Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
took a chemical timer from his belt, a device about
the size and shape of a fountain pen, and inserted it into the
plastique. The timer was already set to explode as
near to 1:30 A.m. as possible.
After setting the timers, they climbed down to the ground,
then ascended the other two legs. In minutes they were
back on the ground.
They locked the padlock, closed up the back of the
van, and drove away.
“One moreea”…Poveda said. He wished he had a map
or diagram, but all that had been left behind in
Florida. There he and Cabrera and the U.s.
Army power grid expert had labored for days over
satellite reconnaissance photos,
photographs taken from the ground by not-so-innocent
tourists, and computer-generated diagrams. They
selected the target towers and committed their locations
to memory. Not a single sheet of paper
left the room with them.
So now Cabrera pointed down one street and
Poveda motioned toward another. The men chuckled.
“I am very sureea”…Poveda said. “Two blocks
down, right turn, then on for a half mile.”
“Okay.”
“I am glad it was tonightea”…Cabrera said. “The
charges had been in place too long, the new
padlocks were there too long, I was getting
nervousyou know what I mean, my friend?”
Poveda grunted. He knew. His stomach felt as
if it were tied in a knot. He hadn’t felt this
uptight about an operation since his first one, fifteen
years ago, when he was very young. He had been
to Cuba many times since, eight as he recalled, and
none of them were as tense as that first time, until now.
The Cubans had almost caught him and his partner that
time. The partner was eventually caught six years
later and died under interrogation, or so they heard
months after that. Poveda had promised himself then and
there that he would never be taken alive, that he would not
die in a Cuban prison.
Communists! He made a spitting motion out the open
window. The communists took everything from the people hi
Cuba who had worked and saved and built for the
future, and gave it to the people who had not. Now look
at the place! Everyone poor, everyone on the edge
of starvation, the cities and towns and factories
rotting from lack of investment. The communists ran off
the people who could make Cuba grow, the people the nation needed
to feed everyone else. Ah, these bastards deserved
their misery, and by God they had had some. Universal
destitution was Castro’s legacy, his gift
to generations yet unborn.
Poveda was a pessimist. He knew that soon
Castro would be dead and things would change in Cuba.
“They’ll forget Fidel’s faults, remember just
the goodea”…he told Cabrera, for the hundredth time.
“You wait and see. In a hundred years the church
will make him a saint.”
“Saint Fidel.”…Cabrera laughed.
“I shit you not. That is the way of the world. The people he
pissed on the most will call him blessed.”
“Saint or devil, we’ll fuck the son of a
bitch a little
tonightea”…Cabrera said as the van pulled up to the last
tower.
Poveda killed the van’s engine and lights and the two
men got out. Silence.
“Awful quiet, don’t you think”…”…Poveda
asked.
Cabrera stood by the van’s rear doors, listening,
looking around. Poveda dug in his pocket for the key
to the padlock, inserted it.
It wouldn’t fit. He tried another.
“What’s wrong?”
“Key doesn’t seem to want to go in this lock.”
“Let’s get the fuck outta here, manea”…Cabrera
said, and started for the van’s passenger door.
A spotlight hit them.
“Put up your handsea”…boomed a voice on a
loudspeaker.
Poveda dropped to his knees, pulled a 9-mm
pistol from his pocket. He didn’t hesitatehe
aimed at the spotlight and started shooting.
Something hit him in the back. He was down beside the
rear tire trying to rise when he realized he had
been shot. People shooting from two directions, muzzle
flashes, thuds of bullets smacking into the van like
hailstones. A groan from Cabrera.
“I’m hit, Enrique.”
“Bad?”
“I think… I think so.”…He grunted as another
bullet audibly smacked into his body.
The bullet that hit Poveda had come out his
stomach. He could feel the wetness, the spreading
warmth as blood poured from the exit wound. Not a lot
of pain yet, but a huge gaping hole in his belly.
He lifted the pistol, pointed it at Arquimidez
Cabrera, his best friend. There, he could see the back
of his head. He fired once; Cabrera’s head
slammed forward into the dirt. Then he put the barrel
flush against the side of his own head and pulled the
trigger.
Sitting in the back of a van just down the street from the
Ministry of Interior, William Henry Chance
watched the second hand of his watch sweep toward the
twelve. It passed 1:30 A.m. and swept
on.
The lights stayed on. Carmellini was looking at his
own watch.
“What the hell is wrong now”…”…Carmellini asked.
“I don’t know.”
“Oh, Lord.”
They sat there in the van looking at the lights of the
city.
“It went badea”…Tommy Carmellini said. “Time for
us to boogie.”
“We’ll give them a few minutes.”
“Jesus, when it doesn’t go down as
planned, something is wrong. What are you waiting for,
a phone call from Fidel? Let’s bail out while
our asses are still firmly attached.”
“If I had any brains I wouldn’t be in this
businessea”…Chance replied tartly.
His watch read exactly ten seconds after 1:32
A.m. when the lights of downtown Havana
flickered. “All rightea”…Carmellini said, and whacked
his leg with his hand.
The lights flickered, dimmed, came back on,
then went completely out. All the lights. Only
automobile headlights broke the total darkness.
‘That’s it. Let’s goea”…Chance said to Tommy
Carmellini. They opened the back of the van and
climbed out while the driver of the van started the
engine. Chance walked the few steps back to an old
Russian Lada parked at the curb behind the van and
got into the passenger seat. Carmellini started the car
and turned on the headlights while the van pulled
away from the curb.
The two agents drove down the street toward the
Ministry of Interior, a hulking immensity even
darker than the night.
The three guards at the main entrance of the Ministry
were illuminated by the headlights when Tommy
Carmellini
drove up. He killed the engine and pocketed the
key as William Henry Chance got out on the
passenger side.
Of course the guards had seen Chance’s uniform from the
car’s interior light while the door was opennow they
flashed the beam of a flashlight upon him. Then they
saluted.
Chance was dressed in the uniform of a Security
Department colonel. He had been to the building
several days ago in the daytime wearing civilian
clothes: he thought it highly unlikely mat anyone
who had seen nun then would recognize him now. It
was a risk he was willing to take. Still, his stomach
felt as if he had swallowed a rock as he
returned the guards” salute, and spoke:
“We were just a block away when the power failed all
over this district.”
“Yes, Colonel. Just a minute or two ago.”
“And you are?”
“Lieutenant G6mez, sir, the duty
officer.”
“Have you taken steps to start the emergency generator,
Goodmez?”
“Ahh… I was about to do so, Colonel.
It is in the basement. I was waiting to see if the
power would come back on immediately. Often these Outages
last but moments and”
“The darkness seems widespread, Gomez. Let
us start the generator.”
“Of course, Colonel.”…The lieutenant began
giving directions to his two enlisted men, who
obviously knew nothing about the emergency generator.
The lieutenant began by telling them which room the
generator was in.
Chance interrupted again. “Perhaps you would like to take them
there, supervise the start-up, Lieutenant. My
driver and I will guard the front entrance until you
return.”
“Of course, Colonel.”…With his flashlight beam
leading the way, the lieutenant and the two enlisted men
made for the stairs.
Carmellini opened the trunk of the car, extracted a
duffel
bag, which he swung over one shoulder. Without a word
to Chance he disappeared into the dark interior of the
building.
Carmellini took the main staircase to the top
floor of the building, then strode quickly down the
hall to Alejo Vargas’s private
office. The door was locked, of course.
Working in total darkness, Carmellini ran his hands
over the door. One lock, near the handle. From the
bag he extracted a small light driven by a
battery unit that hooked on his belt. He donned
a headband, then stuck the light to the headband with a
piece of Velcro.
He checked his watch. It was 1:36 A.m.
He examined the lock, felt in the bag for his
picks.
Hmmm. This one, perhaps. He inserted it into the lock.
No.
This one? Yes.
The latex gloves didn’t seem to affect his
feel for the lock.
Carmellini had always enjoyed pick work. The
exquisite feel necessary, the patience required, the
pressure of time usually, the treasure waiting to be
discovered on the other side of the door… the CIA
had been a damned lucky break. Without that break
he would have certainly wound up in prison sooner or
later when his luck ran out, because no one’s luck
lasts forever.
He inserted a smaller pick, felt for the contacts
…
And twisted, using the strength of his fingers.
The bolt opened.
He stowed the picks, picked up the duffel bag, and
opened the door.
Dark office, with the only light coming through the windows,
the glow of headlights on the street below, somewhere the
flicker of a fire.
The safe sat in the corner away from the windows. It
was old, and huge, at least six feet tall,
three feet wide and three feet deep. Painted
on the door of the safe was a pas-
toral scene; above the landscape arranged in a
semicircle were the words “United Fruit
Company.”
After a quick glance at the safe, Carmellini turned
his attention to the rest of the room. He searched quickly
and methodically. First the drawers of the desk. One of
them held a pistol, one a bottle of expensive
scotch whiskey and several glasses, one pens and
pencils and a blank pad of paper. Several lists
of names, phone numbers, addresses …
The lower right drawer of the desk was locked. A
small, cheap furniture lock. He opened it with a
knife, began examining files. The files seemed
to be on senior people hi the government,
girlfriends, vices, lies told, bribes offered and
accepted, that kind of thing.
He flipped through the files quickly, stacked them on
the desk, and moved oa.
The crystals were on the windowsill. A rack of
books was below the window. A cursory check
revealed no files peeking out between the books.
The displays of old coins didn’t even rate a
glance. Back before he worked for the government the coins
would have made his juices flow, but not now.
On to the credenza. Many files in there. Carmellini
sampled them, looking for anything on biology,
weapons, strange code names. When he saw something
he didn’t understand he opened the file and glanced at
the papers inside. Peoplemost of these files were
on people. Unfortunately Tommy didn’t
recognize the names. He added the files to the stack
on the desk.
Now he discame to the safe. They must have lifted it
to this floor with a crane before the windows
viere
installed, he thought He checked every square inch of the
exterior to see if the safe was wired. No
wires.
Tommy Carmellini tried the handle.
No.
Turned the circular combination dial ever so carefully
to the right, maintaining pressure on the handle. If the
safe
had been closed hastily, all the tumblers might not
have gone home. He took his time.
No. The safe was locked.
He checked his watch. Now 1:47.
The lights would come on soon, powered by the emergency
generator.
He opened the duffel bag and began extracting
items. The first item he removed was a
telescoping rod which he extended and positioned over
the safe’s combination dial; he secured it there with
clamps placed on each side of the safe. Working
quickly, witiMio lost motion, he clamped a
small electric motor to the rod, then adjusted the
jaws protruding from the motor so that they grasped the
dial of the safe.