"Alistair MacLean - Santorini" - читать интересную книгу автора (Maclean Alistair)'What do you make of this, Charles?'
'Could be nothing. Could be important. Sorry, that doesn't help. I have a feeling I don't like it. It would help a bit if we had a sailor around.' Carsonsmiled and pressed a button. 'Do you know if Vice-Admiral Hawkins is in the building?' 'He is, sir.' A girl's voice. 'Do you wish to speak to him or see him?' 'See him, Jean. Ask him if he would be kind enough to stop by.' Vice-Admiral Hawkins was very young for one of his rank. He was short, a little overweight, more than a little rubicund as to his features and exuded an aura of cheerful bonhomie. He didn't look very bright, which he was. He was widely regarded as having one of the most brilliant minds in the Royal Navy. He took the seat to whichCarson had gestured him and glanced at the message slip. 'I see, I see.' He laid the message down. 'But you didn't ask me here to comment on a perfectly straightforward signal. The Sylvester is one of the code names for the frigate HMS Ariadne. One of the vessels under your command, sir.' 'Don't rub it in, David. I know it, of course -- more accurately I know of it. Don't forget I'm just a simple landlubber. Odd name, isn't it? Royal Naval ship with a Greek name.' 'Courtesy gesture to the Greeks, sir. We're carrying out a joint hydrographic survey with them.' 'Is that so?' General Carson ran a hand through his grizzled hair. 'I was not aware that I was in the hydrographic business, David.' 'You're not, sir, although I have no doubt it could carry out such a survey if it were called for. The Ariadne has a radio system that can transmit to, and receive transmissions from, any quarter of the globe. It has telescopes and optical instruments that can pick out the salient features of, say, any passing satellite, even those in geosynchronous orbit - and that's 22.,000 miles up. It carries long-range and surface radar that is as advanced as any in the world. And it has a sonar location and detection system that can pick up a sunken object at the bottom of the ocean just as easily as it can pinpoint a lurking submarine. The Ariadne, sir, is the eyes and the ears and the voice of your fleet.' 'That's nice to know, I must say. Very reassuring. The ability of the commanding officer of the Ariadne is - ah -commensurate with this extraordinary array of devices he controls?' 'Indeed, sir. For an exceptionally complex task an exceptionally qualified man. Commander Talbot is an outstanding officer. Hand-picked for the job.' 'Who picked him?' 'I did.' 'I see. That terminates this line of conversation very abruptly.'Carson pondered briefly. 'I think, Colonel, that we should ask General Simpson about this one.' Simpson, the over-all commander of NATO, was the only man who outrankedCarson inEurope . 'Don't see what else we can do, sir.' 'You would agree, David?' 'No, General. I think you'd be wasting your time. If you don't know anything about this, then I'm damned sure General Simpson doesn't know anything either. This is not an educated guess, call it a completely uneducated guess, but I have an odd feeling that this is one of your planes, sir -- an American plane. A bomber, almost certainly, perhaps not yet off the secret lists - it was, after all, flying at an uncommon height.' 'The Ariadne could have been in error.' 'The Ariadne does not make mistakes. My job and my life on it.' The flat, unemotional voice carried complete conviction. 'Commander Talbot is not the only uniquely qualified man aboard. There are at least thirty others in the same category. We have, for example, an electronics officer so unbelievably advanced in his speciality that none of your much-vaunted high-technology whizzkids in Silicon Valley would even begin to know what he's talking about.' Carsonraised a hand. 'Point taken, David, point taken. So an American bomber. A very special bomber because it must be carrying a very special cargo. What would you guess that to be?' Hawkins smiled faintly. 'I am not yet in the ESP business, sir. People or goods. Very secret, very important goods or very secret and very important people. There's only one source that can give you the answer and it might be pointed out that their refusal to divulge this information might put the whole future of NATO at risk and that the individual ultimately responsible for the negative decision would be answerable directly to the president of the United States. One does not imagine that the individual concerned would remain in a position of responsibility for very much longer.' Carsonsighed. 'If I may speak in a spirit of complaint, David, I might point out that it's easy for you to talk and even easier to talk tough. You're a British officer. I'm an American.' 'I appreciate that, sir.' |
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