In the end he hauled the hydrophone back on board.
Some time later he spotted clouds of spray in the distance, but that was the last he saw of them.
On the way back to Tofino, he thought about how tourists would have reacted to the spectacle - and how they'd react if it happened again. The news would travel fast. Davie's and their tame whales - they'd be inundated with bookings.
Fantastic!
As the Zodiac forged ahead through the still waters of the bay, Anawak stared out at the nearby forest. It was almost too fantastic.
Trondheim, Norway
Sigur Johanson woke with a start, groped for his alarm-clock, then realised his phone was ringing. Rubbing his eyes and swearing, he hauled himself upright, but his sense of balance eluded him and he fell back on to his pillow. His head was spinning.
He tried to remember the previous night. They'd stayed out late drinking, he, some colleagues and a few students. They'd only meant to have dinner at Havfruen, a restaurant in a converted wharf warehouse not far from Gamle Bybro, the old town bridge. It served great seafood and some very good wine. Some truly excellent wine, he recalled. From their table next to the window they'd looked out at the Nid, with its jetties pointing upstream and the little boats, and watched the river flow leisurely towards the nearby Trondheim fjord. Someone had started to tell jokes, then Johanson had gone with the owner into the restaurant's dank wine-cellar to inspect the precious vintage bottlesâ¦
He sighed. I'm fifty-six, he told himself, as he pulled himself up again. I shouldn't do this any more.
The telephone was still ringing. He got to his feet and stumbled into the living room. Was he supposed to be lecturing that morning? He imagined himself standing in front of his students, looking every minute of his age, barely able to stop his chin sagging on to his chest. His tongue felt heavy and furred, disinclined to do anything involving speech.
When he reached the phone it dawned on him that it was Saturday. His mood improved dramatically. âJohanson,' he answered, sounding unexpectedly lucid.
âYou took your time,' said Tina Lund.
Johanson rolled his eyes and lowered himself into an armchair. âWhat time is it?'
âHalf past six.'
âIt's Saturday.'
âI know it is. Is something wrong? You don't sound too good.'
âI'm not feeling too good. Why the hell are you phoning me at this uncivilised hour?'
Lund giggled. âI was hoping to talk you into coming over to Tyholt.'
âTo the institute? For Christ's sake, Tina, why?'
âI thought we could have breakfast together. It'll be fun. Kare's in Trondheim for a few days, and I know he'd love to see you.' She paused. âBesides, there's something I want your opinion on.'
âWhat?'
âNot on the phone. So, are you coming or not?'
âAll right, give me an hour,' said Johanson. He yawned expansively, then stopped in case he strained his jaw. âIn fact, give me two. I'll call in at the lab on the way. There might be news on the worms.'
âLet's hope so. Weird, isn't it? First I was the one making all the fuss, and now it's the other way round. OK, take your time - but don't be too long!'
âAt your service,' Johanson mumbled. Still dizzy, he dragged himself off to the shower.
Thirty minutes later, he was feeling more alive. Outside, it was sunny and Kirkegata Street was all but deserted. The last piles of snow had melted and as Johanson drove out towards the Gloshaugen campus he was whistling Vivaldi. The university was supposed to be closed at the weekend, but no one paid any attention to the rules: it was the best time to sort your mail and work undisturbed.
Johanson went to the post-room, rummaged in his pigeon-hole and pulled out a thick envelope. It had been sent from Kiel and almost certainly contained the lab results that Lund was so desperate to see. He stowed it away, unopened, went back to his car and resumed his journey to Tyholt.
The Institute for Marine Technology, or Marintek, as it was known, had close links with the NTNU, SINTEF and the Statoil research centre. In addition to its collection of simulation tanks and wave tunnels, it also housed the world's biggest artificial ocean-research basin, offering scientists scale-model testing in simulated wind and waves. The Norwegian shelf was covered with floating production systems that had been tested in the eighty-metre-long by ten-metre-deep pool. Two wave machines created miniature currents and storms that seemed terrifyingly powerful. Johanson was pretty sure that Lund would use it to test the underwater unit that she was planning for the slope.
As he had expected, he found her at the poolside, talking to some scientists. There was something droll about the scene. Divers were weaving through the blue-green water past Toytown platforms, while miniature tankers floated past lab staff in rowing-boats. It resembled a cross between a toy-shop and a boating party, but it had a serious purpose: the offshore industry needed Marintek's blessing before any new structure could be built.
Lund spotted him, broke off her conversation and headed over. It meant walking all the way round the pool, which she did at her usual canter.
âWhy not take a boat?' asked Johanson.
âThis isn't the village pond, you know,' she said. âEverything has to be co-ordinated. If I ploughed willy-nilly through the basin, hundreds of oil workers would die in the tidal wave.'
She gave him a peck on the cheek. âYou're all scratchy.'
âAll men with beards are scratchy,' said Johanson. âIt's lucky for you Kare hasn't got one, or you'd have no excuse for picking him instead of me. So, what are you working on? The subsea problem?'
âAs best we can - the basin only lets us simulate realistic conditions for depths of up to a thousand metres.'
âYou don't need to go deeper.'
âTheoretically, no. But we still like to run through the scenarios on the computer. Sometimes its predictions don't fit the results from the basin, so we keep adjusting the parameters until we get a match.'
âShell's looking into building a unit two thousand metres down. It was in the papers yesterday. You've got competition.'
âI know. Marintek's doing the research for them too. It'll be an even harder nut to crack. Come on, let's get some breakfast.'
Once they were out in the corridor Johanson said; âI still don't understand why you can't use a SWOP. Isn't it easier to work on a floating platform and connect it via flexible flowlines?'
She shook her head. âToo risky. Floating structures still have to be anchored.'
âI know that.'
âAnd they can always come adrift.'
âBut the shelf's full of them!'
âGranted, but only where it's shallower. In deeper water, the waves and currents are different. Besides, it's not just a question of anchoring
the units. The longer the riser, the less stable it becomes. The last thing we need is an environmental disaster. And, anyway, who'd want to work on a floating platform on the other side of the shelf? Even the hardiest would spew their guts out. This way.'
They went up some stairs.
âI thought we were going for breakfast,' said Johanson in surprise.
âWe are, but there's something I want to show you first.'
Lund pushed open a door and they went into an office on the floor immediately above the ocean basin. The large glass windows looked down on neat rows of sunlit gardens and gabled houses that stretched out in the direction of Trondheim fjord.
She walked over to a desk, pulled up two Formica chairs and flipped open the widescreen laptop. Her fingers drummed impatiently while the program loaded. The screen filled with photos that seemed strangely familiar. They showed a milky-white patch dissolving into darkness at the edges. All of a sudden Johanson realised what he was looking at. âThe footage from Victor,' he said. âIt's that thing we saw on the slope.'
âThe thing I was worried about.' Lund nodded.
âDo you know what it is yet?'
âNo, but I can tell you what it isn't. It's not a jellyfish, and it's definitely not a shoal. We've tried putting the image through countless different filters, but this is the best we could do.' She enlarged the first photo. âThe thing was caught in Victor's floodlights. We saw a part of it, but not as it would have looked without the artificial lighting.'
âWithout the lighting you wouldn't have seen anything. It was far too deep.'
âYou reckon?'
âUnless, of course, the thing was bioluminescent, in which caseâ' He broke off.
Lund appeared pleased with herself. Her fingers danced over the keyboard and the picture changed again. This time they were looking at a section from the top right-hand corner. At the edge of the image, the bright patch dimmed into darkness, and faint marks could be seen. It was a different kind of light, a deep-blue glow streaked with pale lines.
âWhen light is directed at a luminescent object you can't see its natural glow. Victor's floodlights are so powerful they illuminate everything, except at the very edge of the picture where they're no longer so bright.
But there's definitely something there. That proves to me we're dealing with a luminescent creature - a pretty big one.'
Many deep-sea creatures could luminesce. Their light was the result of symbioses with bacteria. Some organisms on the surface of the ocean could emit light too - algae, for instance, and some small species of squid - but the real sea of lights only started where darkness began, beyond the reach of the sun.
Johanson stared at the screen. There was only a hint of blue, barely visible, and most people would have missed it. Still, the robot was known for the high resolution of its pictures. Perhaps Lund was right. He scratched his beard. âHow big is it, do you think?'
âIt's difficult to say because it disappeared so quickly, but in that time it must have swum to the edge of the beam. If you look here, though, it still almost covers the frame, which suggestsâ¦'
âThat the part we're looking at measures ten to twelve square metres.'
âExactly. The
part
.' She paused. âJudging by the light at the edge of the picture, I'd say we saw just a fraction of it.'
A different explanation occurred to Johanson. âIt could be planktonic organisms,' he said. âMicro-organisms of some kind. Plenty of species glow.'
âHow do you explain the markings?'
âYou mean the paler streaks? Coincidence. We're only assuming that they're markings. We used to think that the channels on Mars were markings too.'
âI'm certain they're not plankton.'
âWe can't see well enough to tell.'
âOh, but we can. Take a look at this.'
Lund called up the next images. The milky patch retreated further into the darkness. It had been visible for less than a second. The pale area of luminescence was still apparent in the second and third frames, but the streaks seemed to shift. By the fourth frame everything had vanished.
âIt turned off its light,' Johanson said, amazed. Certain species of squid could communicate with bioluminescence, and it wasn't unusual for them to flip the switch and disappear into darkness when they felt threatened. But this creature was bigger than any known species of squid.
There was an obvious conclusion, but he was reluctant to draw it. It had no business on the Norwegian continental slope. â
Architheuthis
,' he said.
âGiant squid.' Lund nodded. âIt makes you wonder, doesn't it? But it'd be the first time anything like that showed up in these waters.'
âMore like the first time it showed up anywhere.'
That wasn't strictly true. For a long time stories about
Architheuthis
had been dismissed as sailors' yarns. Then some enormous corpses had washed ashore, which seemed to prove its existence - or would have done, if it weren't for the fact that normal squid flesh was amazingly elastic and could be stretched to almost any size, even when it was decaying. Then a few years ago a team of scientists working off the coast of New Zealand had caught some juvenile specimens whose genetic profile demonstrated conclusively that in less than eighteen months they would grow into twenty-metre squid, weighing a tonne each. But no one had ever seen such a monstrous creature.
Architheuthis
lived in the ocean depths, and there was no reason to believe it might be luminescent.
Johanson's brow furrowed. âNo.'
âWhat do you mean, “no”?'
âThink of all the evidence against it. For a start, it's the wrong place for giant squid.'
âThat's all very well,' Lund waved her hands in the air, âbut we don't know where they live. We know nothing about them at all.'
âThey definitely don't belong here, though.'
âNor do those worms.'
They fell silent.
âOK, suppose you're right,' Johanson said eventually. â
Architheuthi
are shy creatures. No one's ever been attacked by one, so what have you got to worry about?'
âThat's not what people who've seen them say.'
âFor heaven's sake, Tina, maybe they've capsized the odd boat, but you can't seriously be suggesting that they're a danger to the oil industry.'
Lund closed down the screen. âAll right. So, what have you got for me? Any new test results?'
Johanson brandished the envelope at her and opened it. Inside was a fat parcel of closely typed documents.
âGod!' she exclaimed.
âDon't worry, there'll be a summaryâ¦and here it is.!'
âLet me see!'
âJust a moment.' He glanced over the sheet of paper. Lund got up and walked over to the window. Then she started pacing round the room.
Johanson frowned and leafed through the bundle of documents. âInteresting.'
âSpit it out!'
âThey say the worms are polychaetes. This isn't a taxonomical report, but they mention similarities with
Hesiocaeca methanicola
. They're puzzled by the size of the jaws. They also foundâ¦hmm, details, detailsâ¦OK, here we go. They examined the jaws. Powerful mandibles, designed for boring or burrowing.'
âWe knew that already,' Lund said impatiently.
âThat's not all. Next come the results from the isotope ratio mass spectrometry and the scanning electron microscope. Our friend is minus ninety parts per thousand.'