Viral Justice
Book three of the Biological Response Team (description subject to change)
Colonel Maximillian heads the US Army's Biological Response Team. He's responsible for the identification and destruction of any biological hazards and weapons the Army might encounter. He's sent to deal with a potential flu virus that's rapidly killing people in a remote Iraq village. Viruses he understands. Women, not so much. So, when he's assigned a bodyguard, a woman who's a trainer for the Special Forces Combatives program, he's all left feet and thumbs.
Sergeant Alicia Stone has always been the odd woman out and frequently in conflict with male officers who think they know her job better than she does. Max, however needs her more than anyone she's ever met. He's a soldier who can't shoot or defend himself in any way. She takes on the task of keeping him in one piece and teaching him the basics of combat, but it's tough to train a man who refuses to fight back. That might be a problem, because a madman is gunning for Max with a virus that might just wipe humanity out entirely.
Excerpt:
There are very few monsters who warrant the fear we have of them. ~ Andre Gide
Chapter One
“They’re not going to agree with your plan, Colonel,” Alicia muttered as she stared at the group of military doctors standing several feet away.
Colonel Robert Maximillian, head of the US Army Biological Response Team bent closer to the tiny, curvy Sergeant Alicia Stone and had to clear his throat before asking, “What makes you say that?”
“Look at their body language,” she continued in that almost subvocal whisper. “They’ve closed ranks and you’re on the outside.”
He had to consciously hold himself still as he studied the group of men. Military doctors from five different countries. They were positioned in a tight circle, two with their backs to him, talking quietly. All of them stood at just a hair under attention. The faces he could see were set, eyes serious. Understandable. These were dangerous times, and their mutual enemy could be anyone, even someone in your own army.
Stone shifted and her shoulder brushed his arm.
His attraction to the sergeant was irrational and impossible. He wasn’t a fan of either.
“They’re having a simple conversation, Sergeant, nothing more.”
“I’ve been on the receiving end of that kind of conversation,” Stone said, her voice filled with enough acid to melt steel. “If they wanted to include you, they’d have left a space for you to step into, but they didn’t. They’ve already decided and they know you’re not going to like their decision.”
“That’s ridiculous.” He knew every man in the group and had earned their respect. “They’re professionals and they know I have new information for them.”
“It isn’t going to matter. Their minds are made up.” Stone’s voice was so sharp he stopped to really look at her.
“What happened?” he asked her.
“It’s not what happened, but what’s not going to happen that’s the problem, sir.”
“No.” He waved away the reference to the meeting they were about to attend. “I mean, with you. I don’t think I’ve ever seen you this angry before.”
“Me, angry?” she said with wide eyes that did nothing to hide the displeasure on the rest of her face. “I’m grateful, sir, to be the only female combat trainer for the Special Forces.” Her tone made it clear she was anything but grateful.
“Did you break another officer’s arm?” Four months ago, an asshole who’d thought he was some kind of martial arts expert had tried to intimidate Stone during a training session. She’d put him on the mats twice before he got angry and attacked for real, thinking she couldn’t handle an actual fight. She’d not only broken his arm, but two fingers of the opposite hand, as well.
The incident hadn’t ended there. The officer had accused her of assault, but with so many witnesses the charges against Stone had been thrown out, and he’d been charged with assault. Since then, however, at least two other officers had lodged formal complaints against her.
The old boys’ club, closing ranks.
“Nothing that would show up on an X-ray.” Her voice sounded bland. Something had gone very wrong.
If someone hurt her, he was going to find out and make their life miserable. “Is there anything I can do to help?”
She jerked, as if the question startled her. “Don’t argue with me if I tell you to do something.”
“Arguing with one’s bodyguard would be stupid. I try not to be an idiot more than twice a day. I reached my quota an hour ago.” Yet, he always seemed to butt heads with her whenever they were involved in the same operation, even if it was just a meeting. Having her as a bodyguard for any great length of time would be uncomfortable at best.
She blinked.
He consulted his watch as several light armored vehicles pulled up nearby. “Gentlemen, I appreciate your early arrival,” he called out to the five men. “The summit is scheduled to begin in an hour. Several more countries than expected have sent representatives. As a result the meeting has been moved to a larger venue.” He gestured at the waiting vehicles. “If you would? We’ll travel together.”
Their cluster broke apart and they got into vehicles.
When he glanced back, Stone was staring after him with a profoundly confused expression on her face.
Max rode with Franz Meyer, chief medical officer for the German Army, while Stone got into the vehicle behind his with his British counterpart.
“Militants invaded another Kurdish village in Northern Iraq today.” Franz sounded tired. “At least seventy-five dead and an unknown number of women and girls taken.” He shook his head. “Last night a group of refugees attempted to cross the border between Bulgaria and Hungary. At least thirty died in a series of fires started by Molotov cocktails they threw themselves.”
Stupid. Human beings had a great capacity for stupidity. “The unrest isn’t making any of our jobs easier. Which is why we need countries around the world, not just in Europe or the Middle East, to agree to implement a global vaccination plan.”
“But, do you understand the pressure we’re all under?” Franz turned to him, suddenly intent. “We can’t fight a war against an enemy we can’t see. Your proposal is simply too expensive.”
“We’re facing a new era of biological weapons.” Max made direct eye contact with him. “Weapons that are in the hands of people who can and will use them against any target they choose.”
“We can’t arbitrarily begin a counteroffensive against an enemy we aren’t aware of yet,” Franz replied. “We have to have more information, more proof than two isolated incidents.”
Had he read the reports? “Akbar isn’t an incident. He’s a mass murderer who’s just getting started. Treating the sick after the fact is what’ll be expensive. You can’t just ignore the problem because no one is sure how to pay for it.”
“What I’m saying is, where do we start?” Franz spread his hands in a conciliatory gesture that didn’t fool Max for a second. “Which do you feel is more important, training existing medical staff, or increasing staff numbers in both military and civilian medical aid groups in Africa and the Middle East? We can’t afford to do both.”
He held on to his temper with both hands. Stone was right. Franz had already made up his mind.
He had maybe ten minutes more minutes to make his case before they arrived at their destination. Once there, he’d have to repeat his arguments to healthcare leaders from all over Europe, Africa, the Middle East and Asia. Franz had probably thought he was going to catch Max by surprise by asking the question now, but Max had been considering solutions to the problem of worldwide infectious disease control for a long time. Ten minutes might just be enough time to change the German’s thinking.
There were other delegates in the vehicles in front and behind them, along with a military escort to keep trouble at bay. The decisions about to be made at this meeting would have a long reach, and there were many groups, extremists of one sort or another, who would do their best to disrupt and destroy any agreements or resolutions.
Max answered without hesitation. “Both.” He met his German counterpart’s gaze squarely. “If Akbar and Ebola have taught us anything, it’s that no one country, or even a few countries, can handle a large outbreak alone. There will be a domino effect and the resulting chaos will take even more lives. When the Spanish flu circulated the world one hundred years ago, it took a year and a half to make the trip. Now, it might take a week.” Max shook his head. “We can’t afford to do the minimum, Franz. There’s no time to build the support system after the next deadly outbreak occurs.”
“But the cost…”
“The current cost of Ebola is estimated to be two point two billion dollars. That’s just monetary. We lost a lot of doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers too. It’s going to take years for Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone to replace those people. If they get hit by a second wave, or a new infection, they’ve got no more than a skeleton crew to handle it. Which means it won’t be handled. It’ll be chaos.” Max shook his head. “With the Middle East hemorrhaging refugees into Europe, no one is in a position to help without a lot of prep time.”
“We can’t afford the plan you propose—” Franz began.
Max cut him off with a diagonal slash of his hand. “Then help me find another way.”
The German sighed. “I agree with you on principle, but without an imminent threat, my government won’t agree to spend that much time and money on an event that might never happen.”
Their vehicle slowed and the soldier driving it yelled back to them, “We’ve got an accident in front of us, sirs. I’ll have to take another route.”
“That’s fine, Corporal.” Max turned to Franz, determined to see the German’s not-quite-no as an almost-yes. “We start with a framework, an infrastructure—”
Shots and yelling from outside the vehicle cut him off. Their driver stomped on the brakes.
“What’s going on?” Max demanded.
The young soldier never had the chance to answer.
The vehicle in front of them exploded.
For a long moment, the world disintegrated into white noise.
Slowly, his vision and hearing returned. But nothing made sense. Smoke obscured everything, and there was such an uproar of shouting and sirens, he wasn’t even sure where he was.
Another, much smaller explosion farther away pulled him back into focus. Their vehicle was damaged—how badly wasn’t clear—and the way ahead was impassable.
He turned to ask Franz if he was all right and found the German slumped against the seat, blood dripping from his head.
Blood doesn’t flow when you’re dead.
He put his fingers on Franz’s carotid pulse and found it strong and steady.
Thank God.
Flames from the front of their vehicle caught his attention. They weren’t safe yet.
He kicked his door open, then dragged Franz out and back down the street several feet. He went back for the driver, but the young man’s head was all but disarticulated from his body by a piece of twisted metal.
Son of a bitch.
Max looked at the remains of the lead vehicle, but what was left was little more than a chassis covered in bent metal and melted plastic. No one could have survived that.
Stone.
Fear sank an ice pick into his gut. He whipped around to look at the vehicle behind his and saw her running with the men from her vehicle, returning to the base.
Relief burned away the cold, allowing him to breathe again.
Good, the survivors needed to evacuate in case of a follow-up attack.
Shouts from the other side of the flames grabbed his attention, but no one appeared. He turned to check Franz and discovered Ali running toward him, her rifle in her hands. “Max?” she yelled.
“What are you doing here?” he demanded. “I thought you were escorting the others to safety.”
“They’re in good hands.” She glanced at Franz and the blood on Max’s uniform. “You’re the one who needs backup.”
He couldn’t argue the point. That didn’t mean he liked it.
“Are you okay?” He put his hands on her shoulders, sliding them down and over her body to check for injuries.
“I’m good,” she said, wiggling away from him to inspect him instead. “Are you? Is this your blood?”
“No, it’s Franz’s blood. Head wounds often bleed profusely.”
“Help is on its way. Did you see what happened?”
“No.”
She stared at the remains of the lead vehicle with narrowed eyes. “If we were anywhere else, I’d say that was the result of an IED.”
“It could have been,” Max said. “The Boston bombing was a homemade device.” He looked around. “Any injuries in your vehicle?”
“Nothing besides a few bumps and bruises.”
Another explosion had both of them ducking and stepping back from the flames and smoke.
A bullet struck the mess of debris where he’d been standing a moment ago. A second later, Stone took him by the arm and yanked him behind the wreck of his vehicle.
Stone snapped her rifle into position and fired back, but the bullets kept coming. “Get to cover,” she yelled at him.
Not without her. “You too!”
“Max,” she barked. “What did I say about arguing? Get the fuck out of here, before I kick your ass.”
She was right. He could be an idiot later.
Max ducked and found himself using the smoking wreckage to hide from more bullets coming in short bursts all around him. He managed to get back to Franz and move the unconscious man into a sheltered doorway, but he still couldn’t determine where the shooter was. There was probably more than one.
Goddamn it, he didn’t have time to be assassinated. He had too much to do.
Movement from beyond the remains of the lead vehicle caught his attention, and a man—no, a boy, barely a teenager—walked slowly and calmly through the rubble and ruined vehicles. A bulky package was strapped to his chest and his gaze searched for someone or something.
The boy saw Alicia, but he didn’t do anything threatening. In fact, he backed away from her, hugged the wall of the building behind him and kept moving.
That retreat from her, from blowing himself up, was probably the only thing that stopped Alicia from shooting him.
Who the hell would use a child as a suicide bomber?
Extremists, fanatics, madmen. It didn’t matter what anyone called them, they were dead men if Max got his hands on them.
He’d taken a vow to preserve life, but the kind of animals who could plan and execute this terrible act of horror, with a child as a weapon, could not be allowed to continue breathing.
That wasn’t going to improve his immediate situation. The boy was still walking forward and appeared to be looking for something. A target? In a moment, Max and Franz were going to be visible.
He sucked in a deep breath and prepared to leave the relative safety of the doorway. Perhaps he could talk the boy into surrendering. Franz and Alicia would have no doubt argued with him about that plan, but the German was still out cold and Alicia too far away.
He stood and walked toward the teen.
The young man saw him and took a second to stare at Max. An expression of recognition and fear flashed across the boy’s face, and Max knew he was in trouble.
Someone had sent a child to kill him.
If he walked away, would the kid follow? How close did the bomber want to get before detonating the explosives? If there were no eyes on the boy, could he be convinced to abandon his mission?
Max sidestepped away from the doorway, then walked backward. “You don’t have to do this,” he called to the boy. “We can help you, keep you safe.”
The boy followed, picking up his pace to close the distance between them. “They said they will kill my sister and brother if I don’t,” the boy said, his voice bleak and hopeless.
Max was about to turn and run when the young man jerked once, and pitched forward to land on his hands.
Someone had shot the would-be bomber, wounded him.
Shots pinged off the stone wall of the building behind Max and peppered the area around the child bomber. At least one of them hit the boy and he crumpled. Max ducked and ran back to the relative safety of the doorway where he’d left Franz.
Return fire halted the rain of bullets. Max waited for more, but none materialized.
Had Stone taken out the shooter? Or was he being lured out into the open?
He glanced back at Franz. A sizable blood pool had formed around the man’s head. His head wound might be worse than Max had first thought.
Since no one had fired any shots at him for nearly half a minute, he took a chance and rushed back to their vehicle and pulled a first aid kit from the rear seat. It looked completely intact. He ran back to Franz, put on a pair of gloves and began searching for the source of the bleeding. It didn’t take long to find a deep five- or six-inch long cut along the back of the German’s head.
He pulled out a roll of gauze and a large non-stick pad, and proceeded to carefully stanch the bleeding.
The sound of several pairs of booted feet running toward his hiding place had him glancing up.
A contingent of soldiers in US Army uniforms surfaced out of the smoke.
“I need a medical team here now.” Max didn’t wait for a reply, but concentrated on getting the bleeding under control.
American soldiers filtered through the area, some to look for more bodies, others to investigate, while some stood watch. He ignored them until he had Franz ready to transport. By that time a group of combat medics had arrived and they were able to take the German soldier away to a nearby hospital.
Max searched the wreckage for more injured, but everyone still alive had been identified by the medics, and was in various stages of being removed from the area.
“What the hell are you still doing here?” Stone demanded.
He turned and stared at her and the rifle she carried, a sick feeling churning his gut. “Did you shoot the suicide bomber?”
“I wounded him. The sniper who was trying to nail your ass from the roof over there finished the kid off.” She stepped up to him and poked his chest with a finger. “You’re lucky I shot that asshole before he shot you. I also saw you step away from cover and allow that bomber to ID you.” She paused, then asked with heavily laden sarcasm, “Do you have a death wish, Colonel?”
If he did, he wasn’t alone. “You’re the one who stayed out in the open to play shooter.”
Book three of the Biological Response Team (description subject to change)
Colonel Maximillian heads the US Army's Biological Response Team. He's responsible for the identification and destruction of any biological hazards and weapons the Army might encounter. He's sent to deal with a potential flu virus that's rapidly killing people in a remote Iraq village. Viruses he understands. Women, not so much. So, when he's assigned a bodyguard, a woman who's a trainer for the Special Forces Combatives program, he's all left feet and thumbs.
Sergeant Alicia Stone has always been the odd woman out and frequently in conflict with male officers who think they know her job better than she does. Max, however needs her more than anyone she's ever met. He's a soldier who can't shoot or defend himself in any way. She takes on the task of keeping him in one piece and teaching him the basics of combat, but it's tough to train a man who refuses to fight back. That might be a problem, because a madman is gunning for Max with a virus that might just wipe humanity out entirely.
Excerpt:
There are very few monsters who warrant the fear we have of them. ~ Andre Gide
Chapter One
“They’re not going to agree with your plan, Colonel,” Alicia muttered as she stared at the group of military doctors standing several feet away.
Colonel Robert Maximillian, head of the US Army Biological Response Team bent closer to the tiny, curvy Sergeant Alicia Stone and had to clear his throat before asking, “What makes you say that?”
“Look at their body language,” she continued in that almost subvocal whisper. “They’ve closed ranks and you’re on the outside.”
He had to consciously hold himself still as he studied the group of men. Military doctors from five different countries. They were positioned in a tight circle, two with their backs to him, talking quietly. All of them stood at just a hair under attention. The faces he could see were set, eyes serious. Understandable. These were dangerous times, and their mutual enemy could be anyone, even someone in your own army.
Stone shifted and her shoulder brushed his arm.
His attraction to the sergeant was irrational and impossible. He wasn’t a fan of either.
“They’re having a simple conversation, Sergeant, nothing more.”
“I’ve been on the receiving end of that kind of conversation,” Stone said, her voice filled with enough acid to melt steel. “If they wanted to include you, they’d have left a space for you to step into, but they didn’t. They’ve already decided and they know you’re not going to like their decision.”
“That’s ridiculous.” He knew every man in the group and had earned their respect. “They’re professionals and they know I have new information for them.”
“It isn’t going to matter. Their minds are made up.” Stone’s voice was so sharp he stopped to really look at her.
“What happened?” he asked her.
“It’s not what happened, but what’s not going to happen that’s the problem, sir.”
“No.” He waved away the reference to the meeting they were about to attend. “I mean, with you. I don’t think I’ve ever seen you this angry before.”
“Me, angry?” she said with wide eyes that did nothing to hide the displeasure on the rest of her face. “I’m grateful, sir, to be the only female combat trainer for the Special Forces.” Her tone made it clear she was anything but grateful.
“Did you break another officer’s arm?” Four months ago, an asshole who’d thought he was some kind of martial arts expert had tried to intimidate Stone during a training session. She’d put him on the mats twice before he got angry and attacked for real, thinking she couldn’t handle an actual fight. She’d not only broken his arm, but two fingers of the opposite hand, as well.
The incident hadn’t ended there. The officer had accused her of assault, but with so many witnesses the charges against Stone had been thrown out, and he’d been charged with assault. Since then, however, at least two other officers had lodged formal complaints against her.
The old boys’ club, closing ranks.
“Nothing that would show up on an X-ray.” Her voice sounded bland. Something had gone very wrong.
If someone hurt her, he was going to find out and make their life miserable. “Is there anything I can do to help?”
She jerked, as if the question startled her. “Don’t argue with me if I tell you to do something.”
“Arguing with one’s bodyguard would be stupid. I try not to be an idiot more than twice a day. I reached my quota an hour ago.” Yet, he always seemed to butt heads with her whenever they were involved in the same operation, even if it was just a meeting. Having her as a bodyguard for any great length of time would be uncomfortable at best.
She blinked.
He consulted his watch as several light armored vehicles pulled up nearby. “Gentlemen, I appreciate your early arrival,” he called out to the five men. “The summit is scheduled to begin in an hour. Several more countries than expected have sent representatives. As a result the meeting has been moved to a larger venue.” He gestured at the waiting vehicles. “If you would? We’ll travel together.”
Their cluster broke apart and they got into vehicles.
When he glanced back, Stone was staring after him with a profoundly confused expression on her face.
Max rode with Franz Meyer, chief medical officer for the German Army, while Stone got into the vehicle behind his with his British counterpart.
“Militants invaded another Kurdish village in Northern Iraq today.” Franz sounded tired. “At least seventy-five dead and an unknown number of women and girls taken.” He shook his head. “Last night a group of refugees attempted to cross the border between Bulgaria and Hungary. At least thirty died in a series of fires started by Molotov cocktails they threw themselves.”
Stupid. Human beings had a great capacity for stupidity. “The unrest isn’t making any of our jobs easier. Which is why we need countries around the world, not just in Europe or the Middle East, to agree to implement a global vaccination plan.”
“But, do you understand the pressure we’re all under?” Franz turned to him, suddenly intent. “We can’t fight a war against an enemy we can’t see. Your proposal is simply too expensive.”
“We’re facing a new era of biological weapons.” Max made direct eye contact with him. “Weapons that are in the hands of people who can and will use them against any target they choose.”
“We can’t arbitrarily begin a counteroffensive against an enemy we aren’t aware of yet,” Franz replied. “We have to have more information, more proof than two isolated incidents.”
Had he read the reports? “Akbar isn’t an incident. He’s a mass murderer who’s just getting started. Treating the sick after the fact is what’ll be expensive. You can’t just ignore the problem because no one is sure how to pay for it.”
“What I’m saying is, where do we start?” Franz spread his hands in a conciliatory gesture that didn’t fool Max for a second. “Which do you feel is more important, training existing medical staff, or increasing staff numbers in both military and civilian medical aid groups in Africa and the Middle East? We can’t afford to do both.”
He held on to his temper with both hands. Stone was right. Franz had already made up his mind.
He had maybe ten minutes more minutes to make his case before they arrived at their destination. Once there, he’d have to repeat his arguments to healthcare leaders from all over Europe, Africa, the Middle East and Asia. Franz had probably thought he was going to catch Max by surprise by asking the question now, but Max had been considering solutions to the problem of worldwide infectious disease control for a long time. Ten minutes might just be enough time to change the German’s thinking.
There were other delegates in the vehicles in front and behind them, along with a military escort to keep trouble at bay. The decisions about to be made at this meeting would have a long reach, and there were many groups, extremists of one sort or another, who would do their best to disrupt and destroy any agreements or resolutions.
Max answered without hesitation. “Both.” He met his German counterpart’s gaze squarely. “If Akbar and Ebola have taught us anything, it’s that no one country, or even a few countries, can handle a large outbreak alone. There will be a domino effect and the resulting chaos will take even more lives. When the Spanish flu circulated the world one hundred years ago, it took a year and a half to make the trip. Now, it might take a week.” Max shook his head. “We can’t afford to do the minimum, Franz. There’s no time to build the support system after the next deadly outbreak occurs.”
“But the cost…”
“The current cost of Ebola is estimated to be two point two billion dollars. That’s just monetary. We lost a lot of doctors, nurses and other healthcare workers too. It’s going to take years for Guinea, Liberia and Sierra Leone to replace those people. If they get hit by a second wave, or a new infection, they’ve got no more than a skeleton crew to handle it. Which means it won’t be handled. It’ll be chaos.” Max shook his head. “With the Middle East hemorrhaging refugees into Europe, no one is in a position to help without a lot of prep time.”
“We can’t afford the plan you propose—” Franz began.
Max cut him off with a diagonal slash of his hand. “Then help me find another way.”
The German sighed. “I agree with you on principle, but without an imminent threat, my government won’t agree to spend that much time and money on an event that might never happen.”
Their vehicle slowed and the soldier driving it yelled back to them, “We’ve got an accident in front of us, sirs. I’ll have to take another route.”
“That’s fine, Corporal.” Max turned to Franz, determined to see the German’s not-quite-no as an almost-yes. “We start with a framework, an infrastructure—”
Shots and yelling from outside the vehicle cut him off. Their driver stomped on the brakes.
“What’s going on?” Max demanded.
The young soldier never had the chance to answer.
The vehicle in front of them exploded.
For a long moment, the world disintegrated into white noise.
Slowly, his vision and hearing returned. But nothing made sense. Smoke obscured everything, and there was such an uproar of shouting and sirens, he wasn’t even sure where he was.
Another, much smaller explosion farther away pulled him back into focus. Their vehicle was damaged—how badly wasn’t clear—and the way ahead was impassable.
He turned to ask Franz if he was all right and found the German slumped against the seat, blood dripping from his head.
Blood doesn’t flow when you’re dead.
He put his fingers on Franz’s carotid pulse and found it strong and steady.
Thank God.
Flames from the front of their vehicle caught his attention. They weren’t safe yet.
He kicked his door open, then dragged Franz out and back down the street several feet. He went back for the driver, but the young man’s head was all but disarticulated from his body by a piece of twisted metal.
Son of a bitch.
Max looked at the remains of the lead vehicle, but what was left was little more than a chassis covered in bent metal and melted plastic. No one could have survived that.
Stone.
Fear sank an ice pick into his gut. He whipped around to look at the vehicle behind his and saw her running with the men from her vehicle, returning to the base.
Relief burned away the cold, allowing him to breathe again.
Good, the survivors needed to evacuate in case of a follow-up attack.
Shouts from the other side of the flames grabbed his attention, but no one appeared. He turned to check Franz and discovered Ali running toward him, her rifle in her hands. “Max?” she yelled.
“What are you doing here?” he demanded. “I thought you were escorting the others to safety.”
“They’re in good hands.” She glanced at Franz and the blood on Max’s uniform. “You’re the one who needs backup.”
He couldn’t argue the point. That didn’t mean he liked it.
“Are you okay?” He put his hands on her shoulders, sliding them down and over her body to check for injuries.
“I’m good,” she said, wiggling away from him to inspect him instead. “Are you? Is this your blood?”
“No, it’s Franz’s blood. Head wounds often bleed profusely.”
“Help is on its way. Did you see what happened?”
“No.”
She stared at the remains of the lead vehicle with narrowed eyes. “If we were anywhere else, I’d say that was the result of an IED.”
“It could have been,” Max said. “The Boston bombing was a homemade device.” He looked around. “Any injuries in your vehicle?”
“Nothing besides a few bumps and bruises.”
Another explosion had both of them ducking and stepping back from the flames and smoke.
A bullet struck the mess of debris where he’d been standing a moment ago. A second later, Stone took him by the arm and yanked him behind the wreck of his vehicle.
Stone snapped her rifle into position and fired back, but the bullets kept coming. “Get to cover,” she yelled at him.
Not without her. “You too!”
“Max,” she barked. “What did I say about arguing? Get the fuck out of here, before I kick your ass.”
She was right. He could be an idiot later.
Max ducked and found himself using the smoking wreckage to hide from more bullets coming in short bursts all around him. He managed to get back to Franz and move the unconscious man into a sheltered doorway, but he still couldn’t determine where the shooter was. There was probably more than one.
Goddamn it, he didn’t have time to be assassinated. He had too much to do.
Movement from beyond the remains of the lead vehicle caught his attention, and a man—no, a boy, barely a teenager—walked slowly and calmly through the rubble and ruined vehicles. A bulky package was strapped to his chest and his gaze searched for someone or something.
The boy saw Alicia, but he didn’t do anything threatening. In fact, he backed away from her, hugged the wall of the building behind him and kept moving.
That retreat from her, from blowing himself up, was probably the only thing that stopped Alicia from shooting him.
Who the hell would use a child as a suicide bomber?
Extremists, fanatics, madmen. It didn’t matter what anyone called them, they were dead men if Max got his hands on them.
He’d taken a vow to preserve life, but the kind of animals who could plan and execute this terrible act of horror, with a child as a weapon, could not be allowed to continue breathing.
That wasn’t going to improve his immediate situation. The boy was still walking forward and appeared to be looking for something. A target? In a moment, Max and Franz were going to be visible.
He sucked in a deep breath and prepared to leave the relative safety of the doorway. Perhaps he could talk the boy into surrendering. Franz and Alicia would have no doubt argued with him about that plan, but the German was still out cold and Alicia too far away.
He stood and walked toward the teen.
The young man saw him and took a second to stare at Max. An expression of recognition and fear flashed across the boy’s face, and Max knew he was in trouble.
Someone had sent a child to kill him.
If he walked away, would the kid follow? How close did the bomber want to get before detonating the explosives? If there were no eyes on the boy, could he be convinced to abandon his mission?
Max sidestepped away from the doorway, then walked backward. “You don’t have to do this,” he called to the boy. “We can help you, keep you safe.”
The boy followed, picking up his pace to close the distance between them. “They said they will kill my sister and brother if I don’t,” the boy said, his voice bleak and hopeless.
Max was about to turn and run when the young man jerked once, and pitched forward to land on his hands.
Someone had shot the would-be bomber, wounded him.
Shots pinged off the stone wall of the building behind Max and peppered the area around the child bomber. At least one of them hit the boy and he crumpled. Max ducked and ran back to the relative safety of the doorway where he’d left Franz.
Return fire halted the rain of bullets. Max waited for more, but none materialized.
Had Stone taken out the shooter? Or was he being lured out into the open?
He glanced back at Franz. A sizable blood pool had formed around the man’s head. His head wound might be worse than Max had first thought.
Since no one had fired any shots at him for nearly half a minute, he took a chance and rushed back to their vehicle and pulled a first aid kit from the rear seat. It looked completely intact. He ran back to Franz, put on a pair of gloves and began searching for the source of the bleeding. It didn’t take long to find a deep five- or six-inch long cut along the back of the German’s head.
He pulled out a roll of gauze and a large non-stick pad, and proceeded to carefully stanch the bleeding.
The sound of several pairs of booted feet running toward his hiding place had him glancing up.
A contingent of soldiers in US Army uniforms surfaced out of the smoke.
“I need a medical team here now.” Max didn’t wait for a reply, but concentrated on getting the bleeding under control.
American soldiers filtered through the area, some to look for more bodies, others to investigate, while some stood watch. He ignored them until he had Franz ready to transport. By that time a group of combat medics had arrived and they were able to take the German soldier away to a nearby hospital.
Max searched the wreckage for more injured, but everyone still alive had been identified by the medics, and was in various stages of being removed from the area.
“What the hell are you still doing here?” Stone demanded.
He turned and stared at her and the rifle she carried, a sick feeling churning his gut. “Did you shoot the suicide bomber?”
“I wounded him. The sniper who was trying to nail your ass from the roof over there finished the kid off.” She stepped up to him and poked his chest with a finger. “You’re lucky I shot that asshole before he shot you. I also saw you step away from cover and allow that bomber to ID you.” She paused, then asked with heavily laden sarcasm, “Do you have a death wish, Colonel?”
If he did, he wasn’t alone. “You’re the one who stayed out in the open to play shooter.”