"MacLean, Alistair - Santorini" - читать интересную книгу автора (Maclean Alistair)'And that didn't cause what you've just called an international incident?" 'Certainly not. Nobody's fault. Mutual apologies between the two captains and the Russian was towed to a safe port by another Russian warship. Vladivostok, I believe it was.' Talbot turned his head. 'Excuse me. That's the radio-room call-up.' 'Myers again,' the speaker said. 'Delos. Name of the sinking vessel. Very brief message - explosion, on fire, sinking fast.' 'Keep listening,' Talbot said. He looked at the helmsman who already had a pair of binoculars to his eyes. 'You have it, Harrison?' 'Yes, sir.' Harrison handed over the binoculars and twitched the wheel to port. 'Fire off the port bow.' Talbot picked it up immediately, a thin black column of smoke rising vertically, unwaveringly, into the blue and windless sky. He was just lowering his glasses when the bell rang twice again. It was O'Rourke, the weatherman, or, more officially, the senior long-range radar operator. 'Lost him, I'm afraid. The bandit, I mean. I was looking at the vectors on either side of him to see if he had any friends and when I came back he was gone.' 'Any ideas, Chief?' 'Well...' O'Rourke sounded doubtful. 'He could have exploded but I doubt it.' 'So do I. We've had the spy-glass trained on his approach bearing and they'd have picked up an explosion for sure.' 'Then he must have gone into a steep dive. A very steep dive. God knows why. I'll find him.' The speaker clicked off. Almost at once a telephone rang again. It was Van Gelder. 'Almost certainly is. The weatherman's just lost it off the long-range radar screen. Probably a waste of time but try to get that photograph anyway." He moved out on to the starboard wing and trained his glasses over the starboard quarter. He picked it up immediately, a heavy dark plume of smoke with, he thought, a glow of red at its centre. It was still quite high, at an altitude of four or five thousand feet. He didn't pause to check how deeply the plane was diving or whether or not it actually was on fire. He moved quickly back into the bridge and picked up a phone. 'Sub-Lieutenant Cousteau. Quickly.' A brief pause. 'Henri? Captain. Emergency. Have the launch and the lifeboat slung outboard. Crews to stand by to lower. Then report to the bridge.' He rang down to the engine-room for Slow Ahead then .said to Harrison: 'Hard a-port. Steer north.' Denholm, who had moved out on to the starboard wing, returned, lowering his binoculars. 'Well, even I can see that plane. Not a plane, rather a huge streamer of smoke. Could that have been the bandit, sir -- if it was a bandit?' 'Must have been.' Denholm said, tentatively: 'I don't care much for his line of approach, sir.' 'I don't care much for it myself, Lieutenant, especially if it's a military plane and even more especially if it's carrying bombs of any sort. If you look, you'll see that we're getting out of its way.' 'Ah. Evasive action.' Denholm hesitated, then said doubtfully: 'Well, as long as he doesn't alter course.' 'Dead men don't alter courses.' 'That they don't.' Van Gelder had just returned to the bridge. 'And the man or the men behind the controls of that plane are surely dead. No point in my staying there, sir -Gibson's better with the spy-glass camera than I am and he's very busy with it. We'll have plenty of photographs to show you but I doubt whether we'll be able to learn very much from them.' 'As bad as that? You weren't able to establish anything?' |
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