The petty officer looks up at Firsov. “Pizdec, whoever is in command of your ship is a crazy man. He’s going to get your crewmates killed if he keeps up like that.”
“He’s probably already done so,” Firsov replies. He wants to tell the petty officer that if the skipper of the submarine, Captain Second Rank Leonid Svetlovski, hadn’t been so slow on the uptake, this could have been prevented.
As soon as Firsov had made it to the deck of the submarine, he ran aft to the sail, where he shouted up to the pair of sailors on the bridge on watch trying to keep warm.
At first they wouldn’t look down. But they must have heard him. He was making enough racket to wake the dead.
“Bljad, pull your heads out of your asses up there!” he shouted even louder. He glanced back up at the Storozhevoy’s bows looming overhead, fearful that someone might realize that he’d jumped ship and spot him down here. God only knows what order Sablin might give.
Finally one of the sailors looked over the coaming and spotted an officer, his uniform filthy from climbing down the mooring line. On the one hand the sailor had a responsibility for the security of his ship, while on the other he had to show respect to an officer. Right then the sailor was caught between a rock and a hard place, which is fairly common in the Soviet navy.
“Sir, do you need some assistance?” the sailor calls down. It’s the only thing he can think to say.
“Is your captain aboard?” Firsov asks.
“Yes, sir.”
“With compliments, tell him that Senior Lieutenant Vladimir Firsov from the Storozhevoy is on deck and would like to have a word with him. Tell him it’s urgent.”
“Yes, sir,” the sailor replies, and he disappears, presumably to use the submarine’s interphone to call the captain.
Still no one has come to the Storozhevoy’s bow, but Firsov suspects that can’t last much longer.
The sailor is back in a couple of moments. “The captain asks that you come below!” he calls. “Just through the hatch, sir.”
A hatch opens at the base of the sail, and a warrant officer beckons from inside.
Now it begins, Firsov tells himself, not at all sure how this will turn out. But the one thing he’s feared the most turns out to be justified. When he tells his story to the sub’s skipper, Captain Second Rank Svetlovski, he’s met with stunned disbelief.
“A mutiny of the officers is impossible,” Svetlovski fumes. “Such things no longer happen aboard Soviet warships. Where is your KGB officer?”
“He’s been reassigned, sir. The mutiny was ordered by our zampolit. He’s arrested Captain Potulniy and a few of the officers who tried to stop him.”
“What, are you crazy? I know your captain. He would never allow such a thing to happen.”
The next two things Svetlovski does are completely predictable given the circumstances and given the general mood in the Soviet navy. First he steps a little closer so that he can smell Firsov’s breath. Accurate or not, it’s been said that half of all Soviet military forces are drunk half of the time. But Firsov has not had a drink all night, though he wishes he had some of Boris’s spirt.
The second thing the submarine captain does is pass the buck. “I cannot do anything without authorization, Senior Lieutenant,” he tells Firsov. “I’m sending you ashore. You can tell your fantastic story to the duty officer, and it will be up to him. Though if he doesn’t have you shot I’ll be surprised, because God help us all if you’re telling the truth.”
It takes more than a half hour for the launch to be summoned and bring Firsov ashore and several precious minutes longer to convince the security guards on the quay to call the duty officer.
Nobody believes Firsov’s story. Nobody wants to believe him.
Yet the Storozhevoy dropped her moorings, nearly collided with the submarine next to her, almost ran down a tanker, and has sailed downriver into the fog.
The security guard comes back from his post. “The duty officer is on his way, sir.”
“Thank you,” Firsov replies politely, though he feels anything but polite at this moment.
The security guard and the crew aboard the launch are looking at him as if he were insane or as if he were a bug under a microscope. None of them has any real idea what he’s been talking about, but to a man they understand that very big trouble is afoot, and they are thanking their lucky stars that they are not involved.
Another half hour passes before Petty Officer Nikolai Aksenov finally shows up in a gazik, which is the same sort of general-purpose military vehicle as the American jeep. He gives Firsov’s filthy uniform a hard stare, then takes in the security guard and the launch and its crew before he offers a salute.
“Senior Lieutenant, I understand that there may be some trouble,” the duty officer says.
Firsov snaps a sketchy salute in return. “There has been a mutiny aboard the Storozhevoy.”
“How do you know this, sir?”
“He’s my ship. I just came from there!” Firsov shouts. He wants to punch the stupid kid in the mouth. “He just dropped his moorings and headed downriver.”
“What, at this hour? No ships are scheduled to leave until morning.”
“It’s true,” the petty officer aboard the launch says. “We just saw him leave in a big hurry. And he damned near ran down a tanker.”
“I know about the tanker’s schedule,” the petty officer says. He looks downriver, as if he’s trying to spot the departing ship with his own eyes. Of course nothing is to be seen except for the fog and the indistinct hulking shapes of the fleet still at anchor in the middle of the river.
“Well?” Firsov demands.
“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.”
“Bljad, call somebody!”
Aksenov stares out across the river in the direction the Storozhevoy has gone, hoping against hope that either this is a nightmare or the ship would come back. But he’s not asleep in his bunk, dreaming all of this, nor can he see anything moving in the fog.
“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 Bounty, after Captain Bligh was set adrift with some of the crew, after he’d made the impossible voyage in a small open boat halfway across the Pacific, saving the lives of all but one of his men—after all of that—Bligh still faced a court-martial.