VLCCs have long proved favorite targets — if hard ones to reach, for they sail far out. They have small crews. They sail unarmed. Even those few who do carry officers with guns do so more for show than effect, for who is going to risk a spark from a ricochet setting the cargo alight?
But Prometheus had nothing to fear from African pirates that night. It was the last-but-one night of August, thirteen days since they turned north. The Cape Rollers that had followed them almost to the equator had moderated and they had left the Flying Dutchman’s haunted waters without the expected crisis overtaking them. This good luck in spite of the report by Nihil the flute player of a distant, pale three-master heaving up over the horizon at midnight exactly four days ago, then turning away and running south, glowing eerily as she went. There had been a stir among the superstitious at the news: it meant there was bad luck coming.
The signal came in at midnight. Tsirtos was in the shack, not because he was really expecting the signal anymore, but because he had been put aboard to be in that place at that time and so he was. And the signal came in at midnight. Absolutely. Unmistakably. When and as expected — in spite of the fact that everything had changed.
He made no acknowledgment: there was none to make. He simply sat, unbelieving, looking at the equipment in front of him as though it had changed, become monstrous, nightmarish.
He knew the routine. He was to destroy the radio and then take the message to Nicoli. Nicoli would take the message to Captain Levkas. The captain would sound “abandon ship.” They would all pack their suitcases and stock up with everything they needed or wanted before reporting to the lifeboats. They would abandon leisurely but would explain to their rescuers in a day or so’s time that there had been too much urgent confusion for any logs or records to be saved.
There would be no distress calls broadcast except from the lifeboats later.
The last man off would be Nicoli and he would have opened the sea-cocks so Prometheus would sink swiftly, silently, and deep.
But Nicoli and all the rest were dead. Who to tell, therefore; what to do? He sat for a moment in an agony of indecision. But he hadn’t been put here to hesitate. There was only one course of action that he could see: the one he had been preparing for since he discovered the life raft. He would do his bit and then get off Prometheus just as fast as he could. He leaned forward and hit the button he had watched Gallaher add to the equipment nearly two months ago. There was a fierce hiss from behind the radio equipment and a cloud of acrid smoke filled the shack as it all destroyed itself. He slammed the Radio Room door on the first billow and ran down toward the main deck. The sense of being alone in all this was compounded by the normality of the scenes he stealthily sped past. Past the Officers’ Galley, its door ajar, where the captain and his third officer were drinking their cocoa, looking back over the ship’s pool and her fluorescent wake in the dark sea astern; past the crews’ quarters where the hum of quiet, sleepy conversation was punctuated by the plaintive wailing of Nihil’s flute; past the Cargo Control Room, empty now, where the computers stood in rank upon rank, their lights shining like multicolored stars, overseeing the safe disposition of every drop of cargo aboard. And out through the A deck bulkhead door onto the main deck itself.
Into the arms of “Slugger” Napier taking a breather at the end of his watch before he turned in for the night.
“Here!” said the big Mancunian, catching hold of him. “What’s your game?”
In a frenzy of impatience, Tsirtos tore away and ran for the forecastle head. He had gone only half a dozen steps before Napier tackled him. Wrapped around each other like all-in wrestlers, they rolled toward the Pump Room hatchway in the center of the deck immediately in front of the bridge. Desperately, knowing he would be no match for the huge English bully in anything even approaching a fair fight, Tsirtos drove his head up into Napier’s face. His forehead connected shrewdly with Napier’s nose, flattening it even more. The huge engineer pulled back and Tsirtos thought he had won. He wriggled out of Napier’s embrace and gathered himself to get up. He never even saw the left hook that caught the point of his jaw with professional perfection. His head slammed back against the deck and that was that. Like Gallaher, he was unconscious when he died.
Gallaher’s bomb had two timers. The first, the clock, had been reading 00.00 for uncounted hours; it should have detonated days ago. It had failed to do so because Nicoli had knocked loose a wire when he touched it. The second was a much more simple device, designed to trigger five minutes after Tsirtos destroyed the radio. It was a little fail-safe the Irishman had included in this bomb to make certain it did its job. Gallaher had reckoned on being safe and sound back in Durban when it went up in any case.
It triggered now.
The second part of the bomb was plastique, carefully molded to spread its force sideways among the pipes like a scythe through corn. Because Nicoli had moved it, however, its force cut up and down instead of side to side. It destroyed not many pipes but one, filling the air with microscopic droplets of oil from the bunker age — the oil used to drive Prometheus’s engine.
The third part of the bomb, designed to detonate a millisecond after the plastique, was a magnesium-based incendiary. Working with the air-suspended droplets released by the first explosion, it created a fireball that blew open the decking beneath Tsirtos and vaporized both him and Napier at once. It blew away the great steel door below and filled the corridor with flame. It would have incinerated anyone nearby, but the engineering decks were empty at that time.
It is doubtful whether the lethal firefighting equipment could have stopped the process even had the canisters been as full as their faulty gauges boasted. But they were mostly empty, so the fire burned unabated.
The deck split open. The Pump Room hatch flew away like a champagne cork but that was nowhere near enough to alleviate the forces unleashed by the exploding oil. The deck split open from the foot of the bridge to the front of the coffer-dam space separating the engineering area from the first cargo tank. The edges of the wound folded back, white-hot in an instant, into a gap more than ten feet wide, nearly twenty feet long.
Up out of the steel volcano came a column of force too great to be called mere fire. As it rose it pushed the air above it to either side with incredible power.
All the windows on the front of the bridge exploded inward.
As it passed, it sucked air back with hurricane strength into the vacuum left behind it.
Everything loose on the bridge was sucked out except for those things closest to the floor.
The helmsman and the watchkeepers never stood a chance. They were mowed down by the shrapnel glass from the windows coming in. And what was left of them, before it had time to fall, before it had time to do anything other than mark the scorched back wall, was sucked back out a second later as though it had never been.
So that John Higgins, at the rear of the port bridge wing trying to get a decent midnight shot of the stars, was aware only of a terrible screaming roar that robbed him of sense and breath, which was there and was too much to bear — and which was gone in an instant.
John pulled himself to his feet — though he would never remember falling down — and staggered over to the bridge door. The handle was hot and the door stiff, but he tore it open and ran onto the bridge. He was utterly alone. Stunned, he looked out of the holes that had been the windows down into the volcano on the deck. The first blast may have passed but there were still combustibles out of control down there. The decking below him was curved up into a blistered, dully glowing hillock sloping most strongly to port and starboard. Through the ragged lips of the opening at its summit, white-hot flames still roared, their breath enough to singe his eyebrows, fifty feet above.