But the word bomb stops everything.
By the time Jake had stripped out of his dry suit and into his coveralls, the pier was swarming.
The Miami Dade Police Department’s specialized port unit had arrived, followed closely by a black tactical truck from the bomb squad.
A perimeter was established, pushing the angry Steve doors and crane operators back 300 yards.
Jake sat on the bumper of his truck, drinking lukewarm water from a plastic bottle.
He watched the activity with a detached professional eye.
He had been debriefed three times, first by Frank, then by the ship’s furious Captain Vargo, who seemed to blame Jake personally for finding the object.
and finally by a seriousl looking police sergeant.
But it was the arrival of the black sedan that put the hook of true fear into Jake’s gut.
It parked far back near the stacks of shipping containers.
It wasn’t a government car.
No plates that Jake recognized as federal.
Two men in suits got out watching the scene from a distance behind sunglasses.
They didn’t approach the police line.
They just watched the ship.
“You the diver?” Jake looked up.
A man in a heavy kevlar vest holding a helmet stood over him.
The patch on his chest read, “Eodeed Miami Dade.
” He was older with the calm demeanor of someone who dismantled nightmares for a living.
“Yeah, Jake Sullivan.
” “Lieutenant Miller,” the man said, offering a hand.
Good eyes down there.
Most guys would have just scraped around it and invoiced the hours.
It was hard to miss once I hit it, Jake said.
Is it a mine? We don’t know yet, Miller said, looking at the water.
We put a drone down, but the current is whipping up the silt.
Can’t see a damn thing on the camera.
We need to get hands on it.
I told you guys exactly where it is, Jake said.
I know, Miller nodded.
But my divers aren’t hole scrubbers.
They don’t know the geometry of a rudder housing on a ship this size.