‘Meaning what?’
‘Nice way of saying we are on our own. Get home any way we can.’
‘Shit.’
‘It’ll be fine. There are plenty of other support ships at sea. Hamburg is arranging a substitute vessel. It might take a while, though.’
‘When will you tell the men?’
‘Must admit I feel a bit of a fool. Telling everyone they are going home. Getting their hopes up.’
‘So what did Hamburg say? What’s actually happening?’
‘Something bad spreading fast. It seems to be global. That’s the sum of it. Most radio and TV stations are down. No one knows a thing. It’s all just panic and rumour. Marco, our Hamburg contact, says most of the stuff we’ve seen on the news is recycled footage shot last month. Things have got a lot worse since then. He’s says people are leaving the cities for the countryside in case the government firebomb.’
‘So what is it? Flu? Smallpox?’
‘A virus. That’s what he said.’
‘What kind?’
‘Marco’s English is pretty poor. A virus. Some kind of parasite. That’s our little secret, okay? The men don’t need to know.’
Jane returned to her room. She swapped her sweater for a clerical shirt and dog-collar.
‘Get it together,’ she told her reflection. ‘People need you now.’
Jane headed for the gym.
The gym was monopolised each day by Nail Harper and his gang of muscle freaks. A redundant dive crew with nothing to do but lift weights and preen in front of the gymnasium wall mirror.
She heard Motorhead as she approached. Ace of Spades’ echoing down steel corridors.
Nail was sweating his way through a series of barbell curls. He was stripped to the waist. He had a gothic cross tattooed on his back. He stood in front of the wall mirror and watched himself pump. Bull-neck, massive shoulders. Skin stretched taut over veins and tendons. He looked like he was wearing his muscles on the outside.
His gym buddies sat nearby. Gus and Mal. Ivan and Yakov. They took turns to use a leg press.
‘How are you lads doing?’ shouted Jane.
Nail set the barbell on the floor and turned round. He took his time about it. He looked Jane up and down. He stood over her, towelling sweat from his torso. He glanced at one of his buddies, a signal to turn down the music.
‘Come to burn off a few pounds?’
‘I’m going to hold a service in the chapel later on.’
‘Good for you.’
‘I know everyone on this rig tends to stick to their own little group, their own little faction, but maybe we ought to start thinking like a team. You saw the news. We’re in this shit together.’
One of his buddies threw him a protein shake. He swigged.
‘I’ve been here all day, every day. If you fuckers want to talk, if you actually give a shit, you can find me any time. We pass in the corridor, you don’t even look me in the eye. You think me and my boys are dirt. Get off your high horse, bitch. You contribute zero to this rig. You can’t do a damn thing. You can barely tie your shoes. You just sit around all day eating our food. So don’t act like I’m the one with my nose in the air.’
He stared down at Jane. There were centrefolds on the walls around her. Women spreading themselves, women hitching their legs. He was daring her to look. She held his gaze.
‘Point taken. Fresh start, all right? The service is at seven. We’d all be glad to see you.’
Jane led prayers.
‘Father, protect our loved ones in this hour of darkness. We commit them to your loving grace. Lord, in your mercy, hear our prayer.’
Nail and his gang sat in the back row and watched.
They sang ‘Eternal Father Strong to Save’, the sailors’ hymn.
Jane blessed her small congregation. Rawlins stood and gave the news. The Oslo Star hadn’t left port but a second ship was on its way. Oil support vessel Spirit of Endeavour. It would arrive at nine the following morning but wouldn’t stay long. Everyone better be packed and ready to go.
Time to put the rig in hibernation. Rawlins assigned everyone a task.
Jane shut down Main Street. She threw breakers in a wall-mounted fuse box and extinguished the broken neon that blinked and buzzed above each vacant retail unit. Starbucks. Cafe Napoli. Blockbuster. Signage flickered and died.
Jane took a bunch of keys and closed C deck. Punch tagged along.
‘Nice prayer,’ said Punch. ‘I heard a couple of guys say they liked it. Yakov. He’s Catholic.’
Each corridor had a series of blast doors set in the ceiling. In the event of an explosion the doors would drop to prevent the spread of fire. Jane twisted a numbered key into the wall at each intersection and a blast door rumbled downward like a portcullis.
‘I bet most of them didn’t even know we had a chapel.’
‘Do you think prayers are ever answered?’ asked Punch.
‘It helps to voice your fears.’
‘It would be nice to think there was a cosmic parent ready to kiss it all better.’
‘I wrapped my car round a tree a few years ago,’ said Jane. ‘They say I was dead for three minutes. I can tell you for sure there is no God, no happy afterworld. In fact that’s why I became a priest. It’s a short life and people deserve more than work and recreational shopping. They need meaning. A place to belong.’
They stood in the doorway of the stairwell. Jane took a radio from her pocket.
‘C deck clear.’
The steady hum of heating fans died away. Somewhere, high above them, Rawlins flicked a bank of isolator switches to Off. The corridor lights were extinguished one by one.
Next morning the crew gathered in the canteen. They brought kit-bags and suitcases. They wore parkas and snowboots. They looked like tourists in a departure lounge.
They watched TV.
Berlin in chaos. Looting. Riot vans and burning cars. The Brandenburg Gate glimpsed through tear gas.
Bilbao docks. Refugees try to climb a mooring rope and board an oil tanker. Sailors blast them with a fire hose.
The White House south lawn. The President ringed by Secret Service armed with assault rifles. ‘…may God defend us in this dark and difficult hour..!’ Brief wave from the hatch of Marine One.
Punch found a box of crisps in a kitchen storeroom. He upturned the box and scattered crisp packets across the pool table.
‘May as well use them up, folks,’ he said. ‘A ton of food going to waste.’
Nail and his gang hogged the jukebox.
Rawlins sat by the window.
‘They’ll be coming from the north-east.’
Time dragged. Punch took a pack of playing cards from his pocket. He shuffled and re-shuffled.
‘There it is,’ said Rawlins.
They crowded round the window.
‘That ship don’t look right,’ said Nail.
The plastic canteen window was pitted and scratched, scoured by fierce ice storms. The approaching ship was a blur. The crew ran upstairs to the rooftop helipad for a better view. They stood on the big red H and braced their legs against a buffeting wind. A small tug approached from the north.
‘Spirit of Endeavour my ass,’ said one of the men.
‘That’s a dinghy,’ said Punch. ‘That’s a fucking rubber duck.’
The ship drew close. It looked like a small fishing trawler. The wheelhouse was little bigger than a phone booth. Maybe a couple of bunks below.
‘I think some of us might be staying behind,’ said Jane.
The List
The tug entered the shadow of the refinery, splintering ice, and docked at the north leg. The tiny vessel bobbed on the swells like a cork. Chugging diesel engine. The crew watched from the helipad railing.