“Ouch.”
“You’re welcome.”
She gave me a little wink, then nudged me forward. Together we pushed toward the gate. Just me, Alex, and two hundred Colombians.
22
Our car was a clunker. It wasn’t even from a rental agency. One of Alex’s friends loaned us a rusty Chevy Vega with eighty-nine thousand miles and worn-out shocks. It was part of her low-profile strategy. No fancy car, no wads of cash, no jewelry or wristwatch except my nineteen-dollar Swatch. And I could forget those nice restaurants I’d been reading about. At least we’d booked a reputable hotel.
“Hotel?” she said with a chuckle as we left the terminal. “I borrowed a flat from Pablo for a couple days.”
Pablo was the guy who’d loaned us the car that was now limping down the highway. “What about my reservations at the Bogota Royal?”
“You didn’t really think we were staying
“Uh. . yeah.”
“Just a diversion. If someone comes looking for us, we won’t be there.”
I thought she was joking, but she wasn’t smiling. “You’re thinking someone would be following us?”
“They grabbed your father. Obviously someone thinks your family has money.”
I suddenly felt vulnerable. I reached over and locked the passenger door.
She drove, and I rode in the glove compartment. That was what it seemed like, anyway. The passenger seat was stuck in the forwardmost position, so that my knees pressed up against the dash. The ride was bumpy, too many potholes for our little rust-bucket. We made decent time out of the Aeropuerto El Dorado, but traffic clogged as we headed east into the city. The drive from the airport was a foreigner’s first taste of lawlessness in Bogota. Horns blasting, red lights ignored, sudden maneuvers to avoid collisions-all performed to the endless symphony of vulgar gestures and the most violent insults ever hurled between motorists. Yesterday I’d been skeptical upon reading that each day three pedestrians were run over and killed by buses in Bogota, to say nothing of the casualties caused by some nine hundred thousand private automobiles. Now that I’d arrived, I was beginning to think they’d understated the carnage.
Sometime after 2:00 P.M. we finally reached downtown. The cool, thin air surprised me. Bogota was closer to the equator than Miami was, but the city was nestled high in a mountain basin against the jagged ranges of the Cordillera Oriental, about the same altitude as Aspen, Colorado. With over six million people, it was an aggressive metropolis. The mountains bordered the east, wealthy expansion had moved north, poorer housing and industry were to the south and west. The old city center was still vibrant, though some of the colonial buildings were in disrepair. At its best, the feeling was Madrid or New York, especially the old commercial center. There were impressive skyscrapers, wide boulevards, trendy shops, and well-dressed professionals walking with the ubiquitous cell phones. The air was thick with exhaust from plenty of clunkers and some nice cars, too, more than I’d expected. Of course there were beggars at the intersections. Sad, but street poverty was a fact of life in virtually every city in South America, not just Bogota. The atmosphere didn’t strike me as overwhelmingly friendly, but it wasn’t especially scary either. Then we turned the corner and saw the rubble.
Beside a bank was a huge pile of loose bricks, broken concrete, twisted metal. Cleanup crews were shoveling shattered glass and burned-out furnishings into wheelbarrows and dump trucks. The skeletons of three scorched cars were still on the sidewalk, one of them upside down. The work area was secured with rope and barricades. A handful of uniformed officers stood guard, but the investigation appeared to be over. They were just sweeping up the mess.
“Last week’s car bombing,” said Alex.
“Terrorists?”
“
“Who?”
“Who knows? It’s at least the tenth one this year.”
I wanted to be open-minded and say something like “
The traffic light changed, and we were on our way.
Our meeting with the kidnappers wasn’t until tomorrow evening. By arriving a full day early, we were sure not to miss it over a logistical problem like a flight delay or goats in the road. So far everything had gone without a hitch, which left us the rest of the day and a full day tomorrow with nothing to do. I thought I’d take the time to visit one of the organizations I’d been communicating with by Internet, Fundacion Pais Libre, a private foundation whose main mission was to raise public awareness of Colombia’s kidnapping epidemic and to push for reform. With their headquarters just blocks away, I felt rude not stopping by to thank them for the information they’d sent me.
“Skip it,” said Alex.
“Why?”
“Because any time I’m in Colombia to negotiate with kidnappers, my basic rule is to trust no one.”
“Not even the foundation?”
“No one.”
“I don’t have to tell them I came here to talk to the kidnappers.”
“What are they going to think? Your father was kidnapped by guerrillas, so you decided this would be a dandy spot for a vacation?”
“No. They’ll think I came all the way to Bogota because my family is pursuing every possible angle to make sure my father is released as quickly as possible. How can that hurt?”
“Look, I’m not putting down the foundation. They do a lot of great things. But keep in mind that they helped push for the passage of Colombia’s antikidnapping law in the early nineties. One of the things that law did was make it illegal for the families of kidnap victims to pay ransom.”
“You mean if we pay a ransom, we’re breaking the law?”
“Don’t worry. That part of the law was declared unconstitutional by the Colombian Supreme Court. The government still opposes the payment of ransom, but I’ve done everything we need to do to make sure the authorities look the other way.”
“What does that mean?”
“It means that you can’t begin to understand the scope of the kidnapping and ransom problem in this country, and I don’t want you making side trips to talk to people at the foundation or anywhere else. From now until the time we leave, I’d prefer that you stay within my line of sight.”
“Come on, Alex. I appreciate all you’re doing for me, and probably a little paranoia is understandable. But you’re starting to sound worse than me.”
She suddenly turned angry. “You want to see paranoid? I’ll show you.”
She steered down a side street and stepped on the gas. The tires squealed as the little car cornered up a winding road to the top of a steep hill. Minutes later we stopped at the side of the road, where the view of the valley was unobstructed for a good square mile. She stepped down from the car, and I followed her to the edge of the cliff. Below was a residential neighborhood, hundreds of middle- and upper-middle-class homes on the wealthy north side of Bogota.