“Once he reaches open water,” Quinnivan said, “we’ll need another submarine to take over this mission.”
“To get someone to take over?” Seagraves mused. “That’s not easy with no radios.”
“We got off the SLOT buoy message. That’ll have to be how we’d hand off,” Quinnivan said.
“Captain,” the engineroom upper level watchstander said, “the officer of the deck reports the first letter of our call sign has been received aboard on the VLF loop. Also, he requests to shift propulsion to the emergency propulsion motor.”
Seagraves nodded. “Tell the OOD, permission granted to shift propulsion to the EPM.” He looked at Kelly. “Eng, keep a close eye on the EPM. If it fails, we’ll have a very long swim home.” To Quinnivan, he said, “in only two hours we’ll know what the message says.”
“Only two things they could say,” Quinnivan said. “Either break trail and come home to Mommy. Or shoot the fookin’ BUFF out of the ocean and kill his ass.”
“The essential problem of under-ice combat,” Alexeyev said to the room of gathered senior officers, “is to establish enough straight-line distance from the target to be able to shoot at him without sustaining damage to our own submarine.” The words of his dead engineer came to him then—
“But if he loses that thrust bearing, Captain,” Trusov said, “he’s not going anywhere. He’ll be dead in the water. Plus, he won’t be making the noise that’s allowed us to track him.”
“If we don’t hear him,” Sobol said, “we can hit that direction with active sonar and get his position. If he’s a few hundred meters out, we can shoot him with the Shkval torpedo.”
“If that fails, all we have left is a nuclear Gigantskiy,” Alexeyev said. “And as we’ve demonstrated, we need more than ten miles range to avoid damage to us. And we won’t get ten miles under ice, not until we’re much closer to the marginal ice zone.”
“Sir?” Trusov said hesitantly.
“Go ahead,” Alexeyev said.
“Sir, if the Americans lose propulsion, they’ll be trapped under the ice.”
There was silence in the room for a long moment. Finally, Lebedev spoke, her voice harsh.
“Trusov, we’re under orders to
“Madam First,” Trusov said, frowning, “the Americans are fellow submariners. We can’t shoot them if they’re helpless. And we can’t leave them to die under the ice.”
Alexeyev stood up abruptly. “This meeting is over,” he said, acid in his voice. “Clear the room except for Madam Lebedev and Captain Kovalov.”
When the more junior of the officers had left, Alexeyev looked at Kovalov. “Your systems officer is out of line. But she’s also correct.”
“Sir,” Lebedev said, “we have clear orders concerning the hostile submarine. Shoot to kill. I recommend we discuss the ‘how’ of those orders, not the ‘why.’”
“Let me humor you, Madam First,” Alexeyev said. He looked at the projection left on-screen by Maksimov. “We’re here, surfaced at the original ice target — open water. The ice walls roughly form a box, seven miles wide east-to-west, perhaps half of that in the north-south direction. Presumably, Hostile One is hovering underneath us or on the bottom, waiting for our next move. Also, I presume he will follow us no matter what we do. So, imagine this. We vertical dive to a hundred meters. Then we follow our course line that got us into this box back to the corner opening into the ice maze farther west of us. But we do that at flank speed.”
“Flank speed?” Lebedev said, color draining from her face. “If we do that, we could hit a pressure ridge and rupture the hull. Or shear off the conning tower — or the rudder.”
“It’s the only way to establish stand-off distance to the American,” Alexeyev said. “When we’re at the entrance to the box, seven miles from open water, we spin the ship, ping active to get a data package on the American and open fire with a Shkval torpedo. Nominal depth, one hundred to two hundred meters. But we fire it whether or not we have reestablished contact on the American.”
“Shooting a Shkval blind means throwing it away,” Kovalov said, shaking his head. “If Hostile One is surfaced at the open water after we leave — probably to get or send radio messages, you won’t get a return on active sonar. And the probability of a hit on a target not acquired by sonar? You would essentially be jettisoning it.”