Hale immediately knew that like Captain Will Rogers of the Aegis cruiser USS
He also knew that the Japanese defense force sub shouldn’t have been in the grid, that it had strayed out of its predetermined patrol area — most likely lured by a Russian HUK probing the strait near the Japanese’s sacrosanct islands — yet neither he, Rogers, nor the firing officer would ever be the same again. But in the massive conflict raging all about them, whatever stayed with them, no matter how deep it ran, would have to run silently aboard the
Eleven minutes later, at 0150, the downed sub’s big diesel imploded, the noise momentarily deafening Rogers, so that only his training made him hit the “squelch volume” button rather than tearing off his headset, the noise so loud it smothered all sea sound within a three-mile radius.
It was no surprise then that the
Hale heard the fire alarm go off for aft compartment three, above the torpedoes, the temperature gauge already registering 122 degrees Fahrenheit, the sub quickly filling with the pungent reek of an electrical fire.
“Inject Lock!” he ordered, hoping the freon gas would extinguish the fire. Within seconds, over the intercom and above cries of men in the sealed-off section, he could hear the freon hissing into compartment three and then a tremendous explosion as an oxygen tank ruptured, its noise bursting eardrums, its contents blowtorching the 122 degrees Fahrenheit to 628 degrees Fahrenheit, plastic fixtures spontaneously combusting, sending more choking toxic fames throughout the boat.
In the next moment, two torpedos exploded, ripping the sub apart forward of the sail, the pressure, at three thousand feet over 130,000 pounds per square foot, driving the mortally wounded sub down toward the bottom in excess of a hundred miles an hour. First Officer Merrick and Sonarman Rogers barely made it from Control into the six-man forward “pop-out” escape capsule with three others, but the release mechanism wouldn’t work, weighed down by what sounded like a pile of junk blown back from the disemboweled forward section. Then quite unexpectedly they heard the pile of metal above shifting like a collapsed barn in a hurricane, the debris that had been holding them down suddenly jettisoned.
“Release arm!” ordered Hale. There was a sound like a small grenade as the escape hatch burst free of the control section. But the Sea Wolf by then was already too deep — well over crush depth of four thousand feet — the sub plummeting at over 120 miles an hour, the release capsule shooting up from it through the water column like a cork released from a bottomless column.
“Jesus Christ!” It was the voice of a bosun aboard a U.S. Trident sub a hundred miles east of the Kuril gap, the Trident picking up the death throes of the
“Poor bastards!” said the Trident’s bosun. No one else spoke.
By the time the news was being conveyed to Robert Brentwood that he had just lost his second submarine, this time with all hands going down with her, he was about to learn that the target of his mission—”Operation Country Garden”—would constitute the third phase of Freeman’s unexpected counterattack against Yesov.
The other seven members of the SEAL team were as eager as Brentwood had been, but just as taciturn in not showing their expectation — a nonchalant stance, typical of the swimmer commandoes, tempered by the knowledge that whatever the mission was, it was bound to be highly dangerous. It was at this moment of unspoken tension that Brentwood experienced an attack of free-floating anxiety. This time it was guilt, which he irrationally yet understandably felt for not having been in the combat control center when the
After all, he had detected the Alfa that had mortally wounded the
He had been surprised to learn from the doctors in the Oxford radiation clinic that the same dosage could have widely different effects on its victims. Some went on living without apparent damage, as he had so far — then, quite suddenly, as the result of high stress, a man with the same dosage would rapidly decline in health. The psychological factor, in the words of the military MDs, was all but unmeasurable. You never knew. Brentwood now felt doubly at risk, enmeshed by depression upon hearing of the
Had he been aboard, maybe he would have trailed the hydrophone array a little longer instead of relying solely on the inboard built-in hull sensors, and thus might have picked up the
Ranged against his depression, there was his wife Rosemary in England to think about, and the impending birth of their first child. All his training told him he’d have to put the
By the time Robert Brentwood and the seven others were assembled in the “shed,” the briefing officer from Freeman’s HO. — drawing on what a U.S. president had once counseled — reminded the eight-man SEAL team that in crisis situations you
One of the reasons for the Chinese reverence toward the great bridge was that during the bitter Sino-Soviet disputes of the sixties, Khrushchev had suddenly pulled out all Russian advisers, including the plans for the bridge — in effect saying to Beijing, “If you’re so damn smart, build it yourselves.” To the world’s astonishment, especially the Siberians — for whom the bridge was now so vital — the Chinese did build it themselves, producing one of the greatest engineering feats of all time. Not only did the mighty bridge, nine piers in all, support a deck with 2.8 miles of road way, but it had a railroad on a lower second deck that spanned the great river for over four miles. When