“Bermuda Triangle Gate,” Foreman said. “The Bermuda Triangle.”
“It is activating once more,” she said, a statement, not a question.
Foreman nodded. More paper was coming out of the machine. Foreman looked at each piece, then at her. “We've got disturbances at eight of the Gates. Not an open Gate yet at any of them, but give it more time at the rate it's going and they are going to open. Two near the States. Some near populated areas.”
“How can that be happening?” she asked.
“I don't know, but we have to find out.”
“You might wish to inform your Mister Bancroft,” Sin Fen said.
“I will. I think we have his attention now. Or rather I should say that Angkor Gate has his attention now.”
“What will you do about those other places?” she asked.
“My primary concern is Bermuda Triangle Gate near Miami. I’ll move some forces near the area to be ready, but since we really don’t know what we’re facing, it’s difficult to know exactly what our response should be. I’m hoping we can get some of those answers out of Angkor Gate.”
“What about the Devil’s Sea Gate?” Sin Fen asked. “How are the Japanese reacting?”
“Intelligence reports indicate the Japanese are dispatching several submarines and ships to the area to stand by. I’ve been in contact with Professor Nagoya and we are prepared to exchange any information we acquire.”
“The Russians?”
“They are monitoring their two known Gates. At Chernobyl, naturally, they can only work remotely. And at Lake Baikal they are deploying their on-site survey team. I am in contact with them also but I think they will be less forthcoming than Nagoya if they discover anything.” Foreman grimaced. “The old ways die hard. There are too many suspicions and by the time we work together, it might be too late.” The woman turned to go, but he spoke again. “Sin Fen.”
She paused, her body still, only her head turning so that she could see him out of the corner of her eye. “Yes, Mister Foreman?”
“Stay close to them.”
“Yes, Mister Foreman.”
He held up the papers. “There’s not much time.”
“No, Mister Foreman, there is not.”
“Sin Fen,” he said once more halting her. “I think this is the beginning of mankind's worst nightmares and we are the only ones who know it.”
Sin Fen nodded. “But remember, too, how little we know.”
“That is what really frightens me.”
CHAPTER SEVEN
“Any idea who the spy is?” Ariana asked in a low voice. Ingram had been deciphering data for over an hour.
“No,” he said. “Once it hits the GPS satellite, the signal goes everywhere. Anyone with a GPR anywhere on the planet can receive it if they know what to look for.”
“What about the message? Wouldn't that make our data accessible to everyone?”
“Like I said, someone's got to look for the piggyback. And then the data's encoded. It would be gibberish to anyone else who doesn't know the code or the original data to match against the code. That's the only way I was able to figure it out. It's a really smart method.”
“Any ideas?”
“Most likely Hie-Tech,” Ingram said. “They've got the technology and they've got the money to get access to the GPS transmitter.”
“Great,” Ariana muttered. “Just what we need. Could Hie-Tech have sabotaged the flight?”
Ingram shook his head. “That wouldn't be too smart if they had a spy on board. I'd assume they'd want their spy back. Plus they have nothing to gain by sabotaging us this way. They would want the data as much as we did. Remember, we went down before we were directly over the target area.” He held up a disk. “We got maybe twenty-five percent of what we wanted.”
Ariana took the disk and slipped it into the vest pocket of her shirt. “Maybe the spy screwed up. Hie-Tech wanted the data but they wouldn’t want us to get the data. Maybe the spy cut it too close.”
They both looked down the body of the plane at the other members at their stations, illuminated by the dim red glow of the emergency lights, the glare of their computer screens and the golden glow emanating from the vicinity of Argus’s mainframe.
“The spy could be dead,” Ingram noted.
“Could be, but we don't know,” Ariana replied. “Any idea who'd have the expertise to do this type of messaging and encoding on our end?”
“Anyone with the proper training,” Ingram said. “And anyone who has access to the main computer could have put the message in.”
“Damn,” Ariana muttered. “That’s everyone.”
“They must have paid someone off at the NSA to get their messages piggybacked on the GPS signal,” Ingram noted.
“They could afford it,” Ariana said. “We paid forty million for this gear and several million in bribes to get it here. They could afford to spend quite a bit to steal our data after we do all the work.”
“Don't you think we have bigger problems right now,” Ingram gently suggested, looking back where Carpenter was watching the golden beam infiltrate more of Argus's hardware, “than figuring out who the spy is?”
Ariana didn't say anything in reply, which was her only acknowledgment that he was right. She would deal with the spy issue once they were out of here.
“Do you have any clue what that could be?” she asked Ingram, pointing back at Argus.
He sighed. “Based on what I can see it seems to be pure energy in the form of an atomic laser.”
“Atomic laser?” Ariana asked.
“An optical laser operates by emitting photons, which have no mass and move at the speed of light,” Ingram explained. “An atomic lasers emits atoms, which not only have mass, but also have a wavelike nature. I know that there are some people who have been experimenting with such things as part of a super-computing system, but nothing I've heard of is beyond the theory stage.”
“That's no theory back there,” Ariana said.
Ingram rubbed his forehead. “The problem with developing an atomic laser has always been that you have to super-cool the atoms so they will act in a coherent manner by entering a collective quantum state.”
“How can someone here in the middle of Cambodia be able to super-cool atoms?” Ariana asked.
“I don’t know,” Ingram said. “There’s only two labs in the States that have the equipment to do it. And it’s not exactly transportable.”
“What advantage does the atomic laser have over an optical one?” Ariana asked.
Ingram shrugged. “I don't know exactly. The possibilities are limitless; from super-computing like I said, to who knows what.”
“You think it's hooked in to Argus for a purpose?”
“I'm sure it is,” Ingram said. “The way that beam is spreading through the computer's hardware is not random.”
“Why?”
“That's the key question along with who,” Ingram agreed.
“Why would someone who had an atomic laser be wasting their time with Argus?” Ariana asked out loud. “For our data? But as you said we didn't even have a chance to gather much before we went down.”
“Same problem our spy has,” Ingram noted. He ran a hand through his thinning hair. “I'm not too sure that this is about our survey. I think it's something else entirely.”
“Like what?”
“I-”
“Don’t know,” Ariana finished for him. “Go through what we do have and try to get me some ideas.”
“All right.”
Ariana went forward to Hudson's commo area. “Anything?”
Hudson looked tired. Between the stress and his injuries, he was wearing down. “Remember we picked up a transmission just before we crashed?”
Ariana nodded.
Hudson flipped a switch. “Here it is:”
There was loud hiss of static, a voice coming in brokenly. “This… Romeo… Verify… Not. Kansas… more… Prairie.. Repeat… Fire.”
“
It was low on the FM band,” Hudson said. “That part of the spectrum is usually reserved for the military.”
“Any idea what it means?”
“None. It's too broken to make much sense of.”
“Anything else?” Ariana asked.
“I've got my computer scanning the FM waveband. I think the radio is working, but we're not picking up anything. You'd think if there were search teams in the air they'd have zeroed in on our last reported location and they'd be broadcasting. We've been down over twenty hours now.”
Hudson had raised a point that was weighing heavily on her mind. A chopper out of Phnom Penh could have reached their position in a couple of hours. She was sure her father knew the plane was down. The lack of any indication of a search party could mean any of several things, none of which were good.
“All right. Keep monitoring,” Ariana said, then went back to the others in the main console area.
“Any indication what caused us to crash?” she asked Ingram upon reentering the console area.
He had some papers in his hand. “As far as I can tell from the data, we experienced a cascade of systems failures just before we went down. I can give you the exact order that things failed, but basically all equipment that operated in the electromagnetic spectrum failed in rapid succession. Why, I have no clue, except that there must have been some sort of massive interference.” He walked over to a table holding a chart. “I do have our last plotted position before the GPR went down.”
Ariana walked over, along with the others, and stared at the map sheet pinned to the table. Ingram placed his finger on the map. “This is the last plot point. The main computer went off-line five seconds after that plot. I estimate, as best as I can from memory, that we crashed less than thirty seconds after that. The back-up computer also gave me our last heading.” He picked up a pencil and drew a short line. “I think this is where we are. Somewhere in here.”
“Damn,” Mansor exclaimed. “Look at that terrain! There's no way the plane could have come down intact in those hills and jungle.”
“Maybe the pilots found a landing strip?” Daley suggested.
“Where?” Mansor asked. He ran his hand across the chart. “There isn't even a town within a hundred kilometers of this location, never mind a landing strip. We should be scattered across the country-side in tiny little pieces.”
“But we did get down relatively intact,” Ariana noted. “How?”
“I'd have to go outside and take a look,” Mansor said.
“No way!” Herrin exclaimed. “There's something out there.” The old man looked around at the other with wild eyes. “Can't you feel it? Something is out there waiting for us. Something that's into Argus now. It's finding out information about us. If you go out there it will get you like it got Craight!”
“We’re blind in here,” Mansor argued. “I want to know what is going on outside.”
“I think the time has come to at least-” Ariana began, but Hudson's voice suddenly came over the intercom.
“We're getting something on FM!”
The other six on board all rushed forward toward Hudson's position. The commo man had pulled on a set of headphones as he worked the controls on one of his radio sets. “It's Morse,” he said in a hushed tone as he strained to listen, his right hand writing out dashes and dots with a pencil, as the others crowded into the small area.
His left hand was fumbling through a cabinet drawer underneath his console. He pulled out a strange device, which he snapped down high on his thigh, above his wound. His rested his left hand on top and began tapping out a reply.
They waited for almost a minute before Hudson took off the headphones and the knee key. “It's gone now.”
“What did they say?” Ariana asked. “Who was it?”
“I don't know yet,” Hudson said. “I've got to decipher the Morse. I haven't done that in a long time.”
“What did you send in return then if you didn't what the message was or who was sending it?” Ariana asked.
“I sent an international SOS. But I don't think it was acknowledged. The message I was picking up just kept recycling then cut out.”
Ariana pointed at the pad. “What does it say?”
Hudson had been printing in large block letters. He checked the message once, then held up the pad of paper:
L-E-A-V-E-O-R-D-I-E-T-W-E-L–V-E-H-O-U-R-S-L-E-A-V-E-O-R-D-I-E-T-W-E-L–V-E-H-O-U-R-S
“That's the entire message. It kept repeating those letters,” Hudson said.
“Leave or die, twelve hours,” Ariana read, unconsciously checking her watch, which wasn't working.
“Doesn't sound very friendly,” Ingram offered.
“Who sent this?” Ariana asked.
“Your guess is as good as mine,” Hudson said.
“Could it have been the same guy who made that radio transmission we picked up before we crashed?” Ariana asked.
“Maybe,” Hudson said. “He might be sending in Morse now because it has greater range than voice and uses less power.”
Ariana read it once more. “The important question is: Was that message directed at us?”
“I'd say so,” Hudson said. “There's no one else on the radio in this area.”
Ariana looked at the skin of the aircraft. “We're going to have to find out what's going on and make our own help. It's been too long since we crashed. We can't just stay in here and hope someone stumbles across us.”
She didn't add her fear that whoever had sent the message knew something they didn't and that the aircraft gave them a false sense of security. Whatever had ripped open the cockpit could rip through the side of the plane just as easily. And then there was the golden beam feeding into Argus. She had no idea what it was or why it was doing what it was doing, but she had a very strong feeling that it wasn’t a good thing. Ariana’s analytical mind had too much data that she didn’t understand and she was willing to go with her gut instincts.
“All right,” Ariana said. She looked at each person, catching their eye for a few seconds, then moving to the next one. “What we’re going to-”
Suddenly there was a hissing noise on the left side of the plane. Everyone spun about. A small hole, about two inches in diameter suddenly appeared at about knee level and a beam of bright gold light crossed the console area, touched the edge of a computer desk, slicing through it, then hit the far side of the plane, hissed for a second, then was through. The beam remained in the air, like a bar, crossing the compartment.
Herrin scurried behind a console, putting it between him and the light. “They're coming in for us!”
“Calm down!” Ariana yelled. After a few moments to see if anything else would happen, she walked up to the beam. She'd seen top of the line lasers but, like the other golden beam, this was something different. Every few seconds she thought she could detect a change to the flow in the beam, but it was hard to be sure.
“Another atomic laser?” Ariana asked as Ingram came up next to her.
“Probably, but I couldn't tell you what the other one is so I don't know for sure,” Ingram said. “Anyone have any idea what this is?”
Carpenter took a piece of paper and slid it down into the beam. The paper was neatly cut where the beam touched, the material disappearing. “I don't know, but whatever it is, I wouldn't want to step into it.”
“Maybe it's a rescue team, trying to get in?” Daley offered.
Mansor snorted. “It would be a lot easier for them to just open the hatch,” he said, pointing to the emergency door above the wing. “Or knock on the door.”
“I think-” Ariana began when the slithering noise they'd heard earlier when Craight had been taken suddenly filled the cabin, as if something incredibly large was sliding across the top of the plane.
As Ariana watched, the gold light faded somewhat for a couple of seconds, then suddenly there was a noise that tore through her skull. It was a high-pitched squeal but of tremendous volume as if the very air were being ripped at se
veral different frequencies.
The noise was gone after three seconds to be followed by another hissing noise. “Watch out!” Ariana yelled, but it was too late.
A gold beam punched through the top left corner of the console area and caught Daley in the upper left chest. Flesh slowed it not the slightest as the beam came out his lower right back and pierced through the skin of the aircraft on the forward right side of the console area.
Daley's eyes were wide with shock, then he screamed as he toppled over, the beam slicing flesh as easily as the paper had been cut. He was dead and the scream silenced before he hit the floor in two pieces.
“Everyone freeze!” Ariana ordered.
The interior of the plane was silent. Eyes turned toward the left side of the plane, waiting for another hole to be punched. After a minute, Ariana slowly walked over to Daley's body. She draped a cloth over it, avoiding the gold beam.
There was a long period of silence as everyone watched Daly’s blood soak through the cloth.
Ariana fixed Hudson with her gaze across the light. “Will the SATCOM radio work if we reconnect the cable to the dish?”
“It should,” Hudson said.
“I'll do it,” Peter Mansor said.
“You're crazy!” Herrin yelled. “Did you hear that thing that went across us? Don't you think they can get you with the light beam if you go outside?”
Mansor ignored him. “Where does the cable run?”
“Come to my area and I'll show you,” Hudson said.
By moving to the left side of the plane and ducking, they were able to get under the beam and go forward.
Hudson reached into a drawer and pulled out a binder. “It's not as bad as you think,” he said. “There's a chance the cable's failed before it goes up to the rotodome. That means it's cut along the access corridor in the inside top of the plane. You might not have to go outside at all.”
“Luck doesn't seem to be coming in bunches here,” Mansor noted.
“Hey, we're alive,” Ariana countered, aware that the others were listening. “We should have died in the crash, but for some reason we didn’t. So let's keep a positive attitude. We get the SATCOM working, we can get a hold of my father and he'll get us out of here, no matter what it takes.”
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