“No jail,” Citron said.
“You hear that?” Tighe asked. “Morgan here doesn’t like the idea of spending two, three, maybe four years in some beaner jail.”
“Can’t say I blame him,” Yarn said.
“Of course,” Tighe continued, “you may not have to go. It all depends.”
“On what?”
“On how much you know.”
“I don’t know anything.”
Tighe sighed heavily. “Morgan, let me tell you something. For your own good. All Gladys said was that we’ve got to keep you alive. That’s all. I mean, Gladys is probably just one hell of a mother, but for some reason I don’t think she’s the type who’d spend the rest of her life in the slammer for her baby boy, although, like I said, she really must be some mom.”
“But it’s not up to us, you’ve got to understand,” Yarn said.
“Who’s it up to?”
“The general.”
“You see, Morgan,” Tighe said, “the general’s going to want to know what you know.”
“Very little,” Citron said. “Almost nothing.”
“Well, I believe you, and Yarn up there, he believes you, but the general, well, he’s going to want to take you down in the cellar and beat the shit out of you and stick hot wires up your dong just to make sure.”
“A very cautious guy, the general,” Yarn said.
“And mean. About the only thing meaner is a Cuban.”
“Or a Uruguayan. They’re pretty mean, too.”
“So what do you want?” Citron said.
“Tell us what you know,” Tighe said. “Tell us what you know, and what you think you know, and what you’ve guessed, and even what you think you’ve guessed. Then we’ll tell the general that all you’ve done is to make some pretty wild guesses and we don’t see any reason to keep you in the pokey for more than a month at the most, and no reason at all to take you down in the cellar and shove hot wires up your dong.”
“A month,” Citron said. “I’m not sure I can take a month.”
“What about the hot wires?”
“No, I couldn’t take that either.”
“Then let’s hear it,” Yarn said from the front seat. “Your version.” He pulled the car to a stop, turned off the engine, and twisted around in the seat.
Citron took a deep breath and let it out slowly. “You suckered them, didn’t you?” he said. “Langley, I mean.”
There was a long silence until Yarn said, “That’s right. We suckered them.”
Chapter 31
Draper Haere walked back to the Inter-Continental from the American embassy. It was a four-mile walk that led him past the Presidential Palace. He paused to examine the bullet holes in the wall where the President had been executed and wondered if the generals might someday commemorate the spot with a plaque.
Haere walked slowly, because it was hot and because the leisurely pace enabled him to gawk at whatever caught his interest: a three-hundred-year-old Spanish colonial house, a pair of eleven-year-old prostitutes, a forty-one-year-old Buick Roadmaster taxi, and a man in his late twenties who played the guitar while his five-year-old son sang a sad song about how desperately poor they were and held out an International Harvester cap into which no one but Haere dropped any money.
Across the square from the cathedral in a large crowded outdoor cafe, Haere found a vacant table and ordered a cup of coffee. He was halfway through the cup when a man sat down beside him. The man was young, somewhere around twenty-three or twenty-four, and wore a white short-sleeved shirt and dark pants. Haere thought he looked vaguely familiar.
“Naturally, you do not remember me,” the man said in English which had almost no accent.
“You look familiar.”
“Really? I’m surprised.”
“Why?”
“Busboys are rarely remembered.”
It came to Haere then. “At the hotel last night. You replaced the napkins that didn’t need replacing.”
The man smiled politely as though Haere had remarked upon the weather. “We are being watched. In a moment a taxi will arrive. I will get into it. You will remain here. They will follow me. Agreed?”
Haere nodded. “What’s the problem?”
“Please listen carefully,” the man said and looked up at the sky as if to check on the chance of rain. “The man your Mr. Citron met with this morning has been murdered. Smile, please.”
Haere made himself smile. “And Citron?”
The man smiled back. “He was taken to the Presidential Palace by two North Americans. In their early thirties. They shot and killed the man who murdered our leader. Please laugh a little.”
Haere chuckled and nodded.
“Very good,” the busboy said. “The man who killed our leader arrived with you on the flight yesterday.”
“He called himself Dr. Blaine.”
“We have reason to believe he was a hired killer, one without politics, who was sent to kill both you and Mr. Citron. Another small laugh, if you can.”
Haere chuckled appreciatively. “The two North Americans who took Citron to the Presidential Palace?” he asked, still chuckling.
The busboy grinned broadly and wagged his head. “One had blue eyes, one had brown. That’s all I know.” He looked at his watch. “Please remain here until I’ve gone.”
Haere tried, but failed, to keep smiling as the busboy rose with a grin and made his way through the tables to the sidewalk. A taxi pulled up. Haere noted that it was the same 1941 Buick Roadmaster he had seen earlier. The busboy reached for the rear door handle. He had his hand on it when two men in open-necked shirts, sport coats, and blue jeans moved up to him from behind and jammed short-barreled revolvers into his back. The busboy tried to wrench the Buick’s door open, but the old taxi was already pulling away when the two men with the revolvers began firing.
One man shot the busboy three times; the other man shot him twice. The old Buick sped away and a woman screamed. Some café patrons rose and began to race toward the cathedral, either to hide or to pray. Others ducked beneath the café tables. There were more screams and shouts. One man cursed steadily in a low, calm voice. Haere watched as one of the two gunmen knelt by the fallen busboy and shot him through the neck. Haere wondered why, since the bus-boy already seemed quite dead.
The kneeling man rose and said something to the other gunman. Both turned to look at Haere. Still staring at him, they slowly put their short-barreled revolvers away in small belt holsters. They entered the café, made their way through the tables, and stopped at Haere’s. He saw that they were younger than he had thought, neither of them much more than twenty-five. Their black eyes seemed bottomless. Neither wore any identifiable expression, although one of them, Haere noticed, was a mouth breather. The mouth breather was the one who had knelt and shot the busboy through the neck.
“Do you understand Spanish?” the mouth breather asked.
Haere nodded. “A little.”
“Good. Leave our country. Today.”
“Do you understand that?” the other one asked.
“Yes,” Haere said. “I understand.”
“Good,” the mouth breather said. They stared at Haere for a moment longer, then turned and walked back through the tables to the sidewalk and over to where the busboy still lay. A new green Volvo sedan pulled up. The driver popped the trunk latch. The two gunmen bent down, picked up the dead busboy, and folded him away into the Volvo’s trunk. They slammed the lid down, turned, gave Haere another thoughtful look, and then climbed into the rear seat. The Volvo sped away.
Haere rose. His knees felt as if they were going to give way, so he leaned on the table, his head down, gulping great gasping breaths. When the trembling finally subsided, he looked up. People were staring at him. They had all edged away until none was closer than twenty feet. Haere moved slowly through the café tables and onto the sidewalk. He looked down at the spot where the dead busboy had fallen. There was a large thick smear of blood. Haere stared down at it for several seconds, then slowly turned and started walking west toward the Inter-Continental.