Vice

Natalia is nowhere to be found as I leave the mansion. Not that I can go looking for her. With the bi-polar mood Fernando is in today, if anyone suspects I’m purposefully seeking her out, especially Ocho, then I’m in big trouble. I leave the grounds of the Villalobos estate on foot. There are gardeners everywhere, trimming and clipping at bushes, edging the lawn, working tirelessly to make the place look beautiful. I see Ocho meandering along the workers along the perimeter of the grounds, walking parallel to me as I head toward the long, wide wood chipped pathway that cuts into the forest.

Obviously he didn’t fall into one of Fernando’s game traps and get killed yesterday when he wandered off alone, more’s the pity. I can’t shake the feeling that he’s bad fucking news. He’s always there. Always lurking, always watching. He sees everything, and he probably hears everything, too. I don’t believe for a second that he doesn’t speak English. Or at least understand it. I keep a steady, even pace. I’d love to break into a run and lose the fucker, but running around places like this generally makes you look guilty. I don’t need a slug to the back just because I want to shake Ocho.

So, walking. I walk into the forest, and I continue to walk. I don’t deviate from the track the cars use to travel to the estate. Without anyone here to guide me, I’m all too aware that I could put a foot wrong and get blown up by one of Fernando’s booby traps. And wouldn’t that just be fucking perfect?

I know where I left the scrambler. I need to make sure it’s got gas and that it’s still running okay. I head south when the track splits. The journey from the bunker to the Villalobos estate didn’t seem all that long when I was in the car with Ocho the first day I arrived in Orellana, but now, on foot, it feels like miles and miles. The sun is high in the sky by the time I reach the bunker. Natalia told me the old ruined outbuildings here, decayed and standing in ruin, were rigged with traps, too, so I don’t go inside. I skirt around the small settlement, heading to the west, to where I stowed the scrambler.

Only, when I get to the small clearing where I left the Yamaha, the clearing is empty.

“What the fuck?” I know this is where I left it. I have no doubt in my mind. I’m not in the habit of forgetting where I leave vehicles, even if it is in the forest and all you can see for miles is trees. I search the area, scanning the ground for signs of the bike, but I don’t find anything. The ground is soft; after all that rain yesterday, even the deepest, most defined tracks from a set of tires would be gone. Mud sucks at my boots as I cross the clearing, swearing under my breath.

Natalia said the bike was still here. She thought it was yesterday, at least. That means it must have been taken recently, and she’s not being kept in the loop. Am I surprised by this? No, not really. It was a miracle they let me keep my gun on me for so long. I think if I hadn’t used it to shoot William, I’d probably still have it. But a mode of transportation? A means of escaping without them knowing? Fernando wouldn’t stand for that, especially if he thinks there’s a two-million-dollar deal on the line.

“Fuck.” I crouch down, resting my elbows on my knees, trying to think. This isn’t the end of the world. Yes, having the scrambler would have been perfect. It’s designed to excel on rough, uneven terrain and that’s what I’m dealing with around here. But there are Humvees and Patriots back at the estate, too, which are also designed for navigating crazy landscapes. I can take one of those when the time comes. And hell, maybe it’ll be safer if there are two people inside.

God, I don’t even know why I’m even considering something like that. Natalia may not want to come with me. If her father is dead, what’s to say she won’t want to stay here, at the estate? It’s worth a small fucking fortune. The compound and the Widow Makers’ clubhouse is a far cry from the luxury she’s used to.

“You look like the world has ended.”

I jump up, my balisong already in my hand, fully prepared to stab whoever is standing behind me. It takes a full second for me to process the fact that it’s a woman’s voice I’ve heard, and that it’s Natalia hovering on the edge of the clearing, with a backpack slung over her shoulders. Her hair hangs down in a long braid. She’s wearing a long-sleeved shirt with the sleeves rolled up, and some serious hiking boots, like she’s planning on taking off up a mountain.

“So you found me, huh?” I smile at her, flicking the knife over in my hand to retract the blade.

“Not hard to do,” she replies. “You left a track that could probably be seen from outer space.”

She’s right, I’m sure. I’m used to moving through desert and bayou, and I’m good at concealing my movements usually, but in this kind of overgrown, wild forest, even my best efforts are for nothing. I raise an eyebrow at her. “I’ll try not to be too offended. Are you out here following me, or are you about to fly the coop?” I point to her bag.

She pulls a wry expression, looking off into the trees. She doesn’t want to look me in the eye. “I thought,” she starts. “I thought I should probably take you to her. To Laura.” I’m shocked. Too surprised to speak. When I refrain from saying anything, she continues. “Higher up into the mountains, we have a burial site. It’s not much, but that’s where my father told me she had been taken. If you would like to go, to pay your respects to her, I could show you where it is.”





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