“Why?” she asked. “If this Jinn is the guy that caused all this, I want to be there when you get him.”
Kurt cut his eyes at her. “You jeopardized us once, I’m not going to let you do that again. Nor am I going to take you into danger. Nor are we going to get this guy. Unlike you, we’re not some kind of hit squad. We want to find out what he’s up to and why, that’s it. The best thing you could do is go home to Hawaii.”
“I don’t have anyone to go home to,” she said.
“I’m sorry,” Kurt said, “but that isn’t going to work on me this time.”
Gamay came over to intercede. “We could use a marine biologist if we’re going to analyze what’s going on with the food chain. Why don’t you stay here with us?”
Leilani didn’t seem to like that idea, but it was clear she had no other option. Finally she nodded.
Kurt stepped out through the door without another word. He felt badly for her, but he had a job to do.
CHAPTER 16
GULF OF ADEN, OFF THE COAST OF YEMEN
THIRTY-SEVEN HOURS AFTER THE MEETING IN MARCHETTI’S conference room, Kurt and Joe found themselves sitting in a wooden fishing boat in the dark of night a mile or so off the coast of Aden.
Clad in black wet suits, with fins, and small oxygen tanks on their backs, they waited patiently for a signal.
Kurt rubbed a light coat of baby shampoo on the inside glass of his mask before rinsing it to keep it from fogging up. Joe checked his air one last time and secured a diving knife in a sheath on his leg.
“You ready?” Kurt asked.
“As ready as I’m going to be,” Joe said. “You see anything?”
“Not yet.”
“What if this guy got held up?”
“He’ll make it,” Kurt said. “Dirk swears this guy has helped him out a few times before.”
“Did he give you a name?”
Kurt shook his head and smiled. “He said we wouldn’t need it.”
Joe chuckled. “Dirk has his secrets, that’s for sure.”
It was a moonless night w
ith a light wind from the northwest. Kurt could smell the desert on that breeze, but he could see nothing. They were anchored off a desolate stretch of the coast, bobbing up and down on the swells and waiting to hit the water. But they couldn’t go until they were sure someone had arrived to pick them up.
Finally a pair of lights flashed in their direction. On-off. On-off. And then back on again for a few seconds before going permanently dark.
“That’s our man,” Kurt said, pulling his mask into place.
Joe did the same, pausing for a second. “One question,” he said. “What if those bots are in the water here, waiting to chow down on us?”
Kurt hadn’t thought about that and, quite frankly, wished Joe hadn’t either. “Then you better hope they’re not hungry,” he said.
With that, he pushed back over the side and dropped into the inky black water.
A few seconds later Joe hit the water behind him, the muted sound of his plunge reverberating through the dark.
Without delay, Kurt got his bearings and began to kick with smooth, powerful strokes, the thrust from his fins moving him swiftly through the water. It was a quiet, slow-motion approach to the beach.
As he closed in on the shore, he could hear the sound of the waves pounding, he could feel the pull of the ebb tide trying to drag him to the east. He angled slightly into it, but rather than wear himself out fighting it, he mostly rode with it.