Authors: James McCreath
JAMES McCREATH
“No, not at all. I just didn’t think that we would be going to the mattresses
this soon.”
Lonnie was referring to the old Mafia custom of family soldiers holding up
in a dormitory-fortress style existence if there was a gang war in progress, or if
one of their own was being sought by the police or an assassin.
“There is nowhere to go except to the mattresses, Lonnie. If Bertoni is
looking for us, you can be assured it is to turn us in and ease the pressure on
the rest of his organization. I knew the man was a coke head. I should have
never trusted him as I did. We go back so many years, though. It’s because he
is a Porteño. He is caught up in the fast life. Always has been. He doesn’t know
the hardships of the common people in the provinces. He is not one of them,
like we are. The working people of Argentina deserve their civil liberties, not
to be thrown in jail and detained without explanation. I want to keep going, to
show the people . . . Hell, the world, that true Montoneros don’t stop pressing
for justice just because of some irrelevant soccer games. We will work as a unit
again and strike independently for our cause. There is no going back. I did not
anticipate six people dying at the banco, but I was ready to lay down my life
and fight my way out of there if I had to. We have all lived to continue our
righteous work. That is an omen. We can never go back now, only forward, for
the people.”
That stirring piece of rhetoric cemented the formation of the outlaw gang
which was to become the most hated and hunted terrorist cadre in Argentina’s
history.
Preparation leading up to the first act of enlightenment by this splinter
group took almost six weeks to complete the procurement of the necessary
explosives and finalization of plans. Serge and Jean Pierre were moved to a
nondescript rooming house in downtown Tigre. An extended stay at the
fishing cabin would have provoked questions once the season drew to a close.
Everything had to be arranged with the utmost of secrecy and caution.
Lonnie had withdrawn ten thousand U.S. dollars from his private account
and turned the funds over to Serge. He and Celeste continued their work at the
camp as usual, with the exception of sporadic meetings at the rooming house.
It was the Lavalle brothers that would handle all the planning and purchasing.
By the twenty-sixth of March, Serge was ready to reveal the first strike plan.
“I want to hit the middle class first. I want to make them wake up and
realize that we haven’t gone away. These bastards are still thinking about their
fucking football tournament. I want to bring them back to reality. This is
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Argentina, home of the powerful and corrupt. The world must see that someone
still cares about the people who can’t even afford a ticket to a football game. So,
this is what we are going to do.”
Two days later, during the morning rush hour in the southern part
of the capital, a main commuter railway bridge was destroyed by plastic
explosives. No one was injured in the blast, but the disruption kept many an
irate businessperson away from work that day. Celeste had, once again, left her
artistic handiwork at the scene, and the florescent red ‘Montoneros’ painted on
the side of the trestle left no doubt in anyone’s mind just who the perpetrators
had been.
Serge wanted to act quickly and consummate as many operations as
possible in a short period of time, then change headquarters and lay low for a
while. The second sortie involved the bombing of a police station in northwest
Buenos Aires. This particular station was acknowledged to be one of the most
brutal detention and torture centers in the entire country. It took Serge until
April sixth to replenish the supply of plastic explosives after the railway bridge
job. They hit the station that same night.
An old clunker of a car that Lonnie had bought a few days earlier with
his false identification was parked in front of the target and left for several
hours while the operatives kept the comings and goings of the station under
surveillance. They were waiting for the arrival of the new internees, the ones
destined to be tortured or killed. Jean Pierre had memorized the times that the
armored police vehicle arrived at the station each night with its load of freshly
rounded up subversives. The plan was to coordinate the detonation of the car
bomb with the opening of the police station gate.
In the ensuing confusion, it might be possible to free some of the prisoners
before the compound was resecured. The assault was risky, but Serge had
concocted this plan as an act of defiance, an act to show the military and the
police that the Montoneros were an ongoing force with which to deal.
Celeste continued to preach her terrorist dogma throughout the initial
planning stage of the cadre’s new operations. That Lonnie was so thoroughly
brainwashed into the cause of the people’s revolution was, in part, due to her
oratorical skills and, in part, due to her oral skills. Rhetoric was always followed
by passionate lovemaking, and she knew that it was her skill as a lover more
than his passion for politics that kept Lonfranco De Seta a member of the
Montonero movement.
Lonnie never doubted any of the plans that Serge came up with. He was
like a big pussy cat, except for one nagging matter. The fledgling terrorist
wanted to prove that he was a worthy warrior, personally. The police station
operation seemed tailor-made for Lonnie to draw his first blood.
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JAMES McCREATH
The armored police personnel carrier arrived at its destination right on
schedule. Serge sat behind the wheel of the getaway vehicle, half a block away
from the front gates. On his lap lay a remote control detonator. Celeste was
covering the left flank on foot, thirty yards down the street from the car bomb.
Jean Pierre had taken up a similar position on the right flank. Lonnie was
sitting at the bar in a small café, directly across the street from the police
station gates. He wore a hat and dark glasses, concealing his face further by
engrossing himself in the daily newspaper. When he saw the police vehicle
approaching, he turned his back to the window in order to avoid flying glass.
The blast was deafening. Café patrons hit the floor as the walls of the old
building shook from the percussion. Lonnie was out the front door and across
the street in an instant, his Llama nine millimeter pistol at the ready.
Celeste and Jean Pierre converged on the armored vehicle at the same time
that Lonnie arrived. While the blast had been loud and devastating to nearby
buildings and passenger vehicles, it had only seared some paint off the side of
its intended target. The dazed driver and guard refused Lonnie’s threats to get
out of the cab and open the rear prisoners’ door. The cab’s doors and bulletproof
glass were intact, and there was no way that the two men on the inside were
setting foot on the outside. Jean Pierre was trying to force the rear door open
and having very little success when a frustrated Lonnie joined him.
“The driver has locked himself inside. I can’t get the keys. Ten seconds,
and we are out of here.”
His mute companion nodded in agreement. Celeste was busy with her can
of spray paint, while waiting for the first police reinforcements with her cocked
Uzzi ready for action. She didn’t have long to wait.
Just as the lady artist had completed her standard calling card on the
exterior wall of the prison, three uniformed officers rushed from inside the
compound toward the back of the vehicle. As soon as they opened fire on the
partially concealed terrorists that were trying to force the prisoner’s door ajar,
Celeste cut loose with her own automatic weapon.
It was no contest. The standard issue .38 caliber handgun that the officers
possessed was like a peashooter compared to the Uzzi. All three of the constables
fell in Celeste’s hail of lead. But there were more men on the way, too many
policemen to ward off. The prisoners’ door would not budge, and now it was
time to flee so that they could fight again.
Serge had pulled up in the getaway car, and the three pedestrians piled
through its doors. The squeal of rubber was intermixed with the pop-pop-
pop of the police revolvers. While they had been unable to rescue any of the
‘Disappeared’ from the clutches of the corrupt authorities, they had, at least,
managed to block the entrance to the compound with the armored vehicle. It
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would be several minutes before the police could follow in pursuit. Celeste took
one last glance at her handiwork as the car turned a sharp corner.
“One thing’s for certain, they know who was here!” she smiled.
The four revolutionaries abandoned the first escape car, then drove a second
vehicle casually to the boarding house in Tigre. Their mood was sullen and
the air was thick with frustration. It was the nonfamily member that finally
vocalized his dismay.
“Well, as I see it, we didn’t accomplish a damn thing today. No freed
prisoners, no cash, just three dead policemen. That is sure to bring the heat
down even harder. The people’s movement isn’t really benefiting in a tangible
way from our little escapades, are they? And I have done fuckall to help! We
have to do something that will make a difference. There must be something I
can do to make a difference!”
“Lonnie, remember that we are soldiers of the people, fighting against
terrible odds. Especially right now, with the security forces on the alert. We
have let them know that we exist, and that we are ready to kill and be killed for
the people. But I understand your frustration. You are a young Turk, anxious
to lose your virginity, draw your first coup. Well, I have just the job for you. I
will explain everything back at the boarding house.” Serge Lavalle spoke in an
almost fatherly tone to the anxious young buck.
As promised, less than five minutes after arriving back at their headquarters,
the cadre leader summoned his troops.
“Sit down at the table.”
Serge had retrieved a folder from the secret compartment of his suitcase.
The others joined Lonnie at the dining room table.
“Miguel Tobias Panzino, under secretary for economic coordination. Here
is his picture. Take a good look at it, study it. His job, Lonnie, is to distribute
funds to various government agencies, including the military and social services.
In other words, it is this man, and this man alone, that decides if the army gets
a new tank or farmers in a flood-stricken village get emergency aid.”
“Guns or butter, Lonnie! Remember, just like in my tutorials,” Celeste
interjected.
“That is right, guns or butter,” Serge continued. “But this bastard has
been in the pocket of the junta since they took power. Look at the military
spending increases in each of the last two years. Not only that, this man is
lining his own pockets. He is on the take. Government contracts also pass his
desk. They are available for a healthy deposit to the bank of Miguel Tobias
Panzino. Welfare and social benefits have been halved under this arrogant pig.
The people are suffering as a direct result of this man’s actions. Now, if he were
eliminated, the person replacing him might be inclined, primarily out of fear
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for his own life, to reconsider those allocations. The voice of the people will be
heard, Lonnie, and I am giving you the opportunity to be their spokesman.”
An electric current surged up Lonnie’s spine. This was it! A chance to
make a difference by simply squeezing the trigger of his Llama pistol. A hit! A
contract! An assassination!
Viva la revolution!
He was euphoric as Serge detailed the particulars of their next exercise. It
would be necessary to change their base of operations immediately following
the hit, for the two brothers had already stayed longer than most guests at the