belong to the man who owns the property they're buried on.'

'Mr. Trinity will be offered a substantial sum of money for his land and the rights to the relics,' said Nichols. 'I might also add, his payment will be tax-free.,'

Sandecker regarded Nichols skeptically. 'The hoard might be worth hundreds of millions. Is the government prepared to go that high?'

Of course not.'

'And if Trinity won't take your offer?'

'There are other methods of making a deal,' Wismer said with cold determination.

'Since when is the government in the art business?'

'The art, sculpture and the remains of Alexander the Great are only of historic interest,' said Wismer. 'The knowledge in the scrolls, that's the area of vital interest.'

'That depends on the eye of the beholder,' Sandecker said philosophically.

'The information contained in the scientific records, particularly the geological data, could have enormous influence on Our future dealings with the Middle East,' Wismer continued doggedly. 'And there is the religious angle to consider.'

'What's to consider? The Greek umslation of the original Hebrew text of the Old Testament was made at the Library. This translation is the basis for all books of the Bible.'

'But not the New Testament,' Wismer corrected Sandecker.

'There may be historic facts that dispute the founding of Christianity locked away under that hill in Texas. Facts that would be better left hidden.'

Sandecker gave Wismer a cold stare, then turned his eyes to the President. 'I smell a conspiracy, Mr. President. I'd be grateful for the reason behind my presence here.'

Nothing sinister, Admiral, I assure you. But we all agree, this has to be conducted within stringent guidelines.'

Sandecker was not slow; the trap had sprung. He'd known almost from the beginning what was going down. 'So after NUMA-' he paused and stared at Senator Pitt 'and especially your son, Senator, have done all the dirty work, we're to be pushed aside.'

'You must admit, Admiral,' said Wismer in an official tone, this is hardly a job for a governmental agency whose bureaucratic responsibilities lie underwater.'

Sandecker shrugged off Wismer's words. 'We've taken the project this far. I see no reason why we can't see it through to the end.'

'I'm sorry, Admiral,' said the President slowly, 'but I'm taking the project out of your hands and turning it over to the Pentagon.'

Sandecker was stunned. 'The military!' he blurted. 'Whose harebrained idea was that?'

An embarrassed look came into the President's eyes. Then they flicked to Wismer for an instant. 'It makes no difference who conceived the new plan. The decision is mine.'

'I don't think you understand, Jim,' said the Senator quietly. 'What you stumbled upon goes far beyond mere archaeology. The knowledge under that hill could very well reshape our Middle East foreign policy for decades to come.'

'Reason enough why we have to approach this thing as if it was a highly secret intelligence operation,' said Wismer. 'We must keep the discovery classified until all documents are thoroughly examined and their data analyzed.'

'That could take twenty or even a hundred years, depending on the number and condition of the scrolls after underground storage for sixteen hundred years,' Sandecker protested.

'If that's what it takes. . . .' The President shrugged.

The steward brought the Admiral's fruit bowl and glass of milk, but Sandecker had lost his appetite.

'In other words, you need time to add up the value of the windfall,'

Sandecker said acidly. 'Then negotiate political bargains for the ancient charts showing the locations of lost mineral and oil deposits around the Mediterranean. If Alexander hasn't turned to dust, his bones will be traded to the Greek government toward renewed leases for our naval bases. All this before the American people find out you've given away the store.'

'We cannot afford to go public,' Schiller explained patiently. 'Not until we're prepared to move. You fail to realize the tremendous foreign policy advantages you've laid in the government's lap. We can't simply throw them away in the name of public curiosity about historic objects.'

'I'm not naive, gentlemen,' said Sandecker. 'But I do confess to being a sentimental old patriot who believes the people deserve better from their government than they receive. The treasures from the Library of Alexandria do not belong to a few politicians to barter away. They belong to all America by right of possession.'

Sandecker didn't wait for them to answer. He took a quick swallow of milk, then retrieved a newspaper out of his briefcase and casually tossed it on the center of the table.

'Because everyone is so wrapped up with the big picture, your aides missed a small item from Reuters wire service that was carried in most of the newspapers around the world. Here's a copy of a St. Louis paper I picked up at the car-rental agency. I circled the piece on page three.'

Wismer picked up the folded paper, opened it and turned to the page indicated by Sandecker. He read the heading aloud, and then began the text.

'Romans land in Texas?

'According to top-level administration sources in Washington, the search for a vast underground depository of ancient relics from the famed Library of Alexandria, Egypt, has ended a few hundred meters north of the Rio Grande

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