I was still puzzled why this boat didn’t seem to have a builder’s plaque. On Connie’s boat, it was nailed to the hatch cover. Where would it be on a Cheoy Lee?
There had been nothing of a plaque-like description in the cockpit. I didn’t find it in my crawl around the interior of Alice in Wonderland. The only objects hanging on the bulkhead were a barometer and a clock, and one of Andy Albury’s smaller half-boat models. From the slightly pitted brass, I could tell that the barometer and the clock had been there forever, but the boat model looked new.
I popped up to the cockpit, grabbed a screwdriver from the array on the bench and quickly backed out one of the screws that held the ship model in place. I loosened the second screw and moved the model to one side.
The model had been hiding two screw holes, about six inches apart, but whatever had been mounted there was gone.
I had to give Jaime Mueller credit. When he stole a boat, he was thorough.
I snapped a picture of the screw holes with my iPhone, reattached the model and got the hell out.
Paul raised both hands. ‘Stop babbling, Hannah.’
I had been going on and on about Wanderer, starting from when I first spotted the vessel in the boatyard, followed by a blow-by-blow description of what led up to my discovery of the spaghetti-sauce spill.
‘Don’t build me a watch, Hannah. Just tell me what time it is.’
‘Alice in Wonderland is Wanderer,’ I sputtered. ‘And I think we can prove it.’
‘Ah.’ Paul laced his fingers together and rested his hands on his chest. ‘The spaghetti-sauce clue.’
‘Don’t be impossible!’ I pawed in my fanny pack for my iPhone, launched the camera icon, and showed Paul the picture of the number written on the bottom of the drawer.
‘2304. What does that mean?’ he asked.
‘I don’t know. I was hoping you’d tell me.’ I flicked forward to the picture of the pair of screw holes I’d discovered in the wall behind the ship model. ‘And here’s where something was removed from the wall. Could have been the builder’s plaque.’
Paul slipped the iPhone out of my fingers and studied the picture closely. ‘Hard to tell from this. Could have been anything mounted up there. “The Captain’s Word is Law” or “Don’t Flush Anything You Haven’t Eaten First.”’
‘Ha ha ha.’ I pinched his ear lobe, hard, then sat down on the sofa. ‘I looked all over the boat for its hull identification number, but couldn’t find one.’
‘I hate to tell you this, Hannah, but boats built in the sixties weren’t required to have hull identification numbers. Wanderer, and this boat, might not even have one.’
‘Bummer,’ I said. Then I brightened as a thought occurred to me. ‘Do you think Wanderer might have been documented? Can we look it up on the Internet?’ I stood up. ‘Where’s your laptop?’
With Paul’s help, I located the NOAA website where one could search the vessel documentation database by name. I typed in ‘Wanderer,’ pressed Enter, and waited for the results. I sat back, disappointed. ‘Oh, damn. There’s a hundred and seventy-two of them!’
‘It’s a popular name, Hannah. Eric Hiscock sailed three or four Wanderers around the world and wrote books about it. He’s every blue-water dreamer’s hero.’
‘Help me to narrow it down, then. What’s Wanderer’s port of call?’
‘If it’s not Annapolis, I don’t have a clue.’
Only one vessel hailed from Annapolis, and it wasn’t a Cheoy Lee Reliant, but as I scrolled through the display, I realized I could also narrow the search by boat length. Five minutes later I cried, ‘I found it!’ and then, ‘Dammit!’ when I clicked on the record and found that, as Paul had predicted, the space for the hull identification number was blank.
‘Jot down the Coast Guard documentation number,’ Paul suggested. ‘Sometimes owners engrave them on the hull.’
I did as Paul suggested, but didn’t hold out much hope of that. I’d been all over that boat, and if there had been a Coast Guard number anywhere on board, I should have found it.
I stared at the computer screen, chewing my lower lip. ‘What now?’
‘Let’s ask the pro.’ Paul rose from his chair, crossed into the living room and picked up the radio. ‘Dive Gator, Dive Gator, this is Windswept.’ There was no response. After a couple of minutes, he tried again, but Gator was either busy or out of radio range.
‘Sit down and eat your lunch,’ Paul suggested. ‘It’s getting cold.’
‘I’m too upset to eat.’ I tucked my conch burger back into its Styrofoam clamshell and stuck it into the fridge. ‘If Jaime Mueller has Frank and Sally’s boat, then where are Frank and Sally?’
I washed my hands, tried to reach Gator again. This time he replied. ‘What can I do for you, Hannah?’
Since I didn’t want to broadcast my suspicions to everyone who might have been listening in on that channel, I made arrangements to drop by Gator’s office when he returned from his dive.
The afternoon dragged.
I spent some time Googling Cheoy Lee. The company was still in business, but hadn’t made the Reliant since 1976. They built large power yachts now. There appeared to be an active owners’ association, however. I bookmarked both.
Just as I was about to email the Rhodes Reliant and Offshore Forty website, the power failed. I telephoned the Bahamas Electric Company to report the outage. The worker who answered the phone assured me the power would be back in an hour, but with the BEC, that didn’t mean a damn thing. Could be an hour, could be days, depending upon how long it took workers to find and repair the break in the underwater cable. Molly swears they do it with duct tape.
No power, no backup generator, no Internet. Bummer.
Nothing to do but wait.
ELEVEN
THE NATIONAL VESSEL DOCUMENTATION CENTER FACILITATES MARITIME COMMERCE AND THE AVAILABILITY OF FINANCING WHILE PROTECTING ECONOMIC PRIVILEGES OF UNITED STATES CITIZENS THROUGH THE ENFORCEMENT OF REGULATIONS, AND PROVIDES A REGISTER OF VESSELS AVAILABLE IN TIME OF WAR OR EMERGENCY TO DEFEND AND PROTECT THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA.Mission Statement, United States Coast Guard,National Vessel Documentation Center
I found Gator in the cockpit of Deep Magic, slinging empty air tanks on to the dock. I stopped to help.
‘You know that missing sailboat, the Wanderer?’
Gator stopped in mid-swing. ‘Yup.’
‘I think I found it.’
He lowered the tank to the deck and squinted up at me. ‘You’re shitting me. Where?’
‘It’s in Pinder’s boatyard. It’s been stripped and repainted, but I’m pretty sure it’s the same vessel.’ I explained how I knew the Parkers and had sailed on their boat. I told him about the tartan upholstery, the penciled numbers, the telltale screw holes, and even about the spaghetti sauce.
‘Come on. Let’s have a look.’
Faster than I would have thought possible, Gator stepped from Deep Magic to the dock, leaving his boat rocking. He double-timed it up the pier in the direction of his golf cart. By the time I caught up to him, he was already turning the key in the ignition. ‘Hop in.’
The engine sputtered and caught. Gator reached behind his right leg to shove the gear into forward, and we were off. At the boatyard, he brought the cart to a jarring halt in front of the utility shed, hopped out, and motioned for me to follow.
We found Daniel and another Haitian on board the Alice in Wonderland, busily brushing teak oil on the decking.