Another comber swept over the boat and he turned his eyes back to the fury.
'How will you convince Neidelman the sword is radioactive?' Bonterre hollered.
'When Thalassa set up my office, they included all kinds of crazy equipment. Including a radiologist's Radmeter. A high-tech Geiger counter. I never even turned the damn thing on.' Hatch shook his head as they began to climb another wave. 'If I had, it would have gone nuts. All those sick diggers, coming in covered with radioactive dirt. It doesn't matter how much Neidelman wants the sword. He won't be able to argue with that meter.'
He could just barely hear, over the sound of the wind and his own shouting voice, the distant thudding of surf off the starboard side: Wreck Island. As they came out of the lee, the wind increased in intensity. Now, as if on cue, he could see a massive white line, far bigger than any previous wave, rising up above the
'Hang on!' he yelled as the top of the wave reached them. Goosing the throttle, he pointed the boat straight into the roiling mass of water. The
He struggled with the panic and despair that rose within him. That last hadn't been a freakish wave. It was going to be like this for the next three miles.
He began to feel an ominous sensation at each twist of the boat: a funny vibration, a tug at the wheel. The boat felt weighty and overballasted. He peered aft through the lashing wind. The bilge pumps had been running at full capacity since they left the harbor, but the old
'Isobel!' he roared, bracing his feet against the walls of the cabin and locking his hands around the wheel. 'Go into the forward cabin and unscrew the metal hatch in the center of the floor. Tell me how much water's in the hold.'
Bonterre shook the rain from her eyes and nodded her understanding. As Hatch watched, she crawled through the pilothouse and unlatched the cabin door. A moment later, she emerged again.
'It is one quarter full!' she shouted.
Hatch swore; they must have hit some piece of flotsam that stove in the hull, but he'd never felt the impact in the violent seas. He glanced again at the loran. Two and a half miles from the island. Too far out for them to turn around. Perhaps too far to make it.
'Take the wheel!' he yelled. 'I'm going to check the dinghy!'
He crawled aft, hanging desperately to the gunwale railing with both hands.
The dinghy was still behind, bobbing like a cork at the end of its line. It was relatively dry, the
The moment he relieved Bonterre at the helm, he could tell that the boat had grown distinctly heavier. It was taking longer to rise through the masses of water that pressed them down into the sea.
'You okay?' Bonterre called.
'So far,' said Hatch. 'You?'
'Scared.'
The boat sank again into a trough, into that same eerie stillness, and Hatch tensed for the rise, hand on the throttle. But the rise did not come.
Hatch waited. And then it came, but more slowly. For a grateful moment, he thought perhaps the loran was off and they had already come into the lee of the island. Then he heard a strange rumble.
Towering far above his head was a smooth, Himalayan cliff face of water. A churning breaker topped its crown, growling and hissing like a living thing.
Craning her neck upward, Bonterre saw it as well. Neither said a word.
The boat rose and kept rising, ascending forever, while the water gradually filled the air with a waterfall's roar. There was a massive crash as the comber hit them straight on; the boat was flung backward and upward, the deck rising almost to vertical. Hatch clung desperately as he felt his feet slip from the deck beneath him. He could feel the water in the hold shift, twisting the boat sideways.
Then the wheel went abruptly slack. As the roaring water fell away, he realized the boat was swamped.
The
Bonterre followed Hatch's eyes and nodded. Clinging to the side, up to their waists in roiling water, they began working their way toward the stern. Hatch knew that a freakish wave was usually followed by a series of smaller ones. They had two minutes, maybe three, to get into the dinghy and free of the
Clinging to the railing, Hatch held his breath as the water surged over them, first once, then a second time. He felt his hand grasp the stern rail. Already, the eyebolt was too deep underwater to reach. Fumbling about in the chill sea, he located the painter. Letting go of the rail, he reeled in the rope, kicking frantically against the tug of the water until he felt himself bump the dinghy's bow. He scrambled in, falling heavily to the bottom, then rose and looked back for Bonterre.
She was clinging to the stern, the
'We've got to cut loose!' Hatch shouted. He dug into his pocket for his knife and sawed desperately through