A Pibroch (piobaireachd) is associated with the Highlands and is a series of musical variations on a theme, played on bagpipes. A Chaconne is similar but played on different instruments. The theme of this is a lament in five parts.
PIBROCH & CHACONNE
Now
He approached his house; his cap clutched in his hand. Soft light glowed from the lounge and bedroom windows, small illuminations in the darkness that surrounded his home. As he approached, he could see through the lounge window into the dining room, where candlelight revealed the table set for two, the places set with delicate china, crystal glasses and silver cutlery. Wine cooled in an ice bucket, and an extravagance of arranged flowers completed the setting. Soft jazz whispered from inside, and it looked warm and cosy -- a sharp contrast to the cold darkness of his long walk from the main road. There was a flickering warmth from the fireplace, an unnecessary addition to the house's heating system, but a focal point for the languorous lovemaking that they often enjoyed at the end of a perfect evening. They would linger over the food and drink, talking, discussing and planning, drawing things out in the knowledge that there would be an ecstatic culmination to another beautiful evening in their eight-year marriage.
It would have been the perfect homecoming -- except for the fact that he wasn't expected to be there.
**********
Earlier
Captain Brian Barros smelt rank.
The odour was foul enough that he swore he could taste it on the back of his tongue, and that knowledge niggled constantly in the back of his brain.
The hastily borrowed uniform didn't fit properly; the trousers were just too short, the coat -- with no insignia whatsoever on it -- was too big, and the cap made him look like Forrest Gump. Despite wiping them several times, his boots were grimy and scratched from the mountain chase. The realisation that he looked like a slob worried him; it didn't fit his sense of self. He hadn't even had the opportunity to shave before he was hustled onto the C-30 heading for the trip from Kuwait to Ramstein in Germany, with the promise that his kit and belongings would be sent on to him.
Being on the run from a vengeful Taliban through the mountains of Afghanistan for four straight days, trying to avoid capture, with sleep counted in minutes and sometimes even seconds at a time, had been his only concern at the time, which was as it should be. But now the pressure was off, his personal hygiene and appearance were beginning to take precedence.
The mission had been both successful and FUBAR at the same time. The three of them, dressed in the type of robes worn by villagers in that area, were deeply tanned enough to be taken as locals. Selected partly for their ability to speak the dialect, they had successfully followed the hints and tips that had come from Intelligence and finally tracked down the target -- just one man -- to a cave system at the end of an almost indiscernible trail. However, the intelligence had been flawed in not reporting the place was also home to what looked to be a whole company of foreign fighters.
The captain had sighed to himself, but the mission was there to be accomplished, and Philips and Ramirez knew that. Typically, a captain would be in charge of a company of anything up to two hundred men and women. Now he had just two. But that was special forces for you; you did what you were best at, not what the manual said. This time, it was his job to find a way in, come up with a way to make it work, and execute it -- and the sergeant and corporal would be waiting to hear the plan.
His were the decisions. Corporal Craig Philips and Sergeant Manny Ramirez were the weapon. As a sniper team for a never-clarified Other Government Agency, they had worked together repeatedly over the last seven years, and the experience had led to a level of trust and understanding between them that made them seem almost to be psychic, each knowing what the other was thinking. With Philips as the spotter and Ramirez handling the MacMillian TAC-338, preferring the.338 Lapua Magnum round for extra distance, they were among the American military's very best.
Typically they would work purely as a pair in the field, with Ramirez in charge. But this kill was deemed significant enough that Captain Barros was put in charge. As someone who had carried out many infiltration operations in this part of the sandlot, his job was to lead them there, confirm the target and subsequently the kill. He would let them decide how to set up and make the shot as that wasn't his expertise; instead, he would act as their guard and relief spotter while they watched and waited for an opportunity. His reputation was such that Ramirez and Philips were more than happy for him to take the lead. He had a habit of returning with his men intact.
They finally reached the valley, approaching over the crest of the western escarpment to avoid any lookouts positioned at either end. There was a single lookout point on the approach with two men in place, neither paying any attention to their task. Barros waited until one wandered away to piss, silently killing him with a bloodless strike. The remaining guard went the same way, and the trio carefully hid their bodies before moving on. It seemed to be a low risk that their absence would be discovered any time soon, as observation of their movements and the quantity of supplies they had on hand all indicated that they were on permanent duty there. Their absence might very well be put down to simple desertion.
"Take half the supplies, enough to make it look as if they took sufficient to get them through a long walk," ordered Barros. "Bury it with the bodies."
That job taken care of, they scouted the summit for a clear sight of their target. The thinly wooded heights had offered no direct view of the area below the bulge on the opposite bluff, and they had carefully worked their way down the steep side of the valley. From a position almost a kilometre away opposite the Taliban's potential cave system, the three had carefully scouted out the area. Camouflaged by rock, loose boulders and scree, and thin scrub around them, they concentrated on the target, a small dark area beneath a jutting bulge in the rock face opposite escarpment. In the end, it was easily identifiable as the entrance to a cave system, as different men, dressed in widely varying robes and western clothing, periodically popped out to smoke a cigarette, empty a latrine pot or enjoy some fresh air. Between them, Ramirez and Philips identified at least two dozen men wearing European clothes, watches, cigarette lighters and sunglasses, which meant foreign fighters. If they had been tribespeople sheltering from the war, they might have had the odd imported item as a status symbol, but the sheer quantity seen proved otherwise.
Barros attached a small hand-held device to his sat-phone and stabbed at the onscreen keyboard, sending 'IN POSITION'. Then, moving slowly, he lay down alongside the other two. He had got them into position, and now it was up to the other two to complete the mission. After that, he would have to lead them out again. So he put his head on his arms and slept for an hour. Sleep was always a precious commodity to any soldier in an active warzone, or any other time or place.
Lying flat and scanning the area through the M151 high-powered monocular, whose mil cross reticule matched the one on the TAC-339 rifle scope, Philips kept referring to a picture of the target. He had taped an ID photograph to his left wrist to help try and match a potential cigarette smoker to their particular target without having to move too much. Movement was more likely to give them away than being spotted directly. The three ghillie suits had been matched to their surroundings, with dirt, plant life and twigs breaking up their profiles. But movement, any movement, could be a killer.
There was minimal talk between the two on the sniper team. Back at the base, they were loud, chatty and almost tactile as they rested between missions. Now they did their job in almost perfect silence, disturbed only by the breeze that intermittently stirred the dust on the track that zigzagged along the valley below. Philips concentrated all his attention on the men around the cave mouth, waiting for the captain to inform them that one of the other teams had found the target.
Or for that one face to appear on his scope.
There were no insignias or symbols amongst the foreign fighters, and the chief tactician and planner for that area, Abdul Noor al-Nazir, had no particular distinguishing marks. It was going to be facial identification only, although they did have an ace up their sleeve.