Ahmad Dekhtah and his men hit the road at dawn, leaving the pickup where they had slept. Ahmad had come that way many times, to go and fight around Kabul, so he knew there was a hut near the road in that zone. And he thought that if the medic and the two Russians had seen it, they likely stopped there for the night, though he could not be sure they were really there. His idea was to surprise them asleep, and that's why he decided to approach the hut by feet. The pickup could be too much noisy.
All seemed to go as they wished, till something cracked under their feet. They froze for a while, but all remained calm in the hut and around it. So they came on, and did not stop even when something else cracked again. The "Kafirs" seemed to do not sleep heavy. Deep heavy, if they were there at all...
Yuri was not sleeping at all. At the second "crack", he peeked from behind the hut, from the side the moon did not shine on, looked around, saw something moving, but did not see Russian uniforms.
And so he shot.
The first bullet just scarfed Gulbuddin on his left side, the second pierced his chest without serious damage, but the third broke his frontal bone and all that was behind. He fell down, while Yuri ran to the entry of the hut, shooting in front of himself to get everyone could be there to duck down. And all the men of Ahmad did exactly this, till Yuri jumped in the hut, safe but short of breath.
"They are coming!" he shouted with what remained in his lungs.
"How many they are?" the medic asked, realizing one second too late the foolishness of the question: Yuri had had no time to count them. In fact, he looked at him and grinned:
"Too many for me!"
Ahmad reassessed the situation in his head. The surprise had failed. Gulbuddin was in the arms of the Houris. He was the only man of the group which had an RPG. With it, it would have been easy to blow the hut away. But now it was tied with a shoulder strap on the corpse of Gulbuddin, fifteen paces right flank in front of him. between him and the hut. And in the hut there were three people who were able to shoot damn right, and saw all itt happened all around. Or at least, in front of them...
The hut was made mostly with stones. So the AK47s could not destroy it or kill the people inside of it, as it could have done, if there was just a brick wall, or mud, or straws. To launch a grenade inside of the hut could be possible, but not from so far away. It took to get halfway before to throw it, and now it was no more possible to do it without being seen. And killed.
So the only solution was to retake the RPG.
And make the hut blow away.
As he should have done at once, he thought...
Afizullah was not a fool. When Ahmad signaled him to go, he did not go straight towadrs Gulbuddin and the hut. He went to the right, away from the entrance of the hut. while the other men of Ahmad were shooting at the hut, to get the medic and the two Russians to keep low, and distract them from what Afizullah was doing.
One step, one more step, another step...
Afizullah was some meters on the right from the body of Gulbuddin. He lay on his belly and gripped the clothes of Gulbuddin, to tow him on his side, then he took away the shoulder strip from the corpse, took a rocket grenade from the bags on the body...
The men of Ahmad were expert warriors, but not trained soldiers. They had shot all together, and finished the ammo of their mags more or less at the same moment. They had to reload, just in the moment when Afizullah put the grenade launcher on the ground and the rocket grenade inside of it. Too much noise in the silence. The point of a gun barrel poked in a hole between the stones of the wall of the hut and a long volley was heard. Afizullah collapsed on his right side, with the RPG still on his shoulder. still dead. Just one more second, and Afizullah would have pulled the trigger and killed the Russians and the medic who had chosen to go with them, Ahmad thought. War... or destiny?
Katya dropped with her back against the wall of the hut, on the left hand side of the hole where she had seen the man with the RPG ready to fire. "Gòspodi!" she breathed. My lord... She too was discovering that there are no Atheists in foxholes, the medic thought. But Atheism or not, she had saved their lives, one more time...
"And so, scratch two!" Yuri said.
"And many others on the list!" the medic answered.
"How many they are?" the soldier asked. "What do you think?"
"If they are travelling on a pickup or a truck or what, they could be a dozen, or even less. But if they are traveling by feet... Who can say? Twenty, thirty..."
"Well, then let's hope they are motorized..."
"Motorized or not, they are too many..." Katya said, gloomily.
"What do you mean?" the medic wonder. She looked at him. All of a sudden, The seemed deadly tired. Tired of fighting. Tired of all...
"I mean that we are trapped..." she said.
"No..."
"Yes! They don't have to come here and take us! They just have to wait! Sooner or later we will have to sleep! Or else, we will end up without food! Or without water! Or without ammunition! Or..."
"You're letting yourself go too much! i understand, you are tired, but..."
"It's not that I am tired. It's that we are tired. It's that we are dead!" she said, calmly. She dropped his gun. "End of the journey. You have to do what I have asked to you..."
"What?"
"What I have asked to you..." she said, looking in his eyes. her eyes were wet, sweet, big, like the eyes of a wounded horse. They shoot horses, don't they?