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Loch, The

Page 40

by Steve Alten


  As we approached the top of the shaft, the light from the study shone on my face.

  Angus noticed my perturbed expression. “Wis there another loose end ye needed tyin’?”

  “Just one. You knew Johnny C. had been bribing the local EPA officials, just like you knew it was the dynamiting at his resort that was driving the creature mad.”

  “So?”

  “So, the Sargasso Sea incident happened back in January, which means you knew about my night terrors a good month before you confronted Cialino at Urquhart Castle.”

  “Whit’s yer point?”

  “Was it really an accident, or did you condition the monster with bait so it would be in the bay the evening you struck Johnny C.?”

  “Condition the monster? Whit a clever idea. Wish I’d thought o’ that.” He gave me a wink, then stepped off the dumbwaiter into the fireplace where Brandy was waiting. “He’s a’ yours, lass. See if ye can get him tae relax a bit an’ start enjoyin’ his life. The laddie thinks way too much.”

  He waved, then strolled out the front door to the castle driveway, where Theresa Cialino was waiting for him in her Porsche.

  Epilogue Quotes

  « ^ »

  It follows that any being, if it vary however slightly in any manner profitable to itself, under the complex and sometimes varying conditions of life, will have a better chance of surviving, and thus be Naturally Selected.

  —CHARLES DARWIN, THE ORIGIN OF SPECIES, 1859

  Evolution is not “of a very mystical nature.” It depends on accidents. In numerous species these accidents happen often enough to give rise to statistical certainty.

  —J. B. S. HALDANE, A DIALECTICAL ACCOUNT OF EVOLUTION, 1937

  Science is not “show and tell.” As researchers, we should never base our conclusions on the iceberg’s visible tip, nor on man’s limited ability to access Nature. If an undiscovered species exists and we have yet to see it, it still exists. For her part, Nature has done her best to keep us away from her depths, be this the cold, peat-infested abyss of Loch Ness or the uncharted waters of the Mariana Trench. Only after we create the means of access shall the mysteries be unraveled. Until then, any conclusions we draw remain unproven.

  —ZACHARY WALLACE, MARINE BIOLOGIST

  LOCH NESS: A NEW THEORY, SCRIPPS, 1999, (UNPUBLISHED)

  Epilogue

  « ^ »

  Sargasso Sea

  Five months later

  AND SO MY TALE ENDS, only now I’ve come full circle, returning once more to this dreadful Sargasso Sea. Brandy’s with me this time, and yes, we’re married, with a child on the way.

  The night terrors? A distant memory.

  Brandy and I stood together on deck, hand in hand, as the crew of the research vessel, Manhattanville, lowered our remotely operated vehicle over the side. On-board the unmanned submersible were cameras, sonar, and my latest lure, one inspired by a long-forgotten childhood memory.

  National Geographic’s cameras were rolling, documenting what we hoped would be the first live shots of a species I had dubbed, Anguilla giganticusnessensis.

  Never shy around a camera, Brandy flashed them her swollen belly, causing me to laugh.

  I laugh a lot these days.

  An hour later, the last purple blemish of sun crept below the western horizon, just as the ROV arrived at its preprogrammed depth of ten thousand feet. From my master controls I switched the robot’s lights from white to red before engaging my “Nessie lure.”

  The sounds of feeding schools of salmon pumped throughout the deep.

  Twenty-seven minutes later, sonar registered our first incoming signal.

  “It’s a biologic,” called out John Beardon, our master technician. “Range just over two kilometers. Speed at seventeen knots. Whatever they are, they’re closing fast.”

  “Put ‘em on speaker,” I said.

  Blee-bloop ... Blee-bloop ... Blee-bloop ... Blee-bloop ...

  Moments later they arrived—five of them in all, juveniles, each still over twenty feet. Their yellow eyes appeared orange and lumines­cent in the ROV’s red lights as they circled the robot, their serpentlike bodies moving gracefully and in sync with one another.

  “Standing by with the transmitter dart,” I said for the sake of the camera crew.

  Brandy pointed out one of the larger animals on the monitor, probably a female. I waited until she circled closer, took aim, then, using the control stick in my right hand, shot her with the homing dart.

  The big female barely noticed.

  The creatures circled the robot for several more minutes, then left. None ever attacked the lure.

  Cody Saults, the documentary director from our first adven­ture, approached to hound me with more of his questions. “Congratulations, Dr. Wallace, you’ve done it again. How soon before we know if these creatures will migrate back into Loch Ness?”

  “Could be next spring, could be never. Just because the passage’s been reopened guarantees nothing. Our hope is that the homing device will allow us to track the creatures and learn more about their species.”

  “And the monster you faced last August? How big did you say she—”

  “I think that’s enough left-brain thinkin’ for one day,” interrupted Brandy. “The good doctor’s promised tae rub my achin’ back. Did ye know babies are born wi’out kneecaps?”

  “Uh, right. Just one last question! Do you ever see a day when the paying public will be able to descend in cages and observe these magnificent monsters in the wild?”

  “You know,” I said, allowing Brandy to lead me below, “that’s a question you really ought to ask my dad.”

  Notes on Loch Ness

  « ^ »

  For updates about ongoing research at Loch Ness, educational links and tours, movie previews, and to enter a Reader Contest to win an all-expense paid vacation to Scotland go to: www.TheLoch.com

  To learn more about the Scottish Highlands, see photos, or to plan a vacation, we recommend these sites: www.VisitScotland.com and www.ToScotland.com

  CairnGorm Mountain Railway, by Aviemore

  Web: www.cairngormmountain.com

  Email: info@cairngormmountain.com

  Speyside Wildlife, by Aviemore

  Web: www.speysidewildlife.co.uk

  Email: enquiries@speysidewildlife.co.uk

  Highland Wildlife Park, Kincraig

  Web: www.highlandwildlifepark.org

  Email: info@highlandwildlifepark.org

  Loch Ness 2000 Exhibition Centre, Drumnadrochit

  Web: www.loch-ness-scotland.com

  Email: info@loch-ness-scotland.com

  National Trust for Scotland (Culloden Battlefield and Inverewe Garden)

  Web: www.nts.org.uk

  Email: information@nts.org.uk

  Jacobite Cruises, Inverness

  Web: www.jacobite.co.uk

  Email: info@jacobite.co.uk

  Discover Loch Ness, Inverness & Loch Ness

  Web: www.discoverlochness.com

  Email: tony@harmsworth.com

  Scottish Clans and Castles Ltd, Nairn

  Web: www.clansandcastles.com

  Email: alastair@clansandcastles.com

  The Castle & Gardens of Mey, nr Thurso

  Web: www.castleofmey.org.uk

  Email: castleofmey@totalise.co.uk

  Hotels

  Drumnadrochit Hotel, Drumnadrochit

  Web: www.loch-ness-scotland.com

  Email: info@loch-ness-scotland.com

  Loch Ness Lodge Hotels Ltd, Drumnadrochit

  Web: www.lochness-hotel.com

  Email: info@lochness-hotel.com

  The Boat Hotel, Boat of Garten

  Web: www.boathotel.co.uk

  Email: holidays@boathotel.co.uk

  The Waterside, Inverness

  Web: www.thewatersideinverness.com

  Email: info@thewatersideinverness.com

  Muckrach Lodge, Dulnain Bridge

  Web: www.muckrach.co.uk

  Email:
info@muckrach.co.uk

  Claymore House Hotel, Nairn

  Web: www.claymorehousehotel.com

  Email: claymorehousehotel.com

  The Columba Hotel, Inverness

  Web: www.crerarhotels.com

  Email: thecolumba@crerarhotels.com

  Rental Car

  Sharps Reliable Wrecks, Inverness

  Web: www.sharpsreliablewrecks.co.uk

  Email: enquiries@sharpsreliablewrecks.co.uk

  Attention Secondary School Teachers

  « ^ »

  The Loch is part of Adopt-An-Author, an innovative nationwide Non-Profit Program gaining attention among educators for its success in motivating tens of thousands of reluctant secondary school students to read. The program combines fast-paced thrillers and motivational nonfiction stories with an interactive website AND direct contact with the author. All teachers receive curriculum materials and posters for their classrooms. The program is FREE to all secondary school teachers and librarians.

  For more information and to register for Adopt-An-Author,

  go to www.AdoptAnAuthor.com

  We gratefully acknowledge the support of our sponsors.

  The Hannah Langendorf Endowment Fund

  In Loving Memory.

  The Law Offices of Cubit & Cubit

  Ft. Lauderdale, Florida

  Global Neighbors, Inc.

  A Real Estate Investment Company Lake Worth, Florida

  The Writers Lifeline

  “the go-to company for every writer’s need.”

  www.thewriterslifeline.com

  For information about making a tax-deductible donation, please contact us at Meg82159@aol.com

  eBook Notes

  « ^ »

  Version 1.0: January 2009. Original scan. Spell-checked and moderately proofread.

  Version 2.0: July 2009. More extensively proofread; reformatted. Added cover image and map from book.

  If you like the e-book, buy the real book, or just send a donation to the author. Support authors you like so they’ll keep writing books we can all enjoy.

 

 

 


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