Authors: David Levien
Tags: #Teenage boys, #Mystery & Detective, #Ex-police officers, #Private Investigators, #General, #Suspense Fiction, #Missing Persons, #Thrillers, #Suspense, #Fiction, #Parents
“We’re just tourists. On vacation,” Behr said. “If they search the car, we’re thinking about doing a little wing-shooting and target plinking.” Paul understood then that there were guns in the trunk.
There was a knock on the passenger window. They turned. A slender man in his midtwenties was there, having made his way along the rows of stopped cars. He held a bag of dirty oranges.
“We don’t want any.
No, gracias
,“ Paul said putting down the window halfway.
“
No queremos
,” Behr added from the driver’s seat.
The man threw the oranges to the ground. “Ah, you speak Spanish. Good, eh. What you want? I’m Victor. I be your travel agent here,” the young man said in decent English. Behr and Paul considered him, then traffic cleared ahead of them and they drove on. Paul put up the window against the swirling dust.
The border behind them, they passed through what resembled a demilitarized zone of broken bottles, smoldering garbage, and burned-out vehicles. They drove past young people who pushed old bicycles heavily laden with cargo. They made a loop around the outskirts of the town, which was ringed by muddy fields attempting to pass for farmland. Groups of
braceros
lay in the shade of ancient stake-bed trucks taking lunch that seemed to include little food, merely rest. On the east side of the town they passed the
maquiladoras
, long, low cinder-block factories dotted by tiny broken windows that could not admit much light or air for the young women who worked there assembling goods for slave wages.
They reached the city center, as it was, a bit tidier than the outskirts, and parked the car. They began walking among Mexicans and other Americans — fraternity boys wearing southwestern college T-shirts starting off on tequila benders; older middle-management types, pale and pasty under their polo shirts and khakis; young bohemian travelers on their way farther south; and aging married couples, huddling together in groups, who might have been better advised to try a cruise. They passed booths selling cheap merchandise that filled both sides of the streets, narrowing them, forcing pedestrians together in choking foot traffic made dangerous by the dusty vehicles that occasionally rumbled by with bleating horns. Shoddy guitars hung in dense rows outside music stores. Sombreros, plastic sunglasses, bottles of mescal, suntan lotion, woven blankets, and T-shirts of every color lined the way. There were what appeared to be small zebras, actually little donkeys painted black and white, hitched to carts. Pictures with the animals cost a dollar, rides in the carts cost two. Nobody seemed to be buying.
They came upon a plaza, boxed in by a large, run-down church on one end and a neglected government building on the other. Sun-bleached dogs ran around a dry fountain. Old men congregated on benches and stout women pulled children around by the hand, many carrying infants in their free arm. Standing under a large tree smoking were young men in thin leather jackets and worn-out sneakers. Paul had no idea what they’d do next.
“Hungry?” Behr asked. Paul shrugged and they left the plaza for a side street, where they found a small, tin-roofed building that was both a grocery store and some type of restaurant.
They were eating stringy chicken and yellow rice doused in a flaming-hot sauce they hoped would kill the bacteria when Victor walked in and approached them.
“
Hola
once and again,” he said, and sat down at their table. Paul looked to Behr, who didn’t object. “You are on vacation?” Victor asked.
“Yeah, sure,” Behr answered.
“Buy me beer,” Victor said. Behr nodded and Victor shouted to the woman who had brought them the food. She arrived with a can of Tecate a moment later. Victor took a sip and smiled, putting pointy elbows on the table. He was tall and thin, with a downy black mustache and improbable blue eyes.
“So what you want? A tour? A party? A fishing charter? I get it all for you.” Behr shrugged, noncommittal, at the offers. “Maybe you want women? Pretty girls …”
Paul saw Behr perk up at this and attempted to look interested as well.
“
Sí, sí, señor, lo que quieras
. I take you to a good place.”
Behr pushed his plate away. “Sounds good,” he said.
As they left the restaurant, Behr said, “We’re kind of choosy. We’re looking for a special place, just so you know. Don’t take us to the usual.”
“
Sí, sí
, you choose,” Victor assured them. It was unclear whether he’d understood.
The day grew impressively hot in the afternoon, the air suffocating. Everything and everyone moved about at a choked, languid pace. The first brothel was a low mud building connected to a trailer that was up on blocks. There was a canopy creating shade tied to the structure and a half dozen women sat around on plastic chairs beneath it. They wore polyester tube tops and loose skirts. They drank Coke out of sweating bottles and didn’t move or bother putting on a presentation as Behr and Paul walked up behind Victor. Victor greeted several of them and then a slight, dark woman with forbidding eyes emerged from the trailer. Victor addressed her as Marta, then must’ve spoken of them, as she looked them over with a piercing gaze. She walked toward them boldly despite her not being over five feet tall.
“
Como están
,” she began. “You want pretty girls?”
Behr and Paul each shrugged a vague yes, and she took Paul by the hand and dragged him closer to the women. A few of them smiled at his obvious discomfort. As a group they came off as medium plain. Some were taller than others, some meatier, others prettier, but particular characteristics seemed to blend together.
“We have fun,” invited one of the younger girls, who possessed bright white teeth and shining black hair. She had chosen not to dye it blond as had several of her compatriots and so was one of the more attractive members of the group.
Marta looked to Behr and Paul for their decision, and when none came, she turned to Victor.
“You like these girls?” Victor asked.
“No,” Behr said. “Are there any others?”
“Others maybe later tonight. But they are like these,” he answered.
“We want something different. Younger. Different,” Behr said.
Victor and Marta spoke karate-chop Spanish at a speed they were unable to follow. Marta glared at them some more and muttered, “
¿Que quieren, el rancho de los caballitos
?”
“
Ya basta
, Marta,” Victor said, and then Marta and Victor spoke too quietly for them to hear.
Victor turned to them. “She thinks maybe you’re
policía
. I tell her no.”
Behr turned to Marta. “No,” he said. “
No queremos
.“ He broke a hundred-dollar bill off his bankroll and gave it to her. She took it as if he’d offered her a toothpick. The rest of the women seemed amused if anything at the rejection.
“
No importa
,” she mumbled before drifting inside.
“Come on,” Victor said, pulling them away by their arms. “There are many places.”
Behr stopped. “Victor, we don’t want this. Find us something more
interesting. ¿Comprende
?“
Victor did his best to understand. “
Más interesante. Sí. Claro
.”
They spent the next several hours visiting whorehouse after piss-smelling whorehouse until they all became a blur. Some were in the middle of the town in cramped apartment buildings; others were farther out in mud farmhouses. They expended upward of a thousand dollars on madams and steer-ers, attempting to buy goodwill and loose conversation, and almost that much getting rid of the steerers who wanted to follow them around to the next place. After a while they couldn’t tell if the customers, mostly Americans, some of whom they saw at more than one place, were getting older or the girls working in the houses, parading in front of them, were actually getting younger at each stop. Perhaps it was the sheer number of available young women that overwhelmed them. Behr and Paul played the part of somewhat wealthy Americans, sexual tourists, looking for a certain kind of debauched experience. At several of the places they had drinks and perused the hookers, then declined and talked to some of the girls and the madams in cryptic terms about what they were really looking for.
At dusk they stumbled on a live sex show. They stood in the back of a room that was mostly empty except for a few standing patrons. The room had a heavy, fetid smell of chickens and blood that brought Behr back to his boyhood on the farm.
“They hold cockfights here?” he asked Victor, who seemed impressed with the question and answered yes.
A rail-thin man entered and strutted about the stage to a poor, crackling recording of traditional Mexican music. Then a woman no older than twenty walked onto the stage in a sheer red coverup, which she dropped without fanfare. Her body was mocha-colored and supple but bore purple keloid scars on one side of her abdomen. Her hair was wavy and fell past her shoulders, where it obscured some amateurish tattoos. She lay down on a bed and the thin man mounted her without much preamble.
An unseen emcee prattled on loudly in Spanish over the speaker system to the delight of the three or four other men in the audience.
The couple went on for a good while, changing positions several times. Behr and Paul exchanged a glance and headed for the door. Victor had one eye still on the show even as he followed them out.
Outside, the arrival of night had taken some of the weight out of the air, or maybe just being away from the performance enabled them to breathe easier.
“You no like the show?” Victor asked, his faith in his clients seeming to waver for the first time.
“Not much,” Behr answered.
“It was fine,” Paul said, as if Victor was the impresario behind what they’d seen and he didn’t want to offend.
“We’re gonna go eat dinner,” Behr said, walking away.
“I come,” Victor offered. “There are other places—”
“No,” Behr said. He gave Victor one hundred and fifty dollars. “See you later.” The tawdry day had worked on his nerves and had built a well of sickened frustration in him. He needed a break.
They left Victor standing behind them looking bereft despite his smile.
Behr and Paul found a grim motel that had a room with two double beds and a mildewed bathroom, where they washed the day’s grit off their faces and necks. Behr’s arm had recovered to the point where he no longer needed to ice it and just kept it wrapped in an Ace bandage, which was a good thing as the motel had no ice machine. They were tired, but sleep was out of the question. The hotel clerk pointed them to a restaurant down the street. They’d traded perhaps fifty words all day. There was nothing to say.
They sat and ate carne asada with rice and beans off large ceramic plates. They washed it down with half-cold beer and waved at fat and greedy flies with their free hand.
“I had to come here, man,” Paul said, apology in his voice.
“I know,” Behr responded.
“It was a waste of time. Of everything.”
“No,” Behr said without much behind it.
“I’m not even his father anymore.”
“It doesn’t end just because your son is gone.” Behr pushed his plate away.
“We can leave—”
“We’ll leave when we’re done.”
It was then that they saw Victor across the restaurant coming in the door. Paul threw some bills on the table and they got up. He followed Behr’s lead, which was to walk past Victor right out the door. The persistent young man followed them, even as they walked out of the pool of light produced by the restaurant and on into the darkness of the rest of the street.
“Ay, wait.”
“This kid doesn’t quit,” Behr said to Paul, stopping and allowing Victor to reach them.
“I take you someplace else?” Victor said hopefully.
“We’re done with you,” Behr said.
“Come on, man.”
“All right,” Behr said, turning and stepping closer to the slight younger man. “Take us to the place where the rich gringos go. The place where the real young ones are.
Chicos
.”
It registered with Victor. He studied them. “You’re not
jotos
.”
Behr grabbed him by the shirt and jacket and jerked him forward off balance. Paul glanced up and down the street, which was clear.
“No, but we’re looking for what happened to someone important. Someone who may have ended up there. So where would you take us if we had a taste for young boys?”
“You are cops—”
“No.”
“Fuck off.”
“I like you, Victor. You’ve been decent to us. You’re just a guy trying to get ahead. Right?”
“
Sí, sí
.”
“But I will start breaking things on you if you don’t help us.”
“No, man. Fuck off.”
Behr drew back in a blaze of motion and delivered a short, chopping punch to Victor’s liver. The young man gasped and keeled, and Behr held him up.
“More is coming,” Behr warned, and Victor’s head set to nodding. After a moment he regained the ability to speak.
“My cousin is a
pollero
.”
“What’s that? A chicken cowboy?” Behr wondered, as his Spanish was rudimentary.
“
Coyote
? Maybe you know that?”
“Border crosser.” Behr nodded with understanding.
“
Sí
. One thousand U.S.” Victor sucked at the air. “He help with other things. ¿
Entiendes
?“
“Where is he?”
“He gone now. He back tomorrow night. Maybe the next.”
“Fuck that,” Behr said.
“For true. You meet him then.”
Behr let Victor loose and then stepped back and ran his hands through his hair. Victor probed around his midsection with his hands.
Paul moved over to him, handed him two hundred-dollar bills, and patted him on the shoulder. “Bring him to us when he’s back, then. If he takes us where we want to go, you get the rest of the thousand,” he said.
“And don’t fuck around with us,” Behr added.
“I no fuck,” Victor assured them and moved off into the night.
“Damnit,” Behr breathed when it was just the two of them.
“Let’s get a drink,” Paul said.
“Eh—” Behr began, as much defeat in his voice as Paul had ever heard. From some men the tone of voice wouldn’t have meant much, but from Behr it was unacceptable.