Pete laughed out loud. “Sorry, but you’re talking to a guy who knows better, General. I picked that island, I’ve studied the charts probably more than any man on earth. I programmed the drones that surround it on how to kill submarines.”
“We think there’s a way,” the general said again.
Pete scoffed, looking at his two colleagues for support. “Care to share the details?”
“In due time,” said the general. “But first… we have to teach you how to drive a submarine.”
The door to their office burst open again, and a small man in a khaki uniform limped inside. He was wearing a black leather patch over his left eye, the same half of his face covered in pink wrinkled scars, the distinctive scars of a man who’d lived through a ferocious fire. He had the oak leaves of a commander on his collar, but the front of his uniform was devoid of military decoration save for two things: the gold dolphins of a submarine officer, and below that, a war patrol pin. His nametag said ASE.
He nodded at the general and then stared down Pete with his one good eye. Pete felt an old, rebellious urge to say something sarcastic, to show he wasn’t intimidated by this show of military brass.
“Is that pronounced ‘aze’?” he said. “Like purple haze?”
“No,” said the submariner. “It’s pronounced ‘ace.’ As in: I’ve killed a bunch of people.”
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
Pete stared at the sonar screen, his eyes burning from fatigue. The two bright, parallel bars of the degaussing range came into view, as he knew they would.
“Dive, make your depth six hundred and thirty-two feet,” he said.
The diving officer acknowledged the order, and Pete felt the angle in his feet as the ship dived. He pictured the bottom of the ocean rising toward them as their depth increased. It was flat there, he knew, and sandy. But he still didn’t want to touch bottom.
“Left five degrees rudder,” he said, steering the ship slightly, putting it right in the middle of the range. They were easing toward it, right on track. When they lined up perfectly, he gave his next order.
“Ease your rudder to left two degrees.” There was an unusually strong current at the range that day, pushing them sideways, or making them “crab,” in the words of Commander Ase. The small rudder would keep them moving right on track, right down the middle. Unless something went wrong.
Right on cue: a screeching alarm, a swirling red light. “Stuck dive planes, sir!” yelled the diving officer. They suddenly tilted forward steeply. Pete had to grab on the periscope ring over his head to stay on his feet.
“Right full rudder!” he ordered. “Switch to manual control!”
The diving officer complied, but the ship continued to dive. The big rudder was having the desired effect, the ship would dodge the electrified walls of the degaussing range, turning right in front of the entrance at Point Alpha. But he wasn’t sure they would miss the ocean floor.
“Emergency blow!” announced Hamlin. “Forward main ballast tanks!”
He grabbed the right-hand lever and pulled it toward him. He heard the tanks gasp as the valve turned and high-pressure air shot into the forward MBT and expanded, instantly expelling thousands of tons of seawater. The angle of the ship came off instantly, the huge air bubble in the tank overwhelming the force of the stuck planes. For a moment, the ship was level; then the angle started going up. “We caught it!” said Pete. He went from leaning forward to leaning backward as he watched their depth change. The ship was now soaring toward the surface.
The diving officer counted down their depth as they ascended. “One hundred feet,” he said. “Ninety… eighty… seventy…”
The angle leveled off suddenly as the ship broke through the surface, and crashed back down. They were bobbing on the surface.
“Sir, the ship is broached,” said the diving officer, stating the obvious. Pete could hear waves breaking against the side of the hull.
Immediately, drone alarms began screeching from the ESW console. The floor shuddered as bombs rained down on them. “Emergency deep!” shouted Pete as alarms indicating fire, explosions, and flooding lit up the control room. He scanned the alarms, prioritizing, identifying a reactor scram as his most pressing concern because it would kill their propulsion.
Then, with a pneumatic sigh, the control room shuddered and the alarms went silent. The lights surrounding them came on, revealing that they were not in the control room of an actual Polaris-class submarine. They were on a simulator, a perfect replica of a control room perched atop hydraulic pistons and a bank of computers that could simulate every possible catastrophe. It belonged to the Navy’s submarine school in Charleston, South Carolina, but it seemed to Pete that every other student had been sent home so the facility could be devoted entirely to his brief, intense apprenticeship.
Commander Ase limped to the edge and dropped a small steel gangplank that linked the simulator to the surrounding, three-story platform.
“Well, I didn’t hit the bottom that time,” said Pete as Ase made his way in. His heart was racing.
Ase nodded. “Aye, that’s true,” he said. “But you’ll be on the bottom soon enough. After the drones take care of you.”
“So what was I supposed to do?” said Pete, too tired to sound frustrated.
“You’re supposed avoid the bombs,” said Ase. “These submarines cost a lot of money. Reset!” he yelled into the shadows. The simulator shook with a thunk as unseen operators prepared it for another run.
And so they ran it again, Pete trying to squeeze the ship through the degaussing range during fire, flooding, every variety of stuck planes, and attacks from both above and below. When not on the simulator, he was in the classroom, learning from a string of submariners, all of whom seemed to worship Ase, about all the systems that would keep him alive and get him to Eris Island. Even in his exhaustion, Pete soon learned to appreciate the elegance of the submarine’s design, the engineering that had gone into it. Every feature and system had evolved over time, many in battle, to make the ship at once both safe to her crew and deadly to the enemy. His education in aeronautical engineering was more useful in the process than he’d expected. Underwater, the submarine moved more like an airplane than like a surface ship, as the water moving over her control surfaces positioned her just like the air flowing over a plane’s wings. Thus he was comfortable with the principles that kept a submarine submerged. Ase and his followers rarely spoke about how a submarine operated on the surface.
Much of his training revolved around great submarine disasters. They called it “lessons learned,” and in fact, the fleet did an admirable job of adapting their machines and their tactics by studying the wreckage of their martyrs. But it was more than that. His instructors in Charleston were indoctrinating Hamlin into a brotherhood. And part of being in that brotherhood, he learned, was an understanding that every time you left port in a submarine, you were going in harm’s way.
The USS Thresher was the first great nuclear submarine lost, commissioned in 1960 and lost in 1963, with all 129 men aboard. It was during a post-overhaul dive trial, about two hundred miles east of Cape Cod, Massachusetts. The ship was in constant communication with the Skylark, a submarine rescue ship that cruised above her, a safety measure that ended up doing no good at all. At test depth, one thousand feet beneath the surface, flooding began in a place and for reasons that were never determined. At that depth, Pete learned, the force of the water would have been like a cannon, the noise alone would have been debilitating. For reasons not completely understood, the ship’s emergency blow system failed to save them. There was some speculation that the rapidly expanding pressurized air froze the valves that were designed to channel it. At 0915, the worried commander of the Skylark transmitted on the “Gertrude,” his underwater telephone, the message, “Are you in control?”