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“I was a soldier once, I’m used to unpleasant surprises.”

“Unfortunately, so am I,” Aliana sighed. “I’ll take the craft as is, Mr. Falk. Under the circumstances, testing her is out of the question—”

“Actually, it’s not,” Luke said quickly. “I have a motor launch moored beside the Penny. You can still put your boat through her paces, and your guys can tag along to keep an eye on things.”

“I don’t like boats,” Deacon frowned.

“Well, I do,” Aliana said firmly, “and I’ve come a long way to try this one. Have Ibrahim and Rakki follow us in the launch. I’m going sailing.”

Scampering happily into the Penny, Aliana took the helm, while two of Deacon’s men fired up the outboard in the powerboat, rumbling along in the Penny’s wake.

Still scowling, Deacon stood beside Gus’s lawn chair, arms folded, watching the two boats out on the bay.

“Beautiful day for a sail,” Gus observed. “Warm, though. Especially in that monkey suit. Can I offer you a beer, Mr. Deacon?”

“Thank you, no.”

“Still working, huh? How about your guys? Hey, fellas?” he called to the guards at the corner of the boathouse. “Anybody feel like a beer?”

“My men are from the Sudan,” Deacon said. “They don’t speak English.”

“No kidding? How do they manage in this country?”

“They don’t manage. I manage.”

“Ah, I see.” Gus nodded. “So? How do you say ‘anybody want a cold beer’ in Sudanese?”

“It’s better you don’t know that, Mr. Gus,” Deacon said, shaking his head. “I think you enjoy making mischief.”

“I’m surprised you noticed me at all.”

“Why?” Deacon asked.

“In this country, when your hair goes gray and you walk a little slower, you start to disappear, a little bit more each day. People talk past you at first, then after a while they look right through you. Like you’re already halfway to being your own ghost. Is it like that where you’re from?”

“Where I come from, it is well known that old lions are the most dangerous. As they near the end of their time, they lose the fear of dying. That is when they become man-killers.”

“I’m no man-eater, son, and everything scares me. Especially you.”

Deacon smiled broadly, showing canines that came to a point. “That’s not fear, Mr. Gus. That’s wisdom.”

“Sure you won’t take that beer?” Gus prompted.

Deacon eyed the old man curiously, his dark glasses and narrow jaw reinforcing his alien, predatory look. Gus met his gaze with utter innocence.

“An old lion who loves mischief,” Deacon mused. “Be careful, Mr. Gus. That’s a very dangerous combination.”

“I can’t believe how vast these waters are,” Aliana said, once she had the Penny past the breakers into the open. “It’s one thing to see the Great Lakes on a map, but out here? They’re not lakes at all, are they? They’re inland seas.”

Luke nodded, watching her. “The largest bodies of fresh water in the world.”

“But it’s all so... immense. Don’t you find it lonely here?”

“More peaceful than lonely. And it’s not always empty. Next week is the Mackinac Regatta. Two hundred and fifty craft will pass the Point, sailboats scattered from here to the horizon, as far as you can see. Heading for the Straits and then on to Chicago.”

“How far is that?”

“The race is over six hundred miles, but for boatmen, there’s really no end to these waters. My grandfather says that up in Cree country, around Nipigon or Lac Seul, his people can travel upriver a thousand miles, to Hudson Bay or the Great Slave Lake, and never set foot on shore. Free of the land and all its troubles.”

“Maybe that was true once, but nowadays, no one can hide. There are satellites above us that can count the freckles on the back of your hand.”

“But why should they want to? Who are you, Aliana? Why are those feds dogging you?”

“I’m truly not an important person, Mr. Falk, but...” She took a deep breath. “My father is an international arms merchant who deals in surplus munitions. He lives like a prince in Damascus, in a villa that once belonged to the Sultan of Oman. But the Arab world is stifling for a modern woman. I prefer to live in the West.”

“Why all the bodyguards?”

“I’m not a dilettante, Mr. Falk. We were not always rich. I have worked in my father’s business since I was a child. And please spare me the ‘merchants of death’ speech. Americans are our best customers.”

“Lady, I’m the last guy on the planet who can criticize your trade. I’ve worked at it myself. But why are the feds so interested in you?”

“Your government wants to make my father a double agent. But their track record in such matters is terrible. They would only get him killed. So he stays in Syria, a prisoner of his own success. And because I could be a valuable hostage to his enemies, I am always guarded.”

“Seems to me you’re practically a prisoner yourself.”

“Sometimes, it seems so to me, too,” she said with a wan smile. “But not today, out here on the water. I feel free here. Or I would if I didn’t have my two shadows along. It was very... considerate of you to provide my security people with a motor launch.”

“I’m sure Deacon thinks so, too. But then, he doesn’t know much about boats, does he? For instance, in a light chop like this with a quartering breeze, the Penny’s one helluva lot faster than that dory. With a bit more sail she’ll rise on her outriggers and dance across the waves like a gull. If a person wanted to feel really free for a while, she could zip in amongst those offshore islands and disappear.”

“You think?” Aliana asked, grinning as she cranked the mainmast winch, raising the sail another eighteen inches. The Penny responded like a quarter horse coming out of the gate, rising on her pontoons, scampering over the wave crests.

“Oooh, look at her go,” Aliana cooed, enraptured by the speed. “She can almost fly.”

Laughing like a schoolgirl, Aliana quickly left the powerboat far astern. The two bodyguards cranked the outboard motor wide open, but they only pounded the dory into the surf harder, soaking themselves with spray as the heavy craft plunged and bucked in the rough water.

Nearing the south end of the cove, Aliana artfully guided the Penny in among a cluster of wooded islets. Green alder and cedar, cloaked with wild grapevines, quickly closed in on both sides of them like a forest curtain.

Without thinking, Luke reached across and tugged her scarf loose. She shook her hair free, then glanced at him curiously.

“Why did you do that? Was this a trick to get me alone?”

“We’re not really alone. One of those ATF goons is parked in the state forest across the cove. He can probably see us from there.”

“Then let’s give them something to look at,” she said, leaning across the helm, kissing Luke hard on the mouth. Leaving him staring as she resumed her seat.

“What was that for?”

“Curiosity,” she admitted. “I’ve wondered what that would be like since the first day. Now I’m sorry I waited.”

“How did you know I wouldn’t be grievously offended?”

“I negotiate million-dollar deals for a living, Mr. Falk. I’m quite good at reading people. Were you offended?”

“I’m not sure,” he said, kissing her back, and holding it a bit longer.

“Nope,” he said, softly as he drew away. “Definitely not.”

She cocked her head, reading his eyes. And listening to the motor launch drawing closer.

“I suppose we’d better go back,” she said wistfully, wheeling the craft about. “Pity.”