“Estimated range is seventy two hundred yards sir,”
“Estimate angle on the bow to be
port zero six zero, speed seven knots,” he continued. “Chief of the Watch.
Stand by to raise number one BRA-34.”
Tim could feel his stomach twist
instantly into knots from the sound that came through his headphones. A sharp “THUMP THUMP” noise caught his
attention while his ears tried to make his brain register the sound. It took a second or two for his mind to sort
through its years of experience until it finally registered. But the next sound brought terror to his
voice as he screamed out the words that no one wanted to hear. “Torpedo in the water! Torpedo in the water!”
“Oh my God,” someone said in the
Sonar Shack.
The loud voice pierced the
tension of the Control Room like the shot of a pistol in a metal drum. “Conn Sonar. Torpedo in the water. I
repeat, torpedo in the water.”
The high pitch sound from the
counter rotating screws was undeniable as the noise from the incoming weapon
was patched over the Control Room loud speaker. Sounding much like the same high speed kitchen blender, the
disturbing noise grated against the gentle sound of the ocean much like
fingernails on a chalk board.
At first Christine didn’t
understand what it all meant, but by looking at the faces of the men within the
room she could actually see the color drain from them, suddenly knowing that
this wasn’t good.
“Sonar Conn,” Sutton yelled into
the microphone. “Give me a bearing to
the weapon.”
“Conn Sonar. There is one weapon in the water
bearing....... Oh God.... Zero two zero sir.”
“Sonar do you have any opening or
closing bearing rate on the weapon,” Sutton questioned in hopes that the weapon
might be traveling either right or left.
“Negative Conn. Zero bearing rate. Its coming directly for us.
Conn..... We have another
torpedo in the water now, same bearing sir,” he said with his voice an octave
higher.
“Helm. Hard right rudder come to course one nine zero all ahead flank,
signal Maneuvering to cavitate. Dive
make your depth eight hundred feet.
Forty degree down angle.
NOW!” Sutton fired orders one
right after the other to his men.
“Depth five eight feet sir coming
to eight hundred,” the Diving Officer announced.
Christine could feel the knot in
her stomach tighten as she tried to remain in control of her senses, her first
instinct was to run but what kept her from doing it was that she had no place
to run too. She had always prepared
herself to be killed someday maybe in a drug bust gone bad or something like
that, but to be blown up by a torpedo?
Everything around her began to take on slow motion as she observed the
Captain lower the scope while men moved about the small room performing their
jobs.
“Sonar any updates on the
weapons,” Sutton called out as the deck below him slowly began to take on the
down angle from the Stern planesman.
With the slower speed from their transition to periscope depth, the
Memphis was sluggish to respond to the imputs from the control surfaces. Steeling a glance to the forward portion of
the room, he could see that both Planesmen had jammed their controls forward
into the mechanical stops in prayer of more angle.
“Conn Sonar. No updates sir,” the Supervisor replied
hastily. “Weapons are still tracking
with a zero bearing rate.”
Glancing at the speed indicator
on the bulkhead above him, Sutton was disappointed that the Memphis was only at
seven knots. Looking quickly at the
indicator light beside the gauge, he witnessed that all three of them were lit
up like a Christmas tree, indicating that the propeller was thrashing violently
at the water trying to gain speed.
“Six zero feet,” the Diving
Officer called out.
The Soviet Torpedo’s sliced
through the water at over fifty knots.
Their acoustical nose cones parted the water listening for any subtle
changes in the targets propellers.
Imputs from the acoustical cone were then relayed to the processor
giving the position of the target while small adjustments were fed into both
the rudder and elevator control surfaces as the lethal weapons closed in on
their prey.
Water streaked aft along the body
into the counter rotating screws and violently thrashed, mixing with the
exiting exhaust gasses that bubbled aft behind the charging weapon. The first weapon raced towards its target in
front of the second one by over ten seconds.
“Chief of the Watch. Prepare to launch countermeasures.”
“Prepare to launch
countermeasures aye sir,” he replied as the man stood up and poised over the
small control panel awaiting the order.
“Six two feet,” the Diving Officer
called out again.
“Weapons Officer. Snap shot two two,” Sutton ordered.
“Snap shot two two aye sir.”
“Six four feet.”
Punching the button to the 1MC
Sutton repeated the order. “Snap shot
two two.”
It took several agonizing seconds