173408.fb2 Hail Mary - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 27

Hail Mary - читать онлайн бесплатно полную версию книги . Страница 27

Chapter Twenty-six

We waited upstairs in a next-door dive bar called Tacos Luceros. Our seats were near the railing, which overlooked the fish market and some of downtown Ensenada.

Even from here, the stink of fish was heavy. I suspected I was going to smell like it for some days to come. A prospect I wasn’t looking forward to.

Just to mix things up a little, we were drinking Tecate. We had already crushed a bowl of chips, and soon, the cute waitress was bringing us more. As she set the bowl down, along with more salsa, she smiled shyly at me. As she left, I decided her curved hips might just have been perfect.

“ Too skinny,” said Sanchez, wrinkling his nose.

“ If she had smiled at you, she would have been perfect.”

“ If she smiled at me, Danielle would have come down here and tear apart her restaurant.”

“ Your wife scares me,” I said.

“ Me, too.”

“ But I admire her…passion,” I said.

“ Me, too,” said Sanchez. “So, do we have a plan, muchacho?”

“ A plan for what?”

“ In case we come across La Bonita?”

We had a nice view of the parking lot leading up to the fish market. I also had a nice view of the nearby harbor and a lot of Spanish-style architecture with pale yellow and red walls. The sun was shining nearly straight down and, other than the strong fish stink, I could have been chillaxing on my balcony in Huntington Beach. I idly wondered what Jack was up to. Probably busy putting out some fires.

“ Well?” said Sanchez.

I drank more Tecate and finally shrugged. “No clue.”

A leggy young lady strolled beneath us. Her legs, I saw, had a bruise or two. Her shorts were too short, and her top was too tight.

“ Prostitute?” I said to Sanchez.

He nodded. “Would be my guess.”

“ Are we generalizing?”

“ And stereotyping,” he said.

“ We’re on a roll,” I said.

Sanchez drank more beer. “So what do you hope to accomplish by coming here, kemosabe?”

I thought about that. Sanchez had a way of focusing my thoughts, which was a good thing. “I would like to convince certain parties to give up their nefarious ways.”

“ And what are their nefarious ways?”

“ The practice of using live dogs as bait, and, perhaps to convince said parties that cutting up live sharks is a shitty thing to do.”

“ We can’t shut them all down, Knighthorse,” said Sanchez.

“ One’s enough,” I said. “For now.”

“ You do realize that by shutting one down you might be eliminating the sole source of income for an entire family? Perhaps many families. An ethical paradox.”

I nodded. “By saving innocent creatures, I could hurt an innocent family.”

“ So how do you come to terms with it, Knighthorse?”

“ Because it’s not really a paradox, since the innocent creatures have no choice.”

“ And the family does?”

“ The hunters do. The hunter does not have to mistreat the kill.”

Sanchez drank some more beer and watched the scene below us. Without looking at me, he said. “You do realize we might be running for the border after this with the Federales on our asses?”

I grinned. “Wouldn’t have it any other way.”

“ Shit,” he said.

A few minutes later, with the second batch of chips nearly finished, a young man in a tank top came over to our table. The smell of rotting fish preceded him.

I looked at Sanchez. “I think our escort has arrived.”