Eternity Base

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Eternity Base Page 15

by Bob Mayer


  The tunnel ended at a metal grating that ramped up, extending to the white ceiling. “What do you make of that?” Conner asked.

  “I think that’s how they planned on getting these vehicles out of here—and how they got them in,” Vickers replied. He pointed at sections of metal grating stacked to the side. “They could run the bulldozer up the ramp and put down the grating as they went until they reached the surface.”

  Conner looked at her watch. “Let’s send this off and then go to the mess hall and get some food.”

  They retraced their steps back to the east tunnel and turned right until they got to the shaft. At the base, Vickers pulled out the small cassette in Lallo’s camera. He gave it to Conner, who attached a special drive to her portable, that digitized the pictures and stored them on the disk. Taking the disk from her, Vickers headed for the surface to burst everything to Atlanta.

  Conner, Kerns, and Lallo went into the mess hall, where Riley was ladling something into Devlin’s bowl.

  “What did you find?” Conner asked as she sidled up to Devlin.

  “I went down the access shaft to the reactor, but it was blocked by ice about fifty yards in. I assume the reactor is out that way another hundred yards or so.”

  “The reactor is five hundred yards straight line distance from the power room. Southwest,” Riley added. “As you guessed, the rods aren’t in. They were supposed to be brought in and put in place when the base was activated.”

  Conner and Devlin both turned and looked at him. “How do you know that?” Conner demanded.

  “Your sister found the instruction book for this Tinkertoy set,” Riley said, holding up a large blue binder.

  Sammy reached into her pocket and pulled out the letter. “I also found this.”

  Chapter 13

  INTELLIGENCE SUPPORT AGENCY (ISA), HEADQUARTERS

  SOUTHWEST OF WASHINGTON, D.C.

  Another exciting Monday morning. Bob Weaver rubbed his eyes as he looked at the message lying on top of his in box. He had no idea what the connection was between all the requests for information (RFIs) listed in it, but he also knew it wasn’t his place to know. He was just here to find and forward. He started typing in the data, looking for answers to the questions:

  Any further information on Eternity Base?

  Confirm information that U.S. Air Force C-130, tail number 6204 from 487th TAS, Clark Base, Hawaii, was reported as MIA 21 December 1971, Vietnam.

  Determine actual location U.S. Army Engineer unit, B Company, 67th Engineer Battalion, from August 1971 through December 1971.

  Run file on David Riley, former U.S. Army. SSN 906-23-5482.

  Run file on Randall Devlin, member environmental group Our Earth. SSN unknown.

  Run file on Peter Swenson, Australian national, pilot.

  Run file on Samantha Pintella. SSN unknown. Works U.S. National Personnel Records Center, St. Louis, MO.

  Priority request.

  Falcon 2100 Zulu/l 1/27/96

  ETERNITY BASE, ANTARCTICA

  “Hydroponics!” Devlin exclaimed, looking at the diagram of the base and the label for unit C3. “I knew I’d seen that somewhere before. They have a setup like that at UCLA.” “What’s hydroponics?” Lallo asked.

  “It’s the cultivation of plants in water rather than soil. They set aside unit C3 to grow food just like the greenhouse in CI, except this one uses water instead of dirt.” Devlin shook his head. “But I don’t understand why they’d need to dedicate two units of their base to growing food when they have the ice storage tunnels.” He pointed down at the diagram. “The one blocked ice tunnel to the west looks like it’s as large as the one to the east. That’s a lot of food and supplies.”

  “It doesn’t seem as though they were counting on a resupply,” Conner remarked.

  The binder listed the locations of equipment and supplies along with instructions for the use of various equipment, but it didn’t say anything about the purpose of the base or who was supposed to use it.

  “Look how far away they offset the reactor,” Devlin commented. “More than a quarter mile. All that ice in between serves as a very effective shield for the main base.”

  Conner focused on the one unit they hadn’t been able to look at. “Check out the label on unit Al: special supply and armory.” She glanced up. “We have to get into that. If we can record weapons on tape, we have a direct violation of the treaty.”

  “What about the letter?” Devlin prompted. “Will you open it?” Riley handed Conner a pocketknife with the blade open. She slit the top of the letter and pulled out a one-page hand-written note. “Read it aloud,” Devlin said. Conner cleared her throat and began reading.

  21 December 1971

  Peter,

  If you are reading this, then your fears were justified and I suppose this was all worthwhile. It seems odd to write this knowing that if it ever enters your hand I shall be dead. Of course, I will have much good company—if one may call the world’s population company.

  I do not envy you or the special friends you deem worthy of survival here. Until today I saw Eternity Base as a cradle, but your final delivery this morning leaves me with little optimism. The courier who delivered the final shipment will guard your base until you arrive or until the ice claims the base, as per your instructions.

  May you enjoy your kingdom.

  Glaston—sounds a lot like Claxton, the name Freely had mentioned, Conner thought. They now had the name of the murderer. “The bastards set up a survival base down here!” Devlin exclaimed. Riley looked at Devlin and shook his head. “You mean you just figured that out? Hell, why else do you think someone would put something like this down here and stock it so full of supplies? Why do you think they have the greenhouse and the hydroponics?”

  Devlin was rubbing his chin. “Well, they certainly picked the best continent to put it on. In the event of an all out nuclear exchange, there are no worthwhile targets in Antarctica. The winds off the coast would keep the fallout to a minimum. And we’ve already seen how the cold and lack of humidity preserve things.”

  “Let’s remember also that this base was set up in 1971 when the Cold War was still going strong,” Lallo added.

  Devlin was still focusing on the base. “They were smart—not only putting it in Antarctica but in this specific location. It’s as remote as you can get. Straight north of here you hit the South Pacific Ocean. A spot there is the world’s farthest point from dry land. Without having an intermediary base like McMurdo, it would be almost impossible to fly straight to this location.”

  “There’s in-flight refueling,” Riley disagreed. “Yes,” Devlin admitted irritably. “But you have to admit that this is the most isolated location you could possibly find.”

  Riley ignored Devlin and turned to Conner. “You’ve got your story. What do you want to do now?”

  “Aren’t you guys interested in the identity of Peter?” Sammy asked. ‘That seems to be the key question, wouldn’t you say? He had to be the one giving the orders and in charge of this place. He’s the one we want. After Glaston,” she added.

  “I don’t think we’re going to find the answer here,” Riley said. “Well, you don’t need to be in any rush, whatever you want to do.”

  Swenson spoke for the first time. “I just poked my head out the door and the weather’s totally gone to crap.” He pointed over his shoulder as Vickers stormed in wearing his cold-weather gear. “And your man here has some more good news for you.”

  Vickers slid his radio gear onto the table and forced open the lid. The metal looked as if it had been smashed with an ax. “Someone got to my gear. The transmitter is destroyed. We won’t be sending any messages.”

  “And we won’t be flying anywhere either,” Swenson added. “We’re cut off from the rest of the world.”

  “Who had access to your gear?” Riley asked.

  Vickers laughed bitterly. “Shit, everyone. It was lying there in the corridor with the other equipment while we were running a
round doing all that other stuff. It could have been anyone.”

  Conner stood up. “All right. Everyone calm down.” She pointed. “I want my crew to go to the other unit where the baggage is and wait there. I’d like to talk to Sammy, Riley, and Devlin.”

  When the four were alone she looked at Sammy. “Have you been with Riley the entire time since we entered the base?”

  “Listen, Conner. You’ve got no proof of anything, so don’t go making accusations. I—”

  “Just answer my question, damnit!” Conner banged her fist on the tabletop.

  It was Riley who answered. “No. We weren’t together the whole time. I went to the east tunnel and got some food supplies while she started getting things ready for the meal.” He leaned forward. “But I didn’t smash the radio.”

  “How do we know that?” Devlin countered.

  Riley didn’t even spare him a glance as his eyes bored into Conner’s. “Because it was stupid, and I don’t do stupid things. If I wanted to keep you from finding this place or getting the story out, you can be damn sure you all wouldn’t be here right now.”

  “Why do you say it was stupid?” Sammy asked, forestalling Conner’s angry reply.

  Riley finally broke eye contact with Conner. He slumped back in his chair. “It was stupid because I know how we can still send a message to Atlanta.”

  Chapter 14

  SNN HEADQUARTERS, ATLANTA, GEORGIA

  Stu Fernandez pressed the play button on the remote and showed edited scenes of Conner’s tape of Eternity Base. Conner’s recorded voice echoed through the room, five thousand miles away from where she was. Stu had cut the tape down to six minutes of what he felt were the best parts. The picture was grainy—the result of the video being digitized and converted into a format that could be read by a computer and easily transmitted.

  SNN had worked to perfect the computer video-burst transmission technique because it saved sending a large video transmitter and receiver on assignments. The picture had been transmitted the same way Conner’s messages had been—encoded by a special digital recorder onto disk and then burst out over the SATCOM radio. This capability allowed SNN news teams to travel light and move farther and faster than normal teams. This method had proven its worth the previous year when dramatic pictures of the massacre of a Kurdish village in Iraq had stunned Americans who were complacent with a “victory in the desert.”

  Stu knew it was a good sign that the entire six minutes ran without an interruption. The tape faded out with a picture of Conner standing in front of the nuclear power plant control console. Stu flicked on the lights and waited.

  Parker was the first to speak. “Very good. I like it. Superb.”

  “When do you want to run it, sir?” Stu asked.

  Before Parker could answer, John Cordon, his assistant, quietly spoke. “I recommend we hold off until we have the complete story. Presently, there’s no chance another network can cut in. We have an exclusive as long as we keep it quiet. I suggest we get the entire story and then play the whole thing before anyone can react. Let’s give Ms. Young a chance to uncover all she can.

  “We need to do a lot of background. Try to find out who this Glaston fellow is. We have more questions than answers, and we need to get as much information as possible before going live with this.”

  Legere nodded. “I concur, sir. If we play this now, there are going to be planes from all the other networks heading down to Antarctica.”

  “Conner and her people are weathered in right now, so they can’t go anywhere,” Stu added. “We can get their digital video, but as you can see, the quality is not the greatest. I’d like to have the original tapes before I put it together. Plus, if we can get Conner back here, she can do voice-overs and in-studio presentations. She also said they’ve had some problems in the party. Someone damaged their radio gear, and she wants another SATCOM team sent down.”

  “We also don’t know who the dead man is,” Cordon said. “We don’t want to be broadcasting until we can get an identity on him.”

  Parker stood. “I agree that there’s no rush. We need to make sure this stays confidential here in Atlanta. I want no leaks. Tell Ms. Young she can take as much time as she likes, but to be damn sure she has everything she can get before she leaves.”

  “Yes, sir.” Stu smiled as the SNN executives filed out of the room. He and Conner were in the big time now.

  ETERNITY BASE, ANTARCTICA

  Sammy worked the small tractor’s plow, carefully scraping away slivers of ice from the blockage. The controls were similar to those on the forklift she occasionally used in the Records Center, so she had taken charge of the tractor when they’d started it in the supply tunnel. She was enjoying the work, but she wished the corridors were large enough to bring out the bulldozer. She was sure it could punch through in no time. As it was, the small tractor was difficult to maneuver in the narrow confines of the west tunnel.

  The other members of the party—minus Swenson, who was seated in the mess hall reading a book—were standing in back of her, Lallo filming and the rest watching. Riley’s jury-rigged radio, using parts from the commo room, had worked just fine, and Conner had made contact with Atlanta. Whoever smashed the radio had to be getting desperate.

  Nothing more had been said about the radio or what had happened to Swenson back at Aurora Glacier Station. Sammy sensed that her sister was at a loss for what to do, and everyone else seemed equally helpless. With no obvious suspect, each member was eyeing the others with equal suspicion.

  Easing down on the accelerator, Sammy pushed the corner of the plow blade into the ice. She’d been at it now for fifteen minutes and had worked through almost five feet of ice and snow. Of course, she reminded herself, they might not find anything on the other side. The ice may have crushed everything behind the cave-in.

  After scraping off another six inches, she dropped the blade, drew back the debris, and piled it against the wall of unit Bl. She rolled forward again and dug in the blade. The tractor suddenly lurched, and Sammy had to slam on the brakes as the blade broke through. She backed off and shut down the engine.

  Riley came forward with a flashlight and shone the light through the hole. They could see wood planking on the floor—the extension of the west corridor.

  “Let’s use the shovels,” Sammy advised. “I don’t want to take too much of a chunk. For all we know, that ice is the only thing keeping the ridge from coming down farther.”

  Side by side, Riley and Sammy enlarged the hole until it was big enough for a person to slip through. “After you,” Riley gestured.

  Sammy slid through, followed by Conner and Devlin. Riley came last, playing his light at their feet so they wouldn’t trip. They moved up to where the north and west corridors intersected. Devlin went to the door of unit A1 and swung it open. The four stepped in. The glow of the flashlights lit up a well-equipped arms room.

  “Unbelievable,” Conner muttered as they examined the weapons racks.

  Riley tried the light switch on the off chance that the power might still be connected, but the power lines must have been cut when the ceiling came down. He walked along the racks, noting the weapons. Two dozen Ml6s. Four M60 machine guns. Several M79 grenade launchers. Various pistols. The sides of the unit were stacked with boxes of ammunition and other military supplies. Looking at the stencils on them, Riley noted both plastic explosive and TNT. There were also several types of mines. “Why did they need all this stuff?” Sammy asked as she picked up a pistol.

  “For the same reason they built this place,” Riley answered. “The kind of mind that would plan and build Eternity Base, and kill the people who knew about it, would have to border on paranoid. This place was designed to be used after a nuclear war or something equivalent. For all these people knew, the war might still be going on when they got down here. Maybe they were worried about who was going to be in charge once the smoke and radiation cleared. The Russians had several bases already set up in Antarctica in 1971.”
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  Riley moved past the weapons racks. Two large crates, each about twelve feet long by three feet wide and high filled the end of the unit, one on either side of the far door. He played the light over the stenciling on the outside: MACHINED GOODS.

  “What’s that?” Sammy asked.

  “Don’t know,” Riley replied. He tried the lid, which didn’t yield.

  “Do you think we could string power to this unit so Lallo can tape all this?” Conner was asking Devlin.

  “I suppose so. Maybe we can find some extension cords and run them from Bl, through the hole and up here.”

  Conner was leaning over, looking closely at an M60. “I have got to get this on film.”

  Riley grabbed a bayonet off one of the shelves. Army standard issue model M9, he noted as he slid the knife free of the scabbard. He placed the point under the top of the right crate and pushed it in. Putting his body weight on it, he levered up. With a loud screech the top moved half an inch.

  “What did you find?” Conner asked. She and Devlin came over and watched.

  “I don’t know,” Riley grunted as he pushed again. He slid the blade around and carefully applied pressure every foot or so. Slowly the top lifted. Riley put his fingers under the lid and pulled up. The top popped off and he pushed it to the side. A slim, cylindrical gray object, pointed at one end with fins at the other, was inside, resting on a wood cradle.

  “They put a fucking bomb in here?” Devlin exclaimed.

  Riley bent over to examine it with a growing feeling of coldness in his stomach. He noted the suspension lugs where the bomb could be attached to an aircraft. A serial number was stamped on a small metal plate, halfway down the casing. Riley read the ID and then slowly straightened.

  “That’s not just a bomb.” His words were totally flat. He was too numb to have any emotion.

 

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