Water began to gush through the cut, so fast and hard it looked like a beam of white steel. They could all hear it thudding against the hull of the Spector like a battering ram.
The cutting continued. The thin line of water became a torrent, and the steel plating of the ship’s hull began to peel back like the skin of an orange, driven open by the force of the in-rushing water.
The hold was filling quickly as the lasers continued to cut. Plates of steel as large as garage doors began to fall away, swirling into the black depths of the ocean beyond.
“Engaging engines,” Max announced. The controls were set out in a colorful array in front of him, three arcs of holographic symbols and hues, like the multi-tiered keyboards of a high-tech musical instrument. A floating cloud of spheres-the isolated and dormant AI icons-floated off to one side like slumbering attendants waiting for their wake-up call.
The roaring of the water became muted as the levels rose. Max nudged the Spector forward just a fraction, and suddenly the vessel lifted from the buckling floor of the Munro’s hold.
The few objects in the hold that were not secured or welded to the bulkheads floated in the turbulent water that boiled up around them. Max looked away from his holo-display and up at his front-facing flat screen for a moment-then cut the feed, moving it to his own console so no one else could see.
The corpse of Dominic Donovan, arms spread and legs swaying, was floating past the bow camera. A then red ribbon of blood leaked from the bullet hole in his forehead.
The vessel that had carried him for the last month had become his coffin.
“Problems?” Simon asked, looking up to see the holo-display blank.
“Nope,” Max said smoothly, “just checking something out.”
A moment later the turbulent water had pushed the body away to one side behind the ship. Max breathed a sigh of relief and returned the view to the main screen.
“Here we go,” he said and put his mind to moving the vessel forward-smooth and fast, he told himself. Smooth and-
— the submersible shot out of the gaping hole in the bow of the sinking ship, floating free and under its own power for the first time in its existence. Free.
Simon took a moment to imagine the chaos he assumed was taking place a few hundred feet above them: the tilting hull of the Munro moving aggressively against the swell as the storm’s strength intensified, the life boats dropping into the angry sea. He was sure they would hear the loud creaking noise followed by a rumble as their vessel began its final descent to the ocean floor. Donovan and his crew would survive in their sealed life pods, he knew, though it would be an ordeal, bobbing and turning in the stormy water, in waves made even rougher by the sinking of the Munro itself.
He knew nothing of Donovan’s corpse floating in the hold of the doomed freighter. He never would.
“Ryan?” he asked. “The distress beacons are working?”
“Every one of them,” Ryan confirmed. “I’ll keep an eye on them and monitor radio traffic passively until they’re all safe.” He frowned at his console. “Sorry, guys,” he whispered, so no one but Simon could hear him.
Seconds after the Spector had detached entirely from the Munro, the team felt the thundering vibration of the submersible’s thrusters push the vessel down toward the blackness below. The immediate effect was so powerful that Samantha-standing to check a readout that was too high to see while sitting-was thrown off her feet. She landed poorly, banged her elbow and cursed under her breath at her bad judgment and worse luck…but she got to her feet and back to her console without complaint.
“How are we doing?” Simon asked.
“So far so good,” Max said.
Then the lights went out.
* * *
Max had absolutely no idea what was going on.
No, he thought as the console flickered back to life and the front-facing holo-display rolled and fluttered again. Check that. I just don’t know nearly enough.
Sophisticated artificial intelligences grown for these specific tasks were supposed to be handling ninety percent of this craft’s operation. Instead, the cut-off and dumbed-down versions-the only parts that Hayden and Andrew agreed could be trusted without sending signals to the British military-were running about thirty percent of it. And not the important thirty percent, Max thought. Not the part that’s going to get us out of this alive.
He was struggling to make sense of the makeshift digital modules that Hayden had prepared. Some of them seemed to be working wonderfully; others didn’t make a damn bit of sense. He just hoped that Sam on life support and Hayden on the power plant were doing marginally better than he was.
Worst of all, he was sailing blind. Well, not quite blind, he corrected himself. That jerry-rigged front-facing flat screen did give him a trustworthy eyes-up view of what was dead ahead. But there was nothing else-no radar, no sonar, no active or passive sensor of any kind, short of some super-luminal spotlights that made the endless ocean ahead of them glow like a cloud of phosphorous. What was going on above and below him, to the left and right sides, even to the rear was a complete mystery.
But he knew one thing for certain: there were eyes in the sky, far above the surface of the sea, that could penetrate to more than three hundred feet-and those were just the ones he knew of. According to his old-fashioned compass and his trust passive GPS-thank god that was all right to use-they were dead on course for Antarctica, but they were still running far too high in the water. One good deep sonar scan of the region by UNED and they could be detected.
They had to go deeper. Now.
Max eased forward on the luminous controls that would take them down-down to a thousand feet, down into the cold blackness of the Southern Sea, where no one would ever find them.
Ever.
ANTARCTICA
The Command Center
Blackburn wasn’t quite as alone as he preferred to be. He could hear the buzz of activity in adjacent rooms, the occasional and unwelcome sigh of a footfall nearby.
This was not like the room of ice where he preferred to work. There was a desk here and a full communications system that linked him with the rest of the world. A great advantage in some ways; a curse as often as not.
A soft female voice whispered in his ear: Takara, reporting in on her way to Corsica.
“I’ve lost them,” she said.
“Damn. The tracker?”
“We’re scanning, but…they may have found it.”
“May have?” This wasn’t what he wanted to hear, Simon Fitzpatrick and a handful of his compatriots, completely off the charts.
“Shall I get back to London?” Takara asked.
“No,” he said. “You have your mission on the island. That’s where you’re needed.” He cut the connection with a sharp gesture and not a single word.
They’re afraid, he told himself. Terrified. Simon’s oldest friend, murdered by an unseen hand. All of them chased by some shadowy government agency, and they don’t even know why. They’ve run to ground. They’re hiding. Cowering.
Whether that was true or not, it didn’t matter. He turned away from the annoying little episode and put his mind elsewhere.
He had far greater matters to deal with.
THE SOUTHERN SEA
Fifty Miles from Antarctica
The Spector cut through the blackness of the ocean at blazing speed. Simon sat staring wordlessly at the holo-screen and engulfed in deep thoughts.
I wonder if we’ll find him? he asked himself. What if he isn’t there at all? How will I explain all this-justify it? What if the entire mission was for nothing? He played the worst possible scenarios over and over in his head, accompanied by the discordant rummmmble of the Spector’s engines.