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“I’m not – and I’m nervous anyway,” she said.

“Yeah, yeah, well. We’re mortal, right?” he asked.

“Too much so,” Alex answered. “And too easily mortal.”

“You got a good head on you, don’t you, Alex?” he asked. “You’re a smart lady. Just smart enough to be scared because you understand what you’re doing.”

“Not for the first time,” she said. She settled back and watched the coastline draw closer as the early morning hours slid by. Her prevailing sentiment was that she wished this operation were over, and it had barely started.

FORTY

Alex sipped from the water bottle she had attached to her belt.

When it was empty, she picked up a new one, hitched it to her belt, and watched Paul smoke. Parallels with Yuri Federov tumbled into her mind, although Paul only indulged in the occasional cigarette while Yuri, ever the Russian, had smoked like a furnace. Then, too, Paul was old enough to be her father, a quarter century older than she. She wondered how many secrets that extra quarter century held, things she didn’t know about him, things she sensed, things she liked and disliked.

Many times since Federov’s death she had wondered whether she had had an attraction to him – for all the wrong reasons – or a fascination with him – again, for all the wrong reasons. She was feeling a tiny something here, a subtle pull toward Paul Guarneri, and wondered if her passions, her instincts, her longings, were just completely out of whack following the death of Robert, her fiance.

She had fallen in love with the right man once, the one she could have shared a lifetime with, had a family with, and grown old with, and he had been taken from her. So now what? Was it really getting even with God to have a meaningless fling with the wrong man?

She looked away from Paul and into the water where the boat left its wake. A great blanket of seaweed swung and heaved in the water like a giant brownish yellow blanket. Then a couple of splashes and plops about ten meters off the bow of the boat startled her. She realized they were small creatures leaping from the water.

“Flying fish,” Guarneri said. “Pezes voladores.”

His simple explanation settled her. Not only was he watching her, but he had been reading her thoughts. He was starting to know her too well.

“I remember them from when I was a kid,” he said. “We’d sail out just far enough and they’d leap all around us, day or night. They don’t really fly, you know. They just jump out of the water, usually to avoid predators. They glide, not fly. But no one wants to call them ‘gliding fish.’ Is my cigarette bothering you?”

There was a light breeze from the east. It took most of the smoke in the opposite direction from Alex. “Just finish it,” Alex said. “You’re okay.” Then, circling the conversation back a beat, “Are there predators?” she asked. “Larger fish?”

He laughed. “You could say that,” he glanced around. “They’re around here somewhere. Got to be if the pezes voladores are jumping at this hour.”

“What sort?”

Squinting into the darkness, she saw an extra ripple. Then she saw a small triangular fin coming up out of the water, followed by a second one about ten feet behind the first. Then, as her eyes adjusted, she recognized the dark silhouettes by the sweeping languid movement of the tail just below the surface of the sea and the seaweed.

“Brown sharks,” he said evenly, looking at them swishing through the water. “Four-footers, looks like. They won’t hurt you – more scared of us than we are of them. But don’t drag your arm in the water either.” He watched them for a moment. They both did. Alex couldn’t tell if there were three of them or four, but she could follow the little dance of death that the flying fish did with the hungry sharks.

“Brown sharks rarely come within a hundred yards of the beach,” Guarneri said. “But the fishermen throw extra chum to them. So they investigate boats.” He looked into the swirl off the starboard bow. Then he took a final long drag on his cigarette and flicked the butt at one of the sharks. “Here, buddy, have a smoke,” he said.

Soon the flying fish were gone and so were the sharks. Leo cut the engine and let the boat drift. The small outboard motor died with a wheeze. The dim lights on the boat faded to nothing. There was only nighttime and the sound of the surf and the wind rustling across the water. Alex could feel the breeze. It was soft and warm, fluid against her arms and face. Starlight and moonlight poured down. So far, arrival was gentle.

Leo hoisted a small sail, which clanked upward, waffled for a moment, then filled out. The skiff tacked toward shore.

“Good, good,” Guarneri said. “Almost there. We can go in on wind to keep the noise down. Leo’s an expert at this.”

Paul disappeared for a moment and spoke quietly to the captain. Alex couldn’t hear them clearly, but she caught enough to know that Guarneri was indicating a small cove that the boat was to head for, and at the cove would be a green light. The light would flash three times when it spotted the craft; then it would remain on long enough to guide them in.

The sailing was smoother than cruising with the inboard. At the bow, Pedro leaned back, his University of Miami cap tipped back and the carbine across his chest. He looked like the calmest person on board because he had the least to do.

Alex glanced at her watch. It was 5:19 a.m., slightly before dawn. They were exactly within the window of time that would allow them to hit the beach in near darkness, undetected by any Cuban shore patrols or nosy civilians or other traffickers who might be around at that creepy early hour. She looked forward to arrival. Nervous energy was pushing her forward, but fatigue and lack of sleep was starting to set in also. A low mist rolled from shore and sat on top of the water’s surface.

Alex took a final inventory. She reached beneath her pant leg to where her gun was encased in heavy plastic and strapped tightly to her ankle. She fingered the case on her thigh that held her money, her maps, her bank cards, and her Mexican passport. Her small duffel was a few feet away, water resistant but not water tight.

Then Leo spotted the green light.

The boat came into a small bay, maybe a hundred yards across, and Leo, as some sort of precaution, turned his boat and sailed parallel. He wasn’t going to land, he said, until he saw the lights flash. Guarneri went to him and spoke, and the two men seemed to be in a small argument. She could just barely make out that Guarneri wanted to press ahead, while Leo, paranoid soul that he was, sensed something was amiss. Not that they had much in the way of options at this point. Sailing back to the Florida Keys was hardly a possibility.

“What’s going on?” Alex asked.

“They should be flashing us,” Guarneri said. “That’s supposed to be the final all-clear signal. They’re supposed to flash us. They’re not doing it.”

Leo dropped his sail and the boat eased to a near stop. Obviously, he didn’t like this. Alex started to sweat. Impetuously, Leo took a signal lantern from the helm and aimed it at the shore. He gave three quick yellow flashes across the water’s misty surface. Several long seconds passed. Then Leo spotted the response that he solicited. The green light extinguished for a moment, then flashed three times, then went back on.

“There!” Guarneri said. “That’s it! We’re home free.”

Leo muttered something profane about Cubans and turned the tiller sharply. The boat rocked and turned toward the shore. The boom came around fast, and Alex had to duck to keep her head from being taken off. Leo set a sharp final course. They were still out about fifty yards when Alex could discern that the light was on a small dock.

Suddenly, the entire landing area was floodlit. Men in dark blue pants and light blue shirts dashed across the beach, as if rising up from prone positions on the sand. More emerged from behind the dunes and foliage, while others came from within a house farther up the beach and others from behind clumps of palm trees. They held rifles across their chest, and their uniforms suggested local police.