boat. Standing on the bridge, Summer found herself staring at the
“Can’t do anything to bring them back,” he said. “It’s been a long day. Let’s head to the motel and turn in.”
“Just thinking about that message on the footwell and what the captain was trying to say. I wonder if it was a warning of some sort.”
“They died quickly. We don’t even know if it was a last message.”
Summer thought about the inscription again and shook her head. It meant something more than it appeared to, of that much she was certain. Beyond that, she had no clue. Somehow, she told herself, she would figure it out.
6
The restaurant’s decor would never be featured in
“All this roadkill is enough to make a person turn vegan,” Summer grimaced, shaking her head at the bared snout of a grizzly bear.
“Kitimat’s taxidermist must be the richest guy in town,” Dirk replied.
“Probably owns the motel.”
She sipped at a cup of coffee as the door to the cafe opened and a tall man entered the restaurant. He strode directly to their table as Dirk and Summer recognized him as the agitated man they’d encountered on the dock the day before.
“May I please join you?” he asked in a nonthreatening manner.
“Please do,” Dirk said, pushing out a chair. He stuck his hand out at the stranger. “I’m Dirk Pitt. This is my sister, Summer.”
The man’s brow rose a fraction as he gazed at Summer.
“Glad to know you,” he replied, shaking hands. “My name is Trevor Miller. My older brother, Steve, was captain of the
“We’re sorry for what happened yesterday,” Summer replied. She could tell by the look in the man’s eyes that he was deeply shaken by the loss of his brother.
“He was a good man,” Trevor said, his gaze turning distant. He then looked at Summer and offered a sheepish grin. “My apologies for the gruff behavior yesterday. I had just received word of my brother’s death over the marine radio and was a little upset and confused.”
“A natural reaction,” Summer said. “I think we were all a little confused.”
Trevor inquired about their involvement, and Summer told of their discovery of the fishing boat while surveying the Hecate Strait.
“Your brother fished these waters for some time?” Dirk asked.
“No, only two or three years. He was actually a doctor who sold his practice and turned to fishing out of passion. Did pretty well at it, too, despite all the restrictions placed on commercial fishing these days to protect the stocks.”
“Seems like an odd career transition,” Summer remarked.
“We grew up on the water. Our father was an engineer for the local mining company and an avid fisherman. We traveled around a lot but always had a boat. Steve would be on the water every chance he got. He even crewed on a trawler in high school.”
“He sure kept a smart boat,” Dirk said. “I’ve never seen such an immaculate fishing boat.”
“The
“I’m afraid so. The boat was circling haphazardly with no one at the helm when we first spotted it.”
“The
“I’m glad you did,” Trevor said. “The autopsies revealed that the men died of asphyxiation. The police are certain that carbon monoxide poisoning was the cause. Yet I went all over the
“The engine is well astern of the wheelhouse, which makes it perplexing. Perhaps there is no leak and it was just an odd mix of wind and running conditions that allowed the exhaust fumes to accumulate in the cabin,” Dirk suggested. “It does seem odd that the three men succumbed so quickly.”
“It might not be that unusual,” Summer said. “There was a mystery several years ago when a high number of drowning deaths began plaguing houseboat vacationers on Lake Powell. They finally discovered that exhaust fumes were accumulating off the stern of the houseboats and incapacitating swimmers in the water.”
“Steve was such a cautious man,” Miller noted.
“It’s not difficult to be overcome by an unseen killer,” Dirk said.
The discussion was taking a toll on Trevor, and he paled from the strain. Summer poured him a cup of coffee and tried to move the conversation elsewhere.
“If there is anything we can do to help, please ask,” she said, her soft gray eyes showing genuine concern.
“Thank you for trying to help my brother and his crew, and for saving the
“It’s over fifty miles from here,” Dirk said.
“We can take my boat. She cruises at twenty-five knots. I’d just like to see where he was at the time.”
Summer glanced at a clock mounted beneath a sneering mountain lion. “We don’t have to meet with the police inspector until three o’clock,” she said to her brother. “We might be able to make a quick run out and back.”
“I need to check out the ROV and see if we get anything back from the Seattle lab,” Dirk replied. “How about you go with Mr. Miller, and I’ll handle the inspector in case you’re late getting back.”
“Call me Trevor. And I’ll have her back on time,” Trevor said, smiling at Summer as if he were asking her father’s permission to take her out. She was surprised to feel a slight blush cross her cheeks.
“Save me a seat under the hot interrogation light,” she said to Dirk, rising from her chair. “I’ll see you at three.”
7
Trevor helped Summer aboard his boat, then quickly cast off the lines. As the workboat edged away from the dock, she leaned over the side and noted a NATURAL RESOURCES CANADA logo painted on the hull. When the boat had safely slipped past the port dockage and was speeding down Douglas Channel, Summer walked into the cabin and sat on a bench near the pilot’s seat.
“What do you do for the Natural Resources Department?” she asked.
“Coastal ecologist for the department’s Forestry Service,” he replied, steering around a logging ship chugging down the center of the channel. “I work mostly with industrial concerns in the northern British Columbia coastal region. I have been fortunate to base out of Kitimat, since the ongoing port expansion provides plenty of activity.”