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Chapter no 74

Spare

I GOT PROMOTED,ย SORT OF. To a small lookout high above the battlefield. For quite some time the lookout had been driving the Taliban mad. We had

it, they wanted it, and if they couldnโ€™t get it then they were bound to destroy it. Theyโ€™d attacked the lookout scores of times in the months before I got there.

Hours after my arrival at the lookout, here they came again.

AK-47s rattling, bullets whizzing by. It sounded like someone throwing beehives through our window. There were four Gurkhas with me, and they unleashed a Javelin missile in the direction of the incoming fire.

Then they told me to take a seat behind the 50-cal.ย Jump on, saab!

I climbed into the gun nest, grabbed the big handles. I shoved in my earplugs, took aim through the mesh hanging from the window. I squeezed the trigger. The feeling was like a train through the middle of my chest. The sound was locomotive-like as well.ย Chugga chugga chugga.ย The gun spat bullets across the desert, and shell casings flew around the lookout like popcorn. It was the first time Iโ€™d ever fired a 50-cal. I simply couldnโ€™t believe the power.

In my direct line of sight was abandoned farmland, ditches, trees. I lit it all up. There was an old building with two domes that looked like a frogโ€™s eyes. I peppered those domes.

Meanwhile, Dwyer began lobbing its big guns. All was mayhem.

I donโ€™t remember much after that, but I donโ€™t need toโ€”thereโ€™s video. The press was there, by my side, filming. I hated them being there, but Iโ€™d been ordered to take them on an outing. In return theyโ€™d agreed to sit on any images or information they gathered until I was out of the country.

How many did we kill? the press wanted to know. We couldnโ€™t be sure.

Indeterminate, we said.

I thought Iโ€™d be in that lookout for a long time. But soon after that day I was summoned up north to FOB Edinburgh. I boarded a Chinook full of mailbags, lay down among them to hide. Forty minutes later I was hopping off, into knee-deep mud.ย When the hell did it rain?ย I was shown to my quarters in a sandbag house. A tiny bed.

And a roommate. Estonian signals officer.

We hit it off. He gave me one of his badges as a welcome gift.

Five miles away was Musa Qala, a town that had once been a Taliban fortress. In 2006 weโ€™d seized it, after some of the worst fighting British soldiers had seen in half a century. More than a thousand Taliban had been

subdued. After paying such a price, however, the town was quickly, carelessly, lost again. Now weโ€™d won it a second time, and we aimed to keep it.

And a nasty job it was. One of our lads had just been blown up by an IED.

Plus, we were despised in and around the town. Locals whoโ€™d cooperated with us had been tortured, their heads put on spikes along the town walls.

There would be no winning of either hearts or minds.

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