"The Sutanto is a card to be played," he said. "But there is something to what you say. The value of this ship goes beyond the guns and rockets she carries. The information in her archives is potentially more valuable."
Hidaka leaned forward eagerly. "And not just that, sir, but a thousand little pieces of equipment we wouldn't need on a basic mission. We should strip her down to the bones, leaving only what we require to make our point."
He dragged out the flexipad that he now carried with him everywhere and held it up.
"There are nearly a hundred and fifty of these on the Sutanto," he said. "Just one would be of untold value to our scientists and engineers. As Major Brasch has pointed out, we cannot hope to build one. But they are such powerful machines in their own right that they can help us develop-what did you call it, Major, precursive technologies."
"Precursor," Brasch said in a monotone.
"Yes. Moertopo tells me the number calculator in these machines can perform a trillion mathematical operations in the blink of an eye. Then there are the even larger computers, and the signaling devices, and the automatic rifles, and-"
Yamamoto held up his hands.
"I take your point, Commander. And on that point I have some good news for a change."
The other two men reacted in their own ways-Hidaka sitting up ramrod straight, while Brasch reclined in his lounge seat and raised an eyebrow.
"I have been keeping something from you. We have found another ship," said Yamamoto. "The Sutano's sister ship in fact."
"But where?" gasped Hidaka.
Yamamoto smiled. The small lines at the corner of his eyes crinkled with honest delight. "On top of a mountain in New Guinea," he said, shaking his head at the outlandish notion.
"My God," breathed Brasch.
"Indeed, Major. Her stern is buried in the mountainside. I'm told she looks like she's sinking right into the earth. There is unfortunately no chance of digging her out. The metal has somehow fused with the rock. As did many of the crew. However, a unit of the Kempeitai is stripping her down."
"Were there survivors?" asked Brasch.
"Initially." Yamamoto nodded. "Oh, it's not what you think, Major," he hastened to add. "The conditions up there were quite inhospitable. Most of the crew died from exposure while still comatose. I understand we have saved five or six men. They are on their way here now."
Hidaka was fairly bounding from his seat.
"This is excellent news," he said. "We have doubled our gains!"
The grand admiral of the Combined Fleet sighed.
"But we will soon lose the advantage of surprise," he said. "Australian militia scurry about that country like ants. They will soon get word back to MacArthur or Nimitz. And then, my friends, the game will be on in earnest.
"So, Hidaka, by all means, strip the Sutanto. You can start now if you wish. But I want an operational recommendation within two days. If we are to bring off a Kessen Kantai, we must strike before Nimitz."
Both men left the office to return to their research. Hidaka, with action in the offing, could hardly contain his natural restlessness. Brasch found it irritating, but said nothing.
After they left, Yamamoto had a pot of tea brought in. He felt the loneliness of command more than ever in these strange days. There would come a juncture very soon where he would have to confide in the members of the general staff and the cabinet. For now, though, they were as paralyzed by shock as anyone. They trusted the commander in chief of the Combined Fleet to fashion their immediate response to the sensational events of the past two weeks. But would they agree to his grand strategy? Would the Germans? He had no idea.
And what was worse, he had almost no confidence in the decisions he was making. He picked up the research report that had been prepared by Brasch and Hidaka. There, on the very first page, they had produced a comprehensive list of faults with both the Pearl Harbor and Midway operations. He detected the hand of Brasch in that. Hidaka would not have been so bold. But he understood that the German was testing the limits of their autonomy.
And much of the criticism he agreed with emphatically. He had raised all the same objections to war with America. He had foreseen with remarkable prescience the inevitable consequences of waking a giant. But he had not foreseen the result of Midway. He had been so confident of his choices in that matter.
His hands shook as he read the summary of what would have happened, had Kakuta not turned tail and run for home. The breaking of their naval codes meant Nimitz had known exactly what was heading his way. The repair of the Yorktown, which they had thought sunk or at least damaged beyond salvage, had added a crucial platform to the American order of battle.