Read The Command Online

Authors: David Poyer

Tags: #Thriller

The Command (26 page)

“All right,” Dan said. They were glancing at the door when he added, “How are you going to man the new team?”

“We've got a waiting list, sir,” Marchetti said.

“Is Wilson on it?”

“Wilson?”

“Commander Hotchkiss tells me she makes all the musters and workouts and familiarization fires. Think she deserves a shot?”

“I'd rather not, sir.”

“Why not?”

“These ragheads hate Americans anyway. I'd hate to think what they'd say to a woman. You heard the stuff they say over the bridge to bridge, when one of the girls goes on.”

“That the reason? Spare her feelings?” Dan asked him.

“No, sir.”

“Okay, what's the real reason?”

“She's not going to be able to do the job.”

Dan said, not wanting to order him to do this, wanting him to do it because he thought it was worth a try; to get him on the side of giving the girl a chance: “That's your opinion. Right?”

“An opinion based on a hundred and twenty-one boardings.”

“Is it possible you could be wrong?”

“No, sir.”

“Not even remotely?”

“No, sir.”

“You're never wrong, is that it?”

“I didn't say that, sir,” Marchetti said, face about as closed as it was possible for a rock-armed, slick-headed, tattooed senior chief's to get. “I said I couldn't be wrong about that.”

“All right, I've heard enough. Put her on the team, Senior Chief,” Dan said.

Marchetti snapped stiff. “Aye, aye, sir.”

“You can cut the bullshit, too. I expect you to treat her like any other team member. That goes for you, too, Sean. If I hear she's not being treated with the respect due a shipmate, you'll explain why to me.”

The Machete said aye, aye again. Dan let him stand at attention for a couple more seconds, then dismissed them both, telling Cassidy the commodore wanted to see him but that he probably had time for a quick shower first. Thinking as the scowling senior chief left that he wouldn't want to be in Wilson's boots over the next few days. But maybe it would work out.

Or maybe it wouldn't. But that was the whole point, wasn't it. To see.

He leaned back, staring blankly at his Compaq. Unless the environment in Washington meant they were going to be integrated even if it weakened fighting effectiveness. Blair didn't seem to think that was the case, and she was in the thick of it. He had to believe Congress had at least some modicum of responsibility.

Or did they? A conversation from when he'd been working in D.C. came back to him. With a staff aide to a congressman. What had Sandy said? Something about how the guy she'd worked for had tried to do the right thing once. And paid for it. That no one in government had any other goal than to keep their jobs.

He slicked his hair back, feeling the sweat and grit that coated it. He didn't think of himself as above that. But he'd decided a long time ago that if he couldn't do what struck him as right, he didn't need to stay in. Probably not an attitude that would get him to flag rank, but it let him keep some sort of relationship going with Dan Lenson.

He was thinking about that when the 1MC clicked into life. “General quarters. General quarters. Set condition Zebra throughout the ship. Class Bravo fire in main engine room number one. This is not a drill. Class Bravo fire, main space fire in main engine room number one. Repair Five provide.”

16

C
OBIE was squatting on her boots beside the PLCC, working on her quals for the local control monitor, when she heard the explosion. It was the loudest thing she'd ever heard in her life. So deafening it paralyzed her for a second. She had no idea what had happened, only that her ears were ringing so loud all she could hear was a noise from the generator flat that sounded like a Tyrannosaurus sicking up a bad dinner. A hoarse, deafening ROWF, followed by a steadily decreasing
RRRRrrrrrrrr.
She didn't know what it was, only that sparks were flying through the gratings, and she tucked and rolled instinctively, balling herself tight under the heavy steel counter.

Suddenly the air was full of coffee-colored smoke and the stink of burning plastic. The lights went black, succeeded by faraway glows as the relays popped on the battle lanterns.

Sanders tore past, hauling ass up the ladder like a monkey in the zoo, somebody threw a firecracker in their cage. Somebody else rattled after him. Maybe Akhmeed but she wasn't sure. She started to follow, then hesitated, coughing as acrid smoke bit her throat. Shouldn't they try to do something? Pull out the little SEEDs, the emergency air canisters they had to carry in the space, and check things out?

To hell with it. She spun and ran after them, dropping her qualification book, boots ringing the deck plates. The smoke was getting thicker by the second. Now it burned like acid in her throat. She went to port and aft and up the vertical ladder. But at the top she caught something sharp with her head. Stars shot though her brain, and she staggered back, gripping her skull. But forced herself up again, coughing hard now, and turned around twice before she got her bearings and forced her numb legs to push her up the ladder to the IR flat.

This was it, the top of Main One. Only where was the door? Smoke
and darkness, and somewhere outside the echoing bong of the general quarters alarm. She felt around and got her hands on the dogging bar. Closed tight. She almost screamed, but when she heaved the quick-acting lever whanged up and there were faces glowing in the emergency lighting and she stumbled through into Helm's arms, coughing and mopping blood off her forehead with the sleeve of her coveralls.

THEY stayed in the passageway for a while. Helm tried to make her go to sick bay to get her head taken care of, but she wouldn't. She let Akhmeed put on a dressing to stop the blood running down her forehead, though. She felt sick. Helm made her sit down with her head between her legs.

The lights were out in the p-way, probably all over the ship. It was hard to make out what people were saying, and she only gradually realized it wasn't them, it was her hearing. The petty officers were isolating the space, snapping off breakers and closing valves from the emergency control panel. The Porn King said he'd been back by the feedwater tank in the lower level when the big bang went off. It sounded like it was above him. Cobie said it was above her, too, from the PLCC. Helm said it smelled like an electrical fire, and whatever it was had dragged all the gens off line when it went.

“We don't have any power?” she yelled at him. “Anywhere?”

“You don't have to scream, I can hear you. Feel how we're rollin'? We're dead in the water. They're probably trying to start number three back aft. They can do an emergency start with HP air from the Epsy”

She wasn't sure what the Epsy was although she'd heard it mentioned. It was in Main Control, she knew that.

“Whassup?” The investigator, bulky in oxygen breathing apparatus and mask and red hard hat. The rest of Repair Five lurched and stumbled behind him. Helm told him quickly—explosion, smoke—and pointed him down the ladder. The guy looked at her. “She hurt? You need to evacuate her.”

“She's okay. I need her to isolate the space.”

The investigator shrugged and pulled the tab off his canister. He seated it, sealed his mask, and sucked. Smoke curled behind the eyepieces. The oxygen candle lighting off. The number-two man paid out line, and he disappeared into the darkness.

Power came back, lights lit, the slam of breakers echoed along the passageway. The ventilation whirred up the scale, and the smoke
started to clear, at least out here. “Are we gonna go back down?” she asked Akhmeed.

“Sure. Unless it's actually on fire down there.”

They hung there for fifteen minutes, listening to the repair party shouting and passing word. It was still dark in there. You didn't deiso-late the space until you knew what went wrong. Then they started backing out, and she heard the 1MC announce the fire was out and the reflash watch set, and desmoking commenced by method A. The guys got up and she did, too, getting ready to go back in.

Only she didn't want to. Her lungs still hurt. The black oval of the door was a nightmare she didn't want to go back into. She told Akhmeed she had to pee, she'd be right back.

She sat hunched in the stall, shivering, wiping her eyes with toilet paper. What if she didn't go back down? They'd put her on mess cranking till forever. Talk about her like she couldn't take it. And they'd be right. Sure, you're scared, she told herself. You just fucking got to go back down, that's all. She thought about Kaitlyn. She had to do this. For her.

“Hey, Kasson! You in there?” Helm, cracking the door.

She screamed back to fucking close it. “I
said
I had to pee.”

“Sorry. Just checking, in case you passed out or something.”

When she got back, the Red Devils were roaring. The supply ventilators were on in Aux 1 and they were blowing the last of the smoke out of the escape scuttle. “Okay, let's get in there and see what we got,” Helm announced. “Take it easy and watch where you walk. It's still isolated, but don't fucking touch anything looks like it might be hot. You stay with me, Sugar Mama.”

“Don't
fucking call me Sugar Mama, jackoff.” The guys from the repair party sniggered, and she snapped her flashlight on and stalked past them into the dark.

THE IR flat looked OK, but the boiler level was a mess. Stuff was tracked all over. Helm told them to get rubber gloves and foxtails and get it cleaned up, then they'd see what to do next. He and the captain and the exec and the chief engineer, “the whole fucking food chain,” as Ricochet put it, were gathered around number-one GTG.

The first bad thing Cobie saw was the number-one switchboard. Still smoking, with a big hole down at shin level where the lower breaker panel had blown out. Bubbling chunks of brown plastic,
blown-out wires. The disconnect bars, copper contacts big around as her thumb, were melted into shapeless globs of red metal. They were still sizzling as they burned their way into the deck matting. They picked everything up that was too big to sweep and carried it out in buckets. She tried to pull what was left of the breaker carrier out. It didn't move. Akhmeed couldn't get it out either. He said they'd have to get one of the hull techs to cut it out with a torch. She went down to tell Helm but, when she got to the gaggle around the generator, stopped to listen.

Lieutenant Porter, the chief engineer, was explaining to Captain Lenson that the labyrinth seal had blown on the generator. Not the turbine, but the part that made electricity. It had mineral oil in it to lubricate the bearings. When the seal blew, it sprayed the oil on the rotor. “That sent a high voltage, high amperage charge, just like a bolt of lightning, up the bus to the switchboard. That'd blow the 1SG breaker, the switchboard generator breaker. So that's what happened up there.”

“Why'd the seal blow?” the skipper wanted to know.

“No reason I can tell you now, Captain. Could have been a manufacturing defect. Unfortunately, they're not a replaceable item.”

“How about the LP compressor? What happened there?”

“Downstream effect. The breaker blew out of the switchboard and right through the 1SA section. It sheared the bus tiebreakers out of the board and shorted out all the power and tripped all the generators off the line.”

Cobie thought, And we were just lucky none of us was standing in front of the switchboard. But Porter was saying that since the rotor was connected to the generator shaft it had made the shaft jump, and one of the blades inside the turbine had brushed the inside of the casing. Since it was going at thirteen thousand RPM, as soon as metal hit metal the blades came off.

Porter rounded suddenly on Cobie. “You were in the space when it went, right? Kasson?”

“Yessir. I mean, yes, ma'am.”

“What'd it sound like?”

“A bang, superloud. Then a kind of rowfing sound… then a whirring, like everything was dying.”

Mr. Osmani said, “That growl was the turbine eating itself. After the lightning bolt blew the generators off the line. Without power to the electronics the engines power down. They've got five minutes of fuel on the gravity tanks, but they shut down without the auto run signal.”

Cobie kept looking at Porter. She sounded like she knew exactly what had happened and what to do. She didn't seem to be in awe of the captain or the exec. The captain wanted to know if they could fix the turbine. Porter said they weren't allowed to and they didn't have parts kits. They'd have to remove and replace. Captain Lenson said to report the casualty, then, and asked how long would it take to put a new one in once they got it. She said maybe a day. Then he asked about the air compressor, if they could fix it. The chief engineer said they'd try, but they could run the plant, the pneumatic valves, and the rest of the system with the remaining compressor. If that failed, they could bleed air down to operating pressure from the high pressure system, or run the plant in manual if they had to, although they'd have to go to two watch sections to do it. The skipper nodded. He told Helm to tell the watch section they'd done the right things. He was glad they'd all got out safe. Then he told Porter to get on the repairs and ducked out the escape scuttle.

THAT afternoon everybody from the other sections, Punchy and Drone and Ina and one of the hull techs they called Mr. Blonde, after the Michael Madsen character in
Reservoir Dogs,
came down. They stripped the switchboard and cleaned it, and Mr. Blonde burned out the disconnect links with the torch. After a while Patryce came down with root beers, beaded cool cans they sucked gratefully, and the scuttlebutt was they were headed for Jubail to meet their new engine. She said she was off watch, she could stay and help Cobie out. Cobie wasn't too sure about that, but what the hell. They stripped the wiring out and got both switchboards disassembled and the electricians started putting it back together, but that would take longer than taking it apart. Then Chief Bendt put them on stripping down the low-pressure compressor, but it was more fucked than it looked. Some of the heads and blocks had to be replaced. Helm wanted her to help him get the covers off the generator rotor. When they did, black water and shit came pouring out of the casing, with chunks of burnt insulation. It stank, big-time.

Other books

An Heir of Uncertainty by Everett, Alyssa
The Complete Enderby by Anthony Burgess
What I Did by Christopher Wakling
Black by Ted Dekker
Silas: A Supernatural Thriller by Robert J. Duperre


readsbookonline.com Copyright 2016 - 2024