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Synopsis
Ben Raines and his army won a war on two fronts, bringing law, peace and prosperity to the Southern United States of America. But SUSA's northern northern neighbor and erstwhile enemy, the United States, is still in chaos. And when a ferocious invader attacks the soft and crippled nation, Raines has no choice but to act! Courageous warlord Abdullah El Farrar has risen up from the humiliated regions of the oil-rich Near East—unleashing a stunning attack against the once proud northern United States. No One in the Southern United States is surprised that USA cannot defend its own land. But with northern citizens defecting by thousands to El Farrar's forces, Raines can see the handwriting on the wall: his brave armies must go to war—to save their enemy from itself.
Release date: September 1, 2001
Publisher: Pinnacle Books
Print pages: 320
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Destiny in the Ashes
William W. Johnstone
Mike Post, his XO and Chief of Intel, took his customary seat next to Ben’s desk, while Buddy Raines, Ben’s son and heir to his command, sat on his left.
Cooper, known as Coop, was the next to enter, followed closely by Jersey, Ben’s bodyguard. Coop had his left arm in a sling, courtesy of the final shoot-out in Mexico City a few months before.
The rest of Ben’s team filed in and took seats around the large office, sprawling in comfortable chairs and sofas in no particular order.
After they were seated, Ben glanced at Coop’s arm, then at Dr. Larry Buck, who’d taken over the previous year for Dr. Lamar Chase.
“Buck,” Ben said, a wry smile on his lips, “how’s Coop’s arm coming along?”
Buck looked over at Coop and shook his head. “I can’t understand it, Ben. All of the tests show the arm to be completely healed, but Coop still complains of stiffness and pain.”
“Coop?” Ben asked, his eyebrows raised.
Coop assumed a pained look on his face. “I don’t know, Ben,” he said, moving the arm around in his sling. “It just doesn’t feel right yet.”
“Hah!” Jersey exclaimed, a look of derision on her face. “Coop’s just playing it up to the hilt, Ben. He knows you’ve ordered us all to undergo extensive training exercises to keep in shape between hostilities, and he’s using that old wound as an excuse not to run the obstacle course.”
“I think a little refresher course in hand-to-hand combat might be just the thing to get the stiffness outta that arm,” Harley Reno said, smiling at Coop.
“Aw, Ben,” Coop complained, looking injured. “They’re not being fair. I think it just needs a little more physical therapy and it’ll be good as new.”
Jersey’s eyes narrowed. “Is that what you call it?” she asked. “Having that big, buxom Swedish nurse over at sick call rub around on you all day?”
“It is therapy,” Coop said, glaring at Jersey. “Just ask Dr. Buck.”
Buck shook his head, grinning. “I guess you could call it therapy, after a fashion,” he said, “though Helga tells me the arm seems pretty strong to her, especially when she’s trying to keep it away from various parts of her body.”
“That settles it then,” Ben said, laughing. “The sling comes off and Coop will take the physical training with the rest of the squad from now on.”
Coop shook his head. “Traitors,” he mumbled, removing the sling and stretching his arm, as if in pain.
“Now, Mike,” Ben said to Mike Post. “Tell us about the latest intel from the USA.”
Mike took his pipe from his mouth, tamped the tobacco a little with his index finger, then snapped a Zippo lighter and fired the pipe up.
As clouds of cherry-scented tobacco wafted upwards, he began to talk. “So far, President Claire Osterman has been too busy trying to rehabilitate her country to get into any more mischief. The plague organisms she unleashed in concert with Bottger and Perro Loco last year have caused quite a bit of illness in the states bordering the SUSA.”
Ben glanced at the doctor. “Buck, have we sent her an ample supply of medicines and vaccines to help stamp out the epidemic?”
Buck nodded. “Yes, sir, as well as a couple of hundred corpsmen and medical team members to help with the treatment protocols.”
“Anything else going on up there we ought to know about?” Ben asked Mike.
Mike shrugged. “Just the usual aftermath of another unsuccessful attempt to take us over,” he answered. “Claire has made a major change in her command structure, getting rid of General Stevens and replacing him with a General Maxwell Goddard.”
“What do we know about this Goddard?”
“Pretty reasonable sort of fellow from what my men on the inside tell me. Not at all the usual ‘yes-ma’am’ type Claire usually assigns.”
“You don’t mean to tell us he actually tells her the truth about her hare-brained schemes to take out Ben Raines?” Jersey asked, a look of incredulity on her face.
Mike laughed. “I wouldn’t go that far, Jersey, but he seems to give her fairly good advice. At least he has so far.”
“Is there any report of widespread unrest among the citizens?” Harley asked. “I would think after all Claire’s failures and what it’s cost the country, the common people would be standing in line to get rid of her.”
Ben laughed out loud. “You underestimate the greed of what is laughingly called a citizen of the USA nowadays,” he said. “As long as Claire keeps the welfare state pouring money out to the scum who never think they ought to have to work to earn it, the bums will keep her in office over the objections of the masses who pay taxes.”
Mike nodded. “That’s about the size of it, Harley. So far, there’ve been some scattered pockets of rebellion, but nothing so big Claire’s Army couldn’t handle it.”
“Damn shame,” Harley said.
“Oh, I don’t know,” Anna, Ben’s adopted daughter, chimed in, glancing at Harley, whom she adored, sitting next to her. “At least with Claire, we know what we have . . . an idiot who couldn’t plan a major war if her life depended on it.” She shrugged her shoulders. “Who knows? The person who replaced her might even give us more trouble than Claire has.”
Ben smiled. “Anna’s right. Claire’s been a huge pain in the neck, but she’s also been so incompetent that each time she’s moved against us, we’ve come out on top.”
“At the cost of thousands of lives,” Dr. Buck said.
“Thankfully, more thousands of USA lives than SUSA lives,” Hammer Hammerlick reminded the doctor.
“So, to sum up, nothing north of our borders to worry about?” Ben asked Mike.
“Not from the USA, but there are some happenings across the ocean I’ve been monitoring rather closely.
“What in particular?” Ben asked.
“The situation in Iraq is becoming increasingly unstable,” Mike said, pulling a pouch of tobacco out of his pocket and adding a pinch of brown leaf to his pipe, again tamping it down with his finger. “A man over there is raising all kinds of hell.”
“Who are we talking about?” Ben asked.
“Abdullah El Farrar,” Mike said. “He’s the son of one of the richest oil families over there . . . at least they were rich before the United Nations took over the oil fields in that part of the country after the big war.”
“You’ve lost me,” Harley Reno said.
Mike glanced at him. “After the big war, when the United Nations started to try and put the pieces of the old world economy back together, there was a shortage of oil—that is, gasoline, etc.—just about everywhere. With the agreements of most of the Middle Eastern countries, which were devastated by the destruction of the war, the United Nations took over all of the oil fields, refineries, and most of the shipping facilities so that oil and gasoline could be transported around the world to the Third World countries that needed it.”
Ben interjected, “Of course, this ruined many of the ruling families in those areas who’d grown immensely rich on the backs of the common people of the region.”
“Not to mention what it did to the governments of those countries involved, including Iraq, Syria, Egypt, Saudi Arabia, Iran, and Jordan,” Mike added. “Most of them became little more than figureheads, with the real power in the countries being the United Nations.”
“And that pissed this El Farrar off?” Harley asked, grinning.
“Yes,” Mike said. “He was pulled from his expensive schools in Europe and sent home, just another poor rag-head who used to be rich and powerful.”
Ben leaned back in his chair. “So, what is he up to now?”
“He’s become almost a folk hero to his countrymen. He calls himself the Desert Fox now, and has gone up into the hills of Iraq and has been recruiting an army of fanatical followers dedicated to taking back what they consider was stolen from them.”
“You mean he’s trying to retake the oil fields?” Coop asked.
“Not only that, but he has declared himself the rightful heir to the throne of Iraq, as well as the other countries in the Middle East.”
“Sounds like just another egomaniac on the loose,” Ben said.
“Yes,” Mike agreed, “but he seems to be very appealing to an entire continent of people who feel their heritage and lands have been stolen from them by white, non-Muslim interlopers. My intel says he’s developed quite a following.”
“You can’t be too worried about a bunch of Arab types riding around in the desert on horseback, can you?” Jersey asked.
Mike shrugged. “We weren’t, until we found out that El Farrar has acquired huge stores of weapons and war matériel that the previous leader, Saddam Hussein, had stockpiled. There’s even some talk that he may have some nuclear missiles in his arsenal.”
“How large is his army?” Ben asked, leaning forward and putting his elbows on his desk, interested now.
“Over a hundred thousand at last count,” Mike said, “and still growing. Intel has information that his forces are spreading out across the entire area over there, absorbing more and more matériel as they overrun the United Nations forces and confiscate their weapons and ammunition.”
“What does Jean-François Chapelle think of all this?” Ben asked, referring to the Secretary General of the U.N.
“He didn’t seem too worried, until El Farrar began to widen his sphere of influence. Now, he’s biting his nails down to the quick. Word is, he’s tried to reason with El Farrar, to no avail.”
“Any idea of just how big El Farrar’s ambition is?” Ben asked.
Mike nodded. “He’s telling his followers, which includes just about every fundamentalist Muslim in the Middle East, that he plans to take over the USA, then Europe, and eventually the entire world.”
Harley Reno laughed out loud. “At least he doesn’t think small.”
“Surely he can’t be that naive,” Ben remarked.
Mike glanced at Ben. “No, he doesn’t think he can storm the countries involved. He knows his army is too small for that, and must know the other countries in the U.N. wouldn’t allow that. However, he has a huge terrorist network of fanatical members devoted to his ideals. My guess is he plans to institute a pogrom against the USA by infiltrating terrorists into the country a few at a time, and at some later date, set them loose to use terrorist tactics to destabilize the government up there.”
Ben pursed his lips. “And with the growing resentment of many of the citizens against Claire Osterman and her welfare state, he’d find plenty of converts to his cause.”
Mike nodded. “You got it, Boss.”
“Well,” Ben said, “continue to monitor the situation and keep me apprised of any new developments.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Now, back to the more mundane,” Ben said. He turned his attention to his team seated before him. “Now that we don’t have any active hostilities facing us, it is imperative that we don’t let the men and women in our Armed Forces get stale. I want the training exercises increased so that if push comes to shove and we have to intervene anywhere in the world, we’ll be ready.”
Ben glanced at Mike. “And with this new information from Mike, we’d better be doing some extra training in desert-warfare tactics.”
Harley Reno nodded. “Well, our last little outing down in Mexico certainly gave our forces some experience in fighting in the desert.”
Ben smiled. “Good, then use the men with experience down there to help train the ones who didn’t serve in the desert.”
He stood up. “That’s all for now,” he said.
His team got to their feet and began to file out.
Jersey gave Coop a little shove from behind. “Oh, Coop,” she said, “I’ll see you out on the obstacle course right after lunch.”
He grinned over his shoulder at her. “I think maybe I’ll go get one last physical therapy session before my workout.”
“Good. I’ll go with you,” Jersey said, a malicious gleam in her eye. “I want to give the Swede the good news that your arm is all better now.”
Coop’s face fell. “You don’t have to do that, Jerse.”
“No problem,” she said. “Glad to help out.”
Abdullah El Farrar’s eyes blazed with fury as he glared at the sweating young man in front of him. “You have endangered our holy mission with your reckless disregard of the Prophet’s admonition against drinking spirits,” he said as he paced around the small room. Whirling suddenly, he backhanded the man, knocking him to the ground. Farrar straddled him and ground the point of a stiletto against his throat. “Can you give me one good reason not to cut out your throat and feed it to the jackals?”
With some difficulty the man rasped, “It will not happen again . . . I promise.”
The others in the room watched intently, afraid to avert their eyes and draw Farrar’s murderous attention to them. The man cringed, sweat running from his face, as Farrar slipped the point of the stiletto under his shirt. With an abrupt motion he sliced the shirt open, causing the man to cry out in fear. Farrar gently stroked the razor-sharp stiletto against his chest, leaving a thin line dripping blood.
“I shall spare your life but leave you with this mark of shame, lest you forget and again partake of the infidels’ poison. Now get out of my sight before I decide to cut out your tongue which the alcohol loosens!”
The man scrambled to his feet, his face flaming in embarrassment, and fled from the room. As the others also began to file out, Farrar said, “Mustafa, remain. We need to talk.”
Mustafa Kareem, his second in command, inclined his head in obedience and remained seated. Farrar poured them both fruit juice over ice, then shook his head in resignation. “If we didn’t need every man, I would have gutted that camel dung and been done with him.”
“You did right, my brother. All of the men have begun to be infected with the infidels’ ways. The lesson was sorely needed and adroitly applied.” Kareem inclined his head in admiration. “They will all think twice before causing the mission danger in the future.”
“We need action, Mustafa. The men grow soft with the waiting.” Farrar picked up a newspaper and waved it in the air. “I think this will give the men something to do to alleviate their boredom.” Throwing the paper down on the table, he spat on it. The headline read: PRESIDENT CLAIRE OSTERMAN TO APPEAR AT SOCIALIST/DEMOCRATIC FUND-RAISER.
Kareem tilted his head to read the story. “I agree, but there will be much security around such an important gathering. We will need to plan carefully if we are to succeed.”
“You’re right as usual.” Farrar took his stiletto from the table and wiped the blood from the tip with the newspaper, then slipped it into a scabbard behind his neck. “From now on, the men are not to leave the house. Pick up some women and young boys and bring them to the house for the gratification of the men. After a few days, dispose of them in ways which will not implicate us. By then, I will have planned our strike and the need for caution will be over. Our followers in the motherland have been most generous with funds to help us bring the infidels to their knees . . . I would hate to disappoint them.”
As Mustafa left to carry out his orders, Farrar turned to the case of AK-47 assault rifles in the corner and began cleaning and inspecting each one. He spoke softly to himself. “Yes, Allah, we badly need to strike back at the infidels to regain our respect among our brothers in the Middle East, and I need to do this to avenge my family.”
Known only as the Desert Fox to the United Nations intelligence service, Farrar had been number one on their “hit list” for the past seven years. Three agents had been killed trying to assassinate him, and he currently carried the “kill on sight” designation for intelligence agencies in four countries. Although aware of this, Farrar didn’t dwell on it since he was a true believer in the rightness of his cause and of the Prophet’s personal protection for him and his people.
Unknown to the intelligence forces of the United Nations, he and a handpicked band of assassins had made their way to the United States of America for the express purpose of assassinating Claire Osterman and softening up the country for its eventual takeover by his forces.
His band of terrorists were hiding out in a poor section of Indianapolis, preparing for the first strike against the United States, knowing it had been terribly weakened by its unsuccessful war against the SUSA of the previous year. If this attack were to go well, Farrar knew he would have little trouble attracting men of influence to back him and his cause.
Claire Osterman glanced up and smiled at her bodyguard, Herb Knoff, as he handed her a cup of coffee in her office. She was surrounded by her team of advisors, which she called her “cabinet.”
Harlan Millard, ostensibly Claire’s second in command, sat across the room, nervously biting on a thumbnail as he watched Claire with an expression much like a canary watching a cat.
General Maxwell Goddard, who’d recently assumed command of the United States’ Armed Forces after General Bradley Stevens, Jr., had failed in the last war against the SUSA and Ben Raines, rolled a thick, black cigar around in his mouth, not daring to light it in Claire’s presence. He was tall and thin, and not averse to speaking his mind when he thought Claire was going to do something stupid, but he was generally slow to speak and weighed his words carefully, like a skinflint whose every utterance cost him money.
Wallace W. Cox, her Minister of Finance, sat peering at her through glasses as thick as Coke-bottle bottoms, nibbling at the ends of his scraggly mustache, wondering if she were going to blame him for the sorry state of the country’s treasury as she usually did.
Gerald Boykin, her Ministry of Defense and liaison with the U.N., looked bored. The meeting had been called to discuss the upcoming presidential election, and he thought it would have little to do with him. He covered a wide yawn with the back of his hand, and tried desperately to keep his eyelids from drooping as he semi-dozed on the couch.
Clifford Ainsworth, her Minister of Propaganda, sat in a corner in a wrinkled seersucker suit, holes dotting the front of it from cigarette ashes. When he thought no one was looking, he poured dark, amber liquid from a silver flask into his coffee. His head was splitting from a long night at a bar and he needed a bit of the hair of the dog.
“Now,” Claire said brightly after sampling her coffee, “does anyone have any great ideas for propaganda for the upcoming election?”
Harlan Millard shook his head. “I just don’t know why you’re so worried, Claire,” he said in his typical whining tone of voice. “After all, we control the voting booths and the counting computers and the press. Anyone who dares to run against you won’t have a chance of winning.”
Claire’s smile faded a bit and her eyes grew hard. “That’s not necessarily true, Harlan,” she said, her voice hard. “There is talk the United Nations has been asked to intervene in our election.” She cut her eyes to Gerald Boykin, who suddenly began to sweat a bit. “If that’s true, and Gerry over there can’t block it, we may find it harder to steal votes as we did in the last two elections.”
General Goddard cleared his throat and took the cigar out of his mouth.
“Yes, Max?” Claire asked. “You have something you want to add?”
“I wouldn’t worry overly much about the U.N., Madam President,” he growled in a deep voice.
“Why is that, General?”
He shrugged. “The U.N. can decree and fuss all it wants to, but the simple fact is they haven’t the troops to back up any orders they give.”
“That’s true, Max dear, but if they think I stole the election, they could simply not recognize my government. Though it wouldn’t be fatal to us, it would severely hamper us in any efforts to trade with other countries.”
“Not to mention the havoc it would cause if they cut our allowance of foreign oil and gasoline,” Cox said. “At current levels of usage, there wouldn’t be an automobile running in two weeks.”
Claire spread her hands. “There, you see? We’re all in agreement that we must put the best face possible on this upcoming election, just to avoid any messy complications with the U.N.”
She stood up and leaned on her desk. “Now, do any of you have any suggestions for the speech I’m going to give next week at the fund-raiser?”
Harlan Millard shook his head, his face a mask of worry. “I don’t think it wise for you to speak in public yet, Claire.”
“Why not?”
“It’s too soon after our defeat at the hands of Ben Raines,” he said. “There are still a lot of people who blame you for getting us into a war that caused such hardship and misery.”
Claire’s eyes flashed. “Are you saying it was my fault we lost?”
“No, no, of course not, Claire,” Harlan stammered. “But with so many of our citizens dying from the plague our allies released on the SUSA, there are some people who are not thinking correctly who are bound to blame you.” He pulled a handkerchief out of his pocket and swiped it across his face. “I just don’t want you to take any chances, that’s all.”
General Goddard nodded. “I agree with Harlan, Claire. Emotions are still running high out in the country. Perhaps it would be better if the Army took over security for your dinner speech.”
Herb Knoff, who besides being Claire’s bodyguard and part-time lover, oversaw the security provided by the Secret Service agents assigned to protect Claire’s life, bristled.
“I don’t think that’s necessary, General,” he said coldly. “My men are perfectly capable of providing for the president’s security during her speech.”
The general gave a tiny smile, as if he doubted that very much, but he nodded. “All right, Herb, but don’t forget I offered our help.”
“Oh, I won’t forget, Max,” Herb said scornfully, “you can bet on that.”
“Now, gentlemen,” Claire said, “let’s don’t argue. The important thing is for us to get the right message across to the voters.”
“I think you ought to go with the usual,” Gerald Boykin said. “Put the blame for everything on Ben Raines and those SUSA assholes.”
“But Claire,” Harlan argued, “we can’t do that. Raines and his medical people are the ones who developed the vaccine and his medical teams are over here working as hard as they can to save United States citizens’ lives.”
Claire pursed her lips. “For once, you are probably right, Harlan. I think it wise to hold off on attacking Raines, at least until his doctors and nurses have finished their work here.”
“There’s always the U.N.,” General Goddard said slowly.
“The U.N.?” Claire asked.
“Sure. How about trying to lay the blame on them for not keeping a closer eye on Bottger and Perro Loco? After all, you can argue, if the U.N. had prevented them from building up their forces in the first place, there never would have been a war.”
“That’s a brilliant idea, Max,” Claire said.
“And the added benefit,” Boykin said, suddenly coming awake, “is if we stir the people up against the U.N., the U.N. will be less likely to intervene in our election.”
“And even if they do, no one will listen to what they say,” Claire added, rubbing her hands together, a broad smile on her face.
She turned her gaze to Ainsworth, her smile fading. He was leaning back in his chair, his eyes closed and his forehead wrinkled in pain.
“Are you all right, Cliff?” she asked, though there was no real warmth in her voice.
“Got a bitch of a headache, Claire,” he answered shortly.
“I just wondered,” she said, “since you haven’t bothered to join in our discussion.”
Ainsworth opened one eye. “I’ll print whatever you tell me to, as usual, . . .
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