Authors: John Donohue
said, “is the map room. Crackpot philosophy is on the first
floor.”
“OK, so we’re safe,” I replied. She tilted her head and
looked at me. I could see the wheels turning as she wondered
whether to call security. I waved a sheet of paper at her. “I’m
an adjunct in the history department and I’m doing some free-
lance research,” I explained. I put on my most pathetic face.
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John Donohue
“I’m looking to see what these coordinates can tell me. Got a
globe?”
She rolled her eyes, sat down on a wheeled chair, and
bumped me away from the keyboard. “Just numbers?” she said,
“no indications of direction?”
“Is that a problem?”
She shrugged. “Nah. Just a process of elimination. You’ve
got some idea of the general location, right? Please?”
“Surprise me,” I told her and showed her the numbers.
“Ah,” she said, “a test.” She closed her eyes and pulled data
directly from the cartographic fissures of her librarian’s brain.
“East latitude, north longitude puts you… in south-central
China. South longitude somewhere in the Pacific Ocean east
of Australia.”
“You can do this from memory?” I asked.
Her eyes opened. “This,” she repeated with some emphasis,
“is the map room.”
“Of course. And it’s impressive, but not what I’m looking
for.”“Flip the latitude and you’re south of the Tropic of Capri-
corn, again in the ocean.” She eyed me for a reaction.
“Nope.”
“OK. Last variant is west latitude and north longitude.
Somewhere in the American southwest?”
“Bingo,” I said.
She fired up a software program and began plugging in the
string of numbers that I had copied from Westmann’s journal.
She typed and thought and frowned. “You copied these
down sequentially, right?”
“Uh, yeah, they’re samples from a document I’m working
on.” She looked at me as if wondering who in their right mind
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would let me work on something like this unaided.
“OK,” she said and blew a slow, steady stream of air out as
she backtracked and adjusted her entries.
“What?”
“They didn’t make sense at first, but I can see now… these
are multiple readings in more than one series and you just ran
them all together…”
“Almost as if I didn’t know what I was doing.” She looked at
me. “Hard to believe, but true,” I suggested.
Again the testy exhale, but I thought I saw a suppressed
smile. Her pale fingers clacked across the keyboard. She moved
a mouse with the smooth precision of long practice. The nails
of her fingers were cut short, but carefully colored to match
her maroon lipstick. Finally, she was done. She rolled the chair
back and stood up. “I’m running a printout from the office
laser,” she told me. “It’s got better resolution and you won’t get
charged for the printout.”
She came back with a fistful of papers: a record of the data
entered and maps of various scales showing the plotted courses
suggested by the coordinates. I shuffled through them.
“Interesting stuff,” she said.
“Why so?”
She spread the sheets out on a table and started pointing
things out. “Notice the routes being suggested. I overlaid them
on maps with both terrain and manmade features.”
“Lots of terrain,” I said. “Not many roads.”
“Not much of anything,” she said. “Except this little fea-
ture.” All the routes were, at one point or another, bisected by a
dashed line. “You know what this is?” She asked.
“The border between Arizona and the Mexican state of
Sonora,” I said, proud of at least that much knowledge.
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John Donohue
“Yes. All of these routes cross the border. At locations far
from anything, including, I assume, anything remotely resem-
bling a Customs inspection.”
“I wonder,” I said innocently, “what that’s all about?”
She looked then as if she suspected new and unpleas-
ant things about me. Life in the library was probably pretty
tidy. I was not. Then the momentary suspicion faded, routine
reasserted itself and she shrugged. “We supply directions, not
motivations.”
“Of course,” I agreed, “this is, after all, the map room.”
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17
Flight
The mean streets of the old Red Hook have changed. Gen-
trification has arrived in the form of smal bistros, coffee bars,
and microbreweries. The stolid nineteenth century warehouses
are being rehabbed into apartments with big windows and open
floor plans. It’s al very civilized, but not always pleasant.
“Don’t even open your mouth, you asshole,” the voice said
with a venom that was potent. We sat in the dim recesses of a
microbrewery, the brick wal s arching over our heads. It should
have felt safe and comforting; vaguely old world. Instead, I felt
like I was sitting in a vault where they store gunpowder.
My brother Micky was about as angry as I had ever seen
him, and that was saying a great deal. His partner Art sat next
to him, facing me across the dark wooden plank table. He’s usu-
al y the affable one, a man natural y disposed to play the Good
Cop in the same way that my brother emerged from the womb
ful y formed as the consummate Bad Cop. Today, Art’s face was
a tight mask; he watched me with eyes that were remote and
uncaring. It wasn’t like him, but I seemed to be getting this reac-
tion from him a lot in the last few days
I opened and closed my mouth, and then opted for the smart
move and just sat there.
“You are so deep into this wormhole, Connor… I can’t even
begin to…” Micky’s anger seemed to briefly choke off his ability
to speak.
“Bad enough you run afoul of TM-7,” Art said. “And, by the
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way, we’re stil waiting for you to come clean about that.”
“I can explain…” I began, but Art held up a stern hand.
“Little late in the game for confidences. Let me finish.” He
looked like he would rather finish me. “We go from bad to
worse. You manage to get
Los Gemenos
on your case. And we
warned you about Osorio…”
My brother found his voice. “What the
fuck
were you
thinking?”
The waitress came over with our beers. I didn’t answer
Micky’s question, just watched mutely as she set the pint glasses
down in front of us. When she left, I shrugged. “We needed
some sort of ‘in’ to the Hispanic underworld.”
Art made a deep harrumphing noise. “Hispanic underworld.
You been watching too many movies.”
Micky picked up the thought. “Osorio’s a jackal, Connor.
He may like to pretend he’s Ricardo Montalban, but in the end
he’s just another thug.”
I couldn’t object to the characterization. Osorio was the one
who’d told me that Martín was gone. Maybe he was mistaken.
But maybe he’d decided to do someone a favor and set me up.
Time would tel . It was yet another complication that I decided
not to think about right now. I hefted the glass of beer, taking
smal comfort in the familiar smooth curve of the glass in my
hand. I lifted it to my lips and let the aroma of the hops wash
over my face.
Neither of the two men sitting opposite me touched their
glasses. They watched me with an unblinking patience, waiting
for me to crack.
“Look,” I final y said, “I don’t have al the pieces put together
yet. And I was trying not to get you guys involved.”
My brother snorted. “A little late for that.”
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Kage
“Connor,” Art said with real pain, “you are in way over your
fucking head.”
Micky sat back and glared at me. “This has nothing to do
with you wanting to protect us, Connor. I know you. When are
you gonna realize that this is not about you and some fucking
test of skil ? It’s not about measuring up to Yamashita or some
assholic warrior code. This is the real deal.”
“I know that,” I protested. “But I’m pretty sure that this isn’t
the kind of thing that you can afford to be involved with. I may
have to do some things…”
“Things?” Art said.
I nodded. “They might arrest me before it’s al over.”
“Arrest you,” my brother demanded. “Arrest you?” He started
to rise from his seat, but Art held him down. “I’m gonna fucking
kil you if you don’t level with me and tel us what’s going on!”
So I did. The odd job for Lori Westmann and the manu-
script copy I made. The suspicious fire at the Westmann estate
that destroyed the original. The notes and coordinates in the
manuscript copy that detailed a host of clandestine trails for bor-
der crossings.
After my story we al sat for a moment, saying nothing.
Micky ordered a Jameson. Art and I joined him.
“When did you final y fit the pieces together?’ Micky said.
“After the attack?”
I shook my head. “No. I wasn’t real y focused on the manu-
script then. But once you got the information about TM-7, I
started thinking about that guy Xochi in Tucson and the expres-
sion on his face when he saw me with a copy of the manuscript.
Then, when I ran the GPS coordinates, it began to dawn on
me.”“You coulda brought us in, Connor,” Art chided.
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John Donohue
I sipped at the gold and smoke of the Irish whiskey. “Art. You
guys aren’t cops anymore. But you stil have to play by the rules.”
Micky started to say something, but I held up a hand. “Yeah, I
know, not al the rules al the time. But the big ones? Please. It’s
what you do…”
The two cops sat in grudging agreement, looking into the
whiskey for answers it couldn’t provide.
Micky grimaced. “Here’s your problem. TM-7 is like some
beast with multiple heads. Someone in the organization wants
you taken out. You blew away a few of them and Martín has dis-
appeared for the time being. It gives you some breathing room,
but they’re just gonna send someone else.“
I swal owed and asked the big question. “Now what?”
The eyed each other, sending silent signals back and forth,
an ocular cop semaphore. My brother seemed uncomfortable.
Art leaned forward, his big hands resting on the table.
“The rumble over the networks is that something big is
going down on the border. The various cartels are jockeying for
control over smuggling routes. TM-7 is just one of the players.
They want what you have and are not gonna stop ‘til they get it.”
“So what do I do?”
Micky shrugged. “The good news is that these guys are busy
and that if you can find whoever is real y pissed at you and pla-
cate him, the organization itself wil move on.”
“Bigger fish to fry,” Art observed.
“So?” I prompted.
“So you give it to them.”
“Huh?”
“Hear me out,” my brother said. “Someone wants what you
have. They also want you in case you know what you have.
For them it’s a two-part problem. They want the info on the
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smuggling routes, and they don’t want anyone else to have it.
“Why not just ask that guy Xochi?”
Art waved a hand. “They may already have him.”
“They could ask him, of course,” Micky mused. “And it’s our
experience that people like this are terrible liars.”
“There are, of course, more vigorous ways to question some-
one,” Art added. “But there are issues…”
“Such as?”
Art smiled smugly. “Contrary to whatever wet dream some
politicians have had, torture doesn’t yield such great informa-
tion. Besides, even if they got the info, they tend to—get rid of
the source. Makes things much tidier. Although not a great deal
for your pal Xochi. That stil leaves the problem of you having a
copy of the coordinates.”
“So the manuscript is important to them,” Micky said.
“They want it back.”
“Of course, you have also read it,” Art added. “Bad news
for them, since now there’s another loose wheel in their little
scheme.”
“Even worse news for you personal y,” my brother added
with a perverse tone of satisfaction. “’Cause now they have to
eliminate you.”
Art leaned back and smiled broadly. “Of course, we have
made a career out of seeing the silver lining in black clouds. This
problem is no exception”
“I’m overjoyed,” I told them.
They looked at each other and leaned in over the table
simultaneously, the wheels in their heads spinning. I waited,
openmouthed.
“Simple, real y,” Micky said. “We provide the bait—in this
case you and the manuscript. It would be real y surprising if
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whoever is in charge down there, the guy funding the hit on
you, doesn’t surface.”
“And then?”
“The details need a little fleshing out,” Art admitted.
“But the big picture is simple,” Micky said. “You find who-
ever is behind this…”
“And have him arrested?” I asked hopeful y.
Art looked guilty. “Wel , no…”