Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Combat Ops (11 page)

Read Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Combat Ops Online

Authors: David Michaels

Tags: #Fiction, #Action & Adventure

BOOK: Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Combat Ops
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“So you’re JAFO.”
His was old enough and experienced enough to know the term: Just Another Fucking Observer.
“What’s happening here is a little too complex for the average military mind to grasp. I’m sure you saw the PowerPoint they made. That’s why I’m here. We’re not JAFOs. We’re specialists. You guys are just overpaid assassins. And you’re what? Oh for two on night raids now? I mean, that’s amateur crap. Really.”
“I was hoping we could share some intel, so that the next time something happens, it’ll be the last.”
“Of course you were.”
“I need to know whether or not your agency will pose any interference with my mission.”
He threw his head back and cackled at that. I just stood there.
Finally, his smile evaporated. “Joe, my agency inter feres with everything. That’s what we do.”
I envisioned myself crossing to the table, grabbing the bastard by the neck, shoving him against the wall, and saying,
If you get in my way, you’ll be on my target list.
“No help from you, then.”
He shrugged. “Have you met the provincial gover nor?”
I shook my head.
“You should. The people here want him dead more than Zahed. You want to be a hero, kill him.”
“Are you nuts?”
“Look at me, Joe. I could be sitting in a hotel room in Laughlin, going downstairs every night to gamble my ass off, drink my ass off, and have sex with a different hooker every night. But no, I’m here. Of course, I’m nuts.”
“You doing this for America?”
He gave me a sarcastic salute and said, “Apple pie, baby.”
“If I told you that I wanted to talk to Zahed, would you be able to get word back to him?”
“That might depend on what you want to discuss.” Bronco withdrew another cigarette from his breast pocket and was about to light it up when I answered:
“I want to discuss the terms of his surrender.”
He dropped his Zippo and looked up. “Dude, you are a comedian. I’m so glad you came.”
“Do you know anything about EMP disruption being used by the Taliban?”
“You’re talking
Star Trek
to me. What?”
“Weapons that disrupt electronic devices. Have you seen or heard anything about Zahed’s people using weap ons like that?”
He lit his cigarette and took a long drag. “Go home, Joe.”
I grinned crookedly. “I was kinda hoping we could be friends.”
He hoisted a brow. “Well, I do enjoy your humor and sarcasm, but to be honest, you’re pretty much screwed here . . .”
I caught up with Shilmani out near the town’s old well, which would soon run dry. He was loading water jugs onto a flatbed, and the old man behind the wheel of the idling pickup got out when he spotted me.
Mirab Mir Burki wore cream-colored robes with a long white sash draped over his shoulders. His turban sat very low on his head and drooped at the same angles as his eyes. Bushy gray brows furrowed as he cut off my approach. “If you’re going to ask all the same questions, then don’t bother,” he snapped in Pashto.
“I’m not here to interview you,” I said in English.
He looked to Shilmani, who set down his jug and translated quickly.
“What do you want?” asked Burki.
“They’re going to build you a new well,” I said.
Burki answered quickly in broken English. “They talk and talk. But no well.”
“They will dig it soon.”
“You are Captain Harruck’s friend?”
I gave a slow if somewhat tentative nod, then said, “I’m very worried about what will happen to the new well, though. We must protect it from the Taliban.”
Shilmani translated, and Burki suddenly threw up his hands and climbed back in the car.
I looked at Shilmani. “What did I say?”
Shilmani took a deep breath. “He doesn’t want you to protect the well from the Taliban, remember?”
“Yeah,” I groaned. “Now I do. I’m in a difficult situa tion right now. If I can just remove Zahed, then maybe your boss can negotiate for water rights with the next guy.” “He’s very upset about the bridge. We have to drive
fifteen kilometers to cross at the next one.” “Why do you need to cross?”
“To make our deliveries in Sangsar.” “To the Taliban.”
He glanced away. “Scott, I did not contact any of your men. Why are you here?”
“I need you to help me find Zahed.”
“It’s too dangerous for me right now—especially with the bridge destroyed.”
Burki started hollering for Shilmani to finish up. I raised a palm. “It’s okay. For now. When you’re ready.”
His eyes grew glassy before he looked away and fin ished loading his last jug.
My boots dragged through the sand as I crossed back to the Hummer.
I thought about that little girl who’d been raped and kept pinning that on Zahed so he could remain the “bad guy” in my head. But then I heard Harruck saying 
that maybe she’d been raped without Zahed’s knowl edge. Maybe he wasn’t linked to a lot of the crime going on. Maybe he would, in the end, do much more for the people than the government could.
After biting my lips and swearing once more, I hopped into the Hummer, and the private took the wheel. “Where to now, sir?”
“They got a bar around here?” He laughed. “Uh, no, sir.”
I smelled something. Gasoline. Burning. I looked at the private. “Get out!”
TEN
I opened the door and looked back to spot a burning rag stuffed into our open fuel tank. Both the private and I ran from the truck just as, in the next second, the tank rup tured under a muffled explosion and flames began rush ing up the sides. There was no heaving of the HMMWV off the ground, no cinema-like burst of flames, but black smoke and a thick stench spread quickly as I drew my sidearm and scanned the row of houses behind us.
There he was. A kid, maybe eighteen. Running. “Come on!” I shouted to the private.
Off to my left, Shilmani and Burki were already on their way off, but the truck stopped. Shilmani bailed out and started after us.
The private, whose name I’d already forgotten, and I 
charged down the street after the wiry guy, who sprinted like a triathlete. We reached the next intersection, glanced around at all the laundry spanning the alleyways, and the kid was gone.
“I’m sorry, sir,” said the private. “Yeah. Call it in.”
As the private got on his radio, I walked back toward Shilmani, who threw his hands in the air and yelled, “It won’t be a big attack now. It’ll be this. Every day. Day after day. Until they wear you down.”
“I get it,” I answered. “But I’m pretty tough. We’re tough. They don’t torch one Hummer and expect me to go home. No way, pal.”
“This is not the war you expected. This will never be the war you expected.” He spun on his heel and jogged back toward Burki and the truck, now sagging under the weight of water jugs.
We left the alley and returned to the small crowd watching our truck burn. That was two Hummers I’d lost since coming to Senjaray. I was cursed.
The private told me at least three other patrols had also been attacked in a coordinated effort by Taliban residing inside the village. Shilmani was, of course, right. We’d be harassed and terrorized, even as we tried to help.
I was in my quarters, reviewing all the data Army intel ligence had gathered from the aforementioned Predator drones, when Harruck arrived. He stood in the doorway with the XO at his shoulder.
“Next time you head into town, I’ll need you with a more heavily armed escort,” he said tersely.
“Next time I’ll ride my bike. Then again, they might try to blow that up, too.”
“Well, there it is, Scott. Before you got here, my patrols were attacked two, maybe three times at the most. Now it’s begun.”
“You know, I actually considered what you said— putting the word out to Zahed. But I can’t even find a way to do that.”
“You can’t stop trying.”
“I want to meet with Kundi and the provincial governor—what the hell’s his name again?”
“You mean the district governor. Naimut Gul,” he said. “And they call the meeting a
shura
. And there’s no reason for you to meet with either of them. I’m taking care of all that, and within the next week I’ll have a document signed by all twelve elders.”
“You going to get Zahed to sign it, too?”
He just glared at me. “I assume you spoke to Bronco?” “You think I wouldn’t?”
Harruck grinned weakly. “He’s no help. I’ve already tried. His buddies in Kandahar handle our prisoners, and that’s about the extent of it. I think they’re working on something with the opium trade that goes way over Zahed’s head.”
“Have you tried tailing him?”
“Who? Bronco? I don’t have the resources.”
“I do. Maybe I’m not your biggest problem here, Simon. Maybe he is . . .”
“The agency’s got its own agenda, no doubt. I even heard a rumor about the NSA having field agents out here, but I think my mission is too damned simple to be on their radar.”
“You never know . . .”
I spent about a week laying low and examining imagery from the drones, trying to pick out Zahed among the thousands of people living in his village. Twice, I’d thought I’d seen him in the bazaar, but I couldn’t be sure. A half dozen Army intelligence analysts back home were doing the same thing, but I always thought a guy behind a desk somewhere in Virginia might not notice the same things as a grunt in the sand.
My Ghosts continued to pose as regular Army and help with defenses along the defile leading down into Senjaray. Harruck’s patrols were harassed by gunfire a few more times, but no one was hurt, and the attackers, after firing a few rounds, fled before they could be caught. I contended that teenagers sympathetic to the Taliban were to blame.
Anderson, along with the Army Corps of Engineers and a half dozen other aid groups, began moving in building materials and breaking ground for the school and the police station, which would be constructed directly north of the defile so that locals could best defend them from attack.
Our replacement Cross-Coms arrived, but I was hesi tant to have the guys use them until we pinpointed the source of the disruption.
I assigned Ramirez and Beasley to maintain surveil lance on Bronco, who’d been spending a lot of time with landowner Kundi, water man Burki, and a few more of the elders from Senjaray and the other towns in the dis trict.
Bronco hadn’t gone over to Sangsar, as I suspected he would. Ramirez told me that the engineers had assessed the damage we’d caused to the bridge and estimated it would take four to six months to complete repairs. We wouldn’t be in country long enough to see that happen, I assured him.
One night I took a four-man team into the mountains to run some long-range surveillance via Cypher drone and make another attempt to lure out the Taliban and their disruption devices. Nolan flew the drone in low enough for them to have heard and seen it, but there was no response.
“Ghost Lead, this is Jenkins. Suggest we move in past the wall, over.”
The guys were trying to goad me into a close recon of the village, but they always did that. They’d grown rest less and longed for the sound of gunfire. They didn’t need good intel or just cause—just a clear night and full magazines. I was supposed to think responsibly.
“Negative. Hold position.”
“You’re not listening to Harruck, are you?” Ramirez whispered to me from his position at my elbow.
“No reason to swat the hornets yet,” I said.
“I don’t know, boss. Something’s gotta give.” I glanced over at him; he was right.
The next morning, Marcus Brown woke me from a sound sleep. There was trouble out in the old poppy field where the Army engineers had proposed to drill the next well.
Kundi was there, causing a big ruckus, as were Har ruck, Anderson, and a half dozen other engineers and construction supervisors.
Brown and I drove out there, and Harruck pulled me aside and told me I “wasn’t involved.”
“That’s fine. So I’ll just watch. And listen,” I told him, my tone making it clear that I wasn’t going any where.
“So what’s the bottom line?” one of the Army engi neers asked Kundi.
“That’s it,” said Kundi, who was waving his hand over the broad area within which the drilling would occur. About fifty yards to the south lay the base of the foothills—a mottled brown moonscape of pockmarks and stones rising up toward orange-colored peaks. “You cannot put the well here. Over there, on the other side of the field, yes.”
“But we’ll have to drill a lot deeper over there,” said the engineer.
Kundi shook his head.
“Why not? Is this some kind of sacred ground?”
Kundi frowned and looked over to Burki, who in turn cast a quizzical glance at Shilmani, whom they’d obviously 
brought along to translate. He did, and Kundi nodded vigorously. “Yes, yes. God is here!”
I turned to Brown. “You know what God wants? He wants ground-penetrating radar and metal detectors all over this area.”
Brown nodded. “Hallelujah.”
A couple of days later, Harruck caught up with me in the mess hall and wanted an explanation for my request to have a team go out into the field with radar units and metal detectors. I’d had to put in those requests through regular Army channels, Gordon had told me, so Har ruck’s interference came as little surprise.
“Kundi’s hiding something out there,” I said.
“So what if he is?” Harruck asked. “If we instigate him, the agreement goes south.”
“We need to have a look.”
“We’re telling him we don’t trust him if we got guys sweeping the ground out there.”
“Tell him I lost my watch.”
“Don’t be an ass, Scott. Who knows why he doesn’t want a well over there? Maybe he plans to grow cannabis there, plant cherry trees, who knows? So we move the well to the other side of the field. No big deal. Drill a little deeper. If he’s got a bone buried—or an opium stash—out there, I don’t want to know about it. Not right now, anyway.”

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