“You would not understand. There is a difference in our cultures that creates a wide chasm between our belief systems. Unfortunately for you, I expect you will be in the way of my objective, so you will die along with Señora Gamboa.”
Court laughed angrily, “You talk much better than your men fight. I’ve killed a half dozen of your guys already, remember?”
“Yes, I heard all about your actions. You are quite good at what you do. Do you have any idea how much money you could make working for me? Listen, obviously I have found out where you are hiding. I have men outside the hacienda walls even now. You and the family are completely surrounded.”
“And we are well armed. Tell your men to come in and get us.”
The rest of the Gamboa family had entered the room, even Ignacio stood on the stairwell, leaning against the wall, listening to one side of a conversation in a language that he did not speak.
De la Rocha laughed again. “Cálmate, amigo. Calm down. Just listen. We will allow you to surrender, to leave. If you want, you can take everyone except for Elena out with you. We only want her.”
“No deal.”
“Then this is the last time we will speak. You will be dead before dawn, but if this is your choice, it is okay with me.”
The line went dead. Court played with the phone for a moment to check it. Yes, the landline had been cut.
“Everyone check your cell phones,” he commanded, and for the next two minutes there was a shuffling of bodies around the living area of the hacienda as the family scrambled for their phones and tried to get a signal.
No… the mobile tower in the area had been disabled.
Shit. Gentry realized that disabling the cell phones took some manpower and some intelligence on the part of his adversary. Court recognized that they weren’t going to just get hit by a couple of fat Mexican ranch hands in straw hats. No… de la Rocha had managed to get together a decent enough crew, even out here in the wilderness.
Martin and Ramses had been on the landing; each had come in from his post on opposite sides of the casa grande. One had been covering the mirador to the north, the other to the south. Court stayed downstairs in the living room, looked slowly at each member of the Gamboa family. He did not sugarcoat their situation; he only said, “They are coming.”
No one moved.
“Where is Luis?”
“He’s in bed,” said Inez.
“Can you get him to go down in the cellar?”
She just shook her head. “No. He won’t understand. He won’t go.”
Court nodded. He didn’t have time to worry about Luis right now. Looking around the room at his pathetic force of nine, he just blew out a sigh. The Gray Man had always been labor, never management. He was no leader. He wished he had some profound way to rally his troops, but he didn’t really know what to say. It would come down to himself, Ramses, Martin, and Laura. These other poor people — well, he just hoped they didn’t accidentally shoot each other in the attack to come.
Court muttered to himself. “We’re in trouble.”
Elena stood; she’d been sitting on the sofa. “We can stop them.”
Gentry just stared back at her. He tried to say something helpful but could not think of a thing.
Inez announced she had bread in the oven that she needed to take out. Luz followed her into the kitchen, the old women disappearing before Gentry could point out to them that there were more important concerns at the moment.
He turned back to those remaining in the room and to the federales looking down from the landing. “There are four trained fighters here. Only two of us have real weapons. I just have a half-empty wheel gun and a fifty-year-old scattergun, like I’m in fucking Dodge City.” No one understood the reference. They all just looked at their American protector.
In the dim he looked at Elena and Laura, at Ernesto and Diego and Ignacio. He saw eyes of trust. Eyes of hope.
Eyes of fools.
His mind raced; he thought about the impending attack and what he could do about it.
Elena said, “Joe, don’t give up on us. We may not all be soldiers, but we can all help. Everyone can do something!”
The smell of fresh bread wafted from the kitchen.
Court sighed. “We can’t fucking bake our way out of this, Elena!” Elena Gamboa’s face reddened in anger and frustration.
Ramses chuckled on the landing above.
“Other than pelting our enemies with chimichangas, does anyone have any ideas?”
Laura Gamboa held her pistol up. “Sí. I have an idea. How about we just shoot all the pendejos when they come?”
Court shrugged. “Well… yeah, that’s the plan, I guess.” He stiffened. “Everyone to your positions. You know what to do.”
Court stormed past the family towards the first set of sconces and blew out the candles there.
He passed the family again in the living room as he headed to the back door. “Buena suerte,” he mumbled. Good luck. With his hand on the latch he stopped, turned back, and looked at them one last time. They stood like stone statues there in the dark, staring back at him. Luz and Inez stepped out from the kitchen with a tray of rolls.
“Come on, goddammit!” he shouted, utter frustration at their predicament getting the best of him. “Elena, Luz, and Inez to the basement! Ernesto to the cellar hallway to guard the women; Diego and Ignacio to the kitchen to guard the basement access; Laura on the upstairs landing to overlook this room! Blow out all the candles on the way. Move! It’s not that fucking complicated! And stay away from the damn windows!”
Everyone moved off in different directions and, more or less, Court was somewhat relieved to see, in the directions of their duties.
“Fuck,” he said to himself.
He looked up at the landing; Martin had gone back to his post, but Ramses looked down at him. In the darkness the Mexican officer said, “Good luck, amigo.”
“We’re going to need it,” Court replied.
And then he stepped out the back door into darkness.
There were sixteen in the first wave. They were not elite sicarios, but they were nevertheless cold, ruthless men, trained in the use of their weapons and well “encouraged” by their leadership to fulfill the wishes of the head of their cartel.
In the nomenclature of the Mexican cartels, these men were referred to as soldados, “soldiers,” or more dismissively as estacas, in this sense meaning “fence posts.” They weren’t the top-of-the-line, but they could stand there with a gun in their hand and do their job.
Their ages ranged from seventeen to sixty-one; there were two sets of fathers and sons, and two more sets of brothers. All of them had served in the army, and one of them had been an officer, and that made him the leader of this ad hoc group of killers.
These men weren’t the best that the Black Suits had to call on, but they were the closest to the hacienda, and for that reason they would have to do. They all lived up here in the hills and mountains; most had worked together on other assignments at one time or another for Los Trajes Negros.
Three of them were judiciales, state police from Jalisco, and six more were municipales from nearby Tequila. State and local squad cars sat parked alongside the dirt track on the other side of the hacienda’s back wall, alongside two pickup trucks and three old sedans.
Spider had contacted the leader of his enforcers in this region just after eleven p.m., and it had taken all of three hours to get the muscle into the area. They’d pulled down two cell towers with a chain and a truck, and then waited for a radio call ordering them to cut the landline.