Hold Fire — Shliemann's Restraint & Indy's Periscope Lifeline

On the Wurrfler's conning tower a quiet command clash plays out: the submarine's honorable captain refuses an unprovoked torpedo strike while the impatient Nazi Shliemann implies escalation is only a matter of time. As the U-boat submerges, Indiana Jones, soaked and hatless, scrambles aboard, narrowly avoiding being swept away. He fights rising water, climbs to the turret and, improvising, lashes himself to the periscope. The beat both defuses an immediate massacre and sets up a clandestine infiltration—juxtaposing moral restraint against ruthless ambition and foreshadowing unauthorized aggression.

Plot Beats

The narrative micro-steps within this event

2

The Wurrfler's Captain informs Shliemann that all torpedoes are loaded, setting up a potential confrontation.

calm to tension ['submarine bridge']

Shliemann deliberates with the Captain about attacking the Bantu Wind, showing restraint due to their non-war status.

tension to relief ['submarine bridge', 'Bantu Wind']

Who Was There

Characters present in this moment

8

Desperate determination shifting to relieved wryness—survival focus overlays a private, almost embarrassed satisfaction when the dive halts.

Indy appears suddenly amid the aft rail, drags his soaked body onto the sub, loses his felt hat, fights rising water across the deck, clambers the ladder to the conning tower, braces between mast and periscope, and finally ties himself to the periscope with his bullwhip to avoid being swept under.

Goals in this moment
  • Avoid drowning and secure a safe hold on the sub
  • Remain hidden aboard the Wurrfler to continue pursuit of the Ark or allies
Active beliefs
  • Improvisation and physical grit can overcome engineered danger
  • Staying aboard this sub advances his larger mission despite personal risk
Character traits
resourceful physically tenacious cool under pressure
Follow Indiana Jones's journey

Controlled impatience—his outward civility masks a readiness to escalate if tactically useful.

Shliemann stands on the bridge, watches the Bantu Wind with cold calculation, questions the Captain, then issues a curt concession and disappears down the hatch, signaling impatience restrained only by expediency.

Goals in this moment
  • Secure the destruction or neutralization of the Bantu Wind if it benefits the mission
  • Keep pressure on naval commanders to move quickly toward Nazi objectives
Active beliefs
  • Force is an acceptable tool to achieve strategic aims
  • Delaying violence is tactical, not moral; escalation is inevitable when useful
Character traits
impatient coldly strategic commanding
Follow Shliemann's journey

Calm professional integrity; his refusal reflects naval honor and a desire to avoid unnecessary bloodshed.

The Wurrfler's Captain listens, asserts that torpedoes should not be fired because 'we are not at war,' salutes Katanga, and orders the sub to move away, then goes below and pulls the hatch closed.

Goals in this moment
  • Prevent an unprovoked attack and unnecessary loss of life
  • Maintain traditional naval discipline and rules of engagement
Active beliefs
  • Military honor and protocol must limit wartime excesses
  • There are lines that should not be crossed without formal declaration of war
Character traits
honorable restrained procedural
Follow Wurrfler's Captain's journey
Supporting 4

Defiant composure—using visible presence to communicate sovereignty and resilience in the face of threat.

Katanga stands tall on the Bantu Wind's bow, visible and defiant; his gesture toward the Wurrfler reads as a proud salute that the Captain acknowledges, a human counterpoint to the subs' cold machinery.

Goals in this moment
  • Protect his crew by signaling confidence and deterrence
  • Demonstrate moral courage in the face of armed intimidation
Active beliefs
  • Visible defiance can blunt aggression
  • His crew's lives depend on projecting calm and strength
Character traits
proud defiant dignified
Follow Captain Simon …'s journey

Tense vigilance—pride mixed with the knowledge of their exposed position under naval guns.

Katanga's crew are arrayed across the Bantu Wind's bow, a human line of defiance and vulnerability; their presence is the target of Shliemann's aggression and the object of the Captain's restraint.

Goals in this moment
  • Protect their ship and captain through visible solidarity
  • Avoid provocation that would justify violent reprisal
Active beliefs
  • Unity and presence can deter immediate attack
  • They are vulnerable but morally justified in resisting intimidation
Character traits
exposed resolute solidary
Follow Katanga's Crew …'s journey

Businesslike quiet—focused on duty and carrying out commands without show of opinion.

The Captain's Aides stand on the bridge supporting the Captain, then obey his order and follow him below the hatch as the Wurrfler prepares to dive, their movements efficient and respectful.

Goals in this moment
  • Execute the Captain's orders swiftly and correctly
  • Maintain the submarine's operational readiness during the dive
Active beliefs
  • Chain of command must be followed
  • Operational discipline prevents chaos and loss
Character traits
professional disciplined obedient
Follow Captain's Aides's journey
Radioman
secondary

Focused and routine—concerned with transmission accuracy rather than moral deliberation.

The Radioman crisply relays communications into his headset, then drops the headset and follows the aides down the hatch as the sub begins its dive, performing communicative and procedural tasks.

Goals in this moment
  • Transmit and receive orders accurately
  • Support the dive procedure by clearing the bridge communications
Active beliefs
  • Clear communication is vital to safe operations
  • His role is to serve command, not to judge orders
Character traits
procedural efficient unemotional
Follow Radioman's journey
Other Submarines (U-boat escort flotilla)

Other submarines in formation begin to withdraw in the distance once the Wurrfler commences its dive, following the lead sub's …

Objects Involved

Significant items in this scene

9
Indiana Jones' Fedora (Indy's Hat)

Indy's felt hat is noted as lost to the seas during his scramble; it functions here as a small personal casualty that underscores his physical cost and humiliation in the moment.

Before: Perched on Indy's head as part of his …
After: Lost to the water; explicitly gone 'once and …
Before: Perched on Indy's head as part of his usual attire.
After: Lost to the water; explicitly gone 'once and for all.'
Wurrfler's Torpedoes

Torpedoes are explicitly present and loaded—mentioned as the lethal capability that Shliemann urges to use and the Captain refuses—establishing the stakes and the moral choice at the heart of the beat.

Before: Loaded in tubes, armed and ready per the …
After: Remain loaded but unaired as the Captain declines …
Before: Loaded in tubes, armed and ready per the Captain's report.
After: Remain loaded but unaired as the Captain declines to fire and orders withdrawal; thus the immediate lethal threat is deferred.
The Wurrfler's Conning Tower Hatch

The heavy conning tower hatch is pulled closed by the Captain as he goes below, physically sealing the bridge and precipitating the dive which creates the hazardous flooding Indy must survive.

Before: Open while officers remain on the bridge.
After: Shut with a clang, isolating the bridge and …
Before: Open while officers remain on the bridge.
After: Shut with a clang, isolating the bridge and enabling the sub to dive; it separates Indy (outside) from the bridge crew below.
The Wurrfler's Radioman's Headset

The Radioman's headset is used for brief communications at the start of the exchange; he speaks into it and then removes it as he follows the aides below, marking the end of bridge transmissions and the shift into dive operations.

Before: Clamped to the Radioman's head as he transmits …
After: Yanked off and left behind as he descends …
Before: Clamped to the Radioman's head as he transmits orders.
After: Yanked off and left behind as he descends into the sub during the dive.
Wurrfler's Aft Main Deck Rail

The aft main deck rail is the first grip Indy finds when he pulls himself onto the sub; it anchors his initial haul out of the sea before he advances toward the conning tower.

Before: Fixed to the deck, exposed and wet as …
After: Gripped and used by Indy as he climbs; …
Before: Fixed to the deck, exposed and wet as the sub maneuvers.
After: Gripped and used by Indy as he climbs; remains part of the deck's hardware, slick with seawater.
Wurrfler's Aft Mast (radio mast with aftmast light)

The aftmast light serves as a last-ditch handhold: Indy grabs its base to arrest a slip and prevent being swept away while the deck floods and the submarine lists during the dive.

Before: Fixed to the conning tower as a standard …
After: Clutched by Indy briefly; remains affixed and continues …
Before: Fixed to the conning tower as a standard navigation/lighting fixture.
After: Clutched by Indy briefly; remains affixed and continues to function as part of the turret's hardware.
The Wurrfler's Conning Tower Ladder

The fixed metal ladder is the vertical pathway Indy uses to reach the bridge and turret; it facilitates his ascent through flooding and is integral to his survival route upward.

Before: Secured to the conning tower, unused until Indy …
After: Climbed and wet from Indy's ascent; continues serving …
Before: Secured to the conning tower, unused until Indy climbs it.
After: Climbed and wet from Indy's ascent; continues serving as access between deck and turret.
The Wurrfler's Periscope

The periscope becomes Indy's final physical anchor: as the turret submerges he climbs and clings to the top three feet, then uses it as the structural core to lash his bullwhip and secure himself above the waterline.

Before: Extended above the conning tower, functioning as the …
After: Partially exposed (top three feet) with Indy's whip …
Before: Extended above the conning tower, functioning as the sub's observation instrument and exposed to surface view.
After: Partially exposed (top three feet) with Indy's whip lashed to it; serving both its military function and as Indy’s improvised lifeline.
Indiana Jones's Bullwhip

Indy's coiled bullwhip is repurposed from tool/weapon into a survival tether; he extracts and knots it to the periscope to secure himself as the submarine completes its dive.

Before: Rolled at Indy's belt, dry enough to use, …
After: Unwound and tied to the periscope, functioning as …
Before: Rolled at Indy's belt, dry enough to use, part of his typical adventuring kit.
After: Unwound and tied to the periscope, functioning as an improvised lifeline to keep Indy attached to the turret.

Location Details

Places and their significance in this event

3
Wurrfler Conning Tower (submarine turret)

The Wurrfler's conning tower/bridge is the immediate stage for the moral clash, the operational hub for dive procedures, and the physical arena where Indy struggles to reach refuge as the submarine submerges and isolates its personnel below.

Atmosphere Tense, procedural, and then suddenly claustrophobic as the dive seals and water invades deck space.
Function Battleground of moral decision and refuge for survival; it is both the site of command …
Symbolism Represents institutional restraint and the line between lawful conduct and ruthless aggression; also becomes a …
Access Functionally restricted once the hatch is closed—bridge restricted to officers; surface access limited by dive …
Flooding deck with knee-deep water Clang of the hatch being pulled closed Drenched metal surfaces, spray and sea noise
Bantu Wind Bow

The Bantu Wind's bow is the visible focus of the standoff—Katanga and his crew stand there as potential victims and symbols of defiance, drawing the attention and ire of Shliemann and the Nazi subs.

Atmosphere Defiant and exposed—the crew's posture is proud but vulnerable under naval intimidation.
Function Focal point for the potential use of force; a moral test for naval commanders and …
Symbolism Embodies civilian courage and the human cost of military decisions.
Access Open deck area accessible to the pirate crew and visible to nearby vessels; practically vulnerable …
Crew lined across the bow Katanga standing on the rail, silhouetted against the sea Salt spray and the creak of deck planks
Wurrfler's Aft Main Deck Rail

The aft main deck rail serves as Indy's first handhold when he drags himself onto the Wurrfler; it is a literal point of contact between sea and steel that prevents him from being swept away.

Atmosphere Immediate, wet urgency—an edge between perilous sea and temporary safety.
Function Point of entry/support enabling Indy's climb from the water onto the submarine.
Symbolism A small, practical threshold between loss (the sea) and agency (the ship).
Access Public exterior deck rail—accessible but exposed to the elements and enemy sightlines.
Slick metal rail slick with seawater Surging waves washing over the deck Indy's wet sleeve and gripping hand

Organizations Involved

Institutional presence and influence

3
Nazis (general organizational force)

The Nazis are the motivating political-military force: Shliemann's presence and his push to use torpedoes make clear the organization's ruthless intent and strategic willingness to use violence to secure assets or intimidate opponents.

Representation Through Shliemann and loaded weaponry aboard the submarine; their will is expressed by an officer …
Power Dynamics Exerting top-down pressure on naval actors to convert capability into aggression; attempting to subordinate traditional …
Impact Highlights Nazi ideological aggression overriding customary restraint; reveals tensions between political officers and professional military …
Internal Dynamics Factional tension: ideological, impatient officers (Shliemann) versus career naval officers who obey conventions and resist …
Use military assets to intimidate or eliminate perceived obstacles Secure control over people or vessels connected to the Ark's transport Pressure from political/military officers (Shliemann) on naval commanders Provision and readiness of lethal resources (loaded torpedoes)
Crew of the Bantu Wind

The Crew of the Bantu Wind manifest as a civilian/pirate collective whose visible defiance triggers the standoff; their alignment with Katanga's leadership makes them the human stake in the Captain's moral decision.

Representation Through physical presence on the bow and Katanga's salute, projecting collective resolve to the approaching …
Power Dynamics Vulnerable and exposed to the superior military force; they hold moral authority but lack material …
Impact Their presence personalizes the geopolitical conflict and pressures the military actors to show restraint or …
Internal Dynamics Unified under Katanga's leadership; no visible divisions during this beat.
Protect the vessel and crew from seizure or attack Signal noncompliance and moral opposition to intimidation Public, visible solidarity and presence Leadership by Katanga that frames the crew as courageous and unified
Wurrfler Crew

The Wurrfler Crew represents professional naval execution: their adherence to the Captain's order and dive protocol enables the ship to withdraw rather than attack—an operational counterweight to Shliemann's aggression.

Representation Manifested by the Captain, aides, radioman, and the executed dive procedure; the crew's discipline enacts …
Power Dynamics Operational control lies with the Captain and crew who choose procedure over political pressure; they …
Impact Shows the navy as an institution capable of moderating political extremism through discipline and professional …
Internal Dynamics Chain-of-command functioning: Captain exercises authority; aides and radioman follow; limited friction with political officers like …
Conduct a safe, orderly dive and withdrawal Preserve crew lives by following naval rules of engagement Procedural authority of the Captain Technical control of the submarine (hatch, dive controls, communications)

Narrative Connections

How this event relates to others in the story

No narrative connections mapped yet

This event is currently isolated in the narrative graph


Key Dialogue

"THE WURRFLER'S CAPTAIN: "Colonel Shliemann, all torpedoes are loaded.""
"THE WURRFLER'S CAPTAIN: "I think not, Colonel. Nothing is to be gained. We are not at war.""
"SHLIEMANN: "... yet. Let the vermin live. We must be on our way.""