Payback sts-17

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Payback sts-17 Page 28

by Keith Douglass


  “We’ll need the name of the casino and the guys there who shanghaied you so we can have a team out there waiting for us to make a grab.”

  “Cool, I can do that. Tonight. When will your man be on my doorstep?”

  “In about five minutes. Look, Mahanani, we want to make this as easy as we can for you. We know you’re a SEAL and good with weapons. Don’t bring anything with you. Not even an ankle hideout. Okay?”

  “Roger that. No bang-bang.”

  “Good. Our man will drive down the Strand and we’ll meet in Imperial Beach. You’ll have to wait for us. You’ll be riding with Hernando. He’s a good man and speaks Spanish like a native. We’ll see you in about a half hour.”

  Mahanani said good-bye and hung up the phone. He looked over three small guns in the top dresser drawer. The little.32 automatic would fit nicely in a belt holster in the middle of his back. No, they just might frisk him. The DEA said no guns, so he would not take one. He checked his wallet. Twenty-one dollars in cash. He probably wouldn’t spend a dollar.

  He went to the bathroom, washed his hands and face, and checked his beard. No worry. By the time he had combed his dark hair, the front doorbell sounded.

  When he opened the door he saw a Mexican with a mustache, wearing chinos, a tan shirt outside his pants, dark sunglasses, and a baseball cap. He took off the glasses and held out his hand.

  “Jack Mahanani?” he asked in a pleasant voice without a trace of Mexican accent.

  “That’s right. I understand we’re to take a ride.”

  “Sí, amigo. I am Hernando. We take a trip to Imperial Beach.” This time the Mexican accent was solid and sure. He grinned. “Sometimes I do undercover work along the border,” he said without the accent. “I can play it either way. Maybe I should have been an actor.”

  Mahanani locked his front door and they went down the steps to a four-year-old Ford.

  “Company car,” Hernando said. “I drive one of the new VW Beetles.”

  They drove in silence past the Hotel Del Coronado, out the Strand, and past the SEALs’ headquarters. Hernando waved at the complex. “Seems like they keep you guys busy over there,” he said.

  “Some days we work, some days we train,” Mahanani said. He sat there trying to figure his odds of living through the night. If the raid went down without a hitch, and if they nailed at least five bodies at the casino, he would have a chance. He had decided not to call in and tell Harley that he was home but bushed and couldn’t make a run tonight. Maybe he’d give him a call tomorrow afternoon.

  Not calling tonight might be enough to throw suspicion on him, and they might not make a run tonight. But he often didn’t call in for four or five days. He’d leave it like that. Taking down the guys at the casino would be the hairy part.

  They waited near a McDonald’s in Imperial Beach for ten minutes before a Mercury Grand Prix pulled up in back of them. Two men got out and crawled into the Ford.

  “We wanted a car that wouldn’t be conspicuous,” the taller of the two agents said. “I’m Daniels and this is Ronkowski. Now what casino and who are we looking for?”

  “The Casa Grande Casino, out from El Cajon a ways. The man who first contacted me is Harley. He’s a member of the tribe out there. I don’t know his last name. Seems like he’s always near the front doors. The office man is Martillo.”

  Hernando looked over at him. “Hammer? They call him the Hammer?”

  “Right. He’s the guy who sent three of his thugs to pound me around.”

  “We have heard of Martillo. Rojo Martillo, he’s sometimes called. The rojo probably comes from the color of blood, which he spills quite often. We know him and three or four of the men he runs with. I wonder how he got a job at the casino.”

  “He had strong Indian contacts last I knew,” Hernando said. He looked at Mahanani. “We ready to drive?”

  “Are those the only names you have for us?” Daniels asked.

  “Yes. Let’s drive. Sometimes the cars take off from San Ysidro before seven o’clock.”

  “It’s only six-fifteen, Mahanani,” Daniels said. “You left all of your guns at work and at home, I hope.”

  “Right. If it comes to a shoot-out, I don’t want any part of it.”

  “From what I hear, your special Platoon Three of Seventh does quite a bit of shooting,” Ronkowski said.

  “We’re professionals doing a job,” Mahanani said. “We don’t like to mix with amateur drug smugglers.” He scowled. “You guys must also know what kind of toothpaste I use and when I go to the john.”

  “Just about,” Daniels said. “We like to know who we’re dealing with. We didn’t compromise you in any way with the Navy or the SEALs. We know how to gather information without the people knowing they are helping us.”

  “San Ysidro just ahead,” Hernando said.

  “Take the off-ramp, then go down two blocks and turn left into Pismo Street,” Mahanani said. “The little garage has a rusted-out sign, a fence around it, and a wide driveway.”

  “Yeah, I see it,” Hernando said.

  “Just ease past it and go down to the end of the block,” Daniels said. “Park so we can see the driveway.” They had just parked, facing back toward the garage in front of a taco shop, when Mahanani pointed.

  “Okay, that Pontiac just eased into the lot and parked where he’s supposed to,” Mahanani said. “The driver’s getting out of the car.”

  The SEAL then saw that both backseat riders had out large field glasses and were tracking the man. He walked young, but Mahanani had no idea how old he was.

  “Male, Caucasian, maybe thirty, wears glasses,” Daniels said. “Blue pants, light blue shirt, might have a tie on. He’s just going into the Triple A Auto Repair shop on Pismo Street. This is in the San Ysidro section of San Diego, about three miles from the Mexican/U.S. border.”

  Mahanani looked back and saw Daniels lower a small tape recorder. “Helps my memory,” he said.

  “When do you call the men to the casino?”

  “We’ve had undercover people there for two days.”

  “How did you know which one?”

  “We talked to your cleaning lady. She said she was sure that was the one where you spent a lot of time and money. She showed us napkins and matchbooks and a flyer from the casino.”

  “Fucking sneaky,” Mahanani said.

  “Like you SEALs, we do whatever works. We go after the bad guys whole-bore with all our flags flying. Which is why you’re here.”

  “The paper with my pardon on it,” Mahanani said. He figured the DEA wouldn’t give it up unless they had to. Daniels reached in his jacket pocket and took out an envelope. Mahanani opened the envelope, saw the stationery, and read the letter. He nodded, put in his pocket, and watched the kid walk into the garage door. The big door the cars drove into was closed.

  “Don’t try to tail him when he drives out,” Mahanani said. “Yeah, I know you’re experts, but with one or two cars you don’t have a chance. There might be two hundred cars all trying to get into Mexico at the same time. The smugglers give the drivers tips on what to watch for in case they think somebody is following them. It’s a good ten-minute course and they say it works.”

  “Somebody is coming out,” Hernando said. One of the Mexican men from inside came out the regular door and pretended to pick up trash around the lot, but what he really did was check out the street both ways. The DEA men dropped below the level of the rear seat, and Hernando and Mahanani bent down as well when the man looked their way. After a good check around, the man went back inside the garage.

  A moment later the drive-in door lifted and a six-year-old Plymouth eased out of the building and angled toward the driveway and the street.

  “Same guy we saw leave the Pontiac,” Daniels said. “We may have a go here.” Mahanani realized that Daniels had switched to a foot-long handheld radio.

  “We’re on duty here at Gamble One,” the radio speaker said. “I asked somebody where Harley was and she pointed
him out to me. Told them I was trying to sell them a new type of soap for their rest rooms. He usually hangs out around the front doors. Once I saw him turn around a guy who looked like a street person. Another time he greeted a well-dressed woman and escorted her through a door marked employees only. Not sure where it goes. We’re loose. So far I’ve lost only about ten dollars on the slots. I’ve got one with a good view of Harley.”

  “Stay with it. Could be two or three hours. We can’t strike too fast. See what you can find out about three big guys who are used for punishment purposes.”

  “Roger that, Rover. Will do.”

  While the radio chattered, Mahanani watched the faded Plymouth sedan drive down the street a block and turn the corner toward Interstate 5.

  “How long will he be gone?” Daniels asked, looking at his watch.

  “They tell their mules to stay in TJ for at least three hours. The inspectors don’t like over-and-back trips, cars that they can remember.”

  “But the inspectors on the U.S. side don’t see the U.S. cars going in on the Mexican border,” Ronkowski said.

  “You’re right, but they still tell their drivers three hours,” Mahanani repeated.

  “So,” Hernando said. “We have time for a leisurely dinner in a good steak house.”

  The other two DEA men laughed.

  “Right, Hernando. You’re our chef. You get to hike to the nearest fast-food place and bring back enough fish sandwiches, burgers, and milk shakes for all four of us. Get a move on. I missed lunch today and I’m starved.”

  “I tried,” Hernando said with a grin, and opened the door and closed it silently. He vanished down the street away from the garage to where a strip mall showed.

  Three hours and a Big Mac and strawberry shake later, Mahanani saw the six-year-old Plymouth pull up to the driveway and edge in slowly.

  “Same license number,” Daniels said, a note of satisfaction creeping into his voice.

  “Wait until the rig is inside for at least ten minutes,” Mahanani said. “Let them get it opened up to where the drugs are.”

  “The driver?” Ronkowski asked.

  “Up to you. Let him walk or take him down, but do it quietly half a block down.”

  “Hernando, go now and grab the young man as he drives. We’ll need him as a witness.” The Mexican man left the car quietly and ran down the street and beyond the garage.

  Daniels checked his watch. “Let’s go,” he said.

  “Remember, there’s that regular door in front and a door in back that’s usually open,” Mahanani said. “I’m staying here. There’s a phone in the small office and probably a radio somewhere. Most men I’ve seen there are three.” He watched the agents get out of the car. “When do you call the casino?”

  “After we find the drugs and make the bust. Then we radio for them to close in. They have eight guys in the place and will do it quietly.”

  Mahanani nodded at the two DEA men, and they walked quickly down the street the half a block to the garage. He saw one at the front door and the other one vanish. A few moments later the man in front sprang into action.

  DEA Agent Daniels took a deep breath, hefted his Glock fourteen-round automatic pistol, pulled the door open, and leaped inside. He heard the back door open at the same time.

  Immediately in front of him was the old Plymouth that had been backed in. The rear seat had been taken out and the false floor had been pulled up showing bags of something.

  “Hands in the air and don’t move, you’re all under arrest.” One man jolted deeper into the building, which held two other cars being repaired. A second man lifted his hands. The third drew a weapon from his back pocket and snapped a shot at Daniels.

  Another pistol barked from the back of the building, and the shooter screeched in pain and anger and crumpled to the floor. He didn’t move again. Ronkowski rushed up and put his foot on the shooter’s outstretched hand, which still held the pistol.

  Daniels ducked behind the Plymouth and looked for the third man. He heard him behind the third car, but couldn’t see him. A shot blasted into the sudden stillness of the garage, and Daniels reeled backward with a bullet in his shoulder. He ducked farther behind the car.

  “Give yourself up,” Ronkowski roared with a heavy voice. “You’ll only end up wounded or dead. Throw out your weapon and come out with your hands—”

  A shot blasted into his sentence. Ronkowski returned fire, six rounds under both cars toward the sound of the other gun. Nothing happened. Daniels held his right shoulder with his left hand to stop the flow of blood. He tried to raise the Glock, and got it up waist high. He aimed it at the third car and put a round through the rear window. Glass shattered as the panel erupted inward, granulating into small squares. He shot out the driver’s-side rear window, and had a flash of the shooter, but he ducked away out of sight.

  “No other doors or windows out of this firetrap,” Ronkowski said. “We’re DEA agents and you’re under arrest for narcotics smuggling. Why get yourself dead for the big shots who make all the money? A few years in prison and you’ll still be alive and back with your family.”

  Before Daniels could move again, he saw a figure lunge out from the cover of the third car and charge straight at him, a handgun in front firing. Daniels crouched behind the car’s rear fender and after he heard six more shots, he lifted the Glock up and found the shooter four feet away and coming fast. Daniels shot him three times in the chest before he fell against the rear deck of the Plymouth and rolled off on the floor, the pistol sliding out of his hand.

  Daniels checked him. “We’ve got a dead body here, Ronkowski. How’s yours?”

  “Dead and gone,” Ronkowski said. “I’ve got one smart one here and about a hundred pounds of coke. I’ll go bring up the car. This one is handcuffed to the rear door handle.”

  He came around the door and saw Daniels’s bloody shoulder. “I’ll get Mahanani in here. He’s a medical corpsman and can fix up that shoulder until I get you to the hospital. Time to use the radio. What’s the call signal.”

  “Casa Grande Takedown. Tell them we’ve got two dead and two prisoners including the driver and the coke. They should pounce on the casino guys.”

  Five minutes later, Mahanani had found a first-aid kit in the garage and treated the shoulder wound as best he could. “Not enough medicine or bandages in here to do much good, but I’ve got the blood stopped and your arm tied to your chest. I heard the other guy send in the troops at the casino. Hope to hell they get everyone.”

  “Where’s the nearest emergency room?” Ronkowski asked. Mahanani shook his head.

  Ronkowski used a cell phone and dialed 911. “Hi, 911, I’m a DEA agent and we have a wounded man. I’m in San Ysidro. Where’s the nearest hospital with an emergency room?”

  “Do you wish an ambulance?”

  “No, just tell me where I can drive our wounded agent to.”

  “Just a moment, sir.”

  Ronkowski frowned.

  Daniels scowled. “Ronkowski, you stay here and call for some backup to get the prisoners and the coke. Maybe Mahanani can drive me to the hospital.”

  “Sir, that would be the Paradise Valley Hospital in National City. That’s at 2400 E. Fourth Street in National City. I have an ambulance driver to tell you how to get there from San Ysidro.”

  Ronkowski repeated the directions from the ambulance driver. It was up Interstate 5 and not far off the freeway. Mahanani memorized the route, then took Daniels out to the DEA car and helped him inside. Hernando had driven the smuggler’s car back into the lot, with the driver handcuffed to the steering wheel, and went inside to help Ronkowski.

  By the time Mahanani drove to the hospital, there were two DEA men there waiting for them. One took Daniels into Emergency, the other drove Mahanani back to his apartment in Coronado.

  “How did it go at the casino?” the SEAL asked on the way back.

  The DEA man shook his head. “Can’t say a thing about that officially. But I understan
d you set up this raid. I’d say we came out pretty well.”

  Mahanani stared at his front door. When the DEA car drove away, he walked over to his Buick, slid in, and drove over the bridge and toward the casino. He had to find out just how deep the drug business went in the casino.

  In the parking lot he saw no police cars, no yellow crime-scene tape. He parked and went in the front door. Harley did not grab him. He went straight to the floor manager, and then was taken to the night manager. He was an Indian with a ponytail.

  “What’s this about,” he said. “I’m Long Bow Anderson, and I’m the boss around here at night.”

  “This has to do with Harley and Martillo.”

  The manager frowned. “How do you know about that?”

  “Check your records. Martillo said I owned the casino six thousand dollars. I want to find out if his records are right.”

  “Can’t be. We don’t allow anyone to run a tab here. Against our rules. Cash or nothing. Only way we can do business. We do have a short list of those we have banned from playing here due to behavior. Let me check the computer.”

  He hit some keys on the computer and evidently read down a list. “Mahanani?”

  The SEAL nodded. “Nobody by that name on our meet-greet-and-turn-around list.” He hesitated. “You were involved with the highly illegal and totally unknown practices that Martillo had been conducting?”

  “I got sucked into part of it, yes.”

  “Let me assure you that you do not have a debt with us, and that if there are any papers of any kind with your name on them, they will be returned to you. Did you put up any collateral for that phony IOU?”

  “The pink slip for my car.”

  “We’ll find it and get it back to you within a week. Is there anything else?”

  “Martillo had friends. I don’t want them coming after me. Was he taken by the DEA people tonight?”

  Long Bow looked uncomfortable. “It was done with almost no disruption of our gaming. Yes, they took Martillo, Harley Thunder, and three other men who had originally been hired as bouncers here but had been discharged sometime ago. We believe that those five were the only criminals using our casino as a front for their illegal activities.”

 

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