“You’ve done an impressive job building up your outfit, by the way.” He couldn’t look at her, but instead watched a heron fly low across the lake, its wings nearly dipping into the water. “Who would’ve ever thought my Stella would create one of the world’s largest private military corporations. You’re sure giving Blackwater and Rubicon a run for their money. Your daddy would be so proud.”
“This isn’t like the Hunter I knew. What are you hiding? Why the hell aren’t you being straightforward with me?”
He reached for the bottle to pour another round, but she pulled it away and continued speaking. “Let’s get things straight. You faked your death one week before our wedding and I’ve grieved for you ever since. It takes a lot of nerve to pop back into my life and dance around the truth. Kind of makes me want to see you dead again, so I can remember the good man I loved. Today’s a truce because of Granny. Either you come completely clean with me or tomorrow we’re at war.”
“You’re in the business. You know there are things I can’t talk about,” Hunter said, still avoiding eye contact. “Why don’t we hotwire a boat and take a ride up toward Piney? You always wanted to hike in there and find the old Jordan homestead. The chiggers shouldn’t be too bad yet.”
Camille twisted off her engagement ring. She rolled it across the table as the blue flame flickered, then died out.
Part One: Private Wars
The worrisome thing isn’t what Halliburton and other big contractors are supposedly doing behind the scenes. It’s what they’re doing in plain sight. National defense, the blood-and-iron burden of government, is increasingly becoming a province of the private sector.
– The New Yorker, January 12, 2004,
contributed by James Surowiecki
Chapter One
Camp Tornado Point, Anbar Province, Iraq Two months later
Her nose burned as she inhaled the dry air, heavy with diesel fumes that barely masked the stench of the burn pit and the overpowering fragrance of night-blooming jasmine. To Camille Black it was the sweet scent of life on the edge, the smell of money, the perfume of Iraq. She coughed dust and smiled as she circled her new mine-protected personnel carrier, a six-hundred-thousand-dollar Cougar, admiring it as if it were a Ferrari. In this part of Iraq, it was her Ferrari. Its V-shaped underbelly made it look more like a boxy boat than a small troop transport, but it could channel away blasts that would rip open an armored Humvee. As she watched several troops saying short prayers and kissing pictures of loved ones, she ran her hand along the vehicle’s side and sent off her own lonely prayer. She felt a blister in the desert-tan paint and she pretended to care.
Without warning, Drowning Pool’s “Bodies” blared over the Cougar’s sound system, heavy metal shifting the mood. All at once, the men put away their photos and got in each other’s faces, shouting the song’s angry words about letting bodies hit the floor. “Three! Four!” They counted with the lyrics, laughing and smiling, pumping themselves up for the night’s combat mission, a mission that she, too, was supposed to be part of, even though at the moment it didn’t feel that way to her. When the song was over, the operators slapped each other on the back in a bravado of brotherhood-a brotherhood that Camille had grown up with.
She admired the men. Some of the operators wore the short beards and moustaches favored by Force Zulu and Delta Force and others sported shaved heads typical of Navy SEALs. All but one had more wrinkles than their active-duty counterparts and they all had fatter paychecks, Black Management paychecks that she had signed. They were the rock stars of the Iraq War. And they were hers.
The men’s bodies moved with the heavy metal rhythm of combat as they groomed one another, inspecting each other’s equipment, cinching their buddies’ gear and slapping duct tape over loose straps. None of them seemed to notice as she walked into the shadows on the other side of the Cougar, smiling. There she quietly sang “Bodies” to herself as she felt for her extra magazines of ammo to make sure everything was there and accessible. She touched her USP Tactical pistol, then her knife to confirm positions and she tightened her webbing. After she checked her XM8 assault rifle, she was geared up, ready for action. And she was amped.
She circled back around the vehicle. By then the men had already crammed themselves and their war gear into the back of the Cougar, ready for a preemptive raid on what Black Management intelligence suspected was an insurgent safe house. As Camille approached the crew door, one by one each man stopped inspecting his weapon and stared.
But no one spoke to her.
She grabbed a rung and started to climb aboard. Her body armor and gear weighed her down, but she was determined to board without assistance-not that any was offered to her. It stung. All of her life she had trained with Special Forces operators and she knew what they thought about women accompanying them into combat. No matter how many times she had proven herself in battle, they never quite trusted her. She remained an interloper in their shadowy male world, the very one that she was raised to inhabit. She hoisted herself up, barely able to get her center of gravity far enough inside.
The men were tightly packed on benches along the side walls and they seemed to spread out a little more as she searched for space.
“Like it or not, boys, you need to make room for me.”
“Put yourself down right here, sweetie.” An operator grinned at her as he patted his thigh.
“You really want a lap dance from a woman with a Ka-Bar knife strapped to her ankle?” Camille smiled as she pointed to the Marine combat knife her father had given her for her sixteenth birthday. “I’m game if you are.”
He elbowed his buddy and they scooted aside. Camille Black took her place among the operators, pleased with herself.
In the twenty minutes since they’d left the base, no one had spoken to Camille. The Cougar’s air conditioning was fighting the summer heat, but it was a losing battle. The air was warm and stale and the ride hard. A man with a scar the entire length of his right forearm sat across from her, staring at her, calculating something. She looked him in the eyes and he wouldn’t look away or even blink.
His dark eyes looked intelligent, the wrinkles around them, experienced. He was bald and most of his face was clean-shaven, but taunting the Black Management dress code by several inches was a long narrow moustache and a thin veil of a beard that outlined his jawbone and came to a point well below his chin. As she studied him, she realized he could only be the operator known as GENGHIS.
GENGHIS studied her weapon. The lightweight assault rifle was a next generation kinetic energy system that the Army had hoped would replace the Vietnam-era M4 and M16 carbines until Pentagon politics killed the program. Camille loved its sleek design, molded polymer casing and clear plastic magazine. To her the XM8 seemed more like something used to blast space aliens rather than Iraqi insurgents. It had outperformed her expectations on the firing range and she couldn’t wait to field test it, but more importantly, it was cool, jock-cool and it made her feel that way, too.
GENGHIS cleared his throat. “That’s one sexy kit. Haven’t seen that before here in the sandbox.”
The men stopped talking among themselves and watched. Camille handed him the rifle. He weighed it in his right hand.
“Light enough for a girl, I see. So what’s a little lady doing all dolled up with an XM8?”
“Accessorizing.”
“I know who you are.” His teeth were stained from chewing tobacco. He tossed her the carbine. “There’s never been a finer warrior than your daddy. Everyone agrees the Malacca incident never would’ve happened if Charlie had still been with his team where he belonged. It was a helluva blow to the unit when your mommy died and he chose to leave the Corps to raise his little princess.”