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Tier One Wild df-2

Page 10

by Dalton Fury

Raynor knew Webber was his champion here in the Unit, at least until the next op.

  Kolt’s return to Delta had been a positive experience overall, but, just as he had during his first time in the troop, he did have his detractors. People seemed to either love Kolt or hate him. During his first stint in Delta, those who weren’t in Kolt’s fan club admitted that he was one of the hardest-working guys in the compound, but they also said he was a hardheaded son of a bitch and, for an officer, took the Tier One Wild tag a little too much to the extreme.

  The intervening years and the mileage that went along with them had affected him, there was no doubt about that. Kolt considered himself even harder-working than before, with much more to prove than during his first stint here. But now he was determined to change his image — to take that extra breath before speaking or that extra moment to empathize with the other person’s point of view.

  Kolt had always listened to his sergeants. Years ago he had walked into the Unit from the Rangers knowing good and well that he was on the far left of the learning curve, and each and every man he commanded would know more than he about every last aspect of the job. Kolt was not one to argue with the “men in the know” — Delta’s sergeants. He knew he didn’t have to know more than his men to lead them, but he did need to know how to manage his team. But Kolt hated bureaucracy, and those times when he felt his hands were tied by regs or bullshit orders — thus putting his men or his mission in danger — Kolt Raynor historically had been the first one to push back against the system.

  More often than not, Kolt simply ignored the red tape and marched to his own drummer, driven by his own instincts. This had gotten him into trouble, and it had labeled him around the compound as the officer with the shortest fuse in the Unit. That this intensity was for his men and his mission was a mitigating factor, but this did not get him off the hook completely.

  Something else that had always irked Raynor’s detractors during his first time in Delta was the fact that his best friend, Josh Timble, had been perhaps the most respected active duty officer in the organization. Timble had taken Raynor under his wing from the start. TJ ran interference for Racer with Delta leadership when his mouth went too far or his talents did not go far enough.

  And there was one more thing. Even after all the bad shit that had happened to Racer, most guys in the building still thought he was the luckiest son of a bitch alive. The New Delhi hit was one of the biggest Delta successes in a decade, and the fact that Raynor caught the op less than two months after being reinstated gave many in the building the sense that life was not fair.

  The news media were all over the New Delhi hijacking, of course, pushing “unnamed sources” inside the military and intelligence communities to come clean about which unit had saved the day. Passengers reported American accents for the black-clad and armed commandos, but the government was uncharacteristically tight-lipped about the operation — a lesson learned after all the hype following the bin Laden kill. So, with little to go on but speculation, virtually all of the media had proclaimed that the vaunted SEAL Team 6 had done the deed in the skies over New Delhi.

  Kolt and the rest of Delta just laughed this off. Nobody around the Unit benefited from publicity. ST6 could have the attention, for all they were concerned. The men at the compound knew what they had accomplished. There would be an impressive plaque erected next to plaques commemorating other successful ops carried out by Delta, and maybe even a historical diorama built in the long corridor of the compound known as the Spine.

  Visiting VIPs would marvel at it, operators would generally ignore it.

  * * *

  Despite his overall success in the past week, Kolt found himself in a sour mood today. He was glad to get the last bits of New Delhi out of his leg, and he was happy to have returned from two dangerous missions with all of his men. But the death of the elderly woman had him second-guessing his actions.

  The loss of the lady, a seventy-four-year-old Dutch woman as it turned out, who had rushed to the bathroom as the grenade went off, was a black eye on the otherwise stellar mission. Most agreed that the poor lady had felt the quite understandable urge to get to the lavatory so as not to vomit in public, and in her panic she acted on this impulse despite all that was going on around her.

  The woman’s death had made him morose and angry.

  As Raynor headed through the Spine toward the SCIF, he saw Benji, an old-timer master sergeant from another squadron, walking in the other direction. They shook hands.

  “Welcome home, Racer.”

  “Good to be back.”

  “Some guys get all the luck, huh?” Benji said it with a smile.

  Benji used to be one of TJ’s men, but now his team was led by thirty-five-year-old Major Rick Mahoney, code named Gangster. Gangster had let it be known around the compound that he thought Kolt Raynor was an asshole and allowing him to return to Delta was a mistake. But unlike Gangster, Benji and Kolt always got along, so the remark about his lucky streak did not bother Raynor at all. He just said, “Good to see you, brother.”

  “You, too. Heard about your butt. Doc Markham take a look at it yet?”

  “It was my thigh, but yeah. He fished out the foreign bodies. I’m one hundred percent me again.”

  “That’s good. You guys have two more weeks on alert. I hope it’s nice and quiet for you.”

  Kolt said,“With the OPTEMPO running off the charts looking for those missing SAMs, anything can happen at any time. I was just heading down to the SCIF to see if they’ve got any new blips on the radar.”

  Benji chuckled. “You don’t think they’ll let you know if something comes up?”

  “Sure, my beeper will go off, but you know me. I’m all about gaming the system. If I get an early heads-up, maybe I can be better prepared.”

  Benji nodded.

  Just then Tackle came up the hall. Tackle was, like Benji, one of Gangster’s men. At thirty-nine, he was another of the old-guard master sergeants in the Unit and, like Gangster, he had never been one of Raynor’s biggest fans. “Hey, Racer,” Tackle said, “word is you got your ass blown off by a grenade.”

  Benji smiled, either not picking up on his teammate’s snide tone or, more likely, just ignoring it.

  Kolt sighed. “Thigh.”

  Tackle said, “You getting a Purple Heart for those scratches?”

  “Not up to me, but I hope not.”

  Tackle shrugged. “Whatever. Anyway, we take over alert status from you guys soon. How ’bout keeping your bullets in your mag until you get your downtime?”

  Raynor said, “Again, not up to me.”

  Tackle kept moving up the Spine.

  Benji said, “There is a little jealousy about you scoring those two hits back-to-back like that. You get it, right? Guys go half a year without any fun and then you walk into the compound, and within eight weeks you are crawling on the roof of a plane during takeoff.”

  “Yeah, I get it,” Kolt said, knowing that Benji was glossing over the other reasons he wasn’t popular among some men in the compound.

  * * *

  A few minutes later Kolt saw Clay “Stitch” Vickery in the Grimes Library off the chow hall. The library, named after Delta’s first command sergeant major, William “Country” Grimes, was stocked with every possible book on unconventional warfare, terrorism, and the like.

  Stitch was hard to miss. He was six-foot-three, with a barrel chest. He drew his code name from his early Operator Training Course teammates. During a hot wash after a live-fire night helo raid training exercise, he was asked to explain his actions when he entered the room where the hostages were held. He simply said, “I stitched the bad guys and saved the good guys.” Everyone burst out in laughter and he was knighted with the code name.

  Kolt knew men like Stitch were hard to come by in Delta, where the average operator was five feet eleven inches and one hundred eighty pounds. His thick build easily filled a doorway, with his cantaloupe-shaped shoulders practically touching either side of
the doorjamb. His tall frame had him looking down on most others and bumping his head on the overhead compartment when experiencing the cramped surroundings of international air travel or an up-armored Humvee.

  Stitch was a good assaulter, but an even better sniper. He was entirely comfortable operating alone, had been blessed with an eagle eye, and he truly embraced the balance of art and science required of the best snipers in the world. He had decided not to stay in an assault troop, but instead to stick with the recce troop track and become an “advanced assaulter,” a term snipers liked to call themselves once they graduated from an assault troop to a recce troop. The obvious dig being that anyone could be an assaulter, but it took a lot more skill, dedication, and training to become a Unit sniper.

  As with all Delta men, his brawn was only a part of the equation. His brain was fine-tuned to his lethal craft. He had been instrumental in designing a custom 7.62mm round that could penetrate level IV ballistic cockpit glass and retain its trajectory, ensuring the pilot remained safe but the hijacker next to him went down hard.

  But Stitch’s devotion to the Unit came with a heavy price. His first wife had run off with a major in the 82nd Airborne, and his second wife had simply realized her husband was more married to the Unit than to her, and she packed her bags when he was in Afghanistan in 2006.

  Since then Clay Vickery had pretty much sworn off women, so it was no surprise when Kolt found him sitting alone in the Grimes Library when he should have been at home having someone kiss his boo-boo.

  While Stitch used his bandaged left hand to flip the page of a thick hardback, Racer walked up to him and asked, “Did you find a book about operating with only nine digits?”

  The big man looked up at Kolt and smiled. “Welcome back, boss. Heard you and the guys made a wrong turn on the way home, ended up in Tripoli.”

  “We did, indeed. Sorry you couldn’t join us, but it worked out pretty good without you. Your big ass wouldn’t have fit in the extraction aircraft.”

  “I’d have legged it out of the AO for the chance to tag along. I heard it got a little hairy.”

  Kolt changed the subject. “How does it feel?” he asked, nodding to the man’s hand.

  “Burns like a mother, but it’s getting better.” He opened and closed his index finger. “Trigger finger’s workin’ fine, boss.”

  “Good.” Kolt slapped him on the back. “You’ll be needing it soon enough, I expect.”

  Stitch smiled. “I doubt that. Haven’t you heard the news? ST6 is getting all the hits. We don’t even exist.”

  Kolt laughed. “They can have the limelight, as long as we get the action.”

  Just then a female voice came over the intercom. Raynor recognized Joyce, Colonel Webber’s secretary. “Major Raynor, call 4005. Major Raynor, 4005.”

  It was Webber’s office extension. Kolt grabbed the phone off the wall next to him and dialed while Stitch looked on.

  “It’s Raynor, sir.”

  “In my office, ASAP.”

  “On the way.” Raynor exchanged a look with Stitch and then turned to head toward Webber’s office.

  “If you’re not out in an hour can I have your locker, boss?” Stitch teased from behind, but Kolt was too concerned to respond.

  * * *

  When Kolt stepped into Webber’s office he saw that Monk, a master sergeant from the other squadron, was already sitting in front of Webber’s desk. Monk nodded and said, “How’s the ass, Race?”

  Kolt smiled, more concerned with whatever Webber wanted to talk to them about, but he indulged Monk. “Upper thigh. Let’s not start the ass rumor.”

  “That ship sailed long ago, Major.”

  “Great,” Kolt said with a sigh.

  Webber sat down behind his desk. “I wanted to let you guys know first. The CIA and FBI finally have an ID on Daoud al-Amriki.”

  This was big news. The year before, al-Amriki had held several Delta operators hostage, including TJ, Racer’s best friend. He had also led a team of al Qaeda operatives in Pakistan to take over a CIA-run black site in order to turn the tide of the Afghan War.

  For the past seven months little was known around Delta about the man other than what TJ had been able to ferret out in his twenty or so debriefings with U.S. military and intelligence investigators.

  “Who is he?” asked Racer.

  Webber had a printed page on his desk in front of him, but he didn’t look at it. “His name is David Wade Doyle. He is thirty years old, originally from Kelseyville, California.”

  Monk asked, “What the hell was he doing with AQ in Pakistan?”

  “Unknown. But it is thought he is now an operational commander for al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.”

  “Shit. Not the first time an American has made it into AQ, but I’ve never heard of any of them as hands-on as this guy was in Pakistan. Do we have intel about where he is now?”

  “Not really. FBI had learned he moved to Yemen when he was a teenager to convert to Islam. They don’t think he’s been back to the States since. Still … they are making the rounds, interviewing anyone he knows in the U.S. CIA’s got people working all his known contacts in other countries, as well.”

  Raynor shook his head. “He wouldn’t retrace his steps. Wherever he is right now, he’s far from anyone who will finger him to the FBI.”

  “I agree.”

  “Does TJ know about this?”

  “TJ was the one who confirmed the ID.”

  “How?”

  “From a photograph, an old photograph. The British army picked a guy up in Basra, Iraq, back in 2003. He spoke perfect English and managed to convince the Brits he was a freelance reporter, so they let him go. Wasn’t long before other prisoners talked about an American AQ fighter they had met. As you can imagine, the Tommys were pissed they’d let this guy slip through their fingers, but he must have left the theater, and the story was forgotten. MI6 didn’t know anything about him. But with all the hunting around for Daoud al-Amriki in the past few months, an ex — British army sergeant who was in Basra in ’03 and now works in their foreign ministry remembered the story, made some calls, and a picture appeared. TJ confirmed it immediately, so then the FBI started digging around domestically, trying like hell to find out who the guy was.”

  “Needle in a haystack,” said Monk.

  “Pretty much. But finally State found a passport photo of a guy about the same age who went to Yemen back in 1998, and the two faces matched. David Doyle became Daoud al-Amriki.”

  “Nice,” muttered Kolt. He didn’t think that should have taken seven months.

  Webber continued, “TJ thinks we haven’t heard the last of this Doyle/Amriki, and I’m inclined to agree with that assessment. The kid left a good life to go over there and live like a scorpion in the desert all those years. He is a true believer.”

  “He’s a son of a bitch,” Kolt said through gritted teeth.

  “He is that, too,” agreed Webber.

  “Any chance we’re going to be sent after him?” Monk asked.

  Webber stood up from his desk. His two operators followed suit. “In a perfect world, hell, yes. But you guys know the deal, it could go to the SEALs. It’s up to the CG. Now that they’ve ID’d him, maybe they will be able to flush him out of wherever he is before his next play gets off the ground. That is, unless we are too late.”

  Kolt knew he and his men would turn into pumpkins in two weeks and if the hit went to Delta after that, he’d likely be listening to Monk, Benji, Tackle, and Gangster over a satellite radio from the squadron classroom.

  Kolt left Webber’s office a few minutes later. He decided he’d call TJ on his way home, maybe invite his old friend over for pizza. Kolt knew TJ would want someone to talk to right now, and Kolt could provide that for his friend, if nothing else.

  TEN

  That evening Lieutenant Colonel Josh Timble turned his red F-350 Super Duty pickup onto a farm road a few miles north of Fort Bragg. With his wipers beating warm rainwater off his win
dshield, he drove past row after row of chicken coops covered with corrugated roofing, and then pulled to a stop next to a beat-up black Chevy Silverado outside of a dilapidated trailer that sat in a copse of mature pecan trees.

  Kolt’s truck.

  Josh and Kolt had moved into this little trailer together after Kolt joined the Unit as a newly minted operator nearly a decade earlier. They’d shared many good times here over the years, and Josh reminisced back to those days as he turned off his engine and his headlights and just sat there looking around at the place.

  It was a dump, no doubt about it, but it had always been a dump, and with rent only two hundred bucks a month, the two friends never complained.

  TJ found it surreal to be here again, looking through the rain-swept windshield at his old home. For three years he had been a prisoner of war in Pakistan, and he’d spent many nights chained to a wall or a cot or locked behind an iron door, and he’d thought of this place, and of his friend Kolt Raynor.

  Not all of TJ’s thoughts about Kolt had been good. It was Kolt’s mistake that had gotten TJ captured in Pakistan, after all. But any animosity TJ had felt in those first months of captivity had faded away with time, and he knew Kolt had done everything in his power to make amends for his mistake.

  Josh did not blame Kolt for what had happened.

  Not anymore.

  The months since coming home from Pakistan had been difficult. Timble had only returned to Delta a month prior, and he was not back in his former position. He was no longer operational, his three tough years as a POW had taken a heavy toll, and although his body had recovered to a large extent in the months since coming home, he was in no way ready for operational status with Delta. Instead, he now worked in RDI, Research and Development Integration. It was Lieutenant Colonel Timble’s job, along with many others, to find the next top sniper rifle, or GPS device, or armored vehicle, or lightweight body armor; any piece of kit that would help frontline Delta operators perform their difficult duties.

  The work was vital to the success of Delta, but it wasn’t on the sharp edge, and for a man like TJ, it was a hell of a letdown from the excitement and importance of his former job — leading America’s Tier One operators into battle.

 

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