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Hav - Hayday
The hayday was over. And the silence that followed was the loudest sound he had ever heard.
He parked the car. He walked into the radio station. The red light blinked on.
“No,” he said softly.
This was the Hayday .
As he drove down the Prado, he saw them. The students. They were gathered outside the University gates, printing leaflets on a rickety press. Their faces were young and hard, not like his face. They didn't want a DeSoto. They didn't want to sing at the Tropicana. They wanted the casinos closed and the Americans gone. They looked at Augie’s suit and saw a collaborator. Augie looked at their clenched fists and saw the end of his hayday . hav hayday
Augie looked out the window. The golden glow of the hayday was gone. In the east, the sky was a bruised purple. He could hear the distant pop of firecrackers—or were they gunshots?
Augie wasn't a gangster, nor a politician. He was a sonero —a singer. For ten years, he had been the ghost voice on other people’s records. But tonight, at the CMQ radio studio, everything was supposed to change. His producer, a fast-talking Mexican named Pepe, had promised him a session with the Cugat orchestra. The hayday was over
To Augie, it wasn’t just a time. It was a texture. It was the smell of cigar smoke and roasted plantains drifting from the El Floridita bar, where Hemingway had left a stool empty only moments ago. It was the rhythm of the conga drum that never stopped, bleeding out of the Tropicana Club where the showgirls wore feathers imported from Rio and diamonds that cost more than a village in Oriente Province.
The chrome of the 1957 DeSoto gleamed like a sword pulled from the sun. Augusto "Augie" Marín leaned against its fender, his white linen suit crisp despite the 90-degree humidity that rose from the Malecón’s spray. Behind him, the Hotel Nacional’s turrets cast long shadows across the lawn where Meyer Lansky’s men counted chips in the cool dark. Ahead of him, the sea crashed against the seawall, throwing salt into the air like confetti. He walked into the radio station
Augie wanted to believe him. He looked at the DeSoto. It was a rental, paid for with three months of savings. He looked at the lights of the old city, the Morro Castle glowing amber in the twilight. Everything was gold and green. The streets were full of tourists with fat wallets and thin morality. The Cubans laughed loud and danced harder, because everyone knew—on some cellular level—that a city this beautiful could not last.