Wanna live your own We Who Stand On Guard aerial warfare with nukes in massive battles, including carrier groups?
Chapters
- Four To Jordan Without A Road
- Keeping The Team Safe (May 27, 2025 1:00 PM)
- The Beleaguered, The Bold And The Bountiful (Finished June 12, 2025)
- The Country Of The Blind (Finished June 12, 2025)
- Safe And Sound (June 19, 2025)
- Diplomacy In Jordan (Coming Soon)
Please be patient with this story as a lot of research is required and is an on going effort as I write this.
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Shhhh! Digital Media
Brian Joseph Johns
Opening Notes:
According to my research of how most special operations unfold, when it comes to chatter between team members (or squads), there is no character building banter between them and the reason for this is because the comms are specifically for relaying timing and mission critical data between squad members. So you'll never hear lines during an active mission by members of such teams like:
"Remember that time we were in that bar in Tangiers, and old Roger stood up and threw his beret at the bartender?"
When you see that kind of activity in the movies or read it in the pages of a book, most often this is because the writers need to use every opportunity they can to acquaint you with the operators taking part in such a mission. That's a necessary part of the story telling, because they're people, and if you don't understand that and that they have their hopes and dreams too, then why would you even care, other than the natural propensity of most people to have some degree of compassion towards their fellow humankind.
Soldiers do joke and quite often, but rarely if ever in the midst of an operation. Focus, not levity is most often key to their success, and we're talking about professionals.
Perhaps that speech before their last stand might have such elements of levity, and call upon their love of whatever it is they're protecting, but while they're doing they're thing, there's no small talk, unless they did so in an instance to declare their independence from me and what I'm saying here. When they speak to each other, they own their communications. All of them.
So in a story like this, my use of banter between operators is a means by which I'm letting you know that these people doing these difficult tasks that often happen unbeknownst to us in order to protect and preserve the peace, the world over, have hopes and dreams as much so as any one of us. The difference is, that they often put their lives on the line to ensure that we have ours.
Hence, we owe it to them to remind the world that there's people inside of They Who Stand On Guard.
Please be aware that many complex topics related to history and religion will be touched upon througout the course of the story, and in doing so I hope to retain a high degree of objectivity and fairness when dealing with these topics. Everyone will get their fair say and representation.
Brian Joseph Johns
Shhhh! Digital Media Presents:
The Butterfly Dragon: We Who Stand On Guard - Episode 11
Four To Jordan With No Road
The helicopter wreckage lay smouldering, but not burning or smoking for the man who'd planted the Semtech detonation pack had made sure that no such thing would happen. Fire, especially that fueled by the military class fuel upon which the UH-60 relied, burned heavily and with lots of smoke, producing black pyres high into the sky for all to see. Easily seen for tens of clicks by any nearby OPFOR detachments.
The nearby mobile SAM site that had intercepted their chopper had no doubt radioed in the fact that they'd downed a bird, and men had certainly been dispatched to search the area for survivors and to salvage anything they could from the wreckage.
All of these facts weighed heavily on the minds of the two men leading their prisoners to the border between Jordan and Syria, the latter of which whose soil they tread upon, and as quickly as they could. The first prisoner, Tech Head, had often slowed down, purposely so for he wanted them to be captured and executed right before him. He wanted to experience the glory that was his due and with his people, whom the second prisoner had betrayed.
The second prisoner, Phone Man, was technically not a prisoner, and the fact that he was bound was only for his protection. If their captors were captured by the forces undoubtedly pursuing them, he'd still stand a chance assuming that he overcame the treachery of the first prisoner. If he did, then he might have a chance to help liberate them. Allegiances are like gold, but quickly tarnish to the alchemy of betrayal, turning gold to lead. Lead that most often flew from the business end of a firearm in their business.
The two men walking behind them were their captors. Hardened by life, and the realities of an ever evolving battlefield. Both had endured brutal training from early in their lives, advancing to ever more specialized skills as their careers progressed, in both the military and their civilian lives. Every experience they'd had lead to this very moment that found them coaxing two prisoners forth in the rural farming terrain of southern Syria.
Tech Head suddenly tripped, rolling around on the dirt and holding his ankle.
"I think its broken..." he screamed.
Donahue walked over to him as he flailed on the ground, still hanging onto his ankle.
"Get up," Donahue spoke very clearly indicating that he meant it.
"I can't... I can barely move... the pain is sooo terrible..." Tech Head rolled around some more.
"I didn't ask. Get up!" Donahue repeated himself, this time mustering even more authority than he'd previously expressed.
"Please... You would make an injured man walk on their injury...? You are filthy beasts... Oh how I will feast after I see your heads removed from your bodies!" Tech Head responded, still hanging onto his ankle.
"Come on. We need to move. Now!" Stanton urged them both.
Donahue looked to Stanton, and then back to Tech Head, pulling his P226 from its holster and a subsonic silencer from his webbing, which he affixed to the barrel of the gun, quickly screwing it on. He then held it, aiming at the head of the man on the ground.
"Get up!" Donahue said firmly, looking the man right in the eyes.
"No!" he literally spat at Donahue's boots.
Donahue fired a round three inches from the man's head.
"Get up!" Donahue repeated himself.
"I will be praised in paradise, as much so as I will be praised by my people when they catch you. Do as you will," Tech Head responded, keeping his eyes on Donahue's.
Stanton by this point had lost his patience and walked over to the man on the ground, hoisting him into the air with two hands and then planting him firmly on his feet.
Tech Head stood for a moment in shock, not believing what had just happened.
"Now walk!" Stanton said to him furiously.
Tech Head remained there, his hands still bound in front.
Stanton then pushed him full force, causing the man to stumble backwards, using both feet effectively to keep his balance and avoid falling to the ground.
"Put a leash on his neck. You take point and the leash, I'll take up the rear. If he won't go to Jordan like a man, then he'll go like a dog," Stanton told Donahue, both of them clearly having had enough.
"Good idea," Donahue holstered his weapon, removing the silencer before doing so.
He then retrieved the steel twine from his pack and tied it around Tech Head's neck, carefully padding it with utility tape so as to avoid cutting the man.
"Here boy!" Donhahue said, pulling at the leash with force.
He followed without resistance this time and their four man wagon train resumed its treacherous journey to the Jordanese border.
"If anything happens, don't grab our weapons and try to fight your way out. You have a better chance if you play along and tell them you were captured. Kick us. Spit at us. Whatever it takes to convince them. This wretch of a man doesn't have anything that represents the fruits of his labour, while you have a family, and a career behind you. That will likely protect you enough to make it out alive. If they find us, they'll try to take my friend and I alive. We're more valuable to them that way. A diplomatic bargaining chip. This place will be crawling with NATO troops in three days unless we get to the Jordanese border," Stanton told Phone Man.
"I'm Sabir. Sounds a bit like Saber, but far less deadly. It means patient, tolerant, persevering," Phone Man revealed his name to Stanton.
"Its accurate too. I'd tell you mine, if not for the extenuating circumstances. I appreciate your gesture," Stanton responded, and there was a few minutes of silence as the four men walked.
"Your kids, they have future plans?" asked Stanton, trying to keep Sabir's mind on something hopeful.
"My family is away at another residence. I wanted to keep them away while this trouble with the launcher assembly was underway. My kids have many plans, so yes, most certainly. The youngest one wants to be an Astronomer. He really likes looking at the sky at night. Where we lived there, the stars at night were magnificent," Sabir explained to Stanton.
"I know. I got a quick glimpse of them. Reminded me of my cottage back home," Stanton replied, recalling the starry nights up in his cottage on the Lake of Bays.
"May I ask you something?" asked Sabir.
"You may. I can't guarantee that I can answer you. Go ahead," Stanton responded.
"Why can't you just use your radio to call in another helicopter?" asked Sabir.
"When we detonated the launch platform on your property and when they brought our chopper down, they likely started watching the area carefully. Our radios are encrypted, but the signal is detectable by radio direction finders aka RDFs. Some of the more sophisticated RDFs can determine the country of origin, ie whose army the device is in possession of by analyzing the patterns in frequency of the signal. If we used our radios now, they'd lock into our exact location in a short matter of time. It only takes three RDFs at different locations to determine that exactly, or the more advanced models can by themselves determine the exact direction and distance. Bottom line is, we can't," Stanton explained.
The distant sound of a loud motor pierced the silence, spurring both Stanton and Donahue into action.
Stanton hit the dirt, along side Sabir, while Donahue tackled and held Tech Head firmly in his grip, covering his mouth and keeping his neck in an arm lock.
Stanton had pulled his binoculars and was now searching in the direction of the grinding engine.
"Its an old farming tractor. About three hundred meters. Looks to be from the nineteen seventies. Diesel for sure judging by the sound of the motor. One guy, in his forties I'd bet. A civilian for sure. Thankfully, he's not heading this way. He'll cross the path ahead in about two minutes," Stanton told Donahue.
"They must have a bounty for us. Let's just lay low until he passes, and then check our options from there," Donahue responded as he spotted the tractor in the distance.
They lay in the dirt as they watched the tractor pass a hundred meters south of them, it continued on, the driver looking around as he continued on towards another farm in the distance.
Keeping The Team Safe
Halmand sat at a desk, taking further notes in short hand while Tricia continued examining the extent of the offices of Vector Engine Dynamics with a team of forensic investigators.
Tricia was going through the contents of the reception desk when she found a small locked chest in one of the drawers.
"A hope chest. How quaint. Now, if I were a flirtatious and charming receptionist in my mid twenties, where would I put the key?" Tricia asked herself aloud.
"Did you say something?" asked one of the forensic specialists as he passed through reception.
"Just speaking out loud. Going over case details," Tricia smiled to the specialist.
"Better be careful. Something like that can be contagious you know," he winked at her and left to continue his examination of the facility.
"Stuck to the top of a drawer?" Tricia asked herself aloud, feeling around the top of all six of the drawers of the reception desk.
She smirked upon not having found anything.
"Inside of the desk behind the drawers?" Tricia asked herself aloud again, immediately starting by removing the drawers one by one.
When she got to the center drawer beneath the computer keyboard, something metal fell from the drawer when she removed it. She searched the polished granite floor and found a small intricate skeleton key.
"Clever girl. She kept it in the rails on the drawer in the gap between the rollers and the front of the drawer," Tricia remarked aloud.
Tricia picked up the key and used it to open the chest, finding a stack of sticky notes and other paper scraps, each with a note of some value (to the receptionist) written on it. Tricia began reading them one by one, and a story of inter-office politics and romance began unfolding in great detail the more that she read.
Tricia paused upon realizing the inherent danger in what she'd discovered. She quickly made her way back into the office area and to where Halmand was seated, pulling her phone and ready to dial.
"What's up partner?" Halmand stopped writing in his note book and looked to Tricia.
"Do you still have Gracie's number?" asked Tricia.
"That's a bit personal don't you think?" responded Halmand, a little caught off guard.
"She's a material witness in a case involving materials unaccounted for, and now the detonation of a potentially non-conventional weapon over the Red Sea. I'd say that its not personal. Did you ever call her?" asked Tricia firmly of Halmand.
"I considered it a few times, after a few glasses at home, but no, I didn't. What makes her a material witness?" asked Halmand, suddenly feeling very much like he was being interrogated.
"Call her right now. Tell her to lock all of her doors and turn the lights out and play like there's nobody home. Tell her that we'll detach a team to pick her up immediately and to be ready in ten minutes. Now send me her number in our shared contacts list on CPIC. Got it?" Tricia didn't ask him, she ordered him as she put the chest of notes down on the desk in front of him.
He didn't waste any time, first uploading Gracie's contact information to CPIC and then immediately calling her afterwards. There was no answer, instead Halmand was greeted with an answering service.
"Hi. Its Gracie with an 'ie', which rhymes with smiley. Hope you're smiling too. Either way, leave a message and I'll put some cheer into your life as soon as I can. Bye!" Gracie's voice emerged from the phone, almost as bright as the sunshine that day.
"Hi Gracie? Its William. That kind of nerdy lanky guy in a suit that came to your office with a tyrannical red head the other day? Um, look, its kind of an emergency and I need you to be ready in ten minutes. Get yourself ready and we'll go out for a day on the town. Oh, and lock all of the doors and try to stay away from the windows. I wouldn't want anyone to get a glimpse of you before I do. See you soon," Halmand left a message, throwing on his best charm without giving anything away to admins that could potentially listen in on or eavesdrop her message service.
Tricia in the meantime had dispatched an armed team to pickup Gracie at her home address, using her phone number to find it. She then hung up and found Halmand going through her notes, one by one. Halmand quickly realized the risk when he too had put the pieces together.
"Pillow talk?" Halmand asked Tricia.
"She's young. A little bit naive, though certainly experienced when it comes to social acumen of an adult nature. They might have divulged something to her that poses an extreme danger to her given the circumstances. They won't want us to find out, and we very much want to know," Tricia explained to Halmand.
"I got that much, but we aren't punishing her for living her life to its fullest, are we?" asked Halmand with a serious concern.
"No. We're protecting her. Its not her fault that one of those two men might have divulged something to her... Not to mention that the perps connected to this arms network most definitely would want to bury any loose ends," Tricia underlined the situation for Halmand as a pair of men in designer business suits and brief cases entered through the front door of the building, quickly making their way to the back office door.
"Here's the lawyers..." Halmand interrupted Tricia as she turned to see the two men walking with determination to the back office.
"Excuse me? This is a crime scene! You don't have authorization to be here!" Tricia said firmly as she caught up with them, Halmand quickly getting up from his seat and following her, closing and grabbing Gracie's hope chest before doing so.
"And you are?" one of the two men asked.
"The senior officer on the scene. Now its your turn. Your names?" Tricia firmly faced the two men.
"We represent our clients, Vector Engine Dynamics in the interest of protecting their business and employees from wrongful arrest, not to mention the damage to their business. We need access to the corner office to collect our client's files. Now if you open the door for us, we'll collect them and there will be no further action taken against you... Inspector...?" the man faced Tricia, unintimidated by the woman.
"I'm Inspector Gadget. She's Inspector Miss Marple, at least until you tell us your names," Halmand stepped in.
The men ignored them both and continued to the front door of the office they intended to get into, which was covered in Police tape, not to mention a number of symbols marking the room as containing hazardous materials. They ignored the markings on the door and turned the knob only to find that the door was locked.
"Unlock this door immediately," the first man demanded.
"We can't," Halmand said to them blandly.
"Why not? We're on legally sound ground. You could lose your jobs over this," the second man added.
"If we did, we'd be contaminating the entire office, not to mention much of the surrounding area. It seems that your client was keeping more than just lunch in his bar fridge," Halmand said to them.
"What's that supposed to mean?" the first man responded.
"Nobody's getting in there until its been scoured by a class A hazmat team. If you go in, about three days from now your skin will start getting itchy, and you'll start developing sores across your entire body. By day six, your organs will start failing, one by one, starting with your liver. By day nine, you'll be on the coroner's table for an autopsy. However, if you insist, I'll let you in, but its entirely your responsibility," Halmand explained to them, folding his arms across his chest, knowing fully well that these men knew about the connection between their clients and what happened over the Red Sea.
"You'll be hearing from us... and soon. Better start saving your money, because when our firm is done with you, you'll be sleeping on the streets and dumpster diving for food," the man said, turning and making his way back to the front door, where they exited, making their way through the officers who'd failed to stop them.
Tricia tapped on the door of the office in code.
A corresponding knock emerged from the other side of the door.
Tricia used the code words she'd given to Andrej, and he unlocked the door and opened it, letting Tricia and Halmand in.
"How's your progress?" asked Tricia of Andrej.
"Good. I'd give it about another ten minutes. I'm at the last position in the wheel-pack, and its looking good so far. Might even beat the time limit," Andrej explained to Tricia.
"We just chased off the lawyers, so you're probably good for time. It'll take them at least another day to get a court injunction allowing them legal access, assuming they do. We've got to make a run elsewhere, but we'll be back soon. Do you need a refill on coffee? Any food? I'll have one of the Constables outside make a run for you if you'd like?" asked Tricia.
"I'm fine. There's still some food in the fridge, but I certainly could use a trip to the bathroom and a glass of water," Andrej replied.
"You get this done, and I'll get you a bottle personally. The good stuff," Halmand responded.
"A twelve pack would suffice. Malt beer, like they have overseas where I'm from. If you can't find that, then a twelve of Molson Canadian, though its a bit early for hockey season," Andrej smiled at them as he skirted around them and made his way to the bathroom.
"Make it quick!" Tricia yelled after him.
Tricia and Halmand waited until Andrej returned a short time later and left him to open the safe, locking the door behind them and heading to their car to make their way to Gracie's place.
...
They pulled up in front of Gracie's quaint bungalow in north Mississauga, near the south border of Brampton and stopped the car behind the utility vehicle of the Emergency Response Team. The front door was already open as Tricia and Halmand could clearly see as they emerged from their unmarked cruiser and ran towards the house. They drew their badges from the inside of their jackets and unclipped their holsters as they arrived at the front door, bracketing each side of it for cover.
"RCMP! Two at the front door!" Tricia yelled into the house in order to make the ERT aware of their presence.
"ERT present! You're reckognized! The site is secure, but there's nobody home!" a muscular man wearing black gloves and ballistic armour stepped out of the dining area to meet with Tricia and Halmand.
"Got a SITREP?" Tricia asked him.
"I'm Sergeant McGrath. This is First-Class-Constable Deans. We arrived about four minutes before you did. Spent thirty seconds at the door with no response, so we opted for entry. We cleared the site, room by room, but didn't find the material witness. There's no signs of struggle anywhere, nor are there signs of the material witness having packed and left. I'd say she's out shopping," Sergeant McGrath reported to Tricia.
"Good job Sergeant. Constable. We'll need you to keep the home secure and extract her if she returns. We're going to check some material evidence we have in our car that might give us a hint of where else to look for her. I'll keep you updated," Tricia said to them as she stepped out front and across the lawn towards the car.
"Pretty slick. Nice gloves. Bet that helps with powder burn..." Halmand said to the Sergeant.
"Sometimes, but I'm looking forward to the days I have a cushy job like yours, and can look like a million bucks wearing thousand dollar suits," the Sergeant replied sarcastically.
"Try three hundred. Full price. I got mine for one-twenty on sale..." Halmand said as he walked away, drawing a laugh from both the men.
As Halmand arrived at the curb, a car passed between him and their cruiser. It stopped momentarily in front of the house. As it did, Halmand caught sight of the driver. It was Gracie.
She immediately sped off down the street and around the corner as Halmand vaulted the hood of the cruiser and got in the passenger side door.
"It's her!" Halmand said frantically, pointing in the direction Grace had just fled.
Tricia and Halmand quickly buckled up and sped off down the road in pursuit of Gracie.
"Get the strobe up there..." Tricia yelled at Halmand.
"Already on it..." Halmand retrieved the flashing lights and affixed them to the roof from the passenger window.
By the time they'd arrived at Mavis Road, they spotted Gracie's car as it sped north into Brampton. Tricia pulled out into traffic, as it pulled aside for their speed run down the center of the road, quickly catching up with Gracie's car.
The light turned green at the intersection Gracie was stopped and she sped into the intersection in order to avoid her pursuers as another car turned from the adjacent road to join the chase.
"Who's that?" Tricia asked, checking her mirror.
"He's not one of ours. He's got a visor and tinted front windows. Can't really see him..." Halmand told her as he checked over his shoulder.
"Keep six for us. I'll stay with Gracie. Remember, these are big players. Selling non-conventional munitions to clandestine organizations. Return fire only," Tricia reminded Halmand of what was at stake.
Halmand pulled his service pistol from its holster in his jacket and readied himself in the event they were fired upon.
"She's a good driver. I'll give her that, though she's putting everyone around her at risk," Tricia said to Halmand.
"Let's hope she comes to her senses. Our tail is changing lanes into our blind spot. He's tricky. Very tricky," Halmand told Tricia, as he tried to find an angle from which to return fire in the event the need arose.
On the road ahead, Gracie sped up as she tried to get through the next intersection, Steeles Avenue, ignoring the red light. She maneuvered her car back to the left lane and tried to push through the intersection between cars when the rear of her's was blindsided by a sedan, sending her car spinning several times until it collided with a utility pole and stopped.
"Keep an eye on our tail. I'm going to pull up along side of her car and block the intersection!" Tricia exclaimed as they pulled up beside the wrecked vehicle and came to a stop.
She was out of the cruiser with Halmand as the car tailing them passed, continuing through the intersection, the driver peering at them from behind sunglasses.
As the car sped off into the distance, Halmand wrenched the front door of Gracie's car open and checked her for injuries, while Tricia called for an emergency crew, checking on the other vehicle.
"Are you in pain anywhere? Sharp pains in any of your limbs or ribs?" asked Halmand as he examined her for signs of concussion or shock.
"Dizzy... ill..." she said to him in a daze.
"Can you move? I'll help you..." Halmand asked her.
"Need air... so cramped in here..." she said, looking to the other side of her car which was now crumpled and twisted, the passenger seat nearly pressed against her.
Halmand guided her out of the driver's seat and walked her over to the cruiser. She leaned on the hood, and then fell forward to the ground, heaving heavily as her stomach evacuated her lunch onto the asphalt.
She sat on the pavement, catching her breath as Halmand squatted beside her.
"I bet you've never had a first date like that?" Halmand said to her, causing her to smile and then laugh.
"I always seem to find the wrong ones... The ones just looking for a good time... short time... The married ones... The ones who think I'm an easy lay..." she said to Halmand, gagging slightly between sentences.
"That's not your fault. I'd say its a good thing to keep some hope. You just have to be more discerning. Respect yourself. You have something to offer. So protect it. Make them earn it. However, there is the matter at hand, and I'm not a counselor. We're here to make sure that you're safe and that we can find out what you know," Halmand told her honestly.
"Snuggle talk can have a high price, can't it?" Gracie asked Halmand.
"You have no idea. You've got a rough road ahead of you. Lets get you into the cruiser. Its got bullet proof tempered glass, so you should be safe in there from most threats, but I think that you should lie down but don't fall asleep until we get you to the hospital. We're going to stay until the local police arrive and then we'll take you somewhere safe," Halmand promised her.
"Alright Romeo. Gracie. You'll both be happy to know that the other driver is alright. Minor abrasions and contusions, but nothing serious," Tricia told them.
"Its all in the hands of the almighty insurance companies then," Halmand responded as the sound of sirens reached their ears.
...
Much further down the road from the intersection where Tricia and Halmand tended to Gracie, the car that had been pursuing them stopped, pulling off to the side of the road as the dash phone rang.
The driver, a man in his mid to late thirties answered the call.
"Did you cancel the package?" a deep male voice immediately addressed the driver.
"The client wasn't home, and the gardeners were there, trimming the roses," Foller replied.
"You can't let that package get away from us. The client hasn't paid us yet, and you either need to collect on it, or cancel it," the voice on the other end insisted.
"The gardeners took the package and fled with it. They got blind sided by a car going through an intersection. I tried to get the package number and cancel it, but the gardeners got in the way," Foller spoke firmly.
"Get the job done and then seal up the rest of the loose ends and we'll take it from there," the voice asserted firmly, but before he'd finished his sentence, Foller had already hung up.
The Beleaguered, The Bold And The Bountiful
The tractor that had passed their path was now far to the west of them as they continued their trek across the bumpy terrain of southern Syria. As they neared Tisiyah, a small town of Haurani Christian Arabs and Orthodox Greek Antiochs that lay to the east of their location, the traffic of tractors and other off road vehicles increased slightly, forcing them to lay low and to stop often to ensure that their location had not been compromised.
At one such point, while Donahue kept a watchful eye over Tech Head, Stanton adjusted his AN/PRC 152 for passive mode shortwave and AM band reception.
"Talk to me Stanton. What's our situation?" asked Donahue as the unnerving droning sound of the tractor's motor got louder with each passing moment.
"You just keep an eye on Tech Head. I'll watch that tractor. Give me second. I'm going to check the local shortwave for any Government activity..." Stanton said as he rolled over and switched his radio over.
[Citizens of the region of Hauran in Southern Syria. We have dissidents in our midst who seek to destabilize the peace and sovereignty of our fine nation.
Given recent events over the Red Sea, with the detonation of a non-conventional munition said to have originated from Syria, we are offering a reward of one million United States dollars for information leading to the capture of said dissidents.
We suspect that there are between six and eight such dissidents, who are currently fleeing the region in a southerly direction for Jordan. Information you provide will be kept confidential, and compensation will be awarded according to the value of said intelligence.
The information that you provide might prevent incursion into our country by other national forces seeking to use this situation as an excuse to gain foothold on our land. Please do not attempt to apprehend these dissidents as they are armed and extremely dangerous.]
"يا مواطني منطقة حوران في جنوب سوريا، يوجد بيننا معارضون يسعون إلى زعزعة استقرار وسيادة أمتنا الحبيبة.
في ضوء الأحداث الأخيرة فوق البحر الأحمر، وانفجار ذخيرة غير تقليدية يُقال إنها سورية، نعرض مكافأة قدرها مليون دولار أمريكي لمن يدلي بمعلومات تؤدي إلى القبض على هؤلاء المعارضين.
نشتبه بوجود ما بين ستة وثمانية معارضين، يفرون حاليًا من المنطقة باتجاه الجنوب إلى الأردن. ستُحفظ المعلومات التي تُقدمونها بسرية تامة، وسيتم منح تعويضات تتناسب مع قيمة هذه المعلومات.
قد تمنع هذه المعلومات تسلل قوى وطنية أخرى إلى بلدنا، سعيًا منها لاستغلال هذا الوضع كذريعة لفرض سيطرتها على أراضينا. يُرجى عدم محاولة القبض على هؤلاء المعارضين، فهم مسلحون وخطيرون للغاية." a Government representative's recorded voice looped as the shortwave broadcast was relayed and repeated by local towers.
As Stanton listened to the report, which was given in Arabic, he spied another two tractors driving in a southern direction to the east of them, appearing to have departed from Tisiyah, which was by that point slightly north east of them.
"We're marked," Stanton told Donahue, not giving him a specific dollar value in order not to encourage Tech Head.
"The Syrian Government is at peace with the west, is it not?" Sabir spoke optimistically in the hopes of lightening their growing tension.
"Yes, but they've got a gun to their head. In three days, this area's going to be crawling with NATO troops in order to prevent another international crisis that could trigger an all out war..." Stanton explained to Sabir.
"Who would NATO be stopping by such action?" Sabir asked Stanton as he eyed the most recently arrived tractors, driven by farmers hoping to strike it rich by turning them in for a reward.
"The IDF. If NATO doesn't move on this, the IDF will, by latest day four. They'll occupy while they investigate for any signs of the launch site and those who built it. The rising tension of neighbouring Muslim states will reach a critical point, and the people who sold Sabir's associates the materials unaccounted for based munitions, will be flooded with potential buyers, each of them looking to get in on the nuclear arms race against the IDF. That's the first time that a non-conventional munition, let alone a conventional munition, made it through the Iron Dome defense, and that attack was sourced from one site. Imagine attacks coming in from multiple sites that could be assembled in a matter of weeks from now? Each with tactical nuclear warheads?" Stanton explained the full danger that this situation posed.
"What he's saying is that if we don't get this intel across the border, we're looking at World War Three," Donahue explained to Sabir.
"But if NATO gains control of Syria, won't that help stop the situation?" Sabir asked.
"No. The IDF incursion scenario is what we call the right handed doctrine, in one of several scenarios leading to World War Three. A NATO incursion and occupation of a Muslim nation is the left handed doctrine. It triggers a series of events that begin diplomatically, as Russia, China and their allies see the sudden shift in the global geo-political sphere as an indicator of NATO's growing threat, along side the expansionist interests of Zionist Israel," Donahue began.
"The Muslim world is split down the middle, with the UAE and Saudi Arabia, and perhaps one or two other Muslim nations such as Jordan and Kuwait, siding with NATO, while the others unanimously side with their Russian and Chinese allegiance. In Muslim countries that stick with NATO, there will be a tremendous social upheaval that will put the leadership of those countries at risk, with the likelihood of their leadship being toppled, while the United Nations stands the risk of losing both the power of its global trust, and its effectiveness if it gets involved and shows favour to either side," Stanton continued.
"South America will be split as well on this issue and the most recent generation will see a modern version of the Cuban Missile Crisis scenario play out again. This time, one that doesn't have a happy ending and will lead to several countries on North America's doorstep having first strike strategic nuclear capability and possibly set the stages of a naval conflict in Latin American waters. This will once again create a situation where a growing market for the rapid deployment of tactical nuclear arms will be the only means to stop the threat imposed by an IDF/NATO allegiance and these tensions will inevitably lead to a scenario where one side fires the first shot. This is the war that has been brewing for almost six thousand years," Donahue explained to Sabir.
"Syria in this situation has a gun to their head. The first to arrive will be NATO, because if they don't, then Israel will. If, and I say if in the sense that something unspeakable happens that sees neither of them act on this situation, then Russia or China certainly will. Syria is looking down the gun barrels of both sides at this moment. Considering that it was recently liberated from the Assad dynasty, and that the United States backed the other side, we're not going to be too popular amongst the people if and when they catch us..." Donahue finished.
"This isn't a case of one side being the good guys and the other being the bad guys. There's three sides. Two sides that have a history of opposition to one another, and a third side that is essentially chaos, trying to get the other two sides to fight. Russia and China aren't the bad guys, and if you see it that way, then remember that from their perspective, NATO are the bad guys and they're the good guys. All of this is a matter of perspective. Without the information we're carrying, the two sides will be divided. With it, there's a really good chance they'll be united. NATO. IDF. RDF. PLA. Muslim nations. All operating under the assumption that something is trying to get them to start the major fight that will end this world. That has the power to unite us," Stanton summed up what this was all about.
"We've got about seven clicks to go to the Jordanese border. Its going to be crawling with Syrian nationals if we don't pick our pace..." Stanton rolled over from his back, watching as a pair of old UAZ pickup trucks with rear mounted RP-45 squad support weapons joined the trail ran by several of the tractors.
As Stanton paid close attention to the situation, Sabir ever so carefully and quietly snuck one of Stanton's holdout weapons, a GSh-18 from the lower back of his webbing without Stanton noticing. He then pocketed the weapon and continued by taking one of its magazines neighbouring the holster on his webbing. Meanwhile, Stanton continued keeping a close eye on the vehicles that had joined the growing caravan of death.
"Two UAZ just joined the fray. SNA for sure. They've got a mobile platoon after us. They must have found the helicopter wreckage," Stanton informed Donahue, who cursed under his breath.
Donahue rolled over onto his back and pulled his side arm from its holster, affixing the silencer to it.
"What the hell are you doing?" asked Stanton of Donahue.
"Just an insurance policy. The first sign of trouble from your Tech Head friend here, and he's gone. That way, Sabir will have a chance even if we don't," Donahue explained to Stanton.
"Copy that. I didn't want it to come down to that, but it makes the most sense," Stanton nodded affirmatively.
"Any ideas about how we can get out of here in broad daylight?" asked Donahue.
"I was just thinking of something that might help. It would cost us one of our green smoke signal flares..." Stanton explained.
"Go on..." Donahue urged him as he kept a close eye on Tech Head.
"I have another timer and detonator left. I could use it to set off one of the smoke grenades, without compromising our position. Maybe set it up to sound like an arty-sim, with the remainder of our Semtech," Stanton suggested.
Donahue peered over to see the dust being kicked up in the distance by the two UAZ trucks that had joined the search, along with a column of armed men in military fatiques.
"It shouldn't hurt anyone, but it will certainly get their attention and draw them away from us. We'll set it off when we're two clicks out from here. Assuming we haven't been made by that point," Stanton began wiring the explosive kit together that had moments earlier been a thought in his mind, which then became a plan in his words, and were now becoming reality by his hands.
"We depart in two minutes, keeping ourselves half prone as we move. We'll steer this way, following this tiny ravine, which might give us an extra foot of cover, which in this case might save us," Stanton told them as he hid the device he'd constructed inside of a tiny bush.
"Won't the remote give our position away? You said they could detect radio signals?" Sabir asked Stanton.
"No. Not from this. It would appear like a short pulsed blip. Far to short for them to get a fix on our position," Stanton assured Sabir as they prepared to resume their journey.
"Before we leave, check the tape on Tech Head's mouth," Stanton told Donahue.
"I already did. He's just fine. Quiet as a mouse in cat convention..." Donahue joked.
"I'm getting to know the feeling," Stanton replied, reminding Donahue that they too were in much the same predicament.
"If you walk upright for more than three seconds, its game over for you. No second chances. Walk like you're the big man in a really small house," Donahue coaxed Tech Head forward as Sabir, and then Stanton followed carefully behind.
The going was very slow for the first half hour, but then picked up pace as the caravan of death shifted its search further east of them, giving them a little breathing space. Before the hour was done, they'd made it nearly a click and a half from Stanton's ad-hoc device.
"Tell me, how is the information you have going to stop NATO's presence in the area?" asked Sabir.
"We've got serial numbers for several of the parts on the device before we demolished it..." Stanton explained to Sabir.
"But weren't those serial numbers made by the automated line that produced them? Wouldn't they be irrelevant? I mean if anyone can simply throw together a factory printing nuclear weapons, what good are serial numbers?" asked Sabir what amounted to being a very good question.
"Those aren't just serial numbers. They have encoded information embedded within them and they're universally unique. That is, the chances of any two of those numbers being the exact same is very close to one in ten to the power of a hundred. It would take the lifespan of several billion universes for that to occur even just once if you spit out a hundred serial numbers a day. So when you combine those two factors, we know with one hundred percent certainty that the numbers came from a specific algorithm, and encodes a specific set of values. Since there's only one class of designs for this type of manufacturing that employs these means of generating serial numbers, we can link it legally to devices designed by a specific group of people, and trace it through everyone in their supply chain, right to their customer endpoint. That doesn't even include how we know where they got the materials for the nuclear warhead," Stanton explained to Sabir.
"Do you feel that the situation is right? The one involving Israel?" asked Sabir very diplomatically.
"In what way?" asked Stanton.
"I mean, do you feel that its alright that they expand their territory on the grounds of their justifications outlined in their Zionist policies?" asked Sabir the million dollar question.
"If I have neighbours beside me, on either side of my house, and I know both of them are armed, and don't like my family or me for that matter. Now out of concern for what I'm protecting, I decide that it might be a good idea to keep an eye on my neighbours, because they might hurt my family. One day I come home from work, and I find out that both my neighbours, who previously bought pistols, recently bought shotguns, escalating the situation enormously. So I go out and buy my own shotgun..." Stanton began his metaphor.
"The next day, I find out that my neighbour threatened my children, from their side of the property line, but nonetheless, they pose a significant threat to my family, and they've now expressed this. I have proof of it, as my security cameras recorded the whole incident. I go to a community tribunal and present my evidence. They kick me out, claiming that my evidence isn't sufficient for them to act upon it in any meaningful manner. So the next day, I storm my neighbours house, disarm them, take their weapons, and leave. My neighbours go to the tribunal, who level accusations against me but much like they did in protection of my family, they do nothing. I was in my right to protect my family by going into their home and disarming my neighbours who'd threatened my children. Keeping their home, would be an entirely different matter, because that would turn all of the other neighbours against my family, and put my family in even more danger than they were in the first place," Stanton explained to Sabir.
"So you're saying that you support preemptive disarmament in situations where one sovereign nation is under the threat of another, correct?" asked Sabir.
"Correct. But not permanent occupation," Stanton clarified to Sabir.
"Then what is your stance on Zionism?" asked Sabir.
"That's a very complicated question, seeing as there are several different kinds, held by several different nations, each very different from that of their neighbours. If you're talking about Zionism that implicates one group of people as being superior to another on the grounds of race or blood, and therefore having the right of rule over others of lesser stock, I'm against it, and there are ideologies that follow and enforce such ideas, and the world needs to stand strong againt them," Stanton indicated to Sabir.
"So what is your stance then on royalty? Are they not of superior stock and rule over those of lesser stock?" asked Sabir a very rhetorical and divisive question.
"No. Though that would be the understanding of most people who haven't really given the idea much thought. I think of that as another form of rule by representation, albeit one whose means and purpose are often at the risk of many threats that stand to betray the people. Any that do betray the people usually end up excised from their throne, and expelled or in the worst of cases, hanged or beheaded on account of such a fall from the grace of responsibility. Look at the French Revolution and the guillotine. Most people see it as a matter of privilege versus poverty, but in fact, no matter the sytem, it has been proven that there will always be either. The reason for that goes way beyond a central authority figure who represents the leadership of a nation or empire. Society has layers, and within each, there are circles within which people find protection in numbers, usually surrounded by people of like ways and values. Some of us are free to find our way to the circle of our choosing, while others are forced in a direction not of their choosing and these circles can encompass both. Either privilege, poverty, and sometimes something in between," Stanton explained what he'd observed about society and its functioning thus far.
"And where does royalty fit into all of this?" asked Sabir.
"Royalty is a symbol of having the power to license others with that same power, in order to endorse the idea of a public trust to allow such a person entrusted with it to adapt society quickly, through demonstrated ability. Its also giving one the power to decide who, when, where and sometimes how, without the complications of a bureaucracy to interfere in that process or corrupt it," Stanton paused as Donahue spoke.
"Some would call a bureaucracy a means to shield the public from corruption..." Donahue added his perspective.
"Yes, with oversight, that's certainly a prospect," Stanton responded.
"If you're opposed to this perspective of superior blood, then where does your country's ideas on the term blood paid come into meaning?" asked Sabir of Stanton.
"Blood paid in such matters isn't a reference to the superiority of lineage at all. Its a reference to the fact that one has represented the same values that merit some form of honour, or dedication to one's own country and people, or to the people of the world. Where I'm from, we have a bit of both. A system of representation by way of election, and accountability to our Crown and Commonwealth. Like having to answer to an investor," Stanton expressed his views on the matter as Donahue quickly and sarcastically interjected.
"You got that right. Your senate reports to a crowned tyrant, you red coat sympathizers..." Donahue smirked back at Stanton with a hint of a smile.
"Yeah, well you can thank us for your current White House, because we burned the previous one down the last time we got into a serious spat over this topic...ahem..." Stanton smirked back to Donahue, his own smile present, though both men were certainly grateful that it was a matter over which they could now laugh some two hundred years on.
"And what of other forms of Zionism?" Sabir asked Stanton.
"If on the other hand, you're referring to the justification of nation A to take the land of nation B on the grounds that nation B isn't using their land or resources to their fullest advantage, I'm against it," Stanton outlined once again.
"There are many people who'd likely disagree with you on these issues..." Sabir said to Stanton thoughtfully.
"They'd have that right to their own opinion on the matter, as long as they didn't enforce it on others as if it were law, because its not. Imagine if every country in the world practiced the ideas you just asked me about. Zionism where a group of people are a superior race, or Zionism where nation A has the justification to take land and resources from nation B if they're not using them to their fullest. If every nation in the world were like that, we'd all still be living in the dark ages, and in a constant state of war," Stanton expressed how and why he felt that way.
"But yet, you somehow still stand with Israel?" Sabir asked Stanton.
"As much so as I stood with the rest of the Middle East during the Oslo accords. Yes. I believe that was one of the greatest achievements of my generation, and it took people from all sides of that fence to make that possible," Donahue held his fist up, gesturing for them to stop as Stanton finished his sentence.
They all fell to ground as they spied a group of twenty men in military fatigues south east of their position.
The Country Of The Blind
Donahue lay flat, his right hand keeping Tech Head's face to the dirt as he spied trouble ahead.
"Looks like they were patrolling along the Jordanese border. They're headed north. Seem to be sticking to the same trail as the ones in the RP-45 mounted pickup trucks we saw earlier," Donahue reported to Stanton.
"I directed the blast when we demoed the helicopter towards the east. Might have sent debris a fair distance in that direction. We should take advantage of that and get further west and then continue south. I'll set off the smoke flare explosive I rigged earlier," Stanton advised.
"Sounds good. At least the sun being high above us it will help to keep our shadows hidden. Nothing worse than to be spotted as the result of a rising or setting sun," Donahue responded.
"I hear you there. Alright. Fire in the hole..." Stanton twisted the plunger on the detonator, and their ears were met with the same silence of moments earlier.
"Wait for it..." Stanton advised them.
There was a sudden drop in pressure, which caused their ears to become muffled, and then a sudden pressure increase, which was accompanied by the sound of a very loud explosion as the shockwave hit them.
"That's more like it..." Stanton responded.
"Whoa. That got their attention. Look at 'em go!" Donahue watched as the column of men began charging north in the direction of their smoke screen.
When it appeared that all eyes were on their decoy, the got up from the ground, remaining half prone, and ran as fast as they could south westward.
"Keep going if you want to keep your head!" Donahue urged the Tech Head.
"I think we're in the clear...!" Sabir said, running in the direction of the Jordanese border which was less than nine hundred meters away.
"Careful! We're still in the hot zone..." Stanton no sooner had the words out, when the air around them was shredded by heavy machine gun fire.
Donahue was hit in the upper right of his chest, spinning him clean around and onto his back, gasping for air as Stanton and Sabir hit the dirt.
"Oh! That hurts like a..." Donahue quickly inhaled, feeling a seering pain in his chest as air escaped through the large hole opened between his front and back.
Tech Head continued running, now standing fully erect as he sprinted not in the direction of the Jordanese border, but directly at the the pickup truck whose mounted RP-45 had just opened fire on them from two hundred meters away.
Stanton was upon Donahue, applying pressure on his chest in an attempt to stop the bleeding.
"Damn!... this is... tell Linda... George...make sure that Stead... get to George... oh... let them... oh ffff... damn!" and then with one final extruciating inhalation, Donahue's eyes became lifeless as the last of his air escaped through blood flowing from his nostrils, mouth and chest.
"Damn you! Don't you f#cking die on me soldier!" Stanton cursed at the older man, but only his lifeless eyes looked back at him. Through him.
They peered to some unknown point in the sky behind Stanton. Somewhere into eternity.20
Sabir lay on the ground, his head buried in the dirt as he dared not get up lest he draw the same fire that had taken Donahue.
By that point, Stanton had grabbed Donahue's Barrett, and dove to the ground, aiming in the direction of of the pickup truck, Tech Head's back plainly visible as he ran for the vehicle.
[Stop firing! Stop firing! The reward! Remember?!!!]
"توقف عن إطلاق النار! توقف عن إطلاق النار! المكافأة! أتذكر؟!!!" the driver yelled from the cab of the truck at the gunner, who'd just finished unloading his clip.
[Get us closer! They're running!]
"اقتربوا منا! إنهم يركضون!" the gunner responded, quickly pulling a fresh clip from the ammo store in the back of the truck.
[Don't fire! Don't fire! They won't pay us if they're dead!]
"لا تطلقوا النار! لا تطلقوا النار! لن يدفعوا لنا إذا ماتوا!" the driver screamed back at the gunner, putting the truck in gear just as the gunner got the RP-45 reloaded.
Sweat poured from Tech Head's forehead, and the tape that bound his mouth began to slip, giving him room without the breath to yell.
[They're traitors! I captured them but they're traitors!]
"إنهم خونة! لقد أسرتهم لكنهم خونة!" Tech Head yelled, barely getting enough breath behind his voice to be heard.
Stanton aimed the Barrett, finding his first target. He picked the gunner for he was the biggest threat to them all. Stanton let out an even gasp of air as he pulled the trigger, seeing the firey muzzle flash of the RP-45.
The rounds flew faster than the speed of sound, impacted a group of rocks nearby, sending schrapnel flying at Stanton's eyes. One of the pieces broke was stopped by his Oakley ballistic lenses, impacting his eye socket much like a punch, before he'd managed to pull the trigger.
He let go of the Barrett and quickly rolled right, laying flat on his side as he checked his eye with his hand.
He felt only dust and a large fragment of chipped rock caught just beneath his eye lid. He grasped at it carefully with his fingers and pulled it free, his vision in that eye now totally shot. That's when he felt the gun against his head and then heard the familiar voice which accompanied it.
"I'm sorry my friend that it had to work out this way..." Sabir said to Stanton.
"Not nearly as sorry as I am..." Stanton replied, knowing fully well what had happened.
...
The truck bounced as it drove off road, Sabir in the back with Stanton, whose hands were now bound much like Sabir's had been only minutes earlier.
Tech Head was in the passenger seat of the truck, still bound as he had been earlier, a fresh layer of utility tape across his mouth, as tears streamed down his face.
[If you weren't worth such a bounty for me? I'd have shot you myself...]
"لو ما كنتَ تستحقّ هذه المكافأة مني؟ كنتُ سأقتلك بنفسي..." the driver of the truck said to Tech Head, who could do nothing except listen.
Sabir bounced as the truck navigated the rough terrain on its way back to one of the main roads.
[He looked like a top level one. A special forces guy or something? He'll be worth a lot to us!]
"بدا كرجلٍ من الطراز الرفيع. جنديٌّ من القوات الخاصة أم ماذا؟ سيكون ذا قيمةٍ كبيرةٍ لنا!" the gunner kicked Stanton, who grunted back at him, still unable to see.
[We'll have a nice big feast at my place after the holiday!]
"سوف نستمتع بإقامة وليمة كبيرة في منزلي بعد العطلة!" Sabir said to the gunner.
[And you. I'll never forget what you said to me this morning...]
"وأنت. لن أنسى أبدًا ما قلته لي هذا الصباح..." Sabir said to Stanton as he stood up from the back of the truck, bracing himself against the gun mount.
Sabir put the pistol he'd stolen from Stanton against the head of the gunner.
[Don't move! Step out of the gun mount. Take off your shoes, and jump off the back of the truck. Do it, or you'll meet with the business end of my friend here...]
"لا تتحرك! اخرج من حامل البندقية. اخلع حذاءك، واقفز من مؤخرة الشاحنة. افعلها، وإلا ستواجه مصير صديقي هنا..." Sabir ordered the gunner.
The gunner immediately complied, sliding out of the mount on the back of the truck and then slipping his shoes off one by one. When he'd finished, he stood at the back of the truck by the tailgate, and then leapt off onto the hard dry soil of the afternoon sun.
Sabir waited a few minutes for the truck to put some distance between the gunner and the truck, before he tapped on the window of the cab, flagging the driver.
[There's been an accident! We lost the gunner off the back of the truck!]
"لقد وقع حادث! فقدنا المدفعي من مؤخرة الشاحنة!" Sabir yelled to the driver, waving frantically at him through the back window.
The driver slowed the truck until it was safe enough to do so, and finally stopped and got out. He walked around the back of the truck to the tail gate.
[Where did he get to?]
"إلى أين وصل؟!!! asked the driver, at which point he felt a gun against his head.
...
A few moments later and he stood beside Tech Head, who was still bound and gagged with the utility tape as the gunner without his shoes caught up to them. All three of them watched as the truck drove off down the road in the direction of the Jordanese border.
"Here my friend. I had to borrow this. You weren't using it at the time, so I felt justified to take it from you, but seeing as you explained to me how you really feel about such matters, I think I should return it to you. It served its purpose. It saved us both. Now we've got to go and get your friend," Sabir assured Stanton, whose one eye had finally cleared up enough so that he could see, while his injured eye swelled to the size of a baseball, though his ballistic lenses had saved his eye from a potentially far worse injury.
"You had me convinced there for a moment that you'd teetered over to the other side..." Stanton said to him blandly, and then somehow found the room to smile a bit.
"I guess I saw a way to do this while averting more loss of life," Sabir admitted to Stanton.
"I was terrified, and then it occurred to me that your friend had just died trying to save me. And so I owed him the same in attempting to protect you. When I realized that it could all be over at any moment and that it was out of my control, the fear subsided and I acted on the choice. Just like this morning. I could have pulled the trigger, and never have been able to live with myself again, or..." Sabir told Stanton.
"You did the right thing... in both cases. Not to mention, you got us this decent UAZ truck. Kind of feels a little bit more like home," Stanton smiled, thinking of his F-150 back home.
After a five minute drive, they arrived at the spot where Donahue had fallen in battle, his body stiffening as rigor mortis set in.
"It was an honour old friend. They don't make soldiers like you anymore. Rest easy," Stanton had a quiet moment before he got to the matter at hand.
Stanton gently lifted his body onto the flatbed of the truck, tying it in place to ensure that it was not disfigured or further harmed by sliding around in the back of the truck.
"We've got to get you home old friend," Stanton closed the tailgate and quickly made his way around to the passenger side of the truck and got in as Sabir finished his phone call.
"...They're safe in Luxembourg then?" asked Sabir into his phone.
"Yes. They applied for a visa at the embassy earlier. They're being held and debriefed. Get yourself safely back. We'll let them know that you're on your way," the Registrar General of the Embassy in Luxembourg assured Sabir.
"Tell them I'll be there soon. And thank you ever so much," Sabir said, hanging up the phone and pocketing it as they drove back to the road and towards the nearest Jordanese checkpoint.
"Your family? They're safe?" asked Stanton.
"They were just cleared at the embassy. They'll be put in a hotel there and have access to my savings. They said they'll be keeping a plate of warm food for me when I get there," Sabir told Stanton.
"Well then lets not keep them waiting..." Stanton nodded.
"Why didn't you kill him? Tech Head I mean? He heard everything about you and Donahue you know. He'll definitely share that information during his interrogation," Sabir reminded Stanton.
"Most of that information will remain in the hands of professionals and it won't circulate. He'll be put on trial, first by the courts and then by the public. He'll be found guilty, seeing as the launch platform is covered in his DNA. Remember, we're talking about an international team of experts going over that crime scene with a fine tooth comb, in order for Syria to avert occupation. That will go before the United Nations and the world court, and likely be approved by both, given the threat to regional stability this case caused..." Stanton asserted his assessment upon Sabir.
"...if they have the intelligence you collected of the site, correct?" confirmed Sabir.
"If they have that intelligence, then the world will be united. Without it, the diplomacy involved will lean in the direction of one geo-political sphere or the other, meaning that it will be divisive. Tech Head, even if he shares that information about me in prison, won't be taken very seriously. He'll be kept isolated for his own protection, not to mention there are others in my line of work in the prison he'll be going to. We're a tight nit community. We watch each other's backs. He'd be playing with his own safety if he spoke about anything he'd heard," Stanton assured Sabir.
"Then we are truly safe my friend," Sabir said happily.
"Not yet. We still have to get through a Jordanese interrogation, and given the diplomatic value of this information, they'll be very insistent until our representative arrives," Stanton was already preparing himself both physically and mentally.
Do you read my friend?" asked Sabir, of Stanton.
"I have. A fair bit in my life. Why? Do you have something to suggest?" asked Stanton as they drove along the highway, Stanton keeping his eye on the mirrors for any sign of trouble as he field stripped his returned GSh-18 and reassembled it.
"Have you ever read any H.G. Wells? A remarkable writer of intense vision and timeless expression," asked Sabir of Stanton, who smiled and nodded.
"I've read some of his. Not really a big fan of science fiction, but The Shape Of Things To Come was certainly an insightful read, if not a bit prophetic," Stanton admitted that he'd not read much of the author.
"Well then, may I suggest that you read one of his best tales. A short story..." Sabir asked him.
"Sure. What's it called?" asked Stanton.
"Its called: The Country Of The Blind, and if I may quote one of its truly remarkable characters, Nunez: In the country of the blind, the one eyed man is king..." Sabir said to Stanton as they pulled up to the border and were immediately surrounded by an army of armed Jordanese men in military fatigues.
"All hail the king of the dirt..." Stanton said as he raised his hands from inside of the cab of the pickup truck.
Safe And Sound
Grace manually typed the number into her own phone as she sat in the chair of one of the cozy rooms in a non-descript lowrise office building on the west side of Bay Street, just northing of College Street. Detective Ed Farnham sat across from her wearing a compact headset, watching as she put the phone to her ear.
Fifteen kilometers away, Tricia and Halmand sat in their car, their speaker phone on as they listened to the sound of Grace's phone rining.
"Grace? I though I told you never to call me on this number from your regular phone!" Stan Leeski answered the phone, his voice indicating nervousness and stress as he spoke.
"Look, Mr. Griffin told me to take the week off, but I was worried. I can't get a hold of anyone at the office..." Grace said to him, putting on her best performance.
"I think that the company is in serious trouble Grace... You should get as far away from this as possible... I honestly don't know what to tell you..." Stan urged her.
"What about us? What about our plans...?" Grace pleaded with him.
"We... We shouldn't have... I think that we were both on the rebound and we should have known better... It was wrong..." Stan said to her firmly.
"So you think that I should run to Richard, then?!!!" Grace responded, almost threateningly.
"NO! By all means don't do that. Just get away from here. Get far away. Change your name and don't come back... I'm so sorry that it came to this Grace, but honestly, I didn't know..." Stan confided in her.
"I don't know what to do! Can we meet? I need someone to talk too about this... its too much..." Grace said to him, on the verge of tears.
"Maybe we could run away... together..." Grace suggested to him, sniffling as she spoke.
"Meet me at the Wavecrest Restaurant... in fifteen minutes. Are you at home?" asked Stan.
Grace looked to Detective Farnham, shrugging her shoulders when asked where she was.
Detective Farnham nodded affirmatively.
"Yes. I'm just flaked on the sofa..." she said to him.
"Get to the restaurant as soon as you can. We'll discuss this there. Bring your passport, your credit cards and enough clothes to last you three days. Pack light... I'll be at a table registered under the name Gardener," Stant told her and then hung up.
"Did we..." Grace started addressing Farnham when he quickly put up his hand as if to stop her.
She paused, and a red light above the door suddenly switched to the colour green.
"Alright, the line's closed. I think he went for it," Farnham assured her.
"He's turning off the lights and..." Halmand added, coming in over Farnham's headset.
"He's out the door and getting in his car. A gray hybrid sedan," Halmand said to Farnham, then looking over to Tricia.
They waited parked on the street, a distance down from him as he pulled out of his driveway and began heading out of the suburban community and onto one of the main roads.
When he was far enough along, they started their car and followed him, while four men in a van got out from the back, and went over to his home. They quickly gained entry and began searching the premises as Tricia and Halmand pursued Stan to the restaurant.
"Somboon just messaged me. Stan just called the airline and bought another ticket to Havana, Cuba," Farnham reported to Halmand.
"Poor guy. He really has no idea..." Halmand reponded.
"At least he's doing the right thing. He didn't just abandon her," Tricia responded to Halmand.
"We have one shot at this. You're going to have to be his hot date. If we take him with a team, we're blowing their cover story. I'll watch your back, but the cards are all in your hand, partner..." Halmand said to her as they pulled into the parking lot of the restaurant.
"I'll go, get a table by myself," Halmand said to Tricia.
"Got ya. I'll be at his table in five minutes. Get yourself settled in and make sure you've got a good view," Tricia urged him.
"See you soon..." Halmand winked at her as he got out of the car and headed over to the restaurant.
He stepped inside the front door and was greeted by the hostess.
"Good evening. I'm Eva, your hostess. How many of you are there?" Eva asked Halmand.
"One, at my last count, but I failed math you know," Halmand threw on the charm.
"A table for one? Would you rather a seat at the bar?" Eva asked him, laughing politely at his quip.
"No thanks. I'll take a table with a good view of the door preferrably. Wouldn't want my client's husband to sneak away before I catch him with his hands on the dessert you know," he smiled at her.
"Ohhh. Its your line of work, is it? A P.I. maybe?" she asked him as they approached the table she'd selected for him, perhaps even intrigued ever so slightly by him.
"If it saves my client a fortune in pre-nuptials and wasted time, then I've done my part..." Halmand said to her confidently.
"Enjoy. I hope that it all works out for everyone involved. Can I have your waitress bring you something from the bar?" Eva responded tactfully.
"Sure. A glass of mineral water, thank you," Halmand responded as he spied Tricia step into the waiting area by the front door.
...
Eva arrived once again by the waiting area, this time to greet Tricia, who'd undone the top two buttons on her blouse to loosen up a bit for the role she was about to play.
"I'm Eva, your hostess. How many of you will there be?" Eva asked Tricia.
"I'm here as a guest of the Gardener table," Tricia explained to Eva.
"Alright. Could you wait just a moment?" Eva went into the back of the restaurant and sent one of the waitresses to speak with Stan, who sat nervously at his table with a drink in front of him.
A moment later, Eva returned.
"Could you please come this way and I'll take you to Mr. Gardener's table," Eva asked Tricia.
"Sure. I'm sure that he'll be quite happy to see me..." Tricia smiled and followed Eva.
"Here you are. Would you like anything from the bar?" asked Eva of Tricia as she sat down across from Stan.
"No thanks. I'll be alright, thank you," Tricia urged her to leave them in peace.
Eva got the message and left them.
"I'm sorry... there's some kind of a mistake. Do I know you?" asked Stan of Tricia.
"Not yet, but you and I are going to have a lot of fun together. Now first of all, try not to be nervous and don't look around. Keep your eyes on me. You're in very serious danger. I happen to know that you bought an airline ticket to Havana, which while you were on the way here, upgraded to two tickets, the second of which is for your date, for whom I'm here in her place..." Tricia began.
"Is she alright?!!!" Stan immediately asked.
"That's a good sign. So it was a more than just a fling. She's safe. You're going to finish your drink, and when you have, we'll leave together, arm in arm like we're very familiar with one another. We'll go to your car, and seeing as you've been drinking, I'll drive. I'll take you to where Gracie is, and we'll take things from there..." Tricia explained to him how things were going to work.
"How do I know that you're not the real danger?" asked Stan.
"You don't, but if I was, you'd be deceased already. Once outside, and away from the crowd, I'll identify myself to you. We'll get in your car, and I'll drive. Don't try anything funny because I've got other people watching you right this very minute. For your safety and for mine," Tricia asserted to him confidently.
"What choice do I have?" asked Stan of her.
"You made your choice already. Now commit to it. Drink up and lets go," Tricia said to him, trying to appear flirtatious.
"I'm really going to have to act, because you're totally not my type..." Stan said to her as he gulped down his entire drink.
"Well I've got news for you. You're not mine, and I'm not acting. Let's go," Tricia stood from the table with Stan as Eva arrived at Halmand's table.
"I take it you'll be needing the bill?" Eva caught on quickly.
"I'll pay at the cashier, but the service here is impeccable, not to mention the hostess," Halmand stood up and went over to the cash register at the bar, while Tricia left with Stan, arm in arm.
After Halmand left an honest gratuity for the staff, he found his way to their unmarked car and got in the driver's seat as Tricia arrived at Stan's car.
"You said you were going to identify yourself before we get in?" asked Stan of Tricia.
"That I did. I'm Inspector Tricia Camden of the RCMP," Tricia showed Stan her badge.
"Looks like the real thing. Am I under arrest?" asked Stan of her, handing her back her badge.
"As an act of diplomacy in the interest of our cooperation, no. However, you are wanted for questioning and if you make that part difficult, then I can alter our priorities and have you arrested in direct connection with the case, which would change your future possibilities very drastically. I'm gunning for Gracie, and right now it seems to me that you two were meant to be, and the complications of life and a particular case got in the way. I'm giving you a chance to make that right, but only for her sake. You're in by two good choices. Get the third, and I'll make sure that Gracie and you are well looked after and protected, and that this problem becomes a difficult memory from your past. You just have to confirm facts in our case material, and possibly testify in a closed court session, given the nature of this case," Tricia offered him.
"I always thought it was more dangerous for Gracie to be with me, and that's why I was going to run for it. I didn't know that she had a thing with someone else in our office. A year before I met her, and with a much more dangerous and married man..." Stan said to her as he looked across the top of the car at her.
"Are you in?" asked Tricia.
"I'm in," Stan said to her.
"Get in the car and we'll talk while we drive," Tricia ordered him, opening the driver's side door and getting into his car and starting it with his keys.
"You mean Richard, don't you?" Tricia asked him.
"Yes. Our resident shark at Vector Engine Dynamics. I always though that he was a minnow in shark's clothing. The kind of guy every good business needs. But it turns out that he's a shark, in shark's clothing... A real shark. He's only out for himself and his inner circle," Stan said to her as she pulled out into traffic.
Behind them, Halmand followed, keeping a relative distance from them so as to provide cover.
"I didn't know that they had a fling... When Gracie and I first got together, I thought that it might actually be real. We dated for a few months, and then one night, she told me she'd been in a two month fling with Richard. When I heard that, it scared me, and I began thinking that maybe she wasn't the kind of girl that I thought she was... and so I ran..." Stan told Tricia.
"Then somehow, Richard found out about us, and started getting all paranoid around me. He started treating me very differently. Like I had something on him, though in all honesty at that time, I had no idea about anything to do with him..." Stan explained to Tricia.
"Its not what you know... Its what Richard said to her at some point during their relationship. Pillow talk... He confided something to her. Something very big... Now you're going to man-up for her, and be there for her when she needs you most..." Tricia pressured him.
"Look. The only reason that I was going to run, was because I thought it was me that was a risk to her. That Richard had it out for me, because I was in a relationship with her. Some exes get really bizarre about that. Like they have some kind of ownership over all of their exes. An alpha male kind of thing. You know, like the lion that takes over a lion den. It kills all of the competing males, and then kills all that male's cubs. Even after the alpha male has taken a different mate... I thought that Richard was like that. An alpha male shark... and so in order to save Gracie from his wrath, I decided to run..." Stan admitted to her.
"I wish it was as simple as a domestic dispute like that, but its a far cry from anything like that. Haven't you been watching the news? Haven't you put it together with the special engineering projects that Wesley Donahue was working on? His death? Any of this getting through?" asked Tricia as they pulled onto the Gardener expressway eastbound.
Tricia's phone suddenly rang.
"Tricia speaking," Tricia answered the phone.
"Its Andrej. You're in business. The safe's open," Andrej reported to her.
"You're a star! Stay in the office and I'll have an officer relieve you. I'm very busy right now. I'll call you back, " Tricia hung up on him and immediately dialled Halmand.
"Hello, Halmand? I need you to get over to the office and pickup the contents of the safe..." Tricia requested of him.
"Right now? I'm riding shotgun for you. You'll have no cover," Halmand told her.
"You have to get it done. Right now. I'll be alright. Besides, we're only a few clicks out from downtown," Tricia ordered him.
"I can't do that partner..." Halmand said reluctantly.
"I wasn't asking. I'm ordering you," Tricia pulled seniority.
"Alright. I'll be downtown again as fast as I can. Watch your back partner," Halmand replied.
"You too. I'll see you soon," Tricia hung up.
Behind Tricia, Halmand withdrew and took the next exit, quickly turning around and driving back out to Mississauga and to the safe at Vector Engine Dynamics.
As Halmand pulled away from Tricia's car, another took his former spot.
Foller looked on as he followed Tricia on the Gardener expressway.
Diplomacy In Jordan
[Stanton and Sabir find themselves in the custody of the Jordanese General Intelligence Department as Israel and NATO move to advance into Syria. Can Linda Delmore and Dina Shelhevet get them out in time? Meanwhile, the rapid deployment tactical nuclear weapons platform engineered by Vector Engine Dynamics have found new buyers elsewhere.]
Stanton sat alone at a table, in a well lit room. The table itself was permanently cemented into the floor, while the three chairs (the one in which Stanton sat and the two across from him on the other side of the table) were fastened via chains, again to the cement floor, allowing them a small leeway of movement but not to be wielded as weapons.
Both his hands were cuffed and behind his back, and though he could have remedied that, he refrained from doing so, the reasons for as much being somewhat obvious given the situation. His left eye socket was swelled to the size of a grapefruit, and of similar tint, while the corneal abrasions on his left eye entirely prevented its use.
There was a one way glass window on the wall beside him to his left and he knew that he was being watched, and closely as they prepared for his interrogation.
An electromagnetic buzzing sound emanated from the door, and a group of four men stepped into the room, one after the other. The first two were guards, armed only with tazers and tonfas, and their sizeable musculature and body mass, while the other two appeared more to be administrative professionals of some form, Stanton assuming them to be bureaucrats given the situation.
One guard remained by the door, while the other guard situated himself behind Stanton, well out of arm's reach, indicating that they likely had a very good idea of with whom they were dealing.
The bureaucrats, one of them in a three piece suit, and the other in a officer's uniform sat in the seats across from Stanton. The man in the officer's uniform looked to the one way glass and nodded once.
"State your full name. Family name first, then given name, followed by your middle name," the bureaucrat began.
"Are you kidding me? Isn't that kind of redundant?" Stanton responded.
"Please follow my instructions and we'll get through this introductory portion of this process without any unnecessary interruptions. According to the Geneva Convention, you are to provide us with your name, rank and serial number. I'm assuming that you're operating under the instructions of a state who has representation in the United Nations?" the bureaucrat asked Stanton.
"Did you go to school to figure that out? Statistically speaking, you have a ninety-nine percent chance of being correct on that assumption. Why did you even ask me?" Stanton responded.
"This part of the process is necessary under international law. You should be aware of that, given the fact that you are clearly a professional. May I suggest that you start behaving like one?" the bureaucrat responded, completely unphased by any of Stanton's statements.
"As a professional, I'm advising you that the information that you requested, is not available to you at this time," Stanton responded, holding his ground.
The bureaucrat looked to the man in the officer's uniform and then back to Stanton.
"Your injury? Was that inflicted during the same conflict that produced the body that we found in the back of the UAZ?" asked the bureaucrat.
Stanton remained silent, quickly glancing at the bureaucrat's watch to obtain the exact time.
"The other man. The Syrian that was driving the UAZ. Did you kidnap him or otherwise extort him into accompanying you under the threat of violence or any other such coercion?" asked the bureaucrat.
Stanton again remained silent, keeping his eyes focused on a point on the wall on the other side of the table, between the two men across from him, and the guard near the door.
The bureaucrat again looked to the man in the officer's uniform, who nodded negatively in response.
"Very well. I was hoping that we could do this like the civilized people that we both are, but obviously I was mistaken. I can only hope that your behaviour isn't a representation of the west's attitude, both politically and diplomatically, towards the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, its democratically elected officials, or its people," the bureaucrat stated to Stanton before standing and making his way over to the door.
The magnetic lock disengaged, producing a buzzing sound, and the bureaucrat left the room.
"Now I suppose that you're going to try to convince me that we're doing things your way?" asked Stanton, looking to the man in the officer's uniform.
"International law just left the room. Now we're going to deal with the issue of your hauling a dead body into Jordan, with a Syrian national as your accomplice. If you're found to be guilty in the death of that man, or any others in Syria or Jordan, the penalty will most certainly be death," the officer stated to Stanton.
"I'm certain that you're aware that's always a risk in our line of work?" Stanton asked.
"We'll continue this later. As a peer and professional myself, I'd advise to reconsider your stance on the flow of information, because at this point, it appears that your final resting place might be in a grave in Jordan. Think about that until I return, and when I do, that's when we'll really get things started," the officer stood and walked to the door, the guard behind Stanton following him, well out of Stanton's reach.
The three remaining men each filed out of the room, leaving Stanton by his lonesome.
Stanton looked to the one way glass and spoke:
"I guess its just you and me now?" he said to his reflection on the glass, and the group of people on the other side.
...
A car slowly pushed through a growing crowd that had gathered outside of the Jordanian Military Central Command building. Linda sat in the back seat, leaning forward to address the driver.
"What's going on?" she asked him.
"The same thing that is going on in many countries in the region. There are a growing number that believe recent events, especially the detonation of that non-conventional warhead over the Red Sea, are a sign of a coming war. The end war..." the driver stated to Linda.
"They aren't fixing up to rush the building are they?" she asked him.
"No. Maybe. I heard through the social thread that they arrested a westerner recently, and a man from Syria at the border. Most of these people are hardliners, possibly looking to get a piece of that westerner, especially in light of the recent detonation of that weapon. There is currently much confusion in the country, not to mention other nation states in the region. But who am I but a humble driver to question?" the driver responded.
"Can we get close enough to the building so you can let me out? They'll be expecting me. If you can get me close enough to front entrance, they'll have the state guard deployed," explained Linda.
"Get ready then, we're almost there..." he responded to her.
The car pulled up to the front entry way where a large group of military troopers had sectioned off the crowd, keeping them well away from the entrance. One of them got the door for Linda as the car stopped.
"Thank you! Linda Delmore," she introduced herself to the trooper.
"They're expecting you inside. I will take you there myself," he said to her.
"Just a minute..." she responded, leaning back into the car.
"Thank you very much for getting me here safely," she said to the driver.
"These are trying times. What kind of driver would I be if I could not at least protect a lady in need, or at the very least, get her to her destination," he smiled to her.
"She smiled back and then closed the door and was then accompanied by a pair of troopers who led her into the building and to the administrative section of the building.
After she'd checked in with the receptionist, the bureaucrat approached her, extending his hand to greet her.
"Miss Delmore?" he greeted her.
"Yes. Linda," she greeted him with a professional smile.
"I'm Shahem Sanad. Liaison to the Jordanian Executive Office of Foreign Affairs. Would you like a coffee or perhaps a pastry before we speak?" he asked her.
"I'm quite fine, thank you, though a coffee would be a good start," she responded.
"We'll get you that and you can bring it to my office, where we'll discuss matters," Shahem suggested.
"How was your flight?" asked Shahem.
"Short and fairly uneventful, though there's a lot more happening on the ground both here and in Tel Aviv," she replied as they made their way to the cafeteria.
"Yes. We've been keeping a close eye on things here with regard to the situation and working closely with our allies in the region. I'm assuming that's the case with yourself, having come only from Tel Aviv if I may so ask without prying?" Shahem asked her politely.
"I was situated in Tel Aviv for short term administrative functions with the Embassy. Its often mind boggling how complicated diplomacy has become over the last few years," she responded, covering her tracks as they stepped into the sparsely occupied cafeteria.
"That certainly seems to be a growing truth, so I've heard from many in our field. The best we can hope to do is then to represent the interests of what we're protecting," Shahem prepared her coffee for her.
"I agree. Peace is ever so needed, while remaining ever so fragile," Linda stated.
"Here you go. I hope its sweet enough for you?" Shahem asked her.
She took a sip from the cup.
"Perfect, thank you," she smiled.
"I should tell you that if the need arises that you stay a night in Amman, that I'd recommend the Ritz-Carlton, both for its proximity to this facility, and to the Embassy as well," Shahem suggested to her as he led her to his office.
"I'm hoping that given the circumstances, that we can deal with this situation before I leave," Linda responded carefully.
"I'm afraid that the situation is quite complicated... right here please," he opened his office door for her and she took a seat in front of his desk as he made his way around to his chair, closing the door behind him.
"How many do you have in your custody?" asked Linda.
"Two, and a third person, deceased," Shahem responded as he brought up the case files on his computer.
"Have they identified themselves in accordance with international law?" Linda asked him.
"I'm afraid that only one has been cooperative thus far, so I'll be needing some proof from you that the people we have in our custody have some association with your office," Shahem requested of her.
"Very well," Linda opened her briefcase on her lap, quickly retrieving a pair of photos from within, one of Donahue, the other of Stanton.
She placed them on the desk and slid them over to Shahem's side.
He retrieved them both and examined them carefully, revealing no signs of reaction to either photo.
"How many are you seeking to extradite into your custody?" asked Shahem, returning the photos to her after having quickly scanned them for his file.
"Two. The two in those photos" she responded.
"Then we have a problem. They are both suspects and material witnesses in a case involving murder and espionage. Allegedly," Shahem offered her, without revealing too much.
"You said that there were three. Correct?" she confirmed with him.
"Yes. There is a third," Shahem replied carefully.
"Syrian?" Linda asked him.
"I can't comment with regard to the details of the third person's identity. I can only state that they exist and are currently connected to the same investigation," Shahem replied.
"So where does that leave us, and our extradition request?" asked Linda.
Shahem cleared his throat.
"Miss Delmore? These are very complicated times, and information is a crucial resource with regard to the management of growing social issues in both of our countries, as it is in many others. As you know, as part of the administrative effort of our respective countries, we are sandwiched between the elected representatives and the people, especially those maintaining the stability of society, and those seeking to undermine it. Perhaps liberate us from it. We are currently in possession of assets very pertinent to your administration's reach, especially with regard to hunting and collecting as it so far appears, though I'd push that assumption even further and assume that the two you're seeking are both highly trained operators. Perhaps amongst your country's best," Shahem leaned back in his seat.
"I'm afraid that I don't know what you're talking about," Linda replied.
"Miss Delmore. The Middle East is a the boiling pot right now, and we're very rapidly approaching the crescendo if you will, of what many of the more right wing and radical elements of the population believe to be an end war. The conflict to rid us of our western aligned neighbours, and eject the Jewish population from within our midst, while Tel Avis seems to be sending the message globally that they are now a monster even more ferocious than Hamas. In between are the Gazans, caught between the unrestrained conduct of the Israeli Defense Force, who have recently demonstrated their disregard for the safety of civilians, even having committed genocide under the ever watchful eyes of the rest of the world and in diregard of international law. The people you saw gathered outside of this building, are part of a growing sentiment amongst many in the Middle East and in the west, that believe that the leadership of countries is corrupted and broken, and in need of forceful replacement. With every attrocity committed by the IDF with each passing day, that threat grows significantly in every country, even in the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. The two men you've requested from our custody, can be relinquished into your custody, but given this complicated situation, we need something of great value, especially in terms of intelligence or shared information that can help us to alleviate this growing risk," Shahem clarified why the two men whose custody she'd requested were still being held.
"Again Mr. Sanad, I honestly don't know of what risk you're speaking of. I have been authorized by our own state department however, that I can tell you that the presence of the two men in your region, specially who had been operating in Syria, were the in the interest of preventing the detonation of the non-conventional weapons that had been deployed by independent groups within Syria seeking to attack Tel Aviv," Linda explained, giving an overview with few operational details.
"If your country's intelligence aparatus was aware of this, then why have you not shared this information with us? We are civilized people, seeking peace and prosperity as are you. This growing risk about which you claim to be unaware is a problem everywhere. I take it you've studied history Miss Delmore?" asked Shahem, absent of condescension.
"I fail to see how history is connected to our current dealings," Linda replied.
"Oh, I beg to differ. History has demonstrated many times that when humanity arrives at the doorstep of such radical change, that a threat comes both from those seeking that change, and those seeking to cease it. Every revolution in humanity is example of what might happen during such upheaval, if a similar situation arises now. We might end up with the French Revolution ie mass decapitations on all sides, or Bosnia, genocide and mass graves for those discarded from society. Rwanda would look like a picnic comparitively so. In the worst case of course, we have the risk that non-conventional and even strategic weapons might be deployed against the civilian populations in order to stop such a revolution, or triggered as part of a global war. Or, we might just enter into another ideological dark ages powered by technology, where millions upon millions of people will be killed and essentially disappear from history in a new form of genocide, centuries passing before we break free from a technological dark age and once again return to the light of peace and progress, never knowing fully how many were lost. These stakes are far too high for you to withold anything from your allies that might help us to avert this growing risk," Shahem negotiated with Linda.
"May I speak with them before I seek authorization for the relinquishing of any other intelligence, which I currently do not have on my person, that might help your situation as a valued ally?" requested Linda.
"At this point, I can arrange for you to speak with one of them. The other two being material witnesses or suspects in our investigation and therefore unavailable," Shahem replied.
"I'll accept those terms, with the understanding that our discussion will be protected by Jordan's highest level of security, and not shared with any of your allies or those with whom you have competing treaties that operate against the interests of the United States of America, or its NATO and European partners," Linda responded.
Shahem paused and considered her terms carefully.
"I'll need that in writing and signed as well," Linda added.
Shahem nodded to her and then continued:
"We have an agreement. I will have my secretary and our legal department draw up this agreement and you'll have a signed copy in your hands before you leave today. Agreed?" Shahem asked her.
"Agreed. Lets get this going then, because I'm going to tell you right now, I'm not leaving without the two of them at the very least," Linda replied.
"Then lets get this going, as we'll both have our work cut out for us today I suspect," Shahem stood from his chair and locked his computer, then following Linda out the office door and leading her down the hall towards the elevators.
The elevator doors opened and they stepped out into the basement of the facility, a pair of armed guards on either side of the elevator. Shahem led her down a hall, passing through three security checkpoints before arriving at a large metal door. They checked in again at a workstation, and the door was opened, sliding slowly until there was enough space for them to step through, then slowly closing behind them, after which they continued down the hall, stopping at a specific door on their right, with the same two guards who'd accompanied Shahem into his meeting with Stanton.
The door buzzed electromagnetically, and the four of them (Linda, Shahem and the two guards) entered the interrogation room where Stanton still sat, expressionless, barely responding their entry.
"His injuries...?" Linda started.
"No. Not us. We treated his wound when we took him into custody, though the Doctor prescribed that we leave the wound undressed so that his eye could heal properly," Shahem explained to Linda.
"Could we have this talk alone?" asked Linda.
Shahem paused once again, considering her request.
"I'll add this to our signed agreement. Your briefcase?" Shahem gestured to one of the guards, who then walked over to Linda, waiting for her to relinquish her briefcase.
She locked it, and then handed it to the guard. Shahem pulled a chair out for her and then left them in silence, the heavy door closing behind all three men as they left.
"Donahue?" asked Linda of Stanton.
Stanton looked to Linda, and nodded negatively.
She momentarily struggled against tears as it hit her, before regaining her composure.
"Your eye? Is it permanent?" asked Linda.
"They had fifty. A mounted LMG on the back of a truck. I didn't get shot. It was schrapnel. Probably the bits and pieces of a shattered stone that one of those FMJs rounds ploughed into. Felt like getting a punch from a heavy weight contender. Scratched my cornea as well, the Doc said it would take a few days to heal," Stanton responded sternly.
"How are you holding up?" Stanton then asked her.
"How did he...?" asked Linda.
"Like a hero. Right until the end. It was quick," Stanton left out the details about Donahue's final words, knowing that the Jordanese Military Intelligence Unit were recording everything being stated in the room.
"They said there were three of you. Did you detain someone?" asked Linda.
"No. It was an unsuspected ally. A Syrian. I wouldn't be here if it wasn't for him. I'm not leaving without him," Stanton explained to Linda and again there was a moment of uncomfortable silence.
"Dina?" asked Stanton.
"She's thick in active administrative work in Tel Aviv. Cleaning up the mess," Linda informed him.
"Which mess? Seems there's so many of them right now that its getting hard to keep track," Stanton asked her.
"Both. The weapon detonation, and the Gazan massacres," Linda said to Stanton.
"You know that all of us. Soldiers I mean. We have a very strict code," Stanton looked at her sternly.
She nodded, sniffling slightly as she fought tears.
"Its like our honour. We're damned, all of us, but damned be the one who purposefully kills a civilian," Stanton explained to Linda, who again nodded.
"I know," she again fought tears.
"What separates us as soldiers from our enemies if we commit their same attrocities? There's being damned for what our job entails, and then there's being damned for killing civilians and non-combatants. In a court, or outside of it, that's going to be answered for," Stanton said to her unblinkingly.
"Dina's been fighting that one since you two left. Sandwiched between the hardliners and the softliners. Watching her people slowly creep towards becoming exactly what destroyed them on that dark October 7th morning," Linda said to Stanton.
"You ever read any Nietzsche?" asked Stanton of Linda.
"I was thinking the very same thing. So was Dina. In fact, on the night of the second massacre, she said to me: He who fights with monsters should look to it that he himself does not become a monster. And if you gaze long into an abyss, the abyss also gazes long into you," Linda recalled that night.
"Who's going to save Tel Aviv, if nobody is going to save the Gazans? What the hell are we doing here to protect Tel Aviv, when they're busy murdering civilians and becoming exactly the monsters that took theirs?" Stanton responded harshly.
"I..." Linda shook her head, unable to find words to respond given both the pressure of the surveillance monitoring them and the intensity of feelings she had given Donahue.
"This situation is very, very dangerous for everyone, and they're making it much, much worse. Right now, the shoot first policy and shoot civilians policy has disgraced the honour of soldiers everywhere, and turned the leadership into the same kind of monsters they claim of their opponents: HAMAS. The Gazans are caught between two warring gangs of thugs now and are being forced to pick sides in the most horrible way possible, because the IDF soldiers will not protect Gazans from HAMAS, nor will HAMAS protect Gazans from the IDF. High tech weaponry is rapidly being deployed throughout the Middle East, and this situation is escalating. When is someone in their right mind going to realize that both sides need protecting, and both sides have to come to their senses. I can tell you personally that I'll refuse every operation I'm given here until I see something that's protecing those civilians from monsters like that. Those who murdered Israeli women and children on that fateful October 7th morning, and those who murdered Gazan civilians, including pregnant women over the course of a growing number of massacres allegedly committed by IDF soldiers, and supported by a growing coalition of people approving of such tactics, before expanding into Gaza. Dina and I risked our lives protecting the two-state solution during the era of the Oslo Accords. They ripped that all down, and now the situation is more and more creating circumstances that are leading to the complete erasure of the Gazan state and people. When are our elected officials going to find the courage to recognize the statehood of Gaza, as they did Israel? How did we get from the Oslo Accords to here?" Stanton's voice became more and more willful as he spoke.
"When we have the courage to support those who do, and when this has become something that is about far removed the symbol itself, and closer to what those symbols and values actually represent," Linda replied.
"Well said, for an Yankee," Stanton nodded at her, giving her an ever so flight smile.
"Well, not bad for a Canuck," Linda replied, momentarily holding herself back from laughing about one of Donahue's remarks about Canadians, a tear beading up in the midst of her eyelashes and falling into her lap.
The door suddenly buzzed, and the two guards and Shahem filed into the room. Shahem walked over to Linda, and whispered in her ear.
"Can I speak to you outside in the hall for a moment?" he asked her.
"I'm going to attend to something else for a moment," Linda said to Stanton, who nodded affirmatively for her.
"Excuse us please," Shahem turned to Stanton, with a renewed respect for the man.
Stanton nodded affirmatively without saying anything or giving him eye contact.
They left Stanton in the interrogation room by himself, the door closing as the guards took up either side of the door in the hall.
Linda and Shahem walked down the hall a bit for some privacy.
"It seems that there has been a drastic change in the situation. An intervention if you will," Shahem explained to Linda.
"How so? Are they going to trial?" asked Linda, still grieving over her mentor's death.
"No. They're free to go. All of you. It seems that his Majesty the Aga Khan was keeping a very close eye on this situation. Close enough that upon hearing your sentiments with regard to the situation and risk facing the Middle East, he himself gave the order to release the three detained into your custody. Perhaps proof that there is some hope for us in the world, and that peace may find us as it did during the times of the Oslo Accords," Shahem explained to Linda, who was quickly losing the battle against her tears.
"I apologize. Its hard to experience such great loss and such great joy simultaneously," Linda responded to Shahem gratefully.
"Then please, take that hope and help the people of Gaza and Israel in their moment of crisis recognize both the hardship of such great loss and the great joy of a future in peace," Shahem said to her, gesturing back towards the door.
Linda led the way and opened the door when the magnetic lock had released, and entered the room with Shahem.
"You're going home," Linda told Stanton.
"Sabir too?" confirmed Stanton.
Linda looked to Shahem, who smiled and nodded to both Linda and Stanton.
"Donahue too?" Stanton once again looked to them both.
"Absolutely," Shahem agreed.
"To a hero's parade," Linda's tears broke through.
"Then lets go. I can't tell you how grateful I am that we didn't have to do this the hard way," Stanton stood, handing Shahem the handcuffs from which he'd already liberated himself.
"As they say in the west, ditto..." Shahem smiled, following the two guards and Stanton as they left the interrogation room, leaving Linda by herself.
Linda then turned to the one way glass, looking into it and waving.
"Thank you!" she mouthed to the camera feed on the other side of the glass.
That signal fed through terabit optical fiber line, for several kilometers and to the Royal Palace, into the resplendant marble living room into an 85 inch colour television on the wall, across from which his Majesty the Aga Khan, Prince Shah Rahim al-Hussaini and his wife, Princess Salwa Aga Khan watched, smiling at Linda's face as she waved to them.
Epilogue: Dina's Legacy
To be continued...
For my friends Hanif, Shaffin, their sisters, their mother and their family. If we have nothing else in life, then at least let us have a little bit Faith ;-)
Credits and attribution:
Tools:
Daz3D, Corel Painter, Adobe Photoshop, Lightwave 3D, Blender, Stable Diffusion (Easy Diffusion distribution), InstantID, Sadtalker, Google Colaboratory, Microsoft Copilot (Windows 11), Hitfilm, Borderline Obsession...
Invideo.IO which was used to produce the ENERTRINSIC INTERNATIONAL INVESTOR PRESENTATION.
Sadtalker by: Zhang, Wenxuan and Cun, Xiaodong and Wang, Xuan and Zhang, Yong and Shen, Xi and Guo, Yu and Shan, Ying and Wang, Fei. Research Paper Title: SadTalker: Learning Realistic 3D Motion Coefficients for Stylized Audio-Driven Single Image Talking Face Animation.
Gratitude: Our Mentors, Senseis, Sifus, Sebomnims, lifetime inspirations, family, friends, the Nomads (ask Stanton about that one), the Music, the Movies, the Theatre, the Arts, ASMR, (both YouTube and Bilibili and the many other creators on those platforms), the Gaming and Developer communities and of course, the audience.
Martial Arts (in the words of real experts and at least one comedian): https://brucelee.com (home of the real Dragon and an entire family of inspirations), http://iwco.online International Wing Chun Organization (International presence of a very scalable intensity martial art, protected and developed by Shaolin Nun Ng Mui) and the alma mater of Jinn Hua's own specialized variation thereof, https://iogkf.com International Okinawan Goju-Ryu Karatedo Federation (even Hanshi had his teachers), https://itftkd.sport International Taekwondo Federation (Here there be Taegers), https://tangsoodoworld.com Tang Soo Do World (the path of Grandmaster Chuck Norris), https://www.aikido-international.org International Aikido Federation (how else would Navy Chef Steven Seagal liberate a Nimitz Class Aircraft Carrier from a team of hijackers?), https://www.stqitoronto.com Shaolin Temple Quanfa Institute (The City Of Toronto's own Shaolin Temple), https://www.enterthedojoshow.com Master Ken's Ameri-Te-Do presence (If we can't laugh at ourselves, then we can at least laugh the loudest at others, and other Zen)
Jesse Enkamp: Karate Nerd
Sensei Rokas: Martial Arts Journey
Iaido: Train For Katana Mastery Like Samurai
Special thanks to Aitrepreneur, Mickmumpitz, Hugging Face and the YouTube educational content producers, including those catering to the AI content production pipeline and of course AlphaSignal.
Something to give you perspective: The very first teacher had no formal education, didn't graduate and was self taught, but only because they had no other choice. We do.
Very Special Thanks to our Armed Forces and Federal and Provincial Police Services, who really do Stand On Guard, especially when it comes to the Charter of Rights And Freedoms and the Human Rights Act, and often without being self righteous zealots secretly protecting religious law. True keepers of the peace.
This content is entirely produced in Toronto, Ontario, Canada at 200 Sherbourne Street Suite 701 under the Shhhh! Digital Media banner.