
Lifelong, conflicted friendship of two women is the premise of Hannah’s maudlin latest ( Magic Hour, 2006, etc.), again set in Washington State. The treaty is found at last, however, and so the president can address the House of Commons and Senate in Quebec, announcing that our two countries have been one since 1914 (and now we can share in the oil boom). But the train isn't there: it was diverted into an empty quarry and sealed there with its gold shipment, making quite a museum piece when Pitt finds it with its mummified passengers. So it's off to the sunken train in the Hudson.

Lawrence, the treaty copy there proves to be mush. After excruciating-and quite exciting-recovery work in the sunken ship in the St. And what was in the treaty? Well, folks, Britain had sold Canada to the US for one billion dollars, to help finance defenses against Germany! So now the US president orders Pitt to salvage the lost treaties (remember that Quebec energy problem), and Pitt mounts both underwater operations at once.

So Heidi tells Pitt about the missing treaty, copies of which were being carried, in 1914, by two diplomats-both of whom were mysteriously killed, the treaty copies sinking (one in the Hudson, one in the St. And who is Heidi's new lover? None other than Dirk Pitt, hero of Cussler's underwater-salvage series, who's been secretly scuttling about the North Atlantic in his fantastic submersible, the Doodlebug, finding a ten-billion barrel oil deposit in the waters off Quebec. Herbert Asquith from Woodrow Wilson, who laments a lost North American Treaty between England and America. It's 1989, the US is energy-broke (dependent on Quebec's resources), and Navy Commander Heidi Milligan-30, divorced, survivor of a hysterectomy and an affair with an admiral twice her age-discovers a 1914 note to British P.M. Exclamation-point-happy Cussler (Raise the Titanic!) is in zesty form here, inflating a balloon of nonsense that maintains a steady, technological-comic-strip interest.
