"Leave it to me, Father," Silva said. Then, to the sergeant, "It's less than a kilometer from here to the house."
"So?"
"And you're saying nobody heard a thing?"
"Uh-huh."
The sergeant looked from one to the other, not offering anything more. Silva turned on his heel and started walking toward their car. Arnaldo, Hector, and Father Brouwer tagged along behind. Silva didn't object when the priest climbed into the back seat.
"The house, right?" Arnaldo asked, starting the engine.
"Right," Silva said and turned around to address Brouwer.
"I saw you talking to the boy."
Brouwer nodded. "He saw it all. He was in a nearby field, talking with his girlfriend. She's dead. Twelve years old. He blames himself for not holding her down. A stray bullet took her."
"What did he see?"
"As that fat idiot back there just told you, the men were hooded. They arrived in a van. No markings. No license plate. They had flashlights; cut into the tents with machetes; were obviously looking for Pereira and his family. When they found them, they cut the little girl's throat."
"Did you see her body?"
"Yes."
"Did the wound look like the one that killed Diana Poli?"
The priest reflected for a moment. "As a matter of fact, it did. It looked exactly like that."
"All right. Go on."
"Then they killed his mother with a shotgun. The father was last. They did it with a pistol. His kneecaps, his stomach, his head." As Brouwer described Pereira's wounds, he illustrated by pointing to the appropriate parts of his own anatomy. "They wanted him to suffer."
"And the boy saw it all?"
"Everything. After they killed his family, the man who'd cut his sister's throat leaned over and did something with his father's hand."
"Did what with his father's hand?"
"The boy has no idea. He just saw one of them bend over with something shiny. Later he looked, but there was nothing there and no wound."
"I'll want to talk to him."
"I was sure you would. I doubt he has anything useful to add."
"The voices? Anyone have an accent? A speech defect?"
"No. I asked."
"Clothing?"
"It was too dark. The hoods looked like they were made of jute. You know, like coffee sacks."
Arnaldo rolled to a stop in front of the fazenda's main house. The new door was still unpainted. Two capangas, cradling shotguns, were seated in chairs on the veranda. Both stood when Silva got out of the car.
"Here to see the boss?" one asked. It was the one who'd stopped to speak to them on the hillside.
"Yes," Silva said. "Tell him."
The capanga turned and knocked. The door opened a crack. Words were exchanged. The door shut again. "They're letting him know you're here," the capanga said.
Thirty seconds later Silva heard the chain being slipped.
Inside, a man with a thick neck and biceps the size of Hector's thighs led them through the house and into the living room. Despite the heat outside, there was a roaring fire in the fireplace. Air conditioning kept the temperature so low that Muniz was actually wearing a sweater.
Their host didn't offer a hand or a smile. "You're not welcome here, priest," he said to Father Brouwer. "Go get your people off my property."
Silva opened his mouth to speak, but the priest beat him to it. "You've sown the wind, you fool, and now you're going to reap the whirlwind."
"You dare to threaten me? Get out!"
"It's not a threat, you bastard, it's a prom-"
"Shut up, Father," Silva said.
The priest turned furious eyes on Silva. Silva ignored him.
"Did you have anything to do with what happened down there?" Silva pointed in the direction of the encampment.
"No," Muniz said. "but I'm not sorry it happened."
"Two little girls died, Senhor Muniz. One of them was only nine."
"What's that got to do with me? Their damned fool parents shouldn't have brought them here in the first place. It was their fault, not mine."
"The other little girl was twelve."
"Why don't you get out of here, too, Silva? And take these other assholes with you."
Arnaldo grunted, but he didn't move. Hector took a step forward, but Silva closed a hand around his arm.
"All right, Senhor Muniz. You're within your rights. Let's go, senhores."
"That's it?" Brouwer sputtered. "You're just going to leave?"
"That's right, Padre. We're just going to leave. And so are you. Come on."
Silva released his nephew, took Brouwer's elbow, and turned him toward the door. The priest looked back over his shoulder and shot a vengeful glance in Muniz's direction.
But he went.
Ferraz had left the matter of disposing of the two bodies until after his murderous visit to the league encampment.
Vicenza wound up in a culvert. They left the driver in his cab, his empty wallet beside him, as if another robbery had ended in murder.
It was almost 7:00 in the morning when the colonel got home. He'd still had to respond to the voice mail messages left while he'd been "asleep," change into a fresh uniform, and put in an appearance at the encampment. He'd called his media spokeswoman, explained how he wanted to spin it, told her to work up a statement, and picked it up on way.
It was past 10:00 when he was finally able to put his head on a pillow, so he was not at all pleased when his telephone rang at quarter to 11:00.
After the clear instructions he'd left with his secretary, no one at the office would have dared to disturb him. It had to be one of those pain-in-the-ass federal cops. But it wasn't. It was Orlando Muniz, and he, unlike the colonel, was in a very good mood.
"Hello, Colonel. How are you this morning?"
Ferraz swallowed his bile. "Just fine, Senhor Muniz. You?"
"I'm calling to commend you for a job of law enforcement well done."
"Uhh, what job is that?"
"The way you handled those trespassers."
"Sorry, Senhor Muniz. I don't know what you're talking about."
"No, Colonel, of course you don't."
There was a significant moment of silence. Then Muniz said, "I've just had some visitors. Those federal policemen that you're getting to know so well-"
"Fucking assholes."
"Yes. And someone else, too. That radical priest."
"The young one or the old bastard?"
"The younger one."
"Brouwer?"
"That's him. Brouwer. He threatened me, Colonel. I think it would behoove us both to keep a sharp eye on the son of a bitch."
Behoove? What kind of a word is that?
"I've known Brouwer for a long time, Senhor Muniz. A very long time. He's got guts, but he's harmless. He wouldn't hurt a fly."
"No? So much the better for him, then. If he tries anything with me, I'll kill him. You sound tired. A busy night?"
"I had a stomach bug that kept me up."
"Really?"
"Yeah. Really."
"You've got to be careful with stomach bugs, Colonel. They can be dangerous. I've heard they can even kill people."
Muniz was still laughing when he hung up.
Chapter Thirty-seven
A kid b y the name of Bento Alves, the son of a tractor salesman, found Vicenza's body.
Ferraz called Silva to tell him about it. "He stuffed her in a culvert that runs under the road to Miracema," the colonel said in a matter-of-fact voice.
"What makes you so sure the murderer was a `he'?"
"I'm getting to that. She could have been there forever, or at least until the rains came and they started looking for the blockage. As it is, we got lucky. The kid's dog was attracted by the smell, went in there to sniff around and, when the dog wouldn't come out, the kid went in after him. It's a real mess, the corpse is. Scared the shit out of the kid."
"When was this?"
"A little after four."