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"Ditto, Kurt, nothing. All systems are out."
A frown crossed Austin's tanned face. It made no sense. If one system failed, another system should have taken over. Zavala had bragged that the instrumentation he'd designed for the B3 equaled that of a jetliner.
Austin instructed the crane operator to reel the cable in. As it slithered out of the water and around the drum, the operator's voice came over Austin's headset.
"Hey, Kurt, something's wrong. There's no weight resistance at the other end. The cable's coming up too fast and easy. It's like cranking a spinning reel after you've lost your fish."
Austin asked the crane man to speed up the retrieval of the bathysphere, and the cable slinked from the sea at an even faster rate. The launch crew was pressed against the railing, silently watching the streaming cable. The NUMA film crew, sensing the tension in the air, had stopped filming.
"Almost at the surface," the crane operator warned. "Heads up!"
The operator slowed the winch, but still the cable snapped like a bullwhip when it came out of the water, the bathysphere no longer attached. He swung the dangling cable over the ship and put the winch in reverse, letting several yards of the cable coil on the deck. Austin went over to the coil and picked up the end of the cable.
A cameraman standing nearby saw Austin holding the free end of the cable. "Damned thing snapped!" he said.
Austin knew that the cable could hold ten times the weight of the B3. He examined it closely. The strands were as even edged as the bristles of a paintbrush. He turned to the NUMA oceanographer who had chosen the dive site.
"Is there any feature down there, a coral ridge or overhang, that could have snagged the cable?" he asked.
"The bottom is as flat as an ironing board," the oceanographer said, almost insulted at the question. "There's a carpet of marine growth, but that's it. Nothing but mud. That's why we selected this spot. We did intensive bottom profiling before we made our recommendation."
Watching from the bridge, Captain Gannon had seen Austin examining the cable. He hustled down to the deck, and he swore lustily when Austin showed him the sheared-off end. "What the hell happened?"
Austin shook his head. "I wish I knew."
"The press boats have been calling in," the captain said. "They want to know what happened to the video transmission."
Austin scanned the cordon of encircling boats being kept away from the area by a Coast Guard patrol. "Tell them that there was a problem with the fiber-optic cable. We need time to figure this thing out."
The captain called the bridge, relayed Austin's suggestion, and snapped the radio back onto his belt.
"It's going to be all right, isn't it, Kurt?" Gannon asked with worry in his eyes. "The B3's flotation bags will bring them to the surface, right?"
Austin squinted against the glare coming off the surface of the water. "The bathysphere is a long way down; let's give it a while. But we should ready an ROV in case we need to take a look."
Despite his apparent serenity, Austin knew that each passing minute diminished the possibility of a flotation-bag ascent. The bathysphere could rely on battery power for light, but its air would eventually peter out. He waited a few more minutes, then called the captain and recommended that they launch the ROV.
The remotely operated vehicle, or ROV, has become the workhorse of undersea exploration. Controlled by means of a tether, an ROV can dive deep, maneuver into the tightest spaces, and transmit television images, allowing the operator to travel to the depths without leaving the dry comfort of the ship.
The captain had chosen a medium-sized vehicle, about the size and shape of an old steamer trunk, that could operate at a depth of six thousand feet. Six thrusters positioned the vehicle with pinpoint accuracy; it was equipped with two manipulators for collecting samples, and several cameras, including high-resolution color video.
A telescoping starboard boom swung the ROV off its cradle and lowered it into the sea. Austin watched it sink under a mound of pale green bubbles, trailing its tether behind it, then stepped into the remote-sensing control center located in a cargo container on the main deck.
The video feed through the ROV's tether was connected to a console from which the remote's movement was controlled by a pilot with a joystick. Images from the feed were transmitted to a big screen above the console. The ROV's heading and speed were displayed in combination letters and numbers at the top of the screen, along with elapsed time.
Moving in a descending spiral, the ROV traveled in minutes the same distance it had taken the bathysphere hours. The remote blasted through schools of fish, scattering them like leaves, as it corkscrewed into the sea.
"Leveling out," the pilot said.
She put the remote into a shallow-angled dive like an airplane preparing to land. Its twin searchlights picked out brownish green bottom vegetation that looked like leaves of spinach undulating in the current. There was no sign of the Bathysphere 3.
Austin said, "Start searching, in parallel passes, a hundred feet long."
The ROV cruised about twenty feet over the vegetation. It finished its first hundred-foot pass, then traveled back with fifteen feet separating it from the first pass. The speed indicator showed the ROV was doing five knots.
Austin clenched and unclenched his fists, impatient with the glacially slow pace. Other crew members now gathered around the screen, but no one spoke except for the quick communication between Austin and the ROV pilot. Austin mentally excluded everything in the room, pouring himself into the monitor as if he were riding atop the ROV.
Five more minutes passed.
The ROV's methodical back-and-forth movement was similar to that of a lawn mower. The picture transmitted by its electronic eye was the same unchanging monotonous carpet of brownish green.
"Wait," Austin said. He had seen something. "Go to the left."
With a jiggle of the joystick, the pilot pivoted the vehicle so that it was perpendicular to its original path. The twin searchlights picked up mud splatter around the rim of a crater. A mud-covered, domelike shape protruded from the center of the crater. Now Austin saw why the B3 hadn't surfaced; its flotation bags were buried deep in the mud. He asked the pilot to blow mud away from the bathysphere. The ROV's thrusters kicked up a thick brown cloud that hardly made a dent in the heavy muck.
At Austin's request, the pilot put the ROV on the bottom and pointed its searchlights at the sphere. Austin stared at the image, plumbing his training and experience.
He was pondering the technical challenge involved in freeing the B3 from the clutches of the sea when a shadow appeared on the right-hand side of the monitor. Something was moving. It was there for an instant, then gone.
"What was that?" the pilot asked.
Before Austin could venture a guess, the screen went blank.
CHAPTER 8
Zavala lay on his side, his right arm pinned under his hipbone, his left curled up to his chest. His legs were immobilized by a soft weight. Ignoring the jagged shards of pain stabbing under his ear, he lifted his head and saw Kane stretched belly down across his knees.
In the dim, battery-powered light, Zavala saw that the cabin was littered with papers, ditty bags, clothing, bottles of water, seat cushions, and other loose items. Zavala reached for his headset and held it to his ear. Silence. He tested Kane's headset. Not even a hint of static.
The loss of communication was ominous, but Zavala's optimistic nature would not let him dwell on such bad luck. He wiggled one leg, freed his foot, and used it to shove Kane's body off the other leg. Kane rolled onto his back, and a low groan escaped his lips.
The painful exertion triggered waves of nausea in Zavala. He unclipped the first-aid kit from the wall and broke open an ampoule, waving it under his nostrils. The acrid odor snapped him to alertness.
He removed the good-luck cap. Gingerly probing his scalp with his fingertips, he found a lump that felt as big as an egg. He poured water from a canteen on a compress bandage and held it l
ightly against his head. Even the slight pressure was painful, but the throbbing eased.
Zavala tucked a seat cushion under Kane's head. He removed Kane's skullcap and applied the compress. Kane winced, and his eyes blinked wide open.
"Ow!" he said. A good sign.
Zavala lightened the pressure but kept the compress in place.
"Sorry, Doc, Florence Nightingale couldn't make it, so you're stuck with me," Zavala said. "Try moving your toes and fingers."
Kane flexed his hand and foot joints, then bent his legs at the knees, grimacing in pain. "Nothing seems broken."
Zavala helped Kane sit up and handed him the canteen. He waited until Kane had slugged down a couple of gulps, then said, "What do you remember, Doc?"
Kane pursed his lips in thought. "I was looking out the window, broadcasting my observations. He glanced at his headset.
"Don't bother," Zavala said. "The headsets don't work."
Kane's face turned the color of oatmeal. "We're not connected to the surface?"
"Temporarily… Keep talking."
Kane took a deep breath. "We saw some kind of weird big fish or whale. Next, I remember heading for the moon. Then blotto. What about you?"
Zavala jerked a thumb upward. "Same scenario. I went airborne and slammed against the roof. I put my hand out to soften the blow, but all I got for the effort was a sore arm. Good thing I've got a hard head."
"From the sounds of it, the cable probably slipped on the winch drum."
Zavala said nothing.
"I don't get it," Kane said. "Why haven't they winched us up by now?" He noticed that the bathysphere was perfectly still, and he seemed to catch his breath. "We're not moving, Joe. What's happened to us?"
Zavala wanted to avoid panic, but there was no sugarcoating their situation. "We seem to be sitting on the bottom, Doc."
Kane looked at the instrument panel and saw that the systems were operating on batteries. "If we were still attached, we'd have power. Oh, hell! The cable must have snapped."
"That's almost impossible. And there could be other reasons for the breakdown. We're talking about maintaining contact over a cable through more than a half mile of ocean. Remember Beebe comparing the bathysphere to a pea on a cobweb? No man-made system is flawless, but this isn't the Titanic. Even if we were no longer connected to the surface, we've got other options."
Kane brightened. "Duh, of course! Your flotation system."
Zavala managed a smile. "What do you say we pop up to the Beebe lounge and mix a pitcher of margaritas?"
"What are we waiting for?" Kane was as ebullient as a condemned man given an eleventh-hour reprieve.
Zavala unclipped a nylon bag from the wall and asked Kane to clean up the cabin. Busywork would lift Kane's spirits as well.
"The compressed-air tanks are in the center of the platform, and they feed into flotation bags that are stuffed into the skids," Zavala explained. "When the GO switch is activated, doors open in the sides of skids, compressed air fills the bags instantly, and they lift us to the surface, where the ship can snag us."
Kane rubbed his palms together in anticipation. "Margaritaville, here we come."
Zavala slid over to the instrument panel. "Funny, isn't it? We go through all sorts of trouble to get to the bottom of the sea, and, when we finally make it, we want to go home."
"We can discuss the philosophical implications on the deck of the Beebe," Kane said. "I'd be happy just to be able to stretch out my legs."
Zavala turned his attention to a plastic box attached to the wall next to the instrument panel. He unsnapped the box's cover to reveal a red button emblazoned with an arrow pointing up.
"This is a two-step process," he explained. "This button arms the system, and that identical button on the control panel activates it. When I say go, you hit the switch, and I'll do the same with mine. Then hold on. There's a ten-second delay."
Kane put his finger to the button Zavala had indicated. "Ready."
"Go," Zavala said.
Zavala had tested the escape system in a water tank and prepared himself for a muted bang and a whoosh, but nothing happened at the end of ten seconds. He told Kane to try again. Again, nothing happened. Zavala checked a troubleshooting display that would have indicated a system malfunction but saw nothing amiss.
"Why won't it work?" Kane asked.
"Something must have gotten banged around when we hit bottom. Don't worry, I programmed in a backup system."
Zavala tapped a keypad to reroute the signal and told Kane to try again. Again, there was a failure to inflate. They would have to go with the manual switch. Zavala opened another plastic-covered panel and looped his fingers through a handle attached to a cable. Pulling the cable, he explained, would produce a small electrical current that would trigger the flotation mechanism.
He clenched his teeth and yanked. Nothing happened. He tried several more times, but it was no use. The manual trigger failed to activate.
Kane watched these fruitless attempts with growing apprehension. "What's wrong?" he asked.
Zavala's hand dropped from the manual switch. He stared into space, letting his mind's eye travel through the workings of the flotation system. His gaze wandered to the window.
He flicked the searchlight on and was puzzled when he didn't see a glimmer. He moved closer to the window. Sliding a flashlight from its wall rack, he pointed the light out the window, cupping his eyes to prevent reflection. The light failed to penetrate the darkness.
He passed the flashlight to Kane. "Take a look."
Kane peered through the porthole. "Hell, there's black mud against the windows."
"We came down hard. There's nothing wrong with the system. The mud is blocking the flotation doors."
Kane was silent for a time. When he did speak, it was almost in a whisper. "We're screwed, aren't we?"
Zavala reached out and gripped one of Kane's wrists tightly. "Calm down, Doc," he said evenly.
Their eyes locked for a second, and Kane said, "Sorry, Joe, your call."
Zavala loosened his grip. "I don't mean to sound casual. We're in a tough spot, yes, but it's far from hopeless. The folks on the Beebe must know something has happened, and they've got our position."
"What good will that do if the cable is broken? They still have to haul us up somehow."
"I'm sure Kurt will figure it out."
Kane snorted. "Austin's an impressive guy, but he's not a miracle man."
Zavala thought about the countless times Austin's courage and resourcefulness had snatched them back from the edge of disaster.
"I've worked with Kurt for years, and he's as close to a miracle worker as I've ever seen. If anyone can get us out of here, he can. We've got more than three hours of air and enough power to give us light and heat. Our biggest problems will be boredom and el baño." He picked up a plastic bag. "This should take care of our sanitary needs. Since we've been thrown together by the fates, maybe we should know more about each other. Tell me about your work," Zavala said.
Kane's face lit up, and he seemed to forget his claustrophobic surroundings. "My specialty is the phylum Cnidaria, which includes the class commonly known as jellyfish. Many people don't find jellyfish terribly exciting."
"I think jellyfish are very exciting," Zavala said. "I was zapped once by a Portuguese man-of-war. The encounter was extremely painful."
"The man-of-war is not considered a 'true' jellyfish but rather a colony of different organisms living in symbiosis. The tentacles are equipped with thousands of nematocysts—the venom apparatus—and grow as long as sixty-five feet. Size isn't everything, though. You're lucky you didn't encounter the little sea wasp. That critter's string could have landed you in the morgue."
"I didn't consider myself lucky at the time," Zavala said as he recalled the burning sting. "What's the focus of your research?"
"My lab has been looking into ocean biomedicine. We think the ocean will be the most important future source of pharmaceutical compoun
ds."
"Like the Amazon rain forest?"
"There's been a lot of interest in the Amazon, but we think the ocean will far surpass anything that's been found in the jungle."
"You're talking jellyfish instead of jaguars?"
"There are more similarities than differences between the land and the sea. Take curare, for instance. The Amazon Indians used it as a paralyzing poison on their arrow tips, but its muscle-relaxant properties make it useful as a medicine."
"And you see similar potential for jellyfish?"
"That and more. Jellyfish, squid, octopi, snails—seemingly simple creatures with complex systems for feeding and defense."
"What sort of work were you doing in the Pacific Ocean?" Zavala asked.
"I was working on a project that could affect every man, woman, and child on this planet."
"Now you've really got my attention. Tell me more."
"Can't," Kane said, "top secret. I've already said too much. If I told you more, I'd have to kill you."
He realized the absurdity of his threat, given their dire circumstances, and began to giggle uncontrollably. Zavala choked back his laughter. "Laughing uses up too much oxygen."
Kane became serious again. "Do you really think Austin is going to come to our rescue?"
"He's never failed before."
Kane pretended he was zipping his mouth shut. "Then the nature of our work will have to remain classified in case there is a slim chance that we'll get out of this damned hollow steel ball."
Zavala laughed softly. "I guess your romance with Beebe's world is over."
Kane managed to eke out a smile. "Your turn, Joe. Tell me how you came to NUMA."
"Admiral Sandecker hired me right out of college. He needed a good mechanic."
Zavala was being typically modest. The son of Mexican immigrants, he had graduated from New York Maritime College with a degree in marine engineering. He had a brilliant mechanical mind and expertise in every known kind of propulsion, able to repair, modify, or restore any engine—automobile, ship, aircraft—be it steam, diesel, or electric.