Read The Queen of the South Online
Authors: Arturo Pérez-Reverte
Tags: #Modern fiction, #Thrillers, #Young women, #Novel, #Women narcotics dealers, #General, #Drug Traffic, #Fiction
"Not at all," answered Teresa. "But in that case you'll have to wait while I call my attorney. And the same goes for taking notes."
After a look at her boss, Sergeant Moncada frowned, put the tape recorder back into her bag, and used another Kleenex. Captain Castro succinctly explained what had brought them there. In the course of a recent investigation, some reports had pointed toward businesses related to Tran-ser Naga.
"There is proof of that, of course," said Teresa.
"Well, no. I'm sorry to say there's not."
"In that case, I don't understand why you're here."
"It's routine."
"Oh."
"We'd like you to cooperate with the Ministry of Justice." "Oh."
Captain Castro told Teresa that an action by the Guardia Civil—the confiscation of inflatable boats presumably meant for use in drug trafficking— had been aborted because of an information leak and the unexpected intervention of the National Police. Agents from the Estepona division stepped in early, raiding a warehouse building in the industrial park, where, instead of the material the Guardia Civil was tracking, they found only two old motorboats, no longer being used. They found no proof, arrested nobody.
"I'm so sorry to hear that," Teresa said. "But I still don't understand what any of that has to do with me."
"Nothing, for the time being. The police blew it. Our investigation was ruined because somebody passed false information to the Estepona police. No judge would go forward with what we have now."
"Hijole...
. And you've come to tell me this?" Her tone of voice made the officers exchange glances.
"In a way," Captain Castro said. "We thought your opinion might be helpful. At the moment we're working on half a dozen things related to that same area."
Sergeant Moncada leaned forward in her chair. No lipstick, no makeup. Her small eyes looked tired. The cold. The allergy. Maybe a long night last night—working, of course, Teresa ventured. Days without washing her hair. The gold earrings were incongruous.
"The captain means
your
area—in fact, you."
Teresa decided to ignore the hostility. She looked at the woman's wrinkled shirt.
"I don't know what you're talking about." She turned to the man again. "My affairs are all in public view."
"Not these affairs," Captain Castro said. "Have you ever heard of Chemical STM?"
"Never."
"Or of Konstantin Garofi, Limited?"
"Yes. I have shares in that company. A minority holding."
"How strange. According to our information, the Konstantin Garofi import-export company, with headquarters in Gibraltar, is owned entirely by you."
Maybe I should have waited for Teo, thought Teresa. But now was not the time to turn back. She raised an eyebrow.
"I imagine that if you claim that, you have proof of it."
Captain Castro stroked his moustache. He slowly, doubtfully shook his head, as though calculating exactly how much proof he had, or didn't have.
"Well, no," he said at last. "Unfortunately we don't, although in this case it doesn't matter much. Because we've received a report. A request for cooperation from the U.S. DEA and the Colombian government, regarding a shipment of fifteen tons of potassium permanganate seized in Cartagena."
"I didn't realize that shipping potassium permanganate was illegal."
She had leaned back and was looking at the officer with a surprise that to all appearances was authentic.
"In Europe it's not," was the reply. "But in Colombia it's a controlled substance. It's used in the processing of cocaine. And in the United States buying and selling more than a certain amount of potassium permanganate is restricted. It's one of the twelve precursors and thirty-three chemical substances on the list of controlled substances. As you may or may not know, potassium permanganate is one of those twelve products essential for making cocaine paste and cocaine hydrochloride. Combined with other chemicals, ten tons would be enough to refine eighty tons of cocaine. Which, if you'll forgive a well-used phrase, is nothing to sneeze at."
When he finished his speech, Captain Castro continued to look at Teresa inexpressively, as though that was all he had to say. She mentally counted to three.
Chale.
Her head was starting to hurt, but she couldn't allow herself to take out an aspirin in front of these two. She shrugged.
"And?"
"Well, the shipment went by sea from Algeciras. It had been bought by Konstantin Garofi from the Belgian company Chemical STM."
"I think it's odd that a company in Gibraltar would export directly to Colombia."
"We think it's odd, too." If there was sarcasm in his remark, it didn't show. "Actually, what happened is that the stuff was bought in Belgium, brought to Algeciras, and then signed over to another company registered on the island of Jersey, which put it in a container and shipped it first to Puerto Cabello, in Venezuela, and then to Cartagena.... And along the way it was repackaged—into barrels labeled magnesium dioxide."
It wasn't the Gallegos—Teresa knew that. This time it hadn't been them that had blown the whistle. The problem was in Colombia. Local problems, with the DEA behind them, probably. Nothing that would even remotely affect her.
"Where?"
"At sea. Because it left Algeciras labeled as what it was."
So that's the end of the line, sweetheart. Everybody off. Look at my hands on the table, taking a legal cigarette out of a legal package and lighting it with all the calm in the world. Hands as white and innocent as snow. So forget it. What's all this to me?
"Then you should ask that company headquartered in Jersey for an explanation," she said.
The sergeant made a gesture of impatience, but said nothing. Captain Castro bowed his head, as though grateful for a good piece of advice.
"It dissolved after the operation," he said. "It was just a name on Saint Helier Street."
"Hijole.
And there's proof of all that?"
"Of that, yes indeed."
"Then the people at Konstantin Garofi got taken, eh?"
The sergeant opened her mouth to say something, but this time, too, she evidently thought better of it. She looked at her boss and then removed a notebook from her bag. You take out a pencil, thought Teresa, and you're on your ass on the street. Or maybe whether you take out a pencil or not.
"So," she went on, "if I understand this right, you're talking about the transportation of a legal chemical within the Schengen area. I don't see what's strange about that. I'm sure all the documents were in order, with bills of lading and destination documents and everything. I can't say I know all the details of Konstantin Garofi's operations, but as far as I know they're very careful to obey all the applicable laws.... And I'd never have stock in them if they weren't."
"Not to worry," said Captain Castro amiably.
"Do I seem worried?"
He looked at her without immediately answering.
"As far as you and Konstantin Garofi are concerned," he said at last, "everything seems legal."
"Unfortunately," added the sergeant. She licked her thumb to turn a page in the notebook.
Bullshit, thought Teresa. You want to make me think you've got the number of kilos of my last run written down in there?
"Would there be anything else?" she asked.
"There'll always be something else," replied the captain.
So let's move to second base,
cabron,
thought Teresa as she stubbed out her cigarette in the ashtray. She did it with calculated violence, with a hard thumb. Just enough irritation, plus an ounce or two for good measure, despite the fact that her headache was making her feel increasingly uncomfortable. In Sinaloa, these two would already be bought off or dead. She had contempt for the way they showed up there, taking her for something she wasn't. So primitive. But she also knew that contempt led to arrogance, and that's where the mistakes started. Overconfidence kills more people than bullets.
"Let's make things clear," she said. "If you have something concrete that involves me, we can continue this conversation with my lawyers. If not, I'd appreciate it if you'd stop wasting my time."
Sergeant Moncada forgot about her notebook. She tapped the table, as though testing the quality of the wood. She seemed cranky. "We could continue this conversation down at headquarters...."
There you go, thought Teresa. Straight where I was figuring we'd be going.
"Well, I don't think so, Sergeant," Teresa replied very serenely. "Because unless you had something concrete, which you don't, I'd be in your headquarters there just long enough for my attorneys to shove it up your ass.... With compensatory and punitive damages thrown in for good measure."
"There's no reason to be that way," said Captain Castro calmly. "No one's accusing you of anything."
"I'm sure of that. That nobody's accusing me of anything."
"Certainly not Sergeant Velasco."
This is a trap, Teresa thought. And she put on her Aztec mask. "Sorry?... Sergeant who?"
The officer looked at her with cold curiosity. You're damn fine, Teresa thought,
bien padre.
With those good manners and that gray hair and that nice official, gentlemanly moustache. The bitch, however, ought to wash her hair more often.
"Ivan Velasco," the captain said slowly. "Guardia Civil. Deceased." Sergeant Moncada leaned forward again. Brusquely.
"A pig. You know anything about pigs,
senora?”
She said this with ill-repressed rage.
Maybe she's just in a shitty mood, thought Teresa. Or maybe it has something to do with being a redhead. Or maybe she's just overworked, or unhappy with her husband—who the hell knows. Maybe she just needs a good screw. And it can't be easy being a woman in her line of work. Or maybe they take turns: good cop, bad cop. With a
cabrona
like they think I am, they decide the girl's going to be the bad cop. Logical. Like I give a fuck.
"Does this Velasco have something to do with the potassium permanganate?" asked Teresa.
"Be nice, now." The tone of voice did not sound friendly; the sergeant was digging something out from between her teeth with a fingernail. "Don't go pulling our leg."
"Velasco kept bad company," Captain Castro explained, clearly, as he always did. "And he was killed some time ago, just about when you got out of prison. Remember?... Santiago Fisterra, Gibraltar, and all that? When you didn't even dream of being what you've become today."
Teresa's expression gave away nothing of what she might or might not remember. You've got squat, she thought. You just came to pull my chain.
"Well, you know, I don't think I do," she said. "I don't think I can place this Velasco."
"Can't place him," remarked the sergeant. She almost spat it out. She turned to her boss as if to say, What do you think, Captain? But Castro was looking out the window, as though thinking about something else.
"Actually, we can't connect you," Sergeant Moncada went on. "Besides, it's water under the bridge, right?" She licked her thumb again and consulted her notebook, although it was clear she wasn't reading anything there. "And that other guy, Canabota, that got killed—that name's not familiar, either, I suppose?. . . The name Oleg Yasikov ring any bells?... And you never heard of hashish or cocaine or Colombians or Galicians?" She stopped herself, glumly, to let Teresa say something, but Teresa didn't open her mouth. "... Of course. You deal in real estate, the stock market, Jerez wineries, local politics, financial paradises, charity, and dinners with the governor of Malaga."
"And the movies," added the captain drily. He was still turned toward the window, with an expression as though he were thinking about almost anything else. An expression almost melancholy.
The sergeant raised a hand. "It's true. I'd forgotten that you were also into movies." Her tone was becoming more and more insulting—even vulgar, as though so far she had repressed it, or were now using it on purpose, as a provocation. "Between your multimillion-dollar businesses and your fancy lifestyle, with the paparazzi making you a star, you must feel like you're pretty much untouchable."
I've been provoked by better than you, Teresa said to herself. Either this bitch is incredibly naive, despite the venom, or they really have nothing to hang on to.
"Those paparazzi," she replied very calmly, "are now involved in court
cases that won't soon be over for them And as for you, do you really
think I'm going to play cops and robbers with you?"
It was the captain's turn. He had slowly turned back toward her, and was looking at her again.
"Senora.
The sergeant and I have a job to do. That includes several ongoing investigations ..." He cast a none-too-trusting glance at the sergeant's notebook. "The only purpose of this visit is to tell you that."
"How nice, how incredibly nice. Telling me like this, I mean."
"You see? We just wanted to talk for a while. Get to know you better."
"And," the sergeant put in, "maybe make you a little nervous."
Her boss shook his head.
"Senora Mendoza is not one to get nervous. She'd never have gotten where she is"—he smiled a little, the smile of an insurance salesman—"if she were. I hope our next conversation will take place under more favorable circumstances. For me, I mean."
Teresa looked at the ashtray, with her single cigarette butt among the wads of Kleenex. Who did these two take her for? Hers had been a long, hard road—too long and hard to put up with these stupid TV-detective antics. They were just a couple of snoops that picked their teeth and wadded up Kleenex and asked to go through your closets. Make her nervous? Don't make her laugh. Now she was pissed. She had things to do—take an aspirin, for example. The minute these jokers were out of there, she'd have Teo sue for harassment. And then she'd make a few telephone calls.
"I'm going to ask you to leave now," she said, standing up. And it turned out the sergeant knew how to laugh, Teresa discovered, although she didn't like the sound of it. The captain stood up at the same time as Teresa, but the sergeant remained seated, a little forward in the chair, her fingers gripping the edge of the table. With that dry, sneery smile.