Dead Inside
Page 1
Dead Inside
PM Kavanaugh
Published by PM Kavanaugh Books, 2021.
Copyright © 2021by Patrice Marie Kavanaugh
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
Any references to historical events, real people, or real places, are used fictitiously. Names, characters, and places are products of the author’s imagination.
Cover Design by James, GoOnWrite.com
Also by PM Kavanaugh
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Table of Contents
Title Page
Copyright Page
Also By PM Kavanaugh
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
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Acknowledgments
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About the Author
Chapter 1
“It’s time. Get into position. Over.”
“Copy that.” Anika Washington spoke into her comm device.
Go time.
She inhaled a slow breath to steady her thudding heart. Belgrade’s winter air stung her nostrils. Crouched in a corner of the balcony, she stared up at the grayish white sky. The color reminded her of the disgusting synth-milk served at the orphanage where she had grown up.
She lifted into a high squat, making sure to keep her head below the railing. As she stepped forward, her foot slipped on the ice-slick surface. She caught herself from falling.
Focus! No clumsy mistakes. No mistakes period.
She dropped to all fours and crawled forward three meters to her position behind the sniper rifle. Braced on bent elbows, legs stretched out behind her, she was grateful for the insulated unisuit that provided protection from the balcony’s cold marble floor. The barrel of the P4 rested in the V of the squat tripod stand. The semi-automatic rifle was a successor to the M4 carbine rifles popular with the United States military in the first half of the twenty-first century. The upgraded weapon performed better, even in extreme weather conditions. This December day in Serbia qualified. The rifle’s tip poked through the hole in the balcony’s wall. The advance team had positioned the small opening to provide her the best angle and view to do the job.
She gazed through the scope to sight her target. He squatted low outside the ground floor of the government building opposite the luxury residence where she lay prone on the twentieth floor. That meant her target was 1,084 meters’ distance, well within the rifle’s maximum range. His dark profile was outlined against the wall of the building. He stood as still as the granite surface beside him. Inside, his team planted explosives.
“On my order, take out the hostile. Over.” Anika’s team leader, Solomon Nigatu, spoke with practiced authority.
“Copy that.” She hoped he didn’t hear the strain in her voice. Tension coiled around her neck and shoulders.
This would be her first kill. And unlike the sims she had trained on, next-gen e-games where the hostiles were typically masked and hulked out, this man’s face was clearly visible. He looked young—slender, with narrow shoulders and hollow cheeks. Early twenties, she estimated. Her age.
He was actual flesh and blood and bone and muscle. Heart beating. Lungs expanding. Until she fired. One blast, through the temple. Then nothing. Why couldn’t she just tranq him? But that wasn’t her call. Those weren’t her orders. Her orders were to kill.
She had prepared for this moment for so long, first as a new recruit and, more recently, as a Level 1 operative for U.N.I.T, a global counterterrorist organization. She’d thought she was ready to perform in the field. Gianni had said she was ready.
Gianni.
A steel band of anxiety wrapped around her chest. She hadn’t seen him since the night of their first mission together. That had been three months ago. Gianni Brambilla was a Level 3 operative, her trainer, and so much more. What had happened to him? Where was he? Not here, not telling her that she had to kill a real live human being.
Her target touched his ear comm and shot upright, stance rigid, on alert.
Through her scope, Anika watched his head swivel to complete a sweep of the area. His head nodded, his lips moved. He was confirming it was safe to exit.
“Take out the hostile. Over,” Nigatu said.
Anika firmed her grip on the trigger, inhaled, held her breath. What if the young man hadn’t wanted to join the terrorist group, Serbia First?
“Shoot him!” Nigatu’s voice sharpened, a knife tip pricking her ear. “Do you copy?”
What if his family had been threatened with death if he refused?
“Takagi, take out Washington’s target.”
Anika opened her mouth. No. I’ve got him. I’ll do it. But the words wouldn’t come. And her finger wouldn’t move.
From her far right, a single bullet rocketed through the air. The young man’s head jerked back from the impact. His body dropped to the ground. Across the courtyard, a similar scenario played out. Another member of her team shot a second watcher. Then more team members took up the positions of the felled terrorists, while others ringed the courtyard’s perimeter, out of sight of the building’s egress point.
Seconds later, the building’s front door handle moved to the open position. Stopped. Takagi, the female operative who had shot Anika’s target, pressed the dead man’s thumb on the button of his comm wristband to issue the all-clear signal. The door opened. Five hostiles emerged. The dozen-strong U.N.I.T. team erupted from the perimeter, surrounded the group, and forced a quick surrender.
“Washington, report. Over.” Nigatu’s voice boomed in her ear.
Shitshitshit. What could she say? Weapon jammed? The debriefing machines would discredit her. No clear shot? The advance team would disprove it.
What would happen now? Would she be demoted? Lose her new Level 1 privileges? She had gotten used to more freedom, more sleep, more down time.
“Washington, do you copy?” Nigatu said.
Would her punishment be worse than demotion? Anika’s chest tightened. They wouldn’t make her leave, would they? Her childhood wound of rejection throbbed deep inside her. She couldn’t survive being told she wasn’t wanted. Again.
She looked at her right hand, her dominant firing hand. She flexed her fingers, rolled her wrist. In perfect condition. She’d have to change that. Fast.
“I fell. My wrist... it’s broken.” She whimpered the words. “Over.” She waited for the stream of verbal abuse she’d gotten used to in the months of training as a recruit.
“Fuck,” Nigatu said. “Copy. Get your ass back to Transport. Over.”
“Copy that.” Things were clearly different in the field. Or maybe Nigatu was waiting until he could unload on her face-to-face. She disengaged her ear comm. While she
had endured countless bone bruises, even a couple of fractures, during her recruit training, she wasn’t sure she could keep from crying out in pain from what she was about to do. Still, she could handle the physical pain more than the alternative.
The thin layer of ice on the balcony floor glistened in the early morning light. She took a step. The sole of her boot slid on the smooth surface, then stopped. She’d almost forgotten. Body cams. One on her forehead, another behind her right shoulder. Their time recordings would show that she had fallen after she had been given the order to shoot. That wouldn’t work.
She pulled off her camo head gear and smashed it against the marble. Then she twisted her torso away from the building wall and swung back toward it, whip-fast. Her upper back slammed into the wall. Nothing. She tried again. Harder. It took two more tries before she heard the reassuring crack of the camera’s glass eye.
She inhaled another deep breath, gritting her teeth. The sting in her throat, the throbbing in her upper back were nothing compared to what was coming.
She ran forward, hit a slight dip, felt her feet slide out from under her. This time, she didn’t catch herself, but kept falling and stiffened her arm behind her. She landed hard.
Snap.
Sharp pain shot up her wrist to her shoulder. Then, nausea. Short panting breaths streamed through clenched teeth. The pain was much worse than the bruises and fractures from her hand-to-hand fight training.
Don’t pass out. Don’t pass out. Don’t pass out.
She pressed her right toe against the inside sole of her boot to activate the medical patch. The numbing comfort of a pain blocker flooded her system. In seconds, her wrist quieted. Her stomach continued to churn, and she wondered if she could use it to her advantage. If she vomited in the transport vehicle, maybe she’d garner sympathy. No, strike that. This wasn’t the orphanage. This was U.N.I.T., the United Nations Intelligence Trust, the most badass counterterrorism agency on the planet. She’d seem weak as well as incompetent. Standing, she cradled her right arm against her chest, retrieved her weapon, and headed back.
Chapter 2
“How’s the wrist?” Nigatu stood outside the door to the debriefing room. His wide-set brown eyes, the same color as his skin, studied her with unblinking intensity.
Anika held up her arm, encased in a flex-cast from hand to elbow. “Great. The medics in Clinic know their stuff. Especially their meds.” The combination of pain blockers and soothers had erased any sensation of pain and filled her with calm, all without fogging her head. The bio psych exercises she had practiced during the six-hour journey back to U.N.I.T.’s subterranean complex had helped, too. She felt relaxed, but alert. Ready for the debriefing.
“Yeah, well, the tech in there,” he said, jerking his head toward the closed door, “knows her meds, too. If she suspects you’re trying to fool the machines, they’ll pump you full of shit to make you talk straight.” Nigatu’s full lips thinned into a disapproving line.
“Don’t worry about me,” Anika said. “I’ll be fine.”
“I’m not worried about you.” His fist knocked against his thigh in a nervous gesture. “If you fail the debriefing, it won’t just be a mark against you. It’ll be my ass, too. You’re supposed to be the best Level One shooter we have. Don’t make me look like a moron for picking you for the mission.”
“What does a mark mean, anyway?” she asked. “More training? Outside privileges revoked?”
Nigatu snorted. “Marks are serious shit. Get too many, and you’re out.”
Out? Anxiety fluttered through Anika. But I just graduated. Just started feeling like I belong here.
“I won’t fail,” she said.
On the return flight to New Angeles, in between the bio psych exercises, Anika had replayed the mission in her mind. She’d berated herself over her failure to pull the trigger. Swatted away doubts that she could do this kind of work. Then, she’d committed to redoubling her training on kill sims, and promised herself she would pay more attention to the profiles of the hostiles in future missions so she’d know she was taking down bad guys in order to save good guys. She told herself these steps would prevent her from hesitating when the next live kill order came. She willed herself to believe it.
She lifted her chin and held Nigatu’s gaze. “I won’t make you regret picking me. I’ll tell them what they need to hear.” So they won’t regret picking me, either.
“They need to hear what the hell went wrong out there. And they’ll be looking for confirmation from the exterior cams.”
“Exterior?” The flutter returned, this time like the wings of a panicked bird. She’d only known about the body cams. The ones she had destroyed. Were there really additional cams? Was Nigatu telling the truth, or trying to ensure she did?
“Part of the advance team’s prep.” Nigatu’s eyebrows shot up. “That a problem?”
Anika shrugged to hide the tremor in her shoulders. “No problem.”
“Good. Find me in the dining annex later. Let me know how it goes.” Nigatu pressed the button on the side wall. The door to the debriefing room hissed open.
“Save me some dessert.” She brushed past him. “They’re serving chocolate tonight.”
*
Anika took three steps into the brightly-lit room. A female technician stood beside a high-backed metal chair, the only piece of furniture in the narrow rectangular space. The tech wore a light gray suit that matched the streaks running through her close-cropped brown hair. Her left arm was bent, an e-pad attached to it. She tapped the screen, adjusted the sensors resting on the chair arms, then tapped some more. The room’s lights glinted off her rimless glasses as her gaze moved back and forth between the screen and the chair.
“Come in. Sit,” she said, not looking up.
The chair’s sharp angles dug into Anika’s muscles. She forced slow, steady breaths in and out through her nose and focused on a point on the far wall. The tech attached the sensors to her temples, to the pulse points at her left wrist and both ankles, and under her left breast.
This was Anika’s second official debriefing, not counting the practice ones during her months of training as a recruit. The first one had been simple and quick, over in twenty minutes. It hadn’t involved a technician and sensors, just a machine asking questions and recording answers. Maybe because that mission had gone smoothly. Well, not quite as smoothly as the agency believed.
It had been her first mission, the one that would allow her to graduate from recruit to Level 1 status. It had taken place at the gala to celebrate the opening of the North Korean embassy in Washington, D.C. While she’d succeeded in her assignment to obtain a nano disc from the safe in the ambassador’s study, the prototype device inside her shoe that unlocked the safe had malfunctioned and triggered the alarm. Imprisoned in the study by titanium bars, she had faced certain capture—perhaps death—by the embassy guards. If Gianni hadn’t created a diversion to help her escape...
Gianni, where are you?
“Let’s begin,” the tech said. “State your name, tracking ID, rank.”
“Anika Washington. Kilo-bravo-foxtrot-one-seven-two-nine-five. Level One operative.”
A corner of the tech’s mouth turned down. She adjusted the sensor on Anika’s left wrist and tapped her screen once. “State your U.N.I.T. and location.”
“U.N.I.T. six-zero-five. New Angeles.”
“Where were you recruited from?”
“A federal orphanage outside of Washington, D.C.” More like rescued from there, Anika thought.
The tech nodded a fraction, apparently satisfied with the equipment. “Why didn’t you shoot the target?”
Anika’s throat constricted, cutting off her next inhale. The easy questions were over. “I...couldn’t,” she said.
“Explain.”
Anika’s next words had to be chosen with care. She had to convince herself so her vital signs would convince the sensors. She closed her eyes and visualized herself back on the balcony, lying dow
n, ready to shoot the target.
No, back up, she thought. Start earlier.
She was in a corner of the balcony. Crouched against the side wall, the marble structure solid against her back. Milk-colored sky. “I heard the order to get ready. Acknowledged it, then started to move into position.” She remembered lifting up from her crouch, stepping forward, starting to fall. “The balcony floor was covered in ice.” In her mind, she didn’t catch herself. She fell. In the debriefing room, she winced as she relived the actual fall. The sharp crack of bone, the hot pain up her arm. “I slipped. Landed on my wrist. Heard it break.”
“Why didn’t you tell your team lead?”
“I thought I could still shoot. Use my non-dominant hand. The way we were taught during training.” A mix of lie and truth. “But I...” Anika remembered the paralysis that gripped her after receiving the order to shoot. “I couldn’t move.” True.
A faint tapping on the e-pad came from behind her.
She opened her eyes. Refocused on a distant point. Re-steadied her breath. She didn’t try to fill the quiet. Didn’t try to over explain. The less said, the better. She hoped.
“How do you feel now?”
“Fine. The medics fixed me up and—”
“Not physically.” The tech cut her off. “What is your emotional state?”
The question startled her. She hadn’t been asked that in her prior debriefing. What was the right answer now? What should she feel?
“Uncertainty,” she said.
“Continue.”
“I’m wondering what will happen to me since I...was unable to complete the mission. Will I be disciplined? Or...” Despite her best efforts, Anika’s breath faltered and her heart quickened. The machines had to be registering her distress. “Or told to leave.” She swallowed. “I feel...” Terror, dread. “Anxious.”
“Anything else?”
What should a committed operative feel? Frustration at her own incompetence? Remorse at letting the agency down?
She closed her eyes and thought of the one person who could inspire feelings strong enough to convince the machines she was telling the truth. She recalled their last minutes together on the night of her first mission. The gleam of moonlight on his dark-blond hair, the desire in his brown eyes, warm lips on hers when they kissed for the first time.