In 2003, the five women of the mariachi band lost Scarlet Serenas loaded their instruments and drove toward a wedding gig at the exclusive Vance Ranch outside Laredo. Dressed in their signature scarlet and gold suits, they were last seen turning onto the long private road leading to the venue.
For six years, their disappearance remained a frustrating cold case. The official file thick with dead ends and the quiet assumption that they had simply abandoned their lives. Then in 2009, a federal task force raiding the ranch for an unrelated crime uncovered a sophisticated smuggling tunnel. What agents photographed inside that tunnel would link the forgotten local disappearance to a federal crime in a way no one could have imagined.
The persistent smell of synthetic oil and oxidized metal offered the only reliable constant in Alex Koreah’s life. It was an aroma that clung to his clothes and embedded itself beneath his fingernails, defining the narrow boundaries of his existence during the six long years since Sophia Vega had vanished.
Late in the summer of 2009, the Laredo Knight bled humidly into the garage, the air hanging heavy and still, punctuated only by the metallic clatter of tools and the low drone of the fluorescent lights. Buried deep in the guts of a 98 Suburban, Alex wrestled with a transmission that refused to cooperate. The complexity of the job provided a welcome distraction, a mechanical puzzle demanding the kind of total focus that could momentarily silence the grief that otherwise roared in his ears.