- •Deception Point Dan Brown acknowledgments
- •Author’s note
- •Prologue
- •National reconnaissance office (nro)
- •Enabling u.S. Global information superiority, during peace and through war.
- •00:60 Seconds
- •00:05 Seconds
- •East appointment gate, 4:30 p.M. Come alone.
- •Space america, inc.
- •Beal aerospace. Microcosm, inc. Rotary rocket company. Kistler aerospace.
- •19:51 Hours.
- •Earth science enterprise, phase II Earth Observing System (eos)
- •Chris Harper Section Manager, pods
- •Dive area Swimmers May Surface without Warning —Boats Proceed with Caution—
- •Caution: Compressed Air—3,000 psi
- •United States Coast Guard
- •Epilogue
Epilogue
The NASA transport jet banked high over the Atlantic.
Onboard, Administrator Lawrence Ekstrom took a last look at the huge charred rock in the cargo hold. Back to the sea, he thought. Where they found you.
On Ekstrom’s command, the pilot opened the cargo doors and released the rock. They watched as the mammoth stone plummeted downward behind the plane, arcing across the sunlit ocean sky and disappearing beneath the waves in a pillar of silver spray.
The giant stone sank fast.
Underwater, at three hundred feet, barely enough light remained to reveal its tumbling silhouette. Passing five hundred feet, the rock plunged into total darkness.
Racing down.
Deeper.
It fell for almost twelve minutes.
Then, like a meteorite striking the dark side of the moon, the rock crashed into a vast plain of mud on the ocean floor, kicking up a cloud of silt. As the dust settled, one of the ocean’s thousands of unknown species swam over to inspect the odd newcomer.
Unimpressed, the creature moved on.