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The Sum of All Fears.pdf - Delta Force

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previous mark, and penciled in another. 'I think we have something here, sir.'<br />

'I hope you didn't interrupt my sleep for nothing,' Ricks noted. Lieutenant<br />

Pitney caught the look the two other sonarmen exchanged at that.<br />

'Coming back, sir. You know, if this is an Akula, we should be getting a little<br />

pump noise in this spectrum over here<br />

'Intelligence says he's coming out <strong>of</strong> overhaul. Ivan is learning how to make<br />

them quieter,' Ricks said.<br />

'Guess so . . . slow drift to the north, call the current bearing<br />

two-nine-seven.' Both men knew that figure could be <strong>of</strong>f by ten degrees either<br />

way. Even with the enormously expensive system on Maine, really long-distance<br />

bearings were pretty vague.<br />

'Anybody else around?' Pitney asked.<br />

'Omaha is supposed to be around somewhere south <strong>of</strong> Kodiak. Wrong direction. It's<br />

not her. Sure it's not a surface contact?'<br />

'No way, Cap'n. If it was diesel, I'd know it, and if it was steam, I'd know<br />

that, too. <strong>The</strong>re's no pounding from surface noise. Has to be a submerged<br />

contact, Cap'n. Only thing makes sense . . .'<br />

'Pitney, we're on two-eight-one?'<br />

'Yessir.'<br />

'Come left to two-six-five. We'll set up a better baseline for the target-motion<br />

analysis, try to get a range estimate before we turn in.'<br />

Turn in, Pitney thought. Jesus, boomers aren't supposed to do this stuff. He<br />

gave the order anyway, <strong>of</strong> course.<br />

'Where's the layer?'<br />

'One-five-zero feet, sir. Judging by the surface noise, there's<br />

twenty-five-footers up there,' the sonarman added.<br />

'So he's probably staying deep to smooth the ride out.'<br />

'Damn, lost him again . . . we'll see what happens when the tail straightens<br />

back out . . .'<br />

Ricks leaned his head out <strong>of</strong> the sonar room and spoke a single word: 'C<strong>of</strong>fee.'<br />

It never occurred to him that the sonarmen might like some, too.<br />

It took five more minutes <strong>of</strong> waiting before the dots started appearing again in<br />

the right place.<br />

'Okay, he's back. I think,' the sonarman added. 'Bearing looks like<br />

three-zero-two now.'<br />

Ricks walked out to the plotting table. Ensign Shaw was doing his calculations<br />

along with a quartermaster. 'Has to be a hundred-thousand-plus yards. I'm<br />

assuming a north-easterly course from the bearing drift, speed <strong>of</strong> less than ten.<br />

Has to be a hundred-K yards or more.' That was good, fast work, Shaw and the<br />

petty <strong>of</strong>ficer thought.<br />

Ricks nodded curtly and went back to sonar.<br />

'Firming up, getting some stuff on the fifty-hertz line now. Starting to smell<br />

like Mr Akula, maybe.'<br />

'You must have a pretty good channel.'<br />

'Right, Captain, pretty good and improving a little. That storm's gonna change<br />

it when the turbulence gets down to our depth, sir.'<br />

Ricks went into control again: 'Mr Shaw?'

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