USS Hunley
Helen planned to turn over the conn when she reached
safe water. However, their new orders forced her to change those plans. She
remained on the conn using her willpower to keep the boat moving toward their
new target as the crew busily repaired the battle damage. Helen and the crew
knew they would be walking a fine line for the next hour or so. Picking up the
mike, she punched the button for engineering, “Maneuvering, conn. How’s our
battery power holding up?”
“We're down to fifty percent reserve. At the current
use, we'll be dead in the water in sixty-seven minutes.”
“Very well,” was Helen's response. Then, turning to
the Navigator, “Nav, how long to target?”
“In firing range in twenty minutes.”
Helen hastily calculated what battery power would be
left if she had to use the cannon in the upcoming battle. She figured that
after firing the cannon, the boat would have about ten minutes left on the
battery and their hope for survival would be to disable all five enemy ships
with torpedoes. If they have to use the cannon, they’d stop dead in the water
and be blasted to pieces. “Nav, take the conn, steady as she goes. I'll be in
Engineering.”
“Yes, ma'am.” The young Lieutenant stepped onto the
platform.
Helen, hit the deck at a run on her way aft. As she
moved through the tunnel, she saw a group working at the far end and yelled,
“Make a hole!” Once through the group, she hurried to Maneuvering. Upon
reaching the ten-by-twenty-foot, air-conditioned box known as maneuvering,
Helen barged in. Upon entering, she felt a rush of cold air hit her in the
face, in sharp contrast to the one hundred plus temperatures of the other
engineering spaces. “Why the hell is it so cold in here? Ensign, turn that
blower off, damn it!”
“Yes, Captain, but I'm a Lieutenant JG.”
“Correction - you were a JG. Get the Engineer in
here, NOW!”
The man picked up the mike and requested the
Engineering Officer to come to Maneuvering on the double.
When the Engineer showed up, he stuck his head in,
“Request permission to enter. Oh, hi, Captain. Why’s it so cold in here?”
“Commander, I want this man relieved of his current
duties and assigned to the hottest and dirtiest job possible.”
The Engineer glowered at the man who was in tears
and coldly said, “You are relieved. Step outside and wait at attention.” With
that, the cowed young officer moved outside. “Captain, what else can I do for
you?”
“How long until we can start the reactor plant up?”
“We’re working on the last breakers now. But, we
then have to test them, so I estimate another two hours.”
“What if we skip testing and override all the
protective features? How long to get to
full power then?”
“Captain, if we get everything operational, go
directly to pulling rods, and everything works perfectly, about an hour. But, Captain,
there are some other problems. The crew is getting sluggish from the heat. I'm
afraid if we keep pushing them like we have, they’ll start collapsing from heat
stroke.”