NINETEEN
Harruck had never mentioned this issue to me, and
I later found out that he’d known all along and had simply been
hiding it. The news was simply another of the burdens he’d carried
on his shoulders, and it made me understand—at least a bit more—why
his stress level was constantly in the red zone.
I ran down the alley and reached the back of the
crowd. Treehorn and Shilmani were just behind me.
There, in the middle of the road, was a brown sack,
but when I got closer, I realized that a person was covered in that
sack and buried up to the shoulders. The person was struggling, so
I had to assume the hands were tied behind the back.
“Boss, is that what I think it is?” cried
Treehorn.
“Aw, jeez.” I gasped.
A circle had been drawn in the road around the
victim, and no one stepped inside that circle. From the periphery,
they threw their stones, occasionally hitting the person in the
head. Each time a stone made direct contact, the crowd
roared.
“I did not want you to see this,” said Shilmani.
“And I did not realize it would happen so soon. We would have
planned the meeting another day.”
“Why is this happening?” I asked as the crowd
chanted God is great and my mouth fell open.
“This is retribution for her sins.”
“Her sins? What the hell did she do to deserve
this?”
Shilmani didn’t answer. A rock crashed into the
woman’s head, and the sack began to stain with blood. The crowd
grew even louder, and a blood frenzy now widened the eyes of those
nearest the circle’s edge. The women hurtled their rocks even more
fiercely than the men. I started forward, but Shilmani grabbed
me—as did Treehorn.
“If you interfere, you will commit a crime,” said
Shilmani.
“Okay, okay,” I said, fighting for breath and
relaxing my arms so they could release me.
“Her hands are tied behind her back, but if she can
escape the circle, she will be free,” Shilmani explained. “She’s
only buried up to her shoulders to give her a fighting chance. Men
are buried up to their heads.”
“You didn’t answer my question. What did she
do?”
“She had sex outside marriage.”
“I knew it,” said Treehorn. “These women can’t do
anything without getting punished for it.”
“We’d have to kill most American women if this were
our rule,” I said.
“I know. It seems you Americans engage in this
behavior quite a bit.”
“It just happens,” I said.
Shilmani made a face. “I still don’t understand how
he convinced her to do it.”
“You mean the guy?”
He hardened his voice. “Yes, the American soldier
from your camp.”
I considered going to Harruck’s office and telling
him what I’d seen, but I realized the men needed something from me.
And I felt badly for them. They’d been lying around the billet all
day, just wondering what the hell was happening.
Ramirez had come back from the hospital with some
antacid to soothe his stomach. He was lying in his bunk with his
arm draped over his eyes.
I called the group forward, and after a few
seconds, he was the last to gather around.
“Got a couple things going on. We’ll be back up in
the mountains tonight. Engineering op. We’re going to blow those
tunnels.”
“Hoo-ah,” shouted Brown and Smith in unison.
“I want to do everything we can to avoid engaging
the enemy. They don’t call us the Ghosts for nothing. We’ll show
them why.”
Hume raised his hand. “Any word back on the HERF
guns yet? Do we know if they’ve got more?”
“I know the spook is working on something, and we
have to assume they have more. Nolan, we still got two spare
Cross-Coms, right?”
“That’s right.”
“Good, I’ll be taking one and Joey’s got the
other.”
Ramirez frowned at me.
He was still in command of Bravo team. I wasn’t
going to change anything. I’d decided that my paranoia should have
no effect on the way I ran my team. And in retrospect, I think that
was a good decision.
Up to a point.
“Something else going on you should know about.” I
looked to Treehorn, who just sighed. “The water guy? Burki? He
wants us to kill Zahed. Seems the fat bastard screwed him over on
the deal with the new well, so that guy, the translator guy
Shilmani, is going to help us set up a meeting with Zahed.”
“Whoa, whoa, whoa,” said Brown. “How’s that going
to work? You don’t plan to go in there alone, do you?”
“Shilmani says he’s got a cousin who’s a courier
for Zahed. I’ll probably be going in with him.”
“And when does this happen?” asked Nolan, wincing
over the whole idea.
“Pretty soon, I’m guessing.”
“Then we need to work something out. The HERF guns
don’t affect the chips in our bodies, so we can still track
you.”
“You mean in case they take me prisoner.”
“So let me get this straight,” said Ramirez.
“You’re going to walk into a meeting, put a bullet in Zahed’s head,
and expect to walk out of there alive?”
“With a little help from you guys.”
The group chuckled. Ramirez’s expression remained
deadpan. “Boss, I think it’s crazy.”
“Couple other things,” I said. “Higher’s planning a
big offensive to sweep through Sangsar. They’re using Warris’s
capture as an excuse. It’ll take them a couple of weeks to work out
the logistics, so we need to drag our boots on Freddy’s rescue . .
.”
“Hey,” Treehorn began, throwing up his hands. “I
got no problem with that, since that punk wants to burn us
all.”
“All right. Let’s go over the maps, plan the
detonation points, and be ready to roll for tonight.”
The call came in while I was finishing up dinner
in the mess hall. I remember stepping out there, looking at the
mountains haloed by the setting sun, and thinking, This is it.
This is the death call.
That was a very long walk to the comm center.
I was feeling numb by the time they guided me over
to the cubicle, and my brother’s voice sounded strangely
absent.
“Hello, Scott, this is your brother
Nicholas.”
He was always so formal, so well educated and
scholarly. He always talked about being articulate. I didn’t want
him articulate at that moment. I wanted him sobbing.
“Hey, Nick.” My voice was already cracking.
“Dad passed away about an hour ago.”
“Okay.”
“Can you come home? We can delay the funeral for
you, but I’ll need to know as soon as possible.”
Before I could answer him, a commotion behind me
caught my attention. I told him to hang on.
A group of officers and NCOs was gathered around a
flat screen, where a videotape was being played on the Al Jazeera
network.
There was Fred Warris, dressed like a Taliban and
sitting cross-legged with a group of Taliban fighters standing
behind him. I couldn’t hear what he was saying, but that didn’t
matter.
I told Nick I’d call him back. I drifted outside
like a zombie and just stood near the door. I closed my eyes and
thought of my father’s workshop, filled with the heavenly scent of
sawdust. And I pictured his handmade coffin propped up on those
sawhorses. I was also certain he’d left detailed instructions about
his funeral.
I could take the emergency leave. Just bail out on
all the bullshit. Maybe not even come back. Maybe just go AWOL and
let them arrest me. I was entertaining every crazy thought I could,
thinking of ways to self-destruct to hold back the tears.
My father had taught me how to be a man. I owed him
everything. He was gone.
I don’t know how long I was standing there when
Harruck and the XO rushed up and Harruck just looked at me. “Have
you heard? They put Warris on TV!”
The terms for Warris’s release, presented by the
man himself in the video, were quite simple: Stop all construction
in Senjaray. Pull the U.S. Army company out. Pay the equivalent of
five hundred thousand American dollars. Release nearly a dozen
captured Taliban fighters and leaders.
I was sitting in the comm center on a conference
video call with General Keating, Lieutenant Colonel Gordon, and
Harruck’s battalion commander.
“We’re not going to negotiate with these bastards,”
said Keating. “And I’m going to make sure we step up our timetable.
I want a full-scale raid to happen within the next seven days. I
want to make that happen. I don’t care what it takes.”
Gordon just shrugged.
Harruck’s boss was a yes man.
I shook my head in disgust.
“Mitchell, you got a problem with all this?”
“Sir, you told me I wouldn’t have any air support
for this mission, and unless that’s changed, we’ll be moving in
much too slowly with a large force. Zahed’s got spies planted all
over this district. He’ll see our ground forces coming in, and
he’ll be out of there long before they arrive. You won’t get him,
and I doubt you’ll get Warris. We need to be dropped by chopper.
Shock and awe. That’s the only way it’ll work.”
“I’d have to agree with Mitchell,” said Harruck.
“We can’t afford to blow this. We can’t afford any counterattacks
down here. We’re making great progress so far.”
I sat there, debating whether I should tell them
about Burki and my plan to have a face-to-face meeting with Zahed.
Part of me considered the idea that if I managed to bring in the
guy alive, I’d be a hero and they could call off the whole
offensive and save the taxpayers a lot of money. The other part of
me, the realist, said, no, that probably wouldn’t happen; the
offensive would go on because Keating was very upset now, and the
old man would have his blood. So nabbing Zahed wouldn’t affect that
outcome.
But I was intrigued by the idea of talking to
Zahed. Perhaps I was suicidal, but the fat man had caused so much
trouble in the area, created so many headaches, that I just
wouldn’t be satisfied until I met him in the flesh.
And if I presented that cup of soup to “the
committee,” they’d all want to pee in it, thinking it’d taste
better. A crude but accurate metaphor.
Perhaps, I quipped to myself, we should change our
name to Rogue Recon.
Then I realized once again that if I didn’t tell
them what I had in mind, we’d be digging ourselves deeper graves.
So I just took a breath and spilled the beans:
“Gentlemen, I’m in the process of setting up a
meeting with Zahed.”
“Are you serious, Mitchell?” asked Keating.
“Yes, General, I am. One of my contacts in the
village works for the water man, who wants me to kill Zahed. My
contact has a cousin who works for the fat man himself. Let me go
in there and talk to them.”
“No, not you, Mitchell,” snapped Harruck. “We’ll
send in a professional negotiator.”
I started laughing. “I’ve got the translator, and
they’re setting me up as an opium smuggler, so once I get in there,
we’ll spring the trap on Zahed. There won’t be any
negotiations.”
“Now that sounds like a plan,” said Keating. “We
don’t sit around and chat while they’re about to chop the head off
an American soldier. What do you need, Mitchell?”
I faced Harruck and the others on their screens. “I
just need to be left alone so I can do my job, sir. And I need evac
when the fireworks begin.”
Harruck was shaking his head. “General, with all
due respect, sir, don’t you think an ambush operation like this can
do more harm than good? If Mitchell fails, they’ll behead Warris on
TV, and they’ll all be gone before we can launch our offensive.
It’s a lose-lose, if you ask me.”
“We didn’t ask you, Captain. And Mitchell will not
fail.”
Keating looked at me.
I gave him a curt nod. “My team is heading up into
the mountains tonight. There’s a small cave network they’ll try to
use to get down into the valley and attack the school and police
station. We’re going to blow it up.”
“Maybe we should delay that operation until you
meet with Zahed,” said Gordon.
“Colonel, I’d prefer to take care of that first.” I
gave Gordon an emphatic look.
“All right, Captain, understood.”
I wanted to blow the caves first in case I didn’t
make it back. Maybe I was growing a soft heart, but I kept
imagining Anderson standing out there with those construction
workers and those school kids and all of them dying under a hail of
bullets. The cave network, like the bridge we’d blown, was an
avenue of approach that needed to be eliminated.
After the meeting, Harruck pulled me aside and
said, “I’ll have a Bradley and rifle squad ready for you.”
I softened my tone. “Thanks.”
“I’m sorry, Scott, but this is, as far as I’m
concerned, the beginning of the end for you.”
“Why’s that?”
“If you do get that meeting with Zahed, I don’t
think you’ll come back. I think you’re making a huge mistake. I
don’t know what this is about . . . your ego . . . you trying to
prove something to higher. You should’ve been relieved.”
“And that’s the difference between you and
me.”
“Oh, yeah?”
“Yeah. I’ve got faith in that fat old
bastard.”
“Zahed?”
“Yeah.”
“Why?”
“Because I’ve got something he wants—all that water
from the new well. He’s been cut off. He won’t like it.”
“So what you’re saying is you are going to
negotiate with him.”
“Not exactly . . .”
I grinned because I couldn’t believe I’d used those
words, but I had.