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He heard a large diesel starting. The engine fired, ran for about thirty seconds, then died. It fired again, ran a minute, then died again. So, he thought, they were working on the engine. How long before they came to check on their captive.

He might be a coward in the air, but he loved the sea and was a fearless sailor, veteran of over a hundred races. He knew boats and it was time to put his knowledge to use. From the new pine paneling and cabinets and the amateur way the mirror was mounted, he deduced that the boat was being refitted by someone who didn’t know what he was doing.

He heard the steady sound of a forklift purring by. They were in a shipyard. Another forklift told him it was a busy shipyard. From the way the boat rocked gently in the water, he knew it had a deep keel, a sailboat.

Someone jumped onto the hull with a solid thud. Not the sound of deck shoes on teak, more the sound of work shoes on iron. An old iron sailing ship decked out in cheap pine.

They heard the sound of heavy footsteps coming toward the cabin. They braced themselves for the worse, but he felt himself slipping away.

“ Don’t leave me,” she pleaded.

“ I can’t help it.”

“ Come back for me. Save me. Take me away to be your bride forever and ever.”

“ I will.” He felt himself being tugged, a rope around his soul, jerking him away and he was powerless to do anything about it.

“ Promise.”

“ I will find you and we will be together. I swear it.” And the world turned black.

He woke on the Tuhiwai’s sofa, the midday sun streaming in the living room window, shining in his eyes. He blinked and turned away from the light, its warmth welcome. He was covered in a soft quilt and his head rested on a down pillow. He settled his eyes on a wall clock and felt a pang at the loss of time. He had been asleep, or unconscious, for over three hours.

“ You’re awake,” Donna’s mother said. “One minute you were talking and the next you were out.”

“ You didn’t call the police?” he said, thankful, but wondering why she hadn’t. He would have.

“ Mohi wanted to, but I wouldn’t let him. If Ngaarara has her, there is nothing they can do.”

The cough attacked him again. His stomach muscles seized as he started gasping for air.

“ Here.” She handed him the blue inhaler.

“ Thank you.” He took three puffs and caught his breath. “I don’t know what my problem is.”

“ It’s asthma,” she said. “We have a lot of it in New Zealand. Nobody knows why.”

“ You’re kidding?”

“ No. I work in a medical office in Auckland, so I see a lot of it, especially in immigrants from America and England. It happens a lot to people that had it when they were young. They come here and it comes back.”

“ Does it go away?”

“ Sometimes yes, sometimes no. I’ve had it all my life. I use the inhalers to control it. It’s not so bad, the brown one before going to sleep and in the morning when I wake up. The blue one if I get congested.”

“ Isn’t there a pill you can take?”

“ Yes, prednisone, it’s a steroid. It usually works, but we generally don’t like the side effects.”

“ Which are?”

“ Weak bones, enlarged head.” She made an oval with her thumbs and index fingers around her head. “And a hump on your back.” She held her right hand over her shoulder, just below the neck to indicate where the hump would be.

“ Three things I don’t want,” he said.

“ I believe your story,” she said, changing the subject back to her daughter.

“ You believe me?”

“ Nobody, except the females in my family, knows the end to that story. It’s something that’s been handed down from mother to daughter throughout the generations. We’ve been waiting a long time for Ngaarara to exact his revenge. Now he’s come.”

“ And your husband, does he believe me?”

“ He doesn’t know what to believe.”

“ Where is he?”

“ Not far, I sent him out when you started to wake, so that I could talk to you alone. He doesn’t believe in the old ways, like I do. Is my daughter’s spirit still in you?”

“ No.”

“ Taawhiri-maatea, the god of the winds, carried Donna’s spirit so far, halfway around the world, to find you. It’s almost too much for even me to believe, but who knows the ways of the Gods. The only thing I can think of is that the connection binding you and my daughter must be great for her spirit to be drawn over the seas like that.”

“ Okay, Linda, what did you find out?” Mohi Tuhiwai came through the front door. His strong stare bore into Jim. His patience was clearly worn.

“ If we want Donna back, we should help this man,” Linda Tuhiwai said.

“ I think we should call the police.”

“ Then we’ll never find her, can’t you just this once admit that there might be something in this world you don’t understand,” she said.

“ Listen,” Jim interrupted, “I want her back as badly as you, but if we go to the police, they’ll put me in jail and we’ll lose any contact we have with her.”

“ Are you sure she’s not still with you?” Linda Tuhiwai asked again.

“ Yes.”

“ Why not?” Mohi wanted to know.

“ How do I know. I don’t know anything about this kind of stuff. But while I was asleep I was with her, where she is.”

“ Give me a break,” Mohi said.

“ Listen to him. We’ve already lost Danny. I don’t want to lose Donna, too.”

“ I think they’re going to burn her, Sunday, at midnight.”

“ Midnight, Sunday morning or midnight, Sunday night?” she asked.

“ I don’t know, but I’m guessing Sunday morning. He wants his revenge. He wants her to burn, like he did. I can’t swear that’s his plan, but I feel it.”

“ Like Danny,” Linda Tuhiwai said, and she told Jim that her son and his new bride burned to death when his car went off the road and struck a lamp post. “Maybe it wasn’t an accident, the car going out of control, and the fire. Maybe it was Ngaarara.”

Mohi Tuhiwai still looked skeptical.

“ I know you want to call the police, but there’s nothing they can do. We’re her only hope. There is no one else. Until I came you were just sitting around waiting for news. If you keep that up, the only news you’re going to get will be bad. I don’t want bad news for her, not now, not ever. I need your help.”

“ Listen, darling,” Linda said to her husband, “he’s right, at least we’d be doing something. He wants to save our daughter and he needs our help.”

Mohi Tuhiwai was silent for a moment, then said, “He’ll have it.”

“ She’s on a boat that’s being refitted, in a port somewhere. An old iron sailboat, probably big, the refit is being cheaply done. They’re using pine where they should be using teak. We find the boat, we find her. Also there is a man working at the Park Side Motel that might know something.”

It had been dark for almost an hour when Jim Monday and Mohi Tuhiwai drove into the parking lot at the Park Side Motel. They had spent a discouraging six hours checking out the sailboats in and around Whangarei and found only two that looked like they might be what there were looking for. One, the Sundowner, an iron clipper in the marina, hadn’t seen a refit in the last ten or fifteen years and the other, the Reptil Rache, an old iron Dutch schooner converted into a cruising boat, but it had a new teak deck, a new paint job and new sails. It looked first rate, a very expensive refit. Not the cheap job he had witnessed earlier. Either the boat he was looking for wasn’t in Whangarei or it had sailed earlier in the day.

Jim felt he was missing something.

Mohi shut the engine off and they got out of the car. It was raining hard and he held his hand above his forehead in a futile attempt to keep some of the rain out of his eyes. Jim, with a quick dash from the car to the office, didn’t bother.

“ Remember me?” Jim asked, shaking water from himself.