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Authors: R. J. Hillhouse

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He patted down the prisoner and found a small sidearm and took it. The man continued to pray loudly, moving his head with the beat of his words.
“Is kut!”
Hunter shouted to shut him up as he pulled out a zip-tie. He was tightening it around the tango's wrists when Stella shined an infrared light into the man's face.

Hunter froze.

He was trained not to forget faces and this one had been etched into his mind—in Afghanistan where the man had been posing as a Taliban. At the time Hunter had understood from some of the other operators that the guy was some kind of an undercover operative.

Hunter wasn't sure who he worked for, but Hunter guessed the
Other Government Agency
—the CIA. He wasn't going to blow the spook's cover, not even with Stella, so he barked orders at him in Arabic and pulled him to his feet. The sound of gunfire in the courtyard had now slowed to only an occasional shot. In less than fifteen seconds after exiting the Cougar, the action was over.

 

Camille searched the room, moving quickly. G
ENGHIS
walked behind her and muttered under his breath, just loud enough for her to hear. “Should've neutralized him. You're going to get someone killed someday.”

She ignored him, turned the XM8 around and smashed its butt into a mirror. It shattered with a high-pitched ring and the shards fell. A stash of computer disks and papers were in a cavity in the wall behind it. She pulled them out and stuffed them into her cargo pockets. An oriental carpet hung on the wall and a kilim and pillows covered a sofa. She threw the pillows onto the floor and ripped away the tapestry, revealing a long wooden crate. The lid was not nailed shut, so she picked it up and moved it aside. Inside was a three-inch diameter tube, about a meter and a half long with Russian markings. Camille immediately recognized the SA-7, an old Soviet missile that could shoot down a low flying aircraft. Packed around it were slabs of plastic explosives and various types of detonators. She picked up several and looked them over. They had Chinese and Russian markings.

Quality
.

Camille yelled at Hunter, who was hurrying outside with the prisoner. “Someone here's planning a big party, but then I guess you were already invited. So this crap is the big trophy Rubicon was trying to snatch away from me?” Camille motioned toward the crate. “What the hell does Rubicon want with a cache of Russian weapons?”

“I don't know what you're talking about,” Hunter said as he stood at the side of the doorway with the prisoner.

“You've crossed about every line I have. Now get the hell out of here and take your men with you. I don't ever want to see you again unless you're in my crosshairs.” Now she wished she had chosen a shotgun over the XM8; she wanted to pump it for the sound effect.

Chapter Two

[S]ome critics say…that the US government employs private security workers to skirt restrictions by Congress on what US troops can do on the ground, as well as on troop numbers.

—
The Christian Science Monitor
, April 2, 2004, as reported by Ann Scott Tyson

Camp Tornado Point, Anbar Province
3:00
A.M
., Two hours later

At a bend in the Euphrates River, a hodgepodge of hastily constructed plywood structures, prefabricated metal buildings and one of Saddam's bombed-out palaces housed most of the private military corporations and the command center of the Marines in that area of operation. Skirting political pressure not to deploy more troops to Iraq, the Pentagon had quietly increased the number of boots on the ground with soldiers from private military corporations. Other companies were there, claiming to work for the State Department, even though everyone knew there were no diplomats in Anbar. Like their Marine colleagues, most of the contract soldiers in the camp were now returning from their nightly PT, cleaning and stowing their war gear for the next day. Hunter had already taken off his gear and only carried a knife, his sidearm and a couple of extra mags. He walked across the compound toward Rubicon's local corporate offices. He knew he should be thinking about why some corporate executive would want to meet with him in the middle of the night, but he couldn't get the confrontation with Stella out of his head.

His chest ached a little from where she had shot him. The last thing he wanted was physical pain and a telltale bruise to remind him of the pain of losing her. He was afraid things had gone too far this time—that she'd never forgive him even if he could explain that, technically, he hadn't really betrayed her. His gut told him that they'd hit the point where sorting out facts didn't matter.

But it did matter to him. Hunter Stone was the kind of guy who still believed in right and wrong, even if Stella didn't.

He yawned and hoped the meeting would be short because he still had to finish his report about the evening's raid before hitting the rack.

A civilian Hunter had never seen there before showed him into the office and introduced himself as Kyle. He was the type not seen very often in Iraq—slight build, meticulously groomed and with a certain metrosexual air about him that told Hunter he would never be seen wearing khaki, let alone carrying a gun. But Hunter knew better than to believe the image Kyle projected. He was probably a hardened operative who could kill someone with a Twinkie.

“You mind telling me what this is all about?” Hunter said as he crossed his arms.

“Wait here and Mr. Ashland will join us in a moment.”

“Who's Ashland?”

“Someone at a higher pay grade than you.”

 

Mr. Ashland backed into the room, still talking to someone in the hallway. He wore tan Royal Robbins 5.11s that gave no indication of his rank, but made it easy to blend in with fifty thousand other contractors in Iraq. Ashland closed the door and turned around and Hunter knew why he was being called to the meeting—or at least what had prompted it. The short beard and moustache were gone, but his dark curly hair was still there. Hunter couldn't mistake the aquiline nose, deep-set brown eyes and short chin. He'd seen them only hours ago, back when the man was repeating platitudes about Allah's greatness on the floor of the insurgents' safe house.

Ashland was the tango Stella had captured, the one Hunter had recognized as Taliban in Afghanistan, and now the guy was posing as a Rubicon executive. The spook sure got around.

Ashland sailed a photo across the cheap wooden desk.

“You know this man?”

Hunter picked up it up and glanced at it a little longer than he needed to in order to buy some time to strategize his answer. Hunter held Ashland's gaze and he was sure he knew Hunter had recognized him, so he assumed whatever game he was playing was for Kyle's benefit. He decided to play along—for now. “The dude looks kinda familiar, but I'm not sure I can place him. Close cropped hair, 5.11s and everyone here starts to look alike.”

Ashland tossed him another picture. It was grainy and very dark, but showed Hunter at a loading dock, removing a crate from the back of a Ford Expedition.

“The good-looking guy is me. The other one is the dude from the first picture.” Hunter smiled, but Ashland didn't respond.

“What are you doing in the photo?”

“My job. I'm transferring an arms cache we seized from insurgents to the EOD guys at ZapataEngineering. We do it every time we find weapons during a snatch and grab or a take down. We've been finding a lot of those lately—the intel seems to be getting better.”

“What happens next?”

“I come back inside the wire, go to my hootch and jack off.”

Ashland glared at Hunter, but without the intensity Hunter expected from someone really trying to learn about the photos. Hunter had been through brutal interrogations both in SERE training and in the field where he had been captured and held by the North Koreans and by Saddam. This was no interrogation. Ashland's thoughts were elsewhere. Whatever was going on right now was a formality. Hunter shoved the photos toward Ashland.

“What happens to the explosives once you hand them over to Zapata?” Ashland said.

“I'm guessing the EOD guys blow them up—they live for that. That's been the SOP with seized weapons since day one.” Hunter knew this wasn't true. His investigation had found that Rubicon was keeping the caches and shipping the weapons out of the country, but he hadn't yet learned the destination.

“Do you know of any cases in which seized weapons weren't destroyed?”

“Not any big stuff.”

“So you are aware of some arms caches being diverted away from the disposal units?”

“Not on my watch.”

“But you do know of some seized arms that were not destroyed?”

“Come on, every guy who's ever served here in Babylon has some kind of a trophy.”

“Do you have a trophy?”

“This is all the trophy I need from this hellhole—a scar I'll never heal from.” Hunter rolled up his left sleeve. A heart tattoo on his bulging bicep was ripped in two by pink scar tissue. The letter J was mostly intact, but the remaining tattooed letters had been stretched, cut away or were so poorly seamed that they were illegible. “Tattered heart says it all.”

“Who did you turn the arms caches over to?”

“I told you. ZapataEngineering.” Hunter pointed to the top picture. “You even have a picture of me doing it. So what's the problem?”

“Zapata has no record of receipt.”

“That's bullshit. The guy signed for them every time, plus he always gave us a Zapata bill of lading.”

“You mean these.” Kyle pulled a stack of documents from his attaché case and waved them at Hunter.

Hunter reached out for the papers and quickly glanced through them. “Yeah, these are the ones. And that's my signature on the bottom of each of them. Proof they got them.”

“Zapata confirmed that these aren't their documents and the man in the photo has never worked for them.”

“Then who the hell was I handing the arms caches over to?”

“You tell us.”

“Zapata.”

“Do you have any idea how much those arms are worth?”

“I'm a shooter, not a businessman.”

“Can you explain this?”

Ashland's aide handed Hunter a statement from a savings account at Bank of America.

“Let me see that. I don't bank there.” Hunter studied the statements. The cover name, fake social security number and the faux Mrs. were the ones that Force Zulu had created for him as part of the cover identity used to infiltrate Rubicon, but they had not gone this far.

“This is your account—Greg Bolton and Julia Lewis-Bolton with your social security number—and it has some big deposits every month. Twenty-six thousand, thirty-two thousand. There's even one for over forty-k. They start a few weeks after you became deputy project manager at Rubicon and got command of your own team.”

“Where's the money coming from?” Hunter said, still holding the statements.

“All of the deposits are from a business registered in the Bahamas that's tied to an Islamic charity. And guess who that charity happens to be charitable to—al-Zahrani and his al Qaeda faction.”

“This is total bullshit. Someone's trying to set me up and you know it.” Hunter took a deep breath and wondered if his cover had been blown, if they knew the Pentagon had infiltrated their operation and if the accusation of theft and arms trafficking were Rubicon's attempt at getting him out of the picture without tipping their hand, but that still didn't explain what Ashland was doing in the insurgent safe house or what he was doing working for Rubicon, for that matter. Hunter suddenly considered that maybe Ashland was doing both Rubicon and the Agency. Ever since Rumsfeld created Force Zulu, a cold war had been raging between the two clandestine services. It wouldn't be the first time that the CIA had sent someone to spy on a Zulu operator to make sure that the Pentagon didn't beat them to any significant intel prize. “Sir, I need to talk to you privately about something.”

“Anything you have to say you can say in front of my aide, Mr. Kyle.”

“Not this.”

“I said anything.”

“Suit yourself.” It was time to go on the offensive. “What were you doing dressed up as a
muj
in the insurgent's compound tonight?”

“I don't know what you're talking about,” Ashland said with a smile. “You must have mistaken me for someone else.”

“Right. Add a scruffy beard, ratty moustache and some smelly rags and everyone here starts to look alike. And the same goes for Afghanistan where I saw you last. You were dressed up like one of the Taliban goat fuckers.”

“You're in serious trouble.”

“Why is a Rubicon exec hanging out with tangos? And not with just any tangos, but some with a lot of serious toys.” Hunter glanced at Kyle's face. He displayed no signs of astonishment, so whatever his boss had been up to in the safe house, he was also involved.

“Ridiculous accusations will get you nowhere.”

“So did you really go private with Rubicon or are you still spying for the Agency?” Hunter said as he stood to leave, inching his hand toward his SIG Sauer.

“I think this conversation is over.” Ashland stood as well. “Mr. Kyle will escort you to our detention facility and see that you're on the next transfer shuttle to our Abu Ghraib facility.”

Hunter drew his pistol just as Ashland and Kyle reached for theirs. Kyle blocked the door.

“I have another matter I need to attend to,” Ashland said as he moved toward the door. “Mr. Kyle will see you to the facility. I'm sure we can clear this misunderstanding up in the morning.” Ashland forced a crooked smile and made brief eye contact with Hunter as he left the room.

Hunter recognized the icy gaze of a man who had just ordered an execution.

 

Kyle pointed a HK .45 at Hunter. It looked ridiculously oversized in Kyle's petite hand.

“I'm not going to cause you any trouble,” Hunter said, pretending to slowly lower his weapon. His training as a spook told him it was best to let Rubicon play things out—at least until they were outside of the building in the darkness—but, more than anything, Hunter was a warrior and this part of him wanted to fight his way out.

Suddenly, the door burst open. Kyle shifted his aim toward the intruder.

Stella stomped into the room, glaring at Kyle. She had removed her Kevlar vest and the bulky ceramic plates. Her sidearm was still holstered to her leg, her knife strapped to her ankle. Her brunette hair was pulled back into a pony tail and her Under Armour T-shirt clung to her, accentuating her curves. She glanced at Hunter without acknowledging him.

She kept moving toward Kyle, who still pointed the gun at her. “What the hell does Rubicon think it's doing stealing my jobs? And put that gun away now,” Stella said in a commanding voice a drill sergeant would envy.

“I don't think I've had the pleasure, madame.” Kyle lowered his aim, but kept the weapon pointed at her hip.

“Lower your weapon.”

Stella still ignored Hunter as she focused on Kyle. Hunter took it as a hopeful sign that she didn't feel the need to protect her flank from him, then he realized how desperate his thoughts were.

As she held Kyle's gaze, she took a deliberate step toward him and he inched closer to the plywood wall. Hunter knew better than to interfere. He would much rather be facing Kyle's pistol than Stella's temper. For a moment, he pitied Kyle. He knew the fool believed he had the advantage because she hadn't drawn a weapon. The poor bastard didn't understand that he was facing the force majeure that was Stella.

“Rubicon is not going to fuck with me anymore. Put it down now,” Stella said, pushing into his personal space. Kyle stared at Stella's perky breasts as she backed him against the wall. Now he was having second thoughts about trading places with Kyle.

“Don't come any closer.”

“You afraid of an unarmed girl? Oh, I get it. You don't like girls.” Stella turned her upper body as if moving away, then without warning she pivoted, clearing herself from the line of fire. In a single flow of movement, she put her hand on the gun, twisted his wrist backwards, then used her other hand to shove his wrist into further pain until he let go. She snatched the weapon and sprang backwards like a cat.

BOOK: Outsourced
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