Jesus, he thinks, is Yvette Tapia having an affair?
But there’s no other car in the driveway. Maybe, Keller thinks, the guy is cautious enough to park down the street and walk to the assignation. Feeling like a sleazy private detective, Keller shuts off the motor and waits.
If Yvette is having an affair, it lacks passion, because she comes right back out.
Sans suitcase.
Having to choose whether to follow Yvette or stay on the house, he decides on the house.
An hour later, a blue Audi pulls into the driveway and a well-dressed man who looks to be in his midthirties gets out and lets himself into the house. He’s only there for a few minutes, then comes out with the small suitcase and drives away.
Keller gives him a few hundred feet, and then follows.
Yvette Tapia isn’t having an affair.
She’s a bagman.
—
Keller could use help.
Surveillance isn’t a one-man job.
It’s hard to follow a car and not lose it or get “made,” harder still to follow it through the labyrinth of heavy traffic that is the Mexico City metropolitan area, especially when you’re relatively new to the area and don’t know its intricacies. At least the Audi isn’t trying to lose him—the driver seems confident, complacent, unaware that he might be followed.
That helps, but Keller knows that a successful surveillance operation needs a team—two or three cars to trade off the tail, a helicopter, communications and tech support. He could get any of this—all of this—through SEIDO or AFI, but…
…he can’t.
For one thing, he’s not supposed to be doing his own investigation, much less active surveillance. For another thing, he doesn’t know whom he can trust.
Vera? Aguilar?
Every time—every time—they came close to Barrera, he slipped away. Then there was the Atizapán ambush. Did one or the other know? Did they both?
Keller could get some support from DEA, but he can’t even go there because (a) he isn’t supposed to be doing this, (b) they’d want to know why he isn’t working with the Mexicans, and (c) he doesn’t know whom he can trust.
For all he knows, this could be a setup and the blue Audi is leading him into a trap.
I’m bait, Keller thinks.
Now maybe the bait’s been set for me.
He thinks of breaking off the tail. He has the license plate and could probably run it through EPIC without drawing too much attention. Find out who the driver is and proceed from there.
It’s not a bad plan. Maybe smarter than losing the track now or, worse, getting made.
Or driving into an ambush.
The Audi takes a left.
It’s the chance to let it go.
Keller follows.
The whole long way to Lomas de Chapultepec.
—
The man tosses the car keys to the valet outside the Marriott and goes inside, the suitcase in his hand.
This is where Keller could really use a teammate, someone to go inside. If anyone in that lobby knows him, it’s over. But he doesn’t have an option, so he hands the valet his keys and some peso notes. “Keep it close.”
He walks into the lobby and goes straight to the bar.
His man is sitting in the lounge with the case at his feet.
“A Cucapá, please,” Keller says.
He can see his man in the bar mirror. Watches him order a drink, watches as the waiter brings him what looks like a gin and tonic, watches as the man finishes his drink, leaves some bills on the table, and leaves.
The suitcase stays.
Seconds later, another man—in his forties, in a charcoal-colored suit—sits down, looks around briefly, and then picks up the suitcase and walks out.
Keller would give a lot for photographic surveillance.
He quickly pays for his beer, heads for the door, and watches the man get behind the wheel of a white Lexus. It’s too late to get his own car and follow, but he does get the license plate.
The next morning, Keller runs both plates through EPIC. The first plate, the blue Audi that picked up the suitcase at 123 Vista Linda, is registered to a Xavier Cordunna, a junior partner in a Mexico City investment banking firm.
The second plate, the white Lexus that picked up the suitcase at the hotel, belongs to a Manuel Arroyo.
A commander in AFI.
—
Keller punches in Marisol Cisneros’s number.
“I was beginning to think that you’d forgotten it,” she says when she answers.
There’s a little starch in her voice and he hears it—this is not a woman used to being ignored, and she’s going to let you know it.
“No,” Keller says. “I just didn’t want to be pushy. I’m sorry, I’m sort of out of shape in the dating thing. I don’t know what the rules are anymore.”
“I’ll send you the book.”
“Seriously?”
“Another nervous joke. Bad habit.”
“So,” Keller says. “I was thinking if we’re going to have dinner alone, we could have it alone together.”
“That was very good.” Marisol laughs. “Did you practice that?”
“A little.”
“I’m flattered.”
“So…yes?”
“I would love to.” Her voice is deep and sincere now—warm—and it sends a little jolt through him.
“Where would you like to go?” Keller asks.
“We could go back to your Chinese place,” she says, “and redeem you in front of the waiters.”
“It’s kind of a dive. Maybe someplace nicer.”
They settle on a little Italian place they both know in Condesa, and agree to meet there rather than for him to pick her up. “That way if we don’t like each other,” Marisol says, “it will be easier for one or both of us to escape.”
There’s no need to escape. Again, a little to his surprise, the conversation flows easily and he finds that he likes Dr. Marisol Cisneros very much.
Over linguine with clams, served family style, a mozzarella salad, and a bottle of white wine, he learns that she’s originally from Valverde, a little town in the Juárez Valley just along the Río Bravo. Her family has been there “forever,” at least since the 1830s, anyway, when they were given land to settle in exchange for fighting the Apaches who were always raiding from the north.
The Cisneros clan has still been prominent in the Valverde area—not one of the “Five Families” that still dominate the valley, but more upper middle class than most of the people who live there—planting cotton and wheat down along the river, and running cattle and horses on the drier plateaus.
Marisol always knew she didn’t want to be a ranchero’s wife, so she studied hard and won a scholarship to the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México in Mexico City. Then she went to Boston University Medical School and did her residencies at Massachusetts General and Hospital México Americano in Guadalajara, specializing in internal medicine.
She married a contract lawyer from Mexico City, moved back here, and went into practice with three partners in lucrative Polanco, although she volunteers time at a clinic in Iztapalapa.
“Rough neighborhood,” Keller says.
“The people look out for me,” Marisol says, “and it’s only on Saturday mornings. The rest of the week, I take care of rich people’s small complaints. But I’ve been talking and talking. What about you?”
He tells her a little more than he did at the Tapias’ party, “confessing” that his job at the embassy is with DEA.
“We know a little bit about drugs in the valley,” Marisol says. “The Juárez people have been operating there for years through the Escajeda family.”
“Is it a problem for you?”
“Not really,” she says. “Over the years, you work out a modus vivendi. You know how it is—you leave them alone, they leave you alone.”
“I work mostly on bilateral policy issues,” Keller says.
&nb
sp; “I like the U.S.,” Marisol says. “Let me see, I’ve been to El Paso, of course, San Antonio, New Orleans, and New York. Lived in Boston. Of these, I liked New Orleans the best.”
Why? “I’ve never been.”
“The food. The gardens.”
The divorce, she tells Keller, was more her fault than her husband’s. He thought he knew what he was marrying, and so did she. In all fairness, he gave her the life she thought she wanted—a two-professional household in a trendy neighborhood, successful friends, dinners out at the best places…status.
“He was exactly what I wanted him to be,” Marisol says, “and I punished him for it. Anyway, that’s what my therapist said. I was a real bitch toward the end—I think he was quite relieved when I moved out.
“I always thought that Valverde wasn’t enough for me,” Marisol continues. “Then it turned out that it was Mexico City that wasn’t enough for me. I was bored and boring—I was just a consumer. I need to…I don’t know…contribute something. So what’s your story?”
“The usual cop story,” Keller says. “I was married more to my work than to my wife. You’ve seen it in a dozen movies. It was my fault entirely.”
“Well, we’re both just guilty bastards, aren’t we?”
They finish the linguine.
“Do you want to escape?” Keller asks. “Or would you like dessert?”
“I’d very much like dessert,” Marisol says, “but I’d also like to walk this meal off. Perhaps we could go for a stroll and find a place?”
“Sounds great.”
Keller pays the check, likes that she doesn’t offer to split it, and they walk down to the Pendulo bookstore. He enjoys watching her prowl the aisles, seriously perusing the volumes on the shelves.
She looks good in glasses.
“I love doing this of an evening,” she says. “Looking at books, having a coffee. This is a very nice date, Arturo.”
“I’m glad.”
Marisol picks out a volume of Sor Juana’s poems and they sit at a table in the little café and have coffee and pan dulce.
“There’s a bakery in Valverde,” she says. “Best pan dulce in the world. Maybe I’ll take you there sometime.”
“I’d like that.”
Afterward, they stroll down Avenida Nuevo León.
“This is what they did in the old days,” she explains. “A courting couple would walk on the paseo in the evening. Of course, the watchful tías would walk behind—out of earshot but within sight—to make sure that the boy didn’t try to steal a kiss.”
“Are there any tías behind us now?” Keller asks.
She turns around. “No.”
Keller bends down and kisses her. He’s just about as surprised as she is, and he doesn’t know where he found the nerve to do that.
Marisol’s lips are soft and full and warm.
—
Two days later, Keller answers his phone to hear Yvette Tapia say, “Please tell me that you’re free on Sunday.”
“I’m free on Sunday.”
“Good,” she says. “And do you like polo?”
Keller laughs. Polo? Seriously? “I’ve never been asked that before.”
“Martín plays,” Yvette says, “and we’re getting up a group to go watch and then a little party at our place afterwards. Shall we say Campo Marte at one?”
We shall, Keller thinks.
But he doesn’t know why.
—
Campo Marte sits on a plateau in Chapultepec. A rectangle of green field with the high-rises of the city looming in the background.
Keller sits with Yvette Tapia in the shell of an amphitheater that makes up the spectators’ section. She’s resplendent in a white summer dress that shows off her legs and a white bonnet that sets off her jet-black hair.
The rest of the hundred or so spectators are equally well-heeled—the rich, beautiful people of Mexico City—sipping champagne or mimosas, nibbling on hors d’oeuvres served by white-liveried waiters.
“Explain polo to me,” Keller says to Yvette.
“To the extent that I understand it myself,” she answers. “Martín just took it up about two years ago, but already I think he is quite good, a ‘one’ handicap, whatever that means.”
“Do you own the ponies,” Keller asks, “or rent them like bowling shoes?”
“You’re making fun of us,” Yvette says. “That’s all right. It is a bit much, isn’t it? But Martín’s passionate about it, and a wise wife never denies her husband his passions if she wants to stay his wife for long.”
“And a wise husband?” Keller asks.
“Lo mismo.”
The same.
“Some husbands buy sports cars,” Yvette says, “or planes, or whores for that matter. Martín buys horses, so I’m lucky. The horses are very pretty and we meet some very nice people.”
Which is the point, isn’t it? Keller thinks. Golf and tennis place you in one social circle, polo takes you into another stratum altogether.
Keller sits back and watches the flow of play, a swirl of color with the riders’ bright green or red jerseys, and the horses themselves—varied shades of white and brown and black. He barely understands what’s going on—four riders on each side try to knock the ball into the opponents’ goal—but it’s fast and dramatic.
And dangerous.
The horses bump each other or flat-out collide, and several times—to the gasps of the crowd—it looked like one or both were going down.
Martín does look like a good player, a graceful rider, and aggressive in going after the ball. Keller learns that he’s a “number two” on his team, responsible for feeding passes to the leading scorer and also for defense. It’s the most “tactical” role on the team, Yvette tells Keller, who’s not surprised.
The score is tied 4–4 at the end of two chukkers—halftime.
Yvette stands up. “Come on.”
“Where are we going?”
“It’s a tradition.”
With the rest of the crowd they walk onto the playing field for the “divot-stamping,” replacing the sod that the horses’ hooves kicked up. Everyone does it to make the field clean and safe for the second half, but also to socialize.
Yvette introduces him.
Keller meets bankers and their wives, diplomats and their wives, he meets Laura Amaro.
Laura and Yvette are good friends.
“Where is your husband today?” Yvette asks.
“Working.”
“Poor man.”
“The president keeps him busy.” She turns to Keller. “My husband, Benjamín, works in the administration.”
“Ah.”
“I barely see him anymore,” Laura says with a pout. “I live at Yvette’s house more than I do at mine.”
“Can you come to the house after?” Yvette asks.
“There’s nothing stopping me,” Laura says. “Maybe Benjamín can join us.”
“Call him and say that I insist,” Yvette says.
“Well, that should scare him.”
They walk around, replacing divots and talking. Then Yvette points out a striking woman chatting with a tall, broad-smiling man in an impeccably cut Italian suit.
“Do you recognize the woman?” Yvette asks.
“No.”
“The president’s wife,” Yvette says. “The first lady.”
“Do you want to go over?”
Yvette shakes her head. “I’m not there yet. Anyway, there’ll be a new first lady soon, won’t there? God send her husband is PAN.”
Halftime ends and they go back to their seats.
The second half is more intense than the first. The sporting atmosphere becomes more competitive, the play more physical. Once, when it looks like Martín’s horse is about to topple, Yvette reaches over and grabs Keller’s hand.
She keeps it there for several seconds, squeezes, and then lets go.
The match is a 6–6 tie when Martín bursts his gray horse forward, “hooks” the mall
et of the opposing player, and blocks it. Shouldering the other player aside, he takes the ball and drives down the field.
Keller sees the intensity in Yvette’s eyes as her husband gallops ahead.
One opponent stands between him and the goal.
Martín raises his mallet over his head, swings it down, and, at the last second, passes to his teammate, who scores the winner.
—
Laura Amaro’s overworked husband doesn’t show up at dinner, so Yvette sits Keller next to her at dinner as her “date.”
“Benjamín books the president’s travel,” Laura explains, “so it’s a seven-day-a-week job.”
“Important, though,” Keller says.
“Oh, yes, we’re all very important,” Laura answers. “Just ask us. Of course he might be out of a job soon.”
“Do you really think PRD can win?” Keller asks. PRD is a left-wing coalition that basically replaced PRI as the main opposition party. Its presidential candidate, Manuel López Obrador, was the mayor of Mexico City and had seen a commanding lead in the polls fade against the PAN candidate, Felipe Calderón.
“I think it’s going to be close,” Laura says. “So does Benjamín. It would be a disaster for the country, though, if we lose. I think your people in Washington share this opinion, don’t they?”
“I think so, yes.”
Keller also thinks this—the center of the Mexican drug trade isn’t in the frontline border cities of Tijuana, Juárez, or Laredo.
Or even in the heartland of Sinaloa.
It’s here, in Mexico City.
—
“You’re kissing a cobra,” Martín Tapia says as he climbs into bed next to his wife.
“But it’s so much fun.”
“If Adán knew that Keller was a guest here…”
“ ‘Adán, Adán, Adán,’ ” Yvette says, “ ‘Upon what meat does this our Caesar feed that he is grown so great?’ ”
“Diego is devoted to him.”
“I know,” Yvette says, turning to her husband, “they were boys together. Diego’s problem is that he doesn’t see his own worth.”
“He’s loyal.”
“Loyalty should extend both ways.”
“Meaning?”