The Hunt for Red October - Tom Clancy [227]
"You have earned it, Ryan."
"The name's Jack, sir."
"Short for John, is it?" Ramius asked. "John is the same as Ivan, no?"
"Yes, sir, I believe it is." Ryan didn't understand why Ramius' face broke into a smile.
"Tug approaching." Mancuso pointed.
The American captain had superb eyesight. Ryan didn't see the boat through his binoculars for another minute. It was a shadow, darker than the night, perhaps a mile away.
"Sceptre, this is tug Paducah. Do you read? Over."
Mancuso took the docking radio from his pocket. " Paducah this is Sceptre. Good morning, sir." He was speaking in an English accent.
"Please form up on me, Captain, and follow us in."
"Jolly good, Paducah. Will do. Out."
HMS Sceptre was the name of an English attack submarine. She must be somewhere remote, Ryan thought, patrolling the Falklands or some other faraway location so that her arrival at Norfolk would be just another routine occurrence, not unusual and difficult to disprove. Evidently they were thinking about some agent's being suspicious of a strange sub's arrival.
The tug approached to within a few hundred yards, then turned to lead them in at five knots. A single red tuck light showed.
"I hope we don't run into any civilian traffic," Mancuso said.
"But you said the harbor entrance was closed," Ramius said.
"Might be some guy in a little sailboat out there. The public has free passage through the yard to the Dismal Swamp Canal, and they're damned near invisible on radar. They slip through all the time."
"This is crazy."
"It's a free country, Captain," Ryan said softly. "It will take you some time to understand what free really means. The word is often misused, but in time you will see just how wise your decision was."
"Do you live here, Captain Mancuso?" Ramius asked.
"Yes, my squadron is based in Norfolk. My home is in Virginia Beach, down that way. I probably won't get there anytime soon. They're going to send us right back out. Only thing they can do. So, I miss another Christmas at home. Part of the job."
"You have a family?"
"Yes, Captain. A wife and two sons. Michael, eight, and Dominic, four. They're used to having daddy away."
"And you, Ryan?"
"Boy and a girl. Guess I will be home for Christmas. Sorry, Commander. You see, for a while there I had my doubts. After things get settled down some I'd like to get this whole bunch together for something special."
"Big dinner bill," Mancuso chuckled.
"I'll charge it to the CIA."
"And what will the CIA do with us?" Ramius asked.
"As I told you, Captain, a year from now you will be living your own lives, wherever you wish to live, doing whatever you wish to do."
"Just so?"
"Just so. We take pride in our hospitality, sir, and if I ever get transferred back from London, you and your men are welcome in my home at any time."
"Tug's turning to port." Mancuso pointed. The conversation was taking too maudlin a turn for him.
"Give the order, Captain," Ramius said. It was, after all, Mancuso's harbor.
"Left five degrees rudder," Mancuso said'into the microphone.
"Left five degrees rudder, aye," the helmsman responded. "Sir, my rudder is left five degrees."
"Very well."
The Paducah turned into the main channel, past the Saratoga, which was sitting under a massive crane, and headed towards a mile-long line of piers in the Norfolk Naval Shipyard. The channel was totally empty, just the October and the tug. Ryan wondered if the Paducah had a normal complement of enlisted men or a crew made entirely of admirals. He would not have given odds either way.
Norfolk, Virginia
Twenty minutes later they were at their destination. The Eight-Ten Dock was a new dry dock built to service the Ohio-class fleet ballistic missile submarines, a huge concrete box over eight hundred feet long, larger than it had to be, covered with a steel roof so that spy satellites could not see if it were occupied or not. It was in the maximum security section of the base, and one had to pass several security barriers of armed guards