The Hunt for Red October - Tom Clancy [188]
"Dead ahead, hundred yards. Let's make sure we see what that is."
"Right. Going forward . . .There's something, looks like a butcher knife. We want it?"
"No, let's keep going."
"Okay, range?"
"Sixty yards. Ought to be seeing it soon."
The two officers saw it on TV the same time Overton did. Just a spectral image at first, it faded like an afterimage in one's eye. Then it came back.
Overton was the first to react. "Damn!"
It was more than thirty feet long and appeared perfectly round. They approached from its rear and saw the main circle and within it four smaller cones that stuck out a foot or so.
"That's a missile, Skipper, a whole fuckin' Russkie nuclear missile!"
"Hold position, Jess."
"Aye aye." He backed off on the power controls.
"You said she was a Victor," Johnsen said to the Soviet.
"I was mistaken." Kaganovich's mouth twitched.
"Let's take a closer look, Jess."
The Sea Cliff moved forward, up the side of the rocket body. The Cyrillic lettering was unmistakable, though they were too far off to make out the serial numbers. There was a new treasure for Davey Jones, an SS-N-20 Seahawk, with its eight five-hundred-kiloton MIRVs.
Kaganovich was careful to note the markings on the missile body. He'd been briefed on the Seahawk immediately before flying from the Kiev. As an intelligence officer, he ordinarily knew more about American weapons than their Soviet counterparts.
How convenient, he thought. The Americans had allowed him to ride in one of their most advanced research vessels whose internal arrangements he had already memorized, and they had accomplished his mission for him. The Red October was dead. All he had to do was get that information to Admiral Stralbo on the Kirov and the fleet could leave the American coast. Let them come to the Norwegian Sea to play their nasty games! See who would win them up there!
"Position check, Jess. Mark the sucker."
"Aye." Overton pressed a button to deploy a sonar transponder that would respond only to a coded American sonar signal. This would guide them back to the missile. They would return later with their heavy-lift rig to put a line on the missile and haul it to the surface.
"That is the property of the Soviet Union," Kaganovich pointed out. "It is in—under international waters. It belongs to my country."
"Then you can fuckin' come and get it!" snapped the American seaman. He must be an officer in disguise, Kaganovich thought. "Beg pardon, Mr. Johnsen."
"We'll be back for it," Johnsen said.
"You'll never lift it. It is too heavy," Kaganovich objected.
"I suppose you're right." Johnsen smiled.
Kaganovich allowed the Americans their small victory. It could have been worse. Much worse. "Shall we continue to search for more wreckage?"
"No, I think we'll go back up," Johnsen decided.
"But your orders—"
"My orders, Captain Kaganovich, were to search for the remains of a Victor-class attack submarine. We found the grave of a boomer. You lied to us, Captain, and our courtesy to you ends at this point. You got what you wanted, I guess. Later we'll be back for what we want." Johnsen reached up and pulled the release handle for the iron ballast. The metal slab dropped free. This gave the Sea Cliff a thousand pounds of positive buoyancy. There was no way to stay down now, even if they wanted to.
"Home, Jess."
"Aye aye, Skipper."
The ride back to the surface was a silent one.
The USS Austin
An hour later, Kaganovich climbed to the Austin's bridge and requested permission to send a message to the Kirov. This had been agreed upon beforehand, else the Austin's commanding officer would have refused. Word on the dead sub's identity had spread fast. The Soviet officer broadcast a series of code words, accompanied by the serial number from the depth-gauge dial. These were acknowledged at once.
Overton and Johnsen watched the Russian board the helicopter, carrying the depth-gauge dial.
"I didn't like him much, Mr. Johnsen. Keptin Kaganobitch. The name sounds like a terminal studder. We snookered him, didn't we?"
"Remind