answers tomorrow.'
'No, Gordo. What did you always tell me? You’ll have more information. Answers are the stories you tell from that information and stories can be told a lot of different ways.'
17. Fast Attack
'Untie the stern line.'
Nina-who felt only slightly more comfortable in a boat than in a car-searched around until finding and letting loose one of the thick cords keeping the vessel attached to the dock. The rope had barely released when Gordon thrust the throttle. The twin Mercruiser engines propelled the thirty-foot Sleekcraft away from the marina on the west side of Key Biscayne.
Gordon wore his straw hat, Nina had ditched the previous night's sun dress in favor of more comfortable garb: camo BDUs and a black tank top. Not quite right for a hot South Florida afternoon, but about as casual as Nina would get again anytime soon. A baseball cap provided some shade and layers of protective lotion covered every square inch of her body, a reaction to the patch of burning red on her neck from the day before.
In any case, Gordon steered his low-profile, high-performance boat to the south. Nina walked gingerly toward the front trying to find her sense of balance as the boat bounced. She stumbled, practically falling into the forward V-berth.
'Easy does it,' Gordon suggested. 'You gotta get your sea legs.'
Nina righted herself into the passenger seat. The salt water spray from the bobbing bow fell across her face in a loose veil. She found it slightly refreshing.
In fact, slowly-as they passed the southern tip of Key Biscayne and turned east into the Atlantic proper-she began to appreciate the cooling blast of wind and water vapor.
For the first half an hour, she spied other sea goers ranging from long sail boats to a freighter headed north, a military patrol ship watching the waterways and a pair of dueling cigarette boats engaged in a test of speed. However, Nina soon saw herself and Gordon as the only human beings within miles.
Knox closely kept watch over the gauges and readings on the dash, occasionally consulting the folded slip of paper Ernie provided last night.
Still, the further they went the more Nina grew apprehensive. Part of that came from the real worry of sea monsters, but most from her anxiety over the investigation. Clandestine meetings, hacked computer systems, and conspiracy theories did not sit well in her gut. Nina Forest wore a soldier's uniform, not a spy's cloak. While she had an eye for tactics and an instinct for fighting, she did not trust her ability to sift through deception. Apparently Nina's concerns surfaced in her expression. Gordon asked, 'What's wrong?' She lied, 'Nothing.' 'You're wondering why Ashley chose you. Are you the right person for the job?' She sighed. 'So you're a mind reader now? Is that it?'
'I wondered the same thing,' he rubbed salt in the wound. 'You have a reputation as a tremendous soldier. But you'd think Ashley would turn to Jon Brewer or Shep to dig this up. Whatever the reason, it's not because of your talents, but because Ashley has faith in your ability to get the job done. She sent you to me so that you'd have help with the spooking around. She knew I have the contacts.'
Nina confessed, 'She told me she knew everything that happened during that year I can't remember. If I do this, she'll tell me.'
'Ah, so there is a big secret or two. Is that it? I suppose she has faith, then, in your motivation. The good news is I don't think our conspirators are going to be too hard to find. A few more pieces of the puzzle and we…' Gordon's voice trailed as he checked the instruments on the dash, thought, and slowed the Sleekcraft. 'A few more pieces of the puzzle and I think everything is going to come into view.'
The high-powered boat stopped and drifted on calm seas. The bow slowed its bobbing; their wake faded.
'This is it,' Gordon checked his wristwatch and added, 'Right on time, too.'
Nina grabbed a pair of binoculars from the starboard settee and raised them to her eyes. She revolved in a complete circle, scanning the horizon in all directions for any sign of activity.
'There's nothing out there.'
Gordon glanced at his watch once more and suggested she, 'Look again.'
A vibration shook the Sleekcraft. Fifty yards off the port bow the water bubbled and foamed. A groaning klaxon echoed. A spout of water shot like a geyser, followed by a mammoth beast jumping from the sea like a killer whale performing at Sea World.
Black and gray, two eye-like windows at the front, sixty feet long with a bow shaped like a hammerhead shark that hovered in the air for a long second then slapped the water's surface with a heavy splash. The spray fell across Gordon and Nina like a sheet of rain.
The submarine sat on the surface where there had been nothing seconds before. Its sleek body resembled an alligator floating with its spine poking above the surface and its eyes scanning for prey. It made Nina think of a smaller version of Captain Nemo's Nautilus from 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea; a book her father had read to her nearly thirty years ago.
Gordon said, 'Barracuda fast attack sub. First one went into service two years ago.'
Nina knew of the vessels and rattled off, 'Crew of twelve, used primarily for coastal patrol, designed specifically to combat underwater hostiles. Oh, and it runs on something called a magnetohydrodynamic drive that makes it quiet and fast. The military has about a dozen.'
Knox added, 'And Intelligence has a couple, too.'
He turned on the twin Mercruisers again and guided the boat closer to the new arrival. As they closed the distance, a pair of hatches on the smooth skin of the man-made beast popped open. Four men in black wet suits stood on the deck. Gordon maneuvered the Sleekcraft alongside and threw the stern line to one of the seamen who held it secure to allow boarding. Gordon told Nina, 'You go ahead. I'll wait here.' 'Huh? These are your friends, aren't they?' 'It's your mission, Captain. I'm just here to help. Are you afraid of going in there alone?' Nina narrowed her eyes and then swung her leg onto the sub, refusing a helping hand from one of the crewmen in the process. Gordon called, 'Ask 'T' where they were!' She glanced back at him before eyeing the dark portal leading below. Nina crouched and lowered herself inside.
Two decks comprised the small sub. Nina did not know about the lower level but the upper one felt cramped and humid. It was, in essence, a long tube. She saw two wheelmen sitting at helms in the two 'eyes' that were actually darkly tinted windows. Consoles and monitors lined the walls manned by crewmen who leered as she entered their world.
A small, raised platform with a chair sat in the center of the cramped chamber. A white man in a dirty shirt with a Captain's hat occupied it, chewing on a toothpick. When she took a step in his direction he pointed her toward the rear of the deck and a heavy door amid pipes and wires and valves and storage compartments. Nina knocked. The crew laughed. Nina did not wait, she turned the knob and entered.
The room probably served as the Captain's quarters but someone else had usurped that privilege from the boat's master. He sat behind a desk with a big grin revealing one gold tooth. He wore his hair in long dreadlocks and dressed in a blue, short-sleeve shirt unbuttoned enough to reveal a scar across his black chest. A shoulder holster displayed an ivory-handled revolver.
Papers, curled maps, and a laptop computer cluttered the desktop. Closed metal cabinets and a chart table occupied the rest of the space but enough room remained for a metal seat in front of the desk.
Nina still felt the leers of the men on her back. Without looking, she reached and closed the door. The man at the desk found that very funny. He laughed and spoke with a Jamaican accident, 'Hello! Gordon did not come himself?'
'He's outside…waiting.'
'That is too bad. You tell Gordon that 'T' sends his best. You tell him that he still owes me fifty continentals and I will not forget, no matter how he tries to avoid me. Understand?'
'I will,' Nina said trying hard to hide the feeling of being trapped in a floating tomb.
'This is what you came for, I think.'