Read Six Minutes To Freedom Online

Authors: John Gilstrap,Kurt Muse

Six Minutes To Freedom (18 page)

Perry eyed the guards for a long moment and then pushed past them. There wasn’t a scenario he could think of that would allow a PDF nobodyto shoot a lieutenant colonel in the U.S. Army. He went to the heavy wooden door to Madriñán’s office with the intention of marchingright in, but he found it locked, and he pounded with his fist.
The guards moved in close, to threaten him, but they kept their hands to themselves. “Stop!” they commanded.
But Perry kept pounding.
Finally, the door opened, and there was Nivaldo Madriñán, his face red with rage.
Perry gave his most officious smile. “Good afternoon, Colonel. I’m glad to see you’ve returned. We’re here to see Kurt Muse.”
Madriñán snorted, “You have no right.”
“I have every right. He is an American citizen and a dependent of a U.S. military employee. Do I need to show you the Treaty?”
Madriñán’s eyes burned with rage. He knew that Perry was right.
“This needn’t be ugly, Colonel,” Perry said. “But I won’t hesitate to make it so.”
Madriñán stewed for a moment and then nodded. “Come back in one hour. You can see him then.”
“After the press conference?” Perry said.
“In one hour.”
Madriñán closed the door, and that was the end of it.
22
Kurt did not expect the press conference to be as intimidatingas it was. The room was packed wall to wall with people. He figured they must be the representatives of the press, but truthfully, he didn’t realize that there were this many reporters in Panama. In a sense, he was right; of the dozens of reporters crammed into the room, none were from any Panamanian newspaper. This was the foreign press. The Panamanians got their news directly from Noriega’s propagandamachine. After so many sleepless hours, the flashes of the camerastrobes and the commotion of the shouted questions made him feel disoriented and dizzy, and the resulting images showed it. Only, in the pictures he didn’t look tired and disoriented; he looked frightened and guilty as hell.
They brought him in from the side, after reminding him of the ground rules: no questions and no answers. He was to stand there and be a puppet for their outrageous accusations. Along the front of the room, they’d lined a table and the floor with what appeared to be everythingthat he owned. There were the various transmitters, three of them in all, plus the boxes they’d been sent in. They had his computer, two-wayradio, scanner, and various notebooks. The guns they’d taken from the house were also prominently displayed. Honestly, if it had been differentcircumstances on a different day, he himself would have been impressedwith the size of the cache. He’d never seen it all gathered in one spot like this. He and his gang had done one hell of a job.
Madriñán made the presentation. Kurt Frederick Muse, it turned out, citizen of the United States of America, was an employee of the U.S. Department of State and had confessed his direct participation in a destabilization plan involving clandestine television and radio stations.The American government had provided him with this $300,000 worth of clandestine electronic equipment, the purpose of which was to bring harm to the free and independent peoples of Panama.
It went on from there, and Kurt found himself stunned. First of all, last time he’d heard, he’d been a Yankee dog working for the CIA, and now he’d learned that he was a Yankee dog working for the State Department.Who knew? And if he’d known that he could get anything close to $300,000 for the $5,000 or $6,000 worth of gear, he might have cashed out a long time ago.
This whole show was a sham, and deep in his heart he knew that the people who mattered to him would know that every word they heard from the podium here was a lie. Of course, a press corps that agreed to ask no questions of the accused would clearly ask no questionsof his accusers, so the Latin American press would believe everything—evenif they knew better. This was how this part of the world operated. The truth was important, but staying alive was better.
The entire press conference, such as it was, lasted all of ten minutes. It was a diatribe about the evil influence of the Yankee imperialists on the beneficent and peaceful leadership of Manuel Noriega. When Madriñán was done speaking, he turned to leave the podium, and the guards closed in around Kurt to urge him to follow.
Kurt had nearly reached the exit door when an American reporter rushed forward and shoved a microphone under his chin. “Mr. Muse, do you work for the U.S. State Department?”
Kurt didn’t drop a beat. “No.”
“Have you ever worked for them?”
“No, I have never worked for them.”
It was all they could get on the record before the reporter was pushed out of the way.
 
Across town, in the comfort of an apartment he hadn’t left for five days and surrounded by enough firepower to repulse a small army, Pablo Martinez watched the press conference on television. The man he saw on television was a mere ghost of the man he had known for so many years as Kurt Muse. Unshaven and clearly unshowered, he appearedto have lost ten pounds. There was an ashen quality about him, and a deer-in-the-headlights stare that spoke of some form of abuse while in captivity.
But through the gaunt exhaustion, Pablo also saw a measure of defiantstrength. Whatever he had done, and whatever he had signed, he hadn’t crossed the line of betrayal.
His suspicions were confirmed as Pablo listened carefully as Colonel Madriñán read Kurt’s confession. The words themselves were irrelevant;he assumed them all to be lies. What he listened for were key phrases. He heard,
Kurt Muse did this
and
Mr. Muse did that
. He heard about the involvement of the State Department (imagine how surprised the diplomatic corps will be!) and he heard about the attemptof one man—a hated American—to bring down the Noriega government. He heard it all, but never once heard the word “conspiracy.”He never heard a mention of a “them” at all; it was all about what Kurt had done.
As inconceivable as it was, Kurt had withstood the misery and depravitythat the PDF had thrown at him and never once mentioned the names of the people with whom he had worked so closely.
If he hadn’t broken yet, Pablo figured, he never would. He realized that it was safe to come out of hiding.
23
It seemed important to Madriñán that Perry and his entourage—alittle larger on this return trip—see the cache of equipment they had on display in the room that was now devoid of reporters. The guards deliberately took a long way around to the commander’s office, presumably for the express purpose of making sure the equipment was seen and noted. Of particular interest, Perry thought, was the prominentlydisplayed label on one of the boxes showing the shipping destinationto be the Program Development Group at Fort Clayton. He also noted that the shipping address was an APO box, which meant that it had been shipped on military aircraft, presumably without Woerner’s knowledge or permission. The general was going to shit a brick when he found out.
As they walked, Perry fell back in the line to tell one of the junior officers in their party to take a close look at the radio equipment and write down any serial numbers he could find. There was no telling what kind of justice Kurt Muse was likely to see in this armpit of a place, and it seemed like the least they could do to make sure that the evidence itself was not tainted.
In the sixty minutes that had passed since their last meeting, Perry had thought through their strategy one more time. According to the ground rules established by Jimmy Carter during the negotiations that would hand over one of the world’s most valuable assets to one of its craziest citizens, the entire deal could be queered by even minor treaty violations during the interim period. Being robbed of billions of dollarshad to be one of Noriega’s greatest fears, and Perry figured that the Pineapple’s orders to his underlings had to make that point abundantlyclear.
And that was the pressure point on which Perry and his entourage would focus. The treaty was very precise in its language governing the treatment of Defense Department employees in the custody of local law enforcement officials, and Perry was going to see to it that the i’s were dotted and the t’s crossed.
With the one officer left behind, Perry and Jim Ruffer eventually arrivedat Madriñán’s door, which the guard opened without knocking, and ushered them inside. Madriñán sat behind his huge wooden desk, which itself was dwarfed by the cavernous size of the room. He rose grudgingly to greet his visitors and scowled when he counted their numbers.
“Where are the others?” he asked the guard.
Perry answered for him. “They’re back in the other room, looking at the radio equipment.”
Madriñán looked horrified. He shot a glance to the guard for confirmation.
“We’re just noting the serial numbers,” Perry said, as if it meant nothing. “I don’t think you have to worry.”
“Stop them!” Madriñán commanded to the guard, who seemed suddenly frightened. “Right now. Go out there and stop them.” The guard damn near turned himself inside out leaving the office.
“I’ll remind you that this is my office, not yours,” Madriñán said.
Perry tossed off a shrug. “Are you prepared to produce your prisoner?”
You could almost hear the wheels spinning in Madriñán’s head as he considered his options, which were essentially zero. He’d seen the treaty, and by now, after all these days of nonstop interrogation, he surely knew that its provisions were relevant to Muse’s case. Finally, Madriñán nodded to a henchman, who in turn opened a side door and ushered his prisoner into the room.
 
Jim Ruffer was appalled. The man he saw entering the room clearly had been worked over. He was taller than Jim had been expecting, and he walked with the shuffling gate of someone who had been shackled. He kept his hands to his sides, and his eyes cast downward, until he saw the American uniforms and then his face brightened.
One of the DENI guards pointed to a chair at a small table, and the prisoner sat down, his hands folded in front of him.
“Are you Kurt Frederick Muse?” Perry asked.
Kurt nodded. “Yes, sir.” His eyes were bloodshot, Jim noticed, and he appeared to be very, very tired.
“I’m Lieutenant Colonel Robert Perry, and this is Doctor Jim Ruffer.I’m the Treaty Affairs officer here in Panama, and we’re here to make sure that you’re treated properly under the terms of the Panama Canal Treaty.” He went on at some length, explaining Kurt’s right to legal representation and to fair treatment, but Jim had the sense that the speech was more for the benefit of the DENI officers than it was for their prisoner. When he was done with the legal details, Perry said, “We’re working to arrange a Panamanian lawyer for you. I brought Doctor Ruffer along to assess your health and to make sure that you have not been mistreated.”
Ruffer took that as his cue and stepped forward. “I need some privacy,please. I’d like to be alone with my patient.”
Madriñán’s face remained grim. “That is not possible,” he said.
Jim looked to Perry for support.
“He’s legally entitled to medical care,” Perry said.
“Indeed. Examine him. But nowhere in the treaty is he entitled to a private room while the examination takes place.”
Perry’s posture alone told Ruffer that they’d lost this one. He sat down next to Kurt and opened his doctor’s bag. As he did, he noticed that the official party moved away from them. Rhetoric notwithstanding,nobody likes to stand too close to someone else’s medical exam.
“How are you?” Ruffer asked, keeping his voice as low as he could.
“Not bad,” Kurt said.
“Do you mind if I examine you?”
Kurt shrugged. “I suppose not.”
“We just want to make sure that your overall health is good.” Jim slipped a blood pressure cuff onto Kurt’s arm and inflated it. “Your eyes are red,” he said. “Have you been crying?”
“No.” And if he had been, he wouldn’t have admitted it.
“What about your interrogations. What have they been like?”
“Lots and lots of questions.”
“Have you been beaten?”
“No, sir.”
Jim noted that each answer brought definite eye contact, reassuring him that Kurt was telling the truth. “Any mistreatment at all? Don’t be afraid to tell me if there has.”
The fleeting temptation to report the murder of the Colombian evaporated the instant it appeared. This was not the forum, and nothingwould bring the man back. “Just lack of sleep,” Kurt said. “I haven’t slept in days. I haven’t washed or changed clothes, either. I bet I’m gettingpretty rank.”
Actually, he was. “Your blood pressure’s normal,” Jim said, his voice even softer than before.
“They told me that my family is in danger,” Kurt said.
“They lied.” Ruffer said this with a wink and a smile. Perry had anticipatedthis question and told him to assure Kurt that his family was perfectly safe. “Don’t ask for details because I don’t know any, but your family is perfectly fine.”
“Are they still in Panama?” Kurt whispered.
“They’re fine,” Jim repeated. Subtext: We’re not discussing this here.
Kurt understood. “Please make sure they know that I’m okay.”
“We don’t know that yet, do we?”
“Tell them anyway, no matter what.”
Ruffer didn’t commit one way or the other. First of all, he had no idea whether he’d ever be in direct contact with the Muse family, and even if he would, he had no idea what he’d be empowered to say. He put the BP cuff away and removed another tiny medical kit from his bag. This was the lighted scope he used to examine a patient’s ears, nose, and mouth. It came housed in a case, and as he opened the top, he turned it so that Kurt could see the inside of the lid. There, Jim had taped a piece of paper with a snippet of a William Wordsworth poem:
Our birth is but a sleep and a forgetting.—Wordsworth
Jim shined the light into Kurt’s left ear and leaned in close to take a look. “Read the lid, Kurt,” he whispered. To anyone else, it looked like a normal ear exam. “It may feel sometimes as if you are alone, but remember that you never really are. We’re going to work to get you someplace safe, and hopefully get you out of here entirely, but these things can take time.” He pulled away and crossed behind to examine his right ear. “If bad things happen, if they beat you or abuse you in any way, you need to let us know.”
“How?”
It was a good question. “That will become clear in a while.” That was a total bluff. Jim had no idea how they were going to communicateafter this meeting. “Do you need anything now?”
“Clothes,” Kurt said. “I have my suitcase still, but nothing for the heat.”
“I’ll see what I can do. Anything else?”
Kurt thought for a moment, keeping his sights focused on hittable targets. “Just make sure that Annie knows that I’m safe and that I’m being strong.”
Jim nodded and winked. “Done,” he said. “Now watch this.”
Dr. James Ruffer, Lieutenant Colonel, United States Air Force, snapped his examination kit closed and stuffed it into his medical bag. He snatched the bag into his hand and strode over to the official party. His demeanor and gait drew their attention immediately.
“I see you’ve worked him over pretty good, Colonel,” he said to Madriñán. “How dare you treat an American citizen with such utter disregard.” Turning to Perry, he gave his official report. “He looks terrible,Colonel. His blood pressure is high, he’s clearly suffering from exhaustion, brought on by the unrelenting interrogation pressure and denial of rest. This clearly is a violation of the Treaty.”
Those were the magic words—the ones that Noriega most feared. Madriñán seemed confused, but the fact that he didn’t argue told Rufferthat through a little fabrication, he’d landed very close to the truth.
“Unacceptable,” Perry said. “Utterly unacceptable.”
“I fear for Mr. Muse’s continued safety,” Ruffer said. Without any preparation or rehearsal, he and Perry seemed to be building to the same point.
To Madriñán, Perry said, “The Treaty clearly states that we have a right to see any American citizen in your custody, and we have a right to monitor his medical condition.”
Madriñán thought about that. “We have no objection to a reasonablenumber of visits.”
“Every other day,” Ruffer said, out of nowhere. “I must see him every other day to properly monitor his condition.”
Madriñán’s jaw dropped. “That’s ridiculous!”
“It’s our demand,” Perry said. “Unless you want to turn this into an issue of Treaty violation.”
Madriñán’s face reddened, but clearly he understood that he had no cards left to play. “All right, then. You can see him in Modelo Prison beginning the day after tomorrow. I will provide you with a schedule and from there—”
“No, Colonel,” Perry interrupted. “I will provide
you
with a schedule,and you will make every effort to honor it. Now, when do you plan to file formal charges against Mr. Muse?”
Madriñán glared. He was not used to being bossed around, and he didn’t like it one bit. “In due time,” he said. He nodded to the guards to take Kurt away. To the remaining guards he said, “Please help our visitors find their way out.”

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