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January Justice Part 10

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"I know. And that's enough. I'm so sorry. I really am. Let's just forget it. I don't want to-"

"Will you shut up a minute?"

She stared at me. "Okay."

"I wish we could get married. I'd give anything for that. And I'll never marry anyone else, ever, for as long as I live."

"Okay... but...?"

"But I can't."

"You're not already married. Tell me you're not married."

"No. It's nothing like that. It's worse than that."

I told her then. And of course she had already heard about the war crimes of Laui Kalay. Every American knew the details, which had been repeated by the press in horrific detail. The coldhearted desecration of the bodies in search of nearly worthless jewelry and a few gold and silver teeth. The photo opportunities, posing with the dead, draping lifeless arms over each other's shoulders, staging s.e.xual positions. The monstrous jokes. The horrific laughter.

Haley stared at the flames in the fireplace as I spoke, and when I was done, she continued to watch the burning wood for a while. Finally she said, "No. It isn't possible. You didn't do that. You had nothing to do with that."

"I was convicted, Haley. They stripped me of my rank and put me in the stockade for six months, then kicked me out of the Marines with a dishonorable discharge."

"All right. But tell me you didn't do it." She looked at me, searching my face.

The agony within her eyes was more than I could bear. I broke a vow. I said, "I did not."

She moved against me, snuggling her cheek against my chest. She said, "Tell me the rest."

"I can't."

"You have to."

"I know, but I can't. I've already said too much."

"Why? Is it some kind of military secret?"

"No."

She looked up at me. "But you made some kind of promise?"

It shocked me that she could get there so fast. Haley simply knew things. She wasn't psychic; she was just that smart. But I couldn't acknowledge it. I could only stare into the fire.

She said, "You gave your word to someone."

I said nothing.

"And you let them do that to you, knowing you were innocent."

I said nothing.

"And you think this is a reason not to marry me?"

"You know about my father. You know how I grew up, what everybody thought. It's a terrible thing to live with that kind of shame. I won't... I can't let them say the things they'll say about you if you marry me."

She pressed her cheek against my chest again and stared into the flames and said, "Oh, my dear, sweet, idiotic man... how I do adore you."

Then there was a crash. It brought me back. I might have lain awake all night, torturing myself with sweet memories of Haley except for that crash, which was the sound of breaking gla.s.s.

Sitting up in bed, I saw a red light blinking on the floor. I got out of bed and crossed the room. On the floor in the moonlight, I could just make out the shape of a brick. I knelt to look it over. I thought it must be from the planter edging outside the guesthouse. I a.s.sumed it was what had shattered the window. In the darkness beside the brick was a blinking, red light. I went back across the room and switched on the overhead lights. The floor was littered with shards of gla.s.s, and I was bare-footed, but that wasn't important. I quickly went back to kneel beside the bomb.

It took about one second too long for me to realize someone had attached a digital timer and a booster battery to a blasting cap, which was inserted into a small block of C-4, just about enough to level the guesthouse. It took one more second to realize I didn't have enough time to do anything about it. I didn't even have time to throw it back out through the window. I knelt there watching the red numbers as the timer counted 2, and then 1, and then I closed my eyes to die.

14.

The timer beeped. That was all. After another second or so, I opened my eyes and saw the 0 on the display. Gently and slowly, I reached down and disconnected the battery. I carefully pulled the blasting cap out of the plastic explosive. I carried the thing into the kitchen, where the light was better. I did my best to only touch the bomb at the corners in case they had left fingerprints.

Whoever made the bomb hadn't bothered to remove the plastic wrap from the C-4. The black printing on the plastic indicated US military issue. The blasting cap was an M6 electric type, also something I had seen in the Marines.

I left the bomb on the counter, slipped on a pair of shorts and running shoes, grabbed a flashlight, and went outside to look around. Walking to the back of the guesthouse, where my bedroom window was, I saw no sign of anything out of the ordinary. I scanned the ground in front of the window. Nothing. I went to the eight-foot-tall stucco wall that ran along the road beside the property and walked its entire length. Again, I saw nothing of interest. I wasn't surprised. Based on the quality of the ordnance, I hadn't expected them to leave evidence.

Back inside the guesthouse, I carried the bomb into the living room, put it on the coffee table, and sat down on the sofa to stare at it and think.

The C-4 plastic explosive and the M6 detonator weren't readily available to civilians. The whole a.s.sembly was compact and efficient, obviously a.s.sembled by someone who had been well trained, probably by US military munitions experts.

One place a person might learn how to build such a bomb was the WHINSEC, the Western Hemisphere Inst.i.tute for Security Cooperation, at Fort Benning. It used to be called the School of the Americas when it was still in Panama, where US military specialists had provided counterinsurgency training for thousands of personnel sent by Latin American allies of the United States, like Guatemala.

The thing was, there had been no need to throw the bomb into my bedroom. It could have been attached to the wall outside, and I would have been just as dead. So I thought it had probably been a warning rather than an actual attempt to kill me. But a warning from whom?

Castro was the first to come to mind, but I dismissed him almost immediately. For one thing, he carried a Glock 26 handgun, not a US military issue M9 semiautomatic, or an M11. If he had access to US military explosives, it seemed likely he would favor US military sidearms. For another, he had an air about him that didn't line up with the kind of training they gave at Fort Benning. It wasn't something I could explain, but I knew it when I saw it.

On the other hand, there was the cla.s.sically trained way the two men from the Suburban had stood when it looked as if I might attack. I thought about the holstered M9 I had seen on one of them, and the fact that the curriculum at WHINSEC included its proper use. I thought about the fact that our Central American allies in training there almost certainly had their minds fixed on current and former insurgents like Vega and Castro when they aimed at targets on the Fort Benning firing range.

With the power source disconnected, the bomb no longer worried me. I leaned back against the sofa, put my feet up on the table beside the plastic explosive, and thought about friends and enemies. I tried to keep an open mind. I tried to think of everyone. I thought and thought, and sometime in the night, I finally fell asleep.

The next thing I knew, the rising sun had angled through a window and fallen on my face, awaking me. I went into the kitchen, and made a pot of coffee. I sipped the first cup of the day. Always a treat. I decided I had insufficient information. It would be helpful to have the bomb checked for fingerprints and DNA evidence. I dialed 9-1-1.

The first squad car showed up in about five minutes. Within the hour there were five other squad cars and a panel truck for command and control. I was impressed to learn that the Newport Beach Police Department also had an explosives disposal vehicle, which they drove onto the lawn to get as close as possible to the guesthouse. It was a black Ford van with armor plating between the front seats and the cargo bay. In back was a large steel box with a heavy-hinged door facing the rear.

Teru wouldn't be pleased with the damage it did to the lawn.

My a.s.surances that the bomb wasn't operational and my offer to carry it out for them were both ignored. They sent in a guy wearing a disposal suit. He hobbled into the house like a sumo wrestler in body armor, pushing a small cart that had oversized rubber tires and an elaborate shock-absorbing suspension. The bomb was on the cart when he came out. At the rear of the explosives disposal vehicle, he lifted the bomb and put it in the steel container. Then he closed the heavy interior door and the two exterior doors and began removing his body armor.

Around noon the police were finally done with their work. They told me their lab had confirmed that the C-4 and the detonator were both real, but the timer was faulty. I asked if the timer had been purposely modified. They said it appeared the defect had been caused when it was manufactured. So it seemed more likely that the bomb was no mere warning. Maybe they had thrown it through the window just to make double sure. Or maybe they wanted me awake when it happened. Maybe they wanted me to know I was about to die.

The police explained to me that the bomb had been thrown through my bedroom window after the gla.s.s had already been shattered by a brick, which was taken from the edging of the planting bed outside, and there was in fact no other evidence relating to the crime elsewhere on the property. I didn't tell them I already knew all of that.

A Newport detective asked if I had any enemies. I told him I had several and explained that I was in the personal security business. I told him about the two Latinos in the Suburban, that they had been following me for at least two days. I gave him their vehicle's tag number. He promised they would run the plates and question the owner. He said they had found no fingerprints on the bomb except for mine, and no DNA evidence.

When the crime scene crew had gone, I went into the guesthouse and started another pot of coffee brewing. While I waited, I went over recent events.

The bomb was interesting. I thought about the fact that it was interesting, and my first encounter with Vega and Castro had been interesting, and being followed by the guy with the gold medallion and his partner was interesting, and I decided it was a good thing to be interested in something. It was a relief, and I had a feeling I should try to make it last.

So to remain interested, I considered the two guys in the Suburban, Medallion and the Other One, following me and threatening to kill me if I agreed to work for Vega. They had made a tactical mistake. I tended to press into threats, not run away from them.

And of course, there was still Castro. I went back and forth on Castro. Sometimes I wished I had killed him, and sometimes I pitied him because I had the feeling he wasn't totally in control of his own actions. But I figured Vega might be in control, and it would be a good thing to find out for sure.

The most interesting aspect of it all was Haley's plans to produce the film in Guatemala. It could be a coincidence, of course. It probably was. At any given moment, she had been working on about a dozen business deals all around the world. But that particular deal had been centered on Guatemala, and tenuous though the connection was, I had no other leads, nothing that tied in with her murder. There was no way I could ignore the slim possibility of a connection with the rest of it.

Everything pointed back to Vega's proposition, one way or the other.

When the coffee was ready, I poured myself a cup, carried it over to the telephone, and called the Renaissance Hotel. I asked the hotel operator for Mr. Brown. Castro voice came on the line.

He said, "Bueno."

I replied in Spanish. "It is Cutter. I want to speak with Vega."

There was a long pause. I heard him breathing into the telephone's mouthpiece. Finally he said, "A moment."

Half a minute later, Valentin Vega came on the line. He spoke cheerfully in English. "Good morning, Mr. Cutter. This is a pleasant surprise."

Either he was an excellent actor, or he didn't know what Castro had tried to do to me the last time I saw him. I said, "Did Castro tell you what happened at the cemetery?"

"Cemetery?"

I explained that I had nearly killed his bodyguard, and why. When I was done, he said, "Mr. Cutter, on behalf not only of myself but also of my people, I wish to apologize for Fidel's threats against you and his disrespect toward your deceased employer. He will most certainly be punished."

"Do what you think best. As far as I'm concerned, it's over and done with unless Castro wants to press his luck."

"I a.s.sure you he will not 'press his luck,' as you say."

"Fine. He got it wrong, by the way. I'm not connected with the guys following you."

"I did not think you were."

"You need to convince Castro. And don't let him come at me again. For his sake."

"I am beginning to realize it was a mistake to bring him on this mission. But Fidel can be controlled."

"If not, I won't be responsible for what happens."

"Yes, I understand. And I would not blame you."

"All right." I took a sip of coffee. I swallowed. "Do you still want some help?"

"Very much. Are you now interested?"

"It depends. If I take the case, I'll follow it wherever it goes. I'll expose the truth, even if the truth isn't convenient for you. That's the only way I work."

"This is not a problem, Mr. Cutter. The URNG had no involvement in the matter."

"Okay, what are Castro's specialties?"

"I do not understand your question."

"Is he a specialist in hand-to-hand, small weapons, artillery, motor transport, munitions?"

"I believe it is accurate to say he is a specialist, as you call it, in everything you mentioned."

"Where did he qualify in munitions?"

"Qualify? You speak as if Fidel has had formal training. We learned what we know of warfare in the mountains, by-what is your expression?-trial and error?"

"He didn't train at the School of the Americas?"

"Of course not. Your country reserved that opportunity for our enemies, as you most certainly know. Please explain these questions, Mr. Cutter."

I told him about the bomb, including the fact that it had been made from US military ordnance.

He said, "You have my word no person connected with our cause had anything to do with that. We are a political party now. We do not resort to violence. But in the days when we did use bombs, you can be sure they always exploded."

"Okay," I said. "I'm in."

15.

Simon prepared grilled-cheese sandwiches and tomato soup for himself, Teru, and me. We ate together at a table in the shade of the stand of palms beside the pool. Teru complained about the damage to the lawn. I noticed that he still cared about the lawn even though he would soon no longer be responsible for it. I thought a moral lesson was in there somewhere. Something about caring for caring's sake. Honor. Duty. All that kind of thing. But I didn't want to read too much into it. After all, I was the reason he would soon no longer be responsible for the lawn.

Out on the harbor before us, about a dozen kids were holding a regatta in snub-nosed Sabots, the triangular sails filling and luffing as their little boats darted and tacked across the water. We discussed my theory about who had thrown the bomb. I explained about Vega and Castro and the other two guys in the black Suburban. Teru and Simon agreed the other guys were probably operatives of some kind with the Guatemalan junta, and the bomb had probably been their way of making sure I didn't get involved with the URNG.

"So," said Teru, "I imagine you've decided to get involved with the URNG."

I said, "Of course."

Teru nodded, then took another bite out of his grilled-cheese sandwich. "This is pretty good," he said.

"Thank you," replied Simon.

That afternoon as Teru worked on the damaged lawn and Simon took charge of cleaning up the gla.s.s and supervising a guy who came to replace the broken window panes, I thought through how I'd go about investigating the Dona Elena kidnapping. I could have started in a lot of ways, but the kidnapper's friends and neighbors were as good a place as any. I figured Sal Russo might not want to cooperate with me after I had given him so much att.i.tude at our lunch together, so I called the Orange County Sheriff's Department and left a voice mail for Tom Harper. I asked if he would call Russo and get a copy of the file on the Toledo kidnapping and murder case for me, or at least the last known address of the perpetrator, Alejandra Delarosa. Then I searched the Internet for everything I could find about the woman.

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January Justice Part 10 summary

You're reading January Justice. This manga has been translated by Updating. Author(s): Athol Dickson. Already has 624 views.

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