Read Devil's Gate Page 7


  Between deep breaths and a few more sips of water, Joe spoke. “About time you showed up.”

  “Yeah,” Kurt said. “Looks like you’re wearing him down,” he added. “If he keeps hitting you in the head like that, his arms are gonna get tired.”

  Joe swished the water around in his mouth, spat some out, and then looked over at Kurt. “I got him right where I want him.”

  Kurt nodded, finding that doubtful. Joe had boxed in high school, college, and the Navy, but that was a long time ago.

  “At least you have some fans,” Kurt said, nodding toward the front row, which included a group ranging in age from a college girl with a flower in her hair to several women that might have been Joe’s match in years to a pair of older women who were way overdressed and too well made-up for such an event.

  “Let me guess,” Kurt said. “You’re fighting to defend their collective honor.”

  “Nothing like that,” Joe said, as his trainer dunked Joe’s mouth guard and then stuffed it back in his mouth. “I ram ober sombone’s cow.”

  The bell pinged, and Joe stood, clapped his gloves together, and went back out to do battle.

  Joe’s words had been muffled by the mouth guard, but it sounded to Kurt like he’d said I ran over someone’s cow.

  This round went quickly, with Joe dodging the thunderbolts and then landing a few jabs on Thor’s midsection. He might as well have been punching a stone wall. When Joe made it back, he was noticeably winded.

  “You ran over a cow?” Kurt asked.

  “Actually, I just bumped into him,” Joe said breathing hard.

  “Was it the God of Thunder’s cow?” Kurt asked, nodding toward Joe’s opponent.

  “No,” Joe said. “One of the ranchers here.”

  Kurt did not feel the fog of confusion lifting. “How does that turn into a boxing match?”

  “There are rules here,” Joe said, “but no fences. The cows wander everywhere, out onto the roads and everything. If you hit a cow at night, it’s the cow’s fault. But if you hit a cow in the day, it’s your fault. I bumped into one at dusk. Apparently, that’s, ah . . . una zona gris: a gray area.”

  “So you have to fight to the death in a cage match?” Kurt said, joking.

  “Does this look like a fight to the death?” Joe asked.

  “Well . . .”

  “The guy whose cow I hit owns the gym. The Scandinavian guy over there moved here and became the local amateur champ a year ago. The islanders like him but would rather see someone else as champ, someone who looks more like them.”

  Kurt smiled. With his Latin background, Joe looked far more like the islanders than Thor did.

  The bell rang again, and Joe answered it, stepping up and trying to get inside the Scandinavian man’s long reach. It was dangerous work, but aside from a few glancing blows Joe seemed to be holding his own, and the Scandinavian seemed to be slowing.

  Joe sat down again, and Kurt changed the subject.

  “I need to talk to you about the Barracuda,” he said.

  “What about it?”

  “Can it dive to sixteen thousand feet?”

  Joe shook his head. “It’s not a bathysphere, Kurt. It’s designed for speed.”

  “But could you modify it to do the job?”

  “Yeah,” Joe said. “By putting it inside a bathysphere.”

  Kurt went silent. Joe was a genius with machines. Still, he could work only within the laws of physics.

  Joe rinsed his mouth and spat.

  “Okay, I’ll bite,” he said. “What’s on the bottom of the Atlantic that you want to take a look at?”

  “You heard about what happened the other day?”

  Joe nodded. “A ship almost fell on your head.”

  “It did,” Kurt said. “I’d like to get a better look at it now that it’s all safe and sound on the bottom.”

  The bell rang, and Joe stood, his eyes on Kurt. He seemed to be thinking. “There might be a way,” he said, a gleam shining in his eyes.

  By that moment, Joe had lingered too long. The God of Thunder had roamed across the ring.

  “Look out,” Joe’s cornerman shouted.

  Joe turned and ducked, covering up, as the haymaker glanced off his raised arm. He stepped back into the ropes, protecting himself, as the other fighter fired blows at him, left and right.

  Suddenly, Kurt felt horrible for his friend, as what was supposed to be a friendly match looked more like a one-sided beating. Partly his fault for distracting Joe. If it had been a wrestling match, he’d have grabbed a folding chair and slammed it over Thor’s shoulders. But he guessed that wouldn’t do for Queensbury rules.

  Thor’s gloves made a heavy thumping sound as they slammed into Joe’s arms, ribs, and head.

  “Rope-a-dope,” Kurt shouted, throwing out the only boxing advice he could think of.

  His voice was drowned out by the roar of the crowd. Meanwhile, Joe’s cheerleaders gasped. The older women looked away as if they couldn’t watch.

  With little room to maneuver, Joe continued to cover up, unable to even open his arms and clinch the other fighter. Kurt looked at the clock. This was the last round, but there was over a minute to go.

  It didn’t look like Joe would make the bell. Then a moment presented itself. As the Scandinavian wound up to deliver another hammer blow, he opened himself up.

  At that very instant, Joe dropped his shoulder and fired an uppercut. It caught Thor on the chin and snapped his head backward. From the look of things, Thor hadn’t expected anything but defense from Joe at that point. Kurt saw the man’s eyes roll as he stumbled backward.

  Joe stepped forward and fired a heavy right, sending Thor to the canvas.

  The crowd oohed in surprise. Joe’s cheerleaders shrieked with pleasure, like young girls watching the Beatles step off an airplane. The ref began to count.

  The Scandinavian fighter rolled onto his hands and knees by “Four,” while Joe danced around the ring like Sugar Ray Leonard. By “Six,” Thor was using the ropes to help himself up, and Joe looked a little less happy about things. By “Eight,” Thor was standing, looking clearheaded and glaring across the ring. Joe’s face had turned decidedly sour.

  The ref grabbed Thor’s gloves and looked ready to send him back into the fight.

  And then the bell rang.

  The round was over, the fight was over. It was ruled a draw. Nobody was happy but everybody cheered.

  FIFTEEN MINUTES LATER, with his debt to society paid, a few autographs signed, and at least one new phone number in his pocket, Joe Zavala sat with Kurt, ripping the tape off his hands and then pressing an ice bag to his eye.

  “That’ll teach you to run over people’s cows,” Kurt said, using a pair of scissors to help Joe with the tape.

  “Next time I fight,” Joe said, “you sit in the back row. Or, better yet, find something else to do.”

  “What are you talking about?” Kurt asked. “I thought that went well.”

  Joe had to laugh. Kurt was as good and loyal a friend as Joe had ever known, but he did have a penchant for glossing over the downside of things. “I’ve always wondered about your definition of ‘well.’”

  With the tape off, Joe moved the bag of ice to the back of his neck as Kurt explained what had happened aboard the Kinjara Maru.

  It sounded as odd to him as it had seemed to Kurt. “Sixth sense going off?” he asked.

  “Three alarms,” Kurt said.

  “Funny thing,” Joe said, “I hear the same sound in my head right now. But I think it’s for a different reason.”

  Kurt laughed. “All I want is a look,” he insisted. “Do you think the Barracuda can get us there?”

  “There might be a way to do it,” Joe replied. “But only as an ROV. I wouldn’t trust the mods to keep anyone safe at that depth. Plus, there would be no room for us anyway.”

  Kurt smiled. “What are you thinking?”

  “We could build a small outer hull and encase the Barracuda in
side it,” he began.

  As Joe spoke he could see the design in his head, could feel the shape beneath his hands. He designed things intuitively. He did the math just to back up what he already knew.

  “We fill that compartment with a noncompressing liquid, or hyperpressurize it with nitrogen gas. Then we flood the interior of the Barracuda itself or pressurize it to several atmospheres as well, and the three-stage gradient should help balance out the forces. Neither the outer hull nor the inner hull would have to handle all the pressure.”

  “What about the instrumentation and the controls?” Kurt asked.

  Joe shrugged. “Not a problem,” he said. “Everything we put inside is waterproofed and designed for a high-pressure environment.”

  “Sounds good,” Kurt said.

  He looked pleased. Joe knew he would be. And so he dropped the bomb.

  “There is one minor problem.”

  Kurt’s gaze narrowed. “What’s that?”

  “Dirk called me before you got here.”

  “And?”

  “He gave me orders not to let you talk me into anything reckless.”

  “Reckless?”

  “He knows us too well,” Joe said, guessing it took one adventurous, even “reckless,” mind to know the workings of another.

  Kurt nodded, smiling a bit. “That he does. On the other hand, ‘reckless’ gives us a lot of leeway.”

  “Sometimes you scare me,” Joe said. “Just putting that on the record.”

  “Draw up the plans,” Kurt said. “The race is in two days. After that, we’re on our own.”

  Joe smiled, liking the challenge. And while he feared the wrath of Dirk Pitt if they lost NUMA’s million-dollar Barracuda, he was pretty certain that he and Kurt had built up enough markers to cover it if they did.

  Besides, if the stories he’d been told were true, Dirk had lost a few of Admiral Sandecker’s more expensive toys over the years. How angry could he really get?

  11

  AS HE STRODE THROUGH THE PASSAGEWAY of the NUMA vessel Matador , Paul Trout had to duck each time he came to a bulkhead and its watertight door. While anyone over six feet had to crouch at the bulkheads or risk a nasty whack of the head, Paul was six-foot-eight in bare feet, with wide shoulders and long limbs. He all but had to contort himself to make it through unscathed.

  An avid fisherman who preferred the outdoors, Paul was simply not designed for the tight quarters found inside a modern vessel. Naturally, he spent much of his time in one ship or another, twisting himself into small machinery-filled compartments, bending his spine like a pretzel to fit into submersibles, or even just walking the inner passageways of the ship.

  On another day he would have detoured outside onto the main deck before walking the length of the ship, but the Matador was currently operating off the Falkland Islands in the South Atlantic. It was winter in the Southern Hemisphere, and both the wind and sea were up already.

  Climbing through another hatch, Paul reached a more spacious compartment. He peered inside. The dimly lit room was quiet, with most of the light coming from glowing dials, backlit keyboards, and a trio of high-definition, flat-screen monitors.

  A pair of scruffy-looking researchers sat in front of the outboard monitors, while in between them, on a plate of backlit glass marked with a grid, stood a shapely woman with hands outstretched as if she were balancing on a tightrope. A visor covered her eyes and held her wine red hair like a band, while strange-looking gauntlets with wires running from them encased her hands. On her feet a set of high-tech boots sprouted wires of their own, all of which ran to a large computer a few feet behind her.

  Paul smiled to himself as he watched his wife, Gamay. She looked like a robotic ballerina. She moved her head to the right, and the picture on the monitors moved similarly, bright lights illuminating a smooth, sediment-covered surface with a jagged hole in what had once been the hull of a British naval vessel.

  “Gentlemen,” she said, “there’s the entry point of the Exocet missile that sank your proud ship.”

  “It doesn’t look all that bad, really,” one of the men said, his English accent as thick as his beard.

  The Sheffield was the first major British casualty of the Falklands War, hit by a French-made missile that didn’t detonate but still ignited fires that raged throughout the ship.

  She survived for six days after the attack before sinking during an attempt to tow her to port.

  “Bloody French,” the other Englishman said. “Probably just getting back at us for Waterloo and Trafalgar.”

  The bearded man laughed. “Actually, they went to great lengths to tell us the weaknesses of these missiles, and that helped us stop them, but I’d have preferred if they’d been a wee bit more cautious about who they sold them to in the first place.”

  He pointed to the opening. “Can you take it inside?”

  “Sure,” Gamay said.

  She moved her right hand and closed her fingers on an invisible control knob. A second later the sediment stirred up a bit, and the camera began to move closer to the gaping wound on the ship’s hull.

  Paul glanced at one of the displays on the wall. In a visual depiction reminiscent of a First Person Shooter video game, he saw what Gamay saw in her visor: a control panel and various gauges measuring depth, pressure, temperature, and both horizontal and vertical orientation.

  He also saw a second screen that displayed a view from several feet behind the vessel she was piloting. Again it looked like a video game on the screen, as a small, almost human-shaped robotic figure moved forward toward the shattered hull plating.

  “Detaching umbilical,” Gamay said.

  Much smaller than a standard ROV, and shaped more like a person than an undersea vessel, the figure was known by the incredibly awkward name Robotic Advanced Person-shaped Underwater Zero-connection Explorer. Because the acronym shortened to RAPUNZE, the test team had taken to calling the little figure Rapunzel. And this moment, when it disconnected from all surface connectivity, was considered Rapunzel “letting down her hair.”

  Under normal circumstances, Rapunzel could release the mile-long umbilical cord that kept her connected to the Matador and operate on her own in environments where cords, wires, and anything else trailing could be a hazard. Powered by batteries that would last three hours untethered, she was propelled by an impeller located in what would have been her belly. Fully gimballed, it could be rotated three hundred sixty degrees in any direction, allowing her to move up, down, sideways, backward, or any combination in between.

  Because she was human shaped, she could bend and move into places a normal ROV could not go. She could even shrink, retracting her arms and legs so that she took up no more space than a beach ball with a light and video camera on top.

  By using the virtual reality setup and force-feedback boots and gloves, the designers made it possible to operate Rapunzel as if a human were down there doing the work herself. It was expected this would be a huge boon to the salvage world, keeping divers out of dangerous wrecks and allowing exploration into wrecks long considered too dangerous or too deep to get at.

  Exploring the Sheffield was to be Rapunzel’s coming-out party, but something was wrong. A red warning light flashed repeatedly on one of the keyboards and also in the virtual cockpit. The umbilical would not disconnect.

  “Let me try this again,” Gamay said, resetting the sequence.

  Paul stepped in quietly. “Don’t mean to interrupt,” he said, “but I’m afraid Rapunzel has to come back home for dinner.”

  “Is that my wonderful husband out there?” Gamay said, still fiddling with imaginary controls.

  “It is. We have a storm brewing up,” Paul explained, his northeastern accent turning the word storm into something that sounded more like “stahm.” “We need to batten down the ship and head north before it turns into a full-blown gale.”

  Gamay’s shoulders slumped a bit. It didn’t matter anyway, the umbilical would not release, and they couldn??
?t send Rapunzel inside the ship with the cords still attached. She pressed some other switches. An icon labeled “Auto Return” popped up on screen, and Gamay’s virtual hand reached out and touched it.

  Rapunzel began to pull away from the Sheffield and then ascend through the depths. The LEDs on Gamay’s gloves and boots went dark. She took off her visor and blinked at Paul. She stepped toward him and almost lost her balance.

  Paul caught her. “You all right?”

  “It’s a little disorienting to come out,” she said. She blinked a few more times as if trying to refocus on the real world, then smiled at him.

  He smiled back, still wondering how he’d been lucky enough to find someone so pretty and perfect for him.

  “How was it?” he asked.

  “Just like being down there,” she said. “Except I’m not wet and cold, and I can go have lunch with you while Rapunzel makes the fifteen-minute journey back up from the bottom.”

  She reached over and kissed him.

  “Umm-hmm,” one of the Englishman coughed.

  “Sorry,” she said, turning back to them. “I’d say Rapunzel is going to be a huge plus for us. We’ll get the bugs worked out while the storm hits and then drop her down and try it again.”

  “Actually,” Paul said, “we won’t. At least, not until October.”

  “Weather getting too rough for you, old boy?” the Englishman asked. “When I was a kid, we’d go through this kind of chop in a motor launch.”

  Paul had no doubt the man was telling the truth—he was a twenty-five-year vet of the RN before he’d retired a decade ago. He’d been on the Sheffield when it had taken that lethal hit.

  “I guess it is,” Paul said, going with the thought. “We’re heading north. Once we’re through the storm, a helicopter will be coming in to pick you guys up. I guess it’s back to England from there. I’ll be sure they have tea on board.”

  “Ha,” the bearded man said. “Very good of you.”

  The two Englishmen stood. “I guess we saw what we came to see. Would love an invite when you come back.”

  “Of course,” Gamay said. They shook her hand and moved off, making their way down the hall far more easily than Paul had come up minutes before.