Red Tide

Red Tide by Jeff Lindsay

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Authors: Jeff Lindsay
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ship in the Gulf Stream and makes you turn around and take ’em back.”
    “So if somebody loads them in and then just dumps them—”
    “Then they got a low-risk money machine.”
    “How much money?”
    He shook his head. “In Haiti, ten bucks is a big deal, a month’s wages. So I don’t know how they do it, but those people scrape together two or three thousand dollars for a trip across to America.”
    “Two or three thousand  each ?”
    “That’s right. And figure between fifty and two hundred head per trip. It looks like somebody’s figured a pretty good way to maximize his profit.”
    I worked up the numbers and shook my head. It was a lot of money. “All right,” I said. “Who’s working on it, and what have they got?”
    He gave a soundless little cop laugh. “It’s not quite that simple, buddy,” he said. “I guess you’ve been a fishing guide so long you forgot how things are.”
    “Maybe so. How are they?”
    “First, you got to understand that there’s nothing definite to go on here. Just a pile of bodies that’s easy to write off as refugees who drowned trying to come across.”
    “And nobody is working around the clock to make the connection?”
    “Buddy,” Deacon said with a tired shake of his head, “Unless a sworn officer actually stubs his toe on the perpetrator while he’s committing the crime, ain’t nobody ever going to make a connection.”
    “Except you.”
    He shrugged. “They keep me in between two very narrow lines, Billy. I can’t just put on my cape and fly around looking for wrongs to right.”
    “So this just goes on.”
    “If it’s happening, it’s happening in international waters. Out in the great dark deep. The State won’t touch it. Everybody in Tallahassee is pissed off at the Feds because we’re going broke paying for all the immigrants, which is a federal problem, but the Feds won’t help. So F.D.L.E. can’t touch it, Metro doesn’t want it, Sheriff says he can’t handle it, and Marine Patrol says they’re not authorized.
    “The Feds won’t get involved unless there is a direct threat to U.S. citizens, which they figure at this point won’t happen unless more of these guys make it to shore and start taking jobs away from taxpayers. And since there ain’t so much as one syllable of public protest on  anything  to do with any immigrant group that isn’t Cuban, nobody is being forced into doing anything.”
    “So everybody knows something’s happening,” I said.
    “They suspect the hell out of it.”
    “But nobody wants to do anything about it.”
    He winked. “Too many forms to fill out, buddy. And too many people to file ’em with that don’t want to hear about it.”
    “All right,” I said. “What do  you  know?”
    “Not a thing. But I’ll tell you what I think,” he said.
    “Tell me.”
    He held up a finger. “First, we’re talking about one boat.” Another finger. “Probably one of those old rust-bucket freighters out of the Miami River. And one other thing I guaran-damn-tee you, buddy,” he said, holding up his open hand now and closing it into a fist.
    “What’s that?”
    “We’ve got a file on this guy somewhere. Because what it looks like to me is, he’s smuggling refugees, and he’s taking their money and loading ’em onto his boat, and then dumping ’em into the ocean, still alive. ’Cause every one of ’em, they died from drowning.” He winked. “You didn’t hear that from me.”
    “I didn’t hear a thing.”
    “And somebody who can do that is a cold killer, and you don’t come at that from nowhere. You don’t just decide one day you’re gonna murder five or six hundred people.”
    “How many?” I couldn’t believe the number. It was worse than even Nicky imagined.
    Deacon shrugged, but I could tell it bothered him. “Just a guess they’ve put together, based on some things you don’t want to know about.”
    “So I didn’t hear that number from you, either.”
    “You got that

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