Page 134 of Devil's Gate (NUMA Files 9)
She could see no way to stop it.
Suddenly, Klaxons began to sound. Andras reacted, and the door opened seconds later.
âWhat the hell is going on?â Andras demanded.
A breathless crewman stood there. âProblem in the reactor compartment.â
âA leak?â he asked.
âNo,â the man said. âWe have an intruder.â
Andras laughed. âAn intruder? Are you sure? Weâre twelve hundred miles from the nearest land.â
âI know,â the man said. âI canât say how it happened. No ships or boats have come close to us. Sonar has detected no undersea craft. Maybe a stowaway,â he guessed finally.
âAlso unlikely,â Andras said with supreme confidence. âMore probable, someoneâs drunk and making a very big mistake.â
Katarina could hear the anger in his voice. She wouldnât want to be the crewman who might be making that mistake.
âAll the crew are accounted for,â the man said. âOne of the engineers is dead, another was beaten up by an American commando with silver hair.â
Katarinaâs face lit up.
âSilver hair?â Andras said, suddenly tensing.
The crewman nodded.
âAustin,â Andras muttered slowly.
Katarina hoped so. She couldnât figure out how it was possible, but she hoped it was true.
Andras saw it.
âLook at your eyes,â he said sarcastically. âAll full of hope. You wonât make much of an agent if thatâs the best you can hide your feelings.â
âIâm not an agent,â she said.
âClearly.â He sounded disgusted.
âWeâre looking for him now,â the crewman said, interrupting. âBut he ran through the Fulcrum bay and vanished.â
âThis is a ship,â Andras said. âThere are only so many places to go. Keep searching. Iâll be on the bridge. Post guards at all entrances to the Fulcrum and near the reactors. Shoot anything that approaches either.â
; The crewman nodded, and Andras looked at his watch. âWe have nineteen minutes. Keep him at bay that long, and Iâll hunt him down myself.â
The crewman left. Andras grabbed Katarina by the wrist and dragged her into the hall. Two doors down, he opened her cabin, threw her in the chair, and tied her up once again. Hands first, behind the back of the chair, and then her feet.
âIâd hoped to have more fun with you,â he said, âbut itâll have to wait. Donât worry, you wonât need to pretend that youâre interested anymore. I donât care.â
With that, he stormed out, slamming and locking the door.
If ever there was a time to escape, she thought, now was it.
She pulled and twisted and tried desperately to slip the ropes, but they only grew tighter. She looked around the room. Nothing sharp presented itself; no knives, no letter opener, no scissors. But that didnât mean she would give up.
She rocked the chair back and forth until it fell over. Now on the floor, she dragged it, moving along like an inchworm with a stone on its back and making about as much progress. Finally, she had inched her way over to the small desk.