Excerpt: Corbalo's Gold
CHAPTER ONE
Fifty-year-old Taylor Barnes liked to think of himself
as a well-adjusted, reasonably attractive, late bloomer with a fairly firm grasp
on reality. So it is therefore no
great wonder that he was feeling somewhat out of place in the office of Dr.
Nathan Fisher, Psychiatrist- perhaps not unlike the pope might feel at a porno
flick.
"You said on the phone, Mr. Barnes, that you think you
may have lost control. Would you
like to tell me about it?" Fisher
began tapping his number two Ticonderoga on the yellow legal in his lap and
Barnes felt caught in the gaze of those steel gray eyes that looked like they
could penetrate right into his brain if he'd let them.
Fidgeting a little he looked around the room at the furnishings.
It was just the way he'd thought it would be- should be, at these prices,
and on the twentieth floor of a Miami skyscraper- all leather and mahogany with
just a faint smell of pipe tobacco hanging in the air. He
was beginning to wish he hadn't come. Maybe
this whole thing was a big mistake. By
the phrasing of that opening question Fisher had already made himself, to
Barnes, the quintessential shrink; patronizingly intimidating, unnervingly
condescending.
"That was what you said, wasn't it, Mr. Barnes?"
Fisher prompted.
"What, that I may have lost control?
Well yeah, I guess- but not the way you make it sound. What I meant is that I'm starting to think maybe something
that happened to me a couple of years ago went a little beyond the normal realm
of coincidence. When I look back on
what took place in my life in the spring and summer of eighty-five, I just have
to wonder if that whole scenario wasn't choreographed by somebody.
And if that's not crazy enough for you, I'm wondering if that somebody
might be a pirate who died a hundred and seventy-five years ago."
"Is that what you believe?"
Fisher tapped the number two against his raised left eyebrow.
"I don't want to believe it.
I'd much rather go with that old adage... How does it go? 'The swift don't always have the race or the mighty ones the
battle, for time and chance befall them all.'
I guess in today's language that translates into 'Stuff happens.'"
Barnes grinned and Fisher wrote something on his pad about
euphemistic creativity.
"You feel that's a better answer?"
"It's certainly a more preferable one.
It's an answer I can live with anyway."
"And the other idea?"
"The other idea is crazy- that some long gone pirate was
using us to finish something he wasn't able to while he was still alive. That's the answer I can't live with, but it's the one that
makes the most sense. I can just
see this weirdo, up in the sky in a big crow's nest, pushing buttons and pulling
strings, dumping this huge jackpot in our laps, then throwing every
unpredictable obstacle in our path and giggling at all those predictable
mistakes he knew we'd make."
"So there were others involved?"
"Yeah... There
were." A shadow crossed Barnes' face and Fisher wrote something else
on his pad. "And that's why
it's so hard to figure. The timing
had to have been perfect. If I
hadn't just buried my wife a few short weeks before meeting Julie, things
couldn't have fallen into place the way they did.
I would never have gotten involved with Sydney Tuck, never met Beek
McGill, or got on the wrong side of Slick Moran.
I know I would never have developed an affinity with Don Corbalo Delarosa
and his cause, and I sure as hell would never have gotten my hands on his
gold."
"Gold?" Barnes
thought he saw Fisher's ears perk up.
"More than three tons of it and we had everything we
needed to make it happen- the book, the map, even the newspaper article giving
us proof positive that it was all true. The
gold was there waiting for us, all right. We
just had to go get it, and all our problems would be history."
"That sounds simple enough."
"Yeah, well, obviously that's not exactly the way it
turned out. If it did I wouldn't be
here. I'd be lounging poolside at
some island resort, sucking pina coladas though an umbrella straw.
But I am here because it's decision time again, and this time I want to
be sure that I'm the one making it." Concern
now laced his voice and was duly noted on Fisher's pad.
"I'm kind of hoping you can set me straight, Doc.
I need to know if it was all just co-inkeedink that first time around, or
was something more involved? And if
it was Delarosa pulling the strings back then is he still at it- and is he with
me or against me?"
"Well, I'm afraid, Mr. Barnes, I haven't had much
experience with the paranormal, but let's see if we can't sort it out together.
Suppose you make yourself comfortable on the couch and tell me the whole
story just as it occurred."
"O.K., but it's not gonna be easy for me," Barnes
said, moving over to the couch. "Some
of those things that happened are still pretty painful to talk about. I guess they always will be."
"Well perhaps I can help with that problem too.
You're my last appointment for the day, so just relax and start from the
beginning."
"The beginning. I
guess that was a couple of weeks after Gina died..."
"Gina was your wife?"
"For twenty-five years- and in a way, I died with her. I was devastated. But
then Julie came along and jump-started my life. I'd made the mistake of heading into a bar and thus ending
seven years of tea totaling. Whether
what I was feeling was guilt, remorse, or just plain loneliness, it was more
than I wanted to bear in a state of utter sobriety, so I stopped off at a noisy,
smoky, neighborhood tavern in Fort Lauderdale.
It was a place that Gina and I used to frequent back in those
happy-go-lucky days before I would ever admit that I might just have a leetle
problem. One drink wouldn't hurt, I
told myself, but I knew damn good and well I wasn't going to stop at one.
That first double scotch/rocks went down so smooth it called for just one
more for a chaser. By the third one I told the barkeep to hold the rocks.
About three more doubles straight up and I started getting loud.
It didn't matter much. The
Olive Pit was noisier and smokier than usual that night, with most of the action
going on twenty feet across from where I was sitting- over on the other side of
the circular bar. The only one
within earshot of me was a sweet young thing three stools down to my right and
she seemed to be wrapped up in her own set of troubles. She was peering deeply
through the ice-cubes into the sparkling clear liquid in the cocktail glass she
was slowly swirling in her hand.
I remember saying something like..."