“Me thinks he doth protest too much,” Camp quipped.
“Responsibility?”
“Less than 30 minutes after the news broke the Taliban spokesman claimed responsibility and threatened more actions.”
“Pretty standard, Billy. The Taliban will claim responsibility for a car accident, goat flatulence or runny scrambled eggs in the DFAC.”
“But this was different, general. The Taliban referred to the bomber as being a woman, an interpreter who had been hidden within Coalition Forces for four years. Sir, we never described the bomber,” Camp added.
“So, they had no doubt that it was Miriam. Have you gotten anything out of her? Can she talk?” Ferguson asked.
“I spent some time with her yesterday morning, sir, and was able to, ah, persuade her to cooperate with us,” Camp said.
“Does she know anything about Banks?”
“Sir, it looks to us like her husband may be the common denominator in all of this. Miriam says that if she didn’t fulfill her role, her husband would kill their son. She apparently lives for the kid,” Camp said.
“She’s from Khost. Khost and Paktya are all Haqqani turf. They’ve got shadow governors in place wherever you look. As far as I’m concerned, I’d bet you the commander at Thunder is Haqqani, too.”
“You don’t know that Billy.”
“No, but this much we do know,” Camp added, “Miriam said her husband is ISI.”
“Pakistani intelligence? Now what the heck am I supposed to do with that?” Ferguson grunted as he got up and paced the room. “Major Spann… play the video.”
Camp and Finn looked at each other.
“Video, sir?”
“Major Banks is a reservist out of Bucks County, Pennsylvania. Board certified gynecologist for a women’s health practice. He’s got a son, Chad, and a daughter, Brittany. Two days ago Chad gets a video posted to his Facebook wall from one of his new ‘friends’, a friend he thought was part of a Philadelphia Phillies Baseball Fan Club.”
Major Mitchell dimmed the lights then started the two-minute video clip as Camp and Finn watched intently. Spann brought the lights back up. The room was silent.
“Well?” Ferguson asked trying to stimulate discussion.
“Well, at least they didn’t chop his head off in the video,” Finn said with some degree of honest relief.
“Camp?”
“He’s alive… at least he was… that’s a start. Maybe we should show it to Miriam and see if she can tell us anything about it.”
Finn stood up and walked toward the TV monitor.
“Major Spann, would you play that one more time? Let me have the remote control this time.”
Spann dimmed the lights and started the DVD over again from the beginning. He handed the remote to Finn.
“Watch his hands… his hands are on the table but he’s doing something with his fingers.”
They watched the video again and saw Major Banks contorting his fingers while he was speaking. The DVD ended and Spann turned the lights back on.
“Looks kind of random to me,” Ferguson said less than excited.
“Does anybody know sign language? You know, for deaf people?” Finn asked.
The coffee-pouring majors looked at each other, but there were no takers.
“You think he’s saying something, Billy?”
“I don’t know, but the movement of the fingers isn’t natural. Something’s going on there. General, can you see if we have someone at Eggers or ISAF or even the Embassy who’s familiar with sign language?”
With a quick nod from General Ferguson, one of the majors scrambled out the door and down the hallway.
“Okay, why don’t you boys find some billeting and get some food. Let’s reconvene back here at 1400 hours. Camp, if you’d stay an extra second or two, I’d appreciate it.”
Finn stood up and left with Major Spann as Ferguson moved closer to Camp and sat on the front edge of his desk.
“You okay?”
“Hmm? Oh, this? Fine. Not much worse than a sunburn,” Camp said dismissing his burns.
“No, I mean about Jane. Unfortunately we had to deploy you only a few days after her funeral. Not much time to grieve,” Ferguson said, sounding more like Camp’s friend than a commanding officer.
“Yes, sir, I’m fine. The grieving started and ended a long time ago. This was just the letting go part. I’m at peace with the whole thing. Really, I’m okay.”
“So have you talked to her since you deployed?” Ferguson asked with special emphasis.
“No. As a matter of fact I haven’t. I need to call and see how she and dad are doing.”
Ferguson laughed.
“I wasn’t talking about your mother, idiot. I was asking about Raines.”
“Raines? No, I haven’t contacted her recently. I ‘Skyped’ her from FOB Shank when I was stuck there in the snow last month. Not much bandwidth out of Lightning. Is something wrong?”
Ferguson shook his head in disbelief.
“Yes, something’s wrong… she likes you, Camp, and you’re too damn dumb to see it… too blind to appreciate it. The woman has been sending me nonstop emails. Why don’t you head over to the MWR and call her? I think she’d appreciate it.”
“Is the old grizzly playing matchmaker now?”
Ferguson took a long pull on his cigar and filled the room with a billow of smoke.
“You can’t wear the uniform forever, Camp. There’s life after combat boots. Maybe it’s time to start thinking about that.”
Camp got up and walked toward the door.
“With all due respect, sir; I don’t think Mrs. Banks is interested in my lack of a love life right now. But I’ll call Raines if that will make you happy. See you at 1400.”
Camp walked out and down the middle sidewalks of the ISAF compound. The Kabul air was heavy, dirty and disgusting. The local villagers burned wood fires in their cooking pits just about year round. The heavy winter air kept the smoke from escaping over the mountain passes. It took less than two weeks for every American to fall prey to the “Kabul Krud”, an upper respiratory cough that would seldom subside and hardly ever go away until the deployment was over.
Walking into the Morale, Welfare and Recreation building, affectionately known as the MWR, Camp checked in with the Filipino contractor who handled computer check-outs. A piece of wood with the number “7” written in Sharpie ink was Camp’s 30-minute ticket to computer number 7. Twenty-three other soldiers, civilians, contractors and NATO partners were already in the computer room, most of them on Skype talking to friends and family around the world as the war in Afghanistan raged all around them.
“Hello, sailor,” came the voice on the other end as Raines’ image finally caught up with the bandwidth burst. “I was wondering when I might hear from you again.”
“Hello, Leslie. I hope I didn’t call too late.”
“Just getting ready for bed. It’s only 2130 here, but I start at 0600 in the morning. A girl’s got to get her beauty sleep.”
“Well, then you should only need about a half hour. Looks like you’re gorgeous already.”
“That’s coming from the man who currently sees nothing but burka babes.”
Camp laughed and readjusted his headset.
“Geez, Camp… what happened to your hands?” Raines said as she moved closer to her computer monitor.
Camp had forgotten about the bandages.
“No big deal. Just a little grease fire in the DFAC when I was making French fries.”
Raines gave him a dirty look.
“This from the ‘king’ of microwaveable dinners? I don’t think so. But I suppose you’d have to kill me if you told me what happened.”
“How’s the new job going, Les? Do you like it?”
“It’s interesting, not terribly exciting, but fine. Couple of crazies at the gates with posters, but nothing we can’t handle.”