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Blood And Ice Part 12

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He gestured at the underwater camera that had been all but forgotten in the heap of discarded clothes.

"Right you are," Calloway said, retrieving it. "If you see any mermaids, get me a snap."

With that, their face masks were fitted snugly into place, their regulators tested for oxygen flow, and Darryl got a clap on the back from Calloway. While Michael was stepping into his own fins and attaching the flashlight to his waist belt, Darryl lifted the safety grate away from the dive hole, and he was already gone when Michael turned back around. Calloway gave Michael his own clap on the back, a thumbs-up sign, then he followed suit, feetfirst, down the rabbit hole.

The ice cap there was about eight feet thick, and the auger had cut a hole that was wider at the top than the bottom. It was a lot like sliding down a funnel, and Michael felt his feet break through a thin scrim of icy crystals that had already recongealed since Darryl's dive. He plunged through, surrounded by a cloud of sparkling ice and bubbles, and it took a few seconds for the water to clear enough for him to see.

He was hanging suspended about a dozen feet below the dive hole, in a blue world that seemed as lacking in limits as it did in dimensions. He could see, it seemed, forever, and he knew it was because the waters, particularly at that time of the year, were as free of plankton, or any particulate matter, as any on the globe. The sunlight only dimly illuminated the ice cap, which made the safety hole above stand out like a beacon radiating sunbeams downward. A trio of long lines, with plastic pennants on them, hung down from the lip of the hole and into the unseen depths.



And though he had braced himself for the shock of the icy water, Michael was pleasantly surprised. The gear that had left him feeling unbearably clumsy and hot up top was quite comfortable down below. The water not only made it easier to move, but it cooled the outer layers, and he felt himself positively relieved to be in the Antarctic Sea; no wonder Darryl had ducked in so quickly. But he also suspected that what felt cooling at the moment would be chilling soon, and frigid before the hour was up.

Glancing down, he could see Darryl's fins already propelling him downward toward the benthic regions. Clearly, Hirsch was not about to waste any of the time he had. The waters themselves were undisturbed and almost entirely free of any currents or tides that could, in some seas, stealthily move a diver far from his starting point. It was a great blue quiet kingdom, in which all Michael could hear at first was the intrusive clattering of his own regulator.

The seafloor sloped away from the area where the dive hut had been erected, and Michael began to follow its gradual descent. Glaciers had scoured the bottom, leaving ma.s.sive striations in their wake, and dropping boulders that had been picked up miles away and strewn there like marbles. As he came closer to the floor, he could begin to see the myriad life-forms that populated even that seemingly barren landscape. The mud bore the telltale spirals and squiggles of mollusks and crustaceans, sea urchins and brittle stars; limpets clung like pale streamers to the algae-covered sides of the rocks, while starfish-some of them heaped atop each other- silently prospected for clams in the ooze. A sea spider, big as Michael's hand with the fingers spread, stood on a pointed pair of its eight legs, aware of his approach. Michael hovered in the water, raised his camera and took several shots. The creature appeared to have almost no body, just a rust-colored head and neck with two pairs of eyes; the segmented posterior sections were so reduced that they melded into the long legs. But Michael knew that the sea spider's proboscis was a deadly device, which it employed to probe the sediment for its sponge and coral prey. Once it had pierced its quarry, the proboscis then sucked up the fluids and flesh of its victims in one long and lethal kiss. As Michael swam by, the sea spider was buffeted by the wave from his fins, and toppled over in slow, underwater motion. As he turned, he could see it indignantly scrambling to its spiky feet again, ready to impale any unfortunate pa.s.serby.

Darryl was below, with a net in one hand and his other hand on a rock the size of a basketball. When Michael came closer, Darryl indicated, with a tilt of his head and a gesture, that he wanted Michael to tip the rock over. Michael let the camera dangle from his neck while he used both hands to push the rock first one way, then the other. When it finally rolled over, a swarm of tiny amphipods, the size of a fingernail, their antennae waving and their many legs pumping, scurried out, many of them landing in the net, which Darryl expertly turned inside out before transferring them to a transparent Ziploc bag. Darryl gave Michael a thumbs-up-as much as could be done, given the thickness of the gloves-then waved good-bye and Michael took the hint. Darryl really didn't want any extra commotion around him while he was trying to collect his samples and make his observations.

Nor did Michael want to be so enc.u.mbered. He had his own job to do, his own discoveries to make. He loitered above a clump of what looked like worms, each a yard long, as they writhed atop some nearly consumed carrion, and took some more photos that he would later on ask Darryl to explicate. The light was beginning to fade as he swam farther below the surface and the seafloor gradually yielded to a field of icy pressure ridges, like a gigantic sheet of crumpled white paper. From one side, a dark shape suddenly flashed into view, and as Michael peered through his face mask he saw a pair of big nacreous eyes, surrounded by a brush of long black whiskers, looking back at him.

It was one of the Weddell seals, the deepest-diving mammal apart from the minke whale in these waters, and he knew it would do him no harm. As he lifted his camera, the nict.i.tating membrane that protected the cornea contracted, and the whiskers extended out like an opened fan. Ready for your close-up, Michael thought as he clicked off a series of shots.

The seal, five or six feet long, flicked one of its flippers and shot past him, looking back the whole while. It loitered then, as if waiting for this strange new acquaintance to catch up, before sailing off again.

Okay, Michael thought, I'm game. These, he thought, could be some terrific, and even amusing, shots for his article. He used his fins to take off after it, and the seal-a young one if he was any judge, with a sleek, undamaged coat and white unbroken teeth-retreated farther into the depths. Michael's oxygen tank hissed and burbled as he followed the seal around a rotten berg the size of a cabin cruiser, then over a rocky outcropping matted with brown and red algae.

The sea was truly opening up beneath him, and he sensed that if he wasn't careful, he would go too far. He clung to his vision of the sloping floor, and in the gloomy light provided by a break in the ice above, he saw something that looked entirely out of place. It was rectangular, too neatly so, and even encrusted with ice, it looked like a trunk of some kind. The seal spun in a lazy circle around it, almost as if it had been leading him here all along.

Oh my G.o.d, Michael thought, sunken treasure? It can't be. Not here. Not at the South Pole.

He worked his fins and rapidly drew near. Even with all the exertion, he was beginning to feel the cold seeping through the many layers of his clothing. He stopped just above it, waving his arms lazily in the freezing water. And under all the ice, under the clinging limpets and sea urchins and starfish that festooned its sides-one of the ivory-colored starfish had even spread itself out on top like a skeletal hand-he could see that it was definitely a trunk, and that its lid had fallen open. By instinct, he took out his camera and reeled off half a dozen shots.

The seal did a quick arabesque above him.

Michael went deeper, until he could actually look inside the trunk; a frozen cascade of ice spilled out, like crystal coins, but mixed in with them he could detect a hint of something darker. Plum-colored. Glistening.

He swept his gaze from left to right, scanning the seafloor. To one side, the sea descended to a bottomless black, to the other he saw-perhaps a few hundred yards off-a sheer wall of ice that clearly went from high above the cap to a depth he could never approach. Between his present location and the looming glacier, he saw something else, also plum-colored, covered with an icy sheen, but lying on the seabed. He took the flashlight off of his harness belt and aimed the beam in its direction.

It was a bottle ... it had to be. A wine bottle.

Michael swam down, and with his three-fingered glove brushed the sediment away from its neck. An urchin, attached to its base, opened and closed its mouth-a mouth was really all it was-thinking that something edible might be in reach. Michael used the tip of the flashlight to sc.r.a.pe it off. Ice coated the bottle from top to bottom, but under it he could see a sc.r.a.p of what once had been a label, altogether illegible. He tried to prize the bottle from the seafloor, but it was not about to be plucked so easily. He would have to use both hands. He carefully balanced the flashlight between two chunks of ice moored to the bottom, inadvertently disturbing a scale worm that looked like a broken rubber band several feet long- and that then undulated off in search of calmer quarters-before trying again. To loosen the grip of the mud and ice, he had to rock the bottle carefully-the last thing he wanted to do was break an artifact that might have survived for G.o.d knows how many years. Eventually, it broke free-he felt exactly as if he had just won a delicate tug-of-war with the ocean floor-and he turned it all around in his hands, admiring it.

Before he suddenly spotted one more, a dozen yards off, even closer to the glacial wall.

Perhaps he had found a treasure trove! Thoughts of fortune certainly crossed his mind-how couldn't they?-but more than that, it was the scoop! Wait till Gillespie back in Tacoma got a load of this! A photojournalist, on a.s.signment from Eco-Travel Magazine, discovering a sunken chest hundreds of feet below the Antarctic ice cap. From there on in, Michael would be able to write his own ticket.

He stuck the bottle in a mesh bag attached to his harness, and sailed closer to the ice cliff. The seal seemed to hold off, drifting along on his back and looking at him down the length of his own sleek belly.

The closer he got to the glacier, the colder the water suddenly got; it reminded Michael of the impossibly cold katabatic winds that rushed down the sides of glaciers on land and gusted across the polar plains. He shivered in his suit, and glanced at the diving watch clamped to the outside of his wrist. He would have to turn around soon, very soon, and come back later.

The second bottle was wedged beneath a rock, and he decided to leave it where it was. His regulator hissed, and he realized that he had not been breathing normally-the excitement had been getting to him, and he'd not been paying attention. The slanted wall of the ma.s.sive glacier rose above him like a sheer white cliff-not so different from one that he'd encountered on a tragic day in the Cascades-and fell away forever under his feet. Its walls were gouged and scarred, like a fighter who'd been in the ring far too many times. He ran his hand across it, feeling, even through the thick glove, the rough and ancient power of it, a mountain of ice that could slowly but inexorably demolish anything in its path.

And then his breath did stop-entirely.

Beneath his fingers, he saw ... a face.

He shoved himself away, in shock and confusion, a cloud of air bubbles trailing away.

With his arms and legs treading water, he stayed in place. The Weddell seal came back to play, but Michael paid no attention to it.

He could not have seen what he knew he had just seen. He looked around for Darryl, but all he could make out was an orange speck in the far distance, tending to a trap that was being hauled up the line to the safety hole.

He turned back toward the glacier, his heart hammering in his chest-he had to get a grip, or he'd do something stupid and wind up drowning before he ever got to tell anyone about what he'd found-and turned the flashlight on the mottled ice.

From there, he could see very little.

But when he allowed himself to move closer, he saw again something emerging from under the mask of ice ... and when he went closer still, he could see it even more plainly.

A frozen face, with a crown of auburn hair, and a chain-an iron chain?-wrapped around its throat. There was a smudge of blue and black under the ice, where her clothes must be, and quite possibly some other form nestled close behind the one he was looking at. But it was all too difficult to discern or separate out in the dim glacial waters.

He brushed the ice gently-reverently now-with his glove, and put his face mask closer to the wall.

In the beam of the flashlight, he looked into the ice, where, like Sleeping Beauty imprisoned in an icy fortress, he saw a young woman's face, staring out ... but not in repose.

Nothing like it.

Her eyes were open, wide open-eyes so green that even here he was stunned by their brilliance-and so was her mouth, in a final scream. A violent shiver racked his body and a warning alarm sounded from his oxygen tank. He drifted back, barely able to accept what was happening, until he was far enough away that the ice clouded over and its terrible treasure was again concealed.

CHAPTER FIFTEEN.

July 6, 1854, evening WHEN THE BROUGHAM RUMBLED across Trafalgar Square and into the refined precincts of Pall Mall, where the finest gentleman's clubs had all come to roost, Sinclair had the coachman stop at the corner of St. James's, rather than in front of the main entrance to the Longchamps. It was there that the side entrance was located, and it was only through the more humble door that any woman was ever allowed to pa.s.s.

The coachman stepped down smartly unfolded the carriage steps, and helped the ladies to disembark. The gas lamps that lined the street (Pall Mall had been the first such district in London to be so graced, in 1807) were just flickering on against the encroaching dark.

Inside the marble vestibule, a liveried servant-Bentley if Sinclair recalled his name correctly-awaited, but when he saw Sinclair an uncertain look crossed his face.

"Evening, Bentley," Sinclair crowed, in his most affable manner. "We've had a winning day at Ascot!"

"I'm pleased to hear it, sir," Bentley replied, casting his eye over the a.s.semblage.

"And what we need now is refreshment."

"Indeed, sir," Bentley replied, without volunteering anything more.

Now Sinclair knew that something was awry. His debts, he suspected, had risen to the point where the board of governors had posted his name as being in arrears, and his club privileges had been suspended.

While the ladies were no doubt blissfully unaware of any problem-too busy marveling at the way the evening light came through the stained-gla.s.s oriel window-Sinclair knew that Rutherford and Frenchie must have guessed at the problem already. Rutherford looked ready to escort them all back to his coach, and on to the Athenaeum, where he belonged.

"Bentley, may I have a word?" Sinclair said, drawing the nervous servant aside. Once they were out of earshot, Sinclair said, "Have I been posted? Is that it?" and Bentley nodded.

"A bookkeeping mistake," Sinclair said, regretfully shaking his head, "nothing more. I'll straighten it out in the morning."

"But sir, until then, I have been instructed-"

Sinclair put up a hand and Bentley immediately fell silent. Reaching into his pocket, Sinclair extracted a wad of bills, peeled off several, and handed them to Bentley. "Give this to Mr. Wither-spoon in the morning, and have him put it toward my account. Will you do that?"

Bentley, without counting or even looking at the money, said, "I will, sir, of course."

"Good man. For now, what my companions and I require is a cold supper and colder champagne. Can you have something served up in the stranger's coffee-room?" Though hardly the most appealing room in the ma.s.sive old club, it was the only place where women were permitted at all. Bentley said that he could arrange it, and Sinclair returned to his guests.

"Right this way," he said, showing the ladies down a short corridor and into what was in fact an annex that the club had built to accommodate its growing membership. The room was untenanted at present, though a servant quickly appeared to draw the long, red velvet curtains and light the wall sconces. There was a vast, rough-hewn stone hearth at one end, surmounted by a stuffed elk's head, and an array of worn leather seats, sofas, and oaken tables.

The ladies seated themselves in a small conversational grouping beneath the main chandelier, their tired feet resting on a faded Oriental rug.

"Shall we have a fire?" Sinclair asked his guests, but everyone declined.

"Good Lord, haven't you sweltered enough today?" Rutherford said, taking the seat closest to Moira, who was still fanning her throat and shoulders with the Ascot program. "I'm praying for rain."

A storm had been threatening the whole way back from the racecourse, but it had not yet broken. Sinclair, too, appreciated the cool of the room after the long, hot ride in the carriage.

A pair of servants bustled in, and soon one of the round tables was set for six, with yellow damask napery glittering crystal, and a gleaming silver candelabrum. When everything was ready, Bentley nodded toward Sinclair, who seated Eleanor directly to his right, and Moira on his left. Frenchie and Dolly, who had at last removed her garden hat to reveal a cascade of black ringlets, completed the circle. She was a pretty girl, no more than twenty or twenty-one, but wore a rather heavy layer of makeup to conceal what appeared to be smallpox scars.

Once the champagne had been poured, Sinclair raised his fluted gla.s.s and declared, "To Nightingale's Song-our n.o.ble steed and generous benefactor!"

"Why do you only share your losing hunches with me?" Frenchie said, winking at the memory of the pit-bull match, and Sinclair laughed.

"Perhaps my luck has changed," he said, turning ever so slightly toward Eleanor.

"To luck, then," Rutherford said, weary of all the words, and draining his gla.s.s all at once.

Eleanor had had champagne just once before in her life, when the town's mayor had celebrated his election with the farmers and tradesmen, but she was sure that it was meant to be drunk slowly. She lifted the gla.s.s, and the cold froth of the bubbles almost made her sneeze. Even the gla.s.s was cold, and the wine, when she tasted it on her tongue, was sweet and surprising. She took only a sip, then gazed at the gla.s.s, with its bubbles rising, and it reminded her of the bubbles one would sometimes see under the thin ice that covered a stream. There was something very nearly mesmerizing about it, and when she took her eyes away, she saw that Sinclair was amused at her concentration.

"It's for drinking," he said, "not contemplation."

"Hear, hear," Rutherford said, commandeering the bottle to refill his own gla.s.s, and then Moira's. He leaned very far over her as he poured, and Moira obligingly leaned back in her chair to afford him more room, and a better view.

Eleanor, who had often wondered what the interior of such impressive clubs might be like, was somewhat let down by the reality. She had imagined far more sumptuous surroundings, rich with gilding and ornamentation and fine French furniture beautifully upholstered in silks and satin. The room, large though it was and with a high, beamed ceiling, felt much more like a comfortably appointed hunting lodge than a palace.

Under Bentley's close supervision, a series of cold dishes-veal tongue, mutton with mint jelly, duck in aspic-were brought out, and the men regaled their companions with stories of the brigade and its exploits. All three were members of the 17th Duke of Cambridge's Own Lancers, first formed in 1759, and as Rutherford proudly declared while holding a sc.r.a.p of duck aloft on his fork, "Never far from the cannon fire since!"

"In the thick of it more often that not," Le Maitre added.

"And soon to be so again," Sinclair said, and once more, Eleanor felt an unexpected pang. The situation in the east was worsening-Russia, under the pretext of a religious conflict in the ancient city of Jerusalem, had declared war on the Turkish Ottoman Empire, and defeated the Turkish fleet in the Black Sea. It was feared, as Rutherford explained to the ladies, that "if we don't stop the Russian bear on the land, he will soon be swimming in the Mediterranean Sea." Any such challenge to the British command of the seas, it was universally understood, had to be nipped in the bud.

Eleanor grasped only some of this, her knowledge of foreign affairs-and even geography-being slight; her education had been limited to a few years at a local academy for girls, where the emphasis was on etiquette and deportment rather than more intellectual matters. But still, she could see the eagerness and the enthusiasm with which her male company were looking forward to the prospect of battle, and she marveled at their bravery. Frenchie had removed from his pocket a silver cigarette case, on which was emblazoned the emblem of the 17th Light Brigade. It was a Death's Head, and beneath the crossed bones were unfurled the words, "Or Glory." It was pa.s.sed from hand to hand, and when Eleanor received it, she instinctively recoiled and gave it quickly on to Sinclair.

A platter of cheeses, then sweets, were served, along with what was surely the third-or was it the fourth?-bottle of champagne. Eleanor just remembered hearing the popping of several corks over the course of the meal, and when Sinclair offered to fill her gla.s.s again, she placed a hand over it.

"No, thank you. I'm afraid it's already gone to my head."

"Perhaps you'd like to take some air?"

"Yes," she said, "that would probably be well advised."

But when they excused themselves and stepped to the portico door, they could see that the rain had finally arrived. The pavement was wet and shining in the light of the gas lamps, and as Eleanor looked on, a pair of gentlemen in top hats and black capes bolted from a hansom cab and up the steps of the equally grand clubhouse across the street.

"These houses are quite beautiful," she said, craning her neck to see the facade of the Longchamps. There were great rounded columns, made of a cream-colored limestone, and an exquisitely carved bas-relief of a Greek G.o.d, or perhaps an emperor, above the imposing double doors.

"I suppose you're right," Sinclair said, affecting nonchalance. "I'm so accustomed to it, I hardly see it anymore."

"But others do."

He lighted a cigarette and gazed out at the rain. A weary dray horse, drawing a wagon of beer kegs, slowly clip-clopped by, the wheels rumbling over the wet cobblestones. He blew out a puff of smoke, then, struck by inspiration, said, "Would you like to see more?"

Eleanor wasn't sure what he was proposing. "I didn't bring an umbrella, but if you-"

"No, I meant more of the clubhouse."

But Eleanor knew it wasn't allowed.

"There's a quite marvelous tapestry, a Gobelins, in the main hall, and the billiards room is the best in Pall Mall."

Seeing her uncertainty, he said, leaning close with a mischievous smile, "Oh, yes, I see your natural reluctance, and it is quite forbidden. But that's why it will be such fun."

Would it? All day long Eleanor had felt like she'd pa.s.sed through the looking gla.s.s and was moving in a realm she didn't fully understand, and this was just one more instance of it.

"Come on," he said, taking her hand like a child inviting another to play. "I know a way."

Before she knew it, they had reentered the club, pa.s.sed back down the corridor from the stranger's coffee-room, then crept up a back stairs that she suspected only the servants were to use. Sinclair inched a door open, then put a finger to his lips as two men in white tie, holding brandy snifters, ambled by.

"Not even if the Admiralty ordered you to?" one asked, and the other said, "Particularly if the Admiralty ordered it," and they both chuckled.

Once they'd gone, Sinclair opened the door wider and escorted Eleanor through. She was standing at one end of a narrow mezzanine, overlooking a vast entry hall with alternating white and black marble tiles. A dual staircase swept up on either side, and at its apex hung a huge antique tapestry, depicting a stag hunt. It was faded, but must have once been done in brilliant purples and blues; a ragged gold fringe lined its edges.

"It's Belgian," Sinclair whispered, "and quite old."

Still clutching her hand-no one had ever held it so long, or so possessively, and she still did not know how she should have responded to such conduct-he drew her on, offering her a glimpse of a cardroom, where several men were so focused on their game that none so much as looked up at the opening of the door; a sumptuous library with satinwood bookcases standing twelve feet high, all lined with leather-bound books; a trophy room with various silver plates and cups and a veritable menagerie of stuffed animal heads staring off, gla.s.sy-eyed, into eternity. Three or four times they had to duck into alcoves or behind closed doors to avoid being seen by a pa.s.sing servant or member of the club, and on one such occasion Sinclair whispered to her, "That buffoon with the belly is called Fitzroy I've thrashed him once, but I fear I shall have to do it again."

When Fitzroy had pa.s.sed, stifling a belch with the back of his hand, Sinclair drew her out of hiding again. "This way," he said. "Just one more."

They were on the third story, and she could hear a hard but unfamiliar clacking sound, as Sinclair led her up a narrow, carpeted stair, and into a velvet-curtained recess. He held his finger to his lips again, then, finally releasing her hand, parted the curtains a few inches.

They were standing on a tiny balcony, with an elaborately scrolled black iron rail; below them there were half a dozen billiards tables, spread like a deep green lawn across the wainscoted gallery. Just two of the tables were in play, and the men at one were only in their shirtsleeves, their suspenders hanging down; Eleanor blushed at the sight. One of the players stroked a white ball and it rolled smoothly across the table, striking a red ball, before gently nestling against the b.u.mper.

"Well played," his opponent said.

"If only life were a billiards table," the first one replied, pausing to rub something on the end of the stick.

"Ah, but it is. Weren't you told?"

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Blood And Ice Part 12 summary

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