Читаем A Twist of Sand полностью

Hans Tutte listens.

"Too big," says the first officer. "The new British corvettes and frigates turn on a sixpence. They'd get you in a clumsy big thing like this."

"All right for a straight fight with twenty knots, though," said the second thoughtfully. "Fast run in, no noise, torpedoes away, fast run out again."

The engineer is both thrilled and subdued. "Wonderful, if it all hangs together. But burn anything out at sea, and it would be a dockyard job."

"If the Royal Navy ever let you get home," said the first grimly.

"But she's big, and she'll be wonderful for the crew. The lack of confined space will keep up their morale wonderfully."

Hans Tutte leans against the periscope housing and weighs up the experience of his veteran U-boat men.

He says suddenly: "How long do you think men can stay submerged and retain their fighting efficiency? Number One?"

"You mean, sir, in relation to this, or the standard U-boat?"

"This."

"No surface, no action, just submerged?"

"Yes."

No. One pauses.  "At a guess, I'd say twenty days."

Tutte surveys him judicially.   "Number Two?"

"Maybe a month, but they'd be no match for anything when we came up."

"Engineer?"

"It's easier in the engine-room, sir. There's always something to keep my men fully occupied. Small things go wrong and need fixing. But a month is a long time... ."

"Gentlemen," says Tutte coldly. "I have orders to carry out a cruise -- without surfacing at all if possible."

The others gaze at him silently. He knows what is running through their minds, and the same doubts about morale and fighting efficiency are in his.

"No base," he added.

Number One coughs discreetly. "And the length of the cruise, sir?"

Tutte eyes him grimly. "The equivalent of once round the world -- with action."

The U-boat service is too well disciplined to vent its surprise and dismay. Then Tutte smiles the smile for which his crew would follow him to the ends of the earth.

"I think, too, we must have a base, if it's only to surface and relax and see the sun. Not necessarily a naval base, for we have all our stores and torpedoes, but a base to relax in.

The U-boat Command disagrees with that. "Perhaps" he grins knowingly at his trusted officers -- "once we are at sea the High Command might relent."

I sat long with this imaginary scene in my mind. Was it wishful thinking ? I asked myself. I for one would have put forward the argument, as a submarine captain, of the need to relax and surface. What would happen in the interior of a submarine after a month under water ? True, in NP I the air would not foul as in ordinary craft, but what about the stink of humanity, the accumulation of refuse if operating in enemy waters, and the green slime which would coat everything inside the U-boat? What would happen to the physical state of the men themselves ? Would they get sick from some as yet unknown effects of long submersion? And -- this was a wayward thought -- was NP I quite foolproof in her machinery? Might there not be some poisonous exudation from this new-fangled nuclear propulsion? It came to me as I sat there in the pleasant sunshine that, perfect though NP I might be mechanically, the human element, particularly the human element trained in more conventional craft, would not stand up to the strain of the war at sea as well as her designers thought. NP I must find herself a haven, a nook away from the world. If I were Hans Tutte, that is what I would do. Somewhere safe to let the men smoke, swim and tan their bodies in the warm sun. This, I convinced myself, was the true Achilles heel of NP I. A base, a haven, a hidey-hole . . . she must have it.

The relief of having made some positive contribution to my problem was so great that it was some time before I realised that old Captain Peace was talking rationally. I saw that he was rational and his eyes had lost their uncomprehending look.

He stretched out his hand. "Geoffrey!" he exclaimed with pleasure. "Blast me, I never expected to have a real sailor at hand for my last voyage."

I muttered something about everything being well.

"Balls!" he said heartily. "I'm a dead duck, and you know it. What have you been doing with yourself? Why are you in England and not at sea? You didn't leave your submarine just to come and watch an old man die, did you?"

He rose up against his pillows with a burst of violent energy which had characterised him throughout his life.

England's enemies, beware of men like old Captain Peace, I thought to myself.

"No," I said steadily and I saw it cheered him at once. "Special orders."

"No tell, eh? "he laughed.

What the hell, I thought suddenly to myself. Why not tell him? He'd probably be dead before nightfall anyway. Somewhere in that vast accumulation of sea lore there might be something which would help me sink NP I. It would also help me, the unburdening of this terrible secret. I got up and closed the door.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Вечный капитан
Вечный капитан

ВЕЧНЫЙ КАПИТАН — цикл романов с одним героем, нашим современником, капитаном дальнего плавания, посвященный истории человечества через призму истории морского флота. Разные эпохи и разные страны глазами человека, который бывал в тех местах в двадцатом и двадцать первом веках нашей эры. Мало фантастики и фэнтези, много истории.                                                                                    Содержание: 1. Херсон Византийский 2. Морской лорд. Том 1 3. Морской лорд. Том 2 4. Морской лорд 3. Граф Сантаренский 5. Князь Путивльский. Том 1 6. Князь Путивльский. Том 2 7. Каталонская компания 8. Бриганты 9. Бриганты-2. Сенешаль Ла-Рошели 10. Морской волк 11. Морские гезы 12. Капер 13. Казачий адмирал 14. Флибустьер 15. Корсар 16. Под британским флагом 17. Рейдер 18. Шумерский лугаль 19. Народы моря 20. Скиф-Эллин                                                                     

Александр Васильевич Чернобровкин

Фантастика / Приключения / Морские приключения / Альтернативная история / Боевая фантастика