The Territory A Novel

The Territory A Novel - By Tricia Fields



ACKNOWLEDGMENTS


Special thanks to my GD3 writing pals: Linnet, Mella, and Merry. Your collective guidance and friendship were more appreciated than you will ever know. And thank you to my mentor and friend, Sandra Scofield, for helping me to slow down until I finally got it right. And finally, to Peter Joseph, for your infinite patience, kindness, and editing expertise. Thank you all for helping bring this book to life.





ONE



Chief Josie Gray sighted down the rifle scope at two black sedans prowling the empty streets of Piedra Labrada. She was posted atop a fifty-foot-high watchtower, looking across the Rio Grande into a two-block area of squalid bars. For forty-five minutes, Josie had listened to gunfire coming from inside the Garra del Tigre, one of the five bars on the strip, but there had been no movement until the sedans came into view. The watchtower, used jointly by Border Patrol and local police, stood on the U.S. side of the river, just a quarter mile from downtown Piedra. From her vantage point, Josie could see an access road that followed the Rio, then a half dozen blocks of factories fanning out from the collection of bars situated directly south of the tower. She lowered her rifle, slowly scanning the area for a reaction to the cars. Something was about to open up.

The sedans rolled to a stop in the middle of the empty street in front of the Tigre. Although the occupants’ identities were concealed behind black tinted windows, Josie was certain the cars belonged to either Medrano or La Bestia. The Medrano cartel was a family-run drug operation that had terrorized northern Mexico into submission. La Bestia was a newly formed cartel with enough money and firepower to pose a threat to Medrano: a death sentence for anyone caught in between.

Garra del Tigre’s front door hung from its hinges, the wood splintered with bullets. The inside of the club appeared dark and still, but she knew the gunmen maneuvered at night with the ease of cockroaches.

Josie rubbed her neck and rolled her shoulders, trying to ease some of the tension from them. She could feel blood humming through her veins, the tingling of nerve endings on her scalp: Her body was on alert. She was thin, with arm muscles strong enough to surprise a full-grown man if the occasion called for it, and was above average height for a woman. At thirty-three years old, she knew she was attractive, but lately she felt that side of her served little purpose.

Heat lightning snaked across the night sky, and she caught a glimpse of the blue and white jeep patrolling River Road below her with its headlights off. She pulled her cell phone out of her uniform shirt pocket and called the driver, fellow officer Otto Podowski. She disliked leaving him on the ground with no backup, but they were the only officers on duty that night.

Otto answered on the first ring. “Anything?”

“Two sedans just pulled up in front of the Tigre. They’re watching. This has to be a battle between the cartels. Any movement on our side?”

“Not a soul in sight.”

“You see cars pushing across the river? Don’t be a hero. Get out of their way.”

“Backup on the way yet?”

“Are you kidding?” She and Otto made up two-thirds of the Artemis Police Department. The three-person police force should have been enough for a border town with a population of 2,500. But given the current violence across the border, she needed at least triple that number of officers. Without constant vigilance by police agencies, the violence would spread like wildfire through the Southwest.

One block south of the nightclubs, Josie watched two uniformed Piedra police officers approach the east side of the strip, on foot with guns drawn.

“Jesus, there’s two cops ready to run right into the middle of it. They’re walking up the side street. They can’t see the cars yet.”

Josie hung up on Otto and tried the Piedra Labrada police dispatch but received the same busy signal she’d heard for the past two hours. She called her local dispatcher, Lou Hagerty. Lou was a fifty-year-old chain-smoker with a voice like gravel, but no one handled stress better than she did.

“I can’t get through to dispatch in Piedra,” Josie said. She could feel the panic in her throat as she watched the officers approach the corner of the building. Then the panic turned to dread. She grabbed her binoculars off the deck railing and focused them with one hand.

“Every phone line in Mexico must have been slashed. I can’t even get through to the gas station,” Lou said.

Josie focused on the officer who stood almost a foot taller than the other man, and recognized Lorenzo Marín. She had worked with him frequently on cross-border issues. He was a good-natured officer, with a million stories to tell and a loud, high-pitched laugh that could get even the most cynical cop to smile. He had a wife and twin boys at home. It was all she could do to keep from screaming his name, but her voice would never carry.

Josie quickly summed up the gunfire and officer location. “You find a way to get through to someone. Let them know Marín’s walking into an ambush.”

She hung up and found Marín in her cell phone contacts. She had to warn him. The sedans were almost certainly carrying gunmen, cartel members who would not hesitate to shoot a police officer.

Marín didn’t answer, his phone probably silenced. At the corner of the bar, he and the shorter officer stopped and leaned their backs against the side of the building. She could barely see their outline in the shadows. Her stomach clenched as she watched the passenger-side doors of both sedans open and four men exit, each holding automatic weapons. They hunkered low behind the cover of the cars and faced the Tigre.

Josie watched Marín walk cautiously around the front of the building, now in full view of the gunmen crouching behind the sedans. The gunman closest to Marín slowly raised his head above the rear of the sedan and brought his gun up, aiming toward the cop, who was now pressed against the front of the nightclub, his gaze on the front door. Josie heard the shots first, then watched as Marín’s body jerked, hit the wall of the nightclub, and slid down the cement wall, where bullets continued to riddle his body. She screamed and grabbed the deck railing to keep from falling to her knees. The second officer remained around the corner of the building, edging around to open fire on the sedan. The four gunmen disappeared into the cars within seconds, and the sedans rolled off, heading away from the Rio into a darkened residential neighborhood, where Josie lost sight of them. She watched the other officer crouch over Marín, who now slumped against the building, his legs splayed out on the sidewalk.

Her ears buzzed in the sudden silence. Stunned, she watched the other officer lean his head down to Marín’s chest and check his neck for a pulse. Three cars exited the alley behind the nightclub, making their escape before reinforcements could ever arrive.

* * *

Josie repeatedly dialed the Piedra Police Department until finally reaching a dispatcher through sheer luck. She reported an officer down, and within minutes the ambulance arrived. Josie watched as Marín’s lifeless body was loaded into the ambulance. They were treating him like he had a chance, but she had little hope.

She leaned her rifle against the deck railing and forced her breathing to return to normal. She rubbed at the knots in her neck and felt the tension pulling the muscles in her back and shoulders. Thirty-three years old, and she wondered if the dark circles under her eyes would ever fade.

She unbuttoned her uniform shirt and lifted the bulletproof vest and her T-shirt away from her chest, sighing in relief as the air touched her skin. She unclipped her shoulder-length brown hair and finger-combed it back into place. It was four o’clock in the morning. Her body felt numb; her thoughts flatlined.

Josie pushed open the rickety wooden door into the boxy room at the center of the watchtower’s platform and found the water bottle in her backpack. She drained the contents and searched her cell phone for Sergio Pando’s phone number. A single father who obsessed over his teenage daughter’s safety, he was her closest contact on the Mexican police force. His wife had been killed, a bystander to a car bomb explosion when Benita was just a baby. It had nearly destroyed him.

Josie finally made contact with him. “What’s happening over there?”

“Josie, it is insanity. We’ve lost all control. Benita? She’s in the cellar, scared out of her mind.” Sergio’s English was excellent, but his accent was thick, slowing his speech.

“Is she home by herself?” Josie asked.

He sighed heavily and took a moment to respond. “You know where I am? Posted on the International Bridge. As if anyone in their right mind would want into this city right now.”

“The gunfire has let up.” Josie realized how inadequate it sounded. How do you talk to a man whose city is dying?

“For how long?” Sergio’s voice was bitter and tired. “All those government soldiers going to save the villages? Where are they? The Federales are so outmanned, we can’t keep up. It’s a joke.”

“I requested Border Patrol and DPS all night. It’s no good. Dispatch has been nonstop.”

Sergio made a dismissive sound. “The landlines are down, probably destroyed like the rest of the city.”

“Border Patrol is monitoring scanner traffic. They set up defensive positions at the main points. They’re preparing for a mass crossing.”

“They aren’t stupid. The cartels won’t cross tonight.” Sergio’s voice caught. “Thirteen people murdered. One police officer in critical condition. It’s territory and drug routes. Always what it comes to.”

Josie listened in silence as Sergio went on, listing one horrible act after another. She stared down at the river and wondered how long before the chaos spilled over the banks and into the U.S.

After Sergio calmed somewhat, Josie called Otto, dialing his cell phone to keep the radio frequency clear. “Where are you?” she asked.

“Intersection of River Road and Scratchgravel.”

“Any noise?”

“Nothing. It’s too quiet now.”

“Everything’s shut down,” she said. She raised her binoculars again and scanned the city, almost deserted at an hour when third-shift and first-shift workers should have been passing in the streets. An underground system of communication, neighbor to neighbor, spread information throughout the city when trouble started. Lights went out; windows and doors shut. Piedra Labrada went into lockdown.

The radio on Josie’s belt hissed. Lou Hagerty said, “Forty-two twenty-two, location check.”

“Rio watchtower,” Josie replied.

“Mayor Moss requests all units to the Trauma Center, stat.”

* * *

Josie hooked her backpack over her arms and took the wooden stairs that zigzagged down the fifty-foot descent as quickly as she could. Lou had not been provided any details, and Josie dreaded to find out what lay ahead. She shoved her department-issued jeep into four-wheel drive and sped toward the center of town via a dried-up arroyo that also served as a county road. The smell of baked earth and desert scrub blew in through her open window.

The radio forecaster said the overcast sky held no hope for rain and little chance of lowering the record-breaking temperatures. Looking in her rearview mirror Josie noticed the wall of dust she stirred up, and ran her tongue across her lips, tasting the layer of fine sand that coated her skin. The heat had the locals wishing for the monsoon season, but it would be dangerous when it hit. The ground was so hard and dry, the water would wash down arroyos like this one to the Rio, flooding everything in its path.

* * *

The Artemis Trauma Center was located south of the center of town, near a neighborhood of small cinder block homes. As she pulled up, Josie saw the mayor’s white pickup truck enter the empty lot, dingy under the charcoal-colored sky. He parked in front of the center’s entryway, climbed out of the truck, and approached Josie like a drill sergeant. He was a short stocky man with an underbite like a bulldog’s.

“An ER surgeon from El Paso is on his way. He was already on call in Marfa, so he should be here within a half hour. Two scrub nurses should be here any minute. They’ll start setting up for surgery.” Moss’s voice was clipped and too loud for the silent parking lot.

“What’s going on?” Josie felt her face flush in irritation.

He pointed toward the door. “Let’s get inside. We shouldn’t be out here.”

Josie grabbed his shoulder as he turned from her. “Has someone been shot?”

He glared at her and turned back toward the building, forcing Josie to follow behind him.

* * *

The Trauma Center was a one-story brick rectangle with a glass front door and green awning above it. The building housed the town’s Health Department and a one-room surgical unit that had been paid for with a Homeland Security grant the previous year. Artemis supported one family doctor and now a trauma unit, thanks to the drug cartels pushing north.

Using a key from a silver ring with at least a hundred other labeled keys, Moss unlocked the door and pushed it open, flipping on the entry lights to the left of the door, obviously familiar with the building. For the past ten years, he had micromanaged every agency in town, down to the bid orders for paper towels and toilet paper. He ran Artemis like a city manager, at times using authority he did not officially have. Moss and the city council appointed the chief of police, and he had the authority to fire Josie: a fact Moss was not above reminding her. Running unopposed gave him the type of unchallenged power that Josie worried was not in the best interest of the city.

Moss turned on a second set of lights, and fluorescent bulbs lit up the white waiting room, revealing two rows of blue plastic chairs linked together by a metal rail. Low coffee tables on either side of the chairs were littered with various tattered magazines. The room smelled of bleach and Pine-Sol.

Josie pointed ahead to a dimly lit hallway where they could talk in a more protected space, away from the glass entryway and two windows in the waiting room.

Moss leaned against the wall in the hallway and rubbed the stubble on his face. Usually impeccably dressed, he wore a wrinkled shirt that looked as if he had picked it off the floor on the way out of his house.

“I got a call from the Federales. The Medrano ranch is under attack. Five to eight gunmen from La Bestia went there after the gunfight in Piedra. They shot three front men for Medrano, as well as the old man himself. He’s in critical condition.” He paused, looked away from her. “The ambulance is headed our way.”

Josie leaned her head against the wall. She had been warned it would happen eventually. “Wasn’t he shot in Piedra Labrada?” she asked.

Moss nodded. “I had no choice. He’s got dual citizenship. The Federales said La Bestia already has men surrounding the hospital in Ojinaga. There’s not a hospital in Mexico safe enough to take him. The Federales are certain La Bestia’s set to finish the job.”

“So we let them finish the job here? Let our doctors and nurses be killed?” She stopped and forced herself to slow down, lower her voice. “Do you have any idea how many innocent people that man has killed in Mexico?”

Moss took a step forward and pointed a finger toward her chest. “He owns a cattle ranch in West Texas the size of our town! Until our suspicions are confirmed, we treat this man like the U.S. citizen he is. We offer him protection and medical care like we do any other citizen.”

Josie laughed in disbelief. “I can’t cross the border to help a fellow law officer, but we allow criminals to cross the border for medical care? How screwed up is that?”

“You don’t like the rules? Write your congressman.”

Josie bit back a sarcastic barb. “I’ve called Border Patrol and Department of Public Safety for assistance countless times tonight. They’re swamped. We’ll get no help here. Have you called the sheriff yet for backup?”

“I got the call from Mexico and called dispatch. I called our Trauma Center team leader to round up the ER staff and drove here,” Moss said.

“Call the sheriff. Tell him we need every man he can find to surround this building.” Josie paused and listened as she heard an ambulance siren approaching the center’s side entrance. “Otto’s en route. I’ll have him start setting up the perimeter for backup. I’ll work with the surgical team. You have any contacts you can tap for extra help?”

The mayor flipped open his cell phone to begin making calls while Josie met the ambulance.

The two attendants opened the back door of the ambulance and unloaded Hector Medrano, founder of the Medrano cartel. His chest and abdomen were shredded, and blood leaked through the bandages. His large square face was also bloodied and smeared with black dirt. He was as large in life as he appeared in the frequent newspaper and Internet articles that featured his crime sprees. Josie noticed the two Mexican attendants keeping a wary eye on the unconscious patient, stepping back from the gurney as soon as it was rolled into the operating room. Even with his approaching death, Josie could feel the evil that surrounded the man.

Within minutes, the two ER nurses had arrived. Vie Blessings parked and got out of her car, talking on a cell phone, already dressed in blue scrubs. She was a busty forty-year-old woman with spiked hair and vibrant makeup and jewelry. She commanded attention and got it. A younger nurse whom Josie didn’t recognize got out of the passenger seat of the car; she looked pale and terrified and stayed behind Vie’s back.

As soon as the nurses walked into the operating room, the ambulance attendants turned and left without a word.

“How bad is this?” Vie asked.

“I’ll get your team locked in as soon as the surgeon gets here,” Josie said. “How long?”

Vie looked at her watch. “Ten minutes at the most.”

“I’ll be in the room with you. Otto will be in the lobby near the front entrance. We’re waiting on backup to surround the building.”

Vie called over her shoulder to the younger nurse. She was a small-framed girl with slumped shoulders and round glasses.

“Carrie, this is Josie. She’s the officer that will be in the room with us throughout surgery.”

Josie shook the girl’s clammy hand. “Good to meet you, Carrie. Don’t sweat this. We’re going to be okay.”

Carrie offered a weak smile, and Vie told her to get the surgical table set.

After the girl left, Vie planted her hands on her hips and narrowed her eyes at Josie. “You never answered my question. Must mean it’s pretty bad.” Without waiting for a response, Vie turned back to the surgery room, already shouting orders.

When the surgeon arrived, Josie followed him into the prep area, where he scrubbed for surgery and dressed in sterile gear. He was tall, early thirties, and rail thin with a calm demeanor that impressed Josie immediately. She gave him a quick summary of the situation.

Before they walked out of the prep area, Josie stopped him at the door. “My first priority is the medical staff. You have control over the surgery. I have control over your safety. If I give you and the nurses an order, I need you to follow it. No questions asked. These people are murderers. I want to keep you safe.”

He paused, considering his words, and then reached into the breast pocket on his scrub top. He handed Josie a picture of a baby.

“She’s three months old,” he said, his voice strained.

The baby’s hand was wrapped tightly around her father’s little finger, her lips forming an O, as if the camera had caught her by surprise.

“Keep us safe,” he said. He squeezed Josie’s shoulder and pushed open the door into the surgery room.

* * *

Within fifteen minutes, Hector Medrano was prepped, and Josie and Otto had done what they could to secure the building. She had sent the mayor back to his office to reduce his risk and keep him out of the way. Otto was positioned at the front door, crouched behind the receptionist’s desk, while Josie stayed in the operating room. Her biggest fear was the unmanned door at the back of the clinic. It was locked, but they were wide open for attack. There were so few police officers in the region that backup was unlikely. Artemis was surrounded by towns with populations under eight thousand. Odessa was the nearest large town, at ninety thousand people, but it was 240 miles away. She had requested Border Patrol and DPS backup, but time was not on her side.

As surgery began, Josie listened for voices or activity outside the operating room. She stood behind the surgical table to keep a clear view of the door, and attempted to avert her gaze from the bloody mess in front of her. Hearing the suction of body fluids made her realize she had not eaten since a half can of fruit cocktail for supper. She glanced down and watched the gloved hand of the surgeon, slick with blood, exit the man’s chest cavity. Her peripheral vision turned black, and she pressed her hands flat on the cool concrete wall behind her, bent her knees, and breathed in the pungent mix of antiseptic and blood. She forced herself to take slow, deep breaths.

Vie, standing opposite the surgeon, called Josie’s name. “You’re looking a little peaked. You’re not going to drop on us, are you?” Vie asked.

Josie shook her head, hoping Vie would leave her be.

Focusing on the door, Josie listened to the surgeon’s steady voice and the measured blips and whisking of machines as her nausea subsided.

The surgeon walked Carrie through the process of inserting a chest tube to stabilize the patient’s breathing, and Josie wondered at his bravery. He was one of twelve surgeons from El Paso and Odessa who served the trauma needs of several West Texas border towns on a rotating basis. With so few resources, the surgeons were required to take a course in triage. During emergencies, they were taught to determine which patients would live and which would die, regardless of treatment, so they could focus on the patients who would most benefit from immediate care. Josie feared the knowledge might be put to use that day.

Each person on the surgical team understood the danger they were in; operating on one of Mexico’s drug cartel elite after a failed assassination attempt—one that would most certainly be completed in the future—seemed suicidal. And at what cost? Three decent human beings in exchange for a man suspected by authorities to have plotted the deaths of more than twenty rival gang members in the past year. For the assassins, an order to kill was an order, not a suggestion. The international border was no obstacle. La Bestia ran an organization as structured as, and certainly more ruthless than, any government military.

“The bullet struck bone. The fragments have to be removed. This will take longer than I’d hoped.” The surgeon lifted his head and looked to the ceiling, either to stretch or offer a prayer. He took a steel instrument from Vie as the other nurse rattled off numbers that meant nothing to Josie.

Carrie checked the monitors. She pulled her scrubs away from her chest and twitched as if her clothes irritated her skin. Behind the blue mask, Josie saw the fear in her eyes.

“Pressure’s dropping,” the girl said. “There’s blood in the breathing tube.”

Josie heard muffled voices outside the building, and Vie lifted her head, her expression wary.

With her back braced against the wall, her muscles taut and focused, Josie strained to decipher the noises from outside the unit. She reached Otto on his cell phone, not wanting the conversation on the public frequency.

“I hear voices outside the building. DPS arrived?”

“The front parking lot is empty. I just checked with Lou. DPS has two officers on their way, but they’re still thirty minutes out. The voices are coming from the east side of the building. They’re moving toward the back door.” Otto hesitated. “It’s about to get ugly.”

Josie knew Medrano would not have made it through surgery in Juárez. Retaliation in trauma units was common there. It was ranked the deadliest city in the world. Just a month ago, Mexican authorities charged two members of La Bestia for the murder of a high-ranking police commander in Juárez who refused to pay the demanded protection. He took a bullet through his chest as he entered the grocery with his wife. When the bullet failed to kill him, the assassins followed the ambulance to the hospital and killed the officer, the ambulance driver, and three bystanders.

Josie heard a car in the rear of the building, shut her cell phone, and slipped it in her shirt pocket. Within seconds, bullets pelted the back of the building, and glass shattered. The sound echoed down the hallway and filled the operating room. They had shot the back doors open. Voices were shouting, obviously inside the building now, speaking rapid-fire Spanish. Josie’s chest tightened under her vest, and she gritted her teeth, every thought focused on her actions.

“Flat on your stomachs!” she said, waving to the floor.

The surgeon looked wide-eyed at the man on the gurney. “I can’t leave him. He’ll die!”

Josie pointed toward the corner of the room with her gun. “Now! They’ll spray this whole room with bullets if they can’t get in.”

Gunshots echoed down the hall, just outside the trauma room, and Carrie screamed and dropped to her knees. Vie and the surgeon both looked to Josie for an answer. She motioned for them to cover their heads and lie on the floor in the corner.

More shouts from the hallway, then two additional gunshots, single caliber, that sounded like police rounds coming from the front of the building, where Otto was stationed. The three medical personnel lay flat on their stomachs. Josie heard the young nurse crying and Vie praying aloud. The doctor was between both nurses, his hands held protectively over their heads.

Josie crouched in the opposite corner. She had two guns, one on her thigh, cocked and ready for backup, the other trained on the door, both with a bullet in the chamber and a full magazine. The police-issued sidearms were little consolation in combat with automatic weapons that could sweep a room in a matter of seconds.

The trauma room echoed with the pounding of fists on the door and shouts in Spanish, but Josie couldn’t shoot without knowing who stood beyond the wall. With her gun trained on the door, she thought of Otto in the front of the building and hoped he hadn’t been hit. She shoved the image from her mind, forcing herself to keep focus.

The cries of the young nurse on the floor turned to sobs.

Bullets hit the door, ringed the handle, and the door flew open with a kick. Three gunmen screamed as they opened fire on the man lying on the table. Josie fired her pistol, hit one man in the chest, then a second in his upper arm. The first man stumbled backwards into the hallway; the second man fell back against the wall as the third man turned and fled, still yelling as he ran down the hall, spraying the walls with bullets.

She heard the clinic’s back door slam and tires blow gravel through the parking lot. Josie leaped from her crouched position on the floor, yelling at the injured man to drop his weapon. He leaned against the wall, holding the other hand over the bleeding wound, the automatic rifle at his feet.

Josie pushed him to the floor, kneeled on his back. He cried out in pain as she pulled his arms back and snapped handcuffs on him. Stepping into the hallway, she pushed at the gunman lying on his back on the floor. From the chest wound, she was certain he was dead. She put her backup weapon inside the concealed holster under her shirt and carried his AK-47 with her. Otto ran down the hallway to the back entrance as Josie stood, leaving the wounded man moaning on the floor. The two nurses and doctor stared up at her from the floor.

“Anyone hit?” she asked them.

They began to pull themselves up into sitting positions, still too shocked to know if they were hurt. They all appeared fine to her, and she told them to stay down. She glanced at Medrano on the operating table. He was no longer recognizable.

With her back pressed against the wall in the hallway, she moved quickly toward the rear entrance. Otto rushed back inside, sweat dripping down his face, his coloring so red, she worried he might be having a heart attack.

“It’s clear. No one back there, no cars or people in the parking lot or in the yards across the street.”

“You okay?” Josie asked. Her voice echoed in her head as if in a box, and the smell of gunpowder burnt her nose.

Otto wiped the sweat off his forehead with his shirt sleeve. “Jesus, I thought you were all dead. The staff okay?”

“They got the patient. That’s it.”

The two stood in the silence of the hallway, ears still ringing in pain from the gunfire.

* * *

Eight hours later, Josie sat in the mayor’s office, along with Moss and Sheriff Roy Martínez. Moss had requested a debriefing to discuss the shooting. His office was located in the Artemis City Building, which was connected to the left side of the police department in downtown Artemis. The mayor’s office was located in the back of the long, narrow building, and was walled in brown 1970s-style wood paneling and beige shag carpeting. The conference table, large enough for eight people to sit around, dominated the office. A mahogany desk the size of a twin bed took up the space in the back. Josie could smell the cigar smoke on Moss’s clothing from across the table as he plugged a laptop cord into a wall socket.

Built like a linebacker, with wide shoulders and a squat stance, the mayor held himself in great esteem and was not shy about sharing that opinion with anyone who would listen. Three years ago, when Josie applied for the position of chief of police, she had the support of the city council, the other officers in the department, and Sheriff Martínez. Moss was the hold-up. He had told her to take her name out of the running, that she did not belong, that she was not strong enough mentally or physically for the rigors of the job. It wasn’t personal, he said, but women were not “built” for police work. She had ignored his demand and was appointed shortly thereafter. Josie had never learned who put the political pressure on Moss to hire her, but she knew he resented her presence and would relish her dismissal.

Josie connected her digital camera to the mayor’s laptop, downloaded the images, and clicked through the set as she provided a description of the pictures she had taken, inside and out at the Trauma Center, as the Artemis PD and Texas Department of Public Safety officers processed the crime scene. She explained that she had hit one of the gunmen in the chest and he had died at the scene.

Moss interrupted her. “That is not good. Not good at all.” His eyebrows furrowed, and he stared hard at Josie.

She ignored the comment and pointed to a picture of the gunman she had shot in the arm being loaded into an ambulance. “The Arroyo County Sheriff’s Department took this man, the second gunman, into custody and transported him to the Arroyo County Hospital. The bullet was removed and the wound dressed. He was transported to the jail about an hour ago.” She made eye contact with the mayor. “Our jail. The surgeon said the man needed to remain in the hospital overnight.” She gestured to the sheriff sitting across the table from her. “Martínez fought and won.”

Roy Martínez said, “After the hit on the Trauma Center, I won’t risk another unsecured situation.” Martínez shifted in his chair. A burly former marine, he was a large, muscular man who barely fit between the arms of the wooden captain’s chair. He often looked uncomfortable in his uniform, as if he needed more space to breathe. He cleared his throat and said, “There’s a nurse outside his cell to keep track of his medical needs. He’s a Mexican citizen, so we’ll have to figure out who’s going to pay for this mess.”

“We can’t afford the phone bill, let alone the medical bills for a fugitive,” the mayor said.

Josie pressed the space bar on the laptop and showed the last picture, a wide-angle shot of the operating room. The gurney and body had been removed, but blood splatter remained on the walls and floor. Yellow stickers, numbered one through fifty-eight, were scattered about the room near pockmarks and holes in the white cinder block.

“Fifty-eight bullets used to kill a man who was already half-dead,” Josie said. “It’s a miracle we didn’t lose the entire medical staff.”

Moss stood and walked to the window, then turned to face them. “This has to stop. I will not allow my town to be overrun by terrorists.”

Sheriff Martínez cleared his throat and pushed a finger in between his neck and his brown uniform collar and tugged. He leaned forward in his chair toward the mayor. “Allow? You think the law officials in this town are allowing these people to shoot up the town?”

Moss stared back at Martínez and didn’t speak. His expression changed, as if he were recalculating his next move.

“The city police department has three officers, including myself. The sheriff’s department has four, and they have to run the jail,” Josie said. “You have drug cartels across the border with million-dollar arsenals. You patch one hole in the border, and they just blow through another. They dig under the fence, they go over it in biplanes, they scramble the radar. We’re in their line of traffic right now. And we don’t have a tenth of the officers we need to fight back.”

“Then patch the crack. Blow their asses down the border. I don’t really give a damn, but I don’t want them here,” Moss said.

“Then don’t allow medical transports across the border!” Josie said.

“Do you understand what kind of political hell we’d get if he died because we wouldn’t allow him access to a surgeon?” Moss asked. “A U.S. citizen? The media would eat me alive!”

“We have two thousand miles of border with Mexico, and only a third of it is controlled. I just read a briefing last week from Homeland Security stating that West Texas was put on the national watchlist for high-intensity drug trafficking. We’re a designated port for weapons transportation and terrorist entry.” She let her words sink in. “We need more officers.”

“Whose paycheck do you plan on squeezing? Yours?” He pointed directly at Josie. “I’m telling you, either get a grip on this situation, or I will find someone else who can.”

Martínez interrupted. “I don’t like your threat or your tone of voice. You don’t have the power to replace me or her, so knock off the meaningless bully tactics.”

Moss’s eyes bulged in anger. He looked at Martínez. “That’s fine! Let the voters deal with you. But the commissioners and I can and will run her out of town if she isn’t doing her job.”

“You need to be reminded of your place.” Martínez leaned forward in his chair toward Moss. “You’re a figurehead who can be voted out. You have absolutely no support to remove Chief Gray. And if you try, I’ll personally run a campaign against you like this town has never seen.”

* * *

After thirty minutes of talk that left everyone angrier, the mayor dismissed both officers with a wave of his hand and a vague order to catch the sons of bitches. Josie and Martínez exited his office and walked across the street to his car, which was parked in front of the courthouse. It was six o’clock, and the smoldering July sun intensified the misery. The grass around the courthouse lawn had been brown for a month, and even the massive oak trees that ringed the courthouse looked faded to Josie.

Martínez leaned against the hood of his sheriff’s car and stroked his mustache. “You still shook up over the shooting?” he asked.

Josie stared at the pavement and considered the question. She respected and liked Martínez as a person. She was a foot shorter, but he never tried to overpower her with his physical presence, a tactic he used often—and effectively—with others. Josie stood at a thin five feet seven and carried herself with assurance. Most people had no doubt when looking at Chief Gray that she was capable and in charge, but that afternoon, she had begun to worry for the first time in her career that the criminals were getting the upper hand.

She pointed in the direction of the clinic, just a block away from the courthouse and police department, and stared at the yellow police tape that surrounded the building. “I kneeled on that floor, waiting for a hundred bullets to spray across the room. I’m thinking, these three people are lying there and looking to me for answers. For safety. But I felt like a caged animal locked in that room. I basically waited for us to die. What do you do when you have no options left?”

“You got them on the floor and offered protection. Wasn’t much else you could do,” Martínez said.

“I keep hearing Vie praying in my head. I swear I could hear her voice above the bullets.” Josie paused for a minute and finally nodded toward the courthouse. “I can’t take another meeting with that guy.”

“He’s an idiot. Don’t sweat the idiots.”

“The idiot makes statements in the newspaper about the lack of law enforcement in his great town. I look at the guy, and I want to throw a punch. He doesn’t even need to speak, and I want to snap his arrogant—”

Martínez slapped Josie on the back and opened his car door. “He’s scared to death and has no idea how to solve the problem. He sees his reelection floating down the Rio. And when you don’t have solutions, all you have left is blame.”





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