Dad didn’t get an obit anywhere.
Or did he?
A plaque somewhere in the Foreign Ministry, or on an anonymous wall in that big, windowless, Che-covered Lubyanka in the Plaza de la Revolución?
Maybe. I don’t know.
A week after the hit a DGI colonel came to see me. He was carrying a cardboard box and something wrapped in tissue paper. He put the box on my table and made me sign papers in triplicate saying that I’d received it.
The thing in tissue paper was my father’s pistol.
I put it in a drawer.
I let the box sit there until dark.
I flipped the switch and the lights came on.
I opened the lid.
Letters. More than a hundred, from Dad to me. Some of them contained money. Five hundred-dollar bills for a dress for my
Of course-tears.
Tears all night and into the morning and the next day.
Oh, Papi.
It’s going to come. The end of days. Even for you, Jefe, Little Jefe, even for you.
I read the letters, showed them to Ricky and Mom.
I took a sick day. Then I went back to work. The autopsy. The German Embassy. Reports. I began a letter to Francisco, and on the Prado I ran into Felipe, the waiter/baby killer I had arrested the night Ricky returned with his notes. He grinned at me, unable to quite place where we had met before…
Sleep.
Wake.
So go the days.
The Malecón at dusk. The castle before me, the faded grandeur of crumbling hotels, boy jockeys along the seawall, fire belching from the oil refinery in the bay.
The lights on the water are fishing boats and perhaps, beyond the horizon, American yachts in the Dry Tortugas.
I walk on the Malecón and I see the future.
Cell phones, personal computers. The end of ration cards, the end of ID papers, the end of summary arrest. And what happens to the policeman then?
I walk on the Malecón and I see the past. I know you now, Papa. I know your real name. That secret part you concealed from us. You went and you didn’t take us with you. You lied. That was your job, but still, you lied.
I missed you.
I missed you my whole life.
I walk on the Malecón and I see the present. No one sleeps. Everyone sleeps. The police, the beachcombers, the pretty boys and their teenage pimps.
Oh, Havana.
City of hungry doctors.
City of beautiful whores.
City of dead dreams.
I’m tired of you.
I want to be the sea.
I want to spirit myself away. Under the moon, across the starlit waves, with my arms spread out, with fresh-cut flowers in my hair.
Where will I go?
Santiago. Nueva York. Miami.
The forbidden places. The other world.
North, with the egrets and the spoonbills and the blue-plumed tocororo.
Across the cays.
Into the stream.
Dark waves.
Sea spray.
Skimming the blue.
And no one sees. Not the police. Not the navy. Not the brides of the orishas skilled in Santería.
North.
As the sailfish jump.
As the marlins dive.
North.
Always north.
Until the stars cease their wanderings.
Until the sun opens her tired eyes.
And I’ll fly alone.
And I’ll forgive the past.
And I’ll turn the brightness outward.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
ADRIAN MCKINTY was born and grew up in Carrickfergus, Northern Ireland. After studying philosophy at Oxford University he moved to Harlem, New York, and found work in bars, bookstores, and building sites.
In 2001 he relocated to Denver, Colorado, where he taught high school English. His debut crime novel,
Adrian currently lives in Melbourne, Australia, with his wife and daughters. He was working on a sequel to