I'd been watching the small compound below me for the last four days and I wasn't holding out much hope that I was going to see anything. The compound was just a relatively large house in the foothills of the Cordillera de Melida in southwestern Venezuela and didn't have the typical several acres of clearing surrounded by a fence or wall of some sort. There didn't appear to be a regular guard detail either. All I'd seen were three men dressed in jeans and shirts walking around once in a while.
I was hoping for something to happen. If it didn't, I'd been sent on a wild goose chase that put my life in danger for nothing. The compound was supposedly a staging point for the cartel drug traffic between Venezuela and the Caribbean. Drugs would go from Venezuela to the other islands or to Mexico, usually via small plane or boat. This compound would be a place where shipments were consolidated and then transported to the airport in San ChristΓ³bal or possibly to a speedboat that pulled into shore at Punlo Cabello on the north coast.
It was late in the day when I saw an OD green truck coming up the road that led to the compound. When it got close enough, I could see it was a Pinzgauer 4X4 hardtop. The markings and the radio antenna on the back told me it was a Venezuelan Army vehicle. I'd been expecting a Toyota Landcruiser since there were thousands of them in Venezuela. They were a favorite of the cartels because they blended in, but the Venezuelan Army Pinzgauer wasn't a big surprise. The only people in Venezuela who have money are either in the government or are involved in drugs and sex trafficking, usually both.
Evidently the truck was expected. Two of the men I'd seen over the past four days casually strolled out of the house to meet the truck with their H&K MP5's slung across their chests. When the truck stopped, the driver, in the uniform of the Bolivarian National Guard, got out and said something to the two men while his shotgun rider in the same uniform got out, jacked the bolt on his FN-FNC rifle and then opened the side door. A few seconds later, three women stepped out of the truck followed by a third man, also in uniform and with his FNC at the ready.
The women were a surprise, but not because they were women instead of drugs. Sex trafficking is a big part of the cartel's business in Venezuela. The surprise was the difference in their ages. I guessed two of them late teens or early twenties, and the third at probably early forties. Sex traffickers like their women young, and the younger the better. Young women are pretty easy to dupe into thinking they're going to go to the US and make more money in a day they they've had in their entire lives.
The two younger women fit that pattern. It was the older woman who didn't fit. By the time a woman has passed thirty and especially in a country like Venezuela, she's seen and lived enough that she's a lot harder to convince. This woman had left thirty behind her years ago.
The two girls wore jeans that fit tight enough it was pretty easy to guess their age. Both had slender hips, a sure sign that the girl is young. Another clue to their young age was the T-shirts they wore. One had "Los Angeles" printed across the front. The other wore a shirt with a picture of a guy on it. I didn't know the name of the guy but I recognized him as of one of those teenage American singers the girls in El Paso were always gaga over.
The older woman was a different story. She had the full figure of a mature woman, with larger breasts and wide hips that are a lot more appealing to me. She also had a lot of cleavage to show and she was showing a lot of it because her knit top was cut pretty low. At that distance, I couldn't see much other than their bodies, but all three had long, black hair.
I figured something else was going on with the women. They were dressed pretty casually but in better clothes than most of the locals, and all three were barefoot. That told me they were probably not there because they wanted to be. They weren't handcuffed though, so they'd probably gone along with whatever was happening without much of a fight.
I was trying to think of a reasonable explanation when the two men with rifles said something and then waved their rifles at the women. The women started walking toward the main building, followed by the two men from the compound. As soon as they started walking, the uniformed men got back into the Pinzgauer and headed back down the road.
The group was about halfway to the main building when the three women stopped and turned to face the two men from the compound. The two men kept walking until they were less than a meter from the women, and they started to bring their carbines up. I saw the older woman's mouth move and then all hell broke loose for about thirty seconds.
The older woman kicked the man closest to her in the crotch. When he doubled over, she kicked him in the gut and he went down. She kicked him in the gut again, and when he rolled over on his back, she stomped him in the crotch three times. The other two women both wrestled the other man to the ground and one of them jabbed him in the eyes over and over while the third kept stomping his crotch with the heel of her bare foot.
The two men were virtually helpless then. No man can take a hard kick to the balls and still function, let alone a repeated pounding like these two had received. They were probably barely conscious. There was no resistance at all when the older woman grabbed the pistol one of the men carried holstered on his side. She shot him in the head, then turned to the second man. The other two women let him go, and once they were clear, the older woman shot him too. After that, they stripped both men of the rifles and pistols they carried and then started out of the compound at a run -- right in my direction.
It was good that they were running. They'd made it half way to the cover of some trees when the third man from the compound walked out of the main building, took one look at the two on the ground and at the women running away, and then leveled his MP5 at them and started chasing them.
The guy got off about a five round burst, but the MP5 is more of a spray and pray weapon on full auto unless the user knows how to handle the recoil. His first shot wasn't even close to the three women because the guy was running. The rest of his shots kept getting higher and higher because he wasn't controlling the muzzle climb. The last bullet shredded the trees about six meters off the ground.
I didn't really think about what I was doing except to remember that old adage that the enemy of my enemy is my friend. The guy got off one more burst that also went wild before I put a bullet in his chest with the FNC I was carrying on that mission. The three women didn't stop to look. They just kept running and they were getting closer to me.
They were less than ten meters away by then, so there wasn't really time for me to pack up and leave. My only hope was they wouldn't see me when they passed. Just in case, I pulled the Sig from my holster and eased back the slide to make sure I had a round in the chamber. I had no idea who they were or why they were there, but if there was going to be a firefight, the Sig would be faster to point and shoot than the FNC.