Renaldo
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about things military that he wanted to put his classroom training to the test.
In real life. On a real battlefield.
Orville Richard Geary Jr.’s American birth certificate was the passport
to travel and adventure that he needed to accomplish this feat. His first port
of call on what would turn out to be an extended four-year stopover was at
Bien Ho, South Viet Nam, in December 1968. Orville had joined the U.S.
Army to help stop the dreaded forces of communism from gaining a foothold
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in this lovely Asian country. The grunt with the Spanish accent was assigned
to be a radio man in ‘C’ Company, Second Battalion, Twenty-Eighth Infantry
Regiment of the First Infantry Division. Charlie Company of the Big Red One!
‘Duty first, no mission too difficult, no sacrifice too great.’ Orville Geary was
in deep, and he loved it.
A transfer to Army Rangers and a promotion to sergeant followed the
end of his first tour, then three more years of blood and guts. He had become a
skilled, methodical killer who relished a ‘clean hit,’ ‘large enemy body counts,’
and ‘firefights.’
It was a disillusioned and frustrated Orville Geary that returned to South
America with an honorable discharge in early 193. He could not shake the
stinging humiliation of the shellacking that the U.S. forces were taking several
thousand miles away. But it didn’t take long for the former American combat
soldier to find out that the political backdrop in Argentina provided a perfect
venue in which a trained killer might ply his trade.
Left-wing advocacy had been on the ascendant during Orville Geary’s
absence from Argentina, along with increased civil strife, terrorist attacks
against industry and state-run commerce, and a lack of respect for the
ineffectual military. One seemed to have only two political choices, radicalism
or Perónism. There was no right-wing military option at all, and that fact
stirred Orville Geary into action.
The highly proficient killer took it upon himself personally to eliminate
anyone that was obstructing the eventual return of a strong military junta
to power. That was the only hope for Argentina as Orville Geary saw the
situation.
There were many people to eradicate on his list, but each select ‘hit’ would
carry the process a step further. Originally, Orville operated on his own, but
as time passed, he found it useful to employ the services of other patriots that
shared his philosophy. Supplies for his missions were always readily available,
as were schedules and timetables of important targets. Ironclad alibis could be
provided, if necessary.
The last item was never needed, for Geary was so good at his profession
that the trail he left behind always turned cold. He drew around him a band
of disillusioned military specialists, forming his own platoon of underground
right-wing activists. Through the ensuing years, he played a large part in paving
the way for the eventual bloodless military coup that took place in March of
1976. The country had witnessed the return of Juan Perón in June of 1973, his
untimely death from pneumonia in July of 1974, the assumption of his office
by his widow Isabel, and her eventual exile in 1975.
During all these events, Orville Geary was working in the shadows to
strengthen the position of the right-wing military coalition. The ousting of
Isabel Perón was the last stumbling block.
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Her successor, President Italo Luder, declared a state of siege and
immediately signed a decree ordering the army to annihilate armed left-wing
subversives. With the economy stagnant and inflation at eight hundred percent,
the general population was looking for relief from the civil strife and terrorism
that rocked the country. Only the military could provide the strong, often
ruthless, guidance so many sought, and President Luder read the writing on
the wall.
After March 24, 1976, the country was run by men in uniform, and those
men continued to hold Orville Geary in extremely high regard. His particular
skills were constantly required, especially those which involved removing thorns
from the junta’s paws. Orville Geary and his platoon could be relied upon to
handle the most delicate assignments, and Orville Geary always accomplished
his missions.
While young Geary had inherited his military bearing from his father, he
had just as significantly inherited a shock of red hair from his mother. It was a
characteristic that would give him his lifelong nickname, Rojo, meaning ‘Red,’
in English.
Among his friends in Buenos Aires initially, then to his fellow grunts in ‘
’Nam,’ he was always ‘ Rojo’ Geary, never Orville. It was the same Rojo Geary
that Astor Gordero hired to track down Lonnie De Seta in early May of 1978.
The trail, after a long, frustrating month, was now heating up nicely.
June the sixth had turned out to be a particularly rewarding day for Astor
Gordero. The initial good news came via Wolfgang Stoltz shortly after eight
a.m. Florencia De Seta had consented to A.R. Gordero and Sons handling her
personal investment portfolio and estate matters, and she had promised to
pursue the same arrangement with her seventy-eight-year-old mother-in-law
Lydia immediately.
Stoltz had convinced Florencia that it made sense to consolidate all the
asset supervision under one roof, considering Lydia’s age. She alone controlled
the De Seta empire, and it was imperative for Astor Gordero’s plan to work
that Señora Lydia De Seta be brought into the fold. Stoltz had pointed out to
Florencia that it would be much better for the decision-making powers to be
handed over to the future heir’s financial advisors while the family matriarch
was still living. That would ease the strain of bureaucratic paperwork for the
bereaved family after Lydia’s departure. Renaldo’s grandmother had granted
Florencia and Wolfgang Stoltz an audience in Pergamino one week hence to
discuss the matter. Things looked very positive!
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JAMES McCREATH
The second piece of uplifting news came by phone on Astor Gordero’s
private line shortly after nine a.m. Rojo Geary had been instructed to phone
in once a week, using this constantly monitored and debugged line. He had
relayed positive progress for the first time. It appeared certain that Lonnie De
Seta was hiding out in the Boca section of the capital, and Geary was close to
making the initial, and also the final, contact.
The beautiful Symca had accepted Gordero’s invitation to accompany him
to that evening’s football match without hesitation once Gordero relayed the
news that Renaldo De Seta would be in the starting lineup. Octavio Suarez had
confirmed the boy’s starting role in a noon telephone conversation with The Fat
Man, who, in turn, relayed the news instantly to Señorita Symca. He would not
tell Renaldo of the lady’s presence in the stands, however, for fear that it would
distract his concentration.
“We only need the boy running on two legs, not thr
ee!” he had
laughingly told Wolfgang Stoltz. A stellar performance by his young client
before a worldwide audience would certainly increase Renaldo’s value on the
open transfer market. Now all that was needed to make Astor Gordero’s day
a total success was an Argentine victory and a strong showing by his client.
An extended lunch at the Jockey Club with Stoltz, then a few hours of sexual
frolicking with two blonde, Dutch sisters seeking tickets to the tournament
would kill much of the time until kickoff. As things transpired, June the sixth
would be a very, very good day for Astor Gordero.
Renaldo De Seta’s heart started to pound as his visitor to the National
Team Training Center handed him a heavily perfumed envelope. There was
no mistaking either Simone’s handwriting or her fragrance. Thoughts of their
dressing room embrace at Teatro Colon flooded the boy’s mind. Her scent had
made his head spin then, as it did now. He tore open the missive with shaking
hands, unable to wait until he was completely alone to read its contents.
Astor Gordero smiled patiently as his client devoured Symca’s words. She
had written the note in the back of Gordero’s limousine on their way home
from the match the evening before, and while she would not let The Fat Man
read her private jottings, she assured him that what she had inscribed would
fill the recipient with courage . . . and passion!
Renaldo was no more forthcoming with the letter’s contents than the
author had been. Gordero was smart enough to give the boy his leave to go
off and ponder the words and thoughts that preoccupied him at the moment.
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Before parting company, however, Gordero again offered Renaldo tickets to
the upcoming Argentina-Italy match for his mother and brother, Lonnie. The
answer was exactly the same as it had been for the last month.
Señora Florencia De Seta had absolutely no interest in watching her son
play his dangerous little games, and as for Lonnie, Renaldo had not heard from
him for the last several weeks.
“I think he still must be traveling the country with his girlfriend, but he
did express an interest in seeing me play if I made the team. He will probably
show up before long. I just don’t know when,” Renaldo explained.
Gordero was careful not to make the boy suspicious by asking too many
questions concerning his brother’s whereabouts, so he dropped the subject.
Wolfgang Stoltz had also inquired after Lonnie’s locale in a discreet manner
when the opportunity arose with Florencia, but the lady would turn to ice
and make some offhand comment about her vagabond, communist son. The
impression was given that there was no love lost between mother and offspring,
and Stoltz would never pursue the topic after getting the standard response.
There was no doubt that neither Renaldo nor his mother had the slightest
inkling of Lonnie’s whereabouts.
Astor Gordero was shocked by the foul humor that he found manager
Suarez in as he entered the team leader’s inner sanctum after leaving Renaldo.
One would have thought that the thrilling victory over France the previous
evening would have elevated Suarez temporarily to cloud nine, but the manager
sat chain-smoking cigarette after cigarette as he picked up files that were
scattered pell-mell over his office floor.
“Those bastards from Independiente. Do you know what they are trying
to pull? Juan Chacon comes in to see me at nine a.m. sharp and informs me that
I had better start Miguel Cruz at center half against Italy because he has served
his suspension! That if I had other plans for that position, I should rethink
them, for if Cruz is not in the starting lineup, all five of the Independiente
players will leave the team in protest. Then he pushed me further into a corner.
He insisted that his cohorts Arzu, Argueta, and Rios be returned to the starting
lineup as well, or Chacon will refuse to play! How do you like that? The ugly
cocksucker is trying to run this team!”
“So what will you do, Octavio? De Seta played so well against France,
and on the whole, the lineup for that game was much more cohesive than the
game against Hungary. You can’t let the inmates rule the asylum!” Gordero
responded.
“I know, I know, Astor, but I must have Chacon on the back line against
Italy. He is the one player who sets the tone and tenacity of our defense. I am
afraid that without him guarding the gate, the Italians will swarm all over our
goal area.”
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“What does it matter?” an agitated Gordero screamed. “Both Italy and
Argentina have already advanced to the second round. The game is meaningless.
Call their bluff! If you give in to them now, they will own you for the rest of
the tournament!”
Suarez’s eyes narrowed, his face turned red, and the veins in his temples
bulged.
“Goddamn it, Astor, no one runs this team except me, and you know
that. I am not afraid to stand up to Chacon, no matter how badly I need him
on the pitch, but this game is not meaningless! If we lose, we have to pack up
our operation and play the second round in Rosario. I want to stay right here
in Buenos Aires! Your boy De Seta had his opportunity and did an admirable
job. Cruz wants the chance to win back his old position. After all, he did have
an enviable record in the warm-up matches.”
“One game, Octavio, one game is all that he excelled in. A lucky hat
trick, and now he is untouchable? My boy can play circles around that little
fagot, Cruz. I think that you owe the position to De Seta on the merit of his
performance against France. Do you not agree?”
“Under normal circumstances, yes, of course, I do. But these are not normal
times. We are in the middle of the biggest sporting event this nation has ever
seen, and five of my players are threatening to pack up and leave! I must think
on this subject for a while. Stand by me, Astor, for I might just have to give the
Independiente players enough rope to hang themselves with.”
With that, the beleaguered manager walked out of his office, en-route to
the training pitch where his charges were limbering up for the first workout of
the day. There were three days left to prepare for the contest against Italy, and
Astor Gordero knew that they would not be good days to spend in the company
of Octavio Suarez. He would leave the manager to his own designs and trust
that he would make the right decision come the night of June the tenth.
The reaction of his bedraggled customer was startling. The news vendor
could see the drifter’s hands start to shake and his knees buckle slightly. Fear
seemed etched in those black eyes for the first time since he had met the
stranger. Señor Geary would be pleased. This was definitely his man.
The statement that someone was looking for the ‘Attractive Assassin’ had
drawn an affirmative reaction. The two Argentina-Italy football tickets that
had been promised as a reward for positive identification would be like manna
from heaven to the newsy. He doubted that he would ever see his shaggy
client
again, but the tickets more than made up for the loss of a customer!
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Rojo Geary had gone directly to the special investigative services branch
of army intelligence to have the poster likeness of a clean-shaven Lonnie De Seta
enhanced by computer to include a long beard and scraggly hair as detailed by
the newsy. It was this updated version of Lonnie’s countenance that Geary’s
agents showed to boarding house and hotel owners in the Boca district.
Once again, there was an affirmative reaction from one particular landlady,
who confirmed that a person resembling the new poster image was a resident
in her establishment. A wad of pesos freed up the information that this guest
resided in lower room number three, and that he seldom, if ever, was seen by
anyone.
It took less than an hour for Rojo Geary to arrive on the scene with two
other heavily armed men. Swiftly and silently, they descended to the lower
level, set their positions on either side of the door bearing the numeral ‘3,’ then
Rojo Geary sent a jackboot flying against the cheap door clasp.
The obstruction came crashing off its hinges, tumbling back into the
room. The assassins, their heads now covered in black balaclavas, surged into
the quarters beyond, fanning out and hitting the floor as soon as they cleared
the portal. Not a single shot was discharged. Silence, absolute silence!
The intruders studied every corner of the fusty dungeon, their fingers
gently stroking the triggers of their silenced Uzzis. The room was empty. The
terrorist had eluded the assassin . . . this time!
Lonnie De Seta was well-known to the manager and staff of the Banco
Rio de la Plata on Avenida San Martin back in Palermo. After all, he had
been given a sizable inheritance on his twenty-first birthday. Branch manager
Anthony Rodrigues was the man that personally designed the boy’s investment
portfolio. Rodrigues’ father had been Lonnie’s grandfather’s banker, and this
same branch also counted Florencia De Seta among their valuable clients.
The female staff at the Banco had their own reasons for noticing Lonnie.
He had bedded several of them personally, which, in truth, was the reason he
kept all his assets under Señor Rodigues’ roof, rather than divesting the funds