It had been two more days of looking around, two more nights of drinking. They figured they had seen the last of Victor. Now Behr and Paul passed the day flat on their backs in their dingy motel room, drinking the dwindling water they ’ d brought, considering their diminishing funds, and watching a national soccer game that seemed to go on for hours and hours and hours on the minuscule television set. Their stomachs rumbled, but food was not an option.
“That mescal ’ s got some kick,” Paul said, not for the first time.
“Like a damn mule,” Behr agreed.
They sent a halfhearted maid away and went in and out of sleep, interrupted by the chants and shouts of college kids across the motel engaging in a drinking game, turbo quarters or beer pong, it sounded like.
Finally the light coming in through the patchy curtain started turning color from bright yellow to pale and they began to stir.
“I ’ m hitting the shower,” Paul said, standing.
“I ’ ll go after you.”
There was a hammering at the door. They looked at each other and Behr got up. He put his gun at the small of his back in the waistband of his pants.
“їQuiйn es?” he said.
“Policнa,” came the answer. Behr swung the door open. There was a stout man in his mid-thirties standing there. He chewed tobacco and wore a straw cowboy hat, and he had a. 45 on his hip. His partner waited back in the distance in a dirty patrol car.
“їSн?” Behr asked.
“We speak English,” the cop said, “it ’ s more easy.” Behr nodded.
“I am First Sergeant Guillermo Garcia. They call me ‘ Gigi, ’ or also, Fernando.” He patted his big gut and smiled. “Now tell me what are you here for in the ciudad?”
“For the tequila mostly, it seems.” Behr smiled, blanking the cop with his eyes.
“Tequila is good, huh?” It was clear Fernando wanted more.
“And to see the sights, of course,” Behr added.
“Maybe the girls, too?” Fernando said.
“Maybe. We haven ’ t decided,” Behr said. Now Fernando ’ s face changed.
“Ah, you know prostitution is illegal here? This is an important thing.”
“We didn ’ t know,” Paul said, from the bed.
“Is that a fact?” Behr asked.
“Yes. A big crime,” Fernando said. “But it is possible to get a license. Then you do what you want.”
“Huh. Sounds like we need one,” Behr said, already reaching for his money roll. He kept it in his pocket as he peeled off a hundred-dollar bill wrapped around the outside. He handed the bill to Fernando.
“This is good. Now you have no problem,” Fernando said. “My boss will get his mordida — you know what I say?” Behr did, and it wasn ’ t because of his Spanish, but rather that almost everyone in law enforcement was familiar with the term. It translated to “little bite,” as in everyone up the chain took his. Behr had often wondered at the productivity that would result if all the organization and effort that went into the systemic corruption were applied to a useful enterprise. “Oh yeah, but this license,” Fernando held up the bill “it expire tomorrow. Understand? If you stay, I got to come back.”
Behr just nodded.
“So then, have a good night,” Fernando said, and stepped back. Behr closed the door.
After a moment, Behr turned to Paul. “I was wondering when we ’ d have to deal with that. It ’ ll cost more next time. We ’ re pretty much out of time here.”
Paul absorbed this and hurried to the shower.
Around evening time they went to the cafй, which had become their usual place. They ate and then ordered coffee and waited. After a half hour Victor appeared in the doorway. If he held any ill will over the roughing he ’ d received, it didn ’ t show. Instead he whistled and waved, and Behr and Paul followed him out.
They walked quickly through the streets, cutting down a few back alleys. No one said anything, and they soon came upon a worn, mud-spattered Toyota pickup with a man resting on the hood. The man popped up at their approach. He was lithe and wiry, like a punk singer, an orangutan without the hair.
“This is Ernesto,” Victor said, “ mi primo. ” Ernesto wore silver-framed glasses with blue lenses despite the darkness. The man slid off the truck and landed solidly on his feet. They shook hands with him.
“ Quй tal, ” Behr offered. “You have something to show us?”
Ernesto shrugged.
“You can make your fee without carrying anyone across,” Behr said. The pollero looked at them. Maybe he smelled cop. But he wanted the money.
“You hit on my cousin,” Ernesto said. Behr bristled and met his eyes in time to see that the man thought it was more funny than anything else, but then he added, “You no hit on me or else problems.” Behr glared back at him but said nothing. “I show you a place. Get in.” He gestured to the back of his truck.
“We ’ ll get our car and follow you,” Behr said, not liking it.
“Then no come.” Ernesto got in the truck and started it. Behr and Paul looked at each other and then climbed in.
They rumbled out over crumbling asphalt road that gave way to dirt track, and the air changed from thick and fetid with the smells of the town and outlying factories to cool and fresh. Dark hunches of juniper and sagebrush stood out in the blue of the night. They sat low in the truckbed, backs against the wheel wells, heads down against the wind. Every rut shot through the truck ’ s metal frame and up their spines.
Behr spoke as quietly as he could and yet still be heard over the wind.
“This guy, the cousin,” he began, “watch him. He ’ s a blade man.”
“Yeah?”
“If something goes down, you won ’ t see it coming. Knives are meant to be felt, not seen. If he shows it to you, look for what else is on the way.”
“How did you…?”
“I noticed when we shook hands, a callus at the base of his first finger hard as a rock. You ever meet a chef? They always have a callus there, where the heels of all the knives they use rest. And this guy doesn ’ t seem like a cook to me.”
Paul nodded. There was nothing else to say.
After a few miles of rough travel, they drove off the track onto the open plain and the truck began to jostle and buck hard. Behr and Paul held on to the gunwales and ate dust. A few painful minutes passed and the truck began to slow. It came to a stop and then crept along again for several hundred yards before stopping once more. This time it was for good. Behr and Paul climbed down as Ernesto shut the engine but left the headlights on. Ernesto walked forward to where the lights illuminated a low berm, and Victor got out of the truck.
“What ’ s up?” Paul asked.
“Don ’ t know,” Behr answered.
“You see?” Victor said.
“You see?” Ernesto echoed from his place near the berm. “I show you something very dangerous.” And then he began kicking at the ground. He went on for a few moments, going deeper into the soft dirt, and then stopped and stepped back.
Behr and Paul looked at each other and walked forward. They saw it there, covered in brown earth, a human rib cage. Behr pushed at a nearby pile with his foot and uncovered a lower jawbone complete with teeth.
“Ah, shit,” he said.
“What is this?” Paul wondered.
Behr thought back to what he ’ d seen at Eagle Creek Park and knew. “The remains of a teenage boy.”
“ Sн, ” Ernesto said. He seemed vaguely proud to have shown them.
Paul moved forward and began kicking hard at the ground. Behr joined him. They uncovered femur bones, arms, clavicles, and skulls, evidence of perhaps half a dozen bodies. The remains weren ’ t fresh, but still an odor became present — that of decomposition.
“This is where they dump them,” Behr said.
Ernesto nodded. “I don ’ t go more far,” he said. “Or we all be killed.”
Paul realized he was in an unholy burial ground and doubled over, his hands on his thighs. He fell to his knees and began raking through the debris with his hands, looking for what, he was not sure, only something that would tell him what he needed to know. His breathing became ragged and shallow. He fought against a rising nausea and finally ceased with the digging.
Behr stopped his digging, too. There was very little sound above their breathing. “Why did you bring us here?” Behr asked.
“He hope you be satisfy,” Victor piped in. “And you pay him.”
“We ’ re not satisfied,” Behr said. “Where are they kept before?”
Ernesto just shook his head.
“You think I ’ m going to pay you for a graveyard?” Behr asked.
“This is where they end,” Ernesto said. “I no can take you where they are before.”
“Then you ’ re not getting any money,” Behr said with firmness.
“You see this place. I know from my cousin you no customers. I know if I take you there, you make trouble. Then trouble find me. So you gon ’ pay me now and then go away.” Ernesto smiled, the rhythmic clicking of a butterfly knife opening in his hand.
“For this? No,” Behr said, allowing himself to face Ernesto full-on but quartering away from Victor so his right side was shielded. “We want more. We need answers.”
Ernesto nodded at Victor, who was standing at the edge of the pool of the truck ’ s headlights. Behr ’ s assumptions proved correct as Victor raised both arms and in his trembling hands was a Ruger. 357.
Paul saw it and slowly stood. Perhaps he had come all this way to die among what might be the bones of his son.
Behr eased his hand into his pocket and gripped his own gun.
“Don ’ t fuck around, Victor. їComprende? ” Behr said evenly. “Put that thing up before this goes to shit.”
“You no pay him. You hit me. No good,” Victor said.
“You ’ re not shooting anyone. And I’ m not shooting you.” Behr slowly took out his gun and kept it pointed low, but in Victor ’ s general direction. “We ’ ll pay, and we ’ ll pay plenty if you take us to where the boys are kept when they ’ re alive.”
“Maybe we kill you and take all your money?” Ernesto suggested. “Safer for me than to take you there.”
“You do that, you ’ ll have the FBI up your ass,” Behr said with conviction.
“Bullshit, FBI.” Ernesto tried to sound brave and convinced.
“Bullshit if you look in my wallet and don ’ t find a badge there,” Behr said firmly.
Ernesto showed no inclination to check badges or anything else. Instead he yelled harshly at Victor in rapid Spanish. The words policнa and federales popped out from the speech. Victor struggled to keep the gun up and under control. It was an uncomfortable stalemate, one Paul anticipated Behr breaking with gunfire at any moment, and it motivated him to speak.
“Do you have kids?” Paul asked the men. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Victor look to Ernesto, giving him away.
“ Sн, my son, Keke, is two years,” Ernesto said, his voice losing its sharp edges.
“I believe my son, Jamie, could be one of them.” Paul gestured to the bones at their feet. “He ’ d be fourteen.” His words hung like dust in the desert air. “I need to find out what happened to him. To see where he was, how he may have ended up here. That ’ s all I want now.” He swallowed. “I hope nothing bad ever happens to Keke. You can make a lot of money for him right now. It can be easy.” They watched Ernesto chew it over.
“I want two thousand. It ’ s more danger than to bring people across.” He finally spoke.
“Forget two thousand,” Behr began.
“Two thousand,” Paul agreed. Ernesto nodded to Victor to lower the gun. Victor seemed relieved to do it. Paul went right to his pocket for the money. There wouldn ’ t be much left after he paid.