‘Nice poetry reference, boss,’ Mother whispered. ‘Classy.’
‘Is he some kind of demented Robin Hood?’ Schofield said. ‘Bringing down rich nations on behalf of poor ones?’
‘I do not know,’ Champion said. ‘We do not know.’
Schofield bit his lip in thought. ‘The first breakout in Chile released approximately one hundred prisoners. The second in the Sudan released another hundred or so. Add to that an inner sanctum of commanders and we’re looking at two hundred, perhaps two hundred and twenty men.’
‘And only ten of us,’ Mario said sadly. ‘Good fucking luck . . .’
‘Hey, I count for ten,’ Mother said.
‘And I, twenty,’ Baba said.
‘Ironbark’s team said they encountered a hundred men waiting for them at that submarine dock,’ Mario said despairingly. ‘Look at what happened to them, and they were SEALs!’
Schofield checked his watch.
It was 9:35 a.m.
‘We still have an hour and twenty-five minutes.’
Mario stood up. ‘Are you listening? Even if we had fifty fully trained men, we couldn’t storm that island in a week! Look at us: stuck in a stinking hole with nowhere to go. If they decide to send anyone in after us, we’re screwed. This has officially become a suicide mission.’
Schofield gave Mario a long hard look but said nothing, because in all honesty, the young Marine was right.
While Schofield and the others were assessing their situation in the dock, the V-22 Osprey that had attacked them flew south to Dragon Island.
The gunship soared over the three little islets to the north of Dragon before rising swiftly to clear the cliffs of the island’s northern coast, cliffs that formed a U-shaped bay around the closest islet. The winter pack ice had melted substantially here and the bay was unfrozen, dotted here and there with ice floes the size of cars.
The Osprey swept up and over an old cable car terminal that connected the closest islet to Dragon Island. Upon clearing the terminal, an astonishing view met the plane’s pilot, the man known as Hammerhead.
Off to his left were the two colossal vents, belching the shimmering TEB mixture into the sky. At some time during the morning, some wag had spray-painted a huge A-in-a-circle on the flank of one of them—the mark of the Army of Thieves—as a kind of ‘fuck you’ to the various reconnaissance satellites that, no doubt, would now be watching the island.
Directly in front of the Osprey was the main tower, the huge three-storey disc-shaped structure mounted atop a single two-hundred-foot-high concrete pillar. The whole structure was nestled in a circular concrete pit and access to it could be obtained only via one of two crane-operated bridges on either side of the pit. From each crane’s long extended arm hung a bridge that could be lowered to span the gap between the rim and the disc.
On top of the disc itself was a helipad, the two tall spires, and the large glass dome that enclosed the complex’s command centre.
From the base of the great pillar to the tip of the highest antenna on top of the taller spire, the whole structure was at least four hundred feet tall and it dwarfed the approaching Osprey; it also made the many men stationed at the base’s various guardhouses and watchtowers, the members of the Army of Thieves, look like ants.
Hammerhead brought the Osprey into a hover above the helipad, landed softly and with his four-man crew behind him, marched into the command centre.
Hammerhead and his crew stood before their leader.
The clear glass dome that covered the command centre was easily seventy feet across. Beneath it lay several levels of consoles, computers and communications desks, all surrounding a raised platform from which a commander could look out over Dragon Island in every direction.
Seated in the command chair was the leader of the Army of Thieves.
He no longer wore his gaudy Elvis sunglasses. Instead, his eyes were visible for all to see. They were quite unnerving: pale grey eyes that rarely blinked. The discoloured acid-melted skin on his left cheek and throat was also clearly visible, as were the many guns in the many holsters he wore on his thighs, under his shoulders and on his back. A series of small tattoos ran in an ordered line down his neck: among them an image of a Russian cargo ship, a crude ‘USMC’, and an apartment building with ‘Moskva’ written over it.
To his men, he had no name other than ‘the Lord of Anarchy, General of the Army of Thieves’. They addressed him as ‘my Lord’, ‘Lord’, or ‘sir’.
He was Caucasian but had deeply tanned skin. Where he hailed from, no-one knew.
He spoke English with an American accent but then he was also fluent in Russian, Spanish and Farsi.
All anyone in the Army of Thieves knew for sure was that they had all been recruited by him at some time or another. None knew how his inner circle had come together: the Lord of Anarchy and his tight gang of five men who had known each other before they formed the Army—the four senior officers with shark nicknames: Hammerhead, Thresher, White Tip and Mako; and of course Typhon.
Naturally, there were rumours among the men: some said they were ex–Turkish Army officers who had tried to join al-Qaeda but had been turned away because they were too aggressive; others claimed they were a mix of ex-Chilean and ex-Egyptian torturers who had performed enhanced interrogation on terrorist suspects on behalf of the United States; others still claimed they were American mercenaries who just loved the sight of blood.
Beside the Lord of Anarchy stood his XO, Colonel Typhon. Named after the most feared creature in Greek mythology—of immense size, it had fiery eyes and even the gods quailed before it—he was an exceedingly tall, blank-eyed killer whom the men feared greatly.
Upon acceptance into the Army’s ranks, every member of the Army of Thieves met Typhon.
It was he who bestowed the insignia of promotion—a red-hot branding iron to the skin of the forearm which was then infused with tattooist’s ink, creating raised chevrons on the skin. Your rank in the Army was not stitched onto your sleeve, it was seared onto your very skin.
It was also Typhon who performed the initiation ceremony—a drug-hazed beating of horrific proportions while you viewed four television screens at once, screens that bombarded you with clips of gore and grotesquery, snuff killings and beheadings, rape and bestiality, drowning and torture.
The men obeyed the Lord of Anarchy because he was their leader. They obeyed Typhon out of pure terror.
‘Report,’ the Lord of Anarchy said.
‘My Lord,’ Hammerhead said, ‘we found the wreckage of Ivanov’s plane. By the time we arrived, the American testing team was there. We engaged them but then a French submarine surfaced nearby.’
The Lord of Anarchy raised an eyebrow. ‘A French submarine? Go on.’
‘The sub did not appear to be acting in concert with the Americans but we torpedoed it anyway. While we were engaged with the sub, the American team knocked out one of our Cobras and then fled in their assault boats. My second Cobra reacquired them a short while later not far from the islets near here, but the Americans brought down that chopper as well and by the time I got there, they were gone.’
‘Gone?’
‘Their boats, they must have been a new type of subskimmer, sir.’
‘They are a testing team, Captain. I fear, however, that you have neglected something in your report.’
Hammerhead froze, confused. ‘Wh . . . what was that, sir?’
‘How you failed in your mission. You were ordered to go out and kill the Americans. You did not. Ergo, you failed.’
‘They put up a hell of a figh—’
‘I cannot tolerate failure, Captain. Not during this mission. This army expects only one thing: that each of its members performs his duties to the letter. You have not done this, thus you endanger us all. Who is your immediate junior officer?’
Hammerhead nodded to the younger man beside him. ‘Flight Lieutenant Santos, sir. From Chile.’
The Lord of Anarchy turned his gaze upo
n the younger man, looked him quickly up and down. Then he turned to Typhon and nodded.
The dead-eyed XO pulled a gleaming meat cleaver from behind his back and placed it on a table in front of Hammerhead and the young lieutenant.
The Lord of Anarchy said, ‘Lieutenant Santos, I need to teach your captain a lesson, one that he will not soon forget. Now, I could punish him, but in my experience I have found that the only truly effective way to motivate someone—or, for that matter, to extract information from an enemy—is to hurt someone close to them or in their charge. So, if you would be so kind, Lieutenant Santos, would you cut off your own left hand, please.’
A few of the communications operators who had been surreptitiously watching this exchange looked up suddenly.
Santos’s eyes went wide. He threw a look at Hammerhead, but his captain just stared resolutely forward, not meeting his eye.
The Lord of Anarchy waited patiently. He said nothing.
Then, to all the spectators’ surprise, the young lieutenant stepped forward and picked up the steel-bladed cleaver.
Many of them had heard about this sort of thing before, but none of them had ever seen it: tales of the Lord of Anarchy ordering disobedient or disgraced members of the Army to hack off parts of their own body. Fingers, toes, and in one famous case—according to rumour—the Lord had ordered a man who had raped an African nun to sever his own penis . . . and the man had done it.
How he could make this happen, no-one knew. Those members from African and South American countries called it black magic or voodoo, while those from Western nations suspected it was some kind of subliminal process that had been implanted into their minds during the sadistic initiation ceremony. Whatever it was, it made an impact. It ensured total obedience.
As the audience watched, Santos tested the weight of the cleaver in his right hand. Then he placed his left wrist flat on the wooden table.
And raised the cleaver.
The communications men held their breath . . .
The Osprey crew watched in horror . . .
Hammerhead kept staring forward . . .
The Lord of Anarchy gave away nothing . . .
Typhon smiled . . .
The meat cleaver came down hard and the lieutenant’s scream cut through the air.
The Lord of Anarchy turned to Hammerhead.
‘Do not fail me again, Captain. This Army is depending on you. Dismissed.’
As Hammerhead left with his remaining crew members, the Lord of Anarchy directed his personal guards to the now-kneeling figure of Santos. The young lieutenant clutched the bloody stump of his left arm to his body.
‘Put him to work in the gasworks beneath the main vents,’ the Lord of Anarchy said, ‘in a place where he can be seen by all the men. Let word of this spread.’
Santos was dragged away.
When he was gone, the Lord of Anarchy turned to his XO.
‘Colonel Typhon, how long till the uranium spheres are ready?’
‘One hour and twenty minutes, sir.’
‘This American testing team bothers me. While small, its members are worryingly determined. They might be more trouble than they appear.’
‘Mako is on his way back from their camp now. He found one person still there, a military contractor named Hartigan. Mako’s bringing him back now in the second Osprey.’
‘Take Mr Hartigan to the gasworks, too, and torture him. I want to know everything he knows about that test team. He may also provide some entertainment for the men later.’ The Lord of Anarchy nodded at his surveillance screens. ‘Where are they now?’
‘They’re on Bear Islet.’
‘Do we have visuals?’
‘Yes, sir. CCTV feed.’
‘Get stills of all of them and run the images through the military databases. In the meantime, send in Bad Willy and his boys, plus a few berserkers, from behind, and Thresher’s team from in front. We’ve come too far for some rogue group of wannabe heroes to stop us now. Squeeze them and kill them.’
BEAR ISLET LOADING DOCK
4 APRIL, 0940 HOURS
1 HOUR 20 MINUTES TO DEADLINE
In the dark concrete loading dock on Bear Islet, Zack Weinberg and Emma Dawson were checking the corpse of the polar bear that had come bursting out of the shadows upon their arrival. As always, Bertie trailed along behind Zack.
‘I’ve never seen a polar bear like this,’ Emma said. ‘Look at its coat: it’s shaggy and matted and filthy. Polar bears usually have short coats which they keep fastidiously clean.’
Zack winced at the sight of the dead bear. It was indeed filthy. It was also stained all over with its own blood from the gunshot wounds.
‘It’s smaller than other polar bears I’ve seen,’ he said.
‘Yes, it is.’ Emma stepped around the corpse, eyeing it analytically, scientifically. ‘I’d say it’s an adolescent, the bear equivalent of a teenager; moody, aggressive and impetuous.’
She gazed through the reinforced glass door that led into the islet’s laboratory structure. In there she saw a wide octagonal space with a sunken section in the middle. On the elevated walkways ringing that sunken section, four larger polar bears padded around, pacing. One of them came over to the glass door and peered through it at her and Zack.
‘Do you think this bear was living in this dock?’ Zack asked.
Emma shrugged. ‘It’s a good home for a polar bear. A fully enclosed cave with a single underwater entrance.’
‘But why would it be living apart from the others?’
‘Adolescent bears of all species—grizzlies, Kodiaks, polars—often overstep their bounds and fall foul of the older bears. I’d guess this bad boy crossed one of the older males and got chased out. He was living here in exile—’
Smack!
The large bear on the other side of the door punched the glass.
The door shuddered, but held.
Schofield turned at the noise, took in the bear on the other side of the door. ‘You guys okay over there?’
Zack and Emma nodded.
‘How about you, Chad?’ Schofield said.
The young executive was sitting with his back against the wall and his head bowed. He looked up, clearly shaken by their recent experiences, but nodded gamely.
Schofield glanced at the stalking bear. ‘I think it’s time we learned more about this place from Mr Ivanov.’
The group gathered around the Russian scientist.
‘All right, Mr Ivanov, or is it “Doctor” or maybe “Colonel”?’ Schofield asked.
‘It is “Doctor”.’
‘Okay, Dr Ivanov. We know the big picture stuff about Dragon Island, now I want the details from someone who knows them: I want to know everything about that island, from the layout to the atmospheric weapon and what we can do in the next eighty minutes to stop it going off.’
Ivanov shook his head. ‘Ostrov Zmey is a rock, a fortress. With enough men stationed at its watchtowers, it is very difficult to take by force.’
‘If it’s so impregnable, how could this group take it so easily?’ Mother asked.
Ivanov sighed. ‘I suspect they bribed one of the members of the skeleton team I was coming to replace. Specifically, a man named Dr Igor Kotsky. In the new Russia, we men of science are not well paid and I know Kotsky was in considerable debt. He could have been easily bought. We all could have been bought. When my relief plane arrived at Dragon, Kotsky was there at the hangar, waving us in, calling us over . . . into a waiting field of fire.’
‘Okay, then,’ Schofield said, ‘tell us about the weapon. We’ve been told we can disrupt its use by stealing or destroying some red uranium spheres or destroying the missiles that will fire them into the gas cloud. Is that correct?’
‘That is right,’ Ivanov said. ‘In theory, you could also disrupt the creation of the gas cloud itself, but it is far too late for that. If you destroyed the vents now, you might create a gap in the gas cloud, but any gap you created would not be wide enough.
The atmospheric flame, once ignited, is incredibly potent. It would be able to leap any such void. You would need a gap created by at least ninety minutes of zero gas production to create a large enough gap and that is not possible anymore.’
‘So it comes down to the spheres and the missiles?’
‘Yes.’
‘So where are these spheres kept?’
‘They are stored in a sealed laboratory atop the shorter of the two spires mounted upon the main tower. They are the reason for our enemy’s delay—due to their substantial potency, the red uranium spheres are kept at a temperature close to zero Kelvin, or −273 degrees Celsius. So they must be primed before use: priming involves reheating them to ambient temperature at a very precise incremental rate or else their molecular structure will break down and their ability to light the gas will be lost.’
‘How many of these spheres are there?’ Champion asked.
‘Well, there are six in that lab . . .’ Ivanov said, a little hesitantly. Schofield saw it.
‘Are there more spheres elsewhere on Dragon Island?’ he asked.
Ivanov grimaced. ‘There is a secret laboratory built directly underneath the main tower, beneath the great pillar. This laboratory is only accessible by a security-coded elevator and is equipped with a reheating unit of its own and one red uranium sphere. It is a fallback, a last retreat in the event of nuclear conflict, but . . .’
‘But what?’
‘But Kotsky does not know about it. Its existence is beyond his level of clearance. And if Kotsky does not know about it, then neither can this army.’
‘Hmmm.’ Schofield bit his lip in thought. ‘Still, if we can get to that shorter spire and disrupt the priming process, we can render the spheres useless.’
‘Yes, if you get there in time,’ Ivanov said.
Champion asked, ‘Can we destroy the spheres with a grenade blast?’
‘No, they are too dense for a conventional explosive to do any damage to them. Such an explosive would not even crack a red uranium sphere. It requires a large, carefully timed and even more carefully calibrated implosive blast to break one.’