4


The inside of the C-130 remained darkened except for the red lights illuminating the interior as Alex, Pancho, and John took off their civilian clothes. Alex wore silk boxer shorts, and he wasn’t the least bit ashamed. John, however, had on black Speedo swim jammers—formfitting nylon and Lycra spandex that extended from mid-waist down to mid-thigh, similar to triathlon shorts. Alex felt John should have been ashamed, and in the real world he would have, but then there was Pancho. Pancho, always the fashionista of their group, wore only his birthday suit. On this matter, Alex and John thought alike—if they ever got in too much trouble, they could always strip off everything except their shorts and make a swim for it, then walk onto a crowded beach and fit in like the other beachgoers. Pancho hoped he ended up on a nude beach—if not, oh well—can’t blame a guy for hoping.

The SEALs put on polypropylene tops and bottoms in order to wick moisture away from their bodies. It wasn’t simply a comfort thing. They’d be jumping from a high altitude in subzero temperatures and sweat would freeze.

Despite all the advances in material for extreme weather, they all wore wool socks. Scientists still hadn’t managed to beat sheep when it came to putting something on your feet that would wick away moisture and keep them warm.

On his belt he carried a Swiss Army knife and a holstered Iranian Zoaf 9mm pistol, a knockoff of the SIG Sauer. The Zoaf was inferior to the SIG, but SEAL Team Six’s expert armorers had customized this Zoaf with increased accuracy, phosphate corrosion-resistant finish on the internal parts, contrast sights, and a threaded barrel for mounting a silencer and the ability to hold fifteen rounds.

His main weapon would be an AKMS, similar to the AK-47 except this modern version had a side-folding buttstock, which gave Alex the option of making the weapon more compact for ease in parachuting and working in tight areas such as indoors. As with the Zoaf, SEAL Team Six’s armorers customized this AKMS with improved sling attachment points, a Picatinny rail with low-profile holographic and laser sights attached, and an enhanced fire selector switch for easier use and more accurate firing. When in Rome, look like the Romans, but carry a bigger stick.

John carefully put the backpack nuke in his backpack. Of course, the United States could launch a missile with a nuclear warhead at the facility, but it would be difficult to disguise the source of the missile.

Danny is probably trustworthy, but shit happens, Alex thought. He double-checked the route to Leila’s house and encouraged the others to do the same.

Pancho sat nibbling on Keebler cookies. “Can you name them?” Pancho asked.

Alex rolled his eyes.

“Name what?” John asked.

“The Keebler elves. All eighteen of them.”

John corrected him. “All nineteen.”

“Name them.”

“Okay. J. J. Keebler, Ernie Keebler, Fryer Tuck, Zoot, Ma Keebler, Elmer Keebler, Buckets, Fast Eddie, Roger . . .” John started to slow down.

“That’s nine,” Pancho said. “Don’t forget Doc, Zack, Flo, Leonardo, and Elwood.”

“Professor, Edison, Larry, and Art.”

“See, that’s only eighteen,” Pancho said, grinning.

“There’s one more. I just forgot his name.”

Alex couldn’t believe that two grown men were arguing about cookies and elves. After Alex made sure he was ready to go, he lay down on the cold deck, closed his eyes, and got some rest—he had no idea when he’d get a chance to rest again, so he didn’t waste the opportunity. His adrenaline threatened to keep him awake, but he fought it and caught some sleep—only to be awakened by hunger, so he ate a Meal, Ready to Eat (MRE), also known as Meal, Refusing to Exit because the MREs had been known to cause constipation. More than the food, Alex made sure he drank a lot of water, saturating his cells with it.

They flew nine hours to Germany, stopped to refuel, then continued eight more hours to Afghanistan.

During a stretch of Alex’s sleep, John woke him and said, “We’re nearing ten thousand feet.”

Alex put his helmet and mask on—special molds had been made so that each member’s helmet and mask fit exactly. He connected the hose on his mask to an inline tube on the plane’s wall (bulkhead) and started breathing pure oxygen to purge nitrogen from his bloodstream and avoid decompression sickness. Alex was also saturating himself with oxygen, so if he got low, he wouldn’t black out as fast.

He had been through training that simulated a poor mask seal on his face, depriving him of oxygen—it made him feel euphoric. It was like being Superman. He really thought he could fly. If one guy broke seal, everyone had to restart the pre-breathing process, a process that could last thirty minutes to an hour and a half. Alex had seen a SEAL with a new mask that didn’t fit properly. Fortunately it was a training op, and the guy passed out before he jumped. The commanding officer had to make a decision whether to abort the mission or carry on without him. They carried on the mission without him. And he’d heard from John about a training op where a West Coast SEAL had jumped, then gone unconscious. An Emergency Deployment Device (EDD) should have automatically deployed his parachute for him; however, the EDD failed, and he bounced off the ground before he ever woke. Immediately the guys radioed about their dead Teammate. Pancho had been on that op. While waiting nearly an hour for someone to come and help them take the body out, Pancho reached into the rubble of the dead SEAL’s Playmate cooler, took his lunch, and ate it.

Pancho, John, and Danny joined Alex in pre-breathing.

After thirty minutes, the C-130 rose above ten thousand feet over Afghanistan. For each one thousand feet the plane ascended, the temperature dropped 3.6 degrees Fahrenheit. Alex put on overgloves, which covered his tactical gloves so his hands wouldn’t freeze off.

As they reached eighteen thousand feet, a physiology technician monitored the SEALs and aircrew for signs of altitude sickness.

The plane rose higher and higher. Soon the loadmaster called out, “Thirty minutes!”

Alex’s bladder had stretched tight from all the water he’d been drinking, so he relieved himself in a piss tube in the bulkhead.

“Ten minutes!” They were approaching the point of no return. Once they took that step off the plane, there’d be no getting back on.

“Five minutes!” The C-130’s ramp lowered. Although there was no moon, there was still more light outside the plane than inside. The light entered the plane. The guys disconnected their breathing lines from the C-130’s large oxygen tanks and connected the lines to their small individual tanks. Each SEAL checked and double-checked his oxygen bottle pressure and connections. They had duct-taped their masks onto their helmets so when they jumped, the wind wouldn’t blast the masks off their faces. Alex also made a quick check of Pancho, John, and Danny. The PT watched them for signs of hypoxia. Burdened with his green oxygen tank on his left, rifle on his right, and more than a hundred pounds of gear in his backpack, Alex waddled behind the others, who also waddled to the ramp.

“Three minutes!” With all the wind blasting into the plane, Alex couldn’t hear the loadmaster call out the time interval, but Alex recognized the man’s three-finger sign and relayed it to his Teammates in case they hadn’t seen it. Alex dropped to his stomach and slithered onto the ramp. He peeked over the edge and all he could see were clouds. He hoped the ground matched the aerial images the Colonel had shown them.

“One minute!” Alex slithered back away from the ramp and stood. He hoped the pilot and crew were on target.

“Thirty seconds!”

The light on the ramp switched from red to green. Pancho and John looked to Alex for the “okay.” Alex pointed off the ramp: go. John was the lightest and would take the longest to reach the ground, so he jumped first. Danny went next. Pancho was heavier than Alex, but Alex had to make sure everyone got off the plane okay before he jumped. The three SEALs had distributed their gear so Alex carried more weight.

Alex brought up the rear, and stepped off the plane at twenty-six thousand feet above Afghanistan. It was the Superman feeling, mixed with fear and ecstasy. He longed to just fall through space, but the whole point to a high-altitude, high-opening jump was to deploy your chute right after jumping. Even more crucial, if he waited too long to pull his chute, he’d blast through Pancho’s canopy below him and they’d both die.

A mere four seconds after stepping off the plane, Alex pulled his rip cord. He tensed up, even though he had done this hundreds of times before. Would the chute deploy? It was amazing to realize that your life literally hung from a bunch of string.

After what seemed an eternity, the chute opened at twenty-six thousand feet. The force was so abrupt and violent that Alex was certain he cracked a vertebra. Tensing really didn’t help. He looked up and did a 360-degree check of his high glide ratio canopy to make sure it hadn’t folded over itself like a giant brassiere. So far, so good—it had deployed properly and everything checked out fine. He suddenly wondered if, like so much else sold in the United States these days, the chutes had been made by a bunch of kids in a Chinese factory. They could take out a battalion of paratroopers just by skipping a few stitches.

“Damn it!” The temperature was 45 degrees below zero. He really didn’t like HAHO jumps. You froze your damn ass off long before anyone got a chance to shoot it off.

He double-checked the canopy. Satisfied it was in full working order, he loosened the straps on his ruck hanging from his chest and let the ruck drop to the top of his boots to distribute the weight more evenly.

Floating while freezing, he began searching for the other jumpers in the night sky. With shaking hands he pulled down his night optical device (NOD) so that it rested in front of his eyes. Infrared (IR) chemlights glowed on the back of each man’s helmet. Although invisible to the naked eye, the IR chemlights could be seen through the NODs. The Outcasts stacked up. John glided at the bottom and a large blob that was clearly Pancho was just below Alex. The large black space between them should have been Danny, but he wasn’t there. Where’s his chemlight?

Shit, shit, shit!

Alex looked harder at the empty space between John and Pancho. Shit! Danny drifted between them, his chute partially deployed and flapping in the wind! He was already too far away for Alex to tell if he was unconscious or not.

John spun his body and looked up to check his chute. Alex willed John to lunge after Danny and grab him, but he had already fallen past and was picking up speed. Alex did a quick calculation and tore at the release tab of his main chute. It detached and he was suddenly flying again, straight down. He angled his body into a high dive and blew past Pancho and John.

A cloud base at fifteen thousand feet rushed up to meet him. If he didn’t get to Danny before then, he’d lose him. Alex was having a hard time maintaining the angle of his dive and realized his ruck was causing the problem. There was no way to cut it loose now. He strained and kept his dive. The wind ripped at his mask, trying to pry it off his face. The distance between him and Danny closed.

Five hundred feet. He started working out what he would do when he caught up to Danny. He’d try to get the unconscious man in a leg lock and bear hug. Then he’d pull his reserve and hope like hell.

Three hundred seventy-five feet. Danny must be unconscious. He was on his back, his arms flailing about in the wind. Grabbing him wasn’t going to be easy.

Two hundred twenty feet. The top of the cloud base was looming close. This was going to be tight. Alex turned his focus back on Danny.

One hundred feet.

Forty-five feet. Alex reached out his gloved hands. He’d grab Danny first, pull him in tight, then wrap his legs around him.

Twenty feet. A piece of canopy from Danny’s chute ripped loose and flew up into Alex’s face. He desperately clawed at the cloth with his left hand while still reaching out with his right. He pulled the cloth away and was in the clouds.

Danny was gone!

Alex looked around, but he couldn’t see anything. He had no choice. He pulled the D-ring for his reserve chute and a moment later felt the reassuring jerk as the harness straps bit into his body. No point looking up; he wouldn’t be able to see a damn thing.

He tried to calculate how far off course he’d be when he landed. He was still ten thousand feet up, so he should be able to steer close to their original drop zone. If John and Pancho saw his chemlight they’d fly toward him. Alex said a silent goodbye to Danny. Murphy’s law was a bastard.

Most of the buddies Alex lost, like Jabberwocky, he knew better than Danny. Some Alex didn’t know as well. Experiencing so much death rubbed calluses onto his soul, but it didn’t stop him from feeling—seeing a widow and fatherless children at a funeral always hurt him to the core, but now, Alex didn’t have the luxury of mourning, feeling, or belly-button gazing. He had a mission to accomplish—a mission that could potentially save many lives. Now Alex was responsible for keeping Pancho and John alive.

Alex broke through the cloud layer and his vision cleared. It was nautical twilight, his favorite time to make magical mayhem. He saw shapes on the ground, the horizon, and stars in the sky to the east, where the cloud cover was broken up. Alex looked down at the tritium sighted glow-in-the-dark Silva Ranger compass mounted on his chest strap. He was off course. No kidding. Alex’s shivering hands reached up to his parachute toggles and corrected course. Quickly he stuffed his hands under his armpits to protect them from the cold. The cold made his brain slow down. Thinking became difficult.

He spent the next thirty-seven minutes gliding and checking the sky above him for signs of Pancho and John. When he thought his head would fall off his neck from all the twisting he spotted a black shape a thousand yards above him. Pancho! He looked around and was amazed to see a chemlight just seventy-five yards below him, off to his left. John! They’d found him. The sense of relief was incredible. He wouldn’t tell them, but a tear came to his eye. He checked his GPS and saw they’d traveled forty-nine miles from initial jump to their current altitude and position; 2,220 feet and forty-nine miles. Alex couldn’t feel his hands or feet. He was ready to land in a volcano if it would warm him up.

John landed first—fortunately, his atomic backpack didn’t explode into a giant mushroom cloud and take all of them with it. John was the fastest gun, but even he looked like his frozen body was moving in slow motion. Gradually he brought about his AKMS assault rifle and crouched into a covering position as Alex and Pancho came in to land.

Alex hit hard, the soles of his feet stinging as if they’d just slammed against an iceberg. He pitched forward awkwardly, ramming one knee into the dirt then the other as he did his best to roll and absorb the landing. He lay flat on the ground for several seconds, gulping for breath.

A loud thump a few yards away told him Pancho was on the ground. Alex picked himself up and without a word went about policing up their landing site, burying their parachutes and oxygen tanks and readying their gear. No one said a word about Danny. Alex hoped the enemy didn’t hit them now because his fingers were so numb, he didn’t think he could pull the trigger. Minutes later, they were ready, and Alex signaled Pancho to lead them out.

Pancho patrolled at the point, watching 180 degrees in front of them. His position was the most exhausting—trying to sense everything before it sensed them. Alex followed in the middle, wiping the frozen tears off his face, then alternating between covering the left and the right with his eyes and AKMS. John secured the rear by stopping occasionally to turn and check the 180 degrees behind them.

The desert evening was cold. During the day, the heat caused water to evaporate into the atmosphere, creating a barrier that trapped long-wave infrared radiation near the ground. As a result, the area became dry and clouds scarce. At night, when the sun disappeared, there was nothing to block the heat from escaping earth. After the heat fled, the desert became cold.

It felt good to be moving on patrol. Gradually, sensation returned to Alex’s legs and arms. After three kilometers, the cold pain in his hands wore off, and he felt he had a fighting chance at being able to shoot someone. Two kilometers later, the patrol weaved around the bases of sandy dunes and rock formations. They came across a goat path and followed it toward the village.

After two kilometers on the goat path, Alex noticed something to his left. He couldn’t tell if it was a bush or a human. As his eyes strained to see better, he almost ran into Pancho, who had stopped and crouched down. Alex stopped and crouched down, too. John did the same. Pancho pointed ahead to his left. Alex saw movement and aimed his AKMS in the direction of the movement. Pancho and John were aiming in the same direction. Whoever it was, they crouched low as they walked. The figure came closer until Alex recognized it—a goat.

Alex had to keep from laughing out loud. He was sure Pancho and John wanted to laugh, too. Keeping their silence, they resumed their patrol to the village. As they passed around a berm, the indistinct outline of the village came into view.

Continuing forward, they reached another berm—this one was just one hundred yards east of the village. Alex signaled for Pancho and John to stay behind while he went in to rendezvous with Leila. He left his cumbersome backpack with them so he could move more freely.

Alex kept low until he neared the edge of the village and dropped to a low crawl, which he continued until he reached Leila’s house. A neighborhood dog barked. It was times like this that Alex hated dogs. Alex peered through Leila’s back window—the curtain was closed and he couldn’t see inside. He gave the coded knock: two knocks. No answer. Is she asleep? Is she even here? Is this a trap? He gave the coded knock again. Two knocks came back. He knocked four times. Now the window opened, and he recognized her. Leila looked even better than her picture.

He crawled through the window. Inside, he began searching the house.

“There is no one else here,” Leila said quietly.

Alex continued with the search. He didn’t know her well enough to take her word for it. It was a small, modestly furnished two-bedroom house. After clearing the house, rather than make noise by speaking, he broke squelch on his radio once, notifying Pancho and John that it was clear for them to come in. Alex stood guard, watching both the inside and outside of the house.

“Where is Danny?” she asked.

Alex hesitated. “He couldn’t make it.”

“But he said he was coming.”

“He wanted to,” Alex said.

“Something terrible happened?”

Alex wasn’t sure what to say. He hadn’t seen Danny die, but he knew he was dead. Alex didn’t know how close Leila was to Danny. The only words that came out were “I’m sorry.”

She turned her head away.

Pancho and John arrived. Alex let them in through the front door. With the three large men in the small house, the place became even smaller. Alex looked at his watch—it was already morning. Leila took them into a vacant room. “You can keep your things here and sleep today,” she said quietly. “There is not enough dark left for me to take you to the chemical weapons lab now, but when evening comes again, I will take you.”

The three SEALs stashed their gear in the room, then played rock, paper, scissors to see who’d stay awake for the first watch. John lost. Alex was tempted to volunteer to take the watch anyway because he was still too keyed up, but he knew John wouldn’t go for it, so he stayed silent. Pancho collapsed and was snoring inside of a minute.

John went into the kitchen with Leila while Alex made himself comfortable on the floor. He could see the kitchen clearly through the open door. He half closed his eyes and focused on his breathing.

“Would you like a drink?” Leila asked.

“Water, please,” John said. Alex thought he wouldn’t mind a martini, but he didn’t need it dulling his senses now. And alcohol would just make him piss, which would dehydrate him before the mission.

Leila removed a pitcher of water from the refrigerator and filled two cups. She sat down to drink with him. “I am sorry my English is not good.”

“Your English is great,” John said. “How come you speak so fluently?”

She smiled. “It is not great. My mother liked English and she taught me. When I was a high school student, I studied in the United States as an exchange student for a year.”

“Where?”

“Sacramento.”

“That’s great for just one year.”

“Later, I majored in English at California State University.”

“Wow,” John said.

Alex rolled his eyes. No wonder John was single.

“It took me six years to graduate.” She laughed.

“Maybe that’s why your English is so good.”

“I am embarrassed. It should be better.”

“Two rooms but you live alone,” John said. “Is that common here?”

“No.”

Alex wanted John to ask why, but John apparently decided to let it drop.

After nearly a minute of silence, Leila explained: “The local newspaper wrote a false article about my husband—saying he wanted to overthrow the government. One day when he picked my son up from high school, some agents abducted them. I tried everything I could and asked the few people I knew for help. The authorities released my son, but he had received such serious head injuries that later he died. My husband remained in prison, and they tortured him to death.”

“I’m sorry,” John said. His voice was quiet and Alex had to strain to hear.

“It is okay,” Leila said.

“Did you ever find out why the newspaper wrote the false article?”

“It was a basiji.”

Alex understood. In 1979, Ayatollah Khomeini established a militia called Basij. Its members, basiji, were infamous for enforcing morals and obedience to the government.

“Reserve members do not get paid. Full members are paid. The special members are paid to be part of the Basij and Revolutionary Guard. He is a reserve member. His name is Emamali Naqdi.”

Alex started to get up, but stopped. John was leaning across the table. He held Leila’s hand in his.

“Why’d he target your family?” John asked.

“When my husband and I went out, the basiji man stared at me—he made me feel so uncomfortable, but my husband told me not to worry about it, so I did not worry. He looked at my husband with an evil eye, but my husband ignored him, too. The basiji disappeared for a couple of weeks. I thought it was finished. Then my husband was taken away. After my husband died, the basiji reappeared, watching my house late at night. Sometimes he just stood outside; other times he sat in his red Chinese SUV—he’d watch my house for hours. I reported it to the police, but they said that because I was living alone, he was protecting me, and they told me I should be careful not to irritate authorities.”

“Didn’t you have family or friends who could help you?”

“We had just moved here for my husband’s work—we had only a few people. Two helped me free my son, but they were afraid to help my husband.”

“And you hold your government responsible for what happened to your husband and son?”

“Yes. I love Iran, but I hate the government. It is not just what happened to me; it is what happened to so many other Iranians.” She paused.

Alex understood her motivation, but he wondered if he could ever turn on his own government like that. Maybe if it was killing his family and friends and a theocracy, but luckily, the United States was still just a regular, messed-up democracy.

“Why do you do what you do?” she asked John.

“It’s a long story,” John said.

“We have time.”

Alex tuned John out, thinking about his own reasons. It went back to when he was in high school. There was a man who had a hard time holding a job or connecting to society. He blamed the government for all his own shortcomings. One day, he blew up a post office. Both his grandfather and sister Sarah were killed in the explosion. It was an act of terrorism. Didn’t matter what color the man’s skin was or what god he believed in, he’d committed an act of terror. From that day on, Alex vowed to take people like that out.

“Not all Iranians are terrorists,” Leila said, bringing Alex back to their conversation. “Very few.”

“I know,” John said. “It’s the few we came for.”

Leila excused herself and retired to her room to get some sleep. He heard her chair scrape across the floor and then the soft padding of her feet. A moment later there was a light thump on the table and the muffled sound of metal on metal. Alex smiled. John was field-stripping his AKMS. It wasn’t a cold shower, but it worked.

The sun was just warming the house as the occupants began to stir. Alex stretched, sitting up in the kitchen chair after having taken the last watch. An early morning vehicle drove by outside. Alex thought about the red SUV Leila mentioned, but the vehicle was gone before he could peek out the window.

Leila walked into the kitchen and smiled at him. “I will make you breakfast,” she said.

“You don’t have to make anything for us,” Alex said. “We brought some food.”

“It is okay,” she said. “I already bought extra groceries, and they will spoil if we do not eat. It has been a while since I have cooked for more than myself.”

Alex didn’t argue. It would be better than sucking on warm energy gel.

As Leila began preparing breakfast, over village loudspeakers came what Alex hoped was the call to morning prayer—not a call to kill the Americans.