‘I can’t imagine why,’ I teased.
Poor Mr Pinder! His boatyard was a disaster. One powerboat had been blown off its jacks, toppled into the next, which fell against the next… over and over they had tipped and toppled, like a giant game of dominoes. ‘This breaks my heart,’ Paul said, surveying the damage.
‘Wanderer’s not here, thank goodness,’ I told him. ‘Last time I saw her, she was in dry dock. C’mon.’ I grabbed Paul’s hand and together we managed to climb over the debris that separated the boatyard from the marine railway. The space that Wanderer had once occupied stood empty.
‘Where’s Alice in Wonderland?’ I asked one of the yard hands who was bent over, picking up wood and other debris and adding it to a big pile near a dumpster.
He straightened. ‘Jaime Mueller thought she’d be safer tied up to a mooring ball.’
‘Where?’
The yard hand pointed, but I didn’t see anything in the harbor but empty water.
The yard hand shaded his eyes and squinted. ‘Ooops. So much for safety. Doesn’t look like she made it, does it?’
Five minutes later, we boarded Deep Magic.
Gator eased his boat into the harbor, proceeding slowly, steering a careful path through the floating debris. As we cleared the marina I stood up. ‘Over there!’
Gator spun the wheel. ‘What? Where?’
‘That mast sticking out of the water. I think it’s Wanderer. I recognize the radar dome.’
As we neared the obstacle, Gator cut the throttle, drifting as close as he dared. I held on to the gunwale and peered over the side, my eyes following along the length of the mast all the way to the bottom where Wanderer indeed lay. She appeared peaceful, undamaged, as if she’d simply turned over on her side and fallen asleep. A parrot fish pecked at the transom where it said, Alice in Wonderland.
Molly leaned on the gunwale next to me, chin resting on her hands. ‘The End,’ she said, wistfully, capitalizing each word.
Gazing at the sunken boat where we’d spent so many happy hours, I said, ‘I’m not so sure about that.’
I crossed the deck and stood behind Gator as he shifted into reverse and backed Deep Magic away from Wanderer. ‘What about the mini-sub?’ I asked him.
‘What mini-sub?’ Paul wanted to know.
I explained about the now-you-see-it-now-you-don’t mystery vessel. ‘Sometimes I put two and two together and come up with five, but this time I think I’m right. As weird as it seems, I think Jaime Mueller was using that submarine to run drugs. Nothing else makes sense.’
‘Something funny was definitely going on at that beach,’ Molly added. ‘You’d think it was a top-secret military base the way Mueller guarded it.’
Gator motored past the settlement dumpsters that had disgorged their contents into the harbor, picking his way carefully through floating garbage as he rounded the headland at Poinciana Point. Miraculously, Henry’s airplane seemed to have survived the blow, if you discounted the broken wing. It had been sheltered from the worst of Helen’s wrath by the trees of Poinciana Point.
‘I’m having flashbacks,’ Paul said as we neared the plane. He shivered.
I took his hand and squeezed three times: I. Love. You.
With Gator at the controls, Deep Magic nosed in, eased out, nosed in as we searched the water around the Savage Cub for the blue mini-sub.
‘Gone,’ I said at last. ‘Do you think it’s been swept out to sea by the storm?’
Gator shook his head. ‘Not if that plane wasn’t. That mini-sub’s gone, someone drove it out of here.’
‘Well, lookey-lookey!’ Molly caroled in my ear.
I followed her gaze. Whatever had been in the Kelchner’s cottage had disappeared, too. Nothing but a cinderblock foundation remained. Everything else was gone, gone with the wind.
We were heading back to find Pro Bono when I noticed something floating off Poinciana Point. At first I thought it was a tree limb, or a piling. I blinked, refocused, but still couldn’t turn it into a piling. ‘Paul, what’s that?’
‘Part of the airplane?’ He shrugged. ‘There could be anything floating out here about now. Even a body.’
Paul was joking, but as Gator edged closer, I saw that it was a body, floating face down, arms splayed.
Gator noticed it about the same time I did. ‘Bite your tongue, Ives.’ He guided Deep Magic closer, cut the engine, and coaxed the boat sideways until the body lay along the starboard side. ‘I’ll need a boat hook.’
Paul pulled a boat hook from the rack and handed it over.
I watched as Gator used it to hook the victim by the belt. ‘Help me, Paul.’
‘You want to lift him into the boat?’
‘No. I want to turn him over.’
Leaning carefully over the side, the two men tugged and pushed until the body rolled slowly over. Looking up into the sky with sightless eyes was what was left of Jaime Mueller.
I gasped, sat back. It wasn’t out of surprise at the identity of the victim – I had been half expecting that. It was because Jaime’s entire left leg had been torn off at the hip.
Gator buried his face in his hands. ‘Shit, man. I counted heads. Thought he’d made it back after the eye. Drowning’s a helluva way to die.’
‘This is the last time I go out boating with you, Gator Crockett,’ Molly scolded. ‘Every time I do, we turn up a body.’
‘The police…’ I began.
‘I hear you,’ Gator said.
I took a deep, shuddering breath. ‘We just can’t leave him here.’
‘We can in a way.’ He passed the boat hook to Paul. ‘Here. Hang on to him for a minute.’
While Deep Magic bobbed erratically on the restless sea and Paul tried to hold on, Gator went rummaging in the box where he kept his equipment, coming up a few minutes later with a dinghy anchor. He made a rope fast to the anchor, then looped the other end through Jaime’s belt and tied it securely. Then he threw the anchor overboard.
‘Now we call in the pros,’ he said, picking up his microphone. ‘Dive Guana, Dive Guana, this is Deep Magic. Come in Troy.’
Jaime Mueller’s would be one of five bodies claimed by Hurricane Helen. Found floating by a fisherman off Poinciana Point. Sharks may have contributed to Mr Mueller’s deathThe Abaconian would report.
But, I had seen the fury, the tears in Alice’s eyes.
I knew that Jaime was dead before he even hit the water.
Whoever recommended the mangrove was right on the money. Except for minor scrapes, Pro Bono had survived. In a matter of minutes we untied all the lines, climbed aboard and with a farewell wave to Gator, headed back to Bonefish Cay.
Molly’s dock was canted up and missing some planks, but still useable. Likewise ours, although we’d lost our favorite bench from the end of the pier. Branches, palm fronds, coconuts, even whole bushes, littered both yards and trash would continue to wash up on the shore for weeks. Paul hurried to check on his pet banana tree and when I heard him cheer, I knew it, too, had survived.
Inside the house, it was if the storm never happened. ‘Molly was right,’ I told my husband. ‘These houses are bulletproof. We should have stayed here.’ I pawed though Mother Hubbard’s cupboard, checking each can, looking for something that might do for dinner.
Paul opened the refrigerator, but there was no light to greet him. No milk, no cheese, no leftover spaghetti, no ice for his Bahama Mama. The corners of his mouth turned down in a pout, purely phony. ‘I guess it’s time for me to set up that generator.’
Before she left the island and the battered Tamarind Tree Resort and Marina, I paid a call on Gabriele. She met me in the dining room where a simple cold lunch was being served to the worker bees she’d hired to put the place in order.