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Author: Subject: Trouble with Chato
Osprey
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[*] posted on 5-25-2008 at 06:29 PM
Trouble with Chato


No More Trouble with Chato

Chato always knows where to find me. He knows I’m a creature of habit. He just walked into Little Rudy’s in Redondo, bought me a drink, slapped me on the back and took the bar stool next to me. My given name is Gaylen Morris but I never used it. Monkey is my stir name and that’s what Chato knows me by.

“Hey, Monkey, you still got the face. How would you like to sell it for ten thousand dollars amigo? How would you like that? My old cop buddies in Ensenada are still buying a couple of SUV’s a week. They pay big. I made six or seven runs at $5,000 each but my gringo wheel man took his money and ran away to Florida. How about you Monkey? It’s quick, easy money working for the Policia Mexicana. I just need your surfer’s face, guero, the pony tail, the blond beard incase the wrong people stop us between the border and Ensenada.

They want black Tahoe’s. I’ll pop em around Palm Springs; got to move back from the border because it’s overworked right now. All you do is drive em. I’ll jack em to get the keys, stash em for three or four days til the hotsheet settles down. Then you and I just deliver the rigs to Mexico. The fix is on at customs in Tecate – we just glide in there between six and six thirty in the morning when our guy on the inside is there and he waves us on through. Then we jam to Ensenada, see the man, catch a bus back to the border. All we need is driver’s license and passports. You got em Monkey?”

“I can get em. $2,500 U.S. per run, I just drive?”

“That’s it. I stole some old surfboards, we put em on top for insurance. Have never been stopped. Smooth and safe, amigo. Easy money.”

It all made sense. Nobody looks more mean Mexican than Ernesto “Chato” Flores. He needs a gringo blondie. Since he was buying I ordered a shot of Hornitos. Little Rudy’s was filling up. No pool and patio people in here – edge people, people on society’s rim, fuzzy looking men and a few women hiding in plain site. It would be good to get my hands on some cash, get away somewhere, some place real, dull and non-dangerous.

“Okay Chato, when and where?”

“Give me your cell phone number. I’ll let you know in the next couple days.”

On the first run there was just a minute or so of panic when we were in line at the Tecate gate. Chato couldn’t see or recognize our guy. While the line crept forward, we were both thinking ‘way too fast’, we kept checking our watches and eyeballing all the gate guards. In nothing flat we were next in line and Chato still couldn’t see him. Just as we pulled up to the gate Chato saw him coming out of the office. The guy just whistled to get our guard’s attention, gave an almost unseen hand signal and the guard waved us through. We were both holding up our driver’s licenses, passports. The guard saw a fairly new black Tahoe with California plates, two well-worn surfboards on the roof rack, a blondie surf bum driving and his darker pal in the passenger seat.

After that it was smooth sailing. We met some cops on the beach, got the money, gave them the vehicle, caught a cab to the bus station and were back across the border in no time at all. Chato disappeared back into the woodwork, I took a bus to Torrence, walked a few blocks to my little apartment looking forward to more runs.

The next run was almost two weeks later and when Chato picked me up it answered the question about the delay. His left hand was heavily bandaged. I didn’t even have to ask him what happened when he jacked the SUV.

“P-nche perro.”

I didn’t press it. He must not have seen the big dog when he stopped the rig, pointed the gun at the driver and waved him out of the car. Doesn’t take much imagination to see what might have happened next.

Anyway, our guy was at the gate, right on time, waved us through at six fifteen and we were on our way. The sun was turning the canyons to gold on Mexico 3 between Tecate and Ensenada and we were making good time when we saw the lights blinking on the highway ahead. Two black and whites with lights flashing, four uniformed cops were just waving through a big empty flatbed.

I pulled up, stopped, held up my driver’s license and passport. Chato did the same.

“Where you going?” the cop asked.

“Ensenada.” I said.

“Pull over to the side, move up there.” He pointed to the side of the road to a spot behind the second police car.

He motioned for us to turn off the car, get out so they could check it. I opened all the door locks, got out and opened the back. The rig was empty, spotless – the owner or Chato, didn’t matter to me but it was obviously clean as a whistle. They had no dogs.

They were good. I’ll say that. They took all our papers, everything from the glove box over to the car, used the radio, or pretended to. Chato had showed me the registration and we both told them we borrowed the car from my cousin, John Enright of Palm Desert, California, that we going surfing south of Ensenada.

More radio talk (or radio acting).






Then they told us they were going to have to arrest us, hold us for a day or two while they transported the vehicle on a flatbed to an impound yard in Ensenada. It was finally time for some palaver. Chato told them they should first talk to a friend of his, a high-ranking police official in their very own jurisdiction. He punched in a number in his cell phone, handed it to the head cop. The cop put the phone to his ear, turned on his heel, walked away to a place where we couldn’t hear the conversation. He seemed to talk forever – it was like waiting for the jury to come out to give their verdict. We were both sweating bullets.

He folded the phone, smiled, gave it back to Chato then walked away again motioning all the officers to his side. He spoke only a few words and they burst into uproarious laughter. They were holding their sides when they walked back over to us.

“Do you know the term bajo la mesa, under the table? Your friend, the Commandante got caught. He would not share so he is no more. Seńor Morris, you may go. Mr. Flores will come to Ensenada with us to straighten all of this out. It may take some time. If we see you again, you will be arrested. Bien Viaje.”

It was closer to Ensenada than Tecate so I started walking south. About nine a gringo in a green and white bronco picked me up, gave me a lift to town. I walked to the bus station and had no trouble getting home.

Nothin’ more came my way. I did see a little piece on the tube about a carjacking gone bad in Hemet where they found a woman, Karen Enright, a wife and mother of two from Banning, shot to death along with her three year old Rotweiller dog, Storm. No witnesses, no leads. Nothin’ about SUV’s, Mexico, Mexicans – just some bad guy wanted a big car, would stop at nothin’ to get it.

That was months ago. I still hang around Little Rudy’s – the more time that passes without seeing Chato’s face, the luckier I feel. I’m curious of course; wonder what happened to the big car, to the Commandante, to Chato. I’m not curious enough to go pokin’ around down there. People have many reasons to travel to the Baja. Some people have reasons to stay up north here, stay here and wonder what changes are taking place down there. Some things change very, very slowly, others, quick, like a snake striking, like you can’t see it coming. You could get hit, either place. Wherever you go, there you are.
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lindsay
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[*] posted on 5-26-2008 at 11:00 PM
Thanks for Sharing Your Stories!!


Hola Osprey,

I have not posted for awhile but I always enjoy reading your stories so thanks for sharing your writing with us. I'm off to Mulege with Sara for a family visit on Wednesday and we're looking forward to the trip since we have not been there since October...too long!!

Thanks again for your always vivid and thoughtful stories. Reading your writing is also motivation to write some of my own Baja moments down so I can share them with Sara someday. Hope all is well with you and best wishes from San Diego!!
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bobw
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[*] posted on 5-27-2008 at 06:44 AM


Damn good read first thing in the morning....
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gringette
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[*] posted on 6-6-2008 at 01:47 AM


:) love, LOVE your writing Osprey. you make your characters so crisp! and without wasting a lot of time.


i'm imagining Little Rudy's to be the Poopdeck in Hermosa :biggrin:




setting sun deals bands of gold; there\'s velvet in eyes in mexico.
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CaboRon
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[*] posted on 6-6-2008 at 07:31 AM


Great Story !! I have often wondered what happened to him after he and Batman broke up.

CaboRon
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