“I’m sorry, sir, but what do you want me to do?” Aksenov asks. This situation is way beyond him, except that, like the others, he understands there is the potential for a great deal of trouble. He wants to cover his own ass. It’s the sensible thing to do.
“I want you to call the harbormaster and alert him to the situation before it’s too late.”
Aksenov steps back a pace.
“If they make it out to the gulf there’s no telling where they’ll end up!” Firsov shouts.
“I’m sorry, sir, but the harbormaster has given strict instructions that he is not to be disturbed this evening.”
Aksenov stares out across the river in the direction the
“Brigade Seventy-eight,” he mutters. It’s the navy detachment here at Riga that is responsible for all military security, especially security for whatever warships happen to be in port. It’s the next step up in the chain of command, and Firsov realizes that he should have thought of that himself. But time is racing by.
“Well, make the call. Now!”
The duty officer hesitates for just a moment longer, hoping that somehow the situation will resolve itself without him. But that’s not going to happen and he knows it.
“Yes, sir,” he says, and he walks to the guard post to make the first call alerting the Soviet navy that a mutiny has occurred aboard one of its ships.
38. POTULNIY
Locked in the forward sonar parts compartment all evening, Potulniy has had time to think about the consequences, for not only Sablin and the crew, but also himself. After the mutiny aboard the
Bligh had survived and he was made to answer the same kinds of questions that Potulniy knew he would face if he survived.
“What actions did you take, or what actions did you fail to take, over the course of the previous twelve months, that would have driven your crew to rise up against you?”
“How is it that you failed to become aware of the conditions that led to the mutiny?”
“When the mutineer Captain Third Rank Sablin came to your quarters that evening, claiming that there was a CP belowdecks, why did you decide to personally handle the situation instead of sending a subordinate, therefore needlessly placing your person in jeopardy?”
“It is clearly documented that you were close to your
“Why is it that you did not have the support of the majority of your officers?”
“Why is it that you failed to keep a record of potential troublemakers?”
“Why did you allow your KGB representative to leave the ship before you had secured his replacement?”
“Can you honestly tell this commission that you were and are fit to lead men into a battle to defend the Motherland?”
“Can you honestly swear to this commission that you were and are a good Communist?”
“Why didn’t you give your life in defense of your ship?”
“Why didn’t you make more of an effort to escape and regain control of your ship? Or was it that you did not care about the outcome?”
The biggest blow after Sablin tricked Potulniy into entering the compartment and allowing himself to be locked in was the realization that it wasn’t just his
There’d been a commotion out in the corridor earlier. He’d recognized Sablin’s voice and he tried to talk some sense into the man. But it hadn’t worked, and now they were under way.
They’d hit something, but as best Potulniy could judge it was just a glancing blow. No water is rushing into his ship from some gash in the bows, but the engines had spooled up way too fast for navigation in the confines of the river. If they hit something at this speed they could very well sink the ship, and he would die down here locked in a compartment with no way to get out.
Like most sailors, Potulniy has a particular aversion to drowning at sea. Getting blown up in some great sea battle or even dying in a train wreck while on leave would be infinitely better than drowning.
There isn’t much in the compartment, except for a section of hefty steel pipe about twenty millimeters in diameter and one meter in length. Two hatches open from this tiny chamber, one out to the corridor and one up to the compartment directly above.