may well depend on how quickly you’re able to switch these things out.”
“Whoa,” Tristan interrupted. “I’m not shooting at anybody.”
The Big Guy’s eyes flashed anger, and then they flashed patronizing tolerance. “Just humor me, okay?” he said. “My boss wants me to teach you this shit.”
When he actually waited for a response, Tristan gave a shrug that meant,
For the next twenty minutes, Big Guy showed him how to aim the rifle by pressing it into his shoulder, and then how to change the magazines without looking. While shooting, you just raised your trigger finger to stroke the little button, and the magazine fell away. Then, apparently, you could just grab another magazine and slap it into the old one’s place without looking. Big Guy made it look like the easiest thing in the world, but Tristan had a hard time getting the hang of it.
“Why do I need to learn this?” Tristan asked. “I’m not a killer. I couldn’t shoot another human being.”
“I hear that a lot from people who haven’t been shot yet,” Big Guy said. “Again, just humor me.”
From there, Big Guy showed him how to shove as many bullets as possible into the magazine. For his gun, three of the magazines took thirty bullets, but two of them took only fifteen. On full-auto, all of those magazines combined would give him eight seconds of total firepower.
“Fire one shot at a time,” Big Guy said. “One bullet per trigger pull. Even though these are machine guns, and they’re capable of putting hundreds of rounds downrange, I want you to think of your rifle as a single-shot weapon. Questions?”
“Yeah,” Tristan said. “Who will we be shooting at?”
“I have no idea,” Big Guy said. “But I can tell you this-if you’re shooting at them, it will be because they shot at you first. Once you cross that line, a lot of the rest won’t matter. The priority will be to conserve ammunition. Between the various weapons, I figure we have between twenty-five hundred and three thousand rounds. That sounds like a lot, but you’d be surprised at how fast that gets used up.”
“Are you going to actually teach me how to shoot this gun?” Tristan asked.
The Big Guy looked confused. “I already told you about the safety,” he said. “You take that off, and then you point the little round hole toward the bad guy and you pull the trigger. For you, though, the lesson is to keep the friggin’ safety on.”
Venice had guessed right, but Dom found the changes in the voice to be unsettling. It was as if the machine had taken Gail’s voice apart and stripped away the humanity. The other sounds in the room-everything from the gunshots to the other voices-were completely unintelligible. They reminded Dom of someone moaning into a galvanized tube. The overall effect was beyond unnerving.
They listened to Gail’s conversation with Venice, and they heard the long, soothing
And that was it. Her voice was cut off, even as the rest of the noise continued to pound in the background.
“She described her attackers,” Venice said. Her expression showed that she was somewhere between impressed and amazed.
“More than that,” Dom said. “She named one of them. Somebody named Volpe. A Crystal Palace security guard. Are the other descriptions enough to be useful? A young slender white male and a black male? Between the two, she described half the world and three quarters of Scottsdale.” Even as he spoke the words, he had trouble wrapping his head around such a non-emotional discussion of harm against Gail.
Tears returned to Venice’s eyes and she started typing again, perhaps just to mask the emotion. “No coincidences,” she said. “That means that Volpe and some guy named Hainsley both have something in common with somebody named Abrams.”
As Dom watched her do her best to be brave and professional, his already-massive admiration for her grew even larger. She’d known Digger from the day she was born, grown up in the same house as the daughter of his family’s housekeeper. She’d endured his Army years, been there for his marriage and divorce, and had been a friend through the ordeal of his ex-wife’s violent death. Now she was working hard to save Digger’s life, even as she knew that the second love of his life had likely been killed.
“I don’t think you should tell Dig about Gail,” Dom said.
She looked up.
“You know, when he calls in.”
“I can’t lie to him,” she said. “I won’t lie to him. I owe him that much.”
Dom sighed. “Truth isn’t a fine line,” he said. “It’s a sleeve. It’s entirely possible to vary from the line while staying within the sleeve.”
Venice scowled as she looked at him, then cocked her head. “Are you sure you’re a priest?”
“I need another way out of here, Mother Hen,” Jonathan said into the satellite phone. “We’ve been made here. We’ve gone to ground to hold out for the remaining part of the day, but the going is way too slow. If we’re going to have any chance at all, we need to compress the time in country. Can you find me an airplane?”
A pause. “Your original exfil aircraft is out of play, right?”
“That’s affirmative,” Jonathan said. “These guys know too much about our plans. We have to assume that they knew about Gutierrez’s plane.”
Another pause. Longer, this time. “I’ll see what I can do.”
“Hey,” Jonathan said. “You sound strange. Is everything all right?”
She snapped, “Do you want me to find you an airplane, or do you want to chat?”
“Here’s the deal,” Scorpion said, interrupting the shooting lesson. “We’re veering from our plan.”
“Thank God,” Boxers said.
“You don’t know what the new plan is yet,” Jonathan said.
“I don’t have to. It has to be better than the one we’ve got.”
Jonathan beckoned them closer to him and offered them a patch of mulchy jungle floor. He pulled his GPS out of its pouch and turned it on. “I had Mother Hen do some additional research for me.” He handed the device to Boxers. “Look here. This satellite shot is about an hour old.” He brought up an aerial map of a lot of jungle, and then zoomed in until the picture looked like it had been taken from maybe a hundred feet up. “What does that look like to you?”
Boxers smiled broadly. “About the ugliest damn airplane I ever saw.” The make and model weren’t discernable from this angle, but it looked like a Cessna Skylane, a high-wing single engine plane that was typical of hacienda owners who needed to get from place to place while avoiding the miserable roads.
“Now you’re talkin’, Boss,” Big Guy said. “All this ground-hugging has been getting on my nerves.” He moved his head closer to the screen and squinted to see the detail. “That runway looks short, but I guess if he got it in there, I can get it out.” He raised his head and looked to the sky, clearly running numbers in his head, “Gas could be an issue,” he said. “Even with a full tank and if nothing goes wrong, it’ll be tight.”
“What does tight mean?” Tristan asked.
Boxers gave him one of the patented annoyed looks. “It means running out of gas and falling out of the sky.”
The look of shock on the kid’s face made both Boxers and Jonathan laugh.
“Don’t worry, Tristan,” Jonathan assured. “Neither one of us is suicidal.” To Boxers: “How tight?”
“Like running-on-vapors tight.”
Jonathan noted the startled reaction from Tristan.
Tristan noticed Jonathan noticing. “Hey,” he said. “You promised honesty. I get it.” He looked to Boxers.
“Does this mean I don’t have to learn to shoot?”
Boxers opened his mouth to answer, then deferred to his boss.
“Think of it as a life skill.” Jonathan said. “And if things come apart later, we’ll be able to use another trigger finger.” He let the words settle. “Besides, we have time to waste. We might as well spend it productively.”
Boxers cocked his head. “Why do we have time to waste?”