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Authors: Lisa Marie Rice

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BOOK: I Dream of Danger
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She couldn’t pull her finger from her flesh because she’d never have the nerve to dig it back in. With her right hand she pulled, harder and harder, feeling the resistance of the chip, almost as if it were alive.

This wasn’t working. Was it deeper than she thought? But no, she could feel it. It should have been out by now. With her left hand she pulled a clean washcloth from the counter, stuffed it into her mouth and before she could rethink it, braced her feet and pulled as hard as she could. The washcloth muffled her screams as she bent her head back, incapable of breathing from the pain.

Her head spun, black spots danced before her eyes. She was a whisper from passing out when the chip moved under her finger. She pulled harder, the pain so sharp it felt almost like a living thing, then staggered back when she finally pulled the chip out.

Elle spat out the washcloth, head hanging over the washbasin, her panting loud in the room, trying hard not to throw up. Finally, the room stopped swimming. The tears of pain dripped into the sink, her arm throbbed.

Everything disappeared though when she brought the chip up for inspection. It had the Corona logo of three tiny crowns in one corner. It was a standard chip except for one thing—there were tendrils growing out of it, twisting and curling.
Alive.
Holding the chip close to her eyes, she touched the tendrils with a set of tweezers and watched, horrified and fascinated, as they retracted, as a sea anemone’s tendrils would.

The tendrils had grown out of the chip. Whatever was in the chip, it was semi-alive. No, scratch that. Alive.

There was no time now to explore the chip, though. She left it on the edge of the sink, then set about repairing herself. She applied gel from her derma-glue tube that would hold the skin together better than stitches, then stuck on an antibiotic bandage with a painkiller gel.

There. The best she could do.

The pain had powered down to a dull throbbing that hurt like hell but didn’t impede her movements. She moved fast now, in the dark, choosing cold-weather sports clothes from her closet. There might be the faintest of chances that Arka had seeded its employees’ clothes with trackers, so she chose clothes she’d never worn to work.

Warm cashmere sweater, wool pants, thermal socks, boots, long down coat. In the living room her fingers ran across one of the shelves until she reached a familiar book by feel. She couldn’t read the title but she knew what it was. A thick tome on advanced biochemistry, guaranteed to spark not an atom of interest in anyone. Inside she’d carved out a hole in the pages large enough to hold cash. She pulled out the entire stash—two thousand dollars. She knew only too well what it meant to be on the road without cash.

She bolted for the window. Sophie’s voice had been raw with fear. Sophie was so steady and stable. Hearing that note of panic in her voice had galvanized Elle.

There was no background light to betray her as she peered out the edge of her front window. In the back of her mind, she knew what she wanted to see and she saw it. The small empty garden of the front of her building and the empty street beyond it. It was a dead end street, and she knew every car on it and knew every person who lived there.

Nothing. Dark and silent and safe. Was she overreacting? Had Sophie been somehow having a psychotic episode? And yet, that chip with the terrifying tendrils— Maybe it would be best to disappear for a few days. She started to turn away, then stopped as something dark glided into view.

A car she’d never seen before—black and unfashionably huge—slid to a stop and four men exited. The interior lights didn’t come on as they slipped out of the car like shadows. Dressed in black, they seemed to meld into the night, but not so much that Elle couldn’t tell where they were headed.

Straight to her building.

The car rolled forward, made a U-turn on the empty street and stopped right in front of her building’s driveway.

Her four-story apartment building was built slightly back from the road with a small garden in front. The garden was protected by a chest-high wrought-iron fence with a six-foot gate in the middle.

The four men had black full-face helmets with the dull black lenses of nightvision.

Two of the men moved like shadows to the corners of the fence and crouched, the other two disappeared. Elle had no doubt where they had gone—to the back of the building via the alleyway. As she watched, the two men out front tapped their ear and stood.

It didn’t take much to guess what they’d heard. The other two were stationed in the back and they could make their move. In a synchronized flow that would have won medals at the Olympics, the two black-clad men smoothly cleared the fence in a lithe leap and moved slowly, deliberately forward.

Toward the front door. And, eventually to her apartment on the second floor.

Oh my God, Sophie was right!

Elle realized she had seconds to get out. Run and go

She drew a blank. But wherever she was going she had to get there fast. She scooped her purse off the floor and ran.

Her apartment building was part of a complex of four condos, connected by basement corridors invisible from outside the house. Heart thumping, she tumbled down the stairs to the first floor, then kept on going down. She swiped her card past the basement entrance sensor, slapped her hand on the sensor that read the vein pattern of her palms, then let out a sharp exhale as she heard the click of the front door unlocking. The building had excellent security, both digital and bio. She’d traded space for safety. If these men were able to circumvent it in mere seconds, they were very good. Professional. That scared her more than if
DOPA
addicts were breaking into her home.

Her car was lost to her. They’d parked right across the driveway, blocking her. She had to get as far away as she could on foot, when she could hardly stand.

There was no noise from the building. If they were breaking into her apartment, they were doing it silently. Well, her security was a step down from the building security that they’d laughed at when they broke in.

The basement corridor was long and almost completely dark, the only light coming from dim chemical bulbs every ten feet. It felt like the corridor stretched forever. She leaned against the wall, legs weak, arm throbbing.

It had to be done. The wall at the end of the long corridor looked at least a mile away, receding constantly, like some movie effect. Cold sweat covered her face and chest. She swayed and would have fallen if she hadn’t slapped a hand against the wall.

For a moment, for just a moment, she was tempted to simply slide down that wall and wait for whoever was up there to make it down to the basement. If they were thorough, they’d check the building plans on record. The underground connecting corridor was a feature of the building.

If she didn’t move, they’d come for her and find her.

Three people were missing from the program—four now, with Sophie—and it was very likely they’d been abducted by whoever had sent the men who were right here, at this very moment going through her house. Whatever they wanted, it wasn’t good.

Sophie had risked precious minutes warning her. Had maybe compromised her escape to warn her.

Go,
Elle told herself. And a couple of seconds later, her feet obeyed.

She was gasping with fatigue when she reached the end. She stopped, leaned against the wall, catching her breath. It was so awful, the drumbeat of imminent danger sounding in her head, but her body unable to obey. Stress and danger hummed in her, but she could barely stay upright.

Every minute spent here increased the chances of her being found. If the men in black came down to this basement corridor she’d be the easiest prey on earth. She’d read somewhere that the latest generation of stunners could kill or maim at five hundred feet.

She straightened away from the wall and turned, her feet moving in a maddeningly slow shuffle.

There were two exits, one up the building stairs that led to the front door and one that let out the side of the building. Instinct had her taking the side exit. She opened the side door cautiously and peeped out. There was absolutely no one in sight.

How much time did she have?

Even if they circumvented her personal security system as easily as they did the building one, surely it would take some time to establish that she wasn’t home? A few minutes at least.

It would have to be enough.

She knew her neighborhood well enough to make it through backyards, going as fast as she could, until she finally came out onto another section of town. On foot it took about ten minutes. By car it would take longer, even if they knew where she was. As it was, when they discovered she wasn’t home, they’d probably cover her neighborhood in a grid search, which would take time.

Elle exited the warren of backyards and service alleys into an entirely new neighborhood. Not a savory one either.

Great, because maybe they wouldn’t look for her here.

Elle stopped, leaning against a broken street lamp, catching her breath. She needed a plan that covered more than the next five minutes, but it was eluding her. Pain and adrenaline and exhaustion were blocking her thought processes. She needed a safe place—but where?

An expensive hotel was out. So were the three or four hotels that the company habitually used for visiting professors, because the men after her would have that list. And of course they’d know if she used her credit card.

Think Elle!
She clung to the lamppost, head down, trying to reason her way through this. She was so very tired. The test session had drained almost every ounce of energy out of her. Then the shock of the phone call, the pain of digging around in her own arm, of pulling that chip out, the terror at seeing those men in black after her . . .

This is what Jane Macy must have felt like after her breakdown. She’d had a psychotic episode after a test and had disappeared. The company had cited privacy issues when Elle asked about her.

Why was she thinking of Jane?

Oh! The memory popped into her head, clear and complete and she pushed off from the lamppost with a surge of energy she knew was the last of her reserves.

Jane had had an affair with a married guy, a lawyer working for one of the many venture capital firms in the area. His wife was really powerful and could do some serious damage to him if she found out.

The one thing everyone knew about the wife was that she really liked being rich, disliked even seeing poor people. She wouldn’t travel through poorer sections of the cities she visited on business trips, and had her drivers make great circuitous loops to avoid even the sight of the poor.

So Jane had found a tiny motel in the poorer part of town that didn’t ask questions, didn’t take down ID and took cash.

Elle remembered the name of the motel and knew where it was.

It was walkable, just. If her strength held out. And she’d have to walk through more backyards and back roads, because she had to assume there would be cars on the streets looking for her, and cameras they could hack.

The one thing that had been clear when Arka started up the research project was that Arka was awash in money. It had money to burn, and if it sent out its full security force, she was in real trouble.

She couldn’t think beyond finding a place to rest, so she pushed off and began the long trudge to the motel that asked no questions.

Arka Pharmaceuticals Headquarters

Financial District

San Francisco

D
r. Charles Lee watched the video of the debriefing of Dr. Elle Connolly for the fifth time. Dr. Daniels hadn’t been at all thorough and would be reprimanded, but what shone through was that Connolly had penetrated the secret lab at Bayankhongor, apparently during a training session. There were twenty three-star generals in Mongolia and Lee would show Connolly photographs but he was almost certain that the three-star general she’d seen was General Yisu, the head of Mongolian Special Forces.

And the secret camp, whose coordinates he’d given to Connolly, was working on a rail gun.

Surely that would buy him some time with the Chinese Ministry of Science and Technology?

Resentment swelled in his chest at the thought. Though he’d emigrated with his family to America at the age of seven, his heart had remained back in the homeland. He’d raced through school and university and had risen quickly up through the ranks of Arka with one thought, and one thought only. Coming back to Beijing a conqueror, bearing the key to making China the uncontested sole superpower in the world, and taking his rightful place at the top of the government hierarchy.

He’d started by working with General Clancy Flynn, using black funds from the U.S. military, then funneling the results to Beijing. The response had been immensely gratifying. A byproduct of one of the research projects was a cancer vaccine. He’d sent in a black ops team run by Flynn called Ghost Ops—men whose pasts had been erased, men who no longer officially existed—to destroy the lab where the vaccine had been developed, then sent the vaccine to Beijing. The top tiers of the Chinese government were all now vaccinated and a mass vaccination of the forty-million-strong armed forces was under way.

The Ghost Ops team had been accused of domestic terrorism, forevermore criminals in the eyes of the U.S. government.

Flynn had been only too willing to sacrifice his black ops team. Lee understood that Flynn resented the Ghost Ops leader, Captain Lucius Ward. Lee didn’t care either way. It seemed to him the squabbling of children. What he had got out of the operation was four elite warriors to experiment on.

Because his ultimate goal was the creation of a super soldier. Tougher, faster, smarter. With better eyesight, better hearing, greater healing abilities, faster synapses. Captain Ward and the three Ghost Ops soldiers that had been caught—another three had escaped and were still at large—proved recalcitrant in the extreme, however. In the end, Lee had decided to sacrifice them, harvest the brains and study the effects of the drugs he was testing.

BOOK: I Dream of Danger
2.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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