He caught parts of the fight because the atrium echoed.
Rogan! How dare you!
Bitch.
Fool.
They won’t get out of Jalisco alive.
They’re not here, are they?
The app showed Kane as a white dot and Carson’s phone as a green dot. It was moving, about twenty feet from them and walking rapidly away.
Kane motioned down the hall that marked the atrium’s northern perimeter. JT nodded. They both moved down the hall and pursued Carson. They were getting closer when a shout and gunfire had them taking cover.
“Get him,” JT said. “I got you.”
Kane didn’t like leaving his partner, but he also couldn’t let Carson Spade get away. He bolted down the hall and into a room.
Carson had a gun on him. Kane reached out and disarmed him immediately. Fucking accountant and lawyer, not a soldier.
Carson stared at him wild-eyed. “You took my son!”
“My nephew,” Kane said in a low voice, “never forget it.”
Carson made the connection immediately, opened his mouth, then closed it. “You’ll never get out of here.”
“Shut the fuck up. I planned to kill you, but others want you alive. They won the coin toss.” Kane enjoyed the panic written all over Carson’s face.
“What? What do you mean?”
Kane didn’t answer. He looked around the room. They were on the ground floor, which was good. Where was JT?
Gunfire erupted, very close, and JT ran in the door. He was favoring his right arm.
“Fuck it, J!”
“Flesh wound. Let’s go.” JT pushed a table in front of the door.
“I’m not going with you!” Carson shouted purposefully to alert anyone in the house where they were.
Kane hit him. Damn, that felt good. He whispered in his ear as he pulled the bastard’s arm behind his back until he winced, “If you say one more word, I’ll stab you in the kidney and leave you here to die slowly and in agony.”
JT pushed open the window and climbed out. Kane pushed Carson toward the window as someone started hitting at the door. The table moved.
“Now!” Kane ordered.
Carson went through. Kane followed as the guards broke through the barrier. He pulled a grenade out of his pocket, pulled the pin, and tossed it back through the window.
“Run!” he commanded.
Ten seconds later the explosion sent them all to their knees. Screams echoed behind them, but Kane couldn’t be concerned with casualties.
He hoped Jack and Gabriella had been successful, because the plan had them splitting up until they reached the plane.
Provided Sean made it safely to the plane. And was able to land at the right coordinates in the dark with the pending storm.
They couldn’t escape the same way Sean had; by now the perimeter guards would have found the breach. They had to go through the main gate. And the best way was to create another distraction.
“J, now.”
JT pulled a detonator out of his pocket, flipped the switch, then pressed two buttons simultaneously. Every corner of the compound perimeter exploded simultaneously. The bombs had been placed outside the gates because they couldn’t access the inside until Kane had found Jesse. But the distraction was just what they needed. All the guards rushed toward the house to protect the structure. And Kane, JT, and a reluctant but terrified Carson Spade ran toward the road.
The jeep was right where they’d left it, hiding two hundred yards from the entrance. Kane cuffed Carson to the vehicle because if he didn’t, he might have killed him.
He didn’t like criminals as a general rule, but he despised criminals who put kids in danger.
Especially when the kid was family.
Everything that had happened from the moment that Sean had cornered him at the football game had seemed surreal. But tonight… Jesse was living an action movie, only it wasn’t as exciting as he’d thought it might be.
In fact, he’d been scared to death. He still was.
“Explain that again, Matt?” Sean asked the driver.
“I said, you only have 1500 feet to land and take off. But it’s secure.”
“That’s next to impossible. Not the landing part, but we’re going to have what, seven-no, eight-passengers. I need more room.”
“We don’t have more room.”
“We’ll have to dump everything.”
“Okay.”
“And half the fuel.”
“Um, is that a good idea?”
“Do you want to fly or crash?”
“I see your point.” Matt didn’t talk for a while. “Are you going to have enough fuel to make it to Hidalgo?”
“No. Kane better know a place where we can refuel before we hit Monterrey.”
Jesse had flown many times, but never in a small plane. He was scared. And excited.
But mostly scared.
“Jesse, you good?” Sean asked. He looked back at him, winked. “We’ll be fine.”
Fine? He didn’t know if he’d done the right thing. Well, he did… but he didn’t. When Carson didn’t let him call his mom… and then he got the letter from Sean… he thought okay, this was going to happen, Sean was his real dad.
But his real dad was a jerk. His mom said so. His mom said he’d told her he didn’t want a kid and why not just get an abortion. So why would he swoop in and save him now? Risk his life? It didn’t make any sense.
“Seriously, you aren’t hurt or anything, are you? Jesse, talk to me.”
“I’m fine.” He bit his lip. “My mom told me you didn’t want her to have a baby.”
Sean turned in his seat and stared at him. Sean looked really upset. Angry and sad all together.
“Jesse, I don’t know why Madison said or did any of the things that she did. All I can say is this: She was nineteen and pregnant and in college. She made decisions based on what she thought was best for her. I’m not going to fault her for that. But I’m going to tell you this once, and it’s the truth. I never knew you existed until this week. I didn’t know your mom was pregnant. If I had, I would have been there. I wish I had been. God, Jess, I love you.” He looked away. For a second Jesse thought Sean was crying, but maybe not.
He shifted in the seat so he could see Sean better. Yeah, his eyes were wet, Jesse could see that even in the near-dark. Sean put the palms of his hands against his eyes, pressed hard.
Jesse didn’t know what to say. Everything he’d believed for his entire life was a lie. His mom lied to him… and Carson. He couldn’t call Carson Dad anymore. Carson lied to him, too. Told him he couldn’t call his mom, took away his phone, said he’d talked to her. Had he? Had he really talked to her?
And then there was that conversation this morning.
“I heard Carson talking to Mr. Flores this morning,” Jesse said quietly.
“You don’t have to tell me.”
“You were right. About everything you said in your message. And more. He… he talked about it. About how he was moving money around so Dominick could access it. I didn’t understand a lot… but Dominick was angry with my dad. With Carson,” he corrected himself. “Carson kept saying it wasn’t his fault, that he set up these bank accounts and companies or whatever perfectly. But Dominick said, ‘Fix it or else.’ And I knew Carson was scared that the or else meant he’d be killed.” What would that have meant for him? Would they have killed Jesse, too? His mom?
“Carson worked for dangerous people,” Sean said.
“Criminals,” Jesse said. “You said they were criminals.”
“They are,” Sean said. “Flores and his family run a drug and human trafficking organization, and Carson set up their money-laundering operation. The FBI has proof, and that’s why my brother went back to get him.”
“Would Dominick have killed him?”