Brave talk, Eddie thinks. Chacho can afford brave talk—he don’t have a wife and two kids to think about.
“How is this going to help?” Eddie asks.
Because Chacho don’t see what’s happening.
The Big Guys are coming back.
The bosses. Los buchones.
Contreras in the Gulf, pulling the strings from a prison cell.
Solorzano in TJ.
Fuentes in Juárez.
And now Barrera is out and put together “the Alliance”—shit, it sounds like freakin’ Star Wars—with Nacho Esparza, the Tapia brothers, and Fuentes.
Big guys have big appetites and they’re going to eat up the world. The CDG wants the 867—they already swallowed Los Sotos. If we want to survive, we’re going to have to go with one of the big guys.
But Chacho he don’t get that.
“I gotta know whose side you’re on,” Chacho says. “You with me or you with them? You gotta choose.”
Chacho hugs him tight. “The 867, ’mano. Us against the world.”
“The 867,” Eddie echoes.
Outside, he knows he has to act cool, like nothing happened. Who knows, maybe Chacho’s right. Maybe this will back the CDG down.
Yeah, not so much, because a week later, the Nuevo Laredo police find four burning gasoline drums on the outskirts of town. Nothing unusual there, you can find old gasoline drums all over the shabbier parts of the city. People start fires in them for heat, for cooking, for light, or just for the hell of it.
What’s unusual is that there’s a body in each of these drums. The four cops who bagged Mario Soto have been beaten, tied up, stuffed into the drums, and burned alive. The Nuevo Laredo police don’t go out looking for the men who did this to their comrades. They already know who did this to their comrades, and they do the smart thing.
They change sides.
Eddie and Chacho leave town.
—
Monterrey sits in a valley dominated by the Cerra de la Silla, which Eddie knows as Saddle Mountain. Eddie’s bilingual but he usually thinks in English. Now in either language he’s in deep shit.
Stuck up to his neck.
Even in Monterrey, which a lot of people think is the most “American” of Mexico’s cities. Whirlpool is there, and Dell and Boeing, and a lot of other corporations like Samsung, Sony, Toyota, and Nokia.
Monterrey is rich while Nuevo Laredo is poor, and Eddie knows why—the men who sit in those corporate offices decided that the products that used to be made by cheap labor in Nuevo Laredo could be made by even cheaper labor in China.
So Nuevo Laredo dried up and blew away while Monterrey built skyscrapers and opened new restaurants where Mexican yuppies could complain about the hollandaise sauce.
Eddie and Chacho ran to Monterrey because Chacho has a safe house in the suburb of Guadalupe and because, narco-speaking, it’s an open city. No one has a strong presence there, even the CDG, and there’s an unspoken agreement that Monterrey is neutral ground, safe turf. Narcos go there to sit on the sidelines when they need to, or park their families when things heat up in their own plazas.
And things have certainly heated up, so to speak, in Eddie’s plaza.
Or what used to be our plaza, Eddie thinks as he goes down into the Metro. Los Sotos have gone over to the CDG—so have most of the city cops and state police. So has the army, although the army has always been pretty much its own gang anyway.
Eddie knows he can’t live in Monterrey forever. And that he can’t go back to the 867—other than as a human torch—unless he works something out. Fucking Zetas, man. Nobody does shit like that. Sure, every once in a while things get out of hand and someone catches a bullet, but burning guys alive?
That’s some sick shit.
That’s way out of bounds.
Serves a purpose, though, he has to admit. If the purpose was to scare people, it worked.
I’m scared.
Eddie rides the subway to Niños Héroes and then walks the rest of the way to the baseball stadium where the Monterrey Sultanes are playing his own Tecolotes. He isn’t really a fan—he’ll watch baseball if he can’t get a Cowboys game on satellite.
He buys a ticket along the first-base line, finds his section, and makes his way down the row to where he sees a heavyset man with a big beard eating peanuts between gulps from a paper cup of beer.
Has to be Diego Tapia.
No one else looks like that.
Eddie and Chacho had reached out. The Tapias did business through Laredo. We gotta go with someone, Eddie knows, and now they’re the only game in town. The alianza de sangre is their only chance.
The man next to Tapia gets up when he sees Eddie, who takes his seat.
“I like to watch the pitchers,” Diego says. “A lot of people don’t like low-scoring games. I do. You want a Modelo?”
Eddie don’t really want a beer but he don’t want to offend Diego Tapia, either, so he nods, and Diego gestures to the guy, who goes up to get Eddie a beer. Then he asks, “Where’s Chacho?”
“I didn’t think it would be smart for you to be seen with him,” Eddie answers. “Nobody really knows me.”
Diego looks at Eddie as if he’s reevaluating him. Eddie knows that look from football coaches who thought he was too small until they saw him hit someone. Then they took that second look.
“You like baseball?” Diego asks.
“It’s okay.”
“You’re a yanqui,” Diego says. “I thought all yanquis liked baseball.”
“I’m more of a football guy.”
“Which kind?”
“The good kind,” Eddie answered. “The kind where something happens occasionally.”
He’d rather watch grass grow and die again than sit through a soccer game.
“How about them ’Boys?” Diego says in English.
“Something like that.”
Diego’s man puts a beer in Eddie’s hand.
The Tecolotes pitcher hangs a curve and the batter connects. It’s a solid hit, but Eddie can tell from the crack of the bat that it don’t have the legs, and it dies in the center fielder’s glove.
Then Diego asks, “Are you here for yourself, or Chacho?”
It’s risky. Diego has to know that it was Chacho who killed Mario Soto and the others and caused all this hassle. So Chacho is about as popular as herpes right now. But Eddie’s here to offer Diego his loyalty, so if he acts disloyal to Chacho…
“Both of us,” Eddie answers.
Diego takes this in. “And what do you think I can do for you?”
“We had some trouble in Laredo.”
“You boys are in the shit,” Diego says. “You should have come to me before blood got spilled. Harder to fix now.”
But Eddie notices that he left the door open. “Harder” to fix, not “impossible.” He says, “You and Chacho always had a good relationship. You’ve moved product through Laredo.”
“Chacho doesn’t control Laredo anymore,” Diego says. “He can’t fight the CDG.”
“But you could.”
“But I won’t,” Diego says. “Why should I go to war to pay the piso to Chacho instead of Contreras?”
“We’ll lower the rate.”
Diego just smiles.
Eddie drinks his beer because suddenly his throat is dry. If Tapia thinks he’s a clown, the conversation is over and he’ll end up in a fifty-gallon drum filled with gasoline.
Fuck baseball, it’s time to blitz.
“You back the CDG off of us,” Eddie says, “you use our turf, no piso.”
“You have balls.” Diego laughs. “You come to me for protection and then want to charge me rent on property you don’t own.”
The batter smacks a sharp hit to the shortstop, who digs it out of the dirt and throws a beautiful ball to the first baseman for the out.
“Slider,” Diego says. “He wanted the ground ball. If I back the CDG off you, you go to work for us. You handle our product, you manage the plaza, if you move your own product, you pay us eight points.”
The next batter swings on the first pitch. It’s a curve that hung up there a millisecond too long, and now is headed over the left-field wall.