by Adam Baker
‘Okay,’ he shouted. ‘Let’s go.’
Slow motion:
Guy steps out of a doorway and shoulders an RPG. Flash. Billowing back-blast. Streaking projectile. Lucy screaming ‘Get Down!’ Cortez looking at her like ‘What the fuck?’ The grenade hits him between the shoulder blades and suddenly there is nothing left of the CO but pink mist.
It rained meat.
RPG guy stepped from the doorway again. He hurriedly clipped a fresh sabot into the smoking barrel and shouldered the weapon. A young, bearded guy in baggy trousers and white shirt. Lucy shot him through the left eye and blew out the back of his skull. He was thrown clean out of his flip-flops.
A compadre ducked out of the doorway and snatched up the RPG.
The driver got out of the Humvee and looked at scraps of wet muscle draped over the hood and windshield. Shock. Paralysis.
Lucy ran across the street. She grabbed him by the collar of his tac vest. His name patch said DANVER.
‘Specialist. Did you radio it in?’
‘No. Yes.’
‘You have to get it together. Every mobbed-up Sunni in this quarter of the city will be heading this way.’
‘We can’t leave the Corp.’
Lucy glanced around. Scorched flak jacket and ribs beneath the Humvee. Arms and legs in the street. The corporal’s head lay in the sewer trench, still wearing a K-pot helmet. Pooled blood and rainwater.
‘We do not have the time to police this shit up.’
Crack of AK fire. Muzzle flash from a high window. Dirt kicked up around their feet. They took shelter behind the Humvee.
‘Contact,’ screamed Danver. ‘Fire for effect.’
A marine squirmed through the roof hatch of the Humvee, racked the .50 cal and swept walls and windows with heavy fire. The vehicle rocked on its suspension. Jackhammer roar. The weapon ejected a stream of smoking brass. He pulverised balconies and blew craters in cinder block.
Toon and Amanda joined Lucy behind the Humvee and fired full auto up the street. Four-second burst. Reload. Rally shout:
‘Like it?’
‘Love it.’
A kid ducked out of a doorway and spray-fired his AK, so green he closed his eyes and looked away as the weapon bucked in his hands. Amanda dropped him double-tap: efficient centre-of-mass kill shots that shook him like hammer blows.
Another kid jumped from an alleyway. Distant shout:
‘Allahu Akbar…’
Toon stepped out from behind the Humvee. Bullets spitting dirt at his feet. He selected full auto and ripped the kid’s chest open. The kid fell dead. Toon dropped the spent mag and wedged a fresh clip in the receiver. Full auto. He made the dead kid dance.
Lucy dragged Toon to cover.
‘You fucking idiot. Trying to get killed?’
Huang and Voss took flanking positions in doorways and guarded the rear.
‘How many we got?’ shouted Toon. ‘How many shooters?’
‘Two. Three. End of the street.’
Two shooters at a window seventy yards down the street. Amateurs. Spray-fire. She waited for a reload lull. Lucy popped single shots, blowing chunks out of the windowsill. Suppressive fire. She felt calm. A flow state. This was where she belonged.
The last two rounds in each mag were red-tip tracer to alert she was running low. She ejected the clip, pulled a fresh thirty-round STANAG mag from a vest pouch and slapped it into the receiver.
Danver dragged a backpack from the cab. He crouched behind the Humvee and worked the radio.
‘Tell them we are by the old telephone exchange,’ shouted Lucy.
‘All call signs, this is India One, heavy contact, taking RPG and sustained fire. Grid: niner, six, two, five…’
The windshield took hits but didn’t break. Spider web cracks in the ballistic glass.
Bullets splashed mud and rainwater.
‘JTAC says stay put and dig in. The Quick Reaction Force are staging at Camp Freedom. We should have air cover in ten minutes. Mechanised exfil in twenty.’
‘This is nuts. We have to pull the fuck back, get out of this enfilade.’
‘RPG,’ screamed Amanda.
The guy stepped out of an alley. Amanda shot him in the gut as he pulled the trigger. Flash. Billowing blast of rocket efflux. Streaking projectile.
The grenade punched through the windshield and blew out the command Humvee. Lucy threw herself down and lay in the mud. She hid her face from the scalding pressure wave, the supersonic corona of metal and glass.
She struggled to her feet like a boxer trying to beat the count. Concussed. Deafened. She tongued a tooth. She had lost a filling. She wiped blood from her nose with a gloved hand.
She grabbed Danver by his tac-vest and pulled him upright.
Debris imbedded in the road. Jagged shards of metal dug into walls, coiling smoke. Acrid stench of cordite.
The gunner rolled off the roof, legs and hair on fire. Lucy slapped out the flames, seized his collar and dragged him across the street.
A volley of AK fire. Bullets blew rock chips from a nearby wall.
Lucy kicked open a door and pulled the injured man inside, Danver on her heels. Toon and Amanda followed closely behind her, laying down fire.
A shuttered hair salon. Big mirrors. Beautician chairs. Wigs and hair extensions hung from the wall like scalps.
‘Go firm,’ she shouted into her radio. ‘Huang, we need you.’
They lay cover fire as Huang sprinted down the street.
Huang unzipped his trauma kit. He cut away the guy’s tattered pants and wriggled on Nitrile gloves. He swabbed the wounds with Betadine and pressed burn gel dressings on weeping flesh. He checked the kid over, patted him down for wounds.
‘Fucker’s veins are collapsing. Shrapnel. Must be an internal haemorrhage somewhere.’
The gunner fumbled at his groin.
‘Don’t worry,’ said Huang. ‘You haven’t lost your dick.’
Huang pulled his bayonet from a belt sheath and sawed at the injured man’s clothes.
The soldier trembled and arched his back. Grand mal.
‘Can’t you give him something?’
‘Blood pressure is too low for morphine. You. Danver. Help me find the bleed.’
Voss ran through the doorway, slammed against a wall and slid to the floor. He was panting. He dropped a spent magazine and slapped a fresh clip into the receiver.
‘More of them by the minute. We can’t stay here, boss.’
Crackle of gunfire. Lucy crouched in the doorway. She gulped from her canteen. The Humvee was ablaze. Ammunition cooking off. Pistol rounds popped like corn. .50 cal rounds discharged with a heavy thud. The street filled with the sour stench of ignition.
‘Were there phosphor grenades in that thing?’
‘A few,’ said Danver.
‘The SUVs are starting to burn.’
‘Where’s the money?’
‘Fuck the money.’
‘We should throw a strobe.’
‘No need,’ said Lucy. ‘Choppers will see the smoke.’
Bright arterial blood bubbling from a hole in the injured man’s belly.
‘Smells like shit,’ said Danver.
‘Gut wound,’ said Huang. ‘Intestinal bleed. The guy is pretty messed up. We need those fucking Bradleys.’
Lucy glimpsed movement in the lead Suburban. Private Rubin, frozen with fear, money bag in his lap.
‘Ah fuck.’
The hood of the SUV was enveloped in flame. The tyres were ablaze. Burning oil and brake fluid trickled into the gutter. Rubin was starting to nod on the back seat, overcome by fumes.
Lucy gripped her rifle and prepared to sprint to the SUV. The wooden doorframe beside her exploded. She fell backward into the salon and rolled for cover. She pulled a shard of wood out of her cheek.
‘Sniper. He’s on the roof directly across the street. Mandy, lay suppressing fire. Brass him up. Toon, get Rubin out the car.’
‘And you?’
&n
bsp; ‘I’m going to take this fucker down.’
Three-count.
Amanda ducked out the doorway and directed burst-fire at the parapet across the street.
Toon ran to the SUV. He shouldered the money bag and pulled Rubin clear.
Lucy ran across the street and kicked in a door. Some kind of trashy boutique. She toppled mannequins as she ran for the stairs. Three flights. A ladder to a roof hatch. Lucy paused to catch her breath. A sudden wave of too-old-for-this-shit. Her hands were shaking.
She shook out cramps and climbed the ladder. She prodded the hatch open with the muzzle of her rifle.
She lunged up and out. She rolled clear and lay prone.
A wide, flat roof slick with rain. A rusting satellite dish. A couple of air-con units. A water tank. Thick smoke from burning vehicles in the street below. The bitter stink of melting plastic.
Lucy got to her feet dripping rain. She walked along the parapet. A young kid wrestling to reload a massive Dragnov rifle. He looked twelve, thirteen years old.
A gap between buildings. A thirty-foot drop into a garbage-strewn alley. She ran, and vaulted the chasm.
Lucy’s boot clinked spent shell cases. The kid looked round. They stared at each other.
‘Drop it,’ shouted Lucy.
It broke the spell. The kid struggled to work the rifle bolt.
‘Drop the fucking gun.’
The kid chambered the weapon and raised it. Lucy shot him in the chest. A tracer round pierced straight through him like a streak of laser light.
He lay on his back. He wiped rain from his eyes.
She could hear the thrum of incoming choppers. AH-6 Little Bird gun ships ready to lay suppressing fire at six thousand rounds a minute.
She knelt beside the kid. She examined the scorched wound.
‘Can you hear me? Can you understand English?’
The kid smiled. Blood bubbled between his teeth.
‘Fucking whore. Fucking American whore. You bad luck. You die soon.’
She grabbed the kid by his shirt and pulled him to his feet. He drooled blood and saliva. He pulled burnt dollars from the ripped chest-pocket of Lucy’s flak jacket.
He held up the money.
‘My god is greater than your god.’
Lucy threw him over the parapet. He fell three storeys into the wreckage of the burning Humvee, and was lost in flame.
She crouched on the roof and picked wet dollars from rainwater puddles.
Midnight. The Al-Rasheed Hotel
Lucy and her crew in their suite. The room was furnished with leather armchairs and lawn furniture stolen from the Scheherazade Bar on the roof. Stars and stripes nailed to the wall with a couple of bayonets.
A mortar attack had blown the power. A random shell fired over the Zone’s seventeen-foot blast wall had taken out a pylon. The room was lit by candlelight.
The team had stripped down to T-shirts and shorts.
‘Hey,’ said Amanda. ‘I saw this marine sniper on TV the other night. Reporter asked what he felt each time he killed a guy.’
‘What did he say?’
‘Recoil.’
Lucy smiled.
‘Wish I could sleep,’ said Lucy.
‘I got Ambien. Might have some Motrin.’
Amanda fanned herself with a magazine. Her good looks uglified by heavy tattoos and a nose stud.
‘I popped three bombers,’ said Lucy. ‘And NyQuil. Tripping my arse off. Too humid. Just can’t sleep in this heat.’
‘Hear that?’
The distant sound of guys bellowing ‘Living on a Prayer’.
‘Bechtel guys making their own fun until the power’s back on.’
Lucy pulled a fresh Michelob from an ice bucket and ran the cold bottle across her forehead.
Huang, Toon and Voss were asleep on the floor, weapons and flak jackets propped against the wall.
Lucy and Amanda sat in facing armchairs. Money and pills on the table. Half-eaten flatbread and lamb kebab.
Rain lashed the window.
‘Did you see Toon?’ asked Lucy. ‘Did you see him walk into line-of-fire?’
Amanda shrugged. She swigged vodka. ‘We’re coming apart. All of us. My ears are shot. Ringing. It never stops.’
‘I think we’ve used up our luck,’ said Lucy. ‘Playing Russian roulette each time we roll out Assassin’s Gate.’
‘I’ve been broke. I don’t want to be broke any more.’
Amanda’s dad kicked her out when she was seventeen. She slept in a car for a year. Summer. Winter. Parked each night in the lot of a Holiday Inn.
‘Tell me about the guy.’
‘It was a prisoner transport,’ said Amanda. ‘An old guy. Ex-Republican Guard. He told me about a convoy. A bunch of military vehicles escorting an armoured truck. A shipment of stuff taken from the vaults beneath the National Museum days before Baghdad got hammered by Tomahawks and looted to shit. Said they took the truck way out into the desert. Said it was still there.’
‘What was in the truck?’
‘Gold. Lots of gold.’
‘Where is this guy?’
‘Abu Ghraib.’
‘Do you trust him?’
‘I don’t trust anybody.’
A table lamp flickered on and glowed steady.
‘Hey.’
The room powered up. The rising hum of air-con. A beep from the wall phone. A click as the TV returned to standby.
‘Let’s talk to the guy,’ said Lucy. ‘Hear what he has to say.’
She closed her eyes and basked in the breeze as the ceiling fan stirred the air.
TOP SECRET SPECIAL HANDLING NO FORM
Central Intelligence Agency
Directorate of Operations, Near East Division
Doc ID: 575JJUFG
Page 01/1
08/21/05
MEMORANDUM TO: Project Lead, D.Ops
SUBJECT: Spektr
Colonel,
JABRIL JAMADI has been separated from former regime elements currently interned at JSOC’s temporary HUMIT screening facility at Balad, and is now held in solitary confinement at Abu Ghraib, Tier Four. I believe, sooner or later, he will inadvertently reveal the precise location of our objective at the SPEKTR site.
We will continue covert electronic surveillance of his cell. We have a listening device with an independent power source wired into the light fitting. We monitor visitation requests. We have resources available to track his movements following the authorisation of his release. I feel this subterfuge is likely to prove more efficacious than rendition to our black sites in Egypt or Syria. JAMADI has so far proved impervious to standard interrogation techniques. I suggest we allow him to make contact with confederates outside the prison. We should look for an opportunity to turn him loose without arousing his suspicions. I am confident he will lead us to our objective.
R. Koell
Field Officer
CA Special Proj, Baghdad
Jabril
Abu Ghraib detention facility, twenty miles west of Baghdad
‘The Place of Ravens’. Saddam’s grim Lubianka. Site of torture and summary execution.
The site was divided into three zones:
‘The Hard Site’. The prison itself. A square mile of bleak cell blocks and courtyards. A concrete perimeter wall, high as a cliff face. Pylon floodlights and panopticon watch-towers at each corner. Cells used by coalition forces to isolate high-value detainees for interrogation by military intelligence and the CIA.
Camp Ganci. An adjacent tent city surrounded by razor wire and wooden guard towers. Home to prisoners accused of Iraqi-on-Iraqi crimes such as car theft, rape and looting.
Camp Vigilant. Home to ex-Ba’ath party officials and prisoners accused of attacking coalition forces. Holding pen for those likely to be tried for crimes against humanity and profiteering.
Lucy slowed the bullet-scarred GMC as she approached the blockhouse. Multiple checkpoints and blast barriers. Coils of concertina wire.
> She lowered the side window and got a face full of rain. She flashed her provisional authority pass at an MP in a poncho. A hick reservist with a German shepherd on a leash. He checked his rain-sodden clipboard. He ticked Lucy and Amanda, then signalled the main gate.
The reception hall. Empty holding cells lined with wooden benches. Manacle rings set in the concrete floor.
Lucy shook rain from her prairie coat. Amanda slapped rain from her hat.
They badged a guard behind ballistic bank-teller glass and signed the log book. They cleared their weapons and passed them across the counter. They were patted down and scanned with a detector wand. They handed over their phones.
A big sign on the wall:
STRICTLY NO PHOTOGRAPHY
They clipped visitor tags to their lapels.
A young MP introduced himself.
‘Staff Sergeant Castillo.’
His rank and name strip were blanked out with duct tape in case prisoners used ex-pat contacts in the US to target family members for blackmail or reprisal.
They handed Castillo a form. Justice Ministry. Permission to interrogate a detainee. Cost them a box of Dominican Cohibas to get it stamped.
He consulted a clipboard.
‘Jabril Jamadi. A weird one. Guy walked out of the desert half dead. Picked up by a foot patrol. They held him at Balad for a while. Speaks very good English. We call him Jeeves. We’ve been holding him at the hard site while we enquired into his background.’
‘Can we talk to him?’
‘If he were an intel target, absolutely not. But his dossier is totally empty. He’s got prints, a mugshot and a magistrate number. We’ve got nothing on him. He’s a non-person. MI say they have a feeling he’s senior Ba’ath. He matters. He’s a player. But they can’t place him anywhere in the party power structure. Sooner or later we’ll have to hand him to the locals. Maybe they can beat something out of him.’
Castillo turned a key and pulled back a barred gate.
‘The lights are out, I’m afraid. Rain. Something blew.’
Castillo led them through the prison. They each held yellow cyalume above their heads.
Dank corridors. Papers scattered on the floor. Pervading odour of sewage.