Shiva (3 page)

Read Shiva Online

Authors: Carolyn McCray

Had that fire truly transformed the sniper? There were times Brandt felt the old trust building
,
then Davidson would take a single step out of place
,
and it would be shattered. Brandt wished he could wipe that memory of Davidson pointing a gun at Rebecca away, burn it to ashes, but it refused to be uprooted. Was the sniper reformed or just a scorpion biding his time?


Throw on more wood!

Lopez yelled over the clacking of the train, snapping Brandt back to the present.

Picking a steam-powered antique train as their chase vehicle hadn

t been the most efficient choice, but it was what they had
,
so they had to make it work.
Ahead of them
,
a stolen train car filled with live munitions
was booking it
.


Levont!

Brandt ordered.

You heard the man!

The team

s new point man bent over, grabb
ed
a large log,
and
toss
ed
it into the old
-
fashioned furnace. The burly guy made it look easy. The train picked up speed
,
hurling down the tracks of an abandoned railway on the north side of
the
Charleston
Naval
Weapons Station.


Nineteen minutes!

Talli shouted.

Damn it. The
n
aval base had over three
thousand
active-duty personal
,
yet here Brandt and his team were
,
chasing down the bad guys.
The upper brass was worried that this string of ammunitions thefts were inside jobs, hence why they had no military back up.
And now
,
with less than twenty minutes to
go before his wedding?
Typical
.

There was absolutely nothing Brandt could do to spe
e
d up the chase as the Charleston countryside rolled past. Thick grass blanketed the meadows hemmed in only by the weeping willows. It smelled green. Not that muted
,
dusty green of the rest of the world, but that bright, shiny green he

d only found in South Carolina. It smelled like home.


Watch it!

Davidson snapped at Talli.

If you can

t get a shot through the window, don

t take it.

The team

s

official

sniper bristled at the rebuke
.
H
owever
,
Brandt backed their

unofficial

yet infinitely more talented sniper. Ever since Davidson had rejoined the team, Talli had been trying too hard. Which was not helping the man

s accuracy one damned bit.

Honestly
,
Brandt doubted Talli had been targeting the train car itself. In truth
,
Brandt was pretty sure Talli had
meant
to hit the window. The man kept trying to take shots outside his range to keep up with Davidson. Which just wasn

t going to happen.

Normally
,
Brandt would let it slide. He would let Talli find his footing. The problem was
,
right now
,
Talli

s quest to prove himself could get them all blown up.


Look, we

ve got no idea where they

ve stored the stolen ordnance,

Brandt said
,
trying to use his sensitivity training. The upper brass
was
now also all
for
caring about feelings. Brandt was supposed to be careful not to deflate Talli

s ego. He failed miserably.

It

s the engineering window or
nothing
.

Talli

s jaw clenched as he lowered his eye back to his scope. Brandt noticed
,
though
,
that Talli didn

t fire. Good man.

Davidson took several more shots, all equally unsuccessful. Brandt squinted. Were they catching up? Had the other train car slowed? Or had they sped up?

Then Davidson

s rifle snapped up.

Crap.


What?


They

re stopping,

the private reported.


Great!

Lopez whooped.


No,

Davidson said
,
shaking his head.

They

re stopping because the tracks end up ahead.

Not even Lopez could find the silver lining in that. Not with their brakes shot. Gone. Done. Nonexistent.

Brandt turned to Levont.

Any luck?

The tall black man shoved another log into the furnace as he indicated with his head to the antique control panel.

Maybe if we had Henry Ford to help…

The lack of brakes had seemed like a nonissue when the chase began. How often did Lopez use them
,
anyway? Now
,
however? Now brakes kind of seemed important.

Lopez

s smile returned.

You know what I say?

Brandt really didn

t want to know
.
H
owever
,
he had a wedding to get to in nineteen minutes
,
so he let Lopez continue.

I say throw on
all
the wood.

A retort was on Brandt

s lips
,
but it stalled as he saw the long-term strategy of Lopez

s plan. It wasn

t just that Lopez wanted to set the world speed record for a steam engine
and
catch it all on film. It wasn

t even to get to the enemy before they unloaded all of the ammunition they

d stolen. It
was
to ram this train into the other at the highest speed possible,
detonating
all of those live munitions.

It was a

if you can

t beat them, join them

kind of plan. Better to have those dangerous explosives go up here where they could do minimal damage than where the terrorists planned to use them.

Brandt turned to Levont. Even though the man had only been with them a few months, he didn

t need the order
,
as he grabbed a log in each hand, chucking them into the furnace.

As the train surged forward, Brandt had only one little problem to work out.

How the hell to get off the train before it exploded in all its fiery glory?

Minor detail
.

* * *

Rebecca held her tongue as the Brandt women once again fussed all around her. Apparently
,
wedding preparation involved constantly readjusting every inch of her dress.


Maybe,

Brandt

s youngest sister blurted
,

m
aybe Vincent

s had second thoughts.

Mrs. Brandt took a supposedly playful swing at her daughter
,
although when it connected
,
Holly grimace
d
.

Hush, child. Vincent is having no such thing.

The older woman then turned her attention to Rebecca.

Don

t you worry. Vincent
will
be here.

Rebecca was pretty darned sure that the woman said it more for her own sake than any bride

s. The teenager couldn

t help herself
,
though.


But Vincent is never late for



Holly!

Mrs. Brandt snapped, tugging her youngest away from Rebecca.


Mom!

Holly complained as she was dragged off.

You ruffled my dress!

As the two smoothed out the peach chiffon, Rebecca looked to Bunny
,
who pushed a tumble of red curls out of the way, arching an eyebrow.


Never late?

the younger woman whispered.

How about
,
don

t bother to make plans because he is probably on another continent?

Brandt had clearly done a great job of protecting his family from his true occupation. They all thought he was regular army, stationed over in Germany. That worried them enough. If they knew what he really did? If they knew the danger he put himself in on a daily

no
,
hourly

basis?

They would not be nearly as worried about chiffon

that was for certain.


I

m sure Vin

s got a good reason,

Kaydria said as she squeezed Rebecca

s arm.

That was exactly what had Rebecca concerned. Not that Brandt had ditched her. That thought had never crossed her mind. He would take a bullet for her. Actually
,
he

d taken several for her
,
so worrying about his level of devotion was kind of a moot point.

No, she was worried he and his team had gotten themselves into the kind of trouble they couldn

t get themselves out of.

* * *

The hot South Carolina air blasted Brandt in the face as he climbed up onto the roof of the train. Although
,
the blazing summer heat was nothing compared to the inferno inside of the engine car. Levont had stoked the fire so high that flames shot out of the furnace. That was
their
cue to leave.

The only

safe

location was on top of the train, which gave you an indication of exactly how insane their plan was. Lopez swore he had a backup contingency
,
but sometimes the corporal confused contingency with prayer. And there was no time to discuss the difference.

Levont looked over the side of the train to the ground speeding past.

If we throw ourselves off…

Yeah, a broken back would probably be the best-case scenario. Right now
,
the only other option was to crash into the munitions car and die in a ball of flame. So there was that.


Sarge!

Talli yelled
,
pointing to what appeared to be a fly on the horizon. The faster it zipped toward them, the larger it became. That was no fly. It was a helicopter.


When the
g
eneral said
no
base support,

Brandt growled at Lopez,

h
e meant
none
.

The whole reason Brandt

s team had been pulled in was the concern that this heist was an inside job.

Other books

Songs_of_the_Satyrs by Aaron J. French
Healing Rain by Katy Newton Naas
Torn-missing 4 by Margaret Peterson Haddix
Leaving at Noon by Jess Dee
Fargoer by Hannila, Petteri
I'll Be Seeing You by A.P. Hallmark
Gateway by Sharon Shinn
Pilgermann by Russell Hoban