The cloud cover at 300 meters turned the usually azure water off the beach at Saint Tropez an ashy grey broken occasionally by tufts of white foam at the tops of windblown waves. At the end of a centuries old stone pier an immaculately maintained 1942 Chris-Craft runabout bobbed in the growing chop, the highly varnished mahogany of the hull protected by rubber bumpers as two men dressing in white pants and Navy blue jackets held it in place for three. The first, a man in his early fifties with iron grey hair stepped across the gunwale of the boat into the forward cockpit. He offered a hand to a beautiful fresh-faced redhead woman perhaps in her thirties. She sat in the rear cockpit and rummaged through her handbag, coming up with a silk scarf. The last to get in did so with an air of dignity that belied her tender age, fourteen.
She was the best of her parents, the big hazel eyes and slender build of her father with the strawberry blonde hair and perfect complexion of her mother, a 'beauté vraie' as a Parisian society column had proclaimed. Her name was Isabeau du Champs and she was the only daughter of Henri du Champs, CEO of du Champs Energie, and Fiona du Champs, nee O'Connell. The life style given to her to that point had been one of parental indulgence that had made her somewhat spoiled. On that cold, overcast morning, at her insistence, she and her parents were heading for Greece and the warmer climate of the Aegean aboard her father's 50 meter yacht. As usual, she was complaining.
"Pourquoi ne pouvons-nous pas apporter le yacht au quai, pappa?" the girl asked, brushing away her mother's attempts to put the scarf over her head.
"L'eau n'est pas assez profonde ici, Isabeau, je vous ai dit," her father replied as the boat's pilot stepped aboard.
"In English, my darlings," her mother chided gently, her Irish accent undiminished after more than 15 years in France.
"Mamma," Isabeau rolled her eyes. "I just do not see why we must always take the boat out. The sea spray will ruin my hair."
"It is a short trip, Cheri," her father said, turning to look back at her. "And you insisted on this trip to Greece."
Isabeau crossed her arms over her chest and stared off into the distance at nothing. Behind them, the boats engine rumbled to life and the pier attendants released the mooring lines. Slowly the runabout moved away from the pier and lined up on the yacht three hundred meters from shore. Clear of the protection offered by the quay, the incoming waves hit the boat on the starboard quarter, spraying the occupants immediately. The girl made a disgusted sound and almost snatched the scarf from her mother's hand.
"It is all ruined now," she muttered.
"Je suis désolé, mademoiselle," the boat's pilot said.
The girl glared at the back of his head.
"It is not his fault, Isabeau, you know that," her mother said. "We are almost there."
Minutes later the pilot spun the wheel hard to starboard and the runabout gently bumped the foot of the boarding platform. One of the yacht's crew was there to hold it in place as the family debarked. Just as they reached the cover of the stern canopy, the rain began and in seconds drenched the boat pilot and man on the platform. Isabeau du Champs didn't notice as she hurried into the salon. Heading forward, she disappeared into her stateroom, intent on rescuing her hair.
The rain stayed with the yacht as they turned east, and if anything the temperature dropped. In her cabin, Isabeau's fingers flew madly over the keyboard of her high-end laptop. She was obvious to the approaching figure, as was the entire ship's compliment.
There was no attempt to stop the yacht, no effort made to take prisoners, just an all-out attack. The first hit scored destroyed the ship's twin diesels and killed the engineer. The second blew off five meters of the bow. Behind the bridge, in the radio room, the operator began to broadcast an S.O.S. In her stateroom, Isabeau was knocked to the deck by the first blast. She snatched up her laptop from the bed and began typing. The second blast slowed the ship further, driving the now open bow into the sea. On her computer, Isabeau reached a friend. She stood by the stateroom windows and frantically described what she was seeing.