With the Falcon rolling violently and the torpedo bobbing up and down, they had their work cut out for them. As I watched, the man with the grapnel leaned way out over the rail, made a stab-and was drenched from head to foot with solid green water which suddenly rose up under Falcon's counter just as he was reaching. For a moment I thought he must have gone overboard, but the wave receded and he was still there, doubled over the bulwark and clutching it with both hands, a heretofore unnoticed line leading from his waist inboard. There was no sign of his pole, and I thought it gone until I noticed another man hauling in on another line trailing astern, and in a moment he had returned the first man's equipment.
He made several more stabs, each ineffectual, until Jim directed Keith to bring us close aboard on the other side of the torpedo so as to make a lee for it. For fear of drifting down upon it, the Falcon had had to come up to leeward of the torpedo, leaving it to windward and thus making it most difficult to lasso. The interposition of the lower-lying and slower- drifting S-16 to windward created a lee of comparatively smooth water and made the difference. Within minutes after we had moved up we saw the torpedo in the air being hoisted onto Falcon's capacious afterdeck.
"Good thing we waited, hey, Keith," said Jim.
Keith had no opportunity for reply, for at this moment a voice beneath us spoke up.
"Permission to come on the bridge?" It was Roy Savage.
"Permission granted," rejoined Jim, with a glance at me.
It had been crowded before on S-16's cramped little bridge, bundled as we all were against the cold, and the addition of a seventh person made it a very tight squeeze indeed.
"How'd the torpedo look?" asked Savage.
"Fine, sir," replied Jim. "Hit ten yards forward of the M. O. T."
"I mean the torpedo itself, when they picked it up," insisted Savage.
Keith, who had been inspecting the Falcon through his bin- oculars, spoke up. "It looked all right, Captain. No dents that we could see. Propellers and rudders looked okay. They got it aboard without hitting the side."
"Good," rejoined Savage. Then he turned to Jim. "Signal the Falcon to return to base."
Rubinoffski, being not more than two feet away, had heard also. Jim nodded to him and the Quartermaster leaped lightly on top of the periscope supports, bracing himself with one foot on the bridge rail against the wind, as he unfurled his semaphore flags.
Savage was talking to Jim: "We want to go through a few emergency drills before returning to port. After you, get the message off to Falcon get clear of her and dive. We'll spring the emergencies on you after you get her down."
"Aye, aye, sir," answered Jim, and Roy Savage disappeared below again. As he did so, Jim turned to me, his face contorted. "Good God! What more can they want? They saw me hit with the torpedo, didn't they? And they've worked me over for three days besides."
The feeling of uneasiness with which I had come on the bridge, and which had remained and intensified during the minutes prior to the recovery of the torpedo, became stronger yet. I beckoned to Jim, crowded over with him in the after corner of the bridge.
"Jim, old man," I said in a low tone. "That wasn't a very good approach."
"What do you mean?"
"Look, Jim, you were just plain lucky. You ran for over five minutes at high speed without making a single observation.
If the Falcon had zigged during that time instead of at the end, you would never have got close enough to shoot."
"Nothing so lucky about that, when she flashed the light she was on one course, and when I finally got a look at her through the periscope she was on another one. So I knew she had already zigged, and wouldn't zig again for a while!"
"Well, okay," I said, "though that's not a very realistic way of doing it. Another thing: not once during the entire approach did you look around with the periscope. If there had been another ship in the area, or if the target had been escorted, you might have got us in serious trouble."
"But there weren't any other ships anywhere around! I knew that. I took a good look all around before we dived.
"That's not the point, Jim. There are plenty of unrealities in the whole thing, among them that the target flashes a light at us and runs toward us. What if the Falcon had gone the other way, headed out through the Race toward Montauk Point? Then you'd not have had an approach at all. But the worst thing was that at the very end of the approach, at the firing point, you obviously lost the picture. Keith saved the approach for you."
Jim's face became a mottled red. "The hell he did!" he al- most shouted. "Who put the ship in firing position? Who aimed the torpedo? He was my assistant, wasn't he, it's his job to back me up!"
I still spoke in a placating tone. "I know you did, Jim, but remember when you said he had zigged away? Keith knew he had not zigged. You announced the angle on the bow as ninety, which is about what it should have been. Frequently when the target passes at close range just at the time of firing, it looks like a zig, and you fell for it. You wouldn't have fired at all if Keith hadn't made you."
Jim's jaw muscles bulged. "What are you telling me all this for? Don't you want me to be qualified? Are you for me or against me?"
"I want you to be qualified just as much as you do Jim,"
I said steadily, "but what I am trying to say is that the Qualification Board has probably picked up these same points I'm telling you about."
Jim muttered an obscenity. "Damn this whole thing, anyway," he mumbled.
We would have talked further but there came a voice from the conning tower.
"Commander Savage wants Mr. Bledsoe in the control room!"
Jim swung away abruptly without another word and went below.
The Falcon, with our torpedo secured on deck, had already started on her way back to port. Keith in the meantime had turned the ship around and was heading back toward the point where we had previously dived. He looked at me inquiringly, bowing his head against the stiff breeze which on this new course whipped straight across our bridge. There was nothing I could tell him about what had just gone on.
"Keith," I said, "you know what you're supposed to do. As soon as Jim passes up the word, go ahead and dive."
"Aye, aye, sir," answered Keith. "We're still rigged for dive, but the hatch has not been checked yet."
"Hasn't it?" I asked, surprised.
"No, sir. We were crowded up here, and Jim said not to bother because we weren't going to dive again." Our ship's orders required that the bridge hatch be inspected while rigging the ship for dive, and again after every surfacing. This involved closing it, and if we were under way the skipper's as- sent was therefore required. "I'll ask Jim for permission to check it as soon as you get below," said Keith. Ordinarily, of course, I would have given the authority, but today was Jim's show. Even with Jim and Roy Savage below, however, there was hardly any room to spare on the bridge, and Keith evidently wanted to spare me the contortions necessary to allow him room to shut it.
"Very well," I answered, and dropped down the hatch in- to what passed for a conning tower in an S-boat, hardly more than an enlargement of the hatch down to the control room. It contained a built-in desk, used by Jim and the Quartermaster for some of their navigational work, and some signaling equipment. It was not like a fleet boat's conning tower, however, nor really a "conning tower" at all, in the strict sense, for the ship could by no means be conned from there.
Set into the steel walls on either side were two tiny round windows, or eye-ports made of thick glass. Occasionally some member of the crew would watch a dive from there or seek some of the mysteries of the undersea from this vantage point.