SEALs’ whole operation’d be shot. Besides, closest S/D team we’ve got is the one going in on A-7 to help out that goddamn battery that started this whole thing. You’re right — they’d be the closest to the SEAL objective, but we can only use them
“That’d be one for the books,” commented Norton. “Younger brother rescuing the older hand.”
Freeman looked blankly at Norton, the general’s mind having been so preoccupied with the minutiae of preparation for what would be his and history’s biggest airborne invasion since Arnhem in ‘44, he had momentarily forgotten that two of the three Brentwoods would be in action at more or less the same time. The general paid it no mind. It was hardly unprecedented; brothers in Second Army were fighting a lot closer together than young David Brentwood would be at Manzhouli and Robert farther south. The general also paid it no mind because he knew that if Robert Brentwood’s SEAL team met heavy resistance, his entire three-pronged counterattack plan against the Siberian-ChiCom alliance would fail, and it was a thought he didn’t want to entertain. It was the first time Norton had seen Freeman willfully turning away from an unpleasant possibility, which was a measure not only of how badly the war was going for Second Army and how tired the general was, but above all, just how vital the SEAL mission would be along with Freeman’s impending jump over Nizhneangarsk.
Freeman turned his attention to the map of the naval supply line, stretching all the way from America’s west coast through the Kuril Island gaps, immediately north of Japan, through the Sea of Okhotsk to Siberia. It was another possible weak link, for if the Siberian Alfa Hunter/Killer subs could plug the narrow, shallow gaps between the Kurils — the gateway to the Sea of Okhotsk — then the enemy could quite literally turn off the oil supply to Freeman’s entire Second Army, the general reminding Norton of George Patton’s famous dictum: “My men can eat their boots, but my tanks gotta have gas!” Which for just one M1A1 meant two and a half gallons for every mile.
Even as Freeman spoke, the sonar operator aboard the Sea Wolf USS
“What’ve we got, Sonar?” Hale asked raspily, looking at the three-tiered green screen.
“Unidentified submarine, sir. Suspected hostile by nature of sound.”
“Signature?”
“Negative.” It meant there wasn’t enough noise being emitted by the unidentified craft as yet to get a “prop-print” from the computer library, which could identify a specific vessel by matching its in-transit sound which, like the sound of every human being, had an individual “voice” print. But sometimes the enemy tried to add a baffle, a steel plate welded here or there, or extra acoustic, sound-absorbing tile on the superstructure to alter their noise signature. Even so, a good operator, like leading sonarman Rogers — whose higher-range hearing hadn’t been damaged by too much “hard rock” music when he was younger — could often identify the class of ship from a sound which, to someone else’s hearing, would have been the faintest pulsing of a prop.
“I’d say an Alfa,” said Rogers, adding, “Might have flaked,” indicating that the fast, forty-five-knot Hunter/Killer Alfa might have lost part of its anechoic paint, designed to absorb rather than reflect the ping of a searching sub’s “active” sonar. But Hale had the USS
“Sir — correction,” said Rogers. “Louder now. It’s a diesel — a quiet one, all right, but a diesel beat for sure. Ten thousand yards — closing!”
“Print out possible hostiles,” ordered Hale, also informing the crew quickly, calmly, “Mr. Merrick retains the deck. I have the con.” They were now well beyond the relatively shallow shelf of the Kuril Gap, into deeper water. Merrick, as XO in Brentwood’s absence, immediately took up his position as officer of the deck behind the two planesmen, noting one whose face was beaded in perspiration. Wordlessly, he pulled out a damp tissue from the flip-up box and, so as not to alarm the planesman or divert his attention, he simply said, “Wiping,” and drew the tissue across the man’s forehead. A millisecond lost because of stinging perspiration in the eyes could put them all dead in the path of a torpedo or SUBROC. Sonar’s auxiliary screen was now a column of brown X’s, signifying the different classes of diesel to the right of each, listing speed — surfaced and dived — displacement, missiles, radar arrays, sonars, and officer/crew complement.
“Your best estimate?” Hale asked Rogers. They had worked together on the nuclear submarine
“Present speed, submerged,” said Rogers, his tone controlled and assured. “Plus or minus twenty-five knots. Displacement… plus or minus two point five. I’d say Soviet Kilo class. Three thousand eight hundred yards and closing. Bearing zero-three-niner.”
“Man battle stations!” ordered Hale, the chime alert bonging softly throughout the submarine. “Speed?”
“Twenty knots,” answered Rogers.
“Hard left rudder to one-three-five degrees,” ordered Hale.
“Left rudder to one-three-five degrees,” confirmed Rogers, the diving officer watching rudder and trim control.
“Bearing?” asked Hale.
“Zero-three-niner,” came the response.
“Mark! Range?”
“Four thousand.”
“Angle on the bow,” said Hale, beginning the litany of his attack. “Starboard one-four. Firing point procedures. Master one-zero. Tube one.”
“Firing point procedures. Master one-zero. Tube one,” came the confirmation. “Solution ready, sir. Weapons ready. Ship ready.”
“Final bearing and shoot,” announced Hale. “Master one-zero. Tube one.”
Bearing and speed confirmed, the firing officer took over the procedure. “Stand by! Shoot! Fire!… One fired and running.” The sine wave that was the other sub changed its vector on the screen, then fired.
“Shift to zero-eight-five,” commanded Hale, gripping the periscope island rail, anticipating the turn.
“Zero-eight-five, sir.”
“Very well. Fire two.”
“Fire two. Two fired and running, sir.”
“Take her to four hundred. Maximum angle two-zero degrees.”
“Four hundred. Maximum two-zero degrees.”
The second Mk-48 of
The visible sound blip of the other sub hastily, and now noisily, retreating, suddenly swelled from the size of a pinhead to that of a quarter then just as quickly shrank, becoming two microdots of light on the screen, fading, sliding slowly down the screen into nothingness. It was 0129 hours. It had all happened in just under seven minutes.
It was only ten minutes later, at 0139, that Hale and his crew received the information via an urgent TACAMO VHF “burst” message that they had sunk a Setoshio class diesel electric, not a Soviet Kilo; the Setoshio class’s displacement 2.2 thousand tons, a diesel, similar to that of the Soviet Kilo, also with six torpedo tubes but a JDF— Japanese defense force attack submarine — the