Death Card. Nick L. Sacco

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Death Card - Nick L. Sacco

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in print and electronic formats.

      ISBN 978-1-77143-105-7 (pbk.).--ISBN 978-1-77143-106-4 (pdf)

      Additional cataloguing data available from Library and Archives Canada

      Contact Nick L. Sacco through his website: www.acephantom.com

      Back cover artwork credit: Police Brutality Clip Art from Vector.me (by liftarn)

      Disclaimer: This is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents and dialogues are products of the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.

      Extreme care has been taken by the author to ensure that all information presented in this book is accurate and up to date at the time of publishing. Neither the author nor the publisher can be held responsible for any errors or omissions. Additionally, neither is any liability assumed for damages resulting from the use of the information contained herein.

      All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise without the express written permission of the publisher.

      Publisher:

      CCB Publishing

      British Columbia, Canada

       www.ccbpublishing.com

      

       Acknowledgements

      

      To my long time friend, Bill Thompson, who shared his knowledge and technical expertise as an Air Force veteran. Bill helped me plug holes in the technical areas of the book.

      To all of my friends and family for their support and confidence.

      My biggest thanks is to my smoking hot girlfriend, Marcy, who was by my side every step of the way while I wrote Death Card. She gave me both positive and negative feedback, listened to my ideas and endured my rants. She spent hours pouring over every word of my book looking for typos, making suggestions, and laughing, when I was witty enough to trigger her sense of humor.

       “You see dictators on their pedestals, surrounded by the bayonets of their soldiers and the truncheons of their police ... yet in their hearts there is unspoken fear.”

      - Winston Churchill

       Chapter 1

      

      A thunderous sonic boom rattled Washington, D.C. Throughout the city, people panicked as windows shattered and car alarms blared. The undetected supersonic aircraft raced away after dropping its deadly package. Specifically designed to carry nuclear weapons, the B-2 Stealth Bomber was miles away before the carnage erupted on the city below. Its precision-guided warhead detonated directly above the White House.

       Chapter 2

      

      Maggie Kerr was struggling with mixed emotions as she steered her yellow Jeep Wrangler toward the White House. As an ambitious young reporter, she was eager, yet hesitant, to attend this press conference. She felt this assignment might be just what she needed to move up at the Washington Post, where she had been working for nearly five years. During this press conference, Maggie hoped she might get a seat close to the front, among the other media big shots. She imagined the scenario now: The speaker, spotting her raised hand in the sea of other reporters, would motion for her to rise. Uncrossing her shapely legs to stand in her four-inch heels, she would toss her long red hair over one shoulder. Her green eyes smoldering, with notebook clutched to her ample bosom, she would shout a question so significant, so life-altering, that it would be repeated on every news outlet for weeks to come. Maggie had rehearsed it a hundred times...in her mind. In reality, a more experienced reporter would beat her to the punch. Maggie suspected the speaker would be a listless government drone, holding the mundane title of Assistant to the Assistant for the Department of Mad Cow Research.

      As Maggie drove down Connecticut Avenue, she thought back to the text she had received earlier in the evening from her assignment editor. The recognizable sound of the Darth Vader theme song tipped Maggie off that her boss was sending her a message.

      Duty calls. Press conference 10 p.m.

      WHITE HOUSE. DON’T BE LATE.

      Anything good? Write it up and e-mail it to the news desk ASAP.

      Maggie had been looking forward to curling up on the couch with her favorite guy, Puma, a six-year old Calico she had rescued as a kitten, a big bowl of popcorn, and two hours of her favorite home makeover show.

      Now, nearly ten o’clock, she drove through the dark along Independence Avenue. She felt jittery and anxious. It seemed strange to be summoned to a press conference at such a late hour. The traffic seemed about as normal as any Washington evening. Suddenly, Maggie spotted a motorcycle cop pulling into the upcoming intersection, his red strobe lights flashing. Though she had the green light, the officer raised his arm ordering her to stop.

      Maggie peered out her windows, but didn’t see an accident or a DUI checkpoint. For a second, she considered flashing her press credentials and mentioning something about being late for an important mad cow news conference. Maybe she would undo a couple of buttons on her blouse and thrust her chest forward at the cop. She would say, “Officer, these babies have an appointment at the White House.” Her humorous thoughts vanished quickly when a convoy of military trucks, Humvees, and armored vehicles suddenly barreled through the intersection just feet from her car. Maggie could see soldiers in full battle gear. She noticed that nearly every vehicle had a staffed, menacing-looking machine gun on top of it.

      “The boys sure are playing army late tonight,” Maggie thought to herself. A shrill whistle sounded. Maggie looked up to see the motorcycle cop waving rapidly at her to keep moving. She hit the gas and gave a small wave at the police officer as she passed. He ignored her and didn’t wave back.

      As she neared the Capitol, she noticed police officers in reflective vests and more soldiers in their fatigues busily setting up barricades. It must be another political protest following the recent presidential election and the authorities were getting prepared, Maggie thought to herself. For the past several months, protests had grown more frequent and violent. A dozen different antigovernment groups, including the Tea Party, had been demanding everything from changes in policy to the removal of President Marcus Barakat. As more factories and businesses closed, the unemployed swelled the ranks of the protesting crowds. There had been bloody clashes with Washington police and mass arrests. One famous evening news anchor said the current protests seemed like a combination of the 1968 Democratic riots in Chicago and the World Trade Organization riots in Seattle. Now, as the oath of office neared, violent clashes were erupting all across the nation.

      Two blocks from the Capitol, Maggie was stopped at her first checkpoint. An armed man

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