Authors: Ken Follett
Tags: #Fiction, #Historical, #Thrillers, #General, #Espionage, #Unknown
TRIPLE
They looked at the drums then at each other. For a moment all rivalry was
forgotten.
"We did it," said Haman. "By Ood, we did it."
As darkness fell Tyrin had watched the engineer go forward to switch on the
white fight. Coming back, he had not gone UP to the bridge but had walked
farther aft and entered the galley. He was going to get something to eat.
Tyrin was hungry too. He would give his arm for a plate of salted herring
and a loaf of brown bread. Sitting cramped in his lifeboat all afternoon,
waiting for Koch to move, he had had nothing to think about but his hunger,
and be had tortured himself with thoughts of caviar, smoked salmon,
marinated mushrooms and most of all brown bread.
Not yet, Pyotr, he told himself.
As soon as Koch had disappeared from sight, Tyrin got out of the lifeboat,
his mu cles protesting as he stretched, and hurried along the deck to the
foeard store.
He had shifted the boxes and junk in the main store so that they concealed
the entrance to his small radio room. Now he had to get down on hands and
knees, pun away one box, and crawl through a little tunnel to get in.
Ile, set was repeating a short two-letter signal. Tyrin checked the code
book and found it meant he was to switch to another wavelength before
acknowledging. He set the radio to transmit and followed his instructions.
Rostov immediately replied. CHANGE OF PLAN. HASSAN WILL ATTACK COPARELL1.
Tyrin frowned in puzzlement, and made: REPEAT PLEASE.
RASSAN IS A TRAITOR. FEDAYEEN WILL ATTACK COPARELLI.
Tyrin said aloud: "Jesus, what's going on?" The Coparelli was here, he was
on it ... Why would Hassan for the uranium, of course.
Rostov was SO signaling. HASSAN PLANS TO AMBUSH DICK5TEIN. FOR OUR PLAN TO
PROCEED WE MUST WARN DICKSTEIN OF THE AMBUSH.
Tyrin frowned as he decoded tb* then his face cleared as he understood.
"Men we'll be back to square one," he said to himself. 'Ibat's clever. But
what do I dor,
He made: How?
YOU WILL CALL STROMBERG ON COPARELLIS REGULAR WAVELENGTH AND SEND POLLOWINO
MESSAGE PRECISELY RE-
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PEAT PRECISELY. QUOTE COPARELLI TO STROMBERO I AM BOARDED ARABS I THINK.
WATCH UNQUOTE.
Tyrin nodded. Dickstein would think that Koch had time to get a few words
off before the Arabs killed him. Forewarned, Dickstein should be able to
take the Coparelli. Then Rostov's Karla could collide with Dickstein's
ship as planned. Tyrin thought: But what about me?
He made: UNDERSTOOD. He heard a distant bump, as if something had hit the
ship's hull. At first he ignored it, then he remembered there was nobody
aboard but him and Koch. He went to the door of the for'ard store and
looked out.
The Fedayeen had arrived.
He closed the door and hurried back to his transmitter. He made: HASSAN
is HERE. .
Rostov replied, SIGNAL DICKSTEIN NOW.
WHAT DO I DO THEN?
MDE.
Thanks very much, Tyrin thought. He signed off and tuned to the regular
wavelength to signal the Stromberg.
The morbid thought occurred to him that he might never eat salted herring
again.
"I've heard of being armed to the teeth, but this is ridiculous," said
Nat Dickstein, and they all laughed.
The message from the Coparelli had altered his mood. At first he had been
shocked. How had the opposition managed to learn so much of his plan that
they had been able to hijack the Coparelli first? Somewhere he must have
made terrible errors of judgment. Suza ... ? But there was no point now
in castigating himself. There was a fight ahead. His black depression
vanished. The tension was still there, coiled tight inside him like a
steel spring, but now he could ride it and use it, now he had something
to do with it.
The twelve men in the mess room of the Stromberg sensed the change in
Dickstein and they caught his eagerness for the battle, although they
knew some of them would die soon.
Armed to the teeth they were. Each had an Uzi 9-mm submachine gun, a
reliable, compact firearm weighing nine pounds when loaded with the
25-round magazine and only an inch over two feet long with its metal
stock extended. They had three spare magazines each. Each man had a 9-mm
Luger in a belt holster-the pistol would take the same car-
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TRiPLE
tridges as the machine gun-and a clip of four grenades on the opposite
side of his belt. Almost certainly, they all had extra, weapons of their
own choice: knives, blackjacks, bayonets, knuckle-dusters and others more
exotic, carried superstitiously, more like lucky charms than fighting
implements.
Dickstein knew their mood, knew they had caught it from him. He had felt
it before with men before a fight. They were afraid,
and-paradoxically-the fear made them eager to get started, for the
waiting was the worst part, the battle itself was anesthetic, and
afterward you had either survived or you were dead and did not care
anymore.
Dickstein had figured his battle plan in detail and briefed them. 'Me
Coparelli was designed like a miniature tanker, with holds forward and
amidships, the main superstructure on the afterdeck, and a secondary
superstructure in the stern. The, main superstructure contained the
bridge, the officers' quarters and the mess; below it were crew's
quarters. The stern superstructure contained the galley, below that
stores, and below these the engine room. The two superstructures were
separate above deck, but below deck they were connected by gangways.
They were to go over in three teams. Abbas's would attack the bows. The
other two, led by Bader and Gibli, would go up the port and starboard
ladders at the stern.
The two stem teams were detailed to go below and work forward, Bushing
out the enemy amidships where they could be mown down by Abbas and his
men from the prow. The strategy was likely to leave a pocket of
resistance at the bridge, so Dickstein planned to take the bridge
himself.
The attack would be by night; otherwise they would never get aboard-they
would be picked off as they came over the rails. That left the problem
of how to avoid shooting at one another as well as the enemy. For this
he provided a recognition signal, the word Aliyah, and the attack plan
was designed so that they were not expected to confront one another until
the very end.
Now they were waiting.
They sat in a loose circle in the galley of the Stromberg, identical to
the galley of the Coparelli where they would soon be fighting and dying.
Dickstein was speaking to Abbas: "From the bows you'll control the
foredeck, an open field of fire. Deploy your men behind cover and stay
there. When the
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enemy on deck reveal their positions, pick them off. Your main problem is
going to be hailing fire from the bridge." -
Slumped in his chair, Abbas looked even more like a tank than usual.
Dickstein was glad Abbas was on his side. "And we hold our fire at first."
Dickstein nodded. "Yes. You've a good chance of getting aboard unseen. No
point in shooting until you know the rest of us have arrived."
Abbas nodded. "I see Porush is on my team. You know he's my
brother-in-law."
"Yes. I also know he's -the only married man here. I thought you might want
to take care of him."
"Thanks.19
Feinberg looked up from the knife he was cieaning. 'Me lanky New Yorker was
not grinning for once. "How do you figure these ArabsT'
Dickstein shook his head. 'They could be regular army or Fedayeen."
Feinberg grinned. "Let's- hope they're regular army-we make faces, they
surrender."
It was a lousy joke, but they all laughed anyway.
Ish, always pessimistic, sitting with his feet on a table and his eyes
closed, said, "Going over the rail will be the worst part. We'll be naked
as babes."
Dickstein said, "Remember that they believe we're expecting to take over a
deserted boat. Their ambush is supposed to be a big surprise for 'us.
They're looking for an easy victory-but we're prepared. And it will be
dark----
The door opened and the captain came in. "We've sighted the Coparelli."
Dickstein stood up. "Let's go. Good luck, and don't take any prisoners."
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Sixteen
7be three boats pulled away from -the Stramberg in the last few minutes
before dawn.
Within seconds the ship behind them was invisible. She had no navigation
lights, and deck lights and cabin lamps had been extinguished, even below
the waterline, to ensure that no light escaped to warn the Coparelft.
The weather had worsened during the night. The captain of the Stromberg
said it was still not bad enough to be called a storm, but the rain was
torrential, the wind strong enough to blow a steel bucket clattering
along the deck, the waves so high that now Dickstein was obliged to cling
tightly to his bench seat in the well of the-motorboat.
For a while they were in limbo, with nothing visible ahead
or behind. Dickstein could not even see the faces of the four
men in the boat with him. Feinberg broke the silence: "I still
say we should have postponed this fishing trip until tomor
row.90 -
Whistling past the graveyard.
Dickstein was as superstitious as the rest: underneath his oilskin and
his life jacket he wore his father's old striped waistcoat with a smashed
fob watch in the pocket over his heart. 1lie watch had once stopped a
German bullet.
Dickstein was thinking logically, but in a way he knew he had gone a
little crazy. His affair with Suza, and her betrayal, had turned him
upside down: his old values and motivations had been jolted, and the new
ones he had acquired with her had turned to dust in his hands. He still
cared for some things: he wanted to win this battle, he wanted Israel to
have the uranium, and he wanted to kill Yasif Hassan; the one thing he
did not care about was himself. He had no fear, suddenly, of bullets and
pain and death. Suza had betrayed him, and he had no burning desire to
live a long life with that in
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his past. So long as Israel got its bomb, Esther would die peacefully,
Mottie would finish Treasure Island, and Yigael would look after the grapes.
He gripped the barrel of the machine gun beneath his oilskin.
They crested a wave and suddenly, there in the next trough, was the
Coparelli.
Switching from forward to reverse several times in rapid succession Levi
Abbas edged his boat closer to the bows of the Coparel7i. The white fight
above them enabled him to see quite clearly, while the outward-curving hull
shielded his boat from the sight of anyone on deck or on the bridge. When
the boat was close enough to the ladder Abbas took a rope and tied it
around his waist under the oilskin. He hesitated a moment then shucked off
the oilskin, unwrapped his gun and slung-the gun over his neck. He stood
with one foot in the boat and one on the gunwale, waited for his moment,
and jumped.
He hit the ladder with both feet and both hands. He untied the rope around
his waist and secured it to a rung of the ladder. He went up the ladder
almost to the top, then stopped. They should go over the rail as close
together as possible.
He looked back down. Sharrett and Sapir were already on the ladder below
him. As he looked, Porush made his jump, landed awkwardly and missed his
grip, and for a moment Abbas's breath caught in his throat; but Porush
slipped down only one rung before he managed to hook an arm around the side
of the ladder and arrest his descent.
Abbas waited for Porush to come up close behind Sapir, then he went over
the rail. He landed softly on all fours and crouched low beside the
gunwale. The others followed swiftly: one, two, three. The white light was
above them and they were very exposed. . .
Abbas looked about. Sharrett was the smallest and he could wriggle like a
snake. Abbas touched his shoulder and pointed across the deck. "Take cover
on the port side."
Sharrett bellied across two yards of open deck, then he was partly
concealed by the raised edge of the foeard hatch. He inched forward.
Abbas looked up and down the deck. At any moment they
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