William Kennedy - Chango's Beads and Two-Tone Shoes

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Chango's Beads and Two-Tone Shoes: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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From the Pulitzer Prize
winning author of
, a dramatic novel of love and revolution from one of America's finest writers.
When journalist Daniel Quinn meets Ernest Hemingway at the Floridita bar in Havana, Cuba, in 1957, he has no idea that his own affinity for simple, declarative sentences will change his life radically overnight.
So begins William Kennedy's latest novel — a tale of revolutionary intrigue, heroic journalism, crooked politicians, drug-running gangsters, Albany race riots, and the improbable rise of Fidel Castro. Quinn's epic journey carries him through the nightclubs and jungles of Cuba and into the newsrooms and racially charged streets of Albany on the day Robert Kennedy is fatally shot in 1968. The odyssey brings Quinn, and his exotic but unpredictable Cuban wife, Renata, a debutante revolutionary, face-to-face with the darkest facets of human nature and illuminates the power of love in the presence of death.
Kennedy masterfully gathers together an unlikely cast of vivid characters in a breathtaking adventure full of music, mysticism, and murder — a homeless black alcoholic, a radical Catholic priest, a senile parent, a terminally ill jazz legend, the imperious mayor of Albany, Bing Crosby, Hemingway, Castro, and a ragtag ensemble of radicals, prostitutes, provocateurs, and underworld heavies. This is an unforgettably riotous story of revolution, romance, and redemption, set against the landscape of the civil rights movement as it challenges the legendary and vengeful Albany political machine.

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She called the number and recognized Aurelio and he said they must find Felipe Holtz and he knew how close Renata and Felipe were. Holtz, son of sugar baron Julio Holtz, was involved in a gun deal for the Directorio but it was aborted the day of the Palace attack. Holtz is the only one who knows the gun dealer and Aurelio has no one else to send, for all who survived the Palace are known, and traitors are riding with police looking for us all. Could Renata track down Holtz? Renata said she would.

“Why are you telling me all this?” Quinn asked. “They might kill you for revealing so much, and kill me for knowing it.”

“They will not kill you unless I tell them to.”

“Well that’s a comfort.”

She called the Holtz home in Santiago and talked to Natalia, her cousin, who said Felipe was in Mexico or Caracas, expected home next week. Renata didn’t believe her.

“If your friends are in such a hurry,” Quinn said, “I know somebody who might help.”

“You know somebody with guns?”

“I told you I was writing about that in Miami.”

“Who is this person?”

“Alfie Rivero. You ever hear of him?”

“Never. Can he be American intelligence?”

“Anybody can be American intelligence. Alfie’s Cuban from New York with a tie to the Trafficante mob in Tampa, which means he can get you any gun you can pay for. I dated his cousin and I met him with her. He’s the real thing.”

“Is he in Miami?”

“I saw him at the Nacional two days ago. He’s staying there.”

“He will talk to you about guns? He trusts you?”

“He won’t trust me, but I can ask a question for you. I wouldn’t do it for anyone else.”

“Will he take a woman seriously?”

“You’re an unlikely buyer, but you seem trustworthy. If you aren’t then you’re a brilliant actress and a serious liar. But don’t even think about lying to Alfie.”

Quinn drove to El Vedado where the Hotel Nacional had been standing in its eminence since it opened in 1930. It was one of the elite addresses in Havana and the walls of its bar were covered with photomontages of celebrated guests — Churchill, the Windsors, Spanish royalty, Chaplin, Garbo, Gable, John Wayne. Since 1946, when Batista returned to Havana from Florida with Meyer Lansky in tow, Havana and its major hotel had become mob-hospitable, and Lansky and his brother Jake now ran its casino, which was probably Alfie’s reason for staying there.

Quinn and Renata crossed the marble lobby under lofty ceilings and chandeliers and Renata said, “My father was shot here in 1933 in the civil war — after Machado’s exile. Many Americans in Havana took refuge here from anti-American mobs, and a thousand army officers retreated here to protest Batista taking over the army. Batista shelled the hotel all day and many officers died. When they surrendered many more were killed by mobs for being with Machado. My father was shot in the chest but did not die. Batista sent him to prison in the Castillo del Principe and for a week my mother thought he was dead.”

“Revolution haunts your family. I see where you get it,” Quinn said.

“My father would have a stroke if he knew what I was doing here.”

They went to the patio garden with its sculpted shrubbery and its long and beautiful lawn that rolled down toward the water. They took a table and watched two peacocks move imperially under the palms near the bottom of the garden. Beyond that you looked out at the Malecón, and then the sea.

“Order me a rum on ice. I’ll see if Alfie is around.”

Quinn knew from Alfie’s rap sheet that he’d been arrested twice on burglary charges that didn’t stick and had done ten months for a botched dope robbery. He had no convictions after that and when Quinn met him he heard his name linked to an armed excursion by two dozen young Cuban rebels full of invasion bravado who one day disappeared from Miami and turned up on Havana’s front pages, faces and chests caked with blood, eyes wide or shot away, lying alongside their rifles on a rocky beach like a fisherman’s catch, Batista’s catch.

Quinn found Alfie at the pool with a long-legged middle-aged blonde, his catch of the day, who was rubbing suntan oil on his deeply tanned back and shoulders. Quinn sent a note with a waiter and Alfie came over.

“A business matter, Alfie. You still selling avocados?”

“In season.”

“I’m not the one talking here, I’m just a writer.”

“You write about avocados.”

“Don’t trust me.”

“When did I ever trust you?”

“I have somebody who wants to talk.”

“I sometimes talk to people who talk.”

“Do we go someplace?”

“We are someplace. Where’s your man?”

“My man is a woman, out in the patio.”

“Bring her in. Has she got money?”

“I think so. And she’s in a hurry.”

“I’ll talk with her in the pool.”

“She doesn’t have a bathing suit.”

“Buy her one.”

Quinn went back to the patio but Renata was not at the table. Their drinks were there, untouched. She was not in the garden that the peacocks ruled. He found a waiter who had not seen her, took a swallow of his rum and left money for the drinks. She wasn’t in the lobby or by the public phones. At the front desk he asked about messages. None. He saw her coming from the far end of the lobby carrying a paper bag. She had followed him out to the pool and had seen him with Alfie. She read their lips about the bathing suit so she bought one at the boutique.

“Narciso reads minds and you read lips,” Quinn said. “There’s no privacy in Cuba.”

They went to the pool bar and Renata changed into her new suit, dove into the pool, and swam like a dolphin before pausing in neck-deep water. Alfie stepped into the shallow end and swam on his back until he bumped into her. They then discussed avocados.

картинка 18

A panel truck with two young men pulled into the driveway of Garage Miami in Miramar and parked in front of one of the two bays. A few yards back from the two gas pumps Alfie’s blonde from the swimming pool was sitting in a folding chair alongside a pile of tires, her elegant legs crossed, a streetside attraction. Quinn did not think she belonged in a garage. The garage sign advertised PLANTA DE ENGRASE, SE COGEN PONCHES, ABIERTO 24 HORAS. Esme’s Buick was parked in one bay and a pickup truck full of toys, lamps, and pots was on the runners of the grease pit’s lift. The two young men in suitcoats came through the open garage door and Renata introduced the older one to Alfie as her friend Pedrito.

“And who is his friend?” Alfie said.

“My name is Javier,” the friend said. “I am buying your guns.”

“Pedrito is buying them, no?”

“We are buying them together. We are friends,” Javier said. “Who is this?” And he gestured with his head toward Quinn.

“He’s the one who started this,” Alfie said. “He came to me. You don’t trust your own contact?”

“I am grateful for the contact but I don’t know him.”

“This is Quinn,” Renata said. “He is my friend, and he helped me and I trust him. You don’t worry about him.”

“I worry,” Javier said.

“I would like to see las cosas ,” Pedrito said.

“I would like to see the money,” said Alfie.

Pedrito took a fold of cash from his pocket and fanned it.

“Where do you want to make the transfer?” Alfie asked.

“Are you making a joke?” Pedrito said. “Where are they?”

“We can unload wherever you want.”

Javier walked outside and looked up and down the street.

“We can do it here,” he said. “There is little traffic. Take these vehicles out, we will pull in, then you bring in the guns.”

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