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ROBERT
CRAIS: TAKEN
excerpt three
Part
One
Joe Pike:
fourteen days after
they were taken
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 US.
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 confectioner’s
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
swarmed 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 his side.
Orlato showed open palms.
“Policia?”
A man spoke behind him.
“You’re gonna wish we were policia.”
Orlato saw that a man with spikey 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 5-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 blonde 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.”
He jerked Haddad’s face from the dirt and pointed at
Orlato. Haddad’s
eyes bulged like a
dog being crushed,
and he chattered
Arabic.
The blond man shouted to his friend.
“He knows where they took him! He knows who has him.”
The tall man’s pistol suddenly appeared in front of
Orlato’s face,
locked dead center
between his eyes.
The flat copper
snouts of its
bullets slept in
their cylinder
crypts.
“Elvis Cole. Where is he?”
The tall man thumbed back the hammer.
"Ten seconds. Where is he?"
The blond man screamed, livid with rage.
“Think we’re bluffing, you will die. What did you do
with him?”
Orlato abruptly realized he had only one chance. He had
something they
wanted, and that
gave him power.
Power was time, and
time was life. He
showed both palms,
the knife now
forgotten.
"Yes! Yes, they have him."
Haddad barked in Arabic, but Orlato didn’t understand
and did not care.
The blond man pushed
Haddad’s face into
the dirt, and barked
back. The tall man
ignored them.
"Eight seconds."
"Trade, me for him. The Syrian will trade."
"I don’t negotiate.”
The blond man shouted.
“Tell us and live!”
"A trade! By morning he will be dead!"
“Five seconds.”
Orlato screamed.
"A phone call. I talk to the Syrian, we will work out a
trade, and you will
have this man. I
swear it. I swear!”
The tall man hesitated, and Orlato felt a whisper of
hope. The man they
wanted was probably
already dead, but if
they let him call
the Syrian, these
men would not
survive until
morning. Orlato
spoke quickly,
bartering for his
life.
"The Syrian will trade for me. I’m married to his
sister. You will get
your friend. I
promise.”
The tall man glanced at his friend. No other part of
him moved. The gun
didn’t move. Just
the head, turning
and locking in place
with the precision
of a machine.
The blonde man lifted Haddad’s head.
“He’s full of shit. This bastard knows.”
The tall man’s head swiveled back to Orlato.
"Three seconds. Where is he?"
Orlato felt a rush of fear, but still didn't believe
they would kill him.
They would not risk
losing their friend.
"He cannot help. None of them can. I am the only way
you can get your
friend back."
The tall man said, “One second.”
Orlato reached for the knife, but by then it was too
late.
Dennis Orlato’s last thought before he reached for the
knife was one of
fearful admiration.
He thought:
“This man means it.”
Orlato registered a brilliant, blinding flash, and was
dead.
© 2012 by Robert Crais
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