“ Hey, watch it,” a giant of a man yelled when Broxton slammed into his back.
“ I’m a doctor, the prime minister is ill.”
“ I’ll get you there,” the big African Trini yelled back to Broxton. “Get out of the way! Mr. Ramsingh needs his doctor!” The man hurled himself into the crowd, shoulder forward, as if he was blocking for a quarterback.
Broxton kept his head down and his eyes on the broad back as the giant cleared the way, shoving people aside, shouting, “Doctor coming through! Step aside!” Then they were in the center of the crowd, people packed together. He smelled their sweat, felt their anticipation, touched their souls. The parting corridor the big man cut through the throng closed as soon as he’d pushed by. He was but a part of the pack, a single cell in the living, breathing, swaying and crushing crowd.
People started applauding. Something was happening. He couldn’t see.
“ Tammy, Tammy, Tammy,” the crowd chanted, excitement rising.
“ Out of the way,” the big man yelled louder, trying to be heard above the applause.
“ Tammy, Tammy, Tammy,” the crowd shouted as one.
“ Hurry,” Broxton pleaded.
“ Coming through,” the giant shouted, but the closer they got to the gazebo the slower the going. People were jammed together, back to front, shoulder to shoulder, but still the big man grunted, shoved and pushed. “Let the doctor pass,” he wailed, and to their credit, as tightly bunched as they were, people tried to get out of the big man’s way.
“ Ladies and gentlemen,” Tammy Drake’s amplified voice boomed through mammoth speakers, “it’s good to be back. It’s going to be a wonderful evening.” The crowd went wild, yelling, clapping and whooping, drowning out the giant’s voice.
People jumped, some swayed, some danced, some called out, they all clapped. Everybody in Trinidad loved Tammy Drake.
“ Doctor coming through!” The giant pushed into the mass of people, shoving his way to the stage.
“ It’s my great pleasure to bring Ramish Ramsingh up to the podium.”
The crowd was muffled, but there were no catcalls, they remained respectful. Ramsingh wasn’t popular, but the audience wasn’t going to let politics ruin this musical night.
Then they were at the stage.
“ You, stop!” Broxton heard a rough voice scream. The giant dropped his shoulder and Broxton saw four uniformed policemen guarding the steps up the gazebo, all holding truncheons in hand, all raising them to strike. The giant spread his arms and dove into them, grabbing the center two and taking them down. The two on the outside swung their clubs, but the nightsticks hit only air as the big man rolled safely through.
Broxton saw his opportunity and vaulted over the melee, landing on the stage as the prime minister took the podium. He felt a strong hand grab his arm, another wrapped around his neck.
“ Hold,” Ramsingh said.
The policemen relaxed their grips, but still held on to him.
“ It’s all right,” Ramsingh added. “It’s Broxton. He’s in charge of security, remember?”
” Sorry, sir,” one of them said, as they released him. “We didn’t recognize you.”
“ What’s going on?” Ramsingh said. The crowd, sensing something ominous, quieted, all eyes on the stage.
“ Your wife is ill,” Broxton lied. “We have to go.”
“ I’m sorry, ladies and gentlemen. Please forgive me,” Ramsingh said. “I have to leave. I hope you understand.”
Broxton looked across the park as he put his arm around Ramsingh’s shoulder, and he locked onto Dani. She had her armed linked with the big Texan. She was too far for him to see into her eyes, but he knew she was boring into him. The Texan was holding something in his hand and Broxton didn’t think it was a Sony Walkman. He shivered, wondering if she would let him push the button.
“ Is she all right?” Ramsingh asked, breaking Broxton’s concentration.
“ We have to go,” Broxton said.
“ All right,” Ramsingh said as Broxton, turning, pulled the prime minister toward the back of the stage and down the back steps of the gazebo. Cool sweat dripped from under his arms and his neck hairs were prickling. Any second it could all be over. All she had to do was give the word and the podium, the stage, the gazebo, and several people would vaporize. He knew the truth of the thought as surely as he knew his own name.
Chapter Seventeen
“ Yacht Club, Yachting Association, Drake’s,” the youth shouted at Dani. The sun was still up, it was still hot. She wiped sweat off the back of her neck with her left hand as she signaled the young man with her right. “Yacht Club?” he yelled at her.
“ Drake’s,” she yelled back to him.”
“ This is crazy,” Earl said as she took his elbow and motioned for him to cross the street. The large green building on the corner across from the Globe Theater gave the place its name, Green Corner, and Dani was leading Earl to the maxi at the head of the line. There were already four people in it. The driver was waiting for six more.
She passed it and climbed into the van second in line, taking a seat behind the driver. Earl jumped in and moved beside her. She leaned forward and put her mouth next to the driver’s ear as she draped a hand over his shoulder. “Go now,” she said, “and don’t pick up anyone on the way.”
The driver, a thin Rasta man with dreadlocks past his shoulder, snatched the blue hundred from her hand. “We’re gone,” he said, and Earl slid the door closed as the van shot away from the curb, barely missing the maxi in front.
“ Want a fast trip?” the driver asked. Earl recognized the Texas accent as he moved to the seat in back.
“ Fast as you can and still get us there alive,” Dani said, getting up and moving to the back with Earl.
“ Fucking crazy,” Earl whispered to her. “We’re making our getaway on a bus.”
“ It’s Dani Street,” Broxton told Ramsingh as they made their way out of the park.
“ What?”
“ She’s the one behind the attempts to kill you. It explains why they wouldn’t kill me. She doesn’t want me hurt. And right now, I think she’s headed toward the ambassador’s yacht. She’s supposed to be taking it up island.”
“ What are you going to do?”
“ Go after her.”
“ I’m going too,” Ramsingh said. Then he motioned to a young policeman standing next to a blue and white police car. “I’ll be taking the car, Gary.”
“ Sir,” the policeman said.
“ Mr. Broxton and I are going to use the car.” He offered the policeman a bright smile. The officer stood fast.
“ I’m supposed to drive it.”
“ Gary, I’m sixty-two years old. I know how to drive.”
“ Not the point. I’m supposed to drive.”
“ Look at me, Gary.” The policeman looked into Ramsingh’s hard gray eyes. “I’m the prime minister and I’m taking this car. Tell your sergeant that I gave you no choice. Then tell the president I’ll be out of touch for a day or so.”
“ Sir?”
“ Step aside, Gary.”
“ Yes, sir,” the policeman said, as he opened the driver’s door and moved out of Ramsingh’s way. Broxton jumped in the passenger side and in seconds they were driving away from the park, the concert, and the thousands of fans who never knew how close they came to witnessing the assassination of a prime minister and possibly becoming victims themselves.
“ Warren keeps his boat docked at the pier in front of Drake’s Shipyard. It’s a sixty-five foot sloop. Very fast. We’ll play hell trying to catch them. I don’t know if we can,” Ramsingh said, as they passed the maxi stand at Green Corner. They didn’t see Dani and Earl climb into the second maxi. They didn’t notice the maxi bolt from the curb. And they weren’t watching as it followed them down Western Main Road.
“ We can’t have her arrested,” Broxton said.
“ Don’t I know it,” the prime minister said.
“ What are we going to do?” This time it was Broxton asking the question.
“ Follow her and see where she goes. Play it by ear.”