War Angel

War Angel

by Michael Salazar
War Angel

War Angel

by Michael Salazar

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Overview

A military adventure that puts you at the scene of some of the most intense covert action—from an Air Force combat crewmember who’s experienced what it’s like to fall from heaven armed for hell…

The War Angel

As a member of the Air Force’s elite pararescue team, Senior Master Sergeant Jason Johnson has been dropped into some of the hottest spots in the world. But this time the mission Johnson has been assigned is the last one he wants to accept. He will be dropped alone into an Afghan war zone and will assume the identity of a rogue drug lord. Once in place, he’ll have to lead a convoy of super opium and weapons across a brutal landscape—straight into the arms of some of the world’s most infamous terrorists. It’s a trap, of course, but who is the bait and who is the victim? Miles inside enemy territory, marked as an international criminal, Johnson is fighting not only for survival but to avenge a past score—and hoping to stay alive for just one more shot at taking his target down for good.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780307418609
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication date: 12/18/2007
Sold by: Random House
Format: eBook
Pages: 304
Sales rank: 739,576
File size: 458 KB

About the Author

Michael Salazar is an Air Force loadmaster instructor with more than nineteen years of service. He is considered one of the Air Force's most experienced persons in search and rescue. Currently assigned to the 920th Rescue Operation Group at Patrick Air Force Base in Florida, his primary mission is to provide combat rescue for fighter pilots. His group also acts as a rescue support for all NASA space shuttle launches, and he is regularly called on for civilian search and rescue.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1



0900 TUESDAY / 11 SEPTEMBER 2001

750 RAMP / PATRICK AIR FORCE BASE / FLORIDA



Jason Johnson stood at the ramp edge of an HC-130 aircraft giving his PJ team last-minute instructions for a water jump at the Judy drop zone on the Banana River.

"You won't believe it!" cried Rolo Perez, the aircraft crew chief, as he came running toward the plane. "Your flight's canceled. Every flight in America's been canceled! Come on!" he yelled, skidding to a stop. "It's on all the TV channels. You won't believe it. I don't fuckin' believe it! Hurry! Run!"

Clueless, everyone jumped off the plane and raced toward the closest television.

Jason shot through the door of the Thirty-ninth Rescue Squadron and into the ops center. "What's going on?"

Everybody was gathered in front of the television hanging on the far wall, all eyes were glued to the unfolding horror.

The North Tower of the World Trade Center in New York was burning. Everyone gasped when suddenly a second jet appeared on the screen and plowed into the South Tower.

Jason's jaw dropped; mouth open wide, he was speechless. It wasn't real. It was more like watching a movie. This couldn't be happening. It wasn't real.

Opinions instantly formed, and the hateful words voiced.

"Damn ragheads!"

"Let's nuke the camel jockeys and turn their desert into a glass parking lot!"

He'd heard all the nasty words before, during Operation Desert Storm. Feeling helpless that there was nothing he could do at the moment, Jason turned from the horror and walked from the ops section and out to the back deck of the squadron.

It was a beautiful sunny Florida day. The sky was blue and a cool breeze blew offshore. But just a three-hour plane flight away hateful murder was happening.

Sirens sounded everywhere. Security police, their red lights flashing, were securing Patrick Air Force Base. Threat Condition Delta was declared: A terrorist act was under way. Every American military installation around the world was going into lockdown. He couldn't remember when that had ever happened.

"They hit the Pentagon!" a voice cried out over the intercom.

"No! Oh my God." Sorrow pierced Jason's heart. The fuckers had struck at the nation's true might: her military brains. And there wasn't a goddamned thing he could do about it! Bewildered, he sat. Confused and lost. It suddenly occurred to him that there was only one place on the base that he could go to for strength. He'd gone there in the past, and he needed to go there more than ever.

Standing in front of the Patrick Air Force Base's memorial for the five airmen murdered by terrorists on June 25, 1996, Jason closed his eyes and remembered the night that he was at the Khobar Towers in Dhahran, Saudi Arabia. At the time he had already been deployed there with the Seventy-first Air Rescue Squadron for more than thirty days.

He couldn't sleep, so he got out of bed and went to work out at the base gym.

In luck, no one was on the Gravitron, his favorite machine, so he had it all to himself. He'd been on it for about twenty minutes and was working up a good sweat. As he was hanging from the machine, first the lights flickered, then there was a low, violent rumble. Before he could blink, a concussion like a giant wave blasted him off the machine and threw him across the room. Instinctively tucking himself into a ball, he rolled, doing somersaults in the air, and crashed into the mirrored wall on the other side of the room.

Glass flew everywhere. He lay there, stunned, for what seemed like forever before he came to his senses. Cut and bleeding from the mirror splinters, he felt nothing as he sprinted toward his building. At first he didn't believe it was possible, seeing massive amounts of smoke but no flames, then he looked to where his room would've been.

He fought to bring out the wounded and the dead, cursing the terrorists who did it and the base commanders, who had known for years that the building was exposed and vulnerable to an attack but had done nothing to protect it.

Everyone from the surrounding buildings worked with the firefighters to put out some of the smaller fires, then helped wherever they could.

It was a night that he'd never forget, no matter how hard he tried. Torn and mangled bodies, some victims so burned and bloody that Matt Winkler, a veteran combat rescue pilot, told Jason that he couldn't tell who was who.

People, comrades and friends, were wounded or dead. He'd even invited Justin Woods to work out with him, but Woody wanted to sleep. He was gone.

Using all his powers as a medical technician, he lost track of time while he tried to help the wounded. The next day he assisted with the grisly and gloomy task of gathering the remains of the dead. He swore revenge that it would never happen again.

Now it was happening all over again and more innocents had been murdered. From Beirut to now, terrorists had made their cowardly strikes against good and decent people. He'd felt the pain for too damn long.

He softly ran his hand over the picture of Kevin "KJ" Johnson, then touched the pictures of all his other air crewmates. Their mission was to save lives. These men were the good guys, lovers, fathers, brothers, and sons. Once friends, now they were pictures on a granite wall. They had touched a hostile world in peace and paid the price for it with their lives.

He sat on a marble bench and dropped his head into his hands. "Man, it never ends," he whispered. His hands started to shake and his whole body trembled.

Jason tried to calm down, but couldn't. He had escaped death's clutches in many places around the world. He'd saved and taken lives--and he was still standing. Having joined the pararescue brotherhood as a young man, the years he had dedicated to saving lives around the world also taught him about all the hatred in the world.

Used, fooled, and betrayed by others in the name of a greater good left him feeling jaded, cynical, and angry. His nightmares never let him sleep. Mind shaken, but not lost, yet. Now millions screamed out for revenge. He learned that revenge only brought more sorrow. But something had to be done.

He stood in front of his dead comrades, came to attention, and slowly saluted.

Then the tears started, and it felt as if they were never going to stop.



1850 / BUILDING 698 /

PATRICK AIR FORCE BASE / FLORIDA



The World Trade Center Towers had collapsed while the Pentagon burned. America was at war, but with whom?

The section came alive as every PJ in the group began showing up, without being called, and started putting their rescue gear together.

Jason finished packing his gear, then walked into his office and sat at his desk. Lost in thought, he jumped when his phone rang. "Hello?"

"You in or out?"

The color drained from his face. Jason knew well the deep baritone voice. "Look, my team is getting ready to go to New York, or anywhere else we get called. Man, you guys can't call on me at a time like this. I don't work for you anymore, remember?"

"We have no hold over you," the deep voice answered. "Of course, you have a pressing mission."

"But you need me more."

"That's right, Alice."

Jason cringed. He hated his code name and all that it represented. Pissed off with all that was going on, he couldn't hold back. "What? To get screwed by you guys, like usual, and then leave me holding the shitbag, too, right? I'm right, ain't I?"

"Remember who you're talking to."

Oops! The voice on the other end of the phone commanded more power than many world leaders. But he knew what he said was true. "I do, sir, more than you'll ever know."

"Then do you want payback? I know that you care. Alice, we know that you care."

"Payback? I'm not in the payback business anymore, sir."

"Get real. And get over your self-pity. You did what you had to do. Right now you can do something that will make a difference."

While thousands of rescue support people were headed to the Pentagon and New York City, elite Special Forces would be shipping out to the Middle East, Afghanistan, and central Asia. Jason guessed that the most deadly of them all, the Brotherhood of Death, was probably going in first, and as a former member they undoubtedly wanted him back.

"Look. I'm retired."

"Hey, I don't have time for this shit, Alice, so don't fuck with me. I'm in a hurry. Ya in, ya out?"

That was one thing about General Ben Cadallo--he always came straight to the point.

"Sir, don't you fuck with me. You can't try to pin me down like that. I need to hear more before I answer to anything."

"Then read your e-mail." The phone went dead.

Jason dropped the phone back on the receiver and took a deep breath. Checking the e-mail on his computer, there was only one new message: No Subject. He punched the icon.



1000. Wednesday. Swimmer's Hall of Champions. Ft. Lauderdale, Florida. You'll know the boat.



"Damn!" He exhaled.



CHAPTER 2



0940 WEDNESDAY / 12 SEPTEMBER 2001

SWIMMER'S HALL OF CHAMPIONS /

FORT LAUDERDALE / FLORIDA



NATO invokes Article Five of their charter; an attack on one is an attack on all.



Everything might've looked similar, but the world had changed. America, the mighty nation, preeminent world power, had been cut low and hurt. Rocked back on her heels, her shock and pain reverberated around the world. Freedom was under attack. How did this happen? Who were the murdering animals that did it? Where were they? How to get at them? Something had to be done, but what?

One thing Jason knew for damn sure, there were groups in America who had gotten the green light to strike back with malice--proven warriors who'd been "in the shit." They were the men who, at a moment's notice, put themselves in harm's way, crossed over the line, came back blooded; and kept their mouths shut. The battles that they fought were secret, cold, and dirty.

And they jealously protected their turf. Few ever penetrated their world. Fewer were ever asked to "walk the walk" with them. Jason was one of the few who had.

It was a three-hour drive to Fort Lauderdale. Even though his M35 Infiniti was a luxury ride, Jason always hated the heavy traffic on I-95. A marina? He wondered why the meeting wasn't being held at a more secure place instead of some cushy marina. After all, wasn't war business normally conducted on a military base with layers and layers of security? Then again, the Doors never followed any of the established rules. Show the false and hide the real; that was their thing.

Few knew of the existence of the ultrasecret organization. The Doors specialized in dirty deeds that made the CIA look like benign missionaries.

Jason parked his car and walked along the pier. Yacht after yacht bobbed on the water--rich-boy toys. The size and extravagance of everything didn't impress him one bit. He was rich too, but few knew, like his friend Mac Rio. He had no idea how much he was worth, having spent almost nothing of the millions he fell into from Operation Lucifer Light.

Shit, I don't need to be here.

If he wanted to, he could buy his own damn yacht and be out cruising the Mediterranean. But he really didn't give a shit about any of it. His money did him no good because it didn't help him with what he really wanted. But the trouble was, he didn't really know what he wanted. But whatever it was, it would have to wait until he heard what the general had to say.

At the moment he just wanted to get over with the day's business with a secret organization that officially didn't even exist. Its members were named and numbered on a single sheet of paper kept in a top-secret vault somewhere deep inside the Pentagon.

Jason was member number twenty-six of the Brotherhood of Death.

He would've been the first to say that there was no glamour or honor associated with an ultrasecret organization.

Nightmares and betrayals, that's all the Doors had ever given him. Jason wondered why he had even bothered to answer their call. While his combat rescue team back at Patrick was getting ready to deploy to war, here he was, deserting his boys. Still, if someone really wanted to do something about the September 11 homicides, then these were the guys to see. Now, which boat were they on?

"You'll know which one."

Suddenly Jason felt the hair rise on the back of his neck. He stopped walking and assessed his surroundings. A big black bread van blocked any cars from entering the marina. SWAT.

Several sleek and fast cigarette boats drifted in the canal. Instead of the usual pretty girls in bikinis lounging on their decks, thick, unsmiling men wearing dark sunglasses and bulging windbreakers kept their heads on a constant swivel.

One of the go-fast boats on the water was a very elegant number. The name Blue Thunder was splashed across her hull--Blue Thunder belonged to the US Customs Service. Several black Chevy Suburbans with dark-tinted windows were parked around the marina.

Though he couldn't spot them, there was no doubt in Jason's mind that countersnipers had him in their crosshairs. He had ideas of where they might be, so facing a far roof he slowly raised his middle finger to his forehead and rubbed it.

A 150-foot black yacht was tied up at the end berth. Jason couldn't suppress a smile when he saw the name Dark Secrets carved on her fantail.

He strolled to the bottom of the gangway and stood waiting until a burly man dressed in a black suit and sunglasses appeared at the top of the rail. With a nod, the man allowed Jason to start up the gangway.

At the head of the gangway the guard motioned for Jason to raise his hands for a pat-down.

Goon. Jason shook his head and turned to leave. With all the firepower and high-zuit toys surrounding him, he had no intention of being caught without his own exit maker. Not now. Not ever.

"Wait," the guard said, and spoke into a small radio. Pressing his earpiece, the man nodded. "Follow me."

He followed the man through a maze of passageways, impressed with the elegant decor. White and black marble with gilded nautical fittings met his every turn. Chrome, mirrors, and a royal motif covered the ship. He wondered if the route was intentional to try and impress. It did, but he tried to stay cool. Even the president couldn't have a rig this fine. No one in the government could afford such opulence, or could they? His mind flashed back to a multibillion-dollar government embezzler named Frank McCone, better known as Mr. Black. But Black was dead.

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