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Hunt the Dragon

Page 24

by Don Mann


  “Wait there, boss!” Akil shouted. “I’m coming to get you!”

  Crocker knew he couldn’t last much longer. Out of his right periphery he saw a vehicle approaching behind him. Swinging his right arm over, he felt a strand of razor wire slice into his forearm. The new pain seemed to cancel out the old. He pushed off on his left leg.

  With a reserve of energy he didn’t think he had, he swung his weight over and let go, scraping his face along the fence and hitting Akil, who helped break his fall.

  Their eyes met and they smiled for a second—a moment he knew he’d never forget.

  “We did it, boss,” Akil muttered.

  “Fuck, yeah.”

  Warm blood dripping down his wrist and thigh, he stumbled with Akil, Sam, and Dawkins across the road, up an embankment and into a cover of sweet-smelling eucalyptus.

  He felt hands reaching under him and sliding his body onto a stretcher. He sat up and reached for the pistol. It wasn’t in his belt.

  “Hey!”

  “Easy. Easy, big guy.” A wide grin beamed down at him from the face of an Asian man in military garb. “You can relax now, sir. You’re in South Korea.”

  He wasn’t sure whether he was seeing reality or dreaming. “Where’s Akil?”

  “Sir, my name is Sergeant Minjoon Kim.”

  “Sergeant Kim, where are my men?”

  “Two have already been taken away in the first ambulance. The other is waiting for you.”

  “Where?”

  “Close by. You’ll see him soon.”

  When they slid the stretcher into the ambulance, he saw Akil’s heavily bearded face ahead and thought he looked like a terrorist. Didn’t realize that he resembled one too, until he saw his reflection in the stainless-steel strip along the side panel.

  “We look like shit,” he groaned.

  “Where are the dancing girls to greet us?”

  It hurt to laugh, but he knew exactly how Akil felt.

  He still had a duty. He said, “Sergeant Kim, you said my men are okay. I need visual confirmation.”

  “Sir, you’ll see them soon. You can relax now. You’re in safe hands.”

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Nobody who ever gave his best regretted it.

  —George Halas

  Four days later the smile on James Dawkins’s face seemed to permeate his entire being as he walked hand in hand with Nan and Karen down Waikiki Beach in Honolulu, from the Ala Wai Canal to Diamond Head. He didn’t want the moment to end. So when they neared the zoo and Nan offered to hail a cab to take them back to the hotel, James declined.

  “I think I’d rather walk together.”

  “Whatever you want, sweetheart.”

  “Yeah, whatever you want, Daddy,” smiling Karen echoed.

  “You sure you’re not tired?” Nan asked.

  He shook his head. “I’m fine.”

  As they passed the Marriott, Dawkins started to hum the lullaby Sung had taught him.

  “What’s that?” Nan asked, squinting into the sun.

  “When I was on the island, in my deepest despair, the Korean woman who looked after me and made me breakfast sang this song to me. It’s about a mother who has to leave her infant alone in their hut so she can go out and search for food.”

  “It’s lovely,” Nan said. “Will you teach it to me?”

  “Of course. Her name is Sung. She’s the one who smuggled out the message to you. I never got a chance to thank her. I hope she’s okay.”

  “Me, too, darling. If there’s a way, I think we should try to help her.”

  “We should try to do that. Yes.”

  Dawkins didn’t know that a week before his escape from Ung-do, Sung had been dismissed from her job and sent back to her family. She was with them now in the farming cooperative of Genjo near the Chinese border. She, too, was happy to be back with her family, her husband and two young sons, but she was apprehensive. Any day State Security Department officers could arrive to take them to one of the country’s prison camps. She’d heard rumors about a fire near Munchon but nothing about the attack. Neighbors whispered about large-scale shakeups in the government and arrests.

  Now, as Sung sat in the primitive kitchen of their three-room house, she debated whether or not to try to pass a message to her nephew, who had a friend in the North Korean Strategy Center who might be able to smuggle her and her family across the Chinese border. She knew it was a huge risk to take.

  The same night Sung was considering her choice, Crocker stepped off the American Airlines flight from Los Angeles. He’d spent so much time in close proximity with Dawkins and his teammates that it felt strange to walk alone from the gate to the baggage area. He carried the few things he’d packed in his duffel—mainly presents for Jenny, Cyndi, and his nieces and nephews. Sam continued to recuperate at U.S. Naval Hospital in Okinawa, and Akil had gone to visit his family in Detroit.

  As Crocker approached the terminal exit, he realized that he’d parked his pickup at ST-6 headquarters and would have to hire a cab to take him to his apartment. He walked with a slight limp from the frostbite and a hunched left shoulder that was still bandaged and would take weeks to heal. None of the people around him seemed to notice him, the bandages on his forearm and shoulder, or the scabs on his neck.

  Crossing to the automatic doors that led outside, Crocker realized that he hadn’t given a thought about what he would do during his month of medical leave. All he could think about was the pleasure of sleeping in his own bed.

  After the door slid open, he heard someone call his name. Turning left, he saw a young woman’s smiling face and a bouquet of yellow flowers.

  He didn’t realize they were for him until Jenny threw her hands around his neck and hugged him. “Welcome home, Dad!”

  The unexpected greeting brought tears to his eyes. He squeezed her back and remembered how lucky he was to be alive. “Thank you, sweetheart. It’s so wonderful to see you. How did you know I was on this flight?”

  “Dad, I have ways. I’m your daughter.”

  “I’m glad.”

  Standing behind her was another beautiful woman who it took him a few seconds to recognize.

  “Cyndi! Wow. I never expected this.” He opened his right arm to include her in the embrace and found her lips.

  She whispered, “I’ve been waiting a long time for this, Crocker. We never got to finish our date.”

  He smiled and said, “Tonight. I promise. I’ve been waiting a long time, too.”

  The following afternoon, a Thursday, ten days after he crossed the border to South Korea, Crocker exited the navy clinic with a bounce in his step. A navy doctor had just cleared him to drive up to Fairfax with Cyndi and Jenny to visit his ailing father. As he entered the parking lot, his cell phone rang.

  “Where are you, Crocker?” Captain Sutter asked.

  He had a shitload of things to take care of—bills to pay, e-mails to answer, people to call, things to take care of around the apartment. But all that could wait. Cyndi had until Saturday before she had to get back to Vegas, which meant two more glorious days and nights together.

  “Leaving the clinic and about to get in my truck and head north,” he answered.

  “You sure you’re up to it?”

  “Absolutely, sir. A couple of pains and bruises, but I’ve been through worse.” No way he was going to lie in bed recuperating when he could be out hanging with Jenny and Cyndi.

  “If you say so, Tarzan. If you’re ambulatory, how about you stop by HQ for a minute?”

  “Happy to, sir, on Tuesday, when I return.”

  “It’s important, Crocker. You’ll find out why when you get here. All it’ll take is fifteen minutes tops.”

  He put the truck in reverse, backed out of the parking spot, and drove a short distance to the ST-6 compound. A couple of SEAL colleagues spotted him in the hallway and welcomed him back. Life was strange. Two weeks ago he was sleeping on the ground, curled up next to a group of foul-smelling men. Las
t night he’d fallen asleep in the arms of a beautiful woman. The rescue of Dawkins and the escape from North Korea had restored some of his faith. Good did triumph over evil when applied with confidence and intelligence.

  Captain Sutter stood to greet him with a big smile on his face. “Damn, Crocker, you look better then I imagined. I hear you really pushed the envelope this time.”

  Sutter seemed thinner than before. “I did what I had to, sir. Couldn’t be avoided.”

  He’d already heard the sad news that Naylor, Hutchins, and Suarez hadn’t made it—which cast a pall over an otherwise successful mission and hostage rescue. Dawkins had invited him over to dinner Sunday night so he could meet his wife and daughter. Sometime after that, he’d stop by Suarez’s house in Virginia Beach and visit with his widow and family.

  He wasn’t looking forward to it, nor had it really sunk in that he’d lost another teammate. For the next couple of days he wanted to focus on the good, including the news that Davis wasn’t facing a court-martial for assaulting Vice Admiral Greene. Crocker got a kick out of that, and would thank Davis when he had a chance.

  “Sit down, Crocker,” Sutter said. “Someone important wants to thank you.”

  At some point he’d call his brother and sister and try to explain where he’d been.

  “Who’s that?” he asked.

  He recognized the president’s warm, deep voice as soon as it came through the speakerphone but thought that maybe it was a prank.

  “Chief Warrant Crocker, I can’t tell you how proud I am of you and your men, and humbled by the courage you showed in North Korea and the sacrifices you made for your country. I just got off the phone with James Dawkins, and I can tell you that he and his family are extremely grateful, too.”

  He sure sounded like the real thing. “Thank you, Mr. President.” Crocker flashed back to the teenagers in rags dragging dead bodies.

  “I hear from your commander that you’re not a man who goes in much for fanfare or awards, and I respect the need to protect your identity from the public. But I don’t feel that thanking you this way does you justice. So I’m wondering if you would accept an invitation to visit me at the White House tomorrow morning shortly after eleven so I can thank you in person.”

  “I’d be honored, sir. I want to tell you about some of the things I saw there. But there’s a problem. I won’t be able to make it until after one, because I want to spend some time with my father first. He’s recovering from open-heart surgery. ”

  “Oh. How’s he progressing?” the president asked.

  “Very well, sir, from what I hear. Thank you for asking.”

  “Please send him my regards and let me know if there’s anything I can do for him.”

  “I appreciate that, Mr. President. I will, sir.”

  “So I’ll see you tomorrow, sometime after one p.m., here at the White House?”

  “You will, Mr. President. Thank you for the invitation, and I look forward to meeting you.”

  “Me too, Chief Warrant Crocker. And if your family is with you, feel free to bring them, too.”

  “Thank you, Mr. President.”

  The president hung up, and Crocker turned to Captain Sutter, who was standing and looking at him with a wry smile on his face.

  “Did I just hear you tell the president, who is arguably the most powerful man on the planet, that you had to postpone your visit with him because you’re going to see your father first?” Sutter asked.

  “I suppose you did, sir.”

  “Jesus, Crocker, you’re something else.”

  Acknowledgments

  You can’t keep a series like this alive and vital without the help of a number of hard-working and very talented individuals. They start with our agents, Heather Mitchell at Gelfman Schneider and Eric Lupfer at William Morris Endeavor, and include a whole team of people at Mulholland Books / Little, Brown—Wes Miller, Pamela Brown, Ben Allen, Chris Jerome, Katharine Myers, Nicole Dewey, and others. In terms of day-to-day support, we’re supremely grateful to our families. Don wants to thank his father, who quit high school on December 7, 1941, the day Pearl Harbor was attacked, enlisted in the U.S. Navy, and served throughout the war. After retiring, he devoted his time toward helping veterans through the DAV and the VFW organizations. And Ralph wants to acknowledge his lovely wife, Jessica, and children, John, Michael, Francesca, and Alessandra. As for inspiration, we get that from the men and women in the SEAL teams and other agencies of government who do the kind of work we describe in these books. Thank you for your service!

  About the Authors

  DON MANN (CWO3, USN) has for the past thirty years been associated with the U.S. Navy SEALs as a platoon member, assault team member, boat crew leader, and advanced training officer, and more recently as program director preparing civilians to go to BUD/S (SEAL Training). Until 1998 he was on active duty with SEAL Team Six. Since then, he has deployed to the Middle East on numerous occasions in support of the war against terrorism. Many of today’s active-duty SEALs on Team Six are the same guys he taught how to shoot, conduct ship and aircraft takedowns, and operate in urban, arctic, desert, river, and jungle warfare, as well as Close Quarters Battle and Military Operations in Urban Terrain. He has suffered two cases of high-altitude pulmonary edema, frostbite, a broken back, and multiple other broken bones in training or service. He has been captured twice during operations and lived to talk about it.

  RALPH PEZZULLO is a New York Times bestselling author and an award-winning playwright and screenwriter. His books include Jawbreaker and The Walk-In (with CIA operative Gary Berntsen), At the Fall of Somoza, Plunging into Haiti (winner of the Douglas Dillon Award for Distinguished Writing on American Diplomacy), Most Evil (with Steve Hodel), Eve Missing, and Blood of My Blood. His nonfiction book about the shadowy world of private military contracting with former British Special Forces commando Simon Chase, Zero Footprint, was published by Little, Brown in January 2016.

  Books by Don Mann and Ralph Pezzullo

  The SEAL Team Six series

  Hunt the Dragon

  Hunt the Fox

  Hunt the Jackal

  Hunt the Falcon

  Hunt the Scorpion

  Hunt the Wolf

  Other titles

  Inside SEAL Team Six: My Life and Missions with America’s Elite Warriors

  Thank you for buying this ebook, published by Hachette Digital.

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  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Welcome

  Dedication

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Acknowledgments

  About the Authors

  Books by Don Mann and Ralph Pezzullo

  Newsletters

  Copyright

  The characters and events in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is coincidental and not intended by the author.

  Copyright © 2016 by Don Mann and Ralph Pezzullo

  Cover design by Kapo Ng; cover photograph by Nebojsa Bobic/Getty Images

  Cover copyright © 2016 by Hachette Book Group, Inc

  Author photographs: © W
ill Ramos (Don Mann), © Bernard Wolf (Ralph Pezzullo)

  All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher constitute unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at permissions@hbgusa.com. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

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  First ebook edition: May 2016

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  ISBN 978-0-316-37752-2

  E3-20160406-DA-NF

 

 

 


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