The Forgotten (John Puller 2)
Page 74
“Superior numbers and firepower.”
“We’re the underdogs, certainly.”
“I don’t mind that. It’ll just take a little figuring to move us to the top of the food chain.”
“I like your confidence.”
She looked at her phone. “Can’t call in the cavalry. No service.”
“I know. I already checked mine.” He hunkered down, looked around.
He said, “We need higher ground.”
“Soldiers always want higher ground.”
He looked at her, apparently sizing her up for the question he was about to ask. “You mind taking orders from an enlisted?”
She managed a smile. “Under the circumstances I think I’m going to insist that I do. I’ve sat behind a desk too long. Your combat boots are fresher than mine are.”
He rubbed a bead of
sweat from his eye. “You think you can hold this position alone?”
In response she scrambled up to the top of the dune, surveyed the beach, and then rejoined him.
“If they have another RPG round to fire, no. But if it’s gun to gun, I can. For about ten minutes if I manage my ammo properly.”
“I won’t need that long. And I’m leaving both pistols with you.” He handed the weapons to her. “What are you going to do?” she asked.
“Get to higher ground.”
“As a sniper? But the rifle jammed on me.” Puller cleared the rifle’s breech, checked the firing mechanism, and pronounced it workable.
She said, “You think anyone heard what happened? The guns, the explosion? We’re not that far out of town.”
“We’re too far out. And the breakers make a lot of noise.”
“Okay.”
“We’ll make it, General.”
“No doubt. But then every soldier wants to believe that. Good luck.”
“It’ll be about more than luck.”
She touched him on the arm. “Counting on you to come back, John.”
“There’s only one thing that will stop me.” Carson knew what that was.
Death.
She drew a long breath and nodded. “Okay.”
Puller slung the rifle over his shoulder and in a few seconds was gone.
Carson blinked. It was like he had simply vanished. And for a man as big as he was, that took some skill.
But then again, he's a Ranger, she thought. That's what they do.
She gripped her Glock, racked the slide, slid her secondary weapon, Puller’s Mu, into the back of her waistband, and took up her defensive position in a slot she burrowed on top of the dune. She was trying to make herself as invisible as possible. You couldn’t kill what you couldn’t get a bead on.
Gun on gun she could hold this piece of sand for a time. But after that it would just be inevitable.
She would die.
And if they fired another grenade she would be blown into little bits of organic matter.
She crossed herself, settled in, and took aim.
CHAPTER 79
Puller had sized up the battlefield and chosen his high ground. Now he knew he simply had to get there “fastest with the mostest.”
And in that he had pretty much summed up the winning strategy of every military campaign ever fought.
When opposed by superior numbers and firepower it was essential to hit the other side fast and hard and in multiple spots. This would hopefully cause confusion, blunt any momentum they might have, and ideally force a tactical retreat.
Puller would be just fine with confusion. But then he would also be just fine with killing all of them.
He found his spot and shimmied up a tree, coming to rest in the crook formed by the trunk and a sturdy limb. He settled his rifle into place and sighted along the scope, dialing in necessary adjustments to fit the wind, distance to target, and other factors.
There were six men. They came on in two groups of three. They were moving in a V shape, one leader and two followers. From Puller’s perch up the tree they looked like two arrowheads moving forward across the sand. They had some military training, he deduced, but not as much as they should have. He scanned behind the men, looking for reinforcements waiting to be deployed. He’d made that mistake at the Sierra; he didn’t intend to make the same error again.
No reserves—they were bringing their full force against one they presumed was a weaker foe.
Puller’s tactics had already been thought out. He didn’t just line up one shot. Like a chess match he was lining up four. Two from each group. That would leave it at two on two, odds he liked much better.
He observed Carson burrowed in on top of the sand dune. He knew she would see the oncoming enemy, but she was holding her fire, awaiting his first strike. Then he knew she would know what to do because she was a soldier just like him. On the battlefield stars, bars, and stripes fell away. You were just two trained fighters using that training to defeat the other side.
He glanced out at the water and saw a curious sight. It looked like a boat coming in. The navigation lights were steady red and green, so it was heading directly to shore.
This might be backup coming from the big boat out there. If so, he had to get this skirmish on the beach over with pronto.
He let out a breath, got his physiological barometer to cold zero, optimal for minimal muscle quiver, and lasered his crosshairs on target number one.
Bang.
Number one went down.
Bang.
Number two hit the sand.
Puller had known what the other four would do when the first two went down.
They scattered. But they scattered in a predictable pattern.
Bang.
Number three went down with one of Puller’s 7.62 NATO rounds blowing a large hole in the man’s chest.
Bang.
This kill shot came from a Glock.
Number four went down and stayed there.
Carson was emptying the clip from her Glock, spraying fields of fire both left and right, which were the only two directions worth aiming at, because it would also cover fore and aft movements.
She dumped her Glock and aimed the Mu but didn’t fire.
The two survivors down there had made it to cover, both from Carson below and Puller above.
But Puller had gotten most of what he had wished for.
It was now two on two.
The only unknown was the boat.
But for that, he would have just played a waiting game, keeping the two pinned down until they lost their patience and made a run for it.
It would have been a short run.
Puller would get one.