by Peter Sasgen
“Right full rudder, come to new course one-five-zero,” Scott commanded.
“Right full rudder, aye.”
The K-480 turned to avoid the approaching frigates and merchantmen. Scott had his fingers crossed they wouldn’t end up in the sonar cones beating a tattoo on the K-363.
“Starpom, bring her up to periscope depth. Time we take a look around.”
“They found us!” Litvanov shouted.
Zakayev went white. He heard the pings thudding off the coated hull, felt the sonic pulses rattling his brain. The girl registered his shock: A hand flew to her mouth. She knew there was no place to hide.
Litvanov glanced up as if trying to see the sonar beams that had them fingered. So much for the K-363’s anechoic coating. Parts of it were probably missing. He issued a tangle of orders to helm and engine room. The K-363 sped up, turned right, and left a knuckle in the water to confuse the frigates’
sonar. He counted to ten, then commanded, “Fire one LA decoy!”
It took a moment to flood the ejection tube in the bow and equalize the pressure. Then the air ram in the tube cycled and spit a noisemaker meant to sound like an American Los Angeles–class submarine into the K-363’s flow stream.
The K-363 continued swinging round, away from the whining decoy. Litvanov watched the compass wind clockwise then ordered, “Meet her! Steady on course two-seven-zero! Sonar…?”
“No change, Kapitan.”
The pinging frigates seemed as determined as ever.
“They didn’t go for it,” Litvanov said. “Maybe they’ll go for this. Fire Control!”
“Fire Control, aye,” the michman at the fire control console responded, while Veroshilov supervised the input of data.
“Stand by for target acquisition.”
Litvanov’s gaze drifted to Zakayev. The general’s face was a mask; he knew there was no alternative.
Litvanov said, “Target acquisition…target two.”
“Target two?” from the michman.
“Are you deaf?” Veroshilov bellowed. “The kapitan said target two!”
Zakayev stirred. He’d learned how to read the sonar contacts, but before he could protest, Litvanov cut him off. “It’s the only way.”
“Target two acquired, Kapitan,” said the rebuked michman.
Overhead, the pinging grew more intense, more shrill. Zakayev heard the frigates’ thrashing, angry
screws bearing down from the north. He knew he and his comrades had reached a point of no return and had to fight back.
“Stand by to flood tubes one and two,” Litvanov commanded.
“Standing by.”
The data monitor at the fire control console blipped to a vertical white line.
“I have a firing solution and generated bearing, Kapitan,” said the michman.
In the torpedo room, computers aboard the two 53-65 anti–surface-ship torpedoes stabilized and locked.
“Flood tubes one and two and open outer doors,” Veroshilov ordered The michman at the fire control console acknowledged that both outer doors had opened. He released the bail on the safety covers over the red-lighted firing buttons, then flipped both safety locks forward to their ARMED positions and watched the lighted buttons change from red to green. In the torpedo room an electrical pulse energized the air ram inside the tubes.
Litvanov glanced up into the overhead. Then at Zakayev.
The michman’s thick forefinger hovered over the button marked Tube One.
“Fire one!” Litvanov commanded. A moment later: “Fire two!”
Bayer forced himself to move, to make his arms and legs work, to make his mind function. The LA noisemaker hadn’t fooled him: just an attempt by the Russians to cause confusion. But then he heard Garborg bellowing, “Torpedoes in the water! Torpedoes in the water starboard side bearing zero-eight-zero!”
Bayer’s orders came instinctively. A split second later he felt the deck canting left under his feet, felt the Trondheim sheering away, heard a cup and plate shatter on deck.
The bridge speaker linked to CIC grabbed his attention when it broadcast the high-pitched up-Doppler screee of two homing torpedoes. Impossible, Bayer thought. It’s all a mistake. He heard the ominous peeping of the torpedoes’ active sonar hunting for their targets. There was no mistake.
Bayer swung his binoculars to port and saw the Narvik and Norsk also sheering away at full speed. He swung right and saw the freight train of lit-up merchant ships blithely heading south.
“Captain, torpedoes passing wide to starboard!” It was an excited Garborg in CIC. “They’ve missed!”
“What? How wide a miss?”
“Almost a thousand meters….”
An alarm went off in Bayer’s head. “Mr. Dass!”
“Sir?”
“Raise those merchantmen. Say we have an emergency. Tell them to scatter. Move!”
Dass bolted for the wheelhouse and the radiotele phone.
“Signals!”
“Sir?”
“Raise Narvik and Norsk. Tell them to reform on us and stand by for orders. Then get me Stavanger.”
“Aye, Captain.”
Bayer bolted after Dass into the wheelhouse. “Helmsman, come right thirty degrees,” he commanded, aiming the Trondheim back to the line of merchantmen. In the background he heard Dass on the radiotelephone trying to raise one of the ships but getting no answer.
“Are they deaf?” Bayer said, over his shoulder at Dass. He spun around. “Quartermaster, sound the ship’s siren and keep it up until we get their attention.”
The Trondheim swung right, her bow bucking heavy seas, taking water over her strakes and forward gun mount. The line of merchant ships four kilometers away were now bisected by the Trondheim’s jack staff.
A sharp whoop-whoop-whoop made Bayer wince. Insane, he thought, a Russian submarine firing torpedoes at unarmed merchantmen. Insane or not, it was an act of war and he and his men were in it now. And so were the men on those merchant ships.
“Where’s Stavanger?” he said. “Do we have Stavanger?”
“Still trying, sir. Lost our clear channel.”
Bayer stood in the wheelhouse of his ship aware of the massive inflow of information being digested by computers in the Combat Information Center. And no clear channel to Stavanger to warn that a war was about to start.
Bayer raised binoculars to scan the merchant line. His mind worked at lightning speed. How fast are those torpedoes? Fifty knots. Time to target? Under three minutes.
Dass had raised someone on the radiotelephone. A signal lamp on the bridge of the lead ship began to blink on and off.
“Answer them,” Bayer ordered.
The signals yeoman, a hand over the phone’s mouthpiece, called, “Stavanger, Captain.”
But Bayer didn’t move. He stood frozen, binoculars to his eyes, staring at the big white LNG painted on the side of the second ship in line. He thought to give an order to the helm; to stop their headlong rush into the line of freighters, some stacked high with cargo containers. But it was the ship with four huge green domes filled with liquid natural gas that held his attention for what seemed an eternity, until the world lit up like a million suns.
A shock wave, then scorching heat hit the Trondheim as the LNG tanker vaporized before Bayer’s eyes.
An underwater shock wave rolled the K-480 almost on her beam ends. Scott had just enough time to shout a warning and dunk the scope before the shock wave arrived ahead of a deafening blast. He had spotted the LNG tanker, had followed the course of the two torpedoes but didn’t want to believe what Litvanov intended until it was almost too late.
“Starpom, get a damage report—all compartments. See if anyone was injured.”
“Aye, Kapitan.”
“Yuri, lay aft to check on Alex and Botkin.”
Three minutes had passed since the initial explosion. It had seemed like three hours. The CCP had not been damaged, but debris littered the deck and crunched underfoot. The dive watch
had regained control of the boat, had retrimmed and leveled her out again. Satisfied that they were still seaworthy, Scott took stock of the tactical situation.
“Kapitan, I count five perhaps six contacts,” reported the sonarman as Scott listened in.
One contact, a merchantman, was afloat but in two halves. The other two merchantmen, filled with cargo and with little reserve buoyancy, had sunk. Scott heard their bulkheads and hulls moaning in agony as they collapsed and as their cargo-filled compartments ruptured and filled with water. A third ship, the LNG tanker, had simply vanished.
Scott lifted an earmuff.
“These four contacts, here, sir, are the Norwegian frigates. Three of them are dead in the water; the other one is steaming south and has gone active again on sonar.”
“They’re hunting for the K-363.” As Scott watched, fresh sonar contacts from every point of the compass began to blossom on the monitors. “Search and rescue. It’s getting busy up there.”
“Sir, I’m sorry but I’ve lost the contact we had on the K-363,” said the sonarman.
Scott knew she had escaped, masked by noise from the sinking, collapsing ships, into The Sound.
“Rerun the torpedo run-in sequence. See if we can nail down the K-363’s firing point and get a trace on her.”
“Aye, Kapitan.” The sonarman initiated the backup and-recall program.
Scott saw Abakov enter the CCP. “How’s Alex?”
“Not hurt but shaken up. I put her in the wardroom to rest.”
“Good. Botkin?”
Abakov shrugged.
“Stay with her.”
“Kapitan, all compartments secure,” reported the starpom. “No injuries.”
“Very well,” Scott said. He looked around at the men in the CCP. They were at their stations waiting for orders. “Periscope depth. We’ll see what’s what.”
A merchantman torpedoed in the Kattegat, men killed, foreign submarines operating in what was essentially Norwegian-Danish-Swedish waters. Scott winced: There would be hell to pay when the world found out.
He gave a thumbs-up. The scope rose. The video monitor rolled diagonal bars then went to points of light as the periscope head broke water. A quick walkaround confirmed what Scott had expected to see: burning debris, sweeping searchlights, a listing Norwegian frigate attended by two mates. Bobbing, twinkling points of light on the sea marking the locations of survivors equipped with flashlights.
“Down periscope. Come to course one-four-zero. Ahead slow. Rerun the video tape half-speed.”
Played back, the videotape confirmed that one of the Norwegian frigates had been heavily damaged by the explosion of over six million cubic feet of liquid natural gas cooled to minus 160 degrees Celsius.
Torpedoed, the gas aboard the ship had erupted with the force of a small nuclear weapon, and any vessel caught in it would have been sunk or badly damaged. The tidal wave created by the blast would have swamped smaller vessels in the vicinity and destroyed shore installations when it hit the beach.
Scott looked at the men in the CCP and knew they were thinking the same thing he was: The Chechens were determined to start a war.
Returned to the Winter Palace after a performance of Swan Lake by the Mariinsky Theater of St.
Petersburg and, earlier, a tour of the restored Amber Room in Catherine the Great’s summer palace, the president of the United States slipped off his theater pumps and sipped an iced Sinopskaya vodka.
“And they call Pieter the criminal capital of Russia,” he said, using the name St. Petersburgers reserved for their city. “Not that I can see. I’ve had enough culture to last me the rest of my life. On the other hand, they do have a hell of a porn industry. Seen any live fuck shows, Paul?”
The national security advisor felt his face go hot. “No, sir.” He wasn’t in the mood for joking with his boss but smiled anyway. Dressed in formal wear as the president was, he stood in the middle of the room, a glass of kvass in his hand. A worried look had displaced his smile.
“Give me a minute, Paul, to catch my breath. It’s been a long day and I’ve got three more days of meetings scheduled. And I can eat only so much caviar.” The president, looking very tired, drank some vodka. “Have you heard from Subitov?” he asked, referring to the Russian defense minister.
“A half-dozen times,” Friedman said. “His Norwegian counterpart, the others as well.”
“What about the press?”
“Nobody’s said anything yet. A reporter from The New York Times asked what I’d heard about it, but he seemed to believe it was an accident. I don’t know how long that will hold up, but so far we’re okay on it.”
“Is that it, Paul? Is that what Zakayev had in mind all along? Torpedo a liquid natural gas ship and scare the hell out of the Scandinavians?”
Friedman caught the president’s undisquised skepticism. “No, sir. That’s not what he had in mind.”
“Not something that’s likely to make the Russians cave, is it?”
“Not hardly. It was a diversion to help him get away from the Norwegians.”
The president mulled this, then said, “Let’s find out what Karl thinks. Where are we set up?”
“In the library.”
The president slipped on his pumps and stood. Two Secret Service men hovering nearby buttoned their jackets and prepared to escort him down the hall to a small private library once used by Nicholas II. To another agent holding the door open he said, “Tell the First Lady I said not to wait up for me.”
Two portable video-imaging terminals sat open on a worn trestle table typical of those used by researchers working in the library. Colored cables snaked across the parquet floor linking the terminals to a compact video camera facing the president, and a secure troposcatter satellite system dish antenna.
A charged-particle mesh security “bubble” had been assembled from individual panels and erected around the terminal setup.
The president drew up a chair in front of a monitor and said, “Good afternoon, Karl.”
A technician started a backup recording to DVD.
“Good evening, Mr. President. Sorry to make this so late for you.”
Friedman, sitting in a chair beside the president and facing the other terminal, said, “Karl, what’s the latest?”
“Sir, the Norwegians have put the casualty estimate at about eighty dead, eighteen missing. We’ve confirmed that four ships were sunk. A fifth, the KNM Trondheim, a Norwegian frigate, was badly damaged. Her commanding officer and two others were killed. I have a series of satellite photos that will give you some indication of the magnitude of the explosion.”
A picture came up on both terminals. Radford explained that it was a side-angle view from high orbit taken at night by the satellite’s infrared cameras. The coasts of Denmark and Sweden showed up in bright blue and the Kattegat in bright green. A red heat bloom clearly visible in the center of the photo drew their attention. Radford narrated the series in which the bloom grew to enormous size until it almost touched the coast of Sweden.
“Observers as far away as Stockholm, Sweden, and Hamburg, Germany, reported seeing the flash from the explosion,” Radford said. “Some thought a nuclear device had gone off. A couple of TV stations reported one had and you can imagine the panic it set off.
“So far the Norwegians have agreed to our request to say it was an accident aboard an LNG tanker. But it’s got a lot of people worked up including the world’s shipping lines and Lloyds of London, as well as the UN, who are demanding an immediate investigation. On the technical side we’re in agreement with the Norwegians that the LNG tanker took two torpedoes. They know a Russian sub fired them and it’s only a matter of time before the Norwegian Navy puts it together and figures it all out. They admitted they’ve been tracking what they say are two Russian subs for the last week. We know they have the SOSUS contacts to prove it. Also, our cable taps of their communications confirm their suspicions that the Russians may not be in control of their submarines. No
one at ComInC Stavanger has yet mentioned the word terrorist, but that may only be a matter of time. And it may only be a matter of time before the Norwegians, the Swedes, even the Danes, lodge a protest.”
“What about the Russians?” asked the president.
“They’re pulling out of the Barents Sea and we’re starting to see activity in the Baltic. Mr. President, if they aren’t already asking you questions, they soon will.”
“Subitov has asked for a private meeting to discuss, as he put it, ‘the recent incident,’ and I can’t put him off. Tomorrow I’ll probably hear it from the president himself.”
Friedman said, “Karl, have you heard from Grishkov?”
“Not yet. But I will. Bet on it.”
The president finished his vodka and set the glass aside. After a long pause he said, “What’s happened to Scott?”
“We think he’s either in the Kattegat or in the Baltic. We can’t be certain, but I believe he’s still trailing the K-363.”
“Any chance that the K-363 was sunk in that incident?”
“Doubtful, sir,” Radford said. “We would likely have picked it up on satellite. We have the four wrecks heat-spotted—the frigate, too—but no others.”
“No traces of her on satellite imagery?”
“No, sir. Our laser satellites can’t penetrate those waters. Turbidity leaves us blind.”
The president turned to Friedman. “What do you think, Paul? Tell the Russians what we’re up to or continue to play innocent?”
Friedman toyed with the studs in his shirt cuffs, both of which had exploded out of his coat sleeves at least half a foot. “Why let on? Let Scott finish it for us. We’re that close now.”
The president turned to Radford. “Karl, after you talk to Grishkov, see if you can raise Scott and get a status report.”
“I’ll try, but he may have his hands full right now.”
The president turned back to Friedman. “Paul, I can’t stonewall the Russians much longer. Subitov is no dummy. If Scott can’t nail that bastard Zakayev in another day or two, it’s over and we’ll have to come clean.”
Friedman looked as if he were in physical pain.