'Yes, you are,' Lani said, seeing that she was going to lose Mia if she didn't calm her down. 'They make them so you can get back in. Right, Tom.'

Tom eyed Lani and shrugged dubiously. Then he said, 'We can try.'

Twice, Tom and Lani tried to lift Mia onto the kayak, but their awkward position made helping her difficult. Both times she fell back into the water before she was halfway onto the kayak.

'This isn't going to work,' Tom said.

'What am I going to do?' Mia cried.

'What about putting her on your kayak?' Lani said.

'This kayak's pretty small. I'm afraid she'll tip both of us over.'

'Please don't leave me!' Mia cried.

'We're not leaving you,' Lani said. 'Tom is going to tow you.'

'Tow me?'

'Yes. He's stronger than me.'

Tom nodded. 'Good idea. Mia, hang on to this strap.' He loosened one of the seat straps and threw it to Mia. 'Tie it to your life vest. I'll pull you.' He turned to Lani. 'Are you OK? Can you paddle?'

Lani nodded. 'I'll keep up. Let's go.'

They started paddling. Jake was far ahead. Lani looked at her watch. Only 27 minutes left. She paddled harder.

Chapter 28

10:55 AM 27 minutes to Wave Arrival Time

It took Kai a minute to catch his breath again. The news report had gone on to another topic, but the video of Lani blithely kayaking, obviously unaware of the danger, still played in his mind's eye. The dizziness finally faded, but the fear didn't. It simmered just below the surface, propelling his actions. He leapt to his feet, certain about what he had to do next.

'We are leaving!' Kai said, herding everyone toward the door. 'Reggie, how long would it take to transfer what we need to a laptop?'

'Again, I'm way ahead of you. I've already copied everything over the network.'

'Good. You take it.'

'Who's leaving?' said Lara Pimalo.

'You, me, everybody,' Kai said.

'But you said we have 27 minutes left.'

'We only have 27 minutes left,' Kai said, 'and we're on a flat section of land. It'll take a while to get to high ground. Driving, it would only take a few minutes. But you saw the traffic jams. On foot, it'll take longer. You should drive as far as you can. But when you reach a backup, get out and start walking.'

'It sounds like we're not going together,' said Reggie.

'We're not,' Kai said, looking at Brad. 'How fast could you get us to Waikiki on that thing?'

Brad raised an eyebrow, then nodded. He understood what Kai was saying. It was the only way to get Kai on that motorcycle, which was the only way to get through the traffic quickly. 'It depends on the roads, but you know how I drive. We'll get there in time.'

Kai had made the decision to leave his post quickly, but that didn't mean it had been easy. It was his duty versus his daughter. Kai was convinced he was the only person who could save her.

'You're going after Lani on that crotch rocket?' Reggie said, sounding incredulous. 'That's suicide!'

'Maybe.' He just didn't see any other option.

'We could try calling someone…'

Kai cut him off quickly. 'No. With the way the phone lines are tied up, it might take half the time just contacting someone, let alone convincing them to go find her. I'm not taking that chance.'

Reggie nodded in agreement. 'It's what I'd do. But what about the tsunami data? What about warning the other Pacific islands? We still don't know if there are more waves coming.'

'I'm leaving that in good hands. You're in charge now.'

'Me?' Reggie shook his head, his eyes wide at the thought of the responsibility. His face was two shades paler than a moment before. 'But I don't want…'

'Listen, I know I'm abandoning you at a critical time, and I'm sorry. But I need to do this.'

'Maybe Harry should take over. I know he's on Maui, but…'

'Which is why you need to do it. Who knows what the situation on Maui is like? They may not even have phone service after the first wave hits. Come on, Reggie. You know as much as I do, probably more. What's the problem?'

'I didn't make the right call on the tsunami warning.'

'Neither did I.'

'But if you hadn't been here, we'd just be issuing the first warning now. What if I'm wrong again?'

'You did exactly what you were trained to do. It could have gone either way. Look, you'll do fine. I wouldn't leave if I didn't trust you to do the job.' Kai honestly didn't know if that was true-he might have left in any case-but he did trust Reggie, so it didn't matter. 'Use Wheeler Field as your base. You're still going to have to interpret the data coming in.'

Reggie still looked like he had swallowed a live roach, but reluctantly nodded. 'OK, boss. I'll do my best.'

'I'm going to be on my cell phone. You go with Ms. Pimalo. We were going to have to switch control over to Palmer at some point anyway. Might as well be now. You keep in contact with them and let me know when you get new readings. You've got my number.'

The Alaska/West Coast Tsunami Warning Center in Palmer, Alaska, would continue to get all the same readings. They would be warning the West Coast of the US by now of the danger, even though the size of the waves would be diminished by a factor of ten once they went as far as California. At least they would have the hours of warning that Hawaii didn't get.

'Should we do the transition before we go?' Reggie asked.

'There's not enough time,' Kai said. 'I'll call Palmer on the way and tell them you're the man now. Come on! Let's go!'

The five of them scrambled out of the PTWC. By now Bilbo was excited by all the commotion and barked as he followed them out. At the door, Kai stopped to take one last look at the ops room, knowing it would be the last time he saw it.

'Come on, boss,' said Reggie. 'At least we'll get the chance to build the next one in a better location.'

Pimalo and her cameraman ran to their truck. Reggie said, 'Don't leave yet,' and sprinted to his house. Kai assumed he wanted to rescue a few mementos, and he didn't blame him. Kai sprinted to his house too. Bilbo came running after him.

As Kai reached the front door, he didn't know what he was doing. He wasn't thinking that clearly. He just knew he had to take something with him. He couldn't let everything in his family's life disappear.

Kai threw open the door, ran in, and stopped, considering all the things he could and couldn't take with him. Electronics, computers, jewelry, and other tangible objects of value didn't occur to him. Those weren't the things he wanted. In that moment, he knew he could only choose one, maybe two objects that he could take.

Of course, they had souvenirs from vacations they had taken. Valuable antiques that had been passed down through both Rachel and Kai's families, like his father's medals from the Vietnam War, a silver set Rachel's mother had given her, an Etruscan vase they had found at a garage sale that had turned out to be worth thousands of dollars, Kai's old baseball card collection. All of it was meaningful and valuable to him, but each of them was also too big and bulky to carry.

The only things that he considered truly irreplaceable were the photos from their life. The old photos of his parents when they were young and in love. Rachel's family photos from years ago. Their wedding. Lani's baby photos. The good times on holidays. That's when Kai understood what was really important to him. Of all the

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