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Polar Shift Page 24
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“We know you’re in there,” the voice said. “We can see where someone cut the bushes. It’s not polite not to answer when people are talking to you.”
Schroeder crawled forward a few yards, where he had a view of the cave’s mouth.
“It’s not polite to kill innocent people, either.”
“You killed my man. My friend was innocent.”
“Your friend was stupid and deserved to die,” Schroeder said.
Hoarse male laughter greeted his answer.
“Hey, tough guy, my name is Grisha. Who the hell are you?”
“I’m your worst nightmare come true.”
“I heard someone say that in an American movie,” the voice said. “You’re an old man. What do you want with a young girl? I’ll make a deal. I’ll let you go if you give us the girl.”
“I heard someone say that in a movie too,” Schroeder said. “Do you think I’m stupid? Let’s talk some more. Tell me why you want to kill the girl.”
“We don’t want to kill her. She’s worth a lot of money to us.”
“Then you won’t harm her?”
“No, no. Like I said, she’s worth more as a hostage.”
Schroeder paused as if he were seriously considering the offer. “I have lots of money too. I can give it to you right away and you won’t have to wait. How does a million dollars American sound?”
There was a whispered discussion, then the Russian came back. “My men say it’s okay, but they want to see the money first.”
“All right. Come closer to the cave and I’ll throw it out to you.”
The conversation had been in Russian and Karla had understood only part of it. Schroeder whispered to Karla to move deeper into the cave and to cover her ears. He reached into his pack and pulled out an object that looked like a small metal pineapple. He knew that his offer would draw the attackers in like jackals, and, with any luck, he could take out all of them. He stood up. Shards of pain shot up his right leg. The run and climb while carrying the young woman had aggravated the ankle injury.
He moved closer to the entrance. He could see shadows moving closer. Good. There was a slight bend in the cave, and the entrance was a narrow slit, so his aim and timing would have to be just right.
“Here’s your money,” he said, and pulled the pin from the hand grenade.
As he stepped forward to toss it out of the hole, his injured right leg buckled and he fell, slamming his head against the wall of the cave. He almost blacked out. As his eyes were closing, he saw the grenade hit the ground and roll to a stop only a few feet away. He pulled himself back to consciousness and forced himself to hang on. He lunged for the grenade, felt the hard metal in his hand and again tossed it to the entrance.
His aim was better this time, but the grenade glanced off the wall and came to rest in the dead center of the opening.
Schroeder threw himself deeper into the cave and around the bend, where he gained the shelter of the wall. He clamped his hands over his ears just as the grenade exploded. There was a flash of light and a burst of white-hot metal as the shrapnel peppered the cave in a deadly fusillade. Then came a secondary roar as the entrance collapsed.
The cave was filled with dust. Schroeder lifted his head up and crawled toward the sound of coughing. The light flashed on, but the beam was diffused by the brown curtain of dust that hung in the air.
“What happened?” Karla said after the dust settled.
Schroeder groaned and spit out a mouthful of dirt. “I told you I’m getting too old for this sort of thing. I was about to toss out the grenade when I tripped and banged my head. Wait.” He took the flashlight and made his way to the entrance. He came back after a minute and said, “I did a good job. We can’t get out, but they can’t get in.”
“I don’t know about that,” Karla said. “The leader of those men said they have a portable jackhammer.”
Schroeder considered her comment. “We’ll have to go farther into the cave.”
“This place could go on underground for miles! We could become hopelessly lost.”
“Yes, I know. We will only go as far as we need to set up an ambush. I will try not to be so clumsy next time.”
Karla wondered if she was talking to the same man who had bounced her on his knee so many years ago. He had cleanly dispatched the man who tried to rape her, calmly negotiated with a band of murderers, and then, in a businesslike fashion, tried to kill the gang.
“All right,” she said. “But this secret you mentioned. What do you know about it?”
Karl fished a candle out of his pack, lit the wick and stuck it onto a ledge using melted wax.
“I met your grandfather for the first time near the end of World War Two. He was a brilliant and courageous man. Many years ago, he came upon a scientific principle that, if used unwisely, could cause great death and destruction. He wrote a paper warning of the possibilities, and the result was not what he expected. The Nazis captured him and forced him to work on a superweapon, using his theories.”
“That’s incredible. He never gave any hint that he was anything but an inventor and businessman.”
“It’s true. However, I helped him escape from the lab. He had refused to give up his secrets, and his stubbornness cost him his family. Yes, that’s right. He was married and had a child before he moved to the United States after World War Two. He took his secret to the grave, but these men, or the ones they work for, think he passed the secret on to you.”
“What makes them think I know anything like that?”
“History repeats itself. You published an article on the extinction of the woolly mammoths.”
“That’s right. I said it was due to climate changes caused by a polar shift. I used some of my grandfather’s papers and his calculations to back up my theory. Dear God! Is that what they want?”
“That and more. They will do anything and kill anyone to get it.”
“But everything I know is in public view. I don’t know anything about any secret!”
“Your grandfather told the Nazis the same thing. They didn’t believe him either.”
“What can I do?”
“For now, you can keep yourself well.” He went back into his pack again and came out with some jerky and water. “Not exactly cordon bleu, but it will do for now. Maybe we will find some bats that we can cook into a big stew.”
“Now I remember,” Karla said with a smile. “You were always telling me about the crazy things you were going to cook up for me. Snails. Puppy dogs. Brussels sprouts. Ugh. Disgusting.”
“It was the best I could do. I had limited experience entertaining children.”
They talked about shared memories as they chewed the tough jerky. They were washing their meat down with water when they heard what sounded like a giant woodpecker at the mouth of the cave.
“They’ve started drilling,” Karla said.
Schroeder gathered up his things. “Time to get moving.” He handed Karla a light and suggested she use it sparingly, although he always carried plenty of batteries. Then they followed the cave deeper into the ground.
Schroeder had expected the temperature to rise the deeper they went and was heartened that it remained temperate, and that the air was relatively fresh. He remarked on the phenomenon to Karla, and suggested that the cave might eventually lead outdoors. He knew it was a slim hope, especially after the cave floor began to slant downward, but it seemed to give Karla courage.
The cave meandered, going slightly left, then right, but always down. Sometimes the ceiling was high enough to allow them to walk upright. For some stretches, the cave was only about four feet high, and they had to crouch. Schroeder was glad to see that there was only one tunnel, with no branches that would have required a decision and increased the chances of becoming hopelessly lost.
After they had been walking for about an hour, the cave broke open to a larger space. They had no idea how big it was until they started to explore it.
As their flashlight b
eams bounced off the moisture that cast a sheen on the high ceilings and far walls, it became apparent that the cavern was as big as the lobby of a grand hotel. The floor was almost flat. At the far end, opposite where they had come in, was the only other opening, which loomed as large as a garage door.
They walked around the perimeter of the chamber, sipping from their water bottles, marveling at the size and shape of the space. Schroeder had been examining it with an eye toward setting up ambush, and had decided, with its nooks and wall crannies, that it would make an ideal killing field. Karla had wandered over to the other entrance, where she swept the interior with her light, then stepped inside.
“Uncle Karl,” she called out, her voice echoing.
He strode over to where she knelt on the cavern floor. Illuminated in the bull’s-eye of light from her flashlight was a brownish mass of vegetation.
“What is it?” Schroeder asked.
She didn’t answer right away. After a moment, she said, “It looks like elephant scat.”
Schroeder roared with laughter. “Do you think the circus passed this way?”
She stood up and touched it with the toe of her boot. A musky, grassy smell arose from the mound. “I think I need to sit down,” she said.
They found a wall outcropping to sit on and refreshed themselves from their water bottles. Karla told Schroeder about the baby mammoth that had been discovered not far from the cave entrance. “I couldn’t figure out how it could be so well preserved,” she said. “No one has ever found a specimen like that. It seemed to have died only days or weeks ago.”
“Are you suggesting that there are woolly mammoths living in these caves?”
“No, of course not,” she said with a laugh. “That would be impossible. Maybe they once did, though, and the scat is very old. Let me tell you a story. In 1918, a Russian hunter was traveling through the taiga, the great Siberian forest, when he saw huge tracks in the snow. For days, he followed the creatures that made them. They left behind piles of dung and broken tree branches. He described seeing two huge elephants with chestnut hair and massive tusks.”
“An apocryphal hunter’s tale, with no evidence, meant to impress?”
“Possibly. But the Eskimos and North American Indians recounted legends of great shaggy creatures. In 1993, the skeletons of dwarf mammoths were found on Wrangel Island, between Siberia and Alaska, not far from here. Their bones were dated between seven thousand and thirty-seven hundred years ago, which means mammoths roamed the earth well past Paleolithic times, when men were building Stonehenge and the Pyramids.”
Schroeder chuckled and said, “You’d like to explore further, wouldn’t you?”
“I wouldn’t want to waste an opportunity like this sitting around and twiddling our thumbs. Maybe we’ll come across some well-preserved specimens.”
“I don’t think preparing to repel a gang of desperate cutthroats qualifies as twiddling our thumbs, but I shouldn’t be surprised. Once, when you were a child, I read you Alice in Wonderland. Not long after, I found you out in the yard trying to squeeze your head down a rabbit hole. You said you wished you had some tonic that would shrink you, like Alice.”
“It must have been your fault for reading me such stories.”
“Well, now it seems we have little choice,” he said wearily. He picked up his pack and limped toward the opening. “Down the rabbit hole we go.”
26
THE CHESTNUT STALLION GALLOPED across the verdant Virginia countryside as if it were racing neck and neck in the Kentucky Derby. Jordan Gant crouched in the saddle like an overgrown jockey and whipped his crop repeatedly on his mount’s haunches. The horse had been running a punishing pace. Its eyes rolled, its sleek coat was shiny with sweat and its tongue hung from its mouth. Still, Gant showed no mercy. It was not so much cruelty, which would have assumed emotion on his part, but rather the disregard he held for anything that came under his control.
Gant crossed meadows and pastures, and rode along the edge of a driveway bordered by poplar trees until he came to a sprawling country house. He headed to a stable area near the house, and allowed the exhausted animal to come to a trot, then a walk and finally to a halt. Gant slid easily out of the saddle, took a towel from a waiting groom and carelessly tossed him the reins. The horse was limping as it was led away.
Gant strode up a stone walkway toward the front door. He was dressed for polo in a black short-sleeved shirt and jodhpurs. Gant had a muscular, athletic physique, and he would have worn his clothes well even if they weren’t custom-tailored. He whipped his knee-high boots of cordovan leather with his crop as he walked, as if his arm had a mind of its own. The massive wooden front door opened at Gant’s approach, and he stepped into an enormous foyer with a fountain bubbling in the center. Gant handed his gloves and towel to the cadaverous butler who had opened the door.
The butler said, “Your guest has arrived, sir. He’s waiting in the library.”
“A Bombay Sapphire martini, straight up, and the usual for me.”
The butler bowed and disappeared down a long hallway. Gant went through a door off the foyer into a spacious chamber lined with floor-to-ceiling bookshelves filled with the priceless volumes that he collected. Margrave stood near a set of French doors that overlooked manicured lawns that were as green as the top of a billiard table. He was perusing an antique book bound in red Moroccan leather.
“That’s a rare edition of the Divine Comedy published in 1507,” Gant said. “There are only three known copies. I own them all.”
“You’ve got quite the extensive collection of Dante.”
“Actually, it’s the best in the world,” Gant said without pretense.
Margrave smiled and slipped the book back onto the shelf. “I would expect no less. Did you have a good ride?”
Gant tossed the whip onto a side table. “I always have a good ride. The horse does all the work. The animal that I rode today is new to my stables. It’s a stallion that needed to be shown who the boss is. I always take a new horse out for a test-drive. Those that survive are treated like royalty. Those that don’t end up in a glue factory.”
“Survival of the fittest?”
“I’m a great believer in Darwin.”
The butler arrived carrying a tray with two drinks. Gant handed one glass to Margrave, and took the sixteen-year-old, double-matured scotch whisky on the rocks for himself. Margrave sipped his drink. “Perfect martini,” he said. “You know exactly what I drink. I’m impressed.”
“You forget that I’m in a business where deals are often lubricated with alcohol,” Gant said. “Nothing makes a favorable impression like remembering someone’s particular poison.” He settled into a comfortable chair, and gestured for Margrave to take a seat. “What’s the latest on our project?”
“On schedule. But I’m worried about Spider. I haven’t heard from him since he left the island a few days ago.”
“Barrett is a big boy,” Gant said. “He can take care of himself.”
“I don’t care about his health; it’s his mouth I’m concerned about. He’s had an acute attack of conscience. I don’t want to see him on 60 Minutes telling Mike Wallace about our project.”
“You said he agreed to stay with the project until you made contact with Karla Janos.”
“That’s right. He wanted a fail-safe option that could shut the project down in a hurry.”
“Then you have nothing to worry about. Barrett is probably off sulking somewhere. The main question is whether the project can proceed without him.”
“That’s not a problem. Spider has already laid the groundwork that made him indispensable. We don’t need him anymore. All is proceeding according to plan. I worked up this presentation for you.”
Margrave opened a carrying case and pulled out a portable DVD player, which he set up on a mahogany desk. He pressed the ON button and the schematic profile of a ship appeared on the screen.
“This is one of the transmitter ships as originally designed.
Here are the power plants in the hold leading to the electromagnetic low-frequency antenna, which can be lowered into the sea.” He forwarded the picture. “This is the new ship that will do the work of our four experimental vessels.”
“A small ocean liner. Ingenious. How soon will it be on-site?”
“The old transmitter vessels have left the Mississippi shipyard and are on their way to the debarkation point in Rio. They can still be useful as decoys for insurance. The name of the liner is the Polar Adventure. She’ll be in Rio as well, but no one will suspect she is carrying the payload.”
“You’ve made a final choice of a target site, then.”
Margrave pressed a key on the player. A map of the Southern Hemisphere appeared on the screen. The map showed a reddish patch shaped like a flattened sphere that covered a good portion of the ocean between the coast of Brazil and South Africa.
“The South Atlantic Anomaly.”
Margrave nodded. “As you know, the anomaly is a region where the earth’s geomagnetic field flows the wrong way. Some scientists describe it as a ‘pothole,’ or a dip, in the field. There are sections where the field is completely reversed and weakened. Magsat discovered a North Polar region and a spot below South Africa where the magnetism has been growing extremely weak. Exploiting the weakness in the south ocean magnetic field will cause a similar reaction in the north pole region.”
Gant chuckled. “That’s the beauty of this whole scheme. We’re not precipitating the event as much as we’re hastening its arrival.”
“True. The north and south magnetic poles have reversed themselves in the past without help, and the earth’s electromagnetic field started collapsing on its own about a hundred and fifty years ago. Some experts say a shift is overdue. The earth’s magnetism is already affected by the vortices in the molten layer under its crust. Stir up some additional turbulence and only a nudge will be needed to cause a shift. As you say, we’re just helping the process along.”
“Fascinating,” Gant said. “I take it that there has been no change in our original expectations of the impact of this little flip.”