Authors: Clive Cussler
Finally, he turned back to the boat. “So this is
Poco Bonito.
”
“Not much to look at, is she?” Gunn said, as he opened the trunk and helped retrieve the bags. “But she's powered by twin thousand-horsepower diesels and carries scientific gear most chemical labs would die for.”
“There's a switch,” said Pitt.
Gunn looked at him. “How so?”
“This has to be the only vessel in the NUMA fleet that isn't painted turquoise.”
“I'm familiar with the smaller Neptune class of NUMA survey ships,” said Giordino. “She's also built like an armored car and comfortably stable in heavy seas.” He hesitated and looked up and down the wharf at the other fishing boats. “Nice job of disguise. Except for her larger deckhouse, which you can't reduce with a stage set, she fits right in.”
“How old is she?” Pitt asked.
“Six months,” answered Gunn.
“How did our engineers make her look soâ¦so used?”
“Special effects,” Gunn replied, laughing. “The shabby paint and rust are specially formulated to give that appearance.”
Pitt leaped from the dock onto the deck and turned as Giordino passed over their luggage and duffel bag. The sound of feet thumping on the deck alerted a man and a woman, who appeared from the rear door of the deckhouse. The man, in his early fifties with a neatly trimmed gray beard and bushy eyebrows, stepped under the deck light. His head was shaven and gleamed with sweat. He wasn't much taller than Giordino and he stood with slightly hunched shoulders.
The other crew member was nearly six feet tall and willowy, with the anorexic figure of a fashion model. The blond hair, radiant and thick, splashed around her shoulders. Her face was tanned with high cheekbones and when she smiled a greeting she displayed a fine set of white teeth. Like most women who worked in the outdoors, she wore her hair tied back and little makeup, which did not distract from her overall attractiveness. At least not in Pitt's mind. He noted that she did adhere to certain feminine traits of beauty. She painted her toenails.
Both man and woman were dressed in native cotton shirts with vertical stripes over khaki shorts. The man wore sneakers that looked like they had been shot full of holes, while the woman's feet were slipped into wide-strapped sandals.
Gunn made the introductions. “Dr. Renee Ford, our resident fishery's biologist, and Dr. Patrick Dodge, NUMA's leading marine geochemist. I believe you know Dirk Pitt, special projects director, and Al Giordino, marine engineer.”
“We've never worked on the same project together,” said Renee in a husky voice only a few decibels above a whisper. “But we've sat together in conferences on several occasions.”
“Likewise,” said Dodge, as he shook hands.
Pitt was tempted to ask if Ford and Dodge shared a garage, but held back from making a bad joke. “Good to see you again.”
“I trust we'll have a happy ship.” Giordino flashed one of his congenial grins.
“Why wouldn't we?” Renee asked sweetly.
Giordino did not reply. It was another of the rare times he was at a loss for a comeback.
Â
P
ITT STOOD FOR
several moments, listening to the water slapping against the wharf pilings. Not a soul could be seen. The wharf looked deserted. Almost, but not quite.
He dropped down to his cabin in the stern, removed a small black case from his suitcase and eased back up the stairway onto the side of the deck opposite the wharf. Using the deckhouse as a cover, he opened the case and removed what looked like a video camera. He switched on its transformer and it gave off a muted high-pitched whine. Next, he draped a blanket over his head and slowly rose until his eyes could peer over a pile of rope coiled on the deckhouse roof. He pressed his face against the eyepiece of the night-vision monocular as the scope automatically adjusted the amplification, brightness control and infrared illuminator. Then he peered into the darkness across the wharf that was now illuminated in a greenish image that gave him the night vision of an owl.
The Chevrolet pickup truck he'd noticed when arriving at the
Poco Bonito
was still sitting in the dark. The ambient light from the stars and two dim lights a hundred yards down the wharf were now enhanced twenty thousand times, revealing the driver of the truck as if he were in a well-lit room. But as Pitt studied the driver, he saw that he was a she. Pitt could tell by the way the observer swept her scope back and forth across the lit portholes of the hull that she did not suspect that she had been detected. He could even tell that her hair was wet.
Pitt lowered the scope slightly until it was focused on the pickup truck's driver's door. The snoop was no professional, Pitt thought. Nor was she cautious. Probably a construction worker doing double duty as a spy, since the name of her employer was painted on the side of the door in gold letters:
ODYSSEY
The name stood alone, no “Limited,” no “Corporation,” no “Company” after it.
Below the name was the stylized image of a horse running with its legs outstretched. It looked vaguely familiar to Pitt, but he couldn't recall where he'd seen it.
Why was Odyssey interested in a NUMA research expedition? Pitt wondered. What possible threat was a team of ocean scientists? He saw no sense to the stakeout by a giant organization with nothing to gain.
He could not refrain from standing up and walking to the wharf side of the boat and waving to the woman in the pickup, who immediately trained her nightscope on him. Pitt held up his scope to his eyes and stared back. Definitely not a professional snoop, the woman became so shaken that she dropped her scope on the seat, hurriedly kicked over the engine and roared across the wharf into the darkness, spinning her rear tires in a screech of protest.
Renee looked up in unison with Giordino and Dodge. “What was that all about?” asked Renee.
“Someone in a hurry,” Pitt said in amusement.
Renee cast off the bow and stern lines while the men looked on. With Gunn manning the pilothouse, the powerful engines sputtered and rumbled into life with a mellow hum, as they gently shivered the deck. Then
Poco Bonito
slipped away from the wharf and churned into the channel that ran through the Straits of Bluffs to the sea. The course, programed into the computerized navigation equipment, set the bow on a heading toward the northeast. But Gunnâlike most airline pilots, who would rather take off and land a commercial airliner than allow a computer to do itâtook the wheel and steered the vessel seaward.
Pitt descended a ladder to his cabin, replaced the nightscope in his bag and retrieved a Globalstar tri-mode satellite phone. Then he returned to the deck and relaxed in a tattered lounge chair. He turned and smiled as Renee extended her hand through a porthole of the galley with a cup in her hand.
“Coffee?” she inquired from inside the galley.
“You're an angel,” said Pitt. “Thank you.”
He sipped at the coffee and then punched a number on the satellite phone. Sandecker answered on the fourth ring. “Sandecker,” the admiral snapped briskly.
“Did you forget to tell me something, Admiral?”
“You're not clear.”
“Odyssey.”
There was a silence. Then, “Why do you ask?”
“One of their people was spying on us as we boarded the boat. I'm interested in knowing why.”
“Better you learn later,” Sandecker said cryptically.
“Has this to do with Odyssey's excavation project in Nicaragua?” Pitt asked innocently.
Another silence and an echo. “Why do you ask?”
“Just curious.”
“Where did you obtain your information?”
Pitt couldn't resist. “Better you learn later.”
Then he closed the connection.
G
UNN GUIDED
P
OCO
Bonito
through the black water separating the high-bluffed straits. The water was deserted of all shipping as he kept the bow aimed straight down the middle of the channel. The lights on the top of the buoys that marked the entrance to the harbor swayed with the waves in the distance, one with a blinking green light, the opposite showing red.
As Pitt was sitting in the lounge chair enjoying the tropical evening at sea and watching the yellow glow of Bluefields fade into the darkness astern, the memory of the spy on the dock stayed in his mind and spread, like a plant with roots. There was an indefinite thought that seemed distant and unfocused. He was not concerned that they had been observed as they cast off their moorings. That part of the intrigue seemed inconsequential. The pickup truck with
ODYSSEY
painted on the door measured no more than two points on his trepidation scale. It was the haste of the driver when she shot off the dock that puzzled him. There had been no need for a quick getaway. So she was made by the NUMA crew? So what? They'd made no move to approach her. The answer had to lie somewhere else.
And then it all crystallized when he recalled the driver's wet hair.
Gunn's right hand was poised above the twin throttles leading to the big fuel-injected engines in readiness to ease them forward and send the boat whipping over the low swells rolling in from the Caribbean. Abruptly, Pitt sat up in his lounge chair and shouted.
“Rudi, stop the boat!”
Gunn half turned. “What?”
“Stop the boat! Stop it now!”
Pitt's voice was as sharp as a fencing saber, and Gunn quickly complied, pulling the throttles back to their stops. Then Pitt yelled at Giordino, who was down below in the galley with Ford and Dodge, savoring pie and coffee. “Al, bring up my dive gear!”
“What's this all about?” asked Gunn in confusion as he stepped from the side door of the pilothouse. Looking bewildered, Renee and Dodge also appeared on deck to see what all the fuss was about.
“I can't be certain,” explained Pitt, “but I suspect we might have a bomb on board.”
“What brought you to that conclusion?” asked Dodge skeptically.
“The driver of the truck couldn't wait to get away. Why the hurry? There must be a reason.”
“If you're right,” spoke up Dodge, seeing the light, “we'd better find it.”
Pitt nodded decisively. “My thoughts exactly. Rudi, you, Renee and Patrick search every inch of the cabins. Al, you take the engine room. I'm going over the side on the possibility it was attached under the hull.”
“Let's get a move on,” said Al. “The explosives could be on a timer set to detonate as soon as we cleared the harbor and moved into deep water.”
Pitt shook his head. “I don't think so. There was always the chance we might have hung around the dock until morning. Impossible for anyone to predict the precise time we'd cast off and reach the open sea. My guess is that when we pass the entrance, a transmitter attached to one of the channel buoys will activate a receiver connected to the explosives.”
“I believe you have an overactive gray matter,” Renee said dubiously. “I can't for the life of me imagine who has a motive to kill all of us and destroy the boat.”
“Somebody is afraid of what we might find,” Pitt continued. “And for now the Odyssey mob is our prime suspect. Their intelligence-gathering must be good if they saw through the admiral's scheme to smuggle the five of us and the boat into Bluefields.”
Giordino appeared from below with Pitt's dive gear. He didn't require intuition to accept Pitt's theory. From their many years together since elementary school, he knew Pitt rarely if ever misinterpreted events. Their trust in each other's vision was more than a simple bond. Many times in the past their minds had acted as one.
“We better move quickly,” Pitt advised strongly. “The longer we hang around, the sooner our friends know we're on to them. They'll be expecting to see a fireworks display in the next ten minutes.”
The message came through. No one needed any urging. They quickly coordinated their efforts and assigned themselves sections of the boat to search while Pitt stripped to his shorts and strapped on his air tanks and regulator. He didn't bother, nor did he take the time, to slip into a wet suit. Without its buoyancy he felt no necessity to be hindered by a weight belt. Inserting the regulator's mouthpiece between his teeth, he strapped a small tool kit around his left leg, gripped a dive light in his right hand and stepped over the stern.
The water felt warmer than the air above. Visibility was almost diamond clear. Shining the light downward, he could make out a flat, sandy, nondescript bottom eighty feet below. Pitt felt remarkably comfortable as the tepid water pressed against his body. The hull below the waterline was free of growth, having been dry-docked and scraped clean before Sandecker ordered
Poco Bonito
south.
He moved from the rudder and propellers toward the bow, swinging the light from port to starboard and back. There was always the danger of a curious shark, nosing its way toward the light, but in all his years of diving Pitt had seldom crossed paths with the murder machines of the deep. He concentrated instead on the object caught in the beam of his dive light, protruding like a tumor from the keel amidships. His suspicions confirmed, he stroked his fins slowly until he was staring at what he knew without the slightest doubt was an explosive device no more than ten inches in front of his face mask.
Pitt was no bomb expert. All he could determine was that some kind of oval-shaped cannister about three feet in length and eight inches wide had been attached to the aluminum hull where it met the keel. Whoever had placed the cannister had anchored it with an adhesive tape impervious to liquid and strong enough to maintain a grip against the drag from the water as the boat cruised through the channel.
There was no way he could tell what type of explosive was being used, but it looked to him like a classic case of overkill. It seemed far more than enough to blast
Poco Bonito
into a thousand fragments and her crew into tiny shreds of flesh and bone. It was hardly a pretty thought.
He clamped the dive light under an armpit and gently placed both hands on the cannister. One deep breath and he attempted to pull the cannister away from the hull. Nothing happened. He increased his effort, but it was fruitless. Without a firm base to stand on, Pitt could exert too little force to overcome the adhesive. He backed off, reached into the tool kit strapped to his leg and pulled out a small fisherman's knife with a curved blade.
Under the light, he took a quick glance at the orange dial on his ancient Doxa dive watch. He had been down four minutes. He had to hurry before Specter's agent onshore got wise that something was up. Very cautiously slipping the edge of the knife under the cannister as far as he dared, Pitt sliced the blade through the tape as if he was sawing a piece of wood. Whoever had attached the bomb used enough tape to choke a whale. Though he had split the tape in four different areas, the cannister still remained stuck to the hull.
Putting the knife back in the kit, Pitt gripped both ends, curled his body until his finned feet were planted firmly against the keel and heaved, praying that only an electronic signal would set it off. The cannister abruptly came off the hull with such momentum that Pitt was hurled through the water nearly six feet before drifting to a stop. It was then, as heheld the explosives in his hands, that he realized he was gasping air from his tank like a pump, while his heart felt like it was trying to beat through his rib cage.
Without waiting for his heart to slow and his breathing to return to normal, Pitt swam along the keel and surfaced beside the rudder at the stern. No one was visible. They were all busily searching the interior of the boat. He spit out his mouthpiece and shouted.
“I could use some help!” He wasn't surprised that Giordino was the first to respond.
The little Italian burst through the engine room hatch and leaned over the transom. “What have you got?”
“Enough explosives to disintegrate a battleship.”
“You want me to lift it on board?”
“No.” Pitt gasped, as a wave washed over his head. “Tie a long line to a life raft and throw it over the stern.”
Giordino asked no questions as he hurried up a ladder to the roof of the deckhouse. There he feverishly yanked one of the two life rafts out of its cradle, where it was stowed untied so it could float free should the boat sink. Renee and Dodge appeared on the deck just in time to catch the raft as Giordino let it slide over the wheelhouse roof to the deck below.
“What's happening?” asked Renee.
Giordino nodded to Pitt's head bobbing in the water aft of the stern. “Dirk found an explosive device fastened to the hull.”
Renee peered over the transom at the cannister revealed under the glow of Pitt's dive light. “Why doesn't he drop it on the bottom?” she murmured, her tone laced with fear.
“Because he has a plan,” Giordino answered patiently. “Now give me a hand dropping the raft over the side.”
Dodge said nothing, as the three of them manhandled the heavy raft over the railing into the water with a splash that covered Pitt's head. Kicking his fins furiously, he rose out of the water up to his chest, lifted the heavy cannister over his head and carefully lowered it onto the bottom of the raft, terribly aware that he could be overplaying his luck. His only consolation was that he would never realize he was sent to the great beyond until it was over.
Only after the cannister was safely secured inside the raft did Pitt utter a long sigh of relief.
Giordino dropped the boarding ladder and helped Pitt climb on board. As Giordino removed his air tanks, Pitt said, “Pour a few gallons of fuel into the raft, then pay out the line as far as it will go.”
“You expect us to tow a raft full of explosives covered in gasoline?” Dodge asked hesitantly.
“That's the idea.”
“What happens when it passes the buoy with the transmitter?”
Pitt looked at Dodge and flashed a crooked grin. “Then it will go bang.”