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The silence as Swenson turned off the engines was as shocking as any loud sound. They’d lived with engine noise for eight and a half hours. As their senses adjusted, the steady whine of wind bouncing off the skin of the plane became noticeable. With the airplane’s heater off, the temperature immediately started dropping inside.

“Everyone bundle up.” Devlin was cinching down his hood. Conner made sure that everything was on before finally pulling the bulky mittens over her hands. She had arranged for the gear with Devlin over the phone and was very grateful he had followed through. What she called winter clothes back in Atlanta would not have done the job here.

Devlin had also come up with an extra set of gear for Sammy. The only one who did not need to be outfitted in New Zealand was Riley. He had pulled his own cold-weather equipment out of his duffel bag. He was wearing a Gore-tex camouflage parka and overpants that Conner was determined wouldn’t appear in any of their shots — much too militaristic. The three men and her sister were dressed the way she was — a bright orange parka and pants over a pile jacket and bib pants that zipped on the sides and the crotch. The polypropylene underwear next to their bodies would wick away any moisture from their skin. Large boots — Devlin had referred to them as Mickey Mouse boots — covered their feet, which were encased in thick wool socks.

Conner had not introduced Sammy as her sister but had identified Sammy and Riley as a security team sent by SNN. Her crew had taken that in stride, since all of them had worked with security personnel on various overseas assignments.

Swenson swung open his door and Conner took a quick gulp as a blast of cold air slammed into her lungs. Swenson scrambled out and Conner followed suit, her feet crunching in the snow. She’d never felt such cold. The air stung her face, the only exposed part of her body. Her skin rebelled, trying to shrink from the pain of the cold and she felt her muscles tighten as if somehow she might be warmer if she could make herself smaller.

The other members of the party piled out and stood looking around. To the north, Mount Erebus was a solid wall reaching up into the cloud cover. To the south, an endless line of ice disappeared into clouds that seemed to touch the horizon. To the west, the Royal Society Range blotted out the space between cloud and ice. The mountains looked amazingly close, as if you could walk there in an hour or two, yet Conner knew they were almost a hundred miles away. If they got nothing else from their trip here, they’d have some spectacular film footage.

The tractor kicked to life, drawing her attention away from the scenery. It roared up, treads clattering, placing the trailer alongside the plane. The driver, looking like a bear in his garments, waved down at them, pumping his fist. He seemed to be in a rush.

“Let’s off-load,” Devlin called out.

As they busied themselves transferring the gear from plane to trailer, Swenson used a sledge-hammer to drive pitons into the ice— one for each wing, one for the tail, and one for the nose. Rope attached to each piton secured the plane to the ice.

Once all the equipment was off the aircraft, Devlin gave Conner a boost up onto the wooden platform that made up the floor of the trailer. She tried to get as comfortable as possible among the bags and cases. The other members of the party climbed on board, and all grabbed on for dear life as the driver threw the tractor into gear and roared off toward the looming form of Mount Erebus.

Devlin leaned over and yelled in Conner’s ear. “Welcome to Antarctica.”

Chapter 10

AURORA GLACIER STATION, ANTARCTICA

Sammy’s first glimpse of Aurora Glacier Station confirmed what she had expected. The large, squat, boxy building looked more like several trailer homes sealed together than a research station. The bright red building sat on the ice, several hundred yards from the base of Mount Erebus; just to the right a cluster of antennas was tied off to a tower. A colorful banner reading “Our Earth” was strung along the front. Aurora was located six miles from McMurdo Station.

It had taken the tractor almost forty-five minutes to get them off the ice shelf and here to the station. They pulled up in front with a clatter, and a couple of people stepped out of the building to greet them. As Devlin did the introductions, Sammy could see Riley hanging back. His camouflage cold-weather suit contrasted with the bright outfits of the station personnel, and their lackluster handshakes on meeting Riley were a predictable reaction.

“Let’s get our equipment indoors,” Devlin ordered.

Sammy helped Riley haul his duffel bag inside. They were directed down a short corridor and into a small room containing three sets of bunk beds and not much else. Riley dumped his gear onto one bed and went back out to help Conner’s crew with the camera and radio gear.

Sammy stood with Devlin, Conner, and Swenson in the mess hall/ meeting room as Devlin briefed a skinny, bearded man on their mission to find Eternity Base. Devlin had introduced him as Peter McCabe, Our Earth’s foremost Antarctic expert. When Conner showed him the faxed photocopy of the picture, McCabe sat down at the table and looked at it for a long time.

“This looks familiar. It’s rare that you have three nunataks that close to one another.” He pulled out a large chart. “Show me again where you think this place might be based on the air time.”

“Two hours by C-130 comes to roughly five hundred miles.” Devlin traced a half arc around McMurdo Station.

“It’s not to the west,” McCabe announced firmly. ‘That would put it very close to the French station there, and I’ve been in that area quite a bit lately so I’d certainly recognize these peaks if they were there.”

He stared at the map, his eyes boring in as if he could see the actual terrain by just looking at the two dimensional paper. Sammy took the opportunity to glance over at Riley, who had just joined the group. He seemed unconcerned about the whole situation. Ever since their conversation at the airport, he had been very quiet, talking only when directly questioned. Sammy had spent most of their many hours in the air sleeping and recovering from her ordeal.

McCabe turned the map around and placed the photo on it. He tapped a spot on the far side of the Ross Sea. “It’s here. I’d be willing to bet that middle peak is Mount Grace. The one on the right is McKinley Peak. The lower one on the left must be this one that has no name.”

Devlin shook his head. “Are you sure? I’d have thought they’d put the base farther south.” He pointed at the map. “Down here along the Shackleton coast, perhaps.”

McCabe looked up. “No. That’s Mount Grace. I knew I’d seen that silhouette before. To the south of it is the glacier where they launched the Byrd Land South Pole traverse in ‘60. When you fly out in that direction you put the glacier on the right and McKinley on your left. Then it’s open ice until you hit the Executive Committee Mountain Range.”

Conner spoke for the first time. “How soon can we take off again?” she asked Swenson.

The pilot was chewing on the end of his bushy mustache. “Ah, well, missy, the plane, it can take off right now. The problem is the pilot. I just put in ten nonstop hours and I could use a couple of hours to rest. How about in four hours?”

Sammy could tell that Conner wasn’t very happy about the delay. She half expected her sister to order the pilot to take off immediately. But Conner sighed and looked around the table. “All right. It’s presently three-fifteen local time here. We take off at seven-fifteen. The—”

“What about darkness?” Lallo interrupted. “We won’t be able to find the place in the dark.”