Cody's Army
Page 1
IN AMERICA’S WAR
AGAINST TERRORISM,
THERE’S ONLY ONE ARMY-
CODY’S ARMY
JOHN CODY. A former Princetonian seasoned in Vietnam combat, he’s the CIA’s most amazing “mission impossible” man—and sworn to fight terrorism by any means necessary.
HAWKEYE HAWKINS. The tough, wisecracking Texan, he’s one of the most daring men Cody took fire with in Vietnam.
RUFE MURPHY. The black giant whose exploits as a daredevil pilot became a legend, he saves a special hell for terrorists.
RICHARD CAINE. Booted out of England’s crack antiterrorist strike force for insubordination, he’s the world’s greatest demolitions expert—and one of the bravest men alive.
Also by Jim Case
CODY’S ARMY: ASSAULT INTO LIBYA
Forthcoming from
WARNER BOOKS
Contents
Also by Jim Case
Copyright
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
CHAPTER TWENTY-FOUR
CHAPTER TWENTY-FIVE
CHAPTER TWENTY-SIX
CHAPTER TWENTY-SEVEN
Copyright
WARNER BOOKS-EDITION
Copyright © 1986 by Warner Books, Inc.
All rights reserved.
Warner Books, Inc.
Hachette Book Group
237 Park Avenue
New York, NY 10017
Visit our website at www.HachetteBookGroup.com
First eBook Edition: September 2009
ISBN: 978-0-446-56624-7
CHAPTER
ONE
John Cody went into a low combat crouch just short of the tree line, his M-16 held up and ready in firing position, his eyes scanning the semidarkness ahead. He raised his left hand in a gesture that halted the five-man column behind him in the muggy, predawn gloom.
The sticky closeness of rugged jungle terrain murmured with the incessant chatter of birds and insects.
Four of the men behind Cody assumed a loose defensive formation, assault rifles aimed outward at different angles, probing the night for any sign of human movement.
The jungle sounds continued undisturbed around them.
Cody was a big, tautly muscled man, clad in camou fatigues and loaded for bear: in addition to the M-16 head weapon, he wore a Browning 9mm hi-power holstered at his hip. The military webbing strapped across his chest bore an assortment of grenades, a wire garrote, pouches with spare ammunition, and a combat knife sheathed at midchest for quick cross-draw. His hands and face, smeared with a cosmetic blackface goo, rendered him practically invisible, one with the night.
Lopez detached himself from his four men and scrambled forward to crouch beside Cody at the tree line. He, like his men, wore camou fatigues considerably shabbier than Cody’s, and their M-16s were the only weapons they carried.
He and Cody gazed out across the fifty-yard clearing separating their position from ten-foot-high stone walls of the mission and country church.
A half moon shimmered in a cloudless sky, offering enough illumination for Cody to see the white stucco bell tower rising in the night from behind the walls.
Two Soviet-made Jeep-like vehicles with government markings sat parked near the arched entrance of the mission, an armored Soviet-built recon vehicle next to them.
Two Sandinista sentries leaned nonchalantly against the armored vehicle, their backs to Cody and Lopez, their AK-47 assault rifles propped against one of the Jeeps.
Cody saw the red pinpoints of two cigarettes in the gloom across the clearing.
“Get your men ready,” he instructed Lopez in a low whisper. “We’re moving in.”
“Is it not as I told you Senor Gorman?” The contra’s hushed reply quavered with pride and eagerness. “They expect nothing!”
“Yeah, it looks that way,” Cody grunted. “Move it. Let’s go.”
“As you say.”
Lopez crept back to his men, leaving Cody alone to refocus his attention on the mission objective.
The scent of cooking drifted through the heavy air to tantalize Cody’s nostrils.
The government army patrol that had spent the past two nights inside this mission would be waking, stirring, he knew, and the only time to hit was now, in that period just before dawn when the security of any such position is universally at its weakest, when the night-shift sentries have grown bored with their lonely post, and careless.
In a high-risk situation, a commander would change his guard often enough to keep them fresh, but Cody figured the men those vehicles belonged to would be sleepy-eyed and more or less easy pickings for the hard hit that was now heartbeats away from going down.
The mission was situated on a single-lane dirt road that disappeared into the shroud of night in either direction.
They were less than fifteen kilometers north of San Jose de Bocay, but Cody’s group had taken more than two hours to arrive at this spot; night driving was slow along the chaotic mountainscape, and extreme caution was necessary when traveling day or night through this harsh region. The mangrove swamps and cotton or coffee farms that were nominally under government control by day belonged to whomever had the strongest firepower after the sun went down.
Gorman and Snider, the two company contacts for this band of contras, had remained back with the van one kilometer behind.
The contra unit separated, Lopez silently signaling two of them further down the tree line away from Cody’s left flank while the other two antigovernment guerillas jogged off and out of sight in the opposite direction—with barely a sound except for their muted footfalls and the soft sigh of branches and fronds being eased aside as they withdrew.
Lopez returned to crouch beside Cody.
“We are ready.”
The contra stank heavily of b.o. and garlic. Scars from shrapnel wounds marked his throat and forehead.
Cody had little liking for the man or for any of the contras: a ragtag collection of scavenging mountain bandits who took money and weapons from the CIA to wage a guerilla war, supposedly for ideological reasons against a revolution they felt had betrayed them. Cody had no love for Marxists, but could discern little difference between the Sandinista strongmen running things from Managua and these unshaven, grubby opportunists, most of them ex-Somozan thugs who had most likely been robbing and pillaging the campesinos before the company decided to exploit them.
The Central Intelligence Agency had seen fit to utilize these “guerillas” to fight the spread of communism in Central America; to hopefully contain the situation from ever reaching proportions that would require U.S. military intervention.
Cody worked for the CIA.
He thumbed a bead of sweat away from his left eyelid and glanced sideways at Lopez.
“In and to the right of the chapel building?”
Lopez nodded.
“The classroom. It is where the nuns have been kept since the soldiers arrived. They are interrogated there during the day and forced to sleep on the floor during the night.”
“I want you and your men to move in the instant I take out those sentries,” Cody instructed.
“No noise. Just get us those Jeeps and that armored job and get ready to start the engines as soon as you see me. I’ll have the nuns with me.”
Lopez shrugged in an offhand manner.
“Do not worry yourself so, my yanqui friend. All will go as you wish.”
“Sure, it will,” Cody growled.
He moved out, traveling low and fast, bee-lining across the clearing, then along the wall of the mission, advancing on the two sentries from their blind side.
Cody had been at this sort of thing for a long time, utilizing infiltration and combat skills taught him courtesy of Uncle Sam’s Marine Corps and honed to a razor’s edge during three tours of combat duty with the Special Forces in Vietnam. There he had commanded a covert “hit-and-git” hard strike force intended to neutralize important enemy targets, both military and civilian, and, more than a few times, behind enemy lines, pulling off success after success when there had seemed no chance for success, and usually with no mention made in official files.
During that time he had begun working with the CIA, and after the U.S. pullout he continued, even after his official military discharge, handling difficult jobs for the Company that took him from Ireland to Iran, from Libya to El Salvador.
He drew the missions that were considered impossible, or maybe just too damn dirty, except for someone with his skills and track record; dangerous, lonely work, but the only kind Cody could imagine for himself.
He came up on the two sentries.
They were not aware of his presence and wouldn’t be until the killing began.
He had slung his rifle by its strap across his right shoulder so it could be swung around instantly if necessary, but at this point it was essential to keep the hit quiet.
Within moments all hell would break loose, but he had to get inside first and he had to free up these vehicles for Lopez and his men.
He unsheathed his combat knife with his right fist and snaked his left arm around the throat of the closest sentry.
The young soldier’s cigarette dropped from his lips as he was yanked backward off his feet by the soundless, nearly invisible apparition that buried the knife to the hilt from behind just below the sentry’s rib cage.
Cody’s left hand clamped over his victim’s face to silence the death gasp. He withdrew the blade from the body, stepping clear from it as it sagged, turning his attention to the second soldier, whose eyes had widened into white orbs of terror at the sight of his comrade’s collapsing to the ground, the apparition coming at him next.
This sentry started to track his AK-47 around into firing position, started to open his mouth to yell a warning to those inside the walls.
Cody executed a martial-arts snap kick that ripped the rifle from the sentry’s grip and, before the man could step back or react in any way, he moved in with a smooth continuation of the kick and slashed backhand up and outward with the knife’s heavy blade—slicing open the guard’s throat from ear to ear. He swung away from the spurting geysers of the severed jugulars.
The sentry became a dancing dead man, toppling backward against the nearest Jeep, then flopping forward flat onto his face, where he did not move, his dead hands clasped around his throat in a vain attempt to stem the blood flooding from between his fingers to twinkle blackly across the moonlit ground.
Silently.
Silent killing was another of Cody’s specialities.
He faded back against the deeper shadows at the base of the wall and paused just long enough to eyeball Lopez and the inky figures of the four others, jogging toward the vehicles from several points along the tree line across the clearing.
He moved out before they reached him, sheathing the combat knife, swinging his M-16 back around into firing position. He light-footed across the distance separating him from the archway set in the center of the south wall of the mission.
As he advanced, the scent grew stronger of someone boiling cabbage soup.
The day started early in Nicaragua, as in all of Central America, because of the heat, which was already oppressive.
He had been summoned from a secret base in Honduras, where he had been assigned to train some contra leaders in the more refined techniques of “soft” penetration and “hard” hit. The mountain bandits sent to him for shaping up had been lousy students, drunk most of the time and not particularly bright. So he had welcomed the hurry-up summons from Gorman’s station in San Jose de Bocay.
Four American Roman Catholic nuns were being held prisoner, under “house arrest,” within the walls of this mission, where they had been serving their church for the past eighteen months. The Sisters were being held here for interrogation by a unit of the Sandinista army battalion and charged with engaging contras in this region, according to Gorman.
The Nicaraguan regime was understandably sensitive in its dealings with the Church, since eighty percent of the Nicaraguan population was Roman Catholic. So this “preliminary questioning” was taking place here under extreme low profile over the past two days. It was for the men on the scene to decide if there was anything to suspicions that the Sisters were aiding and abetting the contras.
This situation had been brought to Gorman’s attention by Lopez, the CIA’s liaison with the regional contra network.
Gorman had reiterated the gravity of the situation to Cody as they had ridden in the van together to within hoofing distance of the mission.
“The kicker is that the boss nun at that mission, a Sister Mary Francine, has been up to everything those Sandinistas think she’s been up to. Managua made a massive fuck-up when they first took on the contras up here. They relocated nearly seventy-thousand peasants to keep them from being, uh, ’co-opted by the counterrevolutionaries,’ is, I think, how they put it. They weren’t too nice about it. A lot of the people who originally welcomed the new government lost their enthusiasm in a hurry when they saw their homes and land burning and were forced to move at gunpoint, and that brought about exactly what the government was afraid of. That mission has served as a contact point for all kinds of things the government isn’t too happy with, and if they do get those nuns to talk—and they will if they decide there is something to what they’ve heard—well, then, the Company can just kiss off two years of damn hard work.”
Snider, Gorman’s partner, had tacked on almost as an afterthought, “And of course we want to pull those nuns out of that situation in any event.”
Cody reflected on that for a moment as he reached the archway to the mission. He froze with his back to the outside wall, his finger circled around the M-16’s trigger. He watched Lopez and his contra team reach the vehicles.
He had been hustled into the country for a rendevous with the Company men, and Lopez and this crew, and had been brought here directly. His superiors in Honduras had told him that they needed one of the Company’s specialists in this kind of thing and the nearest specialist had been Cody.
There was no time whatsoever to spare.
This was day three coming up of the soldiers questioning these nuns; it would surely be the day they would decide whether or not to leave the Sisters alone or take them to their headquarters for a more thorough “interrogation”—which would be the last anyone ever heard of the nuns, period.
That was the way things happened in Nicaragua. Life was even cheaper than it had been before the revolution. Atrocity was the order of the day for both sides. For their part, the contras were unable and unwilling to care for captured troops and informers in their mobile hit-and-run campaigns against both the government and civilians sympathetic to the government. At the same time, the high command in Managua had intensified its military sweeps through cities and countryside with brutal repression backed up by the muscle of Soviet arms unloading almost daily at the port of Corinto. In a country the size of Alabama, population: three million, it was brother against brother; a bloodbath threatening to spill over Nicaragua’s borders and growing worse day by day.
And here I am, right squat in the middle of another dirty little
war, thought Cody, and he wondered what the tightness in his gut was trying to tell him. It could have been the people he had to work with or maybe he had just been around this track one goddamn time too many.
He told himself this was no time for such thoughts.
He glanced over at Lopez and gave the contra a thumbs-up sign that Lopez did not acknowledge or return. Then, taking a deep breath, Cody pushed himself away from the wall and went around and through the archway and into the mission courtyard, his M-16 up in both fists, ready to deliver.
CHAPTER
TWO
He could see why the military vehicles had been parked outside. It was more than just a show of force to impress and intimidate the locals.
The tiny courtyard of the mission was simply too confined a space in which to park or maneuver vehicles with any effectiveness in the event of an attack.
A long structure that Cody had been told was the nuns’ living quarters, which had been taken over by the seven remaining troopers Lopez claimed were stationed here, was ahead and to his left, beside an area where a tethered donkey munched contentedly from a hay-filled cart.
Next to a chicken coop, a man in fatigues stood in the gloom, over a field stove, his back to Cody, preparing the soup Cody had smelled.
Directly ahead of Cody, next to the living quarters, was the chapel with the bell tower he had seen from outside the walls.
Next to a playground, where a children’s swing set and slide clustered in the silver moonlight, to Cody’s right as he came through the front gateway, keeping to the deep shadows, stood the wooden structure that would be the classroom where the nuns slept by night and were questioned by day, again according to Lopez’s information.
He double-timed along the inside of the wall toward the rear of the classroom building.
A single light shone from the living quarters across the compound.
There would be one, possibly two, men stationed to keep an eye on the nuns.