Phase One: Intelligence
The intelligence gathering phase took three weeks and involved more patience than Shane had exercised in years. They couldn’t rush, couldn’t make mistakes, couldn’t do anything that would alert Royce to the fact that he was being systematically mapped and analyzed.
Marcus brought in two more former military intelligence specialists—Sarah Chen and James Rodriguez, both of whom had transitioned to private security consulting after their service. Together, they ran surveillance on every known Viper operation, photographed everyone who came and went, tracked vehicles, monitored communications, and slowly built a comprehensive picture of how the organization functioned.

What they found was both encouraging and disturbing. Encouraging because the organization was smaller than they’d initially thought—maybe forty core members total, with another hundred associates who did business with them but weren’t directly part of the criminal enterprise. Disturbing because those forty core members included some genuinely dangerous people, including several with murder charges that had been dismissed through intimidated witnesses and mishandled evidence.
The financial side of the operation was equally revealing. Royce’s organization moved roughly five million dollars a year through various illegal activities, but the bulk of that money flowed through just three businesses—a used car dealership, a check-cashing store, and a construction company. Take down those businesses, freeze their assets, and suddenly Royce couldn’t pay his people or his corrupt officials.
Sarah Chen, who had specialized in financial crimes during her time in military intelligence, spent a week going through business records and bank statements that Marcus’s contacts acquired through means they all agreed not to discuss in detail. What she found made the entire operation viable.
“He’s lazy,” Sarah explained during one of their planning meetings in Marcus’s basement office. “Or maybe just arrogant. The money laundering operation is barely disguised—fake invoices, obviously inflated prices, paper trails that a first-year accountant could follow. I think Royce has been protected by corrupt officials for so long that he stopped being careful about documentation.”
“Can you build a case that FBI would pursue?” Shane asked.
“I can build a case that FBI would love,” Sarah replied with satisfaction. “Tax evasion, wire fraud, money laundering, RICO violations—the whole menu. But we need to get this information to them in a way that doesn’t expose our involvement, and we need to do it at exactly the right time to cause maximum disruption.”
James Rodriguez, who had handled human intelligence during his service, provided the final piece of the puzzle. Through cultivating sources in the criminal world—people who owed him favors or who he’d helped in the past—he identified which members of Royce’s organization were weak links, who might be convinced to testify in exchange for immunity or protection.
“There are three guys who hate Royce but work for him because they’re scared,” James explained. “Andre Mullins, Tommy Vega, and Ray Connors. All three have families, all three are in over their heads with debt to the organization, and all three would jump at a chance to get out if they thought they could do it safely. If FBI offers them witness protection and immunity, they’ll sing like canaries.”
The intelligence phase concluded with a detailed operations order that mapped out exactly how they would proceed, what resources they needed, and what the expected outcome would be. Shane read through the thirty-page document and marveled at the level of planning that had gone into something that, if it worked, would look almost spontaneous.
“When do we start Phase Two?” he asked.
“Next week,” Marcus replied. “But first, you need to have a conversation with FBI Agent Kane. She needs to understand what’s coming and be ready to move when we give her the signal.”