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Blaze

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by Andrew Thorp King




  B L A Z E

  Operation Persian Trinity

  Andrew Thorp King

  B L A Z E

  Operation Persian Trinity

  Copyright © 2016 by Andrew Thorp King

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means—whether electronic, digital, mechanical, or otherwise—without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review.

  World Ahead Press is a division of WND Books. The views and opinions expressed in this book are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the official policy or position or WND Books.

  Paperback ISBN: 978-1-944212-28-5

  eBook ISBN: 978-1-944212-29-2

  Printed in the United States of America

  16 17 18 19 20 21 LSI 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  This novel is dedicated to all that know me and yet, still love me. To all of my family, close friends and business partners.

  To my son Griffin and my daughters, Chloe and Violet. Thank you for allowing me to lock my office door on so many Saturday afternoons to transport my mind into the world of Blaze McIntyre. Thank you for being the source of so much joy in my life.

  Although there are too many great friends to mention, I’d like to thank Rami Dakko, Richard ‘Tricky Dick’ Downes, and Barry Eitel specifically for their encouragement in the writing of this story and for all their solid support as friends. I’d also like to thank all of the fellas at the Old Havana Cigar club in West Chester, PA. The camaraderie and friendships that exist there are one of a kind.

  Special thanks to Tom Wallace and Trevor Martin for all of their keen input and wise suggestions in the shaping and editing process. The manuscript benefited greatly from their ideas. Thanks to Pete ‘Swamp Yankee’ Macphee for doing a tremendous job on the cover artwork. He nailed it on the first take.

  Contents

  Acknowledgments

  Wardak Province, West Of Kabul, Afghanistan

  The Mcintyre Residence, Romeo, Michigan

  Langley, Virginia, Office Of Cia Director

  First Baptist Church Of Detroit, Detroit, Michigan

  O’conner’s Irish Boxing Club, Detroit, Michigan

  Client’s Home, Detroit Michigan Suburbs

  The Roosevelt Room, The White House, Washington, Dc

  Natanz, Iran

  Ramona’s Diner, Detroit, Michigan

  China (Memories)

  Laredo, Texas

  The Office Of President Hadi Samani, Tehran, Iran

  Somewhere Along The Streets Of Detroit, Michigan

  First Baptist Church Of Detroit, Detroit, Michigan

  Somewhere In The Suburbs, Detroit, Michigan

  Federal Correction Institution, Fairton, New Jersey

  Henry Ford Hospital, Detroit, Michigan

  Laredo, Texas

  The Office Of Bernie Miller, Detroit, Michigan

  Cliff Bell’s Restaurant, Detroit, Michigan

  The Kremlin, Russia

  O’conner’s Irish Boxing Club, Detroit, Michigan

  The Oval Office, The White House, Washington Dc

  Federal Correction Institution, Fairton, New Jersey

  The Office Of The Prime Minister, Jerusalem, Israel

  The Office Of President Samani, Tehran, Iran

  First Baptist Church Of Detroit, Detroit, Michigan

  The Office Of President Hadi Samani, Tehran, Iran

  Arash Jafari’s Home, Natanz, Iran

  Belfast, Ireland

  The Hampton Inn, Somewhere Near Fairton, New Jersey

  Esfahan Nuclear Facility, Esfahan, Iran

  The Office Of The Prime Minster, Jerusalem, Israel

  Cia Safe House Somewhere Near Esfahan, Iran

  The Mcintyre Residence, Romeo, Michigan

  Esfahan, Iran

  The Kremlin, Russia

  Natanz, Iran

  The Oval Office, The White House, Washington, Dc

  Natanz, Iran

  The Hampton Inn, Somewhere Near Fairton, New Jersey

  Dr. Gabriella Mancini’s Office, Washington, Dc

  Evin Prison, Iran

  Cia Safe House, Somewhere In Iran

  Cia Safe House, Somewhere In Iran

  The Foot Of The Alborz Mountains, Iran

  Romeo, Michigan

  Evin Prison, Iran

  Somewhere On I-75 South Leaving Detroit, Michigan

  Somewhere Outside The Perimeter Of Evin Prison, Iran

  The Office Of President Hadi Samani, Tehran, Iran

  Somewhere Over Iraqi Airspace

  The Kremlin, Russia

  The Oval Office, The White House, Washington, Dc

  The Mcintyre Residence, Romeo, Michigan

  Tehran, Iran

  Chincoteague, Virginia

  Bushehr, Iran

  Sartal, Iran

  Belfast, Ireland

  The Office Of President Hadi Samani, Tehran, Iran

  The Mcintyre Residence, Romeo, Michigan

  The Office Of The Prime Minister, Jerusalem, Israel

  The Mcintyre Residence, Romeo, Michigan

  Tehran, Iran

  Epilogue: Ain’t Like You Tattoo Parlor, Detroit, Michigan

  About The Author

  Author’s Notes

  Coming Soon From Andrew Thorp King

  “Writing a book is an adventure. To begin with, it is a toy and an amusement; then it becomes a mistress, and then it becomes a master, and then a tyrant. The last phase is that just as you are about to be reconciled to your servitude, you kill the monster, and fling him out to the public.”

  Winston Churchill

  “Being Irish, he had an abiding sense of tragedy, which sustained him through temporary periods of joy.”

  William Butler Yeats

  “If I had to define courage myself, I wouldn’t say it’s about shooting people. I’d say it’s the quality that stimulates people, that enables them to move ahead and look beyond themselves.”

  Clint Eastwood

  “Our revolution’s main mission is to pave the way for the reappearance of the 12th Imam, the Mahdi. Therefore, Iran should become a powerful, developed and model Islamic society. Today, we should define our economic, cultural and political policies based on the policy of Imam Mahdi’s return. We should avoid copying the West’s policies and systems.”

  Former Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad

  “And in that day will I make Jerusalem a burdensome stone for all people: all that burden themselves with it shall be cut in pieces, though all the people of the earth be gathered together against it”

  Zechariah 12:3

  CHAPTER ONE

  WARDAK PROVINCE, WEST OF KABUL, AFGHANISTAN

  Blaze McIntyre could see it out of the corner of his eye. An abnormal wind blew behind him. It was a welcomed relief even with the sand it kicked up in his face. The tent behind him quivered from the wind’s effects. Blaze focused on the men that had caught his attention. He continued cleaning his gun without looking down. Something didn’t look right. He held tight to his weapon feeling a premonition that he might very soon need to use it. It was not a typical day in the desert and he sensed that what he saw was not a typical conversation between blue and green. Just beside the checkpoint area something was brewing. Blue looked calm, but increasingly nervous. Green looked abrasive and increasingly angry.

  Blue was the term
used to identify those serving with the ISAF (International Security Assistance Force) sent by NATO. Green was the term used to describe those serving in the ANA, the Afghan National Army. All based on uniform color.

  The checkpoint had been quiet and uneventful for days. When Blaze arrived at the camp he aroused suspicion and curiosity. His guarded mannerisms fueled the curiosity. Blaze was busy holding secret meetings with several equally mysterious MI6 members. He barely interacted with anyone else there on the NATO side. No one on either the ANA side or the ISAF side was really sure why the hell the clandestine service guys were even there. Blaze sensed this and was glad that his designs had fleshed out. He liked keeping everyone guessing.

  His gaze was securely affixed on the arguing soldiers. He could hear the voice of the Afghan soldier in green getting louder and he could see, even with his distant view, the contortions of the Afghan soldier’s angry face flinching with agitation. The ISAF soldier’s temperament had not changed—despite being yelled at—but it was clear the nature of the conversation was heading in a tense direction. Although Blaze was in Afghanistan on specific CIA business, he knew that he couldn’t ignore what he was witnessing. He knew he would have to get involved.

  The shot crackled with terror from the gun of the angry ANA soldier. Brain matter flung with an arched trajectory from the head of an unlucky ISAF soldier. Two other NATO-sent ISAF blues tumbled to the ground and howled in agony. Medics scrambled to rescue the wounded blues that surrounded the scene.

  His position twisted sharply and he saw the aftermath of the shot. The Afghan soldier had fired quickly and the shot had not been visible to Blaze. But the seriousness of the situation was indeed clear to the American spy. It was time for him to get into the mix.

  His legs took on a trajectory of their own as he charged towards the scene of this stupefying growing “incident”. His reaction was instant, but not well thought out. This was, after all, not the typical premeditated spy op he was accustomed to. This was normal warfare with all its spontaneity and unpredictability. The circumstances called upon the instincts that Blaze had honed back in his days in the Marines.

  He saw his three newfound MI6 friends responding in kind close by, as they drew their weapons and ran towards the firefight. Blaze took out his Walther P99 as he ran to fight along side his British pals.

  Several more Afghan soldiers emerged from behind the checkpoint area ahead. They ran with anger and were screaming and shooting their weapons. Sand swirled in the hot air mirroring the chaos of the moment. Other Afghan greens were fleeing, clearly trying to separate themselves from the rogue Afghans that had turned on the blue ISAF NATO soldiers that they were supposed to be working side by side with.

  By the time Blaze got close enough to the checkpoint scene gone wrong, the bullets were flying everywhere. Several whizzed passed his head as he tucked and dodged his way forward. He simultaneously attributed divine protection and Irish luck to the fact that his head was still in one piece. A contradiction in belief that somehow worked well for him.

  He said a quick prayer internally that the Almighty would follow him and swarm him with a “pillar of cloud,” as He did for the Israelites fleeing hordes of Egyptian marauders in ancient times.

  He heard a scream to his left, and saw one of his new MI6 buddies go down with a thump. Blaze kept moving, it appeared not to be a fatal hit.

  Blaze raised his Walther P99 and began firing while running. All the good Afghans had already fled the scene, and all that remained were rogue Afghans shooting brave ISAF soldiers. Blaze killed three rogue Afghans quickly and effortlessly. Two others almost escaped the path of his bullets, but ultimately found death from the flying lead.

  His foot trampled the fingers of a dead Afghan turncoat as he continued to spring forward. An excruciating pain surged abruptly in the side of his right calf. Blaze tried to continue running, but fell forward to the ground after only a few steps. He had been hit. He was down.

  Blaze had been shot before, and knew the pain of a bullet, but this one hit a particularly sensitive and vulnerable spot. He reached down and clutched his ankle in an attempt to calm the unbelievable pain caused by the flaring nerves that spazzed inside his leg. His eyes flinched and closed as he braced the unrelenting agony. He held in his screams as to not draw attention to himself. He had always disciplined himself to not yell and scream like others in battle. He knew the value of holding in expressions of pain. He opened one eye as he held tight his leg. The Afghan was only a few feet away, and his gun was closer.

  Blaze shifted his fallen body with precision. He positioned himself to shoot the oncoming Afghan maggot before he got turned into a bleeding dead pile of red.

  Blaze’s head tilted back and he escaped any feeling of prolonged pain as he felt a dizzying transition out of his body, while the oncoming bullet transitioned its way through his forehead. Death had come.

  CHAPTER TWO

  THE MCINTYRE RESIDENCE, ROMEO, MICHIGAN

  Blaze hated hearing the acronym PTSD uttered by anyone. He despised all the extraneous and insulting new implications it had recently come to carry. He knew Post Traumatic Stress Disorder was real, but he refused to have it applied to him. Ever. The nightmares, the mental terrors that plagued him during waking hours, and the images of horror that constantly shrouded his psyche, were all part of the job. Blaze did not welcome any diagnosis or treatment for his condition. He instead pursued assimilation.

  His chest was pounding as his heart beat. His breath was heavy and sweat drenched his pillow. Diem was still sound asleep.

  After catching his breath, he thanked God that it was only a dream. Additionally, he thanked God that he was never actually shot by the green Afghan soldier that day, and that in fact, that sniveling green puke met his maker with haste as Blaze successfully neutralized what was a military and political cluster fuck. If he could, he would bring that ANA bastard back to life just to have the pleasure of killing him again as extra punishment for the trouble he had helped cause.

  He remembered the charade in the press after the incident. Afghan President Hamid Karzai claimed sadness and no knowledge of the impetus of the inside attacks from green on blue. The US generals all claimed that the majority of the Afghans were “still with us” and did not share the rogue mentality of the wayward turncoat Afghan greens. Blaze doubted it. He suspected there were more Afghan soldiers who didn’t have the balls to go rogue than the US would ever know or imagine.

  Blaze rose out of bed and made his way into the kitchen as he tugged tight on the tie of his navy blue bathrobe. Diem had fresh coffee brewed and ready. God Bless that woman. It was steaming, inviting, and precisely as Blaze liked it. Hot and black. He sipped it with a sense of relief as he saw his wife walk into the kitchen. He stood by the counter. Blaze had only slept five hours. Along with the lingering terror of the nightmares, he also suffered a slight sting of a headache from having enjoyed a tad too much Glenlivet the night before. Single malt scotch and late night reading always paired well for Blaze. The hot cup of joe seemed to help alleviate the ailments caused both by his nightmares and the scotch.

  He was thirteen years deep into his blessed marriage with Diem. She was a lovely Chinese woman who had put up with his catalogue of idiosyncrasies with more tolerance than one could reasonably expect. Only her beauty exceeded the width of her tolerance.

  As Diem reached for her coffee, Blaze gently grabbed her arm and intercepted her as he confessed, “Last night was one of the rough ones. The nightmares again. They hit hard.” In his dreams, there was no fog of war. The images were full color and high definition and he had no nocturnal remote with which to make them stop.

  She nodded with understanding and gave him a hug as she said, “You don’t have to worry about any of that stuff anymore, baby.”

  Shaking off the terror of his night, Blaze settled into his customary seat at the family table while clutching his hot coffee mug wi
th one hand. Although he was in no mood for an unexpected, introspective life talk with his bride over cheerios and a handful of much needed aspirin, he was happy to be awake. Happy to be away from his night terrors. And very happy to be peering at the beauty of his faithful wife.

  Diem sat across from him bearing an expression that signaled she had something to say. He looked at her and smiled as he continued to sip his coffee. She began to speak.

  “Blaze, I know you miss being in the field, but I really do feel so much safer and happier that you’re home now and doing what you do.” Diem took a slow sip of her coffee.

  As aspirin frolicked down Blaze’s throat, chased by another unrelenting volcanic gulp of decisively bitter black coffee, Blaze slightly grunted and held his tongue. He had left the CIA about a year ago and had been working as a financial planner ever since. He was not adjusting well to being a civilian. He didn’t mind wearing the monkey suit every day and chasing every Tom, Dick, Harry, and Frank around the greater Detroit area in an effort to convince them to give an aeronautical fornication about their personal finances, but his heart was certainly not gung ho. As much as the memories of his time in the Marines and the CIA brought pain, regrets, and sorrow, those memories undoubtedly overwhelmed him moreover with pride, nostalgia, and a hunger for further missions. He wanted back in. His balls hadn’t dropped out yet.

  “I know you’re very happy that those days are over, but please don’t talk about them with me like that. Let me deal with my transition emotions in my own Irish way—by burying them.” Blaze sounded part Heartbreak Ridge-era Clint Eastwood and part drunken Irish poet with his tone of barely-caffeinated morning gibberish. Imagine Dylan Thomas writing a character sketch of Gunnery Sergeant Thomas Highway all sung by Shane MacGowan of the Irish rock band The Pogues.

 

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