Authors: Geoffrey Archer
âBloody hell, that's a Nimrod,' he muttered. âWhat's the RAF doing here?'
The HS.125 jolted to a halt. Andrew unbuckled his belt and zipped up his holdall. The whine of the jets died as the pilot cut the engines. From the cockpit came the sound of switches being turned off, and the giros spinning to a standstill.
âDid you see that?' the pilot called over his shoulder. âOne of ours. Nimrod. Probably got a technical hitch.'
Andrew suspected its presence at Tromso was more significant than that. He stretched out his hand to shake the pilot's.
âWell, goodbye, and thanks for a nice flight.'
âIs that bag all you've got? No other luggage?' the RAF man asked.
âThat's all.'
âJust staying overnight then, are you?'
âI've everything I need in here. S'long now.'
Andrew hurried off the plane, anxious to avoid further questions. On the tarmac was an officer in the grey-blue uniform of the Norwegian Air Force.
âCommander Tinker? I'm Major Mjell, the Station Commander. Welcome to Tromso.'
His Norwegian accent seemed to dip in and out of the words like a wading bird.
âThank you. I'm glad to be here.'
âWe should hurry. The weather will get worse. Even now the helicopter pilots are not sure they can land you on your submarine. We might have to try tomorrow.'
âI'm ready now. Let's get a move on. I must get aboard tonight. Is the helicopter ready?'
âYes, but there is someone you must speak with first. Please to come to my office.'
He hurried across the tarmac to the far end of the terminal. The wind was icy and cut through the thick navy blue pullover Andrew was wearing.
âAh, that's better. It's warm in here. Now I'll leave you three alone for five minutes. That should be enough?'
Andrew saw a whey-faced young man in a flying suit rise from a leather armchair to greet him. His shoulder insignia marked him as an RAF Flight Lieutenant.
âFive minutes should be fine,' the pilot acknowledged in a strong Scots accent, then introduced himself. âAlex McCringle. I expect you saw the grey beast on the tarmac?'
âNimrod MR2, unless I'm much mistaken.'
âExactly. Just come off patrol. This is my AEO, Stan Mackintosh. He's the boss. Northwood told us to land here so we could report to you.'
âPicked up some curious activity which they said you'd want to know about,' Mackintosh explained.
âOh? Did they say why I'd want to know?'
Andrew was curious to know how much the RAF had been told of the Navy's problems.
âSaid it was to do with the exercise
Ocean Guardian
? You're involved in a special operation code-named
Shadowhunt
? Playing the part of the Soviets, trying to track one of our submarines?'
âSomething like that, yes.'
He could tell they hadn't been convinced by the cover story.
âOdd sort of operation, when Northwood doesn't even know where its boats are,' the AEO needled. âAnyway, let me tell you what we got.'
The flight lieutenant spread a chart on the office table.
His finger drew a square shape over the sea about two hundred miles west of Trondheim in southern Norway.
âWe began a box search of this area at about one o'clock this morning. Beautiful clear night. Getting worse now, though. Anyway, we dropped a sonobuoy barrier looking for a
Victor
which the Norwegians had been tracking. Well, we found it but he wasn't on his own. He was chasing one of yours, a bloody
Trafalgar.
'
He pointed northeast on the chart.
âAnd what happened?'
âWe tracked them for a bit, then suddenly your boy got wise and slowed right down. The
Victor
didn't realize what had happened at first, but then he slowed up too. We lost your boat at that point. They're bloody quiet when they're not rushing about, the
Trafalgars.
The
Victor
must have lost him too, because he suddenly went active! Practically deafened us!'
âPinged him, did he? They don't often do that.'
âExactly. Must have been pretty bloody eager to keep tabs on your boy, don't you think?'
âWell, they don't often get a chance like that. We're normally too careful for them. But this time. . . .'
Andrew searched for the right words, that would give nothing away.
âThis time it's different tactics,' he added cautiously.
âWell, the sooner you get back to the old ones, the better, I reckon!'
âSo what happened after that?'
âWe never picked up the T-boat again. Nor did the Russian. He went pinging around in all directions, up and down, changing depths, but he never found him again. Northwood told us to try to track your man; we dropped buoys all over the place, but he'd gone. And that's it, Commander. Any use to you?'
âVery much so, thank you. Now show me again on the chart exactly where you lost her.'
The AEO pointed and Andrew made a note of the co-ordinates.
âSo where are ye off to now, then?' McCringle asked,
making no effort to restrain his curiosity. â
Hunting the Shadow
underwater, are ye?'
âThat's right. Trying out some new equipment . . .' Andrew lied.
âHidden in that wee bag, is it?' he joked, pointing at Andrew's holdall.
â'Sright. Don't need much space for a floppy disc . . .'
âWell, we'll see how good it is, then. We've been told to stick around here for a few more days. See if we can be of some help. My fiver says we'll find him again first!'
âIf you do, I'll happily pay you ten times that.'
âYou're on!'
They shook on it.
âWhen do you plan to fly again?'
âTomorrow at eight,' said Mackintosh. âThey're flying in a Here from Kinloss with a load of sonobuoys â we've almost run out.'
The door clicked open. Major Mjell poked his head round.
âYou must go now to the briefing room, Commander. It's the last chance to get off tonight.'
âGood luck,' McCringle called as Andrew followed the major out.
He followed the Norwegian out onto the tarmac again. The wind was even stronger. They passed the HS. 125, refuelling for the return journey, and walked on towards the big, brightly lit hangar with the two helicopters parked outside.
âThis is the regional search and rescue headquarters,' Mjell explained. âThe Coastguard use it too.'
Warm air enveloped them as they stepped inside the flight office.
âKlaasen,' announced the pilot, introducing himself.
âTinker.'
The three-man aircrew for the Sea King were dressed in drab green immersion suits that would keep them dry if they ended up in the sea.
The loadmaster took a quick look at Andrew, assessing his size, and took from a rack a larger rubber suit in dayglo red.
âYou'll be familiar with this equipment, Commander?'
Andrew pulled down the heavy zip and stepped into the legs of the suit. Floppy black rubber boots encased his feet. He forced his arms into the sleeves, taking care not to rip the soft rubber at the end which made a watertight seal with his wrists.
âWe need the suit back,' Klaasen reminded him drily. Andrew knew how expensive they were. âAfter you're safely on board the submarine, we'll lower a bag for you to put it in. And the life-jacket too.'
âFine.'
Andrew slipped the life-preserver over his head and pulled up the strap under his groin.
âNow, if you're ready, I will start my briefing.'
The aircrew stood in a semicircle and checked their watches. Klaasen spoke in Norwegian for the first minute, outlining the flight plan. Then he broke into English.
âThe rendezvous with the
Tenby
should be seventy kilometres west from here. It will take about half-an-hour to the area, and then we have to find her. She should be surfaced, but we have not been able to contact her on VHF. Some hills are in the way. We can try again in the air.
âThe sea is high and the wind getting stronger, so we'll put you on the fin. We lower a guideline first, so that they can pull you to the right place as you go down. You use the same system, I think?'
âYes. I've had the misfortune to go through this several times!'
âThen we'll waste no more time. We can go to the aircraft now, and the loadmaster will give you the safety brief. You have heard it all before, but we insist.'
âFine by me.'
Major Mjell gripped him by the hand and wished him luck.
Andrew clambered into the helicopter, and felt his way into one of the aluminium-framed canvas seats that lined the fuselage. Klaasen flicked the power switch and a red light came on in the roof, just bright enough for Andrew to make out the layout of the interior.
âThe door close while we fly. I open when the pilot finds the ship.' The loadmaster's English wasn't up to the standard of the pilot's. âWhen I say, you unfix seat belt and sit on the floor. Very careful, it's a long way down. Then I put cable harness on you, you know?'
âYes, I know,' Andrew answered patiently.
âEmergency exits.' The loadmaster pointed to the door itself and to two other panels in the fuselage sides. âIf we go in the water, you must wait until the rotor stops, otherwise . . .'
He made a sign of slitting his throat.
âLet in the water first. Then swim out as it sinks. Then pull life-jacket. Not to inflate before leaving aircraft.'
âYes, yes. Fine.'
The pre-flight briefings made Andrew more nervous than the flight itself. It was all pointless anyway. Few people survived helicopter crashes â they all knew that.
With a muffled roar the twin jet engines lit and built up their revs to a high-pitched whine. The loadmaster gave him a thumbs-up sign, which Andrew returned. Then with a bowel-churning grind, the gearbox was engaged and the rotors began to turn.
It was almost pitch black inside the helicopter. From time to time as they flew, the loadmaster pulled out a flashlamp and shone it along the bare pipes of the hydraulic system, checking for leaks.
The two aircrew were bulky, anonymous shadows against the amber glow of their instruments; for the next thirty minutes his life lay in their hands.
He thought of home. Patsy. The children: Theresa, Mark, and Anthony struggling to cope with boarding school.
A change in the engine pitch; his heart beat faster.
He cursed himself for being so nervous. Eyes closed, he thought of the task ahead. The Nimrod could cover a greater area than a submarine, although its small sonobuoys lacked the sensitivity of the bigger, more powerful systems in the
Tenby.
The tail of the machine dipped, slowing down, it banked right, then left, spreading the search. The
loadmaster extended his hands forward and swayed from side to side, indicating the roughness of the water below.
For a good ten minutes they hovered or flew slowly backwards and forwards.
Suddenly the loadmaster touched Andrew on the knee and gave him the thumbs up. They'd found his boat.
The nose dipped, the machine banked and sped in a new direction. Three minutes later Klaasen eased it back into the hover. The loadmaster crouched by the door and wrenched it open, letting in an icy blast. Then he busied himself with the winch, unstrapping the harness, checking the cable and controls.
Klaasen manoeuvred the machine inch by inch. The loadmaster beckoned. Andrew unclipped his belt and slid forward onto the floor, clutching his holdall firmly. The loadmaster slipped the harness over his head. He tightened the strop under his arms and winched the cable taut.
Ahead and below was blackness. Then he saw green and red navigation lights, close together. A boat. A pencil of light from the helicopter pierced the dark, picking out white wave-crests in its search.
It found the smooth, shiny curves of the submarine. The beam followed the casing forward, a sparkle from the foam breaking across the steel, then the fin reaching up. On the top, the pale dots of faces looking up.
He had to land on that? Jesus, it looked so small! As he watched, the periscope and radio mast slid down into the fin so as not to obstruct his descent.
The loadmaster lowered a thin handline, weighted at the bottom. Through his microphone, he directed the pilot until the line was grabbed by a sailor on the bridge. Then he secured the line to Andrew's harness.
He was ready? Andrew nodded and pulled the rubber hood over his head. It was wet down there and bitterly cold.
A final thumbs up; Andrew felt the winch cable jerk the strop tight under his armpits. He sat on the ledge, legs over the edge. The downdraught from the rotor tugged at the loose folds of his survival suit. A firm push in the small of his back and he was in mid-air.
The cable jolted and jerked. The winchman lowered him a few metres at a time. Arms by the side; that's what they always tell you. Do nothing; just hang there; leave it to the other guys. It was an act of faith. It had to be.
The wind tugged at his feet; he felt salt spray on his face, or was it rain? Something pulled him sideways against the wind. He remembered the handline.
Suddenly his shins cracked hard against metal. He gasped at the sharp pain. Rough hands grasped his legs, then his waist. The edge of the bridge grazed his buttocks; he was down. The steel grating felt firm underfoot, and the chest-high rim of the conning tower supported his back.
He lurched against it. The submarine rolled like a plastic duck.
âWelcome to
Tenby,
sir,' the burly rating shouted in his ear.
âThanks!' Andrew yelled, trying to beat the din of the machine overhead. âThere's a bag to come, and they want this kit of theirs back!'
He slipped the harness off and the rating held the strop to one side to show the winchman it was clear. Within seconds it was gone.
âBest take the gear off here, sir!'