Target Engaged

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Target Engaged Page 18

by M. L. Buchman


  Kyle handed her an HK416 rifle that she set across the galley counter in front of her. He slipped a trio of Glocks onto the top step of the companionway ladder, but there was no way to distribute them topside under the watchful eye of the approaching pirates.

  Carla hoped they were wrong but could feel in her bones that they weren’t. A vessel in distress would radio or signal, and they wouldn’t be approaching just astern so that their last turn would place them close alongside.

  The cruiser pulled up on the port side and almost ate a sail boom as Richie performed an “accidental” jib and it slammed across. The pirates’ boat had a main cabin and a small flying bridge up high. There would be helm and engine controls in both places, but they couldn’t see which the boat’s driver was using. Three men were lined up along the lower rail.

  “Douse your sails!” someone shouted over a loud-hailer in Spanish. “This is an official Venezuelan inspection.”

  “Nice of them to talk first,” Kyle commented.

  “It is. Doesn’t strike me as very official. It’s not your average Coast Guard who runs around in a Carver 38 sport boat,” Carla offered drily. They had no official logo on the boat. Instead, it looked very civilian, as if it too had been recently captured.

  “They might at least have thought to say ‘please.’”

  “It was rather rude of them, don’t you think?” Carla was searching through the scope. With only the small kitchen window to aim through, she didn’t have a lot of options. “The sail boom is really in the way.”

  Kyle pitched his voice low to Chad, who still stood at the head of the ladder. “Into the wind. Get the boom amidships.”

  Chad passed the instruction to Richie. They looked like tourists, each of them still in their “I heart Aruba!” T-shirts and baggy shorts. They made a show of wrestling the boom into place as if they didn’t know what they were doing. Chad managed to slip one of the pistols into his waistband in the confusion.

  “I still count three unsavories along the rail. They’re keeping their right arms out of sight, but I spotted the butt of a rifle stock on the leftmost guy,” Carla reported.

  “Roger, three.” Kyle was sighting through the next window down, which wasn’t open.

  Her window was open, but it had a bug screen across it that she’d have to punch out before firing if she didn’t want the grenade going off right in her face.

  “Go for the wheelhouse,” Kyle told her.

  “Now, or when they’re in motion?” Carla loved Kyle’s perfect calm and perfect patience. It steadied her and made her a better soldier every single time. He was screwing up Carla the woman, but that didn’t get in her way right now.

  “I’m seeing rifle stock on middle unsavory.”

  No longer any question what to do. “In one,” Carla said and felt that connection between them as they fired in unison.

  Middle bad guy was just lifting his rifle as Kyle fired. The first shot shattered the window; the second passed through the man’s forehead.

  Carla punched her weapon a half step forward, knocking out the screen. She fired the first High Explosive round at the side of the cruiser’s cabin. The HE punched a hole in the fiberglass. Half a second later, she sent the second one through the new hole in the side of the cabin where it would shred whoever was inside. For good measure, she shot one onto the flying bridge.

  She dropped the MGL and swept up her rifle, but it was over. No one remained at the rail. Well, one did, flopped over it with a gaping hole in his back directly behind where his heart had been.

  Winding back in her memory, she counted five shots from Kyle and two from Chad with the pistol he’d managed to grab.

  Coming from the galley, she was closer to the ladder than Kyle and sprinted up the steps. She tossed the remaining handguns to Duane and Richie, and then she and Kyle covered their teammates as they jumped across the gap and swarmed the boat.

  There were the sharp single spits of “security” shots and then a call of “Clear.” They tossed over a couple of lines so that the boats didn’t drift too far apart.

  “Just need a couple of strip breaching charges and a timer to clean this up,” Duane called back. “Shit! Bloodstains still on the interior carpet. Whoever they grabbed the boat from didn’t do so well.” He leaned out to glance over the stern. “Panama is now shy a couple of tourists.”

  Carla ducked back down, dug out the charge, and tossed it up to Kyle.

  They weren’t in position to report the location of the boat without having to explain themselves. And after their treatment of it, they didn’t want anyone else seeing it either. The bad guys were dead, but…

  “Hey, Richie,” she called out the window she’d fired the MGL through. He was still on the Carver 38 and she’d been reloading the MGL six-shooter. “See if you can find some info on the real owners. Name of someone we can notify.”

  He disappeared into the cabin.

  “Hope y’all signed the damage insurance before we hired our boat,” Chad called out. “Mr. Rental is gonna be ticked about having his window shot out.”

  Carla had also dropped the Milkor grenade launcher right in the middle of their breakfast, scattering the yogurt and most of their fruit to the floor. That was probably the least of their worries, but it meant day-old sandwiches for breakfast.

  They cast the derelict boat adrift, Carla’s grenades had destroyed both control stations as well as two more bad guys. Richie handed her a small packet of papers for a Panamanian couple. She’d have to find something to do with them. If they went to the CIA, no one would ever hear a thing.

  Once they were clear of the boat and about a hundred meters out, there was a loud krump! and a splash of water around the sides of the boat.

  “She no longer has a bottom and is going down,” Duane announced with obvious satisfaction.

  “Bye-bye.” Chad waved at the boat as the Carver slipped rapidly out of sight with its load of dead bodies, tied to the craft to make sure they stayed down. “Assholes.”

  She and Kyle returned below, reloaded and re-stowed the weapons.

  “Nice job, Wild Woman.”

  “Good shooting, Mister Kyle.” The smile was easy between them.

  She loved working with Kyle.

  It was safe to think that, wasn’t it?

  Chapter 17

  Coming into Maracaibo harbor was quite the spectacle. Around the breakwater and past the Faro de San Bernardo. The red lighthouse towered above the sandy lump of San Bernardo Island and the narrow channel leading into the ten-kilometer reach of a lagoon. The water was a crystalline blue, and the air was thick with the scents of palm and arid soil. The wind that had carried them so smoothly continued to favor them and promised hints of high jungles and a friendly city.

  Kyle was once again at the helm and guided them up to the customs dock. The city towered ahead of them. Being on the far side of Lake Maracaibo from the rest of Venezuela, it had evolved in its own way. Other cities were a mayhem of conflicts, violence, and corruption. Maracaibo boasted a mostly peaceful culture and one of the finest universities in South America.

  One of the world’s longest stressed-concrete suspension bridges now connected it to the rest of the country, built to avoid the thousand-kilometer detour around the lake. That historical separation from the rest of the country and the harbor’s position at the sea access to the largest lake on the continent also made it one of the most popular drug-smuggling ports in the world. Right up there with Buenaventura and Cartagena before Colombia finally started its crackdowns.

  This time the team had a different story to tell the customs man. Richie, Duane, and Chad were each in a black T-shirt, dark sunglasses, and khakis. They’d been told to not say a word. Kyle wore a dress shirt and Carla was back in the killer sundress. A man and his woman moving carefully, a man who needed three bodyguards to go sailing.

  Th
ey didn’t try to disguise the bullet holes of the shattered window he’d shot through. Instead, they’d simply cleaned up any evidence that the bullets had come from inside rather than outside and run an obvious strip of duct tape over the window.

  You didn’t arrive at a customs dock bearing guns, at least not visible ones. But Chad, Duane, and Richie did each have a large military knife strapped to their thighs.

  The customs official started out, well, officious. Then he found the thousand in worn U.S. bills, from Major Gonzalez’s stash, folded into Kyle’s passport. He pocketed the money but didn’t become much more cooperative. Five hundred each in Kyle’s “bodyguards’” passports helped somewhat. Kyle wondered how much of the couple thousand he’d pocketed would be left to turn in at the end of this mission.

  They’d debated how much money to put in Carla’s passport—none or the most. He’d thought she should have no money, just be the clueless lady along for the ride. That would be safest for her. That way the customs agents would assume she knew nothing.

  Carla had been strangely quiet and offered him only a pleasant smile at the suggestion.

  Now she moved forward and Kyle’s eyes nearly bugged out. Where the wraparound ties of her sundress met over the small of her back, she’d stuffed a Glock. She was going to shoot the damned agent.

  The woman had lost it.

  She sidled up to the man until his eyes were bugging out trying to look down her cleavage. She tapped her passport on her lower lip, drawing his attention back up to her mouth, then fumbled and dropped it.

  She didn’t squat down to pick it up, she bent from the hip with the flexibility of a ballet dancer revealing the scant covering of the yellow bikini bottoms beneath the sundress, which would disorient any man.

  She stood back up with her back to the agent. She winked at Kyle and cocked a hip—which Kyle could see had a hundred percent of the agent’s attention, though oddly every bit of the color had just drained out of his face. Then she slowly turned back to face the agent and handed over her passport.

  That’s when Kyle finally focused on the handgun tucked in the back of her dress, the weapon she had just flaunted at the customs agent.

  She’d painted it hot pink back on the ship though he hadn’t understood why, and he’d been sidetracked by something before he’d thought to ask. Her weapon was the same color as the notorious AK-47 that belonged to the Empress of the Antrax kill squad.

  With her coloring—it was a sure bet that the customs agent had never met a Cherokee woman before—her long, dark hair, and the surprising things that the sundress did to her cleavage, she was more than a passable imitation of a Mexican drug cartel leader, especially to someone who didn’t follow such news too closely. He probably didn’t see anything past the cleavage and the hot-pink weapon.

  “My man and I,” she purred in English with a thick Mexican accent to the agent still white with shock, “are so looking forward to doing business in your country. And we are always so glad to show our appreciation to anyone who helps us.” Then she reached into the cleavage of her sundress and extracted a thick wad of hundred-dollar bills. Negligently she split it in half, tucking one portion back in her dress. Folding the rest—at least five grand, maybe ten—which she then took her time stuffing well down into the man’s pants.

  It was so perfect. Word of the takedown of the General’s hacienda would have rippled through the military very quickly. It had been three days, almost four since it happened, plenty of time for rumors that it was a Sinaloa drug hit to percolate down to even a mere customs agent.

  The man positively stumbled over himself to cooperate and stamp their passports.

  If Kyle had to judge, the man’s attitude was equal portions of avarice for more bribes, terror at thinking he faced the actual Empress of Antrax, and the desperate lust that Carla was somehow able to evoke at will. No question who the agent would be dreaming about next time he bedded a woman. Kyle liked that his own fantasy woman was the one he got to have in his arms.

  Could make a life’s plan out of that. Their schedule really needed to slow down for a minute so that he and Carla could talk about where they were going, but he didn’t see it happening anytime soon. Their arrival in Venezuela was the end of their idyll, such as it had been.

  The agent sent them to the small, exclusive Club Náutico marina for one of the slips held for the most-special guests of the towering Hotel Ventura. The agent had supplied his cell phone number should they ever be pulling in again and “require” an inspection. He never did look below. Their stowed weapons and other supplies remained unobserved.

  Once the man and the port of entry were out of sight behind them, Richie let out a whoop.

  “You go, girl!” Chad slapped her a hard high five.

  “Remind me never to mess with you.” Duane repeated the high five.

  Kyle did the only thing that came to mind. He dragged her into his arms and kissed her for all he was worth. Her body hummed against his.

  The kiss built until it burned, searing away the niggling concern that had rippled through him on finding that Carla had wept into her pillow. This woman was so powerful and the way she felt was so right, no questions could remain about her—not as soldier, woman, or lover.

  She unwrapped herself from around his body with a high laugh that sparkled out across the shining water. She did a cha-cha-cha dance around the deck.

  “Guys and girl clothes. Who knew the power?” Again the laugh.

  Watching her hips sway and her hair swing as she danced, Kyle could feel the power firsthand.

  “And how much you want to bet”—she did a hip bump with Chad, who was snapping his fingers in applause, and continued speaking a bit breathlessly—“that rumors of our arrival are even now spreading out through the underworld. I expect we’ll have drug traffickers begging for our services within the day.”

  “Or a hit squad.” Kyle considered. “I can imagine that the General’s friends would welcome the opportunity for a serving of revenge.”

  “You’re forgetting Major Gonzales.”

  He was. That sobered the group even though it meant that the Major didn’t have a lot of folks willing to avenge his death.

  Mr. CIA Fred Smith had found many things in the Major’s electronic files on the two USBs that Kyle had grabbed. One of them was a list of where the hostages he’d taken were being held. On the General’s behalf, the Major had kidnapped daughters, cousins, even wives, and stashed them away under guard to ensure their relatives’ cooperation. That had won the cartel a great deal of power, but very few friends.

  And most of the women were under guard at a single location in Maracaibo.

  “Freeing them is our next task,” Kyle decided.

  “How does freeing the Major’s hostages help us? Not saying we shouldn’t, just asking.”

  “It’s either because I’m a soft mush who takes pity on them.” That got him the laugh he was after. Soft mush wasn’t really in his personal profile except around Carla. “Or it’s because of the mass of confusion it will cause among the cartels as they try to figure out who is doing what and why.” That got the confirming nods from the others.

  Besides, Kyle had an idea to up the ante even more.

  When they pulled up to the hotel’s dock, two dock boys in pressed white shorts and shirts were awaiting their arrival, apparently warned by their tame customs agent.

  Yes, word of their arrival was going out far and wide very soon.

  * * *

  The Hotel Ventura was luxurious, discreet, and had them installed in a suite overlooking Lake Maracaibo in a matter of minutes. Another wad of the Major’s money cleared away any questions.

  Kyle had grown up comfortably but had to work a couple of jobs for his first beater car. This “lifestyle of the rich and famous” was so not him, but the view was damned nice. Their hotel room commanded a corner of t
he eighth floor with a view that included both old town and the northern entrance to the lake.

  Eight kilometers of water spread to the east. If they leaned out of the balcony, they could see the great bridge spanning from downtown Maracaibo to the rest of Venezuela. To the north, beyond old town, lay the outer lagoon busy with commercial and pleasure boat traffic and, as a dark blue line, the Atlantic.

  When Carla joined him on the balcony and leaned against the rail with her thoughtless grace, it was even better. He snugged a hand around her waist and pulled her in hip to hip. They watched the world in silence for a time.

  “Where I grew up”—Carla’s voice was soft enough that he wouldn’t have heard her if they were even a step apart—“you could see the backs of a couple of bars to one side, and then dry sage and creosote covering Colorado hills to the other. This view is both breathtaking and claustrophobic. There are a million and half people in this city, and we can probably see a third of them out our hotel window. Where I grew up, there weren’t twenty thousand people within a hundred miles.”

  Colorado. It was his first window into her past other than “Cherokee on Mom’s side.” Those two tidbits and a dead brother. At least having a place in the country to picture Carla Anderson settled something inside him. Colorado.

  “No wonder you can hike the way you do.”

  She leaned her head on his shoulder. “I spent a lot of time walking those hills and mountains, just me, my rifle, and a pack. We should do that sometime, Kyle. Just you and me. It’s beautiful out there.”

  “I’d love to, sweetheart.” He kissed her on the temple.

  * * *

  Carla wondered why she’d said all that. She was from the Army. Now she was from Delta. And suddenly she was spilling her guts to Kyle.

  But she would like to take him out into the Colorado wilderness. Not the known places like Maroon Bells Lake or the Mesa Verde cliff dwellings, but into the true wilderness.

 

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