Arctic Fire c-9

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Arctic Fire c-9 Page 5

by Keith Douglass


  He paused, squinting at Aflu. From this distance, the twenty-mile-long island was only a smidgen on the horizon, a bleak white outcropping of ice and rock. While the uninhabited island had played a major role in World War II, today it served mostly as a landmark for fishing vessels and ecologists searching for schools of fish and pods of endangered whales.

  Like his current passengers. A nice enough herd, if a bit single-minded. After four weeks of listening to their unflagging enthusiasm, their nightly dinner speculations about the state of whales in the northern Pacific were starting to take on a wistfully plaintive note. As much as he begrudged it, he’d found himself eager to find something to cheer them up. One whale — that would do for starters.

  Holden scanned the horizon again. He’d pit his experienced seagoing eyes against their array of techno-toys and sonar monitors any day.

  Finally, he saw what had caught his attention. There was something between the Serenity and Aflu, a trace of darker color against the roiling blue-black, whitecapped ocean. He took two quick steps forward to the front of the bridge, grasped the railing there with one hand, and lifted binoculars to his eyes. The picture came into sharper focus.

  Yes, something definitely was there. He reached for the ship’s telephone to call the scientists, already grinning with anticipation at the childish cries of glee that would shortly be filling the bridge.

  1210 Local

  Kilo 31

  “She’s surfacing, sir,” the sonar technician said.

  “What the hell-?” the Kilo’s skipper muttered. He leaned over the sonar console, his face almost next to his technician’s. “Any indication she’s having trouble?”

  “Could be, sir,” the technician replied. “I thought I saw some instability in her electrical sources.”

  Rogov watched the Kilos commander analyze the possibilities in his mind. A reactor failure, a casualty of some sort, or, worse yet, every submariner’s nightmares — fire. He waited for a few minutes, then decided to intervene, and shoved himself through a mass of technicians and sailors to the sonar console.

  “It is not our business,” he said neutrally. “We have our mission — nothing must interfere with that.”

  “There are one hundred and seventy-eight men on that submarine,” the skipper said. “If they have to abandon ship, we have to be there to pick them up immediately. Otherwise, even with the protective life rafts, they have no hope of survival.”

  Rogov shook his head from side to side almost imperceptibly. “The mission,” he reminded the skipper.

  For the first time, the man showed some signs of fighting spirit. “May God rot your soul,” the normally passive submariner snapped. “You saw what that sea does — ten minutes, at the most. We must-“

  “And just where will you put all these men, Captain?” Rogov asked. “Have them standing in line in your tiny passageways? Will you jettison your torpedoes to make room for them in those tubes? No,” he concluded, “even if you were to reach them, you have no room for them on board. If they have problems, they must solve them themselves. I’m sure their captain is a resourceful man.”

  “They could get to shore. Your camp there — at least they’d have a chance!”

  Rogov stiffened. The breach of operational security was unforgivable. While every sailor on the submarine knew that the boat had surfaced, had noted the absence of the forbidden figures that had boarded it in Petropavlovsk, few knew any details of the larger mission. The captain himself had been Ordered to ensure that his crew remained absolutely silent on the matter, and to crush any speculation immediately. To blurt it out now, within earshot of every junior sailor in the control room, was completely unacceptable.

  “A word privately?” Rogov said, moderating his tone to a respectful murmur. “Perhaps there are options-” Rogov stepped back to allow the submarine captain to move away from the console. He followed the other man aft down a small passageway to the captain’s stateroom.

  The two men squeezed themselves into the tiny compartment and stood face-to-face. “These options you mentioned — what-“

  Rogov’s hand slammed into the captain’s neck, cutting off the questions. He pinned the man against the steel closet set into one side of the cabin, increasing the pressure on the man’s neck. The submarine captain’s eyes bulged, fright and indignation warring in his face. He reached up and tried to pull Rogov’s hands away from his neck, but the Tartar’s massive fingers were interlaced behind his neck, his thumbs pressing against the captain’s throat. Panic flooded the man’s features as he realized the Tartar had no intention of easing up. With one massive thrust, Rogov crushed the man’s windpipe, ending the contest. He let the skipper fall to the deck, and watched the life fade out of his eyes as his brain ran out of oxygen. Just before the man died, Rogov kicked him in the crotch. No reaction. The foul smell of human waste flooded the tiny compartment as the captain’s dying brain gave up control over its autonomic functions.

  When he was sure the man was dead, Rogov lifted the captain up by the back of his collar and positioned him carefully on the bed. He tossed a blanket over him, then turned the man’s face toward the wall, cushioning it on a pillow. He felt several tiny vertebrae snap as he forced the man’s head into position.

  Although he was certain the ruse wouldn’t last for long, it was always handy to give men an excuse to do what their fear compelled them to. If they thought the captain had suddenly taken ill, and might eventually retake command of the boat, there might be less initial resistance. And by the time they were completely certain the captain was dead, it would be too late.

  Rogov left the compartment and returned to the control center to take command of the submarine.

  1220 Local

  SS Serenity

  “There,” Holden said, pointing to the northeast. “Do you see it?”

  “Yes!”

  Holden could see a broad smile spreading below the binoculars, and shook his head. Why seeing one whale made up for the misery of being at sea in the North Pacific for these people, he would never understand.

  “Can you get closer to it?” the scientist asked eagerly. “It’s huge; it could be one of the largest of the species ever seen.”

  “We’ll try, sir, but the seas are a bit touchy right now.” Holden walked back to the navigator’s table and studied the position plotted for the whale on the paper overlay. Maybe, just barely, they could run northeast for a while without getting broadside to the waves. It would take some careful tacking and maneuvering, but it could be done. He looked up and met the navigator’s eyes, exchanging a brief look of disbelief.

  “Yes, sir, I think we can do it,” he said finally, straightening up. “Helmsman, come right to course zero-one-five.”

  The sickening yaw of the small boat increased, but was still within the limits of safety. Holden felt the boat shudder as the waves caught her more solidly on the beam.

  “Oh, man, oh, man,” the scientist said happily, sounding like a child in a candy store. “If this just-“

  “What?” Holden asked sharply. The scientist’s smile had disappeared. He lowered the binoculars slowly. His face was pale. “It’s not a whale,” he said shakily. “I think we’d better-“

  Whatever the man had intended to say was lost forever. The fishing boat’s bow shot up out of the waves like a seesaw, standing her almost completely on her stern. Holden, along with the rest of the men on the bridge, smashed into the aft bulkhead, which now seemed like a floor beneath them. Holden was vaguely aware of the unnatural motion of the ship as it gyrated around on its stern, now truly resembling the cork it had been imitating earlier.

  Someone landed on his back, the impact forcing the breath out of his lungs. Holden felt two ribs crack. The deck — no, the bulkhead — careened crazily underneath him.

  Finally, after what seemed an eternity suspended in the air, the bow of the ship headed down toward the ocean. Holden was flung forward again, this time hitting the glass window in the forward part of the br
idge. He felt it crack, quiver underneath him, the steel safety mesh embedded in it preventing it from shattering completely.

  But steel mesh couldn’t keep water out. The bow and forecastle plunged down, water washing over the bridge and covering most of the forward part of the ship. It quickly filled the bridge, prying Holden off the shattered window and tossing him around on its roiling surface along with the other flotsam and jetsam on the bridge. Holden flailed, barely conscious, trying to lift his head far enough out of the water to try to breath. It was cold, so cold. Thirty-four degrees, he remembered from yesterday’s meteorological report. Survival time — well, in these waters, it was measured in seconds rather than in minutes. No danger of living long enough to ever see a shark or any other leviathan of the deep approaching.

  Holden struggled bitterly to hold on to consciousness, knowing he had only seconds left to live. He had just managed to suck in a deep breath when the last bit of his consciousness faded.

  SS Serenity twisted and rolled in the waves for two minutes longer. The water was already lapping over her bow and washing around the decks. Suddenly, she gave one last shudder and rolled to port, dumping her superstructure into the water. Her starboard side remained visible for a few minutes longer, until one particularly large wave washed over her and shoved her down into the depths. By that time, the core body temperature of the crew and scientists on the ship had already slipped well below the levels needed to maintain consciousness. They all drowned, not a single one of them aware that they were breathing seawater instead of air.

  1237 Local

  Kilo 31

  Rogov stood now in the middle of the control room, occupying the same position the captain had just hours earlier. The stilled, troubled looks on the crew members’ faces told him he had not yet solidified his command of the boat. But he would, and it would be sooner than these young men ever suspected. His Cossack ancestors had learned long ago that fear was a more potent motivator than any pretentious ideals of friendship or mutual respect. These men would understand that soon.

  He stared at the sonar screen, examining what he saw there with the rudimentary amounts of knowledge he had. While he was a quick learner, his time on board the submarine had been too limited to allow him to develop much expertise in interpreting the arcane lines and symbols that streaked across the screen.

  “What is that?” he demanded, pointing at a jagged-looking cluster of lines on the screen.

  The technician swallowed nervously. “An-an explosion, sir,” he said nervously. “Some distance away from US.”

  “The cause?” Rogov demanded.

  “I thought-I thought I heard a torpedo just before that. Maybe. I can’t be sure.”

  Rogov slammed his beefy hand into the side of the technician’s head, knocking him out of the chair. The technician sprawled on the deck, looking up at the Cossack. Fear glazed his eyes.

  Rogov regarded him levelly. “Next time, you will not be so slow to bring significant matters to my attention,” he suggested. “You are not indispensable — none of us are. If you ever lie to me or tell me less than the complete truth — or, as in this instance, neglect to bring some matter to my attention — I will kill you.”

  The technician nodded, a bare twitch of his head. Rogov pointed at the chair. “Resume your duties.” He turned to the rest of the control room crew, letting his cold gaze wander over them, impaling each one where they stood. “You have observed. It is up to you what you have learned. Learn quickly and you will live longer.” He turned back to the technician. “Tell me about this explosion.”

  “it-it was far from us, maybe thirty kilometers,” the technician babbled, profound relief at still being alive making his voice shaky and uneven. “The Oscar — she fired, I think. Maybe a torpedo — I don’t know, I couldn’t hear it all, but-“

  “The target,” Rogov demanded. “Was it the carrier?”

  The technician shook his head. “No, Comrade, the carrier was too far away. It was another surface vessel, I think. There was a fishing boat — at least I think it was a fishing boat. It sounded like one, although it did not act like it. The diesel engine, yes, but no indication of trolling nets or any of the other activities I expect from a fishing boat.” His voice ceased abruptly, as though he realized he was babbling. “There is nothing else I can add, Comrade.”

  Rogov seized the back of the man’s neck, clamping his vise-like fingers down hard. He felt the man’s pulse beat under his fingers, fluttering now like a bird’s. “Do not call me Comrade,” he said quietly, menace in his voice. “You may call me sir, you may call me Colonel, but never Comrade. You and I — we have no blood in common. You will remember that, along with your other duties.”

  “Yes, Colonel,” the man squeaked, barely able to force his voice past the cruel pressure on his throat. “I will remember.”

  “And so will the rest of you,” Rogov said, raising his voice slightly. “Your people have forgotten much, but I will ensure that you remember this much. A Cossack is no comrade to any of you,” he said, pronouncing the hated word with disgust dripping in his voice. “We remember what you have forgotten. You will learn, during the next weeks, how much that is.” He turned back to the navigational chart, pretending to examine their position relative to the Oscar, buying himself some time to think at the expense of the crew’s nerves.

  It must have been the Oscar, he decided. Her orders were to stay in the deep waters that were her natural abode, using her speed and nuclear propulsion to interdict any vessels that approached too close to Aflu or threatened to compromise the mission. For now, at least. Later, she’d have other missions, ones that made better use of her potent ship-killing capabilities.

  But why surface to fire? He puzzled over that for a moment, trying to peer into the mind of the other submarine commander’s mind. Maybe to get a visual on the contact, to better weigh the delicate considerations that went into deciding to fire. With the American carrier in the area, the Oscar’s commander would have wanted to make sure he was not attacking within clear view of any warship. Unexplained losses in the North Pacific were common since the poorly equipped fishing vessels plied unforgiving waters and treacherous, unpredictable seas, but killing one of them within sonar range of the battle group would have been idiotic.

  That must have been it, he decided, and felt a sense of relief as the unexplained explosion slipped neatly into an understandable tactical pattern. The Oscar’s commander was also a Cossack, as reliable and implacably determined as Rogov himself. And, as with Rogov, the Russian submarine force’s chain of command had never suspected either man’s higher loyalties.

  The engineering problems the sonarman mentioned — was it possible? He shrugged. There were contingency plans for just such an occasion. There always were. But before he could alter his own plans, he had to find out whether or not the Oscar was out of commission.

  Rogov turned to the conning officer. “I wish to observe this boat that the Oscar has attacked.”

  The conning officer nodded and gave the commands preparatory to surfacing the submarine. Facing the churning ocean above was far less dangerous than remaining submerged below.

  1508 Local

  Adak

  Tombstone Magruder strode briskly to the front of the room. He paused behind the podium and surveyed the faces arrayed before him. The assembled media and camera crews had that eager, slightly slavering look he’d come to expect from the press. He had even seen that expression on Pamela’s face at times, and flinched away from it.

  Where was — there she was, seated in the middle of the pack. He suppressed a smile, wondering what sort of mistaken maneuvering had earned her that chair. Pamela Drake, star correspondent for ACN, had never been in the middle of the pack — never in her entire life. Her normal seat at any press conference was in the front row, directly in front of the speaker, where her astute questions and bulldog glare could rarely be avoided. She must have arrived late, he mused, and wondered what had been the cause of that.
>
  “Thank you all for being here today,” Tombstone began, shuffling the papers in front of him. “As you know, this is a sad but historic occasion for the Navy. Decommissioning a command that has served this nation so honorably is never a pleasant task, but in these days of downsizing — right-sizing, as some of you have chosen to call it — most of our forward deployed units are being pulled back to CONUS — Continental United States, for you civilians,” he added, noting a few puzzled looks. “Now, I’ll start with a brief-“

  “Admiral Magruder,” he heard someone say. He turned away from the slide presentation he had been about to begin, covering the illustrious history of the P-3 squadron’s service in Adak, his eyes going immediately to the slim, all-too-familiar figure. Pamela’s voice still could cut through him to some warm, secret place deep inside. Memories of the last time he had seen her aboard USS Jefferson surfaced.

  Now, seeing her again after more than six months, the strength of his reaction surprised him. Memories of Tomboy should have erased every trace of Pamela Drake from his soul. Yet there was still something compellingly attractive about the strong, smooth curves of her body, the emerald eyes framed by dark hair now touched with gray, the easy athletic balance of her stance. He sighed. Pamela Drake had quit haunting his dreams five months ago. He supposed seeing her in reality was the payback for that. “Miss Drake,” he began coolly, “if you could just hold your questions, there will be plenty of time for them after the presentation. I think you’ll find that most of the information you need is already contained in this brief.”

  Pamela regarded him bluntly, a slight tinge of amazement creeping into her expression. “Evidently you haven’t heard, yet, Admiral,” she remarked. “if you had, you would know that the decommissioning ranks a poor second against this current story.”

 

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