PROLOGUE: THREE MONTHS BEFORE
The road was desert dusty; any driver would have known the end of it was off the paved path. The truck contributing to the dust had seen better years, and had a few worse ones yet to go. The driver was paying more attention to the bottle of beer the passenger was swilling than the road.
The driver and passenger's skin was darkened with the passage of days in the sun. Their happiness at a stolen hour with their patron's truck described life in simple pleasures: fucking, drinking, sleeping, driving, and combining any that a woman let them get away with. A perfect day be driving to a bar where the word 'Migra' was a curse, drinking the balls to talk to a pretty girl, a creaking motel bed, and sleep with no thoughts of yesterday or tomorrow.
Neither noticed the dirty figure until it was too late, almost. The passenger screamed and reached for the steering wheel. The truck went off the road, coming to a stop inches from a tree that somehow thrived in the desiccation. The two men looked at each other for a second, afraid that they had failed to avoid the figure. They turned to the truck doors, and ran out to where they had jettisoned off the road.
The figure was lying on the ground.
The men looked at each other again. She was wearing a dirt-browned white t-shirt and baby-blue lace panties. They recognized hunger from their own village but to see a white person, a girl, with the look of days without a meal scared them.
This was 'El Norte'.
They worked jobs that gringos did not callous their hands on. Politicos made noise, but the two men were as much a part of the system as everyone who fought to push them back over the border. 'El Norte' did not include green-eyed blonde women looking at them with more fear than either had ever seen. Even covered in grime, the beauty of a tele-novela female lead was obvious in the girl.
It added to their fear. They recognized a scion of privilege in the thousand ways those without can. She reached out a hand to them. They watched as her eyes changed from fear to pleading hope. They turned to look at each other before committing themselves.
They could have abandoned her without anyone knowing. Many of the steps towards a better life had been taken for family and an INS ticket home was a blow to those family members as well. Neither looked at each other again as they picked the woman up and placed her in the truck cab. They did not need to say that going back to the patron was not an option. It was silent judgment of a man who lived well from other people's dreams.
They looked towards the end of the road that they could not see through what now seemed a protective dust. The passenger did not say anything when the driver turned the truck around.
It was a long drive to the city. They had both made the crossing before and managed few months before being caught. They knew where the woman would be helped and shrugged fatalistically at the thought of questions, accusations, and eventual deportation. The patron would be there to take their money for another attempt.
The passenger was comforted by the woman's sobs of relief against his chest. The driver was happy with knowing he had not given up the sleep that abandoning her would have cost him.
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PROLOGUE II: ONE MONTH BEFORE
"Senator," the quiet man said welcoming the last guest to walk into the tastefully expensive hotel room.
The Senator dressed with the elegance of being born with class, while the quiet man dressed as if it might be necessary to blend into the furniture. The last man in the room, standing by the window, wore the face of barely hidden guilt.
The Senator sat down and looked at his co-conspirators; it was a hard word to use for a politician with the money to buy himself.
"Emil," he said to the man by the window. The pain in Emil's eyes was not hidden when he turned and sat in the last available chair.
"How is your youngest daughter?" the quiet man asked the Senator.
"Afraid!" the Senator barked. The quiet man simply nodded and looked to Emil.
"Catherine Stewart was my lover," Emil said suddenly.
The quiet man nodded thoughtfully. The Senator looked at him realizing the content of Emil's outburst had not been a surprise.
"She was one of my best agents," Emil said quietly. "I personally assigned her to the investigation of your daughters' kidnappings."
The Senator remembered thinking how much the agent Emil had sent out resembled his oldest daughter. It burned in his gut that it was in his own home state that their girls' lives had been taken. The burning raged whenever he remembered that he did not even have the comfort of a body to bury. He had chosen the silent path, and it had cost them another bodiless funeral.
"That county is a hellhole," Emil said to no one in particular. "I've read Catherine's early reports. None of the residents will talk. They just about feed you to the wolves themselves. Considering your youngest daughter's mental state when she was found, we were right to make a quiet investigation instead of coming down on that town."
The Senator nodded angrily.
"Catherine wanted me to divorce my wife," Emil continued without thinking. "I sent her out there because I wanted her to..."
The other two men looked at each other but said nothing.
"I sent her down there, and they sent her back with only half her face. The doctors say it was definitely human teeth that did the damage. Whatever is down there cost me the life of a good agent. Her partner will keep quiet about the preliminary investigation, no matter what happens."
Emil looked at the ceiling trying to hide the seconds of relief that he had felt when Catherine died. Those seconds were his guilt; that for a few instants, his thoughts had been for the things her death had preserved.
"Catherine was pregnant," Emil said. "The doctors say she would have known, but she did her job anyway."
There was a long silence.
"What is this?" the Senator asked rhetorically.
"A righteous evil," the quiet man said. He thought of it as murder, but that was only a legal definition and these men needed some comforting.
"This is righteous?" Emil asked out loud.
"What about you, John? You haven't lost a child or a lover to these animals," the Senator said ignoring Emil.
John, the quiet one, looked at the window to think of the best reply to that question. He shrugged internally, deciding both men were over the barrel enough that the truth could not improve their positions.
"You came to me, Senator," John said looking him. The Senator nodded his acceptance of the point.