This is episode forty-six in the sixth novel of The Troy Adventure Series. It is titled The Double-Cross in Paradise. Here are the links to The Double-Cross In Paradise: paperback, Kindle.
Franks and Paul were chained to the mast in the forward hold. Little attention was given to their comfort. Sage manned the wheel while Trace, Makani, Tom, and Kelsey slept in their cabins.
Early morning squawking seagulls woke Trace. He slipped his clothing on and climbed up to the pilothouse.
“Mornin’!” Sage said, cheerfully.
“It’s still dark, but back at ya,” Trace replied. He nodded toward the clock hanging on the pilothouse wall. “According to Kelsey, the Australian Navy should be meeting up with us in a couple of hours.”
Trace breathed deeply through his nostrils. He stepped out of the pilothouse and stood aft. He watched the dark seas wash away in the wake of The Tramp Islander. After a few minutes, he returned to the pilothouse.
“You want to get some sleep?” Trace asked Sage.
“Tom came up a few hours ago and relieved me,” Sage said. “I’m fine.”
Trace bobbed his head. Although answering the question, his mind was elsewhere.
“Texas?” Sage asked.
“Yeah,” Trace said, “how did you guess?”
“I didn’t,” Sage said, “I could have said, Pea Pod, Kentucky, and you’d have said, how did you guess. So what’s rubbin’ your backside raw?”
“It’s best I keep it to myself for now.”
“Well, don’t let it rub ya raw and get infected,” Sage said. He stood, and just before stepping below, he said. “I’m getting some shuteye. Wake me when the Navy gets here.”
Trace gave him an informal two-finger salute.
Trace tossed around in his mind some troubling thoughts. ‘Someone on this boat, and close to me, has been deceiving me. It leaves me empty, like a hollow barrel. The Tin Man—nothing inside, only an echo. It lessens your value in yourself. You question who you really are. You feel you must have done something to deserve deception. Jesus expected someone, Judas. Who is my Judas?’
“Think, Trace, think!” He murmured.
‘How did the trawler find us? And it felt strange to me that Franks was so sure I would be accepted in his operation. It takes months and even years to be trusted with what they wanted me to do. I was promised almost immediate contact with kingpins. And I fell for it. The only way I could get access that quickly is if I were being set up. Franks is obvious, but how was he able to let the trawler find us?’
‘What about Tom? He and Paul may have been holding out on me. Maybe he’s mixed up with them and is waiting for an opportune time to act. He and Paul worked together and had a bond of courage and trust from their time on Flint Island. Is he somehow mixed up in this whole thing? For what? Money, of course.’
‘Kelsey, how could he figure into deceiving me? Maybe he’s not who I think he is. I never heard the transmissions over his headset. Maybe the whole thing is made up. Maybe he’s a thug, and we’re really meeting his thugs. Maybe this whole thing is to discredit and ruin Franks. Perhaps he and Franks were in on it to begin with, and now Kelsey is double-crossing Franks. That’s crazy.’
‘And then there is Makani. He’s been with me from the start. He’s been loyal beyond question. He could have left me long ago. He stayed with me even though he had enough money to leave me long ago, risking his life. He’s helped with problems. Beyond Sage, he’s been my closest confidant.’
‘Sage, no, never. He knows me better than anyone. He’s had my back, and I’ve had his all our lives. He lied for me to keep me out of trouble in the first grade, because I lied for him the week before. Our fathers are best friends. He would never allow anything to come between us.’
‘Let’s review. What would each one gain? With Franks, it’s revenge. That is a powerful motive. And men will go to incredible lengths to exact it. If Kelsey is a crook, it’s control and power of drug operations. If he’s a cop, for sure, there’s nothing to worry about unless he wants to round up as many convictions as possible, and he’d frame me along with his grandmother. Makani, I’ve treated him fair. Why could he possibly betray me? He has a lot of money, but maybe he wants more. And Sage is out of the question, but if it is him, why? Maybe it’s jealousy. His family does alright, and he’s done alright, but our family has always done better. He’s never even hinted at anything like that. And that may be it—jealousy.’
‘There is one thing I’m certain of: there is a clue to who it is. I’ve overlooked it. It did not appear as a clue then. Think, Trace, think. It’s there. Think, Trace, think.’
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