Read Year of the Golden Ape Online
Authors: Colin Forbes
'I had an idea she could be the target, as you know. I've tracked a man half way across the world almost - from Hamburg to Lon
don and then on to Anchorage and Seattle. Now I've lost him. And one or two things I came across made me wonder, but they were dead ends. Like that business about the wireless operator, Swan. It turned out to be nothing more than he'd taken his wife with him on the
Challenger ...'
'Taken his wife with him?' Harper's voice had an edge to it. 'Bad enough for Mackay having one woman aboard - and a journalist at that.'
'What are you talking about?' Sullivan asked. 'Who is the woman who went?'
'An American journalist I know called Betty Cordell.' 'And you say Swan's wife isn't on the ship? I think you're wrong...'
'I'm not wrong! Swan isn't aboard either - although you seem to think he is. He missed the ship. He's ill.' 'Ill at home, you mean?' Sullivan asked gently. 'Where else would he be?'
'That's what I'm beginning to wonder. Because he's not at home - neither is his wife. I've been out there. They both left for the ship at three-fifteen last Thursday...' 'You saw them leave?'
'No, I didn't,' Sullivan said slowly. 'Come to think of it, no one saw them leave - but they're gone...'
'Look, Sullivan .. .' Harper's growing impatience came clearly over the line. 'There's a replacement wireless operator aboard. Chap called Kinnaird. So Swan must be at home - unless he's in hospital.'
'Any idea when all this happened ? And how did Mackay come up with this Kinnaird so conveniently ? In Alaska, for God's sake ?' 'Swan knew him, recommended him. He just happened to be there. Short of a job, I suppose. As to the timing, I'll read you Mackay's cable.
1518 hours. Wireless operator Swan taken ill. Recommended replacement George Kinnaird. Kinnaird sailing with us this trip. Mackay.
Straightforward enough ...'
'No, it isn't. At three-fifteen Mrs Swan phoned a neighbour from home saying she was just leaving to sail with her husband. At three-eighteen - according to that cable - Swan is ill and has found someone else to replace him. All inside three minutes?'
'Does sound peculiar,' Harper admitted.
'It's more than peculiar, it's bloody sinister. Is there anything unusual about this latest trip of the
Challenger!
Anything at all?'
'Not according to Ephraim-nor from the routine reports coming in from Kinnaird ...'
'Who the hell is Ephraim?' Sullivan enquired.
'Sorry, I think you were away when I added him to the insurance cover. Ephraim is an automatic monitor I've had installed in the engine-room - one of those mechanical brain things which independently check the engine performance of the ship. And it is quite independent of the ship. It flashes radio signals to a computer at the Marine Centre in The Hague. The computer decodes the signals and the report comes to me by telex. Whole operation takes less than thirty minutes - seconds for the radio signals to get to The Hague, the rest of the time getting the data back here.'
'And how is the world according to Ephraim?'
'Normal. The
Challenger
is moving through a gentle swell at seventeen knots. She should reach the oil terminal at Oleum -that's near San Francisco - on schedule.'
'And according to Kinnaird ?'
'Again normal. Routine messages come through on time. It's fascinating to compare notes - to see how Kinnaird's weather reports exactly match Ephraim's...'
Latest toy, Sullivan thought. He'll soon get tired of it. 'I'll keep in touch,' he said. 'I may call you from San Francisco - because that's where I'm going...'
'I thought you were coming home. Why San Francisco?'
'That's the end of the line for the
Challenger -
and I want to be there when she reaches it...'
Sullivan put in another call, this time to Mulligan, chief of police at Anchorage. He told him about the Swans, that they weren't aboard the
Challenger,
that maybe it would be a good idea if a patrol car went out to the Swan home and if someone talked to Madge Thompson, the next-door neighbour.
Mulligan reacted with his usual vigour. 'I think maybe we'll go further - we'll send out an all-points bulletin for the Swans. And I'll send patrol cars to take a good look at the whole Matanuska valley area. Of course, Swan could be faking the whole disappearance himself...'
'Why?'
'Supposing the guy reckons he's short on leave, wants to take his wife for some ski-ing up in the mountains? So he fixes up with a pal to take his place, phones Mackay to tell him he's ill, and then takes off for some ski-ing. How does that grab you ?'
'It doesn't...'
'Me too neither. We'll check everywhere...'
Sullivan broke the connection, then made a fresh call to get information on the next flight to San Francisco. He could have had no way of knowing - at that time - that the call he had made to Mulligan would have enormous repercussions which would reach half way round the world. Within a few days.
Winter had the whole ship sewn up tightly, absolutely under his control as he supposed. Two guards were mounted permanently on the bridge where Betty Cordell was spending most of her time. Three more guards were stationed in the engine-room, the heart of the ship. A sixth guard was on duty outside the locked day cabin where the crew not on duty were kept, and a seventh man kept an eye on the galley where Wrigley, the steward, and Bates, the cook, presided over the mysterious rites of their culinary arts. Yet another armed guard was on duty outside the radio cabin. Including Winter himself and LeCat, this left a reserve of seven men who could rest, in readiness to relieve other men at intervals.
'He's a bloody good organiser, I regret to say,' Bennett whispered to Mackay on the bridge. 'And 1 have more bad news.'
Mackay grunted. 'Just like listening to the news bulletins at home. What is it now?'
'Lanky Miller told me he saw Kinnaird going inside the radio cabin.'
'Which is where I would expect Kinnaird to be ...'
'Not while the armed guard stays outside the cabin - with the door closed in his face.'
'Are you sure?'
'Miller is very sure. You see what that means? They would never leave Kinnaird alone in there - with the transmitter - unless he's working with them.'
Mackay sighed heavily. 'So you were right - there was something funny about him.'
'There had to be. I should have realised it at the moment the terrorists came on board. How else could they find us in the middle of the Pacific - unless Kinnaird was sending them regular signals reporting our position? Betty Cordell was right - she did hear him transmitting the other night.'
'At least Winter has let her go back to her cabin.' Mackay glanced at one of the guards. 'I didn't like the way that thug over there was eyeing her. I think we're going to have to get accustomed to bad news on this trip, Mr Bennett.'
'I have more for you already...'
'I rather thought you might have.'
'Since Kinnaird is working for them, that means he never sent your last signal - the one reporting to the Coast Guard that we were picking up their chopper. So forget the hope about a US cruiser looming over the horizon.'
'I grasped that a moment ago,' Mackay said sourly. He dropped his voice to a shade of a whisper. 'Winter seems to have thought of everything, doesn't he? But luckily no one is perfect. The one thing he hasn't thought of is the crew member who isn't on the list - Ephraim. Which is ironical, Mr Bennett - that our lives may depend on Harper's bloody mechanical toy locked away in the engine-room - the only crew member who still has freedom of action aboard this ship.'
Ephraim.
Engine Performance Remote Control Monitor - nick-named Ephraim. Quite independent of all other engine-room operations, the mechanical brain installed inside the control panel was relaying radio signals over many thousands of miles to the master computer in The Hague, reporting constantly on the tanker's performance for the duration of the voyage.
Ephraim reported many things - monitoring fuel consumption, boiler pressures, boiler temperatures, which boilers were fired up, which were not. He reported the speed of the engines and the speed of the ship - not always the same thing if an engine was functioning incorrectly. And he reported the degree of the tanker's pitching and rolling - which meant he was sending his own weather report.
In his London office, Victor Harper was never sure whether he had installed an expensive toy, or whether Ephraim might help to make voyages more profitable. And Ephraim was expensive. The signals he was constantly transmitting were received and decoded by the master computer at the International Marine Centre in The Hague; then the information obtained from the
Challenger
had to be re-transmitted to London by telex.
And Kinnaird was cooperating with Ephraim - without having the least idea he was doing so. Part of the ship's routine which had to continue if conditions aboard were to seem normal to the outside world, was for Kinnaird to transmit a radio message to London at regular intervals. This message confirmed the position of the ship - and included a weather report.
All would be well for Winter so long as Kinnaird continued 'cooperating' with Ephraim. But if for some reason Kinnaird was ordered to fake a weather report, to send to London a message pretending they were passing through quite different weather from what they were experiencing, then deep down in the guts of the ship Ephraim would become a mechanical spy, the only member of the crew who could tell London what was really happening.
The Armalite .22 collapsible rifle with its 4 x 18 telescopic sight, three spare magazines and a yellow package of fifty spare rounds, lay beneath the underclothes almost at the bottom of Betty Cor-dell's suitcase. Not that it immediately looked like a rifle since the main object on view was a tortoiseshell-coloured stock which concealed inside it the dismantled elements of the weapon. The stock was fashioned of plastic foam: dropped into a pool or lake it would float.
Alone in her cabin, Betty Cordell picked up the package of .22 hollow point ammunition and weighed it in her hand. It gave her a comfortable feeling, submerged for a few moments the state of terror she was adjusting to slowly. Then she replaced the package, took one last look at the stock and re-packed her case, filling it up with neat piles of underclothing until once again it had the innocent look of a woman's travelling bag.
Since late childhood she had owned her own gun. At her home near Pear Blossom in the southern Californian desert her father, a strange and independent character like his daughter, had trained the girl to use a weapon. 'It's a violent world we live in, pet,' he used to say. 'Look how your mother died in San Diego - and all that murdering thief got was her billfold. Twenty-five lousy dollars ...'
From the age of eight she was brought up by her father, a farmer, and as the years went by Betty Cordell became skilled to the point of marksmanship with a rifle. She never hunted with it, never went in for competitions, but at twenty-seven she still carried it with her everywhere away from home. Sometimes, driving in the desert, she would stop, set up a line of tin cans as targets and blaze away, working off frustration. Every can was always punctured.
She lit a rare cigarette and stood in the middle of the cabin smoking. The huge tanker was swaying gently as it went on through the swell towards San Francisco, now less than thirty-six hours away. She was thinking that with the mags and the package of spare rounds she had enough ammunition to kill every terrorist on board. The trouble was Betty Cordell had never even shot a bird. She hated the thought of killing live things. Hearing the door open, she turned. LeCat stood in the doorway.
LeCat stood in the doorway holding a full bottle of red wine and behind him the armed guard was leering. LeCat shut the door in his face by leaning against it. Betty Cordell remained standing in the middle of the cabin, staring back at the terrorist with a cold expression which verged on arrogance. She had a constricted feeling in her throat. She was scared and furious with herself at the same time - furious because her heart was thumping and her legs felt weak.
'There is nothing to fear,' LeCat said roughly. 'We did not expect to find a woman on board. Bui it will only be for a few days, so you might as well make the best of it. The best of it,' he repeated, looking at her closely.
'I don't want to talk. Would you please leave my cabin.'
At least her voice sounded steady, almost insolent. Hearing herself speak, she was surprised that her voice sounded so normal, thank God. I've got to deal with this, she told herself, get rid of him. Quickly. He put the bottle down on a table near the door and walked towards her. There were blobs of moisture on his upper lip below the curved moustache.