Deep Freeze
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DEEP FREEZE
Copyright © 2019 by Vicki Hinze
All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher is unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Cover Design by VK Hinze
Print Edition 2019. ISBN: 978-1-939016-35-5
Electronic Edition 2019. ISBN: 978-1-939016-38-6
MAGNOLIA LEAF PRESS
First Edition June 2019
Printed in the USA
DEDICATION
To those who routinely put their
lives on the line for the rest of us.
Some debts can never be repaid,
but never doubt they are noted
with enormous gratitude.
Blessings!
Vicki
Acknowledgments
As always in creating a new series, there are many to thank for sharing their gifts and talents. Heartfelt gratitude to series plotting partner and series co-creator, Debra Webb, and to the esteemed authors who breathed life into the vision, Rita Herron, Regan Black, Peggy Webb, and Cindy Gerard. Incredible women and masterful authors all. We’ve shared an awesome adventure and what a blessing it has been to share it with all of you!
I would also like to thank the incredibly insightful author, Kathy Carmichael, for our hours of discussions on high-containment labs and emotional deep wells in dark places. Your steadfast support is without measure.
Contents
Portal 3 News
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Portal 3 News
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
Portal 3 News
Sneak Peek
The STORMWATCH Series
About the Author
Also by Vicki Hinze
Don’t Miss!
Portal 3 News
Tuesday, December 17th
Darcy Keller stood on the side of the road in the blowing snow and checked her earpiece, watching for her cameraman’s cue. He counted down the last three seconds on his fingers. The anchor at the station segued to Darcy for the live shot.
“A severe weather alert has been issued for our viewing area. Holly is the worst storm in eighty years, and she’s earning the title,” Darcy began. “Fatalities and extensive damage are being reported in Montana.
“This morning, an abrupt jog has turned the storm to Colorado. Specifically, onto you, Portal. The weather is deteriorating rapidly. As you can see behind me, whiteout conditions are already occurring. High winds and a mix of snow and ice are making travel extremely dangerous and next to impossible. Authorities are advising you get where you’re going now and settle in.
“For the last several hours, flights have been halted in Denver and diverted to Portal International Airport. We’re about five miles from PIA now, and it’s taken hours to get this far. All along our path, we’ve witnessed cars spinning and sliding off the road. An eighteen-wheeler jack-knifed near the intersection of Interstates 25 and 76. The driver is critically injured. Stranded motorists have abandoned their vehicles and are seeking shelter on foot despite being warned to stay with their vehicles. Temperatures are plummeting. We expect subzero within the hour. Roads are closed to all but emergency vehicles and will remain shut down until after the storm passes. The National Guard has been activated to assist stranded drivers but, be warned, if the winds get much higher, they, too, will be sidelined, as will emergency responders.
“Over 1800 flights have been canceled at DIA in Denver. Now, I’ve just been advised, the diversionary airport in Portal has closed. With over 5,000 stranded travelers, Portal International is well over capacity. Our crew has been trying to make the typically thirty-minute trek from the station to PIA for over two and a half hours.
“At the moment, authorities are uncertain how many are without power, though they expect the number will be extraordinarily high by tomorrow morning due to ice and near hurricane-strength winds.
“We’ll be on-site at PIA—Portal International—with live updates as soon as possible. Authorities urge residents to exercise extreme caution. In all of Portal’s recorded history, we have not seen a storm like this. It’s critical to your safety and your family’s that you listen to the authorities. Follow their advice. Hunker down, Portal. And stay tuned for the latest weather alerts.
“A personal observation: Conditions are already rough out here. They are going to get a lot worse before they get better. Avoid taking risks, check your emergency supplies, and stay safe. Remember, things can be replaced. You can’t.
“This is Darcy Keller for Portal 3 News. Back to you in the studio…”
Chapter One
1440 (2:40 PM)
Why do weathermen and women stand outside in near hurricane-strength winds, blowing snow and ice, to relay Emergency Weather Alerts, reporting dangerous weather conditions, and urge residents to stay indoors?
Emma Miller stood in a cluster of stranded travelers staring up at the TV screen in the Portal Airport terminal unable to think of one good reason for a person to put themselves through that misery. From Darcy Keller’s involuntary twitches, the ice pelting her stung through her heavy red coat and the hood covering her head. Worse, she was clearly pregnant. A couple standing near Emma questioned the wisdom of Darcy Keller being out in the storm, risking a fall or injury. Silently, Emma agreed. The ice was slick. The heavy scarf at Darcy’s neck draped down the front of her coat, and she wore a hood and gloves and boots so the only exposed skin was on her face, yet the cold air fogged her breath to the point viewers couldn’t clearly make out her features.
From the advisory, it didn’t appear Emma or any of the other passengers diverted from Denver to Portal were going anywhere anytime soon. Figured. At least the plane had landed before the airport shut down.
Emma had been exhausted before getting on the plane, though the adrenaline rush had gotten her this far on the long flight. When taxiing in, she had spotted a hotel attached to the last terminal by a long breezeway, but odds were it was already booked or there wouldn’t be so many people staking out sections of floor in the airport terminal itself. Every seat was taken and most of the floor, too.
She searched her jacket pockets. Found her phone and half a tin of cinnamon Altoids. No purse, no money, nothing but the clothes on her back and the ticket and ID she’d had the foresight to stash in her slacks’ pocket before making the rescue attempt. Darcy Keller had been right. It was going to be a rough couple of days.
Emma walked on from the gate area, looking for a less populated spot with at least semi-privacy to phone in a report to Home Base. The second terminal was as crowded as the third had been, and the first, Terminal A, was even worse than B or C. The din of voices droned a constant hum that hung in the air. She pressed on to the northern end of an area identified by signs as “the Main.” It was a broad and expansive opening defined by overhead, tented awnings, a foo
d court and clusters of shops. Midway through it, she spotted a blessedly empty alcove and ducked into it, then retrieved her phone and contacted Home Base.
“Silencers. Liz speaking. How may I direct your call?”
Seeing the young redhead in her mind, Emma spoke softly. “Liz, it’s Emma.” Why was the Director of Operations answering the phone rather than the receptionist, Billie?
“Are you on the ground?”
“Yes, but not in Denver.”
“They diverted you to Portal, correct?”
“Yes. And as soon as we were wheels down and landed, they shut the airport.” Emma scanned the crowd rushing the food court. “Any chance you can get me some transportation out of—”
“None,” Liz said, cutting her off. “You’ve been diverted.”
Spotting an older silver-haired man with a thick briefcase and stooped shoulders, Emma visually followed him from an outlying sportswear store to the food court. Definitely browsing. “We’ve established that, Liz.”
“I don’t mean the flight. I mean, we—Silencers—have diverted you.”
Surprise streaked through Emma. They were reassigning her to another security detail assignment already? She hadn’t yet gotten home from the last one, and it had been grueling. Hostage rescue operations were always rough. “To where?”
“You’re there. Portal International Airport.”
“Seriously?” More perplexed than anything else, Emma inhaled deeply and caught the scent of lemon. She looked up and sure enough, there was a vent overhead. Why anyone, especially in an airport, would mask scents, she had no idea. It was a prime violation of protocol and an opportunity for unsavory types to insert bio-contaminates.
“Seriously,” Liz said. “Look at it this way. You’re stuck there anyway. At least you’ll be busy during the storm.”
“There are thousands of people crammed into this facility, Liz. Surely PIA has its own security team.” Every international airport did these days.
“It does,” she agreed. “But your assignment isn’t to secure the facility or the people.”
That disclosure made Emma’s mission as clear as mud. Briefcase Man reappeared with coffee and a pretzel. “What am I securing then?” Emma couldn’t imagine.
“Just let me tell you, okay? I’m slammed here today—Billie is out until God knows when with the flu—so I need to streamline for efficiency.”
Emma didn’t sigh. She wanted to, but she didn’t. “Fine. Go ahead.”
“Use your same cover. Investigative journalist for American National Reporters—and no Loeb Award nominations this time. The director is still freaking out over the notoriety on your first mission.”
Emma nearly had been booted from Silencers’ training program over that. Security Specialists were most effective if forgettable and unnoticed. According to Liz, Emma’s looks were Strike One against her. The award nomination, a huge Strike Two. If she got a Third Strike, she would be kicked out of the program. It was that simple. Everything she’d been working toward these past three years would be gone in a snap. No discussion. No reprieve. And no exceptions. Her fingers curled tightly around the phone. “I understand.”
“Stay put under the tent in The Main. That’s an area with stretched canvas overhead in the main terminal.”
She’d seen the signs. “I’m there now.”
“Good.” Liz sounded relieved further explanation was unnecessary. “Apparently, a lot of construction’s going on there.”
“Noted that on the way in. Looks especially comprehensive on Levels Three and Four.”
“It is, or so we’re told. Heavy renovations. Fortunately, you’ll be located elsewhere in the facility, so it shouldn’t be an issue.”
Regardless of where you were located in the facility, those open construction areas created worrisome vulnerabilities. Emma refrained from saying so.
“Your point of contact will retrieve you in fifteen minutes. Six-two, one-ninety, blue eyes, hasn’t shaved in a few days, but he’s a good-looking guy. His name is Dr. Gregory Martin.”
Checking her watch beneath her black coat sleeve, Emma stilled. “Dr. Gregory Mason Martin?” Her throat thick, she waited for Liz’s response. Dread churned with curiosity in her stomach.
“Yes, that’s him.”
A shiver coursed up Emma’s backbone. Of all the people in the world, why him? The entire mission just wrapped up had been like this. She hadn’t been able to catch a break with both hands and a net.
“Bio-containment expert. He runs the high-containment facility there that only a few know exists.”
Emma frowned into her phone. “There’s a high-containment lab here, in this airport?” What genius did that? Airports being terrorist targets had required they be hardened, but, good grief. Bio-contaminates in an airport? That was just insane.
“Afraid so.”
Stranded in a wicked storm in a facility under heavy construction. Five thousand souls at stake, and now this. Bio-contaminates and Mason Martin. The news tumbled straight through bad and into worse. If not to protect the facility or people, why was she being diverted? “What’s my job here?”
“Keep the lab secure,” Liz said, then dropped her voice. “You know this doctor, correct?”
Another shiver coursed through Emma. “I do, yes.”
“From a prior mission?” Liz asked, though she knew the answer already. Liz never asked a question she couldn’t already answer.
“Actually, no. We grew up together and went to the same college. He knows me, Liz. My cover isn’t going—”
“It will hold as much as is needed. His headquarters will see to it. This acquaintance could be helpful. If the doctor knows you, he is less apt to expose you.”
“That’s an assumption.” Emma frowned. “He may be more apt.”
“Oh, boy.”
“What?” The scent changed to cinnamon rolls. She sniffed. Coming from the vent.
“That change in your tone. I only hear it when something is personal.” Liz hesitated but when Emma remained silent, she added, “Were you engaged to him?”
Naturally, that’d be the first thing to occur to Liz. “No.”
“Ah, so he must be the one who got away.”
Surprise rippled across Emma’s chest. “How do you know one got away?”
“Reasonable deduction. Anytime we talk about relationships, it’s written all over your face,” Liz said. “More accurately, it appears whenever we talk about the breakup of another of your relationships.”
Emma clamped her jaw shut. Okay, so she’d been engaged a few times and had never made it to the altar. So what? Wasn’t that better than a string of divorces? She opened her mouth to fire back a snarky retort, but fortunately good sense intervened. If she wanted to get out of training and off probation and be permanently hired at Silencers, Inc., the last thing she needed to do was to cross Liz and lose her support. “No, he isn’t the one who got away.” Oh, Emma hated admitting this. “Speaking honestly, he’s the one I never got.”
“I see.” Liz’s tone held empathy, proving she did see. Too much. “Well, hope springs eternal.”
That remark pricked deep enough to obliterate Emma’s restraint. “Shut up, Liz.”
“Ooh, Touchy.” Liz sounded amused. “Significant sign.”
Emma couldn’t deny it. She was touchy about Mason. She always had been. “I’m sorry. Habitual response. He’s totally insignificant to me now,” she reminded herself as much as Liz. “All that happened a long time ago.”
“Evidently, not long ago enough.”
Emma bristled, stuffed her free hand deeper into her black jacket’s pocket. “Excuse me?”
“The wound is still wide open, Em. It’s in your voice.”
Was it? Probably was. She denied it anyway. “It’s not.”
“It is. It’s evident,” Liz insisted. “But let’s don’t waste time arguing the point. Either way, never kick an opportunity to the curb. That door is opening again for a reason.”
r /> “Yeah, right.” Emma rolled her eyes back in her head, stared at the white ceiling, blanking out old memories she thought she had forgotten. “He’s probably married with a couple of kids by now.”
“Mmm, maybe. Want me to take a look?”
“No!” Emma cringed at having elevated her voice and then lowered it. Fortunately, others hadn’t crowded into the alcove, so no one had overheard her. “No, I do not.” Liz bent the odd rule when it was essential to mission success, but to violate his privacy on a personal interest? That was unexpected. So was the temptation to let Liz look. Not that Emma would give in to it.
“Okay, then.” Liz sounded unaffected, as if the offer had been a test. “Well, if you change your mind…”
Definitely a test. Thankful Emma had tamped curiosity and refused, she assured Liz, “I won’t.”
“Fine. But if you do—”
“I won’t, Liz.” Emma sniffed. “Some opportunities need to be kicked to the curb and some doors are best left shut.”
Chapter Two
Tuesday, December 17th
1500 (3:00 PM)
Emma saw Mason weaving through the crowd. Her breath hitched and she gave herself a mental shake. He was no longer lanky, instead he was muscular. His face was more angular, and she liked the scruff of beard. It accentuated his high cheekbones and slim nose. Gorgeous, as always. Even as a gangly boy, his face had hinted at the man he’d become. And the fitted blue shirt, cuffs still worn rolled up to just below the elbow, made his eyes appear all the bluer. Her breath threatened to hitch again, but the sudden downturn in his wide mouth into a formidable frown nixed that. He’d spotted her. And he was not pleased.