A Flag for Sunrise (34 page)

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Authors: Robert Stone

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BOOK: A Flag for Sunrise
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Another silence and Negus said: “Tino don’t like him.”

“Tino’s not too big on the whole number,” Callahan said.

“Well,” Deedee Callahan said, “Tino’s a fucking mystic. How can you go by Tino?”

“I’m inclined to go by him,” Negus said. “I been with him fifteen years in all weather.”

Crouched in the hold, Pablo heard a step on the deck above him. He heaved himself against the boards and saw a shadow pass between his hiding place and the night sky. It would be Tino, he thought. Coming up from the lazaret. From going through his gear. He bent lower and listened.

“Naftali still take his money up front?” It was Negus.

“First thing that happens is Naftali gets his dough. He’ll be on the pier with his hand out.”

“Chrissakes,” Negus said, “that old boy rakes it in. I seen him peel off hundred-dollar bills like they was lempiras. I think he keeps it all in his hotel room, I swear.”

Pablo was thinking of an old boy in a hotel room full of hundred-dollar bills when he was startled once more by a sound on deck. He looked up and saw the outline of a man directly above him. It could only be Tino again. After a few moments, the man moved off aft. Pablo waited, too anxious to eavesdrop further, and then climbed silently out of the ice hold. He saw no one. For a while he leaned on the rail expecting to be challenged—but there was no further sign of Tino and he was reassured. He went down into the lazaret, found his gear in good order and climbed into his rack.

Negus and the Callahans sat late in their paneled cabin while the
Cloud
ran on automatic. Tino was brewing coffee in the galley.

“We getting ice and fuel from the Perreiras this time?” Negus asked. He was hunched in a captain’s chair, his bony arms folded on the table. Callahan sat across from him nursing a glass of soda water.
His lady reclined on a short sofa, her feet up, reading
High Times.

“I don’t think so,” Callahan said. “I think we’ll get grub and parts from the Perreiras, then after dark we’ll go over to Naftali’s outfit in Serrano. We can get fuel from him along with the goods.”

“What’ll we tell Perreira?”

“We’ll tell him Naftali made us a better offer. He won’t press it. He’s not aggressive.”

“Always wondered how Naftali got away with running that operation,” Negus said. “You’d think the Dutch would know it. Or the Americans.”

“Maybe they do. Anyway it’s Naftali’s property, he owns it and he’s pretty fucking careful. Or else Mossad owns it and they’re super-careful.”

Tino came down from the galley carrying a cup of coffee and took a chair. He spoke briefly to Negus in Papamiento.

“You’re unhappy,” Callahan said to him.

“I don’ like dat mon,” Tino said. “Pablo.”

“Hell, I don’t like him neither,” Negus said. “But he ain’t supposed to be a nice fella. He’s our sonuvabitch.”

“You approved him, Tino. You said you’d ship with him.”

“So I gon to,” Tino said.

Callahan kept his eyes on the engineer.

“You’re sort of off the whole enterprise, in my opinion.”

Tino smiled sadly.

“De ting can be done, capt’n. De money’s good.”

“I think,” Negus said slowly, “that Tino’s concerned about the way things are being done lately.”

“Meaning what?” Callahan asked.

“I ain’ sayin’ dat, Fred. You sayin’ dat, not me.”

“Look, Jack,” Negus said, “you have to admit that we been getting lax. You been drinking a lot, there’s that. You been drinking on the job, so to speak. The both of you been acting like there’s no tomorrow. I mean, the days are past when you can operate down here in a spirit of fun like.”

“You can ask anybody around, Freddy, and they’ll tell you we’re the most professional, the most reliable vessel in the commerce. That’s always been true.”

“It’s been true in the past, Jack.”

“If we weren’t good, Naftali wouldn’t work with us.”

Negus looked down at the tabletop.

“I’ll tell you—sometimes I’m surprised he still does.”

“Well,” Callahan said, “you give me pause, Freddy.”

“I’m sorry, skipper, but there it is. Sometimes it feels like we’re just floating a party.”

“We do like we’ve always done, Fred. The only difference is we seem to be losing our confidence.”

Negus was silent.

Callahan reached across the table for the bottle and poured some rum into his soda.

“Maybe you’re right about getting old for it. Could be it’s the beach for you, old stick. Maybe you should get back to that saloon in Hope Town.”

“I just hope to see it again,” Negus said.

“Nowadays,” Tino told them, “so many droguistas. A mon get killed quick.”

“Young Pablo reminds me of a
droguista,
” Negus said after a while. “That’s what bothers me about him.”

“He’s a Coast Guard deserter,” Callahan said. “Hasn’t been around long enough.”

“Know who he reminds me of,” Negus said. “That dude we had the trouble with … you know. Can’t even remember his damn name.”

Deedee put her magazine aside.

“Oh, dear,” she said. “What an unpleasant thought.”

“Dat was bad,” Tino said.

Negus nodded in somber agreement.

“Well,” Callahan said, “we dealt with it. I trust we won’t have to do that to anybody again. However,” he said, “should the occasion arise … we won’t be found lacking in resolve.”

Freddy Negus stood up and walked to the hatch that led up to the galley.

“It ain’t a matter of Pablo, Jack. It’s the whole thing. I mean, Tecan’s no milk run. Those Tecs lay hands on us, we’ve had the fucking drill.” He leaned in the hatchway for a moment and went back to his chair. “El Jefe’s got a lot of new technology. He’s got more boats and they’re faster. He’s got helicopters. The Yanks give him whatever he wants. They tell him what he wants.”

“We’ve always run the same risks, Fred.”

“Damnit,” Negus said, “we were younger. We were tougher and more squared away. And you were … more responsible.”

“Obviously,” Callahan said, “if you don’t have faith in me we can’t operate.”

“Fred’s been brooding,” Deedee said. “He’s been thinking about that albino dwarf El Jefe keeps.”

Callahan sipped his drink.

“Oh,” he said with a smile, “the one who chews people’s privates off.”

Negus flushed.

“There is such a creature, Jack, I hate to tell you.”

“Snowflake,” Tino told them. “Copo. Das his name.”

“Tecan is a mixture of the old and the new,” Deedee said.

“Look,” Negus said, “there are times when the two of you act stark crazy. Now we gonna keep this damn boat right end up and do our business or what?”

“I’ll come through for you, Fred. You do the same for me. Are you guys with us or not?”

Tino nodded silently.

“Of course I’m with you,” Negus said. “Always have been. Just I get the feeling sometimes you’re flirting with disaster.”

Callahan grinned with adolescent mischief and winked at his wife.

“If it be now, ’tis not to come,” he declared. “If it be not to come, it will be now. If it be not now, yet it will come. The readiness is all.”

“Ripeness,” Deedee Callahan said.

“It’s readiness, Dee.”

“I mean taking a risk is one thing,” Negus told them. “Fucking around for kicks is another.”

“I like ripeness better,” Deedee said.

“You like it,” Callahan said, “because it’s sexier.”

With the air tank tucked into the gunwales under the bench on which he sat, Holliwell smoked and watched the green coastline—palm groves, banana plants strayed from the plantations, beach heliotrope of outsized luxuriance. Sandy, the dive master, ran his thirty-
six-footer at full throttle, slapping the hull over the placid water; the bow took spray over the windward side that soaked the STP jacket Holliwell had worn against the sun.

Sandy was a long, spare man with a freckled English countryman’s face darkened by the suns of Tecan and West Africa. He lounged in the stern, one loose hand over the stick, one elbow on the rail, leaning out to see the water ahead. His long black hair was bleached at the crown, parted at the middle of his skull like a nineteenth-century Russian peasant’s, and this with his sharp black eyes deep-set under thick low brows brought a kind of dervish flair, a Rasputin intensity, to his appearance.

In the boat with Holliwell was a family of five Cuban-Americans from Miami. The father was stocky and muscular, his hair worn in a brush cut, his jaw jowled and pitted from relentless shaving. His wife was buxom and fleshy-faced yet with a long-legged trim frame, a Floridian body honed by dieting and Gloria Stevens. There were three boys between twelve and seventeen—the oldest vulpine with a nearly complete moustache and muscular like his father, the two younger quite like their mother; over the waist of each of their bathing suits sagged a tube of buttery fat. The parents spoke to each other in Spanish, the boys in American Adolescent. All of them ignored Holliwell.

“Could be seein’ turtle over this reef,” Sandy told the boys. “Good place to see dem.”

“Aw-right,” said the middle boy with enthusiasm.

“Would they bite you?” asked the smallest boy.

Sandy laughed. “Turtle bite you? Turtle don’t bite you. Maybe take you for a ride.”

“Hey,” the seventeen-year-old said, “I could go for that.”

When the children’s parents spoke to Sandy it was in a formal and imperious way, as though they were used to service. Sandy answered them with deference.

Three hundred yards offshore, Sandy killed his engine and hopped forward to put the anchor line down. Everyone looked over the side. The sky’s light sparkled back at them, reflected and refracted from the reef tops below—a long line of peaks curving out toward open ocean.

Sandy gave them the dive plan. The current was southerly. They
would dive straight out from the stern, up-current. Then they could follow a semicircle of reef tops, cross a sandy bottom and follow the edge of a drop back to the boat with the current behind them. There was black coral there, Sandy told them. The site was called Twixt by the people of the coast.

Holliwell stared down at the liquid light of the white reefs. They were, after all, what he had come to see. He took a deep breath and put on his buoyancy compensator, his backpack tank, and bent to wrestle on his weight belt. Sandy put his own tank on with the ease of a man donning a sweater. The Cuban-American bustled about, trying stays and buckles—the head of the house overseeing procedure. The woman and the youngest boy were not going down. While Holliwell put his boots and fins on, Sandy checked out the gear of the younger of the two boys who were diving.

“Ever see any sharks around here?” the younger boy asked, as casually as he could. Holliwell admired his sangfroid. Testing his own regulator, he turned to watch Sandy answer.

“No sharks here,” Sandy said simply.

It turned out that the younger boy was diving with Sandy, the oldest with his father. It had been so ordered.

“Want to come with us?” the dive master asked Holliwell.

“I’ll just follow along,” Holliwell said. “I’ll be all right.” He was not in fact a very experienced diver but the dive seemed easy enough.

Holliwell went over last, carrying two five-pound weights, wearing trunks and a tee shirt to ease the shoulder straps on his sunburned back. On the jump-off, his mask filled almost to eye level; he let the water rise in it, pinching his nostrils to equalize pressure. When he saw the reef tips rising around him, he cleared his mask and checked the depth gauge on his wrist. He was forty-five feet below the surface. He settled over a punch-bowl depression on the bottom; his fin tips stirred the milk-white sand there. The visibility at this depth was marvelous—over a hundred feet, perhaps two hundred. Black and golden angelfish swarmed around him as though they expected to be fed. There were parrot fish and convict tangs in uncountable numbers. The reef descended in terraces from its highest peaks, from each terrace elkhorn coral stretched in tortured fantastical shapes between the domes of brain coral. Below him wrasse and groupers glided by, a boxfish watched him shyly from behind two prongs of elkhorn. When
he paddled out from the plateau on which he had rested, two trumpet fish came along with him like scouts. He swam clear of the next terrace and let the weights take him deeper; on the edge of vision he saw a barracuda—fairly small, certainly under three feet—prowling the edge of the swarm to pick off stragglers. When he leveled off, he was at sixty feet and the ocean floor still sloped downward under his fins. Far off and about forty feet above him he saw Sandy and the Cuban boy outlined against the shimmering curtain of the surface, swimming away from him.

On the next terrace he saw the black coral. There seemed to be acres of it, dappled with encrusting yellow infant sponges, and circling down he felt as though he were flying over a lava field grown with daisies. When he was closer, he could see the coral’s root and branch patterns. It was sublime, he thought. He could feel his heart beating faster; his blood coursed through him like a drug. The icy, fragile beauty was beyond the competency of any man’s hand, even beyond man’s imagining. Yet it seemed to him its perfection provoked a recognition. The recognition of what? he wondered. A thing lost or forgotten. He followed the slope of the coral field. Down.

It had been years since he had taken so much pleasure in the living world.

At about ninety feet, he confronted the drop. The last coral terrace fell away and beyond it there was nothing, an immensity of shadowy blue, an abyss. He was losing color now. The coral on the canyon wall read blue-gray as he descended; the wrasse, the butterflies, the parrot fish looked as dun as mackerel. A gray lobster scurried along the cliff. Enormous gray groupers approached to have a look at him. In a coral crevice, a spotted moray drew back at his approach, then put its head out to watch his bubble trail with flat venomous eyes. The surface became a mirage, a distant notion.

He was at a hundred and ten and his pressure gauge, which had pointed twenty-five hundred p.s.i. at the jump-off, now read slightly under eight hundred. It was all right, he thought, the tank had no reserve and no J valve; he would have enough to climb back as the pressure evened out. At a hundred and twenty, his exhilaration was still with him and he was unable to suppress the impulse to turn a somersault. He was at the borders of narcosis. It was time to start up.
As soon as he began to climb, he saw shimmers of reflected light flashing below his feet. In a moment, the flashes were everywhere—above and below. Blue glitters, lightning quick. The bodies of fish in flight. He began pumping a bit, climbing faster, but by the book, not outstripping his own bubble trail.

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