Death Echo
boats, moored freight barges, and the occasional yacht. As they reached a long-line troller that was tied off to a buoy, Blackbird roared up to the fuel dock, leaving the kind of wake that threw boats around. The smaller boats tied to the transient mooring around the fuel dock got the worst ride.
âIdiot,â Mac breathed into his headset.
âI like what that fish captain yelled better,â Emma answered softly. âNot sure I caught that last reference, though.â
âSomething about a chainsaw enema.â
âYikes. They grow âem mean out here.â
âFlop some of that bullwhip kelp over your bow,â Mac said. âIt will help to ride out the wake.â
She dragged a strand of kelp as thick as her arm over the bow just in time for the first two-foot-high wave. Before the last of the wake stopped throwing the kayaks around, Blackbird âs twin was being tied up at the dock. Amanar stood on the dark swim step and passed a stern line to the attendant while Lovich leaped out and strode toward the store like a man on a mission. He ignored the surly shouts from people who didnât approve of his wake or his landing speed.
âOne down,â Mac said very softly.
âOne left on the boat,â she said.
She dumped the kelp off her bow and followed Mac toward Blackbird. With every dip of her paddle, she willed Amanar to step onto the dock, leaving the boat empty. It had been a long, hard ride from Port Hardy. Surely the man would want to stretch his land legs during refueling.
Mac checked Blackbird . The dock attendant had already handed one thick delivery hose up to Amanar, who was positioning it near one intake. The attendant trotted back to the pumps and flicked it on. Soon the hose was humming with fuel being pumped into the thirsty Blackbird .
âFigure about twenty gallons a minute,â Mac murmured. âFigure twenty minutes, if theyâre topping off, twice as long if theyâre running low. A little extra time thrown in for counting all the cash. Twenty-three minutes, minimum, unless the attendant goes slow to punish them for the rude landing.â
âPlenty of time for a silent approach,â Emma said softly, âif Amanar gets the hell off the boat.â
âBig if. Those two might not be trained, but theyâre meaner than the average boat jockey.â
It didnât take long for the port tank. Amanar grabbed the hose, shut the fuel port, and moved the hose to the starboard tank intake.
âThat was fast,â she said.
Mac was silent.
Emma looked at his outline. Relaxed, motionless, waiting for whatever happened next.
Sniper at work.
I donât have the patience to be a sniper, she thought. Iâd rather kick Amanarâs butt overboard and get on with it.
Or is that the âCoastguard Cocktailâ talking?
She had taken the two pills Faroe had included in her belly pack gear. The first pill relaxed the long muscles of the gut so seasickness wasnât an issue. The second one was speed, pure and simple. It cut through any mental fuzziness caused by the first pill.
And made her a bit edgy.
She waited quietly anyway. The fuel dock was well illuminated. Other boats were within calling distance. Some had cabin lights on.
Damn, I hope Graceâs decoy works, she thought.
Emma reached for her cell phone in the waterproof belly pack and waited next to Mac, two shadows among the deepening shadows of Tofino harbor sliding into night.
âBreathe,â Mac murmured through his mic. âSlow and easy.â
Emma realized that she had been holding her breath.
Stupid newbie mistake, she told herself.
She breathed, slow and easy.
By the time the refueling was winding up, she was almost as relaxed as Mac. As the fuel hose left Blackbird, Emma hit the send button on her cell phone. If the insurance company didnât call the dock number as arranged, it would be a lot harder to get aboard. And it wouldnât be real silent.
A buzzer sounded above the door of the fuel dock office. The attendant trotted inside and picked up the phone on the second ring. He spoke for a moment or two, then called out, âAnyone named Lovich here?â
âGo,â Mac said.
70
DAY SIX
TOFINO
6:59 P.M.
W hile Lovich walked from the lighted chartroom that was part of the chandlery, Mac and Emma paddled out from behind the cover of the troller. They saw Lovich take the phone with an impatient movement.
Then
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