39

Ricardo Córdova was a mid-level employee in Hector’s organization. He had started out as muscle for one of the local crews, but had recently been promoted to talent scout because of his eye for detail. In his new role, he was expected to spot the best candidates for flash kidnappings and point them out to his associates. Whether they were wealthy locals or foreign businessmen, it didn’t matter as long as they had money. On weekends, his favourite place to work was the Zócalo, because it was always packed with clueless tourists.

His afternoon had started like any other. He strolled through the plaza while scanning the crowd for signs of wealth. Expensive shoes. Designer clothes. Fancy jewellery. The type of items only the rich could afford. He had just spotted an elderly couple with high-priced watches when he was distracted by a black SUV. He turned and stared as it climbed over the kerb on the edge of the plaza, then headed directly for the flagpole. Although it was uncommon for cars to be driven into the square, the intrusion didn’t catch his attention. But the vehicle did.

He had seen it many times before.

It belonged to his boss, Hector Garcia.

Like most employees, Ricardo knew how important it was to impress his boss. Careers were often made or broken based on personal connections, especially in an organization where trust and loyalty were so important. At first, he was tempted to go over and introduce himself — just so Hector could put a face to his name — but then he realized it was the wrong move in this situation. Obviously something was about to go down, otherwise Hector wouldn’t be drawing so much attention to himself in the middle of a public plaza.

So Ricardo decided to sit back and wait.

He figured, he would keep an eye on things for the next few minutes and hope for the best. If an opening surfaced, he would hustle over and introduce himself. If not, he would go back to work, like every other Saturday. After all, there was money to be made.

Then it happened.

Amongst the smoke and gunshots, he spotted the opportunity of a lifetime.

Not only did he have a chance to meet Hector.

He had a chance to save him.

From Tiffany’s perspective, everything was going smoothly until that moment. The money was being loaded. The medallion was in their hands. And the police were slow to arrive. Thirty more seconds and her crew would have left the plaza as they had planned.

But one bullet changed everything.

Because of the smoke, no one saw Ricardo until it was too late. He emerged from the haze like a thief in the night. One moment he wasn’t there, the next he was. Severely outnumbered, he knew his only chance at success was a surprise attack. No hostages. No threats. No questions of any kind. His gun would do all the talking.

Church was feeling good about the mission until he felt the barrel of the gun against the base of his skull. A moment later, he couldn’t feel anything at all. Ricardo squeezed his trigger and the bullet did the rest, tearing through Church’s brain like a drill through wet clay. Blood splattered as Church fell, collapsing 10 feet in front of Angel, who was kneeling on the ground in agony. Still bleeding from his shoulder wound, Angel ignored the pain and rolled underneath the SUV for cover. Much to his surprise, the gun that had been kicked out of his hand earlier was now within reach. He grabbed it and looked for targets.

Tiffany, who was guarding Hector, spun towards Ricardo and fired two shots, both of which narrowly missed. Ricardo returned the favour, firing two shots of his own. The first whizzed past her face while the second missed high, partially because she had dropped to her knee. In close combat, she knew the smaller she was, the harder she would be to hit.

Hector didn’t know who the gunman was, and the truth was he didn’t care. All that mattered was the chance to get away. Temporarily forgetting about his kids, he scrambled from the ground and sprinted into the smoke. By then, his lone goal was to survive. Within seconds, he had lost all sense of direction because of the haze that surrounded him.

North became south. East became west.

Everything looked the same.

From the flagpole in the centre, the plaza extended for several hundred feet in every direction. No cross streets. No landmarks. No signs. Just thousands of stone tiles, laid in rows, for as far as the eye could see. If Hector had taken a moment to collect his thoughts, he would have made it through the smoke in a hurry. Since the rows were straight, he could have followed any of them to the edge of the square. There was no mystery. No code to decipher. Every row led to freedom. All he had to do was pick one and he would have survived.

Unfortunately for him, he didn’t think of that.

He simply started to run.

While crouching on one knee, Tiffany fired a third shot at Ricardo. It caught him flush in the stomach, three inches above his right hip. He screamed out in pain and fired wildly. The bullet struck the left side of the SUV as he stumbled forward, nearly falling to the ground before he caught his balance with his free hand. By this time, Chase had entered the fray. Known more for his driving than his marksmanship, he fired several shots at Ricardo, hoping to avenge the death of his fallen comrade. One of the shots came close — missing by less than a foot — but the others were way off the mark. Somewhere in the distance, a car window shattered.

‘Shit!’ he screamed in frustration.

Tiffany glanced to her left, expecting to see Hector on his hands and knees, but the bastard was no longer there. At that point, she had a decision to make. Either risk their freedom and try to find him, or hit the road before the police appeared. For her, it was an easy choice.

They had the medallion and the money.

It was time for them to leave.

‘Clear out,’ she said into her earpiece.

Despite the shootout raging nearby, Cash remained near his car. His job had been to deliver the girl to the plaza and to pick up the money. Nothing more, nothing less. Now he wasn’t sure what to do. His share of the ransom was in his vehicle, but so was the kid.

He spoke up. ‘What about the girl?’

Tiffany fired, trying to keep Ricardo pinned down. ‘Cut her loose.’

He struggled to hear. ‘Say again?’

‘Cut her loose!’

Cash rolled his eyes. He hated working for a woman. ‘You don’t have to scream.’

She fired again. ‘Fuck you, Cash! Cut her loose.’

Daniela had been stashed in the backseat of the Beetle, where she had been freaking out for the last several minutes. Blindfolded and gagged, she could barely make a sound — at least none that could be heard over gunfire. Angered by Tiffany’s comment, Cash reached into the car and yanked Daniela through the narrow gap between the folded seat and the door. He banged her shoulder and arm on the doorframe while he pulled her out. With her hands and feet duct-taped together, she flopped like a rag doll when he threw her to the ground.

Cash stood over her. ‘The bitch is free.’

From his hiding spot underneath the SUV, Angel heard something fall a few feet behind him. Using his good arm, he struggled to turn himself around, only to find himself staring at Hector’s daughter. As far as he could tell, she was still in one piece, although maybe not for long. One of the kidnappers was hovering over her in a threatening manner.

Until that moment, Angel had planned to stay hidden, so as not to give his position away until the kidnappers had left the scene. All that changed when he saw Daniela. Thoughts of his wife and baby boy danced through his head. If the situation had been reversed, he would fully expect Hector to try to save them, so he decided to do the same.

Using his elbows and feet, Angel inched forward on his stomach, moving as silently as possible. Blood oozed as he crawled. The pain in his shoulder was excruciating, but he did his best to ignore it. He had to protect Daniela. He had to save the girl.

Unwilling to expose his torso, Angel did the next best thing.

He brought the battle to his level.

He aimed his gun at the kidnapper’s knee and fired a single shot.

One moment Cash was upright, the next he was on the ground — as was much of his knee, which had been blown into tiny pieces. Writhing in agony, Cash paid no attention to the man lying in front of him until he saw the gun. It was pointed directly at his face.

The last thing Cash saw was the smile on Angel’s lips.

Hector heard the gunshot and slowed to a halt. Somehow, someway, the shot had come from directly in front of him. Despite running non-stop since he had left the scene, he seemed to be back where he had started, like an athlete sprinting round a track.

In his state of delirium, he interpreted this as a sign. It was God’s way of giving him a second chance. Instead of running like a coward, he should have charged forward and rescued his kids from danger. They were somewhere in the smoke. All he had to do was find them.

Struggling to catch his breath, he spotted Church’s body on the ground. It was just lying there, missing a chunk of its head. Hector crouched down and pried the gun from the dead man’s grasp. It would come in handy for the fight ahead.

By this time, Ricardo had lost a lot of blood. Sitting on the ground, he leaned against the front tyre of the SUV. He tried to keep pressure on his stomach with his free hand, but the damn wound kept leaking. Blood oozed between his fingers. It felt warm and sticky.

He closed his eyes and prayed for help.

It wouldn’t be coming from Tiffany.

She saw him helpless and went in for the kill.

Using the smoke for cover, she crept around the front bumper of the SUV and raised her weapon. Then, in a fitting tribute to Church, who had died in a similar fashion, she put the gun against Ricardo’s head and calmly pulled the trigger.

Blood sprayed as he slumped over, dead.

His dreams of meeting Hector died with him.

Over the years, Hector had killed a lot of women. Most of them for business, but a few out of passion. In all that time, he had never wanted to kill one as badly as the bitch in front of him.

Hector didn’t know her name, but he knew she was one of them — one of the assholes who had stolen his kids. To him, that was all that mattered. He would make her pay for their sins.

She was 12 feet ahead and didn’t know he was coming.

He would enjoy this immensely.

Tiffany turned when she heard the sound. To her surprise, Hector was standing behind her with his gun raised. Another moment and she would have been dead for sure.

Thankfully, he never had a chance to pull the trigger.

Hector heard the roar of the engine and whirled round to see what it was. In his confusion, he swore a monster was lurking behind him. It was actually something worse.

A split-second before impact, he saw the headlights of the Volkswagen Beetle shining through the smoke and a smiling face behind the wheel. Bro sadistically stomped on the gas and ploughed into Hector at high speed. The curvature of the car’s frame swept his legs out from under him, which was unfortunate for Hector because it meant his face struck the front windshield like a bug on the highway. The glass cracked, and so did his head, sending a spray of red across the white roof of the car.

The force was so great, Hector died instantly.

But there wasn’t time to rejoice.

With the vehicle heading straight for her, Tiffany jumped onto the hood of the SUV, hoping to avoid the same bloody fate. Except her leap wasn’t necessary. Bro slammed on the brakes and expertly spun the wheel, skidding to a stop a few feet from the SUV.

Laughing to himself, he rolled down his window. ‘Now that’s how you catch a cab!’

Angel pulled Daniela underneath the SUV and urged her to stay quiet. For the first time in his life, he was looking forward to the police arriving.

The wail of approaching sirens was music to his ears.

Tiffany heard the sirens, too, and urged her crew to hurry. Bro’s car was no longer viable, so they split the remaining money between the other two taxis. Chase would drive Tiffany. Bro would pick up Boom. They would meet later that day to discuss what went right and what went wrong. Until then, their main goal was to evade capture.

Tiffany pulled off her gas mask and tossed it into the back of the SUV. Chase and Bro followed her lead. To get away clean, they needed to destroy as much of the evidence as possible. That included the bodies of their fallen friends, which they lifted into the SUV.

‘Hold up,’ she blurted. ‘Where are the kids?’

Chase shrugged. ‘Cash cut the girl loose. I don’t know where she ran to.’

‘And the boy?’

Bro answered. ‘I dumped him near the street before I killed his father. What can I say? I’m a softy when it comes to kids.’

Chase nodded his approval. ‘Good thinking, Bro.’

‘Thanks, bro.’

She spoke into her earpiece. ‘Boom, you still there?’

‘Sure am,’ he said from the balcony.

‘Give us thirty seconds, then light the firecracker.’

Boom smiled. ‘With pleasure.’

She surveyed the scene one last time before hopping into the bright-green Beetle. Chase floored it in reverse, yanked the steering wheel hard, then shifted into drive. Tyres smoked as he raced out of the plaza.

Angel saw Tiffany’s face and red hair. He also heard her side of the conversation. He wasn’t sure what ‘firecracker’ referred to, but he knew it probably wasn’t good.

His theory was confirmed when he saw the yellow light. It started blinking two feet in front of his face. Until that moment, he hadn’t noticed the tiny detonator mounted on the bottom of the SUV. Now it was the only thing he could see. Somewhere inside the vehicle, there were enough explosives to kill a small army, and he was hiding directly underneath them.

Joder!’ he cursed in Spanish as he crawled to the side of the SUV. Then he reached back and grabbed Daniela’s arm. He yanked her out, heaved her over his good shoulder, then sprinted as fast as he could towards the south side of the Zócalo.

Boom stared at the plaza below. Despite the lingering cloud of smoke, he’d only used half his homemade arsenal. More than a dozen devices remained in the rubbish bins to the west and south — devices that could possibly be traced back to him. Just to be safe, he decided to ignite them, too. From his perch, he pressed a few keys on his computer.

Whoosh! Whoosh! Whoosh!

One after another, garbage cans to the south erupted in smoke.

Whoosh! Whoosh! Whoosh!

So did all the cans to the west.

Angel heard the explosions and quickly veered to the east. Daniela bounced on his shoulder as he continued to run. He had no idea where he was going, but he wouldn’t stop running until he saw the street. And he wouldn’t stop searching until he got revenge.

Boom glanced at his watch and smiled. He lived for moments like this.

Four seconds until the firecracker.

The thunder. The fire. The destruction.

Then three seconds.

The plaza would never be the same.

And two seconds.

His grin widened.

Then one.

He whispered a single word: ‘Boom.’

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