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Authors: Jinx Schwartz

Tags: #Fiction, #Mystery & Detective, #Women Sleuths

Just Needs Killin (20 page)

BOOK: Just Needs Killin
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CHAPTER THIRTY-SIX

 

Instead of bilge duty that Monday morning following the sunken ship adventure, Fabio assigned me to replace the prop on our 60hp Johnson and, for good measure, made me inspect all the other pangas and outboards. My penance for dinging a shark.

Jan and I had a new plan for snooping, one that did not involve large predators, wild rides on anchor lines, or, hopefully, butt shots.

Two hours before Kazoo and Moto took off for their daily late afternoon outing—and we knew when that was, for the Japanese are nothing if not punctual—we zipped down to the south bay for a hike across Magdalena Island.

Jan and I had climbed around on this island before, when we were spying on Lujàn, and uncovered his plot for baby whale in a can. Hmmm, am I detecting a pattern here?

Anyhow, it wasn't all that hard of a trek that time, even though the volcanic gravel in places is treacherous. Thanks to Google Earth, we knew it was only about two miles across the part of the island we wanted to traverse, but that's as the crow flies. In Baja, you have to follow arroyo bottoms, or hope for four-legged animal paths. At least we had the GPS, and the shipwreck's coordinates, so if we got lost, we could at least work our way in the right direction.

We also took Po Thang, who is great at finding paths, probably because they have marvelous smells such as coyote piss, rabbit poop, and the occasional rattlesnake skin. I always hope he doesn't find the whole rattler. Chino gave him snake aversion training back at the fish camp, but he hadn't been put to the test in real life.

I strapped on his doggie cam harness and his backpack, which by now alerted him he was destined to be tethered to the boat instead of allowed to jump into the water the minute we neared shore. He took it without too much grumbling because he also knew for sure he was going with us.

Jan and I took small backpacks, so between the three of us we had over a gallon of water, cellphones that might or might not work, our own camcorder, binoculars, dog treats, people treats, sunscreen, bug repellent, a couple of printouts from Google Earth, more dog treats, more people treats, and everything we'd need, except maybe a handy 9mm. Snakes, ya know.

Because we meandered all over hell and back, once again leaving little yellow plastic markers so our return would be much faster, the trip took over two hours. Kazoo and Moto were already anchored at the wreck, and underwater, by the time we arrived, so we set up camp, gave Po Thang water and treats, and looked for the best place to watch them without plunging to our deaths over a bluff.

Jan had the binoculars and I was manning the camcorder as we waited for them to surface. We were stretched out on some very uncomfortable, sharp-edged lava gravel, a hundred or so feet up on a bluff, so we didn't have the best view, but then again, they couldn't see us when they came up. We couldn't linger overly long waiting for them to surface though, because even if it remained light until after almost eight we'd be missed by six-thirty, for sure. I figured on the trip back we could cut our walking time in half by following our markers.

At last, as I was counting the minutes, Jan gave my foot a light kick. "They're ready for their close-up, Ms. DeMille."

I leaned over the bluff, zeroed in on the divers as they swam for their panga, and hit RECORD. I couldn't see all that well because of the distance, but I knew the camera would do a better job on replay. The men heaved nets into their panga, followed them, brought up the anchor, and motored away.

Not one single stinking shark nosed around
them
. They owed me.

 

We made it back to the boat in the nick of time for dinner, but not in time to grab a shower. We were covered in dust, as was Po Thang, so we rinsed off the best we could on deck and hurried down to chow. Everyone was already at the table, and we dug in, but I noticed our Japanese pals were giving Jan and me strange looks all during the meal. They didn't talk much unless directly addressed, but that was their norm.

After dinner, Jan and I went back out to raise the panga and give it a wash, and while we were at it, shampooed Po Thang. Now, even wet, he probably smelled better than us, so the next order of business was the shower. With all this going on, there wasn't much time for our evening glass or two of wine in my cabin, so Jan turned in early and I was left with a wet dog and an empty glass. I'd vowed to stop drinking alone, and that a dog didn't count.

I emailed Jenks, and turned in myself. The next thing I knew it was five a.m. and I was wide awake. Po Thang snored softly on his top bunk, and didn't bat an eye when I went to the head. He is not an early bird dog.

Hooking the minicam to my PC, I downloaded our footage of Kazoo and Moto the day before, kind of hoping for a shark, but no luck. They surfaced, hefted their dive bags into the panga, then left the cove. Nothing new or exciting there.

I ran it back and started over, frame by frame, looking for anything unusual. Kazoo actually got into the panga first, pulled those dive bags over the gunwale, with a boost from below by Moto, who remained in the water.

"
Boor
-ing, Po Thang," I declared. "Wanna go pee or something? I need coffee."

He gave me a one-eyed glare and buried his head in his paws. Too early still.

As I was returning with my coffee, I met Jan in the companionway. She, too, woke early, so I invited her into my cabin for a look at our handiwork. She arrived with coffee, which garnered a slight head raise from sleepy head, and we reran the footage.

"Stop!" Jan yelled, startling Po Thang wide awake.

"What? What did you see?"

"Look at that first dive bag. Notice anything weird?"

I zoomed in on the mesh bag. "Oh, crap. No wonder they were giving us looks at dinner. That's our anchor they've got there. It's no surprise it took two of them to bring in those bags."

"Yeah, why?"

"Because the anchor is heavy?"

"Yep. But what about the other bag?"

Once again I zoomed in and this time we realized the second bag must have been much, much heavier. Even with the two of them, they barely got it over the gunwale, and Kazoo jumped back to clear his feet from the bag's path as it fell.

I stopped the action once again and we stared at the screen.

"Can you zoom in more?"

"I can try." I fiddled up and down arrows on the screen, but all I did was make it blurry. Then I un-zoomed (technical term) one click at a time, until it cleared.

Jan sucked in a surprised breath, and my heart rate doubled. "Hetta, do those look like gold bars to you?"

"Oh, my ears and whiskers, Alice. I do believe they do."

CHAPTER THIRTY-SEVEN

 

The best defense is an offense, they say.

When you need a good cover story, the best thing is to launch an offensive.

We were all seated at breakfast when I launched.

"You know, Kazoo, you might have warned us about that abalone hole of yours."

He looked as totally confused as I wanted him. "
Desho
?" he grunted, which is the Japanese equivalent to, "Huh?"

In a scolding schoolmarm voice I said, "Jan and I wanted some more abalone shells, so we went out there where we thought you got them, and the surge was so awful, we never even got to look for any. And, on top of that, our anchor got tangled in the rocks and that's why we lost it."

Kazoo's mouth dropped open, but nothing came out.

Chino rallied to his rescue. "You're saying it's
their
fault that you lost your anchor?"

Jan jumped in with a profound, "Well, duh!"

Fabio let go with a guffaw, and everyone but Kazoo and Moto joined in.

Kazoo did manage to clamp his lips into a very Japanese sign of disapproval, but he still looked at a loss. I waited for him to say he found our anchor, but he didn't.

Moto, evidently a little faster on the uptake, said, "Oh. I believe we found your anchor yesterday. We did not realize it was yours. And you are correct, as that dive area is very dangerous."

Kazoo recovered, and I gotta give him credit, his defense tactic was brilliant. He adopted my own scolding tone and shook his finger at me. "Yes, it is very dangerous. And you, as a novice, should never have attempted to dive there."

Which, of course, stirred up Chino, who gave us a lecture on safety.

Jan interrupted his angry spiel. "Chino, honey, you are so right," she cooed. "Hetta and I have decided we are never, ever, gonna dive again, period."

Caught off guard by this uncharacteristically easy capitulation, he said a lame, "Well, then, good."

Fabio eyed us and shook his head. "
Gringas
!"

 

We made a great show of scrubbing our dry suits, rebreathers, and other dive gear. After they were sun-dried, we packed everything in canvas bags, declared it all retired, then took both bags down into the engine room, to the gear storage bin.

"Think they believed we never dove on the wreck?" Jan whispered when we were back up on the aft deck, reattaching the formerly lost anchor to our panga.

"Who knows? What I want to know is where they're stashing the gold?"

"If it is gold. We don't know for sure. But if it is, don't you wonder if that's why they are really here. And just who sent them?"

"Yep, I've been thinking about that. If they came here on a mission of their own, financed by someone in Japan, that someone wants that gold. So why, if they knew where it was all along, didn't they just come and get it? Why use the expedition for cover?"

"Because they can't just waltz in and go treasure hunting without the blessing of the Mexican government? Chino has a permit. Perfect cover."

"Yes, but this plan of theirs was hatched, in my opinion, long before Chino was permitted."

"You said yourself the Japanese sometimes plan a hundred years in advance."

"They do, but let's say they did have this, whatever this is, in mind since...since when?"

"Maybe since they gave Chino this ship?"

 

To make a long story short, Tanuki Corporation, whose employee was my contact for that feasibility study I was hired to do for a desalination plant in Magdalena Bay, were embarrassed when it turned out that their employee, the now beheaded and missing Ishikawa, had a scheme to use the desal project as a cover for his more lucrative whale in a can thing.

As I summarized the events as a way of maybe understanding what was going on
now
, it went like this: "So, Tanuki's man in Mexico (and Ishikawa's co-schemer), Ricardo Dickless Lujàn, got busted when we outed their plans, and as a way of saving face, and earning that GET OUT OF JAIL card for Dickless, they gave the
Tanuki Maru
—which was eventually destined to snag baby whales—to Chino for a research vessel."

"Sounds right so far. Chino, who is well respected both in the global scientific community, and locally, was convinced, especially after we dredged up that astrolabe during the hurricane, that his ancestor's galleon sank and deposited other valuable historical artifacts in and around Magdalena Bay, and someone in Mexico city agreed."

I picked it up. "So, Chino renames the
Tanuki Maru
the
Nao de Chino
, but he doesn't really have the money to launch an expedition, so he applies for a grant from Mexico City and gets a lousy twenty-five grand, which won't even fill the fuel tanks, much less outfit a dive team."

"Well, we did get a government discount on the fuel. Only cost us fifteen grand to top 'em off."

"Like I said, no way he could swing this little expedition. Sooo, enter, or re-enter, as it were, Ishikawa-san. With, I might add, a hundred grand bankroll. Coincidence? I think not, dear Watson. And by the way, I suspect the fifty he offered you was on his own dime."

"I should've taken the deal. I mean, since he was dead and all when I got to his room anyhow."

"You are such a sentimentalist."

"I got it from you, Hetta-san."

I shot her a digit. "And, said dead dude is then spirited away by our favorite villain, Dickless, and his band of merry dicks. Only to later be fortuitously reported as a passenger on a missing airliner halfway around the world."

"I've been thinking about that. Bad as I hate to say it, you and I both know that everyone on that plane is gone. Really gone. Even if they find the wreckage, anyone onboard will never be found. Sad, but so very convenient for whoever wanted Ishikawa dead, but accounted for."

"Someone, I might add, with the power to fake a name on that passenger manifest."

She stood and gave Po Thang a head scratch. "And maybe plant two men on our boat? Men who might be carting gold bars somewhere for someone. I just don't think they're freelancing. Way too much coincidence there, as well."

"Okay, first things first. The gold, if that's what it is. Let's find their stash. It's gotta be between here and the dive site."

"My guess is it's here, on the boat. You still got those keys for all the cabins?"

"Is there a bouffant do in Dallas?"

 

From the bridge, we closely watched Kazoo and Moto's return each day. They couldn't see us, and anyone entering the bridge would be led to believe we were bird watching, since I placed an Audubon Society book nearby.

After each dive, the two brought heavy bags onboard, removed abalone and lobster from those bags as cover, then washed the bags down. They were pretty slick, but because we knew what to look for, we could tell the bags were not altogether empty.

Unfortunately we couldn't exactly follow them to see where they took those bags, and we had to wait a few days to make our raid on Kazoo and Moto's quarters. As luck would have it, Fabio remained aboard that Sunday, but it was manageable because he was only one man, and we were two very determined and underhanded broads.

Since the two Japanese men had been less than warm and fuzzy towards us all week, we left the ship at the same time as the others to put them off guard. Of course, we didn't go all that far, and watched the ship with our binocs. When we saw them leave, we doubled back.

Fabio was surprised to see us return so soon, but we told him everything in town was closed until noon, so we'd decided to come back and make brownies. Fabio has a soft spot for double fudge with walnuts.

Jan's job was to keep a close eye on Fabio's whereabouts while I executed a little B&E job on Kazoo and Moto's quarters. I guess, since I had a key, it wasn't technically breaking and entering, but breaching the privacy of a fellow shipmate's quarters is morally a big no-no.

Luckily, my morals were breached many moons ago.

Jan and I both had handheld VHF radios with us, just in case she needed to alert me of anyone approaching the boat, or Fabio leaving the upper decks.

I hit Kazoo's digs first, as he seemed to be the one in charge of the two-man team, and literally struck gold two minutes after entering the small cabin. Since we were all responsible for cleaning our quarters and changing our bedding, he must have felt confident enough to store the bars in such obvious spots. He had removed the stuffing from the mattresses on both bunks and stacked the bullion into them. A rolled up futon resting in the corner explained where he slept.

When I pulled a bar through a zippered opening, I was surprised at its heft. Measuring about only two by six inches, and maybe two inches thick, it still weighed a good ten pounds or more.

Not at all resembling the Swiss bars I lusted over on the Internet, these looked as though they'd been poured into a crude mold, but there was no doubt at all they were the real deal.

I did a quick count through the thin cotton fabric and figured they were stacked five high, the length of a six-foot bunk. I'd do the math later, but that was one honkin' stash. It was amazing the bunks hadn't collapsed under the load. I was leaving for Moto's cabin when I spotted Kazoo's PC, open, with the screen saver—cherry blossom time in the old homeland—lit up. I jiggled the mouse, hoping for something like an email from his boss, but everything was in Kanji.

Disappointed, I was turning to leave when the screensaver page changed, and a black and white photo of what looked to be a young Japanese soldier popped up. It would have been hard to date the photograph, had it not been for the background. He was posed, looking solemn, as they did in those days, in front of two banners: the Rising Sun, and the Swastika.

The radio crackled, jolting me from my shock. "We have company."

That was all the warning I needed. Carefully relocking the door, I sprinted down the companionway to my own cabin, hid my precious stash of keys, and went up to join the cookie baking.

When I rushed into the galley, I saw Jan standing stock still, her big blue eyes bugging out of a white face. Fabio, next to her, didn't look much better. Po Thang, held firmly by his collar by both Fabio and Jan, was squirming to get free, and growling.

"Wha...oh, hell!" I cleverly blurted as I realized that Kazoo, Moto, and of all people, Ricardo Dickless Lujàn, were in the galley.

They had guns.

I didn't.

Damn.

BOOK: Just Needs Killin
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