Tom clancys ghost recon.., p.12
Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon: Choke Point, page 12
part #3 of Tom Clancy's Ghost Recon Series
The two troops nodded and rushed off.
‘This was going to be so beautiful,’ said Kozak. ‘We’d hack into his computer, send him misinformation, order him out of here, and keep him in the dark the entire time. It was going to be sophisticated and high-tech, not a friggin’ bloodbath.’
‘Like you said, he had people watching that restaurant like a hawk. You can have all the toys in the world, but they don’t beat a pair of eyes on a target – and there’s no way to tell which set of eyes was watching. Could’ve been anybody in or around that restaurant. It was a calculated risk. They took it. And now look at what we got.’
‘Well, our hands are clean. I got the boy’s murder on video. Nobody can say shit,’ said Kozak.
30K regarded Tamer’s body. ‘What about his suicide?’
‘Cross-Com got that.’
‘So then yeah, I guess you’re right,’ said 30K. ‘We’re clean. And our CIA leak has been plugged for now. But man, that poor kid …’
‘Yeah,’ said Kozak, his voice cracking now. ‘I can’t get him out of my head.’
‘Me, too.’
Back in the church’s basement office, Ross asked for a moment alone as he pulled back the blanket and stared down at the boy’s face, now cast in a deepening pallor.
His first thought hadn’t been how they’d cover up this mess; it’d been how they would tell the boy’s father. Ross felt responsible and wanted to do that himself, but Mitchell would never allow that.
The boy, like many others during wartime, would simply vanish, and his father would mourn silently and avoid seeking help from the authorities because he’d fear retribution. When he’d learned for the first time what his son was doing, Ross had seen it in the old man’s eyes: the impending danger, the thought that maybe my boy is already dead. A resignation.
And now, they couldn’t even return the boy’s body because of the security risks. It’d have to be ‘taken care of’ so that no evidence remained. The NLA troops would handle all of that. Meanwhile, Maziq would have the unenviable task of preparing Tamer’s corpse for transport.
Ross put his hand on the boy’s forehead, and he was wrenched back to Virginia Beach, to 14 August, a day he could not revisit now. Not now.
He slipped the blanket back over Bady’s head, then left the office and returned to his men, who were waiting for him near the basement door.
‘We’re not sure if he called the Agency or not,’ said Ross. ‘But either way, our plans remain the same. We’re going in tonight.’
‘What about lunch?’ asked 30K.
The question caught Ross off guard. ‘Lunch? It’s ten now. We’ll hit the warehouses at 2 a.m. Why are you thinking about lunch?’
‘I mean the kid. He delivered lunch every day to employees in the warehouse. He ain’t gonna show up tomorrow.’
‘Can’t worry about it,’ said Ross. ‘Getting another kid or trying to put some other Band-Aid on that could be worse. They’ll call the restaurant, the boy will be missing, and we’ll leave it at that. It’s a loose end that might be too risky to tie up.’
‘How ’bout some good news?’ Pepper asked wearily. ‘I’m sure we could all use it. I heard back from the guys I left at the hotel. The pilot decided to have dinner, and we finally got some good pictures of him. I forwarded them back home, and we just received the ID.’
‘Who is he?’ asked Ross.
Pepper slipped a tablet computer from his armpit and read from the screen: ‘Bakri Takana. He’s a former Sudanese pilot who saw action in Darfur. Experienced combat jock overqualified for drug smuggling. He’s probably a freelancer hired by our guys.’
Ross nodded and faced the group. ‘All right. Let’s see what Mr Takana plans to fly out of here in the morning.’
THIRTY
A long raft of clouds obscured the waning moon and left the port in a deeper darkness.
A haunted darkness.
Few lights shone in the windows of the office and apartment buildings behind them as Ross, Pepper, Kozak, and 30K fanned out and moved down the shoreline road leading to the pier and warehouses. The Mediterranean was a sheet of smoked glass, and somewhere out there, a buoy flashed.
With the sea’s dank scent now filling his nostrils, Ross reached the rear wall of the two-story building behind the warehouses, a nondescript facility with no security, signs, or other identifying markers of any kind, but one their intel had identified as a warehouse for medical supplies once supported and run by the old Gaddafi regime. Ross paused as the team reported in:
‘Ghost Lead, this is Kozak. Sensor out, in position. Contacts marked.’
‘Roger that.’
Pepper and 30K reported the same.
‘Ghost Team, continue the sweep.’
‘Maziq?’ Ross called over the command net. ‘Cut the power.’
‘Roger that. Stand by.’
Maziq had recruited two engineers from the NLA to cut the power to several blocks along the pier. In the past, the power was often turned off at night anyway, and both brown- and blackouts were not unusual occurrences.
Ross shifted around the corner, and with his Cross-Com he zoomed in on the Fadakno office’s security camera mounted over the front door. The red status light winked off. And three, two, one, it returned, operating on battery backup.
‘Power’s down,’ said Maziq. ‘Ghost Lead? Confirm.’
‘Confirmed,’ said Ross. ‘Ghost Team? Everybody out of the zone?’
The men checked in. They were.
‘Clear to drop EMP. Stand by.’
Ross withdrew the cylindrical EMP grenade from his web gear, pulled the pin, and hurled it toward the office’s front door, just outside of the camera’s view as it was panning toward the south corner.
The grenade, technically a flux compression generator bomb, was a metal cylinder surrounded by a coil of wire called a ‘stator winding.’ The cylinder was filled with high explosive surrounded by a jacket, and the stator winding and cylinder were separated by empty space. A bank of capacitors was attached to the stator, and a switch connected the capacitors to that stator, sending an electrical current through the wires to generate an intense magnetic field.
As the grenade hit the ground, a fuse ignited the explosive material, and the explosion traveled up through the middle of the cylinder, coming in contact with the stator winding and creating a short circuit that in turn cut off the stator from its power supply. This moving short circuit compressed the magnetic field to create an intense non-nuclear electromagnetic pulse that rendered useless all electronics within a prescribed target radius.
A faint thud came from near the door, followed by another sound, like static from a broken television.
The security camera’s status light winked out once more; it remained black.
‘Ghosts? Move out,’ Ross ordered.
Each of the two Fadakno warehouses was approximately ten thousand square feet, with about a thousand square feet dedicated to secondary offices in addition to the main office building (no bigger than a double-wide trailer) situated between them. Each structure had fourteen-foot ceilings with several windows that had either been tinted or painted black from the inside. Two loading dock doors and a third door with a concrete ramp that allowed vehicles to drive straight inside were located at the far ends.
Based on his own experience trying to get into the minds of his enemies, 30K had voiced his concerns about the lack of security outside the buildings. He’d told Ross that despite the cameras, if those boys had something to hide and protect, they wouldn’t leave it alone overnight, cameras and motion sensors notwithstanding. Sure, the place might appear to be minimally guarded (in an effort not to call attention to themselves), but they should, 30K had strongly argued, expect to find company inside. Heavily armed company.
He reached the front door and glanced back at the shimmer in the air behind him: Kozak under his camouflage. While they entered the east warehouse, Pepper and Ross would take the west.
Standard door lock. Piece of cake. Most companies could not machine their parts to near flawless tolerances and still make money; therefore, men like 30K with intentions of bypassing said locks exploited those manufacturing shortcomings with a few simple tools.
The lock opened. However, before opening, 30K fished out a tiny pump bottle of lube and drenched the door’s hinges to be sure they wouldn’t creak. That done, he glanced back to Kozak. ‘You ready, bro?’ he whispered.
‘Let’s do it.’
Wincing, 30K tugged open the door, and it opened effortlessly. He shifted inside, waited a moment, then shut the door, the darkness turning to liquid as Kozak passed him.
Rows of shelving stretched off into the shadows like monoliths lined up on a moonscape, and now voices echoed from somewhere on the other end, near the loading docks.
Were they speaking Arabic? He wasn’t sure.
‘We’ve got contact inside,’ 30K whispered over the team net.
‘Roger that, so do we,’ said Ross. ‘We confirm that the truck isn’t here. Must be in your warehouse. Move in on it now.’
30K turned to Kozak and gave him a hand signal.
Time to earn their keep.
THIRTY-ONE
To the casual eye, everything about the warehouse appeared legitimate, from the hundreds of various-size boxes stored on rows of steel industrial shelves to the orders packed on shipping pallets with attached invoices, the boxes stacked two meters high and bound together by clear stretch wrap.
At least twenty such pallets were lined up near the loading dock doors, and these commanded Ross’s attention. He gave the signal for Pepper to lead them silently toward them, his Cross-Com displaying the current positions of the guards.
Ross had assumed that the three men inside were either ex-police or military, hired from the local population – but once they began speaking in Spanish, he concluded they were FARC troops, trucked in under cover each night to guard the shipments from the inside, thus drawing little attention from the locals. They were armed with compact Skorpion submachine guns procured from local stockpiles. They were probably aware of the clandestine shipping operation but weren’t told much else, lest they be captured.
At the moment, the men were understandably confused, arguing over whether they should remain in place or venture out to see why the power had gone down. One remarked that his cell phone no longer worked and he was concerned that something very bad had taken place, perhaps at the capitol. Perhaps something nuclear. Ross smiled inwardly. Their imaginations were running wild. They began to fight over whether or not they should contact their buddies in the next warehouse, and one said he’d run over there to see what was happening.
Ross patched his own Cross-Com’s signal into 30K’s heads-up display so that the man could see the red outlined image of the guard hustling from the warehouse and moving toward him with a small flashlight in hand.
‘Got ’em, boss. No worries.’
‘Roger, stay sharp.’
There’d been some discussion of a plan to lure the guards out of the warehouses prior to the team entering, but once again, the fewer occurrences out of the norm, the better. The power outage and subsequent EMP burst were all Ross was willing to risk. Mitchell’s intent was clear: They were to identify and tag a cargo shipment heading back to that plane and get out before these six men knew what was happening. The team needed to do that right under the guards’ noses via technology and superior tactics, a mission perfectly suited for the GST.
However, just as Ross’s confidence level was beginning to spike, Pepper, under camouflage but whose heat signature was visible in Ross’s HUD, raised his hand, the signal to halt.
One of the guards was walking straight toward them, leaning over, frowning as though he’d seen something lying on the floor. His flashlight’s batteries were weak, and the pale yellow beam barely lit his path.
Ross shifted slowly toward the shelves to his right, clearing a path down the aisle. Pepper did likewise.
Holding their breaths, they willed themselves into corpses, the camouflage steady now, reflecting the floor, the shelves, the ceiling. Pepper, who was right in front of Ross, was nearly impossible to discern.
Ross got a better look at the guard now, a man in his forties or fifties, graying beard, large eyes and slightly hunched back, as though the burdens of living in a war-torn jungle had weighed too heavily on him. Now they’d flown him around the world to do their dirty work. He’d traded in his jungle fatigues for a dark green uniform with the Fadakno logo on the breast and clutched the submachine gun in his right hand.
His quizzical look sharpening, he came to a dead stop beside Ross, who could reach out and grab his leg.
The guard swung around toward the docks and shouted to his comrade, ‘I’m going outside! Be right back!’
Ross closed his eyes and repressed a sigh.
Pepper didn’t move, not even a fraction.
No, that wasn’t just ‘close.’ That was heart-attack close.
Kozak bit his lip and cursed.
The rear door on the cargo truck was rolled down and sealed with a combination lock. Burning the lock off with a laser torch would be easy. Camouflaging the light produced by the torch might be more difficult, but –
Opening the door without making a sound? Shit, that was never going to happen.
The major had never said that as a Ghost he’d be expected to defy the laws of physics. How the hell were they supposed to get in there now? There might be many techniques for quietly killing a man, but name one silent way of tugging open a heavy cargo door without calling every FARC guard to the party.
You’re a fighter, he told himself. You do not give up yet. He was the new guy, always out to prove himself, so it was time to assess this problem and find a solution. That was what great SF operators did.
The truck’s rear door was shut, yes, but he noted something curious: the hood had been left open, as though repairs or service were being made.
A thought took hold, one too obvious to be true, but he needed to follow his gut anyway. He held up his index finger to 30K: Wait. They huddled down behind a row of six pallets of boxes near the back of the truck.
There, Kozak removed the portable X-ray device (PXD) and accompanying wedge from his pack. Each two-man team was equipped with one. The X-ray itself was no larger than an old digital camcorder, the kind Kozak’s mom had used to film his basketball games back in the day. The imaging wedge was about the size of a fifteen-inch notebook computer with a handle on the top. You held the wedge behind the object you wanted to X-ray, fired up the device, and zap, you got a digital image sent wirelessly to your Cross-Com. US Customs and Border Protection agents loved these little beauties.
30K seized the wedge, nodding to indicate that he understood what Kozak had in mind: X-ray the damned truck first before going through the hassle of breaking in.
The front door swung open, and in burst that guard from Ross’s warehouse.
Time to play statue again. While the FARC troops were hardly geniuses, they were still formidable, if only because they each had a pulse and pair of eyes – and if any of those eyes were to catch a glimpse of them …
Nope. Kozak wouldn’t let that happen. He was tense but not nervous as the guards lapsed once more into a rapid-fire debate. Two said they should go find another cell phone or gain computer access to see if anyone else had information. The others agreed, and during the commotion of their exit, 30K and Kozak slipped behind the pallets, reached the truck, and with excruciatingly slow movements, he stood on the driver’s side of the truck, with 30K on the passenger’s.
With a shudder of anticipation, Kozak aimed the X-ray at the truck, threw the switch, and doing his best to turn his back on the guards and have the PXD’s status light concealed by his active camouflage, he began taking images of the cargo box’s interior, with 30K holding up the imaging wedge. The distance between the PXD and the wedge was beyond normal parameters, but Kozak only needed to confirm the presence of cargo, and even the blurriest or most unclear images would suffice.
He almost snorted in disbelief. His hunch had paid off. The images glowing in his Cross-Com’s HUD were clear enough: the damned truck was empty, hadn’t been loaded yet – perhaps because the truck’s engine hadn’t been fully serviced?
Kozak craned his neck, eyes widening.
The intended cargo might be sitting right behind them.
With his breath quickening, he steered himself back toward the pallets, hunkering down behind the two rows, the boxes rising to just above his head.
That these shipments were rectangular shaped and much larger than any others in the warehouse had not struck him as odd, not at first anyway, but the reason for those oversize boxes became abundantly clear as he and 30K X-rayed the nearest one. He gasped and took a second X-ray to be sure.
There was no mistake.
Holy shit, he thought. Mother lode.
Footfalls now, along with a flickering light.
Kozak switched off the PXD, and both he and 30K lowered to their haunches as the remaining guards muttered to one another, their voices growing nearer.
Suddenly, 30K deactivated his camouflage, his face appearing from the darkness and glowing in Kozak’s night-vision lens. He mouthed the words: What did you see? Then he pointed to the boxes.
Kozak opened his mouth, just as the guard with the flashlight strode alongside the truck.
‘Did you hear something?’ the guard asked his comrade.
‘No.’
‘I thought I heard something. I did. Right here.’
Kozak’s hand went for the suppressed pistol in his holster, and in the next few seconds he saw it all fall apart in his mind’s eye:
The guard’s eyes widening in shock a second before he blew the man’s head off, the other guard escaping, the whole clandestine operation going to holy hell as Ross and the major screamed at him, busted him out of the Ghosts, slapped him with a dishonorable discharge from the Army –












