demanded that she tolerate insubordination that would get a sailor sent to the brig.
Her next call was to the harbormaster, Manuel Lozada. She was afraid that the
Dolos
would cast off early and leave the spies behind if they knew they were cornered and would eventually confess to the covert shipâs true nature.
âA pleasure to hear from you, Admiral,â he said upon answering. âI was just about toââ
âLozada, I want you to raid the
Dolos
. I will have thirty soldiers there in ten minutes to assist the police.â She would redirect some of Dominguezâs reinforcements to La Guanta Harbor.
âBut Admiral, thatâs why I was about to call you. The
Dolos
has just cast off.â
âWhat? You gave them permission?â
âYes. You told me that you would capture them at sea, so I thought . . .â
Ruiz was steaming. She had idiots working for her. But she kept her voice calm.
âLozada, do whatever you can to slow them down. If they leave Venezuelan waters before we get there, capturing them would cause an international incident.â
âAt once, Admiral!â
âAnd use any information that Gao can tell you about the ship. It might give you a tactical advantage.â
âExcellent suggestion, Admiral. We will do everything in our power to keep them from leaving.â
âI want regular updates about its location.â
She hung up, and strode back onto the bridge. She checked their position. They were still forty miles from Puerto La Cruz. At their present speed, they would reach the port in a little more than an hour.
The
Mariscal Sucre
, a Lupo-class frigate, was the pride of the Venezuelan Navy. It was armed with a 127mm forward gun, eight Otomat Mark 2 surface-to-surface missiles, and twin Mark 32 triple torpedo tubes. Ruiz had no compunction about unleashing her arsenal on the spy vessel no matter how well armed or how defenseless it was.
She just had to make sure they got there in time.
âCaptain Escobar,â she barked to the shipâs commander, âI donât care if you burn the turbines out. Give me all the speed you can muster.â
After a smart âAye, aye,â Ruiz could feel the ship vibrate from the increased output, matching the adrenaline coursing through her system. She had never been more ready for a fight, and there was no way she would be denied her victory.
Juan and Linc had the cargo bayâs stern door covered, occasionally taking shots to keep Dominguezâs men from pouring through. The bow door was still locked tight, with a chain looped through the handle, but they could hear someone hammering away at it on the other side. It was only a matter of time before it was breached.
Bullets pinged off the armored vehicles around Juan and Linc as sailors with assault rifles poked their heads through the door to fire off a few shots. None came close. It was as if the men were simply trying to keep them pinned down.
Juan guessed that was exactly their plan. The Venezuelans had the high ground because the doors on either end, one toward the bow and one toward the stern, were at the top of the three-story-high hold, with stairs leading down to the floor, where the vehicles were lined up in eight rows of four. It was a stalemate; Juan and Linc couldnât leave and the Venezuelans couldnât charge down the exposed stairs.
âHow many rounds do you have left?â Juan asked Linc.
âTwo magazines, but at this rate Iâll be out in a few more minutes.â
âIâm down to one on the rifle I borrowed from our friend who let us in here.â A chop from Lincâs hand had dealt the guard a blow that would have him woozy for days. That still left enough men to beat them by attrition alone. There was no chance theyâd make it all the way back to the Humvee. They had to find another way out.
Even if they concentrated on one door and made a break for it, the only way off