Kate’s cottage & Jack’s house. Route from Kate’s cottage to St. Kate, and then to Woman’s Bay.
Kates cottage & Jacks house. Route from Kates cottage to , and then to Womans Bay.CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER ONECHAPTER ONEKodiak, Alaska
Kodiak, AlaskaKATE PERRY’S COTTAGE—KODIAK, ALASKA
KATE PERRY’S COTTAGE—KODIAK, ALASKAI opened my eyes just enough to see Kate’s golden hair spread across the pillow, her head resting on my chest, a sweet, contented smile on her lips. I felt overwhelmed by her presence. My heartbeat quickened. This cannot be happening, I told myself. Kate brushed her left arm across my stomach and pulled herself closer to my body. But it is…
This cannot be happeningBut it is…The phone rang. I started at the sound, but Kate just snuggled closer and moaned softly. I picked up the Princess handset and brought it to my right ear, wincing a bit at the pain in my left shoulder. That was a wound I received from a Soviet dart underwater off Pt. Barrow shortly before we transited to Kodiak, and I still had my left arm in a sling. The bedroom window across the room was dark, but this was Kodiak in the winter. It would remain dark for several hours still. Outside was bitter cold; even the room air was more than chilly.
“Yeah, it’s Mac.”
“Mac, it’s Jack…Petrikoff. Jack Petrikoff,” his Russian accent heavy. “Wake up, Buddy!”
Kate stirred and sat up, rubbing her eyes, the sheet slipping from her pert n*****s. “Wha…?” she started to ask, but I put a finger to her lips and shook my head.
“No time explain, Mac. You and Kate get out of there right now…I mean RIGHT NOW!”
“Jack…”
“RIGHT NOW, Buddy…house gonna blow…you and Kate gonna die!”
That got my attention.
Kate looked at me through sleepy eyes, her tongue moistening her lips. She reached under the covers, a coy smile creeping over her face.
“Mac, you hear me? RIGHT NOW!”
I grabbed Kate’s wrist, interrupting her ministrations.
“Kate, we got a problem. Don’t know what it is, but Jack says we need to get out of here now!”
Kate looked at me in shock.
“He means it…says we’re in mortal danger.”
Kate pulled the sheet up around her chin, her eyes like saucers. I grabbed her arms and pulled her to her feet.
“Get dressed warm, Girl…now!” I said sharply. “We’re leaving ASAP!”
“We’ll be out of here in a minute, Jack. We’ll take Kate’s Datsun. s**t…where do we go?”
“Don’t take her car. It’s gonna blow too!”
I heard some yelling from his end and then, “Jesus, f**k!” apparently not directed at me.
“One of my guys will meet you out back on Poplar. He take you to my boat. Grab what you can to stay warm.”
I heard a shot.
“Go, go, GO!” Jack yelled, and the phone connection went dead.
SOVIET SLEEPER CELL—KODIAK, ALASKA
SOVIET SLEEPER CELL—KODIAK, ALASKAWe rushed out Kate’s back door to Poplar, I in hastily donned uniform with my peacoat tossed over my sling, and Kate in a long skirt, sweater, and fur-lined topcoat. We both wore unlaced mukluks on our feet. The bitter cold stung my nostrils.
One of Jack’s crew was at the back gate in a beat-up pickup with the passenger door open.
“Get in quick!” the driver said. “We gotta get the hell outa here!”
Kate clambered into the cab, and I followed. The driver peeled away before I could shut the door. As we reached the curve where Poplar turned to end at Maple, a loud explosion ripped through the nighttime air, the low overcast reflecting a bright flash. I looked over my right shoulder in time to see pieces of Kate’s cottage tumbling through the air, reflecting flickering flames from the twisted mess below.
As we turned right to approach Maple, a second explosion shattered the night air. In the reflected flames from what was left of Kate’s cottage, I saw her Datsun roadster flip on its side, gasoline-fed fire engulfing it.
Our driver knew Kodiak well. We ripped down side streets, through alleys, across a couple of empty parking lots, and finally down East Rezanof Drive toward Alimaq and the bridge across the bay. At the end of the bridge, he turned hard right, and after about a minute, pulled into a parking lot overlooking St. Herman’s Harbor.
“Hurry,” he urged as we tumbled out of his rig and ran across a road to the outermost floating dock.
We ran down the walkway to an illuminated floating causeway that linked two brightly lit floating docks stretching into the harbor. The right one was filled with boat slips for smaller commercial boats. The left one, our destination, had six slips berthing larger vessels. Jack’s boat, the St. Kate, was moored to the outer dockside away from the slips, starboard side to. A crew member stood on the brow, urging us forward. A shot rang out behind us. We ran faster. I could see that the lines were already cast off. Another shot ricocheted off St. Kate’s steel side. The crew member pulled us across and then retrieved the brow.
St. KateSt. KatesUp in the pilothouse, Jack revved the engines and pulled away from the dock, pushing chunks of ice aside. As quickly as possible, he maneuvered past the breakwater and out to ice-pad-filled open water. Three more shots followed, one shattering a pilothouse window.
Our driver took us to the pilothouse where we met Jack standing at the helm—all five feet, eight inches of him. He gripped the large mahogany ten-spoked wheel with practiced ease. A Russian-style ushanka without a red star covered his salt and pepper hair, and his full beard was trimmed short. He reached out an arm to wrap around Kate’s shoulders and kissed her cheeks. He shook my hand warmly and gave me a quick hug.
“That close call,” he said. “I explain. My parents recruited in 1935 as members of Soviet sleeper cell in Kodiak. They die in 1950s. I never part of cell, but Soviets not agree. Last night, Soviets activate all ten members of cell with orders to kill Kate, blow up home and business, kill you, and destroy Teuthis. I call Coast Guard—they barricade front gate and notify Teuthis. I say I bring you and Kate by boat to Woman’s Bay. Later, we talk more, but first, you call Teuthis. Say you and Kate safe. Say we be there in thirty minutes. Tie up behind Teuthis.” He handed me a mike and set the hailing frequency on his overhead unit.
TeuthisTeuthisTeuthisTeuthisThat was a lot to digest, but Jack was right. First, I had to call Teuthis.
Teuthis“USS Teuthis, this is fishing vessel Saint Kate, over.”
USS TeuthisSaint Kate“Saint Kate, this is Teuthis. Switch to channel forty-three, over.”
Saint KateTeuthisJack changed the channel.
“Teuthis, this is Saint Kate…”
TeuthisSaint KateI asked to speak directly with the captain. When he came on, I briefly told him that Kate and I were okay and that we would arrive in Woman’s Bay shortly. I asked him to set up a meeting in his cabin for the four of us.
I glanced at my watch. It was 0530.
Forty minutes later, Kate and I were sitting on the red Naugahyde couch in the skipper’s cabin, and Jack was in the easy chair. Commander (Cmdr.) Roken sat in his desk chair with his back to a fold-down desk. Jack had just finished explaining the background to his involvement.
“So, when I get activation order, I send my guy to Kate. I quickly call Kate, and Mac answers. I tell them to get out. A cell member tries to shoot me. I nail him, but cell blows up Kate’s home, car, and shop. Mac and Kate escape to my boat, and we come to here.” Jack’s face was filled with worry. “Now, what to do?”
“Why do you think they are after Mac and Kate?” the skipper asked.
“After Kate, no reason,” Jack said, “except she’s with Mac.” He sighed. “Sometimes the Soviets seek revenge for a serious wrong. Revenge often kill entire family, close friends, even pets. Must be something Mac did.” He stopped talking and shut his eyes. “I introduce Mac and Kate when I take Mac to Kate’s This & That?”
Kate’s This & ThatThe skipper lifted his eyebrows.
“That the shop Kate set up after Josh killed. It was a beautiful little shop, but all gone now.” He put his head in his hands, “My fault, all my fault.”
Kate stood and put her arm around him. “Jack, I’m a big girl. I chose to be with Mac. You made that possible, and I love you for it.”
The skipper’s phone rang. He answered, and his face dropped. He looked at Kate. “I don’t have time to explain, Kate. Please stay in my cabin, no matter what you hear or feel.” Then he addressed Jack and me. “The Coast Guard Station has been attacked, and the front gate breached. The combatants are on their way here.” He looked at Jack. “Jack, get your vessel out into Woman’s Bay. Arm your crew to hold off boarders from small craft.” Then he turned to me. “Mac, get us underway from the wharf in the shortest time possible—two to three minutes. I’ll be in Radio.”
Jack sprinted topside to take care of St. Kate. I ran to Control and grabbed the 1MC mike.
St. Kate“This is Lieutenant Commander McDowell. We have an all-hands emergency. We’re getting underway and moving away from the wharf as rapidly as possible. Chief-of-the-Boat, take men topside and cast off all lines by the quickest means possible.”
I turned to the Chief-of-the-Watch. “Sound the general alarm. Prepare to repel boarders. Get someone on the helm or take it yourself.”
I still wore my peacoat, so I headed for the Bridge.
“Send two lookouts with rifles to the Bridge ASAP, and send up a sidearm for me,” I told the Chief-of-the-Watch.
When I got to the Bridge, the COB had just cast off the final line, letting the lines fall into the frigid water. I grabbed the squawk box mike. “Port full on both thrusters,” I ordered. St. Kate had already pulled away from the wharf and was standing by in the south end of Woman’s Bay.
St. Kate“Stop the rear thruster. Ahead slow, right full rudder.”
We developed a good angle to the wharf and moved slowly toward the middle of Woman’s Bay, cracking the thin ice layer. I brought the sub to a standstill about a hundred yards from the wharf, with the wharf broad on the port bow.
Just then, an old pickup screeched to a halt on the wharf, several men jumping out, waving rifles. One climbed onto the hood, rifle pointed toward us.
“Billy-Bob,” I said to Seaman Yokum, who was with me on the Bridge, “how’s your aim?”
“Never better, Sir.”
“Okay, take out the guy standing on the pickup hood.”
“Yes, Sir!” His rifle cracked, and the man pitched forward, a hole between his eyes.
A second vehicle drove up—an older model, dark-green something-or-other, driven by one guy. One of the three remaining men did something to the pickup load, and then all three sprinted to the waiting vehicle.
“Can you take out the driver, Billy-Bob?”
“Yes, Sir.” His rifle cracked, and the driver slumped over.
The three runners pushed his body out of the car and drove away in a hurry.
About five seconds later, the entire wharf erupted in flames as the pickup load exploded. The percussion hit the sub’s sail and rocked the boat slightly but otherwise caused no harm. I examined the concrete wharf through my binocs. I saw a large, blackened area and pickup pieces scattered across the wharf but no significant damage otherwise.
“Radio,” I called on the squawk box, “immediately inform the Coast Guard that an older model dark-green sedan with three occupants just exploded a pickup on the cargo wharf. They are headed toward the front gate. Stop them at all costs!”
The Coasties killed the driver and captured the other two.
I eased Teuthis back against the wharf, port side to, and the COB with his Deck g**g moored us securely to the bollards.
TeuthisUSS TEUTHIS—WOMAN’S BAY, KODIAK, ALASKA
USS TEUTHIS—WOMAN’S BAY, KODIAK, ALASKAUSS TEUTHIS“Officers’ call! Officers’ call!” the Chief-of-the-Watch announced on the 1MC.
The Executive Officer, the XO, Lt. Cmdr. Lonie Franken-Ester, went aft to relieve the Engineering-Officer-of-the-Watch, the EOW. Ten minutes later, all the officers except the XO had assembled in the Wardroom of USS Teuthis (SSNR 2)—the Nuclear Research Submarine-2. It was a bit crowded, but we all knew each other and didn’t mind the close quarters.
USS Teuthis“You may have heard by now,” the skipper said quietly, “but the Soviets activated a sleeper cell in Kodiak several hours ago. They nearly killed Mac and his girlfriend, Kate. They attacked the Coast Guard Station, and—as you all know—they detonated an explosives-laden pickup on the wharf.” He looked at each officer. “I’m going to the Coast Guard comm center where they have sophisticated secure communications. I need to brief SubPac1 and arrange for Kate’s safety and that of your families and those of your men.”
He stood up. “Brief your people. I’ll have more information when I return. Stay alert and be ready to move away from the wharf into Woman’s Bay again on a moment’s notice.”
“Commander McDowell to Radio,” the 1MC announced about a half-hour later. I was sitting with Kate in the Captain’s Cabin, so I stepped down the hall and to the right into the Radio Shack. Senior Chief Radioman Garth Walkman handed me a phone handset. I took it with my right hand, still favoring my left arm a bit.
“It’s the captain,” he said.
“Thanks, Sparks,” I responded, and then into the phone, “Yes, Sir, it’s Mac.”
“Tell me what you know about Kate’s family.”
“She has no family, Skipper. Her folks and older brother perished September 1965 in New Orleans during hurricane Betsy. Authorities found their bodies almost three weeks later. You know about Josh. She’s got no one…’cept me now.”
“Okay, Mac. Thank you.” The skipper hung up.
I stood quietly in Radio after passing the handset back to Sparks. The skipper’s question had put Kate’s situation into sharp focus. She was attending Westover School for girls in Connecticut on that terrible September day when hurricane Betsy took her family. Somehow, although only a teen, she got through that tragedy to graduate as valedictorian. Kate attended Connecticut College on a full history scholarship, graduating magna c*m laude. She met Coast Guard Cadet Josh Perry in his junior year at the Coast Guard Academy homecoming ball. They married the day he received his butter bars. Following his promotion to Lieutenant junior grade a year later, they moved to Kodiak, where he was assigned as Executive Officer on a Coast Guard Cutter out of Woman’s Bay.
magna c*m laudeKate lost Josh when he was swept overboard during the rescue of Jack Petrikoff two years ago. And now, we were an item—something I had never anticipated.
The XO had posted the Duty Officer, Lt. j.g. Seth Beaumont, to the Bridge with sidearm along with a lookout armed with a sniper rifle. About a half-hour after Cmdr. Roken called me, Seth announced over the 1MC, “Teuthis returning…Teuthis returning,” indicating that the captain had returned to the sub.
TeuthisTeuthisI was sitting in the skipper’s cabin with Kate when he returned to the sub. Normally, I would not have been there in his absence, but this was a special circumstance. About ten minutes after the 1MC announcement, I got to my feet as Cmdr. Roken entered his stateroom. He waved me back to the couch beside Kate and sat in his chair, back to his fold-down desk. He smiled at Kate.
“How are you holding up, Kate?”
“Okay, I guess. Things are happening so fast I haven’t had time to digest them.” She smiled tentatively.
“Mac told me about your family. I’m terribly sorry. Life has not been very kind to you.”
“I’ve coped,” Kate said, “and now I have Mac.” She took my hand in hers, and her face brightened.
“Kate, your life is in danger through no fault of yours. To keep you safe, you will ship out with us tomorrow and will transfer at sea to the USS Los Angeles, a fast-attack submarine that will take you to Mare Island, north of San Francisco. There, you will be met by agents from the Defense Intelligence Agency who will escort you to Washington. The DIA will arrange for secure housing and, if you wish, because of your history major, employment as a security analyst with the agency.”
USS Los Angeles“I…I…don’t know what to say,” Kate stammered.
“You don’t have to say anything,” the skipper said with a warm smile. “We got you into this mess, and we’ll get you out of it.”
He picked up his phone, dialed a number, and spoke quietly into the handset. A few minutes later, the Senior Steward, Petty Officer First Class Crisanto Rivera, knocked on the door. He was a Filipino, a couple of inches shorter than Kate, with slightly longish, neatly trimmed black hair. With a professional smile, he presented Kate with a wrapped package.
“This should take care of you until you until you reach Mare Island, Miss Perry,” he said in flawless, unaccented English.
Kate opened the package on the couch. It contained two folded sets of blue submarine coveralls emblazoned with the name PERRY, K over the right pocket and USS Teuthis SSNR 2 at the left shoulder seam, a coiled up khaki belt with gold buckle, several pair of men’s white boxer shorts and tee-shirts, several pair of blue socks, hairbrush, toothpaste and brush, soap and towel, and a pair of steel-toed black deck shoes.
PERRY, KUSS Teuthis SSNR 2 “If the shoes don’t fit, let me know, and I’ll find a pair that will,” Rivera said with a grin and turned to leave.
“You can change in my head,” the skipper told Kate.
She looked at him quizzically.
He chuckled and said, “On a ship, we call a bathroom a head. Please use mine. While onboard, you have the range of the sub except for the Radio Shack, but please only enter the engineering spaces with an escort. Mac will be pretty busy getting ready for underway. I think you’ll find Sonar and the Control Room the most interesting places to be. Just stay out of the way as things happen.”
The skipper got to his feet, and both Kate and I stood up.
“Welcome aboard Teuthis,” he told her.
Teuthis___________
1 Submarine Fleet Pacific, in this case the SubPac Commander, Rear Admiral (Rear Adm.) Austin B. Scott, Jr.