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Ghost Watch
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Scarred by the death of a fellow agent last year, Special Agent Vin Cooper volunteers for the most dangerous job going: personal security for bent politicians in Afghanistan. But when his principal is blown up by a suicide bomber, Cooper is reassigned. Now he’s babysitting a pair of spoilt hip-hop superstars, flown to a top-secret base in Rwanda to perform a sympathy gig for the US military.
It’s bad enough that the pair, once lovers, now hate each others guts. But then their UN chopper is forced down into the warlord-run wilderness of the Congo jungle. Surrounded by enemy fire, Cooper has to think quickly as his principals are dragged away. Now he’s trapped in the jungle without radio or supplies. He’ll risk his life to save his superstars: that’s his job. But who is he fighting? And why is he here?
Ticking like a time-bomb, brimming with terror and threat, David Rollins’ Ghost Watch is a high-voltage story of corruption, cover-up and blistering suspense.
DAVID ROLLINS was born in Sydney and still lives there. He attempted to join the military on leaving school and, luckily for both parties, was rejected. He became a journalist, and then an advertising copywriter. After twenty years selling useless stuff to people who didn’t want or need it, he sat down to write his first novel. He’s still writing.
Also by David Rollins
ROGUE ELEMENT
SWORD OF ALLAH
THE DEATH TRUST
A KNIFE EDGE
HARD RAIN
THE ZERO OPTION
GHOST
WATCH
DAVID ROLLINS
First published in Australia in 2010 by Pan Macmillan.
This paperback edition first published in Great Britain in 2011 by Corvus, an imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd.
Copyright © David Rollins 2010.
The moral right of David Rollins to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act of 1988.
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
This is a work of fiction. All characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ISBN: 978-1-84887-508-1
eBook ISBN: 978-0-85789-269-0
Printed in Great Britain.
Corvus
An imprint of Atlantic Books Ltd
Ormond House
26-27 Boswell Street
London WC1N 3JZ
www.corvus-books.co.uk
For Sam, Jack, Bart and Ruby.
The conquest of the earth, which mostly means the taking it away from those who have a different complexion or slightly flatter noses than ourselves, is not a pretty thing . . .
– Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness
What’s mine is mine. What’s yours is mine.
– Unknown
Prelude
Warm sheets of rain fell from clouds piled like towers of shaving foam above the steaming rainforest. Orange mud showed where vehicles and foot traffic had flayed the skin of vegetation from the ground. There was so much mud, it was as if the base had been rubbed raw. The tread in my boots was clogged with it, making my feet feel heavier than a drunk’s. The stuff was under my fingernails, grinding between my teeth, in my hair and my groin. The sweat and grease of eight days in the Congo rainforest stung my eyes, and a miasma of flies and mosquitoes trailed behind me, along with the rest of my beaten little troop, as we trudged in the stinking humidity through rust-colored puddles of rainwater.
I was looking for someone among the organized chaos and, when I found him, I was going to spoil the asshole’s day.
We looked like the walking dead – a bunch of filthy, haggard, hollow-eyed cadavers lacerated from head to foot by nature’s razor wire: the elephant grass that grew everywhere here. Groups of so-called US allies hereabouts, the armed militia known as the National Congress for the Defense of the People, stopped what they were doing and stared at us. The government troops from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, just across the Rwandan border, called these soldiers ‘the rebels’. My fellow American advisors, here to train the rebels in the art of waging war against the insurgent Hutu militants hunkered down in the DRC, also stared as we cut a swath of silence through the late-afternoon activities at Camp Come Together – most of which consisted of lounging around, smoking and drinking.
And then I saw him. He was up ahead – supervising while others did the grunt work, loading pallets and crates onto a large flatbed truck. Nothing unusual in other people doing his dirty work. The ‘he’ I’m referring to was a shithead by the name of Beau Lockhart, from Kornflak & Greene, the guy who had built this base and ran it for the US Department of Defense. He was involved in shit up to his eyeballs. And the motive? Greed – same as always.
By now I was running on autopilot. I hadn’t eaten much for several days and been forced to drink river water that was soupy with amoeba. Since then, my bowels had had a mind of their own, evacuating themselves whenever. I walked toward Lockhart, my own shit leaking down my legs.
‘Hey, Major!’ Sergeant Major Cy Cassidy called out behind me.
‘Don’t do anything dumb,’ said Staff Sergeant Lex Rutherford.
Now, wouldn’t that be out of character?
‘Cooper! Wait up,’ shouted Captain Duke Ryder, further back.
Lockhart was sharing a joke with a group of US Army personnel, who were, no doubt, good men and women for the most part. But I wondered what they were loading. Did they have any idea what was in those pallets? Lockhart didn’t see me coming. I pulled the Sig Sauer from my holster. Two rounds left in the mag. A couple of the men, and one woman, doing the grunt work looked up and saw me coming. Saw the intent. Froze.
My weapon was raised, two-handed grip, no mistaking the target. Lockhart had his back to me, oblivious.
‘City pussy? It don’t rate by comparison,’ I heard him say with a tsk, like some wine connoisseur unhappy with a vintage. ‘You wanna try pussy from the bush, man. Ai, these fuckin’ tribal girls rut, know what I’m sayin’? I can’t answer for the quality of the local dick, mind. One of you bitches might like to take it from here . . . ha ha . . .’
‘You’re under arrest,’ I said.
He glanced over his shoulder and went instinctively for his pistol. Before his hand got there I smashed the weapon backhand across the side of his skull. Blood burst from a split in the skin on his cheek and spurted from his ear hole as he fell to his knees in the mud.
I had nothing to say to this sack of shit other than the comments posted by my side-arm. The temptation to kick him in the ribs was hard to resist.
Lockhart raised himself on one hand, his head swaying, long strands of spit, sweat and blood draped from his lower lip. Recognition flickered across his face.
‘Damn, Cooper. You still alive, motherfucker?’ he said.
‘Cooper!’ Cassidy shouted once more. ‘C’mon!’
One of the crates being loaded was half on, half off the truck’s tailgate. I leaned on it so that it fell to the ground and I brought the heel of my boot down hard on the green-painted wood packing, splintering it. Shit . . . milk powder. Twenty-four cans of the stuff, not what I was hoping to find.
Lockhart laughed so I struck him again, laying the Sig’s barrel across his jaw line. That wiped away the grin. He coughed and spat a clot of blood into the mud between his hands. Splintered teeth dotted the crimson mucus.
‘Cooper! Stop! Now!’
Cassidy again. I ignored him, pulled back the Sig’s slide, chambering a round, one behind it on standby. I fell to my knees behind Lockhart, grabbed hold of his perfumed hair and pulled back his head. He was semiconscious, no fight left in him. He smelled clean, of hair product and a cologne that was ironically called ‘Guilty’, but there was a stink to this guy that nothing could mask. I placed the business end of the blue-black barrel under his jaw, beneath the joint, and moved my head to the other side, away from the blast of torn flesh, shattered bone, and remaining teeth that would follow the exiting slug.
He again went for the Glock strapped to his thigh. I rapped it sharply with the butt of the Sig to change his mind about pulling it. My purpose hardened. Do it for the dead. For the baby thrown into the bushes; for the women who lost their arms; for all the kids made to grow up mean; for Travis and Shaquand; for Marcus, Francis and Fournier. Do it for what his associates did to Ayesha and for all the men and women mutilated and slaughtered by the people we trained. For the weapons, supplied by this fucker working both sides of the river, that made the mess across the border so much more possible. Do it for Anna.
It would be so easy. An excuse to take revenge on all the bad that just seemed to pile up when no one was looking. Kill Lockhart and I win. That’s the way I looked at it. Cassidy was wrong about this not being the way to do it. Killing Lockhart was right. It would settle so many scores, balance those scales a little. I slipped my finger inside the trigger guard. Three and a half pounds of pressure from my index figure would do it, send one-hundred-and-twenty-four grains of lead up through his brain at twelve hundred feet per second. The slug would be in his head less than a thousandth of a second, enough time to do humankind a big favor.
Muddy water oozed into my pants, mixing with my own funk. My breathing slowed.
‘Cooper. C’mon, man. We’ve come a long way. All of us,’ I heard Twenny Fo, my principal, say. ‘This is not the way it supposed t’ end, you feel me?’
‘There is no other way,’ I told him.
‘Hey, you!’ yelled an unfamiliar voice some distance away, but closing in fast. ‘Drop your weapon!’
A swarm of US Army personnel and Rwandan military police were running toward me, drawing pistols, raising M16s.
Cassidy, Rutherford, West and Ryder turned their weapons on the MPs and a horrible feeling of déjà vu came over me. Everyone was shouting at each other to lower their weapons, but I couldn’t hear them. I was listening to Anna.
‘Vin, no. You’ll die here,’ she said. ‘He’s not worth your life.’
But when I looked up, the voice wasn’t Anna’s. It was Leila’s, my other principal.
The security team fanned out on our flank.
A standoff, just like the one at the Oak Ridge Reservation facility in Tennessee that left Anna on the carpet with a hole the size of my fist blown out of her left breast, her heart rolling in the cavity as it struggled to pump.
One wrong move here and I wasn’t the only one who would die.
‘Put the gun down, Vin,’ said Leila. ‘Let the law have him.’ Her voice wrapped around me like Congo mist.
Lockhart was a sweaty dead weight in my arms, the odor of his cologne clawing at the back of my throat. Maybe Leila was onto something. I threw him to the ground. Seconds later, I sensed Cassidy and Rutherford beside me, felt their hands under my arms, lifting me to my feet.
‘You’re under arrest,’ advised a sergeant MP, a stocky guy with a nose that looked like it had been punched off his face a couple of times. He ripped my arms behind my back and lassoed my wrists together with a pair of flexcuffs. Then he kicked my feet apart and patted down my rags.
‘What’s the charge?’ Ryder demanded to know.
‘Assault and battery, Sherlock. Whaddaya think?’ the sergeant replied. His buddy, a clone but for the fact he had blond hair, kneed me in the guts. That put me down in the mud.
‘Hey!’ said Ryder.
Lockhart rolled his head to the side and looked up at me. Grinning with bloody gums, he mumbled, ‘Yo’ fuckin’ dead meat now, man.’
Contents
Plea
Kabul
Photograph
Kigali
Cyangugu
Merde’
Hostage
Enemies
Friends
Run
Animals
Retreat
Discovery
Rendezvous
Ambush
Reload
Attack
Rescue
Release
Flee
Trapped
Evade
Escape
Verdict
Plea
‘All rise,’ commanded an Air Force sergeant.
The military judge, Colonel Harry Fink, was squat like a bath plug. He entered the largely empty courtroom from a side door, stepped up to the raised bench and took his seat in front of the seal of the Department of the Air Force displayed on the wall.
My defense team and I resumed ours behind a desk opposite him, as did the trial lawyers.
Colonel Fink got proceedings underway, reading the standard pro forma information that ensured there’d be no grounds for appeal down the track. Unlike the many times I’d heard it in the past, where it had brought on a yawning fit, this time the judge’s standard intro gave me an unnerving sense of inevitability, like I was caught on a conveyor belt heading for somewhere unpleasant.
When he was done, Fink raised an eyebrow at the trial lawyers and said, ‘Proceed . . .’
Major Vaughan Latham buttoned his blouse as he stood. Mid-thirties, lean and sinewy, Latham was the outdoors type. And if he wasn’t throwing one into the assistant counsel, a young captain, sitting beside him I’d be questioning his preferences because she was pert, athletic, wore tight pencil skirts and flashed a seductive smile that was as good as a bribe.
Latham took up his part in the script and informed the court that the charges against me were Article 128 Assault with a Deadly Weapon Causing Grievous Bodily Harm, and Article 133 Conduct Unbecoming an Officer and Gentleman.
‘And what plea are we entering today?’ Colonel Fink asked Major Les Cheung, the Area Defense Council lawyer appointed to my defense. All I knew about Cheung was that he looked Chinese. Like the trial lawyer, Cheung had an assistant. His name was Nelson Macri. And all I knew about him was that he wouldn’t look nearly as good as Latham’s assistant did in a pencil skirt.
Cheung stood. ‘Not guilty, sir,’ he said.
‘Enter a plea of not guilty for the accused,’ Fink informed the court reporter.
‘If it please the court,’ said Latham, moving through the formalities of pre-trial, ‘Major Cooper doesn’t own his home. He’s divorced, has no children, and no living relatives. The accused has no binding ties, but he does have a valid passport. And –’
‘You think he’s a flight risk on a 128, Counselor?’ Fink asked, cocking an eyebrow at Latham before turning back to Cheung. ‘No doubt you disagree with this, Counselor?’
‘Vehemently, sir. Pre-trial confinement in the stockade is not necessary here. Major Cooper has been restricted to base by his commander since returning from Africa. He could have absconded at any time should he have chosen to do so. Cooper wishes to clear his name and resume his duties with the Office of Special Investigations, and recognizes that it is not in his best interest to flee. You have before you a recommendation to this effect from his commanding officer.’
Fink read over the letter from my commander, holding it up and inspecting it through a lens of his glasses, like it was a magnifying glass, then sized me up while I kept my eyes fixed forward and did my best impersonation of military bearing.
‘Major,’ Fink said to me after a moment’s consideration, ‘we’ll go with your commanding officer’s recommendation. Consider yourself confined to the base for the duration. Naturally, your suspension from duty will continue pending a verdict.’ He sh
ifted position and let his eyes swivel between Cheung and Latham. ‘Any further business, gentlemen?’
‘No, your Honor,’ said Cheung.
‘No, your Honor,’ Latham echoed.
‘Very well. We’ll reconvene two weeks from today, at 0900,’ Fink said without looking up from his desk. ‘This hearing is adjourned.’
The judge got up, slipped behind his door and was gone within a couple of seconds
‘What now?’ I asked Cheung.
‘Go home. We’ll see you around seven.’
‘Who’s bringing the cards?’
‘We’ll be working, Cooper, to keep you out of Leavenworth.’
‘There were twenty witnesses to the 128.’
‘Which means we’re gonna have to work extra hard.’
I CLIMBED INTO MY old Pontiac parked out in the lot and headed to my temporary residence on the base. It had been provided by Billeting, a ranch-style duplex usually reserved for VIPs with kids. Base accommodations were tight at Andrews AFB, nothing small and uncomfortable currently being available, so at least the needle on this one had swung in my favor. The place had four bedrooms, a yard, and a common porch. The previous occupant had hung two Stars and Stripes, one on either side of the front door, for stereo patriotism.
I drove on autopilot, until my cell began ringing and vibrating.
‘Arlen,’ I said, checking the screen.
‘You were supposed to call me after the arraignment,’ said Lieutenant Colonel Arlen Wayne, the only person at Andrews AFB Office of Special Investigations – my unit – who gave a damn about my current circumstances.
‘Yeah, well, I got a few things on my mind.’
‘Vin, snap out of it, buddy. This is me. How’d it go? You still have your cell, which means they didn’t lock you up. You headed home?’
‘No, Cancun.’
‘Seriously, can I do anything for you?’