Tags:
Fiction,
General,
Suspense,
Americans,
Thrillers,
Suspense fiction,
Espionage,
Political,
Political Science,
middle east,
Adventure stories,
Terrorism,
Political Freedom & Security,
Harvath; Scot (Fictitious Character),
Americans - Middle East
looking at. The bodies had been tied flush against the ceiling, and the heavy timber braces had completely hidden them from view when the team had first entered the room. Billings was about to say something, when a voice crackled over his radio. It was Russo.
“Alpha One. This is Bravo One. Do you copy? Over.”
Billings, his eyes still fixed on the gruesome scene above him, toggled his transmit button and said, “This is Alpha One. I read you, Jimmy. What have you got?”
“We’ve found somebody, Lieutenant. He appears to be one of the village elders. It looks like he hasn’t eaten in a week, but he’s alive.”
“Where’d you find him?”
“He was hiding behind one of the houses we were checking. My guys think he was foraging for food.”
“Does he know what happened to the rest of the villagers?”
“He says all the survivors are hiding in the mosque. That’s where we’re headed now.”
“Wait a second. Survivors?” repeated Billings. “Survivors of what? And what do you mean they’re hiding in the mosque? What are they hiding from?”
“I’m still trying to figure that out. The old guy keeps repeating some word in Arabic I don’t understand.”
Billings motioned to Rodriguez and then said into his radio, “What’s the word? I’ll see if Rodriguez knows it.”
There was a pause as Russo asked the old man to speak directly into his microphone. Then it came-an intense, raspy voice that sounded like a set of hinges in serious need of oiling, “Algul! Algul! Algul!”
“Did you get that?” asked Russo as the old man backed away from his radio.
Billings looked at Rodriguez and noticed that the soldier’s already ashen face had lost what little color was left. The bodies strapped to the ceiling had gotten to all of the men, but they had to hold it together.
“You ever play Xbox, Lieutenant?” muttered Rodriguez, his eyes still glued to the grotesque forms hovering above them.
“No,” said Billings, who failed to comprehend any connection between a video game and their current situation.
“Algul was the first Arabic word I ever learned. I learned it playing a game on Xbox called Phantom Force.”
Anxious for answers, the lieutenant demanded, “What the fuck does it mean?”
“Loosely translated, it’s a horseleech or a bloodsucking genie, but usually it’s used to describe a female demon who lives in the cemetery and feasts on dead babies. When there are no babies left, it moves on to whoever is left in the village and keeps feeding until no one is left alive. I’ve also heard it’s a derivative of an Arabic word which means living dead and devourer of women and children. However you slice it, Algul is Arabic for vampire.”
Billings was about to tell Mike Rodriguez he was full of shit, when one of the bodies strapped to the ceiling above them opened its mouth and covered the soldiers with a fine mist of bloody froth.
FOUR
OUTSKIRTS OF BAGHDAD
TWO WEEKS LATER
At first, Scot Harvath couldn’t tell if he had been shot or not. After the blinding white flash, his vision was blurred, and all he could hear was the thunderous pulse of blood as it rushed in and out of his eardrums. He had never expected Khalid Alomari to be carrying a third pistol under his robes-a knife, a razor, maybe even a grenade, but not a subcompact. It just proved yet again how desperate the man was.
From somewhere beyond the pounding in his ears, Harvath could hear the voice of his boss, Gary Lawlor, telling him to wait, telling him not to go in without backup, but Harvath had come too far to lose Alomari again.
Dubai, amman, Damascus…the terrorist had always been one, if not two steps ahead. For the past two months, Harvath had been trying to close the gap and capture the man Western intelligence had dubbed the heir apparent to Osama bin Laden. Some of the more flippant analysts and operatives at CIA headquarters in Langley, as well as some in Harvath’s own Office of International
Christine Zolendz, Frankie Sutton, Okaycreations