In the Presidential Palace, Morgan Citron had been kept waiting for almost an hour in an anteroom just outside a pair of sixteen-foot-high doors through which Tighe and Yarn had gone. Citron did not wait alone. Seated across the room from him were a young uniformed captain and an even younger lieutenant, both armed with M-16 rifles. The rifles were pointed at Citron, one at his head, the other at his stomach. The fingers of the two young officers were on the triggers. The safeties were off. Citron sat virtually motionless, remembering that the last time he had gone through such a pair of doors, he had been given a diamond. This time he expected no gift.
One of the sixteen-foot-high doors opened and Tighe appeared. “Okay, Morgan.”
Citron rose and followed Tighe through the immense door and into a room that was too large for any conceivable purpose other than a state ball. It was a dark room, made even darker by the heavy curtains that covered a long row of windows. Citron suspected the windows looked out over the grounds that led to the street. The entire room was paneled in a wood so dark it seemed almost black. The paneling only added to the gloom.
Citron followed Tighe across several large, old, and very expensive looking oriental rugs and past a long library table that held the current issues of the Economist, Business Week, Time, National Geographic, and People. Citron read the magazine’s names as he moved past the table and toward the desk at the room’s far end. The desk was the size of a dining table that would seat twelve comfortably and seemed to have been carved out of the same dark wood used to panel the room.
On the front right corner of the desk, his legs crossed, his hands clasping one knee, perched Colonel-General Rafael Carrasco-Cortes. Three leather armchairs were pulled up in front of the desk. Yarn was seated in one of them. Carrasco-Cortes smiled at Citron and gestured toward the center chair. “Please,” he said. Citron took the center chair and Tighe sat down next to him.
“So,” the General said. “You are Gladys’s son, hmm?”
Citron nodded. The general sighed. “Whatever are we to do with you, hmm?”
“Why not put me on the next plane out?”
The general smiled and eased himself off the edge of the desk. He was not wearing a uniform. Instead, he wore a dark-blue pinstripe suit with a vest and a white shirt and a blue-and-gray-striped tie. As he moved around behind the desk, Citron wondered if the general and Draper Haere bought their suits at the same store.
The general sat down, opened a drawer, took out a piece of Kleenex, removed his rimless bifocals, and began to polish them. Without the glasses, his eyes looked almost bewildered. Citron knew that they weren’t.
Still polishing away, the general said, “I’m going to ask you to do something, Morgan.” He looked up. “I hope you don’t mind if I call you Morgan, but I’ve known your remarkable mother for so many, many years that calling you Mr. Citron makes me feel — well, old.” He smiled and slipped the glasses back on.
“What’re you going to ask me to do?” Citron said.
“I’m going to ask you to tell me exactly what you told our two friends here earlier.”
Citron looked at Yarn. “This isn’t quite the way it was supposed to go.”
Yarn shrugged. “All bets are off.”
“You see, Morgan,” the general said, “what I’m trying to decide is whether to have you shot. I must confess that at the moment I’m leaning in that direction. This little session here will be, in effect, your trial — although I suppose court-martial would be more accurate.”
Tighe turned to Citron with a grin. “I’m your defense attorney.”
Citron nodded, turned to Yarn, and said, “What’re you — the prosecutor?”
“Right,” Yarn said.
“What’s the charge?”
“We’re going for espionage and see what happens.”
The general took a large gold watch from his vest pocket, snapped its cover open, and placed it on the desk. “Could we begin with your statement, Morgan, hmm? I do have a rather busy schedule today.”
“I don’t have much choice, do I?”
“None,” Tighe said.
“You put up a great defense.”
Tighe shrugged. Citron looked at the general, who was now leaning back in his chair, his hands steepled in front of him. “All right,” Citron said, “I’ll tell you what I know, what I think I know, and what I suspect. A lot of it’s conjecture.”
“Of course,” the general said and nodded encouragingly.
“After you lined the President up in front of the wall out there and shot him, you found that the coffers were bare. The country was bankrupt and you needed money. As I recall, before your coup the country was divided, mostly for administrative purposes, I guess, into two states or regions — the Eastern Region and the Western Region. You carved it up into thirty-two regions and parceled them out to the other generals according to seniority. You kept the largest region — the capital — for yourself.”
“All this is common knowledge,” the general said.
“A lot of what I know is only that — common knowledge.”
The general nodded. “Continue.”
“You needed money,” Citron said. “You needed it for yourself and to pay your troops and to keep a semblance of order. But because of your human-rights record, which I think is usually called ‘appalling,’ Washington was out. They couldn’t lend or give you a dime. Congress wouldn’t let them. So you turned to your friends in the CIA. You do have friends in the CIA, don’t you, general?”
The general smiled. “A few.”
“Well, even the CIA couldn’t slip you that kind of money under the table, but they came up with something just as good, although God knows where they got it. They came up with a ton or two of cocaine.” Citron looked at Yarn. “What was it, one or two? I’m not sure.”
“Two tons,” Yarn said. “And they got it by calling in some past favors.”
“Two tons of cocaine will fetch how much now?” Citron asked.
Tighe thought about it. “Seven hundred and fifty million a ton on the street,” he said. “But wholesale, about thirty-five to fifty million a ton.”
“Which wasn’t quite enough, right?” Citron said. No one answered, so he asked again. “Right?”
“Continue,” the general said.
“So you decided to buy the two tons of coke from the CIA with government money, steal it from yourselves, and then wholesale it in the States. And that’s what you did. All of you.”
Citron stopped talking. After seconds passed, Yarn turned to him. “I think the general would like a few more details.”
“I have to ask a question first,” Citron said.
The general nodded.
“How long have you known my mother?”
“Years. Twenty-five at least. We met in Barcelona.”
“Then you knew her when she was still with Langley.”
The general smiled his acknowledgment. “We were dear friends.”
“I can imagine,” Citron said. “So you went to her, described what you had in mind, and — I suppose — offered to cut her in. She put you in touch with an ex-big-time coke dealer called B. S. Keats. And Keats lined you up with just the people you were really looking for — the Maneras brothers, Jimmy and Bobby. Or Roberto and Jaime.”
“Bobby was just in on the edge of things,” Tighe said.