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The Towers

Page 1

by David Poyer




  For “Chic” Burlingame III, USNA ’71,

  who gave his life fighting on 9/11,

  For Kevin Shaeffer, ’94,

  And all the others who keep on going

  Day after day

  No matter how rough.

  They’re the real heroes.

  Acknowledgments

  EX nihilo nihil fit. For this book I owe thanks to Nancy Berlage, Bobbie Berryman, Harry Black, Steve Boyer, Suzanne Brugler, Anthony Casper, Jay DeLoach, Jeanne Ellis, Richard H. Enderly, Suzanne Kettenhofen, Les Lykins, William F. Mason, Robert McFadden, Robert E. Nelson, Chuck Nygaard, Paul O’Donnell, Sarandis “Randy” Papadopoulos, Katherine Parsons, Naia Poyer, Diane Putney, Sean Riordan, Laurie Toll, David Trevino, Jennie Lew Tugend, Greg Tuorto, Curtis Utz, Judy Vann, and many others who preferred anonymity, especially those who consented to sometimes painful interviews reliving their experiences on September 11, 2001. Thanks also to Charle Ricci and Carol Vincent of the Eastern Shore Public Library, unendingly patient with my sometimes outré requests; Office of the Chief of Naval Information, both in New York and at the Pentagon; the Naval History and Heritage Command; the Office of the Historian, Office of the Secretary of Defense; the Library of Virginia; the Naval Criminal Investigative Service. My most grateful thanks to George Witte, editor of long standing; to Sally Richardson, Terra Layton, Matt Shear, and Rachel Ekstrom at St. Martin’s; and to Lenore Hart, anchor on lee shores and my North Star when skies are clear.

  The specifics of personalities, locations, and procedures in various locales, and the units and theaters of operations described, are employed as the settings and materials of fiction, not as reportage of historical events. Some details have been altered to protect classified procedures.

  As always, all errors and deficiencies are my own.

  No photograph records

  that day’s unmaking roar.

  Too deep for human ears.

  We wept, or cursed in fear.

  Beseeched unanswered phones

  Please God, alone,

  … No explanation why;

  the perfect alibi

  your word, no witnesses.

  You saw this coming, yes?

  Our brazen structures razed,

  immense collapse the praise

  you craved, that roar’s

  descending, perfect chord.

  —“Uh-Oh,” by George Witte

  Contents

  Title Page

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Epigraph

  I: 9/11

  September 11

  II: An Altered World

  1. Los Angeles, California

  2. Alexandria Hospital, Alexandria, Virginia

  3. Sana’a, Republic of Yemen

  4. New York

  5. Sana’a, Yemen

  6. Tampa, Florida

  7. Coronado, California

  III: The Gates of the Citadel

  8. Prince Georges County, Maryland

  9. Sana’a

  10. Base “X,” Gulf of Oman

  11. Sana’a, Yemen

  12. Night Raid

  13. Sana’a

  14. Bagram Airfield, Afghanistan

  IV: Black Dust

  15. Thirty-Six Miles South of Kandahar

  16. Bagram Joint Operations Center

  17. Leaders’ Recon

  18. Bagram

  Chapter 19

  20. Tora Bora

  21. Joint Special Operations Center, Bagram

  22. Tora Bora

  23. In the White Mountains

  Chapter 24

  The Afterimage

  Also by David Poyer

  Copyright

  I

  9/11

  SEPTEMBER 11, 2001

  5:15 A.M., ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA

  IT was still dark. Yet not so long before sunrise that Dan couldn’t make out the trees through the window by the breakfast table. The back of the house overlooked the creek that ran through the ravine above which the home had been built.

  They lived across the river from Washington, in the suburbs that had grown up along the Metro. A brick colonial with flagstone walks and three bedrooms and a family room in the basement, though they didn’t really have a family, aside from his daughter. Nan was grown up now, in grad school. Maples and elms and yellow poplars shaded the lawn. Blair had furnished it, mostly from the antique shops she made him stop at whenever they drove east to visit her parents. Other pieces were from her family’s estate, things her mom and dad had let go when they’d redecorated.

  A far nicer home than he’d grown up in, and it felt strange having so much room, so many things he didn’t need. But when he felt this, he reminded himself of those who’d sacrificed so much so he could have this excess, this luxury, this safety. He still kept a pistol in the house, but didn’t need it in arm’s reach anymore.

  “They really want you there this early?” he asked his wife.

  Blair sipped coffee and looked at her watch. She was in a severe suit and black pumps. A light coat hung over the back of her chair. “They want me at National at six sharp. But I won’t be flying commercial.”

  Dan grinned. She always called it National, never Ronald Reagan. “Charter?”

  “Their own jet. A limo’ll meet me at JFK.”

  “Sweet. And—when’ll you be back?”

  “Day after tomorrow. Maybe I’ll see a show, if I can get tickets.”

  They drank coffee and gazed out the bay window at the backyard. The hollyhocks and peonies were long gone, the four-o’clocks wouldn’t open till afternoon, but the white blooms of nicotiana seemed to glow even in the half dark.

  “What are you doing today?”

  “Headed in to the Building. See a classmate. Then I’m supposed to look in on Barry Niles.”

  She wrinkled her nose. “The one who shot you down for your promotion?”

  Dan shoved eggs around on his plate. No one was guaranteed promotion, especially at the O-6 level. But he’d hoped. “He didn’t shoot me down.”

  “Oh, he stacked the deck. With the other admirals on the board. He’s always spoken against you, right? Kept you from getting another command, after Horn?”

  “The proceedings are sealed.”

  “Dan, you’re the most decorated officer in the Navy. Navy Cross. Silver Star. And the Congressional, for God’s sake. You’ve pulled their chestnuts out of the fire time and again. And they pass you over for captain.” She raised a finger. “Wouldn’t have happened if I was still at OSD.”

  “That would not have helped. The Navy keeps outsiders out of promotion. SecNav, just maybe. SecDef, no.” But he kept his tone nonargumentative.

  Blair had taken the November election hard. It meant she was out in the cold; a new administration, a new party in charge. That was why she was going to New York.

  “What precisely do these Cohn, Kennedy guys do, again?”

  “I told you. Global financial services. Specialized equity and capital markets for institutional clients. Real estate private equity.” She eyed him humorlessly. “None of which means squat to you, right?”

  “It sounds like … it should pay.”

  “Oh, it will, Dan. I could cubbyhole at SAIC until the next election, but this’ll build our net worth. We may not see much of each other, unless you decide to come to New York with me. But we’ll come out of it with significantly enhanced personal value.”

  “You’re sure they’re hiring?”

  “Good people are always hard to get,” she said without a trace of modesty, false or otherwise. “How much longer do you have? Now you’ve been passed over?”

  “June fifteenth is my punch-out date.”

  “Have you thought about my suggestion?”

  She’d told
him to call his old teacher Dr. Edward Ferenczi, the new president’s national security adviser. Which would make it interesting, Dan working for one party while she was biding her time waiting to come back with the other. “I don’t know. I’m still thinking about it.”

  “Don’t wait, if you want a responsible position.” Her tone was tentative, as if she didn’t want to jab a tender place. “Good God, is that the time?” She grabbed her coat, kissed his cheek, gave his chest a quick raking scratch through the open bathrobe. “See you Thursday.”

  He was about to let her go with that, but something made him get up. A faint unease out of nowhere. “I’ll go to the door with you.”

  The garage door groaned as it rolled up. He eyed the chains, thinking, grease. He caught her smile, a lifted hand as she backed down the drive, then craned around, checking her six before rolling out into the street. A pale rose glow fanned slowly out beyond the trees, like a peacock’s tail.

  When she was gone he stripped the plastic wrapper off the Post, looking at the weather first. Clear skies; she should have a nice flight. The headlines. The new SecDef had declared war on bloat at the Pentagon. He was trimming the staff fifteen percent to start with and twenty percent more in a year. Page two, more criticism of the new missile defense program. He read this article to the end.

  Judges and prosecutors were being murdered in Colombia. NATO was pulling out of Macedonia amid predictions of sectarian massacres. He shuddered, remembering a concrete shed filled with corpses, the buzz of fat flies nestling into mutilated eye sockets. When the Balkans went, they went all the way, tumbling straight through war into the abyss of savagery. More deaths in Iraq too.

  He lifted his gaze, thoughts freezing behind gray eyes. Whatever he read, faces floated up. Images, smells, tastes of numb terror and desperate hope and, sometimes, incredible heroism.

  He’d worn a uniform since he’d been seventeen. The Navy had been home, career, profession … everything. But it ate its young. Destroyed marriages. Relationships. The years had shot past one after the other at sea, or busy ashore. He’d done everything he’d set out to do. Even commanded a destroyer, though not for long enough.

  You could stay in for a few years, after being passed over. But what was the point? Might as well do desk work somewhere they’d actually pay. Maybe not as well as they were going to pay Blair, but better than the Navy.

  The trouble was, he’d never wanted to do anything else.

  3:15 A.M., PCT, LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA

  Theodore Harlett Oberg jerked awake, knowing as he did it was going to be bad. Another shit night. He stared up into the glowing dark and blotted his slick face with the sheet.

  Fuck, he thought. Fuck, fuck, fuck.

  It was Sumo again. Not the only dream he had over and over, but in some ways the worst. He rolled his head to see if he was alone. Someone lay next to him. The starlet. The blonde. Laurne? Loreet? Not Loreeta. Loreena? Something that sounded like cheap cheese. He listened to her breathing. Asleep. Fuck her. Obviously he had, but what else? He’d promised himself before the party he wasn’t going to drink. But by the way his mouth felt … actually he couldn’t remember. Like a black sheet over everything. Which couldn’t be good.

  He inspected the hump again. No, Loreena had left weeks ago. This couldn’t be her. Well, didn’t matter. Long as it wasn’t a guy. Then it’d be time to reach for the Mossberg under the bed. Nibble on some double ought.

  He turned the satin sheets back and slid out. Padded to the window, the hand-laid tile cold against his bare soles.

  His grandmother had bought land on Lookout Mountain after Clara Bow and Harry Houdini but before the cookie-cutter developments with hokey names like Dona Lisa or Zeus Drive had bookended Laurel Canyon. Somehow this little pocket from the twenties and thirties had stayed almost unchanged, a throwback to the hip, cool, funky days when his mom used to see Jim Morrison and John Holmes at the Canyon Store. Back then the guy who ran it was named Bill, and many, many deals had been made at the pay phone in front. Teddy and his friends, kids then, used to sneak into Frank Zappa’s yard and light fires behind the log cabin. There were still stars and musicians around—Jennifer Aniston, Marilyn Manson—but now the Canyon was all fences and development, retaining walls gradually obliterating the chaparral-dotted gray of the slopes like concrete mold. The glow from the city was bright as dawn at midnight.

  But he still had two acres of dense chaparral, and the tunnels under it he’d used to play in. A carport, down by the access road, with low-water plantings. A pool, though it was covered now. The house looked down from under huge live oaks, and standing in front of the floor-to-ceiling windows that had been the wonder of the architectural magazines back in the forties, Teddy reached behind the drapes until his fingers brushed the flash hider of the full automatic M4 he’d left leaning where glass met brick. The drapes stank of mildew. His headache throbbed. Behind him the woman grunted, rolled over, and began snoring.

  His chest rose and fell. He stared down at the shimmering glitter, the scattered house lights and moving headlights of Laurel Canyon. But he wasn’t seeing it.

  A green spheroid. His peripheral vision made it as a grenade.

  And Kaulukukui gave him that look. “War’s a motherfucker, ain’t it?”

  Yeah, Sumo. It’s a motherfucker, all right.

  But us … we were supposed to be the meanest motherfuckers in the valley.

  “You bastard,” he muttered, wiping his nose on his hand. “You fat bastard.”

  The insurgents had pinned the SEALs in the kill zone. Four shooters, pushing muzzles over the catwalk so they could fire down without exposing themselves. He’d snap-shot back. Beside him Kaulukukui was hugging the wall, returning fire. Bullets ripped rock walls, spewing chips. Hot brass spun through the air. Dirt flew, and something hard cracked into his goggles.

  “Obie! Y’in there?” The SEALs behind them, yelling past the machine gunner who’d cut them off.

  “They got us stone, babe,” Oberg had shouted back. “Set us up righteous. Some fucking assistance here!”

  “Can’t get to you, man. Got us cold.”

  Teddy groped for a grenade, then remembered: not even a flash-bang. Gone, used up fighting their way down from the roof to assault the hide site of the man behind this whole insurgency. Or so Higher’d said.

  A shooter stuck his Kalash over the railing and emptied it like a garden hose. A bullet clipped Teddy’s boot, another his harness. “Shit,” he’d muttered, backing toward a corner as he kept the front sight on the balcony, waiting for the next weasel. “Pop the fuck up, fuckers.” But they didn’t, just kept sticking rifles over the rail and spraying lead. Sooner or later—

  He’d been slamming in another mag when something flew down. It struck the ground and took a lopsided bounce. A green spheroid. His peripheral vision made it as a grenade at the same moment it struck the wall beside him.

  It rolled, spinning, and rocked to a halt midway between him and his partner. The drill was to duck or roll, but there was nowhere to go. Or kick it away. But there was nowhere to kick it to. This whole end of the room was open ground.

  His eyes had met Kaulukukui’s across four feet of space. And the big Hawaiian said, “War’s a motherfucker, ain’t it?”

  Before Teddy could react, he stepped over it and crouched, putting himself between Teddy and the grenade.

  “No! Sumo—”

  The shattering crack of high explosive. Kaulukukui had shuddered. Half-turned, a smile still curving his lips.

  Then he’d toppled, exposing the raw bleeding mass that had been his back.

  Shuddering, Teddy drew clawed fingers down his cheeks. Over the ridges of old scars. The cool air crawled over his skin like leeches in a Mindanao rain forest. He turned on a heel and walked naked into the next room, then down flagstone steps. A light glowed over the bar, in front of another floor-to-ceiling window. The bottle’s neck rattled on the glass as he poured Grey Goose. His mouth felt stale and raw, his he
ad slammed and his lips stung, but he got the first slug down.

  He stood again before the lights, looking down. He knew this house. Had let go of that faux bamboo end table to take his first steps, or so his mother had always said. But he didn’t belong here. He wasn’t sure where the fuck he belonged.

  “You got to catch up on your sleep,” he told himself. “Important meeting this morning.” He looked at the neon-circled clock over the bar. Three twenty-four.

  The Movie. He’d left the SEALs to make it. A film that told the truth about combat, about men, about honor, about death. Not Sands of Iwo Jima, not Apocalypse Now, no heroes and no fools, just the sweat and blood and the kind of man it took and the kind it left once the fighting was over. He and Loki had hammered the script out over a year, endless meetings with the writers and the money people, Germans looking to move funds into the United States. He didn’t understand it, but Loki said the European tax laws were such that even if you lost millions on the film, they made money anyway.

  He’d said, Why do we need them? I can front this, mortgage the beach house and all that land. But Loki Dittrich had said no. Rule Number One: Never use your own money. Erase your risk. Get foreign distributors to cover half your production costs. She’d been his mother’s friend. They’d gone to bed once, eons ago, “Just to get that out of the way,” she’d told the then fifteen-year-old Teddy. She’d hooked him up with Breakbone Pictures. Found a million from a hedge fund. Teddy had called one of the guys who used to set fires with him—now an A-list agent—and they had Ewan McGregor and Colin Farrell attached. Russell Crowe, a firm maybe. Teddy wanted Ridley Scott, but Loki said she wanted to do the financing first, have it wrapped up before they signed a director; that would give them leverage.

  That was what the meeting was about: nailing down the Germans. They’d seen the script, made suggestions, read the rewrites. Now they were flying in. They’d meet in the garden of the Polo Lounge, to lock in the memorandum of understanding.

  In Hollywood, it always came down to “credit” and “money.” Since he didn’t need the money, he wanted “A Teddy Oberg Production” above the title. Loki said it was outrageous to ask for it on his first film. But if he produced, it’d get made the way he wanted. If he let the money people drive the train, he might as well just pick up that Mossberg and see what an ounce and a half of buckshot tasted like.

 

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