“Call them off!”
“Let us go,” Jinn said, “and I’ll do as you wish.”
“Call them off or I’ll splatter your brains all over the wall.”
“And what will that get you, Mr. Austin?”
Kurt pulled back. “Marchetti, find a computer, you’re going to have to do your code-breaking thing again.”
Marchetti raced over to another laptop, docked on the main console.
“He’ll never break it,” Jinn insisted. “He’ll never even get in.”
Marchetti looked up. “He’s right. I was able to reverse Otero’s last trick because I could access the files, but we’re locked out of everything.”
“Can’t you hack it?”
“It’s a nine-digit code protected with top-level encryption. A supercomputer couldn’t break it without a month or so to work on it.”
“You’ve got to be able to do something.”
“I can’t even log on.”
Now Kurt understood why Jinn had blasted Otero and the laptop. It was Otero’s code. No chance he would give it up lying dead on the floor and no chance Marchetti could check the laptop for any type of keystroke memory or temp file.
Leilani eased up beside Kurt. “What’s happening?”
“Those things that made us sparkle, they’re all around the island, a lot thicker than they were when we saw them. Jinn’s sent them into a frenzy. They’ll come on board like a horde of locusts and eat everything in sight, including us.”
“What are we going to do?” Leilani asked.
“Is there any way to stop them?” Kurt asked Marchetti.
Marchetti shook his head. “There are too many, fifty miles’ worth in every direction.”
“Then we have to get off the island. Where are those airships of yours?”
“In the hangar bay by the helipad.”
“Take that laptop and get everyone to meet us there,” Kurt said. He looked at Tautog. “Get your men up here. We’re leaving by air.”
“Not to the boats?” Tautog asked.
“The boats won’t help us now.”
Tautog went to the balcony and began yelling to his men, waving for them to come up. Marchetti grabbed a microphone and began an island-wide broadcast through a ser
ies of loudspeakers.
Kurt noticed two small radios on the flat part of the control console. He grabbed them and then shoved Jinn toward the elevator doors. “Let’s go.”
Moments later Kurt and his growing entourage stood on the lighted helipad suspended between the two pyramid buildings. From this vantage point the sea around Aqua-Terra looked more like solid ground covered with millions of beetles. They reflected the glare of Aqua-Terra’s floodlights in a smoky charcoal color. Streams of them could be seen coming inland like long, probing fingers.
“They look thick enough to walk on,” Paul mentioned.
“I wouldn’t try it,” Kurt said.
A hangar door opened in the side of the starboard pyramid, and Marchetti’s men began rolling one of the airships out. Two others waited behind it.