Prologue
JENNIFER
August 25, 1975
165° W, 30° N
165° W, 30° N
THE GUYS FROM THE “A” AND “B” CREWS HAVE been
sitting on their collective ass for five weeks, out in the middle
of nowhere. They’re not alone; there’s the ship’s crew, from the
captain on down to the lowliest assistant cook, and the CIA spooks.
But the other guys have at least got something to do. The ship’s
crew has a vessel to run: an unholy huge behemoth, 66,000 tons of
deep-ocean exploratory mining ship, 400 million bucks and seven
years in the building. The CIA dudes are keeping a wary eye on the
Russian trawler that’s stooging around on the horizon. And as for
the Texan wildcat drilling guys, for the past couple of days
they’ve been working ceaselessly on the stabilized platform,
bolting one sixty-foot steel pipe after another onto the top of the
drill string and lowering it into the depths of the Pacific Ocean.
But the “A” and “B” teams have been sitting on their hands for
weeks with nothing to do but oil and service the enormous mechanism
floating in the moon pool at the heart of the ship, then twiddle
their thumbs nervously for eighty hours as the drill lowers it into
the crushing darkness.
And now that Clementine is nearly on target,
there’s a storm coming.
“Fucking weather,” complains Milgram.
“Language.” Duke is a tight-ass. “How bad can it
get?”
Milgram brandishes his paper, the latest chart to
come out of the weather office on C deck where Stan and Gilmer
hunch over their green-glowing radar displays and the telex from
San Diego. “Force nine predicted within forty-eight hours,
probability sixty percent and rising. We can’t take that, Duke. We
go over force six, the impellers can’t keep us on station. We’ll
lose the string.”
The kid, Steve, crowds close. “Anyone told Spook
City yet?” The guys from Langley hang out in a trailer on E deck
with a locked vault-type door. Everyone calls it Spook City.
“Nah.” Duke doesn’t sound too concerned.
“Firstly, it hasn’t happened yet. Secondly, we’re only forty
fathoms up from zero.” He snaps his fingers at the curious heads
that have turned in his direction from their camera stations: “Look
to it, guys! We’ve got a job to do!”
Clementine—the vast, submersible grab at the end
of the drill string—weighs around 3,000 tons and is nearly 200 feet
long. It’s a huge steel derrick, thickly coated in gray paint to
resist the corrosive effects of miles of seawater. At a distance it
resembles a skeletal lobster, because of the five steel legs
protruding from either flank. Or maybe it’s more like a giant
mantrap, lowered into the icy stillness of Davy Jones’s locker to
grab whatever it can from the seafloor.
Duke runs the engineering office from his throne
in the center of the room. One wall is covered in instruments; the
other is a long stretch of windows overlooking the moon pool at the
heart of the ship. A door at one side of the window wall provides
access to a steel-mesh catwalk fifty feet above the pool.
Here in the office the noise of the hydraulic
stabilizers isn’t quite deafening; there’s a loud mechanical whine
and a vibration they feel through the soles of their boots, but the
skull-rattling throbbing is damped to a survivable level. The
drilling tower above their heads lowers the endless string of pipes
into the center of the pool at a steady six feet per minute, day in
and day out. Steve tries not to look out the window at the pipes
because the effect is hypnotic: they’ve been sliding smoothly into
the depths for many hours now, lowering the grab towards the bottom
of the ocean.
The ship is much bigger than the grab that
dangles beneath it on the end of three miles of steel pipe, but
it’s at the grab’s mercy. Three miles of pipe makes for a
prodigious pendulum, and as the grab sinks slowly through the
deep-ocean currents, the ship has to maneuver frantically to stay
on top of it in the six-foot swells. Exotic domes on top of the
vessel’s bridge suck down transmissions from the Navy’s
Transit positioning satellites, feeding them to the
automatic Station Keeping System that controls the ship’s bow and
stern thrusters, and the cylindrical surge compensators that the
derrick rests on. Like a swan, it looks peaceful on the surface but
under the waterline there’s a hive of frantic activity.
Everything—the entire 400-megabuck investment, ten years of Company
black operations—depends on what happens in the next few hours.
When they reach the bottom.
Steve turns back to his TV screen. It’s another
miracle of technology. The barge has cameras and floodlights,
vacuum tubes designed to function in the abyssal depths. But his
camera is flaking out, static hash marching up the screen in
periodic waves: the pressure, tons per square inch, is damaging the
waterproof cables that carry power and signal. “This is shit,” he
complains. “We’re never going to spot it—if . . .”
He trails off. Good-time Norm at the next desk is
standing up, pointing at something on his screen. There’s a whoop
from the other side of the room. He squints at his screen and
between the lines of static he sees a rectilinear outline.
“Holy—”
The public address system crackles overhead:
“Clementine crew. K-129 on screens two and five, range
approximately fifty feet, bearing two-two-five. Standby, fine
thruster control.”
It’s official—they’ve found what they’re looking
for.
THE ATMOSPHERE IN SPOOK CITY IS TENSE BUT
triumphant. “We’re there,” announces Cooper. He smirks at the
hatchet-faced Brit in the crumpled suit, who is smoking an
unfiltered Camel in clear violation of shipboard fire regulations.
“We did it!”
“We’ll see,” mutters the Brit. He stubs the
cigarette out and shakes his head. “Getting there is only half the
struggle.”
Nettled, Murph glares at him. “What’s your
problem?” he demands.
“You’re messing with something below a thousand
meters, in strict contravention of Article Four,” says the Brit.
“I’m here as a neutral observer in accordance with Section
Two—”
“Fuck you and your neutral status, you’re just
sore because you guys don’t have the balls to stand on your waiver
rights—”
Cooper gets between them before things can
escalate again. “Cool it. Murph, how about checking with the bridge
again to see if there’s been any sign of the commies taking an
interest? They’ll twig when they see we’ve stopped lowering the
string. James—” He pauses. Grimaces slightly. The Brit’s alias is
transparent and, to a Company man, borderline insulting: Cooper
wonders, not for the first time, Why the fuck does he call
himself that? “—let’s go take a hike down to the moon pool and
see what they’ve found.”
“Suits me.” The Brit stands up, unfolding like a
stick-insect inside his badly fitting gray suit. His cheek twitches
but his expression stays frozen. “After you.”
They leave the office and Cooper locks the door
behind him. The Hughes GMDI ship may be enormous—it’s bigger than a
Marine Corps assault carrier, larger than an Iowaclass
battleship—but its companionways and corridors are a cramped, gray
maze, punctuated by color-coded pipes and ducts conveniently
located at shin-scraping and head-banging heights. It doesn’t roll
in the swells but it rocks, weirdly, held solidly on station by the
SKS thrusters (a new technology that accounts for a goodly chunk of
the cost of the ship). Down six flights of steps there’s another
passage and a bulkhead: then Cooper sees the dogged-back hatch
leading out into the moon pool at the level of the fifty-foot
catwalk. As usual it takes his breath away. The moon pool is just
under 200 feet long and 75 feet wide, a stillness of black water
surrounded by the gantries and cranes required for servicing the
barge. The giant docking legs are fully extended below the
waterline at either end of the pool. The drill string pierces the
heart of the chamber like a black steel spear tying it to the ocean
floor. The automatic roughneck and the string handling systems have
fallen silent, the deafening clatter and roar of the drill system
shut down now that the grab has reached its target. Soon, if all
goes well, the derrick above them will begin hauling up the string,
laboriously unbolting the hundreds of pipe segments and stacking
them on the deck of the ship, until finally Clementine—also known
as the HMB-I “mining barge”—rumbles to the surface of the pool in a
flurry of cold water, clutching its treasure beneath it. But for
now the moon pool is a peaceful haven, its surface marred only by
shallow, oily ripples.
The engineering office is a hive of activity in
contrast to the view outside the windows, and nobody notices Cooper
and the British spook as they slip inside and look over the
operations controller’s shoulder at his screens. “Left ten, up
six,” someone calls. “Looks like a hatch,” says someone else.
Strange gray outlines swim on the screen. “Get me a bit more light
on that . . .”
Everyone falls silent for a while. “That’s not
good,” says one of the engineers, a wiry guy from New Mexico who
Cooper vaguely remembers is called Norm. The big TV screen in the
middle is showing a flat surface emerging from a gray morass of
abyssal mud. A rectangular opening with rounded edges gapes in it—a
hatch?—and there’s something white protruding from a cylinder lying
across it. The cylinder looks like a sleeve. Suddenly Cooper
realizes what he’s looking at: an open hatch in the sail of a
submarine, the skeletonized remains of a sailor lying half-in and
half-out of it.
“Poor bastards probably tried to swim for it when
they realized the torpedo room was flooded,” says a voice from the
back of the room. Cooper looks around. It’s Davis, somehow still
managing to look like a Navy officer even though he’s wearing a
civilian suit. “That’s probably what saved the pressure hull—the
escape hatch was already open and the boat was fully flooded before
it passed through its crush depth.”
Cooper shivers, staring at the screen.
“Consider Phlebas,” he thinks, wracking his brain for the
rest of the poem.
“Okay, so what about the impact damage?” That’s
Duke, typically businesslike: “I need to know if we can make this
work.”
More activity. Camera viewpoints swivel crazily,
taking in the length of the Golf-II-class submarine. The water at
this depth is mostly clear and the barge floodlights illuminate the
wreck mercilessly, from the blown hatch in the sail to the great
gash in the side of the torpedo room. The submarine lies on its
side as if resting, and there’s little obvious damage to Cooper’s
untrained eye. A bigger hatch gapes open in front of the sail.
“What’s that?” he asks, pointing.
The kid, Steve, follows his finger. “Looks like
the number two missile tube is open,” he says. The Golf-II class is
a boomer, a ballistic missile submarine—an early one,
diesel-electric. It had carried only three nuclear missiles, and
had to surface before firing. “Hope they didn’t roll while they
were sinking: if they lost the bird it could have landed
anywhere.”
“Anywhere—” Cooper blinks.
“Okay, let’s get her lined up!” hollers Duke,
evidently completing his assessment of the situation. “We’ve got
bad weather coming, so let’s haul!”
For the next half hour the control room is a
madhouse, engineers and dive-control officers hunched over their
consoles and mumbling into microphones. Nobody’s ever done this
before—maneuvered a 3,000-ton grab into position above a sunken
submarine three miles below the surface, with a storm coming. The
sailors on the Soviet spy trawler on the horizon probably have
their controllers back in Moscow convinced that they’ve been
drinking the antifreeze again, with their tale of exotic,
capitalist hyper-technology stealing their sunken boomer.
The tension in the control room is rising. Cooper
watches over Steve’s shoulder as the kid twiddles his joystick,
demonstrating an occult ability to swing cameras to bear on the
huge mechanical grabs, allowing their operators to extend them and
position them close to the hull. Finally it’s time. “Stand by to
blow pressure cylinders,” Duke announces. “Blow them
now.”
Ten pressure cylinders bolted to the grab vent
silvery streams of bubbles: pistons slide home, propelled by a
three-mile column of seawater, drawing the huge clamps tight around
the hull of the submarine. They bite into the mud, stirring up a
gray cloud that obscures everything for a while. Gauges slowly
rotate, showing the position of the jaws. “Okay on even two through
six, odd one through seven. Got a partial on nine and eight,
nothing on ten.”
The atmosphere is electric. Seven clamps have
locked tight around the hull of the submarine: two are loose and
one appears to have failed. Duke looks at Cooper. “Your
call.”
“Can you lift it?” asks Cooper.
“I think so.” Duke’s face is somber. “We’ll see
once we’ve got it off the mud.”
“Let’s check upstairs,” Cooper suggests, and Duke
nods. The captain can say yes or no and make it stick—it’s his ship
they’ll be endangering if they make a wrong call.
Five minutes later they’ve got their answer. “Do
it,” says the skipper, in a tone that brooks no argument. “It’s
what we’re here for.” He’s on the bridge because the impending bad
weather and the proximity of other ships—a second Russian trawler
has just shown up—demands his presence, but there’s no mistaking
his urgency.
“Okay, you heard the man.”
Five minutes later a faint vibration shakes the
surface of the moon pool. Clementine has blown its ballast,
scattering a thousand tons of lead shot across the seafloor around
the submarine. The cameras show nothing but a gray haze for a
while. Then the drill string visible through the control room
window begins to move, slowly inching upward. “Thrusters to full,”
Duke snaps. The string begins to retract faster and faster,
dripping water as it rises from the icy depths. “Give me a strain
gauge report.”
The strain gauges on the giant grabs are reading
green across the board: each arm is supporting nearly 500 tons of
submarine, not to mention the water it contains. There’s a loud
mechanical whine from outside, and a sinking feeling, and the
vibration Cooper can feel through the soles of his Oxford brogues
has increased alarmingly—the Explorer’s drill crew is
running the machines at full power now that the grab has increased
in weight. The ship, gaining thousands of tons in a matter of
seconds, squats deeper in the Pacific swell. “Satisfied now?” asks
Cooper, turning to grin at the Brit, who for his part looks as if
he’s waiting for something, staring at one screen intently.
“Well?”
“We’ve got a little time to go,” says the
hatchet-faced foreigner.
“A little . . . ?”
“Until we learn whether or not you’ve gotten away
with it.”
“What are you smoking, man? Of course we’ve
gotten away with it!” Murph has materialized from the upper decks
like a Boston-Irish ghost, taking out his low-level resentment on
the Brit (who is sufficiently public-school English to make a
suitable whipping boy for Bloody Sunday, not to mention being a
government employee to boot). “Look! Submarine! Submersible grab!
Coming up at six feet per minute! After the break, film at eleven!”
His tone is scathing. “What do you think the commies are going to
do to stop us, start World War Three? They don’t even goddamn know
what we’re doing down here—they don’t even know where their sub
went down to within two hundred miles!”
“It’s not the commies I’m worried about,” says
the Brit. He glances at Cooper. “How about you?”
Cooper shakes his head reluctantly. “I still
think we’re going to make it. The sub’s intact, undamaged, and
we’ve got it—”
“Oh shit,” says Steve.
He points the central camera in the grab’s
navigation cluster down at the seafloor, a vast gray-brown expanse
stirred into slow whorls of foggy motion by the dropping of the
ballast and the departure of the submarine. It should be slowly
settling back into bland desert-dunes of mud by now. But
something’s moving down there, writhing against the current with
unnatural speed.
Cooper stares at the screen. “What’s that?”
“May I remind you of Article Four of the treaty?”
says the Brit. “No establishment of permanent or temporary
structures below a depth of one kilometer beneath mean sea level,
on pain of termination. No removal of structures from the abyssal
plain, on pain of ditto. We’re trespassing: legally they can do as
they please.”
“But we’re only picking up the trash—”
“They may not see it that way.”
Fine fronds, a darker shade against the gray, are
rising from the muddy haze not far from the last resting place of
the K-129. The fronds ripple and waver like giant kelp, but are
thicker and more purposeful. They bring to mind the blind, questing
trunk of an elephant exploring the interior of a puzzle box.
There’s something disturbing about the way they squirt from vents
in the seafloor, rising in pulses, as if they’re more liquid than
solid.
“Damn,” Cooper says softly. He punches his open
left hand. “Damn!”
“Language,” chides Duke. “Barry, how fast can we
crank this rig? Steve, see if you can get a fix on those things. I
want to peg their ascent rate.”
Barry shakes his head emphatically. “The drill
platform can’t take any more, boss. We’re up to force four outside
already, and we’re carrying too much weight. We can maybe go up to
ten feet per minute, but if we try to go much above that we risk
shearing the string and losing Clementine.”
Cooper shudders. The grab will still surface if
the drill string breaks, but it could broach just about anywhere.
And anywhere includes right under the ship’s keel, which is
not built to survive being rammed by 3,000 tons of metal hurtling
out of the depths at twenty knots.
“We can’t risk it,” Duke decides. “Keep hauling
at current ascent rate.”
They watch in silence for the next hour as the
grab rises towards the surface, its precious, stolen cargo still
intact in its arms.
The questing fronds surge up from the depths,
growing towards the lens of the under-slung camera as the engineers
and spooks watch anxiously. The grab is already 400 feet above the
seafloor, but instead of a flat muddy desert below, the abyssal
plain has sprouted an angry forest of grasping tentacles. They’re
extending fast, reaching towards the stolen submarine above
them.
“Hold steady,” says Duke. “Damn, I said hold
steady!” The ship shudders, and the vibration in the deck has risen
to a tooth-rattling grumble and a shriek of overstressed metal. The
air in the control room stinks of hot oil. Up on the drilling deck
the wildcats are shearing bolt-heads and throwing sixty-foot pipe
segments on the stack rather than taking time to position them—a
sure sign of desperation, for the pipe segments are machined from a
special alloy at a cost of $60,000 apiece. They’re hauling in the
drill string almost twice as fast as they payed it out, and the
moon pool is foaming and bubbling, a steady cascade of water
dropping from the chilly metal tubes to rain back down onto its
surface. But it’s anyone’s guess whether they’ll get the grab up to
the surface before the questing tentacles catch it.
“Article Four,” the Brit says tensely.
“Bastard.” Cooper glares at the screen. “It’s
ours.”
“They appear to disagree. Want to argue with
them?”
“A couple of depth charges . . .” Cooper stares
at the drill string longingly.
“They’d fuck you, boy,” the other man says
harshly. “Don’t think it hasn’t been thought of. There are enough
methane hydrates down in that mud to burp the grand-daddy of all
gas bubbles under our keel and drag us down like a gnat in a toad’s
mouth.”
“I know that.” Cooper shakes his head. So much
work! It’s outrageous, an insult to the senses, like watching a
moon shot explode on the launch pad. “But. Those bastards.” He
punches his palm again. “It should be ours!”
“We’ve had dealings with them before that didn’t
go so badly. Witch’s Hole, the treaty zone at Dunwich. You could
have asked us.” The British agent crosses his arms tensely. “You
could have asked your Office of Naval Intelligence, too. But no,
you had to go and get creative.”
“The fuck. You’d just have told us not to bother.
This way—”
“This way you learn your own lesson.”
“The fuck.”
THE GRAB WAS 3,000 FEET BELOW SEA LEVEL and
still rising when the tentacles finally caught up with it.
The rest, as they say, is history.