P Deutermann - The Moonpool

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Tony passed up our gear and then, as agreed, backed away quietly and headed back out to the Cape Fear River. I led Moira up the slanting ladder to the bridge area, and we went through the same interior door Cap’n Pete had used to see if Trask was on board. A centerline companionway led down into the main lounge. I assumed there were cabins forward and the usual amenities aft of the lounge. Moira stretched out on a deep sofa and ran her fingers through her hair. We’d left the interior lights off, but I checked our surroundings through the portholes anyway. The shepherds went around checking out the scents and then plopped themselves down in front of the couch.

I really hadn’t wanted to bring Moira along, but even she recognized that if the Bureau was going to pick me up again, they’d sure as hell pick her up as well. I’d driven to Southport as fast as I could without sucking up a speeding ticket and explained what was going on to my two guys. It was Tony who’d suggested Trask’s boat as a hiding place, at least initially. Pardee had taken my Suburban over to the local Wal-Mart parking lot, parked it, and walked back to the beach house. If the FBI showed up, their story would be that Moira and I went out somewhere and they hadn’t a clue as to where we’d gone after that. That would hold up for a day, at most, but by then we’d be across the river with at least some freedom of movement. Tony and I had traded cell phones just to confuse any existing eavesdropping triangulation systems.

I sat down in a recliner next to the couch and started to explain to Moira why I’d decided to run, at least until Ari Quartermain got to the bottom of this mysterious videotape.

“You don’t have to convince me,” she said with a wave of her hand. “Somebody parked at least one dot-exe file on my Web computer that refuses to scrub, so I figured your Gestapo still loves me.”

“You’ve seen that before?”

She nodded. “Just before they came the last time,” she said. “I had all the resources of the U’s computer lab, and, short of putting the computer in a swimming pool, I still couldn’t make it go away. That’s a federal intrusion, and probably from a National Security Agency super.”

“Can they track you physically if you go online, say, from here?”

“Yes,” she said simply. “If it’s wireless, say, a coffee shop or bookstore, the wi-fi network is registered to a physical place or place of business. If it’s via a cell phone, they can triangulate the towers. If it’s a dial-up, it’s moving over a domestic or business telephone number, all of which have a physical address.”

“Shit, when did all this happen?”

She smiled. “Despite Mr. Gore’s claims, the Internet was created by the Defense Department. They never create anything to which they don’t have supervisory access. That’s not to say it can’t be spoofed, and I can make it really hard. But we’re talking about putting a laptop up against a Cray supercomputer or ten. Bad odds, over time.”

I got up and went around to the portholes again, checking to see if anyone was coming toward or down our pier. But the marina remained asleep, so I dropped back down into the waiting arms of the recliner. Suddenly I was pretty tired and found myself trying to stifle a big yawn. That set Moira off, and then she sat up and patted the corner of the couch. I moved over as she made a pillow out of a car blanket draped across the back of the couch, lay down, and put her head in my lap.

“I just have one question, Mr. Ex-policeman.”

“Shoot.”

“If everybody thinks this Trask guy was murdered, won’t they come here? To where he lived? Won’t they want to search this boat, see if anything points to a motive or something?”

I stared down at her for a second. Of course they would. They’d rustle up a search warrant first thing in the morning and be here in force by nine or so. Shit.

“All of you ex-cops, and you didn’t think of that?” she asked in mock disbelief.

“Some of us ex-cops have had a long effing day,” I said grouchily, mostly because she was absolutely right. None of us had thought it through, and unless we were willing to steal this boat, we’d be seeing a herd of Buroids on deck with the morning sun. At this stage of the game, I was almost willing to just wait for them to show up. Almost.

The cell phone in my jacket pocket vibrated. It was Pardee. Tony hadn’t returned yet, but the beach house had had night visitors. He’d changed the story: Tony was out on the town with Moira, and I was, to the best of his knowledge, still at the power plant. They’d asked to look around, and he’d told them to come back with a warrant, which they promised they would, and when they did, et cetera, et cetera.

“But here’s the thing,” he began.

“I know-we’ve already figured that out.”

“Yeah-okay. Which is why I’ve turned Tony around.”

Then I heard the tramp of footsteps out on the main pier. It sounded like they were coming our way.

“Turn him around again, Pardee,” I said wearily. “I think we’re busted.”

Actually, we weren’t. The footsteps turned out to be two severely inebriated yachtsmen who were trying to goose-step down the pier to their boat. I watched the two clowns make it to their gangway, where they sat down and promptly had another nip.

Too early the next morning I took the mutts down the pier to a grassy area in front of the marina office to let them make their morning insults. I left them out on deck when I got back. Thirty minutes later, I thought I heard them walking around aft as if they were interested in something back there. I went to the portholes, but it was still misty dark outside except for the lights coming from the marina parking lot. None of the nearby boats was showing any lights, and the marina office was still dark. One of the dogs scratched pitifully on the back door, so I relented and went back to bring them in from the cold.

When I opened the door, I discovered both shepherds totally immobilized in what looked like black nylon fishnets, and two space aliens dressed all in black pointing stubby assault rifles at my face. There seemed to be six more climbing over the boat’s transom as I stood there like a complete idiot.

I had to admit: They were good. Really good. They’d managed to get alongside the boat without alerting the shepherds, immobilize them without a sound, and board the Keeper without either of us feeling or hearing anything. The leader of the squad motioned for me to back up into the narrow companionway between the galley and the vestibule leading down into the engine compartment. His face was entirely concealed by a tactical SWAT mask, but the muzzle of his weapon was in plain view and unwavering. Three of them squeezed by the leader with the muffled sounds of body armor, and then I heard a little squeak from Moira in the main lounge. A minute later, Moira and I were sitting on the couch, our hands in our laps bound by plastic handcuffs looped through our belts, and the room was filling up with men in black.

They spread out, quietly but efficiently, throughout the boat, making sure there wasn’t anyone else on board. Within about a minute, the entire crew was back in the main lounge. There were none of the usual “Clear!” reports being shouted from room to room. Instead I heard a muttering sound among the group, which was when I realized they were networked on a tactical headset radio circuit. This was not your garden-variety SWAT team. They were big, and their body armor made them look huge. One of them found Moira’s cell phone. He picked it up, scanned the screen, and then extracted the battery and the SIM card. Then he crunched the plastic carcass in his gloved hand and dropped the plastic bits into a trashcan by the desk.

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