Kovalov nodded seriously. It was never good when his wife’s voice sounded like his mother’s, he thought. “But is an apology appropriate? Considering what she did?”
“It is now,” Adele said. “Trust us. This is the next step.”
He walked back to Magna’s room, knocked, and went in. She was still sobbing, her shoulders shaking, and she wouldn’t look at him. He sat on the bed and tried to touch her arm, but she wailed and retreated to the other side of the bed, crying pitifully.
“Magna,” he said sincerely, “I am so sorry I hurt you. I was much more frightened for you than angry, baby. But I will never hurt you again.”
She was barely able to be understood as she cried into her pillow, but he made out the words, “Get out! Get away from me!”
Those were the last words his daughter had spoken to him for two years. But the sneaking out, the drugs, the partying, the sex — it all stopped. She went back to studying, her grades rising from failing to exemplary. The clothes she picked out no longer looked suitable for a street hooker, but more of what a serious student would wear. She started to speak to her stepmother about going to the university.
But through it all, there was that black silence. Kovalov’s relationship with his daughter was over. He could only interact with her through his wife or his ex-wife, and the pain of it tore his heart out. He tried to console himself that he had
And what if this damned mission, this fool’s errand, went bad and he didn’t return? What would that do to little Magna? Just thinking about it made his eyes moist. He took out a tissue and blew his nose, surreptitiously wiping his eyes.
He looked at Vlasenko, who was on the radio with the yard tug that was tying up to the starboard side of the
“How are the hydronauts?” Hydronauts were underwater commandos who reported to GUGI, the Main Directorate of Deep-Sea Research, and would assist outside the hull when it came time to deploy the Status-6 units. Kovalov had met their stand-offish commander, Captain Second Rank Kir Krupkin, a tall, muscular, blonde-haired, blue-eyed, square-jawed officer who had little to say to Kovalov. Kovalov got the impression that Krupkin disapproved of Kovalov’s fleshy submariner’s body, the rich food and lack of opportunities to exercise leading to a few kilograms around his waist he could well afford to lose. Just another thing to suffer in this mission, Kovalov had thought, and sent Krupkin off with Vlasenko to his and his men’s assigned bunks.
“Assholes, as I suppose you’d expect of elite commandos,” Vlasenko said. “Once we’re aboard
“I’m surprised they didn’t just leave port on the
Vlasenko shrugged. “Maybe they just want to get acquainted with the boat.”
“They’ve been training in simulators for a year. Not sure what a ride on the boat gets them at this point. So who’s driving us out?” Kovalov should have known the action stations for the underway by heart, but he’d been distracted with all his thoughts about Magna and this operation.
“Systems Officer Trusov will take us out,” Vlasenko said.
“Iron Irina,” Kovalov said, smiling. Captain Second Rank “Iron Irina” Trusov had been weapons officer of the ill-fated
“Yes, Captain, I know she will,” Vlasenko said, glancing down the pier. “Looks like we have company. Sail ho.”