Ark found, p.1

Ark Found, page 1

 part  #2 of  Omega Files Adventures Series

 

Ark Found
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Ark Found


  ARK FOUND

  An Omega Files Adventure

  By Rick Chesler

  Copyright © 2019 Rick Chesler All rights reserved.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the authors' imagination or are used fictitiously and should not be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For more information e-mail all inquiries to: rick@rickchesler.com

  Cover art by J. Kent Holloway

  10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  Contents

  Prologue

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Epilogue

  Prologue

  April 15, 1912

  North Atlantic Ocean, aboard the R.M.S. Titanic

  Chronopoulos Dimitrios wondered why the band was still playing. Clearly, despite all the hoopla proclaiming it “unsinkable,” the great liner Titanic was sinking. They’d struck an iceberg, he’d heard. From his position above the port side Boat Deck, he watched the seven musicians play as though it was any other late night performance. But the angle of the deck now had a pronounced list to it. Chronopoulos found himself having to reach out with an arm to grab a railing to keep from slipping.

  He felt a hand grip him on the shoulder and turned around to see his brother, Apostolos, who’d gone to see if he could get more information from the crew about was going on. His next words unsettled him deeply.

  “They’re launching the lifeboats.”

  Chronopoulos made steady eye contact with his brother while he tried to make sense of the uncertainty plaguing his thoughts. A breeze, light but weighted with chill, ruffled his hair.

  “Well come on!” his brother pleaded. “We should get in the queue.”

  Chronopoulos glanced down at the port rail, where he heard a splash over the strains of a waltz. A chorus of shouts erupted as the first boat landed lopsided in the water, nearly tipping over, but then landing upright.

  “Third class will be the last to board, anyway,” Chronopoulos said, turning back to his brother. Even in steerage class, the trip had been an expensive one for them, but the prospect of a visit to New York City held its own potential monetary reward. “Tell you what: you go down there and get in line. I’ve got to get my parcel out of the safe.”

  His brother’s eyes widened in fear. “Are you crazy? That part of the ship could be flooded by now!”

  “I’ve got to take a look. It’s the whole reason for my trip. I’ll be quick about it.” Chronopoulos spun on a heel and looked away from the band toward the stairs that led into the ship’s common areas.

  “Don’t be stupid!” Apostolos’ voice nagged after him. “It’s not worth it. You’re risking your life for what, that old scroll?”

  At this, Chronopoulos wheeled around. “That old scroll as you call it might happen to be the most valuable thing I own. Think about it…the location of Noah’s Ark! Invaluable. And there are no copies of it.”

  Apostolos rolled his eyes. “I respect your career in archaeology, brother, I really do. But honestly, you have no idea if that old paper is genuine or not.”

  “You know what happened. The papyrus it’s printed on was evaluated by a London expert and found to be of proper age, and he recommended I bring it to the collector in New York, who has a network of—” Chronopoulos was interrupted by the sound of a fight breaking out down below on deck. Both siblings turned to look as fisticuffs erupted between two male passengers vying for position in a new line that was forming for a second lifeboat that had not yet been lowered to the water.

  “Go then, if it makes you feel better,” Apostolos relented. “By the looks of things, we could use Noah’s ark right about now, couldn’t we?”

  Chronopoulos smiled warmly at his brother and gave a slight nod as he turned and ran off toward the entrance to the ship’s interior. More people streamed out onto the decks now—both passengers and crew alike—and the young Greek found himself feeling like a salmon swimming upstream as he entered the ship’s common area against the flow. He was bumped into more than a few times as he made his way deeper into the ship. Although there was no public address system, no ship-wide announcement that the mighty Titanic was going down, people were beginning to suspect that was exactly what was happening. The uncertainty served only to make things worse.

  Chronopoulos reached the hallway that led to his quarters and turned left. He didn’t need to go to his quarters—he and his brothers had already retrieved all of their belongings, including the key to the safe—but he didn’t know how to get to the Purser’s Room where the safe was unless he first visited his own room. The ship was that big, and he didn’t have time to squander getting lost. Only a few people occupied the space, most of them walking in the opposite direction to get outside. He passed a husband and wife standing in front of an open quarters door arguing fiercely over where their child was last seen.

  Strange groaning and creaking noises emanated from places unknown as Chronopoulos forged his way down the hallway. He passed his quarters and peered quickly inside without stopping. The berth’s bunk beds, which had housed eight people including Chronopoulos and his brother, were now empty. He noticed the water running in the single communal sink. A shame, he thought, picking up his pace now as he continued down the hall. He really had been having a good time on the voyage. Although he was a third class passenger, he had heard other, more travelled passengers state that the third class accommodations aboard Titanic were equivalent to second class room and aboard on most other ocean liners.

  He passed the open door to the third class smoking lounge and was surprised to see an old woman inside, seated at a table by herself and smoking a cigarette with a long filter as though she had not a care in the world. She made eye contact with him but said nothing nor changed her expression. Chronopoulos kept moving, by now unconsciously adjusting his gait for the increasingly unsteady movement of the ship. He reached a stairwell and took it up two flights before it opened into another hallway, this one shorter than the last. Near the end of it, he saw a gaggle of three or four people outside the door to the Purser’s Room.

  They were arguing. Chronopoulos could see and hear that much even before he could make out the details of their faces or hear the individual words being spoken. He wasn’t sure about what, but then when he got near enough they all stopped talking and watched him approach. The rowdy group of men, third class passengers by the looks of it, though Chronopoulos realized that he himself might fool some people by the way he dressed up a bit, blocked the doorway. Chronopoulos paused at the double-door entrance and looked past them into the Purser’s Room. It appeared no one was inside.

  “Excuse me.” The archaeologist waited for at least one of them to step aside, but instead they all stopped arguing with each other and stared at him. He could smell alcohol on their breath. One of the men looked as though he was about to object, but one of his companions shot him a look that said, let him pass.

  Chronopoulos hurried into the room before they could change their mind. The last thing he needed right now was to be involved in some kind of drunken altercation. He fumbled in his pockets for the key to his safe as he walked across the room. By the time he got to the bank of small safes, read the numbers on them, and assured himself he found the correct one, he realized that the passengers outside the room had followed him inside.

  The tallest and drunkest of the three, an Irishman of about forty years of age, nodded to the key in Chronopoulos ‘ hand. “Well go on, open it!”

  Chronopoulos hesitated.

  “Open it I said!” the drunk man said, taking a step closer. Chronopoulos could smell the cheap whiskey on his breath.

  The young archeologist still hesitated, unsure of how to behave in this situation. He had gotten into one fistfight in his life, in Greece, five years ago with a childhood friend. And he had lost, limping home with his tail between his legs and a bloody nose. But now, as he thought about the treasure that lay inside the box—at least he was convinced that’s what it was—he was not about to even put himself in a position to truly lose. On the other hand, he thought, it was likely that these drunks would have no interest in an old piece of paper. No doubt they sought jewelry, cash, obvious valuables. He decided that was the route he should take, and made fear-defying eye contact with the lead drunk.

  “I have nothing of value in there. Only personal letters and photographs of sentimental value to me and my family.”

  “He said open it, boy!”

One of the other men, to his left, reached out and kicked him in the left leg, a bolt of pain shooting through him as the knee buckled, but held. Chronopoulos was unarmed, untrained in fighting, and outnumbered three to one by men who were not about to listen to reason. He saw no other option than to open the safe and hope they found no interest in his dusty old scroll. He had considered not paying for the safe and instead keeping the parchment in his berth with his general belongings, not wanting to spend the extra money for safekeeping, but the thought of showing up to his meeting in New York empty-handed was enough to get him to pony up the extra funds.

  So now he reluctantly held up the key and turned to the safe. “Okay. Fine, you will see there is nothing of interest in there for—”

  Suddenly all four men tumbled to the ground as the ship canted sharply to the right. A muffled crack was heard at the same time. Chronopoulos winced as his elbow hit the floor. He felt the key leave his grasp and then a tinkling sound as the piece of metal landed out of sight. Then he felt the breath leave his body as a booted foot slammed into his abdomen, knocking the wind out of him. The men untangled from one another and were quicker to rise to their feet than Chronopoulos, but just as they did, the ship rolled again and all of them were back on the floor in a mound.

  That’s when the water began seeping in from the left, sluicing down the Purser’s Room until it jolted them all awake with its icy reality.

  Chronopoulos saw an opportunity to get himself out of a losing fight and seized it. “The Titanic is sinking! We have to get out of here before it goes down!”

  One of the drunkards rose to his feet and moved to kick Chronopoulos in the ribs, but slipped on the water and went down hard, the back of his head striking the floor. The scant millimeters of water cushioned his fall just enough to prevent him from blacking out, but even so he made no move to get to his feet. He lay there on his back, cringing, tears running down the sides of his face. Before anyone could say anything else, the lights in the room blinked on and off three times before remaining off, casting the room in complete darkness. Knowing this was his chance for escape, Chronopoulos slithered across the wet, sloping floor to put some distance between himself and his attackers.

  “Power musta cut out!” one of the drunks said. Various crashing noises were heard as unseen furniture rocked around the room and items slid off of shelves and tables. Chronopoulos continued to slide across the floor. He changed directions when he felt he had gone some number of yards from the group of assailants. He had given up all hope of retrieving his map now and wanted only to escape this terrible situation with his life.

  Then the lights flickered back on and he saw with a start in the unsteady light that he had gone the wrong way—deeper into the room rather than toward the door as he had hoped he had gone.

  “He’s trying to get away!” one of the thugs shouted. Chronopoulos managed to stagger to his feet just as the lights stayed on. They were dimmer than before, and the young Greek heard one of the men mutter the word “generator” before he started to run.

  “Get him!”

  But at that moment, what got him was the wall of the room bursting open as a raging torrent of freezing seawater flooded the room. There was no swimming against it. As water poured into the room with unimaginable force, swift, unrelenting and unbearably cold on contact, Chronopoulos knew that he, nor any of his attackers, would survive this. His mind flashed on his mistake: you should have listened to Apostolos and not come down here.

  At first, while the icy waters lifted him higher as the room flooded, he told himself that he might be able to swim up to the hallway, but before he had even completed the thought he was being carried as if on a waterfall up and out of the room where the wall used to be and then bashed into the hallway wall, snapping his neck and saving him the torture of holding his breath until he drowned.

  His last thought flowed across the neurons in his brain as his body ceased to function forever: I hope Apostolos made it onto one of the lifeboats.

  #

  New York City, one day later

  Noted antiquities collector Charles Miller brought a hand to his mouth in slow motion as he reacted to the headline in that morning’s New York Times: “Titanic Sinks Four Hours After Hitting Iceberg; 866 Rescued By Carpathia, Probably 1,250 Perish; Ismay Safe, Mrs. Astor Maybe, Noted Names Missing.”

  He spent the next hour wringing his hands over whether his appointment with the young Greek archaeologist, whom he knew had chosen the Titanic’s maiden voyage as his means of transportation to New York, would be kept. He re-read the telegraph correspondence he’d had with him to make certain he had the name right: Chronopoulos Dimitrios. So far that name had not shown up on either the survivors or perished lists. Either way, he would miss his appointment with him that day. He knew from the article that the survivors were now en route to New York aboard the rescue ship, Carpathia. He could only hope that Mr. Dimitrios would be among them. For if not, Charles, thought, lifting his gaze from the shocking article….

  If not, then the ark is truly lost once again.

  Chapter 1

  Present Day

  Atlantic Ocean, 370 miles off the coast of Newfoundland

  To Carter Hunt’s eyes, the dark speck on the horizon was an anomaly that signaled he was almost to his destination. After over two hours of sitting in the Augusta Bell AB-212 helicopter with nothing to look at but endless open ocean, the still indistinct blob was a welcome sight. At the same time, Hunt reflected, it was a sight that filled him with a certain sadness, for it marked the wreck site of the RMS Titanic, which had sunk at this very spot over a century ago.

  “Hey, can I see the binoculars?” Carter’s friend and business partner, Jayden Takada, reached a hand into the cockpit from his seat in the back. Hunt passed him the optics before turning to the pilot of their chartered craft. “Hey Buzz, winds seem pretty light? Should be a good landing?”

  The pilot looked over at him and smiled from behind a pair of oversized, mirrored sunglasses. “You know what they say. Any landing you can walk away from is a good one if you ask me. Especially in a ‘copter. In a plane, if you lose an engine, you can still glide. Not so in a chopper. You just drop like a stone.”

  “Thanks for making us feel better,” Hunt joked. But he knew the pilot was aware that his two passengers were ex-Navy combat veterans who’d both served with distinction, Carter as an officer and Jayden as a SEAL and submersible pilot. He wasn’t telling them anything they didn’t already know.

  “I only see one ship on site,” Jayden informed them from behind the binoculars.

  Carter shrugged as he squinted out the window at the distant vessel. “That’s good news, unless of course it means whoever’s been snooping around on the wreck—I prefer to call it a grave site—already took what they were after and left.”

  It was Jayden’s turn to shrug. “That’s our job either way, right? Either to get the map, or else to confirm that someone else already snatched it.”

  Carter nodded. “There’s a third possibility, too.”

  “What’s that?” Jayden handed the binoculars back up front. Carter focused them on the ship as he answered.

  “Maybe the safe is buried in the mud somewhere in the wreckage trail and none of us will ever find it.” At this Jayden shook his head while exhaling a long breath, and Carter continued. “Or there never was any map to Noah’s ark, it was just a hoax, or something that got misconstrued and passed down more and more incorrectly from generation to generation.”

  “Like that old kids’ telephone line game?”

  “Exactly. Or, maybe the safe is there but it rusted open, ruining the parchment inside.”

  “That last possibility would be definitive, at least. It would make our client happy to say for sure what happened.”

  “True.” Carter nodded from behind the glasses. Their client. The only one at the moment, but success with her represented a large payday. Carter was unique in that he insisted his clients pay only half the total fee up front, and the other half only on successful completion of the job. This was both because he wasn’t really doing this work for the money. He’d inherited a fortune from his grandfather, and after a ten-year stint in the Navy as a commissioned officer, decided not to re-up as expected. Instead, disillusioned with the wartime looting of priceless historical artifacts he’d seen in the middle east and elsewhere, he opted to started a private company dedicated to the preservation and safekeeping of historical artifacts so that they might be conserved indefinitely for the greater good.

 

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