Tank (Iniquus Certified Cerberus Tactical K9 #3)

Tank (Iniquus Certified Cerberus Tactical K9 #3)

By Fiona Quinn

Chapter One

Dakota

Sunday

Pulling the zipper, Dakota reached in to retrieve a bundle of neatly coiled lines resting at the top.

Underneath was a water bottle, energy pouches, a towel, a race number with safety pins, and two tubes of grease paint.

He left those in place as he held the handful of webbing and bungee cords under his dog’s nose. “Hey, Tank, have you done this before?”

This was the first time in almost two months that Dakota and Tank were together.

Dakota had been down in Colombia, working a Secret Service mission. For two months, Dakota missed Tank with the same intensity of homesickness he had fought down when he deployed to the Middle East back in his military days.

Dakota had only just arrived back in the States Friday night.

He had spent his Saturday doing the domestic things that needed attention after a long time away—filling the fridge, chucking the dead house plants, and opening the doors wide, despite the March chill, airing out the stale, unused smells that expand in a home when a door never opens to let in a blast of wind or sunshine.

That night, while Dakota was busy emptying his suitcases and throwing a load in the washing machine, Reaper, the lead trainer over at Iniquus’s Cerberus Tactical K9, had called to check in.

“Hey, man, I know you’re scheduled to come to the campus and work with Tank on Tuesday, but we’re a man down on our race team.

We’d appreciate it if you could run Tank for a good cause. ”

“How’s that?” Dakota asked, pouring a capful of detergent into the washer tub. He’d get to see Tank earlier than planned, so whatever this was, the answer was an eager yes.

While Dakota was on mission, Tank had been living at Iniquus’s Cerberus Tactical K9 kennels for advanced scent training and certification in printing ink detection, along with sharpening Tank’s tactical skills to the razor-blade’s edge of Cerberus standards.

“Grace Del Toro, one of the Strike Force wives, is on a team that’s putting on a charity event for the children’s hospital tomorrow, and things took a step sideways.”

Dakota had no idea what his “Sure, I can help. What do you need?” was going to get him into.

But that’s how he now found himself laced up in his trail running gear this bright Sunday morning, standing with all three Cerberus Tactical K9 teams—Alpha, Bravo, and Charlie—in the roped-off parking lot of some Virginia farm just off the highway south of D.C.

There must have been close to two hundred people with dogs of all shapes and sizes scattered around the lot. Most of the dogs had basic leashes clipped to their collars, not this crazy setup he’d pulled from the bag with what looked like straps that went around the thighs.

Like a garter belt, maybe?

That’ll be a new sensation.

With a flick of his wrist, Dakota unraveled the rope system so he could see the length of the contraption.

Tank knew exactly what this was and exactly what came next. His tongue hung low as he panted in anticipation.

“Okay, good, that’s one of us who has a clue.” Dakota looked over as a couple of the Cerberus operators strapped their tethers around their hips.

“Here we go.” Dakota put his foot into the loop. He tried to mimic how the men stepped into the center, pushed the wide panel low on the back of their hips, then secured it in place with the various straps. “You’ll give me a heads up before I get tangled in this spider web of a contraption, right?”

Tank’s yip could be anything from “Let’s go!” to “You look like a fool, dude. You’re wearing it backward.”

Dakota would guess Tank probably meant that second one.

The goal for today’s event was to raise money for the children’s hospital project—building an accessible playground and a safe trail to get the kids off the pediatric floor from time to time and out into the sunshine and fresh air.

Who could turn down an opportunity like that?

The way the hospital was going about raising that money sounded genius. The event paralleled their hospital’s end goal of gathering outside in nature to feel better and have fun in community.

The charitable committee had hired an outfit that put together K9 obstacle runs. Doggos from all over signed up to race five miles, running the hills, lizard crawling under netting, splashing through ponds, and climbing walls.

It was the kind of event that got lots of people posting about their cool experience.

Lots of rattle and shake.

Lots of eyes on the event would hopefully drive a steady flow of funds from far and wide to fill the coffers, and the project would get the funds needed to greenlight the playground.

The problem for the committee was that a pop-up outdoor concert by some new social media sensation was suddenly soaking up local interest, and the competition for eyeballs would overwhelm the charity event's pull. The hospital committee had really leaned into the idea of getting exposure from viral posts and influencer participation. And it didn’t look like they were going to fill the spectators’ ranks the way they’d anticipated.

Grace believed they needed a wow factor, not just Joe Blow running his chihuahua, Spike. Though, honestly, if Spike came in a tutu, Dakota could see how that might work just fine.

Grace decided that Cerberus was the secret sauce for success.

Phone calls were made.

Iniquus Command was thumbs up.

They invited Dakota to join, wondering if a Secret Service special agent could keep up.

And here they were.

Granted, Cerberus competed with their K9s in tactical events all over the world.

It was how they built their international reputation for excellence.

And that was why, after Tank proved he was qualified for a training position and his name was put on the wait list, Dakota had had to save for a year in order to afford Tank’s training in their Cerberus certification program.

Worth every penny as far as Dakota was concerned. In a pinch, this training could save both their lives while working in the field.

And as for today, Dakota could see how the inclusion of the Cerberus teams could push the charitable algorithm into green.

Dakota reasoned it through this way: Who gave the most money to charities? Women.

And what do women want?

Given his track record of late, Dakota was the wrong person to ask. But he’d assume ex-special forces operators in wet T-shirts with their war dogs, fighting to be the first over the finish line, might be something that would catch the female eye.

“Oy there, mate, you ready?” Halo, one of two Aussies on Cerberus, stopped beside Dakota and reached out to re-adjust Dakota’s lines. “First time, hey?” He clipped the bungee lead between Tank’s harness and Dakota’s belt.

“I’ve done mud runs before, and I was in the military. But strapped to a fur missile this way? Yeah, this is a first. Any advice?”

“Well, mate,” Halo’s accent had a friendly ease, “I’d make sure you tell Tank to stop before he pulls you out of your runners.”

“Please don’t do that,” Dakota told Tank. “We’re here for the kiddos and to have some fun.”

“Just a warning, then,” Halo said, “We’ve been working with Tank on his water skills.

When cold water touches his belly, he freaks out a bit.

” Holding the length of his long lead neatly coiled around his fingers, Halo used a hand signal to move his Malinois, Max, between his legs.

“You didn’t swim him when he was a pup?”

“I’m a triathlete. My swims are too long. So, no. I guess I messed up on that one.” Dakota put his hand on Tank’s head, “Sorry about that, buddy.”

“No worries,” Halo said. “Sure, he has a moment of freak-out when his chest gets wet. Just spin him around in the right direction and start swimming. He’ll switch gears, and he’s good to go.”

“Thanks.” Dakota lifted his hand as Halo and Max jogged toward the group of Cerberus Malinois. The Malinois were going to be the first to take off at the starting line. Mainly because Malinois could eat dog food and, by alchemy, transmute it into rocket fuel.

The German shepherds turned it into jet fuel.

Rockets launched first.

Though, to Dakota’s way of thinking, it shouldn’t really matter what kind of fuel they were burning. The dogs would be held back by their person's speed.

Hopefully.

If not, then they’d crash and burn.

“Fun times!” Reaper called out as he approached, hand extended.

“Glad you could make it.” They clasped in a welcoming shake.

“Today, you can see for yourself what Tank’s been up to lately as he gets ready for his final tests.

” He bent to scritch behind Tank’s ears.

“Word of warning, Tank knows what he’s doing here.

When he takes off running, he’s going to pull you along—a blessing and a curse, right?

You’re going to be racing faster than you ever have over an uneven surface.

It’s going to feel disorganized in your brain.

It’s not unusual to feel out of control, even to panic a bit as your speed increases significantly.

Breathe into the sensation. But you also need to communicate with Tank, so he doesn’t pull you off your feet and drag you face-first. The road rash would be epic. ”

If Tank was setting the pace, Dakota was more concerned about having enough lung capacity than the road rash. “You’ve been through this course?”

“We ran it yesterday to test everything out for the organizers. We found a couple of places that seemed too dangerous for the weekend warrior types. So they had to re-engineer a couple of spots. All in all, it was a great time.” Reaper leaned down to scratch Tank’s neck.

“Word of warning, in past evolutions, the shepherds don’t like that the Malinois are out front, so they try to prove they’re in the same running league.

They’re not. Fact of life. But you may want to lean back pretty hard until the Malinois turn out of sight. ”

“Got it.”

“You’ve carried him on your shoulders?” Reaper asked.

“I have, but he was a lot smaller.”

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