Authors: Chris Ryan
Ter Haar turned her phone on and the screen came up with the picture of the pink fluffy toy Hex had sent to her. She'd kept it as her start-up picture for the week. Ter Haar saw it and immediately lost interest. He dropped the phone on the floor where it clattered and bounced, the LCD screen cracking and the glowing pink blob vanishing. Broken. Now it wouldn't tell any tales.
That told Amber a number of things. Ter Haar wasn't used to this game – doing things where people might be spying on you. Someone professional would have checked the phone thoroughly, not discarded it. That made things a bit better for her. But it also told her he wasn't going to keep pretending she was just a simple thief. Here, Ter Haar and his hired muscle were a law unto themselves.
And that didn't look good at all.
Ter Haar walked off towards the lounge, leaving Amber alone with the hit man. She doubted that his name was really John, but she knew that he was very, very dangerous.
The hit man moved her easily out onto the terrace at the front of the house. He did it as though manhandling people by force was the most natural thing in the world. Down below were the strangely coloured pools of the old salt pans.
Paulo and Li were still in position up in the woods. Would they be able to see? What would they do? And what did the hit man plan to do with her?
She walked slowly, awkwardly, to give her time to think of a plan. The hit man pushed her roughly. Amber still had the towel and held it up to her face, whimpering into it so that she looked completely cowed.
'Be quiet,' he said. He reached to take the towel away, Amber pulled back and he yanked it again. Amber seized her chance. She flipped around in a judo twist, using the man's momentum to throw him off balance, but he twisted out of it, grabbing Amber by the scruff of her neck and dragging her to the nearest pond. Her feet became tangled in the towel and her neck burned as his nails dug into her flesh. As they hit the gravel, her knees crunched. The water loomed up, mottled fuchsia and red like a sky at sunset. As if in slow motion she could see the reflection of her own dark, frightened face and wide eyes with the powerful figure behind. She smelled the stagnant water and saw the slimy algae fronds waving like rotten spinach.
Then her face was in the water.
She squeezed her mouth and eyelids together. The brine seared her nose like acid and she prayed she could keep it out of her eyes. The hit man pulled her head up and she gasped in air. It tasted sweet. But not for long. Amber's head was forced down again, her mouth still open. Her lower lip, tongue and teeth shovelled up a heap of grit, slimy things tickled the roof of her mouth and the brine fired the back of her throat and made her gag. As her throat opened she sucked in more. It tasted disgusting, like putrid vegetables. Her eyes – she had to keep them shut.
He pulled her out and turned her head so that he could see her desperate face. Her eyes flew open and she spat, hard. Briny, slimy, gritty water blasted the hit man full in the face. He roared, his hands scrabbling at his eyes. Like an eel, Amber wriggled free.
She didn't look back; she just ran.
Li and Paulo had seen it all. Ter Haar's burly guard was on his feet, spluttering and rubbing his eyes. Amber's long legs pumped as she raced into the sugarcane plantation. She was coughing, but the bottom half of her body just carried on running regardless. Li had already texted Alex and Hex when they saw Amber being brought outside. Now she texted them again:
Amber on the run. B careful tracing. Pursuer has gun.
The burly man lifted his gun and fired after Amber. Li and Paulo jumped at the sound.
Then he gave chase.
Paulo grabbed Li. 'We'd better find more cover. We don't know if he'll end up coming over here.' He started squirming along the ground on his front, like a lizard climbing a wall, and Li followed. They batted aside the slender stalks of sugar cane with their arms, like swimmers doing breaststroke, while wildlife scooted away from them – lizards, rabbits with white tails, bug-eyed frogs, non-poisonous whipsnakes as long as Li's arm. The two friends kept down as flat as possible.
Behind them they heard more shots. They stopped, both holding their breath. Was there a scream? They couldn't see out of the plantation now – which probably meant they couldn't be seen either.
Li let out her breath. 'They're not coming this way. Should we go back? Set up a diversion?'
Paulo shook his head. 'We don't know where they've gone. We'd better get back to Hex and see where her tracer is.'
Li pulled out her compass and took a reading. 'Well, that way's north . . .'
Paulo picked up a stick from the dusty earth and drew a quick sketch. 'This is the house, which faced south-west. This is the road . . .'
Li consulted the compass again, then pointed to a spot on the map. 'We need to go this way.' She took out her phone and texted again:
L+P safe. Coming 2 U.
Paulo said quietly, 'He must have been trying to drown her in the salt pan so that she'd have salt in her lungs. Then they could throw her in the sea.'
Li's voice fell to a whisper. 'I don't like leaving her.'
Paulo's brown eyes were intense. 'If he's still shooting, that means she's still running.'
Amber's lungs were bursting, her legs burning. Her mouth felt scoured and raw. With her arms she beat aside the whippy stalks of cane, crashing them aside as though hacking them down. The hit man was behind her, running hard, the crash of his pursuit filling her ears and fuelling her with adrenaline. A shot whistled past her ear. If she stopped he would have a captive target. A deer crashed into her, but she kept her legs going, determined not to fall. The deer pummelled her with its tiny hooves. Still she ran. While she ran he couldn't stop to take aim – all he could do was shoot wildly. She must not stop. Must not.
Amber was fit but running at top speed was exhausting her. Yet still the man kept up. He was like a machine.
Where could she go? What could she do? Where would it end? He had a gun. It could just come down to who was the fitter. Although he was stronger, Amber had age on her side; she must be a good twenty years younger. She'd have to exhaust him.
Her breath was deafening in her ears, her blood roaring like a hurricane, but she could still hear the breathing of her pursuer and the sound of his footfalls. That was more frightening than any hurricane.
She stumbled into open space and her feet met hard tarmac. A blare of horn and a screech of brakes – a long, dusty red bonnet, then the back end of a pick-up truck flashing past. Amber found even more adrenaline and pumped her legs faster, plunging into the plantation on the other side of the road. She heard the horn again and hoped to hear a thump, but nothing came. Still, even if the truck hadn't knocked the hit man over it would have given her a lead. She raced on. Now the ground was sloping downwards . . . and under her feet was short, close-cropped grass.
Suddenly in front of her – a cliff edge. Below was the sea, white waves thrashing on jagged rocks. Her arms windmilled madly, then she recovered her balance and staggered back. She had nearly gone over.
But he was still coming, crashing closer and closer. Could she get past him again and back into the plantation? No. He would be able to stop and then he could shoot her. He'd certainly get her.
There was nowhere else for her to go.
Amber looked into the water below. It was at least thirty metres down, more than the height Danny had dived in his championship – a competition in which his opponent had been seriously injured. What chance did she have? She pulled herself up sternly. No good panicking, she told herself. You've seen a lesson.
Focus.
She thought of Danny doing his champion dive; she would pretend she was him. She launched herself up.
But her feet hadn't left the ground. She was still standing on the edge of the cliff. A dead goat was slumped bonelessly on a ledge halfway down, its eye staring up. Her body wouldn't allow her to jump.
The sugar cane crunched and snapped behind her. The hit man was there, his face red. He skidded to his knees and she turned and looked down the black hole of his gun barrel. Even after running like that he was ready to fire.
Time stopped. She was in the air, aware not of falling but of the wind. She struggled to keep her body straight, as though she was a mummy bandaged to a board. When she hit the water, feet first with her toes pointed and her legs clamped as hard together as it was possible, it was hard, like hitting a pane of glass. It shook her teeth.
She burst to the surface, spluttering, inhaling seawater and shooting it out again. Her first thought was that, after the brine, it tasted positively sweet. Then she got a mouthful of oil and it was like licking an engine. The jagged rocks were a few metres away and she began to swim towards them, but the current was sweeping her away.
Already exhausted, Amber couldn't fight it. She saw the bulky figure up on the cliff she'd dived from; the hit man looking down like a vulture. The choppy water kept closing over her head like a counterpane. When she next surfaced she saw him turning away, as though he no longer had to check whether she was being pulled out to sea.
Hex and Alex sat in the plantation monitoring the traces. Amber's blip raced through the plantation, paused – and went into the sea.
Alex grabbed his mobile and phoned the coastguard. 'I've just seen a woman go into the sea at—' Hex handed him the palmtop and Alex read off the co-ordinates. He finished the call. 'Greg's going to get her now.'
Hex nodded. 'Li and Paulo are quite close. They should be here in a few minutes.'
Alex stared at the screen with its three dots for a moment. 'Can you tune into coastguard frequencies on that thing? We could listen to what's going on.'
Hex shook his head. 'It's not a radio, you berk.'
They settled down to wait for Li and Paulo, watching as they drew closer on the screen. Amber's trace was still there too, but it would continue working whether she was alive or not.
Alex asked, 'Will that thing still work underwater?'
Hex shook his head. 'Not if she goes more than fifty centimetres below the surface.'
They fell silent. That wasn't much help. Drowned people didn't always go under immediately.
'She's the strongest swimmer of all of us,' said Alex.
He meant it as a comfort, but it gave Hex a vivid mental picture – of Amber fighting for her life between the waves.
Amber was out in the wide sea. The land had become alarmingly small and all around her was vast blue. If she lost that scrap of white cliff she would be lost for sure. She had given up fighting the current and was just trying to keep her head out of the water, letting the sea carry her where it wanted, moving up and down with the gentle rhythm of the waves as if carried in a cradle. Her senses were drowning in salt – salt and the alien, metallic smell of oil. Her mouth was bitter and slimy. It was as if the sea was all around her, insistently trickling through every crevice and orifice, claiming her like a wrecked boat.
She became aware of another smell. Diesel fumes. Something hit her; something solid. It bounced off her and bobbed on the water. She looked at it angrily.
A lifebelt, bright orange. Drifting away from her. And beyond it, a diesel-belching silver dinghy.
She managed to find a shred of strength, kicking towards the lifebelt. When her hand touched its solid, smooth surface she had so little strength she couldn't get it over her head; she was just able to hang on with both hands. Then strong arms hauled her up, over the rope looped on the sides of the dinghy and into a space that wasn't wet, or moving, but dry and warmed by the sun.
On all fours, racked by coughs, she couldn't stop shivering. Someone put a red blanket over her and she pulled it around her tightly and coughed her heart out.
When the spasm subsided she saw a face she knew. He had thinning blond hair, a deep tan and a lifejacket printed with the word
COASTGUARD
. Danny's friend Greg. And there, at the helm, was Danny himself.
She managed a weak grin. 'Hi, Danny.'
Danny was looking at her in astonishment. 'Amber, how on earth did you get in this mess?'
Amber's sense of humour began to return. She considered saying that she'd just done her first cliff dive and that he wouldn't have to worry about her as competition for his world title, but she suddenly felt very sick. She clawed her way to the side not a moment too soon. Her stomach heaved and she vomited into the sea.
'Danny, slow down,' said Greg. 'She looks seasick.'
Amber glared at him. She was an experienced sailor; the last thing she would be was seasick. But as she tried to say something her body had other ideas. She coughed and retched, unable to speak.
'She might have swallowed some of that oil,' said Danny. 'We'd better get her to M—' He had been about to say 'Mara', but then remembered that she was still at the police station. 'I mean, the medical centre,' he said instead. He opened the throttle and the nose of the boat came up in the water as the propeller bit.
Amber leaned back feeling groggy and exhausted, her mind filled with images of the dead birds slowly poisoned by oil. I'll be all right if I get help quickly, she said to herself. Those birds never got any help. Another bout of retching seized her. The spasm was so strong she had to twist her hands into the ropes on the edge of the dinghy.
Suddenly the radio was squawking: 'Mayday – mayday – mayday. This is
Black Gold, Black Gold, Black Gold.'
A distress call; Amber knew the protocol well, the message repeated three times on VHF Channel 16 in the hope that someone was nearby.
Greg flew to the radio. 'This is the coastguard, coastguard, coastguard – what's your position, position, position?'
The voice gave a position then suddenly went silent.
'Hello,
Black Gold}'
said Greg urgently. 'Come in,
Black Gold?'
He was answered only by static.
He tried again.
Moments later the radio crackled into life again. 'Hello, coastguard? Over.'
Greg hit the button. 'Coastguard receiving, go ahead. Over.'
'Coastguard, let's go to Channel Twelve, I'm afraid that was a false alarm.'
Greg frowned and switched to the different channel. The voice came through again.
'Hello, coastguard. I'm very sorry about this. My son got hold of the radio. I'm very sorry and it won't happen again. Over.'
Greg replied. 'Understood. You're quite sure you're not in any danger? Over.'
'Quite sure. It was a mistake. I'm very sorry. Over.'
Greg spoke again. 'We're always happy to answer emergencies but we'd appreciate it in future if you kept your son away from the equipment. You must tell him this is not a toy . . .'
Amber didn't hear the rest. She felt the queasiness return and had to lean over the side again. Her reflection in the choppy water reminded her of seeing herself in the salt pan. With the memory of its taste, she started vomiting once more.
Hex breathed a sigh of relief when he saw the small figure huddled miserably in a blanket in the dinghy. He left Alex, Li and Paulo standing on the veranda and skipped down to help Amber out as the boat rasped up onto the coral beach.
As he put out a hand to help her, she clung to it, quivering like an exhausted bird. His relief changed to worry. Are you OK?' he blurted.
She opened the red blanket. In her sunken, bloodshot eyes there was a twinkle. She was still wearing the uniform. Hex took in the short black dress with its white lacy pinafore, like a French maid's costume, now wet and clinging, grabbed the blanket and pulled it back around her.
'What have you been doing? You were supposed to be hunting for Bowman, not playing kinky games!'
Amber chuckled and allowed him to hurry her along to the others. It was as if he was trying to get away from this strangely dressed creature next to him. By the time they reached the others she felt miles better.
Paulo was looking at Amber with concern. 'We'd better get you to the medical centre,' he said.
Greg walked up behind them, a palm pilot in a rugged protective case in his hands. Behind him Danny was checking the boat over after the trip. 'Sorry, guys,' he said. 'Got to do some paperwork. I need some details about Amber.'
'Hex, you give them,' said Paulo. 'You know Amber best. I'll get her to the medical centre.'
Amber coughed as Paulo led her gently away. 'I reckon I look a bit rough.'
'No, you look lovely in that dress,' chuckled Paulo. Amber scowled at him and pulled the blanket tight around herself again.
'What do you need to know?' Hex asked Greg.
'Just statistics,' the coastguard replied. 'Every call we get we have to log.' He handed Hex the palm pilot and a plastic stylus.
Hex zipped through the questions. It was all quite efficient – already there were details of how the call was logged, where the victim was, whether a boat was involved and what action was taken. One box asked if the cause of the accident was known. Hex had his suspicions but wrote 'no'. Once he was finished, he clicked 'done'.
The screen indicated there was another page to follow. He clicked on it, but the page wasn't about Amber but about a different incident. Greg had already filled in some details: 'Mayday call'. Hex was about to give the palm pilot back to Greg when something caught his eye. The palm pilot obviously had a link with a central computer because it had already logged the source of the call, identifying the vessel's position and registration – a big motor yacht called
Black Gold.
Black Gold
– another name for oil. Then Hex saw something that really made him take notice. He nudged Alex and Li, making them look too. They gasped.
The vessel was registered to Neil Hearst.
Danny and Greg were carrying the dinghy towards a trolley parked at the top of the beach. 'Hey, Danny, look at this,' said Alex casually. 'This is someone from ArBonCo. Poetic justice, eh?'
The two men paused as they went past Alex and peered at the screen.
A big grin spread across Danny's face. 'Oh yes, that twerp from the oil company. He keeps a yacht at the marina on the other side of the island.'
'Mayday call,' said Li. 'Has he sunk?'
'No,' replied Greg, 'it was a false alarm. He said his son had got hold of the radio.'
Danny grinned. 'You could fine Hearst for misuse of emergency resources.'
Greg and Danny heaved the dinghy up onto the trailer. 'Yes, we probably should,' said Greg.
'Do you need a hand with that boat?' said Li.
Danny went up to the terrace and unwound a hose. 'No thanks – we just need to wash it down, get the seawater off.'
Hex handed back the palm pilot back to Greg. 'Is there anything else you need?'
'No, that's fine,' said Greg, 'thanks.'
'Let's go and see how Amber's doing,' said Li.
They found Amber and Paulo in one of the treatment rooms in the clinic. Amber was sitting on a couch wearing the now-familiar cotton T-shirt and boxer shorts, her wet clothes in a bag beside her. She was sipping from a tall glass of black liquid. Hex watched her hand as she tilted the glass up, remembering how she had trembled when she tried to get out of the boat. But the glass didn't shake at all.
Amber saw him looking and held the glass out. 'Here, try some.'
Hex took a sip. It was disgusting. He spluttered and gave it back to her, one hand over his mouth.
'Well, what's it like?' said Amber. 'I can't taste a darn thing.'
'Coal,' said Hex, still trying to get rid of the taste.
'It's activated charcoal, apparently,' said Amber. 'To soak up any residual poison. Although it might as well be rose water for all I can tell. It's just a precaution, really. The doctor thinks I got rid of it all over the side of Danny's boat, otherwise I'd be a lot more ill.' She drank a bit more. 'Anyway, before all that happened I had quite a good trip. Bowman's not at Ter Haar's house. But they've definitely got him. They want him to sign something. Ter Haar and someone else – probably Neil Hearst, but I didn't hear that for sure – are going to get twenty-five million dollars each. Once they've got Bowman to sign they're going to kill him. I heard him say "Over the side", so I guess they've got him on a boat somewhere and are going to toss him overboard.'
Hex looked at Alex. 'Neil Hearst's yacht,' he said, then explained his reasoning to Amber and Paulo. 'Hearst has a yacht, normally moored on the other side of the island. It would be an ideal place to keep Bowman. Easy to guard and difficult to escape from.'
Li came back and handed Amber a tall glass, this time filled with bright yellow hydration liquid. 'So that's why nobody knows where he is.'
'Ah,' said Hex, 'but we do know where the yacht is now. It gave a mayday call. Only it wasn't in trouble – some little kid was larking about with the radio.'
Amber was glugging back the yellow potion. Her eyes grew enormous. She swallowed hard, then spoke.
'Black Gold!
Of course! I was in the dinghy when that call came through. I heard it. There's no way that wasn't genuine.'
Hex was playing scenarios in his head. 'Maybe Bowman got free and made a mayday call before they caught him again.'
Alex's face was grave. 'He probably won't have long before they get him to sign that document. 'Then . . .' He mimed a knife being drawn across his throat.
The door opened. Mara's colleague came in, holding a chart, and came over to Amber, one hand in the pocket of her white coat. 'How are you feeling?' Her accent was Australian.
'OK.'
'No more nausea?'
Amber waggled her hand to indicate so-so.
The doctor pinched the skin on Amber's arm and watched it, then nodded. 'You're hydrating well. I don't think you're poisoned but your stomach is very irritated, so you'll keep feeling sick. You can go, but carry on drinking the hydration solution – reception will give you some more on the way out.'
Amber's face lit up. Freedom again. Now they could get back to work.
The doctor was looking at her chart. 'You're staying at the dive centre, aren't you?'
Amber nodded.
'No diving for a week. Being sick in a regulator can seriously damage your health.'
Paulo looked at Amber sympathetically. 'Join the club.'
Hex was in the dive centre library. A map of the island and its surrounding waters was spread on the big central table; his palmtop lay beside him, open and the screen glowing. He did some calculations, then drew a circle with some compasses on a pad of tracing paper and laid it over the map. He looked at it, satisfied. That was it.
Amber and Paulo came in, Amber sipping at a glass of the yellow hydration mixture. Paulo was carrying a tray of sandwiches; he put them down on the big table.
Alex and Li joined them just as Paulo was starting his second sandwich and Amber was gingerly nibbling at her first.
'Danny's given us free rein with all his gear,' said Alex. 'So, have we found the boat?'
Hex indicated the diagram with a flourish. 'Here it is.'
The others huddled round eagerly and looked. Hex's tracing paper circle covered a large area at least as long as the island of Curaçao and its neighbour, Bonaire – which together had a diameter of about forty-eight kilometres.