The Rules of Wolfe (19 page)

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Authors: James Carlos Blake

BOOK: The Rules of Wolfe
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Before long the stocky man comes into view with the four men and says something to them as he points down the street. A couple of them make grateful gestures and they all hurry away.

Eddie waits until the stocky man has gone back around the corner and the four men have passed by on the other side of the street, then gets out of the truck and puts Miranda's tote into his backpack for greater bulk and slips the pack on over his shoulders. He tells her to slide behind the wheel and keep the motor running.

He goes back to the street fronting the bus depot and sees the stocky man standing near the sidewalk wall, again shifting his attention between the Sinas at the doors and oncoming pedestrians who might be migrants seeking help to get to el norte. Assuming the look of an apprehensive stranger, Eddie starts toward him. The man sees him coming—a hopeful migrant with his worldly possessions on his back—and sidles out to intercept him, smiling.

Hey there, my friend, he says just loud enough for Eddie to hear him, “Viajes al norte?”

Eddie's wide grin abets his squint to better hide the blue of his eyes in the waning daylight.

p

A few minutes later, the man—who'd said his name was Ernesto—takes Eddie around the corner and points the way toward the address he has given him, where the coyote can be found with his assembled crossers. Eddie has told him he is Pedro Mendoza from Mazatlán and will be accompanied by his sister, Rima, who is waiting for him at a little taco place down the street. Ernesto said that was nice to hear, that a family should always try to stay together. Eddie thanks him again and starts away.

At the end of the block, he looks back, sees that the man has gone, then jogs across the street to Miranda and the truck.

Eddie's timing is very lucky, Ernesto had told him, because there's a group leaving for the border this very evening. The entire crossing will be very simple, the man assured him, an easy walk of a few hours to a back road where they will be met by a transport van, then taken to Tucson, a nice town with many Mexican compatriots. From there he can choose to go his own way, or, if he prefers and is willing to pay a little extra, he can be transported to someplace else, someplace bigger, with more opportunities for employment. To Phoenix or Los Angeles or Chicago, wherever he wishes. For still a bit more money, he can even be assured of having a job when he gets there. What's more, he did not have to give money to anyone except Mister Canales, the man Ernesto was sending him to, at the Hotel Pájaro, four blocks from the station and on the street to the left. And the cost for going to Tucson? A bargain, Ernesto told him. He stated the price and Eddie mentally converted the peso amount to $650. A bargain for sure. It confirms his suspicion that the coyote Ernesto works for is an independent. Even along the lower Rio Grande, prices have been jumping since last year, and no big gang would charge so little as $650.

p

Eddie parks the truck a block past the hotel's street and switches off the engine. He has told Miranda they are now brother and sister, Pedro and Rima Mendoza, and don't forget her name. She says she's never heard of anybody named Rima and he says she has now. It's a great relief to her to dispense with the bandanna binding her breasts, and as she starts to rebutton her shirt he reaches into it and fondles her. She smiles and says that it seems like weeks since they have made love. Months, he says, a hundred years. He fingers a nipple and she slaps his hand away, telling him it is no way to touch a sister.

He takes out the two thousand dollars and counts out seven hundred and puts it in a shirt pocket and returns the remainder to his pants. Then extracts the M-16 in its two parts from the backpack and slips the rifle under the front seat. Whoever steals the truck is going to get a nice bonus. Though the MAC has only seven rounds in its magazine, he leaves it in the backpack, then takes out her tote and is about to hand it to her but then pauses.

Tell them but don't ask
.

The thought comes to him like a whisper and he smiles at his mental image of a lightbulb shining above his head.

If you don't ask for help, he thinks, they can't turn you down. Give them the information and nothing more. Don't even give it to them directly. Relay it to them. They'll know what to do with it if they want to. And if they choose to do nothing, so what? They can't say they refused you. None of them can. Because you're not
asking
for a damn thing. They're anyway a backup at best. Odds are you won't need them. Won't even have cause to turn the thing on.

What's wrong? she says. He takes the three phones from the tote and hands her the bag and puts the Sinas phone and one of the prepaids in his pack. She slings the bag onto her shoulder, ready to go. It holds a few clothes, the first-aid supplies, packs of cigarettes, and the Glock. The switchblade's in her pocket with her Mexican cash.

For a moment he can't remember the number he wants to call, a number he has called many times before but not in the past six months. Then it comes to him and he quickly presses the buttons.

She watches him intently.

He's ready to hear surprise at the sound of his voice, is set to deflect questions and say he must keep the call very short and then quickly give her the information. But the phone is answered by a default recording that informs him no one is available to take his call and to please leave a message, and he smiles at his good luck.

“Hey, Little Momma, it's Edward.” He's the only one who calls Catalina by that name or would ever dare to, and she has never objected. Continuing in English, he tells her he's sorry he hasn't time to explain but he has to hurry. He will be crossing the border into Arizona sometime tonight. He asks her to tell Rudy and Frank that he has a Buddha and tells her the make of cell phone he has. He says that if Rudy and Frank don't know what a Buddha is, to ask Aunt Laurel. “Tell them I said they can do whatever they want to with the information. Be sure to tell them that, Little Momma.” He pauses, then ends the call with, “I hope you're well.”

Who was that? Miranda says. Did you call somebody to help us?

Help? You think we need help? I'd say we're doing pretty good on our own. A few minutes ago we were close enough to spit on the bastards and they didn't spot us.

Did
you ask for help?

Sort of. But don't count on getting it.

Why not? Who was it?

Somebody on the other gulf.

She shakes her head. Nobody that far away can help.

I don't think so, either. But like I said, we're doing okay on our own.

He opens the door and drops the used phone next to the curb, then starts up the truck and backs up, crushing the phone under the tire. He shuts off the motor and leaves the key in the ignition. They get out and he puts on his backpack and touches the pistol under his shirt. And they head up the street.

22

Eddie and Miranda

Twilight. Streetlights coming on. Bats swooping over a weedy vacant lot. The air smells of dust and fried peppers.

The hotel stands midway down the street. A small whitewashed structure of two stories fronted by a scrubby yard and a lighted sign that reads “El Pájaro.” It is flanked by a small grocery on one side and on the other by a cantina from whose open door issues radio music. The jumpy polka strains of a conjunto band.

Cool and alert, Edward, cool and alert, Eddie tells himself as he leads Miranda up the walkway toward the front porch, where three men are sitting in the weak glow of an amber bulb above the door. He pauses at the bottom step and sees now that they are two men and a boy, one of the men tall and mustached and wearing a light white coat despite the heat, the other clean-shaved and crew-cut, in worn denim pants and work shirt. The boy is about fourteen, also in work clothes. Eddie introduces himself and Miranda as Pedro and Rima Mendoza and says they are from Santa Rosalba, a village a little west of Hermosillo. He says Ernesto has sent them to see Mister Canales, who can arrange for them to cross into the north tonight.

The tall one rises from his chair and comes to the top of the steps. “Yo soy Canales,” he says. You have been told the cost of the service?

Eddie says he has, but he can pay only in American money and hopes that's acceptable.

Canales smiles. How did you come by so much in American money?

From our brother, Eddie says. He has been in the north for two years and has sent us money almost every month. We can't wait to join him.

Of course, Canales says. Family is of first importance. And where is this brother?

Las Vegas. He says we can get work there.

Ah, Las Vegas, Canales says, and grins and pretends to shake dice in his fist and roll them. A very exciting place, I am told. Tell me, young man, do you speak English?

No sir, but my brother does. We will learn from him.

Never let them know how much you know. Basic rule.

Without the least alteration in his tone or affable aspect, Canales says, “I would dearly love to fuck your sister in the ass and then make her suck my cock.”

But Eddie is on high alert and isn't caught off guard by this old trick for testing someone's knowledge of a language by insulting him under the mask of a smile. Charlie Fortune had taught him about the tactic. He affects a puzzled look. “Cómo, señor?”

Forgive me, Canales says. I was showing off my own English. I simply said that with such determination, you will go far. He gestures at the other man. Give the money to Beto.

Eddie takes the thirteen hundred dollars from his pocket and hands it to the Beto guy, who gets up and goes into the lighted foyer and closes the door behind him. Eddie assumes he's counting it. Maybe checking somehow to make sure it's not counterfeit. Oh man, he thinks, what if it is?

I see you are traveling light, Canales says. Very smart. But be sure you have food and water to last you until tomorrow. You can buy what you need at the little store over there.

Beto comes back out and says, “Todo bien,” and gives the money to Canales.

p

Eddie and Miranda go to the store and buy bottles of water, small packs of raisins, and beef jerky. When they get back to the apartment house only Beto is still on the porch. He ushers them inside and down the dim first-floor hallway to a rear apartment and into a small living room where eight other migrants are already waiting, seated on various pieces of dingy furniture, clutching their backpacks, totes, plastic bags. The boy is there too, but not Canales, whom they will not see again. Beto sits down next to a window overlooking the driveway.

Though its windows are open, the room is hot and smells of body odors. All but one of the migrants are men and most of them return Eddie's nod of greeting. He recognizes the four he saw Ernesto solicit at the bus station. The men all stare at Miranda but are too shy to meet her eyes, except for the guy in the Panama hat, and she looks away from him. The other member of the group is a woman traveling with one of the men.

While they wait for their transport they listen to the cantina music coming through the windows. Miranda lights a cigarette and uses a cardboard coffee cup as an ashtray. No one else lights up but nobody seems to mind her smoking. The migrants chat quietly and Eddie soon comes to know that the couple are married and named Martínez. They are bound for Phoenix, where the woman's brother has been working at a plant nursery for almost a year. A man named Sando and his teenage nephew are from a village in Nayarit and going to a big farm near Albuquerque to work alongside the brother of the man and father of the boy. Three of the men Eddie saw recruited by Ernesto are relatives named Fonseca, two lean brothers and a short fat cousin, who are headed to Denver for jobs in a packinghouse. One of the brothers inquires politely about Eddie's plans, and they are all impressed to learn that Pedro and Rima Mendoza are going to Las Vegas, that glittering symbol of American fortune, to work with a brother at a grand hotel, Rima in the kitchen, Pedro with the grounds crew.

The man in the Panama looks bored by the talk. He is of compact build and has a constant squint. When the elder Sando asks him his name, he says Benito Juárez. Sando misses the sarcasm and says, Truly? Like the great hero? The man laughs without humor, and Sando looks in confusion at the Fonsecas, who look away. The Panama guy tugs his hat brim lower and leans back against the wall with his arms and ankles crossed. Eddie pegs him for some smalltimer on the run.

p

The windows are dark when the group hears a vehicle come up the driveway. Beto says, “Síguenme,” and they quickly take up their things and trail from the room after him.

They exit the building by its back door, next to the end of the driveway, where an idling Chevy Suburban equipped with oversize rough-country tires and three bench seats awaits them. The driver is wearing a reversed baseball cap and smoking a cigarette.

Eddie holds Miranda back as Beto herds the others into the second and third rows of seats. The Panama guy gets in ahead of Martínez and his wife, and Eddie smiles when Martínez catches on to the man's ploy and draws her back and gets in ahead of her, putting himself between her and the Panama. As Eddie had anticipated, the others and their baggage fill up the second and third seats, and Beto takes him and Miranda around to the double rear doors and they get in and sit facing each other on the floor behind the third seat, the backpack and tote between them. It's where Eddie prefers to be. At the rear exit. Just in case.

Beto slams the back doors shut and then goes around and gets in the shotgun seat, the boy seated between him and the driver, and says, “Vámonos.”

23

Catalina

For years now, it has been the maids' practice for one or the other of them to stand outside the bathroom door whenever Doña Catalina takes a bath and listen carefully for any sound of distress, to be ready to rush in and give assistance should she need it. Though they believe this ritual to be a secret from her, Catalina has in fact been aware of it since its inception, her hearing and intuitive perception of someone's near presence still more acute than the maids can imagine. Yet she has never let them know of her awareness. Because if some accident should befall her—a knock on the head from a fall or a faint, an inadvertent slip in the shower or submergence in the tub, any of the not uncommon bathroom mishaps the aged are subject to—far better the ignominy of being rescued by her maids than to die because she was too proud to let them keep furtive vigilance over her. The simple fact of the matter is that she has no desire for life to end, never mind that she has had a greater share of it than the measureless majority of those who have ever lived. She recently read a persuasive argument that pride, long established as the deadliest of the seven great sins, has been supplanted by greed. She had to admit it was so in her case, though at times she's no longer sure there is very much distinction between the two. She has often heard it said that the worst thing in life is to grow old and have to depend on others. Long ago she would have agreed. Now she knows how much worse it must be to grow old and have no one to depend on.

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