Authors: Philip Chen
Martha was first in her class at Quantico and was a nationally-ranked shootist. Proficient in martial arts as well, she most enjoyed spending time in front of computer screens, catching bad guys.
"While you're at that, why don't you have her check out a Timothy Walsh in Minneapolis as well?" said Mike.
"No problem," Adams said. "Oh, by the way, I need to get up to Minneapolis pretty soon to take care of some personal business."
Mike replaced the telephone on its cradle.
"Let's see what that turns up," He said to Mildred, who was sitting on the sofa. "Incidentally, Mildred, did you visit Davenport's office while you were in Des Moines?"
"Why, yes. Remember, I told you that I searched her belongings."
"Well, the office manager, Steven Clark was killed last night. You're not up to your old tricks, are you?" Mike arched an eyebrow.
"Oh, my stars! He was such a sweet man. Do you suppose that he might have been killed by that terrible Walsh? I'm sure that stuffed bear on his shelf looked just like the one that Julie Davenport had with her belongings. Also the paper from Reedy Securities on his desk. My heavens, that poor man."
"I think that your Mr. Walsh needs more looking into."
1100 Hours: Thursday, June 17, 1993: Bethesda, Maryland
"Oh, Mr. Liu, there's a telephone message for you," said the young female clerk at the front desk of the Bethesda Hyatt Regency as Mike returned from a visit with Smith.
"Thank you," said Mike as he took the message asking him to call Adams in Minneapolis.
As the elevator door slid close on the entering Mike Liu, the intense young man looked up from the newspaper that he had been reading. The angular jaw on his young face was set in a clench as he crumpled the newspaper and tossed it on the cushioned bench. Taking off his rimless glasses and wiping them with his handkerchief, the young man walked over to the elevator and pushed the up button.
When Mike got up to his room, overlooking the plaza of the Hyatt Regency and the entrance to the Washington Metro, he dialed Adams' office in Minneapolis.
"Good morning, Federal Bureau of Investigation. How may I help you?"
"Is Herb Adams in?" said Mike.
"You bet. I'll see if he is busy."
"Agent Adams."
"Herb, it's Mike. What's up?"
"As usual, Martha has come up with some rather startling information. Davenport is an impostor. The real Julie Davenport was born in Joliet, Illinois, on January 3, 1958, but died in a traffic accident in December 18, 1960. A real tragedy. The entire family was wiped out in a head-on with an eighteen wheeler. It seems that somebody is doing a landslide business in false identifications."
"What about Tim Walsh? Mildred and I think that he may be involved in the slaying of that office manager."
"As far as we can tell, he immigrated to the United States from Canada about fifteen years ago, worked for awhile in the Ford assembly plant in Windsor, Canada, then in the General Motors plant in Pontiac, and finally migrated to Minneapolis about eight years ago to set up his auto shop. He claims to have been born in the Northwest Territories of Canada. We're having the Royal Canadian Mounted Police check into that angle."
"I'll bet we'll find a dead baby there, too."
"You know, Mike, if I didn't know you better, I'd think you were becoming paranoid."
"What about John Trent?" said Mike.
"That's a tough one, the name is too common and we have no hooks. That Bedford fellow ran a pretty loose ship, no employment records, no W-2s. Couldn't find any social security number in Bedford's files. Bedford insists his salesmen are contractors and not employees, so he didn't file withholding taxes -- nice scam. I've asked my friends in Treasury to look into that one."
"What about the travel angle?"
"Martha is still working on that. So far, what George said at our last meeting seems to be the case. Each trip was individually arranged by separate CSAC offices. There is a modem tie-in between the various CSAC offices, but as far as we can determine that tie-in is not used for travel scheduling purposes. Seems to be a dead end."
"Let's stick with it for now. I just feel there has to be a connection there somewhere."
"Don't worry, Mike. Martha is a pit bull on things like this."
Mike put the handset on the telephone and walked into the bathroom. As he was turning on the hot water, there was a loud knock at his door.
"What the?" muttered Mike as he picked up a towel to wipe his hand. Mike looked through the view hole and was surprised at what he saw.
"Eastwood! What are you doing here?"
"The senior on the Fairington project needed to get some cash flows to you and asked that I come down with the information," said Eastwood holding up a manila envelope for Mike to see.
"Wait a minute, I need to get some pants on," said a grim-faced Mike Liu. "I'll be right with you."
Mike quickly walked to his duffel bag and got his Walther pistol out of its holder. He carefully screwed on the DARPA designed silencer, released the safety and walked carefully to the door, holding the Walther behind his back. With this left hand Mike opened the door and gestured Eastwood to come into the room. "What do you need?"
"The senior needs your signature on this underwriting contract, Mr. Liu."
As Eastwood walked into the room, Mike quickly aimed his Walther and squeezed the trigger. "No one knew I was here," he said to the now lifeless body of Eastwood, Ex-Choate, Ex-Harvard, Ex-Yale, Ex-Life.
Mike quickly stanched the flow of blood from Eastwood's head wound. Mike was now faced with disposing of the lifeless body. Opening the door to his room, Mike looked up and down the hall to see if there were any people around. Seeing no one, Mike picked up the corpse of Eastwood, carefully holding him as if he were helping a drunken friend. Mike was surprised how light Eastwood was.
"Must be all those damn sprouts and power lunches," he said, grim-faced.
Mike carried the body to the service elevator, pushed the down button and waited for the doors to open. As the doors closed on the slumped body of Eastwood, Mike whispered, "Say hi to your pa-pa, asshole."
1993: Watching
0800 Hours: Wednesday, June 16, 1993: Watch Station One
The hatch closed with a metallic clang. A whoosh of air indicated that the passageway to the transfer submersible was being flooded to outside pressure. McHugh climbed down the ladder to the metal grating of the deck.
Two men waited for the older man to reach the bottom of the ladder. In the background, they could hear the metallic sounds of the transfer submersible breaking seal, the gentler, heavier metallic clang of the outer hatch seating itself, and finally the whirring sounds of the transfer submersible's thrusters fading into the void.
"Welcome, Admiral, we're glad to have you on board. It's been a long time," said Captain O'Shannon. Watch Station One was anchored 18,000 feet below the surface of the ocean.
Watch Station commanders were hand-picked by McHugh. Typically, these men were those whose loyalty and devotion to duty were beyond question. O'Shannon was a perfect example of this devotion to duty.
O'Shannon's deputy, Joshua Wong, stood quietly by. Wong was a young Annapolis graduate, plucked out of the nuclear Navy at a very young age, primarily because of his post-graduate work at the Woods Hole Institute of Oceanography on deep ocean geomagnetic interferometric phase characterization.
"Hello, Bill," said McHugh. "How have you been, Mr. Wong? It's good to see you again. You've got a thankless job, Bill. Your men are to be commended on their patience and diligence. Not too many men would give up their families and surface life to live on the ocean bottom for six months at a time."
McHugh was dressed in the special fire-retardant cotton, navy blue jumpsuit that was the required uniform while aboard the Watch Station. On his feet were special grounding boots that discharged any static electricity safely. On the collars of his uniform were embroidered silver stars signifying his rank. Under his jumpsuit, McHugh had remembered to put on his long johns, also made of the same fire retardant cotton material.
Despite all efforts to control the temperature and humidity at the Watch Stations, they tended to be damp and cold, especially to the occasional visitor or new crew member. The dampness and relatively cool temperature of the atmosphere aboard the Watch Station gave the air a characteristic staleness: a metallic, oily, heavy, wet smell.
O'Shannon wore a jumpsuit similar to McHugh's. Like so many of his crew, a personal headset for a Walkman hung around his neck.
Watch Station One was constructed as a network of eight spherical compartments connected by short crawl ways. Each sphere was segregated from the others by airlocks. Despite the incredible pressures outside the spheres, the pressure inside the spheres was maintained at standard atmosphere or surface pressure. Although passage to each sphere was through crawl ways, the spheres were quite large, enabling all twelve of the crewmen to be quite comfortably gathered in any one sphere at one time.
The main command module was packed with instrumentation and recording devices, including one of the new DataTech Neural Network Supercomputing Systems Mark I. The temperature of the Mark I was maintained by a novel cooling system that provided cooling using solid copper heat conductors connected to an outside heat exchanger. The Mark I computer controlled all the systems at Watch Station One, including the recording of all data.
The main command module was originally the only one that had anything resembling windows -- nine centimeter portholes. However, the crew quarters had been outfitted later with one porthole each; dictated by CSAC psychologists as essential for maintaining sanity. Such conveniences were not easily decided upon because of the sea pressures encountered at these depths: the first casualties were portholes.
In order to see out the portholes in the main command module and crew quarters, the interior lights had to be turned off and the outside lights lit. Not that the crew spent much time looking out the portholes. Even with the outside lights on, there just wasn't anything to see but the immense black mass that lay at the edge of the light. At these depths, there was simply no life to speak of.
About the only activity one could see in the bleak, black void was what most called "snowfall." What they were referring to was the seemingly constant fall of detritus from the upper reaches of the ocean. This detritus consisted of lifeless remains from the rich biological photic regions of the ocean drifting slowly down to the ocean bottom.
The other spheres at Watch Station One contained living quarters, a kitchen, a workshop and gymnasium, the submersible room, the nuclear reactor that powered the station, and the transfer room. The transfer room was equipped with a docking station and airlock for the submersibles that brought replacement crews, mail, and supplies. The submersible room also contained an airlock for one of the two Benthic Ranger submersibles attached to the Watch Station.
Benthic Ranger was the latest generation of Squid submersibles that had been developed by MacAlear Aviation. Infinitely more comfortable than the
Squid
, Benthic Ranger could hold up to six people in relative comfort, twelve if absolutely necessary. Each Watch Station had two Benthic Rangers, which served as patrol vehicles as well as escape pods, if the need ever arose. The second Benthic Ranger was accessed from the crew's living quarters via the submersible room.
All the spheres except for the main command module and the two spheres that served as living quarters were awash in brilliant light. Some psychologist had a theory that programmed lighting, especially bright white light, could control sleeplessness in artificial environments such as this. The living quarters, however, were more softly lit. This was done to encourage sleep and rest. One of the living quarters had been painted a pastel pink. Again, some think-tank psychologist thought that pink would have a calming effect on the crew. The crew especially disliked the pink color. Soon, only newer crew members had to endure it. Rank still had some privileges even among the enlisted men.
The main command module was bathed in red light, in order to facilitate the monitoring of the cathode ray tubes, television monitors and other instrumentation.
The Watch Station's complement of twelve was divided into two six-man teams, each working twelve hour shifts. As the Watch Station commander, O'Shannon led one of the two crews, called the Gold Crew. His deputy commander, Wong, led the second crew, called the Blue Crew.
The mission of the Watch Station crew was to monitor the geophysical state of an immense dark object about fifty yards from the station for any indication of life, electronic, biological, or otherwise. Data was collected from transponders strategically located on and in the vicinity of the Sentinel.
Besides the general measurements of temperature, biological oxygen demand, salinity, current and water density, more specific measurements were taken of magnetic background with the new generation proton precession magnetometer which over the years had replaced the metastable helium process for measuring magnetic flux. The instrumentation also continuously measured radioactivity, electromagnetic radiation, conductivity, seismic activity, and opacity.
In addition to the geophysical measurements, an extensive program of biological monitoring was conducted to determine the presence of life forms, if any should appear.
Outside, on top of the Watch Station and at strategic points surrounding the object, was a network of scanning sonars and television monitors. Strobe lights attached to the video cameras also could be controlled by switches inside the main command sphere.
The discovery of not one but four massive non-naturally occurring objects was particularly jarring to the senior levels of government. Some officials even went so far as to call the four structures "Sentinels," suggesting that they were somehow actively monitoring the Earth, for what and for whom no one knew.