Taken

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Taken Page 3

by Robert Crais


  “I’m going to borrow this.”

  “I’ll blame Nita. Take what you want.”

  “You think Nita is right?”

  “About what?”

  “Marriage.”

  “No way. They’re definitely into each other, but she’s jazzed about moving to D.C. I’ve heard her talking with him about it on the phone. Lots of people do the long-distance thing.”

  “So why isn’t she back?”

  Mary Sue climbed onto Krista’s bed, and crossed her legs.

  “Dude. The year’s essentially over. Yeah, Kris was due back Sunday, but she finished her classwork weeks ago. She was going to write a piece for the paper, but if they’re having a blast in Margaritaville, why not enjoy? That’s where I’d be if I had a hoochie boy to go with.”

  “So you aren’t worried?”

  She frowned as she thought about it.

  “Not like Nita, but kinda. It’s weird she isn’t returning my texts, but they’re way out in Palm Springs. Maybe she can’t get a signal.”

  I thought about it and decided the signal business was unlikely. You didn’t stay overdue and out of reach for a week because of bad cell service. I also considered telling her about the five-hundred-dollar ransom demand, but Nita had asked me to save Krista the embarrassment.

  “Is Berman the kind of guy who would be involved in something sketchy?”

  “I never met him. I don’t know, but I doubt it.”

  I looked at her, surprised.

  “Are you kidding?”

  “If you knew Kris, you would doubt it, too. She’s the straightest person on earth.”

  “I didn’t mean that. I meant, how is it you’ve never met him? They’ve been together for over a year.”

  She shrugged.

  “He’s never been here when I’ve been here, and he never comes in.”

  “Not even when he picks her up?”

  “Parking here sucks. She goes out to his car.”

  “He never hangs out?”

  “She goes to his place. No roommates.”

  Nita appeared in the doorway, looking tense and irritated.

  “I can’t just sit out there doing nothing. I’m going to check her bathroom and closet. If she planned a longer stay, maybe I can tell by what she took.”

  “Good idea.”

  I didn’t really think it was a good idea, but it would keep her busy. She disappeared into the bathroom, and I turned back to Krista’s Wall of Infamy and considered the picture of Berman and his Mustang. Maybe they had returned on Sunday like she promised, only she had kept the party going by staying with him.

  “You know where he lives?”

  “Uh-uh. I think it’s in Brentwood or one of those canyon places, but I’m not sure.”

  “Does Krista keep an address book?”

  “Her phone, for sure. Nobody uses paper. She might have a contact list on her computer, but her computer’s locked. You need a password.”

  “Okay. How about you help me search her stuff? An envelope saved with a birthday card might give us a home address. A handwritten note on a letterhead. Something like that.”

  “Okay. Sure.”

  Mary Sue started on the computer leg of Krista’s desk, and I started on the leg scattered with papers. I fingered through the printouts and clippings, looking for anything useful about Berman or their trip to Palm Springs. Most of the printouts were articles about illegal immigration, mass graves in Mexico, and the increasing power of the Mexican cartels. Several were interviews with immigration activists and political figures. Sections of text in almost every article were highlighted in yellow, but none of the notes I found were about Jack Berman, wedding chapels, or Vegas acts. Most appeared to be about the material at hand: who makes the money? where do they come from? who is involved?

  Mary Sue edged closer to see what I was doing.

  “This is research for her editorial. You won’t find anything there.”

  “You never know. People make notes on whatever’s handy.”

  “Uh-huh. I guess.”

  “Is this the piece she was going to finish Sunday night?”

  “Yeah. It’s about illegal immigration and immigration policy. She got super into it a couple of weeks ago.”

  Nita appeared in the doorway.

  “What was she doing?”

  Mary Sue repeated herself.

  “Writing her editorial. It’s her last editorial. She’s been working on it for a couple of weeks.”

  Nita came over and picked up the articles. Her face was lined so deeply as she read, she looked like a stack of folded towels.

  I said, “Did she pack for a long trip or a weekend?”

  Nita didn’t answer.

  “Ms. Morales?”

  She looked at me, but her eyes were vacant, as if she couldn’t quite see me. It took her another full second to answer.

  “Everything’s fine.”

  She backed away, blinked three times, then left. We only knew she had gone when we heard the front door.

  Mary Sue said, “What’s wrong?”

  I considered the articles Krista had highlighted, then looked at Mary Sue.

  “Would you do me a favor?”

  “Sure. I live to serve.”

  “Keep looking. Look for something that tells us where Krista went, or why, and where and how to find her boyfriend, okay?”

  “Okay. Sure.”

  I gave her my card, left her in Krista’s room, and found Nita Morales seated behind the wheel of her car. Her sunglasses were on, but she hadn’t started the engine. She was holding the wheel in the ten and two o’clock positions, and staring straight ahead.

  I got into the passenger’s side, and made my voice gentle.

  “You okay?”

  She shook her head.

  “Talk to me.”

  Nita studied me from the far side of her car on that spring day, a distance too close to some clients and miles too far from others. She looked as if we were going a hundred miles an hour even though we weren’t moving.

  “I am not a legal resident of the United States. My sister and I were sent here when I was seven years old and she was nine. We came to live with an uncle who was legally here on a work visa. I have been here illegally ever since. I am here illegally now.”

  “May I ask why you told me?”

  “What Mary Sue said. That Krista started all this two weeks ago.”

  “You told her two weeks ago.”

  “This isn’t something you tell a child, but she is almost twenty-one, and now she has this job in Washington. I thought she should know. So she can protect herself.”

  “Did she react badly?”

  “I didn’t think so, but she grew worried when we discussed what would happen if this became known.”

  I wasn’t an expert on immigration, but anyone living in Southern California becomes conversant with the issue.

  “Do you have a criminal record?”

  “Of course not.”

  “Are you involved in a criminal enterprise?”

  “Please don’t make fun of this.”

  “Nita, I’m not. I’m trying to tell you ICE isn’t going to knock down your door. Are you scared Krista is doing whatever she’s doing because you told her?”

  “I’ve lied to her.”

  “You said it yourself. This isn’t something you could have told her when she was a child.”

  She closed her eyes as hard as she clenched the steering wheel.

  “She must be ashamed. This girl earned a job with the Congress, and now her mother is a wetback.”

  She tried to hold it together, but convulsed with a sob, and covered her face with her hands. I leaned across the console and held her. It was awkward to hold her like that, but I held her until she straightened herself.

  “I’m sorry. This isn’t how I thought it would be. I don’t know what to do.”

  “You don’t have to do anything. The World’s Greatest Detective takes it from here.”
>
  A tiny smile flickered her lips.

  “I thought you hated being called that.”

  “I made an exception so you’ll feel better.”

  She studied me for a moment, then picked up her purse and placed it in her lap.

  “I didn’t hire you because of an article. I did my homework, but the picture caught my attention. I read the article because of the picture. The one with your clock.”

  “Pinocchio.”

  “The puppet who wanted to be a boy.”

  Two pictures illustrated the article. One was a close shot of me on the phone at my desk. The second photograph was a full-page shot of me leaning against the wall. I was wearing a shoulder holster, sunglasses, and a lovely Jams World print shirt. The shoulder holster and sunglasses were the photographer’s idea. They made me look like a turd. But my Pinocchio clock was on the wall behind me, smiling at everyone who enters my office. Its eyes roll from side to side as it tocks. The photographer thought it was colorful.

  Nita took something from the purse, but I could not see what she held.

  “My uncle had a clock like yours. He told us about Pinocchio, the puppet who dreamed an impossible dream.”

  “To be a flesh-and-blood boy.”

  “To dream of a better life. It was why we were here.”

  “Your uncle sounds like a good man.”

  “The tocking rocked me to sleep. You know how people talk about the surf? The tocking was my surf in Boyle Heights when I was seven years old. I loved that clock. Every day and all night, Pinocchio reminded us to work for our dreams. Do you see?”

  She opened her hand.

  “He gave this to me when I was seven years old.”

  A faded plastic figure of Jiminy Cricket was in her palm, the blue paint of his top hat chipped and worn. Pinocchio’s conscience.

  “When I saw his clock in the picture, I thought we were not so different.”

  She put the figure in my hand.

  “I can’t take this.”

  “Give it back when you find my baby.”

  I put the cricket in my pocket, and got out of her car.

  Joe Pike:

  eleven days after they were taken

  3.

  Dennis Orlato

  Their job was to get rid of the bodies.

  Twenty-two miles west of the Salton Sea, one hundred sixty-two miles east of Los Angeles, yellow dust rooster-tailed behind them as the Escalade raced across the twilight desert. The sound system boomed so they could hear bad music over the eighty-mile-per-hour wind, what with the windows down to blow out the stink.

  Dennis Orlato, who was driving, punched off the music as he checked the GPS.

  Pedro Ruiz, the man in the passenger seat, shifted the 12-gauge shotgun, fingering the barrel like a second dick.

  “What you doin’? Give it back.”

  Ruiz, who was a Colombian with a badly fixed cleft lip, liked narcocorridos—songs that romanticized the lives of drug dealers and Latin-American guerrillas. Orlato was a sixth-generation Mexican-American from Bakersfield, and thought the songs were stupid.

  Orlato said, “I’m looking for the turn. We miss it, we’ll be here all night.”

  In the back seat, Khalil Haddad leaned forward. Haddad was a thin, dark Yemeni drug runner who had been hauling khat into Mexico before the cartels shut him down. Now, he worked for the Syrian like Orlato and Ruiz. Orlato was certain Haddad talked shit about him to the Syrian, Arab to Arab, so Orlato hated the little bastard.

  Haddad said, “A kilometer, less than two. You can’t miss it.”

  When they reached the turn, Orlato zeroed the odometer, and drove another two-point-six miles to the head of a narrow sandy road, then stopped again to search the land ahead. Three crumbling rock walls sprouted from the brush less than a mile in the distance, and were all that remained of an abandoned supply shed built for bauxite miners before the turn of the century. Orlato and Ruiz opened their doors, and climbed onto their seats to scan the coppery gloom with binoculars.

  The surrounding desert was flat for miles, broken only by rocks and scrub too low to conceal a vehicle. The sandy road before them showed only their tire tracks, made three days earlier, and no footprints. Seeing this, Orlato dropped back behind the wheel. No other cars, trucks, motorcycles, people, or ATVs had passed on this road.

  “It’s good. We go.”

  Two minutes later, they pulled up beside the walls, and went to work. It was a nasty and dangerous job, there at the edge of the evening hour, best done quickly before the light was lost. They stripped off their shirts and guns, then pulled on gloves as Haddad threw open the back door. The two women and man were the last of a group from India, pollos who had been on their way to the Pacific Northwest, brought up through Mexico from Brazil and Central America, only to be kidnapped and held for ransom as they crossed the border into the U.S. Each had been shot in the back of the head when their families stopped paying ransom. The three bodies were now wrapped in plastic, and smelled of sour gas. Orlato pulled them from beneath the carpet remnants that covered them, and let the bodies drop. Ruiz and Haddad each dragged a body to a jagged cut in the wash behind the ruins, and Orlato dragged the last. Counting these three, they had deposited eleven bodies here during the past nine days. Their work here west of the Salton Sea was done.

  As Orlato dragged the last body, Ruiz pointed down into the cut.

  “Look at this shit. What you want to do?”

  An animal had gotten down among the bodies and torn open the plastic. A man’s hand now reached through the split.

  Orlato said, “Get the chlorine.”

  “Shit, we put a hundred pounds of chlorine in there already, and it didn’t help. Let’s get the fuck out of here.”

  Powdered chlorine as fine and white as confectioners’ sugar was supposed to keep the coyotes away. Everyone knew the bodies would be found, but the longer it took the better. Their operation was strictly short term. They set up fast, moved often, and kept moving until they had milked or killed the last of the pollos.

  But coyotes would spread the bones, and if a dog brought a human bone home, the police and federal authorities would swarm over the desert.

  Orlato glared at Ruiz.

  “Get the chlorine, you lazy fuck. Maybe you didn’t put enough last time.”

  When Ruiz skulked away for the chlorine, Orlato scanned the horizon for approaching vehicles. He was searching the sky for helicopters when Haddad unzipped his pants.

  “What’re you doing?”

  “Taking a piss.”

  “Don’t piss on them bodies. The police could get your DNA.”

  “What do they have now, a piss detector?”

  Haddad unleashed a rope that hit the plastic as loudly as tearing cloth. Orlato wanted to shove the slack-jaw bastard into the cut with the piss-soaked bodies, but instead turned to see if Ruiz was coming. As he turned, something hit him between the eyes, and three more strikes rained after the first so quickly he threw up his arms to cover his face even as his legs were swept from beneath him. He slammed onto his back, and his solar plexus exploded as he was struck again, then struck on his left temple, snapping his head to the side.

  Shock and awe. A sudden, violent attack of such furious intensity Orlato had not seen the man or men who attacked him, or even understood what was happening. Orlato’s head buzzed as if swarming with wasps, and his ears screamed with a high-pitched hum. Now, drifting in a sleep-world, he felt hands on his body. Someone groped his legs, waist, and groin; rolled him over, then rolled him again. Orlato’s head cleared, but he offered no resistance.

  A low male voice.

  “Look at me.”

  Orlato opened his eyes, and saw a tall, muscular Anglo, dark from the sun, wearing a sleeveless gray sweatshirt and jeans. He had short hair, dark glasses, and blurry tattoos on the outer rounds of his shoulders. Orlato squinted to clear his vision. Scarlet arrows. A black revolver floated at the man’s side.

  Orlato showed op
en palms.

  “Policia?”

  A man spoke behind him.

  “You’re gonna wish we were policia.”

  Orlato saw that a man with spiky blond hair had Haddad pinned to the ground. The blond man held an American M4 battle rifle. He tipped the rifle toward the bodies.

  “You kill these people?”

  Orlato had personally murdered four of the eleven, Ruiz two, and Haddad the rest, but now Orlato shook his head.

  “We only bring the bodies. We don’t kill no one.”

  The blond man showed teeth like a shark, then lifted Haddad’s bloody head by his hair, and said something in Arabic. This surprised Orlato, who had met few people who spoke it besides Arabs. In that moment, Orlato knew these two men were not the police. He assumed they were bajadores—predators who preyed on other criminals.

  “You want the car? The keys are in my pocket. You want money? I can get you money.”

  The tall man said, “Up.”

  Orlato struggled to his feet, careful in how he moved. He remembered being searched, but had left his pistol in the Escalade, and now could not remember if the man found the five-inch knife hidden at the small of his back.

  When Orlato was standing, the tall man touched the center of his own forehead.

  “Anglo. This tall. He was taken.”

  Orlato felt a stitch in his belly. He knew who the tall man described, but shook his head, lying as he had lied about killing the pollos.

  “I don’t know who you are talkin’ about.”

  The man’s pistol snapped up so fast Orlato did not have time to react. The gun rocked his head sideways and unhinged his knees, but the man caught him.

  “Elvis Cole.”

  The blond man shouted from his perch on Haddad, red-faced and furious.

  “Where is he? What did you do with him?”

  Orlato’s head cleared, but he feigned being hurt worse than he was, staggering and blinking. If he fell into the man, he might be able to draw the blade, or he might grab the gun.

  “I did nothing. I don’t know what you’re talkin’ about.”

  The pistol snapped again, and the blond man shouted louder.

  “Lying fuck! The Escalade was at the house. You bastards know. You work for the Syrian.”

 

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