“Got it. Okay, Captain Cole. Strap in.”
An hour passed before the first notable event: the arrival at the scene of Mansur Amir Khan, the keeper of Castle’s homing beacons, or magic dimes. He rolled up to the compound in his white Toyota truck with orange stripes across the hood. It gave Cole an odd feeling to see it again, knowing what would become of it at Sandar Khosh a month and a half later.
“Funny little fucker, isn’t he?” Sharpe said. “Moves like a jockey.”
The truck rolled through the gate into the main compound, and you could see Mansur helping two other men unload boxes from the back.
“He’s a smuggler,” Cole said. “That’s how he got all his contacts. I’m guessing the beacon is in one of the boxes.”
A large man in a turban walked out to hug Mansur.
“I’m guessing that’s Engineer Haider, the warlord killed in the strike.”
Not long after Mansur drove away, Lancer popped up for his second appearance. This time he chatted back and forth with Castle.
(LANCER) Beacon placed.
(FORT1) You still vouch for status and ID of HVT?
(LANCER) Affirmative.
(FORT1) Onward gentlemen.
“Why the fuck did they even need a beacon?” Sharpe asked. “Hell, Haider’s right there, plain as day.”
“Maybe they sent Mansur to verify Haider’s presence. Activating the beacon would’ve been his signal of a positive ID. Still testing out their system, maybe.”
“Still seems like overkill.”
The battered brown Nissan pickup carrying Barb and her fixer arrived an hour later in a cloud of dust. Two people got out of the truck and were escorted to a building outside the compound. Cole recognized Barb from her posture, her walk, without having to see her face. Then two boys scampered across the grounds toward the same building. It sent a shiver up his back.
The explosion, once the attack came, was huge, destroying the main house inside the walls of the compound and leaving two bodies prone on the grounds outside — the old couple who had been standing near Barb. Sharpe clicked ahead to the next exchange between Lancer and Fort1, which came about eighty minutes after the attack.
(FORT1) Getting new reports. Not liking this.
(LANCER) Not liking how?
(FORT1) Wrong man maybe.
Then, fifteen minutes later:
(FORT1) Definitely a misfire. Theories?
(LANCER) Bad intel. Overton?
“He’s blaming Overton Security?” Cole asked.
“That’s what it sounds like to me.”
“But Barb said that’s who Haider worked for. He was one of Overton’s damn sources. Why would they want him rubbed out?”
“Maybe he burned them?”
“Maybe. Either way, somebody got duped.”
“Lancer?”
“Or both of them. Another fuckup, any way you look at it.”
“But Castle must not have thought Mansur was to blame, or why would he have kept working with him? You said they used one of his beacons at Sandar Khosh, right?”
“That’s what Bickell told me.”
“Shit. None of this adds up.”
“Maybe we still don’t know what we’re looking for.”
An hour later, Castle landed in the Pave Hawk helicopter. The screen showed him hopping out of the chopper and heading for the outbuilding where Barb must have still been waiting. That’s when the mission ended.
“Here’s a theory,” Sharpe said. “Lancer knew all along it was the wrong guy, because he was working for IntelPro, Overton’s rival.”
“So he duped Castle, and maybe Mansur as well, just to rub out some of his competition?”
“Exactly.”
“Could be. And Lancer uses this mission to establish contact with Mansur, then starts outbidding Castle on where to place the next beacons.”
“It fits.”
“But how could Castle have known so quickly it was a fuckup?”
“You’d have to ask him, I guess.”
“Fat chance of that now.”
They moved on to the second transcript, Cole and Zach’s recon mission of the town of Mandi Bahar, which he now knew was Mansur’s home village.
To his surprise, he recognized the village immediately, and was struck by the similarity of the setting to Sandar Khosh, even though the two places were miles apart and in different provinces. Each was a small huddle of less than a dozen houses clustered along a dirt road. Each sat next to a small rocky stream, bordering a small grove of gnarled, stunted trees. Shepherd boys took their flocks to and from nearby hills. A child walked out of the trees with a bundle of sticks on his back. A pastoral life, with few signs of warfare or weaponry. They were about to click forward by a few hours when the sight of a figure bursting from a doorway made Cole shout loudly and put a hand on Sharpe’s arm.
“Wait!”
It was the girl, the one in the red shawl, white pants, and blue scarf. She ran into sunlight, and then two small boys followed in quick succession. They disappeared from the frame.
“Back it up. Run that again.”
“Why. What did you see?”
“It’s them. The same three children we saw at Sandar Khosh. The ones we killed.”
Sharpe said nothing, and did as he was told. There they were again, bursting out the doorway.
“Freeze that, then see if you can enlarge it.”
The resolution wasn’t clear enough to see their faces, but it was unmistakably the same three children. No ghosts this time. The real thing, but in the wrong place. And then it hit him.
“Yes! That’s it!”
“What is?”
“I’ve had a feeling from the moment it happened that those kids weren’t supposed to be at that house, the one in Sandar Khosh. I could never say why, because I knew I’d seen them before, in our recon. But it wasn’t the Sandar Khosh recon. It was this one.”
“What does that mean?”
“Keep moving it forward.”
The children moved in and out of the frame several more times during the next five minutes. Then the camera seemed to follow them as they headed back toward the house — or that’s what he thought was happening until he saw the real reason for Zach’s camera work. The sensor’s attention had been drawn by the arrival of a white Toyota truck with orange stripes across the hood. The truck stopped, a door opened, and out stepped a little man who was unmistakably Mansur Amir Khan. So this was his house. And these were his children, the very ones he and Zach would kill with a missile strike five weeks later.
But there must be other members of Mansur’s family, too, ones that remained alive. Why else would he have still been so concerned about their welfare during their conversation at the row house on Pickard Street? What was it he’d said? “Away. My family is away.”
Away where? Did he mean “dead”? Possibly. But now he at least thought he knew why Mansur had moved his family to Sandar Khosh.
“He must’ve been scared Castle would come after him,” Cole said. “After the whole double-cross over the homing beacons. The fuckups and the confusion. So he moved, to get away either from Castle or from Lancer. Then a month later we go and blow up his new house.”
“Except Mansur wasn’t there.”
“But his children were. Most of his family, probably.”
“Then why was it a beacon job?”
“Maybe Bickell was wrong.”
“Let’s look at your recon of Sandar Khosh. It’s the next one in line, a week later.”
Sharpe got it rolling. There were children in this video, too — playing cricket, running errands, tending sheep. But none was the girl or her two brothers. The house, the one they would target a month later, was under construction, but nearly finished. Sharpe skipped around a little while they watched for anything significant.