|
Carlos's Golden Gun |
"I
consider myself just another member of the crew. But the highest paid member of
the crew." (William Friedkin )
***
The DEA
Agent said, "So there I was in this motel in Haiti, a girl who was not my
wife in the shower, suffering from the hangover from hell, when some son of a
bitch starts hammering on the God damned door."
Chris
said, "But you were armed, right? Even though the local cops were dirty,
they let you keep your piece, yeah?"
The DEA
Agent nodded. He said, "I took it with me to answer the door. First I
peeked through the curtains. I figured it was probably the Perp I was after and
a couple of his Cracker thugs come to say good morning."
I said,
"Like maybe you'd blown your cover at the disco the night before? Even
though you'd taken a whore home with you."
The DEA
Agent sighed. "Yeah, even after doing that." He stubbed out his
cigarette and lit another. He said, "Some guys, when you're hunting them,
get prickles up the back of their neck, even if they don't know for a fact that
you're there."
Chris
said, "In Snake Eater's School they taught us that the first rule of the
ambush is to never stare at the enemy. Just quick looks until you are ready to
shoot." He shrugged. "Critters - even human-type critters - can sense
when you are looking at them with ill intent on your mind."
"Yeah,
like that," the DEA Agent said.
"So
was it the bad guys?" I asked.
The DEA
Agent snorted. "Depends on your definition of bad. The guy at the door was
the Port Au Prince police chief who'd given me the brush off before. Him, and a
couple of Haitian plainclothes cops. Mirrored sun glasses. Mean looks. Like the
Tonton Macoute from the days of Baby Doc Duvailer. Probably the same guys who
tailed me when I was shadowing the Perp to his villa."
"Shit,"
Chris said.
"I
was thinking the same thing," the DEA Agent said.
"What
did you do?" I asked.
"First,
I put the gun away," the DEA Agent said. "Then I opened the
door." He paused a beat, reliving the scene, then said, "The police
chief acted real friendly. Charming smile. Easy manner. I asked him to come in.
He did, but to my relief he told the Tonton types to wait outside.
"I
gave him the only chair and sat on the bed. We could hear the shower running
and then it cut off. He gave me this man-to-man... you-sly-dog-you... look. But
he wasn't there to talk about the girl, and she was savvy enough to stay in the
bathroom.
"Then,
out of the blue, he tells me that it had come to his attention that a certain
fugitive from American justice was in their country and he had been told to
kick the guy out of Haiti. It was like we had never talked before."
"Was
he offering to help you arrest him?" I asked.
The DEA
Agent shook his head. "He wasn't going that far. But he was alerting me to
the fact that the guy I had been sent here to find - along with his buddies -
had been declared persona non grata in Haiti and once they cleared Haitian air
space, they were all mine."
"Yeah,
but the Cracker could easily hire a plane and take off for anywhere in the
world," I pointed out. "Head for Columbia and the protection of
Carlos Lehder."
"He
certainly could," the DEA Agent said. "And probably would any minute
now, because the next thing the police chief told me was that he'd just come
from the Perp's house and had told him the jig was up and he had to leave the
country."
"In
other words," Chris said, "he was giving the Son Of A Bitch a head
start."
"Exactly,"
the DEA Agent said. "I learned later that my bosses had pulled some
strings and gotten State to warn the Haitians that certain foreign aid they were
expecting might be delayed if they didn't do something about my boy.
"On
the other hand, my Perp had paid out plenty for protection, so the Chief
probably felt he had some obligation, no matter how slight. And so he gave him
a head start."
"You
must have really busted ass to get to the airport on time," I said.
"And
then some," he said. "Got the chief out of there, gave the girl a nice
tip - she knew something was up and that I wasn't an ordinary John and was
terrified. I called the embassy and got them to hustle a plane big enough to
carry all my prisoners."
Chris
said, "Just you? You were going to confront all those guys by yourself?
Shit, you didn't have enough cuffs, much less enough rounds in your
piece."
"I
was winging it," the DEA Agent said. "Figured I'd get there then
punt. But when I got to the airport - damn if it didn't look like I was too
late. I saw the Perp and six or seven of his guys - and a couple of women -
walking across the tarmac to this little passenger jet. Boy, was I out of
time."
"What
the fuck did you do?" Chris asked.
"First
thought that came into my head was the tower," the DEA Agent said. "I
raced to the Control Tower, grabbed the guys there, showed them my badge and my
gun and said to stop that plane or the whole fucking U.S. government was going
to fall on their heads.
"For
some reason, my bluff worked. When the Perp's pilot radioed for permission to
take off, they stalled him. But, they also got on the phone to talk to their
own bosses. So, I pushed somebody aside, grabbed his phone, called the embassy
again, and said they'd better have a plane for me right this fucking minute or
we were screwed.
"I
figured the police chief would be on his way to stop me any second, so I rushed
out onto the tarmac, ran up to the Perp's plane and hammered on the side until
the door came open. Some stew was looking out at me, blinking and scared. I
showed her my badge and my gun and said everybody on the plane was under
arrest."
"Fuck
me," Chris said.
"It
sort of worked, because the Perp came out to argue with me, followed by his
guys. For some reason, nobody was showing guns but me so they must have thought
I had the whole U.S. Army backing my act.
"Then,
while they're yelling at me, and I'm yelling back, up rolls a bus from the
embassy. Door comes open and the guy behind the wheel... a uniformed embassy
security man... shouts for everybody to get on board, the plane was
waiting."
Chris and
I were staring at the DEA Agent in absolute awe.
"And
they did?" I asked.
"Well,
the Perp hesitated at first," the DEA Agent said. "But then we both
saw - way across the field - a whole line of big black cars coming our way. All
with their light bars flashing. Well, I know it just has to be the police chief
coming to stop me, but the Perp didn't know that.
"He
looked at me, a little scared, and asked what was happening. I said, 'If you
don't want to get thrown into a Haitian prison for the rest of your fucking
life you'd better come with me.'
"And,
damn, if he didn't. He practically ran to the bus, his people behind him, and
they all piled inside. I came after them, then it was a race in the bus to
where the embassy had the plane. All the cop cars coming behind us. They were
faster, of course, but we had a lead.
"A
lead that was almost gone when we got to the plane. It had a U.S. flag on the
side and when the Perp saw it he said, 'It's American, thank God!'"
"Son
of a bitch fooled himself," Chris said.
The DEA
Agent nodded. "Didn't take any effort for me to get them all off the bus
and into the plane. Some more embassy security guys were there and they took over
the business of disarming and taking people into custody."
"What
about the police chief?" I asked. "What happened with him?"
The DEA
Agent gave one of his rare laughs. He said, "The Haitian cops pulled up
beside the plane and the Chief got out. At first he looked furious. I thought
he might order everybody to start shooting. But, then he calmed down. He got on
the radio for instructions, while I stood there at the open door wondering what
was going to happen next. Would they arrest me? Block the plane from leaving
and free the fugitives?
"Instead,
he hands the mike back to the driver, turns to me and gives me a little,
half-assed salute, then climbs into the car and leads the cop convoy off the
runway."
"Friedkin's
gonna love this shit," Chris said, scribbling notes like crazy.
The DEA
Agent said, "But that's not the really weird part."
"It
got weirder, still?" I said. I was already dumbfounded.
"Oh,
boy, did it," the DEA Agent said. "Okay, so we're all on the plane
and the Perp and his friends are congratulating themselves for their narrow
escape. It took everything I had not to laugh in their faces. Then everybody
gets something to eat... talking like crazy... it's gets late, but they are too
excited to sleep.. and I'm wondering when they are going to figure out what
happened and try to stage a rebellion.
"Then
all of a sudden the pilot announced that we had just crossed into U.S. airspace
and the Perp and all his friends cheered and applauded like crazy.
"Then,
out of the blue, the Perp starts singing, 'God Bless America,' and everybody
joins in. Singing, with tears running down their faces - so happy to be back in
The Land Of The Free."
"And
then you threw their asses in jail for the rest of their fucking lives,"
Chris said.
The DEA
Agent grimaced. "Almost felt sorry for them." He raised a finger.
"But, only almost."
"And
they also gave you Carlos," I said.
The DEA
Agent grinned. "They couldn't fink fast enough," he said.
DISSOLVE
TO: INT. BASEMENT - JACKSONVILLE FEDERAL COURTHOUSE
The DEA
Agent showed us around a big basement under the Jacksonville Federal Building,
stuffed with evidence used in the trial of Carlos Lehder And Associates. Agents
in shirts and ties and wearing shoulder holsters were moving through the
evidence, cataloguing it for shipment to wherever it is they keep evidence
against the Forever Damned.
|
Coke Haul |
Two walls
were covered with pictures of beached speedboats, stacks of seized automatic
weapons and pistols with silencers, Caribbean island villas, a variety of
airplanes, including one seaplane, and mound after mound of cocaine in clear,
football-sized plastic bags.
Chris eyed
one of the cocaine photos and said, "Did you know that one of the Popes
always kept a flask of wine laced with cocaine on his belt? The Pope was Louis
Some-Roman-Numeral-Or-Other and the company that made the wine called it Vin
Mariani. His Holiness got it free for advertisement purposes."
The DEA
Agent gave Chris a dirty look.
I said,
"He can't help it. He just knows shit like that."
The DEA
Agent said, "Yeah, but he doesn't have to tell me."
I said,
"He can't help that either. Show him an authority figure and he'll give
the guy a Wedgie."
Figuring
he'd gone far enough, Chris pointed at a picture of an AK-47 that literally
glowed.
He said,
"I know that's an AK, but what the hell did they do to it?"
The DEA
Agent snorted. "Had it God damned gold plated is what they did," he
said. "That's how much money Carlos was wallowing in. Got his entire gun
collection gold plated. Gave out gold-plated guns to his boys as a reward for
good work."
I
indicated a picture of the man I now knew to be Carlos Lehder. He was posing in
a black SS-type uniform, with what looked like an old German Lugar holstered at
his belt. Similarly dressed and booted men flanked him. On the wall behind them
was a huge red Swastika.
"What
the hell is that all about?" I asked.
The DEA
Agent said, "Maybe it was his daddy's fault. Lehder's old man was a German
engineer, who escaped to Columbia after the war. Married a Columbian school
teacher.
"Carlos
admired the hell out of Hitler. Thought the Fourth Reich would be along any day
now, and that his drug money would help arm a whole legion of Nazi soldiers.
After that, it got kookier.
I raised
an eyebrow. What could be kookier?
|
Carlos And Old Prison "Buddy" At The Cay |
The DEA
Agent caught my look and said, "Carlos liked little boys - the younger the
better. He'd play Nazi dress up when he was with them. Put them in little SS
uniforms he had his tailor make up. On the other hand, he professed to hate
homosexuals, and would torture and kill any of his men he thought might be
Trolo limp-wrists."
"That
fuck head is one seriously disturbed dude," Chris said.
Then I
spotted another strange thing. Some of the evidence included expensive
furniture and goods seized from Carlos's island hideout in the Caribbean. Laid
against the concrete block wall of the cellar was a big slab of wood. It looked
like a piece of a ripped out wall, pocked with suspicious-looking holes.
"Are
those bullet holes?" I asked.
"Yeah,
that was from the big shootout when we raided the Cay where Carlos was holed
up," the DEA Agent said. "I told Billy (Friedkin) all about it."
"Mind
telling us, too?" I asked. I mean, shit, we were writing this thing, not
Billy. "First off, which Cay are we talking about? I mean, was it one of
the cays off Antigua, or Trinidad, or something?'
The DEA
Agent shook his head. "I can't say," he told me. "All I can tell
you is that it was a little Cay off a Caribbean island-nation that can't be
named. We had to get permission from the Prime Minister to stage the
raid." (It's now known that Carlos was holed up at Norman's Cay.)
He looked
disgusted. "The asshole and his entire cabinet and police force were reportedly being
paid off by the drug cartels. We had to do some serious arm-twisting to get
permission for the raid. Part of the deal was that the details, including the
location, had to remain secret."
The DEA
Agent paused, thinking it through. He looked at the other agents moving through
the cellar, clearly trying to Big Ear our conversation. Finally, he said,
"Why don't we adjourn for lunch? I'll fill you in over a few beers."
We were on
the second beer when he said, "Okay, here's what happened. The Americans
we busted had clued us in on Carlos's favorite midway station. It was that
little nameless Cay I mentioned. Dope would come in from Columbia, mainly by
plane, but also by boat, and it would be held there until my American Perp and
his guys flew in to do their thing. Sacks of cash for sacks of dope, and so on.
"There
were over a dozen villas on the Cay, some small businesses, shops, a nightclub,
that sort of thing. But Carlos drove all the other residents out. Scared shit
out of them, then bought their places for ten cents on the dollar. So, he
basically had the whole Cay for himself and his crew - along with their
girlfriends and people to wait on them and do the scut work.
"As
far as the merchants and the nightclub people were concerned, their ship had come
in with Carlos at the wheel. Money flowed from him like water and they were
wallowing in the stuff.
"Eventually,
me and my partner made two trips to that Cay." He grinned at the memory,
saying, "It was real Navy SEAL shit. Dark of night. Rowing in from
something the Navy, or the Coasties had dug up for us just offshore. Blackened
faces... stealthy weapons... the whole enchilada.
"We
cased the island, spotted the planes, landing areas and the villas Carlos and
his boys were using. The other places were all boarded up and empty. At night,
it was one scary-looking island.
"Then
comes the big night for the big raid. Word was that Carlos Lehder himself was
in residence. We had to get further permission from the Prime Minister for the
raid, which bothered the hell out of us, but what could we do? The Brass said
we had to, so we had to.
"So,
there were like twelve of us. I take one group... my partner the other. We
close in on the main villa.. the one we were pretty sure Carlos was at. And
damn, the whole place was lit up as if there was some kind of big party. But
there was no music... just guys shouting orders and revving engines.
"Then
all of a sudden vehicles bust out of the villa and are heading away. And people
start shooting. I don't know how it started - I just know it wasn't us shooting
first. Then everything goes crazy. Shouting and shooting and vehicles crashing
across the dunes.
"Me
and my guys got to the main house. We were taking fire like crazy. Then all of
a sudden the shooting inside the villa stopped and a couple of Latinos were
shouting in Spanish that they were surrendering.
"Well,
we go in fast. Secure the prisoners. Give the house a fast search, but no
Carlos. And I am really pissed, but I'm hoping like hell that my partner and
his team managed to bag him. They'd gone charging over the dunes after the
vehicles, which were heading for the landing field.
|
One That Didn't Get Away |
"He
told me later there was an exchange of gunfire at the field, but the firefight
was pretty short. Everybody was too busy trying to scramble on planes. The
seaplane tried to take off, but they stopped it. But, son of a bitch, if a
couple of the other planes didn't manage to get away."
"So,
Carlos was gone," I said.
The DEA
Agent sighed. "Carlos was gone," he confirmed. "Obviously,
somebody in the government had tipped him off about the raid."
Chris
called for another round and we all lit up fresh smokes. In the silence, my
partner and I scribbled more notes.
Finally, I
asked, "What then?"
"What
else?" the DEA Agent said. "I followed him to Medellin."
We were
agog. Chris said, "By yourself?"
"Yeah,
by myself," the DEA Agent said. "My bosses didn't want any of us to
go. The way they saw it, we were hitting on all eight cylinders. We had
arrested all those American smugglers. Sure, Carlos escaped in the raid, but
we'd done him serious harm. Nobody on our side was hurt. But several of his
people were dead or wounded.
"Plus,
we seized a huge haul of cocaine. And money... shit there was so much money.
Stacks, and stacks of bills - all big bills. Filled up a whole damned room. We
even seized two money machines they used to count it. High speed machines - the
kind the major banks use."
I said,
"I saw them in the basement. Man, to think you've got so much money that
you need not one, but two special high speed machines to count it."
Chris
said, "The Brass wanted to declare victory."
"Exactly,"
the DEA Agent said. "But I'd already spent six damned years on the case.
And I was all fired up and there was no way I was going to stop."
"So,
your bosses relented?" I asked.
The DEA
Agent snorted. "Not on your life. But I had vacation time coming, so I
took it. Then I bought myself a round trip ticket to Columbia, packed a bag and
headed for Medellin on my own dime."
He told us
that he made like an ordinary tourist, staying at a mid-priced hotel. He
couldn't bring his gun without alerting the authorities - guys he had reason
not to trust - so the week he spent there was a very nervous week.
"I
had a contact," he said. "A guy we sort of trusted, who provided us
with information now and again."
"Sort
of trusted?" Chris said.
The DEA
Agent shrugged. "He was a paid informant," he said.
I said,
"My dad always said that you could never trust a spy who did it solely for
money. The best information came from patriots who were pissed off at the way
their country was being run."
"That's
right, your dad was Agency," the DEA Agent said. He thought a second, then
added, "Your dad was right. At first the guy came on like my best friend.
He was taking me here and there, showing me the places where the Cartel did
their business, or had their pleasure.
"He
even drove me out into the country, where Carlos kept house. I dressed like a
local and the two of us wandered around the little town there. He showed me the
police station, which was pretty fancy for such an unimportant place.
"But
he said Carlos built it for the cops. And that he used to come by regularly,
like once a month, or more. And the local people would line up outside the
station and be escorted in, one-by-one, to meet El Patron. Carlos would
personally settle arguments, and pass out gifts of money and so forth, acting
like one of those kings in the Days Of Old."
"Then
the contact found out your were there on your own?" I guessed.
The DEA
Agent said, "Something like that. The main thing he realized was that I
didn't have any money for him. He was working gratis. And this was a guy who
made his living playing both sides.
"Then,
one night, he set up a meet at a bar, but when I got there he didn't show.
"Instead, I saw some nasty-looking guys there who were acting way too
curious about me. So, I got the hell out. Next day, I took a plane home."
"So,
the trip was a waste of time," I said.
"Not
really," the DEA Agent said. "Word got out that I had been in
Medellin. Well, not me, exactly. But somebody from the DEA. And it shook up the
Cartel bosses that we had no fear about sending people right into Carlos's
front yard.
"Also,
the raid on the Cay cost Carlos big. All that dope, all that money, all those
guns, all those planes and boats - gone! And before that, we had cut off one of
his main conduits to the States. The American Cracker and his gang. That made
Carlos look weak to the bosses. And there were already some younger guys
wanting to take his place."
He
shrugged, then said, "Next time we asked, the government suddenly agreed
that Carlos Lehder was one bad son of a bitch. And that he had not only broken
a lot of Columbian laws, but he'd done even worse things to their buddies, the
good old USA.
|
Carlos Lehder |
"Then
they arrested him. Put him in chains. Ordered his ass extradited. So, we
stuffed him in a plane and flew him to Tampa for processing, then Jacksonville
to face trial."
"And
that was the end of Carlos Lehder," Chris said.
The DEA
Agent leaned back in his chair, a wide smile on his face. "Yeah, he was
done."
Chris and
I finished scrawling notes, then I asked, "Now, that it's all over... I
mean, you spent years on this case... and suddenly it's over. Doesn't that make
you feel weird? You have to admit that Carlos Lehder and the others became an
obsession. So, how do you motivate yourself out of bed these days?"
The DEA
Agent looked weary. He said, "To my surprise, it bothered me a lot for a
time," he said. "But I have a new wife, and she keeps me settled
down."
Then he
brightened. He said, "Besides, I've got myself a new goal. A new
target."
"Anything
you can tell us about?" I asked.
"Only
this," he said. "When I'm done here I'm flying to Aspen."
Chris
said, "Those poor fuckers in Aspen."
DISSOLVE
TO: MY HOME AND OUR OFFICE IN VENICE BEACH.
Chris and
I wrote up a thirty-page outline of Target: Carlos. Friedkin liked it, but had
a few suggested changes to make, then put us into script.
One of the
changes he wanted involved telephones. He said he hated scenes where characters
exchanged information on the phone. He preferred to see them on camera -
face-to-face. We had a few scenes like that - after all, Crime is mainly
planned and carried out by phone. In those days, real life bad guys always kept
bags of coins at hand to use in a nice safe, unbugable pay phone. Anyway, if
Billy didn't want phones, we'd take out the phones. No problem. And I sort of
got his point.
I wonder,
however, if I asked him about it now what he'd say. With everyone carrying at
least one cell phone it would look unnatural if nobody used them. These days,
one of the things a writer has to figure out is how to set up the plot so that
the Good Guy can't get to their cell phone when the shit hits the fan. He
mislays it. Or, remarks that the battery is getting weak and either he's
misplaced the car charger, or there is no car. If not, the audience wonders,
why don't they just use their cell? Call 911? Turn out the cavalry?
Then came
the day when we finished the first draft. Gave it a fast polish and messengered
the script over to Friedkin's office.
A little
over a week passed. The phone rang. Chris grabbed, heard the secretary say Mr.
Friedkin was on the line, and punched the speaker button so we could both
listen and talk.
Billy came
on. "Boys," he said. "I'm back to where we started. I got some
good news and some bad news."
Chris and
I looked at each other. Oh, maaannn!!!
Chris
said, "Last time we asked for the bad news first. How about this time, the
good news?"
Friedkin
said, "The good news is that I read Target: Carlos and loved it. One of
the best first drafts I've ever read."
We
breathed a sigh of relief.
"That's
high praise coming from you, Billy," I said. "Thanks."
But now we
knew the other shoe just had to fucking drop.
"What's
the bad news?" I asked.
Billy
sighed. "The bad news," he said, "is that the deal with Showtime
is kaput. No movie."
"What
the fuck?" Chris said. "We thought you had a deal already in
place."
"I
did," Billy said. "But you know, that deal always galled me. I
thought they made me give up too much. So I had my agent to renegotiate the
terms. They eventually agreed to give me the full control I wanted. But not the
money. My agent played real hardball with them. Really pushed."
"And
they didn't blink," I said, feeling the floor fall away.
"No,
I guess they didn't," Friedkin said. "But don't worry, boys. You'll
still get the rest of the script money. The full boat, plus a bonus."
"That's
good," Chris said. But his heart wasn't in it. Writers aren't in the game
for the money. All we want is enough to live on - and write.
We
exchanged a few more comments, mostly bullshit. Great working with you, blah,
blah. We'll do it again, and so on and so fucking forth.
We hung
up.
I put my
head on the desk and said, "Shit, shit, shit."
"And
fall back in it," Chris said.
NEXT: THE
REAL STARS OF HOLLYWOOD
*****
THE NEW STEN OMNIBUS EDITIONS
Orbit Books in the U.K. has gathered up all eight novels in the Sten Series and is publishing them as three omnibus editions. The First - BATTLECRY - features the first three books in the series: Sten #1; Sten #2 -The Wolf Worlds; and Sten #3, The Court Of A Thousand Suns. It is available now. (Click this link to buy it.) The Kindle Edition OF BATTLECRY, includes all three books but is only available in the U.K. and territories. (Click this link to buy it.) Coming in November: JUGGERNAUT, which features the next three books: Sten #4, Fleet Of The Damned; Sten #5, Revenge Of The Damned; and Sten #6, The Return Of the Emperor. In the following months Orbit (A division of Little Brown) will publish DEATH MATCH, which will feature Sten #7, Vortex, and Sten #8, End Of Empire. Those will be issued as Kindle editions as well. Stay tuned for details.
*****
THE COMPLETE MISADVENTURES: IT'S A BOOK!
THE VITAL LINKS:
The MisAdventures began humbly enough - with about 2,000 readers. When it rose to over 50,000 (we've now passed the 175,000 mark) I started listening to those of you who urged me to collect the stories into a book. Starting at the beginning, I went back and rewrote the essays, adding new detail and events as they came to mind. This book is the result of that effort. However, I'm mindful of the fact, Gentle Reader, that you also enjoy having these little offerings posted every Friday to put a smile on your face for the weekend. So I'll continue running them until it reaches the final Fade Out. Meanwhile, it would please the heart of this ink-stained wretch - as well as tickle whatever that hard black thing is in my banker's chest - if you bought the book. It will make a great gift, don't you think? And if you'd like a personally autographed copy you can get it directly through my (ahem) Merchant's Link at Amazon.com. Click here. Buy the book and I will sign it and ship it to you. Break a leg!
*****
STEN #1 DEBUTS IN SPANISH!
*****
Sten debuta # 1 en español! Narrada en cuatro partes, Episode Dos ahora aparece en la revista Diaspar, la mejor revista de SF & F en América del Sur!
*****
THE STEN COOKBOOK & KILGOUR JOKEBOOK
Two new companion editions to the international best-selling Sten series. In the first, learn the Emperor's most closely held cooking secrets. In the other, Sten unleashes his shaggy-dog joke cracking sidekick, Alex Kilgour. Both available as trade paperbacks or in all major e-book flavors. Click here to tickle your funny bone or sizzle your palate.
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