Canas. The two-story house, complete with pool and walled patio, sits across four lanes of traffic from a similar domicile now housing the Kidnapping and Organized Crime Unit of the Public Ministry.
Arriving at the compound, Mateo pulled into the drive and sounded the horn. Within seconds a young woman with an owl face and long dark braids swung the gate wide. We entered and parked on a patch of gravel to the right of the front door. The other truck and Jeep followed, and the woman closed and locked the gate.
The team spilled out and began unloading equipment and cardboard boxes, each coded to indicate site, exhumation date, and burial number. In the weeks to come we’d examine every bone, tooth, and artifact to establish identity and cause of death for the Chupan Ya victims. I hoped we’d finish before professional commitments required my return home in June.
I was going back for my third box when Mateo pulled me aside.
“I have a favor to ask.”
“Of course.”
“The
Clyde Snow is one of the grand old men of my profession, the founder of the subspecialty of forensic anthropology.
“Yes?”
“Some reporter wants to interview me about the old man’s involvement in our work down here. I invited him weeks ago, then completely forgot.”
“And?” Normally reluctant to deal with the press, I didn’t like where this was going.
“The guy’s in my office. He’s very excited that you’re here.”
“How does he know that I’m in Guatemala?”
“I might have mentioned it.”
“Mateo?”
“All right, I told him. Sometimes my English is not so good.”
“You grew up in the Bronx. Your English is perfect.”
“Yours is better. Will you talk to him?”
“What does he want?”
“The usual. If you’ll talk to the guy I can start logging and assigning the Chupan Ya cases.”
“O.K.”
I would have preferred measles to an afternoon of baby-sitting an “excited” reporter, but I was here to do what I could to help.
“I owe you.” Mateo squeezed my arm.
“You owe me.”
But the interview was not to be.
I found the reporter working on a nostril in Mateo’s second-floor office. He stopped trolling when I entered, and feigned scratching the scraggly trail of hair tinting his upper lip. Pretending to notice me for the first time, he shot to his feet and stuck out a hand.
“Ollie Nordstern. Olaf, actually. Friends call me Ollie.”
I held palms to chest, wanting no part of Ollie’s nasal booty.
“I’ve been unloading the trucks.” I smiled apologetically.
“Dirty job.” Nordstern dropped his hand.
“Yes.” I gestured him back into his chair.
Nordstern was dressed in polyester from his gel-slicked hair to his Kmart hiking boots. His head turtled forward on a neck the size of my upper arm. I guessed his age at around twenty-two.
“So,” we began simultaneously.
I indicated to Nordstern that he had the floor.
“It is an absolute thrill to meet you, Dr. Brennan. I’ve heard so much about you and your work in Canada. And I read about your testimony in Rwanda.”
“The court actually sits in Arusha, Tanzania.”
Nordstern was referring to my appearance before the United Nations International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.
“Yes, yes, of course. And those cases you did with the Montreal Hells Angels. We followed that very closely in Chicago. The Windy City has its own biker boys, you know.” He winked and pinched his nose. I hoped he wasn’t going back in.
“I’m not the reason you’re here,” I said, glancing at my watch.
“Forgive me. I digress.”