Kurt pulled off his headset, popped open the door, and stepped out. Stretching his legs, he gazed at the sights around him. It was like being on a rooftop restaurant and getting the best view in the house.
The sails he’d seen were at least a hundred feet tall, all marked with a bright blue stripe and the name aqua-terra. A scent lingered in the air, but it was so out of place, it took a moment for Kurt to recognize it: fresh-cut grass.
Another sight heading his way appeared similarly out of place. Wearing orange slacks, a gray shirt and a flowing purple robe decorated with green-and-blue paisley was a man who looked a lot like Elwood Marchetti, and a little like a peacock.
A thick brown beard on his face and circular red sunglasses completed his dizzying ensemble.
A thin man with strawlike blond hair trailed behind him. He wore a business suit and appeared to be upset.
“Mr. Marchetti, you shouldn’t be greeting these people,” the man said. “They have no right to land here.”
Kurt looked past Marchetti to the suit. “We had engine trouble.”
“A convenient time to get it.”
Kurt smiled. “I’ll say. Fortunately for us, your island was right here.”
“It’s a lie,” the man said. “They’re obviously here as spies or to attempt an audit.”
Marchetti shook his head and turned to the aide. He put his hands on the man’s arms and gripped him like an old-time revival preacher, healing someone from the crowd.
“It grieves me,” Marchetti began. “Truly grieves me. To think I’ve made you so paranoid and yet not given you the wisdom you need to see clearly.”
“Blake Matson,” he said, directing the aide’s attention back to Kurt. “This isn’t the man. This fellow doesn’t even resemble the man. The man comes in boats and ships, he brings guns and lawyers and accountants. He doesn’t wear boots and bring beautiful young women with him.”
Marchetti was taking in Leilani as he spoke.
“Excuse me,” Kurt said. “But what on earth are you babbling about?”
“Tax man, my friend,” Marchetti said. “The IRS, the various European equivalents and members of one particularly irksome South American country that seem to think I owe them something.”
“Internal Revenue Service,” Kurt said. “Why would you be worried about them?”
“Because they don’t seem to get the idea that I have now become external to their world and thus am not part of their revenue stream or in any way, shape or form interested in any of their so-called service.”
Marchetti put a hand on Kurt’s shoulder and ushered him forward.
“This is my domain. A billion dollars’ worth of effort so far. Terra firma of my own. Only it’s not firma,” he said, stumbling over his words, “it’s aqua. Terra-aqua. Or Aqua-Terra, actually. But you understand what I’m saying.”
“Barely,” Kurt deadpanned.
“Tax man calls it a ship. They say I have to pay tariffs and registration fees and insurance. Comply with OSHA rules and inspections. They tell me that’s the bow. I tell them this is an island, and that right there is land’s end.”
Kurt stared at Marchetti. “You can call it the planet Mars, for all I care. I’m not with the IRS or anyone else who wants to tax you or question your sovereignty—or your sanity, for that matter. But I am a man with a problem and good reason to believe you’re the cause.”
Marchetti looked stunned. “Me? Problem? Those two words don’t often go together.”
Kurt stared until Marchetti stopped fidgeting.
“What kind of problem?” the billionaire asked.
Kurt pulled a capped vial from his breast pocket. It contained the slushy mix of soot, water and microbots that Gamay had given him.
“Tiny little machines,” he said. “Designed by you, meant to do God knows what, and found on a burned-up boat that’s missing three crew members.”
Marchetti took the vial and lowered the rose-colored glasses. “Machines?”
“Microbots,” Kurt replied.
“In this vial?”
Kurt nodded. “Your design. Unless someone’s been filing patents in your name.”
“But it can’t be.”
Marchetti seemed positively baffled. Kurt could see he would have to prove it.
“You have equipment on board that can look at this?”
Marchetti nodded.
“Then let’s go for a reality check and remove any doubt.”
Five minutes later Kurt, Joe and Leilani had taken an elevator down to the main deck, which Marchetti called the zero deck because the decks beneath it had negative numbers and those above it had positive ones. They walked to a line of parked golf carts, climbed into an extended six-seater and drove off toward the front tip of the island. Matson was left behind, and Nigel remained on the helipad, pretending to work on the helicopter.
Their travels took them across the island, an island that seemed almost deserted.
“What’s your compliment?” Kurt asked.
“Usually fifty, but this month we have only ten on board.”
“Fifty?” Kurt had expected him to say a thousand. He looked around. The sounds of construction reached them from various spots, but Kurt did not see a single worker or even hear voices.
“Who’s doing all the work?”
“Total automation,” Marchetti said.
He pulled to a stop beside a recessed section. He pointed.
Kurt saw sparks jump where things were being welded, heard the sound of rivets being hammered and high-powered screwdrivers turning, but he saw no one. After a few more welding sparks, something moved. An object the size of a vacuum cleaner, with three arms and an arc welder on a fourth appendage, scurried to a ladder.
The machine made the same sudden awkward movements as the robots on an assembly line, jerky but exacting. Robots might be precise, Kurt thought, but they still had no sense of style.
As the machine finished the welds, it retracted two arms and attached itself to one post of the ladder. Gripping on with a motorized clamp, it began to rise. When it reached the deck a few feet from Kurt, it released itself and scurried on down the road.
A smaller machine followed it.
“My workers,” Marchetti said. “I have seventeen hundred robots of different sizes and designs doing most of the construction.”
“Free-range robots,” Kurt noted.
“Oh yes, they can go anywhere on the island,” Marchetti boasted.
Halfway down the path, the robots were joined by several others, forming a little convoy heading somewhere.
“Must be break time,” Joe said, chuckling.
“Actually, it is,” Marchetti said. “Not like a person’s break, but they’re programmed to watch their own power levels. When they run low, they return to the power nodes and plug themselves in. Once they’re charged up, they go back to work. It’s pretty much a twenty-four/seven operation.”
“What if they have an accident?” Joe asked.
“If they break down, they send out a distress signal, and other robots come and get them. They take them to the repair shop, where they get fixed and sent back on the line.”
“Who tells them what to do?” Kurt asked.
“A master program runs them all. They get instructions downloaded through Wi-Fi. They report progress to the central computer, which holds all of Aqua-Terra’s specs and drawings. It also tracks progress and makes adjustments. A second set of smaller robots check on the quality level.”
“Supervisor robots,” Kurt said, almost unable to contain a chuckle.
“Yeah,” Marchetti said, “in a way, but without all that labor/management strife.”