Meanwhile, three men checked the prepared banquet room, looked under the table, careful not to disturb the linen or the place settings as they did so. They scanned for listening devices and discussed arrangements with the servers. Then they entered the kitchen; the manager led the way as the staff lined up and underwent a quick frisking, even the women in the back of the house were patted down. Then the pantry was searched, the walk-in cooler, the dry storage areas, and even the freezer.
Everyone in the kitchen knew this routine.
Six more Black Suits arrived in another white Yukon XL Denali; two men headed straight through the dining room, and the patrons wondered if one of them was their benefactor for the evening. But they headed into the kitchen and stepped out the back door. They opened their coats and took up watch in the alley. The remaining four stepped into the dining room from the cool evening, and they moved with military precision into the four corners of the room. Again, coats opened and eyes scanned all in front of them but did not fix on any one thing.
One of the first men in the door spoke into his radio.
Five minutes later three more white SUVs stopped in front of the restaurant. A thick group of men in identical black suits entered; no one would be able to count the number with the speed and tightness of the mass, but there were certainly a dozen individuals. Their clothing and hairstyles, even their trim beards and mustaches, everything was virtually identical. They passed through the dining room; the patrons at their tables strained their necks and gawked; a woman tipped her wineglass as she leaned back to try and pick out the celebrity.
Was he a famous bullfighter? Was he the singer performing at the Auditorio Telmex tonight?
No one knew who it was, because no one could tell one man from the next. In seconds the mass moved into a back banquet room, the door was shut, and two suits stood at the door facing the restaurant.
The main dining room murmured and speculated. Several said, “Los Trajes Negros,” but none of the men in the black suits standing around nodded or answered back.
Soon the tables began ordering more wine, and the servers poured liberal glassfuls. Champagne corks were popped, and the staid dining room turned into a celebration.
Daniel de la Rocha sat at the end of the long banquet table, sipped his scotch, and gazed at the tea-light candle on the starched white tablecloth. He picked the soft middle out of a slice of crusty French bread and wadded it into a tight ball before popping it into his mouth. The table was set for twelve, but now only five sat with him. The other men paced around the room talking into mobile phones or radios; two were in the corner huddled over a laptop they'd set up on a serving table.
Emilio Lopez Lopez, DLR's personal bodyguard and the leader of his protection forces, stood against the wall not five feet behind his boss.
A waiter in white offered DLR a menu, but he waved it away, asked the server to instruct the chef to prepare him something light. The waiter disappeared, and de la Rocha's attention returned to the candle.
It had not been a good day. Elena Gamboa had survived the attack on the hacienda in the mountains near Tequila and had escaped. Nineteen marines,
federales
, Jalisco state police, and Tequila municipal cops, all under the control of Spider Cepeda, were dead, a couple of
campesinos
as well, and many more were wounded.
Calvo had worked his magic, the news reported that the men died heroically fighting the remaining Madrigal Cartel assassins who had attacked the rally in Puerto Vallarta, but this type of mess did not go away cleanly or quickly or cheaply. There would be blowback from Constantino Madrigal, from the government in Mexico City, from a meddlesome foreign press that Calvo could not so easily influence.
More men sat down now, and de la Rocha lightened a bit. He was with his brothers; they were together, and they would get through this
chingado
mess. The Gamboas would be found, and they would die, and the next wave of “heroes” working for the GOPES would not be so quick to come after him.
They talked about old times, talked about their days together in the army. Daniel was one of the boys now, and he enjoyed moments like this. He liked getting away from his properties, getting out into someplace different, even if it did require two dozen bodyguards and hours of coordination from the local police.
De la Rocha stood up from his chair. The others seated stood with him, but he motioned for them to sit back down. He stepped over to the corner
nicho
, knelt down at a Santa Muerte placed there just for him, and prayed alone.
When finished, he poured a double scotch for
la virgen
and left it there in the
nicho
beside her, then returned to his table.
Nestor Calvo had been pacing with his phone, but he left the dining room for a moment, returned minutes later, and then sat in his seat on Daniel's right. He leaned into the ear of his
patrón
.
“I've been speaking all afternoon to a man from the American embassy. We use him from time to time, for this and that.”
Daniel's plate came. Filet of sole, not too much butter. A mango salsa. Asparagus. He nodded, lifted his fork, and the waiter went away with a sigh of relief. Daniel did not look up as he responded to Nestor. “This and that? Time to time? Okay. You aren't telling me much. What about this gringo?”
“He helps Spider get papers for his men to get into the United States if there is someone up there we need to go after.”
Daniel nodded, bit into the hot fish. His face showed no expression.
Calvo continued. “He . . . I am speaking of the
norteamericano
, he called one of my men this afternoon, says he has valuable information, but he will only give it to you directly. I called him back and told him to go to hell. He flew straight in from the Distrito just now to speak to us. Called me from the airport. I finally persuaded him to tell me what he knows, and I had a man pick him up and bring him here.”
“So he didn't go to hell; he came to me.”
Nestor shrugged. “You are going to want to hear this.”
“Has he been searched?”
“At the airport and again, just now, in the bathroom. Head to toe.”
Now de la Rocha shrugged and nodded, he did not look up from his plate as he ate. “Bring him in.”
Nestor nodded across the banquet room to a man positioned at the door. He stepped out, and seconds later he returned with Jerry Pfleger.
The American was disheveled, no doubt from the rough feeling up that he'd just endured in the bathroom. Wearing his rumpled white short-sleeved shirt and his thin black tie, he looked completely slovenly in the beautiful dining room amidst the well-coifed men with expensive suits. The guard ushered him to the far end of the table to de la Rocha's left. Daniel stood and shook Jerry's hand.
“Nice to meet you, Your Excellency.” Jerry said it with a wide smile.
Daniel sighed.
Gringos
. “Don't call me that. Have a seat.” Both men sat back down. De la Rocha looked to the waiter standing against the wall behind him. “Angelo, bring my
blanco
American friend some
vino blanco
.”
A glass of white wine was poured and Jerry took a long gulp. Daniel had returned to his sole. Between bites he asked, “What can I do for you?”
“I'm really happy you weren't hurt the other day.”
“Me, too.”
“On the news . . . the man who tried to kill you on your yacht. His wife was at the rally in Puerto Vallarta.”
De la Rocha stopped eating. He looked up at Jerry.
Pfleger continued. “Mister Calvo said you might be interested to know where they are?”
“I might be interested, yes.”
“An American came to me today in Mexico City. He wants me to procure forged U.S. visas for three women and one boy.”
De la Rocha just looked at the gringo, “And who are these
mojados
?”
Mojados
was the local translation for “wetback,” or someone who swims the Rio Grande to get into the United States.
“Luz Rosario Gamboa Fuentes, Elena Maria Gamboa Gonzalez, Laura Maria Gamboa Corrales, and Diego Gamboa Fuentes.”
“Spider!” de la Rocha shouted out, startling Pfleger and making him sit up in his chair. Javier “Spider” Cepeda had been at the computer in the corner, but he spun around and darted over to his
patrón
. Daniel had Jerry repeat himself to the leader of his
sicarios
.
“They are in Mexico City?” asked Cepeda hopefully.
“I don't know. I just know the gringo is.”
“When will you meet with him again?”
“Two p.m. tomorrow.”
De la Rocha shook his head. “Seventeen hours. Any way to get to him faster than that?”
“Yes, sir. I got his mobile number. I thought maybe you had a way to triangulateâ”
“Esteban.” Now Cepeda was the one interrupting Pfleger and calling across the room. Esteban Calderon was the technical guru of the Black Suits; he'd been the radio operator in their special forces team, and he had degrees in telecommunications and electrical engineering. He hustled over, and the Mexicans discussed the technical hurdles involved in finding someone by their mobile phone signal in a city as congested as the Distrito Federal.
Finally, when it was settled that with enough equipment and men and a little time the location of a mobile phone could be pinpointed, de la Rocha returned to Pfleger. The American had been all but forgotten for the previous five minutes, by everyone except Emilio and the guards along the wall, that is.
Jerry had gulped a full glass of chardonnay and then another half while he waited.
De la Rocha said, “What do you want, amigo?”
“Your undying appreciation.”
Daniel just stared at him. De la Rocha could see from the man's mannerisms that he was a user of some of the product in which the Black Suits dealt.
When he saw how flat his humor fell, Jerry became serious. “Honestly, nothing much. I just want the American.”
“The American? You want us to take the family, and you want the gringo to go with you.”
“Yes.”
“And what is your interest in him?”
“Apparently, he is wanted by the U.S. government. The embassy was buzzing this afternoon about some guy on the loose down here.
If
he's the guy they are after, and I
think
he is, then there is a reward. I was thinking I provide you the information, then you could provide . . . a group of men to pick them up. You take the Gamboas, and you pass the American over to the embassy. Then you pass me the reward money for my information.”
De la Rocha took a long sip of his wine. “Why do the
norteamericanos
want the gringo?”
“I don't know. Something classified. There's a guy who showed up this afternoon hanging around the embassy, definitely a CIA spook. Apparently, this spy and the wanted gringo used to work together, and he's hanging around waiting to ID him if he's picked up by the
federales
.
Daniel nodded thoughtfully, and caught Calvo's eye. Both men stood and removed themselves from the table, found a quiet corner of the banquet room.
Nestor said, “If la CIA want this gringo so bad, they may be willing to deal for him.”
“I was thinking the same thing. What do they have that we want?”
“It's the Central
Intelligence
Agency. Any hard intelligence they have about Madrigal could be useful.”
DLR stroked his goatee. “They would know who his government contacts are in Peru, in Ecuador, in Colombia.”
“They certainly might know all that.”
“Would they trade that information for this gringo assassin?”
“I will begin immediately to find out. I will set up a chain of intermediaries to contact the embassy, to get us in touch with la CIA. We will judge how much passion they have for this man.”
“Either way, we need to get Jerry to lead us to Elena.”
Nestor was excited by the prospect of trading the gringo for CIA information. It would be a huge intelligence coup against his organization's archrival.
He was less enthusiastic when his boss returned to the original mission, the killing of the police officer's pregnant wife.
Still, Calvo agreed, and his phone was out of his pocket in seconds. Before dealing with American intelligence he would need to establish a series of cutouts, and this would take time.
Daniel addressed the banquet room full of his men. “Everyone, we leave immediately for the D.F.!”
Jerry Pfleger rose, held his wineglass up high in toast. The Mexicans in the banquet room ignored him; instead they quickly assembled on de la Rocha, so that they could file out as one unit and limit the chance of an assassination attempt against their
patrón
.