ISLAMABAD
1600 HOURS
KYLE SWANSON AND JIM Hall were hunched over a small plastic-topped table that was covered with equipment and papers, combing over the final details of the coming shoot. Outside, the heat of the day was waning as the sun drifted lower in the western sky. Swanson was ready, but Hall had spent the night at the hotel. He appeared rested, alert, eager.
“Selim gave me these two pictures of the targets. They’re pretty grainy because they were taken with a cellular phone, but there is enough definition to identify them when we see them.” Hall slid the photographs across to Swanson.
Kyle studied them carefully. “They sure don’t look like mountain men. Look at the clothes and the background. They are comfortable, which means they are getting a bit lazy. Outside of the battle zone, they obviously have lost their edge.”
“Good for our side,” Hall said. “Selim is more than holding up his end of the bargain.”
“If he’s not lying to us.” Kyle dropped the pictures and looked out the window to where the daylight was a thick orange color and losing its strength.
“Not the first time we’ve had to kill people without a formal introduction.”
Swanson would have preferred an exact, specific time to pull the trigger. The sun would take a while to vanish, which was a concern. The longer it took, the longer Kyle and Hall would be exposed to being discovered. He put his strong binos to his eyes and studied the balcony where his targets were to appear. No one was out there now, but a man who looked like a servant had been out for a few minutes and was now moving around inside, cleaning and preparing a table. “I’ve got a good view from here. How about your position?”
“Same kind of unobstructed clear view. We’re good to go. I better get on over there now, so I can settle down. We can do a final comm check then, and shut down outside radios.” Hall picked up the little suitcase that contained his own Accuracy International AW. “Good hunting, pal.”
“Yeah. Compensate for the downward angle on the shot. See you after work.”
“Right. And you remember on egress that your dark SUV with the blue flag on the bumper will roll up downstairs just as the sun is sinking. There will be a driver at the wheel, and one man as a lookout.”
“Got it.”
“Good, then. Let’s do it. Piece of cake.”
19
THE PENTAGON
WASHINGTON, D.C.
THROUGH A WRINKLE IN the world’s time zones, Pakistan was ten hours ahead of Washington. Seven o’clock at night on September 30 in Pakistan would be 9:00 A.M. the same day in Washington and the headquarters of Task Force Trident. Not that it made any difference. When a covert operation was in progress, the office was always manned and available to support whoever was in the field.
In a city of vast bureaucracies and in a building that possessed endless chains of command, Trident was tiny by design, with only five people in the entire organization. It could pull together from any branch of service whatever forces were required to plus up for an operation, and had first call on a four-platoon Marine special operations company for its immediate needs. The tightness of the core group kept things simple.
While Swanson was in Pakistan, the remaining four members of the team had pulled rotating eight-hour shifts at the Pentagon. Rank made little difference behind the thick closed door with the big lock that required fingerprint and retina scans to open.
Master Gunnery Sergeant O. O. Dawkins, a Force Recon legend known as Double-Oh, was Trident’s administrative chief and had finished the overnight shift that started at midnight. He was relieved at 0800 by Navy Lieutenant Commander Benton Freedman, Trident’s unkempt but brilliant communications officer and the resident computer geek.
“No change in mission status,” Dawkins told Freedman. “The timeline is holding. Only thing is that the White House keeps calling for updates.”
“What did you tell them?”
Dawkins smiled, and big, bright even teeth shone in his square jaw. “That they had the wrong number. We are a logistics unit designing new Meals, Ready to Eat packets. Let the general handle those people. We say nothing.”
“We were not required by the previous administration to provide ongoing oversight of an operation to anyone,” Freedman said. “That would risk exposing plans. Gunnery Sergeant Swanson would not be pleased.”
“No,” Dawkins answered. “He would not.”
Once Freedman was plugged into the computers, Double-Oh left to get some breakfast and fresh coffee. By the time he returned, Trident’s operations officer, Major Sybelle Summers, had arrived, although she was not due until the afternoon shift. The commander, Major General Bradley Middleton, was at his desk. Everyone wanted to be on deck when the strike took place in Islamabad.
Summers was sipping coffee from a thick white mug and wearing a slim headset that was tuned to the encrypted channel the field operatives would use after the job was done. She glanced at Dawkins when the big Marine came back, but said nothing. Summers was concentrating on just listening, although there was nothing coming through the headset.
Freedman remained at his computer console, rapidly scanning through other frequencies and trolling for information from multitudes of possible sources. He had been tagged “the Wizard” by other midshipmen when his technical genius had been recognized at the U.S. Naval Academy, and the nickname stuck with him during his two tours aboard nuclear attack submarines. When Middleton created Task Force Trident and drafted him for duty, that nickname was changed to “the Lizard,” or just Liz, because saying “Wizard” did not adequately bust his balls, Marine-style. He might be a genius, but he was still a squid.
Digital clocks tracked the time, counting down on both sides of the world. Dawkins settled into a chair. He had been out on the sharp end of these missions too many times to get nervous.
“They gone quiet?”
The Lizard just shook his head to acknowledge the question. The radios would stay cold so the snipers in the field would be free from the chance that somebody, somewhere would try to mess around and micromanage the situation at the last moment without knowing what was actually happening on the ground. Swanson would reestablish contact when he was ready.
Double-Oh carefully put his spit-shined black shoes on the desk, leaned back, and was instantly asleep.
MAKHDOOM RAGIQ WAITED PATIENTLY while Mohammad Sial finished the lavish meal that had been spread for them by the servants, who had withdrawn to the kitchen. His eyes roamed the spacious apartment. Only to himself would he admit that he had come to enjoy the comfort of the place over the past few days. A warm and comfortable bed, and the delicious food, the cleanliness, and the subtle rhythm of the city beyond the window had been more like a vacation for him than a place in which to prepare for a combat assignment.
Siad dipped some bread in the hot sauce and gobbled it down, followed by a gulp of pure water from a clear pitcher on the table. “I know what you are thinking, my friend,” he said. “You are thinking that you like this place and that it will be hard to return to the mountains.”
“I have enjoyed the comforts, yes. I have not forgotten our mission. We are fighting men, Mohammed. We will die on some frozen hilltop in the name of Allah, killing infidels. So there is nothing wrong with having a few