Richards touched the automatic on her hip. “Did these precipitate this?”
“Waleed could care less about handguns. He wants those missiles. Our Herks can jam the hell out of any surface-to-air missile they’ve got, but not the Stinger.” He reached out and touched Tara’s hand. “Please stay here. It’s safer and you can tell the world what’s happening.” Tara nodded. “I gotta go.”
“I’ll stay here and coordinate with AFRICOM,” Richards said.
“Yes, ma’am,” Allston replied. “Major Sharp, it’s gonna get ugly and you can stay here.”
Jill shook her head. “My assignment is with the Irregulars.” She ran after him.
“Stupid woman,” Richards said under her breath.
“I’d follow him,” Tara replied.
“But you’re staying here.”
“Because he gave me a job to do,” the actress replied. Richards didn’t understand.
Toby was sitting behind the controls of the single-engine utility aircraft when Allston and Jill climbed on board. Allston sat in the copilot’s seat, Jill in the back. Allston jammed on a headset as Toby turned into the wind. Without bothering to take the runway, he gunned the turboprop engine and took off from the parking ramp. They were airborne in less than four hundred feet. “Twenty miles to Malakal,” Toby announced. “Less than ten minutes.” He leveled off at two hundred feet above the ground and turned to the west, flying along the Nile. “I’m guessing Waleed won’t close the runway because of commercial traffic. We should be okay.”
“And if they shoot at us?” Jill asked.
“Not to worry,” Toby answered, “we’ll be in and out before they get a clue.”
“Stalwart fellow,” Allston mumbled.
Malakal
Toby dropped down to a hundred feet above the ground and slowed as they approached the airport. “They haven’t blocked the runway,” Allston said. Toby didn’t answer and concentrated on the landing. He started the flaps down and slowed as he flew along the runway towards the C-130 ramp at the western end. Allston counted all four of his C-130s and did not see any of the familiar Sudanese Army trucks. “I can see a roadblock at the main gate,” he said. “That’s all.” Toby grunted an answer, dumped the flaps to full down and landed the taildragger in less than 300 feet. He turned onto the parking ramp, spun around, and hit the brakes. Allston unlatched the door and was out before the Porter was fully stopped. Jill was right behind him. Allston closed the cargo door and stepped back. Toby gunned the engine and took off at an angle across the ramp and the runway width. “Well done,” Allston allowed.
“That was exciting,” Jill allowed as they walked in.
Vermullen and Lane were waiting in operations. The Frenchman explained that the orders to turn over his weapons had come directly from the UN Peacekeeping mission in Addis Ababa. “In their infinite wisdom, they only ordered us to leave, not where to go.”
“What’s your government telling you?” Allston asked.
“To negotiate what I can but in the end, do as ordered. Are you going to turn over your aircraft?”
“That will be one cold day in hell,” Allston replied, his words etched in stone.
The satellite phone buzzed and Jill answered. “It’s the AFRICOM duty officer. He’s talked to Richards.” She handed the phone to Allston.
Allston quickly briefed the duty officer on the situation. His eyes went cold when the duty officer ordered the 4440th to stand down while AFRICOM coordinated with the NMCC and the State Department. “I will not turn my aircraft over to anyone under any circumstances,” Allston told him. Again, he listened as the duty officer told him not to make the situation worse. Allston sensed he was dealing with a staff officer who did not have the authority, nor the balls, to make a decision. “Thank you, sir.” He punched at the phone, hard, breaking the connection. “Fuckin’ clueless wonder.” He handed the phone to Jill. “Can you get in touch with Toby?”
She punched at the buttons, frustrated by the delays in establishing a link while Allston talked to Vermullen. Finally, she handed Allston the phone. He quickly updated Toby on the situation. “I’m not turning the Herks over and I’m going to evacuate.”
Richards came on the line. “Colonel Allston, I’m in contact with AFRICOM. You were ordered to stand down and not make the situation worse.”
“General, a commander never loses the right of self defense. As I read the situation, my only defense is to cut and run. Further, AFRICOM is not in my chain of command.”
“Not your formal chain of command,” Richards replied, not willing to concede the point. “If you insist on evacuating without clearance from AFRICOM, go to Ethiopia.”
“We need to stay in country. If I read this right, once the Legion is gone, there’s going to be a bloodbath. We need to relocate as many of the Dinka and Nuer as we can out of the oil concessions, and there is no way Ethiopia will allow us to mount a cross-border airlift.”
“We’ve got the space and a fuel dump,” Toby said.
“How about the legionnaires? Okay to bring them?”
“Knowing Waleed,” Toby said, “the Legion is the only thing that will keep him away.”
Richards interrupted. “Colonel Allston, I say again, stand down while I coordinate. You are making the situation worse by your precipitate actions.”
“Copy all,” Allston replied. “Standing by.” He broke the connection. “Precipitate action, my ass.” He drew his .45 automatic and fired a round into the satcom. “Damn, we’ve just gone com out. I guess we’re on our own.”
TWELVE
Malakal
Major Hamid Waleed woke with a jerk. It was still dark and he patted the bed beside him. The girl was gone, which was good. As his adjutant had promised, the fourteen-year-old Dinka was a virgin, but she was worthless now. He checked his watch, pleased that he had woken in time for Fajr, the first prayer of the day. He quickly dressed and stepped outside his tent to insure the three privates standing guard at the main gate leading into the American compound would see him at prayer. They would talk of his piety and add to his reputation as a faithful member of the Umma, the universal Islamic community.
His anger flared when he saw the guards were sound asleep. He drew his prized 9mm automatic and crept up on the sleeping men. For a moment, he hesitated before singling out the oldest, a twenty-year-old private from a village south of Khartoum. The private came from a family without connections or honor and was less than a man. Because he knew these things, Waleed considered himself a good officer, and, more importantly, knew what to do with guards caught sleeping on duty. He slapped the private awake and waited, ensuring the other two guards were fully conscious. He pulled the slide of his Browning back, chambered a round, and shot the private in the forehead. He pulled the trigger again.
The two guards groveled in the dirt and begged for mercy. Waleed questioned them, anxious to learn if there had been any activity among the Americans during the night. Assured that all had been quiet since the small single-engine plane had landed the previous morning, he let them live. What harm could one small aircraft do? he reasoned. He made a show of checking his expensive Rolex. “My ultimatum expires in seven hours,” he announced. “The Americans have no honor, they have no courage. They are pigs and bend to my will.” He returned to his tent and knelt in prayer, certain that letting the two guards live would add to his honor as a just and honorable man — and a warrior.