He returned with the coffees and a Mars Bar chopped in two with his Gerber knife, a prize from a game of poker with Wilson two weeks back.
Happier times.
The master sergeant leaned forward in his own luxury armchair, pressing his fingers up against the single earpiece of their radio. Milosz, without a headset on, could not hear the exchange.
“This is Gopher one-three,” Wilson said, using the latest in an ever-changing series of call signs. “Go with your traffic.”
Milosz waited for Wilson to finish his conversation.
“Gopher copies,” Wilson said. “Out.”
He took the hot coffee from Milosz and inhaled the chocolate bar all in one go.
“Sorry, spring break is over. Militia company pushed a little too far forward up on Madison Square, got ’emselves surrounded. The disco lights just started up from that direction. We’re moving up with the cav to dig ’em out.”
Milosz took a few moments to savor his half of the Mars Bar and sip the rest of the coffee. His gear was ready to move at moment’s notice, and he did not know when they might eat again.
The nig nogs were flooding in from …
Milosz forced himself to back up and rephrase that. He had promised Wilson there would be no more nig nog talk. And anyway, not all the looters were nig nogs. Many were ragheads. Some were beaners. There were even a few outfits from his part of the world, Slavic crews out of Serbia and Russia. The latest intelligence even had a few dozen players from the Chechen mafia working the north end of the island. For some reason, though, the loose coalition of bandits who were actually spoiling for a fight were mostly African or refugees from the Second Holocaust, a grab bag of different Arab nationalities and Iranians. They were flooding into the blocks around Madison Square Park, where Alpha Company of Governor Schimmel’s First New York Militia Regiment was cut off and in danger of being overrun.
“The better part of Alpha has holed up here,” said the colonel as he pointed at a strange map surrounded by cups of stale coffee, pencils, rulers, and message printouts on a dusty conference room table. It showed not only the street grid for that part of the city but 3D-like drawings of the buildings. They reminded Milosz of a tourist guide to Rome he had once owned. He had never been there, of course. Sergeants in the Polish Army did not earn that sort of money. But as a staunch Catholic he often dreamed of visiting the Pope in his hometown, even when the blessed John Paul II had passed on to his reward and been replaced by that creepy German, Ratzinger. So he had bought a copy of that guide to Rome, which featured maps just like this one.
The colonel, whose name tag read KINNINMORE, stabbed his finger down again, pointing to a richly illustrated wedge of parkland.
“Unfortunately,” he continued, raising his voice over a wash of radio chatter that spilled out of a makeshift communications area. The sound of panic filled the room until someone turned the speakers down, reducing the gunfire and shouts to a tolerable level. The colonel resumed his speech. “Unfortunately,” he said, “there’s a platoon and spare change pinned down out here, in the open. They have good tree cover and have dug themselves in as best they can, but the pirates are pouring it on. They want to wipe out a whole company. We’re shielding them with protective fire out of our ships on the river, but they’re running low and resupply is dicey at best.”
Again with the pirates, Milosz thought. They really needed a better name for these asswits. There. Asswits. That would do perfectly well. Master Sergeant Wilson could not complain about that that because asswits, in Fryderyck Milosz’s long and all too common experience, came in a variety of colors and ethnicities. Whereas the pirates who had first raided New York in the weeks after the Wave rolled back came from one place only, Nigeria, specifically the port of Lagos. They were real, modern-day pirates, too, who until then had made a living seizing and ransoming container ships in the Gulf of Guinea when they didn’t simply kill the crew and take the cargo for themselves. The news of the first of their number to strike out across the Atlantic and come home with a hold full of treasures saw most of the port’s pirate cohort immediately slip anchor for the New World. Then most of the port’s other inhabitants followed them. Then, increasingly, competitors from neighboring countries, from the Caribbean and South America and of course from the benighted wastelands of all those lands destroyed by the Israelis’ nuclear strikes.
As far as Milosz could tell, the original Nigerian pirates weren’t even operating here anymore, having been driven off by larger, better-armed and -organized competitors. So it just wasn’t correct to call them pirates anymore. Whereas “asswits”—a term he had picked up from a British officer in Iraq—well, asswits very much appealed to him.
Colonel Kinninmore, however, was sticking with “pirates.”
“The pirates we’re looking at here are probably sourced from over a dozen different crews, until recently none of them coordinating very well but all of them pretty well established in the AOR, and with good equipment. Suspiciously good equipment. They have solid Russian AKMs, PKMs, a lot of Chinese Type 56s, and some crew-served stuff, which they’ve taken off the trucks since we started interdicting them by air. They have some night vision capabilities, a mix of Chinese and Russian gear, which seems to be unevenly distributed. Same with body armor; even got some scavenged NYPD vests thrown in. Their comms gear is very good. Although their radio security is not.”
Milosz stole a glance out the window of the conference room. It was on the fourth floor of a nondescript office building near Union Square, looking out across a little park. All the big boys had been brought to the conference, special operators from all four branches of the U.S. military along with private contract operators from Sandline. One of the Navy SEALs from Ellis Island recognized Milosz and nodded to him.
Dolphin fucker, Milosz thought, nodding back and taking notice of one of the females in the room, a blond woman who could have been army or air force, it was hard to tell. She stood, popping her bubble gum, next to a very large … African American.
“Our first priority with this mission is getting those militia boys out of the shit,” said Kinninmore. “But there is a secondary consideration, too.”
The assembled men and women appeared to perk up at that.
“I said before that the pirates weren’t very well coordinated until recently. But you’ll all be aware that’s changed in this latest round of fighting. Those of you who fought on Ellis will have encountered the guys there with the scarfs. They seemed to be providing tactical-level command. We’ve seen the same thing here on the big island. You’ll also know we haven’t yet been able to capture one.”
Milosz remembered the mess one of those crazy fucks had made of Raab and Sievers.
“As a secondary, and for now I mean secondary, consideration, the National Command Authority would very much like it if we could obtain one of those gentlemen for a full and frank exchange of views on what the fuck they’re doing in New York.”
The room filled with grunts and a few curses. Everyone knew of somebody who’d been taken out by one of the exploding bad guys. Milosz peered out into the darkness. From here you could see flashes and snaking flights of tracer fire farther uptown. The open area below was well lit up as Strykers and Humvees poured into the staging post. Two converted M1Abrams tanks fitted with massive plows and Mk19 grenade launchers were grunting and chugging thick clouds of hot exhaust that caused the paint to peel on the abandoned cars. They cleared the intersections of wrecks, piling them up into a makeshift berm in case everything went wrong and the Americans had to retreat to a strongpoint.
“Anyway, that’s where you come in,” said Kinninmore, and instantly Milosz switched his full attention back to the briefing. The ads were over, and it was time for the main feature, as Sergeant Wilson would say.
“I need you to work in behind the enemy, determine their lines of approach, and mark them for interdiction. If, and only if, you can grab one of our mystery men without getting yourself blown to pieces,
then you’re tasked to do that, too.”
“We getting full air this time, Colonel?” Master Sergeant Wilson asked in a familiar tone, teetering between hope and resignation. “Sounds like we can’t count on arty.”
“We are,” said Kinninmore, surprising everyone. “We’ve got aircraft stacked up in holding patterns up to thirty thousand feet, all loaded for bear. We also have air force operators who will be assigned to each of your teams. The gloves are off, gentlemen. We have fast movers in play right now, in-flight tankers to keep them there. And they are ready to bring death and sadness down on the city. So you will be calling in the real deal. Whole blocks are gonna get leveled if the payoff demands it.”
“Most excellent!” Milosz blurted out before he could stop himself.
Kinninmore did not seem put out by the interruption; instead, he grinned appreciatively.
“Indeed, it is most excellent Sergeant … Milosz.”
He pronounced it wrong, but his sentiments were in the right place.
“No more dicking around, people. We have new orders direct from the president himself. Kill them all.”
“Ah, I knew I liked this president,” said Milosz. “He is reminding me of Clevinger, Yossarian’s foil in Mister Heller’s Catch-22. Has anyone read it? An excellent novel for military men, no?”
He knew they were serious this time, because he was back in a helicopter, and they would be flying through rocket swarms before his feet touched the ground again. If they ever did. Outside of the Blackhawk, other helicopters orbited the rooftop, waiting for Milosz and Wilson to get clear in order to pick up the other teams waiting for insertion at their objectives. The woman from the briefing was sitting across from Milosz. She leaned forward and offered her hand.
“I don’t believe we’ve done the formalities. Tech Sergeant Bonnie Gardener,” she said. She nodded toward her partner, a large man with an M240 machine gun. “And this is my spotter, Staff Sergeant Veal.”
The machine gunner merely nodded in response.
“Tactical air controller, air force special ops,” explained Wilson as the engines spooled up and made normal conversation difficult. “We mark the targets. She calls ’em in.”
“And what if asswit pirate boy is sitting in the Metropolitan Museum of Art?” asked Milosz. “Can be we bomb statutes and paintings now?”
Gardener grinned; an evil-looking grin it was, too.
“I’m from Alabama, Sergeant. We never did care much for art down there. ’Cept for that very special form of performance art created by five-hundred-pound bombs. Or dynamite and iron anvils. Y’all ever seen that done?”
Wilson laughed. “I like you already, Gardener. You’re my kinda cracker.”
And there was much to like about this Gardener, thought Milosz. She was a very attractive woman, although he knew better than to make anything of her sex. This Veal was a very ugly-looking guard dog indeed. Oh, well, the U.S. military took its warm bodies wherever it could find them these days. He was proof of that. And Gardener did not seem at all bothered to be heading into a roiling snake pit, even though women captured by the asswits had a much tougher time of it than men—and male prisoners were routinely tortured, humiliated, and killed in the most gruesome fashion, often on video, for propaganda. Gardener, however, seemed unconcerned.
He felt liftoff press them all into their seats before they banked away from the rooftop helipad. For just a moment he was afforded a clear view of the battle raging a dozen blocks north. The solid, rectilinear landscape of dead Manhattan, miles of right angles and straight lines soaring skyward in the bleak, inky blackness under a lowering sky, was broken and lit up in one small tile of open space where flaring light and fire raged. He could see small, single pinpoints of light moving through the rain from the north and west, like fireflies drawn to a spitting campfire. Across from him, Gardener checked her equipment as Wilson did the same thing. It was busywork. They had all checked and cross-checked their loadouts before climbing on board.
Milosz had switched up again, opting for an M4 fitted with an M203 grenade launcher from the traveling weapons locker that accompanied the ranger teams everywhere they went. He looked it over for any problems, performing a function check on the carbine while in flight. Sighting through the ACOG scope, the M4 felt impossibly light, even with the forty-millimeter launcher mounted under the carbine. He would have preferred a solid AKM with the same grenade launcher but was shot down every time he asked. No weapons that looked like those of the opposing forces, which was just as well since the SAPI plate in his body armor and the weight of three days’ food, rations, and ammunition more than made up for the lightness of the carbine. For good measure, Milosz also packed a pair of claymores, eight rounds of HEMP for the 203, a quartet of frags, and a block of C-4.
Be prepared, he always said.
Wilson and Gardener looked over their M4 carbines. He noticed that Gardener also carried two pistols in combat rigs holstered on her thighs, plus a couple of thermite grenades, probably to destroy the radio and her laser designator.
She smiled when she saw Milosz looking at the pistols. “Nice, aren’t they? Nothing better than an M1911 forty-five for knockdown power. I’m not going easy into that good night, Sergeant.”
Milosz nodded.
Veal growled, “We ain’t going at all.”
“Ah.” Milosz grinned. “That is orgastic Gatsby spirit, yes?”
The air force grunt just stared back, saying nothing. Another illiterate, then.
“Y’all think we’ll be laying hands on any of those scarf-wearing motherfuckers?” Gardener asked.
Wilson was emphatic.
“No. I lost of couple a good guys to one of those whack jobs on Ellis. You see one, Technical Sergeant, you bring the fucking sky down on top of him. We won’t be getting close. Agreed, Fred?”
“Orgastically.” Milosz grinned.
The Blackhawk swooped around far to the west, well away from the main concentration of enemy forces. But even so, ground fire reached up for them as they hammered low over the unlit warren of Greenwich Avenue and the West Village. Metallic pings and pops signaled a couple of lucky hits, but the pilot forged on, describing a snaking path up the island that never exposed them to a line of fire for more than a few seconds. As they crossed West 23rd Street, Gardener toe-tapped Milosz on the side of his boot and jerked her thumb, pointing east. Milosz had a clear view of seven or eight rocket-propelled grenades as they described tightly swirling arcs through the air to detonate in a spectacular constellation of starbursts against the façade of a high-rise. Falling glass and metal twinkled in the light of other fires. And then they had swept past and the destruction was reduced to unseen flashes and sheet lightning.
Master Sergeant Wilson, he noted, had his eyes closed and might even have been sleeping. Veal yawned expansively. Milosz knew it was common among combat veterans, especially airborne forces, to doze fitfully while flying into a landing zone. It was not bravado. This was simply one of the few times over the next few days they would get to sit quietly without having to remain constantly alert to enemy movements. Unfortunately, Milosz had never learned the art of blocking out the infernal racket of a helicopter in flight and so contented himself by furtively sneaking glances at the air force woman.
She was a fine and fierce-looking warrior encased in her body armor and festooned with weapons, and it had been many months since Milosz had enjoyed any quality time with any woman. He sighed and shook off such thoughts as best he could. This was going nowhere. She was very heavily armed.
“Help you, Sergeant?”
Damn, she had caught him sneaking a peek.
“No,” he replied, bluffing. “You catch me daydreaming of better world, yes, except it is not day, and there is nowhere better in the world to be.”
“Oh, yeah. It’s nice work if you can get it,” Gardener happily agreed, although she looked as though she knew exactly what he had been up to. She didn’t seem to care, though.
Milosz r
eached through his body armor to his sweat-soaked T-shirt and pulled out the small cross he wore on a chain around his neck. He kissed it and asked God for the strength to keep his mind on the job and out of Technical Sergeant Gardener’s pants, where it seemed inclined to stray.
“Two minutes!” barked the Blackhawk’s crew chief. He had stuck a Velcro patch on his uniform that read NUMBER ONE INFIDEL.
Milosz saw Gardener smiling at it and was annoyed to find himself feeling a brief pang of jealousy.
Veal blinked groggily like a man awakened far too early from a much-needed nap. Wilson came awake like a cat, all at once.
“Lock and load,” he ordered. Magazines came out of ammo pouches. Wilson and Gardener both tapped mags against their helmets before slapping them into the magazine well. Milosz skipped the meaningless helmet tap and locked a round into place. For good measure, he pulled a fat forty-millimeter high-explosive grenade from his webbing. As he slid the 203 into the breech, he tried to crush the image of his very own weapon slipping into the air force lady.
Oh, Milosz, he scolded himself. Pope John Paul would be very disappointed.
He leaned sideways as the chopper began to angle around for a fast insertion. They were setting down on a clear, flat rooftop, and Milosz fired up his night vision goggles, set for low light amplification, and slapped them down over his eyes, turning the world a cool, fuzzy green.
“Ten seconds,” said the Number One Infidel.
After America Page 23