Surviving The Collapse Super Boxset: EMP Post Apocalyptic Fiction

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Surviving The Collapse Super Boxset: EMP Post Apocalyptic Fiction Page 80

by J. S. Donovan


  Officials shouted out collectively in dismay. Their hands covered their faces, the sting of another attack too much to absorb. Aerial images of smoke and fire consumed the screen. The news cut to cities and towns without any power and frightened residents walking around their own neighborhoods looking stunned.

  “No…” Kessler said. “This cannot be happening.”

  Craig had the same sinking feeling in his gut that he was sure everyone else had. Their enemy’s unquenchable desire to inflict chaos and death seemed to have no end.

  Phase two, Craig thought. Son of bitch…

  Overwhelmed, Secretary Kessler turned and stormed out of the room with his entourage, who were taken off guard and attempting to catch up with him.

  Once Kessler left, McMillian spoke. “So now we see they had every intention of carrying out the attacks on our power infrastructure. We have to believe that the poisoned water distribution is a certainty.”

  Craig, like everyone else, was nearly too shocked to speak. He tried his best to look away from the breaking news updates on TV and think of a solution before the next attack.

  “I can stop them, sir,” he said with brazen confidence.

  McMillian stopped and looked at Craig doubtfully. “With all you’ve been through, Agent Davis, I don’t think it would be wise to send you into such a dangerously volatile environment. This has become a military operation.”

  “Just let me lead the team. I can do this. I have to do this.” Craig projected absolute conviction.

  McMillian looked down and then back to the TV news. The multiple shots of fire and smoke, taken from high overhead looked as if the world itself was on fire. After a slight pause, he looked at Craig and nodded. “Start pulling together a field team, and I’ll see what I can do.”

  Enemy Mine

  Confirmed reports soon poured into the operations room as officials watched the barrage of news on the latest series of attacks. Five power plants had been bombed, their main generators cut out, leaving hundreds of thousands of residents without power.

  The areas affected included, strangely enough, not large cities, but those where more rural populations lived. Some speculated that the plan was to strike the areas to which people from the big cities were fleeing. Moments after the power plant attacks were initiated, one thing was made clear: no one was safe, no matter where they resided.

  Jonesboro, Arkansas. Louisville, Tennessee. Birmingham, Alabama. Columbus, Georgia. Jackson, Mississippi. There was something strategic about the locations, but no official could pinpoint anything beyond the obvious fact that they were southern states in close proximity of one another.

  Hurricane Francis exacerbated the situation even more, as emergency responders and state and local officials scrambled to try to control outbreaks of looting and random lawlessness. ISIS had effectively brought much of the country to its tipping point.

  More and more, it seemed the government had little control of the situation. Vigilantism was on the rise. Churches did their best to take in the frightened, overwhelmed, and helpless. National Guard and Reserve soldiers were called up, leaving their families on their own for an undisclosed amount of time. In a matter of hours following the power plant attacks, it became more evident that all-out war was on the horizon.

  From their limited vantage point in the operations room, the FBI and State Department officials tried to comprehend how another attack of such magnitude could have happened, given the high-alert advisories all over the country.

  But it was as real as the charred bodies scattered along the ports only two days prior. Now they were facing a new onslaught from an enemy that still remained faceless and still hadn’t taken any credit. What would the next attack be? Where would it be? And could the government prevent it? Questions on everyone’s minds that had no real answers. The scope of the terrorists’ ambitions was unprecedented, and given that, hard decisions were going to have to be made.

  “We need to get the president on the line!” McMillian shouted as officials scrambled to maintain their focus and deal with the crisis at hand.

  “Anyone know where the secretary went?” Calderon asked.

  Questions and demands flew left and right as Craig tried to make sense of everything. His family came to mind. He had to leave and see them. Whatever was happening around the country, he could no longer assure them that everything was going to be okay. It was time to prepare for the worst.

  Cross-chatter took over the room as live-feed aerial shots appeared on television of fire and smoke rising from the aftermath of the plant explosions. Then they cut to street shots where mass chaos had taken over. Crowds descended on stores, pillaging them. Lines of cars were stopped dead at gas stations. Oceans of vehicles were gridlocked on the highways, trying to escape town.

  Movement, however, had grown next to impossible. The government began to implement its authority through its agencies—all gathered in operations rooms similar to the one Craig was in.

  The door banged open and Agents Thomas and Keagan burst into the room, looking as if they had come from another meeting.

  “FAA is grounding all flights. Airports are shutting down!” Thomas announced to the room in disbelief.

  All eyes turned to him, but after what they had seen on the television, not much surprised them anymore.

  “Oh no…” Calderon said, placing his head in his hands.

  “Why now and not two days ago?” one official asked.

  “There are close to seven thousand power plants in this country,” McMillian said into his headset, pacing around. “We don’t have enough agents to cover each one.” He paused for a moment while the other person on the line spoke, then said, “I don’t know. Set up a military perimeter.”

  “They’re blocking all travel,” Keagan repeated.

  Craig approached Thomas and Keagan. “What else?” he said.

  Keagan continued, “Just got off the phone with the national transit. Commuter rails are being shut down. Transportation administration is blocking roads everywhere.”

  “Massive checkpoints are being established on all major highways,” Thomas said. He turned to Craig. “Oh, and Homeland is on their way here, and they’re not happy.”

  “I got the CIA on the line. They want to know where we’re holding the terror suspect!” an analyst announced from his workstation.

  “White House has been evacuated. President is set to address the nation soon,” another voice shouted out.

  Walker approached Craig, pale in the face. “I-I think we need to discuss the potential of this water poisoning plan ISIS has in store next.”

  “I agree, sir,” Craig answered. “They’ve been biding their time for years, and these attacks are going to keep coming unless we obliterate their entire organization.”

  Walker whipped his head around after being momentarily distracted by the news. Alleged ISIS-inspired attacks sweep the South appeared as a banner across the TV as a harried-looking female anchor tried to keep up with the latest reports.

  “Where would we even start with this?” Walker asked, lost in a daze of overwhelming fear.

  “We have to go after the sleeper cells,” Craig said. “Find them, wherever they’re operating. Let me have a team, and we’ll stop them and end this madness. We can give this country a moment to breathe.”

  Walker looked at Craig with a hint of skepticism. “I don’t think you’re in any condition to lead such a team. At this point we need to bring in other agencies and get them on board. The FBI can’t do everything.” Walker tried to placate Craig’s disapproving stare. “How about an advisory role?”

  Craig shook his head. Angered, Walker pointed at him. “What are trying to do, get yourself killed? You need to think about your family here.”

  “My family knows, as well as I, that we have to do everything we can to stop these terrorists. We’ve seen what they’ve done. We know what they have planned. There could be thousands of sleeper cells all around the country waiting to strike…” Craig
paused. “If we go after Allawi, they’ll be leaderless. Killing him won’t be the end, but it will shake them up, maybe even stall their plans.”

  Walker stood back. “You really think such a thing is possible?”

  “Why not?” Craig asked. “Did you ever think any of this was possible? This is the second time they’ve hit us in two days and this country has yet to fight back. This is war, and so far, we’re losing.”

  “Homeland’s on its way,” an agent announced from his workstation.

  Craig sighed, gearing up for another confrontation with his favorite agency.

  “Who from Homeland?” McMillian asked.

  “Not the secretary,” the agent answered. “Some representatives and their deputy assistant director.”

  Craig knew exactly who they were talking about. The blond-haired epitome of smugness, Deputy Jenkins. Their paths had crossed many times over the past couple of days—and years, for that matter.

  Both were around the same age and had similar ambitions, and Jenkins had found the best ways to interfere with Craig’s investigations however he could. But Craig was willing to put the bad blood between them aside if it meant stopping the terrorists. His good intentions, however, dissipated within moments of Jenkins’s arriving with his entourage.

  “Where are you holding Ghazi Al-Shehhi?” he asked as the doors flew open, addressing everyone and no one.

  McMillian, offended by their abrupt entrance, lashed out. “This is a highly secure operations room. You can’t just come barging in here, no matter who you represent.”

  Disregarding the FBI director, Jenkins walked to the meeting table with six other men in suits, all dangling I.D. badges. Jenkins hadn’t yet seen Craig, as there were so many other people in the room. “You didn’t answer my question,” he said. “I want to see Mr. Al-Shehhi.”

  “Why?” Craig asked loudly. Anyone not wearing a headset and deep in their own conversation looked up.

  Jenkins turned and smiled, brushing away a curl of blond hair that hung over his forehead. “Agent Davis…” He scanned Craig’s face and dirty attire. “You’re looking…not so well.”

  Craig said nothing.

  “How can we help you, Deputy Jenkins?” Walker asked, and stood next to Craig.

  Calderon cut in from nearby. “We’re very busy here and under a tremendous amount of pressure. Is there something you can help us with or are you here just to make trouble?”

  “I am here on official business, rest assured,” Jenkins continued. “Now I revert back to my earlier question. Can someone tell me where you’re holding Mr. Al-Shehhi?”

  “Mr. Al-Shehhi is currently being held in our intensive care unit,” McMillian answered.

  Craig finally spoke up. “And he’s not going anywhere until he’s answered our questions.”

  Jenkins took a few slow steps, then stopped in front of Craig. “He is not yours to interrogate. He belongs to us.”

  “The hell he does,” Craig said, adamantly.

  Walker was more respectful in his tone. “Exactly what are you talking about, Deputy Jenkins?”

  “I mean that Mr. Al-Shehhi has been working with us. Providing us information. He’s what you might call a double agent.”

  They could not have been more startled if ISIS had set off a bomb in the center of the room. The FBI men look astonished. McMillian seemed to gasp.

  “That’s impossible,” Craig said.

  “Why?” Jenkins asked, oblivious.

  “Because he tried to kill me and my entire family. Are you suggesting that somehow Homeland knew about that?”

  “Of course not,” Jenkins said. “We know nothing about that. Mr. Al-Shehhi is no boy scout. We understand that. But he possesses valuable information.”

  “About what?” McMillian asked with skepticism.

  “I’m not at liberty to discuss all of that right now. I need to speak with him, and that’s that.”

  Craig sprinted across the room and lunged at Jenkins as other FBI and Homeland agents rushed to hold him back.

  “You son of a bitch!” Craig yelled as five others pushed against him. Startled, Jenkins stood safely and calmly between two of the largest men in his entourage. Craig tried to push forward but couldn’t break away.

  “That’s enough, Agent Davis!” Calderon shouted.

  Walker turned to Jenkins and took the job of censuring him. “Why are you trying to rile him up? Do you have any idea what he’s been through?”

  “It doesn’t matter,” Jenkins said. “He always seems to lose his temper whenever I’m around, no matter the circumstance.”

  The men released Craig as he slowly regained his composure. Jenkins was about to make another demand for Ghazi when suddenly, Secretary Kessler burst into the room with his own State Department entourage, expressing similar interest and frustration about Ghazi.

  “I’ve been all over looking for this detainee, and we can’t find him anywhere. Now enough bullshit! Where is he?” He stopped when he noticed the Homeland group. “What are they doing here?”

  “Looking for the same thing as you,” Jenkins answered.

  “CIA chopper just landed on the roof!” an agent announced while pressing his headset against his ear.

  “Enough!” McMillian shouted. The room went nearly silent. “This country is under attack, and unless you’re here to help, I’m going to ask you to go back to your respective agencies at once.”

  Both Jenkins and Kessler looked stunned by the FBI director’s outburst. “I would choose your words more carefully,” Jenkins said.

  Craig still looked angry. Thomas placed a hand on his shoulder. “Easy, man. We need to be fighting them, not each other.”

  “No one is talking to the detainee right now, period. Got that?” McMillian said defiantly.

  Jenkins and Kessler looked ready for a showdown, displaying no hints of backing down.

  McMillian continued, “And I want you to explain exactly how a terrorist who tried to kill one of my agents and his family is some kind of informant for the government. And I want to know why we weren’t told of this.”

  Calderon stepped forward with his own questions, pointing at the television. “Could this have been prevented? Is that what you’re talking about?”

  “Don’t be ridiculous,” Jenkins said. “All we knew was that he was closely working within a sleeper cell as our informant. Haven’t heard from him in four weeks. He must not have known.”

  A voice then loudly called out from one of the workstations. “Presidential address coming live in thirty seconds!”

  Everyone in the room gathered around the meeting table and stared at the television on the wall. The news anchor on screen said that they were soon going to go live to the president, who was going to address the nation from an undisclosed location. In the room, several side arguments briefly followed among officials over whether the president should be addressing the public out in the open or in a secret place.

  “He needs to be out there for everyone to see. Bring the nation’s morale up. They see him cowering in a bunker all hope is lost,” one man said.

  “What do you want him to do? He’s only following protocol,” another contested.

  “Quiet!” Calderon said as he turned up the volume with a remote.

  Breaking News flashed across the screen, followed by an image of the presidential seal. The screen dissolved to the president standing at a podium in front of an American flag with two marines in dress uniforms standing on both sides. It was clear that he was inside a place with artificial lighting, possibly underground, as they were.

  President Dempsey was a tall, lanky man with dark-gray hair slicked back and parted to the side. He had a stare that pierced the television. His smoky, sable eyes were nearly hypnotic, and his brows arched in such a way that his expressions always looked pained when discussing serious topics. Nearing the end of his first term, Dempsey had been looking confident of riding the wave to reelection, but now his presidency and the fate of the nat
ion were in jeopardy.

  His hands gripped the podium, then loosened as he looked up at the camera. The operations room went nearly silent as everyone waited for what he would say.

  “My fellow Americans…” he began. “Throughout history, this nation has faced dark times, but resolute and willing, never failed to emerge resilient and better. We have faced a darkness over the last forty-eight hours similar to challenges in the past. But mark my words, we will come through this a stronger nation. Until then, there is much work to be done.

  “Our nation mourns the five thousand Americans reported dead as a result of simultaneous attacks on our major ports and several power plants in the Gulf States. Our aggressor has been identified as the radical terrorist organization who call themselves the Islamic State. There comes a time, God willing, where the government must act and when citizens must be prepared to preserve their society for generations to come.”

  “He’s about to declare war,” Thomas muttered to Keagan.

  “Our enemy,” said the President, “will not quit. But I say to the murderers of the Islamic State, our country has faced stronger foes than you. We’ve faced better, and we will do everything in our power to bring you to justice. Justice for this nation, and justice for the thousands lost at your demonic hands. We will survive and defeat you.

  “Now to the all Americans, I say this. We are in dangerous times, but our government is dedicated to bringing stability and assistance to areas still reeling from these attacks. We’re also coordinating with Gulf States to prepare for emergency relief for the hurricane. Every agency is on high alert. We are working diligently to bring the horrors of ISIS to an end, above all else.”

  Suddenly, the television transmission began to go in and out. For a moment, they lost the president. His image appeared back on the screen after a noticeable gap.

  “The secret service has advised that I and many members of my cabinet, the Joint Chiefs, and Congress, run the government from an undisclosed location. And I want to make something clear: We are not in hiding. These are merely cautionary measures, and I advise most Americans to find support within their local communities or in the hundreds of FEMA sites until we restore order in areas that been disrupted. Primarily, we are determined to eliminate aggressors of the Islamic State, who still pose a major threat to our country. This is not a time for fear, but for strength. We have only—”

 

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