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Authors: David Wood

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“Manila Bay,”
Bones said.

“Why?”

“Does it matter? Maybe they need to refuel or pick someone up. Maybe they were supposed to meet a convoy. Maybe someone in Manila wanted to buy the bones of the Peking Duck. Whatever the reason, this ship was on its way to the Philippines, not Japan.”

“That’s an assumption,” Dane cautioned.
“You know what they say happens when you assume.”

“Bull
crap.” Bones folded his arms. “Look, regardless of where the ship was headed, we know that it was sunk somewhere in our grid—Loughlin’s coordinates, plus or minus sixty miles. If she was going to Japan, we’ll probably find her in the northwest quadrant. But if she was heading for Manila, she’s somewhere in here—the middle of the grid. If we keep doing what we’re doing, we’ll search this area sooner or later; we can do it today, or next week. So the question is, what does your gut tell you?”

“My gut?”

“Yeah. That thing you never learned to trust?”

The corner of Dane’s
mouth twitched into a smile. “Well, if you’re willing to trust my gut, who am I to argue?”

With Bones still at the hel
m, the
Jacinta
motored thirty miles to the south and resumed the search. On the second pass, they found the ship.

 

Dane stared at
the profile of the sea bottom, shown on the monochrome display of the sonar unit. A long flat protrusion, sharply angled on one end, jutted up from the otherwise smoothly undulating seafloor. It was, unquestionably, a man-made object; the keel and hull of a large ship, on its side.

Professor, who had joined them on the bridge during the trip south, clapped Willis on the shoulder, and Bones let out a war whoop worthy of his ancesto
rs.

Dane, however, shook
his head. “It’s too short.” He pointed at the screen. “The
Awa Maru
was over five hundred feet long. That ship is three hundred…maybe three-fifty. It’s not long enough.”

Bones waved him off.
“Oh, come on, Maddock. Can’t you just let yourself be right once in a while? It’s exactly where you predicted it would be.”

“You think there’s only one sunke
n ship out here? They fought a war here, remember?”

Professor
nodded sagely. “Actually, I’m surprised this is the first wreck we’ve found, given the history of the region.”

“Maybe the ass end broke o
ff,” Bones said. “Like what happened to the
Titanic
.”

Dane just kept staring at the screen.
He desperately wanted to believe that they had found it, but the numbers just weren’t on their side.

Bones wasn’t going to give up.
“Look, it’s only thirty fathoms down. Let’s make the dive and be certain, one way or the other. What have we got to lose?”

“Half a day,” Dane answered, but his reply was half-hearted.
They had come looking for a wreck, and even if it wasn’t the right one, at least it was a chance for a practice dive. A hundred and eighty feet was deep enough to work out the kinks. Besides, diving sure beat the hell out of pushing a shrimp boat back and forth across the sea. “Ah, why not? Let’s do it.”

 

No way am
I giving this up
, Dane thought as the green-gray depths enfolded him. If taking a promotion took him away from the sea, away from a chance to dive, then he had no use for it.

A lifelong SCUBA enthusiast, he had been drawn to the SEALs because of their legendary reputation as “frogmen,” and while amphibious operations were certainly a part of the job, it seemed like most days were spent high and dry, carrying out missions in
jungles and landlocked desert countries. On those rare occasions when the job did require him to dive, the military had a way of taking all the fun right out of it. This was different; this was just him and the sea.

And Bones of course, l
azily kicking his flippers to maintain the correct angle of descent, but like Dane, mostly letting the heavy weight belt and gravity do all the work.

Yeah, even if it means putting up with Bones
.

The chicken soup warm water on the surface grew chilly with depth, and as the last bit of light filtering down from the surface disappeared, the temperature was positively bracing.
Dane wrinkled his forehead beneath his face mask, waiting for the “ice cream” headache to subside, and then held the mask against his face and snorted to equalize the pressure in his ears. When he opened his eyes, he was in total darkness.

He savored
the momentary vacation from all external stimuli. This was why he loved diving. The illusion of solitude evaporated when Bones flicked on his dive light, but Dane’s enthusiasm for the experience was undiminished.

His dive computer ticked off the depth, one-hundred fifteen feet…one-twenty…one-thirty.
Somewhere below lay the wreck of a ship that had evidently remained undiscovered over the years since its sinking. Maybe it wasn’t the
Awa Maru
, but it was a previously undiscovered wreck—it certainly didn’t show up on the charts. They would have only a few minutes on the bottom—most of the air in their tanks would be consumed during decompression stops on the way back to the surface—but it was a small price to pay for being able to touch a previously lost piece of history.

One hundred-fifty.

Dane flicked on his light and played its beam into the darkness below. Through the faint motes of silt, he saw the ship.

Oxidation
and centuries of calcium carbonate accretions made the hull look a little like an enormous vaguely ship-shaped stalagmite. If there were any identifying marks on her hull, they were covered by a mineral crust. The vessel lay on its side, appearing exactly as it had in the sonar image: a long flat hull with a raked bow and a blunt stern. The superstructure was a blocky shape, but Dane was able to distinguish the cylindrical outline of a funnel.

H
e added some air to his buoyancy compensator to slow his descent and kicked toward the superstructure. Bones was right behind him casting the beam of his dive light on the hull as if marking out the path Dane should take.

Up close, he could distinguish finer details
: deck rails, the windows of the bridge, stairways leading to the upper decks, and a large open doorway. The latter feature was a dark void that reminded Dane of the towering black monolith in the movie
2001: A Space Odyssey
. If there were any clues to the ship’s identity, they would surely be on the bridge. The ship’s bell or a dedication plaque perhaps—something that might have withstood the ravages of time and salt water. The bridge was the place to start, but his gaze kept wandering back to the open doorway amidships. It looked like a portal into another reality, enticing him a siren’s song of discovery.

A strange clanking sound broke him out his contemplative reverie.
Bones was rapping on his air tank, trying to get Dane’s attention. When Dane tore his gaze away from the black void, he saw Bones gesturing first to his wristwatch, and then pointing a finger straight up repeatedly.

Time to head back up
.

If they stayed much longer, they wouldn’t have enough air to make their decompression stops.

Just a few seconds more
, Dane thought.
I need to know what’s in there
.

Later, he would wonder if his fascination with the doorway was perhaps the onset of nitrogen narcosis, a condition where excess nitrogen in a diver’s bloodstream causes symptoms ranging from euphoria to paranoia
to full blown hallucinations, but at that moment, he didn’t care.

Just one look
.

He kicked toward the door and thrust his dive light inside.
It took a moment for his slightly addled brain to make sense of what he was seeing. His first impression was of the white blizzard of static from an old television, a three dimensional tableau of light and dark, stark white and impenetrable shadow. As he played the light back and forth, the entire image seemed to come alive, and it was only then that he realized that the strange white shapes were bones.

Human bones.

The skeletons lay piled up from one extremity of the room to the other, and so deep that his light could not reach through them to the bulkhead on the other side. There were hundreds, perhaps more; naked skulls, gazing up at him, skeletal hands reaching out in some final desperate and ultimately futile attempt to grasp salvation.

Perversely, nature had chosen to leave this crypt more or less untouched.
A few rags of clothing were woven through the skeletal sculpture, but there was no accumulation of minerals or sediment.

Dane recalled the brief about the
Awa Maru
; more than two thousand had perished in the sinking. It wasn’t hard to imagine the desperate passengers and crew forced into a single compartment by the quickly rising waters…and yet, something about this explanation didn’t ring true.

Curi
osity overpowered his characteristic caution, and before he quite knew what he was doing, he pulled through the opening and began swimming down to the tangled bones. As he drew closer, he saw that something else had survived. Hanging from almost every single bony neck was something that looked like strands of brown thread. Some were thin strings—bootlaces perhaps—while others appeared to be metal breakaway chain necklaces, tarnished and oxidized by years of immersion. The necklace Dane inspected first had two small semi-rectangular tabs, similarly in a state of incipient corrosion, which he recognized immediately.

Dog tags.

He reached out to touch one, rubbing it between a gloved thumb and forefinger. The rust crumbled away beneath his touch to reveal metal, embossed with words…a name, only partially legible, but written in familiar Roman letters. Howard? Edward?

American
, maybe? Definitely Allied military. Was this a troop ship? If so, where were the helmets and guns?

Comprehension dawned like a spasm
of nausea. These men weren’t troops on their way to the front lines. They had been prisoners of war, captured by the Japanese, destined for a brutal forced labor camps.

This was a hell ship.

The clanking sound came again, but because he was holding audience with the dead, the sound startled him. He twisted as if the skeletal arms were reaching out to grab him, and kicked away, swimming frantically for the opening where Bones—Dane grimaced around his regulator at the thought of his teammate’s nickname—was busy rapping the butt of his dive knife against his air tank.

Yes
, thought Dane, flashing an eager thumb’s up.
Time to go. Let’s get the hell out of here.

 

Just a few
minutes after Maddock and Bones slipped below the surface, Willis glimpsed a dark speck on the horizon. He immediately pointed it out to Professor and in the sixty or so seconds it took for the latter to retrieve a pair of binoculars, the little dark spot grew larger; large enough for both men to recognize that it was another boat and that it was headed right for their position.


Think we ought to prepare to repel boarders?” Willis asked, with only a little bit of sarcasm in his tone.

“Darn it.
Forgot to pack the cutlasses,” Professor answered in the same uneasy tone.

They had kept a constant lookout
during the search, mindful of the fact that their presence in internationally disputed waters might make them a target for a search or shakedown by military patrol, or worse, they might attract the notice of pirates rumored to be operating out of secret bases in the Spratly Islands. Unfortunately, their options for dealing with such an encounter were limited. They had made the difficult decision to limit their shipboard arsenal to a couple of rifles and one pistol apiece—enough, Maddock had explained, to fend off an opportunistic attack by poorly organized pirates, but not so much that an official Chinese or Vietnamese naval interdiction might lead to arrest, capture, or worse.

In the binocul
ars, the approaching vessel was revealed to be a sleek motor yacht, modern and far too expensive for outlaw mariners, though definitely not military. The radar put its approach speed at twenty-one knots. With divers in the water, running wasn’t an option, but even if the men remaining aboard
Jacinta
had been inclined to try, the yacht would have been able to easily overtake them.

“How are we gonna play this, Prof?”
Willis asked, nervously.

Professor
lowered his glasses. He wasn’t particularly bothered by the prospect of violence, but like any other SEAL, there was one thing that he was afraid of: failure…blowing the mission, letting his country and his swim buddies down.

“W-W-M-D,” he muttered.
What would Maddock do
? “Okay, let’s break out the rifles. Maybe if they know they we’re not toothless, they’ll hold back long enough to let Maddock and Bones finish the dive.”

Willis nodded and went off to
retrieve the weapons while Professor maintained his vigil with the binoculars. He could see the silhouettes of men moving about on the approaching vessel, but little else. After a few more minutes, the yacht veered to port, and if the diminishing froth of its wake was any indication, cut its engines. Even as it coasted to a stop, a smaller vessel—Professor recognized it as a Zodiac, a civilian version of the Rigid Inflatable Boat that the SEALs often used—pulled out from sheltered side of the yacht and turned toward the
Jacinta
. There were five occupants, all wearing dark tactical gear and carrying assault weapons.

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