The Death Relic

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The Death Relic Page 33

by Chris Kuzneski


  He would mow them down like weeds.

  Angel’s men had gathered on the southeastern corner of El Castillo. If it had been up to them, they would have launched their search for Tiffany several minutes earlier – as soon as Edgar’s death had confirmed her location in the market. Instead, they had been forced to wait for an injured Angel to hobble all the way from the site’s entrance to the staging area on the opposite side of the Great North Platform. With his arm in the elaborate sling, it would have been quicker if his bodyguards had picked him up and carried him across the plaza. Of course, no one had the cojones to tell him that, but everyone was thinking it.

  Upon his arrival, their attitudes quickly changed.

  Angel sat on the bottom step of the pyramid, his face flushed from the long walk. Blood had soaked through the patch on his shoulder, staining his shirt bright red. No longer annoyed, his men stared at him with a combination of fear and respect. Most of them had never met Angel. He and Hector had rarely made it to this part of Mexico. They had allowed their lieutenants from Yucatán and Quintana Roo to handle the kidnappings in this part of the country. Local troops had heard stories about Angel, but this was the first time they had ever seen his face. To see him like this was inspiring. He looked like he could pass out at any moment, yet here he was leading them onto the battlefield. Whatever the Devil had done, they would make her pay.

  Nevertheless, Angel did his best to motivate them.

  ‘Yesterday afternoon,’ he claimed, ‘the Red Devil tried to kill Hector Garcia’s family by blowing up his truck at Zócalo. I managed to pull his children from the fiery wreckage, risking my life to save theirs. In the process, I took a bullet in the shoulder. Doctors wanted to remove my limb, but I wouldn’t let them because I need both arms to fight the Devil. And that’s what I intend to do until one of us is dead.’

  Payne and Jones had no knowledge of the kidnapping plot, the medallion, or anything else that had happened in Mexico City. All they knew was what Tiffany had told them: that she had tried to kill Angel the day before and he was gunning for revenge. Combining that information with everything they’d learned on their own, they had come up with the best plan possible.

  Now all they had to do was execute it.

  Once Jones was in position near the southern end of the ball field, he told Maria what to say and how to say it. He needed her to pretend to be Tiffany, who she had met earlier that day. Maria didn’t have to mimic the tone of her voice, she just needed to capture the cockiness Tiffany had displayed at the Old Chichén campsite. In addition to being Tiffany’s defining characteristic, Jones knew it would generate an emotional response from Angel. Ultimately, that’s what they were hoping for. They wanted Angel to become so angry that he did something careless. And the moment that happened, they would be ready to pounce.

  Jones stared at her. ‘You can do this.’

  ‘I know I can,’ she assured him.

  He smiled at her confidence. ‘Keep that swagger, and you’ll be fine. The more you taunt, the more unhinged he’ll become. Trust me, I’ve dealt with plenty of men like him before. Pride plays a major role in their lives. Getting beaten by a woman will drive him crazy.’

  Maria nodded in understanding. She was an expert on the topic. Her father’s pride had destroyed many lives and torn her family apart. After all this time, she was still coming to grips with everything he had done, including killing his wife – her mother – in order to protect a family secret. The anger she felt towards him was still a major part of her life. She didn’t want it to be. She truly didn’t. She wanted to let it go. But it was still there, lurking under the surface, ready to bubble up at the worst possible moment.

  For once, she could use the anger to her advantage.

  She would use it to taunt Angel.

  Angel’s men were ready to charge towards the market when they heard a female voice in their earpieces. Angel ordered them to shut up so he could hear what she was saying.

  Maria drew out his name in a mocking way. ‘Annnnnnnnngel! Can you hear me, Angel?’

  ‘Who is this?’ he demanded.

  She ignored his question. ‘Listen to me, Angel, because I am not going to repeat myself. I’m going to give you one chance to go away – one chance to forget about me. If you choose to ignore this offer, you and your men will regret it.’

  Angel struggled to regain his feet. ‘I’ll kill you, puta! Show your face and I’ll kill you! Letting me live was the biggest mistake you ever made!’

  ‘You can’t kill what you can’t find.’

  Angel climbed three steps of the pyramid to see over his men. He stared into the trees, looking for any sign of the Devil. ‘Trust me, puta! I’ll find you – and I’ll kill you.’

  ‘Sounds like fun,’ she taunted. ‘Unfortunately, I’m a little pressed for time. To speed things up, why don’t I tell you where I am?’

  ‘Don’t bother. I never trust a whore!’

  ‘You never trusted your mother? How sad!’

  Physically injured and emotionally exhausted, Angel’s anger continued to build. He unleashed a string of profanity she could barely comprehend. When he paused to catch his breath, she went in for the kill.

  ‘I’ll tell you what, maricón. Why don’t I give you a hint that you can trust?’

  Angel bubbled with rage. In Mexico, ‘maricón’ is a powerful word. Literally, it means ‘homosexual’, but in the criminal world it means something different. It means something stronger. It means you are less than a man. ‘What kind of hint?’

  She nodded at Jones, who fired a single bullet into the ground. The gunshot roared like thunder. Angel and his men turned their heads towards the west, trying to pinpoint the exact location of the sound. But it was tough to gauge on one shot alone.

  ‘Did you hear that, maricón? Or do you need another hint?’

  Jones fired a few more rounds, just to make sure.

  Angel pointed towards the southern end of the ball court. There was no doubt in his mind that the shots had come from there. By this time, his men were raring to go, like pit bulls that had smelled blood and were ready to attack. All Angel had to do was open their cage.

  She cooed at him. ‘I’m waiting, maricón. Do you have the balls to come and get me?’

  Angel stared at his men and growled. ‘Kill the bitch.’

  The real Tiffany listened to the taunts through her earpiece, the one she’d stolen from her first victim. She laughed the entire time. Within seconds, she had figured out what Payne and Jones were attempting to do. They were hoping to lure Angel’s men to a certain part of the site, where they would be lying in wait. She wasn’t sure if Angel would be stupid enough to fall for the trick, but if he did, she would be ready to take advantage.

  Angel’s men charged forward en masse, riding a wave of passion and inexperience to their impending demise. Had Angel taken a moment to think things through, he would have come up with a better plan than a frontal assault in such an enclosed space. Instead, he let his emotions cloud his judgment. It would prove to be a fatal mistake. On the battlefield, guts can only do so much. At some point brains are more important – especially when the enemy is using theirs.

  Less than a minute later, Angel’s men arrived on the southern edge of the playing field. They were keyed up and hungry for vengeance. They were also susceptible to deception. To complete the charade, Jones had asked Maria to wait for them at the northern end of the field, where she would taunt them upon their arrival. As soon as they spotted her, she turned and ran up the temple steps. The colour of her hair didn’t matter. Not from 500 feet away. The only thing that mattered was catching the bitch who’d tried to kill Hector’s family.

  Without thinking, the men quickly gave chase.

  Payne eyed their approach through the front sight of his assault rifle. Elevated above the Great Ball Court, he was protected by one of the stone pillars that held up the temple’s façade. His weapon had a standard effective range – the range to consistently hit and sev
erely wound a human torso – of over 1,600 feet. That was approximately three times the width of the playing field. From the moment they stepped onto the grass, Angel’s men were in play. And yet he patiently waited until they had closed the distance to 200 feet. More than halfway there – so they wouldn’t turn back – yet far enough from him to pose little threat.

  In his mind, it was the perfect kill zone.

  Stuck between two walls with nowhere to hide.

  Payne opened fire on the approaching horde and cut them down with ease. Head shots. Heart shots. Leg shots. Whatever. They tried to fight back by firing wildly towards the temple. Bullets hit the pillars, the steps and the front wall, but Payne was too well protected to even flinch. A few men in the rear tried to run back towards the southern end of the stadium, but Jones was waiting for them. He picked them off one by one, until the only person upright on the field was a man who’d died while trying to climb the western wall. His body leaned against the slanted base of the wall in the area that had been designated as a team bench.

  It almost looked like he was trying to check into the game.

  But it was too late. The game was nearly over.

  While Angel and his bodyguards were focused on the west, Tiffany scurried around the base of the pyramid and came up behind them. One shot, then a second. Both from close range. The bodyguards died without raising their guns. Angel whirled and tried to get off a shot at Tiffany, but she was too quick. She fired a bullet through his ‘good’ shoulder. He dropped his weapon and screamed in pain, no longer able to use either arm.

  ‘Quit your crying!’ she taunted. ‘Now you have a matching set.’

  ‘Fuck you!’ he yelled in Spanish.

  She pushed him to the ground and stepped on his wound. ‘No, fuck you.’

  He shrieked in agony, unable to speak. In her mind, it was a well-deserved punishment for the slaying of her teammates in Mexico City. She refused to ease up on him until she saw Payne and Jones in the distance. They had spotted her and were coming her way. There were things she needed to learn before they intervened.

  She knelt next to Angel. ‘How did you find me?’

  ‘Fuck you!’ he screamed.

  She grabbed his freshly wounded arm and twisted it behind his back. With the bullet still lodged in his shoulder, the pain was beyond excruciating. ‘How’d you find me?’

  He howled in pain. ‘Your picture.’

  ‘What picture?’ she demanded.

  ‘Someone sent me your picture. They told me where to find you.’

  ‘Bullshit!’ She twisted her weapon deeper.

  He screamed again. Blood poured from the wound.

  ‘Prove it,’ she growled.

  He was getting desperate. ‘The picture … it’s on my phone. See for yourself.’

  She dug through his pockets. Sure enough, Angel wasn’t lying. There were several close-ups of her on his phone. They were taken at the campground of Old Chichén. Sent to him via email. As she had suspected, someone at the site had tipped him off. She had a pretty good idea who it was. She would deal with him when the time was right.

  For now, she had to deal with Angel.

  She knew she wouldn’t be safe until he was dead.

  She pulled her trigger and ended the threat.

  64

  For the past several minutes, Payne and Jones had been on the same side of this war as Tiffany. Now that Angel was dead, she went back to being their adversary. They approached her cautiously, fully aware of her skills. Payne closed in from the northwest, the assault rifle aimed at her chest. Meanwhile, Jones looped further south before converging on her location. She was standing next to the pyramid, three corpses at her feet. One was Angel. The other two were his bodyguards. The tattooed men had looked tough, but Tiffany had killed them with ease.

  Payne kept that in mind as he moved in. ‘Drop the weapon!’

  She scoffed at his request. ‘You’ve got to be shitting me.’

  ‘Drop the weapon,’ Jones echoed.

  ‘Seriously? You still don’t trust me?’

  Payne moved closer. ‘Can’t afford to. We saw you in action.’

  She smiled at the compliment. ‘What can I say? This isn’t my first rodeo.’

  Jones took aim. ‘It will be your last rodeo – unless you drop your weapon.’

  ‘Wow! You guys are so serious. I thought you’d be more fun.’ She tossed her weapon to the ground and calmly raised her hands. ‘I’d heard that you were fun.’

  ‘From who?’

  ‘I told you, Jon. I’m not at liberty to say.’

  The comment pissed Payne off. He charged forward and frisked her. Then he pushed her roughly onto the pyramid steps. Still keyed up from the battle, he was sick of her games.

  ‘I’m about to get a lot less fun,’ he assured her.

  ‘Damn! What’s your problem?’

  ‘My problem?’ Payne yelled. ‘Several tourists are dead because of you. Several more are injured because of you. And now you’re going to force me to kick the shit out of you to get some answers. Unless, of course, you want me to skip the beating and go right to torture.’

  She laughed it off. ‘You won’t torture me.’

  ‘Really? I saw what you did to Angel. Did it work?’

  Jones chimed in. ‘Do the Stick Trick. That always works.’

  She glanced at Jones. ‘The what?’

  Payne smiled. It was a tactic from the Vietnam War that involved a bullet hole and a very sharp stick. ‘Can’t. She doesn’t have an open wound.’

  Jones grinned. ‘No problem. I’ll give her one.’

  Before Payne could respond, Jones fired a single round into the pyramid. The bullet hit the steps a few feet above Tiffany’s head. The shot was so close that she felt the sting of debris on the back of her neck. She jumped in alarm, stunned that he’d actually fired his gun.

  ‘What the fuck? I’m not the enemy!’ she screamed.

  ‘How do we know? You won’t tell us who you work for.’

  ‘You know who I work for. Hamilton told you who I work for.’

  ‘Tell us yourself. Or I’ll fire again.’

  ‘Fine! I work for the CIA, just like Hamilton said.’ She checked the back of her neck for blood. ‘Are you happy now? Or do you need me to spell it for you?’

  Jones growled. ‘Wait! What are you suggesting? That black people can’t spell CIA? You racist, redheaded spook. I ought to kill you just for that.’

  Payne nodded in agreement. ‘She deserves it.’

  Jones fired again. This time even closer.

  ‘Stop doing that!’ she screamed.

  Jones shook his head. ‘Not until you tell us.’

  ‘Tell you what?’

  Payne answered. ‘Who is running your op?’

  She took a deep breath and nodded. It wouldn’t hurt to tell them a little more, especially this late in the game. ‘I don’t know his name. I swear to God I don’t. But his codename is Explorer. He says he knows you from back in the day.’

  ‘From where?’ Payne demanded.

  ‘How the fuck should I know? Your records are sealed, and he wouldn’t tell me.’

  Payne shook his head. ‘Not good enough.’

  ‘Sorry, Jon. It will have to do, because that’s all I know about him. If you want to know more, you can ask him yourself. He should be here any minute.’

  ‘You’ve been saying that since the camp ground.’

  ‘What can I say? The guy is late. If I had to guess, I’d say he’s waiting for the fireworks to die down. He’s not the type to get his hands dirty, so to speak.’

  She punctuated her comment with a smile, as if she’d made a joke that they would eventually understand. It was a feeling they didn’t enjoy. Normally they were the ones making the jokes. Not the other way around.

  ‘What’s so funny?’ Jones insisted.

  ‘Nothing,’ she assured him. ‘But if I were you, I’d round up Ulster and Pelati. Once Explorer arrives, we’ll need to clear out of h
ere in a hurry.’

  Payne laughed. ‘Clear out? We’re not going anywhere with you.’

  She shrugged. ‘Suit yourself. If you’d rather stick around and explain to the Federales what happened here, that’s fine with me. I’m sure they’ll let you go with a warning.’

  Jones cleared his throat. He hated to side with Tiffany, but it was a valid point. They needed to clear out ASAP. ‘Jon, she’s right. We don’t want to be here when the cops arrive. I’m not saying we have to go with her, but—’

  ‘Quiet!’ Payne ordered. He turned his ear towards the sky.

  ‘Damn, dude. You don’t have to yell at me.’

  Payne ignored him. ‘Can you hear that?’

  ‘Hear what?’ Jones demanded.

  He frantically searched the clouds. ‘Listen!’

  65

  Payne stepped away from the pyramid to identify the source of the sound. But the scope of the building was messing with the acoustics. ‘Is that a chopper?’

  Jones listened. He heard a distant rumble. ‘Sounds like it.’

  She leaned back on the steps, cocky. ‘Told you he was coming.’

  Payne scanned the horizon. ‘You never mentioned a chopper.’

  She laughed. ‘Did you think we were going to take a bus? Come on, Jon. Get serious. We’re going to fly out before the Federales arrive.’ She glanced at her watch. ‘Speaking of which, that should be any minute now. If I were you, I’d get my friends.’

  Jones looked to Payne for instructions. ‘Jon?’

  Payne continued to listen. The sound was getting closer. It was definitely a helicopter. ‘Get Petr, but stay hidden. There’s no telling who’s coming for us.’

  Jones sprinted towards the east side of the plaza, where Ulster was hiding behind the Temple of the Warriors. Maria was much closer. She was waiting near a small ruin called the Platform of the Eagles and the Jaguars. It was between the Great Ball Court and the west side of El Castillo. She would remain there until Payne or Jones signalled for her to come over. After the violence of the past few minutes, she was inclined to follow their orders.

 

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