one-third. Then give me a few minutes and meet me in my stateroom.”
Ten minutes later, Tom Cubit sits alone in his cabin, rereading the transmission from Naval Intelligence for the fourth time. A knock, and Commander Dennis enters. “Sir?”
“Sit.” He hands his XO the sheet of paper.
“Jesus—this thing wiped out the entire CVBG?” Bo Dennis’s hands are shaking. “I feel like somebody just punched me in the gut.”
“Me too.” Cubit hands him a bottled water. “I’ve been sitting here, thinking. I bet I’ve served with at least a dozen men who were aboard the
“Tom, this attack sub, the
“Just what’s in the message. Never heard of a biochemical computer before.”
“I have. My wife works for Hewlett-Packard. They started playing with the technology back in the late 1990s. If it works like it’s supposed to, this sub’s gonna be damn hard to track.”
“Tracking the
“Aye, sir.”
There are several different ways a submarine commander can disseminate information aboard his ship. Some COs prefer to broadcast the news over the 1-MC, the sub’s intercom, while others choose to keep their crew in the dark, allowing the information to leak out slowly through word of mouth. Tom Cubit realized the news regarding the sinking of the carrier battle group could devastate the morale of his men, but he also needed them to remain in a high state of alert if they were to have any chance of surviving a confrontation with the
“This is the captain. By now, you’ve heard about the attack and sinking of the
“Our mission is not to join in the hunt for the
Cubit hangs up the 1-MC. “Sonar, conn, how close are we to the Typhoon?”
“Conn, sonar, four miles. Contact has changed course to two-one-zero, now heading southwest, increasing speed to ten knots.”
“Officer of the Deck, make your depth five hundred feet. Bring us to within three miles of the Typhoon’s baffles, then match speed and course.”
“Aye, Skipper, making my depth five hundred feet, coming to course two-one-zero. I am closing to within three miles of the contact, then matching speed and course.”
Norwegian Sea
406 nautical miles southwest of Bear Island
The dark, reinforced-steel hull of the Typhoon, nearly two football fields in length, pushes silently through the frigid waters of the North Atlantic as it heads south toward Iceland.
Captain Romanov straps himself into his command chair. Although his ship’s passive sonar reports no tonal bearings, experience tells him that an American submarine, probably a Los Angeles-class attack sub, is hovering somewhere in the vicinity. “Helm, hard right rudder, reverse engines.”
“Aye,
The Typhoon’s bow swings sharply to starboard, the great ship cavitating as its propellers fight to keep their hold on the sea.
Aboard the USS
“Conn, sonar, contact is coming about, changing course to three-three-zero, reducing speed to five knots.”
“Helm, all stop.”
“All stop, aye, sir.”
Long minutes pass as the
“Conn, sonar. Sir, I’m registering ambient sounds, approaching from the northeast. Range, twenty-two- thousand yards, closing at six knots.”
The sonar supervisor’s voice answers over the intercom. “Sir, initial classification is biologics. Believe they may be humpbacks.”
Cubit closes his eyes. The attack on the
“Aye, sir.”
“Conn, sonar, the Typhoon has resumed its course—two-one-zero, increasing speed to fifteen knots.”
“Eighteen knots—”
“Very well. Helm, all ahead one-third—”
“Aye, sir. All ahead one-third.”
“Conn, sonar, I’m getting another set of ambient sounds. Very faint.”
“Belay that order, helm. All stop.”
“All stop, aye, sir.”
“Sonar, Captain, what do you hear?”
“I don’t know, sir. It’s gone now.”
Cubit pushes past his officer of the deck and heads forward, joining his sonar supervisor, who is leaning over Michael Flynn’s luminescent green console. “Talk to me, Michael-Jack. What did you hear?”
“I don’t know, Skipper, it was sort of a
“Sand?”
“Yes, sir. Lots of sand. Like something massive just lifted off the seafloor.”