Lost Republic (7 page)

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Authors: Paul B. Thompson

Tags: #Fiction, #Action & Adventure Fiction, #Fantasy & Magic, #Legends, Myths, Fables

BOOK: Lost Republic
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“Oh my god,” she gasped. “We're sinking!”

Emile grabbed her by the wrist and dragged her toward the door. At the last instant, Eleanor grabbed a photo from the stubbornly open suitcase. It was an LCD picture of her and her mom, taken outside the Parliament building in London.

In the corridor, they discovered the water they heard wasn't the sea filling the ship; it was from the fire extinguisher system overhead. They groped along the crazy, slanted corridor to the steps and started up. In the lounge they ran into Ms. Señales and a pair of worried sailors.

“What are you doing here? Get to the boats!” she said.

Emile nodded and kept going, dragging Eleanor by her unburned arm. On deck, Brock berated them both for leaving during an emergency.

“I went to find Miss Quarrel,” Emile replied. Eleanor had never heard him sound so humble. “No one missed her but me.”

The second lifeboat was in the water. Leigh, Mr. Chen, Kiran Trevedi, and France pulled on the oars. Their technique wasn't any better than the first boat's, but by sheer determination they managed to get away from the dying
Carleton
.

They put Eleanor and Emile in the third boat first. More passengers filled in behind them. The fourth was hung up on its crane. Crewmen swarmed over it, hammering and tugging to free it.

There was a lull in the terrible blows striking the ship. Eleanor slumped low in the boat. She didn't like seeing that they were dangling a dozen meters above the ocean. While there, she cast a secret eye at her rescuer. Emile risked his life to bring her up on deck. He was weird, but maybe he wasn't so bad.

The third lifeboat rode the waves at last. Some of the men got them under way. The fourth lifeboat, freed of its snag, came screeching down behind them. It held the last of the passengers.

The ship's list was so severe now, the boat cranes wouldn't work.
Carleton
's crew launched an inflatable life raft. Sailors began leaping into the water to swim to the raft until Brock and Captain Viega stopped them. Their comrade Ramundo had gone into the water and never come up. There must be rocks or shoals down there, holding the ship and transmitting the awful shocks from shore. Diving in was a good way to break your neck.

The first boat, laden with women and kids, crawled to the beach. Fortunately, the surf wasn't high, and the boat washed up with a gentle bump. Linh and a woman at the bow leaped into the water with lines and dragged the boat higher onto the sand.

“Everyone out!”

The boat emptied. The sailor on the rudder and the four rowers remained.

“Back to the ship?” asked Jenny. The sailor nodded.

With much grunting and yelling, the women on the beach pushed the boat back into the surf. Getting used to their task, Jenny and the other rowers turned about and slowly paddled back to the
Carleton
.

Chapter 8

Wet from the waist down, Julie pushed her hair out of her face and gazed at the stricken ship. Leaning way over, with smoke and steam leaking from every vent and port, the
Carleton
looked like a set from a disaster movie.

“Doesn't look so bad from here,” said Linh quietly. Julie almost laughed.

Some children tried to head up the beach, exploring until their mothers called them back. They made them sit down on the sand facing the ship. Surprisingly, they all did as they were told.

Linh looked up and down the wide band of sand. It was a remarkably empty beach. No driftwood. No drying strands of seaweed. No salty scrub growing out of the sand above the high tide mark. Linh rubbed the toe of her shoe into the sand.

No shells. Not even broken bits of shells. The sand under her toe was as clean and pure as if it had been sifted and washed.

The second lifeboat beached, and the passengers spilled out. Leigh found Julie and gave her a huge hug.

“Let go!” she groaned. “People are watching!”

“You're all right!”

“I was until you cracked my rib.”

The rowers in the second boat called Leigh to join for a return trip to the ship. He kissed Julie on the forehead and told her not to go anywhere.

“Where is there to go?” she said. “The Hotel Bermuda Triangle?”

When Eleanor's boat reached shore, she wondered if Emile would leap into the surf and help her to dry land, but he didn't. He stood at the bow, eyeing the green water with distaste. Tired of waiting, Eleanor pushed past him and swung a leg over the side.

“Are you afraid to get wet?”

He peered down his nose at the foaming waves lapping around the boat.

“I don't like the sea,” Emile said.

“Then you picked a damn funny way to travel!”

Eleanor slid off the gunwale into the surf. The landing, even in squishy sand, made her burned arm throb. More than disappointed, she slogged ashore alone.

Going back and forth, the lifeboats and inflated raft ferried most of the
Carleton
's people ashore. At last, the only ones left on board were the officers: Captain Viega, Purser Brock, Engineer Pascal, Signals Officer Señales, and the bridge crew.

Two boats bobbed below the battered ship. The lifeboat lines hanging down were a convenient, if strenuous, way to climb down. Braced against the slant of the ship, the officers debated who should leave now and who would be last.

“I don't believe this,” Jenny said, waiting below. “Come on! Hurry!”

Señales took hold of a rope. In the boat beneath her, Leigh held tight to the other end to make it easier for her to climb down. She descended slowly. Señales was not as fit as the young sailors who had come down before.

“You're doing fine!” Leigh called. “Hurry!”

As he said this, the water began to boil around the
Carleton
's hull. Leigh knew what this meant: air was escaping from the ship. She was sinking for sure.

Instead of the
Carleton
slowly submerging in the roiling sea, something far stranger happened. The sea began climbing the red steel hull, clinging to it like viscous oil or gelatin. It did the same to Leigh's lifeboat. Jenny's boat, a few meters away, was not affected.

Everyone in the lifeboats screamed for the officers to jump for their lives. Señales halted her descent halfway to the boat when she saw the sea rising. She stared, eyes wide, as the unnaturally thick water flowed up the sides of Leigh's lifeboat. Leigh and his companions grabbed their oars and tried to free themselves from the grip of the green water. Señales' rope fell into the sea. The viscous water began climbing it.

Jenny's boat glided in. They threw a line to Leigh's boat, and eight oars flailing, they pulled free of the clinging trap. By now, the water had risen half the height of the
Carleton
's hull. It flowed upward over Signals Officer Señales. She kicked and screamed, but there was nothing any of them could do. In seconds, she was cocooned in a translucent mass of shimmering green water.

The weight of the water pulled the ship over. Leigh saw the masts and smokestack come whistling down. They rowed for their lives. Facing backward as they were, the rowers in both boats clearly saw the
Carleton
's officers flung over the rail into the sea. Only Captain Viega kept his grip on a davit. In the next awful moment, the ship rolled over on its starboard side. When the superstructure hit the sea, the strange, clinging water instantly turned into plain water again. A massive wave caused by the impact of the superstructure heaved the lifeboats away. In the boats, they could do nothing but hold on for their lives.

From the beach, the passengers and crew saw the
Carleton
roll over. A shout went up from all their throats, but the ship went down in a rush of boiling, frothing water. Then it was gone. Nothing remained on the surface but a great whirlpool as long as the ship. When it died out, there was nothing left but two forlorn lifeboats floating free, without any hand on the rudder or oars in the water.

The sailors dragged their raft into the surf, ready to search for survivors. Before they cleared the beach, a new shout went up. The lifeboats had recovered and were coming in.

Jenny's boat scraped land first. Men and women, passengers and crew, grabbed the gunwales and dragged the boat onto the beach. Everyone in the lifeboat was utterly stunned by the sudden loss of the
Carleton
and all the officers.

“Should we go back?” asked Mrs. Ellis. Her chair was not floating, but resting on the sand.

“There's no reason,” Jenny gasped. Her arms burned from the frantic rowing. “They all went down.”

Leigh's boat was also hauled up on the beach. No one said anything. There was nothing to say.

Minutes passed. The sea calmed, and half an hour later by Emile's Patek Philippe wristwatch, there was no sign anything had ever happened. Crying for the lost ones and their own fate went on a lot longer.

The chief steward was the senior surviving member of the crew. For the first time, Linh learned his name—Bernardi. At his direction, the boat and raft were drawn up beyond the high-tide line. He made an inventory of supplies. The list wasn't impressive.

“We have water for all for twenty days,” he announced. “Food for fifteen.” Some of the emergency supplies had been contaminated by seawater.

“It doesn't matter,” said one of the American navy men. “This isn't a desert isle, and we're not named Gilligan.”

“I am,” said one of the Irish footballers.

A few laughed. Linh didn't understand what was funny.

“What I mean is,” said the American, a petty officer named Clarke, “we're not marooned. This is Ireland, isn't it? If we go inland, we'll find help.”

“Doesn't look like any part of Ireland I know,” Gilligan said. “How 'bout you lads? Is this Eire?” The footballers all agreed—they were not on the Ould Sod.

Where were they? There weren't many choices—Canada? They hadn't sailed far enough to reach Newfoundland. Iceland? Iceland was mountainous, volcanic, and rocky. There were no mountains to be seen.

“Wherever we are, there's bound to be people around,” Clarke said. “Let's go find them.”

It occurred to France that the
Carleton
had been stuck offshore almost two days, and no one onshore had noticed. They saw no other boats, no planes, helicopters, or airships. Aside from the single torch they saw that night on the beach, there had been no sign of life here.

Mr. Bernardi insisted on making a head count. No one had a working PDD to check the passenger or crew list, but by checking and rechecking with everyone on the beach, it became clear all the passengers had survived, and all the crew except the captain, chief engineer, purser, signals officer, crewman Ramundo, and the three bridge officers.

Talk went on about this option or that plan, and nobody moved off the beach. The weather was mild, but they had no protection from the elements. France grew impatient with all the talking and talking. When the sun was almost overhead, he jumped to his feet and started inland. Mr. Bernardi called after him.

“Where do you think you're going?” he demanded.

“To find something!” France called back through cupped hands.

“What?”

“Anything!”

Leigh and Julie Morrison, Hans Bachmann, and four sailors followed him. France waited for them to catch up. They quickly decided to divide the unknown territory ahead into sections. Two people would explore each section. They agreed to strike inland for half an hour and then return to the beach.

“How long's half an hour?” asked Julie. None of their electronics, including watches, worked. Emile's watch, being mechanical, was the only working timepiece they had.

“Estimate,” France said tersely.

The
Carleton
sailors paired up. Two went west, toward one headland. Their comrades took the next area, northwest. France wanted to head straight in, north. Hans offered to go with him.

“Hey,” Julie said, “What about me?”

“Go with your brother,” said France.

“I always have to go with him.” She looked to Hans. “Can I go with you?”

He looked as though someone had just dropped one of the
Queen Mary
plates. “Ah, I do not mind, but—”

Leigh grabbed Julie's hand and dragged her away to the southwest. She protested all the way to the line of scattered pines that bordered the beach. Even after brother and sister disappeared among the trees, France and Hans could hear Julie's voice still complaining.

At last France said, “Let's go.”

They climbed the gentle sandy slope up to the tree line. Hans noticed the sand continued, though there were boulders dotted here and there. Wiry grass and some sort of thorny vines sprouted around the rocks, leaving the space between the pines open, an easy walk. Hans paused to examine a car-size boulder half-buried in the sand.

France asked him what he was doing.

“The kind of rock this is could tell us where we are,” Hans said. Volcanic rock might mean they were near Iceland, if not actually on it. Eroded sedimentary rock could mean they were on a continental landmass, like Ireland.

He pulled aside an armful of vines. The stone beneath was milky colored, fairly smooth on top but with deeply notched sides. Hans frowned. He got out his pocketknife and scratched the boulder a few times.

“What is it?” France asked.

“It's not right.”

“Why? What is it?”

Hans folded his knife and tucked it away. “Looks like marble.”

He didn't bother to explain what was wrong with a marble boulder, and France did not ask. Frankly, he didn't care. It could have been papier-mâché. All he wanted was to find help.

They walked along, close at first, but gradually drawing farther apart in order to cover more ground. The first mile or so was quite desolate. They stirred up a few common shorebirds, and a cloud of black flies swarmed Hans, but that was all the life they found.

The trees got taller the farther they went. Pines, cedars, and balsams were all they saw. France called a halt to answer nature. He stepped behind a pine. While there, he got the distinct feeling he was being stared at.

“Hans,” he called. “Where are you?”

“About ten feet behind you . . .”

“What are you doing?”

“Same thing as you.”

France turned his head suddenly. There was nothing there, but for the briefest instant, he thought there was—something that darted away between the trees. It wasn't low and animal shaped. It was upright and two-legged.

He zipped his fly and ran wide around the pine, trying to cut off whoever had been spying on him. He made a complete circle, returning to where he started just as Hans walked up, squirting sanitizer from a tiny squeeze bottle on his hands.

“Want some?”

“Did you see him?”

Hans's hands stopped rubbing. “Who?”

France turned in a slow circle. “Someone was watching me,” he said in a low voice.

“What did he look like?”

“I didn't see clearly.”

Hans went to the tree France claimed the spy had passed behind. He squatted in the stiff grass, studying the ground.

“I don't see any footprints.” Their own shoes left plain marks in the sandy soil. France's path was clear, but there was no sign anyone else had walked here, ever.

I am seeing things, France thought. He said nothing more about it.

They walked on. Even though it wasn't hot, both boys were thirsty. France had set out so suddenly he'd forgotten to take a bottle of water along. When they saw a low embankment ahead, France and Hans assumed it was a stream. They hurried forward, pushing through brush and thorns. Hans had an easier path and reached the bank first. He halted atop it, staring down at what he saw.

France twisted through the brush and saw it, too. A road.

It wasn't much of a road, just a sandy dirt path with a strip of brown grass growing down the center. It curved away to the west and east, completely empty.

Hans jumped down and ran a hand over the trail.

“No tire tracks,” he said. “There are some ruts made by hard, narrow wheels.” He stood, dusting his hands. “Bicycles, I guess.”

“Roads lead somewhere,” France replied. “Let's tell the others. We can follow the road wherever it takes us.”

They started back the way they came. Hans, who was taller than France by a couple inches, pulled ahead.

“I wonder what the others have found?”

“I hope an Orangina stand,” France muttered.

“Make it Coke, and I'm there!”

They argued good-naturedly about the virtues of their favorite drinks a while. Then a high, far-off scream cut off all thoughts of a nice cold soda.

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