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Authors: Andy McNab

Crisis Four (5 page)

BOOK: Crisis Four
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They stood up with the charge. Everything was nice and slow and controlled. As they started to move, the door burst open.
Voices were shouting in Arabic from around the corner. The door charge was quickly placed on the ground. I saw hands reach into belt kits. They would have to remove the threat, but quietly.
The voices got closer and closer and I could hear the sound of flip-flops slapping against feet. Two boys rounded the corner wearing dish-dashes, arm in arm, both smoking and still shouting about something, maybe what Grant Mitchell was up to in the Queen Vic.
Two of the Regs climbed aboard them, and almost at once I heard a distinctive buzz and crackle. The boys were getting Tazered good style, at the same time as being dragged out of sight towards us. Tazers are cattle prods for humans. As the two electrodes touch a body, you press a button and 100,000 volts zap through the target. They are a great weapon as you can hold the victim at the same time as you fuck them up big time, without getting zapped by the current yourself.
As the blokes got them down on the floor, I could hear them moaning and groaning under the hands that covered their mouths. They were still being dealt with as Glen put on his NVGs. We did the same.
Glen looked back at Sarah to check we were ready. Following his cue, we moved towards the corner with Sarah still between us. It was now one of those situations that couldn’t be stopped. We just had to get on with it. The fuck-it factor had taken over.
We piled in through the door. A Reg secured the entry point and waited for the other two to join him, dragging the two dazed Syrians. The corridor was dark and silent. In a loud whisper Glen said, ‘With me, with me, with me.’ We moved like men possessed down the breeze-block passage, the world through our NVGs looking like a light-green negative film.
We turned right, and through the windows to our left I could see the outside of the building; on the other side there were plywood internal doors leading, I guessed, to rooms or offices. The smell of cigarettes, cooking, coffee and the sweat of not too much air conditioning was almost overpowering.
We came to a T-junction. Glen stopped on the left, Sarah right up behind him. I came up level, on the right. I wasn’t too sure which way we were heading. Glen would tell me. I looked over and he was moving his IR torch beam, attached to his weapon, to the right.
I cleared the corner, moved forward three or four metres and stood my ground, waiting. I knew Glen would be clearing the other way. I saw his weapon’s IR splash against the walls as he turned towards me, then they both passed on my left. Sarah still had her pistol holstered and was keeping close to Glen. The floor was tiled or concrete, it was hard to tell which. All I knew was that there was an echo of footsteps and squeaking rubber as we moved.
Glen stopped and pointed at a door. He took his weapon out of the shoulder, put his back against the wall to the left and reached for the door handle. I moved to the opposite side, weapon still up in the shoulder, ready to make entry. He nodded; I took off my safety and nodded back. He turned the handle and I moved inside, pushing the door with me.
I was blinded. The NVGs were totally whited out. It was as if someone had let off a flare in front of my face.
Glen shouted, ‘The fucking lights are back on!’
I fell on my knees and ripped off the NVGs, blinking hard as I tried to get back some normal vision. I made out movement in the right-hand corner and rolled to the left, trying to make myself a harder target. As my eyes adjusted I saw a middle-aged guy, his head bald apart from wiry side hair. He was curled up against the far wall, his hands protecting his face, flapping even more than I had just been – as you do when, just as the lights come on, a man with a weapon bursts in on you. Fuck it; they must have had standby power.
I became aware of bits of electronic machinery – PCs, screens and computer stuff all over the place, whirring and crunching now the power had returned.
I lifted my weapon into my shoulder and pointed it at him. He got the message. I called for Sarah.
She came in and confirmed, ‘That’s him.’ She gobbed off in Arabic and he immediately did as he was told, sitting down on the sofa against the other wall, away from the desk with all the machinery on it. He didn’t move; his eyes were like saucers, trying to work it all out and listen to Sarah at the same time.
From my bergen, I pulled out six magnesium incendiary devices. All I needed to do was to get them sparked up and we could be on our way.
It was then that Sarah pulled a laptop and some other gear from her bergen and started plugging it in and revving things up, still talking to the Source, referring to the Arabic script displayed on two of the screens. He replied at the speed of sound, trying his best to stay alive.
I was confused. This wasn’t in the plan. I tried to keep a calm voice. ‘Sarah, what are you doing? Come on, it’s time to go.’
Glen stayed outside in the relit corridor, giving protection. I knew he would feel exposed soon and would want to move out. After all, we’d got who we’d come for. I said, ‘Sarah, how long’s this going to take?’
She was still scrolling down the screen. I was getting pissed off. This wasn’t what we were supposed to be here for.
‘No idea – just do your job and keep everyone back.’
I needed to underline the problem we faced. ‘This is going to turn into a gang-fuck soon, Sarah. Let’s just grab him and go.’
She wasn’t even looking at me, just hitting one of the keyboards.
The Source sat tight, looking as confused as I felt.
Glen was starting to get agitated. He stuck his head back into the room. ‘How much longer?’
She said, ‘What’s with you people? Wait.’
Sarah seemed gripped by the information she had before her. I walked towards her, trying to be the good guy. ‘Sarah, we’ve got to go. If not, we’re in a world of shit.’ I grabbed her arm, but she pulled away and glared at me. I said, ‘I don’t understand the problem. We have the Source, so let’s grab him and go.’
We were inches apart, so close I could feel her breath on my face as she spoke. ‘There is more to do, Nick,’ she said, slowly and quietly. ‘You don’t know the full brief.’
I felt ridiculous. Very near the bottom of the food chain as usual, I’d obviously been shown only one piece of a much bigger jigsaw puzzle. They’d justify it in terms of ‘need to know’ or ‘op sec’, but the real reason was that people like me and Glen simply weren’t trusted.
Just as I took a step back the silence was broken by shouting, then the distinctive signature of AKs on auto, their heavy calibre 7.62 short rounds flying around outside the building.
‘Shit… don’t move!’ Glen shouted into the room. We had gone noisy: not good. He left us and ran down the corridor. I closed the door.
I could hear the lighter sound of Car 15s returning fire, and lots of shouting, from our guys as well as the Syrians. It didn’t matter that the Syrians could hear us shouting in English – there was now so much gunfire and confusion that it was irrelevant – much more important was to get the communications right.
I tried to sound calm. ‘Sarah, time to go.’
She turned her back on me and carried on working. Our new friend on the sofa was getting more worried by the minute. I knew just how he felt. There was another exchange of fire outside.
‘Fuck this, Sarah, we’ve got to go. Now!’
She spun round, her face tight with anger. ‘Not yet.’ She almost spat the words. She jabbed her finger towards the direction of the contact as more rounds were fired. ‘That’s what they’re paid for. Let them get on with it. Your job is to stay with me, so do it.’
Glen was at the end of the corridor, screaming to me at the top of his voice. ‘Get them out! Get them out now!’
I moved across the room towards the Source. He was curled into a ball, like a terrified child. I grabbed his arm and started to drag him off the sofa. I hadn’t even put on the plasticuffs. ‘Let’s go, Sarah, we’re… going… now!’
She turned, and as she did I realized that she was drawing down on me, her pistol aimed at my centre mass. She stepped back so there was too much distance for me to react to it.
My new friend didn’t want anything to do with this. He just stood next to me, his arm still half elevated by my hand, gently and calmly praying in a low Arabic moan as he waited to die.
Sarah had had enough. ‘Sit him down.’ She said something in Arabic which must have been to the effect of, ‘Shut the fuck up!’ because he jumped back on the sofa. She levelled her eyes on me again. ‘I’m staying here, what
we
are doing here is important. Do you understand?’
It doesn’t matter who it is, if somebody’s pointing a gun at you, you get to understand very quickly. Whatever her agenda was, it must be important. She turned calmly, holstered her weapon and went back to work on the keys.
I had one last try. ‘Can’t we just take him, plus the computers, and fuck off?’
She didn’t even bother looking at me. ‘No. It has to be done this way.’
I couldn’t do both – take her and the Source. I was still working out what to do when I heard Arabic voices inside the building. The best way to do my job and protect her was to go forward, to get out of the room and stop the threat before it came screaming in to get us.
‘I’m going outside,’ I said in an urgent whisper. ‘Don’t move until somebody comes to get you. Do you understand me?’ I checked my mag was on tight as she looked up from the computer and sort of acknowledged.
I put the Car 15 into my shoulder, and holding the pistol grip to keep the weapon up, opened the door with my left hand.
The lights were still on in the corridor and the sounds of contacts were louder to my right, but my immediate concern was the noises to my left in the corridor. I decided to move down to the next junction and hold it there; that way there would be a weapon at each end with Sarah in the middle.
I closed the door behind me and started to run. After seven or eight strides I was moving past an external door when it burst inwards. The thud as it hit me full-on was as hard and sudden as if I’d walked into the path of a moving car. I was hurled against the opposite wall, stunned and winded. Worse, my weapon had been forced out of my hands. I had lost control of it.
There was yelling on both sides; me from the pain, once I got my breath back, and the Syrian from the surprise. He jumped on top of me on the floor and we grappled like a couple of schoolkids. I tried to get to the pistol on my right thigh, but he had me in a solid bear hug around my armpits. I was pinioned with my arms out like the Michelin Man.
I tried to kick and buck out of position, then to head-butt him. He was doing exactly the same. Both of us were screaming.
The bloke stank. He had a week’s bristle on him and it was rough against my face and neck as he squeezed and squeezed, his eyes closed, snorting through his nose as he cried for help. He was a big old boy, packing maybe sixteen stones of solid weight.
I needed help, too, and screamed for Sarah. There was no way she couldn’t have heard me, but she didn’t respond. I wasn’t entirely sure what this boy was trying to do, whether he wanted to kill me, or if he was just fighting to protect himself.
I yelled again. ‘Sarah! Sarah!’
He responded by lifting his head slightly to scream out even louder. It gave me a momentary window. I head-butted him, trying to make contact wherever I could. He did the same. Then something happened that moved the situation on. You don’t normally feel pain during a fight, but I felt a stinging in my left ear. His teeth were sinking in. I could actually hear the skin break and then the sound of him straining to bite harder. The fucker had a gristly bit of my ear lobe in his mouth and was starting to pull his head back.
I felt the capillary bleeding at once, warm and wet, splashing the side of my cheek as his heavy breathing spat it out. He was in a frenzy, growling at me through clenched teeth, snot and saliva. I was still trying to get my hands down towards my leg so I could reach my pistol, which wasn’t helping keep my ear intact.
I managed to get my legs around his gut. I tried to squeeze, but could only just about get my feet together. I felt the snorting from his nose move away from my face slightly, which wasn’t good news for my ear. Then his head jerked back, taking part of the lobe with him. The pain felt like a blowtorch on the side of my head, but now that he’d moved back a bit I could start to get my hands around his head. I could see the blood on his face and snot running down from his nose as he fought to breathe through his still-gritted teeth. My fingers reached his eyes and he squeezed me up even more, shaking his head and screaming as I began to get a good hold on his face and dig deeper with my thumbs. He tried to bite my fingers. I moved my right hand so I had a flat palm underneath his chin, then switched my left to just below the crown of his head and grabbed a fistful of his hair.
You can’t just whip a head round to break someone’s neck. The design is too good for that. What you have to do is screw it off, as if you were untwisting the cap on a jar of Marmite. You’re trying to take the head off at the atlas, the small joint at the base of the skull. It’s relatively easy if you’re doing it against somebody who’s standing, because if you get them off balance, their body is going down and you can twist and turn at the same time, so their momentum works against them. But I couldn’t do that; all I could do was keep my legs around him and try to keep him in one place.
BOOK: Crisis Four
5.5Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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