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"If it's hot, I'll drink it."
Pitt glanced at his watch, seeing it was nearly three A.M. "If we get going now, we'll be there by sunup."
"Just in time for breakfast."
The two men took off for the dark camp, working their way cautiously down the short ravine, then snaking their way through the rock-strewn hills. They traveled with a renewed sense of vigor, confident the worst of their ordeal was behind them. Food and water awaited them in the village below, which was now in sight.
Their progress slowed as they wound around several vertical uplifts that were too steep to traverse. The jagged rocks gave way to smaller stands of sandstone that the men could climb over and through. Hiking around a blunt mesa, they stopped and rested at the edge of a short plateau. Beneath them, the black-shadowed encampment sat less than a mile away.
The first strands of daylight began lightening the eastern sky, but it was still too early to offer much illumination. The main structures of the encampment were clearly visible, dark gray shapes against the light-colored desert floor. Pitt counted twenty-two of the round tents he knew to be Mongolian gers. In the distance, they appeared larger than the ones they had seen in Ulaanbaatar and around the countryside. Oddly, there were no lights, lanterns, or fires to be seen. The camp was pitch-black.
Scattered around the encampment, Pitt and Giordino could make out the dark shadows of animals, denizens of the local herd. They were too far away to tell whether the animals were horses or camels. A fenced corral held some of the herd close to theirs, while others roamed freely around the area.
"I believe you asked for a horse?" Giordino said.
"Let's hope they're not camels."
The two men moved easily across the last stretch of ground. They approached within a hundred yards of the camp when Pitt suddenly froze. Giordino caught Pitt's abrupt halt and followed suit. He strained his eyes and ears to detect a danger, but noticed nothing out of the ordinary. The night was perfectly still. Not a sound could be heard but for the occasional gust of wind, and he saw no movement around the camp.
"What gives?" he finally whispered to Pitt.
"The herd," Pitt replied quietly. "They're not moving."
Giordino peered at the host of animals scattered about the darkness, looking for signs of movement. A few yards away, he spotted a trio of fuzzy brown camels standing together, their heads raised in the air. He stared at them for a minute, but they didn't move a muscle.
"Maybe they're asleep," he offered.
"No," Pitt replied. "There is no odor either."
Pitt had visited enough farms and ranches to know that the smell of manure was never far from a herd of livestock. He took a few steps forward, creeping up slowly until he stood alongside the three animals. The creatures showed no fear, remaining still even as Pitt swatted one on its furry rump. Giordino looked on in shock as Pitt then grabbed one of the animals around the neck and shoved. The camel didn't resist at all but keeled stiffly over onto its side. Giordino ran over and stared at the animal, which lay motionless on its back with its legs in the air. Only they weren't legs sticking up but pieces of two-by-fours.
The fallen camel, like the rest of the herd, was made of wood.
-28-
DISAPPEARED? WHAT DO YOU MEAN they disappeared?" As Borjin's anger rose, a vein in the shape of an earthworm protruded from the side of his neck. "Your men tracked them into the desert!"
Though he physically towered over Borjin, the gruff head of security wilted like a shrinking violet under his boss's tirade.
"Their tracks simply vanished into the sand, sir. There was no indication they were picked up by another vehicle. They were fifty kilometers from the nearest village, which was to the east as they were traveling south. Their prospects for survival in the Gobi are nonexistent," Batbold said quietly.
Tatiana stood listening at the bar in the corner of the study, mixing a pair of vodka martinis. Handing a gla.s.s to her brother, she took a sip from her own drink, then asked, "Were they spies for the Chinese?"
"No," Batbold replied. "I don't believe so. The two men apparently bribed their way onto the Mongolian state security escort. The Chinese delegation seemed not to notice their absence from the motorcade when they departed. It is noteworthy that they also match the description of the two men who broke into our storage facility in Ulaanbaatar two nights ago."
"The Chinese would not have been so clumsy," Borjin commented.
"The men were not Chinese. I saw them myself. They looked Russian. Though Dr. Gantumur at the laboratory claimed they spoke to him in English with an American accent."
Tatiana suddenly choked on her drink, setting the gla.s.s down and coughing to clear her throat.
"Americans?" she stammered. "What did they look like?"
"From what I saw out the window, one was tall and lean with black hair while the other was short and robust with dark curly hair," Borjin said.
Batbold nodded. "Yes, that is an accurate description," he mumbled, neglecting to relay how close he was to the two men when he got clobbered by the shovel.
"Those sound like the men from NUMA," Tatiana gasped. "Dirk Pitt and Al Giordino. They were the ones who rescued us from the fishing boat on Baikal. The same men who came aboard the Primoski and captured the Russian scientist shortly before we departed Siberia."
"How did they track you here?" Borjin asked sternly.
"I do not know. Perhaps through the lease of the Primoski."
"They have stuck their noses where they don't belong. Where did they go in the compound?" he asked, turning to Batbold.
"They drove into the garage with a flat tire, then entered the research facility. Dr. Gantumur phoned security immediately, so they were only in the lab a few minutes. They somehow eluded the responding guards, and were probably examining the residence when you spotted them entering the sanctuary."
Borjin's face flushed with anger, the vein on his neck rising to new heights.
"They are hunting for the oil company employees, I am certain," Tatiana said. "They know nothing of our work. Do not worry, my brother."
"You should have never brought those people here in the first place," he hissed.
"It is your fault," Tatiana roared back. "If you hadn't killed the Germans before they fully a.s.sessed the field data, we would not have needed further a.s.sistance."
Borjin glared at his sister, refusing to admit the truth of her words. "Then these oil people must be eliminated, too. Have them accelerate the a.n.a.lysis, I wish them gone by the end of the week," he said, his eyes raging with fire.
"Do not worry. The Americans know nothing of our work. And they will not survive to talk anyway."
"Perhaps you are right," he replied, his temper cooling. "These men of the sea are a long ways from the water now. But just to be sure they stay that way, send the monk down there immediately for insurance," he added, speaking to Batbold.
"A prudent decision, brother."
"To their dry and dusty demise," he mused now, raising his gla.s.s and sipping the martini.
Tatiana swallowed the rest of her drink but silently wondered if the demise of the Americans would come as predicted. They were determined men, she had come to realize, who would not face death easily.
It felt as though they were walking through the back-lot set of a Hollywood western, only they were surrounded by camels instead of cattle. Climbing through a fenced corral, Pitt and Giordino were amused to see a large trough to water the wooden livestock. The early-morning sun cast long shadows from the large immobile herd that was strategically placed around the village. Pitt gave up counting when he reached a hundred head of the prop camels.
"Reminds me of that guy in Texas who has all those Cadillacs half buried in his yard," Giordino said.
"I don't think these were put out here for art, if that's what you call it."