by Glen Carter
She saw everything…then disappeared.
LAST
WITNESS
GLEN CARTER
1 Stamp’s Lane, St. John’s, NL, Canada, A1E 3C9
WWW.BREAKWATERBOOKS.COM
COPYRIGHT © 2013 Glen Carter
ISBN 978-1-55081-443-9
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from Library and Archives Canada.
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We acknowledge the support of the Canada Council for the Arts, which last year invested $154 million to bring the arts to Canadians throughout the country. We acknowledge the government of Canada through the Canada Book Fund and the Government of Newfoundland and Labrador through the Department of Tourism, Culture and Recreation for our publishing activities.
PRINTED AND BOUND IN CANADA.
FOR MY BEAUTIFUL MARY JANE.
LIMITLESS IN LOVE AND INSPIRATION.
PROLOGUE
CASTILLO DEL PRINCIPE, HAVANA
The soldiers came as phantoms from a dream.While the prisoners slept. Boots pounded across an ancient moat, thunderous against stone walls and towering bastions. in a matter of seconds, they halted at a broad iron gate where a lone guard was expecting them. Although barely acknowledged, he saluted as they swept through, descending one by one into a maze of red brick tunnels that ran like veins beneath the castle. They moved efficiently, a lockstep march on hard packed earth. Dim grimy lights marked the way and within a few minutes they stopped at a dungeon where another guard was waiting. soundlessly, the tiny cell was opened. eyes and teeth flashed in blackened faces as they swept in and encircled the prisoner.
He was already a wakening when a hand suddenly closed around his throat like a vice on his windpipe. White specks burst into the black as he fought for breath.With a racing heart, confused, the prisoner swung a fist of meat. it connected, bringing an angry curse. He struggled up, ready with another roundhouse, but a jab to the body drove him down.
Knowing he was beaten, he shouted. realizing before the sound perished how useless it was.
one of the invaders ducked in close. “No one will come.”
“Bastardos,” the prisoner spat. “What in the name of christ do you want?”
“you’ll soon see.”
As though weightless, he was jerked to his feet. his hands were knotted and he was blindfolded. Gagged.
A command was barked.
Half dragged, the prisoner was taken. He yelled his own name, but it was just a slur. The other prisoners hollered back. A riot of outrage. Tin cups against iron bars, a racket that echoed through the prison. A few moments later, back the way they came, the gate clanged shut. The prisoner was outside where sounds could not be stifled. A ship’s horn blasted. Dogs snarled nearby.
The prisoner sucked in what he could of fresh air. He was shoved hard into a vehicle and a tailgate slammed shut. The engine roared.
It had happened too fast to process. His mind lagged. Light was a shapeless splotch from behind the blindfold and then, after a time, no light at all. The prisoner sensed the city’s life force falling away. At least in the old prison, with all its misery, he was one of many. He was safer behind those walls even though he had been singled out before. interrogated and beaten. it was worse being cut away from the other prisoners and taken in the middle of the night. he had no idea why.
Laying still, trying to take in what he could. It might have been an hour, maybe more. He didn’t know.When the vehicle stopped it felt eerily like the coffin at his grave. A pair of hands yanked him out, shuffled him a few steps, and left him standing there. Waiting for a bullet.
Quickly, the man bent his head and mouthed a prayer. in the name of sebastian, who had survived a thousand arrows, but not betrayal. he was condemned at that moment to the same fate as his soldier saint, but he steeled himself against regret. it was never the way he lived. he would not die that way.
“Do it,” the man muffled.
Nothing.
Then the click of a weapon’s safety.
Another moment.Waiting to die.
suddenly, his blindfold was torn away.
They laughed.
Julio Rasconi gulped air. Eyes splayed against the night. A rifle retreated from the side of his head. he saw the executioner was a kid in uniform. A dull moon revealed five of them. one rubbed his jaw, looking like he was still pissed. no one spoke.
They were in a clearing on the side of a mountain. A long lush valley lay at its base. Lights from a village glimmered like beacons on a still black sea.
Rasconi knew better than to demand answers. They were goons. If they weren’t going to kill him, he was definitely in for a beating. He was ready. Looking forward to breaking another jaw.
A few moments later, an engine revved followed by the crunch of a transmission. Then Rasconi saw it. A smudge of camouflage bucked up the narrow road. A truck. normally used for troops, but he had seen one stacked with dead bodies once. The war against the bandits had been castro’s doing. The anti-communist insurgents were disorganized and badly outnumbered. Those who weren’t killed surrendered and were executed. Rasconi survived by fleeing deep into the Escambray mountains. Beaten and alone, he could trust no one. With castro’s exterminators on his heels, he escaped to Florida,where he was embraced as another angry exilio.
Eventually, he was given the chance to fight again, to regain his country. Hundreds were recruited to a camp in Guatemala. nothing more than a jungle landing strip and a few buildings. The training was hard, but Rasconi was quickly noticed. Then a hand had fallen on his shoulder and a mission whispered in his ear.
There are many, Julio. But none with your gift.
They were right. God had given the gift. But his destiny had been stolen by men.
Rasconi tightened at the crack of backfire. The truck rolling closer. standing there, on the side of the mountain, the bloody images flooded back. The men slaughtered at playa Giron had sacrificed everything. Hundreds more were captured and imprisoned, as he had been.
The truck came to a stop. The driver killed the engine.
At the back, a canvas flap whipped open. Dark forms stumbled to the dirt.They clung to one another. When he saw them, Rasconi understood, and in a flash he was overcome by rage. Powerful shoulders struggled to break free.
This couldn’t be real. Somehow, they had found his family.
His mother’s face was a sheet of terror. Her clothing was ripped. Stained red.
A face loomed next to his. “Pedazo de mierda.” The breath was rotten. “My puta,” he grinned. “She wants more but I am only one man.”
Rasconi snapped his head and heard a loud crack.
Blood gushed from the soldier’s nose.
Suddenly, a knee punched into the small of his back and Rasconi dropped.
“No,” the woman screeched. “No estan digno.”
“Shut up. Whore,” one of them barked.
A curse was strangled in Rasconi’s throat. If only he could snatch aweapon. A few seconds would be enough. He didn’t care if itmeant his death.
The boy suddenly tried to break free. “Ayúdame!” he yelled.
Rasconi would have died for his little brother but he could not help him.The boywould never have understood that.His big brother was capable of anything, nomatter how impossible.There was a comic book in Rasconi’s footlocker. Aman with a cape. A parting gift from the boy to his hero.
Rasconi tried to get up. A fist slammed into his mo
uth. He spat blood on a boot. Grunted the boy’s name. “Don’t do it,” he pleaded.
They laughed. “Traitor’s earn special treatment.”
Rasconi knew what the treatment would be. Castro’s lust for vengeance could not be satisfied.
His father locked eyes with him then. A face of stone.
Rasconi had often suffered his father’s anger, but this was impossible to bear.
His padre nodded. His eyes urgent. Something that could not be spoken. Action had always been his way. Never words.
Rasconi understood. Only one option. It was madness, but there was no other way. He counted to three and like a jackhammer, he sprang to his feet, drove his head into the soldier closest. The uniform crumpled, leaving his weapon as if suspended in mid air.
The others were caught off guard. Fools fumbling with their weapons.
With a yell, Rasconi’s father lunged for the rifle. Swept it up and was about to fire.
Rasconi seized the chance to bring another man down. He dove into him. Kicking wildly. Until.
A shot split the air.
His padre fell, moaned softly, and became still.
The sneering kid pointed his rifle at him. Ready with another bullet.
Screaming, the woman collapsed. She reached for the boy and he was released to her.
Two men were on Rasconi. He kicked and roared. The gag popped from his mouth. A wail erupted. Nothing left now but anger and shame, too deep to comprehend.
He stared into hismother’s eyes.
Mi rey.
Her king.
Somuch love. But in Rasconi’s shreddedmind, never forgiveness.
Suddenly, there was a crack at the back of his skull, and through the crushing pain came the echoes of screams. In a breath, therewere two more gunshots, and then, in the silence that followed, Rasconi plunged into the limitless abyss of mind’s dreadful night.
1
GUATEMALA, 1962
It was much worse than a nightmare. So real, he was soaked and felt like vomiting. It would take a while for the pounding to slow in his chest.
After a moment he opened his eyes. He squinted at sunlight and swallowed dryly. He took a breath and then another. Raised a shaking hand to wipe the wetness from his face. He didn’t know whether it was sweat or tears. He never did.
When he turned his head he saw she was gone. Strange. The Qatanum slept like logs. Something must have awakened her and she slipped from the covers while he slept off his drunk.
He sat up, rubbed the pounding at the base of his skull and shifted both feet until they found the floor.The night flooded back.They’d spent it on the porch. Quietly, while he drank. She was comfortable with the silence he brought into her life. It was as though the Qatanum communicated in an ancient wordless way.
He savoured the memory of her tight brown body. The wicked tricks she used, so naturally. Her wild love making always made him want her again. He’d go downstairs and pull her away from the stove. Breakfast would wait. She’d fight first and then give in. It was always the way, even if nothing else was predictable about this woman. It’s what drew him to her in the first place.
Suddenly, there was a noise outside. A voice. A man’s.
Rasconi hoisted himself from the sheets and pulled pants up his muscled body.
He stepped rapidly to the window. Pressed his forehead against the glass.
A second later, he snatched his revolver and thundered from the room.
Julio Rasconi pulled his woman to one side. “Ballase para la casa. y quedece alli !” he barked.
Eliza raced to the house.
Then Rasconi turned to face the stranger.
The man was short and fat with wide hooded eyes, thin lips, and a fleshy face set with jowls and a deep cleft that split his chin.Thinning grey hair. He wore a blue short-sleeved shirt, black pants and white leather shoes.
Rasconi circled him.
The stranger waited.
“Your name,” Rasconi demanded in a deep voice.
“Call me Calogero,” the man replied.
“American.”
“Sicilian.”
A large black car was parked a few feet away. Rasconi dropped low and ran to it.He jerked open the door; thrust his weapon into the opening.The car was empty.
The Sicilian gave him an appraising stare. “They call you extrano loco,” he said. “I was warned to bring a weapon.”
In one swift motion, Rasconi placed his gun against the man’s forehead.
The Sicilian stiffened. “But, I didn’t.”
“How did you find me?”
Eliza watched them from the kitchen window. Rasconi flicked his head and she disappeared.
The man looked calmly into his face. “I am good at finding people,” he said.
Rasconi needed food,maybe another drink to stop the thumping inside his skull. He pressed the gun harder into the man’s flesh.“Why don’t I just shoot you,” he said. “Dump your body at the side of the long road you just came in on. In this country, no one gives a shit.”
A bird squawked. Large black wings flapped from a perch in the tall trees surrounding the house. The morning sun burned hot on Rasconi’s bare shoulders. Woody smoke from Eliza’s stove drifted lazily to his nostrils. Rasconi snorted it away.
Calmly, the Sicilian spoke. “I’m not a fool, Julio. My men have orders if I don’t come back.” The man glanced at his watch as if he were late for something.
Rasconi’s guts pulled up tight. Even with his many precautions, this man had simply driven to his doorstep and spoken a name no one here knew—not even Eliza. Rasconi would need to know more about this Sicilian.
“Why are you here?” Rasconi asked.
“In Guatemala?”
“Do not fuck with me.”
“We share a similar misfortune,” the stranger replied quickly. “We are homeless, the both of us. Dispossessed.”
Rasconi looked to his little house.
“That’s not what I mean,my friend.”
There was something familiar about him. It bothered Rasconi that he couldn’t put his finger on it. “I am not your friend,” he said, waving his revolver in the Sicilian’s face. “You’re on my land. Uninvited. And you don’t have fmuch time to explain why.”
Calogero showed his palms in an act of submission that didn’t suit him. “We are both in this shitty little place because of a man’s betrayal,” he said. “I am exiled from my country, like you.” Disgust suddenly took control of theman’s face. “But the fucking suffered by you and your family, my friend. What happened to me is nothing.”
Rasconi swallowed on his confusion. Sweat trailed down his neck. He could shoot this Sicilian and take care of who ever came looking. Though, this man had done something that no one had been able to do.He had found him in the middle of nowhere, twenty miles from a village that wasn’t even on a map. Rasconi suspected that killing him would be a mistake.
“You know too much,” he said, “for a stranger.”
“A stranger. Yes. But also an ally. We were there when it began. In Panama,Nicaragua, Mexico.Guatemala. They needed our contacts in Havana. We were happy to help. To get our beaks wet again.” The Sicilian stopped suddenly. Thinking.
Rasconi allowed it.
When he was finished, he looked up with black pitiless eyes. “They fucked us, Julio.”
Rasconi gripped his gun.
“Like you,” the Sicilian continued. “These vigliacchi. Drove the dagger into the hearts of brave men. They didn’t just leave you to die. They eviscerated you. Took your honour and then...” It was unnecessary to go on.
Imperceptibly, Rasconi flinched. “They?”
“I think you know who I’m talking about.”
Rasconi revealed nothing, especially his anxiety. Then, in one swift motion he cocked his weapon and pulled the trigger.
The bullet struck harmlessly at the Sicilian’s feet. He fell on his ass. “E pazzo figlio di una cagna!”
Rasconi smiled. Time
for this to end. Next, the man would get a good pistol-whipping.
Then. “Drop your weapon.”
The voice came from behind.
Rasconi spun, levelled his weapon. Stunned.
A gun was held at Eliza’s head. Terror on her face.
Rasconi was suddenly immobile. This second man was no stranger. At one time he was a friend. The reason he was still alive.
“We have much to talk about, Julio” the second man said, releasing the woman. “It’s good to see you again.”
Eliza ran to him.
Rasconi lowered his weapon and turned to see the fat Sicilian still on his ass, smiling broadly.
2
DALLAS, TEXAS, 1963
Special agent Ed Malloy stared glumly at the rain and rubbed his chest where a chicken sandwich was lodged in his jejunum. He snapped open his newspaper and sent a splatter of coffee across the table.
“Take it easy, cowboy,” said his partner, Burke. “You Montana hicks spend too much time around horse leather to know fine Italian wool.”
Benignly, Malloy surveyed Burke’s classy suit. “Where I come from, we ride horses. We don’t wear ’em.”
“Poor horses,” Burke grinned.
It was a quarter past noon and they’d already clocked a full day. People shuffled by the diner window. Heads down. Dripping umbrellas. Malloy stared for a bit and then returned to his newspaper. The front page. “Johnson has appointed a commission to investigate the assassination. Earl Warren’s the man.The politicians and lawyers are swarming.”
Burke caught the waitress’s attention and pointed towards his empty cup. After getting a quick top up, he blew across the rim and sipped. “A good man. Tough.”
“You got that,” Malloy said, turning a page.
“What about the Bureau?”
“We’re still getting ink. But it’s on page three.”
Burke clucked his tongue. “Guess the gumshoes aren’t news anymore.”
“Guess not,” Malloy replied. “Not the front page, anyway. Judge Warren. He’s the headline. Oswald and Ruby, too.”