With a sickening smack, Abbey saw the body fly head over heels into the sea and disappear. The force of the collision threw her forward into the curved rail and she almost went over. With a roar Jackie reversed the
Without waiting for orders, Jackie slammed the
'Dad!' Bolt cutters in hand, Abbey took a flying leap off the bow, landing in the sinking stern. An incoming wave heaved the boat up against the rocks a second time with an enormous crunching sound, throwing her down. Gripping the bolt cutters, she grabbed a broken rail and struggled to her feet, trying to maintain her balance on the buckling, splitting deck. A bolt of lightning blasted the scene with spectral light, followed by a thunder crack. She staggered toward the pilothouse. Her father was inside, still shackled to the wheel.
'Dad!'
'Abbey!'
A vertiginous comber materialized out of the dimness, rising like a mountain above the boat. Abbey braced herself, wrapping her arms around the rail as the wave came crashing down, throwing the boat full against the wall of rock and crushing the pilothouse like a Styrofoam cup. Buried in roiling water, Abbey clung on for dear life, trying to keep from being ripped from the boat by the withdrawing surge. After what seemed like an eternity, her lungs almost bursting, the swirl of water subsided and she surfaced, gasping for breath. The boat was a sudden wreck, lying on its side, the hull split, the ribs sprung, the pilothouse in pieces--and the helm underwater. Her father, gone.
With a superhuman effort she grabbed the railing, hauling herself to the shattered pilothouse. The boat was sinking fast and everything was underwater.
'Dad!' she screamed. 'Dad!'
Another wave slammed the boat, throwing her so violently into the smashed wall of the pilothouse that it tore the bolt cutters from her hands, and they vanished into the black water.
She held her breath and dove down, her eyes open underwater in the dim turbulence. She saw a thrashing leg, an arm--her father. Handcuffed to the wheel. Underwater.
With a scissor kick she propelled herself to the bottom of the overturned pilothouse, frantically feeling around for the cutters. The dim light from the
Suddenly there they were: the bolt cutters had hung up on a broken window frame, dangling over the ocean depths. She snatched them and swam up to the wheel. Her father was no longer thrashing, floating silently. She grabbed the wheel to steady herself, fixed the cutters around the handcuff chain, and slammed the handles shut. The chain parted and she dropped the cutters and grabbed her father's hair, dragging him up. They broke the surface inside the pilothouse, just as another wave slammed the boat again, rolling it upside down. They were suddenly underwater, Abbey still grasping her father's hair, and a moment later she pulled him back up. This time they surfaced underneath the cabin hull, in an air pocket.
'Dad, Dad!' she screamed, shaking him, trying to keep his head above water, her voice ringing hollow in the small air space under the hull. 'Dad!'
He coughed, gasped.
Abbey shook him. 'Dad!'
'Abbey . . . Oh my God . . . What?'
'We're trapped under the hull--!'
A tremendous crash jarred the space and the hull shuddered, rolling sideways; a moment later a second booming crash ripped open the hull and it parted with a tearing screech, water surging in as air rushed out.
'Abbey!
In the confusion of water she felt herself given a great shove and they were in the raging surf just outside the rocks, being drawn toward the killing surf by an undertow.
'Abbeeeey!' She saw the
87
Chaudry stared at Ford with a pair of cold eyes. 'I was protecting that crucial piece of classified information that you so carelessly left in your jacket pocket.'
The others were looking on, startled.
'Really?' Ford said quietly. 'Then why not say something to me directly? Why wait until everyone was out of the room and then steal it? Sorry, Dr. Chaudry: that paper was bait and you're the fish that took it.'
'Come now,' said Chaudry, abruptly relaxing. 'This is absurd. You can't possibly believe what you're saying. We're all under a strain. What in the world would I want with that password? I'm mission director--I have access to all the classified data.'
'But not to the location, which is on that drive. That's what your clients have been after all along--the location.' Ford glanced at the group, which hadn't yet reacted. He could read skepticism in their eyes. 'It all started with Freeman. He was murdered by a professional assassin specifically for that hard drive.'
'Absurd,' said Chaudry. 'The killing was thoroughly investigated. It was a homeless man.'
'Who was in charge of the investigation? The FBI--with the heavy involvement of NPF security and you, personally.'
'This is a blood libel on my reputation!' said Chaudry angrily.
'One can speculate how this worked,' said Ford. 'You didn't do this for money. This was too big for money. You realized long ago that Freeman had discovered an alien machine on Mars, although Freeman himself hadn't quite gotten that far with his conclusions. So you fired him to keep the knowledge to yourself. And then you learned he'd stolen a classified hard drive. Somehow decrypted it, copied it, gotten it out. Something even you couldn't do. What an opportunity for your clients to get all the crucial information. And then you learned that Corso continued the work. Not only that, he built on it.
Chaudry faced the stupefied group. 'This man has no proof, no evidence, just a crazy conspiracy story. We have work to do.'
Ford glanced around at the group, and saw skepticism, even hostility, in their eyes.
'Freeman was killed by a piano-wire garrote,' said Ford. 'No homeless drug addict would kill that way. No: