Hung (18 page)

Read Hung Online

Authors: Holly Hart

BOOK: Hung
2.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"
E
cho Company
, Echo Company, come in," I hear Tommy scream into the receiver to my left. I cling on to the M4 carbine clipped to my bullet-proof vest like it's my ticket out of here, releasing the magazine an inch or two to check it’s fully loaded.

I
know it is
, but it's a ritual, a routine, a way of taking my mind off the fact that there are men firing at me, men that want to kill me – and my dog.

I
put
my hand on Jake's back, pressing it in so that he doesn't panic and stand up. "There boy," I say in a soothing tone of voice. "Help's on its way." He can't understand what I'm saying, but we've been together since I graduated boot camp, and he knows me better than I know myself. My low voice seems to soothe him, and it's nice to have someone to concentrate on, so I keep going. I can feel him trembling, the uncontrollable, terrified movements reverberating up through my arm.

"
E
cho Company
, Echo Company, come in," I hear Tommy repeat into the handset beside me.

"
W
hat's going on
?" I ask calmly, feeling adrenaline flooding through my system and calming me down, preparing me for the inevitable fight. "Aren't they answering?"

"
I
'm just getting static
," he says as the bullets keep pinging into the soil around us. I clap him on the shoulder to let him know that I'm moving behind him. "Keep trying," I say loudly. "I'm going to lay down some fire." I move towards the squad machine gun mounted at the front of the watch post, knowing that from this altitude I should be able to lay down fire into the whole valley. I reach it, flick off the safety and fire blind downhill, the gun's thunderous kickback luckily being absorbed into its tripod, rather than my arms.

"
E
cho Company
, Echo Company, this is Echo Foxtrot, come in. We're taking fire from down in the valley, and I think there might be a flanking action. Echo Company, repeat, we're taking fire from all sides."

"
A
ny luck
?" I pant, feeding in another ammunition belt. "Maybe, I dunno," he says, pointing down at the green metal of the radio housing, and I notice that at some point it’s been winged by a bullet. "I think there's a chance they might be receiving this, but I'm definitely not getting anything back."

I
lay
down another round of weapons fire. "Come here," I bark at Tommy, feeling a natural, comfortable aura of authority beginning to emanate from me ever more strongly the longer this fight goes on. "When I stop firing, I need you to fire your entire magazine. I don't care what you hit, just do it – on automatic, okay?"

H
e runs
the short distance that separates us, crouching down, and nods.

"
G
ot it
, Mike."

I
pull
the trigger back again, watch the yard-long eruptions of flame jumping from the barrel, the odd streak of light as a tracer round shoots off into the valley. "On three," I shout, seeing the ammunition belt is almost empty.

"
O
ne
."

"
T
wo
."

I
fire
the last few rounds one-handed, grabbing my carbine with the other.

"
T
hree
!" I scream, picking up my weapon and nestling it in my shoulder all in one motion, feeling the hard, warm metal against my chin as I rest my head on the stock of the rifle. Beside me, Tommy is standing up, firing his rifle on full automatic. I'm not shooting, not yet at least – I need to take a look at what we're facing.

I
scan
the rocky mountainside below us, not using my scope yet, just looking for movement – and I see it. The valley below us is crawling with activity, dozens of men only a few hundred yards away from us now, mostly crouching down to avoid getting hit or running for cover.

"
W
hat do you see
?" I hear Tommy scream over the din his rifle's making. I don't reply, just look right and left.

I
was right
, there are Taliban coming from each direction, not so many as from down in the valley directly below, but far too many for just Tommy and I to fight, no matter how good we are. I know Tommy is coming to the end of this magazine, so I rest my chin back down my weapon, line my eye up with the scope, and take careful aim. I don't have much time.

A
round me
, everything slows to a crawl. The explosions, the bullet impacts, the screams from the injured below – I don't notice any of it. I line up a target in the scope, time my movements with my breathing, and pull the trigger. The man falls to the ground, deathly injured. I know that Tommy's stopped firing; I can't hear anything to the right of me. I haven't got long. I swivel my rifle to the right, picking out the insurgent closest to our pitiful little outpost, I exhale, I fire, he drops, I drop, clutching my arrival to my chest and leaning back against the sandbags, the world suddenly returning to full speed.

"
A
re you fucking crazy
?" Tommy screams. "You get down when I stop firing, okay? We're going to make it out of this."

H
is bravado can't change
the truth; I know we're not. "How many did you see?" he asks. "I couldn't see what I was shooting at – too much dust."

"
T
oo many
," I gasp. "If they don't come soon, we don't stand a chance." I reach out for my sidearm, gripping the stock firmly in my hand. It feels like an old friend.

"
D
on't let
them take me alive, okay?" I say, completely seriously.

I
don't mind dying
, I've known that that was more than likely to happen ever since I arrived in this godforsaken country – but being taken alive by the Taliban would be a fate worse than death.

T
ommy looks serious
. I don't like seeing him like this, he's usually a boisterous, effervescent ball of life.

"
O
kay
, brother. You'll do the same for me?" he asks quietly, and yet, strangely enough, I can hear him perfectly over the cacophony of the raging battle. I nod. I don't need to say anything else. And then, a humming sound fills the air.

"
Y
ou hear that
?" Tommy screams in elation. "I think it's the god damn air force!"

"
I
can't hear a thing
," I shout back, clicking a new magazine into my M4. It's true, but that doesn't mean a plane's not overhead, it's just that I've gone partially deaf from firing hundreds of fucking bullets into this valley.

"
Y
ou ready to do that
routine again?" I shout over the din. Tommy nods. "Let's mix it up this time," I say, grinning with morbid humor, unclipping two grenades from my belt and tossing one to Tommy.

"
I
like your style
." He grins back, and we pull the pins at the same time, count to five, and then lob them as far as we can downhill.

"
I
'm running low
," Tommy warns, but we need to keep up the covering fire and force the Taliban to stop approaching, at least until we get some help, so I just acknowledge the statement with a grunt.

"
I
'm out
," Tommy informs me next, dropping to his knees to reload and shelter. My machine gun is, too, so I switch to the carbine. I'm not aiming my shots now, not really, just firing madly downhill. I can see the barrel of my gun actually steaming, burning off whatever little vapor there is in this dry air. I see a glint in the distance, sun shining off something, but I don't have the time to look up – it could be a plane, or it could just be a vulture prowling for its next meal. After today, it's not going to struggle.


I
'm out
," I echo, dropping to my knees. Like a well choreographed dance routine, Tommy rises just as I fall, and it's my turn to reload. I grab the magazine from my waist, I eject the last one, I slammed the new one home, I pull back the slide, I get ready to stand.

"
F
uck
."

I
t’s just
one short word, but it's one that will change my life. I look left and I see Tommy standing with a shocked, uncomprehending look on his face, and I watch as his weapon drops to the floor and a crater of red balloons outwards, almost like someone has dropped a can of paint on his chest.

I
crawl over to him
, and Jake's already there – he knows something's wrong. He's licking Tommy's face, whining in a way I've never heard before; it's a terrible, keening, howling sound that I hope I'll never hear again. It's the sound of death.

"
O
h
, fucking hell, Tommy, how you doing buddy?" I say, plastering a smile on my face, but knowing it's not fooling anyone. He's covered in blood, and I press my hands down on the worst wound – the one on his chest, but there's blood pouring out from his shoulder and his leg, and I didn't even see but there's blood coming from his stomach now and I can't stop it. I feel like my thoughts are scrambled, like I don’t know who or what I am anymore.

"
I
'm dying
, Mike. Get out of here," Tommy croaks, his voice gurgling through the blood now pouring down his throat. I know he doesn't have long.

"
I
'm not going anywhere
, Tommy," I say, holding his hand, squeezing it tightly, trying to comfort him.

I
t doesn't matter
– he sighs once, and then he's gone. It's not like in the movies, there's no long, drawn out death – one moment the life is in his eyes, the next it's gone, and all that is left behind is a sense of overwhelming loss. Jake's there, just licking his face frantically, and the sight breaks my heart.

I
roar
, a frightful, unhinged sound, and I stand up, and I don't see people or bullets coming towards me. I just see a red mist of anger and sadness and loss and I depress the trigger and I feel the gun bucking into my shoulder. The pain feels good, and I keep the trigger pulled back; it feels like a bronco is kicking my shoulder and then, just like that, it's all over. The magazine's empty, and I'm just standing there in the open.

A
nd then I
feel a stinging in my thigh, as though an insect has bitten me, and within seconds I realize that it wasn't an insect, because now it feels like a hot rod of burning steel has been plunged into my leg to cool off, and I fall to my knees with shock. Now Jake's come to me, he's licking
my
face, and I know it's the end.

I
'm on my back
, I don't know how that happened, but I can see my leg and it's covered in blood. I put one hand on it, compressing the wound, and Jake's lying on me now, so I hug him, whimpering into my chest.

A
n explosion
. I don't know where it came from, but I feel a scorching, buffeting wind all over me, there's sand flying in every direction and I hear the heavy
whomp whomp
of rotating helicopter blades above me and I close my eyes – the last thing I see is something glinting in the sun, and Katie’s face in my mind, and then it fades to black.

C
hapter Two - Katie

"
I
feel
like I've put on ten pounds since we got here," I say, pouting at Sophie. "Whoever thought they'd build a Pizza Hut out here in the desert…"

I
pick
up another slice and wave it under my nose, teasing myself. At least, that’s what I’m trying to do – but as soon as the scent reaches my nostrils, I recoil and a dizzying wave of nausea overcomes me, sending my head spinning and my stomach turning. I drop the slice back onto the table and lean back, sucking in a huge breath of air.

"
I
know what you mean
," Sophie agrees.

"
I
t wouldn't be so
bad if there was something – anything – else to do, but I feel like all I ever do these days is come here. I'm happy – time for pizza! Oh no, now I'm sad – time for pizza," I say, still puzzling over why I suddenly feel so ill.
Surely my blood sugar isn’t low – I had a pretty good breakfast…

"
I
know
, right," I say. "Couldn't they build a movie theater here or something? I swear I heard someone talking about it…"

"
Y
ou've been here what
, nine months?" Sophie asks me with an amused look on her face. "I've been here three times – I'm coming up on three years in country now, and you know what?"

Other books

Burning Angels by Bear Grylls
Designs in Crime by Carolyn Keene
Love Entwined by M.C. Decker
Hyenas by Sellars, Michael
Long Hard Ride by James, Lorelei