Read The Lucifer Network Online
Authors: Geoffrey Archer
They stood again, hands grasping the man in front. Sam's heart hammered. Beyond was a big square void.
Green on.
âGo!' A yell split his ears, whether from behind or from his own throat he didn't know. The pallets rolled and were gone. Then one man, two, three. A jab in his back and the slipstream hit him. Cold air that took his breath away. Then the bang of the harness opening. He hung from his straps. The reserve chute clung to his stomach like a fat blister. His lifesaver if anything went wrong, but it had to go now the main canopy was open. He pulled the release and felt it fall away.
The night was as black as death. Not a speck of light. He'd forgotten to count. Phipps had said ten. Sam shone the torch down, searching for a reflection off the waves.
Six, seven, eight . . . Breath held, hand on harness release. The water hit as soon as he saw it. He yanked at the D-ring and felt the harness let go of his crutch. Then he went down beneath the water. It felt like for ever. At last, with a hiss, the lifejacket cuddled his neck.
Thirteen, fourteen, fifteen . . . An eternity of gurgling ears, then air suddenly. He could breathe again, but not see. He flinched, anticipating a wave pounding down.
A light came on. Beside his head. The lamp on the lifejacket, reliable as paint drying. Enough light to show
a gentle swell. Waves of no consequence. He turned his head. Wherever he looked, more lights twinkling. Like fairy dust. A couple of the men had cracked the cyalume tubes too.
âSam?' A shout off to his left where several lights were grouping together.
âHere!'
âOkay?'
âYep.'
He checked he was free of the canopy lines, then swam towards the voices. They were further off than he'd thought and progress with the lifejacket was slow. After a few minutes, a pencil of light reached out from the darkness, sweeping across them, pausing when it picked out a figure in the water. HMS
Truculent
had surfaced close by. Sam looked away to preserve his night vision and kept swimming.
As he neared the cluster of bodies, he saw that something was wrong. Five of them together, a daisy chain round one man at the centre who wasn't moving.
Lieutenant Willie Phipps held up a waterproof radio, telling the submarine of their casualty.
âHit by something . . . Unconscious . . .' The lap of the water broke into his flow of words. He acknowledged Sam with a nod.
âStick close. The submarine's coming over. Don't get anywhere near the stern. Those propulsors can chop up torpedoes.'
The submarine doused its spotlight. Sam looked towards the vessel and saw the flicker of torchlight on the casing.
âThey don't have a Gemini out, but there'll be a diver to help you,' Phipps told him. âThere'll be a scrambling net to get onto the casing. Look after yourself, okay? I'm busy.'
âNo problem.'
The submarine switched on a deck light so they could see it more easily. It had stopped some fifty metres away. Sam struck out. He saw water splash as a diver from the boat jumped in to help.
The man waved an arm. âOver here!'
Sam reached him.
âYou the civvy?'
âDoes it show?'
âNot what I meant. You're on your own, that's all. Follow me to the casing. Feel for the net with your hand.'
âThanks.' Sam banged against the hull, scrabbling along its smooth surface until he touched the thick rope of the net. He jammed his toes in and struggled to raise himself from the water. His limbs were like lead. Hands reached down and pulled him up onto the casing.
âWelcome on board, sir. Name, please?' asked a brisk, efficient sailor in white rollneck, clutching a clipboard.
Sam gave it.
âStraight down below please, sir.'
A hand took his elbow and guided him firmly to an open hatch. He felt an updraught of warm air, the stale warship smell that he'd once known so well. A CPO met him at the bottom and helped him remove his dry suit.
âAny injuries or immediate needs?'
âYes to the second. A stiff drink.'
The chief smiled. âThere's hot tea in the senior rates' mess. The lad here'll show you down below. The bomb shop's been cleared for you.'
Sam nodded at a young sailor with spots on his chin and a label on his chest that said Griffiths.
âWe're hot bunking to make room for you lot,' the youth complained as he led Sam down the companionway. âWe had a full complement already.'
âSorry to inconvenience you,' Sam muttered.
In the chiefs' mess a mug was pressed into his hands
and he gulped the tea gratefully while the rating waited outside for him to finish. When Sam rejoined him in the passageway leading forward, he seemed eager to make it clear that he hadn't been complaining.
âI didn't mean it were an inconvenience having you on board,' Griffiths explained awkwardly as they reached the ladder down to the weapons storage compartment. âMost interesting thing that's happened all trip. You okay now, sir? Got to go for the others.'
âFine. Thanks.'
Sam looked round at the packed stowage area. In his years in the Navy he'd never served in a submarine. He noted the bunk pallets fixed onto empty torpedo racks, but knew there'd be no time for sleeping.
Over the next fifteen minutes the rest of the landing party gathered. There was little chat amongst the marines, just the clipped grunts of men used to working closely together.
Last down was Lieutenant Willie Phipps, stepping off the bottom rung as the pipe announced they were diving again.
âThat's a bugger,' he murmured. âMacko was our linguist. Fluent Russian and Serbo-whatsit.'
âHow is he?' Sam asked.
âSevere concussion, by the look of it. The MO's got him in the sick bay. How's your Russian?'
âNot good enough.'
âThen I'd better ask if there's anyone on board who can come ashore with us.'
âWhen do we go?'
âIn about two hours.'
They heard footsteps on the ladder and turned to see a lieutenant commander's epaulettes emerge below the hatch.
âEverybody comfy?' the First Lieutenant asked as he
reached the bottom. He had a folder clutched under his arm.
âLike pigs in shit,' growled a voice from the back.
Hayes grinned. âOkay. Happy for me to brief you now?'
âSooner the better,' Phipps told him.
âFine.' Hayes set his folder down on one of the boxes where the GCHQ team stored their tapes. âWe're currently about thirty miles west of Palagra,' he explained, opening a chart of the Lastovski Channel. âWe'll be in position to surface again in about ninety minutes.' He pointed to a circle on the chart. âThere's only one easy way onto the island as far as we can see.' He spread out a small-scale plan that had been faxed from London. âA natural inlet at the eastern end, sheltered from the northwesterlies. The rest of the coastline is rocks and cliffs about ten metres high with thick scrub on top.'
âWhen we left Lyneham, the intelligence picture was like a fog in the Channel,' Willie Phipps interjected. âAll they said was the island's
supposed
to be uninhabited. Nothing about what's on it.'
âWe can do better than that now. The place used to be lived on by monks, until Tito's communists turfed them out so the big man could use their monastery as a guest house for his cronies. When Yugoslavia broke up, the place was reclaimed by the Church, but, strangely enough, they couldn't find any young men wanting to shut themselves away there. So they leased the building to an Austrian religious foundation as a retreat.'
â
Austrian
foundation,' Sam repeated, his interest sharpening. âD'you have a name for it?'
âSorry. Nothing more than that.'
âThe monastery's the only building on the island?' Phipps asked.
âThere's one other house, occupied by a Croatian
family. They run goats and chickens and have a few patches of maize, peaches and vegetables. Used to supply food to Tito's guests when they were in residence, and when they weren't, they'd look after the place for him.'
âHow many bods on the farm?'
âDon't know. A “family” is all it says on the signal.'
âOkay. So tell us about the Russians?'
âThe CTs picked up four different voices. There may be more. Our assumption is they've been occupying the monastery. And not for a prayer meeting. The last transmission monitored suggested panic. Something had gone badly wrong and a manhunt was under way on the island.'
âBut they may have all left,' Phipps prompted. âA boat was seen leaving?'
âThat's right. A cluster of people on board. Hard to tell numbers. At least four, maximum six. We'll show you the video.' He pointed beyond the line of gleaming torpedo tube hatches where a small monitor and video player had been set up.
âNo police or Croatian armed forces on the island?' Phipps queried.
âWe don't think so. There's no reason for them to be there.'
âAnd what's the met picture?'
âCloud cover may break up after midnight Zulu â London time. If it does there's a moon.'
âA new moon, thankfully,' Phipps told him. âNot so bad.' Total darkness suited them best because their night vision gear was brilliant. âOne thing . . . That casualty of ours â Macko â he was our linguist. We'd like a Russian and Serb/Croat speaker with us if possible. Anybody on board who could fill in?'
âWill he have to swim?'
âNo. We'll carry him on our backs if he can tell us what we're listening to.'
Hayes scratched his chin. âI could try the CT who identified the voice of Igor Chursin. He'd be ideal if I can persuade him.'
âGood.'
âHe's racked at the moment, but coming on watch in an hour or so. I'll give him a shake when we've finished our briefing.'
âFine. Let's have a look at your pictures.'
Martin Hayes crouched in front of the recorder as the SBS team bunched closer to the screen.
âOkay. These first shots are of the boat seen leaving the island.'
Sam peered over the heads of the marines. A modern glass-fibre utility boat, with a forward wheelhouse and cabin and a long open stern section for passengers or goods. Ideal as a work boat for someone running a covert laboratory. Two figures visible behind the wheelhouse windows, with more on the open deck.
âAs you can see, an accurate head count is hard.' There was a grunt of affirmation from Phipps. âThe next bit of tape is our circumnavigation of the island. I'll speed through. You'll soon get the message. Pretty unapproachable because of the cliffs and dense woodland. You could get ashore that way, but it'd take an age.'
The marines' eyes drilled the screen. âCan you see any of the buildings from the sea?' one of them asked.
âNope. The trees are too tall.' The First Lieutenant cleared his throat. âAnd now we're back at the inlet.' He slowed the tape to normal speed. âI've done some hard-copy printouts which you can study at your leisure. As you can see, there's what looks like a quay there. Perhaps “quay” is too generous. It's rocks cemented together.'
âFreeze it, could you?' Phipps spread his fingers and
thumb and measured the image on the screen. He estimated fifteen or twenty metres of landing space. âWhen was this taken?'
âTwenty-four hours ago.'
âThere's a family living at the farm, you said?'
âYes, but I've no idea how current or sound that piece of intelligence is,' Hayes cautioned.
âIf they're still there, they're bound to have a boat too, that's all,' Phipps added ruminatively.
âOut fishing?' Hayes suggested. âOr gone across to Lastovo for supplies. Probably find it back there when we arrive.'
âHow close can you take us?'
âHalf a mile at a pinch.'
Sam looked at his watch. A quarter to eleven Zulu. Nearly one in the morning local. Ninety minutes until they neared the island. Fifteen minutes to get the boats loaded and off the casing once they'd surfaced. Two hours ashore at the most before the approach of daylight forced them to withdraw.
âIt's essential the submarine stays undetected,' Hayes told them, âand that
you
do too. NATO does not want to find itself at war because of this operation. Weapons for self-defence only. Absolute last resort. If we have to leave you ashore overnight to prevent detection of the submarine, then so be it. We'll collect you the following night. Or else you could become tourists and make your own way back.'
The thought of being stranded in the Adriatic horrified Sam. His instinct was to be back in Vienna as soon as he could, snapping at the heels of Max Schenk. As the briefing continued he detached his mind from it. Phipps and the First Lieutenant were on to technicalities â communications frequencies and procedures for every balls-up imaginable.
Sam perched on the edge of a bunk pallet watching the faces of the marines, his unease growing. They were a tight-knit group of men, all under thirty. Single-minded and with a clear agenda, but one that was different from his own.
Their
mission was to look for signs of biological weapons being prepared for use against NATO troops, but their priority was to remain unseen. They'd keep their distance. Observe from afar, as they were trained to do.
His
need was to gather the sort of hard evidence that might only be found by taking the place apart. He wanted tangible proof that this rock was where Harry Jackman's shipment had ended up. And confirmation that what had been produced here was now being used by European racists. To get it could well mean becoming very visible indeed. It might even come down to sticking guns in the Russians' mouths to encourage them to talk.
And unless he could persuade them otherwise, the men he was travelling with would do all in their power to stop him.