Bogota. Then he accessed the two-lane road that led out of the capital to Villavicencio, an uncontrolled lawless city to the southeast.

A modern road shortened the driving time to one and a half hours. On the way, he threw his other cane out the car window. He did this while passing through a village where some poor old soul would pick it up and use it. Discarding the cane here, he told himself, was an act of charity, one of which, in a small way, he was proud.

THREE

My mid-afternoon Alex had returned to her office and had begun to unwind from the morning briefing, which had been followed by a private teleconference with various national police agencies up and down the hemisphere.

At her desk, she felt at ease. She had risen early that morning, after working late the night before, a pattern she had fallen into in recent weeks. She had been living in New York, at her new job, for fewer than six months now. At the end of the previous year, Alex had been promoted from her old position in Washington, D.C. Her job was now more hands-on. Fluent in Spanish as well as Italian, French, and Russian, she headed her own investigations into various financial schemes that emanated from Central and South America, schemes that targeted American victims, both corporate and individual.

She did a quick scan of her emails to see if anything was blowing up in any of her operations worldwide. The internet seas seemed calm. Maybe too calm, she thought to herself. She flicked through the message slips that Stacey, her assistant, had left on her desk, the personal mingling with the professional. Two names she didn’t know. There were messages from a district attorney in Illinois, her friend Ben in D.C., another friend from college, and a final one from a name that looked familiar but took a split second to remember.

Paul Guarneri. No message. Just the name and a phone number on Long Island. She had known Guarneri only fleetingly. He was a suburban real estate entrepreneur who had done business with Yuri Federov, the recently deceased Russian racketeer whom Alex had professionally tracked the year before.

As for Guarneri, he enjoyed better fortune than Federov – at least he was still alive. Or at least he was when he made the phone call. Who knew what could have happened in the past hour?

Guarneri’s father, she recalled, had organized-crime connections in Cuba, where his family had lived. So what, Alex wondered as she stared at the slip, did Paul Guarneri want with her? Not having time to agonize over it right now, she zipped through a half dozen emails and arranged the call slips on her desk.

Then she spotted a sealed envelope delivered by private courier. It was from the office of Joshua Silverman, a New York attorney of either renown or notoriety, depending on one’s point of view, who had the reputation as a mob lawyer, as well as the mouthpiece for some white-collar sleaze balls. Humanitarian issues were not his thing.

She tossed his envelope aside. She would get to it later and pass it up the Fin Cen food chain as needed. Chances were that Silverman was using her as a contact, and Alex would end up directing him to the department lawyers anyway. They deserved each other.

She looked at the final message. This one was friendlier. It was from Ben, a close friend of hers who lived in Washington. He was completing his second year of law school at Georgetown and was looking to intern in New York over the summer. He was lining up interviews. He had called a week ago to say that he would be in town this coming week for a short time. Did she know any reasonable place to stay?

She did indeed. She invited Ben to crash at her place for two or three nights. She had a sofa bed in her extra bedroom for just such occasions. Today was Monday and she expected him on the weekend. He was phoning to reconfirm.

Ben was a U.S. Marine veteran who had lost part of his leg in Iraq. After Alex’s fiance’s death in Ukraine sixteen months ago, she and Ben, together, had learned how to walk again, she emotionally and he physically. She enjoyed his company. They had played in pickup basketball games together at the YMCA in D.C., which was where they’d met. Ben was a good man and a good friend.

Right now, however, that was all. Just a good friend. The loss of her fiance, Robert, still weighed heavily upon her. The desire to move on, as well as the pain of clinging to the past, to what had been a nearly perfect relationship, pulled at her almost every day. She was ready for a new romance – but then again, she wasn’t.

She returned Ben’s call. They chatted. When she returned to the challenges on her desk, she glanced again at the envelope from Silverman, Ashkenazy amp; DeLauro. Might as well get this over with, she decided as she tore it open.

The letter was from the founding partner, Joshua Silverman. Alex had been named in a legal proceeding, the letter announced, and she was asked to schedule an appointment so she and Silverman could discuss it further.

Alex phoned Silverman. A receptionist put her through. A few seconds of small talk followed, then, “Just tell me this,” Alex asked. “Is this request personal or professional?”

“Personal for you, professional for me,” Silverman said. “I can confirm that it’s a financial matter. But I’m under instructions from my client to discuss things with you face-to-face or not at all. You’re free to bring your own counsel, obviously, if you wish.”

“Is there a time element involved?”

“The sooner the better,” Silverman said, “… for you.”

Alex looked at her calendar. “What about tomorrow morning? Can we get it done in half an hour? What if I’m there at 7:45?”

“That’d work.”

Alex clicked off. Then, as long as she was dealing with pests, she thought she might as well deal with another. She input the number for Paul Guarneri.

He had been first introduced to her by the late Russian mobster, Yuri Federov, and Guarneri had also protected a young female witness for Alex the previous year. Alex owed him a dinner engagement, a marker that, she supposed, he now wished to call in.

Very well. She would go and listen.

On the phone they arranged to meet for dinner in two days. She set down the phone and marked the new appointments on her calendar: Silverman and Guarneri, with Ben visiting on the weekend.

So much for personal distractions. She clicked into her email again and caught up on what had recently transpired as the Operation Parajo strikes continued. Within the last half hour, she noted with satisfaction, Panamanian authorities had arrested three Mexicans and one Colombian-born Panamanian while driving a truck loaded with 511 kilograms of cocaine. Authorities concluded the cocaine was to be transported overland to Mexico. At the same time, a Panamanian Army helicopter crew identified a Colombian go-fast boat at a pier in Panama’s Bocas del Toro island archipelago near the Costa Rican border. The Panamanian navy intercepted the watercraft and seized more than two tons of cocaine, presumed to be on its way to Florida by way of the Dominican Republic.

Alex was pleased. She was scoring major points against the opposition. But one thing worried her. Senor and Senora Dosi – the enemy king and queen on her chessboard. No confirmation of where they were, no hint that they would be in custody anytime soon.

As long as the Dosis were out there, the battle continued.

FOUR

In Villavicencio that evening, Manuel Perez shaved. With the help of heavy soap and cleaning solvents, he washed the gray dye out of his shaggy hair, and a local barber trimmed it. His hair regained its natural dark brown color.

The assassin now looked twenty years younger than the old Argentine whom his neighbors had known in the Colombian capital. Before the mirror that night, a man of forty-one emerged, handsome, muscular, and striking.

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