2
Shock blasted through Jack like an icy wave
when Tom told him. Not from the news that his account was frozen,
but…
“The feds know you’re here?”
That meant the feds would also know that Jack
was here. A crawly sensation settled on the back of his neck. They
could be under surveillance right now.
They stood on Reid Street, a pair of statues
among bustling shoppers and workers. Fleets of motorbikes buzzed by
on the street, their dinky engines sounding like a swarm of angry
hornets.
Tom shook his head. “No. The feds have no
idea. Otherwise they’d have been waiting for me. Good thing we came
in through the back door.”
But obviously they’ve learned about the
account and think I might try to get to it.
“There’s nothing you can do?”
“No. And I’m lucky the guy in there didn’t
report me.”
“Yeah, but how do you know he won’t change
his mind?”
“He won’t. He’d wind up on the hot seat
himself for not calling his boss when I showed up.” Another head
shake. “Shit!”
“Well, Tom. I’m sorry about this.” And he
was. “But there’s nothing to be done, so let’s get the hell out of
Dodge.”
“No, wait. There is something to be done. But
not about my account.”
“Then what?”
“The Sombra.”
“Oh no.” Jack backed away.
“No-no-no-no.”
“Jack, it’s a chance—my only chance right
now.”
“It’s not a chance. It’s a pipe dream. Look,
I’ll lend you money, help you get a new identity. I’ll even—”
“Help me a different way: Help me find the
Sombra. Help me find the Lilitongue of
Gefreda.”
This was crazy. What was he thinking?
“Look, Tom, even if I had time to help
you—and I don’t because I promised Gia I’d be back day after
tomorrow—how can two men excavate a sunken ship?”
“That’s exactly how most of those three
hundred fifty wrecks were uncovered: by two-man teams. We’re not
talking the Titanic here. The damn ship was
only seventy-five feet long. And excavating is an amazingly simple
process.”
“Shoveling sand? Underwater? Are you
crazy?”
Tom smiled. “Underwater, yes. But no
shoveling. There’s a much easier, better way. You just—”
“News bulletin: I’ve never scuba dived. Not
once.”
“You’re kidding.”
“Never had a need to. Not a frequently
called-upon skill in New York.”
“I’ll teach you. Nothing to it. We’ll only be
down about forty feet, so you can learn all you need to know in
twenty minutes, tops.”
“I can learn all I need to know in zero
minutes because I’m not going.”
“Jack, I need your help on this. I can’t do
it alone. You promised you’d help.”
“And I will help. But not on a wild goose
chase.”
“The ship’s there, Jack. I know it. I knew it
the first time I laid eyes on the map. And if it contains anything
of value, it’ll make up for my frozen account.”
“Let’s be sensible here. This map’s been
around for four hundred years and no one decided to go looking for
the ship before you?”
“Well, it was hidden away most of those
centuries. And the few who understood it probably figured it was
fake.”
Smart folks, Jack thought.
“Everyone except you.”
“Right. And Wenzel’s research confirmed it.
He had no interest in the ship; the map itself was his prize. He’d
researched it thoroughly and believed whoever had made it was
sincere.”
“Crazy people can be sincere. Some of the
most sincere people I’ve ever met have had their receivers off the
hook.”
“I won’t argue that. But I’ve been to the
spot on the map. Last time I was here I went out with a handheld
GPS unit and found it. I dove it. It’s a deep sand hole.”
Jack couldn’t hide his surprise. “If you’ve
been there already, what do you need me for?”
“Because I couldn’t find it.”
“And you think I
will?”
“We will. I’ll bet my
butt it broke apart on the reef and what’s left of it is still in
that hole, covered with sand. And you and I are going to excavate
it.”
A perking suspicion bubbled to the
surface.
“Was this your plan all along, Tom?”
He looked puzzled. “What?”
“A bait and switch. Do you really have a
secret account in there? Or did you make me think I was helping you
run some money when all along you wanted to rope me into a sunken
treasure dive?”
Tom raised a hand. “Swear to God, Jack, I
absolutely do have a frozen account in that bank.”
“Then why make such a big deal of the map on
the trip out?”
Tom reddened. “I did not make a big deal. I just thought it would
interest you.” He looked away. “Okay… I suppose I was hoping to
pique your interest enough to get you to dive it with me as, you
know, a lagniappe. We’d split whatever we found.”
Bullshit or not? Jack could no longer tell
truth from fiction with this guy.
Tom looked at him again. “But we’re not
talking bonus anymore. We’re talking desperate necessity.”
“Tom… no.”
Tom’s mouth twisted. “Fine. You want to head
home, go to it. But you’ll be going without me.”
“What?”
“And if you leave me here, I’m stuck here.
The only way I’ll get back to the States will be in handcuffs. I’d
hope you wouldn’t do that to me.”
“Staying will be your choice.”
“And you—how far do you think you can take
the Sahbon without me?”
Good question. Jack didn’t know if he could
pilot the boat through the reefs, let alone all the way back to
North Carolina. He’d learned enough on the trip out to hazard a
try, but couldn’t guarantee that the Sahbon
wouldn’t end up on Bermuda’s shipwreck map.
And if the Bermuda coast guard or whatever
they were called had to pull him off the reef, they’d want some ID,
they’d want to see his passport.
Shit.
Tom’s tone shifted from challenging to
pleading. “Two days, Jack… two freaking extra days. If we haven’t
found anything by sundown Friday, we head home. I swear—I swear on
Mom’s grave.”
Jack could feel himself being backed into a
corner.
An old saying came to mind: No good deed
shall go unpunished. Right.
Never should have come.
“You’ve got to take my back on this, Jack. I
hate to bring up Dad again—”
“Then don’t.”
“—but I have to. If he were here he’d say,
What’s two more days in the grand scheme of things if you can help
your brother out of the worst jam of his life?”
Jack knew full well the guilt trip Tom was
laying on him, but that didn’t make it any easier to shake
off.
Yeah, Dad probably would have wanted him to
help Tom get another chance.
Jack held up his hands in a surrender
gesture. He knew he was going to regret this.
“Okay, okay. If Gia’s cool with me gone a
couple of extra days, I’ll stay. But only till Friday. Not a moment
longer.”
Tom sagged against the bank’s pink stucco
wall. “Thanks, Jack. You don’t know what this means to me. I’ll owe
you the rest of my life.”
Jack didn’t want Tom to owe him
anything.