A commercial diver cleaning a freighter discovered a mysterious rocket-shaped object clamped to the hull.
But when they hauled it up and torched it open, the shock and contents made even the respondent officers turned pale.
The taste of the port of Miami is a specific aggressive cocktail of diesel fuel, salt, decaying seaggrass, and the metallic tang of industrial runoff.
A flavor that hangs in the heavy humid air long before you even touch the water.
For Jake Sullivan, that taste was simply the flavor of a Tuesday.
At 45, Jake was a man shaped by the sea, broadshouldered, weatherbeaten, with lines around his eyes that came from squinting against the sun in the sting of saltwater.
He stood on the concrete pier of Terminal J, staring up at the steel leviathan that loomed above him.
The ship was the MV Ora, a 900 ft cargo freighter that had just limped in from a transatlantic run originating in South America.
From the dock, she looked like a rusted mountain, her hull, a patchwork of red antifouling paint and streaks of oxidation.
To a tourist, she was just a boat.
To Jake, she was a paycheck, and a necessary one at that.
He adjusted the straps of his heavy diving rig.
The twin yellow tanks on his back clanking softly against the back plate.
Those tanks were his signature.
Bright cautionary yellow, easy to spot in the Merc, a habit he’d picked up after a near miss in the murky waters of the Mississippi Delta a decade ago.
She’s dragon.

The dockmaster, a man named Frank, who looked like a walking leather handbag, shouted over the roar of a nearby crane.