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Ghost Target

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by Nicholas Irving




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  Table of Contents

  About the Authors

  Copyright Page

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  To all who have supported along the way, to those whose life has been changed, to the men and women of our armed forces past, present, future, and those who will see war no more. Most important, my family. RLTW!

  NICHOLAS IRVING

  Dedicated to Michael and Dr. Hanna Haskett, two of my dearest friends.

  A. J. TATA

  ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

  It is a privilege to work with Nick Irving on this exciting new fiction spin-off series of his New York Times bestselling autobiography, The Reaper. From our first conversation and throughout our continuous collaboration, Nick has proven himself to be a true professional, and I want to thank him for the opportunity to partner in entertaining readers through the lens of Vick Harwood. When we first discussed the idea of a fiction story based upon his autobiography, we riffed on ideas, plots, character development, and even our common bond as soldiers in combat, not realizing that two hours had passed when we were done talking. Nick is an American hero, and I’m proud to be teamed with him in this endeavor.

  This collaboration would not have been possible without the hard work of our mutual agent, Scott Miller, and his fantastic team at Trident Media Group. Scott and Trident continue to demonstrate why they are the best in the business. They invest time and energy in their authors and build careers. Simply the best.

  The driver of this story has been our editor, Marc Resnick, who from the very beginning has demonstrated a high level of enthusiasm for the Reaper fiction series. Marc’s unwavering support, endless enthusiasm, and detailed reviews not only made Reaper: Ghost Target a better book, but also made me a better writer.

  Jaime Coyne has done a fabulous job editing Reaper: Ghost Target, and the countless hours she and her team have invested in the story made it the best it could possibly be. Like Marc, her positive outlook under the most demanding deadlines makes everything seem like it will be just fine—which it usually turns out to be.

  If there are mistakes or errors, those are mine, and I accept responsibility. To the extent you enjoy the story, you have Nick, Scott, Marc, and Jaime (and a host of others in the chain) to thank.

  PROLOGUE

  September 12, 2010

  Khasan Basayev, the Chechen, stood in the open bomb bay of a prototype Russian PAK-DA stealth bomber flying at thirty-five thousand feet above sea level just twelve miles off the coast of Savannah, Georgia. Strapped to the front of his parachute harness were a nuclear weapon the size of a briefcase and a small rucksack with essential supplies.

  Three men from the Russian army, his watchers, stared at him from their respective bomb bays. The four men were kitted up with ballistic helmets, blackened face shields, oxygen masks and tanks, Nomex jump suits, and high-altitude skydiving parachutes to help them survive the nearly seven-mile drop.

  The bomb bay light switched from red to green and Basayev dove headfirst into the night from the high-tech, experimental aircraft, which was similar to the American B-1 bomber.

  Basayev looked at his GPS watch and altimeter as he stabilized his aerodynamic flight path toward the east coast of Georgia. At twenty-five thousand feet, he deployed his parachute, which popped open and slowed his descent. The toggles fell in front of his face and he maneuvered them to catch the wind and glide as far west as possible. His goal was to land in a small estuary south of Hunter Army Airfield.

  Already the bright lights of Savannah’s riverfront were glistening off the Savannah River three miles below him. Just south, the runway lights of Hunter Army Airfield provided him the beacon necessary to guide his flight to the watery landing zone. From there he would lead his handlers, if they could keep up, to the electrical power plant and complete his mission.

  He landed with a splash in the estuary, the water warm and soothing for the short period of time he was in it. He pulled the risers of his parachute until the nylon canopy was wadded in his hands, sidestroked to the bank, trudged into the underbrush, and finally reached a dry location. He placed his gear and the canopy on the matted pine straw as he removed his parachute harness. Unlatching the RA-115 case from the harness, Basayev inspected the seal. It seemed secure enough. He had slowed his descent sufficiently to prevent any significant seepage into the case from impact.

  Basayev removed a small rucksack from the harness, then changed from his wet jumpsuit to dry clothes: black cargo pants, tactical shirt, and boots. After stuffing the jumpsuit and parachute into his rucksack, he shouldered the pack. Behind him, he heard the soft splashes of his handlers landing in the estuary. With no time to waste, he picked up the suitcase-sized device and carried it as if he were a businessman on a morning walk to work. His handlers were several minutes behind him. It was better this way. He knew how to find the electrical power grid and he knew how to connect the nuclear device to keep it active, ready for detonation.

  Basayev didn’t hate America; rather, in addition to enjoying the buzz of combat, he loved being rich. The promised payday was fifty million dollars, of which he had already received five. Ten percent down payment on a mission this size was his going rate.

  He would receive the remaining forty-five million when the bomb detonated near the Port of Savannah and Hunter Army Airfield, home of the First Ranger Battalion and Third Battalion of the U.S. Army’s Special Operations Aviation Regiment.

  In the meantime, he would enjoy tasting real combat again. This time in Syria or Afghanistan. With the Arab Spring around the corner, there would be plenty of opportunities.

  CHAPTER 1

  Present Day

  Vick Harwood’s mission was to kill the Chechen, but complications arose quickly as two Taliban riflemen appeared on the ridge above their hide position.

  It was a tough enough shot without the Taliban factor. Harwood and his spotter were in a dusty hide position. The tan-and-black Kandahar Mountains leaned over them like a pissed-off drill sergeant, hot, smelly, and overbearing. The Chechen was holed up eight hundred meters away. Below Harwood, poppy farmers scraped resin into burlap sacks. Red and white poppy flowers framed the brown waters of the Helmand River and its valley until the horizon met the setting sun. Harwood and his spotter smelled like unwashed week-old gym socks.

  But Harwood could make the shot. He’d done it before. Thirty-three times in the last three months, to be exact. Harwood was a sniper. Not just any sniper, but the deadliest sniper in the U.S. Army. He seemed to always be there. Providing cover. Knocking down the guy that was about to kill friendlies. Picking off the mujahedin about to shoot the rocket-propelled grenade. Always there. His buddies had nicknamed him the Reaper. A nom de guerre was a badge of honor among warriors. “Reaper” left no doubt about Harwood’s specialty: killing the enemy.

  With harvesting the next kill on their mind, Harwood and Corporal Sammie Samuelson—too new to have a Ranger nickname—homed in on the Chechen’s domain.

  “We’ve still
got movement on the ridge,” Samuelson whispered. “Two hundred meters. Muj. Still heading our way. AK-47s. And we’ve got a convoy closing in on Sangin village a mile in the other direction.” Sangin was a small hamlet of adobe huts on the Helmand River and was the nexus of Afghanistan’s poppy trade.

  “No way the muj knows about us. We’re solid,” Harwood said under his breath. It was a judgment call. Over the past two days since their insertion, shepherds and wanderers had drifted within fifty meters of their nearly invisible position. They looked like rocks in their tattered ghillie suits.

  “You’re the boss,” Samuelson grunted.

  “What’s up with the convoy?”

  “Three Hilux pickup trucks. Prob Taliban poppy dudes coming in to check the stash.”

  Clumsy footsteps on the far ridge echoed. Boots scraped on shale. Rocks broke free and rolled hundreds of feet down the sheer cliffs. The Taliban were getting close, but only one kill mattered now—the Chechen—not two Taliban riflemen and not the convoy of small pickup trucks. The sun had the Chechen’s hide site—a U-shaped rock formation—spotlighted perfectly.

  “Muj closing in, boss. On the ridge.”

  “Roger,” Harwood said.

  The Chechen’s lightly bearded face briefly filled the crosshairs of Harwood’s Leupold scope, which was mounted on his SR-25 sniper rifle, then disappeared.

  Harwood had nicknamed his rifle “Lindsay” after a foster sister. Lindsay had been older and kind to him. Cooked for him. Gave him advice. Took care of him and the others. Told him to run as far as he could when the time was right—when things turned bad on the farm. But he hadn’t run. He had stayed to fight. To protect Lindsay. To make sure she made it out, too. But he had failed her.

  He carried Lindsay with him everywhere he went now. For Harwood, it was all about keeping the memory alive. He didn’t have much to treasure from his childhood, but Lindsay was someone, a sister of sorts, he would honor his entire life. Lindsay—the rifle—still took care of him, in her own way. She was outfitted with a ballistic sound suppressor on the muzzle. The suppressor wasn’t perfectly quiet, wasn’t meant to be, but it was better than the alternative. Most importantly, Lindsay was effective.

  Thirty-three kills in ninety days.

  The setting sun dialed back the heat incrementally, like turning down the flame of a gas stove. In a matter of minutes, the temperature would swing to cold. The sweat would transition from useful and cooling to damp and irritating. But they were Rangers. Conditions didn’t matter. Only the mission.

  “Confirm friendlies clear,” Harwood said. “Sun is spotlighting his shadow. Might help us predict when he comes out.”

  “Roger, boss. No friendlies in the AO, but those two muj are sniffing now about a hundred meters away,” Samuelson muttered. “AO” was army acronym parlance for area of operations.

  “Chechen’s moving a lot. Shadow looks like he’s on his radio,” Harwood said.

  “Roger, watching,” Samuelson replied. Samuelson was less than five feet from Harwood, observing through his spotter’s scope. The standard was to always be within arm’s reach of your Ranger buddy. Three weeks ago Harwood’s former spotter, Joe LaBoeuf, had been that close when the Chechen’s sniper shot found LaBoeuf’s forehead. The bulk of LaBoeuf’s brains had splattered onto Harwood’s face.

  “Roger. Ignore the muj for now. Focus on Basayev,” Harwood directed.

  After LaBoeuf’s death, the Ranger intelligence officer had provided Harwood with a full dossier on the Chechen. His name was Khasan Basayev. Considered the number-one threat to U.S. soldiers other than roadside bombs, Basayev was a mercenary. The report indicated that the Taliban and Pakistani intelligence paid nicely to kill American soldiers in Helmand Province. Basayev was mainly protecting supply trains moving between Iran and Pakistan. The Ranger operations officer had briefed Harwood and Samuelson, telling them that their mission was to kill the Chechen so that the Rangers could raid the convoys and interdict the weapons and drugs.

  And now, the duel between the Reaper and the Chechen.

  Harwood shifted his scope to the town of Sangin, a short half mile beyond the Chechen’s position. The three-vehicle convoy Samuelson mentioned consisted of identical tan Hilux pickup trucks with toppers. They skidded to a stop in front of some adobe homes—qalats. Switching back to Basayev’s hide, Harwood noticed Basayev’s shadow. The Chechen was gesturing with his arms in an agitated manner.

  “Check out what has him so freaked, Sammie,” Harwood directed his spotter.

  Samuelson was nineteen years old and relatively new to the Rangers. He had passed Ranger training and was an apprentice sniper. The corporal had to have some mettle to get through Ranger School. Even more, Ranger Command Sergeant Major Murdoch must have thought something of him to put him on the path to sniper.

  “Roger. Three guys out of the trucks now and … holy shit.”

  “What?”

  “They’re dragging two women wearing burqas from one of the compounds. They’re handcuffed. Now I see a third woman. She’s fighting like a banshee.”

  “Maybe the Chechen knows them,” Harwood said, remaining focused. The Chechen’s outline danced against the khaki-colored rock formation like a shadow performance.

  With no shot on Basayev, he shifted his scope again to the action Samuelson was describing. He twisted the focus dial with his fingers protruding from cut olive-and-black gloves. The silky sheen of long, raven hair caught his eye. No burqa.

  The men were dressed in traditional Afghan outer garments that loosely covered the torso and leg, and the Peshawari turban, a sweat-stained white sheet wrapped around the head a few times with the remainder left to hang like a ponytail. The captors had dark beards dyed with henna. Two men lifted one woman into each truck. A third man pulled the long black hair of the lady without the burqa. They scrambled. The man slapped her hard. Her face turned toward Harwood, as if she were looking at the scope from a mile away, perhaps wishing for him to shoot her, knowing what torturous fate lay ahead.

  The sun cast an orange glow that made the small village of adobe huts look like center stage in a spaghetti Western. Harwood switched back to Basayev, whose shadow showed he was shouting into a mobile radio or phone as he stared at the village.

  Having no loyalties was the mercenary’s maxim. Fight for money, not country or anything else. A pure cash transaction, devoid of emotion. The thin gruel of intelligence on Basayev identified that he had married a French woman. There had been just one picture in the Ranger intelligence officer’s target folder, showing the Chechen with an attractive, black-haired woman with ropy muscles. The photo showed her wearing a black sleeveless dress, him a gray pin-striped suit with white shirt open at the collar. The background appeared to be a hotel casino.

  Was that Basayev’s wife in the village? Harwood wondered.

  Briefly, the Chechen’s head popped out and his ice-blue eyes flashed at their position. It appeared to be a random, unknowing glance.

  Samuelson noticed it, too. “Think he saw us?”

  “No chance,” Harwood said. “We look like rocks. What do you have up on the ridge?”

  “They’re scanning. Still in the open. I think we’re good.”

  “They connected to what’s happening in the village?”

  “Don’t know. Be weird if they were.”

  From their perch, the poppy fields were no different from the farms Harwood worked as a foster child in rural Maryland. A reputation as a hardworking kid had stopped a series of pass-arounds for young Vick Harwood when a cattle rancher had seen him carrying a bale of hay in each hand as if they were briefcases on a morning commute to work.

  “What’s holding you up, bro?” Samuelson asked. “Thinking about that USO babe?”

  “Watch it, Sammie,” Harwood replied. His lips were dry and dusty as he spoke. The truth was that the “USO babe” made him feel good. Most of the men had swooned over the blond hair and freckles of Jackie Colt, the Olympic air rifle gold medalist they h
ad met a few weeks ago.

  “Just remember, bros before hos,” Samuelson said. “That’s our code.”

  Harwood smiled. The informal code of placing your battle buddy first was ingrained in every Ranger’s mind. It always came down to that in the end. Ranger buddies first and forever. Harwood sniffed and could smell himself, or maybe it was Samuelson. By now it didn’t matter. They both stank, sweat stains dried into their combat uniforms, leaving the white salt residue that was a badge of honor when returning to the forward operating base.

  “Trucks packing up. Like a kidnap team or something. I’ll call it in after we cap the Chechen,” Samuelson reported. “Muj on the ridge at fifty meters. Looking this way. Moving this way.” His whispered words tumbled over each other as the adrenaline surged.

  Harwood shifted his scope and rifle. Three trucks were snaking out of the village.

  “What’d they get? Three women?”

  “Roger that. Back on the Chechen. Check it out,” Samuelson said. Before Harwood moved his scope, one of the men in a passenger seat pulled out his binoculars and scanned in their general direction.

  He shifted back to the Chechen. “I’ve got him. He’s looking right at us. It’s not possible for them to know where we are unless someone’s talking to him,” Harwood said. “What’s on the ridge?”

  “They’re looking right at us,” Samuelson said. The men in the village, the Chechen, and the Taliban on the ridge were all looking in their direction. Not good.

  Basayev carried an SV-98 rifle known for its accuracy and enhanced penetration rounds, but not its distance. Similarly, Harwood’s SR-25 was known for its versatility and accuracy at shorter distances. While the advertised maximum effective range of the weapon was something less than a mile, Harwood knew it all came down to the sniper. His Ranger Regiment command sergeant major had always told him, “It’s the archer, not the arrow.”

 

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