At the other end of the chamber, he spoke close to her ear. Yelling children covered his voice. “Doc, I want to know—do you really know these guys? I know you think you do, but I mean know them? Dr. Bauman, these are some very hard guys. There are, you know, hard guys and hard guys. This is a thing I happen to know about. These are the harder type of hard guy, rather than mugs, if you follow me. These don’t look like no fuzz to me. I can’t see you around these type of fellows. You know, unless they were kin to you or something like that you can’t do anything about.”
Rachel put her hand on his arm. “Thanks, Eddie. I know what you’re saying. But I’ve known these two for a long time. They’re my friends.”
A porpoise had been put in the tank with the whale to provide her company. It was busy hiding pieces of fish in the drain while the whale was distracted by the trainer. The whale slid by the underwater window, taking a full ten seconds to pass by, its small eye looking through the glass at the people talking on the other side.
“This guy I hear about, Jerry Sapp, did a job in Cuba a couple of years ago,” Stiles told Kabakov. “Cuba! He ran in under the coastal radar close to Puerta Cabanas with some Cubans from Miami.” Stiles looked from Kabakov to Rachel and back again. “They had some business on shore, you know, they ran in through the surf in one of these inflatables, like an Avon or a Zodiac, and they came off with this box. I don’t know what the hell it was, but this guy didn’t come back to Florida. He got into it with a Cuban patrol boat out of Bahia Honda and ran straight across to Yucatán. Had a big bladder tank on the foredeck.”
Kabakov listened, tapping his fingers on the rail. The whale was quiet now, resting on the surface. Her great tail arched down, dropping her flukes ten feet below the surface.
“These kids are driving me nuts,” Eddie said. “Let’s move.”
They stood in the dark corridor of the shark house, watching the long gray shapes endlessly circling, small bright fish darting between them.
“Anyway, I had always wondered how this guy ran in close to Cuba. Since the Bay of Pigs they got radar you wouldn’t believe. You said your guy slipped away from the Coast Guard radar. Same thing. So I asked around a little, you know, about this Sapp. He was in Sweeney’s in Asbury Park there, about two weeks ago. But nobody’s seen him since. His boat’s a thirty-eight-foot sportfisherman, a Shing Lu job. They’re built in Hong Kong, and I mean built. This one’s all wood.”
“Where did he keep his boat?” Kabakov asked.
“I don’t know. Nobody seemed to know. I mean, you can’t ask too close, you know? But look, the bartender at Sweeney’s takes messages for this guy, I think he could get in touch. If it was business.”
“What kind of business would he go for?”
“Depends. He has to know he’s hot. If he went himself on this job you’re interested in, of course he knows he’s hot. If it was a contract job, if he let out the boat, then he was listening to the Coast Guard frequency the whole time. Wouldn’t you?”
“Where would you run, if you were this man?”
“I would have watched the boat for a day after it was back, to make sure it wasn’t staked out. Then if I had a place to work I’d paint it, put the legit registration back on and change it up—I’d put a tuna tower on it. I’d catch a string of Gold Platers running south to Florida along the ditch and I’d get right in with ‘em—a string of yachts going down the Intra-coastal Waterway,” Eddie explained. “Those rich guys like to go in a pack.”
“Give me a high-profit item away from here that would make him surface,” Kabakov said. “Something that would require the boat.”
“Smack,” Eddie said, with a guilty glance toward Rachel. “Heroin. Out of Mexico into, say, Corpus Christi or Aransas Pass on the Texas coast. He might go for that. There would have to be some front money, though. And he would have to be approached very careful. He would spook easy.”
“Think about the contact, Eddie. And thank you,” Kabakov said.
“I did it for the doc.” The sharks moved silently in the lighted tank. “Look, I’m gonna split now. I don’t want to look at these things anymore.”
“I’ll meet you back in town, David,” Rachel said.
Kabakov was surprised to see a kind of distaste in her eyes when she looked at him. She and Eddie walked away together, their heads bent, talking. Her arm was around the little man’s shoulders.
Kabakov would have preferred to keep Corley out of it. So far, the FBI agent knew nothing of this business of Jerry Sapp and his boat. Kabakov wanted to pursue it alone. He needed to talk to Sapp before the man wrapped himself in the Constitution.
Kabakov did not mind violating a man’s rights, his dignity, or his person if the violation provided immediate benefits. The fact of doing it did not bother him, but the seed within him that was nourished by the success of these tactics made him uneasy.
He felt himself developing contemptuous attitudes toward the web of safeguards between the citizen and the expediency of investigation. He did not try to rationalize his acts with catchphrases like “the greater good,” for he was not a reflective man. While Kabakov believed his measures to be necessary—knew that they worked—he feared that the mentality a man could develop in their practice was an ugly and dangerous thing, and for him it wore a face. The face of Hitler.
Kabakov recognized that the things he did marked his mind as surely as they marked his body. He wanted to think that his increasing impatience with the restraints of the law were entirely the result of his experience, that he felt anger against these obstacles just as he felt stiffness in old wounds on winter mornings.
But this was not entirely true. The seed of his attitudes was in his nature, a fact he had discovered years ago near Tiberias, in Galilee.
He was en route to inspect some positions on the Syrian border when he stopped his jeep at a well on a mountainside. A windmill, an old American Aermotor, pumped the cold water out of the rock. The windmill creaked at regular intervals as the blades slowly revolved, a lonely sound on a bright and quiet day. Leaning against his jeep, the water still cool on his face, Kabakov watched a flock of sheep grazing above him on the mountainside. A sense of aloneness pressed around him and made him aware of the shape and position of his body in these great tilted spaces. And then he saw an eagle, high, riding a thermal, wingtip feathers splayed like fingers, slipping sideways over the mountain’s face, his shadow slipping fast over the rocks. The eagle was not hunting sheep, for it was winter and there were no lambs among them, but it was above the sheep and they saw it and baaed among themselves. Kabakov became dizzy watching the bird, his horizontal reference distorted by the mountain slope. He found himself holding on to the jeep for balance.
And then he realized that he loved the eagle better than the sheep and that he always would and that, because he did, because it was in him to do it, he could never be perfect in the sight of God.
Kabakov was glad that he would never have any real power.
Now, in an apartment in a cliff face in Manhattan, Kabakov considered how the bait could be presented to Jerry Sapp. If he pursued Sapp alone, then Eddie Stiles had to make the contact. He was the only person Kabakov knew who had access to crime circles along the waterfront. Without him, Kabakov would have to use Corley’s resources. Stiles would do it for Rachel.
“No,” Rachel said at breakfast.