Mind Bomb. Don Pendleton
gone all gift-of-emptiness. Valenzuela really just didn’t seem to get it. She flinched as the Ironman strode forward.
“Let me break it down for you.” Lyons held up a tablet and tapped the relevant photo file. It was the bloodbath at the Villa family farm. He brought up scenes of slaughter. “Your brother-in-law, Rafael, went to your niece Maribel’s room.” He rapidly swiped from crime scene pic to pic. “He came back with a loaded assault rifle, one with a 100-round drum. He shot your sister, the mother of his children, in the face five times.”
Valenzuela recoiled.
“Then he tried to shoot you and my friend. I managed to interrupt that. We thought it was over but then you drew a gun and shot your brother-in-law.”
Sofina Valenzuela’s face went slack. “I don’t own a gun...”
Lyons was relentless. “I could almost buy the heat-of-the-moment revenge angle, but then you turned and shot my friend four times in the chest. You were about to shoot him in the head, like you did Rafa. I had to beat you with Kaliman and choke you out. The story of the slaughter is all over Univisión. You are a missing person, considered kidnapped, which you are, and the federal police have an APB out for you.”
Valenzeula looked like she was about to throw up.
Lyons stared down at Sofi like an angry Old Testament God of the Desert with no sense of humor. “You’re telling me you don’t remember any of this?”
She shook like she might fly apart. “No...”
“Yes, you do.”
“I don’t know who you are!” The woman was close to losing it. “I don’t know what you are talking about!”
Lyons loomed in. “Yes, you do.”
Valenzeula squinted and cringed again as if she was staring into the sun. Her voice came out in a little-girl whimper. “My head hurts.”
People who had been choked out often had terrible headaches, but Lyons had put Valenzuela in a strangle. It was a relatively quiet go-to-sleep; some people actually found it refreshing.
Calvin James raised an eyebrow. He spoke sympathetically. “Señora Valenzuela? Do you suffer from migraines?”
“No.” The woman winced. “But my head, it hurts...”
“Do you tolerate aspirin?”
“I prefer ibuprofen...”
James reached into his medic bag and shook out a pair of pills. Lyons noted James’s sleight of hand and saw that one was a Valium. Calvin fed the woman the pills and helped her drink the rest of the water. “Rest for a few moments.”
James inclined his head for a private powwow and the two warriors stepped into the kitchen. “What do you think?” Lyons asked.
“If you hadn’t told me you were there? I’d believe her.”
“If I hadn’t been there? I’d believe her, too. Question is, Cal, do you believe the señora really doesn’t remember anything?”
James frowned and fished a water out of the fridge. “I don’t know her medical history, or if she or anyone in her family has any history of cognitive disorders. Of course, even if she did, she’s related to Rafa Villa by law rather than blood and it wouldn’t explain his behavior. She might have snapped from the trauma in the living room, gone berserk on everybody, and really doesn’t remember. Hysterical amnesia does exist, but it’s pretty goddamn rare, and none of that explains what she was doing with a concealed and unlicensed Walther PPK.”
“It’s louder than a rape whistle,” Lyons suggested. “And more effective.”
“I got a steak dinner that says when I ask her about the gun she says she’s never seen it before, and I’m betting she says she’s never fired a gun in her life.”
Lyons found himself agreeing. “So what do you think?”
“Positively anomalous. I want to give the Valium a few minutes to calm her down and start in again. Let me lead off, and don’t come in hard unless I give you the signal.”
“You got it.” Lyons reached into the fridge for a bottled water and vainly wished it was beer. His tablet beeped. Kurtzman appeared inset in the top right-hand corner of the screen.
Lyons tapped the screen. “What’s up, Bear?”
“Given all the weirdness I decided to keep an eye on you.”
“Oh?”
“Yeah. I couldn’t get an NSA satellite since you fellows hiding out in the Lone Star State under the aegis of the FBI was a low priority and not worth the hassle.”
Lyons was pretty sure he had a glimmer of what was coming. “But?”
“So, I’m spending a little observation time on a DigitalGlobe private satellite that’s supposed to be working on precision agriculture imaging in your neck of Texas. Akira hacked me in.”
“Nice, so what do you see?”
“You’re about to have company.”
“How much company?”
“Three vehicles. SUVs. They appear to have light bars on top.”
Lyons tapped his screen and spoke to Schwarz in the hidden bathroom. “You hear that?”
“Yup, any police chatter that could be relevant to us?”
“Not on our end. Bear?”
Kurtzman shook his head. “I suggest you assume they are hostile.”
“ETA?”
“Five minutes or less, and unless they’re on patrol or a picnic the only thing at the end of the road is you.”
“How’d they know we’re here?”
“No idea. Possible tracking device on Valenzuela?”
“Gadgets?” Lyons asked.
“I didn’t detect any on her when we took her. Nothing in the house has been or is giving off a radio signal.”
Lyons smiled ugly. “So someone tattled.”
James checked the loads in his HK .45. “And that someone could only be FBI.”
Blancanales spoke over the link. “If these guys are law enforcement, good or bad, there’s a million ways this goes wrong.”
Lyons made his battle plan. “Cal, get Valenzuela secured in the cellar, then come back, stay in the house and cover our six. Pol, you and I are going to meet and greet outside. Gadgets, stay concealed. You’re our ace in the hole if they assault the house.” Lyons went to his gear bag as his team moved. “Jack? We have a situation.”
“So I hear.”
“What’s your ETA?”
Grimaldi had Dragonslayer parked at the Rancho Blanco private airport, clear on the other side of the Laredo metropolitan area. “I can be there in ten flying low and skirting Laredo city airspace. Fifteen if you want me armed.”
“We got about five before they show. Arm up.”
“Inbound.”
Lyons clicked a drum magazine into his shotgun and set his gear bag out by the front door. The ranch house was adobe, which was good for stopping bullets. The front porch was about five feet above ground level and had a nice three-foot-solid running adobe rail save the opening for the stairs. The FBI house was a semidecent little fortress as things went.
Lyons set his shotgun against the porch rail and pulled up a rocker. He hooked his boot under the weapon so that he could flip it up into his hands. Pol came out to join him a moment later. He took a seat on the other side of the stairs to form a cross fire on the frontage and set his carbine