CHAPTER 13
Aboard
Rocky lies facedown on the bunk, her swollen, singed right hand wrapped in a wet towel. Gunnar is seated on the floor beside her. He brushes aside the straw-colored blond hair, matted with perspiration, and massages her neck.
“Don’t touch me.”
A heavy
“She’s hurt.”
The older man, a physician, examines her burn. “I’ll get some salve for this—”
“Tafili, later.” The Asian removes two plastic dog collars from a satchel. “Simon’s requested your presence as our dinner guests. We prefer not to carry weapons. These devices should keep you on your best behavior.”
Thomas Chau slips the collar around Rocky’s throat, locking it in place so that its two quarter-inch metal prongs press against the back of her neck, fitting snugly against the base of her cervical vertebrae. A small black receiver rests along one side of her throat.
“Rigged these myself,” the Albanian physician boasts. “The Russians used similar collars to train our attack dogs. Quite simple really. The remote is linked to the sub’s computer.”
Chau fastens the remaining collar around Gunnar’s neck. “Let’s have a quick test.
A brilliant explosion of pain—sudden and devastating—sizzles through every nerve ending in Gunnar’s body. He collapses to the deck, writhing on the floor like an epileptic having a violent seizure, the purple lights blinding his eyes.
The electrical charge subsides. Gunnar rolls over, spitting up a frothy, acrid saliva. He senses Rocky next to him, the woman gagging as well.
The Albanian physician bends over them. “That was a level-two charge. Please don’t do anything rash, a level-ten charge would fry you like bacon.”
“Simon’s rules are simple,” Chau states. “The two of you are guests, under constant surveillance. Overstep your boundaries and the computer will dole out the appropriate response. Now come with us.”
The three men exit.
Gunnar slips his hand beneath his waistband, groaning in agony as he palpates a small spot below his right hip. The tender point just beneath the skin is scorching hot.
Rocky helps him to his feet. Arm in arm, they follow the three men down the corridor to a small galley. The rest of the crew is already inside, seated around a large rectangular table secured to the deck. Plastic utensils litter the white Formica top. The scent of fresh-baked pizza drifts out from open double doors leading back into the kitchen.
Covah stands to greet Rocky, motioning her to an empty setting on his left. “Please, Commander, come and sit down.”
Rocky steps forward, smiles, then kicks outward, the top of her bare foot rushing toward Covah’s groin.
The electrical charge grips her in midstrike, flipping her body out from under her and hard onto the linoleum floor.
“Like a bull in a china shop,” says David, shaking his head.
Rocky rolls onto her knees, her chest heaving in convulsions.
Gunnar kneels beside her. “Not like this—”
“Leave me alone.”
Covah returns to his seat. “As you can see, the collar’s probes detect even the slightest neuromuscular activity, and I shouldn’t need to remind you how fast
Ignoring her protests, Gunnar helps Rocky to her feet, leading her to one of the empty place settings. “Sit down and save your energy.”
She wipes saliva from her chin. “Go screw yourself.”
Two Arabs enter from the kitchen, carrying pizzas on large aluminum trays. The crew digs in as if famished.
Covah breaks off a small piece of dough and sauce, placing it gingerly in his deformed mouth, the mangled flesh around his jaw and right eye contorting as he chews. “Go ahead, Gunnar, help yourself. If I remember correctly, pizza was your favorite.”
Gunnar’s stomach growls a reply. He takes a slice, earning more of Rocky’s wrath.
Covah feeds himself another morsel, then removes a vial from his pocket, fishing out several pills. One at a time, he places the tablets in his mouth and swallows.
Gunnar watches him, saying nothing.
“I can’t … I can’t do this.” Rocky bites down on her quivering lower lip. “You murdered my husband, you murdered the sailors aboard the
The crew pauses from eating, waiting for Covah’s response.
“You swear to God? What makes you think God is listening? What is he, an absentee God? A God amused by the suffering of His children?” Simon Covah’s mouth twitches in midswallow. He coughs, gags, then reaches out with his good hand, lifting the wine to his lips, dripping some down his rust-colored goatee as he drains the glass. The pale blue lashless eyes never leave the woman’s. “As for murder, isn’t it you who are calling the kettle black?”
“What are you talking about?”
“David tells me it was you who ended the life of Mr. Strejcek.”
“Strejcek killed my husband—”
“And you killed him. Murder is murder, Commander, no matter how we justify the act.”
“That was self-defense. You killed thousands—”
“Using a weapon of mass destruction which you helped design.” Covah swallows another morsel of food. “Interesting how you sit back and judge me—you, a general’s daughter, a sanctimonious warmonger who helped