The Hunt for Red October - Tom Clancy [181]
"Shot?" Mancuso was surprised.
"Worry about that later," Ryan said sharply. "Let's get your doc working on them, okay?"
"Sure, where's the hatch?"
Borodin spoke into the bridge mike, and a few seconds later a circle of light appeared on deck at the foot of the sail.
"We haven't got a physician, we have an independent duty corpsman. He's pretty good, and Pogy's man will be here in another couple minutes. Who are you, by the way?"
"He is a spy," Borodin said with palpable irony.
"Jack Ryan."
"And you, sir?"
"Captain Second Rank Vasily Borodin. I am—first officer, yes? Come over into the station, Commander. Please excuse me, we are all very tired."
"You're not the only ones." There wasn't that much room. Mancuso perched himself on the coaming. "Captain, I want you to know we had a bastard of a time tracking you. You are to be complimented for your professional skill."
The compliment did not elicit the anticipated response from Borodin. "You were able to track us. How?"
"I brought him along, you can meet him."
"And what are we to do?"
"Orders from shore are to wait for the doc to arrive and dive. Then we sit tight until we get orders to move. Maybe a day, maybe two. I think we could all use the rest. After that, we get you to a nice safe place, and I will personally buy you the best damned Italian dinner you ever had." Mancuso grinned. "You get Italian food in Russia ?"
"No, and if you are accustomed to good food, you may fmd Krazny Oktyabr not to your liking."
"Maybe I can fix that. How many men aboard?"
"Twelve. Ten Soviet, the Englishman, and the spy." Borodin glanced at Ryan with a thin smile.
"Okay." Mancuso reached into his coat and came out with a radio. "This is Mancuso."
"We're here, Skipper," Chambers replied.
"Get some food together for our friends. Six meals for twenty-five men. Send a cook over with it. Wally, I want to show these men some good chow. Got it?"
"Aye aye, Skipper. Out."
"I got some good cooks, Captain. Shame this wasn't last week. We had lasagna, just like momma used to make. All that was missing was the Chianti."
"They have vodka," Ryan observed.
"Only for spies," Borodin said. Two hours after the shootout Ryan had had the shakes badly, and Borodin had sent him a drink from the medical stores. "We are told that your submarine men are greatly pampered."
"Maybe so," Mancuso nodded. "But we stay out sixty or seventy days at a time. That's hard enough, don't you think?"
"How about we go below?" Ryan suggested. Everyone agreed. It was getting cold.
Borodin, Ryan and Mancuso went below to find the Americans on one side of the control room and the Soviets on the other, just like before. The American captain broke the ice.
"Captain Borodin, this is the man who found you. Come here, Jonesy."
"It wasn't very easy, sir," Jones said. "Can I get to work? Can I see your sonar room?"
"Bugayev." Borodin waved the ship's electronics officer over. The captain-lieutenant led the sonarman aft.
Jones took one look at the equipment and muttered, "Kludge." The face plates all had louvers on them to let out the heat. God, did they use vacuum tubes? Jones wondered. He pulled a screwdriver from his pocket to find out.
"You speak English, sir?"
"Yes, a little."
"Can I see the circuit diagrams for these, please?"
Bugayev blinked. No enlisted man, and only one of his michmanyy, had ever asked for it. Then he took the binder of schematics from its shelf on the forward bulkhead.
Jones matched the code number of the set he was checking with the right section of the binder. Unfolding the diagram, he noted with relief that ohms were ohms, all over the world. He began tracing his finger along the page, then pulled the cover panel off to look inside the set.
"Kludge, megakludge to the max!" Jones was shocked enough to lapse into Valspeak.
"Excuse me, what is this 'kludge'?"
"Oh, pardon me, sir. That's an expression we use in the navy. I don't know how to say it in Russian. Sorry." Jones stifled a grin as he went back to the schematic. "Sir,