Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
looking for absolution from those who would come after.
Maybe
caret
STEPHEN COONTS
he was thinking about “the p”…even now, thinking of the
promises he had made and the reality that had come
to pass.
When he was leaving the school, on the way to the
borrowed car with two friends who accompanied him,
Hector found himself surrounded by well-dressed men,
obviously not local laborers.
“Hector Sedanoea”…sd one, “you are under arrest.
You must come with us.”
He was stunned. “What am I charged with”…”…he
demanded.
. “That is not for us to discussea”…the man said, and took
his elbow. He pushed him toward a government van.
“They are arresting Sedanoea”…someone shouted. The shout
was taken up by others. As a crowd gathered,
shoved closer, shouting threats and obscenities, the
men around the van pushed Hector into it and jumped in
themselves. In seconds it was in motion.
Hector protested. He had done nothing wrong,
he was not wanted for any crime.
The man showed him a badge. “You are under
arrestea”…he said. “We have our orders. Now be
silent.”
The van raced through the streets of the city, then took
the highway toward Havana.
Maximo Sedano was too excited to sleep. The
adrenaline aftershock of stabbing an ice pick
into Vargas’s thug should have floored him, but the thought of
$53 million, plus interest, kept him wide
awake. That and the possibility of sirens.
He lay in the darkness listening. Every now and then he
heard a siren moaning, faint and far away. He
waited in dread suspense for that moan to join others
and become a wailing convoy of police vehicles
converging on his hotel, followed by the stamping of a
hoard of policemen charging upstairs to arrest him.
He twitched with every howl in the night, though they were
few and faint and never seemed to
CUBA
MF-
grow louder. In the silence between moans he amused
himself by trying to calculate the amount of interest that
might be due on Castro’s hoard.
He hadn’t seen a statement in about six months
… call it six months exactly, half a
year. Interest at 2.45 percent, on $53
million … almost 650,000 American
dollars.
Ha! The interest alone would buy a nice small
villa on Ibiza. Of course he should not rule out
Majorca, nor Minorca for that matter, until
he had traveled over each of the islands and seen
local conditions for himself, and checked the real estate
market. No, indeed. He would visit all the
Balearic Islands in turn, including Formentera and
Cabrera, stay at local urns, drink local
wine, eat lamb and beef and fish prepared as the
islanders preferred …
Ahh, his dream was within Ms grasp. Tomorrow. In just a
few short hours. When the banks opened he would go
immediately to the one with the largest account, submit the
transfer card, men to the next one, and finally, the one
with the smallest amount on deposit, a mere $11
million.
Maximo paced the room, stared out the
window at the lights of the city that housed his fortune,
paced some more.
He was full almost to bursting, too excited
to sleep.
He had almost run back to the hotel from the
railroad station. He had taken his time though,
walked slowly and unhurriedly, paused to feed the
ducks under one of the Limmat bridges, slipped the
ice pick into the river when no one was watching, then
walked on to the hotel so full of joy and happiness
he could barely contain himself.
At about four hi the morning he began to wind down
somewhat, so he lay down on the bed. In minutes
he was asleep.
When Maximo awoke the sun was up, he could hear
a maid running a vacuum sweeper in the next
room.
He checked his watch. Almost eight-thirty.
He showered, shaved, put on clean clothes from the
skin out, then packed his bags. He would come back
to the hotel this afternoon diswhen he had finished his banking and
check
out. He wanted to be long gone if Santana showed
up looking for Rail and the money.
There was a continental breakfast laid out in
the hotel dining room, so Maximo paused there for
coffee and a French roll.
Suitably fortified, with his attach caret case in
bis left hand and the transfer cards signed
by Fidel in his inside breast pocket, Maximo
Sedano set off afoot for the bank that was to be bis
first stop. It was a mere two blocks away, a
huge old building of thick stone walls and small
windows, a building hundreds of years old with the
treasure of the ages in its vaults.
Me spoke to a clerk, was ushered into a small
windowless office to see a middle-aged man who
wore a green eyeshade and spoke tolerably good
Spanish. Maximo surrendered the appropriate
transfer card and settled down to wait after the clerk
left the room.
The bank was quiet. Footsteps were lost on the
vast wood and stone floors. Humans seemed to be
the intruders here, temporary visitors who came
and went while the bank endured the storms of the
centuries, a monument to the power of capital.
Five pleasant minutes passed, then five more.
Maximo was in no hurry. He was prepared to wait
quite a while for $53 million, even if it took
all day. Or several days. After all,
he had waited a lifetime so far. But he wouldn’t have
to wait long. The clerk would be back momentarily.
And he was.
He came in, looked at Maximo with an odd
expression, handed him back the transfer card with just
the slightest hint of a bow.
“I am sorry, sefior, but the balance of this account
is so low that the transfer is impossible to honor.”
Maximo gaped uncomprehendingly. He
swallowed, then said, “What did you say?”
“I am sorry, sefior, but there has been some
mistake.”
“Not on my partea”…Maximo replied heatedly.
The clerk gave a tight little professional smile.
“The bank’s records are perfectly clear.”…He
held out the transfer card. “This account contains just a
few dollars over one thousand.”
Maximo couldn’t believe his ears. “Where did the
money go?”
“Obviously, due to the bank secrecy laws I
have limited discretion about what I can say.”
Maximo Sedano leaped across the table at the man,
grabbed him by his lapels.
“Where did-the money go, fool”…”…he roared.
“Someone with the proper authorization ordered the money
transferred, senor. That much is obvious. I can
say no more.”
And the clerk wriggled from his grasp.
The story was the same at the next two banks
Maximo Sedano visited. Each account contained just
a few dollars above the minimum amount necessary
to maintain the account.
The horror of his position hit Maximo tike
a hammer. Not only was there no money here for him,
Alejo Vargas would kill him when he got back
to Cuba.
He told the bank officer at the last bank he
visited that he wanted to make a telephone call,
and he wanted the bank officer there to talk to the
person at the other end.
He called Vargas at home, caught him before
he went to his office.
After he had explained about the accounts, he asked
the bank officer to verify what he had said. The
officer refused to touch the telephone. “The bank
secrecy laws are very strictea”…he said
self-righteously. Maximo wanted to strangle him.
Vargas had of course listened to this little exchange.
“There is no moneyea”…Maximo told the
secret-police chief. “Someone has stolen it.”
“You assea”…Vargas hissed.
“You
have stolen the money.
You
are the finance minister.”
“Call the other banks, Alejoea”…he urged.
“They are here in Zurich. I will give you their names
and the account numbers. Listen to what the bank officers
have to say.”
“You are a capital ass, Sedano. The Swiss
bankers will not talk to me. The money was deposited
in Switzerland precisely
because
those bastards will talk to no one.”
“I will call you from their office and have them speak to you.”
“Have you lost your mind? What are you playing at?”
This was a scene from a nightmare.
“If I had the money I would not set foot in
Cuba again, Vargas. We both know that. Use your
head! I don’t have the money: I’m coming home.”
He tried to slam the instrument into its cradle and
missed, sent it skittering off the table. Fumbling,
he picked it up by the cord, hung the thing properly
on the cradle.
The account officer looked at him with professional
solicitude, much like an undertaker smiling at die
next of kin.
Perhaps the banks have stolen Fidel’s money,
Maximo thought.
These Swiss bastards pocketed the Jews’ money;
maybe they are keeping Fidel’s.
He opened his mouth to say that very thing to the account officer
sitting across the table, then thought better of it He
picked up his attache”…case with the pistol in it and
walked slowly out of the bank.
The van took Hector Sedano to La Cabana
fortress hi Havana. It stopped hi a dark
courtyard where other men were waiting. They took him
into the prison, down long corridors, through iron
doors that opened before him and closed after him, until
finally they stood before an empty cell hi the
isolation area of the prison. Here they demanded his
clothes, his shoes, his watch, die things in his
pockets. When he stood naked someone gave him a
one-piece jumpsuit. Wearing only that, he was
thrust into die cell and the door was locked behind him.
The journey from (he everyday world of people and
voices and cares and concerns to the stark,
vile reality of a prison cell is one of the most
violent transitions in this life. The present and the
future had been ripped from Hector Sedano,
leaving only his memories of the past.
Hector was well aware of the fact that he could be
physically abused, beaten, even executed, at the
whim of whoever had ordered him jailed. People disappeared
in Cuban prisons, never to be heard from again.
The parallels between his situation and that of Christ
while awaiting his crucifixion immediately leaped
to Hector’s Jesuit mind. Not far behind was the
realization that Fidel Castro had also been
imprisoned before the revolution.
Perhaps prison is a natural stage in the Me
of a revolutionary. Imprisonment by the old regime
for one’s beliefs was de facto recognition that the
beliefs were dangerous and the person who held them a
worthy enemy. The person imprisoned was
automatically elevated in stature and respect
These thoughts swirled through Hector’s mind as he
sat on a hard wooden bunk without blankets and
gave in to his emotions. He found himself shaking with
anger. He paced, he pounded on the walls with his
fists until they were raw.
Finally he threw himself on the bunk and
lay staring into the gloom.
Angel del Mar
pitched and rolled viciously as she wallowed
helplessly in the swells. In every direction nothing
could be seen but sea and cloudy sky. The sky was
completely covered now with cloud, the wind was picking
up, and the swells were getting bigger, with a shorter
period between them. Aboard the boat, many people lay on
their stomach and hugged the heaving deck.
Everyone on board suffered from the lack of water,
some to a greater degree than others. Ocho Sedano,
who had had only a few mouthfuls since the boat
left Cuba and had pushed himself relentlessly, without
mercy, was desperate.
His eyes felt like burning coals, his skin
seemed on fire, his tongue a thick, lifeless
lump of dead flesh in a cracked, dry mouth.
He wasn’t perspiring much now. Of all his
symptoms, that one worried him the most. As an
athlete he knew the importance of regulating
body temperature.
Dora lay in the shade cast by the wheelhouse and said
nothing. She had been sick a time or two, vomit
stained her dress. She seemed to be resting easier
now.
Beside her lay her father, Diego Coca. He was
conscious, his eyes fierce and bright, his jaw swollen
and misshapen. He hadn’t moved in hours,
unwilling to let anyone else have his spot in the
shade.
Ocho sat heavily near Dora, scanned the sea
slowly and carefully.
My
God, there must be a ship! A ship or boatsomething
to give us food and water…
In all this sea there must be hundreds of fishing
boats and yachts, dozens of freighters,
smugglers, American Coast Guard cutters
hunting smugglers, warships… Where the hell are
they? Where are all these goddamn boats and ships?
From time to time he heard jets flying over, occasionally