diplomatic circumstances. And worst of all, it would tip our hand prematurely, that the U.S. is on to the conspiracy.”
Hodgkiss nodded impatiently, half distracted as he read the papers. “These are literal translations?”
“Yes,” the DCI said, “with Argentine slang, tones of voice, and inflection, it’s all there in the transcript with annotations by our linguists.”
Hodgkiss finished reading, then looked up. His face was very grave. He glanced at Ilse and Wilson, and at the director of naval intelligence. Then he glanced at the DCI. “Everyone here has clearance for this?”
The DCI nodded. “Of necessity. On the president’s say-so.”
Hodgkiss let out a long, deep breath. “This says the Argentine bad guys are expecting to receive a supply of atomic warheads from Germany. Soon. Very soon.” He hesitated for a moment, his expression skeptical. “But this is just one source. It could be a ploy, a fake, a provocation.”
“Yes,” the DCI said. “And we have people on the ground at certain Argentine air bases. They say that several Argentine fighter-bombers have been modified, recently and in a hurry. From an interpretation by our experts of how our agents in-country describe the modifications, the refitted aircraft are each intended to carry, arm, and drop an atom bomb. There’s your perfect independent confirmation, Admiral, humint versus sigint, with completely separate locuses of origin.”
“Okay,” Hodgkiss said. “It’s bad, but it does explain how Argentine madmen might hope to win a war with Brazil, outnumbered four or five to one in conventional forces, starting on such a narrow front, with such a lousy road network to fight on, and with such a gigantic area to cover.” Argentina’s population was forty million; Brazil’s was almost two hundred million; heading north from their shared border between Uruguay and Paraguay, Brazil was shaped like a big triangle that got wider and wider until it reached a front as broad as the whole continental U.S. “Brazil would be an attractive target for conquest. Factory sites, mineral wealth, and other natural resources. Even forced labor. But where does Atlantic Fleet come in? We’ve got our hands full and then some with the Central African pocket…. And how arethese atomic bombs supposed to get to Argentina?
“That’s just it,” the national security adviser said. “Atomic war in South America would create a tremendous mess in your rear, at the worst possible time imaginable, right? The worst time for
“It’s a ploy, a diversion,” Hodgkiss scoffed, “a clever fabrication meant to befuddle us. You’re falling into the trap, don’t you see? With respect, General, don’t pull me in there after you…. And don’t tell me they’re sending the A-bombs by U-boat. The South Atlantic weather’s been too good. At this point, nothing, but nothing, could sneak past our open-ocean antisubmarine screens.” The admiral ticked things off on his fingers. “Standing patrols by Allied subs well off South Africa, surface ships that slowly trail long towed arrays, and hydrophone nets on the bottom of the sea — which is probably why the U-boats are massing in Axis-owned African coastal waters.”
The national security adviser and Hodgkiss locked eyes. “Then where is the SMS
Hodgkiss turned to Wilson. “Commodore?”
Wilson cleared his throat. “Last we knew,
“How positive are you of that?” the DCI asked.
Wilson told Ilse to have data from her console updated. Ilse picked up a phone and called the lieutenant (j.g.) who sat beside her in the war room. She asked him to patch the audio signal, consolidated from the sonobuoys, onto the line, then switched her end to speakerphone mode. Everyone in the conference room listened.
A watery hissing and mechanical throbbing filled the air.
“That’s
The sounds got lower in pitch, and quieter, until they became inaudible.
“She’s slowing,” Ilse said, “for better sonar sensitivity…. Now she’ll be listening on passive sonar.”
A loud siren noise came through the speakers. The national security adviser looked startled.
“That’s the ship’s active sonar, ma’am. It does that to confuse enemy acoustic masking.”
Everyone listened. Nothing more happened.
Then the sound of
Ilse lifted the phone and spoke to the lieutenant in the war room. “No trace of torpedo noises?” The junior officer said no. “What’s her course?” He said due east. “Depth?” Four thousand feet. “Okay, thanks.” She hung up the phone.
“Captain Fuller is using what’s called sprint-and-drift tactics now,” Ilse said. “It’s a method of searching for an enemy target that balances covering distance fast with stopping to listen for threats while own-sonar systems are optimized. He’s increased his depth significantly, into the deep sound channel, to maximize his detection range against any enemy submarines. And going deep gives him greater protection against Axis antiship cruise missiles. His pings can probably be heard all the way to the African coast.” Since Wilson didn’t interrupt or seem at all disapproving, she added one more thought. “I would also interpret this to mean that Captain Fuller has become more cautious, because before, after crossing the wall of lingering nuclear bubble clouds, he was making flank speed continuously.”
The national security adviser and the director of central intelligence looked at each other doubtfully.
The DCI turned to Hodgkiss. “What you’re really saying is that
“Temporarily,” Hodgkiss said. Ilse sensed his hackles were up. “
“Why don’t we just
“With respect, ma’am,” Ilse jumped in, “we can’t. He’s too deep for two-way comms.”
The general ignored Ilse and glared at Hodgkiss. “Don’t you have some kind of special radio?”
Hodgkiss shook his head. “It takes forever to send the simplest message, and it’s
Ilse could feel the interpersonal tension mount.
“Sirs,” Ilse spoke up. “Ma’am. There’s someone very important we’re leaving out, besides Captain Fuller.”
Ilse saw everybody turn in her direction and peer at her hard.
“The captain of the
Hodgkiss looked at the others. “This guy we’ve identified, Ernst Beck. What’s
“I can try to guess for you, Admiral, sir,” Ilse said.
“You faced him before, didn’t you, along with Captain Fuller?”
“Yes.” Ilse was flooded by memories of a long and difficult fight. She remembered increasingly ruthless tactics used by both sides. She remembered a climax so violent it seemed a miracle
Ilse stared at the polished mahogany tabletop, and rested her head in her hands, and concentrated.
“A battle happens on a specific time line, one that’s very chaotic and compressed. A battle is a
She looked up abruptly. It came to her so suddenly, the understanding, that it had an almost physical impact, as if she’d gone through a plate-glass door.
“Captain Fuller is heading east because he believes the wall of nuclear detonations was intended by the