Until the End

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Until the End Page 1

by Juno Rushdan




  Also by Juno Rushdan

  Final Hour

  Every Last Breath

  Nothing to Fear

  Until the End

  “No Way Out” in the Turn the Tide romantic suspense anthology

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  Books. Change. Lives.

  Copyright © 2020 by Juno Rushdan

  Cover and internal design © 2020 by Sourcebooks

  Cover art by Kris Keller

  Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks.

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks.

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

  All brand names and product names used in this book are trademarks, registered trademarks, or trade names of their respective holders. Sourcebooks is not associated with any product or vendor in this book.

  Published by Sourcebooks Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks

  P.O. Box 4410, Naperville, Illinois 60567-4410

  (630) 961-3900

  sourcebooks.com

  Contents

  Front Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  Author’s Note

  01

  02

  03

  04

  05

  06

  07

  08

  09

  10

  11

  12

  13

  14

  15

  16

  17

  18

  19

  20

  21

  22

  23

  24

  25

  26

  27

  28

  29

  30

  31

  32

  33

  34

  35

  36

  37

  38

  39

  40

  41

  42

  43

  Epilogue

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Back Cover

  Author’s Note

  If you or anyone you know is suffering from depression or feelings of hopelessness, there is a twenty-four hour a day, seven day a week resource to help you: the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, 1-800-273-8255. If you or someone you know is suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), there is a resource to help you: the PTSD Alliance, 1-888-436-6306.

  01

  Virginia

  Tuesday, February 26, 2:26 a.m. EST

  “Did you find out why they changed security protocol?” Jess asked, driving the armored truck along the dark, deserted road stretching before her like a giant black hole.

  “Nope.” Roger stared out the passenger window. “I don’t care either.”

  She tried ignoring the dread that always bubbled in her gut on Route 15. This road was the worst part of their quarterly drive making deliveries from Nexcellogen to Fort Detrick.

  Her gaze flicked to the rearview mirror. All clear. She half expected to find the boogeyman chasing up behind them. So ridiculous. Nothing was different about this run—except the sidearms she and Roger both carried. A new security requirement that substantiated the unnerving rumors among the drivers about the nature of their cargo.

  Roger tapped his fingers against the gun on his hip like he was itching to shoot something. “Be grateful Nexcellogen didn’t replace us with retired cops. And the hazardous duty pay they’re giving us means more money for our kids’ college funds.”

  Jessica wasn’t turning her nose up at an extra thousand per delivery, but it didn’t whitewash the fact they now had to carry lethal weapons and hadn’t been told why.

  “I heard Fort Detrick handles the biological defense program,” Jessica said. “There’ve been whispers we’re transporting engineered toxins.” The kind of whispers that fueled her nightmares and painted her and Roger as Satan’s little helpers.

  “It’s none of our business.” Roger raised his palms. “We’re paid not to ask—”

  Pop! Pop! The truck jerked and swerved. That was damn loud. It sounded like exploding balloons or gunshots, followed by a whiffling noise. She slowed down and tightened her grip on the wheel.

  “What the hell?” Roger asked. “Did we blow a tire?”

  “More than one. But how on earth—”

  Her head snapped around at the growl of a roaring engine. Blinding light cleaved the darkness on her left—and on the right!—from both sides of the crossroads. Headlights bore down on them.

  Oh God! She threw her arm up, shielding her eyes from the onrushing light.

  It happened fast. Too fast.

  Two vehicles bigger than theirs, traveling at twice their speed, T-boned them on either side. The thunderous crunch of metal smashing into metal swallowed her scream.

  Her head whipped back, slamming on the headrest and then forward into the airbag. The grinding force of the crash jarred every bone in her body.

  Everything inside her hurt like a son of a bitch.

  The airbag deflated. Her vision was fuzzed, dizziness eating away at her brain.

  Roger stirred. “Jess, you okay?”

  She wiped the moisture leaking from her nose. Blood streaked her hand. “Yeah. You?”

  The semis that had pinned them wheeled into reverse, pulling back from the armored truck in an agonized squeal of metal. Headlights flicked on in front of them from a third vehicle.

  She squinted at the light, letting her eyes adjust. Two men appeared in the road, dressed in black, wearing ski masks and carrying guns.

  Roger drew his weapon and aimed it at the windshield.

  “Don’t shoot,” Jessica said. “They can’t get in.” The glass was bulletproof. Doors, shell, and cabin were reinforced. There were no external door locks. The onboard sensor had detected the accident on impact. Police and hopefully an ambulance were already dispatched. “We have to sit tight. The cops are on the way.”

  “Bullshit! Nexcellogen gave us guns to protect ourselves!”

  The taller of the two men made a throwing gesture, bringing his hand from his shoulder straight out toward them.

  A spear-shaped instrument resembling a harpoon shot into the windshield, puncturing the glass. Long prongs ejected like steel fingers, hooking onto the inside of the windshield.

  Bulletproof but not spike-proof. That’s not good.

  “Christ! What do we do?” Roger yelled, the 9mm shaking in his hand.

  Saying a quick prayer, Jessica fumbled for her cell phone. They needed help. Right now! But the cops were already on the way, so who to call?

&nb
sp; “They’re going to get in!” Roger waved his gun wildly at the figures on the other side of the windshield. “Jess, we’ve got to do something.”

  The engine of the vehicle in front of them revved. The safety glass splintered into a mass of spiderweb cracks around the steel prongs.

  Jessica’s heart lurched. Panic swelled. She dialed 911, her fingers moving on instinct.

  The windshield began to buckle, the safety film still holding together.

  “Oh, fuck!” Roger opened fire.

  Bullets ricocheted around the cabin. Searing heat bit into Jessica’s side, tearing through her belly while her ears rang from the percussion of the shots. She dropped the phone and gripped her stomach. Hot blood seeped through her fingers. “I’m…I’m hit.”

  The windshield popped out of the frame. Something whizzed into the cabin and clattered to the footwell. A deafening bang and a startling flash battered the confined space.

  The world turned stark white. A great roaring silence filled her ears. She grabbed her head, disoriented, her senses swimming, just as someone dragged her out of the truck cabin and onto the cold pavement.

  Pain exploded in her side and nausea climbed up her throat.

  The man pressed something to her wound and patted her cheek with a gloved hand. “I’m sorry.” Not a man. A woman’s voice rose over the fading high-pitched hum in Jessica’s ears.

  The back doors of their armored vehicle were hoisted open. Two people climbed inside.

  Jessica shifted her head, looking underneath the truck. Roger was facedown on the ground, his wrists cuffed behind his back. Another individual stood near him.

  “You weren’t supposed to have guns, Jessica,” the woman said.

  They knew her name. How?

  The woman took Jessica’s weapon and tossed it. “No one was supposed to die.”

  Die! “I c-can’t die.” She was only forty. Too young to die.

  “Yankee?” the woman called to the tall, broad-shouldered man stepping out of the truck, a metal container in his hands. “Did we get it?”

  “Smallpox, anthrax, and Z-1984,” Yankee said. “How bad is she?”

  “The bullet punctured her liver. The blood is black.”

  “Sierra, leave her,” Yankee said and turned. “Whiskey, Victor, blow the trucks.”

  “The pain will end soon,” Sierra said. Then she was gone from sight.

  That thought wasn’t reassuring. Pain was good. It meant Jess was still alive. Where were the cops and ambulance?

  Explosions rocked the night. Twin fireballs burst from the Mack trucks, painting the darkness red and orange. Heat licked her face but failed to warm her body.

  She was so cold. Bile flooded her mouth. A growing numbness crept up her side as fear choked her, twisting her heart.

  Still no sirens. Hope fled. The bloodcurdling realization sank in that she was going to die on this godforsaken road…all because someone wanted to steal the deadliest biotech ever created.

  * * *

  Washington, DC

  Friday, October 4, 6:10 p.m. EDT

  Katherine “Kit” Westcott slowed from her power walk down busy First Street, cursing the human parasite who was the bane of her existence. A brisk stroll from the loft while stewing over Jasper Ives had her heart literally seizing.

  Kit passed the Mediterranean Grill that was pumping Greek music from the outdoor speakers. She stopped at the narrow entrance to the passageway running between the restaurant and the Lair, the building she leased in the edgy NoMa—north of Massachusetts Avenue—area for her hacker group, the Outliers.

  Wheezing, she rested against the brick wall and fished her meds out from her messenger bag. Tan bottles rattled in the Ziploc bag. Kit fumbled over them, searching for the Nitrostat.

  Damn. She must’ve forgotten it at home. Kit grabbed the next best thing, propranolol. Only a few tablets were left. All her newly refilled bottles were sitting on her bathroom counter.

  She drew in deep breaths for a count of four. Slow and steady. Held for four. Exhaled the same. The square breathing technique had saved her more than once.

  Stupid, weak heart.

  A chilly breeze whipped up the hem of her flimsy sundress. She zipped her layered hoodie and vegan leather jacket, regretting her flirty ensemble.

  The wheezing eased and her chest lightened. Kit shoved her meds in her bag.

  Her gaze locked on the hulking silver SUV parked in front of her building. It belonged to Bravo, the shady client Jasper had found for the Outliers’ most recent contract. Anyone using an obvious alias and willing to pay two million for only two days of work was trouble in all caps.

  She was an idiot for bringing Jasper around the Outliers. Her stupidity made her want to gag. This was her team, her family he was dragging into black-hat territory and putting at risk.

  Jasper was the water that seeped into the fine cracks of a rock, froze, and expanded, shattering it to pieces. An ice wedge.

  Kit turned down the passageway and headed for the back door where she could slip in and avoid a run-in with Bravo. The creepy guy gave her a distinct Danger, Will Robinson vibe.

  She tapped the code into the digital lock, entered through the alley-side door, and climbed the long flight of stairs. Kit was itching to see Marty, Tim, Jeff, and Lincoln. The guys had been working around the clock and hadn’t had time to come home to the cushy five-bedroom loft they all shared, courtesy of her trust fund. At the top of the landing, she opened the door.

  “Shut up and sit down!” The harsh male voice came from down the hall.

  Kit caught the steel door before it slammed closed and let it ease shut with a slight click.

  The double doors of the work center at the opposite end of the hall were ajar.

  Through the gap, she saw Jasper standing beside his computer station, and she caught Bravo’s side profile. He had the lean, strong body of an athlete. Alabaster skin, cropped reddish-brown hair, glasses. Bravo wore jeans and a black bomber jacket.

  “Why should we do anything else you say?” Jasper asked. “We’re all as good as dead.”

  A chill raced down her spine and she stilled. What was happening?

  Bravo shifted, putting his back to the corridor and Kit, and held up a gun with an attached silencer to Jasper’s forehead. A sheen of sweat glistened on Jasper’s stricken face.

  Holy hell. Something awful was going down. She knew those bastards were no good, but she didn’t want to be right. Not like this.

  Where were the others? Were they in the room? Hurt? Alive?

  Kit considered sneaking back out, but she needed to know if the Outliers were still alive. She crept down the hall toward the work center on the balls of her feet, keeping the chunky heels of her boots from clattering against the tile. She peeked inside the room through the gap between the double doors.

  Jeff, Marty, Lincoln, and Tim sat at their computers, trembling. Two other men had weapons trained on them.

  Jasper looked her way. His frantic eyes locked on hers for only a split second and her heart squeezed. Then just as quickly, his gaze lowered.

  Before Bravo had a chance to turn, Jasper kicked his chair and pressed his forehead against the silencer. “Shoot me, damn it, and get it over with.”

  Blinding panic froze her muscles. It felt like an eternity before she risked taking a breath.

  “There are worse things than a quick, painless death,” Bravo said, too distracted by Jasper’s outburst to notice her. “Sit.”

  Jasper’s gaze darted to her for a nanosecond, then fastened back on the terrifying man with the gun before he lowered his head and did as he was told. “I wish I’d listened to Kit. Wish I could tell her I was sorry, to take the Sentry and make it right.”

  “What’s the Sentry?” Bravo asked.

  “I’ll tell you when I see you in hell,” Jas
per said. “The bottom line is Kit was right.”

  “Speaking of the lovely Kit, I’d hoped she’d join us. Where is she?”

  Tension rocketed through Kit’s chest.

  “Why?” Jasper sucked in a shuddering breath. “Why do you want Kit?”

  “She’s a loose end,” Bravo said. “Tell me where Kit is, or I put a bullet in your groin.”

  Two minutes ago, Kit wanted to be rid of Jasper so badly, she’d tasted the hatred. And the animosity was mutual. Now Jasper had to choose between giving her up or suffering a painful death.

  No contest. She was screwed.

  “Quick and painless. Or slow and agonizing. The way you die is your choice, Jasper.”

  “Kit wanted to stay as far away from you guys as possible.” Jasper’s voice was shaky but had never sounded stronger. “I’m glad she doesn’t know what Tim and Lincoln did.”

  Bravo pointed the gun at Jasper’s crotch. “Where is she?”

  “At the loft,” Jasper said, “waiting for us to finish this job.”

  She stifled a sob of regret for not giving Jasper more credit. Maybe this nightmare could’ve been avoided if she’d been able to talk the team out of working for these evil SOBs.

  “Charlie, go to their apartment,” Bravo said. “Take care of her and make sure none of these whiz kids left any traces leading back to us. We’ll clean up here.”

  The tall one with dark hair nodded, his back still turned to her. “On it.” He disappeared from her sight. The click of the front door shutting followed.

  “She was always smarter than me,” Jasper said. “Told me you guys were a disaster waiting to happen, but I never would’ve guessed you were terrorists.”

  What had the Outliers been working on? What were these men so desperate to cover up that they’d kill a bunch of hackers rather than pay for silence?

  “This is your last warning.” Bravo pressed the muzzle of the silenced gun to Jasper’s temple. “Be quiet, and finish the code for the scheduled broadcast of the video.”

  “You’re going to kill people,” Jasper said, “with some Z-1984 shit—”

  A pop split the air of the compact space like a thunderclap. Blood sprayed from the opposite side of Jasper’s head.

  Kit slapped a palm over her mouth to kill the scream that nearly burst from her dry throat.

 

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