"No good. If we use the radio they'll pick us up and pinpoint our location right down to the last meter. I can't conceive of them not keeping a watch on the possible frequencies that we might use. All we can do is wait until they find us before calling for help.. The captain should be able to figure some way to give us covering fire… if not, then he can contact the Norwegians for help."
The four sat in silence for several minutes before Gadsen commented, "I sure as hell wouldn't give a plug nickel for our chances."
"Don't quit yet," Folsom warned. "We still have a couple of things in our favor. Number one, they have to move a lot more carefully than we do. They never know when Mac is going to open on them again, or even the Norwegians for that matter. They are in unfriendly territory. We, at least, can be assured of asylum in Norway. They can't.
"Number two, they don't know where we are, at least exactly where we are. And they don't know that the ship is standing off the coast… at least I hope they don't." The silence descended again, unbroken even by the roaring wind that had been their constant companion for so long. The silence was thick, thick and heavy with the threat of their total exhaustion and potential capture. Teleman settled down into the sleeping bag and pushed his thawing feet against the chemical warming pad. In spite of his utter exhaustion, his mind was churning with the implications of Folsom words. They did not have much chance. That much was clear to a blind idiot. There was still nine miles to go to the Norwegian base, nine more miles that would take them all day tomorrow in their steadily degenerating condition. He knew that he could not make it and he doubted very much if the others would be able to either. The temperature was dropping fast, and six miles over the frozen, knee-high tufts of tundra grass in forty-below weather was too much to expect of any man. His mind began turning insidiously back to the thoughts that had nagged at him during the endless day. Which of the three men had the orders to kill him?
Teleman groaned inwardly. He was certain that one of them would try to kill him, but which one. He could not watch all three at once. McPherson had the training and the skill, that he knew. He had also been very solicitous of him all day, almost carrying him since noon. But Gadsen — he had not learned very much about the man at all. Except for a few wise comments on their predicament during the day, he had not spoken much.… In the middle of his self-created maze of danger, Teleman's brain blanked and he was deeply asleep.
'Well, we can only wait and see what the new day brings,' Gadsen sighed. Folsom pulled on his face mask and gloves. "Yeah, I guess so." What else was there to say? he thought.
He slammed a new clip into his carbine and shoved extras into a pocket. "Night-night." He grinned and pulled the face mask tight, then pushed through the tent flaps and crawled outside.
The cold air hit him with the force of a truck, sucking the warm air from his body. Still on his knees, he curled into a tight ball, coughing into his fur-lined mittens, breathing slowly to avoid frosting his lungs. In a few moments the spasm passed and he straightened out, face still buried in his gloves while he breathed carefully to regain his breath. Even through the fur and nylon parka, the touch of the air was like hot iron. He stood up and began beating his arms together. We have to walk nine more miles through this, he thought, and he knew that they would never be able to make it, no matter what the circumstances were, no matter what the prize, up to and including life itself. It was an impossible task. But deep inside he knew that they would do it or die trying. Just as the Russians would catch them or die And he also knew that the Russians would not be waiting out the night in a tent — they would be using the night.
The harsh moon was a quarter of the way up in the sky. Its light falling on the freshly snow-covered ground gave him visibility almost to the horizon in every direction. The wind had died away completely, and in the frigid, still air his breath froze instantly, wreathing his head in a clammy fog if he stopped too long in one spot. The moon highlighted the tundra, with the hummocks of grass standing out in bold relief. Folsom had never dreamed it could be so cold. He had never experienced anything like this before.