Coonts, Stephen - Jake Grafton 7 - Cuba

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Coonts, Stephen - Jake Grafton 7 - Cuba Page 31

by Cuba (lit)


  Then he opened the safe, examined its contents with

  Santana's flashlight, then turned on his headband

  light.

  Lots

  of papers, files, two shelves of them. The top

  shelf consisted of files on people, each file had a

  person's name. These were the files he had come to find.

  He raked these into his duffel bag.

  Ah, on the second shelf... files labeled with

  numbers.

  He looked inside one. Engineering drawings,

  possibly of a warhead...

  He dumped everything that looked interesting

  into his duffel bag, including the stack of files

  on Vargas's desk.

  Oh, here was a file about supplies from a Miami

  laboratory supply house ... one about

  susceptibility studies, lethality, vaccines

  ... he stuffed all these in the bag, began checking

  another handful.

  The hell with it! He would take everything..the files

  on the bottom shelf might prove as interesting as

  those on the top. The bag would be heavy, but he could

  lift it. He transferred the files to the bag as

  quickly as he could.

  When he had all the files, he hoisted the bag

  experimentally. Eighty, pounds, at least. Room

  for a few more things...

  What else did Vargas keep in his safe? A

  small laptop computer. Well, he certainly

  didn't need that anymore. Into the bag with it.

  He was pawing through one of the side drawers when he

  sensed movement behind him.

  As he turned Santana's fist grazed his jawhis

  turn had been just enough to save his life. The headband and

  light flew away, somewhere, the little beam flashing around

  crazily.

  He groped for his sap, swung it in a

  roundhouse right and connected with bone.

  Santana went sideways to the floor.

  No time for this! The man is too dangerous!

  He pulled out the Ruger, thumbed off the safety and

  was ready when Santana came off the floor again.

  The pistol coughed.

  Santana's momentum drove his body forward and he

  collapsed against Carmellini's feet.

  The American stepped around the body. He put the

  pistol away, stowed the headband light, zipped the

  duffel bag closed.

  After a quick last look around, Tommy Carmellini

  went

  to the door, made sure it would lock behind him. He

  came back for the duffel bag, hoisted it to his

  left shoulder.

  Out in the dark hall, he pulled the door shut,

  made sure it was locked, then walked quickly down the

  dark hallway for the stairs.

  Tommy Carmellini held the Ruger down by his

  leg as he descended the stair and walked across the

  lobby toward the shadowy figure standing hi the

  doorway.

  As he walked the lights came on. Instantly an

  alarm sounded, loud enough to wake the dead.

  He squinted against the light. That was Chance standing hi

  the doorway.

  "Into the car, quickly nowea"...Chance said. The alarms were

  wailing and every light hi the building was on, wiuThat not

  a soul in sight. If they could be gone before the

  lieutenant and his men got back up here, he

  wouldn't have to kill themthey couldn't have seen his face very

  well in the darkness.

  His watch read 2:04 A.m.

  Chance stood in the doorway with euphoria flooding

  over him while Carmellini stowed the bag hi the

  backseat of the car, got into the driver's seat, and

  started the engine. Three long strides, he jerked

  open the passenger's door and jumped inside, and

  Carmellini fed gas.

  The lights hi the rest of the city were still off, however, so

  when the car pulled away from the building the night

  swallowed it.

  "What did you get?"

  "I got the safe opentook two drawers full of

  files, everything made of paper that was in there, some

  files from a desk. Got a laptop, too."

  "Well done."

  "Someone came hi while I was there. Santana,

  I think. Left him for dead."

  "I didn't take the time to check, and to be honest,

  I really don't care one way or the other. I

  put six bullets into the son of a bitch and whaled

  on him a while with the sap. If he isn't dead he

  ought to be."

  Chance flipped on the interior light of the car, just

  long enough to check Carmellini's face. "Looks like

  he got a piece or two of you."

  "Oh, yeah. He was damned quick."

  "Did he get a look at your face?"

  "I don't think so. Pretty dark. And he's

  probably dead. Don't sweat it."

  Chance grunted and stared out the window at the dark,

  decaying city.

  The voyagers on the

  Angel del Mar

  saw a ship during the night. It came out of one

  dark comer of the universe and passed within a half mile

  of the derelict as the people aboard shouted and waved the

  single working flashlight.

  The ship was a freighter of some type, huge, with

  lights strung all over the topside and

  superstructure. It raced through their world and disappeared

  into the void as quickly as it came, leaving the people gasping

  on deck, exhausted, starved, devoid of

  hope.

  A child had died earlier in the evening, just at sunset,

  and some of the people aboard had wanted to eat it "She is

  beyond caring, and her body can give us life,"eaone man

  said, a sentiment several agreed with.

  The old fisherman went below to tell Ocho, who was

  taking his turn on the pump, which meant he had

  to pump out the water that had accumulated because the man

  before him could not keep abreast of it, as well as the

  water that came in on his watch. He was on the ragged

  edge of total exhaustion, but he listened to the old

  fisherman as he struggled with the pump handle.

  "Maybe..."...Ocho began, but the old man would not

  listen.

  "To eat her would be sacrilege, the moral death of

  every

  onp who tastes her flesh or watches others eat

  it. All flesh must die, but to face God with that on

  our souls would be unforgivable. Come with me!

  Come!"

  He half dragged Ocho up the ladder. Together they

  swung hard fists left and right, reached the corpse,

  and tossed it into the sea.

  In the fading light the old fisherman stood with his

  back to the wheelhouse and shouted at the

  others, some too weak to move. He damned them,

  dared them, kicked at those who came too close,

  punched one man so hard he nearly went overboard.

  The child's body floated, supported by the great vast

  moving ocean, just out of reach, moving with the rise and

  fall of the swells. Some of the people looked at it,

  others refused to. When the last of the light faded the

  body disappeared into the total darkness.

  Ocho went back down the ladder to the hold, which

  reeked of vomit and filth. He worked the pump

&nbs
p; handle like an automaton.

  Finally the fisherman relieved him, helped him up

  the ladder.

  He was lying by a scupper when the ship went by. He

  roused himself, stood with a hand on the rail, tried

  to shout and found he had no voice left.

  Then someone tried to push him overboard.

  There was no mistake. The hard shove in the back,

  the continuing pressure.

  Only his raw strength saved him. Ocho turned and

  swung blindly, felt his fist connect with cartilage

  and bone, swung several more times before the man went

  down."

  Ocho collapsed from the exertion. He crawled

  forward, intent on beating the man as long as

  he had strength to swing his fists, but Dora was there,

  sobbing, and stopped him.

  "No, no, no, my Godff"...she howled. "You are

  killing him!"

  "He tried to shove me over."

  "Oh, damn you, Ocho. If it weren't for you, we

  would be safe in Cuba."

  "Me?"

  "You were Ms ticket out. You! This is your fault."

  "And you are blameless. With the baby in your body you

  risked your life."

  "I am not pregnant! I have never been

  pregnant! He made me tell you I was so you would

  come."...And she dissolved in sobbing.

  Ocho lay in the darkness trying to think, trying to see

  the boat and the people as God must see them, looking down

  from above. His

  Fortunately rain fell occasionally, enough to fill the

  bucket and let people drink. Maybe God was sending

  the showers.

  He was starving, though, and oh so tired.

  His whole life had dissolved into nothing and was soon

  to end, and he didn't care. He tried to tell

  Dora that it didn't matter but he couldn't and she was

  sobbing hysterically, and in truth he really

  didn't care.

  After another turn at the pump, Ocho came back

  on deck and looked for Diego and Dora, to say

  somethinghe didn't know what, but something that would make

  their burdens easier to carry.

  But Diego wasn't there. He wasn't in the hold

  and he wasn't in the wheelhouse and he wasn't on

  deck. Ocho scanned the sea, checking in all

  directions, looking for a head bobbing amid the heaving

  swells.

  Dora was curled

  in

  a ball near the bow. He shook her.

  "Where's Diego?"

  She. had a dazed look on her face, as if she

  didn't understand the words. He repeated the question several

  times.

  She looked around, trying to understand.

  "I do not see himea"...Ocho said, trying to explain.

  "Did he fall overboard?"

  She stared at him with eyes that refused to focus.

  Her face was vacant, blank. Finally her eyes

  focused.

  "He climbed the rail last night.

  Jumped in the ocean."

  Ocho looked again on both sides of the boat,

  staggered to the port side so he could look aft past

  the wheelhouse. Then he returned.

  She was lying down again, curled up, her chin against a

  knee.

  He left her there, lay down and tried to rest.

  "Who did this to you?".

  Alejo Vargas asked the question of Colonel

  Santana while he lay on a gurney in the

  hospital emergency room being propped for

  surgery. He had four bullets in him and a wicked

  wound on his forehead where a bullet had ricochetted

  off his skull. His jaw and one cheekbone were

  severely swollen, his nose smashed, he had lost

  two teeth, and he obviously had a concussion. The

  pupil in his right eye was dilated and refused

  to focus.

  "I don't knowea"...Santana managed. He tried

  to swallow, almost choked on his tongue. After gagging

  several times, he seemed to relax.

  "American?"

  "I do not know. Nothing was said, it was dark. He was

  waiting behind the door when I went in."

  "One of the bullets penetrated the wall of

  his chest, Ministerea"...the doctor said. "We must get

  it out and stop the hemorrhaging. He needs a

  transfusion and rest."

  Vargas left the emergency room. The car drove

  him back to the ministry and he took the elevator

  to his office.

  The workers had the worst of the damage cleaned up.

  Still, the door to the safe was standing open and the drawers

  within were empty.

  The priceless files on the generals and top

  government people that had taken twenty years to compile,

  gonelike a storm in the night. Every sin known to man

  was somewhere in one of those files: marital infidelity,

  theft, rape, incest, sodomy, even murder. Those

  files were the key to

  his power, to his ability to make things happen anywhere

  hi Cuba. And now they were gone.

  Hector Sedano was his fast suspect. Of course

  Hector himself was hi La Cabana, but someone could

  have robbed the safe on his behalf.

  And it could be one of the generals, or Admiral

  Delgado. Any one of those ambitious fools.

  Raul Castro? A possibility, but he discounted

  it. Then the fact that he thought Raul Castro an

  unlikely suspect made him

  suspicious. He would have Raul checked, followed

  day and night, everyone he spoke to would be

  scrutinized.

  Truly there was much to do. Much to do.

  The electrical outage made the burglary

  possible. Four towers down, two dead

  saboteurs.

  There was a trail out there, and some diligent

  investigating would eventually lead him to the man or men

  who did this crime.

  Not that it would do any good. Whoever had those files would

  undoubtedly destroy them immediately.

  All his plans, all that work... up hi smoke.

  Alejo Vargas didn't believe hi

  coincidences. Whoever robbed that safe made

  extensive preparations. This was no spur-of-the-moment

  thingthe robbery was carefully, meticulously planned.

  He looked again at the safe. Not a mark on it.

  Someone had dialed the combination. He had heard that such

  things were possible, but he had never seen it done.

  Nor heard of it being done hi Cuba. Yesterday

  he would have said there was not a man hi Cuba with that kind

  of talent

  And the files on the biological program were gone.

  The day after the break-in at the lab.

  The lab break-in wasn't Hector's stylehe

  would have no reason to burgle the place, nor would

  anyone else there was nothing there to steal.

  Except poliomyelitis viruses. Would

  Hector gain politi-

  cal advantage by publicizing the biological

  weapons program, proving its existence?

  The Americans...

  Alejo Vargas stood looking at his empty

  safe, thinking about Americans.

  The Americans were a possibility, he

  reluctantly concluded.

  He got a magnifying glass from the top drawer of

  his desk, examined the door of the safe as carefullyr />
  as he could.

  There were marks, scratches, several together. He could

  see them. But how long had they been there? What were

  they made by?

  There was no one to tell him, and he decided finally that

  perhaps it didn't matter. The people who opened this safe

  and stole the keys to Cuba had brought down the power

  grid hi central Havana. That was where the trail

  began.

  He spent a few seconds hi contemplation of his

  revenge when he caught these men.

  "Minister, here is Lieutenant G6mez, who

  had the duty last night."

  "You saw these men, G6mez?"

  'Two men arrived just seconds after the lights went

  out, sir. I saw the colonel for a few seconds

  hi a flashlight beam. The driver, no."

  "What did this man look like?"

  "He was tall, not fat"

  "His accent?"

  "None that I noticed, sir."

  "Come, come, Lieutenant. Was he from Cuba, from

  Havana or Oriente, or did he speak

  Castilian Spanish?"

  "From Havana, I thought, sir. He sounded like you and

  me."

  "What did he say?"

  "That we should start the emergency generator."

  "So you did?"

  "Yes, sir. Without power the alarms were disabled, we

  could not talk to each other on the telephone, the

  security

  of-the building was compromised. My men and I went

  to the basement and worked on the generator. I came

  back upstairs once and reported to the colonel,

  told him we were having difficulties; he

  said he had faith. When we got the generator going

  and went back upstairs, the colonel and his driver

  and vehicle were gone."

  "You had never seen this colonel before?"

  "Not to my knowledge, sir."" "Would you recognize him

  if you saw him again?"

  "Oh, yes, sir."

  No, he wouldn't, Vargas decided. If this

  colonel thought there was a glimmer of a chance

  Lieutenant G6mez would recognize him then

  or later, he would have killed him. G6mez was

  alive because he posed no threat.

  Vargas dismissed G6mez and called in his

  department heads to give them orders.

  With no ceremony and no conversation, Mercedes

  Sedano was released from the presidential palace.

  A butler came to the door, suggested she pack.

  The electrical power was still off. It had been off

  when she awoke this morning, and she was given stale

  bread and water for breakfast.

  She put the clothes she wished to keep in two

  shopping bags that were on the floor of the closet,

  sandwiched the cassettes in between them, and took a last

 

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