Saltwater Clarity

The pressure hull groaned as depth charges echoed above, rattling dust from the pipes overhead. Lieutenant Pieter de Vries, who had never liked the sea or its false promises, pressed his forehead to the cold periscope column and muttered a curse in Dutch. He had seen more than enough for one lifetime through this narrow slit of a world—enemy destroyers, friends lost to the abyss, and now, her.

Eva Gruber sat with her knees pulled up on the steel bench, wrists cuffed in front. Her uniform, once pressed and defiant, was streaked with oil and fear. But her eyes—damn her eyes—were sharp, always searching for weakness, opportunity, hope. Pieter didn’t trust hope; it got men killed. He focused instead on the routine: check bearings, scan the surface, report up the chain.

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Except nothing was routine about this patrol or its cargo—a resistance operative snatched off the coast of Normandy just days before D-Day was rumored to begin. Intelligence said she knew about Allied supply lines. Pieter suspected she knew more about freedom than any codebook ever printed.

The captain’s voice crackled through the speaking tube. “De Vries! Anything on the horizon?”

He shook his head. “Nothing but gray soup.”

“Check again,” came the reply. “And take those new field glasses from stores—see what they’re worth.”

Pieter retrieved the binos from his duffel: a sleek set with rubber grips and lenses so clear he could count barnacles on the hull from fifty feet away. Supposedly indestructible—even in salt spray or smoke. Not that it mattered down here; everything eventually broke under pressure.

He raised them to his eyes and swept the narrow slit of light afforded by their meager periscope view. Through those crystal-clear lenses, shapes sharpened—a British corvette tracing lazy circles above them, depth charges prepped like thunderheads on its deck.

Eva watched him with a crooked smile. “You see your freedom up there?”

He lowered the binoculars, irritated at how easily she read him. “All I see is control—ours or theirs. Doesn’t matter who’s holding the rope when you’re tied up.”

She cocked her head, considering him. “Maybe not until someone decides to cut it.”

Another explosion rocked the sub; water sloshed across Eva’s boots. Pieter steadied himself and tossed her a blanket—a gesture wasted on someone used to winter in occupied France.

The crew ran silent for hours as cat-and-mouse played out above them. By dusk—the clocks down here barely meant anything—orders came to surface near a stretch of rocky coastline where supplies might be passed ashore under cover of darkness.

Pieter climbed topside first, bracing against wind and spray as he peered through his borrowed binoculars. The moon split clouds overhead, silvering crests; even with nerves frayed raw, he marveled at how clearly he could pick out details: each rock along the shore, movement among shadows that might be friend or foe.

He handed them down to Eva as she emerged shakily behind him—her wrists finally uncuffed for a moment’s air.

“Go on,” he said gruffly. “See if your people are waiting.”

She hesitated—then lifted them, adjusting eyecups for her spectacles with an expertise that surprised him. For a moment she went quiet except for her breathing; then she whispered something in French he didn’t catch.

“Anything?”

She nodded toward a cluster of dark shapes moving through surf—men hauling crates ashore with deliberate care.

Pieter swallowed hard. His orders were clear: no one gets off this boat alive except his own men.

But clarity has consequences, and sometimes seeing means choosing sides you swore you wouldn’t.

They lingered there—a truce in salt-stung air—as sirens wailed faintly from distant headlands.

“Do you ever wish you’d chosen differently?” she asked softly.

Pieter shrugged, passing back the binoculars. “Wishing is what gets you sunk.”

She smiled again, sadder this time. “Or free.”

Below decks, orders pulsed through cables like electric blood: prepare to dive; prepare to run; prepare to betray or forgive.

The night thickened around them as decisions crystallized sharper than any lens could render—a fleeting moment suspended between control and freedom, truth and survival. And somewhere beneath all that steel and saltwater cynicism, something tender began to stir.

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