The Quiet Gulf
Juan Martillo used to love the rhythm of three boats leaving together. His father's curvina was first, its blue hull catching the first pale light over the Gulf of Venezuela. Then his cousin Carlos, always late, engine coughing to life like a man clearing his throat. Finally Juan's own peñero, a small, wooden, inherited pirogue pulling up the rear. Three specks of hope on a wide grey sea. That was before the drones came. Now, at 4:47 a.m., Juan casts off alone. No headlamp. No radio chatter. Just the soft splash of his oar pushing off the mudbank of Sinamaica. His outboard is a 15-horsepower Yamaha he bought second-hand from a man who no longer fishes at all. It murmurs, never roars. He keeps it that way on purpose. The Americans call them "narco strikes." Precision operations against drug smuggling routes in the Caribbean. But Juan doesn't smuggle anything except sardines and the occasional yellowfin. The problem is that the Gulf of Venezuela has become a highway...