McGuire’s Target (Shadow Hounds: Rogue Waters #1)

McGuire’s Target (Shadow Hounds: Rogue Waters #1)

By Kris Norris

Prologue

Colombia, Guaviare Department

Herrera cartel logging camp…

A crack.

Low.

Finite.

The kind of sound McGuire LaSalle had heard a thousand times, though, usually from his rifle. He turned, fired, sussing out the sniper’s location from years of picking the perfect nesting site — anticipating every angle.

He’d done that. Scanned every possible weakness before he’d given Dane Holloway the go-ahead to establish a comms connection.

And there hadn’t been a single threat.

Dane dropped, red misting out across his equipment, the resulting thud vibrating through the ground as McGuire’s shot hit the sniper in the shoulder. Had him sinking back into the shadows a moment before a low whoosh lit the air.

A flash, then the ground exploded, everything burning into white-hot fire. McGuire flew back, rifle scope slicing a line down his cheek as he tumbled to a halt, the glow from the crescent moon staring down at him through the billowing dust.

He blinked, eyes gritty, a single, high-pitched tone screaming in his head.

Orange light pulsed through the smoke, cast dancing demonic shadows along the kapok trees.

He swallowed, choked back the mix of cordite and burnt diesel as tracers snapped overhead, the green light bright against the midnight sky.

McGuire rolled, pain lighting every joint like neon as he scanned the camp.

Muzzle flashes lit up the eastern berm as Stone McBride and Cross Morgan laid down cover fire, hair coated with dirt and ash, a scattering of shrapnel laced down their ballistic vests.

Footsteps clanged on the raised catwalks north of their position, what sounded like more men with heavy machinery moving in fast, and a distant growl hummed beyond the western gate.

Likely an inbound pickup carrying some version of a fifty-cal strapped onto the flatbed.

Their medic, and McGuire’s best friend, Elias “Patch” Kavanaugh appeared out of the blast dust, face smeared with blood and soot, a hunk of metal embedded in one arm. He hiked Dane’s body onto his shoulders before hoofing it toward McGuire.

Patch freed one hand, then grabbed McGuire by the back of the vest, dragging him behind a large log as he placed Dane on the ground, Patch’s eyes narrowed, mouth pinched tight.

McGuire blinked, a few black streaks tracing in from the left, that shrill tone still hijacking his hearing. He stared at Dane’s limp form, the unrelenting roar cutting off his thoughts before they fully registered. “Dane?”

Patch crouched beside him, rifle at a low ready. “He was dead before he hit the ground, but we’re not leaving him here.”

Bile crested McGuire’s throat.

Fifteen seconds.

That’s how long he’d hesitated after Dane had reported the weird transmission. Fifteen seconds of weighing a phantom warning against Langley’s mission brief.

Fifteen seconds that had gotten Dane killed.

McGuire coughed against the choking smoke, the ringing in his ears still replaying the incoming clicks Dane had isolated.

Not atmospheric noise like he’d first thought.

These had been rhythmic. Telling. A series of long and short pulses that had laid out the future a moment before it had manifested.

What had been Morse code for — ambush, go to secure channel sixteen.

McGuire grabbed his radio, tuned it in. “Who the hell is this? How’d you know about the ambush?”

Static hissed across the speakers, the steady clap of gunfire nearly drowning it out until the line cleared.

A slow breath sounded over the airwaves, somber, low.

“My codename’s Cinder. I don’t have time to explain everything.

They’ve got your feed. You need to head to the south fence before they block your only way out. ”

McGuire looked at Patch, but his buddy shook his head, fired off a series of covering rounds, the hot casings sizzling against the wet ground. “Who’s got our feed?”

A crackle followed by an irritated huff.

“The cartel. I’m staring at a thermal image of you hunkered down behind some shit log, right now.

” She grunted, a strange muffled noise rustling over the frequency, as if she was covering the mic.

“Look, jackass, I’m burning the last year of my life to the ground in order to save your team.

Probably my entire career. I’ll help you for as long as I can, but you’ve got to move. Now.”

McGuire looked at Patch. “Well?”

Patch rolled his shoulders. “We’re dead if we stay here.”

“That’s what I love about you, brother. Your in-depth insights.” He tapped his internal comms. “We’re in. Can you give me a SITREP?”

More rustling, as if she was shifting positions.

“You’ve got a PKM on the north catwalks between the generator and the fuel bladder, and cartel closing in from the east and west. Blow the fuel bladder.

That should blind the drone if you stay low and near the heat.

Head for the south fence. I’ll talk more then.

” She paused, then more static. “And lose everything they can use to track you, and I mean everything. The cartel didn’t hack your feed — they were given access. ”

She cut the transmission leaving an eerie silence playing in his comms.

They were given access…

The words echoed in McGuire’s head, the reality of them hitting him like that missile.

He grabbed his body cam, yanked it off, then fished out his GPS — tossed them both on the ground before doing the same to Dane.

Patch looked at him as if he was crazy but followed suit, all the while muttering to himself, maintaining their cover.

McGuire hit his internal comms. “Stone. Cross. Go dark. No tracers. Stone, blow the bladder once we’re in position. Cross, smoke and cover fire to get us there. Go!”

The men ditched their hardware, then Cross grabbed two canisters, heaved them toward the elevated catwalks north of them. Thick gray smoke poured out, buying them a few precious seconds as they raced across the open ground, blind fire from that belt-fed machine gun stitching across the dirt.

They hit the south side of the generator shed, ducked behind the metal shack as more rounds lit up the darkness, some guy shouting orders in Spanish.

Stone bolted over to the bladder, placed a charge on the side, then ran back.

They huddled against the metal, counted it down until the charge blew, sent a concussive thump clear across the camp.

Diesel fumes saturated the air as debris rained down around them, a massive fireball clawing at the sky.

McGuire motioned to the fence twenty meters off, covering Cross as he sprinted over, cut a line through the chain link. He darted through, peeled back the sides, then waved them over.

McGuire popped out, aimed at the muzzle flashes winking behind them through the smoke. “Go, go, go!”

The men filed through, hit a six-foot wide rain-slicked drainage ditch on the other side a second later.

Cross and Stone half-jumped, half-slid into the black water, cursing as they dragged themselves up the other side.

Patch adjusted Dane’s dead weight, then cleared the worst of it, covering McGuire as he leaped and landed just clear of the edge.

His comms hissed, Cinder’s voice crackling through. “Incoming pickup. Go to ground.”

McGuire barked out the order just as a rusted Toyota veered around the far bend, spotlight cutting through the choking fumes. The truck barreled past the main gate, the rear gunner chewing up the grass as they scanned the open field — looked for any sign of McGuire’s team.

McGuire pointed to the far tree line. Fifty yards of open field with nothing but tall grass between them and the relentless chatter of the machine gun. “Caterpillar crawl, suppressive fire on rotation.”

Cross took point, blew through a mag as the rest of them low-crawled, Stone taking up the cover fire, next. Patch dragged Dane’s body behind, jaw set, arms flexing from the strain. They’d gotten halfway across when his comms buzzed, Cinder’s voice a desperate Hail Mary in the dark.

“You’ve got a spotter on the far water tower. You need to drop him.”

McGuire covered his head as mud rained down over them, bullets cutting a swath across the ground five feet in front.

He sucked in a breath, spun, his rifle notched into his shoulder as he half-leaned on one elbow.

He panned across the edge of the camp, caught a glimpse of a guy on a stilted tower, scope pressed against his cheek.

The guy must have spotted McGuire at the same time because he jerked the scope away, tried to roll just as McGuire squeezed the trigger — dropped him a heartbeat later.

McGuire motioned to the tree line twenty yards away when the gunner stopped firing, picked up on the other side of the field. “They’re just spraying and praying, now. Run.”

They scrambled to their feet, took off, that spotlight still sweeping right. His off-grid cell vibrated in his pocket. Steady. Urgent. He ignored it, picked up speed as his team hit the dense undergrowth running full out, disappeared behind a tangle of palms and ferns.

Another hiss, then Cinder’s voice. “The explosion must have damaged your drone, but there’s still intermittent contact. I can’t do anything about your watchers, but I can try to blow the power grid here. But once I do, you’re on your own.”

“If it means we’ve got a chance, we’ll take it.”

“Hold tight…”

She didn’t fully disconnect, her hushed footsteps sounding over the airwaves.

He heard a click, then branches slapping at the mic, the sound of her racing through the underbrush.

There were shouts, then a massive thump, wood crackling in the background.

Shots echoed through the speakers followed by engines growling nearby.

He hit the mic. “Jesus, Cinder, what the hell?”

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.