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They went inside. Louise and Adams sat gloomily at a table in the front room playing gin rummy. Oakley said, “She didn’t turn up,” and headed for the corridor, ignoring their questions. Orozco trailed him into the office and shut the door. Oakley said, “What about the bug in the suitcase?”

“It went over the border at Lochiel and they lost the signal.”

“They what?” Oakley wheeled.

“Look, Carl, a little transmitter like that ain’t got a whole lot of range. Maybe we’ll pick it up again. I got men on every road south out of Lochiel.”

“They’d damned well better find it.”

“You get no guarantees in this business. We do our best.”

“You sound like a God damned used-car salesman on South Sixth in Tucson.”

Orozco grinned. “I used to be.” He pointed a pudgy finger and, following his glance, Oakley saw a map pinned up against the bookshelves; it hadn’t been there before. Orozco said, “’Scuse me for making the place into a war room but I’m tryin’ to run the whole operation by phone from here.” He went over to the map and beckoned. “Look here. I got men in Nogales and Magdalena. Ain’t all that many roads leading out of Lochiel—sooner or later the bleeper’s got to go through somewhere around there unless they get smart and ditch it or double back this side of the border, in which case I got a man posted at Lochiel. We’ll turn them up. Just a matter of time.”

“Unless they stop to divide up the money and leave the suitcase on a junk heap at Cananea.”

“I’ve got boys closing in. If it’s there they’ll find it.”

“Sure. Then what?”

Orozco shrugged. “You got to play this kind of thing by ear, Carl.”

“And what am I supposed to do in the meantime? Sit here on my ass and diddle myself?”

Orozco brought up a straight chair from the back of the room and reversed it, sitting down cowboy-fashion, astraddle with his thick arms folded across the high back of the chair. “Time we had that little talk about the ranch, Carl. I told you I’d bring it up today.”

“This isn’t the time for it.”

“Hell it ain’t. What else you got to talk about right now?”

“I don’t want to talk at all.”

“Too bad, because I got a few things to say.”

Oakley sat back in Earle’s leather chair and closed his eyes painfully. It didn’t discourage Orozco; the fat man launched into a droning speech.

“In the past year Earle’s had four fences pulled down and two barns burned to the ground. That’s just kid stoff, sure—nothing you can’t handle. But you keep turnin’ a deaf ear to these chicanos and their machismo is going to cause a rising. They see black people getting concessions all over the place and they figure it’s their turn, you know? If the blacks can do it so can the Mexicanos. You ever been out in the scrub behind this ranch out east, Carl? You ever visited a family of chicanos livin’ fourteen to a three-room ’dobe hut, the house full of malnutrition and TB and unemployment and infant mortality? When they can they pick peas for a dollar a day and when they can’t they live on tortillas and beans. Maybe one kid gets a job as a yard boy or carry-out boy. Sitting up there in the scrub hills lookin’ down on this ranch and this big house, all of which got stolen from those people’s grandparents. You know how they did that, Carl? Easy. A honnerd years ago the Mexican goes into the crossroads gringo store to buy a sack of feed and the storekeeper says, ‘Sign here and I’ll give you credit,’ and the chicano goes ahead and signs a paper he can’t read because he needs the credit. Turns out he’s signed a deed to his land. The judges and the lawyers and the tax collectors and every gringo in Arizona defrauded these people out of their birthrights. Now they want ’em back. They want to know if you’re gonna give it to them or if they’re gonna have to take it.”

Orozco’s voice ran down; Oakley kept his eyes shut. His silence argued with Orozco.

Orozco said stubbornly, “I got a cousin out in the back hills there livin’ on beans and bread. No meat, no milk. They get their drinking water from an irrigation ditch. Conniston’s been gettin’ farm payments from the government that exceed the income of every chicano in this county put together. My cousin’s gettin’ fed up, Carl.”

Oakley opened his eyes with a grimace and studied the fat man with cool mistrust. “If he’s your cousin why do you let him live like that?”

“Because he’s too proud to accept my help. I’ve offered him money plenty times.”

“But he’s not too proud to demand title to land he never earned.”

“That’s a redneck argument, Carl. I didn’ expect it from you. ‘Look at the lazy greaser, good for nahthing, livin’ on welfare.’ Only there ain’t no welfare down here to speak of. Just gringos complainin’ about the lazy nogood greasers.”

“Don’t call me a bigot, Diego. You know damn well when I’m in trouble I’d sooner go to you for help than any gringo I know.”

“Sure. And when was the last time you invited a chicano into your home for a nice sociable dinner?”

Oakley tipped his head back and closed his eyes down to slits. “You’re way out of line, Diego. Don’t start calling me names just because your chicanos just can’t adjust to the times. How can you try to bulldoze me with a fantastic pipedream like this? Conniston Industries has firm, clear title to this ranch. This wild chicano talk is going to do about as much good as a girl saying she wants her virginity back.” Abruptly he shot his eyes wide open and leaned forward, elbows on the desk, as if to catch Orozco off guard. “The fact of the matter is you got roped into La Causa by some crazy fanatic or other who knew you had a pipeline to Conniston through me and now you’re going through the motions because you don’t want your friends to call you a Tio Taco or a vendido or a Malinchista sellout Uncle Tom. All right, you made your pitch and I didn’t buy it. Let’s drop it, all right? Go back and tell them I’m not in the market.”

“You don’ think much of me, do you?”

“I think a lot of you, Diego, but I think you got yourself roped into a mistake because you didn’t stop and use your head first.”

“You think I’m just an errand boy for some big-shot Mexican that runs the movement, hey?” Orozco smiled slowly. “I got news for you, Carl. I am the movement.”

Oakley scowled. “I’m not impressed. I gave you more credit for brains.”

“Did you? Did I mention I’m planning to run for the state senate next year?”

“More power to you,” Oakley said with distaste; he was about to add a sharp remark when the phone rang. He grabbed it spitefully. “Hello.”

“Mr. Oakley, please?” A girl’s flat-chested chirp.

“Speaking.”

“Mr. Burns calling, sir? Of Cleland, Burns and Lee, brokerage? Hold on, please, sir?”

“… Hello, Carl? Jim Burns here. On that short-sell order of yours, Conniston Industries common. The stock opened an eighth of a point down this morning and it’s lost three eighths in the day’s trading.”

“What of it?” Oakley snapped.

“Well, just this. There seems to be a lot of short-selling in the stock and it’s disturbed the market. I feel obliged to remind you that you can’t complete a short sale unless there’s been an uptick since you placed the order. There has been no uptick. As of this afternoon’s close, New York time, the stock is half a point below the point where it was when you put through the order. In good conscience I felt I’d better warn you—you could easily be caught holding the bag.”