Stephen Coonts - Jake Grafton 5 - Red Horseman
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Regrets? To watch your country die while the politicians argue and the cowards wring their hands?
Yes, Admiral, I have regrets." "Why didn't you shoot him first?" "That is what I should have done." Yakolev leaned back in his chair and rubbed his face. "Ahh, I am old and tired.
I have lived too long. I have seen too much. I am ready to die." "The world is going to hell, so you played God." "You Americans have a phrase that seems a perfect reply to sanctimonious comments like that: fuck you." "You won't get off that easy," Jake Grafton said. His voice had an edge to it.
"Russia is in the mess it's in because of people like you, because czars and dictators and administrators use pens to authorize murder. 'It had to be done." 'I had to do it." 'I am responsible and I know the way things have to be, so they have to die!" "You Commie messiahs think your people are pigs.
For them you have the profoundest contempt. They are too ignorant, too stupid, too blind to see what's good for them, so they must be taken care of by wise men like you. You feed, clothe, and house them, keep them warm in the winter, and slaughter them when necessary. All for their own good. It's just too goddamn bad they don't understand how wonder u it is that learned, wise, responsible men like you are willing to get their hands dirty running the hog farm." Jake Grafton leaned forward in his chair.
"What if you're wrong?" "We weren't wrong." "Don't give me that shit!" Grafton roared.
"Lenin was wrong, Stalin was wrong, you're wrong!
I'm sick to death of you self-anointed messiahs willing to murder half the people on earth to save the other half, the half you're in.
You make me want to vomit!" Yakolev said nothing, merely reached for another cigarette.
"We have another one out there"-Jake pointed toward the hangar bay--ready to slaughter everyone alive who doesn't agree with him. Now I tell you this--it's time for 0 of us little people to take a page from the book of you prophets of doom and damnation." He stared at Yakolev.
The Russian sneered. "So you brought two Russian villains to Iraq to parade in front of your cameras. The folks at home can see the dirty devils on CNN, prisoners of the victorious, virtuous Americans." "No. I brought you here to help me solve a problem. I need your help." "Help?" Yakolev laughed, a dry, vicious bark.
"As one soldier to another." The laughter died. Nicolai Yakolev's face twisted again.
"You tell me I have no honor, then you appeal to it." He spit on the table, in Jake's direction. "I am not a coward!
I am not afraid of death. I do not fear a bullet." "I know that," Jake said gently.
"I have two sons and a daughter. They have children.
"A trial.
"When?" "You'll know when the time comes." Yakolev glanced again at Jack Yocke, then shrugged.
"I'll think about it. For you personally I would do nothing." Jake Grafton rose from the chair and started for the door.
"Come on, Jack." Out in the hangar bay Yocke wanted to know, "What was that all about?" "About doing the right thing, for a change." MEMEL "Like what?" "You'll figure it out." The room had a table in it about eight feet long.
And chairs. At one end of the table sat Saddain Hussein, who glowered at Jake Grafton and Jack Yocke when they came in. He roared something in Arabic. The translator said to Jake, "He wants to know if you are in charge, sir." "I'm one of the officers in charge, yes," Jake said as he motioned to the two soldiers on guard duty to leave the room.
Hussein ignored Yocke, who leaned against the wall opposite the translator, and directed his remarks at Jake "The United States makes war upon Iraq," the translator said. "You meddle in affairs that are none of your business." Hussein's hands were bound with a single plastic tie in front of him, so he waved them, now stopped and shook his doubled-up fists: "How long, how long, until you nonbelievers stop raping our daughters?
How long until you stop defiling the sacred places? How long until you leave the children of God to worship as the Prophet taught us?" Toad came over to Jake and handed him a pistol, a 9mrn automatic. "We took this off him." Saddam thundered on: "You violate the sovereignty of this nation, of this people. You shoot down Iraqi airplanes over Iraq, you send inspectors to hunt through our offices, you-was Jake Grafton fired the pistol into the ceiling.
The deafening report stopped the flow of words.
The spent casing slapped against the wall and fell to the floor with a tinny, metallic sound.
"I have a question," Jake said softly to the translator.
"Ask him how many Iraqis he has killed with this pistol." The translator did so.
Hussein sat in silence, saying nothing.
"How many Iranians?" Silence.
"How many Kuwaitis?
"How many Kurds?
"How many Shiites?" Unbroken silence.
"If you don't know or can't remember how many men you have personally murdered, perhaps you can tell me how many have died at your orders?" Saddam Hussein's eyes were mere slits.
"When you are dead will they hold a great funeral, or will they drag your corpse through the streets and burn it on a dung heap?" When he heard the translation Saddam Hussein opened his mouth to speak, then apparently decided not to. He looked at the translator, at Jack Yocke, then let his gaze return to Jake Grafton.
The automatic was heavy, Jake Grafton stared at it, examined the safety, the hammer, the maker's name stamped into the metal. Then slowly he removed his own pistol, a.357 Magnum Smith and Wesson revolver, and hefted it thoughtfully.
He laid the revolver about a foot from his fight hand, then gave the automatic a gentle shove with his left. It slid down the table and came to rest about a foot or so in front of the Iraqi dictator, the barrel pointing out to one side.
"Let's settle this fight here," Jake said.
"You have killed many men--one more certainly won't matter on Allah's scales. And an unbeliever to boot. Go ahead! You grab for yours and I'll grab for mine and we'll kill each other." As the translator rattled this off Jake studied the Iraqi's face. It had gone white.
Beads of sweat were coalescing into little rivulets that ran down beside Hussein's nose and dripped off his mustache. Stains were rapidly spreading across his shirt from under each armpit.
"You've seen cowboy movies, haven't you?
Let's shoot it out, you simple, filthy son of a bitch." Hussein sat frozen. He didn't even glance at the automatic within his grasp.
"Pick it up, was Jake Grafton roared.
Hussein sat silently while Jake regained his composure.
He took several deep breaths, then said, "This is your last chance to go out like a man. The next time you will get the same chance you gave your minister of health, the same chance you give the people you send your thugs to kill, the same chance you were going to give the people those bombs out there were meant for, which is none at all. This is your only chance!" Seconds passed. A tic developed in Hussein's left eyelid.
As the twitching became worse, he raised his hands and rubbed his eye.
Finally he lowered his hands back to his lap.
Jake reached for the revolver. As he grasped it the Iraqi started visibly. The admiral rose from his chair, and holding the revolver in his fight hand, retrieved the automatic. He stuck it into his belt.
After one last look at the dictator, Jake Grafton turned and left the room.
Jack Yocke had stood throughout this exchange. Now he pulled a chair away from the table and dropped into it. He got out his notebook and mechanical pencil and very carefully wrote the date on a clean sheet of paper. Beside it he wrote the dictator's name.
He looked at Hussein, who was staring at the open door.
An armed American soldier stood there gazing back at him.
Jack Yocke cleared his throat and caught the attention of the interpreter, who had also pulled up a chair. "I was wondering, Mr. President," Yocke said, "if you'd care to grant me an interview for the Washington Post." Fifteen minutes later Jake Grafton came back through that door, followed by the two Russi
an generals. Captain Iron Mike McElroy was behind them, cradling a submachine gun in his arms. Then came a television reporter and cameraman and two technicians with lights and cables in coils over their shoulders.
Jack Yocke got out of his chair and leaned against a wall.
Toad Tarkington eased in beside him, but he said nothing.
Then Jack realized that Toad was holding a pistol in his hand, down beside his leg, hidden from sight.
Spiro Dalworth was also there. As the television reporter gave orders to his cameraman and the technicians discussed where to put the lights, Yocke heard Jake say to Dalworth, sk General Yakolev if Lieutenant Vasily Lutkin is still alive." "Lutkin?" "Lutkin, the helicopter pilot. Ask him." Dalworth stepped over to where the general sat and asked the question in a low voice. Yakolev glanced at Jake, then shook his head from side to side.
Mikhailov, Yocke noted, sat staring at the top of the table in front of him.
The television types opened a discussion of lighting and camera angles.
Later, when he tried to recall exactly what had happened, Jack Yocke was never sure of the sequence.
He remembered that someone else from a television crew came in carrying a floodlight and several people began looking for plugs. Another cameraman came in and his helper began unrolling cable.
The television reporter was talking to Admiral Grafton about the possibility of moving the news conference out into the hangar bay so they could use one of the missiles for a backdrop when Toad went over to where General Yakolev sat.
Yocke caught that out of the corner of his eye, but he didn't pay much attention.
Toad must have laid the pistol on the table in front of Yakolev, because he was standing there opening a pocketknife-probably to cut the plastic ties around the Russian's wrists-when Yakolev elbowed him hard and he fell away, off balance.
"No!" Yocke yelled, almost as the first shot hammered his eardrums.
Mikhailov's head went sideways-a bullet right above the ear. Then Yakolev was shooting at Saddam Hussein.
Boom, boom, boom-the pistol's trip-hammer reports were painfully magnified in the confines of the room.
The Iraqi dictator came half out of his chair on the first shot into Mikhailov, so he took the next three standing up, at a distance of about ten feet. A burst of silenced submachine gun fire followed the pistol shots almost instantly.
Yakolev went face forward onto the table as Saddam Hussein fell back into his chair and the chair and the body went over backward with a crash. The whole sequence didn't take more than three or four seconds.
I'SHIT, I think they're all dead." Tarkington's voice. He stood and slowly looked around.
Jake Grafton got up from the floor and examined the Russians. Yocke tried to recall when Jake went down and couldn't.
"Yakolev is dead," Jake said.
"Mikhailov is still breathing. One right above the left ear. I don't think he's gonna make it, but... Dalworth, go get a medic." Yocke pushed by the horrified Iraqi interpreter, who stood frozen with his hands half-raised. Toad was bending over the body of the dictator, which was lying on its side.
Toad rolled him over. Saddam had three holes in his chest, one in the left shoulder, one dead center, and the other a little lower down. His eyes were fixed on the ceiling. Toad released a wrist and announced, "No pulse." Saddam Hussein was as dead as Petty Officer Murphy.
and that Iraqi Jack Yocke had knifed in Samarra, the soidier with the rifle he had mowed down. Dead.
Toad Tarkington stood looking down at Saddam's face as he folded his pocketknife and dropped it into a pocket.
He held the pistol Yakolev had used with his left hand wrapped around the action, so the barrel and butt were both visible. That looks like Saddam's pistol, Yocke thought, but he couldn't be sure.
Toad glanced up and met the reporter's gaze.
Jack Yocke took a last look at the Iraqi dictator, then walked for the door.
McElroy was replacing the magazine in his weapon.
He didn't bother to look at Yocke as he went by.
Out in the hangar bay the reporter ran into another television crew, this one still shooting footage of soldiers loading nuclear warheads onto pallets and the pallets into helicopters.
"Were those shots we heard in there? What happened?" The Feporter shoved a microphone at him.
"Saddam Hussein is dead," Jack Yocke said slowly. "A Russian general killed him." "Holy... to C'mon, Harry, grab the lights. Ladies and gentlemen, we are broadcasting live from the Iraqi base at and we have just learned that Saddam Hussein is dead! Stay with us while-was Yocke walked on through the hangar and went outside.
One of the Sky Cranes was lifting off with a Russian missile slung beneath.
The rotors created a terrific wind that almost lifted Yocke's helmet off. He watched the machine transition into forward flight and disappear into the darkness, JAKE GRAFTON WAS ASLEEP WHEN HE HEARD THE KNOCK-+ on the door. "Just a minute." He pulled on his trousers and opened it.
Yocke walked in lugging his computer. "I've written a story and I need to phone it into the paper.
You'll have to read it on the computer." He turned on the desk lamp and set up the machine.
Jake seated himself in front of the screen and put on his reading glasses. "You push the buttons." was Okay." As Jake finished each page, he nodded and Yocke brought up the next one.
The story was an eyewitness account of the air assault on Samarra, the recovery of the nuclear weapons, and the death of Saddam Hussein. Yocke got down to cases on the third page.
Just before the news conference was to begin, General Yakolev seized a pistol from an American officer and shot Marshal Mikhailov and Saddam Hussein before he himself was shot by a guard. Hussein was shot three times and died instantly. Mikhailov suffered a severe head wound and died approximately an hour later. Ya kolev was dead at the scene.
Jake got out of the chair and switched on more lights.
"I thought you weren't going to write fiction," he said to the reporter.
"There isn't a word in there that isn't true.
"Well.
"Look, you're doing the best you can with your weapons, I'm using mine." "You know, Jack," Jake Grafton said softly, "that's the nicest thing you've ever said about me, but I don't know that it's true. Arranging that little shoot-out was the dirtiest thing I ever did." "You were going to shoot Saddam yourself, weren't you?" Jake Grafton ran his fingers through his hair.
"Well, not at first.
After that talk with Yakolev I thought he'd do it, and I felt dirty. I wanted Saddam dead! But if I killed him the political implications would be unpredictable, and perhaps profound. Then in that room listening to him spout bullshit, I thought what the bell, maybe we'll kill each other." "He wouldn't play, so you let Yakolev shoot him." "Something like that." "I'm not ever going to print this." "I know, Jack." "But did someone in Washington want Saddam dead?" "If they did they never said it to me." Jake met Yocke's eyes. "I learned a long time ago in the military that you can have all the authority you are willing to use, but God help you if you screw up." "Did you know Yakolev was going to shoot Mikhailov?" "No. I'm sorry he did. That was his decision." "So what are you going to do now?" "Hell, what is there to do? I'm going to live with it." "Do you feel guilty?" Jake Grafton made a gesture of irritation.
"You did what had to be done." Jake Grafton rubbed his face. "I thought so then, and I thought so when I sent Lieutenant Lutkin on to Moscow in a chopper that I suspected was going to be shot down, when I stuffed those damn poison pills into Herb Tenney's mouth... but!" He gestured helplessly. "When all the preachers have shouted themselves out, the bottom line is that people shouldn't kill people who aren't trying to kill them." His gaze shifted to Yocke's face. "The easiest lie ever told is that old nugget you tell yourself, I'm doing what has to be done." "You're not feeling sorry for Saddam Hussein and Yakolev and Herb Tenney, are you? They were guilty." Jake Grafton laid a hand on Yocke's arm. "I'm feeling sorry fo
r myself, Jack. They got what they deserved all right, but what do I deserve? I'm not God. I don't want his job." "This is the real world, Admiral, not some class in metaphysics. Herb Tenney murdered people with poison and died of it himself. An absolute despot and two wanta-beside are dead-they did it to each other. You didn't pull the trigger.
"That's sophistry, Jack. You should have been a lawyer, his Jack Yocke exploded. "Goddamnit, Admiral! I've had it with all these people who tut-tut over the state of the world and won't do anything.
Mass murder, starvation, tyrannyit's damn near two thousand years since Christ and..." He gestured helplessly. "Guilt seems to be the in drug of the nineties.
Okay, I'll drink my share. I'm glad Saddam's dead... and those two Russian gangsters in uniform. Looking back, I wish I had pulled the trigger." Yocke swallowed hard. "I killed a man last night with a knife. Honest, there was no other way. I had to do it. It was him or me. Then I panicked and gunned a soldier or militiaman who was banging at me with a bolt-action rifle.