Powder Burn. Don Pendleton
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“I’ll drink to that,” Styles said, and drained his beer mug, flagging down the waiter for a refill. While he waited, Styles scanned the street, checked out the foot traffic, focused on men who fit the soldier profile.
Whatever in hell that might be.
Styles wished he had a photo of Matt Cooper, to confirm ID on sight, but the guy was too hush-hush for that, apparently. Or maybe someone in the States was worried about leaks, a very real concern with any operation undertaken in Colombia.
So Styles was flying blind, with Pureza riding his tailwind on faith.
He hoped they wouldn’t crash and burn.
“What time is it?” Pureza asked. She wore a watch, of course, but obviously had a point to make.
“He’s got five minutes,” Styles replied, after a quick glance at his Timex.
“And then we leave?”
Styles felt his temper fraying. “If you’re getting nervous, you can bail out anytime.”
“And leave you here alone?”
“I’m touched by your concern,” he said, letting the sarcasm leak through, “but I can handle it.”
“Support from my superiors is still conditional—”
“On letting you participate,” Styles interrupted her. “I got the memo. But who are we kidding?”
“I don’t understand.”
“Look, I know that your government cares about drugs. The folks on top are pissed about what’s been happening because it makes Colombia look bad. But face it, half the people offering condolences today are on the cartel’s payroll, and they’ll still be picking up their cash next week, next month, next year.”
“Unless we stop them,” Pureza said, with a glint of anger in her striking azure eyes.
“This shit’s been going on, with variations, since the 1970s,” Styles said. “I was in third grade when the Dadeland massacre gave Florida a wakeup call in 1979. You weren’t even born, for Christ’s sake!”
“And your point is?” He thought she looked pretty, even in her anger, trying to pretend she didn’t understand him.
“The names and faces change,” Styles said. “Lehder, Ochoa, Escobar, Londoño, Renteria—and Macario. They come and go, but none of them could operate for two weeks if your leaders really wanted to put them away.”
“And in your own country?” she challenged him.
“Corrupt as hell, no doubt about it,” Styles admitted. “But we don’t build special prisons so that drug lords can maintain their lifestyle in the joint, then give them weekend leave to the Bahamas. We don’t have Mafia bosses running for Congress or blowing up airplanes with a hundred people on board to kill one snitch.”
Pureza aimed a finger at his face. “Listen, Jack—”
But she was interrupted as a shadow fell across their table and a deep voice asked them, “Am I interrupting something?”
“IS THAT HIM?” JAIME Fajardo asked.
“It must be. He’s sitting down,” Germán Mutis replied.
“Let me see him again!”
Fajardo sounded excited, reaching for the compact binoculars Mutis was using to spy on the sidewalk café from two blocks away. Murder always excited Fajardo, but he liked the big, important killings best.
“He’s an American, all right,” Fajardo announced.
“I think so, too,” Mutis agreed.
They’d been expecting an American, another of the endless meddling gringos, but with no description that would help them spot him. Still, it was enough that the stranger would come from nowhere and sit down with two known enemies, Fajardo thought, a gringo DEA man and the cocky bitch from CNP headquarters.
“Shall I give the word?” Fajardo asked.
“Not yet,” Mutis said.
“But—”
“Not yet! Are you deaf?”
Fajardo slumped back into a sulk. Mutis held out an open hand, received the field glasses and raised them to his eyes once more.
There was no rush to give the word. Mutis observed the new arrival, watched him order from a smiling waitress who seemed taken with his looks. Mutis hired women when he wanted them, and didn’t have to ask if they were put off by his many scars.
And yet what was he waiting for? The weapon was in place, with Carlos Mondragón on station, waiting for the order to trigger it by remote control. Mutis was using a mallet to smash a mosquito, but he was a soldier who followed orders. His padrino wanted a message sent back to El Norte, and Mutis was not in the business of second-guessing his masters.
So, why not proceed?
It wasn’t squeamishness. Mutis had built and detonated bigger bombs, inflicting scores of casualties on demand. He cared no more for the men, women and children passing along Carrera 11 than he might for a nest of ants in his yard. They meant less than nothing to Mutis. He was indifferent to their suffering and death.
But the targets intrigued him.
Germán Mutis derived no quasi-erotic pleasure from his work, as did Jaime Fajardo. Beyond the satisfaction of a job well done, he felt nothing when one of his bombs shattered buildings and lives.
He was, however, fascinated by his targets. It soothed him, in some way Mutis could not define, to see them, watch them go about the final moments of their business, and persuade himself that they were worthy of his best efforts.
This day the weapon was a classic ammonium nitrate and fuel oil—ANFO—bomb. It lacked the sophistication of C-4 or Semtex, but it was cheap and easy to make. More to the point, it delivered predictable impact on target.
The bomb, though relatively small by ANFO standards at a mere two hundred pounds, would send the message that El Padrino desired. It was packed in the trunk of a Volvo sedan, surrounded by jars filled with nails and scrap iron. The Volvo itself would provide further shrapnel, along with the flames from its shattered fuel tank. Parked across the street from the Andino Mall, it was well within range of his prey and ready to go.
As soon as Mutis gave the word.
But there was no rush. The gringos and their bitch weren’t going anywhere. Mutis wished he could eavesdrop on their conversation, listen to them scheming, making plans to topple El Padrino unaware that their lives had been measured out in minutes on a ticking clock.
This was the part that Mutis loved, if truth be told. The power to reach out and cancel lives in progress, possibly to change the course of history itself. How many of the strangers whom he killed today might have gone on to greatness or produced child prodigies, if given time? Was a doctor strolling down