think it's crazy, an impossible scheme. I want to give the world its oxygen back, that's all.'.
'How do you propose to do that?' asked Lucas with a half-smile, half-frown.
'By using a process that every schoolboy learns in the first grade. The electrolysis of seawater.'
'On what kind of scale?' Chase asked.
'Well, yes, that really is the crux of the problem,' Hanamura admitted wryly. 'As you know it's easy enough in the laboratory and the process has been used to a limited extent for industrial purposes. But producing the large tonnages of oxygen that would make any appreciable difference to the biosphere is one hell of a problem. So far unresolved.' He seemed quite cheerful about it.
'My first-grade science isn't all that hot,' Claudia Kane said. 'What process is that again?'
Chase said, 'Electrolysis of seawater. You split HzO into its component parts of hydrogen and oxygen by passing an electrical current through brine. As Frank says, nothing is easier in theory, and we've been doing it for years on a small scale. But for the amounts he's talking about there are problems of corrosion and--' He stopped, realizing it was getting technical, and said, 'Well, there
'It's the obvious solution when you think about it,' Hanamura enthused. 'Seven tenths of the earth's surface is seawater. There's a virtually unlimited supply from which we can obtain the oxygen we need to replenish the atmosphere. It's never been done before because we've never needed to do it. And also, of course, because electrolysis has one major drawback.' He glanced keenly at the two men.
'Power,' Lucas said.
Hanamura nodded briskly, his sallow face with its delicate cheekbones becoming more animated. 'I've done some preliminary computer studies and I'm convinced it's technically feasible, given--'
There was a distracting flurry of movement as a bald-headed man in a bow tie came in. He was flushed and agitated. He spoke to a group near the door, whose faces registered numbed, open-mouthed disbelief. The word spread. AP had filed a report that Carl Redman, director of the World Meteorological Organization, had been the victim of pyro-assassination while on a visit to New Mexico. He was the fourth government official to have been killed by the gruesome method of being doused in gasoline and set alight. As with the previous cases, the assassins and their motives were unknown.
Claudia Kane thanked her guests for coming and excused herself. She had to check with the news editor; she might be needed. The shark scenting fresh blood, Chase thought, watching her leave.
'I worked with Carl,' Gene Lucas recalled sadly. 'We served together on a World Climate Research committee two or three years ago.
What in God's name is happening? Why? What's the purpose?' He shook his head, mystified.
It was time for Chase to get back to the hotel. Cheryl and Dan should have returned from their sightseeing trip by now. He was looking forward to a relaxed family dinner at a restaurant and hearing Dan's opinions of the capital.
As they were shaking hands Lucas said, 'Give my regards to Cheryl.'
'I didn't know you knew her.'
'I don't, not personally,' Lucas said, a secretive smile lurking at the corner of his mouth. 'But I once sent her some information, which, I should add, she made excellent use of.' He was smiling broadly now, tickled pink by something that left Chase with a mystified frown.
'What information was that?'
'About a certain project called DEPARTMENT STORE. I think you've probably heard of it.'
After a stunned moment Chase grasped Lucas's hand and shook it again, this time more warmly than ever.
16
After a hard day's work there was nothing the secretary-general of the United Nations liked better than to linger in a sumptuous hot bath liberally sprinkled with Esprit de Lavande from Penhaligon's of Covent Garden, London. The small round bottle with the ground-glass stopper traveled in the UN transatlantic diplomatic pouch, a little privilege that Ingrid Van Dorn allowed herself.
She was tall and straight-limbed with long silvery-blond hair and classic Nordic features, clearly evident in her wide pale forehead and icy blue eyes. Rather angular perhaps, though she measured the same now as she had twenty-five years ago when a strikingly beautiful twenty-two-year-old girl from Orebro in Sweden. That had been before two marriages, two divorces, and two children, both girls, now at boarding school in Vermont.
Floating in the sunken oval bath and breathing in the perfumed mist, Ingrid Van Dorn watched the large flat TV screen inset into the wall. A crystal carafe of iced sangria was within reach of her slender white arm, and a tall glass, beaded with condensation, was on the tiled shelf by her elbow.
'In the studio tonight,' Claudia Kane was saying, making the introductions, 'we're delighted to welcome Dr. Gavin Chase, a British marine biologist, better known to us as the author of that hugely successful and influential book
'When was this recorded?' asked Ingrid Van Dorn. Her husky voice still had a trace of accent, though not as pronounced as when she gave interviews; the media loved it.
The man seated in the upholstered recess took off his horn-rimmed glasses and wiped away the steam with the hem of his bathrobe. 'Last week sometime. Friday, I think. I thought of asking for a tape, but with transmission so near it didn't seem worthwhile.' Kenneth J. Prothero --'Pro' to his friends and some of his close enemies-- senator for North Carolina, slipped his glasses back on and leaned forward, hands clasped above his long, tanned, hairy legs. 'You know, this guy has a lot to--'
'Sssshhhh!' Ingrid Van Dorn held up a slender finger. She glanced toward him, looking like a goddess with her gleaming hair coiled on top of her head. 'Are we recording this?'
Prothero nodded and topped up his glass with a sangria. He chewed on a piece of orange peel, cursing under his breath. Bathtime for Ingrid was a sacred ritual, but with this damned steam he had to keep wiping his specs every two minutes.
Remaining obediently silent until the program was over, he got up and switched the set off. There was the gentle swish of water as Ingrid moved languorously in the tub and the creak of ice melting in the carafe. Prothero stood looking down at her. He couldn't look enough at this fabulous woman: that she was his seemed like a stroke of wondrous good fortune.
'Well, what do you think?'
Ingrid Van Dorn soaped her breasts thoughtfully. 'Yes, I'm impressed. What do we know about him, Pro?'
'Quite a lot.' Prothero settled himself on the step next to the bathtub, feasting his eyes on the swirl of silver hair, the perfect white arch of her neck, the damp hollows formed by her collarbones. 'I've had
him checked out, every last detail. In my opinion we'll never find anyone better qualified.'
'But if he's as committed to Earth Foundation as he makes out, perhaps he won't want to.'
'All the more reason for him to accept, I'd say.'
'Why? Because of the 'challenge'?' Ingrid Van Dorn used the word with scorn. 'A man like Chase has more challenges than he can cope with already.'
Prothero reached into the water and took her hand. It was like a pale water lily in his broad palm. 'If Chase is the kind of guy I think he is, he'll
She gave him a quick sideways smile. 'I guess I'm scared.' An uncharacteristic admission for her. 'We've talked about it for so long, thought about it, and now we have to make the decision. We're burning our bridges ... or at least you are. If your government finds out
Prothero's face tightened. 'My government is up to its neck in bacteriological herbicides. The old, old games. Like a kid fooling around with matches in a house that's burning to the ground.' Then it spilled out of him like venom. 'I've had all that, Ingrid. ASP can go screw itself,
'Screw them before they screw up the world,' Ingrid said. She pouted at him through the rising steam. 'What