Part 26 (1/2)
It had gone from daylight to dusk to dark in a matter of five minutes, casting a cloak of invisibility around the SEALs. They cl.u.s.tered around Murdock to find out how they would attack and subdue the mercenaries holding the crash site.
”This will be a silent operation for as long as possible,” Murdock said. ”We go with our best knife men first, Rafii and Lam. They will move in ahead of our main body. The mercenaries know someone is out here, but they don't know just who we are. They'll have security out, but we hope it isn't well enough trained to do much good. Lam and Rafii have as their first jobs to eliminate that security and call us forward. Depending on what we find, we'll move in with our silenced weapons and use them if we have to.”
”How far out you figure their security is?”
Lam asked. ”In this cover, I'd say not much over thirty to forty yards at the most. They must have some sort of camp in the jungle behind the plane. We have to find it and eliminate as many of them as we can and scare the rest of them off. Let's hope they don't have any RPGs in their weapon group.”
”What about our twenties?” Jaybird asked.
”We use them only if we get surprised or they are too good for us to get inside their ranks. You all have knives. The silent approach here is best all the way around. We can't work in our usual formation. It could be one man at a time moving up in a file and then slanting off into something of an a.s.sault line. Just depends what we find, how thick the jungle is right up there, and where they have their camp.”
”When do we go in?” Rafii asked.
”We wait an hour, then start downslope on the trail into the burn area. Right there somewhere, maybe four hundred yards from the fuselage, we'll make our base camp and wait on Lam and Rafii.”
”How about a third knife man?” Prescott asked.
Murdock considered it only a moment. Prescott was good with his hands in the magic tricks. ”Yes, go. Lam is lead man, go where he indicates. All silent as h.e.l.l.”
The men moved out in a perimeter defense without being told to. It was second nature. They lay in a circle with their feet nearly touching, all facing outward with weapons loaded and ready.
”Bradford, can you set up the box?”
”Yes, sir, no problem. h.e.l.l, do it with one hand if I had to. Give me about two minutes.” Bradford pulled the SATCOM off his back, turned on the switches, and aimed the fold-out antenna until he captured the sky-roving satellite. Then he handed the hand mike to Murdock. ”All set on the channel Stroh told us to use down here.”
”Murdock to Stroh. You have your ears on?”
”On and waiting. Where you been?”
”Busy.” Murdock brought Stroh up to date on what they had found and the opposition. ”My guess is that they are mercenaries with good equipment. We're moving in on them in about an hour. We'll see how well they function in the dark.”
”How did somebody beat you to the prize?”
”Got me, Stroh. Could be one of our helpers at the hangar is more than just a maintenance man. Get rid of both of them. Don't let them hear anything you plan.”
”Right. I can do that. We've contacted your SH-60. The pilot elected to stay there overnight. He'll do a flyover at eight A.M. and contact you on the Motorola. He knows not to fly directly over the crash site.”
”We're covered. Our job now is to rout these pretenders and go in and make sure that the bomb is on the plane. It must be, or why else would thirty men go in here to protect and try to get it out? We'll talk tomorrow.”
”Take care, and don't get shot in the b.u.t.t with any of those pigmy arrows.”
Murdock closed down the set, and Bradford put it on his back and strapped it down.
A half hour later, Lam checked Rafii and Prescott. Nothing on their gear jingled or rattled. ”We'll use hand signals. Beyond about ten feet we won't be able to see each other. Use your penlight aimed away from the target for recognition of placement. Radio beeps will be two for come forward, one for wait where you are. Remember, we might lie in one position for ten minutes watching for any movement in the brush and jungle ahead.”
He stopped talking and signaled for them to move ahead. They vanished into the night and down the improvised trail, on their way to the burn swath where the aviation fuel had charred a fifty-yard path a dozen feet wide burning everything in the way.
Fifty yards from the spot where they saw the faint moonlight gleaming off the white side of the airliner, Lam stopped them. They knelt, then went p.r.o.ne and watched the jungle ahead. Lam did as he had for years. He quartered the scene, then divided it in eighths, took one sector at a time, and studied every aspect of it he could see, memorizing the position of branches and trees. When he was satisfied nothing was dangerous in one sector, he moved to the next. It was in the third square of jungle that he saw something out of place. He put his thermal imager scope on it and checked again. Yes, a man's leg and boot stuck out from a foot-thick tree. Rafii had the other imager. He looked over his part of the vegetation and brush and vines directly in front of him. Twice he saw blips on the dark screen, white figures that scurried away and out of range. Some small animal, he decided and kept looking.
Lam slithered through the moist leaf mould on the jungle floor. He went over roots, around trees, and under more brush. It took him five minutes to work to within ten feet of the leg near the tree. The foliage thinned here. Another section of rock. He moved to the near side of the tree, worked around it in the darkness, and came up soundlessly behind the sentry. The caution was not needed. The man wore a uniform cammie s.h.i.+rt and blue jean pants. He had a rifle cradled in his arms and his head rested on the tree trunk. He snored softly.
Lam grabbed the man's head from behind, jerked it backwards, and sliced his fighting knife across the man's jugular vein and his right carotid artery. The artery spurted hot blood six feet into the air each time the sentry's heart beat. Then it lessened more and more until it dribbled out. Lam let the man's lifeless body down gently to the ground and picked up his AK-47.
He touched his Motorola mike twice. It would transmit a slight beep to all the rest of the sets. It was their signal for the other two men to come forward. As he waited for them to catch up with him, Lam studied through the trees ahead. He figured he was still forty yards from the plane's c.o.c.kpit. There had to be more guards. Where were they? The scent came faint at first, and then increased until he was certain. Cigarette smoke and he was downwind. He tried to find the angle it came from, but he couldn't. He used the imager and checked the areas he could see. No white images of hot blood showed on the tube. There had been no match flare. But the smoker could have lit a new one from the old one.
Prescott slid in beside Lam, who turned, surprised. He wasn't used to men slipping up on him unnoticed. He grinned. The kid was going to be okay. He handed the thermal imager to Prescott and pointed in the areas he hadn't covered. He made smoking signs with his fingers from his mouth and Prescott nodded.
Rafii knelt on Lam's other side.
Lam studied the area just ahead of them. The land was on a gentle slope downward. Here it fell off more sharply. They were in a section beyond the burned swath. Evidently the flaming wing had broken off and gone through the air a hundred feet or more before it hit the ground and kept burning and skidding forward. The growth was spa.r.s.er here, probably from a rocky plate. A good spot for the enemy to lurk behind, waiting for someone to try to cross the fairly open s.p.a.ce.
Prescott tapped Lam on the shoulder and gave him the imager. To the left Murdock saw the white outline of a man standing, probably beside a tree. Then the white ghost vanished. He must have stepped behind the tree. Lam showed Rafii where the figure was and he held up the second imager. The ghost showed on the far side of what Lam figured had to be a tree. A long line crossed the white figure. The rifle he carried would not show white. Lam pointed to the area, and then to Rafii. The small man moved at once to the left and without a sound worked his way past some brush and to a st.u.r.dy tree with a two-foot-thick trunk. He paused and used the scanner again.
Yes, the ghostly white showed, this time moving from the dark spot forward six or eight feet and going p.r.o.ne, head up and probably looking at the spot Rafii had just left. Rafii touched the send b.u.t.ton once on his Motorola, the danger signal.
Rafii judged the distance. The ghost figure in his scope was twenty feet away, facing away at a forty-five-degree angle. Too far for a good knife throw. Rafii edged forward, this time on his belly, moving slowly and watching through the scope. When the sentry's head turned toward him, Rafii stopped and didn't even breathe. The head turned away and Rafii slid forward.
It took him five minutes to work to within ten feet of the man, who was still p.r.o.ne. Rafii had selected the knife he would throw. It had a four-inch blade and a heavy handle, one of his favorites. He could throw a knife and cut a match in half that was taped to a wall twenty feet away. Now he waited for the head to turn away from him. It did.
Rafii lifted up on his knees, c.o.c.ked the blade behind his head, and threw. The knife turned once in the air and the razorlike blade drove deeply into the p.r.o.ne figure's back. It sliced through half of the spinal column, paralyzing the man from the neck down. He croaked out a cry, and the next moment Rafii was on him, a second knife slicing cross the man's throat, stopping the cry.
Rafii touched his radio b.u.t.ton twice. He pulled out his knife and cleaned it on the dead man's s.h.i.+rt, then rolled him over. He was dressed in civvies and carried a submachine gun Rafii did not recognize. He was a dark Mexican, of Indian ancestry. Lam came up and motioned to the side, where there was more cover. The three SEALs slid behind trees and watched ahead.
Lam touched his radio. ”Murdock, move up now.”
He put Prescott twenty yards back along the cleared trail to meet the rest of the platoon. Lam and Rafii worked silently forward. Lam had held up two fingers, then gave a thumbs-down sign. Then he held up three fingers and pointed ahead. There would be at least one more guard.
The two were ten feet apart, moving slowly, sometimes crawling, sometimes walking. They went twenty yards and stopped. Ahead Lam saw the red glow of a cigarette. He motioned to Rafii, whom he could barely make out. Rafii had seen it as well. The imager showed only a hand beyond a tree or some other cover. They waited. A minute later a white figure left the tree, moved over three steps, and stopped. The legs spread and the man put one hand on his hip. He's p.i.s.sing, Lam thought. They were still ten yards from the man. Rafii waved at Lam, stood, and, moving silently through the cover, came to a tree ten feet from the man. He had finished urinating and turned back toward the tree. Rafii threw the same knife he had used before. It turned over once and the blade drove through the man's s.h.i.+rt, sliced between two ribs, and plunged three inches into the man's heart. He staggered a step, then fell forward, ramming the blade up to the hilt in his dead chest.
Both SEALs hurried up. Rafii took back his blade, wiped it on the dead man's cammie s.h.i.+rt, and looked at Lam. The scout whispered, ”Go back and meet Prescott and the rest of the platoon and bring them to this spot. Safe country. I'll work ahead. Thought I heard someone talking a minute ago. Go.”
Rafii turned, jogged back, and worked through the brush as quietly as a spirit. Lam looked forward. He could see the side of the c.o.c.kpit of the big plane. Most of it was buried deeply into the soft ground just to the side of the small stream. The water chattered softly, and gave Lam enough cover to move forward. He kept the scope up but could find no warm bodies.
He eased up another eight feet and touched the white painted side of the nose of the plane. It had broken off cleanly. The fuselage was behind it. Lam couldn't remember how far. The camp for the mercenaries would be to the right, away from the stream, slightly up the hill.
The sound of voices came again. Spanish. He couldn't catch the words. He frowned, searched the area beside the c.o.c.kpit, and then back toward where the fuselage should be. No white ghosts on the black screen.
Then he had a thought. Suppose that the mercenaries were sleeping inside the fuselage? It would have doors on both sides, they all probably broke off in the crash. There would be lots of room inside with just one nuclear bomb in there. He slipped back the way he had come, stepping across the three-foot-wide creek and waiting behind a tree.
Rafii led the group down the slope. Lam caught their movement while they were fifty yards away. When they came near him, he stepped out.
”Boo,” he said softly. ”You guys are all dead.”
Murdock stifled a chuckle. ”So, what did you find?”