by Jeff Buick
UNWELCOME VISITORS
“Relax, Eugenio,” the seated man said in a soft voice. “Your wife and daughter are fine. For now.”
Eugene started to move forward but two guns appeared, Glock A-17’s, one in the right hand of each man leaning against his counter. Eugene stopped. “Where is my wife?” His words were like acid.
“Sit down, Eugenio. Threatening me isn’t going to help your situation.”
Eugene glanced at the guns, and sat at the table, opposite the man. “Who are you?” he asked.
The man smiled. “Now that’s a question I can answer. My name is Javier Rastano. I’m from Medellín. It’s a city in southern Colombia, in case you’re not familiar with it.”
“I know where Medellín is,” Eugene said. “But I don’t understand why you’re here.”
“You are related to the Escobar clan, who, at one time, lived in Medellín. One of your cousins was Pablo Escobar.”
“Pablo is dead. He died a violent death years ago.”
“Did he?” Javier asked, amused. “We have reason to believe that your cousin isn’t as dead as he would like the world to believe. In fact, we’re sure he’s alive…”
BLOODLINE
JEFF BUICK
Dorchester
Publishing
To Teresa Buick.
My love. My angel. Forever in my heart.
DORCHESTER PUBLISHING
Published by
Dorchester Publishing Co., Inc.
200 Madison Avenue
New York, NY 10016
Copyright © 2005 by Jeff Buick
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, without the written permission of the publisher, except where permitted by law. The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
Trade ISBN: 978-1-4285-1855-1
E-book ISBN: 978-1-4285-1844-5
First Dorchester Publishing, Co., Inc. edition: February 2005
The “DP” logo is the property of Dorchester Publishing Co., Inc.
Printed in the United States of America.
Visit us online at www.dorchesterpub.com.
CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Chapter 39
Chapter 40
Chapter 41
Chapter 42
Chapter 43
Chapter 44
Chapter 45
Chapter 46
Chapter 47
Chapter 48
Chapter 49
Chapter 50
Chapter 51
Chapter 52
Chapter 53
Chapter 54
Chapter 55
Chapter 56
Chapter 57
Chapter 58
Chapter 59
Chapter 60
Chapter 61
Chapter 62
Chapter 63
Chapter 64
Chapter 65
Prologue
December 1993
It was a quiet street, with rows of two-story stucco houses lining the narrow strip of pitted asphalt. A thin sidewalk, chipped and gouged from the impact of thousands of tire rims and undercarriages, bordered one side. On the other was a narrow strip of grass with a handful of short, sickly palm trees. The buildings were in disrepair, and in many places chunks of mortar and stucco had fallen to the street below. A handful of decrepit cars were parked at uneven intervals. A group of young boys played marbles on cracked concrete.
A white panel van pulled onto the street and cruised slowly past the kids. A pregnant woman glanced at the darkened windows as the van rolled by. The passenger window was open a crack and she saw a pair of eyes scanning the buildings. Dark eyes. Dangerous eyes. She looked away in fear. Even quiet streets in the Colombian city of Medellín were not to be trusted. The van continued, pausing only once for a brief second as it passed one of the houses, then disappeared around the corner. Inside the vehicle, one man was talking in rapid Spanish.
“It was him,” he said, unable to control his excitement. “I know it was him.”
“Are you sure?” the driver asked. “You only saw him for a split second.”
The passenger grabbed a cell phone from the seat and nodded vigorously as he dialed. “It’s Escobar. Even with the beard, I know that face.” The line connected and he spoke quickly into the phone. “We’ve spotted Pablo Escobar. We have a precise location on him.”
“Give us the location,” said the strong voice on the other end of the line. It belonged to Col. Hugo Martinez, the head of Search Bloc, the often covert arm of the Colombian government put in place to remove the drug lords from Medellín and Cali. “Our ETA is ten minutes. Don’t lose him.” The line went dead.
“Pull up here,” the passenger said, pointing to an opening against the curb. He slipped a revolver from his waistband and snapped off the safety. “Let’s go.”
The two men leapt from the car and jogged back to the corner, slowing as they approached the intersection. The passenger said, “He’s on the second floor, fourth house on the opposite side of the street.” His name was Manuel Sanchez, and for the past sixteen months he had searched the dirty and dangerous streets of Medellín for the richest and most ruthless drug lord in the world. Now they had him. Pablo Escobar was less than fifty yards from where they stood. Sanchez ran his finger down the gun barrel and gave his partner a knowing look. “This is it, Enrico. This is the moment we’ve been waiting for. We cannot let him escape.” He paused for a second, planning the attack. “I’ll take the back of the house. You wait here and cover the front. No one leaves that house alive.”
“They’re dead men, Manuel.” The words were tough, but the voice was scared.
Sanchez patted his partner on the shoulder and was gone. He walked across the intersection, holding the gun at his side in his left hand. He kept his gait as normal as possible, out of view of the second floor window where Escobar had been only minutes before. Was it Escobar? Was it really the elusive drug dealer? Yes, he was sure. It was him. Manuel’s pulse was lightning quick, his breathing shallow. He felt exposed, and thought that if Pablo glanced out that window, the narco would instinctively know he was a cop. And then he would be dead. But running was out of the question; it would give away the advantage of
surprise. He had to walk at a normal pace across the intersection. And risk his life yet again.
Manuel reached the building on the far side and ducked in behind the wall. The stucco felt rough on his back, even through his shirt. He looked down and took another deep breath. He had forgotten to strap on his Kevlar vest. Christ, of all the times to screw up. If he lived through this it would be a miracle. A couple of cleansing breaths to slow his pulse and he moved to the narrow walkway behind the row of buildings. A dirty street urchin in a ripped T-shirt watched him with disinterested eyes as he took a quick glance around the corner. He could see the back of the house, but the midday sun glinting off the second-floor windows made it impossible to know whether anyone was looking his way from behind the glass. He checked his revolver again, saw the bullets in the cylinder and felt a surge of confidence. One more deep breath and he moved into harm’s way, crouching low and driving hard with his legs. It didn’t matter if Escobar saw him walking or running now; he knew the drug lord would be firing at him.
Nothing.
Manuel reached the stone wall between the target house and the walkway and hugged it for safety. He was breathing hard now, his adrenaline pumping through his veins like never before in his life. So close. So long to find him, now so close. How many men had died chasing false leads? How many millions of dollars had been spent in the pursuit of this one man? He had lost track, but the figures were staggering. He slipped his cell phone from his pocket and hit redial. Martinez answered.
“How long until you get here?” Manuel whispered.
“Two, maybe three minutes.”
“No sirens, come in quiet,” Manuel said. “There’s no sign he knows we’re onto him.”
“Roger that. Good work, Manuel. Hang on, we’re almost there.”
Manuel closed the phone and powered it off. An incoming call could alert Escobar. He stayed low against the wall, the afternoon sun baking the narrow alley and turning it into a furnace. Sweat trickled down his forehead and he wiped it away with his free hand. He was shaking almost uncontrollably. He breathed deeply, trying to calm himself and bring his heartbeat down so he could shoot accurately. He checked his watch. Martinez was a minute, maybe two, out. He decided to risk a quick look over the wall.
He raised his head above the rounded stucco edge. Nothing but silence greeted him. The building was a two-story adobe, attached on both sides to the adjoining buildings. The main floor was slightly larger than the upper, and a sloping tiled roof ran under a large second-floor window. There was no balcony or verandah. If Escobar came out the back, it would be through the window. From his vantage point Manuel knew he had a shot; not a great one, but he’d have to work with what he had.
Then it happened. Manuel heard a series of loud thuds as Martinez and his men used a battering ram on the heavy metal door at the front of the house. No more stealth now. He raised his head and shoulders above the wall and took aim on the window with his revolver. Seconds later the glass shattered and a chair flew into the yard. A figure kicked at the remaining shards of glass, then leapt from the window onto the tiled roof directly below. Manuel recognized him. It was Limón Alvero de Jesus, Escobar’s personal bodyguard. He resisted the urge to fire and waited for the next figure. The man himself.
Escobar appeared in the window for a brief second, then jumped to the tiles below. Manuel waited until Escobar landed, then squeezed the trigger. The Smith & Wesson barked and sharp pieces of stucco flew about only an inch or two from Escobar’s head. He fired again, but Escobar was already moving and the bullets smacked harmlessly into the pale stucco behind him.
Manuel briefly caught a glimpse of Limón sighting on him, then the wall in front of his face exploded and slivers of stucco slammed into his forehead and scalp. The pain was excruciating. Blood poured from the wounds, but he jumped up and lowered his gun at the running figures.
He pumped round after round at them, but they were moving too quickly and the shots missed. The hammer clicked on an empty chamber. He swore as he reached for his belt and another cylinder of live cartridges. Then, when it looked like the two men might escape, Limón jerked violently and fell face first to the ground, unmoving. A few seconds later, Escobar took three slugs in quick succession. The first one shattered his femur, the second cut through his chest cavity and the third smashed squarely into his skull. He dropped straight down, his body falling hard on a pile of cinder blocks and tiles. Blood pooled under the body and small rivulets ran off the broken tiles onto the parched earth.
Manuel glanced quickly around. He saw movement on the roof behind him, then the figure was gone. But the image stayed. American. CIA. He knew the face. Christ, the Americans had been monitoring the Search Bloc cell phones and had moved in and covered the rear of the house before Martinez could get his men in place. Thank God they had been in position.
He jumped from behind the wall, wiping the blood from his eyes as he ran to the prone figures. With his revolver pointed directly at Limón’s head, he kicked the corpse. Nothing. He lodged his toe under Limón’s shoulder and lifted. The body rolled over, dead eyes staring at the midday sun. Manuel glanced up at the window where police and Search Bloc members, guns in hand, watched his progress. He approached the second body with caution, the Smith & Wesson leveled and his finger on the trigger. Just as he reached the body, a sound from behind startled him. He turned and saw Col. Martinez entering the yard from the alley. The crunching of broken tiles underfoot was the only sound as Martinez walked quickly to where Manuel hovered over the body. Together, with their guns at the ready, they rolled over the corpse.
It was Pablo Escobar.
Martinez stared at the dead man for a few seconds, then turned to Sanchez and quietly said, “You did it, Manuel. You found our needle in the haystack. You are a true Colombian hero.”
He swiveled about and raised his arms above his head, smiling to the men staring down from the second-floor window.
“Pablo Escobar is dead,” he yelled.
The men erupted into cheers, slapped each other on the shoulders and shook hands. Each wore a smile. The devil was dead. The nightmare of looking for one man among millions while suffering daily reprisals from Escobar’s death squads was over. Some semblance of normalcy could now return to the streets of Medellín. The men dispersed as the coroner arrived to remove the bodies and transport them to the morgue. Martinez and his crew headed to their office to fill out the paperwork, but today they didn’t mind. They would stop at the local tavern later and drink beer. This was a great day.
Unnoticed amid the commotion, an older Mercedes with tinted rear windows was parked a block to the north. From there the two occupants had an unobstructed view of the house where Escobar had hidden. The two men watched the bodies being removed. The coroner slammed the rear doors shut and left the street, followed by a bevy of police and army vehicles. Only then did the man in the rear of the Mercedes tap the driver on the shoulder. The car pulled away from the curb and turned the corner, disappearing into the congestion and chaos of Medellín.
The figure in the back seat bore a striking resemblance to Pablo Escobar.
Chapter One
The Present
The fishing boats began arriving in port just before dawn. The night sky was clear, and the fish were running shallow. Most of the small wooden craft were awash in fresh catch. A six-kilo tuna sat next to a dark-skinned, weather-beaten fisherman, and he held it aloft as his partner threw out the anchor. The first tuna of the season. Soon there would be more. The wives and children who waited for the return of the boats cheered when they saw the steel-colored fish. Tuna meant money, and when the big fish were running the nets were full.
Eugene Escobar watched the scene from the deck of his dive boat, a scene that played out every day of the year. He knew many of the fishermen by name. His children had played with their children years ago, before they reached their teens and stopped playing the simple games of young children. Now it was girlfriends and boyfriends. Eugene didn’t
like them fishing the waters off Los Frailles, it depleted the coves and inlets of the fish his diving clients paid money to see, but without the fish the simple Venezuelan men of Isla de Margarita would have no income. And men without money were dangerous. In South America, if you couldn’t buy food and clothes for your family you stole them. Or robbed someone with a fat wallet.
He watched the men anchor the time-worn boats and ferry their catch ashore in ratty wicker baskets. A fuss was made over the tuna, but soon it would be commonplace. The fisherman who had netted the tuna held his prize out for all to see and admire. Eugene wished the fish were still alive and free, cutting through the Caribbean waters between Margarita and the Venezuelan mainland. But it wasn’t so. He glanced toward the row of pasty stucco buildings bordering the beach as a red Nissan truck pulled off the road and bounced down the steep incline to the hard sand. Eduardo, the dive company owner, was here with the divers and air tanks. He hoisted himself off the gunwale and jumped overboard, the salt water cool on his legs. The top of the sun crested the eastern horizon as Eduardo stopped the Nissan and stepped onto the beach.
“Buenos dias, Eugene,” he said, walking to the box of the truck and lifting out the first of many compressed air tanks.
“Eduardo,” Eugene said, then turned and spoke in rapid Spanish to an overweight man leaning against a post watching the sun rise from the gently rolling water. The man rose, hooked his fingers under the valves atop two of the tanks and headed for the boat. A moment later, a young man of perhaps twenty appeared and asked Eugene if he could help load the boat. “Five hundred bolivars,” Eugene said. “And that includes helping the divers with their gear.”
“Sí, señor.” He grabbed two tanks and headed for the boat.
Eduardo returned from dropping the tanks at the water’s edge and Eugene asked, “Who am I taking out today?”
“Three Germans,” Eduardo said. “Two dives, then home. You’ll be back just after noon.”
“They speak any Spanish?”
Eduardo shook his head. “English.”
“They all certified divers?” Eugene asked and Eduardo nodded.