Выбрать главу

‘You’re very kind. . but do you think you’ll get away with this? My people know where I am, who I’m seeing.’

Lopez shrugged indifferently. ‘I don’t really care. That’s a bridge I’ll cross when I come to it.’ He nodded to his men.

‘Up!’ a harsh voice ordered from behind Donaldson.

Donaldson glanced over his shoulder. Both of the heavies were on their feet, guns in hand, pointed at his back. They were big-calibre revolvers, unwieldy, but probably reliable and deadly at close range. Donaldson rose slowly, a cynical, defeated expression on his face.

‘You think you’ll take over from Mendoza?’ he sneered.

Lopez nodded confidently. ‘I have everything in place. It will be my inheritance. He would not have achieved anything had it not been for my business skills anyway. It’s only right that I now assume control.’

‘Somehow I doubt it,’ Donaldson said. Lopez shrugged, but a dark line of puzzlement crossed his face. ‘He’s too smart.’

‘Unlike you, my friend,’ Lopez said, dismissing the comment. He pointed at him for the benefit of his men and said, ‘Finish him,’ in Spanish.

They did not do it in the restaurant. They should have done, but they didn’t, and once Donaldson realized they were not going to blast him there and then, that they intended to drive him somewhere isolated, kill and dispose of him, he knew he had a chance. Their mistake.

He was in the back seat of a car, a big old Peugeot. Child locks were on and he was sitting directly behind the driver, one of the two guys from the restaurant. The other man was sitting in the front passenger seat, twisted round, his piece aimed lazily at Donaldson’s body mass. His forefinger was on the trigger and the gun looked dangerous.

They were confident guys. They had done this before, that much was apparent. Probably to some dumb hood or another, maybe more than once. They kept quiet, speaking only when necessary, the one in the passenger seat keeping constant vigil on Donaldson.

The car headed out of Ciudad Quesada, then turned inland towards the weather. The wipers struggled against the volume of rain. The headlights, on main beam, hardly seemed to penetrate the darkness ahead. They left the main road and began to climb.

Donaldson considered going for the driver. He could lunge, arms going around the headrest, hands on either side of his neck, and snap the neck within four seconds. Too long. Four seconds was a lifetime in these situations. It would be long enough to see two big, nasty bullet holes in his chest.

He also thought about the pros and cons of going for the one with the gun. He was a fraction too far away. It could be done, but the angles were not favourable.

He would have to wait. . and there was also the problem of the car. Where would it veer to? Peering out into the rain, feeling the car go higher up steep mountain roads, there was a good chance that if he did try something, they would end up over a precipice. Donaldson wanted to come out of this alive. . so he waited.

The road became narrower, winding around hairpins, rising all the time against the atrocious weather.

He smirked, snorting a laugh down his nose.

‘What you laughing at?’ the guy in the passenger seat asked.

Donaldson regarded him with a chill. ‘The way you’re going to die,’ he said. The man’s face dropped. He shifted, then smirked.

‘Don’t you mean the way you are going to?’

‘No.’ Donaldson turned away and looked out of the window, seeing dark trees rising through the heavy rain, liking what he saw. The elements were on his side and also the fact that two street-hardened tough guys were contracted to kill him. To him, that put them down as amateurs.

Twenty minutes later they stopped.

‘As Mr Lopez said, this will be quick. You will not suffer.’

‘Please thank Mr Lopez for that.’

‘You stay seated,’ he was ordered.

The driver climbed out and went to Donaldson’s door whilst the other guy covered him. Donaldson knew this would be the only chance he had — one in the car, the other outside.

The driver had his gun in his hand now, pointed at Donaldson through the window. He put a hand to the door, pulled it open a fraction of an inch.

‘Out!’ the guy in the passenger seat barked.

Donaldson sighed and nodded. He knew if he got out, acquiesced, and then gave them the chance to both be out, he was dead. But one in the car, one out, different story.

‘How much not to kill me?’ he pleaded.

‘You haven’t got enough, gringo,’ sneered the guy.

‘OK. .’ He placed his hand on the inner door rest and pushed the door. The guy on the outside, the one getting drenched and severely irritated by the delay, stepped away from the car. Donaldson paused again, letting him get wetter. ‘I’m an FBI agent, you know. They’ll come for you.’

‘Let them.’

‘Hey, you fuckers! Hurry up!’ the wet one bawled.

‘They won’t give up. You should let me go.’

‘Get out of the car.’

‘I’m going.’ He opened the door a little more. Rain dripped in. The sound of it hitting the car roof was incredible, like marbles being thrown down from the heavens by the million. He gazed up at the wet one. He was half-drowned by now, miserable, wanting to get on with this. Donaldson opened the door a fraction further. Rain cascaded in now, soaking his trouser leg. He needed to move before he too got weighed down by water.

He swung both legs out, but not too quickly, then stood in the rain.

Wet One backed off.

Donaldson bent back inside the car, feeling the rain hitting the back of his shirt. Surely it didn’t rain in Spain like this. He looked at Dry One, opened his mouth to say something further and got the desired effect. Wet One strode across and rammed his gun into Donaldson’s ribs.

‘Get out now. Stop fucking around.’

Donaldson nodded and slowly stepped away from the door, then slammed it shut.

One inside the car, one outside.

Dry One turned to open his door and join his companion, a movement which necessitated him having to look away for a few seconds. Donaldson stood upright, seeing Wet One stepping backwards away from him, the gun now out of Donaldson’s ribs and pointing towards the ground.

Donaldson’s right arm arced, his body twisted. The edge of his hand sliced through the air, blurred by the rain, almost impossible to see.

He connected with the side of Wet One’s neck with such force that the head sprung sideways as though he had been struck by the axe of an executioner. The blow sent him staggering to one side, knees sagging weakly. Donaldson’s follow-up was violent and decisive, as he drove the base of his right hand upwards to the man’s nose, smashing his septum up into the brain like the blade of a small knife. He fell hard, dead before he touched the ground — but as he dropped, Donaldson wrested his gun from him and turned to take on Dry One.