âProbably learned that they're going on leave,' Nicholls growled. âNothing else could possibly make that bunch move so fast. And who are we to grudge them the just rewards for their labours? After so long, so arduous, so dangerous a spell of duty in Northern waters . . . '
The first shrill blast of a bugle killed the rest of the sentence. Instinctively, their eyes swung round on the crackling, humming loudspeaker, then on each other in sheer, shocked disbelief. And then they were on their feet, tense, expectant: the heart-stopping urgency of the bugle-call to action stations never grows dim.
âOh, my God, no!' Brooks moaned. âOh, no, no! Not again! Not in Scapa Flow!'
âOh, God, no! Not againâ
not in Scapa Flow
!'
These were the words in the mouths, the minds, the hearts of 727 exhausted, sleep-haunted, bitter men that bleak winter evening in Scapa Flow. That they thought of, and that only could they think of as the scream of the bugle stopped dead all work on decks and below decks, in engine-rooms and boiler-rooms, on ammunition lighters and fuel tenders, in the galleys and in the offices. And that only could the watch below think ofâand that with an even more poignant despairâas the strident blare seared through the bliss of oblivion and brought them back, sick at heart, dazed in mind and stumbling on their feet, to the iron harshness of reality.
It was, in a strangely indefinite way, a moment of decision. It was the moment that could have broken the
Ulysses
, as a fighting ship, for ever. It was the moment that bitter, exhausted men, relaxed in the comparative safety of a landlocked anchorage, could have chosen to make the inevitable stand against authority, against that wordless, mindless compulsion and merciless insistence which was surely destroying them. If ever there was such a moment, this was it.
The moment cameâand passed. It was no more than a fleeting shadow, a shadow that flitted lightly across men's minds and was gone, lost in the rush of feet pounding to action stations. Perhaps self-preservation was the reason. But that was unlikelyâthe
Ulysses
had long since ceased to care. Perhaps it was just naval discipline, or loyalty to the captain, or what the psychologists call conditioned reflexâyou hear the scream of brakes and you immediately jump for your life. Or perhaps it was something else again.
Whatever it was, the shipâall except the port watch anchor partyâwas closed up in two minutes. Unanimous in their disbelief that this could be happening to them in Scapa Flow, men went to their stations silently or vociferously, according to their nature. They went reluctantly, sullenly, resentfully, despairingly. But they went.
Rear-Admiral Tyndall went also. He was not one of those who went silently. He climbed blasphemously up to the bridge, pushed his way through the port gate and clambered into his high-legged armchair in the for'ard port corner of the compass platform. He looked at Vallery.
âWhat's the flap, in heaven's name, Captain?' he demanded testily. âEverything seems singularly peaceful to me.'
âDon't know yet, sir.' Vallery swept worried eyes over the anchorage. âAlarm signal from C-in-C, with orders to get under way immediately.'
âGet under way! But why, man, why?'
Vallery shook his head.
Tyndall groaned. âIt's all a conspiracy, designed to rob old men like myself of their afternoon sleep,' he declared.
âMore likely a brainwave of Starr's to shake us up a bit,' Turner grunted.
âNo.' Tyndall was decisive. âHe wouldn't try thatâwouldn't dare. Besides, by his lights, he's not a vindictive man.'
Silence fell, a silence broken only by the patter of sleet and hail, and the weird haunting pinging of the Asdic. Vallery suddenly lifted his binoculars.
âGood lord, sir, look at that! The
Duke
's slipped her anchor!'
There was no doubt about it. The shackle-pin had been knocked out and the bows of the great ship were swinging slowly round as it got under way.
âWhat in the worldâ?' Tyndall broke off and scanned the sky. âNot a plane, not a paratrooper in sight, no radar reports, no Asdic contacts, no sign of the German Grand Fleet steaming through the boomâ'
âShe's signalling us, sir!' It was Bentley speaking, Bentley the Chief Yeoman of Signals. He paused and went on slowly: âProceed to our anchorage at once. Make fast to north buoy.'
âAsk them to confirm,' Vallery snapped. He took the fo'c'sle phone from the communication rating.
âCaptain here, Number One. How is she? Up and down? Good.'
He turned to the officer of the watch. âSlow ahead both: Starboard 10.' He looked over at Tyndall's corner, brows wrinkled in question.
âSearch me,' Tyndall growled. âCould be the latest in parlour gamesâa sort of nautical musical chairs, you know . . . Wait a minute, though! Look! The
Cumberland
âall her 5.25's are at maximum depression!'
Vallery's eyes met his.
âNo, it can't be! Good God, do you thinkâ?'
The blare of the Asdic loudspeaker, from the cabinet immediately abaft of the bridge, gave him his answer. The voice of Leading Asdic Operation Chrysler was clear, unhurried.
âAsdicâbridge. Asdicâbridge. Echo, Red 30. Repeat, Red 30. Strengthening. Closing.'
The captain's incredulity leapt and died in the same second.
âAlert Director Control! Red 30. All AA guns maximum depression. Underwater target. Torps'âthis to Lieutenant Marshall, the Canadian Torpedo Officerâ“depth charge stations”.'
He turned back to Tyndall.
âIt can't be, sirâit just can't! A U-boatâI presume it isâin Scapa Flow. Impossible!'
âPrien didn't think so,' Tyndall grunted.
âPrien?'
âKapitan-Leutnant Prienâgent who scuppered the
Royal Oak
.'
âIt couldn't happen again. The new boom defencesâ'
âWould keep out any normal submarines,' Tyndall finished. His voice dropped to a murmur. âRemember what we were told last month about our midget two-man subsâthe chariots? The ones to be taken over to Norway by Norwegian fishing-boats operating from the Shetlands. Could be that the Germans have hit on the same idea.'
âCould be,' Vallery agreed. He nodded sardonically. âJust look at the
Cumberland
goâstraight for the boom.' He paused for a few seconds, his eyes speculative, then looked back at Tyndall. âHow do you like it, sir?'
âLike what, Captain?'
âPlaying Aunt Sally at the fair.' Vallery grinned crookedly. âCan't afford to lose umpteen million pounds worth of capital ship. So the old
Duke
hares out to sea and safety, while we moor near her anchor berth. You can bet German Naval Intelligence has the bearing of her anchorage down to a couple of inches. These midget subs carry detachable warheads and if there's going to be any fitted, they're going to be fitted to us.'
Tyndall looked at him. His face was expressionless. Asdic reports were continuous, reporting steady bearing to port and closing distances.
âOf course, of course,' the Admiral murmured. âWe're the whipping boy. Gad, it makes me feel bad!' His mouth twisted and he laughed mirthlessly. âMe? This is the final straw for the crew. That hellish last trip, the mutiny, the marine boarding party from the
Cumberland
, action stations in harbourâand now this! Risking our necks for thatâthat . . . ' He broke off, spluttering, swore in anger, then resumed quietly:
âWhat are you going to tell the men, Captain? Good God, it's fantastic! I feel like mutiny myself . . . ' He stopped short, looked inquiringly past Vallery's shoulder.
The Captain turned round.
âYes, Marshall?'
âExcuse me, sir. Thisâerâecho.' He jerked a thumb over his shoulder. âA sub, sirâpossibly a pretty small one?' The transatlantic accent was very heavy.
âLikely enough, Marshall. Why?'
âJust how Ralston and I figured it, sir.' He grinned. âWe have an idea for dealing with it.'
Vallery looked out through the driving sleet, gave helm and engine orders, then turned back to the Torpedo Officer. He was coughing heavily, painfully, as he pointed to the glassed-in anchorage chart.
âIf you're thinking of depth-charging our stern off in these shallow watersâ'
âNo, sir. Doubt whether we could get a shallow enough setting anyway. My ideaâRalston's to be correctâis that we take out the motor-boat and a few 25-lb. scuttling charges, 18-second fuses and chemical igniters. Not much of a kick from these, I know, but a miniature sub ain't likely to have helluvaâerâvery thick hulls. And if the crews are sitting on top of the ruddy things instead of insideâ well, it's curtains for sure. It'll kipper âem.'
Vallery smiled.
âNot bad at all, Marshall. I think you've got the answer there. What do you think, sir?'
âWorth trying anyway,' Tyndall agreed. âBetter than waiting around like a sitting duck.'
âGo ahead then, Torps.' Vallery looked at him quizzically. âWho are your explosives experts?'
âI figured on taking Ralstonâ'
âJust what I thought. You're taking nobody, laddie,' said Vallery firmly. âCan't afford to lose my torpedo officer.'
Marshall looked pained, then shrugged resignedly.
âThe chief TGM and Ralstonâhe's the senior LTO. Good men both.'
âRight. Bentleyâdetail a man to accompany them in the boat. We'll signal Asdic bearings from here. Have him take a portable Aldis with him.' He dropped his voice. âMarshall?'
âSir?'
âRalston's young brother died in hospital this afternoon.' He looked across at the Leading Torpedo Operator, a tall, blond, unsmiling figure dressed in faded blue overalls beneath his duffel. âDoes he know yet?'
The Torpedo Officer stared at Vallery, then looked round slowly at the LTO. He swore, softly, bitterly, fluently.
âMarshall!' Vallery's voice was sharp, imperative, but Marshall ignored him, his face a mask, oblivious alike to the reprimand in the Captain's voice and the lashing bite of the sleet.
âNo, sir,' he stated at length, âhe doesn't know. But he did receive some news this morning. Croydon was pasted last week. His mother and three sisters live thereâlived there. It was a land-mine, sirâ there was nothing left.' He turned abruptly and left the bridge.
Fifteen minutes later it was all over. The starboard whaler and the motor-boat on the port side hit the water with the
Ulysses
still moving up to the mooring. The whaler, buoy-jumper aboard, made for the buoy, while the motor-boat slid off at a tangent.
Four hundred yards away from the ship, in obedience to the flickering instructions from the bridge, Ralston fished out a pair of pliers from his overalls and crimped the chemical fuse. The Gunner's Mate stared fixedly at his stop-watch. On the count of twelve the scuttling charge went over the side.
Three more, at different settings, followed it in close succession, while the motor-boat cruised in a tight circle. The first three explosions lifted the stern and jarred the entire length of the boat, viciouslyâand that was all. But with the fourth, a great gout of air came gushing to the surface, followed by a long stream of viscous bubbles. As the turbulence subsided, a thin slick of oil spread over a hundred square yards of sea . . .
Men, fallen out from Action Stations, watched with expressionless faces as the motor-boat made it back to the
Ulysses
and hooked on to the falls just in time: the Hotchkiss steering-gear was badly twisted and she was taking in water fast under the counter.
The
Duke of Cumberland
was a smudge of smoke over a far headland.
Cap in hand, Ralston sat down opposite the Captain. Vallery looked at him for a long time in silence. He wondered what to say, how best to say it. He hated to have to do this.
Richard Vallery also hated war. He always had hated it and he cursed the day it had dragged him out of his comfortable retirement. At least, âdragged' was how he put it; only Tyndall knew that he had volunteered his services to the Admiralty on 1st September, 1939, and had had them gladly accepted.
But he hated war. Not because it interfered with his lifelong passion for music and literature, on both of which he was a considerable authority, not even because it was a perpetual affront to his aestheticism, to his sense of rightness and fitness. He hated it because he was a deeply religious man, because it grieved him to see in mankind the wild beasts of the primeval jungle, because he thought the cross of life was already burden enough without the gratuitous infliction of the mental and physical agony of war, and, above all, because he saw war all too clearly as the wild and insensate folly it was, as a madness of the mind that settled nothing, proved nothingâexcept the old, old truth that God was on the side of the big battalions.
But some things he had to do, and Vallery had clearly seen that this war had to be his also. And so he had come back to the service, and had grown older as the bitter years passed, older and frailer, and more kindly and tolerant and understanding. Among Naval Captains, indeed among men, he was unique. In his charity, in his humility, Captain Richard Vallery walked alone. It was a measure of the man's greatness that this thought never occurred to him.