the men found her. As George watched from within the fireplace, his grandparents were beaten to their knees and then shot in the head. Their brains splattered the wall. In that same room, his mother and sister were raped by all nine men, repeatedly. Every degradation, every humiliation was perpetrated upon them. George was a child, not even seven years old: small, terrified, powerless. The guerrillas stayed until three o'clock the next morning, waiting for George's father, and when they finally left, they slit Yun-ti's throat. Then his mother's throat. So much blood. His father had come home twelve hours later — and found George still hiding in the fireplace, unable to speak. He remained silent for more than three years after they escaped to Taiwan. And when at last he had broken his silence, he had first spoken the names of his mother and sister. Speaking them, he'd wept inconsolably until a physician came to their house and administered a sedative.
Nevertheless, the men in the submarine below were Russians, not Chinese, and they weren't communists any more. Perhaps they had
The men below would not be like those who had violated his mother and sister and then killed them. These were different people in a different time. They could be trusted. He must trust them.
Nevertheless, he was infinitely more afraid of the
11:46
“Officer's mess to captain.”
“I read you.”
“That starboard bulkhead is streaming, Captain.”
“Buckling?”
“No, sir.”
“How much water?”
“Half a liter, sir.”
Trouble in both the torpedo room and the officer's mess. They would soon have to get the hell out of there.
“Stethoscope?” Gorov asked.
“Lots of noise past the bulkhead, sir, but no standard stress signatures.”
“We'll be on our way in five minutes.”
11:47
With the submarine almost within reach, Harry remembered more reason to be hopeful. According to Lieutenant Timoshenko, British divers at Alverstoke, Hampshire, and French divers at Marseilles had reached fifteen hundred feet with advanced scuba gear in simulated chamber dives.
Of course, that one qualifying phrase prevented the data from being as reassuring as he would have liked: “simulated chamber dives.”
This was the real thing.
The tunnel widened out. The ice walls receded until they no longer reflected any of the light.
He had a sense of vastly greater space around him. The water was clearer than it had been above, probably because there were fewer particles of ice in it. Within seconds, he saw colored lights below, first green and then red. Then his hand-held light revealed a great, gray shape hovering in the abyss below him.
Even when he arrived at the sail of the
Furthermore, Harry didn't like the looks of the submarine. Waiting for the others to catch up with him, he had nearly a minute to study the boat. All the running lights were aglow: red on the port side, green on the starboard side, white on the sail, a yellow overtaking light… Maybe his thought processes were affected by pressure or exhaustion, but the
11:49
Rita expected her fear to abate when she reached the bottom of the tunnel and the ice was no longer to every side of her. But the island of ice was still overhead, as high as a seventy-story building and four fifths of a mile long, as enormous as several blocks of Manhattan skyscrapers. She knew that it was buoyant and wouldn't sink on her or crush her into the ocean floor, but she was terrified by the thought of it hanging over her, and she dared not look up.
Someone touched Rita, and she cried out in horror, but at least the scream drove the Audi and avalanche into the past where they belonged.
Pete was on one side of her, Franz on the other. Evidently, she had stopped moving, and they were holding her by the arms and bringing her down the final few fathoms between them. The submarine was directly ahead. She saw Harry holding on to the radar mast above the sail.
11:50
Harry shuddered with relief at the sight of Rita between Pete and Franz, and a thrill of hope coursed through him.
When the other six joined him, he half crawled and half swam along the sail, climbed down the short ladder to the bridge, and pulled himself along the line of cleats on the forward superstructure deck. If he floated off the boat, he would not be able to catch up with it easily, for the nine-knot current would not affect him in precisely the same way that it did the three-hundred-foot-long boat.