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24

Oh, shit,” said Gideon. He sawed through the anchor rope as he heard the engines of their own boat fire up. The Turquesa leapt forward just as the rope parted, the dual jet drives blasting a huge roll of water behind as the boat surged.

As they roared into the darkness the deck gun erupted behind them with incredible noise, a column of white water stitching toward them. The Turquesa veered abruptly, so hard that Gideon was thrown into the rail and almost went into the water, the rounds zipping past their stern, then whipping around again. The boat jerked once more, zigzagging, the hull almost coming clear of the water with each turn, Gideon clinging with both arms to the rail, his legs dangling over the side. There was a sudden eruption of water at the bow and the sound of rounds smacking into fiberglass and Kevlar. But the Turquesa was moving fast, and soon the gouts of water kicked up by the gun were going ever more wild.

They surged out of the bay and hit the swells coming around the point — a rough sea that almost swamped them. Amy slowed slightly, to stabilize the vessel, but it was still leaping and pounding through the swells. Gideon managed to climb back through the rail and crawl into the pilothouse.

“Damn,” said Amy, staring at the radar. “They’re coming after us.”

Gideon grabbed a pair of binoculars and looked back. The Horizonte, brilliantly lit, was indeed following them. Fast.

Amy reached down and slapped a bunch of circuit breakers with the palm of her hand, dousing all the lights on the boat. A moment later the Horizonte also went dark.

“They can’t outrun us,” said Gideon.

Amy stared at the radar. “I’m not so sure about that.”

“That tub?”

“That tub is going thirty knots and getting faster. It must have monstrous engines. And it’s a much heavier boat — it can plow this sea better than we can.”

Even in the darkness, Gideon could see blood running down her leg and pooling on the deck. “Amy, you’re hurt. That hook—”

“Superficial. Didn’t pierce the peritoneum.”

“We need to stop the bleeding. It can’t wait.”

“It has to wait. A storm is coming. As the sea gets rougher, they’re going to gain on us.”

“I’ll take the helm while you take care of that wound.”

“No.”

“I insist—”

You’ll obey my orders.” She said it quietly, but with such conviction that Gideon knew it was pointless to argue.

“I’m going to treat you right here, then.”

She didn’t reply. Gideon went into the galley, clinging to everything as the boat lurched through the rough sea. Feeling around in the darkness, he brought up a first-aid kit and some water in a squirt bottle. She didn’t stop him while he opened her pajama top, sponged out the wound and examined it. The hook had made an inch-long cut. He cleaned it with Betadine, spread on some antibiotic ointment, taped the wound shut, and applied a dressing.

The boat continued to leap through the dark sea. He could see nothing around them but darkness, broken only by the faint gray outlines of streaming whitecaps. But the Horizonte was visible on radar, a green blob half a nautical mile directly behind them.

“They’re gaining,” said Amy.

“What’s the range of a 50-caliber machine gun?”

“Two thousand yards.”

He peered at the radar screen. “They’re only a thousand yards out already.”

“In a sea like this, both of us moving the way we are, they can’t aim.”

“They’ll put a lot of lead in the air and try to take us down that way. Those rounds’ll go right through our Kevlar hull.”

As if in response, he heard a distant, rapid-fire burst from behind. Fifty yards to port, flashes of white water indicated where the rounds had hit. More fire, more white water, this time to starboard.

The boat thundered on, banging and leaping off the waves. Gideon could hear stuff crashing about in the galley.

Amy changed course. “We’re not going to outrun them,” she said. “Find us a plan B.”

“Plan B?”

“It’s all I can do to drive this boat.”

Gideon’s mind raced through a dozen possibilities, rejecting them all. There was another fusillade of fire from the Horizonte.

“Gideon—!”

“Okay, okay. I have an idea. We’ll light up our launch like a Christmas tree, send it off, use it as a decoy while we escape in the darkness.”

Amy rolled her eyes. “They have radar. They can tell the difference between a dinghy and a yacht.”

Gideon fell silent.

And then Amy said: “No, wait. It could work.”

“How?”

“Radar reflectors. In the rear storage chest.”

“Radar reflectors?”

“Metal objects you hang from the mast in a fog to make yourself more visible to ship’s radar.”

“That would make the launch look as big as the Turquesa?”

“Yes. Hang them on the launch as high as possible.”

“Got it.”

Gideon exited the pilothouse, staggering, holding on to whatever he could find. The wind roared around his ears, the boat shuddering and slamming through the sea. He unlatched the storage chest and there — between coiled ropes and other assorted equipment — were two round metal objects with crosspieces inside them, attached to wires. As he pulled them out, he heard another burst of machine-gun fire. Gouts of water swung past the stern.

The Turquesa’s launch, an eleven-foot Zodiac, was hanging on davits at the stern, swinging violently. There was nothing sticking up he could hang the reflectors on…and then he noticed the rod mounts on either side.

Deep-sea fishing rods…

Lurching down into the cluttered galley, Gideon threw open the rod cabinets, quickly assembling the two biggest marlin rods he could find, tying the radar reflectors onto their ends. Back on deck, he climbed into the Zodiac, which was pitching madly, and managed to insert the rods into the mounts, securing the handles in place with duct tape from the storage chest. He set one hurricane lamp in the bow and another in the stern. Then, after a moment’s thought, he pulled the extra gas tank from its berth and hauled it into the Zodiac as well.

More gunfire from astern.

Now he had to lower the Zodiac into the water, with the boat going thirty-five knots in a heavy sea. This was going to be fun.

Climbing out of the launch, he rummaged in a rear cargo box, finding a long towrope. He fixed it to the front bow eye of the Zodiac and wrapped the other end around a rear cleat on the Turquesa. Slowly — stabilizing himself as best he could to ensure he wasn’t jolted overboard by the heavy swells — he switched on the hurricane lamps and then lowered the boat from the davits. But when it hit the water, it spun off the davits like a leaf and almost flipped over, saved only when Gideon released a good ten feet of rope.

The Zodiac stabilized and was now planing behind the yacht, riding its wake. Slowly, carefully, he let out more rope, until it found a stable place in the wake about fifty feet back. Then he tied it off and went into the pilothouse.

“Everything’s set,” he said.

“When you release the launch, I’ll execute an immediate escape maneuver — a course change.”

“We need to go the way they’d least expect,” he said.

“Leave it to me.”

Another burst. A couple of rounds clipped through the side of the pilothouse at an angle, showering them with splinters of fiberglass.

“Son of a bitch!” Without hesitating Gideon scrambled back to the stern, reached out, and cut the towrope. “Done!” he called out.