computer DJ at a dance club in Honolulu.
"It's not saying anything," said Libby Quinn. "It's just random, Clay."
"Well, that's the way it's gone so far, right?"
"But there's been nothing since that first day."
"We knew that might happen, that there couldn't be messages on all of them. We just have to find the right ones."
Libby's eyes were pleading. "Clay, it's a short season. We have to get out in the field. Now that you have this program, you don't need the manpower. Margaret and I will bring back more tapes - we have them coming in from people we trust - but we can't afford to blow off the season."
"And we need to go public with the torpedo range," Margaret added, less sympathetic than Libby had been.
Clay nodded and looked at his bare feet against the hardwood floor. He took a deep breath, and when he looked up, he smiled. "You're right. But don't just blow a whistle and hope someone will notice. Cliff Hyland told me that the diving data was the only thing they were worried about. You're going to need proof that humpbacks dive close to the bottom of the channel, or the navy will claim that you're just being whale buggers and there's no danger to the animals. Even with the range."
"You're okay if we go public, then?" asked Libby.
"People are going to know about the torpedo range soon enough. I don't think that's dangerous for you. Just don't say anything about the rest of this, okay?"
The two women looked at each other, then nodded. "We have to go," Libby said. "We'll call you, Clay. We're not running out on you."
"I know," Clay said.
After they left, Clay turned to the two surfers. Thirty years working with the best scientists and divers in the world, and this was what it came down to: two stoner kids. "If you guys need to go do things, I understand."
"Outta here," said Lolo, on his feet and bounding toward the door.
Clay looked at the screen where Lolo had been sitting. Scrolling across it: WILL ARRIVE GV APPRX 1300 MONDAY HAVE SIZE 11 SNEAKERS WAITING FOR QUINN END MSS AAAA BAXYXABUDAB.
"Get him back," Clay said to Kona. "We need to know which tape this was."
"Libby gave them all to him."
"I know that. I need to know where she got it. Where and when it was recorded. Call Libby's cell phone. See if you can get hold of her." Clay was trying to make the screen print before the message scrolled away. "How the hell does this thing work?"
"How you know I'm not leaving?"
"You woke up this morning, Kona. Did you have a reason to get out of bed other than waves or pot?"
"Yah, mon, need to find Nate."
"How'd that feel?"
"I'm calling Libby, boss."
"Loyalty is important, son. I'll go catch Lolo. Confirm which tape it was."
"Shut up, boss. I'm trying to dial."
Behind them the cryptic message scrolled out of the printer.
CHAPTER TWENTY-EIGHT
Single-Celled Animal
Stockholm syndrome or not, Nate was starting to get tired of the whole hippie-commune, everything-is-wonderful-and-the-Goo-will-provide attitude. Nuñez had come by for three days running to take him out on the town, and every person he met was just a little too damn satisfied with the whole idea that they were living inside a giant organism six hundred feet under the ocean. Like this was a normal thing. Like he just wasn't getting with the program because he continued to ask questions. At least the whaley boys would blow wet raspberries at him and snicker as he walked by. At least they had some sense of the absurdity of all this, despite the fact that they shouldn't even have existed in the first place, which did seem to be a large point of denial on their part.
They'd installed him in what he guessed was a premier apartment, or what you'd call an apartment, on the second floor, looking out over the grotto. The windows were oval, and the glass in them, although perfectly clear, was flexible. It was like looking out on the world through a condom, and that was just the beginning of the things that creeped him out about this place. He had a kitchen sink, a bathroom sink, and a shower - all of which had big honking sphincters in the bottom of them - and the seal on the door around his refrigerator, if that's what you called it, appeared to be made out of slugs, or at least something that