Check out the first three chapter!
Chapter One
My name is Heath Sharp. On June
thirteenth, I discovered a world within our own and it terrified me.
The horizon glowed white between the ocean and sky. No
clouds hovered and there were no strong winds. Gavin Cole was one of my
favorite students and not because he was a whiz kid. I’d trained him every
Tuesday for the past few months and he’d finally broken out of his shell to fly
a few times on his own. I didn’t mind his apprehension; patience was just part
of being a mentor.
“All right, take the yoke.”
“Uh, what’s the yoke again?” Gavin asked. He was also a
smartass.
I gave him a sideways glance and he shot me a wide grin
in return, wrapping his hands around the controls. “Dude, kidding. Just
kidding.”
“Now, remember, it’s not like driving a car,” I said, letting
go of my wheel. “You don’t steer with the yoke. You use the pedals.”
“Got it, dude. Yoke pitches and banks; pedals steer the
plane.”
One of the problems people have when learning to fly is
forgetting their driving habits. It’s a challenge to help them through the
transition from operating a car to flying an aircraft, but I love it.
“Dude, we’re at ninety-five knots. Is that too fast?”
I read the LCD screen. The speedometer wavered between
ninety-four and ninety-five knots. “No, we’re good. Just keep her steady. As
for now, the sky is ours.”
“I like that.”
I have to admit, I did too. Flying gave my students the
feeling of being free from the world, where they could leave all their bad
memories in the clouds. That was the sensation I’d gotten as a young boy the
first time I’d taken to the sky in my grandmother’s airplane. I remember the
rumble of the runway sliding beneath us before it suddenly became smaller as
the plane lifted off the ground. The sky had then opened into a never-ending blue
sheet above our heads.
“If you reach high enough, you can touch the stars,” Grandmother would say.
She’d taught me how to fly. In gratitude, I’d promised if
I ever owned a plane, I’d name it after her—and I had. I’d named my Cessna
Skyhawk Gypsy Girl.
“Man, I like these screens you got in here,” Gavin said,
tapping the LCD displays. “Can we get HBO on ’em?”
“You think it’s funny acting dumb?”
“Yep, it passes the time.” When I grinned, he added,
“What’s this called again?”
I looked over at him. His thin lips were as straight as a
paper’s edge. “Nah, really, I’m not acting dumb this time. Honest.”
With a deep sigh, I turned back to the horizon. “It’s a
G1000. What we’re sitting in is called a glass cockpit.”
“I bet it’s easy to teach people how to fly in one of
these, huh?”
“You’d think,” I grumbled.
“The sight of all these gadgets in an old instrument
panel would downright terrify me. I always liked change. Change is a good
thing—change in the weather, clothes styles, lovers. Anyway, I do know
what kind of cockpit we’re in. I’m not a complete dumbass. I just suck at
remembering numbers. Just about anything with numbers makes me as empty-headed
as a senile person in a guessing game.”
“You did well on the written test. Few people get the
part about the altimeter on the first try.”
“I hated that section,” he bemoaned. “If the small hand
is just over the one, how many feet are you? If you’re cruising at nine
thousand feet MSL, how many feet is that in AGL?”
“And the answer is?”
He bit his bottom lip.
“Damn it, if you’ve forgotten the answers already, I’m
gonna throw your ass out of this plane.”
He went from biting his lip to drumming on his front
teeth. “Er … eighty-two hundred feet?”
“And what does MSL stand for?”
“Mean Sea Level.”
“And?”
“And if the small hand is over the one, you’re at a
thousand feet.”
“Good job.”
“Whew, I’m glad I didn’t complain about every test
question or this would be one hell of a scary flight. Dude, maybe that’s how
you instructors should do the tests. Know what I’m sayin’? Bet you’d get a lot
more people studying their asses off the night before if they knew they’d get
thrown out of a soaring airplane for missing a question.”
“Bet you’re right.”
He pressed on the right pedal to bank the plane in the
other direction. “I have a cousin livin’ in Weed, California. Maybe I’ll visit
him; and while I’m there, I’ll check out that reservation your dad lives on.”
“Weed is a bit far from Whitethorn,”
“What tribe are you again? Wichita?”
“Wailaki. My father is full-blooded but my mother is
white.”
“That would explain those pretty green eyes of yours.” He
laughed. “Don’t worry, dude, I’m not hittin’ on ya.”
I shook my head. “You’re stupid.”
“That’s
pretty cool, though. Not many people can say they have Wailaki blood in ’em.
Most people say they’re Cherokee. It’s funny, ’cause they claim their
great-great-great-grandmother was a Cherokee princess. Not only would there
have to have been a lot of Cherokee princesses back then, but there would also
have to be such a thing as a Cherokee princess. What’s the reason for people
thinking that, anyway?”
“The Trail of Tears,” I said, surprised that Gavin even
knew the Cherokee princess claims were bullshit. I’d heard people—mostly from
white women—say the same thing about their great-great-great-grandmother when I
mentioned my Native American heritage. Whenever some bright blonde number told
me that, I felt compelled to help piece together her family tree and teach her
something about believing everything she’d been told.
“Everything’s lookin’ good,” Gavin said, turning on the
XM radio. “Looks like blue skies from here on out.”
As he turned up the volume, Don McLean’s soothing voice
came over us. So bye, bye, Miss American Pie. Drove my Chevy to the levee,
but the levee was dry.
“Eerie,” I murmured.
“What, the song?”
“Yeah. Don’t you know why McLean wrote it?”
He was quiet for a moment. “Oh, yeah. ’Cause of that band
that died in a plane crash. Think it’s a bad omen? Should we turn around?”
“It’s just a coincidence. Don’t worry about it.” I leaned
back in the leather seat and checked the instruments. “Fuel gauge looks good,
knot speed same, and the plane is level with the horizon. You’re doing great.”
I stared off into the big blue sky. Not a puff of white
anywhere, just a clear view of light blue on the dark.
Them good ol’ boys were drinkin’ whisky ‘n’ rye, singin’
this will be the day that I die. This will be the day that I die.
“Mayday! Mayday!” I yelled into the radio. “This is
Cessna 2B-Golf, requesting assistance! We’ve run into a squall!”
The plane shook violently in the winds. The windshield
wipers couldn’t push away the sheets of rain fast enough. I looked over at
the map on the display screen. “Our
coordinates are—”
I stopped myself when I noticed our location. The map had
to be wrong. “Wait, how did we fly twenty miles past Nassau?”
Both screens turned to snow as a constant beeping came
from the stall warning indicator.
“Shit!” I yelled as static came over the radio. “Steve,
are you there? Mayday!” I waited for a response but got none. “We’ve lost
communications!”
“We’re stalling,” Gavin shouted, pointing to a red light.
“Oh, my God, we’re gonna crash!”
“Shut up!” I barked. “I’ll get us out of this.”
I gripped the control stick and pulled back, lifting the
nose while using full throttle to build up speed.
“What’s wrong with the screens?” he asked. “Oh God,
what’s happening with the instruments?”
I did my best to steady the jerking plane. The entire
backup system went haywire. The compass, speedometer, airspeed indicator, and
altimeter spun wildly. All around us, the sky had turned nearly pitch black,
while the rain pounded so hard it was as if we were flying through a waterfall.
I couldn’t understand it. One second, we were flying
through crisp open skies with Miami at our backs; the next, I was fighting to
get out of a storm that had literally dropped down on us. I couldn’t see
anything. I didn’t know how high we were or if the plane was even level. All
the instruments either beeped or flashed. Both dials on the altimeter went in
different directions and the compass spun so fast I couldn’t make out the
letters.
“Get us outta here, dude!” Gavin shouted, clutching
anything he could as another gust pounded the plane.
I white-knuckled the wheel and stomped on the left pedal,
trying to turn the plane and head back the way we’d come. My body pressed
against the door as the aircraft made a sharp change in direction. It was
dangerous going against the wind, like a surfer going against a big wave. The
storm was like a playground bully and the plane a geeky kid taking one
pulverizing blow after another. I couldn’t tell which direction the wind came
from. It seemed to come from
everywhere at once, giving me no
sense of whether I had done the right thing or not.
I gritted my teeth as the wheel violently shook in my
sweat-drenched hands. When the plane turned, a rush of calm washed over me. If
I could overcome the wind and circle around, there was a chance we might pull
out of the storm.
Then the engine died. Darkness shadowed the inside of the
cockpit as both screens went blank. The control panel lights shut off. The
buzzing of the propellers went silent when the blades stopped.
“Jesus!” Gavin cried. “What happened?”
“We just lost power.”
I tried the magnetos to jolt power into the engine, while
working to crank the throttle, but the propellers wouldn’t turn. The plane was
dead. My stomach slid into my throat as the nose cone dipped.
“We’re losing attitude,” I said, trying anything to
regain power.
“Fuck! We’re gonna crash!”
I wanted to reassure him that I was going to get us
safely out of this, but I said nothing. He was right; we were crashing.
A gust of wind suddenly flew under the right wing,
spinning us as we plummeted. Even when I shut my eyes, I couldn’t escape the
feeling that I was riding the Sizzler at a carnival. Pressure pushed against
both sides of my head. Gavin screamed so loud I didn’t know if he heard me
yell, “Hang on!”
I gripped the wheel so tight my fingernails dug into the
handles. I could see nothing outside as we tumbled through blackness. Soon
everything went dark.
When I regained consciousness, everything around me was
quiet. I was surrounded by dim, blurry objects. The pounding in my skull
answered the question of whether I was alive or dead. With a groan, I slowly
raised my head. The safety harness still held me in my seat. My dark bangs
draped my eyes and I brushed them back with a shaky hand. When I did, my palm
came away soaked in sweat.
That wasn’t the only part of me that
was wet. My feet were submerged in water. My eyes suffered from a hazy cloud
shrouding me but my nose told me it was seawater. My first presumption was
that the plane had somehow miraculously stayed afloat. I took off my sunglasses
and looked at the bent frames until my vision began to clear.
“Gavin,” I said weakly, “we have to get out of here
before the plane sinks.”
Gavin’s head lay on the control wheel, facing me. His
safety harness had broken and his face had slammed into the aluminum wheel. I
tugged on his shirt sleeve. “Gavin, wake up, man. We have to go.”
He didn’t stir. I slipped his sunglasses off and saw he
was dead. His brown eyes were wide and unblinking. Thick streams of blood slid
down his face and dripped from his chin. To be on the safe side, I checked for
a pulse but found none. There was even a strong stench of urine. I didn’t judge
him for it. I had only been seconds away from doing the same.
I looked at the control panel. Both displays were blank
and one was cracked. I tried the radio and called for assistance, but there was
nothing. Gypsy Girl was as dead as the woman she was named after.
I pulled out my cell phone but it had no power. I
searched through Gavin’s pocket and found his, but it was dead as well.
Outside was a gray fog. The rain had stopped, but there
was a strange lingering mist in the wake of the storm.
I needed to deploy the life raft before the plane sank.
Unbuckling my safety harness, I eased into the back area of the plane, happy it
didn’t sink any deeper. Maybe we’d landed on a coral reef. If that was
the case, perhaps the plane would stay put long enough for me to reach shore. I
could then send someone to load the plane onto a ship and tow it back to Miami.
I was ashamed to find myself thinking more about my
aircraft than about Gavin. I wasn’t an insensitive or materialistic person, but
a dead plane seemed more real to me than a dead man. In a way, thinking about
the plane’s future allowed me to focus on my own.
I didn’t have time to mourn Gavin.
It would make me weak and weakness might do me in.
I found the life raft floating like an orange block in
the back. In a wall compartment were two flare guns in a tin box. Since it was
so dark and would only get darker, I grabbed a flashlight before strapping on a
life vest and making my way back to the front.
Gavin remained motionless against the control wheel, his
eyes staring blankly forward. I glanced at him for a moment as I squeezed
between the seats and sat down. Then I checked the side window. The water
reached only to the lower portion of the door.
I saw a dark, shadowy shape through the glass. It was a
solid object close to the plane but I couldn’t make it out. I grabbed the door
handle. Although I wasn’t sure why, I looked back at Gavin and said, “I’ll be
back in a sec.”
I wasn’t worried about water rushing into the plane and
taking it under, but the thought did cross my mind. The mysterious surface the
plane sat on couldn’t be more than five feet underwater. Even so, I held my
breath as I pushed the door open. It proved to be a bit of a challenge, since
the hinges were broken and the water was like syrup. But I used all my strength
to push it just enough to squeeze through. Then I threw caution to the wind and
leapt out, sinking only waist-deep in water.
The ground was bumpy and hard. What I stood on wasn’t
coral; it was muddy rock. I was surprised it hadn’t torn the plane apart upon
impact.
I was glad the ocean temperature near Miami was
comfortable. However, the fact that I wasn’t able to distinguish anything that
might be lurking beneath the surface made me edgy.
I set aside my apprehension and made my way to the nose
of the plane to assess the damage. My chest felt tight every time I breathed,
as if my lungs had collapsed. I was a bit light-headed from the thick smell of
gas. I noticed a sheen of it coating the surface. I thought it came from my
plane—until I saw what I had seen through the windshield of the cockpit: the
wing of another aircraft. Its end was underwater but I could still see a white
star inside a blue circle with red-and-white stripes painted on the side of its
body. A World War
II insignia.
“What the hell?” I muttered.
To keep my flare gun and flashlight dry, I placed
everything back on the seat of my plane, then climbed the wing of the World War
II aircraft. The fog wet my face like sea spray.
Judging by the wing’s length, I estimated the plane’s
wingspan to be at least a hundred and eighteen feet. The wing was tilted enough
to give my New Balance sneakers a challenge with traction. It wasn’t long
before I came across the propellers and a canopy. I stared at it, trying to
catch my breath. The air didn’t help but the fog started to thin, like a
theater crowd at the end of a show.
A much larger Navy symbol was visible on the side of the
plane under its canopy. It was a PBM Martin Mariners patrol aircraft. In War
World II, battles had raged in the Pacific months after the war had ended in
Europe. Planes such as this one had been used by the Navy for long overseas
flights. They were nicknamed flying gas tanks because they carried so much
fuel. This plane’s tank must have cracked and the gas had spread like glossy
butter on the water.
Amazing. I was standing on a piece of history.
As I turned, I found that Gypsy Girl and the PBM
Martin weren’t alone. In the field of water around me, numerous planes and
ships were scattered about, some clustered together, others by themselves. It
was hard to tell in the fog, but I could have sworn they came from several
different eras.
Chapter Two
From where I stood, I saw a 1947 C-54 airplane, three
yachts, two sailboats, other Cessnas, and one Piper Cherokee. In the far
distance, blurry silhouettes of more planes and ships faded into the fog, some
larger than the ones near me.
What the hell had I crashed into? I’d traveled all over
the world and experienced many strange things, but nothing like this. When I
was a kid, my mother and grandmother had taken me to the Mystery Spot near
Santa Cruz, where people could walk up walls and pool balls would roll upward
on planks. It had been my first taste of the bizarre. In my later travels, I’d
seen even more exotic and extraordinary things, but nothing compared to what I
witnessed now.
It appeared that I’d crashed at the edge of a mysterious
landfill. Behind me, there was nothing but mist and dark water. I turned back
to the abandoned ships, both air and watercraft, cupped my hands around my
mouth, and yelled, “Hello! Is anybody out there?”
Silence.
After a few minutes, I decided to explore the PBM. The
plane was tilted sideways, its wing acting like a kickstand. I walked up to the
canopy and looked in. It was dark inside but objects were visible beyond the
thick glass. I half expected to find the skeletal remains of the pilot.
No dust coated the equipment. Other
than the dented and scratched exterior, the entire plane was in pristine
condition. No rust had eaten away at its black metal or the propellers; and the
stars and stripes on the side were crisp and clear, as if they’d been painted
on yesterday. I wanted to go inside but the door was too far down the tail
section and nothing was available for me to climb on.
Judging by the wide-open door, it appeared as if the crew
had survived and abandoned the plane. Even so, the PBM had gone down several
decades ago, so I didn’t expect to find them. There were more recent vessels
and aircraft with possible survivors I could look for. I needed to find
someone. I needed explanations.
The trip off the plane proved more challenging than the
trip up it and my sneakers slipped out from under me. I landed on my back and
slid along the wing like a water slide, all the way into the ocean. I was
underwater for less than a second before my life vest brought me back to the
surface. There, I stood on the muddy surface and slid my hands back to pull the
hair out of my face. My heart knocked against my breastbone as I waded back to
my plane to retrieve the flares, flashlight, and life raft.
When I reached the open door, I looked behind me at the
gray horizon. No wrecks sat out there. The water was flat and dark, and as I
strained to see through the fog, several chunks of what appeared to be ice
drifted by.
Ice in tropical water?
As the ocean swirled around me, the floes liquefied. I
waded a few steps to my right, my arms outstretched, until the muddy bottom
suddenly dropped out from under me. My life vest kept me afloat but it didn’t
keep me warm. The subfreezing temperature raced through my body and ate into my
bones.
How could I be in water so cold that ice floated around
me? My limbs were numb and my heart rate slowed. I frantically thrashed my arms
to keep afloat. Although it was difficult to do the backstroke with my vest on,
I kept kicking until a wash of warm water swept over me. My feet found the
ground and I stepped back onto the ledge, shivering.
The irony of it was overwhelming. If I’d crashed just
three feet
farther away, my plane would have
sunk in that frigid water. It was an amazing stroke of luck to escape death
twice in the same plane crash.
As I counted my blessings, something bumped against my
side: a floating wine bottle with a piece of paper rolled up inside. I popped
the cork and managed to pry it out. It was handwritten but in a foreign
language. Spanish, I presume. I shoved the note back inside, stuffed the cork
in the opening, and hurled it back into the ocean.
As feeling returned to my body, I waded over to my plane
and pulled the cord to inflate the life raft. Tossing the flare guns,
flashlight, and oars into it, I took a last look at Galvin’s lifeless body.
“Sorry, but if I find help, I’ll come back for you.”
It didn’t seem strange to make a promise to a dead man.
After all, I’d yelled at the living, screaming Gavin not long ago.
I clambered into the raft and started my quest to look
for survivors. The journey was more difficult than I anticipated. Everything
was surreal. I didn’t know what was out here but I needed to keep moving. I had
to find someone—anyone—who might give me answers.
I hadn’t been rowing more than ten minutes before a
sharp, jagged piece of metal snagged my raft and tore a hole in it. I didn’t
have any patching supplies, so I jumped ship. Drowning was the least of my
worries. I’d been captain of the swim team in high school and now wore a life
vest.
I should have known the water would be full of hidden
debris on the bottom or floating around, and I cursed myself for not thinking
of it before ruining the raft. To prevent my legs from getting sliced, I tried
leaping from one wreck to the next, until I came upon something my mind
couldn’t wrap itself around.
I climbed onto the deck of a sailboat, heading toward
another plane, when a massive blob stopped me in my tracks. It was a living
mass with veins and tentacles, and it stretched over the side of the boat to
curl around the mast. Its suction cups—each the size of my palm—had fish bones
and broken bits of crab shell stuck to them.
If it was an octopus, it was the biggest goddamn one I’d
ever
seen. I’d heard about giant
octopuses in the North Pacific, but this looked as if it could swallow a car
whole. Its glossy black eyes stared at me as it heaved short breaths. I
retreated slowly, not knowing if it would envelope me in its huge tentacles.
But it didn’t. It just breathed heavily, as if gasping for air.
After carefully wading through the water, I stopped to
rest on the wing of a Piper Aztec. I was surprised to find a number of other octopuses
lounging on ship decks and planes like sea lions. But it was another massive
silhouette that caught my attention. Curious, I carefully jumped to another
Cessna before leaping onto a speedboat and then stepping into the water. As I
drew closer, my mind screamed, This can’t be real! I can’t be seeing this.
It was the underbelly of a massive wooden ship tilted at
a seventy-degree angle. The hull was infested with barnacles, and as I looked
closer, the white shell of one opened. Something spiraled out, nearly licking
my nose. The barnacles were alive, despite being out of water. How the hell did
they survive that way?
I waded along the edge of the huge vessel until I could
climb to the top of a 1979 Beech Musketeer. There, I stood in silent awe of a thousand-ton
Manila galleon warship. It was the oldest and largest vessel I’d come across so
far. I’d seen a couple of Grumman T9F-2 Panthers from World War II, at least
twenty Chris Crafts, three schooners, several Piper planes spanning three
decades, a handful of yachts, and a 1942 TBF Avenger, but the galleon went back
two centuries, although it appeared to be in pristine condition.
None of the vessels had been eaten up by the elements. I
came across two Lancer wooden boats and a Catalina yacht, all as perfect as the
day they’d been made in the fifties. How was it that every one of them seemed
unaffected by the humidity and salt water?
Like the other vessels, the galleon looked ready to go.
Sails hung in the still air on their masts, along with an American flag on the
mizzen topsail. Why the galleon hadn’t capsized confused me, until I noticed
what it rested on. Crushed beneath the side of the great vessel was another
long wooden ship with carvings on its side. The damage done when the galleon
had come to rest against it prevented me from distinguishing its artwork.
I caught sight of something else: a
long plank extending from the unfortunate vessel to a half sunken sailboat. I
wanted to stay out of the water, which meant leapfrogging from one craft to the
next. I jumped onto another aircraft, then onto the back of the sailboat, where
I studied the plank, which turned out not to be a plank at all, but a wooden
sculpture of an ancient dragon.
“A Viking ship?” I muttered, my eyes following the
carving to the crushed ship it was attached to.
The head of the dragon nearly reached the sailboat’s bow.
I took a chance and leapt onto it. The thick wooden construction held my weight
but not without some rebellious creaks. I scrambled over the dragon’s neck,
where a long ladder hung down. I wondered if the crew had placed it there to
escape the ship.
I climbed the ladder, but halfway up, the air seemed to
squeeze my lungs, making it hard to breathe. I stopped to rest and took
advantage of the sights. The fog remained thick but the planes and boats were
still visible. It seemed like a dream, and in a way, I was excited about this
strange world around me. I loved experiencing new things. When I’d left home to
explore the world, I’d journeyed far off the beaten path to discover what most
tourists avoided. But hanging out with headhunters in a jungle couldn’t top the
mystery I now faced.
Near the end of my climb, I found myself face-to-face
with a porthole door. When I raised the heavy wooden flap, the mouth of a
cannon stared back at me. By the time I reached the deck, my lungs burned like
a fifty-year-old smoker. The ship was in perfect condition, with smooth,
untarnished floorboards and ropes hanging from shrouds that were neither broken
nor frayed.
I climbed one of the stern side staircases to reach the
helm. The ship’s wheel was polished and turned with ease. I could hear the
rudder sliding back and forth behind me.
I’d never been on an actual galleon before. The closest
I’d come to that was the Galleon Swinging Ship pirate ride at American Adventures.
Like a kid high on imagination, I played with the wheel for a while before
going below. There, I peered into the dark captain’s cabin. I clicked on my
flashlight but it wouldn’t work.
“Damn it!” I shook it as if that
would help. I’d just changed the batteries.
After my eyes adjusted to the dark, I could make out a
small table. The gray light filtering in through the doorway and large windows
gave enough illumination to find some matches. An oil lantern hung from a
column beside the table. I struck the match and dipped it inside the glass. To
my relief, the wick sprang to life.
I expected spider webs and a blanket of dust, but the
corners and surfaces were clean. The floor, though, was littered with fallen
items. It appeared as if the ship had been caught in a massive storm, throwing
everything that wasn’t nailed down to the floor.
“Hello?” I called, looking around. The cabin smelled of
body odor mixed with a hint of smoke, as if every candle in the room had been
blown out only minutes before. “Is anyone here? Anyone?”
I touched one of the flare guns tucked under my belt. I
didn’t like the idea of using it as a weapon. Shooting someone with a flare
would be like shooting them with a ball of fire. I’d use the aluminum
flashlight over the flare gun if it came to that.
I scanned the room but there was no reply to my call. I
kept my guard up, just in case.
An oak table sat in the center of the room with a scroll
on it. I set the lantern down next to a map pinned on each corner by a Mora
knife. It was a map of the Atlantic Ocean, although many Caribbean islands were
missing. There were over seven thousand islands in the area but the map showed
no more than two hundred. Even the Gulf of Mexico—the ninth largest body of
water in the world—was missing, and Cuba was listed as Isla Juana. The
date in the right-hand corner read 1804.
If the ship and everything on it was really over two
hundred years old, why did it all look relatively new?
There weren’t many other things in the room. Anything
worth taking, the crew had probably carried off with them. Even the mattress on
the small bed was gone. I hoped to find the captain’s log to give me clues as
to what had happened but I couldn’t find any trace of it.
I left the cabin and went down to the gun deck, where
cannon
balls were scattered about. The
smell of gunpowder permeated the air. I knelt, placed the lantern and
flashlight on the floor, and picked up one of the cannon balls. It was no larger
than a coconut but weighed enough that I couldn’t hold it for long. When I
dropped it, it landed with a thud and rolled across the floor.
As I walked through the ship, I passed several empty
barrels. I searched for other artifacts until I found a second staircase.
“Hello? Anyone down there?”
I warily descended to the next level. As I crept down the
steps, another strong whiff of body odor struck me. When I stepped off the
staircase, I found the source of the smell: a man lying in a hammock.
“Oh shit!” I exclaimed, startled.
The man wasn’t disturbed by my expletive.
“Are you all right?” I asked.
He said nothing. He appeared to be asleep, although I
thought otherwise.
Several oil lanterns hung from support beams. Playing
cards and coins were scattered around, as well as three human skeletons. At
first, the skeletons startled me, but I quickly recovered and continued my
search around toppled chairs. I found another skeleton lying behind a table.
Each was dressed in nineteenth century clothing and armed with weaponry from
that era. The bodies, except for the one in the hammock, seemed to have been
involved in a struggle before they’d died. It wasn’t long before I noticed
bullet holes in the walls and one column.
Unlike the others, the man in the hammock looked as if
he’d died not long ago, yet he was dressed in the same fashion. He had a single
bullet wound to the temple. One of his arms hung down, while the other rested
beside him. On the floor, next to a brown stain, was a pistol.
I wondered when he’d died. It couldn’t have been any
later than that day. His body smelled of BO, not decay.
A note lay on his chest. Nearly every word was
misspelled, but at least it was in English—my first real clue. After reading it
twice, I was able to grasp what the letter meant.
To my captin, Jon T. Sherbrik,
I writ tis to xplain wat hapined. Onc you red tis, you
wil understan an not condem me for the achins I hav takin. Dekhand Pal Roy,
canon comandor Joshuy Walkor, secint-in-comand Mastor Richerd Troi an my self
had com bak to the shep Thrs day nit to play cards whin Mastor Walkor acused
Mr. Roy an Mastor Troi of cheeting. To my sham, ech man had ben drinking hevly
an thar mind set was most ineproprit. Harsh words wer xchaned betwen the men an
gun fir eruptid. Mr. Roy was shot in the gut an fel ded, an Mr. Walkor was
wondid. I saw the devel in his eyes, captin.
Mastor Troi trid takin Mistor Walkors pistel whin Mr.
Walkor tok owt his sord an sunk it strait in to Mastor Trois bely. I trid to
sav him. I puld my gun an fird, kilin por Mr. Walkor. It was to lat for Mastor
Troi an I fownd myself alon wit my ded shep mats. I didt want to be hanted by
Mistor Walkor, captin. Ater tirty yers in tis God forsakin plac, we al no wat
hapins win we kil. I codnt liv that wa. I kiled Mistor Walkor an cold not hav
him arownd, tantin me til I go mad. So I hav kiled myself, captan. Ma God show
mursy on me.
Tomas
Febuwry 4th 1836
A tide of questions arose in my head. It wasn’t just the
misspelling that confused me. If the men’s death had happened on the same
night, how could it be that all but one—Tomas—had long since decomposed?
“There’s no freakin’ way this guy died in 1836,” I said
out loud, as if to someone else in the room—someone with a pulse.
I collected some of the coins strewn across the floor.
They were old and American. I saw no other kind of currency, which wasn’t
surprising if the incident had taken place in 1836, since paper money hadn’t
been issued in the United States until the Civil War.
My head was spinning and not just because of the strange
quality of the air. I wondered what Tomas had meant when he’d said he didn’t
want to be haunted by the man he’d killed. I placed the note back on Tomas’s
chest and went topside.
I continued in the same direction I’d been heading before
boarding the galleon. After climbing over wreckage and wading through
dark water, my heart lurched into my
throat. A pale fin drifted across my path. I stopped as it made a U-turn and
headed straight toward me.
“Oh shit!”
I fought my way toward a nearby plane rudder. Even though
the water was only waist deep, I knew I wouldn’t make it to safety before the
shark reached me.
I spun around, pulled a flare gun, and fired. I missed my
target but it scared the shark long enough for me to reach the plane. I grabbed
hold of the rudder and started up. The shark came back and hitched its teeth
into my life vest, yanking me into the water, thrashing. I unbuckled the vest
and slipped out of it, then grabbed the rudder again, hoisted myself up, and
flopped onto the tail of the plane. Breathing heavily, I watched as the shark
glided just beneath the surface. It was a baby great white, an inexperienced
hunter. That was the only reason I was still alive.
Once it realized I wasn’t in the water anymore, it swam
off. I lay on the tail section for a long time, collecting myself before I
stood up and crossed over to a 1950’s Grumman F6F-5 Hellcat. As I neared the
cockpit, I saw another dead body. The canopy window had shattered, sending a
large shard of glass into the pilot’s left eye. Like Tomas, the pilot’s body
showed no sign of decomposition.
Somehow, the vessels and aircraft—and most of the
bodies—remained perfectly preserved. I became more confused by the second, but
it was getting late and I had to find a dry place to sleep.
Just as it almost became too dark to see, I caught sight
of a blotchy dot: another galleon. Light came from torches lining the railing
and through the window of the captain’s cabin. I climbed onto a yacht and read
the distant ship’s name on the stern: The Pride. A moment later, I heard
gales of laughter booming from inside.
Chapter Three
Voices eventually replaced the laughter. It sounded like a
party.
Even
so, I wondered if I should make myself known or do a little investigating
first.
I didn’t have time to decide before a man from above
yelled, “Ahoy! Friend or foe?”
Even though the only light came from torches, someone had
spotted me. He must have been wearing night vision goggles.
“Friend, I guess.”
“You guess, good sir?” the invisible man asked with an
English accent. “What’s that you hold in your hand?”
“A flare gun.”
“A what?”
Before I could repeat myself, another voice said, “He
says it’s a flare gun, Master Judson.”
“Aye, captain,” the first voice said humbly.
A shadowy figure approached the railing between two
torches. “When did you arrive?”
“Today,” I replied.
“Today? Well, then, I’m sure you’re full of inquiries, non?
You better come up and have a drink. Believe me, you’ll need it. Lower the
plank! We have a guest!”
I went to the yacht’s starboard
side, while a pair of crewmen slid a long board gently into the water.
“Hurry up, señor,” one of them called. “Get on
before the sharks come.”
The thought of getting back in the water frightened the
hell out of me, especially when it was now inky black. Nevertheless, I wasn’t
about to look like a fool in front of a band of sailors. I climbed down from
the yacht, waded quickly through the water, and stepped onto the plank.
Unlike the first galleon, The Pride was tied to
other ships and planes by thick rope, keeping the vessel upright. As I walked
up the plank, I wondered who these people were and what they were capable of
doing. Common law most likely wouldn’t apply in a place like this. I reminded
myself that I was on a quest to find people—people with answers—and perhaps I’d
found what I was looking for. Even so, it was best to stay vigilant.
The deck was decorated with a web of lights strung
overhead. Some were solar-powered party lights of various colors; others were
little square glass lamps, each lit by fire. Torches tied to the railing
provided the most light. Why fire and no electric lights? Probably because an
old ship like this had no way to charge batteries.
Once I was on the deck, a pale man with short bristly
hair and a dense mustache greeted me. He was dressed in denim bell-bottoms but
no shirt. “That flare gun you have, I’ll need it—and any other weapons you
have.” His accent was English and he wasn’t wearing night vision goggles as I’d
thought.
“I think I’ll keep it. Don’t worry; I’m not going to try
anything.”
He held out his hand. “Trust me, lad, you don’t want to
kill anyone around here, even accidentally. Hand it over. It’s for your own
good.”
I didn’t understand what he meant, but I handed both my
loaded and unloaded gun over. He didn’t take my flashlight, which I held as
casually as I could so as not to draw any suspicion to it.
Other men appeared on the deck: five black, four Spanish,
and three Caucasians. Each was dressed in clothing from different eras.
One Spaniard and one of the
Caucasian men wore dirty white Royal Navy sailor uniforms. One of the black men
wore only a brown vest and trousers. Another Caucasian was dressed in baggy
denim shorts and a long white T-shirt, reminding me of a wannabe thug. None of
them was over five-foot-six. I was six feet tall and towered above them, but I
was outnumbered and needed to keep my guard up.
“Hi,” I said sociably. “I’m Heath Sharp.”
“I’m Judson,” the bristly-haired man said.
Before anyone else could introduce themselves, a voice
from the staircase said, “And I am the captain.”
A man dressed in a blue captain’s coat with Windfall sewn
in gold thread on the breast pocket walked down the steps. He wore an admiral’s
hat and white pants that were cuffed over his brown loafers, as well as a
Hawaiian shirt. His hair was dark, wavy, and shoulder-length, and his eyes a
piercing black. One hand was tucked into his pants pocket, while the other held
a clay pipe.
“Oh, the questions that must be running through your
head, monsieur,” the captain said as he reached the deck, his voice
laden with French tones.
I said nothing as he approached. His graceful movement
was mesmerizing. When he was about two arm’s length away, he stopped to take a
drag off his pipe. His black eyes never blinked.
“Where are you from?” he asked as he exhaled gray smoke
into the night air. His lips then froze in a slight grin, as if he loved hearing
the sound of his own voice.
“California, originally,” I replied.
He took another puff off his pipe and studied my face.
“You have a unique look about you. What did you say your name was?”
“Heath Sharp.”
He moved closer. “Bonsoir, Monsieur Sharp, I am Capitaine
Jean Lafitte.”
My eyebrows rose in confusion. I’d heard that name before
and my mind quickly backtracked through my memory. The name reminded me of New
Orleans, which reminded me of the magazine The French Quarter: An Informal
History of the New Orleans Underworld. I’d read a copy years ago when I’d
visited the city, of an article
about Jean Lafitte.
“Jean Lafitte, the pirate? Didn’t Jean Lafitte die of
fever in Teljas in the 1800s?”
The captain frowned, his eyes narrowing. “I was no
pirate. I was a privateer. And no, I did not die of a fever.”
The man was probably insane. This guy, who dressed like
Mr. Howell on Gilligan’s Island, told me with a straight face that he
was one of the most famous pirates in history. I couldn’t help but show my
skepticism. “So, where’s Blackbeard?”
“Unless you want to spend eternity in the brig, señor,”
one of the Spaniards sneered, “I suggest you watch your tongue before I cut it
out.”
I instinctively gripped my flashlight a little tighter.
“No, Amado,” the captain said, “he is confused, much like
the rest of us were when the hurricane brought us here.” The captain extended
his hand to suggest that I follow him. “Come, let us sit together like
gentlemen and I will clear your perplexity as best I can.”
I wanted answers so I followed him to his quarters, my
shoes squeaking like mice in hysterics along the way. I was exasperated and
wet. In his quarters, I asked, “Could I trouble you for a pair of dry socks?”
The captain snorted. “It would seem that you need more
than dry socks, mon ami.”
True. I needed an entire new wardrobe, but my wet feet
irritated me the most.
“You may borrow my robe for the night,” he said, plucking
a long fluffy one off a hook on a wall. “Undress and we’ll hang your clothes
outside to dry, provided it doesn’t rain.”
I peeled off my clothes except for my boxers. I wasn’t
going to get totally naked in front of a man I didn’t know.
The room was well lit by a number of candles and adorned
with all types of things from the past and present. A strong smell of tobacco
smoke hung in the air. Heavy chairs surrounded a large oak table, much like the
one I’d seen on the other galleon. The table was littered with naked pinup girl
playing cards, coins, paper money,
and chips, as well as wine and rum
bottles. I must have interrupted a poker game.
To my left was a bookshelf filled with novels, comics,
and reference books. A handful of paintings hung on the walls but I paid them
little mind. Instead, I examined several crude sketches of the captain, crew,
and the planes and ships surrounding the galleon. A strange triangular shadow
hovered in the background but I dismissed it as just another plane or ship in
the sketches.
“Is it always so foggy around here?” I asked as Lafitte
poured two glasses of wine.
He turned slightly and said, “Indeed. From time to time,
it thins out, but it always lingers. It’s like a bad joke.” His tone became somber.
“I do miss the sunshine and the crystal-clear ocean.”
His expression was the saddest I’d ever seen, as if he’d
been committed to life in prison. “I also miss the bayou and my kingdom in
Barataria.” He let out a mournful sigh and approached me with a wine glass in
each hand. “But life always has a way of surprising you, non?”
“For an ancient pirate, you’ve accumulated a lot of
modern things,” I said, draping my sopping clothes over a chair and tying the
robe around my waist. I still didn’t buy that I was in the company of such a
historic figure.
“I told you,” he said sharply, handing me a glass, “I am
no pirate; I’m a privateer. And just because I was born in the nineteenth
century doesn’t mean everything I own has to come from that era; especially
when we’re surrounded by such wonderful new treasures. I only wish most of them
worked.”
As I accepted the glass of wine, he continued. “You like
my drawings, non? It was my hobby until I ran out of paper.”
I pointed to the odd triangle. “What’s this object in the
picture?”
He lowered his glass and studied where I pointed. “That
is the SS Marine Sulphur Queen.”
He thought I meant the ship next to the shadow. There was
a jagged crack running down its keel. “It looks like it’s been badly damaged,
like it snapped or something.”
“The Queen’s captain
explained to me that such cargo ships weren’t structurally sound. When his was
caught in the storm, she snapped in half. You’ll see her tomorrow. She’s not
too far from here, and a ship that large is hard to miss, even on the saddest
of days.”
“Saddest of days?”
“Oui, when the fog is at its heaviest, it can be
quite gloomy.” He took a long drink. “You will soon come to realize that for
yourself.”
“You really believe you’re Jean Lafitte?” I asked,
looking him squarely in the eye as if searching for the truth within his face.
He sighed again. “I understand your confusion and
disbelief, mon ami. I myself once had the same doubts as you. Come; let
me show you some things that may lessen your disbelief.”
He turned on his heel and approached a redwood wardrobe
in the back corner. I finally took a drink before following him to the closet.
It was good wine, some of the best I’d ever tasted, although it left a tart
aftertaste in my mouth.
Inside the wardrobe hung a long red coat, a black cape,
and breeches. A pair of scuffed boots sat on the floor. Hanging from a hook on
the back of the door was a black brim hat with a gray feather. A pair of musket
rifles and a scabbard were propped against the inside wall.
He slipped off his jacket, tossed it onto a nearby chair,
and pulled out the velvet coat. He put it and the hat on, then turned to face
me as he buttoned it up. While the coat was majestic and a perfect fit, it
didn’t go well with his Hawaiian shirt or brown loafers. Its slender sleeves
hugged his arms but gave his wrists some freedom. The wide white collar sat
flawlessly around his neck. The entire ensemble seemed tailor-made, and even
the hat sat on his head as if it was part of him.
“I haven’t worn this in over a decade,” he said, swinging
the cape around him.
“This is how you prove you’re Jean Lafitte?” I asked. “By
putting on some old coat?”
“No, I want to show you what I wore when this portrait
was painted.” He moved over to a framed picture of a man in a red coat
hanging on the wall and posed like
the image on the canvas. “Before coming here, the portrait sustained some salt
air damage, but can you see the similarity?”
I studied the painting before shifting my eyes to the
captain’s same stern expression. The man in the portrait was the spitting image
of him.
“The amusing thing about this painting is that it’s the
original.”
“Why is that funny?”
“Because scores of people have told me that the copy the
artist made before giving me this one is the original. The year 1814 was a
chaotic one. I received a letter from King George III, asking me to fight in
his Royal Navy against the Americans. I still have the letter, if you’d like to
see it.”
Before I answered, he slid open the top drawer of a
nearby desk. There was something on the desk covered by a green velvet cloth. “What’s
under there?”
“Just something I collected from a spiteful little man.
Would you like to see it?”
He pulled the cloth back. What lay under it made my
stomach turn inside out.
“Jesus!” I gasped, gaping at a severed arm submerged in a
yellowish liquid in a ten-gallon fish tank. “Is that thing real?”
“Oui, it belonged to Captain George Saxon. He’s no
one famous; just another unfortunate louse to get caught in this place.”
“What happened between you two?”
“Hard feelings,” he said, lowering the cloth over the
tank. “Let us leave it at that.” He turned and held out an envelope. “Would you
care to read the king’s letter?” Seeing my pallid expression, he asked, “Are
you all right?”
“It’s the air,” I lied.
“Ah, don’t fret, mon ami, you will soon get used
to it and breathe it as well as the air in the natural world. Like being
constantly exposed to a bad smell. Eventually, you won’t notice it anymore.
Come, let us sit and talk. There is something else I would like to show you.”
In spite of myself, I began to believe what he told me.
Could
he actually be Jean Lafitte?
We sat across from each other at the table. The robe’s
fabric prickled my skin. It wasn’t as fluffy as it appeared.
“Okay,” I said as he reached into his shirt pocket and
retrieved a small leather pouch. “If you are who you say you are, what does
that make you? Immortal?”
He withdrew a pinch of tobacco and stuffed it into his
pipe. “That is precisely the case.” He struck a match. “My crew—and everyone else
trapped here, including you—are now immortal.”
I sat back in surprise. “Are you saying I’ll never die?”
“Oh, you can die,” he said, puffing on his pipe. “Death’s
bony hands can reach far, mon ami, even in this place. You can kill
yourself or be murdered, or die accidentally; just not of old age.”
“What is this place?” I asked, leaning forward
again.
He exhaled through his nose, the smoke looming in the
air. “It’s the Bermuda Triangle. Or the Devil’s Triangle. Call it whatever you
wish.”
I blinked. “The Bermuda Triangle? As in the area where
ships and planes vanish?”
“Haven’t you seen enough evidence today to confirm that?”
I rubbed my forehead. “But how is that possible?”
“Anything is possible.”
“Apparently,” I mumbled. “Okay, if that’s true, answer me
this. I saw dead bodies today inside a ship and one of them looked like he’d
died just before I found him.”
The captain’s eyes widened as he stood. “You didn’t
disturb his body, did you?” Not waiting for my reply, he asked again, this time
more insistently. “Did you?”
“Who? The dead man?”
“Yes, you fool, did you disturb it? Touch it? Move it?”
I gave him a questioning look as I shook my head. “No, I
only read a suicide note, but I returned it.”
“And you didn’t touch the body?” he asked, still anxious.
“No, I didn’t touch it.”
He sighed deeply, lowering himself back into his chair.
“Well, that should be all right, then.”
A moment of deep silence settled
over us as he took a drag from his pipe. I waited for him to explain his
outburst, but he didn’t and I became impatient as he casually took a sip. “What
the hell was that all about? I tell you about some dead guy and you nearly shit
yourself.”
He slowly lowered his glass to the table, sliding his
eyes over me. “I do not wish to travel far into the subject. My sole advice to
you about the dead is to leave them be.”
“Why?” I asked, utterly confused.
“Just do as I tell you and let us now talk of other
things.”
“Like what?”
“You were asking how this was possible.”
“Yes, how is it?”
He twisted his fingers around his long goatee. “I know
not. It just is.”
It was like having a conversation with the Caterpillar
from Alice in Wonderland. I sighed in frustration and snatched my glass
from the table. “How many people are here?”
“Hundreds … thousands. I am not sure anymore. I don’t
leave the ship very often. There are some out there, the British especially,
who continue to hold a grudge against me for my part in helping the Americans
defeat them in Louisiana.”
“Is that what happened between you and Captain Saxon?”
“Let’s talk about you,” he suggested, changing the
subject.
I put my glass down. “What about me?”
“Your physical appearance is intriguing. Tell me, what
nationality are you?”
Again with my appearance? I’d inherited my father’s Native
American cheekbones, nose, and dark hair, but I had my mother’s bright green
eyes, which stood out against my olive complexion. I had to admit that seeing a
Native American with green eyes was a bit like coming across an albino.
“I’m half white and half Wailaki Indian.”
“Indian, you say? You’re the first Indian I’ve seen since
we arrived. I must say, your skin color is very light for an Indian.”
“I’m only half Indian.”
“And from whom did you inherit those
electrifying green eyes?”
“My mother.”
“Ah, how times have changed. People of your time can
breed with another nationality without prejudice and fear of death, non?”
“I wouldn’t say without prejudice, but at least you don’t
get put to death for it.”
“What year is it?”
I tried to ease myself into the reality of this surreal
moment. I told him the year and he stared at me a moment before lifting his
glass to take a drink. “Well over a hundred years,” he muttered.
“What does that mean?”
He lowered his glass, resting both elbows on the arms of his
chair, slouching, his legs crossed. “Nothing.”
I let it go and went on to another topic. “How did you
come to end up here?”
He took one last draw from his pipe before placing it on
the table. “My life took a turn for the worse in 1821. Despite my loyalty to
the US Navy, they still viewed me as a threat and drove me out of Galveston. In
retaliation, I set my entire empire ablaze so the government couldn’t claim its
spoils. I meant it as an act to bring me more power but it caused my downfall.
After losing two of my ships when I refused to attack a Spanish merchant
vessel, I was reduced to but a common thief. I tried to rebuild my militia but
failed. After five years of living like an outcast in the country I’d fought
for, I went to Teljas to enjoy wild hunts with the natives. I then left for
Puerto Rico to buy slaves, but a hurricane set upon us.
“When the storm ended, we found ourselves here. There
were other ships trapped here, as well, but not nearly as many as there are
now. Over time, more ships came. Then strange flying machines began to fall
from the sky.” He chuckled. “I thought I’d seen everything. Then I saw my
first television, although it didn’t work. Nothing that requires batteries or
electricity can operate here.”
“Why not?”
“No one knows.”
That explained why neither my cell phone nor flashlight
worked.
“What about that body inside the
ship? The suicide note I found said he died in 1836. If that’s so, why hasn’t
he decomposed?”
“Nothing from the outside rots here,” he explained. He
twisted his fingers around his goatee again. “Everyone is preserved in the same
manner they were when they arrived, even after death. Machines and ships stay
as they were. Metal does not rust and the water does not eat at the wood.” He
untangled his fingers. “And flesh does not decompose or wither away.”
“Why?”
“I do not know.”
“You don’t know? You’ve been here all this time and still
don’t have a clue?”
“I told you, I don’t leave the ship often; and frankly, I
no longer care.”
I decided to try another route. Perhaps it was because I
still didn’t fully believe he was who he claimed to be. “Before you came here,
you say you were a slave trader?”
“Oui,” he answered without hesitation.
“So, those black men on the deck are slaves?”
“I understand in your time the thought of slavery is
inconceivable. But in my time, slavery was a part of everyday life, like tying
a witch to a stake and burning her to death. Yes, I sold salves, even owned
them. We’re all guilty of the wrongs from our own eras, non?” He took a
drink. “And yes, they were slaves. They once belonged to me, but shortly after
we arrived here, I set them free. I gave them the option to leave or stay. At
first, they wouldn’t leave the ship. Like the rest of us, fear kept them
planted here—especially the sounds at night.”
“Sounds?”
“Oui. Torturous shrills with the ability to cease
the beating of even the stoutest heart. Fortunately, they’re not as common now
as they once were. As time went on, some of the crew and slaves left, but those
who remained here have become my friends. My equals, if you will.”
“Didn’t you say you wanted to show me something?” I
asked.
“But of course. Wait right here.”
He went to the other side of the
room, where he rummaged through his belongings. As he did, I glanced over at
the green sheet covering the severed arm. If I didn’t watch my step, I might
end up losing a limb.
When Lafitte returned to the table, he carried a large
wooden chest. With a mighty heave, he hefted it onto the table, knocking over
several bottles and sending them crashing to the floor.
“It’s not another arm, is it?” I asked nervously.
He smiled. “How well do you know my story?”
“Not well.”
He reached into his shirt pocket for a handkerchief. “I
see,” he said, pressing the cloth against his forehead and drumming his fingers
on the lid of the chest. “When I left home, I took a substantial amount of
treasure with me.”
My eyes widened when he raised the lid, exposing silver
and gold coins, pearl necklaces, rubies, and uncut diamonds. It was a typical
pirate treasure—enough to make Bill Gates drool.
“Holy shit!” I said, reaching into the chest and plucking
out an uncut diamond. I held it up to the light to study the stone. It was
heavy, with rough edges, and about the size of a prune. Once cut and polished,
the clarity would be clear enough that it would be worth more than my plane.
“It’s all real, mon ami,” he said, pulling the
stone from my fingers and tossing it back into the chest. He closed the lid.
“Everything is real. And so am I.”
I sat back as the
reality of the situation washed over me. Lafitte laughed as he retook his seat
and rekindled his pipe. Blowing a perfect smoke ring, he said, “Tomorrow, I
will show you where you must go.”