End Game (24 page)

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Authors: John Gilstrap

BOOK: End Game
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“An hour ago,” Jonathan said.

“Are you preparing to go hot?”

“Sooner than later,” Jonathan said. “We’re still determining if that’s the right place. But we think it is. If so, then we go hot right after.”

“Okey-doke,” Venice said. “I’ll let you know when I have something worth sharing.”

Jonathan looked to Boxers, who’d been listening to the same radio traffic. “Anything else to add, Big Guy?”

“I’m just anxious to get moving.”

As Jonathan led the way toward the back door, it opened to reveal LeBron standing expectantly in the opening. “Jesus,” LeBron said, eyeing the weaponry. “You know they’re not here, right?”

Jonathan waited till he had climbed the steps to say, “If the gear is with me, I know it won’t be anywhere else.”

LeBron recoiled from the words. “What, you think my boys are gonna steal from you?”

“A couple of minutes ago, your boys were gonna shoot me,” Boxers said. “Where I come from, stealing isn’t as bad as shooting.”

“Well, you’re in Detroit now,” LeBron said. “Stealing and shooting are different things, but one almost always leads to the other. Your shit would have been safe back there.”

“We mean no offense,” Jonathan said. “May we come in?”

LeBron stepped aside. “Just don’t make a lot of noise. The babies are asleep.”

One day, Jonathan was going to learn to tame his prejudices and preconceptions about people. This neighborhood was a shit hole, and he’d expected the same of LeBron’s house. In fact, the place was spotless. The furnishings weren’t much—he imagined that many of them came from charity thrift stores—but everything was thoroughly dusted and neatly arranged.

They entered through the kitchen, which had all of the necessary comforts, though twenty years out of date.

The Formica of the countertops matched the Formica of the metal-legged table. The appliances were old-school almond, and the floors were flowered linoleum, but overall, the place had a well-loved look. The house exuded pride.

LeBron led the way through a doorway that was slightly smaller than Boxers into the living room, where a sofa and three chairs were all arranged for easy viewing of a nineties-vintage twenty-six-inch television set that was turned off. Dozens of books, if not hundreds of them, lined the short wall from floor to ceiling on the far end. LeBron’s posse had dwindled to one—Georgie, whom he introduced as his little brother.

“This is my wife, Dawn,” LeBron said, nodding to an attractive woman dressed in sweats. She smiled back at Jonathan, though her eyes showed confusion. She looked as though she might have been sleeping.

“Good evening,” Jonathan said. “I’m sorry to intrude.”

“What is this about, Lebby?” Dawn asked. She kept her tone light, but Jonathan was sure he heard an undertone of anger.

“This is Scorpion,” LeBron said. “And his friend, Big Guy. They’re—”

“Why are all of those guns in my house?” Dawn said.

Jonathan moved to explain. “Ma’am, I promise you that we’re not here to do any harm.”

“And they’re not police, either,” LeBron added. “They’re here about the men across the street in the Excalibur Foods plant.”

“Those men are trouble,” Dawn said. “I don’t want to know nothing more about them.”

“Where’s the rest of your team?” Jonathan asked. There was no issue more critical than the location of unaccounted-for firepower.

“I sent them on their way,” LeBron said. “Dawn doesn’t like guns.”

“Including yours,” Dawn said.

“I apologize,” Jonathan said. “But as LeBron told you, those guys in the factory are big trouble.”

“What did they do?” Dawn asked.

“They kidnapped a young boy,” Jonathan said. Off to his side, he more sensed than saw Boxers stiffening. Big Guy hated it when Jonathan shared anything with anyone.

“Oh, my God,” Dawn said, bringing her hand to her mouth. “Why would they do such a thing?”

Jonathan eyed the chairs that were as-yet unoccupied. “May we sit down?”

Dawn seemed hesitant.

“We’ll take these off,” Jonathan said, shrugging out of his ruck and laying it on the floor. Boxers followed suit. Both kept their body armor on, and their weapons either holstered or slung. When he sat, Jonathan took care not to snag the fabric with any of the festooned weapons.

When Boxers sat, he looked like an adult sitting at a little girl’s tea set. Only slightly less comfortable.

“Excuse the gear,” Jonathan said. “We’re sort of obsessive about being prepared.”

“So, who are you really?” LeBron asked. “You never gave me a straight answer.”

“I’m in the business of not giving straight answers,” Jonathan said. He tried to sell it with a smile. “I’m sorry, but that’s just the case.”

“So, you’re with the government,” Georgie said.

A lie would have been so easy here. Given that his client was the FBI, it wouldn’t be that big a stretch just to say yes, but he sensed that that would not necessarily be the right answer in this crowd. “How about I tell you this,” he said, hoping to find a compromise. “We used to work for the government. In fact, we worked for him for a long time.”

“Are you assassins?” Dawn asked.

Jonathan was tempted ask her if that would be a problem. “No, ma’am. While I can’t tell you exactly who or what we are, I can tell you with absolute certainty that we’re the good guys. We’re on the side of the angels.”

“Then how come you don’t have cops with you?” Georgie asked.

Boxers took that one. “Because they’re not always on the same side as us.”

The conversation was meandering, and Jonathan wanted to bring it back on track. “Tell me about your concerns with the Excalibur plant across the street.”

LeBron and Dawn exchanged glances, and Dawn nodded. “That plant’s been empty for almost three years,” LeBron said. “Tore this place up when they left. Took two hundred jobs away because the politicians were too busy putting money in their own damn pockets to pay any attention to the little guy. I used to work there. So did Dawn. Terrible, terrible thing when it closed.”

Jonathan heard Boxers stir and prayed that he would keep his mouth shut. So far, nothing LeBron had said was relevant to anything they wanted to know, but it was a mistake to push people who had just started talking.

“So, it just sat there, you know what I’m sayin’? Just sat there like it was mocking us. They put up that big fence with the warning signs, and then it just sat there.”

“Until about two months ago,” Dawn said. “We started to see all kinds of traffic coming in and out, but none of it looked official.”

“Bunch of damn Arabs, I think,” Georgie said. “Lots of Muslim hats and shit.”

“We called the anonymous FBI hotline, but they didn’t do nothin’,” LeBron said. “Asshole on the phone tried to make me the crazy one. Even called me paranoid.”

“What do you think they’re doing in there?” Jonathan asked.

“I don’t have any idea, but I know it ain’t right. I never thought about kidnapping, but why not? They could be making crystal meth for all I know.”

“And that would be a problem?” Boxers said with too much of a smile in his voice.

“Yeah, Hagrid, that would be a problem,” LeBron said.

Boxers swelled in his seat. He did not like being teased about his size.

LeBron wasn’t done. “Just because I’m black and just because I live in a damn slum don’t mean that I’m stoned out on drugs. I grew up here, asshole. This is my home. You think I want some outsider coming in here and stealing the minds out of all the neighborhood babies?”

“Look,” Jonathan said. “I’m sure Big Guy didn’t—”

“You shut up,” LeBron snapped. “Don’t make excuses for him. He want to make excuses, let him make his own damn excuses.”

“I’m sorry,” Boxers said.

Jonathan almost fell to the floor. He wasn’t sure he’d ever heard Big Guy say those words before.

“I was wrong and I’m sorry.”

LeBron seemed surprised, too. Sort of deflated.

Boxers pointed a forefinger at Jonathan. “And like he said, you shut up.”

“So, the bottom line,” Jonathan said, “is that those folks have been squatting where they don’t belong.”

“Tell ’em about the guns,” Georgie said.

Jonathan arched his eyebrows. Guns were always a relevant topic.

“Those guys don’t bother nobody,” LeBron said. “I got to be honest with you about that. I mean they don’t get in my grill, and I leave them alone, too.”

Jonathan waited for the rest.

“But I watch them,” LeBron went on. “I mean there’s a lot of bad shit goin’ down in this neighborhood, so I watch a lot.”

“Like you were watching us,” Jonathan said.

“Right. Exactly like that.”

“Except you use binoculars for them,” Dawn prompted.

LeBron seemed embarrassed. “Well, yeah. ’Cept I use binoculars to watch them.”

“And you’ve seen guns?” Jonathan asked.


Lots
of guns. Rifles, missile launchers, all kinds of crap like that.”

Boxers leaned forward in his seat. “What did the FBI say when you told them about those?”

“To hell with the FBI. They don’t want to talk with me, they don’t want to talk with me. I ain’t callin’ back to beg.”

Jonathan understood the feeling, and at one level, he admired it. It never ceased to amaze him how shocked bureaucrats became when the public at large spontaneously developed ways to work around their bullshit.

“What do they do with the guns?” Boxers asked.

LeBron looked to Georgie and got a shrug. “Nothing, really. I mean they don’t come to the road or anything. But when they’re down there at their space, they’ve always got guns.”

“You said they had missile launchers,” Jonathan said. “What makes you think they’re missile launchers?”

“Because I watch the Military Channel,” LeBron said. He seemed insulted at such an elementary question.

Jonathan looked to Boxers. “What do you think?”

Big Guy shrugged. “He watches the Military Channel. Not a lot else looks like a missile launcher.”

Jonathan didn’t bother to ask for a hypothesis of why they would want that kind of weapon. While not all portable weapons systems were created equal, they all shared the common purpose of blowing shit up. They were equally useful as offensive or defensive weapons, provided the operators had adequate training. And what else did they have to do while sitting around an abandoned meatpacking plant but train?

This was all bad news, though none of it particularly surprising. In a perfect world, 0300 missions were executed against sleeping unarmed hostage takers. Alas, it so rarely turned out that way.

“How many of them do you think there are?” Jonathan asked.

“What do think, Georgie? Fifteen? Twenty?”

“I’d say at least twenty,” Georgie said. “It’s hard to tell because they come and go all the time. Sometimes new faces, sometimes old ones. Always dudes, by the way. I haven’t seen a single woman go in there.”

“But the rag heads are like that, right?” LeBron asked. “They don’t let women do nothin’.”

Jonathan determined in two seconds that nothing good could come from a discussion launched by that statement. He figured it was the way of the world that everybody needed to call names at someone else.

“So, let’s call it twenty-five people,” Jonathan said.

“We’ve faced worse odds,” Boxers said. His face showed not the slightest trace of concern.

“Only with better intel,” Jonathan said. “I think we should launch the Raven.”

At the mention of the word, Boxers’ eyes darted to the others in the room. He hated sharing operational details.

“It’s declassified now, I promise,” Jonathan said. “It’s public domain.”

Big Guy hesitated for just long enough to demonstrate his displeasure, then he stood and walked back out to the Expedition.

As Boxers exited, Jonathan addressed the others in the room. “I’d like to ask you a favor,” he said. “I’d like to use your lovely home as a kind of command post. Just for a little while. I promise we’ll be careful with your stuff.”

“No,” Dawn said. “The babies are upstairs.”

“I swear to you that we will not draw fire to this location. We just need a spot—”

“Will not
draw fire?
” Dawn said. “Who talks like that?”

“I think they’re like the Army,” LeBron said.

“You should see the shit they’ve got in their truck,” Georgie said. “It’s like a fort or—”

Dawn turned on LeBron next. “Is that why you’re doing this? Is this about your dream to be a soldier?”

“Excuse me,” Jonathan said to defuse what sounded like it could devolve into a long-standing, oft-repeated argument. “Remember what’s at stake here tonight. We believe that the men you describe have kidnapped a young boy after murdering his parents. There’s a young lady involved, too. We don’t know if she is dead or alive.”

Dawn looked horrified. “Who would do that?” she asked. “How do I know that you’re telling the truth?”

“You
do
know that I’m telling the truth,” Jonathan said. “I can see it in your eyes. And I can’t get into details.”

“So, you
are
the government,” LeBron said.

Jonathan surrendered. “Yes,” he said. “Well, not exactly, but essentially, yes. It’s complicated. But I can tell you this: If we don’t help that boy, the consequences will be awful. Not just for him, but for thousands of people.” He paused as the words sank in.

“That’s a really shitty deal, I know,” Jonathan continued. Then, to Dawn, “Forgive my language. Some words are hardwired, but I promise I’ll try.” To the group: “I know I’m asking you to take a leap of faith, but I’m telling you exactly the way it is.”

Sensing a crack in Dawn’s barriers, Jonathan rose, pivoted, and walked three steps to his ruck and pulled out the money satchel. “I have something for you here,” he said. With his back turned to the others, he counted off two banded stacks of hundred-dollar bills.

He turned back to the room. “Here’s two thousand dollars for your troubles,” he said. “Again, you have my word that no harm will come to your house or your children. Consider this payment for your inconvenience.”

Jonathan walked past LeBron and headed for Dawn. “Here you go, ma’am,” he said. “Thank you for your assistance. In advance.”

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