“We can work that out when Felipe gets here.”
That should be interesting. I know I don’t want to shower with Felipe. I asked, “Am I fully briefed now?”
“Felipe has information that I don’t have, such as how to get us and the cargo onboard.”
“Right.” Regarding our vehicle, if one of our amigos back in Havana was voluntarily or involuntarily talking to the police about a black ’53 Buick Roadmaster station wagon, we’d have a major problem, second only to the problem of the police connecting me to Fishy Business. We needed to get the Buick out of sight as soon as possible. And the faster we got on the water, the better.
Sara had seated herself so she could see the station wagon through the window and also the lobby entrance. I had my back to both, so I wouldn’t know when our contact—Felipe—arrived until I saw the happy and surprised expression on Sara’s face. Or not so happy if it was the police.
She kept looking at her watch. “He’s late.”
“He’s probably having a few drinks before he gets here.”
“Is that what you would do?”
“I may have done that on similar occasions.”
She looked at me. “You’re cool without being too macho.”
“It’s okay to be honest. As long as you’re fearless.”
She smiled, then looked over my shoulder, and I knew Felipe had arrived.
Sara said to me, “Tell me you love me.”
“I love you.”
She stood, smiled, and said, “Well, look who’s here.”
I stood and turned around. It was Felipe. What a surprise.
CHAPTER 51
Felipe, wearing jeans, sandals, and a silly tropical shirt with a pineapple motif, walked up to us.
He glanced at me, then tried out his smile on Sara and said, “It’s good to see you here.” And he really did look happy. And relieved to see that his girlfriend was alive and well. He didn’t seem as thrilled to see me alive.
This was supposed to look like a serendipitous meeting, so Felipe and Sara did a hug and double-cheek kiss, then he turned to me and put out his hand. We shook and he said, “I haven’t seen you since Key West. How are you?”
I’m glad he didn’t ask me what I’ve been up to. “I’m well. And you look well.”
“Thank you. And you look . . .”
Unshaven, unkempt, and maybe a bit guilty.
“Mind if I join you?”
“Have a seat,” I said.
He summoned the waitress, whom he seemed to know because he’d been coming here looking for us for the last few nights.
Felipe ordered a daiquiri, which is a close cousin to a pink squirrel, and I knew I could beat him up. Sara and I ordered another round. What the hell?
While the waitress was still there, he asked Sara, “So what brings you to Cayo Guillermo?”
“You.”
He smiled, but clearly he was trying to figure out if I’d seen her naked.
Felipe was looking tan and fit. He was younger than me and younger than Sara, and I wondered what she saw in him. I had no idea what Felipe did for a living when he wasn’t the first mate on Fishy Business, but I had the impression he could have worked in retail. Maybe ladies’ handbags.
He looked around to see if we were alone, then asked Sara, “How did you make out?”
“Good and bad.”
“Tell me the bad.”
“We didn’t get to Camagüey.”
He didn’t look happy. “What happened?”
I didn’t like his tone of voice to Sara, and I said nicely, “It doesn’t matter what happened. It only matters that we didn’t get to Camagüey.” I asked him, “What did Eduardo tell you?”
He stared at me. “Eduardo, the last time I saw him, was undecided about Camagüey.”
“Well, he decided.” I asked him, “How’s Jack?”
“He’s good. And he’ll be happy to hear you’ve made it.”
Did he tell you I was probably fucking your girlfriend?
Felipe said, “You weren’t supposed to meet Jack in Havana.”
Felipe was a little more cocky than I remembered. “It was Eduardo who I wasn’t supposed to meet in Havana.”
He had no reply to that, but asked Sara, “How was my uncle when you saw him?”
“He was happy,” Sara assured him. “He was ready to go home.”
Felipe nodded. “He’s walking with God.”
I said, “He’s walking with too much information.”
Felipe informed me, “You don’t understand.”
I almost said, “Sara has been trying to make me understand,” but I bit my cocktail stirrer.
Sara said, “I pray for him.”
Felipe seconded that. I could see they had a lot in common.
Felipe asked me, “Do you still have the gun?”
“Why would I not?”
“I can take it if you’re uncomfortable carrying it.”
Sigmund Freud would say he wanted to take my dick off. I didn’t reply.
The waitress brought our drinks, and Felipe asked us, for her benefit, “So are you staying here?”
Sara replied, “No. We’re at the Sol Club.”
“Just in from Toronto,” I added.
The waitress left and Felipe told me, “This is where the tournament is staying, and there’s an extra room that you can use to freshen up before our cruise.”
“Sara said.”
He looked at me as though I needed a bath. “I have the key. You can go first, and Sara and I will follow when you come back.”
Really? I didn’t think so. “We have a lot to talk about.”
“We’ll have time after Sara and I use the room.” He smiled. “I need a real shower after five days on your boat.”
I leaned toward him. “Let me make something clear. When we step on my boat, I am in charge. And let me make something else clear—there is no time when you are in charge.”
So we locked eyeballs, and if we’d had horns we’d have locked them, too.
Felipe backed off and said, “The showers can wait.”
Sara said, “Thank you.”
She was obviously a little intimidated by her boyfriend—or feeling guilty. I asked him, “What time do we sail?”
“About eleven.”
“Why eleven?”
“Two reasons. One is port security. The Guarda Frontera—the border guards—have two patrol boats, and Jack and I have watched them. One goes out at dusk, and returns at about three or four in the morning. The other, the faster one, goes out at about midnight and returns at dawn.” He continued, “We want an hour head start on that one.”
“Then let’s leave earlier and get a two-hour start.”
“We can’t. The second reason is the tide. It’ll be high tide at eleven-twelve and I’m going to take the boat into the mangrove swamp on the south side of the island, and I can only do that at high tide.” He added, “I will meet you both there.”
I’d thought we were going to load up and cast off at the marina, and I wasn’t sure about The Maine in a mangrove swamp. “We have only two trunks to load. Why can’t we leave from the marina?”
He explained, a bit impatiently, “Because the border guards want to know what you’re doing, who and what you’re bringing onboard, and if they don’t recognize you, they check passports and tourist visas.”
“They actually want a donation to their retirement fund.”