‘I’ll have to brief the First Sea Lord; he’ll need to tell the Secretary of State tonight. This thing’s going to explode. The PM’ll be horrified. I’m having lunch with her at Downing Street tomorrow. Wants me to tell her all about Ocean Guardian. The Russians have lodged a formal complaint, calling it “provocative”. You’ll have heard on the news all that business about the Americans buzzing a Soviet merchantman bound for Cuba with MiG-29s on her deck? And the furious speech Savkin made this afternoon?’
‘I haven’t heard any news – been a bit busy . . .’
Waverley didn’t hear him, his mind running on what he would say to the Prime Minister.
‘If we’ve got a rogue submarine heading into the middle of all this, it’ll be like tossing a lighted match onto an oil spill. You will find her, won’t you?’
‘Sir, I don’t know. If Hitchens doesn’t want to be found, he’ll make it bloody difficult for us. We’ve got to face it, unless we can divert every ship and plane involved in Ocean Guardian to help with the search, we may not be able to stop him doing whatever he intends to do.’
‘Good God, man! We can’t do that! The whole world would know what’s happened. A Royal Navy nuclear submarine out of control? A British officer threatening a private war with the Soviets? This must never get out! You’ve got to stop him! I’m making you personally responsible for the operation. Set up a small command staff, give it a code name, and use your judgement. I’ll look after the politicians – leave them to me. You just get Hitchens back in line!’
Waverley stood up. His hands were trembling.
‘And now I’ve got to go back and entertain my guests without the editor of the Daily Telegraph suspecting anything!’
Andrew dropped three coins into the payphone, and dialled. He looked at his watch. It was nearly eleven o’clock.
‘Hello?’ Patsy sounded breathless when she eventually answered.
‘Hullo, darling. It’s me. Were you in the bath or something?’ he asked.
‘No, I’ve been out. Heard the phone when I switched off the car – came running in. Hence – breathless.’
‘Been somewhere nice?’
‘Hardly. Parents’ Association meeting. Bleagh! Usual stuff; anxious fathers wondering why their eight-year-olds aren’t being taught Shakespeare. Where are you? I thought you’d be at sea by now.’
‘Plan’s changed. I’m at Northwood. Can’t talk much. Just to say things are getting complicated. I still expect to be away for a while, so I shan’t be able to call you for a bit.’
‘It’s still this business with Philip?’
‘Yes, but I’m on a public phone, so I can’t go into details.’
‘Well . . . , all right, but when are you likely to be back? Have you no idea? The children’ll be home next weekend. You must be here then.’
Her voice sounded strained, angry even.
‘I just don’t know. A few days probably, that’s all.’
‘But it might be longer? Andrew, what is this?’
‘Look, I’ll ring you again when I can, but I may not be near a phone. Could you do something for me?’
‘What?’ she asked suspiciously.
‘It’s Sara. Could you keep an eye on her? Make an excuse to talk to her?’
‘What about?’
‘Well, you know – things. She’ll be pretty worried. And she hasn’t got anyone to talk to.’
‘Hasn’t she? I thought she had a knack of finding people . . .’
‘Patsy!’
He cursed the constraints of talking on an open phone line.
‘Darling, I can’t explain any more. But please do it. Say hello to Sara, will you? It’s deadly serious. And I chose that word carefully.’
There was silence from the other end, just the clicks and the hiss of the line.
‘Oh,’ she said, eventually. She sounded startled. ‘Oh, all right. I’ll look out for her.’
‘Good girl. And if she says anything which you think is important, then go and see Craig and tell him to pass it on to FOSM.’
‘How will I know what’s important?’
It was a reasonable question, but on the open phone he couldn’t explain.
‘You’ll have to use your loaf, love. Now I’ve got to go. I’ll see you . . . sometime.’
He wanted to be reassuring, but knew he had failed.
‘Be careful, won’t you?’
‘Don’t worry. Bye now!’
‘Bye. I love you, by the way.’
Andrew replaced the receiver, but left his hand resting on it. Could he have explained any better? Should he ring her back?
‘Ah, there you are!’ Admiral Bourlet’s gravel voice boomed across the reception area. ‘Let’s go into the bar for a moment. Just time for a nightcap.’
He led the way in. Only a handful of officers were drinking, most of them young and unattached. They stiffened at the sight of an Admiral but Bourlet waved at them to relax.
‘What’s yours?’
‘That’s kind of you, sir. I’ll have a horse’s neck.’
‘Make that two,’ the Admiral told the barman.
They retreated with their drinks to a far corner of the bar, where two large, leather armchairs remained unoccupied.
‘Right,’ Bourlet began softly. ‘The plan goes ahead as discussed this afternoon. I’m giving it the codename “Shadowhunt”. Trying to find a “T” class boat that doesn’t want to be found – it’s pretty apt.
‘Waverley’s given me carte blanche. Ops have talked to the Norwegians and they’re ready to help. Tenby’s been signalled and is on her way to a rendezvous with you. She’s got no clue what it’s about, of course. You’ll have to use your discretion how much you tell her.
‘The RAF’ll be ready for you at ten-thirty at Northolt. They want you there fifteen minutes before that. You’ve got your passport with you, I hope.’
‘Yes, sir. It’s in my bag. Standard kit. There is one thing I thought of, though. My job as I see it, apart from finding Truculent, is to talk to Philip on the underwater telephone. The trouble is, I’m bloody worried about what to say. I mean, it’s a bit like dealing with a gunman in a plane full of hostages.’
‘Damned good point,’ the Admiral growled. ‘And I know just the person you need to talk to. Young friend of mine . . .’
He cleared his throat noisily and rippled his eyebrows to indicate he was about to be indiscreet.
‘Surgeon-Commander Rush – Felicity Rush. Fleet psychiatrist. Based here at Northwood but travels all over the place dealing with mental problems. Delightful girl. Here . . .’
He reached into an inside pocket and pulled out an address book.
‘Look, I happen to have her home number – can’t imagine how.’ Bourlet smirked with self-satisfaction. ‘Why don’t you ring her – see if she can spare you an hour tomorrow first thing? I’d ring myself, but . . . , well, her husband’s around. Bit awkward, you know.’
His chuckle was like treacle.
‘I see. Been needing a little therapy yourself, sir?’ Andrew grinned.
‘Mmmm. Not a good topic in the current circumstances.’
‘Maybe not. I’ll try the number now.’
Andrew felt in his pocket for change, then headed for the payphone.
He returned a few minutes later.
‘Did you get her?’
Andrew nodded.
‘She’ll be here at eight in the morning.’
‘Good. Then I’ll bid you goodnight. Pop into my office for a word before you leave tomorrow, will you?’
* * *
HMS Truculent.
Lieutenant Commander Tim Pike ran a comb through his short, wavy hair. He always did that before going to bed, a hangover from his prep-school when Matron would inspect them all for neatness before lights-out.
It was after 0100 hrs. He’d stripped to his underpants for the night; there was no room on a submarine for luxuries like pyjamas. He looked at himself in the mirror, wondering if his ski
n still bore traces of the suntan acquired in Portugal four months earlier. His fiancée had insisted they go abroad to get rid of his undersea pallor.
Pike pulled at the elastic of his briefs to compare the untanned skin underneath with the rest.
‘Checking your knob’s still there?’ Paul Spriggs jibed, lifting the curtain and entering the cabin.
‘I don’t do that by looking at it,’ Pike quipped back, swinging himself up onto the top bunk. ‘Sandra asked me to leave it behind, this trip. Said it was the only bit of me she’d miss!’
‘So, instead you gave her a new battery for her vibrator.’
‘Coarse at times, aren’t you?’
Spriggs switched off the reading light, leaving the dim glow of the red lamp on the ceiling. The whole submarine was in red-light conditions in the hours of darkness. The men needed night-vision to use the periscope.
Spriggs didn’t bother to undress – just took off his shoes and lay down on the lower bunk.
‘Can I ask you a straightforward question?’ the weapons engineer asked softly.
Pike braced himself to be interrogated on some aspect of his sex-life; he suspected his cabin mate had had little experience of women.
‘If you must . . .’
‘Well . . . have you any idea what the hell’s going on. The captain won’t let anyone in the wireless room when the signals come in. What’s so secret about this change of plan, where the hell are we going, and why?’
Tim Pike lay staring at the ceiling. The answer he wanted to give was a bitter, anguished one, reflecting the offence he felt at not being taken into his captain’s confidence. A first lieutenant on a submarine was meant to be the CO’s right-hand man, but on this patrol Hitchens had been treating him like a mere sub-lieutenant.
‘No.’
‘No, what?’
‘No, I don’t have any idea what the hell’s going on.’
They were silent again, the hum of the ventilation fans loud in the tiny cabin.
‘Uh . . . , don’t you think you should know?’
‘There’s nothing in the rule book that says a captain has to take his first lieutenant into his confidence, unless it’s absolutely necessary for operational reasons. Our captain’s doing it by the book. That’s the on-the-record answer . . . Privately, and just within these walls – I’m as pissed-off as hell!’
‘What has he told you?’
‘Same as he told you and everyone else on the “pipe”. Simply that the patrol task had been changed; we have to make all speed to the Barents Sea and he’s been ordered to vet all communications personally until after the mission’s completed.’
‘Bloody odd, that – vetting all the comms. Ever happened to you before?’
‘Once, maybe. For forty-eight hours or so.’
‘But this is open-ended. Supposing World War Three breaks out up there – how’ll we get to know about it? Can we rely on our captain to tell us?’
‘Don’t worry. The Russians’ll let us know. They’ll tap on the casing with a nuclear depth charge.’
‘That’s not funny, Tim.’
‘Just put it down to experience. It’s good training. Submariners are supposed to be lone wolves, operating in the dark. He’s passing on the intelligence briefs telling us what else is in the area, so we won’t hit anything, I promise you.’
Pike deemed it his duty to be reassuring, but it wasn’t how he felt.
‘You’re sure he’s all right, are you?’ Spriggs asked with renewed earnestness. ‘You don’t think he’s lost his marbles, or anything?’
‘Why do you say that?’ Pike snapped, alarmed that he was not alone in his suspicions.
‘Well, Kitchens has always been a tight-arse, but he seems twitchier than ever this trip. He has domestic problems, doesn’t he? Neurotic wife, or something?’
‘Never confided in me . . .’
‘Oh, come on, Tim! Stop being so fucking stiff-necked! You know bloody well what they say about him!’
Pike rolled over and looked down onto the bunk below.
‘Tell you what, Paul – if you’re really worried about him, then so am I,’ he confided finally. ‘But we need to be bloody careful. I’m no mutineer.’
‘Nor me, for God’s sake. But what do we do about it?’
‘We start making notes. Independently. Every time we notice something about his behaviour that’s not normal, every time he does something that’s not the usual procedure – we make a note of it. Just you and me. Nobody else. No conspiracies or he’ll have us both by the neck!’
He rolled back, eyes fixed on the ceiling, hands behind his head.
‘Okay,’ Spriggs eventually acknowledged from below.
For a good ten minutes they lay there, staring at the red glow, disinclined to sleep, searching their memories for things Commander Hitchens had said and done since they’d left Devonport, things different from his normal behaviour. The more they thought, the more disturbed each became.
‘The trouble with this game,’ Spriggs moaned suddenly, ‘is it leads to paranoia!’
‘Mmmm. Let’s rethink it in the morning.’
‘OK. Goodnight.’
‘’Night.’
Less than a minute later, a sharp rap on the door frame brought them fully awake again.
‘Sorry, sir.’
It was the young navigator. He was duty watch leader.
‘Tried to raise the captain, sir, but he’s out cold. Snoring his head off. Just can’t wake him.’
Pike slipped feet-first from the upper bunk and reached for his shirt and trousers.
‘What’s the problem? What’s happened?’
‘Sodding great contact, sir. Sound room thinks it’s a Russian Victor class sub, coming straight for us!’
CHAPTER FOUR
Monday 21st October. 0130 hrs. GMT.
HMS Truculent. The Norwegian Sea.
‘REPORT!’ PIKE SNAPPED at Cavendish, as he ran into the control room, still buttoning his shirt.
‘Depth – two-hundred-and-fifty. Speed – fifteen knots. Course – zero-five-five,’ called out the navigator.
‘Water under the keel?’
‘Plenty. Two-thousand-three-hundred metres.’
Pulling the back strap of his sandals over his heel, Pike hopped to the video displays of the action information consoles. The cross in the centre of the screen marked their own position, the small square box lower down and to the left that of the contact.
‘We’ve been sprinting at thirty knots for three hours. Dropped our speed just five minutes ago for a listen, and then we heard him. We’d been deafening ourselves going fast.’
‘Range?’
‘Don’t know. Could be ten miles.’
‘Or more. At this depth and with the noise we were making, he could’ve heard us forty miles off easily. Another bloody triumph for NATO naval intelligence!’
The lanky figure of Lieutenant Cordell appeared between the periscope standards. He’d handed over the watch to Cavendish half an hour earlier, but had returned to the control room on hearing of the contact.
‘Talk to me, Sebastian,’ said Pike. ‘What does our TAS officer think?’
‘Definitely a Victor. The last intelligence sitrep mentioned one, but put it much further north. This must be another one. Could’ve picked up our track anytime during the past three hours. He’s coming up astern on our port quarter. We detected him on the towed array when we dropped below eighteen knots.’
‘We need to lose him. Where do we go?’
Pike knew the answer to his own question. But Cordell was new to Truculent and needed testing.
‘He’s chasing fast, so his sonar’s deaf. When he slows down to listen, we should be invisible to him, now we’ve cut our own speed. He’ll start guessing then, wondering whether we’re keeping on the same course.’
‘Control room, sound room!’ The voice of the senior rating in the sound room came from the loudspeaker above the AIS console.
‘Yes, Hicks
,’ Pike answered, keying the transmit switch.
‘Contact’s fading, sir. Same bearing.’
‘There we are. Victor’s slowing down. When he finds out he’s lost us, he’ll guess we’ve detected him,’ Cordell concluded. ‘Now, will he expect us to keep the same course? If he starts searching left or right, he’ll be stabbing in the dark. If he keeps to the same track he may think he’s got a better chance of keeping on our tail.’
‘So what do we do, brains?’
‘I suggest we come left sixty degrees. That’ll keep us in the deep Norwegian Basin, and put us at right-angles to him. We should pick him up on the bow sonar too, then – give us a better bearing and range.’
‘Depth?’ Pike pressured.
‘He can go deeper than us, and faster. So why don’t we go shallower, above the thermocline?’
The first sign of uncertainty flickered in his eyes. Pike was giving him no help.
‘Disadvantages of going shallow?’
‘Can’t hear him any more. But still worthwhile, sir – I think.’
‘What else was in that last intelligence report? Any other “hostiles”?’
‘Nothing, sir – at least, not in the dope the captain handed out.’
Cordell’s words were a reproach. Pike felt it directed at him. Glancing round, he sensed the attention of several pairs of eyes. They’d all been unsettled by the captain’s ‘pipe’ the previous evening.
Pike wanted to round on them, saying he was as much in the dark about their mission as they were, but he kept silent; nothing should be done to undermine the authority of command at a time like this.
‘Navigator, any hazards to the north?’
‘None.’
‘Right! Planesman, ten up. Keep fifty metres. Port ten, steer three-five-five. Revolutions for ten knots.’
Cordell smiled fleetingly; his advice was being followed to the letter.
Pike took Lieutenant Nick Cavendish to the chart table. Bending over it and pretending to study a detail, he spoke in a whisper.
‘I’d better go and see Hitchens. You say you couldn’t rouse him?’
‘Yup. Knocked on the door, called loudly, shook him by the shoulder even, but he was out cold.’
Shadow Hunter Page 10