“I’m not sure I can walk!” Crosswhite shouted over the din. “I think my hip’s dislocated.”
Gil was busy flashing back to Hell Week, five and a half days of misery and pain in the cold surf during the first phase of SEAL training, a week specifically designed to determine who was cut out to endure days like today and who was not. He could see in Crosswhite’s eyes that he was beginning to break down mentally and knew that time was running out. Every man had a limit. Gil had his. But even though Crosswhite’s wounds were not as bad as his own overall, Gil could see that Crosswhite was now much closer to reaching his limit. No shame in that. Had it not been for Crosswhite, Gil would be dead already. This was not a matter of who was the better man. It was simply a matter of who had the deepest reserve of will. Gil would now have to impose that will upon Crosswhite to keep him from giving up so close to the goal line.
He sucked in a deep, painful breath to mostly inflate the still partially collapsed lung and forced himself to his feet. Crosswhite looked up at him wide-eyed, watching as he stepped over and offered him his hand. Both were bleeding from more than one bullet wound, and both were covered in enough blood and grime that their own mothers could not possibly have recognized them.
“Not going to let you ring the bell today,” Gil said, referring to the infamous bell every SEAL knew intimately as throwing in the towel during Hell Week. “Give me your hand, brother. We’re going forward to see this fight through.”
Crosswhite could feel Gil’s strength flowing into him as he grabbed his forearm and hauled himself to his feet. A sharp pain cut through his groin, and he screamed aloud. The joint was definitely dislocated, so Gil supported his left side as they limped past the second line of dead horses toward the mouth of the canyon, where Forogh and his uncles were still trading fire with the enemy.
“Goddamnable waste of horseflesh,” Gil muttered in disgust.
Crosswhite screamed again, trying to slip free of Gil’s grip to the ground, but Gil refused to release him.
“Fuck it! Put me down!”
“They can’t get a chopper in here. Walk!”
“What fucking chopper?” Crosswhite howled.
Gil ignored him, dragging him forward on the good leg.
Two Cobra gunships thundered over the canyon, firing rockets and Gatling guns into the remaining HIK and Taliban forces among the rocks at the mouth. Sparks flew, and rock fragments zipped through the air as bodies exploded and men screamed in agony. The Tajiks threw themselves against the ground, horrified they were about to be annihilated as well, but the Cobras peeled off abruptly and banked out into the valley, their guns still blazing away at God knew who.
A flight of A-10 Thunderbolts flashed briefly overhead, their own Gatling guns roaring with a chainsaw sound that cut through the air in short, ripping bursts of fire.
“Winchester,” Gil said, chugging along like a perforated steam engine. “They popped the fuckin’ cork for us. We’re gonna make it.”
“Let me down!” Crosswhite gasped, crying in agony now. “They can bring me a stretcher.”
They reached the front of the line. Enemy fire raked the rocks from the trees a hundred yards out across the river where the choppers hadn’t been able to spot them. Gil put Crosswhite down behind a boulder, wishing like hell they still had a functioning radio.
“Thank Christ!” Crosswhite said, feeling relief sweep through his body.
Gil saw Orzu looking at him. “I’m sorry about your horses,” he said in English, pointing back at the dead animals and holding out his hands in the gesture of a supplicant.
Orzu stepped forward and turned him around to see the plastic tube hanging out of his lower back. His eyebrows soared, and he patted Gil on the shoulder, saying something in Tajik that Gil hadn’t a prayer of understanding, but the older man’s eyes were telling him not to worry about it, that this was life, and that life was sometimes very cruel.
Forogh joined them. “My uncle asks, What should we do? We can break out now, but there’s nowhere to go on foot.”
“We wait for the helos,” Gil said.
Forogh spoke with Orzu and shook his head with a shrug. “But what about us, he asks? That valley is still full of HIK.”
They stood listening to the jets hammering the valley on the far side of the mountain.
“Not for long, I don’t think,” Gil said.
“They will not get them all. The caves are very deep. The HIK will wait until—”
Gil grabbed Forogh’s arm. “Don’t worry! Tell your uncle you’re all going out with us, or I’m staying here with you.” He looked at the old man and smiled. “Fair enough, Uncle?”
Forogh translated and the old man smiled back.
“He says, Fair enough, Nephew.”
They picked up their rifles and went forward through the rocks to add their own fire to the tree line.
A pair of Night Stalker Black Hawks appeared overhead five minutes later, and three RPGs shot up from the trees after them almost instantly. Only the practiced evasive maneuvers of the pilots averted utter disaster. They banked sharply away, climbing for altitude, their door gunners pouring fire into the tree line.
Gil busted Forogh on the shoulder. “You’d better get your uncle to pull his men back. Air Force will definitely barbecue that fucking tree line now.”
But even as he was speaking, fifty or more Pashtun came pouring out of the forest one hundred yards across the river in a desperate charge to finish off the Tajik traitors, every one of them bent on killing and dying for Allah in this great battle for what they considered to be the soul of Afghanistan. RPGs exploded among the rocks and against the ground as the Tajiks fell back through the canyon with no other option but to give ground rapidly.
Forogh and Orzu dragged a screaming Crosswhite between them, scrambling over the jagged terrain toward the heel of the canyon, where they took cover behind the double phase lines of horses, firing singly at the enemy on semiautomatics, many of them on their last magazine. Were it not for the machine gunners in the Night Stalker helos stationed overhead, they would have been overrun completely or blown to hell by RPGs.
Gil felt the vibration in the canyon floor even before he heard the roar of the General Electric F101 turbofans. “Get down!” he screamed, making gestures with his hands. “Get down!”
A pair of B-1B Lancers streaked through the valley past the mouth of the canyon so low that Gil could have sworn he saw the rivets on their fuselages just before he buried his face against the earth near the belly of the dead horse. When the bombs exploded, the ground shook like the very earth was coming apart at the fault lines. Rocks tumbled down into the canyon, and the Tajiks screamed for their lives until the air was sucked from their lungs in the vacuum. Gil and Crosswhite fared better than the rest, having known to expel the air from their lungs before the bombs went off.
When the explosions ceased and the roar of the Lancers receded, Gil raised up to see an entirely different landscape at the mouth of the canyon than had been there only seconds before. The rocks and the river were no longer really there. Only a moonscape of craters and rivulets of muddy water. A number of the Tajiks were badly battered by the shock wave, and still others were partially buried by the avalanche of rock, but miraculously only five of them had been killed.