Her eyes were fixed on the dinghy a hundred yards away. A diver suddenly broke the surface and clung to the side. She handed me a pair of binoculars and said, “That is what I brought you to see.”
I trained the binoculars on the diver. He looked exhausted, half drowned, his skin turning a strange shade of blue as he coughed up seawater. A frantic crewman finally dragged him into the dinghy.
“Looks like he ran out of air.”
“Of course he did. They don’t use gauges.”
I did a double take. “That’s crazy. How long do they stay down?”
“They come up and down as they think they need it. Some are better than others at figuring out how long is too long.”
“With no gauges? They could drown, get the bends.”
“Some of them do.”
Her voice had an ominous tone. I lowered the binoculars, looked her in the eye. “So this is what Lindsey saw?”
“Plenty of people have seen it. Lindsey was going to write a story about it.”
“How did she find out about it?”
“Senor Cruz. I told you, she was using him.”
“Isn’t that a kick in the teeth? Some young American girl sweet-talks him into exposing the Achilles’ heel of the industry, then dumps him and runs off to her typewriter for her first coup ever as a wannabe journalist.”
“That’s Lindsey.”
“He couldn’t have been too happy about that.”
“A lot of people weren’t happy.”
“My father included, I imagine. Which probably made the story all the more attractive to her.”
I looked again toward that diver lying in the boat, still coughing and trying to recover. Something wasn’t adding up. My father, the man I knew, was the last guy on earth who’d exploit these Indians.
“Did my father know about this?”
“You probably should talk to Lindsey about that.”
“That’s the whole point. I don’t know where she is.”
“I told you, people don’t want this story told. She’s in hiding.”
“How do you know?”
“Because I helped her find a place to hide.”
“You know where Lindsey is?”
She nodded.
“Can you tell me how to find her?”
“No.”
“Why not?”
“Because you were barely able to handle the streets of Puerto Cabezas. You’d hardly manage your way through the rain forest.”
My eyes followed hers, till they came to rest on the thickest part of the jungle north of the city. “My sister is in there?”
“Not far. But too far for you to find her.”
“Why don’t you try me?”
“Why don’t I take you?” she replied.
I smiled wryly and said, “Why didn’t I think of that?”
In Spanish I told the old guy to take us back to shore. He shook his head firmly and said, “Veinte.” Three bucks to take us out here, twenty to bring us back. I’d seen this one coming.
It was just a little thing, but as I handed him a twenty-dollar bill, I realized how easy it was to get yourself into trouble out here. The boat turned and pointed toward the rain forest.
I couldn’t help but wonder, How deep was the mess that Lindsey had gotten herself into?
42
Matthew was no longer alone in his hole.The rain had stopped, and the standing water had finally drained away. Out of sheer exhaustion he’d finally lain flat on his back, knees bent. For perhaps as long as an hour he’d been staring at the dark thatched roof overhead. His eyes had definitely played tricks in the darkness, but the tiny sliver of light at the far corner seemed real. Without a doubt, an almost imperceptible crack of moonlight or sunlight-he didn’t know which-had broken through the thick covering. It was just bright enough to reveal a set of red, beady eyes at the other end of the hole.
It seemed to be staring at him, whatever it was. He listened for its breathing but heard nothing. The eyes were fixed, motionless. They were surely inside the head of some creature, but it was too dark to see any part of the body. If the frozen eyes were any indication, however, the entire creature was locked in some unshakable pose. Stiffened with fright, maybe. Or poised for an attack. A primitive thought crossed his mind, as if he were suddenly inside the small brain of his visitor.
Is that thing over there edible?
The piercing eyes glowed brighter, and finally they blinked. A chill raced through Matthew; fear gripped his heart.
Do anacondas have eyelids?
He suddenly heard breathing-his own. He didn’t dare speak aloud, but silently he was talking himself out of his worst nightmare, assuring himself that it couldn’t be an anaconda, that it was too cold up here in the mountains.
Unless Joaquin brought it here.
It would be the ultimate execution, a wrestling match with a hungry eighteen-foot snake. Ten horrific minutes of rolling in a hole as this monster coiled around his body and squeezed the life out of him, its massive jaws locked on to his head in a desperate effort to swallow him whole.
Matthew was shaking, and the creature seemed to sense his fright. Slowly, not more than a centimeter at a time, the eyes were creeping closer.
It was decision time. If he burst out of the hole, he could well be shot by the guards. If he stayed put, God only knew what was in store for him.
Carefully he sat up, drew his knees in toward his body, and planted his feet on the ground. On the mental count of three he summoned all his strength and shot straight up from the hole. His hands broke through the branches first, sending the makeshift roof splintering in all directions. A screeching noise followed him out of the hole, which only propelled him faster. He was clawing at stalks of bamboo, giant leaves, anything to get a grip and pull himself out.
“Don’t shoot!” he shouted, fearing it would look like an escape. He rolled to the ground outside his hole, tangled in the wet remnants of the thatched roof. He was swinging wildly in self-defense, not sure where those red eyes had gone. Something was at his ankle, then at his leg, and climbing up his belly. He rolled frantically and shouted, “Don’t shoot!”
A gun went off, and a hot, red explosion covered his torso.
“?No se mueve!” the guard shouted.
Matthew froze, obeying the command to stop, though his chest heaved in panicky breaths. Slowly his eyes adjusted to the daylight, and the glob of flesh beside him eventually came into focus.
It was the biggest dead rat he’d ever seen.
Joaquin and another guerrilla stood over him, laughing. Behind them were five others nearly falling over in hysterics.
Matthew was fuming. “Is this your idea of a joke? Turn a rat loose in my hole?”
Joaquin’s laughter faded. His eyes turned cold, colder than the rat’s. “Your hole?” he said, glaring.
The others fell silent. Matthew stared back, but he couldn’t match the black intensity in Joaquin’s eyes. He suspected drugs.
“It’s not your hole,” said Joaquin. “You have nothing here. Not even this hole. Do you understand?”
Matthew was silent.
“I asked you a question.”
He still refused to answer. Joaquin raised his rifle and took aim at Matthew’s chest. “Answer me,” he said harshly. “Or you will own this hole. Forever.”
Matthew stared down the long steel barrel. Finally he said, “I understand.”
Joaquin jerked the rifle and fired off two quick rounds that splattered the rat beyond recognition, most of the mess landing on Matthew. Joaquin and his cronies laughed in chorus.
“You smell better now,” he said.
Matthew didn’t doubt it. After all that time in the hole, he felt like a human pest strip.
Joaquin shouted to his men in Spanish. Matthew didn’t catch it all, but it had something to do with the river. And he thought he heard the name Nisho, the young Japanese widow. With the guerrillas’ reaction, he knew that he’d heard correctly. Two of them howled and started racing back to camp.