Authors: Clive Cussler
Pilston slid out of the pilot's seat and Gunderson climbed aboard.
“How'd our rookie do?” he asked Michaels.
“She's not a bad pilot,” Michaels noted. “I had her do most of the flying while I napped.”
Gunderson smiled and turned back to stare at Pilston. “Be sure and log the hours,” he told her. “When you have two hundred you can apply for a commercial license. Our last operative who certified got a five-thousand-dollar bonus from Cabrillo.”
“This old beast is a smooth flying plane,” Pilston said. “Slow as a slug but as stable as a table.”
“How far out are we?” Gunderson asked Michaels.
Michaels stared at the GPS and examined her marks in the charts, then did a couple of calculations in the flight computer. “Twenty-four minutes, give or take.”
“Have you maintained radio silence?”
“As we planned,” Michaels replied.
Gunderson adjusted the mixture to the engine and watched the gauges a few seconds. Satisfied all was okay, he spoke again. “Tracy, can you pour me a cup of coffee? It's time to call the mother ship.”
Pilston unscrewed the cup off the thermos, put a piece of folded duct tape on the bottom, then poured a cup and handed it to Gunderson. He sipped the hot liquid, then set the cup down on a flat surface, where it stuck. Then he reached for the radio, adjusted the frequency, and spoke.
“Tiny calling the chairman of the board, you out there?”
A few seconds passed before an answer came. “This is control, go ahead.”
“The ladies and I,” Tiny said, “will be there in a few minutes to hook you on board.”
“We have you on the scope,” Cabrillo said. “You should be seeing us shortly.”
“What's the drill?” Gunderson asked.
“You'll have two yanks,” Cabrillo said. “The first is the objectâremember it's heavy.”
“We have a cargo slide with a belt, but the door to this old bird is on the side,” Gunderson said. “My plan was to winch whatever we were taking aboard close, then do some fancy flying to get the load aboard.”
Back on the
Oregon
, Cabrillo shook his head in amazement. “Don't try that on the second load.”
“Why's that, boss?”
“Because the second load is me.”
Michaels was staring out the window. A speck that was the
Oregon
came into view.
“I have a visual,” she said.
“We have you in sight,” Gunderson said, “and we'll take it easy bringing you aboard, Mr. Chairman, don't you worry.”
“I'm going topside to strap up,” Cabrillo said. “Is there anything else you need?”
Gunderson looked at Pilston and Michaels, who shook their heads no.
“Maybe just some ham-and-cheese sandwiches,” Gunderson said.
“I'll see what I can do,” Cabrillo said.
“We're descending now,” Gunderson said. “See you in a few.”
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C
ABRILLO
opened the door and walked into the Magic Shop. Nixon had the Golden Buddha on a small table and was waving a small electronic radar device across the belly. He stared at a monitor and shook his head.
“There's a space there, boss,” Nixon said to Cabrillo, “but I'll be damned if I can figure out the access.”
Cabrillo stood thinking for a moment, then turned to Nixon. “Hand me a heat gun,” he said.
Nixon walked over to the tool bench and removed a heat gun from a peg, attached an extension cord, then dragged it over to the Golden Buddha. Cabrillo flicked the switch on and started to heat the Buddha's belly.
“What are you thinking, boss?” Nixon asked over the roar of the heat gun.
“People always want to rub Buddha's belly for good luck,” Cabrillo said. “Rub something enough and you make heat.”
Nixon reached over and touched the golden belly. It was becoming warm, like human skin.
Cabrillo stared at the icon, then turned to Nixon. “Get me a single-edge razor blade,” he said.
Nixon walked to the workbench, found a box of razor blades, grabbed them, then walked back, peeling the paper off one of the blades.
“There,” Cabrillo said. “There's a crack forming.”
Nixon slid the blade into the tiny gap.
“Slide in another,” Cabrillo said, “and begin to wedge off the belly plate.”
Minutes passed as the gap widened. As it did, Cabrillo diverted the heat under the plate, which heated the glue applied centuries before. At last the crack was large enough that a hand could fit inside. Cabrillo handed Nixon the heat gun, slid his fingers inside the crack, then gently pried back the plate while Nixon continued heating the yak's-hoof glue.
Slowly the plate peeled back. Then, all at once, it came off in Cabrillo's hand.
He stared through the opening into an inner compartment. Inside lay ancient parchments rolled into a tube and secured with a decomposing strip of rawhide. Cabrillo reached in and carefully removed the bundle.
Nixon looked at Cabrillo and smiled. “What now, boss?”
“We copy them,” Cabrillo said quietly, “and put them back.”
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S
UNG
Rhee was in the center of a maelstrom of angry people. The admiral from the Chinese navy had called Beijing to report the damage to his ships, the two billion aires had both returned with teams of attorneys, and his assistant had just called to report that the mayor of Macau was downstairs and on his way up.
And then his telephone rang.
“I told you,” he told his receptionist, “no interruptions.”
“President Hu Jintao's office is calling.”
“Put him through,” Rhee said, motioning with his hand to clear his office. “Put him through.”
A few seconds later, a voice said, “President Jintao is on the line.”
“Good morning, Mr. President,” Rhee said.
“Good morning, Mr. Rhee,” Jintao said quietly. “I understand you had a bit of trouble last night.”
Rhee began to sweat. “Aâ¦a minor theft,” he stammered. “Nothing we can't handle, Mr. President.”
“Mr. Rhee. We've received calls this morning from the United States embassy, the head of the Chinese navy, and the vice president of Greece wanting to know why one of his ships was illegally stopped and boarded on your orders. That does not sound like a
minor theft
to me.”
“Thereâ¦has been some trouble here,” Rhee admitted.
The telephone was silent for a few seconds. “Mr. Rhee,” Jintao said coldly, “I want you to tell me everything that happened. Right now, from the start.”
Slowly, Rhee began speaking.
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G
UNDERSON
started a long lumbering turn around the
Oregon
. As he stared out the cockpit window, he could see a large balloon do a fast inflate, then head up in the air, towing a line.
On the stern deck of the
Oregon
, Kevin Nixon checked the straps around the crate containing the Golden Buddha again. The three-pronged hook was duct-taped to the crate and would be used to yank Cabrillo aboard if they were successful getting the icon aboard the Antonov. Hanley stood off to the side, checking the fit on the harness that wrapped around Cabrillo's chest and upper thighs. Satisfied it was properly attached, he snapped a smaller bag containing the sandwiches to one side of the harness.
“The old Fulton Recovery System,” Cabrillo said. “You'd think with all our funds we'd have found a replacement by now.”
“It's so rare we're this far offshore,” Hanley said. “Past the point our amphibian or a helicopter can reach us.”
“You ever ridden one of these?” Cabrillo asked.
“Never had the pleasure,” Hanley said, smiling.
“It feels like a mule kicked you in the ass,” Cabrillo said.
“That's the least of your worries, the way I see it.”
“How do you figure?” Cabrillo asked.
“The only winch we could find was designed for light trucks,” Hanley noted. “I just hope they can reel you in fast enough before you strike the rear stabilizer.”
“You make it all sound so appealing,” Cabrillo said wryly.
The sound of the Antonov was growing louder.
“Clear the decks,” Nixon shouted, “for the first approach.”
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G
UNDERSON
was noted for never becoming flustered. No matter what the situation, he always maintained his cool. Lowering the flaps on the Antonov, he slowed the speed to just above stall, then lined up less than a hundred feet above the deck.
“Anybody got any gum?” he asked.
Michaels quickly peeled the foil off a piece and jammed it in his mouth.
“Head back to help Tracy,” Gunderson said. “I'll hook the fatso on the first pass, then I'll shout back before I roll her over.”
Inside the
Oregon
, the cameras on the deck relayed an image of the operation throughout the ship. Everyone watched as Gunderson steered closer.
In the cargo compartment, Pilston and Michaels were watching out the open door. The steel cable stretched backward, but the hook on the end was out of view. Gunderson was peering out the front window, then the side window, in a rapid ballet of visual Olympics. At the top of the cable leading to the Fulton Aerial Recovery System, just below the balloon, the cable spread into a Y shape. Gunderson chomped on the gum as he steered the Antonov closer.
“It's show time,” he shouted.
The hook dangling back from the plane slid cleanly into the Y and snagged the cable. A split second later the crate containing the Golden Buddha was yanked from the deck as cleanly as ripping a bandage off a wound. Gunderson instantly felt the drag on the plane and shouted for Pilston to engage the winch.
She threw the lever forward and the package started to reel aboard, while at the same time Gunderson eased the biplane over on her side. Hanley watched from the deck in amazement.
“Tell me when the load's within ten feet,” Gunderson shouted.
A minute or so later, Michaels shouted, “Okay, Chuck.”
Gunderson did a quick sideways dive to the ocean, now only some eighty feet away, and the crate went temporarily weightless from the g forces. The crate floated in the air for a second.
“Rolling flat,” Gunderson shouted.
Pilston and Michaels moved away from the door, and the cable tightened and reeled the Golden Buddha aboard as easily as a book sliding into a bookcase. The crate slammed against the far inner wall of the fuselage and stopped. The crate was cracked, but not much. Pilston turned the winch motor off.
Gunderson stared back, quite happy with the results. He reached for the radio.
“Mr. Hanley,” he said. “I scratched your box a little, but the cargo is safe and sound.”
Hanley pushed the button on his portable radio as Gunderson began to climb and bank around. “Hell of a job, Tiny. There's a different hook attached to the box. Attach that to the cable before you pull the chairman aboard.”
“Roger that,” Gunderson said.
Then he shouted back to Michaels to attach the other hook to the end of the line. By the time Gunderson had passed over the top of the
Oregon
again and was starting his turn to line up, the hook was attached and Pilston started to reel out the cable once again. Gunderson adjusted his flight controls, they set the speed of the Antonov to right at stall.
“Once I hook the boss man,” Gunderson shouted, “you reel him in as fast as possible. When he's next to the door, reach out and pull him inside.”
“Got it,” Pilston shouted.
“Here I come, boss,” Gunderson said into the radio, “ready or not.”
Cabrillo had moved onto the rear deck and Nixon inflated the balloon. It shot in the air when the Antonov was only a hundred yards off the bow.
“Clear the decks,” Nixon shouted as he sprinted away.
Juan Cabrillo stood quietly. There was really no way to prepare for what was about to happen. In a few seconds, he would be yanked from the safety of the
Oregon
and into the air over the ocean. From the known to the unknown in a split second. So Cabrillo simply cleared his mind and waited.
Gunderson chewed his gum, watched the line carefully, and then put the three-pronged hook directly into the center of the Y once again. Bam! One second Cabrillo's feet were on the deck, the next second he was yanked into the air. He moved his feet back and forth like he was trying to run. The wind crept past the goggles he was wearing and his eyes began to weep as the Antonov grew larger. Cabrillo could see hands reaching out of the door as he rose, closer to safety. He tilted his head back and looked. Every few seconds the cable was bumping against the rear stabilizer and he prepared to push himself off as he grew closer.