Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
someday would again.
STEPHEN COONTS
The Cubans watched the American diplomats very
closely, so this officer had no contact with the
agency’s covert intelligence apparatus on the
island. He kept himself busy watching television,
listening to radio, collecting Cuban newspapers
and publications and writing reports based on what
he saw, heard, and read. His diplomatic
colleagues were congenial and the life was
semi-monastic, which he found agreeable.
The man who ran the covert side of the business, was
a Cuban who had never set foot inside the
U.s. Interest Section and probably never would.
He owned a wholesale seafood operation on the
waterfront in Havana Harbor. Every day the fishing
boats brought their catch to his pier and every day he
purchased what he thought he could sell. Both the
price he paid and the price he charged were
set by the government: had there not been a black
market for fish he would have starved.
The cover was decent A Cuban fishing boat could
meet an Americaneaboat or submarine at sea,
passing messages or material in either direction.
The spymaster’s delivery trucks visited every
restaurant, casino, and embassy in the capital.
With people and things coming and going, the old man could keep his
pulse on Cuba. He was called el Tiburon,
the Shark.
William Henry Chance had no intention of ever
meeting el Tiburon unless disaster was staring him in the
face. The CIA man in the American Interest
Section was another matter.
“Ah, yes, Mr. Chance. Delighted to meet you,
of course.”
Dr. Bouchard shook hands with Chance and Carmellini
as he peered at them over the top of his glasses.
He led them down several narrow hallways to a
tiny, windowless cubicle in the bowels of the building.
“Sorry to say, mis is the office. Security,
you know. They used to store food in here. Damp but
quiet”…He took a stack of newspapers off the
only guest chair and moved
them to Ms desk, extracted a folding
metal chair from behind his desk and unfolded it for
Carmellini, then settled into his ctfair.
The knees of all three men almost touched. “So how
are you enjoying Cuba?”
“Fascinatingea”…Chance muttered.
“Yes, isn’t it”…”…Professor Bouchard beamed
complacently. “Six years I’ve been here, and I
don’t ever want to leave. I don’t miss the
snow, I’ll tell you, or the faculty
politics, feuds, dog-eat-dog jealousy over
department budgetsthank God I’m-out of all that.”
Chance nodded, unwilling to get to the point.
“We met once or twice before, I thinkea”…Chance
reminded Bouchard.
“Oh, yes, I do seem to recall… $’e
They discussed it.
“My associate, Mr. Carmellini. I don’t
think you’ve met him.”
The pleasantries over at last, Chance edged around
to business. “You have a few items in your storeroom
that we need to borrow, I believe.”
“Certainly. The inventory is in the safe. If you
gentlemen will step into the hall for a moment…”
They did so and he fiddled with the dial of the safe.
When he had the file he wanted and the safe
was closed and locked, he seated himself again at his
desk. Chance sat back down. Carmellini
remained standing.
“This is the inventory, I’m sure. Yes. What
is it you want?”
“Two Rugers with silencers, ammunition, two
garroting wires, two fighting knives, a dozen
disposable latex gloves, two self-contained gas
masks”
“Let’s see…”…The professor ran his finger
down the list. “Guns, check. Ammo, okay.
Knives … knives … oh, here they are.
Wires, garroting, check … gloves …
masks. Yes, I think we have what you need. Do you
want to take this stuff with you?”
“I think so. In a suitcase of some kind, if you
can manage that.”
“I’ll have to give you one of mine. You can’return
it or pay me for it, as you prefer.”
“We’ll try to return it.”
“That’s best, I think. The accounting department is so
difficult about expense accounts. You gentlemen
wait here; I’ll see what I can do. While
you’re waiting, would you like a cup of coffee, a soft
drink?”
“I’m fine caret Chance said.
“Don’t worry about meea”…Carmellini said.
“This will take a few minutesea”…the professor
advised. “Would you like to wait in the courtyard? The
flora there is my hobby, and the eagle from the Maine
Memorial is a rare work of art.”
“That’s the big eagle over the doorway?”
“Yes. After the revolution Castro demanded it
be’removed from the Maine Memorial. That was about the
time he announced he was a communist, before the Bay of
Pigs. Difficult era for everyone.”
“Ah, yes. We’ll find our way.”
“I’ll look for you in the courtyard when I have your
itemsea”…the professor said, and scurried off. ,
The eagle was huge. “Quite a work of
artea”…Carmellini muttered.
“Too big for youea”…Chance said.
“I don’t know about thatea”…Carmellini replied, and
glanced around to see if there was any way to get the thing
out of the mission ground with a crane. “Run a mobile
construction crane up to the wall, send a man down
on the hook, haul it out. I could snatch it and be
gone in six or seven minutes.”
Chance didn’t even bother to frown. Carmellini had
a habit of chaffing him in an unoffensive
way; protest would be futile.
‘The professor is the most incurious man I’ve
ever met,”
Tommy Carmellini said conversationally a few
minutes later.
“He doesn’t want to know too much.”
“He doesn’t want to know anythingea”…Carmellini
protested. “People who don’t ask obvious questions
worry me.”
“Hmmmea”…sd William Henry Chance, who
didn’t seem at all worried.
The professor came looking for them a half hour
later. After he had scrawled an illegible
signature on a detailed custody card, Chance
offered the professor a photo of a man that his
surveillance team had taken outside the
University of Havana science building. The man
was in his sixties, slightly overweight, balding,
and looking at the camera almost full face. He
didn’t see the camera that took the picture, of
course, since it was in the van.
“If you could, Professor, I would like you to send this
to Washington. I want to know who this man is.”
“American”…”…Dr. Bouchard asked, accepting the
photo and glancing at it.
“I have no idea, sir. We’ve seen him around here
and there and wondered who he might be. Would you have the
folks in Langley try to find out?”
“Of courseea”…the professor said, and put the photo
in his pocket.
Toad Tarkington was in a rare foul mood. He
snapped at the yeomen, snarled at the flag
lieutenant, fumed over the message board, and
generally glowered at anyone who looked his way.
This state of affairs could not go on, of course, so
he went to Ms stateroom, put on his running
togs, and went on deck for a jog. The tropical
sea air, the long foaming rollers, the puffy
clouds running on the breeze, the deep blue of the
Caribbeanall of it made his mood more foul.
None of the leads to find the
Colon
had borne fruit. The ship was still missing, the
captain and crew had stayed
aboard her all the time she was tied to the pier in
Guantanamo, the gloom seemed impenetrable. The
air wing was still searching, but as yet, nothing! And of
course the temperature of the rhetoric coming from the
White House and Pentagon was rising by the hour.
Toad was jogging aft from the bow when a
petty officer from the admiral’s staff flagged him
down. “The AI’S have a photo of the Coston!”
“Where is she?”
“Aground on a reef off the north shore of
Cuba:”
Toddad bolte.d for the hatchway that led down into the
ship, the petty officer right behind.
The photo was of the
Colon,
all right. The ship looked as if it were wedged on some
rocks, almost as if it grounded during a high tide.
Now the tide was out and the
Colon
was marooned.
“When was this picture taken”…”…Toad demanded of the
air intelligence officers.
“Yesterday.”
“And no one recognized it?”
“Not until today.”.
Toad growled. “Have you passed this to the admiral?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Show me the location.”
The AI pinpointed the location on a sectional
chart.
Toad called Jake Grafton. “I
want to see that shipea”…Jake said. “As soon as
possible. We’ll take an F-14 with a TARPS
package.”…TARPS stood for tactical air
reconnaissance pods. Each pod contained two
cameras and an infrared line scanner.
Cuba is an island surrounded by islands, over
sixteen hundred of them. Most of the islands on
Cuba’s north shore are small, uninhabited,
rocky bits of tropical paradise, or so they
looked to Jake Grafton, who saw them through
binoculars from the front seat of an F-14.
The ship was about three miles offshore, stranded on
rocks that just pierced the surface of the sea. The
breaking surf looked white through the binoculars.
The freighter was plainly visible, listing slightly.
Some of the weapons containers were visible on the main
deck. Jake checked the photo in his lap, which was
taken yesterday by an FirstA-18 Hornet pilot
with a hand-held 35-mm camera. Yep, the containers
visible in the photo were still in place aboard the ship.
Although the Cubans claimed a twelve-mile
territorial limit, the United States
recognized but three.
Nuestra Senora de Colon
was stranded on a reef in international
waters, the AI’S assured Jake. They had
checked with the State Department, they said.
South of the ship was the entrance to Bahia de Nipe,
a decent-sized shallow-water bay.
Was the ship on her way into the bay when she went on
the rocks?
Jake was making his initial photo passes a
mile to seaward of the
Colon.
In the event the Cubans chose to send interceptors
to chase him away, he had a flight of F-14’s
ten miles farther north providing cover. Above them
was an EA-6But Prowler electronic warfare
airplane, listening forand ready to jam any Cuban
fire-control radar that came on the air. According to the
electronic warfare detection gear in Jake’s
cockpit, he was being painted only by search radars.
That, as he well knew, could change any second.
He had just completed a photo pass from west to east
and was turning to seaward when the E-2 came on the
air. “Battlestar One, we have company. Bogey
twenty miles west of your posit, heading your way.
Looks like a Fulcrum.”…A Fulcrum was a
MiGo-29.
Jake keyed his radio mike. “Roger
that. I’ll make one more photo pass before he gets
here, then exit the area to the north.”
He tucked the nose down and let the Tomcat
accelerate. The plane was alive in his handthe
descending jet bumped and bounced in the swirling,
roiling tropical air
under the puffy cumulus clouds drifting along on the
trade wind.
“Cameras are on and runningea”…Toad Tarkington
said from the back seat.
Staying just outside the three-mile limit, Jake
flew past the stern of the stranded freighter one more time,
which meant he was probably getting fine views of
her stern and oblique views of her flanks.
“Since we’re here …”…he muttered, and dropped
a wing as he eased the stick and throttles forward.
In the back seat, Toad Tarkington was monitoring
the recon package. “I sure am glad we’re
staying out of Cuban airspaceea”…he told Jake.
“I’d feel a lot more comfortable outside the
twelve-mile limit, but that’s asking too much of this
technology. A ship sitting on the rocks like this,
looks like a setup to me. They’re looking
to mousetrap some dude flying by snapping pictures
and perforate his heinie.”
“Yeahea”…sd Jake Grafton, and leveled off at
a hundred feet above the water. He had the
F-14 flying parallel with the axis of the ship,
offset with the ship to his right since the recon
package was mounted under his right engine.
“Got the cameras and IR scanner going?”
“Oh, yeah, looking real goodea”…Toad said, just as
he picked up the seascape passing by the canopy with
his peripheral vision. He looked right just in time
to see the freighter flash by, then Jake
Grafton pulled back on the stick and lit the
afterburners. The Tomcat’s nose rose to sixty
degrees above the horizon and it went up like a
rocket, corkscrewing back toward the ocean, as the
E-2 Hawkeye radar operator called the
bogey for the Showtime F-14 crews who were
Jake’s armed guard. Both RIO’S said they had