Gina Cresse - Devonie Lace 01 - A Deadly Change of Course--Plan B (8 page)

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Authors: Gina Cresse

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BOOK: Gina Cresse - Devonie Lace 01 - A Deadly Change of Course--Plan B
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“Get your friend and bring him up here,” I ordered.

Bald-headed thug looked down into the galley and saw his partner lying in a pile of broken glass, with blood running from his nose.  “You’ve killed him.  Are you crazy, lady?  You’ve killed Tommy.  The boss is really going to freak now.”

“He’s not dead.  Just get down there and drag him up.”

Bald buy just gaped at me.

“Now!”
I shouted.

He carried Tommy up the steps and laid him on one of the cushioned seats.  I kept the gun pointed at him as I stepped off the
Plan B
and onto the speedboat they had obviously stolen from the marina.  I tossed a life jacket
into the water, then pulled the keys from the ignition and threw them overboard as well.  Then, I climbed back onto my boat and untied the speedboat, shoving it away as hard as I could.

“Bring him over here,” I said as I waved the gun at the whimpering, seasick, lowlife scum who was polluting my boat. 
What a waste of skin
, I thought to myself.

He hoisted his partner onto his shoulder and carried him over to the rail.

“Throw him over.”

“What?”

“You heard me.  I said throw him over, then you next.”

“He’ll drown.”

“No he won’t.  There’s a life jacket out there.  You can take care of him.  Now, get him off my boat.”

Again, I waved the gun at him.  He dropped his partner into the water,
then
jumped in after him.  I watched as he struggled to reach the life jacket, then I pulled up my anchor and started the engine.  I only had a few minutes of fuel left, so I cut it off when I was far enough away from them to be safe.  Quickly, I cleaned up the fishbowl glass while I formulated my short-term plan.

I raised my sails, opened up my
How to Sail
book, and headed north.  My aunt and uncle had a house on th
e ocean near Del Mar.  They had
their own private harbor and dock.  They’d repeatedly invited me to sail up for a visit.  Now seemed like a good time.  I’d only been there by car, so I didn’t know how I would find it from where I
was, but I figured when I got in the general vicinity, I would call and ask directions.

An hour
had
ticked by when my stomach started growling,
then
I realized I hadn’t eaten breakfast. I secured the wheel and went down to the galley for some fruit.  I was feeling quite smug that I had taken care of those two morons

and on top of that

I was sailing my boat successfully.  I flipped on the stereo then climbed back out onto the deck with my apple and glass of juice.  I checked over my shoulder.  Yes, the land was still over there, so I was going in the right direction.  I turned and stepped just in time for the boom to swing around and hit me square in the forehead.  Bad karma
was
the price I
paid
for smugness.

When I came to, I had a pretty good-sized lump on my head

and one whopper of a headache.  Broken glass and orange juice littered the deck.  When I stood up, the boat began spinning, as if caught in a whirlpool.  I reached to grab the rail to catch myself, but I fell back down on the deck.  The palm of my hand landed squarely on a piece of sharp glass and made a rather deep gash that gushed blood.  Finally, the boat quit spinning.  I crawled back down to the galley and pulled myself up to the sink.  I ran water over my throbbing hand and looked around for a clean towel to wrap it in.  There was a first-aid kit in the head, but I was still too dizzy to maneuver my way around the boat.  I got back down on the floor and crawled to the head, then managed to get the first-aid kit opened with my one good hand and cleaned and dressed my wound the best I
could.  I looked out the window.  I was still sailing full blast ahead, with no land in sight.  I made my way back up to the deck and brought the sails down, then dropped anchor so I could clean up the mess and try to get my bearings.  I checked my watch.  I had been sailing aimlessly for several hours.  I had no idea where I was.  Checking my compass, I realized I was headed southwest.  The Santa Ana winds were blowing, which were predominantly from the northeast.  For all I knew, I could have been sailing in circles for the last four hours.  I checked my fuel level and estimated about ten minutes of fuel left. 
After
I got myself turned around,
I
set my sails and headed northeast.  Eventually, I would come to land. 
The only question, would it be Long Beach, or Baja?

When I finally got close enough, I looked through my binoculars toward the land and scanned the coast.  I spotted a restaurant with its own dock a little to the north.  I could barely make out the name on the sign.  It looked like “Swordfish Café.”

I dropped sails again then made a call on my cell
phone.  “Hello.  Aunt Arlene?”

“Yes.  Is this
Devonie
or Monica?” she asked.

“It’s
Devonie
.  Are you and Uncle Doug going to be home for a little while?”

“Yes.  We don’t have any plans to go out.  Are you coming over?”

“Well, I hope so.  I’m on my boat right now, hopefully headed in your direction.  Remember that restaurant you
and Uncle Doug took me to last year when I bought the
Plan B?
  I think it was called the Swordfish Café?”

“Oh, yes.  Wasn’t that the best dinner you ever had?  I just love that restaurant.  We go there at least once a month.”

“Well, I’m directly west of that place.  I need to know how to get to your house from here.”

“Oh, honey.  Let me get Doug to direct you.  Hang on just a minute,” she said.

Uncle Doug wanted to fax me a map.  I had to explain I didn’t have a fax machine on the boat.  He communicated the directions to me, and then I wrote them on a piece of scratch paper I found in the galley.

“Thanks, Uncle Doug.  I’ll see you in a little while,” I said then hung up the phone.

My head ached and at times, I saw two of everything

making it difficult to head toward landmarks.  I finally cruised into the small private harbor that belonged to my aunt and uncle.  I dropped the sails and powered up the engine so I could maneuver to the dock.  Doug and Arlene were waiting for me on the small pier.  I threw them my lines and they tied up my boat while I set the fenders. 

Uncle Doug owned a yacht brokerage in Del Mar.  It was quite a lucrative business for him.  He helped me find the
Plan B
in a small marina up in San Francisco.  He told me that if I didn’t buy her, he was going to snatch her up himself.  She was such a sweet deal. 

“I’ve made lunch reservations for us at the Turf Club.  We’re going to the horse races,” Uncle Doug announced as I shut down the engine and stepped off the boat.

“How fun,” I said, “but I don’t feel too good right now.”

“What’s that bump on your head?” Uncle Doug asked.

“Just call me
Devonie

B
oom-
B
oom’
Lace, master sailor.”

“No.  You didn’t get hit with the boom.  Did you?”

“Afraid so
.
  And I think I might have a concussion.  I’m seeing double and I feel like I have to throw… well… you know the feeling.  On top of that, I fell and cut my hand on some broken glass.  I think I might need some stitches,” I said, holding up my throbbing, bandaged hand.

Aunt Arlene took me by the arm.  “Oh, honey.  We better get you inside to lie down.  Our next-door neighbor is a doctor.  Doug, call Craig and see if he’ll come over to look at this.”

Uncle Doug grinned at Arlene. 
“Oh sure, Arlene.
  Or, we could take her to the emergency room, but there might not be any nice, single young doctors like Craig there.”

“Now you just hush.  Craig is a fine doctor and he can probably be here in five minutes.  I’m only thinking of
Devonie
.”

“I’m sure you are.  I’ll call Craig right now.”

Aunt Arlene led me into a living room so exquisite you would swear you’d seen it in
Lifestyles of the Rich and
Famous
.  Come to think of it, I believe it was featured in an episode two years ago.  One wall, windows from floor to ceiling, overlooked the ocean.  The oak floors, finished in a light, natural tone, gave the room a warm, homey feeling.  A sea-foam green and blue rug relaxed under the fine sofa and coffee table facing the view.  You could sit for hours and admire the living landscape painted just outside the glass.  The open beam ceiling, also finished in natural tones, gave the feeling of a cathedral.  Everything in the room said, “This house belongs to a sailor,” from the paintings on the walls to the trophies on the mantle.  Arlene sat me down on the sofa.  “Now, you just sit here.  I don’t think you’re supposed to lie down or go to sleep

at least until we have the
doctor look
at you first.”

“Okay, Aunt Arlene.  I’m just going to close my eyes for a minute.  I didn’t sleep very well last night, and I’m so tired.”

The next thing I remembered was a hand shaking my shoulder and a voice calling my name.  I opened my eyes.  There were six concerned faces staring at me.  Two Uncle Doug’s, two Aunt Arlene’s, and in the middle, two handsome faces I didn’t recognize.  “
Tom
?  You have a twin?”
I mumbled, only half-conscious.

 

             

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Chapter Nine

 

M
ild concussion was the diagnosis.  Rest was the treatment.  Craig Matthews, the doctor who lived next door, stitched up my hand and gave it a proper dressing.  I used Uncle Doug’s phone to call Jason, since I had left my cell phone on the boat and didn’t feel up to hiking back down to the dock to retrieve it.

“Hello, Jason?
  It’s
Devonie
.”

“Dev.
  Where are you?” he asked.

“I’m at my aunt and uncle’s place in Del Mar.  Did you have any trouble getting the Jeep?”

“No.  I rode my bike over to the marina, loaded it in the back, and brought it home.  No one gave me any trouble.”

“That’s good.  I was going to see if you could bring it here today, but I had a little accident and I wouldn’t be able to drive you home until tomorrow or the next day.”

“Accident?
  Are you okay?” he asked.

“I’m okay.  I got hit in the head with the boom and I have a mild concussion.  I’ll be fine by tomorrow or the
next day, but for now I’m seeing double and I’m a little dizzy, so I can’t get behind the wheel,” I said.

“Do you want me to bring it up to you Wednesday morning?  I could get John to open the shop for me.  That would give you a full day to recover.”

“Yeah, I think that would work.  Let me get my uncle to give you directions on how to get here,” I said, then handed the phone to Doug.  Leaning back on the couch with an ice pack on my forehead, I closed my eyes.

Doug gave detailed directions to Jason, while Arlene thanked Craig for making the house call.  “Would you like to stay for dinner, Craig?” I heard her ask him.  I knew what she was up to.

“I wish I could, Arlene, but I have to attend a retirement dinner tonight for one of the doctors at the
M
ed
C
enter.  I’ll check in on our patient tonight when I get back, and again in the morning to make sure she’s progressing okay.”

“Thank you, Dr. Matthews,” I called to him, not taking the ice pack from my head.

“Any time,
Devonie
.
  You take it easy.  I’ll check in on you tonight,” he called back to me.  “And call me Craig
.

 

Jason arrived Wednesday morning with the Jeep.  I introduced him to Arlene and Doug and they gave him a brief tour of the house.  I said I would show him the dock so I could have a chance to talk to him alone.

“Thanks, again, for getting the Jeep, Jason.  I can’t tell you how much I appreciate all your help,” I told him, as we walked down the path to the dock.

“You’re welcome, Dev.  Now, are you going to tell me what’s going on?”

“Okay, but you have to promise to keep this to yourself.”

“You know I will.”

“Remember those cases I got at the auction?  One of them had a half a million dollars in it.  The other one had a nine millimeter gun with a laser sighting scope and a silencer.”

“Come on, Dev.  Quit kidding around.  You promised you’d tell me what was going on.”

“I’m not kidding, Jason.  What’s more, I showed the gun to Joe, over at the pawn shop.  He had
a friend of his take a
look at it, and now Joe is dead.  I think his friend might be a traitor.  When I went back to my boat, there were two
guys
snooping around, trying to get in.  I overheard them saying they were supposed to ‘take me out’ after they got the money.  That’s why I took off and came here.  They followed me and boarded my boat while I was sleeping.  I managed to get them off, but I’m really scared, Jason.”  My voice trembled.

“You’re serious.  Joe is dead?  Why haven’t you gone to the police?”

“I don’t know.  I guess at first I was afraid they would make me give up the money.  But now, after what happened to Joe, I think I’d better go to the FBI or CIA, or whoever the heck you go to when you’re afraid for your life.”

“Why not just go to the police?”


I think I need the big guns. 
That file cabinet that I stored in your warehouse is full of newspaper clippings.  They all describe the deaths of quite a few prominent people over the last fifteen years.  Remember that plane crash in Mexico last year? 
The one that killed all those people on board?”

“The one where the pilots got off-course and plowed into the side of a mountain?”

“That’s the one.  That was the last article.  Whoever rented that storage unit was a hired assassin and that plane crash was his last job.”

“This is incredible.  But who killed Joe?  And why?”

“I don’t know why, but the only other person who knew about the gun was Joe’s friend, Tony Marino.”

“Tony Marino?”

“Yeah.
  Have you heard of him?”

“That friend of mine I told you about, the one who works for the San Diego Police Department

he told me about a local mobster named Tony Marino.  He has some sort of export business that he uses for a front, but his ties to the mob go pretty deep.  If he knows about you and the gun and the money, then I’d say you’re in quite a bit of danger.”

“I didn’t tell him or Joe about the money.  I don’t see why anyone would kill Joe just because he knew I had the gun.”

We got to the end of the dock and stepped onto the deck of my boat.  Jason opened the hatch and we went below to the galley.

“Sit down.  I want to get that electronic box and the computer before we head back to San Diego,” I said as I made my way back to my cabin.  I opened the closet doors.  Everything seemed to be in order.  I grabbed the two items and closed the doors.

“I want to see if I can get a power cord for this laptop.  The battery is dead and I can’t power it up.  I guess I’ll take this mystery box to the FBI.  Maybe they can identify it.”

“That’s a good idea.  What about the money?  Do you still have it with you?”

“Are you kidding?  I put it in a safe-deposit box.  It’s going to stay there until this thing blows over.  If anything happens to me


“Don’t say it,” Jason said.  “You’ll be fine.”

We walked back up the dock to the house.  I handed Jason the computer and the electronic box.  “
Can you take this stuff to the Jeep?
  I just want to let Arlene and Doug know I’m taking you back home.  I’ll be right there.”

Arlene looked disappointed.  “You mean you’re friend isn’t staying for lunch?”

“No, Aunt Arlene.
  I need to get him home, and I have some business to take care of in San Diego.  I shouldn’t be too late, but don’t hold dinner for me, in case I get tied up.”

“Okay, honey.  How’s your head?  Are you sure you should be driving?  Maybe we should just have Craig come over and take a quick look before you go.”

“I feel fine.  I’m sure I’m completely recovered.  Besides, I saw Craig leave a little while ago.  He must have gone to work.  I’ll see you later, Aunt Arlene.”

 

We stopped at Jason’s warehouse first, and picked up the newspaper clippings from the file cabinet.  Jason insisted on going with me to the FBI office. 

I briefly explained to the man at the front desk about the gun and the newspaper clippings and Joe’s death, and I mentioned the two strangers on my boat.  He directed us to have a seat,
then
he called someone on the phone.  Several minutes later, a man came into the reception area to greet us.

“Miss Lace?” he asked.

“Yes.  This is my friend, Jason Walters,” I said as we both stood up.

“I’m Agent Dan Cooper.  Please come with me to my office,” he said.  We followed him down a long corridor to a door marked PRIVATE and entered the large office.  There was another man already seated next to the desk.

“This is my partner, Agent Willis,” he said.  “Tom, this is
Devonie
Lace, and, I’m sorry, what was your name again?”

“Jason Walters,” he replied, shaking the man’s hand.

“Good to meet you.  Why don’t you tell us what this is all about,” Agent Willis said.

I explained my story from the beginning

giving all the details, except for the money.  I opened each of the file folders and handed the clippings to Agent Cooper. 
Then I laid the mystery box on his desk.  “I found this in the safe, but I don’t know what it is.”

Agent Cooper picked it up, in
spected
it briefly, then he handed it to his partner.  “What do you think, Tom?  Scrambling device, maybe?”

“Yeah.
 
Probably.
  We’d have to send it down to the experts, but I’d bet my last paycheck that’s what it is.”

“What would it be used for?” I asked.

Agent Willis shifted in his chair.  He gave his partner an uneasy look.  “We’ve seen a couple of these devices used in the Middle East.  Terrorists use them to bring down planes and, sometimes helicopters.  They have the ability to cause some of the electronic mechanisms to be inoperative

or worse

to produce erroneous information without the crew realizing it.  They’re most effective on the global positioning systems.  If a plane can’t navigate

especially in bad weather conditions, or at night when there’s no visibility

it’s pretty vulnerable.  They’re complicated.  Not too many people have the skill to build one.”

“Do you suppose that’s how he caused the plane crash in Mexico last year?” I asked, gesturing to the last newspaper clipping Agent Cooper was holding.

“We don’t want to jump to any conclusions, Miss Lace.  As far as the government is concerned, that incident was nothing more than pilot error.  It
’s possible we may decide to re
open the investigation, if the evidence points us in that direction.  For now, we should probably concentrate on your safety.  You say that two men visited your boat?” Agent Cooper asked.

“Yes.  That’s right.”

“Can you describe them?”

“One was tall and skinny and wore a ponytail.  He’s probably got a broken nose
now,
and a fairly good sized lump on the side of his head.  The other was shorter and stocky, with no hair at all.”

“And you say that Tony Marino was the only other person besides your friend who knew you had the gun?” Agent Willis asked.

“That’s right.  Even Jason here didn’t know until this morning, when he brought me my Jeep.”

“Where are you staying now?” Agent Cooper asked.

“I have my boat tied up over at my aunt and uncle’s place in Del Mar.  They have a private dock.  I’m pretty secure there.”

“That’s good.  We suggest that you remain there until we get to the bottom of this.  We’ll probably assign an agent to keep an eye on you,” Agent Cooper explained.

“Do you have any idea how long this will take to clear up?  I mean, how long will I have to stay in hiding?  I have to work and earn a living in the mean time.”

“We suggest you don’t go to your job for now.  Call in sick, or take a vacation.  You shouldn’t go near any place you regularly hang out.  That’ll be the first place someone would look for you,” Agent Cooper
said
.  “As far as how long this will take?  That’s hard to say.  It depends on who’s behind it all, and how much they want to avoid being caught.”

“Great,” I said.  “I guess I can look for some kind of work in Del Mar in the mean time.”

Agent Willis made some notes in a small notepad.  “Can you give us a number where we can reach you?”

I gave him my cell phone number.

“Thank you.  We’ll keep you informed of our investigation.  In the meantime, be very careful, and follow our suggestions.  Okay?”

I nodded.  “Thank you both,” I said. 

 

I dropped Jason off at his shop.  “Are you going straight back to Del Mar now?” he asked me.

“No. First, I’m going to stop and buy a power cord for the computer.  Then I need to pick up groceries and stuff.  After that, I’ll go back to my… my hideout.  Doesn’t it sou
nd so James
Bondish
?” I laughed to keep from crying.

“It’s not funny, Dev.  You need to be careful.”

“I know.  I will.”

 

I called the Grille from the parking lot of the computer supply store to let them know
I would not be able to work that
weekend.  My boss whined that I had just recently taken time off

but I explained that I had a personal emergency and it couldn’t be helped.

By the time I pulled into my aunt and uncle’s driveway, it was nearly six o’clock.  As I carried the computer and a bag of groceries down the dock, Craig came trotting up behind me.  “Wait up,
Devonie
.  Let me help you carry some of that.”

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