As governments, corporations, and public
institutions face mounting pressure around security and global stability, Crude
by Mike Bond frames its story inside that same intensity. A sudden emergency
warning becomes the pivot point for a crisis shaped by political friction and
worldwide stakes.
The story launches with a startling
emergency alert warning Americans to take shelter from a nuclear strike. As
global tensions skyrocket, the U.S. moves closer to a confrontation with
Russia. Ross Bullock, Rawhide Energy’s CEO, steps in with a warning he hopes
will stop disaster. But instead of alerting the public, the press turns the
message into a political battleground. Things escalate when a Rawhide Energy
platform is blown apart in the South China Sea, killing hundreds and signaling
that the threat is deeper than anyone realized. Crossing high-stakes regions
and power structures, Crude explores how political aggression, financial
pressure, and global intelligence collide when the world is already teetering
on the edge.
Mike Bond is the author of nearly a dozen
bestselling novels and an ecologist, war and human rights journalist,
award-winning poet, and international energy expert. His work spans more than
thirty countries across seven continents, often drawn from firsthand
experiences in remote, dangerous, and war-torn regions. His novels are praised
worldwide for their intricate plots, vivid settings, and explosive pacing. His
reporting has covered wars, revolutions, terrorism, and major environmental
crises. Learn more at his website.
Amazon: https://bit.ly/4ocGtKG
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/214299686-crude
B L O O
D I N
T H E WAT E R
The shark hit so hard he thought it was a ship
keel out of the deep, its gritty hide rasping his thigh and its huge tail
ripping a dive fin off his foot. He yanked a
repellant tube from his divepack, fumbled and lost it, couldn’t see it in his
headlamp, faced the shark but it wasn’t there, was above him, to the left,
below, grinning jaws.
He dove, grabbing for the repellant, watching the
shark. It attacked, feinted and dodged, the biggest tiger shark he’d ever seen.
His hand bumped the repellant, knocking it away. He grasped for it, trying to
circle to face the shark, to stay upright despite the missing fin. Don’t panic.
The shark dove, then rose toward him, teeth
glinting in his head‐ lamp. His wrist grazed the repellant, driving it lower.
He snapped on his Orca torch, looked around frantically for Two, but the other
diver wasn’t there.
Don’t panic.
He sank deeper. His face touched the tube. He
grabbed and squeezed it, repellant blinding his mask. The shark circled once,
slid into the depths.
The repellant faded. He coughed, realized he had
spit out his mouthpiece. He shoved it in, gurgled water, coughed and spit it
out. His legs and feet were still there. The shark had just nicked him, tested
him. Maybe it had smelled blood from when he’d torn his knee climbing out of
the sub.
Or blood from someone else?
Where was Two?
The shark darted beneath him. He wanted to shine
his torch at it, but that might attract it, anger it. He pulled in his legs and
yanked out a second tube. Black repellant spurted out.
Don’t panic.
One tube left. The rebreather thundered with his
panting. Larger and larger, the shark nosed toward him through clouds of
repellant, crunching its jaws.
He ripped off his divepack, the rebreather
hissing, and smashed the shark’s snout. It dove, tail slamming him sideways,
swung round and began to circle him, closer and closer.
Don’t panic.
Faster the shark circled. With only one fin he
couldn’t keep up; it would get him. He fired the last repellant.
It clouded the water and he couldn’t see the
shark, only felt the crush of water as it smashed past, couldn’t hear over his
own frantic gasps. Choking and crying, he shoved his arms back through the
divepack straps, tugged up his legs against his body.
Beyond his torch light the watery darkness
expanded forever. Without Two, how could he finish? Should he return to the
sub? Maybe Two was already there, had abandoned the mission because of the
shark? There’d been no message from the sub.
The water grew colder, darker; he was sinking too
deep. The repellant was gone. With tiger sharks, he remembered, when there’s
one, there’s many.
His watch showed 38 feet. He couldn’t see the
shark. Fish schooled past, fusiliers or jacks.
01:52, the watch said. One hour left. If one
diver didn’t reach the platform, the other had to do it alone. He turned to 347
degrees and began to swim, slowly kicking the one fin.
Above him the black waves glinted with light. He
ached to go up, but the shark would attack if he rose to the top like a dying
fish. He swam toward the light till it brightened the wavetops, then surfaced
quickly to check his approach.
Before him, a wide platform of brilliant lights
towered ten stories into the night, a glittering city on pylons over the waves,
its gas flare blazing across the black sky.
A school of barracuda shot like missiles beneath
him. He checked his watch: 02:03. He sank back into the gloom and swam
northeast toward a huge metal strut descending into the sea. His first position
– the southeast corner pylon.
In the oily rushing darkness there was no sign of
Two. For an instant, he wondered who Two was – on missions like this you never
knew the others’ names, you just had numbers.
Waves roiled round the pylon, greasy and
oil-turbid, slamming him against the barnacles and clams on the steel. Bounced
back and forth, he tried to set his course northwest at 320 degrees and almost
swam into another strut of the pylon, so big it took him half a minute to go
around it.
Fish struck his face – butterflies and angels and
little trash feeders drawn to his headlamp.
The platform’s light dissolved down through the
oily water. 02:19. He sank below it, watching for the shark, for sea snakes and
scorpion fish.
At the platform’s center, a huge cluster of four
pipes descended straight down. They roared with the gas rushing up them toward
the platform above.
Easy part now. He touched a pipe, then yanked
back his hand. That gas comes out of the earth at boiling point. And a burn
attracts sharks just like blood.
He was losing it, too worried about the shark,
about Two. Don’t panic.
Above him, waves lashed the pylons, fell back on
themselves and raveled on. Oil streaked the surface, distorting the light from
the platform’s flare. How strange, he thought, to bore into the earth. Suck
life from the past. And burn it in the sky.
He dove down the pipes to fifty feet, where a
great steel ring clamped the four pipes together. The bolts on each flange were
big as his head. He unslung the divepack and took out a heavy package. It was
solid, malleable, crescent-shaped, as long as his forearm. He pinned it into
place under the lower flange, near one of the four hot pipes.
He placed a second charge against the upper
flange. Unrolling the coil of wire that linked them to two other charges from
his pack, he swam a third of the way around the pipes till the wire grew taut,
and fitted the two other charges above and below the flange.
On the unrolled wire midway between the two pairs
of charges was a water-sealed box like a soap dish that he tucked under the
flange. He ran his finger and thumb along each wire; there were no kinks, no
cuts.
02:47 – ahead of schedule, despite the shark.
Even without Two. When his watch hit 02:55, he pushed a two-inch button on the
right side of the water-sealed box, then swam up to twenty feet below surface
and southward from the platform, rechecking his watch often for depth and
direction. He craved to shine down his torch to check for the shark, but that
would only attract it.
Don’t panic.
You can do this in your sleep. In seven minutes
you’ll be back in the sub. Fuck Two.
Far below, a huge shape crossed the deep. No, he
begged. Please no. He lit the torch. The shape undulated onward, trailing
phosphores‐ cence. A giant squid.
But now he’d turned on his torch.
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