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“Rachel? Our daughter admitted her father was right about something. Record the moment and then do CPR. She’s obviously ill.”

“Dad…”

He’d smiled at April then, his silver hair framing his well-tanned face, looking every inch the reliable veteran 747 captain, as he shook his head in defeat. “Oh, all right, if it’ll make you feel better. Just no cameras or microphones inside listening to whatever we’re doing.”

“Don’t worry. It just reports your position.”

“Position?” he’d repeated. “Which ones? Missionary, doggie…”

Rachel Rosen had swatted him on the shoulder as April turned a deep shade of red. “Now… see…” she’d said, fumbling for words, “that’s something I don’t expect to hear coming out of my father’s mouth.”

April chuckled at the memory. She waited for the computer program to report the latest latitude and longitude of the Rosens’ Grumman Albatross and let her eyes fall on the small video camera on top of the screen. Several of her friends now used computer-mounted cameras, too, and they enjoyed being able to see each other when talking over the web, especially her best friend Gracie in Seattle, 150 miles distant. Unfortunately, she’d accidentally left her camera on and connected to the Internet a couple of times, and once she’d been mortified to find that she’d been broadcasting for a whole day and had inadvertently become a popular webshow. She’d disconnected in embarrassment as a small counter had flashed on the screen proudly reporting that nearly ten thousand web surfers had clicked in to watch her moving around her condo. The camera had even had a bird’s-eye view of her bed, making her embarrassment all the more acute.

The world map now assembled itself on the screen, then snapped to a closer view, framing Alaska. The track of the Albatross’s flight from Japan the previous week appeared along with small flags marking each stop. April looked at the track from Anchorage. The trail of blue position dots showed they’d flown down Turnagain Arm and crossed the small range of mountains near Whittier before setting a course for…

What’s this?

A small chill climbed her back. The blue dots did not extend to Sitka, or Juneau, or any of the other places they were planning to visit. Instead they marched to the southeast for almost a hundred miles, past a tiny dot of land called Middleton Island, then turned northwest, toward Valdez. The last dot was somewhere south of the entrance to Prince William Sound and the Valdez area, maybe sixty miles out to sea.

She zoomed the screen and ordered the program to show the time each report had been sent.

They’re probably still in flight, she told herself.

But the last transmission had come during darkness the night before. At 10:13 P.M. local, they had been in flight at 140 miles per hour at an altitude of less than a hundred feet and on a heading of 320 degrees, and after that, the little reporting unit had fallen silent.

April sat back and tried to suppress her growing concern. There were a million possible benign explanations. The unit itself could have failed. They could have had an electrical failure in the airplane. She knew they could still fly and land safely even if that were the case, but wasn’t that open ocean? Her dad had always said that landings in open ocean were far more difficult and dangerous in a seaplane.

Something’s wrong. April sat forward and grabbed for the portable phone as she stood and began pacing, a habit that always drove Gracie to distraction. April entered her parents’ Iridium satellite phone number from memory and waited for the clicks and squawks to end in a ringing sound.

“The Iridium customer you have called is not currently available,” a voice intoned. She disconnected and tried again, harvesting the same result.

The lure of coffee and breakfast completely forgotten, she returned to the computer and launched a search for the FAA’s regional facility in Anchorage, punched the resulting number into the telephone keypad, and worked her way through several people before receiving a definitive no.

“We have no record, Miss… Rosen?

“Yes. April Rosen.”

“No record of any accidents or incidents last night, or calls for help, or even an emergency locator transmission.”

“You would know if one had been received, right?”

“Well, someone would. You say that’s an old Albatross, right? They could easily land out there on the water.”

“I know, but—”

“That’s why the Navy built them. Not as effective as the old PBY Catalina on open ocean, but they can handle it. The Coast Guard used them for years as—”

“Excuse me,” April interrupted.

“Yes?”

“My dad always files a flight plan. Is there any record of his flight plan and where he was going?”

“VFR or IFR?”

“He’s… an airline captain. Very experienced. Usually it’s a visual flight plan, I think, because they stay so low.”

“Okay. Hang on, and I’ll check.”

He put her on hold and returned several minutes later. “Miss Rosen… April… apparently your dad didn’t file a flight plan. Anchorage Flight Service tells me there’s nothing on the computer.”

“That’s really unusual.”

“I’m sure they’re just fine, but if you’re still worried, I’ll give you the number of the Coast Guard’s regional command post, and you can double-check with them.”

April wrote down the digits absently, her mind racing around the entrance to Prince William Sound for an explanation and a reassuring image of her parents floating and fishing or making love or whatever else they might be doing. She thanked him and disconnected before turning to the computer to send an e-mail to Gracie in Seattle, routing it to Gracie’s beeper, cell phone screen, and office and home computers simultaneously.

THREE

TUESDAY, DAY 2 RESEARCH TRIANGLE RALEIGH-DURHAM, NORTH CAROLINA

“Sir, they’re waiting for you.”

Will Martin, chairman of the board of Uniwave Industries, forced himself to turn away from the pleasant vistas of wooded countryside spread out beyond his office windows and glanced at his secretary of six years.

“What, Jill?”

“Did you get my computer message that the teleconference is ready?”

“I’m sorry, no,” he said, permitting himself to notice the lovely contours of her body as his mind replayed a little fantasy about her, a repeated private indulgence that always ended with a flash of fear that she might someday decipher his thoughts. “You… say they’re already waiting?” he added.

Jill nodded. “Yes. Shall I tell them you’ll be right in?”

He smiled back at her and nodded in return, his mind still on the sexy fantasy and wondering if prurient thoughts ever crackled behind her professional facade. He watched her as she turned and left the office, a gentle wave of femininity singularly unburdened by the corporate anvils weighing him down.

Martin turned to pick up a stack of papers and messages on his desk, feeling the strong tug between what he wanted to do and what he had to do.

He wanted to run, but running had never been in his nature.

He wanted to study the expensive paintings on the wall, or watch the squirrels playing in the trees outside, or contemplate the sweet taboo of making love to his secretary—anything to avoid the intense apprehension he would have to skillfully hide in a few minutes from the others.

Martin willed his hand to scoop up a stack of papers on his desk that pertained to the critical black project they’d agreed to build for the Air Force more than three years ago. Back then, all he’d feared were the heavy security procedures the company would have to follow. He’d never questioned their ability to produce the so-called Boomerang Box, the heart of the Skyhook Project, a system designed to safely land by remote control a military aircraft whose crew had been disabled. The system had made good sense, but within months, the task of completing it had rapidly become a nightmare of delays and technical insufficiencies.