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"ABSOLUTELY FANTASTIC... PULSE-POUNDING." - Brad Thor, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Foreign and Domestic One Army geologist is kidnapped - on U.S. soil. Two nuclear plants are attacked - in a matter of days. No American is safe - from the next, and final, wave of terror. Enter Jake Mahegan, a Delta Force veteran on the most important mission of his life. If he fails, our nation falls. The countdown is launched. The clock is ticking. Armageddon begins... Three Minutes to Midnight.
Release date: February 1, 2017
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Print pages: 352
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Three Minutes to Midnight
Anthony J. Tata
“Did you bring any classified information back with you?”
“Did you help the U.S. government steal natural gas from Pakistan?”
“In country, did your relationship with your CIA handler, ‘Jim,’ ever turn sexual?”
“Are you concerned about the safety of your husband, Pete, and daughter, Piper?”
“Are you aware of six natural gas container ships that have departed Karachi, Pakistan, bound for the United States?”
Yes, yes, yes, yes, and yes, she had thought but had never answered. That was when she’d run. Unaware of who these men were or why she was required to meet with them as part of her redeployment processing, Maeve had stood and run, catching them all by surprise.
A track star in high school and at North Carolina State University, Maeve created distance between herself and her pursuers and slid over the hood of her SUV as she heard gunfire in the distance. Could be a training range or it could be people shooting at her, she figured.
Inside the SUV, she pressed the ignition button and slapped the gear selector into drive. She sped toward the gate with the single cantilevered arm blocking her egress. She knew there were probably tire shredders that the gate guard could activate, but she was banking on her head start.
No such luck. As she approached the guardhouse, she watched the shredder bare its teeth facing in her direction, meaning her tires would be ripped apart if she drove over them. She pulled to a stop at the guardhouse, knowing that the security personnel were simply glorified rent-a-cops. She lowered her window and gave the overweight man in white shirt and gray slacks her most charming smile.
“In kind of a rush, sir. Mind opening the gate?”
In her periphery she watched two men dash across the parking lot toward her.
“Was ordered to close the gate.”
“How about this order, sir?” She brandished her officer’s 9 mm Beretta from beneath her seat. She had chambered a round before going into the building, unsure of what might occur. Her instincts had proven good.
“Seriously, lady . . .”
Maeve fired a shot at the man’s communication and television console, shattering the device.
“I am serious. Two seconds. Open the gate. Next bullet is in your head.”
The man pressed a button, and the teeth lowered on the shredder while the metal arm rose. Maeve sped through the gap, then made a series of turns that took her beyond the Fort Bragg drop zones and into the town of Southern Pines. She followed U.S. Route 1 all the way to her home in Cary, near Raleigh.
The stress of the questioning, the hour-long drive, and the fact that she had just returned from twelve months of combat in Afghanistan came together to create an adrenaline dump. She was exhausted and, most of all, worried about her family.
Parking in her driveway, she noticed a strange car on the street in front of her house. Still wearing her uniform, she slung her rucksack over her shoulder, checked behind her to make sure no one had caught up with her yet, and kept her pistol in her right hand.
The front door of their brick-facade colonial home in suburban Cary was unlocked. She opened the door to the sound of a television and muted conversation in the den. She looked up the steps to her left and saw no activity. After walking through the foyer, she leaned against the wall that separated the den from the kitchen.
Piper. She heard her four-year-old daughter’s voice and nearly cried. Then she heard the voice of a young female, most likely that of a babysitter.
She holstered the pistol and turned into the room.
Both Piper and the young woman were startled and screamed. At first, neither recognized her, but then the babysitter, Dawn Jackson, a high school student who lived five blocks away in the neighborhood, said, “Oh my God. Mrs. Cassidy. You’re home a week early!”
Maeve kept her eyes trained on Piper, who didn’t seem to recognize her. She had deployed when Piper was barely three.
“Piper? Come to Mommy?”
Piper looked at Dawn, who nodded. “This is your mother, Piper.”
“You, my mother,” Piper said, pointing at Dawn.
Dawn blushed. “No. I just take care of you. This is your real mommy.”
Maeve’s combat mind kicked into gear. She had no time for this. Her family was in danger, which could arrive with a menacing knock on the door at any moment.
Maeve knelt in front of Piper, staring into her child’s hazel eyes. After a brief moment, Piper’s face lit up and she started slapping her hands on her mother’s shoulders in glee.
“Mommy’s home! Daddy’s been talking about Mommy coming home.”
“That’s right. Mommy’s home, honey.” She hugged her child, wiping tears from her eyes. After a few minutes, she turned to Dawn and said, “I need you to take Piper to your house, if that’s okay. I will pay you double.”
Dawn shrugged. “Sure, Mrs. Cassidy, but that’s not necessary.”
Maeve handed one hundred dollars to Dawn and asked, “Where’s my husband?”
“He went to a party on Ridge Road in Raleigh. Some client party. Something to do with a natural gas pipeline,” Dawn said.
Alarm bells rang in Maeve’s head. Was she too late? Had they also gotten to her husband?
“Please just do this, and either Pete or I will come get Piper. Go. Now.”
Dawn scurried to pick up the playthings, and Maeve said, “No time. Just please go.”
“You’re scaring me, Mrs. Cassidy.”
“It’s okay. Just go to your house.”
Quickly, Dawn was out of the door with Piper, who was now shouting, “Mommy! I want my mommy!”
Maeve took her equipment upstairs and removed a half-used bottle of henna extract from her rucksack and placed it on Piper’s bureau. She slid a picture out of her combat helmet and drew a pyramid on the white photo paper backing, then inscribed a code beneath the drawing. She then picked up a picture frame from Piper’s bureau. In it was a different photo of her and Piper—one directly before her deployment—where she was dressed in the digitized army battle uniform and Piper was wearing a red, white, and blue jeans and T-shirt outfit. She slid the picture from her helmet into a small frame, making sure it was visible between the outward facing picture of her and Piper and the glass cover of the frame. Maeve replaced the frame stand, and stood the picture up on the bureau next to the henna. It was the only clue she could leave.
She dumped her rucksack in her room and then sped out the door toward Ridge Road.
Maeve drove quickly through a couple of neighborhoods until she saw her husband’s car: a practical and safe light blue Chevrolet Malibu with a Graco child seat in the back. She recognized the Cary Running Club decal on the window and parked in the street, behind his car. After walking past a dozen or so other cars, all more upscale than their Malibu, she approached the home, rang the doorbell, then knocked. A young, dark-haired female clad in a light blue UNC T-shirt answered by simply pulling open the door and leaving it that way. To Maeve, it didn’t appear the woman was wearing anything from the waist down.
“Is Pete Cassidy here?” she asked.
The young lady shrugged her shoulders, said in an accented voice, “Perhaps that way,” and nodded her head toward the hallway. In addition to the Eastern European lilt, something about the appearance of the woman made her seem foreign. She had a broad face and an angular nose and was strikingly beautiful. Something Balkan, Maeve guessed. The T-shirt and the woman’s appearance didn’t match. She was young, but not a student, she thought.
The presence of the female only heightened her sense of alarm.
Maeve stepped into the massive two-story home with a hardwood foyer and looked in the grand sunken family room. There were several young women there, either naked or partially clothed. They all had that same European look, Maeve thought. She kept walking until she found herself in the upstairs master bedroom, watching her naked husband have sex with another woman.
Quickly, the woman pulled off of Maeve’s husband, reached into the top drawer of the nightstand, rolled off the bed to the far end of the bedroom, and aimed a pistol at Maeve. Pete, her husband, joined the woman on the far side of the bedroom. Their positions had awkwardly reversed. Maeve’s momentum and eagerness had carried her into the bedroom, past the bed, and toward the far wall, level with the large master bathroom mirror to her right. The woman’s combat roll had positioned her closer to the door. Pete just seemed confused.
So now, on her first full night back in America after twelve months of combat in Afghanistan, Captain Maeve Cassidy found herself in an unfamiliar bedroom, with her troubled marriage bared and as naked as her surprised cheating husband, who looked back at her.
She stood with her back to the wall, keeping the door to the bedroom in her direct line of sight. The room smelled of sex. Oils. Creams. Lotions. Body fluids. A candle flame made shadows dance slowly around the room, as if otherworldly apparitions were having their own strobe-lit orgy.
To her right was the master bathroom. In its large mirror, running at least six feet across both washbasins, she could see the profile of her husband and his companion standing in front of her. Her own reflection was watching her, too. Her loose-fitting Army combat uniform hid her muscular, lithe frame. Her chestnut hair was too long by Army standards and fell around her shoulders, making the uniform appear less official. As if she were an impostor. After her experience in Afghanistan, that was exactly how she felt. Maeve was a faint reflection of the person who had stepped onto the Afghan desert floor twelve months ago.
Her uniform also hid her holstered pistol. She could still smell the smoky residue of the shot she had fired into the guard shack two hours earlier. Her mind registered that she had a round chambered and a nearly full magazine of hollow points in the well.
In her reflection she caught the blackness under her eyes, chiseled there by a year of sleepless nights and impossible missions. Her anxiety was deepened by the burden of the secrets she carried and had to protect at all costs. A year of eating combat rations had hollowed her face, making the planes of her cheekbones more prominent and, oddly, her entire countenance more beautiful. But the stress of her mission and the threats she still endured weighed on her like a heavy rucksack full of equipment she didn’t need.
To Maeve’s left was a nice poster bed, and beyond that a reading alcove with a bay window. Decorative pillows were piled high on the floor, like rubble. Maeve guessed that at some point before she saw an unfamiliar woman riding her husband on the bed beside her, those pillows had been neatly aligned on the bed. A streetlamp outside cast an eerie glow into the bedroom, competing with the candle’s mystic visual effect.
Music wafted down the hall through the open door to the master bedroom. To her, the tune sounded like the Eagles, maybe “Hotel California,” but that song was well before her era.
“How did you find me?” her husband asked. He was standing next to an armoire with family photos in small frames scattered across the top.
Not their family, Maeve thought. The photos did include, however, the naked woman, whose steady aim somewhat impressed Maeve. Maeve knew the pistol was a small Taurus that chambered five .357 hollow-point rounds. She could tell it was the 605 model by the dull blue finish and compact size.
“All I had to do was look beneath her.” Maeve shrugged, pointing at the woman next to her husband. She paused, figuring she was the one who lacked a full understanding of the situation, not her husband and his friend. So she answered the question as she knew it was intended. “Babysitter told me,” Maeve said.
“It’s not what you think,” Pete Cassidy whispered, his voice a tight hiss, like steam escaping.
“Of course not. It never is. But what I think is irrelevant. Your lady friend here wants to shoot me, and that would not be good for either of us, especially Piper. I need to tell you some things that happened . . . overseas.” Maeve was attempting to be cryptic. She wasn’t sure if any of these people knew anything about the threat she had brought home like a nefarious virus that could infect her and her family.
“What are you talking about?” Pete, in what Maeve registered as a submissive move, turned his head toward the woman and said, “And she will not shoot you. Put down the gun. Please.”
“Shut up, Pete. She is right. I am going to shoot her. And I will kill you if you say another word,” said the woman with the pistol.
Maeve had endured roadside bombs in Afghanistan. She had been in firefights with insurgents high on khat or opium. Oddly enough, she had killed her fair share of enemy combatants. The war had had no front lines. Or, put another way, Maeve thought, the entire place had been the front line. As a geologist, she had been there only to study shale drilling as part of a top secret United States energy program. She had arrived when most of the troops were either gone or were leaving. But it hadn’t taken long to see that America had found significant new interests beneath the earth’s dusty shell along the Pakistan border—and those interests had put her face-to-face with Taliban and Al Qaeda zealots.
Now Maeve recognized the crazy, murderous look in the woman’s eyes in front of her. She was gazing at something in the distance, obeying some distant god, convinced of the sanctity of her truth. Clearly, the woman was amped up on meth or cocaine or a more upscale and trendy amphetamine. Maeve had been gone for twelve months, so she didn’t know. Perhaps they had a new drug. She noticed the subtle contours of her adversary’s body: her slim hips, full breasts, and pouting lips, all surgically improved no doubt, and her legs slightly spread in a balanced shooter’s stance.
“Don’t do this. Please,” Pete sputtered. Maeve had never seen her husband more meek. “You can’t.”
“Actually, you can,” a new voice said as a fourth person entered the bedroom.
Four people, three of whom were naked, and two actual weapons, both aimed at Maeve Cassidy, filled the room. Usually, people hid guns in their waistband or pockets, Maeve considered. Exactly what kind of swingers’ party had she crashed? She could see the invitation: Let’s get naked and shoot each other! Or for the men: You go soft, you get shot.
Her well-developed combat defense mechanisms were kicking in, complete with gallows humor. In combat, she had seen enough body parts scattered around like in a modern artist’s rendition of van Gogh.
It was true that she had already established a fatalistic approach to life. Her world had been rocked by the horrors of combat, which in her case she believed had been atypical. Perhaps the experience had loosened a screw; she wasn’t sure. She had just been a reservist doing her duty as the wars were winding down. She guessed that maybe she was just having a hard time adjusting back to civilian life.
Wasn’t it normal to find her husband at a swingers’ party just down the road from their home?
“What are you doing here?” Maeve said to the new person who’d entered the room.
“Good question, dear, Maeve. We’re just celebrating the completion of Daddy’s pipeline to Morehead City. Though I didn’t see your name on the invite list,” the new voice said.
Then a weapon fired. Pete Cassidy screamed. Blood sprayed from Maeve’s body.
And, for all practical purposes, that ended the party.
The same morning that Maeve Cassidy was processing out of Fort Bragg, Maxim Petrov received a text message from his boss. The message contained two words.
Star cluster.
The communication was early, and he was unprepared. Where he thought he had a week, he now had a day, if that. Nervous about being the only one clued into this portion of the plan, Petrov thought back to his Russian Spetsnaz days in Chechnya. A former Special Forces soldier, he knew how to do this. Still, he was on unfamiliar ground in central North Carolina.
He drove slowly past the Wallaby gas station in Chapel Hill and saw a line of Hispanic men waiting for work in the hopeful daily endeavor of day laborers. Petrov had seen these men line up every day here and at other gas stations when he had scouted the area for the mission. The men were desperate for work, and Petrov knew they would take any job. It was usually landscapers, construction foremen, and farmers who cruised through early, picking the most able.
He drove his black pickup truck to the line of waiting journeymen. He jumped out, sized up the lot, selected two strong-looking men, opened the tailgate, and motioned for them to hop in the truck. His boss had told him that he would need more men later to complete the outer security fence, but he needed the cell built immediately.
From downtown Chapel Hill, he drove to the isolated construction site about fifteen miles away. With the two day laborers bouncing in the back of the truck, he entered the site off U.S. Route 1. He made a series of right and left turns through an increasingly wooded area and arrived upon a mile-long tangle of trucks, water tanks, pipes, valves, and drills. It looked better than a junkyard, but not by much.
Petrov turned right again, being careful to stay out of the line of sight of the nineteen other men, like himself, who had been brought to the United States as fracking roughnecks. He followed a minor two-track trail around the eastern side of the hill, where he stopped after a mile of bouncing through the ruts. He shut off the engine and waited, checking again to make sure he had avoided detection by the roughnecks, especially the two Chinese guys. They couldn’t know about this part of the mission, at least not yet, if ever. Certain he was undetected, Petrov issued instructions to the Hispanic men in broken English.
The two workers dismounted and moved to the preconstruction area Petrov had already completed. They helped him lift and place the floor, walls, and roof. They were good workers, steady men who knew how to build. Petrov didn’t ask their names, because he didn’t care. They wouldn’t be alive long enough for it to matter. Once they had the plywood sawed and nailed to the walls, ceiling, and floor, save the eight-by-six-by-three-foot opening in the floor, they took a break.
He offered both men a bottle of water, which they gladly accepted. They sat on the hill, looking to the southeast, toward Shearon Harris Lake, less than five miles away, and to the single cooling tower of the nuclear plant, its steam rising lazily into the early morning sky like drifting cigar smoke. He heard them speaking in Spanish, wondering why he was using plywood and what the hole might be. They guessed it was for a latrine.
Close, he thought. He was going to use it to dispose of something he no longer needed.
Their part was done. He approached from behind and shot each of them in the head using a Glock 17, the gunshots signaling nothing more than a deer hunter on this bucolic hillside. He dragged their bodies into the cell and dumped them into the remaining hole in the floor. He poured two bags of limestone on top of them, filled the hole with dirt, laid the perfectly cut sheet of plywood on the studs, and hammered the floor shut.
It took him the rest of the day to finish the holding cell. Using a shovel, he spread two feet of dirt on the roof, which was even with the crest of the hill. He sprinkled fescue grass seed and straw on top of the dirt. In less than a week, the only part of the cell that would show would be the door, which faced toward the woods, which were about one hundred yards away. He camouflaged the door with brown and green paint.
He walked to the woods and down to a rill running into Shearon Harris Lake. Petrov studied the swampy area and determined that no one in their right mind would cross anywhere within a quarter mile in either direction. But if they did, he wanted to know what they would see. Petrov walked directly toward the holding cell and didn’t notice it until he was out of the woods and within fifty meters of it.
And he was looking for it.
Soon there would be others looking for it also, but by then it would be too late.
At least that was the plan.
Tomorrow he would visit another gas station and find a different work crew, who would need to last a few more days so they could build the rest of the security fence.
As darkness enveloped him, he drove the mile to the graded lot between two hilltops. He saw the crew of roughnecks wrapping up their work, a few of them staring at him as they smoked cigarettes, the orange tips glowing hot.
Sitting in his truck, looking at the lights on the crew trailers up the hill, where they would all sleep tonight, he received a text message.
Package wrapped. Delivery tonight.
THE FOLLOWING MORNING, JAKE MAHEGAN STOOD IN THE LINE LIKE any other unemployed, perhaps homeless, man down on his luck. He had not shaved in a week, and the black stubble of a beard contrasted with his dark blond hair. He wore old, greasy Army battle dress uniform pants, scuffed Doc Marten boots, and a loose-fitting, ripped NC State sweatshirt atop a tan Army T-shirt. But what set him apart from the other day laborers was that he was a good foot taller than most.
He shoved his hands into his pockets, keeping his eyes cast downward at the abused sidewalk next to the Wallaby gas station near Apex, North Carolina. He was fifth in a line of about twenty people looking for work, part of a human assembly line. A truck arrived; a few got on. Another appeared, and some more left. Every day was the same.
He had been here enough days without getting picked that he knew the system. Arrival time equaled line queue number, unless your name was Papa Diablo, who always got the first job regardless of when he arrived.
Mahegan guessed it took about five trips to the Wallaby gas station to earn any bona fides with the perennial group of Hispanic men who lined up here for the assorted odd jobs that came their way. Most frequently, the routine included a pickup truck, a farmer or a construction foreman leaning through the passenger window, and the barking of a number, usually in bad Spanish, such as “Tres!” Three men would then clamber into the back of the pickup, and off they would go to do landscaping or ditch digging, something manual and menial.
But the pay was apparently okay, as Mahegan noticed the same faces in the short time he had been lining up. Every morning there was a new topic of discussion among those in the line, mostly normal locker room scuttlebutt, like the talk Mahegan would hear from his soldiers when he was active duty Army. The chow sucked. Not enough combat action or, in this case, work. Someone’s girlfriend or wife left him, and so on. This morning, though, the chatter up and down the line tested Mahegan’s limited Spanish skills. He heard words like camion negro, idos, no estan en casa, ricos, and borrachos. Apparently, the rumor was that two men from a different gas station’s line had been selected by a black truck, were now missing, and most likely had been so well paid that they had gotten drunk and had never come home.
This line of conversation piqued Mahegan’s interest because he was looking for a black, late-model Ford F-150 being driven by a dark-haired man with a long scar running along one cheek. What Mahegan had learned through his network was that the man driving the black pickup truck was looking for men who could do fracking jobs. Hydraulic fracturing, or fracking, of shale gas deposits would soon be big business in North Carolina, and the men lined up with Mahegan prayed for steady jobs that would provide for their families.
The Ford would have the name of a construction company on the side. Mahegan knew the name of the construction company. Other than losing his best friend in combat, it had been all he had thought about for the past fifteen years. One name. One man.
Since Mahegan’s cycle of deployments to combat had ceased when he was dismissed from active duty Army, he was now able to focus his attention on this entirely personal matter. He was catching up on old, unfinished business, the way a normal person might use a Saturday to run errands. Before his dismissal from the Army less than two years ago, his life had been full of workweeks, 24-7. He had been either engaged in combat or prepping for combat. Now it was nothing but weekends, with no real kind of job and a lot of time to think.
Mahegan watched trucks come and go, and the line shorten accordingly, until he saw a Ford pull into the parking lot and then turn to the gas pump island. He saw white letters arcing across the door, with mud splattered across most of them, making the words illegible. A buzz like that from a lit fuse sizzled through the line of men as a stocky man of average height, with black hair, climbed out of the truck and began to pump low-test gasoline. Out of his periphery, Mahegan saw the man look at the nozzle and then across the truck bed at the two dozen hopeful men, including him. He felt the man’s gaze settle on him, calculating perhaps how much Mahegan could bench-press. Or it may have been a reckoning that he didn’t belong in the group.
Mahegan appeared bored, eyes cast downward. He knew that he wouldn’t be able to detect the man’s scar from over thirty yards away, so he didn’t look. So far, everything matched up. Mahegan was in position number five, unless Papa Diablo suddenly appeared. Then he would be sixth. He hoped the man needed at least six for the job.
Mahegan took a sip of water from a water bottle. He had started bringing a case of it every day and putting it at the head of the line so the workers could grab a bottle as they went with their rides. This act had earned both the praise of the common line dweller and the suspicion of Papa Diablo, who now came walking around the back side of the gas station to jump the line. No doubt he had been waiting for the fracking job, also. It was a different kind of work, and the line had been burning with rumors for weeks that hydraulic fracturing was going to provide not just daily chances for work but also steady jobs. This morning’s news of the happy drunks had only fueled that yearning.
The black-haired man jumped in his truck and pulled to a stop directly in front of Mahegan, who noticed red clay had etched red stains around the edges of the tires like dark lipstick. The mud was caked on thick, but the red clay was a good sign. The fracking job would be off-road. The fracking fault lines were in the rolling hills of western Wake, Chatham, Lee, and Moore Counties, where red clay was dominant.
The driver walked with an intent focus that Mahegan had seen before. The man was task driven to find the biggest, hardest-working men possible. He had quick black eyes, which rapidly scanned the crowd again. He paced along the row of downtrodden men, who were too proud to act desperate, but too desperate not to act interested.
To Mahegan, the driver’s strut looked like that of the goosestepping Schutzstaffel, whom he’d first seen in a middle school social studies class on Nazi propaganda. The man took long, lazy strides just outside the range of the work-worn boots of his potential charges. His black combat boots resonated like a dropping guillotine blade with each footfall, the red clay rimming his boots looking like dried blood splatter. Mahegan took in his mud-stained dungarees, his sweatshirt, and his black leather coat, which was listing to the right, an indication of something heavy in his pocket, perhaps a pistol.
The driver stopped in front of Papa Diablo, nodded to him, as if to acknowledge Diablo’s authority in the group, and said, “Uno.” Then he said, “Dos,” as he pointed at the biggest man in the group other than Mahegan. The driver’s hands were large extensions of thick, powerful arms. When he pointed, the driver aimed his finger like a gun.
Mahegan watched “Dos” and Papa Diablo jump to their feet, open the tailgate, and scramble onto the truck bed.
Turning away, the driver looked over his shoulder at Mahegan, pointed at him, and said, “And you.”
That was when Mahegan saw the scar. He paused, purely an act intended to demonstrate submission and hesitation. Then he walked to the truck, stepped on the tailgate, which shifted the weight of the truck considerably, and slid in next to Papa Diablo. The driver climbed back into the truck, slammed his door, and sped out of the parking lot, as if time was critical.
Mahegan didn’t know the protocol about talking on the way to a job, so he stayed quiet, which was natural for him, anyway. He watched homes and stores pass by from the unobstructed vantage point of the truck bed. Shortly, they were on U.S. Route 1, heading south toward Pinehurst, with populated Wake County falling away behind them. But they didn’t go far. By Mahegan’s estimation, the driver turned the truck off an exit ramp less than fifteen miles from where they had entered the limited-access highway. He pul
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