to scold him for taking his eyes off the danger area when the
whole world exploded. At this range and used in the ground role the
Soviet 14.5 mm anti-aircraft system is one of the most fearsome
weapons known to man, the high-explosive shells designed to punch
massive holes through aircraft left the second gun an unrecognisable
mess of twisted steel. Of its crew only the mate remained, lying in
the mud behind the wreckage and praying he would survive. Bond swung
the barrels round to engage the communications vehicle, but the
Russian crew were obviously professionals, the tracks screaming in
protest as the driver sent it lurching off into the foliage. Bond
gave it a few bursts anyway, but doubted he had done any damage to
the armoured beast. The fighting was getting closer, the proof in the
number of stray rounds blasting past; a loud krak-thump as the
odd round came through the trees, with a thwok! sound when one
hit solid wood. Things were getting hairy, so Bond decided to head to
the pyramid, determined to destroy Morning Star. Paige had been
behind him, part of a group with Benny, but she was no-where to be
seen. From out of nowhere a clattering announced the arrival of a
helicopter, the craft roaring overhead at just over tree height to
hover above the nearest group of attackers. Bond saw the danger, but
it was too late, as he loosed off a long burst at the chopper a
silver canister rolled from its belly, to fall amongst the patriots
bursting open in an explosion of flame and smoke. Horrified, 007 was
powerless to help the poor devils who writhed around in mute agony,
living balls of fire in their own private hell. Mechanically, 007
raised the kalashnikov, thumbing the switch to automatic. Firing
short bursts he moved round the perimeter of the holocaust, ending
the misery for those he could see. A shot from nearby sent him
crouching into the aim, but it was a Russian Sergeant of Guards,
administering mercy shots of his own. Locking eyes, Bond looked into
the blue eyes opposite for any sign of hostility, but the Sergeant
merely nodded in acknowledgment. Returning the gesture saw both men
reach a kind of personal truce, each going on his way unharmed.
In the cabin of the
helicopter, Chago tapped the pilot on the shoulder, whirling a finger
round to indicate another pass. The pilot nodded, banking the machine
into a tight pass around the pyramid and leveling out in a low run
towards the area where the fighting was fiercest. On the ground Benny
took a break, swigging thirstily from a hip flask one of his Cubans
had passed round. The men were in good spirits, despite several
casualties. They did tend to bunch together, but these were not
professional soldiers. Giving the thumbs-up, Benny hefted his tommy
gun, giving the opposition half a magazine. The machine-gun at the
base of the treeline opened up, sending chunks of wood and sand
spinning and spraying up.
'Hey, senor Benny.'
Pancho pointed at the sky, where the helicopter was flying away from
a large fire on the ground. Benny eyed the whirly-bird nervously as
it flashed overhead. Unless they got past that machine – gun, into
the safety of the trees they were finished.
Chago leaned out from
the open doorway, grinning evilly as the helicopter turned to attack
the main group. He hauled the canister to the edge of the door, ready
to slide it out onto the fools below.
Fumbling with the
spanner, Felix wished he'd left this to Bond, the tricky perch and
all the noise not helping one bit. He had to hand it to 'his' Cubans,
they sure were game – throwing un-primed grenades at the rocket
crew to send them running off in a panic. Nearly there! - one more
turn and he would be the proud owner of the guidance box from a
Guideline missile. What he hadn't bargained for was the damned thing
deciding to take off with him still aboard.
Up on the hillside a
glint from binoculars was briefly visible from beneath the camouflage
netting cover. Lowering the binoculars, the Captain of Artillery
nodded to his next in command. The radar had been correct and the
target was indeed an enemy aircraft; a four-engined bomber of British
type was the Captain's assessment. No matter; they would bring it
down, a legitimate target, no doubt connected to the bandits who were
about to be swept into the sea by the Guards troops held back in
readiness.
'Tselevaya na
poltory tysyachi , priobreteniye semidesyati protsentov vosemʹdesyat
pyatʹ, start!' (Target at fifteen-hundred, acquisition seventy
percent, eighty five, LAUNCH!.')
To a background of
noisy chirping, the fire control officer slammed his hand down on the
release button, keeping it down to allow the automatic system to fire
the missile from it's launcher in the clearing below.
'RED LIGHT ON –
STAND IN THE DOOR' The RAF Jumpmaster shouted the words, but knew
no-one would hear him. Still, it was standard drill, and the men
shuffled forward towards the door as one, each hooked onto the cable
running above the door.
In his headphones, the
Loadmaster gave his colleague three fingers followed by a finger to
thumb zero. Thirty seconds.
'Ugh!' Felix hit the
ground hard, knocking the wind out of his lungs. He rolled away as
the rocket-blast blew his boys off their feet, surprised to find he
was still holding the guidance box. Thirty-odd feet of missile
screamed off the rail and with a phenomenal WHURSSHHH lifted
into the sky at a frightening velocity.
Chago heaved at the
incendiary bomb, but was sent sprawling over it as the pilot saw the
launch plume from the forest below.
'Boga nyet!' The
man heaved at the control stick, but to no avail; the rocket went
crazy, spinning and gyrating out of control. On the ground Felix saw
the thing bucking around the sky and, for a moment he was convinced
it would fall back into the clearing. It roared around the helicopter
and toppled into the tail boom.
Bond whipped his head
around, shocked at the scale of this latest explosion, parts raining
down across a wide area.
'GO-GO-GO!'
With scarcely two
seconds between them the men jumped, anxious to keep it tight, a
second at this speed the difference between landing in a group or a
hundred feet away in the jungle. The plane was down to five hundred
feet for its run, the height chosen to help keep the men together and
avoid too much time spent helplessly dangling in the air.
The first pair crashed
down into the canopy, coming to a sudden halt. One man felt his
parachute slipping, quickly pulling at a bag on his leg, sending it
tumbling down to the jungle floor eighty feet or so below. Rappelling
down the canvas strap that had been rolled in the bag he hit the
ground hard, rolling to the side and drawing his pistol to cover
them, pulling the last of the strap through the harness each man wore
for the purpose as the next man's boots came down next to him. This
was repeated until nine of the men had either landed in the trees or
clearings, months of training proving their value as the parachutists
transformed into SBS teams. Jumping on a small island, the
inevitable; the last three men went into the drink, jettisoning their
parachutes as they came down to the water – they knew the trick;
when the horizon looked normal, they were about to go in. More than
one parachutist had a long and fatal fall before this became common
knowledge. Inflating their buoyancy vests, the three stragglers began
striking out for shore.
Maximilian listened to the stream of chatter on the radio.
Instructing the Captain to take the Bayamo to full speed he went to
his state-room. There, he found Ortega coming from his bathroom, in a
track-suit. The man was in excellent shape; he would need to be to
kill this James Bond. What a fool he had been to imagine this pendejo
gringo would have the intellect to comprehend his plans!. Well,
this would end with the knife. Going to a sofa Maximilian pressed two
of the button studs, the back falling open to reveal a small safe.
Spinning the dial, the 'Marques' pulled out a folder containing the
precious plans. Whatever happened on the island he knew these were as
good as hard currency, but he would not leave the gold the Russians
had paid him, or the precious printing plates. The reactor had been a
dangerous diversion, more for Castro's reputation than any real gain.
He would raise the price again – perhaps even offer the
all-important blueprints to the Americans!, surely if the Reds would
pay the rich US would pay double, triple to keep the plans from the
Soviets. With the plates, the operation could still go ahead. Better
to take at least one of the old forgers as insurance.
'Ortega, you will find
Bond, then kill him.'
'And the others?, the
American and the girl, Senorita Turner?.'
'The same. We leave
tonight.'
'All right gentlemen,
you know the score.' Sergeant-Major Mickey Greene was an old hand at
this sort of work, with a career going back to the closing stages of
the war in Italy. The no-nonsense figure was short, but built like a
barrel, a true Cockney from Stepney. 'Now that we're all here,' he
paused to survey the recent arrivals, the three dripping wet from
their swim. 'Now, we've got three teams to cover the whole place –
so we just keep it simple, find this Bond chappie, get him out, no
messing. The Yank and the girl – they're not our responsibility,
but we'd best bring them out anyway.'
'What about the
Reactor?, the personnel, scientists, that sort. What's the word on
this from upstairs?.' The question came, not unexpectedly from Munro,
a dour Scot with a pedants chain of thought.
'Well, we don't know –
each team's got a radiation meter, if anyone starts feeling funny
best get out sharpish. They'll want some pictures, so Davey G thats
you nice and busy, don't ponce about with document photos, just bag
the lot and scarper. Jack and Davey B you've each got a radio, get
set up and wait for further – sorry about the lack of information,
but I only got this much when we were already in the air. Alright,
piss off, the lot of yer.'
With that briefest of
briefings out of the way, the men broke up into three four man
patrols, each taking a different route at intervals of five minutes.
'DE TODAS LAS
UNIDADES DE EMERGENCIA STAND-BY POSICIONES, CON TODAS LAS UNIDADES DE
EMERGENCIA STAND-BY POSICIONES.'
The voice over the
tannoy was that of a man used to command, sounding almost relaxed as
it echoed around the complex.
Bond made sure he was
ready, checking himself over quickly. He had hoped to find a uniform
to replace the boiler suit – green seeming to be la mode above
ground, but his luck seemed to have drawn the line below sartorial
matters. As well as the AK-47 he had a Colt.45 tucked into a pocket
and a holdall containing the satchel charges and two grenades in his
pockets. There were just three magazines for the rifle, not nearly
enough, but he hoped there would be more in the complex itself.
Silently, he stepped into the freight car, hoping the metal sides
were thick enough to stop a bullet. Up ahead, one of Benny's men
reached up to move the locomotive's accelerator lever to half-speed
and press the starter button. With shouts of alarm, the guards
nearest to the train began running to try to stop it as it began
rolling down the track. As the nearest came alongside the freight
cars, Bond lashed out with the butt of the Kalashnikov, sending the
man sprawling to bring the next down in a tangle of arms and legs.
The Bond Railway Company continued on it's inaugural – and terminal
journey.
'¿Qué demonios?.'
The men manning the self-propelled artillery piece looked on in
surprise at the unmanned train, then chaos as automatic fire began
hailing down on them from the car. Bond ran through half a magazine,
giving an observation post up in the trees the last few bursts. He
had the satisfaction of seeing a body topple down before ducking back
down to change magazines.
'Mensaje entendido,
vamos a detenerlo' Clipping the walkie-talkie to his belt, the
soldier at the guard-post outside the pyramid entrance unslung his
rifle, cocking it as he relayed the message 'He's in one of the mine
cars – you jump up on the loco and stop it, soon as he shows
himself, pow!.' The chosen man nodded, steadying himself to make the
jump. The locomotive was going at perhaps twenty miles an hour, but
the man was quick, vaulting into the seat to slap the lever back to
'stop' then rolling off to help cover the cars. Both men looked at
each other, shrugging. They moved forward, down the carriages, but
the train was empty – just an old green bag in the end car. As he
opened it, the first man let out a sigh of relief; there was just
what looked like a grenade pi... BOOMF!. The second Cuban staggered
back, covered in bits of his colleague and riddled with shrapnel. His
last thought as he saw the man walking around the corner was; 'Oh.'
Then there was nothing. Bond walked up the train, throwing down the
satchel charges on the front passenger carriage. Wedging himself low
on the floor of the locomotive, he reached up to push the lever
forward to drive into the pyramid. Disdaining the use of the light,
he let his eyes adjust to the dark as the rock walls went past.
The guards at the lift
were from the Soviet Airborne forces, there were four of them, well
armed and trained, behind a hastily erected sandbag barrier. They
watched the black mouth of the tunnel, the lighting above making it
seem even darker. As the sound of the train intensified the Sergeant
released his safety catch with a click, the signal for the others to
follow suit, the machine-gunner pulling the cocking handle back on
his RPD and releasing the safety, ready to send a belt of 7.62
ammunition into the target. The train, however, did not appear,
squealing to a halt, brakes sparking in the darkened tunnel. Silence.
A long minute passed, the four soldiers keeping all weapons trained
on the tunnel. Eventually, the Sergeant realised they were being
foolish, acting like frightened schoolgirls. Chastened, yet angry at
himself he sent two of the men over to investigate. They reached the
tunnel, one behind the other, going in fast. Six shots sounded,
followed by a long burst – then again, silence.
From his viewpoint
under the locomotive, Bond had been cramped, the view less than
ideal. The boots rushing towards him were too tempting, the four
shots had been his, the men's ankles shattered, one firing a burst
into the tunnel wall. His ears ringing from the noise, 007 hit the
lever, running back to dive into the first mine car. As the little
train rolled out into the chamber, the RPD gunner opened up, the
machine gun blasting the passenger carriages full of holes. Throwing
himself flat in the little car, 007 tossed his last grenade out,
which exploded fairly harmlessly against the sandbags, the two
remaining guards ducking away. By the time they had cautiously raised
their heads – behind their barrels, the train had gone on its way
off into the next tunnel. The moans from the wounded men in the
tunnel brought them back to reality, the Sergeant walking out
cautiously to stare after the departing train, as it rounded the next
corner to disappear from view into the 'Archeology rooms'. Well, that
was a dead end – and a lethal trap for the crazy durak who
had attacked them. He waved his remaining man over to help him get
the wounded over to the lift.
The lead scout froze,
as did the next man. The third man in the patrol slowly closed up to
number two, while the last man simply slid off to the side to go down
on one knee, watching the rear, the barrel of his sterling
sub-machine gun slowly following the movements of his head, alert to
the minutest signs of danger. After what seemed an eternity, the
scout took his left hand from the grip of his pump action shotgun to
signal with a waving motion forward, the third man – the patrol
commander - stepping past number two, who was armed with a Light
Machine Gun, (the old-fashioned Bren gun given a new lease of life
with a conversion to NATO 7.62 calibre). Like their rear security
man, the commander hefted a sterling. The scout, still rigid, brought
his hand up, splaying his pinkie and thumb out to form a line, then
nodding forwards. A tripwire was just visible, but only just –
strung at waist height across the path. The commander took a quick
look himself, finding a soviet anti-personnel grenade had been rigged
up, fixed to the trunk of a palm. As he expected, anyone who survived
the trap and who tried walking around it would simply trigger the
real booby-trap, the string of mines hidden in the soft earth.
It took no more than a
minute for him to render the grenade safe, simply running some
waterproof tape around it before cutting the wire with his
naval-issue clasp knife.
The scout waited
another minute then moved forward at the crouch, shotgun questing for
targets as he made his slow, silent and deadly progress towards the
Headquarters building..
Now on full alert, the
Soviet troops in the crushing room were poised to open fire,
literally; the others giving the flamethrower man a wide berth as he
stood in the 'invisible' gallery ready to spray death down onto the
intruder on the train. Sitting on the lip of the last car, Bond
waited for the right moment, when the first passenger car would
emerge beneath the gallery. He had had the idea on the way in,
stopping the train quickly to grab the cables and two of the
light-stands that he remembered from his first visit. It wasn't the
World's greatest plan, but it was all he had, assuming there was
enough cable. As the faithful little loco emerged into the sinister
chamber, he rammed the plug home, four high powered floodlights
turning subterranean twilight into dazzling, blinding sunlight.
A jet of oily flame
lanced down to envelop the locomotive, licking back greedily to
consume the carriages, the lights and...
'CHRIST!' Bond had a
split-second to push himself down to the floor of the mine car,
before the orange-yellow bloom that ripped the air from his lungs and
sent the last two cars careering back down the track. He had just
enough time, just to clap his hands over his ears and open his
mouth, but although he had avoided ruptured eardrums he would be
effectively deaf for some time. He never saw the man with the
flamethrower stagger, immolated, falling to the ground next to the
macerated corpses of his companions. The blast itself continued down
the paths of least resistance, slamming through the bronze doors into
the printing room and down the tunnel, where after knocking Bond
aside the next victims were the two remaining guards by the lift. In
the outer entrance to the tunnels, the SBS men ducked down as the
rolling boom breathed its last over them as a sharp gust of warm air.
Maximilian pushed the
old man in front of him, behind two of his most loyal men, four more
bringing up the rear with their burdens in two fireproof metal boxes.
Each box contained two sets of printing plates, plus a generous
amount of forged currency. Maximilian would not be short of funds to
continue his operations, he would... but the thought fell from his
mind as the doors ahead exploded inwards, a searing blast of
super-heated air raging towards the party, the two men in front
taking the worst of it, but both declared themselves fit to continue.
Luckily for him, the current owner had discovered the passageways
installed by the originals, whatever caused that blast it would be
foolish to go out that way – plus he doubted his Russian comrades
would be impressed by this withdrawal. Not for the first time,
Maximilian decided to leave his friends behind. With curt commands,
he summoned more of his men. He would need more than this party to
move it all.
In the lift chamber,
the Sergeant climbed groggily to his feet, to see his machine gunner
lurching drunkenly. Both men were now naked, apart from their boots.
The patrol had hit the
ground, low and to the left, alternately lying prone or kneeling,
ready to deliver a lethal volley. There came a scuffling noise, as if
people were running, coming closer. Sergeant-Major Greene frowned
into the darkness, then bellowed a warning that would have stopped a
bull from charging, waving the two Russians forward..
'Stone the crows, look
at these two!, all right, lads we've got some prisoners – don't
think the search will take long, mind.' Faces to the floor, the cowed
Russians walked out, hands up in the universal gesture of surrender.
Smiling, one of the SBS men handed each a leaf to cover their
embarrassment.
It was the bloody
satchel charges – both of them had gone up together when that fool
had sprayed the train with his 'thrower. Bond had been lucky not to
have been incinerated. He realised he had lost the AK somewhere, but
still had the Colt and his teeth... he stumbled out towards the lift,
wondering what the best way would be to destroy the reactor below.
Ears still ringing, Bond reached the lift shaft, finding it empty.
Reaching for the button, he became aware he was not alone.
CHAPTER
21
THE
CHAMBER OF SACRIFICE
'O
stanovitʹsya!, estarse quieto!, Stand still!, don't move
a muscle.' The man in the blue boiler suit froze, his hand
dangerously close to his pocket.
Two of the team moved
in, one to check the man for weapons with the other covering. Bond
was relieved of the Colt, letting himself be controlled by these
newcomers, recognising their equipment and the accent of the one who
had spoken.
At a nod to the
remaining two Marines, the patrol commander stepped forward.
Bond sized him up.
'You're English?.'
'Commander Bond?'
'My friends call me
James.'
'Lovely. Come on, we're
getting you out.'
'And just when I was
enjoying myself...'
The commander, a
plainly-spoken corporal from the Rhonda was in no mood for argument.
'Now listen to me would
you. I've got orders to get you out, see. I take it there's an Atomic
power reactor on the island, lets not hang about chatting, lets go.
Boys.' He snapped his fingers and pointed to Bond, the signal for two
burly Marines to grab hold of him.
'Take your hands off
me!. Listen, I don't have the time for explanations, but clearly
we're on the same side. You've got orders, but I've got a lunatic
who's capable of anything. If I don't stop him he's going to cause
chaos – he'll destroy our country and many more, no-one will be
able to trust their money, everything will collapse!.'
The Welshman looked at
this mad Englishman pityingly, clearly whatever the poor sod had been
through had un-hinged his mind. One of his team came back from the
tunnel.
'Sorry Taff, I think
you'd better see this.' He held a fistful of currency. Outside, it
was raining money – a look to the top of the pyramid revealed the
source; a group of old men who were delightedly throwing handfuls of
the stuff into a massive fan, one of those used for drying the notes.
Bond couldn't have asked for a better moment to slip away, instead he
confronted the patrol commander, who was squinting at a five pound
note he held to the sunlight.
'There's one of those
water-marks, even. Well, it looks real, doesn't it?. All right, James
to my friends – I'll be generous. You tell me why I shouldn't
drag you off this island and best be quick about it.'
As Bond outlined the
plot, the plotter was stepping out into a vast subterranean space, a
crescent-shaped chasm formed when the volcanoes had given birth to
the islands, a place of smoke and fire that had seen the temple
builders come and go over long centuries. In addition to the six men
Maximilian now had a further eight bringing up the rear. The shelf
near to the rim of the shaft was an extension of the natural, a
platform built out over the pit that had then still glowered an angry
red, smouldering and un-satiated. The bowl in the platform floor was
roughly cruciform, those few who had seen it needed no explanation of
purpose; this was an altar for human sacrifice, channels and
apertures designed to drain the victim's lifeblood away to fall to
the thirsty gods that dwelt below. Even though long dormant, the
volcano gods long since forgotten, this place of evil still retained
the aura of the macabre. Overlooking this a stone-lined bowl against
the side of the cavern was a throne of sorts set in what had seemed
to be a crypt, a stone coffer below the throne itself. Inset with a
filigree of brass the coffer was clearly intended to honour a
personage of importance, but the designs engraved into the brass were
clearly Spanish of origin. The old forger – a Czech by birth –
couldn't contain his curiosity, which did not go un-noticed by his
keeper. Placing a hand on the bony shoulder, Maximilian's voice was
kindly.
'This is my greatest
treasure. See, come, you have worked well for me, you should see
why.' At his command, four of his men hauled the cover-stone from the
coffer. Reaching in, Maximilian took out an object wrapped in an
oiled leather roll and then more, each of differing shapes and sizes,
each placed carefully to one side. Remaining in the coffer were
several wooden boxes, with rope handles.
'Gold. The universal
currency, bullion bars each worth a man's life.'
'If I may say so, you
seem to value life rather cheaply.' Maximilian took a moment to
absorb the old man's temerity, then laughed. Why not? - he could
afford to.
Turning his attention
to the leather rolls, he unwrapped the longest, revealing a scabbard
of surprisingly simple beauty, the silver was dented and scratched,
but the design was as artistically worked as the demands of function
allowed. Likewise the sword, which Maximilian drew to reveal an
etched Toledo blade, burnished rather than polished, with a silver
and brass handle. The basket-hilt was dented and pocked, suggesting
many years of service. The pommel itself was adorned with a ruby or
garnet the size of a tuppence. It was the sword of a conqueror, and
as Maximilian pulled it from the old man's stomach, he wiped it on
his own sleeve with due reverence. Falling backwards, the dying man's
arms flopped outwards, his body a terrible illustration of the
purpose of the bowl in which it lay. His blood ran down the channels,
dripping away into the depths.
'Never mind, eh?. I can
always learn to print myself, eh?.' Only Maximilian laughed at the
joke. With the extra men carrying the bullion boxes, they continued
on along a narrow ledge that led to a dramatic halt, just a wheel set
into the rock. At the turn of this wheel, a modern steel gangway was
revealed, detaching itself from a recess in the manner of a folding
ships bunk. Stepping onto the grilled sections, Maximilian strode
forth confidently, his men following visibly less so, the odd glance
downwards amplifying the precariousness of their progress over the
abyss. A stone lintel on the far side seemed welcoming by contrast,
even with the grotesquely carven face that it bore.
The KGB men finished
their search of the apartment, finding nothing save Bond's excavation
work in the bathroom. Security Chief Mitrovkhin was busy
contemplating his likely future when a subordinate broke into his
thoughts, the man's eyes still red and smarting from the pepper Bond
had thrown into them. The Chief beckoned him over impatiently.
'On ushel ! , My
dolzhny soobshchitʹ ob etom srazu!'
('He's gone!, we must
report this at once!'.) But, instead of the usual nod of obedience,
there was just embarrassment. Lowering his gaze, the man mumbled;
'My ne mozhem. Radio
oborudovaniye bylo unichtozheno.'
('We cannot. The radio
equipment has been destroyed.')
Puce with rage, the
Chief rounded on the hapless man.
'Chto? Obʺyasnitʹ
sebe tovarishcha'
('What? Explain
yourself comrade.')
'Gruppa napadayut na
nas idet yarostnaya, a lyubitelʹ. Radio peredach byla unichtozhena
spetsialistami. Yestʹ seychas neskolʹko nashikh lyudey chislyatsya
propavshimi bez vesti .'
('The group attacking
us is fierce, but amateur. The radio gear was destroyed by
professionals. There are now several of our men reported missing.')
Mitrovkhin knew the
ramifications of this. He would be lucky to escape with
're-education' and twenty years in the lead mines – not that anyone
had ever survived the full twenty...
'Vot derʹmo! My
dolzhny zashchititʹ reaktor lyuboy tsenoy. Poluchite , chto
durakpolkovnik , skazhite yemu , chtoby zapechatatʹ yego.'
('Shit! We must protect
the reactor at all costs. Get that fool of a Colonel, tell him to
seal it off.') Red-eyes left with a perfunctory nod. The Chief opened
a box of cigars, selecting one to bite the end off, spitting it onto
the floor as he fished in a pocket for his lighter.
Puffing away he decided
things were not so bleak, sitting in a chair to mull over his
options. He could always defect...
Lost in his plotting,
Mitrovkhin's normal alertness deserted him; he should have noticed
the wall hanging behind him as it ruffled and billowed slightly.
Perhaps it was some sixth sense screaming at him, he turned to see
Maximilian standing there, in full helmet and armour, sword in hand.
The commander of HMS Trafalgar leaned back as the periscope dropped
down. He had seen enough. Captain Alastair Fanning RN was the image
of a young sub skipper, lean, bearded and alert-looking, with a
hawk's eye for danger. Right at this moment, he smelled a rat.
Leaving his second officer to keep things in hand, he went off to his
wardroom to think it over. The island was, as advertised, a death
trap – the whole place was wreathed in smoke it seemed. He buzzed
his steward for a coffee, then opened the envelope containing the
latest from Admiralty. It was only what he had expected; the routine
rubbish plus a re-statement of his responsibilities if caught
operating in foreign waters. Blah-blah-blah. It was only when he got
to the last page that his interest was piqued. On the receipt of
certain codewords, Trafalgar was to close in to the island at a point
marked on the charts to receive the party concerned. As if things
weren't tight enough on board! – he would have to tell Chief Crooke
to find some space for'ard. The orders for the yacht left no room for
interpretation, either; if she leaves, sink her – preferably in the
deeper waters out to the East. The fatheaded idiots!, what did they
think this was?, a torpedo boat? - Trafalgar was no slouch, but even
on electrical power her best was no more than seventeen knots
submerged. No, if he sank the Bayamo, it would have to be done from
the spot. With no cover, he knew using the periscope array was a risk
he could not afford, which left the Hydrophone Operator. Blind, they
would have to listen for the sounds of their prey's attempted escape
– then he would see if they could outrun a Mark VIII Torpedo.
The jolly-boat pulled
away from the Bayamo, but instead of the jetty the craft headed for
the rocks to the side of the bay. Coming around the bluff, a cave
revealed itself, no more than a few feet above the high-tide marks on
the stone. A powerfully-built crewman held the boat from the rocks
with a fender pole. Jumping down into the boat, two of Maximilian's
men started the transfer of the boxes, while the bosun kept the boat
stationary.
'Contact 240 range
seven hundred yards. Single screw, probably a boat.' The voice from
the Hydrophone station was the only sound from inside the sub. Even
at this range and submerged, the dull crump and boom of battle
reached the ears of Trafalgar's crew. Leaning in intently,
Captain Fanning was relying on the young rating to provide him with
the vital warning of the yacht's movement.
'Thank you, Simmons,
keep it up.' The Captain went into the control room to confer with
his duty officers.
Maximilian, resplendent
in full costume and armour stood in the shadows of the cave, watched
the boat taking his fortune to the yacht on which he would soon
escape. All that remained for him to do now was to find and kill that
hijo de puta Englishman Bond. He knew that he would be
taking a risk, but not now... no, now he could not back down. Clad in
the very armour of the great Cortes, there would be no question of
his simply running away like a whipped dog. Hand on hilt, he turned
to exact his vengeance. The vengeance of Cortes.
DON'T MISS THE FINAL INSTALMENT OF BAYAMO
IN TWO WEEKS!
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