"If I may, Commander," Farbeaux said. "The Chateau d'If is a very old prison of some renown in my country, Mrs. Hamilton." He turned from Alice to Samuels. "More famously it is known for the setting of one of the world's great novels." He smiled at all in the half-circle around him. "French, of course--
"Very good, Colonel," Samuels responded with genuine pleasure. "One and the same."
"You're implying--just what
"I imply nothing, Lieutenant McIntire. I am only informing you of a truth."
"I find that somewhat hard to believe, Commander," Farbeaux said without the mirth of a moment before.
"Roderick Deveroux was falsely imprisoned by the Emperor Napoleon in the year 1799. His crime was failure to deliver to the emperor his life's work on ship design and construction of naval vessels that would have revolutionized the navies of France--swift, cutterlike ships that would have been models for today's America's Cup vessels. Plans for steam and coal-fired engines, battery storage systems for electricity--the list would continue for several hundred pages."
"How could he have been so far advanced of the science of design and propulsion?" Niles asked.
"According to legend, Deveroux's intellect was staggering. He spent his life entirely at sea, and most of that time corresponded with the most brilliant minds in the world. He was slave to the betterment of humankind: advanced ways to gather the bounty of the sea, and still not over-fish the grounds--ideas and plans for alternative fuels that would save the lives of whales the world over, and stop men from seeking their deaths for lamp oil and lubrication. Yes, he was a man of science, but also a man of compassion who still believed in his brotherhood with other men. Napoleon guaranteed he would take another view after his imprisonment."
"The emperor couldn't get his designs, so he threw him in prison," Alice said aloud.
"Yes, but he escaped, just like Mr. Dumas said in his account of the story. That is where the tale departs on fits of fancy."
"The treasure was a fallacy in the Dumas story?" Niles asked.
"Oh, no. During his escape, Deveroux was washed ashore on a small island in the English Channel. While there, he discovered a treasure long lost to history: gold and jewels from the sacking of Jerusalem and the Holy Land. We estimate its value in today's currency," he bowed to Niles, "in American dollars, to be just a little less than three-point-seven trillion dollars."
"A sum like that would have destroyed the economies of most nations of the world. Having that much gold and precious stones thrown into the market."
Samuels looked at Lee with a smile.
"Not if the money is doled out slowly, evenly, and used only for the advancement of science being studied on a small, out-of-the-way island." He gestured to a portrait that sat upon an easel. The large painting showed the family Heirthall.
"Mr. Deveroux is seated in the chair with his son, Octavian, and his wife, Alexandria. As I stated before, Octavian was the real genius of the family. After the murder of his father, that left Octavian and his mother, who was severely ill and bedridden by that time by a malady called Osler's disease. The disease is passed from parent to child, and can cause blood clots throughout the body."
The entire Group noted the mention of the disease for later discussion.
"Where did they go after Deveroux's death?" Sarah asked.
"Nowhere; everywhere; America, Asia, the South Pacific--Octavian took his family's work and developed it into the very submarine that you had within your complex, the very first
"What happened to him?" Sarah persisted.
"Octavian Heirthall struck a deal that would preserve part of the sea for his work. Abraham Lincoln recognized the legitimacy of his request and struck that deal--one that guaranteed for Lincoln that the United Kingdom would be kept from recognizing the Confederacy. Heirthall only wanted the Gulf of Mexico protected. As always, men failed the captain--which brings us to the current mistrust."
At that moment, the two large hatchways opened and the lights dimmed as the captain of