Death Echo
SIX
NORTHERN VANCOUVER ISLAND
3:16 P.M.
E mma lowered the binoculars for a moment and closed her eyes to rest them. Both she and Mac had been in the air, staring through binoculars since dawn. She had seen some breathtakingly wild placesâevergreens clinging to rocky cliffs, moss in more shades of green and brown than she could name, water both fresh and salt, calm and roiled, colors of gray and silver and blue impossible to describe.
Then there were the boats. Some small freighters or tankers, cruise ships shifting locations for the winter season, fishing boats, crabbing boats, prawning boats, sailboats, tugboats, log barges, freight barges, inflatables, rowboats, skiffs, power cruisers both dainty and extravagant. She and Mac had examined everything that could float and a few that shouldnât have.
They hadnât seen anything that looked like Blackbird .
Mac hung up his cell phone and spoke through the headphone link to Emma. âSteele says Harrow has at least two planes working south, covering Seattle and the San Juan Islands. Faroe wants us to stay north of Campbell River in case Black Swan is still up here somewhere under wraps.â
âButââ Emma began.
âThe problem is,â Mac continued, âshe could appear anywhere, because she could have been hidden anywhere from Southeast Alaska to the B.C. coast above Vancouver Island.â
âWouldnât that cause a stir? Thatâs an expensive boat to be left for months at a time.â
âItâs not unusual for summer yachties to leave their boats stashed in safe ports up north for the winter, fly out to Florida or Mexico, and fly back in the spring or summer. Some people hire transit captains to bring their baby north to south and back again.â
Emma digested that as she tried to ignore the growling, low-frequency grind of the big radial engine sitting a few feet in front of her. Even with the headset to dampen the bone-deep, droning roar, she felt like she was inside a metal coffin that was being beaten with baseball bats.
She hadnât liked small planes before she stepped aboard this one. Now she respected the sturdy DeHavilland for its ability to rise and fall with the terrain and wind, and land in hair-raising places; but she still didnât like it.
âGive me a boat any day,â she muttered.
âWhat?â Mac said.
âItâs noisy in here.â
âTry the engine room of Blackbird, when she was running.â
âNo thanks.â
âYou sure?â he asked. âI have extra ear protectors.â Or had.
âThe pilot must be deaf.â
âOnly in the lower ranges.â
The pilot was a man of indeterminate age and complete control of his airplane. Whatever his per-hour rate was, he earned it.
âThereâs Chatham Point,â the pilot said over the intercom, pointing ahead through the windshield at a bright, white-and-red-striped lighthouse on a finger of land. âNo noncommercial black, approximately forty-feet-long hulls on the water that I can see. Iâll make a lower pass to be certain.â
Mac put down his binoculars. Heâd learned that the pilotâs eye was so good it was almost eerie, reflecting a combination of expertise and a sixth sense. He could tell the difference between a forty-and a fifty-foot cruiser at a thousand feet.
The plane banked, drifted lower, and circled as though looking for a place to land.
Emma scanned the water through her glasses.
âAnything?â Mac asked.
âNothing we want.â She sighed and lowered the glasses. âThe Inside Passage is an extraordinary, beautiful maze. And maddening. Did I mention that? You could lose an armada down there.â
The radio crackled.
âWeâll need to refuel soon,â the pilot said. âYou want me to do it at Campbell River or Port Hardy?â
âPort Hardy,â Mac said. âWeâre going to give the far northern stretch another look.â
âRoger Port Hardy.â
Emma listened, put the binoculars back to her eyes. She refused to let despair creep over her as she watched the countless, intricate waterways of the Inside Passage and listened to the clock ticking relentlessly in her head.
Weâll find Blackbirdâ s twin.
We have to.
66
DAY SIX
PORT HARDY
4:35 P.M.
T he seaplane splashed down fifty yards off the breakwater that protected the boat basin at Port Hardy. In choppy water, the plane taxied
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