Rogue State (Fractured State Series Book 2)

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Rogue State (Fractured State Series Book 2) Page 29

by Steven Konkoly


  “They wouldn’t risk one of their cowardly drones in this weather,” he said, gathering the tablet and phone. “Is everything set?”

  The team leader assured him that nothing would get through the ambush point.

  “Perfect. I need to make a quick call. Marcos, I’ll meet you at your observation post.”

  “It’s an honor, boss,” said the team leader. “You can fire the first RPG.”

  “I would like that,” said Sergio. “As long as everyone else is firing at the same time. It’s been a while since I’ve used one of those.”

  The men laughed for a few seconds before excusing themselves to leave. Sergio dialed his own boss, who was probably watching the storm arrive from his air-conditioned mansion on the outskirts of Phoenix. Rank had its privileges. Hopefully in a year or so, some of that privilege would find its way into Sergio’s pockets. He was getting tired of driving through the desert, shaking down his Wastelands fiefdom.

  “It’s done?” asked a digitally altered voice.

  “Twenty minutes or so. I’m heading out to personally oversee the ambush.”

  “I’m counting on you, Sergio. There was a big fuckup this morning down in Nogales. El Pedro was killed.”

  He hadn’t heard any of this. “Killed? By the organization?”

  “No. No. He was killed on the highway, trying to run these people down. Don’t take any chances.”

  “We’re not taking any chances. I have enough firepower to stop an army battalion in its tracks.”

  “Good. Call me as soon as it’s done. How is the storm out there?”

  “Coming in fast,” said Sergio. “We’ll be stuck here for a while.”

  “That’s a smart call. This is one of the biggest I’ve seen in a while. Phoenix is completely dark right now. Power is going down everywhere. Make sure to call me.”

  “I will, jefe.”

  His boss didn’t ask about the drone, though he surely knew it had gone down. This told Sergio that their targets were extremely important. He pocketed the phone and grabbed the assault rifle leaned against the table, then nodded at Jorge. “Let’s go.”

  Stiff gusts of wind pelted him with sand as they jogged toward a rusted-out school bus parked perpendicular to the highway in a gas station parking lot. A half-dozen derelict cars lay in the desert scrub next to the lot, many of them hiding cartel gunmen. An RV park entrance across the highway, flanked by several gutted mobile homes about thirty feet back from the road, housed a second team. The third group was spread out to the immediate north, manning heavy machine gun positions hidden in the brush on both sides of the road. Nothing was getting through this gauntlet.

  The bus’s folding door opened when they arrived, revealing Marcos in the driver’s seat. Sergio pushed his goggles onto his forehead and stepped inside, surprised to find that it was mostly sheltered from the weather. A few broken windows on the side let in air, but the bus wasn’t filled with sand like the restaurant. He had just found his new headquarters for the night.

  Marcos led them to the back of the bus, which faced the highway. From the backseats, they had a nice view to the south, despite the rapidly decreasing visibility. A colossal wall of sand, stretching as far as he could see in either direction, loomed thousands of feet over the eastern horizon, in stark contrast to the blue skies and scattered clouds to the west. They’d be digging out from this one.

  “Crazy, isn’t it?” said Marcos, gesturing to the sand cloud. “I hope they get here before this hits. A storm like this might stop them on the road.”

  “That’s why I picked this shithole town. They’ll see it on their maps and slog it out to get here, no matter how bad it gets.”

  “That’s why they made you the boss,” said Marcos, pointing at him.

  He didn’t like the way Marcos said that, and he certainly didn’t appreciate the finger pointed at him. They hadn’t made him the boss—he’d earned the position. Maybe Marcos’s question in the restaurant hadn’t been so innocent. He’d deal with this later. Marcos pressed a finger to an ear, listening to a transmission over the radio net. Sergio had forgotten about his earbuds. He reached into a pocket on his tactical vest for them, but the conversation had ended by the time he’d stuffed them in his ears.

  “What’s up?”

  Marco pointed south, down the road. “Same car that passed through a few hours ago is on the way back.”

  “Scouts,” said Sergio.

  “Must be. They didn’t see shit on the way through. Everyone was out of sight.”

  “They wouldn’t come back through if they saw anything, so we should be able to take them by surprise. Hit them with RPGs. I don’t want them warning off the others.”

  “You want to do the honors?” he asked, lifting an empty RPG-9 launcher from the seat behind them.

  “No. I’d like to make sure we hit the car on the first try,” said Sergio, pressing the “Transmit” button on his vest. “Team leaders, I want you to coordinate a simultaneous RPG strike on the car coming through. Use it as practice for the convoy.”

  “Binoculars?” said Marcos, holding a pair out for him.

  “I’ll use my rifle,” said Sergio, unslinging it and aiming south.

  Through his magnified sight, the road came in and out of view between billows of sand. The vehicle appeared, headlights announcing its presence long before the rest of it materialized. When it reached the first SUV on the opposite side of the highway, trails of smoke raced forward from hidden positions on each side of the road, simultaneously slamming into the car an instant later.

  CHAPTER 57

  Jose stared at his phone, puzzled. From what he could tell, the satellite network hadn’t disconnected the call. He had full coverage, so he assumed that the scout team was in the same situation, unless the storm had somehow hampered the signal. From what he knew about satellite communications, he didn’t think that was the case.

  “Pull over,” he said over the radio net.

  “What’s up?” said David, following the lead vehicle to the shoulder of the road.

  “I just lost contact with Ranger. There was no interference or signal bleed. They were there one second, gone the next.”

  “Dead battery?” said David.

  “They know better,” said Jose. “And they have a backup.”

  He activated his tablet and examined the satellite map. The scout team had just reentered Wikieup, twenty-two miles away. They had cleared the town two hours ago, but a lot could change in a few hours.

  He saw a few options. The most prudent would be to turn around and connect with Interstate 10. He should have taken Jeremy’s advice on that one. They could have holed up near the California border and waited for the storm to pass. The only problem with backtracking was that they would undoubtedly get caught in the storm before reaching the interstate, running the distinct risk of having to pull over and ride out the storm even deeper in cartel territory. The closer they got to Interstate 40, the better.

  Zooming in on the area around Wikieup, Jose noticed some possible side roads to the east. If they could sidestep Wikieup and get back to Highway 93, they could drive blind to Interstate 40 if they had to. GPS road mapping was accurate enough to keep them from driving off the road, if they didn’t push their speed.

  “Jeremy, I just lost contact with Ranger,” Jose said. “What do you think about trying to skirt around Wikieup? I see what looks like a partial state road leaving the highway south of the town,” he said over the net.

  “I see it. Route 159 . . . turns into Cholla Canyon Road?”

  “That’s it.”

  “That would get us around and put us about five miles above Wikieup. Might be a rough road, though. I don’t get the impression road maintenance has been a priority up here for a long time.”

  “I’d prefer a rough ride to another gunfight,” said Jose.

  “What about the river running along the road? Should be hard packed like cement.”

  “Should be, but we can’t afford to g
et a vehicle stuck. I’d rather crawl along Cholla Canyon Road.”

  “Copy that. I’ll input the route and make sure we can find the turnoff. Visibility will be shit by the time we get there.”

  Jose glanced out of the side window at the towering wall of sand. They really didn’t have much time before it enveloped them. The best they could do was get off the highway and move as carefully as possible.

  “All drivers stay as close as possible to the vehicle in front of you,” he said. “We can’t use headlights.”

  “We can pop a few IR chem sticks and tie them to the license plates,” said one of the drivers. “Night vision will pick those up through the dust.”

  “All right. Make it happen. Back on the road in thirty seconds,” said Jose, turning to David. “I got ours.”

  Jose fought against the wind to open the door, sand and pebbles blasting him when he stepped outside. The door slammed shut without his assistance. He walked to the back of the SUV, knelt behind the license plate, and removed a chem stick from his vest. Nathan appeared next to him, shielding his eyes from the blowing sand.

  “I got this,” said Jose, taking a small spool of parachute cord from a pocket.

  Nathan knelt next to him. “I’m a little concerned about riding this out in the vehicle. We have no way to keep the sand out. It’s already hard to breathe.”

  His concern wasn’t trivial. Jose had just been too preoccupied with the route and communicating with the scouts to address it. “We have some N95 respirators in the medical kit. I wish we had some heavier-duty breathing gear.”

  “The respirators will help for now. I’m more concerned with later. This storm could last several hours.”

  “Once we get off the highway and find a safe place to stop, we’ll work on plugging all the cracks. It’s the best we can do,” said Jose. “Let me finish up here and grab the med kit.”

  Nathan nodded. “Do you really think the scout team got hit?”

  “I don’t know,” said Jose. “Wikieup is the only town with more than one or two buildings on Highway 93, so it would be a logical place for an ambush—especially with the storm heading in.”

  Jose cut a section of cord and looped it through the end of the chem stick, tying it to the license plate holder.

  “You forgot to crack it,” said Nathan.

  Jose laughed. “A lot of good that would have done us.” He took the plastic tube in both hands and bent it until he heard it snap, mixing the IR-emitting chemicals. To the naked eye, nothing appeared to have changed.

  “My dad used to bring home boxes of them when I was a kid,” Nathan said. “We gave them away as party favors at my birthday parties. He could be cheap like that.”

  “I bet you were pretty popular with your friends,” said Jose, standing up.

  “Not really. All the other parents did the same thing. I didn’t go to school off base until ninth grade.”

  Jose smiled. “I’m looking forward to meeting your father,” he said, patting his shoulder.

  As soon as they’d shut the car doors, the convoy rolled forward, quickly picking up speed. Jose distributed the respirators, keeping his in the center console so he could talk over the radio net without sounding garbled.

  By the time they reached the turnoff fifteen minutes later, the sky had darkened to the point where he could barely see the outline of the SUV in front of them. Brake lights glowed weakly from time to time, illuminating the sand blowing between the vehicles. Jose reached into the foot well and pulled his helmet off the floor. He knew from experience that everything was about to go pitch-black. With the helmet tightened in place, he lowered the night-vision goggles and found the chem light on the rear of the first SUV, which burned brightly through the sand.

  “Can you see him turning?” asked Jose.

  “Barely,” said David, tapping the brakes.

  “You have at least twenty feet separation. You’re good. Start easing us over in four. Three. Two. One. Start the turn. I’ll tell you when to straighten out.”

  Their SUV followed the lead vehicle onto Route 159.

  “Right here,” said Jose. “What can you see now?”

  “Brake lights. Kind of.”

  The storm had swallowed them.

  CHAPTER 58

  Keira adjusted her son’s mask and held him tight. The inside of the SUV was faintly illuminated by the dashboard, the outline of David’s head barely recognizable through the dust suspended in the air. Judging by the rising tension between David and Jose over the road conditions, she suspected they were about to stop.

  “Do you hear that?” said David.

  “What?” said Jose. Keira hadn’t heard anything either.

  “Sounds like explosions—and gunfire. I can’t tell the distance.”

  She didn’t like the sound of that. A quick glance over the seat didn’t reveal anything unusual. The rear vehicle hadn’t been visible for several minutes. Keira assumed if they were under attack, she’d see gun flashes. Same with the lead vehicle. Still invisible.

  “I can hear it, too,” said Nathan.

  “I don’t hear it,” said Jose. “All units. My driver reports possible gunfire and explosions. Distance unknown. Can any of you confirm?”

  “This is lead driver. Affirmative. Lots of gunfire to the west.”

  “Confirm. Multiple explosions,” said another operative.

  “Copy that,” said Jose. “Let’s stop here to assess the situation. Jeremy, see if you can identify a place to pull over and wait this out.”

  “Already on it,” said Jeremy.

  “I’m gonna get out,” said Jose. “Try to pin this down better.”

  “Are you sure that’s a good idea?” said Keira.

  “If we can’t see them, they can’t see us,” said Jose, opening the door and triggering the dome light.

  So much for nobody seeing us, Keira thought. Nathan reached up and turned it off as a fresh load of sand and debris swirled through the cabin.

  “Close the door, please!” she said.

  When the door slammed shut, the wind settled—but Keira didn’t. “This is ridiculous! Owen is wheezing!”

  “No, I’m not, Mom,” their son protested.

  “Well, I’m having a hard time breathing,” she said. “So you are, too.”

  “There’s nothing we can do about it, honey,” said Nathan, stroking her sand-covered face. “We’ll be fine. When the storm passes, we’ll cruise right up to Vegas.”

  Keira tried to let his gentle touch calm her, but she’d built up an emotional head of steam. “I feel like this is my coffin,” she said, straining to hold back a full breakdown. “All we do is go from one coffin to the next.”

  “Honey,” he said, leaning his helmet against hers. “This is probably the safest place in the world right now. Nobody can see us. Not even with night vision.”

  The front passenger door opened, blasting them with hot air and dust as Jose jumped in.

  “What’s happening out there?” said David.

  “Sounds like a battle going on in Wikieup,” he said, sounding concerned.

  “Who are they shooting at?” said David.

  “I don’t know,” said Jose. “It doesn’t make any sense.”

  That was the last thing she wanted to hear right now. While Jose barked orders over the tactical net, Keira felt the cabin shrink and darken. The warm windows drew closer. She had to get out of here.

  “We need to get out of these vehicles!” she yelled, surprised by her voice.

  Shit. She was coming unglued. Calm down. She had a thought and started laughing quietly.

  “Are you all right?” whispered Nathan, probably worried that she’d gone from screaming to laughing without any kind of transition.

  “I think I’m fine. Kind of,” she said, stifling a laugh.

  “What’s so funny?”

  “I just told myself to calm down and take a deep breath, but I can’t really take a deep breath with this mask on, or the dust floating around
. Good thing I don’t have allergies,” she said, laughing again.

  Nathan laughed. “I’ve had to stop myself from telling you to breathe deeply like five times already.”

  “This is unbearable,” she said calmly.

  “I couldn’t agree with you more, but—”

  “We’ll be fine,” she said.

  “I’d kiss you, but I’m pretty sure that’s logistically impossible wearing all of this gear.”

  “They probably design it that way.”

  Jose interrupted the moment. “We’re moving about three hundred yards down the road. Jeremy thinks we can slide into the riverbed at that point and shelter under a raised riverbank.”

  “Has anyone checked the river?” said David, beating her to the question. “It may not rain often, but it does still rain out here.”

  “We’ll check it out when we get there,” said Jose. “Hang in there, guys.”

  The SUV slowly rolled into the pitch blackness, on what promised to be the longest three-hundred-meter trip of Keira’s life.

  CHAPTER 59

  Nathan strained to catch the slightest glimpse of the SUV ahead of them, intermittently rewarded with a dull red glow that faded as quickly as it appeared. Jose and David communicated quietly, their urgent back-and-forth conversation inspiring little confidence in the backseat. He glanced out of the passenger door window, seeing nothing but a faint reflection of his own silhouette. Someone could be standing three feet from them and he’d never know.

  The SUV jolted to a stop, the already strained conversation in the front seat taking on a more desperate edge. He squeezed Keira’s hand.

  “We can’t just sit here,” hissed David.

  “I’d have to send a team on foot to scout the approach, and they can’t see more than a few meters in front of them. It’s too risky.”

  “This road isn’t exactly a secret,” replied David. “They obviously knew we were coming up 93, which means they had a lookout somewhere south of here. It won’t take them long to figure out we didn’t backtrack to Interstate 10.”

 

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