Down below Gerry switched on the computer. She had not been able to access her department’s intranet site nor any other where she might get any useful information. She wondered if she should try to fly to the USA and see if she could make contact with Dan Hall, or if she should just go back home and report to Cornwall. She had no idea if there was a termination order out on her, imposed by her own service or by the Americans. She did not know whom she could trust, if anyone.
She thought about merely disappearing from view. She had hidden away two UK passports in different names and she was almost sure that one of them was not known to her employers. She also had a valid UAE passport that was an MI6 issue and an Australian one that she had officially handed back but in reality she had returned a partially burnt forged copy and retained the original. Unfortunately none of these were of any immediate use to her because they were all stashed in England.
What she really needed to do was to find out the truth about Gilgamesh because she had decided that the knowledge would protect her now and in the future, and her best chance lay in the USA. There she would find Dan Hall and suggest that together they should go to Baghdad and track down Rashid Hamsin. She had a vague idea that she might call Richard Cornwall, on the basis that he might tell her the truth even if that was merely a warning that a team had been despatched to kill her.
She contemplated asking Steven if she could sail on to the States with him, but she readily admitted to herself that she was scared and that remaining on board his yacht would merely be procrastination. She began to search airline schedules from Bermuda back to Florida and home to London, but then remembered that she was supposed to be making coffee and hastily set about it.
After taking his noon sun sighting, Steven pointed to the horizon. Gerry gazed out and saw a thin green tinge appearing as the yacht crested a wave, and then two hours later the islands of Bermuda stretched across the horizon. Steven showed her the chart. ‘We have to enter St George’s harbour through Town Cut channel, just north of Higgs Island and Horseshoe. Then we have to clear customs and immigration at Ordnance Island here. It’s going to be a bit awkward as you don’t have a passport or anything.’
‘Could you wait until dark and then, well, drop me off somewhere? Maybe I could swim ashore,’ she suggested.
‘Well we could wait until dusk, and then you could slip over the side. Are you happy to swim ashore?’ he asked doubtfully. ‘I’ve got a small inflatable dinghy. If the tide’s right, you could paddle ashore. There’s this little place Building Bay outside the harbour.’
‘That seems ok.’
‘I’m not so sure; Bermuda’s known for rocks and reefs and this stretch here might be really dangerous. It might be better if you hid on board, and then when I’ve cleared customs I can motor round to Hamilton over here.’
‘Yes. Let’s go for that.’
‘Ok, well we’re within VHF range now so I’ll call them up.’
Steven spoke to the Harbour control and reported his yacht’s name, position and likely arrival time in the harbour and declared that he was the only person on board.
‘Well, they seem happy enough,’ Gerry said. Then she was startled by a rapid high pitched beeping that she had never heard before. ‘What on earth was that?’
‘That’s the radar alert,’ Steven replied, ‘there’s a vessel approaching. They both gazed out over the forepeak and saw an ocean going motor yacht heading towards them. ‘The toys of the mega-rich,’ said Steven.
‘It looks like it’s heading towards us,’ said Gerry.
‘Well steam gives way to sail, but anyway I think we’ll miss the harbour entrance on this course, so ready about?’
‘Aye skipper.’
With Gerry’s assistance he tacked on to a more northerly heading. They were sipping coffee having completed the manoeuvre when he realised that the larger vessel was once more heading towards them.
‘It looks like they’re going to intercept us,’ Steven remarked. ‘I wonder what they want.’ He turned to Gerry. ‘It’s not someone looking for you is it? They can’t possibly know you’re on board, can they?’
‘I can’t take that chance,’ she replied. ‘Is there anywhere I could hide?’ She searched around frantically.
‘Over the side!’ he said. ‘You’ll have to hold on to the safety line. We’re going quite slowly.’
‘But they could still see me.’ She crouched down low. ‘If they’ve got binoculars they might have seen me already.’
She was right, but there was no other place to go. ‘Hold on I’ll get a snorkel.’
Steven hurried below and searched frantically in the store cabin and managed to turn up a diving mask with a snorkel attached. He hurried back to the cockpit. Gerry was nowhere to be seen, but he saw her clothes discarded on the seat. He looked over the stern and there she was clinging on to the safety line. He threw the snorkel and it splashed into the sea beside her. She let go of the line and pulled the mask over her face, dragged the straps tight and grabbed the line again. She clenched the tube in her mouth and as the yacht moved along she let the line run through her hands until she was at the far end, and he could just see her head bobbing about in the waves. The blast of a warning siren startled him and then he could hear the chug of the other boat’s diesel motor. He luffed up, spilled the wind out of the mainsail and ran down the jib and watched it pass in front, make a wide turn to parallel his course and then the helmsman skilfully edged it closer. Presumably there was a name and home port painted on its stern but Steven could not see it. There were no other identification marks that he could see. ‘What the hell are you doing?’ he called out as indignantly as possible.
Two men leaned over the side of the boat. One raised a loud hailer. ‘This is Bermuda Coastguard. We would like to come aboard.’
The man shouting was red haired and grinned down at him showing a prominent gold tooth. He spoke with a southern American accent that seemed incongruous in a Bermudan Customs official, and surely a ship belonging to the Coastguard would have its ownership prominently painted on the hull. ‘I’ll be in harbour this evening,’ he shouted. ‘Can’t it wait until then?’
‘We’ve had a report that you have a known criminal on board. Take in your sails; we’re coming alongside.’ Two other men appeared holding machine guns, which at the moment they rested casually on the coaming.
‘Ok, hold off a minute,’ Steven shouted. He lowered the main sail and then he threw the fenders down beside the hull and signalled that he was ready. He looked around the cockpit. Shit, there was her bra lying on the seat! He picked it up and shoved it in his pocket. His yacht juddered as the boat came alongside and the red haired man jumped down on to the deck, followed by another.
‘Ok where is she?’ this second one demanded in an educated English accent.
‘Where’s who?’ Steven asked in return trying to adopt an expression of genuine puzzlement.
‘Vince, why don’t you take a look below?’ red hair suggested. The Englishman opened the cabin door and went into the main saloon.
‘Hey, wait a minute!’ Steven called out.
‘Listen, we know she’s been on board. She accessed the internet and we traced her to your yacht.’
‘Traced who?’ demanded Steven. The American hit him hard under the ribs and he fell back on to the seat clutching at his mid-section and gasping for breath.
‘Quit screwing around. Where is she?’
‘Ok,’ said Steven. I did pick someone up, but two days ago a boat like yours only smaller called the Kingfisher, registered in Miami, intercepted me. They took her off. I don’t know where they went. ‘