The Complete Donavan Adventure Series

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The Complete Donavan Adventure Series Page 2

by Tom Haase


  54. Funeral

  Epilogue

  Betrayed Angel (Excerpt)

  Chapter 1

  About the Author

  Also by Tom Haase

  THE DONAVAN ADVENTURE SERIES

  Secret of the Oil

  Secret Device

  Secret of the Thorns

  Secret of the Bibles

  Secret of the Icon

  Secret Vengeance

  THE COASTAL ADVENTURE SERIES

  Betrayed Angel

  Betrayed Devil

  Betrayed Friend (Winter 2018)

  For the latest information on Tom’s upcoming books, sign up for his free author newsletter at tomhaase.com/news.

  Free Novella

  To receive your free copy of the exclusive Donavan Adventure series novella Secret of the Assassin (not available anywhere else), visit tomhaase.com/assassin.

  Secret of the Oil

  The Donavan Adventure Series (Volume 1)

  To my wife, Kate Haase

  We Are at War

  “In the preamble to the new Iranian constitution in 1979 it was clearly stated that the nation's armed forces "will be responsible not only for safeguarding our borders, but also for accomplishing an ideological mission, that is Jihad for the sake of God, as well as for struggling to open the war for the sovereignty of the Word of God throughout the world." —Ilan Berman in Tehran Rising

  "It has always seemed to me ... probable that there would be a resurrection of Islam and that our sons or our grandsons would see the renewal of that tremendous struggle between the Christian culture and what has been for more than a thousand years its greatest opponent." —Hillaire Belloc in 1938

  “The fact that in Mohammedan law every woman must belong to some man as his absolute property… must delay the final extinction of slavery until the faith of Islam has ceased to be a great power among men.” —Winston Churchill

  “Islam cannot be defeated. Islam will be victorious in all the countries of the world, and Islam and the teachings of the Koran will prevail over the world."

  Ayatollah Khomeini, 1980, Islamic Republic of Iran

  Prologue

  DHAHRAN, SAUDI ARABIA

  JUNE 26, 1996 - 10:30 P.M.

  KOBAR TOWERS COMPLEX

  Tewfik al-Hanbali surveyed the almost deserted street. Two shadowy yet still discernable human figures lurked over a block away where they stood under a pale streetlight. The low wattage of the streetlight, the overcast sky, all contributed to the closeness of the murky darkness. Tonight, he would strike the invaders.

  “Wassif, are you ready?” al-Hanbali asked.

  “Yes. Do you think most of them will be in bed?” Wassif asked.

  “I watched the complex for two weeks and I know their schedule. Have you prepared everything in the fuel tanker?”

  Receiving an affirmative nod, al-Hanbali ordered, “Show me.” He took Wassif by the arm and led him to the back of the truck. Wassif jumped up on the tanker truck and climbed onto the round aluminum cylinder atop the bed of the vehicle. He opened the hatch and looked inside.

  “There are five thousand pounds of high explosives and dual detonators,” Wassif said as he pointed into the truck, visually rechecking the lethal cargo. His voice did not tremble. “I have inserted the blasting caps into the casing inside this tank to arm the bomb. I have the detonator in my hand.” Wassif held it out for al-Hanbali to see and descended to the ground. “I can depress the ignition button at any time after I set the selector switch on the detonator. After I start the engine, I’ll push that switch inside the compound.”

  “Remember to not drive fast as you approach the guardhouse,” al-Hanbali said and moved close to Wassif. “We don’t want anyone alerted before you get close. Then you must speed up to plow through. It’s time for you to go. Are you prepared?” Al-Hanbali looked straight into Wassif’s eyes. He saw no fear there.

  “It is the will of Allah,” came the reply, and the man bowed his head.

  “Allah be with you,” al-Hanbali said with intense fervor, grasping Wassif by the shoulders and touching each of his cheeks with his own. “Your family will be rewarded and cared for.”

  Wassif climbed into the cab of the old dust-covered black Mercedes fuel truck. When he started the engine, the noise of the diesel ignition broke the night silence. He set the selector switch on the detonator transmitter and drove at a slow pace towards the sentry post that guarded the residential complex where the American military maintained sleeping quarters for their personnel.

  Al-Hanbali looked after the truck as it slowly rumbled down the street toward the building. Then he watched as it increased speed, heading straight for the sentry gate and the building located behind it. Everything now proceeded as he had planned. All the weeks of preparation were now a few seconds from fulfillment. He did this for his family. The truck now bore down on the concrete buttresses in front of the sentry at its maximum speed.

  At that moment, gunfire erupted from behind the protective bollards of the complex.

  Al-Hanbali’s heart started to pound. It was all going wrong! The suicide vessel needed to get closer. He couldn’t believe the truck was taking volley after volley of gunfire and it was not yet close enough to the building. How did the devils know to fire on the truck? His plan appeared to be thwarted, a failure. With that much firepower leveled at the truck he knew Wassif must be dead. All the bullets and the flares from the barricade made observing the truck impossible. What had happened to his truck?

  He prepared to retreat and run away in defeat. But his heart leapt as a tremendous fireball interrupted his feeling of failure. Wassif had detonated the thousands of pounds of explosives. Then, less than a half second later came the explosion’s deafening roar. He could not believe the force of the overpressure. Three blocks away he felt his body propelled through the air and slammed to the ground, the air savagely ripped from his lungs.

  He remained frozen in a supine position in the street for a few seconds, and then he scurried to a doorway and with great effort caught his breath. When the dust started to clear, al-Hanbali gazed in disbelief at the devastated remains of the building. The entire front of the barracks had collapsed. The scream of many sirens broke the silence following the explosion. Time to get out of the area. Elated, defeat now turned into victory, he retreated.

  Tonight he would celebrate the culmination of his initial effort to clear the homeland of the Prophet from the presence of the satanic invaders. His first endeavor to strike at the abominable occupation of foreign military personnel was successful, and he, Tewfik al-Hanbali, had carried it out. He praised Allah for his victory this night. Wassif, he knew, now resided in paradise.

  The morning after the attack, he read in the local paper that over nineteen U.S. servicemen had been killed and sixty-two had suffered injuries in the explosion. The pictures of mutilated bodies and body parts pleased him. Al-Hanbali headed for morning prayers at his local mosque.

  “Forgive me for not killing all of the infidels.” While prostrating himself on his prayer rug, he voiced a promise to Allah. “I’ll do better next time.”

  1

  Matt Higgins

  PRESENT DAY

  THURSDAY – 1:10 A.M.

  RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA

  OFFICE, SAUDI CHIEF OF NATIONAL SECURITY

  Captain Matt Higgins paced back and forth in the waiting room of General al-Hassam’s office at the Saudi Defense Department headquarters. He still rode the adrenalin surge from his recent near-death experience. The general’s aide-de-camp entered the room and approached him.

  “Captain, the general requests your patience and will be with you shortly. You must realize that after what just happened there are some things he must immediately attend to. Will you need any medical attention for your wound?” queried the clean-shaven young lieutenant dressed in a starched, creased brown uniform.

  “No, I’m okay, but thanks anyway.”

  “Perhaps a cup of tea or coffee while you wait?”
the young officer offered.

  “I’m fine. I’ll just wait, if you don’t mind,” Matt said.

  The aide turned and left him alone in the room. There were few people in this headquarters building after midnight. Matt scanned the anteroom. The light green walls were filled with pictures of Saudi generals, none of whom he recognized. One picture had the name of al-Hassam. At least now he would know what the man looked like. There was a Saudi flag in the corner behind a small desk and two plain wood chairs, neither of which looked comfortable.

  Matt picked the larger one and sat back trying to rest his head against the wall. The right side of his face hurt, but at least the bleeding had stopped. It would not need stitches, he thought, just a butterfly bandage for a few days. He glanced down at his clothes and saw the suit rumpled and the left knee of his pants had a rip. The blood had stopped seeping out of the slight wound on his leg. His shirt still sported multiple creases from the long flight from Washington. At least the dark blue of his tie complimented the light gray of his suit. Matt realized it was a stupid thing to contemplate at present. He had knotted his tie just before landing in Riyadh, and he now reached to loosen the knot and unfasten the top button of the dress shirt.

  This trip to Saudi had turned out to be far from the milk run expected. The mission had started less than twenty-four hours ago. Captain Matt Higgins and Staff Sergeant Bridget Donavan, his second-in-command, had been at Fort Belvoir, Virginia, on a hand-to-hand combat training course, when they received the message to report to the Center for Organizations and Operations, commonly called “the Center” at the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). Bridget had gone over to thank Captain Jim Cassidy for their hour-long instruction, while Matt gathered their gear from the wet ground. Out of the corner of his eye, Matt had observed Cassidy looking at Bridget as she approached.

  Bridget was a beautiful young woman with piercing golden brown eyes and flaming red hair, about five feet eight, with a slim build and ample endowments. Matt had heard them referred to as “great headlights” by a team member. An appreciative thought must have crossed Cassidy’s mind, Matt thought as he watched the man’s eyes trace over her. Cassidy, without doubt, remembered when Bridget had proven herself a formidable foe in this form of combat, demonstrating she knew how to use her lean, well-toned body to maximum advantage in knife fighting during combat. In a practice session, Matt saw Cassidy make a slight mistake by turning to his left. With great speed, Bridget had moved her right foot behind his knee and flipped him so fast he had no chance to react while she placed the blade at his throat. Game over. He also knew that Bridget hated knives.

  Bridget joined Matt and they slogged through the thin layer of mud to where she had parked her Ford 150 pickup. They dumped their gear into the back, and headed towards the Center. Matt guesstimated it would take about forty-five minutes to get there at this time of day.

  They rode in silence. Matt remembered when the army assigned Bridget to his team. She had come up in the army ranks faster than normal. He inquired shortly after her arrival as to why she had joined the army. Her answer surprised him. She needed to get away from an abusive relationship at home and to remove herself from contact with her brother. She believed he had somehow ruined her future.

  Matt pressed to get some answers on the details, but she clammed up. Her only other statement she made clear that she needed to learn how to be strong and how to defend herself. The army provided both goals, and after 9/11, she also adopted a new mission. She wanted to heap retribution on the ones who inflicted the devastation on America. At least on that point Matt could empathize. In his own mind, he realized she was indeed a strong, tough woman with a definite goal to achieve. She was, however, a bit testy on many occasions and often overconfident, but still a superb soldier. There remained no doubt about her being a beautiful woman.

  On arrival at the Center, Sergeant Peter O’Leary, sandy haired with a wrestler’s physique and a Boston Irish accent, greeted them. His expertise included many black operations for the DIA.

  “Captain, got a message for you from the general. Before she left, she told me you are to go in civilian clothes to the office of the Director of the National Security Agency at Fort Meade, for further orders. The general didn’t say anything else, except that you would be gone a couple of days. Also, she said to tell you that all your instructions would be given to you at NSA,” Peter finished.

  “Any idea what it is about?” Matt asked.

  “I have no friggin’ idea. She didn’t say. You know her. Good luck, sir.”

  Matt and Bridget walked toward where he had parked the Honda 1500cc Goldwing motorcycle, his “freedom machine” when he just wanted to get away and feel the air and speed. He stopped beside the touring bike and turned to her.

  “Bridget, keep the schedules for counter surveillance training going over the next few days. This has to be one of those shit details handed out on a rotational basis and my name just came up on some roster,” Matt said.

  “No problem,” Bridget offered. “Good luck. See you when you get back.” She saluted and moved off.

  Matt rode the bike to his townhouse in Arlington and changed into civilian clothes. He thought his lanky six-foot-one-inch frame didn’t fit his Brooks Brothers suit, but then, on captain’s pay, there wouldn’t be any Giorgio Armani pinstriped suits in the closet. While tying his tie, he noticed in the bathroom mirror his dark suntanned face, the dark tan on his already deep complexion a result of his last mission to the Middle East. He ran his hand through his thick black hair. It was well over the acceptable length for a military officer, but a skintight haircut would scream “military” in any area of the world where he might travel as part of a clandestine DIA operation, and in his area of specialization, the Middle East.

  Most of his training for in-country operations emphasized the need to look as much as possible like the locals. The Center encouraged its members to fit into any areas of possible future operations. Except for field training and some exercises where combat gear made better sense, he wore civilian clothes at all other times.

  After packing a small overnight bag, he drove to received directions to the desk of the admiral’s administrative assistant, Captain Thomas Mattowski, U.S. Navy.

  “Sir, I am Captain Higgins. General Bergermeyer ordered me to report here.”

  “Welcome to the NSA, Captain. Here are your orders. You will find the items you are to deliver in room 214. If you go out the door you just came through and turn right, the room will be on your left down the hall. Master Sergeant Webb will assist you there. Good luck.”

  Matt thanked him, turned and headed for room 214 without reading the order. A shit detail they couldn’t get anyone out here at NSA to volunteer for, he thought. All he’d have to do would be deliver the packages, get back, and continue the interrupted training of his team.

  When he arrived at the designated room, he knocked and entered. No one was there. Two large boxes sat on the floor of an otherwise empty room. Matt grumbled to himself. He needed to read the order to find out what made this such an all-important delivery.

  He ripped the large envelope open. The order specified that he to take the two packages to Riyadh, Saudi Arabia on a flight leaving from Dulles in four hours. Among the papers in the envelope were a ticket for him from Dulles International Airport to the International Airport in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, and a separate return ticket. A ticket for 500 pounds excess accompanying baggage also resided in the envelope. He was to deliver the two packages to the office of Major General al-Hassam. It listed an address and telephone numbers. A military escort would meet him on arrival. The order specified the general himself must sign the attached receipt, and that Matt must deliver the receipt to the office of the director at the NSA immediately upon his return to the United States.

  Matt took out the receipt stamped “Top-Secret, No Foreign, except Major General Rashid al-Hassam.” The wording specified the general must acknowledge receipt of two packages from the NSA, not speci
fying the contents. Matt noticed that Admiral Kidd, the Director of the NSA, had personally put his signature on the order. He stood still for a few minutes taking in the instructions. He began to think of how he might get 500 pounds from this room to the airport, the door opened and a sergeant entered the room.

  "Captain Higgins? Master Sergeant Webb. May I see your identification, please?” Matt handed him the NSA guest badge with his name on it. “Thank you, sir. I'm here to take you and the packages to the airport."

  "Sergeant, you have any idea what's in these packages?"

  "Can’t say, sir, but since you’re at the NSA, my guess is it must be some high tech stuff,” Webb replied and pointed to the door. “I’ve a dolly outside that we can put them on and I’ve got a van waiting at the loading dock. May I take the letter now that you have read your instructions? The admiral said it wasn’t to leave the building. You are to keep the receipt and the tickets."

  Matt handed him the letter and the sergeant departed. After his departure, Matt walked over to take a closer look at the packages. The labels and custom declarations described the contents as “automotive parts.”

  In a pig’s eye, Matt thought. That sergeant sure as hell knows what’s in the boxes. God, he hated this type of spook delivery service. Since the NSA hadn’t used one of its own members to make the delivery, and he’d been handed this job, it had to be something the NSA wanted to keep quiet even within its own ranks.

 

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