Icebound
in the control room, but this place, with its even heavier concentration of electronics, was his true home.
    “Are we ready?” another technician asked.
    “Yes.” Timoshenko flicked a yellow switch.
    Topside, on the outer hull of the
Ilya Pogodin,
a small helium balloon was ejected from a pressurized tube on the sail. It rose rapidly through the dark sea, expanding as it went, trailing the multicommunications wire behind it. When the balloon broke the surface, the technicians in the
Pogodin
were able to monitor every message sent to, from, and within the eastern coast of Greenland via virtually every communications medium except note-passing and underground telephone lines. Because it was the same dull gray-blue as the winter sea, the balloon—and the short, complicated antenna attached to it—couldn’t have been seen from the deck of a ship even ten yards away.
    On land and in civilian society, Timoshenko was frequently self-conscious. He was tall, lanky, rawboned, awkward, and often clumsy. In restaurants and nightclubs, on city streets, he suspected that people were watching him and were quietly amused by his lack of grace. In the
Pogodin,
however, secure in his deep domain, he felt blessedly invisible, as though the sea were not a part of the world above the surface but a parallel dimension to it, and as though he were a spirit slipping through those cold depths, able to hear the inhabitants in the world above without being heard, to see without being seen, safe from their stares, not an object of amusement any longer. A ghost.
             
    After giving Timoshenko a while to deploy the aerial and scan a wide spectrum of frequencies, Captain Gorov stepped into the doorway of the communications shack. He nodded at the assistant technician. To Timoshenko, he said, “Anything?”
    The communications officer was smiling and holding a single earphone to his left ear. “Full input.”
    “Of interest?”
    “Not much as yet. There’s a group of American Marines winter-testing some equipment near the coast.”
    Although they were living in the long shadow of the Cold War’s passage, in a world where old enemies were supposed to have become neutral toward one another or were even said to have become fine friends, the greater part of the former Soviet intelligence apparatus remained intact, both at home and abroad. The Russian Navy continued to conduct extensive information-gathering along the coastlines of every major Western nation, as well as at most points of strategic military importance in the Third World. Change, after all, was the only constant. If enemies could become friends virtually overnight, they could become
enemies
again with equivalent alacrity.
    “Keep me informed,” Gorov said. Then he went to the officer’s mess and ate lunch.
             
    1:40
    Crouched at the shortwave radio, in contact with Edgeway Station, Harry said, “Have you gotten through to Thule?”
    Although Gunvald Larsson’s voice was filtered through a sieve of static, it was intelligible. “I’ve been in continuous contact with them and with Norwegian officials at a meteorological station on Spitsbergen for the past twenty-five minutes.”
    “Can either of them reach us?”
    “The Norwegians are pretty much locked in by ice. The Americans have several Kaman Huskies at Thule. That’s their standard rescue helicopter. The Huskies have auxiliary fuel tanks and long-range capability. But conditions at ground level aren’t really good enough to allow them to lift off. Terrific winds. And by the time they got to you—if they
could
get to you—the weather would have deteriorated so much they probably wouldn’t be able to put down on your iceberg.”
    “There doesn’t just happen to be an icebreaker or a battleship in our neighborhood?”
    “The Americans say not.”
    “So much for miracles.”
    “Do you think you can ride it out?”
    Harry said, “We haven’t taken an inventory of our remaining supplies,

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