“Not without my cooperation.”
“They don’t know that.” Neidelman paused. “And even if they did, minds can always be changed.”
“I don’t know,” Hatch said. “It’s hard for me to believe that…” His voice trailed off as he remembered running into Magnusen
the day before, in the holding area where artifacts were catalogued. She had been examining the gold doubloon found by Bonterre.
At the time, he’d been surprised: the engineer, normally so controlled and devoid of personality, had been staring intently
at the coin, a look of raw, naked desire on her face. She’d put it down quickly when he entered, with a furtive, almost guilty
movement.
“Remember,” the Captain was saying, “there’s a two-billion-dollar fortune to be won here. Plenty of people in this
world would shoot a liquor store clerk for twenty dollars. How many more would commit any crime, including murder, for two
billion?”
The question hung in the air. Neidelman stood up and paced restlessly in front of the window, drawing heavily on his pipe.
“Now that the Pit’s been drained, we can reduce our workforce by half. I’ve already sent the sea barge and the floating crane
back to Portland. That should make the job of security easier. But let us be clear about one thing. A saboteur may well be
at work. He or she may have tampered with the computers, in effect forcing Kerry to join our team this morning. But it was
Macallan
who murdered Kerry Wopner.” He turned suddenly from the window. “Just as he murdered your brother. The man has reached across
three centuries to strike at us. By God, Malin, we can’t let him defeat us now. We will break his Pit and take his gold.
And
the sword.”
Hatch sat in the dark, a host of conflicting feelings welling up in him. He had never quite looked at the Pit in those terms.
But it was true: Macallan had, in a way, murdered his innocent brother and the almost equally innocent computer programmer.
The Water Pit was, at base, a cruel, cold-blooded engine of death.
“I don’t know about any saboteur,” he said, speaking slowly. “But I think you’re right about Macallan. Look at what he said
in his last journal entry. He’s designed that Pit to kill anyone who tries to plunder it. That’s all the more reason to take
a breather, study the journal, rethink our approach. We’ve been moving too fast, way too fast.”
“Malin, that’s exactly the
wrong
approach.” Neidelman’s voice was suddenly loud in the small office. “Don’t you realize that would play right into the saboteur’s
hands? We have to move ahead with all possible speed, map out the interior of the Pit, get the support structures in place.
Besides, every day we delay means more complications, more hindrances. It’s only a matter of time before the press gets wind
of this. And Thalassa is already paying Lloyd’s $300,000 a week in insurance. This accident is going to double our premiums.
We’re over budget, and our investors aren’t happy. Malin, we’re
so
close. How can you suggest we slow down now?”
“Actually,” said Hatch steadily, “I was suggesting we knock off for the season and resume in the spring.”
There was a hiss as Neidelman sucked in his breath. “My God, what are you saying? We’d have to take down the cofferdam, reflood
the whole works, disassemble Orthanc and Island One—you can’t be serious.”
“Look,” said Hatch. “All along, we’ve assumed that there was some key to the treasure chamber. Now we learn that there isn’t.
In fact, it’s just the opposite. We’ve been here three weeks already. August is almost over. Every day we stay increases the
chance of a storm bearing down on us.”
Neidelman made a dismissive gesture. “We’re not building with Tinkertoys here. We can ride out any storm that comes along.
Even a hurricane, if it comes to that.”
“I’m not talking about hurricanes or sou’westers. Those kinds of storms give three or four days’ warning, plenty of time to
evacuate the island. I’m talking about a Nor’easter. They can swoop down on this coast with less than twenty-four hours’ notice.
If that happened, we’d be lucky just to get the boats into port.”
Neidelman frowned. “I know what a Nor’easter is.”
“Then you’ll know it can bring crosswinds and a steep-walled sea even more dangerous than the swell of a hurricane. I don’t
care how heavily it’s been reinforced—your cofferdam would be battered down like a child’s toy.”
Neidelman’s jaw was raised at a truculent angle; it was clear to Hatch that none of his arguments was making any headway.
“Look,” Hatch continued, in as reasonable a tone as he could muster. “We’ve had a setback. But it isn’t a showstopper. The
appendix may be inflamed, but it hasn’t burst. All I’m saying is that we take the time to really study the Pit, examine Macallan’s
other structures, try to understand how his mind worked. Forging blindly ahead is simply too dangerous.”
“I tell you we may have a saboteur among us, that we can’t afford to slow down, and you talk to
me
of blindness?” Neidelman said harshly. “This is exactly the kind of pusillanimous attitude Macallan counted on. Take your
time, don’t do anything risky, piss your money away until nothing’s left. No, Malin. Research is all very fine, but”—the Captain
suddenly lowered his voice, but the determination in it was startling—“now’s the time to go for the
man’s jugular.
”
Hatch had never been called pusillanimous before—had never even heard the word used, outside of books—and he didn’t like it
much. He could feel the old hot anger rising within him, but he mastered it with an effort.
Fly off the handle now, and you’ll wreck everything,
he thought.
Maybe the Captain s right. Maybe Wopner’s death has me rattled. After all, we’ve come this far. And we’re close now, very
close.
In the tense silence, he could make out the faint whine of an outboard coming over the water.
“That must be the coroner’s launch,” Neidelman said. He had turned back toward the window, and Hatch could no longer see his
face. “I think I’ll leave this business in your hands.” He stepped away and headed toward the door.
“Captain Neidelman?” Hatch asked.
The Captain stopped and turned back, hand on the knob. Although Hatch could not make out his face in the dark, he could feel
the extraordinary force of the Captain’s gaze, directed inquiringly toward him.
“That sub full of Nazi gold,” Hatch went on. “What did you do? After your son died, I mean?”
“We continued the operation, of course,” Neidelman answered crisply. “It’s what he would have wanted.”
Then he was gone, the only mark of his visit the faint smell of pipe smoke, lingering in the night air.
B
ud Rowell was not a particularly churchgoing man. He’d become even less of one in the years following Woody Clay’s arrival;
the minister had a severe, fire-and-brimstone manner rarely found in the Congregational church. Frequently, the man would lace
his sermons with calls for his parishioners to take up a spiritual life rather more exacting than Bud cared for. But in Stormhaven,
the ability to gossip fluently was required of a shopkeeper. And as a professional gossip, Rowell hated to miss anything important.
Word had gone round that Reverend Clay had prepared a special sermon—a sermon that would include a very interesting surprise.
Rowell arrived ten minutes before the service to find the little church already wall-to-wall with townspeople. He worked his
way toward the back rows, searching for a seat behind a pillar, from which he could escape unnoticed. Unsuccessful in this,
he settled his bulk near the end of a pew, his joints complaining at the hardness of the wooden seat.
He gazed slowly around the congregation, nodding at the various Superette patrons who caught his eye. He saw Mayor Jasper
Fitzgerald up near the front, gladhanding the head of the city council. Bill Banns, the editor of the paper, was a few rows
back, his green visor as firmly on his head as if it had been planted there. And Claire Clay was in her usual position of
second-row center. She’d become the perfect minister’s wife, right down to the sad smile and lonely eyes. There were also
a couple of strangers scattered about that he assumed were Thalassa employees. This was unusual; nobody from the excavation
had shown up in church before. Maybe the bad business that had taken place out there shook them up a bit.
Then his eyes fell on an unfamiliar object, sitting on a small table next to the pulpit and covered with a crisp linen sheet.
This was decidedly odd. Ministers in Stormhaven didn’t make a practice of using stage props, any more than they made a practice
of yelling or shaking their fists or thumping Bibles.
The church was standing room only by the time Mrs. Fanning arranged herself primly on the pipe organ bench and struck up the
opening chords to “A Mighty Fortress Is Our God.” After the weekly notices and the prayers of the people, Clay strode forward,
his black robe loose on his gaunt frame. He moved into position behind the pulpit and looked around at the congregation, a
humorless, fiercely determined expression on his face.
“Some people,” he began, “might think that a minister’s job is to comfort people. Make them feel good. I am not here today
to make anyone feel good. It is not my mission, or my calling, to blind with consoling platitudes, or soothing half-truths.
I’m a plain-speaking man, and what I’m going to say will make some people uncomfortable.
Thou hast showed thy people hard things.
”
He looked about again, then bowed his head and said a short prayer. After a moment of silence, he turned to his Bible and
opened it to the text of his sermon.
“And the fifth angel sounded,” he began in a strong, vibrant voice,
“… And I saw a star fall from heaven unto the earth: and to him was given the key of the bottomless pit. And he opened the
bottomless pit; and there arose a smoke out of the pit, as the smoke of a great furnace. And they had a king over them, which
is the angel of the bottomless pit, whose name in the Hebrew tongue is Abaddon. The beast that ascendeth out of the bottomless
pit shall make war against them, and shall overcome them, and kill them. And their dead bodies shall lie in the streets. But
the rest of the men repented not of the works of their hands, that they should not worship idols of gold, and silver.”
Clay raised his head and slowly closed the book. “Revelation, chapter nine,” he said, and let an uncomfortable silence grow.
Then he began more quietly. “A few weeks ago, a large company came here to begin yet another doomed effort to recover the
Ragged Island treasure. You have all heard the dynamite, the engines running night and day, the sirens, and the helicopters.
You have seen the island lit up in the dark like an oil platform. Some of you are working for the company, have rented rooms
to its employees, or benefited financially from the treasure hunt.” His eyes roved the room, stopping momentarily on Bud.
The grocer shifted in his seat and glanced toward the door.
“Those of you who are environmentally concerned might be wondering what effect all the pumping, the muddy water, the gas and
oil, the explosions, and the unceasing activity is having on the ecology of the bay. And those fishermen and lobstermen among
you might wonder if all this has anything to do with the lobster catch being off twenty percent recently, and the mackerel
run down almost as much.”
The minister paused. Bud knew that the catch had been steadily dropping over the last two decades, dig or no dig. But this
did not stop the considerable number of fishermen in the room from shifting restlessly in their seats.
“But my concern today is not simply with the noise, the pollution, the ruination of the catch, or the despoliation of the
bay. These worldly matters are the proper domain of the mayor, if he would only take them up.” Clay let a pointed glance fall
upon the mayor. Bud watched as Fitzgerald smiled uncomfortably, a hand flying up to smooth one of his magnificent mustaches.
“My concern is the
spiritual
effect of this treasure hunt.” Clay stepped back from the pulpit. “The Bible is very clear on this matter. Love of gold is
the root of all evil. And only the poor go to heaven. There’s no ambiguity, no arguing over interpretation. That’s a hard
thing to hear, but there it is. And when a wealthy man wanted to follow Jesus, He said give away all your riches first. But
the man couldn’t do it. Remember Lazarus, the beggar who died at the rich man’s gates and went to the bosom of Abraham? The
rich man who lived behind the gates went to hell, and begged for a drop of water to cool his parched tongue. But he did not
receive it. Jesus couldn’t have said it more clearly:
It is easier for a camel to go through the eye of a needle, than for a rich man to enter the kingdom of God.
”
He paused to look around. “Maybe this always seemed like someone else’s problem to you. After all, most people in this town
are not rich by any standard. But this treasure hunt has changed everything. Have you, any of you, stopped to think what will
happen to our town if they succeed? Let me give you an idea. Stormhaven will become the biggest tourist attraction since Disneyland.
It will make Bar Harbor and Freeport look like ghost towns. If you think the fishing is bad now, wait until you see the hundreds
of tourist boats that will ply these waters, the hotels and the summer cottages that will spring up along the shore. The traffic.
Think about the countless venture capitalists and gold seekers who will come, digging here, digging there, onshore and off,
plundering and littering, until the land is destroyed and the fishing beds obliterated. Sure, some in this room will make
money. But will your fate be any different than that of the rich man in the parable of Lazarus? And the poorest among you—those
who make their living from the sea—will be out of luck. There will be only two choices: public assistance or a one-way bus
ticket to Boston.” At this mention of the two most despised things in Stormhaven—welfare and Boston—there was an unhappy murmur.