Vital Force (12 page)

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Authors: Trevor Scott

BOOK: Vital Force
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“True. But with Walker we at least knew who was paying him. We need to know who this Asian woman works for, otherwise we have nothing.”

“Great. Then let me have her alone for a while.”

He smiled with that thought, his eyes penetrating the rain and focused on the Trooper.

●

Inside James Patterson's house, Cliff sat at the kitchen counter watching his old friend make hamburger's on the stove.

“This is one helluva surprise, Cliff,” Patterson said, his attention on his cooking. “Man, I wish you had called. I only have a couple of beers in the house. Shit, we can head on down and pick up some Steelhead. Just like old times. You sure she doesn't want a burger? Man, you gotta put some meat on her bones.” He glanced back around looking for Li. “Where'd she go?”

“She's probably doing some Tai Chi in the bedroom,” Cliff said.

Patterson reached down and shook his substantial belly. “She can have some of this shit.” Then he flipped the burgers and plopped a thick piece of cheese on each. Cliff's old friend leaned toward him. “How'd you meet such a hottie?” he whispered.

“She came to our work to teach a few Tai Chi lessons. Management thought we'd be more productive if we were more relaxed. We kind of hit it off, so she gave me her card and said to come to lessons. Turns out she lived and taught on the east bay close to me.”

“One thing leads to the next,” Patterson said. “You dog. You always did have a thing for Asian chicks. Not that ya got any.” He turned and pulled the burgers from the pan, setting them gingerly onto buns. “No fries. Just chips.”

He turned and put the plate down in front of his friend. After a few minutes of silent munching, the food was devoured.

“How do you like working at home?” Cliff asked him.

“It's cool. As you know, you can do websites anywhere. Makes it nice when old college buds show up outta the blue.” He smiled broadly.

“I'm sorry I didn't call, man. My bad.”

“No problemo. But I expect all the sordid details.”

Cliff smiled, but his smirk quickly changed as he saw Li enter the room.

She had an automatic pistol with a silencer pointed at his head.

18

Shemya, Alaska

Colonel Powers shuffled across the frozen sidewalk toward the command post. The snow from the night before had mostly blown in strips of one-foot drifts every ten feet. A young airman was just finishing clearing a path.

“Sorry it's taking so long, Sir,” the airman said. “The snow blower blew a belt yesterday. I'll have it fixed by the end of the day.”

“No problem, John. Looks good.” The colonel entered the building and approached a check point with two security police behind a locked cage. Everything at this base was low tech from first glance and would have to be upgraded before it became operational again. For now, though, it would have to do, the colonel thought. It was more important to make sure the new technology, including the upgraded software, worked as advertised. And, he knew, security was much easier to maintain when he knew every person on a first-name basis.

“Hey, guys,” the colonel said, pulling his entry badge and I.D. card from inside his parka. “If John slips on the ice out there, you make sure to haul his ass inside. Fifteen minutes out there without moving and he's dead.”

“You got it, Sir,” said the sergeant in charge. “Sir, you don't have to show us those. We know who you are.”

“My orders,” Colonel Powers said. “No one enters without proper I.D., entry badge, and they have to be on the list.”

The door buzzed and the colonel entered, the sergeant closing the metal cage behind him.

“Kinda like my New York club,” the large airman said.

“That's right,” Colonel Powers said, his hand on the man's shoulder. “You're the bouncer.”

“Have a good one, Sir,” the sergeant said to the colonel's back.

Colonel Powers walked to the end of the corridor, punched in a four-number code on the cipher lock and then entered, heading down a flight of stairs to a basement shelter. The command post was set up to withstand any conventional attack and everything but a direct nuclear strike. The air was filtered and self contained, and there was enough food and water in there to last more than a month.

At the bottom of the stairs was a series of two doors. The first was controlled by a cipher lock, which the colonel went through. The second was shielded and sealed from inside.

The colonel punched the buzzer and waited. A couple of seconds later his identity was verified by Captain Sara Chavez, who opened the vault door. She was an attractive woman, her dark hair tied to the back of her head. Although she wore camouflage fatigues, it was quite apparent that she kept herself fit with running, which had become more difficult, the colonel thought, considering the limited distances on Shemya Island. Not to mention the ubiquitous wind and rain. The treadmill had to do the job in the winter.

“Morning, Sir,” she said, stepping aside.

“Morning, Sara. How's the coffee.”

“A bit strong,” she said, closing the vault door behind him.

Before even checking the status board, the colonel poured himself a cup of thick, black coffee. Then he glanced about the small compartment. Besides Captain Chavez, there was one other command controller present; Staff Sergeant Greg Wilson, who sat at a console with headphones.

The colonel took his chair in the back overlooking the status boards and control panels. Most of the panels were inoperative now, phased out by more sophisticated communications, centralized in Colorado. However, the colonel had insisted that they have the most recent communications upgraded as soon as possible, and some of that had already come online.

Captain Chavez stood to the colonel's side, sipping her coffee.

The colonel took a sip and his face crunched. “Wow, Sara. Is this a west Texas brew?”

She smiled. “Damn straight. Put hair on your chest.”

“More like curl the hair on your chest,” he said. “Where's our plane?”

She turned to Sergeant Wilson. “Greg?”

“Twenty miles out,” the sergeant said. “They reported some heavy head winds. You want me to patch you through?”

“That's all right, Greg. Let ‘em fly.”

Colonel Powers drank some more coffee and then turned to the captain again. “We have security police on the tarmac standing by?”

“Yes, Sir,” she said. Bravo Flight.”

“Outstanding.”

“Yes, Sir. Out standing in the cold.” She smiled.

Finally, the colonel laughed. “How long have you waited for that?”

“Just came to me, Sir.”

“What else we got on that plane, Sara?”

She picked up a clipboard and flipped to the second page. “A Master Sergeant Jones and Senior Airman Cato. Both are programmers.”

“That's Jonesy,” he said. “We worked together in Germany. Best point guard we ever had on our basketball team. I don't know Cato. What else?”

“Looks like some fresh salmon again.”

“Great. Just what we need. . .more fish.”

The colonel sucked down the last of his coffee and got up for more. When he turned around, the captain was leaning over the console talking with Sergeant Wilson, her buttocks pointing right in his direction. Damn. He shook it off and took a seat again.

There were five monitors that sequenced through various security cameras placed around the base. From the commander's chair, the colonel could switch to whichever view he wanted and keep it there while the others continued to sequence. He toggled to the corridor above and saw the two security police reading magazines. Then he went to an outside view. Nice job on the sidewalk, he thought. Next he went to the control tower and saw the C-130 had just landed and was now rolling slowly to a halt in front of the operations building. So he switched to the camera above operations and waited.

“The plane has landed,” the captain said, turning around, and realizing he was watching the monitor. “But you know that.” She stood next to the commander's chair and watched with him.

The ground crew pushed a ladder to the plane and then the door opened. Standing back a ways was Bravo Flight with at least fifteen security police airmen. On the perimeter was a Humvee with an M60 machine gun mounted on top and manned. The others had M16s and were spread out around the plane.

The next few seconds were chaos. One of the men getting off the plane fell to the ground. But the security police turned away, reacting to something else.

“What's going on?” the colonel yelled.

Sergeant Wilson held his hand to his headphone. “Sir, there's gunfire.”

“What?”

They watched in horror as a second man fell.

Then the security police returned fire in a burst and took up secure positions behind their Humvees.

19

Jake and Su had slept most of the day, knowing they would be up much of the night traveling through the mountains. He was certain Su's uncle had no idea why they were there, which was a good thing, since Jake was beginning to wonder himself.

Jake was offered a mix of winter clothes that the uncle kept around for when his relatives happened by in the colder months. Judging from their tattered state, they were probably as old as Su. The green wool pants seemed to be from Mao's military and were a snug fit on him. His biggest concern, though, were the mukluks, which Su explained were made mostly of yak hide and fur, but were very tight on his larger feet. He wasn't complaining, though. All of the items were made with dull colors and would keep him warm. Better yet, they might have made him stick out less, especially when he wore the thick fur hat that covered much of his face.

Su had told her uncle that Jake was a winter survivalist, and China, and particularly Manchuria, was on his list of experiences he must accomplish before the age of fifty. The uncle had laughed at that, shaking his head as he smiled. Crazy Americans.

Now, with the sun slowly creeping toward the western mountains, Jake and Su stood on a path at the end of a narrow road. Her uncle had just dropped them off with his little truck, still scratching his head like the two of them were complete idiots as he drove off in a plume of smoke toward town.

“So,” Jake said, “I guess your uncle must think you're nuts.”

She slung her large backpack over her shoulders, and when she got it caught on her heavy coat, Jake helped her put it in place on her back.

“Thanks. Really, he only thinks you're crazy. I told him you paid me one thousand American to guide you here.” She smiled broadly with that revelation. “You ready?”

“You're a funny woman. Yeah, let's go.” He put on his own pack and trudged off.

The snow was only about a foot deep. Nothing compared to what he was used to in the Austrian Alps, but the cold, dry wind nearly took his breath away. They first cleared a small field and then started heading up in elevation. The trail was perhaps ten feet wide and soon started to wind through a thick, fir forest.

Jake stopped and turned to Su. “Is this a road?”

She reached him and halted a moment. “Kind of. In the summer the villagers lead their livestock up to high meadows to eat grass. My uncle uses the road to cut wood for his stove and fireplace. Please, Jake, we must keep moving.”

Without a word, Jake headed out again. After a couple of miles, they reached a ridge that flattened out and appeared to rise up slightly to the west and to the north. There was a small meadow where the snow was deeper.

Su stopped and scanned the area, uncertain. The sun was nearly history and the temperature would soon start to drop fast.

“What's the matter?” Jake asked.

“Nothing. We're about half way.” She pointed off toward the north. “You see. We walk parallel to the road some four miles north, but the road comes this way some. So, we catch up on the plateau.”

“I take it there's no trail now?” Jake said.

“That's right.” With that, she stepped off into the deeper snow and into the thickest of trees.

With the coming darkness and the tight forest, the canopy above them let in very little light. But there was one advantage to that. The dense fir trees had let much less snow hit the ground. They would have been able to pick up their pace if it had not been for the darkness.

His mind drifted back to America and Oregon in particular. In college he had climbed through the coast range after a heavy snowfall, the trees thick and heavy with the weight of snow. Although the forest cover was similar, the cold was not. His nostrils seemed to collapse with each breath he took. Perhaps a bigger problem, though, was his perspiration soaking into his clothes. He knew that when he stopped hiking, the wet, damp wool would freeze and drop his core temperature. They had extra clothes in the backpacks to reduce that eventuality, but that extra weight also compounded the problem. It was like hiking in the desert. The more water you carried the more water you needed.

Jake noticed Su was starting to slump over slightly. “Su, maybe we should change packs,” he said. “Yours must weigh fifty pounds.”

She didn't stop, though. She straightened up and said, “I'm all right.”

Once it was almost impossible to see in front of them, Su pulled out a small pen light and strapped it to the side of her backpack.

Still, the going was slow. At that pace, Jake thought, they would reach their destination around midnight. Perfect timing, but their exhaustion might have a negative impact on their mission there.

Nevertheless, they trudged on through the cold, dark forest.

20

They were at a standoff. Cliff sat on his friend's sofa, and Patterson was in his recliner, his legs raised and his hands behind his head.

Li sat on the floor, legs crossed, a laptop computer in front of her and her gun no more than a few inches from her right hand.

“I didn't know you had a laptop,” Cliff said to her.

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