Hostage in Havana ct-1

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Hostage in Havana ct-1 Page 28

by Noel Hynd


  “From a grave?”

  “The museums of the Western world are filled with such stuff,” he said, dismissing it. “Ever see the King Tut exhibit?”

  “Yes, and I’ve been to Egypt too.”

  “Then you’ve seen the artifacts from the Pyramids. And the mummies.”

  “I know where you’re going with this,” she said.

  “Of course you do. Excavating those tombs is no worse than what we’re going to do. Did you object when you looked at the mummies and the relics from their graves?”

  She looked at him and sighed. “You have a silver tongue, Paul.”

  “I think of it as a rather cozy idea, myself,” he said. “One brother guarding the other’s fortune for half a century. The dead guarding the money and reaching out from the grave to enrich the lives of the living. I like it.”

  Paul triggered thoughts in Alex’s head about the money Federov had left her. She wondered if he knew and was flirting with the topic. Part of her wanted to pursue it, but the wiser voice inside her suggested that she let it go. For now, at least.

  A thought hit her. She opened her cell phone and looked to see if there was a message from Roland Violette. There was none. She began to wonder if her mission was doomed to fail. Well, if he didn’t show up, that wasn’t her fault. But why, she wondered, would he have dropped off the cell phone if he wasn’t planning to defect?

  She closed the phone and looked up.

  Paul was reclining comfortably on a pillow, watching her. “Anything from your spook?” he asked.

  “No,” she said.

  “Who knows, with someone as unstable as that?” he said. Paul continued to gaze at her. “So?” he finally asked.

  “So what?” she answered.

  “So this trip to the cemetery tomorrow night. You’ll go with me?”

  “I’m not comfortable with it, for more reasons than I can count.”

  “Compared to our hard landing in Cuba,” he said, “it should be a cakewalk.”

  “I’ve heard that one before,” she said.

  “Hang around long enough,” he promised, “and you’ll probably hear it again.”

  Another thought hit her. “Tell me again,” she said. “How did you get away from the boat when we landed? There were police everywhere.”

  “The same way that you did. I jumped in the water and swam.”

  “But as I was swimming the gunfight was still going on,” Alex said.

  “You can thank me for that,” he said. “I provided cover for you.”

  “Which way did you swim?” she asked. “I never saw you.”

  “The opposite as you,” he said. “Intentionally. I explained all that.”

  “But I still don’t understand how you eluded them.”

  He went to the closet. He unbuttoned his shirt, slid it off, and pulled on a T-shirt for sleeping. Alex watched him in fascination, wondering if he was going to change completely in front of her.

  “Like I said before, there was a low mist on the water. When I guided the boat out farther, I realized the mist was getting thicker. Almost a fog. That’s when I hung over the far side of the boat. But I turned the outboard motor back on so the boat would continue to move – out to sea. By the time the Cubans got to it, they had no idea where I was. Nor could they see me.”

  “So you hit a beach farther up toward Matanzas?”

  “Yes. I hid out during the day and let the sun dry my clothes. There were a lot of police and militia around. In the late afternoon I found a farmer with a truck. I hired him for a hundred U.S. dollars to drive me out here to Johnny’s and keep his mouth shut.”

  “So what did you and Johnny do your first night here?” Alex asked.

  “You know.” He shrugged. “We just sat around and shot the breeze,” he said. “Lot of catching up to do.”

  “And what about yesterday?” she asked. “Something seems off. Did you stay here last night as well?”

  “Why are you asking?”

  “Because I want to know. What did you do during the day yesterday?”

  “Same as you,” he said. “Laying low. Trying to avoid the police and the shore patrols.”

  “But did you try to make it into Havana to find me at the hotel?” she asked.

  Paul said, “It’s not easy to travel in Cuba, so my intent was to get somewhere and stay off the streets. So no, I didn’t get to Havana until last night.”

  “Then where did you stay last night?”

  He paused. “At the Ambos Mundos,” he said. “Two floors above where you found me today,” Guarneri said. “It’s pretty run down, as you noticed, but perfectly acceptable for Cuba. Hemingway lived there for a while. I don’t think they’ve changed the plumbing or the TVs since Papa put the gun to his head.”

  “Don’t change the subject. Apparently they haven’t changed the window grates in the men’s room either,” she chided. “So did you check in under your real name?”

  “You think I’m crazy? I used my Canuck passport. Why are you always asking so many questions?”

  “Because I’m trained to.”

  “Okay, that’s healthy enough. So are you finished asking me questions so that I can ask my ‘wife’ one?”

  “Sure,” Alex said. “Go for it.”

  “There’s only one bed in this room. Will I have the pleasure of my wife’s company in it?”

  She laughed. “We can share the bed, but we’re not having sex,” she said. “Is that where you were going with that?”

  “I thought I’d try to steer it in that direction.”

  “I thought you would too. You actually steered it off the road.”

  He laughed. “Well, you can’t blame a man for trying. Anyway, I’m going to go down the hall to take a shower. Unless you want to go first. The water is warm, not hot. There are towels and soap in the bath area. It’s rustic but it works. It has a certain primitive charm. You might like it. So? Who first, me or you?”

  “I’ll go,” she said.

  “Want me to show you where?”

  “If I can find my way from the beach outside Matanzas to Havana I can find my way down the hall to the shower,” Alex answered.

  “I’m sure you can,” he said.

  From her bag, she took a pair of thin shorts and a cotton T-shirt to change into for sleeping, plus her toiletries. The shower room had a 1950s feel to it, one pipe coming out of the wall, above a tile floor with a drain. She undressed and blasted her body and hair with the tepid water. There was a plastic container of a Mexican shower soap hanging on a metal hook. She unhooked it, washed thoroughly, and felt refreshed.

  She dressed in the shorts and the T-shirt. She toweled her hair and combed it out. It was still wet when she returned to the room. Paul had left the door half-open to maintain a breeze.

  While he was in the shower, she could hear the water running. She eyed his belongings, one bag and some clothes, where he had left them across a chair and dresser. She went to the door and glanced down the hall. She walked quietly down the hall to make sure he was in the shower. He was.

  She returned to the room. She listened for any approaching footsteps, heard none, and couldn’t resist. She prowled through his things, looking at everything from his passport, his backup pieces of identification, his clothes, his Browning automatic, and the bullets with it. The weapon, upon close examination, gave an indication of having been fired recently, and it still smelled faintly of gunpowder. Of course, he had fired several shots on the morning they arrived. But were they fired from his own gun or from one that he had picked up on the boat? Memory failed her. She couldn’t recall.

  She looked at his passport again. A fine piece of work. And so were the supporting documents: an Ontario driver’s license and an American Express card. They were just fine, she thought to herself, except they were completely fake: same as her own.

  Her hand did a quick pat down of the rest of his suitcase. She came across an envelope, legal size, standard 4 ? by 9 ?. She squeezed it. Cash.
She opened it. Franklin and Grant. Large denomination American currency. Fifties and hundreds. A quick calculation told her that he must have had twenty grand in cash. Well, there was another reason to pack a pistol.

  She heard him turn the water off. She put everything away again, eased back, and settled into her chair, shaking out her hair, enjoying the feel of the sea breeze on her arms and legs.

  Paul returned. He closed the door but not all the way.

  “Time for some sleep,” he said. “Which half of the bed do you want?”

  “Whichever half you’re not on.”

  “Good answer,” he said.

  “Take the left; I’ll take the right.”

  “Deal,” he said. He climbed in. There were light blankets and a sheet.

  She came to the bed and sidled into it on the opposite side. The room’s final light was on her side. She extinguished it. The sheets were cool and soft, the bed more comfortable than it had any right to be. She exhaled a long breath and tried to think of sleep as they lay side by side. Then he moved his arm. His hand found hers and held it.

  “Well?” he asked after half a minute. “Yes or no?”

  “Yes or no what?” she asked.

  “The big question for tonight,” he said, turning toward her in the dim light. “The issue I’ve been wondering about since we walked into this room and closed the door.”

  She turned toward him. “I already answered you,” she said. “I’m not going to let you make love to me.”

  “No, I already shelved that idea,” he said. “It was the other thing I was wondering about, the one you didn’t answer.”

  “And what would that be?” she asked.

  “Are you going to the cemetery tomorrow? You still haven’t answered.”

  She watched the thin curtains flutter against the breeze and looked at the shadows that the moonlight threw into the room. The room was deeply quiet, except for the rumble of the surf on the beach.

  Tomorrow. The cemetery.

  The notion raced through her head that, in spite of everything, this location was comfortable and the people around her were good – even Paul, in his rough and strangely ironic way, even though he alternately irritated her and amused her. Then, of course, there was the danger and the fascination with everything that was going on, an equation that added a shot of adrenaline to everything. She almost disliked herself by getting so turned on by the excitement, the risks, and the challenges.

  She turned back toward him. She spoke to his silhouette against the feeble light from the hallway. “I’ll go,” she said. “I don’t like what we’re going to do. But I’ll go.”

  “Excellent,” he said.

  He rolled over, away from her. She rolled over away from him.

  A few minutes later, she was at the edge of sleep when her cell phone came sharply alive. It jolted her. She sprang from the bed and went to her clothes. She stood in the reflected moonlight from outside, snapped the phone open, and answered. “Hello?”

  Paul lifted himself up on one elbow and watched. For a moment it bothered her that she was so well on view to him, shorts and T-shirt in a moonlit bedroom. Then it stopped bothering her, and her mind bounced back to business.

  “Hello,” an emotionless voice said. “You know who I am, yes?”

  “I know who you are,” she said quietly. “Then who are you?” he asked. “Tell me who.” “I’m Anna.” “Anna who?”

  “Anna Marie Tavares,” she said. “You know why I’m calling?” “I know,” Alex said.

  There was a painfully long silence. Then, “Hotel Plaza Habana. Tomorrow, 3:00 p.m.,” the voice said. “Remember … 3:00 p.m.,” he repeated. “The lobby. Can you do that?” “I can do that,” Alex answered.

  Then the line clicked dead. Alex folded the phone away, heaved a sigh of exhaustion, and turned back toward the bed. Paul was still sitting up, smiling slightly. With courtesy, he lifted the sheet and blanket on her side to welcome her back into bed, as a husband might.

  “Violette,” she said. “He’s ready to play ball.”

  FIFTY-SIX

  The next morning Paul took the Toyota Jeep again. He and Alex drove back to Havana. By early afternoon, Paul had parked in the garage of a man whom he said was a family friend. Then they found their way to the Hotel Plaza Habana, on foot. It was about a fifteen minute walk. Alex tried to memorize the route but wasn’t able.

  The Plaza Habana was one of the oldest hotels in the city, built in 1909. Unlike much of the rest of Havana, it was charming and beautifully restored. It stood proudly on Calle Agramonte in Old Havana, where Agramonte intersected with Zuluete, not far from the Ambos Mundos where she had rendezvoused with Paul the day before.

  Alex entered the hotel with Paul fifty feet behind her. The lobby was vibrant with sunlight, tourists, and bright mosaics. A floor of off-white tile gleamed. There was a surprisingly festive air, supported by groups of laughing Italian travelers. An upbeat salsa melody pulsed from the sound system.

  Alex, nervous, scanned the lobby and proceeded directly to the first-floor bar. She carried her small tote that she had bought on her first day in Cuba. Her gun was in it, beneath her traveling clothes.

  The bar was bright like the lobby. It jutted out from the main hotel building, a separate one-story annex with a high ceiling. There were tables for four, topped with white Formica and light wood. A skylight lit the room and a fountain bubbled unobtrusively at the center. More music was piped in from somewhere, but a different track than in the lobby.

  Alex picked a table where she could watch both doors. Paul, following her a minute later, disappeared to a table in the corner.

  A waiter found Alex, and she ordered a Coca-Cola. She waited. From the corner of her eye, she watched Guarneri order a drink and start a small cigar. From a nearby table, he picked up a newspaper. Trabajadores. The Cuban workers’ newspaper. Well, that would raise Paul’s consciousness a little, Alex mused.

  She scanned the bar again. Like the lobby, it was filled with tourists, mostly Europeans, and some wealthy South Americans. A group of eight young backpackers had pushed two tables together, four girls, four boys, college kids probably, their backpacks bedecked with Canadian flag appliques. They sat around bottles of Cuban beer, in no hurry to go anywhere. There were no cops that Alex could spot, nor anyone she could ID as Cuban security. For that, she was thankful.

  According to the legends that Paul had told her about on their drive that morning, Babe Ruth had once made the hotel’s Suite 216 his personal den of iniquity during his barnstorming tours through Cuba in the 1920s and ‘30s. Also, several of the top dancers from the clubs in the 1950s had had suites there, and more than a few American GIs spent debauched R amp;R weeks there during World War II. Albert Einstein once attended a banquet there. Somehow, the Plaza had navigated both the Batista and Castro eras with comparative ease. Somewhere, Alex concluded, someone knew whom to pay.

  Her soda arrived.

  A quarter hour passed. Alex’s anxiety level spiked. The afternoon heat continued to build outside and started to overpower the air conditioning. Alex looked up and her heart jumped. She spotted a figure at the entrance to the bar. Roland Violette. She recognized him instantly from the surveillance photos she had seen in Langley.

  He looked much older in person. In his khaki pants and rumpled shirt, he looked thin, almost frail, and stooped. He would have been about six feet as a younger man. He moved with difficulty, as if he had arthritis in his hips. His hair was thin and flecked with white, and his dark glasses wrapped around his narrow mocha face. He carried a cardboard box, about the size of a double ream of copy paper.

  He was jittery and moved cautiously, as if at any time he might spot a gun aimed at him. He carried a pack of cigarettes in his right hand – Winstons – which seemed to be his security system, keeping him calm. Alex watched for several seconds and didn’t miss the irony of the cigarettes. She had seen it before. Even those who vilified America most often clung passionately to American prod
ucts and culture. Ho Chi Minh smoked Kools. Castro loved baseball. Khrushchev had loved Fred Astaire movies. Kim Jung Il loves Elvis. Go figure, she mused.

  Violette spotted Alex almost as quickly. His gaze settled on her. She gave him a subtle nod and a smile. She held him in her gaze, eye contact all the way, almost like radar to bring him to her table. He stopped and scanned the room. He didn’t seem to sense that Paul was an accomplice, though he took a long look at him. Or maybe he just didn’t care.

  Violette came to Alex’s table and sat down.

  “Anna from America,” he said in English. “Anna. Anna. Anna. Anna and the King of Siam. Anna from America come to take me home? Right?”

  “Good guess. Right,” she said.

  “Wasn’t much of a guess,” he said. “I used to be a spook. But you knew. You knew that.”

  “I did,” she said. “That’s why I’m here, right?”

  “Guess it is,” he said. “Guess it is.”

  Her instinct was to extend a hand. In a flash everything Roland Violette had done went through her mind – the slaughtered agents behind the Iron Curtain in the final days of the cold war, the flight from Spain, the profligacy with his amoral Costa Rican missus – and she withheld her hand. Then another part of her was in rebellion against her moral instincts. She reminded herself that she was on assignment and not supposed to pass judgment. So she offered her hand.

  He assessed her up and down. He gave her a dead-fish handshake and moved his left hand toward his left pocket. Her eyes shot down and spotted the contours of a small pistol. Her nerves simmered. He withdrew his hand. She pulled her own bag closer, just in case.

  “I’m surprised they sent a woman,” he said.

  “They?” she asked.

  “The CIA people,” he said. “The Careless Intelligence Analysts. We all know who we’re talking about. So don’t flirt. Don’t flirt. Never used to do that, never used to do that. Send women, I mean. If I’d known women who looked like you I might never have left.”

  “What’s done is done,” she said.

  “Yes. It is. It is done.”

  She wondered if he was acting or if his screws really were as loose as they seemed. “You had a wife for many years,” Alex said.

 

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