The girl was almost in hysterics. She’d been kidnapped two days before in Chicago. Her father was a prominent politician, and wealthy. They’d called and demanded a five-hundred-thousand-dollar ransom. Gunny’s team had been called in after the ransom demand. When the kidnappers called again to tell them where to drop the money, which was supposed to happen later on that day, they had traced the call back to this farmhouse, a hundred and fifty miles from Chicago.
“Tasha,” Bobby said calmly, “he’s not going to hurt you. We are here to take you home. If he hurts you, he knows that he doesn’t have any leverage left. Do you hear me?”
The girl nodded weakly, still sobbing. Read More
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“Here’s the deal,” Bobby said calmly, “we already have your guys downstairs. We know who they are, and they are going to prison. You aren’t leaving this room a free man. I don’t give a crap about your threats. But before you do anything, think about this. We are NOT the cops.
“If you hurt that girl, I will put a bullet in your head. After that, I’ll figure out who you are and who you held dear. I will take out revenge on them. Mother, sister, daughter, girlfriend… whatever. THEY will suffer for your poor decisions. And I will tell them exactly why, too. They will know all about you.”
Ronny had moved back down the stairs and gotten the name of the kidnapper from the man that was still conscious downstairs. He radioed it to Bobby.
“Do you understand me, Thompson Walters?” Bobby finally asked.
Hearing the intruder use his name shook his confidence to the core. In the movies, the good guys always laid down their guns. He thought that was some sort of unwritten rule. He would be able to push the girl outside and get in a car and get away. But these guys weren’t playing by the rules.
“I want an exit,” Thompson Walters said to the man standing in front of him.
“You drop the gun and let go of the girl, and you might be able to get out of here alive before the cops arrive. Until you do that, you don’t have an exit unless you’re dead.”
Outside he could hear the helicopter setting down in the back yard, between the house and the barn.
“What’s that?” the kidnapper yelled.
“That’s my ride. Your time is about up,” Bobby replied. Gino slipped from his spot just outside the door in the hallway into the room behind Bobby and moved off to his left, his rifle also raised and pointed at Walters.
Walters looked around. His decision was whether he would set the gun down or just shoot the girl, knowing he would die a moment later.
“On second thought, I might not shoot to kill. I might maim you. If you pull the trigger, your gun hand will get a bullet before the echo dies. After that, I will subdue you, roughly. In the end, when the ambulance picks you up, you will have suffered multiple wounds and by the time you go to prison you will be a eunuch. You are going to be a VERY popular man in prison, Thompson. And I might still visit your family, just to let them know what kind of man you are,” Bobby said with a grin.
Thompson Walters moved the gun away from the girl’s head. As soon as he did, Gino Bell moved in and removed the gun from his hand, dropped him to the floor and zip tied his hands behind his back. He pulled the zip ties as tight as he could and drew blood from both wrists of the kidnapper.
Bobby rushed over to Tasha and removed her gag. “You’re ok, Tasha. We’re here to take you home.” Then he cut off the bindings on her wrists. As soon as she was free, she wrapped her arms around the man in front of her and started crying into his shoulder.
Bobby scooped her up and started carrying her from the room, down the stairs, through the back door and outside to the waiting chopper. Gunny and Gino did a final sweep to make sure they hadn’t left anything, while Ronny started checking the girl over for hidden injuries. They knew that the police would be there any minute, and they didn’t want to be there when they arrived. That would require too many explanations, and stealth was required for their continued success.
Gino jumped into the front and Gunny hopped into the back and slid the door closed.
“Take it up, Five,” Gunny said into his radio.
***
The helicopter set down on top of a high-rise in downtown Chicago. Franklin Johnson walked over as the side door slid open. His sixteen-year-old daughter, Tasha, jumped from the helicopter and ran to her father. When she leapt into his arms, both were in tears. His little girl was all he had left after her mother had passed away a few years before from cancer.
Without a word, the chopper took off again and headed to a private airfield just south of Gary, Indiana. They dropped off the helicopter and boarded their plane to head back to Virginia.
“Bobby, you are a stone-cold badass,” Gino said as they settled into their seats. “Man, you scared me, and I know you’re a big teddy-bear.”
“You were in his head, no doubt,” Gunny confirmed. “He didn’t know how to react because you changed every rule he thought he had to go by. Good work, my friend.”
“Thanks, guys,” he responded.
“That bit about his Momma and his sister, dayum,” Ronny exclaimed, “if I didn’t know better, I’da thought you meant it.”
“I guess I missed the fun part. I mean, I heard it on the radio, but the front row seats were likely better,” Duke chimed in, “but what I heard was epic. You think they got away?”
“Nah,” Gunny said, “I think the police were only a couple of minutes out. They’ll get a tip that the guys were involved in that kidnapping and the girl will be able to identify them. Her father already knows to try to tamp down any conversation about us… and she wouldn’t be able to identify us, anyway.”
They continued to talk and laugh about the successful rescue until the plane set down at Patrick Henry Airport in Newport News, Virginia. Then the group disembarked, packed their gear back into their various vehicles and headed home. The after-action report would be tomorrow morning at 0900.
You can find You Don’t Know Jack on Amazon for Kindle for only $2.99. Here is a link.