Vengeance Is Mine
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Synopsis
William W. Johnstone is legend in contemporary fiction. From his towering westerns to his edgy thrillers, Johnstone captures the true American spirit. Now, in this blockbuster new novel torn from today's headlines, Johnstone puts us on the frontlines of a new war: for the borders of America itself. Vengeance Is Mine They've already started coming across. The drug dealers and the petty criminals. The terrorists and the parasites. For one man on the West Texas border, the time to stand against them is now. John Howard Stark, a Vietnam vet whose family has worked their ranch for generations, has set off a trip wire--and an ambush has exploded all around him. A Columbian drug cartel commander, with the help of an ex-special forces hit man and his own deadly army, has killed three Americans--including Stark's uncle and his neighbor--and will slaughter anyone else who stands in his way. The local law is in his pocket and the Border Patrol is powerless to help. Now John Howard Stark is about to wage a one-man war. And he's got the best kind of reason to fight to the death. But for this American, there's one thing more dangerous than the enemies slithering across the border--and that's the second enemy standing behind his back: His own government. . . William W. Johnstone is the USA Today bestselling author of over 130 books, including the popular Ashes, Mountain Man, and Last Gunfighter series.
Release date: September 9, 2014
Publisher: Pinnacle Books
Print pages: 432
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Vengeance Is Mine
William W. Johnstone
Del Rio, Texas
“Damn it!” John Howard Stark crumpled the newspaper and flung it away from him.
“What is it?” his wife, Elaine, asked from the stove where she was frying bacon. “The Cowboys do something you don’t agree with again?”
“Worse’n that. They found another of those damn mad cows up in Washington.”
“Oh.” Elaine had been a rancher’s wife for over thirty years. She knew how something thousands of miles away, like in the Pacific Northwest, could affect life here in the Rio Grande Valley of Texas. Every time there was another outbreak of mad cow disease anywhere in the country, it made beef prices go down, and that hurt ranchers everywhere.
Stark thought the smell of bacon cooking was just about the best smell in the world. He also thought his wife, still slim and straight with only a little gray in her blond hair despite her five-plus decades on earth, was the prettiest sight. But neither of them could cheer him up now. There had been too much bad news for too long. No real catastrophes, mind, just a seemingly endless stream of developments that made things worse and then worse and then worse again. Stark was fed up. Why, for two cents he’d—
He’d do exactly the same things he had done in his life, the rational part of his brain told him. Regrets were worth just about as much as a bucket of warm spit.
Sitting around and moaning wasn’t a trait that ran in the Stark family. John Howard’s great-great-grandfather had been a frontier judge, a man who had dispensed justice just as easily with a six-gun as with a gavel and a law book. His great-grandfather had worn the badge of county sheriff until settling down to establish this ranch up the Rio Grande from Del Rio. He had faced down some of Pancho Villa’s men to keep it. The generations since had hung on to the Diamond S through good times and bad. John Howard himself had left the place for only one extended period of time in his life—to take a trip for Uncle Sam to a backwater country in Southeast Asia where little fellas in black pajamas shot at him for a couple of years. In the more than three decades since then, he had returned to his home, married his high school sweetheart, raised two boys with her, seen both his parents pass away, and taken over the running of the ranch. It was a hardscrabble spread and a hardscrabble time, here in the first decade of the twenty-first century. And Stark wasn’t as young as he used to be. Fifty-four years old, by God. He had gone to Vietnam at the ripe old age of eighteen, little more than a boy. But he had returned as a man.
That was a long time ago now. For the first few years, Stark had sometimes woken up in the middle of the night shaking and drenched with sweat. He never could remember the dreams that provoked that reaction in him, but he knew they must have been bad ones. He had seen so many men that the war just wouldn’t let go of, so they tried to escape it with drugs and booze and God knows what all. Ruined past, ruined present, ruined future. He’d been one of the lucky ones. He had Elaine and his folks and the ranch. Later he’d had the boys, David and Peter. They all got him through the nightmare landscape that had claimed so many other men, and these days Stark seldom ever thought about Vietnam. When he did he thought not about the dying but about the friends he had made there.
He’d been too busy lately to think about the past. Like all the other ranchers in Val Verde County, he was struggling to make ends meet. In the summer this part of Texas resembled the ass end of hell—hot, dry, and dusty plains dotted with mesquite trees, scrub oaks, and all-too-infrequent patches of grass. The old saying was that hereabouts it took a hundred acres of land just to graze one cow . . . and if the summer was bad enough, you could count the ribs on that cow. Now, to top it off, beef prices were in the crapper, and ever-spiraling taxes and overbearing government regulations didn’t help matters, either. Most of the time he felt older than dirt.
But like the old saying went, gettin’ old sure as hell beat the alternative. Most of the time Stark figured that was true.
Elaine put a plate full of bacon, biscuits, and scrambled eggs in front of him. The eggs had a lot of peppers and cheese in them, just the way he liked them. He poked at them with his fork and said, “This ain’t some of that egg substitute stuff, is it?” He would have used a stronger word than “stuff” if not for the fact that Elaine didn’t allow any cussing at the kitchen table.
“No, it’s the real thing, John Howard,” she said. “I’ve given up on trying to feed you healthy food. You kick up a fuss just like a little baby. Besides, you’re going to be just like your daddy and your uncle and your granddaddy and all the other men in your family. You all pack away the red meat and the grease and you’re still out reshingling the well house and roping steers when you’re ninety-five.”
“Yeah, but I don’t drink much and only smoke one cigar a year, on my birthday.”
She patted him on the shoulder. “I’m sure that’s the secret.”
She started to turn away, but Stark reached out, looped an arm around her slender waist, and pulled her onto his lap. Despite her appearance, she wasn’t a little bitty thing. She was tall and had some heft to her. But Stark was six feet four and weighed two hundred and thirty pounds—only up ten pounds from his fighting weight—and his active life kept him vital and strong in spite of the aches and pains that reminded him of his age. He put his other hand behind Elaine’s head and kissed her. She responded with the eagerness that he still aroused in her. In fact, she was a little breathless by the time they broke the kiss.
“That right there, that’s the secret,” John Howard said.
“What, that all you Stark men are horny old bastards?”
“Damn right.”
She laughed and pressed her lips to his again and when she slipped out of his arms he let her go this time. “Eat your breakfast,” she said. “We’ve both got work to do.”
Stark nodded as he dug the fork into the eggs and picked up a biscuit. “Yeah, I’ve got to go over to Tommy’s in a little while. One of his cows got over on our range yesterday and bogged down in that sinkhole on the creek. I had to pull her out, and I’ve got her and her calf out in the barn. I need to find out what he wants to do about them.”
“You be sure and tell him hello for me. And remind him that we’re expecting him and Julie and the kids over here tomorrow evening.”
Stark nodded. He couldn’t answer. His mouth was full of bacon and eggs and biscuit by now, and somehow his bad mood of a few minutes earlier had evaporated.
Tomas Carranza—Tommy to his friends—owned the ten thousand acres next to John Howard Stark’s Diamond S. It was a small spread for Texas, but Tommy had a small herd. The ranch had belonged to the Carranza family for generations, just as the neighboring land had belonged to the Starks. There had been Carranzas in Sam Houston’s army at San Jacinto, fierce Tejanos who hated Santa Anna and the oppressive rule of the Mexican dictator every bit as much as the Anglos did. Later the family had settled along the Rio Grande, founding the fine little rancho on the Texas side of the river.
John Howard Stark had always been something of a hero to Tommy Carranza. Tommy was considerably younger. When Tommy was a little boy, Stark was the star of the Del Rio High School baseball team, belting a record number of home runs. Tommy loved baseball, and it was special to have a godlike figure such as John Howard Stark befriend him back then.
But John Howard had graduated and gone off to fight in Vietnam, and Tommy had feared that he would never see his friend again. He had prayed to the Blessed Virgin every night to watch over John Howard, and when Stark came back safely from the war, Tommy felt a secret, never expressed pride that perhaps his prayers had had something to do with that.
Over the years since, the age difference between the two men, never all that important, had come to matter even less. They regarded each other as equals and good friends. John Howard and Elaine were godparents to the two children Tommy had with his wife, Julie. Hardly a month went by when the families didn’t get together for a barbecue. In fact, one of the get-togethers was coming up the next day, the Fourth of July.
On this morning Tommy wasn’t thinking about barbecue. He had driven the pickup into Del Rio to get some rolls of fence at the big building supply warehouse store on the edge of town. His land stretched for nearly five miles along the Rio Grande, and Tommy tried to keep every foot of it fenced. The fences kept getting cut, though, by the damned coyotes who trafficked in human cargo and the even more vile drug runners who smuggled their poison across the river.
Sometimes Tommy thought it would be easier just to give up and let the animals take over. But the spirits of his Tejano ancestors wouldn’t let that happen. A Carranza never gave up the fight.
He wrestled the last roll of wire from the flatbed cart into the back of the pickup and then slammed the tailgate. He rolled the cart to one of the little corral places scattered around the big parking lot, and as he turned back toward his truck he was surprised to see a man standing beside it. The fact that the man stood there was less surprising than the way he looked.
The guy was wearing a suit, for God’s sake!
Part of a suit, anyway. He had taken off the jacket and had it draped over one arm. He had also rolled up his sleeves and loosened his tie. The man was stocky, with thinning pale hair. His skin was turning pink in the sun. The suit and the shoes he wore were probably worth more than the battered old pickup beside which he stood.
Tommy thumbed back his straw Stetson with its tightly curled brim and nodded to the stranger. “Hello,” he said. “Something I can do for you?”
“Are you Tomas Carranza?” the man asked bluntly.
“That’s right. Oh hell, you’re not a process server, are you? I told Gustafson I’d pay that feed bill as soon as I can!”
“Oh no, I’m not here to serve you with a lawsuit, Mr. Carranza. But I am a lawyer.” The man took a business card out of his shirt pocket and extended it.
Out of curiosity, Tommy took the card and glanced at it. The name J. Donald Lester was embossed on it in fancy black letters. The address was in Dallas.
“What’s a Dallas lawyer doing all the way down here in the valley?” Tommy asked with a frown.
“I represent a client in the area. Across the river in Cuidad Acuna, in fact.”
Tommy grunted. “A Mexican with a Dallas lawyer. Must be a rich guy. What is he, a drug lord?”
“His name,” J. Donald Lester said, “is Ernesto Diego Espinoza Ramirez.”
Tommy went stiff and tight inside as he drew air sharply in through his nose. “El Bruitre,” he said in a hollow voice.
“Yes, yes, the Vulture,” Lester said impatiently. “It’s a very colorful name, but my client doesn’t care for it, so why don’t we just refer to him as Senor Ramirez?”
Tommy dropped the lawyer’s card onto the concrete of the parking lot. “Why don’t we just call him a murdering, drug-running bastard and be done with it? And I think I’m done talking to you, too, Mr. Lester.”
Tommy turned toward the front door of the pickup, but Lester stopped him with a hand on his arm. “Please, Mr. Carranza, I just want a few moments of your time.”
Shaking off the lawyer’s hand, Tommy said, “I don’t talk to snakes, and if you work for Ramirez you’re just as big a snake as he is, in my book.”
“It’s a matter of money,” Lester said, raising his voice over the squeal of hinges as Tommy jerked the truck’s door open. “A great deal of money.”
A voice in the back of Tommy’s head told him to get in the truck and drive away without paying any more attention to the gringo. But the mention of money piqued his interest. Not that he would ever take one red cent from Ramirez or his ilk. Any money they had would be indelibly stained with the blood and suffering of innocents.
Still, he was a naturally courteous man. And his youngest, Angelina, needed five thousand dollars’ worth of orthodontic work to make her beautiful smile even more beautiful. That was what Julie said, anyway.
“I’ll give you a minute,” he said to Lester, “but I can tell you right now, I’m not gonna be interested in anything you have to say to me.”
“Ten thousand dollars,” Lester said.
Twice as much as what it would cost for Angelina’s braces.
“What?” Tommy asked.
“Each month.”
“You’re offering to pay me ten grand a month?”
Lester nodded his sleekly barbered head. “That’s correct.”
“What for?”
“I think you know the answer to that, Mr. Carranza.”
“Yeah,” Tommy said. That brief moment of hope he’d had came crashing down. No way would anybody pay that much money for something honest, especially not Ramirez. “You want me to look the other way while the Vulture’s couriers bring that goddamn shit across my land.”
“It would be a perfectly legitimate arrangement, an easement, if you will—”
“Easement this,” Tommy said, and he brought up a hard fist and smashed it into Lester’s mouth.
He struck out of anger, furious that this sleazy Dallas lawyer thought he could be bought off with drug money. And he struck out of shame as well, because he hadn’t driven away without even listening to the bastard and because for a split second he had considered the offer. He didn’t know whom he was angrier with, himself or Lester.
But it was the lawyer who got busted in the mouth. The blow sent Lester staggering back across an empty parking space. He slammed into another parked pickup. It had an alarm installed and activated, and the siren began to blare as Lester bounced off the driver’s door and fell to the pavement. He looked up at Tommy, stunned, with blood on his mouth. His bruised lips began to swell.
“Lie down with dogs, get up with fleas, my daddy always said,” Tommy told him, raising his voice so he could be heard over the yowling of the alarm. “Go back to Dallas, Mr. Lawyer.” The words were filled with contempt.
Lester couldn’t get up. All he could do was glare balefully as Tommy got in his pickup and drove away. Tommy didn’t look back.
Stark knew Tommy Carranza well enough to recognize that something was on the younger man’s mind when Stark visited the Carranza ranch that day. Tommy didn’t seem to want to talk about it, though, so Stark didn’t push it. A man didn’t go sticking his nose in another fella’s business without being asked to.
Tommy had just gotten back from Del Rio with a load of fence wire. Stark offered to help him stretch it in the places where his fences needed repair, but Tommy shook his head. “You’ve got your own work to do, John Howard. Besides, I’ve got Martin to help me.”
Martin Carranza was Tommy’s boy, twelve years old and turning into a good hand. With school out for the summer, Martin was doing a lot of work around the ranch.
Stark nodded. “All right, but if you need any help, you know where I am. What about that cow of yours and her calf?”
“If you don’t mind keepin’ ’em another night, I’ll bring the trailer with me when we come over tomorrow and get them then.”
“Sounds like a plan to me,” Stark agreed.
“I’m sorry they strayed onto your range, John Howard.”
A grin creased Stark’s weathered face. “Don’t worry about that. Gettin’ bogged down like it did, that old cow gave Uncle Newt an excuse to practice his roping.”
Newton Stark was John Howard’s uncle, brother to John Howard’s daddy, Ethan. As a boy he had grown up in the saddle, riding before he could walk. By age twelve he had been a top hand, able to do a man’s work and keep up with the cowboys who worked on the Diamond S. A few years later the Second World War had come along, and Newt had found himself trudging through the sands of North Africa behind some of ol’ Blood-and-Guts Patton’s tanks. Newt never talked much about the war except to say that parts of Tunisia looked a hell of a lot like west Texas.
After the war he had come home like hundreds of thousands of other former GIs and gone back to work. In Newt’s case that meant cowboying. His like could have changed when his and Ethan’s father passed away, but Newt wasn’t having any of that.
He had sold his half of the Diamond S to Ethan back when they both inherited the place from their father. To hear Newt tell it, he was a cowboy, and cowboys didn’t have no place in their lives for sittin’ in an office and doin’ book work. Any chore that couldn’t be done from the back of a horse wasn’t worth doing, to Newt’s way of thinking. Now in his eighties, he still lived on the Diamond S and did a full day’s work, blissfully ignorant of the business end of running a ranch.
“I thought you pulled that cow out of the sinkhole,” Tommy commented.
“Well, Newt and me together got her loose,” Stark said. “Anyway, her and the calf will be waiting for you tomorrow evening.”
As Stark drove away in his pickup, he thought that he could just as easily have called Tommy and had this conversation by phone. Stark liked looking at a man when he talked to him, though. And he didn’t mind overmuch the way Tommy’s pretty wife, Julie, fussed over him and offered him lemonade when he visited. The lemonade had been cold and mighty good. Even though it wasn’t quite noon yet, the heat of a Texas summer was in full force and the temperature was already around ninety-five. It would likely top out at 105 or 106 later that afternoon.
When Stark got back to the ranch he found a note from Elaine letting him know that she had gone into Del Rio to finish buying everything she would need for the Independence Day barbecue. She had left his lunch in the refrigerator since she would likely be gone most of the rest of the day. Stark got the bowl out and lifted the aluminum foil cover over it. Salad. He sighed. Elaine might have said she’d given up trying to get him to eat healthy, but she really hadn’t.
Dutifully, he ate the rabbit food. Then he followed it with two thick peanut-butter-and-banana sandwiches he made himself.
With it being the Fourth of July and all, John Howard and Elaine had invited all their friends and neighbors. All the local ranchers from along the river and quite a few folks from town showed up at the sprawling, cottonwood-shaded ranch house on a small knoll that gave a view of the Rio Grande about a mile away. With help from Uncle Newt and Chaco Hernandez, one of the ranch hands who was Newt’s best friend and companion, Stark had set up several picnic tables in the yard. Those tables were packed with food, some of it prepared by Elaine, some brought by the guests. Chaco, who was pushing seventy, was in charge of the barbecue pit, and wonderful smells filled the evening air.
It was hot, of course, because the sun was barely down and the air wouldn’t cool off much for a while yet. But there was a good breeze and almost no humidity, so the weather was bearable. Stark had once seen a T-shirt with a picture on it of two sunbaked skeletons conversing. One of them was saying to the other, “But it’s a dry heat.” That was meant to be sarcastic, of course, but there was some truth to it. One time Stark had visited Houston and felt like he was fixin’ to drown every time he took a deep breath of the humid air there. He hadn’t been able to get out of that place fast enough. It was the armpit of Texas as far as he was concerned.
The ranchers naturally gravitated together while the women talked and the kids ran around yelling and playing. Stark found himself standing in a group of five of his friends: Tommy Carranza, of course, plus Devery Small, W.R. Smathers, Hubie Cornheiser, and Everett Hatcher. The mood was glum despite the fact that this was supposed to be a celebration. All of the men had seen the newspaper and television reports about the latest outbreak of mad cow disease and knew what it would mean to their profits.
“It’s not fair, damn it,” Hubie said as they sipped from bottles of Lone Star beer. “Ain’t never been a single mad cow found in Val Verde County. Every beef we raise is safe as it can be. But the buyers don’t ever think about that.”
W.R. nodded. “Prices are down across the board. That’s what they always say, like it ain’t their fault. And they claim they can’t do a thing about it.”
“They don’t want to do anything about it,” Stark said. “Naturally they want to pay as little as they can get by with.”
“What they’re gonna wind up doin’ is starvin’ us all out,” Everett said. “Then they won’t have to pay anything, so I reckon they’ll be happy. But there won’t be any beef no more, either.”
Devery rubbed his jaw and said, “Yeah, beef prices are worrisome, all right, but to tell you the truth I’m more concerned about those damn drug smugglers.”
Stark saw Tommy flick a startled glance toward Devery and ask, “What do you mean?”
Devery pointed toward the river with his beer bottle. “Hardly a night goes by when some o’ that shit don’t cross the range belonging to one or the other of us. You know, I really don’t mind the illegals all that much, especially the ones who come across on their own. They’re just tryin’ to make a better life for themselves and their families, and I can almost respect that. But those drug runners ain’t doin’ anything except bringin’ pure death across the river.”
“I never have understood what would make a fella want to shoot that crap into his arm,” W.R. said. “It just don’t make no sense to me.”
“The ones who do are too gutless to face up to life,” Stark rumbled. “They’d rather run away, and they use the dope to do it.”
“What’s bad is that our daddies and our daddies’ daddies and on back fought and died to tame this land,” Devery went on. “They had to take on the Comanches and Mex bandidos—no offense, Tommy.”
“None taken,” Tommy said. “But there were Anglo bandits, too, you know.”
Devery nodded. “Damn right, King Fisher and his like were every bit as bad, if not worse. Then you got your rattlesnakes and your scorpions, and the heat and the dust storms and everything else that those old boys had to put up with. But they beat all of it and made this valley a decent place to live. Now, though, it’s bein’ taken over by the same sort of bandidos who got run out of here a hundred years ago. They got cell phones and fancy guns and GPSs now, but they’re still bandidos as far as I’m concerned.”
There were mutters of agreement from the men. Hubie said, “Looks to me like somebody ought to do something about all this.”
“Who?” Devery shot back. “The government?”
“Government?” a harsh voice repeated. The men looked around to see that old Newton Stark, John Howard’s uncle, had come up to join them, all six feet, three inches of his cantankerous self. Newt continued, “All them fellas in Washington are a bunch o’ black-suited, black-hearted bureaucratic robber barons, if you ask me. They ain’t interested in helpin’ anybody but their own selves.”
“You don’t think there are any good politicians?” W.R. asked.
Newt snorted. “I reckon there could be, but I ain’t never seen ’em.”
“It’s not just the ones in Washington,” Devery said. “There are plenty of ’em right here in Texas that I wouldn’t trust as far as I could throw ’em. Like Norval Lee Hammond.”
The sheriff of Val Verde County, Hammond was nearing the end of his second term in office. His first had been marked by controversy, but he had been reelected anyway, some said because of the campaign money that had poured into his coffers from unknown sources. Rumor had it those sources were heavily involved in the drug trade, but nothing had been proven. All anybody knew for sure was that arrests for drug trafficking weren’t made very often, and when they were made, more of them were thrown out of court than seemed natural.
Stark and the others nodded in solemn agreement with Devery’s comment about the sheriff. They might have gone on talking about the increased drug traffic across the border if Chaco hadn’t called out at that moment, “Barbecue’s ready!”
Certain things go with barbecue. Nobody sits down to a big plate of brisket and arugula. But you’ve got your beans, your potato salad, your coleslaw and sliced onions and corn bread, and for dessert peach cobbler or apple cobbler or both, topped with homemade ice cream from a freezer with a hand-turned crank, not one of those electric jobs. Wash it all down with a cold bottle of beer or a big glass of iced tea with sweat dripping off it. That’s eatin’, son.
John Howard Stark was pleasantly full as he sat on one of the benches with his back to the picnic table and his long legs stretched out in front of him. He thought about unfastening his belt buckle and the button of his jeans, but he knew if he did that Elaine would notice and likely swat him one on the back of the head. Country music played from the portable stereo he’d set up earlier, and a few couples were dancing as George Strait sang about getting to Amarillo by morning. Stark sipped his beer, content.
He watched Tommy Carranza dancing with Julie. Tommy was handsome enough in a rough-hewn way, but Julie was really a beauty, taut and tanned with hair as black as a raven’s wing hanging straight down her back. Her high cheekbones and piercing dark eyes bespoke her Indian blood.
Elaine sat down beside Stark and said, “What are you doing?”
“Thinking about how pretty Julie Carranza is.”
She punched him lightly on the arm. “What kind of a man says something like that to his wife?”
“The honest kind?”
“Well, if you want to put it that way . . . and she is awfully pretty.”
“You know you don’t have anything to be jealous about. I never said she was prettier than you. Nobody is.”
“Thank you, John Howard. You never were a man with a smooth line of talk, but you say what you mean and mean what you say, and a woman appreciates that. This one does, anyway.”
Stark put his arm around her shoulders and she rested her head against him. They sat there like that for several minutes, happy to be with each other and to be surrounded by their friends. At moments like this, all thoughts of trouble went away.
The problem was that moments like that never lasted long enough. In this case, the song ended, the dancing stopped, and Tommy and Julie came over to the bench where Stark sat with Elaine.
“John Howard, I need to talk to you for a minute,” Tommy said.
“Uh-oh, I know that tone,” Julie said. “Something’s wrong, isn’t it?”
Tommy shook his head. “Of course not. I just need to talk a little business with John Howard here.”
“Man talk, he means,” Elaine said as she stood up. “You’d think they’d know by now that it’s the twenty-first century and such chauvinistic attitudes are totally outdated.”
“They’re a couple of throwbacks,” Julie said, but she was grinning as she said it.
Stark got to his feet, too, and jerked a thumb toward the barn. “Come on, Tommy, let’s go get that cow and her calf and load ’em up. That’ll give us a chance to talk in peace.”
As they started toward the barn, Tommy asked quietly, “Elaine wasn’t really upset, was she?”
“Naw, she was just hoo-rawin’ us. She’s feisty that way.”
Tommy changed the subject by asking, “You hear anything from the boys lately?”
“Got e-mail from both of ’em a couple of days ago. They say they’re doing fine, but they don’t know when they’ll be back from over there.”
Both of John Howard and Elaine’s sons were in the military. The older boy, David, was in the navy, a pilot flying off an aircraft carrier somewhere in the Middle East. Stark didn’t know where, exactly. The younger one, Peter, was a lieutenant colonel in the marines, a leatherneck like his old man, and he’d been pulling a tour of duty in Iraq for the past year.
“You must worry about them being in harm’s way,” Tommy said.
Stark grunted. “This day and age, with all the evil loose in the world, every American is in harm’s way no matter where he is or what he’s doing. I reckon we’re safer here than the boys are where they are, but at least they’ve got the weapons to fight back. Over here we’re supposed to just roll over and take whatever’s dished out to us, no matter how bad it is. Otherwise we ain’t bein’ sensitive enough to other folks’ beliefs and cultures.” He shook his head. “Just once I’d like to see other folks give a little respect to our beliefs and culture.”
“Roger that,” Tommy said.
Stark stopped, and the younger man did likewise. They were in a patch of shadow, and even though Stark couldn’t see Tommy’s face all that clearly, he looked at him head-on and said, “You didn’t ask to talk just to hear me rant about such things. Something’s bothering you, Tommy. What is it?”
“You can tell?”
“Hell, I’ve known you for over thirty years. Of course I can tell.” Stark made a shrewd guess. “It’s something about all the drug smuggling that’s been goin’ on. I saw the way you reacted when Devery brought it up.”
Tommy shifted his feet uneasily. “When I was in Del Rio yesterday picking up those rolls of fence, a guy talked to me.”
“What guy?”
“
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