Talking to an eejit was almost like talking to himself, Matt thought. He wiped her
mouth with a napkin, and she patiently endured it. “I wish I’d known you
“I am called Waitress,” she replied.
He left her to do whatever she was programmed to do.
4
CIENFUEGOS
Celia was sitting at the kitchen table with a man Matt had never seen before. He was thin to the point of emaciation, and his skin was the same color as a coyote. His eyes were pale brown and watchful. He was cleaning a stun gun of the kind used to subdue Illegals, or sometimes to kill them.
“Matt!” cried Celia, springing up, but she stopped herself before she hugged him. “Oh, dear, I can’t call you Matt anymore. It isn’t dignified.”
“You need a title,” said the strange man, sighting along the stun gun. “This place is like a time bomb. The sooner we establish you as the master, the better.”
“He needs a name suitable for a drug lord,” said Celia.
“How about El Tigre Oscuro, the Hidden Tiger? Or El Vengador, the Avenger?”
“I don’t want a new name,” said Matt.
“You’re going to have enough trouble controlling El Patrón’s empire,” the man explained. “You need a title that inspires fear, and you need to back it up with random acts of violence. I can help you there.”
“Who
“Oh! I forgot you’d never met,” Celia apologized. “This is Cienfuegos, the
“Other house?” said Matt. The Farm Patrol was responsible for trapping Illegals so they could be turned into eejits. They were vicious and dangerous, and Matt wondered why Celia, who had every reason to hate them, tolerated this one.
“The hacienda in the Chiricahua Mountains,” said Cienfuegos. “It’s where El Patrón went on vacation. It’s a very fine place. I’m surprised you never went there.”
“Until recently my job was to wait around until he needed a heart,” Matt said coldly. “Heart donors don’t get vacations.”
Celia caught her breath, but Cienfuegos smiled. It made him look even more like a
hungry coyote. “
Matt remembered one of El Patrón’s most important rules:
“
“Matt doesn’t drink alcohol,” Celia said.
“But I do,” said Cienfuegos. He leaned back in his chair and put his boots up on the kitchen table. Matt was shocked. If anyone else had tried that, Celia would have thrown him out the door. But Cienfuegos looked perfectly comfortable, as if he’d been doing it all his life.
Presently, Celia returned with orange juice for herself and Matt, and a bottle of
Matt hesitated. One of the first things he wanted to do was disband the Farm Patrol. He couldn’t reveal that. In fact, he didn’t want to reveal anything to someone he’d just met and didn’t trust. He wanted to uproot the opium—or most of it, anyway. That would automatically throw Cienfuegos out of work. With Esperanza Mendoza’s help, Matt hoped to shut down the drug distribution network. He remembered the thousands of dealers who depended on it for their livelihood. They wouldn’t like their jobs taken away one bit.