"I'm not certain when he'll return," I warily replied.
"But I'm wondering how you know him."
"Sometimes cases overlap, whether they should or not."
I was not sure what he was implying.
"Dr. Mant understands the importance of not interfering," Green went on. "People like that are good to work with."
"The importance of not interfering with what, Captain Green?"
"If a case is the Navy's, for example, or this jurisdiction or that. There are many different ways that people can interfere. All are a problem and can be harmful. That diver, for example. He went where he didn't belong and look what happened."
I had stopped walking and was staring at him in disbelief.
"It must be my imagination," I said, "but I think you're threatening me."
"Go get your gear, you can park closer in, by the fence over there," he said, walking off.
Chapter 2
LONG AFTER HE HAD DISAPPEARED INSIDE THE BUILDING with the anchor in front, I was sitting on the pier, struggling to pull a thick wet suit over my dive skin.
Not far from me, several rescuers prepared a flat-bottomed boat they had moored to a piling. Shipyard workers wandered about curiously, and on the dive platform, two men in royal blue neoprene tested buddy phones and seemed very thorough in their inspection of scuba gear, which included mine.
I watched the divers talk to each other, but I could not make out a word they said as they unscrewed hoses and fitted belts with weights. Occasionally, they glanced my way, and I was surprised when one of them decided to climb the ladder that led up to my pier. He walked over to where I was and sat beside me on my little patch of cold pavement.
"This seat taken?" He was a handsome young man, black and built like an Olympic athlete.
"There are a lot of people who want it, but I don't know where they are." I fought with the wet suit some more.
"Damn. I hate these things."
"Just think of it as putting on an inner tube."
"Yes, that's an enormous help."
"I need to talk to you about underwater comm equipment. You ever used it before?" he said.
I glanced up at his serious face and asked, "Are you with a squad?"
"Nope. I'm just plain ole Navy. And I don't know about you, but this sure isn't the way I planned to spend my New Year's Eve. Don't know why anybody'd want to dive in this river unless they got some sort of fantasy about being a blind tadpole in a mud puddle. Or maybe if you got ironpoor blood and think all the rust in there will help."
"All the rust in there will do is give you tetanus." I looked around. "Who else here is Navy versus squad?"
"The two with the rescue boat are squad. Ki Soo down there on the dive platform is the only other Navy except our intrepid investigator with NIS. Ki's good. He's my buddy."
He gave an okay sign to Ki Soo, who gave it back, and I found all of this rather interesting and very different from what I had experienced so far.
"Now listen up." My new acquaintance spoke as if he had worked with me for years. "Comm equipment's tricky if you've never used it. It can be real dangerous." His face was earnest.
"I'm familiar with it," I assured him with more ease than I felt.
"Well, you gotta be more than familiar. You gotta be buddies with it, because like your dive buddy, it can save your life." He paused. "It can also kill you."
I had used underwater communication equipment on only one other dive, and was still nervous about having my regulator replaced by a tightly sealed mask fitted with a mouthpiece and no purge valve. I worried about the mask flooding, about having to tear it off as I frantically groped for my alternate air source, or octopus. But I was not going to mention this, not here.
"I'll be fine," I assured him again.
"Great. I heard you were a pro," he said. "By the way, my name's Jerod, and I already know who you are." Sitting Indian-style, he was tossing gravel into the water and seemed fascinated by the slowly spreading ripples. "I've heard a lot of nice things about you. In fact, when my wife finds out I met you, she's going to be jealous."
I was not certain why a diver in the Navy would have heard anything about me beyond what was in the news, which wasn't always nice. But his words were a welcome salve to my raw mood, and I was about to let him know this when he glanced at his watch, then stared down at the platform and met Ki Soo's eyes.
"Dr. Scarpetta," Jerod said as he got up. "I think we're ready to rock and roll. How about you?"
"I'm as ready as I'm going to be." I got up, too.
"What's going to be the best approach?"
"The best way-in fact, the only way-is to follow his hose down."
We stepped closer to the edge of the pier and he pointed to the johnboat.
"I've already been down once, and if you don't follow the hose you'll never find him. You ever had to wade through a sewer with no lights on?"
"That one hasn't happened to me yet."
"Well, you can't see shit. And that's the same thing here."
"To your knowledge, no one has disturbed the body," I said.
"No one's been near it but me."
He watched as I picked up my buoyancy control vest, or BC, and tucked a flashlight in a pocket.
"I wouldn't even bother. In these conditions, all a flashlight's going to do is get in your way."
But I was going to bring it because I wanted any advantage I could possibly have. Jerod and I climbed down the ladder to the dive platform so we could finish preparations, and I ignored overt stares from shipyard men as I massaged cream rinse into my hair and pulled on the neoprene hood.
I strapped a knife to my inner right calf, and then grabbed each end of a fifteen-pound weight belt and quickly hoisted it around my waist. I checked safety releases, and pulled on gloves.
"I'm ready," I said to Ki Soo.
He carried over communication equipment and my regulator.
"I will attach your air hose to the face mask." He spoke with no accent. "I understand you've used comm equipment like this before."
"That's correct," I said.
He squatted beside me and lowered his voice as if we were about to conspire. "You, Jerod and I will be in constant contact with each other over the buddy phones."
They looked like bright red gas masks with a five-strap harness in back. Jerod moved behind me and helped me into my BC and air tank while his buddy talked on'
. "As you know," Ki Soo was saying, "you breathe normally and use the push-to-talk button on the mouthpiece when you want to communicate." He demonstrated. "Now we need to get this nice and secure over your hood and tuck it in. There, you get the rest of your hair tucked in and let me make sure this is nice and tight in back."
I hated buddy phones the most when I wasn't in the water because it was difficult to breathe. I sucked in air as best I could as I peered out through plastic at these two divers I had just entrusted with my life.
"There will be two rescuers in a boat and they will be monitoring us with a transducer that will be lowered into the water. Whatever we say will be heard by whoever is listening on the surface. Do you understand?" Ki Soo looked at me and I knew I had just been given a warning.
I nodded, my breathing loud and labored in my ears.
"You want your fins on now?"
I shook my head and pointed at the water.
"Then you go first and I will toss them to you."
Weighing at least eighty pounds more than when I had arrived, I cautiously made my way to the edge of the dive platform and checked again to make certain my mask was tucked into my hood. Cathodic protectors were like catfish whiskers trailing from the huge dormant ships, the water ruffled by wind. I steeled myself for the most unnerving giant stride I had ever made.
The cold at first was a shock, and my body took its time warming the water leaking into my rubber sheath as I pulled on my fins. Worse, I could not see my computer console or its compass. I could not see my hand in front of my face, and I now understood why it was useless to bring a flashlight. The suspended sediment absorbed light like a blotter, forcing me to surface at frequent intervals to get my bearings as I swam toward the spot where the hose led from the johnboat and disappeared beneath the surface of the river.