Book Read Free

Extinction Aftermath (Extinction Cycle Book 6)

Page 15

by Nicholas Sansbury Smith


  There was a knock on the door that made Ringgold flinch. Flathman rounded a corner and vanished from the feed as she turned to see General Allen peeking inside the room.

  “What is it?” she asked.

  Allen stepped into the room. “We just intercepted an SOS from Commander Rachel Davis of the GW. She’s alive, Madame President, and she’s going to try to take the ship back. But she’s saying there’s a second ship already leaving the area.”

  “The other destroyer,” Johnson said. “That’s how they were able to capture the GW.”

  Allen nodded. “It’s the Zumwalt, sir. I just listened to the transmissions. Wood hailed the GW, pretending to be friendlies. Humphrey had no idea what was coming. Wood also had AH-6 Little birds in the area.” He paused and then said, “If the Zumwalt goes off radar and they escape, then we have more than just the GW to worry about…”

  Johnson dipped his head in defeat. “Guess we know where the stealth ship vanished to all those months ago. These ROT bastards have been planning this for a long time.”

  Commander Davis moved on all fours in the dense grass along the shoreline. Diaz crawled to her right, and a few feet ahead, Black’s thick Mohawk cut through the torpedo grass like a shark fin through water.

  In the distance, heavy smoke streamed out of the city. Davis coughed into her hand, wishing she hadn’t removed her CBRN suit. But she’d had no choice. The white suits made them stand out like ghosts in the night, and it wasn’t just the monsters hunting them now.

  The buzz of a helicopter sent Davis to eating dirt. She flattened her body in the mud and craned her neck to the sky. Two AH-6 Little Birds shot overhead with soldiers clipped to the sides. One of the men pointed in her direction, and Davis quickly averted her gaze.

  They had managed to evade the patrols all morning, but with the sun up it was only a matter of time before they were spotted. She was lucky Diaz had been able to get a call through to President Ringgold about the ambush with their satellite phone. As a communications officer, the lance corporal always carried it with her into the field.

  Davis kept her head down as the choppers circled. She still didn’t know much about this ROT, but she could see they were well trained and well equipped. Plus, they had her ship and a stealth destroyer.

  As soon as the birds passed over, Davis got back up and continued crawling. The GW was still anchored, but the sleek gray body of the Zumwalt was long gone. She had watched the ship sail hours earlier. There was no telling where they were now.

  This is your fault, Rachel. You should never have left!

  She had let her guard down. Part of her had thought rescuing those children might help relieve some of the pain from choosing her duty over her family at the start of the outbreak. Nothing could bring Blake and Ollie back, but maybe if she could save just one more person…

  Gritting her teeth, she fought back the painful memories. Her weakness had killed brave men and women on her ship. She had fallen right into ROT’s trap. Now she was on the run in a city still burning from the missile strikes she had ordered. If that wasn’t bad enough, there were men and monsters prowling the streets, hunting for her team.

  Quick and steady. Keep it quick and steady.

  If there was one thing she had learned in the past seven months, it was that she was never out of the fight. Even now, with enemies closing in from all directions she retained her killer instinct.

  The Little Birds finally abandoned their search. Black slowly rose out of the torpedo grass and waved to Davis and Diaz from the muck. He waded through knee-deep water, then ran up an embankment toward a bar called Bayou Joe’s. Docks with boat slips emerged to the west. She eyed the ride she’d chosen to get back to her ship, but first she needed a diversion.

  Davis and Diaz ran at a crouch toward Black. He propped a shoulder against a tree with a base that was twisted like a Twizzler. Slowly, he moved around the side and aimed his SAW toward a gravel road. Diaz took a knee and sucked down the rest of her water bottle. She dragged a sleeve across her lips and said, “What’s the plan, Commander?”

  “We have to get back to the ship before they leave,” Davis said. “I’m guessing that’s going to be soon, but they must still have soldiers in the field.”

  Black shot her a glance. “All due respect, but you gotta be kiddin’ me, ma’am. They got at least fifty men, bunch of them Little Birds, and hostages.”

  “What about the rest of the strike group?” Diaz asked.

  “Too far away,” Davis replied. “I’m sure they’re already inbound, but by the time they get here it’ll be too late.”

  “Maybe we should consider the GW a loss, ma’am,” Black said. There was fear in his voice, but he held her gaze. “Maybe we should let the big dogs handle this.”

  Davis shook her head. “Absolutely not. That’s my ship. I lost her once, and I got her back. I’m going to get her back again. I understand if you want to stay here and hide....”

  “I’m with you, Commander,” Diaz said.

  Black sighed. “So what’s your plan? Steal a boat and—”

  Raised voices cut him off. He ducked down and fell to his stomach. Diaz took up position behind a second tree, and Davis joined her.

  To the north, several soldiers in black CBRN suits walked down the gravel road. Several more men in white suits trailed them, hands bound, and heads bowed.

  Davis centered her M4’s optics on the prisoners, focusing on a face that looked even worse than when she had seen it aboard the GW a few hours ago. Blood dripped down Sergeant Marks’s battered features. He shuffled along with the other two Marines toward the docks.

  The hum of engines came from the south. Two black Zodiacs coasted over the waves away from the GW, packed full of ROT soldiers. There were two fire-teams—far too many to engage.

  Black looked to Davis for orders. It pained her to do it, but she flashed the signal to stand down. He flared his nostrils and pushed his eye back to the optics on his SAW. She wanted to tell him to open fire, but she couldn’t risk it. Not with those reinforcements on the way.

  Davis waited in silence, listening to the chirp of bugs and the buzz of the distant helicopters. Flames ate the city to the west. Her skin was coated with soot and ash, and her lungs burned from the smoke. Diaz and Black were waiting for her next orders, their faces filthy and apprehensive.

  They had to do something. Davis refused to just sit there while a bunch of terrorists stole her ship.

  Diaz’s eyes suddenly went wide, and she jerked her mud-streaked chin toward the water about two hundred feet away from the Zodiacs.

  Waves moved across the surface as if miniature submarines were gliding underneath. They fanned out into three, then six different arrows. Davis spotted rough, armored shells just beneath the surface.

  “Juveniles,” Diaz whispered.

  Davis centered her M4 back on the dock. Sergeant Marks stood at the edge, a gun pointed at his back. The other two Marines stumbled up to his side. The team of ROT soldiers hung back with their weapons shouldered. They were going to execute the Marines.

  Marks turned toward the men. “You’re not going to get away with this you sons of bitches! Admiral Humphrey will have you all hanged for treason.”

  Davis shook her head. Sarge was about to get himself and the other two Marines shot.

  One of the ROT soldiers let out a muffled laugh. “Humphrey is dead, you old prick. Now shut your mouth, or I’ll put a bullet in it.”

  Marks took a step backward, and Davis lowered her rifle, her stomach dropping like she was about to jump out of a plane. Humphrey was dead?

  This is your fault. You’re the reason he’s dead. You should never have left the ship, you selfish…

  The anger and shame almost caused Davis to do something stupid. She was halfway to pulling the trigger, and damn the consequences, but she forced herself to stand down. She took
in a smoky breath and reminded herself of the truth.

  You didn’t kill Humphrey. These terrorists did.

  She took in another breath and exhaled. She couldn’t lose her cool now.

  Quick and steady, Rachel. You got this.

  The curved backs of the juveniles cut through the water as the beasts surfaced. They were swimming toward the Zodiacs. Despite their armored shells, they were fast—much faster than their Variant parents.

  Davis waited for the monsters to attack. It would buy her a window to take out the soldiers guarding Marks, but it could also end up giving away their position. If things went south, she didn’t want to engage half a dozen juveniles and three teams of ROT soldiers.

  She had two choices: Fight, or sit here and watch whatever happened next.

  It took a glance at the horizon, where the GW waited in the sparkling water, for Davis to make up her mind. They would kill the ROT soldiers guarding Marks and the other Marines as soon as the juveniles attacked the men in the Zodiacs. Then they would steal the ROT uniforms as disguises to get back onto the GW. It was a long shot, but this was the best and only opportunity she would get.

  The crafts coasted over the waves, drawing closer by the second. The soldiers in the bow jolted up and down, unaware that Davis was already choosing which of them would die first. She zoomed in on a face obscured by a gas mask and made her decision.

  “Black and Diaz, you take the assholes on the dock. I’ll focus my fire on the Zodiacs. Cover those Marines. Try to keep the juveniles away from them.”

  Together, the trio crept into position.

  Davis kept her crosshairs on the soldier at the helm of the lead Zodiac. She was preparing to fire when the craft suddenly burst into the air, sending the occupants cartwheeling in all directions. A pair of juveniles surfaced, their maws snapping. One of the beasts jumped out of the water like a great white shark and clamped its teeth over the helmet and shoulders of a soldier. It dove back into the water with its prey and vanished under the surface.

  The boat landed a second later with a splash.

  Screaming, gunfire, and the screeches of enraged, hungry monsters filled the smoky morning air. The soldiers in the second Zodiac fired at the circling juveniles. Bullets connected with targets Davis couldn’t see.

  She trained her gun on the dock, where Marks and the two Marines were being pulled away by their captors. Four ROT soldiers forced their way past the men and took up position on the end of the dock.

  “Now,” Davis ordered.

  She centered her crosshairs on the two soldiers guarding Marks and his men. Her first shot clipped her target in the back of his helmet. Marks seized the opportunity to grab the rifle from the other soldier. An instant later, the other two Marines wrestled the final ROT man to the ground. Marks pulled the soldier’s knife and silenced him with a swift stroke across the throat.

  Black unloaded on the four men at the front of the dock. Splinters exploded as bullets tore up the wooden platform. One of the soldiers clutched his chest and fell into the water. The other three turned to fire on Davis’s position. Black killed another man with a shot to the throat before he was forced to take cover.

  Diaz let out a screech and dropped to the ground. Two rounds bit into the tree above Davis’s head. She cursed but didn’t have time to check on her bodyguard. She squeezed off three shots and crouched as another round punched into the bark where her helmet had been. Her next shot hit one of the ROT soldiers in his visor. She looked back at Diaz.

  “You okay?”

  “I’m good,” Diaz said. She quickly pushed herself off the ground. “Round hit my weapon. No harm, no foul.”

  Davis felt a swell of pride. The woman had conviction, a true warrior. She roved her gun back to the Zodiacs. Bloody bubbles frothed around the capsized boat. The men in the second craft continued to unload their weapons into the water around them. The three soldiers had no fire discipline, and the juveniles seemed to be waiting under the surface for them to run out of magazines.

  Smart, Davis thought. Too smart.

  Black continued to fire on the dock, taking out the last of the ROT soldiers. The men crumpled in heaps of twisted limbs.

  “Over here!” Davis shouted. She waved at Marks, who was busy relieving a dead man of his radio and SCAR. The other two Marines grabbed weapons, then followed the sergeant toward the shore.

  “Let’s go!” Davis shouted. She yanked Diaz to her feet, and with Black on point, they took off running.

  The guns on the Zodiac behind them went silent, one by one. Davis risked a glance over her shoulder just as a juvenile leapt from the water and tackled the final soldier. Bubbles surrounded the sinking craft. A hand broke the surface, and then a face.

  “Help me!”

  Davis would have shot him to end his suffering if it had been one of her Marines, but this man didn’t deserve an ounce of mercy. For the first time since the outbreak, she felt no sympathy for a human killed by the monsters. The ROT terrorists deserved to be ripped to shreds.

  -10-

  Horn and Beckham made their way through the streets toward the central embassy building. Dressed in civilian clothing, the two former Delta Operators walked unnoticed through the throngs of soldiers and the citizens of Plum Island. If it weren’t for their weapons, they might have been mistaken for farmers in their jeans and sweatshirts. But today they weren’t working the fields. They were headed to a meeting called by Mayor Antoine Walker. Every man and woman who could fire a gun had been invited to the embassy to discuss the recent attack.

  The event had cast a dark shadow over the island. Everyone seemed to be paranoid. Civilians huddled together, talking in hushed voices. On a normal day, the market would have been a bustling hotspot. Usually carts full of fresh produce would be lining the streets, and government employees would be handing out boxes of food to citizens in exchange for ration cards. Beckham had been looking forward to cashing in some credits for a pumpkin as a surprise for Tasha and Jenny.

  “Think we’ll hear anything about Fitz and Ghost?” Horn asked. He walked through the town square sucking on a cigarette and showing off his muscles and tattoos beneath rolled-up sleeves.

  “Not sure, but I’m going to ask.”

  “I wouldn’t worry too much, boss. Fitz knows what he’s doing. And the folks he’s got with him on Team Ghost are supposed to be some of the best.” He paused. “I mean, besides us. Obviously.”

  “Shit, I can barely even walk a straight line today. That son of a bitch tased me twice.”

  Horn chuckled. “I can’t believe you punched Durand in the face. Not saying he didn’t deserve it.”

  Beckham grinned back, but even that was painful. His entire body ached from digging the day before and the shocks from the Tasers. He still hadn’t fully recovered from the toxins that had ravaged his body, either. The pain was worse than he let on, but he didn’t want to be put on permanent desk duty. That might kill him.

  They continued through the deserted market quickly, passing stall after stall of corn, potatoes, squash. It was all there, and there was plenty to go around, but no one was buying today. Everyone was either at the embassy or at home with the doors locked.

  “So you’re going to have a boy,” Horn said. He took a drag off his cigarette, then exhaled smoke through his nose. “I really thought you guys were going to have a girl.”

  Beckham smiled. “I think Tasha and Jenny are disappointed. They better not gang up on him. Having two older sisters isn’t easy.”

  Horn laughed again, but then his expression turned serious. “I just wish Sheila was here to see them grow up with your son.”

  “I know, Big Horn. I do, too.”

  “I also wish Sheila would have met Kate. I think they would have really liked each other.”

  Beckham looked down at the ground, not sure what to say. Horn rummaged in his shirt po
cket and pulled out a small envelope. He opened it and tipped out a ring set with a modest diamond.

  “Had this all this time. Chow brought it back for me from Bragg. He couldn’t, you know, bring Sheila home, but this was the next best thing. I want you to have it. I think Sheila would have wanted that too.”

  “Ah, man, I can’t accept…”

  Horn pushed his hand toward Beckham. “You’re gonna marry Kate, and you’re gonna need a ring.”

  Beckham picked up the band with trembling fingers. “Thanks, brother.”

  “Love you, bro,” Horn said.

  Beckham slipped the ring into his pocket with the picture of his mom, then reached out and gave his best friend a one-armed hug.

  “I love you too, Big Horn.”

  They pulled away and continued through the market, walking in silence for a few minutes, both of them lost in their memories. As they approached the end of the market, Horn said, “So, you got a name in mind for your son?”

  “We’ve talked about it…” Beckham hesitated, not wanting to bring up more painful memories. But hell, it wasn’t like they were gonna forget the ones they had lost if they stopped talking about them.

  “Javier Riley,” he said at last. “After her brother—and our brother.”

  For a moment, Horn didn’t say anything. Then he clapped Beckham on the shoulder and said gruffly, “That’s a good name, boss. But why not Javier Alex?”

  “We considered using his first name, but in the end decided it would be better to use Riley to help carry on his family name…”

  A gust of wind bit into them, providing a momentary distraction. Horn shielded his precious cigarette with a hand and eyed a pair of Medical Corps officers walking by. The two soldiers smirked at them.

  “Fuck you lookin’ at?” Horn asked.

  One of the men hesitated, but the other said, “Come on, we’re going to be late.”

 

‹ Prev