Freedom TM
International.
“This is a top secret DOD-sanctioned operation, gentlemen.”
The senior agent frowned and examined the operator’s ID. “I’mS-A-C of the FBI’s Kansas City office. I don’t take instructions from private security contractors.” He pushed past, along with scores of other federal agents and local police, guns still at the ready.
They pushed through a couple dozen plainclothes men with radio earpieces and submachine guns pointed skyward.
“Jesus H. Christ, who the hell authorized a takedown in the middle of a thousand innocent people?”
Philips followed on the senior agent’s heels.
Korr officers held up their hands. “Sir! You can’t come in here!”
“I’m in charge of the FBI’s Kansas City office, and until I see some government badges, I’ll go where I damn well please!”
The swarm of police and federal agents broke through to the center of the Korr team. The scene there shocked everyone.
Six bodies lay steaming on the frozen grass in a pool of blood, with more blood spattered over nearby headstones. One was a wounded Korr officer gulping air and being tended to by his colleagues. The other bodies looked to be Daemon operatives—one of them a young woman—lifeless eyes staring skyward. Philips noticed hundreds of footprints trampling the ground, indicating a mighty struggle.
The FBI SAC stood agape. “Mother of god …”
A tall, muscular Korr officer came up to him, showing credentials. “Sir, this is a top secret military operation. I need you to call—”
Suddenly there was a high-pitched whistle, followed by a sharp
thwack
. Everyone stared in horror at a dagger-shaped steel point that now protruded from the Korr officer’s left cheek. Blood ran from his nose and a large steel dart now extended from the top rear of his skull, like a sinister plume, with an antenna rising out the back. The stricken Korr officer staggered with a surprised look on his face. Servomotors on the vanes of the dart whirred andadjusted in response to his movements—apparently the guidance system.
The man collapsed as the others stared in shock.
And then more whistling was heard.
Without a word everyone scattered.
As she ran, Philips looked up into the clear Kansas sky and saw several glints of steel coming in. She dodged between tombstones as she heard the ringing of steel spikes ricocheting off stone behind her. Screams of pain came on the wind, and she turned to see first one, and then another Korr officer drop as they fled with the rest of the crowd—singled out by the deadly rain. Many of the darts missed their mark, but the spikes were relentless, eventually striking flesh and bringing the Korr men down, one by one. She saw an injured man try to get back up, only to be struck in the back by several more darts.
Philips slowed and watched in amazement as a Korr officer threw down his MP-5 submachine gun and ran toward other officers—who avoided him like the plague.
“Help me! Someone help me! Help!”
There was no cover in the middle of the vast Kansas cemetery, and he zigzagged among the mournful monuments as spikes clanged off stone and buried themselves in the grass behind him.
But finally a dart struck the man in the shoulder. He fell—only to be struck by several more darts as he crawled on the ground.
A Kansas state trooper in dress uniform grabbed Philips by the arm. “Miss, stay back!”
She cast her gaze farther afield, seeing more Korr contractors in the distance—visible because they ran alone or in pairs, slaloming, only to be struck down by a series of glinting missiles.
It was a surgical strike. Philips looked back where Loki had been, but as she expected, he was gone. In the far distance she could see thousands of mourners fleeing to their cars. She knew that findingLoki among them would be next to impossible—not to mention dangerous to the public.
She looked over toward Roy Merritt’s deserted gravesite and cursed Loki. And The Major.
Their war would never stop—not even to honor the dead.
Chapter 4: // End of the Line
You know who you look like? That guy who killed all those cops. The one they executed.”
Pete Sebeck leveled his gaze at the convenience store clerk. She was a matronly Caucasian woman in her fifties. A portable television blared on a shelf behind her, tuned to the most popular tabloid news show in the country—
News to America
. Rotating graphics and techno music in the opening sequence proved distracting. “Well, if
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