“What happened?”
“It’s hushed up, but basically his unit was involved in a bad civilian casualty situation in Iraq. He was individually cleared, but…”
“But his unit was made an example of. I remember something about it.”
“His unit was sent home, then he had some brushes with the law,” Kurtzman stated.
“Tell me he wasn’t dishonorably discharged.”
“Corporal Ochoa was given the opportunity to take an early discharge rather than face trial. He took it.”
“And?” Bolan prompted.
“Our boy turns right around, joins Blackwater as a private contractor and heads right back to Iraq. He distinguishes himself and—”
“And Blackwater gets thrown out of Iraq for a civilian massacre.”
“So Sancho went south and was doing bodyguard work in Central America, and, can you guess?” Kurtzman asked.
“He shot some people he shouldn’t have.”
“Well, rumor is they needed shooting, and rumor is a cartel down there wants him dead. Regardless, his privileges below the Rio Grande have been revoked.”
“What’s he up to now?”
“He’s eking out living as a bounty hunter in the L.A. Latino community. His name is in every private security database in the U.S., but his record and his brushes with the law have him kind of blackballed.”
Bolan sighed.
“You gave me forty-eight hours and some very interesting recruitment parameters, Striker.”
Things looked a little better with the next two. Both men were South African National Defense Force, 44th Parachute Regiment, Pathfinder Platoon and had made warrant officer. The pair currently worked for Transvaal Security Incorporated. TS Inc. provided security for African VIPs and were widely reputed to have supplied mercs during the Diamond Wars. The similarities ended when you looked at the picture of the two grinning men arm in arm holding up steins of beer. Gus Pienaar looked like a 1980s vintage Clint Eastwood with a mild case of albinism. Tlou Tshabalala bore a disturbing resemblance to a young Bill Cosby except with a shaved head and shrapnel scars on his left cheek and neck.
Bolan blinked at their bios. “They both married the other one’s sister?”
“So it seems.”
“Well, racial harmony is a good thing.” Bolan had fought alongside and against South African mercs. They just didn’t come much tougher.
He glanced over the recruit that came straight out of left field. Togsbayar Lkhümbengarav was Mongolian. It was a little known fact that Mongolia was a nearly constant provider of forces to United Nations peacekeeping missions. Sergeant Lkhümbengarav had been serving nearly continuously from Kosovo to Afghanistan. The previous year he had been right there in Chad. His specialty was a small arms instructor for indigenous peoples forming their own security forces. “Definitely keeping him.”
“Thought you’d say that.”
Bolan examined the one commissioned officer in the group, 1st Lieutenant Tien Ching from Taiwan. He had been a demolition man in the 101st Reconnaissance Battalion, better known as the Sea Dragon Frogmen. He had transferred to the 871 Special Operations Group and twice gone to the United States to cross-train with the Navy SEALs. He held numerous Republic of China army medals and citations but nearly all of his deployment records were redacted. “Anything else on Ching?”
“Just that the rumor that he has engaged in some very black operations in Mainland China. Then he went private in Japan. He seemed eager for work outside of Asia when we contacted him. I think the PRC may know who he is and is gunning for him.”
Bolan dragged his finger across the screen and flipped open the next file.
Colour Sergeant Scott Ceallach had been one of Her Majesty’s Royal Marines of 3 Commando Brigade. His individual formation in the Royal Marines had the name 30 Commando Information Exploitation Group. That meant the colour sergeant’s job was to move ahead of the main marine force and find out information about the enemy, by fair means or foul, and exploit it as imaginatively as possible. It seemed he’d done some exploiting in Afghanistan before he had gone private.
“You like him?” Kurtzman asked.
“Royal Marine. What’s not to like?”
Bolan looked wonderingly at the absolute wild card of the bunch, and askance at the baggage she had brought with her.
Elodie-Rousseau Nelsonne had been an agent for the French General Directorate for External Security, Action Division. Female DGSE agent spoke volumes.
“You sure about this, Bear?”
“I know, Action Division has a cowboy reputation, but you know what else they’re also famous for?” Kurtzman queried.
Bolan did. “International rescues.”
“That’s right, and I have it on very high authority she’s been involved in some of their more recent high-profile success stories, as well as some that never made the papers. She’s been in Africa, and is currently doing work with Groupe Belge de Tour.”
Belgian Tower Group was one of the premier European private contractors. That said a lot about Mademoiselle Nelsonne, as well.
Nelsonne had drafted two men of her own choice to fill out the squad. Valeri Onopkov was Russian and Radomir Mrda was a Serb. According to Nelsonne, both men were veterans in their own lands and had seen service in Africa. To Bolan that meant the wars in Chechnya and Bosnia respectively, and Russians and Serbians serving in Africa usually meant war crimes that could appall even the native militias that considered atrocity a national sport.
The phrase “beggars can’t be choosers” came to mind. Bolan was running out of time and running out of options, and Kurtzman had delivered. Counting himself, it was a lean squad, and along with the target, if Dragonslayer was stripped for transport and they stacked everyone like cordwood, Grimaldi just might be able to extract them.
“What’s the team’s status?”
“We tried to make their flights coincide. No one has been waiting at the airport more than four hours. Ochoa’s ETA is fifteen minutes from now. Then the shuttle will pick them up as a unit and bring them to the safehouse.”
“I’ll put out the welcome mat.”
* * *
BOLAN AND GRIMALDI STOOD on the inner upstairs balcony of the safehouse and watched the team file inside. The house followed the general urban geometry of the Sahel and consisted of an almost featureless, two-story brown cube. The thick clay walls insulated against the heat of the day and the often bitter cold of the night. Being a CIA establishment, Uncle Sam in his mercy had installed air-conditioning. The climate control hit the mercs coming in off the street like a hammer, and they gasped and shuddered like people who had just plunged into an unheated pool. Bolan hoped no one had a heart attack. Abeche was in the running for the hottest major city on Earth. Three hundred and thirty-six days a year it was always over 90 degrees Fahrenheit. This day it was 115.
Scott Ceallach dropped his bags and tilted his head back in near ecstasy. He was a big, sleepy-eyed man. The Brit had grown a short mustache and beard since the photo Bolan had seen. He opened his eyes and looked up at the big American. His cockney accent was thick enough to cut with an ax. “Have a pint about?”
“Lager or stout?”
Ceallach raised his hand. “Bloody hell, squire, forget the sales pitch, I’m all in.”
Ochoa grinned up, as well. The sport coat and mock turtleneck he wore hid his tattoos and his high and tight was freshly buzzed. “Yeah, me, too. Whatever it is, I’m down with it.”
Bolan was pretty sure Ceallach was joking. Ochoa seemed in earnest. Lkhümbengarav and Ching were glancing around and talking to each other in low-voiced Mandarin. Lkhümbengarav looked nothing like his military photo. He had grown his hair out so that it could be pulled into a short ponytail, and he was cultivating a Fu Manchu mustache. If you closed your eyes and thought “Mongol,” you would most likely picture Lkhümbengarav in a fur hat on a horse. He noticed Bolan’s gaze and gave back a grin and a head bob. Ching regarded Bolan in open scrutiny but inclined his head.
Pienaar and Tshabalala stood as a unit.
“Lager,” Pienaar stated. His accent told Bolan he was a South African of English descent.
Tshabalala grinned. “Stout for me.”
Bolan examined former DGSE agent Nelsonne, and the woman regarded him back. She had an aquiline nose, widely spaced eyes, a generous mouth and a firm chin. Along with Tshabalala she was the only one who hadn’t sweated through her clothes already. If someone had told Bolan she was a French movie star he would have believed it. Grimaldi clearly liked what he saw. She quirked an eyebrow at Bolan. “Bonjour!”
“Bonjour,” Bolan replied. Onopkov and Mrda flanked Nelsonne like bodyguards. They looked to be very hard men. The Russian was tall enough to look Bolan in the eye but lanky to the point of looking cadaverous. Pale eyes measured the soldier out of slightly sunken sockets that seemed to have permanent dark circles. The Serb was a head shorter and built like a fire hydrant. His flat-topped brown hair stood up out of his head like nerve endings.
One look told Bolan that Nelsonne and her entourage had somehow acquired sidearms after landing.
“Leave your bags.” He jerked his head. “C’mon up.”
Grimaldi opened a tote bag as they filed up the stairs. “Phones and all electronic devices.”
This was met with some grumbling, but phones, tablets, laptops and other devices were handed over.
The largest space upstairs had been converted into a conference room. Two folding tables had been pushed together, and ten chairs surrounded it. Bolan took the seat at the head of the table. Nelsonne took the foot and her two recruits flanked her. Everyone else filled in the sides. Without being prompted, servers entered, bringing roasted lamb, couscous, kebabs of vegetables and buckets of beer.
“That’s the ticket!” Ceallach announced, and immediately began tucking in. The rest of the team attacked the spread like a wolf pack. Bolan waited until the first plate and the first beers had been consumed. He glanced behind him and a server brought in a covered dish. It was uncovered with a flourish to reveal banded stacks of euros.
Eating and drinking around the table ceased.
Five thousand euros had been wired to each individual when they accepted their plane ticket. The other half had been promised on arrival. Bolan took a bundle and tossed it at Lkhümbengarav. The Mongol grinned and snatched it out of the air. Bolan tossed bundles of cash around the table like a cash machine with a throwing arm. Mercs grinned and riffled the stacks.
“May I have your attention?”
Ceallach cracked open a Heineken beer and grinned. “All ears, guv.”
“We’re going into the Sudan, and the Sudanese government won’t be pleased if we are discovered. We aren’t officially sanctioned by any government. No one will come to save our asses if we get in trouble.”
“Where in the Sudan?” Ching asked.
“Can’t tell you.”
That was met by a genuinely inscrutable look.
Tshabalala cocked his head. “What’s the objective?”
“Can’t tell you just yet.”
The majority of the faces around the table went flat. Pienaar scratched his thin platinum hair and spoke for everyone. “So, we’re just supposed to follow who knows who to who knows where to do who knows what? Sounds like shit to me, china.”
“Sounds like kak,” Tshabalala agreed.
Bolan shrugged. “Finish your beer, finish your food, take your money and walk.”
Lkhümbengarav turned his gaze on Bolan. “Okay, GI, you saying I can drink my fill, eat my fill, take this money and go home? Five thousand euros?”
“At this point it’s ten, but yeah.”
“Round eye?” The Mongolian snorted. “You fascinate me. Uncle Sam just tossing his money away these days?”
“It’s not Uncle Sam’s money. It’s mine, and I want you all in or on your way. It’s going to get rough and mean really fast.”
Nelsonne laced her fingers together and made a hammock for her chin. She smiled demurely. “Why all the secrecy?”
“We already made one attempt on the target. We got compromised and got jumped by Sudanese fighters.”
“Sudanese fighters?” The Serbian spoke for the first time.
“A pair of Su-25s.”
The Russian’s eyes locked on Bolan. “And?”
“We shot them down.”
Nelsonne kept smiling. “I have heard nothing about this.”
Bolan nodded. “Yeah, funny about that.”
Ochoa leaned back in his chair. “Jefe, I don’t care if we’re marching to Mars. I need the job. Ten thousands euros is a nice fat chunk of change, but you can’t retire on it or start over. I’ve got no prospects and I got mi madre and nine brothers and sisters who really need a cash infusion. What’s the pay?”
“Fifty thousand euros or its equivalent in any currency you want wired to the accounts I set up for you as soon as we deploy.” Every face around the table save Grimaldi’s and Nelsonne’s went flat again. “Fifty thousand more to anyone who makes it out alive, success or failure.”
Jaws dropped.
“Any medical care needed afterward will be fully paid at my expense. If for some reason there are delays or we need to extract and redeploy, I’m willing to entertain bonus pay.”
You could have heard a pin drop.
Bolan shot a killer grin. “Who’s in?”
Pienaar whistled and stared down the neck of his beer. “Tentatively, china, but what’s the plan?”
“We’re going to deploy on the ground posing as an NGO humanitarian convoy and then take a very unexpected turn.”
Tshabalala visibly relaxed as he saw it. “And when we get close to the package we go low in the bush and acquire the package.”
“That’s about the size of it.”
The Russian lit a contemplative cigarette. “And we drive back?”
“Maybe.” Bolan nodded at Grimaldi. “Or he extracts us.”
“And if there are more Sukhois?”
Grimaldi sipped his beer nonchalantly. “We already shot down two.”
Bolan cracked himself another beer. “So, who’s in?”
Ochoa shot his hand up. “Me!”
“Sounds like a bloody movie.” Ceallach shook his head and raised his hand. “I’m in.”
“Sounds like shit,” Pienaar said.
“Sounds like kak,” Tshabalala agreed.
The two men grinned and spoke in unison. “We’re in.”
Ching finished his beer. “Well, I have never been to the Sudan, and I have no pressing engagements.”
Lkhümbengarav inclined his beer at Ching. “What he said, hot rod.”
Bolan looked at Nelsonne, who reached for another beer. “I was already decided in Bruges.”
Bolan didn’t bother to ask the Russian or the Serb. He was pretty sure Nelsonne had decided them in Bruges, as well. “All right, real quick. We can all get to know one another later, but our mission language is going to be English, and I need to keep things simple.” Bolan looked at Tlou Tshabalala. “You got a lot of la-la-las for tactical communications.”
“Call me T-Lo, everyone does.”
“Done.”
Gus Pienaar piped up without being asked. “Goose, been my name since I was kid.”
Bolan looked at his Royal Marine. “Ceallach?”
Scott Ceallach rolled his eyes and put the “lock” in Ceallach. “Cee-a-laaahckh.”
“How about we just call you Scotty?” Bolan suggested.
“And I’ve been living with you Yanks’ Star Trek fetish all my life, haven’t I, then? And I’m not even Scottish!”
“Good to know.” Bolan glanced at the Mongolian. “Luck-um-ben…?”
The former sergeant smiled like he’d seen it coming from a long way off. “Been ‘Lucky’ on the last three UN deployments, GI.”
Tien Ching raised his beer at Bolan. “T.C.”
Valeri Onopkov nodded at Bolan. “Val.”
Radomir Mrda grunted. “Rad.”
Bolan perked an eyebrow at Nelsonne. “Mademoiselle?”
She nodded. “Russo.”
Ochoa frowned. “Aren’t you going to ask me?”
“Ask you what, Sancho?”
“Hey! How did you— Oh, man, never mind, and what do we call you, Jefe?” Ochoa looked at Ceallach. “Squire?”
“You can call me Striker.”
Nelsonne made an amused noise. “Très Américain.”
“I am that,” Bolan admitted. “Last question. Who besides me can drive a Unimog?”
“Me,” Pienaar replied.
“We have two Land Rovers. Who’s volunteering to drive?”
Mrda and Lkhümbengarav raised their hands.
“Good enough. Everyone finish eating. Take a nap. I’ve got nine beds set up. We’re leaving at sunset.”
The team resumed tucking in. Nelsonne hadn’t taken her eyes off Bolan, and she was still smiling. There was a saying in the United States spook community that there was no such thing as an ex-CIA agent. Until they buried you, you were just on standby.
Bolan was pretty sure there was no such thing as ex-DGSE in France, either.
3
“I believe they call this flying by the seat of your pants,” Grimaldi said.
“That’s your job,” Bolan replied.
Bolan and the Stony Man pilot sat in the conference room comparing notes. The team had collapsed in their beds with mild heatstroke and food comas. Grimaldi gave his old friend an amused look. “I mean, did you actually look at these yahoos?”
“I’ll admit Sancho is a little squirrelly.”
“No, big guy, Sancho’s the only one I trust.” Grimaldi frowned. “Except for maybe the Brixton Bomber and the Mongolian, and the South Africans are okay, except every time I see them I hear the song “Ebony and Ivory” in my head, oh, and T.C. He seems like a stone-cold killer of men.”
That was two-thirds of the squad. “So…you don’t like Russo?” Bolan asked.
“Oh, I like her a lot, but she makes me nervous, and so do those ex-Communist-bloc savages she has with her.”
Bolan controlled his bemusement. “Bear picked her.”
Grimaldi made a noise.
“How we doing on gear?”
“I’ve got a Hercules on the airstrip with all three vehicles and all requested equipment stowed and ready to go. I’ll get you and the team on the ground and in the saddle. After that it’s up to you.”
“Thanks, Jack.”
The pilot shifted in his seat uneasily. “This is messed up. I should be going with you. I should be driving.”
Bolan kept his poker face. It was an interesting phenomenon that pilots automatically assumed they were NASCAR drivers in the making. In Bolan’s experience, “knight of the air” and “rubber meets the road” were two different sciences entirely and rarely mixed well. “I need you hot on the pad, Jack. Ready for extraction from a hot LZ at heartbeat’s notice.”
“Well, if you put it that way,” the pilot said, “I’ll drop you off and be waiting by the phone.”
Both men turned at a polite knock. “Come in,” Bolan said.
Nelsonne walked in smiling, went to the sideboard and made herself a whiskey and soda. “I have taken the liberty of acquiring us a pair of guides.”
Bolan regarded the French agent drily. “Where will they be guiding us to?”
“That is up to you, but they are men of Central Sudan, and have acted as guides and interpreters before. I think you will find them useful in a myriad of ways.”
“You vouch for them?”
“I have worked with them. They are good men.”
“Where are they?”
“Waiting outside.” Nelsonne batted her lashes at Bolan. “Would you like to meet them?”
“Well, it’s awfully hot outside for standing around.” Bolan leaned back and pressed the intercom button. “Two guests outside. Show them up.”
In moments two men in their early twenties appeared in the conference-room doorway and looked in shyly. Both were as tall as Bolan but stick-thin. Their skin was so black it almost seemed blueish. That told Bolan the two men were at least by blood from the South Sudan. Despite the heat they wore matching blue jeans, denim jackets and cowboy boots. They had identical huge brown eyes and even huger identical smiles.
“They are twins,” Nelsonne explained.
“Let me introduce Haitham and Shartai Kong.”
Bolan gestured for his guests to take a seat. “You gentlemen hungry?”
The Kong brothers nodded and sat.
“You guys drink beer?” the soldier asked.
“Yes.”
Bolan hit the intercom for the kitchen. “Could we get a pitcher of beer and some of that lamb up here for our new guests?” Bolan leaned back in his chair. “Kong…that’s a Dinka name.”
The brothers nodded, their shy smiles becoming slightly prideful.
“From Kurdufan?”
Kurdufan was smack-dab in the middle of what had once been the Sudan, and like the Sudan itself Kurdufan had been split into north and south. It was a bit of luck because that was exactly where Bolan was going. The Kong brothers nodded in proud unison.
“Mademoiselle Nelsonne says you’re both excellent guides.”
Bolan was fairly certain it was Haitham who answered. He had a Darth Vader–quality baritone. “Guides, interpreters.” He gave Bolan a sly smile. “Scouts.”
Bolan smiled back in suspicion. “SPLA?”
The Sudanese People’s Liberation Army had been fighting the government in Khartoum since the mid-1980s. Haitham’s chest swelled as he stood and pulled up his T-shirt to show a puckered bullet scar in his lower right abdomen. Both Bolan and Grimaldi’s eyebrows rose as Shartai stood, turned, unbuckled his pants and dropped his trousers to display a long pink scar creasing one buttock. Shartai slapped it for emphasis. Both men burst out laughing and sat again. “Since we were children.”
Bolan glanced at Grimaldi.
“They have a good attitude,” the pilot admitted.
One of the staff brought in a mound of leftover sliced lamb on a bed of couscous and a pitcher of beer. The Kong brothers tucked into the food and greedily began sucking down beer. That told Bolan they were either Christians or animists. The fighting had driven untold numbers of Dinkas south as they had battled the government of the Muslim-dominated North. Christians were ruthlessly suppressed. The traditional African spiritualists were often annihilated out of hand. Nelsonne swirled the ice in her drink. “I have told them you pay well.”
Neither man stopped eating but their eyes snapped to Bolan as they kept shoveling it down. Bolan saw no need to be stingy and he wanted their absolute loyalty, and to him rather than Nelsonne.
“Let’s keep it simple. I’ve already hired nine team members. I see no reason to treat you any differently. As full members of the team I’ll give you ten thousand euros now as a signing bonus, and…”
The Kong brothers stopped chewing and food nearly fell out of their mouths as their jaws dropped.
“And fifty thousand more on completion, or to your families if you’re killed.”
Haitham wiped his chin with the back of his fist and leaned back. “You are serious?”
Bolan went to the safe in the wall, punched in his code and produced two bundles of euros. He sat back down and slid them across the table. “I’m deadly serious. This is going to be hazardous duty, and that’s why I’m paying hazardous-duty pay. I think the two of you will be invaluable members of my team. You in?”
“Oh, indeed,” Haitham said.
“Most assuredly!” Shartai was in full support.
Bolan raised his beer. “Welcome to the team. Jack?”
Grimaldi finished his beer. He knew what was coming. “Yeah?”
“Go get the plane ready.”
Darfur
VEHICLES ROLLED FROM the belly of the C-130. The two Land Rovers were loaded with crates, and the canvas-covered load in the Unimog concealed just under half a ton of fuel, supplies and ordnance. Everything was marked as humanitarian aid. The 4x4s were painted the same beige as the dust storm that was kicking up. The jump-off was auspicious. With a storm coming the landing strip was abandoned. Lkhümbengarav backed a Land Rover down the ramp. “Sancho! Scotty! You’re with me,” Bolan shouted over the wind. “And Lucky, you’re in Rover 1!”
Haitham shouted through the shemagh covering his face. “I am with you, boss!”
“Hop in!”
Everyone except Bolan grabbed his or her bags and clambered aboard.