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Agent Hill Super Boxset: A Gripping Espionage Thriller

Page 59

by James Hunt


  The blades from the choppers grew louder, and Sarah left Grimes to whatever fate the CIA had in store for him, though she didn’t think he would give himself the chance to be taken alive.

  “It’s over, Hill!” Grimes’s voice carried through the woods as Sarah sprinted away. “You don’t have anywhere to run! Your boss, your colleagues, the entire GSF is done! You hear me? Everyone knows your face now! They’re all coming for you! You’re dead!”

  Sarah kept the steady pace of her jog, and before she was even a quarter mile from the cabin she heard the sound of the gunshot echo through the forest air. There was only one, as she expected. Grimes’s job was done. But hers was just beginning.

  13

  The mood in the conference room had turned a complete one-eighty from the previous hour. Mack, Mallory, and the NSA, FBI, and Homeland directors remained seated, watching the feed from the body cams on Mallory’s people.

  Mack watched Mallory sift through the emails on his phone, confirming what Sarah had seen in Grimes’s cabin, and watching Mallory’s expression. It matched exactly how Mack felt; shocked. And after decades in his profession, he hadn’t thought that was possible anymore.

  In hindsight it all made sense. Out of all of the assets that the United States intelligence agency had to boast, there was one that put it a step above, and that was its clout. Grimes didn’t need anything but a vehicle to frame the GSF for the very deplorable acts it was trying to stop. And in one swoop not only did Grimes expose his agency to the world, he pitted the CIA against them to completely sever any and all chances of escape.

  Mallory leaned forward and was the first to speak. “Gentlemen, I need the room for a moment.” The NSA director looked as though he was going to speak up but kept his mouth shut. After a lingering pause, the intelligence directors rose from their seats and left the room, shutting the door behind them.

  Mack kept his phone underneath the desk, away from Mallory’s field of vision. And while he didn’t turn his gaze from Mallory’s, his fingers moved swiftly over the tiny keyboard.

  “I think you know what has to happen now, Mack.”

  “I could use a refresher,” Mack said. “For once, I’m in a bit of unfamiliar territory.”

  “You saw those emails. You saw what Grimes planted.” Mallory stood, quickly. “Every intelligence agency across the world thinks that you’re the bad guys and Grimes just credited the CIA with ousting you to the world.” He spread both palms against his desk. “That’s not something we can take back.”

  Grimes had played his cards well. Using Mallory’s secure account and forging those documents would force the CIA’s hand. If they admitted that the correspondence was fake, then they would be admitting to helping the GSF in its “terrorist” activities.

  “It would be World War III,” Mallory said, his face gone pale now. “I can’t let that happen.”

  “No,” Mack said, finishing up his message and then hitting Send. “I suppose you can’t.”

  Mallory walked over to Mack’s side of the table and sat on the edge. “It’ll be a circus in the beginning, but I might be able to convince the committee hearing in charge of our appropriations to give you a trial behind closed doors. It’ll be quick and fairly painless, but you’ll need to cooperate.”

  Mack placed the phone on the desk, the screen now completely black, and folded his hands, one on top of the other. “You do what you have to do.”

  Less than a minute later, Mack Farr was arrested by the FBI for terrorism and espionage against the United States of America.

  The communication device in Sarah’s ear fried before she even made it out of the forest, which meant one thing: the GSF had gone dark. She ripped the device from her ear and chucked it into the woods. She navigated through them to a small town, where she hijacked a truck and drove the nine hours back to New York City.

  Hidden among the masses on the streets by the unassuming GSF headquarters building in downtown Manhattan, Sarah noticed the sunglasses-wearing figures positioned around the area, watching the entrance from several different locations, including the roof of the adjacent building.

  Now dressed in a large overcoat and hat, Sarah looked like just another face in a city of millions. They couldn’t see her, no more than they could see what Grimes had really done. She started to turn away but stopped, her head craning around for one last look at a place she wasn’t sure she would ever see again.

  Sarah hoped everyone had gotten out in time. She thought they had. After all, Mack had had plenty of time to sound the alarm once Grimes made his dying confession. Now all she had to do was wait for Bryce to reach out per protocol.

  By the time she arrived in Brooklyn, the hunger plaguing her stomach was enough to make her want to snatch the burrito out of the hands of some kid she passed. However, she restrained the urge and settled for a meal at a small diner on the next street corner.

  She had enough cash to go wherever she wanted, but even after she filled the nagging hunger in her stomach, a large portion of her wanted to return to HQ and thump every last one of those CIA badge-carrying cronies on the back of the head, strip off their clothes, and then hang them by their ankles from the side of the building to spell out the words, “The CIA All-Male Nude Revue!” But if she did, the likelihood of her making it out without drawing more attention to herself was zilch.

  The waitress came and retrieved the cleared plate of meatloaf, mashed potatoes, and green beans. “Anything else?” The girl had a pleasant smile, but it was the eyes that triggered a thought deep within the recesses of Sarah’s mind. The fact that she hadn’t thought of it sooner soured the food in her stomach and nearly brought it right back up. “Hey, are you all right?”

  Sarah fished out a handful of bills and slapped them on the table, not bothering to count it after she noticed the twenty among the cluster, and sprinted out the door. Becca, Sarah thought. Matt, Ella.

  If her name and face were plastered around the international intelligence community, then it wouldn’t be long until the world knew about her family. And if they wanted to get to Sarah, then that’s where they would start.

  Storefronts passed by in a blur as Sarah ran down the sidewalk, some of the front doors open in the cool spring air, and she heard the faint echo of a phone ring. She slowed her pace, and the ringing stopped. When she approached the next door, another phone rang, and she heard the shopkeeper answer.

  “Hello? What?” Confusion and shock riddled the old man’s face as he turned to the front window, locking eyes with Sarah immediately. He lowered the receiver and called out to her, “It’s for you!”

  Sarah burst inside, snatched the phone from the old man’s hands without a word, and pressed the receiver to her ear. “Bryce, the kids, I—”

  “Mallory already has them,” Bryce said, his tone defeated. “I tried to send out the call to the extraction team nearby, but Mack triggered the blackout sequence before I had a chance. By the time HQ was emptied and I got set up at the satellite location, they were already gone.”

  A sinking feeling pulled Sarah’s stomach away from the rest of her body. She tightened the grip on the phone, and her knuckles turned white. “Where did he take them?”

  “Langley,” Bryce answered. “That’s where they still have Mack cornered. It’s probably for the best they’re in custody. Because right now, you already have assassins from Russia, Israel, North Korea, China, France, Pakistan, India, and the UK hunting you down.”

  Bryce was right. Mallory didn’t have any direct link to what Grimes had done, and taking her family was more for show than anything else. Plus, as long as Mack was alive, he would keep them safe. The old bastard would die before anything happened to them. “When did the other agencies pull the trigger?”

  “The moment Grimes sent the emails.”

  That meant everyone had at least a ten-hour head start on her, which meant some of those spies were already Stateside. “Can you give me a breakdown of who’s coming?”

  “Yeah, an
d I’ll upload the coordinates of my safe house to your display. Grace is with me. Meet us here, and we can get a game plan going for what to do next.”

  “I already have a game plan,” Sarah said. “Be the one who shoots first.”

  Thank you so much for taking the time to read my story!

  Writing has always been a passion of mine and it’s incredibly gratifying and rewarding whenever you give me an opportunity to let you escape from your everyday surroundings and entertain the world that is your imagination.

  As an indie author, Amazon reviews can have a huge impact on my livelihood. So if you enjoyed the story please leave a review letting me and the rest of the digital world know. And if there was anything you found troubling, please email me. Your feedback helps improve my work, and allows me to continue writing stories that will promise to thrill and excite in the future. But be sure to exclude any spoilers.

  I would love if you could take a second to leave a review: Click here to leave a review on Amazon!

  Again, thank you so much for letting me into your world. I hope you enjoyed reading this story as much as I did writing it!

  Take care,

  James Hunt

  Agent Hill: In The Shadows

  1

  The harsh din of the alarm wailed in the same spurts as the flashing of the emergency lights that bathed the main floor of the GSF in red. Support agents stood hunched over their keyboards, their eyes darting across the screen as they cleaned their hard drives: classified documents, intelligence briefings, emails, everything. Once finished, they joined the mass exodus of personnel into the tunnels beneath the building that would lead them to their rendezvous points.

  One by one, the floor emptied, the hurried pace of footsteps and hastened shouts as deafening as the speakers blasting the evacuation notice, until there were only a few people left.

  Bryce Milks stood at his desk to extract the information from their building’s servers, shifting his weight from side to side as his eyes darted over the six screens that scrolled through trillions of lines of data and code. But instead of deleting the information like his colleagues, he was tasked with backing that collective information up to the GSF satellite. The same satellite that Grimes had used against them to trigger this very evacuation in the first place.

  “Bryce, we have to go! Now!” Grace jogged over from her desk and hovered close, glancing back at the locked doors and tugging on Bryce’s shirtsleeve.

  “Almost done.” Bryce stole a look at his laptop, which monitored the CIA and FBI agents slowly breaking through their security barriers outside, ready to whisk him off to some Guantanamo-style jail cell where he would be tortured until he turned or was killed.

  The doors burst open, and Hank entered, locking the doors again before he made the run over, his six-foot-six, two-hundred-fifty-pound frame rattling the floor. “The rest of the building is clear.” He gave a snarl that revealed the large gap between his front teeth as he gestured to the closed doors. “They’re coming up the stairs now, and they’ve cut the main power to the building.”

  “The generators will stay on until we’ve left,” Bryce said.

  The lines of code slowly disappeared from Bryce’s screens, and as they did, the monitors flicked off one by one until only the bottom middle remained. The sealed doors to their floor buckled from a heavy blow on the other side.

  “Bryce,” Grace said, tugging on his shirt.

  “Just one second, honey.” Bryce’s thin fingers flew across the keyboard in a blur, and another thump reverberated through the room as the FBI tactical team pounded against the reinforced doors. He snapped his head around and saw Hank draw his pistol. “Don’t shoot unless you have to.”

  Three more heavy smacks landed against the doors in quick succession, the last of which knocked the doors flat against the floor. Five FBI agents dressed in tactical gear rushed inside, and Grace yanked Bryce down as bullets zipped through the air.

  Computer screens shattered, and the composite desks splintered as the gunfire intensified. Bryce kept hunched low, finalizing the backup, and at last, the final monitor flicked off. Bryce reached into his desk drawer and removed the service pistol he had been given after his training eight years ago, which was exactly the last time he’d used it.

  Bryce slid his laptop into his pack, slung the straps over his shoulders, and with one hand holding the gun, he reached for Grace’s hand with his free one. “We’re good! Let’s go!”

  The trio kept low on their retreat to the building’s center staircase, which led down to the tunnels. The FBI agents kept close, clustering their fire down the narrow alleyways between the desks where Bryce led them past Mack’s office, where the glass walls cracked with each bullet that smacked against the surface.

  Hank brought up the caboose of their three-man train and returned fire in random spurts, with Bryce and Grace doing the same when they could manage. But the pistol in Bryce’s hand might as well have been a slingshot with rocks. Every squeeze of the trigger made the gun recoil and sent a jolt of pain from his wrist to his shoulder, missing his target every time.

  The group huddled near their escape door, and Bryce pressed his hand against the biometric scanner. A red beam of light passed underneath then switched to green, granting them entry. He grabbed Grace by the shoulder and spun her around to the door while Hank continued his cover-fire. “Grace, you first!”

  She hurried inside, and Bryce turned to Hank. He grabbed the meaty shoulder of the security guard, and just as Hank lowered his pistol, a bullet sliced through the big man’s right temple and exited his left. Blood and bone sprayed the wall, and Hank’s body crumpled into a pile of meat on the carpet.

  Bryce froze, staring at the dead eyes of the man in front of him—a man whom he had said good morning to every day for the past eight years. A man who had always greeted him with a smile and a friendly wave. A man who had stayed behind to make sure everyone got out safely.

  “Bryce!”

  Grace’s voice echoed from inside the stairwell, and Bryce quickly stepped inside, bullets connecting with the doorframe, then sealed the door shut behind him.

  The cacophony of bullets and shouts faded the farther Bryce and Grace descended the tight spiral staircase. Emergency lights guided their path, and when they reached the bottom and entered the hangar where the vehicles were kept, he entered the code to fuse the door shut.

  All but two of the cars had been used in the evacuation, and Grace sprinted to the one on the right, immediately going for the assault rifle in the trunk. When Bryce passed her on the way to the driver-side door, she looked around in confusion.

  “Where’s Hank?” Grace asked.

  Bryce opened the door and simply shook his head. A twinge of pain scrunched her face, but she jumped around to the passenger-side door, just as an explosion catapulted the sealed door off its hinges. Plumes of smoke crawled out like fingers, followed quickly by a host of FBI agents.

  Bryce cranked the engine to life, shifted into drive, and slammed the accelerator. The FBI squad unleashed hell, and while the car’s armor plates protected them from the worst of the bullets, the vibration from every hunk of metal shook Bryce’s fingers, which were curled around the steering wheel.

  “Bring up the evacuation route on the display!” Bryce said.

  Grace activated the small LCD screen in the center console, and a path was highlighted in bright green along the roads that would lead them to their safe house.

  “Route looks okay— Wait.” The path suddenly flashed red, yellow triangles enclosed around tiny exclamation points dotting the screen. “Something’s wrong!”

  Bryce slammed on the brakes, the FBI agents safely in the distance now. He examined the route. “There are sensors along the tunnels that lead us back to the main highways.” He shifted into reverse. “The authorities already have road blocks. We’ll have to go out another way.” He spun a one-eighty, shifted back into drive, and floored the accelerator. The wheels spun on the slick concrete
as they raced back toward danger.

  Grace tucked the butt of the rifle’s stock in the crook of her right shoulder, her eyes focused on the FBI agents gathering to intercept them. “You know the cars are only meant to withstand a certain level of gunfire before the bullets get through.”

  “Stay below the dash. The engine will block any bullets that get through the plates,” Bryce said.

  The engine revved louder, and the first bullet that hit the windshield made Bryce jump. The rest fell like a steady thump of rain. The storm worsened the closer they moved toward the agents, and the emergency sensors flashed their warning of heavy artillery.

  “Bryce!” Grace thrust a finger in the direction of the threesome that held the bazooka. Bryce swerved hard right and the RPG detonated into the asphalt next to the rear left tire.

  The repercussion from the blast shredded the armor and lifted the back wheels off the concrete. Bryce battled the momentum of the explosion, struggling to keep both hands on the wheel and his foot on the pedal as the blast was quickly followed up with more gunfire.

  “Check the alternative routes,” Bryce said, pointing to the display, which was still blinking its emergency warning.

  Grace disabled the alarm then scanned the roads. “I’ve got something that takes us over the bridges.”

  “How long?”

  “Five miles.”

  “It’ll have to do.”

  Light finally appeared at the end of the tunnel, and Bryce peeled off one of his hands and brought up the list of support agents that had fled the facility. “Looks like everyone checked out of the building all right.”

 

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