“Or you’re gonna have me beat up again?”
“If I think it might help, damn right. Get out of here. And no gambling. Your water has been shut off.”
Mahanani kicked the tire of the Chevy and swore under his breath as he walked out to his faithful Buick. He jumped in and spun gravel and dirt from the rear tires as he slammed out of the small lot to the street and headed for the freeway on-ramp.
“Damn them. Goddamn their fucking eyes. I’ve got to get them good. Now how in hell do I do that?”
He stopped talking out loud, mindful that there could be a bug in his car. They just might do that. His thoughts raced from one diabolical plan to the next as he drove carefully on his way home. He didn’t need a car crash.
Could he do something that would work, that would get him out of his debt, and let him stay in SEALs? Also, he didn’t want the drug ring hit men to come after him with Ingrams spitting lead. What he had figured out before still seemed the best. Tip off the DEA about the operation, and let them know both locations, and then have them be there when he brought in a load. At the same time they would have to take down Harley and Martillo out at the Casa Grande Casino east of town. It could be done. The DEA had the troops. Then they would find out if the casino knew anything about the drug mule train. He bet none of the operators or management there knew of this side game that Martillo had. Now, how to contact the DEA?
The good old telephone book. The group would be listed. He’d look up the number and make a call at night when nobody would be in the office. They would have a readout on the calling number, so he would use a public phone far from his house. Pacific Beach, say. Yeah.
At home he looked up the Drug Enforcement Administration number in San Diego in the blue-tinged government-listing pages before the business section of the phone book. It showed four numbers: main, registration information, southwest laboratory, and the San Diego County Integrated Task Force. He picked the last one and wrote it down, then checked it twice and put the slip of paper in his billfold.
Then Mahanani sat down at the kitchen table and wrote out exactly what he would say. He put it down, then made changes and wrote it again. The fourth time through he had it the way he wanted it. It went like this: “Hello, DEA, this is a concerned citizen. I know of a drug mule operation from Tijuana to San Ysidro. I got sucked into it. I can show you the whole operation if you grant me immunity and leave my name out of any report. It involves medium-sized shipments worth about a half-million but working on a regular basis. They are extremely hard to detect by border inspectors. If you’re interested, leave a message for me at your number. My handle is the Reverend. I’ll call back in two days and ask for the message.”
Mahanani read it again, made one small change, and folded the paper and put it in his shirt pocket. When to make the call? He snorted. The sooner the better. He grabbed his car keys, his black cap, and headed for his Buick.
In the Pacific Beach section of San Diego, ten or twelve miles from his apartment, Mahanani found a phone booth where there wasn’t a lot of traffic noise and put his coins in the machine. He dialed the number. The phone rang twice and someone picked it up.
“Good evening, this is the DEA county task force.”
Mahanani hung up the phone and drove away from the phone. Not quite 2000. He’d try again later. Was the phone manned all night? He went to a movie, then at a different phone in downtown San Diego tried the DEA number again.
“Hello, this is the San Diego County Integrated Narcotic Task Force. No one is here right now, but your call is important to us. Please leave a message as long as you need to. We’ll return your call as soon as possible. Leave your name and number after the tone.”
The phone buzzed three times, and he took a deep breath and read his statement just as he had written it. Then he wiped sweat from his forehead, hung up the receiver, and hurried to his car. He got in and drove away. The seed was planted. Now he would see what happened.
When he got home, Mahanani saw the red message light blinking on his phone. He pushed the buttons and listened.
“Jack, this is your mother. You’re never home. I never can get you when I call. Why don’t you have a nice safe nine-to-five job like your brothers so I can call you the way I do them?
“Never mind. I want you to put on your calendar the date of the twenty-fourth. That’s a Saturday afternoon three weeks away and I want you to come to our family luau. You missed last year again. Said you were in Europe or Africa or somewhere. You travel so much I can’t keep up with you.
“Never mind. The whole family will be there. With your three brothers and their wives and children, we now have fifteen in our extended family. Two more are in the oven but not quite done yet. Now listen, I really want you to come. I have to show these mainlanders just what a real luau is. Yes, we’ll have the buried pig this year, a fifty-pounder if I can find one that size. Your brother Mark has contacts with a farmer and he should be able to help us. So call back anytime. Call and tell your old mother that you’ll be there. You come on the twenty-third and sleep over in your old room, and you can help us dig the pit. Your father isn’t as well as he was last year. The arthritis is the problem.
“Oh, by the way. I’m inviting a nice girl I want you to meet. I know her from church and she’s lovely, single, and sings in the choir. Beautiful alto voice and so pretty. I keep hoping that you’ll find a girl and settle down and stop all this running around. I know it’s dangerous and I really think you’ve done your share.
“Well, I hoped that you’d come home while I was talking, but I guess not. I just pray that you’re not out there somewhere and getting shot at.
“You be good and take care, and be sure to come on the twenty-third to help me dig the pig pit. Good-bye. Now call me, Jack.”
Mahanani started to call, then looked at the clock. The talk with his mom would take at least an hour. It was already almost 2300. They had an 0730 call in the morning. He felt drained. That secondary inspection lane at the border had almost wiped him out. He was sure that he had been busted big-time. He could imagine being led off in handcuffs, his mother notified, and him being in jail without bail for weeks. It would have been the end of his Navy career and he’d be looking at seven to twenty in prison. He couldn’t let that happen. The next run he took would be his last. And the end of the casino mule-skinning drug runs. He hoped. If something fouled up somewhere and the DEA didn’t nab the whole operation, the ones left would kill him. He knew that.
Mahanani had a long shower and fell into bed. He figured he would never get to sleep. The next thing he knew the alarm went off at 0600.
NAVSPECWARGRUP-ONE
Coronado, California
Blake Murdock had set up a brutal training schedule. His platoon hadn’t been really tested for some time and he wanted to see how everyone stood up. There had been no casualties in the Sierras, but that had been a relatively simple operation. If they had a really tough one, he wanted to be sure the men were ready, so they had to stay in shape and razor-sharp all the time.
They started at 0800 with a warm-up, a twelve-mile run from BUD/S to the end of the Coronado Strand and back. Then they checked out two IBSs and launched them through the surf. They got together beyond the breakers and Murdock called to them.
“We’re going to shoot the surf, ride in on a breaker the way the surfers do. Just be damn sure you don’t let the bow get down and dump us. Surf along the side of the wave if you want to, but then turn and come in with your bow straight for the beach. We’ll do this three times. If we dump one of the boats, that squad has to do a makeup. Let’s roll.”
They headed the fifteen-foot-long Zodiac craft toward the beach. Jaybird watched the swells forming. He would be their caller. He let two swells surge up and go past them without breaking. The third one was larger, carried more water. He watched it, then shouted.
“Paddle hard, now, go, go. We can catch this baby. Flat out, faster, faster.”
The small rubber boat surged
forward with the six SEALs paddling. Then the powerful moon-driven surge of the swell peaked and began to break. The IBS was in exactly the right spot, and the nose tipped down just a bit as the water broke and the wave curled and hurled the Zodiac down the five-foot mountain of water. Jaybird guided the craft along the side of the wave for twenty feet using his paddle as a rudder. Then, just before the wall of salt water broke over them, Jaybird turned his paddle as a rudder and angled the rushing boat’s bow away from the wave. The massive rush of seawater pounded just behind them and smashed them forward toward the beach. The SEALs in Alpha Squad gave a hoorah, and surfed in on the surging wave of foam until the craft bottomed out on the sandy beach. The SEALs sat there slumped over their paddles a moment gathering their strength.
“Oh, yeah, that was a dandy,” Jaybird said.
“Not bad,” Murdock said. “Let’s get out and launch and do it again.”
Both squads made it through three runs at the beach without a wipeout, and they carried the 265-pound rubber ducks back to supply. After depositing the boats, the men formed up in squads in a column of ducks.
“Men, it’s time to try out that new CQB down by our explosion pit. You’ve been watching it being built. It’s eighty-percent underground, so there can’t be the remotest chance that a round could get loose and go into the highway or out to sea. Absolutely fail-safe. Don’t prove me wrong. I lobbied long and hard to get this CQB built here for better access, rather than driving all the way to Nyland. Weapons in hand, normal ammo load, let’s chogie. Senior Chief, show us how and lead us out at six minutes to the mile. Let’s move.”
When they had come out of the water, Murdock had taken a new waterproof pouch off his combat harness and opened it. Inside lay a cell phone. He punched up the master chief’s number and let it ring.
“Good morning, this is Navy SEALs Central, how may I help you?”
“Damn, you’re grouchy this morning, Master Chief.”
“Murdock, sir. How did the waterproofing work?”
“Must be okay, we’re talking. What I want to know is what happened to that order for the underwater personal radios that Motorola promised us?”
“Those sonar/radios that work submerged? Yes, we ordered enough for both your squads. Cost us a bundle, something like twenty-five hundred dollars each.”
“If they work they’ll be worth it. The demo on them worked fine, but that was two months ago.”
“Takes a while, lad, to get things through the proper channels. This is the Navy, you know.”
“I’m being reminded. Any fallout from the North Korean fiasco?”
“Lots of it. Our United Nations ambassador has demanded a vote of censure and damage to be paid by North Korea. The U.S. has stopped all food and humanitarian shipments to North Korea. Our seventh fleet is heading for waters off North Korea and it is on full wartime alert.”
“About time. They’ve attacked South Korea without provocation, and now trashed the West Coast in a move to save face. We should cut them off from the rest of the world. Put a tight blockade on all their ports.”
“Now, lad, Commander Murdock, sir. That’s being a little easy on them. How about a twenty megaton nuke on Pyongyang?”
“True, they deserve it. They killed five people up there in the Sierras, a big bunch on that airliner, three hundred in San Francisco, and probably dozens more due to the blackout. I don’t know what the hell else they have planned.”
“We’ll see in due course, sir. You sound short of breath, lad. Any breathing problems?”
“Just when I’m running ten miles an hour through the sand and trying to carry on a conversation. Do a trace on the order. I want to test out those underwater radios as soon as possible.”
“Aye, aye, Commander. Consider them traced.”
“I’m running out of breath. I’m out.”
“Right, and remember, Commander, you’re not twenty-two years old anymore.”
Murdock liked the new kill house. It was made of four-by-twelve planks for the walls and the ceiling, with two feet of dirt and sand on top. No round could possibly penetrate four inches of Douglas fir. It had been dug out so all but the roof was underground. Ramps led to the front and back doors. Inside there were four small rooms, each set up with electronic targets, terrorists, hostages, innocents, and SEALs. The targets popped up electronically from pressure pads on the plank floor. The computer had programmed more than fifty thousand combinations of targets so no run-through was ever like any other.
Murdock took his turn at the close-quarters-battle house with Jaybird. They missed a terr in the second room, and both were shot according to the computer readout. They finished the course, and Jaybird had shot only one hostage. No scores were kept.
Murdock watched the other men go in, and checked them when they came out. The consensus was that the new house was good and would serve them well without the long drive.
“Be good to use this once a week,” Ed DeWitt said. “Keep us sharp.”
Murdock’s cell phone sang a small tune. He pulled it from his combat vest and flipped up the cover.
“Murdock.”
“Lad, we’re in business again. The Old Man wants to see you pronto. He’s sending a Humvee for you and DeWitt. Get your men back to their quarters and have them ready to travel. Not sure how many will be going, but we should be prepared. The Humvee just motored down the highway. He’ll cut through the sand and meet you on the high-tide mark.”
“What’s up?”
“His Lordship didn’t confide in me. You know the routine. It’s something that needs to be done quickly, and we get the call. Oh, speaking of calls, there was one from Washington, D.C., but she said she would call you tonight. You probably know who it was.”
“Probably, Master Chief. We’ll meet the Humvee on the side of the highway. Be faster that way. Out.”
Murdock yelled at DeWitt and Senior Chief Sadler. He told them what was up. Then he and DeWitt walked through the soft sand up to the fence and through to the state highway that connected Imperial Beach with Coronado. Sadler pulled the men together and began a quick march back to their quarters.
“What in hell?” DeWitt asked.
“Don’t know,” Murdock said. “I’ve got a hunch we haven’t heard the last of the sneaky North Koreans. This could be something more about them.”
21
Commander Dean Masciareli looked up as Murdock and DeWitt entered his office. They both braced at attention.
“At ease,” he said. “I just received an order through channels to activate some of the platoon. You may not have heard, but there have been ten forest fires in Oregon and Washington through the Cascade Mountains. All of incendiary origin. One eyewitness to one of the fires has reported that a pair of Orientals wearing cammies and backpacks and carrying rifles started a fire, then hurried away and vanished into the woods. The backpackers said the Orientals didn’t see them.”
“Are the fires under control?” DeWitt asked.
“Four of them have been put out. Two are out of control and burning in valuable timber. There’s been another sighting, and now the National Forestry officials say they have reports of four teams of arsonists loose and on foot that they want to track. They are limited as to manpower, and want some help. Frankly, they want eight men who are expert trackers who can deal with the arsonists if and when they are run down.”
“That’s where we come in?” Murdock asked.
“Right. I want each of you to pick the three best trackers in your squads and be ready to shove off in thirty minutes. Go light on the ammo, take all of your Bull Pups for long-range work, and be in the parking lot in thirty. That’s all. You’re dismissed.”
The two officers did snappy about-faces and hurried out the door.
“Tracking arsonists?” DeWitt asked as they hurried back to the platoon area.
“Better than a sharp stick in the eye, but not much,” Murdock said. “I’m taking Lam, Jaybird, and Bradford. You?”
�
��I’m thinking. Franklin, Mahanani, and Fernandez. Eight men, but we only have seven Bull Pups.”
“Have the other man bring an MP-5. We might need it.”
Twenty-five minutes later the eight SEALs, in fresh cammies and dry floppy hats, waited on the parking lot for the bus. They wore their combat vests with the usual gear and carried one GPS device and a SATCOM.
The Gulfstream II that had brought them back from Sacramento had been serviced and restocked and waited for them at North Island. The crew chief was a cute little dark-haired second-class petty officer who checked their seat belts and made sure their gear was stowed safely.
“Good morning, SEALs. You may not know where we’re headed. Our pilot tells me he has flight orders to take you to Portland International Airport up in Oregon. From there you’ll go by CH-46 to the nearest sighting and get to work.”
“Are we all on the same trail?” DeWitt asked.
“That I don’t know. Now, settle down, we have some good Navy chow coming for you.” She grinned. “Not true. We do have some first-class flight trays that we’re waiting for. They are three minutes late, but the pilot says he won’t leave until the chow gets here. There will be one meal.”
“Flight time?” Murdock asked.
“Commander, that will be about two hours. We’re on maximum cruise of five-oh-five miles an hour and the distance is a thousand and ninety miles. Make it two hours and fifteen minutes.” She looked at the front of the craft. “Good, the food has arrived. We’ll be taking off in five minutes.”
She vanished into the front cabin.
“I could get used to this first-class living,” Jaybird said.
“The crew chief is not included on the menu,” Mahanani said.
“Don’t throw boiling pineapple juice on a man’s dreams, Hawaiian beach boy.”
Two hours later they landed in Portland, and were rushed to a pair of waiting CH-46’s with National Forestry markings.
“Two different locations,” DeWitt said.
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