35
The change in priorities could not have been more obvious to Marcos Ostrander. As the endless hot summer dissolved into an endlesshot autumn, the tensions between the United States and the Panamanianregime got steadily worse, with daily harassments of U.S. military personnel by the swaggering PDF forces, bolstered by the unceasingbluster of Noriega. General Woerner, of course, still resisted pushingback, seemingly holding on to the notion that peace at any cost was worth some daily humiliations and the occasional outbreak of violence.
It was getting more and more difficult to get in to see Kurt these days. Checkpoints had been set up on the main avenues into Chorrillo, and any vehicles bearing Americans in uniform were routinely stopped and sometimes detained. Ostrander and Ruffer had adopted the strategyof never making eye contact with the guards as they beckoned for them to stop and to just continue through the checkpoints. It was alwaysa hazardous strategy that occasionally pushed the limits toward a violent clash, but with Perry’s concurrence, Ruffer and Ostrander remainedunanimous in their commitment to visit Kurt on the agreed upon schedule.
The visits, however, had become more complicated, and not only with regard to their logistics. Ostrander didn’t have the need to know, and therefore did not attempt to ask, but it seemed apparent to him that some sort of rescue mission was being cobbled together. Before and after every meeting at Modelo, he was ordered to report to the Tunnel at Quarry Heights, first to receive a list of questions, and then to debrief a bunch of scruffy-looking men in civvies on what he had been able to discover. They wanted the numbers and composition of the guards, the layout of the interior of the prison, the numbers of steps leading from one floor to another, the type of locks on the exteriordoors and on Kurt’s cell itself. They wanted to know details on the types of armaments that were visible, and any other information they could find on the names and backgrounds on individual guards.
Kurt himself proved to be a tremendously reliable source for much of this information. Through idle chats he had with the guards, and simply by being ever-vigilant, he was able to funnel out all kinds of personal information about the guards on his floor. He knew which guards were the violent ones and which were mostly passive. They’d learned that Cáceres and Correa were vicious ideologues who would unquestionably lay down their lives for the Pineapple, while LieutenantDominguez was merely a passive civil servant whose career ambitionbegan and ended with pacing the halls of Modelo. He didn’t participate in the endless political patter that Muse had to listen to every single day.
Ruffer had likewise been summoned to the Tunnel a couple of times, but for him the questions dealt more with Muse’s psychological stability. Had he given up yet? Was he depressed? Had he been turned? Of course, all the answers were in the negative. Simply put, Muse was increasingly impatient with the U.S. government’s toleration of Manuel Noriega, he was sick to death of “Wimp Woerner,” and he was ready to see the country act like the superpower it was and to quit bowing at the feet of a dictator.
Ostrander and Ruffer were careful in their reports to quote as directlyas they could and to make their observations as precise as possible.When they were walking, they were counting their steps, and when they were listening to the guards, they were listening to the dialectsthat were being spoken. Since the elections, they were beginning to pick up more and more Cuban dialects, leading the G-2 guys—the Intelligence guys—to draw all kinds of conclusions, none of which were positive for the Pineapple’s future.
For Ostrander, the only conclusion to be drawn from this questioningin the Tunnel was that someone was planning a prison break. He had learned and was later able to confirm that the spooks at Hurlburt Field in Florida had constructed a three-quarters-scale model of ModeloPrison out in the middle of nowhere and that live-fire exercises could be heard during the night. It pleased him that the plans were that advanced, but of course, the big question would be the timing of any raid. Because this would be a land-based operation, it made sense that when the balloon went up, the execution would fall to Delta Force, a supersecret commando group whose existence was never officially acknowledgedby the government, but whose exploits were quickly becomingthe stuff of Army legend. If the rumors were close to being true, these guys could crash a building, kill the bad guys, and rescue the good guys before anyone even knew that the shooting had started.
It would have been a mistake, of course, for Ostrander to even hint of his suspicions to Kurt. It wasn’t so much that Muse would reveal the plans to the enemy—God knew he had been damned tight-lipped as it was—but more because he thought it unwise to falsely raise any hopes. Planning a rescue operation was a completely different matter from executing one, and for the time being Marcos didn’t see the catalystfor armed invasion anywhere on the horizon.
Besides, planning was what Delta did. Again, Marcos had no firsthandknowledge, but the word on the street in the top-secret world that was so much a part of Marcos’s life was that Delta started planning a rescue mission the moment it heard that American hostages had been taken anywhere overseas. Of those planned missions, precious few were executed, for any number of reasons, and some were taken more seriouslythan others. The presence of a faux Modelo somewhere in the Florida outback told Marcos that this was one of the serious ones, but it never made sense to unnecessarily introduce hope into a prisoner’s life.
Any doubt Ostrander might have harbored on the issue was more than mitigated by Kurt’s impatience to get the hell out of that place. Marcos kept him pretty up to date with the politics of the region, and the more Kurt heard, the more he seemed to be getting frustrated by General Woerner’s lack of action. How many indignities did the people of Panama have to suffer before he got off his ass and did something? Kurt knew through Ostrander and Ruffer that the priorities were changingon the Isthmus, so why did Woerner continue to sit on his hands?
In the months that Kurt, Jim Ruffer, and Marcos Ostrander had been meeting thrice-weekly, they’d developed a certain rhythm of communicationthat suited all of them. If Kurt had something important to say to Ostrander—his political lifeline—he would wear socks to their meetings, and in the days surrounding the elections, there’d been socks for almost every meeting. As a way of sticking his thumb in the eyes of his captors, Kurt had even figured out a way to communicate with his family without enduring the indignity of the official censors.
Marcos routinely brought books in for Kurt to read, everything from
The Hunt for Red October
to
The Count of Monte Cristo
. The books came one at a time. When Kurt finished one, he was allowed to have another. On the way into the prison, Correa or one of his lieutenantswould thoroughly examine the book to search for any contraband.On the way out, though, Kurt noticed that the search was always a cursory one, and when Lieutenant Dominguez did the searching,he always held the paperback by its spine and riffled its pages. The outgoing search took no more than a few seconds.
With this in mind, Kurt had taken to jotting long notes to his family in the gutter where the pages met the book binding. The notes would go on for pages and pages, consisting of hundreds of words whose value lay as much in the small victory they represented as they did in the news they passed along to the family. Of course, Annie, Kimberly, and Erik had to refrain from similar tactics for incoming books. For them, the only option was to write the good old-fashioned newsy letter. Truth be told, of the three, Annie was the only one fully cognizant of how cripplingthe intrusion of censors could be, and as such, her letters tended to be written with fairly stilted language. Kimberly only wished him luck and good things in her letters, while Erik poured out his emotional responses to everything from the Orioles to the Washington Redskins, which he was quickly adopting as his home team.
Ostrander also learned that Kurt had been keeping a journal of his daily activities and travails. As it turned out, the one book that every prisoner was allowed to have, and whose presence was never questioned,was the Holy Bible; in Kurt’s case, a five-by-seven-inch King James version printed on onion skin paper. The last twelve pages of Kurt’s copy were blank. He didn’t know if it was a printing anomaly or if it was intended as a space to write notes, but Kurt carefully tore out one page at a time as needed and wrote his diary in the smallest possible hand. To keep the forbidden chronicle from being found by the guards as they tossed his cell, he stored the pages inside the void space in his stick deodorant tube, where the thumbscrew at the bottom of the tube allowed you to extend the deodorant stick as it was used. Knowing how put off Panamanians were by all by-products of personalhygiene, Kurt made sure that there were always a few armpit hairs on the surface of the stick, so that a curious guard would take only a cursory glance and then quickly put the deodorant down.
By the time September rolled around, Kurt had just about had it with the delays and the lack of progress. Marcos shared with him that the kids were missing him, dreading the start of school in yet another new community, and Kurt was growing impatient with the fact that his parents—his father in particular—continued to be angry at him for having put the family in this kind of situation. He could only imagine what was becoming of Intergraphic. Kurt hadn’t heard anything at all from Carol and David, and he knew that that kind of silence could only mean continuing anger. The whole world, it seemed, was turning against him, and still nobody seemed to be doing anything about it.
Kurt wore socks to one of the September meetings, and Ruffer kept his part of their time together short. When it was Ostrander’s turn, Dr. Ruffer started chatting up the guards on something soccer-related, and Ostrander had his moment alone.
“How are you today, Kurt?” Marcos asked, careful as always not to speak directly to any issue.
“I’m good,” Kurt said. “I’m very, very good.” There was a smugnessto his tone that made Ostrander scowl.
“Well, I’m glad to hear that.”
“This is the secret,” Kurt said, handing over a hardcover copy of
The Godfather
. “This is a very good book.”
Marcos nodded as he took the book. “I’m glad to hear that. I’ve only seen the movie.”
“Well, you should read the book. You should read it carefully. There’s a lot in there.”
Marcos turned the book over in his hands. “I’ll do that,” he said.
“I mean
really
. There’s a lot in that book.”
Marcos suppressed a smile. Jesus, Kurt had never been much for subtlety.
I got it
, Marcos wanted to say.
You’ve hidden something in the book. How obvious do you want to make it?
When the meeting ended ten minutes later, Lieutenant Dominguez gave the book a cursory look and handed it back. Ostrander waited until he was back at the Tunnel before he started searching for the message.It wasn’t Kurt’s typical message in the gutter space, that was obviousfrom the very beginning. In fact, as far as Marcos could tell, the book was pristine. It took him the better part of a half hour to notice the small bubble that appeared in the binding when he opened the book all the way. Kurt Muse, king of the void space.
Using a pencil, Marcos probed the space in the binding, dislodging a fan-folded piece of lined yellow paper. It was a letter to President Bush.
Modelo Prison, Panama, Sept. 7
Dear Mr. President:
I’ve been held in solitary confinement in this prison for over five months, and it now appears I will not be afforded the opportunityto face my accusers. Not only have they denied me due process, the regime’s attorney general now informs me that I will continue to be held hostage “until we see how the situation develops.”By a most fortunate condition as a dependent spouse of a U.S. Forces employee (my wife is a DoDDS teacher), I’m coveredunder the Panama Canal Treaties, provisions of which clearly entitle the U.S. to my custody. In spite of a Herculean effortby the men and women of our office of Treaty Affairs to gain my custody, the Panamanian military have now refused to even discuss the matter. A flagrant treaty violation exists, one that by their own admission involves a political hostage. It is my understandingthat having exhausted all local means of peaceful compliance,that the CINC Southern Command deferred my case to the Joint Chiefs of Staff for procedural instructions. Mr. President,I’ve lived in Panama most of my life and in the last 4 years have come to know the regime’s workings quite well. Without question I can assure you that Mr. Noriega and his band of thugs will only release Panama from their chokehold when we apply force, military force. When you order that to happen, Mr. President,over two million Panamanians and this U.S. Citizen will be in your debt and free at last.
Very truly yours,
Kurt F. Muse