Gabriele blinked and looked away. âWe sent her home to Texas. Jaime's death came as a great shock.'
I'll bet.
There were only two people who knew what really happened on that headland overlooking Poinciana Cove during the eye of the storm. Alice was one, and the other one was dead.
âDuring the storm, Alice hinted that she might be pregnant,' I said.
âShe is. Due in April.'
âThat should be a comfort to her, don't you think?'
â
Al vivo la hogaza y al muerto, la mortaja
, Papa says. Live by the living, not the dead.'
I sat quietly for a while, thinking. My late mother would have agreed with Rudolph Mueller.
âDid Alice take the dog with her?' I asked.
âBeckham?' Gabriele smiled sadly. âYes, yes, of course. The paperwork was a nightmare, but she wouldn't be separated from Beckham.'
There didn't seem to be anything left to say, so I wrote my address on a napkin and extracted a promise from Gabriele that she'd give it to Alice the next time she saw her.
âOne thing else, Gabriele. Promise me you'll take care of Alice?'
She considered me with cool green eyes, nodded, and walked away.
I invited Molly for dinner. Afterwards, we sat on the porch, sharing a chocolate bar by candlelight.
âWe've worked it all out, haven't we, Molly.'
Molly put a square of chocolate in her mouth and licked her fingers. âYou should write a book, Hannah.'
Paul lay in the hammock, only half listening, I was sure. âWorked out what?'
âJaime Mueller was running drugs,' I said. âThe plane would fly in from Colombia or somewhere, they'd off-load the drugs into the mini-sub and toodle over to the United States. Underwater.'
â
Way
under the radar,' Molly added. âI saw it on CNN. The Coast Guard and the Navy are making it so difficult for boats and planes to get through that drug smugglers are turning to submarines.'
âRight. Jaime was the kingpin. The late Craig Meeks, Jeremy Thomas and maybe even trigger-happy Kyle were his accomplices.'
âWho . . . ?' Paul began.
I held up my hand, still holding the chocolate bar. âWait a minute. I'm coming to that. When Frank did that underwater dive, he saw the sub. Maybe he even watched it go out. Trouble was, Jaime saw him, too. So I suspect Craig and Jaime murdered Frank and Sally and stashed their bodies under the lobster trap.'
âAnd after he sailed
Wanderer
back to Hawksbill Cay,' Molly added, âJaime bumped off Craig Meeks.'
âWait a minute,' Paul wanted to know. âWhy would Jaime kill Craig?'
âMaybe Craig was OK with the drugs, but not with the killing?' I shrugged. âAnyway, I figure he killed Craig to keep him from talking. Set his body on fire so it looked like the poor sap died in the wildfire. That's why he was so eager to volunteer. Ugh.'
Molly chimed in. âBut Jaime kept Sally's ring, and the dog Duffy, and gave them to Alice.'
âRight . . .'
âNow that's what I don't understand,' Paul cut in. âStealing
Wanderer
and trying to cover it up was dim-witted enough, but holding on to the dog and that ring was just as good as saying, “Hey, look! I killed those people.”'
âYes, except Jaime never expected the bodies to be found. When they were, he panicked. Alice told me he asked for the ring back, but she refused.
âAs for Duffy,' I continued, âJaime probably thought a dog is a dog is a dog, until he discovered the microchip under Duffy's skin.' I paused long enough to pass the chocolate bar around again. âAnd then poor Duffy had to go, too. Alice told me Jaime threatened to throw the dog off Poinciana Point during the eye of the hurricane, but I think Jaime went over instead.'
Paul rolled on to his side, setting the hammock swinging. âShe killed her husband over a
dog
?'
I shook my head. âIt took me a while to put it together, but earlier in the week Gabriele mentioned that Alice had been under the weather. Then something Alice said during the hurricane finally clicked. “He said I couldn't keep it.” At first I thought she was talking about the ring. Now that I know she's pregnant, I'm pretty sure Jaime was pressuring his wife to have an abortion.'
Paul climbed out of the hammock and came to sit on the bench beside me. âThe boat, the ring, the dog. It beats me how Jaime could be so stupid.'
âGuys like Jaime think they're above the law, like they're born with a get-out-of-jail-free-card clutched in their chubby little hands.'
Paul shook his head. âBut still . . .'
I raised a hand. âWhy would Michael Vick risk a multimillion-dollar career with the NFL by staging illegal dog fights?'
âI read it in the
News & Observer
,' Molly said. âA twenty-two pit bull operation.'
I covered my mouth with my hand. âEeeuw!' Then forged on. âAnd there's hotel maven, Leona Helmsley, who believed that paying taxes was only for “the little people”.'
Next to me Paul was nodding vigorously. âMartha Stewart went to jail because she wanted to save a measly seventy-five thou.'
âI rest my case,' I said.
âCan we back up a minute?' Paul asked. âWho's Jeremy?'
âHe's one of the staffers at Tamarind Tree,' Molly explained. âHe was around when the hurricane started, and he went out during the eye, but we didn't see him at all afterwards. Gabriele came around looking for him.'
âSo, if Jeremy is gone and the mini-sub is gone . . .'
I threw my hands in the air. âCase solved!'
âNot exactly,' Molly added.
âOh, yeah. I forgot to mention that Gator notified the Coast Guard to be on the lookout for the sub. But if Jeremy was dumb enough to take it out in the middle of a hurricane, it's unlikely either he or the submarine will ever be found.'
âDid Gabriele Mueller know what her brother was up to?' Paul wondered.
âI don't think Gabriele knew, or Alice either. I'm not so sure about Jaime's dad. He might have known, but simply looked the other way.'
âWith Jaime gone, what do you think will happen to the Tamarind Tree Resort?'
I shrugged. âWhatever Gabriele wants, I imagine.'
It had been several weeks since Hurricane Helen blew through, and things had returned more or less to normal. The Pink Store reopened at once, although pickings were slim until the barge steamed in with fresh supplies. The Cruise Inn and Conch Out reopened after a week with an all-you-can-eat conch fest which Paul and I attended with Molly and half the population of Hawksbill Cay.
The power came back on after six days, and we celebrated the return of the Cruisers' Net to our morning routine.
Pattie confirmed what we'd learned through the grapevine, that Marsh Harbour had fared surprisingly well. Boats, docks and marinas had sustained moderate damage, but nothing like the havoc wreaked by Jeanne in 2004. Mangoes and Snappas were still closed, but planned to reopen soon, and the Conch Inn was serving dinner in the upstairs bar until their downstairs furniture could be replaced. Groceries, hardware and appliance stores were doing land-rush business, but most happily of all, Mimi called in to report that the horses had survived the hurricane as they had for centuries by taking refuge in the forest.
Paul picked up Daniel as usual each Thursday. Daniel chopped and trimmed and raked, making huge piles of debris on the rocky headline which he'd burn some day, but only when the wind was right.
One afternoon I sat on the dock drinking iced tea and watching Daniel do his Zen-like thing with the rake, and I was remembering Dickie.
I really missed that cat!
I left his bowl in the usual spot, but he never came to eat. Every time a bush rustled, I searched for him. I walked the beach, dreading that I'd find his body washed ashore.
Maybe I should adopt a potcake.
I sighed, waved to Daniel and went inside to wash a load of laundry.
When I came out carrying a basket of wet clothes, Dickie lay on the steps next to his empty food bowl, calmly rearranging his stripes with his tongue.
TWENTY-THREE
IN A DANGEROUS NIGHT OPERATION ON SATURDAY, US COASTGUARD OFFICIALS CAPTURED A SUBMARINE STUFFED WITH SIX BALES OF COCAINE WITH A STREET VALUE OF $30 MILLION.
A COASTGUARD SPOKESMAN WAS QUOTED AS SAYING A TEAM OF SPECIAL AGENTS WERE DISPATCHED ON SMALL BOATS TO SURPRISE THE SMUGGLERS AFTER A US NAVY AIRPLANE SPOTTED THE SUB IN INTERNATIONAL WATERS ABOUT THIRTY MILES OFF THE COAST OF FT LAUDERDALE.
TWO SMUGGLERS WERE ON BOARD THE TWENTY-EIGHT FOOT STEEL AND FIBERGLASS SUB, BUT THE COASTGUARD WAS ABLE TO CAPTURE THE SMUGGLERS BEFORE THEY COULD SCUTTLE THE VESSEL.
ARRESTED WERE JEREMY THOMAS, 23, OF PENSACOLA AND ERIC MYERS, 21, OF OCALA. THE US SHIP THAT NABBED THE TRAFFICKERS ARRIVED IN THE PORT OF FT LAUDERDALE TODAY WITH THE DRUG BOAT IN TOW.
Florida Sun Sentinel
, Sept. 6, 2008, P. B1
TWENTY-FOUR
EL MIRADOR LAND CORPORATION, DEVELOPER OF THE TAMARIND TREE RESORT AND MARINA, AN EXCLUSIVE BAHAMIAN ISLAND RETREAT FOR THE SUPER-RICH, SAID IT FILED FOR BANKRUPTCY AFTER FAILING TO SECURE NEW FINANCING, DEMONSTRATING THAT EVEN THE RICH CANNOT ESCAPE THE COUNTRY'S CURRENT ECONOMIC TROUBLES. SPOKESPERSON GABRIELE MUELLER SAID THE CORPORATION FILED FOR CHAPTER 11 PROTECTION WEDNESDAY IN FEDERAL BANKRUPTCY COURT IN TEXAS. THE MOVE CAME JUST TWO MONTHS AFTER THE RESORT SUFFERED EXTENSIVE DAMAGE IN HURRICANE HELEN WHICH SWEPT THROUGH THE ABACO ISLAND CHAIN IN SEPTEMBER.
IN A STATEMENT TO THE ASSOCIATED PRESS, THE CEO OF EL MIRADOR LAND CORPORATION, RUDOLPH MUELLER, DEVELOPER OF THE TAMARIND TREE RESORT, SAID HE HAD BEEN UNABLE TO SECURE FINANCING ARRANGEMENTS WITH ITS CREDITORS AND BONDHOLDERS. THE COURT FILING SAYS THAT TIGHT CREDIT MARKETS HAD MADE IT DIFFICULT TO RAISE MONEY TO PAY OFF DEBTS AND MAKE NEEDED REPAIRS TO THE RESORT. HE PLANS TO REORGANIZE ITS FINANCES AND EMERGE FROM BANKRUPTCY âAS SOON AS POSSIBLE,' THE STATEMENT SAID.
OPENED IN EARLY 2008, THE RESORT HAD BEEN PLANNING AN EXPANSION WHEN THE CREDIT CRISIS HIT WALL STREET. THOSE PLANS, AS WELL AS PLANS TO DEVELOP OTHER LUXURY RESORTS IN SOUTH AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN ARE NOW ON HOLD PENDING RESOLUTION OF EL MIRADOR'S FINANCIAL WOES.
The Dallas Morning News
, Oct. 16, 2008, P. A1