“Listen, kid. They just do. I need what’s on them. Enough.”
Benji crossed his arms over his chest. “No.” he said sharply. “You look angry. People do bad things when they’re angry.”
Sorenson could’ve shoved the boy out of his way. Instead, he took a deep breath and his expression softened. “They hurt my daughter.”
“My mom got hurt once.”
“It’s tough out there, kid. So you see, I have no choice. I need what’s on those barges.”
Benji shook his head. “Grampa says that people always have choices.”
“Well, your gramps is wrong.”
“Nuh uh.” Benji shook his head even harder. “He’s never wrong. He’s really smart. He’s been around a really long time. He’s old. Like you.”
Sorenson smirked and one eye narrowed. “Yes, I’ve been around and seen plenty. I’ve got to say, I liked the way things used to be a whole lot better than they are now.”
“I did, too,” Benji said. “I liked school. I had a lot of friends.”
Sorenson’s lips tightened. After a moment, he held up the hand not holding a pistol. “We’re leaving.”
“What?” the man at his side asked. “But the barges—”
“We’ve done enough for one day.” Sorenson cut him off with a hard glare. “Everyone’s had enough hurt for a lifetime. We’re heading back to the Lady.”
The man who had spoken seemed pissed, while the other looked relieved.
As they backed up to the door, Benji waved. “Bye. Be careful out there.”
Sorenson gave Clutch and me one final glance before he turned to leave, like he’d just remembered we were still there.
“Game over, asshole,” Jase said from the doorway, his rifle leveled dead-to-rights on Sorenson.
His men jerked around. “You move, I shoot,” Frost said as he squeezed inside.
Clutch yanked up his rifle, and I went for my sidearm.
“We were just leaving,” Sorenson said slowly.
“Not now, you aren’t,” Jase replied much more quickly. “Drop your guns.”
Sorenson eyed Benji and then spun his pistol and handed it over to Jase. The other two men dropped theirs.
“Benji, are you okay?” Frost asked, cranking his head just enough to see his grandson while keeping his rifle aimed at Sorenson’s pals.
“Grampa!” Benji said. He tapped his leg. “C’mon, Diesel!”
The Great Dane’s growling dissipated and he trotted alongside the happy-go-lucky boy to the older man, both oblivious to the showdown of firepower under way. Sorenson watched as the pair bounded past him.
“Did they hurt you, son?” Frost asked, tugging Benji against him.
“I’m fine, Grampa,” he giggled. “No one hurt me.” He pointed to Sorenson. “He’s just sad because his daughter was hurt, that’s all. He wasn’t going to hurt me.”
I took a big breath and leaned into Clutch, who was breathing just as heavily. He knew as well as I did that the only reason we were still alive was because of a boy. A boy with Down Syndrome just proved that a little bit of kindness was sometimes more powerful than all the brute force and guns in the world.
SLOTH
The Fourth Deadly Sin
Chapter XVII
We held Tack’s funeral the following morning.
Griz had used his Ranger skills and somehow managed to climb onto the riverboat and cut down Tack’s body sometime during the attack without getting caught. Tack had been executed—shot in the head. That he hadn’t been beaten was little consolation to any of us.