The wire
Woolf-Gault closed his eyes, gasping for the air which was keeping him alive. He exerted all his strength, yelling inside his mask with the effort. His body slumped and he fell backwards across the lip of the casing.
As his hands clutched at the steel, he felt the boat shuddering beneath him. There was a screeching of metal, a searing pain in the calf of his right leg. As he leaned forward to clear the handle, he saw that the wire had freed, whipping backwards to coil around the calf of his leg. The needle ends of the strands had pierced his suit and a cloud of blood was drifting upwards from his leg. The submarine was dropping away beneath him, a shadowy form vanishing into the abyss. He flailed with his hands, trying to wrench away from the coil. Then he was plunging downwards, spiralling to the sea bed, 520 feet below him. Head down, feet kicking, the blood spurting from his severed artery, Lieutenant Woolf-Gault mercifully lost consciousness before the deep finally claimed him.
Bill Bowies' eyes were rivetted on the fore-plane indicator. At 1009 the first lieutenant in the fore-ends repeated the order to put the fore-planes in hand and to try applying five degrees of rise. Bowles held his breath: the tell-tale
Jimmy was shouting from for'd, 'Go astern!'
The tremor, the agonizing wait, and then, to Bowies' disbelief, the fore-planes were responding to the ten degrees of rise he was transmitting from his column.
Seconds later, as the boat's bows fell away, the planes were back in primary control: the captain ordered half ahead together to give his cox'n a chance to regain control. Bowles. was sweating when finally he pulled her out at three hundred and ten feet, while the trimming officer pumped on Ms and trimmed heavily from for'd to aft.
'Stop starboard, slow ahead port,' Farge ordered from where he was standing between the periscopes. 'Sonar report at once any possible mine contacts — however doubtful.'
Bowles glanced over his shoulder at the man who held their lives in his hands. Farge still looked spruce enough, but the strain was beginning to register: there were grey shadows beneath his eyes and a muscle was twitching in the hollow of his left cheek. Apart from his obvious impatience to know what was going on for'd, he was wasting no time in taking
'No chance, sir,' Prout said quietly. 'Lieutenant Woolf-Gault must be dead.'
'How d'you know?' Farge's voice, Bowles thought, sounded flat, listless.
'Hicks refused to drain down at once, sir. He signalled from the chambers for us to try the planes in hand again, while he watched Woolf-Gault from the lip of the upper hatch. Able Seaman Hicks banged on the tower with his saw: that's when I yelled for astern, sir.'
Bowles watched the tall, tired lieutenant-commander, with the tight, buttoned-up face, and the younger man,
'Able Seaman Hicks saw what happened next, sir,' Prout went on. 'The wire began to slide free, but it catapulted off when the nip freed, the end coiling round Woolf-Gault's leg as the boat gathered sternway. Our bows dropped suddenly. The last Hicks saw of Lieutenant Woolf-Gault was his body spiralling downwards, ahead of the boat and dropping into the depths. Hicks then shut the lid, sir.'
'How is he?'
'I was about to drain down when the doc caught sight of Hicks through the port. May have to recompress him sir.'
'How long for?'
'The doc isn't sure yet, sir. He's watching Hicks now.'
The two men remained silent, the captain's dark, restless eyes sweeping round the consoles, checking, always checking.
'Will Hicks be all right?'
'He'll be lucky to avoid a touch of the bends, the doc says 'Even if Hicks can stand the cold, sir.'