Owen said when something really got her, she’d snort a little and then get embarrassed about it.

You used to make her laugh on purpose just to hear the snort.

I don’t remember.

You were five.

It’s okay not to remember.

They sat with Clare for a long time.

Beth and Martin gave them space, moved down the corridor to give the family privacy.

Finally, Owen stood.

He couldn’t take Clare with him.

She was evidence.

She belonged to the investigation now, but he could document what happened to her.

He could find out why she was here instead of in her cabin where she might have survived longer.

The medical bay door was frozen shut.

Owen shouldered it open, ice cracking like gunshots.

Inside, the medical center was small.

Two examination rooms, a supply closet, a desk for the ship’s doctor.

And behind the desk, frozen in his chair, was the doctor himself.

name tag read Dr.

Leo Brennan, ship’s physician.

On the desk in front of him was an open journal, not a medical log, a personal diary.

The page was dated March 15th, 2011.

Owen read it aloud for Emma to hear.

Something’s wrong with Keith Walden.

I’m sure of it now.

I’ve seen him around the ship for 2 months, and something about him always felt off.

Today, I figured out why.

This morning, he dropped his wallet in the crew mess.

I picked it up to give it back.

His ID card slipped out.

The name printed on the ID wasn’t Keith Walden.

It was something else.

I couldn’t read it clearly before he snatched it away, but it definitely wasn’t the same name.

I asked him about it.

He got defensive.

Said it was his brother’s card.

He’d grabbed the wrong wallet, but the photo on the card was him.

Same face, different name.

I checked the crew manifest.

Keith Walden was hired two months before this voyage.

Background check shows he worked for three other cruise lines.

But when I called those companies pretending to verify his employment, none of them had any record of him.

He’s using a false identity.

I’m going to report this to Captain Voss as soon as my shift ends.

Something is very wrong here.

The entry ended there.

Leo had figured out Keith was using a fake name, same as Nina Torres had discovered, but Leo had written it in his personal journal instead of going straight to the captain.

Had he been planning to gather more evidence first, or had Keith found out he knew? Owen kept searching the medical bay, supply cabinets frozen shut, examination tables empty.

In the second exam room, he found something that made his heart stop.

A radio dispatch log printed time-stamped messages from the ship’s emergency communication system.

March 15th, 2230 hours.

Claire Hartley, passenger cabin 412 to medical.

Dr.

Brennan, something’s wrong with the ship.

I’m an ER nurse.

If you need help, I’m available.

2,240 hours.

Dr.

Brennan to Claire Hartley.

Thank you.

Please stay in your cabin for now.

Captain is investigating.

March 16th, 0015 hours.

Nina Torres, engineering to medical.

Leo, I found evidence of sabotage.

Communications officer Keith Walton has destroyed radio equipment.

Captain is trying to contain situation.

We may need to prepare for emergency evacuation.

00030 hours.

Dr.

Brennan to Nina Torres.

Understood.

Standing by.

0145 hours.

Claire Hartley to medical.

Dr.

Brennan, I saw someone in the crew corridor destroying equipment.

Male, 30s, dark hair, crew uniform.

I tried to stop him.

He pushed me.

I’m okay, but I think he’s dangerous.

Where are you? 0150 hours.

Dr.

Brennan to Clare Hartley.

Stay away from crew areas.

Man you saw is Keith Walton.

He’s sabotaging the ship.

Captain has crew searching for him.

Please return to your cabin.

0 hours.

Claire Hartley to medical.

I can’t get back to my cabin.

Corridor is blocked by panicking passengers.

Temperature is dropping fast.

People are getting hypothermic.

I’m coming to medical to help.

I’m a trauma nurse.

You’re going to need me.

0215 hours.

Dr.

Brennan to Clare Hartley.

Medical bay deck 4.

Hurry.

No more messages after that.

The system had gone dead at 0215 hours.

Right when power failed.

Owen stared at the time stamps.

Clare had seen Keith destroying equipment.

She’d tried to stop him.

That explained the cut on her forehead, the blood in the corridor.

Keith had pushed her, probably tried to kill her, but she’d gotten away.

Then, instead of hiding in her cabin, she’d run toward the medical bay to help save people.

Dad.

Emma was reading over his shoulder.

Mom tried to stop the bad guy.

Yeah.

She figured out he was sabotaging the ship and she tried to stop him.

And when she couldn’t, she went to help people anyway.

That’s who your mom was? Martin appeared in the doorway.

Owen, we’re running out of time.

Captain said, “Four hours.

We’ve got maybe 30 minutes before we have to head back.

” Owen looked around the medical bay one more time.

Dr.

Leo Brennan frozen at his desk.

Claire frozen outside the door trying to reach him.

Both of them trying to save lives while Keith Walden murdered 350 people for money.

“We need to take everything,” Owen said.

Every journal, every log, every piece of evidence, Keith’s payment documents, Nah’s maintenance logs, Leo’s diary, the captain’s log, Claire’s journal, all of it.

That’s removing evidence from a crime scene.

Beth said, “The FBI already has their evidence.

They’ve got Keith’s body and the destroyed equipment.

We need proof for the families.

Proof that our people didn’t die because of an accident or navigation error.

Proof that they died fighting.

” Martin nodded.

I’ve got photos of everything.

We take the originals, send copies to FBI and media simultaneously.

Company can’t bury this if everyone has it.

They gathered everything systematically.

Owen packed the documents carefully in a waterproof bag.

Martin had brought Captain Voss’s log, Nah’s maintenance records, Leo’s diary, the radio dispatch messages, Keith’s payment schedule, and false identity papers.

Claire’s journal.

Eight years of mystery, condensed into a bag of frozen papers.

Beth knelt beside her brother’s body one last time.

Nina, I’m going to make sure everyone knows what you did.

You’re a hero.

Owen stood by Clare.

He wanted to take her with him.

Bring her home right now.

But the Coast Guard needed to process her body, document everything, do this properly.

I’ll come back, he told her.

I’m bringing you home.

I promise.

Emma touched her mother’s hand gently.

Bye, Mom.

I remember you now.

Dad told me about your laugh.

They left the medical bay, left the bodies, left the frozen ship, climbed back to the deck where the Coast Guard boat waited.

The captain checked his watch.

32 minutes to spare.

Find what you needed.

Yeah, Owen said.

We found everything.

As the boat pulled away from the Aurora Dream, Owen looked back at the ship trapped between icebergs.

Clare was still in there.

350 people were still in there.

But now he knew the truth.

Keith Walden had been paid $3 million to murder everyone aboard.

Oceanic Ventures had hired him, given him equipment access, planned the whole thing for insurance money, and Owen had proof.

“What happens now?” Emma asked.

Owen held up the waterproof bag.

Now we make sure everyone knows what the company did and we make sure they pay for it.

Beth was already on her phone as the boat cut through ice filled water.

I’m calling my lawyer and the FBI and every news station I can think of.

Good, Martin said.

Burn it all down.

Owen put his arm around Emma.

She leaned into him, exhausted and grieving and angry all at once.

Dad.

Mom tried to save people.

Even when she knew the ship was dying, she ran to help.

That’s the kind of person she was.

I want to be like that.

Owen pulled his daughter closer.

You already are.

The Aurora dream disappeared behind them, white hull fading into the ice.

But the evidence was safe.

The truth was coming out.

And somewhere, frozen in a ship between icebergs, Clare Hartley was finally going to get justice.

Back at Harbor Inn, Owen spread the documents across the hotel room desk while Emma slept.

The frozen papers were thawing, ink bleeding slightly, but still readable.

He photographed everything with his phone before the documents degraded further.

Keith Walden’s payment schedule, $2.

8 million deposited between September 2010 and March 2011.

Final payment of $3 million promised on confirmation of total loss.

false identity documents, five passports, three social security cards, driver’s licenses from Nevada, Florida, and Maine.

Every document had Keith’s photo, but a different name, and the handwritten note, full payment on confirmation of total loss.

No survivors, no evidence.

Owen’s hands shook as he photographed that line.

No survivors.

They’d planned to kill everyone from the beginning.

His phone rang.

Beth Rener.

Owen, I just got off with my lawyer.

He’s contacting FBI now, but there’s something else.

I did some digging on Keith Walden.

That’s not his real name.

We know.

Leo’s diary said his real name was Dale Morrison, ex-military dishonorable discharge in 2008.

Court marshaled for theft of military equipment.

After discharge, he worked as a maritime security consultant, which is code for mercenary.

Companies hired him to do jobs they couldn’t do legally.

Owen felt cold settle in his stomach.

Oceanic Ventures hired a mercenary to sink their ship.

Not just that, I found Morrison’s ex-wife.

She’s in Nevada.

I called her.

Owen, she said a man from Oceanic Ventures came to their house in 2010.

Offered Dale $3 million for a marine salvage job.

She told me Dale laughed when he heard the amount.

Said it was too much money for salvage work.

Had to be something illegal.

He took it anyway.

She knew.

She knew it was shady.

Didn’t know it was mass murder.

They divorced in 2011, 2 months after the ship disappeared.

She’s been wondering all these years what job Dale took.

Now she knows.

Owen stared at the payment documents.

Someone at Oceanic Ventures had gone to Dale Morrison’s house, had sat in his living room, and offered him $3 million to kill 350 people.

Who from the company? Owen asked, “Who made the offer?” Ex-wife didn’t get a name, but she remembered the title, vice president of operations.

She remembered because the guy had business cards that said VP operations, oceanic ventures, VP operations, the person who would have access to ship systems, crew hiring, operational budgets, the person who could arrange everything Dale Morrison needed to destroy the Aurora Dream.

Owen pulled up his laptop, searched Oceanic Ventures corporate structure, found it within minutes.

David Stratton, vice president of operations, Oceanic Ventures, hired 2009, still employed.

Current role, senior vice president of fleet management.

His bio was corporate sanitized.

David brings 15 years of maritime operations experience to Oceanic Ventures.

Under his leadership, the company has expanded its fleet and improved operational efficiency.

Improved operational efficiency.

They’d blown up one failing ship and used the insurance money to build two profitable ones.

Owen kept searching, found more.

Company financial reports from 2010 showing Aurora Dream losing $2 million per quarter.

Maintenance costs skyrocketing.

board meeting minutes discussing options for Aurora Dream Asset Management.

Then in September 2010, the same month Dale Morrison received his first payment, the company had taken out that massive insurance policy, $340 million for catastrophic loss at sea.

3 months later, Dale Morrison was hired as Keith Walden, communications officer.

It was all there.

Timeline, money trail, corporate decision-making.

They’d planned it for months.

Owen’s phone buzzed.

Text from Martin Ross.

Check email.

Sending you something.

Owen opened his email.

Martin had sent scanned documents.

More pages found on the ship.

Stuff the forensic team hadn’t processed yet.

Corporate communications between David Stratton and someone identified as H.

Marks, CFO.

Stratton, Aurora Dream, hemorrhaging money.

board wants solutions.

Markx, selling her gets us $80 million at best.

Insurance policy gets us $340 million if she’s lost at sea.

Stratton, you’re suggesting what exactly? Markx, I’m suggesting we explore all options.

Maritime disasters happen.

Ships disappear.

Insurance companies pay out.

Stratton, this conversation never happened.

Markx, what conversation? The emails were dated August 2010, one month before Dale Morrison’s first payment.

Owen felt sick.

This wasn’t one rogue VP.

This was conspiracy at the executive level.

CFO Helen Marx and VP David Stratton discussing insurance fraud like it was a quarterly budget adjustment.

Another email, this one from Stratton to an unnamed recipient with only a phone number visible.

Need specialist for marine project.

Discreet, experienced with ship systems.

Contact attached.

Budget approved at $3 million.

Timeline 6 months.

Outcome must appear accidental or environmental.

No investigation trail.

The email was dated September 1st, 2010.

6 days later, Dale Morrison received $500,000 in his Cayman Islands account.

Owen called Martin.

You found more emails? Coast Guard photographer let me shoot his evidence documentation before they bagged everything.

I got photos of Keith, sorry, Dale Morrison’s entire cabin.

The guy kept records of everything.

Payment receipts, email printouts, meeting notes.

He was building an insurance policy of his own.

What do you mean? He was documenting everything in case the company tried to screw him.

He had proof they hired him, proof they planned it, proof they were the ones who decided to kill everyone aboard.

If they didn’t pay him the final 3 million, he could have destroyed them.

But he died before he could collect.

Yeah.

Trapped in ice with everyone else.

Probably tried to use his evidence as leverage to get extracted, but the company couldn’t get a helicopter to him, so he died holding proof of their crimes.

Owen looked at the documents spread across his desk.

Dale Morrison had murdered 350 people, but Oceanic Ventures had hired him, paid him, given him access to ship systems, and then abandoned him to freeze when extraction became impossible.

Everyone was guilty.

Everyone was dead, or should be.

Martin, we need to get this to FBI and media simultaneously.

If we just give it to FBI, the company will bury it in legal proceedings for years.

Already working on it, Beth’s lawyer is drafting a press release.

We’ll drop everything tomorrow morning.

FBI, Coast Guard, New York Times, Washington Post, CNN.

Every outlet gets the same evidence packet at the same time.

The company will deny everything.

Let them.

We have payment records with their letterhead, emails from their executives, meeting notes showing VP Stratton visited Morrison’s house, financial records showing insurance policy timing, Captain Voss’s log showing he confronted Morrison, Nina Torres’s maintenance records showing systematic sabotage.

They can deny all they want.

Evidence doesn’t lie.

Owen hung up, looked at Emma, sleeping in the other bed.

She’d spent eight years without her mother, had grown up wondering if Clare was alive.

somewhere, if she’d abandoned them, if she’d suffered.

Now Emma knew the truth.

Clare had died fighting, had seen Morrison sabotaging the ship and tried to stop him, had run toward danger to help save people instead of hiding in her cabin.

But the people who had hired Morrison to murder Clare, they were alive, still working, still operating cruise ships, still profiting from mass murder.

Owen opened his laptop, started composing an email to every news organization he could think of.

Subject: Evidence of corporate mass murder.

Aurora Dream disaster attached documents prove Oceanic Ventures executives hired mercenary to sink cruise ship for insurance money.

350 people murdered in conspiracy involving Vice President David Stratton and chief financial officer Helen Marx.

He worked through the night building the evidence package.

Scanned documents, timeline showing payment schedule, match chip timeline, corporate emails, witness statements from surviving families, photos of Dale Morrison’s body clutching payment receipts, everything the company had tried to bury for 8 years.

At 6:00 a.

m.

, his phone rang.

FBI agent named Carson.

Mr.

Hartley, I understand you removed evidence from the Aurora Dream yesterday.

I documented a crime scene.

That’s not your job.

You contaminated.

I found proof that Oceanic Ventures executives hired Dale Morrison to murder my wife and 349 other people for insurance money.

I found payment schedules on company letterhead.

I found emails between VP Stratton and CFO Marks discussing getting rid of the ship.

I found Dale Morrison’s false identity documents showing he was ex-military mercenary hired specifically for this job.

You want to arrest me for removing evidence? Go ahead.

But that evidence is already in the hands of every major news organization in the country.

Silence on the line.

Then you sent it to media.

Sented at 5:45 a.

m.

New York Times, Washington Post, CNN, NBC, ABC, CBS, Miami Herald, Boston Globe.

Everyone, your office should be getting the same package right about now.

Mr.

Hartley, you’ve compromised an active investigation.

Your active investigation has been sitting dormant for 8 years while the company that murdered my wife kept operating.

I’m done waiting for bureaucracy.

We need those original documents.

Come get them.

Harbor in room 237.

I’ll be here all day, but the story’s already out.

You can’t stop it now.

Owen hung up.

Emma was awake watching him from the other bed.

Did you just declare war on a cruise company? Yeah.

Good.

Emma sat up.

What happens now? Now we wait for them to panic and then we watch them burn.

By 8:00 a.

m.

Owen’s phone was exploding.

News organizations calling for interviews.

Other Aurora Dream families calling to thank him.

Beth Rener calling to say her lawyer was filing federal criminal complaints against Stratton Marks and Oceanic Ventures CEO Robert Gaines.

At 9:00 a.

m.

CNN broke the story.

Breaking evidence suggests Oceanic Ventures executives hired contractor to sink Aurora Dream for insurance money.

350 dead in corporate mass murder scheme.

By 10 a.

m.

Oceanic Ventures stock had dropped 40%.

Trading was suspended.

At 11:00 a.

m.

FBI agents arrived at Harbor Inn, not to arrest Owen to get his cooperation.

Agent Carson looked exhausted.

Mr.

Hartley, we need everything you have.

We’re opening criminal investigation into Oceanic Ventures executives.

If you have more evidence, we need it now.

Owen handed over the waterproof bag.

Everything’s in there.

Payment records, emails, false identity documents, personal journals from the victims showing they figured out what Morrison was doing.

You’ll want to start with VP David Stratton.

Dale Morrison’s ex-wife can confirm Stratton visited their house in 2010 to hire Morrison.

We’re already moving on that.

Continue reading….
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