On board HMS Vulnerable Somewhere in the north Atlantic
00.43hrs Zulu time. The giant sub had been sitting 40 metres
below the churning waves for eight straight hours. The crew were
edgy, nervous, sweaty, knowing that the fate of the nation and
the free world was being discussed in the skipper's wardroom.
The order to fire the boat's nuclear weapons deep into the heart
of enemy territory had been received and authenticated at
08.00hrs. But now it was gone midnight and still the missiles
were in their tubes.
Behind the oak-panelled door of his cabin, Captain Clint Thrust
was listening wearily to his health and safety executive
officer, Nigel Ormskirk, who had read the risk assessment form
and was not satisfied.
"Captain, you say here that these missiles contain plutonium and
you are proposing that we detonate them over a city. Do you not
realise people could be hurt here?"
Twenty-five-year-old Ormskirk had left Keele University with a
third in human resources, having impressed the examiners with
his paper on the perils of hand and arm vibration injuries among
stone masons. Since being posted to the sub fleet, he had
chalked up a number of successes, chief among which was changing
his boat's name from HMS Vanquish to HMS Vulnerable. He was
particularly proud of his 1997 "Be Seen" campaign after which
the sub had not hit a single trawler. Thrust, the gnarled old
salty sea dog captain, had objected, of course, saying the point
of a submarine was rather lost if it was bright orange and had
to spend its entire time on the surface. But what did he know.
"You see," Ormskirk was saying . . . But a shrill beep from the
PA system cut him off: "Con. Sonar. Contact bearing 270 degrees.
It's a destroyer, sir, and it's coming right at us." Thrust
keyed the mike. "Stay calm, people. We've plenty of air cover.
They can take care of this."
On board the aircraft carrier HMS Weak Somewhere near the
Vulnerable 00.47hrs Zulu Time. Veteran pilot Jack Kill simply
could not believe what he was being told by the Weak's health
and safety officer, Ron Stapleford. "This is a Harrier GR7," he
screamed. "What do you mean by saying the wings don't look long
enough?" "I'm just saying," said Ron in his Brummie drawl, "that
with all those bombs and missiles, it really doesn't look very
safe." "Look," said Kill. "We've just got word from the
Vulnerable that she's under attack. I have to get out there with
my cargo of death. I must spit fire into that enemy ship or the
war will be lost and your children will grow up speaking
Russian." "Don't worry," said Ron. "Ormskirk's on the
Vulnerable. He's a good man. He'll make sure they're safe."
On board the Vulnerable somewhere in the north Atlantic 00.55hrs
Zulu time The depth charges were raining down, sending the
orange sub reeling from side to side. Thrust was barking orders
to the helmsman: "Flood tubes one and four." "Sorry, sir," said
the burly helmsman. "New regulations from health and safety.
After the Herald of Free Enterprise disaster, the doors have
been welded shut."
"Oh, for Christ's sake," yelled Thrust as yet another depth
charge hammered the hull. "Where's Ormskirk?"
He was in the galley, a look of abject horror on his face: "For
crying out loud. How many times do I have to tell you people
that you must not store meat and dairy products in the same
fridge. Do you want to have tummy ache?"
Before they could answer, an enormous explosion ripped the
propeller from its mountings and a wall of freezing sea water
spurted into the engine room. "Close all hatches," yelled Thrust
over the PA system. Oh no, thought Ormskirk. Some of the men
have boyfriends back there. They must be allowed to try to save
them.
Back in the engine room, the trapped men were trying to open the
hatch to get out before the north Atlantic claimed yet another
teenage soul. Some were screaming. Some were praying. Some were
struggling with the latch. But each and every one breathed a
sigh of relief when the man from health and safety appeared at
the window. "Do you need counselling?" he said. "No," they
shouted. "We want you to open this hatch. It can only be done
from the outside." "Yes," said Ormskirk, "that's a valid safety
point and I'll be sure to file a report when we get back." "Open
the bloody thing," they shouted. "I can't," said Ormskirk. "You
know as well as I do that it's a two-man job. I could crick my
back if I tried to do it on my own."
But then he had an idea. He opened a secure channel to Thrust.
"Captain: there are men back here in water that's 4oC colder
than we recommend. I order you to surrender."
............
Gulag 43 Siberia, Russia - Three months later.
It was a grey, misty morning and silence hung over the prison
yard like an old dishcloth as Nigel Ormskirk was tied to the
bullet-ridden post.
"Ready," screamed the Russian execution party leader. "Take aim
. . . "
"Hold on a minute," said Nigel. "You aren't allowed to use
loaded weapons unless there's a trained armourer on the . . ."
"Fire!."