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Authors: Keith Douglass

Deathrace (25 page)

BOOK: Deathrace
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“Move it,” Murdock said to his mike. “Run. Douglas get us to the fucking gate.”

They took some fire from the stragglers around the tank, but nobody got hit. They went to the side a block past more buildings, then the civilian pointed straight ahead, and they found the gate at the end of a street with no buildings.

Murdock had them on a no-shooting rule. No reason to let the bad guys know where they were.

They made it almost to the gate at the fence when the assembly building blew up. At first it was one jolting explosion, then the rest of the TNAZ went off sympathetically and the sky lighted up like a fresh sun. It billowed upward for ten seconds, then they could hear lumber and pieces of metal falling to the ground.

Murdock shot the lock off the steel gate, and the jeep drove through.

He stopped them a hundred feet down the road, and used the radio. “Magic, where are you guys? Did you fade down the fence to the entry point?”

For a moment he heard nothing. He repeated the words. Then a scratchy voice came through.

“Yeah, we moved along the wire. Haven’t seen you spooks. Where the hell are you? Passed our entry point. Gate is still wired shut.”

“Keep going the same direction. We’re at the east end of the plant, just went through a gate in the wire. Get your SEAL asses down here pronto.”

“Like to, L-T, but we got ourselves one huge shitpot full of trouble. About twenty of these hairy-assed Iranians between us and you. They look shit-faced mean after that building blew up. You did good work on it.”

“How far are you past the hole in the fence?” Murdock asked.

“Thirty yards, still a quarter mile to where I see the end of the buildings your way.”

“How’s your ammo supply?”

“Damned near zero. I got two rounds for the fifty, maybe half a belt for the MG, no forties.”

“Hang tough, we’re coming after you.”

Everyone heard the exchange. The troops moved up to Murdock, and waited. “Franklin, Holt, stay here with Douglas and Kat. The rest of you on your horses. We double time until we spot some of the Iranian assholes along the fence.”

They trotted, with Lampedusa out front, in a semipatrol formation. Lam led them by thirty yards. It was so dark they couldn’t see him. They had moved forward to the fence and along it for fifty yards, toward where they had entered the compound, when Lam hit his mike twice, and they all went to ground. Murdock crawled forward until he found Lam.

“So?”

“Thirty yards ahead. Maybe two dozen camel eaters. They been firing now and then up the pike.”

“Move up, no noise,” Murdock said in his mike.

Two minutes later the SEALs had spread out in an assault formation, in a line five yards apart.

“Fraggers,” Murdock said. Every man had at least two. “Both” he added on the radio. He gave the men a minute to get the hand bombs out of their vest pockets. Then he pulled the pin on his first grenade.

“Now,” he said. He threw his grenade forward. He heard some grunts as the other men threw their bombs. The ten fraggers went off in quick succession. They could hear wails of pain and fury ahead of them. They took some fire from the Iranians, but the second throw of grenades silenced those weapons.

“Magic, you guys all A-OK?”

“Right as rain, Boss.”

“We’re moving up to clean house. Don’t shoot at us.”

Murdock took the first four men he could see and waved them forward. They had their weapons ready for assault fire as they ran along the uneven Iranian hillside. They saw two Iranians running toward the fence. They let them go. There were no survivors on the playing field.

“Double time, Magic. Get your team up here so we can haul ass. The whole place is going to be charging out here looking for our hides in about ten minutes.”

The five SEALs squatted, waiting for their men to arrive. They came three minutes later, two running, one limping badly. Magic had the limp.

Gonzalez carried the big fifty McMillan. Ronson watched Magic.

“Fucking glad to see you shebangers,” Magic said. “We stayed in our place about ten minutes too long. We shoulda busted out of there before they got the troops in front of us.”

“You hit, big guy?” Murdock asked.

“Just a scratch. I can move. Which way?”

They retraced their steps along the fence, toward the gate at the far end.

“Coming in,” Murdock said on the mike, and they teamed up with the rest of the group.

“Now we get this outfit in gear and move down the road. We’ve got one more job to do.”

They hit the downslope almost at once, and Murdock let Douglas turn on the jeep’s lights. The road was old, not kept up, made of dirt and filled with runoff gouges and ditches. The going was slow.

After ten minutes, they had left the nuke factory behind and were coming to the first good-sized hill to their left. The road ran directly to what must have been a quarry of some kind.

“Drive it right up to the wall,” Murdock said. Kat
scampered out. They had left the civilian at the opened gate, and saw him run back toward the main buildings.

“Get some TNAZ up here,” Murdock called. Half the men still carried blocks of the powerful explosive. They brought it up, and Murdock placed it beside, in front of, and behind the jeep, against the heavy rock and dirt of the cliff overhead. He tied the charges together with primer cord, and stood there a moment taking a compass bearing.

“We’ll be heading almost due south,” he said.

Kat came up and nodded. “Bury the plutonium under hundreds of tons of dirt and rock. Yes, about the best we can hope for. Make sure you use enough explosive.”

Murdock put four more quarter-pound chunks on the wall, then moved the people a hundred yards down the gully before he set the timers for ten minutes. He pushed the three timers to on, then jogged down to the rest of the group.

The explosion was larger than the one at the nuke assembly building. The sky lit up again. This time the blast came in the open, and sounded louder than a hundred 105 howitzers going off together. A few rocks flew through the air as far as the SEALs, but none of them was hurt.

“Doc, take a casualty report. Kat and I are going back to check on that explosion. We’ll be back in five. Get the troops ready to travel, DeWitt.”

They ran up to the still smoking and dusty side of the mountain. The rock slide extended fifty yards on all sides from where they had parked the jeep and its deadly load. There must be a hundred feet of rock and dirt over the plutonium. It could be dug out, but the Iranians would have to be sure that was what was under there. Kat figured they wouldn’t bother.

“If they could get that much plutonium, they can get some more. At least we stopped them this time.”

They ran back to the other SEALs, put on their gear, and kept moving down the valley.

“We’ll get as far away from the place as we can while it’s
still dark,” Murdock told the men on the Motorola. “Then we’ll hole up during the day while they try to find us. Yes, they’ll be coming. They don’t have the chopper, but they do have a spotter plane, Douglas said. We might ask Magic to shoot it down if they find us.

“I’ve got a suggestion. We’re not going to need those damned Drager rebreathers for a long time. They weigh too much for us land-type SEALs. Let’s ditch them here, and travel lighter. We won’t worry about name brands now. Our job is to get our asses out of here and to the wet. I figure we have about fifty miles due south to the Gulf of Oman. There’s supposed to be a sub out there somewhere waiting for us. Doc, find me.”

Murdock heard the men unstrapping the rebreather units and dropping them. They could be tied to the U.S., but right then, Murdock wasn’t worried about that. He had a platoon to get over fifty miles of enemy territory. He’d do it any way that he could.

They worked ahead in their usual combat formation with Joe Lampedusa out front, and then First Squad, with Murdock leading.

Doc Ellsworth came up and paced beside Murdock. “We have any casualties?”

“Fernandez took a round in the right arm. Not too bad. I got it treated, and wrapped up. He’s fit for service. The sprained ankle hasn’t been bothering whoever had it. Sterling got a graze on his shoulder, just a scratch. Band-Aid time.

“Magic is the worst. He has a round in his left thigh. It could have hit the bone, I’m not sure, but I do know the slug didn’t come out. In way too deep for me to try to dig out the lead. That gives us three days at the most before he loses the leg. He tells me he can walk. Every step is hurting him. Not sure how much longer he can take it. I gave him two shots of morphine. It’ll get worse every hour.”

Murdock talked to his mike. “SEALs, we’ve been lucky
so far. Some nicks and scratches and two bullet wounds. We have fifty miles to go, and when they figure out where we’re heading, there will be all kinds of troops in here after us. Iran has over a half million men under arms, a good air force, a few naval ships, and a well-trained and armed army corps. They didn’t have much up here at the plant, but you can bet your bottom babushka that they’ll be coming after us now with everything they have. Choppers, paratroops, the works. We’ve got to remain as invisible as possible. No, Magic, you won’t be trying to shoot down that spotter plane or any choppers. We’re gonna dig a lot of holes on this one.”

Murdock pushed the light on his watch.

“It’s now 2136. We were on-site too long, but nothing we can do about that now. We have about eight hours of darkness to move our asses. We go at the speed of our weakest man. We didn’t tap any kegs of water in there, so let’s take it easy on drinking. We may have to make it last for two more days. No water between here and the coast unless somebody is good with a staff against a hard rock.”

Murdock heard a few chuckles and figured they were the Bible students.

“Lam, keep us on a due south course unless a valley shows that will keep us out of climbing up and down these damn mountains. We can zigzag a little and make better time, so be it. Now, let’s settle down and put in a good six miles an hour. Even if we can average four an hour, that will put us halfway to the bloody Gulf of Oman before daylight.”

He dropped back and walked beside Kat.

“How’s it going, SEAL lady?”

She grinned. “So far I haven’t had to fire a shot. Maybe I’m a little disappointed. The bombs were not even halfdone. They won’t be able to salvage anything from those blasts to use for new bombs. We’ve put their program back at least a year.”

“Good. Now, about you. When I talked about going the speed of our weakest man, I didn’t mean you. Magic Brown
has a shot-up leg. He’ll slow us down. As long as he’s conscious, he’ll walk. They’ll be coming after us, so don’t lose your shooting eye. You’ll have plenty of times to test it out before we get wet.”

Kat looked at Murdock in the Iranian darkness. He liked the gleam of determination he saw in her eyes.

25

Wednesday, November 2
2100 hours
Nuclear bomb factory
Chah Bahar, Iran

General Reza Ruhollah had been outside his commandeered headquarters at the bomb plant and on his way to where his men reported a firefight was in progress with aggressors. He was furious.

“How the hell did anyone find us?” he had asked his major aide. Then he shook his head. “If they did find us, how did they get through our security? Call out the rest of the military guard. Do it now.”

The major scurried away from the staff car where he had been talking to the general through the window. He headed for the nearest building with a phone.

General Ruhollah had just ordered his driver to head for the bomb assembly plant, when the gigantic explosion rocked the whole area and turned the night into a false dawn as one thundering blast roared toward him and then on past with a surging rush of gale-force wind.

“What in hell?” Ruhollah stepped out of the car and stared ahead. Two hundred yards away, flames lit the sky. He bolted back in the car.

“Drive,” he shouted. “Get to that fire. Now!”

The driver started the car and drove ahead. A block closer to the fire he had to jog around debris in the road that evidently had been blasted there by the explosion. Half a block from the fire the driver stopped. A truck lay on its side in the road where it had been blown from near the bomb assembly building.

“Far as we can drive, sir,” the driver said.

The general pushed open the door and stepped out. A wall of heat hit him and drove him back a step.

“How could this happen?”

He looked around. A half dozen officers had gathered just out of the heat zone. He called to them, and they came over and saluted.

“How bad is the damage?”

“General, sir. The entire assembly plant has been blasted out of existence. We’re not sure if it was a malfunction of some of our explosives to be used in the bombs, or something else.”

“Explosives in a nuclear bomb?”

“Yes, my General. Ten or twelve powerful ones set in a circle around the device. The mechanism will squirt tritium into the core at the moment the explosives ignite. This generates large quantities of neutrons to boost the fission reaction. That reaction in turn blasts more neutrons into another tritium supply, causing a fusion reaction. We were projecting about four hundred and fifty kilotons for each bomb.”

“How could this explosion happen?” General Ruhollah bellowed. “I want a complete investigation. Wasn’t there an attack from outside the wire tonight? How did that happen? Did we catch the attackers? Someone told me that there were some lights shot out in one section of the fence. Who did this? Is there a chance that there was some kind of invasion of our facility?”

“Yes, my General. We have had reports of a small enemy
force inside the wire. They killed a large number of our troops, and evidently forced all the civilian workers out of the bomb assembly building. They were military of some kind. The civilians did not recognize any insignia or style of uniform.”

“Why wasn’t I told about this before now?” General Ruhollah screeched, his face turning red.

“We only now found out. There was an officers party for our commander’s birthday, and—”

“Idiots. You’ll all be shot, of course. Consider yourself under house arrest. Go now.”

BOOK: Deathrace
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