ABOARD U.S.S. JOHN HANCOCK, ONE HUNDRED MILES NORTHWEST OF BENGHAZI, LIBYA
Wendell Nelson convinced only the captain of Nicholson to call him Nellie; the others, though more at ease with him now, remained formal. He and Nicholson’s captain were the last members of the old “black shoe” Navy, the ones who had come aboard during the Vietnam era. They had cut their teeth on remnants of the old steam-boiler fleet or chased through steaming jungles in riverboats. Though they were educated in the weapons of the eighties, they were inured to the older traditions.
Nelson was of their generation, but he was different; he was tight with this new admiral; he was tall and handsome and looked like a Moorish god in his whites; he made statements such as: “Be goddamn happy you have pilots who can fly helos off your fantail, because if you didn’t, the first sound you’d hear would be the detonation of a warhead fired by a submarine you didn’t know was there — and it would be the last thing you’d ever hear,” or, “Thank your lucky stars that you’ve been set loose from that battle group, because you don’t have enough protection on board to keep yourselves from being blown out of the water with that first salvo,” or, “You don’t have to think about the tactics I’m going to use — just follow directions. The computer will save your ass.”
They understood Wendell Nelson, grudgingly accepted his truisms, and would follow him. But that didn’t mean they had to like him. They accorded him the respect that Navy regs required and let it go at that. There was no time for comparing notes to see if they could present a united front. Each commanding officer was hidebound to his ship, responsible to his men, and would fight his ship to the maximum of his ability.
Nelson stretched, then patted his breast pocket and was reminded that he had run out of cigarettes. There was no way he could function without them, not now. He sent the bridge messenger to his cabin for three more packs. There was no telling how long it might be before he was able to get back down there himself.
There was a bit of the old Navy buried deep within Nelson. He preferred to spend as much time on the bridge as possible. Hell, he loved it. He could operate from there because his was a three-dimensional mind, one that could develop an absolute picture of his strategic environment. He could either picture John Hancock as the center and see the air, surface, and subsurface situation, or he could withdraw himself. He would place his mind in a remote location and develop a holographic image. In it, there was no ocean surface on which his ship sailed, nor a darkness that hid submarines. Rather, the surface was an invisible plane, the air above and the water below equally clear. He could visualize the whole picture; he was omniscient.
It was in that manner that he would function as a squadron commander, coordinating two divisions, each operating independently of the other. If the computer projections and Nelson’s mind functioned in concert, those two divisions would actually be sweeping the Soviet wolf packs in closer to each other than was judicious. Then he would destroy them — if they didn’t get him first.
Nelson thanked the messenger for the cigarettes, lit one immediately, and meandered over to the chart table. One of the quartermasters had set up a separate chart for him to insert latest-estimated-position reports. He erased the old locations, pinpointing the Soviet submarines that he was to take out.
He had no concern for those that were to the west of Malta or to the north in the Ionian Sea. They were covered by the NATO forces that Pratt had established. Garibaldi and her mixed-nationality escorts seemed in control up there. The submarines that Nelson targeted were proceeding from the east in advance of Kharkov and other Russian surface forces, or from the Gulf of Sidra to the south. The frigates were only a picket line, a stopgap measure to slow the advance from the east. Nelson estimated that as many as a dozen Soviet subs might penetrate that line after disposing of the frigates. With the eight that were coming from the south, it was indeed a formidable force. There were no friendly submarines to move ahead of him to counter them. The last order Pratt had given to his own submarine commander was to move eastward, placing himself between the Soviet carrier group and Kennedy’s.
Nelson compared these subs to a pulling guard, leading the sweep around the end. Their mission was vitally important to the success of Soviet strategy. If the full force of that all-important first salvo was to achieve maximum effect, these submarines were the key. The Backfire bombers depended a great deal on them, the attacking surface forces depended on them, the entire strategy of achieving an initial blow that the Americans could not recover from depended on their success.
Pratt knew exactly how Nelson’s mind functioned, how the man responded to a threat. The Admiral envied Nelson’s ability to envision the threat by completely withdrawing and establishing that objective mental picture of his. He knew of no other man capable of succeeding in this particular case.
Nelson lit another cigarette from the butt of the one he had just finished. He sketched some more on his chart, then called his executive officer over. “This is where we’re going to chase them.” He pointed at an imaginary spot about a hundred miles north of Benghazi, Libya. “Have the communications officer prepare a message designating Nicholson’s CO as northern division commander. I want him to move the remaining frigates gradually down in that direction. They’ll either chase the subs in their sector in his direction or draw them down there. I’ll take any help I can get.”
The executive officer looked at the chart for a moment with a touch of uncertainty, then back at Nelson. “Admiral Pratt still has tactical command of those pickets, Captain.” He was one of those not yet able to figure out how his commanding officer could assume such responsibilities.
“You’re right. Send another message to Pratt and tell him I will assume command of those frigates immediately.”
“Uh…” The XO couldn’t swallow that one. In his Navy, junior officers were not in the habit of telling an admiral what they were assuming command of. But the XO simply couldn’t think of what to say.
“Just send it, and watch what happens. Okay?” Nelson pushed his baseball cap back on his head in a jaunty manner and grinned at the XO. The meaning of his expression was obvious. It said in no uncertain terms, I know what I’m doing and I know my bounds.
“Right, Captain.”
“And when you get the comm officer set, zip up the ship for the duration. We’re just about in missile range and they have a better idea where we are than we do them. I’m going to need you to run this ship.” It was the way he wanted the XO to see him — a man above the other captains, but also a man who trusted his subordinates, one who would give them all the responsibility they could handle. The XO was a good officer — Nelson had checked his credentials before he’d ever gotten together with Pratt in Washington. He could have asked for another XO, but this man and his ASW training were superb. What the hell, thought Nelson, I might not be too excited about having me for a CO either. But I needed a go-between with the crew, and they understand this guy. A crew needed a known entity and the XO was it.
“Contact!” The voice report echoed across the bridge from sonar a split second before the warning bell went off. A missile was locked on John Hancock!
ABOARD U.S.S. JOHN F. KENNEDY, SOUTHEAST OF MALTA
When Admiral Pratt settled into his chair in flag plot, the displays before him were accurate within seconds. Commander Clark had been made a staff officer because of his brilliance in strategic concepts. Once Pratt made him understand what was expected, Clark was able to deliver. From the moment he entered the room, Pratt knew there would be no necessity for sharp language again. The only element missing was the satellite picture. But that was balanced by the fact that the Russians were no better off in that respect.