Chapter 9
Luck is a Fickle Mistress
We are in Laos. I can hear the choppers fading off into the distance. The bush goes into a brief freeze-frame and then slowly resumes its normal balance of sights and sounds. We have picked this LZ because it is so unlikely a place to set down. We don’t believe that the NVA have trail or LZ watchers in the immediate area, so while the bush is still on pause we are moving and trying to put some distance between the small clearing and us. We cover our track as we go. Our plan is to try to loop towards the south and pick our way carefully into the Hotel-5 target area. Because we haven’t tried to run this area for some time, we may have lulled the NVA into suppressing the density of their watches on likely LZ positions. Our target area lies on both sides of the border. RDF (Radio Direction Finding) and imagery indicates that there is a major base and logistics center in this area to the south and east of us. We have come prepared to do a variety of missions. I have a wiretap with audio cassettes, in the event that we come across a coaxial cable or major landline, and we have special demo and silenced weapons in case we are able to isolate and take a prisoner. This is reconnaissance, much different than running the DMZ, or the A Shau valley proper. No LZ prep, we’re truly trying to deceive the enemy into believing that nothing has transpired. We have birds out seeming to land when, in fact, they are embedding seismic sensors. These are long tubes with synthetic branches and foliage. They are normally air dropped so they plant themselves into the ground and activate. They work on seismic vibrations that relay a signal to a passing aircraft, or some other space cadet stuff the Air Force has. We also know from the past readings that the NVA came and looked, but found only the sensors. They would have cast around and found no sign of a team landing, so we hope that they will assume this was another such implant. All the guns and other birds stay at the orbit point in case we get into trouble. So far, so good. We move about two hundred meters and sit down to listen again. Soon the bush returns to its normal sounds, birds, and some monkeys yowling at each other to our north. No alarm howls from them and that means good news. It is entirely possible that we have not been seen.