‘A hundred and twenty of them. Five of us,’ I said.
‘I ain’t running,’ Boink said.
‘Who said anything about running?’ I responded.
Leila, looking at me as if she were witnessing a spectacular sunrise, said ‘So you’re not running out on Deryck and Ayesha and Peanut and the pilot?’
‘Let’s be clear. A hundred and twenty-odd to five are big odds,’ I said.
‘That all? Those fuckers are in a shitload of trouble,’ said West over his shoulder.
I’d wondered which of the SOCOM boys would turn into John Wayne.
‘I ain’t never lost a principal before,’ said Cassidy. ‘Don’t want to start now.’
John Wayne had a brother.
Ryder chewed his bottom lip.
‘On the basis of the enemy of my enemy is my friend,’ said Rutherford, ‘what about the other side – the opposition up the hill? Might they be inclined to lend us a little assistance?’
Cassidy’s eyes were black caves and his face had the luster of polished wet granite. ‘The hostages are alive . . . for now. But we wait, they die.’
‘LeDuc, what do you think?’ I asked.
‘Up there, on top of the hill, according to the FARDC soldier, they are Laurent Nkunda’s rebels – your allies, the CNDP. But these men are also often no better than murderers and rapists. Our source was just a private soldier. What would he know? It could be the FDLR up there – the Democratic Forces for the Liberation of Rwanda. Or even the Lord’s Resistance Army, from Uganda, that kills in the name of Christ. They could also be Mai-Mai militia. Or they could be just another unit of FARDC settling an old score,’ he said, using two fingers across his blackened forehead like they were windshield wipers to flick away the water and sweat.
I had the picture of a lunatic walking up to half a dozen large bears and kicking all of them in the shins. ‘Back it up a second,’ I said. ‘Who’s this Nkunda guy? I thought our allies were part of some National Congress.’
‘Yes, the Congrès National Pour la Défénse du Peuple. Or as you English say, the National Congress for the Defense of the People. CNDP for us. NCDP pour vous – the soldiers you are training across the border in Rwanda. Laurent Nkunda was a general in FARDC, the army of the DRC, but he rebelled, took his best units, and continued to fight the remnants of his enemies, the Rwandan Hutus, who fed the 1994 Rwandan genocide and set up camp in the east of the DRC. That is what the CNDP claims, but the wider truth is that the CNDP is in the Congo to protect Rwanda’s interests here, which are also America’s interests. That is why the CNDP are your country’s allies – at least for the moment. Those were the soldiers you met at the base in Cyangugu, the ones commanded by Colonel Olivier Biruta and his second in command, Commandant Jean Claude Ntahobali.’
‘So where is this Nkunda?’ I asked.
‘Under arrest. Held in Rwanda on charges of murder and other crimes. But he will never come to trial.’
‘Because?’
‘Because he is an embarrassment to the DRC, Kigali and Washington.’
‘Okay, well . . . are any of these armies, rebels or otherwise, likely to help us?’ I asked, getting us back on track.
‘In the DRC, especially here in Nord-Kivu province where there is so much wealth, it is impossible to say.’
The complication of who was who in this fucked-up zoo was exasperating. ‘But, in your experience, is it worth taking the risk to find out?’
He shrugged; something, it seemed to me, this Frenchman did almost as often as breathing. ‘Perhaps oui, perhaps non. They might also kill you just for the fun of it.’
‘They’d be jumping the queue,’ I said.
‘What kind of wealth are we talking about?’ asked Rutherford.
‘There is Coltan.’
‘Doesn’t he fight Batman, or someone?’ I said.
‘Columbite-tantalite – “Coltan” for short. It is a rare mineral used to make electronic printed circuit boards. You cannot make a computer without it. This part of the Congo has the world’s largest deposits. Gold – there is very much of that here, also.’
‘So we’ve established that everyone is killing everyone in this little enchanted forest. And that it’s probably over Apple Macs and bullion. Back to our principals. What are we going to do about them? Any suggestions?’
‘We need to recon the enemy’s position,’ said Cassidy, checking his weapon. ‘What’s their morale like? Are they vulnerable to a night attack? How do they have our principals guarded?’
The sergeant was on the money. Once we had a better feel for the situation, we could take action or not.
‘Agreed,’ I said. ‘Volunteers?’
‘I’m in,’ said Ryder.
‘I’m coming,’ said Boink.
‘Moi aussi,’ said LeDuc, raising his hand.
Cassidy, West and Rutherford all nodded.
‘Duke, I need you to stay and guard Leila.’
‘I want to be there for Ayesha, Vin,’ said Ryder, his chin jutting forward.
‘I need you here, Duke,’ I repeated, making it an order. The truth of it was that I didn’t want Ryder anywhere near a mission like the one on the table. Wanting to go, no matter how desperate the desire, didn’t cut it. The guy didn’t have the required combat skills, simple as that. His lack of experience could get himself and the people with him killed. Still, Ryder was far from happy about this.
‘You’re not coming either, big guy,’ I told Boink.
‘You gonna stop me?’ he said, taking a step toward me.
I stood my ground. ‘If I have to.’
He stood his.
I tried a different approach, risky though it was, and handed him the Type 97 I was holding. ‘Look, Boink, I need you here with Ryder. So, I’m going to give you one of these. I’m assuming you know your way around a carbine.’ This was tricky but there simply weren’t enough PSOs. If we could trust Boink, arming him would be an asset. Given what I knew he was capable of, though, it was a big if. He pointed the weapon in my general direction; not the reaction I’d been hoping for. I didn’t move, held my breath.
‘Bin around guns all my life, yo,’ he said, his finger slipping inside the trigger guard. There was nothing in his face that I could read. Not so smart after all, Cooper, I told myself. No one moved. This could go badly for me. I wondered if my body armor would stop a round fired from a rifle at point blank range. I tensed. But then Boink raised the weapon to give it a closer inspection and the world started breathing again, or perhaps it was just me.
‘So who’s got recent jungle experience?’ I asked, moving on. ‘Anyone?’
West gave me a nod. ‘Sir, post before last I was instructing at the Jungle Warfare School at Fort Sherman down in Panama,’ he said, keeping one eye on Boink as he moved the selector on his M4 to safety. A tragedy had been averted. ‘That count?’
‘It’ll have to do,’ I said, giving him a grin.
‘What experience you got, Major?’ Cassidy asked.
He had the right to ask. ‘STO stuff – jumping out of planes with your people, mostly.’
‘Where?’
‘Kosovo, Afghanistan.’
Cassidy lost interest, turning away. In effect, I ’d just told him that I’d spent time behind enemy lines, causing havoc, so apparently I’d passed the test; at least till the next test came along. I turned to LeDuc. ‘André, I’m going to need you to come along, in case we need a translator.’
‘D’accord,’ he said, glancing around uncertainly, his earlier bravado fading.
Maybe he was aware that if we needed to call on his language skills, it would be because things had fallen into the meat grinder. I sincerely hoped I would be bringing the Frenchman along unnecessarily.
Ryder, not a happy camper, picked up a stick at his feet and threw it down. I took him aside. ‘Duke, you’ll be the officer in charge if I don’t make it back. If that happens, rely on Cassidy to get everyone out. We clear?’
The reply wasn’t
exactly snappy.
‘Yes, sir,’ he said eventually.
We rejoined the others.
‘So, Cassidy and I are also staying back,’ said Rutherford.
‘Looks like,’ I told him.
They knew the score. The rulebook required a solid protection detail for Leila and Boink. We had no choice but to split our strength down the middle.
‘But you’ll need more than just the two of you, won’t you?’ Leila told me. ‘You said there was a hundred and twenty of them.’ Her face somehow managed to convey confusion, concern, and surprise and stay unlined. Finally, it dawned on her. ‘You’re not going back to rescue them, are you?’
‘We have to go look at the enemy’s positions. Only then will we know what we can and can’t do.’ I turned to West. ‘The company’s HQ – that’s where they’ll be held.’
‘Yep,’ said West, agreeing.
‘I think you’re making excuses,’ Leila said, standing up like she was going someplace. ‘Why don’t you just go and demand our peoples’ release?’
Yeah, just like demanding a better suite at the Ritz. I didn’t want to talk about it any longer. ‘Lex, you got those FARDC uniforms handy?’
Rutherford gestured at LeDuc, who reached for his backpack and pulled them out.
‘They’re big sizes,’ I said, hoping they’d fit over our gear.
I tried on a shirt but the fit was tight – too tight with body armor on – so I took the armor off. That sky blue patch on the shoulder interested me the most. If we were spotted, that identifying flash of color might confuse the issue of our identity long enough for us to fool the enemy for an important couple of seconds.
We had no food; nothing to carry except for our weapons and ammo. I chose an M4 over the Nazarian Type 97 because I knew it like an old buddy.
‘I have no combat experience,’ LeDuc informed me, checking his pistol. I handed him one of the spare Nazarians and a couple of spare mags.
‘Just do what I’m gonna do – follow Mike’s lead.’ I turned to Cas-sidy. ‘Cy, give us four hours to recon the Congolese positions. If we don’t make it back within twelve hours, head due east. According to the map there’s a road around the shores of Lake Kivu. Once you hit it, take a ride south to Cyangugu.’
‘Good luck,’ he said.
We’d need it.
I glanced back over my shoulder at Leila as we left the trees. She was sitting with her back to me, her head in her hands.
West led the way, followed by LeDuc, followed by me. We walked toward the sound of corn popping. Along the way, West blackened his face and arms with charcoal from a tree long ago struck by lightning. Neither LeDuc nor I needed it; our faces and arms were still black from the burned jet fuel. We pulled the green berets down low over our foreheads so that they threw shadows over our eyes.
The blackness under the canopy was soon complete and the going was slow because of it. But at least the rain had mostly been reduced to occasional showers mixed with fat droplets running off the overhead leaves and branches. West stopped us every few minutes to listen. Aside from the sound of distant gunfire, which quickly died away with the last vestiges of light, running water and a howling frenzy of a million mosquitoes were the sounds that accompanied our careful footsteps.
‘Malaria. It’s a problem here,’ West whispered as he came past.
He was searching the floor of the rainforest like he’d lost his keys.
‘What are you doing?’ LeDuc asked.
‘Looking for an ant’s nest,’ he said. ‘Like this one.’ A mound of smooth gray dirt rose out of the leaf litter to about knee height.
‘Pourquoi?’
West kicked the top off it with the heel of his boot, grabbed a handful of the dirt mixed with crushed ant and wiped it over the exposed skin on his arms.
‘Formic acid,’ he said. ‘Nature’s insect repellent. These driver ants are full of it. It’ll stop the mosquitoes cold.’ He took a couple more hand-fuls of dirt, squeezed it in his hands to kill the ants and then rubbed it over his face and the back of his neck.
LeDuc and I followed his lead.
We walked stealthily for a little more than an hour, taking a course that would bring us lower down into the valley, away from the forward picket lines that were no doubt occupied by jumpy soldiers with itchy trigger fingers.
West stopped abruptly beneath a spread of palm fronds and signaled that a target lay dead ahead, ten meters away. I couldn’t see a damn thing. And then the shadow he was pointing at turned and moved slowly away from us. The barrel of a rifle caught some starlight coming through a rent in the canopy. We needed to find out how far apart the pickets were before trying to penetrate the FARDC positions.
We slid to the right, moving the way chameleons do, keeping our boots in midair before placing them carefully on the ground. Finding another picket fifty meters along, we retraced our steps twenty meters or so, then pushed forward between them. The sound of men’s voices soon reached us, a low hum with occasional shouts. Somewhere close by was a company of riflemen doing what men do after battle – eat, talk, dress wounds, die, clean weapons, shit, gamble, urinate, complain, doze, argue.
A sudden, violent thrash in the bushes ahead, lasting no more than a few seconds, cause LeDuc and I to drop to a crouch. I waited till I saw West’s hand signal before moving forward. I took half a dozen steps and saw a FARDC soldier flat on his back, staring up with pinpricks of light in his open eyes. There was not a mark on him that I could see. I cut a couple of palm fronds and laid them over him.
‘Walked into him,’ West whispered in my ear. ‘Had no choice.’ He put a finger to his lips and pointed.
Ahead, through a screen of palms, was a clearing of maybe five meters in diameter. In the center of the clearing, a solider was kneeling on the ground with a small flashlight producing a flickering yellow beam. The man had his pants down and was beating the meat over a deck of cards that I guessed featured naked women. Job done, he picked up one of the cards, wiped it with a wet leaf and put it in his top pocket. We left him to it and worked our way around the edge of the clearing. I spotted a satchel hanging from a tangle of vines and a rifle leaning up against a tree beside it. I stopped West and LeDuc and signaled my intentions. The guy who carried his girlfriend in his pocket was too busy getting his pants back on to notice me. I reached in and took the satchel. The rifle looked familiar. It was an M16. I took it, too, and retreated into the shadows. Checking the satchel, I saw I’d hit the jackpot. Inside were tins of food and a couple of spare mags for the rifle. I gave the weapon the once-over. It was brand-new and its serial numbers had been ground off the receiver, just like those M16s I’d found in Kabul. The same question struck me: why would the numbers be removed if they weren’t somehow significant? A tap on the shoulder refocused my attention. West wanted to keep moving.
Soon the murmur of many voices and the smell of jet fuel caused us to get down on our bellies and inch forward. Through the dense foliage at the edge of a larger clearing, we saw more than thirty men bivouacked under ponchos, screens of umbrella palms, cardboard packaging, blankets – whatever could be used to provide shelter. Tents were non-existent. Here and there, soldiers were cooking their dinners on small portable stoves, the type that utilized bricks of compressed kerosene, which accounted for that smell of jet fuel. A group of half a dozen kids wearing grossly oversized uniforms huddled together under a couple of ponchos with their rifles. Back in my world, kids just a few years younger than these hugged their teddy bears and watched Barney reruns.
West took us on a detour around the clearing. The HQ, our target, would be further in the rear. We found it eventually, ringed by trees with massive trunks and spreading root systems. The roar of fast-moving water told us that a ravine was close. The HQ itself was a collection of four large five-man tents and several smaller ones. Gas lanterns smoldered blue-green within the larger tents. The silhouettes of men moving around inside them played on the tent walls. A number of trestle tables had been
set up. Several fires burned and smoked beneath small shelters thatched with wet umbrella palm fronds. More than a dozen soldiers armed with submachine guns patrolled the perimeter. I was worried that the tins in the satchel would clank together, so I left it, along with the M16, behind a tree and shaved a little bark off the trunk so that I could identify the hiding place on our way out. Slithering on our bellies, we kept to the shadows and worked our way around the edge of the clearing to reconnoiter it.
Then West motioned that he saw something up ahead. I came forward. It was Twenny Fo, his head beneath a black hood and his hands tied behind his back with a rope that looped over a tree branch above him. The rope was tight so that his arms were raised. He was leaning forward, balancing on his toes to take the pressure off his shoulders. I could see that if he lost his balance and fell, his weight would rip his clavicles clean out of their sockets. Peanut had been strung up to another tree; same deal. I could hear him sobbing beneath his hood. Fournier and Ayesha were nowhere to be seen. Around them, half a dozen armed men stood smoking and spitting on the ground.
Just then, a short Asian guy, an athletic type with pale skin and dressed in civilian clothes, strolled out of one of the bigger tents. He walked to a slit trench, scratched his ass, urinated, then went back undercover.
‘What’s a Chinese guy doing here?’ I whispered.
‘An advisor,’ LeDuc replied under his breath.
Ghost Watch Page 13