State of Emergency: Jack Emery 2

BOOK: State of Emergency: Jack Emery 2
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What is the true cost of security?

 

Amid a wave of unprecedented terrorist attacks on American soil, a panicked and inexperienced president declares a state of emergency and hands over control of the country to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). The quiet and unassuming Administrator Hall soon becomes the most powerful man in America. Determined to stop the attacks, Hall enforces his order across the US, using a newly empowered State Guard to deal with anyone who gets in his way.

 

As totalitarianism descends across the country, battle-weary reporter Jack Emery is faced with a terrifying new reality when friends, colleagues and sources are imprisoned before his eyes. Among weekly terrorist attacks, FEMA atrocities and the clamp tightening on every element of society, Jack becomes one of the few struggling to stop the madness.

 

This time though, he’s on the wrong side of the law and fighting the very government he’s trying to save.

 

  

To all those who have resisted the excesses of tyrants in ways big and small and often at great personal cost.

“Twenty seconds.” One pulled a balaclava over her head. “Gun it.”

The driver nodded and put his foot to the floor, the engine roaring as the vehicle sped across the Harvard Bridge and onto Massachusetts Avenue. The windows were tinted, so the pedestrians who glanced at the vehicle as it sped past couldn’t see the deadly cargo inside.

“Ten seconds. Everyone check in.”

As the van took a hard right onto Vasser Street, the rest of One’s team checked in. The team – four in the van with her and one located strategically on a rooftop near the campus – were as slick as ever. One smiled under her mask. She didn’t need to do the check and knew they’d be ready, but fifteen years of habit was hard to break.

One was jolted in her seat as the van mounted the curb and then pulled to a stop. Two slid the door open, climbed out and broke into a run. She too was running as soon as her feet hit the ground. Three and Four would follow, while Five would stay at the wheel. As she moved, there were squeals of panic from nearby students. She ignored them. They were irrelevant unless they got in the way.

The team crossed the sidewalk and reached the entrance of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Electrical Engineering and Computer Science Department in seconds. She pointed at Four and he moved into the building with his submachine gun raised. The others followed him in and they split into pairs.

“Remember, we’re looking for Daryush Daneshgahi.” She paused. “We need him alive.”

From the foyer she went left with Two, while Three and Four went right. They had intelligence that Daneshgahi was a creature of habit and would either be in his office or his lab. She had her weapon raised and was moving briskly when an alarm started to wail. It was a surprise it had taken this long.

Her headset crackled. “One, this is Six. Campus police are starting to arrive.”

One spoke into her voice-activated microphone. “Copy.”

They reached Daneshgahi’s office and took up positions on either side of the door. One waited as Two turned the handle and pushed the door open quickly. She entered the room and swept from side to side with her submachine gun, then quickly lowered the weapon. The office was well lit and empty. There was nowhere he could be hiding.

She cursed under her breath and the distant boom of a high-caliber rifle seemed to punctuate her profanity. Six was on the rooftop, tasked with keeping any police away from them, and he’d started the boom boom. While a few officers weren’t a problem, with each passing second more would arrive.

She left the office with Two in tow as she spoke into her headset. “He’s not in the office. Moving to check the cafeteria.”

As she rounded a corner, a shot boomed. She flinched but kept moving toward an MIT police officer, who stood with his pistol drawn. He looked about fifty and very scared. Her silenced weapon barely made a sound as it delivered two rounds into the officer’s chest. His eyes widened as crimson blossomed on his blue shirt. His pistol fell to the floor with a clattering sound and his body followed. One fired once into his face and didn’t break stride as she stepped over him, with Two behind her.

Her headset crackled. “This is Three. We’ve got him. We have the target. He was in the lab.”

“Good job.” She felt a mix of relief and satisfaction. “Begin exfiltration.”

She pictured the entirety of the exfiltration in her head as she moved. The snatch teams would move through the buildings and then onto the lawn, southeast across the campus. Five would drive to pick them up, while Six would shift position to cover Killian Court and their escape route before withdrawing. The whole team would be in and out with Daneshgahi in less than seven minutes, as planned.

She waved at Two and they moved south through the building and out into the courtyard. Once outside, they kept moving, scanning their surroundings and the top of buildings for shooters. The few students that remained ran when they spotted the armed commandos. Maybe MIT grads were intelligent after all. Smarter than their campus police, anyway.

She looked at her watch. By now Six would have taken his final shots. He’d be abseiling down the Maclaurin Building and moving to meet them at the extraction point. Radio silence meant no hitches. It had gone reasonably well so far and they were in the last minute of the operation. Nobody challenged One and Two as they reached the edge of the campus and crossed Memorial Drive.

She glanced at Three and Four, who were already crouched with weapons raised and facing outward. Two joined them in a covering position while she looked at Daneshgahi, face down on the lawn with his hands cuffed behind his back. She lifted him up. His face was the illustration of terror, but he kept quiet. It looked like he was pretty smart.

A shot drew her attention and she turned towards it. She needn’t have bothered, because her team put down the police officer quickly. A few seconds later, Five pulled the van to a stop in front of them. She slid the door open, bundled Daneshgahi inside and climbed in. Their prisoner gave a small whimper of protest as the rest of the team joined them.

Six arrived at the van just as One was closing the door. The sniper’s breathing was heavy and something had obviously taken longer than it should have, but he’d made it. She didn’t need to ask and he didn’t need to answer – if he hadn’t made it, he’d have been cut loose. That was the business they were in.

As the door slammed shut and the engine roared, One looked over to Daneshgahi. The Iranian computer scientist was watching the floor and she could feel the fear radiating off him. She took the hood that Two was holding out to her and placed it over Daneshgahi’s head. He started to cry.

FEMA would like to assure the public that, despite the recent terrorist attacks, its ability to provide disaster assistance remains intact. Staff are working hard to provide coordinated relief to all locations affected by these attacks. Citizens in need of support or those with something suspicious to report are encouraged to contact the new National Security Hotline.

Federal Emergency Management Agency

News Release

Jack Emery stared at the news bulletin as the massive Reuben sandwich in his hand continued to sag. Though he was meant to be on vacation, you couldn’t take the news out of the newsman. He took a bite without taking his eyes off the screen, his brain working overtime to process the ramifications of what he was seeing. A half-dozen attackers – good ones – had gone to a lot of trouble to snatch one MIT student.

A chunk of corned beef and a dollop of sauerkraut breached the edges of his sandwich and fell onto his lap. He cursed, placed his lunch back on the plate and mopped at the mess with his napkin. It didn’t help. He looked like a freshman who’d been touched in the nice place by a cheerleader. Jack shook his head and looked back at the screen as he picked up his Coke.

A hand on his shoulder made Jack jump and spill the drink. He looked around, angry, until he saw Josefa Tokaloka’s smile beaming down at him. Though it had been only a year since they’d seen each other, the large Islander looked like he’d aged a decade. Jack grinned widely and stood to wrap his arms around Jo’s enormous shoulders. It felt like hugging a bronze statue.

Jo crushed him in a bear hug. “Making a mess as usual.”

Jack laughed and pulled away. “It’s good to see you, Jo. Meeting up was a great idea.”

“No problem, it’s been a while.” Jo’s smile slackened slightly. “Plus, I figured you could do with some human contact that didn’t involve people shooting at you.”

Jack nodded and jerked a thumb at the screen. “Can you believe it?”

“Given recent events?” Jo frowned. “Yeah, Jack, I can.”

Jo had a point. Jack had only been back in the US for a few weeks, but in that time there had been a dozen attacks across the country, all professional and brutally successful, targeting critical infrastructure and public gatherings. No group had claimed responsibility and no suspects had been identified. Casualties were mounting, panic was spreading and the authorities seemed impotent to stop the attacks.

“They’re all connected, Jo. I’m sure of it. If I didn’t know any better, I’d think it was the Foundation reborn.” Jack hated thinking it, but even though over a year had passed it felt like just yesterday he’d been fighting to stop Michelle Dominique and her corrupt think tank. He’d gone to hell and back to stop her, but not before Dominique had sparked a war, taken control of the largest media empire in the world and almost gained control of Congress.

Jo shook his head. “Doesn’t fit. The FBI tore them to shreds and their entire leadership is dead or before the courts.”

“Yeah, you’re right. But these are professional hits.” Jack sat back down and gestured for Jo to sit on the lounge chair opposite. “Makes Syria seem almost civil.”

Jo laughed softly as he sat. “How was it over there? You did some good work.”

“Tough. There’s not a lot of hope.” Jack had spent the last three months in Syria covering the siege of Homs. It had been hard, but had also provided a rich vein of stories for his new site, which focused on long-form investigative journalism that the rest of the news media could bid on to broadcast. It was the perfect deal for everyone: he had the skill and not very much money, while they had the chequebooks but had cleared out most of the journalists with the skill.

“So why Vegas?” Jo looked around at the table games and the slot machines. “Given your particular vice, I figured this would be one of the last places you’d want to spend time.”

Jack followed Jo’s gaze. While the attacks – and the fear of more – had subdued Vegas a bit, you could never fully clear out the stags and hens, the corporate getaways, the tourists and the addicted. They were like moths to a flame. While there was gambling everywhere, it didn’t interest him. The booze did, though he was more in control of those temptations these days. But what really drew him to this particular desert in Nevada was the fact that it was probably the least news-conscious place in America. Day and night passed without notice here and if it didn’t involve gambling, sport or entertainment then it didn’t rate a mention.

He thought he’d needed that time away from the news. After he’d won his second Pulitzer for the stories he’d written about the Foundation, he’d spent months working to get his estranged wife’s body repatriated from Shanghai and organizing her funeral. He’d thought that watching her casket being lowered into the earth would be a release, an ending. He’d been wrong – more pain had come up inside him. After that, he’d tried burying himself in his work. He’d thrown all of his effort into the new site. Then, needing stories to tell and an escape, he’d traveled to Syria. Upon his return, he’d wanted some time away from the news. In theory.

“I like it here.” He exhaled slowly. “Hell, I’m just glad to be back in the States, to tell you the truth. The site is going well and I’ve hired some other contributors. It was time for a break.”

“Glad to hear it.” Jo smiled slightly. His face looked gaunt and tired. “EMCorp wasn’t the same when you left, you know that?”

Jack raised an eyebrow. “Wasn’t?”

Jo’s smile widened. “I retired a few weeks after you left, Jack. I’d love to say it was because you weren’t there, but it was actually the love of my life who forced me to quit.”

“Your wife?”

“My heart surgeon.” Jo laughed and tapped his chest. “This fucking thing should have killed me, but the good people at New York Presbyterian kept me ticking a bit longer.”

Jack couldn’t believe it. Jo was the toughest hunk of meat he’d ever known. “Sorry I wasn’t there, mate. Why didn’t anyone let me know?”

“Well, I was too busy being cut open. I think Celeste wanted to tell you but Peter stopped her. He said you had to be left alone to heal. I don’t think she was very happy about it.”

Jack winced at the mention of her name, but before he could reply a drinks waitress approached. Given the length of her skirt, it was a good thing she had a beaming white smile and cute eyes, or else Jack might have struggled to look anywhere else. They made small talk for a moment before Jack ordered a beer. Jo went with ginger beer. As she shuffled off to get their orders, Jack’s eyes were locked onto her legs.  

Jo gave a long, booming laugh. “Fall off the horse, Jack?”

Jack turned back to Jo, feeling himself flush red. “I never stopped liking women, Jo.”

“The booze, I mean.”

“I limit it to a couple these days.” He shrugged. “Hard to be a saint all the time.”

***

“Good afternoon, Administrator.” The young White House staffer held out her hands in apology. “The President has been delayed, but you’re welcome to wait.”

Richard Hall frowned. He reached up to his nose and slid his glasses back into place. “Okay, please let me know when they’re ready.”

He moved to a sofa and sat with a sigh, his back aching as he did. While Richard had lorded over the entirety of the Federal Emergency Management Agency for a decade, his boss was the most powerful woman on the planet, so delays were to be expected. But within a few moments he looked up to see the President striding down the hallway with members of her staff, each trying to get a word in. The scene was akin to hyenas stalking a wounded lion. The lion might be the most powerful, but the hyenas were legion. It made the lion vulnerable. The thought made him smile as he adjusted his tie.

President Helen Morris offered a tired smile as she approached. “Good to see you, Richard. I hope you haven’t been waiting long?”

Richard stood. “Not at all, Madam President. Only a few minutes.”

Morris didn’t stop walking. “I’m heading to the Situation Room now. Care to join me?”

Richard nodded and followed her to the lift, where the staffers were repelled by some invisible force field. Apparently none of them were senior enough for a jersey in the big game. After a short ride and some small talk, they exited into the cavernous, 5000-square-foot Situation Room. Dominated by a mahogany table and leather chairs, the room was a high-tech dungeon used by the most senior members of government and the military to deal with any crisis abroad – or at home. The other members of the National Security Council were already seated as the President sat at the head of the table and Richard took a chair to her left.

“Thanks for coming in, everyone.” Morris opened her leather folio and quickly perused her papers. “What do we know?”

Richard knew the answer: Nothing. He glanced up to the large screen at the far end of the table, which showed a map of the continental United States with digital pins marking the locations that had been attacked in recent weeks. When displayed in such a way the enormity of the situation revealed itself. Though the attacks had resulted in carnage, the authorities had identified no pattern, no logic, no leads and no suspects. He kept his mouth shut and others adopted the same strategy, though there were a few nervous coughs to punctuate the awkward silence. He sat back. The failure did not belong to him, though the solution might. Forty years of public administration had taught him patience.

Finally, Walt Clarke – the President’s National Security Advisor – leaned forward to speak. “The attack on MIT was precise and astonishingly fast. They were in and out in less than eight minutes. Local police had only just started to arrive.”

“That’s it?” Morris peered over her glasses and down the table at Clarke. It wasn’t a kind look. “I know all of that. I watch CNN and read my briefings. I want to know who? Why? Where next? What’re we doing about it?”

There was a muted sense of tension in the room. While Morris was quite inexperienced, she wasn’t regarded as a pushover. Richard doubted anybody in the room had seen her react this icily to their advice. Though she’d been in office for nearly a year and Richard had hardly been overwhelmed by her competence, this was the first time she’d seemed panicked. Richard knew there was opportunity for whoever could explain the attacks and provide a path forward to stopping them.

Clarke was visibly shaken by the President’s bluntness. “I can’t answer that. We have some footage, but it gives us nothing. We do know they kidnapped a computer scientist – Daryush Daneshgahi – and then swapped vehicles a number of times and disappeared.”

Hayley Penbroke, the Director of National Intelligence, cleared her throat. “While I can’t speculate on the who, the why is clear. Daneshgahi is a genius.”

Clarke scoffed and turned towards Penbroke. “I doubt he grew up with running water. He can’t be worth all that effort, surely?”

Penbroke glared at him, then turned back to the President. “We smuggled him out of Iran and gave him a full scholarship at MIT. He can pop the hardest encryption like it’s bubble wrap. We keep a pretty close eye on him and he’s never given us reason to doubt him. He’s a good kid, really. Whoever has him is now a huge threat.”

Morris frowned. “In practical terms?”

Penbroke didn’t hesitate. “Any computer system is vulnerable. The Stock Exchange. Power grids. Air transportation safety systems. You name it, he can crack it.”

General Mike Cooper, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, raised his hand and interrupted. “Nuclear launch codes?”

“No, not those, General.” Penbroke crossed her arms. “Pretty much everything else is in play though. This is more dangerous than some missing ammonium nitrate.”

“Okay.” Morris placed her hands flat on the table. “While everyone keeps trying to figure out who’s behind all of this, what’re our options? We can’t just sit and wait.”

Cooper spoke. “Madam President, give the word and we can have troops on the street in every major city in the country within twelve hours. We can also increase the cover at major infrastructure. I can’t guarantee that these measures will stop the attacks, but they will make the bastards think twice.”

“No.” Morris’s voice was sharp. “I don't want the army on Sixth Avenue. If there’s one thing that’ll panic people more than attacks across the country, it’s a visible army presence. Besides, there’s no possible way we have enough troops to cover everywhere that needs it. Deploying the military just gives these bastards a victory.”

Richard gave a small smile. He’d underestimated the depth of the President’s dissatisfaction with the other arms of the Federal Government. While she’d no choice but to rely on her advisors, she clearly wasn’t putting much faith in them getting results. He couldn’t blame her. The attacks had rocked America and her advisors weren’t coping. They were overwhelmed and predictable, offering nothing that would work, nothing that would influence the situation or America.

It was time for him speak. “Madam President, if I may?”

Morris gave a small nod. “Go ahead, Richard. That’s why you’re here.”

He leaned forward. “While I agree with the desire for additional security, and concede that combat troops may be needed if this continues, there’s another option. FEMA can use the State Guard to provide more security at key facilities. It’s a middle ground – more protection, but without tanks on street corners.”

Morris’s face was expressionless. She seemed to consider his words for a few moments before she held her hands out. “Thoughts?”

Richard looked around. His plan earned a few nods and a lot of silence. Only Cooper seemed opposed, sitting with his arms folded. Most importantly, nobody raised any objections. Truth be told, they were all out of answers and probably happy for someone else to take the heat for a while. That suited Richard just fine. He was banking on the fact that he’d been in his job for a long time, while many of the people at the table had clocked less than a year in theirs. Rolling up the Foundation for a New America had taken a scythe through the upper ranks of government and the end of the Kurzon administration had removed more still. Richard had kept his head down and his hands clean, and was now considered a trusted broker by many, including Morris. He decided to press his luck.

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