The large force now escaping from the trucks would home in on the signal and accelerate the process rapidly. In six hours a trickle of water would appear on the far side of the dam near the top. That trickle would scour out a channel, and the erosion that followed would quickly turn the flow into a torrent.
The first stage of the disaster would follow as the waters of Lake Nasser flooded over the top, widening the channel in an unstoppable flow, wreaking havoc on the Nile Valley below, but that was just the prelude.
The second tunnel, far deeper in the dam, would destabilize the core, scouring out a tunnel in the heart of the structure. Eventually it would give way and a huge V-shaped section would collapse backward all at once. The flood would become a tsunami.
In a way, General Aziz had done them a favor. Between the message about to be sent at Aswan and the actions Jinn was taking in the Indian Ocean, Sabah doubted any nation of the world would refuse their demands or dare to threaten them.
Would the Americans be willing to see the Hoover Dam crumble, Las Vegas flooded off the map and their southwestern states deprived of power and water at the same time? Would China allow the Three Gorges Dam a similar fate? Sabah thought not.
He flung the remote into the lake and began walking away. A half mile off, a camel waited for him. He would climb on, pull the kaffiyeh around his face and disappear into the desert like the Bedouin had done for a thousand years or more.
CHAPTER 47
KURT AUSTIN AWOKE IN A QUONSET HUT SEVERAL HOURS after being made a prisoner on Pickett’s Island. Imprisoned, exhausted and thinking he would need the rest later, Kurt had lain down on the floor almost as soon as they’d been locked up. He’d fallen asleep in moments. Upon waking, he was upset to find the whole thing hadn’t been a dream.
The men in fatigues dragged him from the hut to another hidden beneath the trees. Inside he found a distinctly military setting that seemed like a tribunal of some kind. Leilani and Ishmael stood beside him.
From behind a desk at the end of the hut another islander of Aboriginal and Polynesian appearance stood and was presiding over the hearing as one of the judges. He was taller and leaner than the man who’d found them on the beach and a fair bit older, Kurt thought. He had a tousle of gray in his black hair.
“I am the eighteenth Roosevelt of Pickett’s Island,” the man said.
“The eighteenth Roosevelt?” Kurt repeated.
“That is correct,” the judge said. “And who am I addressing? You will state your names for the record.”
“I’m the first Kurt Austin of the United States of America,” Kurt said. “At least the first one I know of.”
The judges and the others around them took a collective breath, and Kurt tried to make sense of what he was seeing and hearing.
On the march from the beach to the huts hidden in the trees they’d encountered fortifications, trenches, emplacements of heavy machine guns and then an area of ramshackle buildings, including the old Quonset huts with roofs patched and repaired with thatch and woven palm fronds.
Men in green Army fatigues stood around them. Their uniforms were in no better shape than the huts. In fact, some of them looked like badly sewn replicas. The M1 rifles they carried looked authentic enough, Kurt had several in his collection at home, but they hadn’t been used by any soldiers he knew of since the Korean War.
Beside him, Leilani gave her name, as did Ishmael. Neither did so in the manner Kurt had. Nor did they list their countries of origin.
The eighteenth Roosevelt spoke again. “You are charged with trespassing, possession of weapons and espionage. You will be held as enemy combatants and prisoners of war. Tell us how you plead.”
“Plead?” Leilani blurted out.
“Yes,” the judge said. “Are you members of the Axis forces or not?”
Leilani tugged on Kurt’s sleeve. “What’s going on? What are they talking about?”
Kurt felt like he was playing catch-up. An idea began to form in his head.
“I think this is a cargo cult,” he whispered.
“A what?”
“In the Pacific, during World War Two, islands with tribal societies were suddenly caught in the middle of the largest war ever fought. Any island of strategic value was claimed and used for one purpose or another, often times for storage of supplies that came off ships in endless quantities. Stuff the soldiers and sailors called cargo.”
He nodded at the soldiers surrounding them. “For the people in the tribal societies the sudden appearance of men from the sky or out of great ships from the sea, bringing what seemed like endless amounts of food and manufactured goods, it was like the arrival of minor gods.”
“You have to be kidding me,” she said.
“I’m not. To garner the support of those on the islands, a great deal of stuff got handed over to the islanders like manna from heaven. But when the war ended and the soldiers left, it was a huge shock. No more stuff. No more cargo coming off the ships and planes. No more big silver birds dropping out of the sky.
“In most places life went back to normal, but on some islands the tribes started looking for ways to encourage the return of the soldiers and their cargo. They became known as cargo cults.”
A second judge, who seemed lower in the pecking order than the eighteenth Roosevelt, grew impatient with Kurt’s whispering.
“The defendants will answer!” he demanded.
“We’re discussing our plea,” Kurt replied.
Kurt finished his explanation. “One common practice was mimicking what they’d seen on the American bases. Some of the cults were known to drill like soldiers in boot camp. Dressing like these guys. Carrying fake guns carved from wood. They did morning reveille, had flag-raising ceremonies, they even had ranks and medals and military-style burials. The most famous group I can recall was the John Frum cult on Vanuatu. Rumor had it, the cult got its name because the Americans would introduce themselves by saying, ‘Hi, I’m John from so-and-so.’ So the cult named themselves the John Frummers.”
“That’s just great,” Leilani said sarcastically, “but we’re not in the Pacific. And these guys aren’t carrying fake wooden guns.”
“No,” Kurt said. “Something’s different here.”
He noticed other items around the room. Charts lay spread across a desk, a compass, a barometer and a sextant were nearby. He spotted an antique gray life vest and a pair of dog tags in a spot of honor on the eighteenth Roosevelt’s desk. A faded Yankees baseball cap that had to be seventy years old sat nearby.
“The time for discussion is ended,” the eighteenth Roosevelt said. “You will make your plea or we will enter one for you.”
“Not guilty,” Kurt said. “We’re Americans like you. Well, at least two of us are.”
The judges looked them over. “How can you prove it?” one of them said. “She could be a Japanese spy.”
The statement riled Leilani. “How dare you call me a spy! Even if I was part Japanese, there’s nothing wrong with that.”
“Are you?”
“No. I’m an American, from the state of Hawaii.”
“She means the territory of Hawaii,” Kurt interjected.
“No, I don’t.”
“Yes, you do,” Kurt insisted. “It didn’t become a state until ’fifty-nine!”
Leilani gazed at him with big chestnut-colored eyes. There was trust in that gaze, along with hope and confusion.
“Just let me do the talking,” Kurt whispered, and then turned back to the first judge. “What she means is, she grew up near Pearl Harbor. She’s been there many times to visit the Arizona memorial and pay respects to those who died on December seventh.”
The judge seemed to accept this. “And what about you?” he asked Kurt.
“I work for the National Underwater and Marine Agency. Which is an ocean research section of the U.S. government. It was founded by Admiral James Sandecker.”
“Sandecker?” the second judge said.
“Never hea
rd of him,” a third judge said.
“He’s a real admiral,” Kurt insisted. “He’s a good friend of mine. I’ve been to his house many times. He’s now the Vice President of the United States.”
The judges’ collective eyebrows went up. “The Vice President is a good friend of yours?” one of them asked.
The others started to laugh.
The eighteenth Roosevelt shook his head. “It does not seem possible that the new Harry Truman would be a friend of such a dirty-looking man.”
Kurt considered his appearance. He was battered and bruised with four days of stubble on his face. The stolen uniform fit a little large and was torn in places. At the moment he was just thankful not to be sparkling.
“You’re not exactly seeing me at my best,” he said.
Leilani leaned close. “The new Harry Truman?”
“I have a feeling they’ve mixed up names and titles,” Kurt said. “Whoever came here must have told them the leader of the country was Roosevelt, the Vice President was Truman.”
“Is that why this guy is the eighteenth Roosevelt of Pickett’s Island?”
“I think so.”
“I feel like I’m in the twilight zone,” Leilani said.
So did Kurt. But he figured there were some advantages to the setup, and with his friend’s lives still hanging in the balance, he had no choice but to take advantage of them.
“What I’ve said is true,” Kurt insisted. “And I’m here on Pickett’s Island, looking as I do, because I’ve just escaped the grasp of some enemies of the United States.”
The men seemed impressed and began to whisper among themselves.
“How can we be sure he’s an American?” the second judge said.
“He looks a lot like Pickett,” the eighteenth Roosevelt said.
“He could be German. His name is Kurt.”
The eighteenth Roosevelt seemed to take this as a fair question, he turned to Austin. “You must prove it to us.”
“Tell me how?”
“I will ask you some questions,” he said. “If you answer as an American would, we will believe your story. If you speak wrongly, you will be held guilty.”
“Go ahead,” Kurt said confidently, “ask away.”
“What is the capital of New York State?” the judge asked.
“Albany,” Kurt said.
“Very good. But that was an easy one.”
“So ask a harder one.”
The judge knitted his dark brows together, squinting at Kurt, before asking the next question. “What is meant by the term the pitcher balked?”
Kurt was surprised. He’d expected another geography question or a history question, but in retrospect it made sense. History and geography were easy to learn, obscure rules of national sports were not. As it happened, Kurt had played baseball all his young life.
“A balk occurs many different ways,” he said, “but usually it’s when the pitcher doesn’t come to a complete stop before throwing the pitch to home base.”
The judges nodded in unison.
“Correct,” one said.
“Yes, yes,” another said, still nodding.
“Third question: Who was the sixteenth Roosevelt of the United States?”
Kurt assumed he meant the sixteenth President. “Abraham Lincoln.”
“And where was he born?”
Another good question, Lincoln so widely known as being from Illinois that most assumed he was born there. “Lincoln was born in Kentucky,” Kurt replied. “In a cabin made of logs.”
The judges nodded to one another. It seemed he was making progress.
“I feel like we’re on a bad game show,” Leilani mumbled.
“Too bad we don’t get any lifelines,” Kurt said, “I’d love to make a call right about now.”
“One more question,” the eighteenth Roosevelt said. “Tell us what is meant by The House That Ruth Built?”
Kurt smiled. His eyes fell on the old-style Yankees cap. Someone who’d influenced these men had loved baseball and had obviously been from New York.
“The House That Ruth Built is Yankee Stadium. It’s in the Bronx,” he said, and then added, to the judges hearty approval, “It was named for Babe Ruth, the greatest baseball player of all time.”
“He is correct,” the eighteenth Roosevelt said excitedly. “Only a true American would know these things.”
“Yes, yes,” the others agreed. “Now, what about the woman?”
“She’s with me,” Kurt said.
“And the man?”
Kurt hesitated. “He’s my prisoner.”
“Then he will be our prisoner,” one of the judges said.
“Our first prisoner,” the eighteenth Roosevelt proclaimed to the great excitement of those around the room. “Take him away.”
Ishmael looked shocked as two men with carbines rushed forward and grabbed him.
“He must be treated according to the Geneva convention,” Kurt said sternly.
“Yes, of course. He will be cared for. But he will be guarded night and day. We have never lost a prisoner on Pickett’s Island. Then again, we have never had one before. He will not escape.”
Without a chance to defend himself, Ishmael was dragged off. Kurt figured he would be okay. As the room emptied around him, he approached the bench.
The eighteenth Roosevelt extended a hand. “My apologies for your treatment,” he said. “I had to be sure.”
Kurt shook the hand. “Understandable,” he said. “May I ask your name?”
“I’m Tautog,” the judge said.
“And you’re the eighteenth Roosevelt of the island,” Kurt confirmed.
“Yes,” Tautog said. “Every four years, a new leader is chosen. I am the eighteenth. I have served for two years, defending the island and the Constitution of the United States of America.”
Kurt calculated backward. If each term lasted four years and Tautog had only served for two, that meant the first Roosevelt was chosen seventy years ago, in 1942.
World War Two. These islanders had come into contact with someone during World War Two and been turned into a small fighting force. It seemed like no one had bothered to tell them the war was over.
Kurt’s eyes traveled over the nautical equipment and the life vest. A faded name on it was impossible to read. “A ship landed here?” he said.
“Yes,” Tautog said. “A great ship of fire and steel. The S.S. John Bury.”
“What happened to it?” Kurt asked.
“The keel is buried in the sand on the east side of the island. The rest we took apart and used to build shelters and defenses.”
“Defenses?” Leilani asked. “Against what?”
“Against the Imperial Japanese Navy and the banzai charge,” Tautog said as if it were obvious.
Kurt caught her before she spoke. Tautog and his fellow islanders were extremely isolated and not just geographically. He didn’t know how they would respond to hearing that the war they and their fathers and their grandfathers had been hunkering down to fight had been over for six and a half decades.
“Who trained you?” Kurt asked.
“Captain Pickett and Sergeant First Class Arthur Watkins of the United States Marine Corps. They taught us the drills, how to fight, how to hide, how to spot the enemy.”
“Who was the Yankees fan?” Kurt asked.
“Captain Pickett loved the Yankees. He called them the Bronx Bombers.”
Kurt nodded. “And what happened when they left?”
Tautog looked as if he didn’t understand the question. “They did not leave,” he said. “Both men are buried here along with their crew.”
“They died here?”
“Captain Pickett died from his injuries eight months after the John Bury ran aground. The sergeant was badly injured as well. He could not walk, but he survived for eleven months and taught us how to fight.”
Kurt found the story amazing and intriguing. He’d never heard of a cargo cult where the Americans had
stayed behind. He only wished he could reach St. Julien Perlmutter and access his extensive history of naval warfare. The cargo ship had to be listed somewhere, probably labeled missing and presumed sunk, just another footnote to the huge war.
“I don’t understand,” Leilani said. “Why would you need to fight? I understand about the war and the Japanese, but this island is so small. It’s so far out of the way. I don’t think the Japanese were—I mean are—interested in taking it over.”
“It is not the island itself that we protect,” Tautog said. “It is the machine Captain Pickett entrusted to us.”
Kurt’s eyebrows went up. “The machine?”
“Yes,” Tautog said. “The great machine. The Pain Maker.”
CHAPTER 48
KURT AUSTIN HAD NO IDEA WHAT THE PAIN MAKER WAS, but with a name like that he had to find out. But first he had to deal with being a celebrity.
In a far cry from their initial reception, he and Leilani had become honored guests on Pickett’s Island. The fact that he was their first American visitor in seventy years was one thing, the fact that he knew the current Harry Truman had the tribesmen in their military fatigues treating him like MacArthur returning to the Philippines.
After giving Leilani and him fresh water to drink and allowing them to shower and change into fatigues like the other islanders wore, the men of Pickett’s Island treated them to a meal of fresh-caught fish along with mangoes, bananas and coconut milk from the trees that grew in abundance on the island.
While they ate, Tautog and three others regaled them with stories, explaining how all that they had and all that they knew had come from Captain Pickett and Sergeant Watkins. They didn’t say it in so many words, but it seemed like Pickett and Watkins had created their civilization out of thin air and were regarded almost like mythical spirits.
With dinner finished, Kurt and Leilani were taken on a tour of the island.
Kurt saw remarkable ingenuity in the setup. Structures built of rusting steel plate hid everywhere among the trees. Trenches and tunnels linked the supply-filled cave, lookout posts and areas with cisterns dug to catch rainwater. He saw material from every part of the ship in use somewhere: old boilers, piping and steel beams. Even the John Bury’s bell had been moved to a high point on the island where it could be rung to warn others of an emergency or in case of attack by the Japanese.
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