by Brad Thor
Colleagues. Harvath repeated the word to himself. Could the hit on the organization have been conducted not by some enemy hostile to the United States but actually by some sort of force within?
The idea was insane, yet here he was thinking it. And as crazy as it sounded, he knew better than to dismiss it out of hand. He had been trained to consider all possible options and that included trusting his gut.
Nevertheless, the possibility that any fellow Americans could be behind something like this was almost too far out of left field to be believed.
Harvath looked at his watch. It was after midnight—no wonder his mind was so jumbled. He needed to grab a couple hours of sleep. His thoughts were going in too many strange directions.
After checking Skype one last time and seeing no response, he logged off and shut the computer down.
A heavy fog had settled over the ranch, and Harvath fished a Surefire flashlight from one of the pockets in Riley’s backpack in order to light his way to the stables. The damp cold ate right through his coat. He had been trained to withstand extreme cold, but that didn’t mean he liked it. In fact, the data point that so many SEALs moved to warm-weather climes once they got out made him wonder if the Navy actually bred a deep-seated hatred for cold into its high-end operators, or if the resistance to cold had a relatively short half-life, beyond which SEALs could no longer tolerate it.
It was an interesting riddle but not one he had to solve tonight. He nodded to one of Tello’s heavily armed patrols, men with insulated barn jackets and the traditional black Basque berets the ETA men all wore, before climbing the stairs to the small apartment above the stables.
Inside, he turned on a small space heater in the bedroom and then poured himself a glass of water. Leaning against the bathroom sink, he looked over at Riley’s pack sitting on a chair in the bedroom. He’d gone through all her personal items multiple times, but none of them told him why she had been in Paris nor why he’d been sent to meet her at the safe house in the first place.
Why the hell had any of it happened? And more importantly, why to her? Why did such bad things so often befall the women he cared about? He knew that life wasn’t fair, but damn it, it was almost as if some force somewhere was purposefully undermining him.
There were very few women at all with whom he could even discuss what he did, or who would understand and support him when he went and did it. He had met a handful in his time, and they had been great, but in some form or another, his work had always interceded and the relationships had been turned upside-down. He had hoped things with Riley could be different since she was on the inside.
They had first met earlier that year. The Old Man had sent her in to take a prisoner off his hands during an operation in Switzerland. She was in her mid-thirties and off-the-charts attractive. Tall, with reddish-brown hair, blue eyes, and a wide, full mouth. When they shook hands, he had felt a bolt of lightning pass between them.
She had been a competitive skier before retiring and going to medical school. While she enjoyed practicing medicine, there was a rush she craved and wasn’t finding in her work. She began doing research online, calling friends across the country, and even talking to a few friends of friends in Washington, D.C. She didn’t know exactly what she was looking for but figured she’d recognize it when she saw it.
She was in the process of applying for an overseas position with the CIA’s Office of Medical Services, when two U.S. Army representatives appeared on her doorstep. They were in the process of creating a program that was right up her alley and invited her to try out. Riley not only tried out, she blew the rest of the recruits out of the water and became one of the earliest members of the Athena Project.
The similarities between her and Harvath were uncanny. As he reminisced about her, he knew his mind would be pulled to the other women he had known. It was a dark psychological road overhung with the scarred branches of his past. He knew what happened when he began to walk down it, and it usually ended with too many glasses of whatever was in the nearest bottle. He decided to quit while he was ahead. Focusing on the odd-shaped tiles around the mirror, he tried to count as many of them as he could while he brushed his teeth.
When he was finished in the bathroom, he turned out the light, tried to ignore Riley’s bag, and climbed into bed.
The sheets were cold, and the space heater had done little to beat back the chill that gripped the room. It was just one of those nights when the damp seemed to permeate everything.
Pulling the blanket up around his chest, Harvath closed his eyes and willed himself to relax. He didn’t need a case of runaway thoughts right now. What he needed was sleep, if only for a couple of hours.
He took deep, long breaths and wiped his mind completely clean, focusing on nothing more than the darkness. His consciousness had become an iron box into which no thoughts could intrude. The monkey had been locked in its cage. Soon he was asleep.
A testament to the depth of his fatigue, he rapidly fell into a series of deep, vivid dreams.
They were so vivid in fact, that three hours later, he couldn’t tell if he had actually heard the ranch dogs bark, or if it was only a dream.
He was just about to put it out of his mind and drift back into sleep when he suddenly heard the blast of a gunshot and knew he was no longer dreaming.
CHAPTER 22
Reaching for his weapon, Harvath rolled out of bed and hit the floor. What the hell was happening? he wondered. Seconds passed.
As he lay there, his ears strained for any sound that would explain what was going on. There were no additional shots.
But he knew what he had heard. The dogs had barked. A round had been fired. But how much time had passed between the two? He had no idea. It seemed like maybe a minute, but it could have been ten minutes, or more.
The barking and the gunshot had to be connected. There must be a predator nearby. And if there was, it raised a very important question—was it the four-legged variety, or the much more dangerous kind that came in on two?
Harvath waited, but no other sounds came. For all he knew, it was nothing—the Basque equivalent of a coyote or a mountain lion had wandered onto the property and had been shot. But what if that wasn’t what had happened?
Without a telephone or even a walkie-talkie with which to call down to the guard shack or reach out to Tello in the main house, Harvath had no choice but to investigate for himself.
He quickly got dressed and slipped soundlessly from the apartment. The night air was colder than when he had gone to bed, the fog thicker. He could barely see his hand in front of his face. He chose to leave the flashlight in his pocket. If someone was out there, somewhere in the fog, a flashlight would only draw them to him.
Stepping outside, the fog parted and almost seemed to pull him in. As the sheets enveloped his body, he strained for sounds, any sounds. There were none; not even sounds from the livestock.
They have a very large pasture, he reminded himself. Maybe the animals moved closer to the mountain and away from the ranch buildings when the fog was so dense. Maybe, or maybe there was another reason.
Any moment now, he would draw the attention of the dogs. They were used to Tello and his men, but Harvath was a stranger and they still reacted warily to him.
None of them were coming to investigate his presence outside the stables. Unless they were all huddled with the livestock on the far side of the pasture, something was wrong.
As he walked toward the main house, he kept his pistol in his coat pocket, his hand wrapped around its grip and his finger on the trigger. He wanted to be ready for any surprises, but he didn’t want to be one himself. Too often, the first and only thing people keyed in on was a gun. He didn’t want to get shot by one of Tello’s men.
Halfway to the house, he almost tripped over a pair of leather boots. He bent down through the fog and saw they belonged to one of the men he had nodded to before mounting the stairs to the apartment earlier.
Next to him was a lupara,
and Harvath could smell that the weapon had recently been fired. He reached out to check the man’s pulse. He was still warm, but he didn’t have a heartbeat. When Harvath drew his fingers back, they were slick with blood. The man’s throat had been sliced from ear to ear. The front of his jacket was damp from exsanguination.
There was nothing he could do for him. The man was dead, and the ranch was under attack. He needed to focus on the threat.
Three questions spun through his mind as he moved away from the body and crept toward the main house. Who’s on the property? How many? And why had they come?
As soon as the last question popped into his mind, he had a bad feeling that he was going to get all his answers in short order.
Moving toward the main house, he wondered if the dead Basque had fired his shotgun at an intruder, or to warn his colleagues. Either way, it should have been like kicking a hornet’s nest. The fact that the ranch hadn’t immediately become a maelstrom of activity was a bad sign. From what he knew of Tello’s men, they were serious customers, not the type to run away from a fight.
When Harvath got to the side door he had been using to come and go, he found it ajar and all too inviting. He decided to move along the outside of the house and conduct a quick reconnaissance before going in.
Moving through the fog, he felt his way along the outer wall so as not to lose his way. The windows were dark and didn’t reveal anything inside.
Coming up to the corner of the house, he heard something and pulled up short. It sounded like someone choking back a cough, but he couldn’t be sure.
His Glock already out, Harvath reached into his other pocket and withdrew the flashlight. He heard the cough again, followed by groaning.
He held the flashlight in his left hand, up high and away from his body. Then, taking a deep breath, he exhaled and spun around the corner.
He pressed and released the tailcap switch on the flashlight. It was a drill he had done thousands of times in the SEALs and the Secret Service. The pulse of light lasted only for a second or less, but it was amazing how much information the brain could process in such a short amount of time.
Because of the fog, it was like peering through Vaseline, but he was able to see enough.
There were two men. They wore jeans, hiking boots, and windbreaker-style jackets that seemed ill-suited to the altitude and temperature. They were fit and had short, military-style haircuts. One man was sitting, while the other crouched next to him, pressing a bandage of some sort at the top of his leg near the groin. The wounded man held a silenced pistol, and even though Harvath couldn’t see it, he assumed the other man was armed as well.
That assumption was affirmed almost instantly when a hail of suppressed gunfire sent pieces of chipped stone from the wall near Harvath flying all around him.
Rapidly, Harvath retreated back around the corner. These weren’t Tello’s people. In fact, they reminded him a lot of the men from Paris.
Crouching down, he aimed his pistol around the corner and fired multiple times in rapid succession. The men had no cover and he intended to press his advantage.
He hadn’t affixed the suppressor to his own weapon, but even as the fog gobbled up much of the sound, the shots from the big .45 still boomed like claps of thunder.
Standing up, he pressed his back against the wall and changed magazines. When he was ready, he reached around the corner and let another vicious volley fly.
He drew the pistol back, changed magazines, and waited, his ear as near to the edge of the wall as possible, but there was no sound from the other side.
Cautious not to make any sound himself, he took a quick peek around the corner. Nothing happened. Either they hadn’t been able to see him through the fog, or they were no longer capable of returning fire. Harvath needed to find out.
After readying his weapon, he prepared to peek around the corner once more, but then thought better of it and stepped back. If they were waiting for him, that was the direction they’d expect him to come from. He reminded himself that the only first aid you give under fire is putting rounds on target. If the situation had been reversed, Harvath would have returned fire as he dragged his comrade to safety. Then he would have tried to flank his attacker.
As Harvath moved, his only thought was to neutralize the threat. Fifteen yards or so on, one of the men who had come to flank him stepped out of the fog and Harvath got his chance to take him out.
The man wasn’t expecting to see him and while his reaction was quick, Harvath was quicker.
Remembering the body armor the men in Paris wore, Harvath depressed his trigger and double-tapped the man’s forehead, dropping him to the ground dead.
He kicked the man’s weapon away and quickly patted him down. Just as he had suspected, the man was wearing body armor. He was young, maybe mid- to late twenties, just like the men in Paris. And just like the men in Paris, there wasn’t a scrap of paper anywhere on him that might identify who he was, where he had come from, or who had sent him. All he had was a small walkie-talkie clipped to his belt, along with a headset, which Harvath removed.
Standing up, he strained his ears through the fog for the sound of anyone who might be approaching. It was all quiet. Too quiet.
After putting on the headset and clipping the walkie-talkie inside his coat, he went looking for the other shooter.
He found the man almost exactly where he had last seen him, though now he was slumped over dead. He was also somewhere in his twenties. His upper left leg, as well as a portion of his stomach below his body armor, had been blown away with what looked like a close-range shotgun blast. Harvath gave him a quick pat-down, but like his partner, it didn’t turn up anything at all.
Stepping away from the body, he crept back around the house to the side door, which was still ajar. He stepped inside and stood still for several seconds listening. There was barely enough light to see by.
Finally, he started moving, slowly. From the small mudroom where he had entered, he slipped through the pantry area and into the kitchen. All of his senses were on high alert. The only noise he heard was from an old wooden clock ticking in the living room farther ahead.
He moved from the kitchen into the dining area and stopped. The hair on the back of his neck suddenly stood up. In the living room, he could see an overturned side table and what looked like a pool of blood on the floor. It was too dark to tell any more from this distance and Harvath wasn’t about to use his flashlight.
Walking over, he saw Tello’s enormous frame sprawled facedown on the floor near the couch. After scanning the room, he made his way to him and carefully rolled the body over.
The man had taken a round to the forehead and one just beneath the nose. His eyes were open but lifeless and unfocused. The ETA commander was dead.
Was that what this was? A hit? Carried out by some rival faction? Maybe an organized crime element? Was the Spanish government involved?
The thought only just materialized in Harvath’s mind when he had his answer. “Don’t fucking move,” said a man’s voice from somewhere behind him. It spoke in English and sounded American. There was a cocky, urban edge to it. “Drop your weapon right there, asshole.”
The room was so dark that even if Harvath had spun and tried to shoot, the man behind him would probably have ended up shooting him first. He had no choice but to comply and placed his weapon on the floor alongside Tello’s body.
“On your knees,” the man ordered. “Do it now.”
Harvath followed the instructions.
“Hands behind your head. Interlock your fingers.”
“Who are you?” Harvath demanded. “What are you doing here?”
“Shut up,” said the man. “Hands behind your head. Now!”
“Not until you tell me who you are and what’s going on.”
The man pumped two suppressed rounds into the couch right next to where Harvath was kneeling.
Harvath raised his arms and locked his fingers behind his head. “You’re fucking
with the wrong guy, my friend.”
“Shut up,” the man repeated as he got on his radio. “Red Two to Red One. Target in custody. Building B. Over.”
Harvath still had the headset on and could hear the radio traffic. “Roger that, Red Two,” a voice replied. “Building B. Over.” Were there only four of them? So far he hadn’t heard traffic from anyone else.
“Red Two to Red Three. Give me a SITREP. Over,” the man behind Harvath said. SITREP was shorthand for situation report.
There was no reply.
“Red Two to Red Three. Do you copy? Over.”
Several seconds passed. There was still no reply. If there were only two other guys, they were both dead and Harvath had killed them. “You should have brought more men,” he said.
The man ignored him. “Red Two to Red Four. Over.” He waited and then tried hailing Red Four again. Finally he gave up and hailed Red One.
“Go ahead, Red Two. Over.”
“Is the property secure? Over.”
“Roger that. Over.”
“I want you to begin looking for Red Three and Red Four. Start near Building B and work your way out. Over.”
“Roger that. Red One out.”
The man then turned his attention and his full anger on his prisoner. “My orders only say you have to die. They don’t say how fast.”
“Orders from who?” Harvath replied.
“None of your fucking business, traitor.”
Traitor? The term stunned him. For a moment, he didn’t know how to respond. Finally, he said, “You’ve definitely got the wrong guy.”
“No, I’ve got the right guy, you treasonous motherfucker.”
It was like getting punched in the face. Traitor? Treason? “What the hell are you talking about? You think I’m a traitor?”