Beneath a Panamanian Moon (17 page)

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Authors: David Terrenoire

BOOK: Beneath a Panamanian Moon
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“No,” Cooper said. “I'm good. Just tell me something.”

“Yeah?”

“We're the good guys, right?”

Phil pointed a finger at me and said, “He is. I'm not.”

Cooper turned it over in his head a few times and said, “Okay, let's see what we've got here.”

We split up. Phil went left, Cooper and I went right. The satellites had seen just a small corner of the complex. Most of the streets and structures were hidden beneath triple canopy, impossible to see by air, even by helicopter.

“How'd they know about this place?”

“Infrared shots of night training,” I said. “That's when they started asking questions, after seeing the thermals.”

“Why can't they use Predators to snap pics of the hotel?”

“They're all in Iraq and Afghanistan. Panama isn't exactly a high priority.”

Coop and I walked between the bullet-pocked plywood, made haunted-house creepy by the darkness of the bush and the silence of the jungle around us.

“No wildlife,” Coop whispered.

“It's all been chased away by the gunfire,” I said, touching a splintered bullet hole.

We turned a corner. Cooper said, “Now this is weird.”

There was no question that we were in a simulated city street with alleys and walkways, open plazas, several burned-out cars and a bus, its windows and tires long gone, its shell blackened. Steel silhouettes stood on each corner, on springs, their surfaces dented by live rounds. I touched one. “Whoever this is supposed to be looks mighty dead.”

“Mighty dead,” Coop said.

Phil came up from our left and our nerves were so stretched that if we'd been armed we might have shot him.

“You guys are jumpy as cats,” he said.

“What'd you find?”

“I walked the perimeter. They're using Claymores, RPGs, frags. I even found a launcher for a Stinger.”

Cooper stood, his hands on his hips, and turned around in a full circle. That discomforting feeling of having been here before got under his skin and gave him an itch he couldn't scratch. “Déjà vu like a mother. This seem familiar to you, Phil?”

Phil looked around at the dummy structures, with their vacant windows and doors. “Looks like a street,” he said and shrugged. “Narrow, like a slum.”

Cooper shook his head. “No, not a slum. It could be the old part of the city. What do you think?” Without waiting to hear Phil's answer, Coop walked farther on, trying to match where he was with a place he'd recently been. “This is Casco Viejo, I'm sure of it.” He jogged past plywood shattered by live fire, jumped over man-sized divots in the dirt caused by hand grenades, and ran around more burned-out shells of automobiles, their charred steel perforated by bullet holes. Phil and I ran after him, catching him as he stood looking up at a single, large structure at the center of the street. Here there were doors, kicked in so many times that the impressions of boots were a permanent part of the grain. Inside were complete rooms, and a staircase, the walls shredded by bullet holes and smudged by smoke and tear-gas grenades.

“I don't fucking believe it,” Coop said.

“What? What is it?” I asked. “Where are we supposed to be?”

Cooper walked around the open room, the trees overhead speckling the walls with shifting bits of sunlight.

“I was just here. Just two days ago.”

“Where? What is this place?”

Cooper stopped, his hands on his hips, staring up at the balcony. “It's the Presidential Palace,” Cooper said. “They're training men to storm the Presidential Palace.”

CHAPTER FIFTEEN

I did a three-sixty in the open room, taking in the doorways, the staircase, the balcony, every structural detail of the Presidential Palace interior, right down to the plywood reception desk.

“This is stupid,” Phil said. “They can't be thinking of taking over the country. They don't have the people.”

“How do we know?” Coop said. “We have no idea how many people they've put through this course and then settled into Panama City.”

“Sleeper cells,” I said. “Terrorists.”

“Exactly.”

Phil still wasn't convinced. “No one has enough money to overthrow an entire fucking country.”

“What if the richest people did it together?”

“The guests at the hotel,” Cooper said.

“That's what I'm thinking. I'm also thinking we should boogie on out of here before we get visitors.”

We found our way back to the landing zone and started our quick jog back toward the river. All three of us had our own thoughts, our own questions, and the steady physical rhythm of running let us work through them.

“I don't get it,” Phil grumbled. “Are they so fucking rich they think they can steal a whole country?”

“I think they're getting drug money, too,” I said.

Phil laughed. It sounded more like a bark of disbelief. “Drug money? In Panama?”

“The Colonel mentioned Laos to another man, a young guy with a Cuban accent.”

“Cubans,” Phil said. “That sounds like spooks.”

“And Laos,” Coop said. “The Company financed ops in Southeast Asia with drug money. Maybe they're doing the same thing here.”

I didn't want to believe it. “No. That's too crazy. The people I work for would know if the CIA were involved.”

“Not unless your people are out of the loop,” Cooper said. “Is that possible?”

“In Washington, anything is possible except secrets. Someone would know.”

“You mean like who killed Kennedy?”

“Phil, don't start.”

“Maybe,” Phil said, “it's a rogue outfit.”

“But why start a revolution in Panama?”

“The Canal,” Phil said. “What else has this country got that anyone could possibly want?”

Coop was staying quiet, working through his own questions in his head. As we neared the footbridge Coop stopped, raised his fist in the air, and silently eased into hiding. Phil pulled me off the path into the brush. Coop crawled back to us. “I think there's someone waiting for us across the river.”

“You see anyone?”

“No, but it feels hinky,” he said. “I'm going to check it out.”

“I'm coming with you,” Phil said.

Before I could object, they melted into the foliage, as substantial as smoke.
Damn,
I thought,
how did they do that?
After what felt like hours, after I'd exhausted myself straining to hear, see, smell, or intuit anything beyond the usual jungle critters, the two of them reappeared.

“They know we're here. They're setting up an ambush.”

“To kill us?”

Phil gave me a look through half-closed eyelids. “No, Harp, I think maybe they want to invite us to a party, what do you think?”

Coop knelt and drew a map in the dirt. “They've strung Claymores along the trail here and here, leading up to the bridge.”

“Jesus, you're kidding.”

Cooper shook his head. “And they've got men here and here along the far bank, armed with AKs.”

“What do we do now?”

Phil said, “We can try to run away—”

“And they'll catch us one at a time,” Coop said, “later. When we're by ourselves.”

“So we're going to take 'em out now,” Phil said.

Cooper nodded. “We talked it over.”

“Who talked it over?”

“Phil and I.”

“You didn't think to ask me what I wanted to do? I'm the smart one.”

“We'll let you be smart next time,” Phil said. “But right now we have a plan.” Phil's thin-lipped grin was an unsettling shadow of the scar that ran across his neck, ear to ear.

I didn't think I was going to like this plan. Then after I heard it, I was sure I didn't like it. “I don't like this,” I said. “I think we should reconsider the runaway option.”

“Shut up,” Phil said. “This is the only way.”

“But why do I have to do this?”

“Because,” Phil said, “you're the smallest.”

“And the one with the least experience,” Cooper said.

“And you play piano,” Phil said. “To these macho pendejos, that makes you suspect. You're the one they'll go after.”

This did nothing to put me at ease, and yet, ten minutes later I was at the rope bridge that crossed the river, hiding in the underbrush and waiting, watching the far riverbank for movement.

Behind me, the explosion of a Claymore split the morning. The air around me convulsed and seven hundred steel balls tore away leaves and bark from the trees.

I screamed and ran from the bushes, holding my head. I raced blindly for the rope bridge, tricky even when you took it slow, but running made it buck and jump like a living thing. The river narrowed here considerably, churning up the water and giving the current a dizzying speed beneath my feet.

I was a third of the way across the bridge when a shot zinged past my head, then another, and a voice shouted, “
¡Alto
!” I did. I
alto
'ed so fast the bridge quivered.

Two young men dressed in camo appeared at the far end of the bridge. They carried AK-47s and one aimed his rifle at me while the second stood at the bridge and waved me forward. “Venga,” he said. Come. His voice would have carried more authority if it hadn't cracked from a D-flat to a G-sharp.

I started to back up.

“Venga aquí,” he said. “Aquí,” and pointed to his side of the river.

I shook my head. “No. No aquí.”

Another man, older, appeared out of the brush and ordered the two younger men to get me. They looked at him as if he must be kidding. I know that look. I had used that look quite a lot myself lately. Obviously, by shouting at them, the older man convinced them that he wasn't joking. The two slung their rifles and started across the bridge toward me.

With each step they took forward, I took a step back.

The older man unholstered his pistol and yelled for me to stop. I took three steps back. The older man shot at me, two times, but at a distance of forty yards, the nearest bullet didn't come any closer than three feet. Which was close enough to make all my hair stand on end and my sphincter pucker up around my jaw. I turned and scurried off the bridge and the two young men scrambled to catch up.

By the time I hit the trail, another man was shooting at me with a rifle, and these shots, fired in three-round bursts, zipped by my head and, like the pistol shots in Crystal City, made my eardrums pulse in a highly unpleasant way. I ran harder. Encouraged by the shots, the young men crossed the bridge. They weren't far behind me. I could hear them thrashing through the brush, Latin hounds on the trail of a frightened Yanqui rabbit.

The trail dog-legged to the left and I went right. I grasped what I needed. The two young men, more confident on dry land, sprinted up the trail. When they crossed in front of my hiding place, I jerked the trip wire. It was no longer tied to a Claymore detonator, but to a young, springy sapling, and as I pulled, the sapling swept across the trail, whipping both men backward and off their feet.

Phil and I jumped them before they could stagger upright. I grabbed a rifle, racked the bolt, and stuck the barrel into the shorter man's eye. They both froze and Phil went to work, ripping their shirts into strips and trussing them up like rodeo calves, their hands and ankles tied together behind them. Gagged, they rolled their eyes, silently pleading for their lives, or at least a more dignified way to die. Phil dragged them whimpering into the bushes.

Cooper came back along the path. “The other two have come out and are looking across the river. It won't be long before one of them tries to cross.”

“How many do you think there are?” Phil asked.

“I don't know. Could be a whole company over there in the trees.”

Phil thought a minute. “Okay. I don't see how we have much choice. Give Coop your rifle,” he told me. I didn't argue.

Quietly, we approached the riverbank. Cooper was right. One of the men was in the middle of the rope bridge. The older man waited on the other side, urging his reluctant comrade forward.

Phil and Cooper came up out of the treeline and aimed the AKs at the man on the bridge and the officer on shore. Phil ordered both of them to cross the bridge. Neither of them moved. The man on the bridge, exposed and alone, was scared. The man on the bank was an officer, too proud to surrender, and brave considering he wasn't the one stuck in the middle of the footbridge.

“Don't make us come over there and get you,” Phil shouted.

The officer on the bank pulled a K-Bar knife from his boot. He held it high so that we could see the blade, then he went to work on the bridge.

The man on the bridge saw this, too, and shouted for the man to stop. Quickly, he tried to move back to the far shore before the rope fell away.

“Don't do it!” Cooper yelled.

Phil fired the AK over the man's head but it just inspired the officer to work faster.

First, the right-hand rope went slack and the severed end trailed into the river. The bridge tilted and the man on the bridge held on, suspended from the cat's cradle above the rushing water. The rope at his feet fell away and he was left to hang by one remaining line. The river tugged at his boots.

Phil fired the AK again, closer to the man with the knife, but it was too late. The last rope was cut and the man on the bridge yelped, fell into the muddy water, and was quickly swept downstream. It didn't look like he could swim. I watched the man's head go under. Ten yards farther on, he came up again, coughing and sputtering and slapping the surface. I couldn't watch him drown. I launched myself into the rushing current. It was swift and I swam hard for the middle of the river. The chop and debris made it impossible to see the man, but I did see Phil run along the riverbank, trying to keep up with us.

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