Milton opened the door all the way. “Excuse me.”

The man looked up and around.

“Hello.”

“Who are you?”

He had smooth brown skin, black hair, an easy smile. There was nothing remarkable about him. The kind of man you would never see coming. “My name is Martinez,” he said. “I’m a doctor here. Who are you?”

Milton ignored the question. “What are you doing?”

“Checking that she is okay.” He picked up the pillow and tossed it onto the armchair at the side of the bed. “Just making her comfortable.”

Milton tapped a finger to his breast. “You don’t have any credentials.”

The man looked down at his white medical jacket, shrugging with a self-deprecating smile. “I’ve just come on shift. Must’ve left it in my locker. Thanks.”

“You’re welcome.”

“Do you know her?”

“I’m a friend.”

The doctor looked over Milton’s shoulder and, for a tiny moment, a flicker of something — irritation, perhaps, or frustration — fell across his face. He replaced it with a warm, friendly smile. “Nice to meet you, Señor —?”

“Smith.”

“Señor Smith. I’m sure I’ll see you again.”

The man smiled again, stepped around him and left the room. Milton turned to watch him go just as the policeman from last night, Lieutenant Plato, came in the other direction. The two met in the corridor, Plato stepping to the side to let the other man pass.

Plato was carrying two wrapped burritos. He didn’t look surprised to see him. “Who was that?”

“Said he was a doctor but there was something about him. Seen him before?”

“No.”

Milton started to move.

“Was there anyone else here?” Plato asked. “There should’ve been—”

“No-one else.”

Plato’s face twisted with anxiety. “Is she alright?”

“You better check.”

Milton walked quickly, and then broke into a jog, passing through the busying triage area to the lobby beyond. The elevator was on the first floor and so he couldn’t have taken that. He pushed the bar to open the door to the stairs and looked up and then down. There was no sign of Martinez anywhere. He quickly climbed to the seventh floor but, as he opened the door onto a paediatrics ward he could not see him. He went back down, then descended further, to the fifth, but he couldn’t see him. The man had disappeared.

23

Plato sat on the chair and Milton stood with his back to the wall. They ate the breakfast burritos that Plato had purchased in the canteen.

“How many people died last night?”

Plato looked at him evenly. “Two of the three on the table — the girl died at the scene, the guy was DOA by the time they got him here. Apart from them, one woman eating her dinner got shot in the head. Three dead, all told, and that’s not even counting the five sicarios you took out. Caramba, what a world.”

“The girl who died?”

“That’s the coincidental part. Her name was Delores. Poor little thing. I knew I recognised her when they were wheeling her out. I found her a month ago on Avenue Azucenas. Half undressed and beside herself with panic. She was a worker in the maquiladoras. She’d been abducted and raped but she managed to get away.”

“You think that had something to do with it?”

He shrugged. “Looks to me like she was there to talk to Caterina. Tell her story, maybe. I don’t know — maybe that’s why they got shot.”

“Why would Caterina want to talk to her?”

Milton knew that the information was confidential but, after just a moment of reluctance, Plato shrugged and said, “She’s a journalist. This isn’t a safe place to write about the news. The cartels don’t like to read about themselves. The dead guy was another writer.”

“Newspaper?”

“No,” Plato said, shaking his head. “They’re online — they call it Blog del Borderland. It’s started to be a pretty big deal, not just here but over the border, too. There was a piece in the El Paso Times just last week, all about them, and someone told me they’ve got a book coming out, too. The cartels are all they write about. The shootings, the abductions. It’s like an obsession. Most papers won’t touch that stuff, or, if they do, they don’t write about it truthfully. It’s all under control, there’s nothing to worry about, you know the sort of thing. These kids are different. They’ve had writers go missing and get murdered before but it hasn’t stopped them yet. This time, though? I don’t know, maybe they’ll listen now.”

“What would you do — if you were her?”

“I’d try and get over the border. But that won’t be easy. As far as I can make out she doesn’t have any family here. No ties. She doesn’t have a job. She’s not the kind of person who gets a visa. As far as I know, no journalist has ever been given one. And I doubt she’d even get a border crossing card. They’ll say the chances of her staying over there illegally are too great.”

“So?”

“Join the dots. If she’s going to get across, she’ll have to do it the other way.”

Milton finished the burrito, screwed up the paper and dropped it into the bin. “That doctor —?”

“Who knows. My guess? He was someone they sent to finish her off and you got here just in time.”

“You didn’t recognise him?”

“No. No reason why I would.”

“Why was she unguarded?”

He frowned. “You’d have to ask my captain that.”

“But you’re still here.”

“How can I leave her on her own?” he said helplessly. “I’ve got daughters.”

“I’ll stay with her.”

Plato finished his burrito and wiped his hands with a napkin. “Why would you want to do a thing like that?”

“Like you say — how can we leave her on her own. I’m guessing you boys will have to leave her as soon as they discharge her, right?”

“Right.”

“And how long do you reckon she’ll last without any protection at all? Christ, they almost got her when she was supposed to be guarded. She won’t last five minutes and you know it.”

Plato exhaled wearily. “What’s your story? — really?”

“You don’t want to know.”

“You need to give me a reason to let you stay.”

“I can help. Come on — you know I can. You saw what I can do. You know I could be useful. That’s why you told me where to find her.”

“Maybe it was. And maybe I shouldn’t’ve done that, putting you in harm’s way as well as her.”

“I can look after myself.”

“They’ll come back again. What makes you think you can stop them?”

“Because I’m not afraid of them, Lieutenant.”

24

The girl was awake. She had shuffled back in bed so that she was resting against the headboard, her knees bent beneath the sheet. Her black hair fanned out behind her, long strands running across her shoulders and across the pastel blue hospital pyjamas and the white of the bandage on her right shoulder. She was staring at Milton through the window. He got up from the chair, knocked on the door and went inside.

“Hello,” he said.

“Who are you?”

“My name’s Smith.”

“Have we met?”

“Not really.”

She looked at him. “No. I recognise you. You were there last night. You work in the restaurant, don’t you?”

“I did. Doubt there’s a job for me there any more.”

“You helped us.”

“I did my best.”

The conversation tailed off. She was nervous and Milton felt awkward about it. He pointed to the armchair next to the bed. “Do you mind?” She shrugged. Her right hand tensed and gripped the edge of the sheet. He could see the tendons moving in her wrist.

He moved the pillow out of the way and sat down. “How are you feeling?”

“Like I just got shot in the shoulder.”

“You were lucky — it could’ve been much worse.”

A bitter laugh. “Lucky? I wouldn’t call that luck. And my friends—”

“Yes. They were very unlucky. I’m sorry about them.”

Her chin quivered a little. She controlled it, a frown furrowing her brow. He turned his head and looked at her. She was slender and well put together. He saw that her nails were trimmed and painted. She had an intelligent face, sensitive, but her smoky eyes looked weary.


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