that a member of the Argos crew would deliberately set out to murder a person who was not only a crewmate but a fellow countryman.'

'At least it's something,' Naseby said. 'Brings it down to our own crew, doesn't it?'

'Yes, our crew — and at least six allegedly physical and mentally disturbed cripples from Murmansk.'

Naseby shook his head sorrowfully. 'Archie, this trip is going to be the ruination of you. Never known you to be so terribly suspicious of everybody — and you've just said you could find yourself not even trusting yourself.'

'If a nasty suspicious mind is any kind of hope for survival, George, then I'm going to keep on having just that kind of mind. You will remember that we had to leave Halifax in a tearing hurry, in a cargo ship little more than half converted to a hospital. Why? To get to Archangel and that with all possible speed. Then, after that little accident when we were alongside that corvette it became equally essential that we be diverted to Murmansk. Why?'

'Well, we were listing a bit and down by the head.'

'We had stopped making water, weather conditions were fair, we could have reached the White Sea, crossed it, and made Archangel without much trouble. But no, it was Murmansk or nothing. Again, why?'

'So that the Russians could place that explosive charge in the ballast room.' Ulbricht smiled. 'I recall your words — our gallant allies.'

'I recall them too. I wish I didn't. We all make mistakes, I'm certainly no exception, and that was one of my biggest. The Russians didn't place that charge — your people did.'

'The Germans? Impossible!'

'Lieutenant, if you imagine Murmansk and Archangel aren't botching with German spies and agents, you're living in Alice's never-never Wonderland.'

'It's possible, it's possible. But to infiltrate a Russian naval working party — that's impossible.'

'It's not impossible but it doesn't even have to be necessary. People are capable of being suborned, and while it may not be true that every man has his price, there are always those who have.'

'A Russian traitor, you suggest?'

'Why not? You have your traitors. We have our traitors. Every country has its traitors.'

'Why should we — the Germans — want to place a charge in the San Andreas?'

'I simply have no idea. In the same way as I have simply no idea why the Germans have attacked, harassed and pursued us — but not tried to sink us — ever since we rounded the North Cape. What I'm suggesting is, it's very likely that the same German agent or agents suborned one or more of the invalids we picked up in Murmansk. An alleged psychiatric case or mental breakdown patient, who is sick of both the war and the sea, would make an ideal choice for the traitor's part and I shouldn't even imagine that the price would have to be very high.'

'Objection, Mr McKinnon. It was a last-minute decision to detach the San Andreas from the convoy. You can't suborn a man overnight.'

'True. At the most, highly unlikely. Maybe they knew a week or two ago that we would be detached to Murmansk.'

'How on earth could they have known that?'

'I don't know. The same way I don't know why someone in Halifax knew quite a long time ago that Dr Singh would be in need of a transceiver.'

'And you don't think it extraordinary that the Russians, if they were not responsible for placing that charge, should have brought the San Andreas into Murmansk apparently for the sole benefit of your mysterious German agents?'

'They're not my agents but they're mysterious all right. The answer again is that I simply don't know. The truth appears to be that I just don't know anything about anything.' He sighed. 'Ah, well. Close to noon, Lieutenant. I'll go get the sextant and chronometer.'

Lieutenant Ulbricht straightened from the chart. 'Still, remarkably, holding the same course — 213. Precisely 64s North. Ideally, we should steer due south now but we're near enough to Trondheim as we are now, and that would only bring us closer. I suggest we maintain this course for the present, then turn due south some time during the night, midnight or thereabouts. That should bring us down the east coast of your native islands tomorrow, Mr McKinnon. I'll work it out.' 'You're the navigator,' McKinnon said agreeably.

In marked contrast to the conditions that had existed exactly forty-eight hours previously when the mass burial had taken place, the weather was now almost benign. The wind was no more than Force three, the sea calm enough to keep the San Andreas on an all but steady keel, and the cloud cover consisted of no more than a wide band of white, fleecy, mackerel sky against the pale blue beyond. McKinnon, standing by the starboard rail of the San Andreas, derived no pleasure whatsoever from the improvement: he would greatly have preferred the blanketing white blizzard of the previous burial.

Besides, the Bo'sun, the only other attendants or witnesses — by no stretch of the imagination could they have been called mourners — at the burial were Patterson, Jamieson, Sinclair and the two stokers and two seamen who had brought up the bodies. No one else had asked to come. For obvious reasons no one was going to mourn Dr Singh, and only Sinclair had known the two dead crewmen from the Argos and even then as no more than two unconscious bodies on operating tables.

Dr Singh was unceremoniously tipped over the side — not for him the well-wishing for his journey into the hereafter. Patterson, who would obviously never have made it as a clergyman, quickly read the liturgy from the prayer-book over the two dead Greek seamen and then they, too, were gone.

Patterson closed the prayer-book. 'Twice of that lot is twice too often. Let's hope there's not going to be a third time.' He looked at McKinnon. 'I suppose we just plod on on our far from merry way?'

'All we can do, sir. Lieutenant Ulbricht suggests that we alter course by and by to due south. That'll take us on a more direct route to Aberdeen. He knows what he's about. But that will be approximately twelve hours yet.'

'Whatever's best.' Patterson gazed around the empty horizon. 'Doesn't it strike you as rather odd, Bo'sun, that we've been left unmolested, or at least not located, for the better part of three hours? Since all communication from the U-boat has ceased in that time they must be very dense if they're not aware that something is far wrong with it.'

'I should imagine that Admiral Doenitz's U-boat fleet commander in Trondheim is very far from dense. I've the feeling they know exactly where we are. I understand that some of the latest U-boats are quite quick under water and one could easily be trailing us by Asdic without our knowing anything about it.' Like Patterson, only much more slowly, he looked around the horizon, then stood facing the port quarter. 'We are being tailed.'

'What? What's that?'

'Can't you hear it?'

Patterson cocked his head, then nodded slowly. 'I think I can. Yes, I can.'

'Condor,' McKinnon said. 'Focke-Wulf.' He pointed. 'I can see it now. It's coming straight out of the east and Trondheim is about due east of us now. The pilot of that plane knows exactly where we are. He's been told, probably via Trondheim, by the U-boat that's trailing us.'

'I thought a submarine had to surface to transmit?'

'No. All it has to do is to raise its transmitting aerial above the water. It could do that a couple of miles away and we wouldn't see it. Anyway, it's probably a good deal further distant than that.'

'One wonders what the Condor's intentions are.'

'Your guess, sir. We're not, unfortunately, inside the minds of the U-boat and Luftwaffe commanders in Trondheim. My guess is that they're not going to try to finish us off and that's not because they've been at great pains not to sink us so far. If they wanted to sink us, one torpedo from the U-boat I'm sure is out there would do the job nicely. Or, if they wanted to sink us from the air, they wouldn't use a Condor which is really a reconnaissance plane: Heinkels, Heinkel Ill's or Stukas with long-range tanks could do the job much more efficiently — and Trondheim is only about two hundred miles from here.'

'What's he after, then?' The Condor was two miles distant now and losing height rapidly.

'Information.' McKinnon looked up at the bridge and caught sight of Naseby out on the port wing looking aft towards the approaching Condor. He cupped his hands and shouted: 'George!' Naseby swung round.

'Get down, get down!' McKinnon made the appropriate gesture with his hand. Naseby raised an arm in acknowledgement and disappeared inside the bridge. 'Mr Patterson, let's get inside the superstructure. Now.'

Patterson knew when to ask questions and when not to. He led the way and within ten seconds they were all in shelter except the Bo'sun, who remained in the shattered doorway.

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