The cutter stopped around a hundred yards from the ship. Austin helped Kane put his flotation vest on and walked him to the ramp at the stern, where the Zodiac crew was waiting. He thanked Austin, Joe, and the captain for all their help.
“Sorry you have to leave, Doc,” Austin said.
“Not as sorry as I am to go.” He smiled, and added, “Beebe’s adventures pale by comparison to our dive.”
“Going back to Bonefish Key?”
“No, not for a while . . . I’ll be in touch.”
Kane got into the Zodiac. The inflatable pushed off into the chop and bounced over to the Coast Guard vessel, Kane was helped aboard, and it started to move away even before the inflatable made it back to the ship.
Austin, Gannon, and Zavala watched the cutter until it was out of sight, then Gannon turned to Austin and asked if he wanted to head back to port in the morning. Austin suggested th
at they try to retrieve the lost ROV. Gannon said the forecast called for fair weather after the gale blew itself out. He’d plan a salvage operation using the ship’s largest ROV, a mechanical monster nicknamed Humongous.
“We don’t really know very much about Doc,” Zavala said after the captain had left.
“It’s time we remedy that situation. I’ll ask the Trouts to check into Bonefish Key. In the meantime, British Navy regulations allow a second shot of grog.”
“This is NUMA, not the British Navy,” Zavala said. “And, technically speaking, tequila is not grog.”
“May I point out that we are in Bermudan waters and thus in British territory.”
Zavala slapped Austin on the back and said something in Spanish.
“My Espanol is a bit rusty, pal,” Austin said. “Please translate.”
Zavala lifted his chin and sniffed the air, as if he had smelled something unpleasant.
“I said, ‘Jolly good show, old chap.’”
CHAPTER 13
THE COAST GUARD CUTTER BROUGHT KANE TO THE MAINLAND, where a car drove him to a business jet waiting at the airport. Kane watched the lights of Bermuda fade in the distance, then turned away from the plane’s window and tried to make sense of the past twenty-four hours. His undersea ordeal had worn him out. His thoughts tripped over one another until, finally, he closed his eyes and dozed off. The jounce of the plane’s landing woke him up, and the pilot’s voice over the intercom informed him that they had touched down at Washington’s Reagan National Airport.
The plane taxied to an off-limits section reserved for VIPs. A strapping young man sporting a military brush cut greeted Kane as he stepped onto the tarmac. Aviator sunglasses shaded the man’s eyes, even though it was nighttime, and his black suit would have sent a conspiracy theorist into a swoon.
“Dr. Kane?” the man asked, as if there were some doubt.
The question irritated Kane, since he was the only passenger on the six-seat plane.
“Yes,” he said, “that’s me. How about you?”
“Jones,” the man said without a change in his expression. “Follow me.”
Jones led the way to a black Humvee, opened the rear door for Kane, then got in front next to the driver, who was also dressed like an undertaker. After leaving the airport, they raced along the George Washington Memorial Parkway as if there was no speed limit, skirted the city, and headed toward Maryland.
Jones had been silent during the drive, but as they entered Rockville he spoke briefly into a hand radio. Kane overheard something about a package being delivered. Minutes later, the Humvee pulled up to a large office building. The sign out front identified the building as the Food and Drug Administration’s headquarters. The windows of the FDA were dark except for a few offices lit for cleaning crews.
Jones escorted Kane to a side entrance. They rode an elevator down one level and walked along a hushed corridor to an unmarked door. Jones knocked softly, then opened the door for Kane, who stepped into a nondescript conference room similar to hundreds of other sterile spaces scattered in government edifices around the capital. The room had pale green wall-to-wall carpeting, beige walls decorated with generic artwork, a lectern, and a projection screen. A dozen or so people were seated around a long oak table.
Kane went around the table shaking hands and was greeted with hellos or smiles from everyone except a stranger who identified himself as William Coombs, representing the White House.
Kane sat down in the only unoccupied seat next to a firm-jawed man wearing the uniform of a lieutenant in the U.S. Navy.
“Hello, Max,” he said. “How was your trip from Bermuda?” His name was Charley Casey.
“Fast,” Kane said. “Hard for me to believe that a few hours ago I was a half mile under the ocean.”