By Walter Agnew Moore II
Lobo bounced out into the street, still whistling,
and started to go to the right, back towards the bar
where he had met Nelly, but after two steps he turned
and headed the other way, into a part of Monterrey
he didn't know as well.
He tried not to think about the guy answering Marisol's
phone. OK, so she couldn't be trusted. Fine. He
was a realist, and after Nelly, they were even. He
would find the guy and take care of business, but
he wasn't going to get all weepy. Besides, she was
having his kid. That was permanent, he was part of
the family now, forever.
There would be time to sort out this business with
her and her brother Juan. Lots of time.
He had walked only a couple of blocks when he saw
a sign bathed in orange light that said "Pub
Geronimo". He went closer and saw through the
window that it looked like a decent bar, much less
cheesy than that pitiful whorehouse down the street.
Lobo walked in and took his place at the long bar.
There was American cowboy-movie stuff all over the
walls, busts of Indian chiefs, pictures of John Wayne
in a stetson, bows and arrows, a dartboard down at
the end. It was all panelled in a light brown wood.
There were several men in nice jackets leaning on
the bar or sitting on the stools, and two bartenders
joking around. One man looked at Lobo's t-shirt and
jeans, and then nodded when he saw that Lobo was looking
back.
The nearer of the two bartenders had a bright alert
manner. He jerked his head toward Lobo and said:
"Everything OK, boss? Can I get you a drink?"
"Yeah... I'll take a Sol."
"Right away boss. Hey boss, where you from?"
Lobo sipped his beer and then he said: "I'm
from China."
Several of the customers turned and looked at him,
mouths open. "You are Chinese?" the nearest
man said.
"Well, I'm from China, so of course I'm Chinese."
The nearest man broke out in laughter, and the rest
went along with him. He was in his 50's or early
60's, gray hair pomaded back old-style. "Carlito,
get my Chinese friend a tequila, and give me one too!
Chinese—I like that. My name is Guillermo."
"Lobo. Pleased to me you."
"Equally. You have a Chinese name as well,"
grinned Guillermo, and he shook Lobo's hand. They
lifted the shots of tequila, and Guillermo toasted:
"To China! To Chairman Mao!"
Guillermo continued: "So, seriously, you came
down here from the States because of your job? Good
Spanish, by the way."
"More like I'm looking for work."
"A Gringo who came to Mexico for a job? That's
crazy. Still, I'll keep you in mind. You come here,
you'll always find me."
"Cool."
The rounds came fast, and Lobo ordered drinks in
his turn for Guillermo and two of the other men.
His vision was blurring as the other men settled their
tabs. Guillermo patted him on the shoulder as he
left, saying: "You're a good guy. Whenever
you want to find me, you come here."
Lobo was left alone sitting on a stool at the bar,
with a couple of guys at the other end having their
own conversation, and the weary bartenders polishing
glasses.
This was good. Lobo had the feeling that this Guillermo
dude was a potential hook-up for some kind of job,
he seemed OK. Lobo would come down here tomorrow
and drink some more, see what he could find out.
The alert bartender was sliding a cash register ticket
in front of Lobo. Damn, he'd ordered more drinks
than he thought, that stuff added up quick. Well,
he had the cash.
He checked his other back pocket. His wallet wasn't
there either. His wallet was gone, who the hell took
his wallet—
"That fucking whore!" he roared in English.
"That lying, stealing-ass whore!"
"What's that, boss? What's going on? That's
what you drank, the bill is right."
"I know the bill—I know—it—look, this whore
stole my money. My wallet is gone, I have to go get
it—"
"Whoa whoa whoa boss, you have to pay this first."
The other bartender came up, nodding towards Lobo.
"What's going on with him? What's the problem?"
"He says he can't pay."
"The fuck he can't. He can drink, he can pay...
what did he get?"
"Nine tequilas, he was buying shots for Guillermo
and them, and a Sol."
"Hey, Mr. China, my friend, did you order 10
drinks in my bar when you've got no money?"
Lobo said, "I got money—I had money. I had
money until that fucking whore robbed me."
"What'd he say?"
"He said a whore took his money. I showed him
the bill, and then he started talking about some whore."
"Hey friend, you see any whores in here? I'm
tired of this story. I work here every night, you
think I never hear this kind of shit? You better
give me my damn money, I'm not playing, I'm not telling
you again!"
Lobo put down his shot-glass. "OK, OK, I'm
going to give you the money, right now."
He stood up off his stool, slid his hand into the
pocket where his wallet should have been, then turned
and slammed out the door.
He knew he only had a few seconds before they were
out after him. He twisted quick around the street
corner and slammed up flat against a recessed door.
It helped that there was no street light right here.
He heard curse a few yards away, and saw in his mind
what they were seeing: four dark empty streets with
no movement on them, no clue where he went, and a
bar still open with customers sitting near the cash
register.
He didn't move for a good minute, but he didn't dare
stay either in case they called the cops. He eased
out of his doorway and took off at a slow walk, taking
a roundabout way back to the place where he had picked
up Nelly. He had a thing or two to show her and those
small-time pimps.
It was quiet in front of the whorehouse, but the
doorman was still there, the music was coming out
faintly.
Lobo thought of Nelly sitting inside with his wallet,
all the little pimps and hookers laughing about how
she tricked him. He twitched his right hand and wished
he still had the Beretta, but there was one thing
he had learned the hard way in the past, and that
was if you couldn't make somebody do something without
a gun, then you probably couldn't do it even if you
had one. He was ready, he was going to get all his
money back, and some extra. He had reach and weight
on those guys, and what was more, they didn't know
he was headed their way.
He walked slowly towards the door. The man standing
there looked at Lobo and then turned inside and gestured.
Probably telling Nelly to hide, thought Lobo. He
didn't give a damn, if he got any interference from
this guy he'd kick his shit and scoop out the till
in a matter of seconds.
The stocky man in the white dress shirt stepped out
and stood next to the doorman. He crossed his arms
and looked at Lobo with a patient, almost sad expression.
Lobo stopped a few feet from the men and sized them
up. He was a foot taller than either of them, and
a lot more muscular. This was going to go his way.
Lobo spoke in a hard, even voice to the men: "You
remember me. I don't want trouble. You don't want
trouble. Your whore stole my money. Now, this is
not the day to be fucking with me. You know that.
Let's make it simple: I want my wallet back, and
every centavo that was in it, 3,000 pesos."
The two men looked at him for a few seconds, and
then White Shirt said to the doorman: "Do you
know this guy?"
The doorman shrugged. White Shirt said, "Sir,
I'm sorry somebody robbed you, that's really sad.
But it wasn't us. We've never seen you before."
"You little son of a bitch," muttered Lobo
in English, breathing in deep.
"Oh, 'son of bitch', oh, I know some English,
is that a polite word, Gerolamo?" said White
Shirt.
"No, Mr. Garcia, it's an insult," said
the doorman.
White Shirt stepped down from the door into the street,
stopping within arm's length of Lobo. He said, "I
think maybe I do remember you now, because you have
very bad manners. I remember I was nice to you, and
I introduced you to a girl, our best girl, and now
she is crying because you scared her. I think you
said you were going to break her nose. Yes, I remember
you now. And here you are again, in front of my bar.
Do you apologize? No. You call me a thief in front
of my people, and then you call me 'son of bitch',
maybe you think you can say that and nothing happens?"
Lobo shifted from foot to foot. He sensed others
gathering in the shadows of the street, but he kept
his eyes on the hands of the stolid little man in
front of him. Lobo suddenly felt sober and exposed.
No backing down now though: "I want my fucking
money."
"Your 'fucking money', big man? I don't have
your 'fucking money'. But I tell you what, big man,
you're pretty tough, right? You like to break noses,
right? I tell you what, me, and you. We'll fight.
You want to hit me, right? If you can break my
nose, I'll give you 3,000 pesos, and we'll be even.
What do you think?"
Lobo knew there were at least three other men in
the street with them, not counting the doorman. He
could hear the scrape of their shoes on the asphalt
as they stood, waiting.
Lobo said, "You talk some tough shit, old man,
when you've got a bunch of guys to back you up."
"I don't talk shit, big man." He shouted
to the men: "All of you! Nobody helps me!
If the Gringo knocks me out, you give him 3,000 pesos
from the bar and let him go!"
"There," he continued to Lobo in a soft
voice, "It's just you and me. Like you said,
I'm an old man. This should be easy for you, like
beating up a girl."
Lobo stared at the man.
White Shirt kept talking: "Trust me, you and
me. Nobody else. You heard what I told them. You
have my word, my honor. Do you know what honor is,
Gringo?"
Lobo tensed, breathing.
"I think he's scared, Mr. Garcia!" shouted
one of the men.
"I think you're right. He smells scared. Are
you scared, big man?"
"He's all talk, Mr. Garcia! He's just a puto!"
"Is that so, big man, are you a puto, a faggot?"
"Fuck you!" said Lobo.
"Fuck me? No, you can't even fight me. But
I just thought of how you can make some money—I don't
mind if you are a puto, I can get you some work, you'll
make good money sucking on—"
Lobo punched quick as a snake, his right fist flying
up from the hip square into the man's nose, but it
kept going, throwing him off balance because the man's
head wasn't there anymore, then a blow to the stomach
hammered Lobo's breath out of his body and doubled
him forward and a split-second later another punch
to the right kidney sent him slamming head-first onto
the street. He gagged and tried to breathe, tried
to draw up his knees to cover his nuts and stomach.
He felt a pressure on his neck but couldn't see through
his tears.
"There, big man, you see? My boot is on your
throat. I can kill you if I want. But I think maybe
now you know that I am not a thief, that you are sorry
you ever insulted me. Is this so?"
Lobo gagged, wheezing for air.
"Good, big man, I'm happy to see that you learned
some manners." White Shirt then spoke to someone
else: "Get him out of here. He's bad for business."
"You want us to—"
"No. We don't know him. Just take him somewhere."
Someone was grabbing him by the armpits, and Lobo
heard the creaking metal squeak of a car door opening.