double bourbon within minutes of his arrival.
âBe a sport,â he said, the fumes on his breath thick enough to ignite, âand spring for another.â And another, and another, as it turned out.
Adele had cautioned me about Dominick Capra, and for good reason. Capra was obsessed with the criminality of the new immigrants and the threat they posed to the nation. He spewed bigotry with every breath.
âFirst of all, thereâs no Russian mob,â he told me at one point. âWhat you got in Brighton Beach is a Jewish mob. And itâs bigger than the fuckinâ wops ever were.â At another, he declared, ticking the items off on his fingers. âThereâs a Rumanian mob, a Bulgarian mob, an Israeli mob, a Nigerian mob. Thereâs mobs from ten different parts of China. Hell, you could just make a list of the worldâs busted-out countries and thereâd be organized criminals emigrating from every fucking province.â
I didnât react to Capraâs tirade, probably because my concentration was still focused on my little talk with Adele. But then Capra surprised me with something relevant and my focus shifted abruptly.
Illegal immigrants, he pointed out, arenât hermits and they donât live in caves. They live in ordinary communities, most commonly among individuals they knew in their home countries.
âBottom line, Harry, even if she was illegal, she should have been reported missing. This is especially true for your ex-commies. Before theyâre here a month, the kids are in school, the familyâs on Medicaid and theyâre collectinâ food stamps. They know all the tricks and theyâre not afraid of authority.â
âWhat could I say, Dominick? I keep in touch with Missing Persons on a daily basis. If thereâs anyone out there who cares about her, theyâre keeping it to themselves.â
âI believe you, Harry.â Capraâs head swiveled back and forth, until he caught the attention of a waiter. Then he raised his glass. âPor favor.â Finally, he turned back to me and said, âLook, you got two possibilities here, one pretty remote. Letâs take the remote one first. You donât see much of this in the US, but every day, thousands of girls from across the third world are drawn into the sex trade against their will. Some are lured into it with false promises and some are purchased from their parents. Either way, these girls become virtual slaves.â
Capra tilted his head back and brought his glass to his mouth, draining the last few drops of Jim Beam. Then he grinned. âHowâd ya like to be sold by your parents in Vietnam, taken to a mining camp in Burma, then forced to screw twenty guys a day? For nothing, right? Youâre not even gettinâ paid.â
This was too much for me and I ignored the question. âWhatâs the other possibility?â
Capra thought about it for a moment, then said, âLemme start by givinâ you an example. Four or five years ago, a nineteen-year-old girl, a Philippine national, broke her ankle jumping from the second-floor window of a townhouse. When she got to the emergency room, the docs noticed that sheâd been beat to shit and called in the cops. According to the girl, Consuela Madamba, she was recruited in her home village by a woman representing an American employment agency. For a substantial price, to be paid from her wages, Consuela would be smuggled into the United States and guaranteed employment as a domestic. Consuela didnât find out, until she got here, that her employer would be a Saudi family attached to the UN. She didnât know that sheâd be watched constantly, that she was expected to work sixteen-hour days, or that sheâd be routinely beaten for the slightest failure to maintain the home properly.â
My thoughts flashed to Roach, the profiler, and his prediction: thereâs a sadist in the mix.
Capra