Whiskey Black Book Set: The Complete Tyrant Series (Box Set 1) (39 page)

BOOK: Whiskey Black Book Set: The Complete Tyrant Series (Box Set 1)
5.26Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Duped?” Belt asked.

“The rifle rack is empty; the supplies are gone.”

Michael began to curse.

“I spent most of my adult life situating that bus. They did it,” Michael asserted with confidence.

“I would have to agree with Michael,” Belt said.

“Recommendations?” John asked.

“I say we march ourselves back to that town, demand answers, and take care of business,” Michael said.

“I agree, mostly,” John said. “Let’s head back.”

The four of them began their march back to town, but upon arrival, they were met with a ghost town. Arnie, Alex, Sebastian, Ethan, Bailey, all of them gone.

The fire that had been on the grill was only smoke at this point. Even the fire pit was smoldering.

The four of them cleared Arnie’s house and found no one. They headed to the old barn in the backyard and entered it.

John entered first. Seeing meat hooks hanging from the rafters of the barn, he thought nothing of them.

John handed Belt his rifle and climbed up into the rafters to acquire some chains.

“We’re going to use these chains to remove the logs and get out of Dodge,” John said.

“We’re not going anywhere without my family,” Gideon said.

“Your family’s dead,” John said.

Michael put his hand on Gideon’s shoulder in hopes of comforting him, but he just shrugged it off and stepped away from the group.

“If you guys already have it determined that my family’s toast, then I’ll head out on my own to find them.”

“Calm down, son. If you go out there alone, you’ll turn up missing too. We need to stick together,” John said.

“He’s right,” Michael said.

“Look, Michael, you’ve lost your stuff. “I’ve lost my family. It’s not quite the same, is it?”

Gideon left the group, despite all their combined attempts to keep the team together.

John dropped a few chains and the three men hauled them to the bus. It was hard work and cost them a lot of time, but they opened the roadway and continued west. Michael drove while John and Belt watched for movement in the town as they left it behind.

CHAPTER XXV

Weapons Company was driving up Route 149 to Murphysboro with Nathan. All Nathan could think about was finishing off the Southside Raiders. They had brought so much death to their peaceful community. Nearly all of its residents were killed or missing. His greatest pain was for his murdered sister, Katie. Now the prospect of having Denny on the fringe of a breakdown over Heather’s disappearance or, worst-case scenario, death caused great sadness in Nathan’s heart. These things made him all the more resolute to finish off the raiders.

Buchanan was sitting in the passenger seat of his HMMWV with Nathan sitting catty-cornered to the rear of Buchanan. Nathan was leaning forward as they talked along the way. Nathan and Buchanan had to yell when they spoke because the HMMWVs weren’t built for a quiet ride. The engines had a way of drowning out soft talk.

“I appreciate this, sir,” Nathan said.

“Well, as I thought about it, I realized that we shouldn’t have an alliance going down the drain over a bunch of idiots.”

“Somehow they managed to get UN vehicles and US military support vehicles. I don’t think they’ve hit us with combat equipment yet.”

“That’s a good thing. It tells me that support services have been going to their community and getting ambushed. Resistance should only be a few civilians now that they seem to have emptied their main group out.”

“When we were here earlier, men came pouring out of the buildings along the main drag and piled into busses that sat at intersections. I hope you’re right about them being cleared out, but I need to make sure. We still don’t know who was running the show or why they were attacking us.”

“Maybe they’ve burned through their resources, or maybe the town is too dangerous to plunder?” Buchanan asked.

“Hopefully option A. I’d hate to run into a problem bigger than the raiders,” Nathan replied.

Weapons had successfully made the trip to Murphysboro. The convoy of combat vehicles slowed and spread out to avoid a bottleneck-style attack.

Trash and debris could be seen sitting stationary on the road. In other spots, the trash blew across the streets, making them remember the old Western movies where tumbleweed rolled through town.

The convoy came to a stop and the Marines exited the vehicles. The gunners in the turrets did not leave, but stayed and maintained a defensive posture against a possible attack or surprise ambush. Several others were on foot. Urban warfare has proven, throughout history, to be one of the most dangerous and dreaded ways to fight.

Nathan remembered driving through Murphy just a few short years ago and seeing dozens of Black Hawks flying low through the small city. The news reports said that the military and police were conducting training missions and emergency deployments. Nobody could understand why American troops and police were training in American cities. Before, they had trained in mock towns and simulated force-on-force combat, but as time progressed, FOX News had discovered that there was a large-scale training program currently underway. Every police department and military unit was being utilized and FEMA was overseeing the training operation, by order of the president. It wasn’t until the Flip that it was understood why the training op was on such a grand scale.

The Flip didn’t go as planned. When America was taken captive by a tyrannical government, the people resisted, causing widespread rioting. The rioting and mobs only justified the reasoning behind more executive orders until the government’s grip on society was so tight that it suffocated. The military and police couldn’t maintain control of the mobs and weren’t being compensated enough to make it worth the effort. But mostly, the reason it had failed was because America’s military and police were, by and far, more patriotic than tyrannical. A few stuck around, but not enough to make a difference.

Buchanan, Nathan, and the other Marines were stacked against the wall of an old electronics store, making their way to the corner of Route 149 and Fifteenth Street. The intersection was wide.

“This is about where they had all their vehicles staged,” Nathan said. “They came running out of those buildings there and from over there.” Nathan gave directions, pointing with his hands.

Buchanan could tell that there had been minor combat at a minimum. There were locations where moderate grenade-sized explosions had taken out doorways and storefronts. The corners of some of the buildings were knocked out.

Nathan glanced over at one of the old antique shops and saw what was left of a dead man. “Obviously the victim of a grenade kill,” he said.

They were now stacked at the corner of the storefront. Buchanan peeked around the corner and saw a company of UN troops and vehicles, consisting of about thirty vehicles in all. Most of them were armored personnel carriers with mounted light machine guns. Standing apart from the company of APCs were three formations of UN troops with about fifty to seventy-five troops in each formation.

Buchanan backed the line of Marines up and away from their current position. Fearing they had only a brief window of opportunity, Buchanan returned them to their antitank equipment, where he gave them a brief speech.

“Listen up, gents. These jerkies are in way over their heads. Today’s going to be a bad day, for them. They have found themselves on US soil, where we are supreme and have the home-field advantage.”

Buchanan opened up his notepad and called his platoon sergeants in for a quick briefing.

“Edwards, I want you to take a CAAT platoon and double back that way. Come back around to this location, approximately one block from here. Martin, I want you to take another CAAT platoon to this location and set up right here. Me, Nathan, and Quintin will move into this position. If all pans out correctly, they will have no avenue of escape and will not be able to return to their APCs. Whatever happens, do not leave a survivor. We are not taking POWs, and we are not letting them reach their com. TOWs I want you to focus early in on those personnel carriers while heavy guns lay down some fire on everything that lives, breathes, or moves. Do you understand?”

Everybody nodded their heads in agreement, and Buchanan released them to return to their units. The vehicles fired up, and every unit went to their preassigned area of responsibility.

It seemed all too easy as the Marine units arrived almost simultaneously, opening fire on the United Nations units while they stood in formation.

Buchanan knew that this type of warfare would never have been allowed before the Flip. As far as Buchanan and the others were concerned, the rules of engagement had changed. No longer were they under the Geneva Convention Rules of Engagement, but were now living in a new world, where survival was of the fittest, and these invaders were not a single nation, but a conglomeration of nations.

After the victory over the UN invaders, Nathan was walking amongst the destruction of the Russian-made equipment when he heard radio chatter coming through the frequencies of the radios that had not been destroyed in the attack. He heard a Middle Eastern accent speaking in clear English come on the radio.

“Guys, guys, over here,” Nathan called to Buchanan and the other Marines.

They all ran to where Nathan was, next to a BMP, and he said, “Listen.”

They listened closely.

The radio signal was broken, but the accent was clearly Middle Eastern.

“These guys are amateurs,” Nathan said. “They say way too much on unencrypted radios.”

They continued to listen.

From everything they could put together from the English-speaking Middle Easterner, a shipment of new technology had just been received from the Chinese.

The Chinese had been biding their time since the Flip, waiting to see what was going to become of America before they became more involved. For them, it was a wise move to tarry until they were certain that America was down for the count. Seeing General Muhaimin in the Oval Office was the signal they needed that America had truly been stripped of its democracy.

The transmission may have been intermittent, at best, but it still revealed enough information that the Chinese were making their move, technologically. They were supporting the UN by sending hi-tech gadgets to the shores of America. The speaker did not say what the shipment consisted of or where the shipment was going to land, but everybody assumed it would come in from the Pacific Ocean and rest somewhere on the west coast of America.

“It only makes sense, seeing it’s a straight shot to California from China’s east coast,” Nathan said.

Nathan could tell Buchanan was deep in thought.

“We don’t have the resources to get anywhere on the west coast, let alone know where to intercept the Chinese gizmos.”

“Maybe we can just chalk this up as a heads-up. I mean, we can take extra precautions before we strike from here on out. They could have new weapons, for all we know.”

“I’m not sure about all of that,” Buchanan said. “What I do know is, those UN vehicles are full of fuel, and I want every drop of it before we consider any further movement.”

All the Marines worked on securing as much fuel as they could and poured it into their own vehicles.

“What do you think about heading to Chicago?” Nathan asked Buchanan.

“I plan on heading back to Chester and putting Matt to work on that radio to find out what he can about our new Chinese connection.”

“Sounds good, sir, but I was thinking we needed to liberate some unfortunate Americans that have been taken prisoner by foreign invaders. I swore an oath against all enemies of America, both foreign and domestic,” Nathan said to Buchanan, reminding him that he had sworn the same oath.

“I don’t need a salty has-been reminding me of my oath. I’m very familiar with it. I stayed in the fight, unlike you,” Buchanan barked back at Nathan.

Everybody mounted up on their vehicles and paced themselves as if they were in a combat patrol. Their objective was made clear by Lieutenant Colonel Buchanan. “Take extra caution heading back to Chester. We may soon be facing a new enemy.”

The convoy pulled away.

Buchanan knew Nathan was right, and leaving an imprisoned America wasn’t his intention. He wanted to secure the Chicago FEMA Region Five area, but wasn’t going in unprepared. If China was now in the game, their technology would most certainly be headed to FEMA headquarters. His thought then shifted to the expediency of heading to Chicago, if for no other reason than to beat the shipment of the new Chinese gadgets to their destination.

Buchanan looked at Nathan and said, “We’ll leave for Chicago after we secure more information on the Chinese shipment. We’re headed back to Menard; then we’ll start making preparations.”

Nathan looked at Buchanan and nodded. He knew there was a long road ahead, and it wasn’t the thought of a seven- to eight-hour drive. Everything that had happened to him and the SIHG had led up to this point. It all seemed as if his purpose was laid out before him: his location on the Mississippi River, seeing the UN shipping containers, rescuing Jess, finding Buchanan, and then learning that he had also freed people. Nathan was feeling a sense of purpose, and sitting in a Humvee with fellow Marines made it feel all the more real.

Nathan’s thoughts went back home to his sister, Katie. He missed her and was sad that she had passed away at the hands of the Southside Raiders. Nathan never received his sense of fulfillment from killing the leader of that group, but he at least had a little peace that their reign of terror had come to an end.

I wonder if Denny found Heather yet
, Nathan thought.

Gorham, Illinois

Denny had arrived in Gorham and quickly located Jess, who was working to move the bodies of the deceased to a location for a funeral.

“Where’s Heather?” Denny asked Jess.

“Denny…” Jess couldn’t even speak the words that were necessary for him to hear.

Denny knew what Jess was trying to say, but he wasn’t willing to hear it.

“Jess, where’s Heather?”

She pointed to a home that had been destroyed by fire.

Other books

Haven by Celia Breslin
Just a Taste by Deirdre Martin
Fissure by Nicole Williams
Sugar Daddies by Jade West
Sadler's Birthday by Rose Tremain
Mozart’s Blood by Louise Marley
XPD by Len Deighton
Friendly Fire by Lorhainne Eckhart
Burning Bridges by Nadege Richards
Wiped by Nicola Claire