"Alistair MacLean - San Andreas" - читать интересную книгу автора (Maclean Alistair)


'You couldn't gather anything from the chart?' 'It wasn't a chart any more. It was just a bloodstained rag.'

THREE

It was snowing heavily and a bitter wind blew from the east as they buried their dead in the near-Stygian darkness of the early afternoon. A form of illumination they did have, for the saboteur, probably more than satisfied with the results of his morning's activities, was now resting on his laurels and the deck floodlights were working again, but in that swirling blizzard the light given off was weak, fitful and almost ineffectual, serving only to intensify the ghoulish effect of the burial party hastening about their macabre task and the ghostlike appearance of the bare dozen of snow-covered mourners. Flashlight in hand, Chief Engineer Patterson read out the burial service, but he might as well have been quoting the latest prices on the stock exchange for not a word could be heard: one by one the dead, in their weighted canvas shrouds, slipped down the tilted plank, out from under the Union flag and vanished, silently, into the freezing water of the Barents Sea. No bugle calls, no Last Post for the Merchant Navy, not ever: the only requiem was the lost and lonely keening of the wind through the frozen rigging and the jagged gaps that had been torn in the superstructure.

Shivering violently and mottled blue and white with the cold, the burial party and mourners returned to the only reasonably warm congregating space left on the San Andreas - the dining and recreational area in the hospital between the wards and the cabins.

'We owe you a very great debt, Mr McKinnon,' Dr Singh said. He had been one of the mourners and his teeth were still chattering. 'Very swift, very efficient. It must have been a gruesome task.'

'I had six willing pairs of hands,' the Bo'sun said. 'It was worse for them than it was for me.' The Bo'sun did not have to explain what he meant: everybody knew that anything would always be worse for anybody than for that virtually indestructible Shetlander. He looked at Patterson. 'I have a suggestion, sir.'

'A Royal Naval one?'

'No, sir. Deep-sea fisherman's. Anyway, it's close enough, these are the waters of the Arctic trawlers. A toast to the departed.'

'I endorse that, and not for traditional or sentimental reasons.' Dr Singh's teeth still sounded like castanets. 'Medicinal. I don't know about the rest of you but my red corpuscles are in need of some assistance.'

The Bo'sun looked at Patterson, who nodded his approval. McKinnon turned and looked at an undersized, freckle-faced youth who was hovering at a respectful distance. 'Wayland.'

Wayland came hurrying forward. 'Yes, Mr McKinnon, sir?'

'Go with Mario to the liquor store. Bring back some refreshments.'

'Yes, Mr McKinnon, sir. Right away, Mr McKinnon, sir.' The Bo'sun had long given up trying to get Wayland Day to address him in any other fashion.

Dr Singh said: That won't be necessary, Mr McKinnon. We have supplies here.'

'Medicinal, of course?'

'Of course.' Dr Singh watched as Wayland went into the galley. 'How old is that boy?'

'He claims to be seventeen or eighteen, says he's not sure which. In either case, he's fibbing. I don't believe he's ever seen a razor.'

'He's supposed to be working for you, isn't he? Pantry boy, I understand. He spends nearly all his day here.'

'I don't mind, Doctor, if you don't.'

'No, not at all. He's an eager lad, willing and helpful.'

'He's all yours. Besides, we haven't a pantry left. He's making eyes at one of the nurses?'

'You underestimate the boy. Sister Morrison, no less. At a worshipful distance, of course.'

'Good God!' the Bo'sun said.

Mario entered, bearing, one-handed and a few inches above his head, a rather splendid silver salver laden with bottles and glasses, which, in the circumstances, was no mean feat, as the San Andreas was rolling quite noticeably. With a deft, twirling movement, Mario had the tray on the table without so much as the clink of glass against glass. Where the salver had come from was unexplained and Mario's business. As became the popular conception of an Italian, Mario was darkly and magnificently mustachioed, but whether he possessed the traditional flashing eyes was impossible to say as he invariably wore dark glasses. There were those who purported to see in those glasses a connection with the Sicilian Mafia, an assertion that was always good-humouredly made, as he was well-liked. Mario was overweight, of indeterminate age and claimed to have served in the Savoy Grill, which may have been true. What was beyond dispute was that there lay behind Mario, a man whose rightful home Captain Bowen considered to be either a prisoner-of-war or internment camp, a more than usually chequered career.

After no more than two fingers of Scotch, but evidently considering that his red corpuscles were back on the job, Dr Singh said: 'And now, Mr Patterson?'