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Fenix

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by Vivek Ahuja




  FENIX

  VIVEK AHUJA

  Copyright © 2015 Vivek Ahuja

  All rights reserved.

  ISBN-10: 1506002528

  ISBN-13: 978-1506002521

  In loving memory of my father, late Wing-commander P. M. Ahuja. A true gentlemen and an officer

  .

  ALSO IN THIS SERIES

  CHIMERA

  FENIX

  CERBERUS

  PRINCIPLE CHARACTERS

  INDIA

  Pathanya

  Major, Indian Army Special Operations Command. Pathfinder team leader

  Vikram

  Captain, Indian Army Special Operations Command. Pathfinder team second-in-command

  Kamidalla

  Captain, Indian Army Special Operations Command. Pathfinder team member

  Ansari

  Colonel, Indian Army Special Operations Command

  Gephel

  Colonel, Indian Army Special Operations Command. Former Special Frontier Force Operations (Tibet)

  Grewal

  Wing-commander, Indian Air Force. Commander, No. 45 “Daggers” Squadron

  Malhotra

  Air-Marshal, Indian Air Force. Commander, Indian Aerospace Command

  Sinha

  Rear-Admiral, Indian Navy. Deputy-commander, Indian Aerospace Command

  Basu

  Director, Research and Analysis Wing

  Ravoof

  Minister of External Affairs

  Bafna

  Defense-minister

  Potgam

  Chief-of-Army-Staff, Indian Army

  Sudarshan

  Brigadier, Indian Army. Commander, armored taskforces Rhino and Trishul

  Kulkarni

  Lieutenant-Colonel, Indian Army. Commander, taskforce Rhino

  Jagat

  Lieutenant-Colonel, Indian Army. Commander, Panther-flight (special heli-borne operations)

  Dutt

  Group-Captain, Indian Air Force. Squadron commander, No. 199 Helicopter Unit (“The Himalayan Gunners”)

  Verma

  Air-Commodore, Indian Air Force

  Bhosale

  Air-Chief-Marshal, Indian Air Force

  PAKISTAN

  Hussein

  Chief-of-Army-Staff, Pakistani Army

  Haider

  Lieutenant-General, Pakistani Army. Commander, Inter-Services-Intelligence

  Akram

  Major, Pakistani Army. Aide-de-camp to Haider. Inter-Services-Intelligence

  Muzammil

  Commander, Lashkar-e-taiba

  Afridi

  Field-commander, Lashkar-e-taiba

  CHINA

  Wencang

  President, People’s Republic of China

  Chen

  General, People’s Republic of China Air Force

  ──── PROLOGUE ────

  The blue sky disappeared into a white nothingness. The clouds flashed into oblivion. As he raised his hands to shield himself from the intense light, it only got worse. He could see the reddish-pink color of blood inside his arms as the intense light made even the skin transparent.

  Was that even possible?

  What was certain was that the ball of white light was now turning yellow and revealing itself as an expanding fireball…

  “Go! Go! Get to cover!”

  He ran at full speed, leaping over the rocks and snow. Others turned to do the same. But they weren’t fast enough. How could they? After all, they were only human.

  The ground shook and he fell on his left knee as the gravel began to shake itself loose. Boulders began rolling down the hillside. He tried getting up but found his knees weak. He saw his rifle shaking with the gravel on the ground. He turned to face the valley behind him as others staggered past. He saw Vikram running past. Only seconds had passed, but it felt as though everything was going far slower. Even as he saw Vikram’s gaping mouth yelling his name out, Pathanya turned to see the snow flashing away just as the clouds above. The fireball smashed into the rocky hillsides. A high wall of dirt, gravel and rocks ran up the valley towards them.

  He saw the approaching shockwave from the airborne nuclear detonation. His face wore the mask of pure horror. A large tree trunk overtook Pathanya’s view. It slammed into his leg and his view went black…

  Pathanya jerked from his bed with a cold sweat. His hands were on his chest checking for wounds and surprisingly, he found himself out of breath. He turned to see the small red digital readout of the alarm clock nearby and slowly regained his bearings. He felt the sweat on his forehead. His heartbeat began to slow down to normal rhythm.

  The same nightmare again.

  He caught his breath and realized that there was no way he was going to fall back to bed again. So he shoved his blankets aside and rolled his legs off the bed. He checked his left thigh with his fingers pressing down. The pain slowly shot up the rest of his body. The thick scar left there by that tree log in northwestern Bhutan had taken a year to heal. During that time he had been walking with a stagger that had not gone unnoticed within the small Para community he belonged to. He hated it; hated the attention it garnered and the stories—Rumors! —that spread as a result. He just wanted to be left alone.

  Needless to say, he had not been left alone.

  The work done by Pathanya and his small team of Paras in the mountains of Bhutan had become legend within the Indian Army. He glanced over to his uniform hanging behind the door of the wooden hut and saw the moonlight glistening off the various ribbons and citations. One of these was the special citation given to all Paras from the 9TH, 10TH, 11TH and 12TH Battalions of the Regiment by the King of Bhutan. It was for services rendered in the defense of the Himalayan Kingdom from Chinese forces. The “Snow-Lions”, as the Bhutanese citizenry now called them, had received that ribbon soberly. They had paid a heavy price for it. The two Chinese nuclear missiles launched against the Kingdom in the final days of the war had savagely taken the lives of thousands of Indian soldiers and fifteen-thousand Bhutanese civilians. All in the blink of an eye. That war had been nasty to all parties involved.

  To Pathanya, the personal price had been the loss of six of ten members of his long-range reconnaissance patrol team. Of the four survivors, two had been severely wounded, himself included. The first to go had been second-lieutenant Ganesh who had taken a deep splinter wound on their second day in Bhutan. Days later, the nuclear explosion over Barshong had taken the others with one swipe.

  Gone! Just like that!

  He stopped pressing down on his scar and exhaled a long breath. He then made his way to the uniform hanging near the door to his hut. He could see the black night sky outside beginning to turn to deep blue. The early morning fog descended over the trees. He rubbed his thumb over the ribbon on his uniform chest. This one had been given to Tarun, Vikram and himself by the King of Bhutan, a few months after the war.

  That ceremony had been simple and sober too. The young King had aged tremendously over the course of the war. Even so, he had put the ribbon on the three men for what they had done to prevent the fall of the Bhutanese capital city of Thimpu during the early days of that war.

  “The Thimpu shield,” Pathanya said to himself as he remembered the King’s description of him and his men that day. He sighed again.

  The day had started for him. He took his running tee-shirt from the rack nearby, grabbed his jogging shoes and walked outside. He sat on the cold rocks of the steps at the edge of the hut’s foundation, tied his shoes, stretched his muscles and began running on the dirt path past the lawns. He headed towards the trail that headed into the woods. By now the first chirping birds had begun to fill the skies near the army base at Vairengte, in the state of Mizoram.

  Following his serious leg injury, it had been a major struggle for Pa
thanya to stay on in the army. It had taken him months to recover and even more months after to learn to walk again. Over the last month, he had forced himself to return to jogging just like he used to before the injury. He had managed to survive and prove to the doctors that he was still fit for duty. Given his combat record, the army had been somewhat relenting.

  Pathanya noticed that he wasn’t alone on the jogging track this morning. He was soon catching up to a group of Paras jogging in unison past the greenery at the Counter-Insurgency and Jungle Warfare School, or CIJWS, as the army called it. He was currently posted here, helping the school supplant its high-altitude special-operations and counter-insurgency training methods with combat experience lessons. He and a few other Paras were here because of what they had seen and done in the war.

  Those of us who had survived, that is…he reminded himself as he passed by the jogging soldiers and continued on his lonely path.

  Half an hour later, he was back at his hut and saw that his orderly had set up the steaming tea on the table inside. As always. He slowed his jogging and trotted to a stop. His shirt was dripping from sweat and his legs burning, especially his left thigh. He grimaced at the pain whilst catching his breath.

  “Enjoying the morning, Pathanya?” a voice said behind him as he walked up the steps of his hut. He turned to see an older man in the army field dress walking up to him. He had the SOCOM insignia on his shoulder patch. He also had a smile on his face and the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel. Pathanya stood in attention and saluted; the senior officer returned the gesture.

  “At ease, Major.”

  Pathanya noticed the man was of Tibetan descent. The older man ignored Pathanya’s curiosity and turned to see the green tree leaves, the chirping of the birds and the colorful morning sky.

  “Not as lively up in northern Bhutan, is it?” the Lieutenant-Colonel said with a smile. That piqued Pathanya’s curiosity, but he kept his peace. His records were available at SOCOM. So it was not particularly surprising that the officer knew about his experiences and role in the war.

  Hell, the entire nation knew what he had done thanks to some investigative journalist who had spilled the beans a year after the war had gotten over. So why was this officer spiking his curiosity?

  “You don’t know me, Major,” the older man said quaintly. “My name is Lef-tenant-Colonel Gephel. I did some unusual work during the war while you and your boys were slugging it out in Bhutan.”

  Unusual work…Pathanya thought. He had learnt soon after the war that there had been teams of operatives culled from the regiment for some “nasty” operations, as Colonel Misra had said to him once. That meant inside Tibet. So while Pathanya and his men had been inside Bhutan for about ten days of intensive operations, these men had been inside Tibet far longer. Some in the media had even gone as far as to allege that these men of Tibetan descent had been used inside Tibet to instigate the very rebellion against Beijing that had ultimately led to open war between the two nations.

  Were they really responsible for instigating that war?

  Pathanya had never been able to convince himself suitably on that issue. During his recovery, he had found it easy to blame them. But over time, he had let that question go as realization dawned that the complexity and precipitous nature of events preluding the war with China was beyond his grasp. Besides, if these teams had been used, someone higher up must have authorized them? Could that authorization be the reason that defense-minister Chakri had mysteriously resigned from his position on the PM’s cabinet a few months after the war? If so, weren’t these men just following orders? As he was?

  Could this man be one of them?

  He noticed finally that Gephel was holding out his hand. He shook it and Gephel didn’t let it go:

  “I have been wanting to meet with you ever since I read about you and your men. Despite the fact I work there, it still surprises me on how compartmentalized information really is inside SOCOM. Hell, I know for a fact that you have no clue what I did during the war any more than what I did about yours. Except that yours made it to the evening news and in newspapers while mine didn’t!” Gephel chuckled.

  “Probably better that way too!” he continued. “I doubt many in Delhi would be happy to have the media talking about my role in that nasty mess. Anyway, I wanted to meet you in person, Pathanya. You and your men prevented Bhutan from falling to the Chinese.” He shook his head. “We should have seen that coming, really. But we didn’t.” He finally released Pathanya’s hand.

  “I am afraid I don’t fully understand that myself, sir.” Pathanya replied.

  “Don’t think about it too much, Major. I just wanted to meet you before I leave for Ladakh to help survey our recently established control there.” The smile went away. “The wounds haven’t yet healed for any of us. Hell, I doubt they ever will. All I know is that I will get to smell the gravel of my birthplace once again. It has been more than three years since I last did that!”

  “Yes sir.” Pathanya now felt more certain about who this man was. “Were you originally from Ladakh, sir?”

  “Not really,” Gephel said soberly. “My family originally escaped from Gyantse in Tibet around the time when the Dalai Lama did the same in 1959. Never knew what that place was like. Grew up in a refugee camp in India. So as you can imagine, Pathanya, I had always wanted to go visit my hometown.” Gephel smiled again. “And during the war with the reds, the army was only too happy to oblige!”

  ────

  1 ────

  The small fishing boat heaved with the waves, struggling to maintain its course. The frothing sea water of the Arabian sea splashed against the wooden hull as the vessel cut through the waves. Afridi flinched as a spray of water headed for his eyes. He tasted the salty water and spat it out, turning away from the railing he had been holding on to.

  “Cursed weather!” He straggled to what constituted as the bridge on this small ship. He grabbed the ladder leading up to the small room and looked around. The entire boat was awash and all surfaces were slippery. Waves were breaking above the bows of the ship now, engulfing the tarpaulin covers on their cargo containers. He glanced at the ropes keeping the containers tied down and satisfied himself that they were going to hold. Then he started to climb up the ladder.

  “Can’t you make this thing go any faster?” He blared as he lifted himself off the ladder and on to the floor of the small room. The two men there turned to look at him.

  “If we go any faster, we will break the boat’s back!” The captain of the boat replied in his frail voice. He was the owner of this boat and had been for many years. The boat heaved again and fell over the crest of a large wave. Water splashed high enough to hit the glass of the bridge. Afridi looked at the old man’s eyes and saw the fear. But not of the waves or the weather. The old man had been through countless storms over his long life. No, this fear stemmed from something that scared the old man even more.

  Afridi smiled cruelly and removed the AK-47 hanging off his shoulders. He put the weapon on the small map table and looked at the old man.

  “Are you afraid of this?” He pointed to the rifle laying on the table. Both men in the room beside him remained silent. He nodded appreciatively. Good. Fear was always useful.

  “Today you will accomplish what Allah has wished from you devout Muslims. You will accomplish what he desires and will find a place by his side when the time comes,” Afridi said grandly. He was prone to hyperbole. Especially when he held the power to make people listen. His rifle ensured that power.

  And his mission ensured the afterlife.

  He looked around and saw the overcast clouds and the drizzle hitting the windows. Flashes of thunder followed intermittently, lighting up the bridge in a flood of bluish-white light. The glass vibrated a few seconds later as the thunder crackled through the skies.

  Filthy weather…he thought as the ship heaved again, following the motion of yet another of the never-ending waves. Afridi struggled to hold on and maintain his
balance. He was not a sailor. Never had been and never thought about it. But apparently Allah had other plans, as it had turned out. Given the nature of the job he had been given, however, the discomfort on the high seas was irrelevant.

  This “ship” was barely deserving of the term. But it was a decades-old veteran of the Arabian sea. It had survived countless storms and had always made it back to port. And that kind of security was what Afridi and his men needed on their journey from the beaches west of Karachi.

  Security and anonymity…Afridi reminded himself. For all its glorious years on the seas off the Pakistani and Indian coasts, this ship and its crew were well known to authorities on both sides. And that was important. The last thing he needed now was to be caught off the coast, away from his objective, by Indian naval and coastal security forces.

  Which is where the weather came in…He thought as he put his hand out of the windows to feel the drizzling rain.

  This bad weather made his job easier. There would be little chance of detection from low flying patrol aircraft with these clouds and rolling waves. There would be no moonlight to assist in visual acquisition and the undulating surface of the water coupled with the extremely small thermal signature of this low-tech vessel would ensure that sensory detection threat was low.

 

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