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The Forgotten

Page 36

by David Baldacci


  still chasing him. He had not gone fast enough to lose them. Mecho’s thinking was simple. He could deal with this now or he could deal with it later.

  Might as well get it over with.

  Mecho calculated he was facing six men.

  They would be trained, armed, cagey, cautious, but with enough close-quarter combat skills to size up the ever-evolving battlefield.

  The dunes were up ahead. He left his scooter behind and set out on foot. A minute later he skirted a narrow cleft between two dunes. His front flank was now a funnel his pursuers would have to breach. But it was only wide enough for one man to come through at a time. A classic defensive measure. The same one the Spartans had employed to hold off the far larger Persian army so the Greeks could escape destruction. That same technique had been taught in war colleges ever since.

  If your opponent has far larger numbers, make it as difficult as possible for them to employ those numbers to their advantage.

  Mecho knew this sort of confrontation might happen, so he had hunted for this sort of tactical advantage shortly after he had arrived in Paradise. And then he had spent time doing something to it that would hopefully work to his advantage.

  The dunes were thick enough to stop any ordnance unless they were going to attack him with shoulder-fired missiles, and he doubted that was the case.

  Mecho only had two worries now.

  His rear flank.

  And something coming through that opening other than a man.

  His next steps would address both issues at once.

  The men after Mecho fanned out in a classic attack formation. With a numerical advantage of six to one it would be successful against just about any foe.

  The cleft in the dunes was just ahead.

  A funnel. These men had seen that one before.

  One way in and one way out.

  None of them had any plan or desire to breach that opening with Mecho waiting to pick them off as they came through.

  But they had come prepared for just such a scenario.

  The first man approached, keeping well back of the cleft. He lifted the fist-shaped metal object from his pocket, engaged it, and tossed it through the opening.

  It wasn’t a grenade, but it was as good as one.

  He turned away from the cleft and used his hands to cover his ears as additional protection over the plugs he wore.

  The flash-bang went off.

  Blinding light, paralyzing sound.

  And a concussive-force kicker.

  Anyone in the dune would now be immobilized, easy to kill.

  The six men swarmed through the cleft. Sand dislodged by the flash-bang was swirling everywhere. They had guns ready to fire into the paralyzed man who should now be resting on the sandy floor.

  He would never know how he died.

  The space between the dunes was barely ten by ten. The space had resulted from erosion, wind, and different compactness levels of the sand. The men crowded in, but there was no one lying immobilized on the ground.

  What the leader of the squad did see was a now visible knotted rope dangling in the center of the space. He looked up to where the rope was attached to the thick limb of a tree twenty feet up.

  None of the men had looked up before coming in here. They had focused on the cleft.

  But what was currently up was now coming down.

  Mecho landed on two of the men and they broke his fall by breaking their necks.

  A third man was gutted by Mecho’s knife, the bodies of the first two kills covered with blood from his dissected belly.

  Number four caught two rounds in his face from Mecho’s pistol.

  Number five tried to run.

  One big arm around his neck stopped that retreat and the snap of the spine was followed by the man collapsing to the sandy ground.

  Number six got lucky, however.

  Mecho had stumbled over number five as the man’s legs involuntarily kicked out as he went through the last spasms of death.

  Six drew his bead on Mecho with his MP5. Shot selector on full auto, thirty rounds fired in a couple seconds, if that.

  Not survivable.

  Pistol and knife useless against that.

  Mecho looked at Six.

  Six looked back at Mecho.

  A triumphant smile, a finger on the trigger, ready to finish the job.

  Mecho had a millisecond left to live and there was absolutely nothing he could do about it.

  One shot erupted.

  But it didn’t come from the MP’s muzzle.

  A hole opened in number six’s forehead. The MP had no chance to do its killing because its owner had just died.

  Six fell headlong into the sand, some of his brain splattered along the wall of the dune behind him, because the shot had come from in front of him and behind Mecho.

  Mecho whipped around in that direction, pistol and knife up and ready.

  Chrissy Murdoch stood there. She was not outfitted in Hermes and Chanel tonight. Nor a bikini.

  She wore all black. Dark smudges were under her eyes and over her thin, high cheeks. The eyes looked very different from the pampered ones of the person lounging around the pool at Peter Lampert’s estate.

  They were hard and dark and cold.

  They are like mine, thought Mecho.

  She held a pistol. It was pointed at Mecho’s heart.

  She looked at him and he looked back at her.

  She slipped the gun into a belt holster and said, “We have to get rid of the bodies. I have a boat. Let’s move.”

  As she came forward to do just this, Mecho could only stare.

  She struggled to lift one of the men.

  Mecho still hadn’t moved.

  She glanced sharply at him. “I said, let’s go.”

  “You were the one who warned me?”

  “Who else?” she snapped.

  He put the pistol and knife away and started

  to help her.

  CHAPTER 76

  Puller eased out from behind a tree and did a sweep of the area with his night-vision goggles. He had picked the surveillance spot with the same care he would on a battlefield. It gave him maximum observation coverage with minimal exposure to prying eyes.

  Carson sipped on a bottle of water and watched him. It was hot, muggy, and the sulfur smell was nauseating.

  It was also two in the morning and they had been here for three hours.

  He sat back next to her.

  She said quietly, “Anything?”

  He shook his head, kept his gaze moving. “How much longer do we wait?”

  He looked at her. “As long as it takes, General. These things don’t run on a schedule.”

  “So all night?”

  “Daylight comes, we’ll leave. They won’t be doing anything in the daytime, even at a place like this.”

  “What do you think it is?”

  Puller shrugged, leaned back against the tree, but remained tensed, ready to move in an instant if need be. “Drugs. Guns. The Colombians have lost the drug pipeline to the Mexicans. But the Gulf is still full of traffickers.”

  “Then it could get pretty dicey tonight. We might not have enough firepower.”

  “This is an intelligence-gathering expedition only. No engagement. We take what we find to the proper authorities.”

  “We might not have a choice about engagement. If we’re spotted.”

  “Risk of the battlefield.”

  “On U.S. soil no less. Didn’t teach us that at the Army War College.”

  “Maybe they should have.”

  “Yeah, maybe they should have. I’ll speak to the appropriate parties about it. If I survive hanging with you.”

  They fell silent until Carson said, “Something else on your mind?”

  Puller didn’t look at her. There was something else on his mind. He had continued his investigative work prompted by looking at his watch outside of Grif Mason’s hideaway. And everything he had found out only reinforced his suspicions
. It didn’t sadden him. It angered him. But he would have to productively channel that anger. He looked forward to the opportunity to do so.

  “Just a jumble of things,” he said.

  Carson was about to say something else when Puller put up a hand. “Stay down,” he hissed.

  A few seconds later Carson heard what Puller’s quicker senses had already registered.

  The truck crept along the surface road shielded by a line of trees. It turned and puttered down toward the water, easing into the small park-off, where the driver killed the engine. Several men got out even as Puller and Carson hunkered down at their observation post.

  Puller held up a finger, indicating to Carson that they would communicate solely via nonverbal signals from now on. She nodded in understanding.

  Lying prone in the sand, Puller intensified the power on his night-vision goggles and pointed them at the truck, which sat about a hundred yards away from their position.

  At first Puller was thinking that another vehicle would meet the truck, but that didn’t make any sense. Truck and truck at a clandestine meeting site was not logical. Moving over the road you’d get a warehouse and do your transfer in privacy.

  The only reason to drive down near the water was if you were expecting a delivery from the water.

  A minute later Puller’s deduction was proved correct.

  The whine of the boat wasn’t much, but water was a great conductor of sound. The boat was moving fast, and within thirty seconds Puller could see the outline of what he almost immediately recognized as a RIB. It was the same type of amphibious boat the Rangers used.

  As the RIB grew closer to shore, Puller could make out many people on board. Too many for the boat’s small footprint.

  Carson touched his arm. He looked at her, found her pointing back toward land. Puller focused that way and saw the men from the truck coming down to the beach.

  Right now he would have given anything for a night camera to record what was about to happen.

  People were being pulled off the RIB. When they hit the sand, Puller could see that they were bound and their mouths taped shut.

  They also wore different-colored shirts.

  Puller flipped up his goggles and saw green, red, and blue.

  He felt a gentle squeeze on his arm and turned to see Carson staring over his shoulder. She looked at him. He shook his head and turned back to what was happening on the beach.

  The people were herded up the sand and to the truck where two men were posted there to guard them.

  Puller turned his attention back to the beach, where the RIB had disappeared, but another one was now approaching the beach. The scenario that had just happened on the beach was repeated with this second group.

  A third RIB beached, disgorged passengers, and left.

  Then a fourth RIB came and did the same.

  After the last RIB left, the truck was locked and three men climbed into the cab.

  Carson said, “What do we do now?”

  Puller was thinking this very same question.

  What do we do?

  “We need to call the police, right now,” Carson urged.

  But Puller shook his head. “No,” he said.

  She looked at him in bewilderment. “No? Are you crazy? Those people were prisoners, Puller.”

  “Yeah, I can see that.”

  “Then we call the cops.”

  “Not yet.”

  “When do you think might be a more suitable time?”

  Puller looked at the truck as it started to pull away. “Let’s go,” he said.

  CHAPTER 77

  Puller kept back as far as he could from the truck while still keeping it in sight.

  It was tricky. Headlights back here at this time of night would no doubt make the guys in the truck dangerously suspicious.

  Carson alternated between looking at the tail- lights of the truck and scowling at Puller.

  “I’m still not getting this tactic, Puller. If you don’t call the police for something like this, what then?”

  He said nothing, but kept his gaze upon the truck as it wound around the curves with thick trees on both sides. They might as well have been in a forest. There was no hint of the nearby ocean except for the occasional whiff of brine.

  He finally looked at her. “Well-timed op. Secluded spot, middle of the night. Bring them in by water, truck them out.”

  “Right, so?”

  “How many nights you think they do this?”

  “I have no way of knowing that.”

  “Let’s say they do it three or four times a week. Maybe seven days a week.”

  “Maybe not. Maybe we just got lucky.”

  “No one is that lucky.”

  “And your point?”

  “Maybe this is what my aunt saw. Or what the Storrows saw.”

  “Maybe it is.”

  “My aunt was a good upstanding citizen. The Storrows were, by all indications, pillars of the community.”

  “Granted, they probably were.”

  “And you think these elderly solid citizens saw what we saw and didn’t tell the police?”

  Carson started to say something and then stopped. “So your point is they did tell the police and nothing happened.”

  “Oh, something happened. They ended up dead. All of them.”

  “You think the police are in on what we just saw?”

  “I don’t see how you can run an op like that, even once a week, and trust that the cops are not going to happen upon you. All it would take is one cop on patrol seeing a boat light, or the truck, or just happening to walk down the beach and see what we saw tonight.”

  “And they couldn’t risk that?”

  “We just saw four RIBs. They’re not long-dis- tance boats. That means there’s a larger vessel out there that they launched from. I counted eighty people off the boats, and now they’re in the back of that truck. You’re talking equipment, money, and manpower. The payoff has to justify

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