Martinez pointed a pistol down at him.
“What’s the guy’s name? The one we’re looking for?”
“Abu Mustafa Faraj al-Jihadi?” Luke said. It wasn’t really a question. It wasn’t anything, just a string of syllables.
The man nodded. He didn’t say anything. He looked like he was in some pain.
Luke took a small digital camera from inside his vest. The camera was encased in hard rubber. You could bounce it off the floor and it wouldn’t break. He fidgeted with it for a second, and then took a few snaps of the man. He checked the images before he turned the camera off. They were fine—not exactly professional quality, but Luke didn’t work for National Geographic. All he needed was evidence. He looked down at the terrorist leader.
“Gotcha,” Luke said. “Thanks for playing.”
BANG!
Martinez fired once, and the man’s head came apart.
“Mission accomplished,” Martinez said. He shook his head and walked away.
Luke’s radio crackled.
“Stone! Where are you?”
“Murphy. What’s the status?”
Murphy’s voice cut in and out. “It’s a bloodbath out here. I lost three men. But we commandeered one of their big guns, and we cut an opening. If we want to get out of here, we need to go RIGHT NOW.”
“We’ll be out in a minute.”
“I wouldn’t take that long,” Murphy said. “Not if you want to live.”
* * *
Six men ran through the village.
After all that fighting, the place was like a ghost town. At any second, Luke was expecting gunshots or rockets to come screaming out of the tiny homes. But nothing happened. There didn’t even seem to be any people left here.
Back the way they had come, smoke rose. The walls of the compound were destroyed. The helicopter still burned, the flames crackling in the eerie quiet.
Luke could hear the heavy breathing of the other men, running uphill with gear and weapons. In ten minutes, they made it to the old forward operating base on the rocky hillside outside the village.
To Luke’s surprise, the place was okay. There were no supplies cached there, of course—but the sandbags were still in place, and the location gave a commanding view of the surrounding area. Luke could see lights on in the homes, and the chopper on fire.
“Martinez, see if you can raise Bagram on the radio. We need an extraction. Hide and seek is over. Tell them to send overwhelming force. We need to get back inside that compound and bring our men out.”
Martinez nodded. “I told you, man. Luck runs out for everybody.”
“Don’t tell me, Martinez. Just get us out of here, okay?”
“All right, Stone.”
It was a dark night. The sandstorm had passed. They still had weapons. Along the sandbagged rampart, his men were loading up ammo and checking gear.
It wasn’t out of the question that….
“Murphy, send a flare up,” he said. “I want to get a look at what we’re dealing with.”
“And give away our position?” Murphy said.
“I think they probably know where we are,” Luke said.
Murphy shrugged and popped one into the night.
The flare moved slowly across the sky, casting eerie shadows on the rocky terrain below. The ground almost appeared to be boiling. Luke stared and stared, trying to make sense of what he was seeing. There was so much activity down there, it was like an ant farm, or a swarm of rats.
It was men. Hundreds of men were methodically moving themselves, their gear, and their weapons into position.
“I guess you’re right,” Murphy said. “They know we’re here.”
Luke looked at Martinez.
“Martinez, what’s the status on that extraction?”
Martinez shook his head. “They say it’s a no go. Nothing but wicked sandstorms between base and here. Zero visibility. They can’t even put the choppers in the air. They say hold out till morning. The wind’s supposed to die down after sunrise.”
Luke stared at him. “They have to do better than that.”
Martinez shrugged. “They can’t. If the choppers won’t fly, the choppers won’t fly. I wish those storms had come in before we left.”
Luke stared out at the seething mass of Taliban on the hillsides below them. He turned back to Martinez.
Martinez opened his mouth as if to speak.
Luke pointed at him. “Don’t say it. Just get ready to fight.”
“I’m always ready to fight,” Martinez said.
The shooting started moments later.
* * *
Martinez was screaming.
“They’re coming through on all sides!”
His eyes were wide. His guns were gone. He had taken an AK-47 from a Taliban, and was bayoneting everyone who came over the wall. Luke watched him in horror. Martinez was an island, a small boat in a sea of Taliban fighters.
And he was going under. Then he was gone, under a pile.
They were just trying to live until daybreak, but the sun refused to rise. The ammunition had run out. It was cold, and Luke’s shirt was off. He had ripped it off in the heat of combat.