ANTICHRIST TAKES THE THRONE
DESECRATION
TIM LAHAYE
JERRY B.JENKINS
To Murf, Timmy Mac, and
Mary, with gratitude
Copyright (c) 2001 by Tim LaHaye and Jerry B. Jenkins.
Scripture quotations are taken from the New King James Version.
Copyright (c) 1979, 1980, 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by
permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, King James Version.
Scripture quotation marked TLB is taken from The Living Bible copyright
(c) 1971. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.,
Wheaton, Illinois 60189. All rights reserved.
Left Behind is a registered trademark of Tyndale House Publishers, Inc.
Special
thanks
to David Alien
for expert technical consultation
FORTY-TWO MONTHS
INTO THE TRIBULATION;
TWENTY-FIVE DAYS INTO
THE GREAT TRIBULATION
The Believers
Rayford Steele, mid-forties;
former 747 captain for Pan-Continental;
lost wife and son in the Rapture; former pilot for Global Community
Potentate Nicolae Carpathia; original member of the Tribulation Force;
international fugitive; on assignment at Mizpe Ramon in the Negev
Desert, center for Operation Eagle
Cameron ("Buck") Williams,
early thirties; former senior writer for
Global Weekly; former publisher of Global Community Weekly for
Carpathia; original member of the Trib Force; editor of cybermagazine
The Truth; fugitive; incognito at the King David Hotel, Jerusalem
Chloe Steele Williams, early
twenties; former student, Stanford
University; lost mother and brother in the Rapture; daughter of
Rayford; wife of Buck; mother of fifteen-month-old Kenny Bruce; CEO of
International Commodity Co-op, an underground network of believers;
original Trib Force member; fugitive in exile, Strong Building, Chicago
Tsion Ben-Judah, late forties;
former rabbinical scholar and Israeli
statesman; revealed belief in Jesus as the Messiah on international
TV-wife and two teenagers subsequently murdered; escaped to U.S.;
spiritual leader and teacher of the Trib Force; cyberaudience of more
than a billion daily; fugitive in exile, Strong Building, Chicago
Dr. Chaim Rosenzweig, late
sixties; Nobel Prize-winning Israeli
botanist and statesman; former Global Weekly Newsmaker of the Year;
murderer of Carpathia; incognito, the King David Hotel, Jerusalem
Leah Rose, late thirties;
former head nurse, Arthur Young Memorial
Hospital, Palatine, Illinois; on Trib Force assignment en route to
Mizpe Ramon
Hattie Durham, early thirties;
former Pan-Continental flight attendant;
former personal assistant to Carpathia; on Trib Force assignment in
Israel
Al B. (aka "Albie"), late
forties; native of Al Basrah, north of
Kuwait; pilot; former international black marketer; assisting Rayford
at Mizpe Ramon
David Hassid, mid-twenties;
high-level director for the GC; presumed
dead in plane crash; actually en route to Mizpe Ramon
Mac McCullum, late fifties;
pilot for Carpathia; presumed dead in plane
crash; actually en route to Mizpe Ramon
Abdullah Smith, early thirties;
former Jordanian fighter pilot; first
officer, Phoenix 216; presumed dead in plane crash; actually en route
to Mizpe Ramon
Hannah Palemoon, late twenties;
GC nurse; presumed dead in plane crash;
actually en route to Mizpe Ramon
Ming Toy, early twenties;
widow; former guard at the Belgium Facility
for Female Rehabilitation (Buffer); AWOL from the GC; Strong Building,
Chicago
Chang Wong, seventeen; Ming
Toy's brother; new employee, Global
Community Headquarters, New Babylon
Lukas ("Laslos") Miklos,
mid-fifties; lignite-mining magnate; lost
wife, pastor, and pastor's wife to Nicolae Carpathia's guillotines; in
hiding, Greece, United Carpathian States
Gustaf Zuckermandel Jr. (aka
"Zeke" or "Z"), early twenties; document
forger and disguise specialist; lost father to guillotine; fugitive in
exile, Strong Building, Chicago
Steve Plank (aka Pinkerton Stephens),
fiftyish, former editor of Global
Weekly; former public relations director for Carpathia; assumed dead in
wrath of the Lamb earthquake; undercover with GC Peacekeeping forces
Unknown male, fifteen; escaped loyalty mark center in Ptolemai's,
Greece, with Albie's and Buck's help; whereabouts unknown
Unknown female, sixteen; escaped loyalty mark center in Ptolemai's,
Greece, with Albie's and Buck's help; whereabouts unknown
The Enemies
Nicolae Jetty Carpathia,
mid-thirties; former president of Romania;
former secretary-general, United Nations; self-appointed Global
Community potentate; assassinated in Jerusalem; resurrected at GC
palace complex, New Babylon; visiting Jerusalem
Leon Fortunato, early fifties;
former supreme commander and Carpathia's
right hand; now Most High Reverend Father of Carpathianism, proclaiming
the potentate as the risen god; in Jerusalem with Carpathia
PROLOGUE
From The Mark
"WE CAN all keep our fingers crossed," Mac said. "I've seen those
Quasis do amazing things based solely on what the flight management
system onboard computer tells it to do. But this is a long flight on
its own, and I've asked it to do some interesting stuff, barring
turbulence."
"Cross our fingers?" Hannah said. "Only God can make this work. You're
the expert, Captain McCullum, but if this thing goes down anywhere but
deep in the Mediterranean, it won't take long for someone to discover
no one was aboard."
This plane was not free-falling toward the Mediterranean. No, this
multimillion-Nick marvel of modern technology was accelerating, her
burner cans hot, the vapor shimmering in a long trail. The strange
attitude and angle sent the craft careening toward the shore
approximately three-quarters of a mile south of the crowd.
The Quasi and ostensibly her two-man crew and two passengers slammed
the beach perfectly perpendicular at near the speed of sound. The first
impression of the shocked-to-silence crowd had to be the same as
Buck's. The screaming jet engines still resonated even after the plane
disintegrated, hidden in a billowing globe of angry black-and-orange
flames. An eerie silence swept in, followed less than half a second
later by the nauseating sound of the impact, a thundering explosion
accompanied by the roar and hiss of the raging fire.
Buck hurried to his car and phoned Rayford. "The ship is down on the
shore. No one could have survived it. On my way back to the voice that
will cry in the wilderness."
Buck was struck by an unusual emotion as he merged into traffic that
crawled toward the ancient city. It was as if he had seen his comrades
go down in that plane. He knew it was empty, yet there had been such a
dramatic finality to the ruse. He wished he knew whether it was the end
of something or the beginning of something. Could he hope the GC was
too busy to thoroughly investigate the site? Fat chance.
All Buck knew was that what he had endured in three and a half years
was a walk in the park compared to what was coming. The entire drive
back he spent in silent prayer for every loved one and Trib Force
member. Buck had little doubt that the indwelt Antichrist would not
hesitate to use his every resource to quash the rebellion scheduled to
rise against him the next day.
Buck had never been fearful, never one to back down in the face of
mortal danger. But Nicolae Carpathia was evil personified, and the next
day Buck would be in the line of fire when the battle of the ages
between good and evil for the very souls of men and women would burst
from the heavens, and all hell would break loose on earth.
Then I heard a loud voice from the
temple saying to the seven angels,
"Go and pour out the bowls of the wrath of God on the earth."
So the first went and poured out his
bowl upon the earth, and a foul
and loathsome sore came upon the men who had the mark of the beast and
those who worshiped his image.
Revelation
16:1-2
ONE
RAYFORD STEELE slept fitfully and awoke tangled in a prickly woolen
blanket, knees drawn to his chest and fists balled under his chin. He
bolted from the cot and peered out of his tiny makeshift quarters near
Mizpe Ramon in the Negev Desert.
The sun cast an eerie, orange glow, but it would soon grow harsh and
yellow, shimmering off rock and sand. The thermometer would exceed 100
degrees Fahrenheit by noon-another typical day in the United Carpathian
States.
Engaged in the riskiest endeavor of his life, Rayford had cast his lot
with God and the miracle of technology. There was no hiding a
jury-rigged airstrip on the desert floor-not from the stratospheric
cameras of the Global Community. Ridiculously vulnerable, Rayford and
his ragtag team of flying rebels-having arrived by the dozens from
around the globe-were at the mercy of the most audacious ruse
imaginable.
His comrade in the enemy's lair had planted evidence in the Global
Community database that the massive effort at Mizpe Ramon was an
exercise of the GC'S. As long as GC Security and Intelligence personnel
bought the great "lie in the sky," Rayford and his extended Tribulation
Force would continue what he called Operation Eagle. The name was
inspired by the prophesy in Revelation 12:14: "The woman was given two
wings of a great eagle, that she might fly into the wilderness to her
place, where she is nourished for a time and times and half a time,
from the presence of the serpent.
Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah, spiritual mentor of the Tribulation Force, taught
that the "woman" represented God's chosen people; the "two wings," land
and air; "her place," Petra - the city of stone; "a time" one year-thus
"a time and times and half a time" to be three and a half years; and
the "serpent," Antichrist.
The Tribulation Force believed that Antichrist and his minions were
about to attack Israeli Christians and that, when they fled, Rayford
and his recruited fellow believers would serve as agents of rescue.
He dressed in a khaki shirt and shorts and went looking for Albie, his
second-in-command. The helpers, rallied via the Internet by Rayford's
daughter, Chloe, from the safe house in Chicago, had only recently
finished the landing strip. They had alternated shifts; some were
instructed in flight plans by the same personnel who had checked them
in and verified the mark of the believer on their foreheads, while
others ran heavy equipment or toiled as laborers.
"Here, Chief," Albie said, as Rayford took in the row after row of
helicopters, jets, and even the occasional prop plane lining the far
side of the strip. "First mission accomplished."
The small, dark, former black marketer, nicknamed after his home city
of Al Basrah, wore his bogus GC deputy commander uniform and had in tow
a large young man who, Rayford was not surprised to learn, was from
California.
"George Sebastian," the tall, thick blond said, extending a powerful
hand.
"Rayf-"
"Oh, I know who you are, sir," George said. "Pretty sure everybody here
does."
"Let's hope nobody outside here does," Rayford said. "So you're Albie's
choice for chopper lead."
"Well, he, uh, asked that I refer to him as Commander Elbaz, but yes,
sir."
"What do we like about him?" Rayford asked Albie.
"Experienced. Smart. Knows how to handle a bird."
"Fine by me. Wish I had time to socialize, George,but-"
"If you have just another minute, Captain Steele .. ." Rayford glanced
at his watch. "Walk with us, George." They headed to the south end of
the new airstrip,
Rayford's eyes and ears alert for unfriendly skies.
"I'll make it quick, sir. It's just that I like to tell people how it
happened with me."
"It?"
"You know, sir."
Rayford loved these stories, but there was a time and place for
everything, and this was neither.
"Nothing dramatic, Captain. Had a chopper instructor, Jeremy Murphy,
who always told me Jesus was coming to take Christians to heaven.
'Course, I thought he was a nutcase, and I even got him in trouble for
proselytizing on the job. But he wouldn't quit. He was a good
instructor, but I didn't want a thing to do with the other stuff. I was
loving life-newly married, you know."
"Sure."
"He invited me to church and everything. I never went. Then the big day
happens. Millions missing everywhere. Smart as I'm supposed to be, I
actually tried calling him to see if my session was called off that day
'cause of all the chaos and everything. Later that night somebody found
his clothes on a chair in front of his TV."
Rayford stopped and studied George. He would have enjoyed hearing more,
but the clock was ticking. "Didn't take you long after that, did it?"
George shook his head. "I went cold. I felt so lucky I hadn't been
killed. I prayed, I mean right then, that I would remember the name of
his church. And I did, but hardly anybody was there. Anyway, I found
somebody who knew what was going on, they reminded me what Murphy had
been telling me, and they prayed with me. I've been a believer ever
since. My wife too."
"My story's almost the same," Rayford said, "and maybe one of these
days I'll have time to tell you. But-"
"Sir," the young man said, "I need another second."
"I don't want to be rude, son, but-"
"You need to hear him out, Cap," Albie said.
Rayford sighed.
George pointed to the other end of the airstrip. "I brought samples of
the cargo that's followin' me, soon as the strip can handle a
transport."
"Cargo?"
"Weapons."
"Not in the market."
"These are free, sir."
"Still-"
"Our base trained for combat," George said. "When Carpathia told the
nations to destroy 90 percent of their weapons and send the other 10
percent to him, you can imagine how that went over."
"The U.S. was the largest contributor," Rayford said.
"But I'll bet we also held on to more."
"What've you got?"
"Probably more than you need. Want to see the samples?"
----------
David Hassid sat in the front passenger seat of the rented van with his
solar-powered laptop. Leah Rose was driving. Behind her, Hannah
Palemoon sat next to Mac McCullum, while Abdullah Smith lay on his back
across the third seat. They had spent the night hidden behind a rock
outcropping a mile and a half off the main road, midway between
Resurrection Airport in Amman, Jordan, and Mizpe Ramon. The last thing
they wanted was to lead the GC to Operation Eagle.
David found on the Net that he, Hannah, Mac, and Abdullah were still
presumed dead from the airplane crash in Tel Aviv the day before, but
Security and Intelligence personnel were combing the wreckage. "How
soon before they realize we're at large?" Hannah said.
Mac shook his head. "I hope they assume we'd a been vaporized in a deal
like that. Pray they find small bits of shoes or somethin' they decide
is clothing material."
"I can't raise Chang," David said, angrier than he let on.
"I imagine the boy's busy," Mac said.
"Not for this long. He knows I need to be sure he's all
right."
"Worryin' gets us nowhere," Mac said. "Look at Smitty."
David turned in his seat. Abdullah slept soundly. Hannah and Leah had
hit it off and were planning a mobile first-aid center at the airstrip.
"We all fly back to the States when the operation is over," Leah said.
"Not me," David said, and he felt the eyes of the others. "I'm going to
Petra before anybody else even gets there. That place is going to need
a tech center, and Chang and I have already put a satellite in
geosynchronous orbit above it."
His phone chirped, and he dug it from his belt. "Hey," he heard. "You
know where I am, because I'm on schedule."
"You don't need to talk in code, Buck. Nothing's more secure than these
phones."
"Force of habit. Listen, somebody missed their rendezvous."
"Just say who, Buck. If we were going to be compromised, it's happened
already."
"Hattie."
"She was with Leah in Tel Aviv. Then she was supposed to-"
"I know, David," Buck said. "She was to check in with me at dawn today
in Jerusalem."
"The old man's there and okay?"
"Scared to death, but yeah."
"Tell him we're with him."
"No offense, David, but he knows that, and Hattie is a much bigger
problem."
"She's got her alias, right?"
"David! Can we assume the obvious and deal with the problem? She's
supposed to be here, but I haven't heard from her. I can't go looking
for her. Just let everybody know that if they hear from her, she needs
to call me."
"She crucial to your assignment?"
"No," Buck said, "but if we don't know where she is, we're going to
feel exposed."
"The GC lists her deceased, just like us." "That could be what they
want us to think they believe."
"Hang on," David said, turning to Leah. "What was Hattie supposed to do
after you two split up?"
"Disguise herself as an Israeli, blend into the crowd in Tel Aviv, go
to Jerusalem, check in with Buck, and watch for signs that Carpathia's
people recognized either Buck or Dr. Rosenzweig."
"Then?"
"Lie low in Jerusalem until everything blew up there, then head back to
Tel Aviv. Someone from the operation was going to pick her up and fly
her back to Chicago while all the attention was on Jerusalem and the
escape."
David turned back to the phone. "Maybe she got spooked in Tel Aviv and
never got to Jerusalem."
"She needs to let me know that, David. I've got to hold Chaim's hand
for a while here, so inform everybody, will you?"
A few minutes after midnight, Chicago time, Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah knelt
before his huge curved desk at the Strong Building and prayed for
Chaim. The former rabbi's confidence in his old mentor's ability to
play a modern-day Moses was only as strong as Chaim's own. And while
Rosenzweig had proved a quick and thorough study, he had left the
United North American States still clearly resisting the mantle.
Tsion's reverie was interrupted by the low tone on his computer that
could be triggered by only a handful of people around the world who
knew the code to summon him. He struggled to his feet and peered at the
screen. "Dr. Ben-Judah, I hope you're there," came the message from
Chang Wong, the teenager David had left in his place at Global
Community headquarters in New Babylon. "I am despairing for my life."
Tsion groaned and pulled his chair into place. He sat and pounded the
keys. "I am here, my young brother. I know you must feel very much
alone, but do not despair. The Lord is with you. He will give his
angels charge over you. You have much to do as the point man for all
the various activities of the Tribulation Force around the world. Yes,
it is probably too much to ask of one so young, in years and in the
faith, but we all must do what we have to. Tell me how I can encourage
and help you so you can return to the task."
"I want to kill myself."
"Chang! Unless you have purposely jeopardized our mission, you need
feel no such remorse. If you have made a mistake, reveal it so we can
all adapt. But you have satellites to manipulate and monitor. You have
records to keep in order, in case the enemy checks the various aliases
and operations. We are nearly at zero hour, so do not lose heart. You
can do this."
Chang's message came back: "I am in my room at the palace with
everything set up the way Mr. Hassid and I designed. My machinations
are filtered through a scrambler so complex that it would not be able
to unravel itself. I could end my life right now and not affect the
Tribulation Force."
"Stop this talk, Chang! We need you. You must stay in position and
adjust the databases depending upon what we encounter. Now, quickly,
please, what is the problem?"
"The problem is the mirror, Dr. Ben-Judah! I thought I could do
this! I thought the mark that was forced on me would be an
advantage. But it mocks me, and I hat it! I want to take a razor
blade and slice it from my head, then slit my wrists and let God decide
my fate."
"God has decided, my friend. You have the seal of God upon you,
according to our trusted brothers. You did not accept the mark of
Antichrist, nor will you worship him."
"But I have been studying your own writings, Doctor! The mark of the
beast brings damnation, and the Bible says we can't have both marks!"
"It says we cannot take both."
"But the heroes, the martyrs, the brave ones accepted death for the
sake of the truth! You said a true believer would be given the grace
and courage to stand for his faith in the face of the blade."
"Did you not resist? God is no liar. I have told people
that they cannot lose the mark of the seal of God and that they need
not worry they will lose heart because of their human weakness, but
that God will grant them peace and courage to accept their fate."
"That proves I am lost! I did not have that peace and courage! I
resisted, yes, but I did not speak out for God. I cried like a
baby. My father says I pleaded fear of the needle. When it
became clear they were really going to do this, I wanted to die for my
faith! I planned to resist till the end, though I knew my father would
then find out about my sister and expose her too. Right up until
the time they stuck me, I was prepared to say no, to say that I was a
believer in Christ."
Tsion slumped in his chair. Could it be true? Was it possible God
had not given Chang the power to resist unto death? And if not,
was he not truly a believer?
"Do me this favor," he tapped in slowly. "Do not do anything rash for
twenty-four hours. We need you, and there must be an
answer. I do not want to gloss over it, for I confess it puzzles
me too. Will you stay at the task and fight your temptation until I get
back to you?
Tsion stared at the screen for several minutes, worried he was already
too late.
----------
Rayford's breath caught when he saw what George Sebastian had
apparently already shown Albie. "We're not soldiers," he said.
"We're flyers."
"With these you can be soldiers too," George said. "But it' your call."
"I wish it were my call," Albie said. "If Carpathia's troops are not
our mortal enemies. . ."
George handed Rayford a weapon more than four feet long that weighed at
least thirty-five pounds and had a built-in bipod. Rayford could
barely heft it horizontally.
"Carry it nose up," George said.
"I won't be carrying it at all," Rayford said. "What in the world kind
of ammo does this thing take?"
"Fifty-caliber, Captain," George said, digging out a clip of four
six-inch bullets. "They weigh more than five ounces each, but get this,
they have a range of four miles."
"C'mon!"
"I wouldn't lie to ya. A round leaves the chamber at three thousand
feet a second, but it takes a full seven seconds to hit a target two
miles away, considering deceleration, wind, all that."
"You couldn't hope for any kind of accuracy-"
"It's on record that a guy put five rounds within three inches of each
other from a thousand yards. At two hundred yards you can put one of
these through an inch of rolled steel."
"The recoil must be-"
"Enormous. And the sound? Without an earplug you could damage your
hearing. Wanna try one?"
"Not on your life. I can't imagine a use for these monstrosities, and I
sure wouldn't want to produce a sound that would alert the GC before
the fun starts."
George pressed his lips together and shook his head. "Should have
checked with you first. I've got a hundred of 'em on the way with all
the ammo you'd need, some with incendiary tips."
"Dare I ask?"
"A primer inside makes the casing separate if it hits soft material."
"Like flesh?"
George nodded.
Rayford shook his head. "My flyers would never be able to manage these
from the air, and that's top priority."
Albie said, "We'll store them. You never know."
"Wanna see the other?" George said.
"Not if it's anything like these," Rayford said.
"It's not." George carefully set the fifty-caliber back into the cargo
hold. "These are designed to use from planes or ground vehicles," he
said, producing a lightweight rifle and tossing it to Rayford. "No
projectiles."
"Then what-?"
"It's a DEW, a directed energy weapon. From a little under half a mile
you can shoot a concentrated beam of waves that penetrates clothing and
heats any moisture on the skin to 130 degrees in a couple of seconds."
"What does it do to a man's innards?"
"Not a thing. Nonlethal."
Rayford handed it back. "Impressive," he said. "And we appreciate it.
My problem is, I don't have combat troops, and even if I did, we'd be
no match for the GC."
George shrugged. "They'll be here if you need 'em."
----------
Had the day's prospects not been so dire and Buck not so worried about
Hattie's whereabouts, he might have chuckled at the sight of Dr.
Rosenzweig. The old man opened his door to Buck's knock at the King
David Hotel wearing baggy boxer shorts, a sleeveless T-shirt, and the
sandals he was to wear with the brown robe. "Cameron, my friend,
forgive me; come in, come in." Buck was used to Rosenzweig's normal
appearance: wiry, clean shaven, slight, in his late sixties, pale for
an Israeli, and with hazel eyes and wisps of wild white hair
reminiscent of pictures of Albert Einstein. Normally the decorated
statesman and Nobel Prize winner wore wire-rimmed glasses, bulky
sweaters, baggy trousers, and comfortable shoes.
Buck found it hard to get used to his old friend with burnt amber skin,
very short dark hair, a bushy beard and mustache, deep brown contact
lenses, and a protruding chin caused by a tiny appliance in his back
teeth. "Zeke sure did a job on you," Buck said, aware that surviving a
horrific plane crash had also left its effects on Chaim.
Dr. Rosenzweig retreated to a chair near where he had laid out his
Bible and two commentaries, which he had hidden in his luggage for the
flight from the United North American States. A half glass of water sat
next to him on a lamp table. His roomy, hooded, monklike robe lay on
the bed.
"Why not dress, brother?"
The old man sighed. "I am not ready for the uniform yet, Cameron. I am
not ready for the task," Chaim said, his speech altered not only by the
appliance but also from damage to his jaw.
Buck checked the closet and found a hotel robe. "Put
this on for now," he said. "We've got a couple of hours."
Dr. Rosenzweig seemed grateful to be helped into the terry-cloth
garment, but it was white and a one-size-fits-all. The contrast between
it and his new skin color, and the hem bunching up on the floor when he
sat again, made him look no less comical.
Chaim lowered his head,then looked at the hotel name on the breast
pocket. "King David," he said."Do you not think we should have
'Patriarch Moses' sewn onto the brown one?"
Buck smiled. He could not imagine the pressure on his friend. "God will
be with you, Doctor," he said.
Suddenly Rosenzweig shuddered and slid to the floor. He turned and
knelt, his elbows on the chair. "Oh, God, oh, God," Chaim prayed,then
quickly tore off his sandals, casting them aside.
Buck himself was driven to his knees with emotion so deep he believed
he could not speak. Just before he closed his eyes he noticed the
rising sun reach between the curtains and bathe the room. He too
slipped off his shoes, then buried his face in his hands, flat on the
floor.
Chaim's voice was weak. "Who am I that I should go and bring the
children of Israel out?"
Buck, despite the heat of the day, found himself chilled and trembling.
He was overwhelmed with the conviction that he should answer Chaim, but
who was he to speak for God? He had drunk in the teaching of Dr.
Ben-Judah and overheard his counsel to Chaim on the calling of Moses.
But he had not realized that the dialogue had been burned into his
brain.
Silence hung in the room. Buck allowed himself to peek for an instant
before squeezing his eyes shut again. The room was so bright that the
orange stayed in his vision the way Chaim's question lingered in the
air. The man wept aloud.
"God will certainly be with you," Buck whispered, and Chaim stopped
crying. Buck added, "And this shall be a sign to you that God has sent
you: When you have brought the people out, you shall serve
him."
The old man said, "Indeed, when I come to the remnant of Israel and say
to them, 'The God of your fathers has sent me to you,' and they say to
me, 'What is his name?' what shall I say to them?"
Buck pressed his fingers against his temples. "As God said to Moses,"
he said, "'I Am Who I Am.' Thus you shall say to the children of
Israel, 'I Am has sent me to you. The Lord God of your fathers, the God
of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, has sent me to
you.' This is God's name forever, and this is his memorial to all
generations. 'The Lord God of your fathers has seen what has been done
to you and will bring you up out of the affliction to a land of safety
and refuge.' They will heed your voice; and you shall come to the king
of this world and you shall say to him, 'The Lord God has met with me;
and now, please, let us journey into the wilderness, that we may
sacrifice to the Lord our God.' But the king will not let you go, so
God will stretch out his hand and strike those who would oppose you."
"But suppose they will not believe me or listen to my voice?" Chaim
said, so faintly that Buck could barely hear him. "Suppose they say,
'The Lord has not appeared to you'?"
Buck rolled onto his back and sat up, suddenly frustrated and impatient
with Chaim. He stared at the old man kneeling there, and Buck's head
was abuzz, his eyes full of the color permeating the room. Buck had not
felt so close to God since he had witnessed Dr. Ben-Judah's conversing
with Eli and Moishe at the Wailing Wall. "Reach out your hand and take
the water," he said, suddenly feeling authoritative.
Chaim turned to stare at him. "Cameron, I did not know you knew Hebrew."
Buck knew enough not to argue, though he knew no Hebrew and was
thinking and forming his words in English. "The water," he said.
Chaim held his stare, then turned and grasped the glass. The water
turned to blood, and Chaim set it down so quickly that it sloshed onto
the back of his hand.
Buck said, "This is so that they may believe the Lord God has appeared
to you. Now take the water again."
Chaim timidly reached for the glass, and when he touched it, the blood
became water, even on his hand.
"Now turn your hand toward God's servant," Buck said. Chaim set the
water down again and gestured questioningly toward Buck. And Buck was
paralyzed, unable even to move his lips.
"Cameron, are you all right?"
Buck could not respond, light-headed from having stopped breathing. He
tried to signal Chaim with his eyes, but the man looked terrified.
Chaim pulled his hand back to his chest, as if afraid of its power, and
Buck dropped, gasping, his palms on the floor. When he had caught his
breath, he said, "Then it will be, if they do not believe you, nor heed
the message of the first sign, that they may believe the message of the
latter sign." "Cameron! I am sorry! I-"
But Buck continued, "And it shall be, if they do not believe even these
two signs, or listen to your voice, that you shall take water from the
river and pour it on the dry land. And the water which you take from
the river will become blood on the dry land."
Buck sat back on his haunches, hands on his thighs, exhausted.
Chaim said, "But I am not eloquent, even now since God has spoken to
me. I am slow of speech and slow of tongue."
"Who has made man's mouth?" Buck said. "Or who makes the mute, the
deaf, the seeing, or the blind? Has not the Lord? Now therefore, go,
and he will be with your mouth and teach you what you shall say."
Chaim turned away again and knelt at the chair. "O my Lord," he cried
out, "is there no other you can send?"
Buck knew the story. But there was no Aaron. Tsion was at the safe
house, not having felt led to help in person. The only other member of
the Trib Force with Jewish blood, though he had grown up in Poland, was
David Hassid, and he had his own special skills and assignment. Anyway,
there was no time to disguise him. If David suddenly appeared in
public, he would expose the others who were assumed dead in the plane
crash- at least for now.
Buck waited for God to give him an answer for Chaim, but nothing came.
TWO
JUST BEFORE 9 A.M. and about an hour east of Mizpe Ramon, David told
Leah to pull over. "I'm sorry, everyone," he said, "but I just got
something from Tsion you need to hear, and I have to get a message to
Chang. It's too hard with this thing bouncing in my lap."
"Better hide the van," Mac said. "We're pretty conspicuous."
Leah checked her mirrors, switched into four-wheel drive, and aimed
toward the sand. Abdullah sat up, fastened his seat belt, and said,
"You would think it was the end of the world."
"Hilarious," Mac said.
Leah stopped a couple of miles off the road in the shadow of a small
crag and two scraggly trees. David set his machine on the seat and
stood outside, leaning in. The others stretched, then gathered to hear
him read Tsion's copy of his back-and-forth with Chang.
"That does not sound so good," Abdullah said. "What to do?"
"I'd take a tone with that boy," Mac said.
"Just what I was thinking," David said. "Somebody update Rayford while
I'm working here."
"Got it covered," Mac said, flipping open his phone.
David wrote:
You've got time to interrupt Dr.
Ben-Judah but not to check in with
your immediate superior? You think this is a game, Chang? What happened
to the smart-aleck know-it-all who was going to handle all this in his
sleep? Nobody begrudges you your second thoughts and spiritual angst,
but you had better come to grips with the fact that you accepted this
assignment.
Bottom line, Chang, is that you don't have time for this right now. Too
many people are counting on you, and the very success of a
life-and-death operation is in your hands. Doing harm to yourself
because you can't figure out why God might have let something happen
would be the most royally selfish act you could conjure up.
Now as soon as I transmit this, I want a reply from you that you're
still on the job. If it is not forthcoming, I'll be forced to initiate
the codes that destroy your setup and all the stuff I built there and
explained to you. You know we can't risk your doing yourself in and
leaving evidence that something was amiss. We need to know Suhail
Akbar's plans on investigating the crash site. You need to hack into
Sandra's files and be sure we're up-to-date on Carpathia's schedule.
And if he holds meetings anywhere you can tap into, you've got to
direct that transmission to Chicago, to Mizpe Ramon, and to me. Where's
the 216, who's flying it, and is Carpathia using it for meetings?
Hear me, Chang. Something you wrote to Dr. Ben-Judah reminded me of
something you said to me about this whole dual mark thing. I know you
didn't take it on purpose, though you wanted me to think you got used
to it right away and see, as you called it, the "upside." But it's not
so easy, is it, when we're all so new at this and something doesn't
jibe with what God seems to say about it? Dr. Ben-Judah's the expert,
and you've got him baffled, so I won't pretend to have an answer for
you. But obviously something's not right, and I don't blame you for
wanting to find out how God sees you now.
There's no doubt in my mind that nothing can separate you from God and
his love, but you're not going to have peace until you know for sure
what really happened that morning. Now, again, let me be clear: This is
not your top priority. Most important for you is to complete the tasks
I listed above and make sure we're all safe and still undetected. Last
we knew, Carpathia was to make his public appearance in Jerusalem at
11:00 A.M. Carpathian time.
But once you're sure everything is under control and that we are all up
to speed, try the coordinates I list below. It's a long shot, but I
programmed in a string that might allow access to surveillance
equipment I did not install. It's possible there's a record, video or
audio or both, of what went on that day. The problem is that Building D
was a maintenance facility that the brass rarely, if ever, visited. I
didn't bother planting bugs there, but for all I know, something was
already in place.
You told me in person, and Dr. Ben-Judah a little while ago, that you
were trying to get out of taking the mark and were even prepared to
tell the truth right up to the time they "stuck" you. I took that to
mean up to the time you were given the mark. Maybe that is what you
meant, but that's not the way most people refer to the application of
the tattoo and the embedding of the chip. I don't know. Maybe I'm
reaching. But maybe something else was going on. You never told me what
happened from the time you got to the basement of Building D until you
got to my office. Do you remember? And if not, why not?
So, first, tell me you're there and doing your job. Give us everything
we need. Then see what you can find for Building D. Answer back as soon
as you've read this.
David transmitted the message, then let Mac read it before they headed
off for Mizpe Ramon. Mac nodded. "How much time do you give him?"
David shrugged. "Not much, but I don't want to nuke the system because
he's on a bathroom break either."
Within minutes of their return to the road, David had a reply from
Chang: "Following orders. And, Mr. Hassid, I thought the mark was
administered in the basement of the palace. Blueprints show Building D
several hundred yards from here. I have no memory of having been there.
And by being 'stuck,' I meant the anesthetic they gave me prior to the
procedure. I thought that was done in the palace too."
----------
Rayford was encouraged to hear how close the Quasi Two quartet and Leah
were to Mizpe Ramon. He told Mac about the weapons George Sebastian was
having flown in.
"Smitty will want to see those," Mac said. "He was a combat man before
he flew fighters, you know."
Rayford hadn't known, and he could hear Abdullah in the background,
demanding to know what they were talking about.
"Just keep a rein on that camel there, desert boy," Mac said.
"You watch it, Texas-cowboy boy. I will learn some slurs about you and
torment your ancestors."
"Just a minute, Ray," Mac said. "Smitty, you mean my descendants. My
ancestors are dead."
"So much the better. I will make them turn over in their tombs."
"Albie's a gun guy too," Rayford said. "But I've had my fill. Anyway, I
need both him and Abdullah in the air."
He was glad to hear of Leah and Hannah's plans, but he fell silent at
the news that David wanted to precede everyone to Petra. In the
background he heard Hassid say, "I wanted to tell him that myself, Mac."
But as Rayford turned it over in his mind, David's setting up Petra for
Chaim and the Israeli believers made sense. He asked Mac what anyone
knew about Carpathia's latest plans. Mac brought him up-to-date on the
troubles with Chang.
"I need to know as soon as possible," Rayford said. "The parade or
whatever you want to call it, the desecration, and the attack could all
happen this week."
----------
Buck carried his Corporal Jack Jensen GC Peacekeeper ID, but he wore
civilian clothes and counted on his own new hair and eye color, not to
mention his severely scarred face, to throw off anyone who might
otherwise recognize him. He and Chaim left the King David by car at
9:30 and picked their way through heavy traffic to within walking
distance of the Old City. Chaim's robe was gathered at the waist by a
braid of rope, but the hem brushed the ground and hid his feet, making
it appear he was gliding.
The two were soon enveloped by the masses who lined the Via Dolorosa,
where Carpathia was expected an hour before noon. Buck was struck by
the crowds, despite the waning population around the world. The city
still showed residue from the earthquake that had leveled a tenth of
it, but nothing stopped the opportunists. On every corner hawkers
presented Carpathia memorabilia, including real and plastic fronds to
toss before him as he would make what was becoming known as his
triumphal entry.
Apparently, Nicolae Carpathia the pacifist was no more. Convoys of
tanks, military trucks, fighters and bombers on flatbed trucks, and
even missiles slowly rolled through the streets. Buck knew they
wouldn't fit within the Old City without choking the tiny
thoroughfares, but they were pervasive everywhere else.
Buck kept an eye out for Hattie and a hand on his phone, but he had
long since despaired of a reasonable explanation for her disappearance.
He tried not to think the worst, but reaching him or anyone else in the
Trib Force should have been easy for her.
Chaim trudged along beside him, hunched, hands deep in the folds of his
brown robe, his nearly bald head hidden by the hood. He had uttered not
a word since the hotel-room experience. He had merely traded the King
David terry cloth for the burlap-looking but soft flannel robe and
slipped into his sandals.
It seemed the city was short of Peacekeepers, local or international.
Many shopwindows were boarded up, and anything and everything served as
a taxi, even dilapidated private vehicles. At the occasional open
appliance store, TVs blared from the windows as onlookers gathered and
gaped. Buck put a hand on Chaim's shoulder and nodded toward such a
place. They joined the crowd to watch a replay of the crash of the
Quasi Two, coverage of rubber-gloved technicians picking through the
wreckage, and the somber statements from Potentate Carpathia, Most High
Reverend Father Leon Fortunate, Supreme Commander Walter Moon and,
finally, Security and Intelligence Director Suhail Akbar.
"Unfortunately," the latter said, "while the investigation continues,
we have been unable to confirm the evidence of any human remains. It
is, of course, possible that four loyal patriots of the Global
Community were vaporized upon impact in this tragedy. Medical personnel
tell us they would have died without pain. Once we have confirmed the
deaths, prayers will go to the risen potentate on behalf of their
eternal souls, and we will extend our sympathies to their families and
loved ones."
The news anchor intoned that further investigation revealed pilot error
on the part of Captain Mac McCullum and that a New Babylon-based
loadmaster had warned the crew of a cargo weight-and-balance problem
and had begged them not to take off.
Buck knew he should dread what was coming, but having felt the presence
of God at the King David, he was filled with courage. He didn't know
how he and Chaim were going to avoid detection or what might happen
once Carpathia had initiated his awful deed. He only wished he detected
some evidence that Chaim had derived the same confidence from what had
happened while they were on their knees.
----------
David and the others in the van listened to Suhail Akbar's conclusions
on the radio as Leah followed careful directions and pulled to within
sight of the landing strip outside Mizpe Ramon. David was moved by the
shock and sadness in the voice of Tiffany, his assistant, as she was
interviewed about him. He wished he could tell her he was all right,
but he feared some might already suspect that.
He embraced Rayford, shook hands with Albie, and introduced Hannah all
around. As the rest were briefed on plans wholly dependent on the
unpredictable Carpathia, David was pointed to Rayford's quarters, where
he cleared a table and set up his computer to monitor Chang Wong's
success at keeping up with the potentate.
The young man had succeeded in getting the latest copy of Carpathia's
itinerary. It showed a meeting including NC, LF, WM, SA, and LH on the
FX at 1000 hours. "I know that's now," Chang reported, "but I'm lost
after the initials for the four we know. Help?"
"I don't know LH either," David wrote back, "but come on, smart boy. Go
phonetic and assume FX is the Phoenix and patch me in there."
"I've got the Akbar press conference downloaded. You want that first?"
"Priorities, man! The press conference was broadcast internationally."
David rustled through his bag for earphones and was slipping them on
just as Chang made the connection to the Phoenix. He felt the ambience
of the idle plane, and Chang transmitted an inset screen listing GC
replacements for David, Mac, and Abdullah. "A. Figueroa for ' you,"
Chang wrote. "Know him? Apparently they're not replacing Nurse
Palemoon. Still no idea who LH is."
"No need to prolong this meeting with Hut." That was clearly Carpathia.
"Get on with it."
"Right away, Excellency," Moon said. "Leon, uh, Reverend Fortunate
would like to update you on the image and the animal."
"I just saw him. Where is he?"
"The head, sir. Feeling some discomfort."
"What is the problem?"
"I don't know."
"He was sitting right here a moment ago, Walter."
"Squirming."
"About what?"
"I'm sorry, sir. I-"
"Well, find out, would you? And get Akbar and Hut in here now."
David heard Moon on a walkie-talkie, directing someone to "let Akbar
and Hut board. And have the purser check on Reverend Fortunate."
"Come back?"
"Fortunato. First-class can."
Carpathia roared with laughter in the background. "An apt description,
Mr. Moon!"
"I didn't mean that, sir. I was just-"
"Can we get on with this, Walter? Should Fortunato not find his way
back here, what is he going to tell me about the image and the animal?"
"He didn't tell me, Lordship, but he seemed very excited."
"Until he went to the bathroom in discomfort."
"Exactly."
After a few seconds of silence, Carpathia barked, "Walter, tell Suhail
if he does not have his new man aboard in thirty seconds-"
"Supreme Potentate Carpathia, sir, Security and Intelligence Director
Suhail Akbar of Pakistan and Global Community Morale Monitor Chief
Loren Hut of Canada."
Akbar said, "Forgive the delay, Potentate, but-"
"Sit, both of you. Director Akbar, where did you find this tall
specimen and why is he not still a rodeo cowboy in Calgary?"
David noticed that Carpathia had pronounced the city with emphasis on
the second syllable, just like the locals.
"I enjoy ropin' dissidents more," the young man said.
Carpathia laughed. "I was not speaking to you, Chief Hut, but-"
"Sorry."
"-you saved yourself with that answer. Got everything you need?"
"Yes, sir."
"Yes, Potentate," Carpathia corrected. "Sir will not cut it when
addressing your risen-"
"Absolutely, Excellency, Lordship, Potentate. I was told. I just
misspoke there."
"You would mock me?"
"No, sir! Potentate!"
"I asked you a question."
"I would not mock-"
"Whether you have what you need, imbecile! Honestly, Director Akbar,
this is the best we could do?"
"He is quite accomplished and decorated, Excellency, and merely too
intimidated in your presence to exhibit the loyalty he's known for."
"Indeed?"
"Yes, sir, Potentate. I'm loyal to you and always have been."
"And you worship me?"
"Whenever I can."
Carpathia chuckled. "Is every Morale Monitor armed, Hut?"
"Here in Israel, yes, they are. And everywhere else, they will be by
the end of next week."
"Why the delay?"
"The sheer numbers. But we have the weapons. It's just a matter of
getting 'em to everyone."
"Your top priority is here, Hut. You understand that."
"Absolutely."
"And then it is to arm every one of your troops."
"Yes."
"What is the male-female ratio among the monitors?"
"About sixty-forty males, Excellency."
"About?"
"It's almost exactly fifty-eight to forty-two."
"Excellent. Leon! You're back!"
"Forgive me, Lordship."
"Sit, please. Meet-"
"I'd rather stand, if you don't mind, Excellency. And I have met Mr.
Hut. Impressive young man."
"Yes, well, I am glad you find him so. I will decide for myself by the
end of next week when I learn whether he has accomplished his task. And
I will be interested to know how he handles incorrigibles here."
"In Israel, sir, Potentate?" Hut said.
"That is what 'here' would mean, yes."
"I just can't imagine anybody givin' you a problem here, but if they
do-"
David heard Carpathia suck in a breath. "Yes!" he hissed. "Tell me,
Hut, what you have in store for people who would be so impudent as to
oppose me here in the Holy City."
"They would be immediately apprehended and incarcerated!"
"Wrong!" Carpathia shouted. "Wrong answer! Akbar, I swear, if you do
not-"
David could hear Akbar whispering urgently. Then an earnest Loren Hut:
"I would have them killed, Potentate. On the spot. Or I would kill them
myself!"
"And how would you do this?"
"Probably shoot them."
"Where?"
"In the street. In public. In front of everybody."
"I mean, where on their body?"
"Their body?"
"Where would you shoot them?" Carpathia was speaking quickly now, his
delivery liquid, as if savoring the mere thought.
"In the heart or in the head, Potentate, for a sure kill."
"Yes! No! You have how many rounds in your personal side arm?"
"Me? I'm carryin' a semiautomatic handgun with a nine-round clip."
"Use it all!"
"All?"
"Start with the hands. First one, and when they grab it, the other. As
they scream and dance and turn and try to flee, shoot first one foot,
then the other."
"I see."
"Do you? As they lie howling and others abandon them in fear, you still
have five rounds, do you not?" "
"Yes." Hut sounded terrified.
"Both knees, each shoulder. Particularly painful. Make them change
their mind, Hut. Make them say they love me and that they are sorry
they opposed me. And you know what to do with the final round."
"Heart?"
"A cliche! No creativity!" David heard the leather seat squeak and
imagined Carpathia shifting to act this out. "You put the hot muzzle of
the weapon to their forehead, right where their mark should be. And you
ask if they are prepared to pledge their loyalty. And even if they
scream to the heavens that they have seen the light, you give them
their own mark. It will be the only round they do not hear or feel. And
then what?"
"And then?"
"What do you do, Hut? With a dead victim at your feet, nine rounds in
or through the body, surely you do not leave the carcass in the street."
"No, I'd have him hauled off."
"To the guillotine!"
"Sir? Potentate?"
"The price of disloyalty is the head, Hut!"
"But they are-"
"Already dead, of course. But the world is clear on the choice and the
consequence, friend. Dead or not, a disloyal citizen sacrifices his
head."
"All right."
"Did you know, Hut, that when a live victim is beheaded, the heart can
continue to beat for more than half an hour?"
Apparently Hut was stunned to silence.
"It is true. That is a medical fact. Well, we would not be able to test
it with a victim you riddled with bullets, would we?"
"No."
"But one day we will get the chance. I look forward to it. Do you?"
"No."
"You do not? I hope you are not too timid for your job, son."
"I'm not. I'll shoot your bad guys and chop their heads off, but I
don't need to check the other victims to see if their-"
"Do you not? I do! This is life and death, Hut! Nothing is purer! I
have come to give life! But to the one who chooses to place his loyalty
elsewhere? Well, he has chosen death. What could be so stark, so clear,
so black-and-white?"
"I understand, Potentate."
"Do you?"
"I think so."
"You will."
"Yes."
"Now go. Big week ahead. Be prepared."
David, chilled and disgusted, scribbled himself a note. It would be
just like Carpathia to milk this for days.
He heard Carpathia tell Moon to see Akbar and Hut out and to leave him
alone with Fortunate. "Excuse us for a moment, would you?" he said to
others apparently attending to them in the cabin. After a beat, "Leon,
do you not agree that fear is a form of worship?"
"In your case, certainly, Excellency. The fear of our god is the
beginning of wisdom."
"I like that. Biblical, is it not?"
"Yes, Lordship."
"Sit, Leon, please!"
"I'd like to, but-well, all right."
Leon let out a tiny cry as he settled.
"What is it, my friend? Food disagreeing with you?"
"No, excuse me, but-"
Carpathia snickered. "A true friend feels free to scratch himself in
front of his risen potentate."
"I am so sorry, Excellency."
"Think nothing of it. You are in such discomfort because your hip
itches?"
"I'm afraid it's more than that, sir. But I'd rather not-"
"Bring me up-to-date on your assignments, then."
"The animal is in place."
"You may feel free to call it what it is, Leon." "The pig."
"Oh, I hear it is much more than a pig. A hog! A sow! A huge, ugly,
snorting, smelly beast." "Yes, sir."
"I cannot wait to see it." "Anytime you wish."
"Well, I am due aboard her not long from now, am I not?"
"Yes, sir. But you would have slipped off." "Would have?"
"I had a saddle made for you, Excellency."
"Leon! You do not say! A saddle for a pig?"
"And the biggest pig I've ever seen."
"I should hope so! How did you do it?"
"People are happy to serve you, Potentate."
"It must be wide."
"I worry you will feel as if you are doing the splits."
"You look as if you would like to, Leon. Stand if you must. There you
go! And yes! Scratch if you must!"
"I'm so sorry, Excellency."
"Why, you are wriggling like a schoolboy at his first dance!"
"Forgive me, I'd better head back to the-"
"Go then, by all means. What is it? A bite? An itch can be terribly
annoying."
"I wish that's all it was, Excellency. It's quite painful too. When I
scratch it, it hurts worse. I am miserable."
"You must have been bitten."
"Perhaps. Excuse me."
"Go!"
"I wanted to tell you about the image."
"And I want to hear it, but I cannot stand to see you in such agony."
"I will return before you must leave and tell you about it."
David sat shaking his head. How he wished he could see what was going
on. But the theater of the mind was that much better anyway. Carpathia
called someone to fetch Walter Moon, and then he had Moon "bring me
that costume."
Moon told him the caravan to Pilate's court would be leaving inside ten
minutes. "Did Reverend Fortunate run down the sites for you?"
"No. He seems to be in considerable discomfort."
"Still? Well, we go from Pilate's court to the street. A ways down we
have Viv Ivins in place to meet with you as a stand-in for your
mother." David heard the rustle of paper-a map, he assumed. "Here's
where we have a young woman come out and wipe your face; then two stops
later you exhort the women of Jerusalem. And then, after Golgotha, you
see Viv again, playing your mother. Then it's on to the Garden Tomb."
Someone seemed to be making a sound through his teeth, and David
couldn't imagine Moon doing that in front of Carpathia. Finally Nicolae
said, "All right, cut out half of these. This part, and that one with
Viv, and this, and the one with the young woman and the speech to the
women, this one, and the last one with Viv."
"May I ask-"
"The point is reenacting, Walter. Half of these never happened."
"We don't know that. They're tradi-"
"They never happened. Believe me. I know."
"You'll want to change clothes now?"
"As soon as Leon is finished in the-ah, Leon! Feeling better?"
"Sadly, no."
"So what is it?"
"I'd rather not talk about this with you, sir."
"Nonsense! So is it a bite?"
"I don't think so, sir. But it's large and painful and infected."
"And it is right there?"
"Yes." Leon sounded miserable.
"Poor man! A sore on your left-"
"Yes. On my, uh-on my behind."
Carpathia seemed to be stifling a giggle. "You must tell me about the
image."
"On the way, sir. I was hoping you'd notice."
"Notice?"
"My mark."
"Let me see! On your hand! Striking! Two-one-six! Excellent. Thank you,
my friend. Does it hurt?"
"I wouldn't know. Because of the, uh-"
"Yes, well. . ."
"Anyway, I'll show you the chosen image. It's life-size and gold and
beautiful. And when I had taken the mark of loyalty, I fell before it
and worshiped."
"Bless you, Leon. And may you heal quickly."
THREE
HATTIE KNELT in her hotel room in Tel Aviv, thanking God for all she
had learned from Tsion Ben-Judah in such a short time. She thanked him
for Leah and for Chaim and especially for Buck, whom she had met even
before he became a believer. She thanked God for Rayford, who first
told her about Christ. She thanked him for Albie who, for some reason,
cared so much for her.
As she prayed, she became aware of someone standing in her room. Here
she was, one who always checked everywhere before locking herself in.
No one else could have been there. Yet the sound of his words made her
lower her face to the floor as if in a deep sleep. Suddenly a hand
touched her, which made her tremble. And a voice said, "O daughter, you
are greatly beloved of God. Understand the words I speak to you, and
stand upright, for I have been sent to you."
Hattie had read Dr. Ben-Judah's story of being spoken to in a dream,
and she stood, shaking. The voice said, "Do not fear, for from the
first day you humbled yourself before your God, your words were heard.
I have come because of your words."
"May I know who speaks to me?" Hattie managed.
"I am Michael."
Hattie was too terrified to say anything eloquent. She said, "What are
you supposed to tell me?"
He said, "I have come to make you understand what will happen in these
latter days." Hattie felt so privileged she couldn't say anything. And
Michael added, "O daughter greatly beloved, fear not! Peace be to you;
be strong, yes, be strong! Accept not the blasphemy of the evil one and
his false prophet. If you are wise, you shall shine like the brightness
of the firmament. Those who turn many to righteousness shall shine like
the stars forever and ever. Many shall be purified, and made white and
refined, but the wicked shall do wickedly; and none of the wicked shall
understand, but the wise shall understand."
Hattie sat panting. She took the message to mean she was to speak out
against the lies of Antichrist. She prayed that God would give her the
courage, because she could only imagine what would happen. She couldn't
sleep and asked God if she was deluded. "Why me?" she said. "There are
so many older in the faith and better equipped to do such a thing."
Hattie went to her computer and e-mailed Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah, relaying
the entire incident. She set the message to be delivered to him after
she would have a chance to confront Carpathia the next day, along the
Via Dolorosa, she assumed. She concluded,
Perhaps I should have consulted you rather than scheduling this to be
sent to you after the fact, but I feel directed to exercise faith and
believe God. I look at what I've written and I don't even sound like
myself. I know I don't deserve this any more than I deserved God's love
and forgiveness.
Maybe this is all silly and will not happen. If I chicken out, it will
not have been of God and I will intercept this before it gets to you.
But if you receive it, I assume I will not see you until you are in
heaven. I love you and all the others, in Christ.
Your sister,
Hattie Durham
----------
Rayford gathered the troops at the airstrip. He introduced the Fatal
Four and explained their roles. "Deputy Commander Elbaz," he said,
referring to Albie, "will ferry Mr. Hassid to Petra, where he will
begin setting up the communications center. Jewish by blood, Mr. Hassid
plans to stay with the displaced believers."
A hand went up, an African's. "Is Hassid the one we have to thank for
being able to stand here today?"
"Among many," Rayford said. "But it's safe to say that without the GC
thinking this is their own operation, we'd be getting strafed right
now."
Someone else asked, "How realistic is it that this can last?"
"We're in no-man's-land," Rayford said. "Once the fleeing Israelis are
followed here, it will be obvious what we are doing. As you know, the
healthy will walk. But it is quite a journey, and the GC should quickly
overtake them. We believe God will protect them. The elderly, the
toddlers, and the infirm will need rides. You will recognize them by
the mark of the believer and probably also by the fear on their faces.
Anyone arriving here in any manner should be transported immediately to
Petra by helicopter. Some of these birds have huge capacities, so fill
'em up. Petra is about fifty miles southeast of here. You all have the
flight plans."
"It sounds like a death flight," someone called out.
"By any human standard, it is," Rayford said. "But we are the wings of
the eagle."
"The co-op didn't call for food or clothing," someone said. "How will
these people survive?"
"Anyone want to address that?" Rayford said, and several talked over
each other, explaining that God would provide manna and water and that
clothes would not wear out.
Finally Rayford raised a hand. "One thing we don't know is timing.
Carpathia is on schedule to begin down the Via Dolorosa at 1100 hours.
That will end at the Garden Tomb. Whether he will speak from there or
head for the temple, we don't know. We've heard that the winning image
of the potentate has been chosen and moved to the Temple Mount, where
people are already gathering to worship it and take the mark of
loyalty."
"Of the beast, you mean!"
"Of course. And many want to do that with Carpathia present. When he
learns the crowds are waiting for him, he'll want to be there."
"Are your people in place, Captain Steele?"
"As far as we know. The only one we have not heard from is not crucial
to the operation, unless she has been compromised."
"When will Carpathia be opposed?"
"Our man may debate him before he enters the temple. Who knows? The
crowd may oppose him-at their peril, of course. You must remember, it
is not just Jewish and Gentile believers and unbelievers in Jerusalem.
There are also Orthodox Jews who do not embrace Jesus as their Messiah
but who have never accepted Carpathia as deity either. They could very
well oppose him and refuse to take the mark. Then, of course, there are
many undecided."
"They'll decide soon, won't they?"
"Likely," Rayford said. "And many will decide the wrong way. Without
Christ, they will succumb to fear, especially when they see the
consequences of opposing Carpathia. Okay, it's time for transportation
troops to head toward Israel. When the time comes, help anyone who
needs it."
"And if we are stopped?"
"You're on your own," Rayford said.
"I'm going to tell them I'm on my way to get the mark of loyalty."
"That's lying," someone else shouted.
"I have no problem lying to Carpathia's people!"
"I do!"
Rayford held up a hand again. "Do what God tells you to do," he said.
"We're depending on him to protect his chosen people and those who are
here to help them."
----------
Buck found a perch overlooking Pilate's court behind several thousand
cheering supplicants. The elderly Rosenzweig appeared to gasp for
breath without making a sound. Sweat appeared on his forehead, and Buck
thought it a credit to Zeke that it did not affect the old man's phony
color. This was more than makeup.
Still, Chaim had not spoken since they left the hotel, even when Buck
merely asked how he was doing. He only shrugged or nodded. "You'd tell
me, wouldn't you, if there was a problem?"
Chaim nodded miserably, looking away.
"God will be with you."
He nodded slightly again. But Buck noticed he was trembling. Was it
possible they had chosen the wrong Moses? Could Tsion have
miscalculated? Tsion himself would have been so much better, having
spoken in public for so many years as a rabbi and a scholar. Chaim was
brilliant and fluent in his own field, but to expect this ancient,
tiny, quaking man with the weak-and perhaps now nonexistent-voice to
call down the Antichrist, to rally the very remnant of Israel, to stand
against the forces of Satan? Buck wondered if he himself would have
been a better choice. Despite Chaim's almost comical getup, he appeared
not even to be noticed by the crowd. How could he command an audience?
Buck had worried what he would say or do if GC Peacekeeping forces or
Morale Monitors checked for his mark of loyalty. But loudspeaker trucks
threaded their way through the streets, announcing that all citizens
"are expected to display the mark of loyalty to the risen potentate.
Why not take care of this painless and thrilling obligation while His
Excellency is here?"
Many in the crowd already had the mark, of course, but others talked
among themselves about where the nearest loyalty administration center
was. "I'm taking mine at the Temple Mount today," a woman said, and
several agreed.
Buck was amazed at the number of men and women who carried toddlers
waving real and fake palm branches. Someone passed out sheets with the
lyrics to "Hail Car-pathia," and when people spontaneously broke into
song, others assumed Carpathia had appeared and began a rousing ovation.
Finally Buck spotted a motorcade, led and followed by GC tanks topped
with revolving blue and red and orange lights. Between the tanks were
three oversized black vehicles. When the convoy stopped, a deafening
cheer rose. The first vehicle disgorged local and regional dignitaries,
then Most High Reverend Father Leon Fortunato in full clerical regalia.
Buck stared as the man straightened his robe, front and back, and
slowly continued smoothing it in back. Finally he kept his left hand
just below his hip as he walked, clearly trying to hide it but unable
to keep from massaging an apparently tender spot.
The second vehicle produced GC brass, including Akbar and Moon, and
then, to a renewed burst of applause and waving, Viv Ivins. From more
than a hundred yards away, she stood out among the dark-suited men. Her
white hair and pale face appeared supported by a column of sky blue, a
natty suit tailored to her short, matronly frame. She carried her head
high and moved directly to a small lectern and microphone, where she
held both hands aloft for silence.
All eyes had been on the third vehicle, its doors still closed, though
the driver stood guard at the rear left and Akbar at the rear right,
hand on the handle. Buck noticed that while the attention refocused on
Viv Ivins, Leon went to work on his backside, riffling his fingers over
the area. He couldn't stop, even when Ms. Ivins introduced him as "our
spiritual leader of international Carpathianism, the Reverend
Fortunato!"
He muted the applause with his free hand, then asked everyone to join
him in singing. He began directing with both hands, but Buck wondered
if anyone in the crowd missed it when he kept directing with the right
hand and scratching with the left.
Hail Carpathia, our lord and risen king; Hail Carpathia, rules o'er
everything. We'll worship him until we die; He's our beloved Nicolae.
Hail Carpathia, our lord and risen king.
Buck felt conspicuous not singing, but Chaim seemed not to care what
anyone thought. He merely bowed his head and stared at the ground. When
Leon urged the people to "sing it once more as we welcome the object of
our worship," people clapped and waved as they sang. Buck, ever the
wordsmith, changed the lyrics on the spot and sang:
Fail, Carpathia, you fake and stupid thing;
Fail, Carpathia, fool of everything.
I'll hassle you until you die;
You're headed for a lake of fire.
Fail, Carpathia, you fake and stupid thing.
Finally Suhail Akbar opened the car door with a flourish and a deep
bow, and Carpathia bounded out alone. The crowds gasped, then roared
and applauded at the youthful man wearing gold sandals and an
iridescent white robe, cinched at the waist with a silver belt that
seemed to glow with its own light source. As bodyguards in sunglasses
and black suits, hands clasped before them, formed a half circle behind
him, Nicolae stood with eyes closed, face beatifically pointed toward
the clouds and palms outstretched as if eager to embrace everyone at
once.
Buck stole a glance at Chaim, who merely squinted at Antichrist in the
distance, his face a mix of sadness and disgust.
As the vehicles discreetly pulled away, a camouflage canvas-covered
military truck slowly rolled to within twenty feet of Carpathia. Buck
saw Fortunate kneel and reach under his robe to vigorously scratch his
ankle.
Two uniformed GC Peacekeepers lowered a ramp from the truck; then one
jumped onto the trailer and the other reached for a dangling rope. One
pulling, the other pushing, they brought into view a monstrous pink sow
that, despite its enormous bulk, daintily stepped down the ramp and
turned slowly to face Carpathia. The animal, which had clearly been
drugged, reacted lethargically to the mayhem.
A black leather strap with a flat leather pad and rounded, covered
stirrups was fastened around its middle. Carpathia approached and
cupped the pig's fleshy face in his hands, looking over his shoulder to
the crowd, which was now laughing and whocping in frenzy. One of the
Peacekeepers handed him what appeared to be a noose, which Carpathia
draped around the sow's neck.
Then, with one hand on the rope and the hem of his own garment-which he
hiked up to his knee-and the other steadied by a Peacekeeper, Nicolae
placed his left foot in a stirrup and swung his right over the pig's
back. He let go of the Peacekeeper's hand and smoothed his robe back
down over his legs, held :he rope with both hands, and looked again to
the crowd for a response. The pig had moved not an inch uncer Nicolae's
weight, and as he yanked on the rope, tightening the knot around its
neck, the spindly legs felt for purchase on the pavement and slowly
turned to move the other direction. Nicolae waved as the crowd exulted.
"I don't get it!" a man in front of Buck said, his accent German.
"What's he doing?"
"Putting all previous religions in their places, Fried-rich!" his wife
said, her eyes glued to the scene. "Even Christianity. Especially
Christianity."
"But what's with the pig?"
"Christianity has Jewish roots," she said, still not looking at him.
"What's more offensive to a Jew than an animal he's not allowed to eat?"
The man shrugged, and finally she turned to look at him. "It's hardly
subtle."
"That's what I'm thinking! You'd think he'd have more class."
"Hey," she said, "you come back from the dead, and you can define class
any way you want."
----------
The spectacle was broadcast internationally on radio and television and
via the Internet. David followed it on his computer as Albie
helicoptered him toward Petra. Carpathia's brazenness shouldn't have
surprised him, but with relatives in Israel and childhood memories of
the place, the whole pageant gave him a headache. David's scalp itched,
but he dared not scratch it. He pressed his palm over the healing area,
which reminded him of Hannah's treating him. That, of course, reminded
him of what he was doing when he had collapsed-searching for his
missing fiancee in the aftermath of Carpathia's resurrection-and he
felt the familiar ache for Annie. He would see her again in less than
three and a half years, but that made the second half of the
Tribulation seem even longer. If he stayed in Petra, it would be that
long before he saw Hannah again too.
David envied Buck Williams and his marriage. He couldn't wait to meet
Chloe, the brain behind the International Commodity Co-op. Besides
creating an underground where believers would be able to buy and sell
from each other when they were restricted from world markets, she had
almost single-handedly brought together the personnel for Operation
Eagle without having met them. In a cooler behind Albie was food enough
to last David until the fleeing Israelis joined him. Maybe God would
feed David with manna before the others arrived. He hoped bringing food
was not evidence of faithlessness.
Chloe Williams had arranged for the shipment of the latest high-tech
computer equipment from various parts of the world, and that too was in
the cargo hold. David could only guess how long it would take him and
Albie to unload. He studied an aerial sketch of the area and wondered
where he would set up and where he would live. "This place sure doesn't
look like it could house all the believers in Israel."
"It won't," Albie said. "We're estimating a million people will need
refuge. Petra will hold about a quarter of that."
"What do you plan to do with the rest?"
"Expand the borders, that's all. The co-op has tents for the others."
"Will they be safe? Outside Petra, I mean?"
Albie shook his head. "There's only so much we know, brother. This is a
faith mission."
----------
At a little after three in the morning in Chicago, Tsion lay with his
hands behind his head on the cot in his study. He fought sleep as he
watched the broadcast on his computer monitor. Hearing voices in the
commons area, he padded out to find Chloe, Kenny on her lap, watching
television.
"Do you believe this?" he said.
"Dis!" Kenny said, and Chloe shushed him.
She pressed her lips together. "I wish I were there."
"You should be pleased with what God has allowed you to accomplish,
Chloe. Every report says things are going like clockwork."
"I know. And I've learned what strangers can do when they have a bond."
Tsion sat on the floor. "The vehicle advance should be underway by now."
"It is," she said. "And it's one of the riskiest parts. We didn't have
time to put GC insignias on the vehicles."
"God knows," Tsion said.
"Gott!" Kenny said.
"That's God in German, you know," Tsion said.
"I doubt he's bilingual," Chloe said. "But apparently Buck is. Never
studied another language and now he's speaking Hebrew without even
knowing it."
----------
It was clear to Buck that Carpathia had decided not to address the
crowds until either the Garden Tomb or the Temple Mount. All along the
Via Dolorosa he confused many by skipping traditional sites, and the
people sang and chanted and cheered. Chaim seemed to move more and more
slowly, and Buck worried about his health.
The drugged pig was even weaker, however, and the milling throngs found
it hilarious somehow when her front legs buckled and she dropped to her
knees, nearly pitching Carpathia on his head. They laughed and laughed
as aides rushed to help Carpathia off the animal. He formed a gun with
his thumb and forefinger and pretended to pop the sow where she rested.
Then he dragged a finger across his own neck, as if remembering the
actual plan for the porker.
Nicolae strode on while the military truck pulled into view and half a
dozen Peacekeepers worked on getting the pig back on four feet and into
the trailer. The potentate jogged from the central bus station area up
to the traditional site of Calvary, and it was all Buck could do to
watch. He was grateful there was no mock crucifixion, but still it
turned his stomach to see Carpathia stand at the edge of the Mount and
again spread his arms as if embracing the world.
Suddenly Fortunato stepped beside his boss and tried to mimic his pose.
He could hold it only so long before having to scratch his backside or
his ankle. Some in the crowd seemed to develop sympathetic itches.
"Behold the lamb who takes away the sins of the world!" Fortunato
bellowed.
Buck gritted his teeth and looked away, noticing that Chaim's breath
now came in short gasps.
The sky blackened, and people pulled their collars up and looked around
for shelter. "You need not move if you are loyal to your risen ruler!"
Fortunato said. "I have been imbued with power from on high to call
down fire on the enemies of the king of this world. Let the loyalists
declare themselves!"
Buck froze. While thousands jumped and screamed and waved, he stood
stock-still, fearing that just about anyone would be able to tell he
opposed Carpathia. Chaim crossed his arms and stared directly up at
Fortunato, as if daring the man to strike him dead.
"Today you shall have opportunity to worship the image of your god!"
Fortunato shouted, but he could be seen only when lightning flashed.
Buck saw rapturous looks on the faces of the crowd. "But now you have
opportunity to praise him in person! All glory to the lover of your
souls!"
Thousands knelt and raised their arms to Nicolae, who remained with his
hands outstretched, drinking in the worship.
"How many of you will receive the mark of loyalty even this day at the
Temple Mount?" Fortunato implored, now scratching in three places,
including his stomach.
Buck stared at the strobelike image of Carpathia's pitiful sycophant,
wondering if he would be revealed and struck dead by the man whose
power came from the pit of hell.
Thousands rose from their knees to wave, to assure the leader of
Carpathianism that they would be there, taking the mark in the shadow
of the image. That at least made Buck and Chaim less conspicuous.
"My lord, the very god of this world, has granted me the power to know
your hearts!" Fortunato said. The people jumped and waved all the more.
"Not true," Chaim whispered. Buck leaned close.
"Carpathia-Antichrist-Satan is not omniscient. He cannot tell his False
Prophet what he himself cannot know."
Buck narrowed his eyes at Chaim. So this was it? This was the
opposition? This was Moses standing against Pharaoh? Buck gestured as
if Chaim should shout it out, make it clear. But Chaim looked away.
"I know if your heart is deceitful!" Fortunato said between claps of
thunder, rubbing his body in the flashing light. "You shall not be able
to stand against the all-seeing eye of your god or his servant!"
The hymn to Nicolae spontaneously erupted again, but Buck did not have
the heart to sing even his own lyrics.
Suddenly the crowd fell deathly still, and the thunder diminished to
low rolls that seemed to come from far away. Fortunato stood surveying
the massive throng, still scratching, but his eyes piercing. Carpathia
had somehow maintained his pose for several minutes. Heads and eyes
turned toward a high, screeching voice from the base of Golgotha. The
crowd evaporated from around a woman who stood pointing at Carpathia
and Fortunato.
"Liars!" she railed. "Blasphemers! Antichrist! False Prophet! Woe unto
you who would take the place of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, the Lamb of
God who takes away the sin of the world! You shall not prevail against
the God of heaven!"
Buck was stricken. It was Hattie! Chaim dropped to his knees, clasped
his hands before his face, and prayed, "God, spare her!"
"I have spoken!" Fortunato shouted.
"Yours is the empty, vain tongue of the damned!" Hattie called out. She
lifted her pointing finger from the two on the hill and raised it above
her head. "As he is my witness, there is one God and one mediator
between God and men, the man Christ Jesus!"
Fortunato pointed at her, and a ball of fire roared from the black sky,
illuminating the whole area. Hattie burst into flames. The masses fell
away, screaming in terror as she stood burning, mighty tongues of fire
licking at her clothes, her hair, enveloping her body. As she seemed to
melt in the consuming blaze, the clouds rolled back, the lightning and
thunder ceased, and the sun reappeared.
A soft breeze made Hattie topple like a statue. People gaped as she was
quickly reduced to ash, her silhouette branded onto the ground. As the
fire died and the smoke wafted, Hattie's remains skittered about with
the wind.
Fortunato drew the attention back to himself. "Marvel not that I say
unto you, all power has been given to me in heaven and on the earth!"
Carpathia carefully made his way down the Place of the Skull, and the
silent crowds moved to follow. As people passed the smoldering ashes,
some spit, and others kicked at the powdery stuff.
Buck was overwhelmed with memories of meeting Hattie, of introducing
her to Carpathia. He turned and grabbed the praying Rosenzweig by the
shoulder and yanked him to his feet. "That should have been you," he
hissed. "Or me! We should not have left her with the responsibility!"
He let go of the man's robe and marched off toward the Garden Tomb, not
caring whether Chaim kept up with him. If Rosenzweig would not accept
the mantle, despite having been a believer even longer than Hattie,
maybe Buck was being called to stand in the gap. He didn't know what
Carpathia or Fortunate had in store for the tomb, but this time, if
need be, he would be the one to oppose Antichrist.
----------
Rayford hadn't felt as motivated or useful since he had first become a
believer. Supervising the advance of his Operation Eagle troops, he had
kept just an intermittent eye on what Carpathia was up to. It would be
clear when Chaim revealed himself and sent the remnant toward refuge.
That would be his cue to start watching for the return to Mizpe Ramon
and the airlift to safety.
But now his phone was alive with messages. He took Chloe's call first.
"What was that?" she asked. "Clearly Fortunato zapped someone, but they
didn't show who!
Was it Chaim?"
"I don't know," Rayford said. "Let me call you back."
David reported the same thing just before Rayford heard from Mac and
then Abdullah. "I'll call Buck," he told them.
But Buck wasn't answering.
----------
David spent the next hour setting up near what he knew to be a "high
place," a site used centuries before by pagans who believed they were
sacrificing to their gods by being as close to heaven as possible. He
was lonely already, Albie having headed back as soon as he was
unloaded. David didn't know how long it would be before he was joined
by as many as a million others. So far he had seen only from the air
the stunning red-rock masterpiece of a city carved from stone. He
couldn't imagine what it would look like from close-up when he had the
time to explore.
No one seemed to know what happened with Fortunato and the crowd at
Calvary, and David's occasional glances at the screen merely showed the
crowds making their way to the Garden Tomb. Then he heard a tone and
stood still in the lofty quiet of the high place. Someone was trying to
reach him on his computer. David scrambled from a cave he had decided
might be his first living quarters. He reached his computer and sat
cross-legged before it. The play-by-play from Jerusalem droned on,
commentators filling time before the next event, no one specific about
what had gone on at the last site. He checked the encoded Operation
Eagle site but found nothing new.
The tone sounded again, and he switched screens to receive a summons
from Chang Wong in his apartment at the palace in New Babylon.
"I found the mother lode!" Chang had written. "Uploading so you can
celebrate with me."
----------
Supreme Commander Walter Moon was clearly not comfortable in front of a
crowd, particularly the size of the one pressing around the Garden
Tomb. A microphone and sound system had been hastily rigged up for him,
and he read nervously from notes. Buck had been among the first to
arrive, and he had lost Chaim.
The attitude of the crowd had changed. The festive, eager anticipation
had given way to dread, yet no one seemed to feel free to leave. They
had seen the power delegated to Leon Fortunate, and surely no one
wanted to give the impression they weren't following through on their
commitment to taking the mark of loyalty.
"Thank you for being with us today," Moon began. "As you may know, I'm
Global Community Supreme Commander Walter Moon, and I'm filling in
temporarily for the Most High Reverend Father Fortunato as he goes on
ahead to prepare for Potentate Nicolae Carpathia's address at the
Temple Mount an hour from now."
"Is he all right?" someone called out.
"Oh, he's better than all right," Moon said, "judging by his
performance at Golgotha." He apparently thought that would elicit a
laugh, and when it didn't, he searched his notes again to find his
place.
Buck called Chang. "We on secure phones, Mr. Wong?" he asked. "Be sure."
"Yes, sir, Mr. Williams, and I just communicated with Mr. Hassid by
computer that-"
"Sorry, kid, no time. Check with Medical and see what's happening with
Fortunato."
"I'm sorry?"
"What didn't you hear?"
"I heard you all right, sir, but I was under the impression you were
with the pageant there in Jerusalem. That's where Carpathia and
Fortunato are, along with-"
"Fortunato's disappeared and they're saying he's gone on ahead for
preparations."
"I'm on it." Buck heard him tapping at a keyboard. "Good call, Mr.
Williams," he said. Now reading, "'Classified, top secret,
director-level eyes only . . . Most High Reverend, blah, blah, blah,
under care of palace surgeon in chief, mobile unit, Jerusalem, blah,
blah.' Ah, here it is. 'Preliminary diagnosis rash, several boil-like
epidermal eruptions, testing for carbuncles.' That's all that's here
for now."
FOUR
TSION WORRIED about Chloe. She had a lot on her mind, sure, and the
pressure had to be enormous. But she seemed so distracted. No doubt she
dreaded Buck's being in yet another dangerous situation, but if Tsion
had to guess, being so far from the action frustrated her. Everyone in
the Trib Force had, at one time or another, tried to impress upon Chloe
that she was among its most crucial members and that few people
anywhere could do what she was doing. But she was a young woman of
action. She wanted to be there in the thick of it. Tsion wished he
could dissuade her.
He had enjoyed the respite from his uncomfortable cot, but while he and
Chloe monitored the boring TV feed from Jerusalem, waiting for the
fiasco to reach the Garden Tomb, Kenny had fallen asleep. Chloe looked
at Tsion apologetically as she attempted to rise with the toddler in
her arms. She poked out a free hand and he reached to pull her off the
couch. As she made her way to Kenny's crib, Tsion thought he heard
something from his study. Chang again?
He padded back and found a timed message composed two days before and
sent automatically on a schedule determined by the sender. It read:
Dr. Ben-Judah,
Please pass this along to my brothers and sisters in Christ, old
friends and new. I don't know what to make of it except that I believe
I have been called of God to risk my life for the cause. It certainly
was nothing I was seeking, and I hope you all know I have no grandiose
view of myself.
I knelt to pray in my hotel room in Tel Aviv . . .
Tsion stood, his spirit recognizing that this was no frivolous
imagining from a new believer. He bent over the screen and read,
finally groaning and making his way back out to where Chloe was
watching the end of a brief speech by Walter Moon. "I have forwarded a
message to your computer that you need to read right away," he said,
knowing his quavering voice scared her.
"Is it Buck?" she said. He shook his head. "Chaim?"
"No," he said. "Please wake the others. We will want to pray. And you
will want to call Cameron."
----------
David ignored the signal that he had a message from Tsion. That could
wait as he checked the upload from Chang. Not only had the young man
pieced together recordings from devices in the palace, starting in the
Wongs' guest apartment the morning in question, but he had also taken
the time to include a translation, where necessary, from Chinese to
English. David would check the tape with Ming later to be sure the
translation was accurate. Chang began with the news that he remembered
"only snatches of this before the so-called anesthetic. You must have
known they use no such thing."
David knew. But he hadn't known any more than Chang about what had
really gone on. Chang's pieced-together production began with the audio
of another loud argument between him and his father. Mrs. Wong kept
trying to pacify her husband and son, but she failed.
"You will be among the first to take the mark of loyalty!" the
subtitles read, as David listened to Mr. Wong fiercely whisper to the
boy in Chinese.
"I will not! You are loyal to Carpathia. I am not!"
"Do not speak such heresy to me, young man! My family is loyal to the
international government as I have always been to my superiors. And now
we know the potentate is the son of god!"
"He is not! I know no such thing! He could be the son of Satan for all
I know!"
David heard a slap and someone crashing to the floor. "That was I,"
Chang wrote.
"You saw the man resurrected! You will worship him as I do!"
"Never!"
A door slammed. Then a phone call. "Missah Moon! Son talk crazy. Say he
not want mark, but he just scared of needle. You got tranquilizer?"
"I can get a tranquilizer, Mr. Wong, but it comes in the form of an
injection."
"Injection?"
"Shot. Hypodermic needle?"
"Yes! Yes! I can do."
"You can administer the injection?" Moon said.
"Pardon?"
"Give the shot?"
"Yes! You bring!"
They rang off, and Mr. Wong apparently returned to where Chang had
locked himself in a room. "You be ready to go in ten minutes!"
"I'm not going!"
"You will go or answer to me!"
"I'm answering to you now. I'm telling you I'm not going. I don't want
to work here. I want to go home."
"No!"
"I want to talk with Mother."
"Very well! Mother will talk some sense into you."
A few minutes later, a quiet knock. "Mother?"
"Yes." The door opened. "Son, you must do what your father says. We
cannot survive in this new world without showing loyalty to the leader."
"But I don't believe in him, Mother. Neither does Ming." A long
silence. "She doesn't, Mother."
"She told me. I fear for her life. I cannot tell your father."
"I agree with her, Mother."
"You are a Judah-ite too?"
"I am, and I will say so if he tries to make me take the mark."
"Oh, Chang, don't do this. I will lose both of my children!"
"Mother, you must read what Rabbi Ben-Judah writes too! At least look
into it. Please!"
"Maybe, but you cannot cross your father today. You take the mark. If
you are right, your God will forgive you."
"It doesn't work that way. I have already made my decision."
Mr. Wong returned. "Let's go. Mr. Moon is waiting."
"Not today," Mrs. Wong pleaded. "Let Chang think about it awhile."
"No more time for thinking. He will embarrass the family."
"No! I won't! You can't make me."
Silence. Mrs. Wong: "Please, Husband."
"Very well, then. I will tell Mr. Moon not today."
"Thank you, Father."
"But someday soon."
"Thank you for your patience, Husband."
It sounded as if both parents left. Then the door opened.
"Father?"
"You will think about it?"
"I have been thinking about it a lot."
The bed squeaked. "Father, I-ow! Don't! What are you doing? What's
that?"
"Help you relax. You get some rest now."
"I don't need any rest! What did you do?"
"See? You are not so afraid of needles! That did not hurt."
"But what was it?"
"It will help you calm down."
"I'm calm."
"You rest now."
The door shut.
"How long take, Missah Moon?"
"Not long. Don't wait too long or he won't be able to walk by himself."
"Okay. You help."
They returned.
"Chang?"
"Mmm?"
"You come with us now?"
"Who?"
"Missah Moon and me."
"Who?"
"You know Missah Moon."
"No, I-"
"Come on now."
"I will not. . . take . . . the . . . mmm ..."
"Yes, you will."
"No, I'm ..."
The sound continued with the two men encouraging Chang to walk with
them and his mumbling in Chinese and English about not wanting to,
refusing.
"Now, watch this," Chang wrote. "The surveillance camera from the
hallway picks up that they're pretty much carrying me down the hall,
and look what I'm doing! Crossing myself! I don't even know where I got
that! And look! Here, I'm pointing toward heaven! I know it's
impossible to prove what I was doing, since whatever they gave me made
me forget even the conversation with my mother. And I can't tell what
words I'm trying to form there, but I had to be trying to say I was a
believer!"
The whole rest of the way, as Chang tied together the angles from
various cameras all the way to the corridor leading to Building D,
David watched as Walter Moon and Mr. Wong prodded Chang along. At some
point a third man met them, carrying a camera. The boy wept, pointed,
and tried to form words. Moon reassured the photographer and any
onlookers that the boy was "all right. He's okay. Just a little
reaction to medication."
Most shocking was that indeed there was a surveillance camera in
Building D, and by the time they got Chang there, he was unconscious,
eyes shut, drooling, moaning. "Take cap off," his father said. "Smooth
hair."
A woman technician who looked Filipino fired up the device. "This boy,
he is all right?" she said.
"Fine," Moon said. "What's the region code for the United Asian States?"
"Thirty," the tech said, setting the implanter. "I worry that I might
get into trouble for-"
"Do you know who I am?"
"Of course."
"I'm telling you to do your job."
"Yes, sir."
The woman swabbed Chang's lolling forehead with a tiny cloth and
pressed the mechanism onto his skin, producing a loud click and whoosh.
"Thank you," Moon said. "Now be sure this place is ready for the lines
in about an hour."
The technician left, and Mr. Wong and Mr. Moon took turns keeping Chang
sitting up. "Thing wears off almost as fast as it goes to work," Moon
said.
"Fix hair more," Mr. Wong said, slapping Chang's cheeks. "We get
picture."
The photographer shot Chang with a digital camera. The boy came to, and
his father held the camera before his face. "There!" Mr. Wong said.
"Look at new employee, one of first to take mark!"
Chang wobbled and pulled back, reaching for the camera and trying to
focus on the picture. His shoulders drooped and he glared at his
father, his face stony. When Mr. Wong and Mr. Moon stood him up, he
said, "Where's my hat?"
He jammed it on and stood there until he regained his equilibrium. He
said something to his father in Chinese. "I said, 'What have you
done?'" he wrote.
"Someday you thank me," Mr. Wong said. "Now we go somewhere, relax till
interview."
"I remember just snatches of the argument from the apartment and my
father injecting me," Chang wrote. "I have a vague recollection of the
flash of the camera and being angry at my father. After that, I only
remember sitting awhile in a side room with Moon and my father and
slowly realizing that I had been given the mark of loyalty. I wanted to
kill them, but I was also embarrassed. I worried what you would think.
I was still out of it for the first part of our meeting, but then I
decided to play tough, try to make you see the benefits. You already
know, though I didn't, that the meeting in your office was recorded
too. I can send that if you need reminding, but that's the end of this
upload."
David sat back and realized his legs had gone to sleep. He rolled his
head to release tension in his neck. By now, Chang should be busy
monitoring the Garden Tomb. David clicked on the message that had been
forwarded from Tsion.
----------
Buck's phone vibrated in his pocket, but he didn't look to see who it
was. He was prepared if God was calling him to take Chaim's place, but
that was foolish. Surely, the chosen one would be an Israeli believer.
Maybe Chaim was calling, lost in the crowd. Buck reached in his pocket
and shut off the phone. Let him find his own way. It was long past time
for the man to accept his role. Nobody said it would be easy. Nothing
was easy anymore. But God's call wasn't hard to recognize. It was
clearly on Chaim. If Hattie had the courage to do what she had done,
surely knowing she couldn't survive, how could any of them shirk their
duties again?
Carpathia stepped from behind a draped curtain near the tomb, smiled,
and opened his arms to the crowd. Less animated now, they merely
applauded. The cheering, the kneeling, the waving were over. It seemed
most just wanted to get on to the Temple Mount and get in line for
their mark. That would insure them against the fiery fate of the crazy
woman at Mount Calvary.
"I was never entombed!" Carpathia announced. "I lay in state for three
days for the world to see. Someone was said to have risen from this
spot, but where is he? Did you ever see him? If he was God, why is he
not still here? Some would have you believe it was he behind the
disappearances that so crippled our world. What kind of a God would do
that? And the same people would have you believe I am the antithesis of
this great One. Yet you saw me resurrect myself! I stand here among
you, god on earth, having taken my rightful place. I accept your
allegiance."
He bowed and the people clapped again.
Moon stepped back to the mike and read from his notes. "He is risen!"
The people murmured, "He is risen indeed."
"Come, come," Moon said, smiling nervously. "You can do better than
that. He is risen!"
"He is risen indeed!" the crowd responded, and someone applauded. The
ovation slowly built until Moon held up a hand to silence it. "We are
providing you with the opportunity to worship your potentate and his
image at the Temple Mount, and there you may express your eternal
devotion by accepting the mark of loyalty. Do not delay. Do not put
this off. Be able to tell your descendants that His Excellency
personally was there the day you made your pledge concrete."
Speaking softly now and making it sound like an afterthought but still
clearly reading, Moon added, "And please remember that neither the mark
of loyalty nor the worshiping of the image is optional."
A helicopter nosed into place and descended to take Carpathia and the
rest of the dignitaries to the Temple Mount. Buck still had not seen
Chaim since he had left him near Golgotha. The crowd dispersed quickly,
and many ran in the direction of the loyalty mark application site.
----------
Unable to reach Buck, Rayford called Tsion. "Hattie was the victim,
then, in whatever happened at Calvary?" he said.
"That is what we have pieced together, Rayford. We are grieving and
praying, but we are also amazed at how God spoke to her."
Rayford had known Hattie for years, of course, and had once jeopardized
his marriage over her. He asked to speak with Chloe. At first neither
he nor his daughter could speak. Finally Rayford said, "It seems
forever ago that you met her."
"Think she accomplished anything, Dad?"
"That's not for me to say. She obeyed God, though. That seems clear."
"What was he up to there?"
"I don't know. If someone in the crowd was wavering, who knows?"
"They would see what happens when you oppose Carpathia," Chloe said. "I
don't see what it was all about. Everybody here is speechless."
Rayford tried to dismiss an intruding thought but couldn't. "Chloe, are
you envious?"
"Of Hattie?"
"Yeah."
"Of course I am. More than I can say."
He paused. "Kenny okay?"
"Sleeping." She paused. "Dad, am I a scoundrel?"
"Nah. I know how you feel. At least I think I do. But most people see
you as a hero, hon."
"That's not the point. That's not why I'm envious."
"What then?"
"She was there, Dad! Front lines. Doing the job."
"You're-"
"I know. Just put me out there next time, will ya?"
"We'll see. You heard from Buck?"
"Can't raise him," she said.
"Me neither. I imagine he and Chaim are treading carefully."
"I just wish he'd check in, Dad."
----------
Buck waited at the Garden Tomb until the crowd was gone. He no longer
cared how suspicious he looked. He scanned the horizon and worried how
he would explain himself if he lost track of Chaim. Buck forgot what he
had been trying to prove or elicit by leaving him. He was still
frustrated with Chaim, of course, but what should he expect from an old
man who had endured so much? Chaim had hardly sought this assignment.
Buck moseyed among the olive trees, drawing glances from guards. He
recalled his first meeting with Dr. Rosenzweig. He had known of him
years before that. It wasn't common to become friends with story
subjects, especially Newsmakers of the Year, but it was fair to say the
two had been close.
The afternoon sun was hot. The garden was still a beautiful spot,
untouched by the earthquake. An armed guard, so still he could have
been a mannequin, stood by the entrance to the tomb. "May I?" Buck
said. But the guard did not even look at him. "If I'm just a minute?"
he tried again. Zero response.
Buck shook his head and ducked inside as if to say, "If you're going to
stop me, stop me."
Still the guard did not move. Buck found himself in the surprising
coolness of the sepulchre. The slanting light from the entrance cast a
thin beam where Christ's burial cloth would have been left. Buck
wondered why Carpathia and his people had left this place untouched.
He looked up quickly when Chaim shuffled in. Buck wanted to say
something, to apologize, anything. But the man was weeping softly, and
Buck didn't want to intrude. Chaim knelt at the slab of rock where the
light shone, buried his face in his hands, and sobbed. Buck leaned
against the far wall. He bowed his head, and a lump invaded his throat.
Could it be that Chaim would claim here the final vestige of courage to
follow through on his assignment? He looked so small and frail in the
oversized robe. He seemed so overcome that he could hardly bear up
under his grief.
Buck heard a sigh from outside, then the creak of leather, the crunch
of footsteps. The entrance filled, the silhouette of the guard nearly
blotting out the light.
"Just give us another minute, please," Buck said. But the guard
remained.
"If you don't mind, we'll leave in just a moment. Sir? Do you speak
English? Excuse me ..."
The guard whispered, "Why do you seek the living among the dead? Fear
not, for I know that you seek Jesus, who was crucified. He is not here,
for he is risen, as he said."
Chaim straightened and whirled to look at Buck, squinting at him in the
low light.
"You," Buck said to the guard. "You're-you're a-"
But the guard spoke again. "And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying: 'This
is the way you shall bless the children of Israel. Say to them: "The
Lord bless you and keep you; the Lord make his face shine upon you, and
be gracious to you; the Lord lift up his countenance upon you, and give
you peace."'
"'So they shall put my name on the children of Israel, and I will bless
them.'"
"Thank you, Lord!" Chaim rasped. Buck stared. "Sir? Are you a-"
"l am Anis."
"Anis!"
The guard stepped back outside. Buck followed, but the guard was gone.
Chaim emerged, shielding his eyes from the light. He grabbed Buck's arm
and pulled him to a souvenir shop, where a young woman looked as if she
was about to close up. Buck found it hard to believe such a place
remained open in the Global Community.
Chaim seemed to know exactly what he was looking for. He picked up a
small, cheap replica of the container in which the Dead Sea Scrolls had
been found in the caves of Qumran. He took it to the young woman and
looked to Buck, who felt in his pockets for cash. "Two Nicks," she said.
He peeled off the bills, and Chaim opened the package on the way out.
He discarded the box and the tiny printed scroll and put the palm-sized
clay vessel and its miniature top in the pocket of his robe. Suddenly
his gait was sure and quick, and he led Buck back the way the crowd had
come. Golgotha was deserted now, but Chaim found his way to where
Hattie had been immolated. He knelt by what was left of her ashes and
carefully scooped a handful into the little pot and pressed the top
down.
Chaim put the container of ashes back into his pocket and stood. "Come,
Cameron," he said. "We must get to the Temple Mount."
FIVE
DAVID HASSID sat stunned in the desolate aloneness of a "high place" in
Petra. While the pagan religions of the ancient past had used such
locations to sacrifice to their gods in a helpless, desperate attempt
to gain favor, all he wanted was to express to God his thanks for
grace. Nothing he could do or say or give or sacrifice could gain what
God had offered him freely.
All he could see were sky, clouds, valleys, and the occasional bird of
prey. It was clear this would be the ideal cradle of refuge for the
remnant of Israel, for those who recognized that Jesus was the
long-awaited, prophesied Messiah. It was he who would put the finishing
touches on God's love affair with his chosen people.
But David's own field of expertise, the gadgets and marvels of
technology, would not allow him the proper reprieve to exult in the
holiness of God's plan. He had
needed, desperately, to know the truth about Chang. But now the news of
Hattie Durham had rocked him. And here was a brief message, laboriously
pecked in from Buck's cell phone, that said David needed to monitor
activities at the Temple Mount. Yet another message from Tsion
announced a final teaching on the next event on the prophetic calendar,
Antichrist's desecration of the Holy of Holies.
Well, that was not news, and Tsion had taught on it before. But if the
rabbi felt the need to clarify and crystallize it for his billion
constituents, who was David to argue? The teaching, according to the
worldwide Net announcement, would be posted that evening. The very
people who might most benefit from Tsion's teaching could be in flight
for their lives the next day.
David tapped in the string that brought up the GCNN coverage of the
Temple Mount activities and patched the other half of his screen to an
ancient video monitor that kept a twenty-four-hour eye on the Wailing
Wall. He was convinced the camera there had long been forgotten, and it
was amazing it still functioned, though the fidelity of the picture had
been compromised by the years.
David wanted to set his transceivers in strategic spots to maximize the
wireless network he envisioned for Petra. But here came yet another
urgent message from Chang:
I have been invigorated, encouraged, motivated. Dr. Ben-Judah concurs
that the record vindicates me, though he fears Carpathia and his
henchmen are devious enough to come up with the idea of doping known
believers and forcing the mark on them, and that would be a catastrophe.
I know you're busy, but I thought you'd want to know: I intercepted a
private transmission between Moon and the head of both Peacekeeping and
Morale Monitor forces in Jerusalem. Apparently Walter was spooked by
the change in the attitude of the crowd with the martyrdom of the
dissident and the sudden mystery about Fortunato's health. Without
informing Carpathia, he has directed that armed personnel lead the way
in taking the mark of loyalty. If you haven't checked it out yet,
connect with the Temple Mount and look at the chaos.
So that's what had Buck so exercised that he would use his phone to
transmit a message to David's computer. The official GC broadcast feed
showed news anchors nearly beside themselves with glee. "Look at the
hundreds and hundreds of military vehicles lined up for miles outside
the Old City. They would clog the narrow passageways leading to the
Temple Mount anyway, but these are mostly unmanned. Only a skeleton
crew of, we would estimate, perhaps one uniformed Peacekeeper maintains
custody over every four or five vehicles. We've learned that the ones
left to keep an eye on the rolling stock are personnel who have already
received the mark of loyalty. The rest are leading the way today,
becoming patriotic examples to civilian citizens. Indeed, by the time
the massive crowd followed Potentate Carpathia's pageant through the
Via Dolorosa and half of what is known as the Stations of the Cross
from the now defunct Christian religion, the loyalty mark application
site was already clogged with Peacekeepers and Morale Monitors.
"Many citizens are less than happy about the delay, but the response
from Global Community brass, including His Excellency himself, appears
to be one of delight. Here's the scene at the Temple Mount, where tens
of thousands of GC personnel noisily jockey for position to receive the
mark, and civilians, patient for the most part, are lined up all the
way outside the city walls, awaiting their turn.
"Here's our reporter, Anika Janssen, with several civilians deep in the
long lines."
The tall, blonde reporter exhibited mastery of at least the rudiments
of several languages as she guessed nationalities and began the
interviews in citizens' native languages. Mostly she asked in their
tongue if they understood English so translators would not be forced to
employ captioning on the screen.
"What do you make of this?" she asked a couple hailing from the United
African States.
"It is exciting," the man said, "but I confess we expected to be among
the first in line, rather than the last."
His wife stood nodding, appearing reluctant to speak. But when Ms.
Janssen waved the microphone in her face, the woman proved opinionated.
"Frankly, I believe someone in authority should insist that the
soldiers make way. Those men and women are assigned here. Many of us
are on pilgrimages. I do not mean to criticize the risen potentate, and
I can hardly blame those who happened to have the privilege of
transportation and could get here first, but this does not seem fair."
Other interviews unearthed the same attitudes, though most seemed
almost bemused, or perhaps afraid, to complain publicly. "Oh, look at
this special privilege," Anika Janssen said. "Here is Ms. Viv Ivins of
the potentate's inner circle, working the lines, so to speak. She is
greeting people, thanking them for their patience. Let's see if we can
get a word with her."
To David it seemed that Ms. Ivins had been directed to a spot where a
camera crew would notice her. She was certainly ready with the party
line. "I'm so impressed with the loyal citizens and their patience,"
she said. "His Excellency was overwhelmed at the eagerness of his own
personnel to become examples and role models of loyally."
"Though there is, of course, a visible, prominent guillot-"
"Which we prefer to call a 'loyalty enforcement facilitator,'" Ms.
Ivins said with an icy smile. "Of course it represents the gravity of
such a decision. In all candor, Anika, our intelligence reports
indicated that we might face more opposition here, in the traditional
homeland of several obsolete religions. Yet I daresay that except for
the lunatic fringe, such as the lone representative of the Judah-ites
who recklessly challenged the power and authority of our Most High
Reverend Father of Car-pathianism, any such stubborn opponents have
learned to keep silent."
"Speaking of Reverend Fortunate, ma'am, what can you tell us? We
expected to see him here."
"Oh, he's fine, and thanks for asking. He's fallen a bit under the
weather, but he passes along his greetings and best wishes and expects
to be back at full strength tomorrow for the potentate's blessing of
the temple."
"The blessing of it?"
"Oh, yes. We believe that the beautiful temple was constructed with the
best intentions to honor god, even though the ancients were unaware
that they had misplaced their devotion. They meant to serve the one
true god but were misled by their own innocent ignorance and erred only
in directing worship to their chosen deity. We now know, of course,
that our risen potentate is clearly the god above all pretenders and
that his rightful place is in a house built for the one who sits high
above the heavens. By making this his own house of worship, he lends
credibility and authenticity to it, and it becomes the true house of
god."
"Besides the Judah-ites and their seemingly large Internet following-"
"Clearly inflated and exaggerated, of course."
"Of course. But besides that faction, might you expect opposition from
holdout Jews who are neither Christ-followers nor Carpathianists?"
"An excellent question, Anika. You do your homework. This should give
the lie to those who say that the Global Community News Network is
merely a shill for the potentate."
"Thank you. So, opposition?"
"Well, that is what we were led to believe and what we have been
prepared for. It is still possible, of course, but I am confident that
the display of divine power exhibited a few hours ago, along with the
overwhelming enthusiasm on the part of GC personnel and these thousands
of civilian pilgrims, will far overshadow any pockets of resistance."
"But should either the Judah-"
"Have you seen the image of the potentate yet, Anika? The Reverend
Fortunate judged the entries himself, and the winner is stunningly
beautiful."
"I have not seen it yet, but I hope to-oh, I'm getting word that our
cameras do have a shot of the image, so let's go there now."
----------
Buck had found the area around the Temple Mount-now dominated by the
gleaming new temple itself, of course-so congested that he and Chaim
were able to just amble around and observe, drawing little attention
despite Chaim's getup. Buck looked for other dissidents and was
surprised to see that many Orthodox Jews were allowed at the Wailing
Wall. He could not get close enough to see whether anyone in that area
had the mark of the believer, but he suspected that these devout men of
prayer were prepared to oppose the desecration in more overt ways than
merely wearing their own religious garments and assembling to pray at
the Wall.
The rest of the Mount had been entirely converted into a virtual
factory of efficiency. Dozens and dozens of lines herded the Carpathian
faithful, or at least the fearful, to stations where they were
registered, processed, prepped, and finally marked. Most accepted the
mark on their foreheads, but many took it on the backs of their right
hands.
Unlike what Buck had seen in Greece, here it was not assumed that
anyone in line would decide against taking the mark. In the middle of
all the processing stations stood one gleaming guillotine with two
operators sitting patiently beside it. Ten feet behind the contraption
was a freestanding frame with a drape hung on it, apparently so that
the disembodied could be discreetly hidden once the awful sound and
severing had served their deterring purposes. No sense rubbing it in,
apparently.
As the supplicants finished showing each other their marks and posing
for pictures, they were funneled to the east-facing steps of the new
temple, where the winning image of Carpathia stood at the second to the
top level. The temple itself, a sparkling replica of Solomon's original
house for God, was pristine but simple on the outside, as if modest
about the extravagance of cedar and olive wood, laden with gold and
silver and brass on the inside.
The image of Carpathia appeared bigger than life, but everything Buck
had heard about it confirmed it was as exact a copy of Carpathia
himself as it could be. Behind it were two freestanding pillars outside
the entrance to the temple, and Buck could see what appeared to be a
recently fabricated platform, made of wood but painted gold, in the
porch area. "Carpathia leaves out nothing," Chaim told him. "That
appears to be a replica of where both Solomon and the evil Antiochus-a
forerunner of Antichrist-stood to address the people in centuries past."
Many gasped and fell to their knees upon their first glimpse of the
golden statue, the sun bouncing off its contours. Unlike the mark
application lines, this one moved more quickly as dozens at a time
rushed the steps and knelt-weeping, bowing, praying, singing,
worshiping the very image of their god.
Chaim's revulsion mirrored Buck's own. The older man looked more
resolute than before, but his carriage evidenced no more authority or
promise. And still he limped. Buck wasn't sure how Chaim felt or how he
would know when the time had come to reveal himself as the enemy of
Carpathia, but the more he watched, the more Buck could barely contain
himself. He realized that these people-all of them-were choosing Satan
and hell before his very eyes, that he was powerless to dissuade them,
and that their choice was once and for all.
Buck estimated it would be hours before the GC personnel made way for
the average citizens. He found a ledge where Chaim could rest and asked
if he wanted anything to eat. "Strangely, no," Rosenzweig said. "You
eat. I could not."
Buck pulled a meal bar from deep in his pocket and showed it to Chaim.
"You're sure?"
Chaim nodded, and Buck ate. But he could enjoy nothing while thousands
eagerly lined up to seal their doom. He swallowed his last bite and was
scanning the
area for a water vendor when a cloud shouldered in front of the sun and
the temperature dipped. As if on cue, conversation stopped and the
colossal crowd stared at the image, which seemed to rock forward and
backward, but which Buck was convinced was an illusion.
The voice emanating from it was no illusion, however. Even the rabbis
at the Wall stopped praying and moving, though Buck could see they were
not in the line of sight of the statue.
"This assemblage is not unanimous in its dedication to me!" the image
boomed, and grown men fell to their faces, weeping. "I am the maker of
heaven and earth, the god of all creation. I was and was not and am
again! Bow before your lord!" Even the workers in the mark application
lines froze.
Buck worried that he and Chaim would be exposed. Though the old man had
to be as frightened as he, neither, of course, knelt before the evil
apparition. He forced himself to look away to see if he could find
other believers, and he was amazed at what appeared to be row after row
of them at the far edges of the crowd. Some were dressed in fatigues;
many could have easily been mistaken for GC. They had to be part of
Operation Eagle! They must have driven into Jerusalem, found the
schedule delayed, and wandered to the Temple Mount, prepared to help
with the evacuation.
Buck wanted to signal them, to wave, to approach, to embrace his
brothers and sisters. But who knew how far God chose to extend his
protection? The Trib Force believed Chaim would somehow be
supernaturally insulated, but other brave believers had been martyred
for their faith and courage.
"The choice you make this day," the golden image roared, "is between
life and death! Beware, you who would resist the revelation of your
true and living god, who resurrected himself from the dead! You who are
foolish enough to cling to your outdated, impotent mythologies, cast
off the chains of the past or you shall surely die! Your risen ruler
and king has spoken!"
The sun reappeared, the people slowly rose, and more and more tourists
and pilgrims joined the lines. Buck was jealous that those undecided
should hear both sides, yet when he looked at Chaim, he saw passivity.
As if the man could read his mind, Rosenzweig said, "They know their
options. No one alive could doubt that a great gulf is fixed between
good and evil, life and death, truth and falsehood. This is the battle
of the ages between heaven and hell. There is no other option, and no
honest man or woman can claim otherwise."
Well, the old man knew how to summarize, but his was still the
plaintive, weak voice with the thick Hebrew accent that reminded Buck
of Jewish comedians or storytellers or timid scholars-the latter of
which Dr. Rosenzweig certainly was. Buck wanted the faith to believe
that somehow this modest specimen of a man- so endearing, so
engaging-could capture the imaginations, the hearts, and the minds of
people on the fence.
And yet that was not Chaim's calling. He was to stand against
Antichrist-the evil one, the serpent, that old dragon, the devil. He
was to go nose to nose with Carpathia himself, while instructing the
remnant of Israel that it was time to flee unto the mountains.
Different as Chaim appeared now, whom would he fool? He had been a
close personal friend of Carpathia's long before Nicolae became head of
the Global Community. Chaim had once murdered the man! Would Chaim not
be immediately recognized from his voice alone?
Buck wondered if he himself had the faith to believe this was anything
but folly. If there were really a million Messianic believers in
Israel, surely they were unarmed. Carpathia was of no mind to let them
go! He had more than one hundred thousand armed, plainclothes Morale
Monitors and uniformed Peacekeepers. His arsenal of personnel carriers,
tanks, missiles, rocket launchers, cannons, rifles, and side arms was
on public display. Buck shrugged. Only God could do this, so that made
the thought process simple: You either believed it or you didn't.
Buck had long since chosen to believe it and had to fight a grin.
Resting apparently none too comfortably beside him was the most
unlikely leader of a million people. He couldn't wait to see how God
would manage this.
By now, thousands of GC personnel had received the mark of loyalty and
clogged the area, celebrating. Their commanding officers urged them to
return to their posts and vehicles, and suddenly the Temple Mount was
alive and animated again. Men and women, clearly midlevel managers,
stood in a ring near the front of the application centers, using
bullhorns to remind the newly tattooed and chip-implanted novices that
their spiritual obligation for the day was only half over.
"The worship of the image is not optional!" they shouted. "You are not
finished here until you have knelt before the living, breathing,
speaking image of your lord."
It wasn't as if they were trying to get out of it, Buck thought. But
many of these were young people, excited, flushed with renewed
enthusiasm for their work. They had seen the manifestations of power.
They had seen the potentate himself. They knew that Nicolae's making
the temple of Jerusalem his own was tantamount to setting up residence
in the mosque of the Dome of the Rock or moving into what had once been
St. Peter's Basilica in Rome. This would establish him once and for all
the true god over all. And if the pathetic, weakened resistance had
breath left, if they truly believed there was a higher being than His
Excellency the potentate, where were they? Did they dare reveal their
true loyalties in the face of such overwhelming evidence?
And now the revelers were still again. Those with the bullhorns clicked
them off. Activities in the line ceased. Carpathia himself appeared in
his white robe and gold sandals and shiny rope belt, smiling, standing
one step above his own image, arms outstretched. The silence gave way
to a deafening roar. Would he speak? Would he touch the worshipers?
Some must have wondered the same, for they slowly rose from their knees
on the steps and moved as if to advance upon him. He stopped them with
a gesture and nodded toward the center mark application line.
There came his top military brass in all their finery, dress uniforms
with white gloves, broad epaulets, buttons with sheens as reflective as
their patent-leather shoes, capturing and emitting every staggered ray
from the sun. Two dozen men and women, heads high, bearings regal,
marched to the front of the line, upon command stood at ease, and
removed their uniform caps.
One by one they proudly submitted to the application of the mark of
loyalty, each receiving it on the forehead, several asking for the
largest, darkest tattoo so their homeland designations would be obvious
from far away.
As the last of these were processed, the effusive crowd bubbled over
again as the dozen members of the Supreme Cabinet marshaled themselves
into the staging area. The last three in this contingent were Suhail
Akbar, Walter Moon, and Viv Ivins. While the military brass knelt on
the temple steps, worshiping Carpathia and his image, the cabinet
waited until all were processed and then moved as one to the worship
area.
All the while, Carpathia stood benevolently above and beside the gold
statue, gesturing toward these humble shows of loyalty. The assembled
masses cheered as Mr. Akbar turned to display the giant black 42 that
dominated his olive forehead. Then Mr. Moon displayed his -6. Finally
Viv Ivins chose to kneel on the pavement as she received the
application, then slowly stood and turned. Buck could not make out her
number, but he knew her native Romania was part of the United
Carpathian States and that her discreet tattoo would read 216.
The cabinet solemnly filed to the temple steps as the military brass
moved away. One by one they ascended the steps on their knees,
finishing by wrapping their arms around the statue's feet, their
shoulders heaving with emotion. Carpathia watched each one and
dismissed them by placing his open palm upon their heads.
Finally only Viv Ivins remained at the base of the steps. The crowd
seemed to wait breathlessly as she delicately removed her shoes, tugged
up the hem of her suit's smart skirt, and began the slow, awkward climb
on her knees. Her hose ran with the first brush against the marble, but
people seemed to moan in sympathy and in awe of her willingness to
publicly humble herself.
When finally she reached the third step from the top, she only briefly
embraced the statue, then detoured slightly and went up one more stair,
where she prostrated herself and kissed Nicolae's feet. He raised his
face to the sky as if he could imagine no greater tribute. After
several minutes, he bent and reached for her, but instead of letting
him help her up, she enveloped his hands and kissed them. Then she
reached into a pocket and pulled out a vial- Buck assumed perfume-and
poured it over Nicolae's shoes.
Again Carpathia feigned a humbly honored look and shrugged to the
crowd. Finally, as he pulled Ms. Ivins to her feet, leaving her a step
below him, he turned her to face the crowd and rested his hands upon
her shoulders.
When the cheering died, Nicolae announced, "I personally will be
watching from a secure vantage point, all night if need be, until the
last devoted citizen of Jerusalem receives the mark of loyalty and
worships my image. And tomorrow at noon, I will ascend to my throne in
my new house. I shall initiate new ceremonies, and you will see again
the 'friend' who accompanied me for as long as she could on the journey
today. And you shall be led in worship by the Most High Reverend Father
of Carpathianism."
Nicolae waved farewell to every side, and the application lines began
moving again.
"I'm tired," Buck said. "Shall we head back to the hotel to rest and
pray and prepare for tomorrow?"
Chaim shook his head. "You go, my friend. I feel the Lord would have me
stay."
"Here?"
Chaim nodded.
"I'll stay with you," Buck said.
"No, you need your rest."
"How long will you be?"
"I will be here until the confrontation."
Buck shook his head and leaned close. "Will that be before or after the
desecration?"
"God has not told me yet."
"Chaim, I cannot leave you. What if something happens?"
The old man waved him off.
"I can't, Chaim! Leave you here overnight? I would never forgive
myself."
"If what?"
"If anything! You sit here until the last mark has been applied, and it
will be obvious you have not taken it. I have reason to think Carpathia
is watching, as he said. He doesn't sleep anymore, Chaim. He'll know."
"He will know soon enough anyway, Cameron. Now you go. I insist."
"I need to check with the others. This is lunacy."
"Excuse me? Cameron, you believe God has chosen me for this?"
"Of course, but-"
"He is leading me to stay and prepare. Alone."
Buck pulled out his phone. "Just let me-"
"I will take full responsibility for the consequences. I have my
inspiration in my pocket. The young woman who modeled the ultimate
obedience once personally encouraged me, though she was newer even than
I to the things of God. You are to go back to the hotel to rest and
pray for me."
"God told you that too?"
Chaim smiled sadly. "Not in so many words, but I am telling you that."
Buck was at a loss. Should he pretend to go but watch from somewhere?
He'd done that before. It was near this very spot where he had seen the
two witnesses resurrected and raised to heaven.
"I see your mind turning," Chaim said. "You do what I say. If it is
true that I have been assigned this task, it must come with some
leadership responsibility."
"Only for a million people."
"But not for you?"
"I am not a Messianic Jew, sir. I am not part of the remnant of Israel."
"But surely you must obey one who is to answer for so many."
"I don't follow your logic."
"Ah, Cameron! If this had to do with logic, what would I be doing here?
Look at me! An old man, a scientist. I should be in an easy chair
somewhere. But here I am, a stranger in my own mirror, trying to tell
God he has made a mistake. But he will not listen. He is more stubborn
than I. He uses the simple to confound the wise. His ways are not ours.
The sheer illogic of his choice of me forces me to the reluctant
acceptance that it must be true. Am I ready? No. Am I willing? Perhaps.
After tonight, I must go forward, willing or not. Do I believe he will
go before me? I must."
It seemed as if he and Chaim were alone in a sea of people. Buck pawed
at the pavement with his foot. "Chaim, I-"
"Cameron, I would ask that you call me Micah."
"Micah?"
Chaim nodded.
"I don't get it."
"I am not foolhardy enough to call myself Moses, and I shall not reveal
my real name to Nicolae unless God wills it."
"So you'll tell him you're Micah? Why not Tobias Rogoff? Zeke has
provided identification for that and-"
"Think about it and you will understand."
"Should I bring my fake ID? You don't have a new name for me, do you?"
"You will not need a name."
"You know this for sure."
"As sure as I know anything."
"So I bring no ID."
"Your papers show you as Jack Jensen. Should that be checked, you would
be traced to the ranks of the Peacekeeping forces. How would you
explain a GC corporal assisting the leader of the opposition?"
"So I'll come without papers, and if they demand to know who I am, I'll
be deemed a vagrant."
"I will identify you as my assistant, and that will satisfy them."
Buck looked away. "I liked you more when you were less sure of
yourself."
"And Cameron," Chaim said, "you are a vagrant. We all are. We are
aliens in this world, homeless if anyone is.
Buck thrust his hands deep into his pockets. He couldn't believe it.
The old man had persuaded him. He was going to leave his old friend
alone overnight with the enemy. What was the matter with him? "Micah?"
was all he could say.
"You go," Chaim said. "Check in with our comrades and your family. And
think about my new name. It will come to you."
SIX
THE LATE-AFTERNOON sun made beautifully interesting shadows on the
stunning architecture at Petra. David found a sweater and pulled it
over his shoulders as he descended from the pagan high place to one of
the most remarkable cities ever built.
The various buildings, tombs, shrines, and meeting places had literally
been carved out of the striking red sandstone millennia before, and
though its early history was largely speculative, the place had become
a tourist attraction in the 1800s. David wondered how the new
inhabitants of such a surreal place would make comfortable quarters out
of solid rock. Tsion taught that God had promised food from heaven and
that clothes would not wear out, but what would substitute for
insulation, inner walls, and anything resembling modern conveniences?
The place was spread out, many of its famous edifices-the treasury of
the pharaoh, the five-thousand-seat amphitheater, the various
tombs-connected by a system of gorges and channels dammed and rerouted
by the various civilizations that had inhabited the area.
Because David had arrived by helicopter, he had to hike down to the
main level to find the sole passageway leading in. With rock walls over
three hundred feet high in places and a trail at points fewer than
seven feet across, it was no wonder most visitors rode in on camel,
donkey, or horseback. Operation Eagle would fly in the majority of the
newcomers, because a million fleeing Israelis would be slaughtered if
they had to traverse the roughly mile-long, narrow pass on foot.
David could see why the city had been a perfect defensive location
thousands of years before. Tsion taught that the Edomites, who
inhabited it at the time of Moses, had refused to let the Israelites
pass through. But in this world of high-tech travel, only a miracle
could protect unarmed innocents from aerial attack. Rather than a place
of refuge, David decided, without the hand of God this place could just
as easily be ideal for an ambush.
David's life was no longer about creature comforts. And he had
forgotten what leisure time was. Until the Glorious Appearing, this
would be where the action was, where miracles would be the order of
every day. David's people would inhabit this city, and they would be
preserved from illness and death, insulated against their enemies until
Messiah liberated them. If witnessing that meant making his bed on a
slab of stone, it was a small price to pay.
David made sure his laptop had stored enough solar energy to remain
charged throughout his night in a cave. In the loneliness at the top of
the only world he knew anymore, reading Tsion's post of what he
believed Antichrist was up to, monitoring the Carpathian-fashioned
news, and communicating with his confreres would serve as David's only
links to humanity.
He expected, within twenty-four hours, the first of more company than
he would know what to do with. How a million of them could be contained
even in the vast area surrounding the great rock city was a problem
only God could solve. David had learned not to wonder and question, but
to watch and see.
----------
After checking in with everybody and doing his best to explain how he
could leave Dr. Rosenzweig unattended, Buck spent that evening at the
King David Hotel, watching television with Chaim's Bible before him. He
read through Micah, seeing parallels between the Jerusalem of then and
now, and he noticed the reference to Moses. Clearly the book was a dire
promise of God's judgment, but Buck was not enough of a theologian to
decipher its significance to Chaim. The prophecies seemed to deal more
with the first coming of Christ than with the Rapture or the Glorious
Appearing, but perhaps Chaim planned to use some of the words and
phrases when dealing with Carpathia.
The TV news carried mostly rehashes of the day's events, but at least
Hattie's death was not glossed over as it had been during the live
coverage. While she was not identified - the death of a woman they
thought dead previously would have been a puzzler to the GC anyway - it
was clear she had died for her courage to speak against the ruler of
this earth. The GC did not spin it that way, of course, but boasted of
the event, using it as an example of the veracity of Carpathia's claims
of deity and confirmation of Fortunato's role as his designate of
spiritual power and wonders.
Buck was exhausted, nearly too much so to sleep. But as he stared at
the ceiling in the darkness, eager to get back to the Temple Mount at
first light, he rehearsed Dr. Rosenzweig's insistence on being called
Micah rather than Chaim. The names floated before his mind's eye. And
he slept.
----------
In the middle of the afternoon in Chicago, Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah printed
out the message he planned to post on the most popular Web site in
history. He asked Ming and Chloe to review it for him. They sat
together and read.
To MY DEAR TRIBULATION SAINTS, BELIEVERS IN JESUS THE CHRIST, THE
MESSIAH AND OUR LORD AND SAVIOR, AND TO THE CURIOUS, THE UNDECIDED, AND
THE ENEMIES OF OUR
FAITH:
It has now become clear that Nicolae Carpathia,the one who calls
himself the ruler of this world and whom I have identified (with the
authority of the Holy Scriptures) as Antichrist, along with his False
Prophet Leon Fortunate (upon whom has been bestowed the audacious title
of the Most High Reverend Father of Carpathianism), has scheduled what
the Bible calls the desecration of the temple.
As with every other connivance and scheme Antichrist believes is the
product of his own creative mind, this event too has been prophesied in
the infallible Word of God. The Old Testament prophet Daniel wrote that
during this time in history "the king shall do according to his own
will: he shall exalt and magnify himself above every god" and "shall
speak blasphemies against the God of gods."
The prophet also predicted that "many countries shall be overthrown,"
but one of those that "shall escape from his hand" is Edom. That,
friends, is where Petra lies. Sadly, Egypt will not escape his hand. He
will have "power over the treasures of gold and silver, and over all
the precious things of Egypt; also the Libyans and Ethiopians shall
follow at his heels."
Antichrist has already begun fulfilling the prophecy that "he shall go
out with great fury to destroy and annihilate many." Fortunately,
someday "he shall come to his end, and no one will help him."
It is also prophesied that the great archangel,Michael, shall "at that
time" stand up. He is referred to as "the great prince who stands watch
over the sons of your people," referring to the remnant of Israel,
those Jews like myself who have come to believe that Jesus is the
Messiah. Praise God, Daniel also foretells that "at that time your
people shall be delivered, every one who is found written in the book."
You know from my previous teachings that the book referred to is the
Lamb's Book of Life, in which are recorded those who have trusted in
Christ for their salvation. While I cannot be more specific now, due to
the divine experience of a beloved colleague just within the last few
days, I believe that Michael the archangel is standing watch and that
deliverance is nigh.
Jesus himself referred to the prophecies of Daniel when he warned of
"the 'abomination of desolation' . . . standing in the holy place." I
believe he was speaking of the very desecration planned by Antichrist.
Many were confused before the rapture of the church and believed that
the apostle Paul's second letter to the Thessalonians referred to that
event when he spoke of "the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ and our
gathering together to him." We may rejoice, because it is now clear
that Paul was speaking of the Glorious Appearing. Paul writes, "Let no
one deceive you by any means; for that Day will not come unless the
falling away comes first, and
the man of sin is revealed, the son of perdition, who opposes and
exalts himself above all that is called God or that is worshiped, so
that he sits as God in the temple of God, showing himself that he is
God."
Our hope is in the promise that "the lawless one will be revealed, whom
the Lord will consume with the breath of his mouth and destroy with the
brightness of his coming. The coming of the lawless one is according to
the working of Satan, with all power, signs, and lying wonders, and
with all unrighteous deception among those who perish, because they did
not receive the love of the truth, that they might be saved."
We often wonder, when the truth is now so clear, why not everyone comes
to Christ. It is because of that very deception! People did not, as
Paul says above, "receive the love of the truth." He says it is "for
this reason God will send them strong delusion, that they should
believe the lie, that they all may be condemned who did not believe the
truth but had pleasure in unrighteousness." Can you imagine it? There
are people who know the truth, know their futures are doomed, and yet
still they take pleasure in sin! A warning, if you are one of those:
Due to your rebellion, God may have already hardened your heart so that
you could not change your mind if you wanted to.
Now, if the following is not a description of the two who would steal
the souls of every man and woman, I don't know what is: "So they
worshiped the dragon who gave authority to the beast; and they
worshiped the beast, saying, 'Who is like the beast? Who is able to
make war with him?' And he was given a mouth speaking great things and
blasphemies, and he was given authority to continue for forty-two
months. Then he opened his mouth in blasphemy against God, to blaspheme
his name, his tabernacle, and those who dwell in heaven. It was granted
to him to make war with the saints and to overcome them. And authority
was given him over every tribe, tongue, and nation.
"All who dwell on the earth will worship him, whose names have not been
written in the Book of Life of the Lamb slain from the foundation of
the world."
What could be clearer? If you are in Christ, you are eternally safe and
secure, despite all that we will have to endure these next three and a
half years. If you are undecided, I plead with you to make your choice
while you are still able. That many have already had their hearts
hardened by God-a truth that may go against what we once believed about
him-is nonetheless clearly the danger of putting off receiving Christ.
One day I pray God will grant me the privilege of speaking in person to
the Israeli believers who will soon be led to safety and out of the way
of harm from Antichrist. Brothers and sisters in the Lord, pray as the
final events of this halfway point of the Tribulation period unfold and
usher in the rest of the time before the Glorious Appearing.
Your friend in Christ,
Tsion Ben-Judah
Tsion was intrigued that the young women were clearly finished reading,
but rather than give him their assessment, they whispered among
themselves. He cleared his throat and looked at his watch.
"Ming has a wonderful idea, Tsion," Chloe said. "She believes her
brother could pirate his way into the Global Community News Network and
counter Nicolae's next message to the world with your own teaching."
"What, put my message text on the screen?"
"No," Ming said. "You. Live. In essence you would debate his every
point."
"But how?"
"I will check with Chang, but the little camera atop your monitor, the
one you now use only to project your image to the Tribulation Force
when they are away from Chicago, could be used to broadcast over
television as well."
"But might we risk showing clues that would give away where we are?"
"We would have to work to preclude that, of course."
"But isn't this Dr. Rosenzweig's purview?" Tsion said. "Shouldn't he be
the one to counteract Antichrist?"
"He probably will be," Chloe said. "Any showdown between those two will
likely be on international television anyway."
"Then what would I be needed for?"
"Once the flight to Petra has commenced, Nicolae will be speaking out
against you and us so-called Judah-ites. It would be like a tag-team
wrestling match. When Chaim is no longer there to oppose him in person,
you will debate him via his own television network," Ming said.
Tsion quietly accepted the manuscript back and keyed in the
transmission. "I like the way you think, Mrs. Toy," he said.
"So do I," Chloe said. "I only wish you could have mentioned Hattie by
name or said that she was a Trib Force member."
"I did not want to give away that we even have people in the area,
though I am certain the GC assumes we do."
"And yet, Tsion," Chloe said, "you mentioned Petra by name."
The rabbi covered his mouth with his hand. "I did, didn't I?"
"I meant to say something before you transmitted it,"
Chloe said.
"That is why I wanted you to review it."
"I'm sorry, Tsion. I assumed you had a reason."
"It is not your fault," he said, collapsing into a chair.
"What was I thinking?"
----------
Rayford's eyes popped open at dawn, and a decision he debated in the
night had been made. Leah and Hannah had their mobile medical unit
stocked and ready, so Leah could do double duty, also monitoring the
incoming and outgoing Israelis. That meant Rayford didn't have to stay
at Mizpe Ramon. Surely he would be of more use actually piloting a
chopper.
He dressed quickly and found the airstrip buzzing. The sun shimmered
over the horizon, and Rayford realized it wouldn't be long until he and
his comrades would begin counting the days to the end, the real end-the
Glorious Appearing and the Millennial Kingdom. Much had to happen
first, of course, but the head-spinning pace of the last several weeks
would give way to precious lulls between the final judgments of God
before the Battle of Armageddon. Then things would pick up again. How
he looked forward to at least some rest between crises. Rayford pushed
his hair back and put on his aviator's cap. The next few days would
determine whether he or his loved ones would even survive to the end.
----------
Buck stood under a shower as hot as he could stand it, but the King
David must have installed some sort of a regulator. After a few
minutes, the water went tepid, then cold. With personnel and energy
decimated, there was only so much to go around.
Buck put only enough money in his pocket to be sure he could top off
the tank of the car. Following Chaim's advice, he left his wallet and
ID in the room. Finding a place to park was harder than the day before,
and he had to walk a half mile farther, finally reaching the streets
lined on each side with empty military personnel carriers.
Early as it was, the Temple Mount was already filling. Colossal TV
monitors were visible from every vantage point, and people waiting for
the noon festivities occupied themselves watching the GC network feed
and waving when they saw themselves on-screen.
To Buck's great relief, Chaim was in plain sight, not far from where
the two witnesses had traded off sitting while the other preached. Buck
rushed to Dr. Rosenzweig, who sat with his knees up, staring into the
sky. "Morning, Chaim," he said, but the man did not acknowledge him.
"Sorry," Buck added quickly. "Micah."
Chaim smiled faintly and turned to him. "Cameron, my friend."
"Did you eat?"
"I remain sated," Chaim said.
"Remarkable."
"God is good."
"And has he encouraged you, strengthened you, empowered you?" Buck
pressed.
"I am ready."
He didn't sound ready. In fact, he sounded and looked even wearier than
he had the day before. "Did you sleep?" Buck said.
"No. But I rested."
"How does that work?"
"There is nothing like resting in the Lord," Chaim said, as if he'd
been doing it all his life.
"So, what happens now?" Buck said. "What's the plan?"
"God will reveal it. He shows me only what I need to know, when I need
to know it."
"Terrific."
"I detect sarcasm, Cameron."
"Guilty. I'm a plan-your-work-and-work-your-plan kind of a guy."
Chaim reached for Buck's hand and rose unsteadily. He groaned as joints
cracked. "But this is neither my plan nor my work, you understand."
"I guess. So we just stand around waiting?"
"Oh no, Cameron. Even I do not have the patience to wait until high
noon."
"And if Carpathia does not appear until then?"
"A ruckus will flush him out."
Buck found that intriguing, but again, this frail, little old man
hardly looked up to causing anything. Was he expecting Buck to do
something? Without papers? Without the mark? Buck was willing, but he
didn't know yet what he thought of Chaim's judgment.
"When did they stop administering the mark?" Buck said.
"They have not stopped. See, two lines remain open over there, but it
appears one is about to shut down, despite the number of those waiting.
You have noticed nothing this morning, have you, Cameron?"
"Noticed?"
"The difference between today and yesterday."
Buck looked around. "Crowd's bigger, earlier. Military vehicles are
still everywhere outside the Old City. But why are they closing a line
with people still in it? And why didn't they finish last night? More
people showed up?"
"And you a journalist!"
"I'll bite. What'd I miss?"
"You said it yourself. The vehicles are still there."
"So? A show of strength. Carpathia probably expects opposition today."
"But they would not leave and come back," Chaim said. "You think these
soldiers slept in those trucks? They would not have to. They have
accommodations, centers, places to muster."
"Okay ..."
"How many soldiers did you see with the trucks today?"
"To be honest, Chaim, uh, Micah, I was focused on making sure you were
still here and all right. I was in a hurry and not paying attention."
"You certainly weren't. Now look, they are herding what is left of that
line into the only one still open."
"And I suppose you know why."
"Of course," Chaim said.
"And you're not even a journalist. But still, you'll tell me."
"They closed that line for the same reason the Temple Mount is filled
with civilians rather than GC today."
Buck spun and took in the whole area. "Sure enough. Where are they?"
"They are suffering. Soon they will be as bad off as poor Mr.
Fortunate, who must be miserable almost unto death by now. How utterly
ingenious for our Lord to plant in someone's mind the brilliance of
having the GC personnel go first yesterday. They received the mark of
the beast; then they worshiped his image. And now they are victims of
Revelation 16:1-2."
"The plague of boils!" Buck whispered.
Chaim looked at him meaningfully with a close-mouthed smile, then moved
away from Buck and into an open area. Buck stumbled and nearly toppled,
startled by the huge, deep sounds emitting from the little man's
throat. Chaim's voice was so loud that everyone stopped and stared, and
Buck had to cover his ears.
"I heard a great voice out of the temple!" Chaim shouted, "saying to
the seven angels, 'Go your ways, and pour out the bowls of the
wrath of God upon the earth.' And the first went, and poured out his
bowl upon the earth; and there fell a noisome and grievous sore upon
the men which had the mark of the beast, and upon them which worshiped
his image."
The thousands who had been milling about fell back at the piercing
voice, and Buck was astounded at Chaim's bearing. He stood straighter
and looked taller, his chest puffed out as he inhaled between
sentences. His eyes were ablaze, his jaw set, and he gestured with
balled fists.
Now the curious began to gather round the old man in the brown robe.
"What?" some said. "What are you saying?"
"Let him who has ears hear! Surely the God of heaven has judged the man
of sin, and those who have taken his mark and worshiped his image have
been stricken!"
"Crazy old fool!" someone called out. "You're going to get yourself
killed!"
"We'll see your head rolling before you know it, old man!"
If it was possible, Buck thought Chaim grew louder. He needed no
amplification, for it was obvious that everyone within sight heard him.
"None would dare come against the chosen one of God!"
The people laughed. "You're a chosen one? Where is your God? Can he do
what our risen potentate can do? You want fire from heaven to leave you
in a heap of ashes?"
"I demand audience with the evil one! He must answer to the one true
God, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob! He dare not touch the
remnant of Israel, believers in the Most High God and his Son, the
Messiah, Jesus of Nazareth!"
"You'd better just-"
"Silence!" Chaim roared, and the echo reverberated off the walls and
left the crowd speechless.
Three young armed and uniformed guards, including one female, jogged
up. "Your papers, sir," she said.
"I neither have nor need any documentation. I am here under the
authority of the Creator of heaven and earth."
"Your forehead is clear. Let me see your hand."
Chaim showed the back of his right hand. "Behold the hand of the
servant of God."
The woman raised her rifle and nudged Chaim's arm,trying to steer him
to the mark application line. He would not budge. "Come, sir. You are
either drunk or undernourished. Save yourself the grief and me the
paperwork. Get your mark."
"And worship the image of Carpathia?"
She glared at him and pulled back the firing mechanism on her rifle.
"You will refer to him as His Excellency or His Worship or as the risen
potentate."
"I will refer to him as Satan incarnate!"
She pressed the barrel of her weapon upon Chaim's chest and appeared to
squeeze the trigger. Buck stepped forward, fearing both the blast and
seeing his dear friend hit the pavement. But the young woman did not
move, did not so much as blink. Chaim looked at her male partners.
"When did you receive your marks?"
They both cocked their weapons. "We were among the last," one said.
"And you worshiped the image?"
"Of course."
"You too will soon suffer. The sores have begun to rise on your bodies."
One looked at the other. "I do have something inside my forearm. Look."
The other said, "Will you stop? We have cause to shoot this man, and I
may just do it."
"Shoot him!" someone hollered from the crowd. "What is wrong with your
supervisor?"
Both eyed her warily, then said to Chaim, "Sir, we're going to have to
ask you to get in line to take the mark or bear the consequences."
"I have not been called to martyrdom just yet, young man. When my time
comes, I will proudly bow before the blade, worshiping the God of
heaven. But now, unless you too want to be stricken motionless, you
will get word to the one you worship that I demand an audience."
One turned away and spoke into his walkie-talkie. Then, "I know, sir.
But Corporal Riehl is incapacitated, and-"
"What?"
"He paralyzed her, sir, and-"
"How?"
"We don't know! He's demanding-"
"Shoot to kill!"
The young man shrugged, and both pointed their rifles at Chaim.
"Give me that!" Chaim said, grabbing the walkie-talkie. He depressed
the button. "Whoever you are, tell your so-called potentate that Micah
demands an audience with him."
"How did you get this radio?" the voice said.
"He will find me and my assistant in the center of the Temple Mount
with three catatonic guards."
"I warn you-"
Chaim switched off the walkie-talkie. Within seconds, half a dozen more
guards, two in plainclothes, advanced, weapons drawn. "You don't demand
a meeting with Potentate Carpathia," one scolded.
"Yes, I do!" Chaim shouted, and the six studied their paralyzed
compatriots.
"Well, sir, may I have your name?"
"You may call me Micah."
"Okay, Mr. Micah, sir. The potentate is at the Knesset, where his
Jerusalem headquarters have been established. If you'd like to
accompany us there and request-"
"I am demanding a meeting with him here. You may tell him that if he
refuses, he will face more than a decimated, suffering staff. I am
prepared to return to the plagues called down from heaven by the two
witnesses! Ask him if he would like his medical staff to try to treat
your boils and carbuncles with water that has turned to blood."
SEVEN
DAVID WAS not sure what time the noise of heavy equipment woke him, but
he knew immediately what it meant. He had been nonplussed by Dr.
Ben-Judah's mentioning Petra in his worldwide post, and there was no
question the enemy monitored the Web site.
David crept back to the high place in the blackness of the wee hours,
the stars not providing enough illumination to keep him from skinning
shins, stubbing toes, and falling several times, scraping hands and
arms on the rocks. His eyes having adjusted to the darkness, far below
he saw the semicircle of GC tanks and artillery forming at the
perimeter. Though they kept few lights on, he was able to make out that
they had closed the main foot-traffic entrance and were heavily
stationed around the most likely airdrop zones as well.
David believed God had promised to protect the children of Israel who
would flee the anger of Antichrist, but what of the volunteers who
helped them? How were they to escape an enemy already a step ahead? How
could Tsion have made such a blunder? David phoned Rayford but got no
answer. He tried Albie.
----------
Tsion could not be consoled. He paced, a hand over his mouth, praying
silently. Ming and Chloe had tried to reason with him, reminding him
that God was sovereign, but he could not make sense of what he had
done. He kept the television on, dreading the news of a massacre once
the flight from Jerusalem began.
Tsion finally sat on the arm of the couch in front of the television.
The tall, fat young man they incongruously called Little Zeke-his
recently martyred father had been Big Zeke-lumbered in with a
sketchpad. "Wanna see what I'm thinkin' about doing with Ming? I mean,
it's hard to disguise a, um, Asian woman, but I'm gonna try to make her
look like a guy, I think. I've got a picture of her brother, and with
the right haircut and clothes and, you know, wrappings and stuff-"
"Forgive me, Z, but-"
"Oh, I've already told her I don't mean to insult her or anything. I
mean, she's thin and small, but I'm not saying she looks like a guy
now. In fact, she's really quite pretty and attractive, and feminine."
"I'm preoccupied here, Z. I am sorry. I have made a terrible mistake
and I'm praying that-"
"I know," Zeke said. "That's really why I came out here. I mean, I was
working on Ming's identity for real, but I thought maybe talking about
that would take your mind off-"
"Off tipping off the other side about where our brothers and sisters
are headed? Thanks, but I do not see how the GC could do anything but
beat them there and lie in wait for them."
Zeke set his pad on the couch and eased his bulk onto the floor.
"You're the Bible guy," he said, "but something about this just seems
sort of logical to me."
"Logical? Hardly."
"I mean, there must have been a reason, that's all."
"To humble me, perhaps, but this is quite a price. I never claimed to
be perfect, but I pray so hard over my messages, and God knows I would
never intentionally-"
"That's what I mean, Doc. God must have wanted this to happen somehow."
"Oh, I do not-"
"You said it yourself, you pray about this stuff. That doesn't make
your messages like the Bible, I guess, but God's not gonna let a
regular human like you mess up his plan with one mistake, is he?"
Tsion didn't know what to think. This uneducated young man often had
fresh insight. "Maybe I have myself overrated."
"Maybe. You didn't seem to when you were just the guy who teaches a
billion people. Why didn't you let that go to your head?"
"I do not think of it that way, Z. It's humbling, a privilege."
"See? You could get cocky about having this big ; Internet church, but
you don't. So maybe you shouldn't start thinkin' you're important
enough to get in God's way."
"Obviously I am not above mistakes," Tsion said.
"Yeah, but come on. You think God is gonna say, 'I had this deal all
figured out till Ben-Judah went and messed it up'?"
Tsion had to chuckle. "I suppose he can overcome my blunders."
"I hope so. You always made him out to be big enough."
"Well, thank you, Z. That gives me something to-"
"But it goes past that, even," Zeke said. "I still think God might have
had a reason for lettin' you do that."
"For now I am just trying to take in that God can overrule my error."
"You wait and see, Doc. I bet you're gonna find that either the GC
doesn't buy it because it looks like such an obvious phony lead. Or
they think they've found something juicy and they try to take advantage
of it, only to see it blow up in their faces."
----------
At dawn Rayford was alarmed to find Albie with Big George, uncrating
several of each of the two kinds of weapons the latter had had shipped
in. "What're we doing, Albie?"
"Your phone not working?"
Rayford patted his pocket and pulled it out. "Nuts!" he said. "Used it
too much yesterday." He pulled the solar pack from it and clipped it to
the outside of his shirt pocket, where the sun would rejuvenate it, and
put a fresh pack in. He found he had missed several calls.
Albie said, "Let me save you checking all those out and tell you what
Hassid's and my calls were about."
----------
"Everybody back off." The newest arrival to the Temple Mount was a
tall, athletic-looking, dark-haired plain-clothesman with the outline
of a handgun under his jacket. "Who're you?" he said to Buck, as the
rest of the Morale Monitors and Peacekeepers, including the three who
had been paralyzed, stepped back.
Buck thought he had been prepared for everything, but he felt his
pockets as if about to produce his ID, then pointed to Chaim. "I'm with
him. Who are you?"
"Name's Loren Hut, and I'm chief of the Global Community Morale
Monitors. I have the potentate on the phone for the troublemaker." He
looked at Chaim, making the pressing crowd laugh. "For some reason my
people can't seem to get through to a demented old man. That has to be
you."
Chaim said, "Tell your boss I do not care to speak to him except in
person."
"Not possible, Mr.-"
"Micah."
"Best you're going to get is this call, Mr. Micah. Now I'm not feeling
well this morning, and you're already pressing your luck."
"Not feeling well how, Mr. Hut?"
"Do you want to talk to His Excellency or-"
Chaim looked away, shaking his head.
Hut scowled and put his phone to his ear. "False alarm. Apologize to
the potentate for me. . . . Well, sure, I'll talk to him, but I don't
want to waste his-good morning, sir. Yes ... I don't know . . . I'll be
sure to get full reports from everyb-well, yes, I can get it done. . .
. You want me to do that? I-yes, I know, but it's not as if he poses a
real threat. . . yes, sir. Nine in the clip . . . if that's what you
want... I don't disagree, it's just that he's a frail... I could do
that. . . . Affirmative, you can count on me."
Hut slapped his phone shut and swore. "You," he said to Buck, "keep
your distance. Be glad for your sake I kept you out of this. And you
people-" he gestured toward the crowd-"stay back!" Some moved; most
didn't. "Don't say you weren't warned!"
"Sores starting to get to you, young man?" Chaim said.
"Shut up! You're about to die."
"That will not be up to you, son."
"Actually, yes it will. Now be quiet! Corporal Riehl, are you all
right?"
"A little foggy," she said flatly. "What do you need?"
"Find a GCNN camera crew and get 'em over here. The potentate wants me
to put nine in this guy, but he wants to see it."
"So do I," she said, trotting off.
"Mr. Hut," Chaim said, "will you be able to do your duty? You are
getting worse by the second."
Hut bent over and vigorously scratched his abdomen and belly. "I don't
have to be a hundred percent to kill a man at point-blank range."
"That will not happen."
"You think you can paralyze me?"
"I never know how God will act."
"Well, I know how you will act. You'll be squirming and screaming and
pleading for your life."
"My life is not my own. If God wishes it, he may have it. But as I have
further responsibilities, including talking in person to the coward who
would ignore me, God will spare me."
Corporal Riehl returned with a turbaned man with a camera on his
shoulder. With him was a short black woman carrying a microphone. "What
are we doing?" she asked with a British accent.
"Just tell me when you're rolling," Hut said. "This is for His
Excellency."
"Live or disc?"
"I don't care! Just cue me!"
"All right! Hang on!" She spoke into a small radio. "Yes!" she said.
"Carpathia himself. Just a minute." She turned to Hut. "Central wants
to know your authority."
Hut swore again and scratched himself from abdomen to shoulders. "Hut!"
he said. "GCMM! Now let's go!"
"Okay," the woman said, stepping in front of the camera. "This is
Bernadette Rice, live from the Temple Mount in Jerusalem, where we are
about to witness an execution ordered personally by His Excellency
Nicolae Carpathia. Behind me, Loren Hut, new chief of the Global
Community Morale Monitors, will administer the sentence to a man known
only as Micah, who has refused the mark of loyalty and resisted arrest."
When people from other areas of the Temple Mount saw on the giant TV
monitors what was going on, they flooded the area around Chaim and Buck
and Hut.
----------
"Don't let Kenny see this!" Zeke called out. "But come quick, both of
you!"
It was after midnight in Chicago, and Tsion had slipped off the arm of
the couch to a cushion, where he sat hunched forward, peeking at the
screen between his fingers. "God, please ..."
"There's Buck!" Chloe said, pointing.
Tsion thought Cameron looked weird, standing casually, hands in his
pockets.
The GCMM chief pulled his side arm from its holster, paused to scratch
himself with his left hand and right elbow, then prepared the weapon.
He spread his legs and held the gun in both hands, aiming at Chaim's
hands, which were clasped in front of him. Hut's angle would make the
bullet pass through them without hitting his body.
The explosion of the first shot made Buck skip out of the way and the
crowd recoil, but Chaim didn't move, except to flinch at the sound. Hut
stared in disbelief at Chaim's unmarred hands and moved to his opposite
side, aiming the second shot at them again. The crowd scattered. BLAM!
Another apparent miss from just inches away.
Hut, scratching himself all the way to the knees between shots now,
aimed at Chaim's foot and fired. Nothing. Not even a hole in the robe.
Hut lifted the hem with his left hand and fired at the other foot.
Moaning in agony and apparently fear, Hut scratched with his free hand,
pressed the muzzle onto one of Chaim's knees, then the other. The shots
produced only noise.
The crowd laughed. "This is a joke!" someone said. "A put-on! He's
shooting blanks!"
"Blanks?" Hut screamed, whirling to face the heckler. "You'd bet your
life on that?" He fired shot number seven into the man's sternum. The
back of the victim's head hit the ground first, the sickening crush of
his skull clear on the TV reporter's microphone.
With the crowd running for cover and Bernadette Rice falling out of the
picture, Loren Hut fired at Chaim's left shoulder from six inches, then
pressed the gun to the unharmed old man's forehead. Chaim looked
sympathetically at the shaken, writhing Hut, and casually plugged his
ears. The barrel of the gun left a small indentation on Chaim's skin.
The bullet proved harmless.
Hut tossed the gun away and threw his arms around a tree, rubbing his
body against it for relief. He cried out in agony, then turned and
summoned Corporal Riehl. He reached for her rifle and pointed it under
his own chin. Chaim approached calmly.
"No need for that, Mr. Hut," he said. "The death you have chosen will
overtake you in due time. Put down the weapon and summon Carpathia for
me."
----------
Hut threw down the rifle and staggered away, but already Buck heard the
thwocking of chopper blades. Two helicopters touched down, and the
crowd-which had largely retreated-cautiously returned, avoiding the
corpse that lay in a pool of blood.
Carpathia was the only civilian in either bird, and he wore his
jet-black, pin-striped suit over a white shirt and brilliant red tie.
He strode directly to Chaim and Buck while seven uniformed Peacekeepers
formed a semicircle behind him, weapons trained on Chaim.
Nicolae smiled at the crowd and turned to locate the GCNN cameraman.
Bernadette was still on the ground, trembling. "Keep rolling, son," he
said. "What's your name?"
"R-R-Rashid."
"Well, stand right here, R-R-Rashid, so the world can see who dares
mock my sovereignty."
Carpathia approached Chaim and faced him from three feet away, arms
crossed. "You are too old to be Tsion Ben-Judah," he said. "And you
call yourself Micah." He cocked his head and squinted at Buck, who
feared that Nicolae recognized him. "And this is?"
"My assistant," Chaim said.
"Does he have a name?"
"He has a name."
"May I know it?"
"There is no need."
"You are an insulting dolt, are you not?" Carpathia spoke to a guard,
nodding at Buck. "Get him out of here. The mark or the blade."
Buck set himself to resist, but the guard looked petrified. He cleared
his throat. "Come with me, please, sir."
Buck shook his head. The guard looked helplessly back at Carpathia, who
ignored him. Suddenly the guard dropped, wriggling on the ground,
scratching himself all over.
"All right," Carpathia said. "I concede I have you to thank for the
fact that nearly my entire workforce is suffering this morning."
"Probably all of them," Chaim said. "If they are not, you might want to
check the authenticity of their marks."
"How did you do it?"
"Not I, but God." "You are looking into the face of
god," Carpathia said.
"On the contrary," Chaim said, "I fear God. I do not fear you."
----------
Rayford spread a topographical map on the hood of a truck. "Let's get
Mac and Smitty in on this too," he said. Albie phoned them.
Big George leaned in. "Anywhere we could hunker down within a couple of
miles of Petra?"
Rayford shook his head. "I don't know. Whole area looks a lot different
on paper than from the air. I know you're gung ho ho and everything,
but I'm not prepared to do any killing."
"All due respect, Cap," George said, "but they're going to be killing
our people. You might change your mind when you see that."
"We're here to get people to safety, not to kill the enemy."
Albie slapped his phone shut. "What if killing the enemy is the only
way to get the Israelis to safety?"
"That's God's job."
"I agree," Albie said, "at least from what Dr. Ben-Judah says. But I'd
hate to see us lose one brother or sister, and if these weapons are
what it takes, I say use 'em."
----------
Buck would never forget a detail of this macabre meeting, and the
entire world was watching.
"So, Micah," Carpathia said, shifting his weight, "what will it take
for you to lift this magic spell that has incapacitated my people?"
"There is no magic here," Chaim said, in a voice that sounded as far
from his own as Buck could imagine. "This is the judgment of almighty
God."
"All right," Nicolae said, smiling tolerantly. "What does almighty God
want in exchange for lightening up-" and here he made quotation marks
with his fingers-"on this judgment?"
Chaim shook his head.
"Come, Micah. If you would negotiate on behalf of God, surely you can
think of something!"
"Those who have taken your mark and worship your image shall suffer."
Carpathia moved close, his smile gone. "Do not tell my beloved not to
accept the mark of loyalty or worship me!"
"They know the consequence and can see it here."
Rashid began to pan the camera around to take in many agonized
loyalists. "Do not!" Carpathia whispered to him, grabbing his shoulder
and swinging him back. Then to Chaim, "If anyone refuses my mark, I
will put him to death myself!"
"The choice then," Chaim said, "is life with excruciating pain or death
at your hand." "What do you want?"
"You will carry out your plan for the temple," Chaim said, "but many
will oppose you for it."
"At their peril."
"Many have already decided against you and have pledged themselves to
the one true God and his Son, the Messiah."
"They will pay with their lives."
"You asked what I wanted."
"And you propose that people be allowed to shake their fists in my
face? Never!"
Rashid dropped to one knee, trembling. Carpathia shot him a look. "Get
up!"
"I can't!"
"I see the 42 on your forehead, Rashid! You need not fear!"
"I am not afraid, Excellency! I am in pain!"
"Agh! Set the camera on a tripod and tend to your sores!"
Chaim continued calmly. "A million of God's chosen people in this area
alone have chosen to believe in Messiah. They would die before they
would take your mark."
"Then they shall die!"
"You must let them flee this place before you pour out revenge on your
enemies."
"Never!"
"The recompense for stubbornness is on your hands. The grievous sores
on your followers shall be the least of your troubles."
Buck looked past Carpathia to where the mark application lines had been
replaced by makeshift medical tents. Lines of people waited in misery
for treatment. Some held their friends as they gingerly moved about,
only to collapse under their own pain. Bernadette had crawled away.
Rashid was headed toward the tents. Every guard who had accompanied
Nicolae staggered away. One of the helicopters stopped idling and the
pilot tumbled out, whimpering. The pilot of the other was slumped over
the controls.
Civilians, many of whom had been among the last to take the mark and
worship the image, tried to run from the Temple Mount, only to stumble
with sores appearing all over their bodies.
Chaim said, "Your only hope to avoid the next terrible plague from
heaven is to let Israelis who believe in Messiah go."
Finally Carpathia appeared shaken. "And what might that next plague
entail?"
"You will know when you know," Chaim said. "But I can tell you this: It
will be worse than the one that has brought your people low. I need a
drink of water."
Carpathia caught the eye of a loyalist and told him to "fetch Micah a
bottle of water." Chaim stared at the potentate as they waited.
"You are nothing but a thirsty old man in an outsized robe."
"I am not thirsty."
"Then why-"
"You shall see."
"l can hardly wait."
The man came running with the water. He gave it to Carpathia, who
handed it to Chaim. The old man held it up and peered at it. "I could
not drink this anyway," he said.
"What is wrong with it?" Nicolae said. "See for yourself."
Chaim handed it back, and the bottle turned nearly black as the water
turned to blood.
"Ach!" Carpathia said. "This again? Do you not know what happened to
your two associates at the Wailing wall?"
"Any advantages you gain are by God's hand, and they are temporary."
Nicolae turned to see the disaster at the Temple Mount, nearly everyone
writhing. He turned back to Chaim. "I want my people healthy and my
water pure."
"You know the price."
"Specifics."
"Israeli Jews who have chosen to believe Jesus the Christ is their
Messiah must be allowed to leave before you punish anyone for not
taking your mark. And the devout Orthodox Jews must be allowed a place
where they can worship after you have defiled their temple."
"The Orthodox Jews do not even agree with you, and yet you speak for
them?"
"I reserve the right to continue to attempt to persuade them."
"Would you take them to Petra with the Judah-ites?"
"I would propose Masada as a site for them to gather. Any we are able
to persuade would then join us."
"In Petra."
"I did not say where."
"We already know where, you fool, and it required no intelligence on
our parts."
"You tread on dangerous ground when you call a fool one who has been
granted the power to turn your water to blood."
Carpathia screamed into the air, "I need the assistance of loyalists
who have not yet taken the mark or worshiped my image!" A few civilians
came running. "Follow me to the Knesset Building. Obey me, and I will
reward you."
----------
David made his way from horizon to horizon, trying to gauge the extent
of the GC presence at Petra. While there seemed to be countless
vehicles and weapons, the personnel seemed to be in trouble. Most
languished on the ground or on the beds of trucks, being ministered to
by others thus far less affected. He called Albie to report.
----------
Rayford headed east toward Petra in a vehicle carrying three each of
the weapons George had brought to Mizpe Ramon. Albie and Mac followed
in identical vehicles, similarly laden. George and Abdullah rode
together in a vehicle carrying DEWs. Rayford hoped to find a spot to
set up and, using David Hassid as their eyes, see how many vehicles he
and Albie and Mac could destroy with the fifty-caliber rifles.
There would be no need to kill any GC, if David's reports were
accurate. As the enemy fled, George and Abdullah, from closer
proximity, would try to overheat their skin, making their sores all the
worse. Rayford's biggest concern, after avoiding any intentional
killing, was the five of them getting back to Mizpe Ramon in time to
ferry the first escapees from Israel into Petra.
EIGHT
BUCK FOLLOWED Chaim to the temple, where, within twenty minutes,
civilians without the mark of the beast scurried to set up TV cameras
and make arrangements, apparently following hastily written and
reproduced instructions. From where he and Chaim sat, Buck saw others
tidying up the Temple Mount, some carting off the slain heckler, some
directing people either to spectator locations for what they called the
"temple festivities" or to first-aid lines, and still others replacing
in the medical tents GC doctors and nurses who had themselves fallen
too ill to help out.
"Pray for me," Chaim said.
"Why? What? Carpathia is not even here yet."
Chaim stood and began to speak, again in a huge voice. "Citizens! Hear
me! You who have not taken the mark of loyalty! There may still be time
to choose to obey the one true and living God! While the evil ruler of
this world promises peace, there is no peace! While he promises
benevolence and prosperity, look at your world! Everyone who has
preceded you in taking the mark and worshiping the image of the man of
sin now suffers with grievous sores. That is your lot if you follow him.
"By now you must know that the world has been divided. Nicolae
Carpathia is the opponent of God and wishes only your destruction,
regardless of his lies. The God who created you loves you. His Son who
died for your sins will return to set up his earthly kingdom in less
than three and a half years, and if you have not already rejected him
one time too many, you may receive him now.
"You were born in sin and separated from God, but the Bible says God is
not willing that any should perish but that all should come to
repentance. Ephesians 2:8-9 says that nothing we can do will earn our
salvation but that it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone
should boast. The only payment for our sins was Jesus Christ's death on
the cross. Because besides being fully man, he is fully God, and his
one death had the power to cleanse all of us of our sin.
"John 1:12 says that to as many as received him, to them he gave the
right to become children of God by believing on his name. How do you
receive Christ? Merely tell God that you know you are a sinner and that
you need him. Accept the gift of salvation, believe that Christ is
risen, and say so. For many, it is already too late. I beg of you to
receive Christ right now!"
----------
David Hassid, hiding in the rocks atop Petra, tried to coordinate with
Rayford and his cohorts two miles away. They were so well hidden that
he couldn't see them, though he thought he had seen plumes of dust
south of the village of Wadi Musa, immediately east of Petra. They
conferenced up on their secure phones, and Rayford told him George and
Abdullah were trying to get close enough to use the directed energy
weapons. David couldn't spot them from his perch either.
"We can see the GC hardware from three different locations," Rayford
reported. "Anybody manning those weapons?"
"Not that I can see," David said, whispering because he had no idea how
his voice might carry down the mountainside. "They're likely waiting
for word from Jerusalem that the Israelis are on their way."
"It's hard to tell the location of personnel," Rayford said.
"To my right and your extreme left," David said, "the first six or so
vehicles appear unmanned. Only a few of all the soldiers are still
ambulatory, and they seem to be tending to the others either directly
below me or to my left."
"Take cover," Mac said, cutting in. "These things take a while to aim.
It's going to be hit-and-miss at first, and probably more miss than
hit."
"Just don't overshoot," David said. "I've got a small cave staked out.
When we're done, I'll be incommunicado for a while."
"We'll each fire two rounds from the big guns," Rayford said. "After
you've heard six, come out and try to reconnect. We're trying to drive
the personnel to your left so we can safely take out some of the
vehicles. If we can get the soldiers on the run, George and Smitty will
try to make 'em miserable."
"They're already miserable," David said. "But I hear you. If they think
staying put is going to get 'em killed, they'll start walking back to
Israel! Okay, I'm out."
He ducked into the cave and sat waiting for the first blast.
----------
Rayford tried to remember everything George had told him about the
fifty-calibers. He set up two in the truck bed, side by side and
loaded. Fifty yards away, Albie had the same setup. And fifty yards
farther, Mac was ready. They would fire once in that order, then start
over for the second round. Each would watch through high-powered
telescopes to try to gauge the adjustment for the second shot. Six
rounds were perfect to start, Rayford thought, because at some point
the miserable GC would wonder if the barrage would ever stop and
whether they had a prayer of surviving. All he wanted was to destroy
their weapons and their transportation, send them running, and
discourage any hope of ambushing the Israelis.
George had told him it was impossible to judge the wind between weapon
and target and so to aim high, accounting for the effect of gravity
over two miles, and to not expect accuracy within more than twenty or
thirty yards. Rayford worried that an errant shot would kill someone,
including David. He lay on his stomach in the bed of the truck, made
his final adjustments, and locked in on the left-most vehicle. If he
missed left, the bullet would at least spook the soldiers. If he missed
right, he had all kinds of vehicles he might hit, yet he should still
avoid hitting personnel.
Rayford had his finger on the trigger and the stock pressed hard
against his right shoulder. The scope showed him dialed up forty feet
above the target. Just before he squeezed, he reminded himself to keep
his eyes open-not that it would make any difference in trajectory. Only
amateurs shut their eyes.
Thinking about his eyes reminded him of his ears and George's desperate
admonition to plug them somehow. How close had he come to deafening
himself? Rayford rolled to his side, ripped a strip from his shirttail,
tore it in half, and forced a bunched-up wad of material into each ear.
As he was settling in again, hoping he had not affected the aim, his
phone chirped.
It was Albie. "You going first or what?"
"Yeah. Almost forgot my earplugs."
"Oh, man! Thanks for reminding me!"
"Ten seconds."
"Give me thirty," Albie said. "We want to fire in close succession, but
I've got to get something in my ears too. Remind Mac, eh?"
Rayford dialed Mac. "Another half minute while we get earplugs in."
"Say again?"
"Did you remember earplugs?"
"Just a second. Let me get this out of my ear! Now, what?"
"A few more seconds. Ready?"
"Been ready, boss. Let's commence."
Rayford looked at his watch and settled back in. How loud could it be?
How much recoil? The stories had become legends. People shot these all
the time. Should be interesting, that's all. He would squeeze off the
round and stay put, watching through the scope to see where it hit.
It was as if he had not protected his ears. If his eyes were open when
he pulled the trigger, they were driven shut when the stock drove deep
into his shoulder, sending him sliding on his belly until his boots
slammed into the back of the cab. The explosion was so loud and the
heat so intense from a six-inch burst of fire shooting out the side
that Rayford found himself dazed, ears ringing, head buzzing, hands
vibrating.
The weapon flew forward off the resistance from his shoulder until the
legs of the bipod dropped off the edge of the truck. Rayford had meant
to count one-thousand-one up to one-thousand-seven while looking
through the scope, but all he could do was groan, hearing himself as jf
in an echo chamber, his ears not really working yet.
His other weapon had rattled off its bipod and lay on its side, and
Rayford was glad it had not gone off. Albie was to wait three seconds
from the sound of Rayford's shot, and Mac another three after that.
Rayford heard the boom from Albie's rifle and figured he had four
seconds to get the second weapon into place and still see where his
first bullet hit.
He yanked it up, but the scope seemed cockeyed, and Mac's weapon
sounded only a little farther away than Albie's. Rayford should be
shooting again within a few seconds, but he was desperately searching
with the scope for his first shot while trying to line up the second.
He hurt all over, and his body resisted putting itself through that
again.
He saw a huge cloud of pink smoke, assumed he had hit the rock face
above the vehicles, quickly aimed lower and more to the right, and
squeezed, the concussion driving him back yet again. Rayford knew he
had closed his eyes with that shot, but a cloud of sand and a black
plume told him their first three rounds were high, low, and luckily
right on. His second shot sent a shower of sparks and more red dust,
Albie's brought back the sound of twisted metal, and Mac's seemed to
still be in the air.
By now, George and Abdullah should be shooting the directed energy
weapons, but as DEWs had no projectiles, they emitted only a clicking
sound Rayford was unable to hear. He pulled the cloth out of his ears,
then crawled to the second weapon and removed the scope. He sat up and
tried to survey the results. Without anything to support the powerful
lens, it moved around too much. He went to his knees and lodged it
against the side of the truck bed, then scanned slowly until he got his
bearings. No GC personnel in sight.
Three vehicles from the left and about twenty feet up, a hole bigger
than a truck had been blown deep into the rock wall. The fifth and
sixth armored carriers appeared to have been blown away from the wall
by a shot that may have gone between them. The next vehicle was aflame.
There were two dug-up troughs of sand and another obvious hole in the
face of the rock.
David called. "Whoa, ho!" he said. "Do that again and we're home free!"
"Don't count on it," Rayford said. "I don't ever want to do that again."
"It sounded like World War IV, man! The GC had to have started moving
away with the first explosion, and by the time I looked over the edge,
they were mostly at the other end. A lot of them were just pleading for
their lives, but a few dozen lit out across the desert. The directed
energy thingies must have worked, because it wasn't long before those
guys were rolling around in the sand. Some are coming back to the
trucks now, though, so you might want to think about a couple more
rounds each."
Rayford slumped and groaned. And reloaded.
----------
Tsion was still despairing at just before four o'clock in the morning
in Chicago, so he was grateful for the report of the attack on the GC.
"They knew where we would be, so we knew where they were," David wrote
him. "The area will soon be secure for the fleeing remnant of Israel."
Tsion knew he should sleep, but he also knew the rest of the second
half of the Tribulation would not all be this dense with activity. As
he had often reminded an exhausted Rayford, there would be time to rest
and breathe between Carpathia's breaking of the covenant and the Battle
of Armageddon. If they could keep up their strength while trying to
stay atop everything now, they could endure.
Tsion turned on the television to discover that the plague of sores had
swept the world. Even the reporters on TV were in pain, and one entire
special channel was devoted to advice for the sufferers. While the
potentate's visit to the temple at noon Carpathian Time was next on the
network schedule, Tsion switched to the auxiliary channel to see what
they were saying about something that was not of this world anyway.
There was little relief for a plague sent by God, but the Global
Community tried to put the best face on it.
----------
In New Babylon, Chang worried he would be found out if people realized
he was the one among them not afflicted with the sores. His boss had
e-mailed him to see how he was, and Chang intimated that he had better
stay in his room for several days. His boss granted that permission,
provided Chang was sure to put in place what was necessary for the
senior medical staff person in the palace to go live on the special
channel with treatment advice.
Chang was able to do that without leaving his apartment. He watched a
bit of the feed, reminding himself that at 1:00 Palace Time, Nicolae
would enter the temple.
Dr. Consuela Conchita, with dark circles under her eyes and seeming to
struggle to sit up straight, walked people through their own treatment.
"The fact is that we have thus far been unable to specifically diagnose
this pandemic affliction," she said. "It begins as an irritation of the
skin, most often in areas normally covered by clothing, though it has
been known to spread to the face and hands.
"In its initial stages it progresses to a serious itch, soon becoming a
running sore that acts like a furuncle or a boil and sometimes even a
carbuncle. But whereas the usual such maladies are caused by acute
staph infections, these have not responded to conventional symptomatic
treatment. While staphylococcal bacteria are naturally found in these
sores, because such are found on our skin surfaces anyway, some as yet
undetermined bacteria make this outbreak much more serious and
difficult to treat.
"While these do not appear life threatening, they must be carefully
managed to keep from becoming deeply infected abscesses. We have ruled
out any causal relationship between the sores and the methods used to
administer the mark of loyalty. So while the sores seem to affect only
those who have the mark, the connection seems entirely coincidental.
"These types of skin problems can lead to permanent scarring, so it is
important to keep the affected areas clean and use any anti-itching
recipe you find helpful. Antibiotics have not yet proven effective at
containing the infection, but are recommended nonetheless.
"Wear loose clothing to allow for good ventilation of the skin. Avoid
intravenous drug use, and invest in a good antibacterial soap. Use hot
or cold compresses, whichever best alleviates your discomfort. Fever
and fatigue are common side effects."
Chang didn't know if it was the power of suggestion or just his own
irrational fear. But he noticed an itch on his shin, leaped from his
chair, and pulled up his pant leg. There was nothing visible, but he
couldn't keep from scratching the spot. That made it redden, but was
there something deeper? He told himself it couldn't be, that even if he
had the mark of Carpathia, he had neither chosen it, nor had or would
he ever worship the image of Nicolae, let alone Nicolae himself.
----------
Buck could hardly believe it when dozens of unmarked civilians
approached Chaim and asked to pray with him. "You realize you could pay
with your life," Chaim told them. "This is no idle commitment."
People knelt before him, following him in prayer. The mark of the seal
of God appeared on their foreheads.
"Those of you who are Jews," Chaim said, "listen carefully. God has
prepared a special place of refuge for you. When Carpathia's plans to
retaliate reach their zenith, listen for my announcement and head south
out of the city. Volunteers will drive you to Mizpe Ramon in the Negev.
My assistant here will tell you how to recognize them by something we
can see that our enemy cannot. If you cannot find transportation, get
to the Mount of Olives where, just as from Mizpe Ramon, you will be
airlifted by helicopter to Petra, the ancient Arabian city in
southwestern Jordan. There God has promised to protect us until the
Glorious Appearing of Jesus when he sets up his thousand-year reign on
earth."
As noon approached, the men from the Wailing Wall made their way toward
the temple. They were serious-looking, and clearly not happy. Many were
in traditional Jewish garb and stood at the edges of the crowd that
pressed in on Chaim. They listened, but none approached or spoke.
Several glanced over their shoulders at the temple and at the monitors,
apparently to be sure they missed nothing.
Chaim finished with the new believers, and as they slowly dispersed, he
gestured to those who had come from the Wailing Wall. "You holy men of
Israel," he said, "I know who you are. You remain unpersuaded that
Jesus bar Joseph of Nazareth is the foretold Messiah, yet neither do
you accept that Nicolae Carpathia is of God. I urge you only to listen
as a man enters your Holy of Holies and defiles it in his own name. I
shall tell of Scriptures that foretold this very event. Then I will beg
your indulgence yet again as I seek refuge for you at Masada, where I
will present the evidence for Jesus the Christ as the Messiah of
Judaism."
The holy men scowled and murmured.
"Gentlemen!" Chaim called out with authority. "I ask only for your
attention. What you do with this information is entirely up to you.
Without God's protection you run the risk of death opposing the ruler
of this world, and yet his desecration of this holy site will enrage
you."
Buck felt his phone vibrate and saw that Chang was calling. "Make it
quick," Buck said.
"Are you aware of my sister's idea of my cutting in on Carpathia's
broadcast and superseding it with Dr. Ben-Judah's?"
"Chloe told me. Can you do it for Chaim as well?"
With your help."
"What do you need?"
"A camera and a microphone."
"Where do I get that?"
"You're there, Mr. Williams. I'm not. Obviously, Carpathia will have
cameras in the temple and wants the world to see what he does there. My
schedule says he's going to speak afterward, but I can't tell if that's
inside or outside. If you can somehow commandeer a camera and mike
while he's inside, I can put Rosenzweig on instead of Carpathia, and he
won't know it until someone gets to him."
"I like that."
"I do too," Chang said, "but if he makes his speech outside, he'll see
what we're doing."
"We've got to take that chance. And here he comes now. Chaim thinks he
will speak outside on a replica of Solomon's scaffold. He's got an
entourage of civilians around him carrying an extravagant throne, and
some are dragging that pig from yesterday. Carpathia just told 'em,
'You will all be rewarded. Soon the world will know beyond doubt that I
am god.'"
"No GC brass with him?"
"Yeah, I see Fortunato and Moon and a few others, but they look
terrible. They're not going to be much help to him."
"There have to be unmanned GCNN cameras around, with all the
technicians down with sores."
"I see a few on tripods, aimed at the temple."
"Can you grab one?"
"Who's going to stop me?"
"Go for it. I just need to know the number on the upper left in the
back, and be sure a monitor and a mike are attached."
"Hang on."
Buck hesitated as Carpathia stopped near them, Fortunato, Moon, Ivins,
and others mince-stepping behind, pale and haggard. The holy men turned
and glared at them. Nicolae pointed at Chaim. "You I will deal with
later," he said. "This spell of yours is temporary, and what happened
to your two crazies at the Wailing Wall will befall you as well. And as
for you," he added, gesturing to the angry men, "you will regret the
day Israel turned her back on me. A covenant of peace is only as good
as either side's keeping its word."
"Boo!" one shouted, and others hissed and clucked their tongues. "You
would dare blaspheme our God?" Still more joined in, raising their
fists.
Carpathia turned toward the temple, then spun back. "Your God?" he
said. "Where is he? Inside? Shall I go and see? If he is in there and
does not welcome me, should I tremble? Might he strike me dead?"
"I pray he does!" a rabbi shouted.
Carpathia leveled his eyes at the men. "You will regret the day you
opposed me. It shall not be long before you either submit to my mark or
succumb to my blade."
He strode up the temple steps, but his suffering followers had to help
each other ascend. The holy men followed several feet behind. When
Carpathia and his people followed a contingent of his loyal civilians
past the pillars and into the porch area, the men stood outside,
rocking, bowing, crying out to God.
Buck jogged to an unmanned camera and mike, his phone to his ear. A
small monitor and headphones dangled beneath the camera, fastened
between two of the tripod legs. The monitor carried the network's
global feed and just then showed Carpathia entering the temple. The
camera operator must have been newly recruited, because he fumbled for
the correct lens opening.
"Got it," Buck told Chang and read him the information.
"Good! Wireless. Get it as close to Rosenzweig as you can, and set the
mike in the cradle beneath the lens."
Buck tried to wrestle the tripod, but the wheels were locked, and
working with just one hand, he barely kept it from toppling. He told
Chang he'd call him back and went to work on the wheels.
Meanwhile, Chaim unloaded on Carpathia again. "If you are God," he
railed, "why can you not heal your own Most High Reverend Father or the
woman closer to you than a relative? Where are all your military
leaders and the other members of your cabinet?"
The attention of the crowds moved from Chaim to the temple entrance
again. His ploy had worked. Carpathia had reappeared. Many of the holy
men rushed down the steps, effectively blocking Nicolae's view of the
camera now in front of Chaim, but Buck feared it appeared they were
scared of the potentate.
"Where are your loyal followers," Chaim continued, "those who have
taken your cursed mark and worshiped you and your image? A body covered
with boils is the price one pays to worship you, and you claim to be
God?"
To Buck it appeared Nicolae was merely trying to stare down the old
man. The Rosenzweig Buck knew would not have been able to withstand
that kind of psychological warfare, but Micah-this new Moses- held
Carpathia's gaze so long without even blinking that Nicolae finally
turned away.
Buck studied the monitor. It looked like the last exchange had not been
broadcast. The picture now showed someone in the studio in New Babylon
announcing that GCNN was "returning to Jerusalem, where His Excellency
will tour the famous temple. With the illness affecting much of our
staff as it has so many around the world, we ask your indulgence, as
many of the technicians helping bring you this special event are
volunteers."
----------
David worried when it took several rounds from the big guns and
strategic use of the DEWs to finally dislodge from Petra the already
boil-crippled GC forces. He was certain he had not been detected, and
now he hoped the enemy's military brass would rule out reinforcements.
Rayford told him that he and Albie and Mac were okay except for sore
shoulders and ringing ears, and that George and Abdullah had reported a
few more hits with the flesh-heating weapons as the fleeing GC passed
within a quarter mile of their blind. "I wouldn't be surprised,"
Rayford added, "if you started getting a wave of new residents by late
this afternoon."
That was as close as David had ever been to live combat, but it had
almost not seemed fair. He couldn't imagine trying to stage an attack
while most of your personnel were suffering from nasty sores.
Not knowing whether Chaim would lead or follow the escaping Israelis to
Petra, David considered that he might be in charge until Dr. Rosenzweig
arrived. He could think of no better plan than first come, first
served, and he tried to scope out where the first quarter million would
begin to settle. By the time he got back to his computer to see what
was happening at the temple, a message was waiting from Hannah Palemoon.
David, there is a lull here, and of
course we never know how long those
last. We're praying that the small party that answered your call to
thwart the GC there comes back healthy and successful.
This is not easy to write, but I feel I must get it off my chest.
Besides that you are still grieving the love of your life, neither of
us would likely have considered a relationship during this period of
history anyway, and we barely know each other. So, please, please don't
think I'm writing this in the context of any feelings I think either of
us should have for the other.
We're friends, aren't we? That doesn't obligate us much, if at all. For
both of our sakes, let me just say it. I was hurt at how cavalierly you
treated me regarding your decision to not return to the United North
American States at the end of Operation Eagle. It was a huge,
complicated thing, a major crossroads in your life. I need to say too
that it probably is the right decision.
But I learned about it along with everyone else. You apparently
discussed it at length with Captain Steele, and next thing we know,
it's announced, you're shaking hands and bidding farewells, and off you
go. My friend, my buddy, the one I assumed I would lean on, is gone,
just like that.
I'm sorry to lay this on you, but I just don't feel you have treated me
like a friend. I would have felt honored to help you make the decision
or at least have been informed of it privately, as if you cared what I
thought. I could be making you glad you didn't see this neurotic nurse
as a better friend. If this is crazy and you know without doubt that I
will regret having sent it, pretend I didn't. And thanks, really, for
some cherished memories.
Love in Christ,
Hannah
NINE
BUCK FOCUSED on Chaim, framing him close to keep from giving clues to
his whereabouts to anyone monitoring in New Babylon. If this worked the
way Chang seemed to hope, the Global Community News Network people
would try to pull Chaim off the air and, short of that, try to locate
and reclaim the pirated camera.
Buck turned the monitor so both he and Chaim could keep track of
Carpathia and also be able to tell when Chang switched to them. When
GCNN moved to the camera inside the temple, they found a commotion.
Nicolae barked at the volunteer cameraman's volunteer assistant, and
the picture wobbled. Buck jammed on the headphones and heard the
assistant. "I'm sorry, Excellency, but I don't want to do that."
"You would disobey me?" Nicolae whispered.
"I want to obey, sir, but-"
"Sir?!"
"Holiness! But I'm not supposed to even be in here, and they aren't
going to listen to me."
"You are speaking for me, and if they are not out of here by the time I
get to their stations, their blood will be used for the sacrifices."
"Oh, sir-Potentate!"
"Now, or you face the same fate."
GCNN in New Babylon broke in. "His Excellency's entourage has passed
through the Court of Women, where Ms. Viv Ivins will wait. The rest
have entered the Court of Men and apparently have come upon priests
refusing to leave the temple for Potentate Carpathia's private tour, as
was clearly stipulated.
"From the time he negotiated with the Muslims to move the Dome of the
Rock mosque to New Babylon, the potentate made it clear that all
activity in the rebuilt Jewish temple would be allowed only with his
approval. It is no secret that Orthodox Jews have continued with the
daily rituals and sacrifices of their own faith even after Enigma
Babylon One World Faith was instituted as the only legal international
religion, designed to incorporate the tenets of all faiths. After His
Excellency resurrected himself from the dead, he became our object of
worship, resulting in the dissolution of One World Faith and the
establishing of Carpathianism. Still, the Jews and a faction of
fundamentalist Christians known as Judah-ites-after their leader,
self-proclaimed Messianic Jew, Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah-remain the last
holdouts against our true and living god.
"His Excellency will eventually enter the Holy of Holies, but first he
is insisting on the removal of the dissidents. Let's go back."
"Anyone not here in honor to me may be shot dead," Carpathia said. "Are
you armed and prepared?"
"No!" the assistant cried.
"I am armed," Walter Moon said.
"You," Nicolae said, pointing to the assistant, "take Mr. Moon's weapon
and do your duty."
Buck was riveted to the monitor as Nicolae stared not into the lens but
past it to the volunteer. The camera turned jerkily to show the man
refusing the gun. There was a rustle, a shot, a cry-and the man fell.
The camera turned back to show Carpathia himself with the gun. "Show
him," Nicolae said, and again the camera moved toward the body on the
floor.
A change in ambient noise in Buck's headphones preceded Chang's voice.
"Here we go," he said.
Chaim stepped back into position, and the red light shone on Buck's
camera.
"Not only does the evil ruler of this world want to rid the priests of
their rightful place in their own temple," Chaim said, "but it also
appears he has personally committed murder at this holy site." What
Buck heard did not match the movements of Chaim's mouth, and he
realized the man was speaking in Hebrew and he was hearing in English.
The protesting holy men watching the monitors outside shouted and
pumped their fists, bringing others crowding up the steps. Many of
these, Buck noticed, had no marks of loyalty either, and their number
was growing. He peeked at the small monitor beneath his camera. GCNN
was broadcasting Chaim, though through his headset he could hear
chatter about technical difficulties. Chang broke in again, assuring
Buck, "I've got the New Babylon people muted off the air, but they're
trying to get a bead on your camera. I'll switch back to Carpathia and
let them wonder awhile."
"Hold till Chaim finishes this thought," Buck said.
"As Carpathia continues," Chaim said, "you should be able to see the
laver where the priests wash their hands before they approach the main
altar. The temple was creatively placed over a series of underground
waterways where gravity allows constant water pressure for the various
cleansings. Of course, he has no business in this place, and even a
ceremonial washing of his hands will not exonerate him for defiling it."
"Switching," Chang said, and the monitor showed Carpathia signaling to
his cameraman to follow.
"We were idle there for a moment," the man said.
"What did you miss?"
"I don't think we picked up the, you know ..."
"My touching the blood?"
"No, Excellency. Shall we go back?"
"No!" Carpathia said, disgust in his voice. He held his black-red hands
before the lens. "My faithful get the message." He raised his voice
till it echoed and was distorted. "Any who dares interrupt my
pilgrimage will find his blood on my fingers!"
Pounding footsteps made the cameraman whirl, and the screen filled with
robed priests, charging Carpathia.
"See where this blood comes from!" Carpathia shouted, and the camera
went to the faces of the priests, who stopped and paled.
Looking to where the body lay, they moaned and cried out, "Does your
evil know no bounds?"
"Are you the god-haters," Nicolae raged, "who do not know me as a god,
a god acknowledged by all others, but not named by you?"
One spoke up. "It should not surprise you that we showed our loyalty by
offering daily sacrifices on your behalf."
"You have made offerings," Carpathia said, "but to another, even if it
was for me. What good is it then, for you have not sacrificed to me? No
sacrifice shall ever again be made in this temple except to me. Not for
me, to me. Now leave or face the same fate as this unlucky one who was
foolish enough not to believe that I have been allotted the nature of
god!"
"God will judge you, evil one!"
"Give me your gun again, Supreme Commander!"
"We retreat not in fear but rather because you have turned the house of
God into a killing field!"
"Just go! I shall have my way in my home, and should you be found
without proof of loyalty to me by week's end, you shall offer your
heads as ransom."
The priests left with shouts and threats, and Buck saw their colleagues
outside greet them with sympathy and encouragement. "Lovers of God,
unite!" one shouted, and onlookers picked up the chant.
Buck's camera light went on, and Chaim began again. "The inner court
inside the pillars has stairs that face east and lead to the main
altar. Priests who revere God march around the Court of Priests and the
Holy Place with their left hands closest to the altar. This one who
would trample holy ground has already begun the opposite way, so his
right hand will be closest to the altar. The Scriptures foretold that
he would have no regard for the one true God. What plans he has for the
beast with which he ridiculed the Via Dolorosa will be revealed only as
he invades deeper into God's own territory.
"What a shameful contrast this is to the Shekinah glory of God, which
has thrice appeared, the last time at this very temple. God appeared to
Moses on Mount Sinai when the Ten Commandments were handed down. He
appeared again when Moses dedicated the Tent of God. And finally he
showed himself at the dedication of Solomon's Temple on this very site.
Should God choose, he could reveal himself even today and crush under
his foot this evil enemy. But he has an eternal plan, and Antichrist is
merely a bit player. Though Antichrist has been granted power to work
his horror throughout the world for a time, he shall come to a bitter
end that has already been decided."
"We were off the air again, Excellency," the cameraman reported when
they came back on.
"What are you doing wrong?"
"Nothing, Potentate! My red light merely goes off, and no matter what I
do, it returns when it returns."
"Show that! Show the beauty of the construction that was for my
benefit, even though the architect and the craftsmen did not know it at
the time." The camera panned to the cypress, the cedar, the gold inlays
and coverings, the silver and the brass. "No expense was spared in my
house!" Nicolae exulted.
Leon Fortunato, apparently feeling left out, said something not picked
up by the microphone. "Speak up, my friend!" Carpathia said, removing
his lapel mike and holding it to Fortunato's mouth.
"You, my lord,"Tortunato rasped, obviously weak and wasted, "are the
good spirit of the world and source of all good things."
----------
David Hassid sat high above Petra, with the solar panel of his laptop
facing the sun and the screen shadowed. Chang was amazing. But the
drama being played out on international television and over the
Internet made David wonder how Chaim was going to gain the ability to
free the believing Jews. He wished he could somehow communicate with
Chaim that the time was now to put out a call for everyone to flee
before Carpathia finished the desecration and returned to retaliate.
But scheming was not his place, David knew. God had had this worked out
since the beginning of time, and he alone could prompt Chaim.
The crowds outside the temple looked dangerous. Carpathia supporters
tried to shout down the Orthodox Jews, but those who had received the
mark and worshiped the image could barely stand. The growing opposition
to Carpathia seemed to gain confidence with its numbers, especially
considering that the potentate's inner circle and military personnel
were so clearly incapacitated.
Still, David knew, Nicolae was a mortal incendiary, flaunting his
temporary power. He instructed his ersatz camera bearer to set up
behind him as he waited outside the veil hiding the Holy of Holies.
David could only imagine the God of heaven watching with the rest of
the world as, with a flourish, Nicolae removed a long knife from his
belt and sliced the veil from as high as he could reach all the way to
the floor, then pushed back each side. Over Carpathia's
shoulder-already waiting near the brass altar-David could see
Carpathia's own gaudy throne and the gigantic pig from the day before,
now without a saddle and clearly no longer tranquilized. It fought two
ropes around its neck, held by more Carpathia loyalists who had not yet
received his mark. Fortunate and Moon shuffled into position behind the
pig, as if only to be sure to be in the picture.
Suddenly the feed switched to the camera outside, and David knew Chang
had to have tipped off Buck. He had turned his lens on the opposition
watching the monitors. Many fell to their knees and tore their robes.
The scene switched back inside, where the pig squealed and strained and
Carpathia laughed, approaching with the knife. He lunged at the animal
and it dodged, making him slip. "Want to play?" Nicolae roared and
leaped aboard, knocking the pig to its knees. It quickly righted
itself, and the potentate nearly slid off. He caught himself on one of
the ropes, pulled himself back up, and reached with the knife, slashing
the animal's throat.
The pig went wild and dumped Carpathia to the floor. The animal
thrashed as Carpathia struggled to his feet, his clothes covered in
blood. The handlers held on, and the pig soon slowed and lost its
footing.
Nicolae, abandoning any semblance of ritual, resheathed his knife and
cupped both hands under the blood pouring from the dying pig's neck.
Before he was even upright again, he flung blood toward the altar and
splattered the pig handlers, who ducked and howled in hysterics.
Fortunate and Moon were caught in the melee and appeared to force
smiles, though they also looked as if they were about to collapse.
David sat with his mouth open, wondering how anyone could take
seriously a man who not only thumbed his nose at God, but who also
acted like a drunken reveler at a frat party.
When the pig finally stopped moving, Nicolae attempted to butcher it
with the knife and found neither himself nor the blade equal to the
task. "Pity!" he cried, to the laughter of his people, and plopped
himself down in his throne. "I wanted roast pork!"
Carpathia seemed to quickly tire of the silliness. "Get the pig out of
here," he said, "and bring in my image." He stood and hurried to a
spigot of rushing water. The camera stayed on his face, but it was
clear he disrobed under the spray. "Cold!" he shouted, finally reaching
for a towel provided by yet another lackey. Someone handed him the
robe, sash, and sandals from the day before, and he looked directly
into the lens. "Now, once my image is in place," he said, "we are out
to Solomon's scaffold."
Chang patched in Chaim. "Is this not the most vile man who ever lived?"
Rosenzweig said. "Is he not the antithesis of whom he claims to be? I
call on all who have resisted or delayed in accepting his mark and
plead with you to refuse it. Avoid the sentence of grievous sores and
certain death."
David shifted and stretched his legs, eager to interact with someone
about what everyone had seen. The most logical person he could think of
was Hannah.
----------
Buck feared his appropriated TV camera would be revealed when the small
contingent of Orthodox Jews who had unintentionally worked together to
shield it from Carpathia and his minions suddenly bolted away. The
Temple Mount had become a roiling stew of angry citizens, and not just
those without the mark of the beast. Loyalists had apparently come to
the end of their patience with the loathsome sores all over their
bodies. And the fiasco Carpathia had just perpetrated in the temple
could not have amused more than his basest, most rabid supporters.
Messianic believers, new Christ-followers, the Orthodox Jews, and
seemingly even thousands of undecided among the general populace had
seen the new Carpathia. It was as if he had abandoned any attempt to
persuade or convince anyone. He was to be revered and worshiped and
followed because he was god, and anyone who didn't agree would suffer.
But those who agreed most wholeheartedly were suffering the most.
But to have murdered a man in cold blood on international television,
to literally drench his hands with the man's blood, to have announced
the end of ceremonial sacrifices-except to himself-and then to not just
claim the temple as his own house but to also defile it in such a
graphic, disgusting way was more than the natural mind could comprehend.
Men in flowing beards cried out, "He would sacrifice a pig in the Holy
of Holies and cavort in its blood?" They fell to their knees, weeping
and moaning. But even more people crowded the pillars at the top of the
steps, calling for Carpathia's own blood.
It became clear to Buck when Carpathia finally irrevocably tipped the
scale against himself. The holy men shushed the crowd when Nicolae's
small contingent of healthy men fetched the golden statue. A low rumble
of dissent grew as thousands seemed unable to control themselves, while
trying to hear what dastardly thing he would do next.
"Why worship at an altar of brass?" he said, his sneer filling the
monitors. "If this is indeed the holiest of holy places, every
supplicant should enjoy the privilege of bowing to my image, which our
Most High Reverend Father has imbued with the power to speak when I am
not present!"
Carpathia waited inside the temple for delivery of his statue, but when
the assignees appeared to carefully tip it horizontally and bear it
inside, they were surrounded by the mob. "Even GC personnel are
fighting this, Chaim," Buck said, and the old man nodded. Buck shot him
a double take. Chaim seemed more than solemn. He appeared distracted,
probably running over in his mind his next step. This situation had
turned uglier than anyone in the Tribulation Force had expected, from
what Buck remembered of all their discussions and planning sessions.
Something had to give-and soon.
When the protestors rushed the men carrying the statue, other loyalists
from inside rushed out, brandishing weapons. A few fired into the air
and the crowd backed off, waving their fists and cursing. When the
monitors showed the men transporting the life-size image to the west
end of the temple and up the steps to the Holy of Holies, the crowd had
had enough and began rioting. If a person wore a GC uniform and was not
part of the melee, he or she was a target of it.
Most uniformed personnel were too weak even to fire their weapons, but
when some did and a few fell under their bullets, the throng erupted
and attacked. The medical tents toppled, benches and chairs were
upended, the guillotine was knocked over and stomped into pieces.
Morale Monitors and Peacekeepers were trampled, their weapons yanked
from their hands, and soon the TV monitors came crashing down. All over
the Temple Mount people raged, screeching, "Down with Carpathia! Death
to the monster! May he die and stay dead!"
Buck pulled Chaim to a safe spot and tried to shield the contraband
camera. His monitor showed that the cacophony had reached Carpathia,
and he appeared pale and shaken. "I am coming out to calm my people,"
he said into the lens. "They need only be reminded that I am their
risen lord and god."
Few heard that over the din, but those who did must have spread the
word quickly, because as Buck followed Carpathia's march back to the
entrance of the temple, he looked up to see the Orthodox Jews leading
the way to the fake Solomon's scaffold, which was quickly reduced to
splinters.
A band of zealots spotted Buck's camera, and before he could convince
them he was on their side, they grabbed it and smashed it to the
ground. Desperate to see what would happen in front of the temple, Buck
scampered up a tree and saw Viv Ivins meet Carpathia near the entrance.
Something kept the rioters outside, and Buck guessed it could be only
their reluctance to assassinate a man in the temple, despite what he
had done there.
Nicolae looked petrified while trying to appear otherwise and kept
looking back to find the rest of his entourage. They finally caught up,
but simply remaining upright seemed to take the last vestiges of
strength from Fortunato and Moon and many others. Carpathia pointed and
shouted, and someone found him a microphone that was connected to
loudspeakers in the outer court.
Like a madman choosing the wholly wrong approach to winning back the
crowd, Carpathia held the mike in one hand and raised his other for
attention, crying out, "You have breached the covenant! My pledge of
seven years of peace for Israel is rescinded! Now you must allow me and
my-"
But the rest was drowned out by the mutinous multitude. While they
would not cross the threshold of the temple, they pressed right up to
it, creating a human barrier between Carpathia and his freedom to step
out. Suddenly they quieted and began to chuckle, then laugh, then roar
with pleasure at what they had accomplished. It was as if they had
cornered a helpless pest and now didn't know what to do with him.
"My brothers and sisters of the Global Community," Carpathia began
again, "I will see that you are healed of your sores, and you will
again see that it is I who love you and bring you peace!"
"You'll not leave here alive, pretender!" someone shouted, and others
took up the cause.
Then, crystal clear in the early afternoon air, came the piercing voice
of the little man in the brown robe, and all eyes and ears turned
toward him. "It is not the due time for the man of sin to face
judgment, though it is clear he has been revealed!"
The crowd murmured, not wanting to be dissuaded from killing Carpathia.
Chaim strode slowly toward the bulk of the group, and they
respectfully, silently parted. "As was foretold centuries ago," Chaim
continued as he angled toward the temple steps, "God has chosen to
allow this evil for a time, and impotent as this enemy of your souls
may be today, much more evil will be perpetrated upon you under his
hand. When he once again gains advantage, he will retaliate against
this presumption on his authority, and you would do well to not be here
when his anger is poured out."
"That is right!" Carpathia hollered, his voice sounding tinny compared
to Chaim's authoritative tone. "You will rue the day when you dared-"
"You!" Chaim roared, pointing at Nicolae. "You shall let God's chosen
ones depart before his curse is lifted, lest you face a worse plague in
its place."
Buck, still wedged in the tree, phoned Chang. "Camera's trashed," he
said.
"So I gathered."
"You getting this?"
"The GC's trying to talk over it. It's as if they can't decide whether
Carpathia would want it on the air. Heads are going to roll."
"What'd Carpathia just say?" Buck said. "I missed it."
"Something about his being at the Knesset, available to negotiate or to
answer honest inquiries from his subjects."
"They'll never let him get out of the-"
But they did. The crowd backed away for Nicolae and his people as they
had for Chaim.
"Any chance of tapping into the Knesset?" Buck said.
"Not that I know of," Chang said. "Are you going?"
"If Chaim goes, I go."
"Leave your phone open. I'll patch it to everybody else."
But before Buck could get down from the tree, Chaim raised his arms and
gained the attention of the angry mob. "Let those who are in Judea flee
to the mountains. Let him who is on the housetop not go down to take
anything out of his house. And let him who is in the field not go back
to get his clothes."
"Why should we flee?" someone yelled. "We have exposed the potentate as
an impotent pretender!"
"Because God has spoken!"
"Now we're to believe you are God?"
"The great I Am has told me. Whatsoever he even thinks comes to pass,
and as he purposes, so shall it stand."
Buck was sure the people would have none of it, but Chaim had
apparently spoken with such authority that they were instantly calmed.
"Where shall we go?" someone asked.
"If you are a believer in Jesus Christ as Messiah," Chaim said, "leave
now for Petra by way of Mizpe Ramon. If you have transportation, take
as many with you as you can. Volunteers from around the globe are also
here to transport you, and from Mizpe Ramon you will be helicoptered in
to Petra. The weak, the elderly, the infirm, find your way to the Mount
of Olives, and you will be flown in from there."
"And if we do not believe?"
"If you have an ear to hear, make your way to Masada, where you will be
free to worship God as you once did here at his temple. There I will
present the case for Jesus as Messiah. Do not wait! Do not hesitate! Go
now, everyone!"
Buck was stunned to see many with Carpathia's mark stagger into the
throng that was quickly forming to depart the Temple Mount. He knew
they could not change their minds, that they had once and for all
turned their backs on God. But they were now in no-man's-land. They
were without the protection of God, and yet they had publicly crossed
Antichrist. Should the plague of boils be lifted, surely GC forces
would cut them down. The Orthodox Jews and the undecided were allowed
at Masada, but no one who had taken the mark of the beast could enter.
----------
David had been unable to raise Hannah on his computer, so he wrote his
response to her E-mail and transmitted it just before watching the
goings-on at the Temple Mount. Excitement coursed through him as he
anticipated the first arrivals. He had spent hours setting up the basic
framework of the wireless computer system, and now all he could do was
wait.
----------
Buck didn't want to lose Chaim, but he needn't have worried. The Temple
Mount was soon empty and left a mess. Chaim descended the temple steps
and motioned to Buck to follow. As they walked in the direction of the
Knesset, Jerusalem seemed to explode around them. Looters smashed
windows and knocked over merchandise kiosks in the streets. Drunken
revelers sang and danced and sloshed drinks as they cavorted outside
bars and clubs. Those suffering with boils wailed, and many tried to
kill themselves in broad daylight.
Meanwhile, the Jewish believers, the undecideds, and the Orthodox Jews
hurried along, seeking rides to the Mount of Olives, Masada, or Mizpe
Ramon. Operation Eagle vehicles abounded, unidentified other than by
eager drivers encouraging others with the mark of God on their
foreheads to quickly get aboard. Drivers who saw Buck and Chaim either
saluted or pointed to heaven. Everywhere people called out, "He is
risen," and were answered by, "Christ is risen indeed!" Many were
singing.
Buck suffered from sensory overload. He mourned Hattie. He missed Chloe
and Kenny and feared for their safety. He was both horrified and
thrilled by what he had seen, and he was also puzzled yet hopeful. He
had not expected Chaim to have to persuade people to flee Carpathia
while they believed they had already gained the upper hand. And of
course he had no idea what to expect at the Knesset.
----------
As a commercial pilot Rayford had thrived on the stchedule, the
predictability of his days. But on this mission he had had to adapt at
a moment's notice, depending upon how God led Chaim. This could have
been as simple as driving people from Jerusalem to Mizpe Ramon- roughly
a hundred miles-then airlifting them about fifty miles southeast to
Petra. But somewhere along the line both Masada and the Mount of Olives
had been added to the itinerary, and it was Rayford's job to stretch
his personnel to fit the task. One responsibility he carved out for
himself was picking up Chaim and Buck once everyone else was safe. Dr.
Rosenzweig insisted on their being among the last to arrive at Petra,
akin to a captain and his first mate's being the last ones off a ship,
but Rayford wouldn't know until the last minute where to pick them up.
----------
"Binoculars?" Z said. "I can do ya one better'n that, Chloe. You
lookin' up or out?"
"Mostly out," Chloe said, yawning. "Nothing specific." She didn't want
Zeke to know what was on her mind. It wasn't that she didn't trust him.
She simply didn't want any input. The adults had sat watching the
temple debacle, and the flight to Petra was underway. Once she was
satisfied that Buck was safe, she would be able to sit idle no more.
Zeke had come up with an interesting idea weeks before. Like everyone
else, she liked the way he thought, though his way of expressing
himself might fool a stranger into thinking he was less than bright. He
had encouraged Chloe to clone herself via the Internet. "You know,
recruit other people like you. There have to be lots of young moms who
are feeling left out of the action. Teach 'em what you do, get 'em to
do it in their areas and regions. You can't do it all yourself anyway."
The concept had ignited like a gaslit fire. Chloe uploaded manuals and
lists of duties, procedures, cross-referenced contact
databases-everything a regional director of the International Commodity
Co-op would need. She was virtually working herself out of a job.
Now she had gone to the jack-of-all-trades and the one man besides her
father who had inventoried the entire Strong Building. Zeke had gone
further than Rayford, however. He had computerized a list of everything
he had found. A tower that huge bore a mother lode of treasures. "I
mean, there are binocs," he said. "Some really super-powerful,
top-of-the-line types too. But knowin' you, you want the most powerful
eyes I can find ya, am I right?"
"As usual."
"It'll be dawn soon. You want it like right now?"
"If possible."
"Be right back."
Zeke took several minutes. His computer told him where this item was,
and he headed for the elevators.
Ming headed back to bed while Tsion reported that Chang had informed
him he would try to patch Chicago in to the Knesset meeting of Chaim
and Buck with Carpathia. "I need to sleep," Tsion told Chloe, "but I
will keep an ear open for that. . . unless you want to."
"I've had enough of St. Nick for one night," she said. "Why don't you
just record it and get some rest?"
Tsion nodded with a look that said her idea had scored with him. "That
way I can listen if I want and not worry if I nod off."
Zeke returned, looking as if he couldn't wait to see Chloe's reaction.
He handed her a plain white box that surprised her with its weight. She
sat and opened it, producing a huge, squatty telescope about a foot
long that took two hands to pull from the wrapping. "Wow," she said.
"Will this need a tripod?"
"Not supposed to," Zeke said. "But you gotta brace it on somethin'. The
window ledge will do. Want any help?"
"No thanks, Z. I appreciate it. Let me figure it out for myself. It's
way past your bedtime too, isn't it?"
"Way past."
TEN
THE SORES had so decimated Carpathia's staff that Buck thought anyone
could walk right past security at the Knesset and take him out. The
weak, scratching, wincing crew looked up wearily at Buck and Chaim but
barely acknowledged their presence. Not only was Buck not searched, but
he was also not even asked his name. He and Chaim were ushered into a
small conference room, where Nicolae sat with Fortunato on his right
and Moon on his left. They looked like refugees from a quarantine camp,
both hunched over the table, heads in their hands, barely able to keep
their eyes open.
As the door shut behind Buck, Carpathia said sarcastically, "Forgive me
for not standing." He pointed to two chairs. Buck sat quickly, then
felt conspicuous when Chaim remained standing.
"I represent the one true God and his Son, Jesus, the Christ," the old
man said. "I prefer to stand."
Carpathia appeared so angry he couldn't speak. His jaw muscles
protruded as he ground his teeth, glaring. Chaim merely met his gaze.
"All right," Nicolae said, "I am letting these people run off to the
hills. When do the sores go away? I upheld my end of the bargain."
"We had a bargain?" Chaim said.
"Come, come! We are wasting time! You said you would lift this spell if
I-"
"That is not my recollection," Chaim said. "I said that if you did not
let them go, you would suffer yet a worse plague."
"So I let them go. Now you-"
"It is not as if you had a choice."
Carpathia slammed an open palm on the table, making his cohorts jump.
"Are we here to play word games? I want the sores on my people healed!
What do I have to do?"
"Make no attempt to stop Israeli Messianic believers from getting to
Petra."
Carpathia stood. "Have you not noticed? I am the only full-time
employee of the Global Community not suffering from the plague!"
Chaim remained calm. "And that only because you have not taken your own
mark, though I daresay you worship yourself."
Nicolae rushed around the table and bent to face Chaim from just inches
away. "Our medical experts have determined there is no connection
between the application of the mark of loyalty and-"
"Why does your bad breath not surprise me?"
"You do not dare to lift the curse for fear your fate will be the same
as that of your two associates at the Wall."
"If your medical experts know so much," Chaim said, "how is it that
they have been able to offer no relief?"
Carpathia sighed and sat on the table, his back to Fortunato and Moon.
"So you are not here to negotiate? You are here to tell me I am at your
mercy and that there is nothing I can do to ease the pain of my people?"
"I am here to remind you that this script has already been written. I
have read it. You lose."
Carpathia stood again. "If I am not god," he said, "I challenge yours
to slay me now. I spit in his face and call him a weakling. If I remain
alive for ten more seconds, he, and you, are frauds."
Chaim smiled. "What kind of a God would he be if he felt compelled to
act on your timetable?"
Buck loved seeing Carpathia speechless. He seemed to tremble with rage,
staring and shaking his head. Behind him, Moon tapped Fortunato's
shoulder, making the reverend recoil. "Sorry," Moon whispered and
leaned close to his ear.
"Excellency," Fortunato rasped, "a word, please."
"What? What is it?"
Fortunato struggled to his feet, clasped his hands before him, and
bowed. "Please, Your Worship. A moment."
Nicolae looked as if he were about to detonate. He moved back behind
the table, making Moon stand too. Fortunate pleaded with him in a voice
too faint for Buck to hear.
"I suppose you concur, Moon," Nicolae said.
Moon nodded and Fortunate added, "It was his idea," which made Moon's
face drop, and he shot Leon a look.
"You two get out of here. I want a meeting, you know where, with the
full cabinet."
"Not here?"
"No! I said you know where! These walls have ears!"
The two gingerly made their way out. Carpathia looked down at Buck.
"This one makes me nervous," he said. "Does he have to be here?"
"He does."
"My people are pleading for respite," Nicolae said. "I recognize that I
am forced to concede something."
"And that would be?"
Carpathia's eyes danced, as if he hated with his entire being what he
had to say. "That... I... must. . . submit to you in this. I am
prepared to do what I have to do to enable a lifting of the plague." He
lowered his head as if pushing against an invisible force.
"You are under the authority of the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob,
maker of heaven and earth. You will allow this exodus, and when I am
satisfied that the people under my charge are safe, I will pray God to
lift the affliction."
Buck wouldn't have been surprised to see smoke rise from Carpathia's
ears. "How long?" Nicolae said.
"This is a huge undertaking," Chaim said. "Six hours should be telling."
Carpathia looked up hopefully.
"But should you attempt to lay a hand on one of the chosen," Chaim
warned, "the second judgment will rain down."
"Understood," Carpathia said, a little too quickly. He thrust out his
hand.
Chaim ignored it, glanced at Buck, and left.
Buck rose to follow and wondered if Carpathia recognized either of
them. He avoided eye contact, but as Buck slipped past Antichrist,
Nicolae growled, "Your days are numbered."
Buck nodded, still looking away. "That's for sure."
----------
Chloe scraped a three-inch hole in the black paint at the bottom of a
window. Then she placed a cushion from the couch on the marble floor
and set the telescope lens against the glass, bracing it on the frame.
Several minutes of trial and error finally resulted in her discovering
an image in the predawn haze. She thought she had seen something in the
middle of the night several days before, but she had not been able to
locate it again and thus told no one. Now she slowly scanned the
horizon, trying to keep the hugely powerful apparatus steady and the
image in front of her eye. The image was so magnified that she guessed
she was viewing just a few feet square from more than half a mile away.
The problem was, of course, that such a lens required as much light as
she could find. It was designed to bring stars into focus on clear
nights. All she saw were the dark silhouettes of a ravaged skyline, and
no light anywhere. Frustrated, she set the scope down and refocused
with the naked eye, trying to get a bead on what she had seen faintly
once. At about two o'clock in her field of vision and maybe
three-quarters of a mile away, a speck of light stopped her. So it
wasn't her imagination. The question was, what light would be on in a
city the world thought was radiation contaminated? Was it possible
Tribulation Force members were not the only intelligent life-forms in
this alien universe?
She shook her head. Probably just a streetlight that somehow was still
hooked up to power. Still, the scope might offer more clues. Keeping
the speck in sight, she raised the instrument to the window and
carefully studied the area. After a minute or two she realized she had
aimed too high and was taking in the foreboding waters of Lake
Michigan. Keeping the apparatus in place, she looked past it again and
adjusted, then peeked through the eyepiece again.
The image jumped and moved, appeared and disappeared. It was more than
a streetlight, but the harder she tried to focus on it, the more
elusive it became. Her neck stiffened, her wrists cramped, her eye
wearied. She realized she'd been holding her breath to minimize her
movement, but that just caused her heart to beat harder. Finally she
had to put the telescope down and move. But when she was ready to try
again, the sun teased the eastern horizon. Chloe would have to try
again another night.
----------
"Mount of Olives?" Buck said, as he caught up to Chaim.
"Of course. Then to Masada to see what kind of a crowd we have
attracted."
"Question. Why six hours? You trust him?"
Chaim shot Buck a look. "Trust him? Of course! He was willing to shake
on it."
"Okay, dumb question. But there's no way everybody will be safe by
nightfall."
"We already know he will break the agreement, Cameron. Revelation 12 is
clear that Israel is given two wings of a great eagle, that she might
fly into the wilderness to her place, but that the serpent spews water
out of his mouth like a flood after her. No question he will attack
somehow, plague or not. Tsion believes the 'flood' is Antichrist's
army. That same chapter says the earth helps the woman by opening its
mouth and swallowing up the flood. May the Lord forgive me, but I want
to see that. Don't you?"
Buck nodded, finally grabbing his phone and listening to see if Chang
was still monitoring. "You there?" he said.
"Working on the Phoenix connection," Chang said. "Thanks. That was
spooky."
"You're the best."
"I'll call you when I'm ready to patch you in."
Chaim waited till Buck was finished, then asked, "You know what happens
after God thwarts Antichrist's armies, do you not?"
"You mean before or after you drop the second judgment on him?"
"Before I drop it? I am merely the messenger, my friend."
"I know," Buck said.
"The Bible says the dragon becomes enraged with the woman and goes to
make war with the rest of her offspring, 'who keep the commandments of
God and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.' To me that sounds like the
other believing Jews around the world."
"And what do we do about that?"
"I have no idea," Chaim said. "We obey, that is all."
----------
Rayford was too antsy to sit at Mizpe Ramon waiting for the first
arrivals. He set a course for the Mount of Olives and phoned Tsion in
Chicago on the way. Rayford felt bad when it was obvious from Dr.
Ben-Judah's voice that he had been sleeping. But he said, "You are
never an intrusion, Captain Steele."
"I confess I'm troubled, Dr. Ben-Judah. My military training was during
peacetime, so this is the first time I've been responsible for so many
people in a dangerous situation."
"But you have been through so much with the Tribulation Force!"
"I know, but I just wish I could be assured I will see no casualties."
"We certainly have had no such guarantees in our inner circle," Tsion
said, "have we?"
"That's not reassuring."
"I just want to be honest, Captain. I assume that is what you
want."
"What I want is what I asked for, I'm afraid-the knowledge that I will
lose no one."
"I believe we will lose none of the 144,000, but most of those are
scattered throughout the world. I am also fairly certain that the
prophecies indicate that God will protect the Messianic believers who
are fleeing Jerusalem. But you are asking about your operation
personnel."
"Right."
"I can only pray and hope."
"I'm committed to not engaging the enemy in kill strikes."
"I am sympathetic to that, and yet you wish for no deaths on your side
either. I do not know how realistic that is. Would you not feel
justified in an all-or-nothing situation?"
"You mean if it's my guy or theirs? I guess I would permit firing."
"You know, Captain, the enemy will most certainly suffer losses. The
way the verses read, many will perish in the calamities God puts in
their paths."
"I prefer leaving that work to him."
----------
David checked for a response from Hannah, and seeing none, keyed in a
connect to Chang, who had the bugged Phoenix 216 on-line for the Trib
Force.
The first voice was Walter Moon's. "I should be in bed, Excellency. I
hate to complain, but I might have wished this meeting had been held at
the Knesset. The incessant moving about-"
"Oh, stop your blubbering, Walter. I am not discounting your
discomfort, but you make it sound as if you are at death's door."
"It feels like we are, Lordship," Leon said. "I am not one to-"
"Of course you are! Now I laid down the law to this Micah character and
got him to guarantee a lifting of this disease by nine tonight or there
would be consequences." ,
"You did? Well, how-"
"He had better tread lightly with me."
"But I thought-"
"That is your problem, gentlemen. Sometimes you must act viscerally and
do what needs to be done. Is everyone here?"
"Many are being pulled from sickbeds," Walter said. "Which is where-"
"You should be, yes, I know. Here are Viv and Suhail. Let me know when
we are all here."
"How long will it take to recover, once the affliction has been
lifted?" Viv asked.
"I do not know," Carpathia said. "But even if there is residual fatigue
or pain, you must all fight through it and encourage your people to do
the same."
"Mr. Hut completes the contingent, Potentate."
"You look terrible, son," Nicolae said.
"I feel worse," Hut said.
"I cannot imagine. So how is my inaccurate-shooting friend?"
"Very funny."
"Excuse me," Nicolae said, "but was that two times consecutively you
addressed me without title?"
"Well, pardon me, your highness."
David heard movement and assumed Carpathia had stood. "You would employ
sarcasm with me?"
"I shot that man eight times at point-blank range, worshipfulness! The
heckler I killed from two feet away. You couldn't have killed Micah
yourself."
"Mr. Akbar, your side arm, please."
"Oh, Excellency, is this nee-"
"Is everyone planning to disrespect me? I have death pills enough for
the lot of you, and I deliver them through the barrel of this gun."
"If you could have killed Mr. Micah," Hut said, "why didn't you?"
"Oh, you honor him with a title, but not me-no, not your risen lord."
"You are nothing to me, Carpathia."
"On your feet, boy."
"I wouldn't give you the satisfaction."
BOOM!
Cries and gasps followed the sound of the body's tumbling. "Walter,
have the stewards get him out of here. Now who is next?"
Silence.
"Is there then someone here who would care to fire upon me?"
"No!"
"No, Excellency!"
"Please, Potentate!"
"No!"
"Is there another among you who retains some notion that this is not
serious business? I remind you that I was dead three days and raised
myself! I have demanded your freedom from these sores, and though we
cannot be certain until the time comes, I believe you will enjoy
immediate healing. Regardless, you and yours will be ambulatory and
able enough again to carry out my battle plan."
"Wouldn't an attack bring back the plague, Excellency?" Moon asked.
"Viv, do you see what I have to work with here? Mr. Moon is my supreme
commander, my executive vice president, if you will, yet he wants to
know if-" and here he mimicked Moon with a ridiculous plaintive
whine-"an attack wouldn't bring back the plague! Honestly, Walter, do
you think I am new to the negotiating game?"
"No, sir, I-"
"Spare me! The curse will be lifted at 2100 hours, and the hundreds of
thousands of cowards will be in one of four places. Anyone? Come on!
Someone?"
Suhail Akbar said, "The Mount of Olives, en route to Mizpe Ramon,
Masada, or Petra."
"Excellent! Someone is thinking! And what is unique about so many
people in so few places? Suhail?"
"They are together, and they are vulnerable."
"Precisely. I want the whole of Israel declared a no-fly zone for all
but Global Community aircraft at 2115 hours."
David heard Suhail calling his people.
"And while you are at it, Director," Carpathia said, "establish a
curfew at the same time in all of the United Carpathian States for
civilian vehicular traffic. Prepare a retaliatory strike for the damage
we suffered at Petra earlier today, assuming until further knowledge
that that wanton ambush was initiated by the Judah-ites."
"Where will we attack, Potentate?" Akbar said.
"Masada at 2130 hours. Did you not predict attendance of more than one
hundred thousand?"
"But those are not Judah-ites, Excellency."
"They are potential converts, man! And this Micah himself will address
them! He will surely have followers with him, but he has unwittingly
put them all in one box for us and tied a ribbon around it. What would
it take to ensure annihilation?"
"We have the firepower, sir."
"No arrests on the road. No warnings in the air. Illegal vehicles will
be destroyed on sight and invading planes shot from the sky. This Mizpe
Ramon site was camouflaged to somehow make it appear a GC operation.
Let us make use of it then. And if anyone remains on the Mount of
Olives after 2100, they are fair game."
"Sir?" Moon said. "What if Mr. Micah does call down the plague of sores
again?"
"He will know the consequences if we act with dispatch."
"But what if he follows through on his threat to turn the water-"
"The what-ifs will do you in one day, Walter. You serve the ruler of
the universe, and we shall prevail. I have tricked this wizard into
breaking his spell, and before he realizes his mistake, we will have
regained the advantage. We can virtually eliminate the Jerusalem
Orthodox Jewish population and cripple the Judah-ites to the point of
extinction. Ideally, we will flush out Ben-Judah himself, and this time
he will not find me so hospitable."
"What about those who reach Petra?"
Carpathia laughed. "Petra as a place of refuge is ludicrous! It is as
defenseless as Masada. They will be on foot, stuffed into a bowl of
rock. An air attack should be over in minutes, but for that we shall
wait until the last of them are there."
"The Judah-ites did display heavy firepower today," Akbar said.
"That merely justifies whatever level of retribution we deem
appropriate. Any casualties?"
"No reports of anyone actually hit. Two unaccounted for."
"Missing in action?"
"If you wish."
A long pause. Then Carpathia: "Two MIAs."
----------
Buck and Chaim sat under an ancient tree on the Mount of Olives and
watched thousands find their way in.
Within an hour the Operation Eagle choppers began floating into
position, Rayford himself among the first. The birds were loaded to
capacity but were in no way keeping up with the growing crowd.
Buck had relayed the Carpathia meeting word for word to Chaim as he
listened by phone, but Dr. Rosenzweig had remained expressionless. In
the end he said, "I am not surprised. I will pray that God will lift
the plague of boils completely and restore everyone to full strength. I
want them overconfident, full of themselves when they try to take
vengeance. And when the second plague rains down, I pray it will carry
God's full potency."
"Doctor, do we risk catastrophe at Masada?"
The old man shook his head. "I do not know, but I do not feel we should
back down. We will finish before nine o'clock and warn the Jews of
Carpathia's plan. They may leave or stay and fight, but I hope they
will feel even more urgency to make their decisions for Christ too. As
people are sealed by God, we will rush them to Petra."
----------
Rayford felt alone in the packed chopper. Listening in on the Carpathia
meeting had confirmed his worst fears. The only location he was
confident of was Petra, and even there, he had to wonder if it was the
place or the people who would be protected. He used his secure radio to
reroute all air traffic directly to Petra. "No stops, repeat, no stops
at Mizpe Ramon. Ground vehicles will deliver their charges to the foot
passage into Petra. Those who can walk in, will. Those who cannot-or
when the passageway is too crowded, those who are left exposed- will
need to be air-hopped inside. Continue the routes to and from the Mount
of Olives. And ignore an expected air curfew. Take evasive and
defensive action as necessary, but do not fail these people."
Rayford conference-called Albie, Mac, and Abdullah. "Wish we could get
our heads together," he said. But each was either flying a load to
Petra or returning to pick up another.
"Rethinkin' your no-shootin' policy there, Chief?" Mac said.
"I hope so," Albie said.
Rayford let out a heavy sigh. "I just don't want to lead anyone to
slaughter."
"Arm us, Ray," Albie said. "George has enough weapons for-"
"Tell me George was not privy to the Phoenix patch-in," Rayford said.
It wasn't that he didn't trust the man, but keeping need-to-know
circles close was important and had been made clear.
Silence.
"Tell me, Albie!"
"Ray, you know me better than that. You said nobody but Trib Force, and
that's the way we played it."
"How many of our pilots would know how to handle a fifty-caliber?"
"None of 'em, Ray," Mac said. "You issue those to drivers. Too erratic
and dangerous from the air. Give us the DEWs. Somebody stops us on the
ground, we heat 'em up."
"They're planning to shoot us out of the air, gentlemen!"
"Only way to prevent that with the fifties is to shoot first," Mac
said. "It means a change of policy. Is that where you're goin', Ray?"
Rayford stalled. "Haven't heard from you, Abdullah. You there?"
"Here, boss."
"Well?"
"Not bad, thank you, sir."
"I mean, well, what do you think?"
"About what?"
"Smitty! Come on! I need some counsel here."
"We cannot shoot the big guns and fly too, Captain. That would take two
pilots to a chopper. And out of what hole do we shoot such a weapon?"
"He's right," Mac said. "As usual."
"I am willing to trust God with my life," Abdullah said. "And if he
would allow me, I would happily use a DEW to make toast of the enemy."
Rayford peeked over his shoulder at the believers huddled behind him,
fear and hope etched on their faces. They could not hear him over the
noise of the engine and the whirring blades.
"All right, gentlemen," he hollered into the phone, "after you unload
your passengers, swing by Mizpe Ramon and pick up a third of the DEWs
each and distribute them to your respective squadrons. Albie, get
George involved too. And the first one there, get Ms. Rose and Ms.
Palemoon evacuated if they're ready. You'll need room for all their
supplies too."
"You think the GC is going to waste the landing strip and our
quarters?" Albie said.
"Likely."
"Where are we EVACing these women?"
"Masada for now."
"You gonna distribute fifties to ground drivers, Chief?"
"Still noodling that one, Mac," Rayford said.
----------
David guessed it would be two hours from Chaim's speech at the Temple
Mount until he saw his first arrivals. He called Rayford. "What gives
with our nurses? Hannah owes me an E-mail response. They okay?"
"No reason to believe otherwise. Did you try calling them?"
"No response."
"I'll check in on them." He told David what was happening with the
weapons and the med center.
"Need my help on that?" David said.
"You've got to hang in there and coordinate until Chaim arrives, and
that could be a couple of days."
"I could appoint one of the first to get here. There's no science to
this. How are you going to handle those big guns by yourself?"
"I'll get Leah and Hannah to help."
"They done tearing down and packing up?"
"Should be."
"You regret having the airstrip built and then having to abandon it?"
"Sure, but we needed it on the front end anyway. Where else were all
our birds going to land?"
"Got any prospects on board?"
"For your job? I don't know, David. Why don't you stay put?"
"If they speak Hebrew and can elicit trust, that'll free me up to hop
back to the strip with you and load the guns."
"I'm not even sure I'll issue the fifties," Rayford said.
"Well, I'm willing if you need me."
Late in the afternoon David climbed to the high place and scanned the
horizon. Nothing yet, but he heard movement in the rocks below. No way
anyone on foot could have arrived before the choppers. He knelt and
crept to the edge, holding his breath to listen. His heart banged
against his ribs. He guessed two sets of footsteps, slowly moving.
David pulled out the only weapon he could think of, his phone, and
readied himself to speed-dial Rayford. He rose to where he could peer
over the side. Resolutely and gingerly picking their way through loose
rock not fifty feet below him were two sickly, stumbling GC
Peacekeepers, uniforms drenched in sweat. Each carried a high-powered
rifle. David punched the speed-dial button for Rayford, and the
Peacekeepers both looked directly up at him at the same time. Before he
could get the phone to his ear, they dropped to their knees and angled
their weapons at him.
David dropped the phone and dove for cover, sharp rocks digging deep
into his knees and hands. The soldiers, obviously left for dead by
their compatriots, must have felt a surge of adrenaline. They couldn't
have expected to find anyone here after surviving the fifty-caliber
assault from the other direction, but now they advanced with vigor.
David scrambled to his feet, only to discover something seriously wrong
with his ankle. He tried hopping toward a cave, but unarmed he would be
easy prey there. He heard his pursuers separate just below the ridge,
the sounds of their boots in the rocks coming from about twenty feet
apart. If they rushed him, David had nowhere to go.
He was no match for them, but retreat wasn't an option. He hopped
toward the edge, bent to scoop a handful of jagged rocks, and reared
back to fire at the first head that popped up.
----------
Rayford glanced at his ringing phone and saw who was calling. Again. So
soon. David had never proven to be a pest. "Steele here," he said.
All he heard were sounds of boots on rocks.
"David? You there?"
From a distance, "God, help me!"
"David?"
A desperate cry, a shout in Hebrew, burps of gunfire from at least two
weapons, a fall, a grunt. David's hoarse whisper, "God, please!" Liquid
splashing.
----------
David lay on his back, his body numb, no pain even in his ankle. The
cloudless blue sky filled his entire field of vision. His heart
galloped and his panicked lungs made his chest rise and fall in waves.
Though he could feel nothing, he heard blood gushing from his head.
The soldiers leaned over him, but he could not move his eyes to focus
on either of them. If only he could appear already dead . . . but he
couldn't stop his heaving chest. David could pray only silently now. He
pleaded with God to let him neither hear nor feel the kill shots as the
two pointed their muzzles at his heart and pulled the triggers.
----------
Rayford's phone was still open, but all he heard after more deafening
rifle shots were expressions of effort and what he could only imagine
was the lifting of a body and the flinging of it over the side of a
mountain. Then footsteps away from the phone, until they faded out of
range.
Besides dreading what he would find at Petra, Rayford couldn't deliver
a chopper full of believers to a spot that could be teeming with the
enemy lying in wait.
Hating himself for already thinking past what sounded for all the world
like David Hassid's death, Rayford knew he had to keep that phone from
falling into the wrong hands.
ELEVEN
LEAH DIDN'T understand Hannah, but that was okay. She didn't always
understand herself either. They had secured the last of the medical
supplies into hard-sided boxes that would fit into a cargo hold and
were now monitoring Hannah's computer.
"You know for sure it was Hassid who called?"
Hannah nodded.
"And you want to talk to him, so why didn't you-"
"I'm not sure I want to talk to him until I know how he's going to
respond to my E-mail. He should have written me back. Then I'd know and
I could take his call. Maybe."
Leah shook her head. "Even if we didn't have only three and a half
years, I'd tell you life's too short and you ought to call him. He's a
busy guy. When would he have had time to write you back?"
"I found time to write."
"Hannah! We're not building a computer system here that has to serve a
million people."
Hannah was staring at the screen. The news was nothing but Carpathia
propaganda, pundits trying to spin his temple folly into something that
made sense. Leah leaned in to look at the scroll across the bottom of
the screen. "His Excellency the potentate guarantees healing from the
affliction of sores by 2100 hours Carpathian Time."
"I'm stupid," Hannah said.
"I know."
"Stop it! We hardly know each other."
"Sorry. Why are you stupid?"
Hannah pointed to the computer's status bar below the scrolling
message. It showed she had mail. "Bet that's from David," she said.
"Let's find out," Leah said, but before either could switch screens,
their phones rang simultaneously. "Rayford," Leah told Hannah.
"Mine too," Hannah said.
Leah held up a hand. "Let me," she said. "Med center."
"Leah, Rayford. You two okay?"
"Yeah, except it looks like you called us both at the same time."
"I did. Hannah there?" Leah nodded at her and Hannah answered too. "You
packed up and ready to go?"
"Yes," Leah said. "But where-"
"Just listen. I'm short on time. You know George?"
"Big guy? Calif-"
"That's him. I just pulled him off another assignment.
He's gonna land there within three or four minutes and he's going to
need help setting up a nest of fifty-caliber rifles. Smitty will join
him soon."
"Don't they each have a load of passengers?"
"Yes, and we need to get them as far from the airstrip and the
buildings as we can."
"They're not going to Petra?"
"Eventually. Just listen. By the time it's dark, those people need to
be isolated and invisible from the air. After I land there briefly and
take off again, any other aircraft over Mizpe Ramon will be GC, and
George and Smitty will be defending the airstrip."
"And we'll be baby-sitting two loads of passengers until someone comes
for them?"
"Three. I've got a load too, and I need to pick up a fifty myself."
"Where are you going?"
"I've got a situation at Petra, and I'm going to need one of you to go
with me. Leah, that would be you."
"Hold on!" Hannah said. "Who's at Petra besides David?"
"We've delivered no one yet. I want to be sure the area is secure
before we-"
"Why wouldn't it be? What's the problem?"
"I don't know yet, but-"
"But there's a problem or David could tell you."
"I just can't reach him right now is all," Rayford said. "Let's not
jump to any-"
"Then I'm coming. Leah can help George and Abdullah and herd these
people somewhere."
"Hannah," Rayford said, "I-"
"Don't try to talk me out of this, Captain Steele. I-"
"Hannah! This is a military operation and I am your superior officer. I
decide who will do what, and I've told you who is going and who is
staying. Do you understand?"
"Yes, but-"
"Any questions?"
"No, but, well, I think I just heard from David."
"Either you did or you didn't. Did he call?"
"He e-mailed."
"You're sure?"
"Not entirely," Leah said. "Check it, Hannah."
She switched screens. "Yes, it's from him!"
"When was it sent?"
"Just a sec-oh!"
"Just now or . . . ?"
"No. Some time ago."
"Anything pertinent? Problems? He need help?"
"No," Hannah said, scanning it quickly. "Just personal stuff."
Leah put a hand on Hannah's shoulder and raised her chin at Hannah in
encouragement. The younger woman looked terrified.
"Okay, Hannah? We clear?"
"Yes, sir."
"Let me talk with just Leah now, all right?"
Hannah slapped her phone shut while reading David's message.
"Leah," Rayford said, "I don't know what we're going to find at Petra,
but David tried to call me and all I heard sounded like him being shot."
"Oh, no!"
"Bring heavy-duty, first-aid stuff and a stretcher."
"Got it."
"If we have to load him on the chopper, can you and I do that?"
"Worry about your end, Captain," she said. Then, whispering and turning
away from Hannah, "And you'd better start worrying about that phone and
those computers."
"Way ahead of you," Rayford said. "Be there in a few minutes."
----------
Chang was studying the itchy spot on his leg under a light in his New
Babylon palace apartment when Rayford called. After a fast briefing,
Chang said, "Don't worry about the phone. I can neutralize that from
here."
"What do you mean?"
Chang began tapping keys as they spoke. "I can nuke the innards, erase
the mother chip. In fact, I just did."
"Now let's hope they haven't found it yet."
"When you connect with David," Chang said, "I need to talk with him."
"I didn't like what I heard, Chang."
"I know, but you can't be sure what you were hearing.
"I know David was unarmed."
"I'm checking on those computers."
"Right now? You can do that?"
"Thanks to David, we can do just about anything from here. Luckily,
there's no way they can break into the software. That's on a revolving
encoder that can only unravel itself, and it's programmed not to."
"Well, I don't understand all that, but I'm more worried we've got a
bunch of crazed GCers up there who think they'd be helping their cause
by just destroying all the hardware."
"They would be helping their cause. And they would set us way back. But
there wouldn't be a bunch of them, would there?"
"How would we know?"
"These have to be leftovers from your attack, right?"
"Probably."
"You heard the Phoenix meeting," Chang said. "There were two
unaccounted for."
----------
Rayford put down well off the south end of the airstrip at Mizpe Ramon
and sat talking with Mac and Albie by radio as Hannah and Leah met the
chopper with medical supplies and a stretcher. As Hannah led the
escapees away from the craft, first finding out who understood English
and Hebrew and using them to interpret for her, Leah tossed the
supplies aboard and waited outside. "Mr. Smith is bringing your
weapons," she mouthed.
Rayford nodded and told Mac and Albie to fly their charges to Wadi
Musa, near Petra, and to assume they would be both seen and heard by
the two GC suspected at Petra. "Tell your people to stay with the
choppers until you come back for them, and then get to the footpath
entrance as soon as you can. Don't go in until I get there with weapons
for you."
"Question," Albie said.
"Make it quick."
"Have we been all wrong about this being a place of refuge?"
"Albie, all I know to do is to clear it for the people, get 'em in
there, and trust God to take care of them."
"And if you find Hassid's body?"
Rayford hesitated. "Then I'm gonna assume it's them or us, and let me
tell both you guys something: It's going to be them."
When Rayford leaped from the chopper, Abdullah was already hurrying
across the sand from the munitions storage unit. He was bent under the
weight of three fifty-caliber rifles on his shoulder with a huge belt
of ammunition draped over them. His other arm pointed straight out from
his body for balance. Rayford and Leah ran to him and helped carry the
weapons to the helicopter.
"You all right, Smitty? You ready?"
"George is giving me a course crash," he said, "whatever that means."
"Crash course. Quick, fast."
Abdullah nodded. "I liked the DEWs, but I will shoot these too. George
is setting up at a steep angle to take the enemy planes out of the sky,
but I worry about accuracy."
"All you'll have to hit is one and the rest will run."
"I hope you are right, Captain. I will be praying for you, and I am
hoping you are wrong about Mr. Hassid. He is a wonderful man."
Rayford hoped so too. He and Leah boarded, and as he guided the chopper
up and away, he gazed at the Jordanian sprinting back to where George
was setting up to defend the airstrip. Rayford was in the middle of
exactly what he had hoped to avoid. People were going to die. One may
already have. Knowing he would again see these beloved martyrs, along
with all the others he had lost in so short a time, did little to
console him. There had to be a limit to the trauma a man could endure.
He should have long since blown past his.
----------
Buck had helped Chaim board one of the choppers bound for Masada, and
they arrived to find tens of thousands of curious Israelis streaming up
the steps into the fabled fortress. Buck had been getting sketchy
reports that the airlift had hit a few snags and that the return runs
from Petra to the Mount of Olives would be delayed. Rayford was
undoubtedly busy and in contact with his people, because he was not
answering his phone or returning Buck's calls. Chang reported that he
would rather Buck wait and talk with Rayford personally. It was around
nine in the morning in Chicago, so Buck called Chloe while Chaim was
pacing behind him. Just before Chloe answered, Chaim bent and
whispered, "I shall speak when this place is full."
----------
Rayford could not think of a way to avoid detection by whatever GC
might be waiting at Petra. Three choppers would land close by inside
several minutes of each other, and it wouldn't be long before dozens
more showed up. He considered rerouting the others to Mizpe Ramon, but
he feared Carpathia might order an attack there even before the lifting
of the plague, in retaliation for the firing upon his forces. Fearing
the airstrip was targeted made him wary to risk more than the three
chopper loads already waiting near there. Who knew? Maybe Carpathia or
Akbar were smart enough to delay their attack until dark.
With just himself and Leah to worry about, Rayford decided to set the
helicopter down on the narrow Siq that led pedestrian and hooved
traffic into Petra. He carefully positioned the craft close enough to
the outside walls that even if they had been seen, it would be
impossible to be fired upon from inside the city.
Unless the enemy was asleep or deep in a cave, they had to be aware
that outsiders were coming. Mac and Albie jogged up, the latter gasping
for air. "He is so much older and yet in such better shape," Albie said.
"I jog every day," Mac said. "'Sides, I got about a foot on you."
"Catch your breath," Rayford said. "We've got about another mile to go
on foot, and that just gets us into the city. Unless we want to be just
targets, we're going to have to climb, and you remember how heavy these
babies are."
He handed fifties and ammo to each man while Leah dragged out her box
of supplies. "The stretcher," she said. "Bring it or leave it?"
"We can always come back for it," he said, reminding Mac and Albie to
carry the weapons vertically to focus the center of gravity. "When we
get inside, we're going to split up. If there are only two of them,
we'll even the odds a little. I'm assuming they'll be above us, which
gives them the first advantage. Resist the urge to call out for David."
"That's your urge?" Mac said.
Rayford nodded. "I want to know what happened to him, even if it's what
I fear."
"Let me look for him," Leah said. "I'll leave my stuff at the other end
of the gorge. I don't know why you couldn't have spared another of
those rifles."
"Too much to carry," Rayford said. "Anyway, I hope you're busy with a
patient."
"I won't be much good to him if I'm dead," she said.
Mac handed her his side arm. "It's only a .45," he said.
"I'll take it."
"You know how to use it?"
"Safety on the left?"
Mac nodded.
"I know more than Captain Steele thinks I do," she said.
"We're only as good as the slowest man," Rayford said. "Albie, lead the
way. We need to hurry, but don't waste all your energy."
Albie pulled up his trousers, tightened his belt, and retied his boots.
Hoisting the weapon, he swung it vertically and leaned it back into one
shoulder. He started off at a fast walking pace, frustrating Rayford,
but soon enough he seemed to catch a second wind and began to trot. Mac
dropped in behind, loping easily. Rayford let Leah slide in front of
him and had to admit he was amazed that she could lug the medical box
in one hand, keep her other arm out for balance, and still trot along
apace. Rayford himself had little trouble keeping up, but he felt every
one of his years-and every joint as well.
A little more than ten minutes later, the narrow, high-walled gorge
opened into the stunning sight of Al-Khasneh-the Treasury, once
purported to hold the riches of the pharaoh at the time of the Exodus.
Under different circumstances, Rayford would love to have gawked at the
towering facade cut out of solid rock, but he and his people-not to
mention the million that were to follow-were at a point of no return.
Albie stopped and bent over, sucking for air. The rest quietly set down
their loads. Rayford moved ahead of them and squatted, peeking out into
the vast opening. It was then that he realized that either by dumb luck
or the subtle leading of God, he had done something right. He heard the
thwocking of at least one more helicopter and knew that more could not
be far behind. All those birds had to give the GC, if that's who was
here, pause. Where would they hide but in a cave? Unless they went on
an immediate offensive, they would be quickly outnumbered and had to
assume they would be easily overrun.
Rayford turned and whispered, "Leah, leave the med box here, take a
hard right, stay low and out of sight as much as you can. Circle around
as far as you can go before having to ascend. If that gives you too
much exposure, find a place to stay hidden. Our main objective is to
find David and get him out of here. He usually called me from one of
the high places for best reception."
"Have you tried calling him again?" Leah said.
"Chang already nuked his phone to be safe."
"Safe for whom? What if he's trying to contact us?"
"We couldn't risk it, Leah," Rayford said. "Albie's going to be going
left. Mac and I will cover each other and try to see what's straight
ahead past the main monuments. We're all trying to get as high as we
can without becoming targets. If you find David, click your radio twice
and we'll find you. If you encounter the enemy, keep clicking till you
see us. Questions?"
They looked at each other in the cool dimness of the gorge and shook
their heads. As they moved out into the brighter but fading sun before
twilight, Rayford was overwhelmed with the feeling he was in someone's
crosshairs. It was nothing unique. He had felt the same way years
before in weekend paintball games. There was just something about
knowing you were likely beneath your
enemy that made you feel you could be seen without being able to see.
Rayford must have seemed as slow to Mac as Albie had to Rayford,
because as soon as they reached a clearing wide enough for him to get
by, Mac easily moved on ahead. He was headed for the shadow of an
outcropping of rock, and Rayford accelerated to stay with him. They
knelt there, panting, and Mac squinted across the high horizon behind
them. Two more choppers flew over, and almost immediately, Rayford
heard two clicks on his radio. He and Mac caught each other's eye.
"Who?" Mac mouthed, leaning out and looking to his left, where Albie
would have gone.
Rayford leaned the other way and saw Leah behind a rock maybe a hundred
yards away and thirty or forty yards up a rocky path. He elbowed Mac
and they stared at her as she held up an open palm to them and kept her
eyes in the direction of whatever she had seen. She pulled the .45 from
her belt with her free hand, but her open palm and her gaze did not
stray.
Finally she turned and looked directly at Rayford and Mac. She pointed
two fingers at her eyes, then her index finger above her and to the
left, which would put the target almost directly above the men. She
held up two fingers. "Two directly above us?" Rayford whispered.
Mac nodded. "I'm guessin' she's lookin' a couple hundred yards up."
Rayford kept his eyes on Leah as he started to scoot out from under the
rock overhang, but she held up her palm again, stopping him as she
continued to watch. Suddenly she showed him the back of her hand and
beckoned him out with her fingers. He hesitated, and she looked at him
and nodded, then looked back up.
Rayford duck-walked out and turned to look. He stared at the sheer face
of a rock wall and looked back at Leah to see if he could keep coming
out. She nodded, and he heard two more clicks on his radio. That made
him and Mac and Leah look to where Albie was climbing. He signaled the
same as Leah from his vantage point. Rayford backed away from Mac, who
stayed in position, until he saw the two GC with their backs to him on
a high ridge. Both were uniformed and armed, but they looked lethargic,
following the helicopters and checking the valleys below too.
Rayford signaled to both Leah and Albie to keep moving, then nodded to
Mac to follow him. They hurried out and between building walls to a
small gorge that led to a path toward higher ground. They waited at a
bend where they were out of the line of vision of the two on the ridge
far above. "They're too far from Leah and Albie to hear their radios,"
Mac whispered.
Rayford mashed the button and said, "How sure are we there are only
two?"
"No idea," Leah said.
"They're not on assignment," Albie said. "They're hurting, and they
don't seem to be answering to anyone. They're not doing anything
specific. Just hanging around, waiting."
"You'd bet there are no others?"
"Not sure I'd stake my life on it," Albie said.
Mac clicked in. "That's exactly what we're doing," he said. "Make the
call."
"If we had to decide, I'd say it's worth the chance. But what's the
rush?"
"Hundreds of people starting to line up outside," Rayford said. "And
they've got to be an hour above us."
Two clicks interrupted and Leah came on. "I see about a hundred yards I
can advance without their seeing me. Shall I go for it?"
Rayford glanced at Mac, who nodded. "Affirmative. Three clicks when
you're in place, but don't speak unless you know they're far enough
away."
As soon as he said that, Leah began a long but smooth ascent, the side
arm in her hand. The two GC abruptly turned and walked the other way.
"They're headed your way, Albie," Rayford said.
"I hope they keep coming," he said, and he lay on his stomach,
unfolding the built-in bipod and loading his weapon.
"That's not a bad idea," Mac said. "We can set up right here."
"We've got Leah up there without us then, Mac. We using her for bait?"
Mac shook his head. "Not unless they turn back toward her." He nodded
at her. "She'll reach a flat area up there in thirty minutes." Mac
thrust a round into the chamber of the big gun and stretched out on his
belly.
A little more than twenty minutes later a chopper approached, and the
GC stopped and stared at it, not even attempting to hide. Like mirror
images, they raised their weapons and followed the trajectory of the
craft. "Don't even think about it, scumbags," Rayford muttered.
Mac scooted to his left and sighed. "I've got a bad angle here. You
still got a bead on 'em?"
Rayford sat up and peered through his scope. "Yeah." He punched the
radio. "See 'em, Albie?"
"Do I ever! They've both got that big old mark with Carpathia's mug on
it, about two inches high over their right eyes."
"Hold," Rayford said. "Maybe they've got David somewhere."
"I lost 'em," Albie said.
"Me too," Mac said.
"I've still got 'em," Rayford said.
Click.
"Go, Leah."
She clicked again.
"They're far enough away," Rayford told her. "What've you got?"
But Mac grabbed his arm. "Maybe she can't talk. Maybe she's got more
company."
"Did I give her away by talking to her?" Rayford felt sick.
"Let me check," Mac said. "You got another weapon?"
"Nine millimeter is all."
Mac reached for it. "I got no angle anyway, and Big Bertha will slow me
down."
Rayford dug the weapon from his belt in the back and handed it to Mac,
who quickly rose and hurried off.
Another twenty minutes and Leah came back on. "You don't want to know
what I found," she said.
Rayford almost collapsed from relief. "You're okay there?"
Mac heard the exchange and stopped on the path, his back to a wall.
"I'm okay," Leah said, her voice quavery. "Found David's phone."
"Good."
"Not so good. Lots of blood here, and it leads over the side of a
ridge."
Rayford let his eyes shut for several seconds. "Better stay put."
"I've got to know, Ray. Permission to proceed."
"Denied. Those two come any farther around a crag and they'd be able to
see you."
"Thought you said they were closer to Albie."
"They are, but there's a clear visual line if they come around."
"I'll risk it."
"Negative."
"C'mon, Rayford! They couldn't hit me from there anyway."
"Leah! Stay . . . put."
From as far away as she was, Rayford felt her glare. He wanted as badly
as she did to know just whether the trail of blood led to David's body,
especially if there was a chance he might still be alive.
"Where are they now?" she asked.
"I'll let you know if and when you may proceed. Any hope he's alive?"
"Not if this is his blood."
"How can you know that?"
"You sure you want to know?"
"Give me your professional opinion."
"There's an awful lot of blood here, Ray. If it's all one person's ..."
"And you think it is?"
"One pattern shows a pulsating spray. You want me to go on?"
"Yes."
"Another shows exit wound drainage and no pulse. And the blood leading
to the edge looks like a drain too."
"So whoever it was, was dead before he went over the side."
"Affirmative."
"I want to know if it was David, Leah."
"So do I. Say when."
"Hold."
TWELVE
HANNAH FOUND the Israeli believers remarkably low maintenance. Many had
brought food, which they shared with others. All they wanted was to
know when they might be transported to Petra, and the best Hannah could
tell them was that she believed it would be that very evening. The
people paced or sat and talked about Carpathia, what had gone on at the
temple and the Temple Mount that day, and how excited they were about
this new adventure. They wanted to meet Micah.
Big George, who proved shy around Hannah, and Abdullah, who was shy
around everyone, busied themselves setting up their weapons nest where
they could be seen neither from the sky nor by the Israelis, who did
not need to be unduly troubled.
Hannah found herself praying for David, for Leah, for Rayford, and for
the entire operation. When she had a moment, she stole back into the
medical quarters and reread David's E-mail.
Hannah, forgive me. What can I say? You
are right. I was insensitive.
And don't give a second thought to your worry that I might misinterpret
your feelings. The truth is, if there was one thing that niggled at the
back of my mind in this whole decision, it was that I was going to miss
you. I didn't know how to express it because I didn't want to be
misunderstood either.
I don't know why we feel we have to tiptoe around these issues,
especially now. No, we didn't know each other well enough to be
thinking about anything but a friendship, and I am still in deep pain
over Annie, of course. I would not likely have even wanted to consider
a new romance with such a short time left.
On the other hand, I suppose it's understandable that we were awkward
about this because we were, suddenly in my case, "available." It was
stupid of me to fear you would misunderstand. We had become such good
friends so quickly that, who knows, maybe I feared something deeper
would develop just as quickly. Naturally, I was wary of that, and you
should have been too.
We should have been able to simply let our bond of friendship grow and
prosper, assuming nothing would have come of it. What I especially
appreciate about you, Hannah, is how much you love God. It seems
everything you do-how nice you are to people, what a servant attitude
you have, your cheerfulness and encouragement during such dark, dark
times-well, that is clear evidence of the work of Christ in you. You
are an example to me and to anyone else who pays attention.
You're also right that there is likely no need for medical personnel
here, and you're certainly not an Israeli. :-) You know, despite being
ethnically Jewish, I am not purely an Israeli either, though I have
distant roots here. Regardless, it's almost certain we won't see each
other again until heaven or the Millennial Kingdom. That alone should
have made me invest the time in a proper farewell, and if you would
allow it, I'd like to try to make up for that by phone.
Because of what we have been able to put together using satellite and
solar technology, it is just as easy-not to mention free-for me to call
you in the States as it is to call you here, from about fifty miles
away. When we have worked through the mess I caused by leaving without
so much as a heart-to-heart talk, would you let me call now and then? I
know the time difference is significant and we would have to pick our
spots. We'll both be busy, but I'd like that if you would.
Speaking of busy, I recognize that by taking so long to deal with this,
I may be getting back to you so close to the time when our real
labor-intensive duties kick in that you'll barely have time to read
this, let alone respond to it. It's kind of lonely here, no surprise,
so if I find myself doing nothing but waiting for the choppers to start
arriving, maybe I'll call to make sure you got this and to save you the
time of having to keyboard a response.
Anyway, because of who you are, I know you'll understand and forgive
me, and I look forward to starting over again.
Your friend,
David
----------
Rayford felt a fool. He was no military strategist. While his preys
were clearly weak and bumbling, he had allowed all three of his people
to move into untenable positions. Albie had no line of fire and dared
not move. Mac was out of position with only a handgun. Leah had to
substitute obedience for patience or she might get herself killed.
Rayford himself was the only one with the angle and a shot at the two
GCs, but the fifty-caliber he cradled was a one-shot wonder. And
besides, he had only reluctantly concluded he would actually kill
someone if it came to that. Nothing said he had the nerve or the
ability.
The weapon, however, brought to the table everything he needed. He lay
over it, delicately framing through the powerful scope a spot on the
rock face his targets would pass if they continued on course. His right
hand brushed the trigger while his left palm lay atop the scope,
steadying the piece. And now Leah was on the squawker again, pushing to
be allowed to approach the edge of the ridge.
Rayford didn't want to risk losing his aim, so he slowly reached for
the radio with his left hand and drew it to his lips. "Negative. Don't
call me; I'll call you."
He dropped the radio and cupped the stock of the rifle in his left hand
. . . waiting . . . waiting. The GC had stopped and sat together on a
rock. Rayford carefully pivoted the rifle until he had them both in his
sights. He turned his head slightly and saw Leah waiting. Their backs
were to her. There was no reason she couldn't take her look, if she
hurried. He picked up the radio, while focusing on the targets again.
They looked up and a second later he heard what drew their eyes. Yet
another chopper.
"Leah, go and return quickly. Don't reconfirm, just move."
Rayford gently set down the radio and tried to regulate his breathing.
The two logy GCs filled the lens, and he believed he saw sores on their
sweaty necks from two hundred yards. He aimed inches above the head of
the one on the right. They both slid off the rock and knelt on one
knee, aiming their weapons at the bird about to fly directly over them.
It was an oversized job, a personnel transporter from United North
American States Army surplus-a multimillion-Nick machine that no doubt
carried at least two dozen fleeing Israeli believers. Well-placed
projectiles from as high as the GCs knelt could conceivably bring it
down. The mere sound and fury of Rayford's weapon putting a hole in the
rock above them should save the helicopter, but he needed more
incentive to take the risk.
It came from the radio and Leah's flat, halting news. "It's David . . .
they butchered him . . . the birds are already upon him."
The GC tensed as if ready to fire, and Rayford slightly dropped his
sight just as the soldier on the left leaned in front of the other. If
he had only let David come back to Mizpe Ramon when he wanted to,
Rayford wouldn't be in this mess. He remembered to roll up onto his
toes and bend his knees, so when he squeezed the trigger the recoil
merely sent him sliding back a yard or so. He had forgotten to plug his
ears, however, so the explosion tearing against his shoulder was the
least of his worries.
The blast stunned and deafened him. Without even the sensation of sound
now, he slowly rolled his head, retrieved the toppled rifle, and looked
through the lens. He feared he had permanently damaged his eardrums,
but his vision had not been affected. In his periphery the big chopper
continued past, and across the way both soldiers slumped, motionless, a
cloud of rock dust rising behind them.
Rayford picked up his radio. "Be alert for others," he said, aware he
was speaking too loudly. His words reverberated inside, but he heard
none of them. "Let's see what we've got," he said.
Albie was the first to the targets. Then Leah, Mac, and finally
Rayford. He expected Leah to turn away from the carnage, but she
didn't. She said something and he asked her to repeat it. She took him
by the shoulders and turned him to face her. "David looks worse than
they do," she shouted, and he read her lips.
If that was true, he didn't want to see Hassid. But he knew they should
bury the body. "Can we get him out?"
She shook her head. "Impossible."
"That's where these two should go too," Mac said, or at least that's
what Rayford thought he said.
The bullet had ripped through the spine and heart of one soldier and
the neck of the other before blowing a two-foot-diameter hole in the
rock face. Rayford spun and caught himself, afraid he would be sick.
Isolated by his deafness, he was overcome with remorse. He had done
this. He had killed these two. He had lost a man in a place that was
supposed to be a refuge. Now his airstrip was vulnerable, and the
entrance to Petra swarmed with chopper loads of people waiting to be
let in.
Rayford's knees buckled, but he was borne up by Mac, who held him and
pulled his face close. "This is war!" Mac said. "These men murdered our
unarmed guy, and they would have killed any one of us. They were
drawin' a bead on that packed chopper. You saved us all, Ray!"
Rayford felt his face twist into a grimace, and he tried to form words
to express that he couldn't allow these mutilated bodies here when the
place began to fill. But he could not speak, and Mac was already ahead
of him. He said something to Albie, and the wiry little man stepped
forward without hesitation. He stretched, then squatted to pick up the
first victim. Bouncing once to settle the corpse in his arms, he moved
ten feet toward the ledge and launched him into the unknown. He
returned to do the same with the other.
"Get on the horn, Ray!" Mac said. "Let's get these people in here!"
Rayford shook his head and handed the radio to Mac, pointing at him.
"With pleasure," Mac said. "Let's gather up and get out."
Rushing down and out was sure easier than coming in had been. Leah
stayed close to Rayford, and he believed she looked the way he felt.
Before they even reached the passageway, choppers were popping over the
ridge and setting down to disgorge passengers. By the time they had
traversed the mile through the narrow Siq back to Rayford's craft, a
huge crowd had formed at the entrance. Mac had spent much of his time
on the radio on the way out, and now he and Albie were urging people
not to walk but to accept the helicopter lift into Petra.
Leah helped heft the fifty-caliber, her medical box, and the stretcher
into the chopper, then pulled Rayford off to the side. "You can't fly
until you can hear," she said.
"Yes I can," he said.
"You can hear again already?"
"You can hear for me."
She shrugged. "Well, I sure can't fly," she said.
----------
Despite his youth and his grief, Chang had the maturity and presence of
mind to carefully dole out the awful news about David Hassid. The
Tribulation Force agreed that neither Chaim nor Buck need know until
Chaim finished his work and was safe at Petra. Chloe said she would
inform Buck at the appropriate time.
For the next several hours Chang monitored the Trib Force activities.
Leah treated Rayford's ears back at Mizpe Ramon, informing everyone
that time would be the best healer. The Israelis left there by George
and Abdullah and Rayford were worked into later runs, and Rayford
settled in with the other two in their fifty-caliber lair. They had
seen nothing of the GC.
Leah reported that Hannah had taken the news of David's death so hard
that she was unable to speak. Apparently she had steeled herself to
join Leah on a flight to Masada with Mac, where they would reassemble
the medical center in a tent. Meanwhile, it seemed to Chang one of
God's clear miracles that not one mechanical failure was reported on
the ground or in the air during the massive relocation effort.
When night fell in Jerusalem and the world seemed to wait for the nine
o'clock reprieve from the plague of boils, Chang finally stood and
stretched. He stared at himself in the mirror, and thanked God for
clear skin all over his body. Even the itch on his leg had disappeared,
and he attributed it to either an insect bite or something
psychosomatic.
He returned to his computer to check his E-mail, idly wishing the
Masada event had not been an afterthought. There had not been time even
to arrange for a speaker system, let alone anything Chang could tap
into besides Buck's phone.
Chang was taken aback to discover a message from his mother. He quickly
accessed it. It was filled with mistakes and retries, but plainly she
had painstakingly taught herself how to compose and send the message,
and from what she had to say, she had learned how to access Tsion
Ben-Judah's Web site too.
Father upset over Carpathia's shameful exhibition in Jerusalem. Not
know what to think. Wants me to ask what you think. What do you think?
I will send this before he sees and will erase from storage. You answer
careful in case he see. Carpathia seem bad, bad, bad. Ben-Judah very
interesting, a prophet. How does he know in advance? I need to know how
to send to Ming. Tell her I will.
Mother
----------
Not long after dark and still an hour before 2100 hours, Chaim surveyed
the packed fortress of Masada, and Buck looked out over the overflow
crowd below. He agreed with the old man that almost everyone who was to
come was likely there. Buck put an arm on Dr. Rosenzweig's shoulder and
bowed his head.
"God, grant me the wisdom to say what you want me to say," Chaim said,
"and may these dear ones hear what you want them to hear."
"And God," Buck added, "anoint his voice."
There was neither a stage nor special lighting. Chaim merely stood on
high ground at one end and raised his arms. The place immediately fell
silent, and it seemed all movement stopped. Buck whispered into the
phone to Chang, "At least record this. We can worry about enhancing
fidelity later. The whole Trib Force will want to hear it."
"How are you on power?"
"One and a half packs left. Should be okay."
Chaim spoke in Hebrew, but again, Buck understood him perfectly. "My
friends," he began in a voice of vigor and authority but, Buck feared,
not enough volume, "I cannot guarantee your safety here tonight. Your
very presence makes you an enemy and a threat to the ruler of this
world, and when the plague of sores upon his people is lifted at nine
o'clock tonight, they may target you with a vengeance."
Buck stood and looked to the far reaches of the fortress and outside
below. No one seemed to have to strain to hear. No one moved or emitted
a sound except Leah and Hannah, quietly arranging the small, makeshift
medical center. So far no one seemed to need their services.
"I will keep my remarks brief," Chaim said, "but I will be asking you
to make a'decision that will change your destiny. If you agree with me
and make this commitment, cars, trucks, and helicopters will ferry you
to a place of refuge. If you do not, you may return to your homes and
face the gruesome choice between the guillotine or the mark of loyalty
to the man who sat in your temple this very day and proclaimed himself
god. He is the man who defiled God's house with murder and with the
blood of swine, who installed his own throne and the very image of
himself in the Holy of Holies, who put an end to all sacrifices to the
true and living God, and who withdrew his promise of peace for Israel.
"I must tell you sadly that many of you will make that choice. You will
choose sin over God. You will choose pride and selfishness and life
over the threat of death. Some of you have already rejected God's gift
so many times that your heart has been hardened. And though your risky
sojourn to this meeting may indicate a change of mind on your part, it
is too late for a change of heart. Only God knows.
"Because of who you are and where you come from, and because of who I
am and where I come from, we can stipulate that we agree on many
things. We believe there is one God, creator of the universe and
sustainer of life, that all good and perfect things come from him
alone. But I tell you that the disappearances that ravaged our world
three and a half years ago were the work of his Son, the Messiah, who
was foretold in the Scriptures and whose prophecies did Jesus of
Nazareth, the Christ, fulfill."
Not a murmur or a word of dissent from all these Jewish people, Buck
thought. Could this be Chaim Rosenzweig, the diminutive, soft-spoken
scientist, commanding an audience of tens of thousands with the mere
power of his unamplified voice and the authority of his message?
----------
It was darker than dark at Mizpe Ramon, so Rayford couldn't even read
lips. Fortunately, if George or Abdullah spoke directly at him, he was
starting to be able to make out their words.
"I realize I'm the new guy and everything, Captain," George said, "but
I been wonderin'. Is there anything here worth protectin' from the GC?
I mean, let 'em concentrate their efforts on tearin' up the dirt we
worked so hard to smooth out. And these temporary quarters aren't worth
a nickel either. What say we get back where the action is and start
flyin' some more people to safety instead of lyin' here waitin' for an
enemy that might not show?"
Rayford rolled onto his back and stared at the star-filled sky.
Abdullah waded in with his opinion, and Rayford had to push up on one
elbow and get him to start over louder.
"I was just saying, boss, that I agree. As much as I would enjoy
shooting the big guns and maybe knocking someone out of the sky who
deserves it anyway, why waste ammunition? We might need it to protect
ground troops or flights later."
Rayford's chopper was the only one left. George's and Abdullah's had
been pressed into service. The captain rolled onto his back again and
ran it all through his mind. The truth was, he didn't care if the GC
attacked here. Let them waste their time. He was burned out, desolate,
and needed the break. If someone else would fly his craft, and if
perhaps Mac would take over running the operation, at least for a
while, he could hang on till daybreak. Mac was temporarily in charge
anyway, with Rayford's temporary-he hoped-handicap.
"Let's break camp," he said finally, and the other two quickly broke
down the weapons and loaded them. Rayford asked George to fly and
Abdullah to tell Mac what was going on. He lay on the floor of the
chopper and covered his face with his hands. The problem, Rayford told
himself, was that he had a hero complex. He knew anything good that
happened in a time such as this was God's doing and not his. But
running out of gas before a mission was over was not his idea of what a
leader would or should do.
Was it possible that God had allowed him to forget something so simple
as earplugs just to put him out of commission long enough to restore
his strength? He despaired over losing David and having to kill two
men. But it all worked together to drain him. He was not even aware of
dozing, but a moment later Abdullah woke him with a yank on the arm.
"Please to forgive me, but we are needed at Masada. Mr. McCullum
believes that many, many more will need rides to Petra."
----------
Buck found himself thrilled to the point of bursting. Much as Tsion
Ben-Judah had done on international television years before, Chaim made
the case for Jesus as the Messiah the Jews had sought for so long. As
he ticked off the 109 prophecies fulfilled by Jesus alone, first one,
then another in the crowd stood. Soon the entire crowd was on its feet.
Still they were silent and no one moved around. A holy hush filled the
place.
"He is the only One who could be Messiah," Chaim proclaimed. "He also
died unlike anyone else in history. He gave himself willingly as a
sacrifice and then proved himself worthy when God raised him from the
dead. Even skeptics and unbelievers have called Jesus the most
influential person in history.
"Of the billions and billions of people who have ever lived, One stands
head and shoulders above the rest in terms of influence. More schools,
colleges, hospitals, and orphanages have been started because of him
than because of anyone else. More art was created, more music written,
and more humanitarian acts performed due to him and his influence than
anyone else ever. Great international encyclopedias devote twenty
thousand words to describing him and his influence on the world. Even
our calendar is based on his birth. And all this he accomplished in a
public ministry that lasted just three and a half years!
"Jesus of Nazareth, Son of God, Savior of the world, and Messiah,
predicted that he would build his church and the gates of hell would
not prevail against it. Centuries after his public unmerciful mocking,
his persecution and martyrdom, billions claimed membership in his
church, making it by far the largest religion in the world. And when he
returned, as he said he would, to take his faithful to heaven, the
disappearance of so many had the most profound impact on this globe
that man has ever seen.
"Messiah was to be born in Bethlehem to a virgin, to live a sinless
life, to serve as God's spotless Lamb of sacrifice, to give himself
willingly to die on a cross for the sins of the world, to rise again
three days later, and to sit at the right hand of God the Father
Almighty. Jesus fulfilled these and all the other 109 prophecies,
proving he is the Son of God.
"Tonight, Messiah calls to you from down through the ages. He is the
answer to your condition. He offers forgiveness for your sins. He paid
the penalty for you. As the most prolific writer of Scripture, a Jew
himself, wrote, 'If you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and
believe in your heart that God has raised him from the dead, you will
be saved. For with the heart one believes unto righteousness, and with
the mouth confession is made unto salvation. For the Scripture says,
"Whoever believes on him will not be put to shame." For there is no
distinction between Jew and Greek, for the same Lord over all is rich
to all who call upon him. For whoever calls on the name of the Lord
shall be saved.'
"For years skeptics have made fun of the evangelist's plea, 'Do you
want to be saved tonight?' and yet that is what I ask you right now. Do
not expect God to be fooled. Be not deceived. God will not be mocked.
Do not do this to avoid a confrontation with Antichrist. You need to be
saved because you cannot save yourself.
"The cost is great but the reward greater. This may cost you your
freedom, your family, your very head. You may not survive the journey
to safety. But you will spend eternity with God, worshiping the Lord
Christ, Messiah, Jesus.
"If you choose Christ, pray this prayer with me: Dear God, I am a
sinner and separated from you. I believe Jesus is the Messiah and that
he died on the cross to pay for my sins. I believe he rose again the
third day and that by receiving his gift of love I will have the power
to become a son of God because I believe on his name. Thank you for
hearing me and saving me, and I pledge the rest of my life to you."
All over the vast historic fortress-where legend said Jewish parents
chose to slay their own children and themselves rather than fall into
the hands of the Romans-men and women prayed that prayer aloud. The
mark of the seal of God on the believer appeared on their foreheads,
and thousands and thousands of them followed Chaim as he strode through
the crowd and down the steps to where hundreds of vehicles and
helicopters waited in long lines. Hannah and Leah and their equipment
were among the first to go. Buck saw Mac assign his chopper to another
flyer and help load the medical stuff into an idling truck. He got
behind the wheel as Hannah and Leah herded about a dozen new believers
in.
Thousands of others, despair on their faces, ran from the scene and
looked for rides back to Jerusalem.
Buck caught up to Chaim and stood next to him, watching as the cars and
trucks and choppers filled and took off. The old man breathed heavily
and leaned over on Buck as if his last ounce of strength had been
sapped. "Praise God," he whispered. "Praise God, praise God, praise
God."
Buck looked at his watch. It was minutes before nine, and already the
loudspeakers on GC vehicles began spreading the news that was being
broadcast on television and over the Internet. "The entire state of
Israel has been declared a no-fly zone by the Global Community Security
and Intelligence director. All civilian aircraft, take fair warning:
Any non-GC craft determined to be over Israeli airspace runs the risk
of destruction.
"The potentate himself has also decreed martial law and has instituted
a curfew on civilian vehicular traffic in Israel. Violators are subject
to arrest.
"Due to the severity of the affliction that has befallen GC personnel,
these curfews are required. Only a skeleton crew of workers is
available to maintain order.
"His Excellency reminds citizens that he has effected a relief from the
plague as of 2100 hours, and the populace should plan to celebrate with
him at daybreak."
----------
Abdullah woke Rayford again. He sat up, his hearing still gone. "Your
son-in-law has requested transportation for Dr. Rosenzweig and himself
from Masada to Petra, and he says you personally requested permission
to convey them. Is that still your wish?"
Rayford nodded, wiped his face, and climbed into a seat. George
descended to the staging area outside Masada, and they sat waiting
until nearly everyone was gone save Chaim and Buck and a man standing
behind them in a robe similar to Chaim's.
"Who is that?" Rayford asked, pointing.
"Dr. Rosenzweig and Mr. Williams," Abdullah said.
"No, the other," Rayford said.
"I do not understand."
"Who is with them?"
Rayford saw Abdullah glance at George, and George meet his gaze. "I see
no one," Abdullah said, but Rayford assumed he meant he didn't know
either.
Later, when GC vehicles began arriving at the site and finally only
Buck, Chaim, and the other man remained outside, Abdullah stepped out
of the chopper and held the door open. Chaim walked wearily, Buck with
a hand on his arm. The third stayed a pace behind. As they boarded, it
seemed to Rayford that Abdullah very nearly slammed the door on the
unknown man.
They sat as George turned in his seat and Rayford introduced Chaim and
Buck to him. "And introduce your friend," Rayford said.
Buck smiled. "I'm sorry?"
"Your friend. Introduce your friend. Who is this?" Rayford gestured
toward the third man, who merely looked at him. Chaim and Buck looked
to where he had gestured and then back to Rayford. "Well?" he said.
"What are we missing?" Buck said.
Rayford wondered if he was dreaming. He leaned toward the man as the
man leaned toward him. "So, who are you?" Rayford said.
"I am Michael," he said. "I am here to restore and heal you."
Rayford stiffened as Michael cupped Rayford's head in his hands, his
palms over the ears. Rayford's hearing was restored, and he felt a
surge of life and energy that made him sit up straight. "You mean
Michael the ... I mean, the Michael?"
But the man was gone.
THIRTEEN
RAYFORD FELT twenty years younger and wished he were piloting his own
chopper. But George was doing fine. Abdullah sat next to him, scanning
the sky and the ground with a serious, worried look. Buck sat next to
Chaim on the long side bench, his head back, mouth open, sound asleep.
"You must be exhausted too, Dr. Rosenzweig," Rayford said.
"For the first time today, yes, and you know I was up most of last
night."
"I heard. God has stood by you, hasn't he?"
"Captain, I confess I am famished! It is as if I have been fueled b'y
the energy of the angels to whom God gave charge over me."
"Did you see them, sir?"
"Me? No. But you know Miss Durham saw Michael the archangel."
Rayford nodded. There would be time to tell his own story. "Abdullah?"
he said, and the Jordanian turned. "Were there any foodstuffs in what
we loaded?" He had been heating something over a flameless stove just
before they left Mizpe Ramon.
"There were! Yes!" Abdullah was shouting and enunciating.
"I can hear, Smitty. I've been healed."
"Really!?" He leaned back and quit shouting, but still talked loudly
enough to be heard above the din of the craft. "I have pita bread warm
in an insulated box, along with sauce for the dipping."
"You sound like a waiter in a swanky restaurant."
"How would I know?"
Chaim leaned in. "That sounds like milk and honey to me."
Abdullah unbuckled himself and squeezed back between them, kneeling to
retrieve the box. He pivoted and opened the lid, revealing a stack of
nearly twenty round pitas about ten inches in diameter, steam rising.
The aroma permeated the helicopter and woke Buck. Big George even
reached back without looking. Rayford slapped a couple of pitas into
his open palm. "That's what I'm talkin' about!" the pilot said, though
he hadn't said a word for an hour. All dug in, tearing at the chewy
bread with their teeth.
"Lord, you know we are grateful!" Chaim said, his mouth full, and the
others amened.
Abdullah was still kneeling by the box when he nudged Rayford and
nodded outside. The sky was full of Operation Eagle choppers and GC
craft, both fixed-wings and whirlybirds. Below, the streets were jammed
with fleeing vehicles, careening around corners, bouncing over curbs
and torn-up streets, pursued by GC vehicles with flashing lights.
The others turned to peer out. "How are we doing on fuel?" Chaim asked.
"Several hours' worth," George reported.
"Captain Steele," Chaim said, "could we remain in this area and monitor
this?"
Rayford told George to find a friendly altitude, and they hovered in a
wide-box pattern. A GC chopper moved in behind them at one point and
summoned them with an all-frequency transmission. "Civilian chopper,
you are advised to leave Israel airspace immediately."
"Captain," George said, "what frequency can they hear me on?"
Rayford told him and asked what he had in mind.
"I just think I should be courteous, don't you?"
"Don't antagonize them."
Everybody in the chopper laughed at that, and Rayford realized how
absurd it was. The GC couldn't be any more antagonized.
George switched to the frequency Rayford suggested. "GC chopper, this
is the civilian bird. Over which part of your populated city did you
plan to send our flaming wreckage?"
"Civilian, you are violating a curfew established by Potentate
Carpathia himself."
"I don't recognize the authority."
"Repeat, Carpathia! His Excellency himself!"
"I recognize the name, GC. I repeat, I don't recognize the authority."
Abdullah's eyes were alive. "You Americans are crazy brave!"
The radio crackled again. "By authority of the Global Community and its
risen potentate and lord, His Excellency Nicolae Carpathia, you are
commanded to land at once in the first available area and surrender
yourself, your passengers, your cargo, and your craft."
"No thanks," George said.
"That is not a request, civilian. That is an order sanctioned by the
potentate."
"Sorry, GC, but we're on a mission from the real risen Lord, and we
have both human and edible cargo we don't wish to surrender."
"Repeat?"
"The part about the people or the pita bread?"
"Be forewarned, civilian chopper, we are fully armed and prepared to
destroy your craft if you do not comply immediately."
"Right now?"
"Affirmative."
"Just a minute."
"You request time to comply?"
"No, I just need a minute."
"You have sixty seconds."
"I can't have a minute?"
"Fifty-five seconds, civilian."
"Let me make sure I get over the busiest streets here, GC, in case I'm
not as invulnerable as I think I am."
"Coming up on forty-five seconds. Put that chopper down."
"We're eating and we have no airsick bags. If we have to use evasive
measures, we could make a mess."
"Final warning. Thirty seconds."
"We won't be hearing from you again, then?"
"Negative."
"Not at all?"
"Correct." -
"Not one word?"
"Twenty seconds."
"That's two words."
Rayford had to wonder if George was as scared as he was. The big man
obviously believed they were safe because Chaim was aboard, and Rayford
had more than enough reason to trust God. But when he saw the GC
chopper back off to where a missile explosion would not damage the
shooting craft, he believed they were about to be fired upon. "Buckle
in, Smitty," he shouted.
Abdullah leaped into his seat while Rayford secured the food box. Buck
looked as focused as Rayford, but Chaim seemed bemused. "We belong to
God," the old man said. "His will be done."
----------
Mac hadn't had this much fun since he was a schoolkid and his pet snake
found his sister's room. He bounced along Jerusalem streets with a
truckload of Israeli believers and two nurses from America. The scene
reminded him of the Keystone Kops. Operation Eagle drivers simply would
not be stopped. They swung around barricades, over boulders, through
earthquake residue, and past GC Peacekeeper vehicles.
Back in Texas when Mac was a kid, you could drive a farm vehicle at
twelve. By the sixth grade, he was driving tractors and combines,
pickups and dump trucks. And now he had drawn a new personnel transport
from France, driven in by an International Commodity Co-op volunteer
who had ridden back to get another.
This was a fancy rig with power and the ability to be driven in
automatic or manual. The former would come in handy on the open road,
once they got south of the city, but in the chaos in which he now found
himself, Mac enjoyed the six-speed stick. Even more, he was
entertained-though that seemed too light a word for it under the
circumstances-by the spectacle of the freshly healed GC personnel
thumbing their noses at the Micah-Nicolae agreement and trying to get
in the way of the exodus of a million people.
Nearly all the Operation Eagle vehicles were four-wheel drive and could
pick their way around any obstacle. When the road filled with stopped
cars and trucks, those in the back just swung out and around and made
their own routes and paths. GC Peacekeepers and Morale Monitors-the
former in uniform, the latter wearing their badges and bright orange
sashes-tried to direct traffic, stop civilian cars, check papers, and
inform everyone they were violating the martial-law curfew. They were
ignored, and Mac wondered how God was doing it. He saw a lot of weapons
but heard little gunfire. No one allowed himself to be pulled over, and
when GC vehicles blocked the path of a civilian car or truck, the
latter just backed up and went around.
Mac wondered why the GC didn't shoot or ram these vehicles, but he
figured he'd learn when he was singled out. For now, Leah was asking an
Israeli in the passenger seat if she could switch places with him so
she could talk to Mac.
"We going to make it?" she asked.
He shot her a glance. She was pale and her eyes darted about the scene
around them. "Looks like it," he said. "You see any of ours who are not
making it?"
She shook her head and fastened her seat belt, then sat with her hands
balled into fists in her lap. "Uh, Mr. McCullum, Hannah is wondering
why we're going to Petra, she and I, I mean. Obviously there's no need
for medical personnel there, and neither of us is an Israeli."
"Me either," Mac said. "Obviously we're takin' these people to their
new home. Chloe's got shipments of building materials and such that
will need to be processed. Maybe you can help coordinate that while
we're gettin' the last of the refugees delivered. That's gonna take a
while."
"Okay."
"That a problem?"
"No, it's just that-"
"You're not gonna tell me it's not what you signed up for. I mean, we
all do what we gotta d-"
"No, I know, it's fine. It's just that being at Petra is going to be
real hard on Hannah with what happened, you know."
"I was there."
"So you see."
"Have her join me up here, would ya?"
"She can hardly talk, Mr. McCullum."
"I don't need her to talk. I need her to listen."
----------
Rayford leaned as far to his right as he could and kept an eye on the
GC chopper behind them. They apparently cared not a whit about who or
what was below.
"Everybody secure?" he said. "Prepare for incoming." The pursuing craft
was directly in line with them in a can't-miss situation. Rayford
considered barking evasive maneuvers at George, but it would be futile.
The GC flew a smaller, more agile bird. Even if George eluded the first
fusillade, it would be only a matter of time.
"They're firing!" Rayford hollered, and buried his face between his
knees. He had seen the orange bursts and the white tracers and expected
the instantaneous ravaging of metal and Plexiglas and fuel tanks, the
gush of cold air, the ball of flame, and the free fall.
He felt the blazing, screaming bullet tips shoot past between him and
Buck and Chaim, and the white-hot streaks made him look up. The
ammunition flashed through the bird, and the force of the air pushed
George's head to the left and Abdullah's to the right as both
involuntarily ducked and covered their ears. But there had been no
damage to the back or front of the chopper.
Rayford stared as the shots found the tail rotors of a GC craft ahead
of them and sent it spinning to the ground. He shuddered and realized
he was gripping the seat so tightly his fingers had locked into
position.
"Why are you so fearful? How is it that you have no faith? Be of good
cheer! Do not be afraid."
Rayford turned slowly to see Michael next to him again. "You all see
him this time, don't you?" he said.
"We saw him," Chaim said. "Praise God."
"I heard him," Abdullah said, turning. But again, Michael was already
gone.
----------
Mac saw the flashing lights in his side rearview mirrors. "You're not
going to stop, are you?" Hannah asked quietly.
"Take more'n that to stop me now." The GC behind him started in on
their PA system. "I don't want to talk to them," he said. "I want to
talk to you. Did you lose a loved one today?"
"Of course. Didn't you?"
"Yes, I did."
"Then you should understand."
"That's why I don't, Hannah. I'm not sayin' this is easy. But did you
see David fold up and hibernate when he lost his fiancee? No, ma'am. I
know you and David were close, but what do you think he'd want? Do I
hafta remind you that Rayford lost two wives and a son? That Tsion lost
his whole family? I'm not discountin' it, and I'm not sayin' you don't
have a reason for wanting to stay away from Petra. But David was my
boss and my friend, and this is no picnic for me either."
"I know."
"We're all going to need some grieving time, and we won't likely get it
until we head back to the States. Meanwhile, we need you, Hannah. We
don't have the luxury of grieving the way we used to. Too many people
countin' on us. Now there may be nothin' for you and Leah to do inside
Petra, but you know well as I do that none of us helpers are guaranteed
safety. Who knows what kinda walkin' wounded we might have showin' up
to drop people off?"
She nodded. "Mac, um, you'd better pull over."
"Ma'am?"
She pointed past him, out his window. A guard hung out the passenger
side of a GC vehicle with a submachine gun pointed at Mac.
----------
"Well," George said, "that was just about the most amazing thing I've
ever seen. Do we keep testing our luck or do we get on to Petra?"
"If you think that was luck," Rayford said, "maybe-"
"Just an expression, Cap. I know good and well what that was."
"Let's stay here and watch," Abdullah said, craning his neck to see the
chopper that had fired on them.
"No need to be in the middle of everything," Rayford said. "Get
someplace where we can observe without unduly drawing more fire."
----------
Chang phoned Tsion early in the afternoon Chicago time and walked him
through how to broadcast live over international television from right
where he was. "Is your monitor somewhere that you can stand behind it
and survey the room?"
"Yes."
"Have someone sit where you're going to sit, and see what you can see
past them. Anything that would be a clue to your whereabouts, get rid
of it."
Tsion asked Ming to sit in his chair at the keyboard, and he squeezed
between the back of the monitor and the wall. On the opposite wall a
clock would give away what time zone they were in. "Chang," Tsion said,
"let me get rid of the clock, and then the background will be a blank
wall."
"Good. And then, can you tell me how long your message-wait, sir?"
"Go ahead."
"Why not just change that clock to Carpathian Time and let people
wonder where you are?"
"Interesting."
Ming broke in. "Won't they see it as an obvious trick, Chang?"
"They might if we made it prominent," he said. "Put it in the corner of
the shot, and I'll make sure it's out of focus. People will think they
have discovered something unintended."
"My message will be short, Chang," Tsion said. "Just enough to
encourage the believers before you transmit Chaim's salvation message
audio."
"Excuse me, Dr. Ben-Judah, but I'm getting something on my Phoenix 216
bug. Stand by."
"You go and get back to me later."
----------
Mac held up a finger to the GC as if requesting a moment before he
pulled over. He had speed-dialed Rayford. "Permission to fire upon the
GC before they shoot out our tires."
"Denied, Mac. Just elude. Let God work."
"He can work through your nine millimeter, can't he?"
"You still have that?"
"Sorry."
"Just don't stop," Rayford said.
"Even with a flat?"
"Call back if they flatten your tire."
Mac stopped in the middle of the road with the GC next to him, but he
refused to roll down his window.
The GC pulled in front of Mac. When the passenger got out, Mac backed
up and pulled around the vehicle, and the pursuit began again. When the
GC got close, Mac slammed on the brakes. "Sorry, friends!" he yelled.
"Shoulda told y'all to buckle up!"
The GC stopped within inches of Mac's bumper and they both jumped out,
shouting and waving weapons. Mac took off again, and as soon as they
jumped back in and accelerated, he swung left, popped a U-turn, and
swung in behind them.
----------
Apparently Carpathia still suspected the Knesset Building and thought
his own plane was most secure. Chang followed an indication on the
audiometer from the patch to the bugs there, and sure enough, it
sounded as if workers were setting up for yet another meeting in the
first-class cabin.
A couple of stewards were speaking in an Indian dialect, so Chang
quickly fed it through a filter David had recommended and an immediate
interpretation came up as captions.
"They will not destroy the rebel airstrip, then?"
"It appears the GC will use it for its own purposes. They will take out
the buildings and clear it of the enemy, of course, but then they will
fly in their own troops, who will be trucked to Petra to head off the
fleeing insurgents. They will try to-shh, they are coming."
"Mr. Akbar, sir."
"Pakistani?"
"No, apologies, Director."
"Speak English?"
"Yes, English."
"This will be a small gathering, just the potentate, Reverend
Fortunate, Mr. Moon, Ms. Ivins, and myself."
"Oh, thank you, sir. We had already made room for too many, had we not?"
"No problem. You know what everybody likes. Have it out and available.
And don't forget Ms. Ivins's fondness for ice."
"A thousand thank-yous for reminding me, sir. 'More ice, please,' she
says constantly. Water for you and Mr. Moon, juice for Mr. Fortunato,
and-"
"Reverend Fortunato."
"Oh yes, humble apologies."
"I do not care. But you do not want to make that mistake in front of
His Excellency."
"Or the Most High Reverend Father, ha!"
Chang heard Suhail Akbar chuckle. "Make yourselves scarce once
everything is in place."
Chang formatted the program to record and then switched back to
Chicago. "Ready?" he said.
"I am," Tsion said. "How do I look?"
"Scared."
"I do not wish to look scared."
"Can't help you there, Doctor. We're pirating the only show in town all
over the world. If anyone is watching TV, listening to radio, or
surfing the Net, you're what they're going to get."
"That sets my mind at ease!"
"Just trying to explain your nerves, sir."
"Say when."
"Now."
"I am on?" Tsion said. "Seriously?"
But Chang didn't dare answer for fear of his voice being traced. He
held his breath, grateful Tsion had not used his name.
"Greetings," Tsion said. "It is a privilege for me to address the world
through the miracle of technology. But as I am an unwelcome guest here,
forgive me for being brief, and please lend me your attention ..."
Chang checked in on the Phoenix. It sounded as if everyone was there
and settling in. "Commander Moon, get someone to turn off that
television. Wait! Who is that?"
"You know who that is, Excellency," Leon said. "That's the heretic,
Tsion Ben-Judah."
"More than a heretic," Carpathia said. "He is behind this Micah, thus
the plague of sores. So now he consolidates the Orthodox Jews with him.
How did he get a television network?"
"That is GCNN, Potentate."
"Well, get him off there!" Carpathia raged. "Walter!"
The TV in the Phoenix went silent, and Carpathia exploded. "I mean get
him off the air, you imbecile. Call whom you have to call, do what you
have to do! We have overcome the plague and now we will look like
buffoons, allowing the enemy on our own network!"
Moon was on the phone, his voice shaky, sounding to Chang as if he
feared Carpathia would put him to death if Tsion was aired a minute
longer. Moon swore and demanded to be put through to the head of
broadcasting.
"No excuses!" he cried. "Pull the plug! Now!"
"Give me that phone!" Carpathia said. "Cut the feed! Cut the signal!"
It sounded as if the phone was flung across the cabin. "Turn it on! Let
me see!"
Moon: "I'm sure they've at least gone to black, Excellen-"
"Turn it on! Ach! Still there! What is it with you people? Suhail, come
here. Right here!"
"Excellency."
"No restrictions on curfew enforcement." Carpathia spoke so quickly
that his words ran together and Chang had to strain to understand.
"Shoot to kill at the Mount of Olives, at Masada, on-"
"Those locations have been cleared, Highn-"
"Do not interrupt, Suhail! Every civilian plane destroyed and-"
"We have suffered casualties on the ground from crashing planes, sir-"
"Do you hear me? Do you understand what I am saying? Do I need to have
you executed the way I will execute Walter if this Ben-Judah is not off
the air when again I look at the screen!?"
Moon wailed, "What more can I do, Excellency?"
"You can die!"
"No!"
"Suhail, a weapon."
"Please, sir!"
"Now, Suhail!"
Scuffling. BLAM! A scream.
"Hold out your other hand, Walter!"
"Please!"
BLAM! More screaming. More shots, fresh cries with each. The banging of
shoes against seats and tables as Moon, Chang assumed, frantically
tried to crawl to safety. More rapid shots in succession, wailing like
a terrified baby, finally a last shot, and silence.
"You're doing the right thing, Nicolae," Viv Ivins said. "You should
kill them all and start over."
"Thank you, Viv."
Fortunato: "I worship you, risen master."
"Shut up, Leon. Suhail, put a fresh clip in this."
Sounds of the snapping in of more ammunition.
Fortunato: "I bow in respectful silence to your glory. Oh, for the
privilege of kissing your ring."
"Now give it to me, Suhail."
"As you wish, Excellency, but I will execute anyone you wish. I have
always carried out your directives."
"Then do what I say!"
"Anything, Potentate."
"I want dead insurrectionists! Run them down. Crash their vehicles.
Blow their heads off. As for Petra, wait until we know for certain
Micah is there, then level it. Do we have what we need to do that?"
"We do, sir."
"In the meantime, someone, anyone, get-Ben-Judah- off-the-air!"
"I will pray him off, Your Worship," Fortunato said.
"I will kill you if you do not shut up."
"Quieting now, Highness. Oh!"
"What!?"
"The water! The ice!"
Chang jumped up and turned on the faucet over his sink. Blood.
FOURTEEN
THE TAILLIGHTS ahead went bright red, so Mac slammed on his brakes. But
suddenly the GC vehicle disappeared from his vision. In the distance,
Operation Eagle cars and trucks roared on, but behind them a great
cavern opened and the pursuing GC dropped into it.
Mac jumped out and realized his front tires were on the edge of the
gigantic crevasse. Amazingly, the lights of the GC cars grew smaller as
they continued to fall. The cavity in the earth was hundreds of feet
deep, and his idea to sneak behind the GC had almost been fatal. His
knees rubbery, he climbed back into the truck and carefully backed
away, looking for a way around.
Roaring up past him came yet another GC car, but as it neared the
drop-off, its two occupants leaped out and rolled, their weapons
clattering onto the pavement. Their car hurtled into the great beyond.
The Peacekeepers slowly rose, retrieved their rifles, and took aim at
Mac's truck. "Duck!" he shouted, and his head banged Hannah's shoulder
as they both leaned toward the middle of the front seat. In the back,
the Israelis tussled for position.
The bracketing of gunfire made Mac shut his eyes and cover his head,
but it stopped almost as soon as it had started, and he rose and
stepped out to see the Peacekeepers sprawled dead. No one else was
around. He could only surmise that their own bullets had somehow killed
them. Mac's Operation Eagle truck stood unscathed. His phone rang.
It was Rayford. "Tsion's on the air right now," he reported.
"Well, that's good, Cap. Nothin' I could use more right now than a
little broadcast entertainment."
"Say again?"
"Nothin'."
"What's your location?"
"The Grand Canyon."
"I don't follow."
"Good idea not to."
"Mac, you all right?"
"Yeah. 'Cept for almost drivin' my people into the netherworld, I'll
make it."
"Sounds like you'll have a story, as usual. Can you see what's
happening in the air over Jerusalem?"
"Guess I been lookin' the other direction, Ray."
"Well, look up and listen."
The air battle had moved away from Mac, but in the distance he could
see it, and its low rumbling echoes came rolling back. "They hittin'
anybody?"
"Only each other," Rayford said. "Look out below."
"I heard that!"
----------
Chang was overcome by a feeling so delicious it made him tingle to the
top of his head. All over his computer were frantic codes and messages
and attempts by the broadcasting division in the next building to yank
GCNN off the air. But nothing they did worked. He hoped Tsion would
finish soon so he could go to the Chaim audio. That would drive them
crazy. With no visual to worry about, they would catch each other
coming and going trying to mute the sound.
With one ear monitoring Tsion to know when to make the switch, Chang
was also still listening to the cockpit of the Phoenix. Carpathia had
turned his verbal guns on Fortunato.
"What good is a religion if you cannot come up with some miracles,
Leon?"
"Holiness! I called down fire on your enemy just yesterday!"
"You cooked a harmless woman with a big mouth."
"But you are the object of our worship, Excellency! I pray to you for
signs and wonders!"
"Well, I need a miracle, Reverend."
"Excellency," Akbar interrupted, "you might consider this phone call
miraculous."
"While that infernal Ben-Judah remains on the air, the only miracle is
that either of you remains alive. So, thrill me."
"You recall we lost two prisoners in Greece recently?"
"Young people, yes. A boy and a girl. You have found them?"
"No, but as time and manpower allowed only a cursory investigation, the
best we came up with were witnesses who said a Peacekeeper named Jensen
may have been involved in both disappearances."
"Yes, yes, and though he was our man, you lost track of him. So you
have found him now?"
"Maybe."
"I hate answers like that!"
"Forgive me, Excellency. You know how this Micah and his sidekick
seemed to appear out of nowhere."
"Get to the point. Please! You are making me crazy!"
"We got a tip that the two were seen at the King David Hotel, but when
everyone fell ill, we didn't have time to pursue it. Now we have, and
we even know what rooms they occupied."
"And this is a miracle?"
"We have combed both rooms. One contained a wallet that appears to
belong to Jensen. The photo, however, does not match the photo in our
personnel files."
"Why would he be foolish enough to leave his identification behind? It
is clearly an attempt to mislead."
"We're comparing with our international database fingerprints lifted
from each room."
Chang's fingers flew. He was into the GC Peacekeeper personnel file in
seconds and eradicated all vestiges of Jack Jensen.
"Suhail, there must be dozens of different people's fingerprints in a
hotel room, from every recent guest to the staff to-"
"The predominant prints in the one room trace to Chaim Rosenzweig."
Carpathia laughed. "The man who murdered me."
"One and the same."
He laughed again. "Well, which do you think is Rosenzweig? The one in
the robe or the one with the scarred face?"
"Excellency, the prints from the scarred man's room do not lead to
Peacekeeper Jensen, interestingly enough. They match the prints of a
former employee in your inner circle."
Back Chang went into the system, and seconds later Cameron "Buck"
Williams, former media czar for the Global Community, was gone as if he
had never been there.
"I did not study the sidekick," Carpathia said, "but he did not remind
me of anyone."
"He was your first media guy."
"Plank? Nonsense. Confirmed dead."
"My mistake. Your second media guy but first choice."
"Williams?"
"That's the man."
"Micah's assistant is not Cameron Williams, Suhail. I would know. And
let me tell you something else-Micah is not Dr. Rosenzweig."
"All due respect, Excellency, but miracles of disguise can be wrought
today."
"He may be approximately the same height, but that voice? That look?
That bearing? No. That could not be playacting." There was a long
pause. "Anyway," Carpathia said quietly, "I pardoned my attacker
publicly."
"And that protects him from whom?"
"Everyone."
"Including yourself?"
"Excellent point, Suhail."
"Anyway, you yourself installed Walter Moon as supreme commander.
That apparently didn't give him tenure."
Chang heard the men laugh, while in the background Viv Ivins supervised
the removal of Moon's body and the cleanup of the area.
Chang switched to Tsion's broadcast, which closed with Dr. Ben-Judah's
promise to travel to Petra to personally address his million strong
"brothers and sisters in Messiah."
Someone called Suhail. Chang heard him ask Carpathia's permission
to take it, then: "Ben-Judah is coming to Petra, Excellency."
"Delay its destruction until his arrival."
"And the blood problem is international."
"Meaning?"
"Intelligence is telling me the waters of the sea are 100 percent
blood."
"What sea?"
"Every one. It's crippling us. And we have a mole."
"Where?"
"At the palace. And connected here somehow."
"How can you know that?"
"Jensen and Williams? Their files have disappeared from our
central database since you and I began discussing them."
"Quarantine this plane, Suhail."
"Sir?"
"We will kill the mole, of course, but we must find the leak
first. Lie detector tests for everyone. How many is that?"
"Fortunately, not many. Two stewards, myself, and Leon."
"You were wise to leave me out and diplomatic to leave Viv Ivins
out. Do not be diplomatic."
"You want her polygraphed, Excellency?"
"Absolutely."
"Perhaps I'll conduct it myself," Suhail said.
"And who will conduct yours, Mr. Akbar?"
"Actually, Excellency, lie detecting has become quite
streamlined. We now merely use a computer program that detects
changes in the FM frequency of the voice. A person has no control
over it. He or she can speak at a different pace or even volume,
but the FM frequency will change only under stress."
"Really."
"It's gold, sir."
"Do include me in the testing."
Chang hacked into the personnel files and created a record showing him
in the infirmary and treated symptomatically for boils for the last two
days. He saved everything from his computer to the secure minidisk in
the bowels of the palace, then purposely crashed the hard drive on his
laptop, erasing everything in it. He created a phantom auxiliary hard
drive buried under such massive encoding that only another computer
working twenty-four hours a day for years could even hope to crack it.
He accessed the miniature archive and downloaded everything he needed,
then pulled the cords and packed up the machine, putting it deep in a
closet. David-the only other person on the planet who could have
detected a thing on his hard drive-was actually no longer on the planet.
Chang would be at his desk in his department the next morning, right on
time and ready for work. Not only would they not find the mole, but
they would also strike out in their search for a contact person in the
executive cabinet.
----------
George put down well outside the growing throngs at Petra, opened the
door for ventilation, and Buck and the others dozed as load after load
of more escapees was delivered. Rayford and Chaim had decided to keep
Chaim's presence a secret for as long as possible so as not to
interfere with the massive move into the safe place. Though some had
begun walking in and others were airlifted, by daybreak, hundreds of
thousands clogged the Siq, awaiting their helicopter hop inside. They
sang and rejoiced and prayed.
Buck left the chopper and walked among the people, keeping an eye on
the skies and the western horizon as he listened to the radio. Global
Community forces had been decimated, nearly half lost in firefights in
the sky that never touched Operation Eagle or during ground pursuits
that left GC vehicles and bodies buried so deep that rescue operations
were abandoned.
The GCNN radio network had switched back to Carpathia's auspices
sometime in the night, after Chaim's case for Jesus as the Messiah had
been broadcast around the world, followed by his prayer of allegiance
to Christ. Buck believed Tsion's prediction that a worldwide revival
would break out in the midst of the worst terror of the Tribulation.
Reports from around the globe revealed tragedy and death related to the
seas having turned to blood.
Ships that counted on processes that made the waters of the ocean
drinkable found it impossible to convert the blood. Rotting carcasses
of all species of aquatic life rose to the surface, and crews of ships
fell deathly ill as many boats radioed their inability to get back to
land.
Carpathia announced that his Security and Intelligence forces already
had determined the true identities of the impostors who claimed to
represent the rebels and that it had been their trickery that resulted
in the great seawater catastrophe.
----------
Night had fallen in Chicago, and Chloe found a way to excuse herself
during a lull in the news. She took her new telescope and set up at a
window far from curious eyes. Waiting until the sky was black,
she first scanned the city with the naked eye. The tiny beacon
she had noticed some time before still shined from about three quarters
of a mile away.
Chloe carefully settled and steadied herself, bracing the instrument
and aligning it with what she had seen. At long last she was able
to bring the illusive beam into focus and calm the jumpy lens. To
her astonishment, the source of light was at ground level. She
sat and sat, cramping again but forcing herself to stay still so she
could study the image until it made sense to her overtaxed brain.
She ran the various shapes and images through the grid of her life's
memory, and gradually Chloe thought she came to understand what she was
looking at. One window on the ground or basement floor of a big
building, maybe ten or twelve stories, emitted light from inside.
And the more she sat staring, the more convinced she was that there was
activity inside. Human activity.
----------
At eight in the morning Palace Time, Chang was assigned by his
supervisor to help monitor reports of deaths and casualties attributed
to the oceanic disaster. To the wonder of everyone involved,
lakes and rivers had not been affected.
In the large office where Chang and some thirty others sat at desktop
computers, he made it a point to only occasionally grunt a response to
coworkers who tried to draw him out. He neither looked anyone in
the eye nor smiled. His boss, a tall, bony Mexican named Aurelio S.
Figueroa, proved an officious loner who treated his superiors like
kings and queens and treated his subordinates like servants.
"How are we today, Wong?" Mr. Figueroa said, his Adam's apple
protruding.
"Okay, sir."
"Happy in your work?"
"Happy enough."
"Have you heard the news?"
"About?"
"Supreme Commander Moon."
"I saw nothing on the news about him."
"Come, Master Wong, I know you are a Carpathia pet. Surely you have
inside knowledge."
Chang shook his head.
"Moon is dead."
"Dead? How?"
"Shot to death outside the potentate's plane."
Chang tried to appear stunned and curious, but he hated being drawn in
as Figueroa's confidant. "The enemy?"
"No! Don't be naïve! Our people at the level are surrounded by
security."
"Who then?"
"They suspect the stewards." Figueroa leaned close. "Both Indians."
"But why?"
"No one else would have done it."
"Why would they?"
"Why not? You know the Indians."
"No, I do not."
"They have a contact on the inside."
"On the inside of what?"
"Here."
"Why?"
"You are naive, aren't you?"
Chang bit his tongue. He hated stupid people, especially ones twice his
age. "Not too naive to guess your middle name."
Figueroa's eyes turned dark. "What does that have to do with anything,
Wong?"
Chang shrugged. "Forget it."
"You couldn't know it anyway."
"Of course I couldn't."
"Unless you saw my personnel file."
"How would I do that?"
"You couldn't. Not without my knowing. Everything done on these
computers is recorded, you know."
"Of course."
"I could see if you have been snooping."
"Feel free."
Figueroa broke into a wide grin. "But I trust you, Wong! You are a
friend of His Excellency."
"Well, my Father is."
"I suppose you have heard they have asked for lie-detecting software. I
uploaded it this morning."
"How would I know that?"
Figueroa clutched Chang's shoulder, and it was all Chang could do to
keep from recoiling. "Because you are connected, my
friend!"
"I'm not."
"We are all going to be subjected to searches, you know.
Interrogations."
"Why?"
"I told you! The Indians, the stewards, have a connection here, a leak."
Chang shrugged.
"You want to be first or last?"
"To what?"
"To be interrogated."
"I have nothing to hide. They can interrogate me anytime they want."
"They will search your apartment, want to see your personal computer."
"They may feel free. The hard drive has been worthless for some time."
"Then you have nothing to worry about."
"I was not worried."
Figueroa looked around, as if realizing he might be criticized for
paying too much attention to one worker. "Of course, you weren't, Wong.
You're connected."
Chang shook his head. "Who will replace Moon?"
"Akbar is too important where he is. Fortunato has already had that
job. Maybe Ms. Ivins, who knows? Maybe no one. Maybe Nicolae himself.
One thing is certain, Wong," Figueroa added, turning to leave, "it
won't be you or me."
"Don't be so sure," Chang said, hating himself for playing these games.
As Chang expected, Figueroa stopped. "What are you saying? What do you
know?"
"Nothing to speak of, sir," Chang said. "Have to protect my connection,
you know."
"You're putting me on. You know nothing."
"Of course."
"Seriously, now. I mean it."
"Me too, sir."
Five minutes later, as Chang was collating reports from around the
world and assembling them for a briefing, Figueroa called from his
office. "You swear you've never tapped in to see my personnel files?"
"I swear."
"If I ran a review on your computer, the one here and your own, it
would bear that out?"
"This one would."
"But your personal computer?"
"I told you. The hard drive crashed."
"Then this about knowing my full name ..."
"Would be guessing, sir."
"Want to guess?"
"I'm busy, sir."
"I'll give you one guess."
"I was just talking. I don't know."
"Come now, Wong. Take a shot. Tell you what-you get it right, I'll
leave your name off the interrogation list."
"How could you do that?"
"I have my ways."
"Why would I care about being interrogated?"
"It's a waste of time, a nuisance, stressful."
"Not if you're innocent. I never even heard of the Indian stewards."
"The offer stands."
Chang sighed. Why had he started this? And who would believe Figueroa
gave a rip anyway? "I know it starts with an S. "
"Everybody knows that. It's on my nameplate. But maybe it's like the S
in Harry S Truman and stands for nothing."
"You use the period after it, so it stands for something. I'd just be
guessing."
"Unless you're lying about hacking into my file, a hundred Nicks says
you couldn't guess in ten tries."
"I have only one guess."
"Let's hear it."
"Sequoia."
A long silence. Figueroa swore. "You couldn't know that!"
"I'm right?"
"You are and you know it, but how did you know? It's not even a Mexican
name. Not even Spanish."
"I'm guessing Indian. American Indian, I mean."
"Tell me how you knew that."
"Guessing, sir. I thought it made sense."
----------
Why would a light be on in Chicago? Was it possible, Chloe wondered,
that someone else had somehow discovered that David Hassid had planted
the radiation readings in the Global Community database computer? That
reminded her she had not yet told Buck the horrible news.
Chloe tried to plot where she would find the lighted window, then put
up the telescope and phoned Buck. It broke her heart to hear that he
was at Petra and as excited as she remembered him being in a long time.
She let him go on and on about what had happened, how Rayford had seen
and been healed by the angel, and how he and the others in the chopper
had eventually seen him as well when he protected them from gunfire.
Chloe could only agree with Buck about the signs and wonders, the
confrontations with Carpathia, the supernatural change in Chaim, the
thrill of pirating the network for the spreading of the truth. Finally
he must have noticed her enthusiasm did not match his. "You okay, babe?"
"I have bad news for you, Buck. Two GC MIAs murdered David Hassid, and
we all agreed not to tell you and Chaim until your work was almost
finished. . . . Buck? Are you there?"
"Give me a minute," he said finally.
"I don't know when Daddy was going to tell Chaim. It ought to be soon
if he's right there on-site."
"Yeah," Buck managed. "He'll probably somehow get everybody else out of
the chopper first. We don't want the people to see Chaim yet."
"Of course."
"Chloe, what're we going to do?"
"I don't know. The most awful part is, it's only going to get worse.
Before I fall asleep I run over in my mind everybody we've got left and
I can't help but wonder ..."
"Who'll be next, I know. I didn't know David as well as some of the
others did, but just from a practical, logistical standpoint..."
"He was so crucial," Chloe said. "And how much do we know about Ming's
brother?"
"David was high on him, but he is still a teenager. And he'll never be
in the same position, have the same access David had. I hate to talk
about it only in terms of what it means to the Trib Force, but-"
"The mourning process has to be so blunted, Buck. Everything's life and
death now. Each loss makes it harder for the rest of us to survive, and
it's only natural that we look at it that way. I just want you all back
here and safe one more time."
"Soon," Buck said. "Your dad wants to use Abdullah's underground
contacts to get use of a supersonic plane that will hold eight or so.
Albie's credentials are still intact, so he would fly us all back to
the States and pick up Tsion for a personal visit to Petra."
"I want to go," she said.
"You just said you wanted us back in one piece."
"I need baby-sitters."
"Be serious. We all need some R and R before Armageddon."
"I don't."
"What're you talking about?"
"Dad promised I could go on the next mission if all the bases were
covered. I took that to mean if there were enough people here to watch
Kenny."
Buck was silent.
"You don't approve."
"No," he said. "Kenny could stand losing me more than you."
"Don't be silly."
"I'm being silly? Listen to yourself. You're his mother."
"So I get the whole responsibility."
"That's not what I'm-"
"And you're so crucial to the frontline work of the Trib Force that we
can't risk losing me and leaving you to be Kenny's primary caregiver."
She could tell Buck was angry. "I can't believe I'm standing here in
the middle of the desert, arguing with my wife about who's going to
watch the baby. Listen, you can't come back with Tsion, because the GC
is waiting till he returns before they make an air strike here."
"Yet you send Tsion into that, and a billion people a day are dependent
on him."
"We believe he'll be protected here."
"And I won't?"
"We don't know. David wasn't."
"I don't want to fight about this on the phone, Buck. Please don't be
closed to it until we get a chance to talk it through. And be careful.
I love you and I couldn't live without you."
With her phone in her pocket, Chloe nonchalantly chatted with Zeke out
of the hearing of the others. "If I were to go out for a walk, would
you keep an ear out for Kenny and not feel obligated to mention to
anyone else that I'm gone?"
"This time of night? Ma'am, it's-"
"Z, please. I'm a grown woman and I need to get out of here. I'll have
my phone with me."
"I couldn't lie for you."
"I didn't ask you to. Just don't volunteer anything. I don't want
anyone to worry."
----------
Buck headed back to the helicopter. The transfer of people into Petra
was slow but steady. He wanted to let Rayford know he knew about David
and give him a chance to tell Chaim. But as he worked his way through
the enthusiastic crowd, beautifully bronzed children, exhausted by the
flight and sleeping on parents' shoulders, distracted him. How he
missed Kenny!
The crowd suddenly shifted and smiles froze. Their attention turned to
the east, and Buck jogged to where he could see. Billowing across the
desert came three huge clouds of dust that threatened to blot out the
diminished sun. The two on the left continued to separate themselves
from the one on the right. Buck dialed Chang, only to find out he was
temporarily incommunicado. He dialed Rayford.
"Chloe told me about David. Get rid of the others for a minute and tell
Chaim. And what do you make of what's coming?"
"Abdullah's figured it out," Rayford reported. "GC ground forces.
They're going to separate until they can come at the people
simultaneously from three different directions, forcing them into the
Siq, which will hold only so many."
Buck began sprinting toward the chopper. "The news of David can wait.
Are the rest of us safe, or just Chaim? And are the people safe outside
the entrance?"
"I'm going to switch places with George and get up where I can get a
look at these troops," Rayford said. "When I come back down, be close
by. We may have to take up arms."
"Arms?" Buck said. "I heard about those. Count me out."
"You may change your mind if the GC opens fire."
I just might, Buck thought.
FIFTEEN
CHLOE SLIPPED out in dark slacks and a black jacket. Besides her phone,
she carried an ancient Luger she found among Rayford's keepsakes. She
had experimented with it until she figured out how to load it and work
the safety. She only guessed how it might fire, but it gave her a
measure of security she hadn't known was available.
She walked five blocks in the pitch-blackness of unlighted streets and
heard nary a sound. Chloe looked to her left at every cross street now,
imagining she was close to her target. How far off could she be? Maybe
a quarter of a mile, she decided. So she went left two blocks and
started looking both ways at each corner.
----------
Rayford ascended and hovered at less than a thousand feet, just high
enough to allow himself a sense of what the Global Community Security
and Intelligence forces were sending their way. "George," he said,
"switch seats with Dr. Rosenzweig, please."
"What are we looking at?" Chaim said as he settled in. Rayford told him
and pointed to where the two other columns of tanks, armored trucks,
personnel carriers, and rocket launchers peeled off to circle around
the massive crowd of Israelis.
"I worry that only you Israeli believers are safe," Rayford said. "But
are even you safe outside the walls of Petra?"
"Captain, the question must be academic. Without a miracle of God, we
are still hours from having more than half our people inside. How long
before these attackers reach us?"
"They're probably within firing range right now," Rayford said. "In
twenty more minutes they will all be in position. If they advance as
soon as they are mustered, they would be able to fight hand to hand
within ten more minutes of that."
"So half an hour..."
"Maximum."
"My people are neither armed nor prepared to defend themselves. We are
at the mercy of God."
"I'm tempted to have you urge all believers who are not Israelis to get
into Petra as quickly as they can," Rayford said. "Do you think your
people would defer to them, allowing them to get to the front of the
helicopter lines and make way for those who would walk in?"
"Not without understanding, and how would there be time to
explain?"
"The alternative is that Operation Eagle suspend the airlift and every
able-bodied believer, except those from Israel, be armed and prepared
to stand against this attack."
"You will be hopelessly outnumbered, Captain."
"But we would inflict damage, and we would not go down without a fight."
"I would not begin to try to advise you," Chaim said. "You must do what
you must do. What is God telling you?"
"He's telling me I am as afraid as I have ever been, but I cannot stand
by and allow a massacre. Are you able to operate a weapon, Doctor?"
"Forgive me, but I am not here to resist with arms. I am to take charge
of these people in Petra and prepare the way for a visit from Tsion.
And when he again leaves, I will remain."
Rayford looked over his shoulder and shouted, "George, Abdullah, find
out where Albie and Mac are. Tell them our situation and to connect
with us as soon as we're on the ground, if they can. Stand by to load
weapons and set up a perimeter a hundred yards in front of the
Israelis."
"I am only guessing, Captain," Abdullah said, "but if we are to
surround them up to the walls on either side of the Siq, we will likely
stand more than fifty yards apart each."
"I didn't say this would be easy or even successful, Smitty. I'm open
to suggestions."
"I have none."
"Then round up our guys and tell the rest that all Operation Eagle
personnel are on combat duty effective immediately." He turned back to
Chaim and motioned him to lean close. "Doctor, I need to tell you what
happened here yesterday. ..."
----------
Chang had been the fastest keyboarder in his Chinese high school,
regardless of whether they were inputting in Chinese or English. Now he
sat speed-typing code into a secondary window every chance he got. He
maneuvered his monitor in such a way that it faced neither the
surveillance camera in the corner nor his coworkers if they remained at
their stations. He also forced himself to look not at the characters he
was typing but at the reflection off the screen, which told him when
Figueroa or anyone else happened to stroll within view.
The secondary window, as he designed it, would show up on any check of
the machine as a local notepad, but he programmed his codes so they
would appear as random keys rather than any sensible strings. If
questioned, he could attribute the gibberish to residue in translating
from Chinese to English or even a computer language. He was building
and formatting an independent drive he could access from anywhere and
which would duplicate the capability of his laptop.
Chloe kept peeking at her watch and asking herself if she was a fool.
What did she expect to find? Was she just satisfying her curiosity?
Being out by herself, especially in the dark, gave her a wholly
satisfying sense of freedom, which in turn made her wonder if she was
too young for the responsibilities she bore. She was a wife and mother,
head of an international co-op that meant the difference between health
and starvation for its millions of members. And yet she needed this
kind of an escape? One with perhaps more danger than she knew?
Finally she reached a corner, where she looked right to no avail and
then left, which made her stop. Could that be her source of light, that
faint strip of a lighter shade that seemed to color the darkness four
or five blocks away? Did she have the time or energy to see if she had
been that far off in her calculation? Of course. What else was she out
here for? It was clear Buck and probably her dad were not really going
to let her journey to Petra with Tsion when an air attack was certain.
This might be her only mission, and of course, the odds were it would
prove to be nothing. But even if it was folly and turned out to be
nothing but a game of hide-and-seek in the dark, it was better than
nothing.
She turned left.
----------
Rayford banked and circled to drop back down, and as the craft leveled
and settled, he saw Buck hurryin toward him, motioning with a
finger across his neck to cut the engines as soon as possible. From all
over the area, other drivers and chopper pilots emerged from vehicles
and aircraft and headed his way, awaiting instructions and weaponry for
the stand against the GC.
The crowd, however, seemed to ignore both the Operation Eagle personnel
and the GC, though the clouds of dust and the sounds of engines drew
closer. Rather, the people all seemed riveted to where the Siq led into
the high-walled path into Petra. Rayford had dropped too quickly to see
what they could be looking at.
Buck reached the chopper, more frantically signaling the cut-engine
message, and Rayford quickly shut down and reached past Chaim to push
open the door. "Everybody out," Buck said. "You've got to see this!"
"Do we need weapons?" Rayford called, and they tumbled out.
"Doesn't look like it. Follow me. Chaim, you all right?"
"Call me Micah, but yes. Lead the way."
"Aren't we afraid of people recognizing him?" Rayford said.
"No one's looking," Buck said.
"So I noticed," Rayford said, sprinting behind Buck and realizing that
Chaim had hiked up his robe and was somehow keeping pace. George and
Abdullah pounded along behind.
Buck led them to an incline, then bent and charged up to where a giant
boulder offered a flat surface from where they could overlook the
hundreds of thousands. "There," Buck said, "near the entrance. See?"
----------
Chloe grew more excited the farther she walked. The contrast between
the light and the darkness grew stronger, and she knew she had found
what she had seen from the safe house in the Strong Building. The
possibility that it represented anything more than a rogue light left
on by some quirk of the power grid was, she knew, likely only in her
head. But as she came within a block and a half of the window, which
was barred and indeed at street level, she saw the camera. It sat
directly above the window, hooded by a thick metal box that she would
not be surprised to learn was covered with graffiti. A tiny dot of red
light glowed from it, and the lens, though she could barely make it
out, swiveled in a 180-degree arc.
Chloe was certain she was too far from any light source to have been
picked up by what appeared to be an old camera, but she slowed and
stayed close to buildings and the rubble of buildings, stopping
whenever she detected the lens pointing in her direction. When it swung
away, she hurried to get closer.
Finally she crossed the street away from the camera and pressed her
back up against a wall. Again she stopped when the camera seemed to
find her, and when it swung the other way, she edged closer. Eventually
she was within three feet of where the light from the window reached
the wall next to her across the street. Inside the window she saw only
a fluorescent ceiling unit with three of its four tubes illuminated.
When next the camera scanned her way, she realized the light barely
touched her left sleeve. She stood stock-still, wondering if the camera
had any kind of a motion sensor.
Here came the rotation of the lens again. Chloe remained where she was
but moved her arm slightly in the edge of the light. The camera stopped
rotating and the light in the window went out. Now all she could see
was the dot of red, and it remained stationary. She imagined the lens
opening to try to decipher what stood across the street there in the
darkness.
Should she run? Was it possible that whoever or whatever controlled the
camera and the light was as scared as she was? Did it or they want to
catch her or scare her off? or simply be aware of what was out there?
Chloe took a deep breath and, trying to relax, worked to regulate the
rise and fall of her diaphragm. One thing she was sure of, if she could
trust David and Chang, this was not GC.
Chloe tiptoed halfway across the street and noticed a faded sign on the
wall, but still it was too dark to make out. She stood there, the
camera seeming to study her. Finally the fluorescent light came back
on. She did not move, except to raise her eyes and read the sign. It
was some sort of currency exchange. That meant that behind the bars was
a window likely made of bulletproof glass.
She put her hands in her pockets, the handgrip of the Luger nestled in
her right palm. The camera stayed on her as she moved closer to the
window, and the lens moved only enough to keep her centered, the faint
whine telling her it was also adjusting constantly to keep her in
focus. At long last, throwing caution to the wind, she bent at the
waist and peered inside the window.
A squawk box crackled to life. "Identify yourself and explain your
mark."
----------
There, just above the heads of the people at the front of the crowd,
stood the man Rayford knew to be Michael. He was dressed similarly to
Chaim, though he was taller. He held both hands aloft, and such a hush
fell over the Israelis that everyone could hear him, though he spoke in
normal, conversational tones. Rayford stood far beyond the edge of the
throng, yet it sounded as if Michael spoke directly into his ear.
If the effect on the crowd was the same as on Rayford, they were filled
with a sacred peace.
Michael began, "Fear not, children of Abraham. I am your shield. Fear
not, for God has heard your voice. He says to you, 'I am the God of
Abraham your father: fear not, for I am with you, and will bless you.'
"Behold, the Lord your God has set the land before you: go up and
possess it, as the Lord God of your fathers has said unto you; fear
not, neither be discouraged. Hear, O Israel, you approach this day unto
battle against your enemies: let not your hearts faint, fear not, and
do not tremble, neither be terrified because of them; be strong and of
a good courage, fear not, nor be afraid of them: for the Lord your God,
he it is that goes with you; he will not fail you, nor forsake you.
"Peace be unto you; fear not: you shall not die. Turn not aside from
following the Lord, but serve the Lord with all your heart. God your
Father says, 'You shall eat bread at my table continually. Be
courageous, and be valiant.' Fear not: for they that be with us are
more than they that be with them.
"You shall not need to fight in this battle: set yourselves, stand
still, and see the salvation of the Lord with you, O Judah and
Jerusalem, for the Lord will be with you. God shall hear you, and
afflict them because therefore they fear not his name. Say to them that
are of a fearful heart, 'Be strong, fear not: behold, your God will
come with vengeance, even God with a recompense; he will come and save
you.'"
Michael stepped down and began walking through the masses, who backed
away and followed with their eyes. As he strode past, he continued to
encourage. "For the Lord your God will hold your right hand, saying
unto you, 'Fear not; I will help you, people of Israel.' So says the
Lord, and your redeemer, the Holy One of Israel.
"Thus says the Lord that created you, O Israel, 'Fear not: for I have
redeemed you, I have called you by your name; you are mine.' It shall
be well with you. Be glad and rejoice: for the Lord will do great
things. The very hairs of your head are all numbered. Fear not
therefore: you are of more value than many sparrows.
"The Lord God says, 'Fear not, for I am the first and the last.' Stand
firm then, remnant of Israel. Fear not! Fear not! Fear not! Fear not!"
The crowd began to take up the chant, louder and louder, as Michael
found his way to the edge of the people, facing what was now the middle
column of desert dust, fast approaching. He stood grasping his robe at
the chest, chin raised toward the advancing armies of the evil one, and
behind him the teeming thousands matched his pose.
Rayford and Buck and Abdullah and Chaim hurried down and fell into the
crowd behind Michael. Rayford couldn't know how the others felt. As for
him, fear was gone and he had never rested more surely in God.
----------
Chloe found her throat constricted, but they could see her mark! She
was able to croak, "If you can see it, it does not need to be
explained."
"Identify yourself."
"What more do you need to know than that I am a sister in Christ?"
"How are you able to survive the radiation? Are you supernaturally
protected?"
"I will answer only when I know whether you are all brothers and
sisters."
"Persuade us you are not radioactive and we will welcome you inside."
"I must know if any enemy is among you."
"We are all believers. No Carpathianists, no GC."
"The radiation is a ruse perpetrated by the Judah-ites." Chloe had
crossed a line she could not retreat from. Any more information that
might be secreted to
the enemy, and she would be giving away the safe house and her comrades.
"To what purpose?"
"You should be able to surmise."
"Are you alone, sister?"
"You mean-"
"Is anyone with you now?"
"No."
There was a long silence. The camera remained on her, the light on in
the empty room. It had a ratty, gray, short-nap industrial carpet, a
green countertop built into a wall, and three Plexiglas-windowed
transaction stations, all long since retired from use.
A door in the far corner opened slowly, and a black man in bare feet,
beltless suit pants, and a white, sleeveless T-shirt emerged. Maybe in
his late twenties and muscular, he moved cautiously across the carpet,
standing directly under the light, looking out, not smiling but not
scowling either. Chloe detected hope, curiosity, perhaps bemusement in
his eyes. He invited her closer to the window with a wave, and she
lowered her face to within inches of it. He broke into a huge grin.
"Greetings, sister!" he called out, and she saw the mark of God on his
forehead.
He hurried back to the door and called to others. A black girl came
out, about Chloe's age, wearing shorts and socks and an oversized man's
white shirt. Chloe felt on display, as if at the zoo. And here came two
middle-aged Latino women-one big boned but gaunt, the other thin and
short.
"You're okay?" the young black woman called out. "How long you been
outside?"
"Almost an hour. But I've been out before. Lots of times."
"And you're okay?"
Chloe smiled. "I'm okay! Not contagious!"
"Let her in!"
"Yeah, let her in!"
"Get Enoch! He'll decide."
----------
First in line, Rayford noticed, in each of the three massive divisions
of GC battalions, were full-track tanks, chewing up rocks and dirt and
sand, bouncing and rolling over the uneven ground. Behind them, beyond
the clouds of dust, from what he had seen from the air, were missile
launchers. Then came cannons, then armored personnel carriers, trucks,
jeep-type vehicles with gun-toting soldiers, then smaller cars.
Rayford judged their speed at about thirty-five miles an hour, and he
assumed they would soon synchronize a stopping point where every weapon
in their arsenals would have maximum kill power. But there seemed no
slowing as they drew within half a mile, then a quarter mile. They bore
down on the unarmed civilians.
Rayford suddenly had a sinking feeling. He had only assumed the rest of
the Operation Eagle forces would merely stand in confidence behind
Michael. But what if they acted on old information? What if Albie or
Mac or someone else had provided them weapons and they returned fire,
or worse, initiated it?
He wanted to grab his phone and his walkie-talkie and confirm with his
people that they were to stand down, to remain unarmed. But the GC were
nearly upon them now. The noise reverberated off the rock walls and the
dust blew all around them. Still, neither side opened fire. Rayford
finally ducked and turned, covering his eyes against the dust and
peeking back to be sure none of his people took overt action. As far as
he could see, the Israelis and the Operation Eagle forces remained
calm, standing firm, trusting in God's protection.
Rayford had to fight a smile. In his humanness he allowed that he could
be in heaven within seconds, and his survival instinct wanted him to
defend himself. But the promises of God also rang in his ears. He shook
his head at the lunacy of Carpathia's ego. Clearly this three-pronged
army had been instructed not to fire unless fired upon, and they
intended to run over the Israelis and grind them into the ground!
They were within a hundred feet now, yet Rayford heard not a sound from
behind, not a cry from anyone's lips. This flood from the serpent's
mouth was going to hit an invisible wall or be swept away by some wall
of water from nowhere, or the Israelis and their helpers would prove so
ethereal that the weapons of destruction would pass harmlessly through
them.
Ten feet and ground zero, and suddenly the entire mass of God's people
fell to their knees and covered their ears at the thunderous peals that
resounded like mountains falling. All around the sea of people, right
at the feet of those in the front on every side, the earth split and
ripped open for a mile in every direction away from Petra.
The echoes from the shattering of the earth were as loud as the actual
cleaving, and as the tanks and missiles and cannons and personnel
armaments were fired in panic or from being shaken to their core, the
projectiles rose vertically and eventually dropped back down onto the
plunging armies. Smoke and fire rose in great belches from the colossal
gorge that appeared to reach the bowels of hell. The roar of racing
engines, whose drivetrains propelled steel tracks or wheels that merely
spun in thin air, could not cover the screams of troops who had been
just seconds from squashing their prey and now found themselves
hurtling to their deaths.
Rayford and all those around him pulled their hands from their ears and
thrust them out wide to keep their balance as, still on their knees,
they were rocked by aftershocks. It was as if they surfed on unsolid
ground as the earth slowly healed itself. The walls of the chasm came
back together as the Red Sea must have millennia before, and the loose,
rocky topsoil was suddenly new. The dust settled, and quietness wafted
over the assembled.
Michael was gone. Chaim slowly rose and addressed the people. "As long
as you are on your knees, what better time to thank the God of
creation, the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob? Thank him who sits high
above the heavens, above whom there is no other. Thank the One in whom
there is no change, neither shadow of turning. Praise the holy One of
Israel. Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost!"
----------
Enoch turned out to be an incongruously named Spaniard who carried, of
all things, a cheap, hardbound Bible, the kind you would find in a
hotel or a pew. He too was strangely dressed, wearing expensive shoes
with missing laces and no socks, khaki pants, and a tank top-type
shirt. These people, Chloe decided, looked like they had raided a
Salvation Army barrel.
Enoch conferred with the others, then motioned Chloe around the corner
to the main entrance, where she waited while he released lock after
lock. Finally the inner door was open, and Enoch crossed the shallow
lobby to push open the outer door. "We have limited food supplies," he
said, as he held the door for her.
"I'm not looking for food," she said. "I was just curious about the
light."
"We thought we were the only ones left in the city," he said. "We run
the camera just in case but are just days from shutting it down to
conserve energy."
"I have so many questions," Chloe said.
"So do we."
"I'm afraid I can't say much," she said. "I'll understand if you choose
not to, either."
"We have nothing to hide," Enoch said.
"What is this place?"
"It was once a currency exchange. But it adjoins the basement of an old
office building that was abandoned. ] Since they were connected, we
thought it would be safer for us to stay largely underground,
especially since there was a safe standing open. We never found the
combination, so we do not close it all the way, but some prefer to
sleep in it."
Enoch led Chloe through the old exchange lobby, where the curious who
had eyed her through the window now shyly greeted her and stared. Just
past the door and down the hall stood the huge, walk-in vault, and she
had to assume this was a bank in one of its first manifestations. No
currency exchange, even in Chicago, would need a vault that large.
"How many of you are there?" Chloe asked.
"As of last night, thirty-one."
"You're not serious."
Enoch cocked his head and smiled. "Why would I not be?"
"What are you doing here? How did you get here?"
"Well," he said, pushing open a door that led to a large-pillared
basement room, "I'm sure that's what my friends and I want to know from
you." She stepped in to meet everyone's curious and wary eyes.
----------
Rayford was on his walkie-talkie to Operation Eagle personnel. "Let's
step it up, people. I want constant rounds of chopper hops to get these
people inside Petra. Building materials and miscellaneous stuff flown
or carried in. We believe Carpathia made a major blunder and used our
Mizpe Ramon airstrip rather than destroying it, so we can use it to
take off and get back to our homelands before he finds out what
happened here. No one is left to tell him, so for now he has to assume
he has simply lost radio contact.
"When Micah is inside, our mission is accomplished. Good-bye and
Godspeed."
Rayford clicked off the walkie-talkie and conference-phoned Trib Force
members, old and new, among the crowd. "Let's be ready to get home and
get Tsion. He's got a speaking engagement scheduled here."
SIXTEEN
CHLOE SAT in a cheap metal folding chair surrounded by a wide-eyed mix
of cross-cultural people in their twenties and thirties. She had many
questions, but they insisted on asking theirs first. Clearly they were
true believers, but still she prayed silently, pleading with God for
peace about telling them of the Tribulation Force.
"None of you have been outside since the bombing of the city?" she said.
They shook their heads. Enoch carried the conversation. "If we come to
believe it is safe, all of us will take a walk before dawn. Now tell us
more."
Chloe took a deep breath. "You vouch for everyone in here, Enoch?"
"Check our marks," he said.
Chloe knew that was unnecessary. And she saved her two biggest
revelations till last. "The spiritual mentor I have told you about is
Jewish. He was a rabbi. He is Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah."
The group sat, obviously stunned, many smiling, others shaking their
heads. Finally a Latino said, "Ben-Judah lives in Chicago?"
She nodded. "And I am Chloe Steele Williams."
Enoch leaned toward her, trembling. "And we are hungry," he said,
making the others laugh.
"You look it," she said. "What have you been living on?"
"Canned goods and dry goods. We've been slowly rationing them, but
they're fast running out. If Dr. Ben-Judah is right and we have three
and a half years to go, we're not going to make it. Do you think the
co-op might-"
"Send a couple back with me and I'll load them up with enough to feed
you for a month. Then we'll figure a way you can contribute to the
co-op and start trading for food and supplies."
Several stood to volunteer. "We also want to travel," Enoch said, "to
help other people, to tell them the truth. We're desperate for a chance
to do that."
"We ought to be able to manage it, in time," she said. "Now tell me
your story."
----------
Laslos Miklos had been used to an affluent lifestyle, owning a
lucrative lignite-mining business in Ptolemai's, Greece, before the
disappearances. But when he and his wife became believers in Christ,
his hundreds of trucks and dozens of buildings became fronts for the
efforts of the Greek underground church, which became the largest in
the United Carpathian States.
The Greek Jesus-followers lived on the edge of danger, but for a time
it seemed Nicolae Carpathia was more interested in projecting an image
of tranquillity in the region named for him than in rooting out
dissidents. Laslos did not think he and his fellow believers became
overconfident, but somehow one of their secret meeting places had been
discovered, someone caved, and the largest assembly had been raided.
Many were martyred, the rest scattered.
Laslos lost his wife to the guillotine-also his pastor and his pastor's
wife, plus dozens more adults and many teenagers. He had not been at
the meeting the night of the raid and now lived with guilt. Was there
something he could have done? Though he still felt the hand of God on
his life, the Lord was strangely silent about his blame. Laslos was the
most prominent among those who had escaped and immediately went into
hiding, north of the city.
He feared that a hideout connected in any way to his business would
easily be discovered. But he knew of a long-abandoned dump surrounded
by mountains of debris, including soil and gravel and chunks of
concrete. With the help of trusted friends, he dug himself a
dirt-walled chamber where he slept during the day, far below ground and
with just enough room for plumbing, a cot, and a small television. In
the dead of night, when the walls seemed to close in on him, he would
steal away to connect with other believing desperadoes, who then hooked
up with clandestine members of the International Commodity Co-op, where
they were supplied with food and other necessities.
From those brief, terror-filled meetings grew tiny replicas of the
former underground church that had been so vibrant. Laslos and his
friends shared with each other what they knew of the rest of the
surviving church and passed precious messages back and forth. The few
who had wireless computers and enough power downloaded and printed
Tsion Ben-Judah's daily messages and Buck Williams's The Truth
cyberzine. To Laslos these were more priceless than food and water.
The squat, heavyset, fifty-six-year-old widower retained huge, rocklike
muscles from his early days of manual labor in the mines. Now he stayed
out in the night for as long as he dared, keeping to side and back
streets. Sleeping during the day helped keep his claustrophobia in
check. More than once he found himself praying that he would wake up in
heaven, reunited with his wife and other loved ones.
Late one morning he was awakened by footsteps in the gravel above his
hideaway. As quietly as a man of his girth and age could manage, Laslos
moved to the edge of his bed and slipped onto all fours on the wood
floor. He painfully crept a few feet to where he could reach his
handgun, a classic revolver he had never fired, not even on a practice
range. It was, however, loaded and-he believed-in working order. A man
of peace all his life, he no longer wondered whether he would shoot to
kill a Global Community Peacekeeper or Morale Monitor who threatened
him or any believer.
The sun cast dusty beams between the cracks of the door over the top of
the chamber and the rickety wood planks leading down into the space.
The door was level with the ground, and its topside had been inlaid
with gravel to blend in. As Laslos stood near the bottom plank, his
neck awkwardly craned, staring at the underside of the door, he cocked
the revolver and held his breath. The footsteps were atop the door now,
tentative, as if aware of the subtle difference between a metal surface
with rigid, glued-on stones and the hard-packed but loose gravel of the
real ground.
Laslos used his free hand to guide himself and started slowly up the
planks, listening over the thud of his pulse for any clue to whether
his intruder was alone. When he drew within inches of the door, he
leaned to peer through a peephole undetectable from the other side and
found himself looking from the boots to the head of a teenage boy, bare
armed and wearing neither uniform nor badge nor gun.
Suddenly the boy squatted, as if studying the door. "Mr. Miklos?" he
whispered.
Laslos had to calculate countless options at once. If this boy was
undercover GC, Laslos had been found out. He could pretend to be
fooled, open his door to the boy, and surprise him with a bullet
between the eyes. But if the boy was a believer and had been directed
there by one of Laslos's friends, he should threaten the comrade with a
bullet for stupidity. Either way, for some reason this lad believed
Laslos was there, and he was.
He couldn't risk slaughtering his visitor without cause. "Who goes
there?" Laslos said quietly in Greek.
The boy dropped to all fours, as if overcome. "Oh, Mr. Miklos!" he
rasped desperately. "I am Marcel Papadopoulos! My parents-"
"Shh!" Laslos interrupted, uncocking the weapon and tossing it down
onto his bed. He unbolted the locks and grunted as he pushed up the
door. "Are you alone?"
"Yes!"
"Hurry!"
The boy turned and nimbly backed down the steps. Laslos returned to
refasten the locks. When he came back down, the boy was sitting in a
corner on the floor, his knees pulled up. Even in the low light of the
underground, the boy's mark was plain on his forehead.
Laslos sat on the bed, realizing the gun was gone. How could he have
been such a fool? "I knew your parents, of course," he began carefully.
"I knew you too, did I not?"
"Not really," Marcel said. "I was in a different house church from my
parents."
Laslos had seen this boy with his parents occasionally, he was sure of
it. "Did you not think I'd notice you took my fake pistol?"
"Oh, sir! I was just looking at it!" He held it out and Laslos wrenched
it away. "It looks and feels so real, Mr. Miklos! Is it really fake?"
"Hardly. How can you be so stupid and survive on the street? What made
you think I would not just grab another weapon and shoot you dead?"
"I don't know, sir. I wasn't thinking."
"Who sent you?"
"The old toothless one with the car. He calls himself K."
"I should wring his neck."
"Don't blame him, please, sir. He warned me not to come during the day,
but I have run out of places to go. The GC is thin here with so many
assigned to Israel, but they are on their way back, and there is no
more grace period for taking Carpathia's mark. I have seen people
dragged off the street."
"Your parents, weren't they with Pastor Demetrius and-?"
"They were. And so was I. But a believer who had infiltrated the GC
accused me of being an American and dragged me out, then let me go. I
gave him my parents' names, and I have been praying ever since that he
got them out too. But I know they would have found me if he had."
"He did not. We know who he is, Marcel. He also was able to get a young
woman out."
"I have met her! Tall, brown hair. Georgiana something. But she was not
from our church. She found her way to one of the co-op stations. Her
story was just like mine. How did this man do it?"
Laslos sighed heavily. "Frankly, he blundered with you. He used another
boy's name for you. ..."
"Yes, I told him the only other name I knew from in there. Paulo
Ganter."
"Well, this fake GC told authorities at the prison that you were Paulo
and that he was deporting you back to the United North American States.
But when Ganter took the mark of loyalty, his ID checked out, and they
quickly realized someone else was gone. By process of elimination, they
know your name. He must have done the same with the girl. You may not
have marks they can see, but you are marked young people. Fortunately
your liberator was gone before they realized what he had done."
"How I would love to thank that man. He's American."
"I know," Laslos said. "I know him."
"Could I get a message to him?"
"It could be done."
The boy sighed and his shoulders sagged. "What am I going to do now,
Mr. Miklos? I am out of options."
"You can see there is no room for you here."
"We could expand."
"We? Let's not get ahead of ourselves, son. This is no way to live. You
need a new look, a new identity, and you must continue to keep from
being seen by the GC at all costs."
----------
Rayford assigned Leah and Hannah to search out the computer savvy among
the Israelis. "Tell them that once they have located the computers in
Petra, our man in New Babylon will contact them on-line and provide
information on how to get the network up and running."
Rayford, Albie, Mac, and George joined dozens of others to resume
chopper duty, making run after run to get Israeli believers inside.
Chaim was in seclusion, preparing to address the entire populace when
they were settled. Buck had temporarily taken the duties David would
have had: getting building and miscellaneous supplies in and organized
so builders and finishers could get started. Already volunteers were
passing out blankets and helping people get settled.
Rayford was nearly overwhelmed with the attitude of the Israelis. Maybe
because of their faith, maybe because of the miracles, maybe because of
the novelty of what they were about, they displayed cooperation and a
camaraderie Rayford found unique. Considering they were uprooted from
their homeland and targeted by the entire evil world system, he would
not have been surprised to see manifestations of impatience and anger.
Rayford sent Abdullah bouncing over the desert in one of the most able
four-wheel-drive vehicles they could recruit to rendezvous with his
co-op contact from Jordan. The contact was bringing in a long-range jet
with room for everybody heading back to Chicago. All the co-op guy
wanted in exchange for the loan of his plane was to be delivered to
Crete on the Trib Force's way to the States and to be brought back from
there on their way back.
That gave Rayford the idea that they should stop in Greece to check on
their brothers and sisters. Trouble was, Albie was the only one left
with other-than-suspect papers. During one of his hops into Petra,
Rayford phoned Lukas Miklos.
----------
Chang noticed on his monitor evidence that his bug of the Phoenix 216
had kicked in. He couldn't wait till the end of the workday to get back
to his apartment and see what had been recorded. He switched to the
GCNN feed and learned that Carpathia was already on his way back to New
Babylon. Hiding his trail, Chang hacked into the encoded schedule for
surprise inspections of GC personnel's private computer systems. The
encoding was so elementary he nearly laughed aloud. He discovered he
was third on the list and could expect a "random" visit that evening at
around 2000 hours.
His screen suddenly came alive with a flash from Figueroa's office, and
for an instant Chang thought he might have allowed himself to be caught
using the office desktop for unapproved purposes. He covered his tracks
with a burst of keystrokes and informed Figueroa he was coming.
Chang hurried to the office that had been David Hassid's. Figueroa had
rearranged the furniture and redecorated it within hours of moving in,
and now he glided about in it as if he were the Global Community
potentate himself.
"Have a seat, Wong," he said. "Cigar?"
"Cigar? Do I look like a smoker to you? Anyway, isn't the whole complex
smoke free?"
"A director's office is his domain," Figueroa said, lighting up.
Tiffany, who had also been Hassid's assistant, looked up quickly from
just outside the office window and scowled. Shaking her head, she left
her desk and loudly slapped a switch on the wall between her office and
Figueroa's. A ventilation fan came on, sucking the blue smoke into the
ceiling. "I love when she does that," the director said, but Chang
thought he looked embarrassed.
Figueroa leaned back in his chair and put his feet up on the corner of
his desk. Apparently he miscalculated, because as he pulled the huge
cigar from his lips, his heel slipped off the desk and his center of
gravity shifted. His boots slammed the floor and he nearly flew out of
his chair. He dropped the cigar in the process and leaped from his
chair to keep from burning himself.
He picked it up and brushed off the seat, quickly licking a finger that
had found a hot ash. It was all Chang could do to keep a straight face
when Figueroa smoothed himself, put the wet end of the cigar back in
his mouth, and sat again. He leaned back but thought twice about
putting his feet up and merely crossed his legs. This shifted his
weight back more than he expected, and he had evidently not yet learned
how to tighten the chair's tilt, for he was suddenly leaning back, legs
still crossed, but with both feet in the air.
Figueroa seemed to try to subtly lean forward, but failing that, tried
to appear that this was the way he wanted to sit. He pulled the cigar
out again and rested an elbow on the arm of the chair, blowing smoke
toward the ceiling while trying to maintain eye contact with Chang.
"So," he began, the effort to keep his head erect clearly straining his
neck. He let his head fall back as if searching the ceiling for what he
wanted to say, and suddenly he was inches from toppling over backward.
He quickly reinserted the cigar, gripped both arms of the chair until
his knuckles were white, and pulled himself up again. He leaned
forward, careful to keep his weight centered.
"I, uh, spoke too soon when I exempted you from being interrogated," he
said.
Chang made a teenager's face at him. "What? I thought you were in
charge here."
"Oh, I am. Make no mistake. But I would have to answer for it, probably
to the potentate himself-we talk, you know-if I made an exception for
anyone, especially in my own department."
"So you're going back on your word."
"I didn't exactly give my word."
"No, you just said it, and apparently that doesn't mean anything."
"Of course it does, but you're going to have to roll with me on this
one. I'll owe you."
"It's not that big a deal. Forget it."
"No, now I want to be known as a man of his word. Tell you what-I'll
conduct the polygraph myself."
"Now it's a polygraph?"
"Well, not really. The type I told you about is all."
"Fine."
"You're a good man, Wong."
"Yeah, I'm great."
"No, really, you are."
Chang pressed his lips together and looked away, shaking his head.
"I'm trying to be friends here," Figueroa said.
Chang looked back at him. "You are? Why would you do that?"
"You intrigue me, that's all."
"Oh, no. You're not-"
"Wong! I'm a married man!"
"Thank goodness."
"No, like most everybody else around here, I'm intrigued with your
gifts and skills."
"Which I'm not using as long as I'm sitting here."
"Don't be a hard guy, Wong. I'm in a position to do you some good."
"You're not even in a position to keep your word."
"Hey, that was uncalled for."
"Come on," Chang said. "What's this about? That would have been
uncalled for only if it weren't true."
"Okay, fair enough. It's just that you're bordering on insubordination,
and you don't seem to care that as your boss, I hold your destiny."
"What, you're going to fire me if I don't make nice?"
Figueroa took three short puffs and studied him. "No. But I might fire
you if you don't tell me how you knew my name."
"I told you, I guessed."
"Because to tell you the truth," Figueroa continued, as if not
listening, "I can't think of a way in the world you would know that."
"Me either. You could have denied it and I wouldn't have known the
difference."
"Now see? That's a level of thinking I have to admire. That's
intuitive."
"Whatever."
"No, because you know what? I started thinking about my personnel file,
and I had to wonder if I ever gave them my full name. So, know what I
did? Huh? I checked it myself. Not there."
"What do you know."
"So you really did guess."
"Wow. I'm something."
"You are."
"Can I get back to work now?"
"One condition."
"I'm listening."
"Promise you won't say anything about my telling you I've got your
destiny in my hands or that I could fire you, any of that."
"Already forgot it."
"Good man. Because I know your dad and you-know-who are tight, and ..."
"Already forgot it."
"You want to be a project leader, a group head, anything?"
"Just want to get back to work."
"Fair enough."
"Three and a half years ago there was, like, a church in here," Enoch
said. "Some of us-" he turned to the group-"how many went to the church
thing at least once?" About half a dozen raised their hands. "The rest
of us had just seen a flyer, a brochure, about the place. We still have
those, don't we?" Someone went to get one.
"It's kinda simple, just a regular piece of paper folded in half and
then printed on the four pages in black and white."
Someone handed Chloe one. On the front it read "The Place." Inside, it
said "Jesus loves pimps, whores, crack heads, drunks, players,
hustlers, mothers with no husbands, and children with no fathers."
On the next page it told who made up the people of The Place, mostly
people who had once been like those listed on the previous page. "We
talk about Jesus and what the Bible says about him and you. Come as you
are. Address and time on the back."
Chloe looked at the back, where, besides the address and times, the
brochure also said "Food, clothes, shelter, work, counseling." She
looked up at Enoch and realized she was blushing. Everybody in the room
seemed amused.
Enoch reached for the brochure and faced his people. He read off the
list of who Jesus loves, one by one, pausing after each for a show of
hands. Everyone raised a hand at least once, and several did many
times, always with huge smiles. Enoch carefully set down the
brochure,looked meaningfully at Chloe, and rose. With lips trembling
and tears streaming, he gestured to the assembled and whispered, "And
such were some of you."
They nodded and amened.
"But you were washed ..."
"Amen, hallelujah!"
"But you were sanctified ..."
"Praise Jesus!"
"But you were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit
of our God."
And they stood with hands raised, humming and singing,
"Amazing grace, how sweet the sound, that saved a wretch like me;
I once was lost but now am found, was blind but now I see."
----------
"Rayford, my friend, how are you?" Laslos exulted. "You will not
believe who is here with me. Is Cameron there?"
"Unavailable just now. So who is with you?"
When Laslos told him, Rayford said, "I'll have Buck call. He wondered
what happened with those kids."
"Marcel tells me Georgiana remains on the run too. It is as if God
himself told you to call. You must come get these children and get them
out of here."
"Nowhere is safe, Laslos."
"But your safe house! Your man with the disguises and the papers! We
are literally one wrong look from death here."
Rayford hesitated. "We're stopping on Crete. If you could somehow get
them there ..."
"Captain Steele, you have not seen the oceans! There is no water
travel. None. Could we not somehow try to get them to the airport your
people flew into last time? It would be risky, but we could-"
"It would be a death trap for us, Laslos. We will have virtually
everyone with us."
"There must be some way. Someone."
"Let me noodle that," Rayford said.
"I don't understand 'noodle.'"
"I'll think about it."
----------
"Almost every one of us has the same story," Enoch explained to Chloe.
"The streets, these neighborhoods, were our lives. A lot of us had some
kind of religious background as kids, but obviously we moved a long way
from that. More than half of us served time, and almost all of us
should have. The line between legal and illegal didn't exist for us. We
called everything we did a matter of survival.
"Most of us had seen this place and knew something churchy went on
here. What surprised us were the people who came and went. All colors
and nationalities and people we'd known. We all saw the brochure and,
though we didn't admit it then, it enticed us, you know? Something that
straightforward, that in-your-face, calling things what they are. When
you're at the end of yourself, wondering in the night what's to become
of you in the morning, you start wondering if there's hope anywhere or
if you are too far gone. You remember yourself as a kid and recall that
there was something still innocent about you, and you wonder what
happened to that person.
"Any of these people will tell you that they either came here once or
twice to try to work the system and get something free, or they even
came sincerely and sat through a meeting or two. But all of us, even
those who never came once-me, for one-were fixin' to get around to it.
One of these days, we were going to check out The Place.
"You know the rest. End of the world. People disappearing. We all lost
somebody, and this place just about lost everybody. Well, where did we
run to first? Right here. Empty clothes all over the place and nobody
to tell us what was what. But this poor little church must have had
some money from somewhere because they thought to record everything
they did. Audio and video. Here we are-two, three dozen no-account
street people, some of us women who lost babies-and somebody finds
those discs, man, and the players. It didn't take us long to learn the
truth. It was all there.
"Most of us stayed, sleeping in here, watching, listening, studying,
praying to get Jesus, and all of a sudden, World War III. Chicago's
toast. We've got one TV and one computer hooked up. First we hear it
was not nuclear; then the next wave is, and we expect to die of
radiation poisoning. It doesn't happen, but we don't dare test the
atmosphere outside. We knew if it was fullblown radiation, we were not
protected just because we were inside some basement, but we figured we
were safer in than out. Till now."
----------
Rayford called George and asked if he wanted a mission on his way back
to San Diego. "I thought you'd never ask," he said.
Rayford gave him the gist of the assignment and said, "I can't give you
papers on short notice, but if I can reach our guy in New Babylon, you
can bluff your way around in Greece. If they check on you, you'll
appear to be in the system."
"I can come up with some reason why I don't have papers. And you want
these kids delivered to Chicago?"
"Unless you're prepared for them in California."
----------
Knowing what was coming that evening, Chang felt out of touch with the
Trib Force. Not until after his "surprise" visit at about eight o'clock
could he key in the stuff Rayford wanted for this George Sebastian, nor
could he find out what had happened on the Phoenix 216. He made sure he
was watching GCNN and reading a book at the time, but even he was
surprised at the nature of the drop-in.
Chang thought Figueroa's assignee-a cocky, condescending Scandinavian
named Lars-would have at least knocked. But at a few minutes after
eight, as Chang watched coverage of Carpathia and his senior cabinet
being enthusiastically welcomed back to New Babylon, he heard a key in
his door. It was just as well. He quickly turned up the TV and
pretended he didn't hear a thing until they burst in. This was the best
cover. He was relaxing, watching TV, reading, not even thinking about
his worthless laptop.
The door swung open and two uniformed Peacekeepers marched in. "Mr.
Chang Wong?" one said.
"That's me," he said, rising. "Did I forget to lock my door?"
"Turn off the television, please, sir, and join us over here, if you
would."
"What if I wouldn't?"
"Now, sir."
"Thanks for making me feel welcome in my own place."
"This is not your place, Mr. Wong. This is the property of His
Excellency, the potentate, and you serve here at his behest."
Chang made a show of turning off the TV and dropping his book onto a
chair. As he approached, the Peacekeepers moved aside and one of them
announced, "This, sir, is Mr. L-"
"Lars!" Chang said, smiling, though he had barely done anything more
than greet the guy. "How are you, man? I know him! We're in the same
department."
"We need your cooperation and silence, Mr. Wong," the Peacekeeper said.
"Ooh, okay! What's up?"
SEVENTEEN
THE PEACEKEEPERS asked if they could search Chang's apartment. "For
what?" he said.
"Routine," they told him.
"You won't find any routine here. I am studying English words new to me
and my current favorite is serendipity. That's what you'll find here,
the opposite of routine."
"Funny. We don't need your permission. We were just being polite."
"Of course. My clue was your use of a master key to get me to answer
the door."
While they searched the apartment, Lars set up a high-powered laptop on
Chang's small kitchen table. "I'll be asking a few questions," he said.
"Stop being a smart-aleck," Lars said. "This is my assignment."
"Do the questions relate to finding a leak from the palace to the
suspected mole?"
Lars turned ashen. "You've already been interrogated?"
"No, but I have my reservation in with another interlocutor-another new
word. You like?"
"Computer!" the other Peacekeeper called out. "Looks like his personal
laptop."
"If you had told me what you were looking for, I could have directed
you to it."
"This your only one?"
Chang was tempted to pretend there was another, but the fun of watching
them try to locate it wouldn't be worth their leaving the place in more
of a shambles. He nodded.
"Over here with that," Lars said.
"I'm so glad you're here, Lars," Chang said. "I had everything on that
hard drive, and I mean everything. Maybe you won't feel so bad about
losing the interviewing assignment to our boss if you have this project
to work on."
"Project?"
"I crashed the hard drive, and I've tried everything."
"Everything you know."
"That's right! That's why I'm so glad you're here. I must be missing
something, and even if it's something complex, I know you can solve it."
"You bet your life I can."
Chang, of course, was betting his life Lars couldn't. "I don't want to
be up late, Lars."
"Oh, this shouldn't take long."
"I'm just saying maybe you want to call Mr. Figueroa so he can do
whatever he has to do with me while you're retrieving my information."
"What're you, serious?"
"He promised."
"Why?"
"You'll have to ask him that."
"He'll ask you the same questions I would, and you'll answer into the
same mike."
"Only with him, I'll answer. With you I won't."
"Then you'll be suspected as the leak, and you don't want that, guilty
or not. You hear what happened to the stewards today?"
Chang didn't like it when he was asked a question to which he didn't
know the answer. "Shock me."
"Sentenced to death."
That did shock Chang. "For what?"
"Subversion. Treason. They flunked the lie detector test. They were
feeding information to a mole here. Conversations between the potentate
and his people were acted upon before they were through talking." Lars
handed him a lapel microphone. "Put this on."
"Not for you," Chang said.
"For Figueroa then."
Chang applied it to his shirt, praying silently. The key, he knew, was
how the questions were worded. In his mind, a mole was an animal; he
was a human being. If the questions were too specific and unequivocal,
he'd be in trouble. "Start with my computer, will you? I'd really love
to see all that stuff I had stored."
"You don't back up your stuff?"
Chang shook his head. "Nah. Do you?"
"Not as much as I should, but you gotta know you're going to fry
something-hard drive, motherboard, whatever-every few years."
"Guess I've been lucky."
Lars dialed, tucked his phone between his cheek and neck, and started
pecking furiously at Chang's laptop. "Yes, Mr. Figueroa, sir. I'm at
Chang Wong's apartment and he says-oh, you did. Well, yes, right now.
I'm helping him with a computer problem, so we'll be here. Thank you,
sir."
Slapping his phone shut, eyes still on Chang's computer, Lars mumbled,
"On his way. My, you have fried this thing."
"Really, Lars? You can tell already? Wow."
"Yeah, it won't let me in at all. Let me try this." He appeared to try
everything. "Nothing. Believe me, Wong, if anything was here, I could
get it for you."
"No doubt."
"But this acts like it's been exposed to some super electromagnet."
"Haven't heard that term in a while."
"You know the drive is all about electricity and that a magnet can
wreak serious havoc."
"Really?"
"Oh yeah, it's quite simple."
"For a brain like yours, maybe," Chang said. "I just know what buttons
to push."
"Well, there's a lot more to it than that."
"I suppose. It's Greek to me."
"Thought you were supposed to be some kind of a genius," Lars said.
"Live and learn. Look what I did to my own laptop. Ten gigs somewhere
in the ether."
"Should have called me at the first sign of trouble. There had to be
warnings."
"Yeah, I saw a lot of strange stuff, but you know, laptops are
temperamental."
"Not if they're treated right. Did you defrag and run ScanDisk and all
that?"
"Not often."
"Obviously not. I don't think there's anything here."
"You can't help me?"
"If anyone could, I could. But there's either something on the drive or
there isn't, and in this case, there clearly isn't."
"What if it was on a different drive, named something else?"
"You couldn't do that by accident," Lars said. "I could do it, but you
have to know what you're doing."
"Which I don't."
"Obviously. Here's what I can do for you. While you're being
interviewed, I can format your whole drive for you so you can start
rebuilding."
"That's got to be hard. Complicated."
"Nah. Won't take much."
"You'd do that for me?"
"What are friends for?"
----------
Chloe had sneaked two of her new friends into the Strong Building in
the wee hours of the morning. Only Zeke was stirring, and he blanched
at the new faces. Chloe introduced the young man and woman with such
enthusiasm that she knew he'd understand they were okay, without
wondering if she was covering and he should go find a weapon.
Once he heard the story, Zeke offered to help them transfer a serious
amount of foodstuffs to their place. Chloe wrote every detail she could
remember and e-mailed it to the rest of the Trib Force before
collapsing just before dawn and sleeping till almost noon. She assumed
she would be scolded for taking such a risk, but she was so excited she
was amazed she was able to sleep at all.
----------
No surprise to Chang, Figueroa arrived looking all business and gave
him a stare that communicated he should avoid any familiarity in front
of Lars.
"Ignore me," Lars said, taking Chang's laptop to a couch and settling
in with it. "Just making sure this is ready for a whole new protocol."
Chang wondered if Lars could affect his encoded drive with his clumsy
efforts.
Figueroa pointed to a chair and sat across from Chang. He dismissed the
other Peacekeeper, then whispered, "I didn't think you were going to
hold me to this."
"I could have let it slide," Chang said. "Proved you were completely
untrustworthy. Mind if I take a peek at that software?"
Looking bored, Figueroa pivoted the machine to face Chang. He sighed.
"Newfangled stuff. Supposed to be better than the bulky old hardware."
Chang knew it wasn't all that new. He had seen it in China and even
played with it. He made a show of tilting the screen so the light was
just right. "Interesting," he said, and as Figueroa leaned closer,
Chang added, "Sequoia, ah, I mean, Aurelio."
Figueroa sat back, obviously peeved. "I'd appreciate your addressing me
by my last name."
"Excuse me, of course," Chang said.
Figueroa grabbed the laptop and pulled a small notebook from his
pocket. "State your name," he began, then walked Chang through a series
of banal, obvious questions. "Is today Sunday?"
"No."
"Is the sky blue?"
"Yes."
"Are you a male?"
"Yes."
"Do you work for the Global Community?"
"I am employed by them, yes."
Figueroa looked up at Chang. "That's the answer you want to give?"
"Yes."
"Are you loyal to the supreme potentate?"
Chang closed his eyes and reminded himself that Jesus Christ was the
only person who fit that definition. "Yes," he said.
"Have you ever done anything that would be considered disloyal to the
supreme potentate?"
"Not intentionally, no."
"Stick to yes or no answers."
"No."
"Do you get confidential information from someone who leaks it to you
from the inner circle around the supreme potentate?"
"No."
"Is the supreme potentate risen from the dead and the living lord?"
"Yes."
"Can His Excellency Nicolae Carpathia personally count on your
continuing loyalty for as long as you serve as an employee of the
Global Community?"
Chang hesitated, making Figueroa look up again. "Understand the
question?"
"Of course."
"Then your answer is yes?"
"No."
"Don't start playing games now, Chang, or we'll have to do this all
over again."
"Well, Mr. Figueroa, I can certainly say in all sincerity that I will
continue to show the same level of loyalty to the Global Community
leader that I have shown him since the beginning."
"So that's a yes?"
"It merely is what it is."
"What would he think of this?"
"Probably that you're wasting your time, and mine."
"You don't want to just say yes and be done with it?"
"That's the last question?"
"Yes."
"How'm I doing so far?"
"It looks fine," Figueroa said.
"Then let it ride."
"That last answer could look evasive."
"To whom?"
"To anybody who's got a question."
"Do you have a question, Mr. Fig-"
"Man, do you ever just give a straight answer?"
"Should I?"
"Agh!" Figueroa swept up the equipment. "Let's go, Lars."
"Yes, sir. Laptop's ready to go, Chang."
"Find any of my stuff on it?"
"No, but you can rebuild from here with a clean slate."
"You have no idea how I feel about what you've done for me here, Lars."
"Well, you're welcome."
----------
It was time for the Trib Force assignees to Operation Eagle to head for
Mizpe Ramon and the flight home. The overflow crowd of Israelis was
bivouacking outside Petra, and Chaim was about to be airlifted to a
spot where all could see and hear him, from both inside and outside.
Rayford, Buck, Mac, Leah, Hannah, and Albie stood in a circle with
Chaim, holding hands. Big George from San Diego sat in an idling
chopper fifty yards away, waiting to lift Chaim into Petra, then
transport the Trib Force to Mizpe Ramon, from where he would also fly
his own plane to Greece, then to Chicago, then to San Diego. "Let's get
George in on this," Rayford said, beckoning him with a wave. "I have a
feeling we're going to be seeing more of him."
George jumped out and jogged over. "Micah ready?" he said.
"In a minute, George," Rayford said. "Get in here with us." As they
bowed their heads, Rayford told everyone of George's assignment in
Greece later that night.
"Wish I could go too," Buck said. "But I'm too hot right now. You'll
love those kids, George."
"We should pray," Rayford said.
"One moment, please," Chaim said, letting go of Rayford's hand on one
side and Hannah's on the other. He pulled from his robe the miniature
urn containing Hattie's ashes. "We do not worship the remains of those
who go to God before us, and my wish is to one day toss what is left of
these to the winds from a high place of worship to the one true God
here at Petra. I believe that is what our impetuous but sincere young
sister would have wanted. But first I want to entrust these to you,
Captain Steele, to take back to her new brothers and sisters in the
safe house, back to some who knew her and loved her even long before
she gave herself to the Christ. Then bring them back with Tsion
Ben-Judah, and we will remember her one last time before he addresses
the remnant of Israel. And as we think of David Hassid, we wish only
that we also had a token by which to remember our courageous brother,
who knew so few of us personally but who contributed so much to the
cause."
"I have a token," Leah said, producing David's phone.
"Would you take that, too, to our comrades in Chicago for a moment of
remembrance, looking forward to the day when we shall see this dear one
again?" Chaim said.
Leah handed it to Hannah. "I would like his friend to take it," she
said. Hannah thanked her with a hug.
"And now," Chaim said as they joined hands again, "to those who are
called, sanctified by God the Father, and preserved in Jesus Christ:
mercy, peace, and love be multiplied to you, beloved, building
yourselves up on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Spirit, keep
yourselves in the love of God, looking for the mercy of our Lord Jesus
Christ unto eternal life.
"Now to him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to present you
faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy, to God
our Savior, who alone is wise, be glory and majesty, dominion and
power, both now and forever. Amen."
----------
Finally alone again, Chang waited a few minutes, then moved a chair to
his door, stood on it, and secured a latch he had built in along the
top that would keep out even those with a master key. He dropped into
his chair with his laptop and typed in "Christ alone." That brought up
a screen with a grid of two hundred dots square. He counted in eighteen
rows from the bottom and thirty-seven from the right and clicked on it.
A fifteen-digit counter appeared, the numbers ascending at a rate of
several hundred a second. Chang keyed in a multiplier, factored in the
current date and time, and sent the product hurtling toward a
synchronous number ninety seconds away. Four more minutes and three
complex, moving targets later, Chang was back in business. He was
connected to every Tribulation Force computer, including those at
Petra, and anything he wanted at the palace and on the Phoenix 216.
Chang transmitted hundreds of pages of instructions encoded for the
Petra machines, checked the locations of reporting gadgets from phones
to computers to hand-helds, and let everyone know he was up and
running. Then he checked Rayford's specifications for the man he called
Big George and planted GC credentials in the main palace database. They
had decided to use his real name in case his prints or other details
were cross-checked. George Sebastian of San Diego, California, in the
United North American States, would be transporting a teen male
prisoner and a teen female prisoner from Greece to the States. He would
fly a high-speed, transatlantic, four-seat Rooster Tail and would be
traveling WOP-without papers-due to a recent undercover mission, but
for identification purposes he was six feet four and weighed two
hundred forty pounds, dark complexion, blue eyes, and blond hair. He
had level-A-minus clearance and reported directly to Deputy Commander
Marcus Elbaz. Chang entered a six-digit code that George was to
memorize and recite if asked.
Chang understood that Rayford had planned all this with Lukas Miklos,
who would inform Mr. Papadopoulos, who would inform Georgiana Stavros.
Lukas was to use his own contacts and resources and be responsible for
making sure that the two young people rendezvoused with George.
Chang then located the newest Phoenix 216 recording since last he had
listened in. He put on his headset.
The bug first picked up Akbar. "I assume you are pleased with the new
pilot, Excellency."
"All I care about is getting out of this godforsaken country, Suhail.
Can he accomplish that?"
"Oh, Supreme Potentate," Fortunato sang out, "Israel is no longer
godforsaken. It is now truly the Holy Land, because you have been
installed as the true and-"
"Leon, please! You have conferred upon your underlings the power I have
imbued you with, have you not?"
"I have, Your Worship, but I prefer not to refer to them as underl-"
"Have any of them, one of them-you, for instance- come up with a thing
to match the oceans-to-blood trick?"
"Well, sir, besides the calling down of fire from heaven and the, uh .
. . I'd like to think I played some small role -- whether just the
influence of my presence in part of the meeting with Mr. Micah or ...
anyway-in the healing of the sores."
"I do not believe you realize, Leon, the scope of the tragedy on the
high seas. Do you?"
"Enough to hope it's not a permanent thing, Excellency."
"You hope? Think, man! Suhail, does the right-reverend-whatever get the
cabinet briefings? Does he read the-"
"Yes, sir, he's on the list."
"Leon, read the reports! Our ships are dead in the water! Our marine
biologists tell us every creature in the water is surely dead by now!
If this is temporary and the water turns pristine tomorrow morning, do
you think all the fishies will come flopping back to life too?"
"I certainly hope so!"
"Imbecile," Carpathia muttered, and Chang assumed Fortunate didn't hear
him. The potentate tended to murder people he referred to that way, and
Leon would have been pleading for his life. "Suhail, can we not get
this plane off the ground?"
"We're waiting for Ms. Ivins, sir."
"Where is she?"
"If I may speak to that, Potentate," Leon said.
"Of course, if you know where she is."
"She wanted one last visit to the temple. She wants to be the first
woman to go into the main part and see where you went, worship your
image in the Holy of Holies, sit on the, uh, in the-"
"What?! You are not saying she would dare sit on the throne of god!"
"No, sir, I misspoke there, sir. I'm certain she wanted only to see it,
to perhaps touch it, take a photograph."
"Why are you not there with her?"
"She wanted only security. She plans to walk in alone and, I believe,
just violate a few traditions."
"I like that."
"I thought you might. She thought you might too."
"Find out if she is en route."
"In the meantime, Potentate," Akbar said, "we have received the
software for lie detection."
"Yes, get that started now and begin with the stewards."
Chang heard dread in the voices of the Indians. They answered with
conviction and earnestness. "You both test entirely truthful," Akbar
concluded. They wept, expressing their gratitude.
"Been tested, have you?" Carpathia said, as the sounds of their
bustling about and serving came through the system.
"Yes, sir. Thank you, sir."
"Indeed." Carpathia sounded skeptical and dismissive. "Test the pilot,
Suhail."
"Ms. Ivins is on the tarmac, sir."
"There is time. First him, then Leon, then her. And here is a question
I want added to her session."
The pilot sounded unconcerned, almost bored, answering quickly and
matter-of-factly. "He's clean," Akbar reported. "Reverend Fortunate,
are you ready?"
"I have nothing whatever to hide," Leon said. But when he was asked the
day of the week, he asked if it was a trick question. His answers
became more whiny and pensive, but of course, he was cleared too.
The plane took off; then Suhail could be heard talking with Ms. Ivins.
"I'm assuming, ma'am, that you are willing, just as a matter of
procedure, to submit to the truth test."
She chuckled. "And what do we do if I am revealed as the leak to the
mole?"
"Please clip this on, ma'am."
"Ready."
"State your name."
"Ms. Vivian Ivins."
"Is today Sunday?"
"No, but I would like to know if I got the first question right."
Akbar laughed. "Is the sky blue?"
"Yes."
"Are you a male?"
"No."
"Do you work for the Global Community?"
She hesitated. "Yes."
"It showed okay, ma'am, but just out of curiosity, why the hesitation?"
"I have never really considered myself an employee of the Global
Community. I serve Supreme Potentate Nicolae Carpathia, and I have most
of my adult life. I would, even if I were not compensated, but yes, I
also actually am part of the personnel of the Global Community."
"Are you loyal to the supreme potentate?"
"Yes."
"Have you ever done anything that could be considered disloyal to the
supreme potentate?"
"No."
"Do you leak confidential information from the supreme potentate to
anyone at GC headquarters?"
"No."
"Is the supreme potentate risen from the dead and the living lord?"
"Yes."
"Can His Excellency Nicolae Carpathia personally count on your
continuing loyalty for as long as you serve as an employee of the
Global Community?"
"Yes, and beyond."
"Did you sit on his throne in his temple in Jerusalem today?"
"I-no."
"Thank you, Ms. Ivins."
Chang heard Akbar unbuckle and leave, but it was clear Viv Ivins
immediately followed. "Director Akbar, wait, please. Before you share
the results with His Excellency, let me have a word with him."
"Certainly."
"My lord," she said quietly.
"Yes, dear one," Carpathia said.
"May I kneel and kiss your hand?"
"That depends. How did you do on the little test?"
"I don't know, but regardless of the results, I answered truthfully
until the very end."
"You were deceitful in your answer to my question?"
"I was, sir, but I immediately regretted it and have come to beg your
forgiveness."
If Carpathia responded, Chang couldn't hear it.
"I told Reverend Fortunato what I intended to do," she said, "and he
advised me against it."
"Did he? Did you, Leon?"
"I did, sir."
"Good for you! But it should not be only the Most High Reverend Father
of Carpathianism who knows what a defilement it would be to presume to
sit on the throne of god!"
"I am so sorry, Nicolae," and Chang got the impression she said his
name the way she had when Carpathia was a small boy. Nicolae again fell
silent.
"I did not do it as an act of insubordination, I swear. I merely envied
your moment and felt a deep need to share it. I would like to think I
earned the right with-"
"Earned the right? To sit on my throne? To take my place?"
"-with my years of service, with my uncompromising devotion, with my
love for you. Oh, don't dismiss me, Your Worship. Forgive me. Please!
Nicolae!"
Chang heard her weeping. Then Nicolae: "Suhail, let's administer the
test to each other." Ms. Ivins's crying faded as she must have moved
back to her seat.
Akbar was brief and confident, and when it was Carpathia's turn, of
course the questions were slightly revised. But Carpathia was in a
testy mood.
"State your name," Akbar began.
"God."
"Is today Sunday?"
"Yes."
"Is the sky blue?"
"No."
"Are you a male?"
"No."
"Do you serve the Global Community?"
"No."
"Are you loyal to the citizens under your authority?"
"No."
"Have you ever done anything disloyal to the Global Community?"
"Yes."
"Do you leak confidential information to someone inside GC headquarters
that undermines the effectiveness of your cabinet?"
"No. And I would personally kill anyone who did."
"Did you rise from the dead and are you the living lord?"
"Yes."
"Can the Global Community count on your continuing loyalty for as long
as you serve as supreme potentate?"
"No."
"You astound me, Excellency."
"Well?"
"I don't know how you do that."
"Tell me!" Carpathia said.
"Your answers all proved truthful, even where you were obviously
sporting with me and saying the opposite of the truth."
"The truth is what I say it is, Suhail. I am the father of truth."
EIGHTEEN
ON THE flight home, Buck called Lukas Miklos.
"I imagine you want to talk to the young man whose life you saved, eh,
Cameron?"
"I do, Laslos. And I'm sorry all my other messages to you about what
happened that night had to come electronically and not even by phone. I
wish I could have given you your wife's message in person, but-"
"I understand, my friend," Laslos said, his voice quavery. "I remember
every detail of it. I wish only that I could have gone to heaven with
her."
"I can't imagine how hard it is," Buck said. "But the church needs you
there, and-"
"Oh, Cameron, I am useless. I am not free to help in any real ways
anymore. Sometimes I wish they would just find me so I could testify
for God before they kill me."
Buck wanted to counter him, but what could he say?
"We sure appreciate your help in getting those kids out of the country."
"I'll do what I can. I look forward to getting them connected with your
pilot, but it's unlikely I can risk coming out of the shadows to meet
him. I will get them as close to the airport as I dare. Here, let me
have you talk to the boy."
"Hello, sir?" Marcel said, and Buck remembered the voice from their
only encounter.
"I'm so glad to talk to you again, son. I didn't expect I ever would."
"I can't thank you enough, Mr. Williams. I know you got in trouble for
that. Will I meet you in Chicago?"
"You sure will."
"Mr. Miklos has told me so much about you and your family and friends.
I hope I will be safe there."
"Safer than where you are, I guess. And the girl?"
"Georgiana, um, Stavros," Marcel said. "I was so surprised when I heard
she had the same story as mine. We finally were introduced at a co-op
center."
"And you have been able to communicate with her?"
"It's all set. We will meet her on the road. Mr. Miklos will stay with
us for as far as he can."
"That's quite a journey on foot."
"He has arranged for someone to drive us, at least until we are a
couple of miles from the airport. Then the pilot, Mr. Sebastian, is
it-?"
"Yes."
"-will come find us and walk us in as prisoners."
"We'll be praying for you all."
Chang listened to several minutes' worth of small talk, then a pitiful
effort by Viv Ivins to again reconnect with Nicolae and get his
forgiveness. Finally Nicolae summoned Akbar. "Suhail," he said, "I am
not going to replace Mr. Moon as supreme commander."
"I see."
"The job and the title are redundant."
"Whatever you say, Excellency."
"I will count on you more and more, and you may inherit duties that
might otherwise have been carried out by a supreme commander."
"As you wish."
"First assignment: Take action on our security leak."
"I'm, we're-sir, we are already conducting a full investigation at the
palace, but as you know, we turned up nothing on the plane. ..."
"How does that make sense? You told me it was as if someone were
relaying our very conversations to someone with access to the central
database."
"That's what it seemed. We are scouring headquarters for weaknesses in
our fire walls, but the late Mr. Hassid put the system in place, and
there was not a better person in the world for that job."
"His replacement, the South American-"
"Mexican, sir. Figueroa."
"You have confidence in him?"
"A stellar record. Not the technician Hassid was, but capable. He is
overseeing the testing, and he himself will also be tested, of course."
"I want to send a message to whoever is subverting us from inside. Get
them to panic, put them on the defensive."
"I'm open to any suggestion, Potentate."
"Charge the Indians."
"Sir?"
"The stewards. Convict them of treason."
"Uh, on what evidence?"
"They are the only logical ones, Suhail. The pilot was not even on
board during most of our meetings. They were."
"But they tested clean."
"Who knows that but you and I?"
"Um-hm."
"No one, am I correct?"
"You are."
"Whisper it to Leon. And to Viv. Then release it to the media. They
should disembark in New Babylon in handcuffs. Do you have two pair on
board?"
"I do, but-"
"A problem?"
"I'm at your service, sir, but I'm missing something. The mole will see
we fingered the wrong perpetrators. Rather than put him or her on the
defensive, it may make us look like soft opponents."
"So much the better. Let him grow overconfident. Still, he will see
what we do with people we believe are insurrectionists."
"If convicted, the penalty is death."
"Oh, Suhail! If they get off this plane in shackles, consider them
convicted. The executions should follow within forty-eight hours."
"Done."
"And your conscience, Director?"
"My conscience?"
"Knowing the truth, does this give you pause?"
"No, sir. You are the father of truth. My conscience is at your
service."
There was a long pause. "They do good work, though, do they not?"
Carpathia said at last. "The stewards?"
"Quite."
"No need to inform them or cuff them until we touch down. But do get
the information trail started. And then we need to discuss the final
solution for the Israeli dissidents and the Judah-ites. Let me know as
soon as you have casualty statistics on Operation Petra."
----------
Laslos wished he could go with the two young people all the way to the
safe house in America. What an adventure! But how could he justify
abandoning his brothers and sisters in Greece? The net was tightening
and few of them would survive until the Glorious Appearing, but no one
would question giving the teenagers a better chance.
Being involved in getting them connected with this pilot made Laslos
feel alive again. He dreaded the end of the caper when his friend K
would drive him back to Ptolemai's. He would then walk the last mile
and a half to his secret place and settle into his awful routine.
The plan was for K to pick up the boy and him in the country at the
north edge of town. They would stay on the outskirts, getting Marcel
close enough to the co-op to where he could walk there and get his
meager bag of belongings. Georgiana Stavros would wait for them on the
southern end of town, off the road that led to the airport. Cameron
Williams and Marcel had told him she was a tall brunette, fair-skinned
for a Greek, and pretty. Laslos liked to imagine that she looked like
his wife when first he met her more than forty years before.
----------
Chang noticed that Carpathia's plane sounded as if it was descending
when Suhail Akbar returned to talk with the potentate. "Ah, Director,"
Nicolae began, "we are planning something very special for Petra when
Ben-Judah is confirmed present, no?"
"Sir, we need to talk."
"Answer my question, Suhail."
"Yes, of course, but I have bad news."
"I do not want bad news! Everybody was healthy! We had plenty of
equipment for the Petra offensive. You were going to ignore the
city-waiting to destroy it when Micah and Ben-Judah were both there-and
overtake those not yet inside. What could be bad news? What do we hear
from them?"
"Nothing. Our-"
"Nonsense! They were to report as soon as they had overtaken the
insurgents. The world was to marvel at our complete success without
firing a shot, no casualties for us versus total destruction of those
who oppose me. What happened?"
"We're not sure yet."
"You must have had two hundred commanding officers alone!"
"More than that."
"And not a word from one of them?"
"Our stratospheric photo planes show our forces advancing to within
feet of overrunning approximately five hundred thousand outside Petra."
"A cloud of dust and the enemy, in essence, plowed under."
"That was the plan, Excellency."
"And what? The old men in robes and long beards fought back with hidden
daggers?"
"Our planes waited until the dust cloud settled and now find no
evidence of our troops."
Carpathia laughed.
"I wish I were teasing you, Potentate. High-altitude photographs ten
minutes after the offensive show the same crowd outside Petra, and yet-"
"None of our troops, yes, you said that. And our armaments? One of the
largest conglomerations of fire-power ever assembled, you told me,
split into three divisions. Invincible, you said."
"Disappeared."
"Can those photographs be transmitted here?"
"They're waiting in your office, sir. But people I trust verify what
we're going to see ... or not see, I should say."
Carpathia's voice sounded constricted, as if he'd rather explode than
speak. "I want the potentate of each of the world regions on his way to
New Babylon within the hour. Any who are not en route sixty minutes
from now will be replaced. See to that immediately, and when you
determine when the one from the farthest distance will arrive, set a
meeting for the senior cabinet and me with the ten of them for an hour
later. And these Jews," he said slowly, "we expect them all to be in
Petra as soon as they can be transported there?"
"Actually, they will not all fit. We expect Petra itself to be full and
the rest to camp nearby."
"What is required to level Petra and the surrounding area?"
"Two planes, two crews, two annihilation devices. We could launch a
subsequent missile to ensure thorough devastation, though that might be
overkill."
"Ah, Suhail. You will one day come to realize that there is no such
thing as overkill. Let the Jews and the Judah-ites think they have had
their little victory. And keep the failed operation quiet. We never
launched it. Our missing troops and vehicles and armaments never
existed."
"And what of the questions from their families?"
"The questions should go to the families. We demand to know where these
soldiers are and what they have done with our equipment."
"Tens of thousands AWOL? That's what we will contend?"
"No, Suhail. Rather, I suggest you go on international television and
tell the GCNN audience that the greatest military effort ever carried
out was met by half a million unarmed Jews who made it disappear!
Perhaps you could use a flip chart! Now you see us; now you do not!"
----------
"I'm scared," Marcel told Laslos as they stole out of the hideaway at
nightfall.
"There is no need to be, son. You are just excited. You have endured
tragedy, as we all have, but you are being given a second chance. If
you are not safe with the Tribulation Force, you will never be."
They walked the mile and a half in the dark on dirt paths Laslos had
come to know well. Though he walked more than he rode and never drove
anymore, he still felt the pain and weariness of his age. Marcel seemed
to have to wait for him, and Laslos wished he could tell him to go on.
But he wanted to feel useful. He was part of the escapade, part of the
plan. These precious young people would be in his charge until he sent
them off with Godspeed to rendezvous with George Sebastian.
Half a mile outside Ptolemais, Laslos spotted K's tiny white car well
off a rarely used road. Laslos stopped Marcel with a touch, then made a
birdcall. K tapped the brake and the taillights went on briefly. "That
means no one is around," Laslos said. "Run to the car. I will be there."
He knew Marcel wanted to stretch those lanky legs,and as Laslos
shuffled along as quickly as he could, he enjoyed watching the boy lope
to the car. K had long since removed the inside light, so when the door
opened, the car still looked dark. When Laslos arrived, K was behind
the wheel, Marcel next to him.
Laslos squeezed into the minuscule backseat, directly behind Marcel. K,
older than Laslos, bald and bony, wore a small black stocking cap and
spoke with difficulty because most of his front teeth were missing. He
said, "He ith rithen," and the boy and Laslos-though wheezing-said,
"Christ is risen indeed."
K drove carefully to the edge of the city and parked on a dark street.
"You kmow where you are?" Laslos asked the boy.
"I think so," Marcel said. "The co-op is in the cellar under the pub a
block and a half that way?"
"And you know the password?"
"Of course. They have my stuff."
"And they will confirm that the girl-"
"Georgiana."
"-yes, is waiting."'
Marcel nodded and jumped out of the car. Laslos quickly cranked down
his window. "Psst! Do not run," he whispered. And the boy slowed.
K turned and grinned at him. "Young people," he said.
"How long until our luck runs out, K?"
K shook his head and his smile faded. "We are already living on next
month'th time, Lathloth."
"What happens if you ever get stopped?"
"Thath the end of it," K said. "They'll take me to get the mark but
I'll tell them to jutht kill me, becauth I'm through fighting."
Laslos clapped his friend on the shoulder. "But you're doing damage
until the time comes, eh?"
"Muth ath I can."
Marcel returned, a canvas bag over his shoulder. "Any problem?" Laslos
said.
He shook his head, tossing the bag in the back, leaving just enough
room for the girl. "She's supposed to be there, and nobody followed me.
Look for one small stone on top of two others, eight kilometers from
the airport. She'll be in the underbrush near there. Just pull over and
she'll find us."
K stayed outside the city and headed toward the airport road. They saw
no GC Peacekeepers or vehicles, but still Laslos found his right leg
bouncing, his hands clasped tightly in his lap. When they passed the
10K sign, Laslos leaned forward and helped K watch the odometer. A few
minutes later Marcel said, "There!"
K's headlights showed two small stones on the left side of the road
with another laid casually atop them. No one would have noticed if they
hadn't been looking for them. K checked his mirrors, and Laslos shifted
so he could look out the back too. "Nobody," he said.
K pulled off to the side, his right front tire crunching the three
stones. He sat with the engine idling and the lights on, squinting into
the rearview mirror. "Let's go, young lady," Laslos muttered. "We don't
want to be seen."
"Want me to call for her?" Marcel said.
"She was supposed to find us, right?"
"Right."
"Always stick to the plan. If the plan changes, you don't improvise.
You leave."
K nodded. "Ten thecondth," he said. "I won't thtay here longer."
"There she is!" Marcel said.
Georgiana ran up to the car, and Laslos leaned across Marcel's bag to
open her door. She was shivering in jeans and a white, short-sleeve
shirt, and a ratty, red baseball cap hooding her eyes. She carried a
small, dark green satchel, barely a foot long. "Marcel," she said.
"Good to see you again."
"Yeah, hi! Let's go!"
She jumped in and put her bag between her feet. "You must be Laslos,"
she said. "I'm Georgiana." She squeezed his arm. Her dark fingers were
cold. She put her hands on K's shoulders. "And this must be K."
Marcel raised a hand, and she gripped it. "This is exciting," she said,
then rubbed her palms together.
"He ith rithen," K said.
"Amen!" she said, nearly squealing. "He is risen indeed!"
"Is that all you brought?" Laslos said.
"It's all I have, sir," she said, smiling. "And all I need."
"Venturing out into the new world with hardly a thing to your name."
"God is able," she said. "Marcel tells me you have a gun."
"Marcel has the mouth of a young man," Laslos said. "You must both
learn to say little and listen much."
"I'm sorry," she said. "Am I talking too much? Just excited, that's
all. I haven't felt this way since the day Mr. Williams let me go."
Marcel nodded.
"So I can't see your gun, Mr. Laslos?"
"Miklos. I do not bring my gun out of my home. I am not looking to hurt
anyone. It is for my safety, that's all."
"But K has a gun," she said, squeezing his shoulders again. "Don't you,
young man?"
K smiled shyly and shook his head as he pulled the car back onto the
road.
"You watch too much television," Laslos said. "American TV, am I right?"
"Not for a long time. When I do see it, it's all Carpathia, Carpathia,
Carpathia."
Laslos's leg was still bouncing, his hands still pressed together.
"You're both clear on the plan, then?" he said.
"If Marcel is, I am," Georgiana said. "He's the one who told me. We're
meeting this George guy off the road up from the airport. He'll take us
in like we're his prisoners, and the computer will show that's what
he's there for."
"Yes, and you must avoid eye contact, look sullen, and just go directly
to the plane with him. Maybe you could let Marcel wear your hat low
enough to cover his eyes and you could let your hair hang in your face."
She was still rubbing her hands together. "This thing wouldn't fit him.
Anyway, we'll recognize the pilot how again?"
"He should be the only man on the road looking for you," Laslos said.
"But he's a big man, right? An American?"
"Way over six feet tall and almost two hundred and fifty pounds,"
Marcel said. "Light hair, blue eyes, and-"
"You'll know him," Laslos said. "We should pray."
"Yes," Georgiana said. "Please."
"Why don't you pray?" Laslos said.
"I'm too nervous," she said.
"All right," Laslos said. "Lord, we thank you for these young people
and ask you to go before them and protect them. We-"
"There he is!" Georgiana said. "Is that him?"
A big, young man strode purposefully up the right side of the road. He
wore big boots, khaki pants, and a light, zippered jacket. His hair
looked almost white, his face dark. Laslos couldn't make out the eye
color, but the man stopped and looked directly into the car as K slowed
and passed, pulling over fifty yards beyond him.
Marcel reached for his door handle, and Georgiana reached for her bag.
"Wait!" Laslos said. "He's early." He rolled down his window and leaned
to stick his head out, aware that Georgiana was digging in her bag and
ready to go.
"Mr. Miklos?" the man called out, but Laslos thought he detected a
European accent.
"Hey, Mr. Sebastian!" Marcel shouted before Laslos could shush him.
Now jogging and having cut the distance between him and the car, the
man hollered, "Marcel? Georgiana?"
"Keep rolling, K," Laslos said. "This isn't right."
"Why?" Georgiana said. "What's wrong?"
"If that's Sebastian," Laslos said as K slowly pulled back onto the
road, "he'll find us."
"No!" Georgiana whined. "Stop!"
"We'll not make this transfer in the middle of the road," Laslos said.
"K, pull over," Georgiana said with sudden authority. She pulled a huge
handgun with a silencer from her bag and pressed it against Laslos's
temple. "I'll kill him if you don't stop."
"Don't stop, K!" Laslos cried. "Marcel is for real! I know him!"
K stopped accelerating but coasted. "Stop now," she said. "I mean it."
Marcel whipped around, kneeling on the seat to face her. He yanked her
cap off, and as the silencer pulled away from Laslos's head, he turned
to see Georgiana's forehead and the mark of the beast. The whistling,
abbreviated punch of the shot filled the car with the acrid smell of
gunpowder, and Marcel was driven back with such force that he folded
under the dashboard. The windshield was covered with gore, and Laslos
grimaced at the gaping hole in the back of the boy's head.
"Stop now, K!" she wailed, pointing the gun at the back of his head.
The older man wrenched the wheel back and forth, pushing the
accelerator to the floor. The little car rocked violently, and Laslos
felt himself bang into his door handle before hiis bulk went flying
back over Marcel's bag toward the girl.
She fired through K's neck: and he went limp, the car losing speed and
angling toward the gravel. Laslos wrapped his massive arms around the
girl and pressed the bottoms of his feet against the door on his side,
trying to smash her against her own door. He could only hope the gun
was buried somewhere in the crush, but the sounds of more than one set
of running footsteps told him that unless he wrestled it away from her,
he would soon join his wife in heaven.
The car thudded to a stop, and they both rolled forward into the back
of K's seat. Two other men had joined the Sebastian imposter, and all
carried weapons. One jerked the girl's door open and dragged her out
with one hand. Laslos tried to hang on, but he had no leverage. He lay
on Marcel's bag across the backseat, his arms leaden, gasping.
"You all right, Elena?" one of the men said.
Laslos saw her nod with disgust. "He's the only one left," she said,
pressing the gun to his forehead. He turned his hands over, opening his
palms toward heaven, and closed his eyes.
----------
"We're short-staffed tonight, sir. Hard copy is quicker than the
computer, if you don't mind."
"I hear you," George said. "But I told you, Old Man Elbaz had me
on recon runs over rebel territory in the Negev, and we were all
required to leave our IDs at the field HQ. It's all in the computer."
The airport GC clerk swore. "They never think about what those
decisions mean to us little guys."
"They never think at all," George said. "Sorry."
"What're ya gonna do?" the clerk said, sighing as he tapped his fingers
atop the monitor, waiting for the info. "Hey, what about all the guys
goin' AWOL in Jordan?"
"Don't think I wasn't tempted," George said. "Strangest deal I've ever
seen."
"You get the boils?"
"Who didn't?"
"Here it is. You're good. You got a number for me? Six digits."
" Zero-four-zero-three-zero-one."
"That's it. And where're your prisoners?"
"Being held up the road."
"Need a vehicle?"
"That would be great."
"You're coming right back?"
"Right back. I'll secure 'em in the plane and bring the wheels directly
to you."
The clerk tossed him a set of keys and pointed to a Jeep. George
decided he could get used to Trib Force work, if it was all this easy.
Couldn't be.
He sped a mile and a half up the road and pulled over. What was that in
the distance? The girl? Alone? He turned on his brights. She was
running toward him. Screaming.
He stepped out. "Georgiana?"
"George?"
"Yes!"
"We were ambushed!"
As she got closer he saw she was covered in blood.
He reached for her. "What happened? Where are the oth--"
But as the girl slumped against him, wrapping her arms around his
waist, she called out, "Unarmed!" Two men, one about his size, rushed
from the bushes with weapons trained on him. Another pulled a Jeep into
view, doors standing open.
The big man jumped into the car George had borrowed at the
airport. The other kept a weapon on him as the girl handcuffed
and blindfolded him. He was tempted to drive his bulk into her,
make her pay for whatever she was involved in. But he wanted to
conserve his strength for any real chance to escape. They pushed
him into the Jeep, and as it took off, he heard the other vehicle
behind.
"We're going to have fun with you, Yank," the driver said. "By the time
we're through, we'll know everything you know."
Fat chance George thought - and wanted to say. But he had already
blundered enough, leaving his plane and his weapons unprotected and
venturing unarmed into enemy territory, trusting a risky plan devised
by well-intentioned brothers, but civilians after all. Maybe the
proverbial horse had already escaped the open barn, but too late or
not, his training kicked in. Not only would he not say, "Fat chance,"
but he would also not say anything. The only way these people would
know he was capable of uttering a word was if they remembered he had
spoken to the girl. Unless he somehow escaped, his next word would be
spoken in heaven.
He bounced and lost his balance as the Jeep accelerated, and he kept
bouncing off the door, then almost into the lap of the captor to his
left. The man kept pushing George back upright. He could have planted
his feet more firmly and kept from jostling so much, but he didn't mind
being a two-hundred-forty-pound irritant to the enemy.
"So, George Sebastian of San Diego," the driver said, "and a newly
recruited Judah-ite. A little information will buy you some dinner, and
a lot will have you on your way back to the wife and little one before
you know it. Hungry?
George did not respond, not even with a nod or shake of the head.
"Lonely then, perhaps?"
The man next to George, less fluent in English, said, "Do you know who
is really Elbaz? Because we think we do."
"We do!" the girl said.
George let the next curve throw him into the man, who pushed him back.
"Sit up, you big stupid person!"
NINETEEN
SOUND ASLEEP over the Atlantic and never so happy to be heading home,
Rayford at first thought the incoming call was a dream. Then he wished
it were.
The caller ID showed it originating in Colorado. Before Rayford could
speak, a weird, nasal voice said, "I believe I followed your
instructions on how to call you securely, but could you confirm that
before I proceed?"
Rayford sat straight up. "Stand by," he said, believing he knew whom he
was talking to. He checked the tiny LCD readout as David Hassid had
instructed him. "You're secure," he said.
"You've got trouble," the voice said. "Do you have anybody inside at
New Babylon to replace your guy that died?"
Rayford hesitated.
"Hey, it's me."
"Who?"
"Ah, you may know me as Pinkerton Stephens. GC stationed in Colorado."
"I need to be dead sure, Mr. Stephens."
"Aka Steve Plank."
"A little more, please."
"Your grandson's name is Kenny Bruce."
"How did you know our guy died?"
"Everybody knows, man. Didn't he go down with three others right in
front of Carpathia?"
"Not really, Steve."
"Not bad, Captain. But anyway, New Babylon thinks he's dead, so he's
clearly not inside."
"We're covered inside."
"Good. Then maybe you know this."
"What?"
"About your trouble. Where are you?"
Rayford told him.
"And you have not been brought up to speed by the palace?"
"I thought I had."
"You've been compromised."
"Me personally?" Rayford said.
"Actually, no. Depending on what alias you're using, I think you're
okay. But I just got a high-level, for-your-eyes-only briefing from
Intelligence, and for the first time I thought I'd better take you up
on your request to be informed."
"I'm listening."
"The alias your friend, the one I met, is using has been exposed. I and
S is speculating that Deputy Commander Marcus Elbaz is actually a
former black marketer out of Al Basrah."
"How?"
"This is mostly coming out of Greece, Rayford."
"Oh no. Tell me we weren't wrong about the guy we sent in there."
"Sebastian? No, he's solid. But they've got him."
"Oh no. Start from the top."
"First, you've got your Elbaz character flying your plane right now,
right? And the craft is ostensibly a GC issue."
"Right."
"His name and that bird are on everybody's screens, so don't-"
"Got it. Don't land as GC or as Elbaz."
"You're scheduled into Kankakee, right?"
"You got it. What happened in Greece, Steve?"
"Stay with me. First, I think I've found a way to get you close to
where you want to go. Back to Chicago, correct?"
"Affirmative."
"Okay, listen up. I put in a request for cargo out of Maryland with a
stop at the auxiliary field near where Midway used to be. That's as
close to Chicago as they'll let anybody land, due to the radiation, you
know."
"Right."
"You know as well as I do that you could put down at Meigs."
"On the lake?"
"Sure."
"We're not going to draw any suspicion from heat- > seeking
stratospheric GC recon planes?"
"Not if your guy keeps the phony radiation levels up to speed on the
database."
"This is a pretty big jet to land at Meigs, the way I remember it."
"You've got reverse thrusters, don't you?"
"Of course."
"It can be done. But there's nobody on the ground there, of course. But
listen, Ray, if your guy is still keeping track of Chicago and what the
GC thinks about it, he'd better get in there and tinker."
"What're you saying?"
"I doubt anybody else has checked lately, but just to be sure I wasn't
leading you into a trap, I looked up that area, and something was
giving off moving heat signals down there within the last several
hours."
"We always tell him before we go out, walking, driving, or with the
chopper. That way he can head off any readings we emit."
"Well, somebody's on the move down there. Not much, but it'll arouse
suspicion like it did with me."
"So back to Greece, Steve. We know Buck's Jack Jensen ID is history."
"That's not the worst of it. He cut loose a couple of kids from a
detention center and one of 'em-the girl, Stavros-got herself caught.
You can't blame her; she's just a teenager, but apparently she cracked
and gave up a lot. Story she told matched up with what they figure
happened with the boy, who had used the name Paulo Ganter. 'Course
Ganter was still in there, so they figured out by process of
elimination who got sprung. Kid named Papadopoulos. His parents both
refused to take the mark. GC in Greece plants a young woman with
similar looks to this Stavros in the underground. She starts askin'
around about the boy, somebody gets 'em connected, and she tells him
her story-which is just like his. Bada-bing, she had to be freed by the
same guy, nobody checks her out, she stays away from people who would
know she wasn't who she claimed to be, and-"
"-she walks our people into an ambush."
"Yeah, and it's bad, Rayford."
"Just tell me."
"GC says the ruse went squirrelly at the end and their operatives wind
up having to kill an old man named Kronos, a big fish-name of
Miklos-and the boy."
Rayford sat in the screaming jet with the phone to his ear, head in his
hand, eyes shut. "And Sebastian?"
"Alive and well, but they're confident they can get what they need from
him to lead them to Ben-Judah. He's former military, so he might be
tougher than they think."
"Plus he doesn't know that much."
"He was supposed to bring the kids to you, though, right? He's got to
know enough to hurt you."
"He does. Any idea about the disposition of the real Stavros?"
"I think that goes without saying, now that they have a connection to
you guys. She's served her purpose."
"We don't have to assume the worst."
"Oh, sure we do, Rayford. Of course we do. I always do."
Plank asked if Rayford had anybody on board whose face was not known to
the GC. "Well, I've got three people aboard who are thought dead."
"Can any of 'em look like a Middle Easterner?"
"One's a Jordanian."
"Perfect. Does he have a turban?"
Rayford leaned over and woke Abdullah. "Do you have a turban, or can
you make yourself one?" Abdullah gave him a thumbs-up and went back to
sleep. "That's affirmative, Steve."
"Can you put him on the radio and pretend he's your pilot?"
"He flies."
"Perfect. Here's his new name and a refueling docket number for
Maryland. Your next stop after that should be Resurrection Field here,
south of Colorado Springs. I won't expect you."
"No, but you'll log us in as if we made it."
"Of course."
"Words aren't adequate, Steve. ..."
"Hey, one of these days I'm gonna need a place to hole up ... if I
survive that long."
With Buck, Hannah, Leah, and Mac also asleep, Rayford chose to tell
only Albie what was going on. There would be plenty of time for
Abdullah and Albie to switch seats. Rayford called Chang.
----------
Twelve hours later Chang sat at his terminal in the office, grateful
he'd been able to sleep after a flurry of emergency activity in the
night. He wondered how David had managed this on his own and prayed
that God would either deliver him or send someone to help him. Chang
was unaware of any other believers in New Babylon, but still he held
out hope. While he sat monitoring the overwhelming reports of death and
ruin on the bloody high seas, he was recording the meeting of the ten
regional potentates with Carpathia, Akbar, Fortunate, and Viv Ivins.
The workday was interminable, but Chang walked a fine line. He had to
appear above reproach while maintaining a typically irreverent
attitude. David had warned him that if he appeared too good to be true,
someone would assume he was. And new as he was in assisting the
Tribulation Force, he feared he would be unable to keep pace
emotionally. Losing David had rocked him. He couldn't imagine how the
others dealt with the loss of Miss Durham, then their main contact in
Greece. Things were supposed to get worse and worse. Fear and
loneliness didn't begin to describe his feelings. He prayed that until
he was rescued from this assignment, God would somehow allow him to
stay rested, stay strong, and be able to carry on despite the danger
and tragedy.
In Petra Chaim felt as if he were already in heaven. How was it that
God could make it so that a million believers could live together in
harmony? Chaim reminded the people that Tsion Ben-Judah had promised to
come and address them in person, and they lifted such a roar that he
himself could barely wait for that day.
"You know, do you not," he said, unamplified yet miraculously able to
be heard by all under his charge, "that the Word of God tells us we
will live here unmolested, our clothes not wearing out, and we will be
fed and quenched until the wrath of God against his enemies is
complete. John the Revelator said he saw 'something like a sea of glass
mingled with fire, and those who have the victory over the beast, over
his image and over his mark and over the number of his name, standing
on the sea of glass, having harps of God.' Beloved, those John would
have seen in his revelation of heaven and who had victory over the
beast are those who had been martyred by the beast. Death is considered
victory because of the resurrection of the saints!
"Sing with me the song of Moses, the servant of God, and the song of
the Lamb, saying: 'Great and marvelous are your works, Lord God
Almighty! Just and true are your ways, O King of the saints! Who shall
not fear you, O Lord, and glorify your name? For you alone are holy.
For all nations shall come and worship before you, for your judgments
have been manifested.'
"John said he heard the angel of the waters saying, 'You are righteous,
O Lord, the One who is and who was and who is to be, because you have
judged these things.'
"And what," Chaim continued, "of our enemies who have shed the blood of
saints and prophets? God has turned the oceans into blood, and one day
soon he will turn the rivers and lakes to blood as well, giving them
blood to drink. For it is their just due.
"But what shall we his people eat and drink, here in this place of
refuge? Some would look upon it and say it is desolate and barren. Yet
God says that at twilight we shall eat meat, and in the morning we
shall be filled with bread. In this way we shall know that he is the
Lord our God."
That evening a great flock of quails invaded and a million saints
enjoyed roasting them over open fires. In the morning, when the dew
lifted, there on the rocky ground were small, round flakes as fine as
frost. "We need not ask ourselves, as the children of Israel did, 'What
is it?'" Chaim said. "For we know God has provided it as bread. Take,
eat, and see that it is filling and sweet, like wafers made with honey.
As Moses said to them, 'This is the bread the Lord has given you to
eat.'
"And what shall we drink? Again, God Almighty himself has provided."
Chaim raised both arms, and springs of fresh, cool water flowed from
rocks in every quarter of Petra, enough for everyone.
----------
The refueling had gone without incident in Maryland, but Rayford
wondered when their supply of impostors would run dry. A couple of
hours later, Rayford took the controls for the landing at the tiny
airstrip by Lake Michigan near what was left of downtown Chicago. His
passengers were rested but stunned by the news related in his call from
Steve Plank.
The news had also proved devastating at the safe house. Chang reported
from New Babylon that he had been able to cover in the computer for the
motion and heat activity of Chloe's movements that might otherwise have
raised a red flag, and Tsion told Rayford by phone that Chloe was sick
about having been responsible. "But she has exciting news," Dr.
Ben-Judah said. "She is insisting on being the one to pick you up. And
yes, we have the young Mr. Wong covering for your landing and your
transport here."
The landing was a test of Rayford's skills, and as he touched down as
close to the water as possible, he wondered if he would have been smart
to let Mac handle it. But the reverse thrusters left him with room to
spare, and he maneuvered the jet between two abandoned buildings, where
it could be recognized from the stratosphere only from an angle
available just a few seconds a day.
The others allowed Buck out first to greet Chloe. She drove a Humvee
from beneath the Strong Building and had brought Ming to hold Kenny.
Rayford stretched and watched the reunion as the other five clambered
out and unloaded luggage. Finally safe again in the building,
introductions were made all around before they knelt and prayed and
wept over lost and endangered loved ones. Rayford showed them the urn
of Hattie's ashes, and Hannah passed around David's phone.
"'Course we ain't leavin' this George guy by himself in Greece, right?"
"Exactly, Zeke," Mac said. "But we've got a lot of planning to do in a
short time, and you're gonna be as busy as any of us."
"I know some people I'll bet would want to help," Chloe said.
----------
Chang's day had been filled with coworkers' rumors and gossip. Two
Indian stewards from Carpathia's plane were to be put to death for
leaking secrets to a mole in New Babylon. Everyone was under suspicion
and tested. The general invitation for all employees to visit the
spectacular new office of the supreme potentate had been suspended with
his earlier-than-expected return from Israel. But those who saw it
gushed about the ceiling that rose to the now transparent roof, so it
was as if the office itself looked into heaven. It had been widened,
the walls of adjoining offices and conference rooms demolished to make
one gargantuan space in which the king of the world could relax or
conduct business or hold meetings. Which he had done all day with the
potentates of the ten world regions.
Chang hurried to his apartment to hear the recording of that meeting,
but first he checked copies of what the assembled computer whizzes had
sent around the world from their secure system in Petra. What a thrill
to see Chaim's pronouncements and accounts of the miracles retold and
broadcast to the globe. Reports had come back immediately of people on
every continent printing these out or passing them on electronically.
Secret house churches were encouraged, and many people were becoming
new believers. People undecided and disillusioned with Carpathia sought
out the believers, and international revival was happening right before
Chang's eyes.
And it was none too soon, considering Carpathia's high-level meeting.
He had quickly quelled the cooing over his new digs and gotten down to
business. "The world has changed, gentlemen," he said, "as much in the
last several days as in the last three and a half years. Please, no
hands. I know all your problems and want to talk about mine today.
Without some miraculous intervention, the oceanic catastrophe will not
soon be remedied. We must be creative in our approaches to it. But have
you noticed something, my friends? Is it as obvious to you as it is to
me? We have the Jews to thank for our current predicament.
"Yes, the Jews. Who have been among the last to embrace Carpathianism?
The Jews. Who is their new Moses? A man who calls himself Micah but
whom we believe to be none other than the Jew who vainly assassinated
me, Dr. Chaim Rosenzweig.
"Who are the Judah-ites? They claim to be Jesus-followers, but they
follow Ben-Judah, a Jew. Jesus himself was a Jew. They are fond of
referring to me as Antichrist. Well, I will embrace Anti-Jew. And so
will you. This is war, gentlemen, and I want it waged in all ten
regions of the world.
"For my part, we are planning to stagger and ultimately eradicate the
so-called Jesus-believers who are nothing but Judah cultists. Tsion
Ben-Judah himself, who claims a billion adherents, has publicly
announced what will prove to be his fatal blunder. He has accepted an
invitation from the brash Micah you-know-who- whom we have to thank for
the plague of sores and the seas of blood-to personally speak at Petra
to the million cowards who refused to express loyalty to me and yet ran
like children when they had the chance."
"Excellency," someone said, "could you not have stopped them before
they reached Petra?"
"Please do not interrupt! Of course we could have easily overrun them,
but they have made it much easier and more economical for us. They are
now all in one location, and as soon as Ben-Judah makes good on his
promise, we will welcome him with a surprise. Or two. Or three.
Security and Intelligence Director Suhail Akbar ..."
"Thank you, Your Worship," Akbar said. "We are carefully monitoring the
activities of the Judah-ites, and while we have not infiltrated the
Jews at Petra, they have confined themselves to that area, saving us
the work. We are prepared to rally two fighter-bombers when we know
Ben-Judah is en route-we believe him to be only one or two hours from
Petra anyway-and we should be able to drop one annihilation device from
each craft directly onto Petra, literally within minutes of his
arrival. We will follow with the launch of a missile that will ensure
total destruction. That was scheduled to be launched from an oceangoing
vessel but will now be launched from land."
Chang had to chuckle at the Intelligence area's falling for the clock
ruse from Tsion's pirated TV appearance.
Carpathia took over again. "The Judah-ites have proven to be such hero
worshipers and so dependent on the daily Internet babblings of
Ben-Judah that his death alone may mean the end of that nuisance. While
we are aware of other pockets and strongholds of Judah-iteism, we do
not believe any other leader has the charisma or leadership required to
withstand our unlimited resources.
"But make no mistake, my loyal friends. The Jew is everywhere. Is there
one potentate here who would aver that you do not have a significant
Jewish population somewhere in your region? No one, of course. Here is
the good news, something to make you forget the inconvenience of this
journey I required on short notice. I am opening the treasury for this
project, and no reasonable request will be denied. This is a war I will
win at all costs.
"Maintain your loyalty mark application sites and make use of the
enforcement facilitators. But, effective immediately, do not execute
Jews discovered without the mark. I want them imprisoned and suffering.
Use existing facilities now but build new centers as soon as possible.
They need not be fancy or have any amenities. Just make them secure. Be
creative, and share with each other your ideas. Ideally, these people
should either long to change their minds or long to die. Do not allow
that luxury.
"They will find few remaining Judah-ites to sympathize with them. They
will be alone and as lonely as they have ever been, even though their
cell mates will be fellow Jews. There are no limits on the degradation
I am asking, requiring, you to inflict. No clothes, no heat, no
cooling, no medicine. Just enough food to keep them alive for another
day of suffering.
"I want reports, gentlemen. Pictures, accounts, descriptions,
recordings. These people will wish they had opted for the guillotine.
We will televise your best, most inventive ideas. From time immemorial
these dogs have claimed the title 'God's chosen people.' Well, they
have met their god now. I have chosen them, all right. And they will
not find even death a place they can hide.
"Apply for all the funds, equipment, rolling stock, and weapons you
need to ferret out these weasels. The potentate who demonstrates the
ability to keep them alive the longest, despite their torment, will be
awarded a double portion in next year's budget.
"Questions?"
TWENTY
GEORGE SEBASTIAN had planned to wait to eat until he had his charges on
board and was free in the air again, leaving Greece. Now, of course,
hunger was the least of his problems, but weakness wouldn't help
either. The Greeks, particularly the thugs who had ambushed him and-he
assumed-the people with whom he had been expected to connect, hoarded
their water supply. The news from the high seas had everyone rushing to
lakes and rivers to stock up on freshwater fish. Water would soon be
more valuable than gold.
His captors were well connected, he could tell that. After they drove
more than forty minutes north, then about twenty east, if he still had
his bearings, they plowed through softer soil, and he heard leaves and
branches brush heavily against the Jeep. It sounded as if the vehicle
he had appropriated was still behind them.
George was grateful for his training, which had included blindfolding
and mock torture. He had been astounded at how helpless he felt, even
when he knew his own people were in charge. To be bound and blind, even
knowing you weren't going to die, was a dreadful, sickening, fearful
thing. He had been allowed to get hungry and thirsty, and the most
harrowing part was being left alone long enough for his mind to play
tricks on him. Back then he knew he was still in California, not far
from San Diego, not far from home. But his timekeeping techniques, his
mind games to keep himself calm and sane, quickly dissipated with the
passing of the minutes, and the young, strong, healthy recruit began
imagining it had been hours.
He wanted to take what he had learned from that trauma and use it in
this one, but he hated to even recall it. Having no resources had been
the worst. George had been considered one of the most creative and
innovative soldiers in his platoon. When they were dropped into the
middle of the woods thirty miles from base, wearing only shorts and
boots, he was always the first one back. He could improvise, find his
way based on shadows, foliage, intuition. He knew how to protect
himself from the sun, to keep from walking in circles-somehow a common
malady for people who had lost any sense of direction.
But being left in a dark room without so much as the sound of one other
person breathing, no muffled sounds outside of officers or fellow
recruits gossiping about how long he'd been there, that had been true
torture. Though he had quickly freed himself from the bindings, he
could not free his hands from each other. But he was able to stand and
walk, getting a measure of the room, helping time pass by remembering
songs and poems and birth dates and special occasions.
But when he ran out of all that and began losing count after two hours,
he had been tempted to call out, to tell his fellow GIs that he had had
enough, that he got the point, that it was time to return him to
normal. But who did that, other than the weaklings, the washouts? He
had to face that he too wanted to cry, to scream, to beg and plead, to
kick at the wall, to ask if they hadn't forgotten him. He had succumbed
to the temptation at long last to make noise so at least if he had been
forgotten, they would be reminded and could save face by pretending it
was all part of the drill.
He remembered what it was like to be hungry and thirsty and desperate,
but there had always been that fail-safe. Deep in the recesses of his
fast-unraveling mind had been the knowledge that this was training,
this wasn't real, there was no real threat to his life and health and
mind. No one was going to inflict permanent injury, no one would
threaten his new bride, nothing would happen to his parents.
His superiors had trained the men in basic transcendental meditation,
which most of them passed off as something for weirdos, druggies, and
holy men from the East. Yet George had seen some benefit to thinking
beyond his consciousness, or at least trying to. Even back then, even
before becoming a believer in Christ, he didn't want anything to do
with any religious aspects of meditation. But he did long to transcend
this life, to reach a point beyond himself, to be able to park his
senses and emotions on a plane where they would be safe from the threat
of mere mortals.
It hadn't worked long then, and that was what he feared now. This was
the real thing. While he regulated his breathing and told himself not
to think about his hunger and thirst, they were things he could not
blot from his mind. The more he tried, the worse they invaded.
He was nudged along in the night-no light whatever peeked through his
blindfold-by the butt of a rifle, and as much as he tried to catalog
all the information he could remember since the girl had clumsily
frisked him and he had been jumped, his overriding emotion was shame.
No, he had not been the one who got the teenagers caught-along with
anyone helping them. But while the assignment excited him, he had not
treated it like a military operation. Back in the Negev, that was war,
pure and simple-except when they had been surrounded by superior
firepower and it went from armed conflict to no fair. It had done his
soul good to see what happened to anyone who thumbed his nose at God.
Our general is better than your general, he thought, so game over. That
almost made him smile. Why should he worry about the people who held
him now when Michael the archangel could step in and make them faint
dead away-if they were lucky?
He was held up briefly, then heard two doors open. He was nudged inside
and sensed a light come on. A few more steps, another door, a musty
smell, a shove from behind, steps leading down, but how many? He
started carefully, feeling with his foot, but he was bumped again,
rushed his feet hoping he would come to the bottom before he lost
balance, and failed.
George didn't know how far he might tumble down these wood stairs. The
best he could do was tuck his chin to his chest, clamp his eyes shut as
tightly as possible, and draw his knees up to his chest. He counted
two, three, four stairs, then hard-packed dirt. His momentum carried
him a couple of rolls, and the whole way down, he expected to hit a
wall or who-knows-what with some part of his body.
When he finally came to rest on his right side, he could hear from
their footsteps that his feet faced his captors. He kept his knees
drawn up and feigned more pain than he had. He groaned slightly and did
not move. He waited until steps drew close to him, then thrust out both
feet with all that was in him.
No one on his base could do squats with more weight, and no one could
touch him in leg presses. Had he been able to see the man before him,
he could have broken both his legs. But his thrust had found purchase
on only one of the man's legs. The man cried out, something giving way
in the knee, it seemed to George. The man went flying and rolled, his
weapon clattering.
"Idiot!" the other man said, and George heard the girl stifle a laugh.
"I'll kill him!" the one on the floor said, grunting and whimpering in
pain as he struggled to his feet and cocked his weapon.
"Stop it!" the other said. "He's our only link."
"Well, she didn't have to drop all three of them."
"What's done is done. He's it, so don't do anything stupid again."
"Again?"
"You don't think that was stupid? What are you doing over there?"
A muzzle at his neck. "Keep still there, big boy. Up we go." A hand on
the cuffs, pulling until he had to get up or injure his arms. He was
led to a chair and pushed back onto it. He had the impression only two
of the men and the girl were downstairs with him. Footsteps upstairs.
He tried to slow his breathing so he could hear. The one upstairs was
talking, but no one was responding. He was on the phone, talking about
the car-probably to the clerk who had lent it. Then he said something
about the plane. George decided it would serve him right if they shot
him right there. He had treated this assignment like a game and now had
exposed the entire Tribulation Force. And, if these men had any
credibility, the others in Greece had been killed.
Cigarette smoke. Blown in his face. Please, he thought. These people
had seen too many movies. Maybe cataloging their gaffes would help.
Someone squatted next to him, he assumed the second one down the
stairs. The other would be wary for a while.
"We can make this hard or make this easy," the man whispered, and
George couldn't help himself. He pressed his lips together hard, but he
couldn't keep from giggling. He wanted to ask if they were going to try
good-cop, bad-cop too, but he had resolved to say nothing.
"We know who you are, Mr. Sebastian," and George lost it. He laughed
aloud, knowing what the next line had to be. "We know who you work for."
Trying to keep from laughing only made it worse, and he sat there,
shoulders heaving, squealing to keep from guffawing. He took a backhand
directly on the mouth, splitting his upper lip against his teeth.
George was almost relieved when that sobered him. He wiped his mouth on
his shoulder, tasted blood, and spat. At least he wouldn't get himself
killed for being unable to stop laughing. When the man said he would
cut to the chase, trying to make it sound normal with his thick accent,
George almost laughed again. But his stinging lips were swelling, and
he had a hunch that would be the least of his pain by the time this was
over.
"All we need to know is where we can find your people. Your information
proves correct; you are free to go." As if they wouldn't kill him for
not having the mark of loyalty. "We have them narrowed to the United
Carpathian States."
George cocked his head ever so slightly. That had surprised him, and he
didn't mind it showing, because he knew they would think he was shocked
that they knew. It was no secret Tsion Ben-Judah would soon be on his
way to Petra, so why did they care about anyone else?
"You might be more surprised by how much we know. Rosenzweig is no
threat as long as he stays in the mountains. His assistant we know to
be Cameron Williams, who illegally transmits over the Internet material
subversive to the Global Community, a crime punishable by death. We
know there is a mole connected to the Judah-ites somewhere within the
GC. And the pilot who has disguised himself as a GC officer has pushed
his luck too far. He has been linked with another Williams identity,
who also passed himself off as GC and temporarily freed two rebel
prisoners. We have reason to believe a former guard at the Buffer, now
AWOL, may be connected with these people."
George wondered if they had made the connection between Ming Toy and
Chang Wong. Maybe the fact that she had been married and now had a
different last name would delay that realization. It would be only a
matter of time, of course. Chang had to get out of New Babylon.
George's captor sounded as if he believed George was surprised by how
much they knew. In fact, the opposite was true. Apparently they had
never connected the crash of the Quasi Two with the Trib Force, and no
one even knew it had been empty.
More smoke in his face. "So, you just tell us where to look, and when
you are proved trustworthy, you go home to your family."
Most ironic of all, George would not have been able to give away the
Trib Force if he'd wanted to. For his own safety, Rayford had told him
only to fly Marcel and Georgiana to a Kankakee, Illinois, airstrip and
that he would meet George there. Whether George accompanied them to the
safe house, wherever it was, or flew on home to San Diego, would have
depended on timing, weather, and any suspicion that might have arisen
over whether the GC were onto him.
The man near him tried the next strategy in the hostage-taker's
guidebook. He laid a hand gently on George's shoulder and whispered,
"All we need is a specific location. No one knows where we got it, you
go free, and everybody's happy."
The man had been so full of cliches that George was tempted to answer
with one of his own: a bloody spit to the face. But if there was one
thing he knew well, it was that apathy was more offensive than
resistance. As long as he resisted, his captors knew they were getting
to him. When he ignored them, they had nothing to grab on to, and the
insult of not being taken seriously had to drive them crazy.
Ironically, George had learned that from his wife. He didn't mind when
she argued with him. But when she gave up and said she didn't care,
that got to him. Disengaging, he knew, was a cruel strategy. And he
employed it now with a vengeance. He didn't shake his head. He didn't
try to kick. Since he had shown a modicum of surprise over the man's
asserting that he knew the Trib Force was in the local region, George
had barely moved a muscle. The man had to wonder if he was even
listening. In fact, he wasn't.
To keep from even the temptation of responding nonverbally, George
began reciting silently the books of the Bible. Then his favorite
verses. Then his favorite songs.
The Greek nudged him with his weapon, and George didn't want him to
think he had dozed off. He raised his chin.
"Well, what will it be, Sebastian? You're refusing? At least say so.
No? Tell me you've chosen not to say anything. You just want to give me
rank and serial number? We already know your name. Come on. Not even
that?"
----------
Chang monitored all the various feeds and sites as he continued to
listen to the Carpathia meeting recording. Most alarming was a list
directed to Suhail Akbar that informed him of all the AWOL GC employees
his department was aware of. Chang found his sister's name and deleted
it, but he knew he might have been too late. How many knew that she was
his sister? Perhaps not even Akbar. Moon had known. And Carpathia
himself had known. Chang could only hope that such detail stayed below
the potentate's radar level. Who knew what could come of it? Yes, he
appeared to be loyal, even to the point of the mark. But if
investigated, how long could he keep his parents and his sister out of
it? Now wasn't the time, but one day soon he would have to raise the
issue with Rayford Steele. He believed he could monitor the palace and
GC headquarters from the safe house.
In the Carpathia meeting, someone responded to Nicolae's new emphasis
on the Jewish question with a question of his own. "Does this mean you
no longer want videodisc records of our beheadings?"
"Oh, no! That remains a more than enjoyable pastime. As you know, I no
longer require sustenance or rest. I am able to take advantage of
unlimited time while others eat and sleep. One of the benefits of
godhood is the time to revel in the folly of my opponents. Sometimes I
sit for hours in the night, watching head after head drop into the
baskets. These people are so smug, so stubborn, so pious. They sing.
They testify. Do you not just love that word? They testify to their god
and against me. Ooh, that makes me feel so bad, so jealous. But then
what happens? From fifteen feet above, that heavy, gleaming,
razor-sharp blade is released. It takes one-seventieth of a second to
reach the bottom of the shaft-did you know that? And the last
two-hundredths of one second is all it takes to slice through the neck
as if it were not there.
"I love it! The only problem, dear friends, is that if anything, the
guillotine is too humane! For certain it is far too quick and deadly
for the Jew. How far can you go in inflicting pain upon a man or woman
before he or she dies? I want to know! I want you to report it to me
with all the visual and audio evidence you can. And you know whom I
want you to use as test subjects.
"For a special treat today, during our break we will witness the
execution of the two insurgents we discovered serving on my own plane.
We still search for the mole here at headquarters, but perhaps he or
she will also see the beheadings today and will be flushed from hiding
to plead for his or her life."
"The guillotine then, for these two?" someone asked.
"I know," Nicolae said. "Pedestrian. But we do not have a lot of time,
and it will be a nice respite from the meeting."
Many of the others expressed agreement and excitement. Chang was
sickened. He was tempted to download some of this bile for his mother,
but it was too risky with his father still being such a Carpathia
loyalist. He held out a modicum of hope for them both, having not heard
whether his father had followed through yet on their taking the mark in
their own region. Until he was able to convince his mother and get to
his father with hard evidence, he was persuaded that his father would
turn him in in a heartbeat if he thought Chang was subversive.
----------
Rayford called a meeting of the three remaining original members of the
Trib Force, plus Tsion, in Tsion's study. "I hope we're talking about
who's going to Petra with Dr. Ben-Judah," Chloe said.
"We are," Rayford said, "among other things." Tsion looked deep in
thought as they settled in. "You all right, Doctor?"
"Troubled, I confess," the rabbi said. "I should not be surprised, but
it seems we have come to a crossroads. I know we will lose more and
more as we head toward the end, but it seems as if our tenuous bit of
safety is unraveling fast."
"It is," Rayford said. "We know George can't give us up beyond pointing
them in the direction of Illinois, but I don't think he'll do even
that."
"Neither do I," Buck said. "They're not going to get a thing out of
him."
"Except perhaps his life," Tsion said, sighing.
"What are we going to do about our new friends?" Chloe said.
"That's one of the reasons we're here," Rayford said. "It seems to me,
as exciting and encouraging as it is to discover these wonderful new
brothers and sisters, your escapade was reckless and could have cost us
everything."
Chloe shot him a double take and looked as if she'd rather argue with
him as her father than have to respond to him as head of the Trib
Force. "All due respect, but I didn't know what stratospheric detection
could tell the GC. Shouldn't we all be told that kind of stuff?"
"How were we to know you would venture out on your own?"
"Last time, I discovered the new safe house. And look what has come of
this foray."
"You're lucky what came of it," Rayford said. "What if they had been GC
or just lowlifes? We'd have lost you, probably the safe house, and thus
our whole reason for being."
"I'm sorry, but now we have people we can help and who can help us."
"Did you think about sensitivities, Chloe, such as maybe they don't
want to move to our building, even though it would provide infinitely
more safety and advantages? Maybe they don't want to become part of the
Tribulation Force. They have been self-governing and self-sufficient up
to now. Maybe they don't want to be used for dangerous missions, using
aliases and all that."
"They do want to move here," Chloe said. "They do want to help with
travel and assignments. But you're right. They want to maintain their
own organization. They're comfortable with each other, and while they
would like to have Dr. Ben-Judah's involvement, Enoch is their pastor
and they want it to remain that way."
"So," Rayford said, "all the benefits of the Trib Force, but none of
the responsibilities."
"Oh, they'll pay," Chloe said. "They'll work. They'll travel. They'll
exchange all kinds of things for food and necessities, just like any
other co-op members. It's not like they should owe us rent on a
building we don't own."
"They've made a point about not answering to us?"
"No, I'm making that point. Is it a requirement that they be
subordinate to you?"
"That's not it at all, Chloe. We just don't have time for squabbles,
lack of organization, confusion about responsibility."
Tsion held up a hand. "These are wonderful brothers and sisters,
Captain Steele. I believe they will be a vibrant addition to the
building and that we should take it a step at a time. See how it works
while you and I are gone. I would not recommend using anyone new on
this trip."
Chloe shook her head. "It's already been decided that it's you and
Tsion?"
"No-"
"What's the point of a meeting about it if-"
"I said no, Chloe. Yes, Tsion and I are going. But others will go."
"Me included, I hope."
Rayford stared at her. "I might have hoped the same before you risked
exposing us."
Chloe stood. "I don't believe this," she said. "The co-op can't go on
without me? Buck can't watch Kenny?"
Rayford looked to Buck, not wanting to be parental when Chloe's husband
was right there. "Careful, Chloe," he said. "Daughter or not, there's
protocol."
Buck reached up and took her hand. "Don't talk yourself out of an
interesting assignment," he said.
"I'm not looking for interesting," she said. "I'm looking for crucial."
"How does Greece sound?" Rayford said, and she sat. "I'm going to Petra
with Tsion. I'll have a new look and a new name. As soon as the GC
recognizes that I'm not Buck, we're guessing their attention will be on
Tsion anyway. We need another flyer for insurance over there, so
Abdullah will go. I wanted you and Hannah to go to Greece. You're the
least exposed people we have, at least until we know for sure whether
the GC still suspects Hannah and the others from the plane crash being
at large. You would be less suspicious and threatening, being women."
"Who would fly us?"
"If we can get the logistics done, Chang will have a GC plane delivered
to Crete. You two and Mac would split off there and head into Greece
while Tsion and Smitty and I go on to Petra. You'll be posing as GC,
and it'll be dicey without the mark. Mac will trail you and keep an eye
on you, also posing as GC. Ideally we want at least one of you to talk
your way into overseeing the Sebastian situation for the senior
cabinet."
"How long will it take them to catch on to that?" Chloe said.
"It would work only as long as you made it work. We all need to get
with Zeke for new identities, papers, looks. All but you anyway. I
don't think anybody knows what you look like. But how do I explain
giving such an assignment to someone who pulled-"
"Captain," Chloe said, "let me do it to prove myself."
----------
On instructions from the safe house in Chicago, Chang began building
dossiers on everyone traveling to Crete, then to Greece or Petra.
Rayford's height and weight and a close enough birth date were entered,
along with identification that showed him to be a brother to Abdullah
Smith's phony persona. Both would pose as Egyptians in full regalia.
Fortunately, Abdullah had not shaved for nearly two weeks, and he would
craft his long stubble into a goatee, which Zeke would tinge gray.
Rayford would have his skin chemically darkened, allow a mustache to
grow thick and dark, and wear glasses with small, round lenses.
Taking advantage of Hannah's dark coloring, Zeke was transforming her
into a New Delhi Indian, rather than a Native American. Chloe could go
as she was, but with a new name and Canadian roots.
Mac was the challenge. He would be easily recognized as Carpathia's
former pilot, so his coloring was altered to eliminate his freckles and
the hint of red in his hair. He would also be issued glasses but would
have to rely on bluster as a GC commander with a new name to throw off
overzealous clerks.
"The biggest advantage you all have," Chang wrote Rayford, "is the
decimated state of the GC around the world. 'We' are so understaffed,
ill, and dying that maintaining strict security has become virtually
impossible. Fortunately, in many areas, there are surplus vehicles,
except in Israel, of course."
Once everything was in place in the computer, Chang listened to more of
Carpathia's meeting while composing a nuanced-he hoped-message to his
mother. The trouble was, she was not normally a woman attuned to
nuances.
"We have our engineers working around the clock," Carpathia was saying,
"on the water issue. All saltwater marine industries are dead, of
course. We have lost hundreds of thousands of citizens, who may never
be retrieved off the high seas. Vessels can go only so far through a
liquid with such a thick, sticky consistency, and the diseases brought
by the rotting carcasses of sea creatures may be our most serious
health issue ever. Yes, worse than the boils and sores. People only
wished they could die from those. The water crisis is again decimating
our citizenry."
"Holiness," someone said, "in our region we have seen an alarming
trend. Even those with your mark of loyalty are beginning to speak out
in protest against you. We counter with the fact that this is not your
doing, but you know people. They want to blame someone, and you become
the target."
Before Carpathia could answer, Fortunate jumped in, and Chang thought
he sounded like his old self. "This shall not be tolerated," he said.
"I hereby decree and shall pass this word along to the priests of
Carpathian-ism in all ten regions of the world that from this day
forward, every citizen of the world shall be required to worship the
image of their supreme potentate, their true and risen lord, when they
rise in the morning, after they eat their midday meal, and before they
retire at night."
"How shall we enforce such an order?" someone said.
"See to it," Carpathia said. "This, from the Most High Reverend Father,
is inspired!"
"But, sir, there are still many who have not yet even received the mark
of loyalty!"
Fortunato again: "They shall surely die!"
"Reverend!" Carpathia said, admiration clear in his tone.
"I have spoken," Leon said, warming to his point. "The time is long
past for delays and excuses. Take the mark of loyalty to the god of
this world or die! Anyone found without the mark on his or her forehead
or right hand shall be given immediate opportunity to receive it, and
upon their rejection, shall be put to death by guillotine."
There was silence as Chang sensed the regional potentates were
considering the ramifications.
Finally Carpathia spoke. "With one notable exception," he said.
"Well, of course, Excellency," Leon said. "You need not take your own
mark of loyalty!"
"Oh, Reverend!" Carpathia said, clearly disappointed. "You were doing
so well!"
"Forgive me, Your Worship. The exception?"
"The Jew! The Jew, Reverend Fortunato!"
"Of course!" Leon said. "As the potentate himself has clarified, the
blade is too good for the Jew."
Chang finished his letter to his mother with the following:
Assuming that you and Father have yet to take the mark of loyalty, ask
Father how he would feel about a ruling that said he must take it
immediately or die. What does that do in the heart and mind of someone
who would otherwise be a loyalist? Does it rob him of any satisfaction
he might get out of pledging allegiance to a leader?
That is what is coming, Mother, and you and he may hear it soon after
receiving this. As soon as the regional potentate for the United Asian
States returns from New Babylon, you may expect just that ruling. The
time has never been riper for seeking another object of one's devotion.
It may seem riskier at present, but in the end it will make the
difference between eternal life and death.
TWENTY-ONE
RAYFORD HAD never doubted Zeke's brilliance or artistry, but the young
man outdid himself over the next several days. Around the Strong
Building, various members of the Tribulation Force and members of The
Place shot double takes at the soon-to-leave crew as their looks
changed daily. Rayford caught himself studying his own visage in the
mirror, wondering how such a transformation was possible.
"Your young brother keeps going with this, Captain Steele," Enoch said,
"and you'll find out what it's like to be a black man."
As the people from The Place moved in on another floor in stages, the
two groups began to share meals and prayer times. Enoch promised that
his people would pray for the Trib Force entourage every minute they
were gone. "And then some of us want in on one of your trips. We
wouldn't even have to be disguised. Nobody's expecting to see us."
The day before the flight overseas, the Global Community News Network
announced a special appearance of Carpathianism's Most High Reverend
Father Leon Fortunate. He had a message for the entire world, and it
would be broadcast live over television, radio, and the Internet at
noon Palace Time and every hour on the hour for twenty-four hours so
all the peoples of the world would be able to see it.
At three in the morning in Chicago, per Rayford's invitation, everyone
in the Strong Building, except the babies, padded out and gathered in
the commons near the elevator, where they watched television. The
announcement would have proved anticlimactic, because it only
reiterated what had been announced regionally anyway, save for what
happened-which would be blamed, unfairly in this case, on the
ubiquitous but elusive palace mole.
"We go live now to the sanctuary of the beautiful Church of Carpathia
off the palace court here in New Babylon and the Reverend Fortunato."
Leon had assembled a massive choir behind him, and as he stepped into
the pulpit, clearly standing on a small riser to make himself look
taller, he was in his finery. He had added to the purple and gray and
gold busyness of the robe and tassels. On his pate perched an
Islamic-looking, flattopped, head-hugging cap. It seemed to try to
incorporate the sacred symbol of every historical religion Leon could
remember, but the effect made him look like an exploding ringmaster.
He stood there feigning solemnity and dignity while the choir sang
"Hail Carpathia"; then he spread his notes before him.
"Fellow citizens of the Global Community and parishioners of the
worldwide church of our risen lord, His Excellency, Supreme Potentate
Nicolae Carpathia . . . I come to you this hour under the authority of
our object of worship and with power imbued directly from him to bring
to you a sacred proclamation.
"The time has expired on any grace period related to every citizen
receiving and displaying the mark of loyalty to Nicolae Carpathia.
Loyalty mark application centers remain open twenty-four hours a day
for anyone who for any reason has not had the opportunity to get this
accomplished. Effective immediately, anyone seen without the mark will
be taken directly to a center for application or the alternative, the
enforcement facilitator.
"Furthermore, all citizens are required to worship the image of
Carpathia three times a day, as outlined by your regional potentate,
also under threat of capital punishment for failing to do so.
"I know you share my love for and dedication to our deity and will
enthusiastically participate in every opportunity to bring him praise.
Thank you for your cooperation and attention, and may Lord Nicolae
Carpathia bless you and bless the Global Community."
Fortunato tried to finish with a half wave, half salute, but suddenly
the lights went out in the church. They came back on just in time for
everyone to see the choir stumbling over each other to flee and
Fortunato falling off his little platform, trying to get up, and having
to billow out the skirt of his robe to do it. All eyes seemed to be on
something in the ceiling, but as the camera panned that way, something
happened to the camera operator, and the picture shook and wobbled.
Text rolled across the bottom of the screen: "Please stand by. We have
temporarily lost picture and sound." Yet the interior of the church was
in plain sight. And while the camera seemed to be at a cockeyed angle,
showing only the empty platform and choir loft, the sound of people
stampeding out the doors was clear as well.
Suddenly superimposed over the screen was a face so bright it lit the
room from the television. The voice was so loud that a woman sitting
near Enoch reached up and turned the volume off. Yet the voice could
still be heard.
"If anyone worships the beast and his image and receives his mark on
his forehead or on his hand, he himself shall also drink of the wine of
the wrath of God, which is poured out full strength into the cup of his
indignation. He shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in the
presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb.
"And the smoke of their torment ascends forever and ever; and they have
no rest day or night, who worship the beast and his image, and whoever
receives the mark of his name.
"Here is the patience of the saints; here are those who keep the
commandments of God and the faith of Jesus.
"Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord." The scene changed to the
GCNN anchor desk in New Babylon, where a woman said, "We apologize for
that malfunction, which should be ignored. We will now show again
Reverend Fortunato's message in its entirety." This time, as soon as
the video rolled, the message from the bright visage overwhelmed it.
Again the error message flashed but could not overcome the angelic
announcement. Back at the GCNN desk the anchor-woman said the network
would be off the air until further notice. But the instant the screen
went dark, it came back on again with the message. Script from the
network announced technical difficulties, but nothing could eradicate
the shining face and the loud pronouncement.
----------
Chang checked his computer, and there too the message played and
played. He went outside into the hot sun, and there in the sky was the
overpowering image of the angel of God. Chang dropped hard to his
knees, panting, astounded that anyone anywhere in the world could doubt
that Carpathia was the enemy of the one true God, and after this, they
could doubt it only out of stubborn rebellion. He ran back in to e-mail
his parents, only to discover they had already written him.
Your father says we will risk our lives, live in hiding, or face the
death machines before we will take the mark. He is nearly suicidal over
forcing you. I tell him you already sealed by God, and so is Ming. I
will connect to Ben-Judah Web site. We will be worshipers of God and
fugitives. Pray.
----------
Rayford knew it was folly to expect his people to rest during the day
in anticipation of an early-evening flight from Chicago to Cyprus, then
to Jordan. But they tried. Having their new friends from The Place in
and out all day-singing, praying, and having church-was like a prelude
to heaven. Before they piled into the Humvee, in which Buck would
deliver them to the aircraft, the whole group huddled in a huge circle
on their knees, praying.
----------
George Sebastian's training was out the window by now. The resolve, the
meditation techniques, the strength of character had been scraped away,
replaced by hunger, thirst, loneliness, and, yes, fear. His silence had
brought blows, none enough to do permanent damage, he knew, at least
not yet. But his forehead and the back of his head had been butted
enough times by the stock of a rifle that pain echoed through his skull.
George had been laced across the shoulders and shoulder blades
repeatedly by what felt to him like the chain off a bicycle or
motorcycle. Finally a fist struck him in the cheek and the jaw so many
times that he knew he would never look the same. He tried and tried to
time the swings and punches from his captors so that he could move with
the blow. Finally he got the idea to do the opposite. When he sensed a
fist was coming, heard the inhale of the assailant, felt the air
movement, he lifted his chin and took it square. Just before he hit the
floor and lost consciousness, he knew he had succeeded. Sleep, in any
form, had to cover his body's ravaging need for food and water.
They had not been able to get to him with talk of his family. He knew
better than to think his family would be any safer if he talked. If
they really knew where his wife and child were, they could easily
already be dead. He had despaired of his own life by now too. As long
as he would wake up in heaven, there was no sense in giving up a thing.
The power to maintain silence had not come from within, but from
without. He had, at long last, surrendered to God even whatever
resources he thought he had. He came to on the cold floor in a corner
with no idea of the passage of time, only that his middle was racked
with hunger, his throat desiccated.
His captors argued. "Do you want him dead? You get us killed if we lose
him. Give him some water. Enough to keep him alive anyway."
A few drops on his lips felt like a fresh spring, but he forced himself
not to drink it in for fear they would think it was enough to satisfy
him. He let most of it dribble until they quit being stingy with the
bottle. He grasped the neck of it with his teeth and sucked as hard as
he could, filling himself with enough to refresh him before they
twisted it away. Then they pulled him back to the chair and resumed.
----------
Abdullah landed at what was left of the airport at Larnaca on Cyprus
midmorning. Albie's contact had recommended it as one of the least
patrolled airstrips in the United Carpathian States. He proved dead-on.
And he was waiting with a craft, appropriated by Chang's computer
magic, that Mac would fly to Greece and land at an abandoned strip
Chang had located some eighty miles west of Ptolemais. He had forged an
order to a local GC operative, requiring him to deliver six Peacekeeper
vehicles to an earthquake-damaged vacant lot a half mile from there.
The memo came back to the bogus New Babylon commander: "You're out of
your mind. Best I can do is one."
"Watch your tone," Chang's imaginary brass had answered. "One will do
for now."
Rayford had not begun to seriously worry until he saw the stress on
Chloe's face as they parted in Cyprus. Of course, it wouldn't have been
natural if she wasn't scared. He wanted her on edge. But the
open-endedness of their mission concerned him most. She and Hannah and
Mac would fly in there, drive toward Ptolemais, and what? Start asking
around and trust their GC identities? It sounded like suicide, but
there was no way they would abandon George Sebastian as long as there
was a chance he was still alive.
Rayford embraced her fiercely before she disembarked, wondering, his
throat constricted, whether he would see her again. Chloe held on the
way she had with Buck and Kenny in Chicago, and when finally she turned
to go, Rayford feared he had not said enough. In fact, he had said
nothing.
Toward Amman, Albie's friend took over the flying. As far as anyone
knew, he was alone. Once he was in and down and hangared, Tsion,
Rayford, and Abdullah would emerge from the plane and walk across the
runway to the tarmac, as if appearing from nowhere. When accosted, as
they would surely be, Tsion would ask to talk directly with Carpathia,
offering hope for an end to the blood in the oceans if he and his two
anonymous companions could borrow a helicopter for the trip to Petra.
All Rayford could think of was that the last non-Israeli he had sent
into Petra had not come out. And yet he and his Operation Eagle forces
had proved invulnerable to the attack of Carpathia's army. Whether it
had to do with timing or location, he could not know. He just didn't
want to jeopardize Abdullah's life, or his own, if he could help it.
But he couldn't. The risk was there, and they were going.
----------
Chang furtively monitored Suhail Akbar's and Nicolae's offices as he
sat at his terminal. With the heat turned up and security forces
combing the place for a mole, he had to be more careful than ever. He
kept an eye on Figueroa's office and constantly covered his tracks.
Finally pay dirt.
Director Akbar's secretary informed him that GC Security in Amman was
calling, ostensibly with Tsion Ben-Judah on the line for Carpathia.
"Put them on," Suhail said. When they were patched through, he insisted
on talking with Ben-Judah personally. "How do I know it's really you?"
"You do not, sir," Tsion said. "Except that your own people are telling
you it is 1.1 have a request of Carpathia and will ask it only of him."
"You would be wise to address him appropriately and formally, Dr.
Ben-Judah."
"And then he will overlook the fact that I refer to him daily to a
billion people as Antichrist, the enemy of God, and to Fortunate as his
False Prophet?"
"Hold on."
Suhail told his secretary to give him time to get to Carpathia's office
and to then transfer the call there. Two minutes later, Akbar sat
panting in Nicolae's office when he hit the speaker button.
"Dr. Ben-Judah!" Nicolae began, as if to an old friend.
"I am requesting helicopter transport to Petra for myself and two
associates without interference, in exchange for considering asking God
to withdraw the plague of the seas having turned to blood."
"And why should I contemplate this?"
"You do not need me to tell you that. Surely your people are telling
you that there has never been a time of greater resistance to you
around the world. Renaming all of the oceans the Red Sea could not be
in your best interest."
"If I have someone ferry you to Petra, the seas will return to water?"
"I do not speak on God's behalf. I said I would consider asking him."
"You would only consider it?"
"I will ask. He will consider it."
"Granted."
"But we need only the aircraft. Not a pilot."
"Real-ly. Granted."
Tsion hung up. Carpathia said, "You are welcome. Suhail, how long to
Petra from Amman by helicopter?"
"I will see to it that they are issued one that will get them there in
no more than an hour."
"And everything else is in place?"
"Of course."
"I want the area leveled within minutes after his arrival and the
missile to make sure within moments after that."
"I will merely give my fighter-bombers time to get out of the way. They
will make visual confirmation that he is there, drop their payloads,
clear the area, and we will launch."
"From?"
"Ironically enough, Amman."
"Excellent. And the planes are equipped with videodisc recording
devices?"
"Of course, but not only that."
"Something more?"
"We have arranged for you to watch live.'
"Do not tease."
"A monitor will be in your office."
"Ooh! Oh, Suhail! Something to enjoy."
----------
Had Rayford not been petrified, he might have enjoyed that Tsion looked
the same in the Jordan sun as he did around the Strong Building. It was
Abdullah and Rayford who looked like Middle Easterners in their robes.
Tsion looked more like a rumpled professor.
"Who is your pilot?" a GC guard asked.
Tsion nodded to Abdullah, and they were led to a chopper. Once in the
air, Rayford called Chloe. "Where are you?" he said.
"We're on the road, Dad, but something's not right. Mac had to hot-wire
this vehicle."
"Chang didn't tell the guy to leave the keys?"
"Apparently not. And of course you know Mac. He's going to hop out and
thumb a ride with some other GC while we drive merrily into town,
trying to pass ourselves off as assignees from New Babylon to check on
the Judah-ite raids."
"You ready?"
"Am I ready? Why didn't you make me stay in Chicago with my family?
What kind of a father are you?"
He knew she was kidding, but he couldn't muster a chuckle. "Don't make
me wish I had."
"Don't worry, Dad. We're not coming out of here without Sebastian."
----------
When Abdullah came within sight of Petra, Chaim was in the high place
with a quarter million people inside and another three-quarter million
round about the place, waving to the helicopter. A large flat spot had
been prepared, but the people covered their faces when the craft kicked
up a cloud of dust. The shutting down of the engine and the dissipating
of the dust were met with applause and a cheer as Tsion stepped out and
waved shyly.
Chaim announced, "Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah, our teacher and mentor and man
of God!"
Rayford and Abdullah climbed down unnoticed and sat on a nearby ledge.
Tsion quieted the crowd and began: "My dear brothers and sisters in
Christ, our Messiah and Savior and Lord. Allow me to first fulfill a
promise made to friends and scatter here the ashes of a martyr for the
faith."
He pulled from his pocket the tiny urn and removed the lid, shaking the
contents into the wind. "She defeated him by the blood of the Lamb and
by her testimony, for she did not love her life but laid it down for
him."
Abdullah nudged Rayford and looked up. In the distance came a screaming
pair of fighter-bombers. Within seconds the people noticed them too and
began to murmur.
----------
In New Babylon Chang hunched over his computer, watching what Carpathia
saw transmitted from the cockpit of one of the bombers. Chang layered
the audio from the plane with the bug in Carpathia's office. It became
clear that Leon, Viv, Suhail, and Carpathia's secretary had gathered
around the monitor in the potentate's office.
"Target locked, armed," one pilot said. The other repeated him.
"Here we go!" Nicolae said, his voice high-pitched. "Here we go!"
----------
Tsion held out his hands. "Do not be distracted, beloved, for we rest
in the sure promises of the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob that we
have been delivered to this place of refuge that cannot be penetrated
by the enemy of his Son." He had to wait out the roar of the jets as
they passed over them and banked in the distance.
----------
"Yes!" Nicolae squealed. "Show yourselves; then launch upon your
return!"
----------
As the machines of war returned, Tsion said, "Please join me on your
knees, heads bowed, hearts in tune with God, secure in his promise that
the kingdom and dominion, and the greatness of the kingdom under the
whole heaven, shall be given to the people of the saints of the Most
High, whose kingdom is an everlasting kingdom, and all dominions shall
serve and obey him."
Rayford knelt but kept his eyes on the bombers. As they screamed into
range again, they simultaneously dropped payloads headed directly for
the high place, epicenter of a million kneeling souls.
----------
"Yessss!" Carpathia howled. "Yes! Yes! Yes! Yes!'
EPILOGUE
Rejoice, O Heavens! You citizens of
heaven, rejoice! Be glad! But woe
to you people of the world, for the devil has come down to you in great
anger, knowing that he has little time.
Revelation
12:12, TLB
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
Jerry B. Jenkins
(www.jerryjenkins.com) is the writer of the Left Behind series. He is
author of more than one hundred books, of which eleven have reached the
New York Times best-seller list. Former vice president for publishing
for the Moody Bible Institute of Chicago, he also served many years as
editor of Moody magazine and is now Moody's writer-at-large.
His writing has appeared in publications as varied as Reader's Digest,
Parade, in-flight magazines, and many Christian periodicals. He has
written books in four genres: biography, marriage and family, fiction
for children, and fiction for adults.
Jenkins's biographies include books with Hank Aaron, Bill Gaither, Luis
Palau, Walter Payton, Orel Hershiser, Nolan Ryan, Brett Butler, and
Billy Graham, among many others.
Eight of his apocalyptic novels-Left Behind, Tribulation Force,
Nicolae, Soul Harvest, Apollyon, Assassins, The Indwelling, and The
Mark-have appeared on the Christian Booksellers Association's
best-selling fiction list and the Publishers Weekly religion
best-seller list. Left Behind was nominated for Book of the Year by the
Evangelical Christian Publishers Association in 1997, 1998, 1999, and
2000. The Indwelling was number one on the New York Times best-seller
list for four consecutive weeks.
As a marriage and family author and speaker, Jenkins has been a
frequent guest on Dr. James Dobson's Focus on the Family radio program.
Jerry is also the writer of the nationally syndicated sports story
comic strip Gil Thorp, distributed to newspapers across the United
States by Tribune Media Services.
Jerry and his wife, Dianna, live in Colorado.
Dr. Tim LaHaye
(www.timlahaye.com), who conceived the idea of
fictionalizing an account of the Rapture and the Tribulation, is a
noted author, minister, and nationally recognized speaker on Bible
prophecy. He is the founder of both Tim LaHaye Ministries and The
Pre-Trib Research Center. Presently Dr. LaHaye speaks at many of the
major Bible prophecy conferences in the U.S. and Canada, where his nine
current prophecy books are very popular.
Dr. LaHaye holds a doctor of ministry degree from Western Theological
Seminary and a doctor of literature degree from Liberty University. For
twenty-five years he pastored one of the nation's outstanding churches
in San Diego, which grew to three locations. It was during that time
that he founded two accredited Christian high schools, a Christian
school system of ten schools, and Christian Heritage College.
Dr. LaHaye has written over forty books, with over 30 million copies in
print in thirty-three languages. He has written books on a wide variety
of subjects, such as family life, temperaments, and Bible prophecy. His
current fiction works, written with Jerry B. Jenkins- Left Behind,
Tribulation Force, Nicolae, Soul Harvest, Apollyon, Assassins, The
Indwelling, and The Mark- have all reached number one on the Christian
best-seller charts. Other works by Dr. LaHaye are Perhaps Today;
Spirit-Controlled Temperament; How to Be Happy Though Married;
Revelation Unveiled; Understanding the Last Days; Rapture under Attack;
Are We Living in the End Times?; and the youth fiction series Left
Behind: The Kids.
He is the father of four grown children and grandfather of nine. Snow
skiing, waterskiing, motorcycling, golfing, vacationing with family,
and jogging are among his leisure activities.