The Hunters Read online




  ALSO BY TOM YOUNG

  FICTION

  The Mullah’s Storm

  Silent Enemy

  The Renegades

  The Warriors

  Sand and Fire

  NONFICTION

  The Speed of Heat:

  An Airlift Wing at War in Iraq and Afghanistan

  G. P. PUTNAM’S SONS

  Publishers Since 1838

  An imprint of Penguin Random House LLC

  375 Hudson Street

  New York, New York 10014

  Copyright © 2015 by Tom Young

  Penguin supports copyright. Copyright fuels creativity, encourages diverse voices, promotes free speech, and creates a vibrant culture. Thank you for buying an authorized edition of this book and for complying with copyright laws by not reproducing, scanning, or distributing any part of it in any form without permission. You are supporting writers and allowing Penguin to continue to publish books for every reader.

  Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

  Young, Thomas W., date.

  The hunters / Tom Young.

  p. cm.

  ISBN 978-0-698-13791-2

  I. Title.

  PS3625.O97335H86 2015 2015007428

  813'.6—dc23

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Version_1

  For Kristen

  CONTENTS

  Also by Tom Young

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Chapter 32

  Chapter 33

  Chapter 34

  Chapter 35

  Chapter 36

  Chapter 37

  Chapter 38

  Chapter 39

  The Story Behind The Hunters

  Acknowledgments

  1.

  Hunger. Rage.

  Fourteen-year-old Hussein felt little else as he rode in the back of a Nissan pickup truck along a dirt road south of Mogadishu. Five fellow al-Shabaab fighters traveled with him in the truck bed. One manned a Kord 12.7-millimeter machine gun bolted near the tailgate, and the rest brandished AK-47s. Hussein’s entire worldly possessions consisted of his AK, his sandals, a dirty cotton shirt and trousers, and the machete hanging from a rope belt in a leather sheath.

  For a promised piece of fruit every day, Hussein had become a soldier of God. The older men had yet to give him his daily tangerine; rewards would come later if he and his brothers in jihad performed this mission well. Along with the fruit, he hoped to get a bowl of onion and potato soup. Just like yesterday and the day before that.

  His mouth still watered when he remembered that day last week when the men fed him fried goat meat. Such feasts came rarely for the young soldiers of God. Al-Shabaab, or “The Youth,” faced many hardships inflicted by the infidels. These gaalos, the unbelieving foreigners, brought hunger, the death of parents and friends, and so-called medicine that only made diseases worse.

  But today, the unbelievers would feel God’s wrath.

  The truck slowed and stopped at a crossroads. Dust kicked up by the Nissan’s tires rolled in clouds and stung Hussein’s eyes. Thorn scrub littered the dunes that stretched from the crossroads to the beach. Beyond the beach, the Indian Ocean sparkled blue to the horizon. Seagulls wheeled over the surf.

  The new boss got out of the passenger side of the pickup. Hussein knew him only as “the Sheikh,” a man who spoke of many things Hussein did not understand. But the Sheikh led the struggle now, and God gave him his words just as the angels had bidden Mohammed to recite the holy book.

  “Out of the truck, my pups,” the Sheikh said.

  Hussein and four of his comrades scrambled over the tailgate and hopped to the ground. One stayed behind to man the machine gun. The driver got out of the truck and stood beside the Sheikh. Hussein knew the driver as Abdullahi. Abdullahi would beat you for laziness or for grabbing at food. He wore a black kerchief around his head and neck, which left only his eyes visible. The Sheikh wore plain clothes like Hussein, and mirrored sunglasses.

  Another al-Shabaab truck arrived, carrying only the driver. The driver remained inside and kept the engine idling.

  “A nest of vipers has installed itself in Mogadishu,” the Sheikh said. He gestured with his right hand, index finger extended, as he often did during his sermons. “They dare to call themselves a legitimate government, with their sham elections and unclean money from the Americans and the British and the United Nations. The only legitimate government is that of God, of the Islamic Emirate of Somalia.”

  At the mention of the Islamic emirate, the fighters cheered. Hussein cheered with them, raised his weapon high into the air.

  “At any moment,” the Sheikh continued, “a vehicle will come this way. It will probably be from Mogadishu. We will stop the vehicle and give the occupants a test. If they pass the test, they may proceed on their way. If they fail, you will administer God’s justice. We will stand firm here at this crossroads and test the fidelity of travelers for the rest of the day.”

  Hussein did not know all of these words. He did not know administer or occupant. For that matter, he did not know what emirate meant. But he knew his duty, and he would carry it out with righteous conviction.

  As the Sheikh predicted, in a few minutes a car approached. Two men rode in a Mazda with a dragging tailpipe and rusted-out fenders. As the Mazda neared the gun truck, the other truck pulled across the road behind the car and blocked escape back toward Mogadishu. The boy manning the machine gun fired a burst over the car. The three rapid-fire shots sounded like hammer blows, and the heavy brass casings clanged onto the truck bed as if someone had dropped three wrenches.

  “Halt!” the Sheikh shouted, needlessly. The Mazda had already skidded to a stop. The driver and passenger sat frozen. Both looked like men in their thirties. Neither wore a beard.

  “Out of the car,” the Sheikh ordered.

  Slowly, the driver opened his door. Not fast enough for Abdullahi. Abdullahi tore open the car door, grabbed the driver by the shirt, and slammed him against the hood of the car. Another of the al-Shabaab fighters yanked out the passenger.

  Hussein trembled with anticipation. These looked like kafirs, those who denied God’s truth. Kafir was a new word for Hussein, one the al-Shabaab men had taught him. Kafirs lurked all around, and they deserved no mercy. Hussein would show none.

  He would not hesitate to carry out al-Shabaab’s bidding. In its ranks he had found belonging and importance. No longer rabble of the streets, now he
was a man of weapons. God rewarded his ferocity with tangerines and plums.

  Already the kafirs begged for their lives.

  “Brothers, brothers, who are you?” the passenger asked. “We have done nothing to you.”

  “We have only a little money,” the driver cried. “You can take it. Just let us go.”

  Abdullahi slapped the driver.

  “You came from the direction of Mogadishu,” the Sheikh said. “What were you doing there?”

  Hussein had seen the Sheikh do this before—toy with his victims the way a cat plays with a mouse. The question made both travelers look even more frightened. The driver glanced at his passenger, then turned to the Sheikh with pleading eyes.

  “We are fishermen,” the driver said. “We have been repairing our boat.”

  They didn’t look like fishermen. They wore the shirts and slacks of the gaalos, and leather shoes instead of sandals.

  Abdullahi slapped the man again.

  “You lie,” Abdullahi said. “You have repaired nothing in these clean clothes. You have worked in the offices of the infidel, stealing from the people.”

  “No, no,” the driver said. “We are good Muslims, just like you, brother.”

  “We shall see if you are faithful,” the Sheikh said. “Tell me of the Prophet’s Night Journey, exactly as the Quran tells it.”

  “What, brother?” the driver asked. “I do not understand.”

  “Because I am generous and kind,” the Sheikh said, “I will give you a hint. Recite for me Surah Seventeen.”

  “Recite?” the passenger asked. “What?”

  “Recite for us,” Abdullahi said through gritted teeth, “Surah Seventeen.”

  “What is this madness?” the driver asked.

  The travelers did not know the section of the Quran the Sheikh wanted to hear. Hussein did not know it, either, because he could not read. Nor could most of the al-Shabaab fighters. This did not trouble Hussein. Hunger left little space in his mind for irony.

  “Then I will tell you,” the Sheikh said. He began to recite from memory.

  Glory to Allah, who did take His Servant

  For a journey by night from the Sacred Mosque to the Farthest Mosque,

  Whose precincts we did bless—

  In order that we might show him some of our signs: for He is the One

  Who heareth and seeth all things.

  The two kafirs must have figured out what lay in store. The driver began to weep. The passenger blubbered, “We have always been good Muslims. I have even made the Hajj.”

  “You dare to brag of your pilgrimage to Mecca?” Abdullahi said. “That makes your sins all the worse.”

  The Sheikh stepped back from the men’s car. He raised one arm above his head and barked an order:

  “Give them justice.”

  Hussein slung his AK across his shoulder and unsheathed his machete.

  2.

  In the pilot’s seat of an ancient twin-engine DC-3 cargo plane, Michael Parson felt the aircraft yaw. One of the engines had quit. Instinctively, he pressed the left rudder pedal to keep the nose on heading. With his left boot feeding in rudder pressure and his right boot flat on the floor, he knew the right engine was the one that had failed. Dead foot, dead engine. Parson swore under his breath, then called to his copilot.

  “Damn it, Frenchie, we got a problem. Feather number two for me, will you?”

  “Merde,” the copilot said. “I’m on it.”

  Copilot Alain Chartier usually flew much newer and faster airplanes with the French Armée de l’Air. Parson, a U.S. Air Force colonel, had met Chartier a year ago during a joint counterterrorist operation in North Africa. French Mirage jets, along with American aircraft and U.S. Marines, had put a hurting on some very bad people who attacked civilians with chemical weapons.

  Today, at eighty-five hundred feet over Somalia, Parson and Chartier flew as civilians. Both had taken leave from their military jobs to volunteer for a few weeks as pilots for World Relief Airlift. They wore military-style desert flight suits with WRA patches on their right sleeves. On Parson’s left sleeve he wore a U.S. flag, while Chartier wore the drapeau tricolore of France. Parson had plunked down eighteen thousand dollars of his own money to get a DC-3 type rating—so he could fly a seventy-five-year-old unpressurized airplane over hellholes in the Horn of Africa. He’d done it because he loved to fly. And because he’d do anything for Sophia Gold.

  “Can’t believe the things I do to spend time with Sophia,” Parson muttered.

  Engine failure hardly came as a surprise in an airplane this old, and it didn’t frighten him. As an experienced military aviator, Parson had seen far worse. Even if the second engine failed, the DC-3 would just become a big glider, and Parson could dead-stick to a survivable touchdown on the flat plain below. Just hold her at the pitch angle to get maximum lift over drag and let her settle to the ground.

  The airplane’s third crew member was a Somali American flight mechanic who looked as thin as the struts on a Piper Cub. He wore two flags on his left sleeve: the Stars and Stripes on top, and underneath, the banner of Somalia—a field of light blue with a single white star in the middle. His nametag read GEEDI MURSAL, FLT MECH, WORLD RELIEF AIRLIFT. He had just started working full-time for WRA after spending six years as a jet engine mechanic in the U.S. Air Force. Parson had known Geedi for about a month and had flown with him three times: not enough to know him well, but enough to know he was dependable.

  “I’ll go scan number two,” Geedi said.

  “Thanks, Geedi,” Parson said.

  Geedi unbuckled his jump seat harness. He kept on his headset; his interphone cord stretched long enough to keep in contact with the pilots as he disappeared into the cargo compartment.

  Parson pushed the left prop lever to set a higher RPM, and he added power with the left throttle. Chartier placed his thumb and forefinger on the knob for the right engine’s mixture lever.

  “Confirm number two,” Chartier said.

  “Confirm,” Parson said, after looking to make sure Chartier hadn’t chosen the wrong control.

  Chartier pulled the mixture lever to idle cutoff. He reached overhead and put a finger on the feathering button for the right engine.

  “Confirm two,” he said.

  “Confirm,” Parson responded.

  Chartier pressed the button, and the right propeller stopped windmilling. As its blade angle changed, the prop slowed down until it stood motionless in the slipstream.

  “Number two standing tall,” Geedi called from the back.

  “Thanks, Geedi,” Parson said. “See anything on that cowling?”

  “Leaking some oil.”

  That told Parson little. If those old Pratt & Whitney radials weren’t leaking oil, it meant they didn’t have any oil. Some DC-3s had been upgraded with turboprop engines, but this one staggered through the skies on Depression-era technology.

  “Everything still tied down good back there?” Parson asked.

  “I’m checking now,” Geedi said.

  “Good man.”

  The cargo compartment contained pallets of food. One pallet held several hundred pounds of Humanitarian Daily Rations, much like military MREs. Another consisted of hundred-pound bags of rice. Yet another pallet held boxes of cooking oil and bags of flour and beans. Charitable organizations had donated these relief supplies for Somalis returning home from Kenyan refugee camps.

  From the start of the civil war in 1991, Somalis had fled their homeland by the thousands. For more than two decades, Somalia had no real central government. Armed clans and Islamic militants ran riot, and Somali pirates threatened maritime shipping. Now, at least, Somalia had a president and a parliament, but the country remained impoverished, unstable, and dangerous.

  Adding to the chaos, neighboring Kenya had decided it could no longer h
ost the world’s largest refugee camp. The Dadaab camp complex had housed nearly half a million refugees. Now they were heading home, usually on foot, across miles of dust-blown wasteland and thickets prowled by lions and hyenas.

  Economic pressures played a role in Kenya’s decision, but so did politics. In a 2013 attack on the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi, terrorists from the Somali Islamist group al-Shabaab killed dozens of people. In 2014, al-Shabaab stopped a bus in northern Kenya, separated Muslim passengers from non-Muslims, and murdered twenty-eight. The terrorists said the attacks were retribution for Kenyan military deployment in Somalia. Now Kenyan leaders wanted to wash their hands of the problems next door.

  Cash-strapped governments elsewhere offered little assistance. Bad memories of the 1993 Battle of Mogadishu left American leaders reluctant to commit troops to the region. Many politicians couldn’t find Somalia on a map, but all of them knew about the films Black Hawk Down and Captain Phillips.

  If help was coming from anywhere, it was from private donations. A few pallets at a time. In airplanes old enough for museums. Parson and his crew had picked up this load at the international airport in Djibouti. That’s as close as some big cargo carriers wanted to get to Somalia. Supplies had to travel the rest of the way in rattletraps flown by pilots with more guts than sense. Over the past year, Parson had made two previous short trips as a volunteer pilot for World Relief Airlift, but this was Chartier’s first flight with WRA. Geedi was WRA’s only paid staffer on the crew.

  Chartier ran through the emergency checklist for a single-engine landing. He turned off the bad engine’s fuel valve. Closed the oil shutter. Turned off the failed engine’s magnetos.

  “Guess we better tell Baidoa we’re limping our asses in on one engine,” Parson said. Baidoa was Parson’s original destination, and it was the closest airport with a fire department.

  Chartier pressed his transmit switch mounted on the right yoke. “Baidoa Tower,” he called, “World Relief Eight-Two Alpha with an emergency. Right engine failure.”

  The answer came back in accented but competent English: “World Relief Eight-Two Alpha, Baidoa Tower. We copy your emergency, will have equipment standing by. You are cleared for a straight-in visual approach, Runway Two-Two.”