No harm there.â
âStill, force of habit.â
âThe boat will be here soon enough and whatever it is will still be there. Besides, it seems like the locals are so spooked by the area that we wonât have much to worry about.â
Vanya returned, a smile on her face. âOrwen can see you this morning if youâll go to his office. Hereâs the address,â she said, and handed Sam a business card with handwriting on the back.
âThanks so much for this,â Remi said.
âMy pleasure. Good luck with your mystery. What an exciting life you must lead if itâs always like this.â
âWell, thereâs a lot of hurry up and wait, too,â Sam said.
Manchesterâs office was in one of the nicer buildings on the main street, two stories that looked like they had at least seen paint within the last ten years. A pleasant woman greeted them and showed them back to where Manchester was sitting, resplendent in his suit, behind a desk the size of an economy car.
âPlease, sit. Vanya was very secretive on the phone. Said youâre on an adventure and need some help?â
âWell, Iâm not sure about the adventure part,â Remi said.
Sam told him about the sunken ruins and Manchesterâs eyes widened. When Sam concluded, the big man rose and moved to look out his window at the ocean.
âThatâs quite a tale. Iâm not sure what to make of it.â He hesitated. âWhat would you like me to do?â
âA couple of things. There has to be some kind of evidence of what the ruins are. Some historical reference, or at least a legend.â
âPerhaps. But we have no written history, so I wouldnât expect much. Iâve never heard anything.â
âMaybe an elder who knows all the old stories?â
Manchester appeared to think. âThere are a few relics who might be able to help you. But theyâre out in the middle of nowhere. City life isnât for themâthey prefer the traditional ways.â
âCould you make any introductions?â
Manchester laughed. âItâs not like I can send them an e-mail. But I can give you directions and a note to show them. Although they probably canât read, they might recognize the stationery.â
âThat would be perfect.â Sam paused. âThereâs also the question of how to get the governmentâs approval to investigate the site.â
âThat Iâll need to think about. Weâve never really had anyone approach us to do anything resembling archaeology here, so itâs a first, at least as long as Iâve been a MP. Iâm not sure thereâs a procedure to follow.â
âThat can be both good and bad,â Remi said.
âYes. I understand. Wouldnât want to run afoul of anyoneâs sensibilities. Iâll have lunch with some of the other members of parliament and see what I can come up with. Itâs not like you want mineral rights or anything, just to poke around in some sunken stones. Am I correct?â
âAbsolutely. Anything we find would be the property of the Solomon people. Weâre here merely out of curiosity.â
âI think that will go a long way to engendering support, then. Youâre basically working for free, helping us catalog a piece of history we didnât even know existed until today.â
âThatâs how Iâd present it,â Sam agreed.
Manchester smiled. âWell, I canât guarantee a permit, but Iâll do what I can,â he said doubtfully.
âThatâs all we can ask.â
âAs for the oldsters, I have two people in mind. One lives down by Mbinu, halfway to the eastern tip of the island, and the other is more remoteâhe has a shack on a dirt road by the river east of the village of Aola. What are you driving?â
Sam and Remi exchanged a glance. âWe have to find something to rent.â
âGet an SUV with good tires and
J.A. Konrath, Bernard Schaffer