The Demolishers (38 page)

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Authors: Donald Hamilton

BOOK: The Demolishers
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I frowned as a question popped into my mind belatedly: What reason did I have for believing that Rita Bustamente was a simple little errand girl following other people’s orders? Or that her name was Rita Bustamente? I’d assumed the one and she’d told me the other. Ha-ha. Certainly she’d given a pretty good impersonation of a lowly, and slightly dumb, girl soldier of the underground army of freedom mouthing corny catch phrases from badly printed activist manuals, but I hadn’t really found her act convincing, any more than I’d believed in her abject capitulation to my threats. So what did I believe? Assuming that the little girl was more clever than she appeared, and more important, who was she really?

“Oh, Christ!” I said softly. Then I glanced at the nearby statue and said, “Excuse me, padre.”

I mean, dammit, how long does it take a man to wake up to what’s right under his nose? A smallish girl had been seen in Montego making contact with Dominic Morelos as a susceptible young tourist lady. A smallish girl had been seen in West Palm Beach helping blow up the restaurant called La Mariposa. Sandra had seen a smallish girl in a maid’s uniform leaving a bomb in her room disguised as a vase of flowers. And now a smallish girl had brought an assassination weapon to Raoul Bonnette, along with murder instructions, and allowed herself to be captured so she could feed me misleading information.

We’d assumed in the earlier instances that the blonde girl in Montego had worn a dark wig in West Palm, and been her natural blonde self again in Newport; but it was high time I stopped making casual assumptions about people’s hair. One had almost killed me. We could just as easily be dealing with a dark girl who donned a blonde wig upon occasion. Angelita Johansen didn’t have to be blonde just because her name was Scandinavian. If it was her name. Maybe she was really Margarita Bustamente. Or maybe her true name hadn’t surfaced yet. It was no time to be wasting time on names, anyway.

I was already hurrying back towards the little park where I’d left Dana—left an inexperienced agent to guard a prisoner who was much more dangerous than she knew. When I reached the place, the curb was filled with parked vehicles, but the brown two-door was not among them. I walked forward slowly. Something shiny lay on the sidewalk, a strip of silver duct tape, actually several layers, neatly cut through with a sharp knife. Another, similar strip lay in the gutter. Still retaining something of the shape of the wrists and ankles they’d bound, they put me in mind of the husk shed by an insect. A deadly insect.

Chapter
31

I
considered
waiting until after dark to solve the tactical problem on Pacheco Street, but I decided against it. I didn’t have a clear picture of the enemy dispositions yet, and it was their city, not mine. In the dark, the advantage would be all theirs. Besides, I only had a .22 to shoot with, a gun with no knockdown power whatever. To compensate for the small caliber, accurate marksmanship would be required, hard to achieve at night.

Furthermore, I didn’t want to wait for sunset. It was still a couple of hours away, and I didn’t want to wait at all. I had those scraps of duct tape in mind. As a matter of fact, I’d even found the roll itself discarded under the car that had taken the space formerly occupied by our rental. I remembered that, when I was immobilizing the girl, I’d cut off the last strip I’d needed with my knife and then smoothed down the remaining tape neatly for storage; but more tape had been ripped off since and the last few inches loosened and stuck themselves back onto the roll all wrinkled, with a ragged edge.

All of which was a message to me from Margarita Bus-tamente, or Angelita Johansen, or whatever her real name might be. It read:
I've got your woman all taped up,

Yankee pig; did you really think a pretty lady like that could hold me?

Well, at least Dana was still alive; nobody’d bother to secure a dead captive. What Rita/Angelita’s plans for her might be, I didn’t care to think about; nor did I waste time speculating about how the girl had managed to free herself and gain the upper hand. It happens when you leave untrained people in charge of dangerous prisoners, and it was entirely my fault. I’d been criminally slow in realizing who we had there.

It was possible, of course, that Angelita, as I decided to call her, now expected me to proceed to the hotel where we had reservations—if she didn’t know our arrangements, she could learn them from Dana—and wait for her to call proposing some kind of deal; but we don’t deal. The hostage question is one every organization like ours must face, and Mac had found a simple, one-word answer:
Disregard.
We don’t play that game, ever, in any of its variations. However, we are permitted to try to liberate the hostage or hostages, preferably with maximum casualties among the opposing forces.

But first I had to learn where. With my computer lady incommunicado, I’d have to get my CLL information elsewhere, say from the terrorists currently residing at 427 Pacheco Street. It seemed to me that I had no choice but to go there, and knock on the door politely, and ask the boys nicely where Angelita might have taken Dana.

I found myself back at the little church. Passing the tall stone friar, or priest, or whatever the hell he’d been, I gave him a salute, thinking that it must have been nice, facing danger in a strange land, to know that God was right there beside you. My religion is as indefinite as my politics, but I’ve never been conceited enough to kid myself that, with a few billion other souls to worry about, the Deity takes a special interest in my affairs; although it sometimes does seem that the other guy likes to hang around making things difficult.

I glanced down the length of Pacheco Street as I strolled along the church sidewalk. I could see the heavy traffic passing on the boulevard at the far end, five blocks away. It was a run-down street, mainly residential—I don’t know the exact point at which an apartment house becomes a tenement, but these buildings were getting close—with a couple of comer shops. There was also a small restaurant in the middle of the third block on the right-hand side, my landmark. I'd already determined that number 427 was right across the narrow street from it. Both buildings were three stories high. I moved along without pausing, but I retained the image of the shabby, distant doorway; the door Angelita had told me was kept unlocked; the door inside which, she’d told me, they’d be waiting for me.

And if I believed all that, we’d have to try me next on the tooth fairy. If she said unlocked, the door was presumably not only locked but bolted. If she said inside, they were bound to be waiting for me outside. If she said in front, they were undoubtedly laying for me at the rear. Or were they? The old shell game. How clever was she; and how clever did she think I was? She’d told me the front was covered. Did that mean that she expected me to take her word for it and hit the presumably unprotected rear? Or would she think I’d think it was a double bluff and go for the front door she’d warned me against, on the assumption that she’d lied?

I grimaced. A man could drive himself nuts trying to figure it out that way. So forget about Angelita’s information, true or false, forget about the walnut shells and the pea; use the brains. Remember that Bultman had been on the horn from New York, getting the boys and girls to set this up for my benefit. Well, if you had a tall, kind of stupid, but armed and dangerous, gringo to eliminate,
and wanted to do it with reasonable certainty and safety, how would you go about it? You most certainly wouldn’t try to take him indoors, at close range, in a narrow dark hallway where your CLL gunners would get in each other’s way and he’d be bound to put a few bullets into somebody before he went down.

There was also to be considered the welfare of the Yankee’s female prisoner, an important person, a member of the Legion and even of the Council of Thirteen. There was no possible way of ensuring her safety in a wild melee in a dusky corridor. Of course, this consideration no longer applied; but it had undoubtedly been a factor influencing the way the plans had been made. Even if the boys covering 427 had received notification of An-gelita’s escape, it probably wouldn’t cause them to make any drastic changes in their arrangements now.

The significant thing about what Angelita had told me, I decided, was what she’d refrained from telling me. She’d given me a detailed description of the interior of the building, complete with front and rear stairs and padlocked closet. She’d practically taken me on a guided tour along San Remo Street in back of the place, and through the narrow walkway, and across the small rear courtyard to the entrance farthest to the right. But there had been no mention at all of the street in front, or the building across that street with its restaurant, or the street behind that. . . .

Having come a short block over, I found myself opposite the street in question. It was hardly better than an alley, a skinny, dark thoroughfare called Sebastian’s Lane. About to cross and explore it cautiously, I found myself continuing to walk straight ahead: There was something wrong. The little red light was flickering uncertainly at the back of my mind. The sensors weren’t getting a clear reading, but they’d picked up hostile emanations of some kind, and they were warning me that
conditions down that alley might be unfavorable for survival. In retrospect, I realized that I’d got the same disturbing sensation looking down Pacheco. I kept on walking, therefore; I’ve been in the business too long to ignore that vague unease. It had saved my life too many times in the past. I decided that I’d better make a wide swing around the whole target area to get the feel of the neighborhood, and to see if everybody seemed to be acting naturally and if there was any significant concentration of parked vehicles anywhere.

Sebastian’s Lane; and who the hell was Sebastian and who cared? They couldn’t have all the manpower in the world, I told myself. Concentrating on the Pacheco Street place, front or rear, or both if they belonged to the belt-and-suspenders school of assassination, they probably wouldn’t have people to spare for guarding all the nearby streets and alleys. Not just for a simple ambush. And still . . . and still, when we’d been riding through Old San Juan on the way here, I’d got an impression of bustling vitality; but this part of town felt dead, dead, dead. The few pedestrians visible had a frightened, scurrying look, as if they wanted to get away from the area as fast as possible. In a city like this, at least in the less well-to-do sections, the people would have their own early-warning signals, and apparently the quiet word was going around:
Stay indoors or get clear!

It was what had alerted me, of course, although I hadn’t recognized it at once: the emptiness of the streets I’d been looking down, and the electricity in the air; the eve-of-revolution feeling. Everybody was waiting for the guns to start firing. It would have been flattering to think it was all for me; but it seemed unlikely that a whole section of San Juan was holding its breath waiting for one lousy little murder, even mine.

I made a wide circle, completing it four blocks in back of the church. Then I closed in a little and circled again,
zigzagging through the little alleys and walkways cautiously, working my way around the address on a radius of roughly three blocks. Two vans parked together, one new and blue, the other old and white, held my attention briefly, maybe because the blue one reminded me of Dominic Morelos’s elongated heap; but if they were getaway vehicles, they’d be guarded, so I stayed clear. 1 didn’t know what I was really looking for until I found it: a familiar little brown two-door sedan backed into a narrow space between two buildings. Angelita hadn’t driven very far with her prisoner. Apparently she’d come right here to report her escape, so the boys would know that when I appeared they could fire at will without endangering one of their own.

The area was still unnaturally quiet. I moved forward cautiously with the usual feeling, down there between the buildings, of having eyes watching me from above and maybe even cross hairs steadying on my spine. I consoled myself with the thought that the CLL had exhibited no long-range expertise to date. They’d used their homemade minicannon at point-blank range to deal with Var-ek’s armored Mercedes, and Morelos had brandished a handgun without much skill; aside from that they’d stuck strictly to high explosives.

I kept those explosives in mind as I approached the rental car, and made no attempt to open it. I didn’t even touch it. I simply determined by looking that there were no bodies inside—it was one of the new ones without a real trunk. There was just a space behind the rear seat, cover missing. The only blood I could see was a few spatters resulting from my interrogation of Angelita. . . . A sound behind me made me whirl with the silenced Rugerin my hand.

“Matt, no! It’s me. Don’t shoot!”

I stood ftaring at the sturdy young woman facing me, dressed in white slacks and a big blue shirt belted outside the pants. Blue high heels gave her a little more height than she was entitled to, but she was still a short girl. Although it had only been a day since I’d last seen her, the shorn black hair seemed to have grown significantly, so you were hardly conscious of the fading scar; but now she had her left arm in a sling. I seemed to recall that the right was the one that had been immobilized when I’d first met her. Accident-prone. But an attractive young lady nevertheless.

I could allow myself to appreciate how attractive, now. I no longer had to keep telling myself firmly she was just a chunky little kid, bright and pleasant but not really very pretty, and my daughter-in-law. Another woman had ensured that there was no longer any danger of my making an awkward mistake in that direction.

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