Drone Wars 1: Day of the Drone

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Drone Wars 1: Day of the Drone Page 1

by T. R. Harris




  DAY

  of the

  DRONE

  Drone Wars: Book 1

  Revised & Edited Edition

  A novel of technology

  and international terrorism.

  by

  T.R. Harris

  Published by

  Copyright 2015 by T.R. Harris

  ISBN: 978-0-9913465-7-9

  All rights reserved, without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanically, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book. This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  Special thanks to

  Lee Burton at Ocean’s Edge Editing

  for his incredible work on this newly revised and edited edition.

  It always takes a second pair of eyes and an unbiased view to see

  where a book can be made tighter and better.

  His attention to detail is unsurpassed.

  [email protected]

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  Novels by T.R. Harris

  The Human Chronicles Saga

  Book 1 – The Fringe Worlds

  Book 2 – Alien Assassin

  Book 3 – The War of Pawns

  Book 4 – The Tactics of Revenge

  Book 5 – The Legend of Earth

  Book 6 – Cain’s Crusaders

  Book 7 – The Apex Predator

  Book 8 – A Galaxy to Conquer

  Book 9 – The Masters of War

  Book 10 – Prelude to War

  Jason King – Agent to the Stars Series

  Book 1 – The Enclaves of Sylox

  Drone Wars

  Book 1 – Day of the Drone

  In collaboration with author George Wier

  Captains Malicious – Book One of the Liberation Series

  Contents

  Prologue

  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

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Epilogue

  Pulled from the headlines…

  this is the story of what could happen when drones become weaponized and used to threaten the very fabric of civilization. It’s a rollercoaster ride of action and adventure that will leave you asking … “Is this fiction or is it reality?”

  Here’s what others are saying about Day of the Drone…

  The future is now and T.R. Harris lays it out for us in this amazing account that is both fascinating and damned scary! – Steven M. Thomas

  Five Stars! Kept my interest and was hard to put down. Very interesting and timely topic. – Fred J. Wassenaar

  If you have an appointment and start this book you will be late. Only word to describes this story…Plausible. –Tomas Nagy

  Prologue

  Anastasia Beaumont heard the high-pitched whine before she saw the tiny remote-control dune buggy slip past her and enter the bank. She watched with curiosity as the little toy, with the shiny silver canister taped to it, drove further into the marble-floored and jade-columned vestibule, before it stopped mid-room and began to perform a series of radical three-sixty spins.

  It was an odd scene, with people in the bank displaying diametrically opposed expressions. The two security guards wore scowls on their stern faces, while the customers smiled, waiting for the bank promo regarding auto loans to be announced…

  A small flying drone suddenly lifted off the dune buggy and climbed toward the ceiling. It hovered there, as a tiny attached camera turned on its gimbal, scanning the scene below.

  Knowing this wasn’t part of a bank promotion, the guards hesitated only a moment before spreading out and approaching the vehicle from opposite directions.

  A tiny servo-motor began to whine, and the shiny, foot-long canister atop the dune buggy split open along a thin centerline. Robert Williams pulled his .9mm Glock—feeling silly to be pointing it at a toy—but he gasped when he saw what was inside the canister.

  “Ah-ah … don’t come any closer,” said a tinny voice from hidden speakers.

  The canister contained six sticks of red paper-wrapped dynamite, with a series of wires running end-to-end and terminating at a glowing cellphone.

  “What the hell?” he blurted. Williams and his partner, Gavin St. Croix, were less than ten feet from the menacing object.

  “I can hear you, Mr. Williams,” said the tinny voice, sounding almost giddy as he spoke. “Now, if you don’t want Gavin to get hurt, or Joyce, or Kaitlyn—you see I know the names of all the employees at the bank—then I suggest you holster your weapon and back away.”

  “What’s this all about?” St. Croix asked just as bank manager Francine Howell came up next to him. Her expression was one of concern, rather than the anger displayed on the faces of the guards.

  “This is branch manager Francine—”

  “Yes, I know, Francine Howell,” the voice interrupted. “To answer Mr. St. Croix’s question, this is a robbery, pure and simple.” The speaker paused to let his words register with everyone in earshot. Both guards shook their heads and smirked.

  “Bullshit,” said Williams.

  “Watch your language in the presence of a lady, Bob. As I was saying, this is a robbery. I have six sticks of construction-grade dynamite wired to explode upon my command or if the device is tampered with in any way. Now I will ask that you look to the main entrance door…”

  All eyes turned to the single, four-foot wide glass door, now closed. Outside was another RC vehicle, this one a Tonka replica of the quintessential yellow quarry dump truck, and with a round, thirteen-gallon plastic trash can sitting in the bed box.

  “Please open the door, Mr. St. Croix, so my associate may enter.”

  “No friggin’ way!”

  “Ms. Howell, please have Gavin do as I ask. I would hate to stain the interior of your beautiful bank with the bloody body parts from your fifty or so customers and employees.”

  Panic swept through the cadre of customers and a dozen or so lurched towards the exit. “Stop!” the voice cried out. “Stop … or I’ll set off the bomb.”

  Most people obeyed; others didn’t. Fearing for their lives from the actions of the noncompliant, several of the bank customers grabbed onto the ones still rushing towards the exit and pulled them back by their suits and dresses. Scuffles broke out.

  “Stop it, all of you!” the voice from the toy car boomed out, louder than ever. “All I want is some of the bank’s money. Just let my assoc
iate in and then have the tellers fill the can with cash. After that we’ll be on our way, and with no one getting hurt.”

  Gavin St. Croix snorted. “You really expect us to fill your trash can with money and then just let you drive off?” He had his weapon drawn. “I bet that’s not even real dynamite.” He looked around at the frightened customers and employees. “This is probably some computer geek’s scheme for making a quick buck … by scaring the hell out of everyone here.”

  “Are you willing to risk the lives of everyone here to satisfy your macho bravado? Just let me have the money. After that, it’ll be the job of the real cops to find me. Don’t be a hero, Gavin,” the speaker growled. “Besides, the amount I’ll take from the bank today won’t even register as a rounding error on the ledger. Now do everyone a favor … and open the damn door!”

  One of the customers near the entrance pulled the door open and the RC dump truck quickly entered. In the ensuing confusion, the customer ran out, along with five others.

  “Close the door, Gavin!” the tinny voice demanded. “If another customer leaves I will set off the bomb, and believe me when I say this. Doing so will only cost me a couple hundred dollars in material, as well as a few sticks of the dynamite I stole from the Greater East River Reclamation Project a month ago. I won’t be harmed in any way, and I’ll still have enough dynamite to come back here and do this all over again. Maybe then I’ll be taken more seriously. Of course I’ll be dealing with a whole new set of employees, because all of you will be dead! Now get me my goddamn money … and no paint bombs, either! If I find any I’ll come back here with the sole purpose of blowing the hell out of this place.”

  The dump truck had positioned itself between the original vehicle and tellers row. Francine Howell now motioned with her hands. “Hurry up, all of you. Empty the cash drawers and put the stacks in the can.”

  The eight tellers on duty obeyed, worry clouding their eyes and visible in their frantic movements; however, in less than a minute, a fair amount of money filled the trash can.

  “See, that wasn’t too hard, now was it? And no one got hurt. Now, Mr. Williams, it’s your turn to open the door so we can leave.”

  Robert Williams was now closest to the exit, and he bit his lip as a vein pulsed in his neck. The tiny two-vehicle caravan took off for the front door, slowing to a stop as the guard stood firm with his left hand on the door handle and the other resting on the grip of his company-issued Glock. A standoff ensued.

  “Don’t be stupid, Williams,” the voice said with steely purpose. “It’s not your money, so don’t die for it.”

  The guard took a deep breath before slowly pulling the heavy glass door in towards him.

  “Good choice, Bob. Now step aside and let us leave.”

  Williams took a wide step to his right and the caravan began to roll toward the door. Yet when the lead car drew parallel to the guard, he lunged forward, reaching down to grab a handful of the wires connecting the dynamite with the cellphone. He pulled hard and the wires came loose. Then he kicked the model dune buggy to his right, sending it skidding ten feet over the smooth marble tile floor.

  “I knew it!” Williams declared. “It’s all a fake.”

  The dune buggy spun around on narrow black wheels, the electric motor whining until it was face-on with the guard. The miniature camera mounted on the hovering drone focused on the smiling face of Robert Williams.

  “Do you think I’d be that stupid to build a bomb with only one way to detonate? Not likely. Now, say a prayer, Mr. Williams. You just cost all these people their lives.”

  The explosion blew out the entire fifty-foot glass front of the bank and shattered windows along the entire block. Roiling clouds of white smoke billowed from the gaping hole on the ground floor of the twenty-seven story building. Shards of glass and splintered marble blanketed the street.

  Eight people died in the bank that day—including Anastasia Beaumont—along with two on the street outside. Both security guards were counted in the fatalities. Bank manager Francine Howell wasn’t one of them, although she lost her left arm from the elbow down and suffered third-degree burns along the entire left side of her body. Three other people in the bank were permanently disabled, while every customer and employee in the bank that day experienced some level of injury or psychological trauma.

  ********

  A week later in Chicago, another remote control car entered a bank. This time all instructions were followed without question, and after the robbery the two-car caravan left the bank and scooted along the sidewalk to an alley between the bank building and its neighbor. A large, eight-bladed drone called an octocopter was waiting. Expertly, the unknown pilot snared the dual straps on the trash container and lifted it from the bed of the yellow dump truck. The UAV—unmanned aerial vehicle—was rated for this heavy of a load, and soon the drone and the money disappeared over the crest of the building next to the bank.

  A crowd of people, both from the street and the bank, had followed the RC cars to the alley. Now they stood at the entrance, gawking and uncertain what to do next.

  The tiny dune buggy then turned to face the crowd. The tinny voice spoke for the last time. “All of you should take cover. I’m about to destroy the evidence.”

  Thirty seconds later, an explosion erupted from the alleyway and echoed through the downtown area, yet unlike New York, no one was killed in this event, just some rather extensive property damage in its aftermath.

  The drone and the money were never seen again.

  Chapter 1

  Xander Moore had just pressed down the top of the Keurig coffeemaker, puncturing the small container of Donut Shop brew, when the bug in his ear sounded: “M-9 Alert! Repeat: M-9 Alert. All prime responders return to station.”

  With the coffee machine located on a counter directly behind the pilot console, all he had to do was turn toward the screens to comply with the order.

  “Which one?” he asked the other two men in the room. He already knew from the alert code that this was an attack on a shopping mall and that it was occurring somewhere within Zone Nine, which was the state of Florida.

  “The Dolphin Mall, Miami,” replied Charlie Fox, his wingman. “Six seconds and counting, and we’re first in line.”

  A whole array of basic information concerning the attack was already scrolling on the screens at each of the three stations, requiring only a couple of seconds to digest. Two UAVs, carrying bomb packs, had struck the main entrance to the mall and detonated just to the left of the security maze. The breach was significant enough to allow twelve trailing combat drones to enter the mall.

  “All autos?” Xander asked his scanner-operator, David Lane.

  “These are,” the young man answered, “although an RPA just entered—and a huge muther, too!”

  Xander paused for a moment as he received confirmation through his earpiece that his team was now the lead in the event. “Red-One confirmed, taking command.” He glanced to each side of his station at the other two members of his team. “Okay, boys, we’re it. This is a huge, so we should have backup on-site in seconds. Dave, post them to the exterior of the mall to take out any predators near the service exits. What about our assets?”

  “Up and in route,” Lane replied. In the early seconds of an alert, David Lane was the eyes and ears of the operation, feeding crucial data to the other two from a variety of sensors under his control. “Units were offsite, but ten seconds out. Damn, we have eight rapid-response bunkers along the Dolphin Expressway, with a lot of targets within a few miles, including Miami International.”

  “Any simo’s being reported?”

  “Not yet, it looks like this is the only target being hit at this time.”

  “I have the Viper—assuming control.” With practiced and confident skill, Xander gained control of the main defensive drone—an LSC Industries Viper III. Charlie Fox took command of the smaller JEN-Tech Panther, while Lane locked on to the tiny, yet extremely fast and agile, observation drone
.

  All three team members donned compact virtual reality goggles, placing them in FPV—First Person View—of their respective drones. Even after all the years of doing this, it still took Xander a split second to adjust to the sudden shift in perspective, where one moment he was seated in a dimly-lit team room at a bank of sophisticated monitors and controllers, and the next suddenly zipping forty feet above a crowded parking lot in the brilliant sunshine of south Florida, twenty-three hundred miles away.

  With the defensive drones launching on autopilot from their hidden bunkers only a few blocks from the mall, they were already quickly approaching the main entrance to Miami’s largest shopping center by the time Team Red-One took control. Up ahead, they could see where the iconic and massive banner sign displaying the words “Dolphin Mall” in large block letters had once spanned the outer concourse. At night the panel would be illuminated in brilliant colors of Art Deco neon, in traditional south Florida fashion. Now the sign was split in two, each half still swinging precariously from broken and twisted supports. Sparks popped from severed electrical wires and fire was burning off the remnants of bunting that had once proclaimed the arrival of the joyous Christmas shopping season. All the joy and promise of the holiday season had come to a sudden and tragic halt less than twenty seconds ago.

  Smoke billowed beyond the shattered sign, where the main breach had occurred. Most malls—as well as other large public venues in America—were now fitted with ingress and egress security mazes. These imposing, S-shaped tunnels were designed to slow any attacking drones attempting to gain entry to the mall. They were equipped with heavy blast doors that could be closed at a moment’s notice, trapping the attackers within the solid metal walls. At that point, even if the drones exploded, the damage would be contained within the maze.

 

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