`Out there.' Lane waved a hand towards the open sea. `He is patrolling off the South Jutland coast.' He sat down in front of a transmitter hidden from the outside world by heavy net curtains drawn over the windows. 'Radio contact may be a bit crackly. Let's see, shall we?'
A minute later he handed the phone to Tweed who sat in the chair Lane had vacated.
`Tweed here. Repeat, Tweed here…'
`Heard you the first time. Tug Wilson at this end. We met at a bash at the Admiralty two years ago. Remember you well. How many targets are expected?'
By 'targets' he meant Stealth vessels. Tweed now recalled the cheerful weather-beaten face of Tug Wilson. And he was being careful – talking on an open line.
`I have no idea,' Tweed confessed.
`Are they armed?'
`Again. Haven't a clue.'
`You're a mine of information!' Wilson chuckled. There was no crackle and the communication was crystal- clear. 'But I understand you're the one who sent me my Christmas present. Most acceptable. My thanks.'
`I shall need to communicate with you from now on from a land base,' Tweed warned. 'That should be possible – they have excellent equipment, I'm sure.'
`Ask Lane for the data. Put him on again, please. Glad to have you aboard…'
Tweed handed the phone back to Dave Lane, walked swiftly to another chair, sat down. The large launch was rocking merrily and he hadn't had the foresight to take a Dramamine. But despite a growing queasiness Tweed felt relieved: Tug Wilson was a good man to have on your side. That last reference to being glad to have you aboard was a great compliment, coming from the tough Navy commander.
He happened to look up at a moment when the launch was heeling towards the sea. He hastily averted his eyes as a fleet of large waves rolled into the harbour. Tweed thanked Heaven he was not aboard the Minotaur. The relief vanished when the thought of Paula flashed into his mind. A deep depression enveloped him. Lane had finished talking to Wilson. He wrote swiftly on a pad, tore off the sheet, folded it, and handed it to Tweed.
`That is top secret. It gives the waveband you can contact the Minotaur on, and the code-word. As you'll see, both are changed every three hours on the hour.'
`I appreciate the excellent security. It's only right you should know the transmitter I'll be using will be operated from a military base. A rather special one. And now, if I may ask, I expect you're returning to the Minotaur?'
`No fear!' Lane grinned boyishly. 'The Commander agreed that I should leave harbour immediately – if that suited you. I'm heading down the coast for South Jutland. You think there'll be a rough house?' he asked eagerly.
`I think that today there will be the deadliest and strangest duel ever fought.'
49
`We'll drive north fast and investigate that weird colony of bungalows you found,' Newman decided.
`Suits me,' Marler drawled. 'I did locate them.'
`Paula,' Newman urged, putting his arm round her shoulders, 'I think you ought to go back to Tonder and get a real rest after what you've been through…'
They had driven away from the house of death, leaving behind Ilena and the infamous Dr Hyde. Only when they reached the road and the house had vanished in the fog had Newman stopped his BMW with Paula beside him.
Marler had followed in his Volvo while Butler brought up the rear in his own Volvo. Now they were all standing outside the BMW. For ten minutes Paula had been striding up and down the road, exercising her limbs, bringing herself both physically and mentally back to normal. She gently removed Newman's arm.
`You think you're going to pack me off to bed when the real climax could be near? I appreciate your sympathy, but I am staying with you.'
`Newman could be right,' Marler suggested.
Paula flared up. 'You can both stick it!' She stood, hands on her hips, glaring at them. 'Stick it, I said!'
Butler, who normally used words as though they were money to be spent frugally, stepped forward.
`The lady is fit again. Didn't you hear what she told you to do with your idea of treating her as an invalid?'
And I wish to God,' Paula continued, 'there was some way we could let Tweed know I'm OK.'
`Facilities for communication are a bit scarce on the ground in this part of the world,' Marler warned.
`Then let's bloody well get moving! We're all armed. Drive north. Stop hanging about,' she stormed. 'Bob, I'll travel with you. We'll lead the attack column…'
Fog. Dense fog was rolling in like a poison-gas cloud from the sea. Paula hid from Newman the emotions which welled up inside her. Fog spelt the horror at Lymington marina on the south coast of Britain – when Harvey Boyd had failed to come back alive.
Fog spelt the nightmare on the Elbe at Blankense harbour – the terror of the Holsten being split in two and sinking barely seconds after they'd rushed ashore.
Fog spelt the unknown, fear, menace. She slipped her hand inside her shoulder-bag, gripped the butt of her Browning for comfort. At that moment Marler drew alongside them, waved his hand for them to stop.
As Newman and Paula climbed out Marler leant in, switched off the BMW's lights. Paula glanced back. No lights any more on Marler's car, on Butler's. She spoke first.
`What's happening? Where are we?'
`Very close to those dunes over to the left,' Marler said sombrely. `And I saw lights – beams from flashlights. A lot of them. If each is held by one man there must be up to twenty of them.'
`So, we're outnumbered – if they're armed,' Paula commented.
`Oh, they'll be armed,' Newman said. 'I think I caught a glimpse of a range of dunes when the fog drifted a moment ago.'
`You did,' Marler confirmed grimly. 'The road from here on is pretty straight. I suggest we drive further north half a mile or so, get away from this place while we think what to do next.'
`Agreed,' replied Newman.
Getting back inside their cars, still led by Newman, they crawled without lights. Soon Newman's night vision showed faint pinpoints of light moving about among the dunes. He continued moving north and then saw a small ridge towards the sea. Checking his rear-view mirror to make sure that Marler was close behind, he turned off the road.
`Where are you going now?' Paula asked.
`That ridge should be a good vantage point to spy on what's going on.' He descended into a small dip, parked the BMW and got out as the other two cars pulled up behind him. His right hand flashed inside his windcheater, withdrew the Smith amp; Wesson. A small figure was coming towards them.
`Mr Robert Newman, I presume?' Philip Cardon called out.
`What the devil are you doing here?'
`Surveying the enemy-' He broke off. 'Paula! Thank God! Are you OK?'
`Very OK. Now,' she added. Briefly she told him of her ordeal without making a big thing of it. Cardon took her by the arm, followed by Newman. 'Tweed will be desperate to hear you're alive. I've got a radio transmitter in the car behind that hummock. Come and talk to him
…'
Several hours earlier, Tweed had left the harbour and was driven to the military encampment south of Esbjerg. He was again impressed by the security. Dropped by the driver at the entrance, he was escorted by a uniformed Danish officer inside the guardhouse.
The wide-spread complex, behind a twelve-foot wire fence he suspected was electrified, comprised single- storey huts like giant portacabins. He had to show the officer not only his passport but also his SIS card.
`Anton Norlin is expecting me.'
`He is expecting you, sir. Please follow me…'
The officer led the way between two rows of huts to the largest edifice. Perched on its roof was an array of aerials and a large satellite dish which revolved slowly. Tweed had a slight shock as the officer opened the door, ushered him inside, closed it without entering. Back in the guardhouse he had briefly used a phone, speaking in Danish, not a word of which Tweed had understood.