The Tesla Secret Read online




  The Tesla Secret

  By

  Alex Lukeman

  Book Five in the PROJECT Series

  Copyright 2012 by Alex Lukeman

  http://www.alexlukeman.com

  https://www.facebook.com/alexlukeman?ref=hl

  http://www.alexlukeman.blogspot.com

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed or transmitted in any form or by any means except by prior and express permission of the author.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or used as an element of fiction. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead is entirely coincidental.

  Acknowledgements

  As always, my wife Gayle. Her patience is the stuff of legend. When she reads the revised draft, her observations are spot on. Several people helped with this book, with comments on the "Beta" version. Valerie Miller, Jeff Dawson, Gloria Lakritz, Penny Nichols. Thank you. Your keen eyes and comments make this a better book and me a better writer.

  Another great cover by Neil Jackson.

  Part One

  CHAPTER ONE

  It was what he didn't hear that woke him.

  Nick Carter listened. No insects. No frogs. No rustlings in the trees, no familiar sounds of the night. It was cool in the cabin after the heat of day. The clean scent of California cedars and damp earth drifted through the open windows.

  Selena Connor slept next to him. He touched her on the shoulder and she came awake. His voice was soft in her ear.

  "Get dressed. Something's wrong."

  Nick pushed off the sheet. He placed his feet on the hard wooden floor and picked up the .45 on the nightstand.

  Selena slipped naked out of bed. Her clothes were on a chair near the front bedroom window. Wranglers, a green tank top, underwear. She stayed away from the window, skipped the underwear, pulled on the jeans and the top. She slipped her feet into a pair of Nikes and slipped her Glock from its holster.

  Nick stepped into his pants. He heard a tiny scraping sound of metal against metal outside the window, a familiar click as the lever released. Adrenaline flooded his body, a rush of raw energy.

  "Selena, Grenade!" he shouted.

  He threw his forearm across his face and ran straight through the screen door that led onto the deck, Selena behind him. He leapt off the deck, stumbled and fell and rolled to his feet again. Pain shot up his spine. The explosion of the grenade rocked the cabin.

  The cedars were thirty exposed yards away. They ran across the gap and reached the concealing shadows of the grove. Nick looked back at his cabin. Bright flames lit the bedroom. The fire was already crawling up the outside wall toward the green metal roof.

  Incendiary, he thought. An incendiary grenade. Shit. He took deep breaths and calmed himself.

  "How many?" Selena asked. Her voice was low, tense.

  "Probably more than one." He watched the flames spreading. "We have to take them down. I'll circle right and come out near the front. You go left. Watch for me."

  She nodded.

  He touched her arm. "Don't get hurt."

  He moved away. Selena watched him go. Her heart thumped against her ribs. She began moving though the trees, her pistol held in both hands down at her side.

  The flames roared through the dry wood of the cabin. Red and orange and yellow embers soared into the night sky. Small explosions sounded from inside the burning building. The noise covered Nick's movement through the cedars. He pushed branches aside and lifted his bare feet and set them down with careful precision, feeling the uneven ground. He stayed away from the edge of the grove and circled the flames.

  He heard them talking before he saw them, two white men dressed in black. They had Uzis.

  "They might of got out." The first man said. He was about six feet tall, lean. Ex-military, Nick thought, the way he's standing with that weapon. The second man was short, stocky.

  "From that? Are you kidding?"

  He waved at the building. The cabin was engulfed in flame. The framework began to appear as the inferno consumed the walls and interior.

  Nick raised his pistol and listened.

  "He shouted before it went off," the tall one said.

  "Yeah, well. He can shout all the way to hell. They're fried. Let's get out of here."

  "Hey, look over there. A cat." The tall one pointed.

  A big, orange cat sat at the edge of the clearing, curious, watching the flames. Nick recognized him.

  Burps.

  The cat was always around when they showed up. Nick owed him. He'd saved their lives a year before.

  "Watch this," the man said. "Cat food." He raised his Uzi.

  Nick put two rounds in the center of the tall man's back. He went down hard. The next two shots hit the short man in the chest and knocked him backward onto the ground.

  Burps ran into the woods. Now we're even, buddy. Nick watched and waited. The bodies didn't move. He looked right and left, saw nothing. No one. He walked out into the open.

  Selena's pistol barked in the woods, three hard, flat echoes. A third man fell out into the clearing, dressed in black like the others. Selena stepped from the trees. Nick went over to the man, scanning the shadows. He kicked another Uzi out of reach. Blood bubbled on the man's lips.

  Nick knelt down. "Who sent you?"

  The man looked up, his face contorted with fear. He coughed blood. He tried to speak and coughed again, a sudden gusher of bright red that spilled out over the brown earth. His chest stopped moving.

  Selena walked over and stared down at the man she'd killed. Don't think about it. Deal with it later. She was getting good at tucking her thoughts and feelings away until she could look at them.

  "Damn it," she said.

  Nick got to his feet and gestured at the bodies. "They deserved what they got. That one over there was going to kill Burps. Just for fun."

  "You're bleeding a little," she said. His chest was crossed with welts from the branches and scratches where the screen door had cut him going through.

  "It's nothing. We'd better call Harker. There's a backup phone in the truck. "

  Selena watched the shifting colors of the flames play over him. His gray eyes were black in the night. His skin glowed red in the firelight, the old scars dark shadows and spots and hollows on his body. They walked to his Silverado. He pulled a gym bag from behind the seat and put on running shoes and an old black tee shirt. He took a phone from the bag and stuck it in his pocket.

  The cabin burned. They could feel the heat all the way across the clearing.

  "Let's check the bodies." He went to the first man he'd killed and started going through his pockets. Selena took the man next to him.

  "Nothing," she said.

  "Not here, either." He went to the last body and felt a hard shape through the clothes. He pulled out a cell phone, the kind of cheap throwaway model you could buy anywhere with prepaid time. He pocketed the phone.

  "This place is going to be crawling with cops and fire trucks soon," he said. "We have to get the bodies out of sight. Help me drag them into the trees."

  They moved the three dead men deep into the woods, went back and collected the weapons, put them with the bodies.

  He handed her the phone from the bag. "Give Harker a call while I find some socks."

  Selena stood with the phone and watched him walk back to the truck. As she watched, the propane tank in back of the cabin exploded. She looked at the blazing building and realized she still held the Glock in her other hand.

  How did I get here? she thought.

  CHAPTER TWO

  It was a few minutes before six in the morning in Virginia. Elizabeth Harker had
been behind her desk for more than an hour. A cup of black coffee warmed her hand. She felt at home when she was behind the desk. The Project had become her life.

  Elizabeth Harker had wide green eyes and milk-white skin. She was a small woman. Her size and looks and raven black hair made people think of a Tolkien fantasy where elves and fairies danced in the woods. People sometimes confused size and gender with competence and wrote her off. It was a mistake no one made twice.

  Her satellite phone signaled a call.

  Trouble, she thought, it's too early. She picked up.

  "Director. Someone came after us at Nick's cabin. We need a clean up."

  "Bodies?"

  "Three. The cabin is toast. Literally."

  "Are you all right?"

  "Yes. Nick's scratched up some."

  "Scratched up?"

  "Here, he'll tell you."

  Elizabeth heard Selena say something and Nick came on.

  "Director, we need a clean up team."

  "So Selena said. What happened?" She listened while Nick told her.

  "Hold on," she said. She picked up her desk phone, spoke briefly to someone on the other end. Set the phone down.

  "A team is on the way. It will take them two hours. Hide the bodies and weapons before anyone gets there."

  "Already done."

  Nick watched the embers rise, every one a fire waiting to happen. There'd been a freak rain the day before. The cabin was in a wide clearing. There was plenty of space around the flames and there was no breeze. It might be all right. In the distance he heard the first siren.

  "Fire trucks and the Sheriff will be here soon."

  "What will you tell them?" Harker's voice echoed over the satellite link.

  "Propane leak. They'll buy that, the tank went up with the cabin."

  "Any idea who they were? Any ID?"

  "No. A cell phone, nothing else. There might be something on it."

  "Get back here as soon as you can. Don't get arrested."

  Elizabeth leaned back in her chair and thought about it. If someone had gone after Nick and Selena, they might go after the others. She called Ronnie Peete and told him what had happened. She called Lamont and Stephanie and told them Ronnie would pick them up.

  The Project was the shadow hand of the President. No one was supposed to know who was on the team or where they lived. The Project was secret as far as the public was concerned, but it wasn't the public throwing grenades. Over the last few months too many people had found out about her group. She was getting the feeling that secret wasn't the operative word anymore.

  Elizabeth sipped her coffee and looked at the picture of the Twin Towers she kept on her desk. Anytime she began to doubt why she was here, all she needed to do was look at that picture.

  The day hadn't started well. She wondered what else it would bring.

  CHAPTER THREE

  Ronnie Peete and Lamont Cameron were on their way to pick up Stephanie. They rode in Ronnie's black Hummer,

  "What do you figure?" Lamont said. He looked in the mirror on the door. A black Crown Vic tailed them a block behind.

  "He was outside your building when I picked you up. It could be a cop or Feds. Could be the people who went for Nick. Harker said they used a grenade."

  "Wouldn't be the first time. Nick's got bad karma or something about grenades."

  "Karma? You going New Age on me?"

  "Yeah, right." Lamont took out his pistol and pulled the slide partway back to check for a round. He rested it in his lap. "Nick's got to be pissed about the cabin."

  Ronnie glanced in his mirror. The car was still there. Another black Ford entered the intersection ahead and turned toward them. The car behind sped up to close the gap.

  "Here we go," Ronnie said.

  "Think they're feds?"

  Someone leaned out of the oncoming car as it neared and fired a machine pistol at them. The Hummer was fitted with bullet proof glass. The windshield starred with the rounds.

  "Nope. Not feds."

  Ronnie stepped hard on the emergency brake and cranked the steering left. The Hummer slid into a screeching 180 turn and slammed sideways into the other car and knocked it off to the side.

  Ronnie released the brake, punched the accelerator down and headed straight for the second car. Lamont saw panic on the driver's face as the Hummer bore down on him. He tried to turn out of the way.

  Ronnie's truck was modified with armor plating, a beefed up frame, a turbocharged engine and a lot of extra horses. A heavy black steel bumper and grill dominated the front. It hit the Ford like a 6000 pound hammer and bulldozed it over the curb. Ronnie kept the pedal down and pushed the car into a store front with a big plate glass window. The window disintegrated in an explosion of glass. Neatly dressed mannequins fell out onto the pavement.

  A man scrambled out of the car. Ronnie rolled out of the Hummer and shot him, three quick rounds. Down the block, a woman started screaming.

  Lamont got out and squatted down behind the Hummer a second before a large man came out of the car across the street firing an Uzi. The 9mm rounds rang against the steel plating on the Hummer. Lamont's first and second shots missed. The third and fourth shots didn't. The man dropped out of sight.

  Ronnie fired. The driver fell forward over the wheel.

  That fast, it was over. The echoes died away. Traffic was stopped at the intersections. Nothing moved on the block. Lamont saw a curtain flutter in an apartment window and swung toward it, pistol aimed in both hands. He saw a terrified woman step back out of sight.

  Steam rose under the buckled hood of the car in the store front. The driver was dead, his head at an odd angle. The front seat passenger had a thick shard of plate glass from the store window sticking in his neck. An Uzi was clenched in his dead hand. The front of the car interior was wet and red with blood. The man Ronnie had killed lay sprawled on the sidewalk by the open car door.

  "Let's check the other one," Lamont said.

  They started across the street. No one moved by the second car. Ronnie saw gas underneath. He held out his arm and stopped Lamont. The gas tank exploded, ripping through the Ford.

  Sirens were coming, lots of them. They went back to the Hummer. The right side was a mess. The rear quarter panel was crumpled and bent, the shiny black paint along the side marred and scratched, the front fender buckled in against the tire. The metalwork and windows were pocked with bullet holes.

  "Messed up your ride," Lamont said.

  Ronnie looked at his car and shook his head. "We'll need help with the cops. I'll call in."

  CHAPTER FOUR

  The team met in Harker's office. Nick and Selena had gotten in from California an hour before.

  Stephanie Willits sat on the couch. She was the Project's computer guru, a hacker genius. Everything about computers was in her keeping. Stephanie had dark eyes and hair and a pleasant face people characterized as friendly. She usually had a ready smile. At the moment, the smile had gone missing.

  Ronnie sat next to her. The story of the Navajo Nation was written on his face. He had square, solid features and dark brown eyes. His nose was large, Roman looking, a noble nose. His skin was light brown with an underlying reddish tint that got darker during the sunny months. He had on one of his favorite shirts, a gaudy panorama of big-finned Cadillacs full of joyous surfers cruising the Hawaiian sands.

  A silver pen that had belonged to FDR lay on Harker's desk next to a picture of the Twin Towers on 9/11. She picked it up and twirled it in her fingers.

  "No question this was a concerted attack," she said. "There were no IDs on the people who came after you, in California or here. But we found out who most of them were."

  "How?" Selena asked.

  She looked fresher than Nick, but not by much. Her face showed lines of fatigue, her violet eyes were bloodshot. She wore jeans and a blue sweatshirt and hadn't bothered with makeup. Her red-blonde hair was pulled back in a short ponytail held by a rubber band. She was letting it grow out.


  A long way from when she first walked in here, Harker thought. She's changed. No more rich girl look.

  "The three in California were ex military. Their prints were on file. We couldn't get prints from the one who burned up, but the others used to be with Langley."

  "Mercenaries," Nick said, "and ex spooks."

  "Yes."

  "I don't like that. Where did we see this before? Spooks and mercs?""

  "In Texas," Ronnie said. He still felt the effects of the wound he'd taken there. "You think it's the same people, Director?"

  "Yes. There was one incoming call on the phone you found. It traced back to a company called Endgame Development. They design interactive, violent video games. Think Friday the 13th in 3D and high definition. Endgame is a subsidiary shell of a subsidiary of an entertainment company owned by Malcolm Foxworth."

  "Foxworth runs AEON."

  "That's why I think it's the same people."

  "What do you want us to do?" Nick asked.

  "Endgame is in Brighton Beach, in Brooklyn. I want you and Lamont to go there and see what you can find out." Elizabeth fiddled with her pen. "This could have been a preemptive strike, so we don't get in the way of something. They'd go after you four because you're the guts of the fire team. Steph and I were probably on the list after they got the shooters handled."

  "Big mistake." Lamont smiled. "They don't know you two very well."

  Lamont had retired from the Navy Seals just before joining the Project. A shrapnel scar ran from his forehead down across his nose and cheek. It made a thin ridge of pink against his coffee-colored skin. He had pale blue eyes, a gift from his Ethiopian grandfather.

  Selena said, "What could they be planning?"

  Harker tapped her pen. "If the past is any indication we'll find out soon enough."

  CHAPTER FIVE

  The man who led AEON looked out from his penthouse windows over the city of London. The view took in most of the city. It was a good spot to contemplate power.