The wooden pallet of tamarind soda sat in one corner. Bighead pulled it toward Smithback’s mattress. Though it had to contain a dozen cases of soda, the giant man slid it over as easily as if it had been a shoe box. He settled himself atop the pallet and looked at Smithback.
“Got a little boo-boo, chiquito ?” he asked in surprisingly unaccented English.
Smithback realized that, unconsciously, he was still covering his injured temple, and he immediately lowered his hand.
“So you’re the one who’s been waving photos all over the barrio, asking questions about how we’re inked.”
“I’m a—” Smithback began, but Bighead raised his voice and spoke over him.
“I know who you are. You are Roger Smithback. Smith- back . A reporter.”
For a moment, curiosity mingled with fear: how did this brute know that? Of course — they’d taken his wallet, looked at his driver’s license. A Google search would have done the rest.
“But you’re a long way from home, Smith- back . What are you doing so far from Miami? And why are you asking about the Panteras?”
The man’s English was very good. Smithback swallowed, trying hard to keep in mind the code of journalistic integrity his father, a newspaper editor, had fiercely advocated. What would Ernie Pyle do? he had always asked at difficult moments. “If you know I’m a reporter,” Smithback said, “then you know it’s my business to ask questions. I—”
Bighead shut him up just by lifting one index finger. “I’m the one asking questions now. And you — you’re no reporter anymore. You’re dogshit on the sole of my boot.” He paused, looking at Smithback speculatively. “Got a problem with that, mierda de perro ?”
Journalistic integrity or not, Smithback had no problem with it.
Bighead nodded. “I think I would like being a reporter. You get to go everywhere, stick your nose where it doesn’t belong. You talk to the cops, talk to the street, learn twice as much as anyone else. Ask all the questions you want, even if they’re none of your business.” He paused, mimicking the act of puzzling something out. “And if I was a smart reporter — and maybe I learned something I shouldn’t have — I could ask even more questions. Like about the Panteras. And everybody would think it was just my job.”
Suddenly, swift as an adder’s tongue, the man’s huge arm darted forward, grabbed Smithback by the collar, and pulled him bodily up from the mattress. Smithback yelped in mingled pain and surprise.
“So what’s going on, chiquito ?” he asked in a dreadfully menacing, silky voice. “I know you want to tell me. You wouldn’t have such a hard-on, sniffing around here day and night, if you didn’t know something. What went wrong at the meet? Where are they, las mulas ? What’s the story with all those trucks?”
Smithback’s mind worked fast as the fist tightened, but only a childlike babble escaped his lips. “What are you talking about? Mulas ? Trucks?”
“Don’t play stupid. Big trucks, government trucks. Were they full of stuff? My stuff?” He paused. “Something’s late , my journalist friend. Very, very big. Very, very late. That makes my hombres angry. That makes my jefe angry.”
There was a moment of silence. Then, tightening his fist still further around the collar, he lifted Smithback off the ground. With a grunt of effort, he smacked his other fist into Smithback’s stomach, suspended over the mattress. A horrific pain ripped through the reporter’s gut. His body instinctively tried to curl into a fetal position but, dangling as he was by the collar, his knees only jerked: once, twice. Bighead delivered another terrible blow to his midsection, then threw Smithback down onto the mattress.
Smithback doubled over, vomiting on the filthy cover.
Bighead stepped forward, straddling him. “You don’t have all the shit already, chiquito , or you wouldn’t be around here asking questions. But you know something. I think maybe it’s about those trucks — the ones with their numbers painted over.”
Smithback barely heard. He struggled to breathe, waves of cramping pain ripping through his guts.
“And you will tell me,” Bighead said. “You know why? Because people always tell me. Like when I spent two years in Charlotte CI. I had a thing for new fish, especially the diaper snipers. They were all soft — soft like you. I’d push their shit, just to break them in a little... and they’d start talking, right away!” Bighead laughed in mock surprise. “They’d tell me everything, every secret they ever had, every messed-up thing they’d ever done, hoping to make me stop. But I didn’t stop, chiquito . I pushed their shit until I was fucking finished . Now... talk to me.”
“It’s the feet,” Smithback groaned in agony.
“ ¿Qué? ”
“The feet...” Smithback was still dribbling vomit, and he could only speak a few words at a time. “That washed up... on the beach...”
Bighead stopped straddling him, took a few paces back. “What about the feet?”
“That tattoo... it was on one of the feet...”
“What? Those feet on that beach in Captiva?”
“I got the photo from... from an autopsy... Trying to use the tattoo to... get a story... a story... ”
“Shut up! My missing shipment got nothing to do with those feet! You’re just trying to hustle me.” Bighead cursed, then called over his shoulder. “Carlos! Flaco! ¡Pongan tus culos aquí, carajos! ”
Immediately, the door opened again and the two figures stepped inside. Through his haze of pain, Smithback saw they were both as heavily tattooed as Bighead: one tall and well-built, the other short. Turning away from Smithback, Bighead started speaking to them in low, rapid Spanish. Smithback didn’t even try to understand. Something had occurred to him — something he should probably have thought of before, but it had taken this brief, vicious beating to bring it to mind. That old gardener, the spotter — when he’d driven Smithback around, he’d done a lot of talking. It sounded like the gang, the Panteras, had some kind of serious problem going on — this was what Bighead wanted to know about. But the thing Smithback couldn’t get out of his mind was something a cop buddy had once said: If you’re kidnapped, and they don’t wear masks, if they mention each other’s names in your hearing, that means you’re fucked: sooner or later, they’ll put a cap in your ass.
He realized Bighead was looking back at him. The hulking figure wore an expression Smithback couldn’t read: it might be anger, it might be uncertainty — it could have been any number of things.
“That’s some little story, the feet,” he told Smithback. “I don’t know if you’re smart or stupid. I’m going to ask around. See if maybe you speak a little truth, see if there’s a connection. Then I’ll come back and break you in. That’s when I find out whether you’re lying — or, if you tell the truth, maybe you’ll tell a little bit more.”
“I’ve told you everything—” Smithback began, but Bighead had turned away and was walking toward the door. Already, he was pulling a cell phone out of his pocket. In the doorway, he paused to give his two gunmen another instruction.
“Fuck him up a little more before locking him in again,” he said. Then he stepped into the narrow passageway and vanished.
The R/V Leucothea passed under the causeway bridge as a gray dawn was creeping into a stormy sky, casting a steely light over the choppy water. As they passed the Sanibel Island Lighthouse, they left the shelter of land and began encountering a deep swell from an offshore storm, the boat riding up and down through the whitecaps, the wind whipping the spray across the windows. Pamela Gladstone headed the Leucothea around the southern end of the island into the rough sea.
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