rusted cabin cruiser. She stopped. She wasn’t alone.
She smelled the cigarette smoke too late, realizing all of a sudden that this funky old cabin cruiser was being used as a gatehouse along the route.
‘‘Yo!’’ a man’s voice called out.
She had literally rocked the boat when stepping down onto it, and the sentry called out accordingly. In a catlike motion, she leapt from the deck up over the wheelhouse as the sentry made a lazy effort to identify his visitor. She backed up, facing the stern but completely exposed, as first the sentry’s head and then his incredibly wide shoulders appeared in the cabin hatch not five feet away from her. To move—even to breathe—would give her away. She stood absolutely still, her lungs filled to capacity, her breath held and burning in her chest. The black- haired head pivoted left to right and left again. Another inch or two and he’d pick her up in his peripheral vision.
‘‘Yo?’’ he called out a second time, though more softly. ‘‘Kai? Timmy?’’ No answer.
She prepared to kick him in the face if he glanced back, cocking her right leg back in preparation. He’d never know what hit him.
Again, he looked to his left. Then he climbed back down the steep stairs and into the cabin.
She listened intently, not daring to move. A minute passed. Two. She felt the boat move and feared his coming topside again. But instead she heard him urinating. She crept slowly and quietly to the steep ladder leading off the boat’s far side and climbed, her skin prickling. She moved much more slowly, boat to boat, carefully assessing her situation. Planks and gangways, ladders and crudely fashioned steps. The shore grew increasingly distant. She encountered a set of six garden hoses taped together, water gurgling inside. That mechanical hum grew ever louder. A snoring beast. She marveled at Melissa’s resourcefulness. The woman had the footage to prove she had made it inside. No small feat.
The scavenged trawler loomed in front of her now, huge by comparison with the other boats around it, rising up out of the wreckage of ship decks, cabins and stacks—a rusting mass of iron and steel out of proportion with its neighbors, its joints frozen with rust and corrosion, consumed by decades of salt and storm, sun and wind. A skeleton of its former self. Huge sections missing, scavenged for resale or sold off as scrap, its profile a twisted torment of bent metal and ragged cuts.
She crossed the decks of the remaining two ships, staying low and in shadow, her full attention on that towering trawler. The hum developed different tones, no longer so indistinguishable, but split into a high whine, a tremendous metallic clatter and a low guttural growl. She thought her heart might explode in her chest.
Melissa had been caught. This fact remained foremost in her mind. The big man’s arrival spoke volumes to Stevie. With all that had happened, would they move to close down shop? She resolved to get some footage, drive to Public Safety and make her case, providing Boldt the necessary probable cause to involve the FBI. Behind her, on shore, an eighteen-wheel truck arrived. A figure climbed out. She crouched and ran toward the trawler. She would have to hurry. The driver had left the truck running.
CHAPTER 74
hat the hell does that mean?’’ Boldt thundered, unable to believe what he was hearing.
‘‘It’s a federal impound. Federal property. It is beyond our jurisdiction.’’ Lacey Delgato, the deputy prosecuting attorney with whom LaMoia had met, had a voice that could scratch glass. She was plump and wore her clothes too tight. She talked behind an ironic grin that leant her an imperial arrogance. ‘‘It’s an INS impound, Lieutenant. If anyone’s going to bust in there, it’s them.’’
‘‘But that’s just the point. Right? That’s exactly why we want in there ourselves.’’ He had checked his voice mail only moments before. Suddenly McNeal’s oblique message made more sense: She realized the graveyard was under Coughlie’s jurisdictional control.
‘‘I understand that, but it isn’t going to happen. You crash those gates and you lose anything and everything you discover.’’
‘‘So I have to go back to Talmadge.’’
‘‘Right.’’
‘‘And if he’s in on it?’’
She shrugged. ‘‘Chalk one up for the bad guys.’’
‘‘Unacceptable.’’
‘‘Suggestions?’’
‘‘Other fed agencies? Do they have access?’’
Delgato pursed her lips and gave her next words considerable thought. ‘‘U.S. Attorney would have to be brought in. If you gave him enough evidence, enough probable cause, he might work the Bureau for the raid.’’ She added, ‘‘The Bureau could invite you along for the ride. Nothing preventing that. Yeah. It could work, I suppose.’’
‘‘Put it in motion,’’ he said. ‘‘I’m going to get a surveillance team in place.’’
‘‘Tomorrow, I’m talking about,’’ Delgato complained. ‘‘No way this is going down tonight.’’
‘‘Make the calls,’’ Boldt ordered.
‘‘It’s late.’’
‘‘Now.’’
‘‘I’ll wake him up.’’
‘‘You want a hundred lives on your hands? You want this whole thing to come down to your refusal to make a call, to wake someone up? Fine,’’ he said. ‘‘I’ll make a note of it.’’
‘‘You had better be right about this,’’ she threatened.
‘‘Amen,’’ Boldt said.
CHAPTER 75
he constant coming and going had worn a trail through the rust and corrosion on the trawler’s deck, beating a path around to the far side where any opening of a hatch or door was fully blocked from view of land. Even from across Salmon Bay, because of the trawler’s angle in the graveyard, there was no chance of anyone being seen using this entrance. Coughlie had found himself the perfect hideaway.
The ship’s deck vibrated underfoot like a kitchen appliance. She left the worn route and found her way along the determined shadow on the port side, moving incredibly slowly, every pore in her body alert, every hair at attention. She passed one door after another, having no idea where she was or which to use, and it was only her reporter’s eye that finally spotted the fresh litter of cigarette butts accumulated around one particular door at her feet, causing her to stop and press her ear to this door.
A confusing rumble filled her head, the clatter louder but distant. She looked up to see the tractor trailer truck backing down between two rows in the boatyard. The trailer stopped just on the other side of the chain-link gate and the air brakes hissed.
She eased down on the levered handle and it moved, and she pulled the door open no more than it took to aim her eye inside.