Damage Control

Damage Control by John Gilstrap Page B

Book: Damage Control by John Gilstrap Read Free Book Online
Authors: John Gilstrap
Tags: Fiction, Thrillers, Espionage, Military, Political
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what I mean,” Jonathan said, his patience thinning. As a rule, the precious cargo was not a part of strategy sessions.
    “Then who?” Tristan pressed. He retreated, though, from whatever flashed behind Jonathan’s eyes.
    “They haven’t even had time to find the bodies,” Boxers said. “This whole thing has been a setup.”
    Jonathan closed a loop in his mind. “What do you bet that the second ambush—the one we didn’t walk into—was all about taking us into custody?”
    “And how the hell did they know about Leon Harris and Richard Lerner?” Boxers pressed. He gave a bitter laugh. “I almost admire the guy who set it up. I’ll be sure to tell him when I blow his brains out.”
    Jonathan didn’t respond to that. He wished sometimes that the Big Guy would be less harsh in the presence of others.
    “What about the PC?” Boxers asked, tossing a glance back at Tristan. “We gonna drag him along to a forger? Seems like a lot of extra exposure.”
    Jonathan winced. Big Guy had a point. The mission was to repatriate the hostage—the one who still lived—with his family. For whatever reason, it appeared that Mexico had declared war on Jonathan’s and Boxers’ aliases. The shortest distance between right now and repatriation couldn’t possibly include a side trip to some forger’s outfit.
    “Maybe we can find a church somewhere,” Jonathan said. “With the ransom money, we can make a hell of a donation. Maybe big enough to handle the repatriation.”
    But man, oh man, he didn’t like the thought of it. When the stakes were this high, delegation to others always felt like a mistake.
    “I think you might want to think that through a little more thoroughly,” Big Guy said. Clearly, he didn’t delegate well, either.
    “I’m not getting handed off to anybody,” Tristan said. “I’m only hearing a little bit of this stuff, but if I just heard something about handing me over to a church, I’ll tell you right now that that’s not happening.”
    “Look, kid—” Boxers said.
    “The name’s Tristan. T-R-I-S-T-A-N. And from this point on, I’m hanging with you guys—the people who have at least as many guns as the terrorists do. You just need to know that.”
    Jonathan smiled. He admired attitude from people in general, and hearing it vented against Boxers was doubly entertaining. The kid—Tristan—felt exactly the way Jonathan would have if he’d been in that position.
    “There are a lot of decisions that lie between here and there,” Jonathan said in an attempt to defuse things.
    Where the hell had the authorities gotten ahold of their aliases? Add that to the fact that the bad guys had known exactly where the drop-off was going to be made, and it all became very perplexing.
    Was it possible that Reverend Jackie Mitchell was somehow in on this? Was there any conceivable reason why she would jam him up? Could that even make sense? No, he decided, it couldn’t. Jonathan wasn’t so naïve as to think that members of the clergy were beyond heartless schemes to collect money or gather power—the Crusades, anyone?—but the risk to the children, and the deaths of the chaperones was beyond the pale, even for the worst. Even Jonathan’s cynicism had its limits.
    If not the Crystal Palace, then who? If he hadn’t been betrayed by the good guys, then by process of elimination, he’d been betrayed by the bad guys. They were the only other people who knew the details of the ransom exchange. He still couldn’t imagine how they’d known his alias, but at least the location part was plausible. And the bad guys would certainly know the names of the hostage takers. Just as they would know the names of the hostages.
    “Uh-oh,” he said aloud, drawing a look from Boxers.
    He keyed his mike again and got Mother Hen’s attention. “Do you still have ICIS up?” he asked.
    “Affirmative.”
    “Do me a favor and run the names of our intended PCs.”
    “What are we looking for?”
    “Whatever pops

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