“Each of you joined the Corporation with expectations of using your unique talents to make money. I’m afraid that there won’t be much on this caper, so if any of you want out until we’re done, you have my permission. Your jobs will still be open after we’re through, and there’ll be no questions asked and no recriminations later.”
He waited for a reaction, his eyes meeting each of his senior staff’s. No one said a word until Max cleared his throat.
“It’s like this, Chairman. We’ve all had a chance to talk about this ever since we started following the
The crew gave a few “hear, hears” as they followed Hanley out of the boardroom.
Juan could only smile his gratitude to his people.
Sporting his Jeb Smith disguise again to foil casual observers on the beach, Juan leaned against the rail of the
The massive scale of the buildings, cranes, and pieces of construction equipment rendered the workers almost to insignificance. The derricks towering over the yard swung slabs of steel from the beached ships to fenced-in areas where grimy men attacked them with torches, hammers, and their bare hands. From Juan’s vantage a quarter mile from the beach, they looked like ants devouring the carapace of some giant beetle.
And around the
“Will you look at that,” Max Hanley said, stepping out from the bridge. He wore a pair of grease-stained coveralls. The oil was fresh. He’d just come from the engine room. “Compared to some of those tubs, I’d say the old
A deafening roar from inside the large warehouse reverberated across the bay and drowned out Cabrillo’s reply.
“What
“Murph’s new stereo?” Juan laughed. “I think there’s some kind of saw inside the warehouse. I read about them once — big chain-driven machines that can cut a ship like a slicer going through a loaf of bread.”
Max ducked into the bridge to retrieve a pair of binoculars from their cradle under the chart table. After a few minutes, the warehouse’s landward doors cranked open. Small diesel locomotives emerged towing a twenty-foot-thick slice of a ship. The segment had a graceful flare, almost like a sculpture, and had come from near the unknown vessel’s bow. A mobile crane lifted the section into the air once the train engines had reached the end of the tracks. The piece was open in the middle. Whatever ship it had come from had cargo holds rather than decks, most likely a bulk carrier or a tanker.
“Looks like a freighter-shaped cookie cutter,” Max remarked.
“Big cookie,” Juan said as the chunk of steel was laid on its side for workers to continue the disassembly process.
Something about his distracted tone caught Hanley’s attention. “What’s going on in that cesspool you call a mind?”
“We know Singh is involved. But I’ve been up here a couple of hours, and the place looks like it’s on the up-and-up except what might be going on inside the shed.”
“Where the ship saw is?”
“Uh-huh.” Juan studied the building from the binoculars he’d taken from Max. “I want to take a peek inside tonight.”
“What about the
“She’ll be here soon enough. In the meantime, knowing what ship they’re tearing apart in there might tell us something.”
“It’s possible that it could be one of the ships the pirates hijacked before we were hired to stop them,” Hanley agreed. “Could be they brought her down here inside their other drydock.”