A little more digging and she realized his fascination with this couple.
They were treasure hunters.
She glanced at the map book just as her phone started ringing. Kipp, of course. “You’re never going to believe this,” she said. “I know what he’s after.”
“You need to get out of there. He’s on his way up.”
Thirty
The digital copy of the manifest was exactly what Selma had been hoping for and she got to work researching the fleet of ships that had set sail from Jamaica right after Sam and Remi emailed the pages they’d found in Port Royal. She called them back the next morning with what she’d learned.
“Good news, I hope,” Sam said.
“Mostly,” Selma replied. “I was able to link the vessel that sank off Snake Island to the theft of cargo from Captain Bridgeman during his time in Jamaica. More important, connecting that name to the sunken ship fills in a lot of the blanks. Especially now that we know the cipher wheel sank with it.”
“How so?” Sam asked.
“Bridgeman was an alias for the pirate Henry Every.”
“Every?” Remi asked. “Is it coincidental that Every and Avery sound similar?”
“No,” Selma said. “It may have started off as a misspelling, but they’re used interchangeably throughout most of the documentation I’ve located about Every’s history. Henry Every, or Avery, is none other than Captain Henry Bridgeman. Started off as a slaver, then apparently turned pirate. Not much difference between the two, in my opinion.”
“So what happened to him?” Sam asked.
“Disappeared. Last seen in the Bahamas, supposedly set sail for England, to live and die in obscurity. He was very much a wanted man at that point. The interesting thing is that until you found those missing pages, there were no official records showing that Bridgeman or the
“What else was he trying to hide?”
“Two things. One, this wasn’t the first time Every attacked the
“Investors. As in, more than one owner?”
“There could still be one owner. But multiple investors could mean that the ship was under the control of others. What we do know from the testimony of this crew member is that this item — we’re assuming it was the cipher wheel — was taken during Every’s first contact with the
“He wanted out of there fast,” Sam said. “The second contact was in Jamaica?”
“The
“If,” Sam said, “there’s no record of his being seen after that point, is it possible that he captured the
“A logical assumption,” Selma replied. “Except for the map detailing
“We’re sure,” Remi said, “that he never recovered the original wheel? Or that it even exists?”
“Definitely,” Selma replied. “One, Charles Avery wouldn’t be after it if he had — and he seems to know his family history. Two, Lazlo’s research confirms that the original exists. Every-Bridgeman either died or was captured before he could go after it. Unfortunately, he failed to record
Sam reached over, spreading out their copy of the digitized transcripts they’d gathered from the maritime museum, looking them over. There were just a few pages of the court testimony they’d read in the Kingston Archives. “So, right now, we’re still looking at who he originally stole the cipher wheel from?”