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Inca Gold (Dirk Pitt 12)

Page 111

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Between bites of the chiliburger Loren asked, "You seem convinced that Hunt's river flows into the Sea of Cortez. How do you know it doesn't enter the Pacific off California?"

"Because of Hunt's backpack and canteen. He lost them in the cave and they were found six months later, having drifted up on a beach in the Gulf."

"Don't you think that's highly improbable? The pack and canteen could have belonged to anyone. Why would anyone believe they were his?" Loren questioned the cook as if she was sitting on a congressional investigation committee.

"I guess because his name was stenciled on them."

The unexpected obstacle did not deter Loren. She simply sidestepped it. "There could be a good twenty or more logical explanations for his effects being in the Gulf. They could have been lost or thrown there by someone who found or stole them from Hunt, or more likely he never died in the cave and dropped them from a boat himself."

"Could be he lost them in the sea," admitted the cook, "but then how do you explain the other bodies?"

Pitt looked at him. "What other bodies?"

"The fisherman who disappeared in Lake Cocopah," replied the cook in a hushed voice, as if he was afraid of being overheard. "And the two divers that vanished into Satan's Sink. What was left of their bodies was found floating in the Gulf."

"And the desert telegraph sends out another pair of tall tales," suggested Loren dryly.

The cook held up his right hand. "God's truth. You can check the stories out with the sheriff's department."

"Where are the sink and lake located?" asked Pitt.

"Lake Cocopah, the spot where the fisherman was lost, is southeast of Yuma. Satan's Sink lies in Mexico at the northern foot of the Sierra el Mayor Mountains. You can draw a line from Hunt's mountain through Lake Cocopah and then Satan's Sink right into the Sea of Cortez."

Loren continued the interrogation. "Who's to say they didn't drown while fishing and diving in the Gulf?"

"The fisherman and his wife were out on the lake for the better part of the day when she wanted to head back to their camper to start dinner. He rowed her ashore and then continued trolling around the lake. An hour later, when she looked for him, all she could see was his overturned boat. Three weeks later a water-skier spotted his body floating in the Gulf a hundred and fifty kilometers from the lake."

"I'm more inclined to believe his wife did him in, dumped his remains in the sea and threw off suspicion by claiming he was sucked into an underground waterway."

"What about the divers?" Pitt queried.

"Not much to tell. They dove into Satan's Sink, a flooded pool in an earthquake fault, and never came out. A month later, battered to a pulp, they were also pulled out of the Gulf."

Pitt stabbed a fork at his coleslaw, but he was no longer hungry. His mind was shifting gears. "Do you happen to know approximately where Hunt's gear and the bodies were found?"

"I haven't made a detailed study of the phenomena," answered the diner's owner, staring thoughtfully at the heavily scarred wooden floor. "But as I recollect most of them were found in the waters off Punta el Macharro."

"What part of the Gulf would that be?"

"On the western shore. Macharro Point, as we call it in English, is two or three kilometers above San Felipe."

Loren looked at Pitt. "Our destination."

Pitt made a wry smile. "Remind me to keep a sharp eye for dead bodies."

The cook finished off his beer. "You folks heading for San Felipe to do a little fishing?"

Pitt nodded. "I guess you might call it a fishing expedition."

"The scenery ain't much to look at once you drop below Mexicali. The desert seems desolate and barren to most folks, but it has countless paradoxes. There are more ghosts, skeletons, and myths per kilometer than any jungle or mountains on earth. Keep that in mind and you'll see them as sure as the Irish see leprechauns."

"We'll keep that in mind," Loren said, smiting, "when we cross over Leigh Hunt's underground River of Gold."

"Oh, you'll cross it all right," said the cook. "The sad fact is you won't know it."

After Pitt paid for the gas and the meal, he went outside and checked the Pierce Arrow's oil and water. The old cook accompanied Loren onto the dining car's observation platform. He was carrying a bowl of carrots and lettuce. "Have a good trip," he said cheerfully.

"Thank you." Loren nodded at the vegetables. "Feeding a rabbit?"



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