End Game (12 page)

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Authors: John Gilstrap

BOOK: End Game
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Wortham smiled. “You’re welcome, Mr. John Smith of Coronado, California. Those are nice words. But you still haven’t answered my question. Where did you serve?”

Before he could say anything, Jonathan heard Boxers make a growling sound again. It was Big Guy’s way of warning him not to engage. Wortham could be the nicest guy in the world, but he still had no need to know.

“Let me put it this way,” Jonathan hedged. “You had the military part right. Now, think about every hot spot in the last thirty years or so, and there’s a really good chance that we were there.”

“Are you guys Special Forces or something?” Wortham asked. The facial reactions he saw confirmed it. “Ah. Okay.” Wortham rubbed the back of his head for a few seconds, and then when he looked back up at them, his face was frozen in a place between pain and curiosity. “One thing,” he said. “Just promise me that if I knew what you were doing, I’d be proud to tell people that I’d sold you my car.”

Jonathan smiled. He held out his hand, as if to seal a bet. “That’s a deal, so long as you promise never to tell your friends anything like what you just said you’d be proud to tell them.”

Wortham shook on it. “I miss it, you know,” he said. “It’s terrible to be a man my age and think back and realize that my life was most exciting when I was twenty-two years old.”

Something tugged at Jonathan’s gut when he heard that. It was the secret that civilians could never grasp: As hellish and bloody and deadly and overall awful as war was, nothing outside the battlefield could come within 10 percent of the adrenaline rush.

“Either way,” Jonathan said. “I promise on a stack of Bibles that my friend and I are on the side of the angels.”

Wortham slapped Jonathan’s shoulder. “In that case, I wish a quick trip to Hell for whoever’s on Satan’s side.” With that, he started walking back toward the terminal.

Jonathan felt a flash of guilt. He had the old guy’s car, which meant that the old guy had no wheels. “Hey!” he called. “Mr. Wortham!”

The older man turned.

“Can we drop you somewhere?”

He flashed two rows of perfectly aligned teeth. If they were natural, they were an anomaly for his generation. “Are you shittin’ me? I’m at an airport and I got a pocket full of money. I figure the world is mine, at least for the next month or so. Plus, I won’t have to answer phone calls about where my truck might have ended up. Whatever you’re doin’, good luck to you.”

The old guy disappeared into the executive terminal as Jonathan grabbed the cash bag and brought it up front with him. The Expedition was an Eddie Bauer model, complete with beige leather and beige everything else on the interior. “Nice guy,” Jonathan said.

“Don’t you ever just grunt and ignore people?” Boxers asked. “I mean, Jesus. You flash money like it’s friggin’ manure, and then you tell him we were part of the Unit. Christ, why don’t you just give him a business card with a lipstick print? I wanted to put a friggin’ sock in your mouth.”

Jonathan granted bragging rights to Boxers as the man who’d saved his ass more times than anyone else on earth, and as such granted a huge margin for stepping out of line. This was an unusual break.

“I sense you have a problem,” he said.

Boxers laughed. “How very intuitive of you,” he said. “It’s not a big deal, Dig, but you just need to start taking OpSec more seriously. You’re getting chatty in your old age.”

That was a double shot—old age and flouting security—and Jonathan opted to ignore both of them. They had stuff to do, and they didn’t need the pall of an argument.

Jonathan pulled two radios out of the cash duffel. He handed one to Big Guy and kept the other for himself. Not much bigger than a pack of cigarettes, the radio represented the best in satellite and encryption technology. He hooked it onto his belt at the small of his back and slipped a wireless transceiver into his right ear. He pressed the tiny transmit button on the earpiece and said, “Mother Hen, Scorpion. You there?”

It took a few seconds before Venice’s voice crackled, “Right here. You’re loud and clear.”

“Just so you know, we’re on the ground and on our way,” Jonathan said over the air. “I’ll reestablish contact when we’re close.”

“Got it,” Venice said. “I’ll be standing by.”

C
HAPTER
E
LEVEN

“I
made the phone call,” Graham said. He’d changed into the new clothes and everything fit. He thought she needed to know.

Her face turned pale. “Tell me you’re kidding. Are you talking about the panic call?”

Graham nodded. He knew she was pissed. No, she was beyond pissed.

“Why would you do that?” she shouted. In all the months they’d been together, he’d never heard her raise her voice before.

“Because I promised my mom,” he said. His voice caught in his throat as he spoke, and tears burned his eyes. “You said yourself that she’s probably dead. How could I not?”

“But you didn’t know—” Jolaine stopped herself. She held her hands in front of her, palms out, as if to tell someone to stop. Or maybe to tell the anger to stop. “Okay,” she said. He wasn’t sure to whom. “Okay, what’s done is done. Tell me about it. Tell me what happened.”

“I really didn’t mean any harm,” Graham said. He didn’t think he could handle anyone being angry with him right now. He needed friends. He had enough enemies.

“Please just tell me what happened on the phone call.”

Graham told her about the conversation with the mysterious man on the phone. He tried to be as complete in the details as possible, and he didn’t intentionally leave anything out. The deeper he got into the story, the darker Jolaine’s expression became.

“So, did you or did you not give him the code?”

“I did not.” Not only was that the truth, but he also sensed that it was the right answer. That made him feel less shitty.

Jolaine fell quiet as she thought through the details. Something passed through her brain that made her eyes light up. “Wait a minute,” she said. “What phone did you use?”

Graham pointed to the phone on the nightstand. “That one.”

Jolaine shot to her feet. “Oh, shit. Oh, Christ, now they know where we are.”

“I don’t think I talked long enough for them to trace the call,” Graham said.

“Really? I mean,
really?
This is the twenty-first century, Graham. This is the age of caller I.D. and instant recognition. They knew where you were the instant they answered the phone.” She looked around, clearly on the edge of panic. She was scanning the room for something. She darted into the bathroom and looked there, too.

Graham felt a surge of panic in his gut. “What?” he said. “What is it? What’s wrong? Why are—”

“Do you have anything important in here?” Jolaine asked. She reappeared from the bathroom with the toothbrush she’d bought for him. She tossed it and the toothpaste into one of the shopping bags.

“No, I don’t think so.”

“Then get to the car,” she said. “We have to get out of here.”

“Where are we going?”

“Anywhere,” she said. “We can’t stay here. They’re coming for us.”

“Who?”

“I don’t know!” she shouted. “The same people who came for us last night, Graham. The same people I told you not to call, but you decided to call anyway.” She slapped the lamp that sat atop the dresser and sent it to the end of its electrical cord tether. From there, it crashed to the floor.

“Jesus, Jolaine.” Graham retreated between the beds. He’d never seen her like this.

“You don’t get it, do you?” she shouted, taking a step closer. “I mean, you really, truly, deep in your heart of hearts don’t get it. We are at war, Graham. And we don’t know who the hell the enemy is! People are trying to kill us.”

She spun and moved to the door, the shopping bag dangling from her hand. “Come on,” she said. “Right now. We’re out of here.” She beckoned him with a vast, circular motion of her entire arm.

“What is it?” Graham moved as he spoke. “You’re scared.”

“Damn right I’m scared,” she said. “The bad guys are close. We didn’t drive that far last night. Maybe, what, an hour? Hour and a half max? When did you make your phone call?”

Graham glanced at the clock. It was past checkout time. “I hung up about twenty minutes ago.”

“Shit.” Her beckoning motion grew even larger. “Now. We’re gone.”

Casting a final glance around the tiny space to make sure that he hadn’t left anything—how could he when he hadn’t brought anything?—he darted over to join Jolaine at the door.

She hesitated before opening it. Almost as an afterthought, it seemed, she looked through the peephole.

“Anybody out there?” Graham asked.

“No,” she said. She pressed the button on the car key fob to unlock the doors, then spun around. She planted her back against the door, and reached out to place both her hands on his shoulders. She squeezed tightly enough to hurt. “You have to listen to me, Graham. And you have to do exactly what I say or I swear to God I’ll shoot you myself and be done with this shit. Do you understand me?”

Even after the pep talk of a few minutes ago, he halfway believed that she really would shoot him. “Yes,” he said. “I promise.”

“We’re going to go straight to the car,” Jolaine explained. The intensity in her eyes could have lit a fire. “We’re not going to run, but we’re going to walk with purpose. I will have my hand on your back, and you will not fight me. We are both going to get in on the driver’s side, and you are going to crawl across to the passenger side, then we’re going to get out of here. If anything happens—I mean, if
anything
happens—if there’s shooting or God knows what else, I want you on the floor and I want you to stay there. I know what I’m doing, and you don’t. Are we clear?”

Under any other circumstance, Graham would have launched to the stratosphere if anyone had spoken to him like that—especially if that someone was Jolaine. As it was, he knew he’d screwed up, and now he’d agree to anything. “We’re clear,” he said.

“All right,” Jolaine said. “Let’s do this.” She moved him to the side of the door, but kept one hand on his shoulder. She drew her pistol with her other hand. “When I tell you to open the door, I want you to open it all the way. Just leave it open, and we’ll head to the car.”

Graham pointed to the shopping bags. “What about our stuff?”

“I’ll buy you another goddamn toothbrush, okay?”

It was a stupid question.

She nodded. Just once, a single twitch of her head. “Open the door.”

Just as she’d told him, he pulled on the door, but it stuck. After three tries, it pulled away from the jamb and opened all the way. The door hadn’t even stopped moving before Jolaine was pushing him out the door and into the parking lot.

He heard the SUVs turning the corner into the lot before he saw them. There were two of them and they screamed past the little front office building where the clerk had decided that Jolaine was a pedophile and headed right for them, moving fast enough that Graham didn’t think they’d be able to stop before ramming them.

Graham didn’t have a chance to react before Jolaine bent him at the waist and pushed him to the far side of the vehicle—the passenger side. Just seconds into this, and already they were breaking the rules.

The SUVs screeched to a halt and the doors flew open. The first man Graham saw was the driver of the first vehicle. He stepped out with a rifle in his hands and even before his feet hit the ground, Jolaine fired her pistol twice. Blood flew from the guy’s forehead and he dropped in a heap.

“Get in the car!” Jolaine commanded, opening the door for him. She fired twice more, but he couldn’t see the result.

The world erupted in more gunfire. Bullets tore into their Mercedes, launching puffs of glass, and making the entire chassis vibrate with the individual impacts. Graham cowered on the ground as Jolaine returned fire.

“Where’s your machine gun?” he yelled.

“In the trunk!” She fired again. Again, again, and again.

Graham rose to his knees to peer through the shattered windows to see what was going on. What he saw both surprised and terrified him. Three men lay on the ground near the first vehicle. Two of them lay still, and the third was writhing on the pavement, screaming for help. Others hid behind open doors, firing blindly, exposing only their rifles. Their bullets raked the front of the motel and probably the sky, but precious few impacted the car.

Jolaine, on the other hand, stood tall, allowing the body of the car to serve as a shield as she fired two-and three-shot combinations at the attackers. Graham was watching when the slide on the top of her pistol locked open.

Oh, shit, she’s out of bullets.

Not yet, she wasn’t. With her eyes never leaving the people she was shooting at, she dropped the clip—he thought that’s what it was called—out of the bottom of her gun, and then she produced another one from somewhere under her shirt and slapped it into place. She started firing again.

“How many more of those do you have?” he asked.

She didn’t answer, and he interpreted the silence as the worst kind of news. He didn’t know how many bullets she had left, but it didn’t take a genius to know that once they were gone, both he and Jolaine would be dead unless she somehow killed them all first.

“I’m getting the machine gun,” he said.

“The hell you are!”

“The hell I’m not!” Graham was tired of hiding, and he was tired of being a victim. Like before, when all this shooting shit was just a thought in his head, he was not going to die hiding. Only cowards died hiding. His dad died shooting, and his mom, if she had in fact been killed, died shooting. He was going to be part of the family tradition.

Graham dropped back down onto the ground to get behind the steel, and he moved to the rear door.

“Graham!” Jolaine yelled.

“I’m getting in the friggin’ car!” he yelled. “What do you want from me?”

He pulled the door open and slid like a snake along the floor. He lost a flip-flop in the process, but he’d worry about that later. Or, he wouldn’t. Right now, it didn’t matter. His legs were still hanging out the door when he reached up and pulled down the armrest in the middle of the backseat. He was working a hunch, and it proved to be correct. There was a hatch behind the armrest that opened up to the trunk. If some asshole hadn’t locked it—

He pulled and it opened.

Yes!

There weren’t many advantages to being short and skinny when you’re fourteen years old—in fact, before today, he wouldn’t have been able to name one—but it turned out that being able to slither into a tiny space to retrieve a machine gun was one of them.

He entered like Superman, his arms outstretched over his head, and when his shoulders were clear, he started feeling around. This space defined darkness. But for the tiny streams of light that penetrated through the bullet holes, the blackness would have been perfect, absolute. That dim light, however, provided only shadows, no definition. As the world continued to explode outside, his hands found what he thought might have been a lug wrench, and also something that felt squishy that he didn’t like touching at all.

There it was! His hand landed on the tip of the barrel first—the muzzle and the sight—and he grabbed it. As he backed out of the hole, it occurred to him that the muzzle was pointed directly at his forehead—his Scout Camp counselor had pounded them on the importance of never allowing a gun to point at anything you weren’t willing to destroy—but now was not the time.

His shoulder cleared the hole, and two seconds later, he had the rifle in his hands.

He tumbled back out onto the parking lot just as Jolaine’s gun locked open again. She looked at it with anger, as if it had betrayed her.

“Jolaine!” he yelled.

Her eyes darted first to him, and then to the rifle he held. She smiled and ducked below the level of the fender just long enough to grab the carbine. “Good for you,” she said, and she rumpled his hair. “Now go back in there and get the rest of the ammunition. I’ve got a bunch of extra magazines in pouches. Hurry!”

 

 

Graham was a total shit for not obeying her orders, but when this was over, she was going to have to give him a hug. Jolaine didn’t know what she’d been thinking when she locked her only decent weapon into the trunk of her car, but as the Glock ejected her last shell casing, the appearance of the M4 felt like a gift from God—like a sign that they were destined to survive this round.

Whoever their attackers were, they were not experienced warriors. They fought as if they were afraid of being shot. Of course, everyone in a firefight was afraid of getting shot, but those who were experienced understood that the best way to avoid catching a bullet was to aim your shots and make sure they counted. As a mentor of hers had once said, the secret is to shoot first, shoot fast, and shoot well. As an added bonus, it never hurt to shoot dirty, too.

That first kill—dropping the driver of the first vehicle—had rattled the attackers, and despite their larger numbers, that rattling had given her the advantage. At least for as long as her ammunition held out.

Now that she was armed with thirty rounds of 5.56 millimeter devastation, the other team was going to learn just how bad a mistake they’d made.

Because she was the last person to handle the M4, she knew that a round was already chambered. She used her thumb to change the selector switch from safe to single-shot and she rose again. With the weapon pressed against her shoulder, she moved from behind the Mercedes and advanced on the SUVs and their cowering occupants.

Way back when she’d first loaded the magazines for her carbine, the anticipated threat had been vehicle-borne kidnapping, and as a result she’d loaded them with armor-piercing ammunition. As she stepped out, she scanned for targets. Where she saw legs on the ground, she zeroed in on a spot about three feet north of the legs and fired through the steel panels that obscured the torsos. The titanium-tipped bullets hit with enough energy, concentrated at an infinitesimally small surface area, to liquefy the steel at the point of contact, only to pass through, intact, to pierce whatever—whoever—lay behind the shield.

Two attackers hit, two attackers killed, for a total of five dead, so far.

There had to be at least one more, maybe several. Not only had she thought she’d seen them when they drove up, but it made no sense to have two vehicles with only five people. In a perfect world, the smart move would be to wait them out, let them make the first move, and then pick them off when they did. But this much gunfire and this many bodies were going to attract a lot of attention, and that attention was going to come with badges and guns. She didn’t want any of that. They couldn’t afford any of that. There was no way to explain the inexplicable.

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