The Gauntlet Assassin Read online




  The Gauntlet Assassin

  L. J. Sellers

  L. J. Sellers

  The Gauntlet Assassin

  Chapter 1

  Sat., May 6, 2023, 11:37 a.m.

  Lara Evans attached the LifePac and hit the man with two hundred joules of electrical current. His eyes popped open, his pulse stabilized, and piss flooded his sweatpants. Terrific. He would live long enough to regret cutting off two fingers in an attempt to collect disability funds. She cauterized his bloody stumps and watched him breathe for a few minutes. Gangrene or sepsis might kill him eventually, but she’d done all she could. Lara stepped back from the sweat-soaked couch and packed up her equipment.

  “You’re taking him to the hospital, aren’t you?” The man’s wife grabbed Lara’s arm, her bony fingers pulsing with misery.

  “You said he didn’t have a med card.”

  “If you leave him in the twenty-foot zone, they have to treat him.”

  “I’m sorry, but I could lose my license if I do.” Lara shoved the portable defib into its pouch and strapped the pack around her waist. She had to carry it in public at all times, the privilege of having a freelance paramedic license. With the growing doctor shortage, anyone with medical skills was fully utilized.

  “He has heart disease and needs an artery vac. This was our chance for treatment.”

  “Oh crap.” Lara hated this aspect of her job. “Do you have a car?”

  “Yes.”

  “I’ll help you get him into the vehicle, but you have to drive him.”

  Lara hurried to her med van and hauled out the wheeled gurney she rarely used. She and the gaunt wife struggled to get the now-conscious but heavyset man onto the gurney, then into their small car.

  “When you get to the hospital, pull him out, honk the horn and drive away.” Lara gave her a grim smile. “Good luck.” Walking away from the noncs, as non-covered citizens were called, never got easier, but she dwelled on it less now. She’d once been a homicide detective, a job that had toughened her for the new world.

  She started toward her van and her iCom beeped. Another 909 emergency. The location appeared on her screen in map form, a secluded home only a half mile away. Lara acknowledged the assignment with a push of her thumb and ran to her vehicle. Her body hummed with adrenaline as she raced up City View. What would it be this time? The neighborhood was probably too upscale for something like a gunshot wound or a domestic dispute with knife injuries. Lara scowled. She hoped it wasn’t another VEx accident with a chubby middle-aged woman trying to improve her health with virtual exercise. Someone had called for a freelance paramed instead of an ambulance, so it could be anything.

  Lara loved these moments-rushing to a scene, not knowing what chaos she would encounter. In some ways, it was better than being a police officer because she kept on the move and did a lot less paperwork. She missed the authority of the badge though. She’d liked having people pay attention and feel nervous when she approached. It beat the hell out of her current personal life: a forty-two-year-old woman with no partner, no children, no power.

  Lara turned on Ridgemont, located the street number, and drove through the open gate. The house sat at the end of a long drive, behind a tall screen of Sequoias. A black compact car soaked up sun in the driveway. The summer heat settled in earlier every year. She parked next to the empty vehicle and glanced at her Taser on the passenger’s seat. The weapon was bulky to carry, but some neighborhoods and situations required it. Lara determined this wasn’t one of them. She touched the 9-millimeter in her shoulder holster as she climbed out. The gun went everywhere she did, but for most volatile situations, she preferred the Taser. Less blood, noise, and risk.

  As Lara moved toward the house, the front doors burst open and a man barreled out. Behind him, a giant black dog noisily gave chase. Lara backpedaled toward the med van to get out of their way.

  The running man raised his arm and aimed a gun at her. Lara dropped to the asphalt as he fired. She rolled and pulled her weapon, but his footsteps kept going and a second shot didn’t come. A car door opened, the engine cranked over, and he raced down the driveway. Still facedown, Lara let out her breath. As she stood, the dog turned back and charged into the house.

  What now? The person who’d made the emergency call had likely been shot and still needed medical attention. Heart thumping, Lara glanced down the driveway and watched the black sedan turn left on the road. Her muscles unclenched and she decided to enter the home and check out the situation. She grabbed her Taser and tucked it into her waistband in case the dog turned on her.

  As she hurried up the walkway, she made a mental note of what she’d seen of the assailant: five-ten, lean, dirty blond, thirty-something, and a squarish face. Lara slowed and moved cautiously through the open front door, weapon ready. The big house was quiet and she crept through, taking in details. High ceilings, open floor plan, and two additional exits that she could see. One leading to the garage from the kitchen, the other into a lush side yard. No people, no black dog.

  She made her way down the hall to a room near the end. Weapon raised, she entered a bedroom. A large man, wearing only black leather chaps, lay on the floor on his back. Blood had soaked into the pale-blue rug under him and sprayed the white satin sheets on the bed. A familiar salty smell mingled with the wet metallic of the blood. As she stepped toward the victim, Lara recognized the scent: a mix of sweat and semen.

  She slipped off her medpack and knelt down. She heard shallow breathing and saw that he’d been shot in the shoulder. The black dog lay nearby, whimpering and watching her. “Good dog. You stay.”

  The man opened his eyes. “Thank god.” The dog started to get up, but victim snapped his fingers and it lay back down.

  Lara began to pull out supplies. “You need the ER. Why didn’t you call for a regular ambulance?”

  “It’s personal. I don’t want to report this.”

  Lara groaned, not caring that he heard. She should have left after the jackass shot at her. It was too late now. She couldn’t walk away from a bleeder. Lara lifted his shoulder to see if the bullet had gone through. He moaned and squeezed her wrist. The exit hole was twice the size of the entry wound and bleeding heavily, but at least she wouldn’t have to dig out the bullet. She laid his shoulder back to the floor. “What’s your name?”

  “Thaddeus Morton.”

  Lara froze. “The federal employment commissioner?”

  “Yes.”

  “Aren’t you supposed to be Washington D.C.? Overseeing the Gauntlet?”

  “I’m flying out tomorrow morning-if I don’t bleed to death.”

  “Is this your house? I thought you moved to the capital.”

  “I kept my home here and a friend house-sits for me. I come back whenever I can.” He grimaced as he talked.

  Lara bit back another question and focused on her task. She grabbed a packet of gunshot gauze, a new product designed to fill such a wound and slowly dissolve as the tissue around it healed. A Chicago ER doctor had invented the gauze soon after the dark shift, as she called it. The Supreme Court had struck down a series of gun control laws and now weapons were everywhere. So were gunshot wounds. An entire industry had sprung up to treat them.

  “We need to roll you over so I can bandage the exit wound.” Lara gave him her best smile, which wasn’t much. “This will hurt.”

  “Do you have pain meds?”

  “I’m not licensed for them. You know how the DEA is.”

  Lara cauterized the major bleeders with a C-laser, sprayed the wound with antibacterial, then packed it with gauze. The white material soaked with blood before she could get the skin-sealing bandage in place. The sealer, as medics called it, had biologic properties that bonded with tissue
.

  She taped a padded exterior bandage in place and asked, “Who shot you, and why don’t you want to report it?”

  “My lover.” He paused. “Going public was a political career killer even before the new Congress made homosexual acts illegal. Not that I’m gay. I’m bisexual.”

  Lara didn’t give a rip about his sexual practices, but she watched his face for signs of lying, a habit from her detective days. She saw none. “What makes you think I’ll consider not reporting this? I could lose my license.”

  “Because I’m the employment commissioner and you’re a contestant in the Gauntlet. I can help you if you help me.”

  Lara’s pulse quickened. What was he saying? “Did you ask for me when you called the Paramed Service?”

  “I didn’t have time. But I hoped it would be you.” Morton spoke softly, then waited.

  Lara’s mind raced. The employment commissioner oversaw the contest, now in its third year, and he would rule on any situations that required a judgment call. He could disqualify any competitor too, including her.

  Lara was torn. Her desire to win the Gauntlet was like a tumor growing inside her. Oregon desperately needed the grant money and the jobs that would be awarded to the winner’s state-and she needed a reason to keep getting up every day. Yet having the contest handed to her was not what she had in mind. “I don’t want to win except on my own merit.” She almost regretted the words as soon as they left her mouth.

  “Be more specific.” He sat up and she noticed that he was attractive in a pretty-boy way with dark wavy hair and high cheekbones. She’d only seen the commissioner a few times on the news, and the camera had not flattered him. Still, he was almost fifty and the black leather gear he was sporting made her a little sad for him.

  “I don’t want your help. I want to win clean.”

  “Could I interest you in some cash?”

  Lara laughed. “Taking a bribe for not reporting this incident would be worse than simply not logging the GSW.” She began to pack her medical supplies.

  “Tell me what you want. I can’t let this incident reach the police or the media.”

  “Your boyfriend is a menace. He shot at me on his way out and should probably be locked up.”

  Morton’s eyes widened. “Oh shit. I’m so sorry.” He scooted to the bed and leaned against it. “He’s having a bad reaction to some medication. He’s not usually like this.” The commissioner’s gaze slid away and Lara sensed he’d just lied to her.

  “Does he have a criminal record?”

  “No. He’s never hurt anyone before. He discovered I cheated on him and freaked out. Shooting at you was just a leftover emotional reaction. He’ll calm down and be fine.”

  “I want his name. For my own protection.”

  Morton hesitated. “Richard Bremmer, but please don’t report this. I’ll lose my federal position.” He locked into her eyes. “And everything that goes with it.”

  Lara wanted to get the hell out. After a quick look at the dog, which hadn’t moved since Morton snapped his fingers, she slipped her gun back into its holster and stood to leave.

  “Are you going to report this?”

  “I don’t know yet.”

  In the van, she accessed her call log on her iCom and stared at the cursor, which was waiting for her to speak or type something. Crap. She was required to report the GSW, so that was the safest thing to do. If she lost her paramedic license, she’d be scrambling to find work like millions of others. She couldn’t go through that nightmare again. After leaving the police department, she’d been unemployed for years. Then the gun laws loosened and health insurance got scarce, so paramedics were suddenly in demand.

  Yet, if she reported the incident, Thaddeus Morton would be investigated and likely removed from overseeing the Gauntlet. His last act as commissioner might be to disqualify her. If she kept his secret and he stayed on as a judge, he would owe her, and it couldn’t hurt to have someone in her corner while she competed.

  If she brought home a grant, co-funded by AmGo and the federal government, Oregon would have money to spend on jobs and social programs. AmGo would build a facility in Eugene that employed thousands. Teachers and police officers would go back to work. Not her, of course. She had burned that bridge thoroughly. Still, she was a cop at heart and she hated the way law enforcement had been crippled by the never-ending recession. Most departments now only investigated violent crimes, and detectives had a couple of days to track leads. After that, the case went into the cold file and they moved on. It was shameful. So many victims with no one held accountable.

  Lara slammed out of the van and ran back into the house. Morton had changed into jeans and opened a suitcase on the bed. He jumped like a startled cat when she burst into the room.

  “How is the first section of the contest structured this year?” The Gauntlet had five phases that changed annually, and the details were kept secret until the program went live.

  “It’s an elevated maze.”

  Lara made a quick mental assessment. “I’d like to be paired against someone tall and female.”

  “I’ll see what I can do.”

  “Beyond that, I intend to kick ass on my own.”

  “I’m sure you will.”

  “I hope your accidental shoulder wound heals quickly.” Lara bolted from the room before he could say anything else. No promises had been exchanged, but she felt a little dirty anyway.

  Chapter 2

  Lara parked her rig and hustled up the exterior stairs. On the drive home, she’d heard a storm warning on the radio and the winds were picking up already. Her apartment sat above her landlady’s oversized garage and she’d chosen it for the privacy. In real-estate terms, it was considered a studio even though her bed and dresser were in an alcove partitioned with heavy curtains. Not that the privacy mattered. The only company she ever had was her landlady, a recluse writer who lived online, but came over every once in a while when she needed Lara’s help with something.

  Lara set the perimeter alarm, then unloaded her medpack and Taser into the trunk by the door. She changed into a t-shirt but left the Kel-Tec strapped in place. She liked the weight and comfort of it against her side. The weapon was even more effective than meds at keeping her anxiety to a low murmur. She resisted the temptation to sit down at the NetCom and conduct a quick search for Richard Bremmer. Her flight left at noon from Portland the next day, and she still needed to finish packing for the week-long contest. She’d finally broken down and bought new athletic clothes in bright colors because almost everything she owned was black or brown and wouldn’t look good on camera. She’d chosen water-repellent material on the assumption that she’d have to swim in at least one phase of the contest.

  Her biggest challenge for now was to make everything fit into one suitcase. The “single checked bag and single small carry-on” rule had been in place with the airlines since 2013 when lighter loads and less fuel became a mandate. Since then, fuel prices had risen even more, driving the price of plane tickets even higher. So many people had quit flying that hundreds of airports had closed, including the one in Eugene.

  The wind howled outside her windows and the tall pine trees swayed. Lara worried the storm might cause damage at the Maryland airport and delay her flight. It was tornado season in the Midwest and a twister could cause the airline to reroute her flight. That was the worst risk of flying now-sudden, powerful storms.

  When Lara finally had everything squeezed into her suitcase, she went to her desk and began the search she’d wanted to conduct since leaving the commissioner’s house. With a few clicks and a password, she opened the Eugene PD’s citizen database. Her best friend was still a detective with the department, and he let her use his password to access information. Sometimes she looked up people she’d treated in an emergency call to get the background story. Other times, she perused the files just for the thrill of police work.

  Richard Bremmer, the asshole who’d fired at her, was thirty-five and owned a
spa and fitness center called Flex. Lara searched the Lane County criminal record files and discovered Bremmer had a public indecency charge from 2012 when he was twenty-five and an assault charge in 2014. The man he’d attacked refused to testify, and the judge had dismissed the case. Lara was relieved to learn Bremmer was only a passionate gay man in need of anger management and not a career thug who would track her down because she’d witnessed him leaving the scene of a crime. She stared at his mugshot and tried to visualize him ten years older and with longer hair. He seemed more attractive than the glimpse she’d gotten of him before hitting the ground. But age changed people’s appearance.

  Lara hated being sucked into petty domestic bullshit. Yet for a few moments in that room with the bleeding man, she’d felt essential. Her presence in the world had mattered for a minute or two. Her stomach growled, surprising her. It was unusual for her to feel hungry except after intense exercise. She got up and crossed the living area into a galley kitchen the size of a walk-in closet. Even though her long period of unemployment had forced her into this small living space, she was grateful to look out the windows at a lush backyard surrounded by pine and oak trees, instead of being stacked up in a fifty-unit complex surrounded by asphalt.

  She cored an apple and tossed it into the blender with pineapple juice, sunflower seeds, and two tablespoons of soy protein. She drank her dinner standing at the counter and worried about getting enough nourishment during the intense physical contest. She hadn’t been able to eat solid food since she left the department, and the next week would be no exception. Physically, everything still worked fine. The block was in her head. The idea of chewing and swallowing was simply too repulsive, and she couldn’t make herself put a chunk of food in her mouth. Lara knew what a shrink would say, so she’d never paid for the privilege of hearing it.

  Two containers of protein powder were already tucked into her suitcase, along with a week’s supply of vitamins and flax seed. She’d buy a blender when she arrived in D.C. and drink plenty of coffee. After four years of living this way-and training intensely through most of it-her body had adjusted, and she could only hope that she’d perform at her best. At five-five, she was one of the smallest contestants, but she had exceptionally strong muscles, the only decent thing her father had given her.