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Men clung to the gunwales in fear.
With a sudden drying of his mouth, Captain Rhee saw that the torpedo was going
to strike the Ingo Pungo amidships. Strike at the waterline directly beneath
the spot where he intended to deposit the last lifeboat.
And he knew all was lost for himself and his remaining crewmen.
The ship shuddered alarmingly upon impact. Cold salt brine was thrown up. It
streamed down Rhee's openmouthed face, freezing instantly, stilling his tongue
and sealing one eye shut to the elements.
Rhee grabbed for the rail but it slipped from his grasp. The deck was already
pitching. It pitched its brave captain overboard, which was a kind of mercy.
The Ingo Pungo slipped beneath the waves as if dragged to its doom by
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something inimical. From the moment the first torpedo demolished the stern,
ten minutes had transpired. But only two more after the starboard hull had
been breached.
The sucking of water drew three of the lifeboats down into a brutally cold
vortex, carrying its crew to a violent death.
But not as violent as those in the surviving lifeboats.
They were bobbing in the water in sheer disbelief of the calamity that had
overtaken them, when the heaving sea around them flattened strangely, belled,
then heaved up again as if from some subsea earthquake.
In their midst a black steel snout surfaced, hung poised for a heart-stopping
moment, then came crashing down to dash every last lifeboat into kindling.
A hatch popped up in the top of the gleaming conning tower.
A man whose face was as white as the flag on the sail stepped out and looked
around. His face mirrored the blue heraldic design in the flag.
He called out. Not words. Just a questioning shout.
He got a return shout from the water. Frightened and disoriented.
A sweeping searchlight raked the disturbed Atlantic. It fell on a bobbing
human head.
The bobbing survivor of the Ingo Pungo called out for rescue, his shivering
arms lifted imploringly.
The man with the blue device marking his death white face lifted a
short-barreled machine gun and chopped the lone survivor into fresh chum.
Then the searchlight began picking out other bobbing heads. And the machine
gunner began picking them off with methodical precision. A few ducked when the
hot lights swept toward them. They never resurfaced.
The rest screamed or prayed or did both in their last, terrible moments before
the searchlight blazed a pathway for the merciful bullets. Merciful because a
ripping bullet was preferable to drowning or hypothermia.
The black submarine slipped beneath the waves soon after that.
Other than scattered slicks of blood in the water, no trace of the Ingo Pungo
remained.
Chapter 4
Remo Williams held the thundering cigarette boat on a dead eastern heading,
his dark eyes raking the tossing seas before him.
It was bitterly cold, but the bare skin of his forearms showed no gooseflesh.
The wind whipping through his short dark hair seemed to not bother him at all.
It pressed his black T-shirt to his chest, and made his black chinos flap and
chatter off his legs.
In the moonlight Remo's face had the aspect of a death mask. Old plastic
surgeries had brought out his skull-like cheekbones under the tight, pale
skin. His eyes were set so deep in their sockets they looked empty, like skull
hollows. Long ago Remo had been electrocuted by the state of New Jersey so
that his past could be erased. He might have been the old Remo Williams come
back from the grave to avenge his own death. But he had never died. The chair
had been rigged, his execution faked.
Remo's body temperature was slightly elevated to compensate for the cold. It
was a small technique in the greater repertoire of Sinanju, the Korean martial
art from which all succeeding martial arts were descended. Sinanju placed Remo
in full control of his body and at one with the universe. Conquering deadly
cold or running as if weightless across open water were things he had mastered
long ago and would never forget.
Somewhere beyond the drop point, Remo smelled blood in the water. Remo knew
death more intimately than most men know their wives, so he knew human blood
from ape blood. Chicken blood from beef. He could even sometimes distinguish
male blood from female, though he couldn't put the difference into words.
The blood he smelled was human male. And there was a lot of it.
He let his nose guide him toward the metallic scent.
Moonlight on the water didn't show up the blood. It was his nose that told him
when he was in the middle of it. He chopped the engine and sent the power boat
gliding around in a long arc that brought it back to where the blood scent
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was.
Reaching over the side, Remo dipped his fingers. They came back mercurochrome
red. He could see the red clearly now. It blended with the black of the night
sea. There was a lot of it. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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