âI see,' Jamieson said. âI say this in admiration, Bo'sun, and not in reproof: you have a very devious mind.'
âLet's just hope the Oberleutnant in charge of that U-boat out there hasn't an even more devious mind.' He turned to Patterson. âI'm going up top to join Naseby and see if there's any sign of life around.'
âSign of life? You mean you think the U-boat may have surfaced and is looking for us.'
âMay have done.'
âBut it's dark, you said.'
âHe'll have a searchlight. Two of them, for all I know.'
Jamieson said: âAnd you think he'll be using them?'
âIt's a possibility. Not a probability. He's bound to know by this time what happened to his fellow U-boat this morning.'
Patterson touched his arm. âYou wouldn'tâahâbe considering another possibilityâanother collision?'
âHeavens, no. I don't really think the
San Andreas
could survive another bump like that. Not, of course, that the captain of that submarine
is to know that. He may well be convinced that we're desperate enough for anything.'
âAnd we're not?'
âIt's a long way down to the bottom of the Norwegian Sea.' McKinnon paused reflectively. âWhat we really need now is a nice little old blizzard.'
âStill the Condor, still the flares. Is that it, Bo'sun?'
âIt's not a thought that goes away easily.' He turned to Jamieson. âUnder way in half an hour, sir?'
âHalf an hour it is. But gently, gently?'
âIf you would, sir.'
McKinnon examined the sea from both sides of the upper deck but all was dark and quiet and still. He climbed to the bridge and went out on the wings, but even from this higher perspective there was nothing to be seen, no sweeping finger of a searchlight, nothing.
âWell, George, this makes a change. All is quiet, all is peaceful.'
âIs that a good sign or a bad one?'
âTake your pick. Still quite a bit under way, aren't we?'
âYes. I've just picked up our wake. And I've just located a couple of stars, one off the port bow, the other off the starboard. No idea what they are, of course, but it should keep us heading more or less west until we come to a halt.'
âWhich should take quite a while yet.'
In just under fifteen minutes the
San Andreas
was dead in the water and fifteen minutes after that she came to life again, albeit very, very slowly. From the bridge any sounds from the engine-room were quite inaudible, the only indication that they were under way came from the very faint vibration of the superstructure. After a few minutes McKinnon said: âAny steerage way yet, George?'
âBarely. We're about ten degrees off course right now. To the south. A couple of minutes and we'll be heading west again. I wonder, I wonder.'
âYou wonder, I wonder, we all wonderâare we alone in the Norwegian Sea or do we have company, company that has no intention of making its presence known? I just guess and hope that we're alone. Beyond a certain distance a submarine is not very good at picking up a very slow-turning engine and prop. What it can pick up is a generatorâwhich is why there will be no lights down below for another fifteen minutes yet.'
Just under half an hour after McKinnon had arrived on the bridge the telephone bell shrilled. Naseby answered and handed the phone to the Bo'sun.
âBo'sun? This is Ward A. Sinclair speaking. I think you had better come down.' Sinclair sounded weary or dispirited, or both. âFlannelfoot has struck again. There's been an accident. No need to break your neck, thoughânobody's been hurt.'
âWe've been far too long without an accident.' The Bo'sun felt as weary as Sinclair. âWhat happened?'
âTransceiver's wrecked.'
âThat's just splendid. I'm on my wayâat a leisurely pace.' He replaced the phone. âFlannelfoot's at it again, George. It seems that the transceiver in Ward A is not quite what it was.'
âOh Jesus.' It wasn't an exclamation of shock, horror or anger, just a sign of resignation. âWhy wasn't the alarm buzzer pressed.'
âI shall no doubt find that out when I get there. I'll send Trent to relieve you. I suggest you broach Captain Bowen's supplies. Life aboard the
San Andreas,
George, is like life everywhere, just one damned thing after another.'
The first thing that took McKinnon's eye in Ward A was not the transceiver in the Cardiac Arrest box but the sight of Margaret Morrison, eyes closed, lying on a bed with Janet Magnusson bending over her. The Bo'sun looked at Dr Sinclair, who was sitting disconsolately in the chair that was normally occupied by the ward sister.
âI thought you said nobody had been hurt.'
âNot hurt in the medical sense, although Sister Morrison might take issue with me on that matter. She's been chloroformed but will be fine in a few minutes.'
âChloroformed? Flannelfoot doesn't seem to have a very original turn of mind.'
âHe's a callous bastard. This girl has just been wounded, once quite nastily, but this character seems to have been missing when they handed out humanitarian instincts.'
âYou expect delicacy and a tenderness of feeling from a criminal who tries to murder a man with a crowbar?' McKinnon walked to the side of the table and looked down at the mangled remains of the transceiver. âI'll spare you the obvious remarks. Naturally, of course, no one knows what happened because of course there were no eyewitnesses.'
âThat's about it. If it's any use, Nurse Magnusson here was the person to discover this.'
McKinnon looked at her. âWhy did you come through? Did you hear a noise?'
She straightened from the bed and looked at him with some disfavour.
âYou
are
a cold-blooded fish, Archie McKinnon. This poor, poor girl lying here, the radio smashed and you don't even look upset or annoyed, far less furious.
I
am furious.'
âI can see that. But Margaret will be all right and the set is a total ruin. I see no point in getting angry about things I can do nothing about and what passes for my mind has other things to worry about. Did you hear anything?'
âYou're hopeless. No, I heard nothing. I just came in to talk to her. She was crumpled over her table. I ran for Dr Sinclair and we lifted her into this bed here.'
âSurely
someone
saw
something.
They couldn't all have been asleep.'
âNo. The Captain and the Chief Officer were awake.' She smiled sweetly. âYou may have noticed, Mr McKinnon, that the eyes of both Captain Bowen and Chief Officer Kennet are heavily bandaged.'
âYou just wait,' McKinnon said
sotto voce,
âuntil I get you to the Shetlands. They think a lot of me in Lerwick.' She made a
moue
and the Bo'sun looked across to Bowen. âDid you hear anything, Captain?'
âI heard something that sounded like the tinkling of glass. Wasn't much, though.'
âYou, Mr Kennet?'
âSame, Bo'sun. Again it wasn't much.'
âIt didn't have to be. You don't require a sledgehammer to crush a few valves. A little pressure from the sole of the foot would be enough.' He turned to Janet again. âBut Margaret wouldn't have been asleep. She'd have been boundâno, he couldn't have come that way. He'd have had to pass through your ward. I'm not being very bright today, am I?'
âNo, you're not.' She smiled again but this time without malice. âNot our usual hawk-eyed selves this evening, are we?'
McKinnon turned and looked past the Sister's table. The door to the recovery room was about an inch ajar. McKinnon nodded.
âIt figures. Why should he bother to close it when it would be obvious to anyone with half an eyeâhe must have forgotten about meâthat there was no
other way he could have entered. Mess-deck, side passage, operating room, recovery room, Ward Aâsimple as that. Every door unlocked, of course. Why should they have been otherwise? Well, we don't bother locking them now. When did this happen, anyone knowâsometime between engine start-up and the lights coming back on again?'
âI think it had to be that,' Sinclair said. âIt would have been the ideal time and opportunity. About ten minutes after start-up but five minutes before the generator came on Mr Patterson gave permission for people to talk normally and move around as long as they didn't make any loud noise. The emergency lights are pretty feeble at the best of times, everyone was talking excitedlyârelief of tension I suppose, hopes that we had slipped the submarine, thankfulness that we were still in one piece, that sort of thingâand lots of people moving around. It would have been childishly simple for anyone to disappear unnoticed and return again after a minute, still unnoticed.'
âHad to be that,' the Bo'sun said. âAnyone of the crew, or that lot from Murmanskâin fact, anyone who was out there. Still no nearer the identity of the man with the key to the dispensary. Captain, Mr Kennet, I am wondering why you didn't call Sister Morrison. Surely you must have smelled the chloroform?'
Janet said: âOh, come on Archie, you can see that their noses are bandaged up. Could you smell anything with a handkerchief to your nose?'
âYou're just half right, Nurse,' Bowen said. âI did smell it but it was very faint. The trouble is that there are so many medical and antiseptic smells in a ward that I paid no attention to it.'
âWell, he wouldn't have gone back to the mess-deck with a sponge reeking of chloroform. Hands too, for that matter. Back in a moment.'
The Bo'sun unhooked an emergency light, went into the recovery room, looked around briefly, then passed into the operating theatre where he switched on the lights. Almost immediately, in a bucket in a corner, he found what he was looking for and returned to Ward A.
âA spongeâduly reeking of chloroformâa smashed ampoule and a pair of rubber gloves. Quite useless.'
âNot to Flannelfoot, they weren't,' Sinclair said.
âUseless to us. Useless as evidence. Gets us nowhere.' McKinnon perched on the Sister's table and looked in slight irritation at Oberleutnant Klaussen who was muttering away to himself, unintelligibly, incessantly.
âIs he still like this? Always like this?'
Sinclair nodded. âGoes on non-stop.'
âMust be damned annoying. To the other patients and to the sister or nurse in charge. Why isn't his bed wheeled into the recovery room?'
âBecause the sister in chargeâthat's Margaret, remember?âdoesn't want him removed.' Janet was being cool and patient. âHe's her patient, she
wants to keep a close eye on him and she doesn't mind. Any more questions, Archie?'
âYou mean why don't I be on my way or keep quiet or go and do something. Do what? Do some detecting?' He looked gloomy. âThere's nothing to detect. I'm just waiting till Margaret comes round.'
âSigns of grace at last.'
âI want to ask her some questions.'
âI might have known. What questions? It's as certain as can be that the assailant crept up behind her unseen and had her unconscious before she knew anything about it. Otherwise she'd have reached for the button or called for help. She did neither. There are no questions you can ask her that we can't answer.'
âAs I'm not a gambler I won't take your money away from you. Question number one. How did Flannelfoot knowâand he
must
have knownâthat, apart from Captain Bowen and Mr Kennet who are effectively blind at the moment, everyone else in Ward A was asleep? He would never have dared to do what he did if there was even a remote possibility of someone being awake. So how did he know? Answer, please.'
âIâI don't know.' She was obviously taken aback. âThat had never occurred to me before. But I don't think it occurred to anyone else either.'
âUnderstandable. Such questions occur only to stupid old bo'suns. You're just being defensive, Janet. Question number two.
Who
told him?'
âI don't know that either.'
âBut maybe Maggie does. Number three. What solicitous member of the crew or passengers made solicitous enquiries about the state of health of the patients in Ward A?'
âHow should I know?'
âMaggie might know, mightn't she? After all, she would be the obvious choice to be asked that question, wouldn't she? And you said you could answer any questions that she could. Bosh! Question number four.'
âArchie, you're beginning to sound like a prosecuting counsel. I'm not guilty of anything.'
âDon't be daft. You're not in dock. Fourth question and the most important of all. Flannelfoot, as we all know to our cost, is no fool. He must have taken into account the possibility that someone would ask the question of Maggie: with whom, Sister Morrison, did you discuss the state of health of your patients? He
had
to assume that Maggie was in the position to put the finger on him. So my question is why, to protect his anonymity, did he not, after rendering her unconscious, slit her throat? A nice sharp knife is just as silent as a chloroform sponge. It would have been the logical thing to do, wouldn't it, Janet? But he didn't. Why didn't he murder her?'
Janet had gone very pale and when she spoke her voice was barely above a whisper.
âHorrible,' she said. âHorrible, horrible.'
âAre you referring to me again? Goes well, I must say with what you last called meâa heartless fiend.'
âNot you, not you.' Her voice was still unsteady. âIt's the question. The thought. The possibility. Itâit could have happened that way, couldn't it, Archie?'
âI'm more than mildly astonished that it didn't. But I think we'll find the answer when Maggie wakes up.'
The silence that fell upon the ward was broken by Bowen.
âVery gallant of you, Bo'sun, very gallant indeed. Not to have reproached the young lady for being unable, as she had claimed she could, to answer the questions you asked. If it's any consolation to your friend Janet, not one of those questions occurred to me either.'