Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
forward through the wheelhouse windshield.
“Look, you bastardea”…Ocho ordered through clenched
teeth, and grabbed the smaller man by the
neck. He rammed his head forward against the glass.
“See what your greed and stupidity have cost.”
Then he threw Diego Coca to the floor.
The impact of the disaster bowed Ocho’s head, bent his
back, emptied his heart. Diego’s guilt did
not lessen his, and oh, he knew that well. He,
Ocho Sedano, was
guilty.
His lust had set this chain of events in motion. He
felt as if he were trying to support the weight of the
earth.
Maximo Sedano’s office in the finance ministry
reflected his personal taste. The furniture was
simple, deceptively so. The woods were
hardwoods from the Amazon rain forest, crafted in
Brazil by masters. Little souvenirs from his travels
across Europe and Latin America sat on the
desk and credenza and hung on the walls, small
things of little value because expensive trinkets would be
impolitic.
He turned on the light, then walked to the huge
floor safe, which he unlocked attd opened. He
found the drawer he wanted, removed a stiff
document envelope, took it to his desk and
adjusted the light.
With the contents of the envelope spread out on the highly
polished mahogany, Maximo Sedano paused and
looked around the room with unseeing eyes. He
blinked several times, then leaned back in his chair and
stretched.
There were four bank accounts in Switzerland, all
controlled by Fidel Castro. The last time
Maximo computed the interest, the amount in the accounts
totaled $53 million. Castro had been very
specific when the accounts were opened years ago; the
accounts were to be denominated in United States
dollars. This choice had worked out extraordinarily
well through the years as the currencies of every other
major trading nation underwent major inflation or
devaluation. The United States dollar was the
modern-day equivalent of gold, although it would
certainly be poor pol-
COONTS
itics for any member of the Castro regime to say
so publicly.
Fifty-three million dollars.
Quite a sum.
Enough to live extraordinarily well for a millennium
or two.
Fidel kept that little nest egg in
Switzerland just in case things went wrong here in this
communist paradise and he had to skedaddle. No
sense living on government charity in some other
squalid communist paradise, like Poland or
Russia or the Ukraine, when a little prior
planning could solve the whole problem. So Fidel
rat-holed a fortune where only he could get at it
and slept soundly at night.
Now he wanted the money back in Cuba.
Not that the money ever really belonged to the Cuban
government. The money came from drug dealers, fees
for using Cuban harbors for sanctuary, fees for
being able to send shipments directly to Cuba,
stockpile the drugs, then ship them on when the time was
right.
The money was really just Castro’s personal share of the
drug fees. An even larger chunk of the profits
had gone to army, navy and law enforcement personnel,
all of them, every man in the country who wore a
uniform had been paid; another chunk went
to Castro’s lieutenants and political allies.
Maximo had received almost a half million
dollars himself. All in all, the deals with the drug
syndicates had been good public policythe drug
business was highly profitable, giving
Castro money to buy loyalty and so remain in
power, and the business corrupted America, which he
hated. Ah, yes, the money came from the United
States despite the best efforts of the American
government to prevent it. Fidel had savored that
irony too.
Fifty-three million.
Maximo pursed his. lips as he thought about the
life of luxury and privilege that a fortune that
size would buy. The money could be invested, some
hotels, bank stock, invested to earn a nice
income without touching the principal.
He could stay in the George V in Paris, ski
in St. Moritz, shop in London and Rome and
yacht all over the Mediterranean.
God, it was tempting!
Fifty-three million.
All he had to do was get Castro’s thumbprint on
the transfer order. Without that thumbprint, the banks
would not move a solitary dollar.
Really, those Swiss banks … Maximo had
urged Castro to transfer the money to Spanish and
Cuban banks for months, ever since the dictator
was diagnosed with cancer. If he died with the
money still in Switzerland, prying money out of those
banks was going to be like peeling fresh paint from a
wall with fingernails. And the drug dealers thought their
racket was profitable!
But why be a piker? Why settle for $53
million when there was a lot more, somewhere?
From his pocket he removed a coin, a gold
five-peso coin dated 1915. There was a
portrait of Josd Marti on one side and the
crest of Cuba on the other.
Gold circulated in Cuba until the
revolution, until Fidel and the communists declared it
was no longer legal tender and called it in, allowing
the peso to float on the world market.
Maximo rubbed the gold coin with his fingers. By his
calculations, based upon Ministry of Finance
records, almost 1.2 million ounces of gold were
surrendered to the government in return for paper
money.
One million, two hundred thousand ounces …
about thirty-seven
tons
of gold. On the world market, that thirtyseven tons
of gold should be worth about $360 million.
A man who could get his hands on that hoard
would be on easy street for the rest of his life.
Yes, indeed.
The only problem was finding it. It wasn’t in the
Finance Ministry vaults, it wasn’t in the
vaults of the Bank of Cuba, on account at
banks in Switzerland or London or New
York or Mexico City … it was gone!
Thirty-seven tons of gold, vanished into thin
air.
If a man could lay hands on that gold… well,
Alejo Vargas and Hector Sedano could fight
over the presidency of Cuba, and may the better
man win. Maximo would take the gold. If he
could find it.
He had a few ideas about where it might be. In
fact, he had been quietly researching the problem
since he took over the Finance Ministry. Eight
years of ransacking files, talking to old
employees, looking at clues, thinking about the
problemthe gold had to be in Cuba, in Havana.
Thirtyseven tons of gold.
A-life of ease and luxury in the spas of
Europe, mingling with the rich and famous, surrounded
by beautiful women and the best of everything …
But first the $53 million.
He would type the account numbers on the transfer
orders and the accounts the money was to be transferred
to. He would use the secretary’s typewriter.
He had the account numbers written in the notebook
he removed from the safe. He flipped through the
notebook now, found the page, stared at the
numbers.
How closely would Fidel check the order?
The man is sick, drugged, dying. He is barely
conscious. Unless he has the numbers of the accounts in
the Bank of Cuba by his bedside, he ‘II be
none the wiser.
But what if he does? What if he has the
numbers written down in a book or diary and hands
the transfer order to Mercedes to check? What then?
Fifty-three million. More money than God
has.
He remembered the old days when he was young, when
Castro walked the earth like Jesus Christ with a
Cuban accent. Ah, the fire of the revolution, how
the true believers were going to change the world!
Instead, time changed them, America bled them, and
life defeated them.
Maximo had been loyal to Fidel and the
revolution. No one could ever say he was
not. He had been with Fidel
since he was twenty-four years old, just back from the
university in Spain. He had endured the good times
and the bad, never uttered a single word of criticism.
He had faith in Fidel, proclaimed it
publicly and demanded it of others.
Now Castro was dying. In just a few days he would be
beyond regrets.
Fifty-three million.
The pounding the overloaded boat had taken buckjng
the heavy Gulf Stream swells opened the seams
somewhat, and now the fisherman was pumping out the water
with the bilge pump, which received its power from the
enginedriven generator.
“As long as we can keep the engine running, as long
as the seams don’t open any more than they are,
we’ll be all right.”
“How much fuel do we have on board?”
The fisherman went to check.
Ocho was at the helm, steering almost due east. With the
wind and sea behind her, the
Angel del Mar
rode better. Now the motion was a rocking as the
swells swept under the stern. Very little roll from”
side to side.
Of the eighty-four people who had been aboard when the
boat left the harbor in Cuba, twenty-six
remained alive. The captain’s body lay against the
wheelhouse wall.
Ocho found Diego’s pistol and put it in his
belt. He physically carried Diego from the
wheelhouse and tossed him on the deck.
Fifty-seven living human beings, men, women, and
babies, had gone into the sea. There was no way in the
world to go back to try to rescue them. Even if he
and the fisherman could find those people in the water, in the
darkness, in this sea, the pounding of heading back into the
swells would probably cause the boat to take on
more water, endangering the lives of those who remained
aboard.
No, the people swept overboard were lost to their fate,
whatever that might be.
The living twenty-six would soon join them, Ocho
told himself. The boat was heading east, away from
Florida.
Perhaps if the sea calmed somewhat, they should bring the
boat to a more southerly heading and return to Cuba.
That, he decided, was their only chance.
Cuba. They would have to return.
Why wait? Every sea mile increased the
likelihood of the engine quitting or the boat
sinking.
He turned the helm a bit, worked the boat’s bow
to a more southerly heading. The roll became, more
pronounced. The wind came more over the right stern
quarter.
How long until dawn? An hour or two?
The door to the wheelhouse opened. Diego was standing
there, the whites of his eyes glistening in the dim
light. “Turn back toward Florida! No one
wants to go back to Cuba.”
“It’s the only way. We’ll all die trying
to make it to Florida in this sea.”
“I was dead in Cuba all those yearsea”…Diego
Coca shouted. “I refuse to go go back! I
refuse.”
Ocho hit him in the mouth. One mighty jab with his
left hand as he twisted his body, so all his weight
was behind the punch. Diego went down backward, hit
his head on the deck coaming, and lay still.
Dora wailed, crawled toward her unconscious
father.
Ocho closed the door to the wheelhouse, brought the
boat back to its southeast heading.
Soon the door opened again and the fisherman
stepped inside. “We have fuel for another ten or
twelve hours. No more than that.”
“We’ll be back hi Cuba then.”
caret That’s our only chance.”
The stars in the east were fading when the engine quit.
After trying for a minute to start the engine, the fisherman
dashed below.
Ocho abandoned the helm. The boat rolled
sickeningly in the swells.
At least the swells were smaller than they were earlier
in the night, m the middle of the Gulf Stream.
The fisherman came up on deck after fifteen
minutes, his clothes soaked in diesel fuel.
“It’s no useea”…he said. “The engine has had it.”
“What about the water in the bilges? Is it still coming
in?”
“We’ll “have to take turns on the hand pump.”
“What are we going to do about the engine”…”…Ocho asked.
The fisherman didn’t reply, merely stood
looking at the swells as the sky grew light in the
east.
The van drove up to the massive,
250-feet-tall extra-highvoltage tower beside the
drainage canal on the southern outskirts
of Havana and backed up toward it. The base of the
tower was surrounded by a ten-foot-high-chain link fence
with barbed wire on top. The access door in the
fence was, of course, padlocked.
The driver of the van and his passenger were both wearing
one-piece overalls. They stretched, looked at the
wires far above, and scratched their heads while they
surveyed the ramshackle four-story apartment
buildings that backed up to the canal. One of the men
extracted a pack of cigarettes from his overalls