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“Then, as bizarre as this story is, it doesn’t really tell us anything.”

Jade clung to the story of Gil Perez like a lifeline. “No, this has to be important somehow. We’re talking about someone teleporting! What if,” she glanced at the iPad screen again. “What if we look for other stories like this? Unexplained disappearances. Maybe we can find the Moon stone’s footprint.”

Professor’s expression was dubious. “Well, if you want mysterious disappearances, you don’t have to look very far. The route for Spanish galleons heading back to Europe went right through the Bermuda Triangle.”

Jade’s eyes went wide and Professor hastily added, “But the Bermuda Triangle is just a myth, created by a writer in the 1960s. Most of the so-called disappearances have been completely blown out of proportion and have a perfectly rational explanation.”

“Most? What about the ones that don’t? This makes perfect sense. Alvaro’s ship must have gone down. The Moon stone is sitting there at the bottom of the ocean. It’s probably the cause of those disappearances.”

Dorion weighed in. “If we accept the premise that the dark matter field can cause people to shift between different universes, then this is not implausible.”

Professor made a low grumbling noise.

Ophelia, who had been following the discussion without comment, now spoke up. “If this Moon stone is there, at the bottom of the ocean, how would we find it?”

“I’ve read all the scientific explanations for why the stories about the Bermuda Triangle are probably exaggerated,” Jade said. “But there are cases that still defy a logical explanation. Those planes that left Florida and vanished without a trace—”

“Flight 19,” supplied Professor grudgingly. “Five Avenger torpedo bombers went on a training flight in 1945. The flight leader radioed that he was off course and lost, and all attempts to talk them in or figure out where they were failed. The Navy searched for days in the area where they thought the planes had gone down, but found no trace. One of the search planes disappeared as well. The story of Flight 19 was what started people talking about the Bermuda Triangle. After that, every time a ship or plane went missing in the area, it added to the myth.

“But sometimes planes and ships just disappear, even today. Flight 370, that Malaysia Airlines Boeing 777 went off course and vanished in the Indian Ocean. Everyone wants to believe that there’s some mysterious force at work because we think our technology is foolproof, but it’s not. More than two-thirds of the planet is covered in deep ocean. It’s a great big haystack to lose a needle in. It’s just that simple. Unless you think there are other dark matter fields out there.”

Jade raised an eyebrow. “Maybe there are.”

“You’re worse than Bones,” Professor sighed.

Jade rolled her eyes at the thought of the six-foot-five Cherokee Indian, Uriah “Bones” Bonebrake, Dane Maddock’s partner-in-crime, and like Professor, a former member of the same SEAL team. She and Bones had gotten off on a bad foot, and Maddock’s new relationship with Angel didn’t help, but Jade and Bones had actually gotten along pretty well when they’d last worked together. Jade recalled Bones’ fascination with unexplained phenomena. “We could probably use him on this. Anyway, my point is that we can take those stories — the ones that are still completely unsolved — and triangulate to find the center of the effect. At the very least, it can narrow our search area.”

“The average depth of the Atlantic is nearly two miles down.”

“If you can put us in the ballpark,” Ophelia said, “I can provide a search vessel with submersibles.”

“There may be another way to narrow the search,” said Dorion. “In order to have that kind of effect at a distance, the field would have to be massive, much larger than what we observed in Teotihuacan.”

“Could the Moon stone still be collecting WIMPs?” Jade asked.

“Possibly. But that’s not what I’m getting at. There’s never been a way to detect dark matter, but if the Moon stone is exerting a significant effect on space-time — significant enough to make planes vanish from the sky — there will be measurable relativistic effects.”

“Meaning?”

“Meaning that time will distorted…we’re talking differences of perhaps only a few nanoseconds, but it’s a fairly simple thing to measure those differences with an atomic clock. We have one clock with us, synchronized to the FOCS-1 clock in Switzerland. As we move closer to a disruption of space-time, the clocks will desynchronize. Put simply, we can build a dark matter detector.”

“Speaking of clocks,” Ophelia said, “it’s late. We should all get some rest. I’ve got a breakfast date with my brother in a few hours. I’m not looking forward to that.”

Jade felt a twinge of apprehension. Despite his intervention on their behalf, Laertes Doerner remained a member of the very group that had repeatedly tried to kill them. “Maybe we should keep this just between us?”

“I won’t be able to hide an ocean-going expedition. But you let me worry about Laertes.”

Professor sighed in defeat. “I suppose none of you will be happy until we’ve had a look. But you do realize that, if there’s any truth to this crazy idea, the Bermuda Triangle will be a very dangerous place, and we’ll be sailing right into the heart of it.”

Jade grinned. “Never stopped us before.”

* * *

Brian Hodges closed his eyes and tried to imagine that he was somewhere else. With his hands and ankles zip-tied to a chair, there wasn’t much else he could do to deal with his imprisonment. He had no idea how much time had passed; hours, certainly. He knew that he had dozed off once or twice, but the uncomfortable chair to which he was bound made real sleep impossible. His captors had not fed him or even allowed him to go to the bathroom. His stomach had been grumbling for a while now and he had a splitting headache, though strangely, he didn’t feel the need to urinate. That meant he was probably dehydrated.

“Can I get a drink of water?” he croaked. “You can’t treat me like this. I have rights.”

There was no answer. He had seen no sign of anyone since being tied up and left here in this cell. Had they forgotten about him?

There was a click at the door and it swung open to reveal an irritated-looking man with pale blond hair. He recognized the visitor immediately; Laertes Doerner, the man who had betrayed them to the Greek police.

Hodges felt a surge of defiance from the depths of his misery. “What a surprise. You know they’re going to come after you.”

Doerner cocked his head sideways. “The Group? Oh, I doubt that very much. You and Andres really screwed things up. The Group will be pleased that I managed to clean this mess up with only minimal blowback.”

“Why did you turn us in?”

Doerner chuckled. “Isn’t it obvious? Andres went after my sister. I couldn’t very well just stand by and let that happen.”

“No victory without sacrifice,” Hodges muttered. “I lost my family. A lot of people lost sisters and daughters. What makes you so special?”

“You mean apart from a net worth that runs to eleven figures?”

“You’re a hypocrite. When the Group learns about this—”

Doerner waved his hand as if brushing away a bothersome fly. “Don’t presume to know what the Group thinks. You’re not in our class. In any case, the Group won’t be learning of it. Not from you, at least. You see, somebody has to pay for your little incursion on Greek soil. Those gunslingers Andres hired are already on their way to the deepest darkest prison in Greece. You’ve got reservations there as well, unless…”

Here it comes, thought Hodges. Carrot or stick? He’s going to make me beg for it. “Unless?”