Wardogs: Barrett Mason Book 5 by Stewart Matthews

Wardogs: Barrett Mason Book 5 by Stewart Matthews

Author:Stewart Matthews [Matthews, Stewart]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Primrose Publishing LLC
Published: 2019-06-13T22:00:00+00:00


Chapter 19

The cabbie took me through the heart of Mexico City. We wove through heavy traffic, keeping the pair of black SUVs in sight ahead of us. I filled in Libby and Garcia over the walkie-talkies as we drove.

I was a little concerned about losing radio contact with them the further away I went. But when the SUVs stopped ahead of us, we’d only gone about a mile or so from Zocalo, and I still had decent radio signal.

“Thanks, friend.” I got out of the car. Into the middle of the street, it turned out. The sidewalk was taken up by street vendors as far as the eye could see. I didn’t know exactly where I was, but it appeared to be some kind of bazaar. On the sidewalk straight ahead of me, an old lady and her son worked over a big stove, ripped right out of a restaurant.

Butted up against their right side, a guy with racks of what looked like knock-off DVDs. He sat on a barstool, looking at his phone. Couldn’t give a damn about all the people buzzing around. A TV pinned to a wire wall about eight feet high played Spiderman—the old one I’d seen in the theaters just before I enlisted in the Corps.

I joined all the people milling around the shops. Started making my way toward the black SUVs, which were just starting to pull off. Beside them, a team of men in black suits and dark sunglasses checked the area immediately nearby. I couldn’t see Diputado Hernandez, but it was a safe bet to assume he was at the center of his troupe of bodyguards.

“What’s your situation, Barrett?” Garcia asked over the walkie-talkie.

I smiled at the old lady. She smiled back while she turned over a tortilla with a pair of blackened tongs. A pile of empanadas cooled on a tray in front of her stove.

“Just stopping for a lunch break,” I replied to Garcia. I slapped a ten-peso coin on the back of the stove, took an empanada and winked at her.

“Lunch break? What about Hernandez, you gringo bastard? Where is he?”

I pretended to check out a bootleg copy of the newest James Bond movie in the booth next door, but I watched Hernandez slip out of his pack of bodyguards to shake someone’s hand—someone who looked important. He appeared about a decade older than me, with a thick head of hair trimmed down to a buzz cut, sharp nose, and hard brown eyes. He was thin, but in a way that suggested toughness, like he’d spent a lifetime chopping off heads with his bare hands.

“Hernandez is here,” I said. “He’s rubbing elbows with some of the locals.”

“Who?”

“Hell if I know,” I said. “Older guy in a suit, looks like he jogs every morning.”

Then, I saw him extend a letter-sized envelope to Hernandez. The wind caught the flap, lifting it open and revealing light-pink money.

One of the bodyguards took the envelope and tucked it into his jacket.

“And there it is,” I said, forgetting the walkie-talkie for a moment.



Download



Copyright Disclaimer:
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.