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H.M.S Ulysses by MacLean, Alistair

“Know something, Johnny?” he said abruptly. “I reckon I must have Scotch blood in me.”

“Scots,” Nicholls corrected. “And perish the very thought.”

“I’m feeling-what’s the word?, fey, isn’t it? I’m feeling fey tonight, Johnny.” The Kapok Kid hadn’t even heard the interruption. He shivered. “I don’t know why, I’ve never felt this way before.”

“Ah, nonsense! Indigestion, my boy,” Nicholls said briskly. But he felt strangely uncomfortable.

“Won’t wash this time,” Carpenter shook his head, half-smiling.

“Besides, I haven’t eaten a thing for two days. I’m on the level, Johnny.” In spite of himself, Nicholls was impressed. Emotion, gravity, earnestness-these were utterly alien to the Kapok Kid.

“I won’t be seeing you again,” the Kapok Kid continued softly. “Will you do me a favour, Johnny?”

“Don’t be so bloody silly,” Nicholls said angrily. “How the hell do you——?”

“Take this with you.” The Kapok Kid pulled out a slip of paper, thrust it into Nicholls’s hands. “Can you read it?”

“I can read it.” Nicholls had stilled his anger. “Yes, I can read it.”

There was a name and address on the sheet of paper, a girl’s name and a Surrey address. “So that’s her name,” he said softly. “Juanita …

Juanita.” He pronounced it carefully, accurately, in the Spanish fashion. “My favourite song and my favourite name,” he murmured.

“Is it? “the Kapok Kid asked eagerly. “Is it indeed? And mine, Johnny.”

He paused. “If, perhaps-well, if I don’t, well, you’ll go to see her, Johnny?”

“What are you talking about, man?” Nicholls felt embarrassed.

Half-impatiently, half-playfully, he tapped him on the chest. “Why, with that suit on, you could swim from here to Murmansk. You’ve said so yourself, a hundred times.”

The Kapok Kid grinned up at him. The grin was a little crooked.

“Sure, sure, I know, I know-will you go, Johnny?”

“Dammit to hell, yes!” Nicholls snapped. “I’ll go-and it’s high time I was going somewhere else. Come on!” He snapped off the lights, pulled back the door, stopped with his foot half-way over the sill. Slowly, he stepped back inside the charthouse, closed the door and nicked on the light. The Kapok Kid hadn’t moved, was gazing quietly at him.

“I’m sorry, Andy,” Nicholls said sincerely. “I don’t know what made me——”

“Bad temper,” said the Kapok Kid cheerfully. “You always did hate to think that I was right and you were wrong!”

Nicholls caught his breath, closed his eyes for a second. Then he stretched out his hand.

“All the best, Vasco.” It was an effort to smile. “And don’t worry.

I’ll see her if-well, I’ll see her, I promise you. Juanita… But if I find you there,” he went on threateningly, “I’ll——”

“Thanks, Johnny. Thanks a lot.” The Kapok Kid was almost happy. “Good luck, boy… Vaya con Dios. That’s what she always said to me, what she said before I came away.’ Vaya con Dios.'”

Thirty minutes later, Nicholls was operating aboard the Sirrus.

The time was 0445. It was bitterly cold, with a light wind blowing steadily from the north. The seas were heavier than ever, longer between the crests, deeper in their gloomy troughs, and the damaged Sirrus, labouring under a mountain of ice, was making heavy weather of it. The sky was still clear, a sky of breath-taking purity, and the stars were out again, for the Northern Lights were fading. The fifth successive flare was drifting steadily seawards.

It was at 0445 that they heard it, the distant rumble of gunfire far to the south, perhaps a minute after they had seen the incandescent brilliance of a burning flare on the run of the far horizon. There could be no doubt as to what was happening. The Viking, still in contact with the U-boat, although powerless to do anything about it, was being heavily attacked. And the attack must have been short, sharp and deadly, for the firing ceased soon after it had begun. Ominously, nothing came through on the W.T. No one ever knew what had happened to the Viking, for there were no survivors.

The last echo of the Viking’s guns had barely died away before they heard the roar of the engines of the Condor, at maximum throttle in a shallow dive. For five, perhaps ten seconds-it seemed longer than that, but not long enough for any gun in the convoy to begin tracking him accurately-the great Focke-Wulf actually flew beneath his own flare, and then was gone. Behind him, the sky opened up in a blinding coruscation of flame, more dazzling, more hurtful, than the light of the noonday sun. So intense, so extraordinary the power of those flares, so much did pupils contract and eyelids narrow in instinctive self-protection, that the enemy bombers were through the circle of light and upon them before anyone fully realised what was happening The timing, the split-second co-operation between marker planes and bombers were magnificent.

There were twelve planes in the first wave. There was no concentration on one target, as before: not more than two attacked any ship. Turner, watching from the bridge, watching them swoop down steeply and level out before even the first gun in the Ulysses had opened up, caught his breath in sudden dismay. There was something terribly familiar about the speed, the approach, the silhouette of these planes. Suddenly he had it, Heinkels, by God! Heinkel 111’s. And the Heinkel 111, Turner knew, carried that weapon he dreaded above all others, the glider bomb.

And then, as if he had touched a master switch, every gun on the Ulysses opened up. The air filled with smoke, the pungent smell of burning cordite: the din was indescribable. And all at once, Turner felt fiercely, strangely happy. … To hell with them and their glider bombs, he thought. This was war as he liked to fight it: not the cat-and-mouse, hide-and-seek frustration of trying to outguess the hidden wolf-packs, but war out in the open, where he could see the enemy and hate him and love him for fighting as honest men should and do his damnedest to destroy him. And, Turner knew, if they could at all, the crew of the Ulysses would destroy him. It needed no great sensitivity to direct the sea-change that had overtaken his men-yes, his men now: they no longer cared for themselves: they had crossed the frontier of fear and found that nothing lay beyond it and they would keep on feeding their guns and squeezing their triggers until the enemy overwhelmed them.

The leading Heinkel was blown out of the sky, and fitting enough it was ‘X’ turret that destroyed it, ‘X’ turret, the turret of dead marines, the turret that had destroyed the Condor, and was now manned by a scratch marine crew. The Heinkel behind lifted sharply to avoid the hurtling fragments of fuselage and engines, dipped, flashed past the cruiser’s bows less than a boat-length away, banked steeply to port under maximum power, and swung back in on the Ulysses. Every gun on the ship was caught on the wrong foot, and seconds passed before the first one was brought to bear-time and to spare for the Heinkel to angle in at 60°, drop his bomb and slew frantically away as the concentrated fire of the Oerlikons and pom-poms closed in on him. Miraculously, he escaped.

The winged bomb was high, but not high enough. It wavered, steadied, dipped, then glided forwards and downwards through the drifting smoke of the guns to strike home with a tremendous, deafening explosion that shook the Ulysses to her keel and almost shattered the eardrums of those on deck.

To Turner, looking aft from the bridge, it seemed that the Ulysses could never survive this last assault. An ex-torpedo officer and explosives expert himself, he was skilled in assessing the disruptive power of high explosive: never before had he been so close to so powerful, so devastating an explosion. He had dreaded these glider bombs, but even so he had under-estimated their power: the concussion had been double, treble what he had been expecting.

What Turner did not know was that what he had heard had been not one explosion but two, but so nearly simultaneous as to be indistinguishable. The glider bomb, by a freakish chance had crashed directly into the port torpedo tubes. There had been only one torpedo left there, the other two had sent the Vytura to the bottom, and normally Amatol, the warhead explosive, is extremely stable and inert, even when subjected to violent shock: but the bursting bomb had been too close too powerful: sympathetic detonation had been inevitable.

Damage was extensive and spectacular: it was severe, but not fatal. The side of the Ulysses had been ripped open, as by a giant can-opener, almost to the water’s edge: the tubes had vanished: the decks were holed and splintered: the funnel casing was a shambles, the funnel itself tilting over to port almost to fifteen degrees; but the greatest energy of the explosion had been directed aft, most of the blast expending itself over the open sea, while the galley and canteen, severely damaged already, were no more than a devil’s scrapyard.

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