Court ignored the comment, but Ramses was not finished.
“If there was no demand, amigo, de la Rocha and men like him would have to become wheat farmers or some shit. Talk to your fucking drug addicts in the United States; they bear much of the responsibility for all this death and murder. More of my countrymen would be trustworthy if only more of your countrymen weren’t worthless sons of bitches who break your own laws and, by doing so, destabilize our nation!”
Court nodded in the dark. He got the message, and the message was that he was being a dick. “Sorry, dude. I’m just pissed off.”
After a moment, Ramses said, “It’s okay. We all are.”
The three men fingered their weapons and looked into the night.
They heard the sounds of Ignacio trying to crank the engine of the truck in the barn, fifty yards off to their left. Eddie’s alcoholic brother had the starter spinning up, but so far the machine would not turn over.
Court sighed. If they couldn’t get the truck running, they were fucked. Even if they could, he had no idea where they could escape to here in Mexico. He wasn’t from around—
“What’s it?” asked Ramses.
“You said the U.S. needed to take some responsibility. What if we could get Elena and her family into the U.S.? De la Rocha doesn’t own the institutions up there.”
“No, he doesn’t.”
“It can’t be that hard to get into the USA. Your countrymen manage to do it all day long.”
Ramses nodded. “Last year I was in Mexico City, attached to the AFI, the federal detective force. It’s like the FBI in los Estados Unidos. We discovered a gringo who worked in the U.S. Embassy’s consular office who was selling papers to get into the States. We had everything we needed to arrest this gringo and stop it, but the operation was shut down. We didn’t even tell the Americans what we learned.”
“Why not?”
“Why do you think? Mexico makes a ton of money from people going over the border. There was no reason to stop this guy. I figured we would probably try to help him.”
“Okay. So, you guys are shitty neighbors. How does that help us in our—”
“I know who this guy is. You can buy visas for the Gamboas, get them up into the USA.”
Court thought it over for a moment. “What if we don’t have any money?”
“I have money.” It was Laura. She’d entered the
Court turned to her. “You do?”
“There is an army pension for Guillermo, my late husband. I am given a little money every year. I can take it all out at once if I want to, although there is a penalty.”
“How much can you get?”
“Five hundred thousand pesos.”
Court did the math in his head. “Sixty grand?” He looked to Ramses. “Is that enough?”
The
Court looked back to Laura. “You would do this? You would give up all that money for Elena and your parents and—”
“Of course I would.” She seemed offended. “This is my family. I would do anything for them.”
“And you’d go to the U.S.?”
She shook her head. “They should go. My mom and dad, Elena and Diego. But not me. My home is Mexico. I do not want to leave.”
“Why not?” Court asked, incredulously.
“I just can’t pick up and leave everything behind.”
“Why not?” he repeated himself, then added, “I do it all the time.”
She looked at him a long time in the night. “Then you will not understand what it means to belong somewhere.”
Down below them the truck tried to crank again. Gentry could hear the battery weakening, losing more and more of its charge with each failed turn of the key. After a third long and futile attempt to start the truck, those on the
“Well, first things first, we’re still a long way from getting out of here,” said Court.
Ramses and Martin moved off to other parts of the casa grande; there was an entire west wing surrounding a courtyard near the chapel that needed an occasional patrol, as no
“This house is something, isn’t it?” Laura said after a time.
Gentry chuckled, looked out on the unkempt estate. “Yeah, it’s a fucking shithole.”
He felt Laura looking at him for a moment, then she turned away. “I love it. Guillermo and I were going to live here when he finished his tour with the army.”
Dammit, Court. Some time, some day, some
He heard her laugh softly; it even echoed behind them in the bedroom. It was beautiful to hear, though it somehow did not fit her sad, serious, and reverent personality. “You’re right. It would have taken years to fix it up. But Guillermo wanted to take care of his parents, to restart the farm, to have kids here, and to turn it into a happy place.”
“I’m sorry about everything,” Court said.
“Me, too,” she replied.
Two hours later Ignacio was still in the barn working on the truck. Court had relieved Diego at the second- floor window above the front door on the north side of the house. Court lay prone, looking out at the tree line and the windy, rocky drive that snaked down and then disappeared past the dim moonlight’s reach on its way to the front gate, a hundred meters or more to the north.
He fingered Luis’s old shotgun lying on the tile beside him. He’d given the M1 carbines to the others, had taken some double-aught buckshot shells from one of the shotguns taken from a fallen Tequila
He was sleepy, but Luz had just delivered him some more violently strong black coffee, and it would help him along for a few hours more.
He’d need it for the jolt as well as the warmth; it was below fifty degrees, and he wore nothing more than the denim jacket and his damp pants as he lay exposed to the night breeze on the balcony.
Damn, he wanted to get the fuck out of here.
Some progress
Court rubbed his burning eyes, fought sleep for the third time this minute.
He looked down at his watch: 4:06. He knew that if the Black Suits could get another crew assembled in time, then they would come before dawn. There was no way they would not; they had no reason to wait for the light of day.