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Authors: Harold Robbins

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BOOK: The Piranhas
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She looked into my eyes. “You don’t cry.”

“Crying won’t help. He is gone. It’s over.” I turned and walked back to my bunk. “Why don’t you try to sleep? You will feel better in the morning.”

“I am afraid I will have bad dreams,” she said.

“Don’t be frightened,” I said. “I will be right here.”

She nodded faintly and closed her eyes. In a moment I again heard the faint whisper of her breath as she slept. I pulled out the attaché case Angelo had placed under my bunk. It was locked. I found the key in a pair of pants he had thrown over a chair.

The attaché case was filled with bank-sealed packages of one-hundred-dollar bills. Quickly I checked it. One hundred thousand dollars. On the open top cover was a typewritten note:

Pucallpa to Iquitos—Boat 10m

Iquitos to Medellín—DC 3 20m

Medellín to Panama—DC 320m

Panama to Miami—Cessna 35m

I stared at the money. Angelo had it all laid out. He was not as crazy as he pretended. I took out a package of ten thousand dollars and closed the attaché case. I put the case under my bunk and opened Angelo’s valise leaning against the wall. Under his clothing was another automatic and ten clips of cartridges. I pushed the gun and clips under my bunk next to the attaché case, then closed the valise and placed it back against the wall.

I stretched out on my bunk and put my hands behind my head on the pillow. I stared up at the ceiling—then it hit me. Angelo was gone. And whether I liked it or not, I had to go through with his plan. And even worse than that, at the end of it all, I had to tell his father of his death. And all I could give him of his son was a gold Rolex watch. It would not be easy. Angelo was the apple of his father’s eye. I dozed.

I opened my eyes when I heard soft steps running on the deck over my head, and the soft whispering voices of two men. Quietly I slipped out of my bunk and onto the deck, the gun in my hand. The captain and another man were talking quietly at the stern of the boat. I watched them silently. The stranger gestured with his hand, and two more men came aboard behind him and bent down to the hold, picking up two bales, and started to take them off the boat.

I turned off the safety of the automatic and stepped around the cabin entrance toward them. “What’s happening?” I asked.

The strangers stopped talking and stared at me. I spoke to the captain. “What the hell’s going on?”

“The
señor
says that the deal is off. He hasn’t gotten the money to be paid by your cousin.” The captain was very nervous.

“Tell him that I already know the money has been paid. If not, the coca would never have been placed aboard,” I said.

The captain spoke quickly. The man replied in Spanish, then the captain turned back to me. “Only part of the money. There was still one thousand dollars to be paid when all the coca has been delivered.”

“Tell him that he will get the money as promised when he has delivered the rest of the coca.”

The stranger understood me. He spoke quickly to the captain and the captain translated. “He says that he is a simple farmer and he has worked hard for his crops, and he does not want his labor to be stolen from him.”

I looked at the captain. “How much is he paying you for this bullshit?”


Nada, señor.
Nothing,” the captain said nervously. “On my family’s honor I tell you the truth.”

I stared at him for a moment, then at the stranger. “Tell the son of a bitch to get off this boat or I will kill him. He can come back tomorrow with the rest of the coca, and we will pay whatever else he is due.”

The captain spoke quickly. The stranger looked at me, then nodded. He spoke to the captain and nodded again. “He will be back in the morning,” the captain said.

I gestured with the gun. “Off.”

The stranger and his two men scrambled from the boat. I watched them disappear into the trees around the lagoon. I turned to the captain. “How did he learn that my cousin had died?”

“They are watching. They are always watching us,” he said.

“Why did you allow him to come aboard to take back the coca?”

“He is Indian. Mestizo. Very dangerous. He would have killed me if I didn’t let him on the boat,” he said.

“I see,” I said, thinking for a moment. “Then he will come back tomorrow and kill us.”

The captain was silent.

“But not if we are not here tomorrow,” I said.

The captain looked at me. “They are in the trees hiding and watching,” he said. “They will hear the engines if we try to leave.”

“Then we don’t start the engines. We use boat hooks. Here the river is not deep, and we can push us far enough so that the river current can take us downstream until it is safe to start the engines.”

The captain stared at me with new respect. “You know about such things?”

“In Vietnam. Many times.” I lied; I had only heard about it. I had never really believed it until now.

“Sí, señor,”
he said. “When shall we start?”

“Give them about an hour to fall asleep,” I said. “Then we go.”

“And if they come after us?”

“You have guns?” I asked.

“Two pistols, two rifles,” he answered.

“Then we kill them,” I said. “Bring the guns up to the deck and have your men get ready to cast off.”

He nodded and climbed into the hatchway that opened to his quarters. I went back to the cabin, got the other gun, and stuck it into my belt beside the one I already had. Quickly I stuffed several cartridge clips into my pockets.

Alma’s voice sounded across the cabin. “What is happening?”

“We’re taking off,” I said.

She sat up on the bunk. “But we were supposed to get ten more bales of coca leaves in the morning.”

“We’re not waiting for it,” I said. “The farmer was already aboard and wanted to take the bales back. He said that Angelo hadn’t paid him.”

“It’s not true,” she said. “I saw him give him the money in front of the captain.”

“The captain saw it?”

She nodded. “He arranged it. He spoke to the farmer in the native Indian tongue.

My hunch was right. The captain had already made his deal. “How long will it take us to get downriver to Iquitos?”

“Five, six days,” she said. “It’s down on the Uyacali river where it joins the Amazon.”

“Okay,” I said.

“Will there be trouble?” she asked.

“I don’t know,” I said.

She looked up at me. “Maybe I can help. I can use a gun.” She got out of bed.

I gave her one of Angelo’s guns. “You keep it,” I said. “I don’t expect any trouble tonight, but if there is any, I’ll holler.”

She kept looking at me. “But you are worried about something?”

“Not about the mestizos, it’s the captain, I don’t trust him. He was ready to let the others take off the bales without even letting me know.” I suddenly remembered. “Didn’t we meet the captain in the market in Tingo Maria?”

“That’s right,” she answered. “Tingo Maria is the main source of coca and marijuana. It was the captain who made the deal with the mestizo to bring the coca over the mountain road to Pucallpa. The same road we came down on.”

“It was also the captain who had us move the boat downstream about ten kilometers from the Pucallpa docks.” It began to fall into place. “It was safer, he had said, we would not be found by the police.”

“Yes,” she nodded. “I hadn’t thought about it but the mestizo came right to us. The captain had it all arranged before we left Tingo Maria.”

“Okay,” I said. “You stay down here. I feel we’ll have no trouble here. If he makes a move, it will be when we are further downstream when he thinks that I believe we are safe.”

“You’ll have to watch him,” she said.

“I will.” I reached across her bunk to the shelf where Angelo had left his small bag. I opened it and took out a vial of coke. Quickly I had a snort. I felt my head open and my eyes widen. “I’ll be awake now.”

“You’ll be stoned,” she said.

“I’ll be careful,” I said and went up on deck.

The captain and his two sailors were waiting for me. He gestured, and I saw the guns lying on the shelf in front of the wheelhouse. I nodded. “Now pick up the gangplank,” I said. “But carefully. No sound.”

The captain motioned to the sailors. Quickly and quietly they pulled the gangplank aboard. Then the sailors picked up the boat hooks and began to pole us out of the small lagoon into the main current of the river while the captain held the wheel. I could feel the boat move with the current. It seemed strong, and we moved quickly downstream.

The captain turned to me. “Start the engine now?” he asked.

“Not yet,” I said. “Another fifteen minutes.”

“The water is strong,” he said. “I don’t know if I can keep it straight.”

“Have your men use the boat hooks on the stern. They’ll hold us straight long enough.” I looked back to the lagoon. There was no motion on the bank. “Keep going,” I said.

The captain held up a hand, and one of the sailors took the wheel. The captain walked around and went down into the hatch to the engine room. Fifteen minutes later I heard the engine roar, and the boat began to move faster in the water. I looked at the sailor at the wheel. He turned to look back at me. Mistake. When you have a wheel in your hand, whether you’re driving a car or a boat, you always keep your eyes on the road.

I spun sideways, turning back. The captain was out of the hatchway, a rifle pointed toward me in his hands. I could almost see the surprise on his face as the automatic spit angrily at him. Then slowly his arms stretched out and he tumbled from the stern of the boat into the water.

I pointed the gun at the sailors and gestured toward the wheel. Alma had come from the cabin, the gun in her hands. “What happened?” she called.

“We lost the captain,” I said.

She stared at me.

“Ask the sailor if he can get the boat down to Iquitos,” I told her. “Tell him if he does, he gets a thousand dollars; if he doesn’t he goes swimming with the captain.”

Quickly she spoke to the sailor. The second sailor came to the wheelhouse and spoke to her. She turned to me. “They are captains in their own right, he says. And if they do what we say, the two should get money.”

“They can divide the money,” I said. “I will also give them the boat for themselves.”

She spoke again. They looked at each other, then nodded. They spoke to her and she translated again.

“They want to know if you would give them the papers for the boat?”

“They will have them,” I said.

She spoke to them again, then turned back to me after listening another moment for their answer. “They want you to know that they are not
bandidos
like the captain, they are honest men and all they want to do is their job.”

“Fine,” I said and shook their hands. “It’s a deal.”

They grinned at me. “Deal,” they said.

4

I STARED DOWN
at my plate. Rice and beans covered with a sickly brown tomato sauce and lots of oil. I’d had it. Day and night. It had been four nights since we left Pucallpa. Rice and beans. Rice and greasy yellow fish. Rice and canned meat that produced maggots the moment the can was opened. My stomach was either exploding with gas or threatened with nausea that never quite came.

I looked at Alma. “How can you handle it?”

“Drink more beer,” she said simply. “We have no choice.”

I opened a bottle of beer and gulped half of it down. “Are there restaurants in Iquitos?”

“Iquitos is a big city,” she said. “Relax, we’ll be there tomorrow.”

I pointed at my plate. “Throw this shit overboard.”

“You’ll eat it,” she said firmly. “You’re not eating enough as it is. You look like you’ve lost ten pounds.”

“I’m okay,” I said.

“You’ll need your strength,” she said. “Nobody knows what you’ll have to face tomorrow. We’ve been lucky so far, but you’re like a babe in the woods. You don’t even know what we’ll be facing up there. Angelo never told you anything.”

I took a large spoonful of rice and swallowed it. I followed it with a mouthful of beer. Even though it was warm, it killed the taste of grease in my mouth. I looked over at her. “Did he ever tell you anything about Iquitos?”

“Only that he was meeting a red-bearded man who would be waiting on the docks when we came in.”

“Did he say anything else?”

She shook her head. “Angelo didn’t talk much about his business.”

I nodded. Angelo didn’t talk to anyone. Even me. “Has Iquitos an airport?”

“Yes,” she said. “Iquitos is the second-biggest city in Peru, but the only way to get out is either by boat up the Amazon or by air over the mountains. They are too high to cross any other way.”

“How did the city get so big?” I asked.

“Years ago it was the center of rubber plantations and was important until they brought the rubber trees into Malaysia. When that business had been lost, the city barely existed on produce until they discovered oil. Now tankers can go down to the ocean by way of the Amazon.”

“Is it a big port?”

“I’ve never been there,” she answered. “But I think it has to be pretty big because ocean-going ships go in there from Brazil.”

I was just going for another spoonful of rice when I heard the small engine stop, and the boat began to wallow slowly in the water. I reached for the rifle and climbed out of the cabin with Alma right behind me. I saw the two sailors on the bow dropping the anchor, the long rope slipping into the water behind it. I moved up behind the sailors. “Ask them what they’re doing,” I told Alma.

She spoke rapidly in Spanish. The sailors looked up at us nervously, both of them speaking at the same time. She asked them another question. Then the older one answered her. He seemed to be explaining something to us.

She turned to me. “They thought it would be better for us to anchor in this cove until morning. It is only thirty kilometers to Iquitos, and it would be better if we went in early in the morning.”

“Why not now?” I asked.

Pablo, the older sailor, answered her. She relayed his words to me. “The fishermen are all going out in the channel. Their nets will be everywhere and we could become snarled in them. Many of them are mestizos and thieves. Look over at the channel and you will already see them. They have bright searchlights aiming at the river to attract the fish, and if we have trouble with them, they would all gang up on us.”

BOOK: The Piranhas
13.75Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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