Lost Empire

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Authors: Clive;Grant Blackwood Cussler
though.”
    This was true. During his time at DARPA Sam had undergone covert operative training at the CIA’s Camp Perry facility, the hope being that by seeing how field operatives work DARPA’s engineers could better supply their needs. Going through the program at the same time was a CIA case officer named Rube Haywood. He and Sam had become friends and remained close ever since.
    “And that friend has friends,” Sam added. “In places like Turkey and Bulgaria and Romania . . . I think they call it ‘rendition.’ You’ve heard of rendition, I’m sure. Grim-faced guys in black jump-suits shove you aboard a plane, you disappear somewhere for a few weeks, then come back with an aversion to electricity and power drills.”
    The rendition part was, of course, a bluff, but Sam’s presentation had the desired effect: Yaotl’s eyes were gaping, his lower lip trembling.
    Abruptly, Sam stood up. “So, how about some food. Is bread okay?”
    Yaotl nodded.
     
     
    SAM FED HIM a half loaf of chapati bread and a liter of mineral water from a sports bottle, then asked, “About that friend of mine . . . should I call him or will you answer a few questions?”
    “I’ll answer.”
    Sam took him through the basics: his full name; the names of his partners, including Hawk Nose; who they worked for; had they come to Zanzibar looking for him and Remi; what were they supposed to accomplish; the name of their mother ship. . . Most of the questions Yaotl could answer only partially. He was simply a civilian contractor, he claimed, a former member of Mexico’s Special Forces Airmobile Group, or GAFE. He’d been recruited four days earlier by a man named Itzli Rivera, aka Hawk Nose, also a former member of GAFE, to come to Zanzibar and “find some people.” He’d been given no further background, nor had Rivera explained why Sam and Remi had been targeted. Nor was he sure whether Rivera was working for himself or someone else.
    “But you saw him on the phone several times, correct?” Sam asked. “Did it sound like he was reporting in?”
    “It’s possible. I only overheard parts.”
    Sam questioned him for another ten minutes, at the end of which Yaotl asked, “What will you do with me?”
    “I’ll let you know.”
    “But you said you wouldn’t—Hey, wait!”
    Sam left the room and rejoined Remi on the patio. He recounted his conversation with Yaotl. She said, “Sam . . . electricity and power drills? That’s mean.”
    “No, doing it would be mean. I just planted the seed and let his imagination chew on it for a while.”
    “Yaotl said four days ago, right? He got the call from Rivera four days ago?”
    “Yes.”
    “That was our first day on the island.”
    Sam nodded. “Before we found the bell.”
    “Then it’s us they’re interested in.”
    “And the bell, perhaps. Our ruse with the legal pad clearly got their attention.”
    “But how did they know we were here?” Remi asked, then answered her own question: “The BBC interview right after we landed?”
    “Could be. Let’s put it together: Rivera and whomever he’s working for find out we’re here. They got worried we might find something and they came to investigate.”
    “It’s a big island, though,” Remi replied. “They’d have to be awfully paranoid to think we’d stumble onto whatever they’re worried about. Even if it’s something as big as our bell, it’s a proverbial needle in a haystack.”
    “The interviewer asked us where we were planning on diving. We told her Chumbe Island. Maybe that was the magic phrase.”
    Remi considered this. “And, like it or not, we’ve got something of a reputation. We’ve had some great luck finding treasure that didn’t want to be found.”
    Sam smiled. “You call it luck. I call it—”
    “You know what I mean.”
    “So it’s the combination of us, Zanzibar, and Chumbe Island that got their attention.”
    They went silent for a minute, each examining their what-if scenario from various

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