Hunt the Scorpion

Hunt the Scorpion by Don Mann, Ralph Pezzullo Page B

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Authors: Don Mann, Ralph Pezzullo
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high marble arches formed what remained of the entrance.
    “I smell smoke,” Volman said, poking his head up over the dashboard.
    “It’s the Sheraton, sir,” Mustafa offered. “Looks like it’s been attacked.”
    To the right, past smaller white guesthouses and palms, Crocker saw a marina.
    “Turn this thing around and get us out of here!” Volman shouted.
    Crocker drove within a hundred feet of the hotel entrance and stopped. Cars were fleeing the hotel, steering wildly. A Mercedes with a shattered windshield crashed into another Mercedes in front of it. Crocker pulled up on the sidewalk and parked. “Let’s get out here, Davis. Stick together.”
    “What are you doing? What about us?”
    “Wait here,” Crocker said to Volman and Mustafa. “We’ll be back.”
    They ran, squeezing past cars and frenzied people streaming past. Flames rose to the left around some palm trees near the entrance. Crocker saw the burning carcass of what looked like it had once been a delivery truck near a checkpoint at the end of the block. Flames rose from several other overturned cars nearby. One had landed hood-first in a fountain.
    The explosion had left a gaping hole in one corner of the building. The place looked like some huge creature had taken a bite out of it. There was shattered glass everywhere. People moaning, screaming, calling out names, asking for help in various languages—English, Dutch, Arabic, French.
    Dozens poured out of the smoking structure, stepping over burnt bodies, walking, stumbling, and running in all directions. Some were injured, others looked perfectly fine except for the horrified looks on their faces. Others stared ahead blankly, like the man in a suit who staggered by with blood running down his face, calmly smoking a cigarette.
    The torso of a uniformed man lay in the street. His arms and legs had been blown off. His head was a gory mess of brains and shattered bone.
    Crocker expected sirens but heard none.
    As they approached the entrance, gunfire rang out. People jumped behind trees and walls or threw themselves to the pavement. Crocker and Davis crouched behind a planter overflowing with red bougainvillea.
    “Sounds like the shots are coming from inside,” Davis shouted.
    “That’s odd,” Crocker said, looking for soldiers or security guards and finding none.
    “Real odd.”
    “Maybe we should circle around back.”
    They rose together and almost tripped over a stout middle-aged woman holding up a bleeding man. The man’s face was injured.
    The woman screamed in a language Crocker didn’t understand. The man stumbled and grabbed his neck.
    With Davis’s help, Crocker sat the man down on the ground, against the wall of the entrance. Then he started to reach down his throat.
    The woman shouted, “No! No!” shaking her head, slipping into hysteria.
    Crocker nodded at Davis, who held her back.
    The man’s windpipe was blocked with blood and broken teeth. Crocker swept them free and fished them out of his mouth. The man coughed and started to breathe normally. The gash across his cheek and mouth was serious but not life threatening.
    With no medical kit available, Crocker removed his own black polo shirt and held it against the man’s face. Then he grabbed the woman’s hand. “Hold this here and wait for an ambulance. Your husband will be okay.”
    “Wait?”
    “ Attendez, ” Crocker said, remembering one of the few words he knew in French.
    “ Attendez, oui. ” She nodded her head, then kissed his cheek.
    The firing from inside had picked up. More people were running out in panic. Some wore uniforms; some men, suits. Women were clothed in cocktail gowns and dresses. Many of them abandoned their high heels, which littered the tile floor.
    Crocker saw someone who looked American and stopped him.
    “Where’s the party for the NATO chief?”
    “The party?”
    “Yeah. Where’s Al Cowens?”
    “Out of my way!”
    Crocker grabbed him firmly by the shoulders. “Al Cowens from

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