A Time for Patriots (27 page)

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Authors: Dale Brown

BOOK: A Time for Patriots
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“Let me go in,” Whack said.

“Get out of here, Macomber—this isn't for you,” Chastain snapped. Whack backed up a step; Chastain was going to order him out, but one look at Whack's dark scowl made him decide to just turn and ignore him.

“I'll go in the second CID,” Charlie said. “Randolph and I have been working together all this time—it's best to keep us together.” Jason thought about it for a moment, then nodded.

“Second, I don't want you to engage with them,” Chastain said to Charlie. “What I'm asking is: Can the robots provide you with enough protection from machine-gun fire to allow you to get in there and drag the wreckage away from the compound so those terrorists can't take all of it?”

Charlie thought for a few moments, studying the frozen Sparrowhawk images. “What kind of guns are those, Whack?” she asked.

“They look like M60 machine guns,” he said after studying the screen for a few moments. “I see a couple others that might be M16s, but bigger. AR-18s on a bipod, maybe.”

“Well, Turlock?” Chastain urged.

Charlie turned to Savoy, a look of concern on her face. “The CIDs can take 5.56- and 7.62-millimeter fire at all ranges, even full auto,” she said directly to Savoy. “They can't hurt you, but you
will
feel them. It can get really distracting, even disorientating, like bugs or bats flying around your head. You need to—”

“I can do it, Charlie,” Savoy said. “Let's go.”

“If it's a heavier caliber, like a fifty-cal or twenty-millimeter, at close range with sustained automatic fire, it could damage a muscle joint or sensor, especially in the head,” Charlie went on. “If they use heavier weapons—and your sensors will alert you to the weapon size, direction of fire, and range—you'll have to protect your forward sensor with your forearms. Try not to use just your hands, because the armor's not as tough. If you feel heavy automatic fire on you, you have to move right away so you don't get sustained impacts on one section of armor. The robot's sensors will tell you if you're taking damaging fire . . . sheesh, we've hardly talked about the sensors and helmet warning and malfunction readouts—”

“I understand them pretty well,” Savoy said. “I'm ready.”

“We haven't talked
at
all
about a helicopter insertion.” She turned to Chastain. “We can't do this, Chastain. He's not ready.”

“I
am
ready,” Savoy repeated.

“Is he ready or not, Turlock?” Chastain growled.

Charlie looked at Savoy with concern, but nodded. “I'll be right beside you,” she said. “The best thing to do if you get pinned down by several nests is to run away.”

“Got it, Charlie,” Savoy said. “Let's go.”

Charlie looked at him carefully once more, then nodded at Chastain. “Let's go.”

While Charlie and Savoy mounted inside their CIDs, an Army National Guard UH-60 Black Hawk helicopter was flown over to the hangar. The UH-60 was a long-range medevac model with an external fuel tank on a short pylon on each side mounted above the entry doors, plus protective skids surrounding the landing-gear tires. With the helicopter hovering, Charlie showed Savoy the exact place to hold on to the pylon. “You can fend yourself away from the landing gear,” she radioed to him, “but don't squeeze the pylon, because you'll snap it right off. Grab onto this cross-member on the pylon, circle your fingers around it, and keep your fingers closed. Don't squeeze.”

Minutes later, they were airborne—and the moment they lifted off, Charlie heard a loud
CH
-
CHUNK!
on the other side of the helicopter. “Randolph? You okay?”

“I might have grabbed the pylon a little too hard,” he admitted.

“You copy that, pilot?” Charlie radioed. “You might lose the left fuel tank.”

“They're both empty,” the pilot radioed back.

“Roger,” Charlie said. “If you feel it coming loose, Randolph, just let it bounce off your back.” She hesitated for a moment, then added, “And if you fall . . . well, have a nice ride down. You should be okay when you hit.”

“ ‘Should be'?”

It was a short flight to the Knight compound. From a hundred feet aboveground and two miles away, Charlie could easily see the Sparrowhawk's crash site through her telescopic imaging infrared sensors. The residents had several pickup trucks surrounding the crash, with headlights helping workers pull pieces of wreckage free and throw them into the trucks. “Base, looks like they've just about got the whole thing—we're too late,” Charlie said. “There's four pickups around the crash site full of debris, and it looks like they're loaded up and getting ready to head back. I recommend we—”

At that instant Charlie saw a long, thin flash of yellow fire winking from a few dozen yards west, followed by another several yards north.
“Ground fire!”
she shouted. “We're taking heavy machine-gun fire! Pilot,
break right
!” The Black Hawk swung hard to the right at sixty degrees of bank . . .

. . . and as it did, the entire left pylon snapped from the sudden g-loads and broke free, disappearing into the darkness.

“We lost Savoy!” Charlie shouted, and she let go of the right pylon and fell to earth.

Her landing on the desert surface wasn't her best, because the helicopter had been in such a violent turn when she released, and she rolled and skidded across the hard-packed sand and dirt for about twenty yards before regaining her armored feet. She crouched low and scanned the area. The machine guns were still firing into the night sky. Seconds later, her electronic sensors located Savoy, just fifty yards away, and she dashed toward him. He was facedown, motionless, his arms and legs splayed in unnatural directions.

“I've located Savoy,” Charlie radioed. “Randolph, can you hear me? Damn, he looks hurt.” No response. She checked his physiological readouts. “He's alive but unconscious.” She picked him up in a fireman's carry, then scanned the area. Several pickup trucks were heading from the west toward them, headlights bouncing wildly as they raced across the desert. “They're after me. I'll move east away from these jokers.”

Just as she started to run, her sensors picked up a burst of heavy machine-gun fire on her armor. “Those bastards have a heavy machine gun mounted on one of those pickups!” she radioed. “Might be a fifty-cal!” The fire was pretty sustained considering she was running and the trucks were bouncing all over the place—those pricks were pretty good gunners, she thought. Savoy, on top of Charlie's shoulders, was taking most of the hits. “They're catching up to me,” she radioed. “These guys are driving like maniacs.”

“We've got you in sight,” the Black Hawk pilot radioed. “Keep on coming.” Charlie spotted the Black Hawk in front of her, not more than thirty feet aboveground, heading straight for the pickups.

“They've got a big machine gun,” Charlie radioed. “Break off!”

“Just keep coming,” the pilot said, as calm and cool as if he were sipping a beer. Moments later, the Black Hawk zoomed overhead, flying better than eighty miles an hour.

Charlie could hear the machine gun open fire, but no rounds were hitting her. Were they firing at the helicopter? They must have night vision to be able to see it! Just then she saw a flare of light similar to the machine-gun muzzle flashes, but this one was directed
down
at the ground. Moments later in the sky she saw a burst of fire, followed by a brief trail of fire and loud pops of metal. The roar of the Black Hawk's engines seemed to surge, then hesitate, then surge again. “Are you guys okay?” she radioed. “Are you hit?”

“We took some hits—that last one felt like a missile or RPG,” the pilot radioed, still as calmly as before, “but I got it, I got it, I—” And at that second there was a brilliant flash of light, an earsplitting explosion, and a sharp vibration that rolled through the earth under Charlie's armored feet. She turned and saw a massive fireball blossom across the sky.

“Oh
God
. . .” She ran in the direction of the crash, less than half a mile away, even though she began receiving “POWER 50 PERCENT” warning messages. But as she got closer, she could see the Black Hawk fully engulfed in flames. Soon several pickup trucks surrounded the wreckage, and men began shouting and shooting automatic weapons in the air in celebration.

“One cannon backpack—that's all I need,” Charlie said. Angrily, reluctantly, she turned away from the wreckage and the extremists and headed across the desert to safety.

Washington, D.C.

The next morning

“T
his is without a doubt one of the most flagrant and outrageous misuses of power since Japanese internment camps during World War Two,” former president Joseph Gardner said. Gardner, a tall and impossibly handsome character bred for politics, was a longtime Washington power player—secretary of the Navy and ardent sea-power advocate, who parlayed his steep buildup of naval forces after the American Holocaust into a successful campaign for president of the United States on a strong national defense platform.

“Who would have believed,” Gardner went on, “that Ken Phoenix would order the FBI to use military hardware to secretly spy on American citizens, over American soil?” Gardner went on, deliberately not using Phoenix's title when talking about him. “And then, in an even greater assault on personal freedom, they send two of those manned robots in to attack that community. It's
unthinkable
.”

“Why do you say it's military hardware, Mr. President?” the morning talk-show interviewer asked. “Unmanned aircraft are used by police and Border Patrol agencies, not just the military.”

“Both drones were built by a company called Sky Masters, Inc., which is a small but well-known developer of military hardware of all kinds, including weapons, satellites, and aircraft,” Gardner said. “The drones that crashed were called MQ-15 Sparrowhawks. They are capable of carrying up to a thousand pounds of sensors or weapons, including laser-guided missiles, and they've been used in Afghanistan, Pakistan, and Iraq. That Ken Phoenix actually ordered the FBI to fly potentially armed aircraft over the United States to target innocent American citizens is criminal. And those robots belong to the U.S. Army and are armed with cannons and missile launchers—clearly, military technology, designed to kill. Someone has to be held accountable for this outrage, and the buck stops right on Mr. Phoenix's desk.”

“A spokesperson for the Department of Justice said that suspects residing in the compound where the drone crashed were linked to the recent attacks in Reno and southern Nevada,” the interviewer said. “Shouldn't we be using all the resources we have to investigate such extreme terrorist activity, Mr. President?”

“Where's the evidence backing this claim?” Gardner said, spreading his hands. “Let's see the evidence. Besides, the FBI has its own resources—
legal
resources—to investigate crime. Why did Phoenix give the FBI military hardware?”

“So you oppose using drones and these manned robots to conduct surveillance on suspected terrorists?” the interviewer asked. “As I understand it, it is not against the law for the U.S. military to
assist
law enforcement, as long as they don't make arrests or attack civilians.”

“How would you like a military spy plane flying over your home taking pictures and sending them to gawkers in the FBI and White House?” Gardner asked. “And what do you think those robots were doing out there—taking pictures? It's crazy. This is America, not Soviet Russia. And where's the warrant authorizing these drone flights? Who was the judge that signed the warrant? Or did Phoenix himself order the surveillance, without a warrant? And what if there
was
a midair collision, as the residents there claim? Did Phoenix kill innocent civilians with this dangerous and possibly illegal surveillance? We need answers to all these questions, and so far the Phoenix administration has been slow and extremely reluctant to provide them.”

“T
hat's a load of crap, Gardner,” Vice President Ann Page said acidly at the television she was watching from the Oval Office. She muted the sound, but continued to watch as the cable news network showed a low-light camera image of the Cybernetic Infantry Device robot running across the desert, carrying another robot. “I've put out a press release detailing the entire operation, including the name of the U.S. District Court judge that signed the warrants.”

“I know, Ann, I know,” President Ken Phoenix said. “President Gardner is just spouting off. Point out all of his inaccuracies in the daily press briefing and folks will start to ignore him.”

“Don't worry, I will,” Ann said heatedly.

The computer on the president's desk beeped, and Phoenix hit a button to put the secure videophone call on speakerphone. The screen was split, with Attorney General Jocelyn Caffery on one half and FBI director Fuller on the other. “General Caffery, Director Fuller, this is the president. How are you?”

“Good, thank you, sir,” Attorney General Caffery replied. “Director Fuller has an update for you.”

“Go ahead, Justin.”

“Thank you, sir,” FBI director Justin Fuller replied. “I'm en route to Nevada to oversee the investigation on those two drone crashes and the Black Hawk attack. Here's is the latest:

“There are five casualties: two U.S. Army National Guard pilots and one National Guard crew chief—all volunteers assisting the FBI—and one FBI agent died in the Black Hawk crash. Another FBI agent piloting the Cybernetic Infantry Device robot died about thirty minutes ago of trauma from his fall from the helicopter and wounds from heavy machine-gun fire that pierced his armor. The pilot reported to one of the CIDs that he thought he had been hit by a missile or a rocket-propelled grenade. The FBI and Army are on the scene of the helicopter crash, and the residents of that compound are not interfering, but I ordered all investigators to stay away from the compound.”

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