The Snow Tiger / Night of Error (66 page)

BOOK: The Snow Tiger / Night of Error
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There was a roar of angry voices and a flood of men poured across the deck from
Sirena
, and I saw the flash of knives in the enveloping glow of that fantastic yellow light.

EIGHT

It was a short fight and a bitter one.

In the fraction of a second before they were on to us I saw Campbell’s incredulous face, his mouth open in surprise. Then Geordie roared, ‘Stand together, lads!’ and I was grappling with a hefty brute who wielded a long and wickedly gleaming knife.

If he had come at me from underneath I might have been disembowelled, but he used the basically unsound overarm stab. I saw the knife coming down, grasped his wrist and pulled. This unexpected assistance sent him off balance. I did a neat sidestep, more suited to the dancefloor than the battlefield, twisted his arm and pushed. He reeled into the scuppers and his knife clattered on the deck.

I looked around and all was confusion. I scarcely had time to distinguish friend from enemy before I was attacked again. I felt a cold burn sear along my ribs as the knife struck, and in desperation I hit out slantwise with the edge of my hand at the blurred figure before me. There was a choked gurgle and the blur vanished – I hoped I’d smashed his larynx.

I staggered up, clutching at a stay for support, and as I wavered about the deck I saw Campbell go down under a vicious smashing blow from a belaying pin – and then I saw the unmistakable bulk of Jim Hadley.

He had got hold of Clare and was twisting her arm behind her back and she was screaming in pain. I couldn’t hear her because of the tumult around me but I saw her wide-open mouth and the glaze of terror in her eyes.

I was about to plunge across the deck when there was a staccato rattle of shots and everything seemed to pause momentarily. I took the opportunity to yell, ‘Stop fighting! For God’s sake, stop fighting!’

The roar began again only to be halted by another fusillade of shots. A voice called, ‘Very wise, Mr Trevelyan.’ Then came a rapid spate of Spanish, which I was too dazed to follow.

I called out, ‘Hold it, lads! They have Clare!’

We had been defeated in less than three minutes.

Everything stopped as suddenly as it had begun. I felt the burning ache along my rib-cage as only the most minor of distractions as I looked hastily around the deck. There seemed to be Spaniards everywhere, far more of them than of us, and three men lay on the deck without moving.

Ramirez stepped delicately across the deck with two armed men at his back. I had time to wonder where he’d got a fresh load of weapons from, and then he faced me. ‘We meet under different circumstances, Mr Trevelyan,’ he observed with a mocking smile.

I ignored him. ‘Everyone all right?’

There was a low murmur and then Taffy looked up from one of the prone figures, white-faced under his tan. ‘They’ve killed Danny,’ he said in a level tone.

Over a rising growl I yelled, ‘Cut it out – look at Hadley!’

There was a dead silence. Hadley had forced Clare to her knees; he had her right arm up behind her back and in his other hand he held a heavy pistol trained on the nape of her neck. Ramirez stood in front of me, nodding appreciatively.

‘You have sense, Mr Trevelyan. You’ve lost and you know it.’

‘Tell him to let her go.’

‘In a moment.’ He passed along the deck and came to Geordie, who stared at him impassively. ‘Ah, the brave Mr Wilkins. I told you that you would regret what you did, one day.’ He lifted his hand and struck Geordie across the face with a back-handed blow. A ring cut deep and blood started to drip from Geordie’s mouth. He spat on the deck in silence.

Campbell moaned and tried to lift himself from the deck, and Ramirez strolled over to look down at him with an odd expression on his face. It was almost as if he contemplated the defeat of an old adversary with less than satisfaction. ‘Come on, old one. Get up,’ he said brusquely.

Campbell got halfway up, then collapsed again.

Ramirez made an impatient noise. He pointed to Taffy, still crouched over Danny’s body. ‘You – carry the old man into the saloon.’

Taffy and Ian between them got Campbell up. There seemed to be something wrong with his side, as if his leg was paralysed. As he lifted his head I saw an ugly blotch of blood on his left temple, and rage rose bitter in my throat at the sight.

Ramirez gestured to Geordie with his pistol. ‘You too – into the saloon. And Mr Trevelyan, you too, please. We mustn’t forget you.’

A rifle muzzle poked me in the back and I walked helplessly towards the companionway. I turned my head and saw Hadley dragging Clare to her feet and pushing her forward. I wondered where Paula was.

Before we were thrust into the saloon we were brusquely searched. The man wasn’t too gentle and I gasped with pain as the heel of his hand slammed against the wound in my side. He just grinned, but it was a mindless rather than a sadistic expression, I thought in that moment that there seemed to be a minimum of brain-power around – these men were mostly obedient puppets, no more than that. It might be useful, I thought, and wondered at myself.

In the saloon I helped Taffy to lay Campbell on a settee and said in a low voice, ‘You’re sure Danny was killed?’

‘I’m sure,’ Taffy said tightly. ‘He was stabbed in the chest. God, the blood!’

I looked at Campbell. His eyes were open but unfocussed. I said, forcing my voice to a normal conversational pitch, ‘The old boy’s had a nasty knock. You’ll find some water in the liquor cabinet, Ian.’

I looked around for Clare and found her coming to my side. Hadley had let her go and she was very pale but fully composed. Our hands found each other’s for an instance and then she was looking at the blood on her fingertips. ‘Mike, you’re hurt!’

‘That can wait. It’s nothing. You’d better see to your father first.’

She went to him and began to sponge his head with a cloth dipped in the jug of water Ian held for her, her face clouded with fear and worry.

Paula was thrust into the saloon. She stumbled and nearly fell as her guard gave her a brutal shove before he took up a position near the door, his rifle pointing at us. I took her arm to steady her. ‘Paula – are you all right?’

‘I guess so,’ she gasped. ‘I’ve still got a whole skin.’ She looked round and then said to me in a lower voice, ‘I saw them putting two of our men in the cable hold, Mike – and they’ve hauled in the motor launch too.’

‘Christ!’ said Geordie. He wiped the back of his hand across his mouth and looked without surprise at the blood. He did a quick calculation on his fingers and then said, ‘The two on board must have been Shorty and Davie Blake – the rest of us are here or –‘

Paula took him up. ‘Nick Dugan and young Martin were in the launch. I saw them both. I don’t know about the other.’

They were the only two who had been in the launch, and it wasn’t surprising that Ramirez had spotted them and fetched them back. But there were still Jim and Rex Larkin in the dinghy, and Bill Hunter. I had a faint surge of hope – had Ramirez missed them? And if so, could they stay hidden in that misty, turbulent sea? Geordie and I exchanged a glance and then looked quickly away.

I crossed over to Taffy, who was helping Clare, and made to assist him. ‘Looks as though this is an officer’s party, Taffy. You’d better stay pretty quiet unless you want to join the rest of the boys – they’re in the cable hold.’

He nodded. ‘I’ll be all right,’ he said, and rubbed the back of his neck in a curious gesture as if he had been hurt there.

One of the men with rifles said in Spanish, ‘No speaking! Be silent, all of you.’ I pretended not to understand and started to speak, but this time the gesture that went with the repeated instruction was clear, and I subsided. I had time to assess the situation now.

Neither Ramirez nor Hadley had actually entered the saloon with us – there were only the two armed guards. We were seven, and in the cable hold there were possibly four men. Danny lay dead on the deck – I could barely make myself think about that – and three were, with any luck, still at large.

I decided to try a gamble.

‘It will be all right to let us speak,’ I said in the best Spanish I could muster. ‘Mr Ramirez will permit it.’

They glanced at one another, and one of them shrugged. I had guessed correctly – they were so accustomed to being given orders that they would accept this one even from me, spoken as it had been with an air of authority. I turned to Geordie and told him what I had said in Spanish, with a wary eye to the rifles, but to my relief the guards gave no further sign of stopping us.

Geordie said, ‘What happens now?’

‘That’s not up to us. Ramirez has the next move, and I don’t like to think what that will be. We can’t do much while they’re around.’ I jerked my head very slightly in the direction of the guards.

‘Seven here, four below,’ Geordie murmured. He had done the same arithmetic that I had. ‘And three – somewhere.’

I looked at Campbell who seemed to be recovering. ‘They’re a murderous lot of bastards, aren’t they?’

‘I wish I’d given Jim his head when he wanted to blow a hole in
Sirena
,’ said Geordie viciously.

‘Wishful thinking won’t help us now. What bothers me most is that I think that’s what they may be going to do to us.’

He shook his head irritably and we all lapsed into silence. Clare came over to me, unbuttoned my shirt, and proceeded to patch up what luckily proved to be no more than a skin graze, though it hurt me more than the slight wound warranted. I thanked God that we kept small first aid kits all over the ship. As she worked I felt her hands shaking just a little, and I grasped them to try and reassure her, but it was a wretched attempt.

There was a lot of movement on deck and a great deal of shouting. Ian looked up at the deckhead speculatively. ‘I’m thinking they’re having trouble, skipper. There’s a hell of a tangle at the masthead.’

That was all to the good. The longer they took to separate the two ships the more time we would have to think of a way out of this mess. I looked at the guards and felt very depressed. They looked as though they’d murder their grandmothers for two pesetas, and they’d certainly have no qualms about shooting us if we tried anything.

It was nearly an hour before anything happened. We used the time to some little advantage; all of us achieved better control over ourselves and Clare brought her father to a degree of coherence. He had a pretty bad concussion – his
speech was affected, although his thinking seemed clear enough.

‘Goddam sonsa-bitches,’ he said indistinctly. ‘Why d’you quit, Mike?’

‘Hadley had Clare,’ I said briefly.

‘Haaaah,’ he sighed, and sagged back on the settee. ‘I shoulda lef’ her behind,’ he muttered. ‘Never lissen to a woman, Mike.’ He closed his eyes and turned his head away, and Clare and I exchanged worried looks across his head.

‘It’s my fault,’ Geordie burst out. ‘I should have kept the lads up to scratch. We should have kept watch. We shouldn’t have been surprised like that.’

‘Shut up, Geordie,’ I said. ‘That won’t get us anywhere. There’s no blame – not on us.
We
weren’t looking for trouble.’

‘Aye,’ said Ian softly. ‘Yon Ramirez has a lot to answer for.’

Presently there was a rattle at the door and one of the guards opened it. Out of the corner of my eye I saw Taffy slide into a corner, half-hidden behind the settee, and then Ramirez came in, as elegant as ever. ‘I trust you are comfortable,’ he said solicitously.

‘Let’s not have any blarney,’ I said bluntly. ‘What’s the next move, Ramirez?’

He smiled, and seemed to be enjoying a huge joke.

‘Why, I have to introduce you to someone,’ he said.

He leaned out of the door and beckoned to someone in the passage. He turned back to me and said, ‘I told you once that you shouldn’t make libellous statements that you couldn’t substantiate.’

The man who came into the saloon was about my size, dark and heavily bearded. He carried my laboratory notebook in one hand.

Ramirez said, ‘An old friend for you. I think you all know Mr Mark Trevelyan.’

II

As I looked into Mark’s eyes I think my heart seemed to miss three full beats and I felt the hairs bristle on the nape of my neck. It isn’t often that one is confronted by a dead man – especially a dead brother.

There was a sound as of a long-pent breath being released throughout the saloon and then the silence was total. Ian was the first to stir. ‘That’s the mannie I found …’

His voice tailed off as Mark switched his eyes to him. ‘Ah, Ian Lewis. So it was you who clobbered me, was it?’ he said pleasantly, and then his voice hardened. ‘You’d have done better to stay in your Highland hovel, you Scots peasant.’

The whole pattern of events of the last few months had suddenly been shuffled like the pieces in a kaleidoscope, to present an entirely new picture. It was no wonder that Ian hadn’t recognized the bearded man he found on our raid on
Sirena
; he had last seen Mark as a boy. I might have recognized him, but I hadn’t taken the trouble to look. We weren’t looking for a dead man that night in Nuku’alofa.

I looked round at the others. Their expressions were a mixture of amazement and slowly dawning comprehension. Clare gave Mark one long, measured look, then made a small contemptuous sound and turned back to her father. Campbell took her by the wrist protectively, never taking his eyes off Mark. He said nothing.

Ian was furious and showed it, while Geordie merely stared speculatively at Mark under lowered brows. Paula had made a sudden move as if to go to him, but she shrank back and hid in the shadows at Geordie’s back. Taffy didn’t show himself at all.

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