Page 32 of Havana Bay


  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 Havana. I've shot here daytime, nighttime, it's got that exotic feel that women love."

  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 neumático with a hand shielding a candle. As Walls slowed the boat to idle again, the neumático 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 Riviera? We modified the remote, it's a radio transmitter now, but it still has your fingerprints. Then, people saw the doll in Pribluda's apartment while you were there. We may have lost Sergei, but John said you were so bright you'd serve even better."

  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 Havana Yacht Club."

  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 neumático 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.