Green Ice: A Deadly High

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Green Ice: A Deadly High Page 31

by Christian Fletcher


  Jorge and Letica both slept in their seats, although Jorge awoke every few minutes due to fresh surges of pain in his ankle. Mancini sunk back in his seat and lit a cigarette.

  “Are you okay to keep driving, Trey?” he asked.

  Trey turned his head slightly. “U-huh,” he said, nodding. “I’m really pumped after that situation back in the city, man. The adrenalin rush is still with me. I keep replaying what happened back at that warehouse over and over in my head, man. It would make a great movie one day.”

  Mancini allowed himself a slight laugh. “Go for it. You should try making that movie as a career change from being a badass.”

  Trey shook his head. “I have to admit, I’m not much good at playing a badass. I don’t think I’m cut out for this kind of shit, man. It’s exciting and all but I couldn’t have got myself out of that warehouse like you did, man. That was awesome.”

  “You could have burned that damn car, same as I did,” Mancini sighed. “It didn’t take a genius to work that out.”

  Trey shrugged and the car became silent for a few seconds. Mancini tossed his smoke out of the car, closing his eyes and allowing himself a few minutes of dozing.

  Trey glanced at Mancini in his rear view mirror. “So, what’s your story, man? Are you some kind of fucked up, super Black Ops veteran or some shit, man?”

  Mancini opened his eyes and laughed. He usually kept his past a guarded secret but saw no harm in telling Trey about his military background. There were no guarantees they were going to make it back to the States alive in any case, so what did it matter?

  “Nah, I’m no kind of super guy, Trey. Just some old, ex-army grunt who managed to get himself expunged from the service through my own stupidity in trusting the wrong people.”

  Trey nodded. “U-huh, I knew it. I damn well knew you were ex-military. I said that to myself after five minutes of meeting you, man. I said – this guy is ex-Special Forces or some shit, man. I could tell just by the way you walked and talked. You walked the walk and talked the talk and the way you handle those guns, it’s just like watching Rambo in action, man.”

  “Quit blowing smoke up my ass, man,” Mancini croaked. “You’re embarrassing me.”

  Trey laughed and realized he’d gone far enough with his appraisal. “You from LA or someplace else?”

  “South Pasadena, originally,” Mancini mumbled, feeling the increasingly overwhelming sensation of fatigue.

  “I hear it’s a kind of cool place out there.”

  “So nice I joined the army a day after I turned eighteen to get away,” Mancini muttered, closing his eyes again. “I was from a poor Italian immigrant family and we lived in what you could describe at best as a wooden shack near the railroad. Trains would rattle by day and night and I shared a room with my two brothers. My old man died of a heart attack when I was fifteen and my mom passed away a month after I joined the army. I went back for the funeral but I haven’t set foot there since. The more places you see, the more you realize nowhere is that paradise on Earth you dream about finding.”

  Trey remained silent. He realized his own privileged upbringing was on a totally different scale to the one Mancini had endured. He’d always had everything he ever wanted, showered with gifts and cash from his rich lawyer father and inherently wealthy mother.

  Trey had pretty much flunked High School, infrequently attending classes and mocking the kids who had their noses permanently inside a text book. He didn’t see the point in attaining any kind of exam grades. With the wealth his family had at their disposal, Trey knew he’d never have to bother working for a living if he didn’t want to. Instead, his hang-outs were at the beach or mingling with the rich and famous amongst the LA nightclub scene. Surfing and partying were the only vocations he’d ever been good at but all his pals the same age had recently drifted off into their own lives, with career commitments or engaging in serious relationships. Trey had neither a career path to follow nor seemed capable of holding down a girlfriend for more than a couple of weeks. He’d grown bored on his own and wrongly believed he could become some sort of criminal entrepreneur if he gained a little experience into the murky underworld scene. Trey knew he’d never be like Mancini. He didn’t possess the steely determination to succeed or the ruthless kill or be killed resolve running through his veins. Those qualities were inbred and probably could never be taught.

  The road remained fairly quiet, with only the odd truck or van rumbling by in the opposite direction. Mancini slipped into the world of slumber, dreaming about his childhood home. His family was reunited in the small house and he was a teenager again but the property was surrounded by a crowd of present day infected people.

  Trey knew he’d feel exhausted later during the oncoming day but felt he had to play his part. If that meant driving to La Paz without stopping, then so be it. He thought about what Mancini had said about a career change and began to imagine himself as one of a new breed of movie makers and which famous actor he could cast to play himself.

  Trey’s mind whirled with excitement. With his father’s financial backing, he could become a legendary film director and move in all kinds of privileged circles, rubbing shoulders as an equal with Hollywood’s finest.

  A sudden sense of clarity and realization dawned on him and he felt a cold chill run up his spine. For his new career as a movie maker to come to fruition, Trey had to survive the ensuing perilous situation of battling armed cartel and retrieving the green ice, then continue to survive against the infected onslaught on the return journey back to the States.

  Trey realized the odds of continuing to exist throughout the whole scenario were extremely slim.

  Chapter Sixty-Six

  The impending sunrise projected an orange glow across the clear sky as Trey drove closer to La Paz. The change in light stirred Mancini from his troubled sleep. He rubbed his eyes and sat forward in his seat. Jorge and Leticia still slumbered. Jorge’s head lolled around with the motion from the car and his bare foot shook left and right, while resting on the top of the front seat behind Leticia’s head. She leaned her head against her hand, resting her elbow on top of the door.

  “You okay, Trey?” Mancini croaked. His throat and mouth were dry and parched.

  Trey rubbed his eyes. “Yeah, I’m good. I could do with a cup of old Joe though.”

  “Yeah, good call. I could use a drink myself. Stop when you see a stall or a store.”

  Trey turned his head slightly. “You sure? I thought you said no more stops until we hit La Paz.”

  Mancini nodded. “I did but we must be almost there right now and we don’t know what kind of god awful mess is going to be waiting for us when we get there.”

  Trey nodded. “I saw a road sign that said La Paz was nine miles away a few minutes ago, right before you woke up, man.”

  Mancini reached into the pocket flap and retrieved Trey’s Heckler and Koch handgun then passed it over the top of the seat. Trey took the firearm and stiffed it back into his waistband.

  “We could all use a bathroom break and maybe find a bandage for Hop Along here,” Mancini said, slapping Jorge’s face with the back of his hand.

  Jorge snorted and stirred, awaking from his sleep. “What? Where the hell are we?” he grunted.

  “I see you’re full of morning joy, Jorge,” Mancini sighed.

  “My ankle still hurts like hell,” Jorge whined, leaning forward to move his leg slightly.

  “Well, you’ll be happy to know that we’re nearly at La Paz and we’re going to make a stop at the next store or roadside stall we see.” Mancini figured he also had to call LA to divulge the details of the latest situation report. “I’ll make a call for some more guys to come down and help us out here.”

  Trey spotted a trailer on the roadside with signs hanging on each side of a counter window and pulled the Thunderbird onto the shoulder. Leticia awoke when the wheels bumped on the rough terrain. She yawned and glanced around, taking in their surroundings.

  “Hey,” Tr
ey muttered and flashed her a smile.

  Leticia only nodded in return and Trey figured she was still brooding about lying to the cops back at the blockade.

  Trey halted the car directly opposite the beverage trailer. A greasy looking, unshaven guy peered out from the counter window at the Thunderbird. He had a slightly wary look on his face, which Mancini found a little disconcerting but the smell of fresh coffee was too inviting to pass up.

  “I’ll stay in the car,” Jorge groaned. “I can’t walk on this damned ankle.”

  Mancini was reluctant to leave Jorge in the Thunderbird with an array of loaded firearms tucked away but knew Jorge couldn’t move freely and wouldn’t be physically capable of reaching under the front seat with any great ease. He decided to collect his handgun from the glove box though.

  Trey and Leticia got out the car and Mancini hopped over the side. Trey rolled his neck and arched his aching back, squinting into the early morning sunlight and pointing out the shoreline in the distance. Mancini used Trey and Leticia as a shield from the trailer guy’s prying glare and retrieved his own Heckler and Koch from the glove box.

  Leticia order four coffees from the trailer guy and he grunted in reply. He came back with four steaming Styrofoam cups and conversed in Spanish with Leticia. Trey handed over a bill that the guy snatched away without a glance in his direction.

  “You sit tight there, Jorge,” Mancini said quietly. “I will be watching you.”

  Jorge muttered under his breath and Mancini made his way over to the trailer and collected his coffee cup from the counter.

  Leticia turned to Trey and Mancini with a concerned expression. Trey picked up on her anxiety.

  “What? What is it? What did this guy say?” he asked, glancing briefly at the man inside the trailer.

  Leticia handed Trey his cup and took her own from the counter. “He was asking where we are heading and warned us not to go into La Paz. The whole place is in lockdown with some sort of contagious disease running rife through the city. The entire area is on high alert and the military and law enforcements are everywhere.”

  “Shit,” Mancini hissed. The situation was worse than he’d anticipated. “Hang here a moment and keep your eyes on Jorge,” he said to Trey. “I don’t want him going for those weapons under the seats, although I seriously doubt he will. I have to make a call.”

  Trey nodded. “Got it.”

  Mancini walked a few yards away from the trailer along the dusty shoulder, retrieving his cell phone from his pocket. He speed dialed Eddie Reinbeck’s number. The call was answered almost immediately.

  “Talk to me, Marco,” Eddie barked on the other end of the line. His voice sounded hoarse and tired.

  “We got a big problem here, Eddie,” Mancini said. “We’ve reached the outskirts of La Paz but there are cops and military all over the god damn place. I don’t know how we’re going to find our way through the city.”

  “You found out where Luiz is holed up yet?”

  “We know he’s around here someplace but only Jorge knows the exact address and he ‘aint spilling until we get near the place,” Mancini explained. “These infected fucks are crawling out the woodwork almost every place we go. We’ve had some hairy moments out here, Eddie. How’s it looking for some backup down here?”

  “No can do at the moment, Marco,” Eddie sighed. “I’ve been up all night trying to organize things right here. There’s some kind of terrorist alert or some damn thing going down in LA. The airport’s closed, the train stations are sealed off and the traffic routes are gridlocked. It makes moving anything around almost impossible. I’m relying on street guys to cart all kinds of important shit around the city on foot. And we both know how unpredictable those guys can be.”

  Mancini was barely listening. He’d stopped taking in what Eddie was saying after he’d refused them any backup.

  “Call me when you get some good news, Marco,” Reinbeck continued. “I don’t want to hear any more sob stories. I’ve got a whole bag full of can’t do’s right now, from these useless motherfuckers on the street. They’re all going to give me an aneurism by the end of the day.”

  “Okay, Eddie, I get it,” Mancini groaned, now desperate to get off the phone. He had enough on his plate without Reinbeck’s griping rant. “I’ll call you later.” He folded up his cell phone, leaving Eddie Reinbeck to continue complaining into a dead line.

  “Shit,” Mancini muttered to himself. They’d been left isolated and high and dry. They were now forced to complete the mission on their own.

  Chapter Sixty-Seven

  Mancini slipped his phone back into his pocket and made his way back to the beverage trailer. Trey and Leticia sipped their coffee while standing beside the Thunderbird and Jorge held his cup, resting it on his chest.

  “What’s the story, morning glory?” Trey asked.

  Mancini shook his head. “I asked LA for backup but it ‘aint going to happen.”

  Trey’s face fell. “I thought you said a whole bunch of badasses were going to come down here and help us out, man? Are we supposed to take on the cartel guys and half the Mexican Army as well as all those crazy infected bastards?” Trey shook his head incredulously and felt a sinking sensation in the pit of his stomach. “We ‘aint going to pull this off, man. No way.”

  Mancini sighed and leaned on the hood of the Thunderbird with his head flopping forward, feeling like a beaten man. He thought there had to be way through the city and a way to solve this issue. There was always a way. But they’d ground to a dead end.

  Trey huffed, tossing his coffee cup onto the ground then stood with his arms folded leaning against the driver’s door. Leticia stared at the ground with an expression of despair on her face. The atmosphere was one of collective gloom.

  “The place you are looking for is on the Carretera Escenica route, a mile or so to the north of the city. It is on a hillside overlooking the sea,” Jorge said. “I just want an end to all this, one way or another.”

  Mancini glanced up at Jorge and moved hurriedly to the glove box, retrieving the map. He opened it out across the hood and found La Paz then followed the northern road routes with his finger, pinpointing Carretera Escenica.

  “The Scenic Road,” Leticia muttered.

  “Excuse me?” Mancini asked, briefly turning his attention away from the map.

  “Carretera Escenica means scenic road,” she explained.

  “Okay, that’s great,” Mancini said, with a little more enthusiasm washing over him. He returned his gaze back to the map. Now they had a location, they just had to figure out a route that bypassed the hub of the city.

  A bright yellow pickup truck, with blackened glass windows slowly drove by and stopped on the shoulder a few yards further down from the trailer. The driver let the engine rumble in neutral as he watched the occupants of the Thunderbird in his rear view mirror.

  “Man, I could use a leak,” Trey mumbled.

  “There is a cubicle beside the trailer,” Leticia said, pointing the way.

  Trey strode towards the plastic, portable bathroom and Leticia followed. When they returned, Jorge moaned he needed to also pay a visit and insisted Trey helped him over the rough terrain. Mancini continued to study the map strewn across the hood while smoking a cigarette.

  La Paz sat on the east side of a crescent shaped bay. The Gulf of California sat to the north and west and the main highway circled around the city center. An estuary ran through the south side of the city, cutting it in two. The main highway followed a route over the estuary and back across again slightly further on. Mancini assumed the river crossing was in the form of bridges, which was going to cause a problem. Without knowing exactly where the blockades were positioned, it was impossible to plot a clear route around the city.

  Jorge, Trey and Leticia returned from the bathroom cubicle and all three of them looked suitably disgusted. Jorge hobbled along, leaning on Trey with his arm wrapped around the younger man’s shoulder.

  “Ah, man, that
place stinks,” Trey protested.

  Mancini ignored Trey’s gripes and pointed to the map. “We need to find a route around the city where the cops aren’t likely to have any road blocks set up. You try and figure out a route while I pay a visit to this luxurious bathroom of yours.” He slapped Trey on the shoulder and headed for the cubicle.

  Trey and Leticia eased Jorge into the Thunderbird’s backseat and stood side by side, gazing over the map of La Paz.

  Mancini entered the small cubicle. He did his best to ignore the overpowering stench of human waste and slapped at the cloud of flies buzzing in a circle. He relieved his bladder and washed his face in the small sink then stared at his reflection in the cracked mirror. The easy thing to do in their current predicament was turn around and head back to the States but they were so close to their goal, whatever the outcome was destined to be.

  The guy from the beverage trailer strode towards the Thunderbird, muttering under his breath. He picked up the discarded Styrofoam cups from the ground and pointed to a trash bin to the right of the trailer. Leticia offered an apology and the guy gazed beyond her at the map spread over the hood. He moved closer and stood beside Trey, who was still trying to figure out a workable route to the north of La Paz.

  “You can do this,” Mancini muttered to his own reflection. “You got to stop this damn infection spreading any further.” He clenched his fists and bumped the cubicle walls either side of the mirror. “There is always a way.” Mancini turned and exited the stinking cubicle.

  Trey, Leticia and the guy from the beverage trailer were stood in a huddle, talking beside the front of the Thunderbird when Mancini returned. The trailer guy was busy gesticulating with his hands and Leticia translated to Trey. Trey looked intense, staring at the guy but nodded as Leticia spoke.

  “What’s going down?” Mancini asked as he approached.

 

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