“What I’m looking for here is five rags. In your ‘hood four-five days ago, now they’re gone.” The runners hadn’t been seen anywhere since they broke out. “Y’all know anything about this?”
   Ojeda glared at him, working his jaw. “Why would I?”
   “Because you’re a coyote, Ojeda.” McGinley swayed in another pace, trying to crowd Ojeda, push him out of his comfort zone. No reaction. Harder with the Latins than with whites; they didn’t have the same personal-space issues. “Just like your daddy was. If anyone ‘round here knows how to get them rags over the border, it’s you.”
   Dark spots began to bloom under Ojeda’s armpits. Just what McGinley wanted to see. “Your intel’s shit if that’s what you’re hearing. I’m just a guy trying to make a living. Besides, it’s illegal to leave the country now? I thought you people wanted them out.”
   The air wrench behind McGinley had stopped screaming. He glanced back to catch a shaggy-headed wrench monkey staring at him over the hood of some fancy-ass four-door McGinley didn’t recognize. McGinley showed him how a stare was really done, and after a minute the kid stalked to the workbench behind him.
   “It’s illegal to skip on a camp,” McGinley told Ojeda. “These five came out of Barstow, two weeks or so ago? Got told these boys were headed this way. Sound familiar?”
   “Heard about it on the news. More people must’ve got out than they said.”
   “Well, don’t believe anything you hear on the news.” The engine was ticking over behind Ojeda’s eyes, but he was still way too cool; time to rile him up. McGinley half-turned and waved across the cars. “I reckon it’s way too loud in here for you to think right. How ‘bout I just shut this place down a spell, so me and you can talk private-like.”
   Ojeda’s neck flushed red. “That’s money out of my pocket, cabrón. This a shakedown?”
   Score. “Should it be?” McGinley read the sudden heat coming off Ojeda and dropped back a couple steps, resting his right wrist on the pistol butt in his belt holster. Casual, just a reminder. The file said Ojeda had been Army in Afghanistan back in the day, so he’d probably been carrying as long as McGinley and knew how to use that weapon of his—what was it, a Sig Sauer? Serious piece, nothing cheap. Ojeda looped a thumb over the belt in front of his holster. Casual, just a reminder.
   For a long few seconds, McGinley stared at Ojeda, waiting for a twitch. Well, the man had some balls. Would he really draw down on a Fed? Hard telling. These days, people did what they had to to protect their turf or their lives, and a badge didn’t carry the same weight it used to.
   Finally, McGinley smirked and dropped his hand. He’d rattled the cage enough. “Well, then, Ojeda. Y’all keep your eyes and ears open. If you hear anything about these Muslim former Americans, you let me know right quick.” He stepped forward and flipped a business card out of his shirt pocket up into Ojeda’s face. “Meantime, I reckon I’ll find out where you’ve been the past few nights. Just curious, you know. Your daddy smuggled a lot of people into this country back in the day, and, well, like father, like son, right?”
   The red crept into Ojeda’s hairline. He might look respectable, but hit the secret button and he spun up right nice. “That business is over. Nobody wants to come to this country anymore. People like you saw to that.”
   “That so? Say, your son’s a Marine, ain’t he? Damn good training for the family business. All them long marches—”
   “Leave my son out of this,” Ojeda snapped. “Yeah, Dad was a coyote. That’s long done. Nacho’s got nothing to do with this, and he never will.” He snatched the card out of McGinley’s fingers. “Watch the door on your way out.”
   McGinley snorted, shook his head, looked around. “Some place you got here. It yours?”
   “No. I’m the manager. A Chinese guy up in Sierra Madre owns the chain.”
   “You don’t say.” He had to poke one last time. “Just wondering. If we ran an ID check on your boys yonder, how many do y’all think you’d lose?”
   Ojeda’s eyes had turned black and ice-cold. “Have a shitty day, McGinley.”
   “I often do, amigo.” He slapped Ojeda’s shoulder, turned and strolled outside.
   This one might be worth watching.
   Continue the adventure
   “South is a brilliantly conceived and executed thriller, as good—or maybe better—than anything coming out of mainstream publishing.” – William Davis, author of Black Karma.
   South is available now in the following English editions:
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   Table of Contents
   CAST OF CHARACTERS
   ONE: Brooklyn, New York, 12 September
   TWO: Tel Aviv, Israel, 12 September
   THREE: Haret Hraik, South Beirut, Lebanon, 13 September
   FOUR: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 15 September
   FIVE: Rotterdam, The Netherlands, 23 September
   SIX: Staten Island, New York, 1 October
   SEVEN: Dearborn, Michigan, 15 October
   EIGHT: Beverly, New Jersey, 16 October
   NINE: Tel Aviv, 17 October
   TEN: Brooklyn, 17 October
   ELEVEN: Modena, Italy, 6 November
   TWELVE: Modena, 8 November
   THIRTEEN: Tel Aviv, 10 November
   FOURTEEN: Near Blythe, California, 12 November
   FIFTEEN: Teterboro, New Jersey, 13 November
   SIXTEEN: Burbank, California, 16 November
   SEVENTEEN: Secaucus, New Jersey, 18 November
   EIGHTEEN: Brooklyn, 18 November
   NINETEEN: Cherry Hill, New Jersey, 20 November
   TWENTY: Detroit, Michigan, 21 November
   TWENTY-ONE: Arlington, Virginia, 21 November
   TWENTY-TWO: Arlington, 23 November
   TWENTY-THREE: Arlington, 24 November
   TWENTY-FOUR: Newark, New Jersey, 25 November
   TWENTY-FIVE: Brooklyn, 28 November
   TWENTY-SIX: Brooklyn, 28 November
   TWENTY-SEVEN: Midtown Manhattan, 30 November
   TWENTY-EIGHT: Brooklyn, 1 December
   TWENTY-NINE: Brooklyn, 1 December
   THIRTY: Newark, 1 December
   THIRTY-ONE: Secaucus, 1 December
   THIRTY-TWO: Newark, 1 December
   THIRTY-THREE: Detroit, 2 December
   THIRTY-FOUR: Staten Island, 2 December
   THIRTY-FIVE: Staten Island, 2 December
   THIRTY-SIX: Staten Island, 3 December
   THIRTY-SEVEN: Cherry Hill, 4 December
   THIRTY-EIGHT: Cherry Hill, 4 December
   THIRTY-NINE: Staten Island, 4 December
   FORTY: Philadelphia, 5 December
   FORTY-ONE: Philadelphia, 5 December
   FORTY-TWO: Philadelphia, 5 December
   FORTY-THREE: South Philadelphia East, 5 December
   FORTY-FOUR: East Parkside, Philadelphia, 5 December
   FORTY-FIVE: Philadelphia, 5 December
   FORTY-SIX: Cherry Hill, 6 December
   FORTY-SEVEN: Philadelphia, 6 December
   FORTY-EIGHT: Philadelphia, 6 December
   FORTY-NINE: Cherry Hill, 6 December
   FIFTY: Cherry Hill, 6 December
   FIFTY-ONE: Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 6 December
   FIFTY-TWO: Philadelphia, 7 December
   FIFTY-THREE: Dearborn, 7 December
   FIFTY-FOUR: Cherry Hill, 
8 December
   FIFTY-FIVE: Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 8 December
   FIFTY-SIX: Cherry Hill, 8 December
   FIFTY-SEVEN: Cherry Hill, 9 December
   FIFTY-EIGHT: Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 10 December
   FIFTY-NINE: Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 11 December
   SIXTY: Cherry Hill, 11 December
   SIXTY-ONE: Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 13 December
   SIXTY-TWO: Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 13 December
   SIXTY-THREE: Cherry Hill, 16 December
   SIXTY-FOUR: Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 16 December
   SIXTY-FIVE: Near Wheatland, Pennsylvania, 19 December
   SIXTY-SIX: Crown Heights, Brooklyn, 20 December
   SIXTY-SEVEN: Brooklyn, 20 December
   SIXTY-EIGHT: Brooklyn, 20 December
   SIXTY-NINE: Sunset Park, Brooklyn, 21 December
   SEVENTY: Sunset Park, Brooklyn, 21 December
   SEVENTY-ONE: Sunset Park, Brooklyn, 21 December
   SEVENTY-TWO: Sunset Park, Brooklyn, 22 December
   SEVENTY-THREE: Brooklyn, 22 December
   SEVENTY-FOUR: Sunset Park, Brooklyn, 22 December
   SEVENTY-FIVE: Park Slope, Brooklyn, 22 December
   SEVENTY-SIX: Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, 22 December
   SEVENTY-SEVEN: Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, 22 December
   SEVENTY-EIGHT: Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, 22 December
   SEVENTY-NINE: Green-Wood Cemetery, Brooklyn, 22 December
   EIGHTY: Brooklyn, 22 December
   EIGHTY-ONE: Brooklyn, 23 December
   EIGHTY-TWO: North Bergen, New Jersey, 23 December, 6:45 AM
   EIGHTY-THREE: 23 December, 3:00 PM CET
   EIGHTY-FOUR: Williamsburg, Brooklyn, 23 December, 9:40 AM
   EIGHTY-FIVE: 23 December, 10:40 AM
   EIGHTY-SIX: Brooklyn, 23 December, 10:45 AM
   EIGHTY-SEVEN: Brooklyn, 23 December, 11:10 AM
   EIGHTY-EIGHT: Brooklyn, 23 December, 11:20 AM
   EIGHTY-NINE: Brooklyn, 23 December, 12:05 PM
   NINETY: Lower Manhattan, 23 December, 12:15 PM
   NINETY-ONE: Lower Manhattan, 23 December, 1:35 PM
   NINETY-TWO: Midtown Manhattan, 23 December, 3:10 PM
   NINETY-THREE: Midtown Manhattan, 23 December, 4:05 PM
   NINETY-FOUR: Central Park East, 23 December, 6:05 PM
   NINETY-FIVE: Central Park East, 23 December, 6:10 PM
   NINETY-SIX: Central Park East, 23 December, 6:30 PM
   NINETY-SEVEN: Central Park East, 23 December
   NINETY-EIGHT: Elmont, New York, 5 February
   About the Author
   Like What You Read?
   Want to Know More?
   SOUTH
   
   
   
 
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