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  First Wave

  NORTHWEST COUNTER-TERRORISM TASKFORCE BOOK 1

  Lisa Phillips

  Copyright 2019 Lisa Phillips

  All rights reserved. This book or any portion thereof may not be reproduced or used in any manner whatsoever without the express written permission of the publisher except for the use of brief quotations in a book review.

  Publisher Lisa Phillips

  Cover design Lisa Phillips

  Edited by www.jenwieber.com

  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

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Epilogue

  Chapter 1

  Tonight wasn’t the first night Dakota had spent alone in the woods. Last time had been years ago, long enough she’d almost convinced herself she didn’t remember.

  She hadn’t forgotten the cold, though. The way her ears numbed because she’d pulled her dark hair back in a ponytail. Then and now.

  Tucked in her pocket, Dakota’s phone vibrated. She lifted a hand and used her slender fingers to answer the call on Bluetooth headphones.

  “Pierce.” Her quiet voice sounded far too loud in the stillness of after midnight.

  “Here I thought you might be doing something interesting this late on a Friday night for once.” The director’s voice was void of any kind of tone. She never gave anything away. “And yet, when I locate your phone it seems that you’re sitting on the side of a mountain, fifteen miles from the Canadian border.”

  Dakota said nothing.

  “It’s thirty-eight degrees. It’ll get to twenty-seven by morning.”

  She let her eyes drift across the tops of the trees in the valley below. The fence that bordered the apple orchard, along with a dusting of snow.

  Director Bramlyn sighed. “I suppose it was too much to assume you’d wait until Monday. Look into this then—in the company of one of your team members. You know, the three people who are supposed to have your back.”

  She didn’t include herself in that count. Just the two other agents on the team, and their tech person. The director’s support came in a different way that was no less effective.

  Dakota said, “Case’ll be closed by then.”

  “You found something?”

  “Not yet,” Dakota replied. All they had so far was chatter that’d been picked up. Movement from here to the border. A park ranger who’d been paid off, then disappeared. The local sheriff was next on her list of people to track down. Hopefully he’d still be breathing when she found him.

  “Keep me apprised.”

  “Will do.” Dakota pressed her lips together. “And I’ll call Special Agent O’Caran if I need some help.”

  “I guess I can’t argue with that.” The director sighed.

  Needing help had different definitions for different people. Dakota knew how to spend a night in the woods by herself. Predators came in all shapes and sizes, and she hadn’t met one yet that she couldn’t handle with the knife or one of the two guns she carried. Occasionally she only had to utilize a well-placed knee to subdue an aggressor.

  “So long as you actually do lean on the resources available to you when you need them,” the director said. “After all, it’s why I pay my taxes.”

  The corner of Dakota’s mouth crept up. “I thought you had some under-the-table deal so you don’t have to pay in.”

  “I wish.” Victoria laughed. The director sounded like a classy matron—minus the British accent—from one of the TV shows Dakota would never let on to the team that she actually watched. She sighed. “Are you sure you’re good?”

  She was really worried? Dakota said, “My nose is cold and I think one of my feet went to sleep.”

  “Don’t freeze to death,” Victoria said. “We’ll have to hike in there and carry you out.”

  “Nah, just leave me for the animals.”

  Victoria choked. “For goodness sake, just be careful.”

  Dakota said, “You know I will.” Her capability wasn’t in question. Victoria knew her history—all of it. That was the deal they’d struck when Dakota came on board. Neither of them wanted secrets. She also had no intention of being babied just because Victoria didn’t want this place to mess with her head. So she said, “I’m good.”

  “Try to at least sound convincing when you say stuff like that.”

  “I always sound convincing.”

  “Maybe to all the other people you lie to.” But not Victoria.

  “Just…mark me down as camping for the weekend, or something.”

  “Did you even take a tent with you?”

  Dakota waited a second, then said, “I think my phone battery is dying.” She even reached up and touched the mute button a couple of times, and said a few random words so it sounded like she was cutting out.

  “If you don’t call me in twelve hours, I will send the entire team with backup from the state police to look for you.”

  Dakota lowered her hand. “Deal.”

  Plenty of time for surveillance here. If nothing happened she would pay the sheriff a visit. Flash her badge and watch him squirm.

  They all squirmed.

  “I’m going to regret this.” Victoria sighed, and the call ended.

  A rustle in the brush to her left cut through the silence. Dakota blew out a breath, slow enough that there was no cloud of white. She shifted her weight and lifted her left foot, rotating the ankle. It clicked every time. Had ever since…

  She didn’t finish that thought.

  The past was something she didn’t remember. And whether that meant she’d strived to forget, or was still convincing herself she didn’t remember, the outcome was the same. Dakota was alive now. That was all that mattered.

  Grass under her feet. Cold night air in her lungs. Mountains behind her, and the lights of civilization in the distance.

  One eye on the rustling brush, Dakota lowered her foot back down. Her gun hand was free, but she didn’t reach for the weapon holstered under her arm. Her other hand held a thin flashlight not much larger than a pen, her thumb steady on the button so she could turn it on when needed.

  Dakota crept between trees, as silent as the night. She made her way down the slope toward the orchard, where rows of apple trees lined the outermost field. The property was huge, the house a hundred acres to the west of where she stood, over the slope. Chatter had specifically mentioned the road that led to this end of the outfit.

  Movement accompanied a low rustle. Dakota froze, her right shoulder and hip pressed against a tree trunk.

  A dog raced between apple trees, nose to the ground. One of those police dog types, black and brown coloring. It even had a vest on. No markings, though. There was little as far as a breeze tonight, but she had no idea if she was upwind or downwind of the animal. The last thing she needed was to be scented.

  Twenty feet behind the dog, a man followed in a half-run. Tracking with the dog’s progress but giving it space. He moved like a man trained, his stance alert even with his focus on the animal. Military maybe, or some kind of federal agency.

  There wasn’t an operation here tonight. If there had been, Victoria would have passed that information on. Most of the time the exchange of information between federal agencies worked. Not always. So she didn’t write this off as random.

  Dakota tracked their progress as she made her way to the base of the hill and hopped the fence. She skirted the edge of the orchard, making sure she stayed out of the way.

  Was this one of them? The man and his dog seemed like they were looking for something, but it was possible this guy was a scout and whoever had sparked the chatter about a new “weapon” moving through here intended to show up.

  Fifty feet to the west she stopped.

  Where was…

  “Following me?” The man’s voice was low. Not deadly. She knew what that sounded like. This had a ring of authority but without a layer of intent to do her harm.

  Like she was the one who shouldn’t be here.

  Dakota reached for her weapon. She heard the unmistakable snick of a gun being drawn from its holster and froze.

  “Drop what you’re holding and put your hands up.”

  . . .

  What was probably a flashlight dropped to the dirt. The woman lifted her gloved hands. She’d been reaching for something, he just didn’t know what. Josh heard the familiar sound of Neema’s panting as she padded closer to his left leg. They were a team, and the dog was an asset—considering she’d realized someone else was there before Josh had.

  Who was this woman?

  Josh clicked on his flashlight. “Turn around slowly.”

  As she turned, he shone the light on the darkest of brown hair, almost black, that hung down to the middle of her back. Her mouth was set at an unhappy slant. The frown that marred her features drew her dark eyebrows together. With the lack of light, her eyes looked as black as her hair. Her skin was smooth and flawless.
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  She quite literally took his breath away. The sight of her distracted him enough that he forgot what he was doing for a second.

  “You wanna get that light out of my face?” The lift of her hands splayed her jacket wide enough he saw the gun in its holster.

  “Tell me why you’re following me, and I will.”

  “How about you tell me why you’re here.” She reacted like he was an annoyance, nothing more or less. Like she had as much right to be here as he did? Maybe more?

  Josh said, “I show you mine, and you’ll show me yours?” before he thought it through.

  She made a dismissive noise with her mouth. “Hardly.”

  “Guess not, then. Sorry.” For politeness sake. “My mouth runs away from me sometimes.”

  “I’m glad you have better control of your dog.”

  His favorite subject. Josh smiled, though the woman couldn’t see it considering his light was in her face. He would’ve pet Neema’s head but he didn’t have a free hand, so he leaned his weight left. She braced her weight against his leg in response. Shared comfort, a united front. “This is Neema.”

  “Okay.”

  “Your enthusiasm is overwhelming.” Josh gave the command to release Neema, so she could move around if she wanted to. The woman’s body shifted. A small movement he thought might’ve been a start. Was she really nervous about his dog?

  “She won’t bother you.”

  Neema didn’t move to the side to do her business, though. She wandered toward the woman, and he could hear her nose working. The woman took a step back.

  “Unless there’s a hot dog in your pocket.”

  The woman chuckled, but it gave away her nervousness. She still held her hands up but stood motionless while the dog learned her scent.

  “Neema, leave it.” Sure, he could’ve given the command a few seconds ago, but where was the fun in that? He might need his dog to know her smell. Neema turned away and wandered to the edge of where he could see her.

  There was no reason why she couldn’t sniff around a little.

  The woman held herself as though she was in complete control—apart from the fact she was uneasy around the dog. It was debatable, between Neema and the woman, as to who had more presence. The gun won out, though. Neema could be vicious, but she didn’t have weapons to utilize.

  “So who are you?”

  She shook her head, a slight movement. “Lower the flashlight, and I’ll show you my badge.”

  So she was here in an official capacity. “All right.” He shifted it down and to the side while he tried to figure out what he was going to tell her. Caught red-handed in the middle of the night. Josh said, “Let’s see it.”

  She reached back, which he allowed considering her gun was under one arm. A move like that always made him tense though. Anyone given the opportunity to reach for something out of sight could mean the difference between life and death in a second. He’d had far too much training to ever relax in a situation like this.

  But she didn’t know what Neema was capable of.

  The woman pulled out a leather wallet and flipped it open. Badge and ID. “Homeland Security.”

  But she didn’t tell him her name.

  “Nice to meet you.” He figured she might appreciate the irony in that. “On a case?”

  “You could say that. You?”

  “Something like that.” Ish. Okay, not really at all. This was his weekend off, but what he was doing here was his business and not the business of this stranger who hadn’t identified herself.

  “What is your dog looking for?”

  Josh glanced around to see where Neema had gone. When he didn’t find her, he called out, “Yellow!”

  From his left, not far, Neema’s bark replied to him.

  “Yellow?”

  He shrugged once. “It just means bark. But no one else knows that except the two of us.” She raised her left brow. He gave an almost-smile. “And, well, now you. I use it like Marco Polo normally.” And if the dog kept looking for what he was here to find, then it saved him time.

  The woman bent down and picked up her flashlight, which she slid into her jacket pocket. “Well, it was nice meeting you and all…”

  She let that trail off. Josh got the feeling it wasn’t all that nice to meet him.

  The woman continued, “But you’re going to have to tell me who you are, and what you’re doing here.” Her stance was loose. Still, he could see her readiness in the flex of her fingers. She could pull that gun in seconds, and he’d guess she was fast.

  “I’m Josh,” he said. “Josh Weber.” He didn’t give more detail than that, since he wasn’t here in an official capacity. What he did with his free time was his business.

  Would Neema find what they were looking for? He wanted the answer to be yes, but had to face the fact he might return home with no news at all. The lead that had pointed to this apple orchard was slim. Maggie might have only stuck around here long enough to post that selfie to Instagram. Or she could’ve been driving through on the way to somewhere else.

  Maybe he would never find her.

  Neema let out a bark. One short, sharp alert.

  Josh broke from his conversation with the Homeland Security agent and raced between the rows of apple trees toward the source of the sound. On the way, he gave her the command to bark again.

  The female agent chased him the whole way there. He heard the shuffle of her clothing and the intake of breath as she inhaled and wondered if she would tackle him. Or give up and shoot him in the back.

  Neema sat beside a body, laid out on the grass. A trail of tire ruts stretched from the woman lying there and off to the northwest.

  Josh pulled up short. His stomach sank, but he said, “Good girl,” and scratched Neema’s neck.

  “Move the dog away from her.” The Homeland agent’s voice was sharp. She crouched beside the body. It was turned awkwardly so that one shoulder was up but her hips were flat on the ground. Face down. Arms spread. Hair wrapped around her head.

  The woman agent shifted hair aside and touched the neck.

  After a second of silence she glanced up at him, a dark look on her face. “She’s dead.”

  Chapter 2

  Dakota let out a sigh. She could feel the cold of the skin even with her gloves on.

  A dead young woman was not the way she wanted to spend her weekend. Yes, she’d opted to come out here and do surveillance. But that didn’t mean she hadn’t expected to be on her couch on Sunday with her thick socks on, binge watching season five of her favorite show. With caramel popcorn.

  She pulled her gun, stood up and turned in one move, then stepped toward the man. “Gun on the ground, hands on your head.”

  His eyes flared. “I didn’t do this.”

  Now that the flashlight wasn’t in her face, her eyes had adjusted. The guy was a pretty cute murderer, but still a murderer. Or at least involved in this somehow. She wasn’t going to quibble about his level of involvement. “Hands on your head,” she repeated.

  “But—”

  She cut him off. “Now.”

  The dog barked, body braced in a forward lean that pointed her toward Dakota. Like she was about to lunge.

  “You keep that animal back, and do as I said.” His hands were raised, one still holding the gun, but she didn’t like this inaction. Who was he?

  He bent his knees and lowered the gun to the grass. “Okay. Fine.” When he stood he said, “But I didn’t do this. In fact—” He motioned to the dog, then the body. “—if that’s who I think it is, we’re here looking for her.”

  “You knew this body would be here?”

  “Not the way you think.” He sighed, palms out. She didn’t believe this man would be subdued, though. Not until he was in cuffs, which she hadn’t brought with her. He said, “Look…it’s complicated, okay?”

  “Then explain it.” But not right now. Dakota shifted and had to pull off her glove so she could use her free hand to slide out her phone and dial Victoria’s number.

  It rang once and then the director answered, her voice sharp through the earbud still in Dakota’s left ear. “You found something?”

  “I’ll take you up on that offer now.” She wasn’t about to let this guy know she was out here alone with no backup. “I’ve got a body drop.”