The Leviathan Effect (16 page)

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Authors: James Lilliefors

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BOOK: The Leviathan Effect
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“Let Chaplin provide security for you. You can reach me through him. But just lie low for a while. Okay?” He stood and pressed Chaplin’s number on his cell phone, letting it ring once. “You’ve handled this in the right way,” Charlie added.

Jon shruged and nodded.

“You been okay, otherwise?”

“Until this, fine.”

“Good,” he said. “How’s Melanie?”

“Oh.”

Charlie smiled. He reached to shake his brother’s hand. “Take care,” he said. He turned and glanced around the room, taking in the newspapers, the vegetables, Humphrey Bogart and Claude Rains on the television. Two knocks on the door broke the slightly awkward silence.

Chaplin began to accompany Charlie back to the stairway. Mallory stopped.

“I’ll be okay,” he said. “Look out for my brother. Stay with him. And please find out all you can on these two names.” He handed
him a card. He had written on it
Vladimir Volkov
and
Victor Zorn
. “I need it ASAP.”

Chaplin frowned at the card.

“All right?”

“Yes. But I’d advise against you going back outside yourself without any cover,” he said, reverting to the formal business tone he used with clients. “We have arranged a ride for you.”

Mallory smiled. He shook Chaplin’s hand and walked to the elevator. Took it down to the lobby, without looking back, and walked out into the blustery Washington night until he found a taxi cab.

11:24
P.M.

The 14-ton freighter ship
MS Kassel
plowed through the churning North Atlantic sea at a steady 18 knots. The ocean had been rough for the first four days of their nine-day crossing, with ten-foot waves and miles of white water, but the winds had died down over the past twenty-four hours and the journey ahead promised to be much smoother. The 705-foot-long German ship was more than halfway across its ocean passage now, with a final destination of Savannah, Georgia. On board was a cargo of 780 forty-foot shipping containers, filled with industrial machinery, steel, furniture and Fiat automobiles. It was still well ahead of Tropical Storm Alexander, the monster storm that seemed to be chasing it from afar.

Dieter Gerhard had captained this ship for eleven years; before that, he had crossed the ocean hundreds of times on various other freighters. Life on the water had become the norm for Dieter and the sea now felt like his home; the roots he’d planted on land had all been pulled up long ago—his marriage dissolved, his children gone. It was at times like this, alone in the pilothouse late at night, with the seemingly infinite expanse of ocean surrounding him, its swells reflecting the muted lights from the sky and moon, that he felt alive, connected to the wild, sublime elemental realities that most people never experienced—or could understand.

He stepped onto the deck for several minutes wearing his yellow raincoat, under the shelter of the pilothouse overhang, and smoked a Davidoff cigarette, watching the water. Looking out at the rain slanting in the moonlight. Thinking about nothing in particular. Being here was empowering and humbling, both at the same time:
the constant motion, the subtle shifts, the sheer size—70 percent of Earth was covered by ocean, going as deep as seven miles below the sea’s surface. This distance they were traveling now—from Germany to Savannah—was more than double the distance across the United States. Those were the kinds of spaces that humbled Dieter and gave him perspective, that made most of what people thought and worried about seem trivial. They had become his version of religion.

Dieter was back in the pilothouse making a routine check of GPS coordinates when he happened to glance up and saw something that shouldn’t have been there—what looked at first to be a giant white mountain rising up out of the ocean.

But it couldn’t be.

No. Of course not
. There was no land around for hundreds of miles. And certainly no icebergs this far south.

But there it was. To the starboard side of the ship’s bow.
What the hell is it?

He flicked on the rows of deck lights and squinted through the glass, stunned by what he saw. It was a giant wave of water, rising up out of what had been a relatively calm night sea. No, it couldn’t be. It didn’t make sense. He had seen freak waves over the years, clashing systems of deep ocean currents and sudden mighty winds. But he had never heard of a rogue wave this large.

He lifted his radio and accessed the marine band channel, then the marine VHF radio frequency. “Mayday, Mayday. This is
MS Kassel
,” he shouted, speaking in German, and then gave his coordinates. He knew he was in serious danger; that his ship was going to be severely damaged by this. Part of him even knew it wasn’t going to survive. Dieter was still speaking into the radio when the wave came over the
Kassel
broadside, blowing out the windows of the pilothouse, and then collapsing over the deck, splitting the ship into the trough of another wave as if it were a toy.

I
N
W
ASHINGTON
, D
R
.
Wu was thinking about his wife, Alison, and their two daughters—Kim, who had just begun her senior year of college at Princeton, and Melinda, who was a sophomore at the University of Maryland—when he received an electronic alert that two more distress calls had been picked up in the North Atlantic Sea, one from air traffic control frequencies, the other from the Coast
Guard. Dr. Wu added them to the four from the day before, knowing what it was.
The third anomaly
.

Rogue waves—giant, spontaneous ocean waves that sprang up out of the deep seas, reaching heights topping a hundred feet—were once thought to be nothing more than legends related by wily sea captains, akin to reports of sea serpents. But they were now widely accepted as real, even if their origins were not well understood.

Over the past twenty years, about two hundred super cargo ships had been lost at sea, some of them to freak waves. Now, in just the past day—since Tropical Storm Alexander had formed in the North Atlantic Sea—there had been six reports of cargo ships lost in the deep ocean.

Dr. Wu typed a subject line on his handheld monitor:
THIRD ANOMALY
. He began to address his note to Gabriel Herring but then thought better of it, remembering his promise to himself. Instead, he called Herring. This time, he wanted to brief the President personally. But more importantly, he wanted to ask the President what was really going on.

TWENTY-ONE
Tuesday, October 4, 7:01
A.M.

C
ATHERINE
B
LAINE UNLOCKED HER
fourth-story office in a nondescript building on K Street downtown. She twisted open the blinds a crack, then sat at her desk and glanced through the morning’s
Washington Post
, seeing that the tornadoes in France were at the bottom of page one. She flipped through the “A” section. Found a story on page fourteen about the Cape Verde storm: M
ONSTER
S
TORM
F
ORMS IN
A
TLANTIC
.

Nine minutes later, she walked down the stairway and came out in the lower level of the parking garage, where Jamie Griffith had left a rental car for her. A silver Ford Focus. The keys were underneath the mat.

She
was
playing hide and seek again with the Secret Service, but on occasions like this it felt justified. The issue was freedom, she had decided. The need to find information on her own. She drove to the Beltway, then took 95 north toward Baltimore, getting off in the suburb of Towson, following the directions she’d printed out for the Environmental Physics Research Laboratories, where Dr. Sanchez worked.

At this hour, there were only three other cars in the lot of the single-story, beige-brick building. She recognized one of them—a beat-up old brown Toyota Corolla that looked as if it hadn’t been washed for a year. Blaine smiled to herself as she walked to the entrance, wondering if she should write “Wash Me” with her finger on the back window.

It was two minutes after 8
A.M.
and the office didn’t open for another hour, so Blaine banged on the front doors until she saw him
coming, walking with his intense and slightly prissy swagger. He was wearing a loose-fitting dashiki and flip-flops.

“My god. How’d you get loose?” he said, holding the door for her. He poked his head outside and looked one direction then the other. “I mean, where’s your entourage? Bodyguards and all that?”

“Gave them the slip.”

“Goodness,” he said, and engulfed her in a hug. “Come on back. Please. Your questions have got me thinking. Tea?”

“Sure.” His office was large but impossibly cluttered, with tottering piles of books and magazines, precariously balanced boxes, scattered folders, and a variety of antique musical instruments. Among his many interests, Dr. Sanchez collected antique string instruments, many of which he had learned to play. Charts, memos, emails, and newspaper clippings were tacked on the wood-paneled walls, most of them yellowed, along with maps of various sizes and locales. Three computer monitors were lined up on a work station and a much larger monitor stood on a table beside it.

“I’ve been working on your questions since five thirty. I have to say, they interest me a great deal.”

Blaine smiled. Dr. Sanchez was still one of the smartest weather scientists anywhere, although he didn’t do politics too well. He was in some ways the opposite of Dr. Wu, who had a skill for sounding reasonable and for saying the right thing. Dr. Sanchez had worked for NASA, NOAA, and Lawrence Livermore labs, and, for one year, had been a professor of atmospheric science at Columbia’s Earth Institute. But he didn’t get along well with other people, and each job had involved some degree of confrontation with his employers and co-workers. As he grew older, Sanchez seemed to divide people into two categories—those he liked and those he didn’t like. Blaine was one of the privileged few who still resided in the former category.

“Have a seat. Just clear that off there,” he said, flapping a hand at the sofa. For a moment his head jerked to the side, as if he were trying to shake water from his ear. It was a tic he had, which occurred every few minutes.

Blaine set down her briefcase, and pushed aside papers and a crusty old beach towel, clearing a spot to sit. Sanchez poured them each green tea in plastic tea cups and then sat on a creaky wooden swivel chair and kicked off his flip flops.

“Science begins with questions, yes?” he said, smiling. His personal appearance—full beard, long white hair tied back in a ponytail—and surprising childlike enthusiasms only seemed to accentuate his eccentricity. “And you’ve asked some interesting ones.”

“All hypothetical, of course.”

“Of course, of course.” He winked. “And when we’re finished, I’d like to tell
you
something hypothetical, a theory that may or may not be relevant to what you’re asking me.”

Blaine sipped her tea as he walked to the computer station and sat.

“Now. First things first,” he said, typing on the keyboard in front of him. “You asked me to look at four geo-physical events and determine if any of them could, hypothetically, have been man-made.”

“Yes.” She waited, as if she were in his classroom.

“My answer would be no.”

“Really.”

“Yes.” He nodded gravely, swiveling the chair to face her, his lips pursed. It was not the answer she had expected. Then the messages
were
hoaxes? The events coincidences?

“So,” she said, “even hypothetically speaking. It’s not, in your judgment, feasible that—”

He held up his right hand to stop her. “I’m responding to the question as phrased,” he said. “The term you used was ‘man-made.’ ”

Blaine saw a twinkle in his dark eyes. Although he didn’t show it much anymore, Dr. Sanchez had a winning smile that seemed to transform him into a child. “And to that question, the answer is no. If you had used a different term, I might have responded with a different answer.”

He was waiting for her to ask him. “What term?”

“Man-induced, let’s say. Or man-manipulated.”

“And then what would your answer be?”

“Then I would have said yes.”

“To which event?”

“All four.” He clicked open a slide show on the large monitor and stood. She recognized the first image as an aerial view of eastern India and Bangladesh, with the wedge of the Bay of Bengal between them.

“Take the first example. A tsunami in the Bay of Bengal. Next,” he said, as if instructing someone to change the image, although he was
holding the remote control himself. He zoomed in on the horseshoe-shaped upper bay.

“As you know, the Bay of Bengal is one of the most vulnerable spots on the planet. You won’t get a lot of disagreement about that. The reasons are well-documented: it’s low-lying and heavily populated, prone to deadly floods. Okay? Each year, thousands of people lose their lives during the monsoon season.” He changed the image—this one an aerial of floodwaters encroaching on the land. The borders seemed to have drawn in, the water redefining the shape of the coast. “Projections show the country may lose seventeen percent of its total land mass over the next thirty years. Which, needless to say, will have severe consequences, considering the population density. Next.”

He clicked to another slide, a diagram showing layers of the earth’s crust. It reminded her of something from a college geology class. “The vulnerability that you
don’t
hear about so much has to do with the plates in the earth
beneath
the Bay of Bengal,” he said. “An earthquake, in fact, has been overdue there for decades. An undersea earthquake, in turn, could trigger a tsunami, which is what we now know happened on September twenty-fifth.”

She watched him as he enlarged the image, pacing in front of the big screen like a teacher. “As you know, of course, earthquakes occur when the tectonic plates of the earth’s crust suddenly shift.”

Blaine nodded.

“Now, we aren’t, as of yet, able to determine just
when
earthquakes will occur, in the sense that we can predict thunderstorms or hurricanes or low-pressure systems. But we are able to predict where, on long-term models, earthquakes are
likely
to occur. We know, from magnetic geophysical surveys, for instance, where fault lines lie.”

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