"Smith, Martin Cruz - Havana Bay v3.1 " - читать интересную книгу автора (Smith Martin Cruz) Copyright
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right, in the dark, by Illuminati. About
the e-Book TITLE: AUTHOR: Smith, Martin
Cruz ABEB Version: 3.1 Hog Edition
BY Martin Cruz Smith
Author's
Note
Although this
novel is set in Dedication
for Em Acknowledgments
I would like to
thank, in In
the Most
of all, I owe Knox Burger and Kitty Sprague, who waited for the story. Chapter OneA police boat directed a light toward
tar-covered pilings and water, turning a black scene white. Soda
cans, crab pots, fishing floats, mattresses, Styrofoam bearded with algae
shifted as an investigation team of the Policнa de la Revoluciуn took flash
shots. Arkady waited in a cashmere overcoat with a Captain Arcos, a
barrel-chested little man who looked ironed into military fatigues, and his
Sergeant Luna, large, black and angular. Detective Osorio was a small brown woman
in PNR blue; she gave Arkady a studied glare. A
Cuban named Rufo was the interpreter from the Russian embassy. "It's
very simple," he translated the captain's words. You see the body,
identify the body and then go home." "Sounds
simple." Arkady
tried to be agreeable, although Arcos walked off as if any contact with
Russians was contamination. Osorio
combined the sharp features of an ingenue with the grave expression of a
hangman. She spoke and Rufo explained, "The detective says this is the
Cuban method, not the Russian method or the German method. The Cuban method.
You will see." Arkady
had seen little so far. He had just arrived at the airport in the dark when he
was whisked away by Rufo. They were headed by taxi to the city when Rufo
received a call on a cellular phone that diverted them to the bay. Already
Arkady had a sense that he was unwelcome and unpopular. Rufo
wore a loose Hawaiian shirt and a faint resemblance to the older, softer
Muhammad Ali. "The detective says she hopes you don't mind learning the
Cuban method." "I'm
looking forward to it." Arkady
was nothing if not a good guest. "Could
you ask her when the body was discovered?" "Two
hours ago by the boat." "The
embassy sent me a message yesterday that Pribluda was in trouble. Why did they
say that before you found a body?" "She
says ask the embassy. She was certainly not expecting an investigator. " Professional
honor seemed to be at stake and Arkady felt badly outclassed on that score.
Like Someone
along the tape carried a radio that sang, "La fiesta no es para los
feos. Quй feo es, seсor. Super feo, amigo mнo. No puedes pasar aquн, amigo. La
fiesta no es para los feos." "What
does that mean?" Arkady asked Rufo. "The
song? It says, 'This party is not for ugly people. Sorry, my friend, you can't
come.'" Yet
here I am, Arkady thought. A
vapor trail far overhead showed silver, and ships at anchor started to appear
where only lights had hung moments before. Across the bay the seawall and
mansions of "The
captain is sensitive," Rufo said, "but whoever was right or wrong
about the message, you're here, the body's here." "So
it couldn't have worked out better?" "In
a manner of speaking." Osorio
ordered the boat to back off so that its wash wouldn't stir the body. A
combination of the boat's light and the freshening sky made her face glow. Rufo
said, "Cubans don't like Russians. It's not you, it's just not a good
place for a Russian." "Where
is a good place?" Rufo
shrugged. This
side of the harbor, now that Arkady could see it, was like a village. A
hillside of banana palms overhung abandoned houses that fronted what was more a
cement curb than a seawall that stretched from a coal dock to a ferry landing.
A wooden walkway balanced on a black piling captured whatever floated in. The
day was going to be warm. He could tell by the smell. "Vaya
a cambiar su cara, amigo. Feo, feo, feo como horror, seсor." In
Detective
Osorio's order for the video camera to roll was a signal for onlookers to press
against the tape. The ferry landing filled with commuters, every face turned
toward the pilings, where in the quickening light floated a body as black and
bloated as the inner tube it rested in. Shirt and shorts were split by the
body's expansion. Hands and feet trailed in the water; a swim fin dangled
casually on one foot. The head was eyeless and inflated like a black balloon. "A
neumбtico" Rufo told Arkady. A neumбtico is a fisherman
who fishes from an inner tube. Actually from a fishing net spread over the
tube. Like a hammock. It's very ingenious, very Cuban." "The
inner tube is his boat?" "Better
than a boat. A boat needs gasoline." Arkady
pondered that proposition. "Much
better." A
diver in a wet suit slid off the police boat while an officer in waders dropped
over the seawall. They clambered as much as waded across crab pots and mattress
springs, mindful of hidden nails and septic water, and cornered the inner tube
so that it wouldn't float away. A net was thrown down from the seawall to
stretch under the inner tube and lift it and the body up together. So far,
Arkady wouldn't have done anything differently. Sometimes events were just a
matter of luck. The
diver stepped into a hole and went under. Gasping, he came up out of the water,
grabbed onto first the inner tube and then a foot hanging from it. The foot
came off. The inner tube pressed against the spear of a mattress spring, popped
and started to deflate. As the foot turned to jelly, Detective Osorio shouted
for the officer to toss it to shore: a classic confrontation between authority
and vulgar death, Arkady thought. All along the tape, onlookers clapped and
laughed. Rufo
said, "See, usually, our level of competence is fairly high, but Russians
have this effect. The captain will never forgive you." The
camera went on taping the debacle while another detective jumped into the
water. Arkady hoped the lens captured the way the rising sun poured into the
windows of the ferry. The inner tube was sinking. An arm disengaged. Shouts
flew back and forth between Osorio and the police boat. The more desperately
the men in the water tried to save the situation the worse it became. Captain
Arcos contributed orders to lift the body. As the diver steadied the head, the
pressure of his hands liquefied its face and made it slide like a grape skin
off the skull, which itself separated cleanly from the neck; it was like trying
to lift a man who was perversely disrobing part by part, unembarrassed by the
stench of advanced decomposition. A pelican sailed overhead, red as a flamingo. "I
think identification is going to be a little more complicated than the captain
imagined," Arkady said. The
diver caught the jaw as it dropped off from the skull and juggled each, while
the detectives pushed the other black, swollen limbs pell-mell into the
shriveling inner tube. "Feo,
tan feo. No puedes pasar aqui, amigo. Porque la fiesta no es para los
feos." The
rhythm was... what was the word? Arkady wondered. Unrelenting. Across
the bay a golden dome seemed to burst into flame, and the houses of the Malecуn
started to express their unlikely colors of lemon, rose, royal purple, aquamarine.
It really was a lovely city, he thought. Light from the high windows of the
autopsy theater of the Institute de Medicina Legal fell on three
stainless-steel tables. On the right-hand table lay the neumбtico's
torso and loose parts arranged like an ancient statue dredged in pieces from
the sea. Along the walls were enamel cabinets, scales, X-ray panel, sink,
specimen shelves, freezer, refrigerator, pails. Above, at the observation
level, Rufo and Arkady had a semicircle of seats to themselves. Arkady hadn't
noticed before how scarred Rufo's brows were. "Captain
Luna would rather you watched from here. The examiner is Dr. Blas." Rufo
waited expectantly until Arkady realized he was supposed to react. "The
Dr. Blas?" "The
very one." Blas
had a dapper Spanish beard and wore rubber gloves, goggles, green scrubs. Only
when he appeared satisfied that he had a reasonably complete body did he
measure it and search it meticulously for marks and tattoos, a painstaking task
when skin tended to slide wherever touched. An autopsy could take two hours, as
much as four. At the left-hand table Detective Osorio and a pair of technicians
sorted through the deflated inner tube and fishnet; the body had been left
tangled in them for fear of disturbing it any more. Captain Arcos stood to one
side, Luna a step behind. It occurred to Arkady that Luna's head was as round
and blunt as a black fist with red-rimmed eyes. Already Osorio had found a wet
roll of American dollar bills and a ring of keys kept in a leaky plastic bag.
Fingerprints wouldn't have survived the bag, and she immediately dispatched the
keys with an officer. There was something appealingly energetic and fastidious
about Osorio. She hung wet shirt, shorts and underwear on hangers on a rack. While
Blas worked he commented to a microphone clipped to the lapel of his coat. "Maybe
two weeks in the water," Rufo translated. He added, "It's been hot
and raining, very humid. Even for here." "You've
seen autopsies before?" Arkady asked. "No,
but I've always been curious. And, of course, I'd heard of Dr. Blas." Performing
an autopsy on a body in an advanced stage of putrefaction was as delicate as
dissecting a soft-boiled egg. Sex was obvious but not age, not race, not size
when the chest and stomach cavities were distended, not weight when the body
sagged with water inside, not fingerprints when hands that had trailed in the
water for a week ended in digits nibbled to the bone. Then there was the
gaseous pressure of chemical change. When Blas punctured the abdomen a flatulent
spray shot loudly up, and when he made the Y incision across the chest and then
to groin, a wave of black water and liquefied matter overflowed the table.
Using a pail, a technician deftly caught the viscera as they floated out. An
expanding pong of rot – as if a shovel had been plunged into swamp gas – took
possession of the room, invading everyone's nose and mouth. Arkady was glad he
had left his precious coat in the car. After the first trauma of the stench –
five minutes, no more – the olfactory nerves were traumatized and numb, but he
was already digging deep into his cigarettes. Rufo
said, "That smells disgusting." "Russian
tobacco." Arkady filled his lungs with smoke. "Want one?" "No,
thanks. I boxed in "You
don't like Russians, either?" "I
love Russians. Some of my best friends are Russian." Rufo leaned for a
better view as Blas spread the chest for the camera. "The doctor is very
good. At the rate they're going you'll have time to make your plane. You won't
even have to spend the night." "Won't
the embassy make a fuss about this?" "The
Russians here? No." Blas
slapped the pulpy mass of the heart in a separate tray. "You
don't think they're too indelicate, I hope," Rufo said. "Oh,
no." To be fair, as Arkady remembered, Pribluda used to root through
bodies with the enthusiasm of a boar after nuts. "Imagine the poor
bastard's surprise," Pribluda would have said. "Floating around,
looking up at the stars, and then bang, he's dead." Arkady
lit one cigarette from another and drew the smoke in sharply enough to make his
eyes tear. It occurred to him that he was at a point now where he knew more
people dead than alive, the wrong side of a certain line. "I
picked up a lot of languages touring with the team," Rufo said.
"After boxing, I used to guide groups of singers, musicians, dancers,
intellectuals for the embassy. I miss those days." Detective
Osorio methodically laid out supplies that the dead man had taken to sea:
thermos, wicker box, and plastic bags of candles, rolls of tape, twine, hooks
and extra line. Usually,
an examiner cut at the hairline and peeled the forehead over the face to reach the
skull. Since in this case both the forehead and the face had already slipped
off and bade adieu in the bay, Blas proceeded directly with a rotary saw to
uncover the brain, which proved rotten with worms that reminded Arkady of the
macaroni served by Aeroflot. As the nausea rose he had Rufo lead him to a tiny,
chain-flush lavatory, where he threw up, so perhaps he wasn't so inured after
all, he thought. Maybe he had just reached his limit. Rufo was gone, and
walking back to the autopsy theater on his own, Arkady went by a room perfumed
by carboys of formaldehyde and decorated with anatomical charts. On a table two
feet with yellow toenails stuck out from a sheet. Between the legs lay an
oversized syringe connected by a tube to a tub of embalming fluid on the floor,
a technique used in the smallest, most primitive Russian villages when electric
pumps failed. The needle of the syringe was particularly long and narrow to fit
into an artery, which was thinner than a vein. Between the feet were rubber
gloves and another syringe in an unopened plastic bag. Arkady slipped the bag
into his jacket pocket. When
Arkady returned to his seat, Rufo was waiting with a recuperative Cuban
cigarette. By that time, the brain had been weighed and set aside while Dr.
Blas fitted head and jaw together. Although
Rufo's lighter was the plastic disposable sort, he said it had been refilled
twenty times."The Cuban record is over a hundred." Arkady
lit the cigarette, inhaled. "What kind is this?" "'Popular.'
Black tobacco. You like it?" "It's
perfect." Arkady let out a plume of smoke as blue as the exhaust of a car
in distress. Rufo's
hand kneaded Arkady's shoulder. "Relax. You're down to bones, my
friend." The
officer who had taken the keys from Osorio returned. At the other table, after
Blas had measured the skull vertically and across the brow, he spread a
handkerchief and diligently scrubbed the teeth with a toothbrush. Arkady handed
Rufo a dental chart he had brought from Rufo
interpreted. "The Russian citizen Sergei Sergeevich Pribluda arrived in "Same
thing," Arkady said. The
captain – and in his wake, Rufo – went on. "A week ago the embassy
informed us that Pribluda was missing. We did not expect them to invite a
senior investigator from the Arkady
had talked to Pribluda's son, who had refused to come to Rufo
went on. "Fortunately, the captain says, the identification performed
today before your eyes is simple and conclusive. The captain says that a key
found in the effects was taken to the apartment of the missing man where it
unlocked the door. From an examination of the body recovered from the bay, Dr.
Blas estimates that it is a Caucasoid male approximately fifty to sixty years
of age, one hundred sixty-five centimeters in height, ninety kilos in weight,
in every regard the same as the missing man. Moreover, the dental chart of the
Russian citizen Pribluda you yourself brought shows one lower molar filled.
That molar in the recovered jaw is a steel tooth which, in the opinion of Dr.
Blas, according to the captain, is typical Russian dental work. Do you
agree?" "From
what I saw, yes." "Dr.
Blas says he finds no wounds or broken bones, no signs of violence or foul
play. Your friend died of natural causes, perhaps a stroke or aneurysm or heart
attack, it would be almost impossible to determine which for a body in this
condition. The doctor hopes he did not suffer long." "That's
kind of him." Although the doctor appeared more smug than sympathetic. "The
captain, for his part, asks if you accept the observations of this
autopsy?" "I'd
like to think about it." "Well,
you accept the conclusion that the body recovered is that of the Russian
citizen Pribluda?" Arkady
turned to the examining table. What had been a bloated cadaver was now split
and gutted. Of course, there had been no face or eyes to identify anyway, and
finger bones never did yield prints, but someone had lived in that ruined body. "I
think an inner tube in the bay is a strange place to find a Russian
citizen." "The
captain says they all think that." "Then
there will be an investigation?" Rufo
said, "It depends." "On
what?" "On
many factors." "Such
as?" "The
captain says your friend was a spy. What he was doing when he died was not innocent.
The captain can predict your embassy will ask us to do nothing. We are the ones
who could make an international incident of this, but frankly it is not worth
the effort. We will investigate in our own time, in our own way, although in
this Special Period the Cuban people cannot afford to waste resources on people
who have revealed themselves to be our enemy. Now do you understand what I
mean?" Rufo paused while Arcos took a second to compose himself. "The
captain says an investigation depends on many factors. The position of our
friends at the Russian embassy must be taken into account before premature
steps are taken. The only issue we have here is an identification of a foreign
national who has died on Cuban territory. Do you accept it is the Russian
citizen Sergei Pribluda?" "It
could be," Arkady said. Dr.
Blas sighed, Luna took a deep breath and Detective Osorio weighed the keys in
her palm. Arkady couldn't help feeling like a difficult actor. "It
probably is, but I can't say conclusively that this body is Pribluda. There's
no face, no prints and I doubt very much that you will be able to type the
blood. All you have is a dental chart and one steel tooth. He could be another
Russian. Or one of thousands of Cubans who went to Dr.
Blas asked in precisely snipped Russian, "Did you bring any other
identification from "Just
this. Pribluda sent it a month ago." Arkady dug out of his passport case a
snapshot of three men standing on a beach and squinting at the camera. One man
was so black he could have been carved from jet. He held up a glistening
rainbow of a fish for the admiration of two whites, a shorter man with a
compensating tower of steel-wool hair and, partially obscured by the others,
Pribluda. Behind them was water, a tip of beach, palms. Blas
studied the photograph and read the scribble on the back. " "There
is such a yacht club?" Arkady asked. "There
was such a club before the Revolution," Blas said. "I think
your friend was making a joke." Rufo
said, "Cubans love grandiose titles. A 'drinking society' can be friends
in a bar." "The
others don't look Russian to me. You can make copies of the picture and
circulate them." The
picture went around to Arcos, who put it back into Arkady's hands as if it were
toxic. Rufo said, "The captain says your friend was a spy, that spies come
to bad ends, as they deserve. This is typically Russian, pretending to help and
then stabbing Arkady
gathered as much. The captain looked ready to spit. Rufo
gave Arkady a push. "I think it's time to go." Detective
Osorio, who had been quietly following the conversation, suddenly revealed
fluent Russian. "Was there a letter with the picture?" "Only
a postcard saying hello," Arkady said. "I threw it away." "Idiota"
Osorio said, which nobody bothered to translate. "It's
lucky you're going home, you don't have many friends here," Rufo said.
"The embassy said to put you in an apartment until the plane." They
drove by three-story stone town houses transformed by the Revolution into a far
more colorful backdrop of ruin and decay, marble colonnades refaced with
whatever color was available – green, ultramarine, chartreuse. Not just ordinary
green, either, but a vibrant spectrum: sea, lime, palm and verdigris. Houses
were as blue as powdered turquoise, pools of water, peeling sky, the upper
levels enlivened by balconies of ornate ironwork embellished by canary cages,
florid roosters, hanging bicycles. Even dowdy Russian cars wore a wide variety
of paint, and if their clothes were drab most of the people had the slow grace
and color of big cats. They paused at tables offering guava paste, pastries,
tubers and fruits. One girl shaving ices was streaked red and green with syrup,
another girl sold sweetmeats from a cheesecloth tent. A locksmith rode a
bicycle that powered a key grinder; he wore goggles for the sparks and shavings
flying around him as he pedaled in place. The music of a radio hanging in the
crook of a pushcart's umbrella floated in the air. "Is
this the way to the airport?" Arkady asked. "The
flight is tomorrow. Usually there's only one Aeroflot flight a week during the
winter, so they don't want you to miss it." Rufo rolled the window down.
"Phew, I smell worse than fish." "Autopsies
stay with you." Arkady had left his overcoat outside the operating theater
and separated the coat now from the paper bag holding Pribluda's effects.
"If Dr. Blas and Detective Osorio speak Russian, why were you along?" "There
was a time when it was forbidden to speak English. Now Russian is taboo.
Anyway, the embassy wanted someone along when you were with the police, but
someone not Russian. You know, I never knew anyone so unpopular so fast as you." "That's
a sort of distinction." "But
now you're here you should enjoy yourself. Would you like to see the city, go
to a cafe, to the Havana Libre? It used to be the Hilton. They have a rooftop
restaurant with a fantastic view. And they serve lobster. Only state
restaurants are allowed to serve lobster, which are assets of the state." "No,
thanks." The idea of cracking open a lobster after an autopsy didn't sit
quite right. "Or
a paladar, a private restaurant. They're small, they're only allowed
twelve chairs but the food is much superior. No?" Perhaps
Rufo didn't get a chance to dine out often, but Arkady didn't think he could
even watch someone eat. "No.
The captain and sergeant were in green uniforms, the detective in gray and
blue. Why was that?" "She's
police and they're from the Ministry of the Interior. We just call it Minint.
Police are under Minint." Arkady
nodded; in "I
don't think so." "Why
was the captain going on about the Russian embassy?" "He
has a point. In the old days Russians acted like lords. Even now, for Cuban
police to ask questions at the embassy takes a diplomatic note. Sometimes the
embassy cooperates and sometimes it doesn't." Most
of the traffic was Russian Ladas and Moskviches spraying exhaust and then,
waddling as ponderously as dinosaurs, American cars from before the Revolution.
Rufo and Arkady got out at a two-story house decorated like a blue Egyptian
tomb with scarabs, ankhs and lotuses carved in stucco. A car on blocks sat in
residence on the porch. "'57
Chevrolet." Rufo looked inside at the car's gutted interior, straightened
and ran his hand over the flecked paint. From the back. "Tail fins."
To the front bumper. "And tits." From
the car key in the bag of effects Arkady knew that Pribluda had a Lada. No
breasts on a Russian car. As
they went in and climbed the stairs the door to the ground-floor apartment
cracked open enough for a woman in a housedress to follow their progress. "A
concierge?" Arkady asked. "A
snoop. Don't worry, at night she watches television and doesn't hear a
thing." "I'm
going back tonight." "That's
right." Rufo unlocked the upstairs door. "This is a protocol
apartment the embassy uses for visiting dignitaries. Well, lesser dignitaries.
I don't think we've had anyone here for a year." "Is
someone from the embassy coming to talk about Pribluda?" "The
only one who wants to talk about Pribluda is you. You like cigars?" "I've
never smoked a cigar." "We'll
talk about it later. I'll be back at midnight to take you to the plane. If you
think the flight to The apartment was furnished with a set
of cream-and-gold dining chairs, a sideboard with a coffee service, a nubby
sofa, red phone, a bookshelf with titles like La Amistad Russo-Cubana
and Fidel y Arte supported by erotic bookends in mahogany. In a
disconnected refrigerator a loaf of Bimbo Bread was spotted with mold. The air
conditioner was dead and showed the carbon smudges of an electrical fire.
Arkady thought he probably showed some carbon smudges of his own. He
stripped from his clothes and showered in a stall of tiles that poured water
from every valve and washed the odor of the autopsy off his skin and from his
hair. He dried himself on the scrap of towel provided and stretched out on the
bed under his overcoat in the dark of the bedroom and listened to the voices
and music that filtered from outside through the closed shutters of the window.
He dreamed of floating among the playing fish of Russian
planes did that, sometimes, if they were so old that their instruments failed.
Although there could be other factors. If a pilot made a second landing
approach he could be charged for the extra fuel expended, so he made only one,
good or not. Or they were overloaded or underfueled. He
was both. Circling
sounded good. Chapter TwoOsorio negotiated a white PNR Lada down a potholed
street. Like her driving, she talked in a quick, surefooted way, deleting any s
in the Russian language that she found superfluous. Since Arkady's Spanish
consisted of gracias and par favor, he wasn't inclined to be
critical even if she had appeared without warning in the early evening and
gathered him in a rush. She
said, "You wanted to see your friend's apartment and so we will." "That's
all I asked." "No,
you asked much more. I think you are refusing to make an identification of your
friend because you think you can force us to investigate." "I
assume you want to be sure you're sending the right body to "You
think it's impossible for him to be out on the water the way we found him? Like
a Cuban?" "It
does strike me as unusual." "What
I find unusual is that when a message comes to you from an embassy in The
round-trip took half his savings. On the other hand, what was he saving for?
Anyway, everything in "Tell
me about this friend of yours," she demanded. "You're
interested?" He got no response to that. Oh well, he was fishing.
"Sergei Sergeevich Pribluda. Workers' family from "Not
drinking?" "He
made flavored vodka, that's part of gardening." "Not
culture, the arts?" "Pribluda?
Hardly." "You
worked together?" "In
a way. He tried to kill me. It was a complicated friendship." Arkady gave
her the short version. "There was a murder in "He
disobeyed an order? There's never an excuse for that." "God
knows. He liked to grow his own vegetables. When his wife died, I would go
round to his place and drink his vodka and eat his cucumbers and he would
remind me that not every guest got to dine with his executioner. Red tomato
pickle, green tomato pickle, peppers and dark bread to eat. Lemongrass and
buffalo grass to flavor the vodka." "You
said he was a Communist." "A
good Communist. He would have joined the Party coup if it hadn't been led, as
he said, by imbeciles. Instead, he drank until it all blew over and then went
into a decline. He said we weren't real Russians anymore, only eunuchs, that
the last Russian, the last true Communist anywhere was Castro." Which
Arkady had taken as drunken ranting at the time, a detail he decided not to
share with Osorio. " He said he was looking for a post outside "When
was the last time you saw the colonel?" "More
than a year ago." "But
you were friends." "My
wife didn't like him." "Why
not?" "An
old score. Why would the captain turn down the picture of Pribluda and his
friends?" Arkady asked. "He
must have his reasons," Osorio said in a tone that suggested she didn't
fathom them either. Jasmine
lay like snow over walls, Dumpsters overflowed with the sweet stench of fruit
skins. Binding the ocean was what Osorio
called the Malecуn, a seawall that protected a six-lane boulevard and an
oceanfront line of three-story buildings. The sea was black, and traffic on the
boulevard consisted of the running lights of cars a block apart. The buildings
were the gaudy group Arkady had seen at daybreak from the other side of the
bay; without their colors, dimly lit by lamps, they were occupied wrecks. In
the shadow of a long arcade Osorio unlocked a street door and led him up worn
stone stairs to a steel door which let them into a living room that could have
been delivered complete from Bottles
of Havana Club rum and Stolichnaya stood under the sink. The
only element out of place was a black man in a white shirt with a red bandanna
around his head and Reebok basketball shoes on his feet sitting in a corner
chair and holding a long, straight walking stick. It took a moment without
breathing for Arkady to realize that the figure was a man-sized effigy. The
face had a crudely molded brow and nose, mouth and ears, making its glass eyes
glitter all the more. "What
is that?" "Chango." "Chango?" "A
Santeria spirit." "Right.
And why would Pribluda have it?" "I
don't know. That's not what we came for," Osorio said. What they had come
for, apparently, was to see how thoroughly she had dusted the apartment for
fingerprints, every door, jamb, knob and pull. Some prints had been lifted,
leaving the transfer tracks of tape. But many more prints were visible as brown
whorls expertly brushed. "You
did all this?" he asked Osorio. "Yes." "Brown
powder?" He hadn't seen that before. "Cuban
fingerprint powder. In this Special Period, imported powders are too expensive.
We make powder from burned palm fronds." She
hadn't missed any opportunity. Under the lamp was a small turtle, armored and
obtuse in a bowl of sand. A perfect pet for a spy, Arkady thought. The shell
was branded with a brown fingerprint. She
said, "Pribluda could have had a protocol house, but he rented here
illegally from the Cuban who lives below." "Why
do you think he did that?" For
an answer she opened the balcony doors, their curtains lifting like wings with
the breeze that rushed in. Arkady stepped out between two aluminum chairs and
the balcony's marble rail and looked out on the vault of the night sky and the
Malecуn, displayed as an elegant curve of boulevard lights. Beyond the seawall
was the flash of a lighthouse and deck lights of a freighter and pilot boat
entering the bay. As his eyes adjusted he made out the fainter gunwale lamps of
fishing boats and, nearer in, a widespread candle glimmer. "Neumбticos"
Osorio said. Arkady
imagined them, a flotilla of inner tubes riding black swells. "Why
wasn't there a police seal on the front door?" he asked. "Because
we are not investigating." "So,
what are we doing here, then?" "Putting
your mind to rest." She
motioned Arkady inside through the parlor and to a corridor, past a laundry
room and into an office that held an ancient wooden desk, computer, printer and
bookshelves crammed with binders from the Cuban Ministry of Sugar and photo
albums. Under the printer, two briefcases, one of brown leather, the other of
extraordinarily ugly green plastic. The walls were covered with maps of "Sugarcane
fields," Osorio said. "Pribluda would have visited them because we
foolishly depended on "I
see." Arkady put the album down and moved on to the map of "Here."
She pointed to where the Malecуn swept east toward the Castillo de "I
like to know where I am." "You
are leaving tonight. It doesn't matter if you know where you are." "True."
He looked to see that the power button of the computer was dusted and prints
lifted. Nice. "You're finished here?" "Yes." He
turned the machine and monitor on and the screen pulsed with an electric,
expectant blue. Arkady did not consider himself computer-adept, but in "Do
you know it?" Osorio asked. "No.
A decent spy is supposed to use a random cipher. We could guess forever." Arkady
went through the desk drawers. Inside were a variety of different pens,
stationery and cigars, maps and magnifying glasses, pen knives and pencils and
brown envelopes with string ties for the diplomatic pouch. No passwords hidden
in a matchbox. "There's
a telephone but no fax machine?" "The
telephone lines in this exchange are from before the Revolution. They're not
clear enough for fax transmission." "The
telephone lines are fifty years old?" "Thanks
to the American embargo and the Special Period –" "Caused
by "Yes."
Osorio snapped off the computer and shut the drawer. "Stop. You are not
here to investigate. You are here only to verify that it has been examined
thoroughly for fingerprints." Arkady
acknowledged the track of prints on door-jambs and desk surfaces, ashtray and
telephone. Osorio motioned him to follow her farther down the corridor where
there was a bedroom containing a narrow bed, nightstand, lamp, bureau, portable
radio, bookcase and, hanging on the walls, a tinted portrait of the deceased
Mrs. Pribluda. Beside it was a photograph of the son in an apron looking up at
a levitating disk of pizza dough. In the top bureau drawer was an empty frame
of snapshot size. "There
was a picture in here?" Arkady asked. Osorio
shrugged. The reading material in the bedroom was Spanish-Russian dictionaries,
guidebooks, copies of Red Star and Pravda, reflecting the
interests of a healthy, unreconstructed Communist. The bureau top was clear but
showed signs of dusting and collection. In the closet were clothes, an ironing
board and an iron dusted for prints. Organized on the floor were rubber
sandals, work shoes and a thin, empty suitcase. Arkady stopped for a moment
when he heard drumming from the apartment below, tectonic motion with a Latin
beat. Osorio
opened the door at the corridor's end to a bathroom of crazed but immaculately
clean tiles. A loofah and soap on a rope hung from the shower rod. The corner
of the medicine cabinet mirror bore one fingerprint in full bloom, and another
peeked from under the flush lever of the toilet. "You
don't miss anything," he told her. "But I wonder why you
bothered." "You
will accept that this is Pribluda's apartment?" "It
seems to be." "And
that the prints we find here are Pribluda's?" "We
haven't really checked them, but let's say I do." "Remember
at the autopsy you told Captain Arcos it was a strange way for a Russian to
fish." "In
an inner tube at sea? Yes, it was a first for me." The
detective led him back to the laundry room and turned on a hanging bulb and
this time he saw, besides a stone basin and clothes line, reels of monofilament
and wire and, on rough shelves of orange crate, jars that contained tangles of
barbed, ugly hooks graded by size. Each jar was dusted and covered with clear
prints. Detective Osorio handed Arkady an index card of lifted fingerprints.
Immediately, Arkady saw a large print with a distinctive loop crossed by a scar
identical with prints on the bottles. On a jar he found the same, carefully
dusted print. "He
was right-handed?" Osorio asked. "Yes." "From
the angles you can see, when he held the jar, the prints on the jar are his
right thumb and index fingers and the prints on the glass are his left thumb
and index finger. They're over all the rooms, doors, mirrors, everywhere. So
you see, your Russian friend was a Cuban fisherman." "The
body, how long was it dead?" "According
to Dr. Blas, maybe two weeks." "No
one's been here in the meantime?" "I
asked the neighbors. No." "That
must be a hungry turtle." Arkady
returned to the front room, out of habit memorizing the apartment layout as he
went: balcony, sitting room, laundry room, office, bathroom, bedroom. Inside
the refrigerator were yogurt, greens, eggplant, pickled mushrooms, boiled
tongue and a half-dozen boxes of color 35-mm film. He fed dillweed to the
turtle and glanced at the black doll that filled the corner chair. " I
have to admit these are new aspects to the man I knew. Did you find his
car?" "No." "Do
you know the make?" "Lada."
She shook her head a little for emphasis. "It doesn't matter. Your flight
is in four hours. The body is being prepared for the plane. You will accompany
it. Agreed?" "I
suppose I will." Osorio
frowned, as if she glimpsed a nuance in the answer. On the ride back she asked, "Tell
me, out of curiosity, as an investigator are you any good?" "Not
particularly." "Why
not?" "Various
reasons. I used to have a fair rate of success, as your captain puts it. But
that was when murders in "You
had so many questions." "Habit."
Going through the motions, Arkady thought, as if his body were a suit that
shuffled to the scene of the crime, any crime, anywhere. He was more irritated with
himself than with her. Why had he started snooping? Enough! Osorio was right.
He felt her eyes on him. Only for a moment, though. Because they were crossing
a power blackout she had to proceed on some streets as carefully as steering a
boat in the dark. In Arkady's mind, the syringe beckoned, the needle of a
compass. When
they halted for goats wandering over the road the headlights illuminated a wall
on which was written "Venceremos!" Arkady tried to say it
silently but Osorio caught him. Venceremos!'
means 'We will win!' In spite of "In
spite of history, geography, the law of gravity?" "In
spite of everything! You don't have signs like that in "We
have signs. Now they say Nike and Absolut." He
got a glance from Osorio no worse than the flame of a blowtorch. When they
reached the embassy apartment the detective told him that a driver would gather
him in two hours for the airport. "And you will have your friend to travel
with." "Let's
hope it really is the colonel." Osorio was stung worse than he'd intended.
"A live Russian, a dead Russian, it's hard to tell the difference." "You're
right." Arkady went up alone. A rumba played
either in the house or out of the house, he could no longer tell where, all he
knew was that constant music made him exhausted. Unlocking
the door, he lit a cigarette, careful not to drop embers on his sleeve. It was
a cashmere coat Irina had given him as a wedding present, a soft black wreath
of a coat that, she said, made him look like a poet. With the thin Russian
shoes and shabby pants that he insisted on wearing he appeared all the more
artistic. It was a lucky coat, impervious to bullets. He had walked through a
shootout on the Arbat like an armored saint; later, he realized that no one had
fired at him precisely because in his miraculous coat he resembled neither
gangster nor militia. More
than that, the coat bore the faint lingering perfume of Irina, a secret,
tactile sense of her, and when the thought of her became unbearable this scent
was a final ally against her loss. It
was odd, Osorio asking whether he was any good. What he hadn't told her was
that in Inattention
was the greatest crime of all. He had seen every sort of victim, from nearly
pristine bodies in their beds to the butchered, monstrously altered dead, and
he had to say that, in general, they would still be lightly snoring or laughing
at a well-told joke if someone had only paid more attention to an approaching
knife or shotgun or syringe. All the love in the world could not make up for
lack of attention. Say
you were on the deck of a ferry crossing a narrow strait, and although the
distance was short, the wind and waves came up and the ship foundered. Into the
cold water you go, and the one you love most is in your grasp. All you have to
do to save her life is not let go. And then you look and your hand is empty.
Inattention. Weakness. Well, the self-condemned lived longer nights than others
for good reason. Because they were always trying to reverse time, to return to
that receding, fateful moment and not let go. At night, when they could
concentrate. In
the dark of the room he saw the polyclinic off the Arbat where he, the
solicitous lover, had taken Irina to treat an infection. She had stopped
smoking – they both had, together – and out of waiting-room nerves asked him to
go to a kiosk for a magazine, Elle or Vogue, it didn't matter
how old. He remembered the fatuous slap of his shoes as he crossed the room
and, outside, the flyers of private vendors stapled to the trees – "For
Sale! Best Medicines!" – which could have explained why drugs were in
short supply in the clinic. Having
bought the magazine, Arkady followed the gauzy stream of seeds drifting back to
the clinic, by which time Irina was dead. The nurses tried to keep him from the
examining room, a mistake. The doctors tried to bar his way to the sheet
covering the table and that was a mistake, too, ending in gurneys being
upended, trays scattered, the medical staffs white caps crushed underfoot,
finally a call to the militia to remove the madman. Which
was sheer melodrama. Irina herself hated melodrama, the demonic excess of a There
were five hours until his plane left. Arkady thought the problem with airlines
was that they didn't allow passengers to carry handguns. Otherwise he could
have brought his and shot himself with a tropical view of dark rooflines rigged
with laundry as full as sails and whole new constellations. What
was the final image Irina had in the clinic? The eyes of the nurse widening as
she understood the depth of her mistake? Not too deep, only intravenous, but
deep enough. They both must have understood. Within seconds, Irina's arm would
have displayed a raised, roseate circle and her eyes begun to itch. Arkady was
allowed to read their statements later, a professional courtesy. Irina
Asanova Renkova opened the door to the hall, interrupted the doctor's
conversation and held up the empty vial. Already her breath came
as a wheeze. While the doctor called for the emergency cart, Irina
shook and sweat, her heart accelerating to changing rhythms like a kite
buffeted by gusts of wind. By the time the cart was located and rolled in, she
was in deep anaphylactic shock, her windpipe shut and her heart
racing, stopping, racing. However, the Adrenalin supposed to be on the
cart, the shot that could have reset her heart like a clock and eased the
constriction of her throat, was misplaced, missing, an innocent error. In a
panic, the doctor tried to open the pharmacy cabinet and snapped off the
key in the lock. Which was the same as a coup de grвce. When
Arkady ripped the sheet off the table at the polyclinic, he was amazed to see
all they had done to Irina in the time it had taken him to walk to a kiosk and
buy a magazine. Her face lay twisted in the disarray of hair that seemed
suddenly so much darker she looked drowned, as if immersed in water for a day.
Tangled and unbuttoned to the waist, her dress revealed her chest bruised by
pounding. Her own hands were fists of agony, and she was still warm. He closed
her eyes, smoothed her hair from her brow and buttoned her dress in spite of
the doctor's insistence that he "not disturb the corpus." As an
answer, he picked up the doctor and used him to crack a plate glass sold as
bulletproof. The impact exploded cabinets, spewed instruments, spilled alcohol
that turned the air silvery and aromatic. When the staff was routed and he had
command of the examining room he made a pillow of his coat for her head. He'd
never considered himself melancholy, not on a Russian scale. It wasn't as if
there was suicide in his family – with the exception of his mother, but she'd
always been more dramatic and direct. Well, there was his father, too, but his
father had always been a killer. Arkady resisted the idea not out of morality
but manners, not wanting to make a mess. And there was the practical question
of how. Hanging was unreliable and he didn't want to leave such a sight for
anyone to discover. Shooting announced itself with such a boastful bang. The
problem was that experts in suicide could teach only by example, and he had
seen enough bungled attempts to know how often there was a slip twixt the cup
and the lip. Best was simply to vanish. Being in He
used to be a better person. He used to care about people. He had always
regarded suicides as selfish, leaving their bodies to frighten other people,
their mess for other people to clean up. He could always start over, devote
himself to a worthy cause, allow himself to heal. The trouble was that he
didn't want the memory to fade. While he still remembered her, her breath in
her sleep, the warmth of her back, the way she would turn to him in the
morning, while he was still insane enough to think he would wake up beside her,
or hear her in the next room or see her on the street, now was the time. If it
inconvenienced other people, well, he apologized. From
his jacket he took the sterile syringe he had stolen in the embalming room.
He'd stolen it on impulse, with no conscious plan, or as if some other part of
his brain was seizing opportunities and setting an agenda that he was only
learning about as it went. Everyone was well aware that Over
the pounding steps of his heart he heard someone knocking on the door. "Renko!"
Rufo called. The
plunger had yet to be pushed in, and what Arkady did not want was to make someone
hear him drop. What he'd die of was like a deep-sea diver's bends, and
convulsions made considerable noise. Like a diver hiding under the surface, he
waited for the visitor to go away. When the knocks only became more insistent
he shouted, "Go away." "Open
the door, please." "Go
away." "Let
me in. Please, it's important." Arkady
drew out the needle, tied a handkerchief around his arm, let his sleeve fall
and dropped the syringe into the pocket of his overcoat before he went to the
door and opened it a crack. "You're
early." "Remember,
we talked about cigars." Rufo managed to squeeze his way in, a foot, a
leg, an arm at a time. He had changed into a one-piece jogging outfit and
carried a box of pale wood sealed with an imposing design of interlocking swords.
"Montecristos. Handmade from the finest tobacco leaf in the world. You
know, for a cigar smoker this is like the Holy Grail." "I
don't smoke cigars." "Then
sell them. In "I'm
not interested and I don't have one hundred dollars." "Fifty
dollars. Usually I wouldn't let them go for so little, but..." Rufo spread
his hands like a millionaire temporarily out of change. "I'm
just not interested." "Okay,
okay." Rufo was disappointed but amenable. "You know, when I was here
before, I think I left my cigarette lighter. Did you see it?" Arkady
felt as if he were trying to leap from a plane and people kept dragging him
back. There was no lighter in the living room. Arkady searched the bathroom and
bedroom, no lighter. When he returned to the front, Rufo was digging through
the paper bag of Pribluda's effects. "There's
no lighter there." "I
wanted to make sure you had everything." Rufo held up the lighter.
"Found it." "Good-bye,
Rufo." "A
great pleasure. I'll be back in an hour. I won't bother you before." Rufo
backpedaled to the door. "No
bother, but good-bye." Arkady
pulled back the coat sleeve from his arm as soon as Rufo went downstairs and
with his thumb he found his vein and snapped it with a finger. The urge to be
done was so strong now that he stayed at the open door to finish the job. The
light on the stairwell below went out. See, now he needed a lighter. Typical
socialist collapse, a bulb here, a bulb there. In the light from the room his
exposed arm looked like marble. A samba drifted from another apartment. If "Yes?"
Arkady asked. "I
forgot the cigars," Rufo said. "Rufo
–" As
soon as Arkady opened the door Rufo carried him past the apartment's
cream-and-gold dining chairs and into the far wall's collected works of Fidel,
and pressed Arkady by the neck to the cabinet with a forearm. Perhaps Rufo was
big but he was quicker on his feet than Arkady had imagined. He pinned Arkady
with one arm and pulled the other until Arkady realized that his overcoat was
pinned to the cabinet by a knife that Rufo was trying to free for a second
thrust. The flapping of Arkady's open coat had misled him. Rufo's other problem
was the embalming syringe that stood from his left ear, which meant that six
centimeters of steel needle was buried in his brain. Arkady had struck back
without thinking because the attack had come so fast. The addition to Rufo's
head slowly gained the Cuban's attention, his eyes lifting sideways for a
glimpse of the barrel and returning perplexed to Arkady. Rufo stepped back to
grope at the syringe like a bear bedeviled by a bee, turning his head and
wandering in a circle, leaning sideways lower and lower until he dropped to a
knee and pushed with the opposite foot, squeezing his eyes shut until he
finally pulled out the needle. Rufo blinked through tears at the long, red
shaft and looked up for an explanation. Arkady
said, "All you had to do was wait." Rufo
rolled onto his back, his eyes still turned to the syringe as if it contained
his last thought. Chapter ThreeNot that she would tell Renko, but Ofelia
Osorio had once worked on a Cuban factory ship built by the Russians and
complete with Russian advisers, so she was not only practiced in dealing with
overbearing "big brothers" from the north but skilled in fending them
off with a gutting knife. Earlier, as an idealistic Young Pioneer she had
served as a delegate to a World Youth Conference in Moscow and toured Lenin's
Tomb, Lumumba University and the subway. She remembered how subway riders drew
in their faces at the sight of someone black. Cubans only touched their
forearms to indicate someone dark. Russians recoiled as if from a snake. At
least, at home. At sea, they were willing enough to experiment. It
wasn't only Russians. Vietnamese investigators came to What
was interesting was that when European and Asian men met Cuban girls in She
lived in a solar, an alley of one-room apartments, aptly named for the
way it soaked in the heat of the day. In spite of the late hour, Muriel and
Marisol, her two daughters, were spread languorously on the cool of the floor
intent on a television show about dolphins. The girls were eight and nine with
dark hair flocked with gold, and the blue glow of the screen lapped up to their
chins like a coverlet. Her mother tipped on the rocking chair pretending to be
asleep, a silent reprimand to Ofelia for coming home so late, letting rice and
beans simmer on the burners. Two could play at that game. It was a scandal that
the mother of a PNR detective would spend the day running errands for everyone
in the solar, going for cigarettes for one house, standing in line for
a pair of shoes for another. "Hustle or starve," the old woman would
respond to protests. "With your big pay and our family rations, your
daughters will eat two days out of three. You know the joke, 'What are the
three achievements of the Revolution? Health, education and sports. What are
the three failures? Breakfast, lunch and dinner.' They say Fidel tells that
joke. Why?" Ofelia only argued to a certain point because her mother was
right. Besides, there were so many other things to argue about with her mother.
The week before, Ofelia had come home to find that a portrait of Che had been
moved to make way for a picture torn from a magazine of Celia Cruz. Who would
displace the greatest martyr of the twentieth century with a fat, old traitor
from Ofelia
wrapped her belt around her holster, stripped and folded her uniform neatly on
a hanger. As a detective she could go in plain clothes or not, but she enjoyed
the reassurance of the blue pants, the gray shirt with PNR shield on the
pocket, the cap with its own embossed shield. Also, wearing a uniform saved on
her clothes, which were basically two pairs of jeans. She slipped through the
curtain into an alcove that served as bathroom, vanity, and shower stall,
automatically turning on the Walkman that hung from a string. The radio was a
prize found on the Playa del Este on a family trip. She had told her girls to
ignore the "love couples" of jineteras and their tourists,
but after Muriel had stumbled upon something as incredible as a radio the size
of a clamshell she and her older sister watched the beach like vultures, ready
to search the sand for treasure as soon as any "couple" left. Water
came in lukewarm rivulets, but it was enough. It ran over her forehead and neck
and trailed from her hands. She was secretly pleased with her hair, which was
cut short and as soft as a cap of Persian lamb. The music was insinuating and
percussive. Your cigar fell down. You told me how good it was and how all
the women liked your big cigar. We hardly started smoking and your cigar fell
down. Ofelia let her shoulders relax and roll to the beat. Water ran out
the drain between her feet. In the mirror above the sink she saw herself begin to
fog. A thirty-year-old woman who still looked like a black cane cutter's
daughter. Although she wasn't vain she hated a tan line – better to be the same
brown all over. She leaned forward to let water run off her hair like threads
of glass. The
detective in her wondered about the dead Russian they found in the water. She
would have expected much more interest from his embassy and the fact that they
seemed ready to dispose of him like a dog hit on the street was practically
proof that he had obviously been up to no good. The bay, after all, was a
perfect vantage point for smuggling, infiltration, to spy on shipping. As the
Comandante himself said, there was no more vicious enemy than a man you had
once called friend. The
new Russian was a bit of a contradiction. The plush coat was a sure sign of
corruption, while the poor state of the rest of his clothes indicated a
complete disregard for appearance. One moment he seemed a reasonably alert
investigator, and the next he disappeared into some private train of thought.
He was pale but with eyes deep-set in shadow. The
soap was a sliver her mother had obtained from a friend who worked in a hotel
and so luxurious that Ofelia drew out the shower, the most private moment of
the day despite the voices from other apartments in the solar. One
song's worth was what she allowed herself to save the batteries. Dressed
in a pullover and jeans, she ladled rice to Muriel and beans to Marisol and an
obscure, deep-fried gristle that her mother refused to identify. From the refrigerator
she took a plastic Miranda soda bottle filled with chilled water. "On
the cooking show today they showed how to fry a steak from grapefruit
skin," her mother said. " They turned a grapefruit skin into steak.
Isn't that amazing? This is a revolution that is more amazing all the
time." "I'm
sure it was good," Ofelia said. " Under the circumstances." "They
ate it with gusto. With gusto." "This
is also good." Ofelia sawed into the gristle. "What did you say it
was?" "Mammalian.
Did you meet any dangerous men today, someone who might kill you and leave your
daughters without a mother?" "One.
A Russian." It
was her mother's turn to be exasperated. "A Russian, worse than a
grapefruit skin. Why did you join the police? I still don't understand." "To
help the people." "The
people here hate you. You don't see anyone from "It's
a sugar-mill town." "In
"You
can't move to This
was one issue where Ofelia could always count on her daughters' support. "We
want to be here." "Nobody
wants to be in Hershey. That's a sugar-mill town." Her
mother said, " "Grandmother!" Her
mother relented, and they all quietly sawed the meat on their plates until the
old woman asked, "So what does this Russian look like?" It
struck Ofelia. "Once in Hershey you pointed out a priest who was defrocked
for falling in love with a woman." "I'm
surprised you remember, you were so little. Yes, she was a beautiful woman,
very religious, and it was a sad story all around." "He
looks like that." Her
mother mulled it over. "I can't believe you remembered that." Just
when Ofelia thought that family tension had subsided enough for a pleasant
evening meal, however late, the phone rang. Theirs was the only phone in the solar,
and she suspected her mother of using it to run the neighborhood lottery. The
illegal Cuban lottery was rigged to the legal Venezuelan lottery, and the bet
takers with phones had a great advantage. Ofelia rose and moved slowly around
the girls' chairs toward the phone on the wall to let her mother know she
wasn't going to run for anyone's nefarious business. Her mother maintained an
expression of innocence until Ofelia hung up. "What
was it?" "It's
about the Russian," Ofelia said. "He killed someone." "Ah,
you were meant for each other." When she arrived at the apartment,
Captain Arcos was slamming down the phone and telling Renko, "Your embassy
cannot provide you protection. There will be expressions of anger from the
Cuban people to those who have sold them out. To those who plant the Judas kiss
on us for thirty pieces of silver. If it were up to me, I would not let a
single Russian on the street. I could not guarantee the safety of a Russian,
not even in the safest capital in the world, because Cuban anger is so deep.
You crawl to the camp of the enemy and you warn Cubans we better do the same.
That history has left us behind. No! Arcos
had worked himself into such a rage his face balled like a fist. His black
sergeant Luna stood by, slouching, ominous and bored at the same time. Renko sat
calmly wrapped in his coat. Rufo sprawled in his silvery running suit, his gaze
aimed at a syringe clasped in his left hand. What amazed Ofelia was the lack of
technicians. Where was the normal bustle of video and light operators, the
forensics experts and detectives? Although she didn't question the authority of
the two men from the ministry, she made a point of loudly snapping on surgical
gloves. "The
captain speaks Russian, too," Renko told Ofelia. "It's a night of
surprises." Arcos
was in his forties, Ofelia thought, exactly the generation who had wasted their
youth in learning Russian, and been bitter ever since. Not an insight she'd
share with Renko. "He
has a point, though," Renko told her. "My embassy does not seem
inclined to help me." "This
is the unbelievable statement he gives us," Arcos said. "That Rufo
Pinero, a man with no criminal record, an honored Cuban sportsman, a driver and
interpreter for Renko's own embassy, approached him with the intent to sell
cigars, was told 'no' and, anyway, returned to this apartment here and, without
warning or provocation, attacked Renko with two weapons, a knife and a syringe,
and in a fight accidentally drove a needle through his own head." "Are
there any witnesses?" asked Ofelia. "Not
yet," Arcos said, as if he might dig one up still. Ofelia
had not worked with the captain before but she recognized the type, better at
vigilance than competence and promoted well beyond his natural abilities. She
couldn't expect any help from Luna; the sergeant seemed to regard everyone,
including Arcos, with the same dark disregard. She
unzipped Rufo's running suit and found that under it he was still completely
dressed in the shirt and pants he had been wearing at the ILM. In warm weather
that made very little sense. In his shirt pocket was a plastic case and
passport-sized ID that read: "Rufo Pйrez Pinero; Fecha de nacimiento:
2/6/56; Profesiуn: traductor; Casado: no; Numero de habitation: 155 Esperanza,
La Habana; Status Militar: reserva; Hemotipo: B." Glued in a corner
was a photo of a younger, leaner Rufo. In the same case was a ration card with
columns for months and rows for rice, meat, beans. She emptied Rufo's pockets
of dollars, pesos, house and car keys, handling everything by the edge. She
thought she remembered his having a cigarette lighter, too. Cubans noticed
that. For some reason she also had the conviction that the Russian had already
gone through Rufo's pockets, that she wasn't going to find anything that he
hadn't already. "Has
the investigation started now?" Renko asked. "There
will be an investigation," Arcos promised, "but of what is
the question. Everything you do is suspicious: your attitude to Cuban
authority, reluctance to identify the body of a Russian colleague, now this
attack on Rufo Pinero." "My
attack on Rufo?" "Rufo's
the one who is dead," Arcos insisted. "The
captain thinks I came from Ofelia
was unhappy because basic protocol was to work a crime scene as soon as
possible and Luna had done nothing. She stepped back for a wider view and saw a
knife lodged chest-high in the side panel of a wooden cabinet yet not a book in
it disturbed, not even Fidel y Arte, which was a heavy presentation
book with valuable plates. Neither a chair broken nor a bruise on Renko, as if
the confrontation had been over in an instant. "Your
friend is a spy and you are a murderer," Luna laid into Renko. "This
is intolerable!" Without
dislodging it, Ofelia examined the knife in the cabinet. The weapon was of
Brazilian manufacture, spring-loaded with an ivory handle and silver butt, the
blade double-edged and sharp as a razor. Driven into the wood was a black thread. Arcos
said, "I told the embassy, Renko is like any other visitor, he enjoys no
diplomatic protection. This apartment is like any Cuban apartment, it does not
enjoy extraterritorial protection. This is a Cuban matter, completely up to
us." "Good,"
said Renko. "It was a Cuban that tried to kill me." "Don't
be difficult. Since the facts of this matter are so cloudy and you are alive
and no harm done, you should consider yourself lucky if you are allowed to
leave "You
mean leave "There
will be another in a week. In the meantime, we will continue to
investigate." The
Russian asked Ofelia, "Would you consider this an investigation?" She
hesitated because she had found in the lapel of his black coat a narrow cut in
the wrong place for a buttonhole. Her pause incensed Arcos. "This
is my investigation, run as I see fit, considering many factors, such as
whether you surprised Rufo, stabbed him with the needle and, when he was dead,
placed it in his hand. It could still have your prints." "Do
you think so?" "Rigor
mortis has not set in. We'll look." Before
Ofelia could stop him, the captain knelt and tried to bend Rufo's fingers off
the syringe. Rufo held tight, the way dead men sometimes did. Luna shook his head
and smiled. Renko
told Ofelia, "Inform the captain it's a death spasm, not rigor mortis, but
now he'll have to wait for the rigor to come and go. Depending on how much he
wants to wrestle with Rufo, of course." Which
only made Arcos pull harder. She took Renko back to Pribluda's flat
on the Malecуn for lack of a better place for him to stay. He didn't have the
money for a hotel, the embassy's apartment was now a crime scene, and until he
officially identified Pribluda he would only be staying in the flat of an
absent friend. For
a minute she and Renko stood on the balcony to watch a solitary car sweep along
the boulevard and waves lap against the breast of the seawall. Out on the water
lamplights spilled from fishing boats and neumбticos. "You've
been on the ocean before?" Ofelia asked. "The
"You
don't have to be sorry for me," she said abruptly. " The captain
knows what he's doing." Which
sounded hollow even to her, but Renko relented, "You're right." He
was wrapped in his black coat, like a shipwrecked man happy with the only
article he'd rescued. She felt a conspiracy of sorts between the two of them
because he hadn't mentioned to Arcos and Luna the earlier visit to Pribluda's
flat. "The
captain doesn't usually investigate homicides, does he?" "No." "I
remember newsreels of Castro's first trip to "I
think you are in a confused state. Your friend dies and now you are attacked.
This could give you a very distorted view of Cuban life." "It
could." "And
be upsetting." "Certainly
distracting." She
didn't know what he could mean by that. "There
were no other witnesses?" "No." "You
answered the door and Rufo attacked you without warning." "That's
right." "With
two weapons?" "Yes." "That
sounds implausible." "That's
because you're a good detective. But do you know what I've found?" "What
have you found?" "I
have found from my own experience that – in the absence of other witnesses – a
simple, resolutely maintained lie is wonderfully difficult to break." Chapter FourAs soon as Arkady was alone in Pribluda's
flat he went to the office and opened the computer, which immediately
demanded the password. An access code that combined up to twelve letters and
numbers was virtually unbreakable, but a code also had to be remembered, and
this was where the humans Arkady knew tended to use their birthday or address.
Arkady tried the names of the colonel's wife, son, saint (although Pribluda was
an atheist, he had always enjoyed a bottle on his saint's name day), favorite
writers (Sholokhov and Gorky), favorite teams (Dynamo and Central Army). Arkady
tried 06111968 for the date of Pribluda's Party membership, a chemical
C12H22011 for sugar, a homesick 55-45-37-37 for the coordinates (latitude and
longitude, minutes and seconds) of Arkady
discovered he fostered a killer's calculation hat even if his story was
implausible, the truth was no more plausible. He was also a little bemused by
his own reaction to the attack. He had defended himself instinctively, the way
a man about to dive resists being pushed. He
had no idea why he had been attacked except that it had to do with his friend
Pribluda. Not that Pribluda was a friend in the ordinary sense. They shared no
tastes, interests, politics. In fact, truth be told, Pribluda was in many ways
a terrible man. Arkady
could imagine him now bringing out the vodka and saying, "Renko, old pal,
you're fucked. You are in a crazy country, in a foreign land where you know
nothing, including the language." Pribluda would hunch forward to touch
glasses and grin that ghastly smile of his. He had the habit of loosening a
button, a collar, a cuff with each glassful, as if drinking was serious work.
"All you can be sure of is that you know nothing. No one will help you
because of your brown eyes. Everyone who steps forward as a friend will be an
enemy. Everyone who offers to help is hiding a knife behind his back.
Cheers!" The colonel would make a grand gesture of throwing the vodka's
cap into the sea. That was his idea of panache. "Do you appreciate
logic?" "I
love logic," Arkady might say. "This
is logic: Rufo had no reason to kill you. Rufo tried to kill you. Ergo, someone
sent Rufo. Ergo, that someone will send someone else." "A
nice thought. Was that a present to take home?" Arkady
would nod in the direction of the man-sized doll brooding in the corner. The
way its shadow shifted when the breeze pushed the lamp was a bit unnerving.
" Charming." He fished from his coat a piece of note – paper on which
he had written Rufo's address and the house key he had lifted off the body before
Luna arrived. "What
I think you should do," Pribluda would steamroll on, "is lock
yourself with a gun and oranges, bread and water in a room at the embassy,
maybe a bucket for personal needs, and don't open the door until you go to the
airport." In
his mind, Arkady asked, "Spending a week in "No.
Killing Rufo when you were going to kill yourself, that's
perverse." Arkady
went down the hall to the office and returned with a map of the city that he
spread under a lamp. "You're
leaving?" Pribluda was always horrified when Arkady quit before the bottom
of the bottle. Arkady
searched for a street called Esperanza and wrote down Rufo's address on a piece
of paper. He thought, I'm not just going to sit and wait. I also have your car
key. If you want to help, tell me where the car is. Or give me your code. Pribluda's
ghost, insulted, disappeared. Arkady, on the other hand, was wide awake. Stepping onto the street in a foreign
city in the middle of the night was diving into a dark pool without knowing how
deep the water was. An arcade of columns ran the length of the block, and he
didn't emerge into faint, gassy light until he reached the lamp at the corner.
He continued along the boulevard because its long curve against the sea
simplified the problem of orientation. Although
he listened for the stir of a car or a footfall, all he heard was his own echo
and the surge of the ocean on the other side of empty traffic lanes. On the way
he passed a mural of Castro painted up the side of a three-story building. The
figure appeared to be a giant walking through his city, his head obscured in
the dark above streetlamp level, wearing his characteristic military fatigues,
legs in mid-stride, right hand tossing a salute toward an unseen someone vowing
"A Sus Ordenes, Comandante!" Well, Arkady thought, the
Comandante and he made a strange pair of insomniacs, a furtive Russian and a
sleepless giant on patrol. Six
blocks on was a dark hotel front and a taxi, the driver's head cradled on the
steering wheel. Arkady shook the man and, when one eye squinted open, held up
Rufo's address and a five-dollar bill. Arkady
sat up front as the taxi flew like a bat through the blackout, the driver
yawning the entire way as if nothing short of a collision was worth waking up
for, slowing only when mounds of urban rubble loomed in the headlights. Rufo's
address was stenciled on the front of a low, windowless house on a narrow
street. The cab fumbled away while, with Rufo's lighter, Arkady found the right
key; when he had taken the house key off the dead man before calling the PNR
Arkady noticed how like his own house key Rufo's was, a Russian design with a
star stamped on the grip, no doubt a souvenir of socialist commerce. It did
occur to him that if Detective Osorio had tried to enter with the keys he had
left on Rufo she was frustrated and annoyed. The
door opened to a room narrow enough to make claustrophobia creep up his back.
He walked the lighter flame between an unmade daybed and a low table with a
ceramic ashtray-and-nude and a stack of TV and stereo, tape deck and VCR. A
minibar looked ripped out of a hotel suite. A pedestal sink was lined with
minoxidil, vitamins and aspirin. An armoire held, besides clothes, boxes of
Nike and New Balance running shoes, cigar boxes, a library of videotapes and
copies of Windows '95, a regular emporium. He opened a door to glimpse a filthy
toilet, ducked back into the room and moved more slowly. Tacked to the walls
were newspaper articles headlined gran exito de equipo cubano and,
over a photo of a young world-beating Rufo raising his boxing gloves, Pinero
triunfa en USSR! Framed pictures showed groups of men in team jackets in
Red Square, at Big Ben, the Daysi
32-2007 Susy
30-4031 Vi.
Aflt. 2300 Kid
Choc. 5/1 Vi.
HYC 2200 The
only sense Arkady could make of the list was that he had been the visitor
arriving on Aeroflot at 2300 hours, eleven at night, and that there seemed to
be another visitor from Angola due at almost the same late hour. Anyway, the
list was a lot of phone numbers for a room with no phone or phone jack. Arkady
remembered that Rufo had had a cell phone when they met at the airport,
although when Arkady had searched Rufo's body later, the phone was gone. On
a hook hung an elegant, ivory-colored straw hat with "Made in Most
important, he found no reason for Rufo to try to kill him. Rufo had put some
planning into the attack. The running suit made sense for the same reason
painters wore coveralls, and he felt that the same thought had registered with Osorio.
But why bother killing someone who would be gone from the scene in a matter of
hours? Was Rufo after something or was it simply open season on Russians in As
he stepped outside, the light of dawn showed next to the apartment a scarred
wall in bullfight red that said Gimnasio Atares. At the curb in a PNR
sedan was Detective Osorio. She fixed her eyes on Arkady long enough to make
him squirm before she put out her hand. "The key." "Sorry."
Arkady fished in his pocket and gave her the key to his apartment in "Get
in the car," Osorio said. "I would like to lock you into a cell but
Dr. Blas wants to talk to you." With his trimmed beard and whiff of carbolic
soap, Dr. Blas was the Pluto of a personal, genial underworld, welcoming Arkady
back to the Institute de Medicina Legal and praising Osorio. "Our
Ofelia is very intelligent. If Hamlet had an Ofelia half as smart he would have
solved the murder of his father the king in short order. Of course, they
wouldn't have had much of a play." Two young women in snug IML T-shirts
walked by in the corridor; the doctor's eyes approved. "We were trained by
the FBI in "Is
that it?" Arkady asked. He
thought his problem was that Rufo had tried to kill him, but the director
seemed to have a bigger picture. They walked by a glass case with two head
shots of men with slack mouths and closed eyes. "Missing
persons and unidentified dead. For the public to see." Blas picked up his
thread. "When you think of They
passed a handcuffed man in a chair. He lifted a face of old scars and fresh
bruises. "Waiting
for his psychological evaluation," Blas explained. "We have other
experts in forensic biology, dentistry, toxicology, immunology. A Russian might
find this hard to believe. You used to be the teacher and we used to be the
students. Now we are the teachers in Africa, Central America, "He
is reacting to the attack on himself," she said. "My
reaction has probably been colored by that," Arkady conceded. "Or
finding Pribluda dead. Or jet lag." ' Blas
said, "You have a week more here. You will adjust. It was very
enterprising of you to go to Rufo's. Ofelia said you might. She's intuitive, I
think." "I
think so, too," Arkady said. "If
what you say is true, Rufo inadvertently killed himself by his own hand during
a brief, violent struggle?" "Accidental
suicide." "Very
much so. But that does not answer the question of why Rufo attacked
you. I find this very troubling." "Between
us, I'm troubled too." Blas
stopped at the head of a stairway from which rose a sour coolness like the odor
of spoiled milk. " The nature of the attack with a knife and a
syringe is so peculiar. There was an embalming syringe stolen here yesterday,
although I don't understand when Rufo could have taken it. You were with him
the whole time, weren't you?" "I
went to the rest room once. He could have taken it then." "Yes,
you're right. Well, it was probably that syringe, although I don't understand
why a murderer would choose to use it when he already had a better weapon. Do
you?" Arkady
gave the matter some thought. "Did Rufo have any record of violence?" "I
know the opinion of Captain Arcos in this matter, but I have to be honest.
Better to say that Rufo had a record of not being caught. He was a jinetero,
a hustler. The kind who hangs around tourists and finds someone a girl, changes
their money, gets them cigars. Supposedly very successful with German and
Swedish women, secretaries on vacation. May I be direct?" "Please." "It
is said that he would advertise to foreign women that he had a pinga
like a locomotive." "What
is a pinga?" Arkady asked. "Well,
I'm no psychiatrist, but a man who has a pinga like a locomotive
doesn't use a syringe to kill someone." "More
likely a machete," Osorio spoke up. "You
can't see many of those. How many people would have machetes in the city?" "Every
Cuban has a machete," Blas said. "I have three in my own
closet." "I
have one," Osorio said. Arkady
stood corrected. Blas
asked, "You can't shed any light on this syringe?" "No." "Understand
I am not a detective, I am not the PNR, I am only a forensic pathologist, but I
was trained by my Russian instructors of long ago to think in an analytical
fashion. I believe we are not so different, so I will show you something to
build your confidence in us. And you may even learn something from us." "Such
as?" Blas
rubbed his hands like a host with a program. "We will start where you came
in." The morgue had six drawers, a freezer
and a glass-faced cooler, all with broken handles beaded with condensation.
Blas said, "The refrigerators still work. We had an American pilot from
the invasion at the Blas
rolled out a drawer. Inside, the purple body identified as Pribluda was
rearranged: skull, jaw and right foot between the legs, a plastic sack of
organs where the head should be. Left open, the stomach cavity released a
zoo-like bouquet that made Arkady's eyes smart, and the whole body had been
placed in a zinc tub to keep the liquefying flesh from overflowing. Arkady lit
a cigarette and inhaled deeply. That was reason to smoke right there. So far,
Arkady's confidence was not rising. "We
did have funding promised from our Russian friends for a new refrigeration
system. You can understand how important refrigeration is in "No,
but I think that after a week in the water and having body parts switched, most
people look alike." "I
was instructed by Captain Arcos not to perform biopsies. However, I think I am
still the director here and so I did. The brain and organs show no evidence of
drugs or toxins. That is not conclusive because the body was in the water such
a long time, but there was another aspect. The heart muscle displayed definite
signs of necrosis, which is a strong indicator of heart attack." "A
heart attack while floating in the water?" "A
heart attack after a lifetime of eating and drinking like a Russian, an attack
so massive and so quick he had no time even to thrash, which was why all the
fishing gear was still on board. Did you know that life expectancy is twenty
years less in "Have
you ever seen neumбticos die of a heart attack before?" "No,
mostly shark attacks. But this is the first time I've heard of a Russian neumбtico." "Don't
you think that's worth an investigation?" "You
must understand our situation. We have no crime scene and no witnesses, which
makes an investigation very discouraging, very expensive. And no crime. Worse,
he's Russian and the embassy refuses to cooperate. They say no one worked with
Pribluda, no one knew him and that he was merely an innocent student of the
sugar industry. For us even to visit the embassy requires a diplomatic note.
All the same we asked for a photograph of Pribluda, and since we didn't receive
that, we have matched him and the body to the best possible certainty. There is
nothing more we can do. We must consider him identified and you must take him
home. We will have no more 'cigars' here." "Why
ask the embassy for a photograph? I showed you one." "Yours
wasn't good enough." "You
can't match anything to the way he looks now." Blas
let a smile win his face. He rolled the body drawer shut. " I have a
surprise for you. I want you to return home with the right idea of On the second floor Blas led Arkady and
Osorio into an office with the faded title antropologia on the door. Arkady's
first impression was of a catacomb, the remains of martyrs assiduously sorted
by shelves of skulls, pelvises, thigh bones, metacarpals lying hand in hand,
spines tangled like snakes. Dust swam around a lampshade, the light reflected
by case after case of neatly pinned tropical beetles iridescent as opals. A
fer-de-lance with open fangs coiled within a specimen jar topped by a tarantula
on tiptoe. What looked like dominoes were burned bones in gradations from white
to charcoal black. On the wall the baroque jaws of a shark outgrinned a jawbone
of human teeth filed to points. The cord for the ceiling fan was the braided
hair of a shrunken head. No catacomb, Arkady changed his mind, more a jungle
trading post. A sheet covered something humming on a desk, and if it were a
great ape going philosophical Arkady wouldn't have been surprised. "This
is our anthropological laboratory," said Blas. "Not a large one, but
here we determine by bones and teeth the age, race and sex of a victim. And
different poisonous or violent agents." "The
Caribbean has a number you won't see in "We
are deficient in sharks," Arkady said. "And,"
Blas said, "by insect activity how long the victim has been dead. In other
climates, different insects start at different times. Here in "Fascinating." "Fascinating
but perhaps not what an investigator from "There
are different laboratories for different places." "Exactly!"
Blas picked up the jawbone of pointed teeth. " Our population is, let's
say, unique. A number of African tribes practiced scarification and sharpening
teeth. The Abakua, for example, was a secret leopard society from the "It
conceivably might." "But
to a Cuban a skull and an ax covered in animal blood may be a religious shrine.
The detective can tell you all about it if you want." Osorio squirmed at
the suggestion and Blas went on. "So when we make a psychological analysis
of a person we use the "Oh."
Not that Arkady had ever used the "Nevertheless"
– Blas lifted the cloth – "let me prove that, in spite of superstitions, Unveiled
on a desk was a 486 computer hooked up to a scanner and printer, each running,
and an 8-mm video camera mounted lens down above a stand. Resting in a ring on
the stand and tilted up to the camera was a skull with a hole in the center of
the forehead. The cranium was wired together. Missing teeth made for a gaping
cartoon smile. Arkady
had only read about a system like this. "This is a German identification
technique." "No,"
said Blas, "this is a Cuban technique. The German system, including
software, costs over fifty thousand dollars. Ours costs a tenth as much by
adapting an orthopedic program. In this case, for example, we found a head with
teeth hammered out." Blas touched the keyboard, and on the screen appeared
a color picture of a Dumpster stuffed with palm fronds topped by a decapitated
head. At a keystroke the police and Dumpster were replaced by four photographs
of different men, one getting married, another dancing energetically at a
party, a third holding a basketball, the last slouching on a swaybacked horse.
"Four missing men. Which could it be? A murderer might have been confident
once in believing a face in advanced decay with no teeth could not be matched
to any photograph or records. After all, here in Arkady
chose the bridegroom, and at once the man's image filled the screen, eyes
popping from nervousness, hair as carefully arranged as the frills on his
shirt. Dragging
a mouse on the pad, Dr. Blas outlined the groom's head, hit a key and erased
his shirt and shoulders. At the tap of a key, the head floated to the left of
the screen, and on the right appeared the skull as it stared up at the video
camera like a patient waiting for the dentist's drill. Blas repositioned the
skull so that it gazed up at the camera lens at precisely the same angle as the
face. He enlarged the face to the same size, enhanced the shadows so that flesh
melted and eyes sank into hollows, placed white darts on the skull at jaw and
crown of the skull, at the outside points of the brow, within the orbital and
nasal cavities, across the cheekbones and the corners of the mandible. In
comparison to the laborious reconstruction of faces from skulls that Arkady
knew in "The
numbers are discrepancies in measurement between the missing man and the skull
when they are exactly matched. So we prove, scientifically, they could not
possibly be the same man." Blas
started over again, this time with photo no. 3, a boy smiling proudly in a
Chicago Bulls shirt, one hand weighing a basketball. Blas sliced off, enlarged
and enhanced the boy's head, then brought up and positioned the skull on the
screen. The distances between marker darts came up virtually the same, and when
Blas merged the two images the numbers ratcheted down to zero and a single face
that was both dead and alive looked out from the screen. If ever there was a
picture of a ghost this was it. "Now
our missing man is not missing anymore and you see that even if things are
supposed to be impossible in "That's
why you wanted a photograph of Pribluda?" "To
make a match to the body we took from the bay, yes. But the photograph you
brought was insufficient and the Russian embassy refuses to provide
another." There
was an expectant wait until Arkady picked up the cue. "I
don't need a diplomatic note to go to the embassy." Blas
acted as if the thought had never occurred to him. "If you want to. The
Revolution always needs volunteers. I can write the embassy address, and any
car on the street will probably take you there for two dollars. If you have
American dollars this is the best transportation system in the world." Arkady
was awed by the doctor's ability to put a good gloss on anything. His attention
returned to the screen. "What was the head cut off with?" "In
the Dumpster?" said Blas. " A machete. The machete cut is a distinct
wound. No sawing." "Did
you identify the murderer?" Osorio
said, "Not yet. We will, though." "How
many homicides a year did you say?" "In
"How
many in the heat of passion?" "Overall,
a hundred." "Of
the rest, how many for revenge?" "Maybe
fifty." "Robbery?" "Maybe
forty." "Drugs?" "Five." "Leaving
five. How would you characterize them?" "Organized
crime, without a doubt. Paid murders." "How
organized? What were the weapons in those cases?" "Occasionally
a handgun. The Taurus from "Machetes?"
To Arkady's ear, that did not have the ring of modern homicide. True, he
remembered when any Russian murderer who wiped his knife after slicing a
victim's throat was rated a smooth operator, back in the curiously innocent
days before the worldwide spread of money transfers and remote-control bombs.
Which left "We
have a ninety-eight percent homicide solution rate," Blas said. " The
best in the world." "Enjoy
it," Arkady said. Chapter FiveThe Russian embassy was a thirty-story
tower with an architectural suggestion of squared chest and armored head
looming like a monster of stone that had crossed continents, waded through
oceans and finally stopped dead in its tracks ankle-deep among the green palm
trees of Havana. Plate glass shone on its face, but overall the building stood
in its own shroud of shadow and stillness. Inside, office after office was
stripped to bare walls and phone jacks. Ghosts lingered in the bald spots and
stains of hallway runners, in the hazy, unwashed bottles standing along the
walls, in a ventilation system that spread an ancient reek of cigarettes. From
the office of Vice Consul Vitaly Bugai, Arkady looked down at a world of
white-colonnaded mansions, embassies French, Italian and Vietnamese, their roofs
strung with elaborate radio dipoles and antennae, satellite dishes framed by
gardens of pink hibiscus. Bugai
was a young man with small features squeezed into the center of a soft face. He
wore a silk robe and Chinese sandals and floated in a liquid atmosphere of
air-conditioning, moving, it seemed to Arkady, by contradictory impulses;
relief that another Russian national was not dead and irritation that he would
have to deal with the survivor for another week. He was also, perhaps, a little
surprised that any vestige of Russian authority had been able to defend itself. "Those
houses were all from before the Revolution." Bugai joined Arkady at the
window. "They were rich people. The biggest Cadillac dealership in the
world was in "I
think I've seen some of those cars." "Still,
this is not a Black Hole. A Black Hole would be a posting in "It's
not like the old days, either?" Arkady asked. "Not
at all. Between technicians and military support we had twelve thousand
Russians here and a diplomatic staff of another thousand in attaches, deputies,
cultural liaisons, KGB, secretaries, clerks, communications, couriers,
security. We had Soviet housing, Soviet schools and camps for Russian children.
Why not? We put thirty billion rubles into "Not
conclusively." "It
was conclusive enough for the Cubans. I've talked to a Captain Arcos and he
seemed very reasonable, considering he pulled a Russian out of "A
dead Russian." "As
I understand it, death was caused by a heart attack. A tragic but natural
event." "There's
nothing natural about Pribluda floating in the bay." "With
spies these things happen." "Officially,
he was a sugar attache." "Right.
Well, all he had to do was drive around the island and visit some cane fields
and see the Cubans won't make their sugar quota, because they never have. As
for secret intelligence, the Cuban army is now moving missiles with oxen
instead of trucks, that's all you need to know about that. The faster we get
this little episode behind us the better." "There
is the other little episode of Rufo and me." "Well,
who knows what you are? We've lost a driver and an apartment thanks to
you." "I'll
stay at Pribluda's. It's empty." Bugai
pursed his lips. "That's not the worst solution. I intend to keep this
problem as far from the embassy as possible." Arkady
discovered that talking to Bugai was much like trying to catch a jellyfish;
every time he groped for an answer the vice consul floated out of reach. "Before
the Cubans even found the body someone here at the embassy knew that Pribluda
was in trouble and sent me a fax. It was unsigned. Who could that be?" "I
wish I knew." "You
can't find out?" "I
don't have enough staff to investigate my staff." "Who
assigned Rufo to me?" "The
Cuban Ministry of the Interior assigned Rufo to us. Rufo was their
man, not ours. There was no one else on hand when you arrived in the middle of
the night. I didn't know exactly who you were and I still don't know exactly
who you are. Of course, I've called "What
I'm involved in is identifying Pribluda. The Cubans asked for photographs of
him and wanted to come to the embassy. You refused." "Well,
this is my field. First, we had no photographs. Second, the Cubans always use any
opportunity to gain access to the embassy and poke around sensitive areas. It's
a state of siege. We were the comrades, now we're the criminals. Punctured
tires in the middle of the night. Being pulled over for shakedowns when the
police see Russian license plates." "Like
"But
in "Where's
the ambassador?" "We're
between ambassadors." Arkady
reached for a notepad from the desk and wrote, "Where is the resident
intelligence agent Pribluda reported to?" "It's
no big secret," Bugai said. " The chief of guards is here, he's just
muscle. But the chief of security has been in "When
Pribluda communicated with "We
send encrypted E-mail on a hooded machine that wipes clean, not even a ghost on
the hard drive once you delete. But not that many messages are encrypted. The
usual faxes, calls and E-mail are plain text on ordinary machines, and I would
love a shredder that actually worked." Arkady produced the photograph of
the Havana Yacht Club to ask about Pribluda's Cuban friends, but the vice
consul barely glanced. " We have no Cuban friends. It used to be an event
when a Russian artist visited Arkady
put the Yacht Club away. " The Cubans need a better picture of Pribluda.
The embassy must have a security photograph of him." "That
would be up to our friend in "A
month?" "Or
more." Bugai
had kept retreating and Arkady had kept advancing until he stepped on a pencil
that broke with a sharp crack. The vice consul jumped and looked not as cool as
jellyfish anymore, more like an egg yolk at the sight of a fork. His
nervousness reminded Arkady that he had killed a man; whether in self-defense
or not, killing someone was a violent act and not likely to attract new
friends. "What
was Pribluda, your sugar attache, working on?" "I
can't possibly tell you that." "What
was he working on?" Arkady asked more slowly. "I
don't think you have the authority," Bugai began, and amended as Arkady
started around the desk. " Very well, but this is under protest. There's a
problem with the sugar protocol, a commercial thing you wouldn't understand.
Basically they send us sugar they can't sell anywhere else, and we send them
oil and machinery we can't unload anywhere else." "That
sounds normal." "There
was a misunderstanding. Last year the Cubans demanded negotiations of
agreements already signed. With such bad feelings between the two countries we
let them bring in a third party, a Panamanian sugar trader called AzuPanama.
Everything was resolved. I don't know why Pribluda was looking into that." "Pribluda,
the sugar expert?" "Yes." "And
a photograph of Pribluda?" "Let
me look," Bugai said before Arkady took another step. He backed to the
bookshelves and retrieved a leather album, which he opened on the desk,
flipping through ring-bound pages of mounted photographs. " Guests and
social events. May Day. Mexican Cinco de Mayo. I told you Pribluda didn't come
to these things. Fourth of July with the Americans. The Americans don't have an
embassy, only a so-called Interests Section bigger than an embassy. October,
Cuban Now
we have only a few children, but they demand Santa Claus and a Christmas
party." In
the photograph two girls with bows in their hair sat on the lap of a bearded
man in a plush red suit, a round figure with cheeks rouged to a cheery glow.
Presents ringed a tinsel tree. Behind the children spread a buffet line of
adults balancing plates of cheeses and Christmas cakes and glasses of sweet
champagne. At the far end someone who might have been Sergei Pribluda shoved
his whole hand into his mouth. "The
heat in that suit was unbelievable." "You
wore it?" Arkady took a closer look at the picture. "You don't look
well." "Congestive
heart failure. A bad valve." Kneading his arm, Bugai went around his desk and
rooted through drawers. "Pictures. I'll make a list of possible names and
addresses. Mostovoi is the embassy photographer, then there is Olga." "You
should be in "No,
I angled for Elmar Mostovoi had a monkey's round mug
and curved fingernails and a hairpiece of frizzled orange that sat on his head
like a souvenir. He was in his mid-fifties, Arkady guessed, but still in good
shape, the sort who did push-ups on his fingertips, wore his shirt open and
rolled up his pants to show off a shaved chest and shins as smooth as tubes. He
lived in "They
put Poles, Germans and Russians here. They call it the Sierra Maestra, I call
it Mostovoi's
apartment was decorated with movie posters (Lolita, East of "Are
you interested in photographs?" Mostovoi asked. "Yes." "An
appreciator?" "In
my way." "Do
you like nature?" It was very natural. Mostovoi had boxes of eight-by-ten
black-and-white photographs of young female nudes half hidden by fronds,
romping through waves, peeking through bamboo. " A cross between Lewis
Carroll and Helmut Newton." "Do
you have any photographs of your colleagues at the embassy?" "Bugai
is always after me to take pictures of his so-called cultural events. I can't
be bothered. You can't get Russians to pose like this. You can't even get them
to take their clothes off." "The
climate, perhaps." "No,
even here." Mostovoi pondered the photograph of a Cuban girl lightly
breaded in sand. " Somehow, the people here manage to balance socialism
with naivete. And by mixing with the Cubans I don't live with the paranoia that
has gripped the rest of our dwindling community." "What
paranoia is that?" "Ignorant
paranoia. When an intelligence agent like Pribluda floats around the harbor in
the middle of the night, what is he doing but spying? We never change. It's
disgusting. It's what happens to Europeans in Mostovoi
opened another box. On top, a girl squeezed a volleyball. " My sports
series." "More
of that dramatic angle." The
next shot was of a light-colored nude cradling a skull on her lap. The girl
directed a sultry glower through a mane of curls that only half covered her
breasts. Around her were molten candles, drums, bottles of rum. "Wrong
box," Mostovoi said. " My rainy-day series. We shot in here and I had
to use the props at hand." The
skull was a rough facsimile, lacking detail around the nasal orifice and teeth,
although Arkady was impressed by the number of artifacts a serious photographer
had to have ready for a rainy day. In the next picture another girl wore a
beret to model clay. "Very
artistic." "That's
kind of you. There's talk of a show at the embassy. Bugai strings me along. I
don't care. I only hope I'm there with my camera when he has his heart
attack." She was buxom with fine hair fading
from blond to gray and an oval face with small eyes a little damp with
recollection. Although her air-conditioning had failed, Olga Petrovna's flat
was a little corner of "They
go back twenty-five years. It was such a life. Our own schools with the best
teachers, good Russian food. It was a real community. No one spoke Spanish. The
children had their Pioneer camps, all in Russian, with archery and mountain
climbing and volleyball. None of this baseball idiocy of the Cubans. Our own
beaches, our own clubs and, of course, there were always birthdays and
weddings, real family events. It made you proud to be Russian, to know you were
here protecting socialism on this island far from home in the teeth of the
Americans. It seems hard to believe we were so strong, so sure." "You
are an unofficial historian of the embassy?" "The
embassy mother. I've been there longer than anyone else. I came very young. My
husband is dead and my daughter married a Cuban. The truth is, I'm hostage to a
granddaughter. If it weren't for me she wouldn't speak Russian at all. Who can
imagine such a thing? Her name is Carmen. This is a name for a Russian
girl?" She poured tea and added jam with a conspiratorial smile. "Who
needs sugar?" "Thank
you. Did your granddaughter go to the embassy Christmas party?" "Here
she is." Olga Petrovna opened to the first picture of what appeared to be
the most recent album and pointed to a curly-haired girl in a white dress that
made her look like a walking wedding cake. "Very
cute." "Do
you think so?" "Completely." "Actually,
it's an interesting mix, Russian and Cuban. Very precocious, a little of the
exhibitionist. Carmen insisted – all the children insisted – on an American
Santa Claus. That comes from watching television." From
snapshot to snapshot Arkady followed the little girl's progress to Santa's lap,
a whisper in his ear and her retreat along the buffet. He pointed to a broad
back at the table. "Isn't that Sergei Pribluda?" "How
could you tell? It was Carmen who dragged him to the party. He is such a hard
worker." Olga
Petrovna had the highest esteem for Pribluda, a strong individual with a real
worker's background, patriotic, never drunk though never shy, quiet but
profound, obviously an agent but not the sort to act mysterious. Certainly not
a weakling like Vice Consul Bugai. "Remember
the word 'comrade'?" asked Olga Petrovna. "All
too well." "That's
what I would call Sergei Sergeevich in the best sense of the word. And
cultured." "Really?"
That was such a new perception of Pribluda that Arkady wondered whether they
were speaking of the same person. Unfortunately, despite her respect for the
colonel, she had no other pictures of him. Then, with great delight, "Oh,
here she is." A girl of about eight in an outgrown school jumper of dull
maroon stood at the threshold of the room. She glowered at Arkady from under a vee
of brows. " Carmen, this is our friend Citizen Renko." The
girl advanced in three deliberate steps, shouted "Hai!" and delivered
a kick a millimeter short of contact with his chest. " Uncle Sergei knows
karate." "He
does?" Arkady had always thought of Pribluda as more a kidney-punch
devotee. "He
carries a black belt in his briefcase." "Did
you ever see it?" "No,
but I'm sure." She administered a karate chop to the air and Arkady
stepped back. "Did you see? Fists of fear." "That's
quite enough," Olga Petrovna said. "I know you have homework." "If
he's a friend of Uncle Sergei's he'll want to see it." "That
is enough, young lady." "Stupid
coat." Carmen looked Arkady up and down. Olga
Petrovna clapped her hands until the girl tucked in her chin and marched to the
next room. "I'm sorry, that's children now." "When
was the last time you saw Sergei Sergeevich?" "A
Friday after work. I had taken Carmen for an ice cream on the Malecуn when we
ran into him talking to a Cuban. I remember Carmen said that she heard
something roar, and Sergei Sergeevich said his neighbor kept a lion that ate
little girls. She became so irritable we had to hurry home. Usually they did
get on wonderfully." When Arkady had her show him on a map she pointed to
the Malecуn in front of Pribluda's flat. "Sergei Sergeevich wore a
captain's cap and the Cuban was carrying one of those enormous inner tubes they
fish from. A black man is all I remember." "Did
you hear a roar?" "Something,
maybe." As she put the albums away she asked, "Do you think there's
any truth to this story that Sergei Sergeevich is dead?" "I'm
afraid there might be. Some of the Cuban investigators are very
competent." "Dead
of what?" "A
heart attack, they say." "But
you have some doubts?" "I
just like to be sure." Olga
Petrovna sighed. Even in her time in Arkady took a taxi back to the Malecуn
and walked the last few blocks to Pribluda's apartment past boys demanding
Chiclets and men offering mulatas, and beyond conversation starters of
"Amiga, que hora es? De que pais? Momentico, amigo."
Overhead hung balconies, arabesques of wrought-iron spikes and potted plants,
women in housedresses and men stripped to their underwear and cigars, music
shifting from window to window. Decay everywhere, heat everywhere, faded colors
trying to hold together disintegrating plaster and salt-eaten beams. He
thought for a moment he had caught sight of a man keeping pace behind him in
the dark of the arcade. Was he being followed? He couldn't tell. It was hard to
single out a shadow when everyone knew which way the streets ran except you,
when everyone looked in place but you, with the sea on one side and on the
other a maze of demolition piles, cars hauled onto sidewalks, lines of people
waiting for ice cream, a bus, bread, water. So
he plunged on in his coat, drawing glances as if he were a monk wandered off
the Via Dolorosa. Chapter SixOfelia was Arkady and Dr. Blas played Rufo.
They positioned the tables and taped the floor of the IML conference room
to indicate the perimeters of the walls, bookshelves and doors of the embassy
flat so that they could – for their own information – "reconstruct the
facts" of Rufo Pinero's death. "Reconstruction
of the facts" distinguished Cuban forensic medicine from the American,
Russian, German. In Cuban laboratories, in Nicaraguan rain forests, in the
dusty fields of Nevertheless,
the doctor was stymied and breathing hard. They took into account that Rufo
Pinero was a former athlete, taller and heavier than Renko by twenty kilos,
maybe more. The Russian was exhausted by travel, confused, clearly not
athletic, though not totally obtuse. Blas thought that described Renko well
enough. They
staged the attack in various ways. Rufo rising from a chair, waiting in the
room, entering the door. No matter, wielding scissors and a pencil as a knife
and syringe, Blas didn't come close to efficiently or rapidly dispatching
Ofelia. Part of the problem was that she was so fast afoot. Ofelia had run the
hundred-meter dash at school and hardly gained a kilo since then. She had a
habit of shifting her weight from foot to foot that Blas found annoying. Another
problem was that the attack spoke of surprise. Yet using both a
"knife" and a "syringe" made Blas slow and unwieldy. The
simple act of bringing out not one but two weapons gave a victim time to react.
Rufo would have been led laps around the room and table and chairs would have
flown in all directions had Ofelia been the intended victim. "Maybe
it was a spontaneous attack," Blas said. "Rufo
wore a body-length jumpsuit of waterproof material over his shirt and pants.
There's nothing spontaneous about that. He knew what he was going to do." "Renko
does not look quite so elusive." "Maybe
if he was threatened with a weapon." "Two
weapons." "No,"
Ofelia decided, "Rufo had one weapon, the knife. The needle was the
surprise for him." She hurried because she was a mere detective and Blas
was a pathologist renowned for the rigor of his methodology. However, she could
almost see the fight take place. "You
know how the Russian always wears that ridiculous coat. I believe the knife
pinned the coat to the bookcase. There is a tear in the lapel of the coat and
there was a coat fiber on the knife. I think that was when Rufo was
killed." "With
the syringe?" "In
self-defense." Blas
took Ofelia's hand, which was slim on the soap-scented meat of his palm.
"What is wonderful about you is your sympathy for the most unlikely
people. Only, this is not an investigation. You and I are merely satisfying our
professional curiosity about the physical facts of a death." "But
don't you wonder?" "No."
Blas's expression said he wasn't a sexist, but that women often lost focus.
"You're concerned about the syringe. Very well, we lost one in the lab.
Either Renko or Rufo could have stolen it. But why would Renko? For drugs? I
found no drugs in the syringe. He stole it as a weapon? If he had any fear for
his life he wouldn't have come to "Maybe
he didn't think, maybe he reacted." "With
a syringe already in his hand? A syringe for which he had no use? A syringe
that ended in Rufo's grip?" She
withdrew her hand. "Rufo pulled it out of his head. I would." "Maybe?
Would? You are speculating. Truth reveals itself more to logic than to
inspiration." Blas had caught his breath. "We'll try the
reconstruction again. Only, this time move a little slower. You forget that
Renko is a smoker, probably a drinker, certainly out of condition. You, on the
other hand, are most definitely in shape, younger, more alert. I don't see how
he could start to defend himself. Maybe Rufo slipped. Ready?" Rufo
was not the sort who slipped, Ofelia thought. She
had had a good friend named Maria at the university. Some years later, Maria
married a poet who declared himself an observer for human rights in Soon
Ofelia saw on television that he had been sentenced to twenty years for assault
and that Maria had been arrested for prostitution. When Ofelia visited her in
jail Maria told a different story. She said that she had just come out of her
house in the morning when a man grabbed her and started to pull her clothes off
at her own front door. When her husband ran out to protect her, the man knocked
him to the ground and kicked in his teeth. Only then did a police car appear,
driven by a single officer who took only a statement from the man, who claimed
that Maria had propositioned him and, when he turned her down, that her husband
had assaulted him. Maria remembered two other items: that the backseat of the
car was already covered in a plastic sheet and that when the man who beat her
husband got into the front of the patrol car he picked up two aluminum cigar
tubes from the seat and slipped them into his shirt pocket. The cigars were
his, laid aside for safekeeping. The poet and Maria hanged themselves in
different prisons on the same day. Out of sheer curiosity Ofelia went back and
read their arrest report, which declared that the good citizen who had come
wandering by their door was Rufo Pinero. Rufo
hardly needed one weapon, let alone two. If
the issue of the syringe bothered her and the death of Maria upset her, the
Russian infuriated her. The arrogance to steal Rufo's key, as if he would even
know what he was looking at in a Cuban's room. To think that he could stand in
front of a map of Havana in Pribluda's office and see more than a piece of
paper. For
Ofelia every street, every corner on the map was a memory. For example, her
first school trip to Blas
gasped, "Still too fast." Chapter SevenHavana had sunk into evening shadow, the
sea scalloped black, swallows darting through the arcade when Arkady
reached the Malecуn. As he went up the stairs he heard the ground-floor
neighbor's radio and not quite a lion's roar but a definite reverberation. Slotted
light spread from shutters across the walls of Pribluda's sitting room to the
black doll sitting in the corner, its head tucked away. Perhaps it was the low
angle of sun off the water but the flat seemed subtly altered: a lower ceiling,
wider table, a chair turned a different direction. Since a kid, Arkady always
turned chairs slightly out from a table as if they carried on a silent
conversation. A childish habit, but there it was. Apart
from the door the only access to the apartment was the balcony and an air shaft
midway down the corridor. Even as Arkady turned on lights a power brownout
reduced them to candles. He hung up his coat in the bedroom closet and stuck
his passport in a shoe while he opened his bag. The shirts were perhaps folded
a little differently. If
there were snoops they hadn't taken any food – the Russian stockpile in the
refrigerator was still complete. Arkady poured chilled water from a jar. Dim
light crept from the refrigerator to the glasses on the table, the turtle's
bowl, the glass eyes of the rag doll. Black paint gave Chango not only color
but a rough kind of vigor. Arkady lifted the red bandanna to touch the face,
which was papier-mache molded into crude features, half-formed mouth about to
speak, half-formed nose about to breathe, half-formed hand about to push off
its walking stick and rise. Dolls should be more insubstantial, not quite so
conscious or as watchful, Arkady thought. Sweat located his spine. He was going
to have to stop wearing a coat in The
noise from below reminded him that he had meant to try in at least one language
or another to interview the ground-floor neighbor. According to Detective
Osorio, this was the person who had illegally rented Pribluda the second-floor
rooms. The illegal part appealed to Arkady. Also, he wondered why the neighbor
didn't want both floors himself. The cacophony could have been even more
stereophonic. When
the noise stopped it was interesting how like a seashell a shuttered apartment
could sound. The barely audible sweep of cars, stirring of water along the
seawall, the pounding of the heart. Maybe he was wrong about the chairs and
bag, he thought. Nothing else seemed out of place. The din started downstairs again,
and he took his glass to Pribluda's office phone and studied the list of
numbers he had copied off Rufo's wall. Daysi
32-2007 Susy
30-4031 Vi.
Aflt. 2300 Kid
Choc. 5/1 Vi.
HYC 2200 Now
that he thought about it, why had he assumed that Vi. stood for
visitor? Granted, he was a visitor arriving on Aeroflot, but was the word for
visitor the same in Spanish and English? Rufo knew he was coming. Wouldn't it
be more important to know what day of the week? He looked up the word for
Friday in Pribluda's Spanish-Russian dictionary. "Viernes." Vi.
stood for Friday. Which suggested that on another Friday at 10:00p.m. with a
person or at a place with the initials HYC something would happen
concerning Arkady
tried the names on the list and got an answer on the first ring. "Digame."
Arkady,
in Russian, "Hello, is this Daysi?" "Digame."
"Is
this Daysi?" "Oye,
quiйn es?' In
English, "Is this Daysi?" "Sн, es Daysi" "Do
you speak English?" "Un
poco, sн." "Are
you a friend of Rufo?" "Muy
poco." "You
know Rufo Pinero?" "Rufo,
sн." "Could
we meet and talk?" "Quй?" "Talk?" "Quй?" "Do
you know someone who speaks English?" "Muy
poco." "Thanks." He
hung up and tried Susy. "Hi." "Hello.
You speak English." "Hi." "Could
you tell me where I could find Rufo Pinero?" "El
coсo Rufo? Es amigo suyo? Es cabrуn and come-mierda. Oye, hombre, singate y
singa a tu madre tambiйn." "I
didn't catch that." "Y
singa tu perro. Cuando veas a Rufo, pregъntale, dуnde estб el dinero de
Susy? O mi regalito de QVC?" "Let's
say, you know Rufo. Do you know anyone who speaks English or Russian?" "Y
dнgale, chupa mis nalgas hermosas!" While
he was trying to find chupa in the dictionary, Susy hung up. A
noise drew him to the parlor, although he found no one but Chango glowering
from his chair. The doll had slumped a little, still surly, top-heavy. Had its
head turned since he had been in the room last, raised its eyes to steal a
sideways glance? For some reason he was reminded of the giant Comandante he had
seen painted on a wall the night before, the way the figure seemed to loom
above the lamps like an all-knowing, all-seeing specter, or the way a director
hovered in the dark at the back of a theater. Arkady had felt exceedingly small
and uninformed. He
refilled his glass and wandered back to the office and the map of In
fact, his very work was a reminder that time was a one-way proposition. A
homicide meant, by definition, that someone was too late. Of course,
investigating a crime that had already happened was relatively simple.
Investigating a crime that hadn't yet occurred, to see the lines before they
connected, that might demand skill. At
a creak of wood Arkady noticed Sergeant Luna standing in the office door. It
wasn't just the sound, Arkady thought, more like an entire force field crossing
the threshold. He didn't recognize Luna immediately because the sergeant was in
jeans, sweatshirt and a cap that said "Go Gators." Air "Sergeant
Luna, I didn't hear you come in." "Because
I walk quiet and I have a key." Luna held a key up to illustrate and put
it in a pocket. He had a voice like wet cement being turned by a shovel. The
narrow cap emphasized his round head and the way muscles played on his forehead
and jaw. The whites of his eyes were slightly fried. His biceps balled with
anger. "You
speak Russian, too." "I
picked it up. I thought we could have a talk without the captain or the
detective, with no one else." "I'd
like to talk." Luna had been so silent around Captain Arcos, Arkady was
happy to hear the sergeant out. The bat bothered him. "Let me get you
something to drink." "No,
just talk. I want to know what you're doing." Arkady
always tried honesty first. "I'm
not sure myself. I just didn't think the identification of the body was certain
enough. Since Rufo attacked me, I think maybe there is more to find out." "You
think that was stupid of Rufo?" "Maybe." "Who
are you?" Luna poked him with the fat end of the bat. "You
know who I am." "No,
I mean who are you?" Luna poked him again in the ribs. "I'm
a prosecutor's investigator. I wish you'd stop doing that." "No,
you can't be an investigator here. You can be a tourist here, but you can't be
an investigator here. Understand? Comprendes?" Luna walked around
him. For Arkady it was like talking to a shark. "I
understand perfectly." "I
wouldn't go to "I'm
sorry about Rufo." Within limits, Arkady thought. "It
seems to me you're very difficult." "Where
is Captain Arcos? Did he send you?" "Don't
you worry about Captain Arcos." The sergeant gave him another poke of the
bat. "You're
going to have to stop that." "Are
you going to lose your temper? Are you going to attack a sergeant of the
Ministry of the Interior? I think that would be a bad idea." "What
do you think would be a good idea?" Arkady tried to emphasize the
positive. "It
would be a good idea if you understood you are not Cuban." "I
swear I don't think I'm Cuban." "You
don't know anything here." "I
couldn't agree more." "You
do nothing." "That's
pretty much what I'm doing." "Then
we can be friendly." "Friendly
is good." For
his part, Arkady felt he was being agreeable, soft as a pat of butter, but Luna
still circled him. "Is
that a baseball bat?" Arkady asked. "Baseball
is our national sport. Want to see it?" Luna offered the bat to him handle
first. "Take a swing." "That's
all right." "Take
it." "No." "Then
I'll take it," Luna said and swung the bat into Arkady's left leg above
the knee. Arkady dropped to the floor and Luna moved behind him. "See, you
have to step into it to drive the ball. Did you feel that?" "Yes." "You
have to turn into the ball. You're from "Yes." "I'll
tell you something I should have told you before. I am from the Oriente, the
east of Arkady
called for help, all too aware he was shouting in the wrong language and that
with the banging from below no one would hear him anyway. Once in the parlor he
pushed himself up against a wall and, standing on legs that went every which
way, actually landed a blow that made the bigger man grunt acknowledgment. As
the two men scuffled around the table the turtle bowl rolled off. Finally the
sergeant got free enough to swing the bat again and Arkady found himself on the
rug, blinking through blood, aware he'd lost a few seconds of memory and a
brain cell or two. He felt a foot across his neck as Luna bent close to feel
Arkady's shirt pocket and pants. All Arkady could see was the rug and Chango in
his chair staring back. No mercy there. "Where
is the picture?" "What
picture?" The
foot pressed on Arkady's windpipe. Well, it was a dumb answer, Arkady admitted.
There was only one picture. The "Where?"
Luna eased up to give him another chance. "First
you didn't want it, now you do?" As Arkady felt his windpipe close he
said, "At the embassy. I gave it to them." "Who?" "Zoshchenko."
Zoshchenko was Arkady's favorite comic writer. He felt the situation needed
humor. He hoped there was no poor Zoshchenko at the embassy. He heard a
contemplative slap of the bat in Luna's hand. "Do
you want me to fuck you up?" "No." "Do
you want me to seriously fuck you up?" "No." "Because
you will stay fucked." Although
Arkady was pinned like an insect he did his best to nod. "If
you don't want me to mess with you, you stay here. From now on you're a
tourist, but you will do all your touring in this room. I'll send some food
every day. You don't leave. Stay here. Sunday you go home. A quiet trip." That
sounded quiet, Arkady got that. Satisfied,
Luna removed his foot from Arkady's neck, lifted Arkady's head by the hair and
clubbed him one more time as if dispatching a dog. When Arkady was conscious again it was
dark, and he was stuck to the carpet. He ripped his head off and rolled to the
wall to look and listen before he dared move any more. New blood oozed around
one eye. The furniture was a mass of shadows. Sounds of work had stopped below,
replaced by the unctuous strains of a bolero. Luna was gone. Altogether, Arkady
thought, a hell of a vacation. And certainly the worst suicide he had ever
attended. Just
standing proved to be a feat of balance, as if the sergeant's baseball bat had driven
all the fluid from one inner ear to the other, but he managed to drag a chair
to prop against the door. With
the blood washed off, the head in the bathroom mirror wasn't so bad, one gash
at the hairline he had to shave around and pull back together with butterfly
tapes from the medicine chest, otherwise just a new topological feature at the
back of the skull. A little broader bridge of his nose, a knot on his forehead,
a lasting impression of the rug on his cheek, some difficulty swallowing, but
all teeth accounted for. His legs felt broken, but on the other hand, they
worked. Luna had done a fairly good job of limiting the damage to bruises and
indignities. He
hobbled to the bedroom closet and found the pockets of his coat turned out, but
his passport with the photograph of the Havana Yacht Club still rested in the
shoe where he had put them. Light-headedness and nausea rose, signs of a
concussion. Muddy
blood stained the parlor rug. Like any party, he thought, cleaning up was the
hard part. He'd do it later. First things first. In a kitchen drawer he found a
whetstone and a narrow bladed boning knife that he honed to a fine edge. On the
seat of the chair propped against the door he balanced a bag of empty cans as
an alarm and perhaps a little fun underfoot, and he unscrewed all the
lightbulbs in the parlor and hall so that if Luna returned he would enter the
dark and be silhouetted by the light. The best Arkady could do for the
air-shaft window was ram it shut with a stick. The best he could do for his
head was stay flat. Which he was about to do when he passed out. He didn't feel refreshed. What time it
was he couldn't tell, the room was dark. What room he was in he wouldn't have
known except for the rough bristles of the parlor rug on his face. Like a
drunk, he wasn't positive which way was up. His
body had set in a position of least pain, all things being relative, and in the
manner of a broken chair it had no intention of sitting up again. He did anyway
because a little circulation was probably good for bruised limbs. The turtle
crawled by, practically trotting. Arkady followed on all fours to the
refrigerator, pulled out the water jar and luxuriated in the soft,
unthreatening nimbus of the appliance light. On a purely objective basis it was
interesting how much worse he felt. Drinking water was painful. Touching his
head with a damp cloth combined agony and relief. Irina
liked to say, "Be careful what you wish for." Meaning, of course,
her. Having lost her, what he'd wished for was an end to his guilt, but he
really hadn't meant being beaten to death. In The
phone cord was ripped from the wall, although Arkady wasn't sure whom to call
anyway. The embassy, so they could cringe again at the trouble one of their
nationals was causing? The
dark was so quiet he could almost hear the sweep of the lighthouse beam over
the bay and feel the brush of light across the shutters. Don't
leave, Luna had said. Arkady
didn't plan to. He laid his head in the refrigerator and went to sleep. When he woke again morning light
streamed into the flat. Arkady lifted his head as carefully as a cracked egg.
The Malecуn's backfires and shouts sounded loud and hot, amplified by the sun. He
staggered down the hall to the bathroom mirror. The nose was no better and his
forehead had the dark hue of a storm cloud. He dropped his pants to see the
stripes of bruises on his legs. Rest
and water, he told himself. He ate a handful of aspirin, but didn't dare shower
for fear of slipping, for fear of not hearing the front door, for fear of
hurting. Two
steps and he was dizzy, but he reached the office. He had crawled from it when
Luna began demonstrating his baseball skills to lead the sergeant away from the
miserable list of Rufo's phone numbers. Oddly enough, the list was where Arkady
had left it, in the Spanish-Russian dictionary, meaning that Luna either didn't
know how to search or that he had come only for the picture of the Havana Yacht
Club. Since
he had a little time now, Arkady thought that a real investigator would use
this opportunity to learn Spanish and phone repair and try Daysi and Susy
again. Instead, he slid down the wall to a seated position with the knife in
his hand. He wasn't aware of sleeping until a backfire from the street jolted
him awake. Not
that he was scared. • • • Two young uniformed policemen, one
white, one black, patrolled the seawall. Although they carried radios, handguns
and batons, their orders seemed entirely in the negative: don't lean against
the wall, don't listen to music, don't fraternize with girls. Although they
seemed to pay no special attention to the house, Arkady thought it would be a
little wiser to escape in the evening. He
cleaned the carpet because it was too depressing to look at his own dried
blood. The music below had changed to a work-theme salsa accompanied by a power
drill; Arkady wasn't sure whether he was above a flat or a factory. Not all the
blood came out of the rug; enough remained to suggest a mottled rose. Luna
could scrub the bat and Arkady was sure that the entire ball team was willing
to swear the sergeant had been gamboling on a field with them. How many players
were there on a side in baseball? Ten, twenty? More than enough witnesses. Bugai
wouldn't lodge a protest. Even if he did find the nerve, to whom would he
complain but Arcos and Luna? The only communication that Arkady could expect
between the embassy and Luna was the question "Do you have a Zoshchenko
working there? No? Thank you very much." Arkady
shaved for morale's sake, working around the damage on his face, and tried to
comb his hair over the repair on his brow. When the nausea let up he celebrated
by changing into a clean shirt and pants, so that he looked like a well-groomed
victim of a violent crime. He also tied another knife to a broom to use as a
spear and, giddy with achievement, peeked through the balcony shutters. A
PNR patrol car appeared about every forty minutes. In between, the patrolmen
fought their own war against boredom, sneaking a cigarette, staring at the sea,
watching • • • In the late afternoon Arkady woke with
an enormous thirst and a headache aggravated by the noise below. He had aspirin
and water while he admired Pribluda's variety of pickled garlic heads and
mushrooms. He just didn't feel like food at the moment, and when he turned away
from the refrigerator he realized that Chango had disappeared. The doll that
had sat in the corner was gone. When?
During Luna's lecture on the finer points of baseball? With the sergeant or of
Chango's own volition? The missing doll was reminder enough that a patrol car
was due in a minute and that Luna was overdue. Through the shutters he saw two
black girls dressed in matching pedal pushers of citrus yellow teasing the
PNRs. Some
vacations stretched and some seemed to fly by in a moment, not even time for a
tan. Arkady decided that when man-sized dolls started walking around it was
time for him to go, too, and camp at the embassy whether he was welcome or not.
Or the airport. Arkady
put on his precious coat with the phone list and picture in one pocket and keys
and knife in the other, and cleared the chair and bag of cans from the door. He
still had Pribluda's car key. Who knew, he might be able to drive. As he
tottered down, the stairs pulsated underfoot. From
the street door he saw the girls and the two PNRs bantering and posturing.
Behind them the Cuban sky was gold edged in blue, more mixed day and night than
a simple sunset. As a car limped by, my God, a two-seater Zaporozhets belching
black smoke, Arkady slipped out into the long shadow of the arcade. Chapter EightWearing a cherry-red halter and denim
shorts with a Minnie Mouse patch on a back pocket, Ofelia sat in an
aquamarine '55 DeSoto outside the Casa de Amor and asked herself: Was it cigar
fumes? Something in the rum? The two spoonfuls of sugar in cafй cubano
that made men crazy? If she saw one more young Cuban girl on the arm of one
more fat, balding, lisping Spanish tourist, Ofelia would kill. She'd
pulled enough of them in. Some were family men who had never before been
unfaithful but suddenly found it unnatural to spend a week in The
Casa de Amor was originally a motel, ten units with patios and sliding aluminum
doors around a swimming pool. A heavyset woman in a housedress read a paperback
in a metal chair on a lawn that had been paved over and painted green. In the
office was a register and selections of condoms, beer, rum, Tropicola. The
tip-off that something wrong was going on was that the pool water was clean.
That was for tourists. Traffic
went in and out. At this point Ofelia was expert at telling a German (pink)
from an Englishman (sallow) from a Frenchman (safari shorts), but what she was
waiting for was a Cuban uniform. The law was useless. Cuban law excused a man
for making sexual advances, assuming it was a masculine given, and put the
burden of proof on Ofelia to prove that the girl initiated the approach. Now,
any Cuban female over the age of ten knew how to incite a male into making the
first overt proposal. A Cuban girl could make The
police were worse than useless, they preyed on the girls, demanding money for
letting them into hotel lobbies, for wandering around the marina, for allowing
them to take tourists to places like the Casa de Amor, which was supposed to be
for conjugal activities between Cuban couples who couldn't find sufficient
privacy at home. Well, jineteras had the same problem and could pay
more. Traffic
went in and out the office, the girls steering in their clients like little
tugboats. Ofelia let them go. Someone in authority had arranged matters at the
Casa de Amor, and what Ofelia wanted more than anything else was for some
sleazy PNR commander to check his operation, see her in the car and invite her
to join his string. A badge and gun rested in her straw bag. The look on his
face when she brought them out? Vaya. Sometimes
Ofelia felt it was her against the world. This
one feeble little campaign of hers against an industry that was nearly
official. The Ministry of Tourism discouraged any real crackdown on jineteras
as a threat to The
week before, she had picked up a twelve-year-old jinetera in the Plaza
de Armas. One year older than Muriel. That was the future? She
hadn't given Renko a lot of thought until she gave up surveillance at the end
of the day and visited the IML to check whether the dead Russian was tagged for
transport and, when she found the body wasn't, looked for Blas. She found the
director working at a laboratory counter. "I'm
looking into something," Blas said. " I am not investigating, but you
made such a point about the syringe I think you especially will be
interested." His
instrument was a camcorder modified to fit onto a microscope. The microscope
eyepiece had been removed so that the camera could focus directly on a grayish
paste spread on a specimen slide. A cable led from the camcorder to a video
monitor. On its screen was a magnified version of the paste with gradations in
color that ran from tarry black to chalk white. In front of the monitor was an
embalming syringe. "Rufo's
needle?" Ofelia asked. "Yes,
the syringe stolen from here, from my own laboratory, and found in the hand of
Rufo Pinero. Embarrassing but also informative because the tissue packed into a
needle shaft, you know, is a core sample as good as a biopsy." "You
squeezed it out?" "For
curiosity's sake. Because we are scientists," Blas said as he moved the
slide in minute increments under the camera. "Working backward: brain
tissue, blood corresponding to Rufo's blood type, bone, cochlear material from
the inner ear, skin and more blood and skin. What's interesting is the last
blood, which actually would have been the first blood in the needle shaft. Tell
me what you see." The
screen was a stew of cells, larger ones solid red, the smaller cells with white
centers. "Blood
cells." "Look
again." With
Blas you always learned, she thought. On the second look, many of the red cells
seemed crushed or exploded like overripe pomegranates. "There is something
wrong with them. A disease?" "No.
What you see," he told her, "is a battlefront, a battlefront of whole
blood cells, fragments of blood cells and clumps of antibodies. This blood is
hemolyzed, it is at war." "With
itself?" "No,
this is a war that only occurs when two different blood types come into
contact. Pinero's and...?" "Renko's?" "Most
likely. I'd love to have a sample from the Russian." "He
says he wasn't touched." "I
say otherwise." He was definite, and she knew that when Blas was definite
he was almost always right. "Will
you test for drugs?" she asked. "No
need. You weren't at the autopsy, but I can tell you that on Rufo's arm are the
tracks of old injections. Do you know how much a new syringe is worth to a
user? This proves Rufo had two weapons." "But
Renko is alive and Rufo is dead." "I
admit that is the baffling part." Ofelia
thought of the cut in Renko's coat. That was from the knife. Why wouldn't the
Russian mention a wound from the needle? Blas
had registered the fact that she was still in her shorts and halter, black
curls shining, a glow on her brown skin. " You know, there is a meeting
next month in The
doctor was popular with the women on his staff. In fact, an invitation to
accompany him to an international conference on pathology was one of the prizes
of the institute. He was admired, sometimes awe-inspiring, connected to the
highest government elite, and all Ofelia could really say against him was that
his lower lip, nested in his trim beard, was always wet. Somehow that was
enough. "It
sounds nice but I have to help take care of my mother." "Detective
Osorio, I've asked you to two conferences now. Both important, both in
fascinating places. You always say you have to take care of your mother." "She's
so frail." "Well,
I hope she gets well." "Thank
you."
"If
you can't go, you can't go." Blas pushed aside the microscope and camera
as if they were dinner gone cold. Ofelia's eyes, however, were fixed to the monitor,
to a magnified terrain of warring blood cells where she saw a new answer. Chapter NineThere were more PNRs stationed on the
Malecуn than Arkady had expected. Taking the first street from the water,
then avoiding a patrol car at the next corner, he found himself behind the
block he had just left and at an alley with a flat-faced, vintage American Jeep
in house-paint red. Behind it were two more Jeeps, green and white, each with
new roll bars and upholstery. They shone under lamps strung out from a humming
generator set inside open garage doors where a man in coveralls inspected an
inner tube he held in a tub of water. He raised a white, amiable face and
carried the tube to an air hose. "Needs
air," he said in Russian. "I
suppose so," Arkady said. Inside,
under a caged bulb hanging on a cord, a Jeep sat on ramps over a mechanic
working on his back. As the engine revved a rubber hose taped to the exhaust
pipe funneled white smoke to the alley. There were other signs of the garage's
makeshift nature, the lack of work pits and hydraulic lifts. An engine hung on
chains from an I beam above garage disorder, tanks, tool cabinets, oilcans,
ammeters, tires, tire lever and well, a folding chair behind a worktable of
mallets, a board of car rings on hooks, vises and clamps and greasy rags
everywhere, a beaded curtain marking off a personal area, and Arkady realized
that he was directly below Pribluda's parlor. A boom box vied for volume next
to the Jeep. Since the hood was open, Arkady could see a transplanted Lada
engine resonating like a pea in a can. A knit cap, smudged face and dirty beard
rolled out from under the car to study Arkady from an upside-down angle. "Russian?" "Yes.
Everyone can tell?" "It's
not so hard. Have an accident?" "Kind
of." "In
a car?" "No." The
mechanic looked up at the object of his labor. "If
you need a car you could do worse than this. A '48 Jeep. Try to get parts for a
'48 Jeep. The best I can do is a Lada 2101. I had to eliminate the differential
and adapt the brakes. It's just the seals and valves now that are driving me
crazy." His eyes strained to watch something he was reaching for under the
car. The engine raced and he winced. " What a shit rain." He rolled
back under and shouted, "See any tape?" Arkady
found wrenches, goggles, welding gauntlets, buckets of sand, but reported no
tape. "Mongo
isn't there?" "What
is a Mongo?" Arkady wasn't sure he heard right because of the music. "Mongo
is a black man in coveralls and a green baseball cap." "No
Mongo." "Tico?
Man working on a tire?" "He's
there." "He's
looking for a leak. He'll be looking all day." After what Arkady had to
assume were strong words in Spanish the mechanic said, "Very well, we'll
perform heart surgery by going in through the ass. Find me a hammer and a
screwdriver and get a pan ready." Arkady
handed him the tools. "You like Jeeps?" The
mechanic rolled under the car. "I specialize in Jeeps. Other American cars
are too heavy. You have to put in "No." "Don't
be put off by appearances. This island is like a Court of Miracles, like in
medieval Unbelievably,
the volume had another notch. Maybe this was a Cuban-made radio, Arkady
thought. Meanwhile, the violent whacks from under the Jeep made his head throb. "So
you sell cars?" Arkady shouted. "Yes
and no. An old car from before the Revolution, yes. To buy a new car requires
approval from the highest level, the very highest. The beauty of the system is
that no car in Arkady
heard a glutinous gush. In a single move, the mechanic swung the pan under the
Jeep in his place and shot out on his cart, rolling across the floor until he
backhanded a column of tires and swung to a stop and sat up, grinning. He was a
robust specimen with the smirk of near disaster, and looked so much like a test
pilot after an interesting landing that it took Arkady a moment to notice that
the mechanic's coverall legs ended at leather pads at the knees. When he wiped
his face and removed his cap his hair rose into a salt-and-pepper mane too
unique for Arkady not to recognize the short man from Pribluda's photograph of
the Havana Yacht Club, simply far shorter than Arkady had expected. "Erasmo
Aleman," he introduced himself. "You're Sergei's friend?" "Yes." "I've
been waiting for you." Erasmo pushed his cart with wooden
blocks edged in tire tread to maneuver around his garage at full speed, washing
at a cut-down sink, wiping his hands at a barrel of rags. The radio was down to
half throat. "I
saw a policewoman take you upstairs a couple of nights ago. You look... different." "Someone
tried to teach me baseball." "It's
not your sport." Erasmo's eyes went from the bruise on Arkady's cheek to
the Band-Aid on his head. "Is
this Sergei?" Arkady produced the snapshot of Pribluda with the Yacht
Club. "Yes." "And?"
Arkady pointed to the black fisherman. "Mongo,"
Erasmo said, as if it were self-evident. "And
you." Erasmo
admired the picture. "I look very handsome." "The
Havana Yacht Club," Arkady read the back. "It
was a joke. If we'd had a sailboat we would have called ourselves a navy.
Anyway, I heard about the body they found across the bay. Frankly, I don't
think it's Sergei. He's too pigheaded and tough. I haven't seen him for weeks,
but he could come back tomorrow with some story about driving into a pothole.
There are potholes in "Do
you know where his car is?" "No,
but if it were around here I'd recognize it." Erasmo
explained that diplomatic license plates were black on white and Pribluda's was
060 016; 060 for the Russian embassy and 016 for Pribluda's rank. Cuban plates
were tan for state-owned cars, red for privately owned. "Let
me put it this way," Erasmo said, "there are state-owned cars that
will never move so that private cars can run. A Lada arrives here like a
medical donor so that Willy's Jeeps will never die. Excuse me." He turned
down a salsa that threatened to get out of hand. "The
reason for the radio is so the police can say they don't hear me, because you're
really not supposed to make a garage out of your apartment. Anyway, Tico likes
it loud." Arkady
thought he understood Erasmo, the type of engineer who labors happily below the
deck of a sinking ship, lubricating the pistons, pumping out the water, somehow
keeping the vessel moving while it settles in the waves. "Your
neighbors don't complain about the noise?" "There's
Sergei and a dancer in this building, both out all the time. On one side is a
private restaurant, they don't want the police visiting because it costs them a
free dinner at the least. On the other side lives a santero and the
police certainly don't want to bother him. His apartment is like a nuclear
missile silo of African spirits." "A
santero?" "As
in Santeria." "He's
a friend?" "On
this island a santero is a good friend to have." Arkady
studied the picture of the Havana Yacht Club. There still was some message in
it that he didn't understand. If he was going to be beaten over the head he
wanted to know why. "Who
took the picture?" "Someone
passing by. You know," Erasmo said, "the first time I met Sergei,
Mongo and I saw him standing next to his car on the side of the road, smoke
pouring from the hood. Nobody stops for anyone with Russian plates, but I have
a weak spot for old comrades, no? Pues, we repaired the car, only a
matter of a new clamp on a hose, and as we talked I discovered how little of "With
a kite?" "A
most beautiful way to fish. And I became aware that this Russian, this human
bear from the day before, was standing on the sidewalk and watching. So I
showed him how. I have to tell you that we never saw Russians alone, they
always moved in groups, watching each other. Sergei was different. In our
conversation he mentioned how much he wanted a place on the Malecуn. I had the
rooms upstairs I certainly wasn't using and one thing led to another." For
a disabled man, Erasmo was constantly in motion. He rolled backward to a
refrigerator and returned with two cold beers. " '51 Kelvinator, the
Cadillac of refrigerators." "Thanks." "To
Sergei," Erasmo proposed. They drank and his eyes tabulated the damage on
Arkady, "That must have been a long flight of stairs. Nice coat. A little
warm, no?" "It's
January in "That
explains it." "Your
Russian is very good." "I
was in Cuban army demolitions in "God?" "El
Comandante." Erasmo gestured as if stroking his beard. "Fidel?" "You're
getting it. " "The
rampart of socialism." "The
crumbling dike." "Crumbled.
Dust. Leaving nothing standing but poor They
drank to that, the first food Arkady had in a day, the beer's alcohol a mild anesthetic.
He thought of the black fisherman that Olga Petrovna had seen with Pribluda.
There was time to go to the embassy later and hide away. "I'd
like to meet Mongo." "Can't
you hear him?" Erasmo turned the radio off and Arkady heard what could
have been a rolling of stones in surf if stones shifted to a beat. Walking in the santero's door,
Arkady was unprepared. When Russians were taught about "The
santero," Erasmo told Arkady. "Don't worry, they're just
warming up." The
mechanic had changed from his coveralls to a pleated white shirt he called a
guayabera, "the very height of Cuban formality," but with telltale
grease on his hands and his beard he looked like a corsair in a wheelchair. He
pressed on through a kitchen and hallway until he led Arkady to a backyard where,
under two spindly coconut palms crossed like an X, an old black woman in a
white skirt and a Michael Jordan pullover stirred a cauldron simmering on
coals. Her hair was gray and cropped as short as cotton. Erasmo
said, "This is Abuelita. Abuelita is not only everyone's grandmother, she
is also the CDR for our block. The Committee for the Defense of the Revolution.
Informers usually, but we are blessed with Abuelita, who dutifully watches from
her window from six in the morning and sees nothing all day long." "Did
she ever see Pribluda?" "Ask
her yourself, she speaks English." "From
before the Revolution." Her voice was young and whispery. "There were
a lot of Americans and I was a very sinful girl." "Did
you ever see the Russian here?" "No.
If I saw him, then I would have to report him for renting from a Cuban, which
is against the law. But he was a nice man." A
pig's head bobbed in the stew. A bottle came Erasmo's way; he took a long drink
and shared it with Abuelita, who drank daintily and passed it to Arkady. "What
is it?" he asked her. "Fighting
rum." Her eyes took in the tape on his head. " You need it, no?" Arkady
had expected that by now he would be safely tucked away in the embassy basement
with maybe a cup of tea. This was only a minor detour. He drank and coughed. "What's
in it?" "Rum,
chilies, garlic, turtle testicles." More
people arrived every minute, as many white as black. Arkady was used to the
hushed assembly of the Russian Orthodox Church. Cubans pushed into the yard as
if they were joining a party, a few with the somber devotion of worshipers,
most with the bright anticipation of theatergoers. The only arrival without any
expression was a pale, black-haired girl in jeans and a shirt that said
"Tournee de Ballet." She was followed by a light-brown Cuban man with
blue eyes, hair silver at the temples, in a formal, short-sleeved shirt. "George
Washington Walls," Erasmo introduced him. "Arkady." Not
Cuban. In fact, an American name that rang a bell. Behind Walls came a tourist
with a maple-leaf pin and the last man Arkady wanted to see, Sergeant Luna.
This was nightlife Luna, a splendid Luna in linen pants, white shoes and tank
shirt that showed off the slabbed muscles of a triangular upper body. Arkady
felt himself automatically cringe. "My
good friend, my very good friend, I didn't know you were feeling so good."
Luna put one bare arm around Arkady and the other around a girl whose skin and
mass of hair were the same amber color. She dazzled in spandex pants,
halter, scarlet fingernails, and squirmed so much in Luna's grip Arkady
wouldn't have been surprised if a ruby popped from her navel. " Hedy. Mujer
mia." The sergeant leaned confidentially on Arkady's shoulder. "
I want to tell you something." "Please." "There's
no Zoshchenko at the Russian embassy." "I
lied. I'm sorry." "But
you did lie and you left the apartment, where I told you to stay, understand?
Now you have a good time tonight. I don't want to see you spoil anybody's fun.
Then you and I will have a talk about how you're going to the airport." Luna
scratched his chin with a short ice pick. Arkady understood the sergeant's
dilemma. Half of Luna wanted to be a good host, half of him wanted to plunge
the ice pick into someone's face. "I
don't mind walking," Arkady said. Hedy
laughed as if Arkady had said something clever, which Luna didn't like, and he
said something to her in Spanish that chased the color from her cheeks before
turning his attention back to Arkady. Luna had a smile with broad white teeth
and lots of pink gums. "You
don't mind walking?" "No.
I've seen so little of "You
want to see more?" "It
seems a beautiful island." "You're
crazy." "That
could be." The
girl in the Tournee de Ballet shirt was named Isabel and she spoke excellent
Russian. She asked Arkady whether it was true he was staying in Pribluda's
apartment. " I live above him. Sergei was receiving a letter for me from Arkady
was so disconcerted by Luna it took him a second to respond. " Not that I
know of." The
sergeant seemed to have other duties. After consulting with Luna, Walls told
his friend with the maple-leaf pin, "The real thing starts in a
minute." "I
wish I spoke Spanish." "You're
Canadian, you don't need to. Investors don't need to," Walls assured him.
" And all the investors are coming here. Canadians, Italians, Spanish,
Germans, Swedes, even Mexicans. Everyone but Americans. This is the next big
economic explosion on earth. Healthy, well-educated people. Technological base.
Latin is hot. Get in while you can." "He's
been selling me for two days," the Canadian said. "He
sounds persuasive," Arkady said. "Tonight,"
said Walls, "we've organized something folkloric for my friend from "I
detest this," Isabel told Arkady. "Isabel,
we're speaking English for our friend now," Walls pleaded in the
good-natured way of a man who actually means it. "I gave you English
lessons. Even Luna can speak English. Can you speak a little English?" "He
says he'll take me to "I
think the show's about to begin." Walls ushered people back into the house
as drumming hit a new intensity. "Arkady, I missed something. What are you
doing here?" "Just
trying to fit in." "Good
job." Walls gave him a thumbs-up. Each drum was different – a tall tumba,
hourglass bata, twin congas – and each called to a different spirit of
Santeria or Abakua, a maraca to rouse Chango, a bronze bell for Oshun,
it was all mixed up, like mixing drinks, a little dangerous, yes, Erasmo asked
even as he explained. Mongo, eyes shining from wells of perspiration, beat on
his blade, his call in a language that was not Spanish answered simultaneously
by the drummers and their drums, as if each man possessed two voices. Everyone
had crowded into the room and pressed against the walls. Erasmo rocked in his
chair as if he could lift it up by the sheer power of his arms to tell Arkady
this was the wealth of "You
know that man?" Erasmo asked. "We've
met. He's a sergeant in the Ministry of the Interior. How can he be involved in
a show like this?" "Why
not? Everybody does two things, they have to, there's nothing unusual about
that." "Arranging
Santeria?" Erasmo
shrugged. "That's "But
this is a santero's house, you said." "You
don't do Santeria at night," Erasmo said as if it were self-evident,
"that's when the dead are out." "The
dead are out right now?" "It's
a crowded island at night." Erasmo smiled at the idea. " Anyway, Luna
must have connections with the Abakua. Everyone is into Santeria or Abakua or something." "His
friend, George Washington Walls. Why is that name familiar?" "He
was famous once. The radical, the hijacker." Very
famous once, Arkady realized. He remembered a newspaper picture of a young
American in an Afro and bell-bottom trousers burning a small flag at the top of
an airplane ramp. "What
kind of investments can Walls offer in "Good
question." Arkady
had missed the point when the rhythm had changed and Luna and his golden
friend, Hedy, had taken center stage, dancing not so much separately as skin to
skin, hips rolling, the sergeant's large hands sliding around her back as she
arched, eyes and lips bright, slipping away only to invite him even closer.
Arkady did not know if this was religious or not; he did know that if it took
place in a Russian church the icons would have fallen to the floor. As everyone
else joined in Walls maneuvered Hedy away from Luna and toward the Canadian,
who danced as if he were playing ice hockey without a stick. Now it was even
harder to reach the door. Erasmo
pushed Arkady. "Get out there." "I
don't dance." He was doing well just standing, Arkady thought. "Everyone
dances." The rum seemed to hit Erasmo all at once. He rocked back and
forth in his wheelchair to the beat until he locked his chair, slid off the
seat and danced with Abuelita like a man wading energetically through heavy
surf. He said to Arkady, "No legs and I still move better than you." Embarrassing
but true, Arkady thought. It was also true that, in his condition, Arkady found
the drumming and darkness and mixed smells of smoke, rum and sweat as
overwhelming as an overstoked fire. The drums spoke together, apart, together
again, breathless, syncopated, off the beat. As Mongo shook the gourd the
shells strung across its belly rippled like a snake. The chant went from call
and response to Mongo in his dark glasses, his voice volcanically deep. He
swayed, hands a blur. The rhythm spread, divided, split again like rolling
lava. Maybe it was the effect of fighting rum on an empty stomach. Arkady
slipped into the hall and found that Isabel followed. "I
didn't study classical dance for this," she told Arkady. "It's
not the Bolshoi, but I don't think the Bolshoi does this sort of thing very
well." "Do
you think I'm a whore?" "No."
He was taken aback. The girl looked more like a candlelit saint. "I'm
with Walls because he can help me, I admit. If I were a real whore, though, I'd
learn Italian. Russian is no use at all." "Maybe
you're a little hard on yourself." "If
I were hard on myself, I'd cut my throat." "Don't
do that." "Why
not?" "I've
noticed that few people are good at cutting their own throat." "Interesting.
A Cuban man would have said, 'Oh, but it's such a pretty throat.' Everything with
them leads to sex, even suicide. That's why I like Russians, because with them
suicide is suicide." "Our
talent." Isabel
looked thoughtfully aside. She had the emaciated allure of a Picasso, he
thought. Blue Period. Wonderful, the two most depressed people in the house had
connected like magnets. He caught Walls's anxious glances in their direction.
At the same time he noticed that Luna remained by the door. "How
long are you going to be in "A
week, then back to "Is
it snowing there now?" She rubbed her arms as if imagining them cool. "I'm
sure it is. Your Russian is extraordinarily good." "Yes?
Well, in my family "It
seems to have been a great secret. No." "Claro,
he isn't a very good spy. He says if they needed a good agent in Before
Arkady could beg off, Walls joined them. "You're missing everything,"
he told Isabel. "I
wish I could," she said. "We were talking about Sergei." "Were
you?" he asked Arkady. "Where is the good comrade?" "A
good question." Shouts
erupted in the living room, and a moment later Hedy rushed past them through
the hall. The santero and the Canadian followed. "Oh,
no," Walls said. " I didn't mean this real." "What
do you mean?" Arkady asked. "She's
possessed." Isabel
was unfazed. "It happens all the time. This whole island is
possessed." The
backyard was dark, but Hedy had kicked over the soup cauldron and spun on the
coals as sparks nested in her hair. She swung out of the fire, her spandex
dulled by ashes, golden hair pulled into tufts, while the santero ran
after, trying to pull something invisible from her body. The Canadian looked
ready to retreat to someplace tame and far away. As Luna burst into the yard
the santero spread his arms helplessly and put Hedy between himself
and Luna. Erasmo
squeezed his chair through and told Arkady, "Luna says he is going to kill
the santero if he doesn't get the spirit out of Hedy. The santero
says he can't." "Maybe
he should try again." Arkady saw the ice pick in Luna's hand. As
Luna yanked Hedy aside, her halter strap broke and one breast spilled out like
a loose eye. Luna seized the santero by the neck and bent him belly-up
between the trees. The Canadian bolted through the crowd as it poured into the
yard and pushed Arkady forward. No one else moved except Abuelita, who shoveled
her hands into the fire, rose to her toes and poured a bright stream of live
coals over Luna's back. As Luna wheeled on her Arkady caught the sergeant's
wrist, which was like grabbing the iron wheel of a locomotive, bent it back and
up in the "come along" grip as taught to the Arkady
decided he had not swung the sergeant hard enough. "Now
you're fucked de verdad." Luna wasn't even breathing hard, he'd
barely started. "Parate."
A small woman with a needle-sharp voice stepped in between. Since she was in a
skimpy top and shorts and not a PNR uniform, it took Arkady a moment to
recognize his new colleague, Detective Osorio. Where she had come from and how
long she had been taking in the scene with her grim little gaze he didn't know.
A straw bag hung from one hand and in the other was a Makarov 9-mm. He
recognized the gun right away. She didn't raise it or aim it, but it was there.
Luna recognized the gun, too. He lifted his hands to signify not surrender or
shyness but an awareness of growing complications, his own duties as an
officer, and that he was done only for the time being. "Truly
fucked," Luna told Arkady on his way out. "You
okay?" Walls asked Arkady. "I'm sorry about this. Typical Cuban party.
Too many spirits in one place. Now you'll have to excuse me, my investor has a
head start." Abuelita
dusted ashes from her palms. In the middle of the yard Hedy looked down at her
torn halter and the dirt on her shiny shorts and burst into tears. Arkady went
into the house to look for Mongo and the drummers, but they had all left.
Osorio followed him with an expression that said fools were multiplying. Chapter TenWhile he and Osorio put Erasmo to bed
Arkady looked around at what the mechanic afforded himself for living
quarters: a small space enlarged by the fact that his cot, counter, table and
chairs were all cut to half height. On a pillow of gold African cloth was a
collection of military medals and campaign ribbons. The photographs on the wall
reflected more glory than Erasmo had let on. A hospital-bed scene of Erasmo
being visited by two men in military fatigues – a tall, swarthy man in aviator
glasses who would have passed as Armenian in Russia, the other older with a
full gray beard and wiry brows, unique and unmistakable, the Comandante
himself. Neither man wore officer's insignia on his cap or shoulders; this was,
after all, an egalitarian army. Castro was as puffed with pride as a father.
The second visitor seemed to focus more ruefully on Erasmo's shortness of limb. "The
Cuban general in Another
picture showed the same distinguished friends on the deck of a fishing boat,
this time with Erasmo strapped into the fighting chair. Family pictures
displayed friendly, affluent men and women at swimming pools, bridge tables,
dancing. Or children on baseball fields, bicycles, ponies. And the entire
family in formal suits and ballroom gowns at champagne receptions and Christmas
parties. In one wide photomontage they and hundreds more like them spread up
and down the grand double stairway of a white mansion. "He'll
sleep a long time," Osorio said. "
'Unconscious' is the word." Just
as Luna had been the last man Arkady wanted to encounter, the last place he'd
expected to see again was Pribluda's apartment, but at Osorio's insistence he
climbed the steps with her. Although he thought he had tidied up fairly well,
as soon as he turned on the light the detective noticed a difference. "Dried
blood on the carpet. What happened here?" "You
don't know? You work with Luna and Arcos." "Only
for this case because Russians are involved." "You
weren't surprised to see the sergeant come after me with an ice pick?" "All
I saw was you throwing him into a wall." "It's
a tense relationship. After all, he did beat me with a baseball bat. I think it
was a baseball bat, he said it was." "He
hit you?" "You
know nothing about that?" "This
is a serious charge." "Other
places, not here. Here, my experience is, not much is investigated." "As
a matter of fact," Osorio said, "I did ask your friend, Erasmo,
before he passed out, what happened to you. He said you told him you fell down
the stairs." See, Arkady thought, that was the penalty of ever telling
less than the truth. Osorio's eye fell on the empty corner chair. "What
did you do with Chango?" "What
did I do with Chango?" Arkady asked. "The doll? Only in "I
was looking for you. You weren't here, so I followed the drums." "Naturally."
Arkady touched the cut on his hairline to feel if it had split open. Osorio
set her bag on the parlor table. " Let me see your head. You cleaned up
all the other evidence of this so-called attack." "Detective,
I've been here three days and I've seen the PNR excuse itself from two violent
deaths. I don't think you're going to investigate mere assault." She
pulled his head down, brusquely turned it one way and then the other and ran
her fingers over his scalp. "What do you claim Luna said?" "The
sergeant mentioned that he'd prefer I stayed off the street." "Well,
you didn't." He
winced as she parted the hair around a cut. "I didn't get far." "What
else?" "Nothing."
Arkady wasn't about to strip and show her the bruises on his back and legs and
he wasn't going to hand over the Yacht Club picture so it could be delivered
straight to the sergeant. That he still had it was the luck of tossing his
passport with the picture inside a shoe. Osorio
released his head. "You should see a doctor." "Thanks,
that's helpful." "Don't
be insulting. Listen, I'm only saying that since there's no evidence here that
you haven't compromised and your story has changed already once and since
officers of the Ministry of the Interior do not beat visitors from other
countries, even from He
wondered why Osorio had insisted on coming to the apartment. He also wondered
why she was dressed like a vamp with platform shoes and carrying a big straw
bag. " Detective, what are you here for?" "Because
I want you to go home alive." While
he tried to come up with an answer to that the lights in the room faded and
went dark. He stepped out to the balcony and saw that the problem wasn't only
in the apartment; an entire arc of buildings along the Malecуn had gone black. Arkady fed Pribluda's turtle by the
illumination of Rufo's lighter and then lit a cigarette and inhaled wonderful,
pain-soothing fumes. Osorio sat in the dark at the table. "A
power outage," Osorio said. "I
know the feeling." "You
should stop smoking." "That's
my biggest problem?" He found candles above the sink, lit the fattest one
and joined the detective. "Besides
Sergeant Luna and your friend downstairs, who else did you know at the santero's?" "No
one," Arkady said. " I'd heard of Walls." "Everyone
in "Luna
arranged the show for him. I think Luna's going to arrange a show for me. You
may not be safe here." Arkady had not intended to stay in the flat
himself. She reached into her bag and laid out a Makarov 9-mm, the same police
issue as in "He
knows I have the bullets. The patrolmen you see on the street, they have guns
but they don't have bullets." "There's
a comfort." He saw her lay a toiletry kit by the gun. "What is that
for?" "I'm
staying the night." "I
appreciate the gesture, Detective, but you must have some place to be. A home,
a family, a beloved pet." "Are
you offended to have a woman protect you? Is that it? Do Russians suffer from
machismo?" "Not
me. But why do it if you don't believe me about Luna?" "Luna
is not the one I worry about. Dr. Blas examined the syringe that you say Rufo
attacked you with. The doctor wasn't supposed to, but he did, to look for signs
of drugs." "Were
there?" "No,
only blood and brain tissue of Rufo's and traces of a different blood type
altogether." "Maybe
he stabbed someone else." "Did
he? Where did Rufo get the syringe?" "Dr.
Blas said he stole it at the institute." "Yes,
that's what the doctor said. I have a different answer. Wasn't that Rufo's
lighter you used?" "Yes,
I suppose it is." "Light
it." He
did as she asked and the flame became a resonating circle between them. Osorio
reached into the light and pushed his coat and shirt sleeve up his forearm to
show two dark bruises on the artery. "That's
why I came back." Arkady
regarded the marks with the expression of a man surprised to find himself
tattooed. "Rufo
must have scratched me when we were struggling." She
ran her finger lightly along the vein. " These are punctures, not
scratches. Why did you come to "I
was asked, remember?" He
blew out the flame, but he felt her eyes still intent on him. He no longer knew
why he had answered a summons he could have easily ignored, but exhuming the
reason was more than he cared to do for the Policнa Nacional de la Revoluciуn.
All the same, control of the situation had clearly passed to the hands of the
detective. Because of the heat they camped on the
balcony in metal chairs. Streetlamps were still lit, and the balcony was a
vantage point to see Luna if he returned on the ocean side of the Malecуn.
Osorio seemed to have a different concern, following Arkady's every move, as if
he might suddenly execute a dive to the pavement. Perhaps candy-colored top and
shorts were jinetera fashion – she'd given him a brief account of the
surveillance – but as they only accentuated how fine-boned she was, with hair
in rows of black curls and her eyes set under extravagant lashes, it was like
being tended by a child. Why he was with her rather than pounding at the door
of the Russian embassy for asylum he didn't know. A
wave collapsed along the wall, and he wondered whether the fishing lights
farther out rode ebb or flow. He couldn't see the "Italian
is the official language of jineteras." Ofelia had dropped her
voice. "So
I've heard. It's Hedy, the girl from the santero's. At least she's on
her feet again." "Not
for long." Osorio laid down the words like a bet. There
were times when Arkady thought Osorio spoke with the satisfaction of a hangman.
"So, just what happened to her? She was possessed but the santero
couldn't help her?" "The
drummers were Abakua." "So?" "Abakua
is from the "Is
that so? That sounds awfully... departmental." Osorio
narrowed her eyes on him. "We can believe in Santeria, Palo Monte, Abakua
or Catholic. Or any combination. You think that's impossible?" "No.
It's amazing the things I believe in: evolution, gamma rays, vitamins, the
poetry of Akhmatova, the speed of light. Most of which I take on faith." "What
did Pribluda believe in?" Arkady
thought for a moment because he liked the question. " He was hard as a barrel
and did a hundred sit-ups every day, but he thought the key to health was
garlic, black tea and Bulgarian tobacco. He distrusted redheads and people who
were left-handed. He liked long train trips so he could wear pajamas day and
night. He never picked a bad mushroom. He still called Lenin 'Ilyich.' He
warned you never to say the devil's name because he might come. In the
bathhouse he washed first, then steamed, which is more polite. He said vodka
was water for the soul." Hedy
and her new friend walked out of view. Osorio stretched her feet out onto the
balcony rail, ostensibly getting comfortable, though there was little comfort
in deck chairs. Arkady noticed that the soles of her feet were a delicate pink. Arkady
said, "I know that Dr. Blas has determined that Pribluda had a heart
attack and he has a point about the fishing gear seeming to be intact. But
maybe there was more than fishing gear. If you told me Pribluda keeled over
trying to run a marathon, I might believe it. Basking in the water, no. Let me
ask, how well do you know Dr. Blas? Can you depend on his honesty?" She
took a moment to answer. "Blas is too vain to be wrong. If he says a heart
attack, it was a heart attack. Have the body examined in "There
are other questions that can only be answered here." "There
will be no investigation," Osorio said. "An
investigation of Rufo?" "No." "Of
Luna?" "No." "Of
anything?" "No."
Her disdain would have flattened a man of any sensitivity. A
black swell moved under the beam of the lighthouse. There were times when he
could almost feel the sea reach out to him like a wonderful, dreamless sleep.
The balcony faced north toward familiar constellations. The truth was that he
didn't believe in an expanding universe anymore; he believed in an imploding
universe, a furious rushing together of everything down a celestial drain to a
single point of absolute nothing. He sensed Osorio's eyes watching him. "I
have two daughters, Muriel and Marisol," she said. "Do you have
children?" "No." "You're
married?" "No." "Married
to your work? Dedicated? Che was like that. He was married and had children,
but he gave himself to the Revolution." "More
like divorced from my work. Not like Che, no." "Because
you have the same..." "Same
what?" "Nothing."
After a space, she asked, "You like Cuban music? Everyone likes Cuban
music." "It
has a certain beat." "It
has a beat?" "Primarily." There
was a longer pause. "You
play chess, then?" Osorio tried. Arkady
lit a cigarette. "No." "Sports?" "No." " "What?" " "Oh." "You
never read that?" "No,
what I read in "I'm
sure one of us is right." "The
only difference is that Sergeant Luna used a steel bat." "Aluminum." "I
stand corrected." Osorio
recrossed her legs. Arkady leaned back to release a long plume of smoke. "If
there were an investigation," she finally said, "what would you
do?" "Start
with a chronology. Pribluda was seen first at eight in the morning by a neighbor,
a dancer. He was seen last by a co-worker at the embassy between four and six
in the afternoon. She said he was talking on the street here to a neumбtico,
a black man. If I could speak Spanish I'd go up and down the Malecуn with this
picture until I found everyone who saw him that day." "I
suppose we can talk to the block CDR." "I
know who that is." "Okay,
we'll do that." "And
take another look where the body was found." "But
we found it across the bay in "Not
in the daylight." "This
is not an investigation." "No,
absolutely not." "You're
not afraid of being attacked again?" "I'll
be with you." Her
eyes seemed get even darker. "Quй idiota." That
seemed to be her name for him. Finally, he fell asleep in the chair,
although he was aware of her perfume, a faint scent of vanilla that tinged the
air like ink in water. Chapter ElevenPredawn lent the Malecуn an underwater
light, as if the sea had covered the city overnight. Arkady and Osorio
followed the faint glow of Abuelita having a morning cigar at her windowsill.
She invited them into an apartment with walls as worn as old clothes, with
layers of color, offered them cafй cubano in dark, heavy glasses and
seated them by a statue of the Virgin that had a peacock feather at its back
and at its feet a copper crown stuffed with sandalwood and dollars. Arkady felt
fine, virtually rejuvenated by the fact that Luna had not returned in the
middle of the night with a baseball bat or pick. Detective Osorio was back in
her blue uniform and dark mood. Abuelita showed no burns from having juggled
live coals the night before. In fact, she had the manner of a young girl only
pretending to be old and at once was flirting with Arkady, thanking him for
coming to her aid the night before, allowing him to relight her cigar, and
although the smoke, the scent and golden hues were disorienting, he managed to
explain to her that while there was no official investigation into Pribluda's
death, there was curiosity about his life and asked whether she as a vigilant
member of the Committee for the Defense of the Revolution could describe his
routine. "Boring.
Sometimes your friend would be gone for weeks, claro, but when he was
here it was always the same. He would leave at seven with his briefcase and
come back about seven at night. Except Thursdays. Thursdays he would be back in
the middle of the afternoon and out again and back again. Saturdays, he shopped
at the Diplomercado, because he always found a little something for me.
Chocolates or gin. A kind man. Sundays, he went fishing with Mongo off the
seawall or tied inner tubes to the car to drive somewhere else." "You're
very observant." "Is
my duty. I am the CDR." "Thursday
was his busy day?" "Oh,
yes." Her eyes and her smile widened. He
was aware of missing an insinuation but he pressed on. "Besides
his extra trip, did anything else make his Thursdays different?" "Well,
he took the other briefcase." "'Other'?" "The
nasty green plastic one. Cuban." "Just
that day?" "Yes." "When
was the last time you saw him?" "I'd
have to think. Hijo, let me think." Arkady
may have been confused but he was not stupid. "What is the money in the
crown for?" "Offerings
from people who want spiritual advice, to cast the shells or read cards." "I
need advice about Pribluda." He added five dollars to the crown. "It
doesn't have to be spiritual." Abuelita
concentrated. "Now that I think about it, maybe two Fridays ago was the
last time? Yes. He left a little later than usual and came back a little earlier,
around four." "Four
in the afternoon?" "In
the afternoon. Then he left again around six. I remember because he changed
into shorts. He always wore shorts when he went out with Mongo on the bay. But
Mongo wasn't with him." Osorio
was unable to contain herself. "See, everything points to Pribluda being
the body." "So
far." Arkady
was pleased, too, because everybody had something. He had a version of
Pribluda's final day. Osorio had her moment of triumph. Abuelita had five
dollars. Outside
the day approached more as distinguishable shadow than as light. As Arkady and
Osorio walked up the Malecуn a huddled mass proved to be four PNRs stealing
smokes. They approached Arkady out of curiosity until they registered Osorio's
uniform and the detective gave them a heavy-lidded look that sent them
stumbling in retreat. In her uniform and cap, heavy belt and holster, she
constituted a small armored column, Arkady thought. Or a little tank with laser
eyes. In
the entire harbor the only craft in motion was the A
countersurge of new riders pushed onto the boat, carrying Arkady and Osorio
with them. The interior was set at pre-swelter, seats along the sides, bike
riders to the rear, bars to hang from crisscrossing the ceiling. Arkady's coat
drew stares. He didn't care. "Do
you love boats as much as I do?" "No,"
Osorio said. "Sailboats,
fishing boats, rowboats?" "No." "Maybe
it's a male characteristic. I think the appeal is the apparent irresponsibility
of boats, the sense of floating anywhere, while the opposite is true. You have
to work like a dog to keep from sinking." Osorio gave him no response.
" What is it? What's bothering you?" "It
is contrary to revolutionary law for a tourist to rent rooms. Abuelita should
have reported him. He was hiding among the people because he was a spy." "If
it's any comfort, I doubt that Pribluda ever passed as a Cuban. He wanted a
view of the water. I can understand that." The
more Arkady saw of the harbor the more impressed he was by both its size and
inactivity, a panorama of torpor: "How
do I look?" "Ripe.
Your embassy should lock you up." "I'm
safe with you." "The
only reason I'm with you is because you want to go to "Well,
I'm certainly enjoying myself." The village of Casablanca looked as if it
had started at the top of its hill at Christ's feet and then rolled down to the
water's edge, piling shanties of cinder block and sheet steel on top of more
dignified colonial houses. Scarlet bougainvillea tumbled over walls and the air
warmed with the sticky smell of jasmine. From the ferry landing, Arkady and
Osorio climbed up to a depot for trolleys equipped with cow catchers for rural
duty. They walked a main street with shutters closed against the morning heat,
including the closed door and boarded-up windows of a tiny PNR station, and
down the remains of a circular stairway to a park of weeds, a cement curb, a
panorama of the bay and the tar-black water and pilings, refuse and cans where
the neumбtico had been found three days before. The
scene was different in the daytime, without klieg lights, a crowd, music and
Captain Arcos shouting urgent misdirections. The sun picked out the details of
a waterfront row of elegant houses so gutted they looked like Greek temples
gone to ruin, and defined just how flimsy was the dock that reached over the
water to a half-dozen fishing boats. The craft all had long poles raised like
antennae and " "This
is where he ended up, not where he started. There's nothing to find,"
Osorio said. The
dock disappeared behind a barricade to a shack Arkady hadn't noticed at all on
his first visit. He went around to a back gate that opened to a yard that could
have been on The
boat being repaired, he said, was built in "Has
Andres heard about the body found here?" "He
says that's all they talk about. He wonders why we came back." "Did
they find anything else in the water where the neumбtico was
found?" "He
says no." "Does
he have a chart of the bay?" Arkady picked his way to the dock around
mounds of cans and bottles salvaged from the water and stinking of slime. "I
told you before, the body just floated here. We don't have anything like a
scene of the crime." "Actually,
what I think we have is a very large scene of the crime." Andres
returned with a chart that revealed as a channel that flowed between Havana the
city and Morro Castle and fed three separate inner bays: Atares, west and
nearest to downtown Havana, Guanabacoa in the middle and Casablanca east.
Arkady followed with his finger the tracery of shipping lanes, ferry routes,
depths, buoys, the very few hazards, and understood why the "What
floats in can float out, he says. Depending on the tide: in during high, out
during low. Depending on the wind: northwest in, southeast out. Depending on
the season: in winter winds were generally stronger, in summer hurricanes drew
water out to sea. If everything is equal a body can spin forever in the middle
of the bay, but usually the wind is steady from the northwest and drives bodies
right to his boatyard, which was why you find live neumбticos in Havana
and dead neumбticos in Casablanca." Arkady
tested the spindly dock and for some reason felt promise. Andres's own boat, El
Pinguino, was a coquettish blue with room for two if they could shift
around an engine box, floats, buckets, gaff and tiller. Forward, a sail was
furled between outrigged fishing poles. Aft, rope and wire lay on a transom
crosshatched from braining fish. No satellite uplink, sonar, fish finder, radar
or radio. Osorio
followed. "Looks are deceiving, Andres says. It's enough boat, he claims,
to reach "Why
am I not surprised?" Drawn
to the boat, Arkady crossed planks spaced widely enough for him to follow his
reflection in the water. What he didn't understand were the floats, each
numbered and skewered so that at least three meters of orange pole would stand
free above the water. "This,"
Andres explained through Osorio, "is the Cuban system." The fisherman
turned the chart over and, with a pencil stub, drew a wavy surface of the water
and then, at regular intervals, the poles floating upright. A "mother
line" connected them in a long string of poles. "The problem with
fish is that they swim at different depths at different times. At night with a
full moon, the tuna feed deeper. At the same time, red snapper or grunts feed
closer to the surface. And turtles, too, though you can only catch them while
they're copulating, a season that only lasts a month. Of course, they're
illegal, so he never would. But with the Cuban system you can fish for them all
by hanging hooks from different sections of the mother line at different
depths: forty meters, thirty meters, ten. Everybody sets out different lines
and this way they comb the whole sea." "Ask
him about a current that would have carried a drifting neumбtico from
the Malecуn into the bay." "He
says that is where boats concentrate because that's where fish are found, in
the current. Boats don't fish the entire bay, just that corridor with mother
lines and a gamut of hooks." "Now
ask him what they found, not here at the dock but out on the water. I don't
mean fish." Andres
stopped for breath like a man outrun by his mouth. A Cuban who poached in "He
asks, something snagged in the bay? Around the time that poor man was found at
the dock?" As if to aid recollection Andres glanced back toward the two
men who had been working on the propeller shaft but his friends had vanished.
"Trash maybe, hooked accidentally?" "Exactly." By
now Osorio understood the drift, and when Andres retreated to his shack she went
with him. They returned with a plastic bag and perhaps fifty sheets of what
looked like lottery tickets that had obviously been soaked through and then set
out to dry. In green on white, a barely legible pattern said "Montecristo,
Habana Puro, Fabrica a Mano" over and over again. "These
are official state seals before they're gummed and cut for cigar boxes,"
Osorio said. "With these, ordinary cigars could have been labeled
expensive Montecristos. This is very serious." Andres became a torrent of
explications. "He says the seals snagged on someone's line, he can't
remember whose, a week or more before the body was found. The bag had leaked,
the seals were ruined, besides that was when the weather changed, no one came
to their boats and the seals were forgotten. He dried them but just to read
them and see if they were worth reporting. He was about to himself." Arkady
was entertained by the idea of such valuable cigars. Sugar and cigars, the
diamonds and gold of "Could
you ask exactly where the bag was found?" Andres
marked the chart five hundred meters off the Malecуn between the Hotel Riviera
and Pribluda's flat. " He says only a lunatic would steal government
seals, but he thinks a neumбtico is desperate to begin with. To sail
on a ring of rubber and air? At night? The tide goes out or a current carries
him to sea? One little puncture? Sharks? A man like that makes all fishermen
look bad." Osorio was disgusted with Arkady
was content, having done something remotely professional, and on the ferry ride
back bought a paper flute of peanuts roasted in sugar that he induced Osorio to
share. Her
attitude had changed a little. " That man Andres only showed us the cigar
seals he found because he looked into your eyes. You knew he was hiding
something. How did you do that?" It
was true that from the moment Arkady walked into the boatyard he felt guided to
the flimsy dock and the spear-shaped floats of the "mother line." He
could say it was the way the workmen avoided Osorio, but no, it was as if El
Pinguino had called his name. "A
moment of clarity." "More
than that. You saw through him." "I'm
highly trained in suspicion. It's the Russian method." Osorio
gave him an opaque, humorless gaze. He had yet to figure the detective out. The
fact that Luna had backed off when Osorio arrived in the santero's
yard suggested as much that they were working together as on opposite sides.
She could just be a smaller version of the man who had beaten Arkady with a
bat. Yet there were moments when Arkady would spy an entirely different,
unrevealed person stirring within her. The ferry engines reversed and threw the
deck into vibrations as it coasted to the dock. "Now
we should go to a doctor," Osorio said. " I know a good one." "Thanks,
but I finally have a mission. Your Dr. Blas needs a better photograph of Sergei
Pribluda. I volunteered to find it. At least, to try." The address Isabel had given him the
night before was an old town house that, like a dowager in a once fine but
tattered dress, maintained an illusion of European culture. Wrought-iron
railings guarded marble steps. Lunettes of stained glass cast red and blue
light onto the floor of a reception room staffed with women sitting in white
housecoats. Arkady
followed strains of Tchaikovsky, bright and brittle notes from a badly tuned
piano, into a sun-filled courtyard, where, through an open window, he saw a
class in progress, dancers who balanced the upper bodies of starving waifs on a
powerful musculature that started at the small of their backs, sculpted the
haunches and flowed down through the legs. While Russian ballerinas tended to
be doe-like and softly blonde, however, Cubans had whippet-thin faces trimmed
in black hair and eyes and lit with the arrogance of flamenco dancers. In their
leotards they combined poverty and chic, moving on point in stiffly elegant,
birdlike steps in taped toe shoes across a wooden floor patched with squares of
linoleum. As
a Russian, he took a moment to adjust. He had been brought up with the attitude
that great dancers – Nijinsky, Nureyev, Makarova, Baryshnikov – were, per se,
Russian, that they graduated from schools like the They
took a table in a corner of the courtyard, Isabel inhaling fiercely, looking
Arkady up and down. "Eighty degrees and you're still in your coat. That's
class." "It's
a style. I noticed that you're very good." "It
doesn't matter. I will never be more than corps de ballet no matter how good I
am. If I weren't the best I wouldn't be in the company at all." Arkady
was struck again by the melancholy of her voice and the long line of her neck,
with its nape of feathery black curls on milk-white skin. Also by her
fingernails, which were bitten to the quick. She drew on her cigarette
hungrily, as if it served for food. "I like that you're thin." "There's
that." Arkady lit a cigarette himself, celebrating an attribute he had
been unaware of. "You
can see the conditions in which we have to work," Isabel said. "It
doesn't seem to stop you. Dancers dance no matter what, don't they?" "They
dance to eat. The ballet feeds us better than most Cubans see. Then there's the
chance some infatuated Spaniard from "A
ballerina who defects to "You're
laughing?" "It's
a change. I was never aware of Pribluda's interest in the ballet." "He
was interested in me." "That's
different," Arkady conceded. Her self-absorption was so complete she had yet
to notice any scuff marks on him. "You were close?" "On
my part, strictly friends." "He
wanted to be closer?" "I
suppose so." "Did
he have any photographs of you?" Arkady thought of the frame in Pribluda's
bureau, of Isabel's willowy pose in class. "I
believe so." "Do
you have any photographs of him?" "No."
She appeared to find the question ridiculous. "Or
the two of you together?" "Please." "Only
asking." "Sergei
wanted a different relationship but he was so old, not the most handsome man in
the world and not very cultured." "He
didn't know a pliй from a... whatever?" "Exactly." "But
he was doing something for you." "Sergei
was communicating with "About
what?" "Getting
out of this wretched country." Arkady
had the sensation that he was talking to a fairy-tale princess imprisoned in a
tower. "When
did you last see Sergei?" "Two
weeks ago. It was the day of the first night of Cinderella. One of the
principal dancers was ill, I was filling in as one of the ugly stepsisters and
there was a problem with my wig, because here in "What
time?" "In
the morning, maybe eight. I knocked on his door on the way down. He came to the
door with Gordo." "Gordo?" "His
turtle. I named him. It means 'fat boy.'" Arkady
could see Pribluda opening the door. Had the colonel imagined himself a knight
errant rescuing Isabel from her island prison? "You
lived right above Pribluda," Arkady said, "did you ever notice who
visited him?" "Who
would visit a Russian if they knew his home was watched?" "Who
is watching?" She
touched her chin as if such a delicate feature could sprout a beard. " He
watches. He watches everything." "The
last time you saw Pribluda, did he mention what he was going to do that
day?" "No.
He didn't boast like George, who always has big plans. But Sergei brought
you." "He
didn't send for me, I just came." Arkady tried to get the conversation
back on track. "Did you ever see Pribluda with a Sergeant Luna from the
Ministry of the Interior?" "I
know who you mean. No." Isabel awarded him a smile. "You stood up to
Luna last night. I saw you." "In
a feeble way." What Arkady remembered of the encounter was being saved by
Detective Osorio's arrival. "And
you are going to save me." She placed her cool hand on his and said as if
they'd reached an understanding, "When the letter comes from Over
Isabel's shoulder Arkady saw George Washington Walls almost trip and recover as
he entered the courtyard from the street. His light complexion was even lighter
for a moment before he regained momentum, the street stroll of an American
slowed to a Cuban pace and an actor's self-consciously casual style: pressed
blue jeans and a fastidiously white pullover over brown biceps. The man had to
be fifty, Arkady thought, and Walls could almost play himself as a young man if
there was a movie. Why not? As Arkady remembered, there had been the war
protests, the march on "Comemierda"
she leaned across the table to say, then twisted out her cigarette and marched
back to the rehearsal room. "Do
you want me to translate that?" Walls asked Arkady. "No." "Good.
She is as mean as she is lovely and she is a lovely lady." Walls sat and
gave Arkady his full attention. "Are you interested in ballet? I
contribute to the cause here, but I'm actually more of a fight fan myself. I go
all the time. You?" "Not
too much." "But
sometimes." Walls eyed the repair work on Arkady's head. "So, what
happened to you anyway?" "I
think it was baseball." "Some
game. Look, I wanted to thank you for stopping Luna last night." "I
think you helped." "No,
you did it and it was the right thing. The sergeant was out of line. These
things happen in "George
Washington Walls." "Yeah,
that says it all, doesn't it? Here I am like a kid checking out everyone Isabel
talks to. You surprised me, I admit it. Last night I didn't come on too well,
either. The problem is, I'm the elder statesman of radicals on the run in "That's
all right." Arkady changed the subject, "What was it like to be 'on
the run'?" "Not
bad. In East Germany, the old Democratic Republic, the blonde Hildas and Uses
used to line up to serve under the black commander. I thought I was a god. Here
I am trying to wring one little smile from Isabel's lips." "You've
been here a while." "I've
been here forever. I don't know what the fuck I had in mind. The truth is, I
always let my mouth get away from me. My mouth said, 'I'm not going to war, I'm
not going to let you push around my black brothers in the South, I'm hijacking
this fucking plane.' And the rest of me's going, 'Jesus Christ, I didn't mean
that, please don't hit me again.' I didn't really think they'd take me to "I'm
trying to imagine." "Don't.
They finally gave up and brought me back to "Still..."
Arkady tried to align the images of the world-shaker and investment hustler. Walls
caught the look. "I know, I was somebody. Look, so was Eldridge
Cleaver and Stokely Carmichael. Brother Cleaver crawled back to the States to
do time, and Stokely ended up in "Yes." "Well,
she obsesses on this, she obsesses on men she thinks can help. And she's right,
they'll never let her be a prima ballerina here and they'll never let her out.
Do you love her?" "I
just met her." "But
I saw you two together. Men fall in love with her very fast, especially when
they see her dance. Sometimes they fall all over themselves to offer to
help." "I
would help if I could." "Ah,
that means you have no idea of the situation." "I'm
sure of that," Arkady admitted. "Do you know Sergei Pribluda?" "I
did. I heard they found him in the bay. Are you a spy too?" "Prosecutor's
investigator." "But
Sergei's friend?" "Yes." "Let's
talk outside." Walls led Arkady past the reception desk and through the
fronds of a small yard to the street where a sleekly molded white American
convertible with a red leather interior sat at the curb. On rounded tail fins
were silver rings and on the lid of the trunk the mere suggestion of a spare
tire. As if he were introducing a person, Walls said, "'57 Chrysler Imperial.
Three hundred twenty-five horsepower V-8, TorqueFlite transmission, Torsion
Aire suspension. Ernest Hemingway's car." "You
mean, like Hemingway's car?" Walls
caressed the fender. "No, I mean Hemingway's car. It was Papa Hemingway's,
now it's mine. What I wanted to talk about is this letter coming from "A
little." "Her
father?" "No." Walls
dropped his voice. "I love Cubans, but they do trim the truth. Look, these
people bankrupted Why?
Arkady wondered. "Lazaro
Lindo was number two in the Cuban Party, posted in "Fidel
knew?" "From
the start. He let the plot roll to see who'd sign on. There's a reason the
Comandante has survived this long." "What
happened to Isabel?" "Her
mother went crazy and fell under a bus. Isabel was raised by her aunt under
another name, which was the only reason she was picked for dance school. Cuban
ballet is like Cuban sports, a miracle until you find out how it's done. They
search the country for little prospects and she was a star at twelve. The
uproar when they figured out she was Lazaro Lindo's little girl? Now, they
point to her and say, 'See how we let the children of enemies of the people
rejoin society.' What they're not going to do is promote the name Isabel Lindo
on the bill as a prima ballerina, and they're never going to let her
tour." "Is
her father still alive?" "Died
in jail. Somebody dropped a rock on him. What I'm saying is, this is no
ordinary message Isabel wants from "I
appreciate it." "She's
difficult, I know. You can help." "How?" "Don't
get her hopes up." "Did
Pribluda get her hopes up?" "Sergei
was going to work for me." "As
what?" "Security." "Security?
What kind of security can a Russian offer in "Close.
In Antigua, the Caymans, "Not
yet. Luna said I would see him again, and I don't think he's a man of idle
threats. I doubt Sergeant Luna knows what an idle threat is." Walls
went around to the passenger side and opened the dashboard. Nested on chamois
cloth was a huge handgun with a slot trigger. "A Colt .45 automatic, a
classic, Fidel's favorite. Luna has been useful. He has a lot of interesting
connections. But you saw last night how he's just getting out of control. I
have to disengage and it might be easier with someone watching my back. Maybe
you'd be interested." Arkady
had to smile. Not much had amused him lately, but this offer did. "Right
now I'm watching my own back." "You
don't look it. You have a 'fuck you' quality in an understated way. You could
do general security, too." "I
don't speak Spanish." "You'd
learn." "Actually,
I prefer safer work." "It's
absolutely safe. The truth is, Arkady, I live in this tropical paradise on
sufferance. There are people who would seize any opportunity, any embarrassment
and say, 'Screw George Washington Walls, he's yesterday's news; if the Americans
still want him, send him back.' In my situation, the quieter the better." "Well,
that's interesting, but I'm only in "People
say that. People say they're just coming through Chapter TwelveArkady expected that any minute Luna would
drop from a street sign or pop up from a manhole cover and make good on his
promise to "fuck him up." Fucking up and killing were close but not
the same. There was that added sexual charge, the suggestion of rough mating,
as if a missing eye or ear were a reasonable token of intercourse. Killing was
clean. Fucking up sounded messy. Strangely
enough, though, Arkady felt revitalized. Not exactly happy, but fueled by the
search for the photograph and the small license it gave him to ask questions
about Pribluda. Amused also, in a time of depression, by the implausible offer
of employment providing security for an American radical like George Washington
Walls. Perhaps because When
he got back to Pribluda's flat he propped the front door shut and carried a
bottle of chilled water to the office, where he turned on the computer and,
when the machine demanded a password, entered gordo. The machine
chirped and the screen blinked and offered icons, programs, startup,
accessories, main, printer. Twenty-five years in the KGB and an agent used a
turtle's name as his password. Lenin wept. Still
interested in Pribluda's last day, Arkady went through accessories to calendar.
Hours, days, months rolled backward without appointments, but what curious
comfort to take, he thought. He couldn't speak Spanish, but he could navigate
the universal PC desktop. CUMIN was the Cuban Ministry of Sugar and charts,
RUSMIN the Russian Ministry of Trade, SUG-FUT the futures prices of Cuban,
Brazilian and Indian sugar as they competed in commodities pits. Meanwhile, a
downstairs din of drums and maracas suggested that Erasmo the car mechanic was
at work. Arkady intended to talk to Mongo and find a photograph of Pribluda,
but first things first, while he had the inspiration. He
opened SUGHAB,
which divided Commune Camilo Cienfuegos is the former Hershey sugar
mill east of Arkady
supposed the Cubans would be testy about that. He started a search for the
Havana Yacht Club. Nothing. Rufo Pinero. Nothing. Sergeant Luna and, for good
measure, Captain Arcos. Nothing. Opened the E-mail outbox and inbox. Empty. A
document labeled AZUPANAMA
caught his eye because Vice Consul Bugai had mentioned successful negotiations
between [email protected]/IntelWeb/ru Wed Aug 5 1996 A.I. Serkov, Manager Diamond International Trading 1123 Smolenskaya Ploshad, Rm. 167
Dear
Serkov, Greetings
from the land of mambo kings. I am just now getting used to sending mail
through the internet so I hope you are all well, etc. The weather is agreeable,
thank you. Let me know if this reaches you safely. Yours, S.S.
Pribluda It was like watching someone learn
to ride a bicycle. A.I.
Serkov Diamond
International Trading Dear
Serkov, Progress. Yours, S.S.
Pribluda Arkady
liked the sound of that. Progress! Russian and to the point. Also interesting
in that it had no E-mail address or time sent, suggesting that it was a note
for a real message to be sent from an encrypted machine at the embassy. [email protected]/IntelWeb/ru
Mon Oct 1 1996 Serkov, The
Chinese contact has borne fruit. I think you will see that the fox is flushed!
A fox and a wolf! Pribluda What
a wordsmith. Pribluda had obviously been flushed with victory. "Success!"
was all an agent need say. "Chinese contact" seemed far too much, not
that Arkady was aware of any part of According
to the spreadsheet, Pribluda's finances were straightforward, so much allotted
each month for food, laundry, personal items, gasoline and car repair. The only
unexplained expenditure was a hundred dollars paid every Thursday. If the item
was sex, Arkady thought, Pribluda would have hidden it; as an unreconstructed
Communist, Pribluda had a skewed but ironbound morality. No, the item could be
for his Chinese contact. Or karate lessons. According to little Carmen,
Pribluda did carry a black belt in his briefcase. The
more immediate fact was that the colonel had much more money than was found
with the body in the inner tube. Arkady shut down the computer and searched the
apartment again, more his line of work. This time he emptied everything,
including shoes and hatbands. In pants hanging in the closet he found two red
ticket stubs. In the medicine cabinet he found, rolled with white pasteboard
inside a white aspirin bottle, a couple of pills left for sound effects and
$2,500 American. Which
didn't tell him much. All the same, Arkady was satisfied with finding anything.
He picked up a knife in the kitchen and let the blue of the sea draw him to a
balcony chair. One moment he was full of nervous energy, the next barely able
to move his feet. Was it the six-hour time difference from He
awoke to the rising pitch of sirens. The sun had moved to the far end of the
Malecуn, and coming up the seawall boulevard was a high-speed vanguard of four
motorcycles, their way cleared in advance by PNRs who had suddenly appeared
ahead at every intersection to stop all other traffic and chase bikers and
pedicabs out of the way. Behind the bikes came a smooth, silent convoy, and as
it flashed by people on the sidewalk paused in midstep, eyes darting to each
vehicle as it flew past, from boxy Land Rover to wide Humvee, to a little
Minint Lada that ran like a lapdog in front of two black Mercedes 280s with
tinted glass and the swaying ride of heavy armor, from radio van to ambulance,
from trailing Land Rover to a rear guard of four more cycles, an energetic
whirlwind that made the entire Malecуn come to a stop like a population in a
trance and then, with its passing, released them. Arkady's
name was being shouted, and down on the pavement he saw Erasmo tilted backward
in his wheelchair. "Bolo,
did you see him?" Erasmo touched his beard to signify El Lider, El
Comandante, Fidel himself. "That
was him?" "In
one of the Mercedes. Or his double. No one knows and the where or when of the
presidential cavalcade is never announced ahead of time. In fact, it's the only
surprise in "Has
he got a phone?" "Very
funny. Come down and we'll find him. Besides, it's too beautiful to be inside.
I'll give you the Cuban perspective." Arkady
thought that unless a person had an armored car and entourage it might be
beautiful outside, but with Luna outside it was probably safer in. "Look,"
Erasmo admitted, "I need a driver." Driving a Jeep with the radio pounding
and Erasmo half over the car door, calling to friends on the Malecуn was a
different view of life. To begin with, the mechanic gave the PNRs a rude
salute. "Professional
hijos de puta," he explained to Arkady. "I'm a capitalino,
someone from "Okay." Some
houses were Spanish castles carved from pink limestone, office buildings showed
ranks of shutters with cockeyed slats and the sun itself disintegrated into
light. While Arkady watched for Luna, Erasmo identified oncoming traffic.
" '50 Chevy Styleline, '52 Buick Roadmaster, '58 "Isn't
it dangerous for girls to hitch rides?" asked Arkady. In "If
buses aren't running, women must find rides some other way. Besides, Cuban men
may be macho but they have a sense of honor." All the girls Arkady saw
were fullbore pubescent, with bare midriffs or body suits painted on, their
thumbs out ostensibly for eunuchs. Erasmo spotted a hitchhiker in hot orange.
"When you see a girl like that, you should at least honk." "Did
Pribluda honk?" "No.
Russians know nothing about women." "You
think so?" "Describe
a woman to me." "Intelligent,
humorous, artistic." "Is
this your grandmother? I mean a woman. Like the kinds here. Criolla:
very Spanish, very white. Like the dancer Isabel. Negra: African, black,
which can be very forbidding or very sexy. In the middle, mulata: a
caramel color, skin soft as cocoa, eyes like a gazelle. Like your friend the
police detective." "You
saw her?" "I
noticed her." "Why
do men always describe women in edible terms?" "Why
not? And the best to most Cuban men, china: mulata with just a hint of
Chinese, of the exotic. Now describe a woman." "A
knife in the heart." They
drove for a while. "That's
not bad," Erasmo said. "When
you called me on the street, you said 'Bolo.' What does that
mean?" "Bowling
ball. That's what we call Russians. Bolos." "For
our...?" "Physical
grace." Erasmo unveiled a vicious grin. The mechanic had a broad, vigorous
face, huge shoulders. Arkady realized that with legs the man would have been a
Hercules. "Speaking
of Chinese," Arkady said, "are there Chinese events on Thursdays
around "Chinese
events? Wrong city, my friend." Undeniably,
Arkady thought. They
went past high rises that had the dinginess of fingered postcards, until the
Malecуn was swallowed by a tunnel. Emerging in "For
the tires, at least," Erasmo said. "This is an island of cannibals.
Remember Alive? The plane crash? Fidel is our pilot, but he would call a crash
a Special Period." Erasmo's
wheelchair was a folding model with bicycle tires and once it was pulled from
the back of the car and he was seated, he let Arkady know not to even offer a
push. He tacked recklessly around broken bottles to a series of pool-sized
basins filled with brackish water and, only a step below them, a shelf of
pocked coral and seawater of restless green. Concrete blocks like the stones of
a pyramid had been set out as a breakwater and snorkelers floated between them
and the coral. "They're
spearfishing for octopus," Erasmo said when Arkady caught up. "
Before the Revolution you could swim here in a freshwater pool, a saltwater
pool or the ocean. Parties all the time, American friends learning the
mambo." He lifted his chin toward a house with a wooden pergola on the
second floor where sheets billowed like eager sails. " My grandmother's.
She wore a sable jacket and used a lorgnette instead of eyeglasses, women of a
certain class did. I used to tear up and down here on a Schwinn tricycle with
streamers on the handlebars. I suppose in a way I still do." "Do
you still have family here?" "They
left long ago. Flew out, sailed out, paddled out. And, of course, if you leave,
you're officially a traitor, a gusano, a worm. You can't just disagree
with Fidel, you are against Fidel, against the Revolution, a
criminal, a faggot or a pimp. That way there's no one against Fidel except
scum." Arkady
looked at the house. It was quite grand. Erasmo's hair and beard had gone a
little wild in the breeze. "You
didn't want to live here?" "I
used to. I traded for rooms where a garage wouldn't be so obvious. Mongo lives
here now." "You're
old friends?" "Old
friends. You know, he often misses work but up to now he always let me
know." They
backed the chair up the steps and through a progression of dining room, sitting
room, courtyard, second parlor all turned into separate apartments, the larger
rooms divided by plywood and sheets into two apartments, so that the house was
a pueblecito, as Erasmo called it, a little city. He knocked at a door
in the rear. When there was no answer, he told Arkady to feel over the
doorframe for a key. "This
was my bedroom whenever I slept here. Some things stay the same. I loved it.
Here I was Captain Kidd." The
room afforded such a sweeping view of the water it had to be a theater of
fantasy for a boy brought up on pirate tales of the "Speargun,"
Erasmo said. He had Arkady take it down and showed him how to place the
elongated back end against a hip to pull the bands with both hands to a cocked
position. The spear itself was a steel bolt with, instead of barbs, two folding
wings held down by a sliding collar behind the tip. "The Cuban fisherman
meets his prey on all fronts." Arkady
was more interested in pictures of boxers on the wall. "Kid
Chocolate, Kid Gavilan, Teofilio Stevenson. Mongo's heroes," Erasmo said. Under
a newspaper photo of Fidel in a sparring pose with a tall, spindly fighter the
caption read, "El Jefe con el joven pugilista Ramуn Bartelemy." "You
said his name is Mongo." Erasmo
shrugged as if it were self-evident. "Ramуn, Mongo, same thing." The
picture of Cuban boxers in front of the Eiffel Tower was identical with the one
Arkady had seen in Rufo's room, except now Arkady saw that next to Rufo was
Ramуn "Mongo" Bartelemy. "If
he's not here, where do you think he is?" "I
don't know. His tube is here. Arkady, do you mind if I ask about the PNR? There
were two stationed across the street until the show at the santero's.
I know they don't like Russians, but is there anything you want to tell me?
After all, it's where I live too." Arkady
thought that was a reasonable request. "Sergeant Luna might have something
to do with them." "Luna.
That Luna, the dark phase of the moon, unseen but there. Yes, a bad man to
cross and a very bad man to embarrass before his friends. An exquisite choice
of enemy. And now the PNRs are gone. You may want them in case he's coming
back." "That's
occurred to me." "You're
so intent on finding Sergei?" "Or
what happened to him." "You
should start thinking about what's going to happen to you. You have no
authority and you don't even pretend to speak the language, which is a relief.
You can't investigate, all you can do is get involved." "In
what?" " Arkady
opened the shutter wider. Under a low sun, waves pressed against an offshore
breeze and two neumбticos came into view riding the crown of a swell,
each in turn sliding up the incoming brow, sinking from sight and reappearing
on the next slope of water like riders on submerged horses. " So, if
Mongo's tube is here, where is he?" "He
can still fish." By the time Arkady and Erasmo returned
outside the neumбticos were using short paddles to maneuver around the
breakwater. Green aerated waves churned between the breakwater and rock. The fishermen
had to come in on one rush as much as possible and the boulders struck Arkady
as an excellent place to crack a head. "When
does Mongo go out?" "You
never know. Neumбticos go out day or night. They fish one stretch of
the bay and then another. I think you have to call fishing from an inner tube a
feat of improvisation. They can stay close to shore or go miles out, where the
charter boats are hooking marlin. The boats don't like that, having a couple of
poor Cubans mess with their tourists." "The
neumбticos try to catch marlin?" "They
could. They're like buoys, they just drag behind until a fish gets tired. A
fish could tow them to "Always
in pairs?" "Absolutely,
in case one gets sick or loses his fins. Especially at night." "Do
they have radios?" "No." "And
what exactly could a neumбtico do while his friend was being eaten by
a shark?" Erasmo
let his eyebrows rise. "Well, we have a lot of religions in What
appealed to Arkady was the marginal aspect of the fishermen, the way they
folded into the motion of the sea, rose on the horizon and then slid from
sight, their vanishing act. Lying back in their tubes, they removed their
flippers and sat up, paddles lifted. A still space was followed by a trough
sucking sand and then a set of three waves gathering strength. Both men chose
the same climactic surge and stroked in deep pulls to ride it around the
breakwater and up the rocks. The nearer spilled, clutching his tube with one
hand and rocks with the other until he could scramble up on his belly. The
second was an older man in a straw hat, and he timed his landing to let the
wave's momentum smoothly lift him standing onto the coral, the brim of his hat
trembling raggedly in the breeze, shirt and pants bleached, black shanks ending
in feet gray with calluses. He found a tide pool in which to deposit his catch
while he tucked his gear between the tube and the net that constituted his
one-man craft. Despite the weight and dripping of the inner tube balanced on
his head, he found a match to light the stub of a cigar in his mouth. Arkady
dug out the photograph of the Havana Yacht Club for Erasmo to show him. The
fisherman put his finger on Mongo and pointed to the sky. "Pescando
con cometa. Con cometa." "It's
what I thought." Erasmo pointed out to Arkady a dot in the sky. "You
see that kite? The old man says maybe he saw Mongo fishing over there. Even
from the air the industrious Cuban finds his fish." Arkady
thought of Pribluda's heart attack. "Could you ask him if he ever fishes
in the rain?" "He
says, 'Sure.'" "When
there's lightning?" A
solemn shake of the head. "No." "When
was the last time there was lightning on the bay?" "He
says, 'A month.'" They took the Jeep. Since the kite was
too far over the water to keep track of from the street, Arkady stopped for
another look. From a bathing stairway he saw about two hundred meters farther
on a thin figure in a cap standing on steps and playing out a string rising
with a delicate curve that disappeared into the air. Perhaps three hundred
meters over the water a kite rode the offshore wind. The Jeep honked. "Sorry,
but you should have seen them," Erasmo explained when Arkady returned to
the car. Arkady swiveled and saw a pair of long-legged blondes roller-blading
away. "Jineteras on wheels, a mechanic's fantasy." "We're
looking for Mongo." "Right.
To fish with a kite you actually need two lines," Erasmo said when they
started driving again. "One to the kite, one to the hook. The first line
takes the second one out, and when the kite is far enough to reach the kind of
fish you want, you jerk the second line and it falls into the water." "What
about the charter boats below?" "Richly
amusing. They're playing Hemingway and here's a hook dropping down from some
poor Cuban bastard on the beach." Even
though Mongo was not in view of the street, once they were close the kite
string led them to two lime-green beach houses attached like Siamese twins at
the second floor. The windows were boarded and weeds grew on the roof. Arkady
helped Erasmo into his chair, and they moved through the walkway that ran between
the houses to rocks sparkling with fish scales. A long shovel stood, inserted
by the blade between cement stairs that had split. Reels of kite and hook cord
spun on the wooden shaft, feeding themselves so fast to the outbound kite that
they hummed. A green baseball cap fluttered on the handle. Whether he had seen
Mongo or the shovel, Arkady wasn't sure. The car horn hadn't helped. "How
could he disappear so quickly?" Arkady asked. "He
can be elusive. That's what they called him when he was in the ring, the
Elusive Mongo." "Why
would he run?" "You'd
have to ask him, but people stay away from police investigations if they
can." "Would
you know his cap?" "Of
course." As
Arkady reached for the cap a breeze flipped it onto the water, where it floated
in and out until an undertow dragged it under. At the same time, the spools on
the shaft ran out and kite and hook cords flew into the air and could have been
strings to the sun for all the chance of retrieving them. It
was January. In Chapter ThirteenOfelia found Renko at the Malecуn
apartment. After he placed a chair against the door he led her down the
hall to the office, where the computer monitor told a tale that was sad but
true. American attempts on the life of the Cuban Head of
State have included the use of exploding cigars, exploding seashells, poison
pens, poison pills, poison diving suits, poison sugar, poison cigars, midget
submarines, snipers, bounties. They have employed Cubans, Cuban-Americans,
Venezuelans, Chileans, Angolans, American gangsters. Cuban Security has
investigated 600 plots against the President's life. The CIA has tried to
introduce hallucinogenic sprays into television studios where the President was
broadcasting and depilatory powders to make his beard fall out. For these
reasons, the President continues to make use of a number of secure residences
and never announces his schedule in advance. "You
found Pribluda's password." "Wasn't
that brilliant of me?" he said. "This was entered January 5, the next
to last file Pribluda entered, and I have to ask myself, what has this got to
do with sugar?" "It's
nothing that any Cuban doesn't know. The life of the Comandante is always at
risk." "The
day before he disappears, maybe the day before he dies, Sergei Pribluda gets
the urge to write a short history of assassination attempts?" "Apparently.
He was a spy. Why are you interested?" "I'm
fishing with the Cuban method, setting hooks everywhere." Ofelia
had showered at home and come in jeans, a shirt tied at the midriff, sensible
sandals, floppy straw bag over her shoulder, but she maintained a professional
attitude. "Did you find a photograph of Pribluda for Dr. Blas?" "No." "But
you have been busy." New and old maps of "A
cultural visit to the ballet, a pleasant drive on the Malecуn. You?" "I
have other cases, no?" She regarded Pribluda's computer. "This
machine is on Cuban territory." "Ah,
but the memory of this machine, that is purely Russian." Like a virtuoso
of the keyboard, he exited the file, shut off the computer and, as screen and
room went dark, said, "Useless without the code." "You
don't have the authority, the language or background to investigate here." "I'd
hardly call what I'm doing investigating. But then, you're not either." It
was not easy to control her temper around this man. She opened the bag and
brought out a screwdriver, screws and slide bolt. The screwdriver was hers, but
it had taken her an hour at the flea market outside the Central Train Station
to find the bolt and screws. "I
brought you this for the door." "Thank
you, that's very thoughtful. Let me pay." "A
gift from the Cuban people." She thrust them into his hands. "I
insist." "I
insist more." "Then,
thank you. I will sleep like a babe. Better than a babe, a bivalve." Whatever
that meant, she thought. After screwing in the bolt and latch,
Renko celebrated what he called his "heightened sense of security" by
opening a bottle of Pribluda's rum and taking a tray of Pribluda's pickles,
mushrooms and other Russian indigestibles on a tray out to the balcony. Sitting
in an aluminum chair, she scanned the street for danger while he basked in a
half-moon that balanced at the end of a silver path across the water. The beam
from From
the portal below came a slow country son, a poem by Guillйn adapted to
a six-stringed guitar. "Maria Belen, Maria Belen, Maria Belen,
watching your hips roll and sway from Camaguey to Santiago, from Renko
lit a cigarette. "Actually, Sergeant Luna seems to have forgotten about
me. He didn't seem the forgetful type. Good rum." " "No." Ofelia
hadn't thought so, which meant that he had found it since he had moved into the
apartment, although she herself had looked everywhere when she dusted the place
for prints. She controlled the impulse to glance back at the apartment and was
aware of him watching her do just that. "I've
been thinking. Maybe it would be safer if you went to the embassy and stayed
there under guard." "Ruin
my Even
in poor light she saw the scab and bandage at his hairline. She felt unaccountably
responsible for his state of health and infuriated, as usual, by the way he
twisted a conversation. "But
you still claim that the sergeant attacked you? You think there is a conspiracy
against you?" "Oh,
no, that would be crazy. I would say, however, after Rufo and Luna, a
hint of animosity." "Rufo
is one thing," she maintained. "The accusation that an officer would
attack you is an effort to paint "Why?
It could certainly happen in "Not
in "I
imagined the sergeant wears Air Jordans?" "Then
why hasn't he come back?" "I
don't know. Maybe because of you." She
wasn't sure how to take that. Renko
said, "You told me Dr. Blas was honest, and if he said the heart muscle of
the man you pulled from the bay shows signs of cardiac arrest, the doctor is
telling the truth?" "If
he says so." "Let's
say I do believe him. What I don't believe is that a healthy man has a heart
attack for no reason. If he was out on the water and hit by lightning, that
would be a different matter. Shouldn't Blas examine the body for signs of a
bolt?" "Anything
else?" She meant to be sarcastic. "You
could find who Rufo talked to between the time he let me off and when he came
back to kill me. Check his telephone records." "Rufo
didn't have a telephone." "He
had a cell phone when he picked me up at the airport." "He
didn't when I searched him. In any case, there is no investigation." The
Cuban guitar was the sweetest guitar on earth, with notes that flickered the
way light dappled the water. She watched him light another cigarette from the
ember of the first. "Have
you ever stopped smoking?" "Certainly."
He inhaled. "But I know a doctor who says the optimum time to start
smoking is in a person's forties, when a person can really use nicotine's
effect to focus the mind and forestall senility. He says it generally takes
about twenty years for the consequences – cancer, coronary problems, emphysema
– to develop, and then you are ready to go anyway. Of course, he's a Russian
doctor." Although
she regarded it as a filthy habit, Ofelia heard herself say, "There were
times I wished I smoked. My mother smokes cigars and watches Mexican telenovelas
and shouts to the characters, 'Don't believe her, don't believe that
bitch!'" "Really?" "My
mother is light-skinned from a family of tobacco growers, and even though she
married a black cane cutter, my father, she always maintains the cultural
superiority of tobacco workers. 'When they roll cigars in the factory, there's
someone reading aloud the great stories. Madame Bovary, Don Quixote.
You think in the middle of the cane field there's someone reading Madame
Bovary? " "I
imagine not." Ofelia
opened her bag, laid the Makarov on her knees and placed a necklace of white
and yellow beads around her neck. "Very
pretty," Renko said. Blas
would have disapproved. Yellow was for Oshun, the goddess of fresh water and
sweet things, the color of honey and gold and Oshun's mulata glow.
Ofelia was comfortable wearing it around the Russian because he was ignorant. "Just
beads," she said. " Does the music bother you?" A
song lingered in the arcade under the balcony. "No,"
Arkady said. "You
don't understand any Spanish?" "Honey
and absinthe pour from your veins, into my burning furrow and making me
insane." Along with the song came murmuring and rustling from below.
Couples on the seawall moved closer. "Not
a word." "You
know," Ofelia said, "there are differences between rumba, mambo, son,
songo, salsa." "I'm
sure." "But
everything is based on drums, for dancing." "Well,
I'm not much of a dancer." Not
everyone had to be a dancer, Ofelia thought. Not that she found him attractive.
As her mother would say, will he live through the day? Ofelia's first husband,
Humberto, was black as a domino, a baseball player, a fantastic dancer. The
second, a musician, was the sort everyone called chino, not only
because he was such a handsome mix but because everybody liked him. He played
bongos, which demanded an outgoing personality. Until he finally went out
completely. But an even better dancer than Humberto. Her mother despised them
both and simply called them Primero and Segundo, leaving lots of room for
additions. Compared with them, wrapped in his black coat in spite of the heat,
Renko looked like an invalid. "That's
how spirits communicate," she explained. "They're in the drums.
Unless you dance the spirits can't come out." "Like
they came out for Hedy?" "Yes." "Then
it's safer not to dance." "Then
you're already dead." "Good
point. Abakua is a version of Santeria?" "They
couldn't be more different. Santeria is from "Blas
said they used to run smuggling." Ofelia
was starting to learn how Renko hid behind the most innocent expressions ready
to pounce. She wasn't going to get into the fact there were two Abakuas, a
public one with sincere devotees who could be university professors or Party
members and a secret criminal Abakua that had risen from its grave. This second
Abakua was, needless to say, for men only and had a thieves' morality. Murder
of an outsider was allowed, while informing on another Abakua was the ultimate
sin. And Cubans believed the Abakua could reach anywhere. Ofelia knew an
informer who got himself assigned to a post in "We
don't have to talk about it," Arkady said. "It
was the way you asked." "I
sounded smug? It's just my ignorance. I apologize." "We
will not talk about religions." "God
knows." From
the radio in the portal rose the deep beat of a drum that Ofelia knew had to be
a tall iya with a dark red center on the skin, accompanied by the
grinding rhythm of a belly-shaped gourd. A single horn insinuated itself, the
way a man asked a woman to dance. "Anyway,
it's not a bad thing to be possessed," Ofelia said. "Well,
I have an unimaginative Russian mind, I don't think it's going to happen to me.
What is it like?" "Theoretically?"
She watched him for the slightest hint of condescension. "Theoretically." "As
a child, you must have spread your arms and put your head back and danced in
the rain. You are drenched and clean and dizzy. If you are possessed, it's like
that." "Afterward?" "Your
mind still spins." An
abwe, the poor man's triangle, joined in from below. It was nothing
more than a hoe blade played with a stick of iron, but an abwe could
sound like the ticking in the mind when a man's strong hand reached around your
waist. As the saxophone tried to wrap around it, the gourd trembled, the drum
stopped and started like a heart. These were the snares set for silly girls who
lingered in shadows. Not Ofelia. She visualized a clear mind. She
looked toward his arm, the one she had found the bruises on. "You're
sounding better. You were not in a healthy mood when you came here." "I
am now. I'm curious about Pribluda and Rufo and Luna. I have a new purpose in
life, so to speak." "But
why did you want to hurt yourself?" She
half expected contemptuous dismissal, but Renko said, "You have it
backwards." Ofelia
sensed the next question so strongly she asked before she checked herself,
"Did you lose someone? Not here. In "I
lose people all the time." He lit one cigarette from the other. "Most
boats that go on the rocks really don't intend to go there. It's not a mood,
it's just exhaustion. Exhaustion from self-pity." He added, "You're
with someone and for some reason with them you feel more alive, on another
level. Taste has taste and color has color. You both think the same thing at
the same time and you're doubly alive. And if you manage to lose them in some
gruesomely irrevocable way, then strange things happen. You wander around
looking for a car to hit you so you won't have to go home in the evening. So
this incident with Rufo is interesting to me because I don't mind a car hitting
me, but I do mind a driver trying to hit me. A fine distinction, but
there you are." In the night Ofelia awoke to find
lovers gone, the moon becalmed. In the very lack of breeze she detected a faint
scent, a perfume she traced to Renko's soft black coat, to the sleeve of a man
who claimed he'd never been possessed. Chapter FourteenOsorio left before dawn, and as soon as she
was gone Arkady expected Luna to climb up the front of the building or
crawl through the air shaft. It wasn't so much that Arkady didn't trust Osorio
as that he didn't understand her. Why she would spend the night in a metal
chair with the island's least popular Russian was a mystery to him, unless she
was working with Luna and only insinuating herself into the apartment. If that
was the case, all the locks in the world wouldn't help. By eight o'clock the Malecуn stretched
like a floodlit stage. Boys crouched in the blue shadow of the seawall to spool
loose fishing line. Men opened cases of homemade hooks and weights for sale.
Bikes rolled by with a father on the pedals, a boy on the handlebars, mother
and baby on a plank over the rear wheel, an entire family rolling by. Still no
Sergeant Luna. Arkady
went downstairs, but instead of going out on the street he knocked on Erasmo's
door, deliberately pounding out of rhythm with the music from the garage's
radio until Tico answered and let him into Erasmo's private area with the
cut-down bed and table. "Erasmo's
not here." Tico was in his coveralls, with an inner tube over his shoulder
and a Tropicola can in his hand. Arkady
shouted over the radio. "You speak Russian." "I
speak Russian." Tico sounded as if he'd just realized it. He was the same age
as his friend Erasmo, but time seemed to have left his hair dark and thick as
fur, no wrinkles or lines of care to mark his smooth, trusting visage, a boy's
face on a middle-aged man. "Do
you mind if I go out through the garage?" "I
don't mind. You can go but you can't come back. The garage is closed." Arkady
pushed through the beaded curtain. Tico told the truth. The doors of the garage
were closed, the Jeeps inside parked bumper to bumper. Tico
said, "The garage is closed because Erasmo doesn't want me selling any
cars while he's gone." "I
won't bother you, I just want to go out the back way." And avoid any eyes
out front, Arkady thought. "Erasmo's
with the Chinese. He's with the Chinese." "He
is? What Chinese?" "The
dead Chinese. But he'll be there all day and I'm not supposed to sell any cars.
He said, 'Radio silence!' I'm not supposed to talk to anyone." "Where
are the dead Chinese?" "Radio
silence!" "Ah." "I
wasn't supposed to answer the door." "No,
you were being polite." Arkady dug a pencil from his coat and spread a
piece of paper over a hood. " Can you write it?" "I
can write as well as anyone." "Don't
tell me, but write where I can find Erasmo and the Chinese." "They're
dead, that's a clue." "Good."
As Tico bent over the paper and printed in block letters, Arkady threw in, on
the off-chance, "Do you know where Mongo is?" "No." "Do
you know what happened to Sergei?" "No."
Tico returned the pencil with an anxious expression. "Are you going to see
Erasmo now? If you see him right away he'll know it was me." "Not
right away." Tico
brightened. " Where are you going?" "The
"Where
is that?" Arkady
held up a map. "In the past." He went out the garage doors and walked
the back street half a dozen blocks before returning to the Malecуn. The boulevard
had become familiar in a matter of days, the coughing of trucks, boys casting
nets from the seawall, scruffy dogs chewing on a flattened carcass of a gull. A
PNR at a corner gave all his attention to a bicycle cart weighted with teenage
girls. No Luna at all. In
Arkady's hand was Sergei Pribluda's forty-year-old Texaco map, a foldout map
that located the Presidential Palace and American embassy, Cuban-American
Jockey Club and racetrack, Woolworth's and Biltmore Country Club of a vanished
Havana. Not that the city wasn't still surreal. Houses on the Malecуn were
fantasies: Greek pediments on Moorish columns and crumbling walls with
fleurs-de-lis in faded pinks and blues. What
surprised Arkady was how much It
took Arkady ninety minutes to walk the Malecуn, cross the At
It
wasn't the sort of place people just stumbled onto. There were no other
pedestrians. Cars hurtled around the circle and spun away. Only someone looking
for it would have noticed a driveway curving along a screen of royal palms and
around a lawn to a classical mansion in white with heavy columns, twin grand
staircases and broad colonnades. Over it lay the ghostly silence of a colonial
governor's palace abandoned in a coup, occupants decamped, the first signs of
decay visible in the split reflection of a broken window and a red tile missing
from the hip of the roof. Carved above the pediment of a central porch was the
design of a ship's wheel on a pennant. In the entire scene there was no
movement at all except for the sway of palm fronds. It was easy to imagine He
climbed a stairway and walked through open mahogany doors into a hall of white
walls and limestone floors. Under a wrought-iron chandelier an elderly black
woman in an aluminum chair stared up at him through thick glasses as if he'd
dropped from a spaceship. A red telephone sat at her side, and the sight of a
visitor prompted her to call and talk to someone in slurred Spanish while
Arkady went on through tall French doors to an empty hall. A line of reception
rooms connected like a bright and airy tomb, and the sound of his footsteps
preceded him in the direction of a bar with a dark, curving counter stripped of
stools, chairs, bottles. A portrait of Che hung by an empty glass case that
must at one time have displayed race trophies, sailing ladders, models. All
that was left of a nautical theme were wall medallions of a ship's wheel. The
bar opened to an outdoor area with a stage ready for a Cuban band that could
teach even Americans the mambo. He
returned inside and climbed to the second floor. At the top of the stairway was
a tall admiral's chair of black mahogany. Everything else had been carted away
and nothing added except more metal chairs of the Revolution. He stepped out
onto a porch facing the ocean for a view of a private cove. A
brick promenade as large as a city plaza spread out to a row of thatched
umbrellas and fan-shaped palms that led on to white sand and shallow water
embraced by broad piers and, beyond, enough anchorage in bright blue water for
a regatta. The only craft Arkady saw now were neumбticos, dots on the
horizon, and the only figures on the beach were a dozen boys kicking a soccer
ball back and forth. Arkady
couldn't resist the temptation. After he went back down the stairs he removed
his shoes and socks to walk onto the beach and feel the warm fine-grained sand
underfoot. The boys ignored him. He climbed the steps of a wide cement pier and
walked fifty meters to its end. The
boys on the beach of the club waved, Arkady thought, at him and then he turned
to the clapping of an inboard powerboat sweeping around a breakwater. It
skimmed the waves, shooting rays off its windshield, then slowed with a
skater's turns until Arkady could make out George Washington Walls in short
sleeves and sunglasses. He swung the boat about and approached parallel to the
pier, dropping the engine to a silken idle and keeping a safe distance from the
pilings. The boat was low, long and angular, its hull and deck of gleaming,
black mahogany, its bow sheathed in brass. In the cabin, black curtains were
drawn. The dash had the glinting brightwork and deep patina that came only from
age and infinite care. Fluttering from the transom pole was a pirate's pennant
with crossed sabers. "Hemingway's
boat?" Arkady asked. Walls
shook his head. "Maybe Al Capone's. A seaplane tender turned
rumrunner." "Capone
was here?" "He
had a place." Once
again, Arkady was impressed. "How did you know I was here?" "The
basic form of communication on this island is old women with phones. Why are
you here?" "Curiosity.
I wanted to see the yacht club." "Doesn't
exist." "I've
always wanted to see someplace that didn't exist." " "That
sounds irresistible." Arkady hesitated. "Has Luna been invited,
too?" "Not
to this party. No drums, no dancing, no Luna. Hop in." Walls
reversed and swung the stern to present the transom with the name
"Gavilan" on the stern. Arkady jumped without breaking a leg, and as
he slipped into a leather seat the boat scooped him up and moved away from the
dock. The
ride was brief, smoothly skimming the waves out of the cove to deeper, bluer
water until Walls slowed as smoothly as a limousine driver to a stop, the sharp
nose of the boat headed to the wind. Giving Arkady a sign to wait, he ducked
down into the cabin and returned with a tray table that locked into the cockpit
deck, ducked down and returned with a brass tray carrying a basket of sweet
rolls, a pot of coffee and three china demitasses with "Gavilan"
written on the side. The cabin doors opened again for a small, silver-haired
man in black pajamas and slippers, who climbed the steps and sat himself across
from Arkady. He wore the smile of a man who was both magician and the rabbit in
the hat. Walls
said, "John, I want you to meet Arkady Renko. Arkady, John O'Brien." "A
great pleasure." O'Brien took Arkady's hand with both of his. He caught
Arkady's glance at the pajamas. " Well, it's my boat and I dress as I
please. Winston Churchill, you know, used to wander around in the altogether.
I'll spare you that. And you wear this somewhat astonishing coat, George told
me about that. I apologize for not coming up sooner, but when George winds up
the Gavilan I stay below. Falling overboard would be fatal for my
dignity. You like cafe cubano, I hope?" Walls
poured. O'Brien might have been close to seventy, Arkady guessed, but he had a
youthful voice, engaging eyes and an oval face as lightly freckled as a
shorebird's egg. He wore a wedding band on his hand, a silver Breitling on the
wrist. "How
do you like "Beautiful,
interesting, warm." "The
women are unbelievable. My friend George here is smitten. I can't afford to fall
in love because I still have family in "There
are problems now?" Arkady broached the subject delicately. O'Brien
brushed a crumb from the table. "A legal hurdle or two. George and I have
been fortunate enough to find a home away from home here in "They
do. Did you know him?" "Of
course, he was going to do some security work for us. A simple man, I would
say. Not a very good spy, I'm afraid." "I'm
not a judge of spies." "No,
just a humble investigator, to be sure." O'Brien added a touch of Irish
brogue. He clapped his hands. "What a day! If you're going to be a
fugitive from justice, where would you rather be?" "Are
you the only fugitives in "Hardly.
How many of us are there?" O'Brien cast a doting eye on Walls. "Eighty-four." "Eighty-four
Americans on the lam. Well, it's better than a life in a federal
minimum-security prison, where you get lawyers, congressmen, dope dealers, the
usual cross-section of "So
you try to keep busy?" "We
try to stay alive," O'Brien said. "Useful. Tell me, Arkady, what are
you doing here?" "The
same." "By
visiting the Havana Yacht Club? Explain to me, what has it got to do with a
dead Russian?" "A
missing man at the place that doesn't exist anymore? That sounds perfect to
me." "He's
sort of careful," Walls said to O'Brien. "No,
he's right," O'Brien said and patted Arkady's knee. "Arkady's a man
who's just sat down to play cards and doesn't know the rules of the game and
doesn't know the value of his chips." O'Brien's
black pajamas had pockets. He took out a large cigar that he rolled between his
fingertips. "You
know the great Cuban chess champion Capablanca? He was a genius, thinking ten,
eleven moves ahead. He smoked Cuban cigars, of course, while he played. One
title match his opponent extracted a promise from Capablanca that he wouldn't
smoke. All the same, Capablanca brought out his cigar, squeezed it, licked it,
savored it, and his opponent went nuts, lost the match and said that not
knowing Capablanca was going to light up was even worse than him smoking. I
love Cuban cigars, too, although the joke's on me because the doctor says I'm
not allowed to smoke anymore. Just tease myself, that's all. Anyway, what led
you to the club, that's your cigar. We'll just have to wait for you to light it
up. For the time being, we'll simply say you were curious." "Or
amazed." "By
what?" asked Walls. "That
the club survived the Revolution." "You're
talking about the Havana Yacht Club now," O'Brien said. "The French,
you know, they beheaded Louis, but they didn't burn Walls
pointed toward the Moorish tower. "La Concha, the casino on one side of
the cove, they gave to the caterers' union and the greyhound track they turned
into track and field." "God
knows, I respect idealism," O'Brien said, "but let me put it this
way, as a result these properties have not been developed to their maximum.
There's an opportunity here to create something of enormous value for the Cuban
people." "Is
that where you come in?" "I
hope so. Arkady, I was a developer. Still am. George can tell you I'm not
sneaky. Disney's sneaky. When they start buying up land they form a little
corporation that sounds like your neighbors trying a little preservation,
buying an acre here, an acre there and then you wake up one morning and there's
a two-hundred-foot mouse outside your window. I'm up front. Every developer
wants one great landmark development, his own Walls
took over. "See, the government developed "Its
upkeep drains the state of half a million pesos a year. George, tell him it
could be making the state thirty million dollars a year." "It
could," Walls said. O'Brien
pointed to the club and beach. "That's conference center, restaurant,
nightclub, twenty suites, twenty rooms, time shares or condo that can be
explored. Plus spa, berthing for boats, you want luxury cruisers. What I'm
describing to you, Arkady, is a gold mine waiting for someone to pick up a
shovel." Arkady
couldn't help wondering why two well-placed American fugitives would share
their aspirations with him, although he sensed that O'Brien was the sort of
salesman who enjoyed his own performance, like an actor who could deliver the
most outrageous lines while he winked at the audience. Since Arkady's
construction experience had been in "Twenty
million," Walls took over. "We'd find the money and the Cuban
government wouldn't put up a single peso or dollar." "A
lot of people," O'Brien said modestly, "would call that a gift." "And
what do you want in return?" Arkady asked. O'Brien
said, "Guess." "I
don't have the faintest idea." O'Brien
leaned forward as if sharing a secret. "Last year an Indian casino in "We're
asking for a twenty-five-year lease of the old La Concha casino and an even
split of profits with the Cuban government," Walls said. "It's a
no-risk situation for them, but there's a political problem in that they made
such a big deal about closing casinos after the Revolution." "Closing
casinos and closing the Mafia," O'Brien said. "Which was why, with
the CIA, the Mafia tried to kill the President." "Castro,
he means," Walls said. "And it's not easy to get Cubans to reverse
direction. It would stop us cold if there was even a hint any Mafia, American
or Russian, was involved. Our casino has to be absolutely clean." "Any
project at an early point," said O'Brien, "is like a bubble, anything
can burst it. Your friend Pribluda was going to be our protection from the sort
of Russians who are, I assure you, swarming into the Caribbean like the
Visigoths. The wrong people showing up at the wrong time can burst the bubble.
Which is why I told George we should take the boat and get a certain Russian
investigator off the Yacht Club dock before anyone else heard you were
there." "And
brings us back to the question," Walls reminded Arkady. "Why were you
at the club?" Arkady
felt like a can between two expert can openers. The photograph of the Havana
Yacht Club was in his pocket. However, he wasn't in the mood to offer to
strangers what he had kept at some cost in blood from the sergeant. "In
four more days I'll be back in "Why
go back?" O'Brien asked. "Stay here." Walls
said, "Pribluda's gone. I hate to put it this way, but there is an opening
now." Arkady
took a moment to understand the new direction of the conversation. "An
opening for me?" "Maybe,"
O'Brien stressed. "You don't mind if we got to know you a little better
before we offered you a position?" "A
position?" Arkady asked. "That sounds even better than work. You
don't know me at all." "Oh,
I don't?" O'Brien said. "Let me guess. In your forties, right?
Disappointed in your work. It's evident you're bright but you're still just an
investigator? A little reckless, working too close to the edge, inviting
disaster. Except for the coat, cheap clothes, cheap shoes, signs of an honest
man. But the way things are in Moscow now you must feel like a fool. And
personal life? I'm taking a stab in the dark, but I'd say you don't have one.
No wife, maybe not even kids. Zero, dead end. And that's what you can't wait to
get back to in only four more days? I'm not trying to suck you into a criminal
endeavor, I'm opening you a door on the ground floor of the biggest project in
the Caribbean Basin. Maybe you'd rather soak up vodka and freeze to some
fucking miserable death in Moscow, I don't know. All I can do is offer you an
opportunity for a second chance at life." "Not
a bad guess." O'Brien
smiled in a not unkind way. "Ask yourself this, Arkady, will you be missed
in "Yes,"
Arkady said, a second late. "Sure.
Let me tell you about the saddest picture in the world. The saddest picture in
the world is in the "And
the money?" Arkady asked, just to play the fantasy out. "Forget
the money. Yes, you'd be rich, have a Cuban villa, car, boat, girls, whatever,
that's not the point. The point is you'd have a life and you'd be enjoying
it." "How
would I do that?" "Your
visa can be changed," Walls took over. "We have friends who can
extend your visa and you can stay as long as you like." "You
wouldn't worry then about me being at the Havana Yacht Club?" "Not
if you were on the team," Walls said. "We're
not offering a free ride," O'Brien said, "but you'd be part of
something big, something to be proud of. All we're asking in return is one
miserable token of trust from you. Why were you at the Havana Yacht Club? How
did you get the idea?" Before
Arkady could answer, the boat was surrounded by upwelling light. He looked over
the side, and in the water a thousand spoons reflected the sun. "Bonito,"
O'Brien said. "They
always go east to west?" Arkady asked. "Against
the current," Walls said. "Tuna go against the current, so do the
marlin, and eventually the boats do, too." "A
strong current?" "The
Gulf Stream, sure." "Going
towards the bay?" "Yes." First
one and then by the dozens the fish exploded from the water. Iridescent, glassy
arcs surrounded the Gavilan and salt spray rained. In seconds the
entire school had scattered, replaced by a long dark shape with blue pectoral
wings. "Marlin,"
Walls said. Without
apparent effort the big fish kept pace within the shadow of the boat, a faint
veil of pink trailing behind him. "He's
taking his time," Arkady said. "Hiding,"
said Walls. "He's an assassin, that's the way he operates. He'll slice up
a whole school of tuna and then come back to feed." "Do
you fish?" "Spearfish.
Evens the odds." "Do
you?" Arkady asked O'Brien. "Hardly." From
above, the marlin's sword was thin as a draftsman's line, unsheathed yet almost
invisible. The men were transfixed until the marlin sank into deeper water,
blue into blue. They took Arkady not back to the Yacht Club
but through fishing boats along the western shore. On the outer dock of the
Marina Hemingway a trio of Frontier Guards in fatigues lazily waved the boat
in. The Gavilan steered to the inner dock, where a hook for weighing
fish stood among the thatched parasols of a cantina and disco stage, the smell
of grilled chicken and blare of amplified Beatles. An empty swimming area was
defined by floats, but snorkelers had gathered along the canal where Walls
started veering toward an open berth. Not Hemingway, but an old man in a hat
with a band of miniature beer cans waved Walls away and shouted angrily at
swimmers, "Peligroso! Peligroso!" Steering
wide of the snorkelers, Walls continued down the canal to a turnaround. Fishing
boats with rod racks and flying bridges slid by, speedboats as low and colorful
as sun visors, and power yachts with sun lounges and Jet Ski launches,
oceangoing palaces of affluence and indolence sculpted in white fiberglass. The
shouts from a volleyball court were pure American. "Texans,"
Walls said. "Cruising people from the Gulf, they leave their boats here
year round." Along
the canal people washed out lockers, carried baskets of food and plastic bags
of laundry, pushed trucks of bottled gas. Walls eased to a stop at the inner
end of the canal, where a market sold CopperTone and Johnnie Walker Red.
Outside, a Cuban girl in a Nike shirt sat with a blond boy. His shirt had a
portrait of Che. O'Brien
shook Arkady's hand again in an enthusiastic double grasp. "You're staying
next to the santero, I understand. We'll talk tomorrow." "About
a 'position'? I don't think I'm qualified. I know nothing about casinos." "The
way you handled Sergeant Luna you sound eminently qualified to me. As for
casinos, we'll give you the grand tour of all the famous sin spots of Havana.
Right, George?" Walls
said, "You could have your own boat right here, Arkady. Girls come at
night, knock on the side of the boats. They'll cook and clean, too, just to
stay on board." Arkady
glanced around at his putative yachting neighbors. "What are the Americans
like?" Walls
tried half a smile. "Some are free spirits and some are the same rednecks
I tried to leave thirty years ago. One son of a bitch from Alabama wanted me to
autograph my wanted poster. He said it was a collectible. I was ready to slice
and collect his fucking nuts." "Ah,
well," O'Brien said, "to be a souvenir, that has to be a form of
death. Arkady, you'll consider the offer?" "It's
an unbelievable offer." "Seriously,
think about it," O'Brien said. "I understand, it's tough to leap even
from a sinking ship." There was death and death. Leaving by
the marina's traffic gate, Arkady encountered a fisherman staggering under the
weight of a marlin mounted on an enormous wooden plaque. The fish was caught in
midflight, dorsal fin fanned, spear challenging the sky, the entire animal a
metallic blue so unreal it could have been a small submarine, and Arkady
remembered once walking with Pribluda in Chapter FifteenOfelia reached the pool at the Casa de Amor
and heard Los Van Van on the radio in a room overhead singing "Muevete!"
– Move it! – and it was as if wooden claves were dancing down her spine and she
thought, not for the first time, how she distrusted music. So it had been a
shock for her to put her fingers on the Russian's vein and feel the rhythm of
his pulse. "Don't mess unless you want to be messed with" was one of
her mother's favorite sayings. Along with "Don't move your ass unless
you're advertising." Sometimes she thought, Moving your ass, that was the
Cuban Method. That was why life was such a mess, because at the worst times and
with the worst of men some signal would trickle down from her brain and say, "Muevete!"
On the street in the shade of a tree sat a '57 Dodge Coronet with private
plates she had been allotted for surveillance work. Its front bumper hung on
wires from too many collisions. She knew the feeling. Since
the shore on this stretch of When
Cuban couples came to the Casa de Amor to consummate their passion, no rooms
were ever available. But for "love couples" of jineteras and
tourists, yes, there was always a room with fresh sheets, towels and a vase
with a long-stemmed rose. Ofelia had discovered that complaints to the police
had gone nowhere, which merely meant that the police themselves were protecting
the motel. At the room rate of $90 a night, the cost of first-class
accommodations at the Hotel Nacional, there was reason to protect such a gold
mine, even if the gold was mined with the sweat of Cuban girls. A
heavyset woman in coveralls swept the street with a branch besom at a steady
six strokes a minute. Ofelia stationed herself by an ice machine under the
stairs to the second floor and listened to the music and occasional footfall
from the rooms overhead. Only the middle two units were occupied – just as
well, since her manpower and time were so limited. The boys at the Ping-Pong
table finished one game and started another. The
Russian, she had decided, was a disaster to be avoided. Just the light in his
eyes was like the ember of a banked fire warning, "Don't stir." It was
bad enough he was a danger to himself; his story about Luna was insanity. Here
was a man who threw Luna halfway up a wall and then acted modestly surprised
when the sergeant's head split open. How Renko had banged up his head, she
didn't know. Maybe there was something to his story about the bat. In her
opinion, though, Renko was a goat whose brilliant idea of catching a tiger was
to stake himself down. He would bring the tiger, might bring all the tigers in
the jungle, what then? Which was a shame because he wasn't a bad investigator.
To return with him to The
street sweeper dropped her broom in a can. Over Ofelia's head a door closed,
and two pairs of footsteps made their way the length of the balcony, Ofelia
keeping pace below. She placed herself under the stairs as they came down. It
wasn't until the couple stepped down to pool level that they were aware of the
convergence on them of Ofelia, holding herself as tall as she could in her PNR
gray and blue, and the street sweeper, who dropped her broom to show her own
uniform and gun. The
tourist was a redheaded man in a shirt, shorts, sandals, a Prada bag around his
thick neck, his arm draped like a freckled sausage over the girl's shoulder. He
said, "Scheisse." Ofelia
recognized Teresa Guiteras. The girl was black, smaller than Ofelia with a mop of
curls and a yellow dress that barely reached her thighs. Teresa protested,
"This time it's love." During a public-works frenzy in the
thirties, Teresa
Guiteras Marin was fourteen, a tenth-grade student from the country town of "You
understand that if you do not cooperate, you will be fined a hundred pesos and
entered in the register of prostitutes. At fourteen." Teresa
slipped her feet from her platform sandals and drew her legs up onto the chair.
She had all the mannerisms of a child, the pouty lip and downcast eyes. "I'm
not a prostitute." "You
are. He paid you two hundred dollars to be with him for a week." "A
hundred and fifty." "You
sell yourself too cheaply." "At
least I can sell myself." Teresa played with a curl, wrapping it around a
finger. "That's more than you ever see." "Maybe.
But you had to buy false residence papers to stay in This
was a doublethink that drove Ofelia crazy. Teresa didn't consider herself a
prostitute, no. Jineteras were students, teachers, secretaries merely
making extra money. Some parents were proud of how their little Teresas helped
to support the family; in fact, some regular visitors to "So
now you work two places," Ofelia said. "Days you're at the Casa de
Amor, nights you're at the boats. Is that the kind of life you want to
lead?" Teresa's
eyes shone through her hair. "It's better than school." "Better
than the hospital? Did you check this German friend of yours?" "He
was clean." "Oh,
you have a laboratory?" It
was like arguing with children. They would never be infected, they took
vitamins, anise, vinegar. The men refused to wear condoms because they hadn't
come around the world to smoke half a cigar. "Hija,
listen. Unless you give me the name of police who take money from you I will
enter your name in the register of prostitutes. Whenever there is a sweep of
prostitutes you will be dragged away. And if you are ever caught again you will
be sent to a reeducation farm for two years minimum. That's a nice place to
grow up." Teresa
pulled up her knees and glowered. Her pout was exactly like Muriel's. She was
three years older. Herr Lohmann had been waiting in an
interrogation room. He folded his arms and tilted back in his chair as Ofelia
examined his visa. He spoke lederhose Spanish. " So I have one room at the
Hotel Capri and another at the Casa de Amor? I paid for both. Twice the money
for "How
did you even know about the Casa de Amor?" "The
girl told me. She's not exactly a virgin, you know." "To
be clear," Ofelia said. "You are forty-nine. You are having sex with
a fourteen-year-old girl, a student. You did this regardless of the laws of "I
doubt that very much." "So
you are not afraid." "No." She
opened his passport and flipped through stamped pages. "You travel quite a
lot." "I
have business to attend to." "In
"I'm
a salesman." "Based?" "In
His
passport photo was a head and shoulders of a respectable burgher in dark suit
and tie. "Married?" "Yes." "Children?" No
answer. "Here
for?" "Business." "Not
for pleasure?" "No.
Although I enjoy other cultures." He had teeth like a horse. "I was
at the bar at the Hotel Riviera and this girl asked if I could buy her a
cola." "To
enter the lobby of the "I
don't know. In "Were
there any police in the lobby?" "I
don't know." "You
are aware that it is against Cuban law for Cuban citizens to visit a hotel
room." "Is
that so? Sometimes I stay at hotels in the countryside run by the Cuban army.
When I bring a girl I just pay double. You're the first one to make a
fuss." "You
left the "Teresa
took care of that. I never went in the office." Ofelia
looked at notes she had taken of a phone call. "According to the "A
male friend." "Named
Mossa. He took the room next to you?" "So?" "Wasn't
he also in the room next to you at the Casa de Amor?" "So?" "The
two of you met Teresa and her friend together?" "Wrong.
I found Teresa and he connected on his own." "You
found her?" "Or
she found me. It makes no fucking difference. Girls develop faster here."
He smoothed his hair back. " Look, I have always been a supporter of the
Cuban Revolution. You can't arrest me for being attracted to Cuban girls.
They're very attractive." "Did
you use a condom?" "I
think so." "We
looked in the wastebaskets." "Okay,
no." "I
think for your own sake we will have you examined by doctors and send a medical
report to your embassy." His
smile sealed. As he pressed against the table his shirt opened to a gold chain,
body heat, the smell of stale cologne. He whispered, "You know, you're
even better looking than Teresa." At
that moment Ofelia suffered the fantasy that Renko was with her and that he
picked up the German the way he had picked up Luna and rammed the German into
the wall. "The
doctor will make a thorough examination," Ofelia said and left the room. The
detective room wasn't as empty when she went back. The Sharon Stone poster was
back on the wall, and Teresa looked sideways at the plainclothes detectives,
Soto and Tey, sharply dressed men who bent over the paperwork on their desks
and exchanged smirks. If Ofelia had any other place to question the girl she
would have used it. Teresa
announced, "Singa tu madre. I'm not saying anything against my
friends." "Good
girl," Soto said. "With the right friends you don't have to say
nothing." "Osorio
has confused sex and crime," said Tey. " She's against both." "It's
been so long, right?" said Soto. "I'd
be happy to help her remember," offered Tey. "You
can't touch me," Teresa told Ofelia. " I don't have to tell you
nothing." "Don't
listen to them." Ofelia felt her neck get hot. "Don't
listen to them? They're not on my ass, you are. You're the bitch, not
them. I make ten times what you make. Why would I listen to you?" "Congratulations,
I am putting you on the official list of whores. You will be examined by a
doctor and sent out of "You
can't." "It's
done." But
when she went into the hall with Dora, all Ofelia could think of were her own
daughters and she didn't have the heart to order Teresa's name onto the
register. "Tell
her I did, though," she said. "And have the doctor look at her. And
have the doctor examine our tourist all over and draw some blood and make it
painful." "So
what is the point of what we're doing if we let her go?" Dora was sick of
sweeping streets. "I'm
not after girls, I am after corrupt police." "Then
you're after men, and in the PNR there are a couple of us and thousands of
them. From the top down, everybody winks. They think you're a fanatic and you
know what the real problem is? You're not." Ofelia returned to the Casa de Amor
because although she might have lost Teresa it was just possible that Lohmann's
Italian friend and his girl hadn't yet left the motel. This time, she decided,
she would question them right in the room, not even go close to the station
house. If that was against procedure, well, procedure guaranteed humiliation and
failure. She didn't need Dora along, she didn't need anyone. This was on her
own. When
Ofelia was angry she took steps two at a time. The rooms were set back between
dividers for privacy's sake and hanging on the doorknob of the unit next to
Lohmann's was a plastic tag that said do not disturb. The
two boys were playing their endless table tennis, but otherwise no one was
around. Maybe she was in luck. Maybe she was stupid. She certainly wasn't going
to be appreciated, not if the girl was anything like Teresa. What poor Cuban
girl wouldn't think she was in heaven at a motel like this? Then shopping at a
boutique for a swimsuit that would show off her cute bottom? Or trying on
cat-eyed Ray-Bans or a Gucci scarf? She
knocked on the door. "Housekeeping." The
radio still played. The pool was a blue lens. The boys played, the sound
popping off their paddles. A breeze tugged on the lazy fronds. Ofelia took a
deep breath and caught the faint smells of barnyard and butcher. There was no
answer to her knock. "Police,"
she said. The
door was unlocked but blocked and she had to use all her strength to enter, and
since someone had turned the air-conditioner off and the temperature was in the
eighties, it was like gaining admission to an oven of ripe smells of blood and
body waste. In opening the door she had rolled a body to the side, and she
tried to pick her way across a floor covered with a fallen chair, emptied
bureau drawers, clothes and sheets to the drapes on the other side. She drew
them open and all the light in the world flooded in. The
body she had stepped over was a naked male, a dark-haired European with arms,
back, flanks and scalp slashed. Ofelia had once seen the body of a man who had
fallen into the blades of a combine, been chewed and spat out, which was what
this man looked like, except that the wounds' individual lengths and curves
were the unmistakable work of a machete. Lying on the bed was a naked female,
arms and legs splayed, her head twisted like a dummy's and half sliced off. Bed
and carpet were dark red as if someone had poured blood by the pail. A corona
of blood spattered the wall above the headboard. But there was no broken
furniture, no bloody smears of struggle on the walls. To
be first at an undisturbed homicide, Dr. Blas always lectured, was a gift. If
you were not a willing investigator, if you could not take advantage of the
unique opportunity of being first on the scene, if you were not able to engage
sensorially and intelligently, if your eyes or your mind closed even a little
to the fading, ineffable shadow of a murderer, then you should not open the
door. You should raise children, drive a bus, roll tobacco leaves, anything but
steal that gift from men and women with the discipline and stomach for the job. Both
bodies were hard with rigor mortis, thirty-six hours dead at least in Having
done as much as she could without rubber gloves, Ofelia went to the bathroom,
stepping around blood scuffs on the floor, and threw up in the toilet bowl.
When she flushed the water swirled and backed up, a rising gorge of vomit on
pink water. Before it overflowed she thrust her hand into the toilet throat as
far as she could reach and freed a blood-soaked ball of toilet paper from the
trap. Between dry heaves she laid what she found on a towel: a wadded Italian
passport for a Franco Leo Mossa, 43, of Chapter SixteenA pair of "There
aren't a lot of jobs where having no legs is an advantage," Erasmo said.
"Working in a coffin happens to be one. You don't look happy." Arkady
said, "I've just come from the Havana Yacht Club. You told me the Havana
Yacht Club was a joke, just a few fishermen, you, Mongo and Pribluda. But the
picture was taken at the Yacht Club and you never mentioned that the club
actually existed." Erasmo
frowned, dug his hand into his beard and scratched. "It does and it
doesn't. The building is there, the beach is there, but it's hardly a club
anymore. It's complicated." "Like
"Like
you. Why didn't you tell me you killed Rufo Pinero? I had to hear it on the
street." "It
was an accident." "An
accident?" "Of
a sort." "Yes,
that's like saying Russian roulette is a game of a sort. So we do the same
things in different ways. Anyway, I didn't lie to you. We did call ourselves
the Havana Yacht Club as a joke. It was funny at the time." "Some
club. Pribluda may be dead, Mongo may be missing and you may be the last living
member." "I
admit, it's not funny when you say it." "Unless
there are others. Are there any other members you haven't told me about?" "No." "Rufo?" "No." "Luna?" "No.
The three of us, that's all. You know, you're pissing me off and you're making
my friends very uneasy." The
Chinese followed the conversation with an anxiety matched by their lack of
comprehension. Erasmo coolly introduced Arkady to them, brothers named Liu with
spiky black hair and cigarettes gripped between their teeth. Arkady took in the
cemetery's quiet anarchy, a marble cross leaning on a Buddhist altar, tablets
inscribed with Chinese characters and wrapped in morning glory, headstone
photographs of the departed that peered through scummy ovals of glass. A nice
place to die, Arkady thought, quiet, cool, picturesque. "So
this is the "Yes,
it is," Erasmo said. "I told the Lius you were an expert on fighting
crime. That's why you're so angry. It makes them feel much better." "There's
a lot of crime in a cemetery?" "In
this one, yes." Now
that Arkady noticed, many of the tombs were cracked and reinforced with cement
seams and steel bands. Some of the disrepair had occurred over time and under
the pressure of spreading roots, but there were also signs of vandalism, marble
replaced by cinder blocks or a padlock on a vault's brass door, probably not to
keep the dead in, Arkady realized. "Cubans
don't like the Chinese?" "Cubans
love the Chinese, that's the problem. And some Cubans need lucky bones." "For
what?" "Ceremonies.
If they want money they dig up the bones of a banker, if they want to get well
they dig up the bones of a doctor." "That
makes sense." "Unfortunately
for the Chinese, their bones are supposed to be the luckiest. So this is where
certain people come with their crowbars and shovels, which is very upsetting to
Chinese families that revere their ancestors. Dead or alive, they want granddad
in one piece. Little did I know that demolition expertise would prove so useful
in civilian life. How did you know where to find me?" "Tico
maintained radio silence but I got him to write it out." Arkady looked
down at the coffin, where Erasmo had laid a drill, bell, welder's goggles and
surgical mask on a towel. From an athletic bag Erasmo took a vial of something
fine-grained and black. "Gunpowder?" "Just
a touch. Life would be boring without it." Taking a break, the brothers
Liu sliced up a papaya and sat down between tombstones to eat. The The
problem was that he seemed to be going in reverse, knowing less all the time
rather than more. He didn't know how or where Pribluda died, let alone why. The
circle of Pribluda's acquaintances constantly expanded, but none of them had
anything to do with the price of sugar, supposedly what the colonel had been
investigating. Arkady had never before encountered such a variety of pristinely
unrelated people and events: men in inner tubes, Americans on the run, a madman
from Oriente, a ballerina, now Chinese bones and Erasmo
pulled the mask over his nose and goggles over his eyes before lifting a can
with a plastic lid. "More
gunpowder?" Arkady asked. "A
different explosive." Erasmo lifted the lid and shut it at once, as if
taking a peek at plutonium. "Ground habaneros, the hottest chilies on
earth. I defused all sorts of bombs in "In
your room I saw some pictures of you with..." Arkady tried out the gesture
of the make-believe beard for the Name That Could Not Be Uttered just to feel
Cuban. "Fidel,"
Erasmo said warily. "And
another officer in glasses." "Our
commander in "You
won a lot of military decorations." "The
ribbons? Oh, yes. Well, what would I rather have, the ribbons or my legs? I'll
let you guess. I used to be so proud. Fidel said we would go to "No." "Very
well. The village was strung like a Christmas tree. Little plastic mines to pop
through your foot. Bouncing Betties to cut you off at the waist. Claymores with
trip wires to something as insignificant as an empty can you'd kick out of your
way. There was a car in the garage, not with the key, that would have been too
obvious. A '54 Ford station wagon with real wooden panels. You can't imagine
how valuable a vehicle was in country like that. But just stepping into the
garage meant digging up a whole daisy chain of little mines. Then to look
underneath the car first with a mirror and then on your back. To pop the hood
with a wire from a distance, to inspect the engine and make sure every wire's
automotive, open the glove compartment, the trunk, power windows, seats,
hubcaps. It was in beautiful condition. We cleared everyone else out of the
garage so I could cross the wires. It started right off. It ran out of gas
right away, but the battery was good and everything seemed fine until Richard
kicked a tire. That was one place I hadn't looked, in the tire." Erasmo
pushed a cardboard disk over the gunpowder. "That
was the end of Richard. Plus, the bumper flew off spinning like a helicopter
rotor and caught Tico. We radioed for the ambulance. On the way it hit a hole
where we had dug out a mine and drove right into the minefield. Somehow it
didn't touch a mine but that's where the ambulance was stuck while Tico was
bleeding to death until Luna picked him up and ran right through the mines to
the ambulance. And that's how we liberated a pisshole in "And
how Tico became careful about tires." "He's
very careful about tires." Erasmo
dropped the can and Arkady retrieved it. "Can
I help?" "No,
thanks," Erasmo said. "Do you know the largest minefield in the
world? The American base here at "Luna
saving Tico is a different picture of the sergeant." "No,
it's not. It's just the other side. People here have two sides, what you see
and the opposite." "It's
complicated?" "It's
real. You don't understand. The
Lius looked up expectantly; they may not have understood the words but they
could tell when a conversation had wound to an end. The "Are
there any martial arts dojos in Erasmo
said, " You had to block things out, Ofelia
thought. She ignored the technicians collecting their small evidence first –
clots, hairs, night bag, glasses, bottles of Havana Club – working their way up
to plastic bags for bed-sheets and clothes. She paid no attention to the
photographers working around the female sprawled in bed like a Naked Maja.
All her focus was on Dr. Blas. His hands in waxy rubber gloves, he bent over
the body by the door to show her why, although the male was painted in his own
blood and the track on the carpet showed his agonizing, futile progress to the
door, the dying man didn't cry for help. "The
radio was on. People who take these rooms, as you told me, tend to make noise,
and who knows how much alcohol they consumed? His carotid and peroneal arteries
were both cut – however, he was alive enough to try to cover up while he was
hacked by the machete. He was alive enough to make it to the door, probably
after his assailant left. But he never called out. Why? It wasn't because of
the radio." With the tip of a pencil he probed a dark spot under the dead
man's Adam's apple and slid the pencil halfway in. "A hole in the trachea.
With a hole in your windpipe you cannot say a word. There is no such wound on
the neck of the female, she had her throat cut pure and simple. But the first
blow to the male, I am sure, was this puncture." "Not
made by a machete." "No,
the wound is perfectly round. Still, this sort of mess is typical of the 'crime
of passion.' You did well to keep the hotel calm, and you were lucky to find
the documents the way you did." Which
was Blas's sly way of saying he knew she had been ill in the toilet. The doctor
was at ease with death in a way she, it was becoming clear, never would be. A
body that had been cut up was a flower in bloom, releasing a smell that lodged
like beads of blood in the sinuses and a taste that coated the tongue. All the
same, she had made a sketch and notes to hand over to whomever the Ministry of
the Interior sent over; this was no longer a case of prostitution, and the
ministry didn't generally leave violent crimes involving foreign visitors to
mere detectives of the PNR. Blas
said, "I'll examine the sexual aspect, too. She was a prostitute." Ofelia
looked at the bed. For a girl with her head half sliced off Hedy looked
remarkably serene, neatly edged in blood, sheets hardly rumpled. "The
killer didn't have sex with her." "You
kill a girl in bed, that's sexual to me." A
little insight there, Ofelia thought. "I
saw the female last night at a Santeria ceremony." "What
is the matter with you? You have so much potential, why do you indulge in such
mumbo jumbo?" "The
girl was possessed." "Ridiculous." "You've
never been possessed?" Blas
wiped his pencil. "Of course not." "It
happened to me once. They had to tell me later." The entire night had
remained a blank to her. "Was
this Italian at the ceremony?" "No." "Fine.
Then she came somewhere else later and picked him up here. If I were you I
wouldn't get into Santeria unless there is a very good reason. We are at a hotel
that, wrongly or rightly, specializes in tourists. Should we tell everyone
there are religious fanatics going from room to room killing people?" "What
do you think the Russian will say?" "Renko?
Why should he say anything?" "He
was at the ceremony last night. He saw the girl." "He'll
still say nothing because we won't tell him. Do you think the Russians would
inform us of every murder?" Blas ran the waxy fingers of his gloved hand
down the back of the Italian's legs, hamstrung so that the dead man had to drag
them as he crawled. "Renko is not our colleague. We don't know really what
he is. The fact that an investigator would come to The
photograph of Renko at the airport resided in her pocket. With all the
confusion in the room there was still time to rediscover it. She
asked, "Did Sergeant Luna ever show you a picture of Renko?" "No."
Blas ran his hand up the dead man's arms. "Right-handed by the musculature.
Lovely fingernails." A
chevron of deep cuts down the dead man's back indicated that the attacker had
stood over him and hacked right and left. Ofelia considered mentioning the two round
bruises she'd found on Renko's arm, but it seemed somehow a breach of trust. "Perhaps
we should reexamine the dead Russian. Is it possible he was struck by
lightning? It did rain that week." "Only
there was no lightning on the bay. I'm ahead of you. I checked the
meteorological record for lightning and the body for burns. Don't worry about
Renko." Blas pinched the arm for stiffness. "I have dealt with
Russians. Every one, including women with whom I was intimate, was a spy. Each
was the exact opposite of what he or she claimed to be." He tucked a smile
into his beard, and at that moment looked to Ofelia like a man too fond of his
memories. "What does Renko claim to be?" "A
fool." "His
case may be an exception." Blas
turned the body onto its back. Loss of blood ended in stupefaction, and
although his hair twisted in matted strips, the expression on the Italian's
face was of someone yielding to sleep. Ofelia brushed hair from an oblong scab
at the hairline. "It
looks like he bumped his head a few days ago," Blas said. "The least
of his problems now." "Who
does he remind you of?" "No
one." "How
would you describe him?" Blas
cocked his head like a carpenter delivering an estimate. "European, forty
to fifty, medium height, hair black, eyes brown, high forehead, incipient
widow's peak." "Renko?" "Now
that you mention it." They
had to shift the body from the door as an investigating team from the ministry
arrived, led by Captain Arcos and Sergeant Luna. Arcos gawked at the body on
the floor. Luna went to the foot of the bed and stared down at Hedy. His skin
went gray, and as his lips spread he breathed through his teeth while Ofelia
delivered her statement. She wanted to ask, Where is your ice pick? Instead she
slipped away while Blas took over. The
Casa de Amor had emptied. At the sight of PNR Ladas and an IML forensics van
with scales of justice painted on the door the Casa's guests returned just long
enough to grab their overnight bags and run. At the bottom of the stairs Ofelia
found a hose and washed first the soles of her shoes and then her face and
hands. The criminal laboratory of the Ministry
of the Interior was in the Antiguo Hotel Via Blanca, a nineteenth-century
brownstone palace erected in an erroneous burst of While
Blas's Instituto de Medicina Legal carried out autopsies the laboratories of
Minint analyzed drugs and arson, ballistics and explosives, fingerprints,
documents and currency. The work was done for the PNR, but the uniform was
military fatigues. "Fidel
loves uniforms," her mother always claimed. "Put someone in uniform
and you've created an idiot who watches his neighbors and says, 'How did he get
that dollar? How did she get those chickens?'" Her mother would laugh so
hard she'd have to waddle to the water closet. " 'Socialismo o
Muerte?' Please inform Fidel it's not 'either-or.'" In
the evidence room, weapons were labeled and kept on shelving that on the
underside still bore stencils of the FBI. The rifles were farmers' shotguns;
anything military was recirculated back to the army or militia. Enough machetes
to clear a cane field, axes and knives and homemade curiosities: a mortar
barrel made from bamboo, sugarcane shaved into spears. On opposite shelves lay
incidental evidence: bagged clothes, envelopes of rings and earrings, centavos
in jars, shoes, sandals, a freshly tagged black swimming flipper and an inner
tube. Someone
had rinsed the flipper, and when Ofelia held it to the light she saw the
faintest charring inside the strap, which could have been her imagination or
Renko's influence. She replaced the flipper carefully, as if putting off a
question. She
went to the records room, where a haze of paper dander hung under fluorescent
lights. The two working computers at the table were being used, but in a carrel
behind stacks of volumes tied with faded ribbon she found a third, where she
pulled up the file on her friend Maria. Maria
Luz Romero Holmes, age: 22, address: Vapor 224, Vedado, La Habana, charged with
solicitation outside that address. Jose Romero Gomez, 22, same address, charged
with assault. There was more: marital and educational status, employment, and
the statement of the witness. I was
walking up Vapor to the university when this woman (indicating Maria Romero)
came out her door and asked the time. Then she asked where I was going and
placed her hand on my member. I said, to the university. When she tried to
arouse me I said no, I wasn't interested, I didn't have the time. That's' when
she began screaming and this man (indicating Josй Romero) rushed out of the
house, cursing and swinging a lead pipe at me. I defended myself until the
police came along. Signed, Rufo
Pinero Perez It
was Rufo Pinero's name that had prodded her memory. A former boxer innocently
headed to the university. For a lecture on poetry? Ofelia wondered. Nuclear
science? The
police photograph of Maria showed her wet with tears but defiant. In his photograph
her husband's eyes were dark slits, his nose split, his jaw swollen large as a
gourd. The statement of the witness is corroborated by this
arresting officer, who was also threatened and assaulted by the Romero couple
in the course of his duty. Signed, Sergeant
Facundo Luna, PNR Ofelia
remembered how Maria had said a plastic sheet had been placed over the rear
seat of the police car because Luna knew he would be transporting people covered
in blood, and how Rufo had taken cigars out of the police car's glove
compartment, cigars he had put in beforehand so they wouldn't be damaged during
the scuffle. Luna and Rufo planned ahead. She
thought she knew what had happened at the Casa de Amor. Blas had suggested a
crime of passion, a Cuban boyfriend who killed the Italian and the Cuban girl
in a fit of uncontrollable anger. But what Ofelia saw in her mind was Franco
Mossa and Hedy drinking in the dark, dancing to the radio, laughing. It wasn't
likely Hedy spoke much Italian, but how much did she need? She retired to the
bathroom, emerged undressed, a busty honey-colored girl. She slipped into bed,
and as he took his turn in the bathroom she slipped right out again and opened
the balcony door for a friend. The Italian turned off the bathroom light and,
half blind, walked into the darkened bedroom. Hedy couldn't have seen much.
She'd have heard the sucking sound of the ice pick as it was pulled from the
Italian's neck, though. What had Hedy thought they were up to? Extortion was
the usual game with tourists. She would have been silent and surprised when the
machete whistled out of the dark and cut her head half off her shoulders. The
killer must have been as bloody as a slaughterhouse wall when he was done. The
question was, Why the photograph of the Russian? Who had carried it, Hedy or
her friend? Was there a moment when he turned on the bathroom light and saw to
his own surprise that he had butchered an Italian named Franco, not a Russian
named Renko? Since she was on the machine already, she ran a search for other
connections between Rufo Pinero and Facundo Luna. Besides Maria's case, two
files showed up. Four years earlier a group of criminals had gathered to
distribute drugs under the pretense of organizing a political opposition. When
members of the community became aware of this plan, they burst into the
ringleader's house and demanded he surrender the drugs. In a scuffle provoked
by the ringleader and his family, two patriots who had to defend themselves
were Rufo Pinero and Facundo Luna. More recently a cell of so-called democrats
had staged a rally with the true intent of releasing infectious diseases, only
to be physically barred by vigilant citizens, including the alert Luna and
Pinero. Ofelia
felt that Cubans should be allowed to fight their enemies because the gangsters
in On
her way out, she discovered the officers who had been working at the table were
gone. Sitting alone was Sergeant Luna. She was surprised he had left the Casa de
Amor already. His arms were crossed, stretching his shirt across his chest. His
face hung in the shadow of his cap as he worked his jaw from side to side. His
chair was turned, half blocking the way to the door. Suddenly
she was back in Hershey, in the cattle fields where the egrets came from their
roosts along the river. The birds were as white as shavings of soap, and as
they crossed the carbon-black smoke that lifted from the chimneys of the sugar
mill her anxiety was for the egrets' purity. Nevertheless they would float in
and stalk the cattle fields, impervious to dirt. She was so busy watching them
that she didn't notice that the bull had been let into the field, and the
person who had led the bull in hadn't seen her. The bull saw her, though. The
bull was the largest animal she'd ever seen. Milky white with downward twisting
horns, creamy curls between the horns, shoulders bloated with muscle, a pink
sac down to his knees, eyes red with the indolent torpor of a violent king. Not
dumb, however, not in this situation. Because he ruled. And he waited for her
to make her move. But
something distracted it. Ofelia turned her head and saw a figure in black that
had jumped the fence and was waving and hopping from foot to foot. It was the
town priest, a pale man who had always seemed so sad. His cassock flapped
around him as he laughed and goaded the bull, ran in a circle around it and
threw clods until it charged. Lifting his cassock, the priest took the longest
strides Ofelia had ever seen. He dived over the fence ahead of the bull, which
drove a deep-rooted post half over and went on savaging the wood in frustration
while Ofelia raced to the part of the fence nearest her. She remembered her
first gulp of air from the safety of the other side and how she didn't stop
running until she was home. Luna
said, "Captain Arcos asked if you gave us all the evidence you found in
the motel?" "Yes." Luna
shifted so that his bulk blocked her even more and let his thick arm hang
slack. "Everything?" "Yes." "You
told us everything you know about this?" "Yes." The
sergeant looked toward the carrel. "What
were you looking for?" "Nothing." "Maybe
something I can help you with?" "No." The
sergeant didn't move. He made her press by his arm as if it were a line that
would define just where she stood. Chapter SeventeenArkady's route to Chinatown passed by the
aquarium stillness of deserted department stores, a perfumeria
window with nothing to display but a can of mosquito repellent, the staff of a jewelry
store with elbows glued to empty cases, but around the corner of Calle Rayo,
life: red lanterns, a roasted whole pig, fried plantain and fried batter,
mounds of oranges, lemons, coral peppers, black tubers cut to white flesh,
green tomatoes in papery cowls, avocados and tropical fruit for which Arkady
had no name, although he understood by the dollar signs that this market in the
very center of Central Havana was for private vendors. Flies spun dizzily in
sweet smells of ripening pineapple and banana. Salsa from a hanging radio vied
with tapes of wistful Cantonese five-tone scale and customers with obscured but
still-discernible Chinese features drilled vendors with Cuban Spanish. At a
corner stall a butcher chopped a cow skull open, and a cotton-candy vendor with
her hair festooned in blue, sugary wisps that rose from a tub read Arkady's
note and pointed to a walk-up with the sign KARATE CUBANO. Arkady
had come in a rush. He had gone from the Abuelita,
the eyes of the CDR, had said that on Thursday afternoons Pribluda left the
Malecуn with his ugly plastic Cuban briefcase. The girl Carmen had claimed that
Thursdays were when Uncle Sergei practiced karate. According to his own
spreadsheet, Thursday was the day of Pribluda's unexplained hundred-dollar
expenditure. Didn't it all fit together? Wasn't it possible that every
Thursday, carrying in a common Cuban briefcase not a black belt but an envelope
stuffed with money, the spy Sergei Pribluda had met his "Chinese
contact" at a karate dojo in Havana's Chinatown? Most likely the colonel
kept a sweatsuit or karate gear in a dojo locker, reason enough for him to stop
in the changing room, where, as Arkady imagined it, not a word to the contact
had to be said, not if he had a similar briefcase. The two briefcases could be
switched in a moment, and the anonymous contact would be headed down the stairs
before Pribluda untied his shoes to practice those deadly kicks he showed to
Carmen. The entire business would be swift, silent and professional. Arkady had
the briefcase and this was Thursday. The
only problem was that when Arkady ran gasping up the stairs the door where the
dojo was supposed to be now read evita – el salon nuevo de belleza.
Inside, two women wearing masks of blue mud reposed in barber chairs even as
workmen bolted a third chair to the floor. Arkady retreated to the market and
went through the process with the same piece of paper and received the same
misinformation. At
a Chinese restaurant where no one was Chinese and egg rolls came with a dab of
ketchup Arkady found a waiter who spoke enough English to say that there were
no more dojos in Well,
there was the picture of Pribluda he was supposed to be finding, but for a
moment Arkady had thought he'd caught sight of Pribluda's ghost slipping
between bright mounds of exotic fruit. The walls of the restaurant were
bordello red and had the usual picture of Che Guevara looking so much like
Christ in a beret it was unearthly. Arkady had noticed simply while walking
through the streets and passing open windows that people hung more portraits of
Che than of Fidel, although Che's very martyrdom seemed to validate Fidel. But
martyrs had the advantage of staying romantically young, whereas Fidel, the
survivor, came framed in two ages: the passionate revolutionary with index
finger stabbing each oratorical point and the graybeard lost in haunted
reflection. Arkady
felt haunted by stupidity. It had been exciting for a moment to believe in his
revived powers of deduction, like finding an old steam engine in a derelict
factory and thinking that a match held under the boiler would bring the pistons
back to life. No churning pistons here, he thought. Thank God, Detective Osorio
hadn't been around to witness the fiasco. On
his way from the restaurant he pushed through the market and skirted a group of
boys pummeling one another outside a theater. It was a shabby corner cinema
painted Chinese red with pagoda-style eaves and a poster that showed a karate
master in midair. The title of the film was in Chinese and Spanish, and in
parentheses at the bottom of the poster in English, "Fists of Fear!".
Arkady remembered the ticket stub in Pribluda's pants. That was what Carmen had
been trying to ask him, not "Did you see? Fists of fear!" but
"Did you see Fists of Fear!?' He joined the line at the box
office, paid four pesos for a ticket and climbed the red steps into the dark. The
interior was aromatic of cigarettes, joss sticks, beer. The seats were bald and
taped. Arkady sat in the last row, the better to see the rest of the audience,
rows of heads that bobbed and howled appreciatively for a film that had already
started and seemed to involve a studious young monk defending his sister from
Hong Kong gangsters. The dialogue was Chinese with subtitles in another form of
Chinese, not even Spanish; the laughing of the actors was hideous, and every
kick sounded like a melon being split. Arkady had barely stood the briefcase on
his lap before he was joined in the next seat by a small, sharp-nosed man with
glasses and a similar briefcase. A
whisper in Russian. "Are you from Sergei?" "Yes." "Where
have you been? Where has he been? I was here all day last week and I've seen
this film once already today." "How
long has this film been playing here?" "A
month." "Sorry." "I
would think so. I'm the one who's taking all the chances. And this film is for
cretins. It's bad enough I'm doing this, but to treat me this way." "It's
not right." "It's
debasing. You can pass that on to Sergei." "Whose
idea was it?" "To
meet here? It was my idea, but I didn't intend to pass whole days here. They
must think I'm a pervert." On the screen the gangster chief pulled on a
glove equipped with a power drill and demonstrated it on a luckless henchman.
"Actually, in the old days this was the best porno theater in "What
happened when they switched to karate films?" "We
brought our girlfriends and screwed. The Chinese never paid attention to what
we did." It
was dark, and Arkady didn't want to examine his companion too obviously, but
what he could see sideways was a bureaucrat in his sixties with a gray
mustache, eyes bright as a bird's. "So
you have spent a lot of time here." "I
suffer from a certain personal history. Surprised to see Chinese in "Yes." "Brought
in when the slave trade closed. There's no smoking," the man said to explain
why he was cupping his cigarette. He switched briefcases and, using the
cigarette as a little lamp, dipped his head into the one he'd taken from Arkady
to count the money, the same hundred-dollar expenditure Pribluda had paid every
week. "You understand, I am under extraordinary pressure. If I had known
what buying a car would entail, I never would have agreed to any of this." "You
can buy a car?" "Used,
of course. '55 Chevrolet. Original leather." On the screen, gangsters
marched into a studio where the girl had just finished sculpting a dove in
white marble. As they broke off the statue's wings her brother flew through the
studio window on a motor scooter. "Where is Sergei?" "Not
feeling well," Arkady said, "but I'll tell him you wished him a quick
recovery." The
monk was a whirlwind, dispatching hoodlums with a variety of leaps and kicks.
With every blood-spraying kick Arkady's head throbbed, and when the gangster
chief pulled on his glove Arkady stood. "Aren't
you staying?" his friend said. "This is the good part." Ofelia was late for the meeting with
Muriel's teacher. She
rushed because she was convinced that the Italian with Hedy was slaughtered
simply because he resembled Renko. She had gone to the medical clinic in time
to find Lohmann, the salesman from Hamburg, still being examined and he
truculently answered yes, his friend Franco had bumped his head a few days
earlier on one of those stupid low doorways in Havana Vieja. Poor Hedy had not
been too bright to begin with, and place, time, looks, names, a simple scrape
on the Italian's head, everything had conspired against her. Also
Ofelia wanted to shower. She felt death lying like a film on her skin. If other
people couldn't smell it, she could. A
footbridge led from the Quinta de Molina to the school, modern and airy with
pastel walls covered with self-portraits of students in their maroon uniforms,
skirts for girls and shorts for boys, and murals on the theme of
"Resistance!" featuring children with rifles downing hapless American
jets. Muriel's
class had recently visited a banana plantation, and the classroom walls were
decorated with paper bananas. Ofelia wondered where they got the paper. The
school had one book for every three students, no new books in the library for
three years, no chemicals for chemistry. "They learn in the
abstract," as her mother put it caustically; nevertheless the school was
clean and orderly. Ofelia made profuse apologies to Miss Garcia, Muriel's
teacher, an older woman with eyebrows as thin as spider legs. "I'd
almost given up on you." The brows lifted to indicate exasperation. "I'm
so sorry." Was there anything more self-abased than a parent meeting with
a teacher? Ofelia wondered. "Is there something special you wanted to talk
about?" "Of
course. Why would I have asked you in?" "There's
a problem, no?" "Yes.
A great problem." "Muriel
has not been turning in homework?" "She
turns in her homework." "It's
good?" "Adequate." "She
misbehaves in school?" "She
behaves normally. That was the reason she was allowed to go on the trip. But
deep in her, in the soul of this little girl, is something rotten." "Rotten?" "Festering." "She
hit someone, she lied?" "No,
no, no, no. Don't try to get off easy. Deep in her heart is a worm." "What
did she do?" "She
violated my trust. I took only my best students to the farm. To learn of the
struggle in the countryside. Instead, she revealed herself as an
anti-revolutionary and a thief." Miss Garcia set a paper bag on her desk.
" On the way back on the bus this fell out of her shirt. I heard it
fall." Ofelia
looked inside the bag. "A banana." "Stolen
goods. Stolen by a daughter of an officer of the PNR. This is not going to end
here." "Actually,
a banana skin, no?" Ofelia lifted it from the bag by its unpeeled end. The
skin was brown and blotchy, ripeness on the edge of rotting. "Banana
or banana skin, it makes no difference." "She
had eaten it or not?" "That
doesn't matter." "You
heard it fall. It's not likely you would hear an empty banana skin fall on a
moving bus." "That's
not the point." "Whose
custody has it been in? There could be more than one person involved, there
might be a whole ring involved with this banana. I will test it for
fingerprints inside and out. We can do that. I'm glad you brought this to my
attention. Don't worry, we'll get them all, each and every one. Do you want me
to?" "Well."
Miss Garcia sat back, and her tongue dabbed at the corner of her mouth.
"It was in my custody, of course. I don't know how it got eaten." "We
can investigate. We can make sure the perpetrators never show their faces in
this school again. Is that what you want?" Miss
Garcia looked aside, the eyebrows settled, and she said in an entirely
different voice, "I suppose I was hungry." Now
Ofelia felt even worse. There was no pleasure to be had in cowing a teacher who
didn't even recognize she was slowly starving. Miss Garcia's problem was her
revolutionary purity, she had to be the only person Ofelia knew who didn't have
some small enterprise on the side. Next the poor woman would start
hallucinating and see Che wandering the halls. Ofelia was so ashamed she
couldn't wait to get her hands on Muriel. Arkady opened the briefcase and laid
the contents on Pribluda's desk, photocopies that were in Spanish, naturally,
every word. If he'd only studied Spanish at school instead of English and
German, which were only good for sciences, medicine, philosophy, international
business, Shakespeare and Goethe. For sugar, Spanish seemed to be the key.
Arkady tried anyway: •
A document with the title "Negociacion Russo-Cubano" with lists of
names, Russian for the "Ministerio de Commercio Exterior de Rusia"
(Bykov, Plotnikov, Chenigovskii), Cubans for the Cuban "Ministerio de
Azucar" ( •
A "Certificado del Registro Publico Panameno" for •
A "Referenda Bancaria" for AzuPanama from the Bank for Creative
Investments, •
Face pages of Cuban passports for Ramos, Pico and Arenas. •
Cubana airline tickets from •
Room vouchers for Ramos, Pico and Arenas from the Hotel Lincoln, Zona Libre,
Colуn, billed to the Cuban Ministry of Sugar. •
A long list of Russian commitments in funds and cash equivalents totaling $252
million for Cuban sugar. •
A revised list after mediation by AzuPanama for $272 million. •
A deposit slip of $5,000 in the name of Vitaly Bugai at the Bank for Creative
Investments, In
other words, the mediators Ramos, Pico and Arenas were Cuban, and the neutral
AzuPanama was a creation of the Cuban Ministry of Sugar and the Bank for
Creative Investment. Arkady's Spanish was nonexistent, but his math was fair.
He understood that Close up, Muriel's dark eyes had irises
like solar flares, frightening glimpses of the eleven-year-old soul. Her
interrogation was brief because she admitted to worse than her teacher claimed.
She had bought the banana. "The
workers at the farm were selling them. I had a dollar from Grandmother. We
bought a bunch." "A
bunch? Miss Garcia found only one banana." "Everyone
in class hid a banana. She only found mine." Ofelia's
mother ticked on her rocker. "We got all the others, don't worry." "That's
not the point," Ofelia said. "You've turned my daughters into
profiteers." "A
lesson in capitalism." "They're
not supposed to sell bananas at a state farm like that." "A
lesson in communism." Marisol,
the younger sister, said, "My class is going to see baseballs made. I can
get baseballs." Ofelia's
mother said, "Good, maybe we can cook them." In
her mind Ofelia saw the militant Miss Garcia looming over her two beautiful
daughters, and her mother defending them like a hen in a housedress, the family
universe embattled within and without. "I'm
taking a shower." "Then
what?" her mother asked. "I
have to go out." "To
see that man?" "He's
not a man, he's a Russian." Arkady found that he had been expecting
the detective, with her inquisitor's glare, informal shorts and pullover, straw
bag and gun. All the AzuPanama documents were out of sight, and Osorio could
swing her gaze all she wanted. "Did
you find a picture of Pribluda today?" "No." "Well,
I found a picture of you." It was plain she relished the surprise.
"Do you remember Hedy?" "How
could I forget Hedy?" Osorio
told him about the two bodies at the Casa de Amor, Hedy Infante and an Italian national
named Franco Leo Mossa. She described the condition of the room, positions of
the bodies, nature of the wounds, time of death. "Machetes?"
Arkady asked. "How
did you guess?" "Statistics.
There was no outcry?" "No.
The murderer also used something round and sharp to puncture the Italian's
throat so he couldn't call out." "Like
an ice pick?" "Yes.
At first, I thought of an extortion turned violent. Sometimes a jinetera
goes with a tourist and when his pants are down a so-called boyfriend shows up
and they rob him." "We
know who her boyfriend is." "Then
I thought the dead man looked like you." "There's
a compliment you don't get every day. Was he the man we saw her with on the
street the other night?" "I'm
pretty sure. Did you dance with Hedy?" "No.
We were only introduced. By Sergeant Luna." "You
talked to her?" "Not
really. She wasn't completely sober, and later, of course, she was
possessed." "After
the santero's, Hedy cleaned herself up and returned here. We saw her,
you and I. At the time I wondered why. I mean, everything was over. The
sergeant was gone and this was not the usual place she picked up tourists. I
think the reason she was here was you." "I'd
only met her." "Maybe
she wanted to meet you again." "She
would have known the difference between a well-dressed Italian and me. Why even
think of me?" "This
was in the room." She showed him the picture. A
camera had the photographer's eye and it was always odd to see yourself as
others imagined you. If they were dead, Arkady thought, that lent a certain
finality to what had been a simple snapshot. Arkady saw cars, baggage, heavy
coats, a Russian herd at "Pribluda
took this when I dropped him off at the airport. He said he'd use it for target
practice for old times' sake. This was in the room?" "Hedy
was not a mental giant. She was probably still in a daze from the santero's.
I think maybe someone gave her that to help her pick you out." "You
think the man in this picture could pass as Italian?" "In
the dark some people are hard to tell apart. Did I tell you that the dead man's
name was Franco?" "Yes." "If
a European called Franco looked like Renko, his name sounded like Renko, she
met him outside Renko's apartment and his head had a cut the same as Renko's,
he was probably Renko enough for Hedy. I think it's possible the murder of this
Italian was a second attempt on your life." "This
happened two nights ago?" "Yes." Luna
had said he would be back to fuck him up, Arkady remembered, and the libidinous
Franco Mossa sounded as thoroughly fucked as a man could get. "Does
Sergeant Luna know about the correct identification of the body?" "He
does now. He and Arcos took over the investigation." Luna
would be back again. The days of grace were over. Arkady
asked, "Why kill Hedy?" "I
don't know." "Why
leave the photograph on her?" "He
didn't, he flushed it down the toilet." "Then
how did you get it?" "The
picture was trapped with toilet paper." She described the deeply petaled
slashes, the blood-smeared sheets and blood-soaked air that had been baking in
the sun for a day and a half, and confessed to her nausea. "It was
unprofessional of me." "No,
it's an occupational disease," Arkady said. "The reason I left the
autopsy was to be sick. See, we share a common weakness. I feel like smoking
just hearing about it." "Dr.
Blas has never been sick." "I'm
sure." "Dr.
Blas says we should welcome smell as information. A body's fruity bouquet might
indicate amyl nitrate. The hint of garlic can be arsenic." "He'd
be a delightful man to have dinner with." "Anyway,
I've showered." "Showered
and took the time to paint your toenails. A lot of detectives wouldn't bother
to do that. You took a chance." More
than taken a chance, he thought; by removing the picture the detective had
altered the crime scene, tacitly admitting that she suspected Luna as much as
he did. Sharing the picture was the first real step forward on her part,
painted toes and all. Now it was his turn, that was the etiquette. He could
hold on to his scraps of information until he was safely back in Moscow, where
the contents of the briefcase he had picked up at the Chinese theater might
mean the hook for Bugai and an exchange of red-faced accusations between the
Russian Ministry for Foreign Trade and the Cuban Ministry of Sugar. Over money,
of course. Once back in "Have
you ever heard of a Panamanian sugar company called AzuPanama?" "I've
read about it." Her eyes cooled. "In Granma, the Party
newspaper. There's a problem with the Russians over the sugar contract and
AzuPanama is supposed to help." "Mediate?" "So
I understand." "Because
AzuPanama is neutral." "Yes." "Panamanian?" "Of
course." He
led her to the office, opened the green briefcase and emptied its contents item
by item on the desk. "Copies
of participants' lists from It
seemed to be going well, Arkady thought. Next he could introduce the concept of
O'Brien and George Washington Walls, then their involvement with Luna and
Pribluda. Osorio cleared her throat and sorted the items more neatly, touching
them the way a person did when handling fire. "I
thought you were getting a picture of Pribluda for Dr. Blas," she said. "Oh,
I am. I happened to come across these first." "Where
did they come from?" "Why
don't you look to see what they are?" A
slight hiss developed in Osorio's Russian. " I can see what they are. What
they are is very evident. Documents manufactured to embarrass "You
can see by comparing names on this certificate of registration with the
passports that AzuPanama isn't really Panamanian at all. AzuPanama was set up
in "Of
a heart attack?" "No." "Dr.
Blas says so." "Anyway,"
Arkady went on, "we can make a positive match of the names from AzuPanama
with a roster from the Ministry of Sugar. That's what Pribluda would have done
next." "We
are not doing anything." Osorio stepped back. "You lied to me." "Here
are the documents." "I'm
looking at you. What I see is a man who claims to look for a picture of his
dead friend while he gathers all sorts of anti-Cuban materials. I come to help
you and you throw these papers, which you don't tell me where they came from,
in my face. I won't touch them." This
was not going the way Arkady hoped. "You
can check them." "I'm
not helping you. I don't really know anything about you. It's your word and a
picture that you're Pribluda's friend, that's all I know. Just your word." "No,
that's not true." Her words crystallized what had been vague before. What
had bothered Arkady was how his picture got from Pribluda's flat to Hedy.
"Did you give Pribluda's picture of me to Luna?" "How
can you ask a question like that?" "Because
it makes sense. Let me guess. After the autopsy you came here to dust for
fingerprints and found the picture of this miserable Russian who had just
arrived. You naturally called Luna, who told you to bring the picture to
him." "Never." "Who
gave it to poor Hedy. Have you been helping Luna all along?" "Not
in that way." "Do
all Cuban police carry an ice pick and a baseball bat?" "When
you see Luna with a machete, bolo, that's the time to be afraid. You
should have stayed in "There
you're right." Osorio
snatched up her bag. She was out the door before he could consider whether he
had really handled the issue of AzuPanama as well as possible. But why would a
Cuban be impressed by mere evidence? This was Havana, after all, a place where
sugar attaches floated in the dark, where a Havana Yacht Club did, didn't,
might exist, where a girl could lose her head two nights in a row. Osorio's lie
about the picture had simply been one absurdity too many. All the same there
had been a nasty edge to his words that he regretted. When she reached the street, Ofelia
realized that, apart from a bolt on his door, Renko had no protection if Luna
came back. What she had not told the Russian was how Luna looked when he stood
over Hedy's body at the love motel, how his eyes reddened and the muscles of
his face worked like a twitching fist. Or how the sergeant had later sat in the
archive room, and how simply moving by him was like walking in the shadow of a
volcano. Traffic
on the Malecуn – always thin at night – had as good as disappeared. Even the
couples who usually courted on the seawall were gone. If Ofelia was angry with
Renko, she was furious with herself. She had removed the picture of him from
the crime scene. She had broken the law. For what, so he could accuse her of
taking the same picture from Pribluda's? She knew by now his taste for
frivolous minutiae and then the diagonal question that cut across the board. As
for the documents he pulled from the briefcase she was not surprised by the
lengths Russians would go to discredit Determined
not to be baited again, she went back in the house. Halfway up the stairs
Ofelia heard steps above and a soft knocking at Renko's door. When he opened
the door the light of his room fell on an extraordinarily fair woman with
braided black hair in a Mexican dress and bare feet. She was a rose on a long
stem, a glamorous white flower tinged with blue. Ofelia recognized her from the
Santeria ceremony, the friend of George Washington Walls, the dancer. Ofelia
watched Isabel lift her face and kiss Renko. Before they saw her, she retreated
down into the dark of the stairs, getting smaller and smaller until she reached
the street again. Chapter Eighteen"You're making a mistake," Arkady
told Isabel. "No
mistake." She
guided his hand between her legs so that he could feel her through the cotton
of the dress, then kissed him and slipped into the sitting room. Maybe this was
a test for signs of life, he thought. The dress was thin to show the slimness
of her body and the dark caps of her breasts, and if he were a normal man he
would feel healthy lust. The truth was he did feel a first stirring, feeling
her breath on his neck, taking in the almond scent of her hair braided like
long black silk. Her pale skin made her lips all the more red. "No
mistake," Isabel said. "I asked you to do something for me. Fair
trade. Gordo keeps the rum over the sink." "I
thought Gordo was the name for the turtle." "For
both. Sergei, turtle." "What
do you call George Washington Walls?" "I
call him done with. I have a new boyfriend, no?" "Well,
I can't imagine who that is." Isabel
touched the coat hung on the back of the chair, and when he pulled her hand
away she said, "Relax. Such a strange man, but I like you." She found
the rum herself and rinsed two glasses. "I like strong men." "That's
not me." "Let
me be the judge." She handed him a glass. "I know you've heard about
my father." "I
heard there was a conspiracy." "True.
There's always a conspiracy. Everyone complains, and He..." – she pointed
to her chin – "He lets them, as long as they don't do anything.
As long as they don't organize. All the same, every year there's a conspiracy,
and it's always a mix of conspirators and informers. That's Cuban democracy at
work, that's how we will finally vote, when even the informers decide enough is
enough and they keep their mouths shut and this country is delivered." She
brushed Arkady's cheek. "But not yet, I don't think. This is the first
place where time does not exist. People have been born and died, yes, but time
has not passed because time demands fresh paint, new cars, new clothes. Or
maybe war, one or the other. But not this, which is not dead or alive, which is
neither. You're not drinking." "No."
The last thing he needed was Isabel and alcohol. "Do
you mind?" She took a cigarette. "No." "The
reason my father agreed to the coup in the first place was the assurances from
his Russian friends that he would have their complete support. It wasn't his
idea." "He
should have known better." "I
think I'm choosing more wisely." She inhaled as if the smoke would travel
the length of her body, exhaled and spun, her arms spread, so that the dress
clung to her and smoke trailed behind. "I think we're the best. English
dancers are too stiff, the Russians are too serious. We have the elevation and
technique, but we are also born with music. There is no limit once I'm out,
once I have my letter and my ticket." "The
letter hasn't come." "It
will. It has to. I told George we were looking into going back to "You
and I?" "Yes,
wouldn't that be the simplest way?" Isabel came to rest against the coat
and an ember from her cigarette spilled on the sleeve. "Are you
married?" Arkady
brushed the ember off and took Isabel by the wrist. It was a slim wrist, an
elegant wrist, but he led her to the door. "It's late. If something comes
for you I promise I'll let you know." "What
are you doing?" "I'm
saying good night." "I'm
not done." "I'm
done." He
pushed her out and only had a glimpse of her in the hallway crushed as a moth
before he shut the door. "You
son of a bitch," she shouted through it. "You prick, cono.
Just like your friend Sergei. All he wanted to do was talk about that stupid
plot that got my father killed. You're just the same, another maricуn. El
bollo de tu madre." Arkady
shot the bolt. "I'm sorry. I don't speak Spanish." His way with women was astonishing, he
thought. What a charmer. He wrapped himself in the coat and shivered. Why was
everyone in It
was midnight, and dark had overwhelmed the city when Arkady wasn't looking. A
power outage arranged by Luna, or was his imagination expanding in the dark?
There were no streetlamps on the Malecуn, only a couple of faint headlights
like the sort on luminescent fish found in an ocean trench. Although he latched
the shutters closed and lit a candle, darkness continued to seep into the room
with a solid, tarry quality. A car horn woke him. The horn blared
until he opened the balcony doors and saw that the morning had started hours
before. The sea was a brilliant mirror to a huge sky, the sun high and shadows
reduced to mere spots of ink. Across the Malecуn a boy flipped small, silvery
bait out of a net up to a partner standing on the seawall with a pole. Another
boy gutted his fish on the sidewalk and threw the entrails up to a hovering
gull. Directly below the balcony was a streamlined cloud of chrome and white,
Hemingway's Chrysler Imperial convertible with George Washington Walls at the
wheel and John O'Brien in a golf cap and Hawaiian shirt. "Remember,
we were going to talk about possible employment," Walls called up.
"And show you some famous sin spots." "You
can't just tell me?" "Think
of us as your guides," O'Brien said. "Think of it as a Grand
Tour." Arkady
looked to Walls for any sign that Isabel had reported her midnight visit and he
looked to O'Brien for an indication that word of the AzuPanama papers reached
him via Osorio, but all he saw shining up from the car were bright smiles and
dark glasses. Employment in "Give
me a minute." The
desk drawer had envelopes. Into one Arkady fit all his worldly evidence: Rufo's
house key, Pribluda's car key, AzuPanama documents and the photo of the Havana
Yacht Club. Arkady taped the envelope to the small of his back, put on his
shirt and coat, a man equipped for all climates and occasions. The car even rode like a cloud, the
warm upholstery adhesive to the touch. Arkady noticed even from the backseat
the push-button transmission, how could anyone miss that? They breezed along
the Malecуn while Walls gossiped about other famous cars, Fidel's penchant for Oldsmobiles
and Che's '60 Chevrolet Impala. Arkady looked around. "Have you seen
Luna?" "The
sergeant is no longer associated with us," Walls said. "I
think the man's unhinged," said O'Brien. Walls
said, "Luna is one funky dude." He dipped his glasses from his blue
eyes. "When are you going to dump the coat?" O'Brien
said, "It's like driving around with Abe-Fucking-Lincoln. It is." "When
I get warm." "You
read Hemingway in "He's
very popular there. Jack London, John Steinbeck and Hemingway." "When
writers were bruisers," said O'Brien. "I'd have to say I think of The
Old Man and the Sea every time I see the fishing boats go out. I loved the
book and the film. Spencer Tracy was magnificent. A better Irishman than Cuban,
but magnificent." "John
reads everything," Walls said. "I
love movies too. When I get homesick I put on a video. I have Arkady
thought of Vice Consul Bugai and the $5,000 deposit in Bugai's name at
O'Brien's Panama bank. "Do
you have any Russian friends here?" "There
aren't that many. But to be honest I have to say I steer clear, as a
precautionary measure." "Pariahs,"
said Walls. "The
Russian Mafia would love to get in here. They're already in "None
taken." "A
Russian wants money, he says, I'll kidnap someone rich, bury him up to his neck
and demand a ransom. Maybe his family will pay and maybe they won't. A
short-term proposition either way. An American wants money, he says, I'll do a
mass mailing and offer an investment with an irresistible rate of return. Maybe
the investment pays off or maybe it doesn't, but as long as I have lawyers
those people will be paying me for the rest of their lives. After they're dead
I'll put a lien on their estate. They'll wish I had buried them up to
their necks." "That's
what you did?" Arkady said. "I'm
not saying that's what I did, I'm saying what's done in the States." He
raised his hand and his biggest grin. "Not lying. I have testified in
district court in "That's
a lot of courts to tell the truth in," Arkady said. "The
fact is," said O'Brien, "I prefer happy investors. I'm too old to be
stalked by unshaven, angry men or have to duck subpoenas from men who can stand
outside a door for the rest of their miserable lives. Hey, we're
here!" Walls
swung across oncoming traffic to the curb of an airy high-rise hotel, an angled
tower of blue balconies that nestled at its base the separate dome in mottled colors.
Arkady had passed the hotel before without fully registering how its
architecture was pure American fifties. And they'd arrived in the perfect car,
gliding to a stop under a cantilevered entrance by a statue of, perhaps, a
seahorse and siren carved from the largest of all whale bones. John O'Brien had
visited before, judging by the doormen's zeal. "The
Arkady
asked, "What does this have to do with me?" "A
little patience, please. It all fits." O'Brien
removed his cap as a mark of respect before they climbed the stairs and entered
glass doors to a low lobby of white marble under inset ceiling lights spaced as
irregularly as stars. Sofas as long as boxcars reached across the floor toward
a skylit grotto of elephant-ear ferns. Along one side was the tidal murmur of a
bar, at the far end a staircase suspended on wires wound around a stabile of
black stone, and a bright haze that was plate glass leading to a pool. O'Brien
glided at a reverent pace across the lobby, tassels of his shoes flopping.
"Everything deluxe. Kitchen like a cruise ship, beautifully appointed
rooms. And the casino?" One
step ahead of O'Brien, Walls opened the brass doors to a convention hall
emblazoned with the colorful, forceful logos of Spanish, Venezuelan, Mexican
banks. Knockdown displays and charts on easels forecast "It's
pathetic," O'Brien said. "Market projections, rates of interest,
capital protection, all languages spoken. Look at this." He tried to turn
on the monitor at the screen. "Hell, it doesn't even work." "Maybe
this does." Arkady picked up a remote control from the booth counter and
pushed on. At once, images of serious men and women in expensive suits marched
across the screen. Dollars, pesetas, deutsche-marks flowed from them like lines
of electricity. "Right,"
O'Brien said. "They know how to put your money to work for your benefit
around the world, sure they do. The only trouble, this isn't the world. This is
Arkady
turned the remote off. "Anyway,"
O'Brien said, "the banks have it backwards. Nowadays people are not
interested in a slow accrual of assets. What they want is a jackpot, the
lottery, payday. Look around, you can still see it." He called Arkady's
attention to walls of baroque cream and gold, pointing out how the dropped
ceiling hid the dome overhead. They were in the painted dome they had seen from
outside. If the "No
Cubans?" "Cubans
worked here. They hired Cuban accountants and made them into croupiers
and dealers. Taught them grooming, bought them suits, paid them well to keep
them honest. Of course, they were still vacuumed for chips at the end of the
day." Arkady
had seen casinos. There were casinos in "Mind,
there was always gambling in "It's
hard to believe there was a revolution." "You
can't please everyone," O'Brien said. "Let me show you my personal
favorite, though. Smaller but more historical. On the way, as soon as they left the Arkady
asked, "So, what kind of business have you been doing here?
Investing?" "Investing,
consulting, whatever," O'Brien said. "We solve problems." "For
example?" Walls
and O'Brien glanced at each other, and Walls said, "For example, Cuban
trucks here need spare parts because the Russian factory that used to produce
them is turning out Swiss Army knives now instead. What John and I did was find
a Russian truck factory in "What
did you get out of that?" "Finder's
fee, costs. You know, I used to think because I was a Marxist that I understood
capitalism. I didn't know anything. John plays it like a game." O'Brien
said, "I have always noticed that people from the socialist camp take
money far too seriously. You should have fun." "It's
like a second college education being with John." "Yes?"
Arkady was ready to be educated. "Like
boots," said Walls. "The Cubans ran out of boots. We found out that
the "You
must be appreciated here." "I'd
like to think that George and I are," said O'Brien. "But
how do you do that from "In
a third country, of course." "In
O'Brien
twisted in his seat. "Arkady, you've got to stop being such a cop. Over
the years, I have helped a lot of police in your situation, but it's a matter
of give and take. You want to know this and you want to know that, but you have
yet to give me a believable explanation how you came to stand on the dock of
the Havana Yacht Club." "I
was just visiting places where Pribluda might have been." "What
made you think he might have been there?" "There
was a map in his apartment and the club was circled." Which was true,
although not as true as the photograph. "It was an old map." "Just
an old map? That's how you heard about the Havana Yacht Club? Amazing." The Hotel Capri was a pocket version of
the "I
can't get over the coat," Walls told Arkady. "Do you mind if I try it
on?" "Go
ahead." Although
Arkady didn't want other people even touching the coat, he helped Walls in. The
coat stretched a little over Walls's shoulders. He ran his hands along the
cashmere outside, the silk lining in, felt the pockets inside and out. O'Brien
watched the fashion show. "What do you think?" "I
think he's a man with empty pockets." Walls returned the coat. "But
nice. You got this on an investigator's pay? Good for you." "A
good sign for us all." O'Brien led the way off the lobby and through the
doors into a small, darkened theater. Arkady could barely see the stage, steps,
speakers and overhead lights with colored eels. "La Sala Roja. It wasn't a
cabaret then. It was a better show. Use your imagination and you can see red
drapes, red carpet, red velvet lamps. In the center, four blackjack tables and
four roulette. In the corners, seven-eleven and baccarat. Girls selling cigars,
and I mean beautiful girls selling Cuban cigars. Perhaps a little cocaine,
though who needs it? It's the sound of the ball on the track, the excitement
around a craps table. The man says 'Bets, gentlemen' and people bet. Do you
gamble, Arkady?" "No." "Why?" "I
don't have the money to lose." "Everyone
has the money to lose. Poor people gamble all the time. What you mean is, you
don't like to lose." "I
suppose so." "Well,
you're unusual, most people need to. If they happen to win, they keep on playing
until they do lose. Right now around the world more people are gambling than
ever in the history of man." O'Brien shrugged to show that the phenomenon
was beyond him. "Maybe it's the coming millennium. It's as if people want
to shed material things, not in a church but in a casino. People are willing to
lose everything as long as they have fun. They can't resist. It's human. The
worst snub in the world is a casino where they won't take your money." "Were
you here before the Revolution?" "A
dozen times. Jesus, that was a long time ago." "Did
you gamble?" "I'm
like you, I don't like to lose. Mostly, I admired the operation. You know who I
pointed out to my wife? I pointed out Jack Kennedy. He had a peroxide blonde on
one arm and a sultry mulata on the other. During the missile crisis I
wondered if Jack ever thought back to that night." "There
were other casinos, too," Walls said. " "That's
your plan, to reopen old casinos?" "No,"
O'Brien said, "still too many hard feelings. Anyway, the Havana Yacht Club
and Casino can be ten times bigger than any of these." "You're
ambitious." "Aren't
you?" Walls asked. "The Cold War's over. I was a hero in that war and
look what it got me. Marooned." "What
kind of life is "Work
for you? Take Pribluda's place?" "Like
that," said Walls. "Why
is it that I can't take this offer seriously?" "Because
you're suspicious," said O'Brien. "It's the Russian attitude. You
have to be positive. Every millionaire I ever met was an optimist. Every
down-and-outer expects the worst. It's a new world, Arkady, why not plan
big?" "You
would share your Cuban gold mine with a man you'd never met before?" "But
I've met your type before. You're the man at the end of the pier, who's either
going to jump in the water or change his life." O'Brien's eyes glowed
with... what? Arkady wondered. The showmanship of a salesman or the zeal of a
priest, all his efforts bent to one moment of plausibility for this thoroughly
ridiculous proposition. "Change it. Give yourself a chance." "How?" "As
a partner." "A
partner? This gets better all the time." "But
partnership demands trust," O'Brien said. "You understand what trust
is, don't you, Arkady?" "Yes." "But
you won't show it. For two days I've been waiting for you to be as open with
George and me as we have been with you. Please don't piss on my back and tell
me it's raining. Don't tell me about an old map. Sergeant Luna told us about
the picture of the Havana Yacht Club. We know about it. A picture of a dead
Russian at the Havana Yacht Club is exactly what we don't need now." "John
would feel better if he had it," Walls said. "If
I had it I wouldn't have to worry about it. And I'd know that you had extended
your trust to us the way we have with you. Can you do that, Arkady, and trust
me with that picture?" O'Brien put out his hand. Arkady
felt the envelope with the photograph sticking to his back. "I don't know
about business partnerships, I've always worked directly for the state. But
what about this? If I accept your proposition and work for a year and have a
villa and boat and a satisfying social life, at that point I will give you the
photograph. Until then it's safe because we will be, as you say,
partners." "Are
you hearing this?" Walls asked. "The mother is bargaining." "Resisting."
John O'Brien let his hand drop. He looked his age, suddenly a little spent,
silver hair sticking to temples that were wet like sweat on the edge of
greasepaint, like an actor who passionately acted a play for a dull, deaf
audience. "Because you're Russian, Arkady, I'll make allowances. This is a
new way of thinking for you, being part of a plan." "Remind
me, what part would I be?" Arkady asked. "Security.
George told you, in case any Mafia does show up." "I'd
have to think about this. I'm not sure I'm that tough." "That's
okay," Walls said. "People think you are." "Appearances
go a long way," O'Brien said. "I'll tell you why the Chapter NineteenThe bodega was a warehouse with the dimmest
light in "You
either come home late or you don't come home at all. Who is this man?" "He's
not a man," Ofelia said. "He's
not a man?" Her mother amplified her wonderment to include as many people
as possible in the conversation. "Not
a man like that." "Like
the musicians? Great husbands. Where is the last one, massaging Swedes in Cayo
Largo?" "I
came home last night. Everything is okay." "Everything
is wonderful. Here I am with the world's greatest work of fiction." She
slapped her ration book. "What could be better? To know why you come home
so late?" "It's
a police matter." "With
a Russian! Hija, maybe you haven't heard, the Russian boat has sailed.
Gone. How did you even find one? I'd love to see this stranded Lothario." "Mama,"
Ofelia begged. "Oh,
you're in your uniform, you're embarrassed to be seen with me. I can wait in
line all day so you can run around and make the world safe for..." She
indicated a beard. "We're
almost there." Ofelia fixed her eye on the counter. "We're
almost nowhere. This is nowhere, hija. Remember that boy you knew in
school, the one with the fish tank?" "Aquarium." "Fish
tank. Nothing but dirty water and two catfish that never moved. Take a look at
those clerks." At
a counter with a register and scale were two women with whiskers who looked so
much like those catfish that it was difficult for Ofelia to keep a straight
face. There were four counters in the gloom of the bodega, each with a
chalkboard that listed goods, prices, ration per person or family, and date
available, the "date available" clouded from many corrections. "Tomatoes
next week," Ofelia said. "That's good news." Her
mother exploded with a laugh. "My God, I've raised an idiot. There will be
no tomatoes, no evaporated milk, no flour and maybe no beans or rice. This is a
trap for morons. Hija, I know you are a brilliant detective, but thank
God you have me to shop for you." A
woman behind them hissed and warned, "I will report this
counterrevolutionary propaganda." "Piss
off," Ofelia's mother said. "I fought at Playa Giron. Where were you?
Probably waving your tits at American bombers. I assume you had tits." Her
mother was good at shutting people up. Playa Giron was what the rest of the
world called the "I
have a question," Ofelia said. "Please,
I'm reading the board. Two cans of green peas per family for the month. They
will be delicious, I'm sure. Sugar is available. You will know the end is near
when no sugar is available." "About
pickles." "I
don't see pickles." "Where
would I find them?" The Eastern Bloc had tried to unload bottled pickles
in "Not
here. In the free market you buy cucumbers and pickle them." "Different
sizes?" "A
cucumber is a cucumber. Why would anyone want a small cucumber?" At the
counter her mother made a show of having her book properly marked and
announcing, "You know, if you live on your rations you will enjoy a very
balanced diet." "That's
true," one of the clerks was stupid enough to agree. "Because
you eat for two weeks and starve for two weeks." Having delivered her
torpedo, Ofelia's mother turned and sailed for the exit, leaving Ofelia to
follow with the heavy sack and can of oil the length of the bodega while
everyone stared. When
they reached the street her mother stumped toward home. "You
are impossible," Ofelia said. "I
hope so. This island is driving me crazy." "This
island is driving you crazy? You've never been off this island." "And
it's driving me crazy. And having a daughter who's one of them."
Her mother had been stopped by the police for selling homemade cosmetics door
to door. They'd let her go, of course, as soon as they learned Detective Osorio
was her daughter. "Your uncle Manny wrote to say there is a rocking chair
waiting on the porch for me in "With
a drive-by shooting every night is what he wrote me." "In
his new letter he says he could take Muriel and Marisol. He says they would
love "We
are not going to talk about this." "They
would knock That
was always the insinuation her mother could twist like a knife, that Ofelia
stood apart in the family by the deeper color of her skin, that Ofelia was
different from her own daughters and, in reverse, a lifelong and bitter
disappointment to her mother. And Ofelia knew her mother could see the red heat
in her cheek. "They're
staying with me. If you want to go to "I'm
only saying, it's a new world. It probably doesn't involve a Russian." • • • Arkady had Walls and O'Brien drop him
off a couple of blocks short of the Malecуn. Because he had the sense that Luna
could leap over the seawall any second with an ice pick or machete once Arkady
reached the boulevard, he stayed in the shadows of building columns until he
reached an address with the tricolored banner of the Committee for the Defense
of the Revolution, knocked at Abuelita's door and entered. "Come
in." Light
squeezed through with him into the narrow confines of her room, to the statue
of the shrouded, dark-skinned Virgin and her shimmering peacock feather. Scents
of cigar and sandalwood tickled his nose. Abuelita sat before the Virgin and
solemnly laid cards. Tarot? Arkady looked over the old woman's shoulder.
Solitaire. Today she sported a pullover that said "New York Stock
Exchange." Arkady noticed that the statue also wore something new, a
yellow necklace like Osorio's. "May
I?" "Go
ahead." When he touched the necklace beads Abuelita said, "In
Santeria this Virgin is also the spirit Oshun and her color is yellow, honey,
gold. Oshun is a very sexy spirit." That
hardly described Osorio, Arkady thought, but he didn't have time to delve into
religious matters. "I
saw you leave this morning in that big white car, that chariot with
wings," Abuelita said. "The whole Malecуn was looking at that." "Did
you happen to notice any tall, black sergeant from Minint go in the building
after I left?" "No." "No
one fitting that description carrying a machete or a baseball bat?" He
added five dollars to the crown at the Virgin's feet. Abuelita
sighed and took the money out. "I know the man you mean. The one who
arranged the Abakua. I was at my window like I always am, but the truth is, I
fell asleep right there standing up. Sometimes my body gets old." Arkady
put the money back. "Then I have another question. I still need a picture
of Sergei Pribluda for the police and I'm looking for any close friends of his
who might have one. No one here does, but the first time we met you mentioned
that Sergei Pribluda was a man who shared his pickles. Yesterday I was at a
market that sold vegetables, including cucumbers, but nothing like the homemade
pickles in Pribluda's refrigerator. Because you're right, there's nothing like
a Russian pickle. Did he have a special visitor?" Abuelita
spread her hand wide as a fan and hid her grin. "Now you're talking. There
was one woman, a Russian, who came sometimes with a basket, sometimes
not." "Could
you describe her?" "Oh,
like a fat little dove. She came on Thursdays, sometimes alone, sometimes with
a girl." Ofelia climbed a ladder to Hedy
Infante's home, a platform built under the ceiling of a rococo foyer. The
ten-by-ten loft held her cot, rack of dresses and stretch pants, electric bulb
and candles, cosmetics and shoes, window with rope to a pail and view of the
chandelier and, far below, a marble floor. The house had been built by a sugar
magnate with a taste for froth, and the ceiling's swirls of white plasterwork
evoked a sense of nesting in the clouds. Hedy's
interior decoration was just as fantastic, an interior of pictures she had
clipped from magazines and taped to her walls, a handmade wallpaper of Los Van
Van, Julio Iglesias, Gloria Estefan singing soulfully to a microphone, bathed
in strobe lights, reaching out to fans. On one singer she had superimposed her
own face, which reminded Ofelia of the real condition of Hedy's neck. The loft
wasn't the sort of room a prostitute took a client, it was more her true,
private place. Private
but violated by the little touches left by forensic technicians, police tape
around the dresses, fingerprint powder on the mirror, the subtle disarray when
men rather than women put things away. Hedy had collected hotel soaps, cutlery,
coasters, made a seashell frame around a photograph of her quince, her
fifteenth birthday party – the picture showed off the state – supplied frosted
cake, beer and rum. In another photograph Hedy wore the blue ruffles and scarf
of a devotee of Yemaya, the goddess of the seas, and, sure enough, on the wall
was a statuette of Our Lady of Regla, spirit and saint being one and the same.
A cigar box held snapshots of a variety of tourists with Hedy, toasting her
with daiquiris or mojitos at cafes in the Plaza Vieja, Plaza de Armas,
Plaza de la Catedral, the make-believe world of Old Havana. Hedy's favorites,
though, seemed to be two photos pinned to a heart-shaped pillow of her and
Luna. What had the techs made of that, the dead girl with the officer in
charge? The photos had apparently been taken at different times because of a
difference in clothes, but both in front of a building that bore in rusty
stains the name Centro Russo-Cubano. On the underside of the pillow was pinned
a third snapshot, this of Hedy, Luna and the little jinetera Teresa in
the back of a white Chrysler Imperial. There were no names, telephone numbers
or addresses around the bed, in the cigar box or on the wall. There
were no neighbors in the building to talk, and Ofelia went across the street to
a botбnica, where a cardboard listed guava for diarrhea, oregano for
congestion, parsley for gas. A Coca-Cola mirror hung on the wall, and taped to
it were testimonials, including a postcard from "Hija?"
The herbalista stirred from a chair. "Oh,
yes." Ofelia bought a bag of mahogany bark for her mother's rheumatism
before mentioning Hedy. "Yerba
buena," the herbalista remembered Hedy by remedy. "A pretty
girl but a nervous stomach. A dancer, too. Such a shame." The
woman knew Hedy from the local group that performed at Carnival. There had been
sixty dancers, drummers, men balancing giant tops, all dressed in Yemaya's
signature blue and swirling like waves all the way up the Prado where the
Comandante himself was in the reviewing stand. And she remembered Hedy's
friend, who could burn a hole through wood with his gaze. "There,
that's him." A
Minint Lada stopped outside Hedy's address, and Luna emerged with more haste
than usual. Ofelia turned her back to the door, removed her cap and watched the
street in the mirror, which meant she had to endure more recommendations from
the herbalist and the stupid card from But
it didn't matter to Ofelia that none of the technicians who visited Hedy
Infante's loft had gathered the pillow and its photographs in time. It didn't
matter whether or not they dusted Hedy's childish possessions for prints. None
of them for all their expertise would understand Hedy as well as she did. Ofelia
lived in two worlds. One was the ordinary level of ration lines and bus lines,
of streets of rubble, of the blue trickle of electricity that allowed Fidel to
flicker on the television screen, of oppressive heat that made her two
daughters spread like butterflies on the cool tiles of the floor. The other was
a deeper universe as real as the veins beneath the skin, of the voluptuous
Oshun, maternal Yemaya, thundering Chango, spirits good and bad that brought
blood to the face, taste to the mouth, color to the eye and dwelled in everyone
if they were evoked. Just as drums carried a kola seed that was the soul of the
drum, that only spoke when the drum was played, every person carried a spirit
that spoke through their own heartbeat if they would only listen. So Ofelia
Osorio carried the fire of the sun hidden behind her dark mask and saw with a
penetrating light the double worlds of This time Arkady found Olga Petrovna in
a housedress and her hair up in curlers as she was organizing bags of food in
the front room of her apartment. She gave him the pained smile of a pretty
woman, an older woman caught by surprise. A fat little dove? Perhaps. "A
side business," she said. "A
healthy side business." What
had been a Russian nook was obscured by rows of white plastic bags stretched to
the bursting point by Italian coffee tins, Chinese tableware, toilet paper,
cooking oil, soap, towels, frozen chicken and bottles of Spanish wine. Each bag
was taped and marked with a different Cuban name. "I
do what I can," she said. "It was so much easier in the old days when
there was a real Russian community here. Cubans could depend on us for a decent
supply of dollar goods from the diplomatic market. When the embassy shipped
everyone home, that put a heavy burden on those of us who were left." For
a percentage, Arkady was sure. Ten percent? Twenty? It would have been vulgar
to ask such a perfect Soviet matron. "I'll
be right back," she promised and slipped into a bedroom, which emitted a
hint of sachet. She called through the door, "Talk to Sasha, he loves
company." From
its perch a canary seemed to examine Arkady for a tail. Arkady peeked into the
kitchen. Samovar on an oilcloth, oilcloth on the table. Calendar with a
nostalgically snowy scene. Salt in a bowl, paper napkins in a glass. A
sparkling shelf of home-bottled jams, pickles and bean salad. He was back in
the front room when she returned, ash-blond hair brushed into place, primped in
record time. "I
would offer you something, but my Cuban friends will be arriving soon. It makes
them nervous to see strangers. I hope this won't take long. You
understand." "Of
course. It's about Sergei Pribluda. You said the first time we spoke that some
women on the embassy staff speculated because of the improvement of his Spanish
that he had become romantically involved with a Cuban." Olga
Petrovna allowed herself a smile. "Sergei Sergeevich's Spanish was never
that good." "I
suspect you're right, because he was so Russian. Russian to the core." "As
I told you, a 'comrade' in the old sense of the word." "And
the more I investigate, the more it's clear that if he did find a woman to
admire that deeply, she only could have been as Russian as he was. Would you
agree?" While
Olga Petrovna maintained the same bland smile, something defiant appeared in
her eyes. "I
think so." "The
attraction must have been inevitable," Arkady said. "Perhaps with
reminiscences of home, a real Russian dinner and then, because an affair within
the embassy is always discouraged, the necessity to plan liaisons that were
either secret or seemed accidental. Fortunately, he lived well apart from other
Russians, and she could always find a reason to be on the Malecуn." "It's
possible." "But
she was seen by Cubans." There
was a knock at the door. Olga Petrovna opened it a crack, whispered to someone
and shut the door gently, returned to Arkady, asked for a cigarette and, when it
was lit, sat and exhaled luxuriously. In a new voice, a voice with body, she
said, "We didn't do anything wrong." "I'm
not saying you did. I didn't come to "I
have no idea what Sergei was up to. He didn't say and I knew better than to
ask. We appreciated each other, was all." "That
was enough, I'm sure." "Then
what do you want?" "I
think that someone close to Pribluda, who cared for him, probably has a better
photograph than what you showed me the first time." "That's
all?" "Yes." She
rose, went to her bedroom and returned a moment later with a color photograph
of a tanned and happy Colonel Sergei Pribluda in swim shorts. With the warm "I'm
sorry, I would have given it to you before, but I was sure you would find
another one and this is the only good one I have. Will I get it back?" "I'll
ask." He slipped the picture into his pocket. "Did you ever ask
Pribluda what he was doing in "Men
like Sergei perform special tasks. He would never say and it wasn't my place to
pry." Said
like a true believer, Arkady thought; he could see what a match Pribluda and
Olga Petrovna had been. "You're
the one who sent the message from the embassy to me in "I
was worried, and Sergei had spoken so respectfully of you." "How
did you manage to send it? You must need authorization to send messages to "Officially,
but we're so understaffed. They rely on me to do more and more, and in some
ways it's much easier to get things done. And I was right, wasn't I? He was in
trouble." "Did
you tell anyone else?" "Who
would I tell? The only real Russian at the embassy was Sergei." Her eyes
brimmed. She took a deep breath and glanced toward the door. "What Cubans
don't understand is while we may not sing and dance as much as they do, we love
just as passionately, don't we?" "Yes,
we do." Certainly
Osorio would never understand, Arkady thought. It was a relief to be away from
the detective's steamy mix of revolutionary zeal and Santeria spirits, to be in
a more solid world where post-Soviet romance blossomed over pickles and vodka,
and motive could be measured in dollars and bones were left in the ground and
murder made logical sense. The
sight of chicken thawing in a plastic bag seemed to bring Olga Petrovna back to
earth. She heaved a bosomy sigh, twisted out her cigarette in an ashtray and in
a minute became a businesswoman again, checking a mirror for the proper image
of a sweetly gray grandmother. On
the way out Arkady passed a file of people waiting on the steps. From the top
of the stairs, Olga Petrovna had a second thought. "Or,
maybe I've been here too long," she said, "maybe I'm turning
Cuban." Chapter TwentyOfelia parked the DeSoto near the docks for
fear of blowing a tire. The
single building standing on its corner was the Centro Russo-Cubano. The center
had served as a hotel and social meeting place for Soviet ships' officers in port
and was designed like a three-story ship's deckhouse in cement with
porthole-style windows and a red Soviet flag of glass set into the house at
bridge height, although at this point the ship seemed to have sailed through
bad weather and run aground, rubble piled around the steps, iron railings
ripped off. Ofelia was surprised the doors opened as easily as they did. Inside,
faint rays of light fell from the windows into a lobby. A curved reception desk
of Cuban mahogany was flanked by a girl in black marble cutting a brass sheaf
of cane and, on the other end, a bronze sailor hauling a net. The cane cutter
was barefoot, work clothes molded to her body. The sailor bore heroic Slavic
features, and his net overflowed with fish. Russo-Cubano, indeed! Cubans had
never been allowed in, this had been strictly Russians only. All the signs,
reception, buffet, director, were in Russian. Through the dust Ofelia made out
a floor mosaic of a hammer and sickle on a barely discernible pattern of blue
waves. The only sign of recent life was in the middle of the lobby where a dull
red ray of light reached down from the glass flag to a Lada with Russian
diplomatic plates. The
sound of clicking drew her eyes up to a lightbulb hanging on a cord, to busts
of Marti, Marx and Lenin decorating a mezzanine balcony and finally to a goat
moving along the balcony rail. The goat stared down with disdain. Nothing but a
goat could have climbed the stairs, blocked as they were by the ripped-out and
abandoned cage of the elevator. No great loss, Ofelia thought. Since power
outages began, people didn't trust elevators anyway. An extension ladder
reached from the lobby to the balcony. More goats appeared. At
the steering wheel of the Lada sat a black man, his head twisted toward her,
staring. When he didn't answer her or get out she pulled her gun and opened the
door. Out sagged a rag doll, Chango, with a half-formed face and glass eyes,
dressed in pants and shirt, a red bandanna around his head. She looked into the
car. Red candles were burned down to waxy tears on the dash. From the rearview
mirror hung a shell necklace and a rosary. The sound of a bell drew her
attention back to the balcony, where a Judas goat pushed its way to the
forefront of the other goats and stretched its neck to stare down. As a group
they stiffened and, in a clatter of hoofs, scattered not at the sight of her,
she realized, but someone else behind her. Ofelia
wasn't so much aware of being hit as plunging to the floor and then waking in a
burlap sack, blind as a rabbit bagged for market. She'd lost her gun and a
large hand wrapped tight around her throat as a suggestion not to scream. When
the fingers relaxed, the sweet, milky scent of coconut burst into her mouth. Sometimes, not knowing was better than
knowing. Isabel's long-awaited E-mail from Dear Sergei
Sergeevich, what a pleasure to hear from you and what a surprise! I should have
written you long ago and told you how sorry I was to hear of the passing of
Maria Ivanova, who was always so kind to everyone. You were blessed to have
such a wife. I remember the day we came in off an assignment and were so cold
we couldn't speak. We had to point at the frostbite on each other's nose. She
made practically a banya in the bathroom with herbs and birches and steaming
water and a cold bottle of vodka. She saved our lives that day. All the best
people are gone, it's true. And now there you are in the tropics and I am still
here but not much more than a librarian. But busy, every day someone wants to
declassify this or that. Last week I had a visit from a lawyer of a Western
news organization demanding I open the most sensitive archives of the KGB as if
they were nothing more than a family album. Is nothing sacred? I say that with
tongue in cheek but also seriously. We can no longer simply say, "Those
who know, know." Those days are gone. However, promises made must be
promises kept, that is my watchword. Where society and historical truth are
served by disclosure, where traitors will not be lionized or honorable
reputations destroyed, where innocent people who thought they were doing their
duty in often hazardous circumstances are not victimized by new standards then,
yes!, I am the first man to drag facts to the sunlight. Which
brings me to this inquiry of yours about a former leader of the Cuban Communist
Party, Lazaro Lindo. In particular, you ask whether Lindo was involved in a
so-called Party conspiracy against the Cuban state. As I remember, Castro
claimed that a circle within the CCP, feeling that he had led his countrymen
down a path of adventurism, was conspiring with the By
the by, the entire country is a cheese full of maggots these days. You're well
out of it. Roman
Petrovich Rozov Senior
Archivist Federal Intelligence Service Arkady
printed the letter out to give Isabel, but it was clear that Rozov, Pribluda's
old comrade-in-arms, as good as admitted both the plot and Lindo's part in it,
and although Arkady didn't know Isabel well or even like her, he dreaded
passing the letter on because he had recognized the desperation in the kiss she
had given him the night before. Why kiss him otherwise? The
kiss angered him because it was a parody of real desire, her hard mouth
clinging to him until he pushed her away. All the same, he asked himself, would
a Cuban have rejected her? Would any warm-blooded man? The
other answer he dreaded was in the photograph he had extracted from Olga
Petrovna, the picture that could conclusively identify the body in the morgue
as Sergei Pribluda, yes or no. It was revealing how relieved he was that Blas
had not been at the laboratory. Arkady had left the photograph rather than wait
for the doctor to learn for a certainty that Pribluda was the body in the drawer. Arkady
folded the printout from How
many sorts of coward could a man be? She was inside a car trunk in a sack,
arms tied at elbow level, more burlap sacking piled on top of her. Ofelia
threatened and reasoned, but whoever put her in closed the lid and never said a
word. A car door shut without the sagging of someone getting in. Steps walked
away. White or black, she hadn't seen, but an inner part of her had registered
his scent, the sound of his breathing, his speed and size, and she knew it was
Luna. She
shouted until her throat was raw, but the sacks stuffed on top muffled her and
she doubted she was heard more then ten steps away, let alone from the street.
She decided to wait until she heard someone, although she didn't feel even the
reverberation of a car passing the Centro Russo-Cubano. Well, who would drive
there? She could as well have been at the bottom of the bay. With
every breath, sacking clung to her face, hemp and coconut shag filled her nose
and mouth, and she became aware that with all the bags over her she'd already
consumed most of the trunk's available oxygen. She'd never thought of herself
as having an unusual fear of tight spaces. Now it took all her concentration
not to hyperventilate and waste what air was left. She felt her gun under her
but outside the sack, a particularly embarrassing tease. At least she didn't
yet need to empty her bladder; she thanked God for small favors. Irrelevant
items came to mind. Whether the trunk was clean. What sort of dinner her mother
was cooking for Muriel and Marisol. Something with rice. She started tasting
tears as well as sweat. Ofelia
thought about the statue of the girl gathering cane. The hair was wrong, long
and flowing instead of wiry, but the face was right, especially the eyes
anxiously twisting up, surprised. Depend
on the Russians. There was no spare tire and the nut and bolt that usually held
one down dug painfully into her back. She squirmed, trying to hook the bolt on
the rope that pinioned her arms, but it was like twisting in a shroud. He was more depressed by the possible
identification of Pribluda's body than he would have expected. Originally he
had refused the body simply to goad the Cubans into some sort of investigation,
but now he found there was also part of him that at a more basic level
irrationally and against all the evidence refused to accept the colonel's
death. How could anyone so tough and ugly die? The man was a brute, and yet
Arkady felt like a one-man funeral cortege, perhaps for selfish reasons. Sergei
Pribluda was the person on earth he knew best and, in the colonel's way, one of
Arkady's last connections to Irina. When
she had been wrapped in white on a gurney, her hair brushed, her eyes
meditatively shut, her mouth relaxed into a smile, the doctor reassured him it
was normal to think that a loved one was still breathing. The cool chilled his
sweat. He recalled Pushkin's lines how the lover ... counts the slow hours, vainly
trying To hurry them: he cannot wait. The clock strikes ten: he's off, he's
flying, And suddenly he's at the gate. This
was the gate that would never open. He would return again and again, race and
pant like a schoolboy, strain to see her breathe one more time and the gate
would stay barred. Did
people die of love? Arkady knew a man on a factory ship in the Although
Arkady was no expert in love he was an expert in death, and he knew the
possibility of a relatively painless death for the diver. What killed expert
swimmers practicing underwater laps in pools was not a strangling on water but
the soft oblivion of oxygen deprivation. At the end they no more than gently
stirred, even if in the last lit cell in their brain they were still stroking
powerfully ahead. Ofelia prayed. There was a panoply of
spirits and saints that might help her if they only knew. Sweet Yemaya, who
saved men from drowning. Meek Santa Bбrbara, who changed in an instant to
Chango wreathed in lightning. Ofelia's patron, though, had always been Oshun,
not that Oshun had particularly helped in the past if husbands were anything to
go by. However, the gods picked you more than you picked them, and Oshun was
the useless god of love. Ofelia saw herself sometimes as a little dark boulder
in the middle of a river of useless love. What she needed was a sharp knife.
Unless she got out of the car trunk soon, she would asphyxiate and Blas would
be tweezering hemp threads from the depths of her throat for the edification of
new admirers. The image of herself naked on a steel table for the doctor's
examination was bad enough, but she'd seen other bodies after a day or two in a
warm car trunk, and the recollection was enough to make her saw the rope
against the tip of the bolt whether it cut her or not. She
tried to think of music that would lend a vigorous rhythm to work to, but all
that came to mind was a famous lullaby by Merceditas called "Drume
Negrita" that whispered, "Go to sleep, my little black girl. If you
sleep I'll bring you a new cradle and for your new cradle I'll bring a new
bell. You are my favorite, my pearl, my beloved girl, so don't cry no
more," though strangely enough the voice Ofelia heard was her mother's. • • • Floating in the dark above his bed the
halo of the ceiling fixture put Arkady in mind of Rufo's white hat of woven
straw, made in Panama with Rufo's gilded initials on the sweatband, which
didn't mean anything to Arkady at the time because he hadn't connected it to
AzuPanama S.A. Now he had to wonder what else he had seen in Rufo's room and
not understood. The fact that neither Luna nor Osorio had come for Rufo's key
suggested that they still hadn't tried the key Arkady had surrendered, and it
was even possible that no one had been in the room since. Was
Luna waiting? Was Luna coming? Since the odds were even, Arkady slipped on his
overcoat, his protective shadow, emptied the envelope of meager evidence into a
pocket and went down to the street. He walked a block until he flagged a car.
Arkady didn't remember Rufo's address, but he recalled the fading words on the
wall next door and asked for the Gimnasio Atares. "Te
gustan los pugilistas?" The driver punched the air. "Absolutely,"
Arkady said. Whatever they were. Fighters.
Next door to Rufo's the open-air boxing arena of the Gimnasio Atares had come
to life, and Arkady got a glimpse over a line pushing through the gate of a
ring illuminated by a hanging rack of lights. Spectators chanted, blasted
whistles, rang cowbells under a layered atmosphere of smoke and orbits of
insects. It was between rounds, and in opposite corners two black boxers
shining with sweat sat on stools while their trainers convened like great minds
of science. As the gong rang and every head craned to the center of the ring,
Arkady unlocked Rufo's door and slipped inside. There
were some changes from his earlier visit. Bed, table and sink were in place.
Rufo's With
an eye for other souvenirs from It
seemed possible to Arkady that a man who memorialized a visit to the All
the other tapes had glossy sleeves with pornographic pictures and titles in
different languages. Bringing sex films to Someone
was trying to unlock the door. Arkady turned off the VCR and listened to a key
trying to force its way through the cylinder, followed by a low curse in a
voice he recognized. Luna. Arkady
could hear him thinking. The sergeant probably had the key Arkady had given to
Osorio, which worked perfectly well on Arkady's apartment in For
his part, Arkady became aware that the Gimnasio Atares was silent, the riot of
whistles and bells over. Luna had been annoyed to see Arkady merely venture to
the santero's. How unhappy would he be to find Arkady in Rufo's room? The
door jumped as a fist hit it. Arkady could feel Luna stare at the lock.
Finally, feet turned away, accompanied by the sound of metal scraping stone.
When Arkady cracked the door open, Luna was a block away under a streetlamp
that had faded to brown. Two fighters in sweatsuits shuffled painfully out of
the arena gate, followed by a trainer mopping his face with a towel. As they
reached his door, Arkady slipped out in front of them, close enough to screen
himself from Luna and merge his shadow with theirs all the way to the far
corner. Focused on their own aches, the trio stumbled on. Arkady stopped and
looked back. Luna
was returning. The sound of metal was an empty cart with iron wheels that he
pushed to the curb outside Rufo's. The captain was in plain clothes and this
time, instead of relying on the niceties of a key, he jammed his ice pick into
the latch, applied his shoulder and the door swung open. The captain seemed to
know what he was after, carrying out the television, VCR and boxes of running
shoes to the cart. He rolled the load away, the wheel's grinding reverberating
on either side. Despite the dim lights, with the cart's slow pace and noise
Luna was easy to follow. Somehow
the sergeant was able to find more empty and desolate streets as he went,
maneuvering the cart around mounds of broken stone, the sort of scene that made
He
followed up the steps. Somehow power had been fed to the building because in
the vaulted dark was the ember of a hanging bulb. Luna had moved out of sight
to a deeper interior; Arkady heard the cart progressing through a hallway. He
felt as if he had uncovered a Soviet mausoleum. There were the floor design of
a hammer and sickle under the dirt, unlit sconces of red stars, busts of Marx
and Lenin along the balcony, the difference being that instead of a sarcophagus
in the middle of the floor there was a Lada with plates that read 060 016.
Pribluda's car. And some lighter touches: at opposite ends of a counter of dark
wood were two statues, black and white. The black figure looked too frail for
the sugarcane she had cut, but the white was a Russian superman who had scooped
the bounty of the sea – flounder, crab and octopus – in a single net. A tapping
led Arkady to look up toward the mezzanine again. Between Marx and Lenin shone
the gunslit eyes of goats. Dust stirred around the bulb. Although no one was
visible in the car it shifted from side to side and not just as a trick of the
feeble light. The
keys to Pribluda's car had been in Arkady's possession since the autopsy. He
opened the trunk and felt a mound of burlap sacks. The bottom sack was heavy
and tied with a rope. Arkady untied the sack and pulled it off while the goats
bleated. Osorio raised her head, too stiff to stand. As he lifted her the front
doors of the lobby swung open and a goat bell rang. Luna had returned not from
the hall but through the same door Arkady had just used and the sergeant
carried not a bat but a machete. He said something in Spanish that pleased
himself enormously. Osorio
pressed her mouth to Arkady's ear. "My gun." He
saw the Makarov in the car trunk. As Osorio hung on, he picked up the gun and
cocked it. "Get out of the way." "No."
Luna shook his head. "I don't think so." Arkady aimed over the
sergeant's head and squeezed the trigger. He needn't have bothered, the hammer
snapped on an empty breech. Luna pulled the lobby doors closed. "This is
justice." Arkady
put Osorio into the front passenger seat of the car and went around to the
driver's side. Ladas were not known for their power, but they did start. In the
coldest or warmest weather they started. Arkady turned on the engine and lights
and, blinded, Luna stopped for a moment, then crossed the floor in two strides
and brought the machete down on the car. Arkady reversed so that the blow
landed on the hood, but Luna slapped the blade sideways and split the
windshield into two caved-in sheets of safety glass. Unable to see, Arkady
drove forward, hoping for a piece of the captain, only to hit the long counter
head-on. The rear window crystallized as the machete swung through. Arkady
backed up, cutting the wheel to sweep Luna away. The blade came straight down
through the car roof, probed and vanished. Just when Arkady thought the Cuban
was actually on the car, one headlight exploded. A ladder toppled, crushing
Osorio's side of the car. Arkady
peeled off enough windshield to see. The falling ladder had grazed the bulb,
and as the light swung, goats, stairs, statues swayed from side to side. He
backed into a column hard enough to rock the balcony, shot forward and aimed at
Luna, silhouetted by crystals on his shoulders. Missed him, but as the hanging
bulb flared to life Arkady saw an electric highway of glass leading to the
doors and followed. As the doors burst open, the Lada landed askew on the
steps, righted itself and shouldered through debris. The left-front fender was
crushed, and left turns seemed to be impossible. He drove toward the
streetlamp, and when he was a block beyond he looked back through the gaping
rear window to see Luna running after. Arkady pushed the car as fast as it
could go until the sergeant was out of sight. At
last the streets ended at docks and the deep black and trailing lights of the
harbor. Air blew through the windshield and windows and safety glass sparkled
on their laps. The Lada limped over railroad tracks and finally swung into an
alley, scaring the spangly green eyes of a cat caught in the headlight, and
lurched to a stop. A
black hand swung around Arkady's seat and hit him in the chest. He grabbed its
wrist and twisted in his seat to the figure of Chango. The man-sized doll had
been riding in the back of the car, still wearing its red bandanna, still
holding its walking stick in its other hand, its dark expression the glower of
a kidnap victim. Ofelia aimed the Makarov, loaded or not, at the doll. "Dios
mнo." She let the gun drop. "Exactly."
Arkady got out of the car on weak legs. He
counted the gashes in the roof and sides of the car. The front was crushed,
headlights empty sockets. "If
it were a boat it would sink," he said. "It will get you to a
doctor." "No,"
Ofelia said. "To
the police." "To
say what? That I've refused orders from the police? That I hid evidence? That
I'm helping a Russian instead?" "It
doesn't sound so good when you put it that way. Then what? Luna will only
follow us to Pribluda's." "I
know where to go." Considering that Ofelia made the
arrangements in the middle of the night, she didn't do badly. A switch from the
Lada, Chango and all, to her DeSoto and then to a room at the Rosita, a love
motel on the Playa del Este just fifteen miles outside the city and a block
from the beach. All the Rosita's units were free-standing white stucco cottages
from the fifties with air-conditioning and kitchenette, television and potted
plants, clean sheets and towels at a price only the most successful jineteras
could afford. The
first thing Ofelia did once they were inside was to shower the burlap and shag
off her body. Wrapped in a towel, she asked him to pick nuggets of glass from
her hair. He'd expected her curls to be stiffer, but they were as soft as water
and his fingers never looked more thick and clumsy. Between the wings of her
shoulder blades the skin was rubbed raw and seamed with grains of glass. She
didn't flinch. In the bathroom mirror he saw her eyes on him and the natural
kohl of their lids. She
said, "You were right about the photograph Pribluda took of you. I found
it when I dusted his rooms for prints just as you said. I was the one who gave
it to Luna." "Well,
I never told you that what Luna wanted from me was the photograph that Pribluda
called the Havana Yacht Club. We're even." "Claro,
we're both liars. Look at us." He
saw an unlikely pair, a woman smooth as soap-stone with a ragged man. "What
was Luna saying when he came back?" he asked. "He
said Rufo's television was warm, so he knew you were there. Why didn't you
think of that?" "Actually,
I did." "You
followed him anyway?" Arkady
wondered, "Are you possible to please?" She
said, "Yes." Chapter Twenty-OneShe was a dark sprite, except that in bed she was a woman. Her
breasts were small, tipped in purple, her stomach sleek down to a triangle of
sable. He laid his mouth on hers, and it was so long since he had been with a
woman that it was like learning to eat again. Especially when the taste was
different, heady and strong, as if she were coated in sugary liqueur. He
was helpless in his own greed, working his way through the exquisite unfolding
as Ofelia, his new measure, drew him in. There was something convulsive in this
feast for the starving, who had taken the vow of hunger. He
would have said he cared for people, wished them well and did his best by them,
but he had been dead. She would raise Lazarus and close her legs around him so
as not to let him go. She kissed his forehead, lips, the bruises on the inside
of his arm as if each kiss healed. She was hard and lithe and soft and
certainly more artful and vocal than he was. This seemed to be allowed in Outside,
he heard the ocean say, This is the wave that will sweep away the sand, topple
the buildings and flood the streets. This is the wave. This is the wave. On the bed Arkady arranged Pribluda's
photograph of the "Havana Yacht Club," the AzuPanama documents, his
chronology of Pribluda's last day, list of dates and phone numbers from Rufo's
wall. While Ofelia sorted through them Arkady took in a cement floor painted
blue, pink walls with paper cupids, plastic roses in ice buckets and an
air-conditioner that gasped like an Ilyushin taking off. They had placed Chango
in a corner chair, the doll's head resting heavily against a kitchen counter,
hand balanced on his stick. "If
these documents are real," Ofelia said, "entonces, I can see
why a Russian would think AzuPanama is more an instrument of the Cuban Ministry
of Sugar than a genuine Panamanian corporation." "It
would seem that way." Arkady
told her about O'Brien and the Mexican truck parts, the American boots and the
real Havana Yacht Club. "He's
a charmer, an intriguer, he goes from one story to another. It's like being led
down a path." "I'm
sure it is." He
was distracted by the fact that all she wore was his coat and a glimpse of
yellow beads. He hadn't noticed when she had put on the necklace. The coat was
huge on her, and the sight was like finding a photograph of one woman in a
frame that had always held a picture of another. Every second that it clung to
her, it was exchanging auras of scent and heat and memory. Ofelia
knew. It was not totally true, but the charge could be made that once she had
detected his grief she had suspected his loss, and once she had observed the
tenderness with which he treated his coat and discovered the faint history of
perfume on its sleeve, from that moment on she was determined to wear the coat
herself. Why? Because here was a man who had loved a woman so deeply he was
willing to follow her right into death. Or
it might be he was just the melancholy sort – in short, a Russian. But it had
to be said that when she was in the trunk of the car, trussed, bagged and
barely breathing, the one person she thought might save her was this man she
hadn't even met a week before. Muevete! Ofelia told herself. Get your
clothes on and run. Instead, she said, "In Panama almost anything can
happen. O'Brien's bank is in the Colуn Free Trade Zone of Panama where everything
happens. Still, he has been a friend to "Neither
do I, but you don't try to kill a man who is leaving in a week unless whatever
is going to happen will happen soon. Then, of course, everything will be
perfectly clear." In
his disheveled way, in a white shirt, sleeves rolled, long fingers cupping a
cigarette, he was Ofelia's picture of a Russian musician. A musician sitting by
a bus stalled on the side of the road somewhere in the Urals. "Let me get
this right. You're saying that Rufo, Hedy, Luna, everything that has happened
so far is to cover up a crime that took place not in the past but hasn't even
taken place yet? How are we going to find that?" "Think
of it as a challenge. The biggest advantage a detective usually has is that he
knows what the crime is, that's his starting point. But we're two professional
investigators. Between the Russian Method and the Cuban Method let's see if we
can stop something before it happens." "Okay.
For the sake of argument, somebody's planning something and we don't know what.
But you force their hand when you come here with a picture of Pribluda with his
friends, the two car mechanics, at the old Havana Yacht Club, which,
incidentally, since the Revolution, is the Casa Cultural de Trabajadores de
Construction, but that aside, Rufo tries to kill you for this picture. It would
have been much easier to ignore you, so we will give some weight to that.
Second, you force someone's hand again when you visit the Havana Yacht Club and
Walls and O'Brien come out to take you off the dock and offer you some sort of
employment, which, by the way, is too ridiculous to consider. Again it would
have been easier to pay you no attention at all. Third, Luna beats you with a
bat, but he doesn't try to kill you, maybe because he can't find that picture.
Meanwhile, is anyone trying to kill you over AzuPanama? No. Trying to put the
smallest hole in you over AzuPanama? No. Forget about AzuPanama, it's all about
this picture," she said and stabbed it with her finger. "That's
one way to look at it." "Good.
But what this picture has to do with the future I don't know and neither do
you. You just like to play games with time." She
was all too accurate about that, Arkady thought. She was right about a lot.
"There are two ways back to whatever happened to Pribluda. One is Mongo
and the other, I think, is through O'Brien and Walls." "Well,
your friend O'Brien is nuts if he thinks he's going to start a casino. Not
while Fidel is alive. No casinos. That would be complete surrender. And let me
tell you something else, two men like O'Brien and Walls are not going to share
their fortune with someone who lands in a plane from "According
to a note on Rufo's wall something about " "Rufo
wrote 'Vi. HYC 2200 "This
is some plan." "I'd
also like to find Rufo's cell phone." "He
didn't have one. In "He
had a phone, we just haven't found it. I'd like to push that phone's memory and
learn who his best friends were." This
was the way he was at the boatyard, Ofelia thought. Absolutely certain about
something invisible. The problem was that she agreed. A hustler like Rufo was
incomplete without a cell phone. There
was an explosion of laughter outside as a couple walked by to a different unit.
Ofelia felt compelled to explain how she knew about the Rosita, the system of jineteras
and police. From the Ministry of the Interior an officer like Luna could
protect Hedy and a whole string of girls at tourist bars, hotels and marinas.
The Rosita was safe because it was under the wing of the police in the Playa
del Este. She added, "Luna also does things for his own protection. He and
Rufo were involved together in political activities, silencing dissidents.
Maybe some of those people are anti-Cuban but Luna and Rufo sometimes went too
far." "Did
Mongo?" No. "Captain
Arcos?" "I
don't think so." "And
were they all involved in Santeria, too, like the ceremony I saw?" "That
was not Santeria." Ofelia touched her necklace. "Leave the spirits to
me." The second time was not as ravenous but
just as sweet. Pleasure left alien for so long made the skin a sensual map to
be explored in detail from an undercurve of the breast to the pink of the
tongue to the fine hairs of her brow. She
had a variety of endearments in Spanish. He simply liked the name Ofelia, the
way it filled the mouth and spoke of dreaminess and flowers. The
second time had a slow rhythm that rolled up the spine. He wouldn't know the
beat but Ofelia did, the steady rocking of the tall drum, the sideways shake of
the shells on the gourd, the quicker pace of hourglass drums and then the
mounting acceleration of the iya, the biggest drum with the deepest
pitch and in the center of its skin a red resinous circle that spread the
warmer it grew until she felt herself stretched to the breaking point,
breathless while he held on, his heart pounding like a machine that hadn't
worked in ages. "Now
I know everything," Ofelia murmured. "I know all about you." She
laid her head on his shoulder. The oddest thing, he thought, was how well she
fit. Staring up at the dark, he felt he was free-floating now, as far from "What
does peligroso mean?" he asked. "Dangerous." "A
man said that at the Hemingway marina. We can start there." • • • In the dark Ofelia told him about the priest
in Hershey, the town where she grew up. The
priest was not only Spanish but so frail that people said it was his cassock
that held him up. He became a scandal, though, when he fell in love with the
manager's wife. The manager and his wife were American. Hershey was American.
There were two great smokestacks of the mill belching black smoke and the
wooden shacks of the workers, but in the center of town was a road of shade
trees and cool stone houses with screened windows for Americans, where only Americans
or Cubans with work passes were allowed. There was a baseball and basketball
team run by the Americans, and American women taught school for Cuban and
American children. Both the wife and the priest taught school. She
had angelic blond hair that shone through the mantilla she wore to church. All
Ofelia could remember about the husband was that his Oldsmobile always gleamed
because it was always being washed. The problem in Hershey was the heavy soot
that came from burning bagasse, the sugarcane after the juice had been pressed
out. Bagasse burned very hot and produced soot as thick as fur. It was well
known among maids who worked in the houses that the manager drank, and when he
was drunk he hit his wife. One time when he came to school and began to drag
her out, the priest stepped in between and that was probably when all three
realized that the priest and the wife were in love. Everyone saw, everyone
knew. Then
all three disappeared the same night. Weeks later when men cleaned ash from the
furnaces at the mill, they found a crucifix and pieces of bone. They recognized
the priest's crucifix from around his neck. Everyone assumed that the manager
killed him and threw his body in the oven and took his wife back to the States
and that was the end of it, except, a year later, someone came back from a trip
to New York and said he had seen the manager's wife walking on the street arm
in arm with the priest, who wasn't dressed like a priest anymore but just an
ordinary man. Everyone else in Hershey laughed at this account because they
remembered the priest, how timid he was. But Ofelia believed because she had
seen that very same priest fight a bull. Chapter Twenty-TwoOfelia had gone out earlier, and he didn't
recognize her at first when she returned in skintight white jeans, white
tube top and white-rimmed dark glasses, and carrying bags of coffee, sugar,
oranges. She had a blinding new aura, he thought, like a nuclear reactor when
control rods were withdrawn, and she had for him a shirt with the embroidered design
of a polo player, short-brimmed straw hat, fashionable hip pack, sunglasses. "Where
did you find these?" "There
are hotels in the Playa del Este with dollar boutiques. It's your friend
Pribluda's money, but I think he would approve, no?" He
picked up the shirt. "I don't think it's me." "You
have no choice. Luna has a picture of you. In case he circulates it, we have to
make you look different." "I'm
never going to look Cuban." "Not
Cuban, no. If people can mistake a tourist for you, maybe they'll mistake you
for a tourist." The
truth she admitted only to herself: that she had experienced a shameful thrill
walking into boutiques with so much money. She had also added a new comb and
brush to her floppy straw bag. Necessities for a certain role. And to dress a
man was a pleasure she felt in the marrow of her bones. She
folded his coat over a chair. "We paid for two nights, we can leave your
coat here for now." • • • The Playa del Este offered the overwhelming
nothingness of sand and sea and houses wearing a sun-bleached memory of color
rather than color itself. A billboard announced the imminent construction of a
French hotel by a "Socialist-Leninist Brigade of Workers," and down
the beach rose ranks of new hotels already built. Ofelia drove, and Arkady
discovered that to ride in Ofelia's DeSoto, a vintage monster with wedge-shaped
fins, was to be invisible. A white tourist with an attractive Cuban woman was
instantly categorized and dismissed. For the first time, he fit in because
there were examples of him and Ofelia everywhere, a tall Dutchman and a nearly
miniature black girl sitting at a table under a single Cinzano parasol that
constituted a sidewalk cafe, a Mexican with a blonde jinetera taking
the air in a bicycle cab, a beefy Englishman with a girl tottering on new
platform shoes. Ofelia identified their nationality at a glance. What Arkady
noticed was that each couple held hands but had no conversation. "They
each have a fantasy," Ofelia said. "He that he can leave his ordinary
life and live like a rich man on an island like this. She that he will fall in
love with her and take her away to what she thinks is the real world. It's
better they can't communicate." But
Ofelia, too, felt a welcome invisibility in her dark glasses and jeans, in the
attitude of her chin, and when they passed the plate glass of a gift shop she
saw the reflection of a perfectly acceptable jinetera and tourist,
perhaps slightly more handsome than usual. At the approach of a Cuban girl the
guard at the gate of the Marina Hemingway started from his box, only to step
back in when he saw Arkady escort her around the barrier. He led Ofelia by the
marina shop and across the grass to the dock where George Washington Walls had left
him off after his visit to the Havana Yacht Club. The same loud volleyball game
seemed to be in progress. Other Americans trafficked back and forth with bags
of laundry. A boy in cutoffs hand-trucked cases of beer to a blue-water yacht
the size of an iceberg, yet Ofelia treated the sight of three canals filled
with million-dollar power yachts as offhandedly as Cleopatra reviewing her
barges. Perhaps she was unimpressed, he thought, because of the Cuban girl
suspended in a hammock from a sailboat boom. "What's
so dangerous here?" Ofelia asked. "I
don't know. You've been here before?" "Once
or twice. You go ahead. I'm looking for someone." Among
the sameness of fiberglass boats the Gavilan had a dark, distinctive
silhouette, and Arkady picked it out at the slip Walls had been heading for
when he was waved off by a harbor master yelling "Peligroso!"
at snorkelers. There were no swimmers in the water now, and Arkady couldn't see
any problem. The seaplane tender nudged peacefully against the tire fenders of
the dock while lines fed electricity from a shoreside outlet box over the
boat's brass rail. No swimmers, no shouts, only the deep throbbing of a motor
yacht taxiing down the canal. He
continued along the canal, seeing no obstructions in the water, no flotsam by
the dock. A galvanized pipe led water to each slip; a foreign crew was washing
down a three-story megayacht, spraying one another, drinking the water, so it
was even potable. American boats in Cuba made for an interesting community,
grandiose white palaces mixed in with raffish fishing boats mustached with
stains, all bending the law by even being where they were. Arkady had no
experience on yachts himself, but having spent some time in Vladivostok around
factory ships and trawlers, he knew a little about bringing power on board, and
what caught his eye about the waist-high electrical distribution boxes spaced
along the dock of the Marina Hemingway was how few had ordinary outlets to plug
into. Instead, a power line led from the box while another led from the boat,
and where they met the lines were spliced and taped together, the connection
protected from water by a clear plastic shopping bag taped at the ends. He
worked his way to an empty outdoor bar at the far end of the dock. Fully half
the hookups he saw on the way went through spliced and bagged electrical lines
sitting in water between the hull of the boat and cement wall of the dock. The
transom of the Alabama Baron was smeared with fish guts and scales,
although the jinetera in the sailboat's hammock didn't look like a
fisherman to Ofelia. The girl had the Julia Roberts look from the film Pretty
Woman, very popular in "That's
beautiful," Ofelia said. "Isn't
it? Good price, too." "Diamond?" "Same
as. Last week, they had a chain for the ankle with the same stones. You think
that's a good price, but wait." The woman on the television spread the
bracelet on a bed of velvet and added a pair of earrings. "See, I knew.
You order too soon and you don't get the earrings. You have to know to wait and
then pick up your phone and give them your credit-card number and the bracelet's
yours in two days." Julia Roberts glanced over. "You're new
here." "I'm
looking for Teresa." The
television woman brushed back a mantle of hair to model the earrings, left,
right, frontal. Another girl in a top and thong came out of the cabin. Her hair
was almost as short as Ofelia's but peroxided blonde. "You know
Teresa?" "Yes.
Luna told me she would be here." "You
know Facundo?" The girl in the hammock sat up. "I
met him." "Teresa's
real upset," the blonde knelt by the rail and whispered. "She was
next door when Hedy got her throat slit. They were close." "She
got run in, too," Julia Roberts said. "Some police bitch gave her a
tough time. For helping feed her family, you know." "I
know," said Ofelia. "Teresa's
scared," the blonde said. "She went home to the country. I don't
think she's going to be here for a while." "Is
she afraid of the sergeant?" Ofelia asked. "You
met the sergeant, what do you think?" Julia Roberts said. "With all
due respect, what do you think? I just know him, but Teresa and Hedy were his
private girls, understand?" The
blonde checked out Ofelia's vital points. " Aren't you a little old to be
doing this? What are you, twenty-four, twenty-five?" "Twenty-nine." "Not
bad." "I-am-trying-to-sleep,"
a deep voice in American came from the bowels of the sailboat, and a form
struggled up the galley steps. It had to be the "She's
with me," Arkady said. He had worked his way back along the dock to the
tender and the sailboat, berthed one behind the other. "We were just
admiring the boats." The
baron glanced around at the beer cans on his deck until he noticed that Arkady
meant the Gavilan. "Yeah,
sure, that's a fucking classic. A genuine rumrunner, everything but the bullet
holes." Rumrunner?
Arkady liked that. That smacked of Capone. "Fast?" "I'd
say so. You're talking a V-12, four hundred horses, sixty knots, faster than a
torpedo boat. 'Cept with a woodie you spend all day at the dock sanding,
varnishing, polishing." "That's
a drawback," Arkady agreed. "No
time to fish. Of course, they do all the upkeep for him here. He gets
special treatment. Where you from?" " "Really?"
The baron digested that. "You fish?" "I
wish I could. I don't have enough time." "Locals
keeping you otherwise occupied?" The baron's eye returned to Ofelia, who
kept her face blank of comprehension. "Busy." "Well,
it's a fish or fuck world, it really is. I'll tell you what, the last thing in
the world I want is lift the embargo. "What
do you mean, 'special treatment'?" he asked the baron. "The
owner of that boat is George Washington Walls. Their hero. Hey, I was a fireman
twenty years, I know about heroes. Heroes don't put a gun to no pilot's
head." "You're
not just...?" Arkady raised his eyebrows delicately. "Racist?
Not me." The baron waved his arm toward the jineteras and Ofelia
as proof. "For
example, then?" "For
example." The baron was hot now. He hung on to a guy wire for balance and
pointed to the hookup servicing the tender. "Check out the power lead
installed specially for him just yesterday. Now, look at mine." Where the Alabama
Baron's lead dipped into the water was the typical splice in a bag that
was filthier than the others. " I understand they're clever devils here
and they got American boats and European boats with whole different electrical
frequencies and they got to jury-rig a new line for every boat that hooks up,
but I'm a fireman and I know hot lines and water. Get this lead in the water
and spring a little leak and you will fry yourself some very surprised fish.
All I'm saying is, how come Senor Walls has himself the only berth in the
entire marina with a new power lead?" "And
if a swimmer was in the water?" "Kill
him." "Heart
attack?" "Stop
it cold." "And
there would be burn marks?" "Only
if he touched the line. I've seen bodies in tubs with a hair dryer, same thing.
Look at her" – the baron gave Ofelia an approving nod – "like she
understands every word." The very statement that Teresa had gone
back to the country made Ofelia believe that the jinetera was lying
low in "It's
not like a bolt of lightning but yes" – the doctor agreed with her –
"if a live wire falls into water, there would obviously be a charge." "How
strong?" "It
depends. Submerged in water, power is diffused exponentially depending on the
distance from the source. Then there is the size and physical condition of the
victim, and the peculiarities of each individual heart." "A
fatal charge?" "Depending.
Alternating current, for example, is more dangerous than direct current. Salt
water is a better conductor than fresh." "Leaving
marks?" "It
all depends. If there was contact, there would be a burn. Farther away, a
person might only experience a tingle in his extremities. But the heart and the
respiratory center of the brain are regulated by electrical impulses and an
electrical shock can initiate fibrillations without necessarily causing trauma
to tissue." "Meaning,"
Ofelia said, "that somewhere between too near and too far to a live wire
in water, a victim could suffer a heart attack and there would be no entry or
exit mark, no burns, absolutely nothing?" There
was a silence at the doctor's end. Traffic rattled on the Malecуn. Arkady
seemed to be enjoying his cigarette enormously. "You
could put it that way," Blas finally said. "Why
didn't you say so before?" "Everything
in context. Where would a neumбtico encounter an electrical wire in
the middle of the sea?" There was a burst of static and Blas changed the
subject. "Have you seen the Russian?" "No."
She met Arkady's eyes with hers. "Well,"
Blas said, "I notice that he left a new photograph of Pribluda for
me." "Have
you matched it to the body yet?" "No.
There are other murders, you know." "But
you will try? It's important to him. You know, as it turns out he's not a total
idiot." Since
they'd skipped breakfast, they stopped at a park table for ice cream. Huge
leathery trees overhung a playground and a shooting gallery. Ofelia was going after
Teresa and Arkady wanted to see Mostovoi's apartment again, but at the moment
the detective looked like a movie star on the "We
can meet here later and have ice cream for dinner," Arkady said. "At
six? And if we miss each other, then ten o'clock at the Yacht Club and we'll
see what that has to do with Ofelia
was suspicious. "What will you do in the meantime?" "A
Russian named Mostovoi has a picture of a dead rhinoceros I want to take a look
at." "Why?" "Because
he didn't show it to me before." "That's
all?" "A
simple visit. And you?" "You
said last night when you followed Luna he was pushing a cart of what looked to
you like black-market goods. Well, what goods? Maybe they're still there.
Someone has to see." "You're
not going alone?" "Do
I look crazy? No, I'll take plenty of help, believe me," Ofelia said. She
looked very composed for a moment and then pulled down her dark glasses in
shock. Arkady
turned to face two girls in maroon school jumpers. They had green eyes and hair
streaked with amber and held cones of ice cream close enough to drip on his
shoulder. An energetic gray-haired woman in a housedress and sneakers followed
with a vengeance. "Mama,"
Ofelia asked, "why aren't the girls in school?" "They
should be in school but they should see their mother from time to time, too,
don't you think?" Ofelia's mother took in Arkady. "Oh my God, it's
true. Everyone's meeting a nice Spaniard, a little Englishman, you found a
Russian. My God." "I
just asked her to bring some toiletries," Ofelia told Arkady. "She
looks unhappy," Arkady said. "Don't
offer her your chair." But
the deed was done and her mother was settling in where Arkady had been. "My
mother," Ofelia muttered as an introduction. "My
God," her mother said. "My
pleasure," Arkady said. With
a pride Ofelia couldn't suppress, "My daughters Muriel and Marisol.
Arkady." The
girls rose on tiptoe for his kiss. "Where
do you even find a Russian?" her mother asked. "I thought they were
gone like the dodos." "He's
a senior investigator from "Good.
Did he bring food?" "They
look just like you," Arkady told Ofelia. "You
dressed so nice." Muriel looked Ofelia up and down. "Those
are new clothes." Ofelia's mother took a second look. "No
hablo espanol," Arkady said. "Just
as well," Ofelia assured him. "He
bought them?" "We
are working together." "Then
that's different, that's absolutely different. You're colleagues exchanging
gifts of esteem. I see possibilities here." "It's
not what you think." "Please,
don't disabuse me when I have hopes. He's not so bad. A little lean. A week or
two of rice and beans and he'll be fine." "Do
you like him?" Marisol asked Ofelia. "He's
a nice man." "Pushkin
was a Russian poet," her mother said. "He was part African." "I'm
sure he knows that." "Pushkin?"
Arkady thought he heard something to hang on to. "Does
he have a gun?" Muriel asked. "He's
not carrying a gun." "But
he can shoot?" Marisol asked. "The
best." "The
target gallery!" the girls shouted together. "They
see you so little," Ofelia's mother said. "You shouldn't begrudge
them a little fun, and your Russian marksman can show off." The
shooting gallery was a gutted bus on blocks, the back end replaced by a counter
of air rifles that faced an array of American jet planes and paratroopers cut
from soda cans. Behind them, on a black dropcloth, an artist had added cutout
stars and comets and a vista of the Malecуn with drivers shooting from
convertibles. Sound effects were supplied by a tape of machine-gun fire. The
sisters pushed Arkady into an open space at the counter. "He
should feel right at home," her mother said. "Pump
it." Muriel pushed the rifle into his hands. "You
have to pump it," Ofelia said as she paid. "First
the planes, first the planes," Marisol said. The
rifle was a toy with a tiny bead at the tip of the barrel. He fired at a
particularly mean-looking bomber, and the paratrooper next to it jumped. "What
are you aiming at?" Ofelia asked. "I'm
aiming at everything." The
wrong target was the best he did. Kids around him made planes hop, spin, dance,
but for all the shiny, dangling invaders every other shot of his thudded
ignominiously into the backdrop. "He
must be high up in the police," her mother said. "I don't think he
ever shot at anything." The
girls pushed a rifle into Ofelia's hands. She gave the lever two quick pumps
and aimed at a big bomber from Tropicola. "I
think the bead's a little off," Arkady suggested. The
bomber pinged and spun. "No,
Mama," Marisol complained. "In the center." Balancing
her glasses on her forehead and tucking the stock more firmly against her
cheek, Ofelia pumped and fired at a more steady pace. Silvery planes swung and
paratroopers sang and danced. A comet, too, for good measure. The glasses
dropped down over her eyes, it didn't matter, she had half the targets swaying
at once. Arkady thought of the plane that had brought him less than a week ago,
which now seemed an age. Here he was out in the open with Luna looking for him,
but what better camouflage was there than a Cuban family? What could be more
strange and more natural? Twelve hits with twelve shots earned Ofelia the prize
of a can of lighter fluid that her mother tucked into a net bag. As she said,
"Everything counts." Appeased,
the girls allowed themselves to be kissed by Ofelia and taken in hand by their
grandmother, who dipped into her bag to give Ofelia a plastic toiletries bag
and something wrapped in greasy newspaper. "Banana bread from Muriel's
bananas. You remember the bananas?" "I
can't take this bread." "Your
daughters helped make it. They would feel much better if you did." Muriel
and Marisol made their eyes huge. "Okay,
okay. Thank you, girls." A farewell round of kisses. "Feed
it to him," her mother advised. "And take care of him." Chapter Twenty-ThreeWhat Arkady remembered of Mostovoi's
accommodations on the sixth floor of the Hotel Sierra Maestra were a runway
balcony of parked tricycles and, within, a living room with movie posters,
African artifacts, a plush shag rug, leather sofa and a balcony facing the sea.
He also recalled a front-door lock and deadbolt, a sensible precaution
considering the cameras and equipment inside. And in case he thought of
rapelling athletically by rope from the hotel roof down to Mostovoi's oceanview
balcony, he had noticed in Rufo's videotape Sucre Noir that the
sliding glass door was jammed shut by a steel bar. Spetznaz troops knew all
about swinging in through glass doors; Arkady did not. Also, the trick was not
just getting in, it was getting Mostovoi out and taking another look at the
photographs on the wall. Mostovoi
was correct in calling his hotel Central The
last time Arkady had visited, Mostovoi had switched a photograph of a sailboat
for the safari picture. Or perhaps he had given away the rhino since often
tired of seeing a dead animal on his wall. The safari picture, however, had
looked like the exotic centerpiece of his private gallery, and Arkady wanted to
see it on his own before Mostovoi could rearrange the pictures again. The idea
was to get Mostovoi out in a rush. Arkady
may not have been a marksman or a commando, but one valuable thing he had
learned was that fuel for mayhem was everywhere. Behind a door marked ENTRADA
PROHIBIDA filthy drapes lay on a three-legged chair of black leatherette
set between plastic bags of corn kernels and potato chips and containers of
cooking oil. Arkady made sure the other lobby exits were unlocked before he
carried the chair and drapes to the popcorn machine and returned for the chips
and oil. He opened the containers and poured the viscous oil down the hotel
steps, threw the drapes on the oil, added the bags of chips to the drapes and
lit the last bag with his lighter. Rufo's lighter, actually. The plastic bag
caught nicely and potato chips, dry and saturated with grease, were by weight
about the best kindling on earth. The chair and drapery were polyurethane, a
form of solid petroleum. Cooking oil had to get hot enough to vaporize, but
when it did it was a hard fire to put out. Then he climbed the stairs to the
sixth floor. Arkady
took his time. The alarm, an old-fashioned clapper on a bell, sounded before he
was halfway up, and by the time he reached the stairway door on Mostovoi's
floor and looked down, the blaze was a brilliant orange accelerated by the
grease of the chips while darker flames lapped at the chair and drapes.
Residents lined the balconies for the spectacle of motorcycle police leading a
red fire-engine pumper and a tank. The hotel was only blocks away from The
apartment looked again like the residence of a middle-level Russian diplomat
abroad decorated with souvenirs of a man who had seen much of the world, who
cleaned for himself better than most bachelors, with an interest in books and
the arts, who kept his own creative efforts under wraps. The photograph Arkady
had noticed in the videotape was on the wall, back in its place between the
pictures of a colleague at the It
was a photograph of five men with assault rifles, one standing and four
kneeling around a dead rhinoceros. Now he could see that the poor animal's feet
were shredded and its stomach winking with shiny intestine. The men were not
hunters but soldiers, one Russian soldier and three Cubans. Mostovoi, twenty
years younger and balding even then. Erasmo, his beard mere boyish wisps. A
coltish, skinny Luna cradling an AK-47. Tico with the bright, reckless smile of
a leader, not the nearsighted focus of a man searching for leaks in an inner
tube. And standing behind them in a safari jacket of many pockets, George
Washington Walls. On the bottom border was written, "The best demolition
team in Arkady
moved through the rest of the apartment before Mostovoi returned. On his first
visit Arkady hadn't seen the autographed photographs in the hallway of Mostovoi
with famous Russian film directors or the erotic boudoir series of Cuban girls
that seemed to have been shot in his own bed. Arkady looked in the bureau,
night table and under the pillow. A side table held a laptop, scanner, printer.
The laptop denied him access as soon as he turned it on. The chances of hitting
Mostovoi's password were remote. There was no gun in the drawer or under the
bed. Arkady
walked farther down the hall into a small room redone as a darkroom with a
black curtain inside the door. A red light was on, as if Mostovoi had been
interrupted in the middle of developing. Arkady squeezed between an enlarger
and trays of sour-smelling fixer and developer. Red film curlicued from a red
clothesline. Held to the light, the film had nothing more than volleyball in
the nude, and the developed pictures pinned to a board were embassy fare: Russians
visiting a sugar combine, delivering postcards from the children of Back
in the hall, Arkady had to push past more cabinets of photographs. He riffled through
contact sheets of vacations in Going
by Rufo's sort of calendar – the urgency, that is, in trying to kill someone
who would be in town for only a week – Arkady felt that time was running out.
His time was. Tomorrow night he could be boarding his flight for home, he and
Pribluda, but he felt he was still before the event, whatever it was that would
make sense of the Havana Yacht Club, Rufo and Hedy, and the best demolition
team in Africa. Ofelia didn't bring anyone. Careful not
to scuff her new shoes, she walked up the steps of the Centro Russo-Cubano,
dropping her dark glasses into her bag with the banana bread as she stepped
into the lobby, which had changed from the day before: the statues of the cane
cutter and the fisherman had toppled facedown on the tiles, the ladder
stretched by a splintered counter and no car sat on the lobby floor. Dust
climbed the red ray of light falling from the stained glass overhead. Centro
Russo-Cubano? From what she knew of this place, when the Russians thought they
led the way to the glorious future, it was a very rare Cuban who had ever been
invited in. She
took a deep breath. Ofelia had come alone to see whatever Luna had carted in
the night before because she didn't want to involve anyone else until she knew
what evidence she could find. The PNR did not accuse an officer of the Ministry
of the Interior lightly. That was her professional reason. The real reason was
personal. Nothing humiliated Ofelia more than being afraid, and inside the
trunk of the Lada she had been afraid to the point of tears. She took extra
target practice at the Guanabo range just so that wouldn't happen. A dusty
mirror hung over the counter. She caught sight of herself as she took the gun
from her straw bag and swung, body and weapon moving as one dangerous little jinetera. Being
back in the lobby made her taste the hemp and coconut milk again. That was the
way Luna had picked her up, like a coconut to be thrown into a bag and the bag
tossed into a trunk. She'd tried to find the Lada on the way, and it had
disappeared, perhaps already being cannibalized in an Atares warehouse. A shiny
track showed where the cart's iron wheels had rolled over the floor tiles of a
hammer-and-sickle pattern toward a grim corridor of cement walls and doors of
Cuban hardwood. Ofelia
kicked the first door open, entered an empty luggage room, scanned with the gun
and returned to the hall before anyone could approach behind her. The next door
had the title of "Director" and promised to be larger and farther
from the dim light of the lobby. She'd reloaded the gun but she should have
brought a flashlight. She knew she should have thought of that. This
was the sort of situation where a person had to gauge what they were most
likely to encounter. A sergeant of the Ministry of the Interior carried the
same firearm she did, but a man from the Oriente might have more confidence in
his machete. Also, he knew the layout of the Centro Russo-Cubano, she didn't.
He could pop out of any corner like an oversized goblin. Ofelia
shoved the door with her foot, slipped in and crouched against a wall. When her
eyes adjusted she saw that the office had been stripped of desk, chairs, rug.
All that was left were a bust of Lenin on a pedestal and horizontal red-and-black
stripes spray-painted on the walls, windows, across Lenin's face. She heard
something move in the hall. It
occurred to Ofelia that perhaps she should have changed into her uniform. If
the PNR found her dressed like this, what would they assume? And Blas? He'd
think what fun they could have had in She
slid out of the office on one knee aiming left, then right. Whatever it was had
stopped, although Luna could be coming from either direction. This was a time
when target practice paid off just for holding a heavy gun steady for so long.
Banana bread was a ludicrous item to be toting and she considered lightening
her load. But the girls had helped bake it. The
next office was empty except for corn kernels and feathers underfoot. She heard
a step behind her again, tentative, hanging back, and she tried to get low
enough to sight on a silhouette. She moved across the hall into what had been a
meeting room with no table, no chairs, no windows, just a faint row of framed
Russian faces and ships. She thought if there was more than one individual
after her this was a perfect opportunity to lock the doors at each end and seal
her in as effectively as entombing her. Slower,
she told herself, although she was blinking through sweat, mouth breathing too,
not a good sign, and her shoulders ached from the weight of the gun. She was in
the dark until she opened a door to a linen room, where the light poured
through unbroken windows onto shelves that once held sheets and pillowcases
still white; even the dust was white as talc. On the floor a headless white
chicken lay in a circle of dried blood. She left the door open to illuminate
the hallway and followed a sign that pointed to "Buffet." Checked
into a pantry with nothing except lists on the wall in Russian of meat, dairy
and starchy goods expected six years before. There was a note to a certain This
was the darkest yet. Reentering the hall was like stepping into a pit. Nothing
but black behind her, and nothing ahead but faint light tracing a buffet door.
She could feel as much as hear the step behind her, it was that close. Her
father had cut cane, she knew how cane cutters worked. First slice to the base,
second high to lop off the cane head. Arkady had said Luna was right-handed,
which meant that, constrained by the dimensions of the hall, a downward swing
to the left. She got as small she could on the right side. She
felt breathing on her. A hairy face pressed against hers and she reached out to
feel two stubby horns. A goat. She'd forgotten about the goats. The rest were
gone or this was the only one that had found a way down to the ground floor. A
small goat with a stiff beard, sharp ribs and an inquisitive muzzle that
pressed into her bag. The banana bread, of course, Ofelia thought. She laid her
gun between her legs, unwrapped the bread and broke off half. She couldn't see
the goat but she could hear it devour the bread as if it hadn't been fed for
days. The scent of the bread must have been an irresistible trail through the
building. She was glad her Russian hadn't seen this. When
the goat tried to tear up the rest of the bread Ofelia gave it a not unkind
kick, then scratched its scrawny neck to make amends. Growing up in Hershey,
she'd had to deal with goats, chickens, voracious hogs. Discouraged,
the goat backed away with a tremulous baa, and although Ofelia expected it to
go the way it had come and return to the herd, something seemed to pull it in
the opposite direction. She couldn't see the goat, but she heard its hooves tap
closer to the buffet door, to the ghostly smell of food six years past. It was
a swinging door. The goat nosed it open, there was a glimpse of dingy light,
enough to invite the goat and it trotted through. The door flapped twice,
settled, and then flew open to flame and smoke. Although
she was shielded at the moment of detonation Ofelia's ears rang, her face felt
scoured. Cement dust filled the dark hall, and devoid of both sight and hearing
she swung the gun one way and then the other until the air cleared enough for
her to make out again the faint light that traced the buffet door. She crawled
forward, felt a cord hanging slack on its lower lip and pushed the door open. It
had only been a fragmentation grenade, Ofelia thought, but in close quarters it
accomplished its mission well. Half the goat was close to the door, half well
down the hall, like a botched job of being shot from a cannon. One wall was
pocked from metal shards. Burn marks on the other showed where the grenade had
been placed at floor level, the cord around its ring. Soft clots dripped from
the ceiling. Beyond,
the hall opened to the buffet, where Russian sea captains and their officers
had once been served cognac and cakes, and farther on she saw a large kitchen
with a vent that someone from the outside had once tried to break through,
bending a louver enough let a single finger of light pierce the murk. She
waited for the nerve to move forward. It would come any second. Arkady missed the park rendezvous with
Ofelia. He sat in Mostovoi's living room facing the door and flipped through
the pages of an address book he had found in the nightstand. Pinero, Rufo.
Luna, Sgt. Facundo. Guzman, Erasmo. Walls. No Tico that Arkady could find, but
otherwise the old team was all accounted for. Plus, Vice Consul Bugai, Havana
hotels and garages, French film labs, many girls' names with notes on age,
color, height. Eight
o'clock. Mostovoi was taking a long time to reappear. The emergency was long
over, fire engines gone and residents returned to their apartments. He'd
expected Mostovoi to enter, be surprised and affect outrage at the sight of an
interloper. Arkady would ask him questions about Luna and Walls and pose them
in a manner designed to make Mostovoi resort to the gun in the refrigerator. It
was Arkady's experience that people who were upset were much more talkative
when they felt they had turned the tables. If Mostovoi actually pulled the
trigger, that would be information too. Of course, this scenario depended on
Mostovoi's not carrying another gun in one of his camera bags. Arkady
only had to close his eyes for images to appear. Pribluda's Nine
o'clock. The day had disappeared while he had waited for a man who wasn't
coming back. Arkady carefully replaced the address book where he had found it,
refiled the photos in their boxes and slipped out the door to the balcony,
where tots up late raced tricycles back and forth. From halfway across Miramar
the lights of the Russian embassy stared back. He took the elevator down. The
popcorn machine was gone and the stairs were charred; otherwise it was as if he
hadn't come at all. Following
First Avenue along the water, he put one foot in front of the other in the
manner, he thought, of a sailing ship towed by rowboats when the wind had died.
Not until he passed Erasmo's family house did he realize his legs were taking
him to the rendezvous with Ofelia at the Havana Yacht Club. "Vi. HYC 2200
Angola." Tonight was the night. Or
maybe not. He was late when the royal palms of the Yacht Club's driveway came
into view and Ofelia's DeSoto wasn't in sight at all. The club was black, the
only lights two flashlight beams patrolling the long driveway. No sound except
cars circling the rotary and the laugh of a bird nesting in a palm. This had
been his brilliant idea, his chance to jump ahead of events. Whatever this
event was, it was on a different Friday night. He looked for Ofelia on the
other streets feeding the rotary. Although half an hour didn't seem very late
in Cuba, she wasn't there. A
taxi stopped for him and Arkady dropped into the seat beside the driver, an old
man with a cold cigar. "A
donde?" A
good question, Arkady thought. He had gone everywhere he could think. Back to
Mostovoi's? To the Playa del Este and Ofelia? See, this was exactly the way
he'd lost Irina, he reminded himself. Inattention. How else could a man miss
not one but two rendezvous? In English he said, "I'm looking for someone.
Maybe we can just drive around." "A
donde?" "If
we could drive around here, around the Yacht Club?" "Where?"
the old man took the cigar from his mouth, blew the word as if it were a ring
of smoke. "Is
there an event nearby for Angola?" "Angola?
Quieres Angola?" "I
don't want to go to the embassy for Angola." "No,
no. Entiendo perfectamente." He motioned for Arkady to be patient
while he pulled a stack of business cards from his shirt pocket, found one and
showed Arkady a well-thumbed pasteboard card with an embossed tropical sun over
the words "Angola, Un Paladar Africano en Miramar." "Muy
cerca." "It's
near?" "Claro."
The driver stuffed the card back in his shirt. Arkady
understood the routine. In Moscow when a taxi driver delivered a tourist to a
restaurant, he had an arrangement by which he collected a little extra from the
establishment. The same in Havana, apparently. Arkady thought they'd just drive
by in case the DeSoto was there. The
Angola was on a dark street of large Spanish colonial homes only a minute away.
Over a tall iron gate hung a neon sign of a sun so golden it seemed to drip.
The taxi driver took one look and kept on going. "Lo
siento, no puedes. Esta reservado esta noche." "Go
by again." "No
podemos. Es que digo, completemente reservado. Cualquier otro dнa, si?"
Arkady
didn't speak Spanish but he understood completemente reservado. All
the same he said, "Just drive by." No. Arkady
got out at the corner, paid the driver enough for a good cigar and walked back
under a dramatic canopy of ragged cedar branches. Along both curbs were new
Nissans and Range Rovers, some with drivers sitting almost at attention behind
the wheel. Along the sidewalk were shadows within shadows and the orange swirls
of cigarettes used in conversation, voices hushing as Arkady slowed to admire a
white Imperial convertible reflecting the neon sun. When he pushed the gate
open, a figure materialized from the dark to stop him. Captain Arcos in
civilian clothes, like an armadillo out of his shell. "It's
all right." Arkady pointed to a table inside the gate. "I'm with
them." The
Angola was an outdoor restaurant set in a garden of underlit tree ferns and
tall African statues. Two men in white aprons worked an open-air grill and
although Arkady had been told that a paladar could serve no more than
twelve diners at a time there were, at tables arranged around the grill, easily
twenty customers, all men, in their forties and fifties, most white, all with a
bearing of command, prosperity, success and all Cuban except for John O'Brien
and George Washington Walls. "I
knew it" – O'Brien waved Arkady in. "I told George that you'd show
up." "He
did." Walls shook his head in wonder more at O'Brien than at Arkady. "When
I heard Rufo was so stupid as to write the place and time on a wall I knew you
couldn't fail." O'Brien had another chair brought. Even the developer was in
a Cuban guayabera; the evening's uniform seemed to be graybeards. The two
Cubans at the table looked to O'Brien for a lead; although they were hard,
mature men, O'Brien seemed to have for them the status of a priest among boys.
The entire restaurant had gone quiet, including Erasmo in a wheelchair two
tables away with Tico and Mostovoi, their old comrade-in-arms, the only other
non-Cuban. It was strange to see the mechanics so spruced. " It's perfect
that you're here." O'Brien seemed genuinely pleased. "Everything's
falling into place." Walls
said to the Cuban next to him, "El nuevo bolo." Relief
spread to every face except Erasmo's. He telegraphed Arkady a glum look from
across the garden. Mostovoi saluted. "I'm
the new Russian?" Arkady asked. "It
makes you part of the club," O'Brien said. "What
club is that?" "The
Havana Yacht Club, what else?" Waiters
poured water and rum, although coffee seemed as popular at the tables, an odd
choice for the hour, Arkady thought. "How do you know I visited
Rufo's?" "You
know George is a big fight fan. He went to see some sparring today at the
Gimnasio Atares, and a trainer told him about a white man in a black coat he
saw come out of Rufo's last night. George went in and there it was right on the
wall, a clue no one as sharp as you was going to miss. Maybe you would, maybe
you wouldn't. We have to be careful. Remember, I have been the target of more
police stings and entrapment than you could dream of. By the way, keep in mind
that all our friends here tonight still remember the Russian language. Watch
what you say." Walls
ran his eyes over Arkady's new clothes. "Big: improvement." : The
chefs lifted lobsters from a huge sack to a cutting board, where they sliced
and cleaned the underside of the tails before setting the lobsters alive onto
the grill, poking them with wooden sticks when they tried to crawl from the
flames. Arkady saw no menus, no African food. The two Cubans at Arkady's table
shook his hand but offered no names. One was white, the other mulatto, but they
shared the musculature, direct gaze and obsessionally trimmed fingernails and
hair of military men. "What
does this club do?" Arkady asked. "They
can do anything," O'Brien said. "People wonder, what will happen to The
lobsters were monsters, the largest Arkady had ever seen. They reddened among
flares and sparks. "But
the wonderful thing about evolution," O'Brien said, "is that it can't
be stopped. Eliminate business. Make the army the preferred career route for
idealistic young men. Send them to foreign wars, but don't give them enough
money to fight. Make them earn it. Make them trade in ivory and diamonds so
they have enough ammunition to defend themselves, and you end up with an
interesting group of entrepreneurs. Then, because it works cheap, when the army
comes home make it go into farming, hotels, sugar. Reassign heroes to run the
tourism and citrus and nickel industries. Let me tell you, negotiating a
contract with a construction company from Milan is as good as two years at
Harvard Business School. The ones here tonight are the crиme de la crиme." "The
Havana Yacht Club?" "They
like the name," Walls said. "It's just a social thing." When
the first lobsters were done, a chef stirred a glass bowl full of twists of
paper, picked four twists, unrolled and read them before sending the lobsters
to a table. It seemed to Arkady a better system for a lottery than a
restaurant. How did the chef know who ordered what? Why were there only two
choices, lobster or nothing? "I
thought private restaurants weren't allowed to serve lobster," Arkady
said. "Maybe
tonight is an exception," O'Brien said. Arkady
caught sight of Mostovoi again. "Why am I the new Russian? Why can't
Mostovoi be?" "This
is an enterprise that needs more than a pornographer. You've replaced Pribluda.
Everyone can accept that." O'Brien adopted a forgiving tone. "And you
can keep the photograph Pribluda sent to you. It would have been nice if you'd
offered it as a sign of trust at some point, but you're on the team now." "Rufo
died for that picture." "Thank
God, I much prefer you. I mean, it's worked out wonderfully." "Do
some of these people work in the Ministry of Sugar? Are some of them involved
with AzuPanama?" "We
met some that way, yes. These are the men who make decisions, as much as anyone
can make decisions besides Fidel. Some are deputy ministers, some are still
generals and colonels, men who have known each other all their lives and now in
their prime. Naturally, they're making plans. It is a normal human aspiration,
the need to better themselves and leave something for their families. The same
as Fidel. He has one legitimate son and a dozen illegitimate children salted
away in the government. These men are no different." "The
casino fits somewhere in here?" "I
hope so." "Why
are you telling me all this?" "John
always tells the truth," Walls said. "Just that there are a lot of
layers to the truth." "Casino,
combat boots, AzuPanama. Which is real and which is fake?" "In
Cuba," O'Brien said, "there is a fine line between the real and the
ridiculous. As a boy, Fidel wrote Franklin Roosevelt and asked for an American
dollar. Later Fidel was scouted as a pitcher by the major leagues. Here was a
man who could have been a model American, an inch away. Instead, he becomes
Fidel. Incidentally, the scouting report was 'Fair fastball, no control.' At
heart, my dear Arkady, it's all ridiculous." The
body in the bay was dead, Rufo was dead, Hedy and her Italian had been slashed
to death, Arkady thought. That was real. The Cubans at the table listened with
half an ear as they watched lobsters continue to march off the grill and the
curious ceremony of reading papers at random from a bowl. It didn't seem to
matter who had lobster so much as that they all did. Arkady had the sense that
if one anonymous twist of paper was blank, if one diner hadn't ordered lobster,
the group to a man would have stood and left at once. "Do
you mind...?" Arkady nodded toward Erasmo's table. "Please."
O'Brien gave his blessing. Tico
was happily dismembering his crustacean and Mostovoi was caught sucking on a
claw. "You
can't get lobster this succulent anywhere else in the world." Mostovoi
wiped his mouth as Arkady dropped into a chair. There was no sign from the
photographer that he had connected the fire at the Sierra Maestra to Arkady. Erasmo
didn't say a word or touch his lobster. Arkady remembered him drinking ron
peleo and swaying in his wheelchair to Mongo's drum at the santero's,
leaning out the Jeep like a bearded buccaneer as they cruised the Malecуn. This
was a more subdued Erasmo. "So,
this is the real Havana Yacht Club," Arkady said to him. "No Mongo,
no fish." "It's
a different club." "Apparently." "You
don't understand. These are all men who fought together in Angola and Ethiopia,
who fought side by side with Russians, who shared a common experience." "Except
for O'Brien." "And
you." "Me?"
Arkady didn't remember the initiation. "How did that happen?" Erasmo's
head lolled as if he'd been trying unsuccessfully to drink himself into a
stupor. "How does it happen? By accident. It's like you're in the middle
of a play, say, Act II, and someone wanders onto the stage. Somebody new, never
in the script. What do you do? First, try to get him off, drop a sandbag on him
or lure him behind the scenery so you can hit him over the head with a minimum
of fuss because there is an audience watching. If you can't get the son of a
bitch off the stage what do you do then? You start incorporating him into the
play, find him a role of someone who is missing, feed him some lines as
smoothly as you can so that the Third Act goes virtually unchanged, just like
you always planned." The
last lobster was delivered. Every plate was covered by a lobster or a
well-picked carapace, although Arkady had noticed that many guests had shown no
interest in their dinner once it had been served. A tall man with aviator
glasses rose with a glass of rum. He was the same army officer Arkady had seen
in a picture with Erasmo and the Comandante. The man proposed a toast to
"The Havana Yacht Club." Everyone
but Arkady and Erasmo stood, although Erasmo raised his glass. "Now
what?" Arkady asked. "A meeting's going to begin?" "The
meeting's over." Erasmo added in a whisper, "Good luck." In
fact, men were leaving as soon as they set down their glass, not pouring out as
a crowd but slipping under the neon sun to the dark of the street in twos and
threes. Arkady heard a muffled sound of car doors opening and engines starting.
Mostovoi vanished like a shadow. Tico pushed Erasmo, who leaned his brow on his
hand like Hamlet considering his options. Soon the only ones left in the paladar
were the staff, Walls, O'Brien and Arkady. "You're
part of the club now," O'Brien said. "How does it feel?" "A
little mysterious." "Well,
you've only been here six days. Cuba takes a lifetime to understand. Wouldn't
you say, George?" "Absolutely." O'Brien
pushed himself to his feet. "Anyway, we have to run. It's almost the
witching hour and, frankly, I'm bushed." Arkady
said, "Pribluda was involved in this?" "If
you really want to know, come by the boat tomorrow evening." "I'm
flying to Moscow tomorrow night." "It's
up to you," Walls said and opened the gate. The Imperial glowed at the
curb. "What
is the Havana Yacht Club?" Arkady asked. "What
do you want it to be?" John O'Brien said. "A few guys goofing off
with a fishing line. A dump of a building waiting to be touched by a magic wand
and be turned into a hundred million dollars. A group of patriots, veterans of
their country's wars, having a social evening. Whatever you want, that's what
it is." Chapter Twenty-FourThe DeSoto was parked outside the Rosita.
Ofelia was inside on the bed, curled up tightly in the sheets. Arkady
undressed in the dark, slid beside her and knew by her heartbeat that she was
awake. He ran his hand over her breast and up her arm to the gun in her hand. "You
went back to Luna's place." "I
wanted to see what he had there." "You
went alone?" he asked and read her silence. "You said you would take
someone with you. I would have gone." "I
can't be afraid to go into a house alone." "I
am, often. What did you find?" She
described the condition of the Centro Russo-Cubano, the lobby and each room as
she had investigated them, the goat, the buffet door and the grenade that was
wired to it. Also how she had picked her way through the aftermath of the blast
into a buffet and kitchen without ovens, freezers or refrigerators, then
retraced her route back to the lobby, set the ladder on the balcony rail and
climbed to the mezzanine to search the rooms on that level, opening every door
with the tip of a broom. There were no more booby traps, no goats, nothing but
their droppings and open jars of Russian hair pomade that they had licked
clean. By
then their meeting time at the park had come and gone, and when she went to the
Havana Yacht Club he never showed. She let go of the gun and kissed his mouth
and released him slowly. "I thought you weren't coming." "We
just missed each other, that's all." He
gathered her in his arms and felt her slide down him. In a moment, he was in
her and she wrapped herself around him. Her tongue was sweet, her back hard,
and where he joined her she was endlessly deep. They
ate banana bread with beer while Arkady told Ofelia about his trip to
Mostovoi's apartment, everything except the fire. Arson she might be a stickler
about. He had to smile. She had sneaked through his defenses, a small bird on
barbed wire. There was also pleasure – morbid or professional – in talking with
a colleague. She was a colleague even though her point of view was not so much
from a different world as from a different universe. She was a colleague even
though she sat naked, cross-legged, in the haze of light produced by a power
brownout. "There
are parts of Arkady
looked at the date. "It's two weeks old." "My
mother doesn't read it, she only gets it for wrapping food. Anyway, whatever
Luna had to move – TV, VCR, shoes – he moved. It was gone." "He
tried to kill us in the car. He killed Hedy and her Italian friend if the
combination of ice pick and machete is anything to go by; I don't think that's
an everyday technique. And if he cleared mines in "He
really only hit your side of the car," Ofelia said. "What?"
This was a new tack, Arkady thought. "He
only put me in the car trunk." "He
left you to suffocate." "Maybe.
You got me out." "And
then he tried to chop up the car." "You
mostly." This seemed like splitting hairs to Arkady, but Ofelia went on.
"So, you went to the Yacht Club and didn't find me. What then?" "I
don't know exactly." He told her about the lobster dinner at the Angola paladar.
" They were military types and they called themselves the Havana
Yacht Club. How unusual is it for army officers to take over a private
restaurant like that?" "It's
not unknown." "Or
have lobster there?" "Maybe
it was their own lobster. A lot of officers spearfish. The navy sells lobster,
too. The officers don't eat so bad." "They
seemed unhappy." "This
is the Special Period – except for you and me, everyone is unhappy. What were
they driving?" "Sport
utility vehicles." "See!" "But
at least half of them didn't eat the lobster." "That,"
Ofelia granted, "is strange." "No
speeches." "Very
strange." "I
thought so from what I know of the Cuban character. Also, Walls, O'Brien and
Mostovoi were there. O'Brien described me to them as the 'new Russian' as if I
was taking Pribluda's place. I feel something happened in front of me that I
just didn't see. O'Brien is always ahead of me." "He
hasn't committed any crime." "Yet."
Arkady didn't quibble over the arrest warrant from America or the $20 million
sugar scam of Russia. "Why would twenty highly placed Cubans call
themselves the Havana Yacht Club?" "A
joke?" "That
was the answer for Pribluda's photograph." "You
think this is different?" "No,
I think it's the same. I don't think it was ever a joke." "Did
the officers at this dinner have names?" "No
names that I heard. All I can say is that they all wore guayaberas and ordered
lobster on pieces of paper that had to be unfolded to be read. Some, like
Erasmo, didn't touch their lobster at all, just watched, counting the lobsters,
and as soon as the last one was delivered to a table dinner was over, as if
they'd reached a unanimous vote. Maybe I'll find out tomorrow. I'll see Walls
and O'Brien before I go." "As
long as you don't miss your plane," Ofelia said. He
knew she was studying him for a reaction about leaving. He didn't know what his
reaction was. They were both so far out on a limb that the slightest shift made
for dizzying sways. His eye fell on the newspaper her mother had wrapped banana
bread in. "What
is Chango up to?" "What
do you mean?" Ofelia was not ready to change subjects. He
picked up the newspaper. It was a greasy broadsheet folded to a photo of a
black doll with a red bandanna. Under the photograph a news caption read, Noche
Folklorica Aplazada. Debido a condiciones inclementes fue necesario aplazar el
Festival Folklorico Cubano hasta dos Sбbados mas, a la Casa Cultural de
Trabajadores de Construction. "Inclement
weather I understand and Sбbado is Saturday and the Casa Cultural
is the Havana Yacht Club." "
'Because of rain a folkloric festival is postponed for two weeks,' that's
all." Arkady
checked the newspaper's date. "Until tomorrow." He got up to look at
the Chango sitting in the corner, the doll's left arm lank on a cane, feet
sprawled, half-formed features and glass eyes returning Arkady's gaze. The more
Arkady studied the doll the more convinced he was that it was the one that had
disappeared from Pribluda's flat on the Malecуn. Same red bandanna, same Reebok
shoes, same baleful glare. "He reminds me of Luna." "Of
course," Ofelia said. "Luna is a son of Chango." "A
son of Chango?" Once again Arkady had the sense that any conversation with
Ofelia had trapdoors that could open and drop a person into an alternative
universe. "How do you know this?" "It's
obvious. Sexual, violent, passionate. Chango all over." "Really?"
He leaned to better see the yellow beads around her neck. "And..." "Oshun,"
she said stiffly. "I've
heard of that one." "You
are a son of Oggun." Arkady
felt he was about halfway through the trapdoor. "Go
ahead, who is Oggun?" "Oggun
is Chango's greatest enemy. They often fight because Chango is so violent and
Oggun guards against crime." "A
policeman? Doesn't sound like fun to me." "He
can be very sad. Once, he was so angry at the way of people, their crimes and
lies, that he went into the deep woods, so deep no one could find him, and he
was so silent no one could talk to him or could coax him out. Finally, Oshun
went after him and walked through the woods and walked through the woods until
she came to a clearing by a stream. She could feel Oggun carefully watching
from behind the trees. She didn't make the mistake of calling out to him.
Instead she began to dance slowly with her arms out like this. Oshun has her
own dance, very sexual. When she felt that he was curious and moving closer she
still didn't call his name. Instead she danced a little faster, a little
slower, and when he came out of hiding she danced until he was close enough to
her to dip her fingers into a gourd of honey hanging from her waist and she
smeared the honey on his lips. He had never tasted anything so sweet in his
life. She danced and filled her hand with honey and put more honey in his mouth
and more honey while she tied him to her with a rope of yellow silk and led him
back into the world." "That
could work." Not
honey but the sweet salt of her skin. No silken rope but her arms. No words but
hands and lips, and Arkady was pulling her closer when Chango's cane scraped
across the linoleum. The doll sagged forward, head askew, tipped in the slow
fashion of a drunk releasing himself from the obligations of respectability,
slumped off the chair and landed with a thud on its face. "Some
spell," Arkady said. It had been working on him. He swung out of bed,
picked up the doll and set it in the chair again. Here was a figure that had
followed him all over Havana, his shadow companion, and how he'd ever managed
to get Chango to stay in the chair Arkady didn't know because the cane slid one
way and the doll perversely slumped the other. "The head is just too heavy,
it won't sit up." Ofelia
motioned Arkady back. "Leave it. It's just papier-mвchй." "I
don't think so." The spell was broken. He lifted Chango and brought him to
the bed, the better to see how the head was sewn to the shirt. " Are there
scissors in your toiletry kit?" Arkady
pulled on pants and Ofelia slipped into his coat. Because the nail scissors
were small, Arkady had to cut the threads one at a time to slide the head off a
wooden stake that was the doll's backbone. He let the headless body roll onto
the floor. Ofelia
asked, "What are you doing?" "Looking
into Chango." He
cut off the bandanna, leaving a red ring of cloth still glued. The head was
papier-mache coated with a lacquer-hard paint like a lumpish skull daubed
black. Ofelia found a serrated knife in a drawer of the kitchenette. Arkady
sawed through the head from ear, over the crown, to ear, until he pulled the
doll's face like a mask off a layer of cheesecloth that had been formed on
someone's face to lend the effigy its rough features. Under the cloth were
crumpled newspapers, and under the newspapers was a flat oval of slick silver
tape. In tiny snips Arkady cut around the edges and peeled the tape off five
thick brown waxy sticks that said in English "Hi-Drive Dynamite." The
sticks had been warmed and molded to pack tightly together with a Plexiglas
backing in the oval space of the head. On the middle stick was a printed
circuit board of a radio receiver the size of a credit card with a built-in
kopeck-sized battery and antenna. Arkady prodded the board up. Its wires were
crimped around the leg wires of a blasting cap inserted deep into the dynamite
itself. In spite of the air-conditioning he felt a bloom of sweat. He and
Ofelia had been around the doll on and off for almost a week. Someone could
have pressed a remote transmitter and brought his Havana trip to an end at any
time. He
put the scissors and knife aside. "Something nonsparking?" Ofelia
cradled the doll's head in her lap and delicately dug the cap out with her
fingernails. You
had to admire a woman like that, Arkady thought. Chapter Twenty-FiveEnough daybreak sifted through the window
shade for Arkady to see Chango lying on the table, the front and back of the
head resting separately on the doll's chest. Disconnected, the face seemed more
animated and malevolent than ever. Ofelia
was under Arkady's coat, asleep. He dressed in his old clothes, strapped on the
hip pack and stole his coat as quietly as he could. This was the point where
they went their different ways. As she said, it would be difficult enough to
explain how she had come into possession of the doll. Having a Russian along
wouldn't help. "Arkady?" "Yes?"
He had already opened the door. Ofelia
sat up against the headboard. "Where will I see you again?" They'd
gone over this the night before. "At least at the airport. The night's at
midnight. It's a Russian plane and a Cuban airport, we should have lots of
time." "You're
going to see Walls and O'Brien? I don't want you to go. To their boat? I don't
trust them." "I
don't either." "I'll
be watching. If that boat leaves the dock with you on it, I will send a police
boat out after you." "Good
idea." They had decided all of this already, but he returned to burrow for
a moment in her neck and kiss her mouth. Love's exaction for forward motion. "What
about Blas and the photograph?" she asked. "I'll be seeing him." "Leave
the photograph to me." "And
after?" "After?
We will shop on the Arbat, ski among the birches, go to the Bolshoi, whatever
you want." "You'll
be careful?" "We
will both be careful." Her
eyes let go. Arkady slipped out into a morning with a dull pewterish light
rimming the water, streetlights fading, on his way, appropriately enough, to see
Sergei Pribluda's lover. A
block on, he encountered another socialismo o muerte billboard with a
giant Comandante in fatigues, shambling again in mid-stride, keeping pace. Ofelia took a little longer to dress,
tape the doll's head back together and take it in her straw bag to her car. It
was eight by the time she reached the Institute de Medicina Legal, found Blas
in the autopsy theater and sent a message that she would be waiting for him at
the anthropology room. No one was ever completely alone in that room, there
were too many skulls and skeletons, preserved beetles and snakes huddled in the
light. On the desk a newly scrubbed skull was positioned under a video camera.
She turned on the monitor, and a picture of a robust Pribluda at a beach emerged
on the screen. "Not
yet," Blas said as he came in drying his hands with a paper towel.
"No show until we have our other Russian. Detective, I understand you're
dressed for a certain kind of duty, but I must congratulate you for how
convincing you are." She was in the white jinetera outfit. Blas
threw the towel into a waste basket and ran his hands up and down her arms as
if performing an inspection. "Irresistible." "I
have something for you," she said. After
all, who else could Ofelia go to? He was sympathetic and sophisticated, with
connections at Minint, the army, the PNR well above the level of Captain Arcos
and Sergeant Luna. "A
gift?" "Not
quite." She took the head wrapped in newspapers out of her bag and placed
it in front of the screen. "Well,
I'm always interested." Blas pulled the paper off and revealed Chango's
obsidian stare. The doctor's anticipation disappeared. "What is this
about? You should know by now that my interest in Santeria is strictly
scientific." "But
this head was on a doll that was in Pribluda's apartment. Later it was found
with black-market goods in a building near the docks." "So?
I've seen hundreds of these dolls across the country." Ofelia
peeled off the tape that held the front and back of the head together. "Go
ahead." As
Blas lifted the doll's face his own went whiter than usual. "Cono." "Five
charges of eighty percent dynamite. American-made, but we get it through Panama
all the time for construction and making roads. There was a receiver and
blasting cap that I removed. This is a bomb." "That
was at Pribluda's?" "That
was removed from there, I believe, by Sergeant Luna, who had also taken
Pribluda's car and put it in an abandoned building in Atares, where this doll
was recovered." There
was much Ofelia didn't have to say. In recent years incendiary devices had been
set off at different hotels and discos by reactionaries from Miami. Just for
the sake of terror. Then there was The Target whose name Ofelia was afraid to
invoke, the leader who for forty years had dodged bombs, bullets, cyanide
pills. "This
is a very grave matter. Does the sergeant know you have it?" "Yes,
he tried to stop me. This was two nights ago. I only learned it was a bomb last
night. There don't seem to be any fingerprints on the outside of the head, but
I think there are latent prints on the dynamite." "Leave
it to me. You should have come to me right away. When I think about that poor
Hedy and you." Blas put down the mask to wipe his hands on his lab coat.
" You're so cool about all this. Do you have the receiver and cap?" "Yes."
She brought them wrapped in newspaper from her bag. "Better
that I have all of the device. Who else knows?" "No
one." She was going to omit Arkady as long as possible. A Russian and a
bomb, how would that look? Especially with those assassination files he had
found on Pribluda's computer, it would muddle everything. The reason the doll's
head was clear of prints was that she had wiped Arkady's off. "Except that
we have to assume there are more people involved on Luna's side." "A
conspiracy in the Ministry of the Interior? Sergeant Luna is a nobody, this
could go much higher. It's no wonder he and Captain Arcos refused to
investigate. They're reporting to someone. The question is who? Who assigned
them? Who do I call?" "You
will help?" "Thank
God you came to me. Detective, I have always said it, you are a marvel. Were
you going someplace from here?" "To
the apartment where Rufo died." She didn't want to say where Arkady killed
him, even if it was in self-defense. "It seems to me a hustler like Rufo
must have had a mobile phone. CubaCell has no listing for Rufo but –" "No,
no, no. Stay off the street. We must find someplace safe for you. You must sit
and write a complete statement of all the facts while I cogitate how to
approach this problem. The first call is the most important. Since we have the
means of destruction, thanks to you, we have a minute to think. The safest
place is right here. There's paper and pencil in the desk. You have to put down
everything and everyone involved." "I've
written statements before, no?" "You're
right. The main thing is, don't move from here until I come back. Don't let
anyone else in. Promise?" Blas eased the two halves of the head together,
wrapped the head in newspaper and carried it under his arm to the door.
"Just be patient." Ofelia
was surprised that her anxiety did not dissipate even when the doll was in
competent hands. She found writing materials in a drawer as Blas had said, but
discovered that she had become overly used to typing reports on PNR forms.
Also, beyond the simplest statements of Luna's involvement with the doll it was
difficult not to drag Arkady in. Questioning would be even worse. Who had
identified the doll as being at Pribluda's? If Luna had attacked her, how had
she escaped? Better a brief statement than either the complete truth or a lie.
Once Arkady's name surfaced she knew that suspicion, hard earned by Russians in
Pribluda,
proud of his tan, grinned from the monitor. The skull lay under the video
camera. Chango and Russians, a terrible combination. Ofelia flicked the screen
off and on. Why was she waiting? How would she get to the marina if she was
kept in a room? She admitted she would feel easier once Luna was arrested. At
the same time she had a niggling memory of the sergeant standing over Hedy at
the Casa de Amor and how his entire body seemed to turn to stone. Which
reminded Ofelia of Teresa, Luna's other special girl. Between
two jars of pickled snakes was a telephone. Ofelia opened her notebook and
dialed Daysi's number. This time there was an answer. "Yes?" "Hello,
is Daysi there?" Ofelia asked. "No." "When
will she be back?" "I
don't know." "You
don't know? I have this swimsuit of hers she keeps asking for. It's the suit
with the Wonder Bra like she saw on QVC. She wanted it today. She's not
there?" "No." "Where
is she?" "She's
out." "With
Susy?" "Yes."
A little more relaxed. "You know both of them?" "They're
still at the marina?" "Yes.
Who is this?" Ofelia
said, "This is the friend with the swimsuit. I drop it off today or it's
mine. Frankly, it looks better on me." "Can
you call tomorrow?" "I'm
not calling tomorrow. I'll be gone tomorrow and the suit will go with me and
you explain to Daysi why she doesn't have the suit." During
the silence Ofelia could see Teresa Guiteras, hair tangled, knees up to her
chin, chewing on her fingernails. "Bring
it over." "I
don't know where you are," Ofelia said. "You come here and get
it." "I
thought you were a friend of Daysi." "Okay,
since you're a better friend, you explain to Daysi how she lost her QVC
swimsuit. It's fine with me. I tried." "Wait.
I can't come." "You
can't come? Some friend." "I'm
on Chavez between Zanya and Salud, next to the beauty shop, in back and up the
stairs to the roof and the pink casita. Are you near?" "Maybe.
Look, I have to get off the phone." "Are
you coming?" "Well..."
Ofelia drew the moment out. "You're going to be there?" "I'm
here." "Not
going to leave?" "No." Ofelia
hung up. She signed her statement and tucked it under the monitor. She hated
waiting. Besides, Ofelia still wanted to know why the homicidal Luna, rather
than putting her in the car trunk, hadn't simply killed her, and to that
question Teresa conceivably had the answer. Vice Consul Bugai arrived at his office
at a casual eleven o'clock, removed his jacket and shoes, replaced them with a
silk Chinese robe and sandals. He poured himself tea from a thermos and stood,
cup in hand, at his window, which was twelve stories up, waist level in the
tower that was the Russian embassy. The green palms of Miramar spread to the
sea. Satellite dishes lifted their faces to the sky. Outside, the city baked.
Inside, the air-conditioning throbbed. "So
you do come to work on Saturdays," Arkady said from a corner chair. "My
God." Bugai spilled his tea and stepped back from the cup. "What are
you doing here? How did you get in?" "We
have to talk." "This
is outrageous." Bugai set the cup on a stack of papers and picked up his
telephone. In his robe the vice consul was the picture of an affronted
mandarin. "You're out of bounds. You can't just break into people's
offices. I'm calling the guards. They will sit on you until they put you on the
plane." "I
think they'll sit on both of us and put us both on the plane because I may be
out of bounds, but you, my dear Bugai, have far too much money in the Bank for
Creative Investment in Panama." Arkady
had once seen a militiaman, shot, take ten slow jerky steps before he sat and rolled
over. That was the way Bugai moved as he set down the phone, bumped against the
desk and dropped into his chair. He clutched his heart. "Don't
die on me yet," Arkady said. "There's
a good explanation." "But
you don't have it." Arkady moved the chair so that he was within arm's
reach of Bugai. He said more softly, "Please don't make things worse by
trying to lie. Right now I'm more interested in information than your hide, but
that can change." "They
told me there would be bank security." "You're
a Russian and you thought there would be security in a bank?" "But
this was Panama." "Bugai,
concentrate. At this moment the affair is between you and me. Where it goes
from here depends on your cooperation. I'm going to ask a few basic questions just
to see how honest you're going to be." "That
you already know the answers to?" "That
doesn't matter. It's your cooperation that counts." "It
could have been a loan." "Would
pain help you concentrate?" "No." "We
don't want to resort to that. Who wrote the checks deposited in your
account?" "John
O'Brien." "In
return for?" "For
what we knew about AzuPanama." "For
what Sergei Pribluda knew about AzuPanama." "That's
correct." "Which
was?" "All
I know was that he was getting closer." "To
finding out AzuPanama was a fraudulent sugar broker created by the Cubans to
renegotiate their contract with Russia?" "In
so many words." "They
were concerned." "Yes." "O'Brien
and..." "The
Ministry of Sugar, AzuPanama, WaOs." "So
Pribluda had to be stopped." "Yes.
But there were many ways to stop him. Include him, pay him, get him working on
something else. I said I would have nothing to do with violence. O'Brien
agreed, he said violence only attracts more attention." "Except
Pribluda's dead." "He
had a heart attack. Anyone can have a heart attack, not just me. O'Brien swears
no one touched him." Arkady
walked around Bugai and the desk, viewing the vice consul from different
angles. Despite the air-conditioning Bugai sweat through his robe at the
armpits and lapels. "Have
you ever been to Angola?" "No." "Africa?" "No.
No one wants those postings, believe me." "Worse
than Cuba?" "No
comparison." "Tell
me about the Havana Yacht Club." "What?" "Just
tell me what you know." Bugai
frowned. "In "That's
all you know?" "That's
all I can think of. One story." "What's
that?" "Well,
before the Revolution the old dictator Batista applied for membership in the
club. He was complete ruler of Cuba, held the power of life or death and all
that entails. It didn't matter, the Havana Yacht Club turned him down. That was
the beginning of the end for Batista, they say. The end of his power. The
Havana Yacht Club." "Who
told you that story?" "John
O'Brien." Bugai had a chance to look around his desk. "Why is my
intercom on? I thought this was just between you and me." Arkady
motioned Bugai to follow. They walked out of his office and across a floor of
empty desks to Olga Petrovna, who sat in a small workstation that she had tried
to make pleasant with decals and pictures of her granddaughter. A
voice-activated tape recorder sat by her intercom, and behind her stood a
thickset man with the sort of face a person could grind knives on. Olga
Petrovna, as it turned out, had missed Pribluda more rather than less as days
went by, and the mere suggestion from Arkady when he had found her at breakfast
that another Russian had betrayed Pribluda's work was reason enough for her to
introduce Arkady to the chief of embassy guards and set up her tape recorder. "We
were talking in private," Bugai said. Arkady
admitted, "I wasn't being entirely truthful. If I made any other mistakes,
Olga Petrovna was making notes." She
had been. Pribluda's plump pigeon finished with a flourish and lifted to Bugai
a gaze that would have done Stalin proud. There were black angels bearing wreaths
above the Teatro Garcia Lorca. A black bat that roosted on the Bacardi Building.
Then there was the little black jinetera sitting on top of Daysi's
pink casita, which was not much more than a water tower with a coat of
paint. For
hiding out it wasn't such a bad place, nothing but chimney pots and pigeons all
around. Since the water tank had been removed, water had to be hauled up by
pail, but what Ofelia saw of the tower interior was surprisingly roomy, tiles
on the floor, a bed adorned with paper flowers. Teresa had carried a chair and
an illustrated romance up a ladder to the roof. Her knees looked scuffed and
her curly mass of hair was misshapen, lumped to one side. As
Ofelia came up the ladder Teresa squinted down. "You have the
swimsuit?" "I'll
show you." "Don't
I know you from the marina? The Malecуn?" Ofelia
waited until she reached the roof before she lifted her glasses. "The Casa
de Amor." The
scales fell from Teresa's eyes. She looked Ofelia up and down and tabulated the
slim shoes, white rubbery pants, white top, wide Armani dark glasses. She
herself was in the same bedraggled outfit she had been wearing when Ofelia
arrested her. "Puta, look at you. I don't think you dress like
that on a detective's salary, no, no, no. I'm not blind. I know competition
when I see it. That's why you're always after me." Ofelia's
first impulse was to say, "Stupida, there are a thousand girls
just like you in Havana." She looked down to roofs that spread to the sea,
clotheslines bright as paper cutouts. Sparrows scattered by a peregrine. The
pursuit swirled around the capital dome and to the trees of the Prado. Winter
was hawk season in Havana. Instead she said, "Sorry." "Fuck
your 'sorry.' There's no QVC swimsuit, is there?" "No." "This
is funny. I lost my German. I lost my money. You put me on a list of whores. I
can't go back to Ciego de Avila because my family is depending on me to stay
here and send them money, otherwise I would be in a fucking school, like you
say. And now that you have fucked with my life you're a jinetera, too?
That's funny." "You're
not on the list." "I'm
not on the list?" "Not
on the list. I only said that to scare you." "Because
we're competition." "You're
a smart girl." "Fuck
off." Teresa's nose ran, making a wet smear of her upper lip. "Teresa
–" "Leave
me alone. Go the fuck away." Ofelia
couldn't go away. Luna had gone insane at the sight of Arkady at the Centro
Russo-Cubano, but the sergeant had only stuffed her in the car trunk when
cutting her throat would have been as easy. Why? "Sit
down." "Fuck
away." "Sit
down." Ofelia pressed Teresa down onto the chair and moved behind
her. "Stay there." Teresa's
eyes rolled back to follow. "What are you doing?" "Be
still." Ofelia reached into her bag for her new brush and comb and pulled
back the black excelsior of Teresa's hair. "Just sit." Waves,
curls and spit curls close to the scalp and tight as springs would have daunted
Ofelia if Muriel's hair weren't almost as thick. One pull wouldn't do, she had
to firmly feather the hair out, work it loose, put some shape back into it. "You
have to take care of yourself, chica." To
begin with, Teresa submitted with silent grimness, but after a minute her neck
started to roll with the strokes. Hair like this warmed up with brushing,
especially on a hot day, polished up like silver with a little attention. As
Ofelia lifted the hair from the nape of the neck she could feel Teresa soften
to the touch. Fourteen years old? Alone for two days? Frightened for her life?
Even a stray cat needed to be petted. "I
wish I had hair like this. I wouldn't need a pillow." "Everyone
says that," Teresa murmured. "That's
looking better." As
Teresa relaxed, though, her shoulders began to shake. She turned to Ofelia and
revealed her whole face wet with tears. "Now
my face is a mess." "I'll
cheer you up." Ofelia put the brush into her bag. "Let me show you
what else I have." "The
stupid swimsuit?" "Better
than a swimsuit." "A
condom?" "No,
better than that." Ofelia brought out the Makarov 9-mm pistol and let
Teresa hold it. "Heavy." "Yes."
Ofelia took the Makarov back. "I think all women should be issued guns. No
men, just women." "I
bet Hedy wished she had something like this. You know my friend Hedy?" "I'm
the one who found her." "Cono,"
Teresa said more in awe. When
Ofelia put the gun away, she stayed kneeling and lowered her voice as if they
didn't have the whole skyline of Havana to themselves. "I know you're
afraid the same thing is going to happen to you, but I can stop them. You have
an idea who did it or you wouldn't be hiding, no? The question is, who are you
hiding from?" "You
really are police?" "Yes.
And I don't want to find you like I found Hedy." Ofelia let the girl
contemplate that for a moment. "What happened to her protection?" "I
don't know." "The
man who protects you and Hedy, what's his name?" "I
can't say." "You
can't because he's in Minint and you think this will get back to him. If I get
to him first, then you'd be able to leave this roof." Teresa
folded her arms and shivered in spite of the heat. "I didn't really think
some turista was going to come here and marry me. Why would he want to
take home some ignorant black girl? Everyone would make fun of him. 'Hey,
Herman, you didn't have to marry your whore.' I'm not stupid." "I
know." "Hedy
was really nice." "You
know, I think I can still help you. You don't have to say his name. I'll say
his name." "I
don't know." "Luna.
Sergeant Facundo Luna." "I
didn't say that." "You
didn't, I did." Teresa
looked away, as far as the angels that balanced on the theater. A breeze lifted
her hair the same as it seemed to do to the angels'. "He
gets so mad." "He
has a temper, I know. But maybe I can tell you something that can help. Did you
sleep with him?" When Teresa hesitated Ofelia said, "Look me in the
eyes." "Okay,
once. But Hedy was his girl." "When
you slept with him –" "No
details." "One
detail. Did he keep his drawers on?" Teresa
giggled, the first light moment since Ofelia had found her. "Yes." "Did
he say why?" "He
said he just did." "All
the way through?" "The
whole time." "Never
took them off?" "Not
around me." "Did
you ask Hedy about it." "Well."
Teresa bobbed her head from side to side. "Yes. We were really good
friends. He never did with her either." "You
know, chica, it wouldn't be a bad idea to stay here for another day,
but actually I think you're probably pretty safe." "What
about Hedy?" "I'm
going to have to rethink that." As Ofelia gathered her bag and stood she
kissed Teresa on the cheek. "You helped." "It
was nice to talk." "It
was." Ofelia started down the ladder and paused midway. "By the way,
did you know Rufo Pinero?" "A
friend of Facundo's? I met him once. I didn't like him." "Why
not?" "He
had one of those mobile phones. Mr. Big-Time Jinetero, always on it. No time
for me. So you really think I'll be okay?" "I
think so." Because
the question for Ofelia ever since Sergeant Facundo Luna hadn't killed her
right off at the Russian Center was whether he was Abakua. It was hard to say
about a member of a secret society. The PNR had tried to infiltrate the Abakua
and the result was the opposite: the Abakua had penetrated the police,
recruiting the most macho officers, white as well as black. Identifying them
had become an art. An Abakua might hijack a truck from a ministry yard, but he
would not steal even a peso from a friend. Never allowed an insult to go
unanswered. Might murder but never informed. Wore nothing feminine, no
earrings, tight belts or long hair. There was one conclusive identification: an
Abakua never showed his bare behind to anyone. He never pulled his drawers down
even for making love. Ofelia thought of it as a kind of Achilles' ass. One
more thing an Abakua never did. He
never hurt a woman. Chapter Twenty-SixArkady returned to Mongo's room in the back
of what had been Erasmo's boyhood house. An empty house today, enervated by
heat. After a courtesy knock on the door Arkady reached to the upper lip of the
frame and found the key. Not
much had changed in the bedroom since Arkady's first visit. Shutters opened wide
enough to take in the curve of the sea, fishing boats trolling against the
current, neumбticos wallowing in their wake. Not a cloud in the sky or
a wave in the water. Dead still. The coconuts, plastic saints and photographs of
Mongo's favorite fighters were just as Arkady had seen before, and whether a
sheet was tucked in the same manner he couldn't tell, but a different disc
topped the CD stack, and the swim flippers that had hung from a hook on the
wall and the truck inner tube that had been suspended above the bed were both
gone. Arkady returned to the window to see three different groups of neumбticos
listlessly paddling, each group at least five hundred yards apart from the
other. Arkady
went down to the street and walked a block west to a cafй of cement tables set
in the shade of a wall with the sign SIEMPRE –. Siempre something because bougainvillea had taken root
and smeared the rest of the slogan with magenta. Arkady was not surprised that
Mongo would venture out on the water. Mongo was a fisherman. He had probably
been warned away from Erasmo's repair shop while a Russian investigator
occupied the apartment above. Where better to hide than on the water? If he was
out on his tube, sooner or later he would have to come in, somewhere along
Miramar's First Avenue or the Malecуn, too much ground for Arkady to watch. But
it seemed to him that he could lower the odds by remembering that what a man
with an inner tube needed most of all was air. From his table he had a view of
a gas station with two pumps under a canopy styled with a modernistic fin, blue
once, now the off-white found on the lip of a clamshell. It was a station on
his Texaco map. By the office was a faucet and an air hose. Cars
came and went all afternoon, some struggling like lungfish up to the pump and
then crawling away. Neumбticos had to deal with a garage dog that
accepted some and chased away others. Arkady sipped his way through three
Tropicolas and three cafe cubanos, his heart tapping its fingers while
he sat, invisible in the shadow of his coat. Finally a skinny asphalt-black man
approached the station office with an inner tube that was going limp in his
arms. He threw the dog a fish, went into the office and came out a minute later
with a patch he applied to the tube. When he felt the adhesive had set, he
added air to check the repair. His clothes were a green cap, loose running
shoes and the sort of rags a sensible man would choose for floating in the bay.
Balancing the tube with its net and sticks and reels on his head, he lay his
flippers over one shoulder and a string of rainbow-sided fish over the other.
When he saw Arkady cross the intersection, the neumбtico's red,
salt-stung eyes looked for an avenue of escape, and but for his inner tube and
the day's catch, he no doubt could have easily outrun someone in an overcoat. "Ramуn
'Mongo' Bartelemy?" Arkady asked. He thought he was starting to get a grip
on Spanish. "No." "I
think so." Arkady showed Mongo the picture of himself proudly displaying a
fish to Luna, Erasmo and Pribluda. "I also know you speak Russian."It
was worth a stab. "A
little." "You're
not an easy man to find. Join me for a coffee?" The
elusive Mongo had a beer. Crystal beads of sweat covered his face and chest.
His mesh sack of fish lay on the bench beside him. "I
saw a tape of you fighting," Arkady said. "Did
I win?" "You
made it look easy." "I
could move, you know? I could move with anyone, I just didn't like to get
hit," Mongo said, although his nose was splayed enough to suggest he had
been caught a few times. "Then
when they dropped me from the team I was eligible for the army. Oye,
suddenly I was in Africa with Russians. Russians don't know the difference
between an African and a Cuban. You learn Russian fast." Mongo grinned.
"You learn 'Don't shoot, you assholes!'" "Angola?" "Ethiopia." "Demolition?" "No,
I drove an armored personnel carrier. That's how I became a mechanic, keeping
that puta APC alive." "Is
that where you met Erasmo?" "In
the army." "Luna?" Mongo
regarded his large capable hands, callused from drumming and scarred from
barbs. "Facundo I know from way back when he first came from "Baracoa?" "In
the Oriente. He could hit." "He
and Rufo Pinero were friends?" "Claro.
But what they did I didn't know." Mongo shook his head so emphatically his
sweat sprayed. "I didn't want to know." "And
you were Sergei Pribluda's friend?" "Yes." "You
went fishing together?" "Verdad."
"You
taught him how to fish with a kite?" "I
tried." "And
how to be a neumбtico?" "Yes." "And
what is the most important rule a neumбtico has to follow? Never go
out alone at night. I don't think Pribluda went out alone on that Friday two
weeks ago. I think he went out on the water with his good friend Mongo." Mongo
rested his chin on his chest. Sweat poured off the man as if he were a
fountain, not the sweat of fear like Bugai's but sweat that came from the heavy
work of guilt. It was late in the day. Arkady got more beers so Mongo could
sweat some more. "He
said it was like ice fishing for sharks," Mongo said. "He used to
tell me all about ice fishing. He said I should come to Russia and he would
take me ice fishing. I said 'No, thanks, comrade.'" "What
time did you go into the water?" "Maybe
seven. After dark, because he knew how that would draw attention if people saw
a Russian in a tube. Voices travel on water, so even when we were out there he
would whisper." "What
was the weather like?" "Raining.
He still kept his voice low." "Is
that a good time to fish, when it's raining?" "If
the fish are biting." Arkady
considered that fisherman's truth and asked, "Where did you go in?" "West
of Miramar." "Near
the Marina Hemingway?" "Yes." "Whose
idea was that?" "I
always said where we were going to go, except that time. Sergei said he was
tired of Miramar and the Malecуn. Sergei wanted to try somewhere new." "Once
you were in the water you stayed there. Or did you go west? North? East?" "Drifted
like." "East
because that's the way the current runs, by Miramar and the Malecуn and towards
." "Yes." "And,
on the way, the marina? Whose idea was it to go in there?" Mongo
slumped against the wall. "So, you already know." "I
think I do." "We
really fucked up, huh?" Mongo beat nervously on the bench, stilled his
hands and let the rhythm drop. "I said, Sergei, why would we want to fish
in the marina with the guardia to chase us and maybe a boat moving
through? That's an active channel, and it's night and the boats won't see us, I
said, it's crazy. But I couldn't stop him. The guardia was in their
office out of the rain. If you come in close they can't see you anyway, not at
night in a tube. I followed Sergei up the channel, that's all I could do. He
seemed to know where he was going. They have lights there, but they don't reach
down to the water so well. No one was fueling. The disco was shut down because
of the rain. We could hear people at the bar, that's all, and then we were in a
canal where boats were docked one after the other and Sergei headed for this
one I couldn't even see at first, it was so low and dark. Very sleek, an old
boat but fast, you could tell. There were lights in the cabin and Americans on
board, we could hear them but we couldn't see who. Right away, I knew that this
was some kind of business of Sergei's he was getting me into. I told him I was
going, but he wanted to climb up and see who was in the boat, which is
difficult because there is an overhang on the dock. I was leaving when the
lights on the boat went out. My whole body vibrated. Sergei was about five
meters away between the boat and the dock and he was shaking, shaking, shaking.
They let those fucking power leads lie in the water. I couldn't get any closer.
Then I saw flashlights come up on deck and I hid." Mongo nodded in doleful
self-judgment. "I hid. They came up to see if it was just their boat or
everyone and while they talked back and forth to the person in the cabin Sergei
drifted out. He wasn't shaking anymore. They didn't see him and they didn't see
me because I stayed in the dark. "As
soon as his tube's clear, I told myself, I'd pull Sergei over, but before I
could get to Sergei another boat came up the canal. There's not a lot of room.
The boat went by and then Sergei went by. Sometimes, you know, boats trail
tackle in the water, they shouldn't but they do, and Sergei was hooked by the
net of his tube. He went by faster than I could keep up. I knew he was dead by
the way he sat. They went out the canal together, the boat and tube. I knew
once they cleared the guardia dock and opened the throttle they would
feel the line and find Sergei or the hook would cut the net. "Or
maybe they would find Sergei and just cut him loose, because who needs to get
involved with a dead neumбtico, no? That would be a story they could
tell in a bar in Key West about a crazy Cuban they caught one time. I don't
know, I just saw my friend being towed in the dark until I couldn't see him
anymore. By the time I got past the guardia I couldn't even see the
boat." "Did
you see its name?" "No."
Mongo drank the last of his beer and stared at the pail of fish. "I didn't
even do that." "Who
did you tell about this?" "No
one until you showed up. Then I told Erasmo and Facundo because they're my compays,
my good friends." The
water was flat and glassy enough for pelicans to skim their reflection. Despite
the accumulated heat of the day Arkady felt oddly comfortable, balanced by beer
and overcoat. "The
men who came on deck of the boat that lost its power, did you recognize
them?" "No,
I was looking for Sergei or trying to hide." "Did
they have guns?" "You
know," Mongo said, "it doesn't matter. Sergei was dead by then and it
was an accident. He killed himself, I'm sorry." Mongo looked at the fish.
"I have to go keep these fresh. Thanks for the beer." An
accident? After all this? But it made sense, Arkady thought. Not only the heart
attack but the general confusion. Murders had much better cover-ups. Then he
had arrived from Moscow the same time the body was found in the bay. Small
wonder why Rufo had rushed to be his interpreter, and why Luna had been so
badly surprised by the photograph of the Havana Yacht Club. No one had known what
happened to Pribluda. As
Mongo resettled his cap and inner tube on his head, and picked up his flippers
and fish, Arkady thought of Pribluda's tow in his rubbery sleigh out of the
marina to deeper water – the Gulf Stream, O'Brien had said – where he either
tore loose or was cut free by a no doubt exasperated fisherman. "Cubans
are biting tonight!" Would that have been the joke? Then the long journey
in the rain, drifting past Miramar, along the Malecуn to the mouth of the bay,
a "bag bay," as Captain Andres of the good ship Pinguino had
said. Under the beam of the lighthouse on Moro Castle and then a swing toward
the village of Casablanca to gently snag among the nest of plastics, mattresses
and worm-riddled piers, all sheeted by petroleum scum, where a body could
comfortably rest in the rain for weeks. Arkady
took Pribluda's photograph from under his coat and asked, "Who took this
picture?" "Elmar." "Elmar
who?" "Mostovoi,"
Mongo said as if there had been only one photographer in the group. Confession
was always short-lived and always conditional, and both men knew it wasn't as
if Arkady had the authority to question anyone. Just for the sake of a
reaction, though, Arkady read the reverse of the picture. " 'The Havana
Yacht Club.' Does that mean anything to you?" "No." "A
joke?" "No." "A
social club?" "No." "Do
you know what's happening there tonight?" That
was pressing too hard. The elusive Mongo backed into the street and broke into a
gliding sort of trot, a one-man caravan, his headgear undulating with every
step. He slid by a blue wall, pink wall, peach and the shadow of an alley
seemed to reach out and swallow him up. Ofelia had not been at the embassy
apartment since she had seen Rufo spread out on its floor. She remembered the
building's blue walls and Egyptian decoration of lotuses and ankhs, that hint
of the Nile. In the dusk even the car sitting on the porch had some of the
silent grandeur of a sphinx in residence. Flecks of paint made a red skirt
around the car. Salt pitted once proud chrome, windows were open to the
elements, upholstery cracked and split and the hood ornament was missing, but
hadn't the sphinx itself lost a nose? And although they sat on wooden blocks
the wheels were caked in grease, a promise that someday this beast would cough
and rise again. Ofelia
was looking for Rufo's phone. Arkady had said that in Moscow a hustler like
Rufo would have as likely stepped out of his house without a leg as without a
cell phone. If this were a real investigation she could have taken a laundry
list of names associated with Rufo to CubaCell and worked backward from their
calls. Instead, she'd have to find the phone itself. It was somewhere. For
killing someone with a knife, work that could get messy, Rufo had taken the
precaution of changing shoes and wearing over his clothes a one-piece silvery
running suit; Goretex let in the air, kept out the blood. Likewise, cell phones
were delicate, dollars-only items, not something a careful man placed in harm's
way. Rufo thought ahead, the trick was to think like him. The
door knocker to the ground-floor apartment was answered by a white woman in a
drab housedress and flamboyantly coiffed and hennaed hair. Half the women in
Havana, it seemed to Ofelia, spent their lives getting ready for a party that
never happened. In turn, the woman made a sour study of Ofelia's jinetera
gear until presented with a PNR badge. "Figures,"
the woman said. "I'm
here to see the murder scene upstairs. Do you have a key?" "No.
You can't go in there anyway. That's Russian property, no one can go in. Who
knows what they're doing?" "Show
me." The
woman led the way in slippers that snapped against the stairs. The lock on the
apartment door was shiny and new even in the poor light of the hall. Ofelia
remembered making a search of the sitting room, pulling out Fidel y Arte
and other books, a sofa and sideboard, performing a more hurried look into the
other rooms for fear that the confrontation between Luna and the Russian would
get out of hand. There was a chance the phone was inside the embassy apartment,
but not likely. She reached on tiptoe to the dark underside of the stairs above
for any ledge that Rufo could have set the phone on. No. "You
didn't find anything here?" Ofelia asked. "There's
nothing to find. The Russians don't put anyone there for weeks at a time. Good
riddance." As
Ofelia went back down the stairs she let her hand trail on the risers above.
She stepped out onto the porch with nothing but a dirty hand. "I
told you," the woman said. "You
were right." The woman was starting to remind Ofelia of her mother. "You're
the second one." "Oh?
Who else?" "A
big negro from the Ministry of Interior. Really black. He looked
everywhere. He had a phone, too. He called on it and didn't speak and just
listened, but not to the phone, understand?" Naturally,
Ofelia thought, because Luna was calling Rufo's number and was trying to hear
it ring. That was the trouble with trying to hide a phone, sooner or later
someone would call the number and the phone would announce itself. "Did
he find anything?" "No.
Don't you people work together? You're like everything else in this country.
Everything has to be done twice, no?" Ofelia
walked out to the middle of the street. It was a block of old town houses
transformed by revolution, idealism followed by fatigue and lack of paint and
plaster. One front yard a parking lot for bicycles, another an open-air beauty
salon. Collapsing buildings but busy as a hive. She
tried to imagine a reconstruction of the facts. The same street late at night.
Arkady upstairs, Rufo outside in his freshly donned running suit, improvising
on the run because no one had expected the arrival of a Russian investigator.
Perhaps even placing one last call before he went into the house and up the
steps to what he assumed would be the Russian's doom. Between the two corners
of the block, where was the most likely place for Rufo to put, just for a few
minutes, his precious phone? Ofelia
remembered Maria, the police car and Rufo's cigars. She returned to the porch. "Whose
car is this?" "My
husband's. He went to get some windows for the car, and the next thing I know I
got a letter from Miami. I'm keeping the car till he gets back." "Chevrolet?" "'57,
the best year. I used to get in and pretend Ruperto and I were driving to Playa
del Este, a nice cruise to the beach. I haven't done that for a long
time." "Car
windows are hard to find." "Car
windows are impossible to find." The
upholstery was more a rat's nest than seats. From her bag Ofelia took a pair of
surgical gloves. "Do you mind?" "Mind
what?" With
gloves on, Ofelia reached through the open window and opened the glove
compartment. Within was a wooden cigar box with a broken Montecristo seal of
crossed swords. Inside the box were ten aluminum cigar tubes and an Ericson
cell phone set on vibrate instead of ring. Ofelia
heard a click and looked through the car at a man taking her picture
from the sidewalk. He was a large, middle-aged man with a camera bag over a
shoulder and the sort of vest with many pockets that photographers wore, all
topped by an artistic beret. "I'm
sorry," he said, "you just looked beautiful in that old wreck of a
car. Do you mind? Most women don't mind if I photograph them – in fact, they
rather like it. The light is awful but you looked so perfect. Do you think we
could talk?" Ofelia
put the phone in the cigar box and the box and gloves in her bag before she
straightened out. "What about?" "About
life, about romance, about everything." Despite his size he made a show of
coming shyly through the gate. His Spanish was fluent, with a Russian accent.
"Arkady sent me. Even so, I'm a great admirer of Cuban women." • • • Arkady didn't set anything on fire at
the Sierra Maestra and didn't knock on Mostovoi's door. Instead he inserted the
credit card into the jamb the moment he arrived and hit the door with a grunt
that took the breath out of a watching toddler. Inside, Arkady looked to see
whether the "greatest demolition team in Africa" was still the
centerpiece of the wall. It was. On
his first visit he had gone to pains to make sure Mostovoi wouldn't notice that
he'd had any guests. This time Arkady didn't care. Where there was one
photograph of the Havana Yacht Club there were bound to be more, because a man
who documented his greatest moments didn't destroy his pictures when the wrong
company came – he just put them out of sight. Arkady
took off his coat to work. He emptied shoe boxes and suitcases, spilled book
and kitchen shelves, upended files and drawers, pulled the refrigerator from
the wall and tipped over chairs until he had discovered more photographs,
pornography that was not so sporty and not so sweet, and videotapes of sex and
leather. But everybody had a side business, everyone had a second job. All
Arkady really produced was the sweat on his face. He
visited the bathroom to wash up. The walls were tiled and the medicine-cabinet
mirror was half silvered, half black. Inside the cabinet were a couple of
nostrums, hair elixirs and recreational amounts of amyl nitrate and
amphetamines. As he dried his hands he noticed that the shower curtain was
closed. People with small bathrooms usually kept their curtains drawn for the
illusion of space or a childish fear of what was on the other side. Since that
was an anxiety Arkady freely admitted to, he pulled the curtain wide. Floating
in the tub in ten centimeters of water were four black-and-white photographs
not of nubile sports or foreign travels but of the dead Italian and Hedy. Blood
showed as black and the carpet and sheets were soaked and striped. The Italian
looked almost gilled from machete wounds. Arkady didn't know him, but he did
recognize Hedy even if her head balanced precariously on her shoulders. At
first Arkady thought that Mostovoi had gotten hold of police photographs, but
of course these pictures had just been developed and none of the usual evidence
markers had been laid, no shoe tips of detectives trying to stay out of the
camera's way, and the darkness of the shadows themselves suggested that no
other source of illumination had been on. The photographer had worked alone in
a dark room the night before Ofelia arrived, and real skill must have been
required just to estimate the focus. He'd only chanced four shots or only developed
four from a roll. A single shot of the Italian as he dragged himself, still
alive, toward the door. More thought had gone into the pictures of Hedy. A low
shot from between her legs up to her head. A second that framed her head
between deflated breasts. A third just of Hedy's face, surprise still fresh in
her eyes. The man with the camera had been unable to resist marking the moment,
thrusting his tubular white wrist and hand into the sheen of her curls to
improve the pose. Chapter Twenty-SevenBy eight o'clock the Marina Hemingway had
the social hum of a small village at night. Younger crew, an international
set with stringy blond hair, spread out in front of the market or carried bags
from the ice bunker. From the far end came the amplified pulse of a disco,
glitter and sound reflected in the canals. Overhead an edge of the moon burned
through the electric haze of the marina. He didn't see Ofelia but she tended to
be fanatically good to her word. The
Alabama Baron was gone, replaced by a launch so new it smelled of
plastic. Already ensconced in its cabin was a jinetera mixing rum and
Coke. Ahead, George Washington Walls and John O'Brien were having beers in the
cockpit of the Gavilan, firebrand and financier at their ease. The new
lead from the power box snaked smoothly down to the water and up the dark flank
of the seaplane tender. "You're
here." Walls looked up at Arkady. "Right
on time, too," O'Brien said. "Wonderful. Back into your cashmere
coat, I see. Join us." "I
have a plane to catch. You said we were going to talk about Pribluda." "A
plane to catch?" O'Brien said. " That is sad. This means you are
turning down the chance to be part of our endeavor? I have always counted
myself as fairly persuasive. Apparently with you I've failed." "The
man is a disappointment," Walls said. "That's what Isabel says." "Arkady,
I was hoping to persuade you because I sincerely thought it was for your own
good. I had looked forward to working with you. Come on, have a drink for God's
sake. We'll have an Irish good-bye. Your plane's at midnight?" "Yes." Walls
said, "You've got hours." Arkady
stepped out of the light and down into the boat, settling against a cockpit
cushion. Instantly a cold can of beer was in his hand. At night the boat seemed
to ride even lower, the polished mahogany dark as the water. O'Brien
said, "You're taking back the body of your friend Pribluda? That means
you've positively identified him?" "No." "Because
you don't need to anymore, you already know." "I
think so." "Well,
that's a comfort. Your decision to go is final? What we can do" – O'Brien
tapped Arkady's knee – "is give you a return ticket. Take a week in
Moscow, in that miserable ice chest you call home, and if you change your mind
come back. Is that fair?" "More
than fair, but I think I've made up my mind." "Why?"
Walls asked. O'Brien
said, "Because he found what he came for, I suppose. Is that it,
Arkady?" "Pretty
much." "To
a single-minded man." O'Brien raised his beer. "To the man in the
coat." The
beer was good, far better than Russian. On the dock a line of jineteras
slipped quietly as mice toward the disco, lamplight haloing their hair. It was
Saturday night, after all. The salsa accelerated. Walls balanced on the
captain's chair in a black pullover that reminded Arkady of the sleek young
radical who had stepped out of a plane with a gun and a burning flag. O'Brien
wore his black jumpsuit. Pirate colors. He unwrapped a cigar and turned its tip
over a flame, drawing it in. The boats in their slips sighed as a ripple of
water lifted them. O'Brien
said, "You know what happened to Pribluda, but you don't know why? And I'm
the only one who hasn't had a say?" "You
say a lot, but it's different every time." "Then
I won't tell you, I'll show you. See that sea-bag?" Although
the cabin was dark, Arkady saw one end of a canvas bag in the light at the
bottom of the steps. "Sergei's,"
Walls said. Arkady
was nearest. He put down the beer and went down the cabin stairs. As he picked
up the bag the door shut and locked behind him. The inboard engine started in
the space ahead, producing a reverberation like being inside a double bass.
Overhead, feet nimbly stepped fore and aft, releasing lines and gathering
fenders. The Gavilan backed, swung and eased forward. As the boat
passed the disco, laughter and strobe lights flickered on the curtains. Canal
echo dropped behind, and Arkady heard Walls talking on the radio. Arkady beat
on the door more for form than conviction; a boat as classic as this was built
of hardwood. He moved around a galley table to an engine-room door that was
locked as well. He pulled aside a porthole curtain just in time to see the guardia
dock slide by with no sign yet that Ofelia had raised an alarm. Past the dock
the brass bow of the Gavilan sliced its way so smoothly Arkady felt no
more than the faintest rise and fall, headed directly to sea by the evenness of
wave slap. Along Fifth Avenue were the first signs
of a major event: brigada trucks of huddled Interior troops parked in the
night dark of side streets, motorcycle policemen in white helmets and spurred
boots straddling their bikes, K9 units sniffing the crowd that filed up the
driveway of the Construction Union House, the former Havana Yacht Club.
Ofelia's PNR badge didn't work, but Mostovoi somehow produced a pass that let
them through. There were telltale signs that the Noche Folklorica was a more
important event than she had expected. A feature of national security was that
no one ever knew which of his residences the Comandante would sleep in, let
alone what functions he would attend. However, when he did appear certain
precautions were always taken. Tracks led on the lawn to seven armored
Mercedes, an ambulance, a radio command truck, a media van, two dog vans, a
circle of soldiers and a cordon of men in shirts and windbreakers holding
newspapers folded over cell phones and radios and standing around for no
apparent purpose until a guest deviated from the driveway. The house's two
grand stairways met at a central porch. From there, under the molding of a
ship's wheel on a pennant, soldiers scanned the crowd, although this was not,
to Ofelia, a group that was likely to get out of hand. Some officially approved
Santeria priests were on hand, but mostly she saw stiff ministry and military
types and their spouses following the designated route around the mansion to
the oceanfront side. The occasional man was patted down or a woman stopped to
have her purse searched, but Mostovoi and Ofelia were waved through, and
despite his camera bag the photographer pushed so quickly through the crowd she
could barely keep up. "Why
would Arkady want to meet here?" Ofelia demanded. "How would he even
get in?" "He's
been here before," Mostovoi said. " He gets around." The
Noche Folklorica was an event Arkady had asked about, Ofelia knew. If he had
changed his mind about talking to O'Brien and Walls, that was just as well. She
saw the colors of dancers sequestered behind spiky palms: blue for Yemaya,
yellow for Oshun. Spaced along the beach were soldiers. Tied to the end of the
dock was a black patrol boat. All the light and all the sound was concentrated
on an outdoor stage facing the water. The
Noche Folklorica had already begun, and from the clubhouse balconies men in
plain clothes scanned the crowd. Most people stood on the patio around the
stage, but there was also a reviewing stand with five tiers of special guests.
She knew only the figure in the middle of the front row, a man with a flat,
nearly Greek profile set in wiry gray hair and beard, the face that was the
second sun of her lifetime. Beside him was an empty chair. • • • The doors opened and O'Brien peeked
through to say, "Come on. It's too lovely a night to miss." Arkady
marched up. This far out the cockpit sat under a canopy of stars. Walls steered
parallel to the shore, running at dead slow. Besides his cigar O'Brien also
held, casually but not negligently, a pistol with a barrel extended by a
silencer. The marina had passed from sight, but approaching on the Miramar
shore was a far brighter nexus of excitement and music. Arkady recognized the
Havana Yacht Club brilliant in floodlights. On the patio leading down to the
beach a crowd surrounded a stage and reviewing stand. Along
with floodlights the Yacht Club displayed the colored lights of carnival,
although the club's twin docks were empty and only a black patrol boat had tied
up to enjoy the spectacle. As the Gavilan drew closer Walls slipped
forward to snap covers over the running lights and John O'Brien dropped his
cigar into the water. "Quite
a show." He handed Arkady a set of heavy binoculars. "Now your trip
to The
glasses were 20x Zeiss with a matte metal body, and through them the scene at
the Yacht Club meters leaped into view. Spectators filled two levels of the
patio. A troupe of women in yellow scarves and skirts ascended the stage while
a band filled the time with a percussive rhythm, whistles, bells clearly
audible even from the Gavilan. Arkady zoomed in on the reviewing
stand, on a tall man with aviator glasses, Erasmo's friend, the same man who
had raised a toast to the Havana Yacht Club at the Angola paladar the
night before. Arkady ran the glasses along the other seated guests. In the
front row's places of honor were an empty chair and a man with a gray beard who
looked as if he had been big once but had since shrunk into a stiff green shell
of ironed fatigues. He had the abstracted expression of an old man regarding a
thousand grandchildren whose names he could no longer keep track of. Arkady
went back to the patrol boat. By now, Ofelia ought to have communicated with
someone, and although the Gavilan ran low in the water Arkady assumed
it appeared on the patrol boat's radar. Whether or not Ofelia had made contact,
the Gavilan was within four hundred meters of the stage. Either the
patrol boat at the dock would come out to inspect the Gavilan or
another patrol boat was closing from a different direction. Arkady was
surprised that the Gavilan hadn't been challenged already by radio. O'Brien
said, "The marvelous thing about you, Arkady, is that you're both suicidal
and insatiably curious. 'What' isn't good enough for you, you have to know the
'why.' When you came out to the boat you had to know something like this was
going to happen, but you had to see." "And
then maybe fuck us up," Walls said. "Go out in a blaze of
glory." "Or
leave a message behind," O'Brien said. "Look on the beach to the left
of the stage." Arkady
swung his glasses and saw Ofelia work her way from the spectators. He'd missed
her when she was in the crowd. A PNR shield was pinned to her white halter. He
waited for her to move toward the patrol boat or the stage. Instead, she moved
in the opposite direction. At her side, being helpful, was Mostovoi, a camera
bag swinging from his shoulder. "What
do you want?" Arkady asked. "I
have what I want," O'Brien said. Walls
nudged Arkady. "You're missing the show." Arkady
swung his glasses to the reviewing stand and saw the man in aviator glasses
carry a man-sized doll with a cane and a red bandanna down to the chair in the
front row, where a drummer helped make the doll sit up, its face turned toward
the man on its right. Chango and the Comandante. Arkady focused on the doll's
bandanna and walking stick, different from the ones he had left on a doll's
body at the Rosita. The Comandante returned the doll's gaze at first, then
looked up and joked with his friend in the aviator glasses, who laughed and
retreated from the stage to the side of the stands, where he was joined in the
crowd by Dr. Blas, too energetic to stay in the shadows any longer. Arkady
refocused on Chango, on the doll's roughly molded head, patched and repainted,
with the same glittering eyes. "This
is murder," Arkady said. "Not
just murder, please," O'Brien begged, "This is the elimination of an
individual who has survived more assassination attempts than anyone else in
history." "That
demands respect right there," said Walls. "And
let's admit it," O'Brien said, "the death of this man is the only
crime down here of any interest. You can steal five dollars or a million, it's
still petty crime while he's alive. Because you can't leave with it and
essentially it's all his." "You
can stop," Arkady said. "You haven't done anything violent with your own
hands yet. I know Pribluda's death was an accident." "See,
we told you we never touched him," Walls said. "We had no idea where
Sergei disappeared to." "But
we couldn't stop now," said O'Brien. "In the last forty years only
one generation of Cubans has tasted independent thought, one group has
experienced command on the battlefield and operated in the greater world. There
are two hundred forty generals in the Cuban army, and the army is getting
smaller and smaller. Where do you think they're going to go, what do you think
they're going to do? This is their prime, their window of opportunity." "Their
time to throw the dice?" "Yes." "And
they all ordered lobster." O'Brien
gave Arkady an appreciative smile and lifted his own pair of binoculars.
"That's right, very good. That was the vote. They all wanted in." The
pageant had begun again. Golden skirts and brown legs obscured the guest of
honor in his front-row seat. His green cap seemed to weigh as heavily on him as
a bishop's miter. Chango's roughly molded face was slightly cocked, glass eyes
bright in the lights. At the side of the stage the man in aviator glasses
reached down to shake someone's hand. Erasmo. Appearing gravely pale and weary,
the mechanic lifted his eyes toward the Gavilan, although Arkady knew
the boat had to be invisible from shore. More
figures slipped out of the back rows of the reviewing stand; Arkady recognized
them all from the paladar Angola. The front rows appeared mesmerized
by swirling skirts, the insinuating pace of the drums booming from speakers,
echoing off the clubhouse. Chango's head listed heavily to the bearded man on
his right. "This Side to Enemy," Arkady thought. No doubt the man's
uniform fit as badly as it did in part because of an armored vest, which would
stop a small-caliber bullet but not a shaped charge of dynamite. No shards or
ball bearings, Arkady guessed. They didn't want a general slaughter, just an
effective circle of impact, and who more expert with explosions than Erasmo? He
swung the glasses and found Ofelia and Mostovoi going in a completely different
direction, working their way far from the stage and along the sand to a white
wall that separated the grounds of the Havana Yacht Club from the neighboring
beach. Arkady saw Mostovoi check his watch. "It's La Concha, the old
casino," Mostovoi said. "I consider it one of the most romantic
settings in He
ran his hand up a column. For all the police and military presence on the other
side of the beach wall, Ofelia and Mostovoi had this area entirely to
themselves. It was now the social center for a catering union, but she
remembered that before the Revolution it had been not only a casino but a
Moorish fantasy, with a minaret, date palms and orange trees, tiled roof.
Ofelia and the Russian stood in the long shadow of a colonnade of horseshoe
arches. The fact that she had followed Mostovoi didn't mean she trusted him.
For all his assurances there was a shiftiness about him. His beret shifted, his
hair shifted and his eyes seemed to be over everything, especially her. She
wouldn't have spent a minute with him except for the fact that he claimed to
know where Arkady wanted to meet her. "First
one place, then another? Why would he come here?" "You'll
have to ask him that. Do you mind if I take a picture of you?" "Now?" "While
we're waiting. I think that Cuban women are nature's children. The eyes, the
warm color, a lushness that can be almost too overripe at times. Not you,
though." "Where
and when exactly is Arkady coming?" "Right
here. Who can say exactly when with Renko?" Mostovoi unzipped his bag for
a camera and a flash unit that he tightened into the camera shoe. The unit made
a warm-up whine. "No
pictures." Ofelia wanted to keep eyes adjusted to the night sky, the arc
of sand, the dark of the water. The last thing she needed was a flash.
"You keep looking at your watch." "For
Arkady." The
white light blinded her. She was unprepared because Mostovoi shot without
raising the camera and she saw nothing but a fixed image of flash unit's
faceted lens and the photographer's smirk until she blinked her way back to
normal. "If
you do that again," she said, "I will break your camera. "Sorry,
I couldn't resist." "Was that a signal?" Arkady
noticed that with the flash from the casino Walls eased the throttle forward,
bringing the Gavilan even closer to the beach. Why wasn't the patrol
boat at the dock responding? Walls
said, "When my friend John O'Brien plans something the i's are dotted and the t's are
crossed." "Thank
you, George. The devil, as they say, is in the details. Speaking of
whom..." Ahead
in the water was a neumбtico with a hand shielding a candle. As Walls slowed
the boat to idle again, the neumбtico snuffed the flame with his
fingers, spun his tube and paddled backward to the stern of the Gavilan,
where Walls helped him on board and tied the tube to a transom cleat. Luna
stood dripping in the cockpit. Wet, he had the dank look of a body disinterred
and he stared at Arkady with anticipation. "Now
you'll know what it feels like," Luna promised. "What
feels like?" "I'm
sorry, Arkady," O'Brien said. "It's time to give up the coat now. In
fact, everything. You can do it yourself or we can do it for you." While
Walls took the coat and the rest of Arkady's clothing, too, Luna went below to
change clothes, a modesty that surprised Arkady. The sergeant reappeared in
uniform swollen with a menace kept in thin control, and Arkady wondered how he
had ever managed to throw Luna into a wall. He was, himself, past lifting
weights or fattening up. Then it was Arkady's turn to put on Luna's sodden
shorts and shirt. Up to the point of pulling on flippers Arkady considered himself
relatively safe because they were so difficult to put on the feet of a dead
man. With the flippers on he felt both unsafe and ridiculous. Still, a patrol
boat had to be coming. Holding
the binoculars by the strap, O'Brien returned them to Arkady. "See how it
ends." Onstage,
a melee of golden dancers moved to a quickening pace. Daughters of Oshun,
Arkady thought. Well, he'd learned that much. It wouldn't be a detonation set
by a timer, he thought, because there were too many variables in public events.
The back two rows of the stands had thinned out. Erasmo backed his wheelchair
from the stage. An ecstasy in rays of sweat flew from the dancers. Chango
leaned. By the side of the stage a dozen men looked at their watches. In the
front row, the leader himself and Chango seemed to look straight through the
frenzy of the dancers. How the dancers could turn faster Arkady didn't know,
but they did, their golden skirts spread and spinning at the runaway pace of
the congas. He braced for the flare of explosion. Instead,
plainclothes men started to appear. They came in pairs, quietly taking away the
man in aviator glasses, Blas and, one by one, the other men Arkady recognized
from the paladar. Each man reacted with the same sequence of surprise,
bafflement and resignation. Their military training showed. No one ran or
called out at the moment of his arrest. Arkady looked for Erasmo being wheeled
away. Instead, Erasmo seemed to be in charge of this new phase. Hardly anyone
else in the audience seemed to notice, fixed as they were on blurred hands on
drums and the golden skirts of sensuous Yemayas, every eye transfixed except
for the old man in too much uniform in the front row. He dropped his head by
small degrees until Arkady realized that under the bill of his cap the nation's
leader was checking his own watch. "He
knew," Arkady said. "He knew about the plot." "Much
better," O'Brien said. " He helped start it. He does it every few
years to weed out malcontents. The same as he did with Isabel's father. The
Comandante didn't last this long by waiting for a conspiracy to come for
him." "Erasmo
helped, too?" "In
spite of himself, Erasmo is a Cuban patriot." "You
took care of the details?" "More
than mere details." "The
talk about the Havana Yacht Club?" "All
true to a degree. The fact is, Arkady, revolutions are chancy things, you never
know how they're going to turn out. I prefer to bet with the house, whoever the
house is. The glasses?" He took the binoculars from Arkady by the strap
and lowered them into a plastic Ziploc bag, which he placed in the seabag that
was supposedly Pribluda's. "There's nothing trickier than an
assassination, especially an assassination that's not supposed to succeed. You
have to keep the means and trigger of destruction in your own hands. And you have
to undermine the conspirators in the public eye. These are highly regarded men,
military heroes. It helps paint them black if the man who actually tries to set
off the blast isn't Cuban at all but a generally unpopular figure as, say, a
Russian. A dead Russian, to be precise." Walls
and O'Brien weren't just waiting to explain how brilliant they were, Arkady
knew. There was more to come. Luna opened a cockpit bench to take out a
speargun. He placed the butt against his hip, cocked the power bands and slid
into the muzzle a shaft with a spearhead with folded wings for barbs. No patrol
boat, Arkady understood, was on the way. "Why
would anyone connect me to the blast?" Walls
held up another Ziploc bag so that Arkady could see inside a television remote
control. "Remember the monitor you turned on for John at the O'Brien
answered his cell phone. Arkady hadn't heard a ring. After a word of
satisfaction, O'Brien folded the phone up. Luna
fished in the pockets of Arkady's coat and found the snapshot of Pribluda,
Mongo and Erasmo. "Fuck your He
tore the picture into pieces that he threw onto the water. He kicked the inner
tube off the transom after the bits of paper. "Get
in." Standing at the carved doors of the old
gambling hall, Ofelia caught the button tones and soft fluorescence of
Mostovoi's cell phone. The call was over in a second. "Who
did you call?" "Friends.
Have you ever posed?" "What
friends?" "At
the embassy. I explained that I was helping somebody, which I certainly am
trying to do. I meant it about posing." "For
what?" "Something
different." Her
attention was half on Mostovoi talking to her in the dark interior of the hall
and half on the pale strand of the beach. Music played on the other side of the
beach wall. A rumba for Yemaya. "How
different?" "I
mean very different." She
couldn't tell what was in the room, but its large space magnified sound, and
she heard Mostovoi swallow in a way she found unpleasant. All she could see of
him was the oily eye of his camera and she talked mainly to keep track of him. "What
was in this room?" He
slipped sideways from the moonlight at the door. "What
was here? It was the main casino. Chandeliers from Italy, tiles from Spain.
Roulette tables, craps, blackjack. It was a different world." "Well,
no one's here now." "I
know what you mean. You think maybe Renko went to the plane?" Would
Arkady do that? she wondered. Slip away without a word? It was one of the
things men did best. They didn't need planes, they just disappeared. Her mother
could count them: Primero, Segundo and now Tercero. Blas would deliver
Pribluda's body to the airport. Arkady still might wander in like a beachcomber
or stroll down the portal of arches that framed the sea, but it was more likely
with every minute that he had accomplished the classic retreat, the exit with
no good-bye. She felt profoundly stupid. "I
could see you in any number of poses," Mostovoi said. But
she thought about Arkady's black coat and decided, no, his problem was that he
abandoned no one. One way or another, he was going to come. "There
in the moonlight," Mostovoi said, "is perfect." Ofelia
heard the shutter of his camera click, although the flash failed. She heard two
more rapid clicks before she realized they weren't from a shutter but from a
hammer on the empty breech of a gun. She tried to dig her own gun out of her
straw bag, but it was under Rufo's phone. The hammer clicked again. When Ofelia
found her own gun, it was tangled with straw. She fired one wild round that
exploded the bottom of the bag. Something crushed the plaster wall by her ear.
She dropped to her back and held her gun with both hands more deliberately. Her
second shot through the bag lit Mostovoi, a flash of him swinging his gun down
like a club. The third tunneled into his mouth. Arkady floated in the tube on a short
rope from the stern of the Gavilan. The Caribbean was warm, the net a
hammock, the rubber tube actually cushy, but he felt as if he were looking up
from the bottom of a well at O'Brien, Walls with the gun and Luna with the
spear-gun. They blocked the stars. Arkady would have liked to think at least he
was stalling. No, they were only waiting, having outthought and outmuscled him
all the way. One stunning accomplishment: he not only found out how Pribluda
was duped but got to be the dupe too. Finally a neumбtico himself. Their
heads lifted at the sound of gunshots. Walls
said, "The son of a bitch was supposed to use a silencer." "And
why three shots?" asked O'Brien. A
cell-phone tone came from Luna's shirt pocket. He flipped the phone open and
answered. As he listened he turned toward the beach. "Who
is it?" Walls said. "It's
her, the detective." O'Brien followed Luna's eyes' turn to the casino; it
really was wonderful to see how quickly the man calculated, Arkady thought.
"She got Mostovoi's phone. Or Rufo's, and she's using the memory."
O'Brien told Luna, "Hang up." Luna
raised the speargun for quiet and pressed the phone tight against his ear. "Take
the phone from him," O'Brien told Walls. Luna
pointed the spear at Arkady. "She says he never harmed Hedy. You told me
he came looking for me. What she says is he wasn't after me at all." "How
does she know?" Walls said. "The
night someone killed Hedy, she says he was with her." "She's
lying," Walls said. "They sleep together." "That's
why I believe her. I know her and she knows me. Who hurt my Hedy?" "Do
you believe this?" O'Brien appealed to Arkady as one sane man to another.
"George, will you please take his fucking phone away?" "Your
stupid Hedy," Walls told Luna, "was a whore." The
speargun jumped and a steel shaft with a line of white nylon stuck out of
Wall's stomach. When he looked down blood under pressure sprayed his face. "George,"
O'Brien said. Walls
sat down on the gunwale, raised his gun and shot Luna, who took a single
backward step before moving forward. As Walls tried for another clear shot the
two men fell over the side. Arkady
began climbing out of the tube. On deck O'Brien had pulled the second speargun
from the cockpit bench and was trying to insert the spear and pull back the two
stiff elastic power bands, not an easy task at the best of times, worse
standing amid loose spear cable and blood on the deck. But as Arkady came up
over the transom O'Brien managed to notch one band and pull the gun's trigger,
and Arkady found himself on his back in the water, a spear through his forearm
and the spearhead lodged shallowly in his chest, the spear's force spent on his
arm. Spear cable led back to O'Brien, who had one tasseled shoe on the transom
and was already, Arkady could tell, calculating ten or eleven moves ahead. With
his free hand Arkady yanked the cable. O'Brien dropped the speargun overboard,
but the line that tangled around his ankle stretched him over the polished
mahogany. Arkady pulled with both hands and O'Brien slid all the way over the
stern and in. O'Brien
shouted, "I can't swim!" The
Gavilan was low-slung enough for O'Brien to try to claw his way back
on, but Arkady towed him by the line away from the boat. O'Brien turned to the
inner tube, but his splashing chased the tube more than it closed the distance.
The speargun floated, but not enough to hold up a man. The
spear tip's wings had spread outside the muscle of Arkady's chest. He closed
them under the spear's sliding collar and drew the shaft from the arm while it
was numb. With his good arm he swam underwater. The sea was a cave around a
quarter-moon with glints of fish. On the other side of the boat Walls and Luna
still struggled, trying to climb over each other to the surface. Bubbles
streaked from Walls's gun. Luna had wrapped the spear line around the other
man's neck. Arkady came up for air and made his way back around the stern of
the Gavilan. No more than a meter away the top of O'Brien's head
bobbed in the water. The
patrol boat hadn't moved, although Arkady saw lights along the casino beach.
The Yacht Club was still bright. He
could haul himself onto the Gavilan, but at this point Arkady was
happy to rest, watch the stars swarm overhead and float on a blackness that
held him up. Chapter Twenty-EightSnow fell again in April, enough to dust
the streets and spiral in confusion around the intersections. Trucks
hunched along the embankment road with lights on, a winter habit dying as hard
as winter itself. Arkady
had left the prosecutor's office and walked down to the embankment hoping to
find fresher air along the river, but there really was no escaping the
pollution, the usual pall mixed with snow into a sharp, urban brew. Streetlamps
were on and pools of light swayed overhead, tugged this way and that by the
wind. Buildings along this stretch of Frunzenskaya were an institutional
yellow, etchings of themselves behind lines of snow. The river, choked with
water and ice, ground against stone walls. He'd
gone a block before he realized that a man in a wheelchair was catching up with
him at a determined pace. Not an easy task in such weather, he thought, with
the wheels of the chair slipping on the slick pavement and detouring around the
bodies in bedrolls who had taken up residence along the embankment. Arkady had
stepped aside for the chair to pass when he saw who it was. "Spring
in the Arctic." Erasmo was packed into a parka, ski cap, damp leather
gloves. He brushed snow off his beard and watched his breath with disgust. "How
can you stand it?" "You
keep moving." Erasmo
looked massive in the parka and vibrantly healthy as only Cubans could in
Moscow. When he offered his hand, Arkady waited until it dropped. "What
are you doing here?" Arkady asked. "Renegotiating
the sugar contract." "Of
course." "Don't
be that way," Erasmo said. "I'm in "Come
on, then, I'll give you the Russian perspective." Arkady went at a slower
pace while Erasmo rolled at his side. " '98 Jaguar, a banker who flies
dollars out of Moscow in a Gulfstream jet. '91 Mercedes, a deputy minister or
lesser mafioso. That homeless man under the streetlamp, well, he may be
harmless or he might be an intelligence officer, you never know." "Of
course I was," Erasmo said. "Where else would we let a Russian spy
live except over a spy of our own? It's elemental. I tried to warn you off at
the graveyard. At the restaurant I told you to drop it. After you found Mongo
you could have stopped." "No." "There's
never any reasoning with you, no middle ground. How is the arm?" "Nothing
broken, thank you. It's my Cuban tattoo." "I
almost didn't recognize you. Here you are in a parka like me. What happened to
the wonderful coat?" "It
is a wonderful coat, but I decided I was wearing it out. I still wear it on
special occasions." "Well,
you're still alive, that's the main thing." "No
thanks to you. Why did you do it, Erasmo? Why lead your friends into a trap?
What happened to my intrepid hero of Angola?" "I
had no choice. After all, the officers were already plotting. When the threat
is from men I served with and loved, I mitigate the damage, channel them and do
as little harm as possible. At least no one was killed." "No
one?" "Very
few. O'Brien and Mostovoi did some things I knew nothing about." "But
you tossed me to them like bait." "Well,
you proved to be more than just bait. Poor Bugai." "He's
still alive." "For
God's sake, do you have a cigarette?" The
snow was thicker. Arkady put his back to the wind, lit a couple of cigarettes
and gave one to Erasmo, who inhaled and coughed at the insult to his lungs. He
took in a wider scope of the street to include figures stirring the flakes with
brooms. "Russian women. Remember that day we drove the Jeep down the
Malecуn?" "Of
course." "How
long do you think that's going to last? Not very. You know, sometime we're
going to look back at the Special Period and say, well, it was a ridiculous mess
but it was Cuban. It was the sunset, the last Cuban age. Miss it?" They
had come to a halt under a lamp. Flakes sparkled on Erasmo's beard and brows. "How
is Ofelia?" Arkady said. "I tried to reach her through the PNR and
there was no reply. I don't have a home address for her. That night they just
wrapped up my arm, threw some clothes on me and put me on the plane with
Pribluda. I never saw her." "And
you won't. Keep in mind, Arkady, you left a lot of confusion behind you.
Detective Osorio will be kept busy for quite a while. But she sent this."
Erasmo removed his gloves and felt inside his parka until he pulled out a color
snapshot of Ofelia. She was in an orange two-piece on a beach with her two
girls and a tall, light-brown, handsome man. The girls looked up at him with
adoration and clung proudly to his hands. A conga drum was slung over his
shoulder as if music might be called for at any moment, and on his face was a
smirk somewhere between penitence and self-satisfaction. Behind this domestic
tableau, planted on a towel by the weight of her horror, was Ofelia's mother. "Which
father?" Arkady asked. "The
smaller girl's." Arkady
couldn't see anything coerced about the photograph, no ominous shadows on the
sand or signs of anxiety besides the family tension. Ofelia, however, seemed to
be totally apart from the others. Her hair was damp, combed into ink-black
waves. Her lips open, on the point of speaking. Her expression said, yes, this
is the situation, but the intentness of her eyes had nothing do with anyone
else in the picture, as if she were looking not from the photograph but through
it. Nothing
was written on the back. "You
don't seem particularly moved," Erasmo said. "Should
I be?" "Yes,
I would think so. I wanted to reassure you that all in all, things came out
pretty well for the detective." "Yes,
they look happy." "I
wouldn't go that far. Anyway, you can keep the picture. That's the reason I
came out in this blizzard looking for you just to give it to you." "Thank
you." Arkady unzipped his parka so he could put the photograph safely away
without bending it. Erasmo
blew on his hands before pulling his gloves back on. Suddenly he looked
miserable. "Cold people for a cold climate, that's all I can say."
Snow started to clump on his brows and under his nose. He swung his chair and
gave Arkady half a wave. "I know my way back." "Just
follow the river." Going
back, the wind was against Erasmo. He leaned into it, bucking the oncoming
current of headlights, his wheels losing a little friction on the melting snow
but maintaining the speed of a man who knows where a warm room waits. Arkady's
apartment was in the opposite direction. Headlights fanned his shadow ahead of
him. Like pachyderms, trucks stepped in and out of potholes. In true winter the
reflection of lights off river ice made an illuminated path through the city,
but a late snowfall merely dissolved in sheets into black water. Traffic police
waded between cars, pulling aside that luckless soul whose lights were deemed
malfunctioning until dollars, not rubles, passed hands. It was the sort of
evening, Arkady thought, when each individual apartment window looked like a
craft tossing in a dangerous sea. The Kremlin was out of sight but not its
bonfire glow. Snow outlined lampposts, gutters, sills; packed against truck
tarps and wing mirrors and on the collars people clutched up to their eyes;
melted at the wrist and neck, trickled down the arm and chest; flew down one
flagstone wall of the river and up the other like sparks from a chute; turned
the trees of the park into white-caps; made each step a visible memory and then
covered it over. END OF Copyright
This book was copied
right, in the dark, by Illuminati. About
the e-Book TITLE: AUTHOR: Smith, Martin
Cruz ABEB Version: 3.1 Hog Edition
BY Martin Cruz Smith
Author's
Note
Although this
novel is set in Dedication
for Em Acknowledgments
I would like to
thank, in In
the Most
of all, I owe Knox Burger and Kitty Sprague, who waited for the story. Chapter OneA police boat directed a light toward
tar-covered pilings and water, turning a black scene white. Soda
cans, crab pots, fishing floats, mattresses, Styrofoam bearded with algae
shifted as an investigation team of the Policнa de la Revoluciуn took flash
shots. Arkady waited in a cashmere overcoat with a Captain Arcos, a
barrel-chested little man who looked ironed into military fatigues, and his
Sergeant Luna, large, black and angular. Detective Osorio was a small brown woman
in PNR blue; she gave Arkady a studied glare. A
Cuban named Rufo was the interpreter from the Russian embassy. "It's
very simple," he translated the captain's words. You see the body,
identify the body and then go home." "Sounds
simple." Arkady
tried to be agreeable, although Arcos walked off as if any contact with
Russians was contamination. Osorio
combined the sharp features of an ingenue with the grave expression of a
hangman. She spoke and Rufo explained, "The detective says this is the
Cuban method, not the Russian method or the German method. The Cuban method.
You will see." Arkady
had seen little so far. He had just arrived at the airport in the dark when he
was whisked away by Rufo. They were headed by taxi to the city when Rufo
received a call on a cellular phone that diverted them to the bay. Already
Arkady had a sense that he was unwelcome and unpopular. Rufo
wore a loose Hawaiian shirt and a faint resemblance to the older, softer
Muhammad Ali. "The detective says she hopes you don't mind learning the
Cuban method." "I'm
looking forward to it." Arkady
was nothing if not a good guest. "Could
you ask her when the body was discovered?" "Two
hours ago by the boat." "The
embassy sent me a message yesterday that Pribluda was in trouble. Why did they
say that before you found a body?" "She
says ask the embassy. She was certainly not expecting an investigator. " Professional
honor seemed to be at stake and Arkady felt badly outclassed on that score.
Like Someone
along the tape carried a radio that sang, "La fiesta no es para los
feos. Quй feo es, seсor. Super feo, amigo mнo. No puedes pasar aquн, amigo. La
fiesta no es para los feos." "What
does that mean?" Arkady asked Rufo. "The
song? It says, 'This party is not for ugly people. Sorry, my friend, you can't
come.'" Yet
here I am, Arkady thought. A
vapor trail far overhead showed silver, and ships at anchor started to appear
where only lights had hung moments before. Across the bay the seawall and
mansions of "The
captain is sensitive," Rufo said, "but whoever was right or wrong
about the message, you're here, the body's here." "So
it couldn't have worked out better?" "In
a manner of speaking." Osorio
ordered the boat to back off so that its wash wouldn't stir the body. A
combination of the boat's light and the freshening sky made her face glow. Rufo
said, "Cubans don't like Russians. It's not you, it's just not a good
place for a Russian." "Where
is a good place?" Rufo
shrugged. This
side of the harbor, now that Arkady could see it, was like a village. A
hillside of banana palms overhung abandoned houses that fronted what was more a
cement curb than a seawall that stretched from a coal dock to a ferry landing.
A wooden walkway balanced on a black piling captured whatever floated in. The
day was going to be warm. He could tell by the smell. "Vaya
a cambiar su cara, amigo. Feo, feo, feo como horror, seсor." In
Detective
Osorio's order for the video camera to roll was a signal for onlookers to press
against the tape. The ferry landing filled with commuters, every face turned
toward the pilings, where in the quickening light floated a body as black and
bloated as the inner tube it rested in. Shirt and shorts were split by the
body's expansion. Hands and feet trailed in the water; a swim fin dangled
casually on one foot. The head was eyeless and inflated like a black balloon. "A
neumбtico" Rufo told Arkady. A neumбtico is a fisherman
who fishes from an inner tube. Actually from a fishing net spread over the
tube. Like a hammock. It's very ingenious, very Cuban." "The
inner tube is his boat?" "Better
than a boat. A boat needs gasoline." Arkady
pondered that proposition. "Much
better." A
diver in a wet suit slid off the police boat while an officer in waders dropped
over the seawall. They clambered as much as waded across crab pots and mattress
springs, mindful of hidden nails and septic water, and cornered the inner tube
so that it wouldn't float away. A net was thrown down from the seawall to
stretch under the inner tube and lift it and the body up together. So far,
Arkady wouldn't have done anything differently. Sometimes events were just a
matter of luck. The
diver stepped into a hole and went under. Gasping, he came up out of the water,
grabbed onto first the inner tube and then a foot hanging from it. The foot
came off. The inner tube pressed against the spear of a mattress spring, popped
and started to deflate. As the foot turned to jelly, Detective Osorio shouted
for the officer to toss it to shore: a classic confrontation between authority
and vulgar death, Arkady thought. All along the tape, onlookers clapped and
laughed. Rufo
said, "See, usually, our level of competence is fairly high, but Russians
have this effect. The captain will never forgive you." The
camera went on taping the debacle while another detective jumped into the
water. Arkady hoped the lens captured the way the rising sun poured into the
windows of the ferry. The inner tube was sinking. An arm disengaged. Shouts
flew back and forth between Osorio and the police boat. The more desperately
the men in the water tried to save the situation the worse it became. Captain
Arcos contributed orders to lift the body. As the diver steadied the head, the
pressure of his hands liquefied its face and made it slide like a grape skin
off the skull, which itself separated cleanly from the neck; it was like trying
to lift a man who was perversely disrobing part by part, unembarrassed by the
stench of advanced decomposition. A pelican sailed overhead, red as a flamingo. "I
think identification is going to be a little more complicated than the captain
imagined," Arkady said. The
diver caught the jaw as it dropped off from the skull and juggled each, while
the detectives pushed the other black, swollen limbs pell-mell into the
shriveling inner tube. "Feo,
tan feo. No puedes pasar aqui, amigo. Porque la fiesta no es para los
feos." The
rhythm was... what was the word? Arkady wondered. Unrelenting. Across
the bay a golden dome seemed to burst into flame, and the houses of the Malecуn
started to express their unlikely colors of lemon, rose, royal purple, aquamarine.
It really was a lovely city, he thought. Light from the high windows of the
autopsy theater of the Institute de Medicina Legal fell on three
stainless-steel tables. On the right-hand table lay the neumбtico's
torso and loose parts arranged like an ancient statue dredged in pieces from
the sea. Along the walls were enamel cabinets, scales, X-ray panel, sink,
specimen shelves, freezer, refrigerator, pails. Above, at the observation
level, Rufo and Arkady had a semicircle of seats to themselves. Arkady hadn't
noticed before how scarred Rufo's brows were. "Captain
Luna would rather you watched from here. The examiner is Dr. Blas." Rufo
waited expectantly until Arkady realized he was supposed to react. "The
Dr. Blas?" "The
very one." Blas
had a dapper Spanish beard and wore rubber gloves, goggles, green scrubs. Only
when he appeared satisfied that he had a reasonably complete body did he
measure it and search it meticulously for marks and tattoos, a painstaking task
when skin tended to slide wherever touched. An autopsy could take two hours, as
much as four. At the left-hand table Detective Osorio and a pair of technicians
sorted through the deflated inner tube and fishnet; the body had been left
tangled in them for fear of disturbing it any more. Captain Arcos stood to one
side, Luna a step behind. It occurred to Arkady that Luna's head was as round
and blunt as a black fist with red-rimmed eyes. Already Osorio had found a wet
roll of American dollar bills and a ring of keys kept in a leaky plastic bag.
Fingerprints wouldn't have survived the bag, and she immediately dispatched the
keys with an officer. There was something appealingly energetic and fastidious
about Osorio. She hung wet shirt, shorts and underwear on hangers on a rack. While
Blas worked he commented to a microphone clipped to the lapel of his coat. "Maybe
two weeks in the water," Rufo translated. He added, "It's been hot
and raining, very humid. Even for here." "You've
seen autopsies before?" Arkady asked. "No,
but I've always been curious. And, of course, I'd heard of Dr. Blas." Performing
an autopsy on a body in an advanced stage of putrefaction was as delicate as
dissecting a soft-boiled egg. Sex was obvious but not age, not race, not size
when the chest and stomach cavities were distended, not weight when the body
sagged with water inside, not fingerprints when hands that had trailed in the
water for a week ended in digits nibbled to the bone. Then there was the
gaseous pressure of chemical change. When Blas punctured the abdomen a flatulent
spray shot loudly up, and when he made the Y incision across the chest and then
to groin, a wave of black water and liquefied matter overflowed the table.
Using a pail, a technician deftly caught the viscera as they floated out. An
expanding pong of rot – as if a shovel had been plunged into swamp gas – took
possession of the room, invading everyone's nose and mouth. Arkady was glad he
had left his precious coat in the car. After the first trauma of the stench –
five minutes, no more – the olfactory nerves were traumatized and numb, but he
was already digging deep into his cigarettes. Rufo
said, "That smells disgusting." "Russian
tobacco." Arkady filled his lungs with smoke. "Want one?" "No,
thanks. I boxed in "You
don't like Russians, either?" "I
love Russians. Some of my best friends are Russian." Rufo leaned for a
better view as Blas spread the chest for the camera. "The doctor is very
good. At the rate they're going you'll have time to make your plane. You won't
even have to spend the night." "Won't
the embassy make a fuss about this?" "The
Russians here? No." Blas
slapped the pulpy mass of the heart in a separate tray. "You
don't think they're too indelicate, I hope," Rufo said. "Oh,
no." To be fair, as Arkady remembered, Pribluda used to root through
bodies with the enthusiasm of a boar after nuts. "Imagine the poor
bastard's surprise," Pribluda would have said. "Floating around,
looking up at the stars, and then bang, he's dead." Arkady
lit one cigarette from another and drew the smoke in sharply enough to make his
eyes tear. It occurred to him that he was at a point now where he knew more
people dead than alive, the wrong side of a certain line. "I
picked up a lot of languages touring with the team," Rufo said.
"After boxing, I used to guide groups of singers, musicians, dancers,
intellectuals for the embassy. I miss those days." Detective
Osorio methodically laid out supplies that the dead man had taken to sea:
thermos, wicker box, and plastic bags of candles, rolls of tape, twine, hooks
and extra line. Usually,
an examiner cut at the hairline and peeled the forehead over the face to reach the
skull. Since in this case both the forehead and the face had already slipped
off and bade adieu in the bay, Blas proceeded directly with a rotary saw to
uncover the brain, which proved rotten with worms that reminded Arkady of the
macaroni served by Aeroflot. As the nausea rose he had Rufo lead him to a tiny,
chain-flush lavatory, where he threw up, so perhaps he wasn't so inured after
all, he thought. Maybe he had just reached his limit. Rufo was gone, and
walking back to the autopsy theater on his own, Arkady went by a room perfumed
by carboys of formaldehyde and decorated with anatomical charts. On a table two
feet with yellow toenails stuck out from a sheet. Between the legs lay an
oversized syringe connected by a tube to a tub of embalming fluid on the floor,
a technique used in the smallest, most primitive Russian villages when electric
pumps failed. The needle of the syringe was particularly long and narrow to fit
into an artery, which was thinner than a vein. Between the feet were rubber
gloves and another syringe in an unopened plastic bag. Arkady slipped the bag
into his jacket pocket. When
Arkady returned to his seat, Rufo was waiting with a recuperative Cuban
cigarette. By that time, the brain had been weighed and set aside while Dr.
Blas fitted head and jaw together. Although
Rufo's lighter was the plastic disposable sort, he said it had been refilled
twenty times."The Cuban record is over a hundred." Arkady
lit the cigarette, inhaled. "What kind is this?" "'Popular.'
Black tobacco. You like it?" "It's
perfect." Arkady let out a plume of smoke as blue as the exhaust of a car
in distress. Rufo's
hand kneaded Arkady's shoulder. "Relax. You're down to bones, my
friend." The
officer who had taken the keys from Osorio returned. At the other table, after
Blas had measured the skull vertically and across the brow, he spread a
handkerchief and diligently scrubbed the teeth with a toothbrush. Arkady handed
Rufo a dental chart he had brought from Rufo
interpreted. "The Russian citizen Sergei Sergeevich Pribluda arrived in "Same
thing," Arkady said. The
captain – and in his wake, Rufo – went on. "A week ago the embassy
informed us that Pribluda was missing. We did not expect them to invite a
senior investigator from the Arkady
had talked to Pribluda's son, who had refused to come to Rufo
went on. "Fortunately, the captain says, the identification performed
today before your eyes is simple and conclusive. The captain says that a key
found in the effects was taken to the apartment of the missing man where it
unlocked the door. From an examination of the body recovered from the bay, Dr.
Blas estimates that it is a Caucasoid male approximately fifty to sixty years
of age, one hundred sixty-five centimeters in height, ninety kilos in weight,
in every regard the same as the missing man. Moreover, the dental chart of the
Russian citizen Pribluda you yourself brought shows one lower molar filled.
That molar in the recovered jaw is a steel tooth which, in the opinion of Dr.
Blas, according to the captain, is typical Russian dental work. Do you
agree?" "From
what I saw, yes." "Dr.
Blas says he finds no wounds or broken bones, no signs of violence or foul
play. Your friend died of natural causes, perhaps a stroke or aneurysm or heart
attack, it would be almost impossible to determine which for a body in this
condition. The doctor hopes he did not suffer long." "That's
kind of him." Although the doctor appeared more smug than sympathetic. "The
captain, for his part, asks if you accept the observations of this
autopsy?" "I'd
like to think about it." "Well,
you accept the conclusion that the body recovered is that of the Russian
citizen Pribluda?" Arkady
turned to the examining table. What had been a bloated cadaver was now split
and gutted. Of course, there had been no face or eyes to identify anyway, and
finger bones never did yield prints, but someone had lived in that ruined body. "I
think an inner tube in the bay is a strange place to find a Russian
citizen." "The
captain says they all think that." "Then
there will be an investigation?" Rufo
said, "It depends." "On
what?" "On
many factors." "Such
as?" "The
captain says your friend was a spy. What he was doing when he died was not innocent.
The captain can predict your embassy will ask us to do nothing. We are the ones
who could make an international incident of this, but frankly it is not worth
the effort. We will investigate in our own time, in our own way, although in
this Special Period the Cuban people cannot afford to waste resources on people
who have revealed themselves to be our enemy. Now do you understand what I
mean?" Rufo paused while Arcos took a second to compose himself. "The
captain says an investigation depends on many factors. The position of our
friends at the Russian embassy must be taken into account before premature
steps are taken. The only issue we have here is an identification of a foreign
national who has died on Cuban territory. Do you accept it is the Russian
citizen Sergei Pribluda?" "It
could be," Arkady said. Dr.
Blas sighed, Luna took a deep breath and Detective Osorio weighed the keys in
her palm. Arkady couldn't help feeling like a difficult actor. "It
probably is, but I can't say conclusively that this body is Pribluda. There's
no face, no prints and I doubt very much that you will be able to type the
blood. All you have is a dental chart and one steel tooth. He could be another
Russian. Or one of thousands of Cubans who went to Dr.
Blas asked in precisely snipped Russian, "Did you bring any other
identification from "Just
this. Pribluda sent it a month ago." Arkady dug out of his passport case a
snapshot of three men standing on a beach and squinting at the camera. One man
was so black he could have been carved from jet. He held up a glistening
rainbow of a fish for the admiration of two whites, a shorter man with a
compensating tower of steel-wool hair and, partially obscured by the others,
Pribluda. Behind them was water, a tip of beach, palms. Blas
studied the photograph and read the scribble on the back. " "There
is such a yacht club?" Arkady asked. "There
was such a club before the Revolution," Blas said. "I think
your friend was making a joke." Rufo
said, "Cubans love grandiose titles. A 'drinking society' can be friends
in a bar." "The
others don't look Russian to me. You can make copies of the picture and
circulate them." The
picture went around to Arcos, who put it back into Arkady's hands as if it were
toxic. Rufo said, "The captain says your friend was a spy, that spies come
to bad ends, as they deserve. This is typically Russian, pretending to help and
then stabbing Arkady
gathered as much. The captain looked ready to spit. Rufo
gave Arkady a push. "I think it's time to go." Detective
Osorio, who had been quietly following the conversation, suddenly revealed
fluent Russian. "Was there a letter with the picture?" "Only
a postcard saying hello," Arkady said. "I threw it away." "Idiota"
Osorio said, which nobody bothered to translate. "It's
lucky you're going home, you don't have many friends here," Rufo said.
"The embassy said to put you in an apartment until the plane." They
drove by three-story stone town houses transformed by the Revolution into a far
more colorful backdrop of ruin and decay, marble colonnades refaced with
whatever color was available – green, ultramarine, chartreuse. Not just ordinary
green, either, but a vibrant spectrum: sea, lime, palm and verdigris. Houses
were as blue as powdered turquoise, pools of water, peeling sky, the upper
levels enlivened by balconies of ornate ironwork embellished by canary cages,
florid roosters, hanging bicycles. Even dowdy Russian cars wore a wide variety
of paint, and if their clothes were drab most of the people had the slow grace
and color of big cats. They paused at tables offering guava paste, pastries,
tubers and fruits. One girl shaving ices was streaked red and green with syrup,
another girl sold sweetmeats from a cheesecloth tent. A locksmith rode a
bicycle that powered a key grinder; he wore goggles for the sparks and shavings
flying around him as he pedaled in place. The music of a radio hanging in the
crook of a pushcart's umbrella floated in the air. "Is
this the way to the airport?" Arkady asked. "The
flight is tomorrow. Usually there's only one Aeroflot flight a week during the
winter, so they don't want you to miss it." Rufo rolled the window down.
"Phew, I smell worse than fish." "Autopsies
stay with you." Arkady had left his overcoat outside the operating theater
and separated the coat now from the paper bag holding Pribluda's effects.
"If Dr. Blas and Detective Osorio speak Russian, why were you along?" "There
was a time when it was forbidden to speak English. Now Russian is taboo.
Anyway, the embassy wanted someone along when you were with the police, but
someone not Russian. You know, I never knew anyone so unpopular so fast as you." "That's
a sort of distinction." "But
now you're here you should enjoy yourself. Would you like to see the city, go
to a cafe, to the Havana Libre? It used to be the Hilton. They have a rooftop
restaurant with a fantastic view. And they serve lobster. Only state
restaurants are allowed to serve lobster, which are assets of the state." "No,
thanks." The idea of cracking open a lobster after an autopsy didn't sit
quite right. "Or
a paladar, a private restaurant. They're small, they're only allowed
twelve chairs but the food is much superior. No?" Perhaps
Rufo didn't get a chance to dine out often, but Arkady didn't think he could
even watch someone eat. "No.
The captain and sergeant were in green uniforms, the detective in gray and
blue. Why was that?" "She's
police and they're from the Ministry of the Interior. We just call it Minint.
Police are under Minint." Arkady
nodded; in "I
don't think so." "Why
was the captain going on about the Russian embassy?" "He
has a point. In the old days Russians acted like lords. Even now, for Cuban
police to ask questions at the embassy takes a diplomatic note. Sometimes the
embassy cooperates and sometimes it doesn't." Most
of the traffic was Russian Ladas and Moskviches spraying exhaust and then,
waddling as ponderously as dinosaurs, American cars from before the Revolution.
Rufo and Arkady got out at a two-story house decorated like a blue Egyptian
tomb with scarabs, ankhs and lotuses carved in stucco. A car on blocks sat in
residence on the porch. "'57
Chevrolet." Rufo looked inside at the car's gutted interior, straightened
and ran his hand over the flecked paint. From the back. "Tail fins."
To the front bumper. "And tits." From
the car key in the bag of effects Arkady knew that Pribluda had a Lada. No
breasts on a Russian car. As
they went in and climbed the stairs the door to the ground-floor apartment
cracked open enough for a woman in a housedress to follow their progress. "A
concierge?" Arkady asked. "A
snoop. Don't worry, at night she watches television and doesn't hear a
thing." "I'm
going back tonight." "That's
right." Rufo unlocked the upstairs door. "This is a protocol
apartment the embassy uses for visiting dignitaries. Well, lesser dignitaries.
I don't think we've had anyone here for a year." "Is
someone from the embassy coming to talk about Pribluda?" "The
only one who wants to talk about Pribluda is you. You like cigars?" "I've
never smoked a cigar." "We'll
talk about it later. I'll be back at midnight to take you to the plane. If you
think the flight to The apartment was furnished with a set
of cream-and-gold dining chairs, a sideboard with a coffee service, a nubby
sofa, red phone, a bookshelf with titles like La Amistad Russo-Cubana
and Fidel y Arte supported by erotic bookends in mahogany. In a
disconnected refrigerator a loaf of Bimbo Bread was spotted with mold. The air
conditioner was dead and showed the carbon smudges of an electrical fire.
Arkady thought he probably showed some carbon smudges of his own. He
stripped from his clothes and showered in a stall of tiles that poured water
from every valve and washed the odor of the autopsy off his skin and from his
hair. He dried himself on the scrap of towel provided and stretched out on the
bed under his overcoat in the dark of the bedroom and listened to the voices
and music that filtered from outside through the closed shutters of the window.
He dreamed of floating among the playing fish of Russian
planes did that, sometimes, if they were so old that their instruments failed.
Although there could be other factors. If a pilot made a second landing
approach he could be charged for the extra fuel expended, so he made only one,
good or not. Or they were overloaded or underfueled. He
was both. Circling
sounded good. Chapter TwoOsorio negotiated a white PNR Lada down a potholed
street. Like her driving, she talked in a quick, surefooted way, deleting any s
in the Russian language that she found superfluous. Since Arkady's Spanish
consisted of gracias and par favor, he wasn't inclined to be
critical even if she had appeared without warning in the early evening and
gathered him in a rush. She
said, "You wanted to see your friend's apartment and so we will." "That's
all I asked." "No,
you asked much more. I think you are refusing to make an identification of your
friend because you think you can force us to investigate." "I
assume you want to be sure you're sending the right body to "You
think it's impossible for him to be out on the water the way we found him? Like
a Cuban?" "It
does strike me as unusual." "What
I find unusual is that when a message comes to you from an embassy in The
round-trip took half his savings. On the other hand, what was he saving for?
Anyway, everything in "Tell
me about this friend of yours," she demanded. "You're
interested?" He got no response to that. Oh well, he was fishing.
"Sergei Sergeevich Pribluda. Workers' family from "Not
drinking?" "He
made flavored vodka, that's part of gardening." "Not
culture, the arts?" "Pribluda?
Hardly." "You
worked together?" "In
a way. He tried to kill me. It was a complicated friendship." Arkady gave
her the short version. "There was a murder in "He
disobeyed an order? There's never an excuse for that." "God
knows. He liked to grow his own vegetables. When his wife died, I would go
round to his place and drink his vodka and eat his cucumbers and he would
remind me that not every guest got to dine with his executioner. Red tomato
pickle, green tomato pickle, peppers and dark bread to eat. Lemongrass and
buffalo grass to flavor the vodka." "You
said he was a Communist." "A
good Communist. He would have joined the Party coup if it hadn't been led, as
he said, by imbeciles. Instead, he drank until it all blew over and then went
into a decline. He said we weren't real Russians anymore, only eunuchs, that
the last Russian, the last true Communist anywhere was Castro." Which
Arkady had taken as drunken ranting at the time, a detail he decided not to
share with Osorio. " He said he was looking for a post outside "When
was the last time you saw the colonel?" "More
than a year ago." "But
you were friends." "My
wife didn't like him." "Why
not?" "An
old score. Why would the captain turn down the picture of Pribluda and his
friends?" Arkady asked. "He
must have his reasons," Osorio said in a tone that suggested she didn't
fathom them either. Jasmine
lay like snow over walls, Dumpsters overflowed with the sweet stench of fruit
skins. Binding the ocean was what Osorio
called the Malecуn, a seawall that protected a six-lane boulevard and an
oceanfront line of three-story buildings. The sea was black, and traffic on the
boulevard consisted of the running lights of cars a block apart. The buildings
were the gaudy group Arkady had seen at daybreak from the other side of the
bay; without their colors, dimly lit by lamps, they were occupied wrecks. In
the shadow of a long arcade Osorio unlocked a street door and led him up worn
stone stairs to a steel door which let them into a living room that could have
been delivered complete from Bottles
of Havana Club rum and Stolichnaya stood under the sink. The
only element out of place was a black man in a white shirt with a red bandanna
around his head and Reebok basketball shoes on his feet sitting in a corner
chair and holding a long, straight walking stick. It took a moment without
breathing for Arkady to realize that the figure was a man-sized effigy. The
face had a crudely molded brow and nose, mouth and ears, making its glass eyes
glitter all the more. "What
is that?" "Chango." "Chango?" "A
Santeria spirit." "Right.
And why would Pribluda have it?" "I
don't know. That's not what we came for," Osorio said. What they had come
for, apparently, was to see how thoroughly she had dusted the apartment for
fingerprints, every door, jamb, knob and pull. Some prints had been lifted,
leaving the transfer tracks of tape. But many more prints were visible as brown
whorls expertly brushed. "You
did all this?" he asked Osorio. "Yes." "Brown
powder?" He hadn't seen that before. "Cuban
fingerprint powder. In this Special Period, imported powders are too expensive.
We make powder from burned palm fronds." She
hadn't missed any opportunity. Under the lamp was a small turtle, armored and
obtuse in a bowl of sand. A perfect pet for a spy, Arkady thought. The shell
was branded with a brown fingerprint. She
said, "Pribluda could have had a protocol house, but he rented here
illegally from the Cuban who lives below." "Why
do you think he did that?" For
an answer she opened the balcony doors, their curtains lifting like wings with
the breeze that rushed in. Arkady stepped out between two aluminum chairs and
the balcony's marble rail and looked out on the vault of the night sky and the
Malecуn, displayed as an elegant curve of boulevard lights. Beyond the seawall
was the flash of a lighthouse and deck lights of a freighter and pilot boat
entering the bay. As his eyes adjusted he made out the fainter gunwale lamps of
fishing boats and, nearer in, a widespread candle glimmer. "Neumбticos"
Osorio said. Arkady
imagined them, a flotilla of inner tubes riding black swells. "Why
wasn't there a police seal on the front door?" he asked. "Because
we are not investigating." "So,
what are we doing here, then?" "Putting
your mind to rest." She
motioned Arkady inside through the parlor and to a corridor, past a laundry
room and into an office that held an ancient wooden desk, computer, printer and
bookshelves crammed with binders from the Cuban Ministry of Sugar and photo
albums. Under the printer, two briefcases, one of brown leather, the other of
extraordinarily ugly green plastic. The walls were covered with maps of "Sugarcane
fields," Osorio said. "Pribluda would have visited them because we
foolishly depended on "I
see." Arkady put the album down and moved on to the map of "Here."
She pointed to where the Malecуn swept east toward the Castillo de "I
like to know where I am." "You
are leaving tonight. It doesn't matter if you know where you are." "True."
He looked to see that the power button of the computer was dusted and prints
lifted. Nice. "You're finished here?" "Yes." He
turned the machine and monitor on and the screen pulsed with an electric,
expectant blue. Arkady did not consider himself computer-adept, but in "Do
you know it?" Osorio asked. "No.
A decent spy is supposed to use a random cipher. We could guess forever." Arkady
went through the desk drawers. Inside were a variety of different pens,
stationery and cigars, maps and magnifying glasses, pen knives and pencils and
brown envelopes with string ties for the diplomatic pouch. No passwords hidden
in a matchbox. "There's
a telephone but no fax machine?" "The
telephone lines in this exchange are from before the Revolution. They're not
clear enough for fax transmission." "The
telephone lines are fifty years old?" "Thanks
to the American embargo and the Special Period –" "Caused
by "Yes."
Osorio snapped off the computer and shut the drawer. "Stop. You are not
here to investigate. You are here only to verify that it has been examined
thoroughly for fingerprints." Arkady
acknowledged the track of prints on door-jambs and desk surfaces, ashtray and
telephone. Osorio motioned him to follow her farther down the corridor where
there was a bedroom containing a narrow bed, nightstand, lamp, bureau, portable
radio, bookcase and, hanging on the walls, a tinted portrait of the deceased
Mrs. Pribluda. Beside it was a photograph of the son in an apron looking up at
a levitating disk of pizza dough. In the top bureau drawer was an empty frame
of snapshot size. "There
was a picture in here?" Arkady asked. Osorio
shrugged. The reading material in the bedroom was Spanish-Russian dictionaries,
guidebooks, copies of Red Star and Pravda, reflecting the
interests of a healthy, unreconstructed Communist. The bureau top was clear but
showed signs of dusting and collection. In the closet were clothes, an ironing
board and an iron dusted for prints. Organized on the floor were rubber
sandals, work shoes and a thin, empty suitcase. Arkady stopped for a moment
when he heard drumming from the apartment below, tectonic motion with a Latin
beat. Osorio
opened the door at the corridor's end to a bathroom of crazed but immaculately
clean tiles. A loofah and soap on a rope hung from the shower rod. The corner
of the medicine cabinet mirror bore one fingerprint in full bloom, and another
peeked from under the flush lever of the toilet. "You
don't miss anything," he told her. "But I wonder why you
bothered." "You
will accept that this is Pribluda's apartment?" "It
seems to be." "And
that the prints we find here are Pribluda's?" "We
haven't really checked them, but let's say I do." "Remember
at the autopsy you told Captain Arcos it was a strange way for a Russian to
fish." "In
an inner tube at sea? Yes, it was a first for me." The
detective led him back to the laundry room and turned on a hanging bulb and
this time he saw, besides a stone basin and clothes line, reels of monofilament
and wire and, on rough shelves of orange crate, jars that contained tangles of
barbed, ugly hooks graded by size. Each jar was dusted and covered with clear
prints. Detective Osorio handed Arkady an index card of lifted fingerprints.
Immediately, Arkady saw a large print with a distinctive loop crossed by a scar
identical with prints on the bottles. On a jar he found the same, carefully
dusted print. "He
was right-handed?" Osorio asked. "Yes." "From
the angles you can see, when he held the jar, the prints on the jar are his
right thumb and index fingers and the prints on the glass are his left thumb
and index finger. They're over all the rooms, doors, mirrors, everywhere. So
you see, your Russian friend was a Cuban fisherman." "The
body, how long was it dead?" "According
to Dr. Blas, maybe two weeks." "No
one's been here in the meantime?" "I
asked the neighbors. No." "That
must be a hungry turtle." Arkady
returned to the front room, out of habit memorizing the apartment layout as he
went: balcony, sitting room, laundry room, office, bathroom, bedroom. Inside
the refrigerator were yogurt, greens, eggplant, pickled mushrooms, boiled
tongue and a half-dozen boxes of color 35-mm film. He fed dillweed to the
turtle and glanced at the black doll that filled the corner chair. " I
have to admit these are new aspects to the man I knew. Did you find his
car?" "No." "Do
you know the make?" "Lada."
She shook her head a little for emphasis. "It doesn't matter. Your flight
is in four hours. The body is being prepared for the plane. You will accompany
it. Agreed?" "I
suppose I will." Osorio
frowned, as if she glimpsed a nuance in the answer. On the ride back she asked, "Tell
me, out of curiosity, as an investigator are you any good?" "Not
particularly." "Why
not?" "Various
reasons. I used to have a fair rate of success, as your captain puts it. But
that was when murders in "You
had so many questions." "Habit."
Going through the motions, Arkady thought, as if his body were a suit that
shuffled to the scene of the crime, any crime, anywhere. He was more irritated with
himself than with her. Why had he started snooping? Enough! Osorio was right.
He felt her eyes on him. Only for a moment, though. Because they were crossing
a power blackout she had to proceed on some streets as carefully as steering a
boat in the dark. In Arkady's mind, the syringe beckoned, the needle of a
compass. When
they halted for goats wandering over the road the headlights illuminated a wall
on which was written "Venceremos!" Arkady tried to say it
silently but Osorio caught him. Venceremos!'
means 'We will win!' In spite of "In
spite of history, geography, the law of gravity?" "In
spite of everything! You don't have signs like that in "We
have signs. Now they say Nike and Absolut." He
got a glance from Osorio no worse than the flame of a blowtorch. When they
reached the embassy apartment the detective told him that a driver would gather
him in two hours for the airport. "And you will have your friend to travel
with." "Let's
hope it really is the colonel." Osorio was stung worse than he'd intended.
"A live Russian, a dead Russian, it's hard to tell the difference." "You're
right." Arkady went up alone. A rumba played
either in the house or out of the house, he could no longer tell where, all he
knew was that constant music made him exhausted. Unlocking
the door, he lit a cigarette, careful not to drop embers on his sleeve. It was
a cashmere coat Irina had given him as a wedding present, a soft black wreath
of a coat that, she said, made him look like a poet. With the thin Russian
shoes and shabby pants that he insisted on wearing he appeared all the more
artistic. It was a lucky coat, impervious to bullets. He had walked through a
shootout on the Arbat like an armored saint; later, he realized that no one had
fired at him precisely because in his miraculous coat he resembled neither
gangster nor militia. More
than that, the coat bore the faint lingering perfume of Irina, a secret,
tactile sense of her, and when the thought of her became unbearable this scent
was a final ally against her loss. It
was odd, Osorio asking whether he was any good. What he hadn't told her was
that in Inattention
was the greatest crime of all. He had seen every sort of victim, from nearly
pristine bodies in their beds to the butchered, monstrously altered dead, and
he had to say that, in general, they would still be lightly snoring or laughing
at a well-told joke if someone had only paid more attention to an approaching
knife or shotgun or syringe. All the love in the world could not make up for
lack of attention. Say
you were on the deck of a ferry crossing a narrow strait, and although the
distance was short, the wind and waves came up and the ship foundered. Into the
cold water you go, and the one you love most is in your grasp. All you have to
do to save her life is not let go. And then you look and your hand is empty.
Inattention. Weakness. Well, the self-condemned lived longer nights than others
for good reason. Because they were always trying to reverse time, to return to
that receding, fateful moment and not let go. At night, when they could
concentrate. In
the dark of the room he saw the polyclinic off the Arbat where he, the
solicitous lover, had taken Irina to treat an infection. She had stopped
smoking – they both had, together – and out of waiting-room nerves asked him to
go to a kiosk for a magazine, Elle or Vogue, it didn't matter
how old. He remembered the fatuous slap of his shoes as he crossed the room
and, outside, the flyers of private vendors stapled to the trees – "For
Sale! Best Medicines!" – which could have explained why drugs were in
short supply in the clinic. Having
bought the magazine, Arkady followed the gauzy stream of seeds drifting back to
the clinic, by which time Irina was dead. The nurses tried to keep him from the
examining room, a mistake. The doctors tried to bar his way to the sheet
covering the table and that was a mistake, too, ending in gurneys being
upended, trays scattered, the medical staffs white caps crushed underfoot,
finally a call to the militia to remove the madman. Which
was sheer melodrama. Irina herself hated melodrama, the demonic excess of a There
were five hours until his plane left. Arkady thought the problem with airlines
was that they didn't allow passengers to carry handguns. Otherwise he could
have brought his and shot himself with a tropical view of dark rooflines rigged
with laundry as full as sails and whole new constellations. What
was the final image Irina had in the clinic? The eyes of the nurse widening as
she understood the depth of her mistake? Not too deep, only intravenous, but
deep enough. They both must have understood. Within seconds, Irina's arm would
have displayed a raised, roseate circle and her eyes begun to itch. Arkady was
allowed to read their statements later, a professional courtesy. Irina
Asanova Renkova opened the door to the hall, interrupted the doctor's
conversation and held up the empty vial. Already her breath came
as a wheeze. While the doctor called for the emergency cart, Irina
shook and sweat, her heart accelerating to changing rhythms like a kite
buffeted by gusts of wind. By the time the cart was located and rolled in, she
was in deep anaphylactic shock, her windpipe shut and her heart
racing, stopping, racing. However, the Adrenalin supposed to be on the
cart, the shot that could have reset her heart like a clock and eased the
constriction of her throat, was misplaced, missing, an innocent error. In a
panic, the doctor tried to open the pharmacy cabinet and snapped off the
key in the lock. Which was the same as a coup de grвce. When
Arkady ripped the sheet off the table at the polyclinic, he was amazed to see
all they had done to Irina in the time it had taken him to walk to a kiosk and
buy a magazine. Her face lay twisted in the disarray of hair that seemed
suddenly so much darker she looked drowned, as if immersed in water for a day.
Tangled and unbuttoned to the waist, her dress revealed her chest bruised by
pounding. Her own hands were fists of agony, and she was still warm. He closed
her eyes, smoothed her hair from her brow and buttoned her dress in spite of
the doctor's insistence that he "not disturb the corpus." As an
answer, he picked up the doctor and used him to crack a plate glass sold as
bulletproof. The impact exploded cabinets, spewed instruments, spilled alcohol
that turned the air silvery and aromatic. When the staff was routed and he had
command of the examining room he made a pillow of his coat for her head. He'd
never considered himself melancholy, not on a Russian scale. It wasn't as if
there was suicide in his family – with the exception of his mother, but she'd
always been more dramatic and direct. Well, there was his father, too, but his
father had always been a killer. Arkady resisted the idea not out of morality
but manners, not wanting to make a mess. And there was the practical question
of how. Hanging was unreliable and he didn't want to leave such a sight for
anyone to discover. Shooting announced itself with such a boastful bang. The
problem was that experts in suicide could teach only by example, and he had
seen enough bungled attempts to know how often there was a slip twixt the cup
and the lip. Best was simply to vanish. Being in He
used to be a better person. He used to care about people. He had always
regarded suicides as selfish, leaving their bodies to frighten other people,
their mess for other people to clean up. He could always start over, devote
himself to a worthy cause, allow himself to heal. The trouble was that he
didn't want the memory to fade. While he still remembered her, her breath in
her sleep, the warmth of her back, the way she would turn to him in the
morning, while he was still insane enough to think he would wake up beside her,
or hear her in the next room or see her on the street, now was the time. If it
inconvenienced other people, well, he apologized. From
his jacket he took the sterile syringe he had stolen in the embalming room.
He'd stolen it on impulse, with no conscious plan, or as if some other part of
his brain was seizing opportunities and setting an agenda that he was only
learning about as it went. Everyone was well aware that Over
the pounding steps of his heart he heard someone knocking on the door. "Renko!"
Rufo called. The
plunger had yet to be pushed in, and what Arkady did not want was to make someone
hear him drop. What he'd die of was like a deep-sea diver's bends, and
convulsions made considerable noise. Like a diver hiding under the surface, he
waited for the visitor to go away. When the knocks only became more insistent
he shouted, "Go away." "Open
the door, please." "Go
away." "Let
me in. Please, it's important." Arkady
drew out the needle, tied a handkerchief around his arm, let his sleeve fall
and dropped the syringe into the pocket of his overcoat before he went to the
door and opened it a crack. "You're
early." "Remember,
we talked about cigars." Rufo managed to squeeze his way in, a foot, a
leg, an arm at a time. He had changed into a one-piece jogging outfit and
carried a box of pale wood sealed with an imposing design of interlocking swords.
"Montecristos. Handmade from the finest tobacco leaf in the world. You
know, for a cigar smoker this is like the Holy Grail." "I
don't smoke cigars." "Then
sell them. In "I'm
not interested and I don't have one hundred dollars." "Fifty
dollars. Usually I wouldn't let them go for so little, but..." Rufo spread
his hands like a millionaire temporarily out of change. "I'm
just not interested." "Okay,
okay." Rufo was disappointed but amenable. "You know, when I was here
before, I think I left my cigarette lighter. Did you see it?" Arkady
felt as if he were trying to leap from a plane and people kept dragging him
back. There was no lighter in the living room. Arkady searched the bathroom and
bedroom, no lighter. When he returned to the front, Rufo was digging through
the paper bag of Pribluda's effects. "There's
no lighter there." "I
wanted to make sure you had everything." Rufo held up the lighter.
"Found it." "Good-bye,
Rufo." "A
great pleasure. I'll be back in an hour. I won't bother you before." Rufo
backpedaled to the door. "No
bother, but good-bye." Arkady
pulled back the coat sleeve from his arm as soon as Rufo went downstairs and
with his thumb he found his vein and snapped it with a finger. The urge to be
done was so strong now that he stayed at the open door to finish the job. The
light on the stairwell below went out. See, now he needed a lighter. Typical
socialist collapse, a bulb here, a bulb there. In the light from the room his
exposed arm looked like marble. A samba drifted from another apartment. If "Yes?"
Arkady asked. "I
forgot the cigars," Rufo said. "Rufo
–" As
soon as Arkady opened the door Rufo carried him past the apartment's
cream-and-gold dining chairs and into the far wall's collected works of Fidel,
and pressed Arkady by the neck to the cabinet with a forearm. Perhaps Rufo was
big but he was quicker on his feet than Arkady had imagined. He pinned Arkady
with one arm and pulled the other until Arkady realized that his overcoat was
pinned to the cabinet by a knife that Rufo was trying to free for a second
thrust. The flapping of Arkady's open coat had misled him. Rufo's other problem
was the embalming syringe that stood from his left ear, which meant that six
centimeters of steel needle was buried in his brain. Arkady had struck back
without thinking because the attack had come so fast. The addition to Rufo's
head slowly gained the Cuban's attention, his eyes lifting sideways for a
glimpse of the barrel and returning perplexed to Arkady. Rufo stepped back to
grope at the syringe like a bear bedeviled by a bee, turning his head and
wandering in a circle, leaning sideways lower and lower until he dropped to a
knee and pushed with the opposite foot, squeezing his eyes shut until he
finally pulled out the needle. Rufo blinked through tears at the long, red
shaft and looked up for an explanation. Arkady
said, "All you had to do was wait." Rufo
rolled onto his back, his eyes still turned to the syringe as if it contained
his last thought. Chapter ThreeNot that she would tell Renko, but Ofelia
Osorio had once worked on a Cuban factory ship built by the Russians and
complete with Russian advisers, so she was not only practiced in dealing with
overbearing "big brothers" from the north but skilled in fending them
off with a gutting knife. Earlier, as an idealistic Young Pioneer she had
served as a delegate to a World Youth Conference in Moscow and toured Lenin's
Tomb, Lumumba University and the subway. She remembered how subway riders drew
in their faces at the sight of someone black. Cubans only touched their
forearms to indicate someone dark. Russians recoiled as if from a snake. At
least, at home. At sea, they were willing enough to experiment. It
wasn't only Russians. Vietnamese investigators came to What
was interesting was that when European and Asian men met Cuban girls in She
lived in a solar, an alley of one-room apartments, aptly named for the
way it soaked in the heat of the day. In spite of the late hour, Muriel and
Marisol, her two daughters, were spread languorously on the cool of the floor
intent on a television show about dolphins. The girls were eight and nine with
dark hair flocked with gold, and the blue glow of the screen lapped up to their
chins like a coverlet. Her mother tipped on the rocking chair pretending to be
asleep, a silent reprimand to Ofelia for coming home so late, letting rice and
beans simmer on the burners. Two could play at that game. It was a scandal that
the mother of a PNR detective would spend the day running errands for everyone
in the solar, going for cigarettes for one house, standing in line for
a pair of shoes for another. "Hustle or starve," the old woman would
respond to protests. "With your big pay and our family rations, your
daughters will eat two days out of three. You know the joke, 'What are the
three achievements of the Revolution? Health, education and sports. What are
the three failures? Breakfast, lunch and dinner.' They say Fidel tells that
joke. Why?" Ofelia only argued to a certain point because her mother was
right. Besides, there were so many other things to argue about with her mother.
The week before, Ofelia had come home to find that a portrait of Che had been
moved to make way for a picture torn from a magazine of Celia Cruz. Who would
displace the greatest martyr of the twentieth century with a fat, old traitor
from Ofelia
wrapped her belt around her holster, stripped and folded her uniform neatly on
a hanger. As a detective she could go in plain clothes or not, but she enjoyed
the reassurance of the blue pants, the gray shirt with PNR shield on the
pocket, the cap with its own embossed shield. Also, wearing a uniform saved on
her clothes, which were basically two pairs of jeans. She slipped through the
curtain into an alcove that served as bathroom, vanity, and shower stall,
automatically turning on the Walkman that hung from a string. The radio was a
prize found on the Playa del Este on a family trip. She had told her girls to
ignore the "love couples" of jineteras and their tourists,
but after Muriel had stumbled upon something as incredible as a radio the size
of a clamshell she and her older sister watched the beach like vultures, ready
to search the sand for treasure as soon as any "couple" left. Water
came in lukewarm rivulets, but it was enough. It ran over her forehead and neck
and trailed from her hands. She was secretly pleased with her hair, which was
cut short and as soft as a cap of Persian lamb. The music was insinuating and
percussive. Your cigar fell down. You told me how good it was and how all
the women liked your big cigar. We hardly started smoking and your cigar fell
down. Ofelia let her shoulders relax and roll to the beat. Water ran out
the drain between her feet. In the mirror above the sink she saw herself begin to
fog. A thirty-year-old woman who still looked like a black cane cutter's
daughter. Although she wasn't vain she hated a tan line – better to be the same
brown all over. She leaned forward to let water run off her hair like threads
of glass. The
detective in her wondered about the dead Russian they found in the water. She
would have expected much more interest from his embassy and the fact that they
seemed ready to dispose of him like a dog hit on the street was practically
proof that he had obviously been up to no good. The bay, after all, was a
perfect vantage point for smuggling, infiltration, to spy on shipping. As the
Comandante himself said, there was no more vicious enemy than a man you had
once called friend. The
new Russian was a bit of a contradiction. The plush coat was a sure sign of
corruption, while the poor state of the rest of his clothes indicated a
complete disregard for appearance. One moment he seemed a reasonably alert
investigator, and the next he disappeared into some private train of thought.
He was pale but with eyes deep-set in shadow. The
soap was a sliver her mother had obtained from a friend who worked in a hotel
and so luxurious that Ofelia drew out the shower, the most private moment of
the day despite the voices from other apartments in the solar. One
song's worth was what she allowed herself to save the batteries. Dressed
in a pullover and jeans, she ladled rice to Muriel and beans to Marisol and an
obscure, deep-fried gristle that her mother refused to identify. From the refrigerator
she took a plastic Miranda soda bottle filled with chilled water. "On
the cooking show today they showed how to fry a steak from grapefruit
skin," her mother said. " They turned a grapefruit skin into steak.
Isn't that amazing? This is a revolution that is more amazing all the
time." "I'm
sure it was good," Ofelia said. " Under the circumstances." "They
ate it with gusto. With gusto." "This
is also good." Ofelia sawed into the gristle. "What did you say it
was?" "Mammalian.
Did you meet any dangerous men today, someone who might kill you and leave your
daughters without a mother?" "One.
A Russian." It
was her mother's turn to be exasperated. "A Russian, worse than a
grapefruit skin. Why did you join the police? I still don't understand." "To
help the people." "The
people here hate you. You don't see anyone from "It's
a sugar-mill town." "In
"You
can't move to This
was one issue where Ofelia could always count on her daughters' support. "We
want to be here." "Nobody
wants to be in Hershey. That's a sugar-mill town." Her
mother said, " "Grandmother!" Her
mother relented, and they all quietly sawed the meat on their plates until the
old woman asked, "So what does this Russian look like?" It
struck Ofelia. "Once in Hershey you pointed out a priest who was defrocked
for falling in love with a woman." "I'm
surprised you remember, you were so little. Yes, she was a beautiful woman,
very religious, and it was a sad story all around." "He
looks like that." Her
mother mulled it over. "I can't believe you remembered that." Just
when Ofelia thought that family tension had subsided enough for a pleasant
evening meal, however late, the phone rang. Theirs was the only phone in the solar,
and she suspected her mother of using it to run the neighborhood lottery. The
illegal Cuban lottery was rigged to the legal Venezuelan lottery, and the bet
takers with phones had a great advantage. Ofelia rose and moved slowly around
the girls' chairs toward the phone on the wall to let her mother know she
wasn't going to run for anyone's nefarious business. Her mother maintained an
expression of innocence until Ofelia hung up. "What
was it?" "It's
about the Russian," Ofelia said. "He killed someone." "Ah,
you were meant for each other." When she arrived at the apartment,
Captain Arcos was slamming down the phone and telling Renko, "Your embassy
cannot provide you protection. There will be expressions of anger from the
Cuban people to those who have sold them out. To those who plant the Judas kiss
on us for thirty pieces of silver. If it were up to me, I would not let a
single Russian on the street. I could not guarantee the safety of a Russian,
not even in the safest capital in the world, because Cuban anger is so deep.
You crawl to the camp of the enemy and you warn Cubans we better do the same.
That history has left us behind. No! Arcos
had worked himself into such a rage his face balled like a fist. His black
sergeant Luna stood by, slouching, ominous and bored at the same time. Renko sat
calmly wrapped in his coat. Rufo sprawled in his silvery running suit, his gaze
aimed at a syringe clasped in his left hand. What amazed Ofelia was the lack of
technicians. Where was the normal bustle of video and light operators, the
forensics experts and detectives? Although she didn't question the authority of
the two men from the ministry, she made a point of loudly snapping on surgical
gloves. "The
captain speaks Russian, too," Renko told Ofelia. "It's a night of
surprises." Arcos
was in his forties, Ofelia thought, exactly the generation who had wasted their
youth in learning Russian, and been bitter ever since. Not an insight she'd
share with Renko. "He
has a point, though," Renko told her. "My embassy does not seem
inclined to help me." "This
is the unbelievable statement he gives us," Arcos said. "That Rufo
Pinero, a man with no criminal record, an honored Cuban sportsman, a driver and
interpreter for Renko's own embassy, approached him with the intent to sell
cigars, was told 'no' and, anyway, returned to this apartment here and, without
warning or provocation, attacked Renko with two weapons, a knife and a syringe,
and in a fight accidentally drove a needle through his own head." "Are
there any witnesses?" asked Ofelia. "Not
yet," Arcos said, as if he might dig one up still. Ofelia
had not worked with the captain before but she recognized the type, better at
vigilance than competence and promoted well beyond his natural abilities. She
couldn't expect any help from Luna; the sergeant seemed to regard everyone,
including Arcos, with the same dark disregard. She
unzipped Rufo's running suit and found that under it he was still completely
dressed in the shirt and pants he had been wearing at the ILM. In warm weather
that made very little sense. In his shirt pocket was a plastic case and
passport-sized ID that read: "Rufo Pйrez Pinero; Fecha de nacimiento:
2/6/56; Profesiуn: traductor; Casado: no; Numero de habitation: 155 Esperanza,
La Habana; Status Militar: reserva; Hemotipo: B." Glued in a corner
was a photo of a younger, leaner Rufo. In the same case was a ration card with
columns for months and rows for rice, meat, beans. She emptied Rufo's pockets
of dollars, pesos, house and car keys, handling everything by the edge. She
thought she remembered his having a cigarette lighter, too. Cubans noticed
that. For some reason she also had the conviction that the Russian had already
gone through Rufo's pockets, that she wasn't going to find anything that he
hadn't already. "Has
the investigation started now?" Renko asked. "There
will be an investigation," Arcos promised, "but of what is
the question. Everything you do is suspicious: your attitude to Cuban
authority, reluctance to identify the body of a Russian colleague, now this
attack on Rufo Pinero." "My
attack on Rufo?" "Rufo's
the one who is dead," Arcos insisted. "The
captain thinks I came from Ofelia
was unhappy because basic protocol was to work a crime scene as soon as
possible and Luna had done nothing. She stepped back for a wider view and saw a
knife lodged chest-high in the side panel of a wooden cabinet yet not a book in
it disturbed, not even Fidel y Arte, which was a heavy presentation
book with valuable plates. Neither a chair broken nor a bruise on Renko, as if
the confrontation had been over in an instant. "Your
friend is a spy and you are a murderer," Luna laid into Renko. "This
is intolerable!" Without
dislodging it, Ofelia examined the knife in the cabinet. The weapon was of
Brazilian manufacture, spring-loaded with an ivory handle and silver butt, the
blade double-edged and sharp as a razor. Driven into the wood was a black thread. Arcos
said, "I told the embassy, Renko is like any other visitor, he enjoys no
diplomatic protection. This apartment is like any Cuban apartment, it does not
enjoy extraterritorial protection. This is a Cuban matter, completely up to
us." "Good,"
said Renko. "It was a Cuban that tried to kill me." "Don't
be difficult. Since the facts of this matter are so cloudy and you are alive
and no harm done, you should consider yourself lucky if you are allowed to
leave "You
mean leave "There
will be another in a week. In the meantime, we will continue to
investigate." The
Russian asked Ofelia, "Would you consider this an investigation?" She
hesitated because she had found in the lapel of his black coat a narrow cut in
the wrong place for a buttonhole. Her pause incensed Arcos. "This
is my investigation, run as I see fit, considering many factors, such as
whether you surprised Rufo, stabbed him with the needle and, when he was dead,
placed it in his hand. It could still have your prints." "Do
you think so?" "Rigor
mortis has not set in. We'll look." Before
Ofelia could stop him, the captain knelt and tried to bend Rufo's fingers off
the syringe. Rufo held tight, the way dead men sometimes did. Luna shook his head
and smiled. Renko
told Ofelia, "Inform the captain it's a death spasm, not rigor mortis, but
now he'll have to wait for the rigor to come and go. Depending on how much he
wants to wrestle with Rufo, of course." Which
only made Arcos pull harder. She took Renko back to Pribluda's flat
on the Malecуn for lack of a better place for him to stay. He didn't have the
money for a hotel, the embassy's apartment was now a crime scene, and until he
officially identified Pribluda he would only be staying in the flat of an
absent friend. For
a minute she and Renko stood on the balcony to watch a solitary car sweep along
the boulevard and waves lap against the breast of the seawall. Out on the water
lamplights spilled from fishing boats and neumбticos. "You've
been on the ocean before?" Ofelia asked. "The
"You
don't have to be sorry for me," she said abruptly. " The captain
knows what he's doing." Which
sounded hollow even to her, but Renko relented, "You're right." He
was wrapped in his black coat, like a shipwrecked man happy with the only
article he'd rescued. She felt a conspiracy of sorts between the two of them
because he hadn't mentioned to Arcos and Luna the earlier visit to Pribluda's
flat. "The
captain doesn't usually investigate homicides, does he?" "No." "I
remember newsreels of Castro's first trip to "I
think you are in a confused state. Your friend dies and now you are attacked.
This could give you a very distorted view of Cuban life." "It
could." "And
be upsetting." "Certainly
distracting." She
didn't know what he could mean by that. "There
were no other witnesses?" "No." "You
answered the door and Rufo attacked you without warning." "That's
right." "With
two weapons?" "Yes." "That
sounds implausible." "That's
because you're a good detective. But do you know what I've found?" "What
have you found?" "I
have found from my own experience that – in the absence of other witnesses – a
simple, resolutely maintained lie is wonderfully difficult to break." Chapter FourAs soon as Arkady was alone in Pribluda's
flat he went to the office and opened the computer, which immediately
demanded the password. An access code that combined up to twelve letters and
numbers was virtually unbreakable, but a code also had to be remembered, and
this was where the humans Arkady knew tended to use their birthday or address.
Arkady tried the names of the colonel's wife, son, saint (although Pribluda was
an atheist, he had always enjoyed a bottle on his saint's name day), favorite
writers (Sholokhov and Gorky), favorite teams (Dynamo and Central Army). Arkady
tried 06111968 for the date of Pribluda's Party membership, a chemical
C12H22011 for sugar, a homesick 55-45-37-37 for the coordinates (latitude and
longitude, minutes and seconds) of Arkady
discovered he fostered a killer's calculation hat even if his story was
implausible, the truth was no more plausible. He was also a little bemused by
his own reaction to the attack. He had defended himself instinctively, the way
a man about to dive resists being pushed. He
had no idea why he had been attacked except that it had to do with his friend
Pribluda. Not that Pribluda was a friend in the ordinary sense. They shared no
tastes, interests, politics. In fact, truth be told, Pribluda was in many ways
a terrible man. Arkady
could imagine him now bringing out the vodka and saying, "Renko, old pal,
you're fucked. You are in a crazy country, in a foreign land where you know
nothing, including the language." Pribluda would hunch forward to touch
glasses and grin that ghastly smile of his. He had the habit of loosening a
button, a collar, a cuff with each glassful, as if drinking was serious work.
"All you can be sure of is that you know nothing. No one will help you
because of your brown eyes. Everyone who steps forward as a friend will be an
enemy. Everyone who offers to help is hiding a knife behind his back.
Cheers!" The colonel would make a grand gesture of throwing the vodka's
cap into the sea. That was his idea of panache. "Do you appreciate
logic?" "I
love logic," Arkady might say. "This
is logic: Rufo had no reason to kill you. Rufo tried to kill you. Ergo, someone
sent Rufo. Ergo, that someone will send someone else." "A
nice thought. Was that a present to take home?" Arkady
would nod in the direction of the man-sized doll brooding in the corner. The
way its shadow shifted when the breeze pushed the lamp was a bit unnerving.
" Charming." He fished from his coat a piece of note – paper on which
he had written Rufo's address and the house key he had lifted off the body before
Luna arrived. "What
I think you should do," Pribluda would steamroll on, "is lock
yourself with a gun and oranges, bread and water in a room at the embassy,
maybe a bucket for personal needs, and don't open the door until you go to the
airport." In
his mind, Arkady asked, "Spending a week in "No.
Killing Rufo when you were going to kill yourself, that's
perverse." Arkady
went down the hall to the office and returned with a map of the city that he
spread under a lamp. "You're
leaving?" Pribluda was always horrified when Arkady quit before the bottom
of the bottle. Arkady
searched for a street called Esperanza and wrote down Rufo's address on a piece
of paper. He thought, I'm not just going to sit and wait. I also have your car
key. If you want to help, tell me where the car is. Or give me your code. Pribluda's
ghost, insulted, disappeared. Arkady, on the other hand, was wide awake. Stepping onto the street in a foreign
city in the middle of the night was diving into a dark pool without knowing how
deep the water was. An arcade of columns ran the length of the block, and he
didn't emerge into faint, gassy light until he reached the lamp at the corner.
He continued along the boulevard because its long curve against the sea
simplified the problem of orientation. Although
he listened for the stir of a car or a footfall, all he heard was his own echo
and the surge of the ocean on the other side of empty traffic lanes. On the way
he passed a mural of Castro painted up the side of a three-story building. The
figure appeared to be a giant walking through his city, his head obscured in
the dark above streetlamp level, wearing his characteristic military fatigues,
legs in mid-stride, right hand tossing a salute toward an unseen someone vowing
"A Sus Ordenes, Comandante!" Well, Arkady thought, the
Comandante and he made a strange pair of insomniacs, a furtive Russian and a
sleepless giant on patrol. Six
blocks on was a dark hotel front and a taxi, the driver's head cradled on the
steering wheel. Arkady shook the man and, when one eye squinted open, held up
Rufo's address and a five-dollar bill. Arkady
sat up front as the taxi flew like a bat through the blackout, the driver
yawning the entire way as if nothing short of a collision was worth waking up
for, slowing only when mounds of urban rubble loomed in the headlights. Rufo's
address was stenciled on the front of a low, windowless house on a narrow
street. The cab fumbled away while, with Rufo's lighter, Arkady found the right
key; when he had taken the house key off the dead man before calling the PNR
Arkady noticed how like his own house key Rufo's was, a Russian design with a
star stamped on the grip, no doubt a souvenir of socialist commerce. It did
occur to him that if Detective Osorio had tried to enter with the keys he had
left on Rufo she was frustrated and annoyed. The
door opened to a room narrow enough to make claustrophobia creep up his back.
He walked the lighter flame between an unmade daybed and a low table with a
ceramic ashtray-and-nude and a stack of TV and stereo, tape deck and VCR. A
minibar looked ripped out of a hotel suite. A pedestal sink was lined with
minoxidil, vitamins and aspirin. An armoire held, besides clothes, boxes of
Nike and New Balance running shoes, cigar boxes, a library of videotapes and
copies of Windows '95, a regular emporium. He opened a door to glimpse a filthy
toilet, ducked back into the room and moved more slowly. Tacked to the walls
were newspaper articles headlined gran exito de equipo cubano and,
over a photo of a young world-beating Rufo raising his boxing gloves, Pinero
triunfa en USSR! Framed pictures showed groups of men in team jackets in
Red Square, at Big Ben, the Daysi
32-2007 Susy
30-4031 Vi.
Aflt. 2300 Kid
Choc. 5/1 Vi.
HYC 2200 The
only sense Arkady could make of the list was that he had been the visitor
arriving on Aeroflot at 2300 hours, eleven at night, and that there seemed to
be another visitor from Angola due at almost the same late hour. Anyway, the
list was a lot of phone numbers for a room with no phone or phone jack. Arkady
remembered that Rufo had had a cell phone when they met at the airport,
although when Arkady had searched Rufo's body later, the phone was gone. On
a hook hung an elegant, ivory-colored straw hat with "Made in Most
important, he found no reason for Rufo to try to kill him. Rufo had put some
planning into the attack. The running suit made sense for the same reason
painters wore coveralls, and he felt that the same thought had registered with Osorio.
But why bother killing someone who would be gone from the scene in a matter of
hours? Was Rufo after something or was it simply open season on Russians in As
he stepped outside, the light of dawn showed next to the apartment a scarred
wall in bullfight red that said Gimnasio Atares. At the curb in a PNR
sedan was Detective Osorio. She fixed her eyes on Arkady long enough to make
him squirm before she put out her hand. "The key." "Sorry."
Arkady fished in his pocket and gave her the key to his apartment in "Get
in the car," Osorio said. "I would like to lock you into a cell but
Dr. Blas wants to talk to you." With his trimmed beard and whiff of carbolic
soap, Dr. Blas was the Pluto of a personal, genial underworld, welcoming Arkady
back to the Institute de Medicina Legal and praising Osorio. "Our
Ofelia is very intelligent. If Hamlet had an Ofelia half as smart he would have
solved the murder of his father the king in short order. Of course, they
wouldn't have had much of a play." Two young women in snug IML T-shirts
walked by in the corridor; the doctor's eyes approved. "We were trained by
the FBI in "Is
that it?" Arkady asked. He
thought his problem was that Rufo had tried to kill him, but the director
seemed to have a bigger picture. They walked by a glass case with two head
shots of men with slack mouths and closed eyes. "Missing
persons and unidentified dead. For the public to see." Blas picked up his
thread. "When you think of They
passed a handcuffed man in a chair. He lifted a face of old scars and fresh
bruises. "Waiting
for his psychological evaluation," Blas explained. "We have other
experts in forensic biology, dentistry, toxicology, immunology. A Russian might
find this hard to believe. You used to be the teacher and we used to be the
students. Now we are the teachers in Africa, Central America, "He
is reacting to the attack on himself," she said. "My
reaction has probably been colored by that," Arkady conceded. "Or
finding Pribluda dead. Or jet lag." ' Blas
said, "You have a week more here. You will adjust. It was very
enterprising of you to go to Rufo's. Ofelia said you might. She's intuitive, I
think." "I
think so, too," Arkady said. "If
what you say is true, Rufo inadvertently killed himself by his own hand during
a brief, violent struggle?" "Accidental
suicide." "Very
much so. But that does not answer the question of why Rufo attacked
you. I find this very troubling." "Between
us, I'm troubled too." Blas
stopped at the head of a stairway from which rose a sour coolness like the odor
of spoiled milk. " The nature of the attack with a knife and a
syringe is so peculiar. There was an embalming syringe stolen here yesterday,
although I don't understand when Rufo could have taken it. You were with him
the whole time, weren't you?" "I
went to the rest room once. He could have taken it then." "Yes,
you're right. Well, it was probably that syringe, although I don't understand
why a murderer would choose to use it when he already had a better weapon. Do
you?" Arkady
gave the matter some thought. "Did Rufo have any record of violence?" "I
know the opinion of Captain Arcos in this matter, but I have to be honest.
Better to say that Rufo had a record of not being caught. He was a jinetero,
a hustler. The kind who hangs around tourists and finds someone a girl, changes
their money, gets them cigars. Supposedly very successful with German and
Swedish women, secretaries on vacation. May I be direct?" "Please." "It
is said that he would advertise to foreign women that he had a pinga
like a locomotive." "What
is a pinga?" Arkady asked. "Well,
I'm no psychiatrist, but a man who has a pinga like a locomotive
doesn't use a syringe to kill someone." "More
likely a machete," Osorio spoke up. "You
can't see many of those. How many people would have machetes in the city?" "Every
Cuban has a machete," Blas said. "I have three in my own
closet." "I
have one," Osorio said. Arkady
stood corrected. Blas
asked, "You can't shed any light on this syringe?" "No." "Understand
I am not a detective, I am not the PNR, I am only a forensic pathologist, but I
was trained by my Russian instructors of long ago to think in an analytical
fashion. I believe we are not so different, so I will show you something to
build your confidence in us. And you may even learn something from us." "Such
as?" Blas
rubbed his hands like a host with a program. "We will start where you came
in." The morgue had six drawers, a freezer
and a glass-faced cooler, all with broken handles beaded with condensation.
Blas said, "The refrigerators still work. We had an American pilot from
the invasion at the Blas
rolled out a drawer. Inside, the purple body identified as Pribluda was
rearranged: skull, jaw and right foot between the legs, a plastic sack of
organs where the head should be. Left open, the stomach cavity released a
zoo-like bouquet that made Arkady's eyes smart, and the whole body had been
placed in a zinc tub to keep the liquefying flesh from overflowing. Arkady lit
a cigarette and inhaled deeply. That was reason to smoke right there. So far,
Arkady's confidence was not rising. "We
did have funding promised from our Russian friends for a new refrigeration
system. You can understand how important refrigeration is in "No,
but I think that after a week in the water and having body parts switched, most
people look alike." "I
was instructed by Captain Arcos not to perform biopsies. However, I think I am
still the director here and so I did. The brain and organs show no evidence of
drugs or toxins. That is not conclusive because the body was in the water such
a long time, but there was another aspect. The heart muscle displayed definite
signs of necrosis, which is a strong indicator of heart attack." "A
heart attack while floating in the water?" "A
heart attack after a lifetime of eating and drinking like a Russian, an attack
so massive and so quick he had no time even to thrash, which was why all the
fishing gear was still on board. Did you know that life expectancy is twenty
years less in "Have
you ever seen neumбticos die of a heart attack before?" "No,
mostly shark attacks. But this is the first time I've heard of a Russian neumбtico." "Don't
you think that's worth an investigation?" "You
must understand our situation. We have no crime scene and no witnesses, which
makes an investigation very discouraging, very expensive. And no crime. Worse,
he's Russian and the embassy refuses to cooperate. They say no one worked with
Pribluda, no one knew him and that he was merely an innocent student of the
sugar industry. For us even to visit the embassy requires a diplomatic note.
All the same we asked for a photograph of Pribluda, and since we didn't receive
that, we have matched him and the body to the best possible certainty. There is
nothing more we can do. We must consider him identified and you must take him
home. We will have no more 'cigars' here." "Why
ask the embassy for a photograph? I showed you one." "Yours
wasn't good enough." "You
can't match anything to the way he looks now." Blas
let a smile win his face. He rolled the body drawer shut. " I have a
surprise for you. I want you to return home with the right idea of On the second floor Blas led Arkady and
Osorio into an office with the faded title antropologia on the door. Arkady's
first impression was of a catacomb, the remains of martyrs assiduously sorted
by shelves of skulls, pelvises, thigh bones, metacarpals lying hand in hand,
spines tangled like snakes. Dust swam around a lampshade, the light reflected
by case after case of neatly pinned tropical beetles iridescent as opals. A
fer-de-lance with open fangs coiled within a specimen jar topped by a tarantula
on tiptoe. What looked like dominoes were burned bones in gradations from white
to charcoal black. On the wall the baroque jaws of a shark outgrinned a jawbone
of human teeth filed to points. The cord for the ceiling fan was the braided
hair of a shrunken head. No catacomb, Arkady changed his mind, more a jungle
trading post. A sheet covered something humming on a desk, and if it were a
great ape going philosophical Arkady wouldn't have been surprised. "This
is our anthropological laboratory," said Blas. "Not a large one, but
here we determine by bones and teeth the age, race and sex of a victim. And
different poisonous or violent agents." "The
Caribbean has a number you won't see in "We
are deficient in sharks," Arkady said. "And,"
Blas said, "by insect activity how long the victim has been dead. In other
climates, different insects start at different times. Here in "Fascinating." "Fascinating
but perhaps not what an investigator from "There
are different laboratories for different places." "Exactly!"
Blas picked up the jawbone of pointed teeth. " Our population is, let's
say, unique. A number of African tribes practiced scarification and sharpening
teeth. The Abakua, for example, was a secret leopard society from the "It
conceivably might." "But
to a Cuban a skull and an ax covered in animal blood may be a religious shrine.
The detective can tell you all about it if you want." Osorio squirmed at
the suggestion and Blas went on. "So when we make a psychological analysis
of a person we use the "Oh."
Not that Arkady had ever used the "Nevertheless"
– Blas lifted the cloth – "let me prove that, in spite of superstitions, Unveiled
on a desk was a 486 computer hooked up to a scanner and printer, each running,
and an 8-mm video camera mounted lens down above a stand. Resting in a ring on
the stand and tilted up to the camera was a skull with a hole in the center of
the forehead. The cranium was wired together. Missing teeth made for a gaping
cartoon smile. Arkady
had only read about a system like this. "This is a German identification
technique." "No,"
said Blas, "this is a Cuban technique. The German system, including
software, costs over fifty thousand dollars. Ours costs a tenth as much by
adapting an orthopedic program. In this case, for example, we found a head with
teeth hammered out." Blas touched the keyboard, and on the screen appeared
a color picture of a Dumpster stuffed with palm fronds topped by a decapitated
head. At a keystroke the police and Dumpster were replaced by four photographs
of different men, one getting married, another dancing energetically at a
party, a third holding a basketball, the last slouching on a swaybacked horse.
"Four missing men. Which could it be? A murderer might have been confident
once in believing a face in advanced decay with no teeth could not be matched
to any photograph or records. After all, here in Arkady
chose the bridegroom, and at once the man's image filled the screen, eyes
popping from nervousness, hair as carefully arranged as the frills on his
shirt. Dragging
a mouse on the pad, Dr. Blas outlined the groom's head, hit a key and erased
his shirt and shoulders. At the tap of a key, the head floated to the left of
the screen, and on the right appeared the skull as it stared up at the video
camera like a patient waiting for the dentist's drill. Blas repositioned the
skull so that it gazed up at the camera lens at precisely the same angle as the
face. He enlarged the face to the same size, enhanced the shadows so that flesh
melted and eyes sank into hollows, placed white darts on the skull at jaw and
crown of the skull, at the outside points of the brow, within the orbital and
nasal cavities, across the cheekbones and the corners of the mandible. In
comparison to the laborious reconstruction of faces from skulls that Arkady
knew in "The
numbers are discrepancies in measurement between the missing man and the skull
when they are exactly matched. So we prove, scientifically, they could not
possibly be the same man." Blas
started over again, this time with photo no. 3, a boy smiling proudly in a
Chicago Bulls shirt, one hand weighing a basketball. Blas sliced off, enlarged
and enhanced the boy's head, then brought up and positioned the skull on the
screen. The distances between marker darts came up virtually the same, and when
Blas merged the two images the numbers ratcheted down to zero and a single face
that was both dead and alive looked out from the screen. If ever there was a
picture of a ghost this was it. "Now
our missing man is not missing anymore and you see that even if things are
supposed to be impossible in "That's
why you wanted a photograph of Pribluda?" "To
make a match to the body we took from the bay, yes. But the photograph you
brought was insufficient and the Russian embassy refuses to provide
another." There
was an expectant wait until Arkady picked up the cue. "I
don't need a diplomatic note to go to the embassy." Blas
acted as if the thought had never occurred to him. "If you want to. The
Revolution always needs volunteers. I can write the embassy address, and any
car on the street will probably take you there for two dollars. If you have
American dollars this is the best transportation system in the world." Arkady
was awed by the doctor's ability to put a good gloss on anything. His attention
returned to the screen. "What was the head cut off with?" "In
the Dumpster?" said Blas. " A machete. The machete cut is a distinct
wound. No sawing." "Did
you identify the murderer?" Osorio
said, "Not yet. We will, though." "How
many homicides a year did you say?" "In
"How
many in the heat of passion?" "Overall,
a hundred." "Of
the rest, how many for revenge?" "Maybe
fifty." "Robbery?" "Maybe
forty." "Drugs?" "Five." "Leaving
five. How would you characterize them?" "Organized
crime, without a doubt. Paid murders." "How
organized? What were the weapons in those cases?" "Occasionally
a handgun. The Taurus from "Machetes?"
To Arkady's ear, that did not have the ring of modern homicide. True, he
remembered when any Russian murderer who wiped his knife after slicing a
victim's throat was rated a smooth operator, back in the curiously innocent
days before the worldwide spread of money transfers and remote-control bombs.
Which left "We
have a ninety-eight percent homicide solution rate," Blas said. " The
best in the world." "Enjoy
it," Arkady said. Chapter FiveThe Russian embassy was a thirty-story
tower with an architectural suggestion of squared chest and armored head
looming like a monster of stone that had crossed continents, waded through
oceans and finally stopped dead in its tracks ankle-deep among the green palm
trees of Havana. Plate glass shone on its face, but overall the building stood
in its own shroud of shadow and stillness. Inside, office after office was
stripped to bare walls and phone jacks. Ghosts lingered in the bald spots and
stains of hallway runners, in the hazy, unwashed bottles standing along the
walls, in a ventilation system that spread an ancient reek of cigarettes. From
the office of Vice Consul Vitaly Bugai, Arkady looked down at a world of
white-colonnaded mansions, embassies French, Italian and Vietnamese, their roofs
strung with elaborate radio dipoles and antennae, satellite dishes framed by
gardens of pink hibiscus. Bugai
was a young man with small features squeezed into the center of a soft face. He
wore a silk robe and Chinese sandals and floated in a liquid atmosphere of
air-conditioning, moving, it seemed to Arkady, by contradictory impulses;
relief that another Russian national was not dead and irritation that he would
have to deal with the survivor for another week. He was also, perhaps, a little
surprised that any vestige of Russian authority had been able to defend itself. "Those
houses were all from before the Revolution." Bugai joined Arkady at the
window. "They were rich people. The biggest Cadillac dealership in the
world was in "I
think I've seen some of those cars." "Still,
this is not a Black Hole. A Black Hole would be a posting in "It's
not like the old days, either?" Arkady asked. "Not
at all. Between technicians and military support we had twelve thousand
Russians here and a diplomatic staff of another thousand in attaches, deputies,
cultural liaisons, KGB, secretaries, clerks, communications, couriers,
security. We had Soviet housing, Soviet schools and camps for Russian children.
Why not? We put thirty billion rubles into "Not
conclusively." "It
was conclusive enough for the Cubans. I've talked to a Captain Arcos and he
seemed very reasonable, considering he pulled a Russian out of "A
dead Russian." "As
I understand it, death was caused by a heart attack. A tragic but natural
event." "There's
nothing natural about Pribluda floating in the bay." "With
spies these things happen." "Officially,
he was a sugar attache." "Right.
Well, all he had to do was drive around the island and visit some cane fields
and see the Cubans won't make their sugar quota, because they never have. As
for secret intelligence, the Cuban army is now moving missiles with oxen
instead of trucks, that's all you need to know about that. The faster we get
this little episode behind us the better." "There
is the other little episode of Rufo and me." "Well,
who knows what you are? We've lost a driver and an apartment thanks to
you." "I'll
stay at Pribluda's. It's empty." Bugai
pursed his lips. "That's not the worst solution. I intend to keep this
problem as far from the embassy as possible." Arkady
discovered that talking to Bugai was much like trying to catch a jellyfish;
every time he groped for an answer the vice consul floated out of reach. "Before
the Cubans even found the body someone here at the embassy knew that Pribluda
was in trouble and sent me a fax. It was unsigned. Who could that be?" "I
wish I knew." "You
can't find out?" "I
don't have enough staff to investigate my staff." "Who
assigned Rufo to me?" "The
Cuban Ministry of the Interior assigned Rufo to us. Rufo was their
man, not ours. There was no one else on hand when you arrived in the middle of
the night. I didn't know exactly who you were and I still don't know exactly
who you are. Of course, I've called "What
I'm involved in is identifying Pribluda. The Cubans asked for photographs of
him and wanted to come to the embassy. You refused." "Well,
this is my field. First, we had no photographs. Second, the Cubans always use any
opportunity to gain access to the embassy and poke around sensitive areas. It's
a state of siege. We were the comrades, now we're the criminals. Punctured
tires in the middle of the night. Being pulled over for shakedowns when the
police see Russian license plates." "Like
"But
in "Where's
the ambassador?" "We're
between ambassadors." Arkady
reached for a notepad from the desk and wrote, "Where is the resident
intelligence agent Pribluda reported to?" "It's
no big secret," Bugai said. " The chief of guards is here, he's just
muscle. But the chief of security has been in "When
Pribluda communicated with "We
send encrypted E-mail on a hooded machine that wipes clean, not even a ghost on
the hard drive once you delete. But not that many messages are encrypted. The
usual faxes, calls and E-mail are plain text on ordinary machines, and I would
love a shredder that actually worked." Arkady produced the photograph of
the Havana Yacht Club to ask about Pribluda's Cuban friends, but the vice
consul barely glanced. " We have no Cuban friends. It used to be an event
when a Russian artist visited Arkady
put the Yacht Club away. " The Cubans need a better picture of Pribluda.
The embassy must have a security photograph of him." "That
would be up to our friend in "A
month?" "Or
more." Bugai
had kept retreating and Arkady had kept advancing until he stepped on a pencil
that broke with a sharp crack. The vice consul jumped and looked not as cool as
jellyfish anymore, more like an egg yolk at the sight of a fork. His
nervousness reminded Arkady that he had killed a man; whether in self-defense
or not, killing someone was a violent act and not likely to attract new
friends. "What
was Pribluda, your sugar attache, working on?" "I
can't possibly tell you that." "What
was he working on?" Arkady asked more slowly. "I
don't think you have the authority," Bugai began, and amended as Arkady
started around the desk. " Very well, but this is under protest. There's a
problem with the sugar protocol, a commercial thing you wouldn't understand.
Basically they send us sugar they can't sell anywhere else, and we send them
oil and machinery we can't unload anywhere else." "That
sounds normal." "There
was a misunderstanding. Last year the Cubans demanded negotiations of
agreements already signed. With such bad feelings between the two countries we
let them bring in a third party, a Panamanian sugar trader called AzuPanama.
Everything was resolved. I don't know why Pribluda was looking into that." "Pribluda,
the sugar expert?" "Yes." "And
a photograph of Pribluda?" "Let
me look," Bugai said before Arkady took another step. He backed to the
bookshelves and retrieved a leather album, which he opened on the desk,
flipping through ring-bound pages of mounted photographs. " Guests and
social events. May Day. Mexican Cinco de Mayo. I told you Pribluda didn't come
to these things. Fourth of July with the Americans. The Americans don't have an
embassy, only a so-called Interests Section bigger than an embassy. October,
Cuban Now
we have only a few children, but they demand Santa Claus and a Christmas
party." In
the photograph two girls with bows in their hair sat on the lap of a bearded
man in a plush red suit, a round figure with cheeks rouged to a cheery glow.
Presents ringed a tinsel tree. Behind the children spread a buffet line of
adults balancing plates of cheeses and Christmas cakes and glasses of sweet
champagne. At the far end someone who might have been Sergei Pribluda shoved
his whole hand into his mouth. "The
heat in that suit was unbelievable." "You
wore it?" Arkady took a closer look at the picture. "You don't look
well." "Congestive
heart failure. A bad valve." Kneading his arm, Bugai went around his desk and
rooted through drawers. "Pictures. I'll make a list of possible names and
addresses. Mostovoi is the embassy photographer, then there is Olga." "You
should be in "No,
I angled for Elmar Mostovoi had a monkey's round mug
and curved fingernails and a hairpiece of frizzled orange that sat on his head
like a souvenir. He was in his mid-fifties, Arkady guessed, but still in good
shape, the sort who did push-ups on his fingertips, wore his shirt open and
rolled up his pants to show off a shaved chest and shins as smooth as tubes. He
lived in "They
put Poles, Germans and Russians here. They call it the Sierra Maestra, I call
it Mostovoi's
apartment was decorated with movie posters (Lolita, East of "Are
you interested in photographs?" Mostovoi asked. "Yes." "An
appreciator?" "In
my way." "Do
you like nature?" It was very natural. Mostovoi had boxes of eight-by-ten
black-and-white photographs of young female nudes half hidden by fronds,
romping through waves, peeking through bamboo. " A cross between Lewis
Carroll and Helmut Newton." "Do
you have any photographs of your colleagues at the embassy?" "Bugai
is always after me to take pictures of his so-called cultural events. I can't
be bothered. You can't get Russians to pose like this. You can't even get them
to take their clothes off." "The
climate, perhaps." "No,
even here." Mostovoi pondered the photograph of a Cuban girl lightly
breaded in sand. " Somehow, the people here manage to balance socialism
with naivete. And by mixing with the Cubans I don't live with the paranoia that
has gripped the rest of our dwindling community." "What
paranoia is that?" "Ignorant
paranoia. When an intelligence agent like Pribluda floats around the harbor in
the middle of the night, what is he doing but spying? We never change. It's
disgusting. It's what happens to Europeans in Mostovoi
opened another box. On top, a girl squeezed a volleyball. " My sports
series." "More
of that dramatic angle." The
next shot was of a light-colored nude cradling a skull on her lap. The girl
directed a sultry glower through a mane of curls that only half covered her
breasts. Around her were molten candles, drums, bottles of rum. "Wrong
box," Mostovoi said. " My rainy-day series. We shot in here and I had
to use the props at hand." The
skull was a rough facsimile, lacking detail around the nasal orifice and teeth,
although Arkady was impressed by the number of artifacts a serious photographer
had to have ready for a rainy day. In the next picture another girl wore a
beret to model clay. "Very
artistic." "That's
kind of you. There's talk of a show at the embassy. Bugai strings me along. I
don't care. I only hope I'm there with my camera when he has his heart
attack." She was buxom with fine hair fading
from blond to gray and an oval face with small eyes a little damp with
recollection. Although her air-conditioning had failed, Olga Petrovna's flat
was a little corner of "They
go back twenty-five years. It was such a life. Our own schools with the best
teachers, good Russian food. It was a real community. No one spoke Spanish. The
children had their Pioneer camps, all in Russian, with archery and mountain
climbing and volleyball. None of this baseball idiocy of the Cubans. Our own
beaches, our own clubs and, of course, there were always birthdays and
weddings, real family events. It made you proud to be Russian, to know you were
here protecting socialism on this island far from home in the teeth of the
Americans. It seems hard to believe we were so strong, so sure." "You
are an unofficial historian of the embassy?" "The
embassy mother. I've been there longer than anyone else. I came very young. My
husband is dead and my daughter married a Cuban. The truth is, I'm hostage to a
granddaughter. If it weren't for me she wouldn't speak Russian at all. Who can
imagine such a thing? Her name is Carmen. This is a name for a Russian
girl?" She poured tea and added jam with a conspiratorial smile. "Who
needs sugar?" "Thank
you. Did your granddaughter go to the embassy Christmas party?" "Here
she is." Olga Petrovna opened to the first picture of what appeared to be
the most recent album and pointed to a curly-haired girl in a white dress that
made her look like a walking wedding cake. "Very
cute." "Do
you think so?" "Completely." "Actually,
it's an interesting mix, Russian and Cuban. Very precocious, a little of the
exhibitionist. Carmen insisted – all the children insisted – on an American
Santa Claus. That comes from watching television." From
snapshot to snapshot Arkady followed the little girl's progress to Santa's lap,
a whisper in his ear and her retreat along the buffet. He pointed to a broad
back at the table. "Isn't that Sergei Pribluda?" "How
could you tell? It was Carmen who dragged him to the party. He is such a hard
worker." Olga
Petrovna had the highest esteem for Pribluda, a strong individual with a real
worker's background, patriotic, never drunk though never shy, quiet but
profound, obviously an agent but not the sort to act mysterious. Certainly not
a weakling like Vice Consul Bugai. "Remember
the word 'comrade'?" asked Olga Petrovna. "All
too well." "That's
what I would call Sergei Sergeevich in the best sense of the word. And
cultured." "Really?"
That was such a new perception of Pribluda that Arkady wondered whether they
were speaking of the same person. Unfortunately, despite her respect for the
colonel, she had no other pictures of him. Then, with great delight, "Oh,
here she is." A girl of about eight in an outgrown school jumper of dull
maroon stood at the threshold of the room. She glowered at Arkady from under a vee
of brows. " Carmen, this is our friend Citizen Renko." The
girl advanced in three deliberate steps, shouted "Hai!" and delivered
a kick a millimeter short of contact with his chest. " Uncle Sergei knows
karate." "He
does?" Arkady had always thought of Pribluda as more a kidney-punch
devotee. "He
carries a black belt in his briefcase." "Did
you ever see it?" "No,
but I'm sure." She administered a karate chop to the air and Arkady
stepped back. "Did you see? Fists of fear." "That's
quite enough," Olga Petrovna said. "I know you have homework." "If
he's a friend of Uncle Sergei's he'll want to see it." "That
is enough, young lady." "Stupid
coat." Carmen looked Arkady up and down. Olga
Petrovna clapped her hands until the girl tucked in her chin and marched to the
next room. "I'm sorry, that's children now." "When
was the last time you saw Sergei Sergeevich?" "A
Friday after work. I had taken Carmen for an ice cream on the Malecуn when we
ran into him talking to a Cuban. I remember Carmen said that she heard
something roar, and Sergei Sergeevich said his neighbor kept a lion that ate
little girls. She became so irritable we had to hurry home. Usually they did
get on wonderfully." When Arkady had her show him on a map she pointed to
the Malecуn in front of Pribluda's flat. "Sergei Sergeevich wore a
captain's cap and the Cuban was carrying one of those enormous inner tubes they
fish from. A black man is all I remember." "Did
you hear a roar?" "Something,
maybe." As she put the albums away she asked, "Do you think there's
any truth to this story that Sergei Sergeevich is dead?" "I'm
afraid there might be. Some of the Cuban investigators are very
competent." "Dead
of what?" "A
heart attack, they say." "But
you have some doubts?" "I
just like to be sure." Olga
Petrovna sighed. Even in her time in Arkady took a taxi back to the Malecуn
and walked the last few blocks to Pribluda's apartment past boys demanding
Chiclets and men offering mulatas, and beyond conversation starters of
"Amiga, que hora es? De que pais? Momentico, amigo."
Overhead hung balconies, arabesques of wrought-iron spikes and potted plants,
women in housedresses and men stripped to their underwear and cigars, music
shifting from window to window. Decay everywhere, heat everywhere, faded colors
trying to hold together disintegrating plaster and salt-eaten beams. He
thought for a moment he had caught sight of a man keeping pace behind him in
the dark of the arcade. Was he being followed? He couldn't tell. It was hard to
single out a shadow when everyone knew which way the streets ran except you,
when everyone looked in place but you, with the sea on one side and on the
other a maze of demolition piles, cars hauled onto sidewalks, lines of people
waiting for ice cream, a bus, bread, water. So
he plunged on in his coat, drawing glances as if he were a monk wandered off
the Via Dolorosa. Chapter SixOfelia was Arkady and Dr. Blas played Rufo.
They positioned the tables and taped the floor of the IML conference room
to indicate the perimeters of the walls, bookshelves and doors of the embassy
flat so that they could – for their own information – "reconstruct the
facts" of Rufo Pinero's death. "Reconstruction
of the facts" distinguished Cuban forensic medicine from the American,
Russian, German. In Cuban laboratories, in Nicaraguan rain forests, in the
dusty fields of Nevertheless,
the doctor was stymied and breathing hard. They took into account that Rufo
Pinero was a former athlete, taller and heavier than Renko by twenty kilos,
maybe more. The Russian was exhausted by travel, confused, clearly not
athletic, though not totally obtuse. Blas thought that described Renko well
enough. They
staged the attack in various ways. Rufo rising from a chair, waiting in the
room, entering the door. No matter, wielding scissors and a pencil as a knife
and syringe, Blas didn't come close to efficiently or rapidly dispatching
Ofelia. Part of the problem was that she was so fast afoot. Ofelia had run the
hundred-meter dash at school and hardly gained a kilo since then. She had a
habit of shifting her weight from foot to foot that Blas found annoying. Another
problem was that the attack spoke of surprise. Yet using both a
"knife" and a "syringe" made Blas slow and unwieldy. The
simple act of bringing out not one but two weapons gave a victim time to react.
Rufo would have been led laps around the room and table and chairs would have
flown in all directions had Ofelia been the intended victim. "Maybe
it was a spontaneous attack," Blas said. "Rufo
wore a body-length jumpsuit of waterproof material over his shirt and pants.
There's nothing spontaneous about that. He knew what he was going to do." "Renko
does not look quite so elusive." "Maybe
if he was threatened with a weapon." "Two
weapons." "No,"
Ofelia decided, "Rufo had one weapon, the knife. The needle was the
surprise for him." She hurried because she was a mere detective and Blas
was a pathologist renowned for the rigor of his methodology. However, she could
almost see the fight take place. "You
know how the Russian always wears that ridiculous coat. I believe the knife
pinned the coat to the bookcase. There is a tear in the lapel of the coat and
there was a coat fiber on the knife. I think that was when Rufo was
killed." "With
the syringe?" "In
self-defense." Blas
took Ofelia's hand, which was slim on the soap-scented meat of his palm.
"What is wonderful about you is your sympathy for the most unlikely
people. Only, this is not an investigation. You and I are merely satisfying our
professional curiosity about the physical facts of a death." "But
don't you wonder?" "No."
Blas's expression said he wasn't a sexist, but that women often lost focus.
"You're concerned about the syringe. Very well, we lost one in the lab.
Either Renko or Rufo could have stolen it. But why would Renko? For drugs? I
found no drugs in the syringe. He stole it as a weapon? If he had any fear for
his life he wouldn't have come to "Maybe
he didn't think, maybe he reacted." "With
a syringe already in his hand? A syringe for which he had no use? A syringe
that ended in Rufo's grip?" She
withdrew her hand. "Rufo pulled it out of his head. I would." "Maybe?
Would? You are speculating. Truth reveals itself more to logic than to
inspiration." Blas had caught his breath. "We'll try the
reconstruction again. Only, this time move a little slower. You forget that
Renko is a smoker, probably a drinker, certainly out of condition. You, on the
other hand, are most definitely in shape, younger, more alert. I don't see how
he could start to defend himself. Maybe Rufo slipped. Ready?" Rufo
was not the sort who slipped, Ofelia thought. She
had had a good friend named Maria at the university. Some years later, Maria
married a poet who declared himself an observer for human rights in Soon
Ofelia saw on television that he had been sentenced to twenty years for assault
and that Maria had been arrested for prostitution. When Ofelia visited her in
jail Maria told a different story. She said that she had just come out of her
house in the morning when a man grabbed her and started to pull her clothes off
at her own front door. When her husband ran out to protect her, the man knocked
him to the ground and kicked in his teeth. Only then did a police car appear,
driven by a single officer who took only a statement from the man, who claimed
that Maria had propositioned him and, when he turned her down, that her husband
had assaulted him. Maria remembered two other items: that the backseat of the
car was already covered in a plastic sheet and that when the man who beat her
husband got into the front of the patrol car he picked up two aluminum cigar
tubes from the seat and slipped them into his shirt pocket. The cigars were
his, laid aside for safekeeping. The poet and Maria hanged themselves in
different prisons on the same day. Out of sheer curiosity Ofelia went back and
read their arrest report, which declared that the good citizen who had come
wandering by their door was Rufo Pinero. Rufo
hardly needed one weapon, let alone two. If
the issue of the syringe bothered her and the death of Maria upset her, the
Russian infuriated her. The arrogance to steal Rufo's key, as if he would even
know what he was looking at in a Cuban's room. To think that he could stand in
front of a map of Havana in Pribluda's office and see more than a piece of
paper. For
Ofelia every street, every corner on the map was a memory. For example, her
first school trip to Blas
gasped, "Still too fast." Chapter SevenHavana had sunk into evening shadow, the
sea scalloped black, swallows darting through the arcade when Arkady
reached the Malecуn. As he went up the stairs he heard the ground-floor
neighbor's radio and not quite a lion's roar but a definite reverberation. Slotted
light spread from shutters across the walls of Pribluda's sitting room to the
black doll sitting in the corner, its head tucked away. Perhaps it was the low
angle of sun off the water but the flat seemed subtly altered: a lower ceiling,
wider table, a chair turned a different direction. Since a kid, Arkady always
turned chairs slightly out from a table as if they carried on a silent
conversation. A childish habit, but there it was. Apart
from the door the only access to the apartment was the balcony and an air shaft
midway down the corridor. Even as Arkady turned on lights a power brownout
reduced them to candles. He hung up his coat in the bedroom closet and stuck
his passport in a shoe while he opened his bag. The shirts were perhaps folded
a little differently. If
there were snoops they hadn't taken any food – the Russian stockpile in the
refrigerator was still complete. Arkady poured chilled water from a jar. Dim
light crept from the refrigerator to the glasses on the table, the turtle's
bowl, the glass eyes of the rag doll. Black paint gave Chango not only color
but a rough kind of vigor. Arkady lifted the red bandanna to touch the face,
which was papier-mache molded into crude features, half-formed mouth about to
speak, half-formed nose about to breathe, half-formed hand about to push off
its walking stick and rise. Dolls should be more insubstantial, not quite so
conscious or as watchful, Arkady thought. Sweat located his spine. He was going
to have to stop wearing a coat in The
noise from below reminded him that he had meant to try in at least one language
or another to interview the ground-floor neighbor. According to Detective
Osorio, this was the person who had illegally rented Pribluda the second-floor
rooms. The illegal part appealed to Arkady. Also, he wondered why the neighbor
didn't want both floors himself. The cacophony could have been even more
stereophonic. When
the noise stopped it was interesting how like a seashell a shuttered apartment
could sound. The barely audible sweep of cars, stirring of water along the
seawall, the pounding of the heart. Maybe he was wrong about the chairs and
bag, he thought. Nothing else seemed out of place. The din started downstairs again,
and he took his glass to Pribluda's office phone and studied the list of
numbers he had copied off Rufo's wall. Daysi
32-2007 Susy
30-4031 Vi.
Aflt. 2300 Kid
Choc. 5/1 Vi.
HYC 2200 Now
that he thought about it, why had he assumed that Vi. stood for
visitor? Granted, he was a visitor arriving on Aeroflot, but was the word for
visitor the same in Spanish and English? Rufo knew he was coming. Wouldn't it
be more important to know what day of the week? He looked up the word for
Friday in Pribluda's Spanish-Russian dictionary. "Viernes." Vi.
stood for Friday. Which suggested that on another Friday at 10:00p.m. with a
person or at a place with the initials HYC something would happen
concerning Arkady
tried the names on the list and got an answer on the first ring. "Digame."
Arkady,
in Russian, "Hello, is this Daysi?" "Digame."
"Is
this Daysi?" "Oye,
quiйn es?' In
English, "Is this Daysi?" "Sн, es Daysi" "Do
you speak English?" "Un
poco, sн." "Are
you a friend of Rufo?" "Muy
poco." "You
know Rufo Pinero?" "Rufo,
sн." "Could
we meet and talk?" "Quй?" "Talk?" "Quй?" "Do
you know someone who speaks English?" "Muy
poco." "Thanks." He
hung up and tried Susy. "Hi." "Hello.
You speak English." "Hi." "Could
you tell me where I could find Rufo Pinero?" "El
coсo Rufo? Es amigo suyo? Es cabrуn and come-mierda. Oye, hombre, singate y
singa a tu madre tambiйn." "I
didn't catch that." "Y
singa tu perro. Cuando veas a Rufo, pregъntale, dуnde estб el dinero de
Susy? O mi regalito de QVC?" "Let's
say, you know Rufo. Do you know anyone who speaks English or Russian?" "Y
dнgale, chupa mis nalgas hermosas!" While
he was trying to find chupa in the dictionary, Susy hung up. A
noise drew him to the parlor, although he found no one but Chango glowering
from his chair. The doll had slumped a little, still surly, top-heavy. Had its
head turned since he had been in the room last, raised its eyes to steal a
sideways glance? For some reason he was reminded of the giant Comandante he had
seen painted on a wall the night before, the way the figure seemed to loom
above the lamps like an all-knowing, all-seeing specter, or the way a director
hovered in the dark at the back of a theater. Arkady had felt exceedingly small
and uninformed. He
refilled his glass and wandered back to the office and the map of In
fact, his very work was a reminder that time was a one-way proposition. A
homicide meant, by definition, that someone was too late. Of course,
investigating a crime that had already happened was relatively simple.
Investigating a crime that hadn't yet occurred, to see the lines before they
connected, that might demand skill. At
a creak of wood Arkady noticed Sergeant Luna standing in the office door. It
wasn't just the sound, Arkady thought, more like an entire force field crossing
the threshold. He didn't recognize Luna immediately because the sergeant was in
jeans, sweatshirt and a cap that said "Go Gators." Air "Sergeant
Luna, I didn't hear you come in." "Because
I walk quiet and I have a key." Luna held a key up to illustrate and put
it in a pocket. He had a voice like wet cement being turned by a shovel. The
narrow cap emphasized his round head and the way muscles played on his forehead
and jaw. The whites of his eyes were slightly fried. His biceps balled with
anger. "You
speak Russian, too." "I
picked it up. I thought we could have a talk without the captain or the
detective, with no one else." "I'd
like to talk." Luna had been so silent around Captain Arcos, Arkady was
happy to hear the sergeant out. The bat bothered him. "Let me get you
something to drink." "No,
just talk. I want to know what you're doing." Arkady
always tried honesty first. "I'm
not sure myself. I just didn't think the identification of the body was certain
enough. Since Rufo attacked me, I think maybe there is more to find out." "You
think that was stupid of Rufo?" "Maybe." "Who
are you?" Luna poked him with the fat end of the bat. "You
know who I am." "No,
I mean who are you?" Luna poked him again in the ribs. "I'm
a prosecutor's investigator. I wish you'd stop doing that." "No,
you can't be an investigator here. You can be a tourist here, but you can't be
an investigator here. Understand? Comprendes?" Luna walked around
him. For Arkady it was like talking to a shark. "I
understand perfectly." "I
wouldn't go to "I'm
sorry about Rufo." Within limits, Arkady thought. "It
seems to me you're very difficult." "Where
is Captain Arcos? Did he send you?" "Don't
you worry about Captain Arcos." The sergeant gave him another poke of the
bat. "You're
going to have to stop that." "Are
you going to lose your temper? Are you going to attack a sergeant of the
Ministry of the Interior? I think that would be a bad idea." "What
do you think would be a good idea?" Arkady tried to emphasize the
positive. "It
would be a good idea if you understood you are not Cuban." "I
swear I don't think I'm Cuban." "You
don't know anything here." "I
couldn't agree more." "You
do nothing." "That's
pretty much what I'm doing." "Then
we can be friendly." "Friendly
is good." For
his part, Arkady felt he was being agreeable, soft as a pat of butter, but Luna
still circled him. "Is
that a baseball bat?" Arkady asked. "Baseball
is our national sport. Want to see it?" Luna offered the bat to him handle
first. "Take a swing." "That's
all right." "Take
it." "No." "Then
I'll take it," Luna said and swung the bat into Arkady's left leg above
the knee. Arkady dropped to the floor and Luna moved behind him. "See, you
have to step into it to drive the ball. Did you feel that?" "Yes." "You
have to turn into the ball. You're from "Yes." "I'll
tell you something I should have told you before. I am from the Oriente, the
east of Arkady
called for help, all too aware he was shouting in the wrong language and that
with the banging from below no one would hear him anyway. Once in the parlor he
pushed himself up against a wall and, standing on legs that went every which
way, actually landed a blow that made the bigger man grunt acknowledgment. As
the two men scuffled around the table the turtle bowl rolled off. Finally the
sergeant got free enough to swing the bat again and Arkady found himself on the
rug, blinking through blood, aware he'd lost a few seconds of memory and a
brain cell or two. He felt a foot across his neck as Luna bent close to feel
Arkady's shirt pocket and pants. All Arkady could see was the rug and Chango in
his chair staring back. No mercy there. "Where
is the picture?" "What
picture?" The
foot pressed on Arkady's windpipe. Well, it was a dumb answer, Arkady admitted.
There was only one picture. The "Where?"
Luna eased up to give him another chance. "First
you didn't want it, now you do?" As Arkady felt his windpipe close he
said, "At the embassy. I gave it to them." "Who?" "Zoshchenko."
Zoshchenko was Arkady's favorite comic writer. He felt the situation needed
humor. He hoped there was no poor Zoshchenko at the embassy. He heard a
contemplative slap of the bat in Luna's hand. "Do
you want me to fuck you up?" "No." "Do
you want me to seriously fuck you up?" "No." "Because
you will stay fucked." Although
Arkady was pinned like an insect he did his best to nod. "If
you don't want me to mess with you, you stay here. From now on you're a
tourist, but you will do all your touring in this room. I'll send some food
every day. You don't leave. Stay here. Sunday you go home. A quiet trip." That
sounded quiet, Arkady got that. Satisfied,
Luna removed his foot from Arkady's neck, lifted Arkady's head by the hair and
clubbed him one more time as if dispatching a dog. When Arkady was conscious again it was
dark, and he was stuck to the carpet. He ripped his head off and rolled to the
wall to look and listen before he dared move any more. New blood oozed around
one eye. The furniture was a mass of shadows. Sounds of work had stopped below,
replaced by the unctuous strains of a bolero. Luna was gone. Altogether, Arkady
thought, a hell of a vacation. And certainly the worst suicide he had ever
attended. Just
standing proved to be a feat of balance, as if the sergeant's baseball bat had driven
all the fluid from one inner ear to the other, but he managed to drag a chair
to prop against the door. With
the blood washed off, the head in the bathroom mirror wasn't so bad, one gash
at the hairline he had to shave around and pull back together with butterfly
tapes from the medicine chest, otherwise just a new topological feature at the
back of the skull. A little broader bridge of his nose, a knot on his forehead,
a lasting impression of the rug on his cheek, some difficulty swallowing, but
all teeth accounted for. His legs felt broken, but on the other hand, they
worked. Luna had done a fairly good job of limiting the damage to bruises and
indignities. He
hobbled to the bedroom closet and found the pockets of his coat turned out, but
his passport with the photograph of the Havana Yacht Club still rested in the
shoe where he had put them. Light-headedness and nausea rose, signs of a
concussion. Muddy
blood stained the parlor rug. Like any party, he thought, cleaning up was the
hard part. He'd do it later. First things first. In a kitchen drawer he found a
whetstone and a narrow bladed boning knife that he honed to a fine edge. On the
seat of the chair propped against the door he balanced a bag of empty cans as
an alarm and perhaps a little fun underfoot, and he unscrewed all the
lightbulbs in the parlor and hall so that if Luna returned he would enter the
dark and be silhouetted by the light. The best Arkady could do for the
air-shaft window was ram it shut with a stick. The best he could do for his
head was stay flat. Which he was about to do when he passed out. He didn't feel refreshed. What time it
was he couldn't tell, the room was dark. What room he was in he wouldn't have
known except for the rough bristles of the parlor rug on his face. Like a
drunk, he wasn't positive which way was up. His
body had set in a position of least pain, all things being relative, and in the
manner of a broken chair it had no intention of sitting up again. He did anyway
because a little circulation was probably good for bruised limbs. The turtle
crawled by, practically trotting. Arkady followed on all fours to the
refrigerator, pulled out the water jar and luxuriated in the soft,
unthreatening nimbus of the appliance light. On a purely objective basis it was
interesting how much worse he felt. Drinking water was painful. Touching his
head with a damp cloth combined agony and relief. Irina
liked to say, "Be careful what you wish for." Meaning, of course,
her. Having lost her, what he'd wished for was an end to his guilt, but he
really hadn't meant being beaten to death. In The
phone cord was ripped from the wall, although Arkady wasn't sure whom to call
anyway. The embassy, so they could cringe again at the trouble one of their
nationals was causing? The
dark was so quiet he could almost hear the sweep of the lighthouse beam over
the bay and feel the brush of light across the shutters. Don't
leave, Luna had said. Arkady
didn't plan to. He laid his head in the refrigerator and went to sleep. When he woke again morning light
streamed into the flat. Arkady lifted his head as carefully as a cracked egg.
The Malecуn's backfires and shouts sounded loud and hot, amplified by the sun. He
staggered down the hall to the bathroom mirror. The nose was no better and his
forehead had the dark hue of a storm cloud. He dropped his pants to see the
stripes of bruises on his legs. Rest
and water, he told himself. He ate a handful of aspirin, but didn't dare shower
for fear of slipping, for fear of not hearing the front door, for fear of
hurting. Two
steps and he was dizzy, but he reached the office. He had crawled from it when
Luna began demonstrating his baseball skills to lead the sergeant away from the
miserable list of Rufo's phone numbers. Oddly enough, the list was where Arkady
had left it, in the Spanish-Russian dictionary, meaning that Luna either didn't
know how to search or that he had come only for the picture of the Havana Yacht
Club. Since
he had a little time now, Arkady thought that a real investigator would use
this opportunity to learn Spanish and phone repair and try Daysi and Susy
again. Instead, he slid down the wall to a seated position with the knife in
his hand. He wasn't aware of sleeping until a backfire from the street jolted
him awake. Not
that he was scared. • • • Two young uniformed policemen, one
white, one black, patrolled the seawall. Although they carried radios, handguns
and batons, their orders seemed entirely in the negative: don't lean against
the wall, don't listen to music, don't fraternize with girls. Although they
seemed to pay no special attention to the house, Arkady thought it would be a
little wiser to escape in the evening. He
cleaned the carpet because it was too depressing to look at his own dried
blood. The music below had changed to a work-theme salsa accompanied by a power
drill; Arkady wasn't sure whether he was above a flat or a factory. Not all the
blood came out of the rug; enough remained to suggest a mottled rose. Luna
could scrub the bat and Arkady was sure that the entire ball team was willing
to swear the sergeant had been gamboling on a field with them. How many players
were there on a side in baseball? Ten, twenty? More than enough witnesses. Bugai
wouldn't lodge a protest. Even if he did find the nerve, to whom would he
complain but Arcos and Luna? The only communication that Arkady could expect
between the embassy and Luna was the question "Do you have a Zoshchenko
working there? No? Thank you very much." Arkady
shaved for morale's sake, working around the damage on his face, and tried to
comb his hair over the repair on his brow. When the nausea let up he celebrated
by changing into a clean shirt and pants, so that he looked like a well-groomed
victim of a violent crime. He also tied another knife to a broom to use as a
spear and, giddy with achievement, peeked through the balcony shutters. A
PNR patrol car appeared about every forty minutes. In between, the patrolmen
fought their own war against boredom, sneaking a cigarette, staring at the sea,
watching • • • In the late afternoon Arkady woke with
an enormous thirst and a headache aggravated by the noise below. He had aspirin
and water while he admired Pribluda's variety of pickled garlic heads and
mushrooms. He just didn't feel like food at the moment, and when he turned away
from the refrigerator he realized that Chango had disappeared. The doll that
had sat in the corner was gone. When?
During Luna's lecture on the finer points of baseball? With the sergeant or of
Chango's own volition? The missing doll was reminder enough that a patrol car
was due in a minute and that Luna was overdue. Through the shutters he saw two
black girls dressed in matching pedal pushers of citrus yellow teasing the
PNRs. Some
vacations stretched and some seemed to fly by in a moment, not even time for a
tan. Arkady decided that when man-sized dolls started walking around it was
time for him to go, too, and camp at the embassy whether he was welcome or not.
Or the airport. Arkady
put on his precious coat with the phone list and picture in one pocket and keys
and knife in the other, and cleared the chair and bag of cans from the door. He
still had Pribluda's car key. Who knew, he might be able to drive. As he
tottered down, the stairs pulsated underfoot. From
the street door he saw the girls and the two PNRs bantering and posturing.
Behind them the Cuban sky was gold edged in blue, more mixed day and night than
a simple sunset. As a car limped by, my God, a two-seater Zaporozhets belching
black smoke, Arkady slipped out into the long shadow of the arcade. Chapter EightWearing a cherry-red halter and denim
shorts with a Minnie Mouse patch on a back pocket, Ofelia sat in an
aquamarine '55 DeSoto outside the Casa de Amor and asked herself: Was it cigar
fumes? Something in the rum? The two spoonfuls of sugar in cafй cubano
that made men crazy? If she saw one more young Cuban girl on the arm of one
more fat, balding, lisping Spanish tourist, Ofelia would kill. She'd
pulled enough of them in. Some were family men who had never before been
unfaithful but suddenly found it unnatural to spend a week in The
Casa de Amor was originally a motel, ten units with patios and sliding aluminum
doors around a swimming pool. A heavyset woman in a housedress read a paperback
in a metal chair on a lawn that had been paved over and painted green. In the
office was a register and selections of condoms, beer, rum, Tropicola. The
tip-off that something wrong was going on was that the pool water was clean.
That was for tourists. Traffic
went in and out. At this point Ofelia was expert at telling a German (pink)
from an Englishman (sallow) from a Frenchman (safari shorts), but what she was
waiting for was a Cuban uniform. The law was useless. Cuban law excused a man
for making sexual advances, assuming it was a masculine given, and put the
burden of proof on Ofelia to prove that the girl initiated the approach. Now,
any Cuban female over the age of ten knew how to incite a male into making the
first overt proposal. A Cuban girl could make The
police were worse than useless, they preyed on the girls, demanding money for
letting them into hotel lobbies, for wandering around the marina, for allowing
them to take tourists to places like the Casa de Amor, which was supposed to be
for conjugal activities between Cuban couples who couldn't find sufficient
privacy at home. Well, jineteras had the same problem and could pay
more. Traffic
went in and out the office, the girls steering in their clients like little
tugboats. Ofelia let them go. Someone in authority had arranged matters at the
Casa de Amor, and what Ofelia wanted more than anything else was for some
sleazy PNR commander to check his operation, see her in the car and invite her
to join his string. A badge and gun rested in her straw bag. The look on his
face when she brought them out? Vaya. Sometimes
Ofelia felt it was her against the world. This
one feeble little campaign of hers against an industry that was nearly
official. The Ministry of Tourism discouraged any real crackdown on jineteras
as a threat to The
week before, she had picked up a twelve-year-old jinetera in the Plaza
de Armas. One year older than Muriel. That was the future? She
hadn't given Renko a lot of thought until she gave up surveillance at the end
of the day and visited the IML to check whether the dead Russian was tagged for
transport and, when she found the body wasn't, looked for Blas. She found the
director working at a laboratory counter. "I'm
looking into something," Blas said. " I am not investigating, but you
made such a point about the syringe I think you especially will be
interested." His
instrument was a camcorder modified to fit onto a microscope. The microscope
eyepiece had been removed so that the camera could focus directly on a grayish
paste spread on a specimen slide. A cable led from the camcorder to a video
monitor. On its screen was a magnified version of the paste with gradations in
color that ran from tarry black to chalk white. In front of the monitor was an
embalming syringe. "Rufo's
needle?" Ofelia asked. "Yes,
the syringe stolen from here, from my own laboratory, and found in the hand of
Rufo Pinero. Embarrassing but also informative because the tissue packed into a
needle shaft, you know, is a core sample as good as a biopsy." "You
squeezed it out?" "For
curiosity's sake. Because we are scientists," Blas said as he moved the
slide in minute increments under the camera. "Working backward: brain
tissue, blood corresponding to Rufo's blood type, bone, cochlear material from
the inner ear, skin and more blood and skin. What's interesting is the last
blood, which actually would have been the first blood in the needle shaft. Tell
me what you see." The
screen was a stew of cells, larger ones solid red, the smaller cells with white
centers. "Blood
cells." "Look
again." With
Blas you always learned, she thought. On the second look, many of the red cells
seemed crushed or exploded like overripe pomegranates. "There is something
wrong with them. A disease?" "No.
What you see," he told her, "is a battlefront, a battlefront of whole
blood cells, fragments of blood cells and clumps of antibodies. This blood is
hemolyzed, it is at war." "With
itself?" "No,
this is a war that only occurs when two different blood types come into
contact. Pinero's and...?" "Renko's?" "Most
likely. I'd love to have a sample from the Russian." "He
says he wasn't touched." "I
say otherwise." He was definite, and she knew that when Blas was definite
he was almost always right. "Will
you test for drugs?" she asked. "No
need. You weren't at the autopsy, but I can tell you that on Rufo's arm are the
tracks of old injections. Do you know how much a new syringe is worth to a
user? This proves Rufo had two weapons." "But
Renko is alive and Rufo is dead." "I
admit that is the baffling part." Ofelia
thought of the cut in Renko's coat. That was from the knife. Why wouldn't the
Russian mention a wound from the needle? Blas
had registered the fact that she was still in her shorts and halter, black
curls shining, a glow on her brown skin. " You know, there is a meeting
next month in The
doctor was popular with the women on his staff. In fact, an invitation to
accompany him to an international conference on pathology was one of the prizes
of the institute. He was admired, sometimes awe-inspiring, connected to the
highest government elite, and all Ofelia could really say against him was that
his lower lip, nested in his trim beard, was always wet. Somehow that was
enough. "It
sounds nice but I have to help take care of my mother." "Detective
Osorio, I've asked you to two conferences now. Both important, both in
fascinating places. You always say you have to take care of your mother." "She's
so frail." "Well,
I hope she gets well." "Thank
you."
"If
you can't go, you can't go." Blas pushed aside the microscope and camera
as if they were dinner gone cold. Ofelia's eyes, however, were fixed to the monitor,
to a magnified terrain of warring blood cells where she saw a new answer. Chapter NineThere were more PNRs stationed on the
Malecуn than Arkady had expected. Taking the first street from the water,
then avoiding a patrol car at the next corner, he found himself behind the
block he had just left and at an alley with a flat-faced, vintage American Jeep
in house-paint red. Behind it were two more Jeeps, green and white, each with
new roll bars and upholstery. They shone under lamps strung out from a humming
generator set inside open garage doors where a man in coveralls inspected an
inner tube he held in a tub of water. He raised a white, amiable face and
carried the tube to an air hose. "Needs
air," he said in Russian. "I
suppose so," Arkady said. Inside,
under a caged bulb hanging on a cord, a Jeep sat on ramps over a mechanic
working on his back. As the engine revved a rubber hose taped to the exhaust
pipe funneled white smoke to the alley. There were other signs of the garage's
makeshift nature, the lack of work pits and hydraulic lifts. An engine hung on
chains from an I beam above garage disorder, tanks, tool cabinets, oilcans,
ammeters, tires, tire lever and well, a folding chair behind a worktable of
mallets, a board of car rings on hooks, vises and clamps and greasy rags
everywhere, a beaded curtain marking off a personal area, and Arkady realized
that he was directly below Pribluda's parlor. A boom box vied for volume next
to the Jeep. Since the hood was open, Arkady could see a transplanted Lada
engine resonating like a pea in a can. A knit cap, smudged face and dirty beard
rolled out from under the car to study Arkady from an upside-down angle. "Russian?" "Yes.
Everyone can tell?" "It's
not so hard. Have an accident?" "Kind
of." "In
a car?" "No." The
mechanic looked up at the object of his labor. "If
you need a car you could do worse than this. A '48 Jeep. Try to get parts for a
'48 Jeep. The best I can do is a Lada 2101. I had to eliminate the differential
and adapt the brakes. It's just the seals and valves now that are driving me
crazy." His eyes strained to watch something he was reaching for under the
car. The engine raced and he winced. " What a shit rain." He rolled
back under and shouted, "See any tape?" Arkady
found wrenches, goggles, welding gauntlets, buckets of sand, but reported no
tape. "Mongo
isn't there?" "What
is a Mongo?" Arkady wasn't sure he heard right because of the music. "Mongo
is a black man in coveralls and a green baseball cap." "No
Mongo." "Tico?
Man working on a tire?" "He's
there." "He's
looking for a leak. He'll be looking all day." After what Arkady had to
assume were strong words in Spanish the mechanic said, "Very well, we'll
perform heart surgery by going in through the ass. Find me a hammer and a
screwdriver and get a pan ready." Arkady
handed him the tools. "You like Jeeps?" The
mechanic rolled under the car. "I specialize in Jeeps. Other American cars
are too heavy. You have to put in "No." "Don't
be put off by appearances. This island is like a Court of Miracles, like in
medieval Unbelievably,
the volume had another notch. Maybe this was a Cuban-made radio, Arkady
thought. Meanwhile, the violent whacks from under the Jeep made his head throb. "So
you sell cars?" Arkady shouted. "Yes
and no. An old car from before the Revolution, yes. To buy a new car requires
approval from the highest level, the very highest. The beauty of the system is
that no car in Arkady
heard a glutinous gush. In a single move, the mechanic swung the pan under the
Jeep in his place and shot out on his cart, rolling across the floor until he
backhanded a column of tires and swung to a stop and sat up, grinning. He was a
robust specimen with the smirk of near disaster, and looked so much like a test
pilot after an interesting landing that it took Arkady a moment to notice that
the mechanic's coverall legs ended at leather pads at the knees. When he wiped
his face and removed his cap his hair rose into a salt-and-pepper mane too
unique for Arkady not to recognize the short man from Pribluda's photograph of
the Havana Yacht Club, simply far shorter than Arkady had expected. "Erasmo
Aleman," he introduced himself. "You're Sergei's friend?" "Yes." "I've
been waiting for you." Erasmo pushed his cart with wooden
blocks edged in tire tread to maneuver around his garage at full speed, washing
at a cut-down sink, wiping his hands at a barrel of rags. The radio was down to
half throat. "I
saw a policewoman take you upstairs a couple of nights ago. You look... different." "Someone
tried to teach me baseball." "It's
not your sport." Erasmo's eyes went from the bruise on Arkady's cheek to
the Band-Aid on his head. "Is
this Sergei?" Arkady produced the snapshot of Pribluda with the Yacht
Club. "Yes." "And?"
Arkady pointed to the black fisherman. "Mongo,"
Erasmo said, as if it were self-evident. "And
you." Erasmo
admired the picture. "I look very handsome." "The
Havana Yacht Club," Arkady read the back. "It
was a joke. If we'd had a sailboat we would have called ourselves a navy.
Anyway, I heard about the body they found across the bay. Frankly, I don't
think it's Sergei. He's too pigheaded and tough. I haven't seen him for weeks,
but he could come back tomorrow with some story about driving into a pothole.
There are potholes in "Do
you know where his car is?" "No,
but if it were around here I'd recognize it." Erasmo
explained that diplomatic license plates were black on white and Pribluda's was
060 016; 060 for the Russian embassy and 016 for Pribluda's rank. Cuban plates
were tan for state-owned cars, red for privately owned. "Let
me put it this way," Erasmo said, "there are state-owned cars that
will never move so that private cars can run. A Lada arrives here like a
medical donor so that Willy's Jeeps will never die. Excuse me." He turned
down a salsa that threatened to get out of hand. "The
reason for the radio is so the police can say they don't hear me, because you're
really not supposed to make a garage out of your apartment. Anyway, Tico likes
it loud." Arkady
thought he understood Erasmo, the type of engineer who labors happily below the
deck of a sinking ship, lubricating the pistons, pumping out the water, somehow
keeping the vessel moving while it settles in the waves. "Your
neighbors don't complain about the noise?" "There's
Sergei and a dancer in this building, both out all the time. On one side is a
private restaurant, they don't want the police visiting because it costs them a
free dinner at the least. On the other side lives a santero and the
police certainly don't want to bother him. His apartment is like a nuclear
missile silo of African spirits." "A
santero?" "As
in Santeria." "He's
a friend?" "On
this island a santero is a good friend to have." Arkady
studied the picture of the Havana Yacht Club. There still was some message in
it that he didn't understand. If he was going to be beaten over the head he
wanted to know why. "Who
took the picture?" "Someone
passing by. You know," Erasmo said, "the first time I met Sergei,
Mongo and I saw him standing next to his car on the side of the road, smoke
pouring from the hood. Nobody stops for anyone with Russian plates, but I have
a weak spot for old comrades, no? Pues, we repaired the car, only a
matter of a new clamp on a hose, and as we talked I discovered how little of "With
a kite?" "A
most beautiful way to fish. And I became aware that this Russian, this human
bear from the day before, was standing on the sidewalk and watching. So I
showed him how. I have to tell you that we never saw Russians alone, they
always moved in groups, watching each other. Sergei was different. In our
conversation he mentioned how much he wanted a place on the Malecуn. I had the
rooms upstairs I certainly wasn't using and one thing led to another." For
a disabled man, Erasmo was constantly in motion. He rolled backward to a
refrigerator and returned with two cold beers. " '51 Kelvinator, the
Cadillac of refrigerators." "Thanks." "To
Sergei," Erasmo proposed. They drank and his eyes tabulated the damage on
Arkady, "That must have been a long flight of stairs. Nice coat. A little
warm, no?" "It's
January in "That
explains it." "Your
Russian is very good." "I
was in Cuban army demolitions in "God?" "El
Comandante." Erasmo gestured as if stroking his beard. "Fidel?" "You're
getting it. " "The
rampart of socialism." "The
crumbling dike." "Crumbled.
Dust. Leaving nothing standing but poor They
drank to that, the first food Arkady had in a day, the beer's alcohol a mild anesthetic.
He thought of the black fisherman that Olga Petrovna had seen with Pribluda.
There was time to go to the embassy later and hide away. "I'd
like to meet Mongo." "Can't
you hear him?" Erasmo turned the radio off and Arkady heard what could
have been a rolling of stones in surf if stones shifted to a beat. Walking in the santero's door,
Arkady was unprepared. When Russians were taught about "The
santero," Erasmo told Arkady. "Don't worry, they're just
warming up." The
mechanic had changed from his coveralls to a pleated white shirt he called a
guayabera, "the very height of Cuban formality," but with telltale
grease on his hands and his beard he looked like a corsair in a wheelchair. He
pressed on through a kitchen and hallway until he led Arkady to a backyard where,
under two spindly coconut palms crossed like an X, an old black woman in a
white skirt and a Michael Jordan pullover stirred a cauldron simmering on
coals. Her hair was gray and cropped as short as cotton. Erasmo
said, "This is Abuelita. Abuelita is not only everyone's grandmother, she
is also the CDR for our block. The Committee for the Defense of the Revolution.
Informers usually, but we are blessed with Abuelita, who dutifully watches from
her window from six in the morning and sees nothing all day long." "Did
she ever see Pribluda?" "Ask
her yourself, she speaks English." "From
before the Revolution." Her voice was young and whispery. "There were
a lot of Americans and I was a very sinful girl." "Did
you ever see the Russian here?" "No.
If I saw him, then I would have to report him for renting from a Cuban, which
is against the law. But he was a nice man." A
pig's head bobbed in the stew. A bottle came Erasmo's way; he took a long drink
and shared it with Abuelita, who drank daintily and passed it to Arkady. "What
is it?" he asked her. "Fighting
rum." Her eyes took in the tape on his head. " You need it, no?" Arkady
had expected that by now he would be safely tucked away in the embassy basement
with maybe a cup of tea. This was only a minor detour. He drank and coughed. "What's
in it?" "Rum,
chilies, garlic, turtle testicles." More
people arrived every minute, as many white as black. Arkady was used to the
hushed assembly of the Russian Orthodox Church. Cubans pushed into the yard as
if they were joining a party, a few with the somber devotion of worshipers,
most with the bright anticipation of theatergoers. The only arrival without any
expression was a pale, black-haired girl in jeans and a shirt that said
"Tournee de Ballet." She was followed by a light-brown Cuban man with
blue eyes, hair silver at the temples, in a formal, short-sleeved shirt. "George
Washington Walls," Erasmo introduced him. "Arkady." Not
Cuban. In fact, an American name that rang a bell. Behind Walls came a tourist
with a maple-leaf pin and the last man Arkady wanted to see, Sergeant Luna.
This was nightlife Luna, a splendid Luna in linen pants, white shoes and tank
shirt that showed off the slabbed muscles of a triangular upper body. Arkady
felt himself automatically cringe. "My
good friend, my very good friend, I didn't know you were feeling so good."
Luna put one bare arm around Arkady and the other around a girl whose skin and
mass of hair were the same amber color. She dazzled in spandex pants,
halter, scarlet fingernails, and squirmed so much in Luna's grip Arkady
wouldn't have been surprised if a ruby popped from her navel. " Hedy. Mujer
mia." The sergeant leaned confidentially on Arkady's shoulder. "
I want to tell you something." "Please." "There's
no Zoshchenko at the Russian embassy." "I
lied. I'm sorry." "But
you did lie and you left the apartment, where I told you to stay, understand?
Now you have a good time tonight. I don't want to see you spoil anybody's fun.
Then you and I will have a talk about how you're going to the airport." Luna
scratched his chin with a short ice pick. Arkady understood the sergeant's
dilemma. Half of Luna wanted to be a good host, half of him wanted to plunge
the ice pick into someone's face. "I
don't mind walking," Arkady said. Hedy
laughed as if Arkady had said something clever, which Luna didn't like, and he
said something to her in Spanish that chased the color from her cheeks before
turning his attention back to Arkady. Luna had a smile with broad white teeth
and lots of pink gums. "You
don't mind walking?" "No.
I've seen so little of "You
want to see more?" "It
seems a beautiful island." "You're
crazy." "That
could be." The
girl in the Tournee de Ballet shirt was named Isabel and she spoke excellent
Russian. She asked Arkady whether it was true he was staying in Pribluda's
apartment. " I live above him. Sergei was receiving a letter for me from Arkady
was so disconcerted by Luna it took him a second to respond. " Not that I
know of." The
sergeant seemed to have other duties. After consulting with Luna, Walls told
his friend with the maple-leaf pin, "The real thing starts in a
minute." "I
wish I spoke Spanish." "You're
Canadian, you don't need to. Investors don't need to," Walls assured him.
" And all the investors are coming here. Canadians, Italians, Spanish,
Germans, Swedes, even Mexicans. Everyone but Americans. This is the next big
economic explosion on earth. Healthy, well-educated people. Technological base.
Latin is hot. Get in while you can." "He's
been selling me for two days," the Canadian said. "He
sounds persuasive," Arkady said. "Tonight,"
said Walls, "we've organized something folkloric for my friend from "I
detest this," Isabel told Arkady. "Isabel,
we're speaking English for our friend now," Walls pleaded in the
good-natured way of a man who actually means it. "I gave you English
lessons. Even Luna can speak English. Can you speak a little English?" "He
says he'll take me to "I
think the show's about to begin." Walls ushered people back into the house
as drumming hit a new intensity. "Arkady, I missed something. What are you
doing here?" "Just
trying to fit in." "Good
job." Walls gave him a thumbs-up. Each drum was different – a tall tumba,
hourglass bata, twin congas – and each called to a different spirit of
Santeria or Abakua, a maraca to rouse Chango, a bronze bell for Oshun,
it was all mixed up, like mixing drinks, a little dangerous, yes, Erasmo asked
even as he explained. Mongo, eyes shining from wells of perspiration, beat on
his blade, his call in a language that was not Spanish answered simultaneously
by the drummers and their drums, as if each man possessed two voices. Everyone
had crowded into the room and pressed against the walls. Erasmo rocked in his
chair as if he could lift it up by the sheer power of his arms to tell Arkady
this was the wealth of "You
know that man?" Erasmo asked. "We've
met. He's a sergeant in the Ministry of the Interior. How can he be involved in
a show like this?" "Why
not? Everybody does two things, they have to, there's nothing unusual about
that." "Arranging
Santeria?" Erasmo
shrugged. "That's "But
this is a santero's house, you said." "You
don't do Santeria at night," Erasmo said as if it were self-evident,
"that's when the dead are out." "The
dead are out right now?" "It's
a crowded island at night." Erasmo smiled at the idea. " Anyway, Luna
must have connections with the Abakua. Everyone is into Santeria or Abakua or something." "His
friend, George Washington Walls. Why is that name familiar?" "He
was famous once. The radical, the hijacker." Very
famous once, Arkady realized. He remembered a newspaper picture of a young
American in an Afro and bell-bottom trousers burning a small flag at the top of
an airplane ramp. "What
kind of investments can Walls offer in "Good
question." Arkady
had missed the point when the rhythm had changed and Luna and his golden
friend, Hedy, had taken center stage, dancing not so much separately as skin to
skin, hips rolling, the sergeant's large hands sliding around her back as she
arched, eyes and lips bright, slipping away only to invite him even closer.
Arkady did not know if this was religious or not; he did know that if it took
place in a Russian church the icons would have fallen to the floor. As everyone
else joined in Walls maneuvered Hedy away from Luna and toward the Canadian,
who danced as if he were playing ice hockey without a stick. Now it was even
harder to reach the door. Erasmo
pushed Arkady. "Get out there." "I
don't dance." He was doing well just standing, Arkady thought. "Everyone
dances." The rum seemed to hit Erasmo all at once. He rocked back and
forth in his wheelchair to the beat until he locked his chair, slid off the
seat and danced with Abuelita like a man wading energetically through heavy
surf. He said to Arkady, "No legs and I still move better than you." Embarrassing
but true, Arkady thought. It was also true that, in his condition, Arkady found
the drumming and darkness and mixed smells of smoke, rum and sweat as
overwhelming as an overstoked fire. The drums spoke together, apart, together
again, breathless, syncopated, off the beat. As Mongo shook the gourd the
shells strung across its belly rippled like a snake. The chant went from call
and response to Mongo in his dark glasses, his voice volcanically deep. He
swayed, hands a blur. The rhythm spread, divided, split again like rolling
lava. Maybe it was the effect of fighting rum on an empty stomach. Arkady
slipped into the hall and found that Isabel followed. "I
didn't study classical dance for this," she told Arkady. "It's
not the Bolshoi, but I don't think the Bolshoi does this sort of thing very
well." "Do
you think I'm a whore?" "No."
He was taken aback. The girl looked more like a candlelit saint. "I'm
with Walls because he can help me, I admit. If I were a real whore, though, I'd
learn Italian. Russian is no use at all." "Maybe
you're a little hard on yourself." "If
I were hard on myself, I'd cut my throat." "Don't
do that." "Why
not?" "I've
noticed that few people are good at cutting their own throat." "Interesting.
A Cuban man would have said, 'Oh, but it's such a pretty throat.' Everything with
them leads to sex, even suicide. That's why I like Russians, because with them
suicide is suicide." "Our
talent." Isabel
looked thoughtfully aside. She had the emaciated allure of a Picasso, he
thought. Blue Period. Wonderful, the two most depressed people in the house had
connected like magnets. He caught Walls's anxious glances in their direction.
At the same time he noticed that Luna remained by the door. "How
long are you going to be in "A
week, then back to "Is
it snowing there now?" She rubbed her arms as if imagining them cool. "I'm
sure it is. Your Russian is extraordinarily good." "Yes?
Well, in my family "It
seems to have been a great secret. No." "Claro,
he isn't a very good spy. He says if they needed a good agent in Before
Arkady could beg off, Walls joined them. "You're missing everything,"
he told Isabel. "I
wish I could," she said. "We were talking about Sergei." "Were
you?" he asked Arkady. "Where is the good comrade?" "A
good question." Shouts
erupted in the living room, and a moment later Hedy rushed past them through
the hall. The santero and the Canadian followed. "Oh,
no," Walls said. " I didn't mean this real." "What
do you mean?" Arkady asked. "She's
possessed." Isabel
was unfazed. "It happens all the time. This whole island is
possessed." The
backyard was dark, but Hedy had kicked over the soup cauldron and spun on the
coals as sparks nested in her hair. She swung out of the fire, her spandex
dulled by ashes, golden hair pulled into tufts, while the santero ran
after, trying to pull something invisible from her body. The Canadian looked
ready to retreat to someplace tame and far away. As Luna burst into the yard
the santero spread his arms helplessly and put Hedy between himself
and Luna. Erasmo
squeezed his chair through and told Arkady, "Luna says he is going to kill
the santero if he doesn't get the spirit out of Hedy. The santero
says he can't." "Maybe
he should try again." Arkady saw the ice pick in Luna's hand. As
Luna yanked Hedy aside, her halter strap broke and one breast spilled out like
a loose eye. Luna seized the santero by the neck and bent him belly-up
between the trees. The Canadian bolted through the crowd as it poured into the
yard and pushed Arkady forward. No one else moved except Abuelita, who shoveled
her hands into the fire, rose to her toes and poured a bright stream of live
coals over Luna's back. As Luna wheeled on her Arkady caught the sergeant's
wrist, which was like grabbing the iron wheel of a locomotive, bent it back and
up in the "come along" grip as taught to the Arkady
decided he had not swung the sergeant hard enough. "Now
you're fucked de verdad." Luna wasn't even breathing hard, he'd
barely started. "Parate."
A small woman with a needle-sharp voice stepped in between. Since she was in a
skimpy top and shorts and not a PNR uniform, it took Arkady a moment to
recognize his new colleague, Detective Osorio. Where she had come from and how
long she had been taking in the scene with her grim little gaze he didn't know.
A straw bag hung from one hand and in the other was a Makarov 9-mm. He
recognized the gun right away. She didn't raise it or aim it, but it was there.
Luna recognized the gun, too. He lifted his hands to signify not surrender or
shyness but an awareness of growing complications, his own duties as an
officer, and that he was done only for the time being. "Truly
fucked," Luna told Arkady on his way out. "You
okay?" Walls asked Arkady. "I'm sorry about this. Typical Cuban party.
Too many spirits in one place. Now you'll have to excuse me, my investor has a
head start." Abuelita
dusted ashes from her palms. In the middle of the yard Hedy looked down at her
torn halter and the dirt on her shiny shorts and burst into tears. Arkady went
into the house to look for Mongo and the drummers, but they had all left.
Osorio followed him with an expression that said fools were multiplying. Chapter TenWhile he and Osorio put Erasmo to bed
Arkady looked around at what the mechanic afforded himself for living
quarters: a small space enlarged by the fact that his cot, counter, table and
chairs were all cut to half height. On a pillow of gold African cloth was a
collection of military medals and campaign ribbons. The photographs on the wall
reflected more glory than Erasmo had let on. A hospital-bed scene of Erasmo
being visited by two men in military fatigues – a tall, swarthy man in aviator
glasses who would have passed as Armenian in Russia, the other older with a
full gray beard and wiry brows, unique and unmistakable, the Comandante
himself. Neither man wore officer's insignia on his cap or shoulders; this was,
after all, an egalitarian army. Castro was as puffed with pride as a father.
The second visitor seemed to focus more ruefully on Erasmo's shortness of limb. "The
Cuban general in Another
picture showed the same distinguished friends on the deck of a fishing boat,
this time with Erasmo strapped into the fighting chair. Family pictures
displayed friendly, affluent men and women at swimming pools, bridge tables,
dancing. Or children on baseball fields, bicycles, ponies. And the entire
family in formal suits and ballroom gowns at champagne receptions and Christmas
parties. In one wide photomontage they and hundreds more like them spread up
and down the grand double stairway of a white mansion. "He'll
sleep a long time," Osorio said. "
'Unconscious' is the word." Just
as Luna had been the last man Arkady wanted to encounter, the last place he'd
expected to see again was Pribluda's apartment, but at Osorio's insistence he
climbed the steps with her. Although he thought he had tidied up fairly well,
as soon as he turned on the light the detective noticed a difference. "Dried
blood on the carpet. What happened here?" "You
don't know? You work with Luna and Arcos." "Only
for this case because Russians are involved." "You
weren't surprised to see the sergeant come after me with an ice pick?" "All
I saw was you throwing him into a wall." "It's
a tense relationship. After all, he did beat me with a baseball bat. I think it
was a baseball bat, he said it was." "He
hit you?" "You
know nothing about that?" "This
is a serious charge." "Other
places, not here. Here, my experience is, not much is investigated." "As
a matter of fact," Osorio said, "I did ask your friend, Erasmo,
before he passed out, what happened to you. He said you told him you fell down
the stairs." See, Arkady thought, that was the penalty of ever telling
less than the truth. Osorio's eye fell on the empty corner chair. "What
did you do with Chango?" "What
did I do with Chango?" Arkady asked. "The doll? Only in "I
was looking for you. You weren't here, so I followed the drums." "Naturally."
Arkady touched the cut on his hairline to feel if it had split open. Osorio
set her bag on the parlor table. " Let me see your head. You cleaned up
all the other evidence of this so-called attack." "Detective,
I've been here three days and I've seen the PNR excuse itself from two violent
deaths. I don't think you're going to investigate mere assault." She
pulled his head down, brusquely turned it one way and then the other and ran
her fingers over his scalp. "What do you claim Luna said?" "The
sergeant mentioned that he'd prefer I stayed off the street." "Well,
you didn't." He
winced as she parted the hair around a cut. "I didn't get far." "What
else?" "Nothing."
Arkady wasn't about to strip and show her the bruises on his back and legs and
he wasn't going to hand over the Yacht Club picture so it could be delivered
straight to the sergeant. That he still had it was the luck of tossing his
passport with the picture inside a shoe. Osorio
released his head. "You should see a doctor." "Thanks,
that's helpful." "Don't
be insulting. Listen, I'm only saying that since there's no evidence here that
you haven't compromised and your story has changed already once and since
officers of the Ministry of the Interior do not beat visitors from other
countries, even from He
wondered why Osorio had insisted on coming to the apartment. He also wondered
why she was dressed like a vamp with platform shoes and carrying a big straw
bag. " Detective, what are you here for?" "Because
I want you to go home alive." While
he tried to come up with an answer to that the lights in the room faded and
went dark. He stepped out to the balcony and saw that the problem wasn't only
in the apartment; an entire arc of buildings along the Malecуn had gone black. Arkady fed Pribluda's turtle by the
illumination of Rufo's lighter and then lit a cigarette and inhaled wonderful,
pain-soothing fumes. Osorio sat in the dark at the table. "A
power outage," Osorio said. "I
know the feeling." "You
should stop smoking." "That's
my biggest problem?" He found candles above the sink, lit the fattest one
and joined the detective. "Besides
Sergeant Luna and your friend downstairs, who else did you know at the santero's?" "No
one," Arkady said. " I'd heard of Walls." "Everyone
in "Luna
arranged the show for him. I think Luna's going to arrange a show for me. You
may not be safe here." Arkady had not intended to stay in the flat
himself. She reached into her bag and laid out a Makarov 9-mm, the same police
issue as in "He
knows I have the bullets. The patrolmen you see on the street, they have guns
but they don't have bullets." "There's
a comfort." He saw her lay a toiletry kit by the gun. "What is that
for?" "I'm
staying the night." "I
appreciate the gesture, Detective, but you must have some place to be. A home,
a family, a beloved pet." "Are
you offended to have a woman protect you? Is that it? Do Russians suffer from
machismo?" "Not
me. But why do it if you don't believe me about Luna?" "Luna
is not the one I worry about. Dr. Blas examined the syringe that you say Rufo
attacked you with. The doctor wasn't supposed to, but he did, to look for signs
of drugs." "Were
there?" "No,
only blood and brain tissue of Rufo's and traces of a different blood type
altogether." "Maybe
he stabbed someone else." "Did
he? Where did Rufo get the syringe?" "Dr.
Blas said he stole it at the institute." "Yes,
that's what the doctor said. I have a different answer. Wasn't that Rufo's
lighter you used?" "Yes,
I suppose it is." "Light
it." He
did as she asked and the flame became a resonating circle between them. Osorio
reached into the light and pushed his coat and shirt sleeve up his forearm to
show two dark bruises on the artery. "That's
why I came back." Arkady
regarded the marks with the expression of a man surprised to find himself
tattooed. "Rufo
must have scratched me when we were struggling." She
ran her finger lightly along the vein. " These are punctures, not
scratches. Why did you come to "I
was asked, remember?" He
blew out the flame, but he felt her eyes still intent on him. He no longer knew
why he had answered a summons he could have easily ignored, but exhuming the
reason was more than he cared to do for the Policнa Nacional de la Revoluciуn.
All the same, control of the situation had clearly passed to the hands of the
detective. Because of the heat they camped on the
balcony in metal chairs. Streetlamps were still lit, and the balcony was a
vantage point to see Luna if he returned on the ocean side of the Malecуn.
Osorio seemed to have a different concern, following Arkady's every move, as if
he might suddenly execute a dive to the pavement. Perhaps candy-colored top and
shorts were jinetera fashion – she'd given him a brief account of the
surveillance – but as they only accentuated how fine-boned she was, with hair
in rows of black curls and her eyes set under extravagant lashes, it was like
being tended by a child. Why he was with her rather than pounding at the door
of the Russian embassy for asylum he didn't know. A
wave collapsed along the wall, and he wondered whether the fishing lights
farther out rode ebb or flow. He couldn't see the "Italian
is the official language of jineteras." Ofelia had dropped her
voice. "So
I've heard. It's Hedy, the girl from the santero's. At least she's on
her feet again." "Not
for long." Osorio laid down the words like a bet. There
were times when Arkady thought Osorio spoke with the satisfaction of a hangman.
"So, just what happened to her? She was possessed but the santero
couldn't help her?" "The
drummers were Abakua." "So?" "Abakua
is from the "Is
that so? That sounds awfully... departmental." Osorio
narrowed her eyes on him. "We can believe in Santeria, Palo Monte, Abakua
or Catholic. Or any combination. You think that's impossible?" "No.
It's amazing the things I believe in: evolution, gamma rays, vitamins, the
poetry of Akhmatova, the speed of light. Most of which I take on faith." "What
did Pribluda believe in?" Arkady
thought for a moment because he liked the question. " He was hard as a barrel
and did a hundred sit-ups every day, but he thought the key to health was
garlic, black tea and Bulgarian tobacco. He distrusted redheads and people who
were left-handed. He liked long train trips so he could wear pajamas day and
night. He never picked a bad mushroom. He still called Lenin 'Ilyich.' He
warned you never to say the devil's name because he might come. In the
bathhouse he washed first, then steamed, which is more polite. He said vodka
was water for the soul." Hedy
and her new friend walked out of view. Osorio stretched her feet out onto the
balcony rail, ostensibly getting comfortable, though there was little comfort
in deck chairs. Arkady noticed that the soles of her feet were a delicate pink. Arkady
said, "I know that Dr. Blas has determined that Pribluda had a heart
attack and he has a point about the fishing gear seeming to be intact. But
maybe there was more than fishing gear. If you told me Pribluda keeled over
trying to run a marathon, I might believe it. Basking in the water, no. Let me
ask, how well do you know Dr. Blas? Can you depend on his honesty?" She
took a moment to answer. "Blas is too vain to be wrong. If he says a heart
attack, it was a heart attack. Have the body examined in "There
are other questions that can only be answered here." "There
will be no investigation," Osorio said. "An
investigation of Rufo?" "No." "Of
Luna?" "No." "Of
anything?" "No."
Her disdain would have flattened a man of any sensitivity. A
black swell moved under the beam of the lighthouse. There were times when he
could almost feel the sea reach out to him like a wonderful, dreamless sleep.
The balcony faced north toward familiar constellations. The truth was that he
didn't believe in an expanding universe anymore; he believed in an imploding
universe, a furious rushing together of everything down a celestial drain to a
single point of absolute nothing. He sensed Osorio's eyes watching him. "I
have two daughters, Muriel and Marisol," she said. "Do you have
children?" "No." "You're
married?" "No." "Married
to your work? Dedicated? Che was like that. He was married and had children,
but he gave himself to the Revolution." "More
like divorced from my work. Not like Che, no." "Because
you have the same..." "Same
what?" "Nothing."
After a space, she asked, "You like Cuban music? Everyone likes Cuban
music." "It
has a certain beat." "It
has a beat?" "Primarily." There
was a longer pause. "You
play chess, then?" Osorio tried. Arkady
lit a cigarette. "No." "Sports?" "No." " "What?" " "Oh." "You
never read that?" "No,
what I read in "I'm
sure one of us is right." "The
only difference is that Sergeant Luna used a steel bat." "Aluminum." "I
stand corrected." Osorio
recrossed her legs. Arkady leaned back to release a long plume of smoke. "If
there were an investigation," she finally said, "what would you
do?" "Start
with a chronology. Pribluda was seen first at eight in the morning by a neighbor,
a dancer. He was seen last by a co-worker at the embassy between four and six
in the afternoon. She said he was talking on the street here to a neumбtico,
a black man. If I could speak Spanish I'd go up and down the Malecуn with this
picture until I found everyone who saw him that day." "I
suppose we can talk to the block CDR." "I
know who that is." "Okay,
we'll do that." "And
take another look where the body was found." "But
we found it across the bay in "Not
in the daylight." "This
is not an investigation." "No,
absolutely not." "You're
not afraid of being attacked again?" "I'll
be with you." Her
eyes seemed get even darker. "Quй idiota." That
seemed to be her name for him. Finally, he fell asleep in the chair,
although he was aware of her perfume, a faint scent of vanilla that tinged the
air like ink in water. Chapter ElevenPredawn lent the Malecуn an underwater
light, as if the sea had covered the city overnight. Arkady and Osorio
followed the faint glow of Abuelita having a morning cigar at her windowsill.
She invited them into an apartment with walls as worn as old clothes, with
layers of color, offered them cafй cubano in dark, heavy glasses and
seated them by a statue of the Virgin that had a peacock feather at its back
and at its feet a copper crown stuffed with sandalwood and dollars. Arkady felt
fine, virtually rejuvenated by the fact that Luna had not returned in the
middle of the night with a baseball bat or pick. Detective Osorio was back in
her blue uniform and dark mood. Abuelita showed no burns from having juggled
live coals the night before. In fact, she had the manner of a young girl only
pretending to be old and at once was flirting with Arkady, thanking him for
coming to her aid the night before, allowing him to relight her cigar, and
although the smoke, the scent and golden hues were disorienting, he managed to
explain to her that while there was no official investigation into Pribluda's
death, there was curiosity about his life and asked whether she as a vigilant
member of the Committee for the Defense of the Revolution could describe his
routine. "Boring.
Sometimes your friend would be gone for weeks, claro, but when he was
here it was always the same. He would leave at seven with his briefcase and
come back about seven at night. Except Thursdays. Thursdays he would be back in
the middle of the afternoon and out again and back again. Saturdays, he shopped
at the Diplomercado, because he always found a little something for me.
Chocolates or gin. A kind man. Sundays, he went fishing with Mongo off the
seawall or tied inner tubes to the car to drive somewhere else." "You're
very observant." "Is
my duty. I am the CDR." "Thursday
was his busy day?" "Oh,
yes." Her eyes and her smile widened. He
was aware of missing an insinuation but he pressed on. "Besides
his extra trip, did anything else make his Thursdays different?" "Well,
he took the other briefcase." "'Other'?" "The
nasty green plastic one. Cuban." "Just
that day?" "Yes." "When
was the last time you saw him?" "I'd
have to think. Hijo, let me think." Arkady
may have been confused but he was not stupid. "What is the money in the
crown for?" "Offerings
from people who want spiritual advice, to cast the shells or read cards." "I
need advice about Pribluda." He added five dollars to the crown. "It
doesn't have to be spiritual." Abuelita
concentrated. "Now that I think about it, maybe two Fridays ago was the
last time? Yes. He left a little later than usual and came back a little earlier,
around four." "Four
in the afternoon?" "In
the afternoon. Then he left again around six. I remember because he changed
into shorts. He always wore shorts when he went out with Mongo on the bay. But
Mongo wasn't with him." Osorio
was unable to contain herself. "See, everything points to Pribluda being
the body." "So
far." Arkady
was pleased, too, because everybody had something. He had a version of
Pribluda's final day. Osorio had her moment of triumph. Abuelita had five
dollars. Outside
the day approached more as distinguishable shadow than as light. As Arkady and
Osorio walked up the Malecуn a huddled mass proved to be four PNRs stealing
smokes. They approached Arkady out of curiosity until they registered Osorio's
uniform and the detective gave them a heavy-lidded look that sent them
stumbling in retreat. In her uniform and cap, heavy belt and holster, she
constituted a small armored column, Arkady thought. Or a little tank with laser
eyes. In
the entire harbor the only craft in motion was the A
countersurge of new riders pushed onto the boat, carrying Arkady and Osorio
with them. The interior was set at pre-swelter, seats along the sides, bike
riders to the rear, bars to hang from crisscrossing the ceiling. Arkady's coat
drew stares. He didn't care. "Do
you love boats as much as I do?" "No,"
Osorio said. "Sailboats,
fishing boats, rowboats?" "No." "Maybe
it's a male characteristic. I think the appeal is the apparent irresponsibility
of boats, the sense of floating anywhere, while the opposite is true. You have
to work like a dog to keep from sinking." Osorio gave him no response.
" What is it? What's bothering you?" "It
is contrary to revolutionary law for a tourist to rent rooms. Abuelita should
have reported him. He was hiding among the people because he was a spy." "If
it's any comfort, I doubt that Pribluda ever passed as a Cuban. He wanted a
view of the water. I can understand that." The
more Arkady saw of the harbor the more impressed he was by both its size and
inactivity, a panorama of torpor: "How
do I look?" "Ripe.
Your embassy should lock you up." "I'm
safe with you." "The
only reason I'm with you is because you want to go to "Well,
I'm certainly enjoying myself." The village of Casablanca looked as if it
had started at the top of its hill at Christ's feet and then rolled down to the
water's edge, piling shanties of cinder block and sheet steel on top of more
dignified colonial houses. Scarlet bougainvillea tumbled over walls and the air
warmed with the sticky smell of jasmine. From the ferry landing, Arkady and
Osorio climbed up to a depot for trolleys equipped with cow catchers for rural
duty. They walked a main street with shutters closed against the morning heat,
including the closed door and boarded-up windows of a tiny PNR station, and
down the remains of a circular stairway to a park of weeds, a cement curb, a
panorama of the bay and the tar-black water and pilings, refuse and cans where
the neumбtico had been found three days before. The
scene was different in the daytime, without klieg lights, a crowd, music and
Captain Arcos shouting urgent misdirections. The sun picked out the details of
a waterfront row of elegant houses so gutted they looked like Greek temples
gone to ruin, and defined just how flimsy was the dock that reached over the
water to a half-dozen fishing boats. The craft all had long poles raised like
antennae and " "This
is where he ended up, not where he started. There's nothing to find,"
Osorio said. The
dock disappeared behind a barricade to a shack Arkady hadn't noticed at all on
his first visit. He went around to a back gate that opened to a yard that could
have been on The
boat being repaired, he said, was built in "Has
Andres heard about the body found here?" "He
says that's all they talk about. He wonders why we came back." "Did
they find anything else in the water where the neumбtico was
found?" "He
says no." "Does
he have a chart of the bay?" Arkady picked his way to the dock around
mounds of cans and bottles salvaged from the water and stinking of slime. "I
told you before, the body just floated here. We don't have anything like a
scene of the crime." "Actually,
what I think we have is a very large scene of the crime." Andres
returned with a chart that revealed as a channel that flowed between Havana the
city and Morro Castle and fed three separate inner bays: Atares, west and
nearest to downtown Havana, Guanabacoa in the middle and Casablanca east.
Arkady followed with his finger the tracery of shipping lanes, ferry routes,
depths, buoys, the very few hazards, and understood why the "What
floats in can float out, he says. Depending on the tide: in during high, out
during low. Depending on the wind: northwest in, southeast out. Depending on
the season: in winter winds were generally stronger, in summer hurricanes drew
water out to sea. If everything is equal a body can spin forever in the middle
of the bay, but usually the wind is steady from the northwest and drives bodies
right to his boatyard, which was why you find live neumбticos in Havana
and dead neumбticos in Casablanca." Arkady
tested the spindly dock and for some reason felt promise. Andres's own boat, El
Pinguino, was a coquettish blue with room for two if they could shift
around an engine box, floats, buckets, gaff and tiller. Forward, a sail was
furled between outrigged fishing poles. Aft, rope and wire lay on a transom
crosshatched from braining fish. No satellite uplink, sonar, fish finder, radar
or radio. Osorio
followed. "Looks are deceiving, Andres says. It's enough boat, he claims,
to reach "Why
am I not surprised?" Drawn
to the boat, Arkady crossed planks spaced widely enough for him to follow his
reflection in the water. What he didn't understand were the floats, each
numbered and skewered so that at least three meters of orange pole would stand
free above the water. "This,"
Andres explained through Osorio, "is the Cuban system." The fisherman
turned the chart over and, with a pencil stub, drew a wavy surface of the water
and then, at regular intervals, the poles floating upright. A "mother
line" connected them in a long string of poles. "The problem with
fish is that they swim at different depths at different times. At night with a
full moon, the tuna feed deeper. At the same time, red snapper or grunts feed
closer to the surface. And turtles, too, though you can only catch them while
they're copulating, a season that only lasts a month. Of course, they're
illegal, so he never would. But with the Cuban system you can fish for them all
by hanging hooks from different sections of the mother line at different
depths: forty meters, thirty meters, ten. Everybody sets out different lines
and this way they comb the whole sea." "Ask
him about a current that would have carried a drifting neumбtico from
the Malecуn into the bay." "He
says that is where boats concentrate because that's where fish are found, in
the current. Boats don't fish the entire bay, just that corridor with mother
lines and a gamut of hooks." "Now
ask him what they found, not here at the dock but out on the water. I don't
mean fish." Andres
stopped for breath like a man outrun by his mouth. A Cuban who poached in "He
asks, something snagged in the bay? Around the time that poor man was found at
the dock?" As if to aid recollection Andres glanced back toward the two
men who had been working on the propeller shaft but his friends had vanished.
"Trash maybe, hooked accidentally?" "Exactly." By
now Osorio understood the drift, and when Andres retreated to his shack she went
with him. They returned with a plastic bag and perhaps fifty sheets of what
looked like lottery tickets that had obviously been soaked through and then set
out to dry. In green on white, a barely legible pattern said "Montecristo,
Habana Puro, Fabrica a Mano" over and over again. "These
are official state seals before they're gummed and cut for cigar boxes,"
Osorio said. "With these, ordinary cigars could have been labeled
expensive Montecristos. This is very serious." Andres became a torrent of
explications. "He says the seals snagged on someone's line, he can't
remember whose, a week or more before the body was found. The bag had leaked,
the seals were ruined, besides that was when the weather changed, no one came
to their boats and the seals were forgotten. He dried them but just to read
them and see if they were worth reporting. He was about to himself." Arkady
was entertained by the idea of such valuable cigars. Sugar and cigars, the
diamonds and gold of "Could
you ask exactly where the bag was found?" Andres
marked the chart five hundred meters off the Malecуn between the Hotel Riviera
and Pribluda's flat. " He says only a lunatic would steal government
seals, but he thinks a neumбtico is desperate to begin with. To sail
on a ring of rubber and air? At night? The tide goes out or a current carries
him to sea? One little puncture? Sharks? A man like that makes all fishermen
look bad." Osorio was disgusted with Arkady
was content, having done something remotely professional, and on the ferry ride
back bought a paper flute of peanuts roasted in sugar that he induced Osorio to
share. Her
attitude had changed a little. " That man Andres only showed us the cigar
seals he found because he looked into your eyes. You knew he was hiding
something. How did you do that?" It
was true that from the moment Arkady walked into the boatyard he felt guided to
the flimsy dock and the spear-shaped floats of the "mother line." He
could say it was the way the workmen avoided Osorio, but no, it was as if El
Pinguino had called his name. "A
moment of clarity." "More
than that. You saw through him." "I'm
highly trained in suspicion. It's the Russian method." Osorio
gave him an opaque, humorless gaze. He had yet to figure the detective out. The
fact that Luna had backed off when Osorio arrived in the santero's
yard suggested as much that they were working together as on opposite sides.
She could just be a smaller version of the man who had beaten Arkady with a
bat. Yet there were moments when Arkady would spy an entirely different,
unrevealed person stirring within her. The ferry engines reversed and threw the
deck into vibrations as it coasted to the dock. "Now
we should go to a doctor," Osorio said. " I know a good one." "Thanks,
but I finally have a mission. Your Dr. Blas needs a better photograph of Sergei
Pribluda. I volunteered to find it. At least, to try." The address Isabel had given him the
night before was an old town house that, like a dowager in a once fine but
tattered dress, maintained an illusion of European culture. Wrought-iron
railings guarded marble steps. Lunettes of stained glass cast red and blue
light onto the floor of a reception room staffed with women sitting in white
housecoats. Arkady
followed strains of Tchaikovsky, bright and brittle notes from a badly tuned
piano, into a sun-filled courtyard, where, through an open window, he saw a
class in progress, dancers who balanced the upper bodies of starving waifs on a
powerful musculature that started at the small of their backs, sculpted the
haunches and flowed down through the legs. While Russian ballerinas tended to
be doe-like and softly blonde, however, Cubans had whippet-thin faces trimmed
in black hair and eyes and lit with the arrogance of flamenco dancers. In their
leotards they combined poverty and chic, moving on point in stiffly elegant,
birdlike steps in taped toe shoes across a wooden floor patched with squares of
linoleum. As
a Russian, he took a moment to adjust. He had been brought up with the attitude
that great dancers – Nijinsky, Nureyev, Makarova, Baryshnikov – were, per se,
Russian, that they graduated from schools like the They
took a table in a corner of the courtyard, Isabel inhaling fiercely, looking
Arkady up and down. "Eighty degrees and you're still in your coat. That's
class." "It's
a style. I noticed that you're very good." "It
doesn't matter. I will never be more than corps de ballet no matter how good I
am. If I weren't the best I wouldn't be in the company at all." Arkady
was struck again by the melancholy of her voice and the long line of her neck,
with its nape of feathery black curls on milk-white skin. Also by her
fingernails, which were bitten to the quick. She drew on her cigarette
hungrily, as if it served for food. "I like that you're thin." "There's
that." Arkady lit a cigarette himself, celebrating an attribute he had
been unaware of. "You
can see the conditions in which we have to work," Isabel said. "It
doesn't seem to stop you. Dancers dance no matter what, don't they?" "They
dance to eat. The ballet feeds us better than most Cubans see. Then there's the
chance some infatuated Spaniard from "A
ballerina who defects to "You're
laughing?" "It's
a change. I was never aware of Pribluda's interest in the ballet." "He
was interested in me." "That's
different," Arkady conceded. Her self-absorption was so complete she had yet
to notice any scuff marks on him. "You were close?" "On
my part, strictly friends." "He
wanted to be closer?" "I
suppose so." "Did
he have any photographs of you?" Arkady thought of the frame in Pribluda's
bureau, of Isabel's willowy pose in class. "I
believe so." "Do
you have any photographs of him?" "No."
She appeared to find the question ridiculous. "Or
the two of you together?" "Please." "Only
asking." "Sergei
wanted a different relationship but he was so old, not the most handsome man in
the world and not very cultured." "He
didn't know a pliй from a... whatever?" "Exactly." "But
he was doing something for you." "Sergei
was communicating with "About
what?" "Getting
out of this wretched country." Arkady
had the sensation that he was talking to a fairy-tale princess imprisoned in a
tower. "When
did you last see Sergei?" "Two
weeks ago. It was the day of the first night of Cinderella. One of the
principal dancers was ill, I was filling in as one of the ugly stepsisters and
there was a problem with my wig, because here in "What
time?" "In
the morning, maybe eight. I knocked on his door on the way down. He came to the
door with Gordo." "Gordo?" "His
turtle. I named him. It means 'fat boy.'" Arkady
could see Pribluda opening the door. Had the colonel imagined himself a knight
errant rescuing Isabel from her island prison? "You
lived right above Pribluda," Arkady said, "did you ever notice who
visited him?" "Who
would visit a Russian if they knew his home was watched?" "Who
is watching?" She
touched her chin as if such a delicate feature could sprout a beard. " He
watches. He watches everything." "The
last time you saw Pribluda, did he mention what he was going to do that
day?" "No.
He didn't boast like George, who always has big plans. But Sergei brought
you." "He
didn't send for me, I just came." Arkady tried to get the conversation
back on track. "Did you ever see Pribluda with a Sergeant Luna from the
Ministry of the Interior?" "I
know who you mean. No." Isabel awarded him a smile. "You stood up to
Luna last night. I saw you." "In
a feeble way." What Arkady remembered of the encounter was being saved by
Detective Osorio's arrival. "And
you are going to save me." She placed her cool hand on his and said as if
they'd reached an understanding, "When the letter comes from Over
Isabel's shoulder Arkady saw George Washington Walls almost trip and recover as
he entered the courtyard from the street. His light complexion was even lighter
for a moment before he regained momentum, the street stroll of an American
slowed to a Cuban pace and an actor's self-consciously casual style: pressed
blue jeans and a fastidiously white pullover over brown biceps. The man had to
be fifty, Arkady thought, and Walls could almost play himself as a young man if
there was a movie. Why not? As Arkady remembered, there had been the war
protests, the march on "Comemierda"
she leaned across the table to say, then twisted out her cigarette and marched
back to the rehearsal room. "Do
you want me to translate that?" Walls asked Arkady. "No." "Good.
She is as mean as she is lovely and she is a lovely lady." Walls sat and
gave Arkady his full attention. "Are you interested in ballet? I
contribute to the cause here, but I'm actually more of a fight fan myself. I go
all the time. You?" "Not
too much." "But
sometimes." Walls eyed the repair work on Arkady's head. "So, what
happened to you anyway?" "I
think it was baseball." "Some
game. Look, I wanted to thank you for stopping Luna last night." "I
think you helped." "No,
you did it and it was the right thing. The sergeant was out of line. These
things happen in "George
Washington Walls." "Yeah,
that says it all, doesn't it? Here I am like a kid checking out everyone Isabel
talks to. You surprised me, I admit it. Last night I didn't come on too well,
either. The problem is, I'm the elder statesman of radicals on the run in "That's
all right." Arkady changed the subject, "What was it like to be 'on
the run'?" "Not
bad. In East Germany, the old Democratic Republic, the blonde Hildas and Uses
used to line up to serve under the black commander. I thought I was a god. Here
I am trying to wring one little smile from Isabel's lips." "You've
been here a while." "I've
been here forever. I don't know what the fuck I had in mind. The truth is, I
always let my mouth get away from me. My mouth said, 'I'm not going to war, I'm
not going to let you push around my black brothers in the South, I'm hijacking
this fucking plane.' And the rest of me's going, 'Jesus Christ, I didn't mean
that, please don't hit me again.' I didn't really think they'd take me to "I'm
trying to imagine." "Don't.
They finally gave up and brought me back to "Still..."
Arkady tried to align the images of the world-shaker and investment hustler. Walls
caught the look. "I know, I was somebody. Look, so was Eldridge
Cleaver and Stokely Carmichael. Brother Cleaver crawled back to the States to
do time, and Stokely ended up in "Yes." "Well,
she obsesses on this, she obsesses on men she thinks can help. And she's right,
they'll never let her be a prima ballerina here and they'll never let her out.
Do you love her?" "I
just met her." "But
I saw you two together. Men fall in love with her very fast, especially when
they see her dance. Sometimes they fall all over themselves to offer to
help." "I
would help if I could." "Ah,
that means you have no idea of the situation." "I'm
sure of that," Arkady admitted. "Do you know Sergei Pribluda?" "I
did. I heard they found him in the bay. Are you a spy too?" "Prosecutor's
investigator." "But
Sergei's friend?" "Yes." "Let's
talk outside." Walls led Arkady past the reception desk and through the
fronds of a small yard to the street where a sleekly molded white American
convertible with a red leather interior sat at the curb. On rounded tail fins
were silver rings and on the lid of the trunk the mere suggestion of a spare
tire. As if he were introducing a person, Walls said, "'57 Chrysler Imperial.
Three hundred twenty-five horsepower V-8, TorqueFlite transmission, Torsion
Aire suspension. Ernest Hemingway's car." "You
mean, like Hemingway's car?" Walls
caressed the fender. "No, I mean Hemingway's car. It was Papa Hemingway's,
now it's mine. What I wanted to talk about is this letter coming from "A
little." "Her
father?" "No." Walls
dropped his voice. "I love Cubans, but they do trim the truth. Look, these
people bankrupted Why?
Arkady wondered. "Lazaro
Lindo was number two in the Cuban Party, posted in "Fidel
knew?" "From
the start. He let the plot roll to see who'd sign on. There's a reason the
Comandante has survived this long." "What
happened to Isabel?" "Her
mother went crazy and fell under a bus. Isabel was raised by her aunt under
another name, which was the only reason she was picked for dance school. Cuban
ballet is like Cuban sports, a miracle until you find out how it's done. They
search the country for little prospects and she was a star at twelve. The
uproar when they figured out she was Lazaro Lindo's little girl? Now, they
point to her and say, 'See how we let the children of enemies of the people
rejoin society.' What they're not going to do is promote the name Isabel Lindo
on the bill as a prima ballerina, and they're never going to let her
tour." "Is
her father still alive?" "Died
in jail. Somebody dropped a rock on him. What I'm saying is, this is no
ordinary message Isabel wants from "I
appreciate it." "She's
difficult, I know. You can help." "How?" "Don't
get her hopes up." "Did
Pribluda get her hopes up?" "Sergei
was going to work for me." "As
what?" "Security." "Security?
What kind of security can a Russian offer in "Close.
In Antigua, the Caymans, "Not
yet. Luna said I would see him again, and I don't think he's a man of idle
threats. I doubt Sergeant Luna knows what an idle threat is." Walls
went around to the passenger side and opened the dashboard. Nested on chamois
cloth was a huge handgun with a slot trigger. "A Colt .45 automatic, a
classic, Fidel's favorite. Luna has been useful. He has a lot of interesting
connections. But you saw last night how he's just getting out of control. I
have to disengage and it might be easier with someone watching my back. Maybe
you'd be interested." Arkady
had to smile. Not much had amused him lately, but this offer did. "Right
now I'm watching my own back." "You
don't look it. You have a 'fuck you' quality in an understated way. You could
do general security, too." "I
don't speak Spanish." "You'd
learn." "Actually,
I prefer safer work." "It's
absolutely safe. The truth is, Arkady, I live in this tropical paradise on
sufferance. There are people who would seize any opportunity, any embarrassment
and say, 'Screw George Washington Walls, he's yesterday's news; if the Americans
still want him, send him back.' In my situation, the quieter the better." "Well,
that's interesting, but I'm only in "People
say that. People say they're just coming through Chapter TwelveArkady expected that any minute Luna would
drop from a street sign or pop up from a manhole cover and make good on his
promise to "fuck him up." Fucking up and killing were close but not
the same. There was that added sexual charge, the suggestion of rough mating,
as if a missing eye or ear were a reasonable token of intercourse. Killing was
clean. Fucking up sounded messy. Strangely
enough, though, Arkady felt revitalized. Not exactly happy, but fueled by the
search for the photograph and the small license it gave him to ask questions
about Pribluda. Amused also, in a time of depression, by the implausible offer
of employment providing security for an American radical like George Washington
Walls. Perhaps because When
he got back to Pribluda's flat he propped the front door shut and carried a
bottle of chilled water to the office, where he turned on the computer and,
when the machine demanded a password, entered gordo. The machine
chirped and the screen blinked and offered icons, programs, startup,
accessories, main, printer. Twenty-five years in the KGB and an agent used a
turtle's name as his password. Lenin wept. Still
interested in Pribluda's last day, Arkady went through accessories to calendar.
Hours, days, months rolled backward without appointments, but what curious
comfort to take, he thought. He couldn't speak Spanish, but he could navigate
the universal PC desktop. CUMIN was the Cuban Ministry of Sugar and charts,
RUSMIN the Russian Ministry of Trade, SUG-FUT the futures prices of Cuban,
Brazilian and Indian sugar as they competed in commodities pits. Meanwhile, a
downstairs din of drums and maracas suggested that Erasmo the car mechanic was
at work. Arkady intended to talk to Mongo and find a photograph of Pribluda,
but first things first, while he had the inspiration. He
opened SUGHAB,
which divided Commune Camilo Cienfuegos is the former Hershey sugar
mill east of Arkady
supposed the Cubans would be testy about that. He started a search for the
Havana Yacht Club. Nothing. Rufo Pinero. Nothing. Sergeant Luna and, for good
measure, Captain Arcos. Nothing. Opened the E-mail outbox and inbox. Empty. A
document labeled AZUPANAMA
caught his eye because Vice Consul Bugai had mentioned successful negotiations
between [email protected]/IntelWeb/ru Wed Aug 5 1996 A.I. Serkov, Manager Diamond International Trading 1123 Smolenskaya Ploshad, Rm. 167
Dear
Serkov, Greetings
from the land of mambo kings. I am just now getting used to sending mail
through the internet so I hope you are all well, etc. The weather is agreeable,
thank you. Let me know if this reaches you safely. Yours, S.S.
Pribluda It was like watching someone learn
to ride a bicycle. A.I.
Serkov Diamond
International Trading Dear
Serkov, Progress. Yours, S.S.
Pribluda Arkady
liked the sound of that. Progress! Russian and to the point. Also interesting
in that it had no E-mail address or time sent, suggesting that it was a note
for a real message to be sent from an encrypted machine at the embassy. [email protected]/IntelWeb/ru
Mon Oct 1 1996 Serkov, The
Chinese contact has borne fruit. I think you will see that the fox is flushed!
A fox and a wolf! Pribluda What
a wordsmith. Pribluda had obviously been flushed with victory. "Success!"
was all an agent need say. "Chinese contact" seemed far too much, not
that Arkady was aware of any part of According
to the spreadsheet, Pribluda's finances were straightforward, so much allotted
each month for food, laundry, personal items, gasoline and car repair. The only
unexplained expenditure was a hundred dollars paid every Thursday. If the item
was sex, Arkady thought, Pribluda would have hidden it; as an unreconstructed
Communist, Pribluda had a skewed but ironbound morality. No, the item could be
for his Chinese contact. Or karate lessons. According to little Carmen,
Pribluda did carry a black belt in his briefcase. The
more immediate fact was that the colonel had much more money than was found
with the body in the inner tube. Arkady shut down the computer and searched the
apartment again, more his line of work. This time he emptied everything,
including shoes and hatbands. In pants hanging in the closet he found two red
ticket stubs. In the medicine cabinet he found, rolled with white pasteboard
inside a white aspirin bottle, a couple of pills left for sound effects and
$2,500 American. Which
didn't tell him much. All the same, Arkady was satisfied with finding anything.
He picked up a knife in the kitchen and let the blue of the sea draw him to a
balcony chair. One moment he was full of nervous energy, the next barely able
to move his feet. Was it the six-hour time difference from He
awoke to the rising pitch of sirens. The sun had moved to the far end of the
Malecуn, and coming up the seawall boulevard was a high-speed vanguard of four
motorcycles, their way cleared in advance by PNRs who had suddenly appeared
ahead at every intersection to stop all other traffic and chase bikers and
pedicabs out of the way. Behind the bikes came a smooth, silent convoy, and as
it flashed by people on the sidewalk paused in midstep, eyes darting to each
vehicle as it flew past, from boxy Land Rover to wide Humvee, to a little
Minint Lada that ran like a lapdog in front of two black Mercedes 280s with
tinted glass and the swaying ride of heavy armor, from radio van to ambulance,
from trailing Land Rover to a rear guard of four more cycles, an energetic
whirlwind that made the entire Malecуn come to a stop like a population in a
trance and then, with its passing, released them. Arkady's
name was being shouted, and down on the pavement he saw Erasmo tilted backward
in his wheelchair. "Bolo,
did you see him?" Erasmo touched his beard to signify El Lider, El
Comandante, Fidel himself. "That
was him?" "In
one of the Mercedes. Or his double. No one knows and the where or when of the
presidential cavalcade is never announced ahead of time. In fact, it's the only
surprise in "Has
he got a phone?" "Very
funny. Come down and we'll find him. Besides, it's too beautiful to be inside.
I'll give you the Cuban perspective." Arkady
thought that unless a person had an armored car and entourage it might be
beautiful outside, but with Luna outside it was probably safer in. "Look,"
Erasmo admitted, "I need a driver." Driving a Jeep with the radio pounding
and Erasmo half over the car door, calling to friends on the Malecуn was a
different view of life. To begin with, the mechanic gave the PNRs a rude
salute. "Professional
hijos de puta," he explained to Arkady. "I'm a capitalino,
someone from "Okay." Some
houses were Spanish castles carved from pink limestone, office buildings showed
ranks of shutters with cockeyed slats and the sun itself disintegrated into
light. While Arkady watched for Luna, Erasmo identified oncoming traffic.
" '50 Chevy Styleline, '52 Buick Roadmaster, '58 "Isn't
it dangerous for girls to hitch rides?" asked Arkady. In "If
buses aren't running, women must find rides some other way. Besides, Cuban men
may be macho but they have a sense of honor." All the girls Arkady saw
were fullbore pubescent, with bare midriffs or body suits painted on, their
thumbs out ostensibly for eunuchs. Erasmo spotted a hitchhiker in hot orange.
"When you see a girl like that, you should at least honk." "Did
Pribluda honk?" "No.
Russians know nothing about women." "You
think so?" "Describe
a woman to me." "Intelligent,
humorous, artistic." "Is
this your grandmother? I mean a woman. Like the kinds here. Criolla:
very Spanish, very white. Like the dancer Isabel. Negra: African, black,
which can be very forbidding or very sexy. In the middle, mulata: a
caramel color, skin soft as cocoa, eyes like a gazelle. Like your friend the
police detective." "You
saw her?" "I
noticed her." "Why
do men always describe women in edible terms?" "Why
not? And the best to most Cuban men, china: mulata with just a hint of
Chinese, of the exotic. Now describe a woman." "A
knife in the heart." They
drove for a while. "That's
not bad," Erasmo said. "When
you called me on the street, you said 'Bolo.' What does that
mean?" "Bowling
ball. That's what we call Russians. Bolos." "For
our...?" "Physical
grace." Erasmo unveiled a vicious grin. The mechanic had a broad, vigorous
face, huge shoulders. Arkady realized that with legs the man would have been a
Hercules. "Speaking
of Chinese," Arkady said, "are there Chinese events on Thursdays
around "Chinese
events? Wrong city, my friend." Undeniably,
Arkady thought. They
went past high rises that had the dinginess of fingered postcards, until the
Malecуn was swallowed by a tunnel. Emerging in "For
the tires, at least," Erasmo said. "This is an island of cannibals.
Remember Alive? The plane crash? Fidel is our pilot, but he would call a crash
a Special Period." Erasmo's
wheelchair was a folding model with bicycle tires and once it was pulled from
the back of the car and he was seated, he let Arkady know not to even offer a
push. He tacked recklessly around broken bottles to a series of pool-sized
basins filled with brackish water and, only a step below them, a shelf of
pocked coral and seawater of restless green. Concrete blocks like the stones of
a pyramid had been set out as a breakwater and snorkelers floated between them
and the coral. "They're
spearfishing for octopus," Erasmo said when Arkady caught up. "
Before the Revolution you could swim here in a freshwater pool, a saltwater
pool or the ocean. Parties all the time, American friends learning the
mambo." He lifted his chin toward a house with a wooden pergola on the
second floor where sheets billowed like eager sails. " My grandmother's.
She wore a sable jacket and used a lorgnette instead of eyeglasses, women of a
certain class did. I used to tear up and down here on a Schwinn tricycle with
streamers on the handlebars. I suppose in a way I still do." "Do
you still have family here?" "They
left long ago. Flew out, sailed out, paddled out. And, of course, if you leave,
you're officially a traitor, a gusano, a worm. You can't just disagree
with Fidel, you are against Fidel, against the Revolution, a
criminal, a faggot or a pimp. That way there's no one against Fidel except
scum." Arkady
looked at the house. It was quite grand. Erasmo's hair and beard had gone a
little wild in the breeze. "You
didn't want to live here?" "I
used to. I traded for rooms where a garage wouldn't be so obvious. Mongo lives
here now." "You're
old friends?" "Old
friends. You know, he often misses work but up to now he always let me
know." They
backed the chair up the steps and through a progression of dining room, sitting
room, courtyard, second parlor all turned into separate apartments, the larger
rooms divided by plywood and sheets into two apartments, so that the house was
a pueblecito, as Erasmo called it, a little city. He knocked at a door
in the rear. When there was no answer, he told Arkady to feel over the
doorframe for a key. "This
was my bedroom whenever I slept here. Some things stay the same. I loved it.
Here I was Captain Kidd." The
room afforded such a sweeping view of the water it had to be a theater of
fantasy for a boy brought up on pirate tales of the "Speargun,"
Erasmo said. He had Arkady take it down and showed him how to place the
elongated back end against a hip to pull the bands with both hands to a cocked
position. The spear itself was a steel bolt with, instead of barbs, two folding
wings held down by a sliding collar behind the tip. "The Cuban fisherman
meets his prey on all fronts." Arkady
was more interested in pictures of boxers on the wall. "Kid
Chocolate, Kid Gavilan, Teofilio Stevenson. Mongo's heroes," Erasmo said. Under
a newspaper photo of Fidel in a sparring pose with a tall, spindly fighter the
caption read, "El Jefe con el joven pugilista Ramуn Bartelemy." "You
said his name is Mongo." Erasmo
shrugged as if it were self-evident. "Ramуn, Mongo, same thing." The
picture of Cuban boxers in front of the Eiffel Tower was identical with the one
Arkady had seen in Rufo's room, except now Arkady saw that next to Rufo was
Ramуn "Mongo" Bartelemy. "If
he's not here, where do you think he is?" "I
don't know. His tube is here. Arkady, do you mind if I ask about the PNR? There
were two stationed across the street until the show at the santero's.
I know they don't like Russians, but is there anything you want to tell me?
After all, it's where I live too." Arkady
thought that was a reasonable request. "Sergeant Luna might have something
to do with them." "Luna.
That Luna, the dark phase of the moon, unseen but there. Yes, a bad man to
cross and a very bad man to embarrass before his friends. An exquisite choice
of enemy. And now the PNRs are gone. You may want them in case he's coming
back." "That's
occurred to me." "You're
so intent on finding Sergei?" "Or
what happened to him." "You
should start thinking about what's going to happen to you. You have no
authority and you don't even pretend to speak the language, which is a relief.
You can't investigate, all you can do is get involved." "In
what?" " Arkady
opened the shutter wider. Under a low sun, waves pressed against an offshore
breeze and two neumбticos came into view riding the crown of a swell,
each in turn sliding up the incoming brow, sinking from sight and reappearing
on the next slope of water like riders on submerged horses. " So, if
Mongo's tube is here, where is he?" "He
can still fish." By the time Arkady and Erasmo returned
outside the neumбticos were using short paddles to maneuver around the
breakwater. Green aerated waves churned between the breakwater and rock. The fishermen
had to come in on one rush as much as possible and the boulders struck Arkady
as an excellent place to crack a head. "When
does Mongo go out?" "You
never know. Neumбticos go out day or night. They fish one stretch of
the bay and then another. I think you have to call fishing from an inner tube a
feat of improvisation. They can stay close to shore or go miles out, where the
charter boats are hooking marlin. The boats don't like that, having a couple of
poor Cubans mess with their tourists." "The
neumбticos try to catch marlin?" "They
could. They're like buoys, they just drag behind until a fish gets tired. A
fish could tow them to "Always
in pairs?" "Absolutely,
in case one gets sick or loses his fins. Especially at night." "Do
they have radios?" "No." "And
what exactly could a neumбtico do while his friend was being eaten by
a shark?" Erasmo
let his eyebrows rise. "Well, we have a lot of religions in What
appealed to Arkady was the marginal aspect of the fishermen, the way they
folded into the motion of the sea, rose on the horizon and then slid from
sight, their vanishing act. Lying back in their tubes, they removed their
flippers and sat up, paddles lifted. A still space was followed by a trough
sucking sand and then a set of three waves gathering strength. Both men chose
the same climactic surge and stroked in deep pulls to ride it around the
breakwater and up the rocks. The nearer spilled, clutching his tube with one
hand and rocks with the other until he could scramble up on his belly. The
second was an older man in a straw hat, and he timed his landing to let the
wave's momentum smoothly lift him standing onto the coral, the brim of his hat
trembling raggedly in the breeze, shirt and pants bleached, black shanks ending
in feet gray with calluses. He found a tide pool in which to deposit his catch
while he tucked his gear between the tube and the net that constituted his
one-man craft. Despite the weight and dripping of the inner tube balanced on
his head, he found a match to light the stub of a cigar in his mouth. Arkady
dug out the photograph of the Havana Yacht Club for Erasmo to show him. The
fisherman put his finger on Mongo and pointed to the sky. "Pescando
con cometa. Con cometa." "It's
what I thought." Erasmo pointed out to Arkady a dot in the sky. "You
see that kite? The old man says maybe he saw Mongo fishing over there. Even
from the air the industrious Cuban finds his fish." Arkady
thought of Pribluda's heart attack. "Could you ask him if he ever fishes
in the rain?" "He
says, 'Sure.'" "When
there's lightning?" A
solemn shake of the head. "No." "When
was the last time there was lightning on the bay?" "He
says, 'A month.'" They took the Jeep. Since the kite was
too far over the water to keep track of from the street, Arkady stopped for
another look. From a bathing stairway he saw about two hundred meters farther
on a thin figure in a cap standing on steps and playing out a string rising
with a delicate curve that disappeared into the air. Perhaps three hundred
meters over the water a kite rode the offshore wind. The Jeep honked. "Sorry,
but you should have seen them," Erasmo explained when Arkady returned to
the car. Arkady swiveled and saw a pair of long-legged blondes roller-blading
away. "Jineteras on wheels, a mechanic's fantasy." "We're
looking for Mongo." "Right.
To fish with a kite you actually need two lines," Erasmo said when they
started driving again. "One to the kite, one to the hook. The first line
takes the second one out, and when the kite is far enough to reach the kind of
fish you want, you jerk the second line and it falls into the water." "What
about the charter boats below?" "Richly
amusing. They're playing Hemingway and here's a hook dropping down from some
poor Cuban bastard on the beach." Even
though Mongo was not in view of the street, once they were close the kite
string led them to two lime-green beach houses attached like Siamese twins at
the second floor. The windows were boarded and weeds grew on the roof. Arkady
helped Erasmo into his chair, and they moved through the walkway that ran between
the houses to rocks sparkling with fish scales. A long shovel stood, inserted
by the blade between cement stairs that had split. Reels of kite and hook cord
spun on the wooden shaft, feeding themselves so fast to the outbound kite that
they hummed. A green baseball cap fluttered on the handle. Whether he had seen
Mongo or the shovel, Arkady wasn't sure. The car horn hadn't helped. "How
could he disappear so quickly?" Arkady asked. "He
can be elusive. That's what they called him when he was in the ring, the
Elusive Mongo." "Why
would he run?" "You'd
have to ask him, but people stay away from police investigations if they
can." "Would
you know his cap?" "Of
course." As
Arkady reached for the cap a breeze flipped it onto the water, where it floated
in and out until an undertow dragged it under. At the same time, the spools on
the shaft ran out and kite and hook cords flew into the air and could have been
strings to the sun for all the chance of retrieving them. It
was January. In Chapter ThirteenOfelia found Renko at the Malecуn
apartment. After he placed a chair against the door he led her down the
hall to the office, where the computer monitor told a tale that was sad but
true. American attempts on the life of the Cuban Head of
State have included the use of exploding cigars, exploding seashells, poison
pens, poison pills, poison diving suits, poison sugar, poison cigars, midget
submarines, snipers, bounties. They have employed Cubans, Cuban-Americans,
Venezuelans, Chileans, Angolans, American gangsters. Cuban Security has
investigated 600 plots against the President's life. The CIA has tried to
introduce hallucinogenic sprays into television studios where the President was
broadcasting and depilatory powders to make his beard fall out. For these
reasons, the President continues to make use of a number of secure residences
and never announces his schedule in advance. "You
found Pribluda's password." "Wasn't
that brilliant of me?" he said. "This was entered January 5, the next
to last file Pribluda entered, and I have to ask myself, what has this got to
do with sugar?" "It's
nothing that any Cuban doesn't know. The life of the Comandante is always at
risk." "The
day before he disappears, maybe the day before he dies, Sergei Pribluda gets
the urge to write a short history of assassination attempts?" "Apparently.
He was a spy. Why are you interested?" "I'm
fishing with the Cuban method, setting hooks everywhere." Ofelia
had showered at home and come in jeans, a shirt tied at the midriff, sensible
sandals, floppy straw bag over her shoulder, but she maintained a professional
attitude. "Did you find a photograph of Pribluda for Dr. Blas?" "No." "But
you have been busy." New and old maps of "A
cultural visit to the ballet, a pleasant drive on the Malecуn. You?" "I
have other cases, no?" She regarded Pribluda's computer. "This
machine is on Cuban territory." "Ah,
but the memory of this machine, that is purely Russian." Like a virtuoso
of the keyboard, he exited the file, shut off the computer and, as screen and
room went dark, said, "Useless without the code." "You
don't have the authority, the language or background to investigate here." "I'd
hardly call what I'm doing investigating. But then, you're not either." It
was not easy to control her temper around this man. She opened the bag and
brought out a screwdriver, screws and slide bolt. The screwdriver was hers, but
it had taken her an hour at the flea market outside the Central Train Station
to find the bolt and screws. "I
brought you this for the door." "Thank
you, that's very thoughtful. Let me pay." "A
gift from the Cuban people." She thrust them into his hands. "I
insist." "I
insist more." "Then,
thank you. I will sleep like a babe. Better than a babe, a bivalve." Whatever
that meant, she thought. After screwing in the bolt and latch,
Renko celebrated what he called his "heightened sense of security" by
opening a bottle of Pribluda's rum and taking a tray of Pribluda's pickles,
mushrooms and other Russian indigestibles on a tray out to the balcony. Sitting
in an aluminum chair, she scanned the street for danger while he basked in a
half-moon that balanced at the end of a silver path across the water. The beam
from From
the portal below came a slow country son, a poem by Guillйn adapted to
a six-stringed guitar. "Maria Belen, Maria Belen, Maria Belen,
watching your hips roll and sway from Camaguey to Santiago, from Renko
lit a cigarette. "Actually, Sergeant Luna seems to have forgotten about
me. He didn't seem the forgetful type. Good rum." " "No." Ofelia
hadn't thought so, which meant that he had found it since he had moved into the
apartment, although she herself had looked everywhere when she dusted the place
for prints. She controlled the impulse to glance back at the apartment and was
aware of him watching her do just that. "I've
been thinking. Maybe it would be safer if you went to the embassy and stayed
there under guard." "Ruin
my Even
in poor light she saw the scab and bandage at his hairline. She felt unaccountably
responsible for his state of health and infuriated, as usual, by the way he
twisted a conversation. "But
you still claim that the sergeant attacked you? You think there is a conspiracy
against you?" "Oh,
no, that would be crazy. I would say, however, after Rufo and Luna, a
hint of animosity." "Rufo
is one thing," she maintained. "The accusation that an officer would
attack you is an effort to paint "Why?
It could certainly happen in "Not
in "I
imagined the sergeant wears Air Jordans?" "Then
why hasn't he come back?" "I
don't know. Maybe because of you." She
wasn't sure how to take that. Renko
said, "You told me Dr. Blas was honest, and if he said the heart muscle of
the man you pulled from the bay shows signs of cardiac arrest, the doctor is
telling the truth?" "If
he says so." "Let's
say I do believe him. What I don't believe is that a healthy man has a heart
attack for no reason. If he was out on the water and hit by lightning, that
would be a different matter. Shouldn't Blas examine the body for signs of a
bolt?" "Anything
else?" She meant to be sarcastic. "You
could find who Rufo talked to between the time he let me off and when he came
back to kill me. Check his telephone records." "Rufo
didn't have a telephone." "He
had a cell phone when he picked me up at the airport." "He
didn't when I searched him. In any case, there is no investigation." The
Cuban guitar was the sweetest guitar on earth, with notes that flickered the
way light dappled the water. She watched him light another cigarette from the
ember of the first. "Have
you ever stopped smoking?" "Certainly."
He inhaled. "But I know a doctor who says the optimum time to start
smoking is in a person's forties, when a person can really use nicotine's
effect to focus the mind and forestall senility. He says it generally takes
about twenty years for the consequences – cancer, coronary problems, emphysema
– to develop, and then you are ready to go anyway. Of course, he's a Russian
doctor." Although
she regarded it as a filthy habit, Ofelia heard herself say, "There were
times I wished I smoked. My mother smokes cigars and watches Mexican telenovelas
and shouts to the characters, 'Don't believe her, don't believe that
bitch!'" "Really?" "My
mother is light-skinned from a family of tobacco growers, and even though she
married a black cane cutter, my father, she always maintains the cultural
superiority of tobacco workers. 'When they roll cigars in the factory, there's
someone reading aloud the great stories. Madame Bovary, Don Quixote.
You think in the middle of the cane field there's someone reading Madame
Bovary? " "I
imagine not." Ofelia
opened her bag, laid the Makarov on her knees and placed a necklace of white
and yellow beads around her neck. "Very
pretty," Renko said. Blas
would have disapproved. Yellow was for Oshun, the goddess of fresh water and
sweet things, the color of honey and gold and Oshun's mulata glow.
Ofelia was comfortable wearing it around the Russian because he was ignorant. "Just
beads," she said. " Does the music bother you?" A
song lingered in the arcade under the balcony. "No,"
Arkady said. "You
don't understand any Spanish?" "Honey
and absinthe pour from your veins, into my burning furrow and making me
insane." Along with the song came murmuring and rustling from below.
Couples on the seawall moved closer. "Not
a word." "You
know," Ofelia said, "there are differences between rumba, mambo, son,
songo, salsa." "I'm
sure." "But
everything is based on drums, for dancing." "Well,
I'm not much of a dancer." Not
everyone had to be a dancer, Ofelia thought. Not that she found him attractive.
As her mother would say, will he live through the day? Ofelia's first husband,
Humberto, was black as a domino, a baseball player, a fantastic dancer. The
second, a musician, was the sort everyone called chino, not only
because he was such a handsome mix but because everybody liked him. He played
bongos, which demanded an outgoing personality. Until he finally went out
completely. But an even better dancer than Humberto. Her mother despised them
both and simply called them Primero and Segundo, leaving lots of room for
additions. Compared with them, wrapped in his black coat in spite of the heat,
Renko looked like an invalid. "That's
how spirits communicate," she explained. "They're in the drums.
Unless you dance the spirits can't come out." "Like
they came out for Hedy?" "Yes." "Then
it's safer not to dance." "Then
you're already dead." "Good
point. Abakua is a version of Santeria?" "They
couldn't be more different. Santeria is from "Blas
said they used to run smuggling." Ofelia
was starting to learn how Renko hid behind the most innocent expressions ready
to pounce. She wasn't going to get into the fact there were two Abakuas, a
public one with sincere devotees who could be university professors or Party
members and a secret criminal Abakua that had risen from its grave. This second
Abakua was, needless to say, for men only and had a thieves' morality. Murder
of an outsider was allowed, while informing on another Abakua was the ultimate
sin. And Cubans believed the Abakua could reach anywhere. Ofelia knew an
informer who got himself assigned to a post in "We
don't have to talk about it," Arkady said. "It
was the way you asked." "I
sounded smug? It's just my ignorance. I apologize." "We
will not talk about religions." "God
knows." From
the radio in the portal rose the deep beat of a drum that Ofelia knew had to be
a tall iya with a dark red center on the skin, accompanied by the
grinding rhythm of a belly-shaped gourd. A single horn insinuated itself, the
way a man asked a woman to dance. "Anyway,
it's not a bad thing to be possessed," Ofelia said. "Well,
I have an unimaginative Russian mind, I don't think it's going to happen to me.
What is it like?" "Theoretically?"
She watched him for the slightest hint of condescension. "Theoretically." "As
a child, you must have spread your arms and put your head back and danced in
the rain. You are drenched and clean and dizzy. If you are possessed, it's like
that." "Afterward?" "Your
mind still spins." An
abwe, the poor man's triangle, joined in from below. It was nothing
more than a hoe blade played with a stick of iron, but an abwe could
sound like the ticking in the mind when a man's strong hand reached around your
waist. As the saxophone tried to wrap around it, the gourd trembled, the drum
stopped and started like a heart. These were the snares set for silly girls who
lingered in shadows. Not Ofelia. She visualized a clear mind. She
looked toward his arm, the one she had found the bruises on. "You're
sounding better. You were not in a healthy mood when you came here." "I
am now. I'm curious about Pribluda and Rufo and Luna. I have a new purpose in
life, so to speak." "But
why did you want to hurt yourself?" She
half expected contemptuous dismissal, but Renko said, "You have it
backwards." Ofelia
sensed the next question so strongly she asked before she checked herself,
"Did you lose someone? Not here. In "I
lose people all the time." He lit one cigarette from the other. "Most
boats that go on the rocks really don't intend to go there. It's not a mood,
it's just exhaustion. Exhaustion from self-pity." He added, "You're
with someone and for some reason with them you feel more alive, on another
level. Taste has taste and color has color. You both think the same thing at
the same time and you're doubly alive. And if you manage to lose them in some
gruesomely irrevocable way, then strange things happen. You wander around
looking for a car to hit you so you won't have to go home in the evening. So
this incident with Rufo is interesting to me because I don't mind a car hitting
me, but I do mind a driver trying to hit me. A fine distinction, but
there you are." In the night Ofelia awoke to find
lovers gone, the moon becalmed. In the very lack of breeze she detected a faint
scent, a perfume she traced to Renko's soft black coat, to the sleeve of a man
who claimed he'd never been possessed. Chapter FourteenOsorio left before dawn, and as soon as she
was gone Arkady expected Luna to climb up the front of the building or
crawl through the air shaft. It wasn't so much that Arkady didn't trust Osorio
as that he didn't understand her. Why she would spend the night in a metal
chair with the island's least popular Russian was a mystery to him, unless she
was working with Luna and only insinuating herself into the apartment. If that
was the case, all the locks in the world wouldn't help. By eight o'clock the Malecуn stretched
like a floodlit stage. Boys crouched in the blue shadow of the seawall to spool
loose fishing line. Men opened cases of homemade hooks and weights for sale.
Bikes rolled by with a father on the pedals, a boy on the handlebars, mother
and baby on a plank over the rear wheel, an entire family rolling by. Still no
Sergeant Luna. Arkady
went downstairs, but instead of going out on the street he knocked on Erasmo's
door, deliberately pounding out of rhythm with the music from the garage's
radio until Tico answered and let him into Erasmo's private area with the
cut-down bed and table. "Erasmo's
not here." Tico was in his coveralls, with an inner tube over his shoulder
and a Tropicola can in his hand. Arkady
shouted over the radio. "You speak Russian." "I
speak Russian." Tico sounded as if he'd just realized it. He was the same age
as his friend Erasmo, but time seemed to have left his hair dark and thick as
fur, no wrinkles or lines of care to mark his smooth, trusting visage, a boy's
face on a middle-aged man. "Do
you mind if I go out through the garage?" "I
don't mind. You can go but you can't come back. The garage is closed." Arkady
pushed through the beaded curtain. Tico told the truth. The doors of the garage
were closed, the Jeeps inside parked bumper to bumper. Tico
said, "The garage is closed because Erasmo doesn't want me selling any
cars while he's gone." "I
won't bother you, I just want to go out the back way." And avoid any eyes
out front, Arkady thought. "Erasmo's
with the Chinese. He's with the Chinese." "He
is? What Chinese?" "The
dead Chinese. But he'll be there all day and I'm not supposed to sell any cars.
He said, 'Radio silence!' I'm not supposed to talk to anyone." "Where
are the dead Chinese?" "Radio
silence!" "Ah." "I
wasn't supposed to answer the door." "No,
you were being polite." Arkady dug a pencil from his coat and spread a
piece of paper over a hood. " Can you write it?" "I
can write as well as anyone." "Don't
tell me, but write where I can find Erasmo and the Chinese." "They're
dead, that's a clue." "Good."
As Tico bent over the paper and printed in block letters, Arkady threw in, on
the off-chance, "Do you know where Mongo is?" "No." "Do
you know what happened to Sergei?" "No."
Tico returned the pencil with an anxious expression. "Are you going to see
Erasmo now? If you see him right away he'll know it was me." "Not
right away." Tico
brightened. " Where are you going?" "The
"Where
is that?" Arkady
held up a map. "In the past." He went out the garage doors and walked
the back street half a dozen blocks before returning to the Malecуn. The boulevard
had become familiar in a matter of days, the coughing of trucks, boys casting
nets from the seawall, scruffy dogs chewing on a flattened carcass of a gull. A
PNR at a corner gave all his attention to a bicycle cart weighted with teenage
girls. No Luna at all. In
Arkady's hand was Sergei Pribluda's forty-year-old Texaco map, a foldout map
that located the Presidential Palace and American embassy, Cuban-American
Jockey Club and racetrack, Woolworth's and Biltmore Country Club of a vanished
Havana. Not that the city wasn't still surreal. Houses on the Malecуn were
fantasies: Greek pediments on Moorish columns and crumbling walls with
fleurs-de-lis in faded pinks and blues. What
surprised Arkady was how much It
took Arkady ninety minutes to walk the Malecуn, cross the At
It
wasn't the sort of place people just stumbled onto. There were no other
pedestrians. Cars hurtled around the circle and spun away. Only someone looking
for it would have noticed a driveway curving along a screen of royal palms and
around a lawn to a classical mansion in white with heavy columns, twin grand
staircases and broad colonnades. Over it lay the ghostly silence of a colonial
governor's palace abandoned in a coup, occupants decamped, the first signs of
decay visible in the split reflection of a broken window and a red tile missing
from the hip of the roof. Carved above the pediment of a central porch was the
design of a ship's wheel on a pennant. In the entire scene there was no
movement at all except for the sway of palm fronds. It was easy to imagine He
climbed a stairway and walked through open mahogany doors into a hall of white
walls and limestone floors. Under a wrought-iron chandelier an elderly black
woman in an aluminum chair stared up at him through thick glasses as if he'd
dropped from a spaceship. A red telephone sat at her side, and the sight of a
visitor prompted her to call and talk to someone in slurred Spanish while
Arkady went on through tall French doors to an empty hall. A line of reception
rooms connected like a bright and airy tomb, and the sound of his footsteps
preceded him in the direction of a bar with a dark, curving counter stripped of
stools, chairs, bottles. A portrait of Che hung by an empty glass case that
must at one time have displayed race trophies, sailing ladders, models. All
that was left of a nautical theme were wall medallions of a ship's wheel. The
bar opened to an outdoor area with a stage ready for a Cuban band that could
teach even Americans the mambo. He
returned inside and climbed to the second floor. At the top of the stairway was
a tall admiral's chair of black mahogany. Everything else had been carted away
and nothing added except more metal chairs of the Revolution. He stepped out
onto a porch facing the ocean for a view of a private cove. A
brick promenade as large as a city plaza spread out to a row of thatched
umbrellas and fan-shaped palms that led on to white sand and shallow water
embraced by broad piers and, beyond, enough anchorage in bright blue water for
a regatta. The only craft Arkady saw now were neumбticos, dots on the
horizon, and the only figures on the beach were a dozen boys kicking a soccer
ball back and forth. Arkady
couldn't resist the temptation. After he went back down the stairs he removed
his shoes and socks to walk onto the beach and feel the warm fine-grained sand
underfoot. The boys ignored him. He climbed the steps of a wide cement pier and
walked fifty meters to its end. The
boys on the beach of the club waved, Arkady thought, at him and then he turned
to the clapping of an inboard powerboat sweeping around a breakwater. It
skimmed the waves, shooting rays off its windshield, then slowed with a
skater's turns until Arkady could make out George Washington Walls in short
sleeves and sunglasses. He swung the boat about and approached parallel to the
pier, dropping the engine to a silken idle and keeping a safe distance from the
pilings. The boat was low, long and angular, its hull and deck of gleaming,
black mahogany, its bow sheathed in brass. In the cabin, black curtains were
drawn. The dash had the glinting brightwork and deep patina that came only from
age and infinite care. Fluttering from the transom pole was a pirate's pennant
with crossed sabers. "Hemingway's
boat?" Arkady asked. Walls
shook his head. "Maybe Al Capone's. A seaplane tender turned
rumrunner." "Capone
was here?" "He
had a place." Once
again, Arkady was impressed. "How did you know I was here?" "The
basic form of communication on this island is old women with phones. Why are
you here?" "Curiosity.
I wanted to see the yacht club." "Doesn't
exist." "I've
always wanted to see someplace that didn't exist." " "That
sounds irresistible." Arkady hesitated. "Has Luna been invited,
too?" "Not
to this party. No drums, no dancing, no Luna. Hop in." Walls
reversed and swung the stern to present the transom with the name
"Gavilan" on the stern. Arkady jumped without breaking a leg, and as
he slipped into a leather seat the boat scooped him up and moved away from the
dock. The
ride was brief, smoothly skimming the waves out of the cove to deeper, bluer
water until Walls slowed as smoothly as a limousine driver to a stop, the sharp
nose of the boat headed to the wind. Giving Arkady a sign to wait, he ducked
down into the cabin and returned with a tray table that locked into the cockpit
deck, ducked down and returned with a brass tray carrying a basket of sweet
rolls, a pot of coffee and three china demitasses with "Gavilan"
written on the side. The cabin doors opened again for a small, silver-haired
man in black pajamas and slippers, who climbed the steps and sat himself across
from Arkady. He wore the smile of a man who was both magician and the rabbit in
the hat. Walls
said, "John, I want you to meet Arkady Renko. Arkady, John O'Brien." "A
great pleasure." O'Brien took Arkady's hand with both of his. He caught
Arkady's glance at the pajamas. " Well, it's my boat and I dress as I
please. Winston Churchill, you know, used to wander around in the altogether.
I'll spare you that. And you wear this somewhat astonishing coat, George told
me about that. I apologize for not coming up sooner, but when George winds up
the Gavilan I stay below. Falling overboard would be fatal for my
dignity. You like cafe cubano, I hope?" Walls
poured. O'Brien might have been close to seventy, Arkady guessed, but he had a
youthful voice, engaging eyes and an oval face as lightly freckled as a
shorebird's egg. He wore a wedding band on his hand, a silver Breitling on the
wrist. "How
do you like "Beautiful,
interesting, warm." "The
women are unbelievable. My friend George here is smitten. I can't afford to fall
in love because I still have family in "There
are problems now?" Arkady broached the subject delicately. O'Brien
brushed a crumb from the table. "A legal hurdle or two. George and I have
been fortunate enough to find a home away from home here in "They
do. Did you know him?" "Of
course, he was going to do some security work for us. A simple man, I would
say. Not a very good spy, I'm afraid." "I'm
not a judge of spies." "No,
just a humble investigator, to be sure." O'Brien added a touch of Irish
brogue. He clapped his hands. "What a day! If you're going to be a
fugitive from justice, where would you rather be?" "Are
you the only fugitives in "Hardly.
How many of us are there?" O'Brien cast a doting eye on Walls. "Eighty-four." "Eighty-four
Americans on the lam. Well, it's better than a life in a federal
minimum-security prison, where you get lawyers, congressmen, dope dealers, the
usual cross-section of "So
you try to keep busy?" "We
try to stay alive," O'Brien said. "Useful. Tell me, Arkady, what are
you doing here?" "The
same." "By
visiting the Havana Yacht Club? Explain to me, what has it got to do with a
dead Russian?" "A
missing man at the place that doesn't exist anymore? That sounds perfect to
me." "He's
sort of careful," Walls said to O'Brien. "No,
he's right," O'Brien said and patted Arkady's knee. "Arkady's a man
who's just sat down to play cards and doesn't know the rules of the game and
doesn't know the value of his chips." O'Brien's
black pajamas had pockets. He took out a large cigar that he rolled between his
fingertips. "You
know the great Cuban chess champion Capablanca? He was a genius, thinking ten,
eleven moves ahead. He smoked Cuban cigars, of course, while he played. One
title match his opponent extracted a promise from Capablanca that he wouldn't
smoke. All the same, Capablanca brought out his cigar, squeezed it, licked it,
savored it, and his opponent went nuts, lost the match and said that not
knowing Capablanca was going to light up was even worse than him smoking. I
love Cuban cigars, too, although the joke's on me because the doctor says I'm
not allowed to smoke anymore. Just tease myself, that's all. Anyway, what led
you to the club, that's your cigar. We'll just have to wait for you to light it
up. For the time being, we'll simply say you were curious." "Or
amazed." "By
what?" asked Walls. "That
the club survived the Revolution." "You're
talking about the Havana Yacht Club now," O'Brien said. "The French,
you know, they beheaded Louis, but they didn't burn Walls
pointed toward the Moorish tower. "La Concha, the casino on one side of
the cove, they gave to the caterers' union and the greyhound track they turned
into track and field." "God
knows, I respect idealism," O'Brien said, "but let me put it this
way, as a result these properties have not been developed to their maximum.
There's an opportunity here to create something of enormous value for the Cuban
people." "Is
that where you come in?" "I
hope so. Arkady, I was a developer. Still am. George can tell you I'm not
sneaky. Disney's sneaky. When they start buying up land they form a little
corporation that sounds like your neighbors trying a little preservation,
buying an acre here, an acre there and then you wake up one morning and there's
a two-hundred-foot mouse outside your window. I'm up front. Every developer
wants one great landmark development, his own Walls
took over. "See, the government developed "Its
upkeep drains the state of half a million pesos a year. George, tell him it
could be making the state thirty million dollars a year." "It
could," Walls said. O'Brien
pointed to the club and beach. "That's conference center, restaurant,
nightclub, twenty suites, twenty rooms, time shares or condo that can be
explored. Plus spa, berthing for boats, you want luxury cruisers. What I'm
describing to you, Arkady, is a gold mine waiting for someone to pick up a
shovel." Arkady
couldn't help wondering why two well-placed American fugitives would share
their aspirations with him, although he sensed that O'Brien was the sort of
salesman who enjoyed his own performance, like an actor who could deliver the
most outrageous lines while he winked at the audience. Since Arkady's
construction experience had been in "Twenty
million," Walls took over. "We'd find the money and the Cuban
government wouldn't put up a single peso or dollar." "A
lot of people," O'Brien said modestly, "would call that a gift." "And
what do you want in return?" Arkady asked. O'Brien
said, "Guess." "I
don't have the faintest idea." O'Brien
leaned forward as if sharing a secret. "Last year an Indian casino in "We're
asking for a twenty-five-year lease of the old La Concha casino and an even
split of profits with the Cuban government," Walls said. "It's a
no-risk situation for them, but there's a political problem in that they made
such a big deal about closing casinos after the Revolution." "Closing
casinos and closing the Mafia," O'Brien said. "Which was why, with
the CIA, the Mafia tried to kill the President." "Castro,
he means," Walls said. "And it's not easy to get Cubans to reverse
direction. It would stop us cold if there was even a hint any Mafia, American
or Russian, was involved. Our casino has to be absolutely clean." "Any
project at an early point," said O'Brien, "is like a bubble, anything
can burst it. Your friend Pribluda was going to be our protection from the sort
of Russians who are, I assure you, swarming into the Caribbean like the
Visigoths. The wrong people showing up at the wrong time can burst the bubble.
Which is why I told George we should take the boat and get a certain Russian
investigator off the Yacht Club dock before anyone else heard you were
there." "And
brings us back to the question," Walls reminded Arkady. "Why were you
at the club?" Arkady
felt like a can between two expert can openers. The photograph of the Havana
Yacht Club was in his pocket. However, he wasn't in the mood to offer to
strangers what he had kept at some cost in blood from the sergeant. "In
four more days I'll be back in "Why
go back?" O'Brien asked. "Stay here." Walls
said, "Pribluda's gone. I hate to put it this way, but there is an opening
now." Arkady
took a moment to understand the new direction of the conversation. "An
opening for me?" "Maybe,"
O'Brien stressed. "You don't mind if we got to know you a little better
before we offered you a position?" "A
position?" Arkady asked. "That sounds even better than work. You
don't know me at all." "Oh,
I don't?" O'Brien said. "Let me guess. In your forties, right?
Disappointed in your work. It's evident you're bright but you're still just an
investigator? A little reckless, working too close to the edge, inviting
disaster. Except for the coat, cheap clothes, cheap shoes, signs of an honest
man. But the way things are in Moscow now you must feel like a fool. And
personal life? I'm taking a stab in the dark, but I'd say you don't have one.
No wife, maybe not even kids. Zero, dead end. And that's what you can't wait to
get back to in only four more days? I'm not trying to suck you into a criminal
endeavor, I'm opening you a door on the ground floor of the biggest project in
the Caribbean Basin. Maybe you'd rather soak up vodka and freeze to some
fucking miserable death in Moscow, I don't know. All I can do is offer you an
opportunity for a second chance at life." "Not
a bad guess." O'Brien
smiled in a not unkind way. "Ask yourself this, Arkady, will you be missed
in "Yes,"
Arkady said, a second late. "Sure.
Let me tell you about the saddest picture in the world. The saddest picture in
the world is in the "And
the money?" Arkady asked, just to play the fantasy out. "Forget
the money. Yes, you'd be rich, have a Cuban villa, car, boat, girls, whatever,
that's not the point. The point is you'd have a life and you'd be enjoying
it." "How
would I do that?" "Your
visa can be changed," Walls took over. "We have friends who can
extend your visa and you can stay as long as you like." "You
wouldn't worry then about me being at the Havana Yacht Club?" "Not
if you were on the team," Walls said. "We're
not offering a free ride," O'Brien said, "but you'd be part of
something big, something to be proud of. All we're asking in return is one
miserable token of trust from you. Why were you at the Havana Yacht Club? How
did you get the idea?" Before
Arkady could answer, the boat was surrounded by upwelling light. He looked over
the side, and in the water a thousand spoons reflected the sun. "Bonito,"
O'Brien said. "They
always go east to west?" Arkady asked. "Against
the current," Walls said. "Tuna go against the current, so do the
marlin, and eventually the boats do, too." "A
strong current?" "The
Gulf Stream, sure." "Going
towards the bay?" "Yes." First
one and then by the dozens the fish exploded from the water. Iridescent, glassy
arcs surrounded the Gavilan and salt spray rained. In seconds the
entire school had scattered, replaced by a long dark shape with blue pectoral
wings. "Marlin,"
Walls said. Without
apparent effort the big fish kept pace within the shadow of the boat, a faint
veil of pink trailing behind him. "He's
taking his time," Arkady said. "Hiding,"
said Walls. "He's an assassin, that's the way he operates. He'll slice up
a whole school of tuna and then come back to feed." "Do
you fish?" "Spearfish.
Evens the odds." "Do
you?" Arkady asked O'Brien. "Hardly." From
above, the marlin's sword was thin as a draftsman's line, unsheathed yet almost
invisible. The men were transfixed until the marlin sank into deeper water,
blue into blue. They took Arkady not back to the Yacht Club
but through fishing boats along the western shore. On the outer dock of the
Marina Hemingway a trio of Frontier Guards in fatigues lazily waved the boat
in. The Gavilan steered to the inner dock, where a hook for weighing
fish stood among the thatched parasols of a cantina and disco stage, the smell
of grilled chicken and blare of amplified Beatles. An empty swimming area was
defined by floats, but snorkelers had gathered along the canal where Walls
started veering toward an open berth. Not Hemingway, but an old man in a hat
with a band of miniature beer cans waved Walls away and shouted angrily at
swimmers, "Peligroso! Peligroso!" Steering
wide of the snorkelers, Walls continued down the canal to a turnaround. Fishing
boats with rod racks and flying bridges slid by, speedboats as low and colorful
as sun visors, and power yachts with sun lounges and Jet Ski launches,
oceangoing palaces of affluence and indolence sculpted in white fiberglass. The
shouts from a volleyball court were pure American. "Texans,"
Walls said. "Cruising people from the Gulf, they leave their boats here
year round." Along
the canal people washed out lockers, carried baskets of food and plastic bags
of laundry, pushed trucks of bottled gas. Walls eased to a stop at the inner
end of the canal, where a market sold CopperTone and Johnnie Walker Red.
Outside, a Cuban girl in a Nike shirt sat with a blond boy. His shirt had a
portrait of Che. O'Brien
shook Arkady's hand again in an enthusiastic double grasp. "You're staying
next to the santero, I understand. We'll talk tomorrow." "About
a 'position'? I don't think I'm qualified. I know nothing about casinos." "The
way you handled Sergeant Luna you sound eminently qualified to me. As for
casinos, we'll give you the grand tour of all the famous sin spots of Havana.
Right, George?" Walls
said, "You could have your own boat right here, Arkady. Girls come at
night, knock on the side of the boats. They'll cook and clean, too, just to
stay on board." Arkady
glanced around at his putative yachting neighbors. "What are the Americans
like?" Walls
tried half a smile. "Some are free spirits and some are the same rednecks
I tried to leave thirty years ago. One son of a bitch from Alabama wanted me to
autograph my wanted poster. He said it was a collectible. I was ready to slice
and collect his fucking nuts." "Ah,
well," O'Brien said, "to be a souvenir, that has to be a form of
death. Arkady, you'll consider the offer?" "It's
an unbelievable offer." "Seriously,
think about it," O'Brien said. "I understand, it's tough to leap even
from a sinking ship." There was death and death. Leaving by
the marina's traffic gate, Arkady encountered a fisherman staggering under the
weight of a marlin mounted on an enormous wooden plaque. The fish was caught in
midflight, dorsal fin fanned, spear challenging the sky, the entire animal a
metallic blue so unreal it could have been a small submarine, and Arkady
remembered once walking with Pribluda in Chapter FifteenOfelia reached the pool at the Casa de Amor
and heard Los Van Van on the radio in a room overhead singing "Muevete!"
– Move it! – and it was as if wooden claves were dancing down her spine and she
thought, not for the first time, how she distrusted music. So it had been a
shock for her to put her fingers on the Russian's vein and feel the rhythm of
his pulse. "Don't mess unless you want to be messed with" was one of
her mother's favorite sayings. Along with "Don't move your ass unless
you're advertising." Sometimes she thought, Moving your ass, that was the
Cuban Method. That was why life was such a mess, because at the worst times and
with the worst of men some signal would trickle down from her brain and say, "Muevete!"
On the street in the shade of a tree sat a '57 Dodge Coronet with private
plates she had been allotted for surveillance work. Its front bumper hung on
wires from too many collisions. She knew the feeling. Since
the shore on this stretch of When
Cuban couples came to the Casa de Amor to consummate their passion, no rooms
were ever available. But for "love couples" of jineteras and
tourists, yes, there was always a room with fresh sheets, towels and a vase
with a long-stemmed rose. Ofelia had discovered that complaints to the police
had gone nowhere, which merely meant that the police themselves were protecting
the motel. At the room rate of $90 a night, the cost of first-class
accommodations at the Hotel Nacional, there was reason to protect such a gold
mine, even if the gold was mined with the sweat of Cuban girls. A
heavyset woman in coveralls swept the street with a branch besom at a steady
six strokes a minute. Ofelia stationed herself by an ice machine under the
stairs to the second floor and listened to the music and occasional footfall
from the rooms overhead. Only the middle two units were occupied – just as
well, since her manpower and time were so limited. The boys at the Ping-Pong
table finished one game and started another. The
Russian, she had decided, was a disaster to be avoided. Just the light in his
eyes was like the ember of a banked fire warning, "Don't stir." It was
bad enough he was a danger to himself; his story about Luna was insanity. Here
was a man who threw Luna halfway up a wall and then acted modestly surprised
when the sergeant's head split open. How Renko had banged up his head, she
didn't know. Maybe there was something to his story about the bat. In her
opinion, though, Renko was a goat whose brilliant idea of catching a tiger was
to stake himself down. He would bring the tiger, might bring all the tigers in
the jungle, what then? Which was a shame because he wasn't a bad investigator.
To return with him to The
street sweeper dropped her broom in a can. Over Ofelia's head a door closed,
and two pairs of footsteps made their way the length of the balcony, Ofelia
keeping pace below. She placed herself under the stairs as they came down. It
wasn't until the couple stepped down to pool level that they were aware of the
convergence on them of Ofelia, holding herself as tall as she could in her PNR
gray and blue, and the street sweeper, who dropped her broom to show her own
uniform and gun. The
tourist was a redheaded man in a shirt, shorts, sandals, a Prada bag around his
thick neck, his arm draped like a freckled sausage over the girl's shoulder. He
said, "Scheisse." Ofelia
recognized Teresa Guiteras. The girl was black, smaller than Ofelia with a mop of
curls and a yellow dress that barely reached her thighs. Teresa protested,
"This time it's love." During a public-works frenzy in the
thirties, Teresa
Guiteras Marin was fourteen, a tenth-grade student from the country town of "You
understand that if you do not cooperate, you will be fined a hundred pesos and
entered in the register of prostitutes. At fourteen." Teresa
slipped her feet from her platform sandals and drew her legs up onto the chair.
She had all the mannerisms of a child, the pouty lip and downcast eyes. "I'm
not a prostitute." "You
are. He paid you two hundred dollars to be with him for a week." "A
hundred and fifty." "You
sell yourself too cheaply." "At
least I can sell myself." Teresa played with a curl, wrapping it around a
finger. "That's more than you ever see." "Maybe.
But you had to buy false residence papers to stay in This
was a doublethink that drove Ofelia crazy. Teresa didn't consider herself a
prostitute, no. Jineteras were students, teachers, secretaries merely
making extra money. Some parents were proud of how their little Teresas helped
to support the family; in fact, some regular visitors to "So
now you work two places," Ofelia said. "Days you're at the Casa de
Amor, nights you're at the boats. Is that the kind of life you want to
lead?" Teresa's
eyes shone through her hair. "It's better than school." "Better
than the hospital? Did you check this German friend of yours?" "He
was clean." "Oh,
you have a laboratory?" It
was like arguing with children. They would never be infected, they took
vitamins, anise, vinegar. The men refused to wear condoms because they hadn't
come around the world to smoke half a cigar. "Hija,
listen. Unless you give me the name of police who take money from you I will
enter your name in the register of prostitutes. Whenever there is a sweep of
prostitutes you will be dragged away. And if you are ever caught again you will
be sent to a reeducation farm for two years minimum. That's a nice place to
grow up." Teresa
pulled up her knees and glowered. Her pout was exactly like Muriel's. She was
three years older. Herr Lohmann had been waiting in an
interrogation room. He folded his arms and tilted back in his chair as Ofelia
examined his visa. He spoke lederhose Spanish. " So I have one room at the
Hotel Capri and another at the Casa de Amor? I paid for both. Twice the money
for "How
did you even know about the Casa de Amor?" "The
girl told me. She's not exactly a virgin, you know." "To
be clear," Ofelia said. "You are forty-nine. You are having sex with
a fourteen-year-old girl, a student. You did this regardless of the laws of "I
doubt that very much." "So
you are not afraid." "No." She
opened his passport and flipped through stamped pages. "You travel quite a
lot." "I
have business to attend to." "In
"I'm
a salesman." "Based?" "In
His
passport photo was a head and shoulders of a respectable burgher in dark suit
and tie. "Married?" "Yes." "Children?" No
answer. "Here
for?" "Business." "Not
for pleasure?" "No.
Although I enjoy other cultures." He had teeth like a horse. "I was
at the bar at the Hotel Riviera and this girl asked if I could buy her a
cola." "To
enter the lobby of the "I
don't know. In "Were
there any police in the lobby?" "I
don't know." "You
are aware that it is against Cuban law for Cuban citizens to visit a hotel
room." "Is
that so? Sometimes I stay at hotels in the countryside run by the Cuban army.
When I bring a girl I just pay double. You're the first one to make a
fuss." "You
left the "Teresa
took care of that. I never went in the office." Ofelia
looked at notes she had taken of a phone call. "According to the "A
male friend." "Named
Mossa. He took the room next to you?" "So?" "Wasn't
he also in the room next to you at the Casa de Amor?" "So?" "The
two of you met Teresa and her friend together?" "Wrong.
I found Teresa and he connected on his own." "You
found her?" "Or
she found me. It makes no fucking difference. Girls develop faster here."
He smoothed his hair back. " Look, I have always been a supporter of the
Cuban Revolution. You can't arrest me for being attracted to Cuban girls.
They're very attractive." "Did
you use a condom?" "I
think so." "We
looked in the wastebaskets." "Okay,
no." "I
think for your own sake we will have you examined by doctors and send a medical
report to your embassy." His
smile sealed. As he pressed against the table his shirt opened to a gold chain,
body heat, the smell of stale cologne. He whispered, "You know, you're
even better looking than Teresa." At
that moment Ofelia suffered the fantasy that Renko was with her and that he
picked up the German the way he had picked up Luna and rammed the German into
the wall. "The
doctor will make a thorough examination," Ofelia said and left the room. The
detective room wasn't as empty when she went back. The Sharon Stone poster was
back on the wall, and Teresa looked sideways at the plainclothes detectives,
Soto and Tey, sharply dressed men who bent over the paperwork on their desks
and exchanged smirks. If Ofelia had any other place to question the girl she
would have used it. Teresa
announced, "Singa tu madre. I'm not saying anything against my
friends." "Good
girl," Soto said. "With the right friends you don't have to say
nothing." "Osorio
has confused sex and crime," said Tey. " She's against both." "It's
been so long, right?" said Soto. "I'd
be happy to help her remember," offered Tey. "You
can't touch me," Teresa told Ofelia. " I don't have to tell you
nothing." "Don't
listen to them." Ofelia felt her neck get hot. "Don't
listen to them? They're not on my ass, you are. You're the bitch, not
them. I make ten times what you make. Why would I listen to you?" "Congratulations,
I am putting you on the official list of whores. You will be examined by a
doctor and sent out of "You
can't." "It's
done." But
when she went into the hall with Dora, all Ofelia could think of were her own
daughters and she didn't have the heart to order Teresa's name onto the
register. "Tell
her I did, though," she said. "And have the doctor look at her. And
have the doctor examine our tourist all over and draw some blood and make it
painful." "So
what is the point of what we're doing if we let her go?" Dora was sick of
sweeping streets. "I'm
not after girls, I am after corrupt police." "Then
you're after men, and in the PNR there are a couple of us and thousands of
them. From the top down, everybody winks. They think you're a fanatic and you
know what the real problem is? You're not." Ofelia returned to the Casa de Amor
because although she might have lost Teresa it was just possible that Lohmann's
Italian friend and his girl hadn't yet left the motel. This time, she decided,
she would question them right in the room, not even go close to the station
house. If that was against procedure, well, procedure guaranteed humiliation and
failure. She didn't need Dora along, she didn't need anyone. This was on her
own. When
Ofelia was angry she took steps two at a time. The rooms were set back between
dividers for privacy's sake and hanging on the doorknob of the unit next to
Lohmann's was a plastic tag that said do not disturb. The
two boys were playing their endless table tennis, but otherwise no one was
around. Maybe she was in luck. Maybe she was stupid. She certainly wasn't going
to be appreciated, not if the girl was anything like Teresa. What poor Cuban
girl wouldn't think she was in heaven at a motel like this? Then shopping at a
boutique for a swimsuit that would show off her cute bottom? Or trying on
cat-eyed Ray-Bans or a Gucci scarf? She
knocked on the door. "Housekeeping." The
radio still played. The pool was a blue lens. The boys played, the sound
popping off their paddles. A breeze tugged on the lazy fronds. Ofelia took a
deep breath and caught the faint smells of barnyard and butcher. There was no
answer to her knock. "Police,"
she said. The
door was unlocked but blocked and she had to use all her strength to enter, and
since someone had turned the air-conditioner off and the temperature was in the
eighties, it was like gaining admission to an oven of ripe smells of blood and
body waste. In opening the door she had rolled a body to the side, and she
tried to pick her way across a floor covered with a fallen chair, emptied
bureau drawers, clothes and sheets to the drapes on the other side. She drew
them open and all the light in the world flooded in. The
body she had stepped over was a naked male, a dark-haired European with arms,
back, flanks and scalp slashed. Ofelia had once seen the body of a man who had
fallen into the blades of a combine, been chewed and spat out, which was what
this man looked like, except that the wounds' individual lengths and curves
were the unmistakable work of a machete. Lying on the bed was a naked female,
arms and legs splayed, her head twisted like a dummy's and half sliced off. Bed
and carpet were dark red as if someone had poured blood by the pail. A corona
of blood spattered the wall above the headboard. But there was no broken
furniture, no bloody smears of struggle on the walls. To
be first at an undisturbed homicide, Dr. Blas always lectured, was a gift. If
you were not a willing investigator, if you could not take advantage of the
unique opportunity of being first on the scene, if you were not able to engage
sensorially and intelligently, if your eyes or your mind closed even a little
to the fading, ineffable shadow of a murderer, then you should not open the
door. You should raise children, drive a bus, roll tobacco leaves, anything but
steal that gift from men and women with the discipline and stomach for the job. Both
bodies were hard with rigor mortis, thirty-six hours dead at least in Having
done as much as she could without rubber gloves, Ofelia went to the bathroom,
stepping around blood scuffs on the floor, and threw up in the toilet bowl.
When she flushed the water swirled and backed up, a rising gorge of vomit on
pink water. Before it overflowed she thrust her hand into the toilet throat as
far as she could reach and freed a blood-soaked ball of toilet paper from the
trap. Between dry heaves she laid what she found on a towel: a wadded Italian
passport for a Franco Leo Mossa, 43, of Chapter SixteenA pair of "There
aren't a lot of jobs where having no legs is an advantage," Erasmo said.
"Working in a coffin happens to be one. You don't look happy." Arkady
said, "I've just come from the Havana Yacht Club. You told me the Havana
Yacht Club was a joke, just a few fishermen, you, Mongo and Pribluda. But the
picture was taken at the Yacht Club and you never mentioned that the club
actually existed." Erasmo
frowned, dug his hand into his beard and scratched. "It does and it
doesn't. The building is there, the beach is there, but it's hardly a club
anymore. It's complicated." "Like
"Like
you. Why didn't you tell me you killed Rufo Pinero? I had to hear it on the
street." "It
was an accident." "An
accident?" "Of
a sort." "Yes,
that's like saying Russian roulette is a game of a sort. So we do the same
things in different ways. Anyway, I didn't lie to you. We did call ourselves
the Havana Yacht Club as a joke. It was funny at the time." "Some
club. Pribluda may be dead, Mongo may be missing and you may be the last living
member." "I
admit, it's not funny when you say it." "Unless
there are others. Are there any other members you haven't told me about?" "No." "Rufo?" "No." "Luna?" "No.
The three of us, that's all. You know, you're pissing me off and you're making
my friends very uneasy." The
Chinese followed the conversation with an anxiety matched by their lack of
comprehension. Erasmo coolly introduced Arkady to them, brothers named Liu with
spiky black hair and cigarettes gripped between their teeth. Arkady took in the
cemetery's quiet anarchy, a marble cross leaning on a Buddhist altar, tablets
inscribed with Chinese characters and wrapped in morning glory, headstone
photographs of the departed that peered through scummy ovals of glass. A nice
place to die, Arkady thought, quiet, cool, picturesque. "So
this is the "Yes,
it is," Erasmo said. "I told the Lius you were an expert on fighting
crime. That's why you're so angry. It makes them feel much better." "There's
a lot of crime in a cemetery?" "In
this one, yes." Now
that Arkady noticed, many of the tombs were cracked and reinforced with cement
seams and steel bands. Some of the disrepair had occurred over time and under
the pressure of spreading roots, but there were also signs of vandalism, marble
replaced by cinder blocks or a padlock on a vault's brass door, probably not to
keep the dead in, Arkady realized. "Cubans
don't like the Chinese?" "Cubans
love the Chinese, that's the problem. And some Cubans need lucky bones." "For
what?" "Ceremonies.
If they want money they dig up the bones of a banker, if they want to get well
they dig up the bones of a doctor." "That
makes sense." "Unfortunately
for the Chinese, their bones are supposed to be the luckiest. So this is where
certain people come with their crowbars and shovels, which is very upsetting to
Chinese families that revere their ancestors. Dead or alive, they want granddad
in one piece. Little did I know that demolition expertise would prove so useful
in civilian life. How did you know where to find me?" "Tico
maintained radio silence but I got him to write it out." Arkady looked
down at the coffin, where Erasmo had laid a drill, bell, welder's goggles and
surgical mask on a towel. From an athletic bag Erasmo took a vial of something
fine-grained and black. "Gunpowder?" "Just
a touch. Life would be boring without it." Taking a break, the brothers
Liu sliced up a papaya and sat down between tombstones to eat. The The
problem was that he seemed to be going in reverse, knowing less all the time
rather than more. He didn't know how or where Pribluda died, let alone why. The
circle of Pribluda's acquaintances constantly expanded, but none of them had
anything to do with the price of sugar, supposedly what the colonel had been
investigating. Arkady had never before encountered such a variety of pristinely
unrelated people and events: men in inner tubes, Americans on the run, a madman
from Oriente, a ballerina, now Chinese bones and Erasmo
pulled the mask over his nose and goggles over his eyes before lifting a can
with a plastic lid. "More
gunpowder?" Arkady asked. "A
different explosive." Erasmo lifted the lid and shut it at once, as if
taking a peek at plutonium. "Ground habaneros, the hottest chilies on
earth. I defused all sorts of bombs in "In
your room I saw some pictures of you with..." Arkady tried out the gesture
of the make-believe beard for the Name That Could Not Be Uttered just to feel
Cuban. "Fidel,"
Erasmo said warily. "And
another officer in glasses." "Our
commander in "You
won a lot of military decorations." "The
ribbons? Oh, yes. Well, what would I rather have, the ribbons or my legs? I'll
let you guess. I used to be so proud. Fidel said we would go to "No." "Very
well. The village was strung like a Christmas tree. Little plastic mines to pop
through your foot. Bouncing Betties to cut you off at the waist. Claymores with
trip wires to something as insignificant as an empty can you'd kick out of your
way. There was a car in the garage, not with the key, that would have been too
obvious. A '54 Ford station wagon with real wooden panels. You can't imagine
how valuable a vehicle was in country like that. But just stepping into the
garage meant digging up a whole daisy chain of little mines. Then to look
underneath the car first with a mirror and then on your back. To pop the hood
with a wire from a distance, to inspect the engine and make sure every wire's
automotive, open the glove compartment, the trunk, power windows, seats,
hubcaps. It was in beautiful condition. We cleared everyone else out of the
garage so I could cross the wires. It started right off. It ran out of gas
right away, but the battery was good and everything seemed fine until Richard
kicked a tire. That was one place I hadn't looked, in the tire." Erasmo
pushed a cardboard disk over the gunpowder. "That
was the end of Richard. Plus, the bumper flew off spinning like a helicopter
rotor and caught Tico. We radioed for the ambulance. On the way it hit a hole
where we had dug out a mine and drove right into the minefield. Somehow it
didn't touch a mine but that's where the ambulance was stuck while Tico was
bleeding to death until Luna picked him up and ran right through the mines to
the ambulance. And that's how we liberated a pisshole in "And
how Tico became careful about tires." "He's
very careful about tires." Erasmo
dropped the can and Arkady retrieved it. "Can
I help?" "No,
thanks," Erasmo said. "Do you know the largest minefield in the
world? The American base here at "Luna
saving Tico is a different picture of the sergeant." "No,
it's not. It's just the other side. People here have two sides, what you see
and the opposite." "It's
complicated?" "It's
real. You don't understand. The
Lius looked up expectantly; they may not have understood the words but they
could tell when a conversation had wound to an end. The "Are
there any martial arts dojos in Erasmo
said, " You had to block things out, Ofelia
thought. She ignored the technicians collecting their small evidence first –
clots, hairs, night bag, glasses, bottles of Havana Club – working their way up
to plastic bags for bed-sheets and clothes. She paid no attention to the
photographers working around the female sprawled in bed like a Naked Maja.
All her focus was on Dr. Blas. His hands in waxy rubber gloves, he bent over
the body by the door to show her why, although the male was painted in his own
blood and the track on the carpet showed his agonizing, futile progress to the
door, the dying man didn't cry for help. "The
radio was on. People who take these rooms, as you told me, tend to make noise,
and who knows how much alcohol they consumed? His carotid and peroneal arteries
were both cut – however, he was alive enough to try to cover up while he was
hacked by the machete. He was alive enough to make it to the door, probably
after his assailant left. But he never called out. Why? It wasn't because of
the radio." With the tip of a pencil he probed a dark spot under the dead
man's Adam's apple and slid the pencil halfway in. "A hole in the trachea.
With a hole in your windpipe you cannot say a word. There is no such wound on
the neck of the female, she had her throat cut pure and simple. But the first
blow to the male, I am sure, was this puncture." "Not
made by a machete." "No,
the wound is perfectly round. Still, this sort of mess is typical of the 'crime
of passion.' You did well to keep the hotel calm, and you were lucky to find
the documents the way you did." Which
was Blas's sly way of saying he knew she had been ill in the toilet. The doctor
was at ease with death in a way she, it was becoming clear, never would be. A
body that had been cut up was a flower in bloom, releasing a smell that lodged
like beads of blood in the sinuses and a taste that coated the tongue. All the
same, she had made a sketch and notes to hand over to whomever the Ministry of
the Interior sent over; this was no longer a case of prostitution, and the
ministry didn't generally leave violent crimes involving foreign visitors to
mere detectives of the PNR. Blas
said, "I'll examine the sexual aspect, too. She was a prostitute." Ofelia
looked at the bed. For a girl with her head half sliced off Hedy looked
remarkably serene, neatly edged in blood, sheets hardly rumpled. "The
killer didn't have sex with her." "You
kill a girl in bed, that's sexual to me." A
little insight there, Ofelia thought. "I
saw the female last night at a Santeria ceremony." "What
is the matter with you? You have so much potential, why do you indulge in such
mumbo jumbo?" "The
girl was possessed." "Ridiculous." "You've
never been possessed?" Blas
wiped his pencil. "Of course not." "It
happened to me once. They had to tell me later." The entire night had
remained a blank to her. "Was
this Italian at the ceremony?" "No." "Fine.
Then she came somewhere else later and picked him up here. If I were you I
wouldn't get into Santeria unless there is a very good reason. We are at a hotel
that, wrongly or rightly, specializes in tourists. Should we tell everyone
there are religious fanatics going from room to room killing people?" "What
do you think the Russian will say?" "Renko?
Why should he say anything?" "He
was at the ceremony last night. He saw the girl." "He'll
still say nothing because we won't tell him. Do you think the Russians would
inform us of every murder?" Blas ran the waxy fingers of his gloved hand
down the back of the Italian's legs, hamstrung so that the dead man had to drag
them as he crawled. "Renko is not our colleague. We don't know really what
he is. The fact that an investigator would come to The
photograph of Renko at the airport resided in her pocket. With all the
confusion in the room there was still time to rediscover it. She
asked, "Did Sergeant Luna ever show you a picture of Renko?" "No."
Blas ran his hand up the dead man's arms. "Right-handed by the musculature.
Lovely fingernails." A
chevron of deep cuts down the dead man's back indicated that the attacker had
stood over him and hacked right and left. Ofelia considered mentioning the two round
bruises she'd found on Renko's arm, but it seemed somehow a breach of trust. "Perhaps
we should reexamine the dead Russian. Is it possible he was struck by
lightning? It did rain that week." "Only
there was no lightning on the bay. I'm ahead of you. I checked the
meteorological record for lightning and the body for burns. Don't worry about
Renko." Blas pinched the arm for stiffness. "I have dealt with
Russians. Every one, including women with whom I was intimate, was a spy. Each
was the exact opposite of what he or she claimed to be." He tucked a smile
into his beard, and at that moment looked to Ofelia like a man too fond of his
memories. "What does Renko claim to be?" "A
fool." "His
case may be an exception." Blas
turned the body onto its back. Loss of blood ended in stupefaction, and
although his hair twisted in matted strips, the expression on the Italian's
face was of someone yielding to sleep. Ofelia brushed hair from an oblong scab
at the hairline. "It
looks like he bumped his head a few days ago," Blas said. "The least
of his problems now." "Who
does he remind you of?" "No
one." "How
would you describe him?" Blas
cocked his head like a carpenter delivering an estimate. "European, forty
to fifty, medium height, hair black, eyes brown, high forehead, incipient
widow's peak." "Renko?" "Now
that you mention it." They
had to shift the body from the door as an investigating team from the ministry
arrived, led by Captain Arcos and Sergeant Luna. Arcos gawked at the body on
the floor. Luna went to the foot of the bed and stared down at Hedy. His skin
went gray, and as his lips spread he breathed through his teeth while Ofelia
delivered her statement. She wanted to ask, Where is your ice pick? Instead she
slipped away while Blas took over. The
Casa de Amor had emptied. At the sight of PNR Ladas and an IML forensics van
with scales of justice painted on the door the Casa's guests returned just long
enough to grab their overnight bags and run. At the bottom of the stairs Ofelia
found a hose and washed first the soles of her shoes and then her face and
hands. The criminal laboratory of the Ministry
of the Interior was in the Antiguo Hotel Via Blanca, a nineteenth-century
brownstone palace erected in an erroneous burst of While
Blas's Instituto de Medicina Legal carried out autopsies the laboratories of
Minint analyzed drugs and arson, ballistics and explosives, fingerprints,
documents and currency. The work was done for the PNR, but the uniform was
military fatigues. "Fidel
loves uniforms," her mother always claimed. "Put someone in uniform
and you've created an idiot who watches his neighbors and says, 'How did he get
that dollar? How did she get those chickens?'" Her mother would laugh so
hard she'd have to waddle to the water closet. " 'Socialismo o
Muerte?' Please inform Fidel it's not 'either-or.'" In
the evidence room, weapons were labeled and kept on shelving that on the
underside still bore stencils of the FBI. The rifles were farmers' shotguns;
anything military was recirculated back to the army or militia. Enough machetes
to clear a cane field, axes and knives and homemade curiosities: a mortar
barrel made from bamboo, sugarcane shaved into spears. On opposite shelves lay
incidental evidence: bagged clothes, envelopes of rings and earrings, centavos
in jars, shoes, sandals, a freshly tagged black swimming flipper and an inner
tube. Someone
had rinsed the flipper, and when Ofelia held it to the light she saw the
faintest charring inside the strap, which could have been her imagination or
Renko's influence. She replaced the flipper carefully, as if putting off a
question. She
went to the records room, where a haze of paper dander hung under fluorescent
lights. The two working computers at the table were being used, but in a carrel
behind stacks of volumes tied with faded ribbon she found a third, where she
pulled up the file on her friend Maria. Maria
Luz Romero Holmes, age: 22, address: Vapor 224, Vedado, La Habana, charged with
solicitation outside that address. Jose Romero Gomez, 22, same address, charged
with assault. There was more: marital and educational status, employment, and
the statement of the witness. I was
walking up Vapor to the university when this woman (indicating Maria Romero)
came out her door and asked the time. Then she asked where I was going and
placed her hand on my member. I said, to the university. When she tried to
arouse me I said no, I wasn't interested, I didn't have the time. That's' when
she began screaming and this man (indicating Josй Romero) rushed out of the
house, cursing and swinging a lead pipe at me. I defended myself until the
police came along. Signed, Rufo
Pinero Perez It
was Rufo Pinero's name that had prodded her memory. A former boxer innocently
headed to the university. For a lecture on poetry? Ofelia wondered. Nuclear
science? The
police photograph of Maria showed her wet with tears but defiant. In his photograph
her husband's eyes were dark slits, his nose split, his jaw swollen large as a
gourd. The statement of the witness is corroborated by this
arresting officer, who was also threatened and assaulted by the Romero couple
in the course of his duty. Signed, Sergeant
Facundo Luna, PNR Ofelia
remembered how Maria had said a plastic sheet had been placed over the rear
seat of the police car because Luna knew he would be transporting people covered
in blood, and how Rufo had taken cigars out of the police car's glove
compartment, cigars he had put in beforehand so they wouldn't be damaged during
the scuffle. Luna and Rufo planned ahead. She
thought she knew what had happened at the Casa de Amor. Blas had suggested a
crime of passion, a Cuban boyfriend who killed the Italian and the Cuban girl
in a fit of uncontrollable anger. But what Ofelia saw in her mind was Franco
Mossa and Hedy drinking in the dark, dancing to the radio, laughing. It wasn't
likely Hedy spoke much Italian, but how much did she need? She retired to the
bathroom, emerged undressed, a busty honey-colored girl. She slipped into bed,
and as he took his turn in the bathroom she slipped right out again and opened
the balcony door for a friend. The Italian turned off the bathroom light and,
half blind, walked into the darkened bedroom. Hedy couldn't have seen much.
She'd have heard the sucking sound of the ice pick as it was pulled from the
Italian's neck, though. What had Hedy thought they were up to? Extortion was
the usual game with tourists. She would have been silent and surprised when the
machete whistled out of the dark and cut her head half off her shoulders. The
killer must have been as bloody as a slaughterhouse wall when he was done. The
question was, Why the photograph of the Russian? Who had carried it, Hedy or
her friend? Was there a moment when he turned on the bathroom light and saw to
his own surprise that he had butchered an Italian named Franco, not a Russian
named Renko? Since she was on the machine already, she ran a search for other
connections between Rufo Pinero and Facundo Luna. Besides Maria's case, two
files showed up. Four years earlier a group of criminals had gathered to
distribute drugs under the pretense of organizing a political opposition. When
members of the community became aware of this plan, they burst into the
ringleader's house and demanded he surrender the drugs. In a scuffle provoked
by the ringleader and his family, two patriots who had to defend themselves
were Rufo Pinero and Facundo Luna. More recently a cell of so-called democrats
had staged a rally with the true intent of releasing infectious diseases, only
to be physically barred by vigilant citizens, including the alert Luna and
Pinero. Ofelia
felt that Cubans should be allowed to fight their enemies because the gangsters
in On
her way out, she discovered the officers who had been working at the table were
gone. Sitting alone was Sergeant Luna. She was surprised he had left the Casa de
Amor already. His arms were crossed, stretching his shirt across his chest. His
face hung in the shadow of his cap as he worked his jaw from side to side. His
chair was turned, half blocking the way to the door. Suddenly
she was back in Hershey, in the cattle fields where the egrets came from their
roosts along the river. The birds were as white as shavings of soap, and as
they crossed the carbon-black smoke that lifted from the chimneys of the sugar
mill her anxiety was for the egrets' purity. Nevertheless they would float in
and stalk the cattle fields, impervious to dirt. She was so busy watching them
that she didn't notice that the bull had been let into the field, and the
person who had led the bull in hadn't seen her. The bull saw her, though. The
bull was the largest animal she'd ever seen. Milky white with downward twisting
horns, creamy curls between the horns, shoulders bloated with muscle, a pink
sac down to his knees, eyes red with the indolent torpor of a violent king. Not
dumb, however, not in this situation. Because he ruled. And he waited for her
to make her move. But
something distracted it. Ofelia turned her head and saw a figure in black that
had jumped the fence and was waving and hopping from foot to foot. It was the
town priest, a pale man who had always seemed so sad. His cassock flapped
around him as he laughed and goaded the bull, ran in a circle around it and
threw clods until it charged. Lifting his cassock, the priest took the longest
strides Ofelia had ever seen. He dived over the fence ahead of the bull, which
drove a deep-rooted post half over and went on savaging the wood in frustration
while Ofelia raced to the part of the fence nearest her. She remembered her
first gulp of air from the safety of the other side and how she didn't stop
running until she was home. Luna
said, "Captain Arcos asked if you gave us all the evidence you found in
the motel?" "Yes." Luna
shifted so that his bulk blocked her even more and let his thick arm hang
slack. "Everything?" "Yes." "You
told us everything you know about this?" "Yes." The
sergeant looked toward the carrel. "What
were you looking for?" "Nothing." "Maybe
something I can help you with?" "No." The
sergeant didn't move. He made her press by his arm as if it were a line that
would define just where she stood. Chapter SeventeenArkady's route to Chinatown passed by the
aquarium stillness of deserted department stores, a perfumeria
window with nothing to display but a can of mosquito repellent, the staff of a jewelry
store with elbows glued to empty cases, but around the corner of Calle Rayo,
life: red lanterns, a roasted whole pig, fried plantain and fried batter,
mounds of oranges, lemons, coral peppers, black tubers cut to white flesh,
green tomatoes in papery cowls, avocados and tropical fruit for which Arkady
had no name, although he understood by the dollar signs that this market in the
very center of Central Havana was for private vendors. Flies spun dizzily in
sweet smells of ripening pineapple and banana. Salsa from a hanging radio vied
with tapes of wistful Cantonese five-tone scale and customers with obscured but
still-discernible Chinese features drilled vendors with Cuban Spanish. At a
corner stall a butcher chopped a cow skull open, and a cotton-candy vendor with
her hair festooned in blue, sugary wisps that rose from a tub read Arkady's
note and pointed to a walk-up with the sign KARATE CUBANO. Arkady
had come in a rush. He had gone from the Abuelita,
the eyes of the CDR, had said that on Thursday afternoons Pribluda left the
Malecуn with his ugly plastic Cuban briefcase. The girl Carmen had claimed that
Thursdays were when Uncle Sergei practiced karate. According to his own
spreadsheet, Thursday was the day of Pribluda's unexplained hundred-dollar
expenditure. Didn't it all fit together? Wasn't it possible that every
Thursday, carrying in a common Cuban briefcase not a black belt but an envelope
stuffed with money, the spy Sergei Pribluda had met his "Chinese
contact" at a karate dojo in Havana's Chinatown? Most likely the colonel
kept a sweatsuit or karate gear in a dojo locker, reason enough for him to stop
in the changing room, where, as Arkady imagined it, not a word to the contact
had to be said, not if he had a similar briefcase. The two briefcases could be
switched in a moment, and the anonymous contact would be headed down the stairs
before Pribluda untied his shoes to practice those deadly kicks he showed to
Carmen. The entire business would be swift, silent and professional. Arkady had
the briefcase and this was Thursday. The
only problem was that when Arkady ran gasping up the stairs the door where the
dojo was supposed to be now read evita – el salon nuevo de belleza.
Inside, two women wearing masks of blue mud reposed in barber chairs even as
workmen bolted a third chair to the floor. Arkady retreated to the market and
went through the process with the same piece of paper and received the same
misinformation. At
a Chinese restaurant where no one was Chinese and egg rolls came with a dab of
ketchup Arkady found a waiter who spoke enough English to say that there were
no more dojos in Well,
there was the picture of Pribluda he was supposed to be finding, but for a
moment Arkady had thought he'd caught sight of Pribluda's ghost slipping
between bright mounds of exotic fruit. The walls of the restaurant were
bordello red and had the usual picture of Che Guevara looking so much like
Christ in a beret it was unearthly. Arkady had noticed simply while walking
through the streets and passing open windows that people hung more portraits of
Che than of Fidel, although Che's very martyrdom seemed to validate Fidel. But
martyrs had the advantage of staying romantically young, whereas Fidel, the
survivor, came framed in two ages: the passionate revolutionary with index
finger stabbing each oratorical point and the graybeard lost in haunted
reflection. Arkady
felt haunted by stupidity. It had been exciting for a moment to believe in his
revived powers of deduction, like finding an old steam engine in a derelict
factory and thinking that a match held under the boiler would bring the pistons
back to life. No churning pistons here, he thought. Thank God, Detective Osorio
hadn't been around to witness the fiasco. On
his way from the restaurant he pushed through the market and skirted a group of
boys pummeling one another outside a theater. It was a shabby corner cinema
painted Chinese red with pagoda-style eaves and a poster that showed a karate
master in midair. The title of the film was in Chinese and Spanish, and in
parentheses at the bottom of the poster in English, "Fists of Fear!".
Arkady remembered the ticket stub in Pribluda's pants. That was what Carmen had
been trying to ask him, not "Did you see? Fists of fear!" but
"Did you see Fists of Fear!?' He joined the line at the box
office, paid four pesos for a ticket and climbed the red steps into the dark. The
interior was aromatic of cigarettes, joss sticks, beer. The seats were bald and
taped. Arkady sat in the last row, the better to see the rest of the audience,
rows of heads that bobbed and howled appreciatively for a film that had already
started and seemed to involve a studious young monk defending his sister from
Hong Kong gangsters. The dialogue was Chinese with subtitles in another form of
Chinese, not even Spanish; the laughing of the actors was hideous, and every
kick sounded like a melon being split. Arkady had barely stood the briefcase on
his lap before he was joined in the next seat by a small, sharp-nosed man with
glasses and a similar briefcase. A
whisper in Russian. "Are you from Sergei?" "Yes." "Where
have you been? Where has he been? I was here all day last week and I've seen
this film once already today." "How
long has this film been playing here?" "A
month." "Sorry." "I
would think so. I'm the one who's taking all the chances. And this film is for
cretins. It's bad enough I'm doing this, but to treat me this way." "It's
not right." "It's
debasing. You can pass that on to Sergei." "Whose
idea was it?" "To
meet here? It was my idea, but I didn't intend to pass whole days here. They
must think I'm a pervert." On the screen the gangster chief pulled on a
glove equipped with a power drill and demonstrated it on a luckless henchman.
"Actually, in the old days this was the best porno theater in "What
happened when they switched to karate films?" "We
brought our girlfriends and screwed. The Chinese never paid attention to what
we did." It
was dark, and Arkady didn't want to examine his companion too obviously, but
what he could see sideways was a bureaucrat in his sixties with a gray
mustache, eyes bright as a bird's. "So
you have spent a lot of time here." "I
suffer from a certain personal history. Surprised to see Chinese in "Yes." "Brought
in when the slave trade closed. There's no smoking," the man said to explain
why he was cupping his cigarette. He switched briefcases and, using the
cigarette as a little lamp, dipped his head into the one he'd taken from Arkady
to count the money, the same hundred-dollar expenditure Pribluda had paid every
week. "You understand, I am under extraordinary pressure. If I had known
what buying a car would entail, I never would have agreed to any of this." "You
can buy a car?" "Used,
of course. '55 Chevrolet. Original leather." On the screen, gangsters
marched into a studio where the girl had just finished sculpting a dove in
white marble. As they broke off the statue's wings her brother flew through the
studio window on a motor scooter. "Where is Sergei?" "Not
feeling well," Arkady said, "but I'll tell him you wished him a quick
recovery." The
monk was a whirlwind, dispatching hoodlums with a variety of leaps and kicks.
With every blood-spraying kick Arkady's head throbbed, and when the gangster
chief pulled on his glove Arkady stood. "Aren't
you staying?" his friend said. "This is the good part." Ofelia was late for the meeting with
Muriel's teacher. She
rushed because she was convinced that the Italian with Hedy was slaughtered
simply because he resembled Renko. She had gone to the medical clinic in time
to find Lohmann, the salesman from Hamburg, still being examined and he
truculently answered yes, his friend Franco had bumped his head a few days
earlier on one of those stupid low doorways in Havana Vieja. Poor Hedy had not
been too bright to begin with, and place, time, looks, names, a simple scrape
on the Italian's head, everything had conspired against her. Also
Ofelia wanted to shower. She felt death lying like a film on her skin. If other
people couldn't smell it, she could. A
footbridge led from the Quinta de Molina to the school, modern and airy with
pastel walls covered with self-portraits of students in their maroon uniforms,
skirts for girls and shorts for boys, and murals on the theme of
"Resistance!" featuring children with rifles downing hapless American
jets. Muriel's
class had recently visited a banana plantation, and the classroom walls were
decorated with paper bananas. Ofelia wondered where they got the paper. The
school had one book for every three students, no new books in the library for
three years, no chemicals for chemistry. "They learn in the
abstract," as her mother put it caustically; nevertheless the school was
clean and orderly. Ofelia made profuse apologies to Miss Garcia, Muriel's
teacher, an older woman with eyebrows as thin as spider legs. "I'd
almost given up on you." The brows lifted to indicate exasperation. "I'm
so sorry." Was there anything more self-abased than a parent meeting with
a teacher? Ofelia wondered. "Is there something special you wanted to talk
about?" "Of
course. Why would I have asked you in?" "There's
a problem, no?" "Yes.
A great problem." "Muriel
has not been turning in homework?" "She
turns in her homework." "It's
good?" "Adequate." "She
misbehaves in school?" "She
behaves normally. That was the reason she was allowed to go on the trip. But
deep in her, in the soul of this little girl, is something rotten." "Rotten?" "Festering." "She
hit someone, she lied?" "No,
no, no, no. Don't try to get off easy. Deep in her heart is a worm." "What
did she do?" "She
violated my trust. I took only my best students to the farm. To learn of the
struggle in the countryside. Instead, she revealed herself as an
anti-revolutionary and a thief." Miss Garcia set a paper bag on her desk.
" On the way back on the bus this fell out of her shirt. I heard it
fall." Ofelia
looked inside the bag. "A banana." "Stolen
goods. Stolen by a daughter of an officer of the PNR. This is not going to end
here." "Actually,
a banana skin, no?" Ofelia lifted it from the bag by its unpeeled end. The
skin was brown and blotchy, ripeness on the edge of rotting. "Banana
or banana skin, it makes no difference." "She
had eaten it or not?" "That
doesn't matter." "You
heard it fall. It's not likely you would hear an empty banana skin fall on a
moving bus." "That's
not the point." "Whose
custody has it been in? There could be more than one person involved, there
might be a whole ring involved with this banana. I will test it for
fingerprints inside and out. We can do that. I'm glad you brought this to my
attention. Don't worry, we'll get them all, each and every one. Do you want me
to?" "Well."
Miss Garcia sat back, and her tongue dabbed at the corner of her mouth.
"It was in my custody, of course. I don't know how it got eaten." "We
can investigate. We can make sure the perpetrators never show their faces in
this school again. Is that what you want?" Miss
Garcia looked aside, the eyebrows settled, and she said in an entirely
different voice, "I suppose I was hungry." Now
Ofelia felt even worse. There was no pleasure to be had in cowing a teacher who
didn't even recognize she was slowly starving. Miss Garcia's problem was her
revolutionary purity, she had to be the only person Ofelia knew who didn't have
some small enterprise on the side. Next the poor woman would start
hallucinating and see Che wandering the halls. Ofelia was so ashamed she
couldn't wait to get her hands on Muriel. Arkady opened the briefcase and laid
the contents on Pribluda's desk, photocopies that were in Spanish, naturally,
every word. If he'd only studied Spanish at school instead of English and
German, which were only good for sciences, medicine, philosophy, international
business, Shakespeare and Goethe. For sugar, Spanish seemed to be the key.
Arkady tried anyway: •
A document with the title "Negociacion Russo-Cubano" with lists of
names, Russian for the "Ministerio de Commercio Exterior de Rusia"
(Bykov, Plotnikov, Chenigovskii), Cubans for the Cuban "Ministerio de
Azucar" ( •
A "Certificado del Registro Publico Panameno" for •
A "Referenda Bancaria" for AzuPanama from the Bank for Creative
Investments, •
Face pages of Cuban passports for Ramos, Pico and Arenas. •
Cubana airline tickets from •
Room vouchers for Ramos, Pico and Arenas from the Hotel Lincoln, Zona Libre,
Colуn, billed to the Cuban Ministry of Sugar. •
A long list of Russian commitments in funds and cash equivalents totaling $252
million for Cuban sugar. •
A revised list after mediation by AzuPanama for $272 million. •
A deposit slip of $5,000 in the name of Vitaly Bugai at the Bank for Creative
Investments, In
other words, the mediators Ramos, Pico and Arenas were Cuban, and the neutral
AzuPanama was a creation of the Cuban Ministry of Sugar and the Bank for
Creative Investment. Arkady's Spanish was nonexistent, but his math was fair.
He understood that Close up, Muriel's dark eyes had irises
like solar flares, frightening glimpses of the eleven-year-old soul. Her
interrogation was brief because she admitted to worse than her teacher claimed.
She had bought the banana. "The
workers at the farm were selling them. I had a dollar from Grandmother. We
bought a bunch." "A
bunch? Miss Garcia found only one banana." "Everyone
in class hid a banana. She only found mine." Ofelia's
mother ticked on her rocker. "We got all the others, don't worry." "That's
not the point," Ofelia said. "You've turned my daughters into
profiteers." "A
lesson in capitalism." "They're
not supposed to sell bananas at a state farm like that." "A
lesson in communism." Marisol,
the younger sister, said, "My class is going to see baseballs made. I can
get baseballs." Ofelia's
mother said, "Good, maybe we can cook them." In
her mind Ofelia saw the militant Miss Garcia looming over her two beautiful
daughters, and her mother defending them like a hen in a housedress, the family
universe embattled within and without. "I'm
taking a shower." "Then
what?" her mother asked. "I
have to go out." "To
see that man?" "He's
not a man, he's a Russian." Arkady found that he had been expecting
the detective, with her inquisitor's glare, informal shorts and pullover, straw
bag and gun. All the AzuPanama documents were out of sight, and Osorio could
swing her gaze all she wanted. "Did
you find a picture of Pribluda today?" "No." "Well,
I found a picture of you." It was plain she relished the surprise.
"Do you remember Hedy?" "How
could I forget Hedy?" Osorio
told him about the two bodies at the Casa de Amor, Hedy Infante and an Italian national
named Franco Leo Mossa. She described the condition of the room, positions of
the bodies, nature of the wounds, time of death. "Machetes?"
Arkady asked. "How
did you guess?" "Statistics.
There was no outcry?" "No.
The murderer also used something round and sharp to puncture the Italian's
throat so he couldn't call out." "Like
an ice pick?" "Yes.
At first, I thought of an extortion turned violent. Sometimes a jinetera
goes with a tourist and when his pants are down a so-called boyfriend shows up
and they rob him." "We
know who her boyfriend is." "Then
I thought the dead man looked like you." "There's
a compliment you don't get every day. Was he the man we saw her with on the
street the other night?" "I'm
pretty sure. Did you dance with Hedy?" "No.
We were only introduced. By Sergeant Luna." "You
talked to her?" "Not
really. She wasn't completely sober, and later, of course, she was
possessed." "After
the santero's, Hedy cleaned herself up and returned here. We saw her,
you and I. At the time I wondered why. I mean, everything was over. The
sergeant was gone and this was not the usual place she picked up tourists. I
think the reason she was here was you." "I'd
only met her." "Maybe
she wanted to meet you again." "She
would have known the difference between a well-dressed Italian and me. Why even
think of me?" "This
was in the room." She showed him the picture. A
camera had the photographer's eye and it was always odd to see yourself as
others imagined you. If they were dead, Arkady thought, that lent a certain
finality to what had been a simple snapshot. Arkady saw cars, baggage, heavy
coats, a Russian herd at "Pribluda
took this when I dropped him off at the airport. He said he'd use it for target
practice for old times' sake. This was in the room?" "Hedy
was not a mental giant. She was probably still in a daze from the santero's.
I think maybe someone gave her that to help her pick you out." "You
think the man in this picture could pass as Italian?" "In
the dark some people are hard to tell apart. Did I tell you that the dead man's
name was Franco?" "Yes." "If
a European called Franco looked like Renko, his name sounded like Renko, she
met him outside Renko's apartment and his head had a cut the same as Renko's,
he was probably Renko enough for Hedy. I think it's possible the murder of this
Italian was a second attempt on your life." "This
happened two nights ago?" "Yes." Luna
had said he would be back to fuck him up, Arkady remembered, and the libidinous
Franco Mossa sounded as thoroughly fucked as a man could get. "Does
Sergeant Luna know about the correct identification of the body?" "He
does now. He and Arcos took over the investigation." Luna
would be back again. The days of grace were over. Arkady
asked, "Why kill Hedy?" "I
don't know." "Why
leave the photograph on her?" "He
didn't, he flushed it down the toilet." "Then
how did you get it?" "The
picture was trapped with toilet paper." She described the deeply petaled
slashes, the blood-smeared sheets and blood-soaked air that had been baking in
the sun for a day and a half, and confessed to her nausea. "It was
unprofessional of me." "No,
it's an occupational disease," Arkady said. "The reason I left the
autopsy was to be sick. See, we share a common weakness. I feel like smoking
just hearing about it." "Dr.
Blas has never been sick." "I'm
sure." "Dr.
Blas says we should welcome smell as information. A body's fruity bouquet might
indicate amyl nitrate. The hint of garlic can be arsenic." "He'd
be a delightful man to have dinner with." "Anyway,
I've showered." "Showered
and took the time to paint your toenails. A lot of detectives wouldn't bother
to do that. You took a chance." More
than taken a chance, he thought; by removing the picture the detective had
altered the crime scene, tacitly admitting that she suspected Luna as much as
he did. Sharing the picture was the first real step forward on her part,
painted toes and all. Now it was his turn, that was the etiquette. He could
hold on to his scraps of information until he was safely back in Moscow, where
the contents of the briefcase he had picked up at the Chinese theater might
mean the hook for Bugai and an exchange of red-faced accusations between the
Russian Ministry for Foreign Trade and the Cuban Ministry of Sugar. Over money,
of course. Once back in "Have
you ever heard of a Panamanian sugar company called AzuPanama?" "I've
read about it." Her eyes cooled. "In Granma, the Party
newspaper. There's a problem with the Russians over the sugar contract and
AzuPanama is supposed to help." "Mediate?" "So
I understand." "Because
AzuPanama is neutral." "Yes." "Panamanian?" "Of
course." He
led her to the office, opened the green briefcase and emptied its contents item
by item on the desk. "Copies
of participants' lists from It
seemed to be going well, Arkady thought. Next he could introduce the concept of
O'Brien and George Washington Walls, then their involvement with Luna and
Pribluda. Osorio cleared her throat and sorted the items more neatly, touching
them the way a person did when handling fire. "I
thought you were getting a picture of Pribluda for Dr. Blas," she said. "Oh,
I am. I happened to come across these first." "Where
did they come from?" "Why
don't you look to see what they are?" A
slight hiss developed in Osorio's Russian. " I can see what they are. What
they are is very evident. Documents manufactured to embarrass "You
can see by comparing names on this certificate of registration with the
passports that AzuPanama isn't really Panamanian at all. AzuPanama was set up
in "Of
a heart attack?" "No." "Dr.
Blas says so." "Anyway,"
Arkady went on, "we can make a positive match of the names from AzuPanama
with a roster from the Ministry of Sugar. That's what Pribluda would have done
next." "We
are not doing anything." Osorio stepped back. "You lied to me." "Here
are the documents." "I'm
looking at you. What I see is a man who claims to look for a picture of his
dead friend while he gathers all sorts of anti-Cuban materials. I come to help
you and you throw these papers, which you don't tell me where they came from,
in my face. I won't touch them." This
was not going the way Arkady hoped. "You
can check them." "I'm
not helping you. I don't really know anything about you. It's your word and a
picture that you're Pribluda's friend, that's all I know. Just your word." "No,
that's not true." Her words crystallized what had been vague before. What
had bothered Arkady was how his picture got from Pribluda's flat to Hedy.
"Did you give Pribluda's picture of me to Luna?" "How
can you ask a question like that?" "Because
it makes sense. Let me guess. After the autopsy you came here to dust for
fingerprints and found the picture of this miserable Russian who had just
arrived. You naturally called Luna, who told you to bring the picture to
him." "Never." "Who
gave it to poor Hedy. Have you been helping Luna all along?" "Not
in that way." "Do
all Cuban police carry an ice pick and a baseball bat?" "When
you see Luna with a machete, bolo, that's the time to be afraid. You
should have stayed in "There
you're right." Osorio
snatched up her bag. She was out the door before he could consider whether he
had really handled the issue of AzuPanama as well as possible. But why would a
Cuban be impressed by mere evidence? This was Havana, after all, a place where
sugar attaches floated in the dark, where a Havana Yacht Club did, didn't,
might exist, where a girl could lose her head two nights in a row. Osorio's lie
about the picture had simply been one absurdity too many. All the same there
had been a nasty edge to his words that he regretted. When she reached the street, Ofelia
realized that, apart from a bolt on his door, Renko had no protection if Luna
came back. What she had not told the Russian was how Luna looked when he stood
over Hedy's body at the love motel, how his eyes reddened and the muscles of
his face worked like a twitching fist. Or how the sergeant had later sat in the
archive room, and how simply moving by him was like walking in the shadow of a
volcano. Traffic
on the Malecуn – always thin at night – had as good as disappeared. Even the
couples who usually courted on the seawall were gone. If Ofelia was angry with
Renko, she was furious with herself. She had removed the picture of him from
the crime scene. She had broken the law. For what, so he could accuse her of
taking the same picture from Pribluda's? She knew by now his taste for
frivolous minutiae and then the diagonal question that cut across the board. As
for the documents he pulled from the briefcase she was not surprised by the
lengths Russians would go to discredit Determined
not to be baited again, she went back in the house. Halfway up the stairs
Ofelia heard steps above and a soft knocking at Renko's door. When he opened
the door the light of his room fell on an extraordinarily fair woman with
braided black hair in a Mexican dress and bare feet. She was a rose on a long
stem, a glamorous white flower tinged with blue. Ofelia recognized her from the
Santeria ceremony, the friend of George Washington Walls, the dancer. Ofelia
watched Isabel lift her face and kiss Renko. Before they saw her, she retreated
down into the dark of the stairs, getting smaller and smaller until she reached
the street again. Chapter Eighteen"You're making a mistake," Arkady
told Isabel. "No
mistake." She
guided his hand between her legs so that he could feel her through the cotton
of the dress, then kissed him and slipped into the sitting room. Maybe this was
a test for signs of life, he thought. The dress was thin to show the slimness
of her body and the dark caps of her breasts, and if he were a normal man he
would feel healthy lust. The truth was he did feel a first stirring, feeling
her breath on his neck, taking in the almond scent of her hair braided like
long black silk. Her pale skin made her lips all the more red. "No
mistake," Isabel said. "I asked you to do something for me. Fair
trade. Gordo keeps the rum over the sink." "I
thought Gordo was the name for the turtle." "For
both. Sergei, turtle." "What
do you call George Washington Walls?" "I
call him done with. I have a new boyfriend, no?" "Well,
I can't imagine who that is." Isabel
touched the coat hung on the back of the chair, and when he pulled her hand
away she said, "Relax. Such a strange man, but I like you." She found
the rum herself and rinsed two glasses. "I like strong men." "That's
not me." "Let
me be the judge." She handed him a glass. "I know you've heard about
my father." "I
heard there was a conspiracy." "True.
There's always a conspiracy. Everyone complains, and He..." – she pointed
to her chin – "He lets them, as long as they don't do anything.
As long as they don't organize. All the same, every year there's a conspiracy,
and it's always a mix of conspirators and informers. That's Cuban democracy at
work, that's how we will finally vote, when even the informers decide enough is
enough and they keep their mouths shut and this country is delivered." She
brushed Arkady's cheek. "But not yet, I don't think. This is the first
place where time does not exist. People have been born and died, yes, but time
has not passed because time demands fresh paint, new cars, new clothes. Or
maybe war, one or the other. But not this, which is not dead or alive, which is
neither. You're not drinking." "No."
The last thing he needed was Isabel and alcohol. "Do
you mind?" She took a cigarette. "No." "The
reason my father agreed to the coup in the first place was the assurances from
his Russian friends that he would have their complete support. It wasn't his
idea." "He
should have known better." "I
think I'm choosing more wisely." She inhaled as if the smoke would travel
the length of her body, exhaled and spun, her arms spread, so that the dress
clung to her and smoke trailed behind. "I think we're the best. English
dancers are too stiff, the Russians are too serious. We have the elevation and
technique, but we are also born with music. There is no limit once I'm out,
once I have my letter and my ticket." "The
letter hasn't come." "It
will. It has to. I told George we were looking into going back to "You
and I?" "Yes,
wouldn't that be the simplest way?" Isabel came to rest against the coat
and an ember from her cigarette spilled on the sleeve. "Are you
married?" Arkady
brushed the ember off and took Isabel by the wrist. It was a slim wrist, an
elegant wrist, but he led her to the door. "It's late. If something comes
for you I promise I'll let you know." "What
are you doing?" "I'm
saying good night." "I'm
not done." "I'm
done." He
pushed her out and only had a glimpse of her in the hallway crushed as a moth
before he shut the door. "You
son of a bitch," she shouted through it. "You prick, cono.
Just like your friend Sergei. All he wanted to do was talk about that stupid
plot that got my father killed. You're just the same, another maricуn. El
bollo de tu madre." Arkady
shot the bolt. "I'm sorry. I don't speak Spanish." His way with women was astonishing, he
thought. What a charmer. He wrapped himself in the coat and shivered. Why was
everyone in It
was midnight, and dark had overwhelmed the city when Arkady wasn't looking. A
power outage arranged by Luna, or was his imagination expanding in the dark?
There were no streetlamps on the Malecуn, only a couple of faint headlights
like the sort on luminescent fish found in an ocean trench. Although he latched
the shutters closed and lit a candle, darkness continued to seep into the room
with a solid, tarry quality. A car horn woke him. The horn blared
until he opened the balcony doors and saw that the morning had started hours
before. The sea was a brilliant mirror to a huge sky, the sun high and shadows
reduced to mere spots of ink. Across the Malecуn a boy flipped small, silvery
bait out of a net up to a partner standing on the seawall with a pole. Another
boy gutted his fish on the sidewalk and threw the entrails up to a hovering
gull. Directly below the balcony was a streamlined cloud of chrome and white,
Hemingway's Chrysler Imperial convertible with George Washington Walls at the
wheel and John O'Brien in a golf cap and Hawaiian shirt. "Remember,
we were going to talk about possible employment," Walls called up.
"And show you some famous sin spots." "You
can't just tell me?" "Think
of us as your guides," O'Brien said. "Think of it as a Grand
Tour." Arkady
looked to Walls for any sign that Isabel had reported her midnight visit and he
looked to O'Brien for an indication that word of the AzuPanama papers reached
him via Osorio, but all he saw shining up from the car were bright smiles and
dark glasses. Employment in "Give
me a minute." The
desk drawer had envelopes. Into one Arkady fit all his worldly evidence: Rufo's
house key, Pribluda's car key, AzuPanama documents and the photo of the Havana
Yacht Club. Arkady taped the envelope to the small of his back, put on his
shirt and coat, a man equipped for all climates and occasions. The car even rode like a cloud, the
warm upholstery adhesive to the touch. Arkady noticed even from the backseat
the push-button transmission, how could anyone miss that? They breezed along
the Malecуn while Walls gossiped about other famous cars, Fidel's penchant for Oldsmobiles
and Che's '60 Chevrolet Impala. Arkady looked around. "Have you seen
Luna?" "The
sergeant is no longer associated with us," Walls said. "I
think the man's unhinged," said O'Brien. Walls
said, "Luna is one funky dude." He dipped his glasses from his blue
eyes. "When are you going to dump the coat?" O'Brien
said, "It's like driving around with Abe-Fucking-Lincoln. It is." "When
I get warm." "You
read Hemingway in "He's
very popular there. Jack London, John Steinbeck and Hemingway." "When
writers were bruisers," said O'Brien. "I'd have to say I think of The
Old Man and the Sea every time I see the fishing boats go out. I loved the
book and the film. Spencer Tracy was magnificent. A better Irishman than Cuban,
but magnificent." "John
reads everything," Walls said. "I
love movies too. When I get homesick I put on a video. I have Arkady
thought of Vice Consul Bugai and the $5,000 deposit in Bugai's name at
O'Brien's Panama bank. "Do
you have any Russian friends here?" "There
aren't that many. But to be honest I have to say I steer clear, as a
precautionary measure." "Pariahs,"
said Walls. "The
Russian Mafia would love to get in here. They're already in "None
taken." "A
Russian wants money, he says, I'll kidnap someone rich, bury him up to his neck
and demand a ransom. Maybe his family will pay and maybe they won't. A
short-term proposition either way. An American wants money, he says, I'll do a
mass mailing and offer an investment with an irresistible rate of return. Maybe
the investment pays off or maybe it doesn't, but as long as I have lawyers
those people will be paying me for the rest of their lives. After they're dead
I'll put a lien on their estate. They'll wish I had buried them up to
their necks." "That's
what you did?" Arkady said. "I'm
not saying that's what I did, I'm saying what's done in the States." He
raised his hand and his biggest grin. "Not lying. I have testified in
district court in "That's
a lot of courts to tell the truth in," Arkady said. "The
fact is," said O'Brien, "I prefer happy investors. I'm too old to be
stalked by unshaven, angry men or have to duck subpoenas from men who can stand
outside a door for the rest of their miserable lives. Hey, we're
here!" Walls
swung across oncoming traffic to the curb of an airy high-rise hotel, an angled
tower of blue balconies that nestled at its base the separate dome in mottled colors.
Arkady had passed the hotel before without fully registering how its
architecture was pure American fifties. And they'd arrived in the perfect car,
gliding to a stop under a cantilevered entrance by a statue of, perhaps, a
seahorse and siren carved from the largest of all whale bones. John O'Brien had
visited before, judging by the doormen's zeal. "The
Arkady
asked, "What does this have to do with me?" "A
little patience, please. It all fits." O'Brien
removed his cap as a mark of respect before they climbed the stairs and entered
glass doors to a low lobby of white marble under inset ceiling lights spaced as
irregularly as stars. Sofas as long as boxcars reached across the floor toward
a skylit grotto of elephant-ear ferns. Along one side was the tidal murmur of a
bar, at the far end a staircase suspended on wires wound around a stabile of
black stone, and a bright haze that was plate glass leading to a pool. O'Brien
glided at a reverent pace across the lobby, tassels of his shoes flopping.
"Everything deluxe. Kitchen like a cruise ship, beautifully appointed
rooms. And the casino?" One
step ahead of O'Brien, Walls opened the brass doors to a convention hall
emblazoned with the colorful, forceful logos of Spanish, Venezuelan, Mexican
banks. Knockdown displays and charts on easels forecast "It's
pathetic," O'Brien said. "Market projections, rates of interest,
capital protection, all languages spoken. Look at this." He tried to turn
on the monitor at the screen. "Hell, it doesn't even work." "Maybe
this does." Arkady picked up a remote control from the booth counter and
pushed on. At once, images of serious men and women in expensive suits marched
across the screen. Dollars, pesetas, deutsche-marks flowed from them like lines
of electricity. "Right,"
O'Brien said. "They know how to put your money to work for your benefit
around the world, sure they do. The only trouble, this isn't the world. This is
Arkady
turned the remote off. "Anyway,"
O'Brien said, "the banks have it backwards. Nowadays people are not
interested in a slow accrual of assets. What they want is a jackpot, the
lottery, payday. Look around, you can still see it." He called Arkady's
attention to walls of baroque cream and gold, pointing out how the dropped
ceiling hid the dome overhead. They were in the painted dome they had seen from
outside. If the "No
Cubans?" "Cubans
worked here. They hired Cuban accountants and made them into croupiers
and dealers. Taught them grooming, bought them suits, paid them well to keep
them honest. Of course, they were still vacuumed for chips at the end of the
day." Arkady
had seen casinos. There were casinos in "Mind,
there was always gambling in "It's
hard to believe there was a revolution." "You
can't please everyone," O'Brien said. "Let me show you my personal
favorite, though. Smaller but more historical. On the way, as soon as they left the Arkady
asked, "So, what kind of business have you been doing here?
Investing?" "Investing,
consulting, whatever," O'Brien said. "We solve problems." "For
example?" Walls
and O'Brien glanced at each other, and Walls said, "For example, Cuban
trucks here need spare parts because the Russian factory that used to produce
them is turning out Swiss Army knives now instead. What John and I did was find
a Russian truck factory in "What
did you get out of that?" "Finder's
fee, costs. You know, I used to think because I was a Marxist that I understood
capitalism. I didn't know anything. John plays it like a game." O'Brien
said, "I have always noticed that people from the socialist camp take
money far too seriously. You should have fun." "It's
like a second college education being with John." "Yes?"
Arkady was ready to be educated. "Like
boots," said Walls. "The Cubans ran out of boots. We found out that
the "You
must be appreciated here." "I'd
like to think that George and I are," said O'Brien. "But
how do you do that from "In
a third country, of course." "In
O'Brien
twisted in his seat. "Arkady, you've got to stop being such a cop. Over
the years, I have helped a lot of police in your situation, but it's a matter
of give and take. You want to know this and you want to know that, but you have
yet to give me a believable explanation how you came to stand on the dock of
the Havana Yacht Club." "I
was just visiting places where Pribluda might have been." "What
made you think he might have been there?" "There
was a map in his apartment and the club was circled." Which was true,
although not as true as the photograph. "It was an old map." "Just
an old map? That's how you heard about the Havana Yacht Club? Amazing." The Hotel Capri was a pocket version of
the "I
can't get over the coat," Walls told Arkady. "Do you mind if I try it
on?" "Go
ahead." Although
Arkady didn't want other people even touching the coat, he helped Walls in. The
coat stretched a little over Walls's shoulders. He ran his hands along the
cashmere outside, the silk lining in, felt the pockets inside and out. O'Brien
watched the fashion show. "What do you think?" "I
think he's a man with empty pockets." Walls returned the coat. "But
nice. You got this on an investigator's pay? Good for you." "A
good sign for us all." O'Brien led the way off the lobby and through the
doors into a small, darkened theater. Arkady could barely see the stage, steps,
speakers and overhead lights with colored eels. "La Sala Roja. It wasn't a
cabaret then. It was a better show. Use your imagination and you can see red
drapes, red carpet, red velvet lamps. In the center, four blackjack tables and
four roulette. In the corners, seven-eleven and baccarat. Girls selling cigars,
and I mean beautiful girls selling Cuban cigars. Perhaps a little cocaine,
though who needs it? It's the sound of the ball on the track, the excitement
around a craps table. The man says 'Bets, gentlemen' and people bet. Do you
gamble, Arkady?" "No." "Why?" "I
don't have the money to lose." "Everyone
has the money to lose. Poor people gamble all the time. What you mean is, you
don't like to lose." "I
suppose so." "Well,
you're unusual, most people need to. If they happen to win, they keep on playing
until they do lose. Right now around the world more people are gambling than
ever in the history of man." O'Brien shrugged to show that the phenomenon
was beyond him. "Maybe it's the coming millennium. It's as if people want
to shed material things, not in a church but in a casino. People are willing to
lose everything as long as they have fun. They can't resist. It's human. The
worst snub in the world is a casino where they won't take your money." "Were
you here before the Revolution?" "A
dozen times. Jesus, that was a long time ago." "Did
you gamble?" "I'm
like you, I don't like to lose. Mostly, I admired the operation. You know who I
pointed out to my wife? I pointed out Jack Kennedy. He had a peroxide blonde on
one arm and a sultry mulata on the other. During the missile crisis I
wondered if Jack ever thought back to that night." "There
were other casinos, too," Walls said. " "That's
your plan, to reopen old casinos?" "No,"
O'Brien said, "still too many hard feelings. Anyway, the Havana Yacht Club
and Casino can be ten times bigger than any of these." "You're
ambitious." "Aren't
you?" Walls asked. "The Cold War's over. I was a hero in that war and
look what it got me. Marooned." "What
kind of life is "Work
for you? Take Pribluda's place?" "Like
that," said Walls. "Why
is it that I can't take this offer seriously?" "Because
you're suspicious," said O'Brien. "It's the Russian attitude. You
have to be positive. Every millionaire I ever met was an optimist. Every
down-and-outer expects the worst. It's a new world, Arkady, why not plan
big?" "You
would share your Cuban gold mine with a man you'd never met before?" "But
I've met your type before. You're the man at the end of the pier, who's either
going to jump in the water or change his life." O'Brien's eyes glowed
with... what? Arkady wondered. The showmanship of a salesman or the zeal of a
priest, all his efforts bent to one moment of plausibility for this thoroughly
ridiculous proposition. "Change it. Give yourself a chance." "How?" "As
a partner." "A
partner? This gets better all the time." "But
partnership demands trust," O'Brien said. "You understand what trust
is, don't you, Arkady?" "Yes." "But
you won't show it. For two days I've been waiting for you to be as open with
George and me as we have been with you. Please don't piss on my back and tell
me it's raining. Don't tell me about an old map. Sergeant Luna told us about
the picture of the Havana Yacht Club. We know about it. A picture of a dead
Russian at the Havana Yacht Club is exactly what we don't need now." "John
would feel better if he had it," Walls said. "If
I had it I wouldn't have to worry about it. And I'd know that you had extended
your trust to us the way we have with you. Can you do that, Arkady, and trust
me with that picture?" O'Brien put out his hand. Arkady
felt the envelope with the photograph sticking to his back. "I don't know
about business partnerships, I've always worked directly for the state. But
what about this? If I accept your proposition and work for a year and have a
villa and boat and a satisfying social life, at that point I will give you the
photograph. Until then it's safe because we will be, as you say,
partners." "Are
you hearing this?" Walls asked. "The mother is bargaining." "Resisting."
John O'Brien let his hand drop. He looked his age, suddenly a little spent,
silver hair sticking to temples that were wet like sweat on the edge of
greasepaint, like an actor who passionately acted a play for a dull, deaf
audience. "Because you're Russian, Arkady, I'll make allowances. This is a
new way of thinking for you, being part of a plan." "Remind
me, what part would I be?" Arkady asked. "Security.
George told you, in case any Mafia does show up." "I'd
have to think about this. I'm not sure I'm that tough." "That's
okay," Walls said. "People think you are." "Appearances
go a long way," O'Brien said. "I'll tell you why the Chapter NineteenThe bodega was a warehouse with the dimmest
light in "You
either come home late or you don't come home at all. Who is this man?" "He's
not a man," Ofelia said. "He's
not a man?" Her mother amplified her wonderment to include as many people
as possible in the conversation. "Not
a man like that." "Like
the musicians? Great husbands. Where is the last one, massaging Swedes in Cayo
Largo?" "I
came home last night. Everything is okay." "Everything
is wonderful. Here I am with the world's greatest work of fiction." She
slapped her ration book. "What could be better? To know why you come home
so late?" "It's
a police matter." "With
a Russian! Hija, maybe you haven't heard, the Russian boat has sailed.
Gone. How did you even find one? I'd love to see this stranded Lothario." "Mama,"
Ofelia begged. "Oh,
you're in your uniform, you're embarrassed to be seen with me. I can wait in
line all day so you can run around and make the world safe for..." She
indicated a beard. "We're
almost there." Ofelia fixed her eye on the counter. "We're
almost nowhere. This is nowhere, hija. Remember that boy you knew in
school, the one with the fish tank?" "Aquarium." "Fish
tank. Nothing but dirty water and two catfish that never moved. Take a look at
those clerks." At
a counter with a register and scale were two women with whiskers who looked so
much like those catfish that it was difficult for Ofelia to keep a straight
face. There were four counters in the gloom of the bodega, each with a
chalkboard that listed goods, prices, ration per person or family, and date
available, the "date available" clouded from many corrections. "Tomatoes
next week," Ofelia said. "That's good news." Her
mother exploded with a laugh. "My God, I've raised an idiot. There will be
no tomatoes, no evaporated milk, no flour and maybe no beans or rice. This is a
trap for morons. Hija, I know you are a brilliant detective, but thank
God you have me to shop for you." A
woman behind them hissed and warned, "I will report this
counterrevolutionary propaganda." "Piss
off," Ofelia's mother said. "I fought at Playa Giron. Where were you?
Probably waving your tits at American bombers. I assume you had tits." Her
mother was good at shutting people up. Playa Giron was what the rest of the
world called the "I
have a question," Ofelia said. "Please,
I'm reading the board. Two cans of green peas per family for the month. They
will be delicious, I'm sure. Sugar is available. You will know the end is near
when no sugar is available." "About
pickles." "I
don't see pickles." "Where
would I find them?" The Eastern Bloc had tried to unload bottled pickles
in "Not
here. In the free market you buy cucumbers and pickle them." "Different
sizes?" "A
cucumber is a cucumber. Why would anyone want a small cucumber?" At the
counter her mother made a show of having her book properly marked and
announcing, "You know, if you live on your rations you will enjoy a very
balanced diet." "That's
true," one of the clerks was stupid enough to agree. "Because
you eat for two weeks and starve for two weeks." Having delivered her
torpedo, Ofelia's mother turned and sailed for the exit, leaving Ofelia to
follow with the heavy sack and can of oil the length of the bodega while
everyone stared. When
they reached the street her mother stumped toward home. "You
are impossible," Ofelia said. "I
hope so. This island is driving me crazy." "This
island is driving you crazy? You've never been off this island." "And
it's driving me crazy. And having a daughter who's one of them."
Her mother had been stopped by the police for selling homemade cosmetics door
to door. They'd let her go, of course, as soon as they learned Detective Osorio
was her daughter. "Your uncle Manny wrote to say there is a rocking chair
waiting on the porch for me in "With
a drive-by shooting every night is what he wrote me." "In
his new letter he says he could take Muriel and Marisol. He says they would
love "We
are not going to talk about this." "They
would knock That
was always the insinuation her mother could twist like a knife, that Ofelia
stood apart in the family by the deeper color of her skin, that Ofelia was
different from her own daughters and, in reverse, a lifelong and bitter
disappointment to her mother. And Ofelia knew her mother could see the red heat
in her cheek. "They're
staying with me. If you want to go to "I'm
only saying, it's a new world. It probably doesn't involve a Russian." • • • Arkady had Walls and O'Brien drop him
off a couple of blocks short of the Malecуn. Because he had the sense that Luna
could leap over the seawall any second with an ice pick or machete once Arkady
reached the boulevard, he stayed in the shadows of building columns until he
reached an address with the tricolored banner of the Committee for the Defense
of the Revolution, knocked at Abuelita's door and entered. "Come
in." Light
squeezed through with him into the narrow confines of her room, to the statue
of the shrouded, dark-skinned Virgin and her shimmering peacock feather. Scents
of cigar and sandalwood tickled his nose. Abuelita sat before the Virgin and
solemnly laid cards. Tarot? Arkady looked over the old woman's shoulder.
Solitaire. Today she sported a pullover that said "New York Stock
Exchange." Arkady noticed that the statue also wore something new, a
yellow necklace like Osorio's. "May
I?" "Go
ahead." When he touched the necklace beads Abuelita said, "In
Santeria this Virgin is also the spirit Oshun and her color is yellow, honey,
gold. Oshun is a very sexy spirit." That
hardly described Osorio, Arkady thought, but he didn't have time to delve into
religious matters. "I
saw you leave this morning in that big white car, that chariot with
wings," Abuelita said. "The whole Malecуn was looking at that." "Did
you happen to notice any tall, black sergeant from Minint go in the building
after I left?" "No." "No
one fitting that description carrying a machete or a baseball bat?" He
added five dollars to the crown at the Virgin's feet. Abuelita
sighed and took the money out. "I know the man you mean. The one who
arranged the Abakua. I was at my window like I always am, but the truth is, I
fell asleep right there standing up. Sometimes my body gets old." Arkady
put the money back. "Then I have another question. I still need a picture
of Sergei Pribluda for the police and I'm looking for any close friends of his
who might have one. No one here does, but the first time we met you mentioned
that Sergei Pribluda was a man who shared his pickles. Yesterday I was at a
market that sold vegetables, including cucumbers, but nothing like the homemade
pickles in Pribluda's refrigerator. Because you're right, there's nothing like
a Russian pickle. Did he have a special visitor?" Abuelita
spread her hand wide as a fan and hid her grin. "Now you're talking. There
was one woman, a Russian, who came sometimes with a basket, sometimes
not." "Could
you describe her?" "Oh,
like a fat little dove. She came on Thursdays, sometimes alone, sometimes with
a girl." Ofelia climbed a ladder to Hedy
Infante's home, a platform built under the ceiling of a rococo foyer. The
ten-by-ten loft held her cot, rack of dresses and stretch pants, electric bulb
and candles, cosmetics and shoes, window with rope to a pail and view of the
chandelier and, far below, a marble floor. The house had been built by a sugar
magnate with a taste for froth, and the ceiling's swirls of white plasterwork
evoked a sense of nesting in the clouds. Hedy's
interior decoration was just as fantastic, an interior of pictures she had
clipped from magazines and taped to her walls, a handmade wallpaper of Los Van
Van, Julio Iglesias, Gloria Estefan singing soulfully to a microphone, bathed
in strobe lights, reaching out to fans. On one singer she had superimposed her
own face, which reminded Ofelia of the real condition of Hedy's neck. The loft
wasn't the sort of room a prostitute took a client, it was more her true,
private place. Private
but violated by the little touches left by forensic technicians, police tape
around the dresses, fingerprint powder on the mirror, the subtle disarray when
men rather than women put things away. Hedy had collected hotel soaps, cutlery,
coasters, made a seashell frame around a photograph of her quince, her
fifteenth birthday party – the picture showed off the state – supplied frosted
cake, beer and rum. In another photograph Hedy wore the blue ruffles and scarf
of a devotee of Yemaya, the goddess of the seas, and, sure enough, on the wall
was a statuette of Our Lady of Regla, spirit and saint being one and the same.
A cigar box held snapshots of a variety of tourists with Hedy, toasting her
with daiquiris or mojitos at cafes in the Plaza Vieja, Plaza de Armas,
Plaza de la Catedral, the make-believe world of Old Havana. Hedy's favorites,
though, seemed to be two photos pinned to a heart-shaped pillow of her and
Luna. What had the techs made of that, the dead girl with the officer in
charge? The photos had apparently been taken at different times because of a
difference in clothes, but both in front of a building that bore in rusty
stains the name Centro Russo-Cubano. On the underside of the pillow was pinned
a third snapshot, this of Hedy, Luna and the little jinetera Teresa in
the back of a white Chrysler Imperial. There were no names, telephone numbers
or addresses around the bed, in the cigar box or on the wall. There
were no neighbors in the building to talk, and Ofelia went across the street to
a botбnica, where a cardboard listed guava for diarrhea, oregano for
congestion, parsley for gas. A Coca-Cola mirror hung on the wall, and taped to
it were testimonials, including a postcard from "Hija?"
The herbalista stirred from a chair. "Oh,
yes." Ofelia bought a bag of mahogany bark for her mother's rheumatism
before mentioning Hedy. "Yerba
buena," the herbalista remembered Hedy by remedy. "A pretty
girl but a nervous stomach. A dancer, too. Such a shame." The
woman knew Hedy from the local group that performed at Carnival. There had been
sixty dancers, drummers, men balancing giant tops, all dressed in Yemaya's
signature blue and swirling like waves all the way up the Prado where the
Comandante himself was in the reviewing stand. And she remembered Hedy's
friend, who could burn a hole through wood with his gaze. "There,
that's him." A
Minint Lada stopped outside Hedy's address, and Luna emerged with more haste
than usual. Ofelia turned her back to the door, removed her cap and watched the
street in the mirror, which meant she had to endure more recommendations from
the herbalist and the stupid card from But
it didn't matter to Ofelia that none of the technicians who visited Hedy
Infante's loft had gathered the pillow and its photographs in time. It didn't
matter whether or not they dusted Hedy's childish possessions for prints. None
of them for all their expertise would understand Hedy as well as she did. Ofelia
lived in two worlds. One was the ordinary level of ration lines and bus lines,
of streets of rubble, of the blue trickle of electricity that allowed Fidel to
flicker on the television screen, of oppressive heat that made her two
daughters spread like butterflies on the cool tiles of the floor. The other was
a deeper universe as real as the veins beneath the skin, of the voluptuous
Oshun, maternal Yemaya, thundering Chango, spirits good and bad that brought
blood to the face, taste to the mouth, color to the eye and dwelled in everyone
if they were evoked. Just as drums carried a kola seed that was the soul of the
drum, that only spoke when the drum was played, every person carried a spirit
that spoke through their own heartbeat if they would only listen. So Ofelia
Osorio carried the fire of the sun hidden behind her dark mask and saw with a
penetrating light the double worlds of This time Arkady found Olga Petrovna in
a housedress and her hair up in curlers as she was organizing bags of food in
the front room of her apartment. She gave him the pained smile of a pretty
woman, an older woman caught by surprise. A fat little dove? Perhaps. "A
side business," she said. "A
healthy side business." What
had been a Russian nook was obscured by rows of white plastic bags stretched to
the bursting point by Italian coffee tins, Chinese tableware, toilet paper,
cooking oil, soap, towels, frozen chicken and bottles of Spanish wine. Each bag
was taped and marked with a different Cuban name. "I
do what I can," she said. "It was so much easier in the old days when
there was a real Russian community here. Cubans could depend on us for a decent
supply of dollar goods from the diplomatic market. When the embassy shipped
everyone home, that put a heavy burden on those of us who were left." For
a percentage, Arkady was sure. Ten percent? Twenty? It would have been vulgar
to ask such a perfect Soviet matron. "I'll
be right back," she promised and slipped into a bedroom, which emitted a
hint of sachet. She called through the door, "Talk to Sasha, he loves
company." From
its perch a canary seemed to examine Arkady for a tail. Arkady peeked into the
kitchen. Samovar on an oilcloth, oilcloth on the table. Calendar with a
nostalgically snowy scene. Salt in a bowl, paper napkins in a glass. A
sparkling shelf of home-bottled jams, pickles and bean salad. He was back in
the front room when she returned, ash-blond hair brushed into place, primped in
record time. "I
would offer you something, but my Cuban friends will be arriving soon. It makes
them nervous to see strangers. I hope this won't take long. You
understand." "Of
course. It's about Sergei Pribluda. You said the first time we spoke that some
women on the embassy staff speculated because of the improvement of his Spanish
that he had become romantically involved with a Cuban." Olga
Petrovna allowed herself a smile. "Sergei Sergeevich's Spanish was never
that good." "I
suspect you're right, because he was so Russian. Russian to the core." "As
I told you, a 'comrade' in the old sense of the word." "And
the more I investigate, the more it's clear that if he did find a woman to
admire that deeply, she only could have been as Russian as he was. Would you
agree?" While
Olga Petrovna maintained the same bland smile, something defiant appeared in
her eyes. "I
think so." "The
attraction must have been inevitable," Arkady said. "Perhaps with
reminiscences of home, a real Russian dinner and then, because an affair within
the embassy is always discouraged, the necessity to plan liaisons that were
either secret or seemed accidental. Fortunately, he lived well apart from other
Russians, and she could always find a reason to be on the Malecуn." "It's
possible." "But
she was seen by Cubans." There
was a knock at the door. Olga Petrovna opened it a crack, whispered to someone
and shut the door gently, returned to Arkady, asked for a cigarette and, when it
was lit, sat and exhaled luxuriously. In a new voice, a voice with body, she
said, "We didn't do anything wrong." "I'm
not saying you did. I didn't come to "I
have no idea what Sergei was up to. He didn't say and I knew better than to
ask. We appreciated each other, was all." "That
was enough, I'm sure." "Then
what do you want?" "I
think that someone close to Pribluda, who cared for him, probably has a better
photograph than what you showed me the first time." "That's
all?" "Yes." She
rose, went to her bedroom and returned a moment later with a color photograph
of a tanned and happy Colonel Sergei Pribluda in swim shorts. With the warm "I'm
sorry, I would have given it to you before, but I was sure you would find
another one and this is the only good one I have. Will I get it back?" "I'll
ask." He slipped the picture into his pocket. "Did you ever ask
Pribluda what he was doing in "Men
like Sergei perform special tasks. He would never say and it wasn't my place to
pry." Said
like a true believer, Arkady thought; he could see what a match Pribluda and
Olga Petrovna had been. "You're
the one who sent the message from the embassy to me in "I
was worried, and Sergei had spoken so respectfully of you." "How
did you manage to send it? You must need authorization to send messages to "Officially,
but we're so understaffed. They rely on me to do more and more, and in some
ways it's much easier to get things done. And I was right, wasn't I? He was in
trouble." "Did
you tell anyone else?" "Who
would I tell? The only real Russian at the embassy was Sergei." Her eyes
brimmed. She took a deep breath and glanced toward the door. "What Cubans
don't understand is while we may not sing and dance as much as they do, we love
just as passionately, don't we?" "Yes,
we do." Certainly
Osorio would never understand, Arkady thought. It was a relief to be away from
the detective's steamy mix of revolutionary zeal and Santeria spirits, to be in
a more solid world where post-Soviet romance blossomed over pickles and vodka,
and motive could be measured in dollars and bones were left in the ground and
murder made logical sense. The
sight of chicken thawing in a plastic bag seemed to bring Olga Petrovna back to
earth. She heaved a bosomy sigh, twisted out her cigarette in an ashtray and in
a minute became a businesswoman again, checking a mirror for the proper image
of a sweetly gray grandmother. On
the way out Arkady passed a file of people waiting on the steps. From the top
of the stairs, Olga Petrovna had a second thought. "Or,
maybe I've been here too long," she said, "maybe I'm turning
Cuban." Chapter TwentyOfelia parked the DeSoto near the docks for
fear of blowing a tire. The
single building standing on its corner was the Centro Russo-Cubano. The center
had served as a hotel and social meeting place for Soviet ships' officers in port
and was designed like a three-story ship's deckhouse in cement with
porthole-style windows and a red Soviet flag of glass set into the house at
bridge height, although at this point the ship seemed to have sailed through
bad weather and run aground, rubble piled around the steps, iron railings
ripped off. Ofelia was surprised the doors opened as easily as they did. Inside,
faint rays of light fell from the windows into a lobby. A curved reception desk
of Cuban mahogany was flanked by a girl in black marble cutting a brass sheaf
of cane and, on the other end, a bronze sailor hauling a net. The cane cutter
was barefoot, work clothes molded to her body. The sailor bore heroic Slavic
features, and his net overflowed with fish. Russo-Cubano, indeed! Cubans had
never been allowed in, this had been strictly Russians only. All the signs,
reception, buffet, director, were in Russian. Through the dust Ofelia made out
a floor mosaic of a hammer and sickle on a barely discernible pattern of blue
waves. The only sign of recent life was in the middle of the lobby where a dull
red ray of light reached down from the glass flag to a Lada with Russian
diplomatic plates. The
sound of clicking drew her eyes up to a lightbulb hanging on a cord, to busts
of Marti, Marx and Lenin decorating a mezzanine balcony and finally to a goat
moving along the balcony rail. The goat stared down with disdain. Nothing but a
goat could have climbed the stairs, blocked as they were by the ripped-out and
abandoned cage of the elevator. No great loss, Ofelia thought. Since power
outages began, people didn't trust elevators anyway. An extension ladder
reached from the lobby to the balcony. More goats appeared. At
the steering wheel of the Lada sat a black man, his head twisted toward her,
staring. When he didn't answer her or get out she pulled her gun and opened the
door. Out sagged a rag doll, Chango, with a half-formed face and glass eyes,
dressed in pants and shirt, a red bandanna around his head. She looked into the
car. Red candles were burned down to waxy tears on the dash. From the rearview
mirror hung a shell necklace and a rosary. The sound of a bell drew her
attention back to the balcony, where a Judas goat pushed its way to the
forefront of the other goats and stretched its neck to stare down. As a group
they stiffened and, in a clatter of hoofs, scattered not at the sight of her,
she realized, but someone else behind her. Ofelia
wasn't so much aware of being hit as plunging to the floor and then waking in a
burlap sack, blind as a rabbit bagged for market. She'd lost her gun and a
large hand wrapped tight around her throat as a suggestion not to scream. When
the fingers relaxed, the sweet, milky scent of coconut burst into her mouth. Sometimes, not knowing was better than
knowing. Isabel's long-awaited E-mail from Dear Sergei
Sergeevich, what a pleasure to hear from you and what a surprise! I should have
written you long ago and told you how sorry I was to hear of the passing of
Maria Ivanova, who was always so kind to everyone. You were blessed to have
such a wife. I remember the day we came in off an assignment and were so cold
we couldn't speak. We had to point at the frostbite on each other's nose. She
made practically a banya in the bathroom with herbs and birches and steaming
water and a cold bottle of vodka. She saved our lives that day. All the best
people are gone, it's true. And now there you are in the tropics and I am still
here but not much more than a librarian. But busy, every day someone wants to
declassify this or that. Last week I had a visit from a lawyer of a Western
news organization demanding I open the most sensitive archives of the KGB as if
they were nothing more than a family album. Is nothing sacred? I say that with
tongue in cheek but also seriously. We can no longer simply say, "Those
who know, know." Those days are gone. However, promises made must be
promises kept, that is my watchword. Where society and historical truth are
served by disclosure, where traitors will not be lionized or honorable
reputations destroyed, where innocent people who thought they were doing their
duty in often hazardous circumstances are not victimized by new standards then,
yes!, I am the first man to drag facts to the sunlight. Which
brings me to this inquiry of yours about a former leader of the Cuban Communist
Party, Lazaro Lindo. In particular, you ask whether Lindo was involved in a
so-called Party conspiracy against the Cuban state. As I remember, Castro
claimed that a circle within the CCP, feeling that he had led his countrymen
down a path of adventurism, was conspiring with the By
the by, the entire country is a cheese full of maggots these days. You're well
out of it. Roman
Petrovich Rozov Senior
Archivist Federal Intelligence Service Arkady
printed the letter out to give Isabel, but it was clear that Rozov, Pribluda's
old comrade-in-arms, as good as admitted both the plot and Lindo's part in it,
and although Arkady didn't know Isabel well or even like her, he dreaded
passing the letter on because he had recognized the desperation in the kiss she
had given him the night before. Why kiss him otherwise? The
kiss angered him because it was a parody of real desire, her hard mouth
clinging to him until he pushed her away. All the same, he asked himself, would
a Cuban have rejected her? Would any warm-blooded man? The
other answer he dreaded was in the photograph he had extracted from Olga
Petrovna, the picture that could conclusively identify the body in the morgue
as Sergei Pribluda, yes or no. It was revealing how relieved he was that Blas
had not been at the laboratory. Arkady had left the photograph rather than wait
for the doctor to learn for a certainty that Pribluda was the body in the drawer. Arkady
folded the printout from How
many sorts of coward could a man be? She was inside a car trunk in a sack,
arms tied at elbow level, more burlap sacking piled on top of her. Ofelia
threatened and reasoned, but whoever put her in closed the lid and never said a
word. A car door shut without the sagging of someone getting in. Steps walked
away. White or black, she hadn't seen, but an inner part of her had registered
his scent, the sound of his breathing, his speed and size, and she knew it was
Luna. She
shouted until her throat was raw, but the sacks stuffed on top muffled her and
she doubted she was heard more then ten steps away, let alone from the street.
She decided to wait until she heard someone, although she didn't feel even the
reverberation of a car passing the Centro Russo-Cubano. Well, who would drive
there? She could as well have been at the bottom of the bay. With
every breath, sacking clung to her face, hemp and coconut shag filled her nose
and mouth, and she became aware that with all the bags over her she'd already
consumed most of the trunk's available oxygen. She'd never thought of herself
as having an unusual fear of tight spaces. Now it took all her concentration
not to hyperventilate and waste what air was left. She felt her gun under her
but outside the sack, a particularly embarrassing tease. At least she didn't
yet need to empty her bladder; she thanked God for small favors. Irrelevant
items came to mind. Whether the trunk was clean. What sort of dinner her mother
was cooking for Muriel and Marisol. Something with rice. She started tasting
tears as well as sweat. Ofelia
thought about the statue of the girl gathering cane. The hair was wrong, long
and flowing instead of wiry, but the face was right, especially the eyes
anxiously twisting up, surprised. Depend
on the Russians. There was no spare tire and the nut and bolt that usually held
one down dug painfully into her back. She squirmed, trying to hook the bolt on
the rope that pinioned her arms, but it was like twisting in a shroud. He was more depressed by the possible
identification of Pribluda's body than he would have expected. Originally he
had refused the body simply to goad the Cubans into some sort of investigation,
but now he found there was also part of him that at a more basic level
irrationally and against all the evidence refused to accept the colonel's
death. How could anyone so tough and ugly die? The man was a brute, and yet
Arkady felt like a one-man funeral cortege, perhaps for selfish reasons. Sergei
Pribluda was the person on earth he knew best and, in the colonel's way, one of
Arkady's last connections to Irina. When
she had been wrapped in white on a gurney, her hair brushed, her eyes
meditatively shut, her mouth relaxed into a smile, the doctor reassured him it
was normal to think that a loved one was still breathing. The cool chilled his
sweat. He recalled Pushkin's lines how the lover ... counts the slow hours, vainly
trying To hurry them: he cannot wait. The clock strikes ten: he's off, he's
flying, And suddenly he's at the gate. This
was the gate that would never open. He would return again and again, race and
pant like a schoolboy, strain to see her breathe one more time and the gate
would stay barred. Did
people die of love? Arkady knew a man on a factory ship in the Although
Arkady was no expert in love he was an expert in death, and he knew the
possibility of a relatively painless death for the diver. What killed expert
swimmers practicing underwater laps in pools was not a strangling on water but
the soft oblivion of oxygen deprivation. At the end they no more than gently
stirred, even if in the last lit cell in their brain they were still stroking
powerfully ahead. Ofelia prayed. There was a panoply of
spirits and saints that might help her if they only knew. Sweet Yemaya, who
saved men from drowning. Meek Santa Bбrbara, who changed in an instant to
Chango wreathed in lightning. Ofelia's patron, though, had always been Oshun,
not that Oshun had particularly helped in the past if husbands were anything to
go by. However, the gods picked you more than you picked them, and Oshun was
the useless god of love. Ofelia saw herself sometimes as a little dark boulder
in the middle of a river of useless love. What she needed was a sharp knife.
Unless she got out of the car trunk soon, she would asphyxiate and Blas would
be tweezering hemp threads from the depths of her throat for the edification of
new admirers. The image of herself naked on a steel table for the doctor's
examination was bad enough, but she'd seen other bodies after a day or two in a
warm car trunk, and the recollection was enough to make her saw the rope
against the tip of the bolt whether it cut her or not. She
tried to think of music that would lend a vigorous rhythm to work to, but all
that came to mind was a famous lullaby by Merceditas called "Drume
Negrita" that whispered, "Go to sleep, my little black girl. If you
sleep I'll bring you a new cradle and for your new cradle I'll bring a new
bell. You are my favorite, my pearl, my beloved girl, so don't cry no
more," though strangely enough the voice Ofelia heard was her mother's. • • • Floating in the dark above his bed the
halo of the ceiling fixture put Arkady in mind of Rufo's white hat of woven
straw, made in Panama with Rufo's gilded initials on the sweatband, which
didn't mean anything to Arkady at the time because he hadn't connected it to
AzuPanama S.A. Now he had to wonder what else he had seen in Rufo's room and
not understood. The fact that neither Luna nor Osorio had come for Rufo's key
suggested that they still hadn't tried the key Arkady had surrendered, and it
was even possible that no one had been in the room since. Was
Luna waiting? Was Luna coming? Since the odds were even, Arkady slipped on his
overcoat, his protective shadow, emptied the envelope of meager evidence into a
pocket and went down to the street. He walked a block until he flagged a car.
Arkady didn't remember Rufo's address, but he recalled the fading words on the
wall next door and asked for the Gimnasio Atares. "Te
gustan los pugilistas?" The driver punched the air. "Absolutely,"
Arkady said. Whatever they were. Fighters.
Next door to Rufo's the open-air boxing arena of the Gimnasio Atares had come
to life, and Arkady got a glimpse over a line pushing through the gate of a
ring illuminated by a hanging rack of lights. Spectators chanted, blasted
whistles, rang cowbells under a layered atmosphere of smoke and orbits of
insects. It was between rounds, and in opposite corners two black boxers
shining with sweat sat on stools while their trainers convened like great minds
of science. As the gong rang and every head craned to the center of the ring,
Arkady unlocked Rufo's door and slipped inside. There
were some changes from his earlier visit. Bed, table and sink were in place.
Rufo's With
an eye for other souvenirs from It
seemed possible to Arkady that a man who memorialized a visit to the All
the other tapes had glossy sleeves with pornographic pictures and titles in
different languages. Bringing sex films to Someone
was trying to unlock the door. Arkady turned off the VCR and listened to a key
trying to force its way through the cylinder, followed by a low curse in a
voice he recognized. Luna. Arkady
could hear him thinking. The sergeant probably had the key Arkady had given to
Osorio, which worked perfectly well on Arkady's apartment in For
his part, Arkady became aware that the Gimnasio Atares was silent, the riot of
whistles and bells over. Luna had been annoyed to see Arkady merely venture to
the santero's. How unhappy would he be to find Arkady in Rufo's room? The
door jumped as a fist hit it. Arkady could feel Luna stare at the lock.
Finally, feet turned away, accompanied by the sound of metal scraping stone.
When Arkady cracked the door open, Luna was a block away under a streetlamp
that had faded to brown. Two fighters in sweatsuits shuffled painfully out of
the arena gate, followed by a trainer mopping his face with a towel. As they
reached his door, Arkady slipped out in front of them, close enough to screen
himself from Luna and merge his shadow with theirs all the way to the far
corner. Focused on their own aches, the trio stumbled on. Arkady stopped and
looked back. Luna
was returning. The sound of metal was an empty cart with iron wheels that he
pushed to the curb outside Rufo's. The captain was in plain clothes and this
time, instead of relying on the niceties of a key, he jammed his ice pick into
the latch, applied his shoulder and the door swung open. The captain seemed to
know what he was after, carrying out the television, VCR and boxes of running
shoes to the cart. He rolled the load away, the wheel's grinding reverberating
on either side. Despite the dim lights, with the cart's slow pace and noise
Luna was easy to follow. Somehow
the sergeant was able to find more empty and desolate streets as he went,
maneuvering the cart around mounds of broken stone, the sort of scene that made
He
followed up the steps. Somehow power had been fed to the building because in
the vaulted dark was the ember of a hanging bulb. Luna had moved out of sight
to a deeper interior; Arkady heard the cart progressing through a hallway. He
felt as if he had uncovered a Soviet mausoleum. There were the floor design of
a hammer and sickle under the dirt, unlit sconces of red stars, busts of Marx
and Lenin along the balcony, the difference being that instead of a sarcophagus
in the middle of the floor there was a Lada with plates that read 060 016.
Pribluda's car. And some lighter touches: at opposite ends of a counter of dark
wood were two statues, black and white. The black figure looked too frail for
the sugarcane she had cut, but the white was a Russian superman who had scooped
the bounty of the sea – flounder, crab and octopus – in a single net. A tapping
led Arkady to look up toward the mezzanine again. Between Marx and Lenin shone
the gunslit eyes of goats. Dust stirred around the bulb. Although no one was
visible in the car it shifted from side to side and not just as a trick of the
feeble light. The
keys to Pribluda's car had been in Arkady's possession since the autopsy. He
opened the trunk and felt a mound of burlap sacks. The bottom sack was heavy
and tied with a rope. Arkady untied the sack and pulled it off while the goats
bleated. Osorio raised her head, too stiff to stand. As he lifted her the front
doors of the lobby swung open and a goat bell rang. Luna had returned not from
the hall but through the same door Arkady had just used and the sergeant
carried not a bat but a machete. He said something in Spanish that pleased
himself enormously. Osorio
pressed her mouth to Arkady's ear. "My gun." He
saw the Makarov in the car trunk. As Osorio hung on, he picked up the gun and
cocked it. "Get out of the way." "No."
Luna shook his head. "I don't think so." Arkady aimed over the
sergeant's head and squeezed the trigger. He needn't have bothered, the hammer
snapped on an empty breech. Luna pulled the lobby doors closed. "This is
justice." Arkady
put Osorio into the front passenger seat of the car and went around to the
driver's side. Ladas were not known for their power, but they did start. In the
coldest or warmest weather they started. Arkady turned on the engine and lights
and, blinded, Luna stopped for a moment, then crossed the floor in two strides
and brought the machete down on the car. Arkady reversed so that the blow
landed on the hood, but Luna slapped the blade sideways and split the
windshield into two caved-in sheets of safety glass. Unable to see, Arkady
drove forward, hoping for a piece of the captain, only to hit the long counter
head-on. The rear window crystallized as the machete swung through. Arkady
backed up, cutting the wheel to sweep Luna away. The blade came straight down
through the car roof, probed and vanished. Just when Arkady thought the Cuban
was actually on the car, one headlight exploded. A ladder toppled, crushing
Osorio's side of the car. Arkady
peeled off enough windshield to see. The falling ladder had grazed the bulb,
and as the light swung, goats, stairs, statues swayed from side to side. He
backed into a column hard enough to rock the balcony, shot forward and aimed at
Luna, silhouetted by crystals on his shoulders. Missed him, but as the hanging
bulb flared to life Arkady saw an electric highway of glass leading to the
doors and followed. As the doors burst open, the Lada landed askew on the
steps, righted itself and shouldered through debris. The left-front fender was
crushed, and left turns seemed to be impossible. He drove toward the
streetlamp, and when he was a block beyond he looked back through the gaping
rear window to see Luna running after. Arkady pushed the car as fast as it
could go until the sergeant was out of sight. At
last the streets ended at docks and the deep black and trailing lights of the
harbor. Air blew through the windshield and windows and safety glass sparkled
on their laps. The Lada limped over railroad tracks and finally swung into an
alley, scaring the spangly green eyes of a cat caught in the headlight, and
lurched to a stop. A
black hand swung around Arkady's seat and hit him in the chest. He grabbed its
wrist and twisted in his seat to the figure of Chango. The man-sized doll had
been riding in the back of the car, still wearing its red bandanna, still
holding its walking stick in its other hand, its dark expression the glower of
a kidnap victim. Ofelia aimed the Makarov, loaded or not, at the doll. "Dios
mнo." She let the gun drop. "Exactly."
Arkady got out of the car on weak legs. He
counted the gashes in the roof and sides of the car. The front was crushed,
headlights empty sockets. "If
it were a boat it would sink," he said. "It will get you to a
doctor." "No,"
Ofelia said. "To
the police." "To
say what? That I've refused orders from the police? That I hid evidence? That
I'm helping a Russian instead?" "It
doesn't sound so good when you put it that way. Then what? Luna will only
follow us to Pribluda's." "I
know where to go." Considering that Ofelia made the
arrangements in the middle of the night, she didn't do badly. A switch from the
Lada, Chango and all, to her DeSoto and then to a room at the Rosita, a love
motel on the Playa del Este just fifteen miles outside the city and a block
from the beach. All the Rosita's units were free-standing white stucco cottages
from the fifties with air-conditioning and kitchenette, television and potted
plants, clean sheets and towels at a price only the most successful jineteras
could afford. The
first thing Ofelia did once they were inside was to shower the burlap and shag
off her body. Wrapped in a towel, she asked him to pick nuggets of glass from
her hair. He'd expected her curls to be stiffer, but they were as soft as water
and his fingers never looked more thick and clumsy. Between the wings of her
shoulder blades the skin was rubbed raw and seamed with grains of glass. She
didn't flinch. In the bathroom mirror he saw her eyes on him and the natural
kohl of their lids. She
said, "You were right about the photograph Pribluda took of you. I found
it when I dusted his rooms for prints just as you said. I was the one who gave
it to Luna." "Well,
I never told you that what Luna wanted from me was the photograph that Pribluda
called the Havana Yacht Club. We're even." "Claro,
we're both liars. Look at us." He
saw an unlikely pair, a woman smooth as soap-stone with a ragged man. "What
was Luna saying when he came back?" he asked. "He
said Rufo's television was warm, so he knew you were there. Why didn't you
think of that?" "Actually,
I did." "You
followed him anyway?" Arkady
wondered, "Are you possible to please?" She
said, "Yes." Chapter Twenty-OneShe was a dark sprite, except that in bed she was a woman. Her
breasts were small, tipped in purple, her stomach sleek down to a triangle of
sable. He laid his mouth on hers, and it was so long since he had been with a
woman that it was like learning to eat again. Especially when the taste was
different, heady and strong, as if she were coated in sugary liqueur. He
was helpless in his own greed, working his way through the exquisite unfolding
as Ofelia, his new measure, drew him in. There was something convulsive in this
feast for the starving, who had taken the vow of hunger. He
would have said he cared for people, wished them well and did his best by them,
but he had been dead. She would raise Lazarus and close her legs around him so
as not to let him go. She kissed his forehead, lips, the bruises on the inside
of his arm as if each kiss healed. She was hard and lithe and soft and
certainly more artful and vocal than he was. This seemed to be allowed in Outside,
he heard the ocean say, This is the wave that will sweep away the sand, topple
the buildings and flood the streets. This is the wave. This is the wave. On the bed Arkady arranged Pribluda's
photograph of the "Havana Yacht Club," the AzuPanama documents, his
chronology of Pribluda's last day, list of dates and phone numbers from Rufo's
wall. While Ofelia sorted through them Arkady took in a cement floor painted
blue, pink walls with paper cupids, plastic roses in ice buckets and an
air-conditioner that gasped like an Ilyushin taking off. They had placed Chango
in a corner chair, the doll's head resting heavily against a kitchen counter,
hand balanced on his stick. "If
these documents are real," Ofelia said, "entonces, I can see
why a Russian would think AzuPanama is more an instrument of the Cuban Ministry
of Sugar than a genuine Panamanian corporation." "It
would seem that way." Arkady
told her about O'Brien and the Mexican truck parts, the American boots and the
real Havana Yacht Club. "He's
a charmer, an intriguer, he goes from one story to another. It's like being led
down a path." "I'm
sure it is." He
was distracted by the fact that all she wore was his coat and a glimpse of
yellow beads. He hadn't noticed when she had put on the necklace. The coat was
huge on her, and the sight was like finding a photograph of one woman in a
frame that had always held a picture of another. Every second that it clung to
her, it was exchanging auras of scent and heat and memory. Ofelia
knew. It was not totally true, but the charge could be made that once she had
detected his grief she had suspected his loss, and once she had observed the
tenderness with which he treated his coat and discovered the faint history of
perfume on its sleeve, from that moment on she was determined to wear the coat
herself. Why? Because here was a man who had loved a woman so deeply he was
willing to follow her right into death. Or
it might be he was just the melancholy sort – in short, a Russian. But it had
to be said that when she was in the trunk of the car, trussed, bagged and
barely breathing, the one person she thought might save her was this man she
hadn't even met a week before. Muevete! Ofelia told herself. Get your
clothes on and run. Instead, she said, "In Panama almost anything can
happen. O'Brien's bank is in the Colуn Free Trade Zone of Panama where everything
happens. Still, he has been a friend to "Neither
do I, but you don't try to kill a man who is leaving in a week unless whatever
is going to happen will happen soon. Then, of course, everything will be
perfectly clear." In
his disheveled way, in a white shirt, sleeves rolled, long fingers cupping a
cigarette, he was Ofelia's picture of a Russian musician. A musician sitting by
a bus stalled on the side of the road somewhere in the Urals. "Let me get
this right. You're saying that Rufo, Hedy, Luna, everything that has happened
so far is to cover up a crime that took place not in the past but hasn't even
taken place yet? How are we going to find that?" "Think
of it as a challenge. The biggest advantage a detective usually has is that he
knows what the crime is, that's his starting point. But we're two professional
investigators. Between the Russian Method and the Cuban Method let's see if we
can stop something before it happens." "Okay.
For the sake of argument, somebody's planning something and we don't know what.
But you force their hand when you come here with a picture of Pribluda with his
friends, the two car mechanics, at the old Havana Yacht Club, which,
incidentally, since the Revolution, is the Casa Cultural de Trabajadores de
Construction, but that aside, Rufo tries to kill you for this picture. It would
have been much easier to ignore you, so we will give some weight to that.
Second, you force someone's hand again when you visit the Havana Yacht Club and
Walls and O'Brien come out to take you off the dock and offer you some sort of
employment, which, by the way, is too ridiculous to consider. Again it would
have been easier to pay you no attention at all. Third, Luna beats you with a
bat, but he doesn't try to kill you, maybe because he can't find that picture.
Meanwhile, is anyone trying to kill you over AzuPanama? No. Trying to put the
smallest hole in you over AzuPanama? No. Forget about AzuPanama, it's all about
this picture," she said and stabbed it with her finger. "That's
one way to look at it." "Good.
But what this picture has to do with the future I don't know and neither do
you. You just like to play games with time." She
was all too accurate about that, Arkady thought. She was right about a lot.
"There are two ways back to whatever happened to Pribluda. One is Mongo
and the other, I think, is through O'Brien and Walls." "Well,
your friend O'Brien is nuts if he thinks he's going to start a casino. Not
while Fidel is alive. No casinos. That would be complete surrender. And let me
tell you something else, two men like O'Brien and Walls are not going to share
their fortune with someone who lands in a plane from "According
to a note on Rufo's wall something about " "Rufo
wrote 'Vi. HYC 2200 "This
is some plan." "I'd
also like to find Rufo's cell phone." "He
didn't have one. In "He
had a phone, we just haven't found it. I'd like to push that phone's memory and
learn who his best friends were." This
was the way he was at the boatyard, Ofelia thought. Absolutely certain about
something invisible. The problem was that she agreed. A hustler like Rufo was
incomplete without a cell phone. There
was an explosion of laughter outside as a couple walked by to a different unit.
Ofelia felt compelled to explain how she knew about the Rosita, the system of jineteras
and police. From the Ministry of the Interior an officer like Luna could
protect Hedy and a whole string of girls at tourist bars, hotels and marinas.
The Rosita was safe because it was under the wing of the police in the Playa
del Este. She added, "Luna also does things for his own protection. He and
Rufo were involved together in political activities, silencing dissidents.
Maybe some of those people are anti-Cuban but Luna and Rufo sometimes went too
far." "Did
Mongo?" No. "Captain
Arcos?" "I
don't think so." "And
were they all involved in Santeria, too, like the ceremony I saw?" "That
was not Santeria." Ofelia touched her necklace. "Leave the spirits to
me." The second time was not as ravenous but
just as sweet. Pleasure left alien for so long made the skin a sensual map to
be explored in detail from an undercurve of the breast to the pink of the
tongue to the fine hairs of her brow. She
had a variety of endearments in Spanish. He simply liked the name Ofelia, the
way it filled the mouth and spoke of dreaminess and flowers. The
second time had a slow rhythm that rolled up the spine. He wouldn't know the
beat but Ofelia did, the steady rocking of the tall drum, the sideways shake of
the shells on the gourd, the quicker pace of hourglass drums and then the
mounting acceleration of the iya, the biggest drum with the deepest
pitch and in the center of its skin a red resinous circle that spread the
warmer it grew until she felt herself stretched to the breaking point,
breathless while he held on, his heart pounding like a machine that hadn't
worked in ages. "Now
I know everything," Ofelia murmured. "I know all about you." She
laid her head on his shoulder. The oddest thing, he thought, was how well she
fit. Staring up at the dark, he felt he was free-floating now, as far from "What
does peligroso mean?" he asked. "Dangerous." "A
man said that at the Hemingway marina. We can start there." • • • In the dark Ofelia told him about the priest
in Hershey, the town where she grew up. The
priest was not only Spanish but so frail that people said it was his cassock
that held him up. He became a scandal, though, when he fell in love with the
manager's wife. The manager and his wife were American. Hershey was American.
There were two great smokestacks of the mill belching black smoke and the
wooden shacks of the workers, but in the center of town was a road of shade
trees and cool stone houses with screened windows for Americans, where only Americans
or Cubans with work passes were allowed. There was a baseball and basketball
team run by the Americans, and American women taught school for Cuban and
American children. Both the wife and the priest taught school. She
had angelic blond hair that shone through the mantilla she wore to church. All
Ofelia could remember about the husband was that his Oldsmobile always gleamed
because it was always being washed. The problem in Hershey was the heavy soot
that came from burning bagasse, the sugarcane after the juice had been pressed
out. Bagasse burned very hot and produced soot as thick as fur. It was well
known among maids who worked in the houses that the manager drank, and when he
was drunk he hit his wife. One time when he came to school and began to drag
her out, the priest stepped in between and that was probably when all three
realized that the priest and the wife were in love. Everyone saw, everyone
knew. Then
all three disappeared the same night. Weeks later when men cleaned ash from the
furnaces at the mill, they found a crucifix and pieces of bone. They recognized
the priest's crucifix from around his neck. Everyone assumed that the manager
killed him and threw his body in the oven and took his wife back to the States
and that was the end of it, except, a year later, someone came back from a trip
to New York and said he had seen the manager's wife walking on the street arm
in arm with the priest, who wasn't dressed like a priest anymore but just an
ordinary man. Everyone else in Hershey laughed at this account because they
remembered the priest, how timid he was. But Ofelia believed because she had
seen that very same priest fight a bull. Chapter Twenty-TwoOfelia had gone out earlier, and he didn't
recognize her at first when she returned in skintight white jeans, white
tube top and white-rimmed dark glasses, and carrying bags of coffee, sugar,
oranges. She had a blinding new aura, he thought, like a nuclear reactor when
control rods were withdrawn, and she had for him a shirt with the embroidered design
of a polo player, short-brimmed straw hat, fashionable hip pack, sunglasses. "Where
did you find these?" "There
are hotels in the Playa del Este with dollar boutiques. It's your friend
Pribluda's money, but I think he would approve, no?" He
picked up the shirt. "I don't think it's me." "You
have no choice. Luna has a picture of you. In case he circulates it, we have to
make you look different." "I'm
never going to look Cuban." "Not
Cuban, no. If people can mistake a tourist for you, maybe they'll mistake you
for a tourist." The
truth she admitted only to herself: that she had experienced a shameful thrill
walking into boutiques with so much money. She had also added a new comb and
brush to her floppy straw bag. Necessities for a certain role. And to dress a
man was a pleasure she felt in the marrow of her bones. She
folded his coat over a chair. "We paid for two nights, we can leave your
coat here for now." • • • The Playa del Este offered the overwhelming
nothingness of sand and sea and houses wearing a sun-bleached memory of color
rather than color itself. A billboard announced the imminent construction of a
French hotel by a "Socialist-Leninist Brigade of Workers," and down
the beach rose ranks of new hotels already built. Ofelia drove, and Arkady
discovered that to ride in Ofelia's DeSoto, a vintage monster with wedge-shaped
fins, was to be invisible. A white tourist with an attractive Cuban woman was
instantly categorized and dismissed. For the first time, he fit in because
there were examples of him and Ofelia everywhere, a tall Dutchman and a nearly
miniature black girl sitting at a table under a single Cinzano parasol that
constituted a sidewalk cafe, a Mexican with a blonde jinetera taking
the air in a bicycle cab, a beefy Englishman with a girl tottering on new
platform shoes. Ofelia identified their nationality at a glance. What Arkady
noticed was that each couple held hands but had no conversation. "They
each have a fantasy," Ofelia said. "He that he can leave his ordinary
life and live like a rich man on an island like this. She that he will fall in
love with her and take her away to what she thinks is the real world. It's
better they can't communicate." But
Ofelia, too, felt a welcome invisibility in her dark glasses and jeans, in the
attitude of her chin, and when they passed the plate glass of a gift shop she
saw the reflection of a perfectly acceptable jinetera and tourist,
perhaps slightly more handsome than usual. At the approach of a Cuban girl the
guard at the gate of the Marina Hemingway started from his box, only to step
back in when he saw Arkady escort her around the barrier. He led Ofelia by the
marina shop and across the grass to the dock where George Washington Walls had left
him off after his visit to the Havana Yacht Club. The same loud volleyball game
seemed to be in progress. Other Americans trafficked back and forth with bags
of laundry. A boy in cutoffs hand-trucked cases of beer to a blue-water yacht
the size of an iceberg, yet Ofelia treated the sight of three canals filled
with million-dollar power yachts as offhandedly as Cleopatra reviewing her
barges. Perhaps she was unimpressed, he thought, because of the Cuban girl
suspended in a hammock from a sailboat boom. "What's
so dangerous here?" Ofelia asked. "I
don't know. You've been here before?" "Once
or twice. You go ahead. I'm looking for someone." Among
the sameness of fiberglass boats the Gavilan had a dark, distinctive
silhouette, and Arkady picked it out at the slip Walls had been heading for
when he was waved off by a harbor master yelling "Peligroso!"
at snorkelers. There were no swimmers in the water now, and Arkady couldn't see
any problem. The seaplane tender nudged peacefully against the tire fenders of
the dock while lines fed electricity from a shoreside outlet box over the
boat's brass rail. No swimmers, no shouts, only the deep throbbing of a motor
yacht taxiing down the canal. He
continued along the canal, seeing no obstructions in the water, no flotsam by
the dock. A galvanized pipe led water to each slip; a foreign crew was washing
down a three-story megayacht, spraying one another, drinking the water, so it
was even potable. American boats in Cuba made for an interesting community,
grandiose white palaces mixed in with raffish fishing boats mustached with
stains, all bending the law by even being where they were. Arkady had no
experience on yachts himself, but having spent some time in Vladivostok around
factory ships and trawlers, he knew a little about bringing power on board, and
what caught his eye about the waist-high electrical distribution boxes spaced
along the dock of the Marina Hemingway was how few had ordinary outlets to plug
into. Instead, a power line led from the box while another led from the boat,
and where they met the lines were spliced and taped together, the connection
protected from water by a clear plastic shopping bag taped at the ends. He
worked his way to an empty outdoor bar at the far end of the dock. Fully half
the hookups he saw on the way went through spliced and bagged electrical lines
sitting in water between the hull of the boat and cement wall of the dock. The
transom of the Alabama Baron was smeared with fish guts and scales,
although the jinetera in the sailboat's hammock didn't look like a
fisherman to Ofelia. The girl had the Julia Roberts look from the film Pretty
Woman, very popular in "That's
beautiful," Ofelia said. "Isn't
it? Good price, too." "Diamond?" "Same
as. Last week, they had a chain for the ankle with the same stones. You think
that's a good price, but wait." The woman on the television spread the
bracelet on a bed of velvet and added a pair of earrings. "See, I knew.
You order too soon and you don't get the earrings. You have to know to wait and
then pick up your phone and give them your credit-card number and the bracelet's
yours in two days." Julia Roberts glanced over. "You're new
here." "I'm
looking for Teresa." The
television woman brushed back a mantle of hair to model the earrings, left,
right, frontal. Another girl in a top and thong came out of the cabin. Her hair
was almost as short as Ofelia's but peroxided blonde. "You know
Teresa?" "Yes.
Luna told me she would be here." "You
know Facundo?" The girl in the hammock sat up. "I
met him." "Teresa's
real upset," the blonde knelt by the rail and whispered. "She was
next door when Hedy got her throat slit. They were close." "She
got run in, too," Julia Roberts said. "Some police bitch gave her a
tough time. For helping feed her family, you know." "I
know," said Ofelia. "Teresa's
scared," the blonde said. "She went home to the country. I don't
think she's going to be here for a while." "Is
she afraid of the sergeant?" Ofelia asked. "You
met the sergeant, what do you think?" Julia Roberts said. "With all
due respect, what do you think? I just know him, but Teresa and Hedy were his
private girls, understand?" The
blonde checked out Ofelia's vital points. " Aren't you a little old to be
doing this? What are you, twenty-four, twenty-five?" "Twenty-nine." "Not
bad." "I-am-trying-to-sleep,"
a deep voice in American came from the bowels of the sailboat, and a form
struggled up the galley steps. It had to be the "She's
with me," Arkady said. He had worked his way back along the dock to the
tender and the sailboat, berthed one behind the other. "We were just
admiring the boats." The
baron glanced around at the beer cans on his deck until he noticed that Arkady
meant the Gavilan. "Yeah,
sure, that's a fucking classic. A genuine rumrunner, everything but the bullet
holes." Rumrunner?
Arkady liked that. That smacked of Capone. "Fast?" "I'd
say so. You're talking a V-12, four hundred horses, sixty knots, faster than a
torpedo boat. 'Cept with a woodie you spend all day at the dock sanding,
varnishing, polishing." "That's
a drawback," Arkady agreed. "No
time to fish. Of course, they do all the upkeep for him here. He gets
special treatment. Where you from?" " "Really?"
The baron digested that. "You fish?" "I
wish I could. I don't have enough time." "Locals
keeping you otherwise occupied?" The baron's eye returned to Ofelia, who
kept her face blank of comprehension. "Busy." "Well,
it's a fish or fuck world, it really is. I'll tell you what, the last thing in
the world I want is lift the embargo. "What
do you mean, 'special treatment'?" he asked the baron. "The
owner of that boat is George Washington Walls. Their hero. Hey, I was a fireman
twenty years, I know about heroes. Heroes don't put a gun to no pilot's
head." "You're
not just...?" Arkady raised his eyebrows delicately. "Racist?
Not me." The baron waved his arm toward the jineteras and Ofelia
as proof. "For
example, then?" "For
example." The baron was hot now. He hung on to a guy wire for balance and
pointed to the hookup servicing the tender. "Check out the power lead
installed specially for him just yesterday. Now, look at mine." Where the Alabama
Baron's lead dipped into the water was the typical splice in a bag that
was filthier than the others. " I understand they're clever devils here
and they got American boats and European boats with whole different electrical
frequencies and they got to jury-rig a new line for every boat that hooks up,
but I'm a fireman and I know hot lines and water. Get this lead in the water
and spring a little leak and you will fry yourself some very surprised fish.
All I'm saying is, how come Senor Walls has himself the only berth in the
entire marina with a new power lead?" "And
if a swimmer was in the water?" "Kill
him." "Heart
attack?" "Stop
it cold." "And
there would be burn marks?" "Only
if he touched the line. I've seen bodies in tubs with a hair dryer, same thing.
Look at her" – the baron gave Ofelia an approving nod – "like she
understands every word." The very statement that Teresa had gone
back to the country made Ofelia believe that the jinetera was lying
low in "It's
not like a bolt of lightning but yes" – the doctor agreed with her –
"if a live wire falls into water, there would obviously be a charge." "How
strong?" "It
depends. Submerged in water, power is diffused exponentially depending on the
distance from the source. Then there is the size and physical condition of the
victim, and the peculiarities of each individual heart." "A
fatal charge?" "Depending.
Alternating current, for example, is more dangerous than direct current. Salt
water is a better conductor than fresh." "Leaving
marks?" "It
all depends. If there was contact, there would be a burn. Farther away, a
person might only experience a tingle in his extremities. But the heart and the
respiratory center of the brain are regulated by electrical impulses and an
electrical shock can initiate fibrillations without necessarily causing trauma
to tissue." "Meaning,"
Ofelia said, "that somewhere between too near and too far to a live wire
in water, a victim could suffer a heart attack and there would be no entry or
exit mark, no burns, absolutely nothing?" There
was a silence at the doctor's end. Traffic rattled on the Malecуn. Arkady
seemed to be enjoying his cigarette enormously. "You
could put it that way," Blas finally said. "Why
didn't you say so before?" "Everything
in context. Where would a neumбtico encounter an electrical wire in
the middle of the sea?" There was a burst of static and Blas changed the
subject. "Have you seen the Russian?" "No."
She met Arkady's eyes with hers. "Well,"
Blas said, "I notice that he left a new photograph of Pribluda for
me." "Have
you matched it to the body yet?" "No.
There are other murders, you know." "But
you will try? It's important to him. You know, as it turns out he's not a total
idiot." Since
they'd skipped breakfast, they stopped at a park table for ice cream. Huge
leathery trees overhung a playground and a shooting gallery. Ofelia was going after
Teresa and Arkady wanted to see Mostovoi's apartment again, but at the moment
the detective looked like a movie star on the "We
can meet here later and have ice cream for dinner," Arkady said. "At
six? And if we miss each other, then ten o'clock at the Yacht Club and we'll
see what that has to do with Ofelia
was suspicious. "What will you do in the meantime?" "A
Russian named Mostovoi has a picture of a dead rhinoceros I want to take a look
at." "Why?" "Because
he didn't show it to me before." "That's
all?" "A
simple visit. And you?" "You
said last night when you followed Luna he was pushing a cart of what looked to
you like black-market goods. Well, what goods? Maybe they're still there.
Someone has to see." "You're
not going alone?" "Do
I look crazy? No, I'll take plenty of help, believe me," Ofelia said. She
looked very composed for a moment and then pulled down her dark glasses in
shock. Arkady
turned to face two girls in maroon school jumpers. They had green eyes and hair
streaked with amber and held cones of ice cream close enough to drip on his
shoulder. An energetic gray-haired woman in a housedress and sneakers followed
with a vengeance. "Mama,"
Ofelia asked, "why aren't the girls in school?" "They
should be in school but they should see their mother from time to time, too,
don't you think?" Ofelia's mother took in Arkady. "Oh my God, it's
true. Everyone's meeting a nice Spaniard, a little Englishman, you found a
Russian. My God." "I
just asked her to bring some toiletries," Ofelia told Arkady. "She
looks unhappy," Arkady said. "Don't
offer her your chair." But
the deed was done and her mother was settling in where Arkady had been. "My
mother," Ofelia muttered as an introduction. "My
God," her mother said. "My
pleasure," Arkady said. With
a pride Ofelia couldn't suppress, "My daughters Muriel and Marisol.
Arkady." The
girls rose on tiptoe for his kiss. "Where
do you even find a Russian?" her mother asked. "I thought they were
gone like the dodos." "He's
a senior investigator from "Good.
Did he bring food?" "They
look just like you," Arkady told Ofelia. "You
dressed so nice." Muriel looked Ofelia up and down. "Those
are new clothes." Ofelia's mother took a second look. "No
hablo espanol," Arkady said. "Just
as well," Ofelia assured him. "He
bought them?" "We
are working together." "Then
that's different, that's absolutely different. You're colleagues exchanging
gifts of esteem. I see possibilities here." "It's
not what you think." "Please,
don't disabuse me when I have hopes. He's not so bad. A little lean. A week or
two of rice and beans and he'll be fine." "Do
you like him?" Marisol asked Ofelia. "He's
a nice man." "Pushkin
was a Russian poet," her mother said. "He was part African." "I'm
sure he knows that." "Pushkin?"
Arkady thought he heard something to hang on to. "Does
he have a gun?" Muriel asked. "He's
not carrying a gun." "But
he can shoot?" Marisol asked. "The
best." "The
target gallery!" the girls shouted together. "They
see you so little," Ofelia's mother said. "You shouldn't begrudge
them a little fun, and your Russian marksman can show off." The
shooting gallery was a gutted bus on blocks, the back end replaced by a counter
of air rifles that faced an array of American jet planes and paratroopers cut
from soda cans. Behind them, on a black dropcloth, an artist had added cutout
stars and comets and a vista of the Malecуn with drivers shooting from
convertibles. Sound effects were supplied by a tape of machine-gun fire. The
sisters pushed Arkady into an open space at the counter. "He
should feel right at home," her mother said. "Pump
it." Muriel pushed the rifle into his hands. "You
have to pump it," Ofelia said as she paid. "First
the planes, first the planes," Marisol said. The
rifle was a toy with a tiny bead at the tip of the barrel. He fired at a
particularly mean-looking bomber, and the paratrooper next to it jumped. "What
are you aiming at?" Ofelia asked. "I'm
aiming at everything." The
wrong target was the best he did. Kids around him made planes hop, spin, dance,
but for all the shiny, dangling invaders every other shot of his thudded
ignominiously into the backdrop. "He
must be high up in the police," her mother said. "I don't think he
ever shot at anything." The
girls pushed a rifle into Ofelia's hands. She gave the lever two quick pumps
and aimed at a big bomber from Tropicola. "I
think the bead's a little off," Arkady suggested. The
bomber pinged and spun. "No,
Mama," Marisol complained. "In the center." Balancing
her glasses on her forehead and tucking the stock more firmly against her
cheek, Ofelia pumped and fired at a more steady pace. Silvery planes swung and
paratroopers sang and danced. A comet, too, for good measure. The glasses
dropped down over her eyes, it didn't matter, she had half the targets swaying
at once. Arkady thought of the plane that had brought him less than a week ago,
which now seemed an age. Here he was out in the open with Luna looking for him,
but what better camouflage was there than a Cuban family? What could be more
strange and more natural? Twelve hits with twelve shots earned Ofelia the prize
of a can of lighter fluid that her mother tucked into a net bag. As she said,
"Everything counts." Appeased,
the girls allowed themselves to be kissed by Ofelia and taken in hand by their
grandmother, who dipped into her bag to give Ofelia a plastic toiletries bag
and something wrapped in greasy newspaper. "Banana bread from Muriel's
bananas. You remember the bananas?" "I
can't take this bread." "Your
daughters helped make it. They would feel much better if you did." Muriel
and Marisol made their eyes huge. "Okay,
okay. Thank you, girls." A farewell round of kisses. "Feed
it to him," her mother advised. "And take care of him." Chapter Twenty-ThreeWhat Arkady remembered of Mostovoi's
accommodations on the sixth floor of the Hotel Sierra Maestra were a runway
balcony of parked tricycles and, within, a living room with movie posters,
African artifacts, a plush shag rug, leather sofa and a balcony facing the sea.
He also recalled a front-door lock and deadbolt, a sensible precaution
considering the cameras and equipment inside. And in case he thought of
rapelling athletically by rope from the hotel roof down to Mostovoi's oceanview
balcony, he had noticed in Rufo's videotape Sucre Noir that the
sliding glass door was jammed shut by a steel bar. Spetznaz troops knew all
about swinging in through glass doors; Arkady did not. Also, the trick was not
just getting in, it was getting Mostovoi out and taking another look at the
photographs on the wall. Mostovoi
was correct in calling his hotel Central The
last time Arkady had visited, Mostovoi had switched a photograph of a sailboat
for the safari picture. Or perhaps he had given away the rhino since often
tired of seeing a dead animal on his wall. The safari picture, however, had
looked like the exotic centerpiece of his private gallery, and Arkady wanted to
see it on his own before Mostovoi could rearrange the pictures again. The idea
was to get Mostovoi out in a rush. Arkady
may not have been a marksman or a commando, but one valuable thing he had
learned was that fuel for mayhem was everywhere. Behind a door marked ENTRADA
PROHIBIDA filthy drapes lay on a three-legged chair of black leatherette
set between plastic bags of corn kernels and potato chips and containers of
cooking oil. Arkady made sure the other lobby exits were unlocked before he
carried the chair and drapes to the popcorn machine and returned for the chips
and oil. He opened the containers and poured the viscous oil down the hotel
steps, threw the drapes on the oil, added the bags of chips to the drapes and
lit the last bag with his lighter. Rufo's lighter, actually. The plastic bag
caught nicely and potato chips, dry and saturated with grease, were by weight
about the best kindling on earth. The chair and drapery were polyurethane, a
form of solid petroleum. Cooking oil had to get hot enough to vaporize, but
when it did it was a hard fire to put out. Then he climbed the stairs to the
sixth floor. Arkady
took his time. The alarm, an old-fashioned clapper on a bell, sounded before he
was halfway up, and by the time he reached the stairway door on Mostovoi's
floor and looked down, the blaze was a brilliant orange accelerated by the
grease of the chips while darker flames lapped at the chair and drapes.
Residents lined the balconies for the spectacle of motorcycle police leading a
red fire-engine pumper and a tank. The hotel was only blocks away from The
apartment looked again like the residence of a middle-level Russian diplomat
abroad decorated with souvenirs of a man who had seen much of the world, who
cleaned for himself better than most bachelors, with an interest in books and
the arts, who kept his own creative efforts under wraps. The photograph Arkady
had noticed in the videotape was on the wall, back in its place between the
pictures of a colleague at the It
was a photograph of five men with assault rifles, one standing and four
kneeling around a dead rhinoceros. Now he could see that the poor animal's feet
were shredded and its stomach winking with shiny intestine. The men were not
hunters but soldiers, one Russian soldier and three Cubans. Mostovoi, twenty
years younger and balding even then. Erasmo, his beard mere boyish wisps. A
coltish, skinny Luna cradling an AK-47. Tico with the bright, reckless smile of
a leader, not the nearsighted focus of a man searching for leaks in an inner
tube. And standing behind them in a safari jacket of many pockets, George
Washington Walls. On the bottom border was written, "The best demolition
team in Arkady
moved through the rest of the apartment before Mostovoi returned. On his first
visit Arkady hadn't seen the autographed photographs in the hallway of Mostovoi
with famous Russian film directors or the erotic boudoir series of Cuban girls
that seemed to have been shot in his own bed. Arkady looked in the bureau,
night table and under the pillow. A side table held a laptop, scanner, printer.
The laptop denied him access as soon as he turned it on. The chances of hitting
Mostovoi's password were remote. There was no gun in the drawer or under the
bed. Arkady
walked farther down the hall into a small room redone as a darkroom with a
black curtain inside the door. A red light was on, as if Mostovoi had been
interrupted in the middle of developing. Arkady squeezed between an enlarger
and trays of sour-smelling fixer and developer. Red film curlicued from a red
clothesline. Held to the light, the film had nothing more than volleyball in
the nude, and the developed pictures pinned to a board were embassy fare: Russians
visiting a sugar combine, delivering postcards from the children of Back
in the hall, Arkady had to push past more cabinets of photographs. He riffled through
contact sheets of vacations in Going
by Rufo's sort of calendar – the urgency, that is, in trying to kill someone
who would be in town for only a week – Arkady felt that time was running out.
His time was. Tomorrow night he could be boarding his flight for home, he and
Pribluda, but he felt he was still before the event, whatever it was that would
make sense of the Havana Yacht Club, Rufo and Hedy, and the best demolition
team in Africa. Ofelia didn't bring anyone. Careful not
to scuff her new shoes, she walked up the steps of the Centro Russo-Cubano,
dropping her dark glasses into her bag with the banana bread as she stepped
into the lobby, which had changed from the day before: the statues of the cane
cutter and the fisherman had toppled facedown on the tiles, the ladder
stretched by a splintered counter and no car sat on the lobby floor. Dust
climbed the red ray of light falling from the stained glass overhead. Centro
Russo-Cubano? From what she knew of this place, when the Russians thought they
led the way to the glorious future, it was a very rare Cuban who had ever been
invited in. She
took a deep breath. Ofelia had come alone to see whatever Luna had carted in
the night before because she didn't want to involve anyone else until she knew
what evidence she could find. The PNR did not accuse an officer of the Ministry
of the Interior lightly. That was her professional reason. The real reason was
personal. Nothing humiliated Ofelia more than being afraid, and inside the
trunk of the Lada she had been afraid to the point of tears. She took extra
target practice at the Guanabo range just so that wouldn't happen. A dusty
mirror hung over the counter. She caught sight of herself as she took the gun
from her straw bag and swung, body and weapon moving as one dangerous little jinetera. Being
back in the lobby made her taste the hemp and coconut milk again. That was the
way Luna had picked her up, like a coconut to be thrown into a bag and the bag
tossed into a trunk. She'd tried to find the Lada on the way, and it had
disappeared, perhaps already being cannibalized in an Atares warehouse. A shiny
track showed where the cart's iron wheels had rolled over the floor tiles of a
hammer-and-sickle pattern toward a grim corridor of cement walls and doors of
Cuban hardwood. Ofelia
kicked the first door open, entered an empty luggage room, scanned with the gun
and returned to the hall before anyone could approach behind her. The next door
had the title of "Director" and promised to be larger and farther
from the dim light of the lobby. She'd reloaded the gun but she should have
brought a flashlight. She knew she should have thought of that. This
was the sort of situation where a person had to gauge what they were most
likely to encounter. A sergeant of the Ministry of the Interior carried the
same firearm she did, but a man from the Oriente might have more confidence in
his machete. Also, he knew the layout of the Centro Russo-Cubano, she didn't.
He could pop out of any corner like an oversized goblin. Ofelia
shoved the door with her foot, slipped in and crouched against a wall. When her
eyes adjusted she saw that the office had been stripped of desk, chairs, rug.
All that was left were a bust of Lenin on a pedestal and horizontal red-and-black
stripes spray-painted on the walls, windows, across Lenin's face. She heard
something move in the hall. It
occurred to Ofelia that perhaps she should have changed into her uniform. If
the PNR found her dressed like this, what would they assume? And Blas? He'd
think what fun they could have had in She
slid out of the office on one knee aiming left, then right. Whatever it was had
stopped, although Luna could be coming from either direction. This was a time
when target practice paid off just for holding a heavy gun steady for so long.
Banana bread was a ludicrous item to be toting and she considered lightening
her load. But the girls had helped bake it. The
next office was empty except for corn kernels and feathers underfoot. She heard
a step behind her again, tentative, hanging back, and she tried to get low
enough to sight on a silhouette. She moved across the hall into what had been a
meeting room with no table, no chairs, no windows, just a faint row of framed
Russian faces and ships. She thought if there was more than one individual
after her this was a perfect opportunity to lock the doors at each end and seal
her in as effectively as entombing her. Slower,
she told herself, although she was blinking through sweat, mouth breathing too,
not a good sign, and her shoulders ached from the weight of the gun. She was in
the dark until she opened a door to a linen room, where the light poured
through unbroken windows onto shelves that once held sheets and pillowcases
still white; even the dust was white as talc. On the floor a headless white
chicken lay in a circle of dried blood. She left the door open to illuminate
the hallway and followed a sign that pointed to "Buffet." Checked
into a pantry with nothing except lists on the wall in Russian of meat, dairy
and starchy goods expected six years before. There was a note to a certain This
was the darkest yet. Reentering the hall was like stepping into a pit. Nothing
but black behind her, and nothing ahead but faint light tracing a buffet door.
She could feel as much as hear the step behind her, it was that close. Her
father had cut cane, she knew how cane cutters worked. First slice to the base,
second high to lop off the cane head. Arkady had said Luna was right-handed,
which meant that, constrained by the dimensions of the hall, a downward swing
to the left. She got as small she could on the right side. She
felt breathing on her. A hairy face pressed against hers and she reached out to
feel two stubby horns. A goat. She'd forgotten about the goats. The rest were
gone or this was the only one that had found a way down to the ground floor. A
small goat with a stiff beard, sharp ribs and an inquisitive muzzle that
pressed into her bag. The banana bread, of course, Ofelia thought. She laid her
gun between her legs, unwrapped the bread and broke off half. She couldn't see
the goat but she could hear it devour the bread as if it hadn't been fed for
days. The scent of the bread must have been an irresistible trail through the
building. She was glad her Russian hadn't seen this. When
the goat tried to tear up the rest of the bread Ofelia gave it a not unkind
kick, then scratched its scrawny neck to make amends. Growing up in Hershey,
she'd had to deal with goats, chickens, voracious hogs. Discouraged,
the goat backed away with a tremulous baa, and although Ofelia expected it to
go the way it had come and return to the herd, something seemed to pull it in
the opposite direction. She couldn't see the goat, but she heard its hooves tap
closer to the buffet door, to the ghostly smell of food six years past. It was
a swinging door. The goat nosed it open, there was a glimpse of dingy light,
enough to invite the goat and it trotted through. The door flapped twice,
settled, and then flew open to flame and smoke. Although
she was shielded at the moment of detonation Ofelia's ears rang, her face felt
scoured. Cement dust filled the dark hall, and devoid of both sight and hearing
she swung the gun one way and then the other until the air cleared enough for
her to make out again the faint light that traced the buffet door. She crawled
forward, felt a cord hanging slack on its lower lip and pushed the door open. It
had only been a fragmentation grenade, Ofelia thought, but in close quarters it
accomplished its mission well. Half the goat was close to the door, half well
down the hall, like a botched job of being shot from a cannon. One wall was
pocked from metal shards. Burn marks on the other showed where the grenade had
been placed at floor level, the cord around its ring. Soft clots dripped from
the ceiling. Beyond,
the hall opened to the buffet, where Russian sea captains and their officers
had once been served cognac and cakes, and farther on she saw a large kitchen
with a vent that someone from the outside had once tried to break through,
bending a louver enough let a single finger of light pierce the murk. She
waited for the nerve to move forward. It would come any second. Arkady missed the park rendezvous with
Ofelia. He sat in Mostovoi's living room facing the door and flipped through
the pages of an address book he had found in the nightstand. Pinero, Rufo.
Luna, Sgt. Facundo. Guzman, Erasmo. Walls. No Tico that Arkady could find, but
otherwise the old team was all accounted for. Plus, Vice Consul Bugai, Havana
hotels and garages, French film labs, many girls' names with notes on age,
color, height. Eight
o'clock. Mostovoi was taking a long time to reappear. The emergency was long
over, fire engines gone and residents returned to their apartments. He'd
expected Mostovoi to enter, be surprised and affect outrage at the sight of an
interloper. Arkady would ask him questions about Luna and Walls and pose them
in a manner designed to make Mostovoi resort to the gun in the refrigerator. It
was Arkady's experience that people who were upset were much more talkative
when they felt they had turned the tables. If Mostovoi actually pulled the
trigger, that would be information too. Of course, this scenario depended on
Mostovoi's not carrying another gun in one of his camera bags. Arkady
only had to close his eyes for images to appear. Pribluda's Nine
o'clock. The day had disappeared while he had waited for a man who wasn't
coming back. Arkady carefully replaced the address book where he had found it,
refiled the photos in their boxes and slipped out the door to the balcony,
where tots up late raced tricycles back and forth. From halfway across Miramar
the lights of the Russian embassy stared back. He took the elevator down. The
popcorn machine was gone and the stairs were charred; otherwise it was as if he
hadn't come at all. Following
First Avenue along the water, he put one foot in front of the other in the
manner, he thought, of a sailing ship towed by rowboats when the wind had died.
Not until he passed Erasmo's family house did he realize his legs were taking
him to the rendezvous with Ofelia at the Havana Yacht Club. "Vi. HYC 2200
Angola." Tonight was the night. Or
maybe not. He was late when the royal palms of the Yacht Club's driveway came
into view and Ofelia's DeSoto wasn't in sight at all. The club was black, the
only lights two flashlight beams patrolling the long driveway. No sound except
cars circling the rotary and the laugh of a bird nesting in a palm. This had
been his brilliant idea, his chance to jump ahead of events. Whatever this
event was, it was on a different Friday night. He looked for Ofelia on the
other streets feeding the rotary. Although half an hour didn't seem very late
in Cuba, she wasn't there. A
taxi stopped for him and Arkady dropped into the seat beside the driver, an old
man with a cold cigar. "A
donde?" A
good question, Arkady thought. He had gone everywhere he could think. Back to
Mostovoi's? To the Playa del Este and Ofelia? See, this was exactly the way
he'd lost Irina, he reminded himself. Inattention. How else could a man miss
not one but two rendezvous? In English he said, "I'm looking for someone.
Maybe we can just drive around." "A
donde?" "If
we could drive around here, around the Yacht Club?" "Where?"
the old man took the cigar from his mouth, blew the word as if it were a ring
of smoke. "Is
there an event nearby for Angola?" "Angola?
Quieres Angola?" "I
don't want to go to the embassy for Angola." "No,
no. Entiendo perfectamente." He motioned for Arkady to be patient
while he pulled a stack of business cards from his shirt pocket, found one and
showed Arkady a well-thumbed pasteboard card with an embossed tropical sun over
the words "Angola, Un Paladar Africano en Miramar." "Muy
cerca." "It's
near?" "Claro."
The driver stuffed the card back in his shirt. Arkady
understood the routine. In Moscow when a taxi driver delivered a tourist to a
restaurant, he had an arrangement by which he collected a little extra from the
establishment. The same in Havana, apparently. Arkady thought they'd just drive
by in case the DeSoto was there. The
Angola was on a dark street of large Spanish colonial homes only a minute away.
Over a tall iron gate hung a neon sign of a sun so golden it seemed to drip.
The taxi driver took one look and kept on going. "Lo
siento, no puedes. Esta reservado esta noche." "Go
by again." "No
podemos. Es que digo, completemente reservado. Cualquier otro dнa, si?"
Arkady
didn't speak Spanish but he understood completemente reservado. All
the same he said, "Just drive by." No. Arkady
got out at the corner, paid the driver enough for a good cigar and walked back
under a dramatic canopy of ragged cedar branches. Along both curbs were new
Nissans and Range Rovers, some with drivers sitting almost at attention behind
the wheel. Along the sidewalk were shadows within shadows and the orange swirls
of cigarettes used in conversation, voices hushing as Arkady slowed to admire a
white Imperial convertible reflecting the neon sun. When he pushed the gate
open, a figure materialized from the dark to stop him. Captain Arcos in
civilian clothes, like an armadillo out of his shell. "It's
all right." Arkady pointed to a table inside the gate. "I'm with
them." The
Angola was an outdoor restaurant set in a garden of underlit tree ferns and
tall African statues. Two men in white aprons worked an open-air grill and
although Arkady had been told that a paladar could serve no more than
twelve diners at a time there were, at tables arranged around the grill, easily
twenty customers, all men, in their forties and fifties, most white, all with a
bearing of command, prosperity, success and all Cuban except for John O'Brien
and George Washington Walls. "I
knew it" – O'Brien waved Arkady in. "I told George that you'd show
up." "He
did." Walls shook his head in wonder more at O'Brien than at Arkady. "When
I heard Rufo was so stupid as to write the place and time on a wall I knew you
couldn't fail." O'Brien had another chair brought. Even the developer was in
a Cuban guayabera; the evening's uniform seemed to be graybeards. The two
Cubans at the table looked to O'Brien for a lead; although they were hard,
mature men, O'Brien seemed to have for them the status of a priest among boys.
The entire restaurant had gone quiet, including Erasmo in a wheelchair two
tables away with Tico and Mostovoi, their old comrade-in-arms, the only other
non-Cuban. It was strange to see the mechanics so spruced. " It's perfect
that you're here." O'Brien seemed genuinely pleased. "Everything's
falling into place." Walls
said to the Cuban next to him, "El nuevo bolo." Relief
spread to every face except Erasmo's. He telegraphed Arkady a glum look from
across the garden. Mostovoi saluted. "I'm
the new Russian?" Arkady asked. "It
makes you part of the club," O'Brien said. "What
club is that?" "The
Havana Yacht Club, what else?" Waiters
poured water and rum, although coffee seemed as popular at the tables, an odd
choice for the hour, Arkady thought. "How do you know I visited
Rufo's?" "You
know George is a big fight fan. He went to see some sparring today at the
Gimnasio Atares, and a trainer told him about a white man in a black coat he
saw come out of Rufo's last night. George went in and there it was right on the
wall, a clue no one as sharp as you was going to miss. Maybe you would, maybe
you wouldn't. We have to be careful. Remember, I have been the target of more
police stings and entrapment than you could dream of. By the way, keep in mind
that all our friends here tonight still remember the Russian language. Watch
what you say." Walls
ran his eyes over Arkady's new clothes. "Big: improvement." : The
chefs lifted lobsters from a huge sack to a cutting board, where they sliced
and cleaned the underside of the tails before setting the lobsters alive onto
the grill, poking them with wooden sticks when they tried to crawl from the
flames. Arkady saw no menus, no African food. The two Cubans at Arkady's table
shook his hand but offered no names. One was white, the other mulatto, but they
shared the musculature, direct gaze and obsessionally trimmed fingernails and
hair of military men. "What
does this club do?" Arkady asked. "They
can do anything," O'Brien said. "People wonder, what will happen to The
lobsters were monsters, the largest Arkady had ever seen. They reddened among
flares and sparks. "But
the wonderful thing about evolution," O'Brien said, "is that it can't
be stopped. Eliminate business. Make the army the preferred career route for
idealistic young men. Send them to foreign wars, but don't give them enough
money to fight. Make them earn it. Make them trade in ivory and diamonds so
they have enough ammunition to defend themselves, and you end up with an
interesting group of entrepreneurs. Then, because it works cheap, when the army
comes home make it go into farming, hotels, sugar. Reassign heroes to run the
tourism and citrus and nickel industries. Let me tell you, negotiating a
contract with a construction company from Milan is as good as two years at
Harvard Business School. The ones here tonight are the crиme de la crиme." "The
Havana Yacht Club?" "They
like the name," Walls said. "It's just a social thing." When
the first lobsters were done, a chef stirred a glass bowl full of twists of
paper, picked four twists, unrolled and read them before sending the lobsters
to a table. It seemed to Arkady a better system for a lottery than a
restaurant. How did the chef know who ordered what? Why were there only two
choices, lobster or nothing? "I
thought private restaurants weren't allowed to serve lobster," Arkady
said. "Maybe
tonight is an exception," O'Brien said. Arkady
caught sight of Mostovoi again. "Why am I the new Russian? Why can't
Mostovoi be?" "This
is an enterprise that needs more than a pornographer. You've replaced Pribluda.
Everyone can accept that." O'Brien adopted a forgiving tone. "And you
can keep the photograph Pribluda sent to you. It would have been nice if you'd
offered it as a sign of trust at some point, but you're on the team now." "Rufo
died for that picture." "Thank
God, I much prefer you. I mean, it's worked out wonderfully." "Do
some of these people work in the Ministry of Sugar? Are some of them involved
with AzuPanama?" "We
met some that way, yes. These are the men who make decisions, as much as anyone
can make decisions besides Fidel. Some are deputy ministers, some are still
generals and colonels, men who have known each other all their lives and now in
their prime. Naturally, they're making plans. It is a normal human aspiration,
the need to better themselves and leave something for their families. The same
as Fidel. He has one legitimate son and a dozen illegitimate children salted
away in the government. These men are no different." "The
casino fits somewhere in here?" "I
hope so." "Why
are you telling me all this?" "John
always tells the truth," Walls said. "Just that there are a lot of
layers to the truth." "Casino,
combat boots, AzuPanama. Which is real and which is fake?" "In
Cuba," O'Brien said, "there is a fine line between the real and the
ridiculous. As a boy, Fidel wrote Franklin Roosevelt and asked for an American
dollar. Later Fidel was scouted as a pitcher by the major leagues. Here was a
man who could have been a model American, an inch away. Instead, he becomes
Fidel. Incidentally, the scouting report was 'Fair fastball, no control.' At
heart, my dear Arkady, it's all ridiculous." The
body in the bay was dead, Rufo was dead, Hedy and her Italian had been slashed
to death, Arkady thought. That was real. The Cubans at the table listened with
half an ear as they watched lobsters continue to march off the grill and the
curious ceremony of reading papers at random from a bowl. It didn't seem to
matter who had lobster so much as that they all did. Arkady had the sense that
if one anonymous twist of paper was blank, if one diner hadn't ordered lobster,
the group to a man would have stood and left at once. "Do
you mind...?" Arkady nodded toward Erasmo's table. "Please."
O'Brien gave his blessing. Tico
was happily dismembering his crustacean and Mostovoi was caught sucking on a
claw. "You
can't get lobster this succulent anywhere else in the world." Mostovoi
wiped his mouth as Arkady dropped into a chair. There was no sign from the
photographer that he had connected the fire at the Sierra Maestra to Arkady. Erasmo
didn't say a word or touch his lobster. Arkady remembered him drinking ron
peleo and swaying in his wheelchair to Mongo's drum at the santero's,
leaning out the Jeep like a bearded buccaneer as they cruised the Malecуn. This
was a more subdued Erasmo. "So,
this is the real Havana Yacht Club," Arkady said to him. "No Mongo,
no fish." "It's
a different club." "Apparently." "You
don't understand. These are all men who fought together in Angola and Ethiopia,
who fought side by side with Russians, who shared a common experience." "Except
for O'Brien." "And
you." "Me?"
Arkady didn't remember the initiation. "How did that happen?" Erasmo's
head lolled as if he'd been trying unsuccessfully to drink himself into a
stupor. "How does it happen? By accident. It's like you're in the middle
of a play, say, Act II, and someone wanders onto the stage. Somebody new, never
in the script. What do you do? First, try to get him off, drop a sandbag on him
or lure him behind the scenery so you can hit him over the head with a minimum
of fuss because there is an audience watching. If you can't get the son of a
bitch off the stage what do you do then? You start incorporating him into the
play, find him a role of someone who is missing, feed him some lines as
smoothly as you can so that the Third Act goes virtually unchanged, just like
you always planned." The
last lobster was delivered. Every plate was covered by a lobster or a
well-picked carapace, although Arkady had noticed that many guests had shown no
interest in their dinner once it had been served. A tall man with aviator
glasses rose with a glass of rum. He was the same army officer Arkady had seen
in a picture with Erasmo and the Comandante. The man proposed a toast to
"The Havana Yacht Club." Everyone
but Arkady and Erasmo stood, although Erasmo raised his glass. "Now
what?" Arkady asked. "A meeting's going to begin?" "The
meeting's over." Erasmo added in a whisper, "Good luck." In
fact, men were leaving as soon as they set down their glass, not pouring out as
a crowd but slipping under the neon sun to the dark of the street in twos and
threes. Arkady heard a muffled sound of car doors opening and engines starting.
Mostovoi vanished like a shadow. Tico pushed Erasmo, who leaned his brow on his
hand like Hamlet considering his options. Soon the only ones left in the paladar
were the staff, Walls, O'Brien and Arkady. "You're
part of the club now," O'Brien said. "How does it feel?" "A
little mysterious." "Well,
you've only been here six days. Cuba takes a lifetime to understand. Wouldn't
you say, George?" "Absolutely." O'Brien
pushed himself to his feet. "Anyway, we have to run. It's almost the
witching hour and, frankly, I'm bushed." Arkady
said, "Pribluda was involved in this?" "If
you really want to know, come by the boat tomorrow evening." "I'm
flying to Moscow tomorrow night." "It's
up to you," Walls said and opened the gate. The Imperial glowed at the
curb. "What
is the Havana Yacht Club?" Arkady asked. "What
do you want it to be?" John O'Brien said. "A few guys goofing off
with a fishing line. A dump of a building waiting to be touched by a magic wand
and be turned into a hundred million dollars. A group of patriots, veterans of
their country's wars, having a social evening. Whatever you want, that's what
it is." Chapter Twenty-FourThe DeSoto was parked outside the Rosita.
Ofelia was inside on the bed, curled up tightly in the sheets. Arkady
undressed in the dark, slid beside her and knew by her heartbeat that she was
awake. He ran his hand over her breast and up her arm to the gun in her hand. "You
went back to Luna's place." "I
wanted to see what he had there." "You
went alone?" he asked and read her silence. "You said you would take
someone with you. I would have gone." "I
can't be afraid to go into a house alone." "I
am, often. What did you find?" She
described the condition of the Centro Russo-Cubano, the lobby and each room as
she had investigated them, the goat, the buffet door and the grenade that was
wired to it. Also how she had picked her way through the aftermath of the blast
into a buffet and kitchen without ovens, freezers or refrigerators, then
retraced her route back to the lobby, set the ladder on the balcony rail and
climbed to the mezzanine to search the rooms on that level, opening every door
with the tip of a broom. There were no more booby traps, no goats, nothing but
their droppings and open jars of Russian hair pomade that they had licked
clean. By
then their meeting time at the park had come and gone, and when she went to the
Havana Yacht Club he never showed. She let go of the gun and kissed his mouth
and released him slowly. "I thought you weren't coming." "We
just missed each other, that's all." He
gathered her in his arms and felt her slide down him. In a moment, he was in
her and she wrapped herself around him. Her tongue was sweet, her back hard,
and where he joined her she was endlessly deep. They
ate banana bread with beer while Arkady told Ofelia about his trip to
Mostovoi's apartment, everything except the fire. Arson she might be a stickler
about. He had to smile. She had sneaked through his defenses, a small bird on
barbed wire. There was also pleasure – morbid or professional – in talking with
a colleague. She was a colleague even though her point of view was not so much
from a different world as from a different universe. She was a colleague even
though she sat naked, cross-legged, in the haze of light produced by a power
brownout. "There
are parts of Arkady
looked at the date. "It's two weeks old." "My
mother doesn't read it, she only gets it for wrapping food. Anyway, whatever
Luna had to move – TV, VCR, shoes – he moved. It was gone." "He
tried to kill us in the car. He killed Hedy and her Italian friend if the
combination of ice pick and machete is anything to go by; I don't think that's
an everyday technique. And if he cleared mines in "He
really only hit your side of the car," Ofelia said. "What?"
This was a new tack, Arkady thought. "He
only put me in the car trunk." "He
left you to suffocate." "Maybe.
You got me out." "And
then he tried to chop up the car." "You
mostly." This seemed like splitting hairs to Arkady, but Ofelia went on.
"So, you went to the Yacht Club and didn't find me. What then?" "I
don't know exactly." He told her about the lobster dinner at the Angola paladar.
" They were military types and they called themselves the Havana
Yacht Club. How unusual is it for army officers to take over a private
restaurant like that?" "It's
not unknown." "Or
have lobster there?" "Maybe
it was their own lobster. A lot of officers spearfish. The navy sells lobster,
too. The officers don't eat so bad." "They
seemed unhappy." "This
is the Special Period – except for you and me, everyone is unhappy. What were
they driving?" "Sport
utility vehicles." "See!" "But
at least half of them didn't eat the lobster." "That,"
Ofelia granted, "is strange." "No
speeches." "Very
strange." "I
thought so from what I know of the Cuban character. Also, Walls, O'Brien and
Mostovoi were there. O'Brien described me to them as the 'new Russian' as if I
was taking Pribluda's place. I feel something happened in front of me that I
just didn't see. O'Brien is always ahead of me." "He
hasn't committed any crime." "Yet."
Arkady didn't quibble over the arrest warrant from America or the $20 million
sugar scam of Russia. "Why would twenty highly placed Cubans call
themselves the Havana Yacht Club?" "A
joke?" "That
was the answer for Pribluda's photograph." "You
think this is different?" "No,
I think it's the same. I don't think it was ever a joke." "Did
the officers at this dinner have names?" "No
names that I heard. All I can say is that they all wore guayaberas and ordered
lobster on pieces of paper that had to be unfolded to be read. Some, like
Erasmo, didn't touch their lobster at all, just watched, counting the lobsters,
and as soon as the last one was delivered to a table dinner was over, as if
they'd reached a unanimous vote. Maybe I'll find out tomorrow. I'll see Walls
and O'Brien before I go." "As
long as you don't miss your plane," Ofelia said. He
knew she was studying him for a reaction about leaving. He didn't know what his
reaction was. They were both so far out on a limb that the slightest shift made
for dizzying sways. His eye fell on the newspaper her mother had wrapped banana
bread in. "What
is Chango up to?" "What
do you mean?" Ofelia was not ready to change subjects. He
picked up the newspaper. It was a greasy broadsheet folded to a photo of a
black doll with a red bandanna. Under the photograph a news caption read, Noche
Folklorica Aplazada. Debido a condiciones inclementes fue necesario aplazar el
Festival Folklorico Cubano hasta dos Sбbados mas, a la Casa Cultural de
Trabajadores de Construction. "Inclement
weather I understand and Sбbado is Saturday and the Casa Cultural
is the Havana Yacht Club." "
'Because of rain a folkloric festival is postponed for two weeks,' that's
all." Arkady
checked the newspaper's date. "Until tomorrow." He got up to look at
the Chango sitting in the corner, the doll's left arm lank on a cane, feet
sprawled, half-formed features and glass eyes returning Arkady's gaze. The more
Arkady studied the doll the more convinced he was that it was the one that had
disappeared from Pribluda's flat on the Malecуn. Same red bandanna, same Reebok
shoes, same baleful glare. "He reminds me of Luna." "Of
course," Ofelia said. "Luna is a son of Chango." "A
son of Chango?" Once again Arkady had the sense that any conversation with
Ofelia had trapdoors that could open and drop a person into an alternative
universe. "How do you know this?" "It's
obvious. Sexual, violent, passionate. Chango all over." "Really?"
He leaned to better see the yellow beads around her neck. "And..." "Oshun,"
she said stiffly. "I've
heard of that one." "You
are a son of Oggun." Arkady
felt he was about halfway through the trapdoor. "Go
ahead, who is Oggun?" "Oggun
is Chango's greatest enemy. They often fight because Chango is so violent and
Oggun guards against crime." "A
policeman? Doesn't sound like fun to me." "He
can be very sad. Once, he was so angry at the way of people, their crimes and
lies, that he went into the deep woods, so deep no one could find him, and he
was so silent no one could talk to him or could coax him out. Finally, Oshun
went after him and walked through the woods and walked through the woods until
she came to a clearing by a stream. She could feel Oggun carefully watching
from behind the trees. She didn't make the mistake of calling out to him.
Instead she began to dance slowly with her arms out like this. Oshun has her
own dance, very sexual. When she felt that he was curious and moving closer she
still didn't call his name. Instead she danced a little faster, a little
slower, and when he came out of hiding she danced until he was close enough to
her to dip her fingers into a gourd of honey hanging from her waist and she
smeared the honey on his lips. He had never tasted anything so sweet in his
life. She danced and filled her hand with honey and put more honey in his mouth
and more honey while she tied him to her with a rope of yellow silk and led him
back into the world." "That
could work." Not
honey but the sweet salt of her skin. No silken rope but her arms. No words but
hands and lips, and Arkady was pulling her closer when Chango's cane scraped
across the linoleum. The doll sagged forward, head askew, tipped in the slow
fashion of a drunk releasing himself from the obligations of respectability,
slumped off the chair and landed with a thud on its face. "Some
spell," Arkady said. It had been working on him. He swung out of bed,
picked up the doll and set it in the chair again. Here was a figure that had
followed him all over Havana, his shadow companion, and how he'd ever managed
to get Chango to stay in the chair Arkady didn't know because the cane slid one
way and the doll perversely slumped the other. "The head is just too heavy,
it won't sit up." Ofelia
motioned Arkady back. "Leave it. It's just papier-mвchй." "I
don't think so." The spell was broken. He lifted Chango and brought him to
the bed, the better to see how the head was sewn to the shirt. " Are there
scissors in your toiletry kit?" Arkady
pulled on pants and Ofelia slipped into his coat. Because the nail scissors
were small, Arkady had to cut the threads one at a time to slide the head off a
wooden stake that was the doll's backbone. He let the headless body roll onto
the floor. Ofelia
asked, "What are you doing?" "Looking
into Chango." He
cut off the bandanna, leaving a red ring of cloth still glued. The head was
papier-mache coated with a lacquer-hard paint like a lumpish skull daubed
black. Ofelia found a serrated knife in a drawer of the kitchenette. Arkady
sawed through the head from ear, over the crown, to ear, until he pulled the
doll's face like a mask off a layer of cheesecloth that had been formed on
someone's face to lend the effigy its rough features. Under the cloth were
crumpled newspapers, and under the newspapers was a flat oval of slick silver
tape. In tiny snips Arkady cut around the edges and peeled the tape off five
thick brown waxy sticks that said in English "Hi-Drive Dynamite." The
sticks had been warmed and molded to pack tightly together with a Plexiglas
backing in the oval space of the head. On the middle stick was a printed
circuit board of a radio receiver the size of a credit card with a built-in
kopeck-sized battery and antenna. Arkady prodded the board up. Its wires were
crimped around the leg wires of a blasting cap inserted deep into the dynamite
itself. In spite of the air-conditioning he felt a bloom of sweat. He and
Ofelia had been around the doll on and off for almost a week. Someone could
have pressed a remote transmitter and brought his Havana trip to an end at any
time. He
put the scissors and knife aside. "Something nonsparking?" Ofelia
cradled the doll's head in her lap and delicately dug the cap out with her
fingernails. You
had to admire a woman like that, Arkady thought. Chapter Twenty-FiveEnough daybreak sifted through the window
shade for Arkady to see Chango lying on the table, the front and back of the
head resting separately on the doll's chest. Disconnected, the face seemed more
animated and malevolent than ever. Ofelia
was under Arkady's coat, asleep. He dressed in his old clothes, strapped on the
hip pack and stole his coat as quietly as he could. This was the point where
they went their different ways. As she said, it would be difficult enough to
explain how she had come into possession of the doll. Having a Russian along
wouldn't help. "Arkady?" "Yes?"
He had already opened the door. Ofelia
sat up against the headboard. "Where will I see you again?" They'd
gone over this the night before. "At least at the airport. The night's at
midnight. It's a Russian plane and a Cuban airport, we should have lots of
time." "You're
going to see Walls and O'Brien? I don't want you to go. To their boat? I don't
trust them." "I
don't either." "I'll
be watching. If that boat leaves the dock with you on it, I will send a police
boat out after you." "Good
idea." They had decided all of this already, but he returned to burrow for
a moment in her neck and kiss her mouth. Love's exaction for forward motion. "What
about Blas and the photograph?" she asked. "I'll be seeing him." "Leave
the photograph to me." "And
after?" "After?
We will shop on the Arbat, ski among the birches, go to the Bolshoi, whatever
you want." "You'll
be careful?" "We
will both be careful." Her
eyes let go. Arkady slipped out into a morning with a dull pewterish light
rimming the water, streetlights fading, on his way, appropriately enough, to see
Sergei Pribluda's lover. A
block on, he encountered another socialismo o muerte billboard with a
giant Comandante in fatigues, shambling again in mid-stride, keeping pace. Ofelia took a little longer to dress,
tape the doll's head back together and take it in her straw bag to her car. It
was eight by the time she reached the Institute de Medicina Legal, found Blas
in the autopsy theater and sent a message that she would be waiting for him at
the anthropology room. No one was ever completely alone in that room, there
were too many skulls and skeletons, preserved beetles and snakes huddled in the
light. On the desk a newly scrubbed skull was positioned under a video camera.
She turned on the monitor, and a picture of a robust Pribluda at a beach emerged
on the screen. "Not
yet," Blas said as he came in drying his hands with a paper towel.
"No show until we have our other Russian. Detective, I understand you're
dressed for a certain kind of duty, but I must congratulate you for how
convincing you are." She was in the white jinetera outfit. Blas
threw the towel into a waste basket and ran his hands up and down her arms as
if performing an inspection. "Irresistible." "I
have something for you," she said. After
all, who else could Ofelia go to? He was sympathetic and sophisticated, with
connections at Minint, the army, the PNR well above the level of Captain Arcos
and Sergeant Luna. "A
gift?" "Not
quite." She took the head wrapped in newspapers out of her bag and placed
it in front of the screen. "Well,
I'm always interested." Blas pulled the paper off and revealed Chango's
obsidian stare. The doctor's anticipation disappeared. "What is this
about? You should know by now that my interest in Santeria is strictly
scientific." "But
this head was on a doll that was in Pribluda's apartment. Later it was found
with black-market goods in a building near the docks." "So?
I've seen hundreds of these dolls across the country." Ofelia
peeled off the tape that held the front and back of the head together. "Go
ahead." As
Blas lifted the doll's face his own went whiter than usual. "Cono." "Five
charges of eighty percent dynamite. American-made, but we get it through Panama
all the time for construction and making roads. There was a receiver and
blasting cap that I removed. This is a bomb." "That
was at Pribluda's?" "That
was removed from there, I believe, by Sergeant Luna, who had also taken
Pribluda's car and put it in an abandoned building in Atares, where this doll
was recovered." There
was much Ofelia didn't have to say. In recent years incendiary devices had been
set off at different hotels and discos by reactionaries from Miami. Just for
the sake of terror. Then there was The Target whose name Ofelia was afraid to
invoke, the leader who for forty years had dodged bombs, bullets, cyanide
pills. "This
is a very grave matter. Does the sergeant know you have it?" "Yes,
he tried to stop me. This was two nights ago. I only learned it was a bomb last
night. There don't seem to be any fingerprints on the outside of the head, but
I think there are latent prints on the dynamite." "Leave
it to me. You should have come to me right away. When I think about that poor
Hedy and you." Blas put down the mask to wipe his hands on his lab coat.
" You're so cool about all this. Do you have the receiver and cap?" "Yes."
She brought them wrapped in newspaper from her bag. "Better
that I have all of the device. Who else knows?" "No
one." She was going to omit Arkady as long as possible. A Russian and a
bomb, how would that look? Especially with those assassination files he had
found on Pribluda's computer, it would muddle everything. The reason the doll's
head was clear of prints was that she had wiped Arkady's off. "Except that
we have to assume there are more people involved on Luna's side." "A
conspiracy in the Ministry of the Interior? Sergeant Luna is a nobody, this
could go much higher. It's no wonder he and Captain Arcos refused to
investigate. They're reporting to someone. The question is who? Who assigned
them? Who do I call?" "You
will help?" "Thank
God you came to me. Detective, I have always said it, you are a marvel. Were
you going someplace from here?" "To
the apartment where Rufo died." She didn't want to say where Arkady killed
him, even if it was in self-defense. "It seems to me a hustler like Rufo
must have had a mobile phone. CubaCell has no listing for Rufo but –" "No,
no, no. Stay off the street. We must find someplace safe for you. You must sit
and write a complete statement of all the facts while I cogitate how to
approach this problem. The first call is the most important. Since we have the
means of destruction, thanks to you, we have a minute to think. The safest
place is right here. There's paper and pencil in the desk. You have to put down
everything and everyone involved." "I've
written statements before, no?" "You're
right. The main thing is, don't move from here until I come back. Don't let
anyone else in. Promise?" Blas eased the two halves of the head together,
wrapped the head in newspaper and carried it under his arm to the door.
"Just be patient." Ofelia
was surprised that her anxiety did not dissipate even when the doll was in
competent hands. She found writing materials in a drawer as Blas had said, but
discovered that she had become overly used to typing reports on PNR forms.
Also, beyond the simplest statements of Luna's involvement with the doll it was
difficult not to drag Arkady in. Questioning would be even worse. Who had
identified the doll as being at Pribluda's? If Luna had attacked her, how had
she escaped? Better a brief statement than either the complete truth or a lie.
Once Arkady's name surfaced she knew that suspicion, hard earned by Russians in
Pribluda,
proud of his tan, grinned from the monitor. The skull lay under the video
camera. Chango and Russians, a terrible combination. Ofelia flicked the screen
off and on. Why was she waiting? How would she get to the marina if she was
kept in a room? She admitted she would feel easier once Luna was arrested. At
the same time she had a niggling memory of the sergeant standing over Hedy at
the Casa de Amor and how his entire body seemed to turn to stone. Which
reminded Ofelia of Teresa, Luna's other special girl. Between
two jars of pickled snakes was a telephone. Ofelia opened her notebook and
dialed Daysi's number. This time there was an answer. "Yes?" "Hello,
is Daysi there?" Ofelia asked. "No." "When
will she be back?" "I
don't know." "You
don't know? I have this swimsuit of hers she keeps asking for. It's the suit
with the Wonder Bra like she saw on QVC. She wanted it today. She's not
there?" "No." "Where
is she?" "She's
out." "With
Susy?" "Yes."
A little more relaxed. "You know both of them?" "They're
still at the marina?" "Yes.
Who is this?" Ofelia
said, "This is the friend with the swimsuit. I drop it off today or it's
mine. Frankly, it looks better on me." "Can
you call tomorrow?" "I'm
not calling tomorrow. I'll be gone tomorrow and the suit will go with me and
you explain to Daysi why she doesn't have the suit." During
the silence Ofelia could see Teresa Guiteras, hair tangled, knees up to her
chin, chewing on her fingernails. "Bring
it over." "I
don't know where you are," Ofelia said. "You come here and get
it." "I
thought you were a friend of Daysi." "Okay,
since you're a better friend, you explain to Daysi how she lost her QVC
swimsuit. It's fine with me. I tried." "Wait.
I can't come." "You
can't come? Some friend." "I'm
on Chavez between Zanya and Salud, next to the beauty shop, in back and up the
stairs to the roof and the pink casita. Are you near?" "Maybe.
Look, I have to get off the phone." "Are
you coming?" "Well..."
Ofelia drew the moment out. "You're going to be there?" "I'm
here." "Not
going to leave?" "No." Ofelia
hung up. She signed her statement and tucked it under the monitor. She hated
waiting. Besides, Ofelia still wanted to know why the homicidal Luna, rather
than putting her in the car trunk, hadn't simply killed her, and to that
question Teresa conceivably had the answer. Vice Consul Bugai arrived at his office
at a casual eleven o'clock, removed his jacket and shoes, replaced them with a
silk Chinese robe and sandals. He poured himself tea from a thermos and stood,
cup in hand, at his window, which was twelve stories up, waist level in the
tower that was the Russian embassy. The green palms of Miramar spread to the
sea. Satellite dishes lifted their faces to the sky. Outside, the city baked.
Inside, the air-conditioning throbbed. "So
you do come to work on Saturdays," Arkady said from a corner chair. "My
God." Bugai spilled his tea and stepped back from the cup. "What are
you doing here? How did you get in?" "We
have to talk." "This
is outrageous." Bugai set the cup on a stack of papers and picked up his
telephone. In his robe the vice consul was the picture of an affronted
mandarin. "You're out of bounds. You can't just break into people's
offices. I'm calling the guards. They will sit on you until they put you on the
plane." "I
think they'll sit on both of us and put us both on the plane because I may be
out of bounds, but you, my dear Bugai, have far too much money in the Bank for
Creative Investment in Panama." Arkady
had once seen a militiaman, shot, take ten slow jerky steps before he sat and rolled
over. That was the way Bugai moved as he set down the phone, bumped against the
desk and dropped into his chair. He clutched his heart. "Don't
die on me yet," Arkady said. "There's
a good explanation." "But
you don't have it." Arkady moved the chair so that he was within arm's
reach of Bugai. He said more softly, "Please don't make things worse by
trying to lie. Right now I'm more interested in information than your hide, but
that can change." "They
told me there would be bank security." "You're
a Russian and you thought there would be security in a bank?" "But
this was Panama." "Bugai,
concentrate. At this moment the affair is between you and me. Where it goes
from here depends on your cooperation. I'm going to ask a few basic questions just
to see how honest you're going to be." "That
you already know the answers to?" "That
doesn't matter. It's your cooperation that counts." "It
could have been a loan." "Would
pain help you concentrate?" "No." "We
don't want to resort to that. Who wrote the checks deposited in your
account?" "John
O'Brien." "In
return for?" "For
what we knew about AzuPanama." "For
what Sergei Pribluda knew about AzuPanama." "That's
correct." "Which
was?" "All
I know was that he was getting closer." "To
finding out AzuPanama was a fraudulent sugar broker created by the Cubans to
renegotiate their contract with Russia?" "In
so many words." "They
were concerned." "Yes." "O'Brien
and..." "The
Ministry of Sugar, AzuPanama, WaOs." "So
Pribluda had to be stopped." "Yes.
But there were many ways to stop him. Include him, pay him, get him working on
something else. I said I would have nothing to do with violence. O'Brien
agreed, he said violence only attracts more attention." "Except
Pribluda's dead." "He
had a heart attack. Anyone can have a heart attack, not just me. O'Brien swears
no one touched him." Arkady
walked around Bugai and the desk, viewing the vice consul from different
angles. Despite the air-conditioning Bugai sweat through his robe at the
armpits and lapels. "Have
you ever been to Angola?" "No." "Africa?" "No.
No one wants those postings, believe me." "Worse
than Cuba?" "No
comparison." "Tell
me about the Havana Yacht Club." "What?" "Just
tell me what you know." Bugai
frowned. "In "That's
all you know?" "That's
all I can think of. One story." "What's
that?" "Well,
before the Revolution the old dictator Batista applied for membership in the
club. He was complete ruler of Cuba, held the power of life or death and all
that entails. It didn't matter, the Havana Yacht Club turned him down. That was
the beginning of the end for Batista, they say. The end of his power. The
Havana Yacht Club." "Who
told you that story?" "John
O'Brien." Bugai had a chance to look around his desk. "Why is my
intercom on? I thought this was just between you and me." Arkady
motioned Bugai to follow. They walked out of his office and across a floor of
empty desks to Olga Petrovna, who sat in a small workstation that she had tried
to make pleasant with decals and pictures of her granddaughter. A
voice-activated tape recorder sat by her intercom, and behind her stood a
thickset man with the sort of face a person could grind knives on. Olga
Petrovna, as it turned out, had missed Pribluda more rather than less as days
went by, and the mere suggestion from Arkady when he had found her at breakfast
that another Russian had betrayed Pribluda's work was reason enough for her to
introduce Arkady to the chief of embassy guards and set up her tape recorder. "We
were talking in private," Bugai said. Arkady
admitted, "I wasn't being entirely truthful. If I made any other mistakes,
Olga Petrovna was making notes." She
had been. Pribluda's plump pigeon finished with a flourish and lifted to Bugai
a gaze that would have done Stalin proud. There were black angels bearing wreaths
above the Teatro Garcia Lorca. A black bat that roosted on the Bacardi Building.
Then there was the little black jinetera sitting on top of Daysi's
pink casita, which was not much more than a water tower with a coat of
paint. For
hiding out it wasn't such a bad place, nothing but chimney pots and pigeons all
around. Since the water tank had been removed, water had to be hauled up by
pail, but what Ofelia saw of the tower interior was surprisingly roomy, tiles
on the floor, a bed adorned with paper flowers. Teresa had carried a chair and
an illustrated romance up a ladder to the roof. Her knees looked scuffed and
her curly mass of hair was misshapen, lumped to one side. As
Ofelia came up the ladder Teresa squinted down. "You have the
swimsuit?" "I'll
show you." "Don't
I know you from the marina? The Malecуn?" Ofelia
waited until she reached the roof before she lifted her glasses. "The Casa
de Amor." The
scales fell from Teresa's eyes. She looked Ofelia up and down and tabulated the
slim shoes, white rubbery pants, white top, wide Armani dark glasses. She
herself was in the same bedraggled outfit she had been wearing when Ofelia
arrested her. "Puta, look at you. I don't think you dress like
that on a detective's salary, no, no, no. I'm not blind. I know competition
when I see it. That's why you're always after me." Ofelia's
first impulse was to say, "Stupida, there are a thousand girls
just like you in Havana." She looked down to roofs that spread to the sea,
clotheslines bright as paper cutouts. Sparrows scattered by a peregrine. The
pursuit swirled around the capital dome and to the trees of the Prado. Winter
was hawk season in Havana. Instead she said, "Sorry." "Fuck
your 'sorry.' There's no QVC swimsuit, is there?" "No." "This
is funny. I lost my German. I lost my money. You put me on a list of whores. I
can't go back to Ciego de Avila because my family is depending on me to stay
here and send them money, otherwise I would be in a fucking school, like you
say. And now that you have fucked with my life you're a jinetera, too?
That's funny." "You're
not on the list." "I'm
not on the list?" "Not
on the list. I only said that to scare you." "Because
we're competition." "You're
a smart girl." "Fuck
off." Teresa's nose ran, making a wet smear of her upper lip. "Teresa
–" "Leave
me alone. Go the fuck away." Ofelia
couldn't go away. Luna had gone insane at the sight of Arkady at the Centro
Russo-Cubano, but the sergeant had only stuffed her in the car trunk when
cutting her throat would have been as easy. Why? "Sit
down." "Fuck
away." "Sit
down." Ofelia pressed Teresa down onto the chair and moved behind
her. "Stay there." Teresa's
eyes rolled back to follow. "What are you doing?" "Be
still." Ofelia reached into her bag for her new brush and comb and pulled
back the black excelsior of Teresa's hair. "Just sit." Waves,
curls and spit curls close to the scalp and tight as springs would have daunted
Ofelia if Muriel's hair weren't almost as thick. One pull wouldn't do, she had
to firmly feather the hair out, work it loose, put some shape back into it. "You
have to take care of yourself, chica." To
begin with, Teresa submitted with silent grimness, but after a minute her neck
started to roll with the strokes. Hair like this warmed up with brushing,
especially on a hot day, polished up like silver with a little attention. As
Ofelia lifted the hair from the nape of the neck she could feel Teresa soften
to the touch. Fourteen years old? Alone for two days? Frightened for her life?
Even a stray cat needed to be petted. "I
wish I had hair like this. I wouldn't need a pillow." "Everyone
says that," Teresa murmured. "That's
looking better." As
Teresa relaxed, though, her shoulders began to shake. She turned to Ofelia and
revealed her whole face wet with tears. "Now
my face is a mess." "I'll
cheer you up." Ofelia put the brush into her bag. "Let me show you
what else I have." "The
stupid swimsuit?" "Better
than a swimsuit." "A
condom?" "No,
better than that." Ofelia brought out the Makarov 9-mm pistol and let
Teresa hold it. "Heavy." "Yes."
Ofelia took the Makarov back. "I think all women should be issued guns. No
men, just women." "I
bet Hedy wished she had something like this. You know my friend Hedy?" "I'm
the one who found her." "Cono,"
Teresa said more in awe. When
Ofelia put the gun away, she stayed kneeling and lowered her voice as if they
didn't have the whole skyline of Havana to themselves. "I know you're
afraid the same thing is going to happen to you, but I can stop them. You have
an idea who did it or you wouldn't be hiding, no? The question is, who are you
hiding from?" "You
really are police?" "Yes.
And I don't want to find you like I found Hedy." Ofelia let the girl
contemplate that for a moment. "What happened to her protection?" "I
don't know." "The
man who protects you and Hedy, what's his name?" "I
can't say." "You
can't because he's in Minint and you think this will get back to him. If I get
to him first, then you'd be able to leave this roof." Teresa
folded her arms and shivered in spite of the heat. "I didn't really think
some turista was going to come here and marry me. Why would he want to
take home some ignorant black girl? Everyone would make fun of him. 'Hey,
Herman, you didn't have to marry your whore.' I'm not stupid." "I
know." "Hedy
was really nice." "You
know, I think I can still help you. You don't have to say his name. I'll say
his name." "I
don't know." "Luna.
Sergeant Facundo Luna." "I
didn't say that." "You
didn't, I did." Teresa
looked away, as far as the angels that balanced on the theater. A breeze lifted
her hair the same as it seemed to do to the angels'. "He
gets so mad." "He
has a temper, I know. But maybe I can tell you something that can help. Did you
sleep with him?" When Teresa hesitated Ofelia said, "Look me in the
eyes." "Okay,
once. But Hedy was his girl." "When
you slept with him –" "No
details." "One
detail. Did he keep his drawers on?" Teresa
giggled, the first light moment since Ofelia had found her. "Yes." "Did
he say why?" "He
said he just did." "All
the way through?" "The
whole time." "Never
took them off?" "Not
around me." "Did
you ask Hedy about it." "Well."
Teresa bobbed her head from side to side. "Yes. We were really good
friends. He never did with her either." "You
know, chica, it wouldn't be a bad idea to stay here for another day,
but actually I think you're probably pretty safe." "What
about Hedy?" "I'm
going to have to rethink that." As Ofelia gathered her bag and stood she
kissed Teresa on the cheek. "You helped." "It
was nice to talk." "It
was." Ofelia started down the ladder and paused midway. "By the way,
did you know Rufo Pinero?" "A
friend of Facundo's? I met him once. I didn't like him." "Why
not?" "He
had one of those mobile phones. Mr. Big-Time Jinetero, always on it. No time
for me. So you really think I'll be okay?" "I
think so." Because
the question for Ofelia ever since Sergeant Facundo Luna hadn't killed her
right off at the Russian Center was whether he was Abakua. It was hard to say
about a member of a secret society. The PNR had tried to infiltrate the Abakua
and the result was the opposite: the Abakua had penetrated the police,
recruiting the most macho officers, white as well as black. Identifying them
had become an art. An Abakua might hijack a truck from a ministry yard, but he
would not steal even a peso from a friend. Never allowed an insult to go
unanswered. Might murder but never informed. Wore nothing feminine, no
earrings, tight belts or long hair. There was one conclusive identification: an
Abakua never showed his bare behind to anyone. He never pulled his drawers down
even for making love. Ofelia thought of it as a kind of Achilles' ass. One
more thing an Abakua never did. He
never hurt a woman. Chapter Twenty-SixArkady returned to Mongo's room in the back
of what had been Erasmo's boyhood house. An empty house today, enervated by
heat. After a courtesy knock on the door Arkady reached to the upper lip of the
frame and found the key. Not
much had changed in the bedroom since Arkady's first visit. Shutters opened wide
enough to take in the curve of the sea, fishing boats trolling against the
current, neumбticos wallowing in their wake. Not a cloud in the sky or
a wave in the water. Dead still. The coconuts, plastic saints and photographs of
Mongo's favorite fighters were just as Arkady had seen before, and whether a
sheet was tucked in the same manner he couldn't tell, but a different disc
topped the CD stack, and the swim flippers that had hung from a hook on the
wall and the truck inner tube that had been suspended above the bed were both
gone. Arkady returned to the window to see three different groups of neumбticos
listlessly paddling, each group at least five hundred yards apart from the
other. Arkady
went down to the street and walked a block west to a cafй of cement tables set
in the shade of a wall with the sign SIEMPRE –. Siempre something because bougainvillea had taken root
and smeared the rest of the slogan with magenta. Arkady was not surprised that
Mongo would venture out on the water. Mongo was a fisherman. He had probably
been warned away from Erasmo's repair shop while a Russian investigator
occupied the apartment above. Where better to hide than on the water? If he was
out on his tube, sooner or later he would have to come in, somewhere along
Miramar's First Avenue or the Malecуn, too much ground for Arkady to watch. But
it seemed to him that he could lower the odds by remembering that what a man
with an inner tube needed most of all was air. From his table he had a view of
a gas station with two pumps under a canopy styled with a modernistic fin, blue
once, now the off-white found on the lip of a clamshell. It was a station on
his Texaco map. By the office was a faucet and an air hose. Cars
came and went all afternoon, some struggling like lungfish up to the pump and
then crawling away. Neumбticos had to deal with a garage dog that
accepted some and chased away others. Arkady sipped his way through three
Tropicolas and three cafe cubanos, his heart tapping its fingers while
he sat, invisible in the shadow of his coat. Finally a skinny asphalt-black man
approached the station office with an inner tube that was going limp in his
arms. He threw the dog a fish, went into the office and came out a minute later
with a patch he applied to the tube. When he felt the adhesive had set, he
added air to check the repair. His clothes were a green cap, loose running
shoes and the sort of rags a sensible man would choose for floating in the bay.
Balancing the tube with its net and sticks and reels on his head, he lay his
flippers over one shoulder and a string of rainbow-sided fish over the other.
When he saw Arkady cross the intersection, the neumбtico's red,
salt-stung eyes looked for an avenue of escape, and but for his inner tube and
the day's catch, he no doubt could have easily outrun someone in an overcoat. "Ramуn
'Mongo' Bartelemy?" Arkady asked. He thought he was starting to get a grip
on Spanish. "No." "I
think so." Arkady showed Mongo the picture of himself proudly displaying a
fish to Luna, Erasmo and Pribluda. "I also know you speak Russian."It
was worth a stab. "A
little." "You're
not an easy man to find. Join me for a coffee?" The
elusive Mongo had a beer. Crystal beads of sweat covered his face and chest.
His mesh sack of fish lay on the bench beside him. "I
saw a tape of you fighting," Arkady said. "Did
I win?" "You
made it look easy." "I
could move, you know? I could move with anyone, I just didn't like to get
hit," Mongo said, although his nose was splayed enough to suggest he had
been caught a few times. "Then
when they dropped me from the team I was eligible for the army. Oye,
suddenly I was in Africa with Russians. Russians don't know the difference
between an African and a Cuban. You learn Russian fast." Mongo grinned.
"You learn 'Don't shoot, you assholes!'" "Angola?" "Ethiopia." "Demolition?" "No,
I drove an armored personnel carrier. That's how I became a mechanic, keeping
that puta APC alive." "Is
that where you met Erasmo?" "In
the army." "Luna?" Mongo
regarded his large capable hands, callused from drumming and scarred from
barbs. "Facundo I know from way back when he first came from "Baracoa?" "In
the Oriente. He could hit." "He
and Rufo Pinero were friends?" "Claro.
But what they did I didn't know." Mongo shook his head so emphatically his
sweat sprayed. "I didn't want to know." "And
you were Sergei Pribluda's friend?" "Yes." "You
went fishing together?" "Verdad."
"You
taught him how to fish with a kite?" "I
tried." "And
how to be a neumбtico?" "Yes." "And
what is the most important rule a neumбtico has to follow? Never go
out alone at night. I don't think Pribluda went out alone on that Friday two
weeks ago. I think he went out on the water with his good friend Mongo." Mongo
rested his chin on his chest. Sweat poured off the man as if he were a
fountain, not the sweat of fear like Bugai's but sweat that came from the heavy
work of guilt. It was late in the day. Arkady got more beers so Mongo could
sweat some more. "He
said it was like ice fishing for sharks," Mongo said. "He used to
tell me all about ice fishing. He said I should come to Russia and he would
take me ice fishing. I said 'No, thanks, comrade.'" "What
time did you go into the water?" "Maybe
seven. After dark, because he knew how that would draw attention if people saw
a Russian in a tube. Voices travel on water, so even when we were out there he
would whisper." "What
was the weather like?" "Raining.
He still kept his voice low." "Is
that a good time to fish, when it's raining?" "If
the fish are biting." Arkady
considered that fisherman's truth and asked, "Where did you go in?" "West
of Miramar." "Near
the Marina Hemingway?" "Yes." "Whose
idea was that?" "I
always said where we were going to go, except that time. Sergei said he was
tired of Miramar and the Malecуn. Sergei wanted to try somewhere new." "Once
you were in the water you stayed there. Or did you go west? North? East?" "Drifted
like." "East
because that's the way the current runs, by Miramar and the Malecуn and towards
." "Yes." "And,
on the way, the marina? Whose idea was it to go in there?" Mongo
slumped against the wall. "So, you already know." "I
think I do." "We
really fucked up, huh?" Mongo beat nervously on the bench, stilled his
hands and let the rhythm drop. "I said, Sergei, why would we want to fish
in the marina with the guardia to chase us and maybe a boat moving
through? That's an active channel, and it's night and the boats won't see us, I
said, it's crazy. But I couldn't stop him. The guardia was in their
office out of the rain. If you come in close they can't see you anyway, not at
night in a tube. I followed Sergei up the channel, that's all I could do. He
seemed to know where he was going. They have lights there, but they don't reach
down to the water so well. No one was fueling. The disco was shut down because
of the rain. We could hear people at the bar, that's all, and then we were in a
canal where boats were docked one after the other and Sergei headed for this
one I couldn't even see at first, it was so low and dark. Very sleek, an old
boat but fast, you could tell. There were lights in the cabin and Americans on
board, we could hear them but we couldn't see who. Right away, I knew that this
was some kind of business of Sergei's he was getting me into. I told him I was
going, but he wanted to climb up and see who was in the boat, which is
difficult because there is an overhang on the dock. I was leaving when the
lights on the boat went out. My whole body vibrated. Sergei was about five
meters away between the boat and the dock and he was shaking, shaking, shaking.
They let those fucking power leads lie in the water. I couldn't get any closer.
Then I saw flashlights come up on deck and I hid." Mongo nodded in doleful
self-judgment. "I hid. They came up to see if it was just their boat or
everyone and while they talked back and forth to the person in the cabin Sergei
drifted out. He wasn't shaking anymore. They didn't see him and they didn't see
me because I stayed in the dark. "As
soon as his tube's clear, I told myself, I'd pull Sergei over, but before I
could get to Sergei another boat came up the canal. There's not a lot of room.
The boat went by and then Sergei went by. Sometimes, you know, boats trail
tackle in the water, they shouldn't but they do, and Sergei was hooked by the
net of his tube. He went by faster than I could keep up. I knew he was dead by
the way he sat. They went out the canal together, the boat and tube. I knew
once they cleared the guardia dock and opened the throttle they would
feel the line and find Sergei or the hook would cut the net. "Or
maybe they would find Sergei and just cut him loose, because who needs to get
involved with a dead neumбtico, no? That would be a story they could
tell in a bar in Key West about a crazy Cuban they caught one time. I don't
know, I just saw my friend being towed in the dark until I couldn't see him
anymore. By the time I got past the guardia I couldn't even see the
boat." "Did
you see its name?" "No."
Mongo drank the last of his beer and stared at the pail of fish. "I didn't
even do that." "Who
did you tell about this?" "No
one until you showed up. Then I told Erasmo and Facundo because they're my compays,
my good friends." The
water was flat and glassy enough for pelicans to skim their reflection. Despite
the accumulated heat of the day Arkady felt oddly comfortable, balanced by beer
and overcoat. "The
men who came on deck of the boat that lost its power, did you recognize
them?" "No,
I was looking for Sergei or trying to hide." "Did
they have guns?" "You
know," Mongo said, "it doesn't matter. Sergei was dead by then and it
was an accident. He killed himself, I'm sorry." Mongo looked at the fish.
"I have to go keep these fresh. Thanks for the beer." An
accident? After all this? But it made sense, Arkady thought. Not only the heart
attack but the general confusion. Murders had much better cover-ups. Then he
had arrived from Moscow the same time the body was found in the bay. Small
wonder why Rufo had rushed to be his interpreter, and why Luna had been so
badly surprised by the photograph of the Havana Yacht Club. No one had known what
happened to Pribluda. As
Mongo resettled his cap and inner tube on his head, and picked up his flippers
and fish, Arkady thought of Pribluda's tow in his rubbery sleigh out of the
marina to deeper water – the Gulf Stream, O'Brien had said – where he either
tore loose or was cut free by a no doubt exasperated fisherman. "Cubans
are biting tonight!" Would that have been the joke? Then the long journey
in the rain, drifting past Miramar, along the Malecуn to the mouth of the bay,
a "bag bay," as Captain Andres of the good ship Pinguino had
said. Under the beam of the lighthouse on Moro Castle and then a swing toward
the village of Casablanca to gently snag among the nest of plastics, mattresses
and worm-riddled piers, all sheeted by petroleum scum, where a body could
comfortably rest in the rain for weeks. Arkady
took Pribluda's photograph from under his coat and asked, "Who took this
picture?" "Elmar." "Elmar
who?" "Mostovoi,"
Mongo said as if there had been only one photographer in the group. Confession
was always short-lived and always conditional, and both men knew it wasn't as
if Arkady had the authority to question anyone. Just for the sake of a
reaction, though, Arkady read the reverse of the picture. " 'The Havana
Yacht Club.' Does that mean anything to you?" "No." "A
joke?" "No." "A
social club?" "No." "Do
you know what's happening there tonight?" That
was pressing too hard. The elusive Mongo backed into the street and broke into a
gliding sort of trot, a one-man caravan, his headgear undulating with every
step. He slid by a blue wall, pink wall, peach and the shadow of an alley
seemed to reach out and swallow him up. Ofelia had not been at the embassy
apartment since she had seen Rufo spread out on its floor. She remembered the
building's blue walls and Egyptian decoration of lotuses and ankhs, that hint
of the Nile. In the dusk even the car sitting on the porch had some of the
silent grandeur of a sphinx in residence. Flecks of paint made a red skirt
around the car. Salt pitted once proud chrome, windows were open to the
elements, upholstery cracked and split and the hood ornament was missing, but
hadn't the sphinx itself lost a nose? And although they sat on wooden blocks
the wheels were caked in grease, a promise that someday this beast would cough
and rise again. Ofelia
was looking for Rufo's phone. Arkady had said that in Moscow a hustler like
Rufo would have as likely stepped out of his house without a leg as without a
cell phone. If this were a real investigation she could have taken a laundry
list of names associated with Rufo to CubaCell and worked backward from their
calls. Instead, she'd have to find the phone itself. It was somewhere. For
killing someone with a knife, work that could get messy, Rufo had taken the
precaution of changing shoes and wearing over his clothes a one-piece silvery
running suit; Goretex let in the air, kept out the blood. Likewise, cell phones
were delicate, dollars-only items, not something a careful man placed in harm's
way. Rufo thought ahead, the trick was to think like him. The
door knocker to the ground-floor apartment was answered by a white woman in a
drab housedress and flamboyantly coiffed and hennaed hair. Half the women in
Havana, it seemed to Ofelia, spent their lives getting ready for a party that
never happened. In turn, the woman made a sour study of Ofelia's jinetera
gear until presented with a PNR badge. "Figures,"
the woman said. "I'm
here to see the murder scene upstairs. Do you have a key?" "No.
You can't go in there anyway. That's Russian property, no one can go in. Who
knows what they're doing?" "Show
me." The
woman led the way in slippers that snapped against the stairs. The lock on the
apartment door was shiny and new even in the poor light of the hall. Ofelia
remembered making a search of the sitting room, pulling out Fidel y Arte
and other books, a sofa and sideboard, performing a more hurried look into the
other rooms for fear that the confrontation between Luna and the Russian would
get out of hand. There was a chance the phone was inside the embassy apartment,
but not likely. She reached on tiptoe to the dark underside of the stairs above
for any ledge that Rufo could have set the phone on. No. "You
didn't find anything here?" Ofelia asked. "There's
nothing to find. The Russians don't put anyone there for weeks at a time. Good
riddance." As
Ofelia went back down the stairs she let her hand trail on the risers above.
She stepped out onto the porch with nothing but a dirty hand. "I
told you," the woman said. "You
were right." The woman was starting to remind Ofelia of her mother. "You're
the second one." "Oh?
Who else?" "A
big negro from the Ministry of Interior. Really black. He looked
everywhere. He had a phone, too. He called on it and didn't speak and just
listened, but not to the phone, understand?" Naturally,
Ofelia thought, because Luna was calling Rufo's number and was trying to hear
it ring. That was the trouble with trying to hide a phone, sooner or later
someone would call the number and the phone would announce itself. "Did
he find anything?" "No.
Don't you people work together? You're like everything else in this country.
Everything has to be done twice, no?" Ofelia
walked out to the middle of the street. It was a block of old town houses
transformed by revolution, idealism followed by fatigue and lack of paint and
plaster. One front yard a parking lot for bicycles, another an open-air beauty
salon. Collapsing buildings but busy as a hive. She
tried to imagine a reconstruction of the facts. The same street late at night.
Arkady upstairs, Rufo outside in his freshly donned running suit, improvising
on the run because no one had expected the arrival of a Russian investigator.
Perhaps even placing one last call before he went into the house and up the
steps to what he assumed would be the Russian's doom. Between the two corners
of the block, where was the most likely place for Rufo to put, just for a few
minutes, his precious phone? Ofelia
remembered Maria, the police car and Rufo's cigars. She returned to the porch. "Whose
car is this?" "My
husband's. He went to get some windows for the car, and the next thing I know I
got a letter from Miami. I'm keeping the car till he gets back." "Chevrolet?" "'57,
the best year. I used to get in and pretend Ruperto and I were driving to Playa
del Este, a nice cruise to the beach. I haven't done that for a long
time." "Car
windows are hard to find." "Car
windows are impossible to find." The
upholstery was more a rat's nest than seats. From her bag Ofelia took a pair of
surgical gloves. "Do you mind?" "Mind
what?" With
gloves on, Ofelia reached through the open window and opened the glove
compartment. Within was a wooden cigar box with a broken Montecristo seal of
crossed swords. Inside the box were ten aluminum cigar tubes and an Ericson
cell phone set on vibrate instead of ring. Ofelia
heard a click and looked through the car at a man taking her picture
from the sidewalk. He was a large, middle-aged man with a camera bag over a
shoulder and the sort of vest with many pockets that photographers wore, all
topped by an artistic beret. "I'm
sorry," he said, "you just looked beautiful in that old wreck of a
car. Do you mind? Most women don't mind if I photograph them – in fact, they
rather like it. The light is awful but you looked so perfect. Do you think we
could talk?" Ofelia
put the phone in the cigar box and the box and gloves in her bag before she
straightened out. "What about?" "About
life, about romance, about everything." Despite his size he made a show of
coming shyly through the gate. His Spanish was fluent, with a Russian accent.
"Arkady sent me. Even so, I'm a great admirer of Cuban women." • • • Arkady didn't set anything on fire at
the Sierra Maestra and didn't knock on Mostovoi's door. Instead he inserted the
credit card into the jamb the moment he arrived and hit the door with a grunt
that took the breath out of a watching toddler. Inside, Arkady looked to see
whether the "greatest demolition team in Africa" was still the
centerpiece of the wall. It was. On
his first visit he had gone to pains to make sure Mostovoi wouldn't notice that
he'd had any guests. This time Arkady didn't care. Where there was one
photograph of the Havana Yacht Club there were bound to be more, because a man
who documented his greatest moments didn't destroy his pictures when the wrong
company came – he just put them out of sight. Arkady
took off his coat to work. He emptied shoe boxes and suitcases, spilled book
and kitchen shelves, upended files and drawers, pulled the refrigerator from
the wall and tipped over chairs until he had discovered more photographs,
pornography that was not so sporty and not so sweet, and videotapes of sex and
leather. But everybody had a side business, everyone had a second job. All
Arkady really produced was the sweat on his face. He
visited the bathroom to wash up. The walls were tiled and the medicine-cabinet
mirror was half silvered, half black. Inside the cabinet were a couple of
nostrums, hair elixirs and recreational amounts of amyl nitrate and
amphetamines. As he dried his hands he noticed that the shower curtain was
closed. People with small bathrooms usually kept their curtains drawn for the
illusion of space or a childish fear of what was on the other side. Since that
was an anxiety Arkady freely admitted to, he pulled the curtain wide. Floating
in the tub in ten centimeters of water were four black-and-white photographs
not of nubile sports or foreign travels but of the dead Italian and Hedy. Blood
showed as black and the carpet and sheets were soaked and striped. The Italian
looked almost gilled from machete wounds. Arkady didn't know him, but he did
recognize Hedy even if her head balanced precariously on her shoulders. At
first Arkady thought that Mostovoi had gotten hold of police photographs, but
of course these pictures had just been developed and none of the usual evidence
markers had been laid, no shoe tips of detectives trying to stay out of the
camera's way, and the darkness of the shadows themselves suggested that no
other source of illumination had been on. The photographer had worked alone in
a dark room the night before Ofelia arrived, and real skill must have been
required just to estimate the focus. He'd only chanced four shots or only developed
four from a roll. A single shot of the Italian as he dragged himself, still
alive, toward the door. More thought had gone into the pictures of Hedy. A low
shot from between her legs up to her head. A second that framed her head
between deflated breasts. A third just of Hedy's face, surprise still fresh in
her eyes. The man with the camera had been unable to resist marking the moment,
thrusting his tubular white wrist and hand into the sheen of her curls to
improve the pose. Chapter Twenty-SevenBy eight o'clock the Marina Hemingway had
the social hum of a small village at night. Younger crew, an international
set with stringy blond hair, spread out in front of the market or carried bags
from the ice bunker. From the far end came the amplified pulse of a disco,
glitter and sound reflected in the canals. Overhead an edge of the moon burned
through the electric haze of the marina. He didn't see Ofelia but she tended to
be fanatically good to her word. The
Alabama Baron was gone, replaced by a launch so new it smelled of
plastic. Already ensconced in its cabin was a jinetera mixing rum and
Coke. Ahead, George Washington Walls and John O'Brien were having beers in the
cockpit of the Gavilan, firebrand and financier at their ease. The new
lead from the power box snaked smoothly down to the water and up the dark flank
of the seaplane tender. "You're
here." Walls looked up at Arkady. "Right
on time, too," O'Brien said. "Wonderful. Back into your cashmere
coat, I see. Join us." "I
have a plane to catch. You said we were going to talk about Pribluda." "A
plane to catch?" O'Brien said. " That is sad. This means you are
turning down the chance to be part of our endeavor? I have always counted
myself as fairly persuasive. Apparently with you I've failed." "The
man is a disappointment," Walls said. "That's what Isabel says." "Arkady,
I was hoping to persuade you because I sincerely thought it was for your own
good. I had looked forward to working with you. Come on, have a drink for God's
sake. We'll have an Irish good-bye. Your plane's at midnight?" "Yes." Walls
said, "You've got hours." Arkady
stepped out of the light and down into the boat, settling against a cockpit
cushion. Instantly a cold can of beer was in his hand. At night the boat seemed
to ride even lower, the polished mahogany dark as the water. O'Brien
said, "You're taking back the body of your friend Pribluda? That means
you've positively identified him?" "No." "Because
you don't need to anymore, you already know." "I
think so." "Well,
that's a comfort. Your decision to go is final? What we can do" – O'Brien
tapped Arkady's knee – "is give you a return ticket. Take a week in
Moscow, in that miserable ice chest you call home, and if you change your mind
come back. Is that fair?" "More
than fair, but I think I've made up my mind." "Why?"
Walls asked. O'Brien
said, "Because he found what he came for, I suppose. Is that it,
Arkady?" "Pretty
much." "To
a single-minded man." O'Brien raised his beer. "To the man in the
coat." The
beer was good, far better than Russian. On the dock a line of jineteras
slipped quietly as mice toward the disco, lamplight haloing their hair. It was
Saturday night, after all. The salsa accelerated. Walls balanced on the
captain's chair in a black pullover that reminded Arkady of the sleek young
radical who had stepped out of a plane with a gun and a burning flag. O'Brien
wore his black jumpsuit. Pirate colors. He unwrapped a cigar and turned its tip
over a flame, drawing it in. The boats in their slips sighed as a ripple of
water lifted them. O'Brien
said, "You know what happened to Pribluda, but you don't know why? And I'm
the only one who hasn't had a say?" "You
say a lot, but it's different every time." "Then
I won't tell you, I'll show you. See that sea-bag?" Although
the cabin was dark, Arkady saw one end of a canvas bag in the light at the
bottom of the steps. "Sergei's,"
Walls said. Arkady
was nearest. He put down the beer and went down the cabin stairs. As he picked
up the bag the door shut and locked behind him. The inboard engine started in
the space ahead, producing a reverberation like being inside a double bass.
Overhead, feet nimbly stepped fore and aft, releasing lines and gathering
fenders. The Gavilan backed, swung and eased forward. As the boat
passed the disco, laughter and strobe lights flickered on the curtains. Canal
echo dropped behind, and Arkady heard Walls talking on the radio. Arkady beat
on the door more for form than conviction; a boat as classic as this was built
of hardwood. He moved around a galley table to an engine-room door that was
locked as well. He pulled aside a porthole curtain just in time to see the guardia
dock slide by with no sign yet that Ofelia had raised an alarm. Past the dock
the brass bow of the Gavilan sliced its way so smoothly Arkady felt no
more than the faintest rise and fall, headed directly to sea by the evenness of
wave slap. Along Fifth Avenue were the first signs
of a major event: brigada trucks of huddled Interior troops parked in the
night dark of side streets, motorcycle policemen in white helmets and spurred
boots straddling their bikes, K9 units sniffing the crowd that filed up the
driveway of the Construction Union House, the former Havana Yacht Club.
Ofelia's PNR badge didn't work, but Mostovoi somehow produced a pass that let
them through. There were telltale signs that the Noche Folklorica was a more
important event than she had expected. A feature of national security was that
no one ever knew which of his residences the Comandante would sleep in, let
alone what functions he would attend. However, when he did appear certain
precautions were always taken. Tracks led on the lawn to seven armored
Mercedes, an ambulance, a radio command truck, a media van, two dog vans, a
circle of soldiers and a cordon of men in shirts and windbreakers holding
newspapers folded over cell phones and radios and standing around for no
apparent purpose until a guest deviated from the driveway. The house's two
grand stairways met at a central porch. From there, under the molding of a
ship's wheel on a pennant, soldiers scanned the crowd, although this was not,
to Ofelia, a group that was likely to get out of hand. Some officially approved
Santeria priests were on hand, but mostly she saw stiff ministry and military
types and their spouses following the designated route around the mansion to
the oceanfront side. The occasional man was patted down or a woman stopped to
have her purse searched, but Mostovoi and Ofelia were waved through, and
despite his camera bag the photographer pushed so quickly through the crowd she
could barely keep up. "Why
would Arkady want to meet here?" Ofelia demanded. "How would he even
get in?" "He's
been here before," Mostovoi said. " He gets around." The
Noche Folklorica was an event Arkady had asked about, Ofelia knew. If he had
changed his mind about talking to O'Brien and Walls, that was just as well. She
saw the colors of dancers sequestered behind spiky palms: blue for Yemaya,
yellow for Oshun. Spaced along the beach were soldiers. Tied to the end of the
dock was a black patrol boat. All the light and all the sound was concentrated
on an outdoor stage facing the water. The
Noche Folklorica had already begun, and from the clubhouse balconies men in
plain clothes scanned the crowd. Most people stood on the patio around the
stage, but there was also a reviewing stand with five tiers of special guests.
She knew only the figure in the middle of the front row, a man with a flat,
nearly Greek profile set in wiry gray hair and beard, the face that was the
second sun of her lifetime. Beside him was an empty chair. • • • The doors opened and O'Brien peeked
through to say, "Come on. It's too lovely a night to miss." Arkady
marched up. This far out the cockpit sat under a canopy of stars. Walls steered
parallel to the shore, running at dead slow. Besides his cigar O'Brien also
held, casually but not negligently, a pistol with a barrel extended by a
silencer. The marina had passed from sight, but approaching on the Miramar
shore was a far brighter nexus of excitement and music. Arkady recognized the
Havana Yacht Club brilliant in floodlights. On the patio leading down to the
beach a crowd surrounded a stage and reviewing stand. Along
with floodlights the Yacht Club displayed the colored lights of carnival,
although the club's twin docks were empty and only a black patrol boat had tied
up to enjoy the spectacle. As the Gavilan drew closer Walls slipped
forward to snap covers over the running lights and John O'Brien dropped his
cigar into the water. "Quite
a show." He handed Arkady a set of heavy binoculars. "Now your trip
to The
glasses were 20x Zeiss with a matte metal body, and through them the scene at
the Yacht Club meters leaped into view. Spectators filled two levels of the
patio. A troupe of women in yellow scarves and skirts ascended the stage while
a band filled the time with a percussive rhythm, whistles, bells clearly
audible even from the Gavilan. Arkady zoomed in on the reviewing
stand, on a tall man with aviator glasses, Erasmo's friend, the same man who
had raised a toast to the Havana Yacht Club at the Angola paladar the
night before. Arkady ran the glasses along the other seated guests. In the
front row's places of honor were an empty chair and a man with a gray beard who
looked as if he had been big once but had since shrunk into a stiff green shell
of ironed fatigues. He had the abstracted expression of an old man regarding a
thousand grandchildren whose names he could no longer keep track of. Arkady
went back to the patrol boat. By now, Ofelia ought to have communicated with
someone, and although the Gavilan ran low in the water Arkady assumed
it appeared on the patrol boat's radar. Whether or not Ofelia had made contact,
the Gavilan was within four hundred meters of the stage. Either the
patrol boat at the dock would come out to inspect the Gavilan or
another patrol boat was closing from a different direction. Arkady was
surprised that the Gavilan hadn't been challenged already by radio. O'Brien
said, "The marvelous thing about you, Arkady, is that you're both suicidal
and insatiably curious. 'What' isn't good enough for you, you have to know the
'why.' When you came out to the boat you had to know something like this was
going to happen, but you had to see." "And
then maybe fuck us up," Walls said. "Go out in a blaze of
glory." "Or
leave a message behind," O'Brien said. "Look on the beach to the left
of the stage." Arkady
swung his glasses and saw Ofelia work her way from the spectators. He'd missed
her when she was in the crowd. A PNR shield was pinned to her white halter. He
waited for her to move toward the patrol boat or the stage. Instead, she moved
in the opposite direction. At her side, being helpful, was Mostovoi, a camera
bag swinging from his shoulder. "What
do you want?" Arkady asked. "I
have what I want," O'Brien said. Walls
nudged Arkady. "You're missing the show." Arkady
swung his glasses to the reviewing stand and saw the man in aviator glasses
carry a man-sized doll with a cane and a red bandanna down to the chair in the
front row, where a drummer helped make the doll sit up, its face turned toward
the man on its right. Chango and the Comandante. Arkady focused on the doll's
bandanna and walking stick, different from the ones he had left on a doll's
body at the Rosita. The Comandante returned the doll's gaze at first, then
looked up and joked with his friend in the aviator glasses, who laughed and
retreated from the stage to the side of the stands, where he was joined in the
crowd by Dr. Blas, too energetic to stay in the shadows any longer. Arkady
refocused on Chango, on the doll's roughly molded head, patched and repainted,
with the same glittering eyes. "This
is murder," Arkady said. "Not
just murder, please," O'Brien begged, "This is the elimination of an
individual who has survived more assassination attempts than anyone else in
history." "That
demands respect right there," said Walls. "And
let's admit it," O'Brien said, "the death of this man is the only
crime down here of any interest. You can steal five dollars or a million, it's
still petty crime while he's alive. Because you can't leave with it and
essentially it's all his." "You
can stop," Arkady said. "You haven't done anything violent with your own
hands yet. I know Pribluda's death was an accident." "See,
we told you we never touched him," Walls said. "We had no idea where
Sergei disappeared to." "But
we couldn't stop now," said O'Brien. "In the last forty years only
one generation of Cubans has tasted independent thought, one group has
experienced command on the battlefield and operated in the greater world. There
are two hundred forty generals in the Cuban army, and the army is getting
smaller and smaller. Where do you think they're going to go, what do you think
they're going to do? This is their prime, their window of opportunity." "Their
time to throw the dice?" "Yes." "And
they all ordered lobster." O'Brien
gave Arkady an appreciative smile and lifted his own pair of binoculars.
"That's right, very good. That was the vote. They all wanted in." The
pageant had begun again. Golden skirts and brown legs obscured the guest of
honor in his front-row seat. His green cap seemed to weigh as heavily on him as
a bishop's miter. Chango's roughly molded face was slightly cocked, glass eyes
bright in the lights. At the side of the stage the man in aviator glasses
reached down to shake someone's hand. Erasmo. Appearing gravely pale and weary,
the mechanic lifted his eyes toward the Gavilan, although Arkady knew
the boat had to be invisible from shore. More
figures slipped out of the back rows of the reviewing stand; Arkady recognized
them all from the paladar Angola. The front rows appeared mesmerized
by swirling skirts, the insinuating pace of the drums booming from speakers,
echoing off the clubhouse. Chango's head listed heavily to the bearded man on
his right. "This Side to Enemy," Arkady thought. No doubt the man's
uniform fit as badly as it did in part because of an armored vest, which would
stop a small-caliber bullet but not a shaped charge of dynamite. No shards or
ball bearings, Arkady guessed. They didn't want a general slaughter, just an
effective circle of impact, and who more expert with explosions than Erasmo? He
swung the glasses and found Ofelia and Mostovoi going in a completely different
direction, working their way far from the stage and along the sand to a white
wall that separated the grounds of the Havana Yacht Club from the neighboring
beach. Arkady saw Mostovoi check his watch. "It's La Concha, the old
casino," Mostovoi said. "I consider it one of the most romantic
settings in He
ran his hand up a column. For all the police and military presence on the other
side of the beach wall, Ofelia and Mostovoi had this area entirely to
themselves. It was now the social center for a catering union, but she
remembered that before the Revolution it had been not only a casino but a
Moorish fantasy, with a minaret, date palms and orange trees, tiled roof.
Ofelia and the Russian stood in the long shadow of a colonnade of horseshoe
arches. The fact that she had followed Mostovoi didn't mean she trusted him.
For all his assurances there was a shiftiness about him. His beret shifted, his
hair shifted and his eyes seemed to be over everything, especially her. She
wouldn't have spent a minute with him except for the fact that he claimed to
know where Arkady wanted to meet her. "First
one place, then another? Why would he come here?" "You'll
have to ask him that. Do you mind if I take a picture of you?" "Now?" "While
we're waiting. I think that Cuban women are nature's children. The eyes, the
warm color, a lushness that can be almost too overripe at times. Not you,
though." "Where
and when exactly is Arkady coming?" "Right
here. Who can say exactly when with Renko?" Mostovoi unzipped his bag for
a camera and a flash unit that he tightened into the camera shoe. The unit made
a warm-up whine. "No
pictures." Ofelia wanted to keep eyes adjusted to the night sky, the arc
of sand, the dark of the water. The last thing she needed was a flash.
"You keep looking at your watch." "For
Arkady." The
white light blinded her. She was unprepared because Mostovoi shot without
raising the camera and she saw nothing but a fixed image of flash unit's
faceted lens and the photographer's smirk until she blinked her way back to
normal. "If
you do that again," she said, "I will break your camera. "Sorry,
I couldn't resist." "Was that a signal?" Arkady
noticed that with the flash from the casino Walls eased the throttle forward,
bringing the Gavilan even closer to the beach. Why wasn't the patrol
boat at the dock responding? Walls
said, "When my friend John O'Brien plans something the i's are dotted and the t's are
crossed." "Thank
you, George. The devil, as they say, is in the details. Speaking of
whom..." Ahead
in the water was a neumбtico with a hand shielding a candle. As Walls slowed
the boat to idle again, the neumбtico snuffed the flame with his
fingers, spun his tube and paddled backward to the stern of the Gavilan,
where Walls helped him on board and tied the tube to a transom cleat. Luna
stood dripping in the cockpit. Wet, he had the dank look of a body disinterred
and he stared at Arkady with anticipation. "Now
you'll know what it feels like," Luna promised. "What
feels like?" "I'm
sorry, Arkady," O'Brien said. "It's time to give up the coat now. In
fact, everything. You can do it yourself or we can do it for you." While
Walls took the coat and the rest of Arkady's clothing, too, Luna went below to
change clothes, a modesty that surprised Arkady. The sergeant reappeared in
uniform swollen with a menace kept in thin control, and Arkady wondered how he
had ever managed to throw Luna into a wall. He was, himself, past lifting
weights or fattening up. Then it was Arkady's turn to put on Luna's sodden
shorts and shirt. Up to the point of pulling on flippers Arkady considered himself
relatively safe because they were so difficult to put on the feet of a dead
man. With the flippers on he felt both unsafe and ridiculous. Still, a patrol
boat had to be coming. Holding
the binoculars by the strap, O'Brien returned them to Arkady. "See how it
ends." Onstage,
a melee of golden dancers moved to a quickening pace. Daughters of Oshun,
Arkady thought. Well, he'd learned that much. It wouldn't be a detonation set
by a timer, he thought, because there were too many variables in public events.
The back two rows of the stands had thinned out. Erasmo backed his wheelchair
from the stage. An ecstasy in rays of sweat flew from the dancers. Chango
leaned. By the side of the stage a dozen men looked at their watches. In the
front row, the leader himself and Chango seemed to look straight through the
frenzy of the dancers. How the dancers could turn faster Arkady didn't know,
but they did, their golden skirts spread and spinning at the runaway pace of
the congas. He braced for the flare of explosion. Instead,
plainclothes men started to appear. They came in pairs, quietly taking away the
man in aviator glasses, Blas and, one by one, the other men Arkady recognized
from the paladar. Each man reacted with the same sequence of surprise,
bafflement and resignation. Their military training showed. No one ran or
called out at the moment of his arrest. Arkady looked for Erasmo being wheeled
away. Instead, Erasmo seemed to be in charge of this new phase. Hardly anyone
else in the audience seemed to notice, fixed as they were on blurred hands on
drums and the golden skirts of sensuous Yemayas, every eye transfixed except
for the old man in too much uniform in the front row. He dropped his head by
small degrees until Arkady realized that under the bill of his cap the nation's
leader was checking his own watch. "He
knew," Arkady said. "He knew about the plot." "Much
better," O'Brien said. " He helped start it. He does it every few
years to weed out malcontents. The same as he did with Isabel's father. The
Comandante didn't last this long by waiting for a conspiracy to come for
him." "Erasmo
helped, too?" "In
spite of himself, Erasmo is a Cuban patriot." "You
took care of the details?" "More
than mere details." "The
talk about the Havana Yacht Club?" "All
true to a degree. The fact is, Arkady, revolutions are chancy things, you never
know how they're going to turn out. I prefer to bet with the house, whoever the
house is. The glasses?" He took the binoculars from Arkady by the strap
and lowered them into a plastic Ziploc bag, which he placed in the seabag that
was supposedly Pribluda's. "There's nothing trickier than an
assassination, especially an assassination that's not supposed to succeed. You
have to keep the means and trigger of destruction in your own hands. And you have
to undermine the conspirators in the public eye. These are highly regarded men,
military heroes. It helps paint them black if the man who actually tries to set
off the blast isn't Cuban at all but a generally unpopular figure as, say, a
Russian. A dead Russian, to be precise." Walls
and O'Brien weren't just waiting to explain how brilliant they were, Arkady
knew. There was more to come. Luna opened a cockpit bench to take out a
speargun. He placed the butt against his hip, cocked the power bands and slid
into the muzzle a shaft with a spearhead with folded wings for barbs. No patrol
boat, Arkady understood, was on the way. "Why
would anyone connect me to the blast?" Walls
held up another Ziploc bag so that Arkady could see inside a television remote
control. "Remember the monitor you turned on for John at the O'Brien
answered his cell phone. Arkady hadn't heard a ring. After a word of
satisfaction, O'Brien folded the phone up. Luna
fished in the pockets of Arkady's coat and found the snapshot of Pribluda,
Mongo and Erasmo. "Fuck your He
tore the picture into pieces that he threw onto the water. He kicked the inner
tube off the transom after the bits of paper. "Get
in." Standing at the carved doors of the old
gambling hall, Ofelia caught the button tones and soft fluorescence of
Mostovoi's cell phone. The call was over in a second. "Who
did you call?" "Friends.
Have you ever posed?" "What
friends?" "At
the embassy. I explained that I was helping somebody, which I certainly am
trying to do. I meant it about posing." "For
what?" "Something
different." Her
attention was half on Mostovoi talking to her in the dark interior of the hall
and half on the pale strand of the beach. Music played on the other side of the
beach wall. A rumba for Yemaya. "How
different?" "I
mean very different." She
couldn't tell what was in the room, but its large space magnified sound, and
she heard Mostovoi swallow in a way she found unpleasant. All she could see of
him was the oily eye of his camera and she talked mainly to keep track of him. "What
was in this room?" He
slipped sideways from the moonlight at the door. "What
was here? It was the main casino. Chandeliers from Italy, tiles from Spain.
Roulette tables, craps, blackjack. It was a different world." "Well,
no one's here now." "I
know what you mean. You think maybe Renko went to the plane?" Would
Arkady do that? she wondered. Slip away without a word? It was one of the
things men did best. They didn't need planes, they just disappeared. Her mother
could count them: Primero, Segundo and now Tercero. Blas would deliver
Pribluda's body to the airport. Arkady still might wander in like a beachcomber
or stroll down the portal of arches that framed the sea, but it was more likely
with every minute that he had accomplished the classic retreat, the exit with
no good-bye. She felt profoundly stupid. "I
could see you in any number of poses," Mostovoi said. But
she thought about Arkady's black coat and decided, no, his problem was that he
abandoned no one. One way or another, he was going to come. "There
in the moonlight," Mostovoi said, "is perfect." Ofelia
heard the shutter of his camera click, although the flash failed. She heard two
more rapid clicks before she realized they weren't from a shutter but from a
hammer on the empty breech of a gun. She tried to dig her own gun out of her
straw bag, but it was under Rufo's phone. The hammer clicked again. When Ofelia
found her own gun, it was tangled with straw. She fired one wild round that
exploded the bottom of the bag. Something crushed the plaster wall by her ear.
She dropped to her back and held her gun with both hands more deliberately. Her
second shot through the bag lit Mostovoi, a flash of him swinging his gun down
like a club. The third tunneled into his mouth. Arkady floated in the tube on a short
rope from the stern of the Gavilan. The Caribbean was warm, the net a
hammock, the rubber tube actually cushy, but he felt as if he were looking up
from the bottom of a well at O'Brien, Walls with the gun and Luna with the
spear-gun. They blocked the stars. Arkady would have liked to think at least he
was stalling. No, they were only waiting, having outthought and outmuscled him
all the way. One stunning accomplishment: he not only found out how Pribluda
was duped but got to be the dupe too. Finally a neumбtico himself. Their
heads lifted at the sound of gunshots. Walls
said, "The son of a bitch was supposed to use a silencer." "And
why three shots?" asked O'Brien. A
cell-phone tone came from Luna's shirt pocket. He flipped the phone open and
answered. As he listened he turned toward the beach. "Who
is it?" Walls said. "It's
her, the detective." O'Brien followed Luna's eyes' turn to the casino; it
really was wonderful to see how quickly the man calculated, Arkady thought.
"She got Mostovoi's phone. Or Rufo's, and she's using the memory."
O'Brien told Luna, "Hang up." Luna
raised the speargun for quiet and pressed the phone tight against his ear. "Take
the phone from him," O'Brien told Walls. Luna
pointed the spear at Arkady. "She says he never harmed Hedy. You told me
he came looking for me. What she says is he wasn't after me at all." "How
does she know?" Walls said. "The
night someone killed Hedy, she says he was with her." "She's
lying," Walls said. "They sleep together." "That's
why I believe her. I know her and she knows me. Who hurt my Hedy?" "Do
you believe this?" O'Brien appealed to Arkady as one sane man to another.
"George, will you please take his fucking phone away?" "Your
stupid Hedy," Walls told Luna, "was a whore." The
speargun jumped and a steel shaft with a line of white nylon stuck out of
Wall's stomach. When he looked down blood under pressure sprayed his face. "George,"
O'Brien said. Walls
sat down on the gunwale, raised his gun and shot Luna, who took a single
backward step before moving forward. As Walls tried for another clear shot the
two men fell over the side. Arkady
began climbing out of the tube. On deck O'Brien had pulled the second speargun
from the cockpit bench and was trying to insert the spear and pull back the two
stiff elastic power bands, not an easy task at the best of times, worse
standing amid loose spear cable and blood on the deck. But as Arkady came up
over the transom O'Brien managed to notch one band and pull the gun's trigger,
and Arkady found himself on his back in the water, a spear through his forearm
and the spearhead lodged shallowly in his chest, the spear's force spent on his
arm. Spear cable led back to O'Brien, who had one tasseled shoe on the transom
and was already, Arkady could tell, calculating ten or eleven moves ahead. With
his free hand Arkady yanked the cable. O'Brien dropped the speargun overboard,
but the line that tangled around his ankle stretched him over the polished
mahogany. Arkady pulled with both hands and O'Brien slid all the way over the
stern and in. O'Brien
shouted, "I can't swim!" The
Gavilan was low-slung enough for O'Brien to try to claw his way back
on, but Arkady towed him by the line away from the boat. O'Brien turned to the
inner tube, but his splashing chased the tube more than it closed the distance.
The speargun floated, but not enough to hold up a man. The
spear tip's wings had spread outside the muscle of Arkady's chest. He closed
them under the spear's sliding collar and drew the shaft from the arm while it
was numb. With his good arm he swam underwater. The sea was a cave around a
quarter-moon with glints of fish. On the other side of the boat Walls and Luna
still struggled, trying to climb over each other to the surface. Bubbles
streaked from Walls's gun. Luna had wrapped the spear line around the other
man's neck. Arkady came up for air and made his way back around the stern of
the Gavilan. No more than a meter away the top of O'Brien's head
bobbed in the water. The
patrol boat hadn't moved, although Arkady saw lights along the casino beach.
The Yacht Club was still bright. He
could haul himself onto the Gavilan, but at this point Arkady was
happy to rest, watch the stars swarm overhead and float on a blackness that
held him up. Chapter Twenty-EightSnow fell again in April, enough to dust
the streets and spiral in confusion around the intersections. Trucks
hunched along the embankment road with lights on, a winter habit dying as hard
as winter itself. Arkady
had left the prosecutor's office and walked down to the embankment hoping to
find fresher air along the river, but there really was no escaping the
pollution, the usual pall mixed with snow into a sharp, urban brew. Streetlamps
were on and pools of light swayed overhead, tugged this way and that by the
wind. Buildings along this stretch of Frunzenskaya were an institutional
yellow, etchings of themselves behind lines of snow. The river, choked with
water and ice, ground against stone walls. He'd
gone a block before he realized that a man in a wheelchair was catching up with
him at a determined pace. Not an easy task in such weather, he thought, with
the wheels of the chair slipping on the slick pavement and detouring around the
bodies in bedrolls who had taken up residence along the embankment. Arkady had
stepped aside for the chair to pass when he saw who it was. "Spring
in the Arctic." Erasmo was packed into a parka, ski cap, damp leather
gloves. He brushed snow off his beard and watched his breath with disgust. "How
can you stand it?" "You
keep moving." Erasmo
looked massive in the parka and vibrantly healthy as only Cubans could in
Moscow. When he offered his hand, Arkady waited until it dropped. "What
are you doing here?" Arkady asked. "Renegotiating
the sugar contract." "Of
course." "Don't
be that way," Erasmo said. "I'm in "Come
on, then, I'll give you the Russian perspective." Arkady went at a slower
pace while Erasmo rolled at his side. " '98 Jaguar, a banker who flies
dollars out of Moscow in a Gulfstream jet. '91 Mercedes, a deputy minister or
lesser mafioso. That homeless man under the streetlamp, well, he may be
harmless or he might be an intelligence officer, you never know." "Of
course I was," Erasmo said. "Where else would we let a Russian spy
live except over a spy of our own? It's elemental. I tried to warn you off at
the graveyard. At the restaurant I told you to drop it. After you found Mongo
you could have stopped." "No." "There's
never any reasoning with you, no middle ground. How is the arm?" "Nothing
broken, thank you. It's my Cuban tattoo." "I
almost didn't recognize you. Here you are in a parka like me. What happened to
the wonderful coat?" "It
is a wonderful coat, but I decided I was wearing it out. I still wear it on
special occasions." "Well,
you're still alive, that's the main thing." "No
thanks to you. Why did you do it, Erasmo? Why lead your friends into a trap?
What happened to my intrepid hero of Angola?" "I
had no choice. After all, the officers were already plotting. When the threat
is from men I served with and loved, I mitigate the damage, channel them and do
as little harm as possible. At least no one was killed." "No
one?" "Very
few. O'Brien and Mostovoi did some things I knew nothing about." "But
you tossed me to them like bait." "Well,
you proved to be more than just bait. Poor Bugai." "He's
still alive." "For
God's sake, do you have a cigarette?" The
snow was thicker. Arkady put his back to the wind, lit a couple of cigarettes
and gave one to Erasmo, who inhaled and coughed at the insult to his lungs. He
took in a wider scope of the street to include figures stirring the flakes with
brooms. "Russian women. Remember that day we drove the Jeep down the
Malecуn?" "Of
course." "How
long do you think that's going to last? Not very. You know, sometime we're
going to look back at the Special Period and say, well, it was a ridiculous mess
but it was Cuban. It was the sunset, the last Cuban age. Miss it?" They
had come to a halt under a lamp. Flakes sparkled on Erasmo's beard and brows. "How
is Ofelia?" Arkady said. "I tried to reach her through the PNR and
there was no reply. I don't have a home address for her. That night they just
wrapped up my arm, threw some clothes on me and put me on the plane with
Pribluda. I never saw her." "And
you won't. Keep in mind, Arkady, you left a lot of confusion behind you.
Detective Osorio will be kept busy for quite a while. But she sent this."
Erasmo removed his gloves and felt inside his parka until he pulled out a color
snapshot of Ofelia. She was in an orange two-piece on a beach with her two
girls and a tall, light-brown, handsome man. The girls looked up at him with
adoration and clung proudly to his hands. A conga drum was slung over his
shoulder as if music might be called for at any moment, and on his face was a
smirk somewhere between penitence and self-satisfaction. Behind this domestic
tableau, planted on a towel by the weight of her horror, was Ofelia's mother. "Which
father?" Arkady asked. "The
smaller girl's." Arkady
couldn't see anything coerced about the photograph, no ominous shadows on the
sand or signs of anxiety besides the family tension. Ofelia, however, seemed to
be totally apart from the others. Her hair was damp, combed into ink-black
waves. Her lips open, on the point of speaking. Her expression said, yes, this
is the situation, but the intentness of her eyes had nothing do with anyone
else in the picture, as if she were looking not from the photograph but through
it. Nothing
was written on the back. "You
don't seem particularly moved," Erasmo said. "Should
I be?" "Yes,
I would think so. I wanted to reassure you that all in all, things came out
pretty well for the detective." "Yes,
they look happy." "I
wouldn't go that far. Anyway, you can keep the picture. That's the reason I
came out in this blizzard looking for you just to give it to you." "Thank
you." Arkady unzipped his parka so he could put the photograph safely away
without bending it. Erasmo
blew on his hands before pulling his gloves back on. Suddenly he looked
miserable. "Cold people for a cold climate, that's all I can say."
Snow started to clump on his brows and under his nose. He swung his chair and
gave Arkady half a wave. "I know my way back." "Just
follow the river." Going
back, the wind was against Erasmo. He leaned into it, bucking the oncoming
current of headlights, his wheels losing a little friction on the melting snow
but maintaining the speed of a man who knows where a warm room waits. Arkady's
apartment was in the opposite direction. Headlights fanned his shadow ahead of
him. Like pachyderms, trucks stepped in and out of potholes. In true winter the
reflection of lights off river ice made an illuminated path through the city,
but a late snowfall merely dissolved in sheets into black water. Traffic police
waded between cars, pulling aside that luckless soul whose lights were deemed
malfunctioning until dollars, not rubles, passed hands. It was the sort of
evening, Arkady thought, when each individual apartment window looked like a
craft tossing in a dangerous sea. The Kremlin was out of sight but not its
bonfire glow. Snow outlined lampposts, gutters, sills; packed against truck
tarps and wing mirrors and on the collars people clutched up to their eyes;
melted at the wrist and neck, trickled down the arm and chest; flew down one
flagstone wall of the river and up the other like sparks from a chute; turned
the trees of the park into white-caps; made each step a visible memory and then
covered it over. END OF |
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