Gina Cresse - Devonie Lace 02 - A Deadly Bargain, Plan C

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BOOK: Gina Cresse - Devonie Lace 02 - A Deadly Bargain, Plan C
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Gina Cresse - Devonie Lace 02 - A Deadly Bargain, Plan C
Devonie Lace [2]
Gina Cresse
Avalon Books (2000)
Tags:
Mystery: Cozy - Treasure Hunter - California
Mystery: Cozy - Treasure Hunter - Californiattt
Devonie Lace gets more than she bargained for when she buys an old equipment trunk from a crafty seaman who salvaged an abandoned dive boat found off the coast of Catalina. Her simple life as a treasure hunter turns into a quagmire of complications that nearly get her killed as she tries to uncover the mystery behind the items she discovers in the chest.
Her investigation leads her back to the Pacific, where it all began, and the discovery of two deaths ignites a feeding frenzy of police and media speculation. When people around Devonie start to disappear, she must rely on her own cunning to keep one step ahead of the ruthless men who are determined to stop her. Can she solve the mystery before they kill her?

             

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

A Deadly
Bargain

Plan C

 

By Gina Cresse

 

www.GinaCresse.com

Original edition published in 2000 by

Avalon Books

Thomas
Bouregy
and Company, Inc.

 

Revised edition published by

Gina Cresse

Copyright © 2012
by
Gina Cresse

 

All rights reserved.
  No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes in reviews.

 

Cover
graphics and
design

b
y

Terese Knapp

and

Pam Drake

All the characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.

 

 

 

             

 

 

Chapter
One

 

 

 

R
oy Hastings cut the single Detroit-diesel engine on his 45-foot Fort Pierce dive boat.  The storm winds, already whipping with menacing force, beat the rain against his unshaven face like jabs of a thousand tiny darts. 

He
’d
set out from Avalon Harbor as soon as he got word of the storm

bound and determined not to let
that
stinkin

El Niño
take his precious
Little Maria
the way it
had
claimed
The Sweet Life
back in ‘82.

Not that the
Little Maria
was anything
elaborate or notably valuable—
at least in the eyes of a marine-craft appraiser.  As boats go, she was as common as they come. 
She’s
functional
,
Roy remembered thinking to himself the day he bought her.  She’d carry all the divers, fishermen, and equipment they’d want to take along on chartered trips.  She didn’t offer any sleeping quarters, fancy furniture, or shiny chrome and brass points, but she did have a modest galley and a head

that certainly counted for something.  No, an appraiser wouldn’t put the same value on her that Roy did.  To
him, she was more than a boat—
much more.  She gave him independence.  She gave him freedom to do wh
at he loved.  She gave him life
—his life.  In his eyes, she was priceless. 

He finished tying the last bowline in a nylon rope and struggled to keep a tight hold on the sea anchor attached to it.  The wind caught the parachute-like device and threatened to carry it, along with Roy, over the railing into the nine-foot swells, waiting to swallow the vessel in one giant gulp.  In the past, Roy used an old surplus parachute to keep his bow into the wind, but this storm gave him a bad feeling.  After the devil-sent storms of ‘82 beat his boat against the rocks until it broke into a thousand pieces of splintered wood, Roy took to weathering the storms at sea.  He’d take his chances and go down with the ship if it came to that, but he wasn’t about to let the elements take his o
nly means of livelihood, again—
not without a fight. 

The brand
new, bright-red nylon anchor whipped in the wind and the hardware beat against his arms and chest.  He swore under his breath and shook his fist at the gloomy, black sky.  When he finally had the lines secured, he hurled the big, awkward thing overboard and watched the wind catch it, like a drag-chute on a racecar.  The anchor settled itself on the surface,
then
san
k
slowly into the turbulent sea
.  When the water rose up over his head, he saw the red fabric lurk in the swells like the tongue of a giant boat-eating monster.

He raised his face and scowled at the black clouds that loomed overhead, preying on the
Little Maria
.  “You’re not
gettin
’ this one!” he swore.

The deck pitched and rolled with the huge swells.  Roy clung to the rail as he made his way to the cabin door.  A lightning strike off the port side, followed by a clap of thunder, shook him in his shoes.  He lost his grip on the rail and fell to the deck.  He climbed back to his feet and reached for the door handle.  Opening the door, he remembered he’d left his only pair of binoculars on the
flybridge
.  He considered leaving them there to fend for
themselves
, but common sense reminded him he’d need them.  He closed the door and hiked his jacket collar up around his neck to keep the rain from running down his back.

Roy
set one foot on the first rung of the slippery ladder and then climbed.  Halfway up, his foot slipped and he banged his shin on the hard metal bar.  Though he was cold and numb, he was sure it drew blood.  He cursed again.

The binoculars slipped off the console and landed under the pilot seat.  Roy picked them up, held them to his wind-beaten face,
then
scanned the roller-coaster horizon.  When the
Little Maria
reached the top of the swell, he spotted a yacht in the distance, off the port side.  Then his boat fell to the bottom of the wave and he lost sight of the vessel.  He waited for the crest of the swell five more times to get a good look at the neighboring yacht,
then
made his way down to the shelter of the cabin.

The yacht must have been at least a hundred-footer, maybe even bigger from the looks of it. 
Some fancy yacht for sure
, Roy thought to himself. 
They must be out there weathering the storm, same as me.

He shed his soaked windbreaker and grabbed a towel from the head to dry his drenched hair.  “Long night,” he said to himself as he peered out the window and cringed at the solid wall of water facing him.

 

It was nearly three in the morning before the storm finally subsided.  Exhausted, Roy peeled off his soaked clothes and slipped into a pair of dry jeans and a zip-up sweatshirt.  He poured a cup of hot coffee from a thermos, but fell asleep before he took the first sip.

He woke, still sitting at the galley table with his head resting on his folded arms.  The sun peeked through the porthole and caught him square in the eyes. 

He stepped onto the deck and smiled at the clear sky. 
“Told
ya
you couldn’t have her

didn’t I!”

He inspected the condition of the
Little Maria
.  She was still afloat
—that was most important.  His smile turned to a frown wh
en he saw the radio-
antenn
a cable dangling in the breeze—
missing the antenna.

The water, calm and smooth as glass, was a far cry from the horrible monster of the night before.  Roy hauled in the sea anchor and spread it out on the deck to dry.  He climbed up to the
flybridge
and scanned the horizon for the yacht he’d seen the night before.  She was nowhere in sight.

“Hmm.
  Probably off to Mexico, by now.”

Roy took one last look in the direction of the mysterious boat,
then
fired up his engine.  It would take almost two hours to get back to Avalon Harbor on Catalina Island

back to the safety of the marina.

He’d been cruising along for forty-five minutes when something floating in the water caught his eye.  He cut back the throttle and motored up to it.  A white deck chair drifted by his bow. 
Then another.
  A closer inspection of the area revealed a half-dozen seat cushions, ten adult-sized life jackets, a first-aid kit, and a Jim Buoy throw ring.  Something odd bobbed in the water about ten yards away.  Roy approached, squinting to focus on the dozen-or-so items floating by his port sid
e.  They were flat, about eight
inches square, black and white, and marked sort of like a Holstein cow. 

“What the heck?”  Roy fished one of the strange objects from the water.  The small plastic mat dripped a few spots of water on his shoe as he shook it.

Roy opened his equipment trunk and tossed the curious item inside, resigned to dis
cover its purpose later
—after he made a more thorough search of the area.

The bright colors on the depth sounder’s video screen reminded Roy of a painting he’d seen at an art exhibit in Avalon last summer.  Modern art, they called it.  No.  Impressionist art, that’s what it was.  Roy’s impression was that even a monkey, given the correct colors of paint, could have created it.  He drifted slowly around the area, his eyes trained on the screen.  The bright red, yellow, and green on the deep-blue background formed abstract shapes, indicating the contours of the bottom
of the ocean
.  Roy knew the geometry of the shape he stared at wasn’t a natural occurrence.  There was something down there.

Roy dropped his anchor and watched as the nylon rope fed itself into the waiting water.


Hundred and fifty feet.
 
Pretty deep.”

He went below and checked the gauges on the scuba tanks in the racks.  He pulled one out and hauled it up to the deck
, then
unlocked a trunk and pulled out the rest of his diving gear.  He peeled off his bulky jeans and sweatshirt, and then he squeezed into the rubber wet suit.

Roy hooked his underwater camera and flashlight to his dive belt, adjusted his mouthpiece, and pulled his mask over his face.  He pushed himself backward over the rail
and splashed into the unusually
warm Pacific water.

He descended as quickly as was safe.  It didn’t take long for his powerful flashlight to locate the brilliant-white paint of the S.M. Italian
Motoryacht
.  Roy checked his watch.  In one hundred and fifty feet, he could only dive the wreck for about ten minutes
before he’d have to surface

The yacht was beautiful

built in the early to mid-nineties, by Roy’s estimation.  He unhooked the camera from his belt and snapped pictures of the scene.  He checked his watch
,
then
slithered through the salon doorway to get a look inside.  Even in the dark murky water, the overstuffed sofas, plush carpeting, expensively framed paintings, gold-plated flatware, and a bank of electronic equipment that would have put an aircraft carrier to shame, made it clear this was no poor-man’s toy. 

Roy checked his watch again.  He didn’t have much time left.  He located the hatch to get below deck and slipped through the opening.  Some sort of water-tight containers were stacked along the edges of the hold.  Roy knew they must
have been
water-tight because they pressed against the ceiling
,
trying to float to the surface. 

Roy’s interest in the float
ing containers didn’t last long
once he’d looked past them.  Staring in amazement at the sight, Roy shook his head in dis
belief.  He checked his camera—
only two frames left.  He snapped them both,
then
looked at his watch.  His time was up.  He began his ascent back to the surface.

The GPS-99P, one of the best investments Roy
had
made last year, could store two hundred and thirty latitude/longitude positions, allowing him to keep track of all his favorite diving and fishing spots.  He punched in the identifier, “
elninowreck
,” and saved the date, time, and location in the electronic navigation system.

Roy took one last look at the floating debris, fired up his engine, and headed for home.

 

Roy tied the
Little Maria
to her designated buoy.  He loaded a tank cart and two dive tanks into his dinghy and
motored
it to the dock
, then
removed the equipment from the small boat and headed up the wooden walkway toward Sherman’s Dive Shop.  The wheels of the cart squeaked as they rolled behind him.  In his free hand, he carried the strange rubber mat he’d found floating near the wreck site.  He was busy studying the words on the mat and almost walked into a man coming
from
the other direction.  “Oh!  Pardon me,” Roy apologized.

“No problem,” the man replied.  He stepped aside to let Roy pass
.

Roy and Sherman had been friends for nearly fifteen years.  Sherman arranged most
of Roy’s charters—
for a small commission.  The business relationship was a good one for them both.

The big cowbell
hanging on the dive s
hop door clanked as Roy pushed it open.   Sherman
, with his long gray hair pulled into a ponytail,
glanced up to see Roy stroll in.

“Hey,
Sherm
.
  How’d you make out in that storm?”

Sherman put his fingers on his wrist to check his pulse.  “Let’s see.  Yeah, blood’s still
pumpin
’, if that’s what you mean.  But my boat’s seen better days. 
Got a big
ol
’ hole in her hull.”

“Sorry to hear it.  You ought to do what I do
.  S
ave you a bunch of money in repair costs.”

“I’d rather risk losing the boat while I sit in my living room and watch Titanic videos than face a storm like that one last night,” Sherman
said
.

“Why, you’re nothing but a chicken, Sherman.”


Ain’t
denying it.
 
Cluck, cluck.”

The two men laughed.

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