Authors: Douglas Carlton Abrams
EYE
OF
THE
WHALE
A
LSO BY
D
OUGLAS
C
ARLTON
A
BRAMS
The Lost Diary of Don Juan
ATRIA
BOOKS
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This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Copyright © 2009 by Idea Architects
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ISBN-13: 978-1-4391-6554-6
ISBN-10: 1-4391-6554-8
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For the young and all who are working to protect them—and especially for my children, Jesse, Kayla, and Eliana
Leviathan….
On earth he has no equal….
Will he speak soft words unto Thee?
—Job 41
NOTE TO READERS
W
HILE THIS
is a work of fiction, it was inspired by humpback whales that swam up the Sacramento River in California in 1985 and in 2007. The descriptions of whale behavior and intelligence are informed by the latest research into what we can and cannot know about these giants of the deep. The discoveries about endocrine disruption and the environment revealed in the story are also based on thousands of well-documented studies. I could never have written this novel without the expertise and guidance of dozens of scientists, physicians, scholars, and journalists who have worked tirelessly to uncover the truth about what is happening to marine and terrestrial life on our planet. I have tried in some small way to thank them in my acknowledgments. You can learn about their research and the facts on which the story is based at
www.DouglasCarltonAbrams.com
. Our understanding of this research and the story it tells about the future of life on our planet could not be more important.
EYE
OF
THE
WHALE
CONTENTS
PROLOGUE:
SIREN SONG
11:14
P.M.
Thursday, February 15
Near Socorro Island, Pacific coast of Mexico
18°48’N, 110°59’W
Clear night, wind SW 5 knots
A
POLLO HOVERED SILENTLY
as a school of hundreds of hammerheads encircled him in the rich upwelling—
His massive forty-foot body hung just below the surface, cradled by the swell of the sea—
Moonlight filtered through the shrouded water of night—
Every inch of his skin straining to hear—
Waiting—
Silence—
Only the slow throb of his giant heart—the pulse pounding in his skull—
Slowly his tail floated up until he hung upside down—his twelve-foot pectoral fins splayed outward from his sides like a cross—
Rotating almost imperceptibly—he began to sing again—
Creaks and moans—cries and whistles—animated the water with the pulsing power of song—
The echoes cascaded back to him off the ocean floor as the sounds revealed the texture of the deep—
Then again silence—
At last—he heard two other males singing—amplifying the sound—
Then others—males and females—young and old—swam closer and closer
—
T
HE
P
ACIFIC
S
QUALL
bobbed on top of the cresting waves, the steel hull of the research vessel vibrating from the whale song. The otherworldly music spilled out from the speakers strapped to the walls as whale biologist John Maddings accompanied on the cello. His weathered fingers, graying hairs surrounding each knuckle, pressed the strings against the neck as if taking its rhythmic pulse. The other hand lovingly rocked the delicate bow across the strings in a hypnotic melody.