Sleeper Cell Super Boxset (158 page)

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Authors: Roger Hayden,James Hunt

BOOK: Sleeper Cell Super Boxset
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It was Bram’s last play. If this didn’t work he knew it was over.

 

“Cease fire!” Bram yelled.

 

The men around him echoed his orders. A few moments later the firing stopped and Bram could hear similar shouts from the rebels.

 

“Get me a bullhorn,” Bram said.

 

 

***

 

“The explosives are set, sir.”

 

“All right. We’re all set here. Let’s get the hell out of Dodge,” the lieutenant said.

 

Mike stared at Kalen’s face on the stretcher they set her on. At that moment he wasn’t in Cincinnati, in the middle of a war, standing in a factory with soldiers and missiles.

 

Right now he was back in Pittsburgh. He was just getting ready for work, making his rounds to everyone’s room. He was opening Kalen’s door to give her a kiss on the forehead before he left for the day, taking a moment to watch her sleep. She always looked like her mom when she slept. It was so peaceful.

 

But when the lieutenant grabbed his shoulder and spun him around that moment was gone. He wasn’t in Pittsburgh. He wasn’t watching his daughter sleep. He
was
in the middle of a war.

 

“Mike Grant.”

 

Mike recognized Bram’s voice, and when he looked outside through the scope of his gun he could see his wife standing right next to him.

 

 

***

 

The lieutenant gave Mike a rundown of the situation. Bram would trade her life for his factory.

 

“Take the goddamn chargers down,” Mike said.

 

“Mike, it’s not that simple.”

 

“Take them down!”

 

“If you talk to him and buy us some time, then I can position some of my snipers to take him out.”

 

“They better have good aim.”

 

Bram had himself surrounded by his men. When Mike got close Bram told his men to make a small opening so Mike could see him.

 

Anne was stained with blood, and Mike had no idea whether or not the blood was hers.
“Anne, honey, are you okay?” Mike asked.

 

“She’ll be fine when my men finish a clean sweep of the factory and the rest of the rebel bastards that are here have gone back over the river,” Bram said.

 

“Let her go, Bram,” Mike said. “If you want a bargaining chip, then use me. I’m the one who led them here. I know where you can find Wyatt.”

 

“And where is our mutual friend?” Bram asked. “Still having others do his dirty work for him? Wyatt always had a problem with the execution.”

 

Mike didn’t know how much time the lieutenant’s men needed.

 

“I’m going to give you till the count of ten, Mike. If my factory isn’t cleared out and the rest of the rebels aren’t hightailing it out of here, then your wife dies.”

 

Cain handed Bram his knife and he put it to Anne’s throat. She didn’t move. She didn’t scream. The only noticeable change was the tears streaming down her face.

 

“One,” Bram said.

 

“Bram, look around. It’s over,” Mike said.

 

“Two.”

 

There had been plenty of time to take the shot by now. Mike didn’t know what the lieutenant was waiting for.

 

“Three.”

 

“Let her go, Bram.”

 

Mike’s hand reached for his gun, but he didn’t grab it. He was afraid if he tried to make a move then Bram would too. The knife was too close to Anne’s throat.

 

“Four.”

 

What is he waiting for?

 

“Five.”

 

Mike looked over to the lieutenant’s men, still aiming their guns at Bram’s soldiers. Nobody was moving.

 

“Six.”

 

“Lieutenant, tell your men to back down. Tell them to do it now!” Mike said.

 

“Seven.”

 

Mike rushed up to one of the lieutenant’s soldiers. Mike pulled out his own gun and put it to the soldier’s head.

 

“Clear the factory now!” Mike screamed.

 

“Eight.”

 

Mike looked back to Anne. His body was churning with grief and rage. He couldn’t watch another one of his girls die.

 

“I will kill this man if you don’t get the hell out. Do you hear me, lieutenant?” Mike yelled.

 

“Nine.”

 

Mike squeezed the grip of his gun hard. Either his fingers would break, or the rifle’s handle would.

 

Bram’s mouth looked as though it was about to form the word “ten” when a bullet split the side of Cain’s head open. The moment that happened Bram slid the blade of his knife across Anne’s throat and she fell to the ground.

 

Mike aimed his gun at Bram and squeezed the trigger. He pulled it repeatedly. He couldn’t tell how many of his shots got off, because once the first bullet went into Bram’s body every other soldier with a weapon fired.

 

Once Mike could hear the click of the firing pin signaling that his magazine was empty, he felt the pieces of lead tear through him.

 

The hot bullets flew into his chest, sending him backwards and hurling him to the ground.

 

 

***

 

When Mike woke up he felt as if a car was sitting on top of his chest. His vision was blurry as he looked around. There were tubes stuck into his arm, and it was difficult to breathe.

 

He was dressed in a hospital gown and when he tried to move a sharp pain shot through his entire body.

 

He could hear a beeping somewhere next to him. It was growing louder. A woman came in and pressed a few buttons on the machine next to his bed.

 

“Where am I?” Mike asked.

 

“Take it easy, Mr. Grant.”

 

She pressed her hand on his shoulder. Mike started to feel dizzy.

 

“I need to see my son,” Mike said.

 

“You need to rest.”

 

The nurse plugged another needle into his arm. He started to feel sleepy again.

 

“No, I need… to… see…”

 

 

***

 

When Mike woke up again his chest still hurt, but he was propped up in the bed. The first face he saw when he opened his eyes was Dr. Wyatt.

 

“Hello, Mike,” Wyatt said. “You’ve been out cold for a few days now. It’s good to see you awake.”

 

Mike tried to remember the events before the hospital. How he got there. Where his family was. Slowly, everything came back to him.

 

 

 

 

“Where is Freddy?” Mike asked.

 

“How are you feeling?” Dr. Wyatt asked.

 

Wyatt kept dodging the question. Mike could feel panic rush over him. There wasn’t any anger left. It was just fear. Fear and grief. He started crying.

 

“Where’s my son?” Mike asked, tears pouring down his face.

 

Dr. Wyatt rose from his seat slowly. He reached into his pocket and pulled out the silver pocket watch that Mike had given his son.

 

When Dr. Wyatt placed it in Mike’s hand the scream that came out of him was so primal, so harrowing that it caused three hospital staff members to rush into his room.

 

Mike thrashed on the bed. His chest felt as if it was going to rip apart, but he didn’t care. He’d lost everything. There wasn’t any type of pain left in the world that could hurt him.

 

Day 56 (Cincinnati)

 

Mike put on the shirt the hospital staff gave him. He buckled his pants, tied his shoes, and ran his fingers over the scars on his chest.

 

The doctors took out four bullets. Even though it had been a few weeks Mike still couldn’t push himself. The doctors told him it would take another three months of rehab before he could do anything physical again, but Mike didn’t have any plans on staying here.

 

He knew the doctors couldn’t make him stay once he was able to start getting up and moving around on his own. The only time he’d left the hospital previous to this was when he buried his family.

 

It was a few weeks ago. He declined to speak during the funeral. What little hope he held onto was that his family knew how much he loved them. And he knew they couldn’t hear him anymore anyway.

 

Dr. Wyatt requested to see him before he left. Mike didn’t want to speak with the man, but that was the one condition upon his release. This place was as much of a prison as it was a hospital.

 

Mike walked into the waiting room and Dr. Wyatt was there, reading a magazine.

 

“What do you want?” Mike asked.

 

Mike’s tone was dry, heartless. If he had a weapon on him he would have killed Wyatt on the spot.

 

“I’m asking you to stay. You’re still not well enough to travel and be on your own yet. We’re just now starting to set up supply routes to get the rest of the country up and running, but it’ll take a few more months. It’s still not safe out there,” Dr. Wyatt said.

 

“It’s not safe anywhere.”

 

Mike reached into his pocket and pulled out the pocket watch that belonged to his father, which he passed down to his own son. Now both his father and his son were dead. Mike tossed the watch to Wyatt.

 

“I don’t want it,” Mike said.

 

“It’s something you should keep. It belongs to your family.”

 

“Then bury it where the rest of my family is.”

 

Mike turned to go, but Dr. Wyatt stopped him.

 

“Here, take this,” Dr. Wyatt said, handing him the journal.

 

“Why?”

 

“Because I didn’t hold up my end of the deal. This journal has enough evidence for you to do whatever you want to me.”

 

Mike grabbed the journal, stuffed it into his bag, and left. As he walked down the streets of Cincinnati he realized there wasn’t anything left in this world for him. He decided to go back to the one place where he could be alone. The cabin.

 

The only thing he had to worry about now was how he was going to choose to leave this world. That was one choice he wasn’t going to let anyone else make for him.

Six Months After the Blackout

 

The judge brought the gavel down hard.

 

“Order. I will have order in this courtroom,” he said.

 

Mike still had his handcuffs on and he was sitting next to his appointed attorney.

 

“Mike Grant,” the judge said, “you have pleaded guilty and provided a written statement to the crimes against the United States government and its people, correct?”

 

“Yes, Your Honor.”

 

“At this time you are able to make any opening statements before the proceedings take place.”

 

The courtroom was small. The only people that were allowed inside were a few high-ranking government officials, the attorneys, the judge, and sitting directly behind Mike was Agent Sullivan.

 

Mike dug his hand into his pants pocket and felt the cool outline of the his father’s silver watch. When the guards patted him down he was allowed to keep it.

 

“I have done terrible things. Things that have cost me everything I hold dear. When the power went out we didn’t just lose the lights in the cities, we lost the light within ourselves. We became dark, and twisted. We killed each other. We lost our way,” Mike said.

 

Everyone in the room was looking at him, staring, waiting for him to finish so they could walk through the dog and pony show and get to the execution, delivering him to justice.

 

“I watched my father, my wife, and my daughter die in front of me. I’ve felt their blood on my hands. It’s a stain I still haven’t been able to wash off. And when I found out that my son had been murdered, I didn’t think I had anything left to live for.”

 

Mike gripped the pocket watch harder. He was holding onto it for dear life.

 

“I thought I wanted to die. That’s why I came here, why I turned myself in. But then I remembered something my father told me a long time ago. He said that as long as one member of a family is alive, the rest live with them. They live on through the choices you make,” Mike said.

 

“What are you getting at, Mr. Grant?” the judge asked.

 

“Every single event that I listed in my statement happened—the EMP explosion, the planned coup to overthrow the government, all of it. But I wasn’t the one who planned it.”

 

Mike’s attorney started typing furiously at his laptop. Everyone started talking. The judge banged the gavel hard again.

 

“Order! Order! Mr. Grant, do you have any proof of your statements?” the judge asked.

 

“Yes, I do. There is a small cabin just outside of Carrollton, Ohio. It belonged to me. Inside you’ll find a desk and in the bottom drawer is a journal. The journal belonged to a Dr. Quinn Wyatt. In it you’ll find all the evidence you need of who planned the attacks.”

 

Mike turned around and looked at Agent Sullivan. Ben was smiling.

 

“In light of these recent events I move that we take a recess. I would like both counselors to join me in my chambers,” the judge said.

 

Mike’s attorney disappeared and an officer came and escorted Mike out of the courtroom. Before Mike left Ben grabbed his arm.

 

“What changed your mind?” Ben asked.

 

“My son.”

 

 

***

 

Once the authorities confirmed the journal was at Mike’s cabin a new investigation was launched. Agent Sullivan was hailed for his thoroughness and diligence, and Mike was told that he would be set free.

 

Up until his release Mike was allowed to see visitors. This time he chose to see two.

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