“No way,” Kelly said. “We have to go public.”
“Agreed,” Duncan said. “As soon as we land, I can contact the President and we can stop this insanity.” She tapped Scheuler on the shoulder. “Land us at Las Vegas.”
The pilot laughed with a manic edge as his hands worked at the controls. “Lady, you can shoot me if you want, but I don’t think we’re going to land in Las Vegas.”
Turcotte still had his submachine gun ready for use.
“Why not?”
The pilot held up his hands. “Because I’m no longer flying this thing.” “Who is?” Turcotte asked.
“It’s flying itself,” Scheuler said.
“Where are we going, then?” Turcotte demanded.
“Just east of south right now on a heading of eighty-four degrees,” the pilot said. “More than that I can’t tell you until we get there.”
“Does the radio work?” Duncan asked. “I can call and get us help.” Scheuler tried it. “No, ma’am.”
“Give me a direction, Quinn,” Gullick growled into the radio as Aurora powered up.
Quinn’s voice came back through the headset. “South, sir.”
“You heard him,” Gullick said to the pilot as he settled into the RSO’s seat. “Due south.”
The plane hurtled forward and lifted. Out of the small window Gullick could just make out the silhouette of the mountain that hid the mothership. He felt the pain intensify in his head. “Stay busy,” he whispered to himself. He knew they couldn’t catch the bouncer, but at least they could track it. Eventually it would land. He ordered tankers along their projected flight path for in-flight refueling.
Kelly knelt down next to the pilot. “Do you have a map of the world?”
Scheuler nodded. He swung in the laptop control and brought up a world overlay on the screen.
“Show me where Easter Island is,” Kelly said.
Scheuler tapped a few keys. “Easter Island is in the Pacific. Off the coast of Chile. I’d say about five thousand miles from where we are right now.”
“And on what azimuth from us?” Kelly asked.
Scheuler checked, then looked up. “Eighty-four degrees.”
“It appears we’re going to Easter Island whether we want to or not,” Kelly announced. “How long until we get there?”
Scheuler did some calculations. “We’re not maxed out but we’re going fast enough. I estimate we’ll be there in about an hour and a half.”
“Well, now that we have time,” Kelly said, “and we know where we’re going, let’s find out as much as we can. Talk to me, Professor. What does the tablet say is on Easter Island?”
Nabinger was sitting cross-legged on the floor, the rongorongo tablet in his lap. “I’ve only managed to decipher part of this, but what I have…” He looked at a small notepad in his lap.
“Wait one,” Turcotte said. “Let’s not go through this guessing game again. Just tell us what you think it says rather than the literal translation.”
Nabinger obviously wasn’t happy about that unscientific approach, but he nodded. “All right. First, the tablet makes reference to powerful beings from the sky. People with hair of fire — red hair, I assume. They — the red-haired people — came and lived for a while at the place of eyes-looking-at-heaven. That’s how they describe it. From there they ruled after the month of the dark sky.
“Long after the month of the dark sky, the people with hair of fire went up in the great ship of the sky and left, never to return. But their…” Nabinger paused. “I am not quite sure what the next word is. It could mean ‘parent,’ but it doesn’t seem to fit in context. Perhaps ‘guardian’ or ‘protector’—remained and ruled.
“Even after the people with fire hair were gone, though,” Nabinger continued, “the little suns carried the word of the, hmm, let’s use the word guardian.”
“‘Little suns’?” Von Seeckt asked.
Turcotte remembered the foo fighter up in Nebraska and reminded the others. “So these things most definitely are connected to the bouncers and the mothership?”
“I’m certain of it,” Nabinger said. “There is more here, but it has to do with the worship of the guardian. I have only the one tablet. If I had the others I might know more.”
“How many are there?” Kelly asked.
“There used to be thousands on the island,” Nabinger answered, “but most were eventually used up as firewood or destroyed by missionaries who thought they were part of old pagan rites. There are just twenty-one in existence now — or at least there were only twenty-one suspected to be in existence. I don’t believe that counted this one, since it was hidden in Dulce.”
“How did it get to Dulce?” Kelly asked.
“Majic-12 has studied the high runes for years,” Von Seeckt said. “They never had as much luck as our good professor here has in translating them, but they have continued to collect whatever they can.”
“So maybe people for MJ-12 already have checked out Easter Island?” Kelly ventured.
“They may have,” Von Seeckt said, “but I believe I would have heard if they had discovered anything.”
“What do you know about Easter Island?” Kelly asked.
“It is the most isolated island on the face of the planet,” Nabinger said, remembering what was in Slater’s notes. “It is the place that is farthest from any other landfall. It wasn’t discovered by Europeans until 1722, on Easter Sunday — that’s how it got its name. The islanders themselves call their island Rapa Nui.”
“That remote location also helps explain why these aliens might have wanted to use it as a base camp,” Von Seeckt added. “Remember the part of the tablet from Hangar Two about not interfering with the local inhabitants?”
“What is the island like?” Turcotte asked, more focused on the immediate future as always.
For that Nabinger did have to consult the notes he’d carried in his backpack through all their adventures. “The island is shaped like a triangle with a volcano at each corner. Land mass is about sixty-two square miles. It doesn’t really have any beaches, one reason early visitors had a hard time getting ashore. It is very rocky. Almost no trees were left on the island when it was discovered. There are some now that have been planted.
“And, of course,” Nabinger said, “there are the statues, carved out of solid rock in a quarry on the slopes of one of the volcanoes. The largest is over thirty-two feet tall and weighs over ninety tons. There are over a thousand of them scattered all about the island.”
“I’ve seen pictures of those things,” Kelly said. “How did those ancient people move such large and heavy objects?”
“Good question,” Nabinger said. “There are several theories, none of which quite work.”
“Ah,” Von Seeckt said, “but perhaps our red-haired ancients might have had something to do with that. Or maybe left something lying around that the natives used to move the statues. Perhaps an antigravity sled or magnetic—”
“Is there any evidence of this guardian?” Turcotte cut in. “Anything like the bouncers or the mothership or even what was found in the pyramid?”
Nabinger shook his head. “No, but not as much is known about the island as people would like to think. We don’t know why the statues were built, never mind how they got to their locations around the coast. There is much that is hidden about the history of the island. Archaeologists are still making new finds as they explore. The island is volcanic and honeycombed with caves.”
That caught Turcotte’s interest. “So maybe there is something there?” “Perhaps this guardian still exists,” Kelly suggested.
“I hope something’s down there,” Turcotte noted, looking over Scheuler’s shoulder at the tactical display. “Because we’ve got someone hot on our tail. I don’t believe General Gullick has given up yet.”