urgent!'

'You're a liar,' Dodson said pleasantly. 'Why did you bring the coffee?'

'For myself.' The smile was gone, the face set and sullen. 'But I thought you needed it, you don't look so good to me... They'll fix you up back in the engine-room.'

'And that's just where you're going, right nowl' Dodson said evenly.

Riley gave no sign that he had heard.

'On your way, Riley,' Dodson said curtly. 'That's an order!'

'-----, off!' Riley growled. 'I'm stayin'. You don't require to have three -----, great gold stripes on your sleeve to handle a bloody oil can,' he finished derisively.

'Possibly not.' Dodson braced against a sudden, violent pitch, but too late to prevent himself lurching into Riley. 'Sorry, Riley. Weather's worsening, I'm afraid. Well, we, ah-appear to have reached an impasse.'

'What's that?' Riley asked suspiciously.

'A dead end. A no-decision fight... Tell me, Riley,' he asked quietly. 'What brought you here?'

'I told you!' Riley was aggrieved. 'Grierson, Lieutenant Grierson sent me.'

'What brought you here?' Dodson persisted. It was as if Riley had not spoken.

'That's my -----, business!' Riley answered savagely.

''What brought you here?'

'Oh, for Christ's sake leave me alone!' Riley shouted. His voice echoed loudly along the dark tunnel. Suddenly he turned round full face, his mouth twisted bitterly. 'You know bloody well why I came.'

'To do me in, perhaps?'

Riley looked at him a long second, then turned away. His shoulders were hunched, his head held low.

'You're the only bastard in this ship that ever gave me a break,' he muttered. 'The only bastard I've ever known who ever gave me a chance,' he amended slowly. 'Bastard,' Dodson supposed, was Riley's accolade of friendship, and he felt suddenly ashamed of his last remark.

'If it wasn't for you,' Riley went on softly, 'I'd 'a' been in cells the first time, in a civvy jail the second. Remember, sir?'

Dodson nodded. 'You were rather foolish, Riley,' he admitted.

'Why did you do it?' The big stoker was intense, worried. 'God, everyone knows What I'm like------'

'Do they? I wonder... I thought you had the makings of a better man than you ------'

'Don't give me that bull!' Riley scoffed. ' know what I'm like. I know what I am. I'm no -----, good! Everybody says I'm no -----, good! And they're right...' He leaned forward. 'Do you know somethin'? I'm a Catholic. Four hours from now...' He broke off. 'I should be on my knees, shouldn't I?' he sneered.

'Repentance, lookin' for, what do they call it?'

'Absolution?'

'Aye. That's it. Absolution. And do you know what?' He spoke slowly, emphatically. 'I don't give a single, solitary damn!'

'Maybe you don't have to,' Dodson murmured. 'For the last time, get back to that engine-room!'

'No!'

The Engineer-Commander sighed, picked up the Thermos.

'In that case, perhaps you would care to join me in a cup of coffee?'

Riley looked up, grinned, and when he spoke it was in a very creditable imitation of Colonel Chinstrap of the famous ITMA radio programme.

'Ectually, I don't mind if I do!'

Vallery rolled over on his side, his legs doubled up, his hand automatically reaching for the towel. His emaciated body shook violently, and the sound of the harsh, retching cough beat back at him from the iron walls of his shelter. God, he thought, oh, God, it's never been as bad as this before. Funny, he thought, it doesn't hurt any more, not even a little bit. The attack eased. He looked at the crimson, sodden towel, flung it in sudden disgust and with what little feeble strength was left him into the darkest corner of the shelter.

'You carry this damned ship on your back!' Unbidden, old Socrates's phrase came into his mind and he smiled faintly. Well, if ever they needed him, it was now. And if he waited any longer, he knew he could never be able to go.

He sat up, sweating with the effort, swung his legs carefully over the side. As his feet touched the deck, the Ulysses pitched suddenly, steeply, and he fell forward against a chair, sliding helplessly to the floor. It took an eternity of time, an infinite effort to drag himself to his feet again: another effort like that, he knew, would surely kill him.

And then there was the door, that heavy, steel door. Somehow he had to open it, and he knew he couldn't. But he laid hold of the handle and the door opened, and suddenly, miraculously, he was outside, gasping as the cruel, sub-zero wind seared down through his throat and wasted lungs.

He looked fore and aft. The fires were dying, he saw, the fires on the Stirling and on his own poop-deck. Thank God for that at least. Beside him, two men had just finished levering the door off the Asdic cabinet, were flashing a torch inside. But he couldn't bear to look: he averted his head, staggered with outstretched hands for the gate of the compass platform.

Turner saw him coming, hurried to meet him, helped him slowly to his chair.

'You've no right to be here,' he said quietly. He looked at Vallery for a long moment. 'How are you feeling, sir?'

'I'm a good deal better, now, thanks,' Vallery replied. He smiled and went on: 'We Rear-Admirals have our responsibilities, you know, Commander: it's time I began to earn my princely salary.'

'Stand back, there!' Carrington ordered curtly. 'Into the wheelhouse or up on the ladder, all of you. Let's have a look at this.'

He looked down at the great, steel hatch cover. Looking at it, he realised he'd never before appreciated just how solid, how massive that cover was. The hatch cover, open no more than an inch, was resting on a tommy- bar. He noticed the broken, stranded pulley, the heavy counterweight lying against the sill of the wheelhouse. So that's off, he thought: thank the Lord for that, anyway.

'Have you tried a block and tackle?' he asked abruptly.

'Yes, sir,' the man nearest him replied. He pointed to a tangled heap in a corner. 'No use, sir. The ladder takes the strain all right, but we can't get the hook under the hatch, except sideways, and then it slips off all the time.' He gestured to the hatch. 'And every clip's either bent, they were opened by sledges, or at the wrong angle.... I think I know how to use a block and tackle, sir.'

'I'm sure you do,' Carrington said absently. 'Here, give me a hand, will you?'

He hooked his fingers under the hatch, took a deep breath. The seaman at one side of the cover, the other side was hard against the after bulkhead, did the same. Together they strained, thighs and backs quivering under the strain. Carrington felt his face turning crimson with effort, heard the blood pounding in his ears, and relaxed. They were only killing themselves and that damned cover hadn't shifted a fraction, someone had done remarkably well to open it even that far. But even though they were tired and anything but fit, Carrington thought, two men should have been able to raise an edge of that hatch. He suspected that the hinges were jammed, or the deck buckled. If that were so, he mused, even if they could hook on a tackle, it would be of little help. A tackle was of no use when a sudden, immediate application of force was required; it always yielded that fraction before tightening up.

He sank to his knees, put his mouth to the edge of the hatch.

'Below there!' he called. 'Can you hear me?'

'We can hear you.' The voice was weak, muffled. 'For God's sake get us out of here. We're trapped like rats!'. 'Is that you, Brierley? Don't worry, we'll get you out. How's the water down there?'

'Water? More bloody oil than water! There must be a fracture right through the port oil tank. I think the ring main passage must be flooded, too.'

'How deep is it?'

'Three quarters way up already! We're standing on generators, hanging on to switchboards. One of our boys is gone already, we couldn't hold him.'

Even muffled by the hatch, the strain, the near desperation in the voice was all too obvious. 'For pity's sake, hurry up!'

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