Monday, May 23, 2011

23rd May,2011

The plane flew over the illuminated area once more. Those magnificent trophies for the sharks the blazing globes-continued to burn in the waves. If only they could have burned in the sharks’ bellies! The plane circled once and flew off into the night sky. They did not see it again.

Heidi was given the sparklingly clean isolation ward. There she was met by Natasha Popova.

One of the mates went to the bridge and spoke to the captain. “You’ll be going below to isolation ward now, of course.”

The captain filled his pipe, and then asked, “What for?”

Stress, bruises, exposure, exhaustion – Heidi had gotten her full share. But the joy of being rescued works wonders. Heidi regained her self-control. She tried to do everything herself: take off her own clothes, walk, pour her own water….it was if she were showing her gratitude for being rescued. She could not manage everything the weakness she felt was stronger than she was. But she tried. And smiled as she did. She had held out alone in the ocean and now she wanted to hold out among others.

A captain was drawn over the window of the isolation ward: half the ship’s company was milling around noisily outside, as though Heidi was about to give birth.

……. When she asked for a style dryer, Natasha realized that Heidi was fine. She gave Heidi hers.

The young pilot was ready to meet the captain. And the captain came.

“Well,” he said in English, “how do you feel?”

“Okay!” Heidi replied brightly. “It’s all over now. Thank you.”

“We’ve been in touch with Honolulu,” the captain told her. “Now we’re sailing towards one another – an American ship and ours. We should meet in about four or five hours. You’ll be transferred to it. Get some rest.”

Heidi nodded. “Captain,” she blurted out, “ I don’t know what would have happened to me if you’d come half an hour later than you did. Or not come at all… I don’t know.”

And I don’t know, Mochalov wanted to say, but refrained because he knew quite well what would have happened. He laid his hand on her shoulder for an instant, “It’s all right.”

The Soviet refrigerator ship and an American military vessel met five hours later, as estimated. Dawn was approaching. The storm still raged. Almost everyone came up on deck to see Heidi off. She kissed the sailors, hugged the ship’s doctor and shook hands with the captain and his mates. The boat from the American ship approached. In the light of the deck lamps a rope was tied around Heidi – for safety’s sake. Then she was led to the Jacob’s ladder. Heidi dashed fearlessly to the twelve meter drop and descended. Below she was caught by her countrymen. She waved and waved until the boat was concealed from view. The ships parted.

From – No Man Is An Island

Written by Gennady Bocharov

Sunday, May 22, 2011

22nd May, 2011

The pilots saw that a boat had been lowered into the water. The plane turned and flew off. Half a minute later it reappeared, speeding just above the waves towards the boat. When it was about one hundred meters short the pilots switched on a powerful searchlight. Its long white ray traced an exact course for the boat-right up to Heidi’s life raft.

The plane shot upwards and vanished into the darkness. The next minute it reappeared, flying even lower, and again the white beam traced the same course. The third time the plane flew higher and the beam glided along the water at an obtuse angle.

The burning globes danced around the boat. Thus, the riddle was solved. Ahead a tiny electric light twinkled. Heidi’s life raft was fitted out with a light bulb and battery. The captain’s radio came to life.

“There are luminous buoys around us,” Logvinov reported. And a bit later, “A little girl.”

They opened the cowling and went in closer. Went right up to the raft. Now they could see that it contained not a child but a young woman. They calculated the amplitude of the waves, and then grabbed the raft. It broke away. Heidi could not bear to wait-she tumbled towards them. Arms gathered her up and pulled her into the boat. Water streamed from her. Her legs buckled- room was made for her on a seat. A slight attack of hysterics: she seemed to be laughing. Or perhaps she was crying. The difference between her situation now and the predicament she had just been in was not so very great. Two sailors fished her raft out of the water. The first mate spoke to the captain: “The woman’s in the boat. What next?”

“Where’s the little girl?” the captain asked.

Logvinov said, “It’s her.”

“Can she talk?” the captain asked.

“Yes,” the first mate replied. “She’s already talking.”

He switched off the radio. The whole story tumbled out. Logvinov repeated what Heidi had said to the captain.

“She’s alone,” the first mate said. “She insists she was alone. She was piloting the plane.”

“Look around,” Mochalov nevertheless urges. “May be she’s delirious.”

“Now,” the first mate said, with less assurance. “She seems all right. She wasn’t bobbing out her all that long: 15-18 hours.”

“Come on back,” the captain said.

It look half an hour to get back to the ship – the wind drove heavy, thundering billows along. The sailors looked at Heidi – she was shivering. Heidi looked at them. She was beside herself, no doubt about it.

The ship. The deck. Fate’s nasty joke was undone.

From – No Man Is An Island

Written by Gennady Bocharov

Wednesday, May 18, 2011

18 May 2011

Heidi saw a brilliant globe drop from the Coast Guard plane. It was followed by a second and a third. The globes fell into the water but were not extinguished: in fact, they burned even brighter in the waves. Heidi could have hugged herself: these guys knew what they were doing. Not one of the white creatures that was hanging about would mess with her now. Those pea brains are scared of things they do not understand.

The light from the floating globes was broken up by the roaring waves-a spasmodic cardiogram-and gilded the night air. The darkness could not close over Heidi’s head.

The captain focused his binoculars. Forty-fifty degrees off to the starboard of the course they were following he saw multicolored streaks on the horizon. To all appearances a fire on board a large ship.

The Americans sighted the approaching refrigerator ship and fired a series of orange flares. The signal meant, “ A man in distress needs help.” Now the sky shone, too.

The captain saw all this. It conjured up a picture in his mind: rockets over the black ruins of Leningrad buildings. He was making his way through a pitch-black courtyard, he was a puny 14 year old, and buildings were on fire after an attack. The way was illuminated by an orange light.

And rockets were in the air.

The captain shook himself.

“Man overboard!” he said. “Turn on the searchlights!”

Three searchlights-one on the bow and two on the deck house-lit up simultaneously. Those who would be working in the waves pulled on life jackets. The windlasses began to hum. Tarpaulin slapped in the wind. The ship’s doctor, Natasha Popova, drank down some tincture of valerian and got ready to save the lives of the burned people.

The ship had been moving at top speed-now it needed to be slowed to a halt. Otherwise, the multiton vessel could add to the misfortunes of those who had gotten a full dose already. The calculations had to be perfect. Captain Mochalov directed the approach to the site of the emergency.

Heidi’s raft was tossed about like a child’s shoe. Her last ounces of strength went towards holding on. The ship and plane were before her eyes.

Heidi got ready to live!

The Ussuriiskaya taiga performed a couple of ponderous maneuvers and hove to. The point of the maneuvers was to protect the starboard lifeboat from the waves. Everyone not on watch-everyone who was loitering idly about-had come up on desk. They looked at the roaring night sea. From a distance some took the lights to be the burning remnants of a ship, others for lifeboats.

“All of you go,” the captain ordered his mates: Logvinov, Stepanov and Zarichansky. “Take 12 sailors with you.”

Twelve young men took their places in the boat, and it set off alone to contend with the waves. Four hundred meters-that was approximately where the boundary lay between the pinkish darkness and the yellow-red light of the globes.

From – No Man Is An Island

Written by Gennady Bocharov

Tuesday, May 17, 2011

17th May,2011

Heidi perceived that on top of everything else-the waves, wind, thirst, hunger and uncertainly-it was getting colder-winter was still not over in the southern hemisphere. The water of the open ocean was cold. A track suit was all Heidi had on and her head was bare-casual dress for a routine flight over the ocean. The waves had been drenching Heidi for more than twelve hours by then. She shivered. The life raft became less safe.

There was no doubt about it-a shark fin had cut through the water. Heidi felt as if she had died. The impact of a wave brought her to her senses. She clutched the rubber side of the raft. The next wave almost washed her overboard.

Killed by those creatures! Killed by creatures that attacked anything! Killed by creature with a mania for food! Killed by creatures that ate their own innards!

Heidi had seen Jaws. She remembered.

In the next moment she saw something else-a four engine plane was speeding right towards her. The Coast Guard! The plane passed overhead, turned around and came back. The sharks and the airplane, the horror and the joy all but caused her heart to burst.

Then a thought occurred to Heidi: how could the plane help her? Indeed, how?

“It can’t,” Heidi shouted.

“It can’t,” the sharks said silently.

A tall wave raised her life raft and, a second later, crashed down on the Cessna, which, as though tired of bobbing on the surface, went straight to the bottom. Before Heidi’s eyes the plane’s white cross sunk into the ocean depths. It was all over with the Cessna.

Heidi got ready alternately to live and to die.

Emptiness lapped in the lenses of the captain’s binoculars. He lowered them and wondered what was on the radar.

It had been a long time since Mochalove peered into the watery distance as he did now. But he remembered how he had once. That was long ago-almost forty years. Then, admittedly, he had not been a captain. He was 20. the war* was over but their lives hung by a thread each day. The crew was clearing the sea of mines, which outnumbered the fish. He had escaped being blown to smithereens. Though he could have been, he thought.

In all his years of seafaring no one had ever asked him if he liked his work. He had not asked himself that question either. Now it was kind of late. And the answer was clear.

The first mate reported that the radar had picked up the airplane. It was circling over one spot.

“That means it’s there,” the captain said. And, without pausing he added, “Full speed ahead.”

In other words, 18 knots.

“There,” he repeated. No one would circle over one spot just for the fun of it. For no reason at all.

The ship picked up speed. Night descended over the ocean, but it seemed to be waking up.

From – No Man Is An Island

Sunday, May 15, 2011

15th May, 2011

Despite his strong nerves and character, the captain was as affected by this tension, as electrified by it, as the next man. Not much was needed to act as a spark-having his ship buzzed was enough. So it could be expected that the captain would slam the bridge door and spit after the plane in defiance. And his ship, loaded to the top with fish, would stay its course, not diverging from it a degree. No one could have accused him of bringing about the American pilot’s death. Rather, the blame would lie with the pilots of American planes, who had so often played on his and his colleagues’ nerves.

But events in the Pacific Ocean took a different turn. It seemed as though the plane had wagged its wings. Somebody thought one of the engines had been switched off. What had actually happened?

The captain went up to the open flying bridge. He had his own, special seafaring experience. In all the decades he had spent on the seas and oceans he had never been in distress. He had never gotten into a mess, only in a storm. He had never given command “Man overboard!” except during drills. Fires, holes, collisions-all that had happened to someone else, not to him. He was perhaps only captain who had never seen a single flying saucer. The merchant navy had given him an award “For 20 years of accident-free service.” But only because they had not come up with the idea of giving on “For 30 years.”

The plane seemed to be summoning him somewhere. Two times it flew off in one and the same direction. That was the only information he had. The radio was silent-magnetic storms could not be discounted. If they followed the plane they might run right smack into the typhoon. And how long would it take? An hour? A day? Two? And most importantly, for the sake of what?

The Americans flew away. Perhaps they decided they had been understood.

Life’s most unbreakable code- what and where? How and when? Who and whom? Why and where to?-presented itself to the captain in classical biblical from.

For everything that happens to man, no matter how unexpected it looks, and for everything he undertakes, no matte how inexplicable it seems, the ground has been prepared.

In the ocean that day there were all the latest achievements of modern civilization: a powerful refrigerator ship and a four engine airplane, both equipped with radar, automated systems and similar apparatuses. The technology worked, moved, did not stand still. But it passed a person by. Something else was decisive-the working of the human heart. Intuition and instinct were decisive now, as they had once been ages ago. The captain swung the ship round and pointed it in the direction of the typhoon, where the plane had headed.

From – No Man Is An Island

Written by Gennady Bocharov

Saturday, May 14, 2011

13th May,2011
The navigator on watch informed the captain of the Ussuriiskaya taiga that a four engine plane with the identifying marks of the US Coast Guard was approaching the refrigerator ship. At the same moment Mochalov saw the plane come in over the port side. The roar of the engines rolled over the deck. Banking, the plane flew off.
"Did they make contact?" the captain asked.
"No," the radio operator replied.
"Buzzing," Mochalov decided. The plane came back. This time it approached the Ussuriiskaya taiga from the starboard side. It passed within inches of the masts, then banked again.
"You're going to knock the masts down, you dolt!" the captain exclaimed.
No contact was made. Silence reigned on channel 16.* No information came through on the additional frequencies either.
Let us change gears again and pause for a moment.
Civil ships are continuously being buzzed by military aircraft, escorted by cutters and even heavy vessels. I have been told this by many captains, sailors and fishermen.
The planes appear suddenly, do not respond to radio inquiries, intersect your course and circle overhead at impermissible heights. Why do they approach ships? Why do they circle over them? What are they looking for? What will they do next?
You cannot get an answer, no matter how hard you try. All you can do is watch. And wait. And guess. And frankly-worry. The sad state of world affairs is perceptible at sea as well as on shore. Perhaps even more so at sea.

From - No Man Is An Island
Written By - Gennady Bocharov

12th May, 2011

The waves grew. The jolting exhausted Heidi physically, while the empty horizon undermined her spirits. She realized that no matter how long the day was-she had flown several hours ahead of the sun-it would come to an end. Ahead lay a night in the ocean.

Why had it happened to her? After all, it did not happen to everybody. That hurt.

The waves rumbled and roared. Strange things were going on with the ocean. High in the tropical sky purple and pink shadows gathered. Bright white clouds that lit up the darkness to man lived for its own beauty. Heidi looked away. She felt like a child, cruelly abandoned by everyone.

Heidi was the offspring of the human race.

The Cessna was still afloat. But clearly, if the waves rose by just one more point it would all be over.

“And I’ll be washed into the drink,” was Heidi’s chilling conclusion.

The more she thought about night and the waves, the more it brought to mind land. The firmness and reliability of land now seemed like a sacred gift. That morning it would not have occurred to her. Now Heidi could have given her youth for the chance to feel the earth under her feet-rocky, soft, dry, damp, bare, and grassy. The earth under his feet-that is all a person needs. That first. Everything else comes later.

Fate is not fair. Heidi was clinging to a stabilizer that was gradually slipping away. She still believed she might be rescued. Most who believe perish. Only in a very few instances are those who believe rescue. It is, however, not the majority, who believe and perish, who are remembered, but those few who believe and survive.

From – No Man Is An Island

Written by Gennady Bocharov

Wednesday, May 11, 2011

11th may, 2011

The first minutes after an accident bring man an exaggerated faith in his powers. Time passes and so does that faith. Hope of being rescued arises-someone knows of your existence.

Hope passes. Destructive stages lie in wait: bewilderment (why doesn’t anyone come and rescue me?), impatience, anger, despair. And then the final stage. It is customary to consider it avoid. Thus, the stage does not exist. The victim-if he has not lost the ability to think by that time-realizes that the hope of being rescued he had before is the answer. So is the faith he had in his powers.

Heidi hoped she is would be rescued. And she continued to believed that the world small.

Let us change gears and slow the pace of this story. Heidi was not alone in the mistaken belief that “the world is small.” The author is acquainted with it, too, and not second-hand. A journalist’s work involves travel. I have traveled and flown about the world for many years now. And it really does seem as though distances have been reduced: today you are in one part of the world, tomorrow you are in another. But have they? A few unpleasant occurrences in the mountains and desert helped me realize this was a delusion! One instance in particular come to mind-it bears greater similarity to the story being told here. The incident occurred in an appropriate place-the “Bermuda Triangle.” Three times in a twenty-four hour period the Boeing in which I was flying from Colombia to New York. USA (Heidi Ann Porch’s country) came close to disaster-three times. Each time, when the engines stalled, we found ourselves over boundless, deserted expanses of sea; they were not rushing past below us as before. We were spinning our wheels in a vast space. Each time the barracudas-the worst members of the shark family-were waiting for those the sky promised them. It all ended well-even when the engines caught fire. Ended and was part of the past. But the insight I gained stayed with me: the world we fly in and find ourselves face to face with in times of trouble is not small but vast. It is boundless. It did not become any smaller because we started to fly faster. It is still as it was at the hour of creation. It is constantly huge, invariably dangerous and equally indifferent to all.

Radio operators in Hawaii picked up the SOS, and a Coast Guard plane was sent up. It started looking for traces of a crash. When the pilot’s initial attempts ended in failure they surmised that the search might take longer than expected. Even of they were lucky; however, they would not be able to rescue the pilot. That could only be accomplished by someone who was right alongside; in other words, by sailors. A ship had to be brought to the probable area of the crash. Abandoning the search for Heidi, they began looking for ship. It look quite some time……..

From – No Man Is An Island

Written by Gennady Bocharov

Monday, May 9, 2011

9th may, 2011

Water patterned with rainbow colored streaks and swirls of gasoline washed over the Cessna. Somehow Heidi managed to grab hold of an aileron and then pull herself up into the orange life raft. Its low sides would be no protection against even moderately choppy seas, but it floated. Fortunately, there were no waves. All around, as far as the eye could see, stretched the ocean, as calm as a meadow. There was nothing except water and light.

The captain played the piano.

Heidi prayed to God that the Cessna would not sink straight away. First, she would be easier to find the plane was visible to aircraft and ships. Second, the rising wind and waves might carry the life raft away, and then the coordinates she had radioed to Hawaii would seem muddled. Rocked by the waves, Heidi held on to the stabilizer. It was the last service the plane could do her.

A horror of Earth’s boundless expanses brushed against her consciousness. Not long before she had been sure that nothing could be smaller than the world she sped over on the wings of her Cessna and her youth. After all, she had an engine at her command. Late twentieth century man’s belief that the world is ridiculously small was firmly embedded in her soul. That belief, along with her stamina, served Heidi well. She believed that another minute would go by and a ship would appear on the horizon. Or a plane would appear in the sky. Or some kind of sailing vessel even would show up. Or, a submarine would surface, for goodness sake! Youth has a right to count on that, too.

But hope and reality are different things. Hours went by and nothing changed. Heidi had crashed in one of the most deserted areas of the Pacific Ocean.

From – No Man Is An Island

Written by Gennady Bocharov

Sunday, May 8, 2011

8th may,2011
Captain Mochalov left the bridge and peeped into the mess. Two sailors were resting after their watch. The ship's doctor, Natasha Popova, leafed through some magazines. It was the best time of any voyage-the journey homeward. Mochalov sat down at the piano and struck a few chords. He was not a particularly good player, but it was something he enjoyed.
The Cessna 182 hit the water, nosed over and came to rest, belly up. The cabin was underwater. Deafened by the crash, Heidi did not recover immediately. When her head finally cleared it struck her that she would be unable to get out of the cabin, which meant drowning in the sinking plane. Her back hurt but she could bend it-there was nothing seriously the matter. Heidi pulled out the inflatable life raft and unbuckled her seat belt. Then, opening the canopy, she took one last gulp of air as water poured into the cockpit. Pushing off the duralumin fuselage she rose to the surface:
"Alive and in one piece." The sun made her dizzy. The rubber cylinders of the landing gear went back before her eyes.

From- Gennady Bocharov's
No Man Is An Island

Monday, May 2, 2011

2nd May 2, 2011

Captain Mochalov was a man whose very appearance did not permit him to pass the captaining profession by. His body was well-proportioned, his eyes-dark blue, hair-a silvery gray, skin-tanned. Perhaps all that kept him from being the very image of a sea skipper was his diction-it was the diction of a man who forgot about his subordinates.

He stood on the bridge, bit down on his pipestem and thought, “What next?”

Heidi rejoiced in the flight. She blessed the moment she had made her choice. “My life could have turned out differently,” Heidi thought with light-hearted horror, “But not now.”

The captain did not give useless things a thought. But pipes were another matter. He had nine of them, curved and straight. If one was not suitable for a particular tobacco, he switched it for another that was.

The pipe he was smoking tasted good. Every once in a while he looked through his binoculars. He had long before gotten used to the fact that everything his ship was sailing towards would eventually be behind him.

Heidi glanced at the oil pressure gauge: the needle had fallen.

“Hey, what’s this!” Heidi exclaimed.

The needle fell. Heidi accelerated. The needle fell. She throttled back. The needle fell. Soon it froze at the bottom of the scale. The engine coughed several times, then began to heat up. All thrust ceased. Heidi tried to hold the Cessna in the air stream. The plane lost speed. There was a sudden, loud noise and the engine fell silent. Then Heidi knew that the flight was over. The Cessna’s altitude over the open ocean began to diminish rapidly. Heidi kept the plane from going into a spin and scattered distress signals over the airwaves. She hoped they would be heard. At least in Hawaii they should, she thought.

Faster and faster the plane plummeted towards the water that blinded like broken glass-someone had smashed all the windows in the Empire State Building at once. The world, which had been such a friendly place not long before, expanded until it was frighteningly boundless.

Heidi’s last radio communication was, "I am alone up here, I am descending into the ocean.”

From-
No Man Is An Island

Sunday, May 1, 2011

It had already happened.
The young American pilot, Heidi Ann Porch, received permission to take off. She lifted her single engine Cessna 182 into the sky from a California airport and set course for Oakland, New Zealand.
It was Heidi's tenth flight across the Pacific. As on the previous nine trips she was delivering aviation technology to customers in Australia and New Zealand.
I. A. Mochalov, the fifty-seven year old captain of the ocean-going refrigerator ship, the Ussuriiskaya taiga, came onto the bridge. The vessel, on course for Vladivostok, was approaching the Tsugaru-kaikyo. This was considered the best passage between the Pacific Ocean and the Sea of Japan.
Heidi listened to music.
The captain listened to the weather report. Off the Japanese coast a typhoon was forming.
To Heidi it seemed as though her plane was suspended over a motionless ocean. At such moments she felt slightly irritated: everything should happen fast. But when ships appeared below, dots on the water that glistened like broken glass, she saw that she was moving swiftly towards her destination. Soon she would be landing. Arrival always held the promise of something new for her.
Heidi only believed in what lay ahead.

From Gennady Bocharov's novel-
No Man Is An Island