F.C. is what the Cuban Americans call Fidel Castro, though I don’t know why. Anyway, Eduardo’s damnation sounded very solemn in his Cuban accent.
I think I understood where Carlos and Eduardo were coming from, but Sara was a cipher. She still seemed a bit reserved, but she liked a good cigar, drank straight rum, and wore a baseball cap. She’d also slipped off her loafers and was barefoot. Jack says that women who go barefoot are hot. Sounded plausible.
Jack came up from below into the cabin to turn on the running lights and check the radar to make sure a cargo ship wasn’t bearing down on us.
We sat silently with our own thoughts, smoking and drinking, listening to Sinatra, and enjoying the majesty of the sea and sky. Life is good.
Until Carlos said to me, “I think there’s some fishing business for you to discuss with Sara and Eduardo. I’ll go below and watch TV. Jack can join me or stay in the cabin.” He looked at me. “Captain?”
I nodded.
Carlos went into the cabin for a word with Jack, then disappeared below, leaving me with his clients.
Sara said to me, “I think you’re the man we’re looking for.”
I didn’t reply.
“We can’t evaluate you any further. But you can evaluate us, and see if you’re interested in working with us.” She asked, “Do you want to hear more?”
I looked at Eduardo, whose face seemed expressionless in the darkness. He drew on his cigar and stared out to sea.
I turned my attention back to Sara. “I told Carlos I wasn’t interested.”
“But you are interested. Or we wouldn’t be here.”
Well, the moment for an important decision had arrived, as it had so many times in Kandahar Province. I stared at the red glow of my cigar, then looked at Eduardo, then Sara. “Okay.”
CHAPTER 8
Sinatra was singing, “I did it my way,” and a bright moon began to rise in the east, casting a river of light on the dark water.
Sara looked at me and we made eye contact. She said, “You probably want to know who we are before you hear what we have to say.”
She had a soft voice, but it commanded attention. “That’s a good start.”
“I’m Sara Ortega and this is Eduardo Valazquez, though you should not repeat our names to anyone.”
“I ask the same of you.”
She nodded and continued, “I’m American born, an architect by trade, living and working in Miami. You can visit my website.”
“Married?”
She glanced at me. “No.”
It was Eduardo’s turn and he said, “I, too, live in Miami and my life’s work is the destruction of the Communist regime in my homeland.”
“Website?”
“No.”
Well, there were thousands of Cubans in South Florida and elsewhere in America who belonged to any one of several dozen anti-Castro groups. It was like a small industry in Miami, but getting smaller as the younger generation of Cuban Americans lost interest in the crusade. The third generation had no memory of old Cuba and no personal experience with the Communist regime to fully understand the hatred that their parents and grandparents clung to. Also, the CIA was not funding these groups like they used to, so maybe this was why Eduardo and his amigos needed sixty million dollars.
Sara said, “In my private life, I’m a supporter of Eduardo and his friends, but in my public life, I’ve shown no interest in exile affairs.”
“So you won’t be arrested as soon as you step off the plane in Havana?”
“Hopefully not.” She added, “There are many like me who keep a low profile so that we can travel to Cuba.”
“Have you been?”
“Once. Last year.” She asked, “And you?”
“I haven’t had the pleasure.”
“I hope I have the pleasure of showing you around Havana.”
Normally, I’d say, “Me too.” But I didn’t.
She also let me know, “I speak perfect Cuban Spanish and when I wear clothes bought in Cuba I can pass for a native.”
I wasn’t so sure about that.
She asked, “Do you speak any Spanish?”
“Corona.”
“Well, that’s not important.”
What was important was that this sounded like we were going on a secret assignment together, and this was the mission briefing. I said, “I think we’re getting ahead of ourselves.”
“Well, then, catch up to me. I’m in Havana. Are you?”
That was a bit sassy. “Let’s go back to Miami. Who else knows about this?”
Eduardo replied, “A few of our friends, but each person knows only what he needs to know. And only a few people know your name.”
“Hopefully the Cuban secret police are not among those people.”
He replied, “I would be lying to you if I said there was no possibility of a security leak. But our experience in the past has been very good, and our friends in American intelligence assure us that no secret police from Cuba have infiltrated our group. As for Cuban American informants in our midst, we have always identified these traitors, and they are no longer with us.”
I didn’t ask for a clarification of “no longer with us.” I did ask, however, “How about all these thousands of new refugees escaping from Cuba?”
“We have little to do with them. We help them, especially if there are family connections, but we can’t trust them all so we remain separate from them.” He added, “For the most part they hate the regime as we do, but for different reasons. My goal is to return to a free Cuba. Their goal is to get out of Cuba. To get a job in America.” He editorialized, “Unfortunately, these people have not done an honest day’s work in their lives.”
“They will when Starbucks gets to Cuba.”
Eduardo ignored that and informed me, “Everyone in Cuba works for the government, and everyone makes the same money—twenty dollars a month. Slave wages. There is no incentive. That is Communism.”
Actually, I’ve had a few months where a twenty-dollar profit would look good. That’s Capitalism.
Eduardo continued, “The people are hungry. There is malnutrition.”
“Sorry to hear that. But to return to the topic of security and this . . . mission being compromised—”
“You think like a military man,” Eduardo said. “That’s good.”
“Right. So—”
“There is always a chance that we will be betrayed. I will not lie to you. We have lost people in Cuba.”
I had a flashback to the battalion ops bunker where some colonel was saying, “I won’t lie to you, Mac. This is going to be tough.”
I looked at the cabin and saw that Jack was still there, having a smoke. I could see the flickering light of the TV coming from the stateroom below. Maybe Carlos was watching reruns of “I Love Lucy.”
This might be a good time to announce that the sunset cruise was over.
Sara said, “I’d understand if you didn’t want to go to Havana with me. There’s an element of danger, and maybe the money isn’t enough of an incentive. But for me, it’s personal, so I’m going.”
“How is sixty million dollars personal?”
“The money will be returned to those it belongs to—including my family. And some of it will go to our cause. And, of course, you will be paid.” She added, “Carlos says you want five million. Will you take three?”