BRAINRUSH, a Thriller (37 page)

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Authors: Richard Bard

BOOK: BRAINRUSH, a Thriller
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On the way out, Snake and Ripper picked up Willie’s body. Tark tried to stop them; he wanted to do it himself.

“Hey, man,” Snake said. “He saved our asses too.” He motioned to the tunnel. “Besides, you got work to do.”

There were shouts from deep inside the tunnel and Snake and Ripper moved down the hill fast, Willie’s body held between them. Tark pulled up behind a rock outcropping at the second twist in the trail. With his back to the granite, he depressed the red button on the detonator.

The deep rumble from the subterranean explosions shook the ground under Tark’s feet. A thick wave of dust and gravel blasted from the mouth of the tunnel, pelting the rocks around him.

**

 

 

3:10
am

 

Battista’s anger surged at the sound of the twin explosions. “What the hell was that?”

Abdullah held his hand up as he pulled his buzzing comm unit from his belt and held it to his ear. He hit the transmit button. “Report.”

The expression on Abdullah’s face morphed from anger to fear. He lowered the comm unit. “The Americans blew up the mouth of the upper tunnel. There was a massive cave-in. The tunnel is sealed. Half of our men were killed. The remaining ten are returning here.”

Battista’s voice was controlled, but menacing. “So, your plan to flank the Americans has failed.”

In a blur of motion, Battista pulled up his 9mm Makarov and shot Abdullah in the forehead. The man’s head snapped backward and he slumped to the floor. The crack of the weapon froze everyone in place; the ping of the shell casing as it hit the floor was the only sound in the room. Battista holstered the pistol. He motioned to Carlo. “What are you waiting for? Get that locator on the child immediately.”

Carlo nodded and left the room. 

Battista grabbed Abdullah’s communicator from the floor and issued a series of orders that stopped most of his men from continuing up the narrow pass toward the clearing. He ordered fifty of them to backtrack into the lower caverns to use a little-known tunnel that led to the upper caverns. Most of the remaining men—over one hundred of them—would take various paths up and over the mountain to surround the clearing. It would take much longer, but they would not likely be ambushed in getting there. Only twenty of his men would continue up the narrow pass, where the Americans were surely expecting them.

Battista turned to one of his subcommanders. “Get ten men and meet me in the security room.”

**

 

3:10
am

 

Jake held back his panic, his thoughts embracing Francesca as he squeezed through the narrow opening.

Twin violent explosions shook the ground, stopping him cold. He heard the faint rumble of what sounded like a cave-in up ahead. Pebbles danced on the rock floor in front of his face. A thin mist of dust filled the space. Just as the shaking began to subside, a boulder dislodged itself from the ceiling behind him, pinning his feet. 

Jake’s heart leaped. 

From a place that he’d prayed had been long dead and buried, Jake let out a shrieking cry. “Francesca!”

Jake?

Her voice in his head?
Francesca?

Jake, I feel you.

I’m coming!

They know you’re—

Her voice faded away.

Francesca! Can you hear me?

 The brief connection was lost. Jake drowned his fears in a flood of determination. She was alive! 

Using his elbows, fingers, and toes, Jake crawled out from under the boulder and snaked his way down the narrowing walls of the tube. At its tightest point, he had to exhale in order to collapse his girth enough to wriggle through.

After that, the tunnel widened.

A glow of light shone from an opening in the floor about five yards ahead. He switched off the flashlight and inched forward. Peeking through the dust-filled air of the opening, he found himself looking at a loose pile of rocks and dirt on the floor of an earthen corridor carved out of the rock. Its ceiling was covered with air ducts, conduit, and fluorescent lighting that stretched in both directions. 

The cave-in had provided Jake his way in. 

He needed to find the security room.

Chapter 40
 

 

 

Hindu Kush Mountains, Afghanistan

3:12
am

 

J
ake dropped to the floor of the tunnel. The natural sweep of the walls and ceiling told him it was not man-made. The floor and walls had been cleared and smoothed by man’s hand, but the basic structure had been Mother Nature’s doing. The interior diameter was about the same as a commuter bus and Jake had the sense that the curving corridor snaked a fair distance in either direction. Fluorescent fixtures suspended from the ceiling drove away the shadows. Jake tasted moistness in the air.

An echo of angry voices and pounding feet rushed at him from around the bend ahead. He turned to run but thought better of it. He’d never make it out of sight by the time the source of the voices cleared the corner. Resisting the temptation to grab his Beretta from the folds of his
dishdashah
, he dropped his hands to his sides and walked toward the noise with an air of authority. 

It was time to put his new skills to the test.

The group of men running toward him looked like they had just escaped the bowels of hell and the devil was still on their heels. Most of them were covered in dark soot. Several bled from a score of minor lacerations. One man had blistering burns on his nose and forehead; his beard was scorched. They were all heavily armed. Jake figured they were the remnants of the group that had tried to flank the team through the upper exit. He prayed the explosions he heard had sealed it.

Stepping in their path, Jake held his palm in front of him. The group skidded to a stop. One man pushed his way to the front, his expression furious. 

Jake shouted in the man’s face in his native tongue. “What has taken you so long?”

The man’s initial expression of anger wilted under the force of Jake’s words. “But—”

“I don’t want to hear your excuses. You should be there already. We are under attack!”

“Yes, sir!”

Pointing at two men toward the back of the pack, Jake said, “You two, come with me to the security room. The rest of you, on your way while there is still time. Move. Now!”

Jake glared at the first group of men as they ran by. None of them met his gaze. The last two waited for his lead. He motioned with his head for them to move out in front of him. “Quickly!”

The two men hurried down the tunnel toward the security room with Jake on their heels.
So far, so good.

At the first fork the larger group split to the right. From their comments Jake suspected they were going to reinforce the troops at the main entrance. Jake and his two recruits took the left branch, which sloped down to a lower level. 

He overheard one of the men asking the other if he knew Jake’s identity. Before the other man answered, Jake barked at them. “Pick up the pace. Lives are at stake!” Jake laced his words with a focused stream of embedded emotion. He mentally attacked the two men, sending tendrils of fear into their thoughts, willing them to avoid upsetting the demon behind them. One of them sped up. The other staggered for an instant and then sprinted to catch up with his partner.

As the passageway leveled out, they passed several open rooms with laboratory and medical equipment. One room held a surgical table surrounded by an array of support equipment. Jake could imagine it being used by Battista’s doctors to insert the brain implants into their subjects. He wondered how many
jihadists
had received the improved devices in the last couple of days. Were some of them already on their way to America?

They passed room after room. The size of the underground facility was mind-boggling. Although the rooms were empty at this late hour, there were signs everywhere that they were actively used: water bottles left on a counter, patient folders stacked in vertical trays, the equipment clean and dust-free. According to Ahmed, the technicians and doctors would be in the lower caverns near the village getting a good night’s sleep before continuing their grisly work in the morning. 

Not if he could help it.

They passed an arched opening that widened to an expansive natural cavern. Jake slowed his pace to look inside. It was about the size of a high school gymnasium. A subterranean pond occupied the center of the chamber. Its mirrored surface rippled in expanding circles from drops of water slipping from one of several large stalactites that hung down from the forty-foot high ceiling. A string of incandescent lights along the walls illuminated the room, reflecting off thousands of sparkling quartz crystals embedded in the walls and ceiling.

But it wasn’t the natural beauty of the room that drew his attention. What caught his breath were the stacks upon stacks of weapons, ammo, and explosives that lined the perimeter, all stored on neat rows of industrial shelves pressed against the walls. 

Like a Costco for terrorists.
 

There were enough explosives here to obliterate a small city.

Jake turned his attention back to the two soldiers, hurrying to catch up before he fell too far behind. There was much more to this facility than Jake had ever imagined. 

After two more twists in the tunnel, the out-of-breath guards stopped at a heavy steel door. Anxious to be free of Jake, the first guard looked into a camera over the door, pressed a button on the wall, and said, “Azul, open up!”

 The door swung open. A security technician popped his head out. “I was told that the
sheikh
was coming, too. Is he with you?” 

Jake pushed by the surprised technician, glaring at the tech and the two guards. “The three of you stay put. Don’t let anyone pass without my authority.” Jake grabbed the comm unit clipped on the technician’s belt, stalked into the room, and closed the heavy steel door behind him.

Whoever the
sheikh
was, Jake wanted to be gone before he arrived. At this point, any hopes of installing the flash drive secretly had vanished. The best he could accomplish was to plant the drive in order to give Marshall access to the system—at least for a few minutes—and then get the hell out of there to find the girls. 

Three computer stations lined the perimeter of the small room. Each station had twin twenty-four-inch monitors. The overhead lights were dimmed, so the soft light from the computer screens lent an ethereal glow to the room. A wispy layer of cigarette smoke hung in the air. 

A young technician, barely out of his teens, stared at Jake from a seat at the center console. He crushed a half-smoked cigarette in a dirty ashtray next to his keyboard. Having overheard Jake’s barking command to the men outside the door, he stood and faced Jake with a worried expression.

“Seal the door,” Jake said. “The Americans are just outside!”

The technician’s eyes went wide. He sat down and spun to his keyboard. After a few keystrokes, Jake heard a soft click from the door latch. The tech spun around in his chair to find himself staring down the silenced barrel of Jake’s Beretta.

“Don’t even twitch. Stand up very slowly.” 

The tech stood, his hands extended to his sides, his shoulders slumped in submission. But the kid’s eyes betrayed his intent. Jake saw his pupils dilate from the surge of adrenaline. The technician lunged forward to grab the gun. Jake dodged to the left and squeezed the trigger twice. 

Both rounds hit center mass. The young man’s surprised gasp turned to a blood-filled gurgle as he collapsed to the floor. Jake placed his finger on the man’s neck to check his pulse. After the third beat, it stopped.

A surge of bile rose to Jake’s throat. He was out of his element. Taking a life was wrong; he knew it. But the circumstances forced him to banish his self-doubt, at least for now. Many more lives would be taken before this night was over.

Uncoiling the fifteen-foot Ethernet cable he had wrapped around his waist under his clothes, he stepped over the body and ducked down under the console to study the layout of the CPUs.  

The key to the “hack-proof” nature of the Zodar security system was that the server was physically and electronically isolated from the rest of the world. It couldn’t be hacked because it couldn’t be accessed. But the software program still needed to be updated online periodically. That meant an Internet server had to be nearby. 

Jake sorted through the wires behind the CPUs and identified the Internet server. Using his cable, he connected it to the primary CPU and slipped Marshall’s flash drive into a USB port at the back of the machine. As expected, Marshall’s password screen popped up. Jake sat at the terminal and started typing, recalling Marshall’s detailed instructions perfectly.

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