Night of Terror by Desmond Bagley

walked to the foremast, a satchel slung round his shoulder. He climbed

the mast steadily. Almost all our crew were watching from various

hidden vantage points, several with rifles or pistols handy. Jim

reached the yardarm, paused, then swung the satchel in front of him and

put his hand inside. He’d have to clip his way through some of the

tangle first. On board Sirena there was no one in sight; like us, they

were staying in cover.

There was a sudden lurch of the two ships as an eddy caught us. I was

braced and swaying with the movement, hoping to God that Jim had a firm

handhold and that he wouldn’t drop a grenade. Suddenly from Sirena’s

wheelhouse came a babel of, voices, and a second later Hadley came

running on deck, in full view. He was laughing, and he carried a

sub-machinegun. Swiftly he raised it and fired a burst at the

foremast.

Jim toppled from the yardarm, falling with limbs aw slam with a dull

thud across the starboard bulkhead. If bullets hadn’t killed him, then

that fall would surely done so.

There was an angry roar from Esmerelda and guns began firing.

Hadley stepped back into the shadow, still laughing, and sprayed the

rest of the magazine across our decks.

Splinters flew on deck at the madman’s feet but he seemed to dance away

from the bullets and vanished into cover.

Hadley’s blast had shattered the rest of the wheelhouse windows.

I catapulted myself out of there towards Geordie and Campbell. Geordie

was speechless with rage and grief.

Campbell was snarling. “The goddam maniac!” “I’ll have his guts,”

Geordie said stiffly.

The firing from our crew died away and I saw faces staring, stunned by

the horror of what they’d seen. Two’men broke cover to go and collect

Jim’s body. No one shot at them.

Slowly I followed the others below for a council, and found Clare

waiting for us, in the passageway, white-faced and riggid. She came

and clung to me and I held her tightly, and for a moment the only

reality seemed to be my love for her.

“Dear God, Mike – Pop – what happened up there?” “Jim’s been killed,”

Campbell said shortly.

“They’ve got a raving maniac over there,” I told her.

“Hadley – he’s lost all control.” “I’ll kill him,”said Geordie.

“Geordie, wait! This isn’t a war and you’re not some bloodyininded

general who doesn’t care how many men he loses to the cause. We’ve

lost Danny and Jim – and Rex – and other men are wounded. We haven’t a

hope of getting aboard Sirena – we’d be massacred.” “Hell, what other

way is there?” he asked, still spoiling for a fight. There was a

growl of approval from most of our crew. I felt as they did, but I had

to stop them.

“Look, Hadley’s run mad and there’s no knowing what he’ll do next.

But I’ll -bet those Spaniards over there are even more scared of him

than we are. I think Ramirez will have him dealt with, for their own

safety.” Geordie’s face was still shuttered and frozen. He wasn’t

going to listen. Then Campbell said, “Don’t forget we’re drifting

now.

You slipped the anchor.” And that brought Geordie fully to his

senses.

He frowned, and it was an expression of worry that was far healthier

for all of us than his glare of bitter hatred. “Christ, yes!

We could drift right into that thing. We’ve got to get the foremast

right out of its housing, clear the shrouds, the lot. Dump it all

overboard. It’ll hamper Sirena if she tries to give chase – Taffy

Nick— His voice rose in command.

The men gathered round, grasping their weapons and waiting for him to

order them into battle. Instead he began to.

give firm orders for freeing Esmerelda, and they recognized the urgency

and sense in his voice. The fighting craze began to leave them all.

I turned to Clare. “Are you all right?” I asked quietly.

“Better now, darling.” But even now there wasn’t time for more than

that one quick moment of comfort. “Where are Paula and Mark?” I asked

her.

She nodded towards the saloon. “They’re still in there. He’s not too

seriously hurt. He was sitting in a chair the last time I looked in.

But he won’t give us any trouble, Mike. I’ve never seen him so

subdued.” “There are all the signs that Falcon will get rougher

soon.

I want you to get both of them up on deck – it’ll be safer thaw.

staying below. And stay with your father, Clare. Keep them all

together.” I kissed her and then she went into t without a word.

Geordie and the men had gone up on deck and oOn board Sirena there was

frantic activity as men struggled with equipment at the base of the

focastle, a similar scene was being enacted on our ship. There was

shooting, and of Hadley there was no sign. With had killed him

themselves. I had a brief glimpse of our launch, still attached and

dancing wildly astern strewn on deck, of Jim’s body being passed beloN

go forward and make myself useful.

And then Falcon blew.

There was a mighty roar as thousands of tons of seawater exploded into

superheated steam. A bright flickering shone on us and the sunlight

was dimmed as a pillar of steam ascended into the sky.

The first wave reached us in less than fifteen seconds. As I

staggered, grabbing for support, I saw it racing down towards

Esmerelda, silhouetted against the raging furnace. It was a monstrous

wave, rearing mast high, creamed with dirty grey spume and coming with

the speed of an express train.

I crouched on the open deck, trying to flatten myself into the

planking.

The wave broke against Esmerelda. She heaved convulsively and ground

against Sirena. There was a rending crash and I thought that both

ships must have been stove in. A flood of near scalding water washed

over the deck, and I writhed as I felt it in the stab wound in my

side.

Then the wave was past us and the ships dipped in the afterwash,

creaking and groaning in every timber. There were four more huge

waves, but none as high as the first. I staggered to my feet, feeling

the ships’ curious writhing motion on the water.

The waves had done what we had failed to do. Sirena was dipping and

bobbing in the water about fifty yards away from us. Esmerelda was

free, and she had no foremast at all. It had been plucked out by the

roots.

But every time Sirena rolled there was a crash which sent a shudder

through her. I stumbled to the side and looked down into the water.

Our foremast hung there, still tethered to Sirena’s mast by a cat’s

cradle of lines and spars. As I watched a surge of water sent it

slamming against her hull like a battering ram and she shivered from

stem to stern. She wouldn’t stand much more of that treatment.

I fell over a body lying in the scuppers. Nick lay there with blood

oozing from a wound in his forehead, but as I turned him over he

groaned and stirred and opened his eyes. He must have had a

constitution like an ox because, in spite of the massive contusion, he

began to struggle to his feet at once.

I shouted, “Let’s look for the others!” and he nodded. We turned and

then stood frozen in amazement as we caught a glimpse of Falcon.

There was land back there. Land that glowed a dull red shot with fiery

gold streaks and which surrounded the pit of Hell itself – a vast

incandescent crater which spewed forth red hot cinders and streams of

lava. Falcon was building an island once more.

The sea fought the new land but the land was winning.

Nothing qould stop the outpouring of that huge gaping red mouth, but

the sea did its best, pitting water against fire, and the result was an

inferno of noise. There was a great earsplitting hiss as though all

the engines of the world were letting off steam together, and under

that a rumbling bass from the depths of the chasm.

Great gouts of fire leapt up from the crater, half hidden behind the

red mist, and the water boiled as it encountered from the blazing heat

of the new Fonua Fo’ou. There was the sound of surf pounding along a

reef, but such surf as none of us had ever seen before. Mighty columns

of tephra, all the pent-up material that Falcon could fling into the

air from its huge maw, seethed and erupted in spasms, hurling ash magma

and boulders high into the sky. A hazy brown cloud of fragmentary

pumice hung over all, obscuring the sun Esmerelda was pitching as

helplessly as Sirena. Black figures moved on both decks, outlined

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