'Sector contact:
'Roger.' There she was, a speck on the edge of the area, keeping guard.
'Officer of the Watch on the search periscope.'
'Officer of the Watch, sir.' Grenville stepped forward to replace Coombes at the handles.
'Up attack,' Coombes ordered. The thin tube slid upwards and he jammed his face into its eyepieces, carried out a careful all-round look and then, relieved to see no ships dangerously close, gave the order. 'Stand by to surface.'
The sec watchkeeper repeated the order and the crew began its drill of opening up valves on the ventilation exhaust and draining the low pressure blower system. When he was satisfied, Coombes barked the orders which had now become part of his existence. He heard the bolts being knocked off the lower lid as the drill continued:
'Mast draining down… shut the inter-space drain. Inter-space drain shut. Roger. Ready to surface, sir.'
'Down attack,' Coombes snapped. He briefed the officer of the watch on the surface situation, then slammed shut the handles of the periscope. He stood back to glance at the gauges.
'Pipe, "Surfacing now".
The sec repeated the order, then began counting, '… Four, five, six. Stop blowing.' High pressure air was precious: there was not much of it.
'Open the upper lid. Start the blower,' Coombes ordered. 'Raise the radar mast.' He turned over the submarine to the officer of the watch on the bridge, then glanced at the first lieutenant: 'Patrol routine. Specials in a quarter of an hour's rime, Number One. I'm going up top.'
As Coombes began climbing up the ladders in the tower, he heard the intercom piping the Red Watch to Patrol Routine and for the White and Blue Watch libertymen to clean. Emerging through the upper lid to the daylight of the overcast May afternoon, the thought crossed his mind that this would be his last ascent for some time. He tucked himself into his corner of the bridge and picked up the mike: 'Control — bridge: bring the plant to three-quarter power state. Revs for ten knots.'
He opened and shut four main vent, to expel the air in four main ballast tank. This would bring her stern down so that the propeller could bite deeper and he could ring on a few more revs.
'Six-nine revolutions set, sir,' the control reported. The bridge watch was now complete: the OOW, Lieutenant Geoff Punt, the boat's TASO and the weak link in Coombes' officers; Midshipman Basil Spurle, still wet behind the ears; and the lookout, a sonar plotter, Able Seaman Joe Robinson; he was a West Indian from Tobago, a popular, cheerful man. The search periscope revolved above their heads as the navigating officer fixed her position, below in the control room. Coombes pulled the collar of his jacket closer about his neck as a rain squall swept down upon them.
'Take her between the islands, Lieutenant Punt. Leave Longay Haifa mile to starboard.' Coombes leaned over the lip of his bridge; he sniffed the humid air, pulled down the peak of his cap on which the commander's oak-leaves still gleamed with pristine newness. Beneath his anorak, he had shifted into his number ones, so that he would not hold up the liberty-boat. The weather was notoriously unpredictable in this dreary neck of the woods: he certainly understood Trix for not wanting to settle up here. She longed to be in her native Surrey again, particularly since the biopsy. He picked up the mike. 'Give the Signals Communication Officer my compliments and ask him to speak to me.'
'Signals Officer, sir.' Wesley was a good officer, a bright lad, the sort of bloke Coombes liked: robust, plain-spoken, he would stand up to his captain if necessary.
'Have you got
'Yes, sir. No problem.'
'Make to her, "CO to CO — RFC 183 °Carnburn for a quickie. I have to return on board by 1900 boat".'
'Roger, sir.' Farge would understand and in half an hour they could fix tomorrow's arrangements.
'Specials in five minutes time,' Coombes said into the intercom. 'Tell the first lieutenant that the liberty-boat is lying off waiting for us. He can pipe libertymen.'
'Aye, aye, sir. Message to
'Very good.'