Damn that Michael Cole! His thoughts raged. How dare he blackmail me into renegotiating our deal.
Two days earlier, on Christmas Eve, he had embarked on a promising new venture with the acquisition of a Spyder device. He had come to Santo Domingo believing that the arrangement with Cole had been finalized. Cole was to resign from the CIA and open a consulting business whose sole client would be one of Parnell’s well-shielded corporations. As a consultant, Cole would earn generous fees for the services that he provided for this client- namely, running the Spyder.
But Cole had surprised him, and Ian Parnell didn’t like being surprised. The computer engineer had made a play for a greater share of the Spyder profits, backing his bid with the threat of blackmail. The leverage that Cole claimed to possess confirmed something Parnell had long suspected, that Alexandra Roe had once worked for the KGB.
Parnell really didn’t care where Roe had learned her trade; as a freelance spy, she was one of the best. Unfortunately, Cole’s threat posed a very real danger. Even if all of his consultation work was completely legitimate, Parnell knew that any hint of an espionage scandal would destroy his business. He took another sip of gin and ran the scene with Cole through his head for the hundredth time.
He was alone on the bridge, a solitude paid for by a small bribe to the Barahona harbormaster, who’d rented him the Hatteras. Eighty feet below the boat, Cole and Roe explored a spectacular reef that a local dive-shop owner had recommended. They’d spent the morning deep-sea fishing off the western shore of Pedernales, near the Haitian border, catching nothing, and Parnell now sat back and enjoyed the quiet as he decided what to do about Michael Cole.
‘Ian, we’re up!’ Roe called out as she broke the water’s surface behind the boat.
The shout interrupted Parnell’s brooding. Cole and Roe were already climbing onto the jump deck when he opened the stern rail. The divers handed their gear up to him before climbing aboard.
‘Alex, do you mind tending ship for a bit? I think it’s time Michael and I discussed the revised terms of our deal.’
Roe nodded and continued checking her scuba equipment while Cole toweled off and accompanied Parnell below.
‘I’ve laid out the revised proposal on the galley table. Why don’t you have a look while I use the head?’
Cole leaned over the legal documents that Parnell had spread out for him, careful not to drip water on the papers. He skipped over the boilerplate defining the relationship between Cole’s professional corporation and Parnell’s corporate shell in the Caymans to the paragraph on fees and percentages. Cole’s heart skipped a beat when he read the breakdown of profits; the sliding scale was definitely skewed in his favor. After eighteen years at a mediocre salary and a disastrous divorce that had left him all but bankrupt, Michael Cole saw himself poised to earn a small fortune. The structure of the agreement hid the money well enough that his ex-wife would never see a dime of it.
‘Ian,’ Cole called out. ‘This looks-’
Parnell drove the three-pound rubber mallet down on Cole’s skull like an ax, rendering the man unconscious. He grabbed Cole as he collapsed and dragged him to a hatch in the stern of the boat. Carefully, he hauled Cole down into the boat’s engine compartment and placed him between the twin diesels, securing his arms and legs with duct tape. He then disconnected the exhaust pipe from one of the diesel engines. Satisfied that everything was ready, Parnell closed the hatch and returned to the bridge.
‘How did it go with Cole?’ Roe asked when Parnell appeared on deck.
‘I think he found the revised terms agreeable. He’s not feeling too well, though; he seems to have a bit of a headache. I left him below to rest while we head back to port.’
Parnell primed the pumps and started the engines. After checking the compass heading and the charts, he turned the boat around and headed back to Barahona.
Both Parnell and Roe remained silent most of the way back, each deeply engrossed in their own thoughts. For Roe, memories of a past life, long buried, had resurfaced. The information that Cole had produced, details about her identity and her KGB career, could only have come from one source-her mentor, Andrei Yakushev. Yakushev alone had kept the files that linked his agents with their deep-cover assignments, but he was long dead.
Roe had been in Moscow when the hard-line Communists tried to overthrow the Gorbachev government. Fearing the worst, Yakushev had altered her records in Lubyanka, listing her as ‘killed on assignment,’ and destroyed the operations files that identified her as Anna Mironova. She had last seen Yakushev during the opening hours of the coup, when he freed her from the KGB. The Soviet power struggle was one that Yakushev did not expect to survive.
The sudden quiet brought Roe back to the present. They had been cruising at a leisurely pace for forty-five minutes when Parnell cut the engines and brought the boat to a stop.
‘That ought to about do it.’
‘Ought to do what?’ Roe had no idea what he was talking about.
‘Cole. He’s dead, or should be by now. I knocked him out and left him down beside the diesels. I estimate threequarters of an hour should be enough to kill him. What do you think? Should I run it for another twenty minutes, just to make sure?’
Roe’s mouth opened to form a question her mind was still trying to assemble. Parnell talked about killing Cole as if it were some kind of recipe he was trying to follow. ‘What have you done with Cole?’
‘I killed him.’ Parnell spoke in slow, measured tones, precisely delivering each word.
Roe bolted from her chair and ran belowdecks, hoping that this was just a sick example of British humor. Parnell wasn’t laughing.
‘I wouldn’t go down there if I were you, fumes and all. Might get you, as well.’
Cole was nowhere to be seen in the main cabin. Roe located the hatch panel to the engine room and opened it. It was just as Parnell had described; Cole lay prone and motionless along the beam of the boat, between the twin engines. The compartment was thick with heat and grimy diesel exhaust.
‘Yes, he’s dead,’ Parnell declared icily, looking over her shoulder.
Roe found it difficult to suppress the violent shiver running down her spine. ‘Why?’
‘Don’t give me that. It’s not like I’m Jack the Ripper. We don’t need him, and I won’t have a bastard like Cole holding a sword over my head for the rest of my life. The way I see it, I did both of us a favor. Now go get your scuba tank on.’ Parnell’s tone left no room for discussion.
After Roe suited up, Parnell instructed her to take Cole’s scuba tanks into the engine room and, using a small electric compressor, dope them with monoxidetainted air. Should Cole’s body ever be recovered, Parnell reasoned, the fouled tanks would be the apparent cause of death. Once Roe finished with the tanks, she dragged Cole’s body up on deck. By this time, the sun was gliding down to the horizon and twilight was upon them.
‘Ian, if Cole just disappears like this, don’t you think someone is going to report it to the police?’
‘Yes. That’s why his disappearance has to be very public and explainable. Michael was scheduled to dive with a tourist group out of Barahona tomorrow. I intend to take his place, and you are going to help me stage a tragic accident.’ Parnell eyed Roe carefully. ‘I realize that this alters our professional relationship. We are both going to have to trust each other if we are to succeed in our new venture. You are with me on this, aren’t you?’
Sitting on the deck beside a dead man and his killer didn’t encourage Roe to question Parnell’s plans. There was no way she could explain any of this without going to jail. Worse yet, Cole’s murder had occurred in a foreign country. She might well be in prison for years before she ever got to see the U.S. ambassador, who wouldn’t visit at all if her former espionage activities came to light. She was trapped, trapped by her past, by Cole, and now, by Parnell.
Parnell and Roe struggled to place diving gear on Cole’s lifeless body. If Roe hadn’t still been in shock over her situation, she might have found the morbidly absurd scene amusing. As it was, she was not as careful inspecting the fittings as she had been when they dove earlier in the day.
‘Good riddance, you sorry sod,’ Parnell said as he pushed Cole’s body off the back of the boat.
The black form fell sideways and struck the calm water with a slap. It lay there on the surface for a moment; then, slowly, the blue water enveloped it.
Once the body disappeared, Parnell returned to the bridge to start the journey back to port. Roe remained on the aft deck, sensing that they both needed to be alone for a while.
Weighted down with a belt of lead weights and a nearly empty metal scuba tank, Michael Cole’s body plummeted to the seafloor as quickly as the water would allow. The lifeless black form spiraled downward like a