he handed to Austin. 'We found this in his pocket. He was quite a handsome devil at one time.'
Austin examined the inscription on the back of the watch. 'A Pierre, de Claudette, avecamour.' Then he flipped the watch open. Set into the cover was a picture of a young man and woman.
He showed the watch to the other members of the NUMA team. 'What do you think?'
Gamay examined the tag and the watch. 'One of the first things I learned in marine archaeology was the importance of establishing provenance. For instance, a Roman coin found in a Connecticut cornfield could mean that a Roman had dropped it, but it's just as likely the source was a Colonial-era coin collector.'
Mayhew sighed. 'Perhaps Dr. Blair can convince you.' 'I didn't believe it either,' said the white-frocked pathologist. 'We did an autopsy on the gentleman. The cells in this individual are comparable to those of a man in his late twenties, but the brain sutures, the joints of the skull, indicate the gentleman is ' He cleared his throat. 'Ah, more than a hundred years old.'
'That would mean the work on the life extension formula goes back much further than we've assumed,' Austin said.
'An incredible yet reasonable assumption,' Mayhew said. 'There
were rumors during World War One of attempts to develop a
'berserker,' a super-soldier of sorts who would charge enemy trenches in the face of fierce fire.'
'You're thinking that it's related to the life extension research?' 'I don't know,' Mayhew said. He drew the sheet back over the creature's face.
'Poor hombre,' Zavala said, glancing at the happy couple in the watch photograph. 'What a waste of a hundred years.'
'We may only have uncovered the tip of the iceberg,' Mayhew said. 'Who knows how many have died to keep this terrible secret?'
'I don't blame them for not advertising failures like the one on that table,' Gamay said.
'It goes beyond that,' Mayhew said. 'Suppose this elixir has been perfected. What kind of a world would we have if some people could live longer than others?'
'A world that will be very much off balance,' Gamay ventured.
'My feelings exactly, but I'm a lowly detective. I'll leave that for the analysts and policymakers to deal with. Do you plan to stay long in the UK?' he asked Austin.
'Probably not,' Austin said. 'We'll talk about our plans and let you know what we decide.'
'I'd appreciate that.' Mayhew produced a business card with his name and phone number and handed it to Austin. 'Please call. Night or day. In the meantime, I can't overemphasize the importance of keeping this to yourselves.'
'My report will go only to Dirk Pitt and Rudi Gunn. I'm sure the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution will be interested in the fate of its submersible.'
'Fine. I'll let you know what our marines find on the island. Maybe we can track down the people behind this thing. Murder, kidnapping, hijacking, slave labor,' he mused. 'Immortality is a potent
motive for evil. I'd wager that anyone in this room would sell his firstborn rather than pass up the chance to live forever.'
'Not everyone,' said Austin.
'What do you mean? Given the chance, who wouldn't want to live forever?'
Austin gesturing toward the sheet-draped gurney. 'Ask the old soldier lying on that table.'
I HATE TO THROW cold water on this warmhearted reunion,' Gamay said. 'But with all this talk of red-eyed monsters and the Philosopher's Stone, we've~forgotten we have some unfinished business to attend to.'
After the meeting with Mayhew, they had gone to their hotel lounge to discuss strategy. Sandy, the Alvin pilot, had been anxious to leave, and Mayhew had put her on a flight to London where she could catch a plane home. The scientists were still being debriefed.
'You're right,' Zavala said, lifting his glass to the light. 'I'm way behind in my goal to drink all the top-shelf tequila in the world.'
'That's very laudable, Joe, but I'm more interested in the survival of the world, not its tequila supply,' Gamay said. 'May I sum the problem up in one word? Gorgon weed.'
'I haven't forgotten,' Austin said. 'I didn't want to spoil your reunion with Paul. Now that you've brought the subject up, what's the situation?'
'Not good,' Gamay said. 'I've talked to Dr. Osborne, the infestation is spreading faster than anyone imagined.'
'The mining operation has been stopped. Won't this halt the spread of Gorgon weed?' Austin said.
Gamay heaved a heavy sigh. 'I wish. The mutated weed has become self-replicating and will continue to spread. We'll see harbors clogged along the east coast of the U.S. first, then Europe and the Pacific coast. The weed will continue its spread to other continents.'
'How long do we have?'
'I don't know,' Gamay said. 'The ocean currents are moving the stuff all around the Atlantic.'
Austin tried to picture his beloved ocean turned into a noxious saltwater swamp.
'Ironic, isn't it?' Austin said. 'The Fauchards want to extend their lives, and in doing so they will produce a world that may not be worth living in.' He looked around the table. 'Any idea how we can stop this thing?'
'The Lost City enzyme holds the key to halting the weed's spread,' Gamay said. 'If we can figure out the basic molecular makeup, we may be able to find a way to reverse the process.'
'My body is covered with bumps and bruises that tell me the Fauchards don't give up family secrets easily,' Austin said.
'That's why Gamay and I should go back to Washington to set up a conference at NUMA with Dr. Osborne,' Trout said. 'We can try to get a flight out of here the first thing in the morning.'
'Go to it.' Austin looked around at the weary faces. 'But first I suggest we all get a good night's sleep.'
After bidding his friends a good-night, Austin found a computer room off the hotel lobby, where he did an abbreviated report for Rudi Gunn and sent it off by e-mail with the promise to follow up with a call in the morning. He rubbed his eyes a few times as he was typing and was glad when he pressed the SEND button and sent the message winging across the ocean.
He went up to his room and noticed that someone had called his cell phone. He returned the call, which turned out to be from Dar-nay. He had located Austin through his NUMA office.
'Thank God I have found you, Monsieur Austin,' the antiquities dealer said. 'Have you heard from Skye?'
'Not lately,' Austin said. 'I've been on the move or out at sea. I thought she was with you.'
'She left here the same day she arrived. We had discovered what looked like a chemical equation etched into the crown of the helmet and she wanted to show it to an expert at the Sorbonne. I saw her off at the train. When I didn't hear from her after that night, I called the university the next day. They said she hadn't been in.'
'Maybe she's been sick.'
'I wish that were so. I called her apartment. There was no answer. I spoke to her landlady. Mademoiselle Skye never returned to her home after visiting me in Provence.'
'I think you had better call the police,' Austin said without hesitation.
'The police?'
'I know you have an understandable aversion to the authorities,' Austin said in a firm voice, 'but you must do this for Skye. Make an anonymous call from a pay phone if you'd like, but you must call them and report her missing. Her life may depend on it.'
'Yes, yes, of course. I'll call them. She's like a daughter to me. I warned her to be careful, but you know how young people are.'
'I'm in Scotland now, but I'll return to France tomorrow. I'll call you again when I get to Paris.' He hung up so Darnay could notify the police and stared into space for a few moments, trying to make
sense of Skye's disappearance. His cell phone rang. It was Lessard, the manager of the glacier power plant.
'Lessard? Thank God. I've been trying to get you,' he said.
'Sorry. I've been away from the phone,' Austin said. 'How are things at the glacier?'
'The glacier is as it always is,' Lessard said. 'But there are some strange things going on here.'