Pulling the pistol from my jeans and checking chamber, I moved out of the study. Three strides got me across the hall and into the kitchen. I closed the door behind me, took a couple of deep breaths, and waited.
The front door opened; I could hear both of them in the hallway. There was a click, and light spilled under the kitchen door.
Then footsteps, and I could hear nervous breathing on the other side, and the jangle of keys on a belt.
I heard the study door opening. Then a half-shouted, half-whispered, "Melvin, Melvin--in here!"
"Yo!"
I knew it was my time. I brought the pistol up into the fire position, put my hand on the doorknob and gently twisted. I moved into the hallway.
Melvin was in the study doorway, his back toward me. He was young and of medium build. I took a couple of big strides, grabbed him across the forehead with my left hand, yanked his head back, and rammed the pistol muzzle into his neck. In a very controlled voice that had nothing to do with the way I was feeling, I said, "Drop your weapon, Melvin.
Don't fuck around with me. Drop it now."
Melvin's arm came down to his side and he let the gun fall to the floor.
I couldn't see if the other one had his pistol out or not. It was still dark in the study. Their flashlight was no help.
Melvin and I blocked out most of the hallway light. I was hoping that he'd already reholstered, because part of their training would be not to scare kids. As far as he was concerned, Kelly had been just a kid there on her own.
Melvin and I were in the doorway. I shouted, "Put the lights on, Kelly--do it now!"
Nothing happened.
"Kelly, turn the lights on." I heard small footsteps coming toward us.
There was a click, and the lights came on.
"Now wait there." I could see her eyes were swollen and red.
Inside the room stood Michelin Man. He must have weighed around 250 pounds, and by the looks of him, he had only a couple of years to go before retirement. He was holstered, but his hand was down by his pistol.
I said, "Don't do it! Tell him, Melvin." I prodded his neck.
Melvin went, "I'm fucked, Ron."
"Ron, don't start messing around. This is not the one to do it for. It's not worth it, not just for this."
I could see that Ron was on top of it. He was thinking about his wife, his mortgage, and the chances of ever seeing another bag of doughnuts.
Melvin's radio sparked up. Control snapped, "Unit Sixty-two, Unit Sixty-two. Do you copy?" It sounded like a demand, not a request. It must have been great to be married to her.
"That's you, isn't it, Melvin?" I said.
"Yes, sir, that's us."
"Melvin, tell them you're OK." I jabbed the pistol a little harder into his neck to underline the point.
"The safety catch is off, Melvin. I've got my finger on the trigger. Just tell them everything's OK.. It ain't worth it, mate."
Ron blurted, "I'll do it."
Another demand: "Unit Sixty-two, respond."
I said, "Put your right hand up and answer with your left.
Kelly, be very quiet, OK?"
She nodded. Ron pressed his radio.
"Hello, Control. We've checked. Everything's fine."
"Roger, Unit Sixty-two, your report timed at twenty-two thirteen."
Ron clicked off.
Kelly immediately went back into crying mode and sank to the floor. I was stuck in the doorway with a pistol to Melvin's neck, and Ron, who still had a weapon in his holster, was facing me from the middle of the room.
"When all's said and done, Ron, if you don't play the game, Melvin's going to die--and then you're going to die.
Do you understand me?"
Ron nodded.
"OK, Ron, let's see you turn around."
He did.
"Get on your knees."
He did. He was about four feet from Kelly, but as long as she stayed still she wasn't in the line of fire.
Melvin was sweating big-time. My hand was slipping on his forehead. There were even droplets running down the top-slide. His shirt was so wet I could make out the shape of his body armor underneath.
I said, "With your left hand, Ron, I want you to lift out your pistol. Very slow, and use just your thumb and forefinger.
Then I want you to move it to your left-hand side and drop it.
Do you understand me, Ron?"
Ron nodded.
I said, "Tell him, Melvin, tell him not to fuck around."
"Listen to the man, Ron."
Ron gently removed his pistol from its holster and dropped it on the floor.
"What I want you to do now, with your left hand, is get hold of your handcuffs, and I want you to drop them just behind you. Understand?"
Ron complied. I turned my attention to Melvin, who was starting to tremble. I spoke quietly in his ear.
"Don't worry about it, you're going to live. You'll be talking to your grandchildren about this. Just do exactly what I say. Understand?"
He nodded.
I turned to Ron and said, "Now lie down, Ron. Facedown on the floor."
Ron spreadeagled himself and was now under control. I said, "What I'm going to do next, Melvin, is take one step back, and this pistol is going to leave your neck--but it's still going to be pointing at your head, so don't get any ideas.
Once I've stepped back, I'm then going to tell you to kneel down--do you understand me?"
He nodded, and I took a swift step backward. I wanted to be out of arm's reach from him right away; I didn't want him doing some kind of heroic pirouette to grab the gun or knock it out of the way.
"OK, kneel down, then lie down. Just like Ron. Now put your hand next to Ron's."
I now had both of them lying facedown, forearms together.
I moved behind them, picked up the handcuffs, and with the pistol stuck in Melvin's ear, I locked his left wrist to Ron's right. I then took Melvin's handcuffs from their holster, stepped back, and said, "I want you to arch your bodies and move your free hands around so they're together as well. Both understand me? Believe me, boys, I want to get this over and done with; I just want out of here."
I finished the job. They weren't going anywhere. I took their wallets and threw them into the bag. I took Melvin's radio and kept it with me, and took the battery out of Ron's and threw it into the bag. At the same time, I grabbed the roll of gaffer tape. I started with their legs, then used the tape to bind their heads together as well. I put a final strip around their necks, and another around their mouths. I checked that both were breathing through their noses, then dragged them into the hallway--no small job, but I didn't want them to see what I was going to do next.
I looked at Kelly, pressed against the study wall. She looked pathetic. This must have been terrible for her. She'd been looking forward so much to coming home, only to find it wasn't the place she'd been expecting. It wasn't only that her family was missing; everything that was familiar to her was drenched in chemicals, shoved to one side, or simply not there.
I heard myself saying, "Why don't you go and see if your teddies are there."
She turned and ran. I heard her rattling up the now uncarpeted stairs.
I went into the study, crouched down by the baseboard, and, at last, was able to open the gun box. There was nothing inside but a lone floppy disk.
I put the chair back by the desk and lifted up the PC. I soon had it working. There was no password protection, probably deliberately. If anything happened to Kev, he'd want the whole world to read what was on the disk.
I clicked open various files but found nothing interesting.
Then I found one called Flavius; I knew I'd hit pay dirt. It was the code name of the Gibraltar operation.
I started reading. Kev had found out pretty much what Big Al had told me--that PIRA's connection with the cartels originated when it started running drugs for the Colombians up through North Africa and into Gibraltar for distribution in Spain and the rest of Europe. PIRA was good at the job, and the cartels paid well.