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The bus rumbled on.

7

Casey Brackett held her breath as the pilot guided the HH-60 Pave Hawk helicopter over a dam and what appeared to be a sleek, modern water reclamation plant. The structure perched on the edge of a cliff, and Casey tensed as the helicopter descended toward a marked landing pad beside a waterfall. It looked like something out of a James Bond movie, conspicuous in its attempt to seem innocuous, at least in her current mindset.

She’d never ridden in a helicopter before, and the moment the chopper touched down, she promised herself she’d do her best to avoid it in the future. Dr. Casey Brackett wasn’t the type to shy away from risky behavior, but there was risk and then there was buzzing thousands of feet above the ground in a tin can with whirling blades overhead as gusts of wind tried to blow you from the sky.

One of the security men who’d been riding with her jumped out ahead of her, then another. They turned to assist her, but there was no sense of gallantry in these men, only practicality. She’d studied them throughout the flight and had concluded that they weren’t regular military. Her father and grandfather had been military men—she’d been around them all her life, even lived on bases as a child—and she knew the difference. These guys were black ops, or even mercenaries. They wore no insignias denoting rank, no name tags, and they didn’t joke around the way the military men she’d known always did. These men were all business. She tried to tell herself that was a good thing.

Agent Church, who’d so far acted as spokesman for the group that had requisitioned her services, climbed out of the helicopter behind her and strode toward what appeared to be an outbuilding, a structure the size of somebody’s backyard shed. The guards went along with them, and Casey gazed around, wondering just how much of what she was seeing might be a façade.

At the shed, Church handed her a clipboard. “Non-disclosure agreement.”

“I signed that when they recruited me, two years ago,” she replied.

“It’s a rider,” Church explained. “New information’s come to light in the last day.”

A shiver went through Casey. Of course, there was new information—without it, they never would have brought her here—but still, she felt her heart racing.

“I’m in the middle of nowhere surrounded by armed mercenaries,” she said. “Do I have a choice?”

Church gave her a terse smile. “There’s always a choice.”

She didn’t like the sound of that. She also noticed that he hadn’t challenged her identification of the guards as mercenaries, which meant she was right. Not only were they not regular military, but they weren’t CIA either, or anything else truly official. She felt uncomfortably like she was about to take an almighty leap into the unknown.

Taking a breath, she signed on the clipboard. The code box outside the shed emitted a hollow click and heavy doors slid open to reveal a small, compact room—some kind of security checkpoint. A technician stood at a workstation laden with scanners, cameras, printers, and other instruments. On the far wall was a Big Red Button that drew her eye instantly.

The tech stepped forward and used one of the instruments to scan Casey’s retinas, then another to record her handprints. As soon as the tech confirmed that she was clear, Church slammed his hand down on the Big Red Button. The whole room shuddered, and Casey heard a hydraulic whine coming from every wall as the entire chamber jerked and then began to descend.

Her eyes went wide. The interior of the shed was an elevator.

“Is it your imagination?” the tech asked in a deep, spooky voice. “Or is this haunted room actually stretching?”

Agent Church shook his head at the Haunted Mansion reference. “Every fucking time.”

Moments later the elevator door slid open and Church ushered Casey into a sprawling underground complex, brightly lit and ultra-modern. Technicians bustled about like bees inside a hive, some of them wearing lab coats and scrubs. None of them seemed to take any notice of their arrival and for a moment Casey felt as invisible as a ghost. Then she spotted a bespectacled man headed straight for them as if they were his personal responsibility. The guy had big eyes and a set of gleaming teeth that she thought might give him a grin that could be joyful or terrifying, depending on his mood.

“Ah, there you are,” he said. “I’m Doctor Shawn Keyes. Thanks for coming.”

He shook Casey’s hand and ushered her deeper into the hive, keeping up a stream of chatter. “I’m told you pretty much wrote the book on evolutionary biology.”

“Four, actually,” Casey said, before realizing how much that sounded like bragging. “Um… books…”

She glanced to her left, and halted in her tracks, staring in stunned amazement at a plexiglass display case. Or, more accurately, at what was behind the plexiglass. A large helmet, loaded with tech and clearly not designed for a human head, sat on display. There were dents and scrapes that she assumed had come from combat, but she had no idea what had worn it. The other items in the display gave her some hints—a chest plate, also battle-scarred, and various weapons that were unlike anything she’d ever seen.

“My God, this is…” She turned to Keyes. “Am I allowed to swear?”

Dr. Keyes raised his eyebrows. “Knock yourself out.”

Casey stepped closer, studying the long battle staff. “Holy. Fucking. Shit. This is alien technology. This is what you brought me here to see.”

Keyes showed her his grin, then pointed further along the corridor. More plexiglass awaited, and now Casey found her breath freezing in her lungs. Ice trickling along her spine, she stepped toward the glass and stared in at a medical facility that was like something out of a science fiction movie—or more specifically at the treatment table in the center of the room, around which med techs were fluttering like flies around a banquet.

She gaped and gaped, her mind trying to assimilate what she was seeing. Because strapped to the table was something she had waited her entire life to see.

Eventually she let out a gasp, suddenly aware both that she’d been holding her breath and that her heartbeat had become a drumroll. But why wouldn’t she respond that way? Hell, in the space of a few seconds her whole life had changed.

She stared again at the creature on the table. It had to be at least seven feet in height, and massively powerful. Bipedal humanoid, she told herself, trying desperately to reassert an air of scientific professionalism. The skin of the creature seemed reptilian at first glance, but she realized almost immediately that that was a lazy comparison—mental shorthand for something not of this earth. What she’d first taken to be hair, considering the way it hung like dreadlocks from the alien’s head, now appeared to be a cluster of thick appendages, but she had no idea what purpose they might serve. Its mouth hung slightly open, and what a mouth it was—arthropod-like mandibles, and sharp inner teeth. There were undersea creatures with uglier mouths, but not many. The thought made her wonder if the alien might be amphibious, but that was a question for later.

Later, she thought with excitement, mind already racing ahead to the moment when she’d be able to examine it in person.

“Agent Traeger,” Church said.

A man inside the lab turned toward the window. Handsome, intelligent, arrogant, was Casey’s snap judgment.

“Dr. Brackett?” Traeger asked. She gave a tentative nod and he smiled. “Would you like to meet a Predator?”

Predator, she thought. Fuck, yeah, she wanted to meet a Predator.

Dr. Keyes stepped aside with a chivalrous flourish to allow her to precede him into the decontamination chamber. Casey had never thought of herself as claustrophobic, but stepping into the blinding-white, antiseptic box room made her skin crawl. Her thoughts flashed back to an old Meryl Streep movie, Silkwood—a true story about a woman purposely exposed to radiation in order to shut her up. Casey had been twelve when her mother showed her that movie, to let her know that the truth always had enemies. Science had always been about truth for Casey, and the movie had been one of the foundations of that quest. She’d had nightmares, yes, but she hadn’t let them stop her. Karen Silkwood had died for the truth. Mama Brackett hadn’t raised a fool—Casey didn’t want to die—but she’d risk anything for answers to the questions that haunted her.