y later. For now, the key point is that the Crypt is all important. I can take all of my ideas and put them into a single pod of information, but almost every government in the world would prevent distribution to its citizens. It is essential to build the Crypt so that the HEAP can be freely distributed throughout the world." "HEAP?" "Holocaust Education and Avoidance Pod." "Oh, Jesus Christ!" "This is the true meaning of what you are working on," Avi says, "and so I urge you not to lose heart. Whenever you are about to get bored stamping out those license plates in the Philippines, think of the HEAP. Think of what those Nahuatl villagers could have done to those fucking Aztecs if they'd had a holocaust prevention manual a handbook on guerilla warfare tactics." Randy sits and ponders for a while. "We have to go and buy some water," he finally says. "I've sweated away a few liters just sitting here." "We can just go back to the hotel," Avi says, "I'm basically finished." "You're finished. I haven't even started," Randy says. "Started what?" "Telling you why there's no chance I'm going to be bored in the Philippines." Avi blinks. "You met a girl?" "No!" Randy says testily, meaning Yes, of course. "Come on, let's go." They go to a nearby 24 Jam and purchase bluish plastic bottles of water the size of cinderblocks. Then they wander around through streets crowded with unbearably savory smelling food carts, guzzling the water. "I got e mail from Doug Shaftoe a few days ago," Randy says. "From his boat, via satellite phone." "In the clear?" "Yeah. I keep bothering him to get Ordo and encrypt his e mail, but he won't." "That is really unprofessional," Avi grumbles. "He needs to be more paranoid." "He's so paranoid that he doesn't even trust Ordo." Avi's scowl eases. "Oh. That's okay then." "His e mail contained a stupid joke about Imelda Marcos." "You took me on this walk to tell me a joke?" "No, no, no," Randy says. "The joke was a prearranged signal. Doug told me that he would send me e mail containing an Imelda joke if a certain thing happened." "What certain thing?" Randy takes a big swig of water, draws a deep breath, and composes himself. "More than a year ago, I had a conversation with Doug Shaftoe during that big party that the Dentist threw on board the Rui Faleiro. He wanted us to hire his company, Semper Marine Services, to do the survey work on all future cable lays. In return he offered to cut us in on any sunken treasure he found while performing the survey." Avi skids to a stop and clutches his water bottle in both hands as if he's afraid he might drop it. "Sunken treasure, like, yo ho ho and a bottle of rum? Pieces of six? That kind of thing?" "Pieces of eight. Same basic idea," Randy says. "The Shaftoes are treasure hunters. Doug is obsessed with the idea that there are vast hoards of treasure in and around the Philippines." "From where? Those Spanish galleons?" "No. Well, yes, actually. But that's not what Doug's after." He and Avi have begun walking again. "Most of it is either much older than that pottery from sunken Chinese junks or much more recent Japanese war gold." As Randy had expected, the mention of Japanese war gold makes a huge impact on Avi. Randy keeps talking. "Rumor has it that the Nipponese left a lot of gold in the area. Supposedly, Marcos recovered a big stash buried in a tunnel somewhere that's where he got all his money. Most people think Marcos was worth something like five, six billion dollars, but a lot of people in the Philippines think he recovered more like sixty billion." "Sixty billion!" Avi's spine stiffens. "Impossible." "Look, you can believe the rumors or not, I don't care," Randy says. "But since it looks like one of Marcos's bag men is going to be a founding depositor in the Crypt, it is the kind of thing you should know." "Keep talking," Avi says, suddenly ravenous for data. "Okay. So people have been running all over the Philippines ever since the war, digging holes and dredging the seafloor, trying to find the legendary Nipponese war gold. Doug Shaftoe is one of those people. Problem is, making a thorough sidescan sonar survey of the whole area is quite expensive you can't just go out and do it on spec. He saw an opportunity when we came along." "I see. Very smart," Avi says approvingly. "He would do the survey work that we needed anyway, in order to lay the cables." "Perhaps a bit more than was strictly necessary, as long as he was out there." "Right. Now I remember some angry mail from the Dentist's due diligence harpies because the survey was costing too much and taking too long. They felt we could have hired a different company and gotten the same results quicker and cheaper." "They were probably right," Randy admits. "Anyway, Doug wanted to cut a deal that gave us ten percent of whatever he found. More, if we wanted to underwrite recovery operations." All of a sudden Avi's eyes go wide and he swallows a big gulp of air. "Oh, shit," he says. "He wanted to keep the whole thing a secret from the Dentist." "Exactly. Because the Dentist would end up taking all of it. And because of the Dentist's peculiar domestic situation, that means that the Bolobolos would know everything about it too. These guys would happily kill to get their hands on gold." "Wow!" Avi says, shaking his head. "Y'know, I don't want to seem like one of those hackneyed Jews that you see in heartwarming movies. But at times like this, all I can say is 'Oy, gevalt!' " "I never told you about this deal, Avi, for two reasons. One of them is just our general policy of not blabbing about things. The other reason is that we decided to hire Semper Marine Services anyway just on their own merits so Doug Shaftoe's proposition was irrelevant." Avi thinks this one over. "Correction. It was irrelevant, as long as Doug Shaftoe didn't find any sunken treasure." "Right. And I assumed that he wouldn't." "You assumed wrong." "I assumed wrong," Randy admits. "Shaftoe has found the remains of an old Nipponese submarine." "How do you know that?" "If he found a Chinese junk he was going to send me a joke about Ferdinand Marcos. If he found World War II stuff, it was going to be Imelda. If it was a surface ship, it was going to be about Imelda's shoes. If it was a submarine, her sexual habits. He sent me a joke about Imelda's sexual habits." "Now, did you ever formally respond to Doug Shaftoe's proposition?" Avi says. "No. Like I said, it wasn't relevant, we were going to hire him any way. But then, after the contracts were all signed and we were drawing up the survey schedule, he told me about this code involving the Marcos jokes. I realized then he believed that by hiring him, we had implicitly said yes to his proposition." "It's a funny way to do business," Avi says, wrinkling his nose. "You'd think he would have been more explicit." "He is the kind of guy who does deals on a handshake. On personal honor," Randy says. "Once he had made the proposition, he would never withdraw it." "The problem with those honorable men," Avi says, "is that they expect everyone else to be honorable in the same way." "It is true." "So he believes, now, that we are accomplices in this plan to hide the existence of this sunken treasure from the Dentist and the Bolobolos," Avi says. "Unless we come clean to them right away." "In which case we are betraying Doug Shaftoe," Avi says. "Cravenly backstabbing the ex SEAL who served six years of combat duty in Vietnam, and who has scary and well connected friends all over the world," Randy adds. "Damn, Randy! I thought I was going to freak you out by telling you about the HEAP." "You did." "And then you spring this on me!" "Life's rich pageant. And all that," Randy says. Avi thinks for a minute. "Well, I guess it comes down to whom would we rather have on our side in a bar fight." "The answer can only be Douglas MacArthur Shaftoe," Randy says. "But that doesn't mean we'll make it out of the bar alive." Chapter 47 SEEKY They have stuffed him into the narrow gap between the U boat's slotted outer hull and the pressure hull within, so that bitterly cold, black water streams through with the bludgeoning force of a firehose and wracks him with malarial chills: bones cracking, joints freezing, muscles knotting. He is wedged in tightly between uneven surfaces of hard rough steel, bending him in ways he's not supposed to bend, and punishing him when he tries to move. Barnacles are beginning to grow on him: sort of like lice but bigger and capable of burrowing deeper into the flesh. Somehow he is able to fight for breath anyway, just enough to stay alive and really savor just how unpleasant the situation is. He's been breathing cold seawater for a long time, it has made his windpipe raw, and he suspects that plankton or something are eating his lungs from the inside out. He pounds on the pressure hull but the impact makes no noise. He can sense the warmth and heat inside, and he would like to get in and enjoy both of them. Finally some kind of dream logic thing happens and he finds a hatch. The current sweeps Shaftoe out, leaving him suspended alone in the watery cosmos, and the U boat hisses away and abandons him. Shaftoe is lost now. He cannot tell up from down. Something bashes him on the head. He sees a few black drumlike things moving inexorably through the water with parallel comet trails of bubbles behind them. Depth charges. Then Shaftoe comes awake and knows that this was all just his body desiring morphine. He is certain for a moment that he is back in Oakland and that Lieutenant Reagan is looming over him, preparing for Phase 2 of the interview. "Good afternoon, Sergeant Shaftoe," Reagan says. He has adopted a heavy German accent for some reason. A joke. These actors! Shaftoe smells meat, and other things not so inviting. Something heavy, but not especially hard, thuds into his face. Then it draws back. Then it hits him again. *** "Your companion is morphium seeky?" says Beck. Enoch Root is a bit taken aback; they've only been on the boat for eight hours. "Is he already making a nuisance of himself?" "He is semiconscious," Beck says, "and has a great deal to say about giant lizards among other subjects." "Oh, that's normal for him," Root says, relieved. "What makes you think he is morphium seeky?" "The morphium bottle and hypodermic syringe that were in his pocket," Beck says with that deadpan Teutonic irony, "and the needle marks in his arms." Root observes that the U boat is like a tunnel bored out of the sea and lined with hardware. This cabin (if that's not too grand a word for it) is by far the largest open space Root has seen, meaning that he can almost stretch his arms out without hitting someone or inadvertently tripping a switch or a valve. It even sports some wooden cabinetry, and has been sealed off from the corridor by a leather curtain. When they first brought Root in here, he thought it was a storage closet. But as he looks around the place, he begins to realize that it's the nicest place on the whole boat: the captain's private cabin. This is confirmed when Beck unlocks a desk drawer and produces a bottle of Armagnac. "Conquering France hath its privileges," Beck says. "Yeah," Root says, "you blokes really know how to sack a place." *** Lieutenant Reagan is back again, molesting Bobby Shaftoe with a stethoscope that appears to have been kept in a bath of liquid nitrogen until ready for use. "Cough, cough, cough!" he keeps saying. Finally he takes the instrument away. Something is fucking with Shaftoe's ankles. He tries to get up on his elbows to look, and smashes his face into a blistering hot pipe. When he's recovered from that, he peeks carefully down the length of his body and sees a goddamn hardware store down there. The bastards have put him in leg irons! He lies back down and gets slugged in the face by a dangling ham. Above him is a firmament of pipes and cables. Where has he seen this before? On the Dutch Hammer, that's where. Except the lights are on in this U boat, and it doesn't appear to be sinking, and it's full of Germans. The Germans are calm and relaxed. None of them is bleeding or screaming. Damn! The boat rocks sideways, and a giant Blutwurst socks him in the belly. He begins looking around, trying to get his bearings. There's not much else to see except hanging meat. This cabin is a six foot long slice of U boat, with a narrow gangway down the center, hemmed in by bunks. Or maybe they are bunks. The one directly across from him is occupied by a dirty canvas sack. Fuck that. Where is the box with the purple bottles? *** "It is amusing to read my communications from Charlottenburg," Beck says to Root, changing the subject to the message decrypts on his table. "They were perhaps written by that Jew Kafka." "How so?" "It seems that they do not expect that we will ever make it home alive." "What makes you say that?" Root says, trying not to savor the Armagnac too much. When he brings it up to his nose and inhales, its perfume nearly obliterates the reek of urine, vomit, rotten food, and diesel that suffuses everything on the U boat down to the atomic level. "They are pressing us for information about our prisoners. They are very interested in you guys," Beck says. "In other words," Root says carefully, "they want you to question us now." "Precisely." "And send the results in by radio?" "Yes," Beck says. "But I really should be concentrating on how to keep us alive the sun will be up soon, and then we are in for some very bad trouble. You'll remember that your ship radioed our coordinates before I sunk it. Every allied plane and ship is now out looking for us." "So, if I cooperate," Root says, "you can get back to the business of keeping us all alive." Beck tries to control a smile. His little tactic was crude and obvious to begin with, and Root has already seen through it. Beck is, if any thing, more uncomfortable than Root with this whole interrogation business. "Suppose I tell you everything I know," Root says. "If you send it all back to Charlottenburg, you'll be running your radio, on the surface, for hours. Huffduff will pick you out in a few seconds and then every destroyer and bomber within a thousand miles will jump on you." "On us," Beck corrects him. "Yes. So if I really want to stay alive, it's best if I shut up," Root says. *** "Are you looking for this?" says the German with the stethoscope, who (Shaftoe has learned) is not a real doctor just the guy who happens to be in charge of the box of medical stuff. Anyway, he is holding up just the thing. The very thing. "Gimme that!" Shaftoe says, making a weak grab for it. "That's mine!" "Actually, it's mine," the medic says. "Yours is with the captain. I might share some of mine with you, if you are cooperative." "Fuck you," Shaftoe says. "Very well then," the medic says, "I will by leave it." He puts the syringe full of morphine on the bunk opposite and one level below Shaftoe's, so that Shaftoe, by peering between a couple of Knockwursts, can see it. But he can't reach it. Then the medic leaves. *** "Why was Sergeant Shaftoe carrying a German morphine bottle and a German syringe?" says Beck quizzically, doing his best to make it sound conversational and not interrogational. But the effort is too much for him and that smile tries to seize control of his lips again. It is the smile of a whipped dog. Root finds this somewhat alarming, since Beck's the guy in charge of keeping everyone on the boat alive. "That's news to me," Root says. "Morphine is closely regulated," Beck says. "Each bottle has a number. We have already radioed the number on Sergeant Shaftoe's bottle to Charlottenburg, and soon they'll know where it came from. Even though they may not tell us." "Good work. That should keep them busy for a while. Why don't you go back to running the ship?" Root suggests. "We are in the calm before the storm," Beck says, "and I have not so much to do. So I try to satisfy my own curiosity about you." *** "We're fucked, aren't we!?" says a German voice. "Huh?" Shaftoe says. "I said, we're fucked! You guys broke the Enigma!" "What's the Enigma?" "Don't play stupid," says the German. Shaftoe feels prickly on the back of his neck. That sounds exactly like the kind of thing a German would say before commencing torture. Shaftoe composes his face into the cool, heavy lidded, dopey expression that he always uses when he's trying to irritate an officer. As best he can when his legs are bolted down, he rolls over on his side, towards the sound of the voice. He is expecting to see an aquiline SS officer in a black uniform, jackboots, death's head insignia, and riding crop, perhaps twiddling a pair of thumbscrews in his black leather gloves. Instead he sees no one at all. Shit! Hallucinations again! Then the dirty canvas sail bag in the bunk opposite him begins to move around. Shaftoe blinks and resolves a head sticking out of one end: straw blond but prematurely half bald, contrasting black beard, catlike pale green eyes. The man's canvas garment is not exactly a bag, but a voluminous overcoat. He has his arms crossed over his body. "Oh, well," the German mutters, "I was just trying to make conversation." He turns his head and scratches his nose by nuzzling his pillow for a while. "You can tell me any secret you want," he says. "See, I've already notified Dönitz that the Enigma is shit. And it made no difference. Except he ordered me a new overcoat. The man rolls over, exposing his back to Shaftoe. The sleeves of the garment are sewn shut at the ends and tied together behind his back. "It is more comfortable than you would think, for the first day or two." *** A mate pulls the leather curtain aside, nods apologetically, and hands Beck a fresh message decrypt. Beck reads it, raises his eyebrows, and blinks tiredly. He sets it down on the table and stares at the wall for fifteen seconds. Then he picks it up and reads it again, carefully. "It says that I am not to ask you any more questions." "What!?" "Under no circumstances," Beck says, "am I to extract any more information from you." "What the hell does that mean?" "Probably that you know something I am not authorized to know," Beck says. *** It has been about two hundred years, now, since Bobby Shaftoe had a trace of morphine in his system. Without it, he cannot know pleasure or even comfort. The syringe gleams like a cold star on the shelf underneath the crazy German in the straitjacket. He'd rather that they just tore his fingernails out or something. He knows he's going to crack. He tries to think of a way to crack that won't kill any Marines. "I could bring you the syringe in my teeth," suggests the man, who has introduced himself as Bischoff. Shaftoe mulls it over. "In exchange for?" "You tell me whether the Enigma has been decrypted." "Oh." Shaftoe's relieved; he was afraid maybe Bischoff was going to demand a blow job. "That's the code machine thingamajig you were telling me about?" He and Bischoff have had a lot of time to shoot the breeze. "Yeah." Shaftoe's desperate. But he's also highly irritable, which serves him well now. "You expect me to believe that you are just a crazy guy who is curious about Enigma, and not a German naval officer who's dressed up in a straitjacket to trick me?" Bischoff is exasperated. "I already said that I've told Dönitz that Enigma is crap! So if you tell me it's crap, that doesn't make any difference!" *** "Let me ask you a question, then," Root says. "Yes?" Beck says, making a visible effort to raise his eyebrows and look like he cares. "What have you told Charlottenburg about us?" "Names, ranks, serial numbers, circumstances of capture." "But you told them that yesterday." "Correct." "What have you told them recently?" "Nothing. Except for the serial number on the morphium bottle." "And how long after you told them that did they send you the message to stop extracting information from us?" "About forty five minutes," Beck says. "So, yes, I would very much like to ask you where that bottle came from. But it is against orders." *** "I might consider answering your question about Enigma," Shaftoe says, "if you tell me whether this pipe bomb is carrying any gold." Bischoff's brow furrows; he's having translation problems. "You mean money? Geld?" "No. Gold. The expensive yellow metal." "A little, maybe," Bischoff says. "Not petty cash," Shaftoe says. "Tons and tons." "No. U boats don't carry tons of gold," Bischoff says flatly. "I'm sorry you said that, Bischoff. Because I thought you and I were starting a good relationship. Then you went and lied to me you fuck!" To Shaftoe's surprise and mounting irritation, Bischoff thinks that it's absolutely hilarious to be called a fuck. "Why the hell should I lie to you? For god's sake, Shaftoe! Since you bastards broke Enigma and put radar on everything that moves, virtually every U boat that's put to sea has been sunk! Why would the Kriegsmarine load tons of gold onto a ship that they know is doomed! ?" "Why don't you ask the guys who loaded it on board U 553?" "Ha! This only proves you are full of shit!" Bischoff says. "U 553 was sunk a year ago, during a convoy attack." "Not so. I was on board it just a couple of months ago," Shaftoe says, "off Qwghlm. It was full of gold." "Bullshit," Bischoff says. "What was painted on its conning tower?" "A polar bear holding a beer stein." Long silence. "You want to know more? I went into the captain's cabin," Shaftoe said, "and there was a photo of him with some other guys, and now that I think of it, one of them looked like you." "What were we doing?" "You were all in swimming trunks. You all had whores on your laps!" Shaftoe shouts. "Unless those were your wives in which case I'm sorry your wife is a whore!" "Oh, ho ho ho ho ho!" Bischoff says. He rolls onto his back and stares up into the plumbing for a while, considering this, and then continues. "Ho ho ho ho ho ho ho!" "What, did I just say something secret? Fuck you and your mother if I did," Shaftoe says. "Beck!" Bischoff screams. "Achtung!" "What're you doing?" Shaftoe asks. "Getting you your morphine." "Oh. Thank you." Half an hour later, the skipper's there. Pretty punctual by officer standards. He and Bischoff talk for a while in German. Shaftoe hears the word morphium several times. Finally, the skipper summons the medic, who pokes the needle into Shaftoe's arm and injects about half of it. "You have something to say?" the skipper asks Shaftoe. Seems like a nice enough guy. They all seem like pretty nice guys, now. First, Shaftoe addresses Bischoff. "Sir! I'm sorry I used harsh language on you, sir!" "It's okay," Bischoff replied, "she was a whore, like you said." The skipper clears his throat impatiently. "Yeah. I was just wondering," Shaftoe says turning to the skipper, "you have any gold on this U boat?" "The yellow metal?" "Yeah. Bars of it." The captain is still nonplussed. Shaftoe is beginning to feel a certain mischievous satisfaction. Playing with officers' minds isn't as good as having a brain saturated with highly refined opiates, but it will do in a pinch. "I thought all these U boats carried it," he says. Beck dismisses the medic. Then he and Bischoff talk about Shaftoe for a while in German. In the middle of this conversation, Beck drops some kind of a bomb on Bischoff. Bischoff is stunned, and refuses to believe it for a while, and Beck keeps telling him it's true. Then Bischoff goes back into that strange ho ho ho thing. "He can't ask you questions," Bischoff says. "Orders from Berlin. Ho, ho! But I can." "Shoot," Shaftoe says. "Tell us more about gold." "Give me more morphine." Beck summons the medic again, and the medic gives him the rest of the syringe. Shaftoe's never felt better. What a fucking deal! He's getting morphine out of the Germans in exchange for telling them German military secrets. Bischoff starts interrogating Shaftoe in depth, while Beck watches. Shaftoe tells the whole story of U 553 about three times over. Bischoff is fascinated, Beck looks sad and scared. When Shaftoe mentions that the gold bars had Chinese characters stamped on them, both Beck and Bischoff are floored. Their faces come aglow, as if lit up by the scanning beam of a Leigh light on a moonless night. Beck begins to sniffle, as if he's caught a cold, and Shaftoe's startled to realize that he's actually crying. He is crying tears of shame. But Bischoff is still fascinated and focused. Then a mate bursts in and hands Beck a message. The mate is clearly shocked and scared out of his wits. He keeps looking, not at Beck, but at Bischoff. Beck gets a grip on himself and reads the message. Bischoff lunges out of his bunk, hooks his chin over Beck's shoulder, and reads it at the same time. They look like a two headed circus geek who hasn't bathed since the Hoover Administration. Neither speaks for at least a minute. Bischoff is silent because his mental wheels are spinning like the gyroscope of a torpedo. Beck is silent because he's on the verge of blacking out. Outside the cabin, Shaftoe can hear the news, whatever it is, traveling up and down the length of the U boat with the speed of sound. Some of the men are shouting in rage, some sobbing, some laughing hysterically. Shaftoe figures a big battle must have been won, or lost. Maybe Hitler's been assassinated. Maybe Berlin's been sacked. Beck is now visibly terrified. The medic enters. He has adopted an erect military posture the first time Shaftoe's seen such formality on the U boat. He addresses Beck briefly in German. Beck nods continuously while the medic is talking. Then he helps the doctor get Bischoff out of his straitjacket. Bischoff's a bit stiff, a bit unsteady, but he limbers up fast. He's shorter than average, with a strong frame and a trim waist, and as he pounces from bunk to deck, he reminds Shaftoe of a jaguar deploying itself from a tree. He shakes hands heartily with the medic, and with the miserable Beck. Then he opens the hatch that leads towards the control room. Half the crew is jammed into the gangway, watching that door, and when they see Bischoff, ecstasy floods over their faces and they erupt into wild cheering. Bischoff accepts handshakes from all of them, making his way towards his duty station like a politician through an adoring crowd. Beck slinks out the other hatch and loses himself among the hammering diesels. Shaftoe has no idea what the fuck's going on until Root shows up a quarter of an hour later. Root picks the message up off the deck and reads it. His perpetually bemused affect, normally so annoying, serves him well at times like this. "This is a broadcast to all ships at sea from German supreme naval command, Tirpitzufer, Berlin. It says that U 691 which is this boat we're on, Bobby has been boarded and captured by Allied commandos, and has already attacked and sunk a milchcow in the Atlantic. Now it appears to be on its way towards continental Europe where it will presumably try to infiltrate German naval bases and sink more ships. All German naval and air forces are ordered to be on the lookout for U 691 and to destroy it on sight." "Shit," Shaftoe says. "We are on the wrong boat at the wrong time," Root says. "What's the deal with that Bischoff character?" "He was relieved of command earlier. Now he's back." "That maniac's running the boat?" "He is the captain," Root says. "Well, where's he going to take us?" "I'm not sure if even he knows that." *** Bischoff goes to his cabin and pours himself a slug of that Armagnac. Then he goes to the chart room, which he's always preferred to his cabin. The chart room is the only civilized place on the whole boat. It's got a beautiful sextant in a polished wooden box, for example. Speaking tubes converge here from all over the boat, and even though no one is speaking into them directly, he can hear snatches of conversation from them, the distant clamor of the diesels, the zap of a deck of cards being shuffled, the hiss of fresh eggs hitting the griddle. Fresh eggs! Thank god they managed to rendezvous with the milchcow before she was sunk. He unrolls a small scale chart that encompasses the whole Northeast Atlantic, divided into numbered and lettered grid squares for convoy hunting. He should be looking at the southern part of the chart, which is where they are now. But eyes are drawn, again and again, northwards to the Qwghlm Archipelago. Put it at the center of a clock. Then Great Britain is at five and six o'clock, and Ireland is at seven o'clock. Norway is due east, at three o'clock. Denmark is just south of Norway, at four o'clock, and at the base of Denmark, where it plugs into Germany, is Wilhelmshaven. France, home to so many U boats, is far, far to the south completely out of the picture. A U boat that was headed from the open sea towards a safe port on Fortress Europe would just go to the French ports on the Bay of Biscay Lorient, most likely. Getting to Germany's North Sea and Baltic ports would be a far longer and more complicated and dangerous trip. The U boat would have to get around Great Britain somehow. To the south, it would have to make a dash up the Channel, which (setting aside that it's a bottleneck, crackling with British radar) has been turned into a maze of sunken block ships and minefields by those Royal Navy spoil sports. There is a lot more room up north. Assuming Shaftoe's story is true and there must be some truth in it, or else where would he have gotten the morphine bottle then it should have been a reasonably simple matter for U 553 to get around Great Britain via the northern route. But U boats almost always had mechanical problems to some degree, especially after they had been at sea for a while. This might cause a skipper to hug the coast rather than taking to the open seas, where there would be no hope of survival if the engines shut down entirely. During the last couple of years, stricken U boats had been abandoned on the coasts of Ireland and Iceland. But supposing that an ailing, coast hugging U boat happened to pass near the Royal Navy base at Qwghlm at just the time some other U boat was staging a raid there, as Shaftoe claimed. Then the dragnet of destroyers and airplanes that was sent out to capture the raiders could quite easily capture U 553, especially if her ability to maneuver were impaired to begin with. There are two implausibilities in Shaftoe's story. One, that a U boat would be carrying a trove of solid gold. Two, that a U boat would be headed for German ports instead of one of the French ports. But these two together are more plausible than either one of them by itself. A U boat carrying that much gold might have very good reasons for going straight to the Fatherland. Some highly placed person wanted to keep this gold secret. Not just secret from the enemy, but secret from other Germans as well. Why are the Japanese giving gold to Germans? The Germans must be giving them something they need in return: strategic materials, plans for new weapons, advisors, something like that. He writes out a message: Dönitz! It is Bischoff. I am back in command. Thank you for the pleasant vacation. Now I am refreshed. How uncivilized for you to order that we should be sunk. There must be a misunderstanding. Can we not discuss it face to face? A drunken polar bear told me some fascinating things. Perhaps I will broadcast this information in an hour or so. Since I do not trust the Enigma anyway, I will not bother to encrypt it. Yours respectfully, Bischoff *** A flock of white Vs migrates north from Gibraltar across a sunlit sea. At the apex of each V is a nitlike mote. The motes are ships, hauling megatons of war crap, and thousands of soldiers from North Africa (where their services are no longer needed) to Great Britain. That's how it looks to the pilots of the airplanes over the Bay of Biscay. All of those pilots and all of those planes are English or American the Allies own Biscay now and have turned it into a crucible for U boat crews. Most of the Vs track straight parallel courses northwards, but a few of them curl and twist incessantly: these are destroyers, literally running circles around the plodding transports, pinging. Those tin cans will protect the convoys; the pilots of the airplanes who are trying to find U 691 can therefore search elsewhere. The powerful sun casts a deep shadow in front of each ship; the eyes of the lookouts, irised down to pinpoints and squinting against the maritime glare, can no more penetrate that shade than they could see through plywood. If they could, they might notice that one of the big transports in the front rank has got some kind of unusual attachment: a pipe sticking vertically out of the water just in front and to one side of its bow. Actually it is a cluster of pipes, one sucking in air, another spewing diesel exhaust, another carrying a stream of information in the form of prismatically reflected light. Follow that data stream a few yards down into the water and you will enter the optic nerve of one Kapitänleutnant Günter Bischoff. This in turn leads to his brain, which is highly active. In the age of sonar, Bischoffs U boat was a rat in a dark, cluttered, infinite cellar, hiding from a man who had neither torch nor lantern: only two rocks that would spark when banged together. Bischoff sank a lot of ships in those days. One day, while he was on the surface, trying to make some time across the Caribbean, a Catalina appeared out of nowhere. It came from a clear blue sky and so Bischoff had plenty of time to dive. The Catalina dropped a few depth charges and then went away; it must have been at the end of its range. Two days later, a front moved in, the sky became mostly cloudy, and Bischoff made the mistake of relaxing. Another Catalina found them: this one used the clouds to conceal his approach, waited until U 691 was crossing a patch of sunlit water, and then dove, centering his own shadow on the U boat's bridge. Fortunately, Bischoff had double sun sector air lookouts. This was a jargonic way of saying that at any given moment, two shirtless, stinking, unshaven, sunburned men were standing on the deck, casting shadows over their eyes with their outstretched hands. One of these men said something in a quizzical tone of voice, which alerted Bischoff. Then both lookouts were torn apart by a rocket. Five more of Bischoffs men were wounded by cannon fire and rockets before Bischoff could get the boat under the surface. The next day, the front had covered the sky with low blue grey clouds from horizon to horizon. U 691 was far out of sight of land. Even so, Bischoff had Holz, his chief engineer, take her up to periscope depth first. Bischoff scanned the horizon meticulously. Satisfied that they were perfectly alone, he had Holz bring her to the surface. They fired up the diesels and pointed the boat east. Their mission was finished, their boat was damaged, it was time to go home. Two hours later a flying boat bellied down through the cloud layer and dropped a skinny black egg on them. Bischoff was up on the bridge, enjoying some fresh air, and had the presence of mind to scream some thing about evasive action into the speaking tube. Metzger, the helms man, instantly took it hard to starboard. The bomb plunged into the water exactly where the deck of U 691 would have been. It continued in that vein until they got far away from land. When they finally limped back to their base at Lorient, Bischoff told this story to his superiors in tones of superstitious awe, when they finally broke the news to him that the enemy had this new thing called radar. Bischoff studied it and read the intelligence reports: the Allies were even putting the shit on airplanes now! It could see your periscope! His U boat is no longer a rat in a dark cellar. Now it is a wingless horsefly dragging itself across an immaculate tablecloth in the streaming light of the afternoon sun. Dönitz, bless him, is trying to build new U boats that can stay submerged all the time. But he has to beg for every ton of steel and for the services of every engineer. In the meantime there is this stopgap measure, the Schnorkel, which is just plumbing: a pipe that sticks up out of the water and enables you to run on diesel power, just beneath the surface. Even the Schnorkel will show up on radar, but less brilliantly. Every time U 691 surfaces for more than an hour, Holz is up there working on the Schnorkel, welding new bits on, grinding old bits off, wrapping it in rubber or some other stuff that he hopes will absorb the radar. The engineers who installed the Schnorkel in Lorient six months ago wouldn't recognize it now because it has evolved, like shrews evolving into tigers. If Bischoff can just get U 691 back to a safe port, others can learn from Holz's innovations, and the few U boats that haven't been sunk can derive some benefit from the experiment. He snaps out of it. This must be how officers die, and get their men killed: they spend more time reviewing the past than planning for the future. It is nothing short of masturbation for Bischoff to be thinking about all of this. He must concentrate. He doesn't have to worry so much about being sunk by Germans. As soon as he sent Dönitz the message threatening to broadcast the information about the gold, Dönitz retracted his general order to sink U 691. But there is the possibility that some ship might have received the first order but missed the second one, so he still has to watch himself. Big deal. There is hardly any German Navy left to sink him anyway. He can worry about being sunk by the Allies instead. They will be intently irritated when they figure out that he has been shadowing this convoy for two whole days. Bischoff is pretty irritated himself, it is a fast convoy that protects itself by zigzagging, and if U 691 does not zigzag in perfect unison with the ship above it, it will either be crushed by her, or blunder out of her shadow and be noticed. This has put quite a strain on skipper and crew, and quite a drain on the boat's supply of benzedrine. But they've covered five hundred miles! Soon, fatal Biscay will be behind them, Brittany will be off to starboard, and Bischoff will have a choice: hang a right into the