Night of Terror by Desmond Bagley

disappointed. He’s like this on every new project though, Mike. As

long as it’s going well he’s on top of the world, and when it isn’t

he’s down in the dumps. I keep telling him he’ll get ulcers.” “Like

gout, it’s supposed to be the rich man’s ailment. That should cheer

him up,” I said. “It’s only—‘ Danny Williams’s voice soared up from

the bows, cracking with excitement.

“Go left! Go left! Go to port!” Someone else started shouting.

I spun the wheel desperately and Esmerelda heeled violently as she came

round. Hanging on, I had only time to see a jumble of white waters in

the sunshine, and then to my intense relief Ian was with me, taking

over at the wheel. I fell away from him, cannoning into Clare who was

also off balance.

Shouts and the thud of bare feet told me that the whole crew was

tumbling up on deck to see what was happening. I noticed the echo

sounder and in one incredible second I saw the indicator light spin

round the dial. It looked as though the bottom was coming up to hit

us.

Ian let Esmerelda continue to go about until the foaming area in the

sea was well behind us, then straightened her out and the indicator

light of the echo sounder spun the other way just as fast. He

throttled the engine down and I took a deep breath to steady myself.

Geordie came running along the deck.

“What the hell was that?” he shouted.

“I think we damn near speared ourselves on a reef – I think we’ve found

her,” I gasped, still winded. Everyone was crowding to look astern at

the jumble of white waters, but from where we were it was already

impossible to see anything underneath it. “Unless it’s more fish-‘ Ian

said, “No, it was a reef. I saw it – about a foot sticking out.

And we shoaled bloody fast just then too.” Campbell came up from

below, looking startled and groggy. He may have been asleep. “What’s

happened?” “I think we’ve found Minerva.” He looked aft and saw what

we were all trying to get a better glimpse of. “What, that?” he asked

incredulously.

“Is that all?” Clare asked. Some of the crew, the non-sailors, looked

equally baffled.

“What did you all expect – the Statue of Liberty?” I asked.

“We’ve got it, boys, wherever it is we’re there!”Geordie was exultant

and relieved, and more nervous for the safety of his ship than ever.

Danny Williams came aft to a little storm of back-patting- f “Good job

you kept your eyes open,”I told him, and he looked very pleased.

“God, I was never so scared in my life,” he said. “It came out of

nowhere – now you see it, now you don’t. I thought the bloody boat was

going to ride up on it. You were pretty handy with that wheel.” There

was another murmur of assent and it was my turn to look pleased.

Geordie said to Ian, “I want you to keep her just where she is.

I’ll bet that if we lay off a couple of miles we’ll never find it

again.

Christ, it’s lucky it’s almost low water, it wouldn’t show at all

otherwise. It’ll only dry out to about three feet at this rate.”

“There’ll be coral clusters all round,” I said, reinforcing Geordie’s

warning. “And deep water between them and the actual reef. There’ll

be a lagoon beyond that. An atoll is forming.” I saw that they were

all taking an interest, apart from lar and the on-watch lookouts, so I

expanded a little. “This rock spear that was underneath us can’t have

been there very long, or it would have been higher -you’d have an

island here. But this coral has only just started to form.” Geordie

said suspiciously, “What do you mean by “only just”?” “Within the last

five or ten thousand years – I’ll know better when I can take a closer

look at it.” “I thought you’d say that. But you’re not going to look

at it.

Do you think we could get to the middle of that little lot?” We all

looked back towards Minerva, if Minerva it was.

“No,” I said dubiously. “No, perhaps not.” Campbell had a question on

his lips that he was dying to ask, but not in public.

Headshakes and heavy gestures indicated his desire for a private word,

so I extricated myself from the still excited crew and followed him

below together with Clare.

Campbell said, “I’m sorry to interrupt the course of pure science, but

how does this tie in with the nodules? Do you think we’re going to be

luckier now?” I said soberly, “That’s just the trouble; I don’t see

how we can. Most nodules are very old, but Mark’s was comparatively

young.

He had a theory which I’m beginning to grasp, to do with them forming

very fast as a result of volcanic action. Now there’s been volcanic

action here all right but much too long ago for my taste.

There’s been time for a long slow coral growth and it doesn’t quite tie

in.” “So this is another goddarn false alarm,” said Campbell

gloomily.

“Maybe not. I could be wrong. We can only find out by dredging.”

So we dredged.

As soon as he could Geordie had taken careful sightings of the reef.

“I’m going to nail this thing down once and for all,”he said.

“Then we’ll cruise around it carefully and not too closely, keeping an

eye on the depth, and take soundings and chart everything we can see.

And then we’ll decide what to do next.” After we had satisfied him we

got started. Geordie took Esmerelda in as close as he dared and the

dredge went over the side. I could imagine it going down like a huge

steel spider at the end of its line, dropping past the incredible

cliffs of Minerva, plunging deeper and deeper into the abyss.

The operation was negative – there were no nodules at all.

I was unperturbed. “I was expecting that. Let’s go round and try the

other side again.” So we skirted the shoal and tried again, with the

same result – no nodules.

I thought that there probably had been nodules in the area, but the

up-thrust of our friendly reef had queered the pitch.

We were all calling it Minerva by now, although Geordie and I were

aware that it might be a different reef altogether – the seas

hereabouts were notorious for vigias. I decided to try further out,

away from the disturbance.

This time we began to find nodules again, coming in like sacks of

potatoes. I was busy in the lab once more but becoming depressed.

“This is standard stuff,” I told my small audience. “High manganese

low cobalt, just as before. And it’s too deep for commercial

dredging.

But we’ll do it thoroughly.” And day after day the dredging and the

shifting of position went on, with the results of my assays continuing

to be unfruitful.

Then one evening Geordie and I consulted with one another and decided

to call it off. We had been out from NONE& Panama for over two weeks,

nearly three, and I was anxious to carry on to Tahiti to be there

before the Eastern Sun arrived. Geordie wasn’t anxious over stores or

even water thanks to his careful planning we could stay at sea for up

to six weeks if we needed to – but he felt that the activity, or lack

of it, would begin to irk a crew which was after all partly made up of

people to whom he’d virtually promised action and excitement. Campbell

was quite ready to chuck the whole thing in on a land search he would

be more tenacious, but then he was seldom out there himself during the

early exploratory days, usually only coming in at the kill, so to

speak. And so we decided to call a halt to the proceedings and to turn

towards Tahiti the next morning.

The news was greeted with relief by everyone, the excitement of finding

the reef we were searching for having palled. Campbell walked heavily

across the deck towards the companionway, his shoulders stooped. I

realized for the first time that he wasn’t a young man.

“It’s hit him hard,” I said.

“Aye,”said Geordie. “What do we do now – after Papeete?” “I’ve been

thinking a lot about that. If it hadn’t been for that damned diary

then Minerva Reef would be the last place I’d go looking for

high-cobalt nodules, but Mark’s scribbling has hypnotized us.” “We

don’t even know if he meant Minerva. Do you think he was on the wrong

track?” “I don’t know what track he was on – that’s the d evil of

it.

I only leafed through those notebooks of his before they were stolen,

and I couldn’t absorb anything much in that time. But one thing did

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