Shadow Warriors: Breaking Point Part 10
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"N-no...please, help us!" Her mouth contorted in a cry as she touched her brother's bloodied face with her shaking fingers.
"Search her," Gabe ordered.
Bay clipped her M-4. "Stand up. I need to make sure you aren't carrying weapons."
The girl sobbed and gently placed her unmoving brother, dressed similarly to her, on the rocks. Standing, she stared fearfully up at her. Bay had performed hundreds of searches on women in Iraq. Very quickly, she moved her hands around the girl's thin body. Trying to ignore the shock in her eyes, the tears smearing the dirt across her cheekbones, she completed the search.
"Clear," she told Gabe.
"Okay, check him out."
"Roger."
Bay told the girl to stand where she was. Very quickly, as she felt for weapons on the boy, who was probably in his late teens, she saw he was dead, his face grayish looking. "Clear. This kid is dead," she muttered.
"Okay, get the girl to sit down, render her first aid if she needs it. If she does, she's your patient and you're in charge of her."
Bay smiled a little and held out her hand. "My name is Bay. What is yours?"
The girl sniffed, her gaze never leaving her brother who lay unmoving on the rocks. "I-I am Asifa." She pointed down. "That is my brother, Raouf."
"Good to know." She curved her fingers. "Come here. I want you to sit down. You're hurt."
Asifa was wearing men's clothes, but Bay couldn't understand how the young girl had managed to survive the carnage. Further, she wore sandals made of tires, which had been cut up, on her small, dainty feet. She had no socks, no jacket. The girl's teeth were chattering, her arms wrapped around herself. Bay quickly shrugged out of her medical ruck, laid it on the ground and opened it up. Asifa came and meekly sat down in front of her, her knees drawn up, arms around them, s.h.i.+vering.
Gabe came and stood nearby, watchful as Bay went to work. He sent the info back to the chief about their discovery. Bay carefully felt Asifa's head, moved her hands knowingly down her neck to her shoulders, seeking signs of injury. Asifa sat there, head bowed, trembling, tears falling from her eyes as she continued to stare over at her brother.
"Are you hurt anywhere?" Bay asked, catching Asifa's tear-filled eyes. She was filthy, blood everywhere.
"I-I don't know. It was terrible. The noise. The screams..." She took her hand, which was shaking badly, and tried to wipe the tears from her face. All she managed to do was smear them into mud, mixed with blood.
Moving quickly, Bay stood up, took off her warm down coat. "Here, put this on. You're going hypothermic." She helped Asifa pull on the coat. As she felt along the girl's torso, Asifa flinched. She tried not to cry out.
"Hurt?"
"Y-yes. Last night." She gulped. "The helicopters came. My beloved brother was near an explosion. He was thrown into me and we were both knocked off the path into this wadi." She pointed above to the path. "I-I grabbed him because he cried out." Sniffing, she whispered, "We landed here. I was so frightened. All I could do was hold Raouf and pray to Allah...."
Moving her hand gently, Bay said, "I'm sorry. Your brother is dead. There's nothing I can do to help him, Asifa." The girl's face wrinkled up, her wide mouth opening in a silent scream. Moving her hand over the girl's dirt-encrusted, uncombed hair, Bay whispered, "I'm so sorry...."
Gabe swallowed hard as he watched Bay work with the injured girl. Her long, spare hands were incredibly gentle, supportive. Asifa responded in a positive, trusting way toward her. Bay listened to her heart and lungs with the stethoscope and took her pulse. There was worry in her eyes. Bay finished her examination and looked up toward him.
"I need a CASEVAC called, Gabe. She's got at least four fractured ribs. I'm worried she has a punctured lung, which makes her CASEVAC status."
"Roger, will call," he told her, switching channels to the chief, who would decide whether to make the request or not.
"I-I'm so cold," Asifa chattered.
Bay nodded. "I know you are." The girl's bare feet and lower legs were grayish-blue looking. She had another pair of socks in her pack. Getting them out, Bay helped pull them over Asifa's feet. "There, that should help." She got out her canteen and handed it to her. "You need to drink as much as you can."
Grateful, Asifa took it in her shaking hands, gulping down the water, nearly emptying the canteen.
Bay said nothing, her mouth grim. Asifa was near starvation. She could feel every rib protruding from the girl's body. Her cheeks were high, but sunken, indicating starvation. Her brother didn't look very healthy, either. He, too, was very thin.
"Thank you," Asifa whispered, handing the canteen back to Bay.
"Why were you here, Asifa?" she asked, placing the canteen back on her web belt.
Sniffing, she whispered unsteadily, "Our parents are starving to death in a U.N. camp in Pakistan. We were told that if we would carry a load across the Khyber Pa.s.s, we would be paid well. Raouf persuaded me to come. He said we could earn twice as much." She sobbed, her hands against her mouth. "I-I wanted to help. I love him so much. He's my only brother who is left. The other two younger ones have already died because there was no food to feed them. Now..." she wept, "Raouf is dead!"
Bay slid her arm around her thin shoulders. Asifa leaned against her, her b.l.o.o.d.y hand gripping her Kevlar vest, hiding her face against it, weeping because she'd lost everything in her world. Bay held her carefully, watching and hoping one of those broken ribs would not puncture her lung. Her breathing was shallow and she couldn't cry without wincing from the pain.
Bay heard a commotion above her and twisted a look toward Gabe. The two CIA guys were sliding down, in a hurry to reach them. Automatically, Bay became protective. The red-haired guy with blue eyes, Granger, reached them first.
"A Taliban girl," he said, surprised. And then his face changed and became hard. He walked around Bay and reached out to grab at the jacket Bay had put on Asifa.
"Stop!" Bay growled, grabbing his wrist. She glared up at Granger. "She's badly injured. Don't touch her. We've got a medevac coming in to take her to Camp Bravo." The man's face went icy.
"You have no authority here, doll face," he said, jerking his wrist out of her fingers. "She's ours now."
"Like h.e.l.l she is," Bay said, holding his glare. "I'm the medic. I'm in charge here, not you."
The second CIA guy, blond hair and hazel eyes, shorter than Granger, came around and stared at his boss and then at Bay. "Hey, let's take her and get the h.e.l.l out of her. It's a.s.s-freezing cold up here on this ridge," he grumbled.
"You're not taking this girl anywhere," Bay told him. She felt Asifa stiffen in her arms, her eyes growing huge as the two large men hunkered threateningly over them.
Granger snarled, "She's ours, doll. Now remove your arms and stand aside. We're taking her for interrogation. She's the only one left alive in this group, and we need to know what she knows."
Bay stood, moving in front of Asifa, her hand closing over the b.u.t.t of the SIG. "That's not going to happen. She's my patient. And until I release her to a doctor at Camp Bravo, you're not going to do anything. She's got life-threatening injuries." Bay saw Granger get angry, his hands ball into fists.
Gabe came around to s.h.i.+eld Asifa. "Okay, Granger, stand down. A medevac's on its way and you can wait until the doc at Bravo approves of you interrogating her."
Granger gave him a hard look. "Griffin? Right?"
Gabe smiled a little. "Want me to spell it for you?" He knew what Granger was implying. He'd remember his last name and the next time he was on a patrol and needed a drone, it would somehow, inconveniently, be slowed down in coming on station to help them. That's how people like Granger got even when someone pushed into their little fiefdom.
Bay felt the tension grow. She heard Asifa sniffing, fear in her eyes. Her disgust over Granger's behavior made Bay angry. Gabe was calm and collected, standing near her shoulder, relaxed.
"She's Taliban, dammit!" Granger suddenly shouted. He made a move to pa.s.s between them to grab the girl.
In one swift movement, Gabe lifted his M-4 and poked the barrel into Granger's chest. The CIA agent made a grunting sound, knocked backward, nearly losing his balance. He instantly grabbed at his sternum beneath the Kevlar vest he wore.
"She's Doc's patient," Gabe said quietly. "Now respect it."
Cursing, the CIA agent snarled, "You're in trouble, Griffin. Big-time."
Shrugging, Gabe glanced over his shoulder. He could hear the medevac coming in. He looked over at Bay.
"Is she ambulatory?"
"Yes," she breathed softly, moving behind him to gently bring Asifa to her feet.
Gabe watched the CIA agents back off. Granger's face was crimson and it made his freckles stand out even more. Gabe turned without a word, placed his arm around the girl's waist opposite Bay and helped her slowly up the rocky slope to the path.
The medevac landed below the ridge, and as Bay helped the girl climb into the helo, she felt Gabe's hand on her shoulder. The blades were whirling nearly at takeoff speed, the wind buffeting them. She turned, looking into his eyes.
"Go with her. Make sure she gets put into the dispensary system, and stay with her. Don't let her out of your sight, because Granger will try and grab her. Chief Hampton is calling it all in right now. When we get done here, I'll come over to get you and see how she's doing."
Giving him a tight smile of thanks, Bay nodded. The air crew chief held out his hand to her and hauled her into the medevac. The door closed. Bay focused on Asifa, who was lain down on the litter, the other medic covering her with a number of blankets to keep her warm. Bay hooked into the inter cabin system and gave the other two medics Asifa's medical condition.
The gravity pushed them downward as the medevac quickly lifted straight up and then banked, moving rapidly down across the slope, quickly gaining alt.i.tude. The shaking and shuddering felt calming to Bay as she placed an IV in Asifa's left arm after cleaning it off.
She could tell how scared the girl was. She'd never ridden in a helo before. The other two men were strangers and in Asifa's culture, men did not touch her; it was forbidden. Bay took over any tasks that were needed because she was a woman and Asifa would be more trusting of her and less frightened.
Within ten minutes, they were landing at the dispensary in the center of Camp Bravo. Two orderlies and a gurney were brought up and Asifa, under many blankets, was gently transferred to it. Bay hopped out, her medical ruck slung over her right shoulder, the M-4 across her chest. She kept a hand on Asifa's blanketed arm, the blades whipping gusts of wind around them. She was glad she had the knit cap on her hair or it would have flown all over her face.
Moving through the doors and into the dispensary, Bay saw a woman doctor approach, a U.S. Navy lieutenant commander. As they wheeled Asifa into one of the curtain cubicles, Bay gave her all the information.
"Commander Johnson? This woman is to be treated as a prisoner," Bay told her. "The CIA wants to talk to her."
Johnson, who wore a white lab coat, in her forties, smiled kindly over at Asifa, who was looking around, frightened. "This girl was found out there from last night's attack?" she demanded.
"Yes, ma'am," Bay said, remaining at Asifa's side. "I have orders from my chief to stay with this woman. I speak Pashto, and I can help translate."
"Good to know," Dr. Johnson murmured. "I speak enough to get into trouble. So Granger is out there snooping around? Causing trouble as usual?"
"Yes, ma'am."
The woman's face grew grim. She moved the flashlight beam across Asifa's eyes. A nurse placed an oxygen mask across the girl's face and Bay explained to her that it would help her breathe easier.
"Well, Doc," Dr. Johnson muttered in a warning, "you will remain with this prisoner at all times. Those spooks think they can do anything they want around here and get away with it." Her mouth thinned as she placed the flashlight in the pocket of her lab coat. "But not in my dispensary."
CHAPTER TWELVE.
BAY REMAINED WITH Asifa throughout the examination process. The young girl was emotionally spent, dehydrated, starved and distraught by the loss of her brother. Bay felt very sorry for the Pakistani girl. Dr. Johnson looked at the X-rays and said, "Can't tell if she's got a punctured a lung or not. My guess is she does, but we need an MRI to prove it and we don't have that kind of equipment here. We'll tape them and keep her on an IV of nutrients, Ringer's lactate, oxygen and let her get some sleep. She's exhausted."
Bay nodded. "And where will she be taken, ma'am?"
"We have a room over there." Dr. Johnson pointed out beyond the closed blue curtains. "I've had the nurse inform the Marine detachment here. They'll be guarding her twenty-four hours a day."
"And then what?" Bay was worried that Granger would take things into his own hands. She was horrified at the thought of Asifa being waterboarded. She was no terrorist. Not Taliban, either. All she was doing was trying to make money to buy food for her starving family.
"She's under my orders and command," Dr. Johnson said, looping the stethoscope around her neck. She smiled a little. "Get your chief or LT to give you permission to keep yourself here with her at all times. I'm going to do some finagling and call a surgeon at the Bagram Hospital. I want her transferred there immediately. An X-ray won't always show a punctured lung, but her breathing and her oxygen levels are down, indicating a lung rupture."
Relief moved through Bay. "But she'll still be treated like a prisoner of war?"
Nodding, Johnson pulled the curtain aside. "Yes, but we have a professional interrogation unit at Bagram who, shall we say, plays gentle with someone like this girl. She's no terrorist. She's just caught up in something she didn't fully understand. More than likely, they'll let her go once she recovers."
Unlike Granger's heavy-handed methods, Bay thought. "You're her guardian angel, ma'am."
Dr. Johnson chuckled, her eyes sparkling. "No, Doc, you were. I heard the radio transmissions out there on that ridge after your chief called for a medevac." Her lips twitched. "You're just what this girl needs-a big, bad 18 Delta guard dog combat corpsman. Nice job protecting your patient out there. Stay close to her, okay, Doc?"
Managing a grin, Bay nodded, relief flowing through her. She stepped out of the way as two orderlies got ready to release the brakes on the gurney and take Asifa to the private room across the way.
Bay told Asifa what was going to happen. The girl was dazed and in shock. She licked her lips and nodded, her eyes closing. The nurses had done a good job of cleaning Asifa up, but her hair was filthy. Bay asked for the equipment to wash her hair for her once they got her to the security room. It was the least she could do for the grieving young girl. Asifa had no idea how much trouble she was in. Bay made the call to her Chief Hampton and received permission to remain with the Pakistani girl.
GABE ARRIVED AT the dispensary near dusk. He'd been told Bay was with the young girl they'd found on the mountain this morning. He saw two Marine guards at the door. After Gabe gave his name and unit, the guards stepped aside. Opening the door, he walked in. The young girl slept on the bed, an IV in each arm. Bay sat nearby in one of two chairs.
She looked up, happiness brightening her face as she saw him quietly enter the room and shut the door. Gabe smiled a little h.e.l.lo, moving to her side. Taking the M-4 out of the sling, he set it nearby and pulled up the other chair. He made sure the chair wasn't too close to Bay. She looked tired.
"How's Asifa doing?" he asked quietly, gazing over at the girl.
"Okay. Dr. Johnson, who took care of her, has been pulling all kinds of strings to get Asifa taken to Bagram for care."
Nodding, Gabe rubbed his eyes, weariness stalking him. "Good, because I've been hearing those two CIA guys are raising h.e.l.l back in Was.h.i.+ngton about that little incident out there on the mountain slope this morning." He wiped his dirty hands across his cammies. Giving her a concerned look, Gabe added, "They're p.i.s.sed."
"Is this going to blow back on you and me?" she asked. Bay stared at his mouth, which sparked her own desire. Gabe was emotionally scrambling, unsure of how to stop his feelings from reacting to her.
He shrugged. "Oh, this isn't the first rodeo we've had with these two spooks." His mouth curved ruefully and he held her worried gaze. "This is a game to them. Chief Hampton knows this girl isn't Taliban. I told him what she'd said to you out there on the slope. She's just a kid caught up in something way over her head. Her reasons were okay, but the group she picked to carry them out with wasn't."
"That's true. I talked to her earlier here in the room. She's so naive. She didn't know her brother was carrying fertilizer or that it was used to make bombs."
Nodding, Gabe leaned his elbows on his thighs, his hands clasped between them. Just being with Bay was filling him with a joyful, light feeling, erasing his exhaustion. She'd done nothing to make him want more. "Did you ask if she was carrying one of those bundles of fertilizer?"
"Yes, I did. She wasn't. She tried to carry a bag, but it was too heavy for her, so she came along to keep her brother company. He's the one who carried the bag."
Nodding, Gabe said, "That's what I thought. d.a.m.n, she's skinny."
"Starved," Bay said softly. "They're starving to death in those U.N. camps."
"War's a b.i.t.c.h, isn't it?" Gabe twisted a look toward her. Bay's eyes were dark with concern and he could hear the emotions in her voice. His gaze fell to her lips. She had a beautiful mouth, and sadness moved through him. He'd never get to kiss her, to taste her mouth beneath his.
"I've gotten so I hate war," Bay said, strained. "War never decides who's right or wrong. It only decides who is left to remember the atrocity of it."
Rubbing his bearded chin, Gabe nodded. "But we stop the bad guys. And that's what counts."
Bay suddenly heard men's raised, angry voices outside the room. She instantly tensed and sat up. So did Gabe.
He rose. "Stay here." He held out his hand toward her to indicate she remain seated. He walked over and picked up his M-4 and opened the door.
Bay saw Granger and his buddy trying to threaten the two Marine guards standing in front of the door. The rage was evident on Granger's face. He wasn't hiding it from anyone.
Shadow Warriors: Breaking Point Part 10
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Shadow Warriors: Breaking Point Part 10 summary
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