The Genesis Plague (2010)

Free The Genesis Plague (2010) by Michael Byrnes

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Authors: Michael Byrnes
simple by replying, ‘We work for the Department of Defense.’
    ‘Sounds very official,’ she said. ‘So what can I do for you?’
    ‘Actually, this might take a while. Maybe I can buy you a coffee in the cafe downstairs?’
    ‘All right,’ she said. ‘But tea. Green tea.’

12
IRAQ
    Jason used his binoculars to survey the approaching military convoy. With all the dust being kicked up, he wondered why they even bothered painting the vehicles in desert camouflage paint.
    The lead vehicle was a six-wheeled, twenty-ton behemoth with a V-hull - a Mine Resistant Ambush Protected armoured transport, or MRAP. Affixed to its front end was a huge mine roller that scraped the ground to pre-detonate any pressure-triggered improvised explosive devices, or IEDs, that might be buried in the roadway. To Jason, the apparatus looked more like a colossal paint roller or something that might be used to flatten asphalt. On the MRAP’s roof, he could make out a telescoping optics mast - infrared, heat sensors, the works. He suspected it had been retrofitted with metal detectors and radio frequency jamming equipment too.
    Trailing like ducklings behind the MRAP were five flat-bellied Humvees.
    He spied the Blackhawk again. Its side doors were open. Besides the pilot and copilot, he spied six marines inside the fuselage.
    A conservative tabulation meant that twenty-five to thirty jar-heads would be arriving in the next five minutes. Marines weren’t always keen on cooperating with contractors. But circumstance dictated that a team effort would be critical to getting into that cave … and fast. Play nice, an inner voice told Jason.
    ‘Hey, Meat,’ Jason called out.
    ‘Yo.’
    ‘Print out those pictures, pronto. I need to send Hazo on a field trip.’
    ‘I’m on it.’
    Hazo came over with a nervous look on his face. ‘Field trip?’
    ‘You know the locals,’ Jason explained. ‘I want you to take those pictures with you, show them around, figure out what those images on the wall can tell us. And I want you to see if anyone knows this woman whose ID we found melted to that door. No way she was here alone.’
    Tentative, Hazo nodded. ‘I understand.’
    ‘Good. And don’t be long. I’m going to need your help here.’
    ‘But how will I get to the city?’
    ‘You’ll fly, of course.’ Jason pointed to the chopper.
    While the twenty-eight light infantry troops of the 5th Marine Regiment, 1st Division Expeditionary Force, busily pitched camp, Jason convened with Colonel Bryce Crawford in the makeshift Bedouin command tent. Before he set out to brief the colonel on what had transpired, Jason requested Crawford to loan out his chopper for a critical fact-finding mission. It took some convincing, but Jason was a consummate diplomat. Jason then summoned Hazo inside.
    ‘Make it fast,’ Crawford warned Hazo. ‘No goofing around out there.’
    Jason could tell that the forty-something, no-nonsense Texan - nothing but muscle dressed in crisp fatigues and a soft cap - intimidated Hazo. The Kurd cowered from the colonel’s tough, grey eyes and jutting square cleft chin.
    ‘Yes Colonel,’ Hazo replied sheepishly. ‘I promise to work quickly.’
    ‘Then why are you still standing here? Get moving!’ Crawford barked.
    Jason watched Hazo scramble out from the tent, down the hill to the chopper.
    ‘A Kurd?’ Crawford grumbled, shaking his head with severe incredulity. ‘You sure he’s on our side, Sergeant?’
    ‘Hazo’s been thoroughly vetted. We’d be dead in the water without him.’
    ‘You guys really do march to a different drummer. If he fucks up, it’s on your head, Yaeger. Not mine. Got it?’
    Jason nodded.
    Crawford pummelled agitatedly to the Blackhawk pilot that the request had been granted.
    They watched as the copilot helped Hazo into the fuselage jumpseat and secure his flight helmet. Then the copilot took his place in the cockpit. The rotors wound up and the chopper lifted into the air, spinning sand in its

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