From the novel,
Stones
by
James C. Hendee
Dedicated to the late
Julianne "Jules" Nordby-Milanese
“The most precious jewels are not made of stone,
but of flesh.”
-- Robert Ludlum
Hero is Jason Stouter, together with sidekick Sali Bryant,
as from the novel Codon Zero, adding good guys & gals,
Julene, Colorado, Naieema, Masen, Captain Chet, and Jamie
(Novel to be released at the end of 2021 or early 2022...)
Following is a part of the chapter that introduces "Captain Chet"
in the Berry Islands, Bahamas,
followed by two excerpts near the end of the book, where,
"WE'RE ALL GONNA DIE!"
----------- Introducing Captain Chet ------------
When the old man with the long grey beard had dropped off his passenger at the Garnet Lady, he saluted the new passenger for the yacht and said, "Have a safe trip. See you next time." He turned the skiff around and headed back into shore full speed.
The men on board the Garnet Lady gave the new man a hand as he climbed on board the yacht. There were just Reznik, Nadav and Vlad to greet him on the afterdeck, with the captured women below locked in their quarters.
As the new man stepped on board, he greeted Reznik first. "Mr. Reznik, I presume?"
"You are correct. I trust Marek has finalized your payment concerns?"
"He has indeed. Half already sent; the rest given upon arrival."
"Good," said Reznik, then turned to his crew. "Men, this is our captain now. He knows these waters a hell of a lot better than me, and he's going to take over the ship now until we get there. His name is Chester..."
The new captain interrupted him, "Please, just call me Captain Chet. I'd rather the IRS and the few people I do business with not know my last name. I'm sure you understand."
Captain Chet knew every passage and every coral head between Miami and Trinidad, and had piloted everything from a surfboard to an oil tanker. His knowledge was legendary among charter boat captains of the Caribbean, and you could hire no better captain to take your yacht through the Bahamas during a gale on the verge of becoming a hurricane . He was in his early sixties but he retained the youthful resilience of a hard man in his forties. People could easily recognize him from a distance by his big, thick grey mustache, as well as his characteristic bearing, gait and laughing demeanor. His forearms and hands were large and extremely strong from reeling in so many fish and pulling on so many lines attached to anchors. His gut showed only a passing attraction to dark beers. His life on the sea had made him a strong and capable survivor, and he had the wisdom of a life on the ocean. He had mostly worked legitimate jobs, but he was rumored to have smuggled tons of marijuana and cocaine into the United States, yet he had never been caught, nor had the shipments apparently ever been witnessed.
He turned to Reznik. "If you can show me around, we can get started as soon as your men are ready."
Reznik introduced his crew, then said, "There are also three women on board, but they are belowdecks in their private quarters. I ask that you not speak with them, and don't ask any questions either. They are part of a surprise at our destination."
"Fair enough," said Captain Chet, then paused for a moment. "May I ask if there is anything illegal about their passage?"
"No," said Reznik, who stared back at him with a piercing stare and said nothing more.
The new captain thought to himself: Well does he mean, "No, you may not ask," or, "No there's nothing illegal about their passage," but he decided to keep his mouth shut and instead just said, "Good enough. Shall we continue with the tour?"
----------- Near the End of the Novel ------------
Their initial excitement on leaving the underwater grotto of Rubicon Mountain gave way to anxiety as the Triton submarine entered the wondrous coral-encircled realm at sixty feet deep and onward to a precipice of an underwater cliff that was hundreds of feet deep. They were quite literally in a twilight zone of reduced light at such a depth, and it was gradually getting darker as the sun above dwindled in brilliance as dusk approached.
Naieema began to shudder and cry. "I'm scared. I'm sorry. I can't help it. I'm claustrophobic and I've never even been skin-diving in my entire life."
Colorado wrapped her arms around her and hugged her. "Hang in there, girl. They don't make unsafe multi-million dollar subs anymore."
"She's right, Naieema, and we can start moving up now toward the surface," said Jason. "It won't be long now. Just hang in there."
Jason turned to Captain Chet. "Let's start moving slowly to the surface so we can get our bearings. Stay just below the surface until the sun goes down, then rise slowly to the surface."
The captain tried tugging at the ascent/descent control, but it wouldn't budge. "Uh oh."
The black silence within the sub dumbfounded them all for long seconds as they continued to gently fall through the sea past bioluminescent fish and other animals reflected by the headlights of the sub.
"What do you mean 'Uh oh,'" uttered Jason as they continued to descend.
"I mean the stick is frozen. I can't get it to move one way or the other. It was working fine when we left, but it just now froze, for some reason."
Naieema started to wail louder.
"Is that the only control for ascent and descent?"
"It's the only one I've seen."
Nobody said anything as Captain Chet continued struggling with the control and the sub picked up speed as it continued to fall toward the bottom of the ocean.
Suddenly they could see the bottom approaching. Jason and Captain Chet both looked at the depth meter at the same time. They had just crossed three hundred feet deep.
"Everybody brace yourself!" shouted Jason.
Naieema was sobbing uncontrollably. Colorado's eyes were opened wide and her lips were trembling as she and Julene held tight to Naieema. Sali and Jason both pulled the straps tight on their seatbelts.
They all watched the bottom drawing closer. Captain Chet kept pulling on the stick. "Oohhhhhh shit!"
They landed on the ocean floor sending up a great cloud of brilliant white sand billowing around them. It was a soft landing compared to what it might have been, owing to the depth of the sand.
Nothing was broken, no leaks. Nothing but silence, and the headlights still shone out into the darkness as various strange-looking fish swam by or sea stars or other critters crept along the bottom.
Soon, however, after the sand cloud settled, they noticed that they were on a slope near the edge of a cliff and they could see nothing but deep blue-black reflecting back at them from the lights of the vessel.
Jason said, "Is everybody okay?"
Naieema whimpered, "I don't want to die!" Everybody else nodded their heads that they were okay.
Captain Chet finally gave up on the stick and started looking around the inside of the vessel for any clues as to other ways to move the submersible.
Julene scolded nobody in particular: "Hey, did anybody read the fucking manual? There's got to be a way to get this thing moving."
Captain Chet, Sali and Jason started looking all over the sub for the documentation or any other clues as to how to get the sub moving.
Just then the sub began sliding down the sandy incline, heading for the edge of the underwater cliff.
"Oh, shit, oh dear," said Julene quietly.
Captain Chet tried pulling up on the stick again. Nothing. It was frozen. The sub continued to slide. Jason and Sali, undaunted by the passenger's apparent slide into oblivion, kept looking around the sub for documentation on the operation of the sub.
"Oh my God," said Colorado. "This is it. We're all going to die down here and nobody is ever going to find us."
"Shut up," said Julene, "You're only making matters worse."
Just then the sub fell over the precipice of the great underwater cliff, orienting completely vertical and now at over five hundred feet deep, and free-fell more, yet at a slower pace than before. Captain Chet was able to steer it back to horizontal, but there was no longer a bottom with swimming organisms to give them any sense of perspective as to how fast and how far they were falling; but they all knew they were indeed falling because the tiny particulate matter was flying upward in the lights as they plunged deeper and deeper.
"How much air do we have left?" asked Jason softly.
"About six hours," answered Captain Chet.
Nobody said anything as the sub continued to descend slowly, and they all just sat there for the moment, wondering what might happen next, if anything, while Naieema continued with a sob muffled by her folded arm over her mouth.
-------------------
"Hello, can anybody hear us? Mayday, mayday, mayday. Please somebody answer, can you hear us?"
But he knew it was fruitless, and so, probably, did they. Who could possibly be listening, and even if they were, what could they do? They all sat there in their own little world of ruin, each with their own thoughts of their lives unexpectedly coming to an end at the bottom of the ocean.
----- End of Excerpt -----
