He wasn’t a drinker.
“Are you curious,” Porter turned to Gannon after his fourth beer “as to why everyone’s giving you a hard time?”
Gannon shrugged.
“Down here, we bleed for our stories. We’ve all stared down the barrel of a gun. We’ve all faced jail, abduction, threats, intimidation and beatings.”
“The thing is,” Turner said, “we know about your hiring and the bit of stink around your situation at your former rag, the Buffalo Sentinel.”
“Is that right?”
Turner bobbed her head in a big alcohol-laden nod.
“You should be glad you’re not working there anymore,” Porter said. “The print newspaper industry is melting. But the WPA will survive as one of the world’s biggest online content providers… I digress.”
“You digress,” Archer agreed.
“Jack,” Porter put his arm around Gannon. “We heard about your little adventure story about that cop out of Buffalo that impressed Melody so much that, despite everyone’s advice to the contrary, she hired you. And from what we understand, the story was more luck than journalism.”
Gannon shook his head, smiling at their inebriated arrogance.
“You guys are good.”
“Well,” Porter chuckled, “we are.” He pointed to Archer, Turner and himself. “All Pulitzer winners, pal.”
“It’s amazing that you know what I went through for my ‘little adventure story’ sitting all the way down here in South America, because I didn’t bump into any Pulitzer winners while I was living it. In fact, it was the WPA who begged me to help its reporters.”
“Loosen up.” Porter slapped Gannon’s back. “Giving the rookie a hard time is a right of passage. Ain’t that right, Sally?”
The three drinkers raised their glasses, laughed, then bought another round to honor their dead friends as the afternoon morphed into a wake of teary tributes to Gabriela and Marcelo, leaving Gannon alone with his thoughts.
He withdrew into his memories of growing up a blue-collar kid in Buffalo where his mother was a waitress and his father worked in a factory that made rope. He remembered how his big sister, Cora, got their parents to buy him a used computer and encouraged him to write and pursue his dream of being a journalist.
You’re going to be a great writer some day… I see it in your eyes. You don’t let go. You don’t give up…
Gannon worshipped Cora, but they grew apart. She got into trouble with drugs before she ran away from home. Over the years, while he graduated from college and got a job as a staff reporter at the Sentinel, his parents tried to find her.
At times Gannon would push aside his anger and search for Cora himself.
Always in vain.
While he gave up, his parents never stopped trying, right up until they were killed when a drunk driver slammed into their car just over a year ago.
Gannon had no other family.
No wife, no girlfriend. He was alone in the world.
But that was fine with him, he thought, glimpsing himself on the Globo TV news report on the set over the bar. As it played, he studied the few seconds of footage of the scene and the breeze kicking up ash.
That’s when it hit him. The piece he’d been missing.
“Excuse me,” he said to the others. “It’s been a long day, I’d like to head back to my hotel.” He pulled several bills from his pocket and left them on the table.
Turner plucked out a couple and put them back in his hand.
“Tomorrow-” Porter started a new beer “-they may have the complete victim list. We’ll work on that.”
“You get to your hotel while it’s still light out, Jack,” Archer said. “This town isn’t safe after dark. You remember what to tell your taxi driver?”
“Hotel de nove palmas.”
“Good.”
But five minutes later, when Gannon got into a cab, he told the driver to take him to the Cafe Amaldo, the A Zona da Matanca. Returning to the blast area, he saw police officers still protecting the scene while a few forensic people continued to work. Most of the news crews had left.
He walked along the fringes, wondering why the experts ignored a basic rule by not protecting transient physical evidence. All day long, the wind had been lifting ash and papers from the blast site.
The stuff had been carried along on a virtual flight path.
Sloppy police work, he thought. It helped explain why Rio’s homicide clearance rate was around 3 percent, while the average back home was about 65. Using what he’d seen at the site, and on the TV footage, to guide him, Gannon figured that most of the material had ended up in the alley across the street from the cafe.
Although police were present, the alley was not sealed. The narrow passage between the tall buildings was vacant and dark, but there was enough natural light remaining. Gannon’s pulse quickened.
A number of papers were on the pavement among other debris, or pressed to the walls. He began collecting them. Were they from the blast? Who knew? He’d study every one he could find.
“Hey! Que voce esta fazendo la?” a voice boomed down the alley. He was in trouble.
“Que voce esta fazendo la?”
The voice was now closer; two figures were approaching from a distance. Gannon turned and walked in the opposite direction.
“Batente!”
The figures were moving faster, Gannon’s breathing quickened and he started a fast trot.
“Policia! Batente agora!”
His heart pounding, Gannon ran from the alley.
Don’t let the police get near you.
He cut across a busy street to a large hotel, entered the lobby and rushed through it, finding a rear exit that opened to an ornate gurgling fountain, which led to a plaza.
Sirens echoed through the city.
Were they for him?
Fueled by adrenaline, he kept moving.
Without looking back he hurried around the plaza’s statues. Two or three blocks away, the lights of a theater, nightclubs and restaurants glittered in the dusk. He slipped into the crowds on the sidewalk and made his way toward the restaurants until he saw a taxi.
The driver was in his fifties, wearing a white cap. Gannon neared the cab, pointing at it then himself. The driver nodded, making the small silver cross on the chain around his neck sway a little.
“Hotel de nove palmas,” Gannon said after getting in the back.
The taxi pulled away. No police were in sight.
As Gannon’s breathing settled, he analyzed the situation. All he’d done was gather trash from a public street in an unsealed area near a crime scene.
Still, if Estralla learned of it, it would be disastrous.
Gannon dragged the back of his hand over his moist brow and glimpsed the driver’s eyes studying him in the rearview mirror. Gannon felt a small ache in his right hand. He was still gripping the papers, a sheaf nearly half an inch thick.
As the cab worked its way through Centro, Gannon inserted his earpiece into his digital recorder and played Gabriela’s last message, cuing up the key aspect.
“…I got a call from an anonymous woman who claims to have a big story and documents for us. I set up a meeting at the Cafe Amaldo…”
Gannon replayed “and documents for us,” several times.
If Gabriela met her source, and if that source brought records, then it’s possible the blast scattered some of them to the street.
Those documents could be in his hands now.
A few of the papers were charred. Some had burned edges.
They had to have come from the blast.
Gannon caught his breath when he stopped at one page.
It looked like it was smeared with blood.
As soon as he got to his hotel room he started working.
This wouldn’t be easy. The papers were in Portuguese. He set them out on the desk and switched on his laptop. Some papers had letterheads, some looked like spread sheets, sales records, membership lists, business correspondence.
He typed phrases into free online language services and translated what he could into English. It gave him a sense of what each record was. When he found pages that obviously belonged together, he grouped them. The documents were from computer companies, law firms, banks, churches. It was meticulous work but he kept at it until exhaustion overtook him and he went to bed.