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by James McCreath

the ‘Attractive Assassin.’ The men at No Se Preocupe were true assassins.

  Professionals! The police would have telegraphed their arrival in the silent Tigre

  night long before they reached the camp gates. Lonnie was outside, enjoying

  the beautiful night while keeping watch and listening on the dock. He had

  heard nothing until the sledgehammer fell!

  With the exception of his roughly cropped hairstyle, Lonnie De Seta

  looked, for all the world, like a successful business executive in his blue silk

  double-breasted suit and Newton’s alumni tie. A jaunty straw fedora solved

  the coiffure problem, and a pair of dark sunglasses further shielded his true

  identity. He had thrown an assortment of clothes and keepsakes in a folding

  leather club bag, then slowly made the heartbreaking walk to the main floor

  entrance foyer. His eyes darted everywhere as he moved, searching, reflecting,

  inspecting, remembering.

  “Good-bye, dear Oli. I will miss you more than you will ever know. Now,

  make sure there is not a word of this visit to my mother, or I will be forced to

  break my vacation short and arrive unannounced again to tickle you for your

  indiscretions.”

  He bent forward from the waist and kissed the native woman on her

  cheek. In all the years of their friendship, it was the one act of affection that he

  had never thought of committing. The fugitive’s eyes welled with tears behind

  his dark glasses as he turned and left the shocked lady muttering his name in

  the doorway.

  It was an easy walk from Lonnie’s home to the Banco Rio de la Plata on

  Avenido San Martin. He had devised a scheme in his solitary hours in Tigre

  that would allow him to circumvent the long queues at the teller’s wickets

  and keep his public exposure to a minimum. That scheme was called Marla

  Gallego.

  Señorita Gallego was an assistant to branch manager Anthony Rodrigue’s

  personal secretary. She was a nicely wrapped package that Señor Rodrigues

  did not mind staring at through his office window. As a matter of fact, the top

  executive had reorganized his outer office in order to afford himself a better

  view of the young lady’s long, velvety gams and tight curves.

  Marla Gallego was as friendly as she was erotically stimulating. She would

  always strike up conversations with the bank clients waiting close to her desk

  for their turn to pay homage to the boss. One of those conversations with

  Lonnie De Seta culminated in the best fuck she had ever experienced. They

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  had dated a few times, but Lonnie was too wild, and ultimately too moody for

  the marriage-minded Marla. That did not stop her from often fantasizing about

  their unions as she sat working at her desk near the marble-topped service

  counter.

  “Marla! Marla, can I talk with you for a moment?” The pretty clerk looked

  up from her ledger at the stranger who was softly calling her name. She had no

  idea who was hiding under the fedora and glasses.

  “Marla, come here for a second. I have to talk to you.” The customer was

  now motioning with his hand for her to approach the counter.

  Who is this man that knows my name? I don’t recall him at all! she pondered.

  More out of curiosity than courtesy, Marla finally gave in to the persistence

  of her admirer. Even as they stood face-to-face over the counter, there was no

  flash of recognition in her sweet mind.

  “Marla, it’s me, Lonnie De Seta. How have you been? You look good

  enough to eat!” The customer removed his dark glasses and doffed his hat

  momentarily while making his introduction. He was totally unprepared for the

  look of shock and horror that greeted the announcing of his name.

  Marla’s eyes almost fell out of their sockets, and she backed up several steps

  until she was flush against her desk. The sexy stenographer glanced around the

  immediate area to make sure that no one was watching, then stepped cautiously

  back to the counter. Her voice was barely a whisper when she finally spoke.

  “Lonnie, are you in trouble? There are men here looking for you. They are

  not bank people. They have guns under their jackets! We have all been told to

  notify them if you or anyone else tries to make a transaction on your accounts.

  They have been here waiting for you for several weeks. I don’t like them. They

  are rude and ignorant scum. What is going on, Lonnie? We have only been told

  that you may have been kidnapped, and that if you came here it would be to

  collect ransom money against your will. They have told us that the men with

  guns are here to protect you from your kidnappers. The longer those two swine

  are around here, the less I believe that story. Tell me quickly now, before they

  notice us!”

  Lonnie De Seta had to grasp the bevelled edge of the counter for support.

  He had walked into the lion’s den unprepared to tame the wild beasts. He just

  wanted a few simple items, one small transaction, that was it. His knees buckled

  and the remaining color drained from his face as Marla’s words registered.

  “Marla, you must help me! I am not being held hostage by anyone, but

  there are people who are after me. Those two thugs you speak of must be

  working for the people that want me dead. Marla, you must trust me now, and

  do as I ask.”

  He reached into his jacket pocket and removed his wallet. The safety

  deposit box key was then placed between them. Lonnie took a deposit slip and

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  JAMES McCREATH

  pen from the adjacent reservoir and scribbled several numerals. He then tore

  the piece of paper in two.

  “Here is the key to my safeety box. I have written its number on the

  deposit slip. Write down your home phone number for me on this other half.

  When you have the chance, go and empty the contents of my box and take

  them home with you. I will call you tonight and make arrangements to pick

  them up. Please, Marla, I am desperate! I have also written a check on my

  account for some money. Take it, and try to get me whatever you can!”

  “Lonnie, I can’t access your account. It has been frozen by the computers. I

  can lend you a bit of money from my own account, but it will be nowhere near

  the sum of this check. As for the deposit box, I need your signature to . . .”

  Marla’s voice trailed off as her eyes focused on a figure approaching from

  across the employee’s concourse.

  “Lonnie you must get out of here now. One of those men is coming this

  way. Here, this is my number. Call me tonight. I will see what I can do. Now,

  go!”

  She spun around quickly clutching the key and the piece of paper in her

  small fist. Marla Gallego was seated and pouring over her ledgers by the time

  the shadow of Astor Gordero’s operative fell across her desk.

  Lonnie De Seta had reacted with equal stealth, mostly due to the enormous

  amount of nervous adrenaline that was pounding through his veins. He moved

  swiftly, but he was cautious not to attract undue attention. He allowed himself

  one final glance back at Marla just as he was about to push the revolving door

  and make his exit.

  The young girl was visibly upset, and in that sp
lit second, his eyes met

  those of the phony bank employee. The man shouted for his partner and reached

  underneath his jacket to reveal the butt of an oversized handgun.

  The wanted man was through the door and down the steps of the Banco

  Rio de la Plata in a heartbeat. He barely felt the weight of his suitcase as he

  searched desperately for a means of escape. There was only one obvious choice.

  It was fortunate for Lonnie De Seta that Avenido San Martin was a

  prosperous commercial street. It was also fortunate that due to the heavy

  demands placed on city’s banks during World Cup Tournament, there was

  always a profusion of yellow and black taxis adjacent to these institutions. It

  was into the rear seat of one of these vehicles-for-hire that the desperado flung

  himself.

  “Hurry, I have a train to catch. Constitution Station, pronto!”

  As the cabby wheeled from the curb, he took a good look at his passenger

  in the rearview mirror.

  “Hey, you’re not some kind of bank robber or something are you? I saw you

  come down those steps in a real hurry. I don’t want any trouble or anything.”

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  RENALDO

  “Relax, my friend, I’m not going to hurt you. Just drive quickly!” Lonnie’s

  hand gripped the handle of the Llama pistol that protruded from his waistband

  under his suit-jacket.

  “I had the misfortune of running into my lover’s husband in the bank

  queue. It became a rather messy scene. He threatened to rearrange my anatomy

  right then and there, so I decided that discretion was the better part of valor,

  and I beat it! Now drive, amigo, for I must get out of the city for an extended

  vacation. The man is a monster!”

  The lusty smile that greeted the tall tale reassured Lonnie that the cabbie

  was no longer a threat. He turned around to glance out the rear window.

  “Don’t worry, Señor. No one will catch us. I drive like a Formula One

  champion! Sit back, relax. I will take care of you.”

  What Lonnie De Seta needed now was to disappear and rethink his course

  of action. Everything rode on Marla being able to access his safety deposit

  box. It would be several hours before she arrived home from the bank, and he

  needed to formulate a contingency plan. The situation had gone from bad to

  worse, and if things continued to unravel, there were very few people left that

  could lend a helping hand.

  Surrender was not even a consideration, for the stories of the barbaric

  treatment of prisoners emanating from such places as Olimpo Prison made it a

  moot point. He had to carefully plan his next move. It would have to be a plan

  he could use if the sexy little bank employee came home empty-handed.

  Constitution Station serviced the southern routes to and from the capital

  city, and on this day in particular, the mammoth structure filled Lonnie’s needs

  perfectly. Both the approaches and the passenger concourse were teeming with

  newly arrived football fanatics and weekend revellers, all in a party mood.

  The atmosphere had a distinct Brazilian flavor about it, for thousands of

  the samba men’s devotees had made the trip north from their headquarters at

  Mar del Plata. They were arriving en mass to spur their heroes on to victory in

  Saturday’s third-place battle against Italy. It was as if an impromptu carnival

  had erupted, and each successive trainload of visitors added to the frivolous

  mood of merriment. The drums, the whistles, the music. The samba beat had

  reached the capital city for the first time in the tournament.

  The man running for his life lurked in the shadows of the taxi’s backseat.

  He kept a sharp eye on both the crowd and the cab’s meter. It soon became

  evident that their progress would be slowed to a crawl by the surging throng

  that spilled out onto the main thoroughfares surrounding the station.

  His freedom flight had been expensive. The fare of almost eight thousand

  pesos, or ten American dollars, virtually cleaned out all his financial reserves.

  He pondered the possibility of bolting from the crawling vehicle and dissolving

  into the crowd.

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  JAMES McCREATH

  Lonnie knew that he would be slowed by the bulky club bag, and the

  last thing he needed was the notoriety of some irate cabbie screaming at the

  bystanders that he had been robbed or cheated. No, he was painfully aware that

  the only option here was the straight and narrow. He had enough money left to

  make a few phone calls and maybe buy a cup of coffee, that was it!

  “Look at those stupid assholes!” the cabbie shook his head in disgust.

  “What the fuck do they have to celebrate? You would think that they were in

  the championship final the way they are carrying on. Go home! Go back to

  where you came from, you bunch of banana eaters!”

  He was leaning out his driver’s door window screaming at the bemused

  party makers. Lonnie threw a handful of peso notes into the front seat, slid

  quietly out the rear passenger-side door onto the sidewalk, and disappeared into

  the samba line. The loudmouth driver was now involved in a heated discussion

  with several men dressed in yellow Brazilian football jerseys, and the last thing

  that the hunted man needed was to become involved in an altercation.

  The journey into the terminal proper was circuitous and boisterous to say

  the least. Lonnie didn’t feel like dancing, but one glimpse of the olive green

  militia uniforms that ringed the party scene convinced him that the snaking

  samba line offered the anonymity he needed. The suitcase was a nuisance, but

  finally after about ten minutes of rhythmic shuffling, he walked through the

  open air portal and into the darkness of Constitution Station.

  The national security forces were highly visible that weekend. Wherever

  there was a chance of large groups of people congregating, the men in uniform

  made their presence known. Police with dogs, mounted units on horseback

  dressed in full riot gear, armored vehicles with their terrifying water canons,

  and of course, scores of foot soldiers were all in attendance. As if that were not

  sufficient, busloads of reserves were parked on quiet side streets in strategic

  locations. The tournament had come off without any terrorist incidents thus

  far, and both the governing junta and the common people of Argentina were,

  for once, in agreement. A strong show of military muscle and an obvious

  preparedness to defuse any ticklish situations were the best deterrents. No one

  wanted it to rain on this parade!

  Lonnie’s heart was pounding heavily as he finally managed to locate a

  remote waiting area and plunk himself down on an empty wooden bench. He

  was drenched in perspiration from his impromptu samba lesson. A discarded

  newspaper became his shield from curious eyes as he opened it studiously and

  pretended to pour over its pages. His eyes were unable to focus on any but the

  largest headlines, however, for the thoughts racing through his mind dealt only

  with his own survival.

  It was over one half hour before he dared to lower his pulp protector and

  scan the area for any overt interest in his being. Much to his relief, the festivities

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>   RENALDO

  taking place outside in the open air were much more interesting than the now

  rumpled transient. No one gave the ‘Attractive Assassin’ a second glance.

  By five-thirty in the afternoon, he got up enough nerve to try Marla’s

  home phone number. The banks closed at four o’clock, so there was a chance

  that she might have had enough time to make it to her flat, which was not

  a great distance from the Banco Rio de la Plata. He knew that on Fridays,

  the employees seldom left the branch before six o’clock, but he was so bored,

  he figured that he had nothing to lose. To his amazement, his former lover

  answered the phone after just one ring.

  “Hello, Marla, it’s Lonnie. How are things? Are you alright?” There was

  dead silence on the end of the receiver.

  “Marla, are you there? Can you hear me? It’s Lonnie. I’ve been waiting for

  . . .”

  “Lonnie, I can hear you, although the sound of your voice is like a

  nightmare to me. I am so confused and frightened.” Her voice was a tearful

  whisper, barely audible over the stacic-riddled phone lines.

  “Marla, were you able to get into my safety-deposit box? What did that

  man say to you after I left? How about the cash? Were you . . .?”

  “Lonnie, listen to me. I don’t know what kind of trouble you are in, but

  why did you have to involve me in your deceptions? I haven’t seen or talked to

  you in over a year, then suddenly you turn up out of the blue one day and all

  hell breaks loose.” Lonnie could sense the fear in her voice turning to anger.

  “I don’t have anything for you tonight, and I won’t be able to help you, ever!

  That agent wanted to know who the man was that I had been talking to. He

  said that he had never seen you before in the branch. The bank has surveillance

  cameras everywhere, especially in the vaults where the safety-deposit boxes

  are located. One of the men works the floor of the bank, the other one is in a

  back room monitoring the cameras. If I ever set foot in that area after today,

  they would know I was your accomplice. Frankly, Lonnie, you are not worth

  the risk to me!” She was talking so quickly now that she had to stop to catch

  her breath.

  “Don’t be frightened, Marla, just tell me what happened.”

  “Don’t be frightened? Fuck you, Lonnie! They pulled me into Señor

  Rodrigue’s office for over an hour and treated me like I was dirt! I won’t be

 

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