After walking down several corridors, they reached the loading dock. Niklas thought they might be moving him to another prison. He could not comprehend how much worse the new prison could be than the one he was in but figured he would find out.
As they approached the interior door of the loading dock, the short guard motioned him to stop. He poked his head in and looked both ways. The guards hugged the wall, and gestured for him to do the same. Then the tall one motioned to the CCTV camera that they were just out of sight of. Niklas was confused.
When they got to the large door that led outside, the tall one punched some controls. A motor groaned as the door rose slowly, as if protesting the early morning. When the door had opened fully, Niklas noticed a single van parked in front with an outside light shining on it. The van was light blue, with a logo of bubbles and the words Limpieza y Mantenimiento. Niklas’s knowledge of Spanish was rudimentary, but he knew enough to know it was a cleaning and maintenance van from the logo.
The back door of the van swung open, and a square-framed man yelled, “Come!” At the same time, both guards whispered in almost hissing sounds, “Vamos, Vamos.”
Niklas got the message. Hugging the wall, he approached the van, grabbed the man’s hand, and jumped inside. The door slammed, and the van took off. It was then that Niklas recognized the man who had helped him into the van.
“My God! Tepeu!” Niklas yelled.
“Yes, Señor Niklas, I’m so sorry we took so long, but we had to make preparations for your rescue.” Tepeu smiled and pounded Niklas’s shoulder.
“How did you get me out of there?” Niklas asked. He was squatting on a bucket, and his feet rested between various mops and brooms. The aroma of urinal blocks and disinfectants filled the air. The smell was wonderful.
“Ah, the dolphins told us how to get you out,” Tepeu said. He perched himself on boxes of garbage bags across from Niklas and held on to him as the van rocked over the curb and into the quiet morning of Cancun. In minutes the police station was far behind them.
“The dolphins told you?”
“Si, yes, they told us to bribe the guards just like we bribe dolphins with fish to do tricks. They told us with a big enough fish, you can get a man to do any trick you want. See, they were right. They let you go.” Tepeu slapped Niklas on the leg to make his point.
Niklas balanced himself on the soap bucket, and the realization of what had just happened dawned on him. He reached forward and grabbed Tepeu’s hand. “But now I’m a fugitive, an escaped criminal. How will I ever get back to Finland? They have my passport.” Reality hit home. He felt a wave pass over him. The wave was fear, indecision. Should I return to prison?
Tepeu took both of Niklas’s hands in his and held his gaze. “My friend, we have a new passport for you. If you want to return to your home someday, perhaps you can, but not for some time. The Mexican government wants to make an example of you. The prosecutor wants you to serve ten to fifteen years. Your government in Finland did not object. Señor Acan is very grateful for what you did, and he has made a new home you. Be patient, my friend, relax. We are taking you there now.” Tepeu released Niklas’s hands and yelled to the driver of the van to speed up.
The van lurched forward, and Niklas grabbed on to the soap bucket with both hands. “So, I can never go home?”
Tepeu smiled again. “Señor Niklas, relax, wait and see what we have for you. You’ll be very happy.”
Niklas sat back in the van. He felt his life was not his own anymore. What part of my life is now a dream? He wondered. This one, where I’m awake, or the one where the dolphins take me through the magic of their world at night?
The van slowed to a stop. Niklas could hear Mexican voices outside talking to the driver. Tepeu motioned for him to be quiet and mouthed, “Policia.” Everything in Niklas went quiet. He tried to quiet his racing heart, which sounded like a large brass drum in his ears.
After a few tense moments, the van moved on and soon slowed to a stop again. He could hear airplanes flying overhead. Then the back door opened, and when Niklas’s eyes had adjusted to the early light, he saw Maria, motioning for him to step down and into her arms.
CHAPTER TWENTY
FLIGHT OF THE DESPERADOS
Niklas stepped out of the van and almost collapsed into Maria’s arms. Never had another human being felt so good to him. He had not known if he would ever see her again, and now here she was — almost as real as the dream of her this morning.
Maria reached up and pulled his face to hers in a long, warm kiss that renewed his very core and ignited a fire in his heart. The despair and fear vanished.
She pulled back from him and looked into his eyes. “You see, the Mayan gods smiled on us. First they helped us set the dolphins free, and then they helped us release you.” She touched his cheek. “Last night, the Mayan goddess of the moon told me she would free you —she let me dream of you.”
Niklas took Maria’s face in his hands. “What was your dream?”
Maria smiled, and her eyes filled with tears. “I was in a boat, and you swam up to me. You were transformed into a dolphin, but I it knew it was you.”
Niklas laughed. “I dreamed of you as well. I saw you in the boat with moonlight shining down on you. You said something to me, but I couldn’t understand it.”
Maria pressed her head against Niklas’s chest. “I told you I loved you.”
Niklas kissed the top of her head and murmured, “I love you too.”
Tepeu tapped them both on the shoulders. “My friends, we are all now desperados. The bribes will only keep the silence for so long. They say sooner or later, even the parrots start to gossip in Mexico. We must go.”
Maria and Niklas followed Tepeu into a large hangar. A twin-engine, six-seater Piper Aztec was being readied by a flight crew. Tepeu exchanged greetings with a man who looked to be the pilot, and Tepeu handed him a thick envelope. More bribes, Niklas thought.
Tepeu walked back to Maria and Niklas. “Everything is ready,” he said. “We can board the plane.” Tepeu reached into another thick, large envelope he was carrying and handed two small blue books to Niklas and Maria. “These are your new passports. Welcome to Canada —we are now all Canadians. This is good, yes?” Tepeu smiled at Maria and Niklas.
Niklas opened his Canadian passport. He was now Stephen Larsen, a math teacher from Calgary, Alberta, Canada. Maria had downloaded a picture of Niklas from Facebook. He glanced at Maria’s —she was now Maria Larsen. “Are we going to Canada?” he asked.
Tepeu laughed. “No, no, that is too cold. We are going to Belize. A very nice place Acan has picked out for us. There is a nice dive shop for you, and a nice bar to run for me. You will see, you will see, this will be good. And we will meet our dolphin friends there.” Tepeu pushed him and Maria towards the plane.
The engines fired, and the plane taxied on the runway behind a giant 767 headed for New York. A short time later, they were airborne. Niklas felt the freedom of flight like never before. He was free of the Cancun prison and soaring through air with the blue ocean on his left and the green jungle on his right.
The large mass of Cancun hotels and beaches gave way to an expanse of brilliant blue ocean and white clouds. Never in his wildest dreams had he imagined he would free dolphins, and free himself in the process. Whatever the future held for him, he knew he could face it. He had Maria beside him. Niklas rested his head back in his seat, squeezed Maria’s hand, and fell asleep.
CHAPTER TWENTY ONE
NEW ARRIVAL
As the small airplane touched down, Niklas realized just seven days had passed since he had first arrived in Mexico. Now here he was in another foreign country, under a new name. He was a fugitive. He could not have been happier.
The small party of desperados breezed through Belize customs and took off again for its final destination —Ambergris Caye and the airport of San Pedro. Fans of Madonna, the singer, would know the place from the song. Those lucky enough to have visited the place w
ould remember it for its beauty.
There was no taxi to greet the desperados; instead, a golf cart bounced them along sandy streets lined with colorful houses and small, low-rise hotels. There was no building taller than a palm tree, and Niklas could hardly believe this place and Cancun existed in the same universe —they were diametrically opposite.
Families rode together on golf carts or in groups on bicycles, and people walked, or strolled, or ambled at a pace almost slower than a land turtle. The few vehicles present made way for everyone, and horns were used to honk hello to friends and neighbors.
The cart motored along through the little town of San Pedro, down the length of the caye, and finally deposited them at the front of a large, three-story house raised on stilts. An ornate stairway led up to a wide, wraparound balcony with a hammock that dared anyone to rest in its folds for just a moment that would seem like forever. Maria and Niklas followed Tepeu into the house, which was beautifully decorated in a style that even a Tommy Bahama designer would fall in love with, and walked out to the beach on the other side. The pristine blue ocean lay before them, and a hint of reef a kilometer out to sea was evident through the spray of white waves.
Maria and Niklas drew close to each other as they continued following Tepeu on the tour of their new place. Tepeu effusively described the home, the surroundings, the beach, and their future in Belize.
He motioned for them to follow him onto the long dock that jutted some two hundred meters out into the sea. “There is one last thing I must show you, but I hope they have arrived,” he said as he hurried along the dock.
Maria and Niklas had no idea what Tepeu was talking about but dutifully followed him as two people lost in a new wonderland. “What is it?” Niklas asked.
“Wait.” Tepeu put one finger to his lips, motioning for silence. Only the sea breeze made the merest whisper, and then there it was —the sound, the unmistakable sound, of dolphins. “You hear them? They have arrived, all the way from Cancun.” Tepeu threw up his hands.
Maria, Niklas, and Tepeu moved forward to the end of the dock, and a pod of twelve dolphins surfaced. They splashed and jumped and called back and forth to each other and to Maria and Niklas.
Niklas turned to Maria, “Are these the dolphins we freed in Cancun?”
Maria took Nikla’s hand, “Yes, can you hear their voices, do you recognize them?”
Niklas cocked his head to one side, listening intently to their clicks and whistles, “My god, yes, I recognize them, they were the same ones from my dreams, they are the same ones we freed.” He looked at Maria and Tepeu, “How did they get here so fast?”
“They have swum over four hundred nautical miles, the leader there …” Maria motioned to a large dolphin with noticeable grey patches, “claims they rested only briefly, they wanted to be here to greet us.”
Maria and Niklas hugged and kissed each other, then jumped in the water with the dolphins. They each grabbed a fin and laughed and shouted as the dolphins pulled them along.
“You see,” Tepeu shouted from the dock, “they knew you would be here, and they came to be with you. You are their lifelong friends.”
Maria and Niklas floated in the ocean, their hands touching, as the dolphins swam lazily by, creating small swirls and waves in the calm water. If there would be a time happier than this they were not sure, but at the moment, the moment was magic.
EPILOGUE
Pekka and Caroline languished in the Cancun jail for several months. Niklas wanted to help free them, but he couldn’t do it without revealing who had actually assisted him in the Dolphins escape.
A video taken by a tourist and posted on YouTube showed Pekka and Caroline throwing off their clothes and rushing into the ocean only minutes before the Dolphins were freed. An American lawyer hired by Pekka argued successfully that the two, (now dubbed the naked eco terrorist) by the Mexican media could not have assisted in the dolphins escape. A previous video from the nightclub showed them locked in an embrace only twenty minutes before the dolphin escape.
With great reluctance, the Mexican police set Pekka and Caroline free. Pekka returned to a large empty home in the states, with a note from his wife telling him to contact her lawyer regarding their divorce. Caroline returned to England to be fired by Malcolm. He had had enough of her conference prowling. Niklas heard that Caroline started an athletic sportswear company and within a short time had a legion of young men under her.
Niklas started a dive shop with the help of Acun, and Tepeu opened a small bar nearby called the Blue Dolphin. One day while Niklas was loading diving gear on the dock, Ansa and Magnus showed up.
Ansa and Niklas rekindled their relationship and spent that summer scuba diving. In the years that followed, while Ansa studied marine biology in San Diego, she would come to live with her father in the summers.
Niklas and Maria married later that summer. Maria was pregnant by the fall, and the baby girl who came into their lives was named Ixchel, after the Mayan moon.
Niklas could not have been happier. Some nights, when the waves lapped the shore outside the house, and the frigate birds sailed overhead in tight formation, and the moon shone just right he would grab onto a dolphins fin in his dreams. The next moment he was flexing his powerful tail and swimming with them under the Maya moon. Maria would be there, right by his side, and sometimes even with baby IxChel. The dolphins still let them into their dreams, just every so often, so they could play together.
No one seemed to mind.
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
I want to thank my good friend Diane Semchuck, who read this book while my wife and I were on our 30th anniversary cruise in Europe. When I returned from our trip, the manuscript was laying on the counter with a note, “I loved, loved, loved your book! I couldn’t put it down.” That was my first review, and the motivation to get this published.
I also want to thank the guidance of Susan Toy, for providing me a road map of self publishers, graphic artists and editors, who guided me along. For a first time writer and self publisher, her information was invaluable. Susan gave me an introduction to Rachel Small at www.faultessfinishediting.com, and with her copy and stylistic edit, and insights, this Novella came to be.
My final thanks to the good people at Iguana Books, who liked what I wrote, and said they would be proud to publish it.
Iguana Books
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