by Martha Carr
General Buff Summerton opened the box and spat. He pulled a piece of paper out of the box and then tossed it on the desk. Several bones rattled and bounced out of it.
“I knew this was going to happen, dammit!” he eyeballed Troy, “you don’t negotiate with these bastards. They get all high and mighty and start getting more and more dangerous. We shoulda cut our losses a long time ago.”
He unfolded the piece of paper and looked at it, his lips moving silently as he read. He slammed his fist down on his desk.
“Three goddamn million,” he growled, “Now the bastard wants three goddamn million.”
Troy stood at attention saying nothing. The general stood and walked around his desk.
“You know where this kid’s uncle is?”
“Sir, yes, sir.” Troy answered.
“Good,” Summerton poked his finger in his chest, “You and Harry get your chopper down there and blow this guy away. No questions, no interrogations, no nothing. End this today.”
Troy was taken aback for a second and said nothing.
“Is that clear, soldier?” the general snapped.
“Um… sir, yes, sir,” Troy stuttered, “but, what about the Ambassador. Don’t we need to run this by him before…”
“The Ambassador is out of country. And his payoff-the-terrorists plan failed miserably. Now, we get to implement my clean-up-the-trash plan.”
Troy didn’t know what to say so he snapped a salute. The general returned it and waved him out of his office.
As he turned away he heard Summerton pick up the phone. Walking into the hall, he overheard him say, “it’s plan B time. Yes, it ends today.”
Troy ran. He burst into his bunk to find Harry lounging in the bunk with a book open on his chest. He was snoring loudly.
“Harry,” Troy shook him, “get up, man. I need your help with something.”
“Huh, what…?” Harry was clearly disoriented being shaken out of a deep sleep, “what’s going on?”
“I need your help with something,” Troy nearly dragged him off the bunk.
“Okay, okay,” Harry rubbed his eyes, “what do you need help with?”
“Saving a terrorist’s life.”
Taken
The Apache landed in the bank parking lot across from Aasif’s apartment building. The scree flew in all directions sandblasting everything within a few hundred feet of the helicopter’s rotor wash.
“I hope you know what you’re doing,” Harry said through the mic as Troy took off his helmet and jumped down.
He jogged across the lot with his head low in the rushing air. He took the stairs three at a time and ran down the hall toward the boy’s apartment. He didn’t knock. He just shouldered his way into the door. It flew open with little protest.
Ramin jumped up from the kitchen table.
“What the hell is this?” he yelled.
Troy held his hands up, “I need to know what’s going on with the boxes.”
Ramin said nothing, he just stared at him.
Troy jerked his pistol from its holster and pointed it at him, “I’m not joking around here, Ramin. I’ve been sent to blow you away, but I think something funny is going on here.”
He shook the gun, “now start talking, or I’ll follow my orders.”
Ramin sat back down. He sighed and rested his hands on the table.
“It started with a letter. I was told that my brother and sister-in-law had been taken by the Taliban and that they had a job for me to do.”
Troy lowered his gun.
“I was to have Aasif deliver packages to the embassy or his parents would be murdered. And then the first box came.”
“And you don’t know where they come from?” Troy asked.
“No,” Ramin said, “I have no idea. But they have my brother and his wife. I had no choice.”
Troy thought for a minute, “and you have no idea who’s putting them there?”
“No.”
“There’s no chance you have a security camera is there?”
Ramin sighed, “no.”
“Where’s your store?”
“It is next door, of course.”
“Show me.”
Ramin walked him out of the apartment building and down to the corner. A small shop with dingy posters of food displayed in the windows stood next door. A black mailbox hung on the door frame.
“This is where they are delivered,” Ramin pointed at the box.
Troy examined it for a moment. Nothing unusual. He thought about trying to get fingerprints, but there would be hundreds of sets of prints on the mailbox including Ramin’s. And the bone boxes had been dusted and they hadn’t found any to match anyway. He looked across the street at the now calm helicopter. Harry waved.
“Dangit,” he inhaled, “Ramin. You gotta get outta here. The people I work for want you killed and I was sent to…”
His voice trailed off as he saw the blinking light behind the chopper. The ATM. Still powered up. Still working. Still recording everything in its path.
Troy took off running toward it. Upon ripping open the machine, locating its video recorder, downloading the video to a flash drive, and watching hours of empty footage… he found what he was looking for… a delivery in progress.
He could not believe what he was watching. Special Envoy to Afghanistan, Sid Phillips, was dropping a small package into the mailbox. He had all his fingers.
General
General James “Buff” Summerton glared at the footage, “what the hell is this?”
“Sir, it appears to be Sid delivering his own ransom note to the…”
“Shut the hell up!” he interrupted Troy.
Summerton chewed on an unlit cigar. He clicked a button on the laptop displaying the footage.
“Who else saw this?”
Troy was confused by the question, “sir?”
“Who else has seen this video, soldier?”
“Um… Harry, and the boy’s uncle,” Troy answered, “and now you.”
He considered this for a long moment and finally asked, “and we don’t know where Sid is now?”
“Well, I have an idea.”
“Go on.”
“Ramin said the boxes look like…,” Troy started.
“Who they hell is Ramin?” the general interrupted.
“The boy’s uncle,” Troy said, then continued, “He says he recognizes the boxes from a nearby jewelry store.”
“And…?”
“Harry and I investigated.”
Buff waved his hand to indicate Troy should continue.
“It seems Sid has been buying jewelry there. The store owner says he always talks about shipping the jewelry back to his wife.”
“Sid’s been divorced for over a year,” the general protested.
“Maybe he’s trying to get her back,” Troy shrugged, “Anyway, he always comes down the street from the North side. Toward the mountains.”
“Okay… and?”
“The jeweler says there’s an old Taliban camp up there. Abandoned, but probably still a good place to hide out in.”
“Shit,” Buff slumped forward and steepled his hands, “what in the hell are we gonna do now?”
“I have an idea,” Troy said.
“I’m all ears.”
Shrapnel - Today
Harry Nedman landed them just South of the rocky hills outside of town. Based on what the locals had told them, the old, abandoned camp was just a mile or so up the trail. Troy shouldered an M-16 and prayed desperately that he wouldn’t need it. Harry powered the chopper down and jumped out. He looked nervous. The camp was well within the safe zone, so they shouldn’t encounter any resistance, but if this war had shown them anything, it was that anything was possible.
They walked slowly up the road for a few minutes before finding a cave tucked into the rocky face of the hills. Outside the hole in the ground was a ring of rocks with a pile of ashes in the center. Propped against one of those rocks, blade pointe
d upward, was a large survival knife. It had what looked like blood stains on it.
Troy pointed two fingers at his eyes, then back to the cave opening. Harry understood and nodded. Troy pulled his rifle from his shoulder and pointed it at the hole. He walked slowly toward it.
“Afternoon, soldier,” a distinctly American voice called from above them.
Troy dropped to the ground and looked up. The sun blinded him, he couldn’t make out where the voice was coming from at all. He was a sitting duck.
“So, I guess you’ve figured out my little plan, eh?”
Troy said nothing.
“They were going to fire me, you know?” the voice said, “All the great work I’ve done in this God forsaken place and they were downsizing me.”
“Mr. Phillips,” Harry called out, “we’re just here to help.”
Troy shushed him harshly.
Ambassador Phillips laughed sarcastically, “Help?!? What are you going to help with? You going to get me a new job? Get my wife to come back to me? Hell, I’d settle for get my wife to leave me alone.”
Harry slid up beside Troy crouching low, “He’s straight back there.”
He pointed to a rocky outcropping about thirty feet above the cave. At that point, Troy Clint Bodean didn’t know the I.E.D. would go off in exactly fourteen minutes and fifty-nine seconds burying a piece of jagged metal almost two inches deep into his knee and blowing both of Harry Nedman’s legs off at the hip. If he had, he would’ve smoked his last Morven Gold cigarette before stepping down out of the cockpit of the AH-64 they’d dropped in the middle of the road just outside of Kabul. Hell, if he’d known that, he would’ve put the chopper in the air and gotten their asses out of Dodge!
“You keep him talking and I’ll see if I can get a bead on him,” Harry said.
Troy nodded.
“Ambassador, we’re just here to help you get back to the Embassy,” Troy called up to him.
Harry scrambled a few feet away and stopped, waiting.
“I know what you boys are up to and it’s admirable, but I’m not going back,” Phillips called down, “And I can see what you’re doing down there. Trying to triangulate on my position. I’m going to shoot you long before that happens… that is, if you don’t step on one of my bombs down there first. It’s amazing what you can pick up from the impound lot.”
“Shit,” Harry muttered.
“I have a proposition for you, fellas,” he called out again, “You just hop back in your chopper, head back to the embassy and tell them you couldn’t find me.”
Harry shuffled a few feet. The ground popped in front of him and scrabble flew up from a warning shot from above.
“Hold it right there, kid,” Phillips said, “you don’t know what you’re getting into.”
Troy held up his hand in a stop gesture and stood up.
“Sir,” he said smoothly, “we just want to help. There’s no reason for anyone to get hurt.”
Again, Phillips laughed, “If you wanted to help, you would’ve dropped my money in the right place. Damned if you didn’t try to drop it in a terrorist hot spot. If you had been able to pull off that simple exchange, everything would be okay.”
Without warning, Harry jumped up and aimed his rifle at the hill. He shot a couple of times. Troy yelled at him to cease fire, but he couldn’t hear him. Harry took two steps to the right and that’s when it detonated.
The entire lower half of his torso exploded. He opened his mouth to scream, but nothing came out. His torn body crashed to the ground and stopped moving. Troy was knocked backward from the blast and his head rang from the sound. His hearing was muffled, but he didn’t care. His right leg was screaming in pain. He looked down to see the ragged piece of shrapnel buried in his knee. He dragged himself over to Harry, but he was gone. He laid there waiting for the shot that would end him… but it never came.
He slid into darkness.
Home
Troy woke to the sounds of silence. He lifted himself up on his elbows to see that he was lying in the medical building. He blinked his eyes as a cute nurse walked over to him.
“How are we feeling?” she smiled at him and looked at a clipboard at the foot of his bed.
“I feel like a hundred bucks,” he said rolling his head around, cracking his neck.
“Good,” she replaced the clipboard, “can I get you anything for pain?”
She nodded at his leg. It was bandaged and held in place with a large leg brace on his knee.
“How bad is it?” he asked.
“Your ACL was shredded,” she said, “but given the situation, it could’ve been much worse. You’re lucky that Dr. Samson was here. He’s an expert surgeon.”
“Awesome,” Troy flashed her a thumbs up, “so, when am I back on duty?”
“Oh, you’re not going back on duty with that injury,” she shook her head, “you’ll be going home.”
The debriefing was thankfully short and sweet. Apparently, Harry had somehow gotten off a shot that struck Ambassador Phillips in the head and killed him. If he’d only stayed in the same spot, he wouldn’t have triggered the bomb. Poor Harry. Inside the cave, they found Aasif’s parents, bound and gagged. Alive and mostly unhurt. The worst of it was that the man had his fingers removed from his left hand and his mother had one toe removed from her left foot. Phillips had been a doctor before being appointed to his post and had done a reasonable job of surgery to remove the digits.
They were reunited with Aasif and paid the hefty sum of 1.5 million dollars for their trouble. Sedra’s body was returned to them and Uncle Ramin had sent a hand-written note to Troy thanking him for his effort to save her.
Troy was awarded a Purple Heart for injury officially caused by hostile forces, since the I.E.D. had originally come from the Taliban. He was honorably discharged and spent a week in the medical building flirting with the nurse. After that, he was shipped back to the states… some reports indicate that he is living in Las Vegas, working as a D.J. at the Peppermint Hippo Strip Club…
… but that is another story.
About David Berens
David F. Berens has been a writer for most of his life creating books since the age of five out of cardboard and construction paper. Eventually, he added to that desire to write with an English Literature degree from East Tennessee State University. He is published in Addvantage Magazine, Coaching Life Magazine, and has published several books including ones about tennis instruction, life lessons, fantasy, and thriller.
His story, Knucklebones, is a prequel to his latest novel, Hat Check – A Troy Bodean Adventure, which will be followed up later this year with a sequel titled, Ocean Blue – A Troy Bodean Adventure.
He was born in Marietta, Georgia and now resides in Knoxville, Tennessee with his wife, daughter, two dogs, and two cats. For continuing updates, be sure to follow him at www.DavidFBerens.com.
Nine
The Interrogator
By John Ling
When Karim stepped on to the plane, the first thing he noticed was the sickly-sweet smell of vomit. It was so harsh that it stung his nostrils, forcing him to breathe through his mouth.
Ya Allah…
This wasn’t exactly the ideal welcome.
Blinking hard, Karim made his way down the cabin’s aisle. Empty seats flanked him, left and right. There were no passengers, no crew. This was meant to be a ghost flight. There would be no records.
Karim approached the rear of the cabin.
That’s when he saw the detainee for the first time.
The man’s arms and legs were restrained with plastic flexi-cuffs, and he lay on his side on the floor. He was shivering and groaning in a puddle of his own puke, clearly delirious.
Karim furrowed his lips and stared.
This wasn’t part of the plan.
Damn it…
Lifting his gaze, Karim regarded the three members of the rendition team – Ahmad, Faisal and Mazlan. They were standing around the detainee. They looked sheepish,
as if they’d rather be anywhere but here.
Karim tipped his chin. ‘Tell me what happened.’
Ahmad spoke first, raising his hands in a remorseful gesture. ‘I’m sorry, sir. The detainee became sick during the flight. He kept throwing up.’
‘When did it start?’
‘About thirty minutes in.’
‘So, you removed his hood?’
Faisal nodded. ‘We decided he’d be better off without it. We needed to be sure he wasn’t choking on his own vomit.’
‘And did he?’
‘Twice.’
‘So, you were forced to improvise.’
Mazlan shrugged. ‘Yes, sir. And we cleaned him up as best we could. But it was bad. He just wouldn’t stop throwing up...’
Karim sighed. He knelt and pressed his fingers against the detainee’s neck. The man’s pulse was elevated, and his sweaty skin felt hot to the touch. Feverish.
This wasn’t good.
That’s when the detainee whimpered something that Karim couldn’t quite make out.
Was it mummy?
Or was it help me?
The detainee raised his head off the floor. And, in that moment of moments, Karim detected a flicker of sobriety looming past the detainee’s fogged-up eyes.
There was emotion there.
Fear.
Because he had just been snatched from his home. From his family. From everything he had ever known.
Karim could almost feel a connection with the poor bastard. A common thread of humanity. But that moment was fleeting, and it quickly passed.
The detainee flopped back down against the floor. He slipped once more into his drug-addled haze, fidgeting, moaning.
Karim swallowed uneasily and stood back up. ‘This doesn’t make any sense. Were you too rough on him? Did you bump his head? Vomiting is a sign of brain trauma.’
Ahmad frowned. ‘It can’t be brain trauma. We took every precaution. I can vouch for that.’
‘Then you must have messed up the dosage somehow.’