18

Tomlinson and Vue left by boat before noon with some of our gear to lighten the plane. It would give us additional range and speed. But Vue had brought a couple of boxes for us-food, I was told-so the difference would not be striking.

Once ashore, they would drive a rented Land Rover south to a safe place to overnight.

As they said good-bye, I heard the president tell Tomlinson, “When you get back to Sanibel, you will receive an envelope containing the information I promised you.”

I wondered if a similar envelope would be awaiting me.

An hour later, a single-engine aircraft-another Cessna, Wilson said-circled the island once, showing an interest that made us both uneasy. The Maule was covered with camouflage netting, but that was no guarantee.

It was rare to see a plane in this part of the world. The airstrip hadn’t been used in months. Locals still traveled by dugout canoe and fished with nets woven by hand.

The plane banked as if to make another pass but turned south instead. Had the pilot lost interest? Or had thunderheads, stalled to the east, forced him onward?

I’d been trying to buy time, hoping General Juan Rivera would show, but also thinking I don’t need a weapon. A bullet is not how Praxcedes Lourdes should die.

No, I didn’t need a weapon. I knew what it was like to have the man by the throat; to feel reflex contractions caused by fear, not flames. Bullies are driven by cowardice. It was the only normal human characteristic I could assign to Lourdes.

But Kal Wilson was an impatient man. This island was now poison to him.

“We need to get under way.” Wilson had been worried about the weather, now there was a plane to think about.

I said, “I really think you should cut me loose. He was here, I can pick up his trail. When the local police arrive, I can talk to them. Maybe they’ll know something.”

Wilson’s expression said Why are we having this discussion again? “That was six months ago.”

“But Lourdes grew up here. There’s a settlement of Miskito Indians not far, on the coast. They have a communications network better than any telegraph. They’ll know he’s out. They might know where he is. They’re terrified of him, so they keep track.”

Wilson wouldn’t budge. “We have to be in Panama by tomorrow. Why are you stalling? You’re expecting someone, aren’t you?”

I told him yes, that I’d e-mailed a man who might have the equipment I need.

“Who?”

Wilson had every reason to despise Juan Rivera, even though both men had been out of the political spotlight for years. But that’s not the reason I replied, “I’d rather not say, sir. He would expect me to keep his name confidential.”

“Did he tell you that?”

“No. But I would expect the same of him.”

“Sorry. You said you need at least a day to get set up? This will give you extra time.”

No, I had said I needed a week but didn’t correct him. The president was still shaken by what we’d found on the rim of the volcano and by what Tomlinson had told him.

What that was, exactly, I didn’t know. I’d gotten Tomlinson off alone, but he was emotionally drained. I didn’t chide him when he opened the silver cigarette case he carries while traveling and lit another joint.

“Bad?”

He inhaled, waited for a moment, attuned to his internal chemistry, before he exhaled. “Horrible.” Meaning, how Wray Wilson had died. “Praxcedes Lourdes was here. The evil one. He had three or four men with him.”

Although the case was plea-bargained, Tomlinson had been deposed as a witness against Lourdes because he is friends with my son. Tomlinson had actually faced Lourdes once, in a courthouse hallway.

Since that day, he has always referred to Lourdes as “The Evil One,” as if the term should be capitalized.

There are times when I wrestle with the possibility that Tomlinson really does have extrasensory powers. But then I remind myself it is a mistake to confuse empathy with telepathy. For Tomlinson, the pain of others is as palpable as vapor, as contagious as a virus. It seeps into his brain, then his soul. He doesn’t just empathize, he absorbs. Tomlinson says he loves people for their flaws because flaws are the conduits of humanity.

Like many who spend their lives outdoors, he also has a heightened awareness of sensory anomalies. The stink of charred adipose is uncommon at sea.

I asked, “What did you tell the president?”

“The truth. You can’t lie to a man like that. But I softened it as much as I could. There were details… details about those poor, poor people… what they went through before… before…”

Tomlinson stopped as if waiting for pain to fade. He looked at me with his wise, sad Buddha eyes. “For Wray Wilson, the worst part was the silence of the flames. Water, wind, earth, and fire-all elemental. But combustion isn’t a substance, it’s a chain reaction. To a woman unable to hear? Fire is deafening.”

I packed the camouflage netting as the president went through his preflight. We left the volcanoes of Lake Nicaragua behind, flying south.

Less than two hours later, we landed at a place I hadn’t seen for many years-the Azuero Peninsula, on the Pacific coast of Panama. Rock, opal sea, jungle. There was a tuna research facility nearby operated by my friend Vern Scholey.

As Wilson idled the plane toward what looked like a seaside cattle ranch, he told me, “A man’s supposed to meet us here at three. But we’re early and he’s one of those pompous asses who’s always late.”

I knew he wasn’t talking about Vern.

Four hours later, at sunset, the man arrived. Turned out the pompous ass was Kal Wilson’s adversary, General Juan Rivera.

Rivera hadn’t gotten my e-mail. And he wasn’t in Panama to see me.

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