“Perdoname, donde esta la estacion?” he said in Spanish. Asking where the railway station was.
The driver smiled and motioned to the right.
“Sólo al norte de aqui, ” he said, slowing as he approached the sentry gate. “It’s just north of here.”
Eduardo glanced in that direction, and saw nothing but the wide, muddy lot. Then he heard Ramon’s pushbutton window roll down, jerked his eyes back toward him, and saw him reach out the window to swipe an identification card through a gatepost security scanner.
Eduardo felt a cold spark of alarm as it swung open to admit them and Ramon pulled to a halt several yards in front of the building.
“Qué es esto?” he blurted. “I don—”
Its movement a blur, Ramon’s hand had shot beneath the dash and come back into sight gripping a pistol that must have been clipped to the dash’s underside.
“Open your door and get out,” he said, brandishing the gun at Eduardo. “Slowly.”
Eduardo swallowed thickly, dumbfounded. One look at the weapon had told him it was a Sig Pro.40 semiautomatic — a standard-issue DEA sidearm. The thought that he’d fallen for another anti-drug squad setup flashed through his mind, and was quickly dismissed. What sense did that make? He had not escaped from confinement, but been willingly freed by his jailers. Nor had he uttered a peep about his business dealings to his driver or the plainclothes men who had escorted him to the border crossing.
He decided that Ramon, if that was his real name, must indeed be with DeVane — but the suddenly aggressive look in the man’s eyes, the deft speed with which he’d produced his concealed weapon, and the particular model of gun he was using were all indications that he was no mere chauffeur. While conducting anti-drug operations in Bolivia and elsewhere in South America, DEA and U.S. Special Forces units had recruited and trained in-country field commandos who knew the territory and were able to speak the language. After completing their mandatory one-year tours of duty these natives — many of whom had blood ties to the coca farmers and distributors — would often put their skills and inside knowledge of narco police tactics up for sale to the cartels they had once sworn to oppose.
Eduardo cursed himself for a fool. His uncle was a respected lieutenant in the DeVane organization, and he had assumed it was Vicente, acting out of familial loyalty, who had brought about his release. But it could have been DeVane who’d engineered it. Must have been. And for reasons that, it seemed, were far from benign.
His face paling, Eduardo did as he had been instructed. Almost before he had exited the vehicle, Ramon was out his own door. He hurried around to Eduardo’s side, grabbed him roughly by the arm with one hand, and shoved him along toward the building’s corrugated metal door, the Sig pistol jammed against the back of his head.
There was an intercom beside the entrance. Ramon leaned toward it, pushed a button under the speaker, and announced himself, his gun held steady. An instant later the door rose clankily on its metal tracks.
Ramon prodded Eduardo through the entrance with the Sig and followed him inside. Then the door rattled down behind them, shutting out the daylight. Eduardo found himself thrown into sudden gloom. The air was stale and warm. Incandescent lightbulbs on the ceiling, covered by simple metal grills, seemed to propagate rather than dispel the interior shadows.
Ramon forced him to keep moving. As his pupils adjusted to the dimness, Eduardo glanced from side to side, and noticed the shipping crates on wooden pallets stacked all around him. Just as he had suspected, a warehouse. He guessed it was a hundred feet deep and twice as wide.
Then he looked straight ahead of him, saw the group of men waiting in the cleared-out space at the end of the aisle, and felt a sharp jab of fear. Only two were seated, the backs of their chairs against the bare unpainted walls. Vicente was one of them. Although Eduardo had never met him in person, he knew the slightly built American in the incongruous white suit seated to his uncle’s right was Harlan DeVane. On either side of them stood a pair of guards holding short-barreled Micro Uzi assault rifles.
The tall, muscular man standing rigidly in front of the others, his chiseled face impassive, was DeVane’s chief lieutenant, Siegfried Kuhl.
“Eduardo,” DeVane said, his voice carrying softly across the room. “How do you do?”
Eduardo tried to think of something to say, but thought was impossible, swept from his head in the whipping gale of terror generated from the group of men before him and the pressure of Ramon’s gun against the base of his skull.
DeVane steepled his hands on his lap. His legs were crossed, his right thigh hanging loosely over his left knee.
“You look frightened,” he said. “Are you?”
Eduardo still could not wring any sound from his throat. He felt a choking, breathless nausea.
“Tell me if you are afraid,” DeVane said.
Eduardo opened his mouth in another unsuccessful attempt at speech, then closed it and simply nodded. The tiny projection of the Sig’s front sight ruffled his neck hairs as his head moved up and down.
DeVane sighed.
“You know, my boy, I am as loath to be here as yourself,” he said in his smooth, quiet voice. “I preside over a great many enterprises, and generally a small complication such as you have caused would be the sort of thing I let others handle. I cannot be everywhere at once. A leader must have confidence in those who work for him.” His hand left his lap and fluttered toward Vicente. “Solid, honorable men like your uncle.”
Eduardo glanced over at Vicente. A rail-thin man in his mid-sixties with a sweep of white hair over a high forehead, Vicente looked back at him for only a second, his wrinkled face grim. Then he dropped his eyes.
Eduardo’s legs weakened underneath him. It was the expression on the old man’s face. The way he had avoided his gaze.
“This isn’t to say your situation hasn’t been of interest to me, or that I feel it is inconsequential,” DeVane went on. “The problem isn’t your arrest. That happens. In any competition there are errors and setbacks. Times when the best of plays are outdone by your opponent. Do you understand me so far?”
Eduardo nodded.
“Good,” DeVane said. “And since you’ve admitted to your own fear, I’ll tell you what scares me.” He leaned slightly forward in his chair. “I fear the stupid and the weak, because history illustrates that their actions can bring down the most powerful. When someone like you is gullible enough to be duped by a common street-walker, letting her convince you to deal with men you do not know, men you do not bother checking out, there is no telling what information might slip to the other side. It doesn’t matter how much or how little you have to offer, because one thing leads to another, and that to another, and so forth.
“For example, by contacting Vicente to bail you out of trouble, you put him in a position of having to ask a favor of me. Out of respect for your uncle, I then felt obliged to offer bribe money to a petty government bureaucrat, some of which filtered down to the magistrate in charge of your case, with smaller amounts trickling in dribs and drabs to a federal prosecutor, and then, I suppose, to a police clerk in an evidence control room who conveniently made the proof of your transaction disappear. These are markers, my boy. And they may lead an astute and determined opponent from you to Vicente, from Vicente up to me, from me down to a lackey officer, and then finally back to you — a connective loop that could theoretically cause me trouble without end.”