“Yes, but the ocean floor is littered with lobster traps,” Nessa said. “It’s like a giant dump down there. That’s probably why the killer chose the spot.”
“Maybe the bodies are inside lobster traps.”
Nessa had considered that, too. But it didn’t make the situation any less hopeless. “There could be thousands of traps. We don’t have the resources to pull them all up.”
Josh’s brow furrowed. “Why bring them up to the surface? Why can’t someone go down and take a look?”
“You mean police divers?” Jo asked. “We can’t go to the cops. We think someone on the force is tipping off Spencer Harding. And even if there isn’t a mole, the police wouldn’t send divers down just because Nessa says she sees dead people.”
“Why does it have to be the police?” Josh had clearly experienced an epiphany. “We just need to find someone who’s certified to scuba dive.”
Jo fell back in her chair as a thought slammed into her. “I’m scuba certified.” That’s what she’d gotten from an employer one year in lieu of a promotion—scuba classes and gear. Refusing to acknowledge the insult, she’d learned how to dive. The skill came in handy every spring when her family visited Art’s mother and stepfather in South Florida, allowing Jo to escape for few peaceful hours every day.
“Then I suppose all we need is the equipment,” Josh said.
Jo hesitated for a moment before she added, “I have that, too. It’s in my garage. I’d just need to clean it off and get tanks from the dive shop.”
“You’re really willing to go looking for dead bodies at the bottom of the ocean?” Josh suddenly seemed to be taking the whole enterprise more seriously. “Who the hell knows what else might be down there.”
“If you’re worried, you can come along and keep me company,” Jo offered.
“Yeah, no thanks,” Josh said. “But I’ll happily throw in a GoPro.”
When they got back to Harriett’s, they found her stoned on the sofa, wearing headphones plugged into an iPhone.
“Did you know—” Harriett pulled off her headphones and took a toke. “That three hundred thousand women and girls were reported missing last year? Two hundred and forty thousand were girls under twenty-one. Half were women of color. Let’s say ninety-nine percent made it back home safe and sound. That still leaves twenty-four hundred girls. Where are they? The FBI claims there are fifty serial killers active in the U.S. at any one time. So how many of those girls are everyone’s favorite bogeymen taking? Five hundred? A thousand? What’s happening to the others?”
“Where are you getting all these statistics?” Nessa asked.
“They Walk Among Us,” Harriett said. “Figured I ought to check it out. Josh Gibbon’s a bit of a serial killer fanboy, isn’t he?”
“What the hell, Harriett,” Jo said, staring at the device in Harriett’s lap. “We came all the way back here to tell you the news and you’re lying there listening to a podcast? Since when do you have a phone?”
“Since always,” Harriett said. “I own a leaf blower, too, but I seldom use that, either. How did your meeting go?”
“He’s interested, but he wants proof. Do you think Celeste might be willing to take us out on her boat tomorrow morning?”
“Yeah. Her husband took the kids to his parents’ house, so she and I are going to spend the night on the boat. We’ll meet you at the dock at eight.”
Jo shot Nessa a look. “You already arranged it?” she asked Harriett.
“Right after you left. I assumed your podcast friend would want to have a look for the bodies. A scoop like that would be too hard to resist.”