Fallout

Fallout

by Earl Merkel
Fallout

Fallout

by Earl Merkel

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Overview

When DC is leveled by a nuclear attack and the President is assassinated, former CIA op Beck Casey rises from the ashes to bring terrorists to justice . . .
 
“Washington . . . gone.
 
Ominous words uttered on an Israeli submarine stationed in the Gulf of Oman moments before a torpedo destroys that vessel as well.
 
A nuclear strike has rendered the American capital a radioactive wasteland. But that’s just the beginning of a vast, coordinated terrorist attack. The President falls next. Lone wolf shootings erupt throughout the heartland. Computer viruses take down systems and disable grids across the country.
 
The stakes have never been higher, as former CIA agent Beck Casey joins forces with an international task force to neutralize a seemingly unstoppable enemy. They’ve got three days to save the world . . . or die trying.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781626816299
Publisher: Diversion Books
Publication date: 02/06/2019
Series: The Beck Casey Thrillers , #3
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 366
Sales rank: 1,031,135
File size: 2 MB

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

May 1
Oak Park Shopping Mall Overland Park, Kansas
1:52 P.M. CDT

Randi Taylor struggled with the heavy glass door, handicapped as she was with an oversized stroller, a dangling diaper bag, her Coach purse — and, of course, Amanda herself: still fretful from being awakened and hoisted from a designer pink car seat, only to be strapped into yet another pink-hued, four-wheeled contrivance.

Which was now wedged in the half-open door, defying Randi's contortions to simultaneously yank it open and push the stroller through.

She was rescued by a hand that came from behind, reaching past her to pull the balky doorway wide and hold it open.

Randi glanced back, and shot a wan smile in gratitude.

The owner of the hand — a kid, Randi saw, trying to look older than he was — nodded his own smile in return.

They moved inside as if they were a couple.

"Thanks," Randi said, "I really appreciate — "

But the young stranger was already gone, absorbed into the hustle of faceless others moving with determination inside.

Randi trudged forward, more than a bit envious of his unencumbered freedom.

Cripes, she told herself. Really packed in here today. Yeah, great idea, dragging Mandy and everything she owns into this mob scene ...

Still, it was an escape. Of sorts.

For the past twelve hours-plus, there had been no respite from what had, rapidly and succinctly, become known as "The Attack." Every television channel, every website, even the music stations on her car radio during the drive here — all had been consumed by the tragic events in Washington D.C.

For Randi, it had been wildly overwhelming at first — and then, it had become stultifyingly oversaturated. By Amanda's noon-time feeding, she had had more than enough televised punditry, "news" accounts that were still little more than ill-informed speculation, and video clips of a dying city — Certainly, she had mused, enough to last the rest of my life.

And so Randi had packed up her almost-one-year-old child, along with the requisite impedimenta that filled even the spacious mid-seat of her Honda Odyssey.

And headed for the mall.

Others had had the same idea. The mall was crowded, a bustling throng of news-refugee shoppers — more reminiscent of a pre-Christmas weekend than of a Thursday afternoon in May.

Lots of offices closed down for the day, Randi told herself. Probably lots of other people too freaked out to go in, I bet. Didn't know what else to do, so they came here.

Like me, she added, rueful.

Randi took a deep breath, then wedged the too-large baby carriage — a gift from grandparents decidedly doting, if also somewhat clueless to a young mother's navigational needs — into the jostling torrent of shopping humanity.

As she did, from the stroller came a new, rising clamor.

Perhaps annoyed at the tumult — or perhaps alerted by a primordial, instinctive sense of looming disaster — Amanda started to cry, loudly.

* * *

He had been polite, holding the door for the woman and her child. That was for show, to avoid attracting any unwanted attention; video cameras were everywhere, and he reckoned that any display of nerves, or of impatience, or of anything but what could be deemed "normal" behavior might well mark him in the eyes of mall security watchers.

Today, for sure, he thought. Especially today.

He had taken pains to appear "normal." His hair was carefully combed, in a more conservative style than he would otherwise sport; he had donned a pair of casual loafers, which melded well with the pressed-and-creased khaki slacks; a light-blue Oxford shirt, collar-points buttoned over a bright-silk vermillion tie, emphasized his newly fresh-faced features.

Even the stylish sports coat — tweed, possibly a bit too bulky for a mild day in May — suited his needs nicely. It fit well, and the side pockets showed not a sign of the burden they carried.

Six 17-round magazines, three in each pocket.

A total of one hundred and twenty 9mm rounds, if one also counted the loaded Glock and the bullet already chambered therein.

Charles Alexander Campbell — known more familiarly as Chaz to what one news reporter would subsequently describe as an "increasingly concerned circle of friends" among his fellow junior-class students at Shawnee Mission East High School — merged seamlessly into the crowd: in it, if not of it.

Ahead of him, at the top of the escalator, a department store anchored the east side of the mall; it overlooked a packed food court.

The store's open-to-the-mall entryway was marked with a large red star.

To Chaz Campbell, it seemed very much like a beacon.

* * *

Goddamn crazy in here today, Piper Cameron muttered, if silently. She sidestepped, narrowly avoiding a head-on collision with an Asian woman who bent under the weight of four red-starred shopping bags she carried and, instead, bumping hard against the shoulder of a harried store employee rushing in the opposite direction.

Piper straightened, keyed the radio mic clipped to her forest-green uniform's left shoulder epaulette.

"Base, Cameron."

The response was immediate: "Go ahead, Piper."

"The thing at Macy's. All clear. Store decided she wasn't a shoplifter after all."

"Ten-four. All clear." The voice dropped a level, conspiratorially. "Let me guess. A regular customer, hefty charge-card balance?"

Piper smiled despite herself. "Roger that. Just 'forgot' she dropped a bottle of Chanel in her purse. She paid; manager apologized to her for the misunderstanding."

"Yeah. Make sure you put her name on the report. I'll archive the video, in case she forgets again the next time."

"Way ahead of you there, Base. I already flagged her driver's license and Macy's account numbers. Cameron, out."

Ah, said the wry voice inside her head. The exciting life of a mall cop. They ought to make a movie. Oh, wait — they already did. No Oscar for that guy, either.

Still, she countered, recognizing how pathetic the unspoken debate sounded even to her, I get to wear a uniform again.

Truth be told, she had missed that. It gave her a feeling of purpose — even if it was a different uniform from that which Piper had worn during two tours in the Sandbox, when her National Guard unit had been activated for duty in the Middle East.

There she had been assigned to a military police unit, the beneficiary of specialized training that "they" had promised would make her application a "sure thing" when she returned to full-time civilian life.

The lingering post-crash economy and what seemed like an epidemic of law-enforcement hiring freezes had put a resounding kibosh to those plans.

Piper still sent out her vitae on a regular, if recently a less- frequent, basis. But as with the inexorable solidity of concrete hardening, she knew: Fate had carefully studied her, weighed its options, issued its edict.

Congratulations! Your "career" is limited to shoplifters and the occasional pickpocket, she told herself. Oh, yeah, and giving teenaged mall rats — who are almost as bored as I am — carefully jovial, unflinchingly polite suggestions to move along or go home.

She tried to reassure herself. That the mall rats complied — if usually with more than a few snickering asides — was fortunate for them. That they did so grudgingly was probably due more to youthful disdain for any Authority Figure than to the fact that she was admittedly shorter than many of them, and looked younger than most of them.

On the plus side, Piper reasoned, after five years in the Guard, I'm arguably more physically fit than any of 'em. So eat your Wheaties, kids. You too can aspire to a thrilling life of crime fighting at the shopping center ...

Piper Cameron sighed.

Ahead of her, through the wide entry of the store, the expanse of skylighted mall was bright and bustling. It turned the foreground of passing shoppers into little more than silhouettes — including one who now detached himself from that moving river of bodies, then stood stock-still, gazing down at the crowded food court.

* * *

Amanda was still crying as Randi slid into the recently vacated plastic seat, still warm from the previous occupant. Randi wrinkled her nose, only partly due to the miasma of frying meats from the half-circle of food vendors. She frowned at the crumpled burger wrapper and the half-consumed soft drink that her unknown seat-benefactor had abandoned.

A resigned sigh, barely audible; Randi pulled the stroller closer, then fished out an opaque plastic bottle from amid the spare diapers, baby wipes, and other essential detritus that filled the bag.

"C'mon, Mandy," she cooed. "Let's see if a little snack will dry up those tears, 'kay? Just for Mommy, baby?"

Thus occupied, Randi Taylor did not notice the figure — thirty feet above and slightly to the side of her — who at that moment was reaching inside his tweed sports coat.

In this, she was not alone. No one else noticed, either.

* * *

"The damn thing ... is ... oh, shit ... c'mon!

Right shoulder hunched awkwardly, Chaz could touch the butt of the Glock thrust deeply into the waistband of his trousers.

Too deeply. As he worked his fingertips past the belt he had earlier cinched tight, the pistol slipped further down.

It hung at his abdomen, hooked only by the lip of its magazine extension — as delicately poised as a hapless tightrope artist might dangle by a finger after a slip.

Gravity always wins. As he pushed his two-finger pinch deeper, the Glock was suddenly free — sliding down Chaz's pant leg and out the cuff, landing with an acrylic clatter on the polished concrete floor at his feet.

Chaz ducked into a crouch and snatched up the pistol, feral in posture and eye.

But among the passing crowd, only one person had taken note: a boy, perhaps six years old, being wrist-tugged by an oblivious mother as they pushed past. As Chaz straightened, from the corner of his eye he could see the boy look back over his shoulder, curious yet unconcerned.

And then Charles Campbell turned, his waist pressed hard against the balcony railing and the pistol in both hands, the faceless crowd below filling its sights.

* * *

The first shot was a single shot, but only strictly speaking. The 9mm Glock is a semi-automatic weapon, firing once with each trigger pull. But the plastic and metal pistol is also renowned for a smoothness of operation, a steadiness of recoil, an ability for the shooter to reacquire a target quickly and accurately.

It also allows firing at the speed at which the shooter can twitch his finger.

For his initial fusillade, Chaz Campbell twitched his finger at an appalling speed.

Firing into a packed mass — first, a half-dozen rounds down into the food court, then several rounds snapped to his left, right, and behind his position — made any sharpshooting accuracy needless.

* * *

The flat, piercing crack-thuds — the first of them, so closely spaced that they merged into a single, ripping, horrific stutter — spun Piper into an involuntary crouch, her body reacting with instincts honed under an Afghan sky even before her conscious mind had identified the sound.

Not so for the plump woman beside her, still standing but now wide- eyed.

"Gun! Get down!" Piper screamed, and the woman's eyes shifted toward her without comprehension.

And then the woman's face exploded in a crimson mist, simultaneously with what Piper knew without counting was the next three-round burst. The woman — a body now, nothing more — fell to both knees, swaying slightly, then toppled to the floor.

Piper looked around wildly, trying to identify the source amid the chaos of gunshots, gunshot echoes, and the sudden cacophony of screams.

Other bodies were falling now too, almost at random: A man in a Kansas City Royals baseball cap clutched at his neck, spinning into a trio of manikins and sending all four figures tumbling; a teenaged clerk threw her arms high as if in elation, then pitched forward onto a cosmetics counter.

More shots, more screams, legs scrambling past her in every direction; panic and pandemonium and still more gunfire. Her head still swiveling as if on a pivot, Piper snatched at her radio microphone.

"Shots fired! Macy's, west entrance, upper level! We've got a shooter here! I can't ... I can't locate where it's coming from — "

The radio crackled in urgent reply, in words unintelligible to her.

But suddenly, framed in the bright half-oval of the store's entryway, her eyes found him: twenty feet distant. Where there had once been a moving mass of people, now only a single silhouette stood.

As she stared, the figure leaned forward, fired one-two-three-four shots down into what Piper knew was the food court. Then he half-turned, the locked-back action of the pistol in a hand at shoulder height, the now-empty magazine falling from it, in Piper's mind everything moving in an absurd slow-motion. The figure outline pawed at its jacket pocket, a re-load so he could shoot again, and —

— and she was on her feet, not aware of rising, already at a full sprint past the fallen, over some of them, it was too far; he had reloaded and snapped forward the pistol's slide and had seen her and was turning now and oh God, it's pointing at my head!

Piper scarcely saw the muzzle flash, heard only the first millisecond of the gunshot before it deafened her, felt only what seemed like a slight tug beneath her collarbone — and then the impact, as she crashed into the figure with all the force and momentum and fury that an unlikely hero can muster, driving both of them back and over ...

Falling, falling, falling ...

Her arms were locked in a death-grip around her quarry; against the cheek pressed hard into his body, she recognized — and knew it to be incongruous — the feel of tweed.

Impact again, immeasurably more painful and this time accompanied by a brilliant explosion of light.

Piper sensed, rather than felt, herself rolling off the inert figure beneath her.

Half-rolling, rather, her progress stopped by the pedestal of a food court table. The motionless figure beside her blocked all but a thin sliver of her vision. Yes, she told herself with an irrational satisfaction, it was tweed ...

But in that space, past the broken body of Charles Alexander Campbell, in the eerie silence of her deafened ears and crouched under a table, Piper stared into the eyes — full-mooned, blinking in horror — of a young woman who clutched a pink blanket in tight embrace.

The blanket moved; a tiny hand emerged to grasp a mother's blouse.

Piper Cameron had just enough time. She smiled, just as the soft, black darkness closed like an iris around her.

CHAPTER 2

May 1
Motiva Port Arthur Refinery Port Arthur, Texas
2:09 P.M. CDT

Shane Yerkey was a worried man.

It was a chronic condition for him, though Shane took great pains to conceal that malady under a carefully constructed façade — one that he was convinced comingled good-ol'-boy bonhomie with the precise, professional eye-to-detail instilled by an engineering degree from UT's Austin campus.

Both attributes, Shane believed, were suitably reinforced by the "Hook 'Em, Horns!" tattoo on a beefy bicep, only partially concealed by the short-sleeved, pristine-white, medium-starched shirts that were his unofficial uniform at work.

Nonetheless, his unconscious reflex of unbuttoning the collar and yanking loose his tie, inevitably seen during the not-infrequent moments of mini-crisis on this job, was well-marked by his staff as a storm warning — even if it was a "tell" completely lost on Shane, who also considered himself an adept, if often inexplicably unlucky, poker player.

Still, it would have taken a blithe spirit indeed not to be worried in the role Shane played, as manager of Engineering Control at the largest petroleum refinery in the United States. The fact that the Motiva refinery was co-owned by two of the most powerful corporate entities in the world — Royal Dutch Shell and Saudi Aramco, the latter an unofficial nation-within-a-nation-state and the former, for most intents and purposes, nearly so itself — only underscored the weight of his responsibilities.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "Fallout"
by .
Copyright © 2014 Earl Merkel.
Excerpted by permission of Diversion Publishing Corp..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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