drifting just like the merchant ship, with all hands dead.'
'Interesting story,' Neidelman said. 'But I don't think it's worth stopping work for me to listen to. This is the twentieth century. It has no bearing on us.'
'That's where you're wrong. Haven't you noticed the recent rash of illnesses among the crew?'
Neidelman shrugged. 'Sickness always occurs in a group of this size. Especially when people are becoming tired and the work is dangerous.'
'This isn't malingering we're talking about. I've done the blood work. In almost every case, the white cell counts are extremely low. And just this afternoon, one of your digging team came into my office with the most unusual skin disorder I've ever seen. He had ugly rashes and swelling across his arms, thighs, and groin.'
'What is it?' Neidelman asked.
'I don't know yet. I've checked my medical references, and I haven't been able to make a specific diagnosis yet. If I didn't know better, I'd say they were buboes.'
Neidelman looked at Hatch with a raised eyebrow. 'Black death? Bubonic plague, in twentieth-century Maine?'
'As I said, I haven't been able to diagnose it yet.'
Neidelman frowned. 'Then what are you rabbiting on about?'
Hatch took a breath, controlling his temper. 'Gerard, I don't know exactly what St. Michael's Sword is. But it's obviously very dangerous. It's left a trail of death wherever it's gone. I wonder if we were right, assuming that the Spanish meant to wield the sword against Ockham. Perhaps he was
'Ah,' Neidelman nodded, an edge of sarcasm distorting his voice. 'Perhaps the sword is cursed after all?' Streeter, standing to one side, sniffed derisively.
'You know I don't believe in curses any more than you do,' Hatch snapped. 'That doesn't mean there isn't some underlying physical
'And that would explain why several of our sick crew have bacterial infections, while another has viral pneumonia, and yet another a weird infection of the teeth. Just what kind of epidemic might this be, Doctor?'
Hatch looked at the lean face. 'I know the diversity of diseases is puzzling. The point is, the sword
Neidelman nodded, smiling distantly. 'I see. You can't figure out why the crew is sick. You're not even sure what some of them are sick
'It isn't just the illnesses,' Hatch countered. 'You must know that a big Nor'easter is brewing. If it keeps heading our way, it'll make last week's storm look like a spring shower. It would be crazy to continue.'
'Crazy to continue,' Neidelman repeated. 'And just how do you propose to stop the dig?'
Hatch paused for a moment as this sunk in. 'By appealing to your good sense,' he said, as calmly as he could.
There was a tense silence. 'No,' said Neidelman, with a heavy tone of finality. 'The dig continues.'
'Then your stubbornness leaves me no choice. I'm going to have to shut down the dig myself for the season, effective immediately.'
'How, exactly?'
'By invoking clause nineteen of our contract.'
Nobody spoke.
'My clause, remember?' Hatch went on. 'Giving me the right to stop the dig if I felt conditions had become too dangerous.'
Slowly, Neidelman fished his pipe out of a pocket and loaded it with tobacco. 'Funny,' he said in a quiet, dead voice, turning to Streeter. 'Very funny, isn't it, Mr. Streeter? Now that we're only thirty hours from the treasure chamber, Dr. Hatch here wants to shut the whole operation down.'
'In thirty hours,' Hatch said, 'the storm may be right on top of us—'
'Somehow,' the Captain interrupted, 'I'm not at all convinced it's the sword, or the storm, that you're really worried about. And these papers of yours are medieval mumbo jumbo, if they're real at all. I don't see why you . . .' He paused. Then something dawned in his eyes. 'But yes. Of course I see why. You have another motive, don't you?'
'What are you talking about?'
'If we pull out now, Thalassa will lose its entire investment. You know very well that our investors have already faced ten percent overrun calls. They're not going to cough up another twenty million for next year's dig. But that's exactly what you're counting on, isn't it?'
'Don't lay your paranoid fantasies on me,' Hatch said angrily.
'Oh, but they're not fantasy, are they?' Neidelman lowered his voice further. 'Now that you've gotten the information you need out of Thalassa, now that we've practically opened the front door for you, you'd love nothing more than to see us fail. Then, next year, you could come in, finish the job, and get