years older, none of the drinking and drug use. She expressed contempt for all that. There was a quiet wisdom about Jinx that contrasted sharply with her line of bright patter and her extraordinary, dark beauty. There was also a naïvetéâCat thoughtshe was still not fully aware of the effect her bun-revealing shorts and tiny bikinis had on the opposite sex, not excluding himself. For all her native intelligence, she was still very much the child-woman. These two years of sailing were going to be precious to himâthe rare gift of an extension of what had always been a remarkably close father-daughter relationship.
They sailed along quietly for a couple of minutes, then, without any warning, she said, âDaddy, what about Dell?â
Catâs stomach knotted at the sound of his sonâs name. âWhat about him?â
âWhy donât you call him from Santa Marta and ask him to meet us in Panama? You know what a great crew he is.â
âI donât think Dell is interested in sailing these days. Besides, heâd probably get arrested going through customs.â
âCat, you need to patch it up with him,â she said, gravely.
âWrong, Jinx,â Cat replied, quickly, âDell needs to patch it up with the world. How can I possibly patch it up with him while heâs doing what heâs doing? Are we going to have big, family Sunday dinners and worry about the cops busting in on us? Am I going to take him sailing through a dozen foreign ports and have to sweat getting busted in customs every time?â
âHe needs your help.â
âIâll give him my help when heâs ready to ask me for it. Itâs been rejected too many times.â God knew that was true; he had given up thinking about the number of scrapes heâd gotten the boy out of, the number of new schools and fresh starts heâd financed. In marked contrast to Jinx, Dell had always been rebellious, lazy, and surly.
Katie appeared in the companionway with two plates of pancakes and they both shut up.
Cat grinned at her. âNow I remember why I married you.â
âYou want these in your lap, buster?â Katie grinned back.
Jinx patted his belly. âYeah, you might just as well apply them directly to the paunch. Why go to the trouble of eating them?â
Three hours later, the entrance to the harbor at Santa Marta loomed ahead. The three of them stood in the cockpit and gazed at the land. To their right, a group of high-rise buildings stood behind a fringe of palms. âThatâs the beach area,â Cat said. âThe port is over there to the left, behind that little island. The main town is at the port.â An older, more Spanish group of buildings could be seen beyond the beach.
Suddenly Katie said, âCat, letâs donât go in here. Iâve got a bad feeling about this place.â
Cat didnât speak for a moment. Katie had had bad feelings about things before, and she was usually right. âOh, hell, Katie,â he said, finally. âWeâre half an hour away from getting the alternator fixed. Showers for everybody!â
Katie said nothing.
Glancing frequently at the chart, Cat held his course for the harbor entrance.
2
C AT HAD EXPECTED A MARINA OF SOME SORT, HOWEVER PRIMITIVE, but he was disappointed. There was an area to his left that berthed half a dozen modern ships, loading and unloading; there was a mixture of smaller craft around the harborâa small coaster or two, some fishing boats, and the odd sportfishermanâand tied next to a concrete wharf were four or five sailboats, ranging from roughly twenty-five to fifty feet in length.
With Jinx and Katie standing by with lines at bow and stem, their regular drill, Cat eased the yacht into a vacant spot at the wharf. Jinx had changed into a bikini, and he could almost hear the eyeballs click on the boats around them and on the quay as she hopped ashore and secured her