your old man, Keller thinks. What was left of the bottom half of him was lying in the ashes of a smoldering bonfire. “I think you’d better get your head around the probability that your father’s not coming back.”
The expression on Ascensión’s face is exactly that of a dog that’s just learned it has lost its beloved master.
Confusion.
Grief.
Rage.
“How do you know that?” Iván asks Keller.
Ric wraps his arms around Iván. “I’m sorry, ’mano.”
“Someone’s going to pay for this,” Iván says.
“I have Elena on the phone,” Núñez says. He puts it on speaker. “Elena, have you heard anything more?”
It has to be Elena Sánchez, Keller thinks. Adán’s sister, retired from the family trade since she handed Baja over to the Esparzas.
“Nothing, Ricardo. Have you?”
“We have confirmation that Ignacio is gone.”
“Has anyone told Eva? Has anyone been to see her?”
“Not yet,” Núñez says. “We’ve been waiting until we know something definitive.”
“Someone should be with her,” Elena says. “She’s lost her father and maybe her husband. The poor boys . . .”
Eva has twin sons by Adán.
“I’ll go,” Iván says. “I’ll take her to my mother’s.”
“She’ll be grieving, too,” Núñez says.
“I’m flying down.”
“Do you need transportation from the airport?” Núñez asks.
“We still have people there, Ricardo.”
They’ve forgotten I’m even here, Keller thinks.
Oddly enough, it’s the young stoned one—Ric?—who remembers. “Uhhh, what do we do with him?”
More commotion outside.
Shouts.
Punches and slaps.
Grunts of pain, screams.
The interrogations have started, Keller thinks. The cartel is rounding people up—suspected Zetas, possible traitors, Guatemalan associates, anyone—to try to get information.
By any means necessary.
Keller hears chains being pulled across the concrete floor.
The hiss of an acetylene torch being lit.
Núñez looks up at Keller and raises his eyebrows.
“I came to tell you that I’m done,” Keller says. “It’s over for me now. I’m going to stay in Mexico, but I’m out of all this. You won’t hear from me and I don’t expect to hear from you.”
“You walk away and my father doesn’t?” Iván asks. He pulls a Glock 9 from his jacket and points it at Keller’s face. “I don’t think so.”
It’s a young man’s mistake.
Putting the gun too close to the guy you want to kill.
Keller leans away from the barrel at the same time that his hand shoots out, grabs the gun barrel, twists, and wrenches it out of Iván’s hand. Then he smashes it three times into Iván’s face and hears the cheekbone shatter before Iván slides to the floor like a robe dropped at Keller’s feet.
Ascensión moves in but Keller has his forearm wrapped around Ric Núñez’s throat and puts the gun to the side of his head. “No.”
El Mastín freezes.
“The fuck did I do?” Ric asks.
“Here’s how it’s going to work,” Keller says. “I’m going to walk out of here. I’m going to live my life, you’re going to live yours. If anyone comes after me, I’ll kill all of you. ¿Entienden?”
“We understand,” Núñez says.
Holding Ric as a shield, Keller backs out of the room.
He sees men chained to the walls, pools of blood, smells sweat and urine. No one moves, they all watch him go outside.
There’s nothing he can do for them.
Not a damn thing.
Twenty rifles point at him but no one is going to take a chance on hitting their boss’s son.
Reaching behind him, Keller opens the passenger door of the cab, then pushes Ric to the ground.
Sticks the gun into the back of the driver’s seat. “Ándale.”
On the drive back to the airport, Keller sees the first memorial to Adán on the side of the highway.
A banner spray-painted—
adán vive.
Adán lives.
Juárez is a city of ghosts.
What Art Keller thinks as he drives through the town.
More than ten thousand Juarenses were killed in Adán Barrera’s conquest of the city, which he ripped from the old Juárez cartel to give him another gateway into the United States. Four bridges—the Stanton Street Bridge, the Ysleta International Bridge, the Paso del Norte and the Bridge of the Americas, the so-called Bridge of Dreams.
Ten thousand lives so Barrera could have those bridges.
During the five years of the war between the Sinaloa and Juárez cartels, more than three hundred thousand Juarenses fled the city, leaving the population at about a million and a half.
A third of whom, Keller has read, suffer from post-traumatic stress disorder.
He’s surprised there aren’t more. At the height of the fighting, the citizens of Juárez got used to stepping over dead bodies on the sidewalk. The cartels would radio ambulance drivers to tell them which wounded they could pick up, and which they had to