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Chavez watched his partner, watched his eyes. Facial expressions can be manufactured when necessary, but the eyes were a little trickier to get right. The look in Dominic’s eyes told Ding he was serious.

“Dom…”

“Two seconds…”

“Dom!” Chavez rasped.

Hadi was nodding, raising his hands in supplication. Dominic withdrew the gun, and Hadi said, “Ford Corcel.”

Lancia growled, “You’re a traitor.”

Dominic pointed the gun at Lancia’s left eye. “You’re next. Where’s it parked?”

Lancia didn’t respond.

“This time you get three seconds,” Dominic said, then shifted his gun, jamming it against Lancia’s knee. “Then a cane for life.”

“One block east of the pool hall, middle of the block on the south side.”

Chavez said to Dom, “Go grab it. I’ll babysit our friends.”

Fifteen minutes later, Chavez heard a honk and looked down the alley. The Corcel was sitting there, side door open. He got Lancia and Hadi up and walking. At the car, he prodded them into the backseat. “Found this in the trunk,” Dominic said, holding up a small coil of rusted baling wire.

Chavez leaned over the seat. “Gimme your hands.”

Dominic started driving.

“We’re gonna need some privacy,” Chavez said. He sat sideways in the passenger seat, gun resting on the backrest.

“I think I’ve got the place. Saw it on the way here.”

The building was nearly identical to all the others-four-story rectangle with one door and balconied windows-except that the windows and door were boarded up. On the side of the building, a set of steps overgrown with shrubbery rose into the darkness. An official-looking seal was plastered across the front door. In Portuguese it read “Condemned.”

“Here,” Dominic said. “Be right back.”

He got out, shoved his way through the overgrown steps, and disappeared. He was back in two minutes. He nodded at Chavez, who got out and fell in behind Lancia and Hadi as they followed Dominic up the steps. After about thirty feet, the shrubbery thinned out and the steps turned right onto a porch. Like the one below, the back door was emblazoned with the “Condemned” seal, but this one was hanging by only its bottom hinge. Dominic lifted the door free and set it to one side. Chavez ordered Hadi and Lancia inside.

Under the glow of Dominic’s LED penlight, it quickly became clear why the building had been condemned. The walls, floor, and ceiling were covered in soot and in some places charred down to the supports. The floor was a checkerboard of melted linoleum tiles, charred plywood, and open holes, through which they could see the lower floors.

“Sit down,” Chavez ordered them.

“Where?” Lancia snapped.

“Anywhere that isn’t a hole. Sit.”

They complied.

Dominic said, “I’m gonna have a look around.”

Chavez sat down across from their prisoners, listening as Dominic rummaged through the other rooms. He came back with a tarnished kerosene lantern. He gave it a shake; fluid sloshed inside. He set it down in the corner and lit it. Hissing yellow light filled the room.

Chavez looked over to Dom and shrugged. Dominic said, “You’re the boss; your show.”

Chavez got up, walked closer to Lancia and Hadi, then knelt down again. “I’m gonna talk for a little bit. I want you to listen. Closely. I ain’t gonna bullshit you, and I don’t want you to bullshit me. If we get along, you two stand a much better chance of seeing sunrise. What’re your names?”

Neither man answered.

“Come on, just first names, so we can talk.”

“Hadi.”

The other one hesitated, his lips pressed tightly together. Finally he said, “Ibrahim.”

“Good, thanks. Listen, we know you two, and your two dead friends, did the Paulinia refinery. We know this, so let’s not talk about that again. We’re not cops, and we’re not here to arrest you for the refinery.”

“Then who are you?” Hadi asked.

“Someone else.”

“What makes you think we were involved with that place?” Ibrahim asked.

“How do you think?” This Chavez said with a half-smile and a fleeting glance at Hadi.

“Why do you look at me?”

To Ibrahim, Chavez asked, “Why were you chasing Hadi?” Ibrahim didn’t answer, so Chavez continued: “I’m going to take a wild guess at something: You did the refinery job but didn’t count on the smoke closing down the São Paulo airport, so you went to plan B-come to Rio. You get here, then things go bad. Hadi goes on the run; Ibrahim, you chase after him. Why?”

“Why don’t you care about the refinery?” Ibrahim pressed.

“Not our country, not our problem. Why were you chasing him?”

“He’s a traitor.”

Hadi snapped, “You’re a liar. You’re the traitor. You, or Ahmed, or Fa’ad. You leaked the sketch.”

“What sketch?”

“The one on the television. I saw it; it looked like me. Who else could have given it to them?”

“Who told you all this?”

“The Em-when I saw the sketch, I made contact. There was a message waiting. It said you’d betrayed me and that I had to run.”

“You were tricked.”

“I authenticated it. It was genuine.”

Ibrahim was shaking his head. “No, you’re wrong. We didn’t betray you.”

Chavez said, “So you and your friends just wanted to catch up with him and chat, is that it?”

“Yes.”

Chavez leaned closer to Hadi. “That’s bullshit, and you know it. Whether that message was real or not, all they knew was you were running. Probably to the police. They weren’t going to take that chance. You know it’s true.”

Hadi said nothing.

“Okay, so here’s the deal,” Chavez said. “As far as we’re concerned-”

“We still don’t know who you are.”

“Don’t our accents tell you something?”

“Americans.”

“Right. As far as we’re concerned, the refinery is off the table. What we want to know is who’s operating in the U.S. How many cells, where they’re located… All that.”

“Fuck you,” said Ibrahim.

Chavez heard Dominic standing up behind him. He turned to see him walking into the kitchen. He turned back to Hadi. “How about you? Just give us-”

He heard Dominic’s footsteps returning, but at a faster pace and with purpose. He turned. His gun wrapped in a mold-encrusted dish towel, Dominic walked up to Ibrahim, put the gun against his left knee, and pulled the trigger. The towel muffled the shot to a muted pop. Ibrahim screamed. Dominic stuffed a second towel in his mouth.

Chavez said, “Dom, Jesus…”

Dominic shifted the gun again and fired a round into Ibrahim’s right knee. Ibrahim thrashed, screaming into the towel, his head banging against the wall behind him. Dominic crouched down beside him and slapped his face hard, once, twice, then a third time. Ibrahim went quiet. Tears streamed down his face. Hadi had shrunk away from his partner, trying to slide himself down the wall.

Chavez pointed at him. “Not another inch.” He grabbed Dominic’s arm and tried to stand him up. Dominic didn’t budge but just crouched there, slump-shouldered beside Ibrahim, staring into his face.

“Dom! Get up.”

Dominic tore his eyes off Ibrahim and stood up. Chavez pulled him into the kitchen. “What the fuck was that?”

“The talk therapy wasn’t working, Ding.”

“Not your call to make. Christ, get ahold of yourself. He’s useless to us now. A bullet in each knee… we’ll be lucky if he can string two words together.”

Dominic shrugged. “Hadi’s our guy anyway. He was a courier. Ibrahim is a cell leader. He knows Paulinia and that’s it.”

“We don’t know that. Let me do it my way?”

“Okay, sure.”

“You hearing me?”

“Yeah, dammit, I said I was.”

Chavez walked back into the room and knelt down again. To Ibrahim he said, “I’m going to take the towel out. If you scream, it goes back in.”