Turn the page for a sneak preview of
Randy Wayne White’s
new Doc Ford mystery,
Randy Wayne White’s
new Doc Ford mystery,
tampa burn
Available in hardcover from G. P. Putnam’s
Sons
Ciudad de Masagua
Republic of Masagua
Central America
April
Republic of Masagua
Central America
April
Several hours before Praxcedes Lourdes
abducted Marion Ford’s son, he was sitting in a smoky cantina with
his getaway driver, bragging about his new fame.
In Spanish, he said, “The visitor who burns men
alive. It’s what the poor assholes in Nicaragua call me. The
peasants. And in Guatemala. The night visitor. They use my name to
scare hell out of children. To make brats behave when they disobey.
Understand? At a certain age, kids stop believing in Santa Claus.
Even some of the saints. But they’ll never stop believing in
me.”
Prax was smoking a Cohiba cigar. He inhaled,
perhaps smiling, though it was impossible to tell because he wore a
mask made of thin wire mesh. Guerrilla fighters wore identical
masks during Nicaragua’s Contra war to hide their identities.
Eyebrows and pink cheek flush were painted on the outside—a
clownish touch.
Lourdes liked that.
The man always kept his face covered. When he
traveled, or went out at night, he wore surgical gauze, the kind
that protects from germs. Because of certain Asian viruses, it was
no longer an oddity.
At other times, he wore a bandana, or a bandage
wrap, plus sunglasses—except for now, in this dark bar. The Contra
mask, though, was his favorite because he could smoke and drink,
and also because it provided him a face when he looked in the
mirror.
The driver watched smoke sieve through the mesh.
He averted his eyes.
“Not long after General Balserio paid me to come
to Masagua, your people started calling me Incendiario. Using only
the one word. That’s a better name, don’t you think? It sounds like
a rock singer in the United States. It’s got star appeal. Sexy—not
that you coffee peons know anything about show business.”
Prax made a card-fan with his hands, as if
creating a marquee above the table, and said with flair, “The great
Incendiario. Like I’m star of this half-assed revolution, more
famous than your generals. Which I am. In the mountains, when
people say my name, they whisper. You know why?”
The driver was staring at the table, aware the
man was not speaking to him; an answer wasn’t expected. He was
bragging to please himself. Even so, the driver replied, “It’s
because the people of Masagua are superstitious. They don’t believe
that you are—” He paused. He’d almost said “human.” “That you
really exist.”
Lourdes leaned forward slightly. His Spanish was
unusually accented—French Canadian with a dose of Florida Cracker.
The accent was amplified when he grew strident, and he became
strident now.
“No. It’s because Masaguans are stupid turds,
like most people. No smarter than a bunch of sheep, including your
genius generals. What I had to teach them was, if you kill a couple
thousand enemy, nothing changes. But if you scare two hundred
thousand of them shitless—make their families afraid to leave the
house at night—that’s when a war starts going your way.”
The mask seemed to bob oddly. Another
smile?
“But not you, Reynaldo. I don’t scare you. Do
I?”
The driver reached to take a drink of his rum,
but stopped because he realized his hand would shake if he lifted
the glass. He said, “Why should I be scared? In my village, we
speak well of you. We hear the rumors.” He shrugged as if
unconcerned, but his laughter was strained. “Crazy stories. Lies.
But we fight for the same cause, so we know you’re a good
man.”
In reply to Lourdes’s dubious gesture—the way he
tilted his head—the driver spoke a little too loudly when he added,
“It’s true. We teach our children that you are a great
revolutionary. That they have no reason to fear you.”
“No reason to fear me?”
“God as my witness! That is what we teach
children.”
Signaling the waitress for another drink,
Praxcedes said softly, “Talking to God like he’s your pal. That’s
brave. They send a hero like you to drive the car.”
Sarcasm? Reynaldo couldn’t be sure.
He was glad when Prax changed the subject,
saying, “The boy and his mother live in what used to be a nunnery,
Clois ters La Concepcion. It’s across from the Presidential Palace,
next to the market.”
He was back to discussing the kidnapping.
Reynaldo nodded. “I know the market. We sold
vegetables at the Mercado Central every Sunday. I know the city as
well as any man.”
“Um-huh. Brave and a genius, too.”
That inflection again.
“If you know the city, then you know about the
tunnel that connects the convent with the park.”
Reynaldo answered, “A tunnel? A tunnel runs
beneath the street from the convent?”
Praxcedes blew a stream of smoke into the older
man’s face. “There’s something you don’t know? Then keep your mouth
closed while I explain.”
The driver sat motionless, silent, as Prax told
him that the convent, where the boy lived, had been built in the
1500s. The tunnel had been built in the 1600s, during the
Inquisition.
He said, “The nuns dug the tunnel to save dumb
Indios, just like you, who were sentenced to death. I was telling
you about my fame? History, that’s how it started.
“During the Inquisition, Spaniards burned Indians
at the stake if they wouldn’t turn Catholic. Thousands of them.
When the Indios screamed, if they called out to God—like for mercy?
The priests wrote their words on paper. To those assholes, that was
a form of conversion. It’s what they wanted.
“I’ve got a laptop computer with a wireless
connection,” Lourdes said. “I’m not like the rest of you ignorant
hicks. I do research. All the time, I’m learning. The Catholic
thing, burning men alive to win a war. When I read it, I thought,
Perfect. Even though it was years after what the soldiers did to
me.”
Lourdes stopped and stared at his driver. “You’ve
probably heard all kinds of stories. About why I look the way I
look.”
Reynaldo dipped his head twice, slowly.
Yes.
“Later, when we’ve got the boy, if you don’t
screw up, maybe I’ll tell you what really happened. The details.
Would you like that?”
He watched the driver think about it for several
seconds.
“Yes.”
“Then you’ll understand. The church, the
government, they’re both the same. Big shots trying to screw you if
they can.”
With a whistle of scorn, Prax took a kitchen
match, struck it, and leaned close to refire his cigar.
Reynaldo looked long enough to see, floating
above the flame, one sleepy gray eye and one lidless blue eye
leering out at him from the mask. Prax wore a hooded brown monk’s
smock that was common in Central America. The hood was back, so
Reynaldo could also see the damage that fire had done to the man’s
scalp. The top of his head appeared to be a human skull over which
gray skin had been stretched too tight, torn, then patched with
melted wax. There were tufts of blond hair growing out of white
bone.
When Prax spoke certain words, he lisped, which
suggested that his lips and face were also scarred.
When Reynaldo had first received the assignment
to drive Incendiario, he’d been excited. He’d hoped, in a perverse
way, that he would be among the few to see the great man’s
face.
After only a few hours, though, Reynaldo
regretted his decision to drive the car.
Prax didn’t behave like a great man. His Spanish
was a Yankee’s Spanish, rude and profane. He talked incessantly,
always about himself, and he wore his monk’s robe and mask like a
costume—even his hand gestures were theatrical.
The exaggerated mannerisms reminded him of
something; something he’d seen as a child. At a circus,
perhaps?
Reynaldo couldn’t bring the memory to the front
of his brain.
In the light of the flaming match, the driver
looked at the eyes inside the mask. He was glad the mask separated
them.
In the morning darkness, Praxcedes said to
Reynaldo, “The entrance to this thing, this tunnel, it’s too small.
My shoulders won’t fit. I can’t believe the stupid bastards didn’t
warn me about this!”
Straining, beginning to sweat, Prax whispered to
himself in English, “Jesus Christ, you’d have to be a freak show
con tort to squeeze through this bastard.”
Con-tort was carnival slang for contortionist.
Prax, whose name had once been Jimmie Gauer, remembered lots of
slang. As a child, his family had worked carnivals all summer, then
wintered in Florida. They had a trailer there in a tiny carney
town.
Sweating, now beginning to panic, Lourdes added,
“I get down there, what if it caves in? Then what?”
Reynaldo said, “Well, the general will still pay
you your money. If we can find you.”
Lourdes thought, You’ll pay for that,
smartass.
It was dark in the park at 2:30 A.M., shadows of
trees above. Beyond, the lighted windows of the Presidential Palace
created a vitreous checkerboard against a loft of mountain peaks
and stars.
They’d found the Mayan stele that marked the
entrance, then strained together to lift the stone. Now, stuck in
the tunnel’s mouth, Incendiario was balking.
Reynaldo said carefully, “Some people are not
comfortable in narrow places. There’s a word for it that I can’t
remember. Shall I crawl through and get the boy while you wait
here? There is no shame in being frightened.”
Lourdes snapped, “You’re calling me a coward?
Screw you. You’ll regret that mouth of yours one day.”
He took a deep breath as if about to submerge,
exhaled, and forced his body through the entrance.
Underground, he had to pull his elbows against
his ribs, and wiggle to turn. He rushed to find his micro-light.
The tunnel was walled with brick, and smelled of mold and water.
The floor was brick and broken stone that was etched with Mayan
hieroglyphics a thousand years old: grotesque faces, birds
clutching snakes.
Crawling, Prax stopped several times, panting, so
much sweat dripping off his face that he removed the mask. He felt
as if his lungs might implode.
Finally, he saw frail bands of light ahead. Then
he came to a grate that moved easily in his big hands. Prax rolled
out into a hallway, stood, and fitted the mask, feeling his lungs
expand to normal.
The convent was built of stone, ceilings
twenty-feet high, religious murals on walls that were poorly
illuminated by bare bulbs where torches had once burned. He’d been
briefed on the convent, what to avoid. They’d told him that the
boy’s room was on the second floor near the staircase. He’d also
been told that the guard normally stationed there would leave after
midnight, claiming to be ill.
Even so, Prax moved quietly up the steps. His
smock was belted at the waist, hood up. He fished his hand into a
pocket and removed a knife. He snapped the blade open, then stopped
at the top of the stairs.
To his left was a hallway that ended at a set of
wooden doors. The boy’s mother, Pilar Fuentes, would be inside,
asleep at this hour. A famous lady, and drop-dead gorgeous,
too—he’d seen her photo in newspapers. A social hotshit even though
she looked pure Mayan, and probably a snob. Even in Central
America, the rich always were.
Prax considered paying the snob a quick visit.
Was tempted to see for himself if she was as beautiful in the
flesh. Or perhaps—this idea flashed behind his eyes—perhaps abduct
the boy and the mother.
For a moment, that excited him, and he began to
think about it; how it might play out.
Why not? He’d soon need a woman. A test subject.
Someone to try things with that he’d never been able to pay or
force a prostitute to do. Not with his face. Not this old face,
anyway.
But a new face. . . . ?
For years, he’d wondered what it would be like.
Now it was happening. Happening because he was making it happen.
When he wasn’t planning, he was on the Internet, researching.
Thinking about it so much that, lately, it was hard to think about
anything else. Dreamed about it.
Pilar Fuentes. Yeah. Take the famous beauty.
Surprise the society snob in bed. He could abduct her along with
the boy, and then . . . and then. . . .
But wait. . . .
As the idea came unraveled, his excitement
drained.
It wasn’t workable—even though it would be a
sweet way to screw over the jerk who was the woman’s ex-husband,
Jorge Balserio.
Prax despised authority, felt it in his belly,
and General Balserio was as arrogant as anyone he’d ever met. The
man was his employer—which was another good reason to snatch her
because Balserio still paid him like he was some Indio peon heel,
even though the government was this close to falling.
Incendiario deserved a fair chunk of the credit
for that.
Taking the kid was supposed to be the final
straw.
So it was tempting to take her, keep her all for
himself.
But sometimes, Prax knew, it just wasn’t smart to
screw with the locals.
To the right of the stairs was a second set of
doors. On the doors were tacked clippings from magazines: baseball
stars, a map of the moon, and a photograph of a great white shark.
The shark was leaping out of the water toward a skin diver perched
on the skid of a helicopter.
There was also a plastic sign in Spanish that
read, “No girls! Trespassers will be violated!”
The boy’s room.
Smart-ass rich punk.
Lourdes wondered how smart-assed the kid would be
once his arms and mouth were taped.
He touched the wrought iron latch. It was locked,
which was no surprise. The guard had told them that there was only
one key.
“He’s methodical,” the guard had said. “So
organized. He’s more like a grown man.”
From a pocket, Prax took a miniature blowtorch
nozzle, and threaded it to a seven-ounce propane tank. Assembled,
it was the shape and size of a handgun. He opened the valve, lit
the torch, enjoying it, that sound, the pressurized hiss.
He lowered his black glasses and adjusted the
flame until it was orange-blue, shaped like a scalpel. Then he
moved the flame over the dead bolt, up and down, for less than a
minute before the bolt gave way.
Prax pushed the door open and stepped into the
boy’s room.
It was a large room with windows that opened onto
a courtyard and fountains below. The room was illuminated with
bluish light that came from a half dozen glass aquaria that held
coral and fish.
The largest tank was in the center. Clown-colored
fish swam among aerator bubbles while, beneath them, what Prax
recognized as a moray eel watched open-mouthed, its eyes reptilian.
The moray was big, as thick as his wrist.
The boy was in bed beneath the open windows. He
appeared as a charcoal shape.
The blowtorch hissing, Prax walked toward the
bed, but stopped when he heard the boy ask, in Spanish, “Hey—who
are you? What’s burning?”
It was an adolescent voice, but deep.
Prax had spent lots of private time in front of a
mirror. He had the hood pulled over this head, mask fixed, looking
just the way he wanted—spooky. He answered, “Shut your fucking
mouth. Don’t say another word, or I’ll set your bed on fire.”
That was something he’d learned: Scare them fast.
When you take down a mark, shock them quick, let them know who’s
boss.
But the kid didn’t scare easy. He was sitting,
rubbing his eyes with his fists. “Hey—you get the hell out of my
room. If I call the guards, they’ll shoot. That’s if you’re
lucky.”
The boy’s self-confidence, his calm, were
infuriating.
Prax hissed back, “You little punk, you’re
leaving with me,” as he lifted the torch so that the kid could see
his mask. He stood there letting the boy look at him, feeling the
boy’s eyes and the heat of the flame on his face. Then slowly, very
slowly, he pulled the mask down just low enough so that the burn
scars on his forehead and his lidless eyes were visible.
He heard the boy’s quick intake of breath. Heard
the boy whisper, “Jesus Christ, it’s. . . . You’re real?”
Prax answered, “Oh, yeah. Every fucking story
you’ve ever heard. I’m real.”
Oh, man, he liked that. Loved the timing of it,
the kid’s reaction, and the way he’d listened, frozen, as Prax
spoke his best line, laid out the words just right. Now,
readjusting his mask, he motioned with the blowtorch. “Get your
clothes on. Do what I say, you won’t get hurt. Move.”
When the boy didn’t budge, he turned, walked
across to the aquarium, and plunged the nozzle into the water. A
portable torch burns at more than two thousand degrees Fahrenheit,
and within seconds, the fish and large moray began to contort in
the super-heated bubbles.
“Stop! Quit it.”
“Your voice. Too loud.”
“You’re killing them.”
“I’ll stop when you move.”
“Go to hell. I won’t.”
Stubborn little son-of-a-bitch.
Looking at the kid, trying to read him, Prax
said, “You do what I tell you to do, or . . . my partners are in
your mother’s room right now. I’ll call them, they’ll bring her in
here, and I’ll use this on your mother. How’d you like that? I’ll
burn her fucking face right off.”
“You leave my mother alone!”
That did it. Prax Lourdes could hear it in the
boy’s voice. From now on, anything he wanted, anything, all he had
to do was threaten to have someone harm the woman.
The torch was still in the water. He watch the
moray writhe on the bottom. Then the clown-colored fish began to
explode into fleshy clouds as their air bladders ruptured.
“Get your clothes on. You’d better hurry.”
The boy leaped out of bed, and found the reading
lamp: big kid with black-brown hair, shoulders like they were built
from planks, square jaw and pale eyes. He wore boxer underwear, his
abdominal muscles symmetrical.
“I’m hurrying. Enough.”
He didn’t sound so self-assured now.
Prax lifted the torch from the tank, and closed
the valve as he watched the boy dress. He was already dreading the
trip back through the tunnel, having to squeeze through that
darkness.
To take his mind off it, he settled his attention
on the boy, concentrating on the boy’s face, the way it was
constructed. Along with all his Internet research on plastic
surgery, it was something else he’d been doing lately: studying the
facial makeup of other men—particularly young men.
There were interesting, subtle differences.
Staring at the boy, Prax was startled to realize
that the kid was handsome; had a face that was nicely proportioned.
Maybe even beautifully proportioned. Which shouldn’t have been a
surprise, considering his famous mother.
Jesus, to have that face, his soft skin.
Prax Lourdes was torn.
The most innovative reconstructive surgeon in
America was Dr. Valerie Santos. She wasn’t like that strung-out
Mexican quack he’d been using.
Yeah, Dr. Valerie. That’s what the press called
her. Cool lady who went by her first name. All those awards, her
photo in People, and a great web page where someone answered
E-mails from potential patients who had questions.
He’d already received several detailed
replies.
Fake profiles, that’s the way he was playing the
con. His most ingenious was posing as a teenage South American burn
victim who was working on a film script.
Dr. Santos and Prax were destined. He knew it the
instant he read about her, because of where she did her magic:
Tampa General Burn Unit, right across the bay from the little
carney trailer park where he still remembered spending winters as a
boy.
Lourdes loved the idea of cornering the big shot
lady doctor, referencing one of her E-mails, then pointing to the
kid’s face and telling her, “Harvest that.”
There was something else, however, he’d been
coveting: the chance to light the boy’s clothes on fire.
What a rush that would be, watching this pretty
child run.