Running the Maze s-5

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Running the Maze s-5 Page 28

by Jack Coughlin


  Kyle turned to the master gunny. “That works, and I need to chop a pair of sniper teams to me. Not for shooting unless I give the call, but to flank the position and feed me information. Let’s go ahead and do their insertion by air right away. Take along their ghillie suits, establish hides, and report. Sooner the better.”

  The MARSOC officer had a question. “You think this Curtis guy understands that we do desert warfare training up here all the time? What edge does he possibly believe he can obtain just by going into the dunes?”

  “It’s probably based on his planned egress route,” answered the master gunny. “This is only a few hundred yards from the international border in the middle of a wasteland, so once he does the deed, he hauls ass across the line. Obviously he has been there before to stake it out and plan this, and he thinks he has control; he has the hostages, the dynamite, and a handpicked position and is calling the orders. Want to bet that he’s got an off-road vehicle stashed nearby?”

  The staff officer made a note. “We can lay on an Osprey right now to take you and the sniper teams down so you can all can hump in, and it can hang around out of sight, then be a medevac when it’s all done.”

  “Sounds good, sir, but I’m not going in with the sniper teams. I’ve got to invade Mexico first, and faster than an Osprey can move. Time is critical. Can you line me up with a Citation down to Calexico?”

  As the other three men were running checklists through their heads, Swanson called for the Lizard again. “I’m out of here, gang. See if Sybelle can arrange a priority call for me with the Fuerzas Especiales unit of the Infantería de Marina in Tijuana; particularly I need to talk to Capitano Miguel Francisco Castillo. Last I heard, he was running a platoon of Special Forces against the cartel in Sonora, right along the area where we will be working. I’ll be in the air, but the Stumps can patch the call through.”

  The master gunnery sergeant gave a wicked grin. “We trained those Mexican marines. Good, solid fighters, although they do prefer that piece of shit Heckler & Koch MSG-90 for a sniper rifle.”

  Swanson was up and moving. “I helped train Mickey myself, back when he was still an enlisted man, so he can be my spotter. His weapon, Master Gunny, doesn’t matter, because I’ll be taking my own.”

  * * *

  CAPTAIN MICKEY CASTILLO WAS waiting at the Calexico International Airport when Kyle came in aboard a Cessna Citation V; he escorted Swanson through the border crossing with his gear, then drove to the Taboada International in the mirroring town of Mexicali. In minutes, they were aboard a Eurocopter Panther AS-565 helicopter churning east along I-8, paralleling the border, and were dropped off three miles south of the line. A following helicopter dumped out a dozen Marines who spread out to form a broad half-moon defensive position and protect the rear of the position for the unusual sniper team of Swanson and Castillo.

  Kyle knew he had won the race. Curtis would still be on the road, believing he was ahead of the curve and would have about an hour to set up his trap atop a giant sand dune. Swanson, meanwhile, would be in a hide two and a half miles away, in Mexico, watching.

  He and Mickey made quick work of digging a comfortable hole in the loose sand at the top of a huge dune, covering it with boards, then stacking the dirt back on and plugging in chunks of local vegetation. “This will be a very long shot, Kyle. I hope your special rifle can even make the shot at this range,” Castillo said.

  “It’s not just the rifle, Mickey. I’ll be using a rocket-powered titanium bullet that is still in the experimental stage. We were testing it at 29 Palms when this mission popped up.” He arranged his radio, made the Excalibur ready, and covered it with a clean, soft cloth to keep out the fine dirt until it was time to use it. “I appreciate you taking time off from your druggies to help out this morning.”

  “Always happy to help kill an American terrorist.” The Mexican captain in the black beret grinned, and his bright teeth flashed beneath the mustache. “The guy sounds like a real asshole.”

  “That he is, my friend. That he is. But he has two women, one of whom is Beth Ledford, a good friend of mine, and we have to rescue them.”

  “Aha. A pretty señorita?”

  “Actually, she is pretty. A little blonde with a nice figure, but we’re just friends. Beth is a helluva fighter, can shoot better than you, and is going to join Task Force Trident.”

  “Then she certainly sounds worth saving. Afterward, we can perhaps have a celebration?”

  “You always have women on your mind. Just concentrate for now on popping this tango, OK?”

  “Of course. Or course. This Beth Ledford; she is a little blonde, did you say?”

  EL CENTRO, CALIFORNIA

  BILL CURTIS KEPT HIS van within the speed limit on the interstate highway as he passed through the agricultural fields of the fertile Imperial Valley, and the smell of fertilizer and chemicals hung heavy on the night air. Huge sprinkler systems hissed from pipes. He was in control. The women were immobilized in the back, wrapped in dynamite, and gagged, behaving themselves. He would have the sun at his back when Swanson came through the big dunes and into the kill zone. He would be up high, with the advantage of looking down on the approaching man, who would be helpless. The explosive device was buried at the turnoff where he would leave his van, and Curtis had planted two additional dynamite caches along the little path up the steep, shifting side of the sand dune. At that point, there would be nothing Swanson could do to stop him.

  He looked at the digital clock on the dashboard and saw that it was almost four thirty in the morning, which meant it was seven thirty at the Space Center; according to the published schedule, the Mars astronauts would be boarding the command module of the rocket about now. Coming up on T minus three hours. He pressed the scan button to see if a news report might be picked up out in the desert night. Radio reception was tricky in this bowl of desert that was below sea level, and getting clear signals from commercial stations was erratic.

  Curtis found a talk show whose host specialized in the weird and bizarre, including coverage of aliens and UFOs, for his listening audience of night owls. He had been refereeing an argument for the past hour between experts about what kind of life existed on Mars, and if it might be hostile to humans.

  “Well, guys, this is really interesting, and our lines are on fire, but I want to bring everybody up to date here. The wire services are reporting from the Cape that the Mars launch has been scrubbed!” Excitement rose in his voice. “A NASA spokesman has just announced that during the final safety check this morning, several heat-resistant tiles on the reentry vehicle were found to be defective, and the America will not fly until the problem can be corrected. A news conference will be held later. Well, guys, this is a stunner. No launch this morning! What do you think, Dr. Lerner?”

  Bill Curtis slammed on the brakes, and the tires locked and the van skidded to a jerky halt with the right wheels off the pavement. He bashed the steering wheel with both hands and shouted every obscenity he could think of, got out and stormed around, waving his arms in frustration, then beat hard on the side of the van. A passing motorist gave him a curious look, then sped away. The damned Mars mission was off! How? What? They would go through the rocket piece by piece now and find the detonator. Ohhhhhh, damndamndamn. His groan was deep and guttural, and his stomach was in such sudden pain that he leaned over and vomited bile onto the pavement. He collapsed beside the back wheel, leaned back, and drew in deep breaths. Failure again. First the bridge, then his exposure as a traitor, and now this. The tiles story had to be a lie. He didn’t know how but was certain that Swanson was involved in foiling the rocket plan, too. The double strike on the United States had evaporated. Blood surged through his veins, and he felt like killing somebody.

  * * *

  KYLE SWANSON SWEPT THE 40-power spotting scope slowly over the empty sands that would turn into a cauldron within a few hours as temperatures soared to over 100 degrees, occasionally kissing 120 plus. On most summer days, the cooked littl
e towns in the Imperial Valley were among the hottest places in the United States. The dunes folded away, one after another for forty miles to the north, and when the hot, heavy winds kicked in, the incredibly wrinkled landscape would rearrange itself into brand-new trackless, bumpy wastes, and sand would fill the air and turn the world tan and blot out the sun.

  “Headlights,” he said and handed the scope to Mickey. Without the increased magnification, the lights were a mere dot in the darkness to the naked eye, but when Kyle brought up the Excalibur, its 20-power scope brought everything back to clarity, adjusting to night-vision mode. “He’s late. Only thirty minutes until sunrise.” The darkness was already thinning as a new day crept toward the valley.

  The hump of the huge dune hid the new arrivals, but the flanking teams had clear views and gave step-by-step reports as Bill Curtis parked south of the small bridge at the intersection of the All-American and New Coachella canals, part of the desert aqueduct system. He killed the engine and pulled his two hostages from the back of the van, cut the manacles on their ankles, and made each carry some gear as they climbed the dune, following the little flags dimly visible at their feet.

  The snipers had all lasered the top of the target dune earlier with infrared beams, and Swanson had locked the exact distance into Excalibur’s internal computer. “Windage?” he asked and was told there was no change. A recurring light breeze had been recorded sweeping through the valleys between the dunes every seven minutes, and the timing had remained constant. Mickey was keeping track of the time, and just as expected, the faint wind eased down through the depressions right on schedule.

  “We’ve got another seven minutes of clear air,” he whispered, as though his voice might be heard two and a half miles away. In the big scope, he saw the man come to the crest of the faraway ridge with the women beside him. Then the women sat down, and the man stood tall. “Everybody stay still,” Mickey called. “He’s doing a sweep of the area with binoculars. Good. He’s done. Jesus, Kyle, he didn’t even look this way.”

  “Of course not. He’s overconfident and careless. This is Mexico, and he drew a mental boundary on threats at the border. He has not factored in the danger to himself. What’s that he’s doing?”

  “Shit. It’s a beach chair! The son of a bitch has unfolded a beach chair and has plopped his ass down in it, like a king on a throne. A hostage is tight on each side.”

  Swanson brought the picture to perfect clarity in his own scope. Hunh. The elevation calculation was still good; Kyle’s hide was fifty feet above the target, and he figured a plus three. His aim point would be the base of the neck, right above the shoulders. Not much wiggle room left and right, but better margin of error up and down, and Swanson did not plan on missing anyway. Not this morning.

  While Curtis was seated, Kyle could only glimpse the head itself, which was moving back and forth, either talking to the hostages or looking for the expected vehicle. “Stand up, you fucker. Stand up.” The rifle was ready, the shooter was ready, and the target had about a minute to live.

  At precisely 5:42 A.M., the final wispy gray fled the sky and the fiery rim of the sun seemed to leap up with a blinding light. Curtis would not even try to look backward now, and right on time, the huge Marine MRAP armored truck surged out of the west, the big engine shattering the stillness, as if the world’s biggest dune buggy had awakened. The driver jammed the accelerator down hard so the noise could help complete the distraction, and he was confident the beast would do no more than rock a few times on its protected springs if a couple of sticks of dynamite exploded beneath it. It ate big bombs for breakfast.

  Curtis saw the MRAP coming, put aside the detonator for the vests, and picked up the one for the explosive package that he had buried at the wooden bridge. The truck was rushing nearer by the instant, Swanson hurrying for his doom. In the building excitement, Big Bill Curtis stood up, and Kyle took the shot.

  A twin instantaneous explosion tore through the daybreak; a ka-pow… POW thunder as Excalibur fired. The huge .50 caliber bullet erupted from the barrel with a deafening crack and instantly covered the first thousand yards on its own power; then three microscopic fins popped open and a tiny solid-fuel motor ignited with a roar of its own that kicked the bullet forward even harder and multiplied its normal effective range without altering the spin. The bullet became a missile.

  It struck Curtis with such brutal force that it ripped his head off at the neck, and the impact hurled the body forward as if it had leaped ten feet. The corpse hit the slope hard, and it cartwheeled hideously down the length of the high dune, leaving behind a splattered trail of blood and gore that shone brightly in the sunlight of the new day.

  * * *

  LANCE CORPORAL JIM “BOOMER” Carpenter saw the head fly off of the man at the top of the steep dune before he heard the double-whammy of the shot. As the body tumbled down the sharply angled slope, he kept up the speed of his MRAP and dodged it, letting the truck’s Caterpillar turbocharged diesel engine churn the strong Michelin tires until it could go no farther. Sand and gravity stopped it about halfway up. Boomer was a little disappointed that he had not run over any booby trap. He grasped the microphone from the dashboard and flipped on the loudspeaker. “Ladies up there! It’s all over! Stay calm. The helicopter is inbound from the south.” Then he unbuckled the four-point safety harness and climbed up behind the machine gun in the turret, just in case.

  The Eurocopter Panther did not touch the ground when it swirled in to let Kyle and Mickey jump aboard, and then it covered the two and a half miles to the dune in a flash. To keep from creating a sandstorm with its rotors, it hovered above the crest and the two Marines fast-roped down, crouching beneath the blast until the bird flew away.

  Kyle ran to the hostage on his left while Mickey sprinted to the other woman. Margaret Ledford’s eyes were tightly shut, and tears tracked from the corners; her body shook with sobs. Kyle knelt down and propped her into a sitting position against his left arm and leg. “It’s OK, Mrs. Ledford. Everything is under control now. My name is Kyle Swanson, and I’m a friend of Beth’s.” He gently peeled away the duct tape gag, and she hauled in deep breaths and gagged a bit while he used his Ka-Bar knife to slice away the ties at her wrists and ankles, then closely examined the dynamite pack. “I don’t see any triggering device on this vest, Mickey. He probably wanted to command detonate after he got away. I think we can just cut them off.”

  He looked over to where Mickey and Beth were, less than ten feet away. She was sitting up on her own, and Mickey had removed the tape from her mouth and cut away the bindings. He had his black beret low over his forehead, and somehow his desert camo uniform looked clean and sharp. They were looking directly into each other’s eyes, dark Latin brown and bright Iowa blue, and Mickey lifted Beth’s right hand to his lips to give it a light kiss. “I am Captain Miguel Francisco Castillo, Infantería de Marina, señorita. At your service. Please, call me Mickey.”

  Swanson shook his head in wonder as Beth gave Mickey a ten-thousand-watt smile that erased the dangerous past hours as if they never had happened. Damn, he thought, she never smiled at me like that.

  PEARL HARBOR, HAWAII

  TWO WEEKS LATER, KYLE Swanson was wrapping up some leave time in Hawaii before heading back to Washington. He had spent long days on the beaches of Oahu, hanging out with the surfer crowds and even now and then catching an empty wave where he would find himself alone with his board atop a surging mountain of water. As much as the waves called to him at Makaha and Waimea and out in the Pipeline, he tore himself away from the lure of the breaking surf for his final evening in Hawaii, had his hair cut, shaved, and donned his full evening dress uniform. For a change, he wanted—needed—to look sharp. Even the Medal of Honor would be worn around his neck on its silken blue ribbon.

  At 1700 hours sharp, Swanson strode up the gangway to the mighty battleship USS Missouri, anchored at Ford Island, saluted the flag and the welcoming officer of the deck, and stepped aboard to join a private
reception being hosted by the U.S. Pacific Command. A new admiral was taking over, and this party was the last hurrah for the departing commander. Major General Brad Middleton of Task Force Trident had been invited to the change-of-command ceremony because he was an old friend of the incoming admiral but could not get away from Washington, so he sent Medal of Honor winner Kyle Swanson as a consolation prize.

  Kyle spent an hour of meaningless mingling to make sure that Middleton would be informed that everything had gone off well; then he casually drifted away from the herd of dress uniforms, stars, and tuxedoes, and the women in gowns that seemed to glow in the bright lights. The cocktails would be followed by dinner and dancing, but Kyle wanted some alone time aboard the Mighty Mo.

  The ship was huge, as big as a small city, and he wandered freely beneath the big guns, from the stern to the bow, which was pointed directly at the Arizona memorial. The positioning represented the alpha and omega, the beginning and the end, of World War II for America, since the Arizona was sunk when the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbor in 1941, and the surrender documents were signed aboard the Missouri almost four years later in 1945 in Tokyo Bay.

  Alone at the bow, Kyle came to attention and saluted the Arizona, which entombed most of the 1,177 crewmen who lost their lives that day. The memories were as fresh as the oil that still oozed from the bunkers of the dead battlewagon.

  Closure. That was what Kyle wanted on this latest war, but he knew he would never live to see it. The War on Terror had already lasted twice as long as World War II and showed no signs of really stopping; there would never be a signing of a peace treaty with the shadowy jihadist religious fanatics and their supporters in so many countries. They would never stop trying to attack the United States.

 

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