Читать книгу Devils And Dust - J.D. Rhoades - Страница 15

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THEY HAD started out as ten men and five women; now there were only eight men. The women were kept separate, in another one of the long, narrow barracks. The men rarely saw them, but they knew what was going on in that sealed building. They saw guards going in and out, heard the crude comments and jokes they made. It was making them all crazy, but none dared make a move against their captors. Not after what had happened to Diego.

They worked every day from just after dawn until just before sunset, in the blazing heat of summer. Some worked the fields, some were marched to the forest at the back of the compound to cut down trees and clear-cut land. A sawmill built at the edge of the cleared area turned the usable trees into lumber. Every morning, they’d be rousted from their beds by one or the other of their guards banging a metal ladle on a galvanized bucket, which he’d then leave inside the door. The bucket held their meager breakfast, usually thin oatmeal, occasionally a white corn porridge, similar to the mazamorra they’d grown up eating. Diego, who’d been north before, told them the dish was called “grits.”

That was before he was executed.

They’d been working the field three days after their arrival, always under the watchful eyes of two men with guns, radios, and belts hung with equipment that Ruben couldn’t identify. The guards varied, but the most common one was the blond man who’d been among the group that had first taken them prisoner. He liked to walk up and down the rows, weapon loose in his hands, and carry on a conversation with his fellow guards about what he’d done the night before, inside the women’s barracks. He always pitched his voice loud enough for the workers to hear. Most of them didn’t speak English, so the words meant nothing to them, but Blondie’s hand gestures and the kissing and slurping noises he made with his thick, wet lips were enough to get the message across. Ruben understood most of it, but he kept his head down. The guards also carried stiff hide whips like the one Blondie had wielded the night they were taken. The whips were used to “smarten up” anyone who lagged in their picking or “eyeballed” a guard, which was the word for anyone daring to look them in the eye. He’d heard Blondie refer to the crop as a sjambok, and he claimed it was made of rhino hide from South Africa. Whatever it was made of, it left nasty painful welts with even the lightest stroke. No one wanted to feel what it could do with real force behind it.

Ruben had been picking in the row next to Diego, his mind far away. He’d quickly learned the trick of letting his thoughts drift, going elsewhere. Going home. He thought about breakfasts with his aunt and uncle, who’d been raising him since Papa left. They told him Papa would come for him, would take him to America, away from the violence and the threats of kidnapping that still hung over the cities. He didn’t think of this place as America. America was the country of basketball and fast cars and pretty women. This place…he didn’t know what this was. Sometimes he wondered if the truck had crashed and he was in hell. But he didn’t see how that could be. He’d gone to Mass, made his confessions, said all the words and been granted absolution by Father Enrique. He looked up and saw Diego. The look on the older man’s face startled him out of his reverie. He heard Blondie coming up the row, chattering as usual.

“I tell you, bro,” he said, “I had that pretty lil’ chica, the one with the ponytail, an’ I was doin’ her from the back. I had that ponytail in one hand.” He demonstrated with a clenched fist. “An’ I was slappin’ her ass with the other. She starts goin’,” his voice went to a high, girlish falsetto “Ay, Papi. Ay, Papi…”

Diego roared with rage. He stood up and charged Blondie. The man was so surprised, he didn’t see the blow coming until it had connected with his chin. His head snapped back and Diego hit him again, this time in the nose. The other guard, a pudgy little moon-faced man with a camo boonie hat shading his fat, sweating face, was running toward them, yelling into his radio.

Time seemed to slow down for Ruben. He saw Blondie step back and bring his gun to bear. He saw and heard Diego screaming at him, as if daring him to fire. He saw Boonie Hat yank a black device from his belt and point it at Diego. Diego’s entire body went rigid, and he began to convulse. His eyes rolled back in his head and he fell to the ground shivering like a man in a fever. Blondie turned his gun on the other men, who’d stopped picking and stood up, faces blank with shock. There was blood around his mouth and his eyes were insane with rage. “BACK THE FUCK UP!” he screamed, although no one had made a move toward him. He stood there, breathing heavily, and then spoke to Boonie Hat. “Secure that bastard,” he said. Boonie Hat took something off his belt and bent over. Ruben saw the glint of handcuffs in the hot sunlight. Blondie raised his voice again. “LINE UP!” he shouted. “BY THE ROAD!” He glanced at Ruben, who was standing slack-jawed, goggling at where Diego lay twitching on the ground. “Boy,” he snapped, “tell them to line up. By the road.”

Ruben looked up, unable to speak. He looked at his brother. Edgar was crying.

“DO IT!” Blondie screamed. “Or I swear to Christ, I’ll kill every one of them. You bastards can be replaced. Easily.”

In a shaky voice, Ruben told them what to do. They complied, walking like shell-shocked troops stumbling off a battlefield. Ruben took his place in the line, on the other end from Edgar. He knew if he stood next to him, his brother would expect comfort. But he also knew Blondie’s cruelty firsthand. If the guard realized that Edgar was his little brother, who knew the sick ways he’d find to use that knowledge to torment him?

When they were in line, Blondie turned to Boonie Hat. “Cover them,” he said. He walked over to where Diego lay on the ground, cuffed and helpless. He pulled the sjambok off his belt and lashed it back and forth. It made that familiar chilling whistle as it cut through the air.

Muchacho,” he said. “You just bought yourself an all-expense paid tour of hell. And I’m gonna enjoy being your tour guide.” He kicked Diego in the stomach. The man doubled up, gagging and retching, robbed even of the air it would take to scream. Blondie raised the sjambok over his head and brought it down against Diego’s side with all his might. The blow split Diego’s shirt and cut into the skin beneath. This time Diego did scream, a raw, terrible sound of animal torment.

“Oh,” Blondie said, with exaggerated concern, “did that hurt?” He raised the whip again. Diego whined like a dog and tried to squirm away. Blood soaked his shirt where the sjambok had sliced open fabric and skin. Blondie followed him relentlessly and brought the whip down. Diego shrieked again, so loudly that some of the men put their hands over their ears. Ruben stole a look at Boonie Hat. The man’s eyes flicked back and forth between the line of trembling men and the torture going on a few feet away. He looked as if he was going to be sick.

“Please,” Ruben whispered to him. “Please. Make him stop.”

Boonie Hat turned back to him. His piggy little eyes narrowed. “Shut up,” he said, “unless you want to take his place.” Another whistle, another wet sound of splitting flesh, another scream. Boonie Hat flinched, but he made no other move. Ruben closed his eyes.

From behind him, he heard the sound of an engine. He turned slightly to see a large black pickup truck speeding down the dirt road toward them. The truck braked to a stop, kicking up a cloud of dust that blew up around the line of standing men. Blondie stopped his beating and turned to watch.

The truck just sat there, the only sounds the rumble of the engine and Diego’s sobs and whimpers. The windows of the truck so heavily tinted there was no way to see inside. Ruben felt a shiver of dread, an atavistic impulse to flee whatever was behind that darkness. The door opened and a man stepped out of the driver’s side. It was the hairless man that had been there when they were taken, the man who had served as the judge at their mock trial. Another man holding a shotgun climbed out of the passenger seat. The bald man walked past the line of men as if he didn’t notice them, over to where Blondie stood over Diego.

“Sergeant,” he said. “Report.”

Blondie gestured with the sjambok. “Son of a bitch attacked me, General.”

“Language, Sergeant Kinney,” the man said.

“Sorry, sir.”

The bald man bent over to look at Diego. He stood up and looked at the blood on Blondie’s mouth. “Corporal Bender,” he said over his shoulder. “Is this true?”

“Yes sir,” Boonie Hat replied. “Guy went crazy. Charged at Caleb—I mean, Sergeant Kinney—and busted him in the mouth.”

“Very well,” the bald man said. “Put him in the back of the truck. We’re taking him to Building Three.”

Blondie bent over and grabbed the back of Diego’s shirt. “On your feet,” he ordered. He was smiling like a child who’d just gotten everything he wanted for Christmas.

“The trial will commence immediately. Sentence will be carried out at sunset. No rations tonight.” From down the line, Ruben heard a man groan. Dinner was no better than breakfast, usually just some sort of stew with a little bit of meat in it and some bread, but it was all they had. Ruben felt his own stomach cramp with disappointed hunger. The General pointed at the man who’d groaned. “And none for that one tomorrow. Now, back to work.” Blondie had pulled Diego to his feet and was dragging him stumbling over to the bed of the truck.

“You heard the General,” Bender shouted. “Back to work!” Slowly, the men shuffled back toward the field, their heads down. Ruben noted how skinny they were getting. He’d begun seeing his own ribs visible beneath the flesh, and his brother’s. They’re working us to death. They mean to kill us all.

Devils And Dust

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