Brooks and Downey should have been checking along the edge of the trench. He glanced at his watch again. Thirty-five minutes had now passed. At this depth they were easily good for forty. Unless heâd given the order, the rest of the team should still be working.
A diver appeared over the lip of the trench and swam directly toward him. For a split second Todd was certain it was Downey, then something wrong registered; the neoprene suit and the gear were regulation, but the mask and the tank werenât. Adrenaline pumped. It was possible the stranger was a diver from the charter launch that had been trolling in the area earlier. He couldnât hear the sound of the launchâs engine, which meant they could have dropped anchor nearby, but recreational diving wasnât compatible with game fishing, especially not this far out and with the visibility so poor.
The second possibility was that the diver was one of the bad guys, protecting their drop site. Instinctively, he depressed the shutter on the camera, then reached for the knife sheathed at his ankle. The diver veered off to one side. Todd spun in the water as a second diver swam up out of the trench. A hand ripped at his face mask. Salt water stung his eyes and filled his mouth: his oxygen line had been cut. An arm clamped around his neck. He slashed with the knife. Blood clouded the water and the arm released. With a grunt, he kicked free, heading for the surface. With a lungful of air he could make twice the distance with ease.
A hand latched around his ankle, dragging him back down. Jackknifing, he dove at the man, slicing with the knife. Blood and air erupted. He glimpsed the camera as it drifted down to the seabed, the strap cut in the struggle, and he registered that the other diver had also used a knife.
Vision blurring, he grabbed the limp diverâs regulator and sucked in a lungful of air. He had a split second to register a third diver, then a spear punched into his shoulder, driving him back against the hull of the ship. Shock reverberated through him; salt water filled his lungs. Arm and shoulder numbed, chest burning with a cold fire and his throat clamped against the convulsive urge to cough, he kicked upward.
Sixty feet above, the ocean surface rippled like molten silver. Sunlight. Oxygen.
A sudden image of his wife, Eleanor, and small son, Steve, sunbathing in their backyard in Shreveport sent a powerful surge of adrenaline through his veins. He cleared the edge of the hull.
A split second before his vision faded, he spotted Mathews and Hendrickson, floating. Distantly, he felt hard fingers close around one ankle, the cold pressure of the water as he was towed down into the trench.
Shreveport, Louisiana
October 21
Eight-year-old Steven Fischer dropped the ball.
âAw, Steve. Didja have toââ
His cousin Saraâs voice was high-pitched and sharp as Steve stumbled to a halt. It was the middle of the day in his cousinâs backyard. Despite the fact that it was autumn, the sun was hot enough to fry eggs and so bright it hurt his eyes, but that wasnât the reason his vision had gone funny. He could see a picture of his dad, staring at him, which wasnât right. His dad was away, down south somewhere. Having another holiday on the navy, Granddad Fischer had joked.
This time heâd promised to bring Steve back a sombrero.
Fear gripped him. As abruptly as it had formed, the picture faded, like a television set being turned off, and the tight feeling in his chest was gone.
âIâm not playing anymore.â He stared blankly at Sara, who was looking ticked. He was going home. Something had happened. Something bad.
Shreveport, Louisiana
November 20, 1984
Eleanor Fischer watched the coffin as it was lowered into the grave and fought the wrenching urge to cry out.
The gleaming oak box was filled with Toddâs clothing and a few mementos that had meant something to him. Silly bits and pieces she had