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Escalation

Page 2

by Peter Nealen


  “Fuck you, Phil,” Jordan hissed back, a real note of anger in his voice. His face was painted green and brown, but was black as the ace of spades underneath the paint. “That shit ain’t funny.”

  I was starting to get pissed. This wasn’t the time nor the place. We’d been prepared to quickly plan the hit based on our recon, but this was turning into a debate, not a planning session. We were all too old and too experienced to fall into this bullshit.

  “Knock it off,” I whispered. “It’s my call. We’re hitting the house. If England’s in there, we pull him out. If not, we cause as much noise and chaos as we can before we get out, then fall back to Rally Point Hotel. Any questions?”

  There weren’t any. I’d known that there wouldn’t be. Their initial reaction had been something of a rational one; we were five guys about to go charging into a hotbed of Kosovar and Syrian militia. None of these bastards were in Slovakia for good reasons, regardless of the European Defense Council’s platitudes about the “plight of refugees.”

  And the fact of the matter was, that every one of us was a warrior. We weren’t going to sit by and let more Americans get slaughtered if we could help it.

  And we were more confident in our own training and skill than we were in the current US Army’s.

  I started out, moving out of the bushes and skirting the treeline, trying to get some distance between my precious personal hide and Greg’s and Dwight’s line of fire. The sun was still fairly low in the partly cloudy sky, so the light was dim enough that I was pretty sure I was still hard to see, looking more like a green and brown swamp thing than a man as I moved against the thick vegetation behind me.

  The house was two stories tall, with a red tile roof and plastered walls. Surrounded by a waist-high iron and brick fence, it was something of a sprawling estate for Marianka; clearly the original owners had been well-off. But they were long gone, and it looked like Baruti had appropriated it for his own headquarters.

  There was another treeline running down the edge of the field to the corner of the fence, and I slipped into it. Phil and Jordan followed in trace, maintaining a spread-out file, weapons held ready as they scanned around us. I was doing the same thing; we hadn’t had time to build much of a picture of the enemy’s pattern of life since the sun had come up, but the drone’s intel was painting a grim picture. This well-to-do suburb of Bratislava had been turned into enemy territory pretty quickly.

  I wasn’t running, but I wasn’t moving slowly, either. With the peacekeepers getting closer by the minute, we were on the clock. Despite my insistence, I hated going off half-cocked like this. The rest of the team knew it, too, which was why I’d gotten as little pushback as I had.

  We reached the fence without incident. I could hear yelling in Arabic and Albanian on the other side as I took a knee, facing down the fence line, my OBR held ready while I waited for Jordan and Phil to catch up.

  I heard the rustle as they joined me, then Jordan’s hand came down on my shoulder. “Up,” he whispered.

  I rose slowly, easing head and weapon over the top of the fence. We were right behind the guest house in the corner of the back yard. I couldn’t be sure that it was unoccupied, but the windows were dark. We’d still probably have to clear it quickly. None of us wanted to leave a pocket of bad guys behind us as we crossed the open yard to the main house.

  As I covered, Phil put his rifle atop the fence and vaulted over it. It was an easier barrier than some of the walls we’d trained on, based on compounds in the Middle East and Afghanistan. Jordan followed, and then I was the last one over.

  For a brief moment, we crouched in the shadows between the fence and the guest house. I peered around the corner, seeing a single figure loitering on the back deck of the main house, carrying a FAMAS.

  Whether it had come from a captured weapons cache or had directly been supplied by the French portion of the EDC was anybody’s guess.

  Jordan was at my elbow. “The house looks clear,” he whispered into my ear. “The front door’s open, no lights, just crap piled in the hall and the living room.” He’d peered into the window while I’d been scanning our target.

  “Deacon, Weeb,” Scott’s voice crackled in my ear. “Time’s up. If you’re going to go, you’d better do it now.”

  So, I leaned out around the corner and put a bullet into the guy on the deck.

  The thunderous report of the 7.62 echoed across the hills around the town, shattering the early morning calm. The dark-clad man with the FAMAS bullpup staggered, staring down at the widening dark stain on his chest for a brief fraction of a second before he crumpled, crashing to the deck with a thump and a muffled clatter as he landed on top of his rifle.

  I was already up and moving as he hit the floor, sprinting around the side of the guest house and heading for the steps leading up to the deck. A figure loomed in the doorway, and I caught a glimpse of a weapon. I started to slow, bringing my own rifle back up to fire, but a shot cracked past my shoulder and took the man in the chest. He fell backwards, into the house.

  Then I was up onto the deck, my OBR leveled at the door, Jordan right on my heels, as Dwight opened fire on the front of the house with a long, roaring burst of 7.62.

  The back wall was mostly big picture windows and the door. There was no point in pausing; there was no cover. Fortunately, Jordan was right there with me, and so we didn’t even slow down as we punched through the door and into the house.

  I stepped over the fallen body in the doorway. The man was in his death spasms, choking on his own blood. I still kicked the old Skorpion machine pistol away from his hand as I passed, just in case.

  We were in a sort of living room, or at least it had been. The sectional couch and chairs were still there, as was the coffee table. The pictures on the walls had been torn down, and the place was trashed. There were piles of propaganda leaflets on the coffee table, as well as porn and what looked an awful lot like drugs. A partial wall closed half of it off from the rest of the house, though the opening into the kitchen/dining area was wide open.

  I went left, Jordan went right, and Phil darted in behind us, following me along the left-hand wall. He’d paused to take that shot on the way, then rushed to catch up with the two of us. A two-man entry was preferable to a one-man, but the more guns in the fight, the better.

  More gunfire echoed outside. It sounded like Dwight and Greg were in a medium-range firefight with somebody up near the front of the house; not all the fire was going in one direction. We rapidly closed on the doorway; the living room was clear.

  Jordan had hung back closer to the door, having moved only far enough to get his back to a wall instead of a window. He had a lot wider field of fire than I did, even as I quickly crossed the room, angling toward the end of that partial wall, with Phil right behind me. Jordan snapped his OBR up and fired, pumping three shots rapidly into the dining room. The reports were deafening inside the enclosed space of the house.

  He ceased fire just as I reached the end of the wall, and then I was committed. Taking a breath, I stepped around, snapping my own rifle toward the nearest corner.

  There was a stairway ahead of me, leading up into the second story, and a short hallway next to it, leading to the entryway and more rooms on the ground floor. There was also a body at my feet. A few feet away, I saw another Kosovar fighter with a SIG 550 in his hands, crouched and aimed in at the corner that I’d just rounded.

  He was half-slumped against the wall, his rifle pointed off to one side, and off balance. He’d apparently dived for cover as Jordan blew his buddy’s brains all over his jacket, but that momentary loss of balance was all the advantage I needed.

  I drove my rifle toward him, barely picking up the offset irons alongside the shortdot scope, and blew a chunk of his heart out of his back. The second shot, that scorched his beard with the muzzle blast as the bullet blew the back of his skull off, spattering blood and brains against the wall behind him, was little more than insurance, but it had been so instinct
ive that the twin reports almost blended into a single, catastrophic noise.

  The dead man was still sliding down the wall, his rifle slipping from nerveless fingers, as another figure appeared at the top of the stairs, his eyes widening as he saw the weird, leafy apparitions with rifles standing over his fellow militiaman’s body. He lifted the FAMAS rifle in his hands. I had a split second to shift targets, throwing myself sideways as I did so. Staying still was a good way to get shot.

  He triggered a burst into the wall above Phil’s head, just before both of us blasted him. He staggered, wobbled for a second, then fell face-first down the stairs, actually doing a somersault before he hit the floor at the bottom.

  More gunfire erupted behind me as Jordan shot at somebody toward the front of the house, but Phil and I were already driving our way up the stairs, stepping hard on the body at the base of the steps as we went.

  Press the immediate threat.

  I drove up the stairs two at a time, only slowing as I neared the top. I really didn’t want to get my head blown off by sticking it up without at least my own muzzle between my noggin and the bad guys.

  Phil was right next to me, and we popped over the landing with our rifles leveled at the same time. The short hallway at the top of the stairs was clear, for the moment. We both surged the rest of the way up, as more gunfire thundered and echoed from the front of the house.

  More shots cracked from the door to the right. I started to angle toward it, though there was yet another open door right to the left. The barking reports of gunfire were coming from that one, that made it a threat.

  I didn’t have to say or even signal anything. Phil, who was closer, moved right to the door, pausing just long enough to know that I was right beside him, then pushed in.

  He was already shooting as he crossed the threshold. I was so close behind him that my muzzle was right over his shoulder, but the man leaning out of the window, firing back at the treeline was already down, leaving a red smear on the white wall. His rifle had fallen out the open window.

  It took less than three seconds to ensure that the room was clear, and then we were coming out, this time with Jordan in the lead. He went straight across the hallway, bursting into the room we’d bypassed, and I was halfway across the threshold when he called, “Clear!”

  We barely paused, just turning and burning back down the hall.

  As I came out, I glanced down the stairway, in time to see two men in dark clothes, chest rigs, and turbans start up the stairs. I threw myself across the hallway as they opened fire, bullets chewing into the ceiling and sending bits of plaster raining down on us, and returned fire. My first shot smashed into the smaller man’s collarbone, sending him reeling as the follow-up shot tore his throat out.

  The snap of the bullet made the taller, skinnier guy flinch. Which was when Jordan leaned out of the door and shot him in the skull. His head snapped backward as he crashed onto his back. Red started seeping from the turban wrapped around his head.

  Everything went quiet all of a sudden after that. We still pressed on to finish clearing the house, even as Scott said in my ear, “Deacon, Weeb. The patrol’s halted short of the town. Looks like they’re setting security and calling higher for instructions.”

  Of course they are. I acknowledged with a double squelch break. I shouldn’t have been surprised. The current US Armed Forces seemed to be even more hogtied in red tape and armchair quarterbacking than it had been when I’d been a Marine.

  There wasn’t time to worry about it, especially as Dwight’s voice broke in. “Deacon, Teddy. Y’all kicked the anthill. There’s probably a platoon heading your way. I can keep ‘em back for a bit, but you need to wrap it up and get out of there.”

  I didn’t answer immediately, because we were moving into the next room, at the end of the hall. It was as empty as the second one had been. I held up a hand to hold for a moment. “Deacon copies all,” I said, as chagrined as always that I was breathing as hard as I was. Close quarters combat gets the heart pumping harder than any run. “Top floor cleared. We’re going to check the rest of the first floor, then exfil.”

  I had a sneaking suspicion that we weren’t going to find Specialist England, or if we did, we weren’t going to like what we found. It was too quiet for anything else.

  But as I nodded to Phil, he flowed out into the hallway and headed for the steps.

  He hooked around the base of the steps as I stepped out to cover the opening onto the living room. Jordan tapped me as he went past, and I turned to follow.

  Two more bodies were slumped at the front of the entryway. The door was standing open, with what might have been yet another corpse lying on the front steps.

  There were two rooms on the side, a master bedroom and a bathroom. It took seconds to clear both. No more bad guys, and no sign of the hostage. In fact, it didn’t look like he’d ever been there.

  “This is Deacon,” I sent. “We’re on our way out.” I’d barely gotten the last syllable out before Dwight opened fire again, the rattling roar of the Mk 48 tearing the brief quiet to shreds.

  It took moments to retrace our steps to the back, even as we started hearing heavier ordnance going off to the west. It sounded like the militia had started engaging those Griffins anyway, and unless I missed my guess, they were getting some .50 caliber love in return. Of course, the M5s had 50mm main guns, too, but the gunners were probably locked out of those for the time being.

  In a way, I thought, even as we vaulted the fence again and faded into the treeline, the paralysis of the US peacekeepers was a good thing. After all, it wouldn’t be good if they found out we were even in the country.

  Chapter 2

  “Friendlies coming in,” I called over the radio.

  “I’ve got you,” Tony replied. “Come ahead.”

  It was almost dark. As thick as the woods were in that part of Slovakia, we’d had to move very carefully to avoid the locals, not to mention the occasional peacekeeper or militia patrols. It had taken slow, methodical movement, slipping from cover to cover, often halting to stay put and just watch and listen.

  Phil got to his feet and started toward the ancient barn. Built of plastered stone and graying, aged timber, the roof was starting to sag and the base was overgrown, but it was still solid. I suspected it had been standing for at least a couple of centuries. It probably would still have been in use if not for the turmoil that had engulfed Slovakia over the last few years.

  I carefully scanned the surrounding woods and the open field beyond for a moment, despite the fact that I knew that Scott had security set and the drone up. The abandoned farm sat right at the no-man’s land between the Belgian peacekeeping sector and one of the few, small, Loyalist Slovak Army sectors. While what was left of the Army that hadn’t gone over to the Nationalists after the initial riots was still outwardly loyal to the shaky government in Bratislava, that loyalty was in question among many of the peacekeepers, especially the Germans and Belgians. None of this would have been happening if the Slovaks hadn’t already had enough of both Brussels’ financial demands and the forced immigration, mostly of young Kosovar, Bosnian, and Syrian men. To that end, most of the EDC peacekeepers made no secret of the fact that they didn’t trust the Slovak Army.

  Which made the uneasy borders between zones the best place to hide out, even though it had meant one hell of an infiltration from Hungary.

  Seeing no movement, nor the hulking silhouettes of armored vehicles on the road, in the fields, or against the treeline, I followed Phil toward the barn.

  Tony was right at the door, though set back in the shadows, his PSQ-20 thermal fusion NVGs down in front of one eye. He was on a knee, his own Mk 48 held over his thigh. Unfortunately, the NVGs weren’t all that conducive to staying down in the prone. They tended to sag, making it extremely uncomfortable to crane your neck to see.

  I slipped inside, making sure not to step in front of Tony’s muzzle. Not because I expected the thickset former SF Weapons Sergeant to shoot
me by accident, but because it just wasn’t a good habit to get into. And if somebody did pop out of that treeline, that split second it would take to get out of his way could be fatal to us both.

  Scott was hunkered down in the darkened corner, away from the doors, behind a nest of comm gear and the drone control console. It hadn’t been fun, lugging that crap in from Hungary, but it had been useful.

  He looked up as I crossed to join him. His vaguely Asian features were still camouflaged, despite the fact that most of us had sweated most of the cammie paint off on the infil. Knowing Scott, he’d pestered the rest of the Bravo Element to reapply their cammie paint before he’d even gotten the comms set up all the way.

  I was sure that David and Chris had appreciated the reminder, and told him just how much they appreciated it in no uncertain terms. After all, nobody in this team was an amateur.

  “Dry hole,” I said, as I sat against the wall, leaning my rifle next to me. Dwight, Jordan, and Greg filed in behind me and found positions in the barn where they could easily switch out with the guys on security when the time came. “But you knew that already.” I grabbed one of the water bladders that Scott had filled and purified and drank greedily. It had been a long movement.

  “But it might have pointed us in the right direction,” Scott said. My assistant team lead was all business in the field, despite the Japanese manga I was pretty sure was shoved into his pack somewhere. He turned the tablet he was using around and tapped the screen to shift windows. I peered at it, seeing a satellite map of southwest Slovakia on the dimly-lit screen, with several bright red dots pulsating on it.

  “Shortly after you hit that ambush, Borinka lit up like a Christmas tree,” he said. “At least three more Persons of Interest, too. I don’t think they were expecting to get hit so soon.”

  “I wasn’t expecting the leash to get taken off the BCT that quick, either,” I replied. “Are you still tapped in? Are they finally on the hunt?”

 

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