Child’s play was that woman lying to this fat, greedy sailor. But something more, something murky, lay beneath the surface. Yusuf looked forward to meeting this scientist and prying the truth out of her personally.
“And she was willing to be hijacked to stop it?”
“Strong woman.”
“That qumayo will need to be. And you, my friend. You are Russian. You would do this to your own land?”
“I am poor Russian. That is different land.”
“So you were willing to be hijacked and bring your entire crew along. For money.”
“Yes.”
“Believe me, I understand what a poor man will do.”
Yusuf set the point of the knife beneath Grisha’s chin. He tilted the officer’s head backward, making him stare down his own cheeks out of scared eyes.
“You will ransom yourself. You will pay me two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.”
Yusuf lifted the tip, putting the officer on tiptoes. A crimson drop ran down the blade.
“Go back inside and sit with the men you’ve deceived. I will let you go for money. I don’t know what they will ask.”
Yusuf lowered the dagger. The officer staggered to the wheel-house.
Suleiman came out of the bridge. Yusuf sent the guard inside. He would speak with his cousin privately.
“The captain,” Suleiman said, “has found his traitor. What did you find?”
Yusuf explained what Grisha had revealed about the passenger Iris Cherlina. Her bribe, the Chechens and Islamists, the intrigues between Iran and the other nations, the drone aircraft and electronics deep in the cargo hold. The strange machine, perhaps a cannon, alone in the forward cargo bay.
Suleiman sucked his gold teeth. “We should find this woman.” He nodded to himself, a private image perhaps of questioning Iris Cherlina.
“I want to speak with her too, cousin. But nothing she’ll tell us will change in the next five hours. Let her hide. Right now, we need everyone on guard.” Yusuf lapped a hand over his cousin’s thin shoulder. “I fear this night.”
Suleiman nodded. “We have their balls. I suppose they will want them back.” He turned to go back to the wheelhouse. “We’ll kill a goat in Qandala.”
Yusuf stayed outside with the stars, admiring the velvet depth of the dark. He gazed south for land and east for the sun. Both lay long hours away. He would trade all the money he had for both right now.
Chapter 23
On board HC-130 Broadway 1
6,000 feet above the Gulf of Aden
The team cheered LB’s call with fist pumps. Just as important as his survival, they all liked their chances better now with him at large under the pirates’ noses. LB was—Wally could describe him only one way—LB.
Wally propped a whiteboard across his lap. He drew a bad facsimile of a cargo ship, resembling a spearhead. He made stick figures for pirates.
Around him in the rumbling bay of the HC-130, Doc put the team through a final op check. Communications were tested, weapons function okayed. He dug into fanny packs and rucks for flotation devices, 228 mm lights, tourniquets, med supplies, flashlights, night-vision goggles. Doc pounded on body armor and counted ammo magazines. The target was ninety minutes out.
Doc shot Wally a thumbs-up. Wally gathered and seated the team. He pulled off his headset to shout the briefing, trusting his own voice more than the team intercom to be sure every word was heard.
He began with the dimensions of the freighter. Two hundred meters long, thirty meters wide. Nine meters in height from the waterline to the rail, twenty-seven meters from the top of the superstructure to the surface. Her max speed was twelve knots because of a busted piston.
He handed out the brochure photos of the Valnea.
“She’s got no containers on deck. Lots of room for the targets to spread out, but expect them to be along these corridors, here at the stern, on the bow, and flanking the bridge. LB’s going to get us better intel on number and location of the guards.”
Jamie shouted, “Any info on the hostages?”
Wally answered quickly, to be definitive. “No.”
The team nodded unhappily.
“Listen up. We are not on a CSAR op. This is search and destroy. I want clarity on this. We’ll do what we can for the hostages. But we’ll follow orders, and we’ll get home. Any questions, ask them now.” No mouths opened. “All right.”
He continued into the mission brief. Weather over the target remained clear. Seas one foot, water temperature 75°F. Winds at sea level seven knots southwest.
The HC-130 would go black sixty minutes out. Zero hour approximately 0110. Chutes on at zero minus thirty. The stack would be Wally at the bottom, then big Quincy, Jamie, Dow, Mouse, and Doc as team leader. Fifteen-second intervals between them on landing.
Wally propped the whiteboard on his knees for the team to see. He set a finger on the port wing beside the pilothouse.
“This is our LZ. It’s thirty feet long, ten feet wide. Nine stories above the water, and it’s moving at twelve knots.”
Quincy carped, “That’s a shit Z.”
The team chuckled. That broke some ice.
“Anyone who misses the ship will get picked up by Robey. He and his team will be in the water with the RAMZ five minutes before we jump.”
Doc called out, “At least his team’ll be there. Can’t speak for Robey.”
Quincy barked, “All the more reason to hit the shit Z, guys.”
Wally didn’t laugh with the team. The LT was green, and this was a tough first mission. Wally had more hope than confidence in the young CRO.
Doc leaned forward to stab a finger at the port wing, on the stick figure there.
“That a guard?”
“Yes.”
“That a problem?”
“I’m at the bottom of the stack. I’ll secure the LZ.”
“How?”
“I’ll kick him in the head.”
Doc settled back. “Oh.”
Mouse raised a hand. He shouted, “I missed that. Did you just say you’re gonna kick him in the head?”
Wally drew a small circle on the whiteboard. He tossed the panel on the deck between him and the team.
“To be a member of the jump team at the academy, you had to cover a three-inch dot with your boot ten times in a row.” He planted one heel over the circle. “To run the team, you had to do it twenty times. I ran it. I’ll kick him in the head.”
He plucked the board off the deck. “The moon won’t be up when we land, so it’ll be plenty dark. If we’re lucky, we’ll be on station before anyone inside the bridge spots us. Quincy, when you get down, help the others behind you. There’s gonna be wind on that wing. Dow and Jamie, the moment you’re out of your containers, you take defensive positions here and here. As soon as we’re all down, Dow, you lead Mouse by this catwalk”—Wally trailed a finger behind the bridge, along a platform running beneath the smokestack—“around to the starboard wing. You’re the backstop. Doc, Jamie, and Quincy stay with me on the port wing. We’re the assault team.”
Doc, Jamie, and Quincy knocked fists. Mouse and Dow did the same.
“When everyone’s in position, on my signal, we move on the bridge. If the doors are locked, we shoot out the windows on my mark and unlock them. Dow and Quincy throw flashbangs, then we enter. Doc heads for the exit in the rear of the bridge, behind the chart room. Cut off retreat to the stairs. Dow and Mouse handle any targets who head for the starboard wing. Pirate strength inside the bridge is unknown. We’ll wait on LB for that. We don’t know who else might be inside, so take down only armed and identified targets. When you do, shoot to kill.”
Once control of the bridge was established, the team would take up defensive positions to hold it. Wally would pull back on the throttle and stop the ship’s progress toward the Somali coast.
“That should keep the Reaper off our backs.”
Next, two teams would fan out over the ship to locate and free the hostag
es, then mop up pirate resistance. Once the ship was secure, Wally would radio the trailing warship Nicholas. A pilot would be sent over to turn the freighter around and guide it to Djibouti.
Jamie asked, “If any pirates surrender, can we take prisoners?”
“Yes.”
Every PJ looked relieved. Wally made no mention, per his orders, of his lone task to eliminate the pirate chieftain Yusuf Raage, whether he surrendered or not.
“That’s it. Rest up.” Wally checked his watch. “Zero minus eighty.”
Chapter 24
CMA CGN Valnea
Gulf of Aden
Short-legged and thick, LB was not built for scrambling in tight places. The rows of lashing bridges across the cargo deck made for great cover if he stood still, but he couldn’t.
After clambering over and through the first two sets of gates and cables, LB paused to gather himself. He remembered what it was like to be younger and leaner, when he could have slung himself over this landscape, leaped and landed, leaped again. There was a time he was so quick that even if he was spotted, no one would believe they’d seen a man, not just a trick of the eye.
He squatted in an alley between two lashing bridges, at the base of the forward crane, stuck with a beat-up, squat forty-two-year-old soldier’s body. If he continued to stumble over the obstacles every twenty feet on the cargo deck, he’d be a sitting duck for anyone watching from the bridge, even in starlight. His camos and clumsiness would mark him against the white-painted field.
If he was going to get a count of the pirates, their weapons and positions, no other way presented itself. He’d need to take a closer look. If possible, without compromising himself, he wanted a peek, too, at the location and condition of the hostages.
Why had Wally skipped over the hostages? What did he mean, “need to know”? LB didn’t like where that pointed. He was out of the loop, but accepted that was how it should be. If the pirates captured him, it’d be best if he didn’t know the whole plan.
Twenty years in the military; this was his first time on the wrong side of the PJ equation. Being the one waiting for the cavalry, on the ground, on the run, in danger and scared, he blessed every man on those HC-130s rushing his way, taking his peril for their own. LB hoped all those times he’d been the one blessed added up, and paid off tonight.
He slung the Zastava to his back. He didn’t expect to use it; with more than an hour until Wally and the team dropped in, he stood no chance of surviving a gunfight with dozens of pirates. He tugged his pants leg out of his boot to take in hand the quietest weapon, his four-inch blade.
LB had a few things in his favor: it was the darkest part of the night, the Somalis didn’t know he was here, and he knew what he was doing. With a deep and uneasy breath, he crept to port for the ladder off the cargo deck.
He approached the opening on hands and knees. Slowly, he dropped his head first, glancing both ways along the narrow steel corridor. LB would recon only one side of the ship; logic indicated the pirates would assign guards equally left and right.
Ten feet away, the outline of a single pirate shuffled toward the stern. The path to the bow looked clear. LB eased down the ladder, lay flat. When he was sure he could move, he coiled into a low crouch.
Carefully, he coaxed every corner and crooked line of the passage to hide him. He kept watch forward and aft, should the guard behind him come back his way. The Milky Way cast enough light to betray him, so he crawled in the murk beneath the rail. Far below, the wake water made enough noise to hide his small jangles and footfalls.
After forty yards, LB emerged from the companionway, stepping from under the cover of the cargo deck. He stopped to rest his legs, on fire from the long walking squat. Ahead, high on its mast, the steaming light glowed over the open bow. With many places to hide, he hurried behind a hawser meant to hold docking lines thick as his arm. Along the rail, four pirates kept watch over the broad gulf. LB slunk back into the portside companionway.
Immediately he ducked into a dark nook, kneeling behind a life raft canister. The guard he’d avoided minutes before strolled his way. LB peered from behind cover until the Somali ambled back toward the stern. Softly, careful to stay in the shadows below the rail, LB followed the pirate for thirty meters, as far as he dared, before scampering up another ladder to the cargo deck. There he waited, getting a sense of the distance this guard covered and the pace of his patrol.
Waiting a minute, LB poked his head through the ladder opening. The Somali had passed, returning to the bow. LB crept down the ladder, hunched low, and made his way toward the stern, head on a swivel, until he caught sight of the next target in the passage.
Twice more, he stole up ladders to lay low on the cargo deck, keeping an eye through the opening until the pirates sauntered past. LB descended to move sternward, invisible and soundless.
Nearing the foot of the superstructure, the glowing red dot of a cigarette sent him scuttling behind the nearest cover, a metal staircase. One more Somali came his way from the corridor behind the superstructure. The pirate paid more attention to the cigarette than to his vigilance. He walked past LB to the port rail, dropping his spent butt on the deck. LB huddled in the shadows, watching through the louvers of the stairs while the pirate tried to light another in the breeze.
The Somali could not get his cigarette going. He moved away from the open wind that snuffed his matches to the cover of the superstructure. With his back only five feet from LB’s hiding place, the pirate managed to light his smoke. With a deep drag, he took a seat on the stairs.
LB tightened his grip on the knife. The pirate’s blouse hung loosely around him; he was thin and young, redolent of the odor of days without a bath. He enjoyed his cigarette as a luxury, a poor man’s savor. LB concentrated on his own balance, the pirate’s rib cage under the blowing tunic, and a heartsick prayer for him to go away.
Someone had put LB in this position—Wally and the team, too. Somebody very high up had decided that politics and schemes were bigger than the PJ oath. LB was going to have to kill, probably a lot, before he got off this ship. He made himself a promise to square that up with someone, first chance he got.
The Somali tipped back his head to finish the cigarette. When he’d drawn it down to his fingertips, he tossed the glowing nub under the steps.
The butt bounced off LB’s shoulder, showered sparks, and landed out in the open.
LB came out of his crouch.
The pirate looked down.
LB surged forward. He shot his left arm between the open stairs, wrapping the pirate’s waist to lock him in place. His right hand drove the knife into the Somali’s back, aiming for a lung. The pirate’s legs and arms heaved, he shrieked in shock. LB hauled him down harder, pulled out the knife, and rammed it again to the hilt between the pirate’s ribs. In wounded panic the Somali found the last of his strength, jammed his feet and hands under him to push off the steps. The sudden move lifted LB hard into the stairs, slamming his face and chest against the metal edges. The pirate flailed to get away.
LB’s grip slipped around the pirate’s waist. The man pivoted, straining away from the reaching arm and blade. He twisted fast, wringing his torso from LB’s grip. Still at close range with his knees on the stairs, not yet mortally wounded, he reached with shaking hands toward his dangling Kalashnikov.
With no other choice left, LB flung himself against the stairs, extending his arm as far as he could. His fingertips found the fabric of the pirate’s blouse. LB grabbed, yanked the Somali off balance, chest down into the steps, and plunged the knife. The pirate lay on the Kalashnikov, unable to bring it to bear. His last gasp came in LB’s face.
The man had screamed, only once but enough to alert any other pirates in earshot. LB drew out the knife. He skittered from under the steps, swinging the Zastava into his hands. He shoved his back against the superstructure to check all directions. Nothing pricked his senses. The headwind must have blown the pirate’s shout backward. The stern, right over t
he propeller and wake, would be the noisiest spot on deck. Maybe the guards there hadn’t heard their mate’s killing.
LB approached the corpse splayed on the stairs. The man’s heart had spilled over LB’s hands. Wiping blood on his pants legs, he stood over the pirate, whose blood oozed onto the stairs, dripping where LB had hidden.
He rolled the Somali over. The dead man’s features had relaxed from their last spasm on the point of LB’s knife. The mouth and eyes had shut, slack and final.
He whispered, “Can’t leave you here, pal. Sorry.”
LB hefted the corpse across his shoulders. Keeping to the shadows between the stairs and port rail, he checked for any trace of other pirates. The way was clear. He dumped the body overboard, throwing away the Kalashnikov too. LB didn’t watch the corpse and rifle tumble but stooped to hustle into the passage. He found a cranny there. No one came his way. The pirate’s thin body had landed unseen in the froth three stories below; the splash it made didn’t rise above the sounds of the freighter under way. Except for his blood, dark in a dark corner, he was gone.
LB crept to find three more Somalis at the stern rail. That made three targets on port, three on the stern, four on the bow; he supposed another four down the starboard rail. He checked his watch. The recon had taken forty minutes. He returned to the base of the superstructure and the steps, but could not consider going up them. He had valuable intel for the operation. Wally and the team would need to incorporate the locations of the guards on deck into their assault plan. There wasn’t time to hunt for the hostages.
LB picked his way forward along the companionway, stealing as far as he guessed the dead pirate might’ve had as his patrol. He hoped the man’s absence wouldn’t be noticed for another hour. Even if it was, it would take the others a while to figure out he wasn’t just off sleeping somewhere.
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