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Authors: Clive Cussler

Sahara (46 page)

BOOK: Sahara
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Through the doors they could hear the switches click and the electric motor hummed to life as the elevator began its descent from a level above.

“You must have struck a chord,” said Giordino, smiling.

“I trusted to luck that any combination might work just so long as it wasn’t one long buzz.”

In a half minute the hum stopped and the doors opened. The operator guard looked out and didn’t see anyone Curious, he stepped over the threshold and was knocked out by a quick thrust of Pitt’s gun butt against the nape of his neck. Giordino quickly dragged the operator inside as Pitt closed the doors.

“All aboard for a nonstop run to the executive offices,” said Pitt, pressing the upper button of the panel.

“No tours of the crusher or cyanide recovery floors?”

“Only if you insist.”

“I’ll pass,” Giordino grunted as the elevator began rising.

They stood side-by-side in the small enclosure, watching the lights blink on the indicator above the switch panel, wondering if they’d be greeted by an army of Tuareg guards ready to shoot them full of holes. The hum ceased and the elevator eased to a stop so smoothly it was hardly sensed.

Pitt readied his gun and nodded to Giordino. “Get set.”

The door opened and nobody pumped bullets into them. There was an engineer and a guard walking together in the corridor, it was true, but they were absorbed in conversation and walking away, their backs to the elevator.

“It’s almost as if they want us to leave,” Giordino mumbled.

“Don’t tempt the gods,” Pitt said curtly. “We’re not out of here yet.”

There was nowhere to hide the elevator operator, so Pitt pushed the button to the lowest level and sent him on his way. They tagged behind the guard and engineer, keeping out of sight, until O’Bannion’s men turned and entered an office behind one of the antique carved doors.

The fluted wall corridor was as deserted as when the guards marched them through less than twenty-four hours previously. Guns poised and aimed ahead, they each ran along one wall of the corridor until it met the tunnel leading to the Gallery where the trucks were parked. A Tuareg, seated on a camp stool, guarded the entrance. Not expecting trouble from the engineering offices and living quarters behind him, he was sitting and smoking a pipe while reading the Koran.

They stopped to take a breath and looked back the way they had come. No one had appeared behind them. They turned their attention to the final hurdle. It was open ground for a good 50 meters with no visible sign of surveillance cameras.

“I can run faster than you,” Pitt whispered as he handed his gun to Giordino. “If he comes on to me before I reach him, take him out with a quick shot.”

“Just don’t get in my line of fire,” Giordino warned him.

Pitt removed his shoes, then took a sprinter’s start position, firmly gripped his feet on the rock floor, tensed, and then sprang forward, accelerating to a fast pace. He was, Pitt knew with sickening certainty, terribly exposed. Though his stocking feet were muffled, the acoustics in the rock-hewn tunnel were too acute. He had covered almost 40 meters before the guard, curious at the sound of thumping feet behind him, turned and stared dumbly at the slave laborer hurtling toward him. But Pitt’s saving grace was the guard’s slow reaction time. The machine gun’s barrel was just beginning to rise as Pitt leaped and smashed into the guard.

Shock it was that showed in the guard’s eyes, then quick, flashing pain as his head struck the rock wall and the eyes rolling into the head as he went limp under Pitt’s weight. Pitt rolled off the guard, sucking in air to catch his breath. He lay on his back panting as Giordino approached and looked down.

“Not bad speed for an old man crowding forty,” he said, extending his hand and helping Pitt to his feet.

“I’m not going to try that again. Not ever,” Pitt shook his head in finality. On his feet again his gaze took in the long underground gallery. Two Renault trucks were parked side-by-side just next to the narrow tunnel leading out into the ravine. Then he stared at the crumpled form of the Tuareg. “You’re a big strong boy,” he said to Giordino. “Carry him over to the nearest truck and dump him in the bed. We’ll take him with us. If anyone wanders by, they might think he got bored, left his post, and went for a joyride.”

Giordino easily shouldered the guard and hoisted him over the tailgate of the first truck as Pitt stepped into the cab and checked the dashboard instruments. There was no ignition key but the switch turned off and on without one. As Fairweather had promised, the fuel gauge read “Full.”

He flipped on the switch and pressed the starter button. The engine kicked over and started right up.

“Is there a clock on the dash?” inquired Giordino.

A quick scan and Pitt shook his head. “This is a cheap model with no options. Why do you want to know?”

“Those dirty Tuaregs took my watch. I’ve lost all track of time.”

Pitt slipped off one sneaker and retrieved his Doxa dive watch where he’d hidden it under his sole. He slipped it back on his wrist and held it up in front of Giordino. “One-twenty in the morning.”

“Nothing like an early start.”

Pitt shifted into first gear and eased out the clutch, steering the truck into the exit tunnel, moving only slightly faster than idle so the sound of the exhaust wouldn’t travel up the tunnel to suspicious ears.

The walls were so close they nearly touched the sides of the truck. Pitt cared little about scratching the paint. His main concern was scraping noises that might have drawn attention, but once they broke into the open and entered the narrow ravine, he shifted up, mashed the accelerator to the floor, and switched on the headlights. The Renault plunged through the tight ravine, bouncing crazily and trailing a swirling cloud of dust.

Pitt mentally recalled where the soft spots in the sand were located during the trip through the canyon. He had surveyed the nearby landmarks when he was required to push the truck to firmer ground. Now he threw the truck through the tight crack of the rocky plateau with reckless abandon, hurtling across the yielding sand patches that grabbed at the tires but failed to bog them down because of the truck’s rapid momentum.

He took no notice of the smell of freedom, the cold night air of the desert, nor did he waste a quick look at the stars above. Each kilometer they put between them and pursuit was golden, every minute precious. He drove like a demon, pushing the truck to its limits.

Giordino made no complaints, no appeals to slow down. He put his implicit faith in Pitt, propped his feet against the dashboard, and gripped the bottom of his seat, teeth clenched against the jarring ride, eyes fixed on the barely distinct tire tracks looming in the darkness under the steep walls of the canyon.

Abruptly the headlights showed empty flatlands ahead as they sped out into flat desert. Only then did Pitt look up at the sky, pick out the north star, and aim the radiator cap of the truck toward the east.

They had crossed the point of no return in a suicidal attempt with odds so high that failure seemed inevitable. But Pitt wouldn’t have had it any other way. There could be no stopping until they reached water or rescue.

Ahead lay 400 kilometers of desert, inviting, ominous, and deadly. The race for survival was on.

39

For the five hours of remaining darkness, Pitt spun the truck’s wheels through the awesome wilderness of sand where time had little meaning. This was truly a land of no compromise that chilled with its cold mornings, choked with its fine sand, and baked with a sun that seemed magnified by a crystal atmosphere. He felt as if he had entered a world not of his universe.

They were moving through a section of the Sahara called the Tanezrouft, huge sprawling badlands with almost 200,000 square kilometers of bleak, grotesque wasteland broken only by a few rugged escarpments and an occasional sea of sand dunes that relentlessly moved across the flats like ghostly armies of veiled phantoms.

This was the desert primeval without a weed in sight.

And yet, there was life. Moths fluttered about the headlights. A pair of ravens, the desert’s scavenging, cleaning service, disturbed by the approach of the truck took wing and squawked in annoyance. Large black scarabs scampered over the sand to escape the tires as did an occasion I scorpion and tiny green lizard.

Pitt found it easy to become intimidated by the surrounding void, by the hundreds of kilometers they had yet to travel, the almost certain hunger, thirst, and privations that remained to be endured. His only solace was the steady roar of the Renault’s engine. It hadn’t skipped a beat since leaving the mines, and the four-wheel-drive performed flawlessly, surging through soft spots Pitt was sure would bog them down. On four occasions he was forced to drive into deep, narrow dry washes with sloping soft gravel banks, barely making it up and over the opposite edge in low gear. Often he found no way to dodge sudden drop-offs or boulders and having to risk going over seeming impossible barriers, but somehow the sturdy Renault pulled them through.

They took no time to stop, get out, and stretch their legs. They would get enough of walking later when they abandoned the truck. They even took calls of nature on the fly without braking.

“How far have we traveled?” asked Giordino.

Pitt glanced at the odometer. “A hundred and two kilometers.”

Giordino looked at him. “You take the wrong short cut or are we going in circles? We should have covered almost 200 kilometers by now. Are we lost?”

“We’re on course,” said Pitt confidently. “Blame it on Fairweather’s directions. He gave distances as the crow flies. No crow with half a brain would be flying around the desert if he could be attacking a scarecrow in an Iowa cornfield. Impossible to maintain a straight line when we’ve already had to detour 40 kilometers to avoid two deep ravines and a herd of sand dunes.”

Giordino stirred uncomfortably. “Why do I get a sinking feeling we’re about to hike a lot further than 100 kilometers across no-man’s-land.”

“Not
a cheery thought,” Pitt agreed.

“Be light soon. We’ll lose the stars to navigate by.”

“Don’t need them. I finally remembered how to build a do-it-yourself compass straight out of the
Army Field Manual.”

“Glad to hear it,” Giordino yawned. “What does the fuel gauge read?”

“Slightly over half a tank left.”

Giordino turned and looked back at the Tuareg they had tied up in the truck bed. “Our friend looks about as happy as a shanghaied sailor.”

“He doesn’t know it yet, but he’s our ticket to evade pursuit,” answered Pitt.

“The devious mind again. It never stops churning.”

Pitt briefly stared up at the sickle moon. He would have preferred a full phase, but he was thankful for what little light it sent down as he drove the truck across a terrain equal to a lunar landscape. He shifted gears and strained his eyes on the uneven ground revealed by the headlights. Then suddenly the desert smoothed out and began to sparkle like fireworks.

The Renault rolled onto a huge dry lake with crystal deposits that reflected the twin beams from the headlights like prisms in rainbow colors. Pitt opened the Renault up in high gear and felt exhilarated to be speeding over a firm, flat surface at nearly 90 kilometers an hour.

The desert floor seemed to reach into infinity, the early morning stars falling below the horizon line as if the great brink of a flat world abruptly fell away into space. The sky looked as if it was closing in all around them like the four walls and ceiling of a small room. An unnerving sense of disorientation gripped Pitt. Yet he was following nearly the same parallel as Havana, Cuba, so the big dipper was still above the horizon. He continually used Polaris as a base point to line up a star to the east and then steered toward it.

Hour passed upon monotonous hour as the crystal lake gave way to low, boulder-strewn hills. Pitt could not recall having experienced such a heavy shroud of monotony. His only respite was a small peak off his left to the north that rose like an island in the middle of a vast and sterile sea.

Giordino took over the driving chore as the sun burst from the horizon as if shot from a cannon. There it seemed to hang without moving throughout the day until suddenly falling like a rock shortly before sunset. Shadows stretched far into the distance or did not exist. There was no in-between.

An hour after daylight, Pitt stopped the truck and searched around the cargo bed until he found a loose pipe about a meter in length. Then he stepped to the ground and pushed the pipe into the sand until it stood vertical and cast a shadow. Picking up two small stones, he placed one at the tip of the shadow.

“Is this your poor man’s compass?” asked Giordino, studying Pitt’s actions from the shade of the truck.

“Observe the master at work.” He joined Giordino and waited approximately twelve minutes before marking the distance the shadow had traveled with another stone. Next he drew a straight line from the first stone to the second and extended it about half a meter beyond. He then stood with the toe of his left foot at the first rock and toe of his right where the line ended. Lifting his left arm and pointing straight ahead, he said, “That’s north.” Then he extended his right arm to the side. “East to the Trans-Saharan Track.”

Giordino sighted down Pitt’s outstretched right arm and hand. “I see a dune in that direction we can use as a reference point.”

They moved on, repeating the process every hour. At about nine o’clock the wind began to blow from the south-cast, swirling the sand in clouds that cut visibility to less than 200 meters. By ten, the heated wind had increased and was seeping into the cab of the truck despite the rolled-up windows. Swept up in small gusts, the sand rose and twisted like whirling dervishes.

The mercury jumped and fell like a pogo stick. This day the temperature rose from 15 degrees C (60 degrees F) to 35 degrees C (95 degrees F) in three hours, topping off during the hottest part of the afternoon at 46 degrees C (114 degrees F). Pitt and Giordino felt as if they were driving into a furnace, the air hot and dry in their nostrils as they breathed in and exhaled. Their only relief came from the breeze generated by their speed over the stripped and barren land.

BOOK: Sahara
8.17Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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