2
Yesterday’s excitement at finding and
starting to exhume a four-hundred-year-old wreck quickly devolved
to drudgery on day two.
Jack found the routine of sifting the newly
exposed sand in the wake of Tom’s water stream deadly dull. So dull
that he’d all but forgotten about the lifeless coral walls around
them.
They were on their second tanks and had found
nothing besides scraps of rotten wood ranging in length from a
finger to an arm. The ship must have shattered when it hit the
reef. Centuries in salt water had done the rest: The larger
remnants crumbled under the slightest pressure.
A colossal waste of time.
But Jack held up his end, hugging the bottom,
digging his gloved fingers into the sand, pulling free anything he
found. He spotted the corner of another board, got a grip, and
pulled. A big chunk broke off. Small fragments and dustlike
particles floated away downstream.
He turned it over in his hands. Just like the
rest. At first he’d wondered why no worm holes, then realized that
whatever had killed the coral had probably killed the worms as
well. He tossed it aside and gripped the rest of the board. As he
hauled it free he caught a reflection of sunlight just below it,
then sand refilled the cavity.
Metal?
He tapped Tom on the leg and pointed to the
spot. Tom directed the stream into the depression. Sand billowed
and sprayed while Jack worked his hands deeper. More flashes of
yellow reflection. Gold?
His earlier apathy vanished. Something down
there… something more than rotted wood. Despite all his misgivings
about this wreck, he couldn’t deny a surge of excitement. They
might be uncovering something that no human eyes had seen for
centuries.
There—metal. A bright yellow band, curved
across a curving surface… a surface that resembled carved wood…
lacquered wood.
But how…?
Tom had seen it too and was working the hose
nozzle back, forth, and around in a seeming frenzy. Didn’t take too
long to realize they’d discovered a small sea chest wrapped in
rusty links of heavy chain.
Tom knelt and concentrated the stream along
the left end of the chest with one hand while working his free hand
deeper and deeper until he found a handle. He leaned back, pulling
upward while playing the hose back and forth across the
surface.
As the top was revealed Jack saw that it was
a camelback style chest with a convex top crossed by three brass
bands. He’d seen lots of them—even owned one, though nowhere near
as ornate—but had never seen one this shape: square, running maybe
two feet on each side. The most startling thing about it was its
cherry condition. The chain around it had wasted to a rusted
skeleton of its former self. But the chest… no rot, no oxidation of
the brass, no dulling of the lacquer finish.
And that was wrong. The rest of the Sombra wasn’t fit for a beach bonfire, but this
thing looked as if it could have fallen off a passing boat ten
minutes ago.
Despite the vague dread roiling his gut, Jack
leaned in to help. He didn’t see that he had much choice.
He worked a hand down along the chest’s
opposite side, found a handle that felt like leather—strong,
unrotted leather—and began to pull. With
the stream from the hose plus their combined efforts rocking it
back and forth, they managed to work the chest free.
As they knelt in the sand, holding it between
them, Jack looked at Tom’s face. He was grinning around his
mouthpiece and his eyes were wide and bright behind the faceplate
of his mask. He released the hose, letting it snake away behind
him, and tugged on the rotted chain. The links fractured and fell
away amid a cloud of rust flakes.
Jack lowered his gaze to the little square
chest. Except for the domed top it was pretty near a perfect cube.
And as pristine at its base as it was along its top.
This was all very wrong. Jack had no idea
what it was or what it held, but he sensed that everyone would be
better off if they just left this thing where it was. That look in
Tom’s eyes, though, said that would never happen.
Another strange thing about the chest. Its
weight… much lighter than he’d have thought. Almost
weightless.
Tom motioned for them to put it down. They
lowered it to the sand and released the handles. To Jack’s
amazement the chest began to rise. As it picked up speed in its
wobbly ascent, neither of them grabbed for it. They knelt and
stared like a couple of awestruck children. Before they could react
it was out of reach.
Tom pushed off the bottom and kicked after
it. He caught up to it halfway to the surface and tucked it under
his arm. Then he continued toward the surface.
Filled with foreboding, Jack watched him go.
Everything about this was wrong, wrong, wrong.
Reluctantly he shot some air into his vest
and began his own ascent.