Surviving The Collapse Super Boxset: EMP Post Apocalyptic Fiction
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“Stop screaming or you will wake the dead,” Kareem joked. “Now, try again,” Kareem said. “I want her name. You can lie, risk it if you want. See if I don’t catch on.” He then brought the drill right to Martinez’s left eye. “Tell me another lie, and this is gonna go right in. Just enough to pop your little pupil into goo.”
Martinez closed his eyes, trying to hold back the tears. Aside from primal fear, he felt confused and disoriented. Had he any chance to escape?
“Five seconds,” Kareem said, causally.
“Angela!” Martinez shouted.
Kareem kept his finger at the ready, caressing the trigger. “Angela who?”
“Angela Gannon. Border Patrol Agent Angela Gannon!” Martinez’s voice echoed throughout the room, and when he opened his eyes, he saw that the drill was no longer there. Seeming convinced, Kareem set it aside and grabbed a pair of pliers. “That time I believe you.”
He stopped and signaled one of his men over as Martinez began to fade in and out of consciousness. Kareem spoke quickly to the man in Arabic, saying the name Angela Gannon several times. The masked man nodded and then left the room as though he had been dispatched to deliver a message. Once the man was gone, all of Kareem’s attention was back on Martinez.
“There’s some more questions I have for you, and then we’ll be done.” He held up a pair of rusty pliers to the light, flashing his perpetual smile. “But first… I’m going to have to ask you to open wide.”
He pushed Martinez’s head down, squeezing his nose shut. Martinez shut his mouth and tried his best to resist, but breathing was getting more difficult by the second. The moment his mouth opened, gasping for breath, Kareem went in with the pliers squeezing them against his front teeth. Martinez pleaded with him to stop, but Kareem was far too determined.
Suddenly a rumbling could be heard outside—something large and alarming. He pulled the pliers away from Martinez’s mouth and stood frozen listening. He spoke quietly and with urgency to his men. No one, it seemed, knew what was going on.
“It’s him,” one of the masked men shouted, pointing at Martinez. “He brought more of them here!”
Martinez tried to look around to understand what was going on, but the men seemed in a panic. He could hear the noise as well: whopping helicopter rotors with an engine that sounded as though it was descending fast.
“Call headquarters!” Kareem shouted. “Tell them everything this man told us. We have to act now!”
The men scrambled and ran out of the room with Kareem following in a panic and leaving Martinez with the most immense sense of relief he had ever felt in his life.
11
Wolves to Slaughter
With the compound in view, the FBI helicopter touched down near their set coordinates. The quick plunge startled Angela, and she gripped the seat but the FBI team, night-vision goggles affixed to their helmets, seemed calm and ready as could be.
The red light inside the helicopter only made it more difficult to see anything within their dark cabin. They landed with a tremendous shake that nearly tossed Angela out of her seat. Next to her, Sutherland wasted no time. He adjusted his night-vision goggles, stood up, and opened the door, calling to the team, “Let’s move out!”
Lynch and Hopper rose, but Thaxton remained seated, ready and waiting as she had been in their previous raid. Angela grabbed her night-vision goggles and unbuckled her seat belt, moving toward the door and looking for the spare vest. Hooper and Lynch jumped out. As she moved to the door, Sutherland blocked her way.
“You stay here with the assistant director. If we need you, we’ll let you know.”
Surprised, her mouth dropped open. “He’s my partner!”
“We don’t know who or what’s in there at the moment, if anyone! If there are people inside, they certainly know we’re here.”
Angela went for her pistol and pulled it from her side holster. “I know how to use this.”
Sutherland shook his head. “Negative. You sit tight. This won’t take long.”
She turned to the director who was busy monitoring the laptop resting on her legs. Sutherland jumped out and shut the door before she could respond. Thaxton looked up at Angela and shrugged then patted the spot next to her.
“Have a seat, Agent Gannon.”
Angela huffed and sat down, as the helicopter’s rotors continued to spin. She held the night vision goggles to her eyes and looked over the pilot’s shoulder beyond the windshield where she could see the FBI team racing toward a large, square compound. An all-encompassing tarp supported by several poles covered it entirely.
“We can watch it all on here,” Thaxton said pointing to the screen.
Angela glanced at the screen to see three open windows displaying live video feeds from the agents’ helmet cam. She had not even been aware they were wearing cameras. The images showed the compound getting closer as they moved to one side, looking for an entrance. There were no entrances and, from the looks of it, no doors.
As much as she wanted to watch, she felt deeply conflicted about having to wait behind. Thaxton noticed her silence and turned to her, speaking close to her ear. “I’m going to level with you. Captain Martinez may be a little over his head here.”
“Tell me something I don’t know,” Angela snapped. She then realized who she was talking to. “Sorry, ma’am.”
Thaxton waved her off. “What I mean is that our mutual friend may have fallen in with the wrong group.”
Angela looked at her, stunned. “What? The terrorists?”
“No,” Thaxton said. “Not the kind you may be thinking of. These are homegrown vigilantes, and the government wants to clamp down on them. I’m sure you’ve heard of them in your profession.”
Angela shook her head.
“The South Texas Border Recon. Call themselves the Outlaws,” Thaxton continued. Noticing Angela’s skepticism, she elaborated. “I’m not talking good ol’ American boys. These guys are dangerous.” She held her hands ten inches apart from each other. “We’ve got a file on them this thick. Administration wants them stopped.”
“And Captain Martinez?” Angela said in disbelief.
“We’re hoping that he’ll lead us to them.”
“But the address?” Angela said. “That man, Mahmoud. He said this was an ISIS location.”
“Look around where you’re at,” Thaxton said, trying to talk over the engine. “We’re not in Kansas anymore.”
Angela glanced at the screen. The team had circled to the other side of the building, stopping at a metal door sealed shut. One of the agents attached a digital cube-like device on the door and then set a timer on it, crouching for cover.
Angela stood up, ready to give the assistant director a piece of her mind and damn the consequences. “Is ISIS in that building or not? Who in the hell are we looking for?”
Thaxton remained calm and collected as always and then spoke, barely raising her voice. “We don’t know just yet. This location was not on our radar before. It’s the first we’ve heard of it. Either way, we’re going to set up camp and wait for Captain Martinez and his border recon team.”
“And then what?” Angela shouted. “Arrest him?”
“With you here, that may not be necessary,” Thaxton said as her eyes went back to the screen.
Angela stood frozen. She felt sick inside, like someone had punched her in the gut. The entire mission was a crapshoot, based on the assumption that the FBI could intercept Captain Martinez. Thaxton showed little, if at all, concern about a terror cell. Astoundingly, her priorities seemed skewed far in the other direction.
Angela scanned the helicopter and saw a bulletproof vest lying on the floor at the end of Thaxton’s seat. She walked to the end of the seat, and grabbed the vest, hoisting it over her head and onto her shoulders.
Her quick movements gained Thaxton’s otherwise distracted attention. “What are you doing?”
Suddenly, a brief explosion lit up the side of the compound like a firecracker. A
ngela ran to the door, pulled the handle, and swung it open.
“Get back here!” Thaxton shouted.
Angela jumped out and slammed the door behind her. She sprinted off without looking back. Something was going on, and she wasn’t going to allow herself to be used any longer. She was well aware that Thaxton was running after her, but she had already gained a sizeable lead. Whatever the FBI was up to, she planned to be right there with them. Her partner needed her.
Kareem ran out of the room behind his panicked men and into the otherwise empty hall where ten other sleeper cell operatives flew off cots, startled awake by the commotions.
“Get up, you lazy goats! We have to leave. Now!” Kareem shouted.
“No!” said a bald man with a light shade of stubble on his face. He grabbed the AK-47 from under his cot and pulled the charging handle back. “We must stay and fight.” He stood defiant in his thin, baggy white pants and matching white top. The other men scrambled around, unsure of what to do.
“That is not the plan!” Kareem shouted back.
The men got the message and moved quickly to a corner room that looked to be little more than a closet. “Salah told us if we were to be found to destroy any sensitive documents and leave. This place is compromised. We have to go underground and escape while we can.”
The other men stood half awake and uncertain of what to do.
The bald man hurried toward Kareem with his rifle pointed upward. “What do you think Salah will do to us if we run, brother? He will make an example of us, like all the others.”
“Then that is Allah’s will. Stay here and you will die,” Kareem said. “Grab your things. Escape while you still can!” He then pointed to the room where Captain Martinez was being held. “First there was one American. Now there are more. It’s over if we stay. If they capture us, they will surely torture us for information.”
The men seemed convinced as they grabbed their packs and rifles and ran toward the escape room. The bald man, however, remained in place.
Kareem narrowed his eyes at the man and shook his head. “You’re going to ruin our entire operation with this foolishness, Salazar.”
“I’m not scared of the Americans,” the bald man said. “Let them come.”
A loud burst erupted at the end of the hall, sending Kareem to the floor on his chest. After an instantaneous flash, they could see smoke seeping into the room.
“They’ve breached the door!” Kareem said, jumping up. “Run!”
The other fighters were halfway to the escape room when two men kicked the door opened and charged in, firing into the air without warning. A third man rushed inside and threw a flash grenade which exploded instantly, sending the fleeing men into a frenzy.
Salazar flew to the ground under his cot, as the intruders aimed their pistols at the confused, blinded men and shot them dead, one by one. Kareem ran past the carnage into the escape room just as bullets whizzed by his head.
He threw himself into the tightly confined room as more gunfire erupted, shaken to the core. His loyal security team was at the shelved wall behind him, revealing their secret exit. He could hear Salazar yelling at the men in Arabic, cursing them to hell. The AK-47 erupted with a hail of bullets only to be met with more gunfire from the Americans. Then, for a moment, everything was quiet.
“Clear!” he heard one of the Americans yell.
“Where are the others? I saw more,” another one said.
Kareem stood up, balancing himself against the wall as his legs shook. “Hurry up!” he said to the men in a panicked whisper, as they pushed the heavy wall open.
“Did you kill him?” one of the masked men asked.
“Who?” Kareem asked back.
“Who do you think? The American! He’s seen your face.”
At that moment, panic gripped Kareem’s rapidly beating heart. In his haste, he couldn’t believe he had been so careless. But it was too late to turn back now. His only option was to escape or die.
“It’s opened!” one of the masked men said, pushing against the wall.
“Hurry!” Kareem said, rushing past them. “We have to seal it back up before they find us!”
His men rushed down the darkened tunnel, leaving one man behind to pull the bookshelf wall closed. But it was too late. Another man rushed into the room and shot a round through the ISIS lackey’s head.
From down inside the cramped tunnel, Kareem led the way. The final entry underground was near. Kareem was too concerned with his own life to think about the underground weapon caches and military uniform storage that the Americans would surely find after a search of the perimeter. For Kareem and his men, martyrdom awaited, whether they were ready for it or not.
Angela rushed toward the compound just in time to hear a barrage of shots fired from inside. Her heart jumped as she remained close to the windowless wall to her side, near the place where the FBI team had breached the door. While running, she looked behind her to see Thaxton gaining on her and shouting for her to stop.
Too close to turn back now, she told herself.
She reached the end of the compound, exhausted, and glanced around the corner, pistol drawn, to make sure no one was there. The door in back was open, with light spilling out onto the desert sand from the inside. She could hear shouting followed by more gunshots, which caused her to flinch.
What in the hell was happening in there?
She took a deep breath, her pistol pointed up and close to her chin, and then ran around the side and toward the breached door. She stopped at the side of the door and peeked inside just in time to see Lynch, Sutherland, and Hopper run into a room in the distance. As she examined the open hall before her, she saw several low-hanging fluorescent lights interconnected by extension cords.
How the building lasted in the middle of nowhere was beyond her. Knowing that Thaxton was hot on her trail, Angela took another deep breath and stormed inside, pointing her gun in each and every direction. A thin cloud of smoke permeated the air, and what at first looked like piles of clothes strewn on the floor in the distance came into focus as bodies.
A man lay under a cot with an AK-47 near him in a pool of blood. His head was spilt open in multiple spots, brain matter exposed. Most shocking of all were the men lying on the floor in contorted poses, maybe ten of them, riddled with bullets, their blood splattered all over the concrete floor.
The sight was shocking, but Angela knew she had to keep pushing forward before Thaxton’s inevitable arrival and interference. She moved around the mass carnage of dead bodies—young Middle Eastern-looking men—and examined them only to see if Martinez was among the dead. He wasn’t.
She had no idea if he was anywhere near or why he would be there in the first place. The dead on the ground hardly looked like members of the South Texas Border Recon.
She trusted her instincts and charged forward into a single darkened room, where she immediately came to a wall pushed open and another dead body, masked but with a hole in his head.
“Agent Gannon!” she could hear from afar. Thaxton had arrived.
She ignored her and crouched to enter a five-foot hole where a vent had been removed and proceeded on, feeling as though she was on a hunt of her own. With her night-vision goggles, she navigated the cramped confines of the tunnel until reaching a wall and, oddly enough, finding a drain cover that had been removed, leading to an underground ladder. She listened for voices or gunfire but heard nothing. There was no turning back then either.
She climbed down the ladder, breathing the damp and stale air and reached the bottom, twenty feet below, enveloped in total darkness. Down the tunnel ahead, there were men running. The back of their jackets said FBI. She was close.
She ran forward with her pistol drawn. Beyond the FBI team, she could see several other men running down the long corridor of a tunnel. No telling how long it was or where it might end.
The FBI team was gaining on its quarry, and before she could make her presence known or say anything, she watched
as they fired multiple shots into the fleeing men, taking each one of them down. The gun bursts were loud and alarming, and she instantly backed against the wall for cover. The gun fire ended but she remained in place, frozen, goggles at her side. Surrounded by complete darkness, she tried not to make a sound.
“No! No, please!” a man’s voice shouted out.
Gunshots followed in three white flash bursts, and the pleading man said no more. She instantly brought the goggles to her eyes and saw Lynch, Hopper, and Sutherland ten feet ahead standing over several bodies, their guns pointed downward. At that moment she wanted nothing more than to run back up the ladder and never turn back.
Hopper whipped around, scanning the area. “Who’s there?” he shouted, raising his pistol.
Angela threw her hands in the air. “It’s just me, Agent Gannon!”
The men stopped and looked at each other.
“What the hell are you doing here?” Sutherland asked.
She felt angered by his question and approached the men defiantly. “What am I doing here? Watching you shoot fleeing suspects in the back. That’s what I’m doing!”
“Did we get all of them?” Lynch asked, cutting in.
“I don’t fucking know,” Sutherland said. “You see anyone else alive?”
“What… is… going… on… here?” Angela asked with each hardened step she took toward the men.
“Relax,” Sutherland said, raising a hand. “We were given specific instructions to neutralize the situation.”
“Do you even know who you’ve killed?” Angela shouted. She couldn’t see them very well, but it didn’t matter.
They grew silent. Then Lynch spoke up, but in a calmer way, setting a new, friendlier tone. “Looks like we got the terror cell to me.”
“Was that really who you were looking for?” Angela asked, closing in. “Or is Captain Martinez the real objective here?”