- Home
- Randy Wayne White
Twelve Mile Limit df-9 Page 27
Twelve Mile Limit df-9 Read online
Page 27
I’m not foolish enough or courageous enough to invest that much faith in myself. The latter option would be the best choice.
I said, “I want a SEAL team. I know SEAL Team Four operates in the area. Their hostage-rescue guys, that’s exactly who I want, and we need to get moving right away.” I checked my watch: 2:45 A.M. “We still have, what? about three hours of darkness left. You know Colombia better than I do. How far is it to Remanso, the southern border?”
“Remanso’s about four hundred miles. The southern border is way beyond.”
“Damn it! I didn’t think it was that far. Well… if we really hustle, we can locate their facility and take them down while they’re still having their morning coffee. And before the guys who snatched Amelia even arrive. The little airstrip near the village doesn’t have lights. Stallings warned me about that. Kazan is going to have to keep her somewhere near here, then fly her out in the morning.”
Harrington said, “So I need to have some of our people watch the local airports. I doubt if they’d be that stupid. There are plenty of private strips inland they can use. But you never know.”
“Good idea. But a SEAL team, that’s what you need to work on now. I want to be there waiting, in control of his facility, hideout, whatever it is when Kazan arrives. So make the call and scramble our guys. I’m going to throw some gear together. I’ll expect to hear from you in ten minutes or so. No more.”
He said, “I’ll call when I have something to tell you,” and hung up.
Half an hour later, now dressed in black T-shirt, camo field pants, and jungle boots, I answered the beeping satellite phone and heard Harrington say, “Okay, I’ve got a hostage-rescue team waiting for you. A chopper, too. Do you know where the Navy Amphib base is on the way to Boca Grande?”
Of course I knew where it was. Years ago, I’d been involved in an operation that had used the base as a staging area.
Harrington said, “Grab a cab, and you can be there in ten minutes. I’ll have one of our people at the gate waiting for you.”
There was something about his tone that made me uneasy. He wasn’t being evasive, but I got the impression that he hadn’t told me everything, either.
I said, “You said you have a hostage-rescue team. You mean a SEAL boat crew, correct? Snatch and bag. A squad of seven or eight studs, fully tactical, fully trained, ready to go.”
“Doc, SEAL Four is working way south and out of contact. I tried. Absolutely no way can they dump what they’re doing and redeploy out of here. So I got you the next best thing. I’ve got a Colombian Anfibio team waiting to go.”
I groaned loud enough for Harrington to hear me, so he raised his voice, continuing, “Now wait! Don’t get pissed off at me. They’re better than they used to be. Things have changed since you were in the business. What do you think SEAL Four spends half its time doing down here? Training their people, making them better so we don’t have to invest so much tactical time in their country. It’s not the same group that you used to deal with.”
I hoped not. Colombia’s Grupo de Commandos Anfibios or Amphibious Commando Group was a SEAL-type unit established back in the 1960s to work against drug trafficking, but it was also given other missions, such as naval counterterrorism.
I’d known some of their people and had worked with them once or twice over the years.
I was not impressed.
The Anfibios, or GCA as they are also known, are head-quartered at the Cartagena Naval Base and are approximately one hundred men strong. Soon after the unit’s inception, a Mobile Training Team from SEAL Team Two traveled to Cartagena to train them in basic swimming, demolitions, SCUBA, and land warfare. They were reportedly pretty good, but they lacked sound leadership-too often the case in Colombia.
I told Harrington, “You know what the last thing I heard about the Anfibios was? That their commanding officer got blown up testing a homemade limpet mine. Just a couple of years back. Is that true?”
I heard him sigh. “Yes, it’s true. You know it’s true. But they’ve gotten better.”
“I hope so. I hope to hell you’re right.”
“Look at it this way, Doc. They’re the only people we’ve got.”
24
The naval base ran for a mile or so along the busy four-lane highway that led to the beaches and tourist high-rises of Boca Grande. It was fenced the whole way, lighted guard-houses at the entrances and exits.
At this hour, there wasn’t much traffic, mostly donkey and ox carts pulling wagons filled with vegetables and woven goods toward the markets of the old city. On the way, I passed the time by using fishing line to create a light and comfortable strap for my glasses-a fishing guide’s trick. I also had a recent acquisition boxed and put away in my pants pocket: contacts. I didn’t like to wear them, but it was good to have a backup.
Standing inside the guardhouse, with three Colombian soldiers, was a tall, blond man wearing dark slacks and a white short-sleeve dress shirt. He could have been a model for a catalogue company. As I stepped from the cab, he came out, shook hands, and said to me, “My name’s Ron Iossi, Commander Ford. I’m with the embassy. I’ve been instructed to assist you on this mission.”
I’d been expecting someone like him to be waiting for me. Was glad, in fact, that he was there. The word embassy was a euphemism for the CIA.
He had a Humvee, engine running, driver waiting. We drove through the tree shadows and beneath streetlights, through the military complex, on the road that parallels Cartagena Bay. Like many military bases, the architecture was repetitive, as if stamped from a mold, and dated well back into the previous century.
I only got a glimpse of the base’s main docks. Among the Coast Guard cutters and light naval ships was a row of private vessels, both power and sail, anchored below powerful security lights. They’d probably all been seized because of some kind of illegal activity, so I was not surprised to see a black oceangoing motor-sailer there, more than one hundred feet long. I recognized the boat as having once belonged to a man nicknamed the Turk by a transplanted Australian friend of mine. The vessel had Istanbul registry and was christened The Moon of something. I’d forgotten exactly what.
That afternoon, when Amelia and I had had some free time, I’d tried to contact that Australian friend, Garret Norman, by calling Club Nautico, the local marina he owned. Garret’s a smart, observant guy, and he could have provided me with some useful insights into Colombia’s kidnap trade.
Instead, Candelaria, Garret’s wife, gave me a surprising update on what had happened since I’d last been in Colombia. The Turk had been found shot in the back of the head, floating in Cartagena Bay. Garret had been arrested on unassociated-and bogus-charges. He’d escaped from jail and fled the country.
No one knew where he was.
“Garret always liked you,” his wife told me. “He trusted you. You and your crazy old uncle. The one who beat up the Turk that time. What was his name?”
The way she spoke of her husband in the past tense gave me the uncomfortable feeling that Garret was dead.
No way of me finding out. In Colombia, people disappeared so commonly, so suddenly, that authorities no longer bothered to keep track.
The center for Colombia’s counterterrorism special forces, the Fuerzas Especiales Anti-Terrorista, is located on the bay side of the Cartagena base, not far from the old three-story tropical white house where the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency and the CIA both keep offices.
We stopped briefly at that house, and Iossi-he pronounced it “Yohsee”-led me inside, then handed me several documents, including a laminated Colorado drivers’ license that identified me as “Marion North.”
I said, “You guys work fast.”
“Not us, the computer. Press a couple buttons, then hit print. Presto. It’s kind of what we do.”
“This picture’s at least ten years old.”
“It’s the only one we had on file. The other documents are important. Keep them on you at all times. They identify you
as a privately employed mercenary for hire. A headhunter.”
I said, “Headhunter?”
“It’s a term we’ve come to use. There are still real headhunters out there in the jungle-don’t let those little bastards catch you-but this means something different. It means you’re an American soldier of fortune. Up in the mountains, there are probably a dozen ex-SEALs, former Rangers, Delta Force guys. Maybe more. Came down here to make lots of money as bounty hunters.”
“You’re kidding.”
“Nope. An absolute fact. They’ve been hired by the Colombian government, using a front business called Gin-EE Electronics out of Virginia, or a dummy corporation called SAIC. They’re mercenaries hired to kill retreating FARC troops. They’re hired specifically because of their backgrounds and the quality of their work in Southeast Asia, the Middle East, Central America, Africa-the world. They’re each assigned their own little territory, kind of like gold claims back in the old days. The more successful they are, the bigger their claim gets.”
I said, “And that’s what I’m posing as?”
Iossi said, “Commander Ford, hopefully this evolution will go down so fast and hard, you’re not going to need to pose as anything. But if something goes wrong, if you’re captured or killed, the company can’t be associated with you in any way. SOP-standard operating procedure. If someone asks us who you are, we’ll tell them you’re a gun for hire, you’re a headhunter. Simple as that. You are not with us.”
I nodded. “Killing people to get rich.”
Iossi was walking toward the door. “Killing killers to get rich. Yeah, a couple of our people have made a ton of money.”
The Colombian Anfibios all looked like teenage boys. There were four of them in full camouflage battle dress, faces painted, boonie hats pulled low. All together, they carried an M-16; some kind of stockless, sci-fi looking automatic shotgun; a 60-caliber machine gun; and a Knight’s Armaments sniper rifle, complete with a complicated new generation of Startron night-vision systems that I’d never seen before.
Maybe they had gotten better.
Their commanding officer was Lt. Rafidio Martinez, a very short, squat wrestler type who wasted no time making certain I knew exactly who was in charge.
“Once we locate the facility, Commander, the helicopter will hover, and our team will fast-rope to the ground. You will stay in the stern of the ship, out of our way. We don’t want to risk those lines getting tangled or someone accidentally knocking you out of the ship.
“Once we have secured the facility and taken down any resistance, we will signal the chopper to land. Then and only then can you enter the facility. Questions, sir?”
Nope. No questions. I liked the way the guy took command. In fact, I found it very reassuring.
The Anfibio had gotten better-or so I thought.
They walked me out through the early morning darkness to the helio pad. There I saw what appeared to be a ultramodern Plexiglas bubble attached to a khaki and camo fuselage. The aircraft had a six-bladed main rotor and a canted four-bladed tail rotor. There were infrared sensors in several places on the exterior, rocket tubes, a bristling of antenna and miniguns, plus twin external dismount planks.
I’d seen one of these choppers before. It was a high-tech, special-duty helicopter named Little Bird. Its principal role was to ferry commandos into tight situations. Troops rode on the two planks attached to the aircraft’s sides, enabling them to dismount immediately upon touchdown.
Martinez had told me his crew would be fast-roping in- sliding down woven lines when the chopper was within seventy feet of the ground.
So we didn’t need the planks, but I was inordinately pleased we’d been assigned such a craft. The chopper had to be massively expensive, which meant superiors would entrust the thing only to a first-rate pilot. Also, all the sensory systems suggested to me a level of electronic sophistication that would make certain the pilot was warned if someone opened fire on us with missiles or other guidance-system weaponry.
In other words, we wouldn’t be a fat target as we flew low over the jungle.
There was a reason I was concerned. I hate flying in choppers. I’m not a particularly emotional person, but my fear of them approaches phobia. Maybe it’s because they glide like a rock.
More likely, it’s because I was once in a chopper that was hit with light weapons fire and lost its transmission. The pilot had to put it into an autorotation to get the ship down. It was one of the most sickening, helpless feelings I’ve ever experienced.
I much prefer boats.
As we walked toward the chopper, I told Lieutenant Martinez, “I’m impressed by your equipment. A covert Little Bird. I’ve never flown in one.”
Martinez’s voice had more than a touch of envy when he answered. “Me neither. That one’s assigned to your SEALs. They won’t let us touch it. We’re going to be transported in that piece of shit.”
He gestured toward a hangar. His men were just sliding back the big double doors.
Inside, was an old Bell UH-type Iroquois-“H” as in a Huey slick. It was painted desert yellow-an unlikely color for a country dense with rain forest. Even the main rotor was bright yellow-an old chopper pilot trick so that fighter aircraft overhead wouldn’t accidentally drop a bomb on you.
I walked into the hangar to take a closer look. The place smelled of dust, diesel fuel, and paint. The chopper’s large cargo doors were open, showing khaki bench seats inside and a single M-60 machine gun fixed in its harness on the starboard side.
I walked to the front of the craft and touched my hand to the landing light, knelt, and read the black and gold crest above it:
BUSHRANGER.
I turned and looked at Martinez. “Jesus Christ! This is an old Australian Huey. It’s got to be thirty, forty years old.” I reached for the satellite phone in my pocket-Harrington could certainly find us something safer than this.
The young commando was nodding, not pleased. “I know, I know. Let’s hope we can get the damn thing started this time.”
Above, through the Huey’s open cargo door, the sky was a current of stars. Beneath us was an ocean of blue mist afloat upon canyons of shadow.
We were flying over jungle, the top strata of forest canopy awash in moonlight. The moon was at eye level, through the starboard door. It was huge, pocked by geologic cataclysm, white as winter ice. As we traveled at close to 130 miles an hour, there was the illusion that the moon was sailing along with us, gliding over the rain forest in pursuit, ghostly in its silence.
We had to stop and refuel at a military base near some large city in the mountains-I guessed it to be Bogota. As the aircraft banked away, nose down, and gathered speed in the darkness, flying south, I watched the lights of the city fade, then disappear. After that, there were only small pockets of light: jungle villages, fires burning, the night strongholds of rural people linked by darkness, aglow like incremental pearls, bright and solitary from half a mile high.
In the air a second time, I began to relax a little. Yes, I hated flying in helicopters, but the fact that we had now lifted off safely twice had increased my level of confidence.
Even Lieutenant Martinez seemed to noticed the difference. He slapped me on the shoulder and smiled, “You are not so sick-looking this time, Commander. Not so pale!”
I doubted if he was serious about my coloring-the cabin’s interior was lighted with two overhead red bulbs. Very dim. The human eye contains two types of photoreceptors, rods and cones. Rods do not respond to red light, thus red lights do not alter our night vision.
I didn’t doubt, however, that he and his crew perceived that I was a lot happier on the ground than off. Now, though, in the rare moments I wasn’t worrying about Amelia and what Kazan’s people might be doing to her, I could actually look out onto the jungle and take some small pleasure in the vastness of it, the pure wilderness that it implied.
I knew that we had crossed into the rim of rain forest and rivers that is the beginning of the Amazon Valle
y, one of the earth’s last remaining wild regions. Below, there were many hundreds-perhaps thousands-of plants, insects, and even fish that had yet to be discovered or described scientifically. People, too-there were still dozens of isolated tribes that had had little or no contact with the outside world.
The thought of doing fieldwork here, of doing a fish count and finding a new species, made me long for my little lab back on Sanibel. I wanted to be back there. I wanted Amelia with me. I liked the image that played in my head: The two of us alone-her doing her work, me doing mine-joined by our proximity, but more than that, too. I liked the idea of the two of us creating our own isolated tribe and reducing our contact with the outside world. Maybe for a couple of months. Maybe a couple of years-or more.
That would be a good thing, too.
The thought that was always with me, though, was much darker. What if Kazan or Stallings had touched her? What if they’d done something to her?
The prospect made me nauseous.
If they had, I’d help put it behind her. She was one of the strong ones. Amelia would be okay. We’d be okay once we got back to Florida.
Before I could take her home, though, I had to find her.
When we were far away from civilization, we dropped down low, probably only five hundred feet or so above the tops of the trees, the pilot following the contour of the jungle.
Through the open cargo door, I could feel the temperature drop as we followed, for a time, the course of a river. I could smell the musk of rotting wood and vine, the quarry scent of fresh water.
One of Tomlinson’s favorite assertions is that for a certain type of person-both of us included-an external association with water is as important as internal consumption. Oddly, just knowing I was over water made me feel better.
But the feeling didn’t last long.
From the cockpit, I heard the pilot shout Shit, a word that, in Spanish, has an ironic, musical sound. Then he yelled, “Those sons of bitches!” as the chopper twisted suddenly to port.