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Authors: Vaughn Heppner

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BOOK: Invasion: Colorado
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“I heard what this traitor said,” hissed Valdez. He glared at Paul. “Do you think you can
buy
my forgiveness?”

“Apparently not,” Paul said.

The Colonel began to cough and his gun-hand lost strength so he set the weapon on the floorboard, although he kept his hand around the butt and his finger curled around the trigger.

The Mexico Home Army soldiers in the truck stared at Paul and stared at Romo.

“He needs medical help,” Romo said. “I doubt he’ll get it if he shoots the American.”

“Traitor,” Valdez hissed so spit flew from his mouth. A particle landed on his chin as he raised the gun.

Before he could fire, the driver lunged into the truck. The man had a leopard’s swiftness. He grabbed the gun and twisted. A shot rang out. Amazingly, the bullet hit no one.

The captain and his MPs raced back. “What’s going on here?” he demanded.

The driver had ripped away the pistol, holding it in his hands. With hostility in their eyes and as they gripped their weapons, the others in the truck watched the MPs.

“The Colonel is delirious,” Paul said. “He thought we were Chinese soldiers and fired at us.” Paul put his fingers on the end of the stretcher. “Come on, Romo, give me a hand.”

Paul dragged the Colonel out of the truck-bed and Romo grabbed the other end of the stretcher.

“Let him go with the Colonel,” Paul said to the captain. He used his chin and pointed at the driver. “The others can wait.”

“The others can walk along I-70 with everyone else,” the captain said. “Only the wounded are getting a ride out. Well, he can go, I guess. But don’t give
him
the gun until he’s well.”

“I won’t,” the driver said.

“Come on,” Paul told the driver. “I’ll show you the way.”

Paul and Romo carried a sick Colonel Valdez onto the Chinook, laying him down among other wounded.

Valdez’s hot eyes flickered open. “This changes nothing,” he told Paul.

“No,” Paul said. “You’re wrong. This changes everything. I just saved your life. Heck, I probably saved you from jail, too, or from the firing squad. That’s what would have happened to you if you’d killed me.”

“My men—”

“Would have been badly outnumbered here,” Paul said. “Anyway, just shut up for change. I’ve listened to you rant before. The way I figure it is that you owe me big time. Most people are grateful to someone saving their life. How about you: are you an ingrate and a dog, or are you a man who pays his debts?”

Valdez’s eyes seemed to burn hotter.

“Think about it,” Paul said. “What I know is that I’ve paid you back for what happened to Maria. There isn’t any more guilt in my heart that you can tap. If you keep coming after me, I’ll kill you just like the assassin Santiago that you sent after Romo.”

“Words,” Valdez said with a sneer.

“It’s time to start channeling your anger the right way,” Paul said. “Kill the Chinese, drive them home and then worry about your stinking honor, as worthless as yours is.”

“No one speaks to me like that.”

“You ready?” Paul asked Romo.

“Si.”

“Then let’s go. Be seeing you,” Paul told the driver. “And thanks. I owe you one.”

With that, Paul left Colonel Valdez in the Chinook, which took off five minutes later. It was strange, but it felt good saving a life for once instead of taking it, even that of a man who hated him.

 

 

BEIJING, PRC

 

Shun Li knelt in the cage with the small polar bear cub. The fur was so soft and she loved listening to the little fellow as she held the milk bottle for him.

He sucked strongly, drinking deeply. The Chairman no longer let the mother bear pace in the next chamber, watching. Shun Li smiled. She wondered how much longer she would get to do this.

She’d been agonizing over the correct course of action. The Police Minister’s plot continued apace. She had written many reports for Xiao, and his questions about the Chairman and his Lion Guards had become very pointed. She enjoyed Tang and his rough lovemaking. She loved this little polar bear cub. But she did care for either enough to die for them?

She had come to wonder if the Chairman’s days were numbered. China’s armies had suffered hard defeats. The North American conquest hung in the balance. How could the Chairman defeat Xiao if the military backed the secret policeman?

She stroked the cub’s fur as he suckled.

“You love him,” the Chairman said.

Shun Li twisted around in fright. She hadn’t heard the Chairman sneak up behind her. Tang waited with Hong.

There was one thing about Tang that impressed Shun Li. The Lion Guardsman never acknowledged her while he was on duty, never winked or joked. He acted utterly like the Leader’s protective guardian. He was loyal.

“I have been studying you,” Hong said. “And I have finally reached a conclusion.”

That sounded ominous. She tried to smile, but failed. So she went back to helping the cub suckle the bottle.

“There,” Hong said, as if speaking to Tang. “That is why I trust her. She loves the cub. Xiao Yang could never love.”

“He loves China,” Shun Li heard herself say.

“He is a fanatic,” Hong said. “He has always been a fanatic and it warps his judgment. I’ve begun to wonder if having Xiao around me has warped my judgment.”

Shun Li stared at the cub. If Xiao won, he would slaughter the polar bears. She sighed as she thought about that. She had spent a lifetime killing people. It had warped her. She had no doubt about that. Likely, she was going to pay a bitter cost for her killings. She’d fled to China to escape her fate, but it looked like that wasn’t going to happen.

She thought about an interview she’d had with Xiao several days ago. The Police Minister had almost seemed emotional, delighted as he told her about the Behemoth Manufacturing Plant. It had proved much smaller than her estimate. He had wondered aloud if she had doctored her document. The threat was obvious. He would tell the Leader about the forgery if she did not do exactly as he wanted.

“Sir,” Shun Li said. “I have something to tell you.” As she squatted before the cub, holding the bottle, she twisted around.

“The Police Minister has…forced me to write reports about my visits here.”

Hong glanced at Tang. When the Leader looked at her again, he seemed like a different individual. His eyes had hardened and his lips firmed.

“The Police Minister spoke with Marshal Gang in his office,” Shun Li said. “It occurred the day the heavy lasers destroyed many Behemoth tanks.”

“Gang was in Beijing?” the Leader asked.

“Yes sir.”

“You have evidence of this?”

“Only the evidence of my eyes,” Shun Li said. “And that of the two East Lightning operatives who escorted me to Xiao’s office.”

“So…” Hong whispered. The Chairman of Greater China began to pace before her. “The Army thinks I am weakened by these temporary setbacks. Yes, the marshals are clever. They realize they must pry me from my secret police.”

Hong stopped, and he stared at the cub suckling from the bottle. The Leader stroked his chin.

“The polar bear is an unpredictable beast,” Hong said. “Often he lazes on the Arctic ice. He will amble in peace and go away if a man approaches him. Sometimes, however, the polar bear turns savage, and then nothing can stand before him.”

Chairman Hong smiled. “Shun Li, you can love. Do you love China?”

“Yes Leader.”

“Then you must aid China this hour and help me decapitate the cancer in charge of the police. You will go the Police Ministry. You will take Tang and several other Lion Guardsmen. You must know the passwords.”

“They change every day.”

Hong made a decisive gesture, chopping the air with the edge of his hand. He had a new ring, and it glittered golden in the light. “Listen to me, Shun Li. There is a secret to power that I am about to share with you. Strike first and strike hard. Do you understand?”

Shun Li stared at Hong.

“I will tell you another secret. I can only trust those who love, as you love. I have searched long and hard for a new Minister of Police. I believe you are that person, Shun Li. Are you ready to risk everything for China?”

She nodded, wondering if Hong’s plan had any chance of success. Then she realized it was her only hope. She might have been Xiao’s knife or means to get to the well-guarded Chairman. But Xiao was a crocodile who would eat her without pause. The Chairman was eccentric and strange. But he could love, and that made him more human.

“When shall I go, sir?” she asked.

“As soon as you are done feeding the cub,” he said.

Shun Li nodded, and wondered what the next few hours would hold.

 

 

IDAHO SPRING, COLORADO

 

Jake, Goose and the Lieutenant were dug in outside of Idaho Springs. The city was in the mountains, thirty miles from Denver. It was nestled beside I-70 and the town had become the forward point against the Chinese still in metropolitan Denver.

As often happened in war, the military seemed to change its mind abruptly. The survivors of the siege of Denver formed the core group of soldiers holding the line here. Soon came regular food, new uniforms, weapons and plenty of air and artillery support. If the Chinese wanted to knock them out of here, they were welcome to try.

Several drafts of Militia replacements had already joined them out here. The Lieutenant had persuaded the Director to bump Goose to sergeant. He didn’t enough sergeants and if he was going to run a full-strength platoon, he needed more.

For Jake, the reward came when the Lieutenant escorted him to the Battalion comm-shack.

Sergeant Jake Higgins and the Lieutenant stamped their feet on a pad outside the shack and then entered the warm room.

“Heaters,” Jake said. It was like a different world in here.

“Go outside for a bit,” the Lieutenant told the comm-operator.

“Orders are strict, Lieutenant,” the operator said. “I can’t do that while someone else is in here.”

The Lieutenant didn’t hesitate. He drew his pistol and put the barrel against the operator’s stomach. “Let me ask you a question. Do you see the captain in here or am I the highest ranking officer?”

The frightened operator looked down at the gun and then up into the Lieutenant’s face. The operator appeared as if he wanted to say something. Finally, he gulped and hurried outside.

“I’m going to make sure he stays out until you’re done,” the Lieutenant said.

Jake stared at the man, the fanatic who had fought the hardest these past months. This crazy, ardent nationalist had turned out to be his good comrade at arms. They had gone to the wall for each other and they would continue to do so.

“Thanks,” Jake said.

Without another word, the Lieutenant went outside.

Jake used the code words given him. He had to provide them several times. Finally, his father appeared on the screen.

“Dad,” Jake said, grinning from ear to ear.

His father stared at him and tears welled in his eyes. It made Jake’s ears tear up too.

“Jake,” his dad said. “You’ve alive.”

“Yes sir, so are you.”

“Oh, Jake, it’s so good to see you.” His old man wiped his eyes.

Jake did the same to his.

“Where are you?” his dad asked.

“Idaho Springs. We’re all that’s left from the siege.”

Colonel Stan Higgins grinned. “Have you phoned your mother yet?”

“She’s next on the list, Dad. Hey, I’ve seen some footage. You did a real number on the Chinese armies that killed a lot of my friends.”

“We did our best,” Stan said.

“Guess what. I’m a sergeant now. I guess I made it off the bad list and onto the good.”

“You’ve made me proud, Jake, very proud.”

“Is America going to hold this giant pocket and round up the Chinese in it?” Jake asked.

Stan became grim. “This is more than a giant pocket. It’s most of Third Front. The Chinese can’t afford to let us capture more than a million of their soldiers. Heck, it’s probably closer to two million. But to answer your question, it’s going to take a lot more fighting before these soldiers surrender.”

“Do you think they will try to get out this way through Idaho Springs?”

“It doesn’t make any strategic sense for them to try that. I’m thinking you’ve seen the worst of it.”

That was good news, but who could tell?

“Son, I want you to call your mother. I have her number and a priority clearance you’ll need to get through to her. Call her. Tell her you’re well. Don’t tell her anything about the fighting, though.”

“I understand, Dad.”

Stan Higgins grinned. “I’m so glad you’re well. Call me again after you’re done with her, if you can.”

“Yes sir.”

Stan grinned even wider.

It made Jake felt great. He nodded, and then he broke the connection and began typing in the code that would let him talk to his worried mother.

 

 

BEIJING, PRC

 

Shun Li figured the plan was crazy and far too risky. Didn’t the Chairman have any idea of the security arrangements around and in the Police Ministry? She’d even been bold enough to question the Leader directly on his insane plan.

“Guardian Inspector, you would be surprised what audaciousness can achieve in a situation like this. The key is twofold. Do not hesitate to kill and act with supreme confidence.”

She now sat in the back of a big Chinese four-door automobile. The vehicle lacked American aerodynamics and often struck her more as a giant metal box with wheels than a car.

A Lion Guardsman drove, and two others sat up front with him. Each wore body armor and the submachine gun they liked carrying. In back with her sat Tang and one other thickly built and heavily armed and armored killer.

A mere six of us to topple Xiao from power. This is preposterous
.

They passed several security checks without a problem. It was different at the guard shack before the great gray Police Ministry Headquarters.

The driver’s window rolled down. A stern-faced East Lightning operative looked in. “You are not cleared for entrance.”

“Show him your pass,” Tang whispered to Shun Li.

BOOK: Invasion: Colorado
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