Forty minutes later, he was in Fort Meade, being escorted up to the Director's office on the eighth floor. When he arrived, Jimmy and Admiral Morris were standing in front of the illuminated computer screen on the wall, staring down the 56.40W line of longitude.
'George…Jimmy,' said Arnold, nodding curtly, heading straight for the big chair he once occupied, and shooting a laser glance at the coffeepot. 'Two bullets, Lieutenant Commander, one calculator, and your full attention.' To Admiral Morris, 'You got him under control, George?'
'Absolutely.'
'Excellent. Date of the Akula detection off the coast of Ireland?'
'March twenty-third, sir.'
'Time?'
'Sixteen ten, sir.'
'Latitude?'
'Fifty-one thirty north, sir.'
'Date and time of detection in the South Atlantic?'
'Today, sir. April eleventh, 0500.'
'Latitude?'
'Fifty-one fifty south, sir.'
Arnold hit the calculator buttons. 'Over six thousand miles running south,' he muttered. 'You got an accurate mileage, Jimmy — taking in the distance west?'
'Yessir. Seven thousand two hundred and eighty-two point nine five.'
'Vague, Ramshawe, vague. Try to be more precise, would you?'
'Yessir.' Lt. Commander Ramshawe was well up to this game.
'Nineteen days, eh?' said Admiral Morgan, again hitting the buttons. 'He must have been making an average of fifteen, sixteen knots all the way.'
'Sixteen point four, sir. It was only eighteen and a half days.'
'Shut up, James.'
'Yessir.'
Arnold chuckled and sipped his coffee. 'I guess it's gotta be the same boat. And it's gotta be Russian since nothing else could possibly have been anywhere near. And there's no point trying to call the Russians. Rankov would never return this call. He'd guess right away the Brits had picked up his fucking submarine.'
'And anyway, we may not want to alert them we know something's going on,' replied Admiral Morris.
'No. I suppose not. Unless we want to try and frighten them off. I could get the President to make the call, and feign absolute fury, demanding the Akula be removed instantly from the Falklands battle zone.'
'Yes. We could try that. But you know, Arnie, I'm not sure it would work. The Russian President would just say he had no knowledge of any submarine in the South Atlantic, and then Rankov would tell everyone to be even more careful. We may never see the damn thing again.'
'But what if the damn thing took out the Royal Navy carrier?'
'If that's his plan, there's not a whole lot we can do about it. Short of going down there and hunting it down.'
'We don't have time,' replied Arnold Morgan. 'The Task Force arrives on Wednesday, and the Brits cannot afford to waste their own time. That's a very weak fleet they have down there, and they've no replacements. If I were Holbrook I'd start firing as soon as I was in range before it all starts falling apart.'
'It's kinda frustrating, isn't it?' said Admiral Morris. 'We ought to have been able to stop this, but we can't. We ought to be able to defend American oil interests, but somehow we can't. And we ought to be able to sink this Russian intruder, but we can't. It's been that way right from the start.'
'Nonetheless,' said Admiral Morgan, somewhat grandly, 'I think in the end, like the Russians, we're gonna be in this thing up to our fucking jockstraps.'
HMS
Today, however, there was no Total Exclusion Zone. The Royal Navy had informed the Prime Minister and his politicians they had so many disadvantages, they would shoot at anyone they damn pleased whenever they damn pleased, so get used to it.
By this time, the Prime Minister was so nerve-wracked about his own career, he would have agreed to anything put forward by the men who were going to try to rescue his government.
Mercifully, a thick blanket of fog covered the ocean, which at least provided some cover from air attack, but it also rendered all flying impossible. The GR9s, remember, can't see.
Admiral Holbrook and his staff knew there may be a Russian submarine in the area, and everyone was also worried about minor repairs that had to be carried out on at least three of the escorts before battle commenced. And with this in mind, they made course south, across the old TEZ straight for the Burdwood Bank.
This is a large area of fairly shallow water on the edge of the South American continental shelf. It's two hundred miles long, east to west, by about sixty miles wide, north to south. It sits one hundred miles south of East Falkland.
On its southern side the bank slopes steeply down into waters two miles deep. To the north, around the islands, it's only around 300 to 400 feet deep. But on the bank itself the seabed is only 150 feet from the surface, and no submarine can run across it at speed without leaving a considerable wake on the surface.
Deep in the fog of the Burdwood Bank, Admiral Holbrook's Task Force would conduct their repairs, refuel, and make ready for battle. Both the Royal Navy submarines were headed inshore to patrol the coast and, if possible, sink any Argentine warships, since none of them had yet been seen by the Task Force.
When the fog lifted, the Royal Navy would turn to the north, and come out fighting. In the broadest terms, they would immediately launch missiles at any Argentine warship that came within range. They would get the GR9s away in an attempt to slam the airfield and the harbor, and pray to God they could hit the incoming Argentine air attack. And hit it early.
In the dark hours before that, the
But for two days and two nights the fog bank never moved; the winds were light, and sometimes it rained, but visibility was constantly poor. The CO of
Nothing was definite, either way, but Captain Vanislav stayed in deep water, very slow and very quiet, waiting for the satellite signal that would tell him the time and day of Argentina's aerial onslaught from Rio Grande and Mount Pleasant.
When the Royal Navy ships moved, he was confident he would pick them up. Right now in the fog he could only wait twenty miles north of the Burdwood Bank, where he suspected they were. But he was not about to venture into those shallow waters, where he would most certainly be detected.
Back in Washington there was no feedback whatsoever from Buenos Aires. President Bedford had carried out his threat and closed down the Argentine consulates all over the country. London also had no communique from Argentina, even after the Ambassador and all the diplomats had been expelled.
At 1530 on Friday afternoon, April 15, with the repairs completed, the wind got up, and so did the sea. But the skies became clear, and the sun fought its way through the dank and rainy clouds of the South Atlantic.
Admiral Holbrook, by now regretting the loss of the fog cover, placed the