42

Mitchell brought his johnboat in back of the Highlander and tied it to the dive platform. He looked around the marina. The lights had gone off in the super-yacht he’d seen earlier. Other than the lights from fixtures on the docks, the only other light came from a small building at the front of the marina. In an upscale marina like this one, he could be certain there was a guard sitting inside in front of a bank of screens that showed different camera angles from around the harbor. It was also a certainty that he would make periodic rounds.

Mitchell debated whether or not to change the boat lettering while he was in the marina. The last thing he wanted to do was try to cut off the lock on the main cabin. The sound might not carry all the way to the guard, but he might hear it when he walked his rounds. Thinking of the truck stop the night before, Mitchell had the added risk of there being people asleep on any of the boats around the marina. When he worked at a marina, he met several colorful characters who lived on their boats and yachts year-round.

The lettering could wait until he was safely away from there. He used the Wi-Fi network to look at a Google map of the area to figure out where he wanted to take the boat. Thirty minutes north of him the Intracoastal ran into a bay with a bunch of small islands like the one he had been on. He could take the boat up there and park it behind one of the islands that night and change the name and registration numbers.

Before he took the boat out of the marina, assuming he could get to the key, he needed to look for a GPS antenna. On a boat that cost over $300,000, it was a given the owner would install a security system that would tell him if it had been moved more than fifteen feet from where it was berthed.

On most boats, it would be mounted to the canopy. The Highlander didn’t have one. It was just an open cockpit. Mitchell climbed under the covering and searched around under the inside of the sides of the boats. He couldn’t find anything that felt like a unit, but he found two cables that ran from the cabin to the back of the boat under one of the locked covers.

One of them was probably the antenna for the alarm system. The other was probably an electric cable control for the back hatches. He pulled on them both. One of them let out several feet of slack. That was most likely the GPS cable. Installers tended to roll the slack up into coils and zip-tie them inside of a well in case the owner wants to move the unit. Mitchell cut the cable and looked at the cross section. It looked like what he thought it should. Before leaving the harbor, he’d do another pass through the interior and take a look at the electrical system.

With the alarm system out of the way, Mitchell was ready to cut the lock. He gathered all the gear from the johnboat. He set the flashlight he was using on the floor and put a metal grinding disk in the angle grinder. To keep the lock from flopping around, he taped it to the hatch.

He plugged the extension cord into the grinder and then poked his head out from the covering to see if anyone was near. The dock was empty on either side. He couldn’t do anything about the security cameras, so he just went for it. Mitchell leaned out over the edge and plugged the cord into the outlet on the pylon nearest the cockpit.

He ducked back down and pulled the covering back in place. With any luck, nobody would notice the sound. With slightly less luck, they wouldn’t know where the sound came from. Worse-case scenario: He could hop into his johnboat and go find another island.

He’d seen an angle grinder used to cut a lock but had never tried it himself. Mitchell gripped the grinder and held it over the lock. He was about to find out real quick if observing was the same as doing.

He turned the grinder on and touched the spinning disk to the lock. The cockpit was filled with an earsplitting sound while his legs were showered with sparks. Mitchell squinted as they bounced into his face. He cursed himself for not getting eye protection or earmuffs.

After a few seconds of abuse, the lock gave up and fell open. The small space under the cover was filled with the smell of burnt metal. Mitchell’s ears were ringing but he could still hear the sounds of dispatchers in his earbud as they responded to the latest crisis he caused at the Super Center.

Mitchell grabbed the lock and then jerked his hand away from the heat. Dumb move, he told himself. He used the edge of the jacket he had taken off to pull the lock away. Mitchell opened the hatch on the cabin and shined his flashlight inside.

On his left he could see a panel of green lights that showed the systems that had power. He flashed the light around and saw a sink, the head, and the U-shaped couch at the front that also served as a bed.

Remembering back to the marina he worked at, he pulled up the carpet beneath the hatch. There was a small door that opened to the bottom of the hull. Mitchell reached down there and felt a box the size of a thick wallet. He yanked it free. It came out attached to two cables. He was looking for the key but found the GPS alarm system. He unplugged it and tossed it aside.

Mitchell reached his arm back down again and found a plastic bag wedged between some cables. He pulled it out. Through the plastic he could see several keys. One for the hatches, one for the ignition and another one that unlocked the lockers that held the dive gear and the reason he wanted to steal this boat in particular.

Mitchell made sure the johnboat was firmly fastened to the stern and then made his preparations to leave. He leaned out and undid the line at the stern. To avoid being seen on the dock, he climbed into the cabin and up a hatch and unfastened the line attached to the bow.

He looked out over the marina. It was still quiet. He paid careful attention to the scanner. On that frequency, Mitchell would have heard a police car dispatched to the marina. It would also let him know if they had alerted the Marine Patrol.

Mitchell gave the dock a push and sent the bow of the boat in a gentle arc away from the dock. He climbed back into the cockpit and peeled away the front of the covering. He slid the key into the ignition and gave it a turn. The powerboat started with a powerful roar.

He looked around the marina but nothing stirred. With his right hand on the throttle and his left on the wheel, he reversed the boat and slowly pulled it backward out of the harbor. When he was clear of the last boat, he nudged the throttle forward and slipped the shifter into forward. The vessel moved away from the docks and Mitchell and his latest prize faded into the night in search of a quiet place where he could finish his home improvement project on the boat.

* * *

Fifty miles away from Mitchell, the man called Mr. Lewis had his own shop project. He set a briefcase on the hotel room table next to a bag of things he’d purchased at a drug store. The Discovery Channel played in the background.

The briefcase had been with him his whole trip from Virginia onboard a private aircraft. Any prying eyes that had a look inside it would have had a lot of questions. But Mr. Lewis wasn’t in the business of answering questions, at least not truthfully. His job was to stop people from asking them or at the very least make them ask the wrong ones.

He opened up his case and pulled out a few parts and some tools. He took apart a hand-held cutting torch and used the pieces to make something new. He took a can of spray-on suntan lotion and drained it into a wastebasket. He then used a Dremel tool to saw it neatly in half.

He took a break for a half-hour to watch a documentary on snow leopards. He then returned to his work.

He used some epoxy on a few parts and then used a drill to make several punctures into the top half of the suntan spray canister. Two hours later it was finished. It was obviously a rushed job by his standards. It was put together with the minimal amount of craft needed to make it looked plausible. The device was just a prop for a larger piece of theater.

With the addition of Mr. Baylor’s “bow,” it would look like a plausible device. The CO2 cylinder attached to the valve from the hand torch led to a small valve that extended outside the thin aluminum cylinder. The valve opened up to a small chamber lined with very thin gauze. Two screws would hold in place a glass cylinder like the kind used to store a blood sample. A third screw, this one a thumb screw, would break the glass cylinder when it was twisted. The open valve would blow a blast of compressed gas into the chamber and blow whatever was in the glass cylinder into the open air, quickly filling every corner of whatever room it was in.

Prop or not, it was still a lethal device when the “bow” was added to it. Mr. Lewis wanted to make sure that he was well clear after he planted it.

He placed his tools back into his case and put his leftover materials into the plastic shopping bag to be disposed of away from the hotel.

He sat down on the bed and sorted through various ID badges and chose the one he wanted to use when he got the call to proceed. The advantage of working for the people that he did was that most of them weren’t forgeries.

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