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Authors: James Grippando

Black Horizon

BOOK: Black Horizon
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Dedication

For Tiffany, with love.

Thanks for twenty years of happy beginnings.

Contents

Dedication

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Chapter 34

Chapter 35

Chapter 36

Chapter 37

Chapter 38

Chapter 39

Chapter 40

Chapter 41

Chapter 42

Chapter 43

Chapter 44

Chapter 45

Chapter 46

Chapter 47

Chapter 48

Chapter 49

Chapter 50

Chapter 51

Chapter 52

Chapter 53

Chapter 54

Chapter 55

Chapter 56

Chapter 57

Chapter 58

Chapter 59

Chapter 60

Chapter 61

Chapter 62

Chapter 63

Chapter 64

Chapter 65

Chapter 66

Chapter 67

Chapter 68

Chapter 69

Epilogue

Acknowledgments

About the Author

Also by James Grippando

Credits

Copyright

About the Publisher

Chapter 1

T
wo words, and life changes forever. Nothing new for a criminal defense lawyer. This time, however, Jack Swyteck wasn’t waiting outside a jury room for a verdict of “not guilty.” He was rehearsing his most important line.

I do.

Jack straightened the white boutonniere on his lapel and adjusted his bow tie in the bathroom mirror. His hand was shaking as he brushed the sleeve of his tuxedo jacket, shedding the raindrops that he’d carried indoors. He wasn’t sure why he was so nervous. For a guy whose love life could have filled an entire volume of
Cupid’s Rules of Love and War
,
Idiots’ Edition
, he should never have expected a wedding without glitches.

“Plan A” would have been picture perfect: bride and groom standing barefoot on a sandy beach, a canopy of white sails and colorful orchids overhead, the turquoise waters of an underwater national park glistening in the background. Mid-September, however, was the height of Florida’s hurricane season, and their Saturday-afternoon ceremony became a race against Mother Nature. They lost. Just as the mother of the bride was escorted to her seat, Key Largo was hit by a storm straight out of its namesake movie starring Bogie and Bacall. Soaked guests ran to their cars through a wind-driven downpour. Band after band of torrential rain blew ashore, making it pointless to wait out a tropical storm that stretched from Miami to Havana. The ceremony was moved a few miles north, indoors, to Sparky’s Tavern, an old gas station that had been converted into the last watering hole between the mainland and the Florida Keys. The proud owner was Theo Knight, a former gangbanger from Miami’s ghetto who’d survived death row and then named his bar Sparky’s—a double-barreled flip of the bird to Florida’s old electric chair, nicknamed “Old Sparky.” Actually, it was a fitting place for the wedding. Jack had presented the DNA evidence to prove Theo innocent, and the down payment on Sparky’s had come from Theo’s “compensation” for having come so close to execution that they’d fed him a last meal and shaved his head and ankles to attach the electrodes.

“Ready, dude?” asked Theo. He was the best man.

“I do,” said Jack. “I mean, yes.”

Jack led the way from the men’s room, down the hall and into the bar. On saxophone was Theo’s great-uncle Cy, entertaining the waterlogged guests with his jazzy interpretation of the Pachelbel Canon. In his prime, Cyrus Knight had been a nightclub star in old Overtown Village, Miami’s Little Harlem. The music calmed Jack, and it made him smile to see how quickly the friends of the bride and groom had transformed Sparky’s into a worthy venue. The white canopy from the beach had been reconstructed beneath the vintage disco ball. Folding chairs covered the dance floor, bride’s side and groom’s side separated by a makeshift center aisle. Every chair was filled, not one of the seventy-odd guests having decided to bag the wedding to dry off at home.

Jack and Theo entered from the side, taking their places near a jukebox that hadn’t worked since Reagan was president. Harry Swyteck shook his son’s hand. At the height of his political career, back when Jack was just a newbie lawyer at the Freedom Institute, Harry had served two terms as Florida’s governor, but it was his enduring office of notary public that empowered him to perform a wedding ceremony.

“Your grandmother is so proud,” Harry said softly.

Many familiar faces were in the audience, but Jack’s gaze was fixed on Abuela. There were tears in his grandmother’s eyes—mostly joy, but surely some sadness that Jack’s mother wasn’t there. She’d died in childbirth, and it wasn’t until Jack was a grown man that Abuela had found a way to leave Castro’s Cuba. Abuela had made it her mission to give her gringo grandson, “half Hispanic, in blood only,” a crash course in Cuban culture. A marriage outside the Church could bump him down to about a C-minus, but there was endless potential for extra credit upon delivery of great-grandchildren.

The music stopped, and Sparky’s fell uncharacteristically still for a Saturday afternoon, only the patter of raindrops on the roof. All eyes turned toward the set of double doors in the rear that led to the billiard room. A golden retriever named Sam, the guide dog for groomsman Vincent Paulo, came down the aisle first. One paw at a time, his dark, reddish coat shining, Sam unfurled the runway, a long pink ribbon connecting his collar to a roll of white butcher paper that Theo had found in the storeroom. It would have been fun to pair up Sam with Max, the lovable dumb blond who thought he was Jack and Andie’s first child, but the runway was impromptu, and Max would have freaked in the storm anyway. On cue, Uncle Cy began to play a jazz-laden, spirited version of “Here Comes the Bride.”

The guests rose, the doors to the billiard room opened, and Andie appeared at the end of the aisle.

“Wow,” Jack heard himself say, completely involuntarily.

Andie Henning was unlike any woman he had ever known, and not just because she worked undercover for the FBI. Jack loved that she wasn’t afraid to cave-dive in Florida’s aquifer, that in her training at the FBI Academy she’d nailed a perfect score on one of the toughest shooting ranges in the world. He loved the green eyes she got from her Anglo father and the raven-black hair from her Native American mother, a mix that made for such exotic beauty.
Radiant
was probably an overused word at weddings, but it fit. There was nothing like a beautiful woman and a long, white wedding dress in the neon glow of a Bud Light sign.

Andie walked down the aisle escorted by her father, and they stopped at the front row. Her father kissed her on the cheek and went to his wife’s side. The maid of honor carried the train of the dress as Andie climbed the single step onto a small stage where many a local band had played. Her run from the beach in the sudden downpour had left her bouquet battered and shaken, and the ivory bloom of a rose broke off and dropped to the floor. Jack quickly picked it up.

“Five-second rule,” he whispered, and then he kissed it and tucked it into his pocket.

“So glad you didn’t say, ‘This bud’s for you,’” Andie said through her teeth.

Jack tried not to laugh as she joined him beneath the canopy. The music stopped, and the guests settled into their chairs. Harry paused to punctuate the moment, then spoke in a strong voice that beamed with pride.

“Ladies and gentlemen, we are gathered here today to join Andrea Henning and John Swyteck—Andie and Jack—in matrimony. Marriage is a very important institution. One built on trust and love. We are here to celebrate their love for one another and have asked you as guests to share in this display of their love for each other.”

Harry paused. Jack and Andie had asked him to dispense with the anachronistic verbiage from traditional wedding ceremonies, but like all politicians Harry loved to hear himself talk.

“If there is anyone here who can show just cause why these two should not wed,” said Harry, “speak now or forever hold your peace.”

The crack of a thunderbolt rattled the room. It was a near miss—too near. The neon beer lights flickered, and the room went dark.

“Ay, Dios mío!
” said Abuela, crossing herself.

Jack and Theo exchanged glances, the irony not lost; they were, after all, in
Sparky’s
.

“I guess He prefers a candlelight ceremony,” said Jack, glancing upward.

Andie squeezed Jack’s hand. “You mean ‘She.’”

Jack smiled. “Yes, dear. She.”

Chapter 2

T
he storm system was centered over the Florida Straits, midway between the hundred-mile swath of Gulf Stream current that separated Key West from Havana. Sustained winds of forty miles per hour were barely half those of a Category 1 hurricane, but they were strong enough to churn twenty-foot swells that could pitch and roll the most massive of oil rigs. And they were just strong enough to earn the storm a name.

“Come on, Rosa! Blow, bitch, blow!”

Rafael Lopez leaned over the safety rail and punched his loudmouthed crewmate in the chest, but it landed with little more force than the driven rain. The storm’s name was Miguel. Rosa was Rafael’s sister back in Havana.

“Shut it!” Rafael shouted into a howling wind.

His friend laughed it off. Rafael was in no mood for jokes. The night shift was just beginning, and he was dreading another twelve hours of horizontal rain that would slap him in the face and soak through his foul-weather gear. Under normal conditions, the rig’s white industrial lighting would set the surrounding seas aglow, but tonight Rafael couldn’t even see to the end of the platform.

“You two!” the drilling supervisor shouted at them. “Quit clowning around. It’s dangerous out here.”

No shit
, thought Rafael.

Rafael and his Norwegian supervisor were part of a multinational crew of 167 oil workers who operated the largest exploratory rig in the world for a drilling consortium that included Cuba, China, Russia, and Venezuela. A Scottish company had pulled out, but its name for the rig stuck. The Scarborough 8 was specially built in response to official estimates that Cuba’s North Basin held anywhere from 5 to 20 billion barrels of oil and 9.8 trillion cubic feet of natural gas. It was problem enough that those reserves lay beneath five thousand or more feet of ocean. “Ultradeep-water drilling” was the industry classification. An added problem was the long-standing U.S. policy toward Cuba that prohibited American companies from participating in any drilling south of the boundary between the exclusive economic zones of the United States and Cuba—roughly sixty miles from Key West. To sidestep Washington’s fifty-year-old trade embargo against the Castro regime, the Scarborough 8 had been built at a shipyard in the Shandong Province of China with less than 10 percent of U.S. parts. At 36,000 gross tons, it was too big for the Panama Canal and had to be transported around the Cape of Good Hope on its maiden voyage across the globe. An Olympic soccer field couldn’t match its astounding length and width. In fair weather, the submerged hull dipped thirty-five meters below the water surface, more than three times the draw of the
Queen Mary II
. In survival mode, facing the likes of Tropical Storm Miguel, the Scarborough 8 was engineered to rise up in the water, with just a nineteen-meter draft, which elevated the platform above rough seas.

Not high enough to suit Rafael.

The spray on his face tasted of the ocean, not of the falling rain. His gaze followed the string of lights that ran up the side of the derrick, a tapered mast of steel framework that was the oil industry’s most recognizable symbol. Rafael was six months away from a degree in engineering, but on this rig he was a derrick monkey, one of several handsomely paid risk-takers whose job it was to support the team of drillers from a catwalk above the platform. His work station, the “monkey board,” was a fifty-foot climb up the side of the derrick.

BOOK: Black Horizon
7.46Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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