Best Kept Secrets
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BEST KEPT SECRETS
ROCHELLE ALERS
BEST KEPT SECRETS
I dedicate Best Kept Secrets to all who wanted to know what happened before there was Hideaway and before there was Vows.
A man should fulfill his duty as a husband, and a woman should fulfill her duty as a wife, and each should satisfy the other’s needs.
—1 Corinthians 7:3
Contents
PART 1: Marguerite-Josefina Isabel Diaz
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
PART 2: Everett Kirkland
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
PART 3: Teresa Maldonado
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
PART 4: Samuel Claridge Cole
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
PART 1
1924
Marguerite-Josefina Isabel Diaz
The history of every country begins in the heart of a man or a woman
—Willa Cather
Chapter 1
‘Twas mercy brought me from my pagan land; taught my benighted soul to understand.
—Phillis Wheatley
Havana, Cuba—veintiuno de Octubre 1924
At the age of twenty-six, Samuel Claridge Cole was on a Portuguese tanker sailing for Havana harbor, following his heart. All he had was his name, a business proposal and a bank draft for enough money to buy a sugarcane plantation in Artemisa, Cuba.
Oblivious of the twin smokestacks belching smoke, the minute black particles dotting his white linen suit, oblivious of the tropical sun beating down on his head, he stood calmly at the rail of the prewar ship instead of the sleek cruiser to which he’d been denied passage in Miami because of his race. He was determined that neither prejudice nor racial bigotry would dissuade him from his quest.
His mother had called him a dreamer, but his father’s constant ridicule made him an overachiever. Before Charles would compliment him he’d say, You won’t never ’mount to nothin’ because yo head is always up yo ass. Samuel’s sole mission was to prove Charles Cole wrong.
But his maternal grandmother believed in him, listened to his tales of grandeur, encouraged him to follow his heart, and depend on nobody but the goodness of the Creator.
His daddy hadn’t lived long enough to witness his youngest son’s success, but that no longer mattered because he didn’t need Charles’s approval.
He reached into a pocket of his trousers for the watch attached to a gold fob at his waist. It was after four o’clock—an hour later than his appointed time to meet his guide and interpreter.
Samuel returned the timepiece to his pocket and rested his arms on the railing, his gaze narrowing as the skyline of Havana grew larger. He was certain his guide would wait indefinitely for the norteamericano who would pay him more for a week of his services than he would earn in six months as a Havana taxi driver. A cynical smile lifted the corners of Samuel’s mouth. Everyone had a price. That was something he’d learned as a soldier during the war.
Before peace had been declared and he found himself on a battleship sailing back to the States, Samuel had witnessed firsthand black marketeers selling everything from cigarettes, tins of food and medical supplies, to shoes and wine. Some Frenchmen willingly bartered priceless heirloom pieces for a case of quality Bordeaux or Chardonnay.
Samuel learned more from the marketeers in three months than he’d learned in twelve years of instruction in a segregated Tallahassee, Florida, school system. Even though he didn’t smoke or drink wine, he’d managed to stockpile the much-sought-after products and trade them for a strand of perfectly matched pearls, a gaudy ruby and diamond brooch, and a woman’s ring with a large, flawless pale pink Australian diamond. After smuggling the jewels into the States, he sold them, using the proceeds to buy land to set up one of the first soybean farms in the South.
He knew he was taking a risk investing in Cuba, but he knew any attempt to set up a plantation within the United States would be viewed unfavorably by both whites and Negroes. His hope was to purchase either the Cuban sugarcane plantation or, if this proved futile, a banana plantation in Costa Rica.
Forty minutes later, Samuel disembarked from the tanker after dock officials had checked the captain’s manifest and cargo, and it was another half hour before he was able to clear customs.
Samuel sat in the rear of a Ford Model T staring at the Spanish Colonial buildings as the driver increased his speed to twenty miles an hour along the Malecon, the seawall built in 1901 when the United States government controlled Cuba. Waves crashed over the wall, soaking cars and strollers alike.
“Are there many Americans living here?” Samuel asked.
Hernan Cruz nodded, but did not turn around. “Yes, Senor Cole. Too many,” he added, wondering how the norteamericano would interpret his response. If Samuel Cole had been other than a Negro he would’ve lied to him.
“They come here,” he continued in accented English, a language he’d learned while working in a Tampa cigar factory, “with their bossy attitudes, yelling orders as if we were slaves.”
Samuel rested the back of his head against the leather seat. “Although I’ve seen very little of your very beautiful country, I have no intention of living here.”
Hernan glanced up into the rearview mirror. Samuel Cole was a norteamericano but could easily pass for a Cubano. His coloring and facial features reflected those of African ancestry throughout the Caribbean and the other Americas, the result of European slaveholders mixing their blood with their slaves.
“I am certain it would be different with you, Senor Cole.”
Samuel lifted a thick, black eyebrow. “Why me?”
Hernan’s gaze returned to the wet roadway. “You’re not Anglo.”
How right you are, Senor Morales, I am not Anglo, Samuel mused. He was a citizen of the United States—albeit a second-class citizen who’d risked his life fighting with the 369th Infantry, the first black U.S. combat overseas unit, a regiment that didn’t lose a man, trench or any ground, a regiment known to the Germans as the “Hell Fighters.” He’d been one of 171 who’d earned a croix de guerre or a Legion of Merit, France’s highest military medal. No U.S. medals of honor were awarded to any black troops.
He had been a black soldier, returning from World War I, and he refused to march at the back of a victory parade because a segregated parade seemed contradictory to the principles they’d supposedly fought for.
Closing his eyes, Samuel recalled the first time he’d killed another man—a German boy with peach-fuzz cheeks, a soldier whose uniform collar was too large for his scrawny neck, an enemy soldier who would’ve killed him if he hadn’t bayoneted him first. It took days before he was able to erase the image of his sightless blue eyes staring up at the darkening sky, blood staining the front of his uniform, the distinctive sound of a death rattle. After his first kill, the others no longer mattered to Samuel. It was
either kill or be killed, because he’d had no wish to die on foreign soil.
A wry smile twisted his mouth, but he did not open his eyes. He’d killed white men in Europe and had received a medal for his actions. But if he had killed a single white man in Florida he would’ve forfeited his life—with or without a trial.
A weighted fatigue swept over him as he sank deeper into the leather seat. He didn’t know when the car increased its speed or when Hernan left the city of Havana, heading southwest. He slept soundly, waking only when the vehicle stopped in front of a small salmon-colored, two-story building several hundred feet from a plaza filled with an elaborate marble fountain, palm trees and flowering shrubs. The cloying fragrance of orchids, bougainvillea and frangipani lingering in the sultry air wafted through the car’s open windows.
Straightening, his dark eyes widening, Samuel stared at the small crowd that had gathered around a group of musicians. The sounds filling the air had a distinctive Latin beat infused with rhythms that were unmistakably African. A lithe, dark-skinned woman in an ankle-length white dress swayed and twirled in tempo with the hypnotic drumming. Her ruffled hem snapped and fluttered wildly as she danced as if under a powerful spell that made her spin as fast as the hands pounding the skins stretched over drums of various shapes and sizes.
“Senor Cole?” Hernan held the car door open for him.
Samuel blinked as if coming out of his own trance. He didn’t know whether it was the music, the flora, the tropical heat, the smells or the sight of the woman dancing in a sensual, unrestrained abandonment that held him captivated, but there was something about the island country that pulled him in and refused to let him go. Within seconds he had become enthralled with Cuba, its people and its music.
Ducking his head, he stepped out of the car, smiling. The sounds of spoken Spanish floated all around him, and although he could not understand more than five words of the language, it still sounded like music to his ears.
Hernan reached for the bag with SCC branded into the supple leather, cradling it in his right hand while his own corrugated luggage sat on the ground beside him. He had thought himself blessed when his Florida cousin asked him to act as Senor Cole’s driver and interpreter. The money he would earn coupled with what he’d saved would be enough to buy the house he’d wanted for years. He was tired of living in the little guesthouse behind his in-laws’ much larger residence.
He leaned closer, noting his passenger’s entrancement. Samuel Cole had fallen in love with Cuba.
Samuel followed Hernan and the proprietor of the converted convent up a staircase to the second story. Despite the heat, the interiors of the stucco building remained cool. The owner unlocked the door to a room facing the plaza and pushed it open.
“This is my best room,” he said to Hernan.
Hernan nodded, his expression purposefully serious. “Senor Cole is a very important businessman from the Estados Unidos,” he said in Spanish, his tone low and mysterious. He would occupy another room—a much smaller room—connecting to Samuel’s by a common door.
The innkeeper stepped aside, bowing slightly. “I understand. If there is anything you need, please let me know.” He smiled broadly when Hernan handed him a coin. “Mil gracias.”
Hernan could afford to be generous because Samuel had been more than generous with him.
Samuel found the furnishings at the hotel provincial, but they would serve his purpose during his stay. All he needed was a clean bed and indoor plumbing with a private bath.
A bed, a mahogany armoire and a matching rocker were the only furnishings in the space that was no larger than the dressing room in the master bedroom suite of his West Palm Beach home. He sat down on the side of the bed, patting the mattress. At least it was firm—the way he liked it.
Reaching into the pocket of his trousers, he took out a stack of bills and handed several to Hernan. “I’m going to need a Panama hat.”
Hernan took the money. “What size?”
Samuel gave him his hat size as he unbuttoned his shirt. “I also need someone to press my clothes.” The woman who kept his house had packed his luggage very carefully, but there was no doubt some of the articles would bear wrinkles or creases and he’d always prided himself on his appearance.
He had heard people speak of the seven deadly sins, and he was guilty of committing most of them on one or more occasion. Sloth was the only one he knew he would not commit. Charles Cole was gone, but unconsciously Samuel was still driven to prove his worth to a man who blamed his youngest son for all of his own failures.
He shrugged out of his shirt, leaving it on the rocker, opened the lock on his luggage and withdrew a case containing his shaving equipment. By the time he’d disappeared into the bathroom, closing the door behind him, Hernan had removed half a dozen shirts and several suits from the calfskin bag.
A woman dressed in a pale pink uniform escorted Samuel and Hernan into a rear courtyard. The sun had moved lower in the heavens, taking with it the intense heat and leaving the fragrant air cooler.
Samuel stared up at a massive acacia tree with its twisted roots spreading out over a lush lawn, shading the rear of a sprawling Spanish Colonial house made of pale pink limestone.
Arturo Moreno rose from where he sat under the shade of fanlike banana leaves to greet his visitors. His gaze swept over the American, cataloging everything about him within seconds. He was tall, at least six feet or more, slender and broad-shouldered. The cut of his double-breasted reefer jacket lounge suit was as exquisite as the finely woven Panama hat perched on his head at a jaunty angle. As the man came closer he examined the lean, angular face with large deep-set, dark eyes. Samuel Cole presented an imposing figure, radiating confidence and power. And Arturo had to hide his surprise that the man who wanted to buy his sugarcane plantation wasn’t Anglo.
Samuel removed his hat, holding it in his left hand while he extended his right one to his host. “Buenas noches, Senor Moreno.”
Arturo inclined his head, accepting the proffered hand. “Buenas noches, Senor Cole.” He gestured to a nearby chair. “Please, sit down,” he continued in slow, halting English. He retook his seat, then turned to his servant. “Please see that Senor Cruz is given something to eat.” He’d switched fluidly back to Spanish.
Hernan and Samuel exchanged questioning glances. It was apparent Arturo wanted to conduct the meeting without Hernan interpreting his Spanish into English.
The woman bowed her head and made her way toward the house, Hernan following.
Unbuttoning his jacket, sitting and crossing one leg over the other, Samuel rested his hat on his lap. He gave Arturo a direct stare. He had waited a year to get an appointment with him, and there was something about the man that made him feel uneasy. He was short, barely five feet, slight, with hands and feet that were no larger than a child’s. Inky black hair, parted and brushed neatly on the left and off his forehead, enhanced the pallor of his pale skin. His light brown eyes bulged from their sockets like those of the tiny dogs Samuel had seen in Mexico.
He closed his eyes for several seconds, trying to recall the breed. Chihuahua! It was the name of the city in Mexico where he and his brothers had transported their soybean crop for processing.
“Are you aware that I hired Senor Cruz to act as my interpreter?”
A slight flicker wrinkled Arturo’s forehead. “That may be so, but I believe my English is better than your Spanish.”
Although his English was very heavily accented, Samuel was able to understand him. “You’re probably right about that.”
“I know that I am right, Senor Cole. What you and I have to discuss should not be overheard by servants.”
Samuel wanted to tell the condescending little man that Hernan wasn’t his servant, but decided to hold his tongue.
Arturo glanced at his pocket watch. “I want us to talk before we dine.”
“I’ve come to purchase your sugarcane plantation, Senor Moreno.”
Nodding, Arturo laced his
fingers together. “That is true.”
“Your solicitor quoted me a price that I’m prepared to meet.”
“Would you answer a question for me, Senor Cole? Why do you want a Cuban sugarcane plantation when you can purchase one in the United States?”
It was a full minute before Samuel replied. “Even though our countries are separated by ninety miles of ocean, I’m certain you’re aware of the racial bigotry in my country. I have no doubt my business endeavors would anger certain people.”
A cold smile parted the Cuban’s thin lips. “Do you think Cuba is exempt from racial bigotry?”
A muscle throbbed noticeably in Samuel’s jaw as a sixth sense told him that his attempt to buy the plantation would be thwarted because of his race.
“No, Arturo,” he replied, using the man’s name for the first time. “Any time a ruling class enslaves another group or race of people, there is always bigotry, and therefore injustice. Cuba will have to pay for its sins just like my country will have to pay for its own.”
“How much do you know about our history, Samuel?” It was Arturo’s turn to use Samuel’s given name.
“Apparently you believe I don’t know enough.”
The landowner glared at the brash American, hating him and everything he represented. He was young, tall, handsome, healthy, a Negro, and had enough money to meet the asking price for his plantation, while he’d been stricken with an illness that baffled the best medical experts, an illness that made his eyes bulge, affected his breathing and weakened him so much that getting out of bed and walking more than ten feet was becoming more difficult with each sunrise.