Page 92
Story: Daughter of the Deep
‘Aronnax,’ I say. ‘This is Captain Ana Dakkar of theNautilus. Stand down or you will be destroyed.’
Silence.
The hardest thing about making a stupid bluff is reminding yourself that your opponent doesn’tknowit’s a stupid bluff. TheAronnaxhas seen us recover from an EMP blast. They’ve seen us fire two torpedoes. They won’t know if we have any more. They won’t know what other capabilities we might have.
I also have to assume they took some damage from our first shot. I don’t expect them to surrender. Dev would never do that. But he might stall for time, giving his skiff a chance to return to theAronnax. Until our cold-fusion reactor is back online, I’ll take all the time I can get.
When Dev speaks, he sounds ready to snap. ‘Nice try, sis. But right now, I’m the only one over here trying to keep you alive. The next shot won’t be to cripple. It’ll send you all to the bottom.Nautiluscrew, you know who I am. I’m the senior Dakkar family member. That ship belongs to me.Stand down.’
The bridge crew looks to me.
‘Gearr an líne,’ I tell Virgil.Cut the line.
Gem turns. ‘They’re opening forward tubes. Four of them.’
My heart sinks into my gut. A spread of four torpedoes at this range –
‘Leidenfrost shields,’ I order. ‘Fire forward Leyden cannon. Helm, evasive manoeuvres –’
But it’s too much to ask of the old choo-choo engine. ACLANGechoes through the ship like we’ve broken a crankshaft. The LOCUS displays flicker like candle flames in a breeze.
‘Helm unresponsive!’ Halimah says.
‘Leidenfrost inoperative!’ Gem adds.
‘NO!’ Nelinha comes on the comm, sharing a few choice curses in Portuguese. ‘I told you, Ana! I need more time!’
‘We need more power!’ I yell back.
But we don’t have either.
On Gem’s display, the purple triangle of theAronnaxlooms closer. Dev’s skiff hovers a few hundred metres off our port side, waiting to loot the carcass of our ship. Then a string of four smaller blips appears from theAronnax’s prow.
We are about to be dead in the water. Literally.
I have one last desperation play. I slam my hand against the armrest console and yell, ‘Nautilus, emergency dive! Forward vents!’
The ship must hear the urgency in my voice. With her final gasp of coal-powered energy, she jettisons ballast and spews aerated water over the prow, whiting out the windows.
An emergency descent is one thing submarines do very well. Rather like giving up and collapsing, it doesn’t take much energy. We sink like a rock.
On Gem’s LOCUS, theAronnax’s four torpedoes sail straight over our heads – their guidance systems confused by the cloud of air and ballast.
I start to say, ‘Rig for –’ when the chain explosion detonates a hundred metres beyond our stern.
I black out from the shock wave.
When my senses start working again, the bridge is dark except for an electrical fire at Virgil’s comm station. The LOCUS displays are dead. An acrid haze hangs in the air. Top is barking indignantly, still restrained in his doggy bed. Ester stumbles around, checking the bridge crew for injuries. Virgil sits dazed on the floor, his seat belt broken, a wisp of smoke curling fromhis hair. Gem has a trickle of blood glistening on the side of his face.
‘All weapons offline,’ Gem says. ‘No shielding.’
‘No helm control,’ says Halimah.
‘Depth forty-two metres,’ Lee-Ann reports. ‘I’ve only got analogue readings, but theAronnax… Oh.’ Her voice shrinks. ‘There she is.’
She’s not looking at her controls. She’s looking out of the windows.
For the first time, I see the enemy sub in person.
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