“It’s a big boat.” She started working over the little nav computer as she spoke. “Without a sweeper, it would be impossible to secure. Faroe knew it. That’s why he didn’t crap all over you. St. Kilda took a calculated risk. We lost.”
“You think Faroe sees it that way?”
“Yes. He’s not running around now, trying to cover his ass. It was his call to leave the bug sweeper behind. It was the right call, as our little strip-search proved. If there’s a slap coming down, he’ll take it.”
“That would be…refreshing.”
She laughed without humor. “It surprised me, too, the first time it happened. But if he thinks you’ve been careless, God help you, because the Devil is rubbing his hands in glee.”
The sound of the Zodiac’s massive outboards swelled like an approaching aircraft.
“I should just wave them over to us and throw in the game,” she said, her voice rich with disgust.
“But you won’t.”
“No. Not while there’s still a chance, however
Mac recognized the Southern border slang and nodded. “I feel the same way.”
Two hundred yards away, the Zodiac suddenly altered course. The craft heeled over and sped off in another direction.
“Just another whale-watching boat gone chasing a new orca spotting,” Mac said.
“Harrow doesn’t call off easily. Wonder what Grace said.”
“Yeah, I’d like to have heard it. That’s a no-assing-around kind of woman.” He smiled grimly.
“She’s a former federal judge.”
“Must have been hell on the bench,” Mac said.
But they weren’t really listening to each other. He was focused on the fading sound of the Zodiac. She was frowning over the nav computer.
The black craft roared up a different channel and vanished. The men aboard were pros. Not once did any of them look toward Mac and Emma.
“How much time before the seaplane arrives?” he asked.
“At least an hour. It will probably be flying up from Rosario or Seattle, maybe farther north if we’re lucky. The CIA has more assets to call on than St. Kilda.”
“Then we have time to take a look around.”
She shrugged. “Can’t hurt and we might even find something.”
“Elephants might fly.”
“Thought that was pigs.”
“Pigs are easy,” he said.
Any other time she would have laughed. Now she just guided the little boat closer to the place where they had left
“At least we know odds are good it wasn’t Harrow,” Mac said. “He was too eager to co-opt us.”
“Which leaves Demidov.”
“Or the mysterious, stupidly rich owner who was going to contact us somewhere along the way on this Inside Passage snipe hunt.”
“If he exists,” she said.
“Plenty of stupidly rich exist. Temuri might be one of them.”
“Why would he steal his own boat?”
“Good question. I’ll ask him the next time we see him.”
While Emma motored them closer to the clutter of beached and tangled debris, Mac watched through the binoculars.
The gillnet camouflage floated in the rocky niche like the empty cocoon of a giant insect. Lines that had secured the boat dangled uselessly in the water. Two of the lines were already beginning to unwind where they had been slashed through, removing their whipped ends.
“It looks like somebody just cut the net loose, peeled it back, cut the lines, and motored away,” Mac said. “Ten minutes work, at most.”
Emma’s cell phone went off. It wasn’t Faroe, which left Harrow-unless somebody else had squeezed her number out of St. Kilda. She cut power and answered.
“What,” she said curtly.
“Do you expect me to believe you’ve lost that fucking boat?” Harrow yelled.
“Believe what you want.
Harrow’s response told her that he had been hanging out with sailors long enough to expand his salty vocabulary.
“Get that goddamned boat back and do it fast,” Harrow snarled, “or I’ll hang your ass so high you’ll think you’re walking on the moon.”
“We’re working on it,”
She ended the call.
“That was fast,” Mac said, still studying the debris.
“I don’t have to take his abuse anymore.”
“I hope Harrow alerted Border Protection in the San Juan Islands,” Mac said without looking away from the binoculars. “If they’ve already loaded the currency, or whatever the goods are,
“You’re back to sweet talk again.”
“Pushed to the firewall,
“Do you want to look at the crime scene or keep depressing me?”
Mac started swearing, a toneless stream of words that made Emma wince.
“What now?” she asked. “Did you find a nasty-gram in a floating bottle?”
“Oil slick ahead.”
Emma pulled the throttle back to idle. “Will it hurt the dinghy?”
“No. It’s the death cry of a blackbird.”
“Mac-”
“The bastards sank her,” Mac said bleakly. “A fuel slick is a ship’s grave marker.”
“What?”
He pointed toward the plume of the fuel spill. “See that?”
“Yes. Smell it, too.”
“Follow the slick back to its source.”
She traced the slick, saw that it led toward the mangled camouflage netting, and said, “You want to get closer.”
“Yeah.” He reached past her and began making the little nav computer sit up and do tricks. “Don’t worry. The slick is no worse than what you find near a fuel dock in a commercial marina.”
“Beautiful.”
“Go slow. I want to watch the bottom. This could be just a smokescreen. If we think
Emma idled forward, following the rainbow sheen of fuel to its end, maybe fifty yards from where
Mac watched the display. The sonar gave a garish, two-toned picture of the uneven, rocky bottom. Emma crisscrossed the area, amazed to see that only a few yards away from where they had concealed