Callsign: Knight - Book 1 (A Shin Dae-jung - Chess Team Novella)
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CALLSIGN: KNIGHT
Book 1
by Jeremy Robinson
and Ethan Cross
© 2011 Jeremy Robinson. All rights reserved.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously and should not be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews. For more information e-mail all inquiries to: info@jeremyrobinsononline.com
Visit Jeremy Robinson on the World Wide Web at:
www.jeremyrobinsononline.com
Visit Ethan Cross on the World Wide Web at:
www.ethancross.com
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FICTION by JEREMY ROBINSON
(click to view on Amazon and buy)
The Antarktos Saga
The Last Hunter - Pursuit
The Last Hunter - Descent
The Jack Sigler Thrillers
Threshold
Instinct
Pulse
Callsign: King - Book 1
Callsign: Queen - Book 1
Callsign: Rook - Book 1
Callsign: Knight - Book 1
Callsign: Bishop - Book 1
Callsign: King - Book 2 - Underworld
Origins Editions (first five novels)
Kronos
Antarktos Rising
Beneath
Raising the Past
The Didymus Contingency
Short Stories
Insomnia
Humor
The Zombie's Way (Ike Onsoomyu)
The Ninja’s Path (Kutyuso Deep)
Writing as Jeremy Bishop
Torment
The Sentinel
FICTION by ETHAN CROSS
The Shepherd
The Cage
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Chapter 29
Chapter 30
Chapter 31
Chapter 32
Chapter 33
Chapter 34
Chapter 35
Chapter 36
Chapter 37
Chapter 38
Epilogue
About the Authors
Sample: THE LAST HUNTER by Jeremy Robinson
Sample: THE SHEPHERD by Ethan Cross
Sample: THE SENTINEL by Jeremy Robinson
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CALLSIGN: KNIGHT
1.
Shin Dae-jung—Callsign: Knight, could detect most attacks before they struck. What his keen ears and eyes didn’t detect, he could normally feel, as though he possessed some kind of sixth sense. Most soldiers experienced this from time to time, but Knight, as a member of the ultra-black ops Chess Team, relied on it more than most. So when he felt a tingling on his skin, he tensed and filled his lungs to shout a warning, but the pilot, Captain Daniel Mueller, beat him to the punch. “Instrumentation is down!” Mueller shouted.
“We’re going down!” called the co-pilot, whose name Knight never learned.
Knight’s training didn’t allow him to panic. He quickly analyzed the situation to determine if there was anything that he could do to help. Unfortunately, double-checking his seatbelt and gripping his armrests were his only options.
The transport was a hybrid aircraft known as a CV-22B Osprey that combined the hovering and vertical take-off and landing abilities of a helicopter and the long-range transport capabilities and speed of an airplane. It had wings like a plane but also had four prop-rotors powered by turboprop engines, and transmission nacelles mounted on each wingtip that could tilt up or down. It had been painted black for use by special ops. Knight supposed that if he was going die in a crash, at least he was doing it in style.
“I’m going to try and sit it down on top of one of these buildings,” Mueller said. “Hang on!”
Knight tried to focus his mind on his surroundings instead of his impending death. The sound in the cabin wasn’t as he expected however. It was eerily quiet. In other crashes he had experienced, a million different noises compounded upon each other and created a deafening wall of sound. Blaring alarms, flashing lights, the squealing of a broken rotor blade or damaged engine, the sound of enemy fire still rattling against the chopper’s fuselage, the buckling of metal, the roar and snap of fire. He wondered for a moment why everything was so quiet. Then, he realized what had hit them. It could only have been some type of electro-magnetic pulse weapon, a device designed to overload electronic systems, which meant that the Osprey had been converted into a twenty-ton glider.
He opened his eyes but immediately regretted doing so. The large gray concrete walls of a parking garage loomed ahead, and he knew from experience that they were coming in much too fast for a safe landing.
He braced himself as the belly of the Osprey struck the surface of the parking garage and skidded forward. Sparks shot up from the friction on the concrete from the bird’s metal belly.
Mueller tried to direct the Osprey sideways and away from the approaching sidewall of the structure. But they were moving too fast, and he had too little control. The Osprey burst through the wall, sending fragments of concrete raining down, and careened forward over the edge of the building.
Knight’s stomach climbed into his throat as the ground fell out from beneath them and they plummeted downward. He fought the urge to tighten his muscles for the impact, knowing that being relaxed and loose during a crash could save your life. This was the reason that so many drunk drivers survived a crash while their victims were killed.
Luckily, the parking structure had a multi-tiered design, and they only had three levels to fall. The nose of the Osprey struck the concrete and dug a groove as its momentum pushed it forward. The contents of the cabin tore free from the harnesses, and a large supply box slammed against Knight’s side. The smell of charred metal and hydraulic fluids filled the air, and the screeching of metal on metal sounded like a freight train throwing on its brakes. The Osprey slid sideways to the middle of the empty parking garage’s roof and then finally came to a stop.
He didn’t waste any time. He popped off his restraints and stepped over the scattered mess of the cabin toward the cockpit. Mueller was conscious, but his leg had been trapped when the Osprey’s nose had compacted. The co-pilot, on the other hand, was very dead—his chest impaled by wreckage.
Damnit, Knight thought, but stopped himself from thinking about the dead man. They’d been attacked. He was sure. That meant time was short. Knight positioned himself on Mueller’s side and grabbed hold of the control panel pressing against the man’s leg. “Okay, I’m going to try and pu
sh this up. You pull your leg free.”
Mueller’s head bobbed up and down rapidly.
“One…two…three.” He pressed up on the panel with all his strength. Mueller cried out and pulled himself away. Some of the metal had pierced the man’s left leg, but with a scream of pain, he tore it free, widening the gash.
Knight dropped the panel and moved to Mueller’s side. He glanced at the wound on the man’s leg and sighed. Knight reached to his belt—a fifteen hundred dollar stingray skin belt—and unbuckled it. He wrapped the belt around the man’s leg and cinched it tight, coating the pricey accoutrement in blood. He could afford another one—his parents had been wealthy, leaving their small fortune to him when they died—but he didn’t like seeing nice clothing ruined. He lived simply most of the time, especially while on base or on a mission. But he dressed to the nines and traveled to exotic locations—and women—when he could, which is exactly what he had been doing before his vacation had been cut short in the middle of a date with a pretty blonde he’d met at the beach.
Unfortunately, when he had been pulled into this mission, he hadn’t been given any details. He was told that he would receive a briefing and all of the necessary equipment when he arrived. He hadn’t even been given time to change his clothes, and he still wore his eight thousand dollar Brioni cream silk suit and printed silk shirt.
With the bleeding contained, he pulled Mueller from the wreckage and propped him against the far wall of the parking structure. “Sit tight. I’m going to grab some supplies.”
He climbed back into the downed Osprey’s cabin and searched the mess for anything that they might need. He assumed that they were close to the rendezvous point, but they were also in hostile territory. He needed weapons.
The back half of the cabin contained a four-wheel ATV that he assumed would have been for his use on the mission. It was black with a supply rack mounted on the back containing extra fuel and spots for storing weapons and ammo. He noticed a bulletproof shield mounted to the handlebars and nitrous oxide boosters connected to the engine. He could have had some fun with it, but it was useless now. The EMP would have fried it as it had the Osprey, and the bay doors were wedged shut.
Next to the ATV, he found the weapons locker. It was locked tight, but he found a piece of metal that had torn free from the fuselage and was able to use leverage to snap the lock free. The locker contained a row of standard issue M4 carbine assault rifles, but the last in line had been modified with a grenade launcher. He grabbed it, two Beretta 9mm handguns and some extra ammunition.
He returned to Mueller, snapped a magazine into the M4, jacked back the slide and then looked out over the ghost city. From his vantage point, he could see a good distance in both directions. The cityscape resembled any other modern metropolis with skyscrapers, traffic lights, shopping malls, parking garages, store fronts, subways and office buildings. The difference here was that this city—called Shenhuang—lacked a major component possessed by all the other cities of the world. It was empty. No one lived there.
The Chinese government had built sprawling urban centers like Shenhuang in remote areas of their country to raise their gross national product and make their country appear as if it were sustaining growth. In actuality, the Chinese people couldn’t afford to live within the new cities with estimates putting the number of empty homes at as many as sixty four million. But the government had no plans of stopping their expansion as they continued to build twenty new cities every year within China’s vast areas of open country.
Normally, the few people who did live in the cities were maintenance workers and government authorities. This particular city, however, had been evacuated. The government claimed that it was due to a chemical spill, but Knight suspected it was to a far more nefarious end. The evacuation of a city that hardly anyone lived in, however, hadn’t been enough to draw much international scrutiny.
The wind blew up from the streets and ruffled his dark, black hair. It blew the smells of the crash from his mind. The air smelled clean and cool. No hint of the pollution or car exhaust that he had become accustomed to in other cities. The air smelled like country air, but not quite. It was missing something. In the countryside, the smells of flowers, crops and vegetation permeated every breath. But the air here was oddly sterile.
The one nice thing about the city being uninhabited was that he would be able to spot their enemy coming from a mile away. But as his eyes passed over the towers of glass and concrete and the roads labeled in Chinese script, he couldn’t see a single person, enemy or otherwise.
“Can you move?” he said to Mueller.
“I think my leg’s broken, but I’ll make it.”
Knight slid an arm under Mueller’s shoulders and lifted him from the pavement. The pilot stood six inches taller than Knight, which made carrying him down the stairs of the parking garage a formidable task. But within a few moments, they had reached the bottom floor and set off down the empty street of the ghost city.
2.
The creature watched the two small things pull themselves from the wreckage of the metal bird. It didn’t hate them, but knew it would soon taste their blood. And killing them would be easy. The small things were so fragile and afraid. They would scream and run, and fire their weapons, but the creature felt no fear. They could not harm it, though a part of it longed for death.
The beast stretched out a clawed hand and scratched its razor-sharp talons against its concrete perch. An image from the past entered its mind from another life. Something called a gargoyle. They hung menacingly on the sides of buildings. But it wasn’t a gargoyle, at least it didn’t think so. It wasn’t actually sure what it was.
The small device attached to its ear beeped to life and the master’s voice filled its mind. “Huangdi, I want you to kill the two soldiers, but I want you to do so quietly and slowly. Play with them a bit. Give us a show.”
The creature looked to the two fragile things. When the master commanded, it had to answer. That was what it had been programmed to do. It thought of the screams of the other small things, and some strange feeling overwhelmed it. Its mind fought to put a name to the emotion. Regret? Shame? It knew the words but couldn’t associate a meaning.
It didn’t think that it enjoyed the killing, but its mind was so clouded and confused that it couldn’t tell one way or the other. The only thing that brought clarity, certainty and understanding was the objective. It was the only graspable thread, the only connection to the world it had lost.
The objective brought peace.
And right now, the objective was to kill the two small things.
3.
Knight sensed that they were being watched. That animal part of his brain that had saved him so many times in the past screamed that they were not alone. He learned to trust his instincts long ago, but his options were limited.
Mueller was a dead weight against his shoulder, and his lungs burned for air from carrying the man down the ten flights of stairs necessary to reach street level. He dropped the wounded soldier onto the curb and glanced around the abandoned streets.
The buildings were beautiful and clean—shining pillars of glass, concrete and steel that would have been at home in any major city within the U.S.. The only difference being that these buildings were empty, while scores of men, women and children inhabited their U.S. counterparts. In fact, Knight was sure that this was the cleanest street he had ever seen, much cleaner than even the most environmentally conscious city back in the states.
Empty storefronts and lobbies decorated with red and white realtor signs coupled with the lack of cars and people gave rise to memories of the best visions of the apocalypse that Hollywood had churned out. But in most of those films, the buildings and streets were in decay and falling in on themselves. The cleanliness and beauty of the scene actually made it feel more disturbing, as if all the people in the world had simply vanished.
Knight turned back to Mueller and said, “Where’s the rendezvous point?”
/> Mueller coughed into his hand. He was tall with sandy blonde hair and a surfer’s tan, but his voice sounded small and frail. “Judging from our last position before we went down, we’re a little over three clicks from the staging area. We were supposed to land in the parking lot outside of an empty warehouse in the industrial district. I don’t know what the hell hit us.”
Knight’s eyes continued to scan the buildings as he replied. “Most people don’t get to feel an electromagnetic pulse. They’re most commonly associated as an after effect of a nuclear detonation. But the eggheads have also been developing directed EMP weaponry for years. Which means that whoever hit us is well-equipped.”
He squatted down to eye level with Mueller and fixed him with an intense gaze. “If you know anything about this mission, you need to tell me right now.”
Mueller shrugged. “Sorry, the brass never tells me anything. They just say where and when to fly, and that’s what I do. I don’t ask questions, and I figure that if I need to know, then somebody’ll fill me in.”
“Well, I need to know. You’re sure that you didn’t hear anything?”
Mueller hesitated a moment and then said, “I did hear a rumor about a covert military base being hit and a whole team of spec ops soldiers being wiped out, but I figured it was just a ghost story.”
Knight shook his head and cursed General Keasling for dragging him into this mess without even supplying him with the basic details of the mission. He had been wreck diving off the coast of Thailand for the week, and had been enjoying good food and beautiful company, when he had received the message. Deep Blue, a.k.a. Tom Duncan, the former president of the United States, and the brains behind Chess Team, informed him that Keasling had requested the team’s brand of assistance on a very sensitive black op into China. Keasling had provided a time and location for pickup and little else. Knight had been instructed to rendezvous with a team from Delta already onsite where he would receive a full briefing and equipment. He shook his head in disgust; there was nothing like jumping blind into a hot zone. It was never supposed to play out that way in the age of information, but Keasling always did play his cards close to the chest.