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StrikeForce Reborn




  StrikeForce Reborn

  Also by Kevin Lee Swaim

  Project StrikeForce

  Project StrikeForce

  The Chimera Strain

  Project StrikeForce: Exodus

  StrikeForce Reborn

  Sam Harlan, Vampire Hunter

  Hard Times

  Damned Cold

  Deal with the Devil

  Come What May

  Watch for more at Kevin Lee Swaim’s site.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Also By Kevin Lee Swaim

  Kevin Lee Swaim | Copyright © 2019 Kevin Lee Swaim All Rights Reserved.

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  A note from the Author

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  Also By Kevin Lee Swaim

  Kevin Lee Swaim

  Copyright © 2019 Kevin Lee Swaim All Rights Reserved.

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  Chapter One

  Quantico, Virginia

  Omar Andrews leaned forward and shook the badge around his neck against the door’s proximity reader, but the reader wouldn’t beep, and the door remained stubbornly shut. He tried balancing his bear claw on top of his Starbucks coffee while he fiddled with it, but the bear claw kept sliding across the plastic top and threatened to fall to the industrial carpet.

  “Hey, Omar,” his passing coworker, Bill, said in a snotty tone of voice. “Maybe that’s a sign you should lay off the donuts!”

  Omar resisted the urge to tell Bill where he could shove it. “It’s not a donut, it’s a bear claw. Can you help me?”

  “Sorry,” Bill said. “I can’t badge you in. You know that.”

  “I meant, could you hold my coffee?”

  “Why don’t you drop the bear claw? It would be better for your waistline, and I’m pretty sure that sugary goop isn’t on your list of approved foods.”

  “Thanks for the help, Bill. You’re a peach.”

  Bill walked off, snickering to himself.

  It’s not like you couldn’t stand to lose twenty pounds! I bet Linda would love to see your penis instead of that fat roll around your waist! He sighed heavily. Why do I always manage to think of the right thing to say after they walk off?

  A few more seconds and he finally balanced the bear claw and swiped his proximity badge against the reader, causing a faint metallic click. When the door opened, he smiled at the sight of his new lab.

  The FBI had finally promoted him from forensic chemist to nuclear physical security specialist. He practically drooled at the thought of the electron microscope, so shiny and new, like a Christmas present waiting just for him.

  When I get home tonight, I’m going to rub it in my corpies’ faces!

  His new manager, Maureen, a lovely blond woman in her early thirties, waited for him at his new desk. He thought her suit looked tasteful but manly, and he was pretty sure it had cost more than his Toyota Corolla. “Good morning!”

  Her eyes darted to the bear claw in his hand. “Seriously? You are supposed to be on a diet.”

  “I am. I thought, this being my first day and all, that I could use a little pep in my step.”

  Her face remained neutral. “Do I need to remind you of the weight limit for this position? You have to—”

  “Fit in my HAZMAT suit, I know.”

  “I took a risk on you. You know that, don’t you?”

  “What risk?”

  She glanced at his desk. “Don’t make me regret this, Omar.”

  “Why would you regret my promotion? I’m the smartest person here.”

  “See, that’s the kind of thing that puts people on edge. You’re not the smartest person here, Omar. You’re bright, and you do good work. I need someone to—”

  “Who is smarter than me? Chen? I’ll place my work against that jerk’s any day.”

  “—get caught up. What I don’t need is you irritating everyone else. Can you do that for me?”

  He placed the coffee and bear claw on the table and stuck out his hand. “I promise you won’t regret this, Maureen.”

  She stared at his hand as if it had something on it. “That’s another thing. Don’t call me Maureen. Your old manager let you get away with that, but as long as you work for me, it’s Director Short.”

  “Director Short. Got it. My mistake.”

  “Get to work, Omar. We’re six months behind.”

  She exited the lab like she was running from a fire. Omar muttered to himself, “Sure, Director Short. I’ll get right on it, Director Short. I live but to serve, Director Short.”

  Who am I kidding? There’s no way I’m going any higher in the FBI. Maureen may not be the best scientist, but she played the game and made director before forty. But that’s okay. I have my new electron microscope, and I’ll always have Eve Online!

  He sat and shoved the bear claw in his mouth, smacking his lips and moaning softly, then washed down the pastry crumbs with lukewarm coffee. His eyes rolled back into his head and he gurgled out, “That’s the stuff. I knew I should have bought two of them.”

  Once his hunger had quieted, he went to inspect the electron microscope. The FEI Titan was everything he had hoped and more, like an Eve Online item made real. He had already downloaded and read through the manual at home during his corporation’s Saturday afternoon mining op, but he removed the printed manual from the shelving unit next to the microscope and read through the start-up procedure again, just to be sure, then fired it up and adjusted and calibrated the microscope using the manufacturer’s test samples.

  “Oh my,” he said softly. “You sexy thing. Oh my.”

  The LCD screen’s clarity was stunning. He played with the contrast and the brightness while trying different voltages, running the different samples, from straight metal to trace organics. He removed the last of the samples from the inspection plate and rummaged through the first of the heavy plastic crates in the corner.

  By a weird twist of fate, his position rarely involved radioactive material. Most of the samples were metallurgical or biological, and after an hour he had managed to analyze two case files and provide detailed notes that would help the special agents in charge close their cases.

  Isn’t there something more ... challenging?

  He rummaged through the plastic cases until he finally found one on the bottom with a radiological sample. A quick check of the sample with a radiation detector and he struggled into the HAZMAT suit, then carefully removed the container from the lead-lined case and prepared a slide for the microscope.

  The case notes indicated it was from the Pittsburgh bombing, and he chuckled over the date. They let this sample sit here for four months? No wonder the public has such a negative opinion of their government.

  He adjusted the beam to a higher voltage and inspected the sample. At first, it appeared to be nothing more than simp
le concrete, but as he studied the LCD screen, he caught sight of an object that resembled a tiny ball.

  It’s a buckyball!

  Buckminsterfullerenes naturally occurred in soot, but he had never seen one in such detail. His heart raced as he adjusted the sample, increasing the beam to its highest voltage, trying to make out the soccer-ball structure, but as he moved the sample, he came across something else that piqued his interest.

  What is that?

  It appeared to be a large block, and he decreased the magnification slightly. When he did, he found ninety-degree angles that were so perfect it was unnatural except in certain minerals.

  Maybe it’s some sort of crystalline structure?

  He pulled back farther, and then farther still, until he could get a better look at the object.

  That’s odd.

  It appeared to be the edge of something ... man-made. He pulled back even farther until he could finally see the entire object on the LCD screen.

  That’s ... that’s impossible.

  He stared at the screen for minutes, shivering in the perfectly comfortable seventy-two degrees.

  No lab on earth has managed to develop a working nanobot, at least not a working machine with a complex assembly.

  He remembered reading a paper the previous year postulating that the initial research into nanobots might finally allow the creation of such a sophisticated machine.

  The paper said it would take thirty to forty years! But this is sitting dead center on my LCD! What happened in Pittsburgh, and how on earth did a nanobot get in the sample? Wait until my corpmates hear about this!

  * * *

  Washington, D.C.

  Lieutenant Colonel Donald Largewell glanced over as Colonel Matthew Roberts finished double-checking the preflight checklist of the Sikorsky VH-3D Sea King. “Confirm that the checklist is complete.”

  “Affirmative,” Roberts replied. “Checklist is complete.”

  “Status of the Shell Game?”

  The Shell Game was a procedure designed to obscure the location of the president. Upon takeoff, the two Sikorsky helicopters hovering nearby would join their flight and begin to regularly shift in formation.

  Roberts spoke softly into his microphone to the other pilots, then replied, “The other birds are ready.” So softly that Largewell could barely hear, Roberts muttered, “Not that it matters...”

  Largewell grunted. Marine One had never been attacked, but they would soon be carrying the president to Camp David. “We only need to make one mistake, Matt. And the bad guys only need to get lucky once.”

  “Don’t you ever get tired of this? We fly from Andrews to here, and from here to Andrews. Yeah, sometimes we hit New York or Camp David, but c’mon, it’s the same thing over and over again.”

  “You know how many times I’ve heard that same speech?”

  “That’s because you haven’t retired. Yet.”

  Largewell turned to Roberts and grinned. “Soon, Matt. Then you’ll be promoted to full bird colonel, and you can listen to some smart-ass fifteen years younger than you bitch and moan about your retirement.”

  Roberts grinned back. “I’m only twelve years younger than you, Donnie D, and I look forward to making that smart-ass sweat it out a long time.”

  Marine One’s crew chief, Edward Vasquez, said over their headsets, “You two are like an old married couple. You better let your wife know she’s got some competition, Donnie.”

  “She put you up to that, Eddie? Because, I swear—” In the distance, the crowd of reporters and cameramen that had been waiting patiently by the barricades suddenly came to attention. “Look alive, gents. Renegade is on his way.”

  A few minutes later, Vasquez spoke over the radio. “Renegade is on board. Transition protocol has been completed with the Secret Service, and the pass-off is complete.”

  “Roger that,” Largewell said. “Let’s get this bird in the air, Matt.”

  As Roberts brought the engines to full power, the airframe began to vibrate in a low thrumming that shook Largewell to his core.

  Matt’s right. I should have retired already, but damned if I ever get tired of this.

  He keyed on his mic and spoke to the commander-in-chief. “Mr. President, the weather is good. Travel time to Buckeye is approximately forty minutes.”

  “Thank you, Colonel Largewell,” the young man from Illinois responded from the cabin. “I’ve brought my daughter. I know we’ll be safe in your capable hands.”

  “Roger that, Mr. President.” He tapped on his headset and brought up the HUD. The ghostly readout came to life before his eyes, and he inspected the glowing images showing the airspace above Washington.

  Everything looks good. Then again, it always does.

  He was still thinking that as he pulled up on the collective and started ascending into the clear blue sky, as he had done hundreds of times before, pushing forward on the cyclic and turning the helicopter to head south over the President’s Park, when the ghostly image of a bogey lit up on his HUD.

  “What the hell is that?” Roberts asked. “Could it be a pigeon, or maybe a seagull?”

  “Last year’s upgrade fixed the radar reflections from birds, remember?”

  “Maybe it’s on the fritz?”

  “They spent four million dollars on that upgrade. I’m pretty sure—” As he spoke, another ghostly blip appeared. “Are you reading that? One hundred and fifty feet.”

  “It’s moving too quickly for a bird,” Roberts said.

  Largewell agreed. “Hang on, I’m going to try and gain some altitude.”

  Another blip joined the other two, and then more blips appeared, all converging on Marine One’s position.

  There must be dozens of them! “They’re drones.”

  “What?”

  “Deploy the countermeasures. Now!”

  Robert’s voice cracked as he barked out, “Deploying countermeasures!”

  There was a grinding noise as the access panels on the sides of the helicopter blasted away and then a swooshing as flares and chaff deployed.

  They could be heat-seeking, or maybe they’re using radar—

  As the dozens of drones continued on toward Marine One, he realized that they weren’t diverting.

  There’s no ping in the HUD from an active radar, and the flares had no effect. Is someone guiding them? That’s impossible. The Secret Service has a signal jammer in place for that.

  “What’s going on up there?” Vasquez shouted.

  “Renegade is an active target,” Largewell said. “Hang on, we’re going to lose altitude.”

  “Lose altitude?” Roberts yelled. “We need to gain altitude!”

  “Negative,” Largewell said calmly. “We can’t climb above them. We need to set down before those things take us down from a height we can’t recover from.”

  Roberts nodded his head and screamed into the headset, “Mr. President, prepare for an emergency landing!”

  Largewell couldn’t even make out the president’s response over the yelling in his headset. All he could do was manhandle the collective to drop the helicopter as fast as he dared, much faster than he had ever performed during his yearly emergency practice maneuvers over the Atlantic Ocean, and he sighed in relief as the lumbering helicopter shed altitude and speed.

  We’re going to make it.

  His stomach lurched into his throat as he guided the big Sikorsky toward a spot in the park as the swarm of drones smashed into the helicopter’s rotors.

  There was an explosive pop-popping and then the shrieking of metal as the helicopter’s blades tore themselves apart. Marine One fell like a rock, smashing into the fresh-cut lawn from a height of nearly fifteen feet and a speed of thirty knots, plowing into the hard earth like a runaway locomotive.

  Largewell blinked rapidly. There was a numbness in his skull, and he knew that he had been briefly knocked unconscious, but he didn’t have a clue as to how much time had passed.

  The helicopter was listing to
the right, propped up by the nacelle. Ghostly images of every warning and alarm on the helicopter flashed red in his still-active HUD. The clock indicated he had lost at least thirty seconds, and his teeth ached where they had smashed together.

  There was an eerie silence. He tried to turn his head to check on Roberts, but a stabbing pain in his back made that impossible. Then he remembered his training. Before checking on Roberts or Vasquez, he was supposed to check on the status of Renegade. “Mr. President, are you hurt? Can you speak?”

  A groan came over his headset, and then the president replied, “I’m getting too old for this, Colonel.”

  “Sir, are you injured?”

  There was a long pause before the president responded. “I’m only banged up. My daughter is ... she’s bruised, but she’s okay.”

  Roberts groaned, then said, “The fuel tank’s integrity is holding. We’re safe, but we need to exit the helicopter as soon as the first responders arrive.”

  Blaring sirens quickly approached. “Sir,” Largewell said, “there was an attempt on your life. We need to hang tight until the Secret Service arrives. They should be here any second.”

  “Colonel?” the president said softly. “The crew chief is seriously hurt.”

  The sirens had increased in volume, and Roberts finally managed to turn his head and watch as the fleet of cars, trucks, and armored personnel carriers came skidding to a halt. Men jumped from them and ran toward the helicopter, shouting orders at each other. In the distance, a fire raged and threw clouds of smoke into the sky.

  It’s one of the other Sikorsky helicopters. They must have targeted all of us.

  Roberts thrashed about, finally managing to unhook himself, then turned to look back into the cabin. “Vasquez? Eddie?”

  He heard the president’s daughter through the coms. Her voice was anguished, and it sounded like she was choking back tears. “I think the crew chief’s neck is broken. He’s not breathing!”

  * * *

  London, United Kingdom

  Eric Wise knocked softly on the closed door. “Deion? It’s time.”

  From within the flat’s bedroom, a woman groaned. “He’s busy. Come back later.”