I Am Automaton

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I Am Automaton Page 17

by Edward P. Cardillo


  The leader gave a signal, and they closed in. The surrounding area was silent. The leader banged on the crate with the butt of his AK-47. It sounded somewhat hollow.

  They spoke to each other, as if debating what to do. After some conversation, the leader opened up the doors of the crate.

  They looked inside and raised their weapons. They shouted commands into the box. One of the men made a sour face.

  Suddenly, from out of the surrounding brush came two dogs and they attacked the men. But before the men could defend themselves, people from within the box emerged and began to fall upon them, biting into them.

  The assailed squad was torn between the dogs and the biters and fell into disorganization. In the scuffle, not one shot was fired.

  As the men were overcome by the people from the box, the dogs backed off. The silence was interrupted by screams of terror and pain as flesh was torn from bone with jagged teeth.

  Insidious Drones 1, Bad Guys 0.

  In minutes, the screaming ceased and the ID finished their meal in savage bloodlust. Then Peter, a master of field craft, emerged from his camouflage with the environment and hit the Amygdala Inhibitor master kill switch.

  The platoon reemerged and formed their reverse Vee formation, and Peter reactivated the ID. Having dealt with the patrol, they resumed their mission, making their way to the cenote unfettered.

  The passage of time breathed down Peter’s neck like an unrelenting predator. It was just past noon, and their little diversion cost them time. Besides, they didn’t have much time before the Navajas realized that their scouts had not checked back in.

  All they knew at the moment was that their scouts found an abandoned shipping crate in the middle of the wilderness. He prayed they didn’t get spooked and run.

  They traversed more difficult terrain, slowly but steadily, as the ID staggered through underbrush and over exposed roots, the dogs running alongside and nipping at their heels.

  There were a couple of instances of humpers separating from the group, but Peter flicked the AI kill switches on and off by squads, and they reset and rejoined the group.

  By 03:00, they reached the vicinity of the target cenote. Peter signaled for the platoon to halt, and he hit the AI kill switch. The ID were immobilized.

  Peter consulted his Multi-tasker and received satellite pictures of the cenote. It was definitely occupied, probably being used as a relay station for cocaine from Columbia. What better place to hide it than a large hole in the ground in a protected nature preserve?

  Peter scanned the immediate vicinity for some time. No other patrols emerged from the cenote, and none returned. Peter made the signal to resume their approach, and he reactivated the ID.

  As the mouth of the funnel came within fifty feet of the cenote, they must have tripped an alarm, because shouts came from inside the cenote.

  Peter signaled for them to move faster and the formation pushed up to the edge of the hole, which had to have been about 100 feet across.

  The ID walked right up to the edge and dropped right in like paratroopers stepping out of a plane. They fell like lemmings, one after another, without any regard for their own safety. But that was, of course, unnecessary.

  Lorenzo called for the SWEEPERS. Carl leapt forward with the other, and they each swept along the side of the hole. There were many red blips and about as many blue blips, but the blue blips were vanishing quickly.

  Shrieks and panicked gunshots emanated from the cenote as the Insidious Drones took to their ghastly work. The flanks of the formation, without the ID right next to them, were able to focus entirely on their surroundings.

  Peter couldn’t believe it. It was all working exactly as they trained. And none of them had to venture into the cenote itself. No matter how far the Navajas receded into the limestone bowels, the ID would pursue them.

  Carl watched the screen of his MR.UD as the blue blips vanished before his very eyes. After about twenty minutes, the last blue blip extinguished, and he gave the signal to Lorenzo. The other SWEEPER confirmed.

  The hole was now silent, save the shuffling around of hungry ID crunching down on tibias and fibulas. Peter hit the master AI kill switch. The hole was still.

  Mission accomplished. Everything had gone according to their training. Peter thought at that very moment that he should have felt relief, but instead he felt something else.

  Suddenly an inexplicable wave of panic swept over him. Rationally, he knew such a feeling made no sense given the context, but he saw the same reaction in his men.

  Carl felt a sudden, alien feeling of fear, and he looked down at the screen of his MR.UD. The screen was flickering.

  As fast as the sensation came on, it was gone and Navajas came out of the woodwork, AK-47’s trained on Peter’s platoon, shouting at them to drop their weapons.

  His men raised their weapons and pulled their triggers, but nothing happened.

  Peter looked truly stunned. “What the hell just happened?”

  “EMP,” Carl yelled over to Peter.

  “EMP? As in electromagnetic pulse?”

  “Yeah, some kind of weaponized version,” Carl explained.

  “Perfect for frying our nice new electric guns,” Peter hissed.

  There was only one thing to do.

  “Lower your weapons,” he ordered.

  It was like Tijuana all over again. Another trap. Someone ratted them out, again. These Navajas had a mole on the inside. That was the only way Peter figured they had managed to always be one step ahead.

  Behind him he heard the ID stirring about, their AI chips fried from the EMP.

  “Who’s in charge?” Peter demanded.

  None of the Navajas answered. They just waited.

  “Why aren’t they talking?” Peter asked Lorenzo.

  Lorenzo dropped his rifle to his side and sighed. “That’s because they’re waiting for me to answer.”

  Chapter 12

  Lorenzo stepped away from Peter and stood in front of the Navajas. Peter was now doubly stunned.

  “Mike, what the hell are you doing?”

  “Peter, you’ve come to a very important decision point, and I want you to consider your options carefully.”

  “What options? What are you talking about, Mike? These guys are with you? So who was in the hole we just cleared?”

  “Our competition.”

  “What competition?”

  “The O.I.L. security detail that the Navajas have been using…until now, that is.”

  “I still don’t get it, Mike.”

  “It’s not rocket science, Pete. Now we’re the security.”

  Peter did not believe what he was hearing. Was Mike in league with the Navajas? This was the man he trained with for months, the man he had countless drinks with, the man he invited into his home.

  “So what, you’re in the security business now, and for these rat bastards no less?”

  “Pete, you’re so short sighted. But I’ll forgive you since these ‘rat bastards’ killed your squad in Tijuana. The situation is so much more complex than that.”

  “Really? Explain it to me then.”

  “Pete, you make me sound like I’m some kind of bad guy now. We’re using the ID in Mexico to take out O.I.L. We’ll be protecting a pretty gaping border. You know how many terrorists have been slipping through? The war’s not just in the Middle East, Pete.”

  “And why not make some money out of it? Is that right, Mike?”

  “Oh, you have no idea. Not only are we providing security, we’re also providing the perfect mules.”

  “Mules?”

  “Think about it. The drug runners for the Navajas have to cross desert and mountain to cross the border. They lose most of them to dehydration and exhaustion. But the ID…”

  Peter was beginning to understand. “They don’t need water. And they never tire.”

  Lorenzo smiled. “See, I knew you’d get it.”

  “But where are you getting the ID from?”

&
nbsp; “I provided the Navajas with our precise drop coordinates and the drop coordinates for the ID. Their presence in the area caused HQ to modify the drop coordinates.”

  A light went off in Peter’s head. “The other two crates.”

  “Yes, the fact that two were dropped off away from the third crate was dumb luck.”

  “You can’t just take ID, Mike.”

  “Can’t I? I’ll just report that the mission was a sterling success, but we lost the ID. Lewis will be pissed, but we have more.”

  Peter had wondered if Lewis was in on it. From Lorenzo’s remark, he guessed not. “Lewis?”

  Lorenzo waived his hand dismissively. “He’s just an administrator, a paper-pushing moron. He’ll never know the details. He deals in broad strokes. I expect that I’ll receive a promotion and run this outfit as I see fit, killing terrorists and making money.”

  A promotion. Peter knew that would only happen upon his death. “And Lockwood?”

  Lorenzo smiled wickedly. “Oh, he’s just waiting for me to finish with you.”

  Hence the ride-along as an ‘observer.’

  “So it was you who tipped off the Navajas in Tijuana?”

  “Actually that was Lockwood. But you can’t be too hard on him, Pete. He didn’t even know you yet.”

  “So you’re a drug runner now, Mike.”

  “Oh, don’t be so naïve, Pete. The army moved opium in Viet Nam while doing their sworn duty to fight communism. Besides, the Navajas are small potatoes. The Order for International Liberation’s the big fish. They’re the real threat.”

  “Mike, don’t give me that end justifies the means bullshit.”

  “Pete, it’s like the war on gangs. You’ve got to team up with the little gangs to nail the big ones. How do you think the FBI took down the mafia? Deals with the small fish, that’s how.”

  “Spare me. You’re just a sleazy opportunist, plain and simple.”

  “Which brings us to one all important question, Pete. When opportunity knocks, do you answer?”

  “You’ve got be kidding me, Mike.”

  “Pete, remember when I went to your house? Remember we talked about belonging to something? Well, this is your chance to belong to something.”

  “You are so self-deluded.”

  “Pete, we’re doing good. We’ll cut you in. Your brother, too.”

  Peter felt his men get antsy. They noticed they weren’t in the equation. Peter made a sweeping gesture with his hand.

  “You’re going to bribe the whole goddamned platoon, Mike?”

  “They’ll be unfortunate casualties on the maiden voyage of the Insidious Drones. Heroes, actually.”

  The men began to stir, and the Navajas inched in closer, guns trained with itchy trigger fingers.

  “So what do you say, Pete?”

  He would not be the lone survivor again. This time he would go down with his men. “Take my brother.”

  Carl looked alarmed. “Pete…no.”

  “And you, Pete?”

  “I’ll share my men’s fate.”

  Lorenzo shook his head disappointed. “I thought you might say that. In fact, it’ll be perfect. I’ll just tell good ol’ Major Lewis that you caved under the stress and went bonkers, killing your own men.”

  Peter looked around. “So what now, you’re going to shoot us?”

  Lorenzo put his finger thoughtfully to his lips. “No, then it wouldn’t look like an accident. There’d be an investigation, ballistic reports. There can’t be anything left to analyze.”

  Peter knew what that meant. The ID were stirring in the cenote, and they were hungry. They were always hungry.

  “In the olden days, British naval officers punished their own by making them walk the plank,” Lorenzo gloated.

  Peter looked at him incredulous.

  “Oh, come on, Pete,” Lorenzo said in exasperation, “I don’t have to sketch it out for you, do I?”

  Peter reached down and grabbed his rifle. The Navajas brandished their weapons menacingly. Lorenzo put up a dismissive hand.

  “It’s okay, muchachos. The guns are useless anyway. It might buy them an extra few seconds as melee weapons.” He looked right into Peter’s eyes. “My gift to you, Pete.”

  Peter looked around at his men.

  “We have to go in that hole, Pete, don’t we” Carl asked, his pitch high. “I’m not going in that hole.”

  Lorenzo picked his teeth with his fingernail casually. “You all have until the count of three. Jump into the cenote, or I’ll be forced to gun you down.”

  “But that wouldn’t look like an accident, Mike,” Peter retorted in a last ditch attempt.

  Lorenzo shrugged. “You know what they say about best laid plans.”

  Peter heard the ID writhing around in the cenote behind him. In that brief moment, he weighed being shot against being torn apart.

  “One...”

  If shot, he’d be dead. If he dove into the cenote he’d have a chance. Not a good chance. Hell, not even a slim chance. But it was a chance.

  “Two...”

  He looked over at his brother.

  “Jump, Carl.”

  “Pete, I can’t…”

  “THREE.”

  Pete turned and jumped into the pit. He heard gunfire from up above. He landed hard on a bunch of horizontal ID and was rolled off onto the rock floor. He was lucky. It was a pack of humpers who were too occupied with their necrophilia to notice him.

  He heard several other people drop. Some were not so lucky. Undead hands reached out for them and held them fast as jaws of death clamped down on their flailing limbs.

  He hit an ID in the face as one approached him. “CARL! CARL!”

  He looked around frantically for his brother as the cave was filled with the echoes of screaming men. Some were screaming in pain, others in terror.

  The ID were swarming everywhere, and it was difficult to see. There were clouds of white in the air. The ID had disturbed the cocaine being stored down there.

  “Pete…PETE.”

  “Carl, go into the water!”

  Peter waded backwards into the cool spring water as bats flapped their wings in protest at the ruckus below. A few ID followed him, reaching out for him. He felt necrotic fingertips brush the front of his suit, unable to grab hold.

  Peter bashed another in the face with his rifle as he saw Carl wade into the water still clutching his MR.UD. When Carl caught up, they were waist deep. The water was frigid due to lack of direct sun exposure.

  “What are we going to do, Pete?”

  “We go deeper into the cave.”

  They waded in further. Within minutes, they were treading water as several ID stumbled in after them. Several other soldiers made it into the water.

  “Pete, the ceiling is dropping.”

  The ceiling of the cave was sloping down to meet the water.

  “Where are we going?”

  Peter looked behind him. The top of his helmet was now scraping the rough ceiling. The water was up to their chins, and the bobbing motion of treading water caused the crisp water to enter their mouths.

  The pursuing ID, not knowing how to swim, were at this point under the water. Peter imagined feeling cold, dead hands grabbing at his ankles.

  “Carl, we need to dive down.”

  “But what’s down there?”

  “It might lead to another cave. Some of these cenotes are connected.”

  “And what if it doesn’t lead anywhere, Pete?”

  “Then I guess we’ll die. But we’ll definitely die if we let them catch up to us.”

  Carl looked at him wide-eyed and shivering, and not just from the temperature of the water.

  This was it. Do or die.

  “Just trust me, Carl. Follow me.”

  Carl nodded.

  Peter took a deep breath and held it. He dipped under the surface of the water. Carl dipped down too.

  Under the water, Peter shined his shoulder light. There was a small hole about
twenty feet away. He began to swim for it. Carl followed.

  Peter quickly passed his rifle through first and then squeezed through it, tearing his suit. God he hoped it led to another cave. Otherwise, they were trapped underneath and running out of air fast.

  Carl passed his apparatus through and then began to squeeze. He felt some resistance, but it took him a moment to figure out that it was not the size of the hole.

  Something had his left ankle.

  He began to kick wildly, expending the breath that he was trying so hard to conserve for as long as he could.

  Peter saw his brother struggling, but he was running out of breath. His only option was to find air and come back for his brother.

  He looked up and only saw ceiling. His heart was beating faster, and that profound wave of panic was beginning to take over.

  In the meantime, Carl had wriggled free. He passed Peter and continued down the narrow conduit. Peter followed behind him. Both pushed against the rock with hands and feet.

  As their panic mounted and their bodies began to squirm involuntarily due to the panic of oxygen deprivation, they squeezed through as the walls became narrower and narrower.

  Carl squeezed through and shot straight up without looking, praying not to hit rock ceiling. He breached the surface above and gasped loudly as his lungs soaked in sweet air.

  Peter popped up next to him, gasping, choking, and clawing at Carl.

  “P-Pete. We…did…it.”

  Pete held onto Carl as if his life depended on it. Carl backstroked over to rock, dragging his brother with him. They waited until they caught their breath, and then they pulled themselves and each other up onto the cold, jagged rock.

  Peter put his head back on the rock while Carl looked around. “You were right, Pete. It’s another cave.”

  Peter was panting, but he sat up and surveyed their surroundings. A few heads popped up in the water. Some others had made it through.

  All in all, there were now eight of them left. The other SWEEPER had made it through with his apparatus too. It was their training. Army did not part easily with their equipment during combat. In total, there was Peter, Carl, Mirabella, Barnes, Munger, Hasbro, Smithe, and Longo.

  Peter looked up and saw daylight. It was a way out. But this opening couldn’t have been much farther away from the original cenote.

 

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