Very trying.
Mac wedged more fresh vegetables into the small fridge and folded the paper bag for reuse. Between the check from Blue Water Marine Group and St. Kilda’s “petty cash” advance, he wasn’t worried about paying for his next meal.
He made a point of not noticing that Emma was back to wearing one of her eye-candy outfits. Her short shorts and tight crop top told him what he already knew-playing her lover was going to be hard on him. Literally.
Good advice. He was trying hard to take it.
Hard. Really hard.
Sex was easy to ignore only when you were getting some regularly. Having Emma close by reminded Mac that he’d been on short rations recently. He shut the fridge door.
Hard.
Warily, Emma watched him from the corner of her eye. The waves of testosterone were thick enough to float on. Problem was, she was tempted to dive right in.
She took a bite out of her ham sandwich, chewed, and wished she was sipping on him rather than on iced tea.
Mac settled onto the bench seat opposite her, unwrapped his sandwich, and said, “Anything new?”
Emma opened her bag of chips. “Not in the last half hour.”
“Tell me more about
“Blue Water Marine Group franchises yacht dealerships,” she said, “mainly on the West Coast. The hulls are laid in Malaysia and the fancy teak work is done there. The boats are mostly finished by the time they go on a container ship.”
Mac took a big bite from his meatball sub.
“Several other high-end boat names also have the major work done in Malaysia,” she said. “Costs less and the craftsmanship is better than good.”
He nodded. “I’ve picked up more than one overseas boat in Seattle for Blue Water.”
“There’s one you didn’t pick up. About a year ago, there was a yacht called
He waited, chewing an oversize chunk of meatball sub.
“We don’t know where it was hijacked off the container ship,” Emma said. “Irkutsk or Vladivostok are most likely.”
“Was
“In every way we’ve been able to confirm.”
Mac chewed on that for a while. Then he opened his tea. “St. Kilda has been working this for a year?”
“Investigating yacht thefts? Yes.”
“Are the thefts tied together?”
“No pattern has been found beyond the fact of the luxury yachts themselves. Every major American shipbuilder in Malaysia has been hit. If one of the Russian
“Were all the missing boats about the same size?” he asked.
“So far, nothing smaller than forty-one feet or bigger than seventy-three has been hijacked. The smaller boats are the really high-end ones.”
Mac nodded.
“Within that size range, the estimates are that at least two yachts a year have been lost in the last decade from container ships departing Malaysia. It adds up to a lot of millions, and that’s just from the boats covered by the Consortium’s insurance program. Other insurers have losses as big or bigger. They’re all tired of paying without really playing.”
Mac ate and turned over pieces of the puzzle in his mind. “Unless you dupe in a bunch of undercover agents along various water-fronts, the insurers have a hard slog ahead. All a hijacker needs is one crooked shift on harbor duty and a big-ass hammerhead crane.”
“That pretty much describes any of the big ports along Malaysia and the Pacific coastline of the FSU. Excuse me, Russian Federation. Wonder what they’ll be called a year from now?” She shrugged.
“But I’d lay good money on hijacked yachts being used to shuttle
“How did the insurance claims explain the losses?”
“Rogue waves. Each and every one of them.”
Mac raised dark eyebrows. “With all the satellites in orbit measuring changes in height of the ocean surface, and the amount of traffic in the shipping lanes, there should be plenty of warnings on the air about rogue waves in the containership transit zones.”
“You’d think,” Emma agreed wryly. “But, damn, those sneaky mountains of water just keep rushing up and washing really expensive yachts into the drink. Nothing cheap, mind you. No wannabe yachts need apply.”
“Is there a chance that the Consortium is some kind of stalking horse for the opposition?” Mac asked.
“If they are, St. Kilda couldn’t find it. And yes, we looked. We’re real picky about our clients.”
For a few minutes there was nothing but the small sounds of lunch being devoured.
“Is
“Not on any documents we could find.
Mac smiled. “Bent your ear, did she?”
“He,” Emma said. “Before I was assigned to the case, he chewed on insurance agents while his lover threatened class-action suits in all possible venues, known and unknown.”
“Class action for yachties?” Mac shook his head and laughed over his vanishing sandwich.
She smiled. “You and Faroe think alike.”
“I know those yacht hulls come off the production line like big cars, only in much smaller numbers,” Mac said. “But what are the chances of two rich yachties going to Blue Water Marine Group franchises in two states and insisting on identical interior design and black on the hull and swim step? And throwing in whacking great oversize engines just for kicks and giggles?”
“Same questions Faroe asked. Their son is still trying to calculate the odds, and Lane is some kind of math- computer guru.”
Silently Mac finished his sandwich, took a big swallow of iced tea, and rapped his knuckles slowly, gently, on the table.
Emma could tell when a man was thinking hard. She shut up and waited.
“If it wasn’t for the built-alike thing,” Mac said finally, “I’d say that the thefts were probably done by unrelated gangs in various Malaysian and FSU ports that were lifting anything they could get a sling under.”
“The identical-twin thing is why I was assigned up close and personal to
“Smart man.”
“Very. People who believe his easygoing, howya-doing act deserve what they get. Then there’s the name of the first ship.”
“The name got popular after the World Trade Center was brought down by terrorists. We were like the