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Tier One Wild df-2

Page 22

by Dalton Fury


  “Yes. 0330 hours,” Raynor confirmed.

  “I’m glad you’re going to destroy the SA-24s, but I wish you were also going in to arrest Saleh and his men.”

  Kolt had a brief mental image of him and his two mates flex-cuffing fifteen or so international criminals, and then somehow sneaking them out of the country. “JSOC wrote this op with the real world in mind. What you are talking about is fantasyland.”

  “Maybe so, but Saleh is going to just go to ground and keep transferring weapons to rogue nations and terrorists.”

  “Job security for you, I guess. We’ll find him again. Seriously, if the SA-24s are in the warehouse, we’ll destroy them, which will prevent the transfer to the Iranians, which will prevent the transfer to Lebanon, Iraq, and Afghanistan. We’re just going to have to be satisfied with that for now.”

  Curtis shrugged. “Hey, you know me. I’m hard to please. Want to do one last drive-by of the target?”

  “Uhhh … Negative, Curtis,” Kolt answered with a tint of sarcasm. This guy is a loose cannon.

  “Your guy still in the area?” Raynor asked.

  “Yeah. He hasn’t seen any activity since the last report.”

  “Good. What about the Quds Force goons?”

  Curtis replied, “We have eyes on. I’ve got a man at the Sofitel watching them.”

  “What, down in the lobby?”

  Curtis did not answer.

  “What exactly does ‘eyes on’ mean, Curtis?”

  “Well … if they are up in their rooms, then no, we don’t have eyes on. But we’ve got a guy making sure they don’t leave.”

  “Your man has eyes on his martini, more like it,” Raynor said. “Your men are too close to the X. If they haven’t been burned already, then they will be once things get interesting. Pull your surveillance off Rhine and Stone at H-10 mikes, and pull the guy out of the Sofitel at 0330, H-hour.”

  H-Hour, like D-Day, signified the beginning of an operation.

  Curtis nodded as he made a turnaround at a traffic circle and began heading back for the metro station.

  Kolt then said, “You, too. I want you to unass your safe house. Tonight.”

  The CIA man seemed surprised by this. He shook his head. “Nobody is going to find us.”

  “Look, man. You are less than two klicks from the target location. If we hit Rhine and blow a shipment of SAMs, it’s going to be a big fucking deal. Everybody in Maadi will be running around saying Israeli or American spies are in the neighborhood. Your antenna farm and front travel agency won’t survive the first knock at the door. Trust me on this, I’ve seen a bit of the Arab street.”

  “Of course you have, Rambo.”

  Raynor ignored him. “You’ll wake up tomorrow to find two dozen kids on the sidewalk out in front of your place pointing up at your window and jumping up and down.”

  Curtis started to argue back, it was his way, after all, but he stopped himself. Something about Raynor’s imagery sank in. After a moment he said, “We’ve got a place in El Salam City. Way up to the northeast. Ten or twelve miles from Maadi.”

  Kolt nodded. “I looked it over on FalconView on the flight in. I think that’s a great choice. You’ll need to steer clear of Maadi completely after this. No drive-bys. Your cables to Langley can wait. We can get a better damage assessment from CNN than from you taking snapshots of the rubble from the Kornish al Nile.”

  Curtis chuckled and nodded. He said, “Okay, Mother. We will sterilize the safe house, and get out of there by the time your team hits the building. And as always, I appreciate your concern for my well-being.”

  “I don’t give a shit about your well-being. You can get hit by a bus once this op is over, for all I care. Just not till we get the SAMs dealt with.”

  “Fair enough.”

  “Thank you,” Kolt said, officially crossing Myron Curtis and his team of well-educated but bumbling case officers off of his list of worries.

  “You’re welcome,” said Curtis, as he pulled to a stop back in front of the Hadayeq El-Maadi station. “Now go find those SAMs and blow them to kingdom come.”

  “Yep,” Kolt said as he stepped out onto the street. Hope you enjoy yourself from the comfort of your new condo, partner.

  * * *

  At the Hotel Sofitel Cairo Maadi Towers and Casino, the CIA case officer from Cairo Station assigned to watch the suspected Iranian Quds Force personnel rolled onto his side and fluffed the fleece jacket that he was using as a pillow.

  As far as he was concerned, he’d done damn fine work tonight, and he deserved a couple hours of shut-eye. He’d positioned himself in the lobby at eight p.m., taking over for another man from the local station. Shortly after this, five of the seven target subjects came down from their rooms and headed into the gift shop off the lobby. The case officer had positioned himself close enough to hear one of the Iranians speak in English to the attendant there, explaining that two of their party had fallen ill with a stomachache and asking about a remedy.

  As one of the Iranians paid for the over-the-counter medicine and then took it upstairs, the rest of the group entered the restaurant Le Clovis and were seated at a large table within view of the lobby. When their colleague returned, the five enjoyed a long, late, and relaxed dinner in the restaurant. And then, around midnight, the five men headed up to their rooms, shaking hands with each other. On the way through the lobby to the elevator, one of their party had spoken English to the bellman, telling him they would be leaving in the morning and arranging for someone to come collect their bags at eight-thirty.

  Then the men climbed into elevators and went up.

  The case officer’s job had been to watch the men and make certain they did not leave the hotel. Once he had convinced himself they were in for the night, he left the Sofitel and returned to his car, where he lowered the seat and fell soundly to sleep.

  He slept through the few comings and goings in the parking lot, and he slept as hotel security escorted a disgruntled gambler back to his vehicle. It was the kind of sloppy CIA fieldcraft that Kolt had lost sleep over.

  And he slept through one more event of interest. Five men, each with a suitcase and a carry-on, entered the covered lot from the hotel’s stairwell at two a.m. They climbed into a black Mahindro Scorpio SUV, and rolled slowly and quietly out of the hotel grounds.

  TWENTY-FOUR

  At 0230 hours Racer was back with his team at their safe house on Gamel Abd El Nasir. Digger and Slapshot had already taken the dinghy to the water’s edge, just a few blocks to the west of their location. They had secreted it in some high reeds and anchored it in knee-deep water. From here it would be a journey of twenty minutes at low power to reach the property of Maadi Land and Sea Freight, Ltd., a mile north of their position on the same shore.

  Now the two sergeants were checking their kit to make sure they had everything for the hit. They wore dark brown local garb, and they sat at the table in the tiny kitchen looking over satellite images of the property along with color photographs taken during their close-target recces of the past few days.

  Raynor was in the back room with Hawk, sitting on a bunk next to her with his laptop in his lap. They were using FalconView and recon photos to help them find the best point downriver where she could gain access to the water’s edge in the van and still remain away from concentrations of civilians or police. They finally found a spot, nearly a half mile from the target location, just before a slow turn in the river that might have exposed them to anyone on the Ring Road Bridge.

  After picking out a couple of alternate access points to the river, Kolt got up from the bunk and checked his MP7 PDW rifle.

  “Racer?” Hawk said.

  “Yeah?”

  “You are going to encounter a significant amount of security in that complex.”

  “Ya think?” He said it playfully, but his mind was 100 percent on mission.

  “You could use another gun in this.”

  He stopped what he was doing and looked up at her
. “Out of the question, Hawk. You are not an operator. Uh, I mean, listen, this isn’t about your abilities. I know you can handle yourself, I’m not questioning that. I — ”

  “Well, sir, I’m glad you corrected yourself. I am not an operator. But just because I don’t have a dick doesn’t mean my gun on target wouldn’t be a good thing if it goes loud.”

  “Sorry, Hawk. Not going to happen. You’re an important contingency on this one. If we go to plan B, I need to know you are there to help us out.”

  She nodded. “Right, boss,” she said, but she was thinking she could help the men out better if she was in there with them when the shit hit the fan.

  “We leave in five.” Raynor hefted his chest rig of magazines and his soft armor and headed out the door.

  “Shit,” Cindy Bird said to the empty room.

  * * *

  As much as he hated to admit that Racer was right, Curtis knew moving to another safe house before the hit on the target took place was a good call. He wished he had thought of it first. He knew he would not get it all sanitized before H-Hour, but that wasn’t the point. He wanted to get his ass, and the asses of his men, out of the location before all of Maadi was rocked with emergency sirens and engulfed in flashing lights.

  To that end he had everyone working on getting as much packed up as possible. Murphy and Wychowski stacked duffel bags and backpacks at the top of the staircase. Denton had backed the panel truck up in the gated parking lot next to the Range Rover and he and Buckley were finishing up loading all the guns and ammo into crates in their room.

  Curtis made a final call on the sat phone before disconnecting it from the roof antenna and putting it in one of the many padded Pelican cases lying around. He then took a moment to check his watch. Racer and his team would be hitting objective Rhine in half an hour. He needed to pick up the pace if they were going to be rolling before then.

  Curtis grabbed an empty backpack off of a shelf and began stuffing it with gear.

  * * *

  While Buckley broke down the Alamo kits of rifles, mags, and binos positioned in the windows, Denton hefted four big duffels of gear and headed up the hall. He exited the travel agency and then crossed the landing to the stairs, taking them down to the darkened lobby.

  At the front door he glanced out the small window, making certain the parking lot was empty except for the panel truck and the SUV, and also making sure the electronic gate was closed. After doing this, he opened the door and headed out to load the bags. A warm breeze blew trash from the construction site across the street, over the dark two-lane road, and through the openings in the fence around the parking lot. The CIA SAD officer packed the gear in the back of the panel truck and then headed back into the building to grab two more armloads of duffels.

  He pressed the key code at the front door to the building and the locks popped open. As he pushed open the heavy door, his head snapped forward, and his body tumbled into the lobby to the stairs, his legs still outside the door. His body twitched for a few seconds, but soon he stilled.

  Denton had been shot through the skull by a suppressed Dragunov sniper rifle from the fifth floor of the lot across the street. The bullet had exited his forehead and taken a small portion of his brain with it.

  As this all happened, the electronic gate access to the small parking lot began to open silently. As soon as there was a foot of separation between the two gate doors, a black figure pushed through the rest of the way. As he did so he let the remote control for the gate fall from his hands. His Libyan associates had been given the remote by the security company who designed it, and then they had passed it on to his team.

  It had served its purpose, but now the Iranian needed both of his hands to operate his weapon.

  The man in black, along with four more men dressed in black behind him, sprinted across the parking lot toward the door left propped open by the dead American. Here they vaulted the body and entered the lobby. The first three men crouched at the bottom of the open staircase, their weapons trained on the landing above, and the other two men rolled Denton’s body back outside before shutting the door.

  All four Iranian Quds Force operatives headed up the stairs quietly, their eyes scanning for targets in the dimness.

  * * *

  The Delta AFO cell drove west toward the site of their hidden dinghy in the shallows of the Nile River. Hawk was behind the wheel, a blue veil covering her face and hair, and an MP7 with its stock collapsed hung under her right arm.

  Raynor sat in the back with Slapshot and Digger. They would darken their faces with black waterproof camo paint at the very last moment before climbing onto the boat, but for now he and the others kept their faces clean.

  As they rode in silence Kolt grabbed his mobile phone from inside his duffel on the floor next to him. He announced to the van, “I’m going to double-check that Curtis and his team are out the door.”

  He punched Curtis’s number, and listened to the phone make the connection.

  “We’re pulling up to the dinghy,” Hawk said softly from the front seat, and the van slowed and stopped in the parking lot of a shuttered boathouse along the water.

  “Come on, Curtis,” Kolt muttered softly. Slapshot and Digger were pulling the long gallabiyas off their bodies, revealing the black Nomex, black canvas, and quick-release buckles underneath.

  Curtis did not answer.

  Kolt looked down to his watch.

  Suddenly he had a very bad feeling.

  “Hawk,” Kolt barked. “You have Murphy’s cell number saved on your phone?”

  “Roger, why?”

  “Call him, Curtis isn’t answering.”

  It rang six times before Hawk looked back at Kolt and shook her head no.

  “Shit!” Kolt said as he looked out the window. He didn’t need this. But something didn’t feel right. He knew Murphy had been staring at Hawk’s ass since day one. Not answering her phone call was a hell of an indicator.

  “Back to the safe house on Ahmed Kamel Street. As quick as you can get us there.”

  Digger asked, “You don’t think they got hit, do you?”

  Kolt shook his head, but the look on his face did not match the gesture. He tried the call again. “I don’t know. If we get there and they are fine, or they are already gone, then we can be back here in twenty minutes.”

  As they neared Ahmed Kamel Street, the team saw a large number of locals out in the street for this time of night. They seemed to be looking around.

  Hawk said, “Looks like something just happened in this neighborhood.”

  Digger added, “They all heard something, but they don’t know where it went down.”

  “Park in the mouth to the back alleyway,” Kolt said. “We don’t need any spectators as we approach, and I don’t want any snipers in the high-rise construction to take a potshot at us.”

  With that Hawk killed the van’s headlights and, a few seconds later, turned into the alley that led behind the safe house building. At Raynor’s direction, they parked two blocks from the back door of the property. Kolt said, “Foxtrot from here. Back entrance. Quiet and careful. No one knows we’re coming.”

  The rest of the team nodded as one.

  Kolt and Cindy began heading up one side of the alley, Digger and Slapshot across from them.

  The back door to the building was secure, and all the lights were off downstairs. Kolt knelt down and took a quick look through the window next to the rear door, and he saw a body on the staircase. Shit. Quickly he slipped across the window to the other side, and motioned for Slapshot to unlock and open the door.

  Slapshot pulled a pair of keys out and reached across the glass to the lock.

  Seconds later the back door opened and Kolt moved into the downstairs lobby, his rifle high, his back moving sideways along the rear wall to the west. Digger moved in right behind him and followed the wall to the east, keeping himself out of view up the staircase ahead of him. Slapshot and Hawk moved in behind them — Slapshot followi
ng Kolt all the way around on the left and Hawk going in Digger’s direction.

  There was blood all over the floor in front of the front door. Kolt and Slapshot noticed this, but they kept moving.

  Once they cleared the downstairs rooms, they moved upstairs in silence and near-complete darkness. The little light that filtered in from the lobby’s windows revealed that the man on the stairs was Buckley, one of the SAD officers. Digger knelt to check his pulse, but in seconds he looked up at Raynor and shook his head. The stairs were covered in blood around Buckley’s body, but Kolt and the others did not take time to look for his wounds before continuing cautiously up the staircase.

  They found the door to the travel agency wide open, and the lights off. They slipped into the office silently, moving low, their weapons trained on the open door to the safe house in back. As they went behind the counter, they found Murphy. There was no point in Digger checking for a pulse. The man’s eyes were wide open in death.

  Their tactical train entered the hallway of the safe house and they cleared the kitchen, finding it empty, but bullet holes and blood smears told of a recent fight here. In the first bedroom they found Wychowski facedown in a pool of blood.

  Digger checked his pulse, but he was dead.

  The rest of the rooms were empty, just the way they had looked the day before when Raynor and his men had vacated them.

  The team formed at the bathroom at the end of the hall. Kolt reached forward with one hand and pulled the latch.

  As he opened the door, he felt the resistance of something pushing against it. He flashed the flashlight on his rifle’s barrel quickly, illuminating the room before him, and he saw a scene of utter carnage.

  A man head-to-toe in black was facedown next to the toilet; blood had spurted from an artery across the walls and mirror of the small bathroom.

  And Myron Curtis was sitting on the floor next to the dead Iranian. His back was against the wall under the towel rack by the shower. The rack had been bent almost in half and the towel was wrapped tightly around Curtis’s upper leg.

 

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