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They had to act now, before they were detected. The Roc could outrun them if she chose, and the yacht was so close to New York that she didn’t have to stay afloat much longer to shoot the EMP weapon into the sky.

“Ready torpedoes,” Laila said and heard her words immediately echoed back from the torpedo room.

It had begun. And no one had doubts.

“Another ship is heading toward the Roc.” Ambra bent lower over the sonar table. “The engines are running on a weird frequency, or I would have picked it up on passive sonar. It looks like an old military boat. Probably just using the shipping lane. Unlikely to be armed.”

“Not a threat. Close on the Roc.” If she perceived a threat, she would sink the new ship later. For now, everything was about the Roc.

The helmsman was already changing direction. They were closing in on their target at their top speed of twenty knots. The Roc had a top speed of thirty-four knots, but she was still plowing ahead on her regular course at twenty knots, like a horse heading back to the barn.

The Roc didn’t know they were there. She was helpless before them. As helpless as Laila’s sister had been before the prince.

“Surface to periscope depth.” Laila wanted to see every bit of destruction. Flames. A hole ripped in the sleek hull. Bodies spilling off the decks. Blood and oil on the water. If the Roc launched lifeboats, she would shoot them, too. She would leave no survivors. All leadership would have to be rebuilt.

Ambra paced the tiny bridge. The planesman and the helmsman looked at her as if they expected her to do something besides pilot the submarine. Laila watched the women study Ambra. She hated to think what they expected Ambra to do. Mutiny?

But they had come too far to turn back now. They all knew it.

Ambra tucked her yellow pencil behind her ear and looked up.

Laila waited. Ambra knew her duty. They all did.

If they didn’t, she would remind them. Or Meri would.

She looked over to where Meri stood near the periscope. A pistol was tucked into her overalls. As Laila well knew, Meri wouldn’t hesitate to use it against any obstacle. Meri met her gaze, her expression resolute.

“Ready to fire,” Laila said.

And they were ready.

Chapter 48

North Atlantic aboard the Siren
March 22, afternoon

Vivian jerked upright from an uneasy sleep. Pain lanced from her shoulders down to her wrists. The hand not protected by her cast was numb. Hoping to get some blood flowing, she opened and closed both hands.

Nahal had curled up near the head of the bed. Her bright brown eyes studied Vivian. She’d probably been watching her sleep. Creepy.

“Please take off the handcuffs,” Vivian said.

“How do I know you won’t hurt me?”

“What would be the point?” Vivian tried to massage one hand with the other. Both hands were cold. “Would your boss care if I took you hostage?”

“She would not. She is a Dakkar, and that comes with a certain ruthlessness of spirit. She will spare no one, including me.” Slowly, Nahal sat and inched closer to Vivian. With one small hand, she unlocked the cuffs and set them on the desk.

Vivian stood and rolled her shoulders. Her back and neck popped. She bounced from foot to foot. She wanted to do a couple jumping jacks, but worried that might freak out Nahal. Best to keep it slow and steady. Instead, she stood still and massaged her numb hand. A little feeling returned to her wrist. It was going to hurt like hell soon. Good. Pain was just weakness leaving your body. Who had said that?

“Is your hand all right?” Nahal asked.

“I think so. It’s warming up a little, so that’s a good sign.” Vivian opened and closed her hands over and over.

“Aren’t you afraid to die in this tin can deep underwater? To never see your family again?” Vivian looked around the tiny room. “I sure don’t want to die here.”

“I already died when the plane crashed. We all did.”

“Not really.”

“I can never see my family again. Never go back to the places I consider home. The submarine is my home now, and I’m prepared to die again.” Nahal sat back. “If necessary, we will all drown together. So long as the men of the House of Dakkar drown with us, it would have been a sacrifice I’d gladly make.”

“They must have really pissed you off.” Vivian moved between Nahal and the desk, blocking her view. She scooped up the handcuffs and stuffed them in the top of her cast.

Nahal laughed. “If they hadn’t turned to creating a global war, I would have let them go their way and I would have gone mine. Perhaps I would have needled them from afar, damaging their banks or their investments to make them pay. But that would have been all.”

It didn’t seem like Nahal was so convinced, she kept saying would have been instead of would be. Something had changed for her, and Vivian hoped it would be enough to keep them both alive. “Will killing them make you feel better? Will it really change things?”

“It will not.” Nahal struggled to her feet. Like the other women on the ship, she wore blue coveralls, but hers were so big that the pant legs and sleeves were rolled up. The top was unzipped halfway to her waist, and a white bandage was visible on her chest.

“What happened there?” Vivian pointed to the bandage.

“I was shot when we took the sub.”

“How many other people were shot?”

“I don’t know.”

“How many people died?”

“Some. Soldiers, but still innocents, I concede.” Nahal touched her bandage. “As were those on the tanker.”

“How high does the body count need to go before it’s worse than what you’re trying to prevent?” Vivian said. “I’ve been trained to kill to stop war, too. Is the cost worth what you gain?”

“For this, today, yes.”

“Will sinking the prince’s ship stop his plans? If it does, will Laila stop? Will she let me go?”

Nahal turned away and closed her eyes. Vivian breathed through the pain in her hand, flexing it and shaking it. She even tossed in a few jumping jacks, her hands nearly touching the walls. Eventually, Nahal opened her eyes.

“Are you ready to sentence me to death?” Vivian felt guilty hammering on a wounded woman, but she was the only leverage around.

“I have been thinking about these things,” Nahal sat up again, “since long before you arrived to pester me.”

Vivian ignored the dig. “And what’s come out of all that thinking?”

“Before your arrival, I gathered what I need to prove to the world the prince is a traitor. That he planned to attack New York, sink his yacht, and blame Israel for the deaths in New York, the deaths of the royal family.”

That was a lot right there. “How are you going to get the information out there if the sub sinks with you inside?”

“I worry, of course I do. If I don’t explain, no one will know why the Roc sank. Or we sank. And if the prince or his conspirators survive, they may try again. It was a high risk, but I had no other choices. But now I do.”

“Am I part of these new choices?” Definitely a new risk, but Vivian would rather go down fighting hand to hand than sink to a watery tomb to die in the cold darkness without any air.

“Your Mr. Tesla has the means for me to distribute my information. He wouldn’t have ventured into the real world without still being connected to the virtual one. He can help me bring Prince Timgad’s villainy to light so no one can use his plan.”

“What about saving New York?”