Praise for Richard Marcinko and
Rogue Warrior®: Dictator’s Ransom
“Richard Marcinko is a master at showing us his world. It’s not a very safe place, but visiting is well worth the risk. Marcinko’s stories are as vivid as they are real. He’s been there, and he has the talent to take us with him.”
—Larry Bond, New York Times
bestselling author of Dangerous Ground
“Marcinko gives new meaning to the word tough.”
—Publishers Weekly
“Marcinko is the real thing: combat veteran, killer SEAL, specialist in unconventional warfare.”
—The Washington Times
“Marcinko’s Rogue Warrior yarns . . . are the purest kind of thriller around, with action, pacing, and hardware galore.”
—Booklist
“Marcinko is the real McCoy, a warrior who has lived it.”
—Stephen Coonts, New York Times
bestselling author of The Assassin
Also by Richard Marcinko
FICTION
Violence of Action
With John Weisman
Red Cell
Green Team
Task Force Blue
Designation Gold
Seal Force Alpha
Option Delta
The Real Team
Echo Platoon
Detachment Bravo
With Jim DeFelice
Vengeance
Holy Terror
Rogue Warrior: Seize the Day
NONFICTION
Rogue Warrior (with John Weisman)
Leadership Secrets of the Rogue Warrior:
A Commando’s Guide to Success
The Rogue Warrior’s Strategy for Success
ROGUE WARRIOR®
Dictator’s
Ransom
Richard Marcinko
and
Jim DeFelice
A TOM DOHERTY ASSOCIATES BOOK
NEW YORK
NOTE: If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the authors nor the publisher have received any payment for this “stripped book.”
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously.
ROGUE WARRIOR®: DICTATOR’S RANSOM
Copyright © 2008 by Richard Marcinko and Jim DeFelice
All rights reserved.
A Tor Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
www.tor-forge.com
Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.
ISBN 978-0-7653-5749-6
First Edition: October 2008
First Mass Market Edition: October 2009
Printed in the United States of America
0 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
DEDICATION
This book is dedicated to the memory of SEAL Lt. Michael P. Murphy, who died in Afghanistan during Operation Redwing on June 28, 2005. Details of the mission remain highly classified.
Ambushed and under heavy fire from a superior enemy force, Murphy maintained radio contact with his headquarters unit to obtain aerial support for his men. The lieutenant, who lived in Patchogue, New York, later died of his wounds.
Two other SEALs, Petty Officer Mathew Axelson and Petty Officer Second Class Danny Dietz, were also killed in the engagement. The lone survivor, Petty Officer Marcus Luttrell, undertook an incredible odyssey to freedom, finally escaping with the aid of Afghan tribesmen. He wrote an account of the battle and his subsequent fight to survive in Lone Survivor: The Eyewitness Account of Operation Redwing and the Lost Heroes of SEAL Team 10.
In the attempt to rescue Murphy and his men, an Army Special Operations Chinook was also lost, along with its crew and a number of Navy SEALs en route to help their brothers:
Army
Maj. Stephen C. Reich, Chief Warrant Officer Chris J. Scherkenbach, Chief Warrant Officer Corey J. Goodnature, Master Sgt. James W. Ponder III, Sgt. 1st Class Michael L. Russell, Sgt. 1st Class Marcus V. Muralles, Staff Sgt. Shamus O. Goare, Sgt. Kip A. Jacoby
SEALs
Lt. Cmdr. Erik S. Kristensen, Lt. Michael M. McGreevy, Jr., Senior Chief Petty Officer Daniel R. Healy, Chief Petty Officer Jacques J. Fontan, Petty Officer 1st Class Jeffrey A. Lucas, Petty Officer 1st Class Jeffrey S. Taylor, Petty Officer 2nd Class James E. Suh, Petty Officer Second Class Eric Shane Patton
SpecOp operators live and die for each other regardless of service affiliation. The “shooters code” goes beyond services and even nations. It’s the true “good ol’ boys network,” and these men selflessly fulfilled the code with their own blood.
“A revolution is not a dinner party . . .”
—MAO TSE-TUNG
PART ONE
SNAFU
1
[ I ]1
IMPRESSIONS OF NORTH Korea:
Cold. Crappy food. Cheap booze.
Great place to hunt. Especially if you’re with the world’s cruelest dictator.
Not a good place to be shot, especially by said dictator.
But let me start at the beginning . . .
IT WAS SPRINGTIME at Rogue Manor:
The snow had melted, the crocuses and whatnot were pushing their pointy buds up through the turf, and there was a lovely scent in the air.
Gunpowder, that is.
It was the first week of April. Trace Dahlgren had just finished working with some new recruits for Red Cell International—the security company I run with a little help from my friends. Trace had spent the morning running the kids through a makeshift obstacle course on the back forty, trying to separate the wheat from the chaff. This was just a preliminary trial, so we gave them a nugget break—there were only two sections of live-fire exercise involved, and in both cases the shooters were instructed to keep their aim a good six inches from anything moving.
Any recruit who stopped, of course, was fair game.
“No casualties,” said Trace, reporting in at lunchtime. She sounded disappointed.
Red Cell is an equal opportunity employer—we hire ex-army as well as ex-SEALs, and I think we even have an old air farcer on the payroll. As a former blanket hugger and a member of the female persuasion herself, Trace Dahlgren gives the company that well-rounded culture the human resources department would love to brag about, if we had a HR department. She learned how to break in new recruits while working with Delta Force, the army’s counter-terror unit. (If you’re a faithful reader—and you sure as hell better be—you’ll recall that Trace was a member of Delta’s female squadron.2) At five-eight and 130 pounds, Trace has assets male shooters don’t, which makes her deadly in the field as well as undercover, both literally and figuratively. Her real love, though, is busting humps during training—even I have trouble keeping up with her PT routines—which is why she’s in charge of what we call prerecruitment month at Red Cell.
The participants call it hell, along with some other choice terms of endearment—high compliments from guys and gals who have survived SEAL training and the like. Basically, if you make it through the month at Rogue Manor with all of your limbs intact, we offer you a job. The pay’s great and the bennies can’t be beat, though rumor has it that the boss is one mean son of a bitch.
We were in the process of gearing up for some new business ventures in Eastern Europe, and I was more than a little interested in finding out about what the new crop of recruits looked like. But before I could ask for a detailed report, Rogue Manor’s early-warning radar be
gan sounding an intruder alert.
No, it wasn’t a high-tech burglar alarm—my dogs were hounding a black Lexus LS 460L as it sped up the driveway. Yappy, being male, took up the lead, with Macey and Rosie right behind him. Abbey hung back a bit, surveying the scene; she was the oldest, and had to present a dignified demeanor. I went out on the porch and watched the car fishtail around the curves and then slam to a stop in the muddy gravel in front of the house. The driver jumped from the front of the car as it stopped and tried to run around to open the rear passenger door. The dogs intercepted him, pinning him against the car. They weren’t being malicious, nor were they hungry; they hadn’t had a chance to play all day.
“Meomcheseyo!” shouted the man, and right there I had a feeling that the day was going to be more interesting than usual. Because not only was he speaking Korean—loosely translated, “Meomcheseyo!” means “God damn it, stop this bullshit right now!”—but he had a North Korean accent.
The problem was, in dog speak “Meomcheseyo!” means something like Come on and jump on my car, sniff my crotch, and hump my leg. The dogs were happy to comply. They were so excited I had to whistle three times before they remembered who kept their food dishes filled.
“Inside, now,” I told them when they finally looked in my direction.
They gave the air a sniff, decided they didn’t like what they smelled, and retreated.
With the dogs gone, a gorgeous woman emerged from the car. When I say gorgeous, I don’t mean drop-dead gorgeous—I mean kick you in the throat, douse you with kerosene, burn you to a crisp with no trace of remorse gorgeous. She was Asian, and as I gathered, Korean. Black hair, red skirt—short, short skirt—and a figure that demanded you do politically incorrect things in public.
“Annyeonghaseyo,” I told her, bowing my head, both in respect and to get a closer look at her legs.
“Enough with the Korean,” she said sharply. “Your accent is terrible. You are Richard Marcinko, Mr. Rogue Warrior?”
“Dick to you,” I said. “I love a woman who gets to the point.”
Not to mention one who was holding a Smith & Wesson revolver six inches from my head. I can’t imagine where she’d been hiding it; there sure wasn’t any extra room in the dress.
“Nice pistol,” I said.
“It’s loaded, Dick.”
“So are you.”
“You are a very funny man, Mr. Marcinko.”
The gun was a nice little S&W Chief’s Special, a Model 37 I believe, with the blued J frame. Manufactured by S&W back in the day, it was a .38 caliber snub-nose, still a nasty little customer if you’re not expecting it.
The chauffeur, meanwhile, had recovered from his encounter with the dogs and was reaching into his jacket.
“You can point anything you want at me,” I told the woman. “But if he takes a gun out of his pocket he’s going to eat it. And then the dogs are going to eat him.”
She said something to him in Korean. The chauffeur frowned, but kept whatever weapon he had holstered.
“So, Mr. Marcinko, you do not seem as brilliant in real life as you are on the page,” said the woman, returning to English. “There is a little bit of fiction in your accounts, no?”
Everybody’s a critic these days.
“Why don’t you come inside and we can discuss that. My study is always open.”
“You want to get me in bed, is that it?”
“If that’s what it will take.”
She moved the Smith & Wesson so that it was no longer aimed at my head, though I’ve often been accused of having my brains where she pointed it.
“I am not here to sleep with you,” she told me.
“Who said anything about sleeping?”
She finally smiled. But that was the extent of our budding romance—Trace interrupted our tête-à-tête with a flying jump from the side roof, landing on my Korean guest. I grabbed the Smith & Wesson as it flew into the air.
“Meomcheseyo!” I told the chauffeur as he started to reach for his gun. “One more inch and you’ll have a new hole to eat kimchi out of.”
Red Skirt was beautiful, tough, and highly skilled in Korean kickboxing. Trace is just as beautiful, twice as tough, and is an expert in Jeet Kune Do, the martial art that Bruce Lee made famous.
Wasn’t much of a match. Trace had her pinned inside of ten seconds.
“All right, let her up,” I said as the dust settled. “It’s not every day the most hated dictator in the universe sends a personal representative to visit Rogue Manor.”
Trace and Red Skirt gave me a funny look, but it was pretty obvious who she worked for. The only other people who would have been so rude were members of the Christians in Action—otherwise known as the CIA—and no intelligence officer was going to drive a Lexus limo this close to the Langley accounting staff.
“I am here to deliver an invitation,” said Red Skirt.
“At the point of a gun?” asked Trace.
“In America, doesn’t everyone travel with guns?” asked Red Skirt. “It is required by your Constitution.”
She reached back into the limo and pulled out a leather briefcase. Trace tensed behind her as she opened it, but all she produced was an envelope. It was made of thick, fancy paper and had a wax seal at the back. It looked like the invitations I get when one of the great-aunt’s grandchildren decides to get hitched.
“Mr. Rogue Warrior, hand-deliver” was written on the outside.
“Sealed with a kiss?” I asked, turning it over.
“Maybe we should check it for a bomb,” said Trace.
I broke the fancy seal on the back and slipped open the envelope. There was an invitation inside, engraved of course, written in both English and Hangul, the Korean script.
At least I assume that’s what those squiggly characters were about.
Dear Mister Marcinko:
Your honorable presence for drinks and dinner is humbly requested by the great one, Kim Jong Il.
Ms. Chimdae will make the arrangements.
There’s something about being called “Mister”—especially when it’s spelled out—that always gets me in a special place.
Usually my wallet.
“Thanks, but no thanks,” I told Red Skirt, handing back the invitation. “Have a pleasant day.”
Ms. Chimdae gave me a blank look. Obviously no one in her experience turned down a request from the Great Dictator.
I cracked open her pistol and slipped the bullets out, giving the cylinder a good spin before handing the gun back. “The dogs will be back out in a minute. Your chauffeur will probably feel more comfortable if you’re off the property by then.”
“You do not understand, Mr. Marcinko. This is a great honor,” said Chimdae.
“No doubt.”
“You be sorry for this, Rogue Warrior,” chirped the chauffeur. “Very sorry.”
“Words to live by,” I said, turning around and heading for the door.
[ II ]
POSSIBLY I WAS a little hasty. It’s not every day that the world’s sleaziest dictator asks me over for dinner. Nor should the fact that someone is a slimebag prevent me from hoisting a few at the bar with him. If that were the case, I’d have to remain sober every time I went to New York to meet with my agent.
But I’d been to North Korea once—you can read about it in Red Cell—and had no desire to go back, with or without Kim Jong Il’s invitation. And I had plenty to do, both at home and in Europe with the company. So I didn’t second guess my decision until the next morning when a black Lincoln Town Car made its way up the drive, the squeal of brakes accompanied by the howling of my dogs. The Town Car was not traveling alone—it was in the middle of a procession of black Chevy Suburbans, each packed with six or seven plainclothes security types, who fanned out along the drive as the Lincoln came to a stop. The sunglasses were Wal-Mart; the radio earplugs government issue. I whistled to the dogs, who circled the caravan, growling.
The door to the Lincoln popped open and a rotun
d man in a blue pin-striped suit emerged. It wasn’t more than sixty degrees out, but the man was already perspiring heavily. He wore thick, wire-rimmed glasses, which teetered at the edge of his nose. The briefcase in his hand looked as if it had been through a war.
“Marcinko?”
“That’s right. And you are?”
“Ambassador at large, Asia, Roderick Kant Fogglebottom3,” he said. “State Department. May we talk inside?”
“It’s a free country.”
“The secretary of state sent me,” he said once we reached the kitchen. He put his briefcase down on the table and snapped it open. “He wants you to reconsider this invitation from Kim Jong Il.”
“The secretary of state wants me to go to North Korea and have dinner with this scumbag?”
“I’m told the monkey brains are a delight,” said Fogglebottom.
I’ll spare you the rest of the conversation, which included a lively discussion of Korean culinary highlights such as rotted cabbage and fried dog innards. The bottom line was this: the U.S., with the help of South Korea, Japan, and China, was negotiating a deal with Kim Jong Il. North Korea’s Great Leader had very generously (cough, cough) offered to forgo further development of nuclear weapons, and in fact to get rid of those that he had already made, in exchange for the release of several billion dollars in assets, two nuclear power plants, and a lifetime pass to Tokyo Disney. The talks had evidently reached a very delicate stage, and the administration was worried that any little upset would throw them off.
“Including indigestion?” I asked.
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