The Reluctant Warrior (Warriors Series Book 2) (12 page)

BOOK: The Reluctant Warrior (Warriors Series Book 2)
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A couple of miles further, dawn broke, bathing the valley in silence, the vast and towering landscape making them feel like the only living beings on the planet.

A mile on, they got a mobile signal.

About forty-five minutes later they heard the Customs and Border Patrol chopper, which on spotting them swung low, and a loudspeaker came on, asking them to follow it to a clearing.

The chopper settled down in the clearing, and three heavily-armed Border Patrol agents jumped out and spread wide as they approached the group. Two other agents covered them from within the chopper, their H&K UMP .40 submachine guns tracking them. Bwana and Roger kept their hands empty and relaxed, conveying a nonthreatening message.

One of the agents walked up to them, his hands free but close to his H&K P2000 holstered pistol, while the other two circled the group of women and started offering water. Roger noticed one of those two was also carrying a medical kit with him.

He drew his attention back to the agent in front of him.

‘Supervisory Border Patrol Agent Gonzalez,’ the agent introduced himself. ‘You guys had a long walk, it looks like. Need anything? Water? Chow? Medication?’

‘We’re good,’ Bwana replied and introduced Roger and himself.

Gonzalez chewed slowly as he looked them over and noted their weapons. ‘Never heard or seen such a thing happening before, two guys, ex-Special Forces, right? We checked on you. You guys took down eight bandits and rescued forty-odd hostages. They would have been sold into sex slavery, and once they had outlived that, would have been used as drug mules. All these women seem white American or European… at a casual glance, anyway. We’ll process them once we take them to Nogales and start the investigative process as well as inform their kin.’

He scratched his head. ‘We’ve busted some human-trafficking runs before, but not this large nor have we put down so many bandits. This has gotten the entire Border Patrol buzzing. You guys are going to have quite the reception when we get to Tucson.’

‘Tucson? Not Nogales?’ Roger asked him.

‘Nope, we’re going to Sector HQ in Tucson – this is big.’ He paused. ‘So why don’t you tell me all that happened right from the beginning?’

Roger and Bwana were expecting this and talked him through their camping trip and the happenings of the night.

‘Sir,’ one of the agents shouted at Gonzalez, ‘these women are drugged and are in a stupor. We need to move them fast.’

‘Load them up and take them to base, Brodell. All of them won’t fit, so we’ll need to make two or three round trips. I’ll stay with these guys till we’re all done here.’

Brodell acknowledged with a thumbs-up and started leading the women to the chopper. Gonzalez watched as Brodell led about fourteen women to the chopper while the other agent led the rest to shade and tried to make them comfortable.

He then turned back to Roger and Bwana and saw they had drawn a map in the earth and hunkered down. Roger stuck a stick in the earth. ‘This is where we were camping. Still got our gear there. Woke up in the night, sensed something was wrong–’

‘Sensed how?’ Gonzalez shouted over the roar of the chopper lifting off.

Bwana shrugged at him. ‘We’ve lived with danger a long time. Knowing when something is off is second nature to us.’

Gonzalez nodded, expecting the answer, and waved at Roger to carry on.

‘So we woke up, scouted around a bit, and saw this glow in the night, followed it and came across these guys.’ He stuck another stick in the ground. ‘This is where the bastards shot three women, and then we took them all out and led the women here, about four miles from where the action happened.’

‘And if we track back, we’ll find the bodies?’ Gonzalez asked them.

‘Danged right, but you’d better get there before buzzards and animals make short work of them. You’ll also find their rifles, smashed, and if you go back further, our gear.’

‘We’ll be obliged if you get our gear back,’ Bwana said straight faced.

Gonzalez laughed. ‘We’ll try.’ He looked at the sheet of paper Bwana handed over to him.

‘Coordinates of all the points Rog marked over there,’ Bwana explained.

Gonzalez nodded in thanks, stood up, and used his radio to check where the chopper was. He then walked over to the women, tried talking to them, and walked back defeated.

‘Have seen this before. The bandits drug them to the eyeballs and then make them walk the trails. Makes it easier for them to manage. By the way, did the bastards have any markings on them? Any gang signs?’

‘Had a playing card sign on them. Here.’ Bwana pulled out his phone and brought up a photograph and showed it to Gonzalez.

Bwana scrolled through a few more pictures and showed them to Gonzalez.

Gonzalez whistled as he swiped through the pictures. ‘I dunno how well you guys are clued on gangs operating on the border, but these guys, 5Clubs, are an upcoming gang who’ve muscled in and started taking over the drug and human-trafficking business. This is the first time we’ve busted one of their runs.’

He looked up. ‘Once we get you back to Tucson and sort out all the formalities and paperwork, will you come back with me to locate the bodies?’

‘We’re good to go right now,’ Bwana replied.

Gonzalez shook his head. ‘I wish we could, but paperwork is paperwork. Still let’s see if we can grease the wheels and turn it around quickly.’

They heard the chopper returning and looked up.

‘There’s another behind it,’ Roger commented.

‘Yup, I want to get the women back to Tucson and medical attention as soon as possible,’ Gonzalez said as he approached the women and got them organized.

Roger and Bwana followed him and helped him to split the women in two groups and get them aboard the choppers.

‘We’ll be turning back as soon as you meet the DCPA and debrief,’ Gonzalez shouted over the racket of the chopper.

‘Deputy Chief Patrol Agent Hugo Fernandez,’ he clarified on seeing Roger’s and Bwana’s quizzical looks. ‘El Jefe in Tucson, for the moment.’

Roger nodded and stared out of the chopper. He knew what was coming: briefing after briefing, to bureaucrats. He looked at Bwana, who read his mind and shrugged.

They were greeted by a phalanx of ambulances, doctors, and agents, who rushed to the group of women and took them away. Gonzalez led Roger and Bwana to the DCPA’s office, who rose from his seat and strode around his desk to greet them. The room was bare of decoration except for a few awards and framed pictures of the President, and one of a uniformed person who they took to be the Chief of the Border Patrol.

Fernandez was short, stocky and mustachioed, with a weather-beaten face that had seen everything on the border. He sharply assessed the two before him and ushered them to their chairs.

‘Gentlemen, Gonzalez would have told you we’ve rescued many men and women from human-trafficking bandits, turned away many illegal Mexicans, busted many drug runs, but this beats them all. I’ve no idea whether to call you heroes or lucky fools, but whatever you are, our thanks go to you.’

Roger and Bwana nodded silently.

‘Now,’ rasped Fernandez, in a voice sandpapered by the sun and the border, ‘why don’t you tell me everything right from the start.’

Bwana and Roger narrated their story once again as Fernandez silently handed over a couple of sheets to Gonzalez.
Our military records
, guessed Bwana. When Roger had finished, Fernandez strode over to a large map of the border on the wall behind him, took a box of flag pins with him, and grunted, ‘Again.’

He started sticking pins on the map as Roger went through the events and walked them through the route they had taken. He turned around when they had fallen silent. ‘This route is known to us, and we routinely patrol it, but budget cuts have taken their toll on our ability to man it as well as we would like to.

‘This new gang, 5Clubs, is a lot smarter than all the others. They track us and seem to know when we are going to patrol the Corridor and lie low at that point. It wouldn’t surprise us at all if they had snitches in Nogales and Tucson who monitored our movements, our choppers, everything, based on which the gang moved people. I mentioned before – this is the largest people bust we have made – but this is also the first time we have busted a movement going to the
other
side. In addition to that, it’s the first time we’ve struck at this gang, and believe me, we’ve been itching to do this for a long time,’ Gonzalez chimed in.

‘Despite all our technology, all the choppers, sensors, satellites, all the geek shit we can throw at it, there’s no way in hell we can seal the border totally, and thus drugs and people still get smuggled across the border.’ Fernandez looked resigned for a moment and went quiet.

Bwana and Roger sat silently, allowing Fernandez and Gonzalez to blow steam. They had seen firsthand the enormity of the border and knew how difficult the task of patrolling was.

Fernandez collected himself, gave a last look at the map, sat down at his desk, and scribbled on a notepad. Tearing the sheet off, he handed it to Gonzalez and looked at the two men in front of him. ‘You will go with Gonzo and recover the bodies and your kit.’ It wasn’t a request.

‘We can leave once we’ve done that?’ Roger asked him.

Fernandez nodded. ‘Yup. No call to hold you guys. If it was me, I would have pinned a fricking medal or two on your chests.’

‘Speaking of medals,’ he continued, ‘you don’t have any shortage of those, do you? I made some calls when we first got your message. Got your sheets sent to me… you guys come recommended from so many places, so high, that my poor old head goes dizzy just thinking of those heights.’

Bwana shrugged. ‘All those medals, they’re a past life. We just got lucky in those days.’

‘Not so past, so I’ve been told.’ Fernandez looked at him shrewdly. ‘I’ve also been told not to ask you guys too many questions about what you do now.’

‘Why? We just fish now, sir.’ Roger laughed and stood up to leave, Bwana following suit.

‘One last point.’ Fernandez halted them as the trio was heading to the door.

‘This bust is so big that in no way can it be contained. The media will be all over it, and truth to say, we like our fifteen minutes. It makes the jobs of all these guys worthwhile and makes them feel recognized.’ He waved broadly, meaning Gonzalez and the Border Patrol.

‘Question to you – we can spin this to take all the credit, or we can share credit with you. If we share credit with you, your names will be public. The danger with that is that 5Clubs might hunt you down. They have a reputation for being ruthless and for meting out punishment… and seeing that you have wiped out a good amount of them and caused them a serious loss, they might want to treat you extra special.’

Roger grinned wide as he pointed at Bwana. ‘Heck, mention our names. We’re not shy. Besides, he’s getting fat and lazy with all that fishing and sleeping. Time we had some excitement in our lives.’

‘Are you sure? If they come after you, it’ll be open season. They’re known for it. There was this guy in Nogales who was suspected of being our snitch. He wasn’t – we take care of our snitches and hide them well – but the rumor mill and the media somehow made this guy to be a snitch who fed us juice on 5Clubs and other gangs.

‘This story broke out one evening. The next day, the guy was found dead at home, hanging from a ceiling fan. On closer inspection, his head was pinned to the fan with a stake. Driven through him when he was alive. Around him lay his family, all butchered, three generations of it.’

Fernandez paused. ‘So, think about it. It could mean war if you guys are mentioned as being responsible for this bust and killing all those bandits.’

Bwana replied quietly, ‘War is our business, sir.’

Chapter 16

Roger and Bwana followed Fernandez and Gonzalez outside the Border Patrol Office on Swan Road – a swarm of news vans and reporters awaited them. They spent the next hour answering the reporters and then made their escape with Gonzalez to the chopper awaiting them. They were accompanied by six more Border Patrol agents.
To get the bodies back
, thought Roger.

‘I’d rather face twenty hostiles barehanded than go through that again,’ grumbled Bwana as he belted himself in the chopper.

‘What, and lose the chance to be known all across the country as the baddest man not to be crossed?’ Roger grinned at him. Bwana gave him the finger and leaned forward to guide Gonzalez and the pilot, not that any directions were required, since they had coordinates to all the locations.

The chopper settled down at the same place that it had picked them up from, outside the canyon – that was the closest the chopper could get. Forty-five minutes later, as the sun was casting long shadows in the stillness of the canyon, they reached the bodies. What was left of them.

A few vultures lazily flew away as they approached, and Bwana shooed away the last coyote. Gonzalez went over the seven bodies again and discovered nothing – Roger and Bwana had handed over all that they had collected from the bodies. Gonzalez produced a camera and took several photographs of the bodies and the 5Clubs markings on all of them. He took a few other photographs of the surroundings and then beckoned to his agents. They’d brought large black body bags with them and in a short while had all the bodies wrapped. The six agents paired up and carried the bodies back to the chopper.

‘Might be quicker if we helped,’ Bwana murmured.

‘Not his fault. Blame his folks. They brought him up to never be idle, not even for a few seconds,’ Roger sighed, addressing the air, and followed Bwana.

An hour later, the bodies were stacked in the chopper, and Bwana led the way to the remaining bodies a hundred yards away. There was a risk that the gang would send more bandits to check on the missing, and Bwana and Roger were alert, but they were the only ones moving in the ravine. Other than the shadows.

Gonzalez approached the fallen women first and circled around them, his camera working rapidly. He knelt in silence next to one of the bodies, the woman who had been felled by the bandit’s rifle, and noted her deformed head. His face was grim when he arose, and looking over at Roger and Bwana, he uttered a silent
thank you
.

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