What
happened next, however, took me by surprise. The door gave way to a kick that shattered
the silence. I opened my eyes in time to see eight armed Taliban fighters come barging into the
room. The first one came straight over to my cot and slapped me across the face with all his
force. That really pissed me off, and he was a very lucky boy that I could not move and was
effectively a prisoner. If he’d even thought about putting his hands on me when I was fit, I’d
have ripped his fucking head off. Little prick.
I knew they were Taliban because of their appearance, very clean cut, manicured beards, clean
teeth, hands, and clothes. They were well fed and could speak broken English. None of them was
very big, maybe around five feet eight on average, and they all wore those old Soviet leather
belts, the ones with the red star in the middle of the buckle. They wore Afghan clothes, but each
one had a different-colored vest. Every man carried a knife and a Russian pistol jammed into his
belt. Everything made in Moscow. Everything stolen.
There was nothing I could get my hands on to defend myself.
I had no rifle, no grenade, just my
own personal badge of courage, the Lone Star of Texas on my arm and chest. I needed some of
that courage because these bastards laid into me, kicking my left leg and punching my face and
upper body, beating me to hell.
I didn’t give that much of a shit. I can suck this kind of crap up, like I’ve been trained. Anyway,
they didn’t have a decent punch among them. Essentially they were all very lucky boys, because
in normal circumstances, I could have thrown any one of them straight through the freakin’
window. My main worry was they might decide to shoot me or tie me up and march me off
somewhere, maybe over the border to Pakistan, to film me and then cut off my head on camera.
If I’d thought for one moment that was their intention, it would have been bad news for all of us.
I was hurt, but not so bad as I was making out, and I was formulating a fallback plan. Up above
me
in the rafters, I could see a four-foot-long iron bar, just resting there. Could I get it if I stood
up? Yes.
In a life-or-death situation, I’d grab that bar, carefully select the most violent of them, and smash
it right through him. He’d never get up again. Then I’d lay into the front two, taking them
entirely by surprise. At the same time, using the bar, I’d ram the whole group into a corner,
crushing them together, as per standard SEAL combat strategy, making it impossible for anyone
to draw down on me,
pull a knife, or get out.
I’d probably have to obliterate the skulls of another couple of them before using one of those
Russian pistols to finish anyone still alive. Could I have done it? I think so. My buddies back in
SEAL Team 10 would have been mighty disappointed in me if I’d failed.
My absolute fallback position would have been to kill them all, grab their weapons and
ammunition, then barricade myself in the house until the Americans came to get me.
The problem was, where would all this get me in the short term? What was the point of being a
bad-ass SEAL, the way some guys would be? The house was surrounded by more Taliban, all of
them with AKs. I saw those guards come in and then go out again. Some of the little creeps were
right outside the window. Anyway, the entire sprawl of the village of Sabray was surrounded by
the Taliban. Sarawa had told me so, and it beat me why I’d been left alone...unless they
knew...unless they were indoctrinated...unless I really was in the hands of off-duty Taliban
warriors.
But the guys at my bedside were not off duty. They were right on my case, demanding to know
why I was there, what
the American planes were doing, whether the United States was planning
an attack on them, who was coming to rescue me (good question, right?). I knew that right now
discretion was, by a long way, the better part of valor, because my objective was simply to try
and stay alive, not to get into a brawl with knife-wielding tribesmen or, worse, get myself shot.
I kept telling them I was just a doctor, out here to help with our wounded. I also told them a huge
lie, that I had diabetes. I was not a member of the special forces, and I needed water, which they
ignored. The main trouble was,
strangely, my beard, because they knew the U.S. Army did not
permit beards. Only the U.S. Special Forces allows that.
I managed to persuade them I needed to go outside, and they gave me this one single
opportunity, one last desperate try to slip away. But I could not move fast enough, and they just
dragged me back inside, threw me on the ground, and beat me even more seriously than they had
before. Broke the bones in my wrist. That hurt, and I’ve since needed two operations to correct
it.
By now they had lit their lanterns, maybe three of them, and the room was quite light. And their
inquisition went on for maybe six hours. Yelling and beating, yelling and kicking.
They told me
my buddies were all dead, told me they’d already cut everyone’s head off and that I was next.
They said they had shot down an American helicopter, killed everyone. They were just full of
bravado, shouting, boasting they would in the end kill every American in their country and then
some...
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