Chapter Twenty ... Hungerford’s Capture
Steel balls and fifty dollars were about all Colonel
Charles Hungerford had left to his name, as he trekked eastward from Chiang
Saen in Northern Thailand into Laos; finding his cover story of being a
dissident American escaping from the Vietnam conflict, a tale that spared his
life several times among his encounters with the primitive people of the
countryside. He just hoped his
miserable existence would be relieved when Khun Sa, the Golden Triangle warlord
contacted him. Realizing the CIA and
other intelligence agencies were obviously in a frenzy searching for his
whereabouts, his fragile position and bold plan had to be accomplished very
soon, or he would face capture given the precarious circumstances.
When he had thought out a scheme to steal a nuclear
suitcase bomb, it had been with what he radically felt a noble Western cause of
putting the United States into a more aggressive stance, rather than the
defensive quagmire the politicians had forced our military into in South
Vietnam. Hungerford wanted to somehow
place the bomb in the hands of fanatics that hated the North Vietnamese enough
to detonate the device in Hanoi. His
theory was this would start a chain reaction of international events, perhaps
even nuclear war with the Soviet Union.
He had become a bitter man, ironically created my his devotion to the
system, which he felt had become weakened by liberal politicians.
A system in 1971, so overloaded with social and
political cancers, that even the most disciplined conservative intellectual,
such as Hungerford truly was, would eventually reach conclusions that were
considered by outsiders of the system looking back in retrospective, to be an
insanity induced by the very system they defended. But there is something here needing to be explained...mortals react
on some perceived level of perception in their existence to two basic
instincts: fear and greed. When this
truism surfaces in a life or death situation, such as Colonel Charles
Hungerford had induced through his own malady of discontent, it becomes
apparent that man is always just one step away from being a savage when
cornered.
Hungerford, armed with only a U.S. M1A11 .45 pistol
and a Hershey candy bar containing sarin (GB) nerve agent, and accompanied by a
nervous Laotian interrupter he did not trust, knew he was being followed as
they proceeded down remote hilly trails.
This movement resembled more of an aimless wandering than a sought out
destination. Whatever the outcome, he
was now having feelings of misgivings of what he had done, and just wished for
the events in his destiny to be over with quickly.
Khun Sa, the powerful drug warlord, had in his
employment several dozen “Wa” mercenaries from the Kachin State located in
Northeastern Burma. They are so
ferocious that even the American OSS used them with much success in World War
Two against the Japanese. Wa take heads
of their enemy, regarding them as magical protection against evil spirits. When Queen Victoria sent a survey party into
their territory in 1900, two members of the expedition lost their heads to this
notorious group. Wa considered those
they tracked with long hair and beards to be extra powerful in the spirit
world.
Unknown to Hungerford, the Wa’s Khun Sa dispatched
to track him down, had finally found him.
They were elated by his long hair and beard. Perhaps Khun Sa would reward them with the big Americans head
once they presented him alive, as they had been instructed to do. Khun Sa had already promised to purchase
their entire opium crop if they brought the American alive to him; but the
powerful spirit head, ah, what a better reward.
His capture was not at all what the Wa expected, as
the American turned out to be a skilled warrior of super-human strength. For days they had observed him with a lackey
Laotian wandering the hills appearing to be going in circles. Since both men were lightly armed with only
pistols, they decided to capture them with snares. Eight of the dozen Wa had silently gone around and ahead of their
prey while they traveled down a long hilly trail. They hastily prepared the large vine snares, covered them, and
then positioned themselves in the dense jungle on both sides of the trail,
confidently thinking they could easily subdue both men once they were hanging
upside down in the trap. Had it not
been for the four Wa’s still sleuthing Hungerford from behind, they would not
have captured the man.
Hungerford realized what was happening almost as
soon as he stepped in the snare. The
wiry bent sapling sprung upwards like a steel spring snapping him skyward
upside-down caught in the rope-like vine.
His Laotian companion suffered a similar fate, as all eight Wa jumped
from their hiding places in jubilation.
With machetes, two of them whacked down the swaying
sapling, sending Hungerford and the screaming Laotian earthward. Unfortunately, for the highly disciplined
Wa, they would not be rewarded if they presented Hungerford to Khun Sa
dead. The trail party of four Wa’s was
only about fifty meters behind when Hungerford dropped with the snare vines
still around his ankles, but in the long second of his fall, he reached in his
belt for the .45 pistol shooting seven of the Wa with savage swiftness while he
rolled among them like a madman. The
one remaining Wa was slicing the throat of the Laotian squirming in the moldy
dank leafs and reddish mud, when Hungerford was rushing to jam another clip
into his pistol, but it was not fast enough, as the