Books by Eric Douglas

Thriller fiction and Non-fiction

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    • Heart of the Maya: Murder for the Gods
    • Wreck of the Huron: Cuban Secrets
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    • Dive-abled: The Leo Morales Story
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You are here: Home / Archives for Excerpt Fridays

Guardians’ Keep: Excerpt Friday #1

March 31, 2017 By Eric Douglas

The following is an excerpt from the Mike Scott thriller Guardians’ Keep.

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As Mike exhaled and sank below the water, it took his eyes a moment to adjust to the lower light level and then another second to get a grasp of what he was looking at. A carpet of anemones and sea life covered everything below him. Sea fans and barnacles created a jumble of color—reds, greens, blues, pinks and oranges exploded everywhere around. The layer of moving life gave the surface a fuzzy texture like a fur rug draped over furniture.

Mike realized the shapes on the sea floor that looked like random blobs were actually structures rising up from the sea floor. There were walls and pillars. Tables of stone littered the area. The waving action as the animals and plants drifted with the small waves above, served to erase any sharp edges and blend one item into the next, but he was beginning to sort it out.

Okay, I can make this out, now, Mike thought. That big building must be the main hall. Those over there are probably private quarters for people. It’s actually sort of set up like the work site above with two half-circles, and then there was a courtyard in the middle. A few of the buildings look like they may’ve fallen down, but it looks intact.

Turning to look back across the entire site, things began to make sense to Mike. It had been a jumble of confusion at first. He could tell the site was ring-shaped. The tallest building was on one side, with smaller buildings wrapped around it on each wing. He was sure at least one of the fallen-down buildings beneath him was a chapel. Mike guessed another hump was a fountain or a statue.

After allowing him to swim around for a few minutes, Frankie got Mike’s attention and pointed out the direction she wanted him to head. As they swam, they passed two sets of divers working around the site. Both teams were preparing a section for further excavation. Using string, divers had laid out a grid pattern over the entire area. The dive teams were taking measurements and detailed photographs of each square. They would use these images and notes to evaluate likely areas to search later and for comparison purposes after they began excavations.

At the edge of the grid pattern, Mike could see another crew working, actually carrying out excavations. They were using a large underwater suction hose to move sand and debris up to the surface onto a floating platform. When the platform was full, they would swim it in to the beach, where workers on the surface would sift through it to make sure they didn’t miss any small items that were potentially important. The propellers of the dive boat up above provided the power for the vacuum, directing the water upward, instead of backward. There were also two smaller rigid, inflatable boats to support the operations. The team had also built an underwater structure, like a set of scaffolds, from which to work and to support the suction hoses.

Frankie and Mike hovered effortlessly in the water just above and to the side of the divers watching as they cleared away the material and began to expose the buildings below. They were in a normal swimming position, almost perfectly parallel to the bottom.

With nothing but the sound of his own breathing, and the droning of the boat engine driving the underwater vacuum, Mike began to imagine what life might have been like in this small community, before the rising sea and slipping hillside caused everything to slide beneath the waves. It was much the same process as he went through mentally when hovering over a shipwreck for the first time.

The sight of metal pipes passing directly in front of his eyes roused him from his daydream. As his brain began to register the danger that he, Frankie and the other divers were in, he felt something heavy strike the back of his legs and begin to pull him down to the sea floor. He began to struggle and attempted to swim from beneath the weight. Just as he started to move forward, he felt his body strike the bottom. Mike was pinned to the sea floor by the scaffold. The collapse of the scaffolding disturbed the sandy bottom.

Mike couldn’t see anyone else around him, although he knew there were several other divers in the water nearby. He wasn’t about to wait for someone to rescue him. As he twisted and struggled to get free of the burden holding him down, he realized the bulk of the weight was resting squarely on his back. He was pinned to the ocean floor.

Mike knew he was going to need to control his breathing and think for a minute. He knew he had plenty of air because he had been underwater for only about 15 minutes and it was a shallow dive. Still, he needed to calm down, slow his breathing and think.

After reviewing his options, he decided to slip out of his gear to see if he couldn’t free himself of the entanglement. A trained cave and wreck diver, Mike had slid out of his gear on more than one occasion underwater to get past a small restriction. He began loosening the straps on his shoulders and around his waist. It took some struggling to get his hands and fingertips around the buckles to where he could release the tension.

After what felt like forever, Mike was able to slide the buoyancy compensation jacket off his shoulders and twist out of his prison. He had to take his regulator out of his mouth for a moment until he got clear of the wreckage. Wiggling free and looking all around, he was able to see what happened. A large section of the underwater structure had collapsed and rained down metal pipes on the area Frankie’s team was exploring.

Mike also quickly realized why no one had come to help him. Frankie was trapped and didn’t appear to be moving. Mike quickly pulled his gear free of the wreckage and slid it back into place. He swam over to where the other two divers were struggling to get pipes off Frankie. As he arrived, the two men were able to get the last pipe moving.

Small bubbles escaped from Frankie’s regulator on regular intervals. Mike guessed she was breathing, but he wasn’t going to take any chances. As the two men raised the bar off Frankie’s legs, Mike moved into position and began lifting her as gently as he could off the bottom. He quickly moved one hand in front of her and held her regulator in her mouth. With his other hand, Mike reached around in front of her limp body and released her weight belt so he wouldn’t have to struggle to get her to the surface. He immediately began to swim with her, knowing he needed to get her to air and additional help. Mike’s mind was racing as he swam upward with Frankie’s still shape in his arms. It was only 30 feet to the surface, but the adrenaline racing through his bloodstream made it feel like he was moving in slow motion.

Breaking the surface, Mike began signaling for help with his free arm and yelling at the top of his lungs.

“We’re over here! I need help now! Help! Help!” he called out. Two crew members were circling in one of the smaller boats. They knew there had been an accident below and were waiting for the divers to surface so they could pull them onboard. Both of them immediately dived into the water and swam over to where Mike and Frankie bobbed on the surface.

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Get your copy of Guardians’ Keep today, in softcover or Kindle. It is also part of the Mike Scott Boxed Set that includes the first five novels and two short stories.

 

Filed Under: Books, Diving, Excerpt Fridays

Flooding Hollywood: Excerpt Friday #3

March 24, 2017 By Eric Douglas

This is the third excerpt from Flooding Hollywood. It is the second novel from the Mike Scott series.

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Mike reached out and gingerly pulled the detonator out of the plastic explosive bundle. Realizing that the detonator was a small bomb itself, Mike picked up the timer. After a second, he found a switch and turned off the timer as well. It was then that he realized that only a few seconds remained on the countdown. They surely would have been killed when the blast went off underwater. The shock waves and concussion would have knocked them unconscious, even if they weren’t close to the actual blast. And that was assuming that the water wouldn’t have swept them quickly through the gap in the wall and down into the valley below.

After a second, Mike looked up to see Diane beside him. He gave her a big smile behind his regulator. Giving her the OK signal and then the thumbs up signal to ascend, she agreed and responded with an OK back. Mike grabbed his pressure gauge to see how much air he had left. He confirmed that it was time to get on the surface—immediately. They had been underwater for more than twenty minutes and had gone fairly deep; they were more than eighty feet down when they found the bombs. Their air supply was running low.

Carrying the detonator with them, Mike and Diane began swimming for the surface. Looking up as he ascended, Mike saw two divers descending toward them. Guessing they were members of the police dive team, Mike handed the timer and detonator to Diane and signaled to them, using his arm and then his light. The two divers altered their course and headed straight for Mike. As the men got closer, Mike began to have second thoughts about the identity of the other divers. As the gloom parted and the men got close, he realized it was the terrorists coming back. They had been watching the lake and returned to make sure the bomb went off as planned.

The first diver to reach Mike struck him across the face, dislodging his mask. Mike floated backward as he struggled to get his mask back in place and get his breathing under control. Every diver learns to clear water from his mask in case it was accidentally knocked loose, but the swiftness of the attack caught Mike completely off-guard. It took him a moment to get himself stabilized.

The second diver grabbed Diane trying to get the detonator and the timer away from her. She grappled with the man, fighting back. She was strong and wiry, but the diver began to get the better of her. The only thing in Diane’s favor was that the man didn’t have any leverage. The man pulled on Diane, but he turned himself in the process. She was able to twist herself around to keep the man from getting a firm grip. They continued to spin in a circle.

The first terrorist, the one who struck Mike, chose not to help his friend, assuming he could handle a woman, and swam away to check on the bomb.

As soon as Mike got his mask straight, he swam back into the fray.

As he arrived at the scene, Diane turned her body hard, rotating her attacker directly in front of Mike. Mike quickly latched onto the man’s tank with his knees and began turning the knob to close off the terrorist’s air supply. With his free hand, Mike also returned the favor given him by the man’s accomplice by pulling the terrorist’s mask off of his face.

It took a few seconds for the pressurized air in the hose to be completely exhausted, even after Mike shut it off. The terrorist diver was able to take one, then a second breath, before nothing came out on his third attempt. The exertion of the struggle with Diane had caused the man to breathe hard—harder than he had realized. When he inhaled against his regulator and nothing came, he was shocked. That shock quickly turned to panic. He couldn’t inhale at all. There was nothing there. He knew he was sixty feet underwater.

Panic set in. All the diver’s brain could come up with at that moment was that he needed to get to the surface. He knew that was where he needed to be. And he knew he needed to get there quickly. If he didn’t, he was going to die. He bolted for the surface without another thought in his mind.

Diane was close to panic herself from the attack and the fight. Mike reached out and took the detonator and timer away from her. He started guiding her to the surface. There was another terrorist in the water, but Mike wanted to get the timer and detonator as far away from the explosives as possible. Also, Mike knew their air supply would be dangerously low by now.

Mike’s desire to get the detonator out of the water clouded his judgment. He didn’t look around before he left. If he had done so, he would have realized the first terrorist was right behind him.

The terrorist had checked out the explosives and realized they were all there. Just as quickly, he realized Mike had the detonator and he knew he needed to get it back if the plan were to succeed. The old man wouldn’t tolerate a second failure. He had been very clear about that. Seeing Brother Jack lose the fight and bolt toward the surface, the first terrorist—Brother Darryl—swam straight at Mike.

Darryl grabbed Mike’s fin as soon as he got in range and dragged him back down. Mike turned and twisted, trying to face the diver chasing him. He knew he was going to have to deal with this man, too.

Divers carry knives to cut away fishing line, kelp or other entanglements. It was also a bit of a macho exercise for many men to carry the biggest knife they could find. The terrorist was no exception. He drew his dive knife, revealing its nine-inch blade. He lunged at Mike while still holding Mike’s fin.

Holding the timer box in front of him like a shield, Mike parried the knife thrusts. First one, then another. They circled each other, while Mike tried to stay clear. With a particularly vicious jab, the knife hit the timer’s metal box and twisted to one side. The blade struck Mike’s finger and sliced his hand. Reacting to the pain, Mike twisted away and nearly dropped the timer. He was barely able to hold on with his one good hand, but he wouldn’t be able to block another attack.

Seeing Mike in trouble, Diane moved in and tried to latch onto the attacking terrorist’s back. She planned to do to him exactly what Mike had done to the man coming after her. She tried to get her hands on the knob that would shut off his air supply, but the man kept twisting and turning, preventing her from getting a good grip. She wasn’t able to control him.

All three divers were slowly floating upward and had risen to about thirty feet. Holding his hand in pain, Mike floated backward, moving slightly away from Diane and the terrorist. Seeing Mike injured and moving away, the terrorist wheeled on Diane. He started swimming after her, slashing with the knife. Diane swam backward, trying to stay away from the dangerous arcs of the knife, but she couldn’t swim backward as quickly as the man could move forward. One more swipe and he would cut her too.

As the man lunged forward, confident he was going to knock Diane out of the fight, his head suddenly snapped upward. He looked like a dog who reached the end of his rope. Mike was back. He caught the man from behind.

Knowing they had precious little air left, and not willing to continue this fight any longer, Mike jammed the timer and the detonator between the man’s tank and buoyancy jacket. As he did so, he flipped the switch, turning the timer back on.

With his injured hand, Mike grabbed the man’s power inflator on his buoyancy jacket. It took all his concentration to make his injured hand squeeze the button that would fill the compensator with air, making him float toward the surface.

Diane realized what Mike was doing and grabbed the man’s weight belt. She quickly flipped the buckle open and sent the terrorist’s weights dropping 100 feet below.

The additional air and the missing weight belt made the man extremely buoyant. He took off like he was riding an elevator. Unlike his partner, however, he still had air and could breathe. No one had been able to turn off his air supply. As long as he breathed normally and exhaled as he rose, he would probably be fine when he hit the surface. He just wouldn’t be able to rearm the bomb.

He would have been fine, that is, except for the detonator positioned directly against the aluminum scuba cylinder. There had only been a few seconds left on the timer when Mike had turned it off earlier. When he turned it back on, it picked up where it left off and began counting down to zero.

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Flooding Hollywood is available in softcover and on Kindle. It is also part of the Mike Scott Boxed set.

Filed Under: Excerpt Fridays

Flooding Hollywood: Excerpt Friday #2

March 17, 2017 By Eric Douglas

The second excerpt from Flooding Hollywood. This is the second Mike Scott thriller.

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“So, you’re telling me God has made you his servant and his tool to cleanse the earth. I think you’re just another lunatic. Just like all the rest. The voice you hear in your head isn’t God,” Mike said. He didn’t really have a plan at the moment, but he had to try to get out and stop the bomb from destroying the dam. He needed to find a way to get past Runyan and his men outside.

“Oh, the nonbelievers. I told you, you were just as bad as all the vile creatures that cover this earth and make it unclean. You’re just as bad, because you defend them. You could convert to our side, Mike. You could repent and be forgiven of your actions, because you didn’t know the error of your ways. But, no, I don’t believe that will happen. You are with them. You have no love in you for God. You just love the world and the evil that is in it. You love the sodomites. You love the Muslims, the Asians and the Mexicans and all the rest. They are the problem with this world. They are the ones destroying it, with their lies and their money. They take away opportunities from good people like me and my men. They take our jobs and our women. They take our pride and our opportunity,” Runyan fumed, finally beginning to expose the roots of his delusion.

“But I thought the most important commandment, according to Jesus, was to love the Lord your God with all your heart and mind and soul,” Mike said, trying to stall until he found a way out of the house.

“That’s true, Mike. That’s true. You did learn something on your mother’s knee when you were growing up. Maybe there is hope for you yet. Those words of Jesus are the most important things I live by and that is what I teach my men. All of the words of Jesus are sacred to us. That’s what drives us and makes us who we are today,” Runyan readily agreed, suddenly sounding more rational, as if appeased by hearing scripture. He had a flash that Mike might be turning to his side and wanted to make the most of it.

“The next thing Jesus said was that you should love your neighbor as yourself. Isn’t that right? Now, how can you tell me you hate everyone around you and that they are all corrupt and vile, when God, through Jesus, tells you to love everyone else in the world? You might be able to hate what some people do, like killing innocents by blowing up dams and destroying ships in harbors, but you aren’t supposed to hate other people. You are supposed to reach out to them with love. Aren’t you?” Mike asked. “I haven’t heard you say anything about love. I’ve heard you preaching about hate and I’ve heard you preaching your prejudice, but not about love. Where does that come in?”

“You,” Runyan screamed. “You just don’t know what you’re talking about. Even Satan can quote the scripture. In fact, the Bible teaches that he knows it better than most people. He twists the word of God around and can spew it out to justify anything. You must be filled with Satan. Get thee behind me, Satan,” Runyan exploded, his eyes bulging.

Mike was surprised that Runyan’s men didn’t come rushing in to help him at this point. The man was in full meltdown. His eyes and his body language spoke of a complete lack of coherence. He was completely out of control.

“You must be in with the evil gays. They are the ones taking over this country. They are the ones taking over this world. They are the true evil alive today in this…”

Runyan had backed himself up near the open door in his fit. In mid-sentence, he broke off and crumpled to the floor. Mike first suspected he had had an aneurism or a stroke, until Max stepped in through the door over him. Mike was so surprised he laughed.

Max was holding a baseball bat in one hand. He had just used it on Runyan. Standing over the unconscious zealot, Max looked down at him and said, “I thought it was time someone shut him up. Don’t you agree?”

Grinning, Max stepped forward and pulled a knife from his pocket. He began working on Diane’s ropes.

“So, how did you find us? What did you do?” Mike asked, still in shock at the sudden turn of events.

“Diane left a message for me. I tried to call the cops, but they thought I was just calling in a prank. They said they would get someone up here as soon as they could, but because they didn’t think it was an emergency, it wouldn’t be immediately. After the thing yesterday in the harbor, there have been prank calls all over the city. It’s been all over the news,” Max explained.

“But what about Runyan’s other men?” Mike asked, waiting his turn to get free.

“There were only two of them out there. I pretended to be a lost hiker and caught them off guard. I hosted a survival show on cable for a while. I know how to take care of myself,” he said as he finished cutting through Diane’s bonds. She stood up and went over to check on Runyan, who fell away from the door, in the corner.

“Well, I sure appreciate your help on this one,” Mike said.

Suddenly, two more of Runyan’s men burst through the door. They had come back from an errand and found their two friends unconscious on the floor. Mike, Diane and Max all heard the deafening roar of a vintage military issue Colt .45 handgun going off in the small room. The relatively big and slow-moving bullet immediately knocked Max down, delivering its punch and releasing all of its built up energy into his body. Max nearly flipped as he was struck in the leg, the close-range attack knocking his feet out from under him.

Mike’s hands were still tied as Max had just begun to free him. Mike rose up off the floor, preparing to fight off the attack from the zealots come to protect their master. But Diane charged in first. Her hands were free.

Trained to fight on movie sets, her instructors had taught her that she had to know how to throw a real punch before she could ever throw a fake movie punch and make it look real. She would have had a black belt if she trained with a traditional martial arts school and entered competitions.

As she rose up from her crouched position checking on Runyan, she launched herself into the air and kicked the man holding the gun in the upper abdomen, doubling him over. The second zealot appeared to be unarmed, but Diane didn’t take any chances. As soon as her feet hit the floor, she jumped again, this time in a reverse spin kick that landed her foot against the back of his neck, knocking him to the floor as well. She then stepped forward and struck the first man across the back of the neck and shoulders with a forearm blow, driving him to the ground.

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Flooding Hollywood is available in softcover and on Kindle. It is also part of the Mike Scott Boxed set.

Filed Under: Excerpt Fridays

Flooding Hollywood: Excerpt Friday #1

March 10, 2017 By Eric Douglas

The following is the first excerpt from Flooding Hollywood, the second Mike Scott thriller. It is set in southern California.

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The terror cell had been able to purchase more explosives than they needed for their objective and had actually sold a portion of the material to another, unrelated group bent on destruction. That they didn’t know or agree with the goals of the other group meant nothing to them. That sale, though, brought them to the attention of the Mexican Federales and, consequently, the antiterrorism unit from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security. The group that bought the material got away, but not before leaving the terror cell open for a raid.

The antiterrorism team had set up a base of operations for the raid a few blocks away from their objective. Spotters were already in place watching the building, accompanied by sharpshooters in case things got out of hand. The bad guys weren’t going anywhere without the good guys knowing it.

As the team members prepared their equipment, so did Mike. He needed to make sure everything was ready to go. He had to move and capture images quickly. He couldn’t waste time on a faulty piece of equipment. For his own protection, Mike was dressed in battle fatigues and body armor, loaned by Commander Light, the leader of the antiterrorist team. At 6 feet 2 inches, with broad shoulders and closely-cropped hair, Mike looked as if he could very easily fit in with the group.

Once the team was ready, the members moved as a single unit to a back entrance of the warehouse. They maneuvered into position to get as close as possible to the second-story room where the terrorists were holed up. Waiting in a stairwell, just below the door that led to the intended target, Mike did his best to stay out of the way and let the troopers do their job.

“Man. You’re nuts,” one of the men whispered to him out of the side of his mouth, without taking his eyes off the door ahead of him. The first men that would go through the door were using electronic surveillance cameras to confirm how many men were inside the room and where they were. They didn’t want any surprises when they burst inside. “At least we have guns when we do this. They shoot at us, we shoot back. You can’t even do that. You’re either crazy or ballsy. I’m still not sure which. Maybe, it’s both.”

“You do what you do and I do what I do. That’s how it goes,” Mike replied, just as softly. “I’ve been shot at before. Can’t say I ever get used to it, but I just think about doing my job and I trust that I’ll be all right.”

“You say so, man,” the trooper replied with a shake of his head and a slight grin.

“I’m not the one going through the door first, you are,” Mike said to break the tension a little bit. “You guys break up the problems and I let other terrorists know you’re out there doing your job. I want the good guys to know what you’re doing, too,” Mike explained as he checked over his cameras one last time, a little bit self-consciously. “Like I said, you have your job to do and I have mine. I don’t even think about it.”

The other man chuckled, smiled, and turned his attention back to the door above them. Mike Scott was very serious about his work and his words came from the heart.

While they waited, Mike took a few images of the team. The whisper-quiet shutter on his Nikon D4 digital cameras held no risk of the noise giving away the position. He was able to capture, he hoped, some of the tension, and determination, on the faces of the team as they waited. It occurred to him that he could be photographing the last minutes of someone’s life and he felt the responsibility of doing it right.

Above, by the door, Commander Light gave the signal. The team members were all tense, but ready to move. This was what they trained to do. As one body, they stood and moved up the stairs. The first two men advanced and positioned themselves on either side of the door, with a battering ram held between them. The rest of the team members prepared their weapons, and disengaged the safety mechanisms. They slid their blast goggles into place. On a final signal from Light, the two men with the battering ram smashed the flimsy wooden door off its hinges.

The noise created by the single stroke from the heavy ram was the signal for a second team of men to enter the room from the outside. That team consisted of three men who crashed through the windows after they had repelled down the outside of the building from the roof. As they came through the glass, these men fired stun grenades into the room careful to avoid the explosives in the room, timing their entrance to minimize their own exposure to the detonations.

Mike ran as quickly as he could up the stairs, but, for his own safety, he was at the end of the line. After the initial thunder from the grenades faded, he heard shouts directing the men inside to drop their weapons and get down on the floor. Then he heard the distinctive sound of the response when one of the terrorists inside decided not to comply quickly enough and opened fire with a fully-automatic machine gun. It had to be one of the terrorists, Mike reasoned. Soldiers and professionals never use full auto for handheld weapons. It’s too difficult to control. Then Mike heard the response as several of the troopers crashing through the door returned fire with tight, controlled bursts. The raid was over almost before it started.

A moment later, Mike heard the “All Clear” signal from inside and he stepped into the small room. The smell of cordite from the weapons and the stun grenades was still acrid in the air. Mike had a camera to his face, photographing the scene.

None of the antiterrorist team members were injured in the raid, but three of the terrorists lay dead on the floor. Two others—they must have been right on top of the stun grenades when they went off—were still alive, but they were rolling around on the floor holding their ears. Their hands, faces and ears were bloody from the concussion and shock.

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Flooding Hollywood is available in softcover and on Kindle. It is also part of the Mike Scott Boxed set.

Filed Under: Excerpt Fridays

Cayman Cowboys: Excerpt Friday #3

March 3, 2017 By Eric Douglas

Cayman Cowboys cover artThe third excerpt from Cayman Cowboys for Excerpt Friday.

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Mike checked the video camera to make sure it was working and was amazed to see the quality of the picture through the LCD port on the back of the video camera housing. Not wanting to waste batteries he didn’t run it for long, but he quickly realized they would easily be able to capture whatever was going on—assuming they were there at the right place at the right time. From there, it was simply a matter of swimming and waiting.

About an hour passed before anything happened. Mike was beginning to have doubts they had guessed correctly. Both divers realized at about the same time that they were hearing the sounds of a small boat, or at least a propeller. Before long they realized there were several propellers churning through the water. Direction is hard to determine underwater, but the relative quiet and the concentration of noise from the multiple propellers gave them a general direction to search.

Kelly took the lead as the two divers slowly and cautiously moved toward the noise. Another 15 minutes of swimming passed before they found what they were looking for. And both of them were amazed. They saw four divers with scooters and what appeared to be a small tourist submarine hovering over a patch of coral. The sub had specially diffused lights that reduced the amount of light that leaked toward the surface.

But what amazed Mike and Kelly more was what the divers were doing. The submarine actually had claws mounted below it and it was ruthlessly tearing through coral. The divers were following along, pointing out things to the sub pilot and picking up items and putting them in baskets on the sub and attached to their scooters.

Mike was so stunned to see the cause of the destruction he had first witnessed with Tanya that he almost forgot to turn on the video camera. The light coming from the sub was almost too much for the video camera since it was prepared for extremely low levels of light. Mike quickly adjusted the settings on the camera and received a clear picture of the destruction.

“Believe?” Kelly scribbled to Mike on the slate.

“No. Amazing.” Mike wrote back as he juggled the video camera.

Mike and Kelly moved as close to the demolition zone as they dared and Mike kept the camera going. Kelly kept a look-out and made sure they weren’t noticed. After approximately a half an hour, and several moves to avoid detection and get better camera angles, the pair moved away from the scene. Mike had all of the evidence he needed to show something was going on.

Unfortunately, the masks the divers wore blocked out their faces so no one could be identified, but the submarine would be traceable. Regardless, they would be able to force the authorities to investigate and admit something was happening.

Underwater for about two hours, Mike and Kelly realized it was much too early for the yacht to return so they headed toward the shore. The swim to the beach took more than half an hour, but it still made more sense than waiting for two more hours, especially when there was something going on. They both wanted to get in and contact the authorities immediately. About 50 yards from shore, Kelly surfaced to find a good exit point. He saw what appeared to be a small beach area about 100 yards away to the right, took a compass heading and descended back to join Mike. The divers then changed course and headed for the beach. In full scuba gear, it is much easier to swim underwater than on the surface, so they swam on the bottom almost until their heads were sticking out of the water.

As they climbed up the rest of the beach through the light surf and out of the water, tired and a little cool, they were able to talk to each other for the first time. And while they kept their voices down, they could barely contain their excitement.

“Do you believe what we just saw?” Kelly asked.

“Not at all. What do you think they were doing?” Mike replied.

“I have no idea. But they were sure tearing up the reef. That sure helps to explain a lot of what’s been going on around here lately,” Kelly said.

As they moved up the beach, Kelly spotted a log for them both to sit down on. They both began to strip out of their dive gear.

“So how do we signal Tanya?” Mike asked. He hadn’t thought about it earlier.

“I have my ways,” Kelly said, playing with Mike.

“Care to share them with me?” Mike asked in response, with more than a little irritation in his voice. He really wasn’t in the mood to play.

“I have a converted emergency signaling device. We use it from time to time around the shop on special dives. The moment we broke the surface, it began sending out a signal. This one, though, operates on a non-emergency frequency. Tanya will be able to track it using a direction finder. Considering how early we are, she’ll have no doubt we are on the shore and come looking for us.”

“Now I’m impressed. How’d you come up with that?” Mike asked.

“What? You think you have all the fancy toys?” he said as he gestured to the video camera Mike had sat on the sand beside the log. “Actually, I hate to admit it, but it was Tanya’s idea. She had seen the personal EPIRBs that send out an emergency signal for lost divers, and the ones on the boats that send out a signal when a boat sinks so rescuers can find them. She got the idea to adjust one to a different frequency to use it in situations sort of like this.”

“Are you in situations like this a lot?” Mike asked, somewhat surprised. “If so, I think there’s a lot you aren’t telling me about your life here on the island since I left,” he said with mock seriousness.

“Well, not like this, but there are times when we need to find each other and can’t just pick up the cell phone,” Kelly said.

Before Mike or Kelly could react, two men jumped out of the shadows behind them. Both divers were knocked unconscious and bound tightly before they could struggle.

“So now what do we do with them?” one of the men asked.

“The boss said to bring them to him,” the other responded.

###

Get your copy of Cayman Cowboys today, in softcover or Kindle. It is also part of the Mike Scott Boxed Set that includes the first five novels and two short stories.

Filed Under: Excerpt Fridays

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