demon. I donât have a healing knack. And even if I did, he might still be under the influence of Jupeâs suggestion.â
âOh, God,â Jupe murmured, his face tight with worry. âWhat have I done? Iâm so sorry, Dad.â
âI know you are, I know,â Lon said softly. âBut we canât turn back time, so letâs just concentrate on what we can do, okay?â
âOkay.â
My eyes met Lonâs across the portly captainâs prone body. âCan you pilot a boat?â
âIf you count a rusty bass boat with an outboard motor. Kar Yee?â
âMe?â Her tone was somewhere between indignation and disbelief.
My ears translated this as one big hell no . In the years Iâd known her, she mostly viewed transportation as something done by other people at her request: call taxi, ride in taxi, pay taxi. Sheâd only bought her first car a year agoâif she could get away with riding around in a gilded litter carried by four underpaid shirtless men, she would.
âOne of us better figure out how,â I said.
âSteering in a straight line on a sunny day is one thing,â Lon said. âPiloting through squalls and rough water takes skill. I think weâre going to have to call for help.â
Jupe whipped out his cell. âNo signal. Hotlegs is offline, remember?â
âWe can use the VHF radio to call the Coast Guard,â Lon said.
I handed Kar Yee the bloodied bandana. âYou and Jupe stay here with the captain. Make sure he doesnât roll around or anything.â
Lon and I trekked upstairs to the salon. I opened the door to the deck and was punched in the face with rain. We were in the middle of a raging storm, no ifs, ands, or buts about it. The sky was the color of a newly paved parking lot. A fierce wind blew across the deck, sending a wall of briny spray over the railings as it battered the grizzly bear design on the red-and-white California state flag hanging above the parlor. The boat seesawed, caught in an army of angry waves attacking the stern. I gripped the doorframe to stop myself from sliding.
âIâll go alone,â Lon shouted over the wind and rain, trying to pull me back into the salon.
I pictured him falling overboard and shook my head. âCome on, before it gets worse.â
We clung to the outside of the cabin and clattered up metal stairs. Lightning streaked across the bow of the boat as we cleared the top step, illuminating the surface of the ocean, a million peaks of rippling waves. The thunder that followedânot more than a second or two behindâwas so loud, I hunched over, as if shielding myself from dynamite. But what scared me more than the brewing typhoon was Lonâs face. This was clearly the last place he thought we should be with all this lightning.
But neither one of us was willing to sit around belowdecks, waiting for the captain to die while the yacht crashed into the rocky shoreline.
A canvas Bimini canopy on metal poles, which looked about as strong as an awning over a restaurant patio, covered the bridge where Captain Christie had been steering the boat. It kept the storm off our heads, but not off our clothes: fierce winds blew torrents of rain beneath it.
An outdoor lounge area sat at the back of the bridge, complete with built-in chaise longues, a dining table, and a really nice gas grill set into a granite countertop. âJesus, heâs living large up here,â I muttered to myself.
âDonât touch anything metal,â Lon shouted.
âCollege-educated adult,â I reminded him. âNot your teenage son.â
He feigned deafness, gesturing to his ear while surveying the bridge. But my attention shifted to my feet, which were now standing on a circular design in the center of the bridge. About the size of a car tire and painted in tinted shellac, the wheel-like pattern resembled a stylized compass. And to the undiscerning eye,