he had an extra set of hands.
They gave him a diploma for attendance, and Escobar began spending all his time partying in the beach nightclubs with knee-walking-drunk kids on spring break.
Then the scandal.
A gun went off in one of the clubs. Escobar’s. He was the only person hit, left-hip cargo pocket, sending twenty packets of cocaine scattering across the dance floor and sparking a stampede, also involving chickens.
The general had seen enough. He decided Escobar needed some manning up.
“I’m cutting you off! You’re going in the army first thing tomorrow!”
“But I don’t want to go in the army.”
“My decision’s final! It’s that or the street.”
The youth pouted, then looked up. “Will I get a gun?”
Escobar was short, soft, and plump, but made up for it by being stupid and pushy about it. A light bronze complexion with black hair and silly bangs. He grew the first wisps of a mustache that looked like he needed a napkin. With family influence, he received extra attention at basic training. Three classes of recruits had passed through and Escobar was still there, dangling like a gourd from the chin-up bar. The training instructor went to his supervisor.
“I can’t do anything with him. He’s failed every physical.”
“But he’s the general’s nephew.”
“He’s going to cripple himself on the obstacle course.”
The supervisor sat back under a plantation fan. Then he waved his right arm in frustration. “Give him a pass and throw him in with a platoon. Who’s got the lightest duty?”
“D Company.”
And so Escobar marched through misty mountains, fiddling with his assault rifle and bitching nonstop.
“And stop bitching!” said the commander. “You’re giving me a headache.”
Escobar snarled and mouthed silent insults. He kept marching and watching the eyes in the jungle that nobody else wanted to see.
“Sir?”
“What!”
“Are you sure the rebels are harmless?”
“What rebels?”
“But they’re so close. They could easily wipe out the whole platoon.”
“Keep it in your pants.”
Suddenly a deafening burst of automatic-weapon fire.
“Everyone down!” shouted the commander.
The platoon flattened on the dirt.
Except Escobar, who struggled to maintain a grip on his rifle, which was stuck on automatic and twirled him around in the middle of the trail.
The commander tackled him. “Gimme that thing!” He ejected the magazine and stuck it in his pocket, then shoved the rifle back in Escobar’s stomach. “No more bullets for you.”
From the back of the platoon: “Sir.”
“What is it?”
A soldier pointed off the side of the trail. Muffled screams.
The commander made a quick hand gesture, and they charged the brush. Soldiers broke into a clearing, where rebels ran in circles of panic. The commander looked down, then up in astonishment at Escobar. “You killed a rebel. Do you have any idea how endangered they are?”
“I didn’t mean to.”
Back at base camp, the commander marched into a major’s office, dragging Scooter by the scruff of his neck.
“I can’t do anything with him.”
“But he’s the general’s nephew.”
“He killed a rebel.”
“What!”
“The other rebels were so scared they ran off into the woods. My platoon had to hunt them down and force them back to their camp at gunpoint.”
“We can’t be having that.” The major rubbed his whiskered cheeks in consternation. “But what about the general?”
“There’s got to be some job that’s idiot-proof.”
“Wait.” The major nodded and raised a finger. “I got it.” He picked up the telephone. “Military intelligence.”
The next day:
A plain, pastel-green government building in the capital of Costa Gorda.
“This is where you’ll be working.”
Escobar looked at an empty desk. “What do I do?”
“Sit.”
The captain of intelligence left.
Escobar sat.
He looked out his door at a hum of diligent activity from some of the nation’s top espionage minds.
He frowned.
A look around his office. Something in the corner. “What’s that?”
Escobar walked over. He threw a switch on and off. He liked it. Next stop, a filing cabinet.
The captain of intelligence was deep in thought over reports of rebel desertion. Something had been gnawing at him for the last half hour. “What’s that sound?”
The captain tracked it across the office until he arrived at the source. “What the hell is going on? I told you to sit!”
“Huh?” said Escobar, standing over a running document shredder.
The captain dragged him into the office of the director of Costa Gordan intelligence. “I can’t do anything with him!”
“But he’s the general’s nephew.”
“He shredded most of our files.”
The director knew Escobar’s entire history. He thought a moment. “I’ve got it.” Quick scribbling on a memo pad. He tore off the top sheet and handed it to the captain. “Take care of this pronto.”
“But I’ve wanted that job for years,” said the captain.
“So have I,” said the chief. “But none of us will have any job if we don’t stop the bleeding.”
They both looked at Escobar. He was bleeding. A stapler.
The captain nodded in resignation. “I’ll handle it immediately.” He stood at attention and snapped a salute. “First flight to Miami…”
Midnight
“Put on your uniform,” said Serge.
“Can’t I just wear this?”
“First impressions are important,” said Serge. “If I can wear the cape…”
An orange-and-green Road Runner drove west across Miami out to Sweetwater on the edge of the Everglades. A modest neighborhood of well-kept ranch houses and thriving palms that didn’t need to be kept. Toys in yards. Above-ground pools.
Serge found a street running along the turnpike. He checked his notepad again and parked. “This is the place. We’re on.”
They strolled up the walkway. Serge knocked hard on a door that was rotten along the bottom from absent rain gutters.
A bowling-ball-gut resident answered with a Miller in his hand.
Serge elbowed Coleman. “He’s even wearing a wife-beater.”