Authors: Chris Ryan
Also by Chris Ryan:
Agent 21
The One That Got Away
Code Red series
Alpha Force series
If you liked this, you’ll love…
You think it’s funny, do you? You think it’s a laugh to stare at me limping through the park? How old are you? Not much younger than I was when I lost my leg.
Yeah, that’s right. Eighteen years old. My whole life ahead of me. Still think I look funny, hey? Go on, have a good giggle at the man with the plastic foot.
What? You want to know how it happened?
Don’t mess me around. Seriously, are you sure?
Alright then. Let’s sit down on this park bench here. I’m sorry, I’m a little out of breath. It’s tiring going around on these crutches. I was very fit back in my army days. But … well, those days are gone. My name’s Jamie, by the way. Pleased to meet you.
It happened on a hot afternoon. Correction: it happened on a
scorching
hot afternoon. Every summer’s day in Afghanistan is a scorcher. You sometimes think you’ll never be cool again.
We’d been on patrol since before dawn. Our route had taken us into the Green Zone.
What’s the Green Zone?
Well, in the south of Afghanistan, most of the terrain is desert. Dry. Barren. But there are rivers that carry water down from the nearby mountains. The banks of these rivers are fertile – good for growing stuff. That’s why they call it the Green Zone, and it’s where they grow fruit and vegetables. Most of the locals live in the Green Zone. Most of the enemy, too. They’re called the Taliban – you’ve probably heard of them on the news. All they want to do is kill British soldiers. And if they can’t kill them, they’ll make do with maiming them. Loads of my friends out there have lost arms. Or legs. Or both.
Friends. That’s what being in the army is all about. You make friends. You look after your friends. You watch each other’s back. But there was this one guy in my platoon who wasn’t really a friend. The opposite, in fact. I used to laugh at him. We all did.
A bit like you were laughing at me just then. His name was Sam. Sam Maguire. And why did we laugh at him? Because he was different, I suppose.
You see, Sam’s best friend wasn’t another soldier. His best friend was a sniffer dog called Charlie.
Didn’t you know they had dogs in the army? You’d be surprised. Attack dogs. Patrol dogs. Sentry dogs. Search and rescue dogs. But Charlie? He was one of the best.
You wouldn’t think it to look at him. A raggedy-looking thing. A springer spaniel with puppy-dog eyes. His ears touched the ground when he drank from his bowl. But that dog could sniff out a bomb from a hundred metres. It was Sam who taught him to do it. Together, they uncovered more bombs than any other team in the British Army.
And the Taliban, they like their bombs. We called them IEDs out there – Improvised Explosive Devices. They’re almost impossible to see. If you tread on one, you’re coming home in a box. At least, the bits of you that they can find are. But Charlie could sniff them out, and Sam could defuse them. I don’t know how many lives they must’ve saved. Hundreds, probably.
They were a strange couple, though. Inseparable. Back at base, Sam would never hang out with the rest of us. He just wanted to be with his dog. We’d all be playing
Call of Duty
together while Sam would be grooming Charlie. Brushing the desert sand out of his fur. Checking his paws. Keeping him company. Of course, we used to tease him. You know the sort of thing. “Hey, Sam, what is it with you and Charlie. Does he remind you of your girlfriend or something?” But I never saw Sam get cross. He just smiled and shrugged it off. Then he went back to brushing Charlie’s coat. He loved that dog. And the dog loved him back. Charlie would do anything for Sam.
He would even follow him into the Green Zone.
It was three o’clock in the afternoon. We’d been sheltering from the midday sun in an abandoned courtyard on the edge of a village. We were just getting ready to leave, hoisting our rucksacks onto our backs, when we heard gunfire.
You never get used to it. The crack of an AK47. The whoosh of a rocket-propelled grenade as it hurtles over your head. It stops your heart for a few seconds.
“RPG!” someone shouted at the top of their voice. We all hit the ground. I heard the rocket explode just beyond the courtyard. Then I heard a shower of shrapnel hitting the ground.
I looked round to check none of my friends had been hit. All the guys – there were sixteen of us – were lying on their fronts. So was Charlie. Unlike the men, he didn’t look scared. He was alongside Sam, still, but alert.
There was a moment of silence. And then the enemy opened fire again. We could tell they were close. Between thirty and fifty metres. I tried to work out how many guns were firing. I couldn’t. There were too many. This was a heavy attack.
Our patrol commander got on the radio back to base. “Zero, this is patrol Delta Tango Five. We have heavy small arms fire from the north. Request pick-up, repeat, request pick-up.”
The gunfire fell quiet. That made me feel more nervous. It meant the enemy were on the move.
The patrol commander got to his feet and jabbed one finger in a westerly direction. Made sense. The enemy fire had come from the north. South or east would have taken us back into the heart of the Green Zone. West was our only option. We left that dusty courtyard through a door in the western wall, treading quietly and in single file.
My L85 assault rifle was cocked and locked. I held it across my chest with the barrel pointing downwards, and followed the guy in front. His name was Doug Talbot. He was a thin, lanky Scottish lad, and a good friend. I kept five metres from him. When you’re marching in single file, you mustn’t bunch up. If you’re too close together, you make an easy target.
Our path took us away from the village, along a shallow ditch towards a field of corn. It was the size of a football pitch. The corn was as tall as me, but it only came up to Doug Talbot’s shoulders. Tall bloke, was Doug.
Once we’d reached the cover of the cornfield, the patrol commander gave us the lowdown. “OK, lads,” he said, sweat clearing lines through the dirt on his face. “On the other side of this field, there’s fifty metres of open ground. Beyond that, there’s an abandoned compound. We can take cover there until a chopper arrives to pick us up.”
“But, Sarge,” someone said, “if we walk across open ground we’ll be a target…”
The patrol commander nodded grimly. “Check for snipers before you step out of the cornfield. And don’t walk: run.”
Doug led the way across the cornfield, keeping his shoulders hunched and his head down. I went next. Behind me was Sam, and behind him, Charlie. The rest of the platoon followed.
It took about three minutes to cross the cornfield. At the far side, just like the commander had said, there was a stretch of open ground. Fifty metres away was the abandoned compound.
Doug was nervously licking his lips when I caught up with him. Together we peered out from the edge of the cornfield. We were looking for snipers, but couldn’t see anyone. Just the compound. It shimmered in the heat haze.
Doug looked at me.
I looked back at him.
“I’ll go first,” he said.
We clenched our fists and touched our knuckles together. That was something we always did.
“Take care, buddy,” I said.
He nodded.
And then he walked to his death.
Looking back, I know what our mistake was. We didn’t have enough respect for our enemy. They’d forced us to take this escape route. We never worked out that they had us exactly where they wanted us. In the middle of a minefield.
Doug moved quickly. He was about ten metres out into open ground when I followed. I had to stop myself from sprinting. If I caught up with him, we’d be bunched up. And I’ve already told you what that means. So I ran ten metres behind – just looking straight ahead. Doug was halfway across the open ground. The compound looked so close… And then Doug stepped directly onto an IED pressure plate.
It’s the noise that gets you at first. Forget all those explosions you’ve seen in the movies. This was like being in the middle of a thunderclap. Then the shock waves hit you.
Have you ever been punched? This is a hundred times worse.
I was thrown back several metres, and landed on my back. I couldn’t see anything through the cloud of dust. I shouted Doug’s name. No reply. I heard something thud onto the ground right next to me. It was an arm, severed just below the shoulder. I knew then that Doug was dead.
I’m sorry. I know my voice is breaking up. It’s a hard thing to talk about. I’ll be alright in a second.
Rubble was falling on me. A shower of stones. But then something hit my own leg that wasn’t a stone. It slammed into my shin. I couldn’t see what it was because of the dust. And at first my leg didn’t hurt. But then the dust settled. I saw a twisted hunk of metal sticking out of my lower leg. My trousers were ripped. And there was blood.
A lot of blood.
The pain hit me suddenly. It’s hard to describe how bad it was. To start with, it felt as if all the blood in my leg had turned to ice. I tried to sit up and pull the shrapnel out. A terrible twist of agony shrieked up through my knee. I fell back to the ground again. I think I was screaming. Yelling to my mates to come and help me. But as I looked back towards the cornfield, I could see that the patrol commander had ordered them not to step out into the open ground. No one was coming to help. I didn’t blame them. Where you find one IED, you normally find loads. A single step could kill any one of them. They were afraid. Who wouldn’t be?
There was one exception. Charlie, the sniffer dog, was already poking his nose through the edge of the cornfield. And Sam, his handler, was by his side. He had one hand on the dog’s head. His eyes were narrowed in concentration.
The man and his dog stepped out into open ground.
Charlie and Sam had to cover about twenty metres. Doesn’t sound like a lot, does it? Well, believe me – if a single step could kill you, it might as well be twenty miles.
The dog went first. His nose was close to the ground. He inched forwards, sniffing the desert floor. And even though I was screaming – oh, boy, the pain – he didn’t look up once. Sam walked directly behind him. He had a plastic bottle full of white chalk dust. He used this to mark a safe passage behind him.
My world started to spin. I no longer had the energy to scream. But I still had the energy to be scared. And I was scared when I saw the dog stop.
He was only ten metres away from me. He barked once, then sat down.
His handler crouched on all fours. He stretched out one hand and gently scraped the dusty earth in front of the dog. I couldn’t see what he found, but it must have been a pressure plate. Sam made a chalk circle around it. The dog turned ninety degrees and boxed round the IED. Its nose was back down to the ground.
I think I must have passed out then. The next thing I knew, Charlie was licking my face. I heard Sam’s voice. “Stay with us, buddy,” he said. “We’re going to get you out of here.” I felt a needle puncture my trousers and slip into my good leg. Sam was giving me morphine. Seconds later, the drug hit my bloodstream.
It’s a weird feeling, morphine. It doesn’t take the pain away. It just stops you caring about it. I felt drowsy as Sam lifted me up in his arms and followed Charlie, step by slow step, towards the compound. How long did it take? I couldn’t tell you. All I know is that without the dog, we’d never have made it there in safety.