The Mediterranean Caper

The Mediterranean Caper Read Free

Book: The Mediterranean Caper Read Free
Author: Clive Cussler
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and listened hard over the droning roar of the PBY Catalina’s twin engines. The voice he heard was fading, when it should have been getting stronger. The volume control was turned to full-on, and Brady Field was only thirty miles away. Under those conditions, the air traffic operator’s voice should have blasted Pitt’s eardrums out. The operator is either losing power or he’s seriously injured, thought Pitt. He pondered a minute and then reached over to his right and shook the sleeping figure in the co-pilot’s seat.
    â€œCome out of it, sleeping beauty.” He spoke in a tone that was soft and effortless, yet had a way of making itself heard in a throbbing airplane or a crowded room.
    Captain Al Giordino wearily raised his head and yawned loudly. The fatigue of sitting in an old vibrating PBY flying boat for thirteen hours straight was evident in his dark, bloodshot eyes. He flung his arms upward, puffed out his barrel chest and stretched. Then he came erect and leaned forward, peering out in the distance beyond the cockpit windows.
    â€œAre we over the First Attempt yet?” Giordino mumbled through another yawn.
    â€œAlmost,” replied Pitt. “There’s Thasos dead ahead.”
    â€œOh hell,” Giordino grunted; then grinned. “I could have slept another ten minutes. Why’d you wake me?”
    â€œI intercepted a message from Brady Control that said the field was under attack by an unidentified aircraft.”
    â€œYou can’t be serious,” Giordino said incredulously. “It must be some kind of a joke.”
    â€œNo, I don’t think so. The control operator’s voice didn’t sound like it was faking.” Pitt hesitated and kept an eye on the water only fifty feet away as it flashed under the PBY’s hull. Just for practice he had wave-hopped the last two hundred miles; a means of keeping his reflexes honed and sharp.
    â€œIt might be that Brady Control was telling the truth,” said Giordino, peering through the cockpit windshield. “Look over there toward the eastern part of the island.”
    Both men stared at the approaching mound rising out of the sea. The beaches bordering the surf were yellow and barren, but the round sloping hills were green with trees. The colors danced in the heat waves and vividly contrasted against the encircling blue of the Aegean. On the eastern side of Thasos a large pillar of smoke rose into the windless sky and formed a giant, spiral-shaped, black cloud. The PBY’s bow soared closer to the island, and soon they could distinguish the orange movement of flames at the base of the smoke.
    Pitt grabbed the mike and pressed the button on the side of the handgrip. “Brady Control, Brady Control, this is PBY-086, over.” There was no response. Pitt repeated the call twice more.
    â€œNo answer?” queried Giordino.
    â€œNothing,” returned Pitt.
    â€œYou said an unidentified aircraft . I take it that means one?”
    â€œThat’s precisely what Brady Control said before they went off the air.”
    â€œIt doesn’t make sense. Why would one plane attack a United States Air Force Base?”
    â€œWho knows,” Pitt said, easing the control column back slightly. “Maybe it’s an irate Greek farmer who’s tired of our jets scaring his goats. Anyway, it can’t be a full-scale attack, or Washington would have notified us by now. We’ll have to wait and see.” He rubbed his eyes and blinked away the drowsiness. “Get ready. I’m going to take her up, circle in over those hills and come down out of the sun for a closer look.”
    â€œTake it nice and easy.” Giordino’s eyebrows came together and he grinned a serious grin. “This old bus is way overmatched if that’s a rocket firing jet down there.”
    â€œDon’t worry.” Pitt laughed. “My main goal in life is to stay healthy as long as

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