Authors: Geoffrey Archer
Three miles they'd covered; three miles further from the
Victor,
he hoped. Time to listen again.
âReduce speed. Revs for fifteen knots,' he called.
The instruction was relayed aft to the manoeuvring room. The response from the propulsion plant was almost immediate.
âAircraft overhead!'
barked the tannoy.
Coming alive again, the sonar had picked up the roar of jet engines.
âJesus! What
is
this? A plane too?'
âBecause of the exercise?' Cordell guessed. âThe Sovs keeping tabs on Ocean Guardian?'
âOr something else. Something to do with what the captain was talking about. The East-West crisis!'
Pike hurled a silent curse at the sleeping Hitchens. Why hadn't the bastard told him what was going on?
Cordell's head turned, snake-like on his long, thin neck. There was a flicker of fear in his eyes.
âYou mean the
Victor
was trying for a firing solution?' he asked aghast. âWants to torpedo us?'
âThat's the usual reason for going active, isn't it?'
âYou're joking!'
âWell, I
hope
I am!'
âShit! The tubes are empty! We're defenceless!'
Pike thought hard. The intelligence reports had let them down. They were on their own. Better play it safe. He grabbed the microphone for the tannoy.
âWatch stand to!' he spoke, steadying his voice. âWe're being shadowed by a Soviet SSN, and will adopt defence watch conditions.'
âTaking it a bit personally, aren't you?' the weapon engineer chided as he entered the control room at a run.
âTaking no chances. Anyway,
you
were the one worrying about World War Three starting. Better bring the bloody tubes to the action state!'
Spriggs raised one eyebrow, but disappeared fast down the ladder to the torpedo stowage compartment below, where the ratings were already wrenching open the tube rear doors and loading the 1½ tonne
Tigerfish
torpedoes. Attached behind each propeller was the drum of guidance wire that would spool out after launch, keeping the weapons under the control of the submarine.
âWhere's the target, TAS?' asked Pike.
âMoving away, sir. Bearing one-nine-three. Range ten-thousand yards. Heading one-seven-zero. Still pinging.'
âGood. Let's show him some more leg. Set course ten degrees. Revolutions for thirty knots.'
âAye, aye, sir!'
* * *
In the sky above, the Nimrod banked and weaved. When the British boat slowed down she became desperately difficult to track.
They'd detected the start of her turn to port, but by the time they'd dropped a pair of buoys on what they thought was the new track, there was no sign of her.
Locating the Russian boat was easy. Its sonar âpings' set the ink-pens quivering on the hard-copy printers of the acoustic processor.
âNoisy bastard!' growled the AEO. âDoesn't want to lose our boy, does he?'
The pens quivered again and then a third time.
The AEO began to frown. It was doubly odd; a Soviet sub using active sonar, and a British boat being somewhere it wasn't meant to be.
âI don't know what's going on down there, but I'm not taking any chances,' he told the TacNav. âArm up a couple of Stingrays just in case that
Victor
decides to do something nasty.'
The navigator punched buttons to switch on the giros in two of the torpedoes in the bomb bay.
âGetting a reply to that signal, by the look of it,' remarked the radio operator, as the teleprinter began to buzz. He read the cipher as it was being printed and began to decrypt it from his code cards.
The AEO took the handwritten note when it was completed.
âWell, bugger me!' he exclaimed. âThey
didn't
know they had a boat here! They're ordering us to track her, and they're sending a tanker to refuel us so we can stay on task longer.'
âYou mean we're not getting home today?' the TacNav groaned.
â'Sright, sunshine.'
âMy wife'll kill me. It's our anniversary! We'd got a dinner booked!'
* * *
The flight bringing Vice-Admiral Feliks Astashenkov back from Moscow was delayed again; then the taxi bringing him from Murmansk to the naval town of Severomorsk suffered a puncture, so it was four in the morning before he arrived at the comfortable villa that went with the job of Deputy Commander of the Northern Fleet.
He didn't go to bed. Apart from not wanting to wake
his wife, he'd come straight from the arms of another woman, and his conscience pricked him.
It had been a painful farewell with Tatiana. They'd both known they wouldn't meet again, but neither had said it.
He made himself some tea and slumped back in the red-velvet, wing-backed armchair that had belonged to his grandmother.
He felt afraid. Savkin had tricked him into making a personal commitment that could put him at odds with his own Commander-in-Chief, even the entire Stavka, the high command.
He knew what pressure the General Secretary was under from the Politburo. Savkin's survival was by no means certain, and if he lost his gamble to preserve
perestroika
Astashenkov could see himself being pulled down with him.
Why had he committed himself? Because he still believed in the complete restructuring of Soviet society that Gorbachev had begun, and Savkin was struggling to continue. But what if he could see that Savkin was going to fail, and still the call came to honour that commitment? Was he ready to destroy his own career for a lost cause? Better surely to hold his hand, to fight another day. All he could hope was that the call would never come.
His eyes focused on the canvas over the fireplace, an heroic oil painting of the destroyer
Sevastopol,
which his father had commanded in 1943 and in which he'd died. From childhood Feliks' ambition had been to honour his father by reaching the highest levels in the Soviet Navy, and having a warship named after him. At the age of fifty he was on track to achieve that goal â or would be if Nikolai Savkin didn't ask him to throw it all away.
In the dim light from the desk lamp, Astashenkov's eyelids began to droop. He dozed for about an hour.
He came to when the carriage clock on the mantelpiece chimed six. He stroked his chin and decided to begin the new day. Quietly he made his way upstairs to the bathroom.
After a shower and a shave he felt refreshed. His
dressing room was separate from the bedroom, so he need not disturb his wife as he hung up his brown civilian suit and donned the dark-blue uniform of a Vice-Admiral with its two stars on the heavy gold shoulderboards, one broad band and two narrow ones on the sleeves.
The smell of coffee told him that his staff were awake and about their business. The house was managed by a middle-aged civilian couple from Leningrad; the woman cooked and cleaned, and her husband served at table, polished brass and silver and acted as valet to Feliks.
He also had a personal driver, who lived in the barracks in the main naval base area, a
starshina
who would arrive outside the house at 6.30 each morning, drunk or sober.
Feliks would take his breakfast in the kitchen, bread, sliced sausage, and coffee. His staff took pleasure in his passing the time of day with them; his wife treated them like serfs.
The kitchen window faced east, overlooking a distant creek where sailing boats lined the jetties of a small marina belonging to the officers' club. The sky was grey, but gold where the clouds broke to reveal the rising sun.
He would start early as soon as the driver arrived, tour the harbour and see who he could catch off-guard.
Severomorsk is a grey, granite naval town, ringed by greenhouse farms to provide fresh vegetables for the Navy. The town's only purpose is to serve as the headquarters of the Northern Fleet. Set on a bay on the east bank of the Kol'skiy Zaliv, the Kola inlet that leads to Murmansk, its piers stretch from the dockyard like outspread fingers. Heavy cranes tower black against the clouds.
They passed a guard post and the duty man hurried back into his hut to telephone ahead that the Deputy Commander was on the prowl.
To Feliks' right lay the sea, grey and choppy in the chill breeze that felt as if it came from the North Pole. The low hills on the far bank of the fjord five kilometres distant were discernible just as an outline in the mist.
Some of the finest warships in the Soviet fleet lined the piers. The twelve-thousand-ton cruiser
Slava
took up
almost the whole length of No.3 jetty, some of her long-range missile tubes hoisted ashore for maintenance. Beyond her, at anchor in the bay, Feliks could see the distinctive outline of the aircraft-carrier
Minsk
.
He instructed the driver to stop the car, and wound down the window. The temperature felt below freezing, but he sniffed the air, savouring the odours of oil fumes and rotting fish. It was a smell of which he would never tire.
He was proud of his Navy, which had been expanded and modernized dramatically in the past decade. Yet he prayed it would never have to fight a war. He looked again at the
Minsk.
She carried a dozen vertical take-off jet fighters and a similar number of helicopters, but had none of the striking power of the Americans. The first of his own Navy's big carriers was still on sea trials and there'd be no more built.
Another pier, and a pair of
Sovremenny
class destroyers. They were due to sail any day now, to join the carrier
Kiev
and the cruiser
Kirov
maintaining the defensive barrier north of North Cape. Their departure depended on crew training; three-quarters of the men on board were conscripts. Autumn was the time for a new intake, and all the problems of moulding reluctant, ignorant young men into sailors.
His own submarine service was the worst affected. Greater skills were needed for the complex technology. With a rapid turnover of crews, harbour-time was high; most submarines in the fleet would spend all but a few weeks of the year alongside the jetty.
Feliks envied the professional, volunteer navies of other countries.
âLet's move on, Comrade,' he called to his driver.
They drove along the waterfront road that linked the heads of the piers. There were no submarines in harbour that morning; in fact, there were seldom any at Severomorsk, the main submarine bases being further north around Polyarny, at the mouth of the Kol'skiy Zaliv.
Looking out to the main navigation channel, he watched a fish-factory ship heading south for Murmansk, low in
the water with the weight of its catch from around the shores of the British Isles.
Murmansk was an ugly sprawl of a city, whose population had grown to nearly four hundred thousand on the back of the Atlantic fishing fleet based there. The Gulf Stream kept the fjord to Murmansk open all year round with winter temperatures ten degrees higher than other Arctic zones on the same latitude.
To Feliks, however, the whole area was grim. He hated the bare rocks of the coastal zone, and pitied the puny shrubs and birch trees that struggled to survive inland. He longed for the gardened splendour of Leningrad.
The car turned left, past the storage sheds and maintenance workshops essential for keeping the complicated and costly warships operational. Men on bicycles weaved their way through dockyard clutter, as a night-shift finished and the day workers began.
Feliks decided against an unannounced visit to a ship. He'd bitterly resented such treatment from his own superiors when he'd been a submarine commander.
âTake me to the headquarters building,' he grunted. He'd put in an hour or so with the paperwork that threatened to take over his desk, before attending the morning command briefing.
* * *
Andrew Tinker searched the corridor of the Fleet headquarters for the office of the Fleet Psychiatrist. Finding the door, he tapped on it but there was no answer.
It was locked. He checked his watch â just past eight.
Behind him in the corridor he heard the click of high heels.
âExcessive punctuality's a sign of anxiety,' chided a confident female voice.
Andrew turned to see a short, red-haired WRN commander approaching.
âTell that to those who trained me,' he countered.
She took his outstretched hand and held it loosely.
âIt's a lost cause with me, I'm afraid,' she smiled.
Commander Felicity Rush was maturely attractive, but she looked weary.
âThe thing is, I'm terrible at getting up in the mornings. Never normally see anyone before ten if I can help it. But when an Admiral orders. . . .'
She unlocked the door and led him in. Andrew was expecting it to be more like a consulting room than just another office.
âYou
are
Commander Tinker?'
âIndeed I am.'
She placed her briefcase on the desk but left it unopened.
âPull up a seat. There's nothing very comfortable, I'm afraid. I don't rate an armchair.'
Andrew dragged a typist's swivel seat over to the desk and sat down.
âNow, I've no idea what this is about,' she began, pulling a notepad from a drawer, âexcept that it must be exceptionally urgent. Admiral Bourlet knows perfectly well how badly I function at this hour.'
Andrew raised an eyebrow at what he thought was innuendo, but there was no hint of embarrassment on her face.
âAre you the one with the problem?' she pressed, her eyes softening with professional sympathy.
âWhat? No, thank God! Not me. It's a friend of mine. He also drives a submarine, but the poor sod's just had a bust-up with his wife. We're worried he may have had some sort of breakdown.'
âOh?'
âYes. He's not responding to signals from headquarters and is now somewhere under the North Atlantic heading for the Arctic Circle at a rate of knots.'