The man reached down and picked up his green canvas medic bag and left the building to where an unmarked Ford Explorer was waiting. At no point during his interaction had the medic asked who the hurt man was, or who Lyons and Schwarz were or who they worked for. Heâd simply done what was required of him without unnecessary comment and then left. The hard-nosed Lyons was impressed, almost in spite of himself.
He watched Gonzales take his pills and then wash them down with the water. The informant sat in a straight-backed chair in front of a small metal table in a nondescript room. A black lamp with a flexible neck and a powerful bulb sat turned off on the table. There was a tablet of lined paper and a ballpoint pen on the table in front of the man.
Lyons reached over and turned on the lamp. Gonzales blinked against the sudden harsh illumination. Then the big ex-cop turned to where Schwarz was waiting beside the door, and nodded once. Schwarz reached over and turned off the overhead lights in the room.
Now the hard light of the lamp provided the only illumination in the room. It cast a sharp-edged white pool that plunged the rest of the room in deep shadow. Just beyond the reach of the lightbulb Lyons pulled up a chair and sat opposite Gonzales.
Behind him the door next to where Schwarz was standing swung open, revealing a dark hallway. Hal Brognola, his face cloaked in shadow, entered the room, closed the door behind him and took a seat against the wall.
âGonzales. Excuse the setup,â Lyons said, his voice neutral. âItâs for your own protection.â
âYeah, sure,â Gonzales replied. In his mindâs eye the Mexican informant was seeing the burly blond-headed man sitting across from him as he had been in the New Orleans warehouseâthe automatic shotgun booming, Zetas bodies being thrown around by the impact of the 12-gauge rounds. âWhereâs my handler?â he asked. âWhereâs Hart?â
âYouâll see him in a bit,â Lyons replied. âHeâs taking care of your wife and daughter. I know youâre worried about them, but theyâre safe. We pulled you free of that warehouse, and my very good friend took a knife to the stomach to get you out. So, now, in return, you will fill us in on the missing pieces.â
âI donât know much that I hadnât already passed on to my handler,â Gonzales replied. âI only knew something big was coming. I thought it was a drug deal.â
âThis Bellicose Dawn,â Brognola said.
He was a faceless voice in the shadows. Gonzales instinctively looked up toward the sound and was immediately blinded by the glare of the lamp. He held his hand up, blinked, then looked down. He nodded.
âI passed that much on,â he said. âThen I tried to find out more and somehow Lagos knew that information had gotten out. I was supposed to meet them for a dinner. I wound up hanging in that warehouse instead.â
âWhatâd you find out?â Lyons asked.
âI only know bits and pieces. It doesnât make sense, but it doesnât sound like a drug deal.â Gonzales paused and drank more water. âIt sounds like an assault, an attack or something.â
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