Authors: Stephen Coonts
Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Cuba, #Political, #Fiction, #Grafton; Jake (Fictitious character), #Thrillers, #Espionage
scholar, mediocre hi every sense, employed here hi
Cuba because I tired of the publish-or-perish
imperative of the academic world. My work is of little
import to the United States government or anyone
else. still
do not work for the CIA.
There has been some mistake.”
Mercedes maintained a polite silence until he
ran out of words, then she said, “Fidel and I
watched an American movie a few months ago,
about dinosaurs in a parkan extraordinary story and
an extraordinary film. We marveled at the
magic that could make dinosaurs so lifelike upon the
screen. It was almost as if the moviemakers had some
dinosaurs to film. Perhaps the magic had something to do
with computers. However they did it, they made something
mat had been dead a very long time come back
to life.”
Bouchard didn’t know what to say. Agency
regulations did not permit him to tell anyone
outside the agency who
his employer was. He twisted his hands as
he tried to decide how he should handle this woman who
refused to listen to his denials.
“Did you say something”…”…she asked.
“I don’t like moviesea”…Bouchard muttered. “There
are no good actors these days.”
“Perhaps not livingea”…sd Mercedes Sedano. “But you
must admit the magicians have given new life to some
dead ones. You and your friends could perform a great
service for Cuba if you would take these
videotapes to the moviemakers and let them bring
Fidel back to life. For just a little while.”
Bouchard picked up the cassettes,- held them in
his hands as he examined them.
“I dissuppose the cultural attach caret might
be able to pass these things alongea”…Bouchard admitted.
“What is it you wish Fidel had lived to say?”
Mercedes nodded. She looked Bouchard straight in
the eyes and told him.
Maximo Sedano huddled in bis great padded leather
chair at the Finance Ministry staring out at the
Havana skyline. He took another sip of
rum, eased the position of his injured hand. He was
holding it pointed straight up. The doctor who
set the broken bones in bis fingers assured him
elevating the hand would help keep the
swelling down.
That pig Santana! He whipped out his pistol and
smashed it down on the fingers of Maximo’s left
hand so quickly Maximo didn’t even think of jerking
it away. Three broken fingers.
Then the son of a bitch laughed! And Vargas
laughed.
Vargas had whispered in his ear: “You aren’t going
to be the next president of Cuba, Maximo. You
have no allies. Delgado and Alba will obey me
to then- dying day, as you will. You have a wife and daughter
and your health. Be content with that.”
He said nothing.
“Your brother Hector is in prison charged with
sedition. I suggest you meditate upon that fact.”
Maximo sipped some more ram.
His fingers hurt like hell. The doctor gave him a
local anesthetic and a half dozen pills when he
set the fingers, but now the anesthetic was wearing off and the
pills weren’t doing much good.
He probably shouldn’t be drinking rum while taking
these pills, but what the hell. A man has to die
only once.
Where was the $53 million?
Somewhere on the other side of the black hole that was the
Swiss banking system.
Face facts, Maximo. You can kiss those bucks
good-bye. Those dollars might as well be on the
back side of the moon.
He spent some time dwelling on what might have been
he was only humanbut after a while those dreams
faded. The reality was the pain in his hand, and the fact that
he was stuck hi this Third World hellhole and would
soon be out of a job. Whatever government followed
Fidel would appoint a new finance minister.
He had no chance of succeeding Castro, and he let
go of that fantasy too. He didn’t have the allies
hi high places, he wasn’t well enough known, and
if he had been he would be in a cell beside Hector
this very minute.
Hector’s plight didn’t cause bun much
concern. He and Hector had never been close, had
never had much in common. Well, to be frank, they
loathed each other.
A pigeon landed on the ledge outside his window.
He watched it idly. It searched the ledge for
food, found none, then took eff.
Maximo watched it. The pigeon circled the
square hi front of the ministry and landed on
a statue that stood near the front door. Maximo
had never liked the statue, some Greek goddess with a
sword. Still, it gave the building a certain tone,
so he had never ordered it moved.
Statues. At least he got the goddess instead of
that
larger-than-life bust of Fidel that the Ministry of
Agriculture
He stared at the goddess. She was made of
bronze. Some kind of metal that had turned green
as the rain and sun and salt from the sea worked on it.
The bust of Fidel in front of the Ministry of
Agriculture was of course manufactured and
erected after the revolution.
So were the statues in the Plaza de Revolucion.
And some of the statues in Old Havana, at the
Museo de Arte Colonial, at the Catedral
de San Cristobal de la Havana, on some
of the minor squares.
After
the revolution! After the government collected all the
gold pesos, or before?
The Museum of the Revolution! The old
presidential palace was converted to a propaganda
temple that would prove to all generations the
venality of Batista, the dictator Fidel had
overthrown. Maximo recalled reading somewhere that
Fidel had personally supervised the renovation and
conversion of the old building.
Thirty-seven tons of gold. Fidel had
squirreled it away somewhere.
What he needed to do was go to the Museum of the
Revolution, lock himself in a room with the collection
of Havana newspapers. After the revolution, after
the gold was collected, what was Fidel doing?
Thirty-seven tons of gold.
“One sample vial from the Cuban lab contained a
new, super-infectious strain of poliomyelitis.
The viruses are so hot they kill in seconds.”
The members of the National Security Council
didn’t say anything.
“The scientists said they never saw anything like itea”…the
national security adviser continued. “The four
sample vials contained three different strains of the
polio virus. Two of the vials contained the same
type of virus.”
“Is the vaccination we were all given as children
effective against these strains”…”…The chairman of the
joint chiefs asked this question.
“Apparently jiot. The scientists will
need more time to verify that, but apparently … no.”
The president looked glum. “Talk about a
choice. We can wait until the Cubans use that
stuff on us or we can bomb the lab right now.”
“No, sirea”…the chairman said. ‘There is no
guarantee a bomb would kill that virus. Bombing
the lab would “probably just release the viruses to the
atmosphere and kill everyone in Cuba who happened
to be downwind.”
The silence that followed that remark was broken by the
secretary of state, who asked, “Do the scientists
have an estimate on how long those viruses can live
outside the lab?”
“Not yetea”…the national security adviser replied.
He took a deep breath and referred back to his
notes. “Here is the situation in Cuba as we
believe it to be: We received a report two hours
ago from our man in Havana who says he was told
earlier today that Fidel Castro is dead. He is
sending some videotapes in the diplomatic pouch.”
“Dead, huh”…”…sd the president. “I’ll believe
it when they put his corpse on display in a tomb
on the Plaza de Revolucion.”
Someone tittered.
The national security adviser continued
to read from his notes. “Review of the documents from the
safe of the secret police chief, Alejo
Vargas, indicates that the Cubans have installed
biological warheads on intermediate-range
ballistic missiles.”
“What?”
the president demanded. He pounded on the table with the
flat of his hand to silence everyone else. In the
silence that followed, he roared, “Where in hell did
those people get ballistic missiles?”
The national security adviser looked like he was in
severe pain. “From the Russians, sir. In
1962. Apparently the
STEPHEN COONTS
Russians left some behind after the Cuban missile
crisis. You may recall that Castro refused
to let the UN inspection team into the country to verify
that all the missiles had been removed.”
“How good is this information?”"…The man who sent it is
absolutely reliable.”…The president mouthed a
profane oath, which the chairman of the joint chiefs
thought a succinct summation of the whole situation.
In a country as poor as Cuba safe houses were
hard to come by. The one that William
Henry Chance and Tommy Carmellini found themselves in
was an abandoned monastery on a promontory of land
on the south coast of the island. Surrounded by tidal
flats and dense vegetation, the sprawling one-story
building was an occasional refuge for drug
smugglers and young lovers, who had left their trash
strewn about. The rotten thatched roof remained
intact over just one room, the kitchen. A roaring
fire burned in the fireplace, which apparently the
monks had used primarily for cooking.
From the window three fishing boats were visible,
wooden boats with a single mast, manned by one or
two men. The crew of two of the boats were rigging
trot lines, the other was hauling in a net. Chance
examined each through binoculars. They looked harmless
enoughhe doubted if any of the boats had an engine
or radio.
“What do you think”…”…Carmellini asked.
“We have a little time, but I don’t know how much.”
“Guess it depends on how efficient the
secret police and the military are.”
“Ummea”…Chance grunted, and after one more sweep of
everything in sight, put down the binoculars.
Tommy Carmellini sat feeding sheets of paper
from the secret police files into the fire
as fast as they would burn. He merely scanned the
pages as he ripped them from the files and tossed them
into the flames.
“Vargas and bis guys were certainly
thoroughea”…Car-
mellini commented. “They looked under every rock.”
“And found every slimy thing that walks or
crawlsea”…Chance agreed. Vargas’s laptop was
on, so Chance resumed his examination of the files.
“Sort of like J. Edgar Hoover.”
“Secret police are pretty much alike the world
overea”…Chance muttered. He moved the cursor to the
next file on the list and called it up.
“How many missiles are there on this
island”…”…Carmellini asked as he tore paper.
“I have found six missile files, so far. There
may be moreI see some references to material that
doesn’t seem to be on this computer.”
“Six? With locations?”
“Names only. Every missile has a name: Miami,
Atlanta, Jacksonville, Charleston, New
Orleans, and Tampa.”
“What about Mobile?”‘
- “Don’t see it on here.”
“Birmingham, Orlando, the army bases in
Alabama?”
“Nothing.”
“I find it hard to believe that in the decades since
1962, the Cubans have managed to keep the secret
of their ballistic missiles.”
Chance didn’t reply. He had never agreed with the
agency’s spending priorities, which were heavily
slanted toward reconnaissance satellites. The
people in Washington were sold on high-tech computer and
sensor networks for the collection of intelligence.
Hardware and software didn’t turn traitor and were
easy to justify to the bean counters. The spymasters
seemed to have lost sight of a basic truth: networks
could only collect the information their sensors’ were
designed to obtain. And they could be fooled. If
garbage goes in, garbage comes out.
Ah, well. The world keeps turning.
“How long is that going to take”…”…Chance asked,
referring to the files and the fire.
“Couple hours at this rate.”
Chance glanced at his watch. A few minutes after
one o’clock in the afternoon. The rendezvous with the submarine was
set for ten o’clock tonight, almost nine hours away. “If
we have to run for it, we’ll take everything
we haven’t burned.”
He and Carmellini and die four U.s. Navy
SEAL’S on guard in the grasses and bushes out
front would try to escape if the Cubans
attacked the place. Two speedboats were fueled
and ready inside die old boathouse, and a
submarine would meet diem fifty miles south.
Unfortunately he had no way of knowing if die
submarine was already lying submerged at die
rendezvous position or if the skipper planned