Her eyes held as much challenge as invitation. He took a chance. Slipping an arm around her waist, he pulled her closer. For a long millisecond she hesitated on that delicious cusp, only to cave in completely and push against him. Brown decided to go all in. He tipped her chin up and charged those puckered lips.
Just before contact, their baggage came bounding towards them while screaming like a kid on Christmas. For the second time that day Brown wanted to shoot the fool, and he had just met him.
“They’re on their way! Let’s go, come on, please! Let’s get the hell out of this hick town!”
“Relax hoss. Even if the Army crossed the border right now, it’ll take the lead elements a day or two to get here.” He smiled down at the contemplative woman in his arms. “Hopefully at least a night or two.”
“Are you crazy? The military has had a drone watching us ever since I first called. They’ve got helicopters coming from whatever Air Force base is next to Cape Canaveral. Come on, we’re behind enemy lines here.” He finally toned it down and lowered his voice, trying to act more natural. “Could you imagine if these hillbillies knew who I am?” All the other shoppers politely ignored him and his rudeness. Rebellion or not, this was still the South.
Only then did Brown show nervousness. He hadn’t planned to go anywhere. There was too much unfinished business to attend to, too many of his men to avenge. Over the air conditioning and background country music he heard whumping outside. The three of them rushed to the storefront windows while everyone else ran to the back of the store. The search and rescue team was already here, with a pair of Super Cobras as escort. Brown weighed the impossible odds of taking them down with his rifle out in the stolen car while the other two cheered.
Jessica grabbed his face and pulled him close. Finishing what he started. They came up for air about 10 seconds later.
“Looks like it’s my place tonight…” she murmured.
After all this time, Brown was finally trapped.
Not only was Sergeant Major Brown welcomed back from the dead with open arms, he was even awarded a Distinguished Service Cross by a new command structure desperate for heroes.
His reluctance to talk about his experiences since escaping Camp Blanding was simply chalked up to PTSD. The Army intelligence types that debriefed him noticed many discrepancies in his story, but they had bigger things to worry about. Their consensus suspicion was he might have gone AWOL for a while, but after what he did for the congressman, best to let it lie. The official line was, “He’s a hero.” Why rock the boat?
Sure, the FBI team investigating the White House attack matched witnesses’ descriptions and some security camera footage to Brown long ago, but that line of investigation went cold when they learned he died at Camp Blanding before the attack. Thanks to typical bureaucratic efficiency, none of the investigators would ever learn that the rumors of his death were greatly exaggerated.
Even if they had, they probably wouldn’t have cared. By now, all their likely suspects were on-the-run Florida ex-Guardsmen. Besides, the FBI would be swamped with thousands of other major attacks over the coming year. What was one more unsolved mystery at the bottom of the stack?
Freedom Referendum Day
Huntington Beach, California
Elections aren’t won by convincing your opposition they’re wrong. Elections are won by getting your people out to vote, by firing up your base more than the other guy’s. Of course, the corollary means keeping the other side’s supporters from the polls is just as effective a strategy.
This was the primary rationale behind founding the Freedom Brigades in the first place. The extremely tenuous legal status of these armed vigilantes rested with the fear of other armed vigilantes interfering with the democratic process. In practice, they were mainly used to keep the democratically elected Federal Government from stopping California’s statewide Freedom referendum.
The country’s most populous state had a long history of passing legislation directly at odds with federal law. Usually Washington looked the other way while the district courts sidestepped the issue and avoided making landmark decisions. Not this time. This was no minor squabble over legalizing pot. This unmistakable and dangerous challenge to central authority could not be ignored. It also would require a gentle approach and extremely delicate handling. So, with typical government finesse, they sent in the Marines.
Sophie didn’t feel at home in her new tactical vest or body armor. She no longer sported bruises when she took the heavy gear off, but the weight still felt strange. These new boots weren’t even broken in either. The strange Israeli made TAR-21 assault rifle also felt off. With magazine and bolt assembly built into the butt stock, pointy parts of this bullpup design weapon always jabbed into the side of her breast. Not for the first time she was glad they weren’t bustier. Comfortable or not, at least she looked impressive.
She assumed that’s why these FBI agents kept glaring at her. Some obviously worried, some clearly angry, but all showed respect. To her and her team protecting the polling station, at least. They were far less deferential to the local police blocking their way inside. Had the policemen been alone, yeah, they would have caved into the official pressure. Let the Feds shut the place down. With a dozen soldier look-a-likes backing them up, they were emboldened enough to tell the federal cops to “fuck off.”
California’s leadership would not tolerate a repeat of the street violence back in February. The Guard stayed on alert, but Sacramento ordered them to stay put in their bases. No sense in inflaming the situation further. Besides, might as well give these auxiliaries a chance to shine.
For his part, the president had decided on the soft approach this time to interrupt the plebiscite. He sent whatever federal law enforcement personnel they had in California, from FBI agents to Park Rangers, to try to put a stop to this nonsense. That gentle touch in the face of prepared, armed resistance only showed the weakness of the president’s dictatorial gamble. In politics, as in the jungle, weakness was an invitation for trouble.
Sophie had no way to know why these agents were backing off. Not all of these confrontations around the state were such bullshit stunts like this one. While the cops and Feds traded insults and threats here, in other parts of town they traded shots. A mile away, her sister militia group gunned down a trio of ATF agents trying to arrest them. These might be the first federal causalities of the day, but they wouldn’t be the last.
These FBI men received a call from someone. After a quick huddle, they just hopped back in their cars and sped off. Not another word spoken. Their abrupt departure even took the gusto out of the small cluster of pro-government protestors across the street.
Sophie’s group leader, they weren’t yet properly organized into hierarchical units, whistled. “That was damn easy. Look at them run! Talk about voting with your feet!”
Sophie laughed as well. Despite their success, disappointment gnawed on her imagination. Her lust for action, to put all this new training to use, rivaled any longing for a lost lover. How would she react when things got real? That sweet mix of anticipation and fear over her first time only heightened her desire.
When she finally found the chance, about an hour later, to go all the way she had no time to worry. Let alone savor it. Survival was her great orgasm. The rumble of Humvees filled the street, echoing off the apartment complexes around them as if she were in a giant concrete cave.