He finally made it to the gate and zipped through before the Marine had even lowered his salute. Down Trigger Road and to the pier, he ran up the stairs at squadron headquarters where Commander Bushbaum was standing by his desk with the message. He handed it to him without a word, knowing better than to offer an interpretation before the commodore had read it. Soldato imagined the scene in control as it was typed by the radiomen, vetted by the communicator, and then hurriedly approved by the captain and transmitted. He fought back the urge again to think that none of this would have happened had he still been in charge.
SAFETY FLASH — LARGE AMTS FREON LOST. SOME TRANSFORMATION TO PHOSGENE DUE TO THERMAL CONTACT WITH SCRUBBERS. ONE DEAD NO INJURIES. SIX HOURS TO VENTILATE INTO SPEC MAKING UP TRACK NOW ESTIMATE ON TIME ARRIVAL TO PAPA ZULU. INVESTIGATION UNDERWAY IN CONJUNCTION WITH PREVIOUS FLASH INCIDENT.
He dropped the message to his desk and rubbed his temples. Bushbaum took this as a signal that it was time for him to speak.
“I guess the good news is that they still think they can make it to Taiwan in time.”
“I know every man on that crew,” Soldato snapped. “Including the dead one.” He let the reproach hang in the air.
“Sorry sir…I didn’t mean…”
Soldato waved his hand in a way that said…that was a stupid fucking thing to say, but we’ve got more important shit to worry about at the moment. “After six hours at PD fighting the casualty…in EAB’s for Christ sake….they still might make it.”
“And it’s a good thing,” offered Bushbaum cautiously. “The CNO’s office is asking for updates almost hourly. His number two called me the other day to tell me that a White House speechwriter was working on something, wanted some facts and figures about
Soldato looked back down at the message and tried to read into it what he could. A massive Freon leak, phosgene gas, a dead sailor. Six hours to replace all the bad air with good: a shit ton of Freon. Soldato tried to imagine how that much could be dumped, and failed to come up with a scenario. He imagined large amounts of food were turning bad inside the coolers of the Alabama. At the speeds they would be travelling, they wouldn’t be able to TDU it fast enough. They might run out of food. Odor would become an issue, although it was the least of the issues in his mind.
“Is Navships aware of this Freon-to-Phosgene conversion?”
“They knew there was a theoretical concern.”
“More than theoretical now, I guess.”
“They’re revaluating the advantages of the new refrigerant.”
Soldato had to wait a moment again for his anger to subside at that galactic fuck up by Navships, and then looked back down at the message. “Revaluating,” he said. “I’ll fucking bet. If I had more time, I’d track down that cocksucker EDO who recommended this change.”
“Did you also notice, ‘In conjunction with the previous incident.’”
“The dryer fire.”
“Right. That caught my eye too,” said Bushbaum.
It bothered Soldato, too, although he couldn’t put his finger on why. Words were like gold in a message like that, you didn’t include them unless you absolutely had too. These weren’t letters home, they were the first piece of paper in a stack that would grow into a mountain of documentation. They would be studied for months, possible even years, as the bureaucracy went to work and tried to figure out who to blame. Especially with a sailor dead…the incident would employ an army of investigators and desk jockeys for months to come. There was an art to writing messages like that, to include every essential fact and not one thing more.
“Why mention that the two investigations are in “in conjunction?”“
Bushbaum shrugged. “They’re being done by the same guy?”
“Probably.”
“But why mention that?”
“Maybe they think the two incidents have a common cause.”
Bushbaum stepped back. “What in the hell could be the common cause of a dryer fire and a Freon dump?”
Soldato hesitated. “A saboteur.”
“Jesus Christ.”
“It wouldn’t be the first time. You’re too young to remember, but when I first got in the navy, during Vietnam, it was a real concern. They called it “Stop our Ship,” or SOS. Set fires, threw wrenches into reduction gears, sailors refusing to show up, shit like that.”
“On submarines?”
“No, it was mostly those pussies on carriers.”
“But you think it might be politically motivated? Because of the Taiwan mission?”