Read An Armageddon Duology Online
Authors: Erec Stebbins
“
T
hose were
soldiers
!”
said Houston. “We need to go back!”
The three stood in a stairwell, two flights down from Intel 1. The hacker Fawkes had just been killed in the office of John Savas—his head blown open from a sniper shot through the window. Sara Houston and Francisco Lopez had fled along with the remaining FBI agents, only to have Angel Lightfoote pull them to the side and toward a glowing EXIT sign.
“Trust me!
” she had whispered without further explanation.
For reasons Houston would never fully understand, she had. In a split second decision, she had followed the bald woman into the stairwell, Lopez behind them. They glimpsed at the last moment a group of soldiers pour from the elevators with weapons drawn.
Browning in hand, Houston began to climb the stairs. The muscled arm of Lightfoote held her back.
“We can’t!” she said. “There isn’t time! They’ll be looking for us. They’ll know soon we’re not with them.”
Houston nodded. “We’re wanted fugitives, I get it. But they’ve risked everything with us. I’m not going to abandon them now.”
Lightfoote shook her head. “Not for you. For me!” She removed a thumb drive from her pocket and brandished it at Houston. “Fawkes’s email and attachment. They want this! We can’t let them have it. Not until we know what it is.” Houston’s pause was all the assent Lightfoote required. “Now, let’s move!”
The FBI agent bounded down the stairs like a spider. Houston glared at Lopez who shrugged, and they followed after her, both struggling to keep up.
“Subbasement?” rasped Houston, glancing at the signs over the doorways.
Lightfoote landed heavily from a jump. “Yes.”
A door was ajar, the stairway ending in a dank and musty corner. The smell of rotten eggs assaulted them. Lopez grabbed Lightfoote with his good arm, the sling on the other soaked in sweat.
“Where are we going?”
Houston scowled at the dimly lit passageway in front of them. “The goddam sewers. That’s where.”
Lightfoote nodded. “These huge buildings produce a lot of shit. There’s got to be a connection to New York’s underground rivers. If we can get access, we can follow it to some of the manhole connections—maybe find one they haven’t welded shut. Come up on street level somewhere a little downstream.” She turned on the flashlight app of her smartphone. “There has to be an access door down here somewhere.”
There was. After several tense minutes of searching around pumps and other machinery, they found an iron hatch opening to the main sewer line. It required all the strength Lopez had left to pry it open, but soon they scrambled into the dark bowels of the city. A knee-high river of waste greeted them.
“Glad we skipped lunch,” said Lopez, holding his hand to his mouth.
Houston stopped Lightfoote with her hand.
“Okay, before we go any further, hacker girl, what the hell is going on? Who were those soldiers? What do you know?”
Lightfoote cocked her head to the side. “I don’t know. I feel it. Fawkes opened up Pandora’s Box, Sara. Bad things came out. The soldiers came out. They’re part of it. We have to see what’s in this file. That’s what they want. That’s why he was killed.”
“But you don’t even know what’s in that file!”
“Fawkes was a crazy bastard. That’s what I know. But we had a kind of sick relationship.” Lightfoote stared down into the darkness of the tunnel. “Whatever’s in this, it was everything to him. It’s why he did it all, brought the fucking world to its knees. He was trying to kill something. Something in this file.”
“This Bilderberg?”
“Maybe,” said Lightfoote.
Lopez shook his head. “And you think he’s right? You think his death and those soldiers are somehow related to this?”
“Yes,” she said. “Let’s just give ourselves the chance to find out, get a look at this, okay? Before they whisk us off to some dungeon somewhere.”
Houston stared into the green eyes before her. “Some dungeon? So that’s what’s going to happen to them? We left them to that?”
“I don’t know for sure.”
“But you feel it.” Lopez crossed himself. “God be with them. I know what the monsters do in those dungeons. I’ve seen the product up close.” He passed his finger over the stigmata on his forehead.
“All right,” said Houston. “Let’s get out of here. Get back to the apartment in Harlem. We’ve got computers. Internet access—to whatever’s left of it. We’ll see what we can find out there. And we better find something. Or we abandoned them for nothing.”
A
n old Chinese
couple crossing the street jumped backward and scampered away as a manhole cover rocketed into the air and landed several feet away from the dark hole. The iron disk wobbled like a giant coin to a ringing stop.
A bald woman in combat fatigues leapt out of the manhole, landing heavily on her feet. She drew a pistol and scanned around her, body in a tense crouch. Two others followed: a second woman covered in black, giving a hand to a large man in a flowing coat nursing his left shoulder.
Chinatown was empty, the old couple having thought better of continuing their walk. Shops around them were boarded up, many looted, debris and trash littering the roads and sidewalks. As the sun began to dip below the ridge of buildings in lower Manhattan, the three of them raced out of the road and into the alleyways, disappearing like silent shadows into the falling night.
T
he nightmare began as soon
as they exited the FBI Jarvits building. Savas glimpsed several black vans and military issue trucks parked outside, armed men lining the perimeter. Soldiers marched them in file to the convoy like prisoners of war, hostile eyes tracking their movements, weapons in plain sight and at the ready.
As they approached the vans they were separated, each directed to a different vehicle. Savas had only an instant to stare into Cohen’s eyes before the men jerked fabric over his head, leaving him in claustrophobic darkness. They cuffed his arms behind him, then roughly shoved him forward. He stumbled into the vehicle, smashing his forehead. A foot thrust him tightly into the corner and knocked the wind out of him.
“Shut up and don’t move, and I won’t have to use this.”
Savas could hear the static crackle of a Taser inches from his face.
Several heavy bodies dropped into seats around him before the door slammed shut. The engine turned over and the vehicle lurched forward into the streets of New York.
With no visual input his brain had nothing to offset the choppy movements of the drive. Growing nausea churned his stomach into a painful knot. He tried visualizing images with the movements, always a step behind, the effort hardly compensating.
God help me from getting sick in this bag.
He tried to guess their direction, the streets taken, hoping to learn where these men were taking them. But he failed. Within minutes, the vehicle’s jerky maneuvers had scrambled his sense of direction.
He guessed it had been half an hour when the van stopped abruptly, throwing his face into the chair in front of him. The impact gave him a black eye, and he tasted copper from a busted lip. Unable to wipe his face, the blood dripped through the hood.
“He’s a bleeder!” cried a man standing over him.
Laughter erupted. Arms hoisted him roughly to his feet and flung him out of the van. He forced himself not to gasp as his shoulder smacked the concrete. Pulling up slowly, he spit blood.
Focus, John.
He tried to slow his heart rate. He breathed deeply.
The sea.
The thick taste of brine and marine life penetrated the hood. The gull cries and sounds of waves told him all he needed to know. He’d been taken to a port, likely in lower Manhattan given the travel time. Boots rang on thin metal as a massive object thudded gently into the space before him.
A boat.
His other senses were primed, hearing and touch sharpened. He sensed the vessel and its weight rocking on the waves, knocking against the dock.
They’re taking me out to sea.
T
hey stowed
him roughly below deck, his wrists chained to the wall, the pitch of the boat sending another wave of nausea through him. They still hadn’t removed the hood, the fabric now glued to his face from clotted blood. He didn’t dare show any weakness or ask for aid. Whoever these men worked for, they had been instructed to treat him like the worst terrorist suspect. The implications sent a chill through him as he thought about Cohen and Miller, and what fate awaited them all.
At least he knew they would be together. The three had been split up, either for security or psychological warfare. Perhaps both. But their captors weren’t careful enough. He’d heard the high-pitched sounds of a woman’s voice—
Rebecca’s voice
—as she cried out, an impact sounding from her hitting the deck heavily.
She’s on board.
But he couldn’t let himself dwell on what had happened to her. He had to focus, keep his wits about him, and discover all he could that might aid in an escape.
But he wasn’t fooling himself. He’d known too many rendered terrorists, read too many reports, and could appraise professionally their situation. Statistically, escape was all but impossible. Only a handful had been recorded. As he fought off the bile climbing in his throat, he forced himself to face the truth—any attempts to escape, should they ever present themselves, would almost certainly end in failure. Probably in death.
We’ll have to work with them.
A recipe for Stockholm Syndrome. But the only hope for freedom, for survival, lay with their captors. Hope depended on meeting the desires of those now controlling their lives. Part of him wanted simply to resist, to find an opportunity to make a last stand and take down as many of them with him as he could.
But I’m not alone. Rebecca’s here.
Such a selfish death would not only break her heart, but would seriously endanger her life. He had to swallow his pride, his anger, suppress the desire to strike out. He had to act calmly. Shrewdly. He had to find a way to bring his captors to his side and convince them to release them. But without knowing who had taken him or why, it was impossible to know what to do, or how likely such efforts were to succeed.
The boat moved. He felt the random vectors of pitch, roll, and yaw from the waves give way to a clear direction. The sounds of powerful engines vibrated through the walls of the vessel. Kerosene fumes began to choke him.
The ship left the dock, but headed where, or why, he couldn’t guess.
“
H
oly shit
! Look at this!”
Lightfoote leapt across the cluttered floor of the dilapidated brownstone, holding a laptop in the air as she approached Houston and Lopez.
“A second, fly-girl,” said Houston, eyes focused on the deep wound in Lopez’s shoulder.
Lightfoote stared at the hulking form of the former priest, shaking her head.
Damn.
Even in the middle of everything else, he
was
distracting. His shirt removed, he resembled a bodybuilder more than a former math teacher. His pecs flared and his lats striated as he tensed from the pain. She watched Houston finish applying ointment and seal the wound with taped gauze.
“Healing?” she asked, impressed with the CIA agent’s field dressing.
Lopez grabbed his shirt and stood up. Houston exhaled. “Yeah, he heals fast. But it was an ugly gash. High caliber round ran like a spear through the muscle. But it’s closing well. Just need to keep it from infection. Couple weeks and he’ll be back in the ring.”
“Well, if blowing up bad guys gets boring, he’s got a career modeling for the Priest Calendar.”
Lopez smirked and turned away, slipping his shirt slowly over his head. Lightfoote’s gaze followed him as he walked to the window and stared outside.
“So, where’s the fire,” said Houston.
Lightfoote crouched and placed her laptop on the floor, turning the screen toward Houston. A series of colored strands ran across a map of the world in a diabolically complicated web.
More and more,
my
web.
“Remember this map?”
Houston nodded. “Yeah, your worm versus Fawkes’s. Yours were red? Looks like you’ve turned the tide.”
“Right?” Lightfoote grinned softly. “At this rate, just a few weeks and the danger’s gone. Well, millions of computers may still be infected. But my code isn’t going anywhere. It’ll take down any further attempts of his to spread. Best case scenario: we’ll just have a few years of flare ups before we can hunt down the last copies.”
“Congratulations, Angel,” said Houston, rubbing her temples. “You need a medal or something.”
Lightfoote breathed deeply. “Well, that’s the good news.”
Lopez turned around and walked over to the pair. “Sounded much too positive given current events. What else?”
“World’s gone to shit. Communication’s spotty from overseas. Media’s mostly down and what’s up is just broadcasting propaganda.”
“Propaganda?” said Lopez, crouching down and looking at the screen.
Lightfoote opened a series of windows. Headlines from newspapers appeared online alongside video from ashen-faced newscasters.
“A presidential
coup?”
said Houston.
Lopez touched a window filled with text. “York claimed emergency powers and dismissed Congress? Nation-wide martial law?”
“I told you it was Pandora’s Box,” said Lightfoote. “Times article has the most details. York annulled the constitution and suspended civilian courts. Half the military’s gone over with her, claiming extraordinary wartime powers. The other half is protecting members of Congress and attempting to end the coup.” She leaned back on her hands and looked between the pair. “Basically we’re in civil war, if you believe this.”
Lopez eyed her sharply. “Do you?”
“There’s a war on, that’s for sure.” She gestured at the screen. “The public opinion damage control is in full swing. But York, a dictator?”
Houston nodded, locking eyes with Lightfoote. “We met her. Only for a few minutes, but you learn a lot about someone when bullets and bombs are blasting around you. I didn’t see dictator in her.”
“I agree,” said Lopez. “But if we’re right, how do we explain this?”
“Assume there is a coup,” said Lightfoote, “but not led by York. What if in the chaos Fawkes unleashed someone else decided to play Beautiful Leader?”
“Right,” said Houston. “They’d need to sell their narrative. Slander York as the rebel, turn the population against her.”
“Which means they don’t have her,” said Lopez.
“Not yet, anyway,” said Lightfoote, pleased her new companions were so quick on the uptake. “But one thing’s for sure, we’re in a bad zone.”
Lopez cocked his head at her. “The press slant?”
“If they’re being fed this shit, we’re in hostile territory.” Lightfoote put her hands in her lap. “You said you left York at Mount Weather. That’s Virginia?”
Houston nodded. “Seemed safe at the time. Didn’t count on our government eating itself.”
Lopez laughed. “Maybe it shouldn’t surprise us. They sure have been quick to eat their own to cover dirty laundry. We know about that.” Houston winced, and he reached out, stroking her hair. Houston cupped his hand.
Lightfoote looked between the two, her voice raw. “Let’s hope the battle lines are drawn there.”
“And if they aren’t?” asked Houston. “If York’s inside enemy territory?”
“Then we’d better hope she got the hell out.”
The three sat in silence for several minutes. Videos of carnage and chaos looped on the laptop screen. Lightfoote fought to suppress the vague visions percolating within her. What had Savas called it?
Intuition
. Something Kanter and Savas had found useful to the Bureau. For Lightfoote, it was something else entirely.
Hypersensitive
. As painful as it was protective. Once burned, one detected even the slightest heat. And right now, the world was on fire.
“All right, been avoiding this one. There’s even more bad news,” Lightfoote paused. “I’ve tracked our friends.”
“How?” asked Houston. “Not their phones. We made sure to use phones without GPS.”
“Lots of ways to triangulate if enough towers are up. They’re coming back online.” Lightfoote entered several keystrokes, closed other windows and opened a map of the Eastern seaboard. A white circle blinked in the Atlantic, centered in a triangle of dots. “That’s Rebecca’s phone. John’s and Frank’s aren’t responding. I assume they were taken, probably destroyed. Maybe Rebecca managed to hide hers, stow it somewhere.”
“A bit of luck in a sea of disaster,” said Lopez. “And speaking of
sea
—what the hell is her phone signal doing there?”
“Remember Fawkes?” said Houston. “He wanted to base his operations at sea to avoid the chaos he produced. Maybe our coup leader had the same idea.”
Lopez leaned back and grunted. “But if they’re out there, it’s not on an armored yacht. If this is a military coup, our friends are likely secured on a naval destroyer.”
“Complicates a rescue mission,” said Lightfoote. Her stomach churned.
Houston shook her head. “Makes it
impossible
, Angel.” She placed a hand on Lightfoote’s shoulder. “I’m sorry.”
Lightfoote stood up and removed the thumb drive from her pocket, pushing the conversation from her mind. “So we deal with this, what we can. Maybe it’s the key to solving our crises, and finding our friends.”
“Assuming you can get into it,” said Houston. “Didn’t Fawkes taunt you that it was encrypted?”
“I’ve tried. It’s not going to be easy.” Lightfoote set her jaw. “But I’ve got some ideas. In fact, a bunch of people have a bunch of ideas.”