was already on his way to a Komsomol camp on the Black Sea with twenty other young people from Pripyat. Sheranchuk took consolation in those good thoughts. At least his family was out of danger…
If — thinking of the cloud of gases that blew helter-skelter across the face of the earth — anyone in Europe were out of danger. Or anyone in the world.
The pleasant moment had turned sour.
Sheranchuk got out of the shower and dried himself on a pair of his own undershorts — towels were among the niceties no one had yet thought to truck in to the control post. He pulled on a cotton shirt and a pair of work pants and felt slippers. As dressed as he needed to be, he shuffled down the length of the improvised dormitory, past the rows of bunks, some of them with men snoring away, and the tables where other men were talking or playing cards, to his six o'clock conference.
That was the bad side of the good fact that so many Soviet citizens had hurried to help. Meetings. With more than two thousand men and women deployed to fight the explosion and its consequences, the people in charge had to keep in almost constant conference to coordinate their efforts.
In the meeting room there was a table with an unshaded light hanging over it, and half a dozen men were waiting for his report. He gave it quickly: 'The valves won't open. They're trying to force them now, but I think they'll just break.'
Looking around the table, Sheranchuk realized that he was now nearly the highest-ranking person left on the scene from the peacetime — he corrected himself, the pre-explosion time — of the Chernobyl Power Station. Smin was in his hospital in Moscow, fighting for his life. After the Director had arrived, he had insisted on taking charge of the emergency effort just long enough to be removed from it. Where he was now was easy to guess, and the Chief Engineer along with him. Others were in Hospital No. 18 in Kiev, or evacuated with their families, or simply run away. The people around this table now were all from outside the district, from Moscow and Kiev and Novosibirsk and Kursk. Most of them wore military uniforms under their coveralls.
The person chairing the meeting, however, was the civilian from the Ministry of Nuclear Energy, Istvili. He was no longer as dapper as when he first arrived, but he was still energetic as he received Sheranchuk's bad news. He did not seem surprised. He only said, 'The plenum has to be drained.' The plenum was the reserve of water under the reactor itself, built there so that in the event of a rupture of a single tube the steam would bubble through the plenum and cool back down to water instead of bursting the containment shell. Of course, against what had actually happened at the plant it was useless— worse than useless, a danger.
The general of fire brigades stirred restlessly. 'I don't see why we can't just leave it alone,' he said.
'Because, Comrade General, we don't want water down there, we want concrete. We need to isolate that entire core from the world outside, top, bottom, and sides.'
'You're talking about work that will take months!'
'I hope we can do it just in months. In any case, we don't know how much strength there is in the structures that hold the core; if it should fall into the plenum, it would be serious.'
Serious! It was already serious enough for Sheranchuk, who put in obstinately, 'Nevertheless, I don't think those valves will open.'
Istvili nodded. 'Then what do you propose?'
'Attack it from another direction,' Sheranchuk said, throwing his cigarette on the floor to free his hands. 'Here, let me show you.' He quickly sketched the outlines of the ruined reactor and the water-filled chamber below it. 'If we cut into the tank from another side, we can pump it dry. Here. Where it approaches the plenum for Reactor Number Three. Pump that one out, then people can get in to cut through.'
Istvili studied the sketch, unsurprised. 'I approve. Also, I think, we should try digging another shaft from — here. It will be longer, but easier to cut through, perhaps.'
'My men aren't moles,' the fire general barked.
'We won't need your men for that, Comrade General. A team of miners from the Donetsk coalfields is already on its way. Now. As to the fire in the graphite itself?'
The fire brigade commander said, 'The helicopter drops are helping. Another fifty tons of sand are needed, though, at least.'
'Comrade Colonel?'
The Air Force officer rapped out, 'Of course. We have requested another squadron of men and machines; they should be here in the morning. With them, we will continue the drops on schedule.'
Istvili looked at the fire brigade commander, who shrugged. 'If that is so, then perhaps we ought to have more volunteers to fill the sandbags. Also my men can't get through the rubble near the reactor building.'
'Have it bulldozed away!'
'To be sure, Comrade Istvili,' the fireman said mildly, 'but to where? Some has already been dumped into the pond—'
'Good God, man,' Sheranchuk cried. 'Not the cooling pond! We've poisoned enough water already.'
'So I have said, but then, where?'
Since no one else spoke, Sheranchuk said, 'There's a foundation dug for another reactor on the other side of the station. I doubt it will ever be built now; can't you shove everything in there?'
'Do it,' said Istvili, turning to gaze at Sheranchuk again. He asked the meeting at large, 'Is there anything else we need our hydrologist-engineer for at this time?'
Sheranchuk said quickly, 'There is something I need the meeting for, at least.' 'And what is that?'
'It is simply impossible to accomplish anything in a two-hour shift a couple of times a day. I request permission to work for longer periods.' 'How long?'
'As long as I have to! Four hours at a time, at least.' Istvili drummed his fingers on the table, looking around. 'How are your white-blood corpuscle readings, Comrade Sheranchuk?'
'Who can tell? They simply take it and go away somewhere. At least they have not told me I am in danger.'
Istvili nodded. Then he sighed. 'Permission granted,' he said. 'Now let us see how we stand for materiel. . '
Chapter 21
Except perhaps for the anniversary of the October Revolution (which occurs in November, because of the changed calendar), the paramount public holiday of the Soviet Union is on the first day of May. It is called International Labor Day, or more frequently simply 'May Day.' There is no village in the USSR so small that it does not have at least a celebration on May Day, and in the largest cities the event is an immense production.
'But we can't watch it on the TV,' Candace Garfield told her husband reasonably, 'because we don't have one in this delightful little toilet you found for us, and they'll just charge us extra if we want to use the one in the living room, and it's in black and white anyway.'
'Well, hell, hon,' said her husband, also reasonably — it was only eight in the morning, and they were both still being reasonable—'who wants to watch it on TV? We might as well be home in Beverly Hills if that's all we want to do. We'll go on into town, and—'
'And walk to the subway, right? Because those buses don't ever run?'
'They were running all right yesterday, honey. It was only like on Sunday and Monday that we couldn't find one.'
'And today's a holiday, right? So they probably won't be running at all.'
Garfield opened his mouth to respond a touch less reasonably, because his own temper was beginning to run short after four days on their own in Kiev. They were saved by a knock on the door. 'Oh, poop,' said Candace, 'that's Abdul for the rent. Wait a minute till I get something on.'
Abdul was who it was, although his name was surely not Abdul. He was some sort of Arab in some sort of diplomatic post at some Arab consulate — for four straight days he had managed to avoid telling them which nation paid his salary.
He was a constantly smiling slim young man, no more than thirty. This time, as always, he greeted them with