“Let’s see,” he muttered again. “Hippodrome, Indiana, Igloo.” Then, flipping through more of the envelopes, he realized that someone was ignoring alphabetical order. “Poker” was in front of “Barricade.”
But then he found what he was searching for.
“Morningstar,” he read aloud, then checked that the envelope was perfectly sealed and checked the code name in the upper left-hand corner and across the seal. He stood and walked to his cabin door. He locked it and threw the bolt. Orders were orders, he thought. Going back to his desk, he opened the envelope.
The co-ordinates in the first paragraph startled him. Using the old Perry route past Baffin Bay and Greenland, he’d intersect the Nautilus polar exploration route-the same route Byrd had used in part-bypassing Franz-Josef Land. Then he’d strike out across the Barents Sea toward the Kanin Peninsula. His target lay 67 degrees north, 31 degrees east, near Murmansk on the Kola Peninsula. The icepack would be above the Ben Franklin until she was halfway out of the Barents Sea.
“Wonderful,” he said again. There were submarine pens near Murmansk and Archangel and those were his targets.
“Captain…” The voice on the intercom was that of Pete Billings, his exec.
“Captain here,” he switched. “What is it, Pete?”
“Probably nothing much, sir, but the Russians sure got a whole hell of a lot more trawlers out here than usual.”
“Figures, Pete,” Captain Wilmer sighed. “Don’t get into a fender-bender with the con. I’ll be along in a minute or so. Keep me posted if you need to.” Wilmer switched off
“Trawlers,” he muttered. Why the Soviet Navy still relied so heavily on trawlers was beyond him. Soviet satellite tracking was just as good as its American counterpart-or was supposed to be-and subs could be tracked by infrared from space a lot more accurately than sonar from the ocean surface. Shrugging his shoulders Wilmer replaced the orders, noted what had transpired-including the trawlers-in his log book, then closed the interior and exterior safe doors and locked the desk.
Putting the keys back in his pocket, Wilmer reached reluctantly into the bottom drawer on the other side of the desk. His 1917 1A1-slightly oily to the touch-was there, next to its shoulder holster. Standing up, he slipped the harness over his head and left shoulder and settled the strap across his chest, checked the .45 for a full magazine and empty chamber, lowered the hammer, and put the pistol away beside his left armpit. He snapped the strap of the holster closed over it. Wilmer had never liked guns, felt uncomfortable wearing one, and doubted that if he ever needed to use the pistol, he could hit anything with it after all these years.
He reached down to the intercom and flipped the switch to call the sub’s hailing system. “Attention, all hands, this is the captain. We are now officially on alert. Section chiefs, report to your stations. All officers, meet with me on the bridge in ten minutes.” He started to click off, then thought better of it and added, “We’ll be going under the ice on this run, coming up near the Soviet mainland.” Technically, he was disobeying the standing orders by telling this to the crew, but made the command decision that everyone would be better off knowing something. “We are not on a war footing. I repeat, not a war footing. So take it easy. Wilmer out.”
He snatched his hat as he walked to the door, then passed into the companionway. He passed a seaman first class on his way toward the bridge and noticed that the man was nervously eyeing the .45 automatic he carried. Wilmer smiled at him, murmuring, “Everything’s jake.”
Wilmer spent a long time on the bridge, then retired again to his cabin, not bothering to eat, telling Billings, “Wake me before we’re too close to the ice, Pete.” Wilmer tried sleeping, couldn’t, then took two sleeping pills. He disliked the way his mouth would taste afterward, but rationalized their use since he would get little rest once under the ice, and after that-he didn’t know…
There was knocking on his cabin door. Wilmer sat bolt upright, then wiped his hand across his face.
Another reason he hated sleeping pills was because they always caused him to dream. And worse still, all he could ever remember of the dreams were that they were horrifying, but he could never remember why.
“Yoh,” he shouted, and the knocking stopped.
“Approaching the icepack sir!” The muffled voice on the other side of the door he recognized as that of Dan Kimberly, a chief.
“Gotcha, Dan,” Wilmer rasped, his mouth dry. “With ya’ in a sec’.” Feeling his face again, he decided on a quick shave. He swung his feet off his bunk and into his shoes and went into the bathroom. Five minutes later he was going along the companionway, the .45 back under his arm. On the bridge, he saw Billings, walked up behind him, and said, “You get any sleep, Pete?”
“No, sir. Figured I would after we got under the ice.”
“You’re lucky-I can never sleep worth a damn under the ice. I think I’m claustrophobic or getting that way after all these years. Hell of a thing for a submariner, isn’t it?”
“Yes, sir,” Billings said.
Turning around, Wilmer looked to the man beside the most exotic of the consoles, the ice machine with the long technical name everyone shortened to “Watchyamacallit,” the machine that gave a constant readout on the thickness of the ice overhead.
“Got the Watchyamacallit all revved up, Henderson?” Wilmer asked.
“Aye, aye, Captain.”
“Okay,” Wilmer said, then turned to Billings.
“Take her under the ice, Pete.”
As Wilmer leaned back against the railing on the central island, he told himself again that there was no real change. You were still under tons of water-just tons of ice over that. And surfacing was possible-unless the ice was too thick. And you always rode the instruments like a mother hen looked after her chicks; only, under the ice, the instrument readings had to be more precise and their readings could change more quickly.
An hour later, just as Wilmer was preparing to get Billings to take his promised sleep, the new sonar man called out, “Blip, approximately five hundred off the starboard bowplane.”
Five hundred what, man?” Wilmer rasped. “Sing it out!”
“Make that five hundred-four seventy-five yards now, sir.”
Wilmer was already standing behind the sonar man, Billings off to his right behind another console operator.
“Russian, Captain?” Billings asked.
“Hell if it’s American-unless we got submarines they haven’t told me about. Yeah, Russian, all right. Looks like this is kind of a busy street, huh?” Wilmer turned to Billings, then glanced back at the scope in front of him.
The man working the console tugged at his earphones, saying, “Captain, I’m pickin’ up something. I can’t be sure what it is.”
“Gimme that,” Wilmer said, his words harsher than his tone. He took the earphones and twisted them around so he could hear; then looked down at the scope.
“Did a pinch on sonar once, a long time ago,” Wilmer recited, slowly.
Turning to Billings, he rasped, “Load up number one and two with conventionals, and ready number three with-” Dropping the earphones, he shouted, “Dammit-that was a torpedo being launched!”
“Captain! We got it on the scope here! Comm’ right at-”
“Hard starboard-all ahead three quarters. Make that all ahead full!” Wilmer shouted. The Russian torpedo slicing through the water off the port bow sounded just inches away when it made an echo along the length of the hull. Wilmer, Billings, and every man on the bridge watched along its path as if somehow they could see it.
“Fire one! Fire two!” Wilmer snapped.
Chapter Twelve
“Zero deviant flux on my signal. Ten, nine, eight-”
Mikhail Vorovoi watched the entire firing complex from the steel-railed mezzanine with a sense of satisfaction that was evident in his smile. As the technician droned off the countdown for activation of the laser charge through the particle chamber, Vorovoi could already see in his mind’s eye, the Army drone aircraft being set free on auto pilot miles away toward the upper atmosphere, the warheadless missiles being launched from the Ukraine uncounted miles away.
“How do you feel, Mikhail?” a voice said. He turned, saw the hand on his shoulder, looked into the icy blue eyes of the blonde-haired woman beside him, the white lab coat poorly concealing what he had found with her almost every night since they had first met when she’d just come to work on the project. “Your first test on multiple targets, and both missiles and planes. You should be proud, Mikhail Andreyevich, dushenko.”
“Elizabeta,” he whispered, “you know what this means. If my particle beam weapon passes this test, soon it will be operational, and then nuclear war will have become obsolete. Its threat will not hang over us anymore like a plague waiting to break. In just a few years, it will be these weapons that both our country and the Americans will rely upon! No more radiation, no mass murder”‘