popped up and was heading to the door. âLetâs go,â he barked over his shoulder.
LeFleur turned to Sprague. âWhat the hell is going on?â he whispered. âWho is this guy ?â
âHe works for Jason Lambert,â Sprague said. He rubbed his thumb against his fingers. Money.
News
ANCHOR: Tonight, Tyler Brewer completes his tribute series on the victims of the Galaxy yacht with a profile of a famous name in swimming who, tragically, was lost to the sea.
REPORTER: Thank you, Jim. Geri Reede was most at home in the water. From the age of three, she was swimming at a local pool in Mission Viejo, California. Before she was ten, she was competing in national events. A self-described âpool ratâ and the daughter of a swim-instructor mother and an oceanographer father, Geri qualified for the US Olympic team when she was nineteen. She went to the Games in Sydney and won a gold medal in the breaststroke and two silvers in the relay events. She made the team again four years later and captured a silver medal in Athens before retiring from the sport and spending a year as a global ambassador for world hunger.
At twenty-six, Reede decided to try medical school, but left after two semesters. Describing herself as ârestlessâ without competitive sports, she spent a year crewing with the yacht Athena , an Americaâs Cup challenger.
Eventually Reede partnered with a fitness company to create Water Works!, a health-care line for athletes thatblossomed into a hugely successful company. Reedeâs signature spiked blond hair and smart if somewhat acerbic style endeared her to fans, and she became a spokesperson in the Water Works! ad campaigns.
Although Geri Reede never married or had children, she often spoke about the importance of early swimming lessons for kids. âFear of the water is one of the earliest fears we have,â she once said. âThe faster we get over it, the faster we learn how to overcome others.â
Reede was thirty-nine years old when she vanished with nearly four dozen others aboard the Galaxy .
âGeri was a trailblazer and an inspiration for young women everywhere,â said Yuan Ross, a spokesperson for USA Swimming. âShe was somebody you wanted on your team, in the pool and in life. Losing her is a tragedy.â
Sea
My dear Annabelle. Itâs been days since I last wrote you. A weakness has taken hold of my body and my soul. I can barely lift pen to paper. So much has happened, some of which I still cannot accept.
By our nineteenth day, hunger and thirst had completely overtaken us. Weâd eaten every part of the bird that was edible. Geri balled up some of the flesh in an attempt at fishing. She fashioned a hook from a small wing bone and dropped the line in the water. As exhausted as we were, we pulled ourselves over to watch.
Then Yannis yelled, âLook!â In the distance, gray clouds were packed together, with a funnel-shaped darkness dropping to the sea.
âRain,â Geri rasped, her voice thin from dehydration. We perked up at the idea of fresh water. But the wind begangusting wildly. The waves increased. We rose and fell and rose and fell, the raft floor slapping with each new bump.
âGrab on to something,â Yannis yelled. Geri, the Lord, and I hooked our arms around the safety rope. Lambert ducked under the canopy, as did Nina, Alice, and Jean Philippe. The raft bounced like an amusement park ride. We had not been this tossed since the night the Galaxy sank. The skies darkened. We rose sharply. I saw Geri staring over my shoulder. Her eyes widened.
âHang on, Benji!â she yelled.
I spun in time to see a giant wave opening wide behind us, like the yawning mouth of a water beast. We were sucked up into it and tilted to the edge of flipping. Then an avalanche of white water crashed overhead, and I gripped the rope for dear life. Through the bubbly rush I saw a body shoot out from the canopy
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