Текст книги "Ice Hunt"
Автор книги: James Rollins
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13. Run of the Station
APRIL 9, 3:23 P.M.
ICE STATION GRENDEL
Matt shivered as he leaned over the station schematics. The map was unfolded and spread on the floor of the cramped cubbyhole, another of the old service rooms carved out of the ice. He knelt on one side of the paper, flanked by Craig and Amanda. On the far side crouched Washburn, Greer, and Lieutenant Commander Bratt.
Off to the side, the group of biologists kept to themselves. Dr. Ogden stood, leaning on one wall, eyes glazed. His lips moved silently as if he were talking to himself, going over something in his head. His three grad students – Magdalene, Antony, and Zane – huddled together, wearing matching expressions of misery and fear.
A full half hour had passed since the fiery death of Petty Officer Pearlson. Racing on pure adrenaline, the remaining group had fled here to one of the service sheds on Level Three.
Since then, they had weighed several different strategies: from staying put and holing up, to dividing their numbers and fleeing throughout the warren of service passages to lessen the risk of the entire group’s capture, even to trying to escape to the surface and make for the parked Sno-Cats and Ski-Doos. But as the pros and cons of each were discussed, one fact became clear. In each scenario, they would have a better chance of survival if they had additional firepower.
So before any decision about where to go next was made, they needed to reach the armory. Washburn had inventoried the WWII weapons locker. It held several boxes of Russian grenades, a trio of German-made flamethrowers, and a wall of oiled and sealskin-wrapped Russian rifles.
“They still work,” Washburn said. “I test fired a pair last week. The ammunition is boxed in straw-filled crates. Here and here.” She jabbed the end of her steel meat hook at two corners of the armory marked on the map.
Matt leaned closer, studying the layout. He had to shift the weight on his knees. Having lost his pants to Little Willy, he was left with only his long underwear. And kneeling on the ice was testing the limits of the garment’s thermal capability.
Washburn continued: “We should be able to get in and out in under a minute. The problem is getting there.”
Bratt nodded. Greer had returned a moment ago from scouting the service tunnel that led back to the station base. On this floor, the service hatch opened into the generator room and battery compartment. Unfortunately, the armory lay on the far side of the level, clear across the open central space.
Matt squinted, trying to force his brain to thaw and think. There has to be a way…Along with the others, he pored over the map.
The generator room had a side door that led to a neighboring electrical room, but from there, they would have to cross the open central space. Without a doubt, it would be guarded. And with the pilfered medical supplies as their only weapons, they would be hard-pressed to subdue the guards without rousing the rest of the base.
Matt sat back, lifting his knees from the ice and rubbing them. “And there’s no other access into this level? We have to enter through the generator and electrical rooms.”
Bratt shrugged. “As far as we know. We have only these plans to go by.”
Craig spoke up. “Well, the obvious distraction would be to switch off the generators, black out the station, and make a run for the armory.”
Greer shook his head. “We have to assume that the Russians know where the main generators are. If we knock out the power grid, they’ll be swarming right where we don’t want them.” He tapped the map. “Level Three.”
Amanda had been studying the lieutenant as he spoke, reading his lips. “Besides,” she added, “even if we turn off the generators, the batteries will retain enough power to keep most of the lights on. They’ve been charging since the generators were first overhauled by the material sciences team.”
Matt considered all sides of the discussion. “What if we leave the generators running”—he rested his finger on the designated room, then shifted it to the neighboring electrical suite—“but cut only the circuits to the top level of the station? If Lieutenant Greer is correct, such a blackout would draw the Russians’ attention to that level, away from us.”
Greer nodded to Bratt. “He’s right, sir. I’d wager the Russians already have most of their forces up top. They’d be on heightened guard, believing we might make a break for the surface. Cut off the power to just that level and the whole occupying force will be rushing up there.”
“Well, let’s just hope that includes the guards stationed on our level,” Bratt grumbled. He stared at the map, considering this option.
“Whatever we do,” Amanda said, “we’d better act fast. At some point, the Russians are going to start sending search parties into these service tunnels.”
“Or simply lob more incendiary grenades down here,” Craig said dourly. The reporter crouched on his heels, arms wrapped around his chest. His gaze flicked to the three tunnels that left the small room, clearly watching for Russian commandos to storm through or for another of the black pineapples to bounce in and incinerate the lot of them.
Bratt nodded and straightened. “Okay. Let’s scout out the electrical room. See if it’s even possible and do a head count on the Russians on this tier.” He eyed the group. “Greer and Washburn are with me.”
“I’m coming, too,” Matt said. He was not about to be left behind.
Greer supported Matt’s decision. “The man was Green Beret, sir. And we sure as hell could use an extra body if we have to take out any guards.”
Bratt eyed Matt up and down, then nodded. “The rest will stay here.”
Matt raised his hand. “We should also have someone on watch in the generator room. In case we get in trouble, they could haul ass back here and get everyone else moving up higher.”
“Very good,” Bratt acknowledged.
“I’ll do it,” Craig said, but he looked like the words had to be choked out of him.
“Then let’s get this done.” Bratt folded up the schematic and passed it to Amanda. He quickly reviewed the plan. “We hit the lights. Use the distraction to take out any soldiers that remain here. Then make a dash-and-grab on the weapons locker.”
Matt picked up the length of sharpened pipe from the floor. He met Amanda’s worried gaze and offered a smile that he hoped looked reassuring.
“Be careful,” she said.
He nodded and followed the Navy trio into the service duct. Craig crawled on hands and knees behind him. The generator room was only sixty feet down the tunnel. They reached the end, and Washburn used her meat hooks to work the vent free.
They crawled into the room. The reek of diesel oil and exhaust gases hung heavy in the humid, heated air. The generators rattled in their stanchions, plenty of noise to cover their invasion.
As they gathered, Matt noted the stacks of batteries against the left wall; each was the size of a standard air-conditioning unit. As he eyed the power storage units, a glint on the neighboring wall caught his eye. The corners of his mouth lifted with pleasure.
He dropped his pipe and crossed to the wall. He removed the heavy fire ax from its wall pegs.
“Oh, man,” Greer griped, lifting the foot-long steel bone pins in his hands. “I wish I had seen that first.”
“Finders keepers,” Matt said, hefting the ax to his shoulder.
Bratt led them to the neighboring room. All four walls were covered with electrical panels. As they searched for the controls to Level One, Matt saw the difficulty immediately. Everything was coded in Russian Cyrillic.
“Here,” Washburn whispered. She pointed to a set of hotdog-sized glass-and-lead fuses. “These are the relays for the first level.”
“Are you sure?” Matt asked.
“My father was an electrician with Oakland PG&E,” she said.
“And she reads Russian,” Greer said. “My sort of woman.”
“The main switch is corroded in place,” she said. “I’ll have to pull the fuses.”
“Wait.” Bratt crossed and posted himself at the door that led to the main room. A small window in the door allowed him to spy into the central open space. He pointed to his eyes with two fingers, then splayed four fingers up in the air.
He spotted four guards.
Bratt turned to them. “Mr. Teague,” he whispered tersely, pointing to Craig. “Close the generator door. We don’t want the noise to alert the guards when we open the main door.”
The reporter nodded, closing the door and keeping guard in front of it.
Bratt turned to the others. “On my count,” he whispered tersely. “Pull the fuses, then be ready to bolt.” He lifted his hand, all fingers up. He counted down, lowering one finger at a time.
Five…four…three…
3:28 P.M.
Admiral Viktor Petkov stood in the entrance room to Level Four’s research labs. The steel door lay on the floor behind him, the hinges and security bar cut away. Across the door’s surface, letters were scored in Russian Cyrillic:
It was the name of the laboratory, the name of the base, the name of the monsters that nested in the neighboring ice caves.
Grendel.
His father’s project.
Viktor stood in front of an open cabinet. It contained dated journals, coded and stored, written in his father’s own handwriting. Viktor didn’t touch anything. He simply noted the missing volumes. Three of them. Whoever had been here knew what they had been looking for. A fist clenched. He could guess the identity of the thief – especially considering the news just related to him.
The young lieutenant who had relayed the update still stood stiffly at his shoulder, awaiting his response. Viktor had yet to acknowledge the man’s hurried report.
A moment ago, the lieutenant had rushed in, insisting on speaking to the admiral immediately. The radio operator manning the UQC underwater phone had picked up some disturbing noises over the unit’s hydrophone. He reported hearing distant blasts echoing under the ice shelf: multiple explosions.
“Depth charges,” the lieutenant had related. “The radioman believes he was hearing the concussion of depth charges.”
But that wasn’t the worst of the news. Amid the explosions, a weak static-chewed message had been transmitted on shortwave. A Mayday from the Drakon. Their submarine was under attack.
It had to be the U.S. Delta Force team, finally having arrived on the playing field. Late, but making up for its tardiness with deadly efficiency.
The lieutenant had then finished his message, barely keeping the panic from his voice. “The radioman reported definite bubbling, marking a sub implosion.”
Viktor fixed his gaze on the gaps in the shelf of journals. There was no doubt who had stolen the volumes: the same person who called the attack down upon the Drakon, the Delta Force controller, the leader sent in advance to covertly obtain his father’s research, to secure it before calling in the clean-up crew. Now with the prize in hand, the Delta Forces had been mobilized.
“Sir?” the lieutenant mumbled.
Viktor turned. “No one else must know about the Drakon.”
“Sir…?” There was a long pause as the admiral fixed the man with his steel-gray eyes, then a strained response: “Yes, sir.”
“We will hold this station, Lieutenant. We will find the Americans who were here earlier.” He continued to clench a fist. “We will not fail in this mission.”
“No, sir.”
“I have new orders to pass on to the men.”
The lieutenant stood straighter, ready to accept his assignment. Viktor told him what he wanted done. The Polaris engine had been unpacked and bolted to the floor on Level Five. By now, all the crew had been briefed with the mission assignment: to retrieve the research here, then erase all signs of the base. And while the crew certainly knew the destructive nature of the explosive device on Level Five – believing it to be a mere Z-class nuclear incendiary device – none knew its true purpose.
The lieutenant paled as Viktor gave him the code to prime the Polaris device. “We will not let the Americans steal the prize here,” he finished. “Even if it costs all our lives, that must not happen.”
“Yes, sir…no, sir,” the young man stammered. “My men will find them, Admiral.”
“Don’t fail, Lieutenant. Dismissed.”
The lieutenant fled away. There was no threat like one’s own death to motivate a crew. The Americans would be found, and the prize recaptured, or no one would be leaving this base alive – not the Americans, not the Russians, not even himself.
Viktor studied his wrist monitor as he listened to the lieutenant’s footsteps retreating below. On the monitor, the Polaris star glowed brightly, marking his continued contact with the array. The center trigger remained dark.
He waited.
Before detonating Polaris, he had first hoped to return to Russia with his father’s research in hand, to clear his family name. But now matters had changed.
Viktor had risen through the ranks to become admiral of the Northern Fleet because of his ability to mold strategies to circumstances, to keep the larger picture in mind at all times. He did so now as he stared at the tiny red heart-shaped icon in the lower corner of the wrist monitor, slipping back to another time.
He was eighteen, entering his apartment, full of pride, clutching his admission papers to the Russian Naval Academy. He smelled the urine first. Then the gusty breeze through the open door set his mother’s body to swinging from her broken neck. He rushed forward, the admission papers fluttering from his fingers and landing under his mother’s heels.
He closed his eyes. He had come full circle now, leaving his mother’s body and ending here at his father’s crypt.
From one death to another.
It was now time to complete the cycle.
Vengeance weighed far heavier on his heart than honor.
Thatwas the bigger picture.
He opened his eyes and found the monitor had changed – subtly but significantly. The five points of the star continued their sequential flashing, winding around the dial, and the small heart icon still blinked with each pulse beat in his wrist. But now a new glow lit the monitor, a crimson diamond in the center of the star.
The lieutenant had followed orders.
The Polaris engine had been primed.
All was in readiness, requiring only one last act.
Viktor reached to the one button he had held off touching until now. He depressed the red bezel on the side of the wrist monitor, holding it for the required minute.
Seconds counted away – then the central trigger light on the wrist monitor began to flash. Activated.
He studied the blinking. The trigger marker flashed in sync with the heart icon in the corner of the screen. Only then did he let go.
It was done.
The detonation of the Polaris device was now tied to his own heartbeat, to his own pulse. If his heartbeat ceased for a minute’s time, the device would blow automatically. It was an extra bit of insurance, a fallback plan in case all should turn against him.
Victor lowered his arm.
He was now a living trigger for the array. There was no abort code, no fail-safe. Once it was initiated, nothing could stop Polaris.
With its detonation, the old world would end, and a new one would begin, forged in ice and blood. His revenge would be exacted on all: the Russians, the Americans, the world. Viktor’s only regret in such a scenario was that he would not be around to see it happen.
But he knew how to live with regret…he had done it his entire life.
As he began to turn away, a sailor ran up to him, coming from the hall that held the frozen tanks. “Sir! Admiral Petkov, sir!”
He paused. “What is it?”
“S-something…” He motioned back to the hall. “Something is happening down there.”
“What? Is it the Americans?” Viktor had left a group of guards by the service vent. They were to wait until the caustic blast from the incendiary grenade cooled, then proceed and hunt down any survivors.
“No, not the Americans!” The sailor was breathless, eyes wide with horror. “You must see for yourself!”
3:29 P.M.
…two…one…
From his post beside the electrical panel, Matt watched as Bratt finished his silent count, ticking down with his fingers, ending with a clenched fist in the air.
…zero…go!
Washburn began yanking at the fuses that powered Level One, but the old glass tubes were stubborn, corroded in place. She was going too slow.
Matt motioned her aside and used the butt of his fire axe to smash the line of fuses. The tinkling cascade of shards blew outward. A wisp of electrical smoke followed, snaking into the air.
The effect was immediate. Distant shouts echoed to the group.
Bratt waved them all to the door. Through the window, Matt saw a handful of men in white parkas rush toward the central spiral staircase. Rifles were at the ready. More shouting followed, interspersed with barked orders.
Two of the four men mounted the stairs and fled upward. Two remained on guard.
“A couple birds aren’t leaving the nest,” Greer grumbled.
“We’ll have to take them out,” Bratt said. “We have no other choice. Our hand is played.”
The two soldiers, dressed in unzipped parkas, continued to man their posts, but they kept their attention fixed toward the stairs, their backs to the electrical suite.
Bratt pointed to Washburn and Matt. “You take the one on the left. We’ll take the other.” He nodded to Greer.
Matt readied his ax. He had never killed a man with such a crude weapon. In the Green Berets, he had shot men, even bayoneted one, but never hacked one with an ax. He glanced over to Craig.
The reporter stared, wide-eyed, unblinking at them. He sheltered by the door to the neighboring generator room.
“Watch through this window,” Matt said. “If anything goes wrong, you haul ass back to the others. Get them running.”
Craig opened his mouth, then closed it and nodded. He hurried over. Something fell out of his coat and clattered against the floor.
Bratt scowled at the noise, but the rumbling generators more than covered it. Matt retrieved the object. A book. He recognized it as one of the journals from down in the lab. He lifted an eyebrow and handed it back to Craig.
“For the story,” the reporter said hurriedly, tucking it back away. “If I ever get out of this mess…”
Matt had to give the guy credit. He stuck to his guns.
“Ready,” Bratt said.
Nods all around.
Bratt reached for the handle. He waited for a flare-up of shouting from the levels above, then tugged the door open. The four of them ran through, splitting into two teams to cross toward the guards, whose backs still remained toward them.
Matt raced, oblivious to the ache in his feet. He carried the ax in both hands. Washburn flew beside him, outdistancing him in five steps.
But with her speed, she failed to spot the abandoned dinner tray on the floor.
Her foot hit it and skidded out from under her, turning her efficient sprint into a headlong tumble. She tried to catch herself on a table, but only succeeded in taking it down with her at the heels of the two guards.
The crashing noise drew both men around, weapons raised.
Bratt and Greer were close enough. With a flash of silver, Bratt whipped a scalpel at the man. It flew with frightening accuracy, impaling the man’s left eye. He fell backward, mouth open, but before he could scream, Greer dove on top of him.
Matt faced his own target, leaping over Washburn’s struggling form. “Stay down!”
Still in midair, he swung his ax in a wide arc – but he was too slow, too far away.
Gunfire spat from the end of the Russian’s AK-47. It chewed a path over his shoulder, then oddly continued up toward the ceiling.
Only then did Matt notice Washburn below him. She had lashed out with one her meat hooks, impaling the soldier through the calf and ripping him off balance.
Matt landed as the guard fell back, hitting the floor hard. With the detachment that could only come from years of Special Forces training, Matt brought his ax down upon the head of the soldier. The skull gave way like a ripe watermelon.
Matt quickly let go of the handle, rolling away on his knees, as his target convulsed under the embedded ax.
Matt’s hands shook. Too many years had passed since he’d been a soldier. He had made the mistake of looking into the eyes of the man he killed – rather, boyhe had killed. No older than nineteen. He had seen the pain and terror in his victim’s eyes.
Bratt was at their side. “Let’s go. Someone surely heard that shooting. We can’t count on the confusion buying us much time.”
Matt choked back bile and climbed to his feet. Sorrow or not, he had to keep moving. He remembered Jenny’s Sno-Cat vanishing into the blizzard’s gloom amid sounds of gunfire and explosions.
They had not started this war.
A step away, Greer stripped his target’s camouflage gear: parka and snow pants. “With all the noise, we’ll need someone to act as lookout.” He rubbed the bloodstains off the waterproof coat and began to pull it on, ready to stand in for the fallen soldier.
“Let me,” Matt said. “You know better what we’ll need from the armory.”
Greer nodded and tossed the gear at him.
Sitting in a chair, Matt yanked the pants on over his boots. The man had a larger frame, making it easier. Once suited, he pulled the oversized parka over his own Army jacket and retrieved the AK-47 from the floor.
Meanwhile, Washburn and Bratt had dragged the bodies behind two overturned tables while Greer had used the butt of his weapon to shatter a few overhead bulbs, creating deeper shadows.
“Okay, let’s move out,” Bratt said, and led Washburn and Greer at a dead run toward the armory.
They vanished through the doorway.
Alone now, Matt pulled the parka’s hood over his head, hiding his features. He stared down at himself.
If nothing else, at least I’ll die with pants on.
He stepped closer to the stairway, placing himself between the stairs and the smeared pools of blood. So far no one had come to investigate the short spate of gunfire – but they would. Bratt was right. The confusion would last only so long.
Matt prayed it lasted long enough.
His prayer was not answered. Footsteps suddenly sounded on the stairs, echoing from above, pounding down toward this level.
Damn it…
Matt moved closer, but he kept his head tilted to keep his features hooded. A line of soldiers appeared, bristling with weapons, ready for combat. They barked at him in Russian.
Too bad he didn’t understand a word of it.
Instead he hurried forward, feigning panic. He kept his weapon lowered, but his finger remained on the trigger. He pointed his other arm down, frantically motioning toward the lower levels. With all the shouting and noise, the soldiers probably couldn’t tell for sure from which level the gunfire had originated. He tried to indicate it came from farther below.
To reinforce the act, Matt took a step forward, like he meant to follow the others down.
The leader of the squad waved him to hold his position, then motioned his squad down the stairs. They continued their dash into the depths of the station.
Matt backed away as the last man spiraled away into the ice. He let out a loud sigh. His ruse would not last long – but luckily it didn’t have to.
Bratt appeared at the armory door, both shoulders loaded with weapons. “Quick thinking there.” He nodded to the staircase. He must have been watching from the doorway.
Behind Bratt, Washburn and Greer exited, similarly loaded, lugging a wooden crate between them.
“Grenades,” Greer said as he passed, his words bitter. “Now it’s our turn for a surprise or two.”
Together the group fled back to the electrical suite, then into the generator room. Craig was no longer there. He must have retreated back to the others.
With a bit of manhandling, they crawled through the vent, hauling their arsenal, dragging the box of grenades behind them.
Matt led them, carrying the pilfered AK-47 and two additional rifles on his back. His parka pockets were full of ammunition.
Reaching the end, he rolled out of the duct and into the service cubbyhole. He stood up, his eyes darting around the room.
The place was empty. The others were gone.
Washburn came next. Her expression soured. “The reporter must have been spooked by the gunfire. He did what we told him and bugged out with the others.”
Matt shook his head as the others crawled inside.
Greer scowled as he eyed the empty room. “I hate this. We go to all the trouble to bring in the party supplies and everyone’s already left.”
“But where did they go?” Matt asked.
Bratt had been searching the floor. “I don’t know, but they took the station schematics with them. Our only map to this damn place.”
3:38 P.M.
Admiral Petkov followed the young ensign down the hall. He kept his attention away from the frosted tanks with their frozen sentinels inside. He felt the eyes of the dead upon him, sensing the accusations of those unwilling participants in his father’s experiments.
But those were not the only ghosts who laid claim to the lost base. All the researchers stationed here, including his father, had died – entombed in ice as surely as the poor unfortunates in this hall.
Among so many ghosts, it was only fitting that the Beliy Prizrak,the White Ghost of the Northern Fleet, should stride these halls now, too.
Ensign Lausevic led him onward, half stumbling as he tried to hurry but did not want to rush his superior. “I’m not sure what it means, but we thought you should see it for yourself.”
Viktor waved the man on. “Show me.”
The curved hall followed the exterior wall of this level. They were almost halfway around when laughter from up ahead trailed back to Viktor. They rounded the curve and spotted a cluster of five soldiers. They had been lounging, one smoking, until the admiral appeared.
Laughter strangled away, and the group straightened. The cigarette was hastily stamped out.
The group parted for the admiral. They had been clustered around one of the tanks. Unlike the other dark, frosted vessels, this one glowed from within. The frost had melted and wept down the glass front.
Victor crossed to it. He felt the heat coming from its surface. A small motor could be heard chugging and wheezing behind it, along with a faint gurgling.
“We didn’t know what to do,” Lausevic said, running a hand through his black hair.
Inside the tank, what was once solid ice was now a bath of warm water, gently bubbling, its ice melted by a triple-layered heating mesh that covered the entire back half of the chamber. The mesh was the source of the light. The outer layers glowed with a ruddy warmth, while the deeper levels shone more intensely, brighter.
“Why wasn’t I alerted to this earlier?” Victor intoned.
“We thought it was a ploy by the Americans to distract us,” one of the other men said. “It’s right by the duct they fled through.” He pointed to a nearby vent. A bit of smoke from the incendiary grenade still wafted through its opening.
“We weren’t sure it was important,” Lausevic added.
Not important?Victor stared at the tank. He was unable to take his eyes from the sight.
Within the tank, a small boy floated, suspended within the bubbling water. His eyes were closed as if in slumber. His face looked so peaceful, smooth, olive-skinned, framed in a halo of shoulder-length black hair. His limbs floated at his side, angelic and perfect.
Then his left arm twitched, jerking as if pulled by the strings of an invisible puppeteer.
The young ensign pointed. “It’s been doing that for the past few minutes. Starting with just a finger twitch.”
The boy’s leg kicked, spasming up.
Viktor stepped closer. Could he still be alive?He remembered the missing journals. That was the quest here. To retrieve his father’s notes. To see if the last report made by his father was true. He had read this final report himself, hearing his father’s voice in his head, as if he were speaking directly to his son.
He remembered the final line: On this day, we’ve defeated death.
He watched the boy. Could it be true?If so, the stolen notebooks wouldn’t matter. Here was proof of his father’s success. Viktor glanced to the soldiers. He had witnesses to verify it. Though the exact mechanism and procedure were locked in his father’s coded notes, the boy would be living and breathing proof.
“Is there a way to open the tank?” Viktor asked.
Ensign Lausevic pointed to a large lever on one side of the tank. It was locked at the upper end marked CLOSED in Russian. The lower end of the levered slot was lettered in Cyrillic: OPEN.
Viktor nodded to the ensign.
He stepped forward, gripped the heavy handle with both hands, and tugged. It resisted the ensign’s efforts for a moment. Then, with a loud crack,the lever snapped out. Lausevic used his shoulders to pull the lever and slam it down into the “open” slot.
Immediately a rush of water sounded, not unlike a toilet flushing. From his position, Viktor saw the grated bottom of the tank open. Water flowed down a drain.
Caught in the swirling force of the draining water, the boy’s body spun, arms flailed out. His body seemed boneless, limp. He bumped against the glass, the back mesh. Then, as the water drained fully away, he settled in a loose pile on the bottom of the tank, as lifeless as some deep-sea denizen washed up on a beach.
Then with a soft, damp pop,the seal on the glass released. The entire front of the tank swung open like a door, blowing out compressed air from within. There was a faint hint of ammonia that came with it.
Lausevic pulled the door aside for the admiral.
Viktor found himself stepping forward, dropping to his knees beside the naked boy. He reached to the boy’s arm, draped half out the door.
It was warm, heated by the bubbling bath.
But there appeared to be no life.
His hand slipped from wrist to the small fingers. He tried to will the boy back to life. What stories could he tell? Had he known his father? Did he know what had happened here? Why the base had gone dead quiet so suddenly?
It had been the last years of World War II. The Germans were marching into Russia, laying siege to city after city. Then a remote research station in the Arctic went quiet, late reporting in…first one month, then another. But with the war heating up at home, no one had time to investigate. With communication being what it was and travel through the polar region so difficult, there were no resources for a full investigation.