Revenge of the Assassin (Assassin Series 2) (30 page)

BOOK: Revenge of the Assassin (Assassin Series 2)
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He slowed as he reached the alley mouth and then executed a tight right turn, catching a glimpse of the pursuing police captain just rounding the corner.
El Rey
opened the throttle wide, putting distance between himself and
Capitan
Cruz, who had his gun drawn.

A navy blue car came swerving out of the next street, sending the Vespa skittering from underneath him as he bounced off the hood and then crashed head first into the windshield.

The last thing he saw as he blacked out was a vaguely familiar face nearly obscured by the white balloon of an airbag – the officer he’d shot at the summit – gripping the steering wheel with one hand as he stared in shock at the nun he’d just run down, blood streaming freely from his nose.

 

Chapter 30

 

 

“I don’t give a shit. I want my men here, twenty-four seven. Two in the room, two outside, and if he tries anything, they shoot,” Cruz said to the doctor, who was obviously annoyed with the quasi-military presence of the tactical squad members in full assault gear, toting sub-machine guns and looking menacing. “And he will remain cuffed to the bed. Both hands. And his feet shackled to the rail. This man is easily the most dangerous man in Mexico, so I want no more discussion about what is or isn’t good for his convalescence or pain management.”

“Captain, I understand, but this is most irregular. He’s got a concussion, and a cerebral hemorrhage we’re managing now, after the surgery, and two fractured vertebrae, as well as several broken ribs. He won’t be going anywhere or trying anything. I really think this is unnecessary…” the doctor complained.

“That may well be, but you don’t know him like I do. He’s a magician, not to mention that he’s killed dozens, if not hundreds of people in cold blood. I wouldn’t put it past him to chew his own arms off to escape, so there will be no negotiation. If I need to call the hospital administrator, I’ll be more than happy to do so. What’s it going to be?” Cruz threatened.

The doctor backed down. Fighting for his patients only went so far, and he didn’t need any additional grief in his life.

“Well, I don’t like it,” he lamented pugnaciously and then stalked off down the hall, shaking his head.

Cruz turned to the four heavily armed officers. “I want you on high alert. No fraternizing with the nurses. Do not eat anything, and only drink bottled water. You will be replaced in eight hours. Expect a full-scale assault to free this man, and also expect him to try to kill any and all of you with anything he can get his hands on. Do not let down your guard under any circumstances,” he warned them.

The elevator at the end of the hall opened, and Briones approached, his nose swollen, with a bandage across it holding a piece of gauze in place.

“Broken,
eh
?” Cruz asked.

Briones nodded. “Damned air bag hit it just the right way. A fluke. It actually blew my hand up, and my hand broke it.”

“So, you punched yourself in the nose?”

Cruz started chuckling, as did Briones. It was a little funny, and the dark humor helped relieve the accumulated tension.

“Yeah, but you should have seen the other guy…”

Cruz grinned, and then described the security precautions in place at the hospital. Briones listened intently and then nodded.

“The doctor just told me that he’s come to,” Cruz informed him. “They spent five hours operating on his skull, trying to drain the blood and fix the damage. He says the prognosis is good. I wish he’d stuck a pair of forceps into his brain and ended this, but that’s not how the Hippocratic Oath works, apparently. So
El Rey
’s still with us,” Cruz explained. “I’m going in to interrogate him. You want to be a fly on the wall?” he asked Briones.

“I wouldn’t miss it for the world.”

The pair opened the door and walked into the room.
El Rey
was handcuffed and chained to the steel frame, and held down with restraint straps for good measure. His eyes followed Cruz and Briones from beneath a bandage enveloping his head as they walked to the foot of his bed. Cruz noticed that he had remarkable eyes. Bright, intelligent, but chillingly void of any emotion.

“What’s your name?” Cruz asked.

The man smiled almost shyly. “You can call me Romero.”

Cruz recognized that the assassin was mocking him by choosing his first name.

“Very amusing, indeed. You’re quite a card,
eh
?” Cruz leaned over the bed and lowered his voice. “You’ve pulled your last stunt, my friend. It’s over. You’ll spend the rest of your life rotting in prison for your reward. I hope it was worth it…”

El Rey
didn’t say anything; just stared at them both with a disinterested gaze before closing his eyes.

“You’ll never be able to keep me prisoner. No prison will be able to hold me. Enjoy your moment of triumph. You deserve it,”
El Rey
said in a hoarse whisper directed to the ceiling.

“Oh, I think you underestimate my resolve. I agree, under normal circumstances you’d have a good chance at escape. But you, my little bird, are going to be kept in solitary in a special facility that houses the worst of the worst – under twenty-four hour guard. If you’re lucky they’ll give you solid food once in a while, and not make you eat through a straw. Assuming you can even chew, and the doctor that did the surgery on your brain didn’t scramble it.”

El Rey
opened one eye. “Do what you have to do.”

“Oh, I intend to. Believe me. But I do have one question. Who hired you to kill the president? Who put you up to it?” Cruz asked.

“It was pro bono. Call it my charitable contribution to the great nation of Mexico.”

“I don’t believe that for a second. But no matter. I suspect whoever did it will want their money back, or will be looking for you harder than we did. You’ll be praying the prison is secure every night as you cry yourself to sleep,” Cruz said, smiling humorlessly.

“Right. You’re delusional. I watched the president being blown into a million pieces. Nice try, though.”

“Maybe you thought you did, but I’m afraid all you accomplished was to kill a few more innocent men. Seems like your reputation is a little bigger than your actual effectiveness. Par for the course with blowhards,” Cruz said.

“I’m sure that’s the last thing your men were thinking when they disintegrated in flames at the apartment. I read about it in the paper. Sad, really. You don’t train them very well, do you?”
El Rey
offered, eyes closed again, reclining against his pillow.

Cruz nodded at Briones. He walked over to the television suspended in the right corner of the room and switched it on. Looking at his watch, he flipped through the stations until he got to a news program. The newscaster was reporting on the morning’s attack on the cathedral, and then cut to footage of the president speaking about it. The camera cut back to the announcer, who concluded with the statement that the president had been involved in a near-miss assassination attempt, but was unhurt.

El Rey
’s eyes had opened at the sound of the broadcast and now narrowed.

“I saw it myself.”

“What you saw was an hallucination. You failed. Both times you tried to kill a president, you failed miserably. You’re a loser. Maybe you got a reputation as hot stuff snuffing out drug lords and local politicians, but in the big leagues, you’ve been tested and found wanting. And you’ll be spending the rest of your life in a hole, the laughingstock of the prison. That’s your future, you cockroach.”

El Rey
stared at him with that dead gaze, and then closed his eyes again. For him, the discussion was over.

Cruz spoke for a few more minutes, taunting him, but got no response. Eventually he tired of it, and he and Briones moved out into the hallway, being replaced in the room by two of the four armed guards.

They walked easily towards the elevator, and Briones turned to Cruz.

“I saw it, too.”

“What you saw was a very brave man – no, several brave men – give their lives for their country. One of which was an impersonator. A lookalike.”

Briones stopped. “Not the president?”

“No. When I met with his chief of staff, I was able to convince him that
El Rey
was likely to succeed, and that if the president insisted on being seen at public events while he was at risk, that they should find a standin for the events where he didn’t have to give a speech – much like many of the Middle Eastern despots have. This was the first time he used one, which turned out to be fortunate. Or unfortunate, depending upon who you ask.”

“Well, I’ll be damned,” Briones exclaimed, touching his battered nose gingerly with his fingers.

“Yes, I suspect we both will. It seems to go with the territory.”

“At least the hours are good.”

They both chuckled again.

The elevator opened and they stepped inside, an odd couple who looked like they were carrying the weight of the world on their shoulders. Cruz pushed the lobby button, and as the doors closed he glanced at Briones again and smiled.

Sometimes the good guys won a round.

Today was one of those days.

 

Chapter 31

 

 

“We got the information from the freight forwarder and traced it to a shipping company here. They gave us the address, so whenever you’re ready, we’ll go in,” Briones reported.

It had been two days since the attack at the cathedral, and they had traced down the manufacturer of the helicopter in the U.S. and gotten the information on the address where it had been sent. It wasn’t hard – there weren’t that many companies making four-foot-long electric remote controlled helicopters that could accommodate substantial modifications. Once they had located the builder, they were able to find the freight forwarder in San Ysidro, California who had imported it into the country. From there it had just been grunt work to track it to Mexico City, where yet another local company had delivered it.

Briones approached Cruz’s desk and put a slip of paper on it bearing a street name and address. Cruz studied it briefly, glanced at the mountain of paperwork on his desk, and then shrugged before rising to his feet.

“I’ve got nothing to do. Let’s go take a look at Santa’s workshop,” Cruz said

The address was in a borderline area of town, mostly industrial buildings covered with graffiti and the few pedestrians, obviously either on their last legs, or overtly dangerous. Briones was driving – it wasn’t the kind of neighborhood to take a high-end BMW, and the Federal Police cruiser would keep most of the miscreants away while they were inside. Briones had warned the landlord not to enter the premises, cautioning that they could be booby-trapped.

“What are we looking for, exactly, sir?” Briones asked as he navigated around the deep potholes.

“I don’t know. Anything that can be used for additional evidence. Maybe a clue as to who hired him to kill the president. Maybe some indication of who he really is. Information.”

“He’s going to be sentenced to hundreds of years in prison. There’s no chance of him ever getting out,” Briones said with satisfaction. “Whoever he is, he’s going to be staring at the gray walls of a twelve-by-eight cell for the rest of his life.”

The prints had come back under the name of a former marine with special operations certification, who had deserted a decade earlier. But further digging into the navy’s documentation had quickly showed the birth certificate and voter’s registration card he had used to enlist was a forgery. It was mystifying – they had no idea who the man they had under guard awaiting trial really was and were no closer to understanding him than they had been a year before.

Mexico didn’t have the death penalty because it considered state-sponsored execution barbaric.
El Rey
would get multiple life sentences with no possibility of parole – the harshest penalty under Mexican law. The district attorney had already spoken with Cruz, and they were going to make a spectacle of the assassin’s trial, sending the message that no matter who you were, crime didn’t pay. After sentencing, he would go to one of the few truly dependable maximum security prisons in Mexico – Federal Social Readaptation Center Number One, ‘Altiplano’, near Mexico City, which housed a who’s who of drug kingpins. He would be sequestered from the general population and locked down twenty-four hours a day, having no contact with anyone but his guards, who would be regularly rotated from among the most senior and incorruptible in the system.

They rolled to the curb in front of a battered brick building with six metal entry doors, one of which stood with its protective outer grating opened. The owner fidgeted by it jangling a set of keys as he glanced nervously up and down the street. It was late afternoon, but this wasn’t an area you wanted to be in after dark.

“Captain Cruz? Hidalgo Sanchez. Nice to meet you,” the man said, sizing Cruz up as he offered his hand in greeting.

“Likewise. This is Lieutenant Briones,” Cruz said, which prompted the man to shake hands with Briones.

“Have you been inside?” Cruz asked pointedly.

“Of course not. I followed your instructions to the letter. I waited until you got here. I don’t want any trouble from anyone. If a criminal was using one of my workshops, I had no way of knowing. I want it understood I am cooperating with the police,” Sanchez insisted.

“Good. And don’t worry. You’re not suspected of anything.” Cruz hadn’t told him who the criminal was or what he had done. Some things were better left out of the conversation.

Sanchez exhaled a noticeable sigh of relief and then walked back to the door and ceremoniously opened the deadbolt. He turned the knob and swung the steel door open, then gestured to the two officers.

“I’ll just wait out here. Take your time, gentlemen.”

Cruz entered first, his eyes adjusting to the gloom, and then both he and Briones ignited their flashlights – after the incident at the apartment, neither of them was in a mood to try the light switches. A long rectangular work table stood at the far end of the room, near a bank of grimy windows a few feet below the ceiling.

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