Authors: Unknown
to see him, though; the sun sat right behind him. Behind the
enclosed walls of the cemetery, Zane could see the uneven
structures of tombs and tiny chapels. Stone angels wept. Brick
faltered to the hands of time and unstable earth.
Zane took a moment to steady himself, and then crossed
to the other side of the street. The agent saw him coming and
nodded at him, then turned, following a small tour group into
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the cemetery and breaking off to the right. Ty had told the
FBI contact to meet them in the front of the cemetery.
“He’s heading in. It’s a trap,” Ty said in Zane’s ear.
“Everybody bug out.”
“Negative,” Zane said, and he followed the man into the
cemetery.
“Dammit, Garrett, the others can’t cover you in there!”
Ty shouted.
Zane nodded. He’d spent most of his time undercover
alone; he was more used to taking these types of risks than Ty
was. And he had every confidence that Ty’s sniper rifle would
cover him just fine.
Zane trailed through the maze of tombs, following the
directions Ty whispered in his ear. He headed to the back
where Ty said the Protestant section would be. It was a grassy
area, devoid of vaults and mostly clear. It took Zane many
twists and turns, and several dead ends with Ty’s voice in his
ear telling him which way to go, before he found it.
The agent was sitting on an iron bench, waiting for him.
He was possibly the most Federal-looking FBI agent Zane
had ever seen: black suit, loafers, sunglasses, and a thick black
tie. He’d unbuttoned his jacket and his shoulder holster was
partially visible, and his pants leg rode up to reveal his backup
holster and weapon. A field agent he was not.
Zane sighed and stepped out of the row of tombs he’d cut
through. The man straightened when he caught sight of Zane,
and he stood, buttoning his jacket.
“Special Agent Howard?” Zane asked.
“That’s right. Are you Garrett?”
Zane nodded.
“Where’s your CI?”
“My CI?”
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“You said you were bringing in a CI. A Tyler Beaumont.”
“Oh, yeah. Yeah, he’s the one with that little red dot on
your chest,” Zane said, pointing to Howard’s tie.
Howard looked down and jerked when he saw the laser
sight dancing on his tie. His eyes were wide and scared when
they met Zane’s. He reached for his gun, but his buttoned
suit impeded him, so he brought his wrist to his mouth and
ducked, as if that would save him from Ty’s sniper rifle.
“They’re onto us! They came armed!” he shouted to
whoever was on the other end of his radio.
Zane cursed and turned to duck behind the nearest row
of tombs. The telltale pops of a suppressed weapon echoed
in the humidity. Marble chips flew as the rounds hit next to
Zane’s head. He ducked and weaved left, covering his head. He
could hear the others in his ear bud. None of them sounded
panicked. In fact, Ty’s voice came over the frequency as calm
as if he were ordering a sandwich at the local deli. Zane had
heard more emotion from Ty as he watched a football game.
“Got five going over the northeast wal ,” Ty said in Zane’s
ear. “Which one’s northeast?” Owen shouted.
“Not yours. Garrett’s hemmed in.”
“Aye aye, we’re going in,” Nick growled. More suppressed
pops came from the wal , followed by the boom of Nick’s
weapon.
“Five more through the main entrance,” Ty murmured.
“These aren’t locals. Get out.”
Shots fired from the roof. Zane peered around the tomb
to see Special Agent Howard scrabbling for cover. Bullets hit
at his feet, kicking up earth and grass, making him dance back
and forth. Ty was playing with him, pinning him down.
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Tourists screamed in the distance. Horses whinnied.
Sirens began to blare from the traffic station down the street.
Zane lunged from his hiding spot and ran low, angling toward
Howard, where he was trapped in the open by Ty’s covering
fire. A bullet whizzed past his arm, so close it burned.
“Shit. Sorry,” Ty said in his ear.
“Watch it!” Zane snarled. He reached Howard and
grabbed him by the scruff of his neck, jerking him to his feet
and pul ing him toward the tombs. He saw Nick and Kelly
scaling the gate on the back wal .
When he reached cover, Zane slammed Howard to the
ground and held his gun to the man’s nose. He patted him
down, taking all his weapons, his badge, and his car keys.
“Six, you got cops on your position in three,” Nick
shouted.
Ty ignored the warning and fired more shots. Someone in
the cemetery screamed.
“Two down. And a half. Seven live. Get your asses out
of there!” Ty ordered. “Garrett, quit dancing with him and
move!”
Zane didn’t release the man, instead gripping him hard by
his col ar and forcing him along with him.
“It’s too hot up here, I’m gone,” Ty said. “Clear out!”
Shots continued to echo through the cemetery, but the
sniper rifle fell silent.
Zane craned his head to look up at the roof as he dragged
Howard through the maze of vaults and tombs. Ty had finally
abandoned his post, but Zane didn’t know how he planned
to get out of that building now that all hell had broken loose.
There was more gunfire from the back of the cemetery.
Zane couldn’t tell if Sidewinder was chasing the unfriendlies
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or if they were now being chased. Agent Howard fell to his
knees, whimpering and tugging at Zane’s hand.
“Get up!” Zane shouted. He yanked him hard, slamming
him against the crumbling exposed brick of an ancient vault.
He shoved his gun under Howard’s chin. “Who’d you cal ?”
Howard began blubbering. Zane could barely make out
his words. He yanked the ear bud from his ear to be rid of
the chatter and shoved the gun harder against Howard’s neck.
“Shut your damn mouth.”
Howard’s sniveling cut off with a gulp. “Please don’t kill
me,” he whispered. “I have a family.”
Zane bared his teeth. “I don’t care. Who did you cal ?”
“Police commander. Gaudet.”
“This isn’t cop firepower; who else is involved?”
“He—he said he had help. Someone new in town.”
“Names.”
Howard jerked his head from side to side. He was
trembling. “Spanish. I don’t know.”
“Colombian?”
“I don’t know! Please God, don’t hurt me.”
Zane released him. He peered over the vault. The gunfire
continued. He stuck the ear bud back in, only to be greeted by
garbled shouts and echoes of shots.
He stepped away from Howard and pointed the gun at
the man’s leg.
“Oh, God no!”
“This is your final lesson in loyalty,” Zane growled. He put
a bullet in the man’s kneecap and darted away.
“Where the hell did they get all this firepower?” Nick
shouted as he and Kelly ducked behind a large marble vault.
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Bullets thwapped into the ground around them, ricocheting
off marble and stone. Nick’s face was bleeding and he could
feel a shard of something stuck just below his eye. His
sunglasses had probably saved his vision.
“Not cops!” Ty yelled through the static in Nick’s ear. He
was breathing hard, probably running.
“Cartel hitters,” Zane hissed. “Howard said Gaudet called
them in.”
“So wait, the cartel and the cops are working together?”
Owen asked. “How’s that fair?”
“Does it matter?” Kelly shouted. “Sound the retreat, baby,
let’s get our happy asses out of here!” He reached to Nick’s
face and yanked the piece of shrapnel out. Nick cussed him
up and down and held his hand to the wound.
Owen’s voice came through. “Six?”
Ty’s response was barely audible.
“Rabbit hole,” Kelly muttered at Nick’s side. He was
reloading his gun, crouched as low as he could get. If Ty’d
gone down the rabbit hole, there was no one to offer cover
fire.“Get the hell out of here,” Zane ordered. “Everybody out!”
“Should’ve put a guard on the roost,” Digger said.
“Goddamn you Liam Bell!”
Nick couldn’t make out where any of the others were.
They’d been outnumbered and overpowered, chased into the
maze of tombs within the cemetery. It encompassed an entire
block, filled with crumbling sidewalks, winding alleyways too
small to fit a grown man through, and towering stonework
that abruptly cut off pathways and created kill boxes with no
escape. Without Ty in the sniper’s roost to cover them or give
them enemy positions, they were in the dark.
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“I’m almost at the front entrance,” Zane said on the ear
bud. “Make your way here, I’ll cover you.”
Nick patted Kelly’s knee, pointing toward the direction
of the main entrance. Kelly nodded and they both darted off
down the closest lane.
Shots chased them.
“Free drinks! Fireworks!” Ty shouted at the top of his
lungs. His signal was stronger, meaning he’d escaped the
Basin Street building somehow. Nick snorted. Ty and the
cockroaches. He could imagine him running into a crowd of
Easter Sunday churchgoers, tourists, and parade marchers,
trying to create a distraction and lure people out of harm’s
way. “Free drinks inside!”
Out of the corner of his eye, Nick saw a man climb on top
of a touring van parked on a side street. He crouched on the
roof and tossed something into the cemetery. An earsplitting
boom and a flash followed. As he and Kelly darted between
tombs and dodged bullets and shrapnel, Nick got a closer
look at the man. Liam Bell.
“Oh shit,” he hissed.
“Is he on our side?” Kelly called.
“I don’t care! Run!”
Smoke began to billow from the back of the cemetery.
Liam tossed two more canisters, closer to their own position.
Nick and Kelly skidded to a stop. Nick covered his ears and
squeezed his eyes closed as the flashbangs went off.
They wasted precious seconds trying to shake off the
concussive blast. Nick could hear screams of pain and anger.
He peeked around the corner of the tomb that shielded them,
only to come face-to-face with a man who was doing the same
thing. Nick rolled away as the man brought his gun up and
fired.
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“Go!” he yelled, pushing at Kelly’s arm.
They sprinted down the lane, catching glimpses through
the narrow alleys of two men racing down the opposite lane.
When they reached a widened intersection, Nick raised his
weapon, preparing to fire as their pursuers rounded the corner.
But Zane was there, flattened against the tomb wal ,
knives in his hands. When the two assassins reached the
corner of the tomb, he stepped out and swept a hand across
one man’s neck. Blood spurted as Zane turned gracefully and
shoved a knife into the other man’s side. He jerked it up, under
the body armor, under the ribs. He stepped back, covered in
blood as both men fell to the ground, dead or dying.
Nick and Kelly gaped at him as he twirled both knives
over his fingers and shoved them back into their sheaths.
“Nice,” Kelly grunted.
Zane shrugged and bent to gather the weapons off the
dead bodies. He pointed toward the entrance, a mere ten
yards away.
Nick and Kelly stayed low and close, watching each
other’s backs as Zane brought up the rear, scurrying from
tomb to tomb for cover. Owen and Digger appeared from
the other side. The smoke bombs Liam had thrown seemed to
have bought them enough time to clear the cemetery. Owen
and Digger darted out, then took up posts behind the walls to
cover their last few yards.
Nick was almost to the open gate when something
thumped into him from behind. The report of the shot
reached his ears a split-second later. He was thrown forward.
More bullets hit the walls around him.
“He’s hit, he’s hit!” Owen cried, the voice coming both
from nearby and inside Nick’s ear. “Doc!”
“Who’s hit?” Ty asked, voice suddenly panicked.
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No one answered him.
Nick pushed at the ground, but the weight on top of him
was too much. He turned his head. Kelly had fallen into him
when the bullet hit. Owen fell to his knees beside Nick’s face.
They lifted Kelly off him and Nick pushed up, scrabbling the
rest of the way out of the cemetery.
They hit open ground and ran, rushing into traffic on
Rampart Street. Nick and Zane fell back to cover them as
Owen and Digger carried Kelly between them. They faltered
in the large grassy median and took cover behind a horse and
carriage that had been abandoned by its driver.
Crowds of people were running to and fro, panicked and
confused.
“Who’s hit?” Ty demanded, his voice breaking.
“We’re in the median,” Zane said, breathless. “Kelly’s
down.”
“Doc,” Digger said as he put a hand on Kelly’s face.