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The Sector
The Sector
The Sector
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The Sector

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Sixteen elite Sector soldiers board a plane bound for Southeast Asia and then disappear without a trace. Infuriated and humiliated by the covert attack, the Sector deploys Agent Tate Ryan to uncover the truth and rescue her fellow soldiers.

You Have Just Been Upgraded
Over the course of her investigation, Tate learns that thousands of human locator beacons delivered to the Sector contain bombs embedded in their internal processors. The missing soldiers aren't the only ones to receive the tampered-with upgrade. Tate, too, is unwittingly injected with an altered device, transforming her from an elite warrior into a walking time bomb.

Autonomy Can Get You Splintered
Tate runs a fine line between functioning operative and rogue agent. Cross that line and she will be exterminated. As she closes in on the truth behind the missing soldiers, Tate is betrayed by her own people. The time bomb in her neck is starting to tick.

Russian Roulette
Now, risking a quick death at best, Tate hand-picks a few specialists to join her as she faces a twisted psychopath conducting horrifying human experiments, a Russian dictator intent on obliterating millions of people and his vast army bent on destroying Tate and her team.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherKari Nichols
Release dateFeb 19, 2014
ISBN9781310730368
The Sector
Author

Kari Nichols

Kari Nichols has over 15 years of experience working in the Vancouver video game industry. She has an unabashed love for action movies and one-man-army style novels. The plethora of male-dominated action heroes compelled her to write her own one-woman-army novels.

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    Book preview

    The Sector - Kari Nichols

    The Sector

    by

    Kari Nichols

    This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

    THE SECTOR

    Published by Kari Nichols at Smashwords

    Copyright 2011 by Kari Nichols

    All rights reserved.

    Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: TXu 1-790-444

    Cover Art by Laura Kinder

    Smashwords Edition, License Notes

    This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your favorite ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

    This book is dedicated to Faye Nichols.

    For reading the book every time I wanted to make a small change.

    Thanks Mum!

    I would like to thank the following people for their contributions to this book:

    Candice Teo – thank you for always telling me that my work is too wordy. Make it terser! I can’t wait to see your book up on Amazon or on a bookstore shelf!

    Laura Kinder – my writer’s group partner! Thank you for your work on the cover and for your assistance in editing this book.

    Michelle Donnelly – thank you for your assistance with the cover art brainstorming and for all of the helpful articles you’ve sent me regarding self-publishing. I do read them, honest!

    Concetta Solinas – thank you for your assistance in editing this book. It’s always great to have a fresh take on the work.

    Faye Nichols – thank you for always reading everything I write, no matter how many times I change it, rearrange it, or just completely mess with it.

    Dean Nichols – I know you said you read it … I’m still waiting to hear what you think! Jeez, bro! :)

    Kenny Chu – thanks for allowing me to kill you in this book. It may not always be death-by-bacon, but if I can work it in, there will always be a Kenny Chu in my books, for better or worse.

    Any mistakes that still exist in this book are my fault. I take full responsibility for them. If you’d care to point them out to me, I’m happy to hear from you. Comments can be made on my blog at: blogmybook.wordpress.com

    Thanks for reading! :)

    Table of Contents

    Chapter 1

    Chapter 2

    Chapter 3

    Chapter 4

    Chapter 5

    Chapter 6

    Chapter 7

    Chapter 8

    Chapter 9

    Chapter 10

    Chapter 11

    Chapter 12

    Chapter 13

    Chapter 14

    Chapter 15

    Chapter 16

    Chapter 17

    Chapter 18

    Chapter 19

    Chapter 20

    Chapter 21

    Chapter 22

    Chapter 23

    Epilogue

    About Kari Nichols

    Preview - The Job

    Connect With Me

    Chapter 1

    Hillman could hear the soldiers closing in on his position. He had already wasted too much energy thrashing through the jungle. Now, he would make them come to him. He allowed his muscles to rest, his heart to stop hammering inside his chest. He lay beneath the scrub of an enormous tree, his body stretched out full. His feet pressed against the trunk of the tree, giving him purchase. The jungle wasn’t very large. It wasn’t even a true jungle; more of an overgrown forest. He’d already found the edge of it and looked down on the eighty foot drop to the ocean below. The waves crashed up against the rocks making the chances of surviving a cliff dive next to impossible.

    Still, he’d considered it. If he could survive the dive, they’d have a damn difficult time finding him in the water. He’d posted the second best swim time at his most recent fitness evaluation, beating out guys who were ten years his junior. He could remain submerged for three minutes and forty-five seconds. He knew that if he cut that by fifteen seconds then he could come up for air with barely a ripple in the water’s surface. With nothing but his lips breaking through to open air, his captors would have little to watch for.

    Long and lean, Hillman had feet like flippers. Underwater, away from the heavy pull of the surface waves, he could gain one hundred yards or more with each breath. A calculated guess of the distance put the nearest island at a five mile swim. A piece of cake. First he had to even the odds a little.

    Hillman scanned the area in front of him. He could hear someone creeping closer. A twig snapped; a palm frond whapped back into place. His pursuer made too much noise. Hillman ignored him. He blocked out the sounds and focused on the area to either side of his enemy. The noisy one had moved closer. In danger of being stepped on, Hillman tensed, ready to attack.

    A movement out of the corner of his eye jerked his attention to the right. A second soldier had moved up next to his companion. They didn’t sense him. The noisy one obliterated all but the loudest forest sounds. Hillman waited until they were a foot away from stepping on him.

    The noisy one walked with his gun held in front of him, a two-handed grip on the stock, one finger resting on the trigger. Hillman leapt up, his right hand forcing the gun away. He slammed his left fist into his enemy’s testicles. Bent over double from the pain, the noisy one started to gag. Hillman used the man’s body as protection from the second gunman, who had started firing. Hillman jabbed upward with his left hand to catch the noisy one in the throat. Spinning the dying man around, Hillman gripped the man’s trigger finger and forced it down. Bullets chewed up the second man’s chest.

    With both men down, Hillman relieved them of their weapons and extra ammunition. He stole a radio, a hunting knife and the second man’s boots. His feet were too used to being shod. Running through the jungle with them bared to the elements had already ripped a few chunks out of them. He dragged both bodies into the shadows of the jungle. A trained eye could detect the disturbance, but Hillman wasn’t worried about that. He returned to the safety of the dense undergrowth and made his way toward the edge of the island.

    He couldn’t determine what their game was. He’d been pulled from his cell and dumped into the jungle. Then they’d started shooting at him. He had run for close to an hour before he’d managed to break away from their chase. Then he’d hidden. Now, with his stolen radio, he could judge where they were. His instincts were screaming at him. Stalk, kill. But he’d made a promise to his team.

    One of them had to get off this fucking island, alive. The fourth to be pulled from their cell, Hillman vowed to survive. The other three soldiers had never returned. Help had not arrived. No one knew where they were.

    He could hear the other pursuers searching, calling out over the radio. They were concentrating on the east side of the jungle. Hillman forced himself to turn toward the west.

    He fingered the scar at the back of his neck, unaware that he’d recently adopted the habit. His locator beacon had just been upgraded. Smaller than a book of matches, the doctor had inserted it under the skin at the base of Hillman’s neck. When activated, it would send a signal to the nearest orbiting satellite. That signal would bounce back to HQ with his exact GPS coordinates. Each soldier had one. They’d all gone in for their upgrade a month before they’d been deployed on this last mission.

    Captured two months earlier, help should have arrived within a day or two, three at the most. After the first week, they’d begun to question the upgrades. After two weeks with no sign of help, they knew something had gone wrong with the new locators. Just as they’d come to terms with the idea of no rescue, the Russians removed the first soldier from their cell. Two weeks after the first soldier, they’d come for the second; then the third. Now, they had taken Hillman.

    Their captors spoke very little when they entered the cell. They chose the soldier they wanted, released him and then dragged him out. Always, there were four guards with guns aimed at the remaining men. Chained to the wall, they could do nothing to resist. Their bonds were loosened during meal times. Never removed, the chains were lengthened so they could move their cuffed hands from their plate to their mouth. If they attempted to cause trouble, they got blasted with the taser.

    When the first man hadn’t returned to the cell and the Russians had taken the second man, the remaining prisoners had discussed the need for someone to get off the island. With no idea what numbers the enemy force employed, they had agreed that a one-man assault would be a suicide mission. Their team leader, Major John Alan ‘Warp’ Douglass, had ordered them to do whatever it took to escape. The order had a lot of gray areas that were open for interpretation. No one knew where the soldiers were being taken.

    Hillman squinted as the harsh sunlight burned his eyes. They were being held in a subterranean room blasted out of the bedrock. Hillman hadn’t seen sunlight in two months. Dropped into the jungle, the Russians had started shooting at him.

    He edged his way further west, the crashing waves getting louder. His enemies hadn’t found the bodies, yet. They’d abandoned their search of the east side of the jungle and were heading west. Crawling through the undergrowth, Hillman battled disappointment over his slow progress. If he stood up and ran, he could make better time. Hillman crushed the idea before it could gain in appeal. Standing, he would be a much larger target. The dense brush reached three feet in height. Hillman topped out at a few inches over six feet tall.

    The road lay ten feet ahead of him. Eight feet wide and cleared of all foliage, it stretched forty feet to his right before it curved out of sight. To the left, it ran ten feet before it angled in toward the island. Beyond the road, another section of jungle spread outward. Less dense than the main part of the island, the jungle hugging the edge of the island extended out some thirty feet before it gave way to the cliffs. Hillman could see all the way through it.

    If he could cross that road to get to it, he could make those cliffs.

    No chatter whispered over his radio. The silence had started five minutes ago. They must have suspected that he’d copped a radio. Spinning through the channels, he couldn’t find any other chatter. Radio silence would keep their positions unknown. It also forced them to work alone. A team limited by visual distance in order to read hand signals would be ineffective at clearing such a large area. A lone man could wait for the line to pass by and then make his way in the opposite direction.

    The jungle ran level with the road. Hillman crawled around the edge, looking for the narrowest place to cross. He placed his feet against the back of a tree and crouched in a sprinter’s stance. Hunched down, he remained partially covered by the brush.

    And he waited.

    He filtered out all sounds and then gradually allowed them to seep back in. Bird calls twittered above him. The waves crashed in the distance. Insects buzzed around him. Their drone increased in regularity and volume. Hillman focused on the insects. He realized he could hear them underneath the sound of the drone.

    As he watched, a Jeep poked its nose around the corner to his right. The driver kept to an even 5km while the other three occupants searched the darkness of the jungle. Hillman perched too close to the edge. They’d spot him going that slowly. Easing down from his crouch, he laid out flat and melted back into the jungle.

    The Jeep coasted past. It continued toward the bend in the road and disappeared. Hillman started to move toward the road again when a second Jeep came into view from the right. Watching it pass, he counted the seconds from its disappearance until the next Jeep’s arrival. He got as far as ‘one-thousand-and-five’ before he spotted the next Jeep in the line.

    The road extended eight feet across at its widest point. He stood over six feet tall, with a thirty-six inch inseam. Three full strides would carry him across the open expanse and into the brush on the other side. A sprinter took a few quick, shorter steps to get up to speed. Hillman needed to be at speed during those brief few seconds of exposure. Angling over to another, better spot, he wedged his feet against a tree and gathered into his crouch.

    The Jeep rounded the corner on his right. He tracked it as it crept along the road. As it neared his position, he held his breath to minimize all movement. The Jeep rolled past and he took a deep, even breath. He kept his eyes on the Jeep as it continued down the road. The instant it rounded the corner, Hillman burst upward. Two short steps brought him to speed. Three long strides and he crossed over the road. He dove into the brush on the opposite side and turned to face the road once more. Already the next Jeep had rounded the bend and started to work its way down the road.

    Hillman waited for it to pass. If they’d spotted him they’d have done one of two things. They would have sped up and chased him into the bushes or they would lull him into a false sense of security and then chase him into the bushes once they were closer to him. He resumed normal breathing once the Jeep had continued past him. Easing down into the depths of the brush, he began to pick his way around the trees.

    Where the fuck is he? Godin demanded. His Bluetooth plugged into his ear, he paced his office like a caged lion. Sergei Godin, a Russian billionaire, now lived in exile after some shady business deals over a couple of Akula-class submarines. The money he’d offered would have been enough to line the pockets of the president and his cabinet ministers for many years, but they had made the mistake of trusting Godin. Delivery of the submarines were made with a twenty percent deposit due, with the remaining funds to be transferred to the accounts that each man specified.

    Those accounts never received the expected money and, after two warnings, the president had rolled up the welcome mat to Godin. He could not step foot anywhere on Russian soil without the risk of being arrested. Instead, Godin spent his days on his island in the South China Seas. A small island in the Con Dao region, it registered as little more than a speck on any world map. His guards patrolled the twelve square miles around the clock and any boats showing too much interest in her shores were given one warning before Godin released his attack boats.

    His Ferragamo loafers slapped against the hardwood flooring. He had small feet for such a tall man. He wore shoes that were two sizes too big, in an attempt to mask their size. His trousers brushed the tops of his shoes, to help conceal the ill-fitting footwear. He didn’t believe it made him vain. No one ever contradicted this belief.

    This test had turned into a colossal waste of time, just as the previous tests had. Freed from his cell, Godin’s soldiers had chased the prisoner through the jungle. Colin ‘Finn’ Finnegan – his lead engineer – would then attempt to access the self-destruct mechanism within each soldier’s locator. Months ago, Godin had believed Finn when he’d said it would be a cakewalk to determine the codes. Now, he had to suppress the urge to shoot the fucker. Not only was it not a cakewalk, it was beginning to get damn expensive. Soon it would be cheaper to pay the guy who had designed the fucking locator his half-a-billion dollar extortion fee just to get the rest of the tech.

    We don’t know where the soldier is, sir, Pleski admitted. He was glad that he’d made his report over the phone. Godin in a rage could mean the end of whoever was standing too close. Pleski was his right-hand man, but that position wouldn’t spare him from the brunt of Godin’s temper. They’d released the soldier over five hours earlier and twice they’d almost run him into the ground, but he’d managed to escape both times. Now he’d disappeared and they’d had no sign of him for well over two hours.

    Godin stalked around his study as he listened to Pleski breathing at the other end of the line. His men had captured the entire Sector team with a few losses on his side. He’d sent thirty men to collect the sixteen soldiers and it had cost him eight lives. He wasn’t pleased with those odds. Godin had taken his displeasure out on his team leader by shooting him in the head. His newly promoted team leader had seen to the containment of the prisoners.

    There were twelve prisoners left, not including this soldier, Hillman. Giving Finn a two week window to conduct his tests, Godin had enough subjects to continue for another twenty-four weeks. He bloody well hoped it wouldn’t take that long. A half-a-billion dollars wasn’t out of line for what Godin had asked for. Jonathan McMaster had shouldered a lot of responsibility, after all. He’d won the contract to manufacture The Sector’s new locators fairly. Once he’d earned the contract, Godin had contacted him. He had offered the man whatever he’d asked for, up front, with no intention of paying up. Godin had underestimated McMaster’s business acumen.

    McMaster had done a little checking and had learned of Godin’s ploy with the submarines. Deciding Godin could play the same game twice, McMaster had omitted some fundamental information from his final delivery. McMaster had created the locators to exact specifications. Everything that Godin had asked for had been delivered. What he had withheld, however, was the procedure for accessing the chip’s self-destruct feature.

    Godin focused on the immediate problem once again. This missing soldier needed to be rounded up. He left his study and crossed the long hallway to his tech center. Opening the door, he poked his head in and stared at Finn. Deactivate the jammer and locate the soldier. Send his coordinates to Pleski. The one thing that Finn had managed to do right was create a blind for the locator’s GPS beacon. Instead of bouncing up to the nearest satellite and sending the information to The Sector’s headquarters, it sent the information to Godin’s tech team. Godin would give Finn one more chance to get him those codes before he’d consider handing over the cash to McMaster.

    Hillman’s lungs were beginning to burn. The salt water wasn’t doing any wonders for his eyes, either. After his crawl through the jungle, he’d descended the eighty foot cliff. The skin on his fingertips was raw and bleeding. Tossing aside his borrowed boots as well as the gun, Hillman had shoved the knife through a belt loop and dived into the water.

    Once he’d swum down deep enough to escape the pull of the waves, he’d made decent time. He’d been forced to surface after every three minutes. The energy expended trying to dive down to calmer water used up more of his reserves than he’d anticipated. He didn’t know how long he’d been swimming, but assumed it was close to an hour. If his calculations were correct, he would be close to a mile out from the island. He didn’t waste energy looking behind him. The island he was heading toward was always directly in front of him and that was the only goal he needed.

    His next trip to the surface brought with it an ominous sound. He’d been worried about the bloody fingertips attracting sharks, but so far he’d been lucky there. Now, behind him, he could hear a boat approaching. Taking his breath and diving back down, Hillman stopped swimming and waited to see where the boat was headed.

    Hillman allowed himself to sink further below the surface. The water at this depth was too dark for his eyes to make out anything in the murk, but he could feel the vibrations in the water. The boat’s engines slowed as they neared his position. Before it could roar past him, the driver turned wide, circling the area where Hillman had submerged.

    The realization hit him and almost robbed him of his precious store of oxygen. They knew where he was. There was only one way they could be so certain of his precise location. How the hell had they discovered his locator beacon? He’d thought that it was broken. If it wasn’t, why hadn’t his people come to rescue them? There was no plausible deniability at The Sector. If shit went wrong in the field, another team would have been deployed to assist.

    An active beacon meant his enemies had his location pinpointed to within ten feet. The boat slowed, but no one entered the water. One-on-one, he could take them. If they remained in the boat and waited until he ran out of air, the advantage would be theirs. Hillman needed to take the advantage once again.

    Coming up under the boat, he palmed his way forward, using the curve of the boat to lead him to the front. When he was a foot from the surface, he could see clear enough that someone was searching the water for him. The guard carried an automatic rifle, his finger already gripping the trigger. Hillman pulled the knife from his belt loop and gripped it in his right hand. When the man turned away, Hillman broke the surface of the water and launched himself up the side of the boat. He gripped the edge of the boat. His knife flashed in the sunlight and arced down toward the man in front of him. With one sharp jab, he stabbed the man through the neck. Reflexively, the dead man pulled the trigger. The gun chattered. Hillman grabbed the man’s arm and strafed bullets into the boat.

    The driver caught the brunt of the fire fight. Two men in the back dove for cover but a third held firm and opened fire. Hillman took three slugs to the chest and hip. His left arm still supported his weight out of the water. He couldn’t feel his right side. His right arm weakening, Hillman aimed the rifle a little to the side of the lone gunman. Three rounds burst through the boat’s engines. The boat was engulfed in flames. Gasoline spewed upward and the fire chased it. The lone gunman ignited, his hands whipping around in an effort to quell the flames, but they were too much for him.

    His body fatigued beyond anything he’d ever endured, Hillman dropped back into the water. He had another brief thought about sharks before a calm blackness set in.

    Half a world away, another computer pinged as soon as the jammer was deactivated. Unbeknownst to Godin, the design of the Sector locator now included two GPS burst signals. If the first burst failed to link to a satellite, then a second burst on a different frequency would be sent. Finn had had the locators jammed before they’d ever been activated. He’d known which team to expect and what the codes were for their locators. He’d set up the jammer before Godin’s men had captured the soldiers. Once The Sector had activated each locator, it had hit the jammer. The first burst couldn’t send, so the second burst wasn’t triggered.

    Now, with Hillman’s locator being unjammed, the first GPS burst hit Finn’s blind and bounced back undetected. It didn’t reach the satellite, so it triggered the second burst. While Finn was blocking one GPS burst, he was unprepared for the second burst. He scrambled to contain it, but knew it was hopeless the instant he spotted it. It was already out.

    That burst made its way back to Sector HQ, to Fiona Engleton’s computer. As the head of the Signals department, all GPS transmissions came to her. She recognized the ID code on the locator. She’d had two months to memorize them all. It belonged to Steve Hillman, Sector Task Force Team Alfa Four (TA-4), Second Lieutenant, previously of the Canadian Army and Joint Task Force 2 (JTF2), Canada’s elite force. He’d joined The Sector five years earlier and his record was exemplary.

    Fiona ran the GPS coordinates to get their real world location. TA-4, Hillman’s team, had gone missing near Vietnam. The coordinates from his locator put him in the middle of the South China Seas. They’d been deployed to eliminate a rogue Sector Agent named Simon Elliott. They had arrived at their insertion point and then they had disappeared. The Sector activated each locator, but not a single GPS burst was received. The static she was getting back told Fiona that the signals were being jammed at the source. She’d passed the information on to the head of Deployment, Walter Freemantle, who had suggested she confer with him on this, alone.

    The Sector was very compartmentalized, so the request hadn’t sounded fishy to her. The longer the team remained missing, the more the request started to stink. She had taken her information to Mark Blackburn, but he’d given her the same runaround that Freemantle had. After that, she’d kept her information to herself.

    Now she had a location where they could send a team and start searching for the rest of TA-4. And she didn’t know who to trust with that information. Fiona sat at her desk, staring into space. She rattled her fingers over the keyboard without pressing any of the keys. Her eyes jumped to the picture she’d placed next to her phone. Picking it up, she stared at the three occupants. It was taken in Boston a few years earlier, before she’d come to work at The Sector. She stared at her brother’s face. His hair was the same deep auburn as hers, though she’d recently gone blonde. They had both inherited their mother’s green eyes. That was where their similarities ended. Fiona was a slim 5’8 compared to her brother’s 6’5. He’d gained so much bulk in the Navy that everyone had started calling him Tank. The nickname had transferred over to his civilian life. He’d asked her to remain at The Sector as long as she could, even when she’d told him about the secrets being kept. She was worried that it would come back to hurt her. She needed to talk to him now. She needed to tell him what was going on and to get his advice. She’d stay if Tank thought it was best, but she was getting nervous.

    Fiona had passed Blackburn in the hallway earlier that week and he’d given her a conspiratorial wink. If he kept track of the information she’d given him, he could spin it to make her look bad. Looking bad wasn’t what concerned her. Treason; now that concerned her. Canada didn’t hang people for it; but the military could always broker an exception. They’d just do so without the general public ever becoming aware of it.

    Swiveling in her chair, she studied the room around her. It was full of people working on computers, just like her. The Sector employed over four thousand people around the world, both military and civilian. Three quarters of the staff were military. Fiona started with The Sector a little over four years earlier and had loved her job until quite recently. Not knowing who to trust made it impossible to enjoy her work. But she couldn’t sit on the information. There was a personal reason that was driving her harder than any other. A very good friend of her brother’s was one of the missing men. She stared at the third man in the picture on her desk.

    Warp Douglass had joined the US Navy SEALs at the same time as her brother. They’d fought together, they’d partied together. They’d retired at the same time. Fiona had hung out with them on a regular basis and treated Warp as a second brother. When his team had gone missing two months earlier, she’d called her brother to inform him. She’d had precious little to tell then.

    The CIA had recruited Tank before the ink had dried on his release papers. Fiona wasn’t supposed to know that, but it was difficult to keep anything from her. Tank hadn’t told her, the computers had. If the information existed on a computer, she could find it. She had given Tank the coordinates for Simon Elliott’s last known location, which was also used as TA-4’s insertion point. He’d spent two weeks scouring the jungle, but he’d found no sign of them. Now, given all the secrecy, Fiona wondered if TA-4’s plane had ever landed. Could their arrival at their insertion point have been faked?

    This new set of coordinates, the one for Hillman’s locator beacon, was the best lead they’d had so far. She gathered all of the details and transferred them to a dummy account she’d set up. She didn’t need her employers tracking her transmissions and discovering that she was sending out confidential information to a competitor. Though technically after the same objective,

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