Simon had seen places like this on television. But he was still not prepared for what he faced. They crossed the main road and started up a road that was barely more than a steep alley. The hill they climbed was separated from Ojinaga’s other districts by the north-south highway and a narrow gorge. The cone-shaped hill was carved into a series of uneven steps, each lined by a circular lane. Houses of every size and description lined these roads, everything from brightly painted mansions to windowless hovels.
The road grew worse the higher they climbed. The pavement was rutted, the potholes deep. They passed a couple of cars descending the grade in slow motion, dipping and rocking over the pitted surface. They climbed at such an angle Simon was pressed back into his seat.
At a particularly steep juncture Pedro stopped, which entailed pressing both feet on the brakes and pulling out the hand brake as well. He squinted around, muttering to himself. Then he put the truck back in gear, raced the engine, and took a right. The roads circling the hill were not paved at all. The truck’s engine emitted a trickle of steam from either side of the hood.
Simon asked, “Do you know where we’re going?”
“Maybe.”
“Should we ask someone?”
“They will not tell us. The professor is dead. We are strangers. This is Mexico.”
“Why didn’t we ask Sofia?”
Pedro took his eye off the road long enough to cast Simon a scornful look. “She has never been to this place.”
“I thought you said she was the professor’s friend.”
“She was. But this hill is Boys’ Town.”
Simon waited. When Pedro said nothing more, he pressed. “That means what exactly?”
“It is where the bad women worked. Before. Some say there are still a few houses. But I do not think this is true. Enrique has shut down all the ones we know of.” Pedro spun the wheel and turned the truck as far as he could manage. “It is not this street. We must go up another level.”
All Simon could see were blank walls, most of rusting metal. A few were solid concrete-block topped with barbed wire. Inside the fences, skinny dogs tracked their progress and barked. “How can you tell?”
“The professor, he bought this home because he loved his view of the mountains.” Pedro waved at the cracked and grimy front windshield. “We have gone too far around the hill. You cannot see the mountains from here.”
Reversing the car took nine tight maneuvers. Pedro retraced his route, then turned up the hill. He took another left, and this time Simon understood why. A hundred meters after they turned, the mountains emerged in all their glory. From this height, the view was stupendous, a rich array of desert tones and jagged peaks that laced the far horizon.
Then Simon’s attention was drawn to the lane ahead. “Stop!”
Pedro hit the brakes. “What’s the matter?”
“Back up!”
“But the professor’s house—”
“That’s the attacker’s car!”
Pedro clearly did not believe him, but he reversed the truck back around the bend. “Señor Simon, the town is full of dark SUVs.”
“I’ve seen that one often enough to be certain.” He opened his door. “Turn your truck around and park where he won’t see you if he leaves.”
Pedro’s face showed rising alarm. “What are you doing?”
Simon shut his door. “I’ll be right back.”
Pedro watched Simon move away from the pickup. The man was everything Sofia feared. He was a threat to the orphanage. He did not belong. He was a wastrel. Yet in spite of it all, Pedro agreed with Harold. He liked Simon. He liked him very much.
The gringo had been hunted by a very bad man. This bad man was still out there somewhere. Why the hunter was so intent on Simon, Pedro had no idea. Many things in the border country made no sense. But Pedro knew one thing with absolute certainty. People had been afraid for too long. And Simon was not ruled by fear.
Back at the orphanage, Simon had thought Pedro was angry with him. But this was simply not true. Pedro always left an argument with his sister feeling exhausted. He could work all day in the sun and still not be nearly as weary as he felt after five minutes with Sofia. When she started on one of those tirades, he felt like a wet dishrag being twisted in her strong hands, until every drop of energy was wrenched out.
But nothing would have come from telling Sofia what he felt. Which was this: Simon’s coming was an act of God.
The orphanage was in serious trouble. For weeks, Pedro and Harold had been praying for a miracle. And Harold thought Simon Orwell was the miracle they had been waiting for. Why Harold felt this way, Pedro had no idea. And he did not need to know. He trusted Harold’s judgment. For him, that was enough.
Pedro spent a great deal of his time observing from the periphery. Especially when he was in the company of Enrique. Around the mayor, Pedro went unnoticed. He used such times to observe the life from which he had been excluded. He saw how families had to rely upon each other. How Mexican parents were the only real authority that mattered. Most schools were abysmal failures. Parents were the main educators of their children. They were the source of their children’s identity. And for most Mexicans, success was just another word for survival.
Most Mexican families did not seek to raise their children up to positions beyond their own. That was a confusing trait they observed north of the border. What good came of this, when the children were pushed away, never to return? Here in Mexico, family was everything. The children’s first responsibility was to be there when it mattered most and take care of their own. When their parents grew old, the children saw to their parents’ needs.
Pedro felt his orphan status every day. It was a weight he had learned to carry and live with. But he never forgot his heritage. And he never stopped giving thanks for Harold. That one blessing made up for all the misfortune and the sorrow Pedro had known.
He knew the situation within most state orphanages. He had visited several with Enrique. Those encounters had given him terrible nightmares. How close he had come to enduring the same tragic fate as these children. How vital it was that Harold’s orphanage find the resources necessary to survive.
Harold had done far more for Pedro than give him a sense of identity. Harold had inspired him.
Many of the visiting missionaries saw Pedro as a glorified janitor for a grimy border town. But thanks to Harold, Pedro knew different.
His goal in life was to continue Harold’s dream and take over running the orphanage when it was time. For now, he protected the orphanage from his position within the city government. He needed no thanks. He desired no recognition. He knew, Harold knew, God knew. For Pedro, that was enough.
He backed the pickup into an alley where shadows from the neighboring wall masked it from the sight of any passing vehicle. Then he slipped from the pickup and followed Simon. The young man might indeed be the answer to their prayers. But only if Pedro could keep him alive.
And something else. Something vital. Pedro needed to be certain, absolutely positive, that God was behind Simon’s arrival. After all, Sofia could in fact be right. Simon could be nothing more than a threat. Pedro considered it his responsibility to be certain. One way or the other.
So as he left the alley, he sent a swift plea up toward heaven. God, please give me a sign. If Simon is indeed the answer we have been praying for, please show me this clearly. The lives of the children depended upon Pedro getting this one right.
He knew Simon carried a huge weight. Pedro had heard from his sister how Simon had wasted his life. But what man was free from wrongful deeds? And Pedro had learned from Harold that no man was a failure as long as he continued to draw breath. Simon might have given up on himself. But God had not given up on Simon. Of this Pedro was certain.
And one other thing he knew. One thing that Sofia in her agitated fear either did not see or chose to ignore. Harold was only getting started with this one. Pedro had seen Harold’s impact on too many people to question his ability to change a life’s course.
Pedro ran across the dusty road. Simon had no idea what was in store, just around the next bend.