Authors: Hammond; Innes
âSeems perfectly natural,' I said. âIn the circumstances.'
âWhat circumstances?' The words were snapped out, and he stood there, his thick waterproof sleeping bag in his hand, staring at me. And when I told him, he said, âGood God, man! Ye should've told me.'
âDamn it!' I said, âYou could see Carlos worshipped the man â his behaviour, all his actions, right back to the way he followed Iris down to Greenwich and later into the Isle of Dogs.'
He stared at me a moment longer, then he nodded. âAye. Ye're probably right. Ah should've remembered.'
It was shortly after that, just as I was about to work my way into my bag, that he wanted to know if I knew anything about firearms. I asked him what sort â âI've done some wildfowl shooting. Why?'
For answer he pulled a longish, plastic case from the unstrapped pile of stuff on his sledge. Out of it he slipped the dark gunmetal shape of a deadly looking weapon. âYe may as well know how this thin' works. Just in case.'
âWhat is it, a Kalashnikov?' I asked as he unfolded the skeletal metal butt and handed the thing to me. I had never handled a Kalashnikov. In fact, I had never handled any firearm more lethal than a shotgun. I could just read the maker's name as he ran through the safety and firing mechanism for me. It wasn't a Russian name, or English, or Italian. The name stamped into the metal was Heckler & Koch. âGerman?'
He nodded.
âHow did you come by it?'
âAh saved up my petrol coupons.' He grinned at me, then went on explaining how to handle it when firing. There was a single shot mechanism and it was fitted with a small telescopic sight. It was only later I learned, quite by chance, that the Heckler & Koch sub-machine-gun was a weapon favoured by the SAS. âAre you expecting Ãngel to be armed?' I was feeling suddenly chilled and a little tense. Shooting birds and rabbits was one thing â¦
âAye. He'll be armed all right.' And he added, âAlso he's haulin' tae, possibly three of those cases of Semtex he brought on board with him.'
I think that shocked me more than the thought that he might be armed. âYou mean you loaded them on that sledge yesterday?'
â'Course Ah didn't load them. But as soon as we found he'd gone Ah checked the forepeak, where we had stored them, and tae of the cases were definitely missin'.'
It was not a comfortable thought to go to sleep on, but I was so damned tired I fell asleep immediately, not even bothering to eat the bar of chocolate, nuts and raisins we had dug out of the stores. I woke once during the night, my face wet with snow. I shone a torch out into the twilight. The wind was blowing and it was snowing big, sticky flakes, so that all I could see was a moving curtain of white, and Iain, lying beside me, was just a snow-covered hump. It was very warm in my waterproof bag. I tucked my face down into it and fell asleep again immediately.
I woke finally to a blindingly white world and a sun like a great blazing orange resting its lower rim on a crystal horizon, everything very clear, so clear in fact that I couldn't gauge the distance off or the height of the bergs that seemed to litter the endless ice field ahead. I couldn't even guess how far it was to the Ice Front to our left. It just stood there, a long wall of white blocking us off from the sight of anything further to the west.
Iain was already out of his bag, sitting hunched on the untidy heap of his sledge. He had a little plastic compass in his hand and between his knees was a small radio. âYou trying to get a forecast?' I asked him.
He shook his head, holding up his hand for quiet. He sat there for several minutes more, head bent, and listening with great concentration as he made small adjustments to the position of the radio, periodically raising the compass to his eye and aligning it in the same direction. âOkay,' he said finally, and put the radio carefully back in its case. âIt's fainter than it was last night, so Ah reck'n they're already on the move. We'll eat as we go.'
We wore skis that morning and I was glad he had made me practise for a few minutes the previous day, for he set a fast pace. âWe'll start closin' up on them soon. Those bergs will hold them up. The ice will be bad there. Could be the snowmobile won't make it if he has to go through to the other side.' He wanted to be much closer to them at that stage. âIf they get behind the berg Ah may not be able to pick them up.' Apparently he had fixed a homing limpet to the snowmobile and the little radio was a direction finder.
All that day the sun shone and the bergs seemed to get no nearer. The snow clogged on the skis, the going hard. We tried snowshoes, but those were worse, and with the snow almost a foot deep, it was incredibly tiring to haul in just our boots. The bergs were flat-topped, obviously carved off the Ice Shelf, and judging by the jagged layering of the pack around them we presumed them to be grounded. âShouldn't be. We're way off shore.' And when I muttered that we still had the Ice Front in sight, he laughed and said, âThat's the ice cap pushin' seaward. If those bergs are grounded, they're on some sort of an underwater reef, the top of a submarine volcano even.'
The fact that we were gradually able to make out more and more of their detail was the only indication we had that we were slowly getting nearer. The ice field around them was very broken as though the sea crashing against their massive bulks had suddenly frozen into solidity.
We shed layers of clothing as we trudged, and time passed. It was quite hot when the sun reached its zenith, blazing straight in our faces. It was a day for dark goggles and white sun cream. I couldn't see myself, but Iain looked like some crazy clown out of a comic movie. Every two hours we stopped for a breather and he checked the bearing of the tiny blips given but by the homing limpet. This was when we ate, quick snacks of concentrated food, an apple each, and on the march we sucked an occasional barley sugar.
It was after our fourth stop that our line of march cut obliquely into the snowmobile's tracks. They were sharp and clear, obviously made since the night's snowfall, so that we were now only a few hours behind them. By then we were also very close to the first of the bergs, so close that suddenly we could see individual pebbles and boulders embedded in the ice, a yellowish band low down near the pack. There was a small polynya just to the east of it. A seal's head surfaced in the centre and we realised that it was a blowhole and we were right on top of it. In the blinding white of the light our eyes played tricks.
Nothing moved on the berg, or on the surface of the ice around it. We could see the twin line of the tracks passing to the west of it. The ice was flat there and relatively undisturbed, as though the berg had acted as a breakwater. All to the east it was a jumbled mass of layered chaos where wind and current had thrust the pack against the sheer wall-like side of the berg, certain proof that the solid mass of glacial ice was grounded.
âYe said ye had read what Sunderby wrote about the ship, his description of it.' Iain was speaking to me over his shoulder. âCan ye remember whether he said anythin' about bergs?'
âI don't think so,' I replied. âAt least I don't recall a reference to icebergs. He wrote that there was something that looked like the figure of a man standing at the helm and the masts were all broken off short, just the stumps left. But I can't recall that he made any reference to the ice around the vessel.'
Iain had his glasses out and was searching the flat area on the shoreward side of the stranded mass of ice.
âYou're thinking bergs like these might have acted as a breakwater, protecting the vessel from the moving pack, is that it?'
âAye. It's the only explanation. The current runs northward up this side of the Weddell, and if the ship had been caught in the pack, it would have been carried up the coast, almost certainly smashed to pieces. It could be this group of bergs, or another further on that's saved it.' He put the glasses down. âWell, it doesn't matter much. Our Ãngel came lookin' fur it in that aircraft he was testin' and he found it. He knows, so we've only to follow him.' He reached down, burrowing into the pile of gear on his sledge. âD'ye think his name is really Connor-Gómez?' He came, out with a silver flask and held it up with the sort of smile a magician wears when he has accomplished a clever trick. âAh thought per'aps a wee dram wouldna come amiss at this point.' He took a swig, wiped the top of it with his hand and passed it across to me. âIt's the real malt â Glenmorangie.'
It was smooth and warming. âWell, what's in a name? But just suppose he's not the lassie's brother, but the product of that whore Rosalli Gabrielli and that pimp of hers, or perhaps some unknown, a one-night stand.' He smiled. âInterestin' thought, eh?' And he added, suddenly leaning forward and stabbing his finger at me, âBut a bloody sight more interestin' is the thought of what the fuckin' bastard has been up to with a ship and a pack of poor devils, Disappeareds from out of that ghastly huddle of old prison huts.' He reached for the flask and swallowed another mouthful, then slipped it back into its place on the sledge. âOch, well, better get goin' now. All will be revealed, eh?' But he didn't move for a moment, just stood there, staring towards the stranded iceberg, a shut, taut look on his face. âYe remember, Iris's brother was one of them â Eduardo.'
âOne of the Disappeareds, yes. Or do you mean â¦?' I saw him nodding and I said, âIn those huts, is that what you mean? I didn't see his name there.'
âNo, ye weren't lookin' for what Ah was, or in the same place.' And he added, âAh knew what to look fur. A lot of prisoners write their names on the walls of their cells before they are taken out to die. I suppose they think it's the only monument they'll get, and man in his vanity likes to leave something for posterity.'
âYou say Eduardo Connor-Gómez's name was there?'
âNot his name, but â¦' He leaned down, tightening the fastenings of his sledge: âAh didn't show it to ye. Ah didn't want her to know.'
âI wouldn't have told her.'
âNo, but she might have asked, and if she had, Ah was afraid she'd read the answer in yer face.' He reached down with his dummy hand, picked up his sledge harness and began shrugging his massive shoulders into it. âIf she had even guessed he had been on that ship, she'd have insisted on comin' with us, and Ah didn't want that. Yon man â' He nodded to the north along the line of the tracks â âif ye can call him a man, more a devil, Ah think â if he thought she knew, he'd kill her. He'd kill anyone who discovered his secret.' He broke his sledge out and began pulling.
âUs?' My mouth felt suddenly dry. âYou mean he'd kill us?'
âWhy do ye think Ah brought that gun with me? Aye. If we find the ship, and there's still evidence on board of what happened to the human cargo â¦' He left it at that and we trudged on in silence, my thoughts running back over the whole sequence of events since he had ducked in through the door of the
Cutty Sark
's saloon.
We didn't stop after that until we were abreast of the berg and could see the tramline marks of the snowmobile tracks running clear-cut across flat floe ice to the frozen chaos of what looked like a huddle of some five or six bergs. One of them was so long it stretched right across our line of march, out into the infinity of the Weddell Sea, where the flatness of its top merged with the pack. By then the sun was lipping the distant wall of the Ice Front, shadowing the face of it, so that it showed as a black line along the north-western horizon.
Darkness came on the black wings of a storm cloud. We just managed to get our sleeping bags out and wriggle into them before it hit with a violent rush of wind that was suddenly full of hailstones the size of peas that drove at us almost horizontally and poured along the ice with a rustling sound. It was as though the contents of a container full of ball-bearings were being flung across our cowering bodies, covering them in an armoured shroud.
I don't suppose the storm lasted more than ten or fifteen minutes, but it seemed to go on and on for ever. And when it did stop, it was as though a fairy godmother had waved a magic wand: there was sudden and absolute peace, not a sound anywhere, the stars showing bright in a shot-silk sky of deepening purple.
My father, towards the end, became addicted to the
Rubáiyát of Omar Khayyám
. He liked to read extracts of it aloud to anyone who would listen. It was natural for him in the circumstances of his illness, but for a kid of fifteen, which was all I was when he died, it was not exactly appropriate, dealing as it did with death and the meaning of life. However, there were times when the words stuck in my memory and one particular passage came back to me now.
We had stopped where the surface of the ice was no longer flat, but had shattered and ridden up against the old shore ice in great jumbled slabs. The sun had vanished below the horizon, the sky beginning to cloud over again so that it was getting quite dark. We had placed our sleeping bags in the lee of one of the up-ended slabs of ice so that we were out of the wind, which was blowing from the north-west about force 4, enough at any rate to drift the surface snow in exposed places. We had with us a small spirit stove and it was after we had brewed up a mug of tea, very strong with a lot of sugar, and were drinking it â the first hot drink we had had since leaving
Isvik
⦠that I recited those two lines to Iain: â
And that inverted bowl we call The Sky, Whereunder crawling coop't we live and die â
' hesitated, my memory failing me.
âFitz,' he said. âUnmistakable.'
âSomething about it rolling inexorably on â¦'
He shook his head, frowning. â
Lift not thy hand â¦
Aye, that's it.
Lift not thy hands to it for help
â' And then I took up the rest of it with him: â
For it Rolls impotently on as Thou or I
.'