About the Author

New York Times bestselling author HAROLD COYLE is a graduate of the Virginia Military Institute.  He spent fourteen years on active duty with the US Army. He lives in Leavenworth, Kansas.

BARRETT TILLMAN is the author of many fiction and nonfiction books including Clash of the Carriers and Hellcats. He lives in Mesa, Arizona.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

1
SOUTH GOVERNATE, LEBANON
The stalkers awaited the signal.
It came in the dappled gray light of 5:00 a.m. because delay was as much an enemy as the dedicated men inside the remote building.
Outside the  .ve- room  house, the assault leader gave a quick click- click of his tactical headset. The eleven mem­bers of his team recognized it as the preparatory signal. Receiving no response, he proceeded with his countdown.
“Ready... ready...”
A long three- second wait allowed anyone to delay the inevitable. No one did. The four men on perimeter guard saw nothing to interfere with the operation. Meanwhile, the two assault teams and the command element  were tensed, leg muscles coiled to propel them from the shadows.
The team leader licked his lips. He had extensive experi­ence but it was always like this: an eager dread. He glanced around. Only his radio operator returned his gaze; every­one else was focused on the objective. It looked good: they had probably achieved surprise, but surprise without vio­lence was useless.
“Ready... go!”
Two explosions shattered the Mediterranean air, two seconds apart. The .rst was a  Chinese- made RPG whose high- explosive warhead blew a hole in the brick- and-mortar wall facing the sunrise. The second was another RPG near the opposite corner that smashed through a win­dow and detonated on the interior wall.
Assaulting together, each section was preceded by Rheinmetall .ash- bang grenades to compensate for any defenders who escaped the RPG blasts.
A quick two- count, and both teams entered through the holes. It was doctrine: avoid the usual entrances, which could be mined.
The attackers’ mission was simple: kill or capture everyone present. Take no unnecessary chances.
There  were no novices on either side of the door.
The raiders held the advantage, exploiting the stunning effects of the grenades and  .ash- bangs. Moving with .uid rapidity, they “ran the walls,” closing the distance on the defenders, .ring short, disciplined bursts. The Egoz recon­naissance unit allowed its members a great deal of latitude: most chose 7.62 Galils but a few carried AK-47s. Both  were lethally effective.
Three defenders  were shot down in the front room; only one got off a round and it went high. A fragmentation grenade arced through the entrance to the next room. Be­fore it exploded, the men inside opened .re with their AKs. The  150- grain rounds shredded the blanket separat­ing the two rooms, and some  were deliberately aimed low. One raider dropped with a Kalashnikov’s bullet through the left thigh.
The grenade .zzled. Too long in  storage— the result of clandestine acquisition  policies— it exploded in a  low-order detonation that in.icted minor wounds. Inside the small room, a close- range .re.ght erupted. It was fought at near muzzle contact.
One raider was killed, taking a round above the ballis­tic plate of his tactical vest. Another was clipped in the right bicep.
The defenders  were shot down in an ephemeral mo­ment of loud noise, bright muzzle .ashes, and icy terror. Each body received one or two rounds to the head before the last brass clattered on the wood .oor.
One man escaped the house, .eeing through the back door. The designated marksman with a scoped Galil shot him from sixty meters.
Order, if not quiet, returned to the shattered structure.
“Clear!”
“Clear!”
Without awaiting instructions, the raiders moved through the  house according to their individual priorities. Two guarded the bodies on the .oor while two others se­cured the victims’ hands with .ex cuffs. The fact that they were dead was irrelevant; some of the raiders had seen dead men kill the living.
The number two man turned to his superior. “No useful prisoners, Chief. Sorry.”
The team leader shrugged philosophically. “I know. It couldn’t be helped.” As papers  were gathered, the radioman began taking photos with his digital camera.
Hearing the  all- clear, the team medic entered through the door— the only one to do so. He had one immediate case and two lesser. He was experienced and calm; com­bat triage was nothing new to him.
“Arterial bleeding  here,” said one man, leaning over the .rst casualty. The medic went to work, knowing that his friends would treat other casualties for the moment. He glanced at a green- clad form, not moving. One of the raiders merely shook his head. The decedent’s family would be told that he died in a training accident, body unrecoverable. Knowing it was a lie, the parents would accept the fabrication.
The other killers began tearing the place apart. They searched thoroughly, quickly, indelicately. They opened every cabinet and drawer, spilling the contents, and pulled mattresses off beds. They searched for loose boards and pried at the ceiling. Finally one of them returned to the liv­ing room.
“Nothing here, Avri.”
“It has to be here. Look again. Everywhere.”
Abraham pulled the kaf.yeh off his head and allowed it to drape over his tactical vest. “We’ve already looked everywhere. Twice. I’m telling you, it’s not  here.”
Avri looked around the  house. “God damn it!” For the grandson of a rabbi, he was famously profane.
He grabbed the radioman. “Get me Capri Six. Priority.”
The RTO handed over the instrument. “Scramble mode selected.”
“Capri, this is Purchase. Pass.” The commander re­leased the transmit button, allowing the scrambler to do its work. In an instant the carrier wave was back.
“Purchase, I read you. Pass.”
“The well is dry. Repeat, the well is dry. End.”
The response was decidedly nonregulation, but the transmission from the south drew no comment. After all, this time the offending voice belonged to an agnostic.

SSI OFFICES, ARLINGTON, VIRGINIA
“Ladies and gentlemen, we’re in trouble.”
Rear Admiral Michael Derringer had been retired for longer than he cared to remember but he had lost little of his command presence. As found er and CEO of Strategic Solutions, Incorporated, he had conned the company through its early years, building success upon success as the military contractor market expanded. Working around the world, performing often clandestine tasks for the U.S. Gov­ernment, SSI had become the  go- to .rm when DoD or State needed something done without of.cial recognition.
But that was then; this was now.
“Still no new contracts?” George Ferraro, SSI vice pres­ident and chief .nancial of.cer, had no problem guessing the admiral’s intent.
“Correct.” Derringer’s balding head bobbed in assent. “SecDef canceled our electronic warfare project in Ara­bia and State vetoed us for another African job. Oh,  we’re still getting business but it’s  paper-clip money: security work, training assignments,  small- scale jobs. About the only advantage is that they keep some of our regulars on the payroll. But they don’t reduce the red ink, and we can’t operate on our stock portfolio inde.nitely.”
Among the nine people sitting around the polished table was Lieutenant General Thomas Varlowe, U.S. Army (Retired), the gray presence who never quite shed the three stars he once wore. As chairman of SSI’s advisory board, he had little .nancial stake in the .rm but remained inter­ested in the fascinating projects that came down the Belt­way. Though he seldom spoke up in board meetings, the situation called for an exception.
“Ahem.” Heads turned toward the former West Point track star. “I wanted to talk to Admiral Derringer before the meeting but I didn’t get the chance. In case there’s any doubt about the company’s lack of work, I can elaborate.”
Derringer barely managed to suppress a tight smile. The two retirees  were “Admiral” and “General” to one an­other in SSI meetings but friendly rivals named Mike and Tom the rest of the  time—especially in November for the Army- Navy game.
“Go ahead, General.” The Navy man knew what was coming.
Varlowe shoved back from the table. “It’s that job with the Israelis. Damned poor situation to get into...” He came within an inch of adding, As I tried to tell all of you. Instead, he pushed ahead. “I’ve snooped around and found that new business dried up almost before that ship sank... what was it? Three or four months ago? Sure, our people prevented the uranium ore from reaching Iran, but that hardly matters.”
“I’ve been traveling in Eu rope, General. What does matter?” Beverly Ann Shumard, with a PhD in interna­tional relations, was one of two women on the board of directors, and among the most outspoken of all.
Derringer interjected. “Dr. Shumard, the mission sum­mary is still being prepared owing to, ah, security con­cerns. But the short version is, our training team in Chad got involved in a double play set up by the Israelis, pre­sumably against the Ira ni ans. Col o nel Leopole can pro­vide some operational details, but basically our tasking changed from instruction to interdiction, preventing a load of yellow cake from being shipped to Iran.”
Shumard shook her head. “I’m sorry, Admiral. As I said, I’ve been away and didn’t know the particulars. But why would Iran want ore from Chad? I mean, Iran has its own mines.”
Derringer nodded to the chief of operations.
Lieutenant Col o nel Frank Leopole looked, talked, and acted as Central Casting would expect of a Marine Corps of.cer. He was tall, lean, and hard with a ...