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    Colombiano


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      About the Book

      BLENDING FACT AND FICTION, COLOMBIANO IS A HEART-THUMPING JOURNEY INTO THE VIOLENT AND UNPREDICTABLE WORLD OF POST-ESCOBAR COLOMBIA.

      For four years Rusty Young worked secretly for the US government in Colombia. During this time he was shocked by the stories of child soldiers he encountered. He vowed that one day he would turn their tales into a book and let their voices be heard.

      ‘Eventually, you have to pick a side. Or one will be picked for you …’

      All Pedro Gutiérrez cares about is fishing, playing pool and his girlfriend Camila’s promise to sleep with him on his sixteenth birthday. But his life is ripped apart when his father is callously executed in front of him by Guerrilla soldiers and he and his mother are banished from their farm.

      Vowing to take vengeance against the five men responsible, Pedro joins an illegal paramilitary group with his best friend, Palillo, where he is trained to fight, kill and crush any sign of weakness.

      But as he descends into a world of unspeakable violence, Pedro must decide how far he is willing to go. Can he stop himself before he becomes just as ruthless as those he is hunting? Or will his dark obsession cost him all he loves?

      From innocent teenage love to barbaric torture … from cruel despots to cocaine traficantes … from seedy drug markets to brutal battlefields … COLOMBIANO is a blockbuster revenge thriller and an electrifying coming-of-age story.

      CONTENTS

      Cover

      About the Book

      Title Page

      Map

      Dedication

      Author prologue

      PART ONE: Little Pedro

      Chapter 1

      Chapter 2

      Chapter 3

      Chapter 4

      Chapter 5

      Chapter 6

      Chapter 7

      Chapter 8

      Chapter 9

      Chapter 10

      Chapter 11

      Chapter 12

      Chapter 13

      Chapter 14

      Chapter 15

      Chapter 16

      Chapter 17

      PART TWO: Learning to Kill

      Chapter 18

      Chapter 19

      Chapter 20

      Chapter 21

      Chapter 22

      Chapter 23

      Chapter 24

      Chapter 25

      Chapter 26

      Chapter 27

      Chapter 28

      Chapter 29

      Chapter 30

      Chapter 31

      Chapter 32

      Chapter 33

      Chapter 34

      Chapter 35

      Chapter 36

      Chapter 37

      Chapter 38

      Chapter 39

      Chapter 40

      Chapter 41

      Chapter 42

      Chapter 43

      Chapter 44

      PART THREE: Trapping a Rat

      Chapter 45

      Chapter 46

      Chapter 47

      Chapter 48

      Chapter 49

      Chapter 50

      Chapter 51

      Chapter 52

      Chapter 53

      Chapter 54

      Chapter 55

      Chapter 56

      Chapter 57

      Chapter 58

      Chapter 59

      Chapter 60

      PART FOUR: Working for the Company

      Chapter 61

      Chapter 62

      Chapter 63

      Chapter 64

      Chapter 65

      Chapter 66

      Chapter 67

      Chapter 68

      Chapter 69

      Chapter 70

      Chapter 71

      Chapter 72

      Chapter 73

      Chapter 74

      Chapter 75

      PART FIVE: Los Narcos

      Chapter 76

      Chapter 77

      Chapter 78

      Chapter 79

      Chapter 80

      Chapter 81

      Chapter 82

      Chapter 83

      Chapter 84

      Chapter 85

      Chapter 86

      PART SIX: The Battle of Jaguar River

      Chapter 87

      Chapter 88

      Chapter 89

      Chapter 90

      Chapter 91

      Chapter 92

      Chapter 93

      Chapter 94

      Chapter 95

      Chapter 96

      Chapter 97

      Chapter 98

      Chapter 99

      Chapter 100

      Chapter 101

      Chapter 102

      Chapter 103

      Chapter 104

      Chapter 105

      PART SEVEN: Social Cleansing

      Chapter 106

      Chapter 107

      Chapter 108

      Chapter 109

      Chapter 110

      Chapter 111

      Chapter 112

      Chapter 113

      Chapter 114

      Chapter 115

      Chapter 116

      Chapter 117

      Chapter 118

      Chapter 119

      Chapter 120

      Chapter 121

      Chapter 122

      PART EIGHT: The Dark Alliance

      Chapter 123

      Chapter 124

      Chapter 125

      Chapter 126

      Chapter 127

      Chapter 128

      Chapter 129

      Chapter 130

      Chapter 131

      Chapter 132

      Chapter 133

      Chapter 134

      Chapter 135

      Chapter 136

      Chapter 137

      Chapter 138

      Chapter 139

      Chapter 140

      Chapter 141

      Chapter 142

      Chapter 143

      Chapter 144

      Chapter 145

      PART NINE: The Work of Other Men

      Chapter 146

      Chapter 147

      Chapter 148

      Chapter 149

      Chapter 150

      Chapter 151

      Chapter 152

      Chapter 153

      Chapter 154

      Chapter 155

      Chapter 156

      Chapter 157

      Chapter 158

      Chapter 159

      Chapter 160

      Chapter 161

      Chapter 162

      Chapter 163

      Chapter 164

      Epilogue

      Glossary of Spanish terms and slang

      Acknowledgements

      About the Author

      Also by Rusty Young

      Copyright Notice

      To my loving parents, Marie and Peter,

      and to

      Simone Camilleri, fellow writer and lifelong friend

      AUTHOR PROLOGUE

      I FIRST MET Pedro Juan Gutiérrez González (not his real name) in Bogotá. It was during my initial visit to an albergue – a halfway house for child soldiers exiting the vicious civil war.

      The children I was about to interview were participants in a government ‘demobilisation’ program that aimed to help them overcome their trauma and begin a new life by providing them with accommodation, food, education and psychological counselling.

      As I pulled up in front of a large, ordinary-looking Spanish colonial house in the leafy, residential suburb of Teusaquillo, I noticed a well-dressed man in his early twenties standing outside the gate. He appeared to be waiting for me.

      ‘You must be the journalist. Welcome!’ he said, shaking my hand firmly as I exited my SUV. ‘I’m Pedro. I’m a volunteer assistant here.’

      In appearance, Pedro was typically Colombian – of medium build with straight dark hair, an olive complexion and brown eyes. He was handsome despite a prominent scar running down his left cheek. He glanced at my S
    UV.

      ‘Level three armoured vehicle,’ he stated confidently, tapping the bulletproof windscreen.

      I nodded and tried to laugh it off. ‘A potentially dangerous profession.’ After all, Colombia had the highest murder rate of journalists in the world and armoured vehicles were common enough. However, it took experienced eyes to recognise one, and Pedro’s narrowed.

      ‘Which newspaper did you say you work for?’

      ‘I’m freelance.’

      Pedro nodded. As I followed him inside I noticed he walked with a slight limp. He gave no further indication of disbelieving me about my car or profession and quickly changed the subject, asking me whether I was married and mentioning his own wife and newborn son. However, if he did harbour any suspicions they were well founded – I wasn’t a true journalist. I’d written only one book. Since publishing Marching Powder, I’d travelled to Colombia, fallen in love with the country and decided to make it my home. I was now working as a manager of a US government counter-terrorism program in anti-kidnapping. The work was interesting and satisfying. I felt we were making a difference. But in a country with two terrorist organisations whose members numbered in the tens of thousands, it didn’t pay to advertise my job.

      The first group was the FARC Guerrilla. In the 1960s, peasant farmers took up arms, aiming to fight poverty and social inequality by toppling the government and installing communist rule. To fund their revolution, they ‘taxed’ businesses and kidnapped the rich, appropriating their lands for redistribution to the poor.

      The second group – the Paramilitaries – was created in response. Wealthy land and business owners, tired of the government’s failure to protect them, formed their own private militias and ‘death squads’.

      Despite my absorbing job in counter-terrorism, the writer in me had remained restless; I was always on the hunt for interesting stories. Meeting these former child soldiers might be my first step towards at least writing an article.

      ‘These kids have been through so much,’ Pedro told me as we entered the albergue. ‘You simply can’t imagine. Here, we don’t refer to them by their group. They need to stop thinking of themselves as Guerrilla or Paramilitaries. So please don’t ask them that question.’

      Pedro ushered me down a long corridor, knocked on a door and then pushed it open.

      The scene inside reminded me of school camp. In an unpainted dormitory sat seven boys and five girls on bunk beds. Aged from thirteen to seventeen, they were dressed in jeans, T-shirts and sneakers. It was impossible to distinguish them from ordinary teenagers, let alone know which side they’d belonged to. However, they clearly knew who was who, and didn’t seem happy sleeping in the same room with others who, only a month earlier, would have gladly slit their throats.

      They were even more mistrustful of journalists, especially white-skinned gringo interviewers like me.

      I greeted them individually and ventured a few questions. Their responses were courteous but contained nothing of substance. They restricted themselves to shrugs and mumbles, answering, ‘I don’t know, señor,’ while glancing nervously at their roommates.

      I left the dormitory and walked out of the house with Pedro, deflated and discouraged.

      ‘You could interview me,’ he offered as we reached my car.

      ‘About what?’

      ‘I was in the Paramilitaries for two and a half years. As a commander. I went through this same program three years ago.’

      Suddenly his confidence and expertise made sense. I’d been thrown by his demeanour, maturity and his mention of a wife and child. I hadn’t conceived that Pedro himself might have been a child soldier. He definitely had my attention now.

      ‘Why do you want to tell your story?’

      ‘For the same reason I’m working here: to help. People need to understand the truth in order to heal their scars.’ He touched his cheek. ‘I’m one of the lucky ones. I should be dead – the Guerrilla almost killed me several times – and I went down a dark path myself.’

      I raised my eyebrows.

      ‘This limp I have.’ He chuckled ironically, lifting his right foot and shaking it. ‘That was my own doing. I shot myself in the foot to avoid being captured and tortured to death.’

      I shared similar concerns about avoiding kidnap. However, among the many precautionary measures recommended in the US Embassy security briefing, shooting yourself wasn’t one of them.

      ‘But this scar right here.’ Pedro tapped his fist to the left of his sternum. ‘The one I have here in my heart is the only scar that hasn’t truly healed. This scar you’ll only understand by listening. And that will require more than just the article you want to write. It will require a book.’

      ‘If you’re willing to talk,’ I said, ‘I have time.’

      We began our recorded interviews that afternoon. Very quickly, I realised I’d been wrong to have characterised Pedro as ‘typical’. At twenty-one he’d already led an incredible life, one so far removed from anything I could ever invent, and yet one so horrific that I would not wish it upon my worst enemy.

      Eventually, witnessing Pedro’s trust in me, other child soldiers from the albergue came forward and shared their stories.

      Making sense of their experiences and putting them in coherent order was difficult. Most didn’t want their names mentioned for fear of reprisals – against themselves or their families. They were from different provinces, from different groups, and they’d joined and left the war at different times. Mostly, they were ordinary boys and girls simply wanting to make sense of what they’d been through. But they all had one thing in common: they were trying to salir adelante. Trying to move on and put their pasts behind them. Just like their country.

      I also realised the complexity of attempting to chronicle a conflict that had raged over four decades. Many times I questioned my right as an extranjero – an outsider – to pass comment on a beautiful country I loved that had already been deeply maligned and stereotyped.

      The more emotionally involved I became with the child soldiers’ stories, the harder I found it to maintain any pretence of journalistic objectivity. Ultimately, I decided to weave their stories into a novel.

      Some parts of this story are real. Most parts are fictionalised and informed by my own experiences and historical research. These children’s pasts were complicated and painful. Their stories affected me deeply and changed my life. I felt they needed to be told.

      Rusty Young

      PART ONE

      LITTLE PEDRO

      1

      THEY CAME ON a Wednesday to execute my father.

      Looking back, I should have sensed something amiss during morning Mass three days earlier. The new priest’s maiden sermon had left the congregation divided – some bored, some irate – never a good omen in a small Colombian town.

      When the congregation rose to leave, Señor Muñoz, the father of my girlfriend Camila, paused briefly in the aisle and leaned towards Papá.

      ‘May I talk to you outside?’ Glancing at me, he added, ‘In private.’

      I was fifteen years old and in adolescent limbo: not old enough to be included in adult discussions yet not young enough to run off and play. While the grown-ups talked, I stood shiftily on the church steps with Camila and my best friend, Palillo, waiting for them to finish.

      Palillo, or ‘Toothpick’ – whose real name was Diego Hernandez – liked provoking trouble. And he liked pushing others into it, then running around them in figure eights like a dog in long grass.

      Half a head taller than us, he now draped his arms over our shoulders, placed his hands behind our heads and twisted them towards our fathers. They were deep in conversation, breaking only to scratch their chins and cast significant glances our way.

      ‘¡Pillado!’ Palillo declared gleefully. ‘You two are so busted!’

     


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