The Border. Don winslow

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The Border - Don winslow

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      “Yeah.”

      He’s not as scared about going there anymore since he got a call from Keller telling him that his paperwork was squeaky clean. Anyone looking at it could read through the lines and decide that Eddie got four years because his lawyer was a lot stronger than the government’s case.

      “Don’t worry,” Caro says. “We have friends there. They’ll look after you.”

      “Thank you.”

      “La Mariposa,” Caro says.

      Another name for La Eme.

      Caro says, “I’ll miss our talks.”

      “Me too.”

      “You’re a good young man, Eddie. You show respect.” Caro is quiet for a few seconds, then he says, “M’ijo, I want you to do something for me in V-Ville.”

      “Anything, Señor.”

      Eddie doesn’t want to do whatever it is.

      Just wants to do his time and get out.

      Out of the joint, out of the trade.

      He’s still toying with producing a movie about his life, what do they call it, a “biopic,” which would have to be, like, a huge hit if they got someone like DiCaprio to play him.

      But he can’t say no to Rafael Caro. If he does, La Eme will give him another kind of welcome to V-Ville. Maybe shank him on the spot, or maybe just shun him. Either way, he won’t survive without being cliqued up with a gang.

      “I knew that would be your answer,” Caro says. He lowers his voice so Eddie can barely hear him say—

      “Find us a mayate.

      A black guy.

      “From New York. With an early release date. Put him in your debt,” Caro says. “Do you understand?”

      Jesus Christ, Eddie thinks. Caro is still a player.

      He does the math—Caro has done twenty years on his twenty-five-year sentence. Federal time, they can make you do every day or they can knock it down to 85 percent, maybe even less.

      Which makes Caro a short-timer, looking at the gate.

      And he wants back in the game.

      “I understand, Señor,” Eddie says. “You want to put the arm on a black guy who’s going to get out soon. But why?”

      “Because Adán Barrera was right,” Caro says.

      Heroin was our past.

      And our past is our future.

      He don’t need to tell Eddie that.

      Keller gets on the horn to Ben O’Brien. “Call me back on a clean line.”

      The first time Keller met O’Brien was in a hotel room in Georgetown a few weeks before the Guatemala raid. They didn’t exchange names, and Keller, who was never much of a political animal, didn’t recognize him as a senator from Texas. He just knew that the man represented certain oil interests willing to fund an operation to eliminate the Zeta leadership because the “Z Company” was taking over valuable oil and gas fields in northern Mexico.

      The White House had just officially rejected the operation but sent O’Brien to authorize it off the record. The senator arranged a funding line through his oil connections and helped put together a team of mercenaries through a private firm based in Virginia. Keller had resigned from DEA and joined Tidewater Security as a consultant.

      Now O’Brien calls him back. “What’s wrong?”

      Keller tells him about Eddie’s threat. “You have any leverage at BOP? Get Ruiz’s PSI scrubbed?”

      “In English?”

      “I need you to reach out to someone in the Bureau of Prisons and get Ruiz’s records cleansed of any trace of his deal,” Keller says.

      “We’re letting drug dealers blackmail us now?” O’Brien asks.

      “Pretty much,” Keller says. “Unless you want to answer a lot of questions about what happened down in Guatemala.”

      “I’ll get it done.”

      “I don’t like it any more than you do.”

      Goddamn Barrera, Keller thinks when he clicks off.

      Adán vive.

      Elena Sánchez Barrera is reluctant to admit, even to herself, that her brother is dead.

      The family held out hope through the long silence that lasted days, then weeks, and now months, as they tried to glean information as to what had happened in Dos Erres.

      But so far they’ve come up with no new information. Nor, apparently, have the authorities disseminated what they do know down the ranks—it seems as if half of law enforcement believe that the rumor of Adán’s death was put out as a smoke screen to help him evade arrest.

      As if, Elena thinks. The federal police are virtually a wholly owned subsidiary of the Sinaloa cartel. The government favors us because we pay them well, we retain order and we’re not savages. So the idea that Adán staged his own death to avoid capture is as ludicrous as it is widespread.

      If it wasn’t the police, it was the media.

      Elena had heard the term media circus before, but she never fully realized what it meant until the rumors about Adán’s death began to swirl. Then she was besieged—reporters even had the nerve to set up post outside her house in Tijuana. She couldn’t go out the door without being harassed by questions about Adán.

      “How many ways can I say ‘I don’t know’?” she had said to the reporters. “All I can tell you is that I love my brother and pray for his safety.”

       “So you can confirm he’s missing?”

      “I love my brother and pray for his safety.”

       “Is it true your brother was the world’s biggest drug trafficker?”

      “My brother is a businessman. I love him and pray for his safety.”

      Every fresh rumor prompted a new assault. “We’ve heard Adán is in Costa Rica.” “Is it true he’s hiding in the United States?” “Adán has been seen in Brazil, Colombia, Paraguay, Paris …”

      “All I can tell you is that I love my brother and pray for his safety.”

      The pack of hyenas would have eaten little Eva alive, torn her to shreds. If they could have found her. It wasn’t for lack of trying. The media flooded Culiacán, Badiraguato.

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