NOTE
TO THE READER: This is the
uncorrected first-draft of a James Bond story. Unabridged and
unashamed, with not the slightest attempt at grammaticals. I s'pose
you'll expect a copyright bit, so here, have one – its on the
house.
Mark
Sohn reserves the right to be recognised as the author of this work,
but certain characters are Ian Fleming's, as far as I am dimly aware
the wonderful folk at Eon Productions own 007. For a better
explanation of copyright, open a book.
Hopefully
you are still having fun – Here's Part Two – Chapters 10 to 17.
Poor Jimmy Bond; he's all at sea – don't feel sorry for him though;
007 could find a girl in the middle of the Atlantic...
More
to follow soon!
BAYAMO
CHAPTER
10
BLOOD
AND GOLD
It was well
after dark. Finally sleep had claimed James Bond for a few hours, but
it was not a comfortable one. The guards had left him to his own
devices, but sometimes he could still hear them through the thin
steel of the bulkhead. Outside, the clouds scudded by as the moon
sank to the western horizon, chased by the racing yacht. The smooth
effortless power of the Bayamo seemed to settle any doubt
about her power source. Being this close to an atomic reactor was an
experience Bond endured without relish. The clank and scrape of the
door interrupted his attempts at sleep. At once, Bond sat up,
smoothing back his hair in a belated attempt at grooming. The girl
shooed the guard away, pulling the heavy steel door shut behind her.
For a moment, Bond sized her up in the moonlight streaming through
the porthole. She was taller than he expected, just the right side of
skinny with a pleasing array of curves. Even in this half light he
could see she was stunning, her hair somewhere between rust and
carmine with the most engaging green eyes Bond had ever seen. It was
like a dream and it made his head spin. The shimmer of silk at her
shoulders with that recklessness of hair made her seem like some
exotic dragonfly. She held his gaze with hers for what seemed an
indecently long half minute. Finally, he shook himself free.
'Well, this must be
fate. Funny, I didn't see you in my horoscope.' She offered him a
cigarette from a packet of Dunhill, taking one for herself.
'Thank You.' Lighting
both with a gold Ronson she leaned back against the bulkhead. Both
smoked without speaking, each seeming unsure at finding themselves in
such an odd situation.
'That's a man's
lighter. Your father's perhaps?.'
'You must be a spy –
who else would notice such a thing?. Yes. My father's.' She smiled, a
sad little smile and Bond was glad he was sitting. He tried to
envisage 'M's face as if the Old Man were watching; he could easily
imagine the disapproval and reprobation.
'Call me James. Yes, I
do notice things – it's a habit of mine, like your perfume, Arpege;
you wore it the other night in the alleyway. Unmistakable.' She
seemed amused at having been recognised as Bond's saviour, wagging a
finger in mock admonishment.
'You are a spy.
A spy who's following me. I should be flattered, most men wouldn't
follow a girl halfway across an ocean.'
'Well-if I'm a spy,
what are you?. Why all this? - I know a girl needs to make a living,
but...' He waved vaguely, letting the question hang.
'Oh, Max – he's not
so bad, he really isn't, but he – takes care of me.'
Bond was standing.
'Yes I'm sure he's the
life of the party – who locks passing spies up, surrounds himself
with nasty men with guns and likes to relax by wearing armour.'
Her laugh lacked
humour.
'Normally he wears a
uniform, that or a business suit. Sometimes he dresses like a
peasant. He does many unusual things, but that's just Max. He's
posing for a portrait – him as a Conquistador, or some such
nonsense - he wanted something to help him. James,
if I tell you any more
you must understand; sometimes we get swept along by things, things
we can't control. You must know that if I had realized what was
happening before I was in too far... well, I am, too far now.' She
smiled, bravely. Taking her by the arms he turned her to him. 'You
really don't belong here – oh don't bother, I've heard them all by
the way; the other men were all so boring, his wife didn't
understand... whatever it is brought you into this doesn't really
matter. I can help you, no really I can. The diver today – you
heard?. (She nodded) Well, he was a friend of mine. A man called
Chago tried to kill him, with a gun and men who like to play with
guns can be very bad company for a girl. You were telling me about
the portrait...'.
Over the next half
hour, the girl talked and James Bond listened. He learnt that the
girl was from a good family, with all the usual advantages right down
to the obligatory Swiss finishing school – where she had ran away
over the obligatory boy. Bond learnt that the mother had died in the
Blitz, but of her father there was no mention, save that he had been
'in the war'. In disgrace after Switzerland, she had finally burned
the family bridge with a job working for one of those Paris fashion
houses frequented by neurotic bankers wives hoping ten thousand
francs would excite husbands whose attentions were increasingly on
the hungry models at the salon. She had met Maximilian at some
Consulate 'do' – there was something about a fling with an
under-secretary and talk of scandal – and there he was, a mystery
on the circuit in the most absurd sparkle of an outfit – he was
certainly too garish to miss. In his short velvet chaquetilla and
cummerbund he might have passed for a matador. The girl was
intrigued, then charmed. The strange Hispanic – he was from Cuba –
was certainly enigmatic. Maximilian told her tales of a life of
simple peasantry, born a farmer's son on a lonely hillside he had
grown up knowing only the hard, spare life of his ilk. An only child,
his parents had christened him Felipe. Every day before dawn
his father was gone to his few goats and the meagre crops that were
all the thin soil allowed. His mother supplemented their income by
taking in washing from the few professionals in the village, some
three miles away. The affairs of the World were nothing to him, until
the day the Government men came. He had heard of the revolution of
'33, but the men who hid in the hills were only ghosts and whispers;
village talk. The girl recalled how his voice was a monotone as he
continued the reminiscence, his eyes sad, distant even. Returning
from the village school, he had found his mother holding the body of
his father. Driven from her senses, she never spoke again and was
taken to live in a home run by the Sisters of Charity. It was the
village Doctor, a kindly old man who took the boy in, who ensured he
attended school – and from whose books the young Felipe learned
more of the world beyond the horizon. Doctor Juarez was relatively
wealthy, keeping a modest though well-stocked library, with subjects
ranging from ancient history to the sciences. One book in particular
stirred the avid student, an old volume on Cortez and the New World.
Heavy, yellowed and blemished with age the book might have almost
been written by the great explorer himself. From its pages flowed
exploits and deeds long since passed into legend, tales of gold and
savage rituals, of human sacrifice and ruthless conquest. Blood and
Gold. For the first time the farmers son felt a sense of destiny, of
purpose to the patent fleetness that is life. Each day he would
return from school – increasingly impatient – to rush through his
chores and then pore over the books, avaricious in his consumption of
knowledge. Eventually, at the age of fourteen he had turned every
page in the room. It was time to move on. One night it was raining
incessantly, the sort of weather suitable to his plans. Waiting until
the old Doctor was asleep, Felipe filled his school-bag with a few
things and half a loaf with some cheese that he had saved. Following
his idol Cortez, he had planned carefully and provisioned himself. He
regretted nothing now, though it saddened him to think of the old man
alone. In the lull between rain showers he was gone, his tracks
dissolving into the mud.
Bond was interested,
but getting lost fast.
'Very touching – but
he told you all this over cocktails?'
'Just what I've told
you really, I think it was a long time since he'd spoken to anyone –
anyone who could offer him what I could.'
'And what could you
offer?. To dear old Max, I mean?'
'Not that, if
thats the way you think. I think it was because I'm a good listener
really. Anyway, the rest is part what he told me and part sailor's
gossip, I'm sure the truth is in between there somewhere...'
Bond smiled
disarmingly. 'Well, lets see if we can't get to it between ourselves
– the truth that is.' Her eyes narrowed, but he could see he was
getting to this girl. Bond could only hope he reached her before she
was missed.
The Cuba that
flourished after the war years was increasingly both a haven and a
magnet for organized crime. The girl recounted the story of how
mobsters from the USA flooded to the island, no mere bandits these,
but hard-nosed men from Chicago's Lower East side, New York State or
Miami beach. Such men thought nothing of mixing business with murder,
extortion and the numbers rackets that sprang up to replace the old
speakeasy joints. After Batista seized power things got worse, and a
new breed of men started to appear. Named after the Escopeteros of
old, the rebel bands in the Mountain ranges of the Sierra Maestra
and Escambray claimed allegiance to a number of causes. Acting
as forward scouts for larger groups, the fame of these brigands
spread across the whole region. One band, the 'Midnight Men' of the
Sierra Maestra became especially feared. Named for their method of
raiding pro-Batista villages during the dead of night, Los Hombres
de Medianoche favoured the machete over the gun, carving for
themselves a brutal reputation for indiscriminate killing and bloody
reprisal. Then, nothing. As quickly as they had sprung up they were
gone. It was only gradually that they were found; a farmer would find
a body, gruesome with mutilation, lashed to a fence-post, sometimes
just a severed head in a jug, a morbid warning against betrayal with
echoes of the evil days before modern America had been formed. One by
one the Midnight Men had met the end they themselves had brought to
so many. It was said – in whispers, that they had been killed by
one of their own, a man consumed with hate and revenge, so fearful of
betrayal that all he could do was betray.
Castro!, the very name
evocative of the new Cuba, to some a progressive liberator of the
people, to others, chief among them the United States he was viewed
with increasing alarm, despite earlier encouraging Batista to stand
down and offering recognition to the fledgling government of the
iconic figure. Originally from a wealthy family, the young lawyer's
conversion to communism was well-documented. Fleeing to the Sierra
Maestra
after his failed coup
of 1953 he formed the 26th of July Movement, uniting the newly formed
pro-communist Escopeteros bands – one of which was making
more waves than most. Known as La Venganza de Cortes, (The
spelling of Cortes with an 's' is from the Castillean
tradition) they numbered no more than twenty at any one time. Strange
rumours began to circulate – that each of the twenty had sworn a
blood oath, that they had taken Conquistadore names, that they
lived in the old mines that Cortes himself had once owned. Strangest
of all was their leader – a young man now known only as Maximilian,
of whom little was known – save that he had an odd obsession with
history, and was said to carry a sword.
It is a truth that most
men are born without apparent purpose; happy accident or unwanted
burden, the whim of the fates and human desire – but a few, a tiny
percentage seem to be born to fulfill a specific ambition, as if
working to some hidden design. These singular characters are
invariably individualists, often compulsive in nature with a drive
that exceeds that of the normal. As the girl paused to light another
cigarette, Bond considered the nature of his strange captor. It was
obvious the murder of his father had triggered more than the simple
need for revenge, no, this boy – now man was on a journey
approaching that of a spiritual quest. Destiny was calling both men,
but to what end?.
'So, thats about all I
know – the next thing I knew I received an invitation to take a
holiday aboard Max's yacht. We spent a couple of weeks in the
Mediterranean, the Greek islands, Sicily then Majorca – all at
Max's expense. He insisted on paying for everything – including
Alfie.'
'Alfie?. A poodle?.'
'A car. My Alfa – I
call him Alfie.'
'Him?, I thought cars
were female.'
'This one is all man.
He's Italian, temperamental, and likes to shout.'
'Oh, well mines
British, also temperamental and he does his fair share of whining and
roaring – but thats enough about me. In fact, I have a small
confession.'
'Really?, oh James you
don't look the type...'
'Well, its just that
I'm falling madly in love with you and simply must have you – but I
don't even know your name.'
'Well, my Dad certainly
had a sense of humour. His name was Peter Turner, by the way. He
named me Paige.'
'Paige...Turner. Well,
I'll bet your school days were never dull. Anyway, we're wasting time
– by the way, what time is it exactly?.'
Her watch showed a
quarter to two, which gave Bond no more than five hour until
daybreak.
'Well, Miss Turner.
There's a few things I need you to do for me before I can help you,
it might be a little risky so if you say no I'll understand.' Her
answer was in the look she gave him, her arms folded defiantly. 'Good
girl. Now, tomorrow I'll need to get hold of a few things and a
diversion might be required. Which just leaves this.'
He kissed her, a
fierce, hungry kiss born of need and lust. Her response came with
breathless passion, the arms unfolding to embrace him, nails as claws
holding, hurting him. His tongue sought hers, his eyes remaining open
to see hers staring back into his. He felt himself hardening. An
over-noisy clattering from the gangway outside separated the pair,
the girl quickly smoothing herself down before nodding
conspiratorially. There was just a brief glimpse of an exchange of
notes with the guard before the door was locked shut once more.
At least the arrival of
the guard had saved Bond from himself. Normally there was no possible
circumstance in which he might have made love to a girl in such
squalid surroundings. With Paige Turner, he was no longer sure of any
such thing. Angrily, he lay down to rest, sleep being a virtual
impossibility.
CHAPTER
11
ATLANTIC
RENDEZVOUS
There is an old,
trusted and well-proven axiom in the British Military; No plan
survives first contact with the Enemy. A sleepy James Bond was
reminded of this when, in the crepuscular light of the false dawn the
Bayamo shuddered then coasted to a halt. As the yacht rolled
lazily in the gentle swell, Bond quickly splashed some water into his
face and, fully awake he went over to the porthole to be rewarded
with the most unexpected sight. There, lying in the water not forty
feet away was a Soviet Submarine!. The sub was massive, much larger
than the usual diesel-electric Atlantic patrol jobs – with an array
of pipework that was being extended to mate with the Bayamo,
much like the old German 'Milk-Cows' of the War that the Kriegsmarine
had used to refuel U-Boats at sea. One thing had become clear to
007; whatever the Bayamo's power plant was, it wasn't atomic –
those pipes were conveying liquid fuel of some kind. But why all
this?, why not simply re-fuel at the Azores? - the answer had to lie
in the sub's tanks. Bond needed to get out of the cell – and there
wasn't time to wait for the girl. He started work straight away,
working on the bolts holding the bulkhead light cover on with an
improvised tool he had made from the handles of the buckets, winding
them together to make a sprung clamp that, once over the bolt-heads
provided the leverage to turn them. Unscrewing the bulb a quick
inspection of the light fitting revealed the wiring, which went to
the light-switch in a panel by the door as well as to the yacht's
auxiliary lighting circuits. So far so good, thought Bond, using the
blade terminals of the bulb itself to remove the screws holding the
panel to the bulkhead. Next, he pulled the switch wiring through the
light fitting and yanked it free from the junction box behind. Then
it was simple; plugging one end of the wires into the light fitting,
he wound each of the other ends around the two bucket handles, one
which he had carefully wedged under the coaming beneath the
watertight door - the other now back in place on the water bucket,
which was resting innocently on the edge of the mattress. Picking the
empty bucket up, he started up a racket, banging and smashing it
against the bulkhead and shouting 'Hey! estúpido! despertar
idiota!'. After a few seconds, he heard the angry protest of the
guard, the door starting to open. Timing his move to the second, Bond
waited for the guard's foot to touch the metal floor before kicking
the water bucket over, rolling back onto the mattress, careful to
avoid touching the walls or floor. There was a flash of electricity
and the unfortunate man went down, falling onto the wet floor
heavily, his body convulsing spasmodically. Bond yanked the wire free
from the light socket, grabbing the man's sub-machine gun and
whipping it around to face the guard's partner, who had appeared in
the doorway. Raising his hands, the man knew Bond had him cold.
'Allí,
rápidamente!' Eyes wide, the second guard stepped over his
colleague, standing awkwardly in the corner of the room. Bond
relieved the man of his pistol, tucking it into a pocket. Smiling, he
flipped a jaunty salute with the fingers of his left hand before
swinging the door shut, dogging the latches at top and bottom to lock
it. Cautiously, he made his way aft, reaching the bottom-most of
three ladders that led up to the promenade deck. Moving silently, he
went up, leaning into the rail, letting his sleeve guide him, anxious
not to make any noise. Banging the metalwork with his sub-machine gun
wouldn't help his cause. The next deck was apparently abandoned, but
the noise from above had increased sharply. He decided to move to a
better position, reasoning a few well-aimed bursts at the pipework
might cause a big enough bang for London to investigate. He was
halfway up the third ladder when the tannoy blared out.
'Mr.Taylor, would
you join me in my State-room please?'.
Bond thought the
unprintable word, closing his eyes in disgust.
'Mr.Taylor – I
know you can hear this. There is no-where to go to my friend – I
think we can talk, a man in your position can only benefit from such
an offer.'
The yacht was racing
through the sea, at a rate of knots that defied belief. The
rendezvous with the refueling submarine had gone smoothly, and the
Bayamo's tanks were full, but of what?. As he stepped into the
corridor leading to the reception hall, James Bond knew he had been
beaten. Even if he had opened fire on the Soviet Sub, he knew he
wouldn't have achieved much. Indeed, apart from risking triggering
World War Three, he would have failed in his objective. 'Find the
source of these forgeries, investigate and report...' M's words
came back to him. All he could do was hand over the sub-machine gun,
pursing his lips as the grinning Chago frisked him, finding the
pistol, which he waved admonishingly at Bond.
The 'Grandee of
Florida' received his guest in a cordial fashion, this time in the
State-room beyond the reception hall. This room was part-office, part
lounge, with comfortable leather settees and coffee tables at one
end. Again, the floor was marble – this time black with flecks of
gold. The lounge area featured a large circular rug with the regal
'M' woven in golden thread. Maximilian stepped out from behind his
desk, waving at an open globe containing drinks.
'Please – we have
much to discuss, thirsty work as you Englishmen say. First, I
apologise for striking you '
'Well, it only hurts
when I'm awake.' Bond poured himself two fingers of scotch, watching
as Maximilian took a cigar from a humidor that was apparently built
into his desk. Using a cutter, he snipped the end off and lit it from
a match, waiting until the wood was burning before doing so. He held
the cigar up, inclining his head to indicate the offer.
'I'd prefer a
cigarette, if that's alright – not that I make a habit of turning
down a vintage Bolívar .'
Smiling at Bond's
knowledge, Maximilian took a pack of cigarettes from a draw, leaving
them on the desk and stepping back. Curious, Bond walked over,
reaching for the pack – at which point his host slapped down a
large bundle of US Dollars. They were Hundred-Dollar Bills, freshly
printed by the look of them.
Bond lit a cigarette,
noting the brand; Monterrey Superfinos Negros, made in
Havana.
'So, let me guess –
you like to smoke Cuban tobacco and burn Russian fuel - by the way -
I should warn you Hydrogen Peroxide is exceptionally volatile, it
wouldn't do to go anyway near it with one of those cigars...ugh'.
Bond pulled a face, the scotch burned his tongue. A look at the label
told him why; it was a hand-printed label bearing the name James
Grant above a single number; 1899. 'Be a shame to waste it.' Was his
first thought.
'So, I'm guessing that
money is undetectable. It is, isn't it – fake I mean?.'
Maximilian clapped his
hands together.
'I see I am right. You
know, Chago – he wanted to kill you, but then he is always killing
people. He killed my crewman, the one that betrayed my trust with his
stupidity. Spending money before everything was in place; he deserved
his death, every hour of it. You are a very resourceful and capable
man, I am convinced of this. Clearly, you saw our fuel delivery –
and guessed, correctly that we use Hydrogen Peroxide.'
'Yes, I seem to recall
something of its use by the Nazis as rocket fuel – their new
submarines were to have been powered by it, but it proved highly
unstable in the concentrations they were attempting.'
'I believe the science
is improved now – our Soviet Comrades in the Struggle for Socialist
Revolution managed to - appropriate an entire team of experts
from the German fascists. These men have been only too happy to
continue their vitally important work in the USSR. Thanks largely to
their efforts – and the generous donation of this vessel – as we
speak we are only hours from the coast of the Peoples Republic.'
'Cuba? - but,
that means the Bayamo must be sailing at... it can't be, that
would make this capable of incredible speed.' His only answer was a
modest bow and a smile.
'You were sent to find
out my plans, so I asked the Captain of the Submarine to make a
little call from his radio to our comrades in Moscow. They have a lot
of files, so many files it took a little while for them to look
through all the faces.'
Blowing smoke, Bond
perched himself on the arm of a settee, waiting for the inevitable.
'So, what did your
comrades have to say that a simple ship to shore call couldn't have
said?.'
'Oh, not much – James
Bond, Licenced to Kill, with a Double-O number believed to be 007,
current whereabouts unknown, last reports seen entering British
Secret Intelligence building in Hy...but, enough perhaps. They say
you are a very dangerous man, Mr. Bond. Such men can be useful. It
all depends on your point of view – whether you see a man as a
revolutionary, or a criminal.'
'Politics?, I don't
care for them – the games of old men and young fools.'
'Well, perhaps.
Personally I consider myself to be above such matters, but that is
just between the two of us. I am merely a claimant to the birthright
denied to me by the – old men and young fools you mention.'
'Here we go,' thought
Bond, but he kept the thought private, taking another drag of his
cigarette, exhaling slowly.
'Birthright?'
'As I said before, I am
the Marques de Bayamo, Grandee of Florida. These titles are mine by
virtue of my birth. Long and careful studies were required for me to
discover this, as you can imagine such titles are protected jealously
by those in power. Both the Americans and the old Cuban Government
(Bond detected undertones of pure venom in these last), both have
denied to recognise my claims, Comrade Castro would simply laugh if
told. My ancestors were of both Spanish and Indian blood, from when a
Conquistadore by the name of Diego Vasquez ran off with a
Tequesta woman. As her tribe inhabited the area now known as Miami,
whilst Vasquez settled in the hills near Bayamo, the nature of my
claim should become clear.'
'Well, I'm no
genealogist, but I see the outline of it; but it's all coming up Red
to me – The Russians I mean, Russia and Cuba – hardly consistent
with claims of Royal titles.'
'A means to an end, my
friend. You are a perceptive man, so you can probably guess what your
fate would be if you turn me down. Either way, there is no further
reason for secrets between us. As I say, my claims are ignored – I
cannot take my rightful position; but if things changed, if there was
a Global revolution...then I am assured of my place in History.'
The shine was back in
Maximilian's eyes, Bond could see he would have to tread carefully,
but also knew he hadn't heard all of it yet.
'So, You've done a
deal?, to help ensure a Soviet revolution – Worldwide?, but
that would mean...it's not possible!. You'd have to persuade the
whole of Europe, The U.S.A and the Commonwealth to overthrow
everything they've believed in for centuries!.'
'Just that. Everything
is ready, it will happen, of that there can be no doubt. Considering
the scale of my plans my demands for land and title are modest –
although I will be the richest man on Earth. Such compensations are
due to one who can achieve such a change - my friends in the
Politburo agree, although not publicly naturally.'
'And of course, those
same friends intend to honour their part of the bargain after the
Revolution?.'
'I hope so. Moscow is
such a pretty place, such delicate buildings. An Atomic Bomb
exploding in Red Square would make such a terrible mess, don't you
think, Mr. Bond?.'
Bond could feel the
blood freeze in his veins. The last thing he needed now was the girl.
CHAPTER
12
THE
FOURTH MAN
'Very still please, Mr. Bond – or shall I still call
you James?.' The playfulness was gone from her voice, now there was
only coldness. In her hand was the ugly shape of a pistol, Bond
couldn't be sure, but from where he sat it looked like a Silenced
Czech Model 27, part of the old German Abwehr armoury. From the
little he remembered from the reports on the Abwehr, a few
truck-loads of their more exotic kit was hauled off by the Soviets
during the mad days after the war in Europe. Whoever this girl worked
for, she was clearly deadly serious. Gone was the silk gown, in
favour of a military-cut one piece in beige. Somehow she still
managed to look ravishing, even in such an austere outfit.
'Darling, I think we
need to talk – its a bit soon for us to be fighting.' Bond's humour
fell on stony ground.
'Personally, I am in
agreement with my British friend here – why the gun?.' Maximilian
turned to his desk as if to get the pile of bills. Bond guessed there
was either an alarm button under the draws or a gun in one.
'Thats far enough, Max.
I wouldn't want you to die without knowing why.' The self-styled
Grandee smiled, his arms apart in an expansive gesture.
'O.K. - but you should
know, putting that gun on the table – well, you'd become very rich
indeed.'
'I am very rich
– you made me rich, Max, or don't you remember?.' The two men
exchanged glances, Bond reading the confusion in Maximilian's eyes –
and an unspoken plea for help.
'My father's name was
Turner, everyone called him Peter; he was that sort of man, but as
Sir. Anthony Peter Stanley Turner (Bond nearly choked on his Scotch)
the press loved to call him Turn-Coat Turner, or Red Tony. He was
unmasked as the fourth man in the R.A.F. Super-sonic bomber plot, a
coward who took his own life rather than face what he had done, but I
suppose you listen to the World Service.'
'Of course; Radio Free
Havana is a little heavy on propaganda for my tastes – though the
dance programmes are delightful.' Maximilian saw the look in her eyes
and stopped. Paige clenched her jaw, delaying the moment, her voice
coarse with the struggle of emotion and reason.
'Was our meeting at the
Consulate really chance?. You forgot to mention a few things
that night; that you were responsible for my Father's death for one.
All I knew was that Daddy had walked into the sea, leaving Jonny and
me in that car. Only he didn't, did he?. When exactly did you decide
to betray my Father?. I know he was taking us somewhere, we were
going to the beach. A boat-ride, Daddy said, then we were to have a
new house, clothes and all of that. A new life, Max.'
'Paige, there's more to
this than it...' Bond held his hands up, his words tailing off as
Maximilian stepped forward.
'Yes. I was there - the
rendezvous was your Father's idea, he wanted a boat to take you to
the Yugoslavian coast. At the time I was still conducting the
sea-trials for this yacht – it really is most unique, such a lot of
complicated machinery. Lucky for me it came with, shall we say
technical experts?. I was waiting off your Kent coast, a delightful
little bay – named for Saint Margaret I recall. Your Father never
arrived. I am sorry, I had nothing to do with his death.'
'Yes, I rather thought
so.' Bond ignored the mouth of the silencer as it followed his track
across the room. Careless to the threat, he set down his glass,
looking through the drinks globe, spotting a bottle of 1790
Courvoisier & Curlier brandy. He had a plan involving flaming
liquid – but not sacrilege. Sighing inwardly, he selected a bottle
of 1928 Krug, nonchalantly tossing it into the air to catch it single
handed, a display of faux camaraderie, his fingers working
fast, tearing at the foil.
'I know - let's
celebrate – I mean, since old Max here is going off so suddenly it
seems only fair he gets a last drink...' Bond paused, shrugging, as
he walked onto the
POK! The cork shot past
Paige's startled face, an inch from her nose. Bemusement turned to
amusement at the near miss.
'Words fail me, James –
is that the best the British Secret Service can do?.'
'Well, ask me that in a
minute...' Taking his thumb from the neck of the bottle, he let her
have it, a good Thousand Pound's worth right in the face, leaning
down sharply to wrench the rug from under her feet. She fell
awkwardly, banging her elbow hard onto a coffee table as she went,
the gun shattering through the glass top to clatter harmlessly onto
the marble.
'Bravo!' After a
moment, Maximilian had recovered his composure enough to applaud
Bond's trick as the latter checked the girl. His smile became a
clench of his teeth around the cigar. 'Did she break her pretty
neck?.'
The girl was soaked and
dazed, but mainly furious at herself for falling for the cheap trick.
Angrily, she batted away Bond's offer of a helping hand, rolling
around to pull herself up with her good left arm. Her right was
clearly injured. Maximilian's attention was distracted by a discreet
chiming, walking across to press a button on a panel built into his
desk. Bond seized the chance to scoop up the gun and whisper.
'You'll just have to
believe I had no choice – you'll thank me later.'
She stared at Bond in
disbelief, taking his handkerchief to wipe herself down as best as
she could with one arm.
Turning towards
Maximilian, 007 waited for him to finish speaking into the intercom.
'Sí, sí, lo
entiendo. Vamos a necesitar que te lo arreglen, sin embargo. Informar
a mí a la vez.' Taking his finger from the button, the Cuban
pointed at the pistol Bond was now aiming at his heart.
'You know, you cannot
kill me. My destiny is predetermined, as is your own.'
'I won't miss, Max. All
I want is to know where a few things are; for starters the printing
press those notes came from, the plates and so forth. Oh, and where
exactly is that Atomic bomb of yours?, I think your Comrades might
like to know, perhaps we'd better let them know the disarming codes
as well – Two World Wars were enough, don't you agree, Miss
Turner?.'
Reaching forward,
Maximilian dramatically lowered a down-turned index finger slowly
onto the intercom button, whistling in mimicry of a bomb falling
through the air.
'Max, enough!.' But the
finger was on the button.
'Chago. De aquí a
dos hombres, de forma inmediata.'
Bond took the shot –
or would have. An ominous snik! Told him the game was up, the
noisy arrival of Chago and two goons confirming it. .
'I trust no-one, not
even pretty faces. Perhaps I should have known Turner was your Father
– but I only knew his code-name. By the time I put it together –
well, how was I to know this?. All I knew was someone was being sent
to assassinate me; and firing-pins can be so easily filed down
without it being noticed.' Pressing another button, the curtains
pulled back to reveal the stunning vista outside. No longer were they
surrounded by the open Atlantic, but in a bay of fabulous beauty,
just a small concrete jetty to show any sign of habitation amongst
the sand and lush vegetation. The beach ended with the jungle to one
side, the other a bluff, a rocky outcrop that would do for a
cliff-diver's dreams. The sun was setting swiftly, the sky turning
golden, then falling into shades of orange and red.
Chago leered at the
girl, her lissom figure revealed to his lecherous gaze by the damp
material clinging to it.
'Welcome to Cuba. I
think you like it here, we gon' be very close you an' me, eh?.'
Bond struck the brute
with a resounding slap.
'Mind your manners,
she's not one of your dance hall girls.' Wiping his lip, Chago
grinned, all bad teeth and worse breath.
'Okay Mister. I think
you are dead, but between now an' then – well, that can be such a
long time...'
Maximilian lit another
cigar, walking ahead of the two prisoners and their guard. 'First we
better get that arm seen to. You'll both need to be in good shape for
what lies ahead.'
Turning to them, his
smile was that of a shark.
'Of course, afterwards
you might have preferred I let Chago have his fun – but, who
knows?, perhaps it is true what they say, that there are worse things
than death?.'
CHAPTER
13
THE
LEITER SIDE
They were
bundled into the back of a big American Ford station wagon, with one
of Maximilian's men at the wheel and another covering them with a
Russian Tokarev, the heavy pistol advising both passengers of
the inadvisability of escape attempts. The car pulled onto the road
behind a Buick sedan, which had four more aboard – presumably part
of whatever organisation Maximilian was running on the island. With
no choice, Bond sat back in his seat, the girl doing her furious best
to ignore both him and the pain in her arm as they jolted along the
rough track. From the condition of the road Bond guessed it was an
old smuggler's track, but had recently been graded for some purpose.
Gradually, the tension of the day faded, his resources at a low ebb.
He allowed himself to nod, conserving his energy for a better time.
It was no more than twenty minutes later that Bond was startled into
wakefulness, even as the Ford's brakes screamed their protest at
being stamped on. Bracing himself against the bench seat in front, he
shielded his eyes from a blinding, dazzling light that was filling
the windshield; just as the world exploded.
The volley of shots was
awesome in its ferocity, the side-windows of the leading car
shattering into fragments, a split-second before the windshield of
the Ford crazed, the driver throwing his hands across his face even
as he died. Bond threw himself across the girl, but not before he saw
the thug with the Tokarev cut down after no more than three paces
from the wrecked car. There were shapes, blurred shapes of men
crowding in, the door was wrenched open and there were rough hands
reaching in for them. As the girl was dragged screaming from the car
Bond put up a struggle, but it was hopeless in such a confined space,
against the roughnecks who pinned him to the side of the car. Getting
a good look at the gang didn't lift Bond's spirits, a ragged bunch
that seemed to have come from some second-rate Mexican western novel.
'Camaradas, eso es
suficiente!' Oddly, the voice seemed familiar, coming from a
hunched figure sitting on the hood of an old truck. Sliding down to
stand in front of the couple, the man seemed amused at their
predicament, before becoming serious again.
'Poner los cuerpos
en los autos y rollo de ellos en el río, rápidamente!'. At this
command the bandits set to work, moving the bodies and pushing the
cars off the road, down a small incline where, with a final splash,
they slowly sank from view.
'Well, don't you turn
up at the darndest places?.' Bond's jaw might have sagged if it
wasn't for the flush of relief he felt. It was none other than Felix
Leiter!.
'I could say the same
for you, Felix.' The two men shook hands, before Leiter embarrassed
Bond with a crushing hug.
'Whats with the
desperadoes?, have you gone into the Banditry profession or is the
CIA recruiting from Pancho Villa lookalike agencies these days?.'
'Still the same British
sense of humour I see – who knows, one day I might even laugh?.
Come on, we'd better get going.'
Pointing at the
passenger side of the cab, Felix climbed in behind the wheel,
starting the engine coughing into life as the men clambered over the
side into the truck-bed. Paige refusing Bond's offered help as she
hauled herself up to sit on the bench, then ignoring his broad smile
as he shut the door. The rangy Texan hit the gas, sending gravel
chips flying. They drove without lights, using the moon as guidance
to stay on the road under the royal palms. Paige couldn't help but
notice the golfing glove on the right hand – which seemed oddly
frozen. Looking across, Bond had seen it too.
'You approve?.'
'Well, it's better than
that hook – damn thing made you look like a pirate.'
'Prosthetic hand.'
Felix smiled at Paige. 'The right leg too – souvenir of an
encounter with a shark.' Felix drove fast, the old truck's engine
burbling and rumbling along. Lighting a Chesterfield, the CIA man
offered the pack around. Ice duly broken, Bond made the introductions
as they smoked. At a junction the truck took a right to start winding
its way up into the hills. Cigarette between his teeth, Felix jerked
a thumb backwards.
'These are my
compañeros, very useful guys – not exactly the kind to ask
questions or likely to go to the authorities here. They were
small-time smugglers when I arrived.'
The girl seemed
interested.
'And now?.'
'Now, sweetheart,
they're in the big leagues. With relations as bad as they are,
there's getting to be a shortage of most everything round here; auto
parts, gasoline – hell even these Chesterfields had to come in
through us. About the only thing they've got plenty of are cigars and
Mafia bosses in hiding – I export both, by the way.'
'Mafia bosses?' Paige
seemed incredulous.
'Transmissions and gas
in; hand-rolled Havanas and hoodlums back out; the cigars in boxes,
the hoods in, well hoods and cuffs. Our State Department doesn't ask
too many awkward questions and Big Tony gets five to life.'
'O.K. Felix, I get the
picture.' Bond cut in, helping himself to a swig of Bourbon from a
bottle he had found wedged under the seat. 'We can't exactly talk
shop here, but I'm on a job and I've come up a little short. I could
use some of that American largess of yours – I'll need a few
things, but first this poor creature has gone and hurt her arm,
(There was a sharp kick to his ankle) I don't suppose you know any
good vets?.'
Smiling, Leiter shook
his head.
'Same old James. Always
right in the middle of it – and there's always a girl in there with
him.'
Bond tried his best to
appear innocent of the charge, Paige fixing him with a wicked stare.
'Oh really, Dear, you
mustn't listen to strange men, especially strange men from Texas.'
The air behind the cab
was filled with singing, the rough band unwinding from the tense
encounter and the shock of gunfire. Gradually the palms gave way to
cuban pines and ferns, growing high either side of the track which
was taking them ever deeper into the occluded slopes and safety of
the Sierra Maestra.
Dawn over the
mountains. Bond woke early, to find Felix already making coffee. They
were in a large shack in an old mining village. In the main communal
room Paige was still sleeping in the cot Felix had made up for her,
her arm in a sling. At first the elbow had appeared broken, but
between them Leiter and a guilty Bond had managed to twist and
manipulate it back into shape, the girl's courage impressive as she
took the pain in grim silence. Taking pity on his friend, Leiter had
gone round his gang to return with what might have passed for clothes
at a respectable distance and uncertain lighting. Bond found a stone
trough and hurried through his ablutions. Toweling himself he joined
his friend on the veranda, accepting a steaming mug of the coffee,
the smoky brew rich and dark like the soil of the green hills. No-one
actually knew the name of this place; the copper miners had laid
their tools down here for the last time in the early part of the
century, making the dilapidated collection of sheds and huts ideal as
a base for Felix and his unorthodox associates. The two men sat
together in silence, contemplating the misty valley and taking in the
early morning sounds. From somewhere below a squawking was followed
by a flash of iridescence as a parrot erupted from the foliage,
calling out with raucous cries mid-flight. Bond had hoped to see one
of the famous Tocoloro birds, but had to make do with hearing
them call to each other, the distinctive sound giving them their
name. He took a Chesterfield and closed his eyes, enjoying the simple
feel of life.
'So, James, how am I
going to get rid of you this time – and what's the story; you and
the girl, I mean?.'
'Okay Felix, I'll show
you mine... but you first; how did you know where to pick us up?,
Thewlett?.'
'Right on the money,
your Royal Marine pal. He'll live, by the way, but he won't be diving
any time soon. When the equipment drop went sour your people hit the
button – we were watching that boat right out of the Azores, the
Navy boys are fighting to get a better look at her. Our long range
patrol planes picked up the Soviet sub too – she was last seen
heading back to Murmansk or wherever the hell they keep those
babies.'
'So you set up that
ambush last night – pretty slick. But you haven't been living up
here just waiting for me to come along...'.
Getting to his feet,
Felix tossed away the last remnants of his coffee, leaning against a
roofing post.
'James its not a good
time. Frankly, we've got a lot going on down here and Washington's
furious – cables to London and all that. Your Mister 'M' is going
to need broad shoulders to catch what's coming over this. Now this is
strictly between us; I'm putting together a network of anti-Castro
people sympathetic to US interests in the region. With orders to
remove him, by peaceful means if possible...'
Bond stood.
'And if not?.'
Moodily, Leiter threw
his mug down.
'Look, I don't always
like my job, but I've got orders. You are out of here on the next
boat – that's final, by the way. I haven't got orders about the
girl, take her with you for all I care. I'm sorry James, but the
interests of the United States come first.'
'So thats it – I'm
stepping on toes...'. Bond was angry, he was in an impossible
situation, but pushed on regardless.
'Well, I've got my
orders too, Felix. I've got to find out where that lunatic Max makes
his money, I'm supposed to call it in and just wait for London to
make the necessary calls to your people. Well, what would you say to
a bit of nuclear blackmail? - that the man's involved in some mad
scheme to take over Florida – that's Florida in the United
States by the way – and whatever the means behind it, he's
threatening to set off an atomic bomb in the middle of Moscow. Now,
supposing he does that?, who do you think will get the blame?.'
'Okay James, nice
speech. In the light of what you've told me I need to make a few
calls, as we're buddies I'll even spin you a quarter for an
international call – I'm sure dear old 'M' is just dying to hear
from you.'
The shack Felix kept
his radio gear in was set apart from the others, on a hummock further
up the hillside. As they walked, Bond was surprised to see a group of
women washing clothes on the rocks by a small stream, there were even
a few children, the urchins playing in the water or with the older
women collecting leaves in baskets – presumably to roll into the
crude cigarros smoked by both the compañeros and their
women. Idly Bond wondered what would become of these people once the
inevitable orders arrived for Felix. Assuming Castro's survival,
these peasant-bandits would be hunted down, with the ruthlessness for
which the revolutionary leader was becoming known. Inside, the shack
itself was a sparse business; no more than an old chair and a table,
the set waiting expectantly on top. The power came from a trio of
truck batteries wired in series.
'O.K. James – Guests
first, now this is the latest equipment, so I'll give you a
run-down...'
'Ah yes, the RS-1 field
set – let me see now.' Seating himself astride the chair, Bond's
fingers moved expertly across the dials. 'Lets see...3-6 Mega Cycles,
its half past six so Station C should be listening on this band.
Really Felix, you should have done your homework – we borrowed two
of these for evaluation from the manufacturer last year.'
'I might have known.'
Chastened, Felix watched as Bond worked the set, one earphone to his
left ear as he began tapping out high-speed morse on the key,
repeating his call-sign at ten second intervals. Over his shoulder,
Bond spoke quietly.
'What are the Cubans
like at direction-finding?.'
'Russian equipment and
instructors – so first-class, I'd say three minutes is a risk, five
is dangerous.' That meant Bond had two minutes before the Cuban
intelligence men were alerted to their presence by the radio waves
coming from the hill-top. Luckily, Kingston was on the ball, sending
the pre-arranged reply within thirty seconds. Keeping one eye on the
second-hand of his watch, Bond switched over to voice transmission –
the time factor making the risk a necessity.
'Station-C from
Barracuda, Barracuda urgent. Respond over.' There was the briefest of
delays before the voice from Kingston replied; female – a wren, no
doubt, the tones neutrally British and deliberately so for clarity
and reassurance to agents under pressure in the field.
'Station-C to
Barracuda. Verify please, Yellow-Three, Over.' Bond shut his
eyes, trawling his memory for the correct response.
'Barracuda, Blue-Five.
Emergency report; Barracuda at cousin Virginia's house. Inform Father
current situation unresolved. Inform Father possible situation Black
Sun at Red Castle, I repeat possible Black Sun Red Castle. Do not
verify, many thanks, Barracuda Out.'
'Well, that ought to
set alarm bells going – thanks Felix, I'll wait outside, but first
I need another favour, strictly between us, you understand.'
'Go on.'
'Just this; the girl.
She said something back on that boat that set me thinking, something
about her father, chap by the name of Turner, better write this down;
Sir. Anthony Peter Stanley Turner no less. He was feeding the other
side secrets; the new bomber fleet, that kind of stuff. He's dead,
suicide by drowning, but we thought at the time there was more to it
than that and...' Felix's eyebrows were raised quizzically, willing
Bond to get to it. 'It's probably nothing, but I can't quite figure
out how she knew.'
'Knew?, James, this
really needs to make more sense.'
'Exactly; how in hell
did she know that Max was involved with her father's death?, I mean,
he admitted as such himself. Who put her on to him?.'
'Maybe dear old daddy
told her himself.'
'Its possible. I don't
like it, Felix, not a bit of it, but I can't mention this to London
or the old man will have my head. Puffing at an imaginary pipe, Bond
mimicked 'M's voice; “You have an assignment Double-O-Seven, I
expect you to keep it.”
Smiling, Felix turned
to the radio set.
'Okay James, I get the
picture. Leave it to Uncle Felix, I'll ask my Uncle Sam if he knows
anything about a certain green-eyed redhead.'
Patting his friend's
shoulder in thanks, Bond stretched his legs while Felix sent his
report. He had kept his own report to a minimum, but knew that a
coded signal was being sent straight off to London. He smiled to
himself at the vision of 'M' choking on his pipe over the Black Sun
and Red Castle bit – the code-words for an Atom Bomb and Moscow
respectively. Three short minutes passed and Felix was standing next
to him.
'Well, James that was
interesting – seems my reports are being flashed straight to
Kennedy's desk – and I just got this, straight from the top; lets
hit the town.'
CHAPTER
14
CUBA
LIBRE!
Much to Bond's
surprise, Havana seemed largely unchanged despite the Revolution.
There were signs, of course, from the trucks full of soldiers that
rushed past at intervals, to the slogans that adorned almost every
large flat surface. Venceremos – ANTIIMPERIALISTA – Patria o
Muerte! And images of Castro's benevolent smile seemed to follow
the trio's progress into the city. They were in Felix's pride and joy
– a practically new Chevrolet Impala, with Bond at the wheel. Even
for someone who usually detested over-sized jukeboxes, he had to
admit the car was a beauty. Enjoying the smooth power of the 300
horses mated to the Turboglide automatic transmission Bond was
enthralled. The coil suspension made for easy cornering – not
something for which Detroit was famous. The downtown traffic was
fairly hectic, a mix of ancient farm-trucks and horse-carts at the
outskirts had been replaced by taxis and motor traffic. Cruising
through the streets of Habana Vieja with its Spanish colonial
and baroque buildings the centuries crowded in on all sides around
the singular threesome. A market was in full flow, all hustle and
shouting, the goods on offer either riotous with the cheerful local
colour and tastes or everyday groceries, the familiar made oddly
unfamiliar by the labels and packaging.
'Turn left here, James.
We need to do something about your wardrobe.'
Bond merely glanced
over at his friend, himself in a loud floral shirt and white panama
hat, shaking his head. Amused, Paige's smile turned to a wince of
discomfort as they went over a pothole.
'How's that arm, Miss
Turner?.'
'Nothing that a hot
bath couldn't cure, thank you.'
'All in hand, but we
need to make a stop first.'
The Chevrolet purred
into a dark alleyway lined with shops. Halfway along the crumbling
buildings with their faded wooden shutters Felix indicated a space
beside a second hand furniture warehouse. Leading the way, the
American took them through the warehouse past the piled antique
mahogany and newer pine, Bond noting the decline in quality; a sure
sign of economic hardship. There was a courtyard behind the
warehouse, beyond that the noise and bustle of a busy cafe next door
to the tailor's shop that was their destination.
'Ramon! réveiller
mon pote!, voici les clients! - Ramon is a Frenchman exiled here
for, lets say Political reasons. He's the best cloth cutter outside
of New York.'
'I used to work in
Jermyn Street before the war.' Ramon himself was, at first glance, a
fish out of water. His features were lined from what looked a mixture
of a life of hardship and the creases around his forehead from long
hours of concentration. If Bond had to guess, he'd say a quarter
jewish with morrocan or algerian lineage mixed in with a drop of
gaelic for odd measure. The tape around his tired shoulders was worn
as a doctors stethoscope or a P.T. Instructors whistle, there was
even the expected chalk behind the ear. Standing by a wall of draws
and shelves Bond idly tried one, finding it full of handkerchiefs.
'Ramon we're in your
hands. My friend here needs a couple of suits and evening dress for
tonight.'
'The last minute –
always, a week; other people, half a day?, I should change my name to
Ramon Half a day, Ramon Halfday is better – you are from England?.'
Bond's look at Leiter was batted down by the yellowed hand. 'Don't
worry, no questions and no drill – I know the score.' The tape
measured, the chalk wrote. 'Let's have a natural shoulder with canvas
– a plain weave, nice and light. I'm pushed for time here so
single-breasted, two buttons and the usual. For shoes its a derby –
I don't do them myself, but I know a nice man...size?.'
'I take a ten and a
half wide, US eleven.' Bond looked through a selection of ties,
picking a few he hoped were suitable.
'Side-adjusters or
loops?' Bond chose the former.
'Right – where do I
send it all, Felix?.'
'We'll be at the
Capri.'
Back in the Chevrolet,
Bond followed Felix's instructions, the old town giving way now to
broad avenues, the buildings here more angular and purposeful than
the rococo facades before them.
'I was hoping for the
Nacional, by the way.'
'Well, you'll be there
tonight if my information is worth the twenty sawbucks it cost.'
'Tonight?.'
'Tonight, James. First
we need to check in at the Capri, I just hope Benny's still around.'
'Benny?.'
'Yes James, Benny –
lets just say he's the man who put the Capo in the Capri.'
To Bond's disdain the
Capri was a modern concrete brick of a place, the kind that
flourished under Batista, where rich Americans left their Cadillacs
with the valet and crocodile-skin luggage with the porters to head
straight for the tables or the slots. Castro was famously opposed to
gambling, having closed down the casino at the Nacional just the
previous year. The Capri was mob money, an investment in greed that
saw big returns in the post-war boom. The actor George Raft had owned
a chunk of the place, along with the gangsters Trafficante and Lansky
but the times had changed and the action fell away to Vegas. The desk
clerk seemed suspicious of the young couple who walked nervously into
the lobby, more so of the brash American who busied himself stuffing
bills into the pocket of the porter and making a point of letting
everyone know that he was loaded – in both senses of the word.
Visibly anxious, Bond was still waiting for his papers to come
through; a mix-up at Miami, his bride hadn't realised she needed
papers in her married name, the Americans trust no-one going to the
Republic and what nicer place to be stranded?. Falling in with the
deception, Paige complained about the luggage – they didn't lose
your bags in London, she would have to go shopping all over again and
what would the Barrington-Smythes make of it all?. Picking his
moment, rudely elbowing over to the counter, Leiter slapped down his
passport (Mr.Whitman), snapping his fingers for his room key and
leaning with his back to the desk. The clerk bought none of it, until
Leiter butted in with his tourist guide, open at an inviting little
place called bribery – US $100 the exact address. Having checked
in, they went up to their rooms, 'Whitman' on the eighteenth while
'Mr and Mrs.Forbes' took the Laguna Suite above on the top floor. The
clerk waited a full five minutes before dialing through to the
Policía Nacional Revolucionaria.
The Laguna Suite was
impressive in the American way; everywhere was a lake of
sand-coloured carpet of the deepest possible pile, split-level, with
anti-clockwise stairs down to a lounge area beyond the reception
platform and the bedroom area opposite up another set of stairs
curving to the clockwise. There was a gallery running along the back
of the suite linking bedroom to bathroom to the entrance area. Bond
tipped the porter and went for a walk around. The furniture was
modern and looked expensive, the centre-piece of the lounge started
with a monstrous crystal chandelier, a waterfall of a thing that
twinkled and spiraled down to just above a large circular glass
table, which itself covered a miniature rockery pool. There had
probably been fish once, but not now. Idly Bond wondered if Castro
had declared them political prisoners and set them free. Fishy
revolutionaries. The thought amused him, so much so he began
whistling 'The Red Banner'.
'A Communist anthem in
a museum of Capitalism.' Paige was smiling at him from the balcony,
and he was reminded of how badly he had wanted this strange girl.
'Actually, I prefer
Capitalism. Neither is perfect, but at least the greed is visible.'
'Speaking of
Capitalism, I'm going shopping.'
'The missing luggage?.'
'If I go another hour
without some fresh clothes I'll go quite mad. Since you nearly broke
my arm I don't expect any complaints.'
'Not at all. I'll stay
here – just in case Felix decides to let me know what he's up to.
By the way-' Bond was genuinely contrite. '- I am sorry for hurting
you; no really, I am. I had to stop you because that maniac is
involved in some extremely dangerous business, when I find out more
you can kill him all you like. Do we have a deal?.'
'Do I have a choice?.'
Bond seized her by the
good arm, spinning her to face him.
'Look, I can't play
silly bloody games!. You're in over your damn head here – this is
no place for a girl with revenge on her mind. To hell with it. Go and
get your fresh clothes, I need a bloody drink.' She strode out,
leaving Bond angry at everything and nothing. To hell with it.
'In at the deep end
again, huh?.'
'Benny!. Benny the
Breeze – am I glad to see you. Thank Christ for the mob.'
Felix had been nursing
a coffee at the bar in the Hotel nightclub. He was the only patron
there, apart from the bartender there was just a couple of dancers
going through a routine for tonight's cabaret. The girls were pretty,
but the dancing was more hope than talent.
Ordering a beer, Benny
helped himself from a bowl of peanuts, watching the girls while he
waited. 'Not exactly the Rockettes, but they were all we could get.'
'They look like a
couple of chamber maids playing dress-up.'
'They are chamber
maids, Felix. All the pros hoofed it back to Miami when the locals
found religion. So, you came for the show?.'
Holding his hands up,
the CIA man's smile was tight-lipped.
'Okay Benny. Look, some
business is coming that, well it won't be nice – or quiet.' The
look on 'The Breeze's' face was so markedly everyday it was a
give-away. All this was meat and potatoes to this man.
'Well, what's our end?
- what are the numbers?. Come on Felix, quit the choirboy routine –
we both know you wouldn't be in this joint if your Hillbilly Zapatas
could have done the job. Which means two things, my friend; One;
Money, a lot of it. Two; More of Item One...'.
'Never a problem.'
Benny spluttered into
his beer, dabbing at his shirt with a napkin.
'Whoa-whoa-now I'm
worried. Somebody says 'No problem' there's problems. Who's going to
get upset by this not-very-nice, not-very-quiet business?.'
Felix told him, from
what he knew; the opposition was professional, but he didn't know
their true extent, or if they had ties with the Cubans themselves
beyond the tenuous bond of Political fraternity.
'I'll need an army,
that's about all I know. If they could be exiled Cubans it would make
a good cover – it's all simmering over here anyway.'
'So I hear. Me, I got
friends in a lot of places, friends who tell me the future's rosier
back home. Maybe you got friends. Maybe I should head for the roses.
Maybe...'
'Maybe you need a
cleaner record. Okay Benny, I owe you that much.'
'For what?.'
'Oh, for not squealing
on my, what was that, Hillbilly Zapatas?.'
'Who says I didn't?. I
told the Secret Police you were hiding out in the Escambray
mountains.'
'Benny, you should have
gone into Intelligence work.'
'Nah, I'd rather be
wise than intelligent. Catch the midnight show, I'll keep a
table back for you and those two love-birds you are babysitting.'
Room Service was
neither fast nor efficient, Bond decided, calling down in annoyance
to cancel the sandwich that hadn't arrived, no doubt to the amusement
of the secret police. It was no great leap to guess that every line
into the place was tapped. Deciding to skip lunch, he plumped for a
swim instead. The hard work that had gone to making this place
clockwork-smooth had obviously left to follow the money. At least the
rooftop pool made up for it; the view was breathtaking, the long,
dramatic curve of the bay on one side and the whole of the island the
other, stretching away into its own horizons. Paige hadn't returned –
still shopping with the money Felix had given her, no doubt. Bond had
managed to scrounge a pair of Bermuda Shorts from one of the maids –
without embarassing her too much about what else guests left behind.
He'd hoped for a bar up here, but least there was a trolley. In
experimental mood, he tried the local beers; the Cristal was
passable, the second bottle less so. Abandoning the experiment, he
went over to the glass railing, reasoning that he had might as well
act like a tourist. Here was the view of American conquerors that
could never have been enjoyed by the real Conquistadors – and
suddenly Bond knew what it was about this place; a killer from an
advanced race arriving from the sea – the thrill of blood and lure
of gold, the easy metal that drives man to murder his friend, his
neighbour. The natives!, they knew where it was!. Only there was no
gold – had never been; just the blood of innocents washing into the
surf. At once the centuries hit Bond like a fist in the stomach, and
he felt sick to its pit. Suddenly he needed the cleansing embrace of
the cool water. The surface erupted into foam as he dived in.
It was after six when
Bond woke up, calling down to the front desk again, he ordered for
two, reasoning the girl would be back before the meal – if it
arrived at all. The bathroom was a lavish riot of mirrors and natural
stone, all in keeping with the lagoon theme – all too natural to be
anything but man-made. He poured himself a bath, finding some bath
salts which he thew in to help ease the tension he was beginning to
feel. He knew the feeling of old, this deep in what was effectively
enemy territory. It would pass. Turning the taps off he leant back,
eyes closed. After a much-needed soak he heard the door to the suite
opening. It was the girl, Bond covering himself quickly with a towel
as she waved in a troupe of porters laden with cases, boxes and bags
of every kind. Tipping each extravagantly, she waved their gratitude
off with a smile. Finding a pair of bath robes bearing the hotel's
moniker Bond emerged just in time to catch her hiding something
behind her back, the mischievous sparkle of emeralds in her eyes.
'Darling – there you
are, I hope you don't mind I picked up a few things.'
Bond was incredulous;
clearly she had thawed out somewhat.
'Well, at least the
room's big enough – where did you get all this?, I thought luxury
goods were hard to come by here.'
'Not as hard as
American Dollars are now. Felix was incredibly generous – he said
business was good, that the money couldn't leave the island anyway.
Everyone's simply bursting with enthusiasm for the Revolution, James,
so much so they'll sell anything to get out. The nice man in the
tobacconist said he'd been keeping the box since before the war.'
'Box?.' She handed him
a package wrapped in old brown paper, standing close, all pout and
eyelashes.
'Don't be angry with me
James, after all it is our honeymoon.' Bond couldn't keep his jaw
closed as the paper tore to reveal a plain-looking cigar box. There
was a label inside, a faded piece of paper bearing the inscription
Montecristos with the signature A.Menéndez.
'I wouldn't have
believed it. How much did you...'
But there were no more
words, just her lips seeking his. They kissed hungrily, almost
hurting each other in their need. Bond felt her tongue between his
lips, pushing it aside with his, as if struggling with her for
dominance.
They were interrupted
by the arrival of dinner, Bond stepping out for a quick – much
needed - cigarette on the balcony while the waiters arranged the
trays on the glass and side-tables. From their suite he could see,
could hardly miss the imposing facade of the Hotel Nacional, one of
the most remarkable hotels anywhere in the World, the Spanish
Colonial style building actually a product of a New York firm of
architects. Simply the place for the 'In' crowd, a haven for
every-one from The Prince of Wales and the Duke and Duchess of
Windsor to the stars of sports and screen; names such as Dempsey,
Keaton, Flynn, Grable and Gardner, Astaire, Romero, Cooper and
Sinatra, so many names! Add Churchill and Hemingway! And the stars
were serenaded by yet more names; Eartha Kitt and Nat 'King' Cole
just two.
A discreet cough
signaled the table was set. Paige tipped the waiters as Bond joined
her, pulling a bottle of Dom Perignon '43 from the bucket.
'Max likes to open the
bottle with a sword – I think he wants to style himself as some
sort of Cuban Napoleon.'
Bond pulled the bottle
smoothly from the cork, pouring two coupes. Handing Paige hers
he raised his glass, with mock ceremony and dramatic intonation;
'Champagne! In victory
one deserves it; in defeat one needs it.'
'De Gaulle?.'
'God no – almost as
bad; Napoleon.'
Giggling, she took a
sip. Saluting, she proposed a toast.
'To Napoleon; to all
short Frenchmen everywhere – and their horses.'
Her smile fell away at
the serious look on James Bond's face.
'To us. To tonight –
and the devil take tomorrow.'
She touched his
outstretched glass.
'To us, James.'
He drank thirstily,
draining his glass.
'Now, lets see what the
chef is made of.' Lifting the lids on their platters he uncovered
their meal with a flourish of the hand.
'Ceviche de
Langosta' - Lobster Ceviche followed by 'El Pez espada a la
Plancha con Patatas dulces – Grilled Swordfish with sweet
potatoes. For dessert we have Dulce de Platano, thats ripe
plantains cooked in wine, sugared and spiced.'
They helped themselves,
in the local style – from the bowl, eating the meal with gusto and
abandon. The Ceviche was wonderfully light, the Dom Perignon perfect
for cleansing the palate between each delicious mouthful. Bond had to
pace himself, his stomach filling rapidly, this meal more than making
up for the shabby service earlier. By the second course, any thoughts
of recrimination had melted like the sea-salted butter dripping over
the chunks of Swordfish, the meat being fresh and firmer than the
usual flaky offerings from the freezer of European restaurants.
Paige was in heaven.
She had simply never eaten so well, with no Mother to learn from and
a Father not prone to wasting time or effort with fancy cuisine. By
the dessert, both had to admit defeat. Bond pushing his plate away
with the satisfied mien of the aesthete.
Slapping her hands
together, Paige took her glass over to the couch where she had left
the cigars, producing a
pair of what looked like nail scissors to cut one. Handing it to
Bond, she held out her other hand – as well as the cutter there was
a silver Zippo lighter.
'Well James, aren't you
going to smoke it?.'
'Yes, of course. But,
what's this?.' The lighter was crudely inscribed – For James,
Paige.
He thanked her with a
kiss, but she slipped away to get a packet of Cohibas from a clutch
purse that lay on top of her pile of goods. Each lost in the view,
they smoked in silence, Bond enjoying the sacrilege of sending such a
rarity up in smoke. The Montecristo was cool, aromatic and
burnt with a richness beyond comparison. With the sparkle of Vedado,
the nightclub district around them and the low rumble of the surf
beyond the inviting lights of the Nacional, they might have been in
paradise had it not been for the circumstances. In the gardens
surrounding the Nacional, a man lowered his binoculars. He had seen
enough. He had seen Bond and the girl, had seen his target for
tonight.
While Bond savoured the
Montecristo, Paige took a well-earned bath, emerging clad in a
towel to find him, amused, looking through the results of her
expedition. Slapping his hand away from her waist, she gracefully
dodged away with a bag in each hand, disappearing up the stairs with
a stern look that brooked no arguments. Bond found the panel for the
radio, selecting a latin dance station, practicing a few steps before
going for another look at the view.
In the back of the
taxi, a pair of gloved hands opened a long case, extracting a long
tube of steel and a receiver, which snapped together with a twist. An
'L' shaped piece of steel with a thick rubber pad on the bottom was
next, slotting into the back of the receiver. Finally, a smaller
tube, a telescopic sight was clipped on top and the rifle was
complete. There were two magazines in the case; one containing five
rounds of standard 7.62mm Soviet rifle ammunition, one loaded with
five of the steel-jacketed armour piercing type.
The glove paused before
selecting the standard. At this range the 7.62 round would not miss.
CHAPTER
15
A SHOT
IN THE DARK
The sight that
greeted Bond as he turned around would have caused a statue to gasp.
St the top of the stairs Paige stood in heels and gold ear-rings. She
held an evening dress over herself, a gossamer silk number in pink.
Another dress – green, dangled from its hanger over her shoulder.
'Well, Mr.Forbes,
pink...or green?.' With that she let the silk slip away, to show Bond
the green. As she did the switch, he could see she was naked behind
the dress, a tantalising glimpse of her breasts and the down of her
sex.
Climbing the stairs,
Bond kept his gaze firmly on her eyes.
'Mrs.Forbes, I'd like
to see both, in shall we say, an hour?.'
The shameless whore!,
the cross-hairs of the telescopic sight whipped up after the
retreating back of the Englishman, but he had gone from sight. Wiping
his eyes after the brazen show with his gloved hand the assassin
settled back into the aim. He would wait.
It was around forty
minutes later, around eight when Ramon's boy delivered the bulky
package to Felix's room, the American pressing a twenty dollar bill
into the kid's hand. Waving the boy's thanks away,
Felix – in a cream
dinner suit with blue cummerbund headed for the back-stairs, taking
them two at a time so as not to waste any time. He knocked at the
door of the Laguna suite, getting no reply he found a maid and
persuaded her to use her pass-key.
Hearing the sounds
coming from the bedroom, the CIA man let out a low chuckle, spotting
the bucket, he helped himself to a glass of the '43 and a seat on one
of the plush sofas scattered around the edge of the lounge.
At length, Paige
emerged, heading for the bathroom. She was naked. Bond looked out
after her, then down at the grinning Leiter.
'I hope you averted
your gaze.'
'Not on your life,
James. Ramon worked his magic, you shall go to the ball...'
Aware of his nakedness, Bond ducked back into the bedroom for the
robe, striding back out along the gallery towards the bathroom, to be
engulfed in a blizzard of a thousand shards of razor-sharp crystal a
split second before a distinct kerrak! was heard. Instinct
took over; throwing his arm up, 007 pivoted on his left heel and
threw himself forward over the railing, vaulting over to fall onto a
table, breaking its legs as well as his fall, letting himself roll
onto the pile below the gallery. The lights went out; Felix, no
doubt.
'Paige, stay in there –
it's a sniper!.' Bond was at the balcony, down on one knee. He saw a
few cars and possibly a taxi driving away, but apart from that there
was only the same scene as before.
Felix worked his magic
charming the maid into cleaning up the mess without too much fuss,
while Bond dressed quickly. Ramon had certainly worked miracles, the
black trousers with their military cut fitted to perfection as did
the shirt, a plain cotton base with stylised floral accents.
Expertly, Paige tied his bow tie for him. There was an off-white
tuxedo jacket on the bed, which completed the outfit.
'Well, how do I -' They
laughed, having both said exactly the same thing at the same time.
Paige was simply
ravishing in green. Finishing above the knees the simply cut dress
was set off to perfection by a climbing rose pattern in golden
thread, as well as the hair she had piled superbly above her head, a
freshly-picked flower in her hair. Her bag and shoes were both
glitzy-emerald. Felix was waiting patiently.
'Let's get out of here
– It's only the next block over, but in case the chandelier
murderer is still out there we'll sneak out the service entrance out
back.'
Bond was all business,
his stride bursting with renewed purpose.
'Good. I'm ready –
and it's high time you filled us in on what's going on.'
The night air was
sobering, as if being the target of a sniper was not enough to clear
the head, Bond smoking a Chesterfield to help steady his nerve.
Leiter had certainly been busy – Maximilian kept a suite of rooms
at the Nacional for unforeseen emergencies, and Benny's contacts had
tipped him the wink that the big man was in town tonight. Deciding to
call him out, Leiter had sent word to set up a meet. Neutral
territory it wasn't, but Bond trusted the Texan of old, knowing he
had unfinished business with the bizarre Max. They reached the hotel,
subjected themselves to the expected pat-down search. The goons at
the door were thorough, even Paige's purse not escaping their
scrutiny. They walked along the main hall, with its high archways and
spanish timbers, to the hallway at the end. The strained party was
waved through to the Casino – the doors to which had been padlocked
shut, a sign proclaiming the Casino had been closed on behalf of the
People, by the Vedado Revolutionary Committee. They were searched
again while the padlock was ceremoniously unlocked. Once inside, the
rattle of the chain signified their confinement.
The casino at the
Nacional had lost none of it's majesty, the marbled walls and
chandeliers bringing a piece of Versailles to the island. The thickly
padded stools were empty, however; the roulette tables covered in
dust sheets, as were the baccarat and blackjack tables. The only
tables not covered, two at the far end, had Bond's immediate
interest. At one, seated beside the loathsome Chago were two
unfamiliar figures. The man in the garish pinstripe suit and homburg
hat sat playing with a pack of cards, while the uniformed Policeman
next to him cut a ridiculous figure, high-topped boots crossed on the
table, his vast belly barely constrained by a pistol belt. A
ludicrous cannon of a handgun protruded from its holster, lending the
swaggering figure the air of a Mexican Bandit in a Mack Sennett film.
He made no effort to conceal the bad teeth as he leered at the new
arrivals, his eyes firmly on Paige's bosom.
Maximilian was dressed
in a black and silver Goyesca outfit that would have suited a
Spanish Noble from the last century, a silk jacket high at the waist
with a cummerbund and close fitting knee-length leggings with black
silk socks and Zapatilla shoes.
He greeted Bond
expansively, gesturing for him to sit at his table.
'Well, I'm glad I
dressed for the occasion.'
'Good evening Mr. Bond,
Senorita Turner. And this must be Mr. Felix Leiter of the
Central Intelligence Agency.' Felix bowed, taking a seat at the next
table, close to the Policeman. Bond winked at Paige, who took the
hint and found herself a stool at the edge of the unfolding scene.
Seated, 007 waited for the opener. It was not long in coming.
'I could have killed
you, my friend, I could have thrown you overboard. I could have told
Senor Ortega here to
put his bullet through your skull.' Pinstripe inclined his head
towards Bond, raising his hat.
'Yes, I rather wondered
about that. Three hundred yards, forty-degree angle, little or no
wind, not much chance of a professional missing in those
circumstances. I'm indebted.'
Bond nodded towards the
sniper in acknowledgement, one professional to another. Maximilian
leaned back in his chair.
'I am a very busy man,
with matters that require my attention. Despite this, I have shown
mercy. The men in this room alone will hear what I now offer. You,
Mr. Bond are a representative of a small island insignificant to me,
but with strategic importance to my Comrades in the global struggle.
You, Mr. Leiter represent in many ways the bigger threat, you both
could call on your Navies, your Air Forces and your Marines to
destroy myself and my plans. My supremacy is only assured with the
smooth running of my plans uninterrupted and undiscovered.' Lighting
a Bolivar, the Cuban exhaled, with his eyes firmly on the ceiling. He
lowered his gaze to meet Bond's. 'Excuse me, my manners - ' he
signaled to a flunky for drinks all round, offering Bond and Leiter a
cigar. Felix took one, but Bond simply drew one of the precious
Montecristos from his pocket in a wordless display of
one-upmanship that did not go unnoticed by those Cubans present.
Clearly, this foreigner must have connections!, Paige doing her best
to hide the smile at her lips at the reaction her present had
provoked. Lighting the cigar, Bond waved the offered drink away, his
expression hard and sardonic, his voice matched to suit.
'So, you want us to
join the firm, then?. Whats the catch – oh yes, I almost forgot. We
have to betray everything we hold dear, every tradition of decency
that your Comrades in the Kremlin sneer at. But, of course you aren't
interested in playing revolutionary, are you? - I can only guess at
the look on Castro's face when he learns of your plans. King Max the
First, quite a ring to it, don't you think, Felix?.'
'Quite.'
'Well said, Mr. James
Bond, your Queen would be very pleased with her most loyal servant. I
suppose maybe she will give you a castle in her Scotland and a big
white horse to go around on.' Kicking the chair back from the table,
Maximilian was on his feet, fists balled on the green baize.
'I get what I want!.'
The shining points of the eyes and the howl of the madman's struggle
for control were truly frightening, even the hard faces around them
seemed frozen in the face of such fury and rage. 'You don't tell ME
what I get!. All I want from you two is a month, four lousy weeks!.
You tell your bosses nothing, you tell them anything, but you say not
one word about me. Four weeks!. I make you both rich men – or I
kill you and I kill the men who come next and then again!.' Once more
the mask of sanity was back on with un-natural rapidity.
'You take chances with
me again. Now, I give you three chances to live, three chances of
death. One game, six players. Any one of you wins, you all live. To
refuse is death, to lose is death. If you win I show you what
you could be part of, I show you History itself.' Bond thought hard
for a moment. If he and Leiter refused the offer, they were certainly
not going to walk out of there alive. It would take the Service, one,
two weeks to get a satisfactory response to their inquiries – Bond
absent without leave, investigate and report – yes, nearer to two.
There would be the slimmest chance of interception, of stopping
whatever Maximilian was about to set in motion. What choice
remained?. Bond looked across at his ally of so many tight scrapes.
It was almost as if the Texan agent could read his mind. With a hint
of a smile, Bond popped the question.
'Felix, what do you say
to a game of cards?.'
CHAPTER
16
THE
GAME
Seated at the
table were Paige, to Bond's left, then the Assassin Ortega, with
Maximilian opposite Bond. To Maximilian's left was Captain Manuel
Pinera, with Felix Leiter completing the circle. Bond's request to
leave the girl out of it fell on stony ground; she was big enough to
carry a gun, she could hold a hand of cards. Tonight they played
Poker, the Seven Card Stud variety popular in the region - at first
Bond had proposed a game of baccarat, but Chemin de Fer was
not a game the Cubans were familiar with. The stakes were agreed; if
Bond or one of his party won all would live. Each player had a pile
of chips to the value of $10,000. The ante was set at $10, otherwise
there were no limits on bets, small or big. Captain Pinera acted as
dealer – in the Spanish style, i.e. counter-clockwise.
James Bond knew the
percentages, playing with the cold solidity of mathematics for his
foundation, but he had a keen eye and knew when to play the man and
not the numbers.
They started
conservatively, as most big players do, each reluctant to expose too
much for fear of giving their opponents the secrets behind their
style or system. From the outset it soon became apparent that while
Captain Pinera was a poor player, Senor Ortega's air of mystique was
only enhanced at the table, the man proving inscrutable in his
delivery of the cards, his raises modest and his expression
unreadable. Maximilian was bombast itself then the model of prudence
in the next hand, unreliably unpredictable with a nasty habit of
raising at the worst times. Felix was the steadying influence on
Bond's 'team', the long hours around smoky tables in Texas and around
the World a bedrock on which to build a style that offered the odd
surprise, but more often the easy familiarity with money that enables
Americans to risk so much with so little reserve. Bond's admiration
for Felix's style was matched only by concern for Paige. She had
clearly spent somewhat of a sheltered existence, her unfamiliarity
with the cards apparent as she folded on a straight flush.
The hours began to drop
away, the tension around the room never far from the surface. From
her early setback, Paige proved to be a quick study, winning two
games on the trot. Steadily, slowly the pile of chips began showing
favour as the skill began to outweigh the luck. The stakes rose
steadily, until the approach of midnight, when Pinera's star finally
extinguished itself and he was out of chips. Bond kept his demeanour
sanguine as Maximilian and, reluctantly, Ortega both pushed across
two thousand dollars in chips to the pathetic, embarrassing noises of
appreciation from the perspiring functionary. So be it. Well aware
that he was playing for life itself, Bond kept his head, his pile of
chips rising slowly. There was $60,000 to shift and he fancied an
early night over an early death, both possibilities ending with Paige
lying next to him, but knowing she wore nothing under her dress did
nothing for the latter.
Calling a break at two,
Maximilian had retired to his suite for refreshment, Bond and his
allies having to make do with a shared bathroom adjoining the Casino.
The man waited until Paige had 'freshened up' and 'fixed her face'
first. The guards with them made for stilted conversation. Felix was
busy combing his hair as Bond immersed his head in a sink of cold
water. 'So, James, what do you make of the odds?.'
Gasping for air, Bond
toweled himself vigorously, borrowing his friend's comb.
'Rotten, I'd say we are
as good as dead and that those two charmers with Max aren't very
likely to pick up their pensions either. Not much light at the end of
the tunnel, I'm afraid.'
'And who says that
light isn't on a train coming straight at us?. Well, James, it's been
fun.'
The two men shook
hands, Bond replacing his shirt and tying his bow while Felix waited.
The room fell silent as
Paige Turner, flanked by James Bond and Felix Leiter strode in with
the air of determination and purposeful tread of people that knew
they faced death, but refused to be cowed by it.
The game began. Paige
was dealing. Bond waited for third street before looking at his hand.
Pinera had the 'bring' with a three, going for the jugular by setting
it at $60, never taking his eyes far from Paige's figure. Maximilian
called, Bond immediately alert for signs of a bluff – his show card
was the Queen of Diamonds. Ortega was showing a six, calling smoothly
with no trace of nerve. Would he pull the trigger?, or did Maximilian
do his own dirty work after all?. Bond's jaw tightened at the thought
as Paige raised on a nine. He called, showing an eight, with a Jack
and the Queen of Clubs in the hole. If he was lucky he might put
together a straight, probably wouldn't. Showing the King of Spades
Felix seemed reluctant to call, blowing smoke from his cigar and
taking a long sip of bourbon. Bond waited until Felix's call to snap
his fingers, ordering a vodka martini. Paige dealt the next round,
her eyes meeting Bond's as she took the players to fourth street –
the second show card, each hand now shaping up. Bond winced at his
four, Felix had an eight, Pinera had the Ace of Clubs , Maximilian
got the Jack of Spades next to his Queen, Ortega another six whilst
Paige dealt herself a two. With his double, Ortega opened, threw down
a $100 chip. With admirable spirit Paige raised, throwing the chips
from her dwindling stack down with abandon. Bond blew out a column of
smoke from his Montecristo, staring Maximilian straight in the
eyes before raising. Not wanting to be left out in the bravado
stakes, Felix's reluctant call signaled trouble – with any luck a
bluff in itself. Then Pinera, who was now drenched in sweat, the fat
policeman wiped his brow with the back of his right hand – there!,
Bond exchanged glances with Leiter, who had also seen it. The Captain
was a cheat – worse, a bad one with a good hand, signifying an ace
in the hole with a pudgy little finger. Somehow Bond had known the
final game would be crooked – would have felt cheated if it were
not so. He buried the irony with a sip of his drink as Pinera's nerve
somehow held, the rotund figure doubling the bet, despite now having
only a few chips left in front of him. Maximilian seemed amused,
himself projecting an aura of unnerving tranquility as he raised.
Bond knew the real
danger amongst the opposition was Ortega – but Maximilian was a
dangerous player, Pinera less so. If the bloody awful man could keep
the telegraph-station shut and his eyes off Paige he might not have
made such an idiot of himself. With a barely concealed snort of
derision, 007 raised, with that awful 'I'd rather be lucky than good'
phrase ringing in his ears, the hallmark of a bad player and always
the prelude to disaster. To hell with it – the bastard would
probably kill them whoever won.
Fifth street; Bond;
Queen of Hearts, Leiter; a three, Pinera; a four. Maximilian; Nine of
Diamonds, Ortega; a ten, and Paige another two. Senor Ortega's $200
was followed by a furious round of betting; Paige's raise followed by
a call from Bond that was aimed at raising suspicion in the enemy
camp. Felix called, tossing the chips down with indecent haste. Bond
covered his smile with his glass, knowing Felix was playing along. He
could only hope now. Pinera was visibly in trouble – possibly too
deep to get out, hands beginning to shake as he lifted his chips. It
looked to Bond as if the Policeman was about to have a heart attack,
but the palsied fingers opened to drop the chips into the pot. With a
smoothing motion Maximilian pushed a pile of chips across, the raise
coming as a warning klaxon on a U-boat, Bond knowing that his meagre
pair wouldn't be any insurance against a straight – or worse. He
was in trouble already, but knew one card wouldn't decide much.
.
Sixth street came and
Bond's luck changed with the Jack of Clubs. Leiter had a seven,
Pinera another three, Maximilian a seven, Ortega and Paige a nine and
the King of Hearts respectively. Ortega launched off the pad with
$1,000, which Paige couldn't match. With nowhere else to go, she
folded, throwing her cards down with a stifled cry of bitterness.
Bond leaned back in his seat, steepling his fingers. From here on in
it was just him and Felix. He raised, throwing caution to the wind,
suddenly knowing what he was going to do. Puzzled – he had expected
Bond to bail the girl out – Leiter wasn't holding the best cards –
a five and the Ace of Hearts in the hole. He was dead in the water,
but hoped Bond had something. He raised anyway, throwing most of his
remaining chips onto the table in the process. The oily grin
spreading across Pinera's face as he called fooled no-one; he was
bluffing and Bond knew it. If Maximilian raised now, it probably
meant he had a flush – and three bodies to dispose of. Maximilian
raised.
Finally, Seventh
Street, the last card in the hand; the River card – face down and
dangerous.
Rather than change
dealers, Paige accepted Maximilian's suggestion to remain for the
final deal. These are the cards the remaining players received;
James Bond; The Jack of
Diamonds.
Felix Leiter; Five of
Clubs.
Captain Pinera; Three
of Diamonds.
Maximilian; Ten of
Hearts.
Senor Ortega; The King
of Clubs.
With the best cards –
those on show at any rate, once more it fell to the Assassin Ortega
to open the round, $500 this time, his last. The play came to Bond,
who pushed all his chips over to the pot. Leiter couldn't match or
raise, but pushed his chips across anyway. Pinera sneered.
'No use to a dead man,
eh?.'
Maximilian cut the man
short with a softly spoken curse. Immediately contrite, Pinera
called, his eyes downcast as the 'Grandee' pushed his own chips into
the pot.
The Showdown - If you
are still in at this point, you have nowhere to hide. All bluffs are
called and the inescapable truth of the cards – that no matter how
poor the hand, a good player can still beat a great hand poorly
played.
Each man showed his
hand; Leiter was holding a pair of fives, Pinera had three of a kind,
with threes beaten by Ortega's three sixes. Time seemed to slow as
Maximilian turned over his cards; he had made a straight, seven
through to the Jack!.
Bond took a long pull
at his vodka martini, emptying the glass and loosening his bow tie.
Slowly, he turned them over. 'Full House - Jacks full of Queens.'
Bond had won!.
Maximilian had been as
good as his word, proving himself a gracious loser. To Bond's
surprise, he even paid up, clicking his fingers for Chago to bring
across a large briefcase stuffed with bills.
'You must forgive me
Mr. Bond, but you will not be spending this money.'
'And why is that?.'
'Not, at least for the
time being. I must insist you remain, out of – incommunicado.
Three weeks, perhaps four. You will be my guests – you and your
friends. Who knows?, perhaps you will like what you see. The choice
will be yours entirely.'
CHAPTER
17
THE
ISLAND
The Bayamo
powered through the startling blue waters at forty-plus knots, an
impossible speed for a conventional frigate. The Hydrogen Peroxide
system ran at incredible pressures due to the advanced metallurgy
provided by the former Nazi engineers working for the Soviets. As a
test-bed prototype the turbines had not aroused sufficient interest
from the World's intelligence services, which largely believed them
to be un-reliable and overly prone to corrosion damage. Bond knew
better, as the converted warship hurtled past a series of sandbars,
her shallow draft a distinct advantage in these waters. They had left
the main island of Cuba now, traversing west along the coastline to
avoid the heavily-patrolled waters to the North.
Paige, Felix and Bond
were effectively prisoners aboard, albeit in the comfortable
surroundings of the State-room. Of Maximilian himself they saw
nothing, until after their lunch was served when Bond was summoned to
the bridge.
Any doubts about the
origins of the Bayamo melted away as Bond took it all in.
There was enough of the very latest navigational and communication
gear to open a trade show, plus what looked to Bond ominously like a
fire control panel set against one bulkhead. The 'Grandee of Florida'
was on exuberant form, greeting Bond in a quasi-Naval uniform
complete with a cap adorned with a golden anchor.
'So, You approve of my
speedboat?.'
'Yes, she's certainly
unique – Soviet Riga Class frigate with a Walter Turbine, the
engineers solved the problems with the Perhydrol I take it?.'
'Precisely, Mr.Bond,
precisely. The original systems were prone to exploding due to
excessive pressure, but developments in the science of rocketry has
brought us extreme high pressure pipes and valves...but.' Gesturing
with an open hand, Maximilian went over to the helmsman, conferring
in curt, brief phrases. Bond was beckoned across to the navigator's
station, where a map table showed the area of the Gulf of Mexico.
'You see here, the
island of Cuba, here is Florida, the Keys, so forth. We are currently
here.' Using dividers, Maximilian indicated an area South of Cuba.
'Within a few hours we shall have reached these islands, the largest
of which – here, is our destination.' The map showed a line of
islands, some little more than a sand spar, others perhaps half a
mile wide. 'These islands have gone by many names, since the original
Tainos settlements. On the two largest islands, ancient ruins
have been uncovered in the jungle, some of which have been dated at
before the time of the Aztecs. I have made my base on the very
largest, which is known locally as 'La isla de los Hijos de Oro.'
'Sounds like something
from one of those old adventure serials – The Island of the Golden
Sons.'
'Your Spanish does you
credit, my friend. The island is some three miles in length, at its
heart a valley in which a temple has been carved out of the volcanic
rock. This temple was only discovered in recent times. It really is
fascinating, I believe it is the only example of Aztec stonework this
far to the West.'
'The islands –
deserted, I take it?.'
'To all extents, yes.
The original inhabitants disappeared, no-one knows why. Perhaps the
ground shook and they fled – the islands were formed by volcanic
activity many thousands of years ago. There has been no such activity
for many centuries. When I arrived, there were a few local
fishermen...'
'Were?.'
'Yes, were. Now, there
are no more.' Bond looked out over the bows, deep in thought. He
decided he didn't like Maximilian very much, but that would wait for
a better time.
The Bayamo lay at
anchor, the jolly-boat bringing them into a sheltered inlet. Bond
stepped onto the jetty, helping Paige. With Maximilian was Chago,
eyes narrowed and boring into Bond with silent hate. Felix was
shepherded along by two sullen guards, the party completed by a squad
of men carrying metal boxes between them. Clearly, whatever their
contents, the boxes were exceptionally heavy, to judge from the way
the men had to struggle to move them. The pathway snaked off into the
lush greenery of the island, but this was no innocent atoll.
Everywhere Bond looked he saw signs of fortification, cleverly
disguised and camouflaged. In a clearing a quad-barreled
anti-aircraft gun sat hidden beneath netting, manned by soldiers in
olive green drab uniform without badges of rank or distinction. The
squat outline of a self-propelled gun was expertly concealed by
shrubbery, ferns appearing to grow from the tracks. The whole place
was a death trap for the unwary, it would take a Naval bombardment
and a full-scale air strike plus at least a regiment of amphibious
troops to take the island.
'I've heard of being
prepared.' Bond's muttered over his shoulder.
Leiter had been
observing the hardware himself. 'Quite the Boy Scout, isn't he?. I
wonder if Washington knows about this place?.'
'We won't be left alone
is my guess. Think you could swim to the next island?, maybe there's
fishermen.' They were cut short by Chago, who had turned to watch
them both.
'You get on, keep quiet
eh?.'
Bond pushed past him.
'Why don't you kiss my ahh, there's a little train!.'
There was indeed, a
small-gauge mining track underneath the canopy of palms, on which sat
a compact little train, a miniature electric locomotive with a
battery tender behind with a string of passenger carriages and open
freight cars that reminded Bond of a seaside ride he had gone on as a
boy. Maximilian's men hauled and hefted the boxes onto the last of
the cars, sitting astride them.
The train set off,
taking the party deeper into the island. Bond smoked a Chesterfield,
enjoying the ride, his trained eye noting the positions and
dispensation of the island's defences. The tracks curved downwards
into a narrow gorge, steeper now and beneath overhanging rockery that
blocked out much of the light here. The tracks went behind a
waterfall at one point, the curtain of water gouting over the rocks
to leave the train virtually dry. The fauna here was wonderful,
bright orchids growing in crevices and the mariposa, the so-called
Butterfly of flowers blooming white, fragile.
The natural beauty
served only as enhancement of the magnificent scene that they saw
next.
Protruding from the
rock face was what seemed to be a set of massive stone steps,
wreathed in foliage and garlanded with creepers. In the centre of the
pyramid was an opening, the tracks disappearing into the darkness
that swallowed the little train and its passengers. Bond's eyes took
a minute to adjust to the sepulcheral gloom. They were now in a
tunnel of some sort, low-ceilinged and ancient. The locomotive driver
switched on the headlight, throwing the beam down the narrow shaft.
After perhaps a quarter
of a mile into the rock, the tunnel suddenly opened out into a large
man-made cavern, perhaps fifty feet square. The tracks continued, but
clearly the ride was over, Maximilian striding across to a large
metal cage set in a lattice framework of steel girders, Chago opening
the gate and grunting for the others to get a move on.
The cage was a cargo
lift, which dropped smoothly away into the earth, starting a long
descent. Despite himself, Bond was impressed at the cavern that had
opened around them, a massive natural cave the size of a cathedral,
with a colossal steel and concrete dome reaching up to the forest of
natural stalactites hanging down from the roof. The whole place had
the air of a construction site, with sparks cascading from several
points around the building. Everywhere there was activity, from a
gantry crane moving a giant bucket to the trucks that moved around
the perimeter on a graded trackway. Something told Bond that this all
boded ill, his instinct confirmed by the expectant grin on
Maximilian's face as he threw his arms outwards encompassing the
scene before them.
'Welcome to the source
of my power, I give you Morning Star – or People's Reactor MS-1, to
give the prosaic designation bestowed upon the project by the Soviet
Union.'
'An atomic reactor?, to
what end?. Why down here?, why not on the main island?.' Bond was
sure he wouldn't like the answer when it came.
'With relations between
the Soviet Union and America so tense, a reactor on Cuban soil would
be unthinkable. So, I offered a solution; this cave, part of a
complex uncovered by archaeologists exploring the temple site above
us. All it requires is a fifteen-mile undersea cable – easily laid
using underwater engineering teams and under the cover of a simple
telephone line installation. The People's Republic will benefit from
free electricity, the Soviet's provide the hardware and personnel –
both for the reactor and the defence zone around the islands.'
'So, what do you get? -
if the power's free no money changes hands, apart from your own …'
Bond knew he had answered his own question; this was where
Maximilian's atomic bomb was to come from!.
'I take it none of you
have no desire to get closer to our stockpile of uranium, so we shall
now go back up. I have one more aspect of my operation that you
should be aware of.'
The lift took them back
up to the railway, the train waiting to take them further along the
original tunnel, turning sharply right to enter a series of rooms,
their angular symmetry exaggerating the surreal. In the first two,
light stands and digging tools such as those used by archaeologists
or builders stood unattended, Maximilian explaining their use as
cover for all the engineering work – sooner or later there were
bound to be questions, what better cover than an archaeological
find?. The third room was the end of the line, to all apparent
purpose; the rails ending at a set of buffers with a nifty lifting
jig, a sort of miniature cradle affair that the locomotive rolled
into, to be lifted and turned while smoothly moved back over the
carriages to be neatly deposited facing the way they had come.
'Quite a train set you
have there, Max.'
Shaking his head, their
host laughed, clapping Bond unexpectedly on the back.
'I knew you'd like it;
here we are in the most amazing temple and the Englishman is admiring
the train!. Hey, if you stay loyal maybe I give you trains of your
own... how's about the Orient Express?, maybe your famous Flying
Scotsman?.'
Not for the first time,
Bond found himself liking this maniac, despite an urge to simply
strangle him there and then. The Cuban was obviously under the
delusion that two secret agents could be persuaded to betray their
countries at the revelation of his scheme – so Bond would play his
part - for the moment.
They smoked while they
waited for the locomotive to be re-coupled, watching in bemused
fascination as, at a nod, Maximilian and two of his men went to stand
as if at attention in the centre of the room. Bond was just about to
ask the meaning of the odd triangle when – with a sudden shudder,
they all realised the chamber was getting smaller!. At first it
seemed that the roof was lowering towards them – but it was an
illusion, the floor section below them was actually rising,
with a grating sound of smooth rock on rock and some hidden heavy
machinery. Just as it seemed they would be crushed against the roof,
the whole contraption shuddered to a halt, the driver starting the
engine. There was, completely invisible, another level, the slabs of
rock cut in a clever fashion to conceal the perspective of the upper
level from the chamber below. The tracks continued, joining smoothly
with the section on which the train had been raised.
'Clever, eh? - the
priests that built this place had many secrets, secrets they guarded
jealously. Any of the profane – outsiders – who reached that
chamber below, would have been crushed to a horrible death, their
remains taken through this passageway to preserve the secrets of the
trap. The trap is operated by the unwary stepping on those dark green
stones. Unless three men – originally the high priest and his
acolytes – stand where we stood...' Maximilian ground his hands
together with relish. Bond's gaze followed his host's, there were
indeed rows of seemingly-innocent stones, distinguishable by the
smooth shine of their surface and darker colour than the others in
the floor. 'I wonder how many people have disappeared in this place
over the centuries?.'
Paige felt herself
tremble at Maximilian's macabre thought, holding Bond's arm. Noticing
the girl's unease, Chago said something vulgar in Spanish, the guards
laughing until Maximilian cut them short furiously.
The chambers ahead
formed an elongated square that wasn't quite a rectangle, the outer
side solid rock, roughly - hewn , the other sloping buttresses
forming a three-sided gallery that over-looked an open atrium of
sorts, an inner courtyard where sunlight just reached down to the
first of a series of terraces that carried a stream of water down in
a lazy spiral to a pool far below. The riot of vines and greenery
that stretched down into the shadows was a reminder of how nature
reclaims her own, gently laughing at man's foolish transient vanity.
They were now approaching a set of bronzed doors, which opened at the
locomotive's approach. The chamber beyond was low-ceilinged and vast,
armed guards patrolling a scene that looked like a Dali painting of
the Royal Mint. Bond counted upwards of twenty printing presses, most
busily engaged stamping and pressing currency of various kinds. As
they disembarked, Leiter let out a whistle at the cages being filled
with money from several nations. American Dollars lay next to British
Pounds, Spanish Peseta next to Swiss Francs. One machine lay idle, an
elderly man complaining to a hulking Hispanic, who was angrily
alternating gestures at the machine with a clenched fist under the
older man's nose. The resigned face seemed indifferent to the threat.
It was the face of a slave. Several others, most of them also in
their latter years were variously engaged around the printing
apparatus.
'You see my friends,
this is the heart of it all. We make the money here, we deliver it
after suitable aging and wear has been simulated – we find
industrial washing machines and blasts of steam and hot air seem to
provide the most convincing of results.'
Bond was inspecting a
laundry hamper filled with creased, used notes, an array of
industrial fans drying whole batches at a time.
'You take it out by
train, the Bayamo is the perfect delivery service – quick,
efficient and I'm guessing that submarine we saw does the rest.'
'Once again, Mr. Bond,
you prove my instincts correct. Perhaps Mr. Leiter would care to
guess the rest.'
'Okay, Max – I don't
need glasses to see this picture clearly – you spread the phoney
dough around, maybe a million here, a few million there – not
enough to arouse immediate suspicion if done carefully. I can see the
targets from the currency; lets take France; first you build up a
network, maybe use the resident crooks, whatsit - the Union Corse?,
whatever, you get them onboard with a chunk of the real McCoy, lets
say more than a few million Francs – all the while you're busy
taking names for when the big event comes, those old business
partners can be real liabilities, right?.'
'Continue, please.'
'Well, 'kay...' Felix
lit one of his eternal Chesterfields, waving smoke as he talked.
'When it's time, you hit the economy, flood the market with the fake
simoleons – and Bingo!, no-one trusts their money anymore. Banks
get over-run with jittery investors and the French President is
crying into his handkerchief. You do that in enough places... well,
you certainly don't need to be a fortune teller to guess who benefits
from all this.'
Bond spelled it out;
'The World Union of Soviet Socialist Republics... apart from Florida,
naturally.'
Maximilian seemed
reluctant, but he gestured back to the train.
'Quite so. Now, I am
afraid the tour has ended. You must understand I cannot afford the
luxury of trust at this particular moment. I must insist on your
indulgence.'
This time the cargo
lift went upwards from the entrance cavern, up into the temple
complex itself. There they followed Maximilian through a path of
flagstones that went through a large rectangular room with narrow
pools running alongside the walls, the far end dropping once more to
form a corridor that abruptly terminated in two large bronzed doors,
two guards standing to either side, guns at the ready.
'These doors lead to my
personal living quarters. I assure you you will be provided for and
as comfortable as myself.' The doors swung open, revealing the
temple's inner sanctum, now a luxurious suite of apartments, each
area delineated by different levels in a large circle, each level set
at randomly stepped heights, the thousand year old stone lit by
hidden lighting, an oddly well-suited backdrop for the European
furniture and Spanish portraits. Mexican wall-hangings and rugs were
a tasteful, if predictable complement. The whole effect was of a
chaotic blend that shouldn't have worked well together, but did, and
Bond found it appealed to his inner playboy.
'This is quite a place
– I suppose the guards don't get any days off.' Maximilian inclined
his head.
'As always, I have a
schedule, as always I must be elsewhere. I have arranged for your
belongings to be brought to you – I took the liberty of settling
your bill at the Capri. Mr. Leiter, if you would be so kind as to
accompany me – these quarters are only comfortable for two. Mr.
Bond, Miss Turner, I shall return at the completion of my affairs, at
which point you will be a free man – and lady, of course. We will
have plenty of time to discuss our partnership at that time.' With a
formal bow of the head, the bizarre figure turned on his heel and
left, Felix giving Bond a nod and wave as he followed, the guards
closing and locking the doors behind them.
Over four thousand
nautical miles distant, in the building near Regent's Park, M was
waiting for a connection with Washington DC. Consulting his clock, he
saw it was exactly eight-o'clock – making it three in the morning
in the anonymous office block that housed various government
departments, including a modestly titled offshoot of the Bureau of
Statistics that was actually a cover for the Central Intelligence
Agency's liason office. Despite the unsociable hour, M knew that the
Duty Officer – usually a retired Marine Corps Sergeant Major or the
like – would see the incoming line button flashing; not the usual
blue that denoted the British Foreign Ministry, rather the urgent red
that signified either the Service, MI5 or Ronnie Vallance at Special
Branch. After giving his prefix (Specially allocated each month on a
random basis), M would be put through to the Office of the Director,
sometimes it would be Dulles himself, or his Deputy, a disagreeable
type that M found faintly amusing.
'Connecting you now,
Sir. Setting Three please.' The voice from the switchboard was
followed by the maddening buzz of the scrambler. Stabbing angrily at
the box in his unlocked drawer, M picked up, the handset now only
beeped quietly and intermittently, the signal that the scrambler was
working and the call secure.
The voice of the Deputy
Director came through, brash, impatient.
'Hello?, this thing
on?, Hello? M – that you?.'
'Deputy Director, good
morning. M speaking, reference Operation Hotspur, I gather you have a
briefing today.'
'Well, what of it?, we
get plenty of briefings – what's so special it couldn't wait for
the Director?.'
'We've got a man
overdue for his report, 007, he's on detached service with your man
Leiter, Felix Leiter in the Cuban theatre.'
'Yeah, I see – that's
a hot potato right now, anyone mentions Castro and the Oval Office
goes nuts over it. I'm looking at the files right now. We got a
report from Leiter two days back, around 06:15 Eastern Standard time.
Nothing since, he missed his daily radio check yesterday. We are
assuming technical failure or station compromise. From the log of the
last contact it seems he made his standard report, plus a trace.'
'Trace?.' M was in a
sour mood, with no time for the breezy shorthand of modern America.
'Yeah, a trace – what
the cops call a make or a jacket on a collar; information about a
person, do they have a rap sheet?, suchlike.'
Jacket, Sheet,
Collar – M was beginning to feel like a laundryman.
'And did they?, have a
sheet, that is?.'
'Not with us, but you
might have something at your end. Turner, Paige, no middle name. Age
Twenty Five, redhead, five feet... well, you get the idea. Now here's
the bit; Turner, Peter Stanley – or Sir.Anthony Peter Stanley
Turner if you please, you are probably familiar with this gem - now
sadly deceased - of your Royal Air Force... turns out he was her
Father. Leiter didn't say what the interest was, but its likely the
inquiry came from your man.'
M was kneading his
temple, briefly considered taking early retirement as the various
possibilities and implications began sinking in.
'Assuming they can be
located, what are the chances of an assisted evacuation?. Can you set
up a contingency for an escape?.'
'Not a chance. M, I'm
sorry, but I gotta level with you, when it comes to Cuba all bets are
off. Your man knew the risks, so did Leiter. Either they are dead
already or in enemy hands, better dead in my opinion. Now, I'm
willing to bet you are the kind of guy who'll stop at nothing to get
his man back, I can respect that, but there is no way your Prime
Minister will allow any British rescue mission; not now, not with
this goddam Cold War and Soviet Russia breathing so hot. I just hope
Double-O-Seven didn't have a family.'
Storming from his
office, M was in a cold fury, fists clenched in impotent rage. He
would go to the PM about this, he would go to Kennedy himself!, he
would... he softened at the sight of Moneypenny, who had been dabbing
at her face when he flung open the thick double-leather doors. With a
visible effort of will, she forced herself into a semblance of
composure.
'Listening on that damn
intercom again?. Well, knowing Double-O-Seven he's not finished just
yet.'
M handed his secretary
a slip of paper with Paige Turner, British National, and her
father's details in his unmistakable scrawl. 'Get on to records,
would you? - name's on there – just in case you weren't paying
attention. As for the Americans, they don't control the weather. Call
the Air Ministry if you please Miss Moneypenny. One of our planes is
about to be blown off course.'
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