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   "On the run" was a misnomer, for Escobar did not do much running. He spent most of his time lying low, eating, sleeping, talking on the radio. He hired prostitutes, mostly teenage girls, to help him while away the hours. It wasn't the same as the lavish orgies he had arranged in years past, but his money and notoriety still allowed for some indulgences.

   Escobar had trouble finding jeans that would fit. To get a waist size to accommodate his girth, he had to wear pants that were a good six inches too long. The light blue pair he wore on this day were turned up twice in a wide cuff. He wore flip-flops and had pulled on a loose blue polo shirt.

   Prone to intestinal discomfort, he may have been feeling the effects of his birthday revelry the night before. On this afternoon, the only other person in the house was Alvero de Jesus Agudelo, known as Limon, who served as Escobar's valet, driver and bodyguard. The two others staying with them, his courier, Jaime Alberto Rua-Restrepo, and his aunt and cook, Luz Mila Restrepo, had gone out after fixing breakfast.

   At 1 o'clock, Escobar tried several times to phone his family, posing as a radio journalist, but the switchboard operator at the Tequendama Hotel told him the staff had been instructed to block all calls from journalists. He was put on hold, then asked to call back, but finally he got through on the third attempt, speaking briefly to his daughter, Manuela, and then to his wife, Maria Victoria, and his son, Juan Pablo.

   Maria Victoria sobbed on the phone. She was depressed and fatalistic.

   "Honey, what a hangover," Pablo said sympathetically. She continued crying. "These things are a drag. So, what are you going to do?"

   "I don't know."

   "What does your mother say?"

   "It was as if my mother fainted," she said, explaining they had last seen her as they left the airport Friday in Medellin during the family's failed attempt to flee Colombia for Frankfurt, Germany. "I did not call her. She told me bye, and then– "

   "And you have not spoken to her?"

   "No. My mother is so nervous. My mother will die because she made me crazy," Maria Victoria said, explaining how all the family deaths in the previous year - most at the hands of the vigilantes from Los Pepes - had just about killed her with sorrow.

   At his apartment, Hugo was awakened by a phone call from his father.

   "Pablo's talking!" the colonel said. Hugo dressed quickly and hurried back out to the parking lot, where the other officers were assembling.

   Escobar was still on the phone.

   "So, what are you going to do?" he asked his wife gently.

   "I don't know. I mean, wait and see where we are going to go and I believe that will be the end of us."

   "No!"

   "So?" Maria Victoria asked flatly.

   "Don't you give me this coldness! Holy Mary!"

   "And you?"

   "Ahhh."

   "And you?"

   "What about me?"

   "What are you going to do?"

   "Nothing. . . . What do you need?" Pablo asked. He did not want to talk about himself.

   "Nothing," his wife said.

   "What do you want?"

   "What would I want?" she asked glumly.

   "If you need something, call me, OK?"

   "OK."

   "You call me now, quickly. There is nothing more I can tell you. What else can I say? I have remained right on track, right?"

   "But how are you? Oh, my God, I don't know!"

   "We must go on. Think about it. Now that I am so close, right?" Pablo said, in what appears to be a suggestion that he was about to surrender.

   "Yes," his wife said, with no enthusiasm.

   "Think about your boy, too, and everything else, and don't make any decisions too quickly, OK?"

   "Yes."

   "Call your mother again and ask her if she wants you to go there or what."

   "OK."

   "Remember that you can reach me by beeper."

   "OK."

   "OK."

   "Ciao," said Maria Victoria.

   "So long," her husband said.

   With the police Search Bloc listening in and recording the conversation, Pablo Escobar chatted on the phone with his wife and family as they holed up in a hotel in Bogota, trying desperately to get out of Colombia. It was Thursday, Dec. 2, 1993.

   After Escobar had spoken with his wife, his son, Juan Pablo, got back on the line. Juan Pablo had been given a list of questions from a journalist.

   Often, when Escobar was in trouble, he used the Colombian media to broadcast his messages and demands, trying to whip up public sentiment in his favor. Other times, when he was displeased with the media, he would have reporters and editors killed. Juan Pablo wanted his father's advice on how to answer these questions.

   "Look, this is very important in Bogota," Escobar told his son. He suggested that they might also be able to sell his answers to publications overseas, an opportunity to lobby publicly for his family to be given refuge. For now he just wanted to hear what the questions were. He said he would call back later to help his son answer them.

   "This is also publicity," Escobar said. "Explaining the reasons and other matters to them. Do you understand? Well done and well organized."

   "Yes, yes," Juan Pablo said. He began to read the questions: " 'Whatever the country, refuge is conditioned on the immediate surrender of your father. Would your father be willing to turn himself in if you are settled somewhere?' "

   ". . . Go on," Pablo instructed.

   "The next one is, 'Would he be willing to turn himself in before you take refuge abroad?' "

   "Go on."

   "I spoke with the man and he told me that if there were some questions I did not want to answer, there was no problem, and if I wanted to add some questions, he would include them."

   "OK. The next one?"

   " 'Why do you think that several countries have refused to receive your family?' OK?"

   "Yes."

   " 'From which embassies have you requested help for them to take you in. . . ?' "

   "OK."

   " 'Don't you think your father's situation, accused of X number of crimes, assassination of public figures, considered one of the most powerful drug traffickers in the world . . . ?' " Juan Pablo stopped reading.

   "Go on."

   "But there are many. Around 40 questions."

   Escobar told his son he would call back later in the day. "I may find a way to communicate by fax," he said.

   "No," Juan Pablo said, apparently concerned that use of a fax would somehow be too dangerous.

   "No, huh? OK. OK. So, good luck."

   Escobar hung up.

   Lt. Hugo Martinez and his special Colombian police electronic tracking team had not been able to assemble in time to chase the signal from this phone call. However, the American technicians at Centra Spike and the Search Bloc's own fixed listening posts had triangulated it to the same Los Olivos neighborhood where the calls had originated the day before.

   They hunkered down and waited for the promised next call. If Escobar was going to try to answer 40 questions, he was going to be on the phone a long time.

   At precisely 3 p.m. that Thursday, Escobar called his son back.

   Juan Pablo again began relaying the journalist's questions. The first asked the son to explain what it would take for his father to surrender.

   Escobar instructed, "Tell him: 'My father cannot turn himself in unless he has guarantees for his security.' "

   "OK," said Juan Pablo.

   "And we totally support him in that."

   "OK."

   "Above any considerations."

   "Yep."

   "My father is not going to turn himself in before we are placed in a foreign country, and while the police -"