That's for Antarctica.
Bolden grabbed Evans's leg on the next kick, and Evans went down. But he kicked once more as he fell, hitting Bolden in the head, and with the impact, Bolden rolled once.
And rolled under the plate.
His body was half under, half out. It began to shake, to vibrate. Bolden opened his mouth to scream but there was no sound. Evans kicked him a final time, and the body went entirely under.
By the time Evans had dropped to his hands and knees, to look under the plate, nothing was there. Just a haze of acrid smoke.
He got to his feet, and went outside.
Glancing over her shoulder, Jennifer ripped her blouse with her teeth and tore a strip of cloth for a tourniquet. She didn't think an artery had been hit, but there was a lot of blood on one leg and a lot of blood in the sand, and she was feeling a little dizzy.
She had to keep watching because there was one more tent, and if the guys from that tent showed up...
She spun, raising her gun as a figure emerged from the forest.
It was John Kenner. She lowered the gun.
He ran toward her.
Sanjong fired into the glass in front of the control deck, but nothing happened. The glass didn't even shatter. Bulletproof glass, he thought in surprise. The technician inside looked up in shock. By then Sanjong was moving toward the door.
The technician reached for the control switches. Sanjong fired twice, once hitting the technician, once aiming for the control panel.
But it was too late. Across the top of the panel, red lights flashed, one after another. The undersea detonations were taking place.
Automatically, a loud alarm began to sound, like a submarine claxon. The men on the other side of the ship were shouting, terror in their voices, and with good reason, Sanjong thought.
The tsunami had been generated.
It was only a matter of seconds now before it would hit them.
RESOLUTION BAY
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 14
4:43 P. M.
The air was filled with sound.
Evans ran from the tent. Directly ahead he saw Kenner lifting Jennifer in his arms. Kenner was shouting something, but Evans couldn't hear. He could vaguely see that Jennifer was soaked in blood. Evans ran for the jeep, jumped in, and drove it over to Kenner.
Kenner put Jennifer in the back. She was breathing shallowly. Directly ahead, they saw Sarah helping Morton into the other jeep. Kenner had to shout over the noise. For a minute Evans couldn't understand.
Then he realized what Kenner was saying. "Sanjong! Where is Sanjong!"
Evans shook his head. "Morton says he's dead! Rebels!"
"Do you know for sure?"
"No!"
Kenner looked back down the beach.
"Drive!"
Sarah was in the car, trying to hold Morton upright and drive at the same time. But she had to let go of him to shift gears, and as soon as she did he'd flop over against her shoulder. He was wheezing, breathing with difficulty. She suspected that his lung was punctured. She was distracted, trying to count in her head. She thought it was already ten seconds since the landslide.
Which meant they had fifteen seconds to get up the hill.
Sanjong leapt from the ship to the trees on the shore. He grabbed a handful of leaves and branches. He scrambled down to the ground and began to climb the hill frantically. On the ship, the men saw him, and they jumped, too, trying to follow him.
Sanjong guessed that they all had half a minute before the first wave struck. It would be the smallest wave, but it would still probably be five meters high. The runup--the splash on the hillside--could be another five meters. That meant he had to scramble at least thirty feet up the muddy slope in the next thirty seconds.
He knew he would never make it.
He couldn't do it.
He climbed anyway.
Sarah drove up the muddy track, the jeep slipping precariously on the incline. Beside her, Morton was not saying anything and his skin had turned an ugly blue gray. She yelled, "Hold on, George! Hold on! Just a little!" The jeep fishtailed in the mud, and Sarah howled in panic. She downshifted, grinding gears, got control, and continued up. In the rearview mirror, she saw Evans behind her.
In her mind, she was counting:
Eighteen.
Nineteen.
Twenty.
From the third tent on the beach, two men with machine guns jumped into the last remaining jeep. They drove up the hill after Evans, firing at him as they drove. Kenner was firing back. The bullets shattered Evans's windshield. Evans slowed.
"Keep driving!" Kenner yelled. "Go!"
Evans couldn't really see. Where the windshield wasn't shattered it was spattered with mud. He kept moving his head, trying to see the route ahead.
"Go!" Kenner yelled.
The bullets were whizzing around them.
Kenner was shooting at the tires of the jeep behind them. He hit them, and the jeep lurched over onto its side. The two men fell out into the mud. They scrambled to their feet, limping. They were only about fifteen feet above the beach.
Not high enough.
Kenner looked back at the ocean.