Authors: Sylvia Sarno
Kika had spent the past two days shuttling back and forth between her hotel room and her little sanctuary where she had petitioned the Virgin Mary for guidance. Now that her formal novena to Mary was completed it was time for her to leave Mesa Grande.
Kika returned to her hotel and gathered her belongings. After promising her friends she would visit again soon, Kika refueled her car at a station down the road. She purchased a hot cup of coffee from the station’s convenience store, returned to her car, and turned on her phone.
Before she started for San Diego, Kika wanted to check the many messages she was sure had accumulated over the past week. The first message from San Diego detective Tom Long took her by surprise. “Ms. Garcia. We need to talk to you right away. As soon as you get this message, call us. It’s an emergency.” The second message, from a CPS co-worker brought terror to her heart. “It’s all over the newspapers, Kika. They say you kidnapped the Olson boy. You must come home to clear your name!”
The remaining voicemail messages were all the same: Travis Olson had disappeared and the police were searching for her. Her hands shaking, Kika logged onto the Internet and read about the case. Apparently Travis Olson had disappeared from his backyard on October 2, the same night she had left for Tijuana. The police seemed to have no leads as of yet, except for her.
From the tone of the news reports it was clear that everyone believed Kika was a crazed kidnapper.
What happened to that sweet little boy? And why do they suspect me?
The answer came to Kika swiftly, like a slap in the face. She had accused Ann and Richard Olson of abusing their child,
and she had threatened to remove Travis from his home. More, Kika had quit her job suddenly. Her resignation letter was one big rant against abusive parents and CPS’s inability to protect children. The whole world must have concluded that she had made good on her threat.
But who would want to hurt the child?
The answer sent Kika’s heart plummeting. She pictured Ann Olson screaming at her cowering child, the boy’s hands to his face trying to defend himself. “Mary, Mother of God,” she whispered, “please protect him.”
On the way to San Diego, Kika stopped at a desert rest stop to use the facilities. After her initial suspicion that Ann Olson had done away with her son, Kika had calmed down enough to realize that maybe she was letting her emotions influence her objectivity.
Clearly, Ann was a difficult woman with an anger problem. The fact that the police had been called to her house because she had lost her temper with her son proved it. More, Mrs. Olson had flat out refused to consider CPS services—services that could have helped her improve the way she interacted with her child. Her fancy lawyer had even threatened to sue Kika personally if she didn’t back off. But none of this actually proved that Ann had kidnapped—or worse—murdered her own child.
Leaving the restroom, Kika spotted a bench under a shady tree. Sheltered from the sun’s glare, she pulled out her phone. Before resuming her journey north, she wanted to see if there were any new developments in the Olson case. Ann Olson’s name in Google returned hundreds of hits. She scrolled down to an account of the press conference the morning after Travis disappeared. A photograph of Ann Olson popped up. Kika studied Ann’s image. Gone was Ann’s haughtiness, gone was her anger. All that remained of the woman she despised was a look of uncomprehending terror. Kika felt a pang of pity.
The next link set Kika’s heart beating faster. It was a video-clip of her nemesis, in her home, talking about her failed efforts to find her son. In the video, Ann admitted that she had made mistakes. “My husband tried to talk me out of Tijuana, but I wouldn’t listen,” Ann said. “It’s a pattern
with me, I guess. I get an idea into my head and I go with it. Even…” Her voice breaking, she turned from the camera. “If it’s a little crazy.”
A more reasonable Ann...
Kika wondered, with sudden insight, whether she had let her own guilt in failing little Frankie Barton cloud her judgment about Ann. Tears came to her eyes. It was true. She had come down hard on the Olsons, to prove to herself that she was still capable of protecting a child.
7:00 A.M
.
T
he sole illumination in the closet that was Ann’s prison was a thin band of light at the bottom of the metal door. The space was barely large enough for her and what appeared to be a stack of wooden crates piled to the low ceiling. Ann tried to loosen the thick ropes that held her wrists behind her back, but they were tied too tightly. Her legs bound at the knees, it was difficult to sit up.
She remembered screaming for water after she was dragged through the six-foot-high tunnel and dumped in this dark closet. She was thirsty, her head ached, and she felt feverish. One of her jailers, a hairy brute with glistening arms, had doused her with a bucket of it. “Here’s your water!” he had bellowed before taping her mouth shut. Then he rifled through her pockets and removed her wallet and phone. “Just in case,” he smirked.
Ann lay in the timeless darkness trying to connect everything she knew about her son and the missing children to the fact that she had apparently discovered a drug smuggling tunnel.
Jesús Ramirez and his friends hung around this place. Could these men have captured him?
And what about Kika Garcia? The social worker was in Mexico. Her boyfriend’s family was involved in the drug trade. The Valdez family lived close to the border. Their son, Pedro, disappeared after angering a passerby, a Latino man. The Valdez family seemed awash in cash. After the Azizs were robbed in Mexico, their daughter disappeared and their house was vandalized. Sabela Villarreal’s Mexican nanny had kidnapped her. All of these facts pointed to Mexico and its criminal underworld.
The door to Ann’s prison swung open, startling her. The glare of her jailer’s flashlight hurt her eyes. The brute jerked Ann up and dragged her into the narrow passageway. Thick arms pulled her across the plywood flooring. The light from the flashlight under her captor’s arm bobbed at the crude tunnel walls. Her backside burned from being dragged across the splintered wood. Her jailer’s sour breath came in fitful bursts at her
neck, as he strained under the weight of her. If it weren’t for the tape over her mouth Ann would have thrown up.
Animal Man
, as Ann came to think of him, pulled her down the narrow space, an offshoot of the wider tunnel she had first entered. Dropping her in front of a wide, dark curtain, he mumbled something in Spanish. A man’s voice on the other side of the curtain barked, “
Ven adentro!
” Animal Man heaved Ann into the space and threw her to the ground.
On her belly, bound and taped, Ann managed to lift her head and look around. The well-lit room appeared to be a sort of office. A desk, a metal filing cabinet, and plastic folding chairs lined the walls. There were wide, scuffed doors at the back of the space. She turned her head to get a look at the man who had admitted them. She saw trousered legs moving behind her.
Straining her head further, Ann glimpsed the edge of her captor’s face before he turned and walked to the other side of the room. He stopped at a makeshift bar wedged between two cabinets and poured himself a drink. The man’s left ear was missing. He was the same man in Blackmart’s gallery the night she was attacked.
Earless Man
swung around, his eyes slowly roving over Ann’s face, torn shirt, and muddied jeans. He signaled Animal Man to turn her over and remove the tape from her mouth. Animal Man flipped Ann onto her back with his booted foot then he reached down and ripped the heavy tape off. Thin pinpricks of blood beaded on her lips. Wincing, Ann licked them. The blood tasted like warm salt.
Earless Man spoke sharply to Animal Man, apparently chastising him for his rough treatment of her. Ann closed her eyes, relieved that, at least for now, more physical pain was not likely. When she looked up, she saw Animal Man reaching for his knife. Before she could protest, he cut the ropes that bound her legs.
Earless Man took a cloth handkerchief from the pocket of his sports jacket. Indicating a chair by the wooden desk at the wall, he said to Animal Man. “
Ponla en esa silla y limpia la sangre de su boca.”
Animal Man hoisted Ann up. Taking more care with her than he had before, he guided her to a sitting position. His face close to hers, he wiped the blood from her mouth.
Her mouth clean and her legs free, Ann’s courage returned. “Could I have some water, please?”
Earless Man nodded to the tray at his elbow. “Untie her arms and get her some water,” he said in English. He swung a chair in front of Ann and straddled it, his face inches from hers.
Earless Man smelled like cigarettes and whiskey. His swarthy skin was dotted with large pores and black freckles and was loose, like stretched elastic that once released doesn’t regain its shape. His shadowy eyes looked her over again, this time with more interest. They lingered on her sweaty tee shirt clinging to her breasts, before moving on to her flat stomach. Ann hunched forward in a feeble attempt to ward off his disturbing gaze.
Earless Man’s rubbery lips opened slightly. His eyes were softer. “Want more water?”
She might not have a chance at water later. “Yes, please.” She gulped down her drink.
Earless Man’s voice rang out, “Who are you and what are you doing here?”
The water went down the wrong way. Ann coughed. Wiping her mouth with the back of her hand, she took her time formulating her response. She concluded that telling the truth was less dangerous than lying. “My name is Ann Olson. I’m looking for my son, Travis. He was taken from our home six days ago. Three of the missing kids are Mexican. You see, there’s this woman—”
“Shut up!” Earless Man barked. “I saw you at Blackmart’s gallery the other night. Why are you following me around? Do you know what you’ve done, coming here? You’ve put us all at risk. Do you understand? How the hell did you find this place?”
Ann started to tremble. “I just want my son. I’ll never mention this place. I swear. I don’t want to get involved in your business. I don’t care
what you’re doing. I think drugs should be legalized.” She talked rapidly trying to get his darkening face to understand that she wouldn’t breathe a word of any if this if they would just—
Earless Man stood up and kicked his chair. It fell into the metal cabinet with a loud clatter. “Damn your son! You know how many millions pass through this tunnel? Do you have any idea? Who else knows about this place?”
If she told them that no one knew her whereabouts, they’d kill her right away. If Ann admitted that Marty Ramirez told her about the warehouse, she would be putting
her
at risk. “Tell me what you’ve done with Jesús Ramirez,” she said. “And then I’ll tell you how I came here.”
Earless Man’s eyes widened with surprise. “You’ve got nothing to bargain with,
gringa
.” He waved at her body. “Nothing. Besides, I’m in charge here, not you!” He pulled a gun from his waistband. “You see this? I can blow your
gringa
brains out with my little finger. That’s what you mean to me, less than nothing. But before I do, I need to know how you found this place and why the devil you’re following me around!”
Ann knew she was taking a chance, that at any moment this crazy drug dealer could do as he threatened. She swallowed hard. “I can be useful to you. If you’ll let me.”
A ghost of a smile on his lips, Earless man waved her on.
She sat up straighter. “No one would suspect me. I’ll make you money. But first I’ll need a shower and new clothes.” She glared at Animal Man, “He dumped water all over me. Look, I’m covered in dirt. That’s no way to treat a lady. And I want some food. I haven’t eaten in days.” She swallowed hard. Offering to sell drugs for these creeps made her sick.
Earless man’s smile was shrewd and mocking. He seemed to know that Ann would say anything. The gun still in his hand, he crossed his arms and looked her over again, this time more carefully.
Ann shrank back.
Earless Man slipped his gun into his belt. Before she knew what was happening, Animal Man grabbed Ann’s arms from behind and started winding heavy rope around her wrists. Earless Man gripped Ann’s throat
with one hand while he reached down and pulled at her shirt with the other. She tried to kick him away, but the beast had straddled her, pinning her legs to the chair. His leering face close to hers, he slipped his fingers through a hole in her shirt and worked his way into her bra.
When he pinched her nipple, she screamed.
Earless Man’s phone rang. Cursing, he stood up.
Ann caught the Spanish words,
night
and
guns
.
His conversation ended, Earless Man turned back to Ann, a pensive look on his face.
When Animal Man started winding the rope around her legs, Ann tried to kick him away. His eyes glistening, Earless Man watched Animal Man jerk her swinging legs off the chair and onto the dirt floor.
Ann felt her shirt riding up over her abdomen.
Earless Man’s face broke into an evil grin.
Horrified, Ann struggled to cover herself.
Licking his lips, Earless Man reached for her.
9:00 P.M
.
K
ika returned to her home in La Jolla. She had spent the past eight hours at police headquarters, answering questions about her whereabouts, her CPS work on the Olson case, and more. The FBI man, Julian Fox—his last name suited him perfectly—seemed particularly annoyed that she had managed to elude his connection in Mexico. The agent was also surprised that she declined legal representation. Kika explained that she wished to be as helpful and non-confrontational as possible, having caused the Olsons so much trouble in the past. The police detective, who was also present at the interview, seemed to understand.
Kika kicked off her shoes and lay down on her bed. Bits of the grueling interview at police headquarters swirled in her head as she reached for her ringing telephone. It was Max.
“I finally got out of that place,” she said to her lover. “They asked me to take a lie detector test. Of course I passed. But that didn’t stop them from having me followed home. When I asked if the other missing children were related to the Olsons’ case, they were evasive. I know, Max. Five children missing this year alone is a lot of kids. I’m going to see Ann first thing in the morning to see how I can help. I’ll call you tomorrow.” She told Max she loved him and hung up the phone.