Robert Ludlum’s The Treadstone Rendition
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Description
The final days of the American presence in Afghanistan bring Adam Hayes a summons he can’t ignore in the latest electrifying thriller from the world of Robert Ludlum.
Adam Hayes has stepped away from the field for the last time. He’s promised his wife that he won’t put his life on the line any more, and there’s nothing that will make him break a promise to his wife.
Well…almost nothing. With America withdrawing from Afghanistan and the Taliban closing in, Abdul Nassir reached out to his old friend. Ten years ago, he saved the American’s life, and the time has come for repayment. The Afghan is desperate to flee his homeland. Like most of his countrymen, he is petrified by the Taliban takeover, but he also can’t trust the Americans. He’s the only eyewitness to a massacre committed by a rogue team of CIA contractors. Not only can he identify the butcher who directed the bloodbath, he also has photographic proof. He’ll only be safe when those pictures are made public.
Now, there’s just one man he can trust to get him to safety–Adam Hayes.Robert Ludlum was the author of twenty-seven novels, each one a New York Times bestseller. There are more than 225 million of his books in print, and they have been translated into thirty-two languages. He is the author of the Jason Bourne series—The Bourne Identity, The Bourne Supremacy, and The Bourne Ultimatum—among other novels. Mr. Ludlum passed away in March 2001.
Joshua Hood is the author of Warning Order and Clear by Fire. He graduated from the University of Memphis before joining the military and spending five years in the 82nd Airborne Division. On his return to civilian life he became a sniper team leader on a full-time SWAT team in Memphis.1
Maidan Wardak Province, Afghanistan
August 15, 2021
The CIA-contracted Mi-17V raced over the ridgeline, the pilot chomping hard on the stick of gum as he cleared the ridge and dove for the spiderweb of wadis-water channels, bone dry in the summer heat-that crisscrossed the valley floor. Like everyone else aboard the helicopter, he was all too aware of the valley’s reputation as a Taliban stronghold, and with the American withdrawal from Afghanistan already underway, the last thing he wanted was to get shot down in Indian country.
The pilot had been desperate for a way out of this mission ever since they’d taken off from the CIA compound in Kabul, but with the target area rapidly approaching, he knew he was running out of time.
He was beginning to give up any hope of aborting when a quick look at the instrument panel showed both the oil pressure and the RPM gauges dangerously close to the red, a clear sign that he was pushing the aged Russian helo too hard. The prudent move would be to ease up, decrease the power, but instead, the pilot sensed the chance for a last-minute reprieve. He reached for the collective, wondering how much more throttle it would take before something on the aircraft finally failed.
He wouldn’t get the chance to find out. As he began to increase power, a silver-haired man stepped into the cockpit from the helo’s cargo bay, the lights of the instrument panel glinting off of the pistol in his hand.
***
Dominic Porter wasn’t a maintenance officer, but after ten years in the Navy SEALs and another decade as a CIA paramilitary officer, he’d logged more hours in the air than most pilots. From fresh off the assembly line UH-64 Black Hawks to the Eastern Bloc relics favored by third-world dictators, he’d spent enough time in darkened cargo holds to know the good sounds from the bad.
It had taken Porter about five seconds of listening to the high-pitched roar of the Mi-17’s turbine to know that something was seriously fucked.
He was on his feet in an instant, his hand on the butt of his Glock 19 as he squeezed past the squad of heavily armed mercenaries packed in around him.
“What is it?” the team leader asked.
But Porter ignored him, not sure if he was being paranoid or if Ground Branch had stuck him with another spineless pilot. The moment he stepped into the cockpit, he could smell the pilot’s fear over the caustic burn of aviation fuel and transmission fluid that permeated the cabin. Sweat streamed down the pilot’s face as he white-knuckled the controls.
His eyes darted to the instrument panel, and the red-lined gauges he found there confirmed what he’d suspected since taking off from Kabul thirty minutes prior: the pilot was trying to sabotage the mission.
Fucking coward.
Before the pilot could register his presence, Porter drew his pistol and jammed the barrel hard into the man’s neck, the cold press of steel against warm flesh sending the man stammering over the internal comms.
“Wh-what the hell-“
“Back it down,” Porter told him. “Now.”
The pilot stared at him, his pupils wide as eight balls.
“Back it down. Or you’re a dead man.”
But the man was vapor-locked, his mind flatlined by the 9-millimeter pressed to his throat.
Porter turned to the copilot, who’d to this point only watched, wordless, as the drama played out. “You’ve got the controls,” Porter told him, and without waiting for the man’s reply, turned back to the pilot, backhanding him across the face with the barrel of his Glock.
The pilot slumped forward, blood gushing from his flattened nose, and the helicopter dipped crazily toward the craggy outcroppings below, the terrain avoidance radar toning loud in the cockpit.
“Get him off the stick!” the copilot shouted.
Porter holstered the pistol and grabbed the unconscious pilot by the back of his flight suit and hauled him off of the controls. He pushed the man’s limp body against the firewall, and expertly unhooked his harness. Once the copilot had regained control of the aircraft, Porter jerked the pilot from his seat.
Porter threw the man back into the cargo hold and motioned a thick-necked mercenary forward. “O’Malley, drop your gear and get in the pilot’s seat,” he ordered.
O’Malley frowned, confused by the order, but like every man in the mix of contract mercenaries and Afghan commandos in the cargo hold, he’d been handpicked by Porter for the mission at hand. Aware he was being paid handsomely to obey without a moment’s hesitation, he dutifully dropped his kit and climbed into the right-hand seat.
“What the hell is this?” the copilot asked.
“An insurance policy,” Porter replied.
“I don’t understand.”
“Just fly the fucking bird.” Porter turned to O’Malley. “Make sure this man doesn’t forget why we’re here.”
Then he was back in the cargo hold, pausing to snatch his HK416 and helmet from the nylon bench. He slung the rifle across the front of his blood-spattered plate carrier and strapped the helmet tight over his head, then moved to open the troop door. He held up his hand to the men around him, all five fingers extended. “Five minutes.“
***
At forty-three, Porter had almost two decades on the men around him, but their cocky smiles and easy confidence as they stretched and double-checked their weapons and gear reminded him of when he’d first come to Kabul as a twenty-four-year-old Navy SEAL with bright eyes and an eagerness to make a difference.
“Loyalty to Country and Team” was the code he’d lived by, and that loyalty was the reason Porter and so many of his brothers had returned to Afghanistan, again and again. But somewhere during the twenty-year war, Porter had lost faith in the mission. He’d grown tired of risking his ass for a country and a people that at best didn’t seem to want his help, and at worst tried every way it possibly could to kill him.
Osama bin Laden was dead. The lives of innocent Americans back home were no longer at stake here, not the way they’d been when Porter had first arrived in-country. Still, the war dragged on, and Porter could see no real benefit to it except to line the pockets of the weapons manufacturers back home who kept feeding the machine, sending young American lives to be slaughtered thousands of miles from their homes.
Somewhere along the way, Porter had grown sick of risking his life and getting nothing in return. He’d given twenty years to this godless place. He was damn sure going to walk away with something for his trouble.
“One minute,” the copilot announced.
Porter raised his index finger and the men pushed themselves to their feet and shuffled toward the rear of the helo, past the door gunners hunched expectantly behind the pair of M134 miniguns mounted behind the cockpit.
Ordinarily, Porter would have preferred to land short of the target and close the distance on foot, using the cover of darkness and perhaps an orbiting AC-130 gunship or a CIA drone to mask their approach. But this little excursion was in no way a sanctioned hit, and Porter didn’t have any air assets to protect his men. If something went wrong, this was going to have to be a down and dirty fight.
“Target building coming up,” the copilot advised over the radio. “Looks like we’ve got a welcoming party out front.”
“I see ’em,” the door gunner said, spooling up the minigun.
“Light them up,” Porter told him. Knowing that the Taliban fighters gathered below wouldn’t be expecting the ambush-and that even if they were, there wasn’t a hell of a lot they could do about it now.
The pilot brought the helo in low and fast, and Porter braced himself against the strut watching the first tracers come coiling up from the ground like a multicolored snake. In retaliation, the door gunner mashed down on his trigger and the minigun roared to life, flame spitting from its six rotating barrels. The gunner hosed the rooftop, the two-hundred-round burst of 7.62x51mm bullets from the minigun cutting through the fighters like a flail, sending a cloud of torn flesh and bone drifting down to the street below.
The gunner relaxed the trigger. “All clear.”
A second later, the pilot pulled back on the stick and the helo flared like a stallion, the downdraft from the rotors sending a wall of dust and debris tumbling over the collection of mud-brick buildings and terraced gardens built into the side of the mountain.
Porter leapt from the helicopter the moment the rear wheel touched the earth, the impact of his boots against the hard dirt sending a lightning bolt of pain through his knees. The sudden surge of pain might have sent another man to the ground, but Porter’s adrenaline was pumping, and he made himself ignore it.
He hooked right and brought his rifle up to his shoulder, the exhaust from the turbine hot as a blowtorch on the back of his neck. He held his breath and started toward the target building just as a man stepped out of the alley with an AK-47.
The fighter lifted the rifle at Porter, but before he could fire, Porter was already on the trigger of his HK. He fired twice, the pair of Black Hills 77-gram hollow points punching through the other man’s sternum at 2,700 feet per second.
The impact rocked the fighter back on his heels, the clatter of the rifle to the ground muted by the roar of the Mi-17 lifting skyward.
Porter held security on the alley and waited for his team to catch up, studying the target building out of the corner of his eyes. Compared to the rest of the village, the aluminum façade of the target looked like something from another planet.
But Porter had seen enough of the modular buildings being unloaded from the backs of C-17s to know they weren’t from another world; they were from Texas. Each one custom-built for the Provincial Reconstruction Teams who thought they could buy the people’s loyalty by providing infrastructure to the more rural areas.
This one had been set up as a medical clinic. And though it had been installed here to help Afghan citizens, civilians, and perhaps the odd member of the Afghan National Army, Porter knew the equipment inside was now being used to treat Taliban fighters instead. And while Porter couldn’t have truly cared anymore, one way or the other, there was one particular patient inside who he very much wanted to see.
The rapid-fire chatter of another AK from one of the target’s windows brought him quickly back to the present. But before he could lift his rifle onto the target, one of his men sent a 40-millimeter high-explosive grenade arcing through the window, the explosion killing the fighter and blowing the glass out of every window on the west side of the building.
“Ten minutes,” Porter told the mercenaries over the radio, starting his stopwatch.
For most teams, it was an impossible time hack, but Porter had spent the last year drilling his men for just this moment, and the commandos worked through the lethal ballet with a confidence born of thousands of repetitions.
The point man moved to the window on the left side of the door and grabbed a frag grenade from his kit. He pulled the pin and released the spoon, hesitating a couple of seconds before tossing the grenade through the window.
There was a panicked shout from inside the building, followed by the resounding boom of the grenade, and the crash as a mercenary booted down the front door. Then the team was flowing through the breach, Porter pausing to activate the GoPro attached to his helmet before following them in.
With most of the wounded inside the clinic confined to beds, the assault was over almost before it had begun, and Porter’s men made light work of the few combatants inside still able to lift a weapon. Leaving Porter with nothing to do but record the bedridden Taliban begging for their lives.
Porter had seen the atrocities the Taliban had committed on their comrades in Kandahar-seen the pinched faces and thousand-yard stares of the refugees fleeing north to Kabul. There would be no quarter.
While Porter filmed, his men walked calmly between the beds, dispatching the wounded fighters with double taps to the chest. For the few who managed to drag themselves to the back of the building and lock themselves into the surgical rooms, his men used frags.
“Sir.” A voice behind him. One of the mercenaries-one of the younger guys, Spinarski. “I think we found the target,” he said, meeting Porter’s gaze with worried eyes. “But it looks like someone got to him first.”
2
Porter followed Spinarski through the ruins of the clinic. Past the beds of lifeless bodies that lay in bloody rows down the length of the small building, to a row of private rooms at the rear. There, two more mercenaries waited, their HK416s pointed down at the floor, their expressions as troubled as Spinarski’s.
All three men watched Porter as he looked past them through the doorway, as his eyes took in the scene that awaited him.
For most of the men on the Mi-17 tonight, this hit was supposed to be just one last kick at the Taliban before everyone went home, a last-second, garbage-time, moral victory for the good guys that would remind the enemy that American soldiers still weren’t to be fucked with, no matter if the war was over or not. One last hit to celebrate on the plane ride back Stateside, end the war on a positive note. One last good battle story to tell your buddies at the bar.
Only Porter and a few of his men knew the real reason they’d come here tonight. To this medical clinic, in this part of Afghanistan. Only a few of Porter’s men knew they’d come here for the man who lay dead in the bed in front of Porter.
The dead man’s name was Akhtar Mansour, and he was Taliban, but not a fighter. No, Mansour was a bagman, a money guy. And though Dominic Porter desperately wanted him dead, he’d expected to have to be the one who pulled the trigger.
But someone had gotten to Mansour first. The bagman had been stabbed to death; he’d bled out where he lay, beside the dialysis machine that Porter knew was the reason he came here, three times a week, from whichever hole in the desert he called home.
“What the hell is going on here?” Porter asked his men. His mind struggling to compute the implications of what he was seeing. “Who found him?”
“I did, sir,” Spinarski said. “He was long gone before I even opened the door.”
“Get the rest of the team out of here. I don’t want anyone seeing this. Not until we figure out what the hell we’re dealing with.”
He crossed to Mansour’s body. The bagman wore a tunic and trousers, his head wrapped in a white turban. As Spinarski closed the door to the private room, Porter pulled on a pair of latex gloves and proceeded to pat down Mansour’s body. The man was rail-thin and bony beneath his clothes; Porter found a holster for a sidearm at his hip, but no pistol, and nothing else.
Porter removed the dead man’s turban. Unfurled it and let it hang over the floor, but nothing fell out of the folds of cloth. Maybe it’s your lucky day, he thought. Maybe this bastard screwed some other haji’s wife and tonight just happened to be the night he got what was coming to him.
Porter searched the rest of the room. The tables with syringes and gloves and swabs, the cabinets full of clean towels, saline solution. He saw signs of a struggle, the tubes of the dialysis machine ripped out of Mansour’s arm, dangling and forgotten, the bed lying askew and the bedclothes torn and disheveled.
A knock at the door. Spinarski. “Sir?”
“Not now,” Porter called back.
Spinarski pushed the door open an inch. Peered in. “Sir, you’re going to want to hear this.”
Damn it.
Porter scanned the room one more time. Then he turned to the door and followed Spinarski back out into the carnage of the main room. The mercenary gestured with the barrel of his rifle to a figure on the floor, a few feet away. A man in his thirties, wearing medical scrubs. The floor around him pooled with fresh blood.
Maybe Taliban, maybe not. But either way, he was helping the bastards.
The man was alive, Porter saw. Barely. As Porter watched, he groaned, opened his eyes and reached, feebly, toward Porter.
“He says he’s a doctor,” Spinarski told Porter. “Says he knows what happened to Mansour.”
The dying man nodded. Drew one hand, weakly, across his throat. “Killed,” he whispered, in English.
Porter crouched down beside the man. “Yeah, no shit someone killed him,” he said in Pashto. “I want to know who.”
The dying man took a shallow, ragged breath. Winced from the pain. “A man,” he said. “Older than… me. Army, I think. Afghan. Not white.”
“What else?” Porter asked. “Why was he here? Who was he?”
The dying man tried to shrug. The effort clearly exhausting, and painful. “He took something.” He coughed, wincing again. “I think… a computer drive. Small.”
Porter felt a jolt of electricity through his body. This was bad. “Where did he go? Who the hell was he? What kind of computer drive?”
But the man on the floor had no more answers. He coughed again, weaker this time. Stared up at Porter, his eyes beseeching. “Please,” he whispered. “Help.”US
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Dimensions | 0.9000 × 4.1300 × 7.5000 in |
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