Powerless- America Unplugged

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Powerless- America Unplugged Page 159

by Diane Matousek Schnabel


  “I got lucky?” Bradley repeated incredulously as he blotted his wound with an antiseptic wipe. “How exactly did you get captured?”

  “Why exactly are you AWOL?”

  Although Bradley’s expression remained flat, Kyle’s supplied the confirmation Ryan had been seeking. “It makes my job tougher when assholes don’t report for duty.”

  “Well, if he had reported, you would be singing castrato. How fucking tough would that make your job?” Kyle asked.

  Ryan smirked and downed the remainder of his water. He hadn’t enjoyed a good ball-busting exchange since losing Dannel, Marcos, and Mike. “Your father plays hardball. I see where you get it from.”

  “He’s not my father,” Bradley told him. “But you got the hardball part right. He’s Kyle Murphy, hall-of-fame shortstop.”

  “Get the hell out of here,” Ryan said, genuinely surprised. “That’s why you seemed familiar. When I was a teenager, your face was plastered all over the tabloids. You were banging that female pitcher—”

  “Yo, that’s his late wife,” Bradley said.

  “No disrespect intended.” Ryan bowed his head then turned toward Bradley. “You planning on introducing yourself?”

  He gave a slow nod, remorse evident in his expression. “Lance Corporal Bradley Webber, Marine Corps Sniper.”

  Now, things were starting to make sense. “So, how did you end up at that campground?”

  “We tailed the savages. It’s not every day you see a hog-tied Army Ranger, dangling upside down from a pole.”

  Ryan grinned at the ballsy twentysomething, unafraid to taunt a Soldier of superior rank, even while admittedly AWOL. “I got nailed by a tranquilizer dart,” he said, finally understanding why his wrists ached. “Did you shoot up that warehouse in Astatula?”

  “The guards,” Bradley said, “not the teens.”

  “Right, they were shredded by an IED.” Ryan studied his face for signs of deception, but found none.

  “Americans have been getting attacked by savages and showered with poisoned food,” Kyle said as he looped a gauze bandage around Bradley’s injured arm. “And where the hell were you? And the U.S. military?”

  “Who the fuck do you think shot down those aircraft? And destroyed the Iranian bases launching that shit?”

  Kyle’s green eyes bored into him. “The same idiots who let the savages steal a Patriot missile battery?”

  “So you wreaked havoc at Haywood Field too?”

  “No, I sat that one out,” Kyle told him, stuffing water, food, and survival gear into his backpack. “That was Bradley and my daughter.”

  Ryan’s lips parted. His eyes teetered between Bradley and Kyle. “Your daughter?”

  “She’s an NRA competition shooter,” Bradley said. “Not your average sixteen-year-old.”

  This was why he had been kidnapped and nearly tortured?

  For information about an AWOL Marine, a senior citizen, and a teenaged girl?

  154H

  “ZAAKIR, WHY DO YOU have such an allegiance to strangers?” Eliza smacked her palm against the granite-topped kitchen island. “Your family is starving—”

  “We’re hungry, Eliza. Not starving,” he corrected her.

  She rambled on as if he hadn’t spoken. “Your daughter had an asthma attack this morning; and instead of leaving for Tavares—where there’s medical care, food, and safety—we’re sitting here, awaiting the permission of strangers!”

  “Strangers?” he shouted back. “They saved us from extremists. Without them, we would’ve known true starvation.”

  “Kyle told you he wasn’t the sharpshooter; he denied giving us the food. If you won’t believe me, at least believe him!”

  “We’ve been over this. He wants to remain anonymous to avoid inviting an attack. He asked us to respect those wishes.”

  “You’re putting your faith in a man who lied to you.”

  My faith? Zaakir shook his head at the irony. Jihadists are trying to kill us in the name of Allah while the evil infidels are protecting and feeding us in the name of their Lord.

  “Say something, Zaakir!”

  The argument had been churning for hours, a carousel of misery, round and round, neither able to persuade or pacify the other.

  Mustering his most rigid, authoritative tone, he said, “If the FEMA camp is legitimate, we’ll leave at sunup.”

  “But we’re hungry now! Let’s just go!”

  Her shrill, whiny voice felt like a piranha nibbling his brain. He couldn’t bear another minute. Exhaling weariness in an audible hiss, he snatched his inherited AK-47 from the kitchen table.

  “Finally, you’ve come to your senses. I can be ready in—”

  “Eliza!” he snapped. “I’m going hunting.”

  155H

  BRADLEY WAS GROWING aggravated with Staff Sergeant Ryan Andrews. The guy clearly preferred to be on the asking end of questions. “You can at least separate fact from propaganda. We put our asses on the line to save yours.”

  “You guys had my back, and I appreciate it. Thank you.” Ryan eyed him like a human X-ray machine, gauging his trustworthiness, then said, “Tell me what you know, and I’ll try to fill in the blanks.”

  “We’ve heard there were Fort-Hood-style shootings on a dozen stateside military bases.”

  Ryan nodded somberly. “Affirmative. Terrorists were all homegrown. Fucking traitors.”

  “Langden Air Force Base attacked by our own jet?”

  “Affirmative.”

  Heat radiated from Bradley’s body as if his blood were magma. His pulse felt like a bludgeon against his wounded arm. “Did the U.S.S. Stellate lose a billion dollars worth of aircraft?”

  Ryan’s head tilted toward him, eyes penetrating like lasers. “Where are you getting this information?”

  “Emergency Broadcast System,” Bradley told him. “I was assuming it was psyops.”

  “The most dangerous type,” Ryan said. “The kind where they’re actually telling the truth.”

  “What about the nuclear power plants?” Bradley asked. “Are they melting down?”

  “Negative. Army and Air Force have been scrambling to secure them and keep cooling pumps running.”

  “I don’t understand why you’re not wiping out these cells,” Kyle said, condemnation dripping from his tone. “You’re abandoning the civilians you’re supposed to protect.”

  An uncontainable rage flared in Ryan’s eyes. Kyle hadn’t struck a nerve, he had pulverized them all.

  “We’re fighting an enemy dressed like civilians, hiding amongst civilians, and our rules of engagement don’t allow us to shoot until fired upon. I intervened once when Americans were being executed on their front lawns, and you know what happened? I got demoted and threatened with court-martial.”

  What are they gonna do to me? Bradley wondered, eyes roving left to right, fearful that raised voices might attract unwanted attention.

  “So you’re just supposed to watch the slaughter?” Kyle demanded.

  “We’re not law enforcement, and the terrorists know it. They smile and recite our rules of engagement, flaunting the fact that they’re untouchable. Bradley, you’ve got the right idea. Stay AWOL because you’re actually making a difference.”

  Disconcerted, Bradley took a slow breath. “Is there anything else noteworthy?”

  “Besides poisoned MREs and mess hall slop? Ammo spiked with explosives? Traitors stealing our weapons and turning them against us? Preschool suicide bombers? The loss of satellites?”

  “The EMP fried military satellites?” Bradley asked.

  “No, we lost those to a fleet of satellite-killing drones. No warheads necessary. The kinetic energy alone shredded them. And I almost forgot,” Ryan said, sarcastically throwing up his hands. “While our satellites were being turned into confetti, Iran ambushed Israel; and North Korea attacked South Korea and Japan. The only good news is that China hasn’t taken advantage of the chaos and invaded Taiwan ... Yet.”

  Bradle
y was gnawing his lip. Fighting on multiple fronts overseas in addition to savages on the mainland? Could the U.S. military stretch that far? With no economy to back it?

  The hairs on his neck stood on end as he realized there was a new crop of reasons to discourage Abby from enlisting in the Marine Corps.

  Kyle broke the prolonged silence. “Ryan, you know anything about a FEMA Camp near Tavares?”

  The Ranger’s head did not move. His eyes shifted upward. “There’s one at Camp Sunshine. That’s up near Gainesville.”

  “Well, Tavares is where we’re headed,” Bradley said. “Why don’t you tag along? See if you can make a difference?”

  156H

  OMID GHORBANI MARCHED forward, determination burning more furiously than the raw sores on his feet. He had smelled the carnage of Haywood Field long before his eyes beheld it. The stench pressed against him, smothering and relentless, like wading into a lake of decaying corpses. Swarms of bugs marked the position of each body, black clouds of failure shaming them even in death. Turkey buzzards swooped in, feasting on bits of flesh, defiling his brethren; and Omid drank in every detail, vowing to make the infidels pay.

  With Hamid Khadem trailing after him, he searched each building then slowly circled the remains of the Patriot missile battery. After one lap, he found them—the wires used to detonate the explosives. Omid clasped them lightly, allowing them to glide through his fingers as he walked.

  He cursed the grass-covered, sandy soil. It was like a sponge, momentarily absorbing his weight then rebounding to its original shape, swallowing up all footprints.

  He traced each wire’s length in a southwestern direction, crossing the runway, passing between deceased paratroopers before locating the spools and detonators.

  “We should follow this southwestern heading,” he said, displaying the evidence for Hamid. If the infidels had deliberately unraveled the wires in a direction contrary to their bearing, he stood little chance of picking up their trail. This was his best option.

  He discarded the spools and began walking. “There was a severe thunderstorm that night,” he told Hamid. “Perhaps they sought shelter. We should search every structure within sight.”

  By one p.m., they had ransacked a dozen houses and ventured into a sparsely populated plot of land west of Lake Apopka. Doubt was beginning to erode his confidence.

  Both men hiked in silence until Omid spotted a building two hundred meters to the east. He approached for a closer look.

  At the rear corner of the house, branches from a crepe myrtle tree were scattered atop a bed of mulch. One of its half dozen trunks had been sawed off at the base, and judging by the color of the gash, it had been cut recently.

  Why would anyone want a segment from that tree? he asked himself. The trunk was two inches thick, too large and wet for kindling, too inconsequential for firewood. Were they attempting to fashion a weapon? A booby trap? Why overlook a harder, stronger wood like oak?

  Omid estimated the length of the amputated limb to be chest high. Had someone used it as a crutch? If so, the trunk might have left an impression, even in this spongy soil.

  He searched for nearly an hour before finding a small, circular depression with a diameter that was the perfect size.

  Omid marked the spot with his tactical knife then gently combed the grass using a spiral pattern. He found a second imprint about a meter from the first, supporting his crutch theory.

  He followed the line defined by the two imprints and located more indentations in the sand. Smiling, he summoned his partner. “I have discovered their trail.”

  157H

  ZAAKIR TRAVERSED THE woods on the western shore of Lake Apopka, the marital argument still replaying through his mind. What was he going to do if the Assistance Center turned out to be a trap? Could Eliza ever be convinced?

  Unanswered questions continued to accumulate. Was the situation better in other parts of the country? When would power be restored? Even more than food, Zaakir craved information.

  The breeze is picking up, he thought. Not good for Raeleah’s asthma.

  The rustle of leaves wended through the forest, aerosolizing a yellowish film of pollen. Zaakir shook his head, worried about the combined effects of allergens and exertion. Would the long walk to Tavares save his daughter? Or induce a life-threatening asthma attack?

  He returned his attention to the hunt, having seen no deer, squirrels, rabbits, or even snakes. Edible insects were plentiful, but his wife and daughter would never eat cockroaches or worms.

  Zaakir sunk onto his backside twenty feet from the lake, wondering if he would have better luck fishing.

  What could I use for a hook?

  He vented a frustrated sigh, feeling utterly unprepared for the perpetual battle of staying alive.

  A splotch of gray caught his peripheral vision. Two sandhill cranes were ambling toward him. Nearly four feet tall, the birds had lanky legs with slender necks that jutted from football-shaped torsos. He had seen them many times stopping traffic on neighborhood streets, straggling through yards, pecking at their own reflections in mirrored windows.

  The question took shape slowly.

  What would sandhill crane taste like?

  He tried to shoo away the thought, but the birds stopped directly in front of him. A voice inside him whispered, “Eliza and Raeleah will think it’s wild turkey.”

  A single gunshot killed the larger of the two birds, then Zaakir got to work gutting it.

  ( ( ( 79% Complete ) ) )

  158H

  DESPITE HER NEW HIDE and two trip wires, Abby’s uneasiness had mushroomed. She felt jittery, unable to dispel the notion that an attack was imminent, unable to erase Bradley’s words from her mind. I’m counting on you to keep everybody safe.

  She needed a force multiplier, a strategy that would give her an edge, even when outnumbered.

  We should’ve invited that Fern Ridge family to stay with us, she thought. They could have used the AK-47s stored in Gramps’ garage. More defenders could have prevented a concentration of firepower, prevented Abby from getting pinned down the way Bradley had.

  But it’s too late now, she thought.

  Or is it?

  Inside Gramps’ garage, she dug through the heap of rifles until she found a fully automatic AK-47. From beneath the workbench, she extricated a rectangular, plastic recycle bin, dumping aluminum carcasses onto the floor.

  With her tactical knife, she cut a circle directly below the bin’s molded handgrip, careful not to create stray slits that could split open. She angled the AK-47 barrel through the hole then carved a slot into the opposite end to cradle the butt stock. After a few adjustments, the rifle was suspended perfectly level, and she added a dime-sized puncture across from the trigger.

  Pleased with her progress, she swiped a ball of twine from atop a stack of newspapers and tossed it into the bin along with a loaded thirty-round magazine. Then Abby carted her ballistic Frankenstein to its new home, thirty feet below her hide and twenty yards west.

  She fished the twine through the tiny hole, then tied a slipknot around the trigger and pistol grip.

  “Abby, what the heck are you doing?” Gramps asked, his voice muddled by the static hiss of the walkie-talkie.

  She unclipped the transmitter from her waistband, squeezed the press-to-talk button, and glanced toward overwatch. “Aren’t you supposed to be watching for bad guys?”

  “I’d swear I’m looking at an AK-47 pointing in my direction.”

  “I hear the eyes are the first to go when you get old.”

  “You’ve been spending too much time with my smart-ass grandson!” Gramps’ laughter evolved into a phlegmy cough.

  Grinning, Abby continued preparing the rifle for a dry-fire test.

  “Seriously though,” Gramps said, still trying to clear his throat. “That rifle’s gonna dance like a Mexican jumping bean.”

  Abby drew the walkie-talkie closer to her face. “I know. I’m gonna weight the bin with sand and
countersink it into the hillside to absorb the recoil.” She yanked the twine, and the trigger engaged. It worked!

  “You’d better be damned careful because I’m too old to be dodging bullets.”

  “And too damned distracted to spot the bad guys!”

  “Abigail, nothing gets past me.”

  Smirking, she said, “Gramps, I could sneak past you carrying a pink Volkswagen with the radio blaring and the four-ways flashing!”

  “Sounds like you need some tough love, wisenheimer. 1800 hours, after my shift ends. I say you can’t make it halfway up that hill ... even with a ghillie suit.”

  Abby could hear the dare in Gramps’ voice, could picture him across the street, playfully waggling his fist like a cartoon villain.

  “I love you too, Gramps,” she said, giggling. “But you’re gonna eat those words!”

  159H

  OMID GHORBANI COMBED the ground, painstakingly advancing a meter at a time between circular indentations. He had nearly overlooked a southerly bend in the trail, a blunder that would have taken them off course, missing their prey by kilometers.

  Cresting a rolling hill, his eye was drawn to it. The crepe-myrtle crutch was broken, its V-shaped end tethered by a white towel wrapped with thick silver tape.

  Dismayed, he examined surrounding trees for amputated limbs; the ground, for the scars of combat boots. Omid strained to listen above the swish of wind for voices or footsteps, anything out of place. He sniffed the air for fires, body odor, or even a decaying corpse, any indication people were nearby, but the trail had just evaporated.

  “Should we continue on this bearing?” Hamid asked.

  Omid leaned against an oak tree, arms folded in front of him, pondering the question. The trail could veer off at any moment. Unless they discovered another marker, they would be wandering aimlessly.

  A single gunshot severed his thought.

  “That was close by. Let’s go.”

  After trekking stealthily toward Lake Apopka, Omid spotted a man gutting a large bird. Of Middle Eastern descent, he was dressed in jeans and a polo shirt. An AK-47 rested against a tree beside him.

 

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