CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER TWO
10:01 p.m. Afghanistan Time (1:01 p.m. Eastern Daylight Time)
Near the Pakistan Border
Kamdesh District
Nuristan Province, Afghanistan
“Go!” Luke shouted. “Go! Go! Go!”
Two thick ropes descended from the bay door of the chopper. Men dropped down them, then disappeared into the swirling dust. They could be a thousand feet in the air, or ten feet above the playground.
The wind howled. Biting sand and dirt sprayed in. Luke’s face was covered by a ventilator mask. He and Heath were the last ones out the door. Heath wore a similar mask—they looked like two survivors of a nuclear war.
Heath looked at Luke. His mouth moved beneath his mask.
“We’re gonna be legends, Stone!”
Luke hit the green START button on his stopwatch. This had better be quick.
He glanced below him. He couldn’t see a damn thing down there, or anywhere. It was all on faith. He went over the side and fell through bleak darkness. Two seconds later, maybe three, he touched down hard on the ground. The landing sent a shockwave up his legs.
He released the rope and looked around, trying to get his bearings.
Heath landed a second later.
Men in masks appeared out of the gloom. Martinez, Hendricks. Hendricks gestured behind him.
“There’s the wall!”
Something large loomed back there. Okay, that was the wall to the compound. A couple of dim lights shone on top of it.
Hendricks was saying something, but Luke couldn’t hear it.
“What?”
“They know!”
They know? Who? Knew what?
Above their heads, the sound of the chopper’s engines changed as it began to rise away. Suddenly, a bright light flashed from on top of the wall.
Something zipped by, screaming as it did.
Mortar.
“Incoming!” Luke screamed. “Incoming!”
All around him, vague shadows threw themselves to the ground.
Two more flashes of light launched.
Then another.
Then another.
How did they know?
In the black darkness of the sky, something exploded. It blew up in muted orange and red. In the sandstorm, the explosion sounded like the crackling of distant thunder. The chopper. It was hit.
From his vantage point on the ground, Luke watched it circle in the sky, an orange streak against the black. It looped toward the right, spinning now. Its engines screamed, and Luke thought he could hear the sound of its blades.
Whump. Whump. Whump. Whump.
It seemed to move in slow motion, sideways and down. It lit up the night like a tracer as it passed over the stone wall of the compound.
BOOOM!
It exploded on the other side of the wall, inside the compound. A fireball went up, two or three stories high. For an instant, Luke imagined it was all over. Chopper down, pilots dead. Support chopper inoperable. They were trapped here, and the Taliban seemed to have known they were coming.
But that helicopter just blew apart inside the compound.
Like a bomb.
And that might give them the initiative.
Several men in masks lay nearby.
Martinez, Hendricks, Colley, Simmons. His team.
Heath had to be around here somewhere.
“Up!” Luke shouted. “Up! Let’s go!”
He jumped to his feet, dragging the nearest person with him. In an instant, they were all up and running, a dozen men, moving fast. Night vision was useless. Lights were useless, and would draw fire. They simply ran in total, spinning darkness.
In ten seconds, they reached the wall. Luke guessed left, and moved that way, hugging the stone. Within a few seconds, he came to the opening. There was the chopper, an apocalypse. A few silhouettes ran in the light from the flames, pulling wounded away from it.
Luke didn’t hesitate. He ran through the opening, his MP5 out now. He gave them a burst from the gun, a blat of automatic fire. Now the silhouettes were running away, back toward another looming shadow, lights beckoning in the chaos.
The house.
His men were running with him.
Up ahead, the silhouettes of the retreating men sprinted up the small flight of stairs to the stone house. Luke sprinted up the stairs behind them.
Two men faced the doorway, pulling automatic weapons down from their shoulders. They wore the long beards and headwraps of the Taliban.
POP! POP! POP! POP! POP!
Luke fired without thinking about it. The two men fell.
Suddenly, there was an explosion behind him. He glanced back—it was impossible to see what was going on. He moved into the house. An instant later, four more men appeared next to him—his A-Team. They took up firing positions in the stone foyer, facing in toward the rest of the house.
They removed their ventilator masks simultaneously, almost as if they were one person. Martinez went to the downed Taliban and shot each one in the head. He didn’t touch either one of them.
“Dead!” he said.
It was quieter here.
“B-Team leader,” Luke said into his helmet mic. “Status?”
Heath came running into the house out of the darkness.
“B-Team leader…”
“We’re holding the front gate,” a voice said inside Luke’s helmet. It was Murphy. His Bronx accent was unmistakable. “Stone! This don’t look good. That was an ambush! They were waiting for us!”
“Just hold the gate, Murph. We’ll be out in a couple of minutes.”
“You better hurry, man. Somebody knew we were coming. Won’t be long before there’s more of them, and I can’t see ten feet in front of my nose.”
Luke’s team had already moved further into the house. Heat went in right behind them.
“Hang in there. We’re inside.”
“Make it quick,” Murphy’s voice said. “I don’t know if we’re still going to be here.”
“Murphy! Hold that gate! We’ll be right out.”
“Aye, aye,” Murphy said.
Luke turned toward the darkened corridor.
Another man appeared—a big man in a white robe. He managed to reach his trigger, but he fired wildly. Luke kneeled, drew a bead on the man.
POP! A dark red circle appeared on his chest.
He seemed surprised, but then slid bonelessly to the floor.
Now Luke moved through the dark hallways, listening for sounds up ahead. He didn’t have to listen long.
BANG!
A flashbang went off, then another.
BANG!
There was shouting and gunfire up ahead. Luke moved slowly toward it, snaking along the wall. Now there were sounds behind him, out on the grounds—automatic fire and explosions.
Luke checked his stopwatch. They’d been on the ground for less than four minutes, and the whole mission was already FUBAR.
“Stone!”
Murphy’s voice again. “Trouble. Barbarians at the gates. I repeat: front gates under attack. Unfriendlies converging. Men down. Hastings down. Bailey down. We are falling back to the house.”
“Uh, negative, B-Team. Hold those gates!”
“There’s nothing to hold,” Murphy said. “They’re ripping it up! They got an anti-tank gun out there.”
“Hold it anyway. It’s our only way out of here.”
“Dammit, Stone!”
“Murphy! Hold those gates!”
Luke ran further into the house.
There was screaming just ahead of him. He ran through a doorway, crossed the threshold…
And came upon a scene of total chaos.
There were at least fifteen people in a large back room. The floors were covered in thick, overlapping carpets. The walls were hung with carpets—ornate, richly colored carpets depicting vast landscapes—deserts, mountains, jungles, waterfalls.
Simmons was dead. He lay on his back, his body splayed, his eyes open and staring. His helmet was off and a chunk of his head above the eyes was gone. Two women were also dead. A small child, a boy, was dead. Three men in robes and turbans were dead. It was a massacre in here. There were guns, and blood, all over the floor.
At the very back, near a closed door, a mass of people stood. A crowd of men in robes and turbans held children in front of them, and pointed rifles outward. Behind the men, another man lurked—he was hidden enough that Luke could barely see him.
He must be the target.
All around the chamber, Luke’s team crouched or kneeled, still as statues, their guns trained on the group, looking for a shot. Lieutenant Colonel Heath stood in the center of the room, his MP5 machine gun pointed into the crowd.
“Okay,” Luke said. “It’s okay. Nobody do any—”
“Drop those weapons!” Heath shouted in English. His eyes were wild. He was focused on one thing—getting that whale.
“Heath!” Luke said. “Relax. There’s children. We can—”
“I see the children, Stone.”
“So let’s just—”
Heath fired, a burst of full auto.
Instantly Luke hit the ground as gunfire broke out in all directions. He covered his head, curled into a ball, and turned his back to the action.
The shooting lasted several seconds. Even after it stopped, a few shots continued, one every few seconds, like the last of the popcorn popping. When it was finally over, Luke picked his head up. The knot of people by the closed door lay in a writhing pile.
Heath was down. Luke didn’t care about that. Heath was the cause of this nightmare.
Another of Luke’s men was down, over in the corner. God, what a mess. Three men down. An unknown number of civilians dead.
Luke climbed to his feet. Two other men stood at the same time. One was Martinez. The other was Colley. Martinez and Colley converged on the pile of people near the back, moving slowly, guns still drawn.
Luke glanced around the room. There were corpses everywhere. Simmons was dead. Heath… a large hole had been punched through his head where his face had been. The man had no face. Luke felt nothing about that. This was Heath’s mission. It had gone as wrong as possible. Now Heath was dead.
And one more man was down.
It seemed like a complicated math problem, but really, it was simple subtraction that anyone could do. Luke’s mind was not working correctly. He recognized that. Six men had come in here. Heath and Simmons were dead. Martinez, Colley, and Stone were still in the game. That meant the last man down could only be…
Luke ran to the man. Yes, it was. It was Hendricks. Wayne.
WAYNE.
He was still moving.
Luke kneeled by him and pulled off his helmet.
Wayne’s arms and legs were moving slowly, almost like he was treading water.
“Wayne! Wayne! Where are you hit?”
Wayne’s eyes rolled. They found Luke. He shook his head. He began to cry. He was breathing heavily, almost gasping for air.
“Oh, buddy…” Wayne said.
“Wayne! Talk to me.”
Feverishly, Luke began to unfasten Wayne’s ballistic vest.
“Medic!” he screamed. “Medic!”
An instant later, Colley was there, kneeling behind him. “Simpson was the medic. I’m the backup.”
Wayne was hit in the chest. Somehow shrapnel had gotten under his vest. Luke’s hands searched him. He was also shot high in the leg. That was worse than the chest, by a lot. His pants were saturated with blood. His femoral artery must be hit. Luke’s hand came away dripping red. There was blood everywhere. There was a lake of it under Wayne’s body. It was a miracle he was still alive.
“Tell Katie,” Wayne said.
“Shut up!” Luke said. “You’re going to tell her yourself.”
Wayne’s voice was barely above a whisper.
“Tell her…”
Wayne seemed to be looking at something far away. He gazed, and then did a double take, as if confused by what he was seeing. An instant later, his eyes became still.
He stared at Luke. His mouth was slack. Nobody was home.
“Oh God, Wayne. No.”
Luke looked at Colley. It was as if he were seeing Colley for the first time. Colley looked young—like barely old enough to shave. That couldn’t be, of course. The man was in Delta Force. He was a trained killer. He was a consummate pro. But his neck looked about as thick as Luke’s forearm. He seemed to be swimming in his clothes.
“Check him,” Luke said, though he already knew what Colley would say. He fell back into a cross-legged position, and sat that way for a long moment. They had a day off during Ranger School one time. A bunch of guys held a pick-up game of football. It was a hot day, and the game was shirts versus skins. Luke spent the game throwing laser strikes to this big, thick, foul-mouthed redneck with a front tooth missing.
“Wayne.”
“He’s gone,” Colley said.
Just like that, Wayne was dead. Luke’s blood brother. The godfather of Luke’s unborn son. A long, helpless breath went out of Luke.
In war, Luke knew, that’s how it went. One second, your friend—or your sister, or your wife, or your child—was alive. The next second, they were gone. There was no way to turn back that clock, not even one second.
Wayne was dead. They were a long way from home. And this night was just getting started.
“Stone!” Martinez said.
Luke pulled himself to his feet once again. Martinez stood by the pile of corpses that had once protected the target. All of them appeared to be dead, all but one, the man who had stood at the back. He was tall, still youthful, with a long black beard speckled with a little gray. He lay among the fallen—shot full of holes, but alive.
Martinez pointed a pistol down at him.
“What’s the guy’s name? The one we’re looking for?”
“Abu Mustafa Faraj al-Jihadi?” Luke said. It wasn’t really a question. It wasn’t anything, just a string of syllables.
The man nodded. He didn’t say anything. He looked like he was in some pain.
Luke took a small digital camera from inside his vest. The camera was encased in hard rubber. You could bounce it off the floor and it wouldn’t break. He fidgeted with it for a second, and then took a few snaps of the man. He checked the images before he turned the camera off. They were fine—not exactly professional quality, but Luke didn’t work for
National Geographic
. All he needed was evidence. He looked down at the terrorist leader.
“Gotcha,” Luke said. “Thanks for playing.”
BANG!
Martinez fired once, and the man’s head came apart.
“Mission accomplished,” Martinez said. He shook his head and walked away.
Luke’s radio crackled.
“Stone! Where are you?”
“Murphy. What’s the status?”
Murphy’s voice cut in and out. “It’s a bloodbath out here. I lost three men. But we commandeered one of their big guns, and we cut an opening. If we want to get out of here, we need to go RIGHT NOW.”
“We’ll be out in a minute.”
“I wouldn’t take that long,” Murphy said. “Not if you want to live.”
Six men ran through the village.
After all that fighting, the place was like a ghost town. At any second, Luke was expecting gunshots or rockets to come screaming out of the tiny homes. But nothing happened. There didn’t even seem to be any people left here.
Back the way they had come, smoke rose. The walls of the compound were destroyed. The helicopter still burned, the flames crackling in the eerie quiet.
Luke could hear the heavy breathing of the other men, running uphill with gear and weapons. In ten minutes, they made it to the old forward operating base on the rocky hillside outside the village.
To Luke’s surprise, the place was okay. There were no supplies cached there, of course—but the sandbags were still in place, and the location gave a commanding view of the surrounding area. Luke could see lights on in the homes, and the chopper on fire.
“Martinez, see if you can raise Bagram on the radio. We need an extraction. Hide and seek is over. Tell them to send overwhelming force. We need to get back inside that compound and bring our men out.”
Martinez nodded. “I told you, man. Luck runs out for everybody.”
“Don’t tell me, Martinez. Just get us out of here, okay?”
“All right, Stone.”
It was a dark night. The sandstorm had passed. They still had weapons. Along the sandbagged rampart, his men were loading up ammo and checking gear.
It wasn’t out of the question that….
“Murphy, send a flare up,” he said. “I want to get a look at what we’re dealing with.”
“And give away our position?” Murphy said.
“I think they probably know where we are,” Luke said.
Murphy shrugged and popped one into the night.
The flare moved slowly across the sky, casting eerie shadows on the rocky terrain below. The ground almost appeared to be boiling. Luke stared and stared, trying to make sense of what he was seeing. There was so much activity down there, it was like an ant farm, or a swarm of rats.
It was men. Hundreds of men were methodically moving themselves, their gear, and their weapons into position.
“I guess you’re right,” Murphy said. “They know we’re here.”
Luke looked at Martinez.
“Martinez, what’s the status on that extraction?”
Martinez shook his head. “They say it’s a no go. Nothing but wicked sandstorms between base and here. Zero visibility. They can’t even put the choppers in the air. They say hold out till morning. The wind’s supposed to die down after sunrise.”
Luke stared at him. “They have to do better than that.”
Martinez shrugged. “They can’t. If the choppers won’t fly, the choppers won’t fly. I wish those storms had come in before we left.”
Luke stared out at the seething mass of Taliban on the hillsides below them. He turned back to Martinez.
Martinez opened his mouth as if to speak.
Luke pointed at him. “Don’t say it. Just get ready to fight.”
“I’m always ready to fight,” Martinez said.
The shooting started moments later.
Martinez was screaming.
“They’re coming through on all sides!”
His eyes were wide. His guns were gone. He had taken an AK-47 from a Taliban, and was bayoneting everyone who came over the wall. Luke watched him in horror. Martinez was an island, a small boat in a sea of Taliban fighters.
And he was going under. Then he was gone, under a pile.
They were just trying to live until daybreak, but the sun refused to rise. The ammunition had run out. It was cold, and Luke’s shirt was off. He had ripped it off in the heat of combat.
Turbaned, bearded Taliban fighters poured over the walls of the outpost. Men screamed all around him.
A man came over the wall with a metal hatchet.
Luke shot him in the face. The man lay dead against the sandbags. Now Luke had the hatchet. He waded into the fighters surrounding Martinez, swinging wildly. Blood spattered. He chopped at them, sliced them.
Martinez reappeared, back on his feet, stabbing with the bayonet.
Luke buried the hatchet in a man’s skull. It was deep. He couldn’t pull it out. Even with the adrenaline raging through his system, he didn’t have the strength left. He looked at Martinez.
“You okay?”
Martinez shrugged. He gestured at the bodies all around them. “I been better than this before. I’ll tell you that.”
There was an AK-47 at Luke’s feet. He picked it up and checked the magazine. Empty. Luke tossed it away and pulled his handgun. He fired down the trench—it was overrun with enemies. A line of them were running this way. More came sliding, falling, jumping over the wall.
Where were his guys? Was anyone else still alive?
He killed the closest man with a shot to the face. The head exploded like a cherry tomato. He grabbed the man by his tunic and held him up as a shield. The headless man was light—it was if the corpse was an empty suit of clothes.
He killed four men with four shots. He kept firing.
Then he was out of bullets. Again.
A Taliban charged with an AK-47, bayonet attached. Luke pushed the corpse at him, then threw his gun like a tomahawk. It bounced off the man’s head, distracting him for a second. Luke used that time. He stepped into the attack, sliding along the edge of the bayonet. He plunged two fingers deep into the man’s eyes, and pulled.
The man screamed. His hands went to his face. Now Luke had the AK. He bayoneted his enemy in the chest, two, three, four times. He pushed it in deep.
The man breathed his last right into Luke’s face.
Luke’s hands roamed the man’s body. The fresh corpse had a grenade in its breast pocket. Luke took it, pulled it, and tossed it over the rampart into the oncoming hordes.
He hit the deck.
BOOOM.
The explosion was
right there
, spraying dirt and rock and blood and bone. The sandbagged wall half collapsed on top of him.
Luke clawed his way to his feet, deaf now, his ears ringing. He checked the AK. Empty. But he still had the bayonet.
“Come on, you bastards!” he screamed. “Come on!”
More men came over the wall, and he stabbed them in a frenzy. He ripped and tore at them with his bare hands. He shot them with their own guns.
A man came over what was left of the wall. He wasn’t a man—he was a boy. He had no beard. He had no need of a razor. His skin was smooth and dark. His brown eyes were round in terror. He clutched his hands to his chest.
Luke faced off with this child—the kid was maybe fourteen. There were more coming behind him. They slid and crashed over the barrier. The passageway was choked with corpses.
Why are his hands like that?
Luke knew why. He was a suicide bomber.
“Grenade!” Luke shouted, even if no one was alive to hear him.
He dove backward, digging under one body, then another. There were so many, he crawled and crawled, burrowing toward the center of the Earth, putting a blanket of dead men between him and the boy.
BOOOM!
He heard the explosion, muffled by the bodies, and he felt the heat wave. He heard the shrieks of the next wave of dying. But then another explosion came, and another.
And another.
Luke was fading from the concussions. Maybe he was hit. Maybe he was dying. If this was to die, it wasn’t so bad. There was no pain.
He thought of the kid—skinny teenager, wide around the middle like a barrel-chested man. The kid was wearing a suicide vest.
He thought of Rebecca, round with child.
Darkness took him.
At some point, the sun had risen, but there was no warmth in it. The fighting had stopped somehow—he couldn’t remember when, or how, it had ended. The ground was rugged and hard. There were dead bodies everywhere. Skinny, bearded men lay all over the ground, with eyes wide and staring.
Luke. His name was Luke.
He was sitting on a pile of bodies. He had awakened beneath them, and he had crawled out from under them like a snake.
They were piled here like cordwood. He didn’t like sitting on them, but it was convenient. It was high enough that it gave him a view down the hillside through the remains of the sandbag wall, but it kept him low enough that no one but a very good sniper could probably get a shot at him.
The Taliban didn’t have a lot of very good snipers. Some, but not many, and most of the Taliban around here appeared to be dead now.
Nearby, he spotted one crawling back down the hill, trailing a line of blood like the trail of slime that follows a snail. He should really go out there and kill that guy, but he didn’t want to risk being in the open.
Luke glanced down at himself. He didn’t look good. His chest was painted red. He was soaked in the blood of dead men. His body trembled from hunger, and from exhaustion. He stared out at the surrounding mountains, just coming into view as the day brightened. It was really a pretty day. This was beautiful country.
How many more were out there? How long before they came?
He shook his head. He didn’t know. It didn’t really matter. Any at all would probably be too many.
Martinez was sprawled on his back nearby, low in the trench. He was crying. He couldn’t move his legs. He’d had enough. He wanted to die. Luke realized he had been tuning out Martinez for a while now.
“Stone,” he said. “Hey, Stone. Hey! Kill me, man. Just kill me. Hey, Stone! Listen to me, man!”
Luke was numb.
“I’m not going to kill you, Martinez. You’re gonna be all right. We’re going to get out of here, and the docs are gonna patch you up. So give it a rest… okay?”
Nearby, Murphy was sitting on an outcropping of rock, staring into space. He wasn’t even trying to take cover.
“Murph! Get down here. You want a sniper to put a bullet in your head?”
Murphy turned and looked at Luke. His eyes were just… gone. He shook his head. An exhalation of air escaped from him. It sounded almost like laughter. He stayed right where he was.
As Luke watched, Murphy took out a pistol. It was incredible that he still had a gun on him. Luke had been fighting with his bare hands, rocks, and sharp objects for…
He didn’t know how long.
Murphy put the barrel of the gun to the side of his head, eyes on Luke the entire time. He pulled the trigger.
Click.
He pulled the trigger several more times.
Click, click, click, click… click.
“Out,” he said.
He threw the gun away. It clattered down the hillside.
Luke watched the gun bounce away. It seemed to go on for longer than he would ever expect. Eventually, it slid to a stop in a scree of loose rocks. He looked at Murphy again. Murphy just sat there, looking at nothing.
If more Taliban came, they were done. Neither one of these guys had much fight left in them, and the only weapon Stone still had was the bent bayonet in his hand. For a moment, he thought idly about picking through some of these dead guys for weapons. He didn’t know if he had the strength left to stand. He might have to crawl instead.
A line of black insects appeared in the sky far away. He knew what they were in an instant. Helicopters. United States military helicopters, probably Black Hawks. The cavalry was coming. Luke didn’t feel good about that, or bad.
He felt nothing at all.