than the finest grains of sand.
It was over in a matter of seconds—thirty-three to be exact. In that short time, 228 people lay dead or dying, and nothing over the height of twelve inches was left standing in the village.
Only a few of those two dozen who were wounded but still alive saw the huge helicopter appear over the village ten minutes later. It landed, and a man in a green Iraqi Army uniform was the first to step off. He was a major. He had a huge scar running down his right cheek.
As he supervised the killing of the wounded, the helicopter crew hooked the Toyota truck onto a thick cable hanging beneath their heavy-lift aircraft, preparing to fly it away. In the brutally quick, massive attack, the Toyota was the only thing that had not been harmed. Indeed, it wasn't even scratched, so accurate had been the fire from the sky.
This was a good thing for the Army major with the scarred face.
He had admired the white truck with the silver stripes from the second he saw it on the dock at Basra.
And now, it was his.
Chapter 7
It was a place that did not show up on any tourist maps—yet it looked like somewhere just about any tourist in south Florida would want to visit.
It was called Seven Ghosts Key by some. It was an island located about forty-five miles south of Key West, deep in the Florida Straits.
Five miles long and a half mile wide, it was covered with palm trees—some real, some not—and various other kinds of tropical fauna. It was surrounded by very light blue water. A huge coral reef dominated its northern side. A white sandy beach stretched along its southern end.
The center of the island boasted what appeared to be a small airfield, one capable of handling civilian aircraft like Piper Cubs, Cherokees, and so on. Close to this was a dock with facilities for a few dozen sport-fishing boats and yachts, with gasoline pumps, a repair shack, and bait barrels also on hand.
The main part of the resort was a cluster of six buildings located next to the airport. Three were obviously hangars—though to the trained eye they might have appeared a bit too large to handle only private airplanes. Two more buildings looked like motels—brightly colored one-story framed structures with lots of windows. The fifth building looked like a warehouse. The sixth was a restaurant. It was of vintage 1950's design, its roof and gutters adorned with ancient-looking patio lights that were turned on both night and day. Its expansive deck looked out over the calm waters to the north of the key.
The only vehicles ever seen on the island were powder-pink jeeps. Their sole purpose seemed to be for transporting fishermen from the docks to the restaurant and back, yet rarely did any of these vehicles move from their parking lot behind the boat slips. The pristine beach on the south side also appeared very inviting, with its pearl sand, its field of beach umbrellas, and the waves gently lapping against its straight-as-a-razor shoreline. Yet rarely could any visitors be spotted there, or anywhere on the island for that matter.
This was because Seven Ghosts Key was not what it seemed. First of all, its runway was actually two miles long—four fifths of it invisible, hidden by cleverly painted camouflage and intricately placed fauna. The restaurant, while serving as a mess hall as well, was crammed with millions of dollars of military communications equipment. What appeared to be an air- conditioner vent-house on its roof actually contained a Hawk antiaircraft missile battery. One of the large hangars boasted facilities big enough to house more than a hundred people. A second held enough weaponry to outfit a small army. The third actually served to store aircraft, many of which had never been seen by a civilian eye. The pink jeeps all carried Uzi machine guns or M- 16CGS NightVision-equipped rifles. And the "motels" held even more mysterious things inside.
No, Seven Ghosts Key was not what it seemed.
It was, in fact, another