Coonts, Stephen - Jake Grafton 7 - Cuba
Page 5
He didn't accumulate a fortune worth almost a
half billion dollars by being timid. So he and his
bodyguards boarded the plane. That was almost a week
ago. He had been steadily losing money in the
casinos every day since while waiting. Now the waiting
was over.
Tonight he was to see the man he came to meet,
Alejo Vargas. In five minutes.
He checked his watch, then pocketed his chips and
walked for. the door of the club, the Tropicana, the
jewel of Havana. His bodyguards joined him, like
shadows.
El Gato left the casino via the back entrance.
The three men walked a block to a large black
limousine sitting by the curb and climbed into the rear
seats.
Two men were sitting on the front-facing seats.
"El Gato, welcome to Havana. I confess,
I didn't think we would ever meet on
Cuban comsoil."
"Miracles never cease, Senor Vargas. The
world turns, the sun rises and sets and we all
get older day by day. Wise men change with the times."
"Quite so. This is Colonel Santana, head of the
Department of State Security:"
El Gato nodded politely at Santana, then
introduced his bodyguards, men Santana didn't
even bother to look at.
"I was hoping, Senor Vargas, that you and I might
have a private conversation, perhaps while these gentlemen
watched from a small distance?"
Vargas nodded Ms assent, pushed a button, and
spoke into an intercom to the driver. After about
fifteen minutes of travel, during which nothing was
said, the limo pulled up to a curb and all the men
got out. The car was sitting on a breakwater near
Morro Castle, with the dark battlements looming
above them in the glare of Havana reflecting off the
clouds.
Vargas and El Gato began strolling.
"The cargo is aboardea"...El Gato said, "and the ship
has sailed. I presume you kept me waiting
to see if that event would occur."
"When you proposed this operation, I had my
doubts. I still do."
"I cannot guarantee successea"...El Gato said.
"I do everything within my power to make success
possible, but sometimes the world does not turn my way.
I understand that, and I keep trying anyway."
'The waiting will soon be overea"...Vargas said.
"Indeed. In many ways. I hear rumors that
Fidel will not be with us much longer."
Vargas didn't reply to that remark.
"Change is rapidly coming to Cubaea"...El Gato
began, "and the thought occurred to me that a man with friends in
Cuba under the new order would be in an enviable
position."
"You have such friends?"
"I am here to test the water, so to speak, to learn if
I, do."
"After your years of opposition to Castro, any friends
you have will not be very vocal about it."
"Noisy friends I have aplenty in Florida. No,
the kind of friends I need are the kind who keep their
friendship to themselves and help when help is needed, who
give approvals when asked, who nod yes at the
appropriate time."
"How much money have you given the exiles"
political movements over the years?"
"You wish to know the figure?"
"Yes. I wish to learn if you will be honest with me.
Obviously I have sources and some idea of the amount.
Come now, impress me with your frankness and your
honesty."
"Over five million Americanea"...El Gato
said.
This was twice the figure Vargas expected, and he
looked at the American sharply. If El Gato
was lying, exaggerating the number to impress Vargas,
it didn't show in his face.
"Some of that money, a small amount it is true,
came directly from the Cuban governmentea"...El
Gato said. "I believe you authorized those
payments."
"You have a sense of the sardonic, I seeea"...Vargas
said without humor. One got the impression he had not
smiled in his lifetime, nor would he.
El Gato nodded.
"You had a commodity to sell, we wished to buy. We
paid a fair price."
"Come, come, Senor Vargas. Let's not pretend
with each other. I arranged for you to acquire the
equipmenteaand chemicals necessary to create a
biological warfare program. What you have done with
those chemicals and equipment
1 don't know, nor do I want to know. But you know
as well as I that if the American government found
out about the sale I would be ruined. And you know that I
made no profit in the transaction."
Vargas nodded, a dip of the head.
"Nor have I asked for money for arranging to steal
Nuestra Senora."
"That is true, but if the operation succeeds, we would
have paid a fair amount."
"I do not want your money."
"You want something. What?"
El Gato walked a few paces with his hands in his
pockets before he spoke. "After Castro I
envision a Cuba much more friendly to American
interests, more open to a free flow of capital in and
out. A great many people in the
United States have a great deal of money
accumulated that they want to invest in Cuba, which they
will do as soon as the United States government
allows them to do so, and as soon as the Cuban
government guarantees these investors that their investment
will not be confiscated or stolen with hidden taxes or
demands for graft. A man who could
guarantee that his friends would be fairly treated in
Cuba could make a lot of money. He would be a
patron, if you will. And if he carefully screened
his friends, Cuba would get a vetted flow of capable
investors who would perform as promised."
"Something for everyoneea"...Vargas said.
"Precisely."
"Just so that I understandare you suggesting that you want to be
that man,
el jefecitol"
"I could do it, I believe."
"The exiles expect to come to Cuba at Castro's
death and take over the country. They want
billions in repatriations! I tell you now, you have
helped fuel their expectations with your five
million dollars."
What he failed to mention was the fact that the Cuban
government had played to the fears of the peons who
stayed, telling them they would be thrown from their
homes"...if the exiles ever returned.
El Gato smiled. "Like the exiles, you fail
to clearly see the situation. They are Americans.
They make more money in America than they ever could in
Cuba. They will never return in significant
numbers. In fact, if the borders are
thrown open, the net human flow will be toward the
United States, not back to Cuba. If the
American government would allow it, a million
Cubans a year would leave this island. You would be
wise to let people go where the
y wish to go."
"You are saying the exile problem will just disappear?"
"Except for a few bitter old men, yes, I
believe it will. The young ones have gotten on with their
lives. They have no old scores to settle."
"So you betray these old ones for your own profit?"
"Senor Vargas, if they wish to nurse old
grudges and dream of a time which is long past and will
never come again, who am I to tell them no? Most of
these people are quite harmless. Those who aren't can be dealt with
when they cause problems. A public apology
to dispossessed old people, a plea for healing, a few
pesos, and the exiles could be appeased."
"Assassination plots against Castro and the like?"
"Plots that never get off the ground are harmless.
Let them have their meetings and their thunderous
denunciations. These people will pass from the scene soon
enough."
Vargas made a gesture of irritation. He had his
own opinions and didn't really wish to hear
other people's. "Colonel Santana will take you and
your men to your hotel."
"Thank you."
"I can promise you very little, El Gato. I understand
that you cannot guarantee the future, but the North
Koreans must fulfill their part of our bargain. If
they do, there is a chance, just a chance, that I may
rule after Castro."
El Gato waited.
Vargas continued: "I will not forget what you did for
me, for Cuba. If the day ever comes when I am in
a position to help you, feel free to ask. What
I can do then will have to be decided upon that day."
"That is more than I hoped forea"...El Gato said,
genuine warmth obvious in his voice. "I thank you
for that promise."
The F-14 Tomcat hung suspended in an
infinite blue sky, over an infinite blue sea.
Or so it seemed to Jake Grafton, who sat in
the front cockpit taking it all in. Behind him
Toad Tarkington was working the radar, searching the sky
ahead. The air was dead calm today, so without a
visual reference there was no sensation of motion. The
puffy clouds on the surface of the sea seemed to be
marching uniformly toward the rear of the
aircraft, almost as if the sky were spinning under the
airplane.
The fighter was cruising at 31,000 feet, heading
northwestward parallel with the southern coast of
Cuba, about a hundred and fifty miles offshore.
"I sure am glad you got us off the ship,
sirea"...Tarkington said cheerfully. "A little flying
helps clean out the pipes, keeps everything in
perspective."
"That it doesea"...Jake agreed, and stretched.
He had the best job in the navy, he thought. As a
battle group commander he could still flyindeed, an
occasional flight was part of the job description.
Yet his flying days would soon be over: in just two
months he was scheduled to turn over the command to another
admiral and be on his way somewhere.
He searched the empty sky automatically as he
thought again about where the next set of orders might send
him. If the people in the flag detailing office in the
Pentagon had a clue, they certainly weren't
talking.
Ah, it would all work out. The powers that be would send
him another set of orders or retire him, and it
really
39
didn't matter much which way it went. Everyone has
to move on sooner or later, so why not now?
Maybe he should just submit his retirement papers,
get on with the rest of his life.
With his right hand he hit the emergency disconnect for the
autopilot, which worked as it should.
Without touching the throttles, Jake Grafton
smoothly lifted the nose and began feeding in left
stick. Nose climbing, wing dropping ... rolling
smoothly through the in-- verted position, though with
only seventy degrees of heading change. The
nose continued downkeep the roll inffandthe G
increased as the fighter came out of the dive and back
to the original heading, only 1,400 below the entry
altitude. Ta-ta! There you have ita sloppy
barrel roll!
Jake kept the stick back and started a barrel
roll to the right.
"Are you okay up there, sir"..."...Toad Tarkington
asked anxiously.
"You ask that of me? The world's fine'st acrobatic
pilot? Have you no respect?"
"These whifferdills are not quite up to your usual
worldclass standards, so one wonders. Could it be
illness, decrepitude, senility?"
They were passing the inverted positon when Jake said,
"Just for that, Tarkington, you can put us on the flight
schedule every day so we can practice. An hour and a
half of high-G maneuvers seven times a week
will teach you to respect your elders."
"You got that rightea"...Toad replied, and moaned as if
he were in pain as Jake lifted the Tomcat into a
loop.
"War Ace One Oh Four, this is Sea Hawk.
You have traffic to the northwest, one hundred miles,
heading south at about 30,000."
"Roger, Sea Hawk.",
Coming down the back side of the loop, Jake turned
to the northwest.
STEPHEN COONTS
"Admiral, I know you think I was loafing back
hereea"...Toad said obsequiously, "but I had that guy
on the scope. Honest! I was just gonna say something
when that E-2 guy beat me to the switch."
"Sure, Toad. These things happen. If you're
going to nap, next time bring a pillow."
"This guy is coming south, like he's out of some base in
central Cuba, about our altitude. Heck of a
coincidence, huh?"
The F-14 had an optical camera mounted in the
nose that was slaved to the radar cross-hairs.
"Tell me when you see himea"...Jake murmured.
"Be a couple miles yet. Let's come right ten
degrees just for grins and see what happens."
Jake again had the fighter on autopilot. He
pushed the stick right, then leveled on the new
course.
At fifty miles Toad had the other airplane
on the screen of his monitor. A silver
airplane, fighter size, with the sun glinting off its
skin. The electronic conntermeasures (Ecm)
panel lit up as the F-14's sensors picked
up the emissions of the other plane's radar.
"A MiGo-29ea"...Jake said.
"What's he doing out here"..."...Toad wondered.
"Same thing as we are. Out flying around seeing what
is what."
"I thought th@lCubans had retired their
MiGo-29's. Couldn't keep paying the bills on
"em.". "Well, at least one is still operational."
.
Even as they watched, the MiGo altered course to the
left so that he would have a chance to turn in behind the
F-14 when their flight paths converged.
Jake Grafton was suddenly sure he didn't
want the MiGo behind him. The Soviets
specifically designed the MiGo-29 to be able
to defeat the F-14, F-15, F-16 and
FirstA-18 in close combat; it was,
probably, the second-best fighter in the world (the
best being the Sukhoi Su-27 Flanker). Jake
altered course so the two planes would converge
head-on.
What would the MiGo pilot do?
If the Cuban pilot opened fire over the ocean,
over a hundred miles from land, who would ever know?
"Sea Hawk, One Oh Four, are you getting this
on tape?"
"Yes, sir. We're recording."
"This bogey is a MiGo-29."
"Roger that. We've been tracking him for
twenty-five minutes now."
The range was closing rapidly, but still Jake
didn't see the MiG. He looked at the target
dot in the heads-up display, but the sky was huge and the
Cuban fighter too far away, although it was almost as
large as the F-14.
The MiGo was about four miles away when
Jake finally saw it, a winged silver glint that shot
by just under his right wing. Jake Grafton disconnected
the autopilot and slammed the stick over.
He pulled carefully, cleanly, craned his head and
braced himself with his left hand as he kept the turning
MiGo in sight.
The Cuban fighter rolled out of his turn heading
north. Jake leveled out on a parallel course.
Careful not to point his nose at the Cuban, Jake
let the Tomcat drift closer on a converging
course.
When the planes were less than a hundred yards
apart, he slowed the closure rate but kept moving
in.
Finally the two planes were in formation with their wingtips
about twenty yards apart.
"Look at that thing, would you"..."...Toad enthused. "Have you
ever seen a more gorgeous airplane?"
"I hear it's a real dream machineea"...Jake
agreed.
"Oh, baby, the lines, the curves ... The
Russians sure know how to design flying
machines."
"If this guy has to jump out of that thingea"...Jake
asked Toad, "do you think Cuban
Air-Sea Rescue is going to come pick him
up?"
"I doubt itea"...Toad replied. "And I suspect
he knows that."
"He's got a set of cojones on himea"...Jake
said. "Bet he can fly the hell out of that thing,
too."
In the Cuban fighter, Major Carlos
Corrado took his time looking over the American
plane. This was the first time he had ever seen an
F-14. Amazing how big they were, with the two men