Apocalypse Burning (19 page)

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Authors: Mel Odom

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BOOK: Apocalypse Burning
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Shutting Goose out of ops was behavior Remington had exhibited before. This increased distance between them served as a silent reminder that they were officer and first sergeant now instead of equals and an official notice that Remington didn’t like having his authority questioned or negated in any fashion. If Remington discovered that Goose actually talked with Icarus, the first sergeant knew the captain would have him up on charges immediately. Goose refused to worry now because he knew that when Remington needed him, all would be forgiven. The only option at the moment was waiting it out.

Besides that, there wasn’t much Remington could plan or strategize that would surprise Goose. Most of Remington’s actions were dictated by the amount of damage the Syrians had caused during their latest attack. During the recovery briefing, Goose had organized most of the mission and tasking lists himself, only passing them through Remington’s office for the rubber-stamp treatment.

The few changes the captain had wanted had been cosmetic things, timing issues, or inconsequential items that served only to remind Goose who was in charge. Remington hadn’t wanted to deal with the day-to-day nuts and bolts of command. Goose knew the captain was striving to find some way to come out a winner. That was Remington’s nature, and that was what made him an excellent officer.

“Check the clearance,” Goose ordered. He turned from the privates and peered out at the street.

Rain drummed the broken concrete and poured into the gutters. The streets flooded quickly because Sanliurfa wasn’t designed to handle this amount of precipitation. A cargo truck sped by, and its tires whistled wetly as they plowed through standing water.

Private Malone talked quickly into his headset, identifying Goose and letting the security detail know Goose wanted to see the captain. A moment later, the security teams inside the building cleared Goose.

After he entered the door, a two-man security team met Goose. They flanked him without talking as he headed for the stairwell to the left that led to the underground basement where the command post nerve center was set up.

As he glanced around the open area of the office building’s main lobby, Goose saw that security in all the areas had been stepped up. All the security personnel were Rangers. No one had notified him that security for the ops center was being bumped up.

He took the stairwell down, wishing he’d taken the elevator, but he was too proud to favor his injured knee like that. He gritted his teeth against the throbbing pain and kept the knee in motion.

The office building was one of the newest constructions. It had leased space to companies and corporations all over the world. Those companies and corporations had been some of the first to evacuate Sanliurfa after the first wave of SCUDs.

The basement area had been designed to withstand terrorist attacks and even operate cut off from the rest of the city for a time. Auxiliary generators kept the power on to the belowground offices even in times of power outages.

Goose and the privates’ footsteps echoed in the hallway as he followed the familiar path to the command post’s nerve center. When he entered the room, Goose was surprised at the amount of activity. Evidently Remington had called all three shifts in.

The large room was darkened except for the pale, glowing light of dozens of computer screens on desks as well as on walls. As Goose’s gaze swept the monitors, he noted instantly that many of the op techs were watching satellite pictures of the area around and north of the Turkish-Syrian border. Ordnance tape held thick, fat serpents’ coils of cables together and fastened to the tiled floor.

“When did we get satellite access back?” Goose asked.

“I’m sorry, First Sergeant,” one of the two privates accompanying Goose replied, “but we’re not at liberty to discuss anything happening here at this time. Captain’s orders. We’re on a communications blackout with the rest of the military. Our guys as well. Everything in this area operates on a need-to-know basis. So far, you’re not cleared for that knowledge.”

So we’ve got satellite access and we’re not telling the U.N. Peacekeeping force’s commanding officer or Colonel Mkchian of the Turkish army,
Goose thought, and immediately felt uneasy. When those two men discovered that Remington had somehow gotten access to a satellite array, Goose knew the relationships among the three military teams were going to be strained. The strategy wasn’t the wisest in the present situation because the secret could divide loyalties, but Goose knew Remington had chosen to play it that way because the captain kept total control. Remington worked to keep control of everything he was involved with.

The Ranger captain stood at the back of the room in front of a huge wall screen. When Remington’s cybernetic ops teams had first hit Sanliurfa, they’d made the rounds among the computer stores and shops and salvaged every bit of equipment they could, adding to what they already carried and replacing what they’d had to abandon at the border. In hours, they’d cobbled together a nerve center that looked like it could have managed space-shuttle launches.

Remington was talking to a man in civilian clothes. At first Goose thought the man might be one of Cody’s CIA operatives. Goose’s stomach clenched, and his mind filled with questions as he considered the possibility that Remington was working with the CIA. That might explain the satellite access. Goose couldn’t help wondering if the CIA had finally caught up to Icarus and if the rogue agent had told Cody and his people that he had told Goose everything.

When the man turned to face Goose, the first sergeant saw something predatory in the man’s gaze. Even standing there in Kevlar with his assault rifle and sidearm, Goose felt more vulnerable than he had on the battlefield. The man was tall and bald and broad. A mustache and goatee marked his Middle Eastern features. But his clothing was expensive, a European suit that hadn’t come off the rack. A dangling earring in the shape of an upside-down pointed star hung from his left ear.

The man smiled at Goose, but there was nothing friendly about the expression. The first sergeant almost felt like he’d been threatened.

“Captain,” one of the privates said just before they came to a stop a few feet from Remington. “First Sergeant Gander reporting, sir.”

Reading the situation, Goose remained at attention. He watched as the scenes shifted on a rotating basis every few seconds. The big screen was divided into eight sections, all of them showing Syrian armor and troop movements.

“At ease, First Sergeant,” Remington said.

“Yes, sir,” Goose responded. “Thank you, sir.”

The two privates took three steps back, but never left Goose unattended.

“What brings you here, First Sergeant?” Remington asked.

“The rain, sir.” Goose felt foolish as soon as he gave the answer. He’d wanted to say more, but his instant read of the captain’s mood had shut down his enthusiasm. Also, the guilt for having talked to Icarus behind the captain’s back and telling Baker about it came fullblown to the surface.

“You came here to tell me it’s raining?” Remington waved a hand toward the computer screens. “I know it’s raining, First Sergeant. I can tell you all of the immediate vicinities where it is raining. In just a few seconds, I can tell you where it is not raining.”

Goose tried to ignore the biting sarcasm embedded in each word the captain spoke. “With the rain, Captain, I doubt very much that the Syrians will move their armored cav units.”

“No, First Sergeant, they are not moving. Nor do they show any signs of moving until this rain stops. I’ve already confirmed that.” Remington waved to the screens where Syrian T-62 and T-72 tanks sat alongside BTR-60 APCs and artillery field pieces covered by tarps and tied to stakes hammered in the ground.

Goose tried not to let the cold distance in Remington’s tone throw him. “I thought we might discuss possible strategies for taking advantage of this reprieve, sir.”

“That’s commendable, First Sergeant,” Remington said, “but I was already starting to plan those strategies forty-two minutes ago when I learned the unexpected storm front was gathering.”

“We have satellite access again, sir?” Goose asked.


I
do.” Remington nodded.

“I wasn’t aware that the U.S. satellites were back online. The media people still seem pretty much out of the loop and don’t have access to these connections.”

“The U.S. satellites are not back online, First Sergeant.”

Goose thought about that. The mil-sat systems the Rangers presently tied into were part of the same system that supported the American media efforts. If he wasn’t using those, that meant Remington had an outside source for the feeds on the screens.

“You have feeds,” Goose stated.

Remington turned and looked at Goose. “Yes, I do, First Sergeant. And I’m considering my options at this point. With the Syrian cav units temporarily immobilized, I intend to capitalize on their weakness. We are a Ranger unit. We specialize in hit-and-git strikes when the time comes. At present, I am identifying targets and examining possible courses of action.”

“Yes, sir.”

“When I find something you’ll be useful for, First Sergeant, I’ll send for you.”

Even in the darkness, Goose felt heat fill his face. “Yes, sir.” OCS might have placed bars on Remington’s shoulders and taught him about diplomacy, command history, and how to conduct himself in the upper tiers of the military, but Goose knew he was as wellinformed about tactics, weapons, men, and materials as Remington was. The only thing the captain had over him at the moment was access to enemy intel.

Remington turned from Goose. “You can also discontinue the need for weather reports, First Sergeant. Although I appreciate your zeal, I’d rather get them the modern way.”

Something’s going on,
Goose realized. He’d rarely seen Remington so cold and contained. Although their relationship was sometimes rocky, as all relationships got at times, Goose could count on the fingers of one hand when Remington had gone out of his way to pull rank so harshly. And the captain never pulled rank in front of other members of the team unless dressing Goose down was an object lesson to the others and put them all on notice, uniting them and letting them know that their fates depended on how well they served their captain.

“Don’t you have ops you should be overseeing, First Sergeant?” Remington asked, shifting his attention back in Goose’s direction.

“Yes, sir.” Goose pulled his right arm up in a salute.

Remington cut him a brief salute and turned away.

Dismissed abruptly, knowing Remington had stopped just short of being insulting, Goose performed a sharp about-face that set his knee to screaming. He managed three steps before Remington called for him.

“First Sergeant Gander.”

Goose turned, on the defensive at once and feeling helpless. When they were sergeants together, Goose had taken offense at the smug tone of superiority Remington often evidenced. The captain had better diction, was totally comfortable at a general’s black-tie affair, and had master’s degrees in history and political science—from college courses taken while he was a sergeant and aiming for general—to fill in the lulls in conversation.

During the seventeen years of their association, Goose had never felt intimidated by Remington when it came to the hands-on grunt work of soldiering. Only in the occasional social circles or around women had Goose felt somewhat at a loss. Remington could be the life of the party, and he always had two or three good-looking women hanging around him.

“It has come to my attention that the void left by the death of First Lieutenant Tarver as my executive officer in the chain of command has yet to be filled,” Remington said, facing Goose again.

“Yes, sir.” Goose also knew that the captain hadn’t had a single problem using him as executive officer. They’d worked together as a team for years. They knew each other’s moves. None of the lieutenants available to replace the XO had that kind of knowledge.

“I’ve rectified that by placing Lieutenant Perrin as my XO as of this morning.”

Goose knew Perrin and didn’t care for the man. Nick Perrin was twenty-nine years old and had come into the military as an officer out of college. The fact that he hadn’t advanced past lieutenant in five years spoke volumes. However, Perrin was devious and smart as a weasel, making him one of Remington’s immediate selections for the group of hard cases the captain kept for ops that didn’t run exactly by the book.

“Understood, sir,” Goose said.

Remington waited, probably thinking that Goose might want to comment on the selection.

Goose wanted to comment but knew that the effort would do no good. The fact that Remington had selected Perrin out of three other lieutenant choices within the Rangers spoke volumes. Perrin had been chosen for two reasons that Goose could see. One reason was to get back at Goose because Remington knew Goose didn’t approve of the lieutenant, and the other was to make certain Remington could operate any questionable activities in plain view without meeting Perrin on the sly. That didn’t mean that Remington’s black ops would take place aboveboard, but Perrin’s constant presence wasn’t going to be questioned.

“Comments, First Sergeant?” Remington invited.

Goose knew better than to bite. “No, sir. I understand, sir. I’ll be awaiting your orders or Lieutenant Perrin’s, sir.”

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