Canal Administration Building
Balboa Heights, Panama
Roddy Herrara’s throat was so dry that swallowing
felt like a hot needle being jammed into the back of his throat.
His palms were greasy and the lump of the 9mm pistol tucked into
the back of his pants weighed a ton. He stood along a tree-lined
street in the Prado, the area of stately
homes created for the canal’s original builders. The neighborhood
resembled a slice of small-town America circa 1912. Looming above
on a grassy hill was the three-story administration building, its
red-tiled roof contrasting with its massive white stone walls.
Where once the flags of Panama and the United States had waved, a
single blue, white, and red checkerboard standard of the Republic
of Panama now hung like a rag in the humid air. He wondered if
someday they’d be so bold as to fly China’s bloodred flag next to
it.
Near where Roddy waited was the house of the canal
administrator, Felix Silvera-Arias. He and Carmen had been invited
there for a lavish reception when the legislature confirmed his
appointment. A short while later, Roddy had his “accident,” and had
been summarily fired.
The memory was as bitter as the taste of fear in
his mouth.
He had another few minutes to wait for Esmerelda
Vega. Essie was a fixture within the Canal Authority, a procurement
manager who’d outlasted the past six administrators. Overweight and
mustached, Essie was perhaps the finest person Roddy had ever met,
and that included his own wife. She was like a mother to many canal
employees and best friend to the rest. Roddy had called her from
his car, telling her only that he needed to meet her outside the
building. Without argument or need for explanation, the
sixty-six-year-old grandmother of seventeen agreed.
While Roddy was confident, he was also racked by
guilt. His responsibility to his family weighed heavily on his
mind. Carmen had been a pillar of strength since he’d lost his job,
encouraging one minute and commiserating the next as his moods
swung from outrage to despair. The kids, too young to really
understand the strain on the family, had been wonderful. Then there
was Miguel. Despite everything that had befallen his family, Carmen
was talking about adopting the boy. Had she not miscarried their
first child, he or she would be Miguel’s age now. He knew she
wasn’t trying to make up for their loss—she was too practical for
that—yet here was an opportunity to give a full life to another.
Though he hadn’t given his consent, Roddy knew they would take
Miguel in if the orphan wanted to stay. Roddy should be with them
now, he felt, not standing in the shadows of the very place that
had denied him his career.
And still he was here. It wasn’t that his duty to
his country meant more than his obligation to his family. In his
mind this was one of those times the two ideas merged into
one.
A pair of soldiers stood outside the entrance to
the building, their M-16s cradled in their arms. Even at this
range, Roddy could sense they were eager to use them. As he
watched, the main door swung open and a large spot of color
appeared. Essie. She wore a shapeless muumuu large enough to cover
a motorcycle, and in such a bright shade of pink that Roddy
couldn’t help but smile. Unlike many other women, Esmerelda enjoyed
drawing attention to her size and often dressed to emphasize
it.
Roddy pushed himself from the tree he’d been
leaning against and began the long walk up the steps to the office
building. When she finally spotted him Essie gave a cry and her
dark, moon face blossomed with a smile.
“About time you showed up!” she said with
good-natured scorn. “The office is a madhouse without you.”
Not knowing exactly what Esmerelda was talking
about, Roddy went along. “Traffic was a nightmare.”
“Well, Felix wants to see you right this minute.
Ships in the canal are backing up every second we waste. Come
on.”
Roddy took the last few stairs three at a time. The
two guards considering denying him entry had heard the exchange and
how casually Essie used the director’s name. They let him pass
without challenge and continued their monotonous staring across the
Prado.
Essie held the door for Roddy. “Hurry,
hurry.”
Once through, she led him across the rotunda, past
the overly heroic William Van Iagen murals of the canal’s
construction, and up the sweeping stairs. Another guard had been
sitting at a reception desk, but she hadn’t given him enough time
to even think about stopping them.
The brightly lit hallways were nearly deserted,
which surprised Roddy. At this time of the day, the administration
building should be a hive of activity as they coordinated ships in
transit as well as maintenance and all the other details that kept
the waterway functioning. He thought Liu Yousheng’s impending
attack was the likely reason it was so quiet.
Approaching her office, Esmerelda placed her hand
on Roddy’s back in a motherly attempt to guide him. Feeling the
outline of the pistol, her jaw dropped and her eyes became huge.
She was about to question him when a male voice echoed off the
walls from down the hall.
“You there. Stop.” It was another guard. This one
didn’t have an M-16, but the webbing belt cinched around his
scorpion-thin waist supported a dangling holster. The soldier
wasn’t more than twenty years old, yet swaggered as if he’d
practiced the walk his entire life.
Roddy’s heart pounded in his chest so loudly he was
sure the young soldier could hear. There was nothing he could do.
One minute into the building and he was already being captured. And
then he thought about the pistol. Could he use it? Surely this was
important enough to kill for, but the sound would draw more guards.
He felt paralyzed.
“Who are you?” the guard demanded.
“Esmerelda Vega. You’ve seen me a dozen times.”
Essie moved so she was backed slightly into her office.
“Not you, cow. Him.” The soldier reached to unsnap
his holster, revealing the dark glint of his sidearm. “I asked you
a question.”
Unable to believe what he was doing, Roddy reached
behind him with the hand the soldier couldn’t see. And felt Essie
was already pulling up his shirt. Jesus, no! He planned to push her
into the office before showing the weapon. Now she was placing
herself right in the middle of the fight.
“Don’t you dare call me cow, young man.”
Esmerelda’s tone was filled with the censure of a school principal.
She didn’t betray that just past the guard’s view she was pulling a
9mm pistol. “Did your mother allow you to use such language?”
Don’t do it, Roddy silently prayed. Essie cleared
the gun from his shirt. He didn’t dare turn away from the guard to
see what she was doing with it.
The young soldier didn’t look quite so bold in the
face of her anger. “Who is he?” he asked with a little more
respect.
Without missing a beat, Essie Vega set the pistol
on top of a filing cabinet just inside her office and brushed her
substantial calf against the door to close it slightly. “This is
Rodrigo Herrara. He’s a senior canal pilot. Director Silvera-Arias
has called him in to help handle a crisis. Why don’t you come into
my office and we can call him together and you can explain why Mr.
Herrara’s being held up from his duties.”
Roddy felt like he was going to throw up. He
swiveled his eyes and could see the H&K’s ugly shape on the
cabinet. If the soldier took another couple of paces closer he’d be
able to see it too.
The guard frowned, looking even less certain now. A
silence hung for a few seconds. Squinting, the soldier studied
Roddy. Mustering every scrap of self-discipline he possessed, Roddy
remained motionless, trying to appear bored.
“Very well,” the soldier said at last. “Carry on.”
He returned back down the hallway to wherever he’d been
lurking.
Esmerelda bustled him into her office and closed
the glazed door before Roddy’s knees buckled and his breath wheezed
in a wet sigh. She plucked the automatic from the file cabinet and
handed it back. “Are you going to explain what you think you’re
doing, Mr. Secret Agent Man?”
“Shaving a decade off my life.” Roddy sighed. “Did
you have to invite him in? Jesus, he would have seen the
gun.”
“Don’t blaspheme,” she said sternly. “And besides,
it worked.”
Roddy slumped into a chair facing her desk while
Esmerelda shuffled to her seat. She lowered herself slowly and
still the chair creaked under her weight. “My feet are killing me,”
she complained. “I think I’ve got the gout.”
“Essie, I hate to be rude, but I don’t have time to
talk aches and pains.”
“Didn’t think you did.” She smiled knowingly. “What
are you mixed up in, Rodrigo? I know it’s not drugs. Carmen would
have already killed you.”
“Nothing like that. It’s canal business.”
Essie’s expression turned sour. “What business?
This place has turned into a military base. Armed boys running
around, secret meetings with all sorts of wicked-looking Chinese
men. I’m actually thinking about retiring if this nonsense keeps
up.”
Roddy knew that his friend deserved a full
explanation, but every second he spent in the building increased
his chances of being discovered. “Can you trust me?”
“I’ve always trusted you.” Essie saw the sharpness
in Roddy’s features, the tension in his body. Fear crept into her
voice. “What’s happening?”
“Hatcherly Consolidated, the company who built the
new piers—”
“I know who they are,” Essie interrupted.
“Sometime tomorrow they’re going to explode a ship
in the Gaillard Cut and try to seal the canal entirely.” The
elderly woman didn’t even bat an eye. For Roddy to believe this
story was enough for her. “I’m working with the American military
to stop them. We know the name of the ship, only we don’t know when
it’s transiting.”
Esmerelda nodded her head so that the shiny wattles
under her chin compressed like an accordion. “Now I see why
tomorrow’s schedule was changed.”
Roddy seized on her comment. “I need that manifest.
I also need to know if a ship named Korvald
has put in at any of Hatcherly’s facilities.”
“The schedule hasn’t been posted. I heard that the
personnel department is calling pilots directly to assign ships and
times.”
“Damn,” Roddy spat. “Is there any way you can help
me?”
Essie thought for a moment, leaning back in her
chair so that the wood groaned like a schooner at full reach. She
was not unaware of the danger. It took her another second to reach
for the phone. “Hello, Juana, it’s Essie. Yes, fine, thanks. You?
Good. And Ramón, how’s his arm? That’s too bad. Well, boys are like
that. You should see some of the scars mine got over the years.”
She paid little attention to Roddy’s mounting frustration as she
continued chatting. “And you say the recipe’s better than your
sister’s? I’ll have to try it. Thanks. Oh, Juana, I called to see
if you’ve received tomorrow’s transit orders? Yeah, I know he’s
keeping it secret for some reason, but I need to know tugboat
requisitions to see how much fuel to send to Gamboa.” She paused to
listen. “I don’t care who’s on the ships, just which are going
through, and when.”
Roddy knew that Juana was Director Silvera-Arias’s
secretary. In a stage whisper he said to Essie, “Tell her that they
only want to keep the pilots’ names secret, something to do with
the attack on the car carrier a couple days ago. Make it sound like
a corruption investigation.”
Esmerelda nodded and passed on the lie,
embellishing as she went. “That’s right. I don’t think any of the
pilots are involved either but they’re investigating anyway. I
assume that’s the reason there’s so much security here. What? Oh,
great, thanks. Yeah, just use a pen to block out their names.”
Essie sighed. “Can you do me one more favor and fax it to my
office. The gout’s acting up again and I don’t want to be climbing
more stairs than necessary.”
Someone rapped on Essie’s office door and blew in
without being invited. Roddy had no time to react, no place to
hide. The interloper was Panamanian, wearing suit pants and a
button-down shirt. He stormed straight to the desk, leaning over
Roddy’s shoulder like he wasn’t even there. He was enraged. “Essie,
where the hell is the replacement hydraulic ram I ordered?”
“Later, Tomás,” Esmerelda said and continued her
conversation with Juana. “I’m sorry, what did you say? Your fax is
broken. Oh, all right. I’ll come up.”
“Like hell you will,” the man named Tomás shouted.
“You’re going to find that ram for me. You said it was here.”
Before Essie could answer, the guard that had
challenged Roddy earlier appeared at the door, drawn by the angry
voices. “What’s the problem here?”
“Nothing,” Essie said, the phone still gripped in
her hand. She looked at Roddy. “Can you go upstairs to get that
list for me, Mr. Herrara?”
Roddy turned green. From the jaws of victory, he’d
managed to snatch defeat. He didn’t dare go up to the executive
suite, yet Essie was suddenly stuck in a bureaucratic snafu she
couldn’t get away from without arousing suspicion.
Tomás, the soldier, and Essie seemed to be waiting
for him to answer. He gulped a mouthful of air. “Ah, sure. It’s,
ah, the list of lubricant suppliers, right?”
“Yup.” She pulled her hand away from the phone’s
mouthpiece. “Juana, I’m sending someone up for it. He’ll be there
in a second.” She hung up.
“What’s this about changing lubricant suppliers?”
Roddy’s cover story infuriated Tomás even further.
“We’re just looking into it,” Essie replied
placidly, doubtlessly wishing Roddy had come up with a better lie
considering Tomás headed one of the physical plant departments.
“Don’t worry.”
The guard continued to stand at the door, looking
from face to face. Like a condemned man, Roddy hauled himself out
of his chair. Tomás barely gave him a chance to step aside before
throwing himself in the vacated seat. He continued to berate Essie
about his missing part.
Roddy gave the soldier an assuring half smile, as
if to say the argument was none of their business. The youth gave
no physical reaction so Roddy stepped past him and started down the
hallway. He could feel the guard’s eyes boring through his spine. A
dozen yards down the hall Roddy slid into a secondary stairway. He
climbed quickly. When he reached the third floor he headed in the
direction of the executive suite.
He had only met Juana a couple of times and he
doubted he’d made an impression on the secretary, but still he was
concerned she’d recognize him. He dreaded getting drawn into a
conversation with her no more than ten feet from Silvera-Arias’s
office. His hands were already shaking enough.
The suite of executive offices had been recently
redecorated and the air conditioning seemed incapable of drawing
away the heavy smell of fresh paint. The chemical stench only
increased the nausea Roddy felt as he stepped into the reception
area. Beyond Juana’s immaculate desk he saw the door to Felix’s
office. Even as he studied it, fighting the urge to run in and kill
the bastard, it swung open.
Felix Silvera-Arias looked smug and self-satisfied
in his suit and glossy shoes. His hair was slick with brilliantine
and his mustache was perfectly trimmed, a black slash above his
tight mouth in the style of a clichéd Latin lover. Roddy nearly
turned and ran right then, and would have had another man not
emerged from the director’s office. He was handsome by any
standard, with a commanding presence that clearly defined him as a
leader of men. That he was Chinese and looked like he’d just given
Silvera-Arias a final set of orders left no question in Roddy’s
mind that here was Liu Yousheng.
The emotional surge made Roddy sway. Here was the
man behind the whole operation and he had a gun tucked into his
waistband. Should he do it? Could he do it? Before he could react,
the two men strode past him without a glance.
“Did Esmerelda send you?” Juana asked.
“H’mm? Oh, yes.” Roddy turned to the
assistant.
She studied him for a moment, a spark of
recognition in her eye. She glanced down at her desk, dismissing
whatever feeling she’d had. “Here’s that list. As you can see I’ve
blocked out the pilots’ names.”
“Thank you.” Roddy took the proffered list.
At the end of the hall he saw Liu and Felix talking
in front of the elevator. With them were two other Chinese men
wearing light jackets that did little to hide their concealed
weapons. Roddy turned the other way, knowing that the operation
would go on with or without its architect and that it was more
important to get the six-page list to Mercer than exact revenge
right now.
He exited the building as quickly as possible,
coming out at the back of the structure near the parking lot. A
guard gave him only a passing inspection as he left.
Walking a wide arc around the office, he reached
his car a few minutes later. He didn’t bother to give its air
conditioning time to vent the stifling waves of heat that washed
from the interior. The steering wheel felt like a steam pipe and
the gearshift a rock that had lain in a campfire. After tossing the
gun under his seat, he jammed the car in gear and spun one hundred
and eighty degrees on the quiet street.
Rather than drive all the way across the snarled
city, Roddy decided to find a shipping service that sent faxes for
business customers.
Once he passed the old Ancon Train Station and
encountered the anonymity of heavy traffic he dialed the hotel with
his cell phone. “It’s Roddy.”
“Damn,” Harry said. “I was hoping it was General
Vanik. I was going to tell him that Mercer’s been making eyes at
his daughter. Hey, did you get it?”
“I got it. I’m looking for a place to fax it to
you. It’ll be quicker.”
“I’ll tell Mercer when he gets back. He’s
downstairs talking to that Barber woman. Any problems?”
“Went fine.” Roddy still felt like the tension was
going to make him ill.
“Congratulations. I’ll make sure you’re given the
secret decoder ring and learn our club handshake.”
“Hold on, Harry.” Roddy checked his rearview
mirror. With traffic so dense it was difficult to be certain but he
thought he was being followed. There was little he could do to
check. The street he was on was nearly bumper to bumper.
“What is it?” Harry asked finally.
“I’m not sure, maybe nothing.” Roddy scanned the
businesses along the street. Usually he saw plenty of places that
sent faxes, but now he saw nothing but bodegas and children’s
clothing stores. He turned another corner, moving deeper into the
city’s commercial district. The car, a sedan with windows tinted so
dark he couldn’t see the occupants, stayed with him. “Listen,
Harry, I’d better go. I think someone’s following me.”
“Where are you?” the old man asked. “I’ll have some
of the French pick you up.”
There! A copy center. “Too late, stand by the fax
machine.” Roddy clicked off his phone and bulled his way toward the
curb. A Kuna woman on a rickety bicycle almost went down under his
car.
Roddy pulled a wad of cash from his wallet and
jumped from his Honda. Car horns screamed as he tied up traffic by
blocking half a lane. The bottleneck helped pin the pursuing car
fifty yards back. He dashed across the sidewalk, clutching the
manifest and the money in one hand. The copy center was busy, with
employees in blue slacks or skirts and white shirts helping harried
secretaries and students with their orders. On the long counter sat
a cup of pens. Roddy hurriedly scrawled the fax number in Mercer’s
room on the top of the shipping itinerary.
As he did he noted the names of the first dozen
ships scheduled to pass through the canal the next day. Oh my God!
No! He looked again, more closely. None were named Gemini. None were even close to Gemini. He scanned the rest of the list.
Nothing.
“Can I help you?”
Without looking at how much money he was handing
the clerk, Roddy passed over the roll of bills and the six sheets
of paper. “Please send this as quickly as possible.” He was near
panic.
Without waiting for an acknowledgment he fled the
store. He pushed past several pedestrians, and when he reached the
curb he dropped to his knees. The tension and fear and defeat
spilled into the gutter.
When his stomach was empty, he looked up, wiping
his mouth. Two men stood over him. Locals. Dangerous-looking.
Ex-Dignity Brigades for sure. An image of Carmen and the children
flashed through his mind in the seconds before one of them reached
down and plucked him from the sidewalk. Without a word they began
to duckwalk him back to their car. People on the street parted as
they passed, all looking at anything other than the pathetic man
with vomit on his chin and the look of death in his eye.