“What’s that?”
“She was always interested in postings at that specific firm.”
“Why?”
“Again, I must emphasize that this is not for publication?”
“Certainly.”
“There were rumors that Worldwide Rio Advogados represented the interests of big narco networks,” Viana said. “Some said they set up shell companies for the CIA, or numbered companies operating child labor sweat shops in contravention of UN treaties. All of it rumor, nothing ever surfaced. If it had, we would never send our people there.”
“Yes, but would Maria be the kind of person who would want to expose such activities if she’d found evidence, say documented evidence?”
“Perhaps. She was passionate about human rights, but really-” Viana shook his head as if to downplay the subject “-I don’t know. Those are only rumors and my speculation is not for publication, please.”
“Where did Maria live?”
“In the favela with her parents, Pedro and Fatima Santo.”
“She never moved out?”
“No, she wanted to make life better in her neighborhood.”
“Which favela?”
“Ceu sobre Rio. Loosely translated, it means, heaven over Rio,” Viana said.
“Do you have a specific address? I’d like to go there and talk to her family and friends.”
“That’s not advisable,” Viana said.
“As a journalist, I must go. Luiz here can be my guide.”
“No, I could not,” Luiz said. “It would not be safe for either of us. Ceu sobre Rio is one of the most dangerous favelas in all of Rio de Janeiro,”
“The drug gangs live there and control it,” Viana said. “As you may know, they control many favelas. In exchange for loyalty, they protect the residents and provide them with the things governments don’t,” Viana said. “If you enter as a stranger without permission, you could be robbed or beaten, taken hostage for ransom, or worse.”
“I understand it can be dangerous.”
“Especially for people like you, Mr. Gannon,” Viana said. “A year ago, a Brazilian TV crew doing interviews in the favelas was taken hostage after the narco chiefs accused them of being police sympathizers. They were tortured for days, their agony recorded with their own TV cameras.”
“I recall reading about that case. They were killed?”
“Executed,” Viana said. “No one was arrested. Then just last month, a reporter and photographer from Spain went into Ceu sobre Rio. No one heard from them for five days-that is when their bodies were found in a Dumpster behind a Zona Sul police station. The drug bosses had suspected them to be undercover international police posing as foreign journalists. They were tortured, their torment recorded on a disk left on their bodies. It shows their killers, their faces hidden under bandannas, warning other ‘foreign police rats’ to stay away. It was on the TV news.”
“I understand,” Gannon said, taking a few moments to ponder Viana’s advice. Then he asked a few minor questions before closing his notebook and thanking him.
The taxi trip back to Centro was a long, silent one until the cab neared the bureau and Luiz turned to Gannon.
“You did some good digging, Jack, finding out Maria Santo was Gabriela’s source and everything else we learned today.”
“We got lucky there.”
“I guess we’ve reached a dead end at the favelas.”
“I’m not sure where we go on this story next,” Gannon said.
“The others are due back the day after tomorrow. It doesn’t leave you much time.”
The taxi had stopped in front of their building.
“It’s been a long day, Luiz, thanks for your help. Send a news status update to New York, say that follow-up stories to the bombing are in development, then go home. I’ll see you tomorrow.”
“Okay, thank you.”
After Luiz entered the building’s lobby Gannon said to his driver, “Do you speak English?”
“A little.”
“Take me to a restaurant that is as close as possible to the entrance for Ceu sobre Rio.”
“Ceu sobre Rio?” The driver raised his eyebrows, shifted his transmission and eased into traffic. “Okay.”
After negotiating heavy late-day traffic, the driver came to a collection of boutiques and shops bordered by rising hills. The taxi stopped at a small restaurant called the Real American Diner, where Gannon got a table outside on the patio and ordered a burger made with beef from Argentina. In making awkward small talk with his waiter, Gannon confirmed that ascending beside him was the favela, Ceu sobre Rio, an explosion of clustered shacks, jutting at all angles, piled on top of each other as they clung in defiance to the steep hill. While the sun sank behind the hill, Gannon asked his waiter if any of the staff lived there, or if he knew anyone who lived there.
After several minutes, Gannon was invited into the darkened restaurant, to the end of the bar where some of the staff had gathered. A man in his thirties, who bore a friendly face and spoke English, nodded to the youngest in the group, a teenager wearing an apron over jeans and a white T-shirt.
“Alfonso, our dishwasher, lives in the favela.”
“I am a journalist from New York City.” Gannon showed them his laminated WPA ID, then the clipping about the bombing victims. “I need to find the family of this woman.” He tapped Maria Santo’s picture. “Pedro and Fatima Santo. I need to visit them in the favela and talk about Maria.”
The older man translated and Alfonso began nodding.
“He knows Maria’s family.”
“Will he take me to them? Will he be my guide? I will tip him.”
The older man asked the boy, who spoke for a moment.
“Yes, he says. Meet him out front of this restaurant tomorrow at noon.”
“Can’t we go now?”
The man asked the boy.
“No, it is almost night, tomorrow is Sunday, it will be safer to take you then.”
“Good.”
Energized by the break and the meal, Gannon tipped the staff, who called a cab for him. As he waited, twilight fell and he gazed up at the Ceu sobre Rio. The echo of traffic, shouting and throbbing hip-hop music rolled down in the evening air.
Every now and then, Gannon heard the sporadic pop of gunfire.
17
Big Cloud, Wyoming
After the funeral, time floated by Emma like fog.
She’d lost track of it as she grappled with the emptiness.
She’d sit alone in Tyler’s room for hours, rocking in the chair where she had nursed him. Joe had made the chair for her from Canadian maple. Its rhythmic squeak comforted her as she held Tyler’s teddy bear while images of the crash whirled around her.
Each time Emma replayed the tragedy, she saw Tyler being saved.
Was she crazy?
Oh, Joe, tell me what to do. Please, tell me!
Emma could feel Joe pulling her back to that day.
“You’re one of the most fearless people I know. Woe to anyone or anything that comes between you and Tyler.”
That was her answer.
Emma could not allow a lie to come between her and their baby. Emma needed proof, evidence that what she saw, that what she felt with all her heart, was wrong. And until she had it, she would never ever let go of her belief that Tyler was alive.
Never.
She found the binder holding papers from the funeral director and snapped through it, coming to the documents she needed.
“What is it, dear?” Aunt Marsha asked.
“I need to go out, to see to matters.”
Emma showered, dressed, made phone calls from the bedroom, then collected her purse and files.
“Are you sure you’re up to going out alone?” her uncle asked. “What matters are you talking about? Maybe we can see to them for you?”
“Thank you, Uncle Ned, but this is something I have to do myself.”
Emma got into her Chevrolet Cobalt and caught her breath.