EASTERN ZABUL PROVINCE, AFGHANISTAN

In rural Afghanistan, AK-47s were as cheap and easy to find as cell phones. The Pashtun family that didn’t own at least one rifle was poor indeed. American soldiers quietly tolerated the weapons. They’d learned the hard way that confiscating them caused unnecessary trouble.

But they treated Dragunov sniper rifles very differently. Dragunovs were costly and rare, and soldiers would detain anyone caught with one as an insurgent. Even Amadullah Thuwani didn’t have one. He ordered his clansmen to find one, and after two days a half nephew came back with a never-used Dragunov, still in its crate. The price was two thousand dollars. Amadullah grumbled and paid. He had no choice. He had to have it. Though not for himself.

SINCE PICKING UP the surface-to-air missiles, Amadullah had stayed in Afghanistan. He was living now with his half brother Hamid in a village in Zabul so small it didn’t appear on maps. He’d trimmed his beard and taken off his Rolex, trying to stay anonymous. Still, he kept the cell phone Stan had given him. He knew he was taking a risk. The Americans could track the phone when it was on, and for all Amadullah knew, when it was off, too. But after seeing Stan kill Daood, Amadullah had decided to trust him. His lies, his venom, were aimed at other Americans. Why else had he killed Daood and given Amadullah these SA-24s? Amadullah had even brought his bomb-making cousin from Muslim Bagh to look over the missiles. They were real. Amadullah thought now that the drugs had been an excuse, a way for the CIA man to reach him.

Three days after their meeting, Stan called and asked him to buy the Dragunov. “And what shall I do with this?”

“Bring it to Kharjoy on Saturday. At noon. On Highway 1. Park at the petrol station by the bazaar.”

“I know where Kharjoy is.”

“Of course. Someone will meet you.”

“How will I know him?”

“He’ll know you.”

“An American?”

But Stan was gone.

Amadullah had understood the Soviets. They were kaffirs and unbelievers, brutal men. In the early years of their invasion, when they still believed that they could win with sheer force, they had bombed whole villages into dust. They had killed two of Amadullah’s brothers. Even now Amadullah hated the single star of the Red Army. But he’d understood what they wanted. They wanted the Afghans on one knee, serving the Kremlin. They had come from the north over the Amu Darya River and tried to break the Afghans. But Amadullah and his people had broken them instead. The Russians were hard, but the Afghans were harder. All the Soviet jets and tanks weren’t enough. Finally they turned tail and went home.

The Americans were different. They had come here to rid themselves of Osama bin Laden and the Arabs. Amadullah didn’t blame them. After all, the Arabs had attacked them in their own country. And the Arabs were troublemakers. Amadullah didn’t like them. The rich ones looked down on the Pashtuns. The poor ones made a competition of prayers, as if Allah cared how many verses of the Quran they knew. None of them respected these mountains.

So the Americans came and broke up the camps where the Arabs trained. They had even killed bin Laden. They’d taken a long time, but they’d killed him. But still they hadn’t left. Their soldiers were everywhere. Even the birds couldn’t escape their helicopters and their big white balloons filled with cameras that watched the whole world.

The Americans said they were friends. Maybe they believed their own words. They hired men by the thousand to dig ditches and clean fields. Their officers met village elders each week to drink tea and talk about building canals and schools. At first, Amadullah thought that the meetings were a trap and the Americans would arrest anyone who came to their bases. But no. The safe-conduct privilege was real. The Americans wanted to hear what the elders had to say. They didn’t rape and murder like the Russians either. Amadullah knew of a boy who had fallen down a well and broken his legs and arms. His brothers dragged him out and carried him to an American base near Kandahar City. The doctor there helped him, put him in a cast and gave him medicine. The boy’s brothers had been Talibs. But the doctor hadn’t cared.

So Amadullah couldn’t hate the Americans as he hated the Russians. Maybe they were telling the truth when they said they didn’t want to rule Afghanistan. Even so, he and his men would fight them as long as they stayed. They didn’t belong in his country any more than he belonged in America. No matter how hard they tried to prove they meant well, their very presence stirred up trouble. On patrols, they gave candy to children and made them disrespect their fathers. They brought Tajiks and Hazaras down to the Pashtun lands and gave them rifles and told them they were soldiers. Even worse, they caused problems between men and women. The Americans talked about giving rights to women, but the truth was the opposite. The women wanted the Americans gone most of all. They wanted to know why their husbands and fathers couldn’t stop soldiers from coming into their houses and looking at them, disrespecting them, humiliating them.

If the Americans would just leave, then Amadullah and the other Pashtuns would make sure that al-Qaeda never came back to Afghanistan. Amadullah himself would slit the Arabs’ throats. He had fought his whole life. He wanted a few years of peace, a few years of living in a country that wasn’t just a battlefield for outsiders. But the Americans didn’t trust the Pashtuns to do that work. They didn’t understand. And so every day, more Americans died. Amadullah had no sympathy for them, no pity. He’d kill as many as he could. But still he couldn’t help but feel that the war was a waste.

Now he’d run across this strange CIA man. Amadullah thought the man must be mad, that something had happened to twist his reason. He supposed that one day he’d learn what. The mountains exposed every secret.

AMADULLAH DIDN’T WANT to carry the Dragunov in his Ford. The Americans and Afghans sometimes put roadblocks on Highway 1. He stowed the crate in the back of Hamid’s old Nissan pickup and covered it with sacks of bricks and told Jaji to follow him in the Nissan. Jaji ran his hands through his thick black Pashtun hair and looked vaguely sulky at the order but didn’t dare disagree. In any case, the roadblocks were off that morning. They reached Kharjoy at eleven a.m. A cold rain had fallen the night before, but the swift autumn wind had moved the clouds away and left the sky bright and blue.

They parked near the petrol station and walked through the bazaar, stepping over the mud puddles the storm had left. Merchants and their boys sat under plastic tarpaulins outside one-room stores. They sold potatoes and pomegranates and flour, plus chips and batteries and brightly colored candy from China. These days they also had music and movies. Some merchants had gone back to selling pornography, too. During the Taliban’s time, a merchant caught selling regular movies was supposed to get twenty-five lashes. One selling the sex videos could get a hundred. Of course, plenty of the Talibs liked pornos. They would watch the DVDs they took from the merchants.

At the edge of the bazaar, Amadullah bought himself a Coke. As he did a patrol of American soldiers walked past. “Good morning,” a soldier said. He was young, like all of them, and broad in the shoulders and wearing the sunglasses that they favored and the heavy armored vest. A child who hoped that hiding his eyes would make him a man. He walked with a loose, proud gait, as if he believed he belonged here. Just as Stan had named Kharjoy for the meeting and then told Amadullah it was on Highway 1. As if Amadullah hadn’t lived here his whole life. As if he didn’t know every village and all the chiefs within a hundred miles.

Amadullah hated the soldier and felt a strange shame, too. Living in Pakistan had kept him safe. But it had also let him avert his eyes from these American boots everywhere on his soil. Go. Leave my land. The soldiers turned a corner and Amadullah poured the Coke into the muddy soil and threw away the can.

Just past noon, a Toyota pickup with heavily tinted windows parked at the edge of the muddy lot. A man stepped out. He had light brown skin and wore a gray shalwar kameez and sandals. He looked like a northerner, though he didn’t have the almond-shaped eyes of many Tajiks. “Good day,” he said.

His Pashtun wasn’t as good as the other American’s. And he stood too tall, like the soldiers on the patrol. Not like the other American. John Wells, the CIA man had called him. That one carried himself with his pride hidden away and so he had fooled Amadullah.

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