Death Echo

Death Echo Read Free Page B

Book: Death Echo Read Free
Author: Elizabeth Lowell
Tags: thriller, Suspense, adventure, Romance, Contemporary, Mystery, Adult
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was making way toward its station at Pier 48, and a dozen pleasure craft of varying sizes were crisscrossing the heavily traveled waters in the afternoon sunshine.
    The black rubber Zodiac with two people aboard lay about a hundred yards offshore, bobbing and jerking in the wakes and chop. The open craft had a shiny stainless-steel radar arch and the logo of a local tour outfit. The captain and single passenger wore standard offshore gear to protect them from wind and spray in the open boat. The passenger was busy with the camera again.
    The round black eye of the long-distance lens made the fine hairs on Mac’s neck lift.
    Too many memories of sniper scopes.
    He shook off his past and watched as the crane operator delicately lowered
Blackbird
into the water. Mac signaled for a stop. The operator held the boat in place in the cradle, afloat but not adrift. Mac checked his instruments once more, then touched the port start button on the console.
    Beneath him, he felt as much as heard one huge engine rattle and cough. He held the switch closed while he glanced over his left shoulder toward the stern quarter of the boat. Black smoke belched, then cleared and belched again. The stuttering sound of engine ignition smoothed out into a comforting, throaty rumble.
    The starboard engine started more easily and leveled out instantly. He went to the stainless-steel railing aft of the bridge and checked. Both exhaust ports were trailing diesel smoke. Beneath it, he could see the steady flow of cooling water.
    Good to go.
    He signaled thumbs-up to the crane operator. The yacht slipped down a few more inches until the water took the full weight of the boat. Moments later the slings went slack. Then the operator let out enough cable to ease the lifting frame far enough aft that the yacht was free.
    The big power pods took over as Mac put the engine controls into forward. She felt solid. Clean. Good. A grand yacht doing what she had been designed to do. He left the joystick controls alone and worked with the old-fashioned throttle levers. Testing himself and a new control system in the busy bay was stupid. He’d try the joystick out later, when he was away from the crowds.
    Mac idled away from the container docks. He purely loved the first instants of freedom, of being responsible only for himself. Grinning, he glanced over his shoulder to check the wake.
    The black Zodiac was moving with him. No faster. No slower. Same direction. Same angle.
    The hair on Mac’s neck stirred again in silent warning.
    This time he didn’t ignore it. He got his binoculars out of the small duffel he always carried, and took a good, long look from the cover of the cabin.
    You’re being paranoid,
the civilian part of himself said.
    The part of him that had been honed to a killing edge years ago just kept memorizing faces, features, and boat registration numbers.

3

DAY ONE
    BELLTOWN MARINA
    AFTERNOON
    P ut me ashore there,” Emma said, pointing at the dock next to the Belltown Marina.
    “Isn’t your car back at—”
    “My problem, not yours,” she cut in.
    While Josh headed for the dock, she stripped off the red Mustang suit and secured the camera in her backpack. They had wallowed behind in
Blackbird’
s wake for fifteen minutes, long enough for Emma to realize that solo surveillance on the water was even trickier than on city streets. Joe Faroe would be flying in as soon as he could, disguised as a tourist. Any more obvious backup for what was supposed to be an insurance investigation would send off warning bells in the wrong places.
    All she could do was pray that Alara had some trustworthy people on the ground.
    Or not.
    Leaks were something Emma didn’t want to share.
    Josh brought the Zodiac up to the hotel dock, cutting his speed at the last moment and killing all momentum with a short burst of reverse power. Emma stood poised, one foot on the black rubber gunwale, and stepped off just a second before the Zodiac touched the dock.
    “Call me

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