"Looks like a 747 cockpit. Not that I've ever been in one, but…"

"State of the art," Tom said. He looked like such a proud papa, Jack wondered if the boat might really be his. "Every telltale and navigation device you can imagine, and each backed up with another just like it. The previous owner is a very careful man."

But not quite careful enough, Jack thought. Otherwise he wouldn't be facing a vacation in a federal pen.

Jack nodded appreciatively. "Lots of navigation gizmos. Good. I like that. Wouldn't want to miss Bermuda and wind up in Africa."

Tom laughed. "This is the age of GPS, my boy. In case you don't know, that stands for Global Positioning—"

"—System. I know. So this stuff works like one of those car navigators?"

"Even better. Soon as we clear the inlet, we plug in the latitude and longitude of Bermuda's Great Sound and then we just sit back, crack a few beers, and relax."

"Just how far is Bermuda?"

"About six hundred fifty miles due east."

The figure jolted Jack.

"Six hundred—Jesus! How many miles a gallon does this thing get?"

"Maybe one."

"One? That means we need—"

"Lots of gallons. Seven hundred to be safe."

Jack looked around. "But where…?"

"Don't worry. We've got plenty. Good old Chiram more than doubled Sahbons range by sticking extra tanks everywhere—under the bunks, under the dinette, in every available open space, all with a state-of-the-art manifold system to feed it to the engines. We'll be riding low and slow at first, but we'll do better as the tanks empty."

"What about storms?"

"We're past hurricane season and the seven-day forecast is clear and calm all the way."

"And you say you've done this before?"

"Loads of times. Piece of cake. With this kind of equipment the boat literally drives itself."

"Awful long way to go in a little boat."

Tom bristled. "First off, it's not 'little.' And second, if you think Bermuda's far for the Sahbon, consider this: Every year people race to Bermuda in sailboats from places like Halifax and Newport."

Another shock. "Sailboats?"

"Sailboats."

"Why?"

"Because."

Jack shrugged. "Good a reason as any, I guess." He locked his gaze on his brother. "You're sure you know what you're doing?"

"Of course. Why do you keep asking me?"

"Because I'm leaving there"—he double-jerked his thumb over his shoulder at land—"and heading there"—he pointed to the water—"so I'd like to be—"

Tom snapped his fingers. "Yul Brynner, The Magnificent Seven. Right?"

Jack experienced a few seconds of disorientation, then realized what Tom was talking about. One of the few neutral topics of discussion on the drive down had been movies. Tom seemed to love them as much as Jack.

"Yeah, right," he said. "Talking to the traveling salesman. Good pickup."

Jack was impressed. Might have been more impressed if he weren't facing the prospect of six-hundred-plus miles across open sea on a ship belonging to an indicted money launderer.

I'll soon be in the middle of the goddamn Atlantic Ocean, in the dark, heading for the Bermuda Triangle, with Tom as my skipper. Now there was a comforting thought. At least the boat wasn't named The Minnow.

2

Jack sat on a deck chair and kept his back to the coastline—so he wouldn't have to see the lights disappear—while Tom manned the helm. Ahead, only water… a limitless expanse of black, gently rolling waves.

It had been full dark by the time they'd chugged away from the docks, heading south into Pimlico Sound. After maybe eight or nine miles—or should he start thinking in leagues now?—they'd passed under a highway arching over a gap called the Oregon Inlet, and then they were out to sea.

Am I having fun yet? Jack thought. Answer: no.

The breeze felt cool but Jack was comfortable in his jeans, flannel shirt, and hoodie. Crying seagulls swooped and glided between the boat and the starlit sky.

Half of Jack had wanted to wait for tomorrow and get a fresh start first thing in the morning; the idea of cruising through the dark sent ripples through his gut, but there was no way around it: They were going to have to spend a night or two at sea no matter what time they left.

The other half wanted to get this whole deal over with, reminding him that the sooner they got going, the sooner they'd be back.

Tom came aft to the cooler and pulled out a Bud Light. Jack grimaced. Good movie sense, no beer sense. Maybe all the vodka he drank had killed off his taste buds.

"Want one?"

Jack shook his head. He'd stocked his cooler with Yuengling.

"Maybe later."

Tom stepped below. He returned a few seconds later with a folded piece of paper, pulled up a chair, and settled beside Jack.

"Ever see a treasure map?"

"No." Jack pointed to the helm. "I don't mean to be picky, but shouldn't someone be driving the boat?"

"Like I told you, this thing pilots itself. It knows where Bermuda is and knows it's supposed to go there. And there's not another boat around, so relax."

Yes, Jack knew what Tom had told him, but he still didn't like it.

He unfolded the sheet and handed it to Jack.

"Take a gander."

The sheet was actually four Xeroxed pages taped together into a large rectangle. A compass rose indicated that north was toward the top of the sheet. Right of center was a wedge-shaped landmass with a northward-pointing nipple. A line ran on a diagonal to a star surrounded by wiggly lines. The star had been labeled Sombra. The number of miles—eight and a half—had been written in ornate script along the line. Readings in minutes and degrees that Jack assumed to be latitudes had been placed above the nipple and the star.

Ornate handwritten Spanish filled the lower right corner. Jack's Spanish wasn't up to a translation.

"'Splain to me."

"Okay, Ricky."

Tom had spotted Ricky Ricardo. But that was an easy one.

"Translation?"

Tom closed his eyes and recited. " 'The resting place of the Sombra and the Lilitongue of Gefreda, in the depths near the Isle of Devils, this Twenty-eighth day of March, Year of Our Lord Fifteen-ninety-eight.' And then it's signed by Francisco Mendes, Society of Jesus."

Fifteen ninety-eight…

"This is over four hundred years old?"

Tom nodded. "The original is. It's parchment and barely holding together as it is. I wasn't about to take it out on the Atlantic."

"What's "Sombra"? And what the hell is the Lilitongue of Gefreda?"

Tom held up a hand. "Let me start at the beginning. When I was in private practice I joined a firm and inherited this client from one of the partners who was retiring due to ill health. The client's name was Allan Wenzel, a sweet old guy who was a devoted antiquities collector—especially maps." He tapped the sheets in Jack's hand. "This was one of his favorites. He told me it'd been found in the ruins of a Spanish monastery and had languished in various antique shops for years before he discovered it."

"How did he know he wasn't buying a Brooklyn Bridge?"

"He had the parchment dated and it's from the late sixteenth century. The details—the distance and the precise latitude reading—point to someone who was on the spot and knew what he was talking about."

"But who is that someone?"

Tom pointed to the signature on the lower right sheet. "This Jesuit named Mendes, I'd guess. Wenzel's guess was that he must have been a passenger."

"On what?"

"The Sombra—a Spanish cargo ship."

Jack couldn't help laughing. "Don't tell me: It's a treasure ship laden with gold and jewels."

Tom shrugged. "Could be."

"Okay. I'll bite: Where's this Isle of Devils?"

"It's the old name for Bermuda before she was settled."