Don't Tell Me The Odds
Sharkbait Down Under
The Australian Council Treaty was a foregone conclusion after the events of the last few weeks. Werewolves, Mermaids, and Vampires had proven themselves to each other in a way that built up the trust needed. Not every leader in each species in the world was that way, but our Continent had it.
Adrienne had provided a draft treaty and structure based on her experiences that made sense. Covens and Packs had top-down leadership that lent itself to single representation, but the Mermaids did not. Having one representative from each species would be simple but concentrated power into too few people to satisfy the Mers. It would also make things more difficult down the road if another Pack or Coven got started. In the end, we agreed on a nine-person Council, with each species having three representatives and one alternate. Changes to the Council Bylaws required eight of the nine to agree, ensuring fairness to all species. A three-person subcommittee could do day-to-day things like approving visitors.
I felt better after a blood transfusion, so the rest of our time in Sydney went smoothly. The Mermaids knew how to party, and I didnât even try to keep up. Consuela wanted to see the country, so we brought her along in a rental car. For security, we had two single Werewolves from our Pack who volunteered to drive us home.
Driving had been Nicholasâ idea, but it was fine with me. I hadnât seen much of Australia yet, and we planned to stop to visit Pack members and unaffiliated werewolves at every stop along the way. Iâd met most of them when we were in Bonnie Doon, but that seemed like a year ago now. Our visits were more relaxed, and I got to know my Pack members personally and share our vision for the future. âWe can be a Pack all spread out like this, but over the decades, youâll feel the desire to move closer due to your wolves,â I told them. âItâs a natural impulse for your wolves to gather. We will help where we can; relocation allowances, help finding jobs in the Adelaide area, educational assistance at the local colleges and trade schools. The more often we gather as a Pack, the better your wolves will feel. Weâve got plenty of room for our wolves to run on, and the ocean is our backyard.â
Six families didnât want to join our Pack. In all six cases, the wife didnât want to make the change, and the husband didnât want to risk another situation like Ian and Dorothy. Until that happened, the promise of a change and choice mating seemed worth the risk.
We stayed for a week in Bonnie Doon with the remaining sixteen wives who elected to make the change. All sixteen made it and became choice mates of their husbands. Our Pack was now twenty-five for twenty-five on changes, a success rate that defied belief. I asked Adrienne what she thought it meant on our daily conference call after I woke up, and she couldnât explain it. âI ran the numbers; itâs more than a one-in-thirty-three-million chance of happening this way, Vicki. If youâre this lucky, you should buy lotto tickets. I have to believe there is something else in play.â
I didnât know how to explain it. âItâs not you, Unky Leo. You werenât here for this set.â
âAnd itâs not you either,â Leo said. âYou were on tour when Adrienne and I supervised turns with Nicholas. No, I think this one is all Luna.â
âWhat do you mean?â
âI think the Goddess took pity on your people for being isolated and alone for so long. The wives showed loyalty to our kind and bore sons and daughters to keep Her people going. It is her reward for them.â
It was as good a reason as any. âHow should I handle it?â
âLike the blessing it is. If anyone asks, you didnât do anything we donât do in the rest of the world, and the Goddess does what she wants.â
That made sense.
The migration towards Adelaide was already underway. Ian stayed with his brother and his family while the divorce went through. Their family had found a place in Wirrina Cove, a small vacation town about fifteen minutes north of Cape Jervis along the St. Vincent Gulf. It was in the hills and had a view of the ocean, plus he could be at the marina in five minutes. In another surprise move, two sisters in another family decided to transfer from the University of Melbourne to Adelaide, and four more families were actively looking for jobs near us.
It was January 29th, and we were visiting a family in Mount Gambier. I called my accountant back after brekky regarding his urgent message. Early morning in South Australia was late afternoon the previous day back home, so he was in his office. âHey, Stan, whatâs going on?â
Stan Greenberg had been busy. âVicki, do you remember that offer on the yacht I told you about?â
âYeah, one-point-five if I paid cash by the end of January.â It was a good discount, but I hadnât given him an answer yet because Iâd been busy with other things.
âHe called me today and asked if he could do anything to sweeten the pot. I told him it would cost us sixty grand to sail it to Adelaide and change the registration, so you were thinking about buying something down there instead. He panicked and offered to drop it to one-point-four if you paid cash by tomorrow.â
âMoney problems,â I said.
âWorse. The owner has divorce problems, and the ex wants the money now.â
âLet me call you back.â
I had Nicholas in the room with me, and I set up a call with Amy and the twins, Ian, and my parents. After explaining what was going on, Mom urged me to buy it. âYou like the boat a lot, and itâs going to be a year or two until your home gets built,â she said. âThen there is school; a boat in a marina could serve as an apartment in Adelaide if you donât want to drive a hundred minutes each way.â
âDonât worry about us; we can find a luxury apartment or two until the boys get their next orders. Itâs not like we all canât afford it,â Amy teased. âOur lawyer said the lawsuit settlement sailed through the Justice Department, and we should have our checks in hand next month.â Consuela Vespucci had set this windfall up with her lawyer and ours. The seized funds from Vespucciâs American account was going to the six kidnapping victims and Linda. Sheâd been added to the lawsuit because sheâd witnessed the attack and the killing of our guide when he was feet away. The proposed settlement would give the six of us just over six million each, plus three million for Linda. The rest went to our lawyer. Naturally, the Government did nothing but was going to end up with half of it via taxes.
âIâll bring it down for you,â Ian said. I looked at him in shock. âItâs not like I have much to do right now, and my brother would love to take his wife on a cruise. We could take a month and see the world on your dime,â he said with a smile.
âCould that work?â
âSure, weâre both ship captains, and from the photos, youâve got an indoor and a flying bridge with modern electronics. You cover the expenses, and weâll get her here safe and sound.â
I looked at Nicholas, who just nodded. âWeâre not just going to LOOK at the water, Vicki,â he said. âIâm sure you can dive off this yacht too.â
âI want it,â I said. Ian called back, saying his brother and his mate would do it, and I made one more call. âLinda, itâs Vicki. Whatâs your plan after Matt retires?â Nicholas and I had tickets to Perth tonight. We would film me diving and training with Mattâs unit, and then weâd stick around for his retirement ceremony.
âI have to go back to Los Angeles to close out my apartment and prepare my stuff for shipping,â she said. âWeâll do some traveling, I hope.â
âDo you know where youâre going?â
âAdelaide area,â she said. âMattâs open to anywhere, and I figure Sharkbait Productions is moving there soon.â
She was right. âHave I got a deal for you,â I told her. Theyâd have a stateroom on my yacht, get to travel, and there was plenty of room for her stuff. She could even set her editing equipment up and keep working on the episodes in between ports.
âWeâll do it,â Matt said. âI commanded a Minesweeper years ago, and I can handle myself on a bridge. With three of us to split the bridge time, it will be easy.â
âOOOH!â Linda was practically bouncing in her seat. âWhat if you talked to Admiral Kirk and your SEAL team friends in Coronado and got us permission to film a day there with the other girls? We could make a whole episode showing you with the Aussies and the twins and Amy with the Americans!â
It was genius, and we made it happen.
Linda taped a day in Perth at HMAS Stirling as I spent a day with the dive team. We started with calisthenics and a beach run. For some reason, they insisted I run in front of the group with the Commander and Master Chief. After that, we boarded a rigid-hull inflatable and headed out to a training exercise just offshore. Linda and some volunteers filmed me as we walked through disarming a mine on the seafloor. In the next dive, we used rebreathers (think scuba without bubbles) to infiltrate the harbor and plant a limpet charge on the keel of a warship. It was fun, as was the retirement party on the beach they threw for Commander Rooney. The next day he was relieved of command, and they started the multi-flight trip to Los Angeles a few hours later.
Nicholas and I returned to the resort overlooking our new beach and didnât come out for three days.