Authors: Patrick Robinson
The CO picked up his bags and made his way to the control center, where there was already activity. The fishing boat was signaling about a mile off their port bow. Ben ordered them to surface and make their way toward the boat. The night outside was frigid, but the sea was calm, and the skies were clear. “We’ll make a straight ship-to-ship transfer,” he said. “Put the fisherman on your starboard side…deck crew to their stations.” Then he turned, removed his right glove, and asked his senior officers to enter the control center.
He said that he had been privileged to fight with men such as they. “And I believe you will all become very fine submariners. You have learned thoroughly and learned quickly…and I shall miss each one of you, although I have high hopes that we shall meet again.”
Then he paused, and an immense sadness settled upon him as he prepared to part from the men with whom he had lived and worked for so long. For a moment he seemed lost for words, but then he extended his right palm, and, echoing the words of another commander, he said softly, “I should be obliged if each of you would come and take me by the hand.”
And as they did so, they each understood the meaning of the word “camaraderie,” as perhaps only fighting men can, those who have faced danger together, but somehow come through it. Most of these young Iranians had been with their Iraqi-born leader for well over a year. Most of them had gone into the water with him in the outer reaches of Plymouth Sound on that black night when they had stolen the submarine. It was not yet clear in their minds that they were the most hunted men in the world. But they knew it was not over yet.
By now the deck crew was preparing to secure
Unseen
alongside the still-moving, aged, rusting 200-tonner,
Flower of Scotland.
And there was urgency in their every move. Out there were the search ships of both the United States Navy and the Royal Navy. And the Iranians intended to be on the surface for the minimum time. It was understood among them that they would dive the submarine and, if necessary, leave the commander in the water should they be threatened.
And now the fishing boat was lowering big fenders very low, its engines reversing, the captain himself throwing a looped continuous line over the rail to the submarine for the CO’s bags. Commander Adnam had his life jacket on, and they were hitching two lifelines to his belt. Transfers of this type can be extremely dangerous in the dark in mid-ocean, and there was tension in the air.
The wide gangway was pushed out under the rail of the fishing boat, and the submarine’s deck crew hauled it over. They had just made it secure, when, somewhat to Ben’s surprise, a submarine officer he had seen several times in Bandar Abbas walked across and joined him on the casing.
“Good evening, Commander,” he said. “I am Lieutenant Commander Alaam. I was responsible for hiring the boat; you will return it to Mallaig. The skipper knows the way.”
“But I understood you were coming back with me,” replied Adnam.
“Change of plan, sir. I am taking over
Unseen
all the way home.”
“I see. But I have not briefed you.”
“I presume you have briefed someone, sir.”
“Of course. The navigation officer, Lieutenant Commander Rajavi, is in a position to take command. But the matter is nothing to do with me. I should speak to him immediately if I were you.”
“Yessir. Good-bye, sir.”
Commander Adnam turned once more to face his deck team for the last time. “Allah go with you,” he said.
“And also with you, sir,” replied one of them.
And with that Benjamin Adnam walked across to the
Flower of Scotland
and ordered the skipper to let go all lines and head due east with all speed. He stood on deck in the biting wind and watched
Unseen
pull away, running south. One minute later she was gone, beneath the dark waters of the North Atlantic in which she had caused such havoc.
Then he turned and went immediately to the bridge and asked Captain Gregor Mackay to join him alone on the deck. His request was simple. “I want you to stop this ship immediately and hand over to me the rigid inflatable you have on the stern, I want her filled with petrol, and ready to go in five minutes. Also put a full four-and-a-half-gallon jerry can in the boat. Do it yourself, no one else.”
“I canna do that,” said the captain, in a broad Scottish brogue. “I dinnae even own the ship.”
Ben smiled at the old familiar accent he had heard so often during his days training at Faslane. He pushed away a million memories of the Scotland of his younger days and returned quickly to business, a subject he knew sits easily with any Scotsman, especially a fisherman. “How much is the Zodiac worth? She’s a 15-footer, right? With a 60 h.p. outboard?”
“Yessir. I suppose £6,000, sir.”
“Then if I give you £10,000 in cash, you’ll be well ahead, correct?”
“Yessir.”
“Then hurry, man,” snapped the commander, reaching into his bag for the cash and watching with some satisfaction as the fisherman from the Western Isles moved aft and began to fill the tank with gasoline.
Seven minutes later, the ship was stationary, and the Zodiac was in the water, secured by a painter to the port-side rail. Commander Adnam handed over the money, and Captain Mackay counted it out very carefully. “Aye, sir, I think 200 of these 50-pound notes adds up very nicely.”
Ben grabbed his bags, threw them down into the rubberized Zodiac. He climbed over the side, dropped onto the firm GRP deck, revved the engine, slammed her into gear, and took off into the night. Captain Mackay watched him go, half in amazement, half in ecstasy. “That young man is in a very great hurry,” he muttered. “But it was a pleasure doing business with him.”
Ben Adnam moderated the speed as soon as he had put 200 yards between the Zodiac and the
Flower of Scotland.
He checked his global positioning system, then the compass, and settled into a steady 15 knots, which he would hold in an easterly direction for a little over two hours. He did not yet refer to his map. Instead, he made himself comfortable on the long rubber seat behind the wheel, pulled up his hood, and watched the lights of the fishing boat, heading southeast, over his right shoulder.
The night was bitterly cold, but still clear as he moved swiftly across the calm sea. There was a slight swell, but the Zodiac rode that perfectly, the silence of the seascape broken only by the high-pitched whine of the well-tuned outboard. So far as Ben could tell there was no other ship in the vicinity, save for the
Flower of Scotland,
the lights of which he could still see 2 miles away.
He checked his watch, which was still set for Greenwich Mean Time, and saw that it was 2320. He glanced again at the running lights of the fishing boat; then he turned back toward the east, where a rising moon was casting a thin silver path on the sea, lighting his way.
Nonetheless, the mighty red-and-orange flash that lit up the sky over his right shoulder still turned the night into day. Two seconds later the thunder of the blast split the night air as the
Flower of Scotland
and her three-man crew were blown to pieces by a bomb that detonated right behind her engine.
Ben Adnam watched the burning wreckage scatter downward onto the water. Then he shook his head, shrugged, and kept heading east.
He knew it was a bomb. A torpedo from
Unseen
would have caused quite another kind of explosion, more muffled, less spectacular. And yet he was curious. Because he saw in his mind the tense, worried look there had been on the face of Lieutenant Commander Alaam. He remembered the way there had been no time for even the warm exchange of greetings so prevalent in the Muslim world. No time to discuss anything, not even to deliver the congratulations of their masters. Not a word about the success of the operation. Not even civility. Not even approval, far less warmth.
The Iranian, in Ben’s view, had been a man on the edge of his nerves, taut, dry-mouthed, and desperate to get away. He had been too overwrought even to offer a reasoned explanation for the change of plan. In Commander Adnam’s view, he might as well have carried a placard with him which stated he had just booby-trapped the
Flower of Scotland
in order to kill their redundant employee, who knew too much.
But Ben Adnam was still curious. “I wonder why,” he asked the empty ocean. “After all that I have done, some people still assume that I may be a fool?”
So many lessons, for so many people. “Especially Captain Mackay,” he mused. “That was a hard way to learn there’s no such thing as a free lunch.”
His own situation was, however, only marginally better than that of the late master of the
Flower of Scotland.
Betrayed first by Iraq, and now by Iran, he felt the horizons closing in. He understood the reasoning of the Ayatollahs—that he, Benjamin, was just too much of a liability. If they offered him shelter and perhaps more work in Iran, it would be a only matter of time before someone put together the pieces that made up his murderous six-week reign of terror in the North Atlantic.
The Americans were plainly not going to sit still and forget about the acts of mass destruction he had perpetrated. There would be men in the Pentagon and the CIA, perhaps even the White House, who would never rest until he was caught. He knew, too, the icy cunning of the British military, who would eventually learn of his whereabouts and come after him.
The Ayatollahs would be crazy to harbor him; he had always known that. It was nonetheless an emotional, if not intellectual, shock, that they had attempted to execute him quite so summarily, within a couple of hours of his leaving the superb submarine he had acquired for them.
On reflection,
he thought,
I’m glad I played it safe. I just hope my crew is as lucky.
He had experienced the feeling of desolation when he had walked from Baghdad almost two years previously. But that night it was a hundred times worse. Because he could not go back to the Middle East, where he was wanted as no Arab had ever been wanted. Three powerful governments, Israel, Iraq, and Iran, had all made determined attempts to assassinate him. He had to face it. There was
nowhere
for him to go. He was, as usual, on his own.
For the moment, he must concentrate on survival in the short run. He could feel the chill of the night upon his face as the Zodiac ran on toward the island. He pulled out his chart, and he checked the GPS and the compass. He held the little boat steady on course zero-nine-zero and, facing the east, prayed silently to his God to forgive him.
The trouble was, he needed to get into his bag for the flashlight, and he needed time to look at his chart, just to check. Rather than attempt to hold his course during those routine navigational procedures, he switched off the motor and stopped. And there, solitary in the gusting chill of the Atlantic, Ben Adnam once more studied his bearings. He had already programmed in the way points, and after two minutes of checking, he kicked over the engine and headed east again, course, zero-nine-zero.
As expected, the GPS told him he was about 15 miles west of the four lonely, uninhabited islands of St. Kilda, which sit in gale-swept isolation, at the mercy of the open Atlantic, 50 miles west of the rest of the Hebridean Islands, and 110 miles from the Scottish mainland. They are the most westerly point of the British Isles, save for the great granite slab of Rockall, which lies another 180 miles closer to North America.
Commander Adnam was headed for the largest of the St. Kilda group, named Hirta, which is these days referred to simply as St. Kilda, separate from the trio of tiny neighboring islands of Soay, Boreray, and Rona. The combined population of the four is easy to calculate. Zero.
Before the 1800s the only way out to St. Kilda from the Scottish mainland was in a rowboat pulled by the men of the Isle of Skye. It took several days, and nights, and even today it can be impossible to make a landing in the massive seas that have battered the islands since the dawn of time.
Ben knew the problems, and he knew how swiftly the weather could change out there. He could feel the wind freshening a little from the southwest, and he thanked his God it was not from the southeast, because a gale from there renders the only landing place on the entire island, Village Bay, unapproachable. He had been to St. Kilda once before, during his submarine training with the Royal Navy, but they had not landed, and, so far as he knew, no British Navy warship had ever put into Village Bay. Not even in the deep water on the outer edges.
He just had to pray the weather held and that he could get into shelter unobserved. Instinct was telling him to open the throttle fully and go for it. But that would use too much gas. And, besides, much more important in his mind, it would betray panic, a lack of professionalism. Ben Adnam despised amateurs.
He shined the flashlight on the chart again, noted the depth of the water, and the precise position of his way points along the route to the beach. He noted once more that the southeastern tip of St. Kilda was separately named Dun, a high, jagged promontory, three-quarters of a mile long. The chart showed that there was a channel between Dun and the main part of the island. But it was very narrow, and shallow at low water, strewn with rocks. At one point the chart was showing zero depth at low tide, and the former commander of HMS
Unseen
had long assumed he would go right around the long headland of Dun, despite the extra twenty minutes running time that would add to his journey into Village Bay. If he revved the propeller on the rocky floor of the Dun channel, he knew he would be finished.
With the slight rise of the wind, the night grew a little darker, as lower clouds drifted northeastward out of the Atlantic, a high thin layer of cirrus, covering the moon. But none of it worried Ben. He knew everything he would see in the dim, diffused light. And he recognized the cloud for what it was, the precursor of an Atlantic low, bringing rain on a southwest wind, with reasonably warm temperatures.
Commander Adnam was satisfied he had his mission under tight control, including the weather, his precise course and position. Not for him the nagging dread of less experienced helmsman at the dead of night with no radar, that of being swept against the cliffs or the rocks, in a following sea, which he had.