The burly man who ran the shipyard looked at him and shook his head. “All right, it’s your neck. I’ll get someone.” He walked to the end of the brow and shouted.
It took a moment or two before he was heard, then Morrison came up on deck. The commander motioned him to come onto the dock and then waited until the man had removed his head covering. “Mr. Kepinsky has decided to make a personal inspection of the interior of the hull,” he said. “He wants a suit and would like to go on board as soon as he can.”
“We don’t have any spares,” Morrison answered. “I’ll have to get one of my men up and they can change here on the dock.” He went back on board and disappeared down the hatch once more. He returned within a minute followed by another man, then came across the short brow with enough evidence of speed to keep Kepinsky satisfied. Without being instructed the man in the decontamination suit began to remove the protective clothing; he was obviously unhappy, but carried on because he had no choice.
It was some minutes before Kepinsky was ready to enter the hull. In that interval of time a considerable change had taken place within the submarine. The three suits worn by the diving team had been carefully hidden and the team had been warned by an emergency signal. The slight sounds coming from the extreme rear of the ship ceased almost at once. The isotope which Chief Summers had placed had already been moved to a suitable and difficult-of-access position in the reactor compartment where it continued to pour out its raw radiation, no less deadly because it was invisible and unheard. Within two minutes all superficial evidence of light-up had been removed and even to an expert eye the environment of an authentic emergency was close to complete. If the unwelcome visitor brought any kind of a Geiger counter or other instrument with him, it would give all of the properly misleading answers.
It took Kepinsky considerably longer than he wished to get into the somewhat complicated decontamination suit that he had borrowed. He was helped, but the assistance seemed to do nothing to speed him on his way. As he struggled to encase himself properly he cursed the weakness within himself that had kept him standing on the dock for so long when, as he knew now, he should have been inside the submarine making a firsthand inspection of everything. His stomach knotted when he realized that the only report he could give as of that moment would be based on what he had heard and what he had been told by the Americans. The only tangible thing he had seen himself was the reading on the radiation detector on the dock. When he was fully ready he went across the brow behind the supervisor and climbed down inside the hull.
He was almost relieved to discover that every one of the men on board was hard at work doing all of the things he knew to be necessary. Because of his suit he could not be recognized, but he was unaware of the red flashlight signals that had been given just prior to his coming on board.
He spent almost thirty minutes examining everything and was satisfied, first that this was a real and authentic nuclear mishap and second that he could so report on the basis of close personal inspection. His own position was now far more secure, and with that knowledge relief flooded through him. He still could not explain his delay in seeing things for himself, but with the data he had now he was confident that he could conjure some kind of a realistic excuse that would sound valid.
He was tapped on the shoulder by Morrison, who then indicated the dial of his watch. A radiation counter close to the reactor compartment was going like mad, which was adequate warning. It had to be genuine because the independent instrument on the pier, which was known to be untampered with, had been telling the same story. Kepinsky turned his back on the hard-working men crowded into the available space and made his way up the ladders with no regrets. Later on, at an appropriate time, he would go inside again.
Not until he was well out of his protective clothing did the real work inside the submarine resume. The waiting divers were signaled, the light-up crew went back to work, and the cooling pumps were started. On the dock the day-shift men came back as a group, escorted by two guards, obviously both tired and unhappy. When the decontamination suit had been returned to its proper owner and the man had gone about getting into it once more, Morrison joined the yard commander for a brief conference with both Kepinsky and the commander’s overseer tuned in.
“I think we can*let most of the day-shift men go home,” he said. “I’d like to keep a few on hand for extra work if that can be managed, particularly plumbers if there are any.”
“How about relieving them and calling some fresh men on the job?” the commander suggested.
“You might have trouble getting anyone to come in; the word will be out now all over town. One suggestion: the men are used to this ship. Up in the forward end, shielded from the radiation, there are some bunks which they could use. Then when we need them we can wake them up.”
The commander appeared to consider that. “Why not,” he said finally, “if we can depend on them to stay out of the way until they’re needed.”
“They will, I can guarantee that — if they value their skins.” “How many do you think you’ll need?”
Morrison glanced over at the waiting men. “Half of them would be enough.”
The commander walked over to where the day-shift workers were gathered. “Some of you can go home now,” he said, “the rest of you we’ll keep on for a while longer. You’re all getting overtime, so take it easy.”
There was a brief murmur from the men, but the assurance of the extra pay was obviously what they wanted to hear. Quickly the commander sorted them into two groups, then he dismissed the first contingent and saw them start down the pier — anxious now to get away. “We’ve made some arrangements for the rest of you,” he announced. “We’ve got the radiation shielded off from the forepart of the ship. There are plenty of crew bunks down there that you can use. So you might as well sack out, and if we need you we’ll wake you up.”
“I don’t think we’d like that,” Summers said. “It’s too dangerous.”
The commander bristled. “Listen, you, in case you haven’t heard, things aren’t the way that they used to be. We’re all taking orders now whether we like it or not. Personally I don’t like it, but there isn’t a damn thing I can do about it. Right now the job is to protect our own men and the people that live close around this base.
“We still get paid?” Summers pressed.
“Yes, you get paid — overtime rates even while you’re in the sack.”
“All right.” Resignedly Summers got to his feet.
Slowly the others followed suit. Morrison, bulky in his decontamination clothing, led them on board and escorted them down the front hatch well forward of where the critical work was being done. Kepinsky carefully counted them; there were twenty-three. They could do no harm where they were going because he personally had seen the thorough precautions that had been taken to seal off the front end of the submarine.
A Jeep driven by an enemy security agent came slowly down the pier and stopped beside Kepinsky. “A report is wanted,” the agent said in his own language.
“I just came up from the submarine a few moments ago,” Kepinsky answered. “I made a personal inspection in detail. It is presently very hazardous down there.”