The market maker (36 page)

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Authors: Michael Ridpath

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I thought of Ricardo and Eduardo and felt a surge \

of anger. They were responsible for this. Together with -Francisco. He was a father. How would he feel if it were his son in that farmhouse, with only a day or two

to live? ]

Of course! -

'' Nelson, I have an idea. " '.

He sighed. "'Another one. We're running out of time \

for ideas.'' i

" No, listen. This one will work."

28

We were a ramshackle gang. Cordelia was at Luis's apartment by the phone. Nelson, his associate Ronaldo, Euclides, and I were in the car, one of two Nelson had bought the evening before from a car thief he knew. And Luis himself was in London at the Savoy Hotel, praying for our success. Nelson, Ronaldo, and I had guns. We had let Euclides come with us as long as he left his treasured gun behind. He might turn out to be useful.

I had never carried a handgun before. It was stuffed in the belt of my jeans under a loose sweatshirt. It was heavy. The metal, at first cold, had been warmed by my body. Nelson had quickly shown me how to fire it, but the idea was that I should use it only in an emergency.

I was scared, but I was also elated. For the first time I felt I was doing something positive that might actually get Isabel released. Nelson was cool, deliberate, tense. Ronaldo stared stolidly ahead, watching the traffic drive by. Slight, with an unremarkable black face and a wispy mustache, he was a former colleague of Nelson's in the Rio police force.

The car was parked down the road from Francisco's house. This wasn't going to be a well-planned snatch. It

didn't have to be. Speed was of the essence here. We had no need to keep our identity secret or escape detection. There was little chance of police involvement. But we did need to achieve a resolution quickly.

It was Tuesday morning. The sun was still low enough in the winter morning sky to throw shadows across the road. At six-thirty as usual, the gates to Francisco's house opened and a little gray Renault edged out. There was occasional traffic on this road. Someone w^ould see us, but Nelson was sure that the most likely response of the average BraziUan motorist would be to

drive on.

As the Renault turned left down the hill. Nelson started his engine. He accelerated across the road, smashing into the other car with a jolt, driving it into the wall. The seat belt bit into my chest and shoulders on impact. I quickly released it and leaped out of the car. Nelson had already pulled open the door of the Renault. Francisco filho hadn't been wearing a seat belt, and had hit his face on the steering wheel. There was blood on his mouth and he was dazed. Ronaldo and Nelson dragged him out of the Renault, and 1 ran to the other car we had parked a few yards down the road. EucUdes had the trunk open, and we bundled the kid m before he knew what was happening. Then we were m

the car and off. .

I had noticed several vehicles driving past durmg all this, but as Nelson had expected, none of them had stopped. Neither had I seen anyone run out of Francisco's house just up the road.

Ronaldo drove fast and accurately, a typical Ayrton Senna in Rio's morning traffic. Nelson pulled out his mobile phone and told Cordelia we had the boy

The car banged and rocked, especially when we stopped at traffic lights. Sitting in the back, I could hear

muffled shouts. But the commuting cariocas around didn't seem to hear, or if they did, they took no notice.

It seemed to take us forever to get out of Rio. Although we were generally going in the opposite direction to Rio's rush hour, we had planned on a slow journey. But it added to the tension. I sat stiffly in the backseat, my hands clasped tightly together, the gun biting into my thigh. Nelson and Ronaldo seemed perfectly calm in the front. Euclides sat next to me with shining eyes cind a big smile. None of us said a word.

An hour later, as we were finally beginning to break free of Rio, Nelson's phone chirped. He answered it, spoke for a few seconds, and put it down.

"Cordelia has contacted Francisco."

"What did he say?"

"He said he needed time to think. He said it might be a setup. Cordelia said if we wanted to kill him, there would be many easier ways. She gave him ten minutes."

Oh, God. We needed Francisco to respond immediately. A prolonged standoff would be much harder to deal with. The families of kidnap victims were advised to be cautious about accepting kidnappers' first demands, as Francisco would well know. But we weren't asking him for money. We merely wanted him to go somewhere to pick up a message.

The ten minutes ticked slowly past. It was fifteen before Cordelia called back.

Nelson listened quickly and grinned. "He's agreed," he said. "He's taking a mobile phone so Cordelia can stay in touch with him."

We were out of the city now, and heading up into the hills. After a half hour we reached an empty stretch of road about twenty kilometers from Sao Jose. We stopped in a lane just off the road, with a clear view down a hill to a gas station, bearing the by now familiar

orange and green insignia of Petrobras. Cordelia would instruct Francisco to park on the forecourt and wait for a further message. The two men working the pumps had been paid to see nothing.

We hauled the junior Francisco out of the trunk of the car, gave him some water, gagged him, bound his hands, and then stuffed him back in.

His cheek was swollen where he had bumped it on the steering wheel of the Renault when we had snatched him, but his mouth had long ago stopped bleeding. His eyes were wide with fear, and he babbled pleas in Portuguese. I felt sorry for the kid. It wasn't really his fault that Francisco was his father. But if all went well, he would be released soon.

We waited. Ronaldo smoked endless cigarettes, and Nelson borrowed a couple from him.

"I didn't realize you smoked/' I said.

"I don't," he replied.

Cordelia called to say that Francisco was two kilometers away. She had delayed saying exactly where he was to stop until she knew he was almost there.

Nelson pulled out his binoculars and trained them on the gas station.

Within five minutes a blue car pulled up. It parked on the forecourt, and sent the gas attendant away. No one got out, but I could see there was only one occupant. We waited another ten minutes to make sure Francisco was unaccompanied, and then Nelson started the engine and drove the car down the hill.

As we neared the gas station we could see Francisco in the front seat of his car, looking at his watch and then at us. Nelson swung in, and we parked right next to him.

Nelson and I got out of the car, as did Francisco. He was hot, beads of sweat oiled his bald brow, giving it a

grimy shine. He had never seen Nelson before, but he recognized me. He was about to say something, but then thought better of it. He still didn't know how much we knew.

"Thank you for com.ing," I said. "Do you mind if we search you and your car?"

"Yes, I do!" protested Francisco, but Nelson flung the heavier man against the car and frisked him. Francisco struggled briefly, but then held still. I bent down and quickly searched the car. There was a gun in the glove compartment, which I handed to Ronaldo.

When Nelson finished his search, Francisco turned and glowered at us. "Where's my son?" he demanded.

Nelson beckoned to him to follow him around to the back of our car and unlocked the trunk. Francisco junior was writhing and grunting, but when he saw his father he stopped, his eyes full of alarm.

"You can't keep him there! Let him out!" growled Francisco.

"We will," I said. "In good time. But first come with us. We'll take your car."

I sat in the back with Francisco, and waited while Nelson quickly handed the gas attendant some bank notes to add to those he had given him earlier. Then he climbed into the driver's seat and drove off. Behind us were Ronaldo and Euclides, with Francisco junior still in the trunk.

We drove back the way we and Francisco had come, and after a few kilometers turned left toward Sao Jose. Francisco watched the road ahead grimly, his thin lips pursed, his brow and shirt damp. He didn't say anything.

As we made our way farther into the hills, the sky became grayer and the sun disappeared. We were driving up a broad valley, with a river rushing down its center. There was farmland on either side, and every few kilo-

meters we came across a village. Farther up the hillsides were dense trees. I was reminded of my night blundering through the Tijuca Forest.

We soon reached Sao Jose, and turned left up the narrow road Euclides had shown us the day before. We drove past the second farm and stopped. Above us, about a quarter of a mile away at the end of the road, was the farmhouse where Isabel was being kept. Above that, pasture turned into trees and rock face, as the valley melted into the mountainside.

I opened the door of the car and motioned for Francisco to get out.

It was cooler up here. The grass and poorly paved road were glistening with moisture. A stream tumbled down under a small bridge a few feet in front of us, carrying the recent rain on its steep journey down to the Atlantic. There was little sound, the straining of a truck's engine from the road up to Sao Jose below us, the urgent rushing of the water, and the occasional bleating from a group of bedraggled sheep farther up the hill. The farmhouse behind us was quiet, and we couldn't see any signs of life in the building above. Two large black ravenlike birds circled over it, almost as though they were reconnoitering it for us.

''Isabel Pereira is being held in that farmhouse up there," I said. "We want you to release her."

Francisco, who had been silent since we had set off from the gas station, chose this moment to protest.

"I told you, I know nothing about her kidnapping! I can't release her. Just give me my son back. Now!"

"No, Francisco," I said, trying hard to keep my patience. "I want you to walk up to the house, and explain to those men that they should let Isabel go free. We will have your son down here. As soon as she begins to walk down the hill to us, we'll send him up. We give

you our word that we won't inform the police about any of this. You and whoever is up there with Isabel can go unharnaed."

''You don't listen to me!" cried Francisco. "I don't know anything about this!"

I interrupted him. "I'm sure you'll think of something to persuade them to let her go. We'll be waiting. Oh, and by the way, if Isabel isn't making her way down that hill in ten minutes, we leave. With your

son."

"What will you do with him then?"

"We'll leave that to Isabel's father to decide when he returns. I don't think he likes you very much. I doubt he'll be sympathetic. Now go!"

I pushed Francisco along the road toward the farmhouse.

He walked quickly up the hill, his arms swinging on either side of his ample backside. As he reached the house the door opened, and he disappeared inside.

That was a good sign. It meant that whoever was in there knew him. Although I hadn't really believed Francisco's protests, at the back of my mind I had been worried that perhaps he really had had nothing to do with Isabel's kidnapping, and we had made some horrible mistake.

Nelson pulled Francisco filho out of the tnmk, and stood him upright in the middle of the road facing up toward the farmhouse.

We waited, Ronaldo, Nelson, me, and the scared boy.

The two big black birds were joined by a couple more. A tractor drove up the road toward us from the village, but turned off into the first farm below. We were exposed here, exposed to local curiosity, and also to any reinforcements the kidnappers might call up.

My eyes never left the door of the farmhouse. The

walls were partially covered in white paint, which was peeling to reveal concrete underneath. I wondered what it would be like to be cooped up for two months in there. A red pickup truck was parked next to it, presumably the one Euclides had hitched a ride in.

My nerves jangled. It wasn't just the obvious fear that Isabel wouldn't make it, though that was bad enough. After all this time, now that there was a good chance I would actually see her, I was nervous. What would she be like after so long in captivity? Would she be all right physically? Would she have suffered psychological damage? And what about me? How would she feel about seeing me again? Would she care? It was a selfish thought, but I realized that part of what scared me was the fear that after all my efforts to set her free, I would discover that I meant nothing to her.

Where was she? I checked my watch. The ten minutes was up. It had taken Francisco a few of them to puff his way up the hill, but even so, he should have sent her out by now.

I glanced at Nelson next to me.

"What do you think?"

He looked at his watch. "We can give him a bit more time. Maybe they're having some kind of discussion. But we can't risk staying here too long. We don't want to meet the rest of the gang on the way down."

I glanced anxiously down toward the road to Sao Jose. The traffic was infrequent, but the odd car did pass. We had no way of knowing if one was driven by the kidnappers' friends. But if they were coming all the way from Rio, and it was a good guess that they were, it would take them a while.

A quarter of an hour. Still no sign of her. Why hadn't we told Francisco to take his mobile phone with him so

we could talk to him and find out what was going on Stupid!

I began to think about what we would do if we were forced to leave without Isabel. All would not be lost. We'd still have Francisco/i/Zio, and while we held him Isabel should be safe. But a long standoff would be difficult to sustain, and not just emotionally. Francisco and his men knew who we were. They'd be looking for us and looking for the boy, and they would be willing to use more ruthless methods than we to get him back. No, we had to avoid that if at all possible.

I glanced again at Nelson. He shrugged. Francisco filho was biting his lip. He was just as anxious as us.

Then his eyes widened. I looked up the hill to see the door of the farmhouse open. A figure was pushed out. Slight, long hair blown over her face. Isabel!

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