his arm. A thin trickle of blood oozed to the surface and he dabbed at it with a rag.
In two more days they’d reach London and then he’d have the rash examined.
USING THE COMPUTER-CONTROLLED thrusters, Hanley placed the
“Tell me what you heard and what happened afterward,” Cabrillo said as he followed Murphy into the main salon.
Murphy explained the light popping sounds and the masked man entering his cabin.
“It was all over in five minutes,” he said as the rest of the team finished filing into the salon. “I waited another ten minutes before venturing out.”
“Search every compartment,” Cabrillo ordered. “I want some answers.”
The team split up and fanned out through the vessel. Rifles and handguns were strewn about the staterooms, as well as clothing, personal items and suitcases. The beds were rumpled and some had the covers pulled back. Copies of the Koran were in every cabin and shoes were still sitting by the beds on the floor.
It was as if a UFO had come down and snatched the men into the heavens.
ON BOARD THE
Stone slid into Hanley’s seat and began to adjust the cameras on deck so he could watch what was happening.
Hanley stepped across to the
“It was here,” he said as Hanley passed through the room.
Just up the passageway Ross was holding a spray bottle containing blue liquid. She sprayed the walls then slipped on a pair of goggles as Hanley passed behind her. Hanley continued down to a stairway.
“If they transferred to another ship,” Cabrillo was saying to Murphy just as Hanley opened the door to the cabin, “why didn’t they take their personal belongings?”
“Maybe they didn’t want anything with them that might be traced back to here,” Hanley said.
“Doesn’t make any sense,” Cabrillo noted. “They go through the trouble to kidnap who they think is the emir of Qatar, then they leave him, as well as a multimillion-dollar yacht, unattended?”
“They must be planning on returning,” Murphy offered.
Right then Seng popped his head inside the cabin. “Mr. Chairman, Ross has something she wants to show you,” he said.
The four men filed down the passageway to where Ross was standing. On the wall were areas outlined with barriers of sprayed foam. The walls inside the barriers were tinted blue. Ross slid off the goggles and handed them to Cabrillo silently.
Cabrillo slid the goggles over his head and stared at the areas. The fluorescent glow of blood splatters looked like a Jackson Pollock painting. He slid off the goggles and handed them to Hanley.
“They tried to clean it off,” Ross said, “but it was a fast and dirty job.”
Just at that instant Stone’s voice came out of a radio clipped to Cabrillo’s belt.
“Mr. Cabrillo, Mr. Hanley,” he said, “there’s something you need to see.”
The two men walked down the hallway out through the main salon, then onto the rear deck and across to the
Cabrillo opened the door. Stone pointed to a monitor on the wall.
“I thought it was a dead baby whale,” he said, “until it flipped over and I saw a face.”
Just then another body surfaced.
“Have Reyes and Kasim fish them out,” Cabrillo said to Hanley, “I’m going back across.”
Cabrillo left the control room and stepped across to the
Cabrillo nodded.
“Ross has found blood in the pilothouse and staterooms as well as in and around the main salon and passageways. The captain was on duty, the posted guards and the rest were sleeping. That would be my guess.”
Cabrillo nodded again.
“Whoever hit them, boss,” Seng said, “came in hard and fast.”
“I’m going to the pilothouse,” Cabrillo said, walking away.
Once there he examined the ship’s log. The last entry was only two hours old and it stated nothing out of the ordinary. Whoever the visitors were, they’d come unannounced.
After leaving the pilothouse, Cabrillo was walking down the hall when his radio was called.
“Mr. Cabrillo,” Huxley’s voice said, “come to the sick bay at once.”
Cabrillo made his way through the