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âInvaded?â asked Deuce. âWho? Taiwan?â
âSouthern what?â asked Garza.
ââmarines off the eastern seaboard. Apache Dawn is in effectââ The static came back and this time the voice didn't.
âAnvil, this is Hammer 2, Actual, come in!â said Captain Alston. âAnvil!â
He switched frequencies and tried again. âAnvil, this is Hammer 2, Actual, how copy?â
The only reply was static.
He switched frequencies again. âHammer 2-1, this is Hammer 2, Actual, do you read me?â
The instant reply was two breaks in squelch. Captain Alston leaned his head back against the wall and sighed. âAt least we have squad-level comms. Must be only long-distance thatâs been killed, along with our satellites.â His brow furrowed in thought, then relaxed. âApache DawnâŠâ
âWhatâs that?â asked Chad.
Captain Alston sighed. âItâs a code. It means the United States has been invaded by foreign forces. Enemy combatants on American soil. If that has happened, itâs bad juju for everyone.â He shook his head. âI just donât get it.â
âSo we donât know what âsouthernâ meant,â observed Zuka from his corner of the little shack.
âI got an idea,â said the captain. He opened a side pouch on his pack and pulled out a smartphone. âI keep this thing off for OpSec, but you never know when youâll need itâŠâ He turned it on and waited for it to start up.
Chad shook his head. âWonât work. Too many valleys and tall mountains around hereâcell signals are pretty much blocked completely.â
The phone chirped as soon as Chad stopped talking. Captain Alston grinned. âOkayâŠcouple text messagesâŠAh, hereâs a voicemail.â He held the phone up to his ear and his face split into a smile as he listened.
I didnât realize we were high enough up to get a signal, yet. Forgot how tall Mt. Vaught isâŠwish mine had worked when I needed itâŠ
Chad pulled out his own cell phone and noticed with a frown that its display was shattered. The battery case fell apart in his hands. Sighing, he tossed the worthless phone on the floor and rubbed his hands together to heat them up a bit.
At last, Captain Alston pulled the phone away from his ear. He was still smiling.
âGood news?â asked Garza.
âHorrible news,â said the captain, smiling. He hit a button on the phone and the speakerphone came to life.
ââlisten to your messages, press 1. To delete, press 7ââ
The captain pushed a button. Everyone in the little shack heard the womanâs gentle voice say, âFirst new messageâŠâ
A youthful voice, tight with anxiety, came over the speaker. Chad grinned. She sounded cute. âHey bro, itâs me. Weâre really in the deep-end here. L.A. is a war zone! Thereâs North Korean marines all over the place, jets strafing buildings and missiles dropping out of the sky all around us. Iâm not supposed to be calling you, but the hell with it, they already know where we are. We may not have much time. Lookâthat flu I was telling you about? Itâs bad. Real bad. People who were exposed to the Blue Flu have a chance of being at least partially immune and thatâs it. Everyone else seems to be incapacitatedâIâm talking bedriddenâin 48 hours or less. ItâsâŠworse than before.â
There was some indistinct commotion in the background followed by a big crash and static, then a lot of coughing and finally the captainâs sister came back on the line. âJesus, that was close. Theyâre still raining missiles down on the city and that one probably took out a building down the block from us. Itâs like an earthquake every time one hits. But they wonât touch this hospital becauseâŠâ Her voice dropped to a conspiratorial whisper.
Chad imagined her crouching behind something, one hand covering the phoneâŠ
âThe President is here!â she hissed. âHe caught the flu on some campaign fundraiser downtown a few days ago and the Secret Service brought him here at oh-dark-thirty this morning. Heâs in real bad shape, DeeâŠIâŠI donât know if heâs going to make it. We donât have any of the H5N1 vaccine here and I think the antibodies in that vaccine are the only thing that can fight this new strain even, halfway! The really scary thing is we heard the President is dead on the newsâŠbut Iâm sitting not thirty feet from him right now! What does that mean?â
A different, deeper and rougher voice could be heard in the background, issuing indistinct orders. Then, quite clearly, everyone in the tiny cabin heard, âAll right, people, we are leaving! Get your shit wired and prep to jump. We move as a group and we fight as a group. Weâre going to cut through these fuckersââ
Captain Alstonâs sister returned. âI gotta go, the SEALs are getting us out of here. Their leaderâs kinda cute,â she whispered. Chad saw Alstonâs face harden.
âWeâre heading to some Air Force base around here. My new hospitalâAll Saintâsâitâs just not safeâŠGod, I wish you were here. IâŠI love you bro,â she said, her voice thick with emotion. The shouting in the background started up again and a single shot rang out and the message ended.
âEnd of new messages. To save, pressââ
The captain clicked the button to end the call and put the phone down.
âUh, why you smilinâ, Cap? That message sounded pretty bad to me,â asked Deuce.
âDonovan, wipe that confused look off your face. Weâre changing our flight plan.â
âWhat? Donât we have orders to get this guy to Spokane?â asked Garza.
âWe do. But that was before we knew everything we know now.â He stared at his empty hands. âSince we were ordered to Spokane, we have lost direct contact with HQ. We donât even know if our ride will show up when the weather quits.â
âI still donât know what the hell is going on,â said Chad.
âWell, we know everything we need to know, now,â replied Captain Alston. He held up a cold finger. âThose NKor bastards are invading southern California, which means weâre at war. That also means the Chinese are involved somehow. North Korea doesnât take a piss without the âgo-aheadâ from Beijingâeveryone knows that. Our primary mission is to defend this nationânow, we know where to do that.â
Another finger went up. âThe President isâor wasâat All Saintâs Hospital, in Los Angeles.â
Another finger went up. âMy sister isâor wasâalive as of last night, at that same hospital.â
Another finger. âApache Dawn has been put into play. And that means we abort all other missions or tasks and get our asses to the front, get to our CO, and fight to the last man.â Captain Alston paused and looked at every man in turn. Chad watchedâno one flinched or seemed to show any sign of reluctance. They were a dangerous-looking group of men.
âWell, gentlemen, we are cut off from our COâbut now we know where our CNC is.â
His thumb went up. âThe President is with my sister, along with some Navy SEALs apparently.â His face turned sour. âLeaving aside my sister thinks one of those Squids is cuteââ disgust dripped from his tongue and he shook his head, âthe Presidentâs already been declared deadâdespite the fact that my sister says heâs very much alive. That tells me someone is grabbing power during this shitstorm back in Washington. That donât fly in my book.â He shook his head again, glowering.
âNo, the President is alive and it looks like thereâs only one thing that can save himâŠâ He turned to look at Chad. All the Rangers looked at Chad.
Chad put his hands up in front of him. âWhoaâŠheyâŠâ
Washington, D.C.
The White House
âAll right everyone,â said the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court, a wrinkled conservative crone whose voice sounded like crumbling parchment sliding on pavement.
Harold could almost taste the dislike the shriveled old woman was broadcasting by her body language. She held herself stiff, like a corpse wrapped in a black shroud, as if preparing herself for a very unpleasant task. He mentally shrugged, supposing for her it was unpleasant. She was one of the conservative dinosaurs that had been made irrelevant in the last few general elections, a relic of a bygone era.
And now he would be ushered into office and assume command, leading a vast network of like-minded congressmen and
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