ARMAGEDDON
Tim
LaHaye
Jerry B. Jenkins
SIX
YEARS INTO THE TRIBULATION;
TWO AND ONE-HALF YEARS INTO THE GREAT
TRIBULATION
The Believer's
Rayford Steele, late 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 in
exile, Petra
Cameron ("Buck") Williams,
mid-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 in exile, San Diego
Chloe Steele Williams,
mid-twenties; former student, Stanford University; lost mother and
brother in the Rapture; daughter
of Rayford; wife of Buck; mother of
three-and-a-half-year-old Kenny Bruce; CEO of International Commodity
Co-op, an underground network of believers; original Trib Force member;
fugitive in exile, San Diego
George Sebastian, late
twenties; former San Diego-based U.S. Air Force combat helicopter
pilot; underground with Trib Force and Co-op, San Diego
Ming Toy, mid-twenties; widow;
former guard at the Belgium Facility for Female Rehabilitation
(Buffer); AWOL from the GC; underground in San Diego
Ree Woo, mid-twenties; pilot
for Co-op; underground in San Diego
Tsion Ben-Judah, early fifties;
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.; former spiritual leader and
teacher of the Trib Force, now teaching the Jewish remnant at Petra;
cyberaudience of more than a billion daily
Dr. Chaim Rosenzweig, early
seventies; Nobel Prize-winning Israeli botanist and statesman; former
Global Weekly Newsmaker of the Year; murderer of Carpathia; leading the
Jewish remnant at Petra
Abdullah Smith, mid-thirties;
former Jordanian fighter pilot; former first officer, Phoenix 216;
presumed dead in plane crash; on assignment at Petra
Al B. (aka "Albie"), early
fifties; native of Al Basrah, north of Kuwait; pilot; former
international black marketer; now member of Trib Force; underground in
Al Basrah
Mac McCullum, early sixties;
former pilot for Carpathia; presumed dead in plane crash; underground
in Al Basrah
Hannah Palemoon, early
thirties; former GC nurse; presumed dead in plane crash; underground in
Long Grove, Illinois
Leah Rose, early forties;
former head nurse, Arthur Young Memorial Hospital, Palatine, Illinois;
under-ground in Long Grove, Illinois
Lionel Whalum, late forties;
former businessman; Co-op pilot; underground in Long Grove, Illinois
Chang Wong, twenty; Ming Toy's
brother; Trib Force's mole at Global Community Headquarters, New Babylon
Gustaf Zuckermandel Jr. (aka
"Zeke" or "Z"), mid-twenties; document and appearance forger; lost
father to guillotine; underground in Avery, Wisconsin
The E n e m i e s
Nicolae Jetty Carpathia, late
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
Leon Fortunato, mid-fifties;
former supreme commander and Carpathia's right hand; now Most High
Reverend Father of Carpathianism, proclaiming the potentate as the
risen god; GC Palace, New Babylon
Viv Ivins, late sixties;
lifelong friend of Carpathia; GC operative; GC Palace, New Babylon
Suhail Akbar, mid-forties;
Carpathia's chief of Security and Intelligence; GC Palace, New Babylon
PROLOGUE
From The Remnant
"FOR THE FIRST time in a long time," Nicolae Carpathia said, "we play
on an even field. The waterways are heal-ing themselves, and we have
rebuilding to do in the infra-structure. Let us work at getting all our
loyal citizens back onto the same page with us. Director Akbar and I
have some special surprises in store for dissidents on various levels.
We are back in business, people. It is time to recoup our losses and
start delivering a few."
The new mood lasted three days. Then the lights went out. Literally.
Everything went dark. Not just the sun, but the moon also, the stars,
street lamps, electric lights, car lights. Anything anywhere that ever
emitted light was now dark. No keypads on telephones, no flashlights,
nothing iridescent, nothing glow-in-the-dark. Emergency lights, exit
signs, fire signs, alarm signs-everything. Pitch-black.
The cliche of not being able to see one's hand in front of one's face?
Now true. It mattered not what time of day it was; people could see
nothing. Not their clocks, watches, not even fire, matches, gas grills,
electric grills. It was as if the light had done worse than go out; any
vestige of it had been sucked from the universe.
People screamed in terror, finding this the worst nightmare of their
lives-and they had many to choose from. They were blind-completely,
utterly, totally, wholly unable to see anything but blackness
twenty-four hours a day.
They felt their way around the palace; they pushed their way outdoors.
They tried every light and every switch they could remember. They
called out to each other to see if it was just them, or if everyone had
the same problem. Find a candle! Rub two sticks together! Shuffle on
the carpet and create static electricity. Do anything. Anything!
Something to allow some vestige of a shadow, a hint, a sliver.
All to no avail.
Chang wanted to laugh. He wanted to howl from his gut. He wished he
could tell everyone everywhere that once again God had meted out a
curse, a judgment upon the earth that affected only those who bore the
mark of the beast. Chang could see. It was different. He didn't see
lights either. He simply saw everything in sepia tone, as if someone
had turned down the wattage on a chandelier.
He saw whatever he needed to, including his computer and screen and
watch and quarters. His food, his sink, his stove-everything. Best of
all, he could tiptoe around the palace in his rubber-soled shoes,
weaving between his coworkers as they felt their way along.
Within hours, though, something even stranger hap-pened. People were
not starving or dying of thirst. They were able to feel their way to
food and drink. But they could not work. There was nothing to discuss,
nothing to talk about but the cursed darkness. And for some rea-son,
they also began to feel pain.
They itched and so they scratched. They ached and so they rubbed. They
cried out and scratched and rubbed some more. For many the pain grew so
intense that all they could do was bend down and feel the ground to
make sure there was no hole or stairwell to fall into and then collapse
in a heap, writhing, scratching, seeking relief.
The longer it went, the worse it got, and now people swore and cursed
God and chewed their tongues. They crawled about the corridors, looking
for weapons, plead-ing with friends or even strangers to kill them.
Many killed themselves. The entire complex became an asylum of screams
and moans and guttural wails, as these people became convinced that
this, finally, was it-the end of the world.
But no such luck. Unless they had the wherewithal, the guts, to do
themselves in, they merely suffered. Worse by the hour. Increasingly
bad by the day. This went on and on and on. And in the middle of it,
Chang came up with the most brilliant idea of his life.
If ever there was a perfect time for him to escape, it was now. He
would contact Rayford or Mac, anyone willing and able and available to
come and get him. It had to be that the rest of the Tribulation
Force-in fact, all of the sealed and marked believers in the world-had
the same benefit he did.
Someone would be able to fly a jet and land it right there in New
Babylon, and GC personnel would have to run for cover, having no idea
who could do such a thing in the utter darkness. As long as no one
spoke, they could not be identified. The Force could commandeer planes
and weapons, whatever they wanted.
If anyone accosted them or challenged them, what better advantage could
the Trib Force have than that they could see? They would have the drop
on everyone and everybody. With but a year to go until the Glorious
Appearing, Chang thought, the good guys finally had even a better deal
than they had when the daylight hours belonged solely to them.
Now, for as long as God tarried, for as long as he saw fit to keep the
shades pulled down and the lights off, everything was in the believers'
favor.
"God," Chang said, "just give me a couple more days of this."
ONE
FOR THE FIRST TIME since takeoff, Rayford Steele had second thoughts
about his and Abdullah Smith's passenger. "We shouldn't have brought
her, Smitty," he said. He stole a glance at Abdullah behind the
controls.
The Jordanian shook his head. "That's on you, Cap-tain, I am sorry to
say. I tried to tell you how important she was to Petra."
The darkness enveloping only New Babylon, but visible from more than a
hundred miles, was unlike anything Rayford had ever seen. By the time
Abdullah initiated the descent of the Gulfstream IX toward Iraq, the
clock read 1200 hours, Palace Time.
Normally the magnificent structures of the new world capital gleamed
stunningly in the noonday sun. Now a stark and isolated column of
blackness rose from New Babylon's expansive borders into the cloudless
heavens as high as the eye could see.
Chang Wong was Rayford's mole inside the palace. Trusting the young
man's assurances that they would be able to see where others could not,
Rayford traded glances with Abdullah as he guided the craft into the
dark from the whiteness reflecting off the desert sand. Abdullah
flipped on his landing lights.
Rayford squinted. "Do we need an ILS approach?"
"Instrument landing system?" Abdullah said. "Don't think so, Captain. I
can see enough to fly."
Rayford compared the freakish darkness to the beau-tiful day they had
left in Petra. He peeked over his shoulder at the young woman, whom he
expected to look afraid. She didn't. "We can still turn back," he said.
"Your father looked reluctant when we boarded."
"That was probably for your benefit," Naomi Tiberias said. "He knows
I'll be fine."
The teenage computer whiz's humor and self-confidence were legendary.
She seemed shy and self-conscious around adults until she got to know
them; then she interacted like a peer. Rayford knew she had brought
Abdullah up to speed in computer savvy, and she had been in nearly
constant touch with Chang since the lights went out in New Babylon.
"Why is it dark only here?" Naomi said. "It's so strange."
"I don't know," Rayford said. "The prophecy says it affects `the throne
of the beast, and his kingdom became full of darkness.' That's all we
know."
Rayford's every visit to Petra had found Naomi grow-ing in influence
and responsibility among the Remnant. She had emerged early as a
technological prodigy, and as she taught others, Naomi had become the
de facto head of the vast computer center. Quickly rising from go-to
person to the one in charge, she'd finally become the teacher who
taught teachers.
The center that had been designed by Chang's pre-decessor, the late
David Hassid, was now the hub that kept Petra in touch with more than a
billion souls every day. Thousands of computers allowed that many
men-tors to keep up with Tsion Ben-Judah's universal cyber-audience.
Naomi personally coordinated the contact between Chang in New Babylon
and the Tribulation Force around the world.
Having her join the flight to rescue him from New Babylon had been
Chang's idea. Rayford had initially rejected it. He had enough trouble
assigning himself the task of traveling more than seventy-five hundred
miles from San Diego to Petra, then having Abdullah fly him the last
five hundred miles to New Babylon. Combat-trained George Sebastian was
better suited, but Rayford thought the big man had been through enough
for a while. There was plenty for him to do in San Diego, and anyway,
Rayford wanted to save George for what Dr. Ben-Judah called the "battle
of that great day of God Almighty," now less than a year off.
Mac McCullum and Albie, stationed in Al Basrah-little more than two
hundred miles south of New Bab-ylon-stood ready. But Rayford had other
things in mind for them.
Rayford's son-in-law and daughter, Buck and Chloe Williams, both wanted
in on the extraction of Chang from the enemy lair-no surprise-but
Rayford was convinced Buck would soon be more valuable in Israel. As
for Chloe, the International Commodity Co-op always suffered when she
was away. And somebody had to be there for little Kenny.
"Store and grab all the equipment you need while I'm en route, Chang,"
Rayford had said, the phone tucked between his shoulder and ear as he
packed. "Smitty and I will come get you in a couple of days."
Chang had explained that the job was too big and that he and Naomi
working together could get him out of there that much faster. "I don't
want to miss a thing. She can help. I want to be able to monitor this
place from anywhere."
"Don't worry," Rayford said. "You'll get to see her face-to-face soon
enough."
"I don't know what you're talking about."
"Her father is one of the Petra elders, you know."
"So?"
"Only the two of them are left in the family. He's very protective."
"We both have too much work to do."
"Uh-huh."
"I'm not kidding, Captain Steele. Please bring her along. It's not like
I haven't seen her on-screen already."
"So, what do you think?"
"I told you. We have a lot of work to do."
-----
Rayford felt a tug on the back of his copilot's chair as Naomi pulled
herself forward. "Can Mr. Smith see to land?"
"Not sure yet," Rayford said. "It's as if someone painted our windows
brown. See if you can raise our boy."
Chang was to be sure the New Babylon runways were clear, but he
couldn't talk by phone from there for fear someone would overhear.
Naomi pulled a small, thin computer from an aluminum box and attacked
the keys.
"Avoid runways 3 left and 3 right," she said. "And he wants to know
which you choose so he can be there to meet us."
Rayford glanced at Abdullah. "He's serious, Naomi)"
She nodded.
"Tell him the tower is closed, and it's not like we were going to
announce our arrival anyway. We can't see which runway is which from up
here, so he's going to have to give us coordinates and-"
"Hold on," Naomi said, keyboarding again. "He's attached everything you
need." She passed the machine to Rayford and pointed at the attachment.
"It is voice activated. Just tell it what you want."
"It'll recognize my voice?" Rayford said, studying the screen.
"Yes," the computer intoned.
Naomi chuckled.
"Attachment, please," Rayford said.
A detailed grid appeared with an aerial view of the New Babylon
airfield.
"I'll set the coordinates for you, Smitty," Rayford said, reaching to
program the flight management system.
"This thing will do everything but cook a meal for you, Captain
Steele," Naomi said. "You have an infrared port?"
"I assume. Do we, Smitty?"
Abdullah pointed to a spot on the control panel.
"Here," Naomi said. "Let me." She leaned over Rayford's shoulder and
pointed the back of the computer at the port. "Ready to land, Captain?"
she said.
"Roger."
"Initiate landing sequence," she said and hit a button.
"Runway choice?" the computer asked.
Naomi looked at Rayford, who looked to Abdullah. "Does that thing
recognize even my accent?" the Jordanian said.
"Yes," the computer said. "Congestion on runways 3 left and 3 right.
Please select from runways 11 or 16."
"Eleven," Abdullah said.
"Left or right?" the computer said.
"Left," Abdullah said. "Why not?"
Abdullah engaged the left autopilot and lifted his hands from the
controls. "Thank you," he said.
"You're welcome," the computer said.
Six minutes later the Gulfstream touched down.
-----
At just after one o'clock in the morning in San Diego, Buck bolted
upright in bed.
Chloe stirred. "Go back to sleep, hon," she said. "You stood watch
three straight nights. Not tonight."
He held up a hand.
"You need your sleep, Buck."
"Thought I heard something."
The tiny walkie-talkie on the nightstand chirped. Sebastian's telltale
code. Buck grabbed it. "Yeah, George."
"Motion detector," Sebastian whispered.
Now Chloe sat up too.
"I'll check the periscope," Buck said.
"Carefully," Sebastian said. "Don't raise or rotate it."
"Roger. Anybody else aware?"
"Negative."
"On it."
Chloe was already out of bed and had pulled on a sweatshirt. She
unlocked a cabinet, removed two Uzis, and tossed one to Buck as he
headed for the periscope next to Kenny's tiny chamber. He set the
weapon on the floor, dropped the walkie-talkie into his pajama
pocket, and bent to peer into the viewer. As his eyes adjusted to
the darkness he was aware of Chloe opening and closing Kenny's door.
Going on four years old, Kenny slept longer but less soundly than he
used to.
"He out?" Buck said, eyes still glued to the scope.
"Dead to the world," Chloe said, draping a sweater around Buck's
shoulders. "As you should be."
"Wish I was," Buck said.
"I should think so." She rested her palms on his shoulders. "What do
you see?"
"Nothing. George doesn't think I ought to rotate the scope. It's facing
west at ground level. I'd love to elevate it about six inches and let
it give me a three-sixty."
"He's right, babe," she said. "You know it's got that whine when it
moves. Anybody out there could hear it."
"I don't think anybody is out there," Buck said, pull-ing away and
rubbing his eyes.
She sighed. "Want a chair?"
He nodded and returned to the periscope. "Could have been an animal.
Maybe the wind."
Chloe pressed a chair behind his knees and guided him into it. "That's
why you should just let me-"
"Oh no," he said.
"What?"
He put a finger to his lips and pulled out the walkie--talkie.
"George," he whispered. "Six, seven, eight, nine. Nine uniformed, armed
GC directly above to the west."
"Doing?"
"Not much. Kicking at the vents. They look bored. Maybe something
caught their eye on the way by."
"Vehicles?"
"I'd have to raise or rotate."
"Negative. Any more?"
"Can't tell from this angle. No more coming past. Only three left in
sight now."
"Listen for engines."
Buck sat silent a moment. Then, "Yeah, there's one. And another."
"I hear 'em," George said. "Must be leaving. Can I come over?"
"Tell him no," Chloe whispered.
-----
What palace personnel Rayford could make out in the eerie sepia-toned
landscape through the cockpit window appeared to be in agony. Chang had
told him that the people writhed and moaned, but a jet screaming onto
the runway also clearly terrified them. They had to think it was about
to crash, as some had on runways 3 left and 3 right.
It was as if the people had given up trying to see. Any-one near the
Gulfstream IX had stumbled in the darkness to get away from it, and now
they huddled here and there.
"That has to be Chang," Rayford said, pointing to a slight Asian
hurrying toward them and gesturing wildly to open the door.
"Let me get that, Miss Naomi," Abdullah said, unstrapping himself and
climbing past her. As he pushed the door open and lowered the steps,
Rayford saw Chang turn to a small group of men and women in dark
jumpsuits feeling their way along behind him.
"Keep your distance!" he shouted. "Danger! Hot engines! Leaking fuel!"
They turned and hurried away in all directions. "How did it land?"
someone shouted.
"It's a miracle," another said.
"Did you all remember rubber-soled shoes?" Chang said, reaching to help
them off the plane.
"Nice to meet you too, Mr. Wong," Abdullah said.
Chang shushed him. "They're blind," he whispered. "Not deaf."
"Chang," Rayford began, but the boy was shyly greet-ing Naomi. "All
right, you two, get acquainted back at the ranch. Let's do what we have
to and get out of here."
-----
"Should I change?" Buck said when he saw Sebastian in fatigues.
"Nah. I always wear these on watch. Let me have a look." He peered
through the periscope. "Nothing. Want to raise and rotate it, Buck?"
"Be my guest."
"Clear. False alarm."
Chloe snorted. "Don't be saying that to put me at ease. At least nine
GC were out there, and for all we know there were more, and they'll be
back."
"Hey," Sebastian said, "why not assume the best and not the worst?"
"Maybe I am," she said. "Priscilla and Beth Ann sleep through this?"
He nodded. "I might not even tell Priss, so I'd appreci-ate it-"
"If I didn't either? Makes sense, George. Let the little woman carry
on, oblivious to the fact that it's time to move," said Chloe.
"Move?" Buck said. "I can't even imagine it."
"Then we sit here and wait till they find us, which they may already
have?"
"Chloe, listen," Buck said. "I should have let you take a look at those
guys. They weren't even suspicious. They were probably talking about
how this used to be a military base. They weren't tense, weren't really
looking. They just saw the vents and checked them out, that's all."
Chloe shook her head and slumped in a chair. "I hate living like this."
"Me too," Sebastian said. "But what're our options? GC found an enclave
of people without the mark yester-day in what's left of LA. Executed
more'n two dozen."
Chloe gasped. "Believers?"
"Don't think so. Usually they'll say if it's Judah-ites. I got the
impression it was some militia holdouts, some-thing like that."
"Those are the people we're trying to reach," Chloe said. "And here we
all sit, unable to show our faces, raising babies who hardly ever see
the sun. Isn't there some-where in the middle of nowhere where the GC
wouldn't even know we were around?"
"The next best thing is Petra," Buck said. "They know who's there, but
they can't do a thing about it."
"That's starting to sound more attractive all the time. Anyway, what
are we going to do about what just hap-pened?"
Buck and Sebastian looked at each other.
"Come on, guys," Chloe said. "You think Priscilla doesn't know you're
gone and isn't going to ask where you've been?"
"She knows I was on watch."
"But you don't come over here unless something's up."
"I'm hoping she slept through it."
Chloe stood and moved to Buck's lap. "Look, I'm not trying to be
cantankerous. Buck, tell him."
"Chloe Steele Williams is not trying to be cantanker-ous," he announced.
"Good," Sebastian muttered. "Coulda fooled me."
Chloe shook her head. "George, please. You know I think you're one of
the best things that's ever happened to the Trib Force. You bring gifts
nobody else has, and you've kept us from disaster more than once. But
every-one living here deserves to know what you guys saw tonight. Not
telling people, pretending it didn't happen, isn't going to change that
we came this close to being found out."
"But we didn't, Chloe," Sebastian said. "Why stir up everybody?"
"We're already stirred up! I'm with these wives and kids all day. Even
without bands of GC nosing around right over our heads in the middle of
the night, we live like prairie dogs. The kids get fresh air only if
they happen to wake up before the sun and someone herds them out the
vehicle bay door. You guys have to sneak around and drive thirty miles,
hoping you're not followed, to get to your planes. All I'm saying is
that if we're going to have to defend ourselves, we have a right to be
prepared."
-----
Rayford would have to ask Tsion about this one. What was it about the
darkness that was so oppressive it left victims in agony? He had heard
of disaster scenes-train wrecks, earthquakes, battles-where what
haunted the rescue workers for years had been the shrieks and moans of
the injured. As he and Abdullah and the two young people tiptoed across
the massive runways, around heavy equipment and between writhing
personnel, it was clear these people would rather be dead. And some had
already died. Two crashed planes lay in pieces, still smol-dering, many
charred bodies still in their seats.
As he moved from the dead to the suffering, Rayford was overcome. The
wailing pierced him and he slowed, desperate to help. But what could he
do?
"Oh! Someone!" It was the shriek of a middle-aged woman. "Anyone,
please! Help me!"
Rayford stopped and stared. She lay on her side on the tarmac near the
terminal. Others shushed her. A man cried out, "We are all lost and
blind, woman! You don't need more help than we do!"
"I'm starving!" she whined. "Does anyone have anything?"
"We're all starving! Shut up!"
"I don't want to die."
"I do!"
"Where is the potentate? He will save us!"
"When was the last time you saw the potentate? He has his own concerns."
Rayford was unable to pull away. He looked ahead, but even he had but
twenty feet of visibility, and he had lost the others. Here came
Abdullah. "I dare not call you by name, Captain, but you must come."
"Comrade, I cannot."
"Can you make it back to the plane?"
"Yes."
"Then we will meet you there."
Abdullah was off again, but their muffled conversation had caused a
lull in the cacophony of agony. Now someone called out, "Who is that?"
"Where is he going?"
"Who has a plane?"
"Can you see?"
"What can you see?"
The woman again: "Oh, God, save me. Now I lay me down to sleep-"
"Shut up over there!"
"God is great; God is good. Now I thank him-" "Put a sock in it! If you
can't produce light, shut your mouth!"
"God! Oh, God! Save me!"
Rayford knelt and touched the woman's shoulder. She wrenched away with
a squeal. "Wait!" he said, reaching for her again.
"Oh! The pain!"
"I don't mean to hurt you," he said quietly.
"Who are you?" she groaned, and he saw the United European States'
number 6 tattooed on her forehead. "An angel?"
"No."
"I prayed for an angel."
"You prayed?"
"Promise you'll tell no one, sir. I'm begging you."
"You prayed to God?"
"Yes!"
"But you bear Carpathia's mark."
"I despise that mark! I know the truth. I always have.
I just didn't want to have anything to do with it."
"God loved you."
"I know, but it's too late."
"Why didn't you ask his forgiveness and accept his gift? He wanted to
save you."
She sobbed. "How can you be here and say that?"
"I am not from here."
"You are my angel!"
"No, but I am a believer."
"And you can see?"
"Enough to get around."
"Oh, sir, take me to food! Get me inside the terminal to the snack
machines. Please!"
Rayford tried to help her up, but she reacted as if her body were
afire. "Please, don't touch me!"
"I'm sorry."
"Just let me hold your sleeve. Can you see the terminal?"
"Barely," he said. "I can get you there."
"Please, sir." She struggled to her feet and gingerly clasped the cuff
of his sleeve between her thumb and forefinger. "Slowly, please." She
mince-stepped behind Rayford. "How far?" she said.
"Not a hundred yards."
"I don't know if I can make it," she said, tears streaming.
"Let me go get you something," he said. "What would you like?"
"Anything," she said. "A sandwich, candy, water---anything."
"Wait right here."
She chuckled pitifully. "Sir, all I see is black. I could go nowhere."
"I'll be right back. I'll find you."
"I've been praying that God will save my soul. And when he does, I will
be able to see."
Rayford didn't know what to say.
She had said herself it was too late. "In the beginning," she said.
"For God so loved the world. The Lord is my shepherd.
Oh, God. .."
Rayford jogged toward the terminal, stepping between ailing people. He
wanted to help them all, but he knew he could not. A man lay across the
inside of the auto-matic door, not moving. Rayford stepped close enough
to trip the electric eye, and the door opened a few inches and bumped
the man.
"Please move away from the door," Rayford said. The man was asleep or
dead.
Rayford pushed harder, but the door barely budged. Finally he lowered
his shoulder and put his weight behind it. He bent and drove with his
legs, feeling the pressure on his quads as the door slowly rolled the
man away. Rayford heard him groan.
Inside, Rayford found a bank of vending machines, but as he reached in
his pocket for Nick coins, he saw that the machines had been trashed.
Enough people had felt their way here to tear the machines open and
loot them for every last vestige of food. Rayford searched and searched
for something, anything, they had missed. All he found were empty
bottles and cans and wrappers.
"Who goes there?" someone demanded. "Where are you going? Can you see?
Is there light anywhere? What has happened? Are we all going to die?
Where is the potentate?"
Rayford hurried back outside. "Where're you going?" someone shouted.
"Take me with you!"
He found the woman on her stomach, face buried in her arms. She was
wracked with sobs so deep and mournful he could barely stand to watch.
"I'm back, ma'am," he said quietly. "No food. I'm sorry."
"Oh, God, oh, God and Jesus, help me!"
"Ma'am," he said, reaching for her. She shrieked when he touched her,
but he pulled at the sides of her head until he could see her hollow,
unseeing, terrified eyes.
"I knew before everybody disappeared," she said piti-fully. "And then I
knew for sure. With every plague and judgment,
I shook my fist in God's face. He tried to reach me, but I had my own
life. I wasn't going to be subservient to anybody.
"But I've always been afraid of the dark, and my worst nightmare is
starving. I've changed my mind, want to take it all back...."
"But you can't."
"I can't! I can't! I waited too long!"
Rayford knew the prophecy-that people would reject God enough times
that God would harden their hearts and they wouldn't be able to choose
him even if they wanted to. But knowing it didn't mean Rayford
under-stood it. And it certainly didn't mean he had to like it. He
couldn't make it compute with the God he knew, the loving and merciful
one who seemed to look for ways to welcome everyone into heaven, not
keep them out.
Rayford stood and felt the blood rush from his head. And that's when he
heard the loudspeakers.
"This is your potentate!" came the booming voice. "Be of good cheer.
Have no fear. Your torment is nearly past. Follow the sound of my voice
to the nearest loud-speaker tower. Food and water will be delivered
there, along with further instructions."
-----
"I'll make a deal with you," Chloe said. "I'll take over the rest of
the watch, and you agree that we tell every-body in the morning that we
had visitors tonight."
Buck looked to George, who pointed at him. "You're in charge when your
father-in-law is away, pal."
"Only because of seniority. I defer to you on military stuff."
"This isn't combat, man. It's public relations. If you want my advice,
I'd say do what you want but do it right. Tell them, `It's only fair we
tell you people we saw GC around here last night, but as far as we know
there's nothing to be concerned about yet."'
"Fair enough, Chlo'?" Buck said.
She nodded. "I'd rather pray and pass the ammu-nition, but yes. Treat
everybody like adults and you'll get the best out of them."
"If you're really taking watch, Chloe," Sebastian said, "I'm going home
and turning off my walkie-talkie."
"Deal."
TWO
WHOEVER HAD figured out how to rally the panicked souls in New Babylon
thought playing music over the sound system would draw them to the
loudspeaker towers.
So while Nicolae Carpathia's right-hand man,
Leon Fortunato, spoke soothingly-"Tread carefully, loyal subjects. Help
one another. Avoid danger."-a recorded version of "Hail Carpathia,"
sung by the 500-voice Carpathianism Chorale, played in the back-ground:
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.
Rayford hated that song and the infernal penchant of the Global
Community Broadcasting System to play it over the radio at least every
two hours. Carpathia insisted upon its performance at his every public
appearance. The staged parades and rallies in his honor always began
and ended with it.
Something strange was happening here, though. While the people seemed
to rouse and slowly, agonizingly move toward the sound, no one sang
along.
"Remember," Fortunato intoned, his words pinched when he grimaced from
his own pain, "those of us ser-vicing you, bringing you water and food,
are also follow-ing the sound to the right places. Please be patient
and allow pushcarts to pass. There is plenty for everyone if we all
work together. Now, sing along with the chorale. This takes the place
of your worshiping our supreme potentate's image, currently not
visible."
The people around Rayford were not encouraged. "I'm not singing," one
said. "Death to the potentate!"
"Watch your mouth," another said. "You'll get your-self killed."
"Carpathia can't see any more than we can! He doesn't know who's
talking."
"He's no mere mortal. I wouldn't be tempting fate."
"What has he done for you lately?"
Personnel inside the palace had a better time of it, Rayford assumed.
They could at least feel their way to familiar places, including
showers, beds, and refrigera-tors. Many outside couldn't even find
their way back in. Rayford could only imagine the disorientation of
zero light anywhere. It was frustrating enough to have been granted
even diminished vision.
"There are twelve separate loudspeaker towers," Fortunato said, the
music mercifully subdued as he spoke. "When supplies have arrived,
please be as orderly as possible. State your name so our personnel can
record it on audiodisc, and take your ration of food and water."
"We want answers too!" someone shouted as if Fortunato could hear.
"What is this? How long will it last? Why does it hurt?"
-----
Chloe knew what Ming Toy's response to this new dan-ger would be in the
morning. She and Ree Woo would want to marry right away. Everyone but
Chloe had been trying to talk them out of it, but Ming had it all
planned. She wanted Tsion Ben-Judah to officiate from Petra via video
cam. "I know it's a lot to ask of such an important and busy man," she
confided to Chloe. "But I have designed the ceremony to last just a few
minutes."
"I think he'd do it," Chloe had told her. "I would if I were him."
The same people who urged Ming and Ree not to marry, given where things
stood on the prophetic calen-dar, were the ones who had advised against
Chloe and Buck having a child during the Tribulation. But certain
matters were private issues of the heart. Chloe couldn't imagine not
having married Buck, despite knowing how little time they had. And she
couldn't get her mind around the concept of life without their precious
little one.
If Ming and Ree wanted a year of marriage before the Glorious
Appearing, whose business was it but theirs? It wasn't as if they were
unaware of the hardships. Starting a family at this stage was another
thing, of course, but Chloe figured that was none of her business
either, unless Ming asked.
It seemed Buck was asleep again in seconds. She assumed George was
right about his wife sleeping through his leaving their quarters.
Priscilla was one of the busiest people in the compound, always up
before dawn and rarely fully healthy. She often appeared groggy soon
after dinner and was usually in bed by nine.
Chloe was glad to stand watch, if for no other reason than to keep Buck
from having to do it for the fourth night in a row. She enjoyed the
routine-checking the motion detector, surveying the area with the
periscope. Her daily job was hectic and demanding, spent almost
entirely at the computer, contacting and coordinating suppliers and
shippers of supplies and foodstuffs around the globe.
That was also her way of keeping up with the news, only the news kept
getting worse. More and more of her contacts were being found out,
caught by the GC in nighttime raids or at surprise checkpoints. As soon
as it was discovered that these delivery people did not bear the mark
of loyalty to Carpathia, they were executed.
One eyewitness reported that the Co-op driver of an eighteen-wheeler,
laden with copies of Buck's The Truth magazine translated into
Norwegian, refused to let his cargo fall into GC hands. Distracting
checkpoint guards long enough for his backup driver to escape, he set
the rig to roll out of control and plunge down a hundred-foot
embankment into a deep fjord. Morale Monitors shot him to death.
Chloe also heard of dissidents around the world, Jews mostly, who,
rather than being put to death, were trans-ported to concentration
camps where they were merci-lessly tortured while purposely kept alive.
Occasional reports of miraculous interventions came, like an angel
appearing at a guillotine site to warn the uncommitted of the
consequences of choosing Car-pathia's mark. Besides the fact that by
now even the last-minute decision to take the mark was futile-tardy
ones were put to death anyway-the angel had pleaded with the undecideds
to choose Christ and be saved. And many did.
Chloe wrapped an afghan around her shoulders and moseyed to Kenny's
room. His breathing was still deep and slow, and she draped another
blanket over him. He did not stir.
Closing his door, she checked the motion detector, then sat before the
periscope. With no evidence of any-one in the area, she could raise and
rotate it for a full view. She rather liked having the contraption in
the middle of her home. It satisfied some inner need to
protect-control, Buck would have teased-her friends and loved ones, the
more than two hundred who now lived underground in San Diego. All hoped
to survive until the Glorious Appearing, but more than that, to also
somehow make a difference from their claustro-phobic warren.
A unique feature of the periscope was that the viewer did not have to
move when it did. A simple control on the handgrips raised and lowered
the contraption, as well as made it scan in a circle in either
direction. Chloe didn't want to think about the series of mirrors
required for that.
As she rested her forehead on the eyepiece and relaxed, letting her
eyes adjust to the low light outside, she noticed that George Sebastian
had left the scope at ground level and pointing west. The topside lens
was camouflaged with fake shrubbery. It could be raised as much as five
feet, but it was crucial to do a 360-degree scan at ground level first
to be sure no one was in the vicinity who might notice.
The scan could be done all in one smooth motion at virtually any speed,
but of course the San Diego Trib Force had learned that slower was
better and easier on the eyes and equilibrium. Chloe's method of
choice, however, was to move the mechanism one inch at a time. With
each mash of a tiny red plunger on the left-hand grip, another one-inch
turn of the lens brought a new 45-degree view; thus eight moves covered
360 degrees.
Seeing nothing due west, Chloe began her incremental scan to the right.
It was just past three o'clock in the morning in California.
----------
Rayford had walked perhaps a quarter of a mile north from the terminal,
easily slipping past men and women clearly younger than he but who
shuffled along with the painful gait of the elderly.
"In our effort to keep you totally informed," Fortunato announced, "we
bring some encouraging news. While it remains true that no light is
being emitted in New Babylon, this puzzling phenomenon has not affected
telephone or radio transmission. Our heating and cooling systems remain
functional. Your stoves even work, unless they are solar powered.
Electric and gas stoves will still burn and radiate heat, though you
will not see it, so be extremely careful.
"Pilots flying from New Babylon or toward her when this darkness
occurred report that it is confined to the city. As we do not know how
long this will last, be assured that if you can follow a path that
leads you beyond our borders, you will eventually reach light."
From all around, Rayford heard determination on the parts of the
sufferers. "I'm going," one said.
"Me too. I don't know where or how, but I'm getting to the light
somehow."
"Does anyone have a Braille compass? We'll wander in circles without
one."
"Attention," Fortunato broke in again, "all senior command personnel
are to meet in the potentate's office at 1500 hours."
Rayford studied his watch. It's one-fifteen. How are they going to pull
that off by three in the afternoon?
"Use audio clocks," Fortunato said. "It is now 1315 hours. At 1430
hours we shall turn off all loudspeakers except for the ones on the
tower near the west entrance of the palace. Follow the sound there and
you should be able to make your way to the meeting. Elevators are
operational. The bottom right button is the top floor. Attendance is
mandatory but limited to command-level personnel."
"I'm going anyway," someone said.
"So am I. Get to the bottom of this."
"Find out what the deal is."
"He's supposed to be god incarnate; why can't he do something?"
Rayford blinked, then blinked again. In the distance he thought he saw
light. He was getting farther from the plane and from where Chang and
Naomi and Abdullah were, but if worse came to worst, he could follow
command personnel to the palace entrance at two-thirty and find his
people from there. For now, he had to investi-gate the light.
----------
Chloe was four clicks into her intermittent scan now, looking due east.
As she studied the dark landscape she detected a pair of pinpricks of
light. She held her breath as they became larger. Whatever they
represented was drawing closer. Soon it became clear it was a car or
truck. It rolled to within a block of the compound, stopped, and turned
around. Now she saw only the red taillights. And there it sat. For ten
minutes, then another five.
Chloe hurriedly scanned the rest of the way around. Nothing. One more
click and she was back to the east section and the idle vehicle. No way
she was going to wake Buck for this. It wasn't as if those in the
compound expected no traffic outside. But there wasn't much else in the
area, certainly nothing worth stopping for at this time of the night.
Chloe wished the periscope had a telescope feature so she could home in
on the vehicle and see whether anyone was emerging. The compound's
hidden vehicle bay, used only at night when they knew the area was
clear, opened to the east. Dare she head that way for a closer look? An
individual service door, hidden next to the big one, would allow her to
peek out if she kept the inside lights off. She would be a hundred
yards closer. And it wasn't like she was planning to actually venture
outside.
Chloe pulled a black sweat suit with a hood from the closet and put it
on over her pajamas and sweatshirt. Over thick woolen socks she laced
high-top hiking boots. She took the Uzi but not the walkie-talkie. She
didn't want any unintended transmission to give her away. And she did
not intend to get herself into a situation where she'd need to call for
help. The Uzi was just for peace of mind. So was the prayer: "Lord,
help me or forgive me, one of the two."
Chloe quietly opened Kenny's door yet again. He hadn't moved. She felt
his cheek. Moist with sleep but comfort-ably warm. She kissed his
forehead. Cool and soft.
Shutting his door, she made her way to where Buck slept and planted a
knee on the mattress next to his midsection. She leaned to kiss him,
holding his head. If he were anything but sound asleep, that would have
roused him. In the darkness Chloe was struck by the contrast between
her dark clothing and her skin, which hardly ever saw the sun.
She found gloves and a ski mask, and by the time she was in the
corridor that led past other underground quarters to the vehicle bay,
Chloe was sweating. Their place was in the center of the complex, and
four wings led to everyone else's places. She crept past the
Sebas-tians', three other families' places, a bank of single men's
residences-including Ree Woo's and her own father's-two more family
places, then a mixture of family and single quarters, including Ming's.
Everybody knew Big George was on watch tonight and that Buck Williams,
in charge when Rayford was gone, was first alternate. That must have
been why everyone seemed to be sleeping so soundly.
----------
Rayford broke away from the tentative crowd and headed toward the
light. Was it his imagination? Past twenty feet all was foggy anyway,
and no one near him seemed able to see anything, let alone what he saw.
The closer he got, the more the light appeared to be the silhouette of
a person, but he saw nothing else and guessed it was still fifty yards
away. When he had worked at the palace and lived nearby, the garages
and motor pool had been in that area.
Had someone figured a way to produce light? Rayford had passed through
small groups of limping people, and now it appeared nothing stood
between him and this ... this what? Apparition? It looked merely bright
from a distance, but soon the color became more distinct. First red,
then yellowish, and finally, a deep burnt orange. Yes, clearly a
person, specifically a
man, tall and lithe. And moving.
Others were within a few feet of the man, using his light to work on
vehicles. They seemed in pain like every-one else, but they worked with
dispatch, as if invigorated by the light. The glowing man appeared to
be able to see as far as he radiated, about three feet. Anyone who
needed light had to be that close to him.
Rayford realized it was Carpathia. Dr. Ben-Judah had often taught that
this same person came first as a lying snake, then as a roaring lion,
and finally as an angel of light. Rayford had to stifle a chuckle. The
devil in Nicolae surely wished he could emit more than this pathetic
glow that allowed him to identify only those within a few feet of him.
Rayford moved until he was among a small crowd just outside the circle
of mechanics trying to ready several vehicles for some purpose he did
not yet understand.
"All systems are functional?" Carpathia said.
"Yes, Potentate. The jeep is operational."
"Turn on the lights."
The mechanic did. "You can hear the drain on the electrical system, so
juice is flowing, Excellency, but as you can see-"
"As we can all see or not," Carpathia said, "no lights. Well, if I
must, I will walk ahead of the convoy until we pass through the
darkness on the way to Al Hillah. I do not care how long it takes."
What kind of a strategy was this? The brass will meet in Carpathia's
office, and then he will lead them to Al Hillah? For what? And what
about the thousands remaining in New Babylon? Wouldn't they want to
follow, to find relief?
"What's in Al Hillah?" Rayford said.
"Who is asking?" Carpathia said. "And why do you not address me with a
title of honor?"
Nicolae was looking in Rayford's direction, but it was obvious he could
see no farther than anyone else within range of his hellish aura. As
Nicolae moved forward, Rayford moved back and to his left, then circled
around behind Carpathia.
"Yeah," Rayford said in a slightly different tone. "What is in Al
Hillah, 0 Great One?"
Nicolae whirled around, and Rayford slipped away again. "I was speaking
to the original questioner! Who is asking?"
"Perhaps he fled in fear," Rayford said with a gravelly voice,
"Excellency."
This could be fun.
----------
Chloe had known the long passageway to the vehicle bay to be cold and
damp most of the time, and perhaps it was now. But in her getup and in
her state of mind, mov-ing quickly up the incline past the vehicles and
toward where the doors opened to ground level, she had grown
uncomfortably warm. She removed her gloves and ski mask, chiding
herself for having them on before she needed them anyway. Chloe lowered
the zipper on the sweatshirt, then squatted to cool down and catch her
breath with her back against the dirt wall between the bay door and the
service door.
Being that close to the surface and the outside gave Chloe a delicious
feeling of freedom. Less than a year to real freedom.
Her knees soon burned, so she slid to the earthen floor and
straightened her legs. Setting her weapon aside, she reached for the
toes of her boots, alternately stretching her right and left sides.
Despite her many serious injuries, she was proud that her duties in
Greece had proved she was still in remarkable shape. She zipped her
sweatshirt to her neck, pulled the ski mask over her face, raised the
hood over that, tugged on her gloves, put the strap of the Uzi over her
head so the weapon rested on her right hip and in her right hand, then
stood and turned to the service door.
There could be no slight opening of the bay door. That was an all or
nothing deal. The glued-on sand and dirt and greenery moved as one, and
the thing was either fully open or shut. But the service door, though
camouflaged the same way, she could open as slowly and slightly as she
wanted. She flipped off the light and gripped the doorknob.
----------
Rayford hurried toward the palace. He wanted to check on the others and
tell them of his plan. He had experi-enced more bizarre events in six
years than he ever could have imagined, and while many had been bigger
and louder and wilder, this was unique. These poor people! Yes, they
had made their choices, and yes, they had had their opportunities to
turn to God. But what a price!
They were in agony. Everywhere he went, more and more people came into
the twenty-foot limit of his visi-bility. Many were dead. More sat
rocking or lay weep-ing. All had given up looking for ways to see
anything but a blackness so thick it disoriented them. Those who tried
to follow the music or Fortunato's voice limped or shuffled with arms
extended to the front or sides, tipping one way and then the other as
if drunk or dizzy. They ran into each other, into buildings, tripped
over debris, and many simply seemed to run out of gas, slowing,
stopping, and tumbling. Rayford wished he could help, but there was
nothing he could do.
On his way to Chang's quarters, Rayford came up with an idea and
changed course. He stayed on the elevator and reached
the top floor of
the palace. There he tiptoed past several executives and their aides,
who talked on phones or sat before computers, trying to dictate but
unable to see whether their messages were getting through.
The phone calls all had the same theme and tone. Carpathia had a new
assistant since the time when Rayford had worked with him. Chang had
told him her name. He assumed she was the one on the phone at the desk
outside Carpathia's new office. Rayford noticed her double take when
she heard him sit on a couch across from her area, but he said nothing
and she continued her conversation.
"I don't know," she said with a whine. "He wants me to try to carry on
as if I am not suffering like all the oth-ers. But I am, Mom. There are
little things I can do when he is in here, because he emits this glow
of some sort and I can at least find a few things. But he's called a
meeting of the brass and they're planning some sort of a
pilgrimage.... No, I don't get to go, and I don't want to. He's not
even telling the rank and file that their bosses are leaving.
"Ooh! Ouch ... oh, I don't know how to describe it. Cramps, I guess. A
headache like nothing I've ever had, and I've had
some doozies...."
She sounded American, but her back was to Rayford and he could not see
the number on her forehead or hand.
"And it feels as if I'm carrying a huge weight on my shoulders,
pressing on my spine. My hips hurt, my knees, ankles, feet. Like your
arthritis, I suppose. But, Mom, I'm thirty-six years old. I feel like
I'm seventy-five.... Yes, I'm eating. I feel my way back to my
apartment and I can manage, but when I lie down, I want to sleep for a
hundred years. But I can't.... Well, because of the pain! No position
relieves it. It's like this darkness itself is pushing on me and
causing all this, and it's the same for everybody."
Rayford shifted his weight and the woman froze. "Hold a minute, Mom."
She turned and Rayford saw the -6 on her forehead, confirming his
guess. The United North American States. "Is someone there? May I help
you?"
He was tempted to tell her he had some questions about the meeting but
that he would wait until she was off the phone. But he knew she knew
who was left on the decimated senior staff, and she would not recognize
his voice. He wished he could speak soothingly to her, to say something
Jesus would say. But she was beyond help now. Rayford had never felt so
hog-tied.
"Sorry, Mom," she said. "Now I'm hearing things. I'd better get off.
This meeting's coming up, and I don't even know what he's going to
want. No one will be able to read anything unless they hold it up to
his light, and there are twenty expected.... Yes, twenty.... I know.
... Yeah, we're down from thirty-six. Imagine.
"Exciting? No. Not for a long time. He is not the man I thought he
was.... Oh, in every way. Mean, cruel, vicious, egotistical, selfish. I
swear, I'd need a thesaurus. ... Well, I can't! ... No! Of course I
can't! Where would I go? What would I do? He knows what I know, and he
wouldn't be able to let me out of his control.... No, now I just have
to live with it.... I don't know, Mom. It can't end well. I don't care
anymore. Death will be a relief.... Well, I'm sorry, but I mean it....
Now don't, Mom. I'm not planning anything rash.... I know you have. We
all have. All but Uncle Gregory, I guess. He's still holding out, is
he? ... How does he live? You know what happens if he's found out....
No, don't tell me. I don't want to know. That way if somebody asks,
I'll be able to tell them I don't know. Just tell him I'm proud of him
and keep it up, but be careful. You and Dad be careful too. If you're
caught aiding him in any way..."
Rayford heard footsteps in the hall, and it was clear she did too.
"Gotta go, Mom. Stay well."
She hung up and turned when the door swung open. A big, bony man of
about fifty looked wide-eyed at Rayford and his mouth fell open. He
pointed at Rayford's forehead, and Rayford noticed the mark of the
believer on him too.
"May I help you?" Carpathia's assistant said. "Who is it?"
Rayford held a finger to his lips and pointed down the hall. He
mouthed, "Five minutes," and the man shut the door and ran off.
The woman shrugged. "Thanks for dropping by," she muttered, "whoever
you were."
"Whoever it was has left," Rayford said.
She jumped. "And how long have you been here?"
"Long enough to know about Uncle Gregory."
"I'm so stupid! I don't know you, do I?"
"No."
"You're not senior staff."
"I'm not."
"Is anyone with you?"
"No, Krystall."
"How do you know my name?"
"I can help your uncle."
"Tell a soul, I'll deny every word."
"Don't you want him helped?"
"You're trying to trap me."
"I'm not. If I was GC, I would not be able to see, would I?"
"You can't see."
"I can. And I can prove it. Your colors don't match."
"You couldn't prove that by me, idiot. I can't see them either. I dress
by sense of touch these days, like everybody else."
"My mistake. Hold up some fingers; I'll tell you how many.... Three,
and your right hand is facing me, and the three fingers are your
pinkie, ring, and middle."
"How do you know that?"
"You mean how can I see?"
"You can't see."
"Then how do I know you're showing me six fingers now, all five on your
left and the index on your right, the backs of your hands toward me? I
can see by your face you're starting to be convinced. You're hiding
your hands under the desk now."
Krystall pressed her lips together and looked as if she was about to
cry. Rayford stood.
"Stay where you are," she said, voice quavery, hands in her lap.
Rayford slipped around behind her. "That would be no fun," he said, and
she jumped and spun in her chair. "Now I can see your hands again," he
said. "They're balled in your lap, thumbs pointing."
"Okay, so you can see me. How?"
"Because this darkness is a curse from God, and I am one of his."
"Are you serious?"
"I can help your uncle, Krystall."
"How?"
"Were you implying he has not yet taken the mark?"
"What if I was?"
"Then it's not too late for him. Is he a believer in Christ?"
"I don't think so. I think he's just a rebel."
"A lucky one, if he acts quickly."
"If you think you're going to trick me into telling you where he's
hiding, you're-"
"I don't need to know that. You'd be foolish to risk telling me, and
anyway, didn't you tell your mother not to even tell you where he was?"
She didn't respond.
"If you really want to help him, tell him to log on to the Web site of
Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah. Can you remember it if I spell it for you?"
"You think I don't know that name and how to spell it?"
"Sorry."
"It's from his Web site that I know it's too late for me and my
parents, my whole family ... who were so proud of me."
"I'm sorry, Krystall."
"You're sorry? How do you think I feel?"
"Ma'am, you're not going to tell anyone I was here, are you?"
"Why would I? They couldn't see you anyway, and what would they do?
Feel around for you?"
"Good point."
"What are you doing here?"
"Business. The prospect of helping your uncle was just a bonus."
"Well, thanks for that. You're a Judah-ite, eh?"
"A believer in Christ, to be more precise."
"Tell me something then: what's the deal with it being too late for
people who already took Carpathia's mark? We don't still have our own
free will?"
Rayford felt his throat tighten. "Apparently not," he managed. "I don't
quite understand it myself, but you have to admit, you
had plenty of
reasons to choose the other way."
"For years."
"You said it, Krystall."
"So the statute of limitations ran out on me when I made the big
choice."
"Well, then for sure. Maybe even before that. Who knows the mind of
God?"
"I'm starting to, sir."
"How's that?"
"This hurts. It hurts worse than the pain from the darkness. Just
learned it too late, I guess, that you don't mess with God."
THREE
THE PROBLEM with the camouflaged service door open just a sliver was
that it did not give Chloe the view she needed. While the door faced
east, where the suspicious vehicle had stood idling just a block away
last time she looked, the opening in the door gave her only a
north-east view. The door would have to swing open to at least
forty-five degrees to confirm that the car or truck or whatever it was
was still there. Dare she risk the door catching a glint from a street
lamp or making a sound or triggering some portable motion detector the
GC might have brought along?
Chloe allowed herself to wish that the vehicle brought good news rather
than bad. Maybe it bore a band of other underground believers who had
heard about the Trib Force contingent that had burrowed itself beneath
a former military base. Wouldn't that be heaven, to discover more
brothers and sisters who could come alongside to help, encourage, and
defend? It was Chloe who had stumbled upon The Place in Chicago with
its exciting band of self-taught believers. On the other hand, all that
activity, their moving in with the Trib Force, was the first step in
compromising the safe house. That many warm bodies moving about in an
area the GC had believed was quarantined tipped them off and brought
them sniffing. If Chloe was to take credit for the new friends, she had
to accept the heat for the end of a great safe house.
She couldn't let that happen again. There were too many here, and
though the place was under the earth, it had all the advantages the
Strong Building had. For one thing, it had George Sebastian, who had
expanded on what Chloe-and anyone else who was interested-had learned
about combat training from Mac McCullum on their mission to Greece. The
rickety exercise equipment George and Priscilla had salvaged from the
military base was anything but state-of-the-art, but George thought
that was an advantage.
"The newfangled machines do all the work for ya, anyway," he said. He
had refurbished and lubricated what was available, and within six weeks
several Trib Forcers had spent enough time in a makeshift workout room
to start toning neglected muscles. That was just a prerequisite, of
course. What Chloe enjoyed most was George's training. A lot of it was
just common sense, but a lot of it wasn't. He had been trained at the
highest levels and proved to be an excellent teacher. Chloe felt she
could handle herself and a weapon in almost any situation.
That training was what niggled at the back of her brain now and told
her she was making a fundamental mistake. Not only was she away from
her post, but no one would have a clue where she was. She had no way of
communicating from a remote location. So if she was going to open the
service door wide enough to see a potential enemy a block away or-for
all she knew-standing directly in front of her, she had to make a
deci-sion. Was she opening the door quickly to step outside and shut it
again, or was she going to keep a hand on the doorknob in case she
needed to retreat fast?
She pressed her ear against the door to see if she could detect
movement nearby, but her Uzi clattered against it, and her ear was
covered by her sweatshirt hood and ski mask anyway. She pulled back,
feeling like an idiot. Deep breath. Calm down. Let's just step outside
in one smooth motion and shut the door behind us. Referring to herself
in the collective we made her feel less alone, but she knew she was
kidding herself.
Careful to take full, quiet strides, rolling heel to toe, Chloe pushed
the door open, moved out, and shut it behind her. Was the vehicle still
there? She'd have to wait a beat. If it was, its taillights were off.
Chloe moved to a row of tall bushes that hid her from the east, then
spun silently to be sure no enemy had flanked her from another
direction. She paused for a moment to drink in the freedom of simply
being out in the crisp wee-hour air.
As her eyes adjusted to the dim light provided only by street lamps,
Chloe peered through the shrubbery and saw the white GC personnel
carrier parked where she had seen it from inside. Not only were its
lights off, but it also didn't appear to be idling.
The question was whether it was empty, and if so, how many troops had
it brought, and where were they?
----------
Rayford quickly tiptoed to the end of the corridor and found the big
man rocking on the balls of his feet and wringing his hands.
"English?"
he said with a thick German accent.
"Yes. I'm an American."
"Brother, brother, brother!" the man whispered, grabbing Rayford in a
fierce embrace. "Who are you? What is your name? What are you doing
here?"
The man felt solid, as if he could have been a manual laborer. "I have
the same questions for you, friend," Rayford said, extricating himself.
"But let's make sure we won't be overheard."
"Good, good, yes. Where?"
"I have colleagues in private quarters here. You need to meet them. We
can talk there."
"I'm not sure I can wait that long! This is so exciting. How far?"
"Six stories down and a wing the other way," Rayford said, leading him
toward the elevator. "You live here? In the palace, I mean? You work
here?"
"Used to." Rayford looked around and then leaned close. "I'm with the
underground in San Diego with connections in Petra. We're getting our
mole out of here while we can."
"I was going to ask if you were the mole!"
"Used to be one of several. We are down to just this one, or at least
that's what we thought. You're from here?"
"Not six miles away, can you believe it?"
At the bank of elevators three executives stood lightly touching each
other and feeling for the buttons. Rayford and his new friend looked at
each other knowingly and merely moved behind them into the first
available eleva-tor car.
"Got to be back up here on time," one executive said.
"Yes," another said. "Wish I had an audible watch."
"I took the crystal off mine. I'm learning to feel what time it is.
Problem is, I keep snagging the hands on who knows what, and for all I
know, I don't have the right time anymore myself." He pressed two
fingers lightly on his watch. "I'm guessing 2:50. Gives us ten minutes."
Rayford noticed the German check his own watch and raise his eyebrows.
The elevator stopped two floors down, and the three felt their way off.
But as the doors were shutting, Rayford's companion reached out with
both hands, tapped the timekeeper on a shoulder, and rubbed his thumb
against the man's watch at the same time. The tap made him hesitate,
which made the man behind him bump into him. He said, "Hm?" and the
third man said, "What?"
The big man pulled his arms back in, in time for the doors to shut
unimpeded, and when it was just he and Rayford on the elevator, he
burst into laughter. "I think that was the last time he'll have the
time right, you know? Now, may I introduce myself?"
"Not just yet," Rayford said. He mouthed, "Most of the elevators and
corridors are bugged."
----------
Foolhardy or brave? Chloe knew that was a matter of opinion and that
she would likely hear from many who assumed the former. But she was
desperately curious about that personnel carrier, and even more, about
the personnel. Keeping to the tree line and away from street lamps, she
circled left and headed a block west, moving silently in the night as
she had been taught.
She slowed as she came even with the vehicle from about thirty yards to
the left of it, chastising herself for not bringing binoculars. And the
walkie-talkie. She could have left it off until she needed it, avoiding
an inoppor-tune transmission while still having the ability to
com-municate with Buck or anyone else in a pinch.
So far though, no pinch. Chloe moved closer, telling herself that if
anyone sat in the truck the engine would be running or one or more
windows would be open. None of that was so, but she didn't want to
think she could simply advance past it without knowing for sure. First
turning in a slow circle to be sure no one was approaching or that she
had not missed anyone, Chloe finally reached the truck and peered in
the back windows. No one.
But from there she could not tell if anyone was in the front seat. If
anyone was waiting, he or she would most likely be behind the wheel.
She approached from the other side, staying below the window level
until she could stand quickly and take her prey by surprise, if
necessary.
----------
Rayford was stunned by the increased number of ailing residents who
filled the halls as he and his new buddy left the elevator and headed
toward Chang's quarters. Couples huddled in corners, weeping. Others
crawled, feeling their way to various rooms, pulling themselves up by
door handles and running their fingers across numbers before knocking,
pleading with friends to be let in.
"This breaks my heart," he whispered to the German.
"Not mine," the man said, "but I'm working on it."
Rayford knocked lightly on Chang's door and heard the conversation
inside die. "It's me," he said, just above a whisper.
"And don't be
alarmed. I have someone with me."
Abdullah opened the door just wide enough to accom-modate one eye and
the barrel of a .45-caliber Glock. That eye, satisfied with seeing
Rayford, surveyed the German side to side and head to toe. Apparently
noticing the mark of the believer on the man's forehead, Abdullah swung
the door open.
Once inside, it seemed the man couldn't be still. After looking at
everyone and the computers and stacks of miniature disks,
he said, "I
can talk? We are okay here?"
Chang nodded and, though he seemed overwhelmed by the man's
effusiveness, he and Naomi kept working.
"Otto Weser is my name," he said. "German timberman, Judah-ite, head of
a small band of believers right here in New Babylon."
He embraced Abdullah. "Watch that side arm now, would you?" Otto said,
laughing. He nearly lifted Chang off the floor.
"Look at us! You are
Asian. Our turbaned friend is, what, Egyptian?" Abdullah corrected him.
"Ah, Jordanian. I was close. I am German. Mr. Steele, your name is
Western and you told me you were American, but your appearance is
Egyptian also."
"A disguise."
"And the young lady, you are Middle Eastern too, are you not? Of course
you are. I will not hug you without the permission of your father."
Otto pointed first to Rayford, who shook his head, and then to
Abdullah, who looked insulted. "Oh, you are old enough even if she is
not yours." He turned to Chang. "I know she does not belong to you,
unless by marriage."
Naomi approached him, arms spread. "My father is not here, but if the
permission is mine to give, you have it."
"Ah, I love the young ones who appreciate the old movies."
When he had learned everyone's name, Otto said, "I will be brief. I
know you are on a mission and you must go. I did not know if I would
find any brothers or sisters inside the palace, but I am so glad I did.
My friends and I, we consider ourselves fulfillments of prophecy. Do
you want to know why? We were holed up in Germany, hiding mostly but
fighting the GC when we could, and God-who else?-led me to Revelation
18. It dumb-founded me; what else can I say? You know the passage. I
have it memorized.
"I'm no scholar, no student, no theologian, but I try to stay a step
ahead of my people so I can teach them a little. Well, Revelation 18
talks about the coming destruction of this city, this one right here.
Beginning at the fourth verse it says, `I heard another voice from
heaven saying, "Come out of her, my people, lest you share in her sins,
and lest you receive of her plagues. For her sins have reached to
heaven, and God has remembered her iniquities. Render to her just as
she rendered to you, and repay her double according to her works; in
the cup which she has mixed, mix double for her. In the measure that
she glori-fied herself and lived luxuriously, in the same measure give
her torment and sorrow; for she says in her heart, `I sit as queen, and
am no widow, and will not see sorrow.' Therefore her plagues will come
in one day-death and mourning and famine. And she will be utterly
burned with fire, for strong is the Lord God who judges her."'
"Well, you could have knocked me over. `Come out of her, my people'?
What were we to make of that except the obvious? People of God-at least
some-were going to be here until just before this happens! Who were
they? I could not imagine believers being here, and if they were, not
for long. How could they be? If the GC and the Morale Monitors are
killing people all over the world for not bearing the mark of
Carpathia, what chance would someone stand here?
"We didn't know, but we wanted to find out, and I tell you, playing
hide-and-seek with the GC in Germany was getting old. Nearly forty of
us packed up and headed this way-no easy trip, I want to say. It has
not been easy living here either, but we knew it would not be when we
came. We have lost six of our members since we have been here-four all
at once, and two, I have to say, were my fault, to my eternal shame.
But we will see them again, will we not? And I cannot wait.
"Something else I could not wait for was this plague of darkness. When
it came and we realized that every-one was blind but us, I got it in my
head I wanted to see this place-the compound, the courtyard, the palace
and all-especially the potentate's office. I could not get any of the
others to come with me, so here I am, and who should I run into but
you? Well, if we are ful-filling prophecy by being at least some of
God's people who must come out of here before the end, you are an
answer to prayer if I ever saw one. We need a place to go if we are to
come out, and what better place than where we will finally be safe? If
you have connec-tions at Petra, that is where we want to be, if they
will have us."
"Excuse me, Rayford," Chang said. "This is all very interesting and
exciting, but I need to show Naomi the, you know, inner workings David
set up here, and then I think we need to get going."
"Right," Rayford said, "and I'll feel more comfortable if Abdullah
stays with you two. I want to head back to Carpathia's office and see
if Otto and I can crash the big meeting and see what's going on."
"Oh! I'd love that! As I said, I wanted to see his office anyway.
That's why I was there when you were, but I was so startled to see
someone with the mark of the be-"
"Otto," Rayford said, "we've got to move."
----------
Chloe had crouched by the passenger-side door long enough to almost
talk herself out of what she planned. What if she rose into view of a
driver waiting for his charges? She likely had the drop on him, and
then what was she going to do? Disarm him? Keep him from the radio?
Make him tell her where his people were and what they were up to? That
would do nothing but give away the underground compound unless Chloe
was willing to kill the man and try to run off the rest of
them-provided he told the truth about where they were.
She finally told herself that if the truck was empty, she would merely
make one wide reconnaissance loop around the compound to make sure the
GC weren't close or on to them or about to be; then she would head back
for help.
Chloe released the safety on the Uzi, put her right index finger on the
trigger, cradled the barrel in her other palm, and rose quickly.
Empty.
And so was she. She had been unaware of the effects of the adrenaline
on her since she had ventured out of the service door, but the
resultant crash of her system left her nearly immobile. She slumped by
the truck to gather herself. Her arms and legs felt rubbery, and had
Chloe's senses not been on such high alert, she believed she could have
tucked her chin to her chest and slept.
Though she couldn't escape the feeling she was being watched-she
imagined at least nine GC with scopes trained on her-she felt
remarkably lucky, given how ser-endipitous her plan had been. That is
to say, she hardly had a plan. And while she agreed with the
Tribulation Force's motto-"We don't do luck"-it was difficult to
attribute her safety so far to God when she felt so foolish for how she
had again tested her destiny.
Chloe rose and began her scouting ring of the perim-eter. As she moved
silently in the darkness, feeling vulnerable and trying
to be more
thorough than quick, all she was aware of was the pace of her breathing
and her thundering pulse.
By the time Rayford and Otto reached Carpathia's suite of offices, the
meeting had begun and the stragglers spilled out of the doorway of his
conference room. Ray-ford saw Carpathia's wretched glow, but it was
obvious that only Leon Fortunato stood close enough to the man to take
advantage of it.
Rayford gently put his hands on men in the doorway, and they gave way
to let him slip through, Otto following. To be safe, ,they moved to
the far end of the room, away from Carpathia. The potentate asked
Krystall to call the roll, which she did almost entirely from memory.
When she drew a blank on the last three names, she asked if she could
read the rest of the list in Carpathia's light.
"Better simply to have those whose names have not been called identify
themselves," Nicolae said.
As they were doing that, Otto touched Rayford's arm and mouthed that he
was tempted to call out his own name and see what kind of havoc that
might wreak.
"If you gentlemen would kindly attempt to keep your outbursts to a
minimum," Carpathia began, "Director of Security and Intelligence
Suhail Akbar has the first item."
"Thank you, Excellency. Oh! Forgive me, sir, but I am in pain as well.
Ah!"
"Suhail, please!"
"Apologies, Highness, but I don't know what to-"
"Control yourself, man!"
"I shall try, sir. Our primary concern, ladies and gentlemen, besides
the obvious, is that a-"
"What's more important than the obvious?" someone with an Indian accent
said. "We've got to find a solution to this-"
"Who is that?" Carpathia demanded. "Raman Vajpayee, is that you?"
"Yes, sir, I simply want to know-"
"Raman, I simply want you to be quiet. How dare you interrupt a member
of my cabinet?"
"Well, sir, it is most important that-"
"What is most important is that the only response to your offense is an
abject apology, and it had better be immediately forthcoming."
"I am sorry, Potentate, but-"
"That was hardly abject. At a time of international crisis, I cannot
imagine such insubordination. I am of a mind-"
"To what?" Vajpayee said. "To put me to death as you do anyone who
speaks his mind? I tell you, I would rather be dead than to live like
this! In the dark! In pain! No relief in sight. And yet you carry on-"
"Show yourself, Raman! Do it now!"
The Indian rushed forward, pushing others out of his way. It was clear
to Rayford that he was simply follow-ing the sound of Carpathia's
voice, unable to see even the glow. "I am here, within arm's length of
you! Kill me for daring to speak my mind, or reveal yourself as a
coward!"
"Suhail," Carpathia said, "take this man out and execute him!"
"So you are a coward! You will not do it yourself! At least give me
that much respect."
"I have only contempt for you, Raman. You have disgraced your position
with the Global Community and I-"
"Kill me yourself, you impotent-"
And with that, Carpathia thrust himself toward the Indian, finally
allowing both to see one another. As the others listened in horror, the
two men struggled, and Carpathia succeeded in getting the man's head in
his hands. With a violent twist he broke Vajpayee's neck, and the dead
man slid to the floor.
"Any other dissidents?" Carpathia said. "Anyone who would rather be
dead than suffer for the cause? Hmm? If not, Suhail, proceed, and when
you are finished, get this corpse out of here."
Somehow a shaken Akbar was able to control his own outcries of pain as
he reported that an aircraft had landed at the New Babylon airstrip
that very afternoon. "We can only assume it was a miracle of
autopiloting " he said, "but we have no record of what plane it is and
urge caution on everyone's part, as we may have subver-sives among us."
"If we cannot accomplish having the occupants of that plane identify
themselves," Carpathia said, "I will per-sonally inspect it at the end
of this meeting."
"That's our cue," Rayford whispered to Otto. "We've got to be out of
here before then."
As they began to surreptitiously make their way out of the room,
Carpathia continued. "As you know, I am determined to put an end to our
Jewish problem, and if that includes the cowardly Judah-ites who remain
hidden in the mountains, so much the better. I am hereby calling for a
meeting of all ten heads of the global regions in six months' time. We
shall meet in Baghdad to map our strategy to rid the world of our
enemies. Meanwhile, we will move our command post into the light at Al
Hillah. As many of you know-and if this is news to you, I expect full
confidentiality-Al Hillah is the location of our vast storehouse of
nuclear weaponry, voluntarily surrendered to us by the rest of the
world as a condition of my accepting my position. That will prove most
useful to us in this ultimate effort and final solution.
"Until the rest of the world is on the same page with me, I plan to
begin amassing fighting forces in Israel. All available military
personnel in the United Carpathian States who are not already assigned
as Peacekeepers or Morale Monitors will be expected to report for duty
in the Jezreel Valley for combat training.
"As for our relocation to Al Hillah, be ready to move out in
twenty-four hours. Take anything that will assist you in this transfer."
"What about our workers, our departments?"
"They will stay, and they must not know where we are going or even that
we are going. Is that understood?"
Rayford was just outside the door when he heard that no one had
responded.
"Understood?"
"Yes," a few muttered.
"Then go about your business. Mr. Akbar, Reverend Fortunato, and I will
make our way to the airstrip."
Rayford motioned for Otto to follow, and he began running toward the
elevators. "Call every car and push every button on each. Stall those
elevators for as long as you can. I'll take the stairs. I have no idea
where my friends are, but I need to leave a note at Chang's place in
case they head back there. We have to be out of here before Carpathia
finds out the identity of our plane and where we are. Got it?"
"Got it. Thanks for trusting me."
"Were you hoping to come with us? Because unless you can get-"
"No, we'll arrange that later. I wouldn't come without my people
anyway."
"If you happen to see any of my friends before I do, send them to the
plane."
Rayford bounded down the stairs, drawing screams and squeals from
people suffering in the stairwells. They called out, asking how he
could run like that in the dark. He hated ignoring them.
He reached the main level, vaulted over several people, and zigzagged
between others. He burst out the door and sprinted across the runways
toward the plane. If he could get it started and turned around, all he
could do was hope and pray that Chang, Naomi, and Abdullah were on
their way.
----------
Buck had been sound asleep for hours before something began troubling
him. He grew fitful and was suddenly wide awake. It was guilt. Letting
Chloe take watch duty when she worked so hard all day with the Co-op
and their son. What kind of a husband was he?
He ran his hands through his hair and sat up, calling out. "How's it
going, babe?"
Maybe she was checking on Kenny. Or getting herself some tea in the
kitchen. He padded out of the bedroom, stretching. "Chlo'!" he called
out. "You've got something on the motion detector here!"
He bent over the periscope and scanned quickly. He saw nothing until he
got to the southwest, where he saw a lone figure, armed. He scowled.
"Chloe!" he called. "Better call George. I've got a bogey at eight
o'clock. Chloe?"
He froze. He stood and moved toward the kitchen. It was dark. And Kenny
was crying. Buck grabbed the phone on his way to Kenny's room and
punched in Ming's number.
"Hey, big boy," Buck said, finding the boy standing in his bed, quickly
going from crying to smiling. "Mama?"
"In a minute," he said. "Why don't you lie down and go back to sleep.
It's still night."
Ming answered.
"I'm so sorry to wake you, Ming, but I've got a little emergency here."
"Anything, Buck."
"Could you watch Kenny for a little while? I think Chloe is outside."
"Be there in less than a minute."
He thanked her and got on the walkie-talkie. "George, you up?"
FOUR
RAYFORD HAD the engines started and the plane turned around when he saw
Carpathia's glow in the distance. The potentate seemed in a hurry, but
he was apparently leading Suhail Akbar and Leon Fortunato, and he had
to go slowly to light the way for them a few feet at a time. That would
not have been as much help without the sounds of the jet engines,
however, so Rayford shut down and prayed that this mostly blind
threesome would veer off course before his own trio found him.
Rayford turned on his cell phone and called Mac McCullum in Al Basrah
to debrief him. "Can you and Albie leave for Al Hillah today?"
"We been sittin' here like a past-due hen."
"I'll take that as a yes. You're pretty hot since Greece. How are you
going to get around?"
"With bluster, charm, and only at night, of course.
I figure you pretty much just want to know what NC and his boys are up
to."
"Ideal would be your finding out where they're meet-ing in Baghdad and
bugging the place for us."
"Oh, sure. I'll just tell 'em I'm his new valet and can I have a few
hours in the meeting room before everyone else gets there."
"If I thought it was easy, I'd do it myself," Rayford said. "Albie
knows everybody. If it's gonna get done, he'll get it done."
Chang, Naomi, and Abdullah appeared, each laden with boxes and cases.
Naomi looked ashen. Rayford opened the door
and lowered the steps.
"Good timing," he said.
"We were on it all the way, Captain," Abdullah said. "Thanks to this
young genius."
"Just showing off," Chang said, handing cargo in and helping Naomi
aboard. "I wanted to show her how David had bugged the whole place and
that we could actually listen in on Carpathia."
"So you knew he was coming," Rayford said, letting Abdullah edge past
to the pilot's chair.
"Could we please talk about something else?" Naomi said.
That made everyone uncomfortably quiet. Rayford sneaked a peek. The
pale orange silhouette was moving more quickly now. He must have
abandoned Akbar and Fortunato or they were ailing anew. The pain didn't
seem to reach Carpathia. Maybe God was saving his best till last for
him.
Rayford and Abdullah eschewed a formal checklist for a quick
confirmation of the cockpit flow by checking the critical switch
positions. "Crank 'er up," Rayford said.
But Abdullah just sat there, craning his neck to watch the glow grow
larger as it neared the plane.
"What're you waiting on, Smitty? Let's move out."
"A moment, please, Captain. How far do you assume he can see?"
"About as far as he glows. Now let's go."
"A moment, please."
"What are you doing, Mr. Smith?" Naomi called out. "Isn't that
Carpathia?"
"He does not know where he is going. But I do."
"Once we start up, he can do nothing," Rayford said. "But I'd rather he
not know who we are."
"He won't," Abdullah said.
Rayford leaned past Abdullah and saw Carpathia hurry across the runway
about twenty feet behind the craft.
"Here we go," Abdullah said, firing up the engines and blowing the
orange glow to the ground over and over until Nicolae was just an ember
in the distance.
Once in the air, Naomi leaned forward. "Can I talk to you?" she said.
Rayford removed his headphones.
"Is that stuff normal for you guys?" she said.
"Nothing's normal anymore, Naomi. You've been through a lot yourself."
"I never heard a man being murdered before. And I've never walked by so
many hurting people without a thing I could do for them. We're isolated
in Petra, and I wanted to be where the action is. But if I never see
anything else like this, it'll be all right with me. And we can do
more from our computer center than anywhere I can think of."
"I'm sorry it was hard," Rayford said. "It was for me too." He told her
of the woman he had tried to help and of his conversation with
Nicolae's assistant.
"We'll watch for her uncle's name on the system," she said. "And I
suppose we'll hear from Mr. Weser too."
"Hope so. What a character."
She leaned closer, and while she had to raise her voice over the
engines, Naomi seemed to speak so only Rayford could hear. "Chang's
not doing well, you know."
"Why's that?"
"This has been his home, crazy as it's had to have been. It's got to be
strange leaving."
"I should think he'd be glad to be gone."
"I wish I could have met Mr. Hassid, the one Chang talks about so much.
What they did in the palace and the setup at our place ..."
Rayford nodded. "You going to be able to do the same thing-monitor this
place-from Petra now?"
"With Chang, yes. It's going to be wonderful to have him in our shop."
"Is he going to be competition?"
"Hardly. I'll just let him do what he wants. He likes the technical
stuff, keyboarding and inside the box, more than managing people. But
he can teach if he wants to."
Rayford's phone chirped. It was George Sebastian. "Been trying to get
hold of you. Your phone down?"
"Had it off for the palace mission. I was going to report in when I
knew you guys were up. It's still early there, isn't it?"
"We've got a situation."
"Why are you whispering? Where are you?"
"Outside."
"What time is it there?"
"Just before five in the morning. We can't find Chloe."
----------
It hit Buck that the figure on the periscope had been Chloe, so where
was she? It was just like her to be out without a walkie-talkie or a
phone, which he attributed to strategy rather than impetuousness. He
would have a hard time convincing anyone else of that, though.
He and George had split up, fully armed and in constant touch with
each other. George had found the empty GC personnel carrier-which had
to be some sort of a decoy-but no GC or Chloe. Buck hoped he wouldn't
have to call for more help and further expose his people or their
location.
Two hours later, when the sun left Buck and George with no choice but
to retreat inside, they had covered two square miles with nothing to
show for it. In the compound, everybody was up, worried, praying, and
eager to be brought up to speed. Ming Toy took Kenny and George's
daughter, Beth Ann, to her place "for as long as is necessary."
George and Priscilla set up a command center in the workout room. Ree
Woo sat at a small folding table in the corner, digging through files
to see if any of their aliases had been underused or uncompromised.
Buck admitted he was going to be of little help. "I'm paralyzed."
"Snap out of it," George said. "You do Chloe and us no good that way."
Buck glared at him, knowing he was right. "Easy for you to say,
Sebastian. It's not your wife out there."
Priscilla looked away. George let his papers fall on a table and
approached Buck. He put a hand on each arm of Buck's chair and leaned
close to his face. "I'm only gonna say it once. If it was my wife out
there, I wouldn't be sitting in here with my hands in my lap. I owe
your wife big time. She risked her life for me in Greece. I can only
imagine how you feel. Not knowing anything is worse than knowing the
worst, but we know nothing. Maybe you're just a little mad at her
because she didn't seem to follow protocol and skipped a lot of steps
here.
"Maybe you're feeling guilty about being angry with her because you're
scared to death she's into something over her head. I don't blame you.
I don't. I'm telling you, we need everybody on this, especially
somebody with your brain. Now, you want to find her so we can get her
back safe and sound, or you want to assume the worst and start grieving
now?"
"George!" Priscilla scolded.
"I'm not trying to be a hard case," George said. "It's just that
there's nothing we can do outside in the day-light unless we know the
coast is clear and we've got someone with a good disguise and alias.
Meanwhile, we've got to rest and strategize, and we don't need Buck
sitting here feeling sorry for hims-"
"All right, George, I got it! Okay?"
"You and I are all right then?"
"Of course."
"I mean, you think I was out there in the middle of the night for my
health?"
"Not so good news," Ree said. "Chloe's 'Chloe Irene' and Mac's 'Howie
Johnson' are no good after Greece. Hannah's 'Indira Jinnah' might still
be okay, but only she can use it and she's too far away. Rayford and
Abdullah's Middle Eastern brothers IDs may still be okay, but Abdullah
is staying in Petra and Rayford will need R and R when he gets here."
"Don't be so sure," George said. "He'll go till he drops."
"Tell me about it," Buck said.
"Has Albie's `Commander Elbaz' been exposed yet?" Ree asked.
Buck nodded. "Unfortunately, yes."
"Too far away too," George said. "What else have we got?"
"One more. Ming's guy persona, 'Chang Chow."'
"Let's not risk Ming," Buck said.
"Why not?" George said. "She's still got the uniform. She can cut her
hair and-"
"Hey!" Ree said. "You're talking about my fiancee."
"So?"
"She at least ought to be consulted."
"No, Ree," George said. "I thought we'd just drag her in here, hold her
down, and cut her hair."
"Cool down, boys," Priscilla said. "Nobody knows who I am. I could be
given an alias and-"
"No you don't," George said.
"Shoe's on the other foot now, eh?" Buck said.
"Prospect of sending your wife out there-"
"Stop it!" George said. "I'm just saying she's inexperienced and not
all that healthy."
"Ming is not very physical," Ree said. "Not trained in weapons."
"Don't give me that," Buck said. "She worked at Buffer."
"Handling inmates at a women's prison is not like rescuing one of our
people from the local GC."
"We wouldn't be looking for her to do that anyway," George said. "Buck
and I and maybe you, Ree, would have to go get Chloe. We need Ming, or
somebody, just to find out where she is."
----------
Chloe had caught sight of two more GC vehicles, both moving, to the
south as she was in the middle of her loop around the compound. As she
watched, both trucks stopped and more than half a dozen troops
disembarked from each. It became clear that they were walking a
care-fully planned grid to check for hidden encampments. And the
underground safe house was in their path. They may have looked bored to
Buck through the periscope a few hours before, but something had sent
them for reinforcements.
These guys were serious. They had metal detectors, probes, and what
appeared to be Geiger counters. Chloe debated whether she had time to
race back to the com-pound to alert the others. If she erred, she could
lead these guys right to her door.
Determined to distract them and knock them off course, she started
moving again. She had to make them see her without appearing to want
that. She moved stealthily, but with a purpose.
Rather than take a right at the edge of the property and circle back to
the entrance, Chloe continued west on the south side. When she heard at
least one of the vehicles heading her way, she broke into a trot, then
a jog, then a full run. She was not going to outrun a truck, but maybe
she could go where it couldn't.
The Uzi, light as it was, weighed her down. Unless she believed she
could take on an entire platoon or two of GC with it, it made more
sense to ditch it and come back for it later. She would never be able
to explain a weapon like that. With the sound of a truck, and maybe two
of them, just a block south and closing fast, Chloe detoured and flung
the Uzi and her ski mask behind some trees. She picked up her pace and
sprinted about a quarter of a mile, succeeding in getting both trucks
to bear down on her.
Chloe was out of sight of the underground complex and decided the best
approach was indifference, so she kept her head down and kept running.
The lead truck pulled up beside her, but she didn't even turn to look.
From the passenger-side window a young woman called out, "Need a lift?"
"No thanks."
"Get in."
"No thanks. I'm good."
"We want to ask you a few questions."
"Go ahead."
"C'mon, stop and let us talk to you."
"Talk to me anyway."
"Where you from?"
"About six miles west."
"That was underwater from the tsunami not that long ago."
"How well I know."
"What're you doing down here?"
"Running."
"How'd you get here?"
"Ran."
"Where you going?"
"Home."
"What's your name?"
"Phoebe."
It sounds biblical.
"Phoebe what?"
"Phoebe Evangelista."
"Ethnic?"
"Husband is." He's a WASP.
"Have any ID?"
"Not on me."
"Okay, ma'am, I'm going to have to ask you to stop and let us talk with
you a minute."
"No thanks. You can follow me home if you want."
I'll run as far from the underground as I can until I drop.
"I need to know your original region and see your mark."
"I'm not taking off my hood or my gloves in this weather after working
up a sweat."
"What, you've got marks both places?"
Chloe waved her off and kept running. The truck veered off the road in
front of her and stopped. Chloe swerved around it and kept going. She
heard doors open-ing and boots on pavement. Soon armed GC in full
uni-form flanked her, a man on each side, keeping pace.
"Okay," one said, "fun's over. Stop or we'll have to put you in the
truck. Come on now, ma'am, you know we can take you down, and there's
no need for that."
Chloe kept running. The man on her right tossed his weapon to the one
on the left, and the next thing she knew he had both arms around her
neck and was draw-ing his knees up into the middle of her back. He had
to weigh two hundred pounds. She staggered and fell. He shifted his
weight just before she hit the ground and drove her face into the dirt.
Chloe knew she had been scraped deep, and blood ran down her forehead.
He slid up and pressed his knee behind her neck, pulled her hands
behind her, and handcuffed her.
Desperate to stall them, Chloe let herself go limp. "Have it your way,"
one of the men said. He grabbed the cuffs to drag her toward the truck.
She purposely kept her face down, letting sand and pebbles and
pavement tear at her face.
On her stomach next to the truck, she could not be lifted by the
handcuffs without wrenching her shoulders out of place, which the GC
almost did. "There's an easier way," a young guard said, "if that's
what she wants."
He grabbed her feet and bent her legs up to where he could bind her
ankles to the handcuffs with a plastic band. He tossed her into the
truck.
Chloe was sure she had cracked a rib. During the twenty-five-minute
ride to the local GC headquarters, Chloe began to pray. "God, give me
strength. Let me die before I give away anything. Be with Kenny and
Buck and Dad."
She remembered George regaling them with stories about how he had said
absolutely nothing to his captors in Greece. If only she had that kind
of fortitude. She would rather banter, anger them, mislead them. Was it
better to sit and take it or to shoot back, to let them know she was no
pushover?
Torture. Could she handle that? "With your strength, God. Let me trade
my body for the ones I love."
At headquarters she was uncuffed, searched, and again asked her name
and home region. Chloe said nothing. She gingerly pressed a palm
against her face and felt the abrasions on her forehead and cheeks.
"She already told us. Phoebe Evangelista, American."
"Then there ought to be a -6 somewhere under that blood. Get a wet
cloth and wash that off."
Someone held Chloe by the back of her head and dragged the cloth across
her face. She cried out.
"I don't see anything. Doesn't mean it's not there. We running her name
and description?"
"Yeah. Nothing so far."
"Jock will be in at nine. Get her cleaned up and in a jumpsuit. And
fingerprinted."
Chloe was tempted to go limp again and make the GC undress her, hose
her down, and dress her, but she did what she was told. She came out of
the shower with her face stinging, changed into the dark green
jumpsuit, and clenched her fists.
When she was led to the photo area and printing sta-tion, she kept her
hands balled. Chloe looked so different from the girl who had been at
Stanford six years before, she wasn't worried about her photo giving
anything away.
A matronly Mexican guard reached for Chloe's hand and said, "Right
first, please."
Chloe shook her head.
"Come on, honey. You don't want to fight me. You're going to get
yourself fingerprinted, so you might as well just let me do it."
Chloe shook her head again.
"I'm going to do this, so how's it going to happen? Do I have to get a
couple of guys in here to hold you down? Because If I do, here's what
I'm going to use."
The woman showed Chloe an ugly adjustable metal cord similar to the
tool dogcatchers use at the ends of poles to snag puppies. "I wrap this
about three inches above your wrist. When it tightens, your hand comes
open. I don't know who you are or why you're in here, but you don't
want to endure this."
Chloe shook her head again, and the woman spoke into her radio, asking
for help. Chloe resisted the two young men, but as the matron had said,
it was hardly worth the effort. When that metal loop tightened around
her arm, her fingers popped open, and the GC had finger-prints that
were sent via the Internet to their databases all over the world.
"We also read your eyes with the camera, honey. If you've ever had a
driver's license, been to college, gotten married, anything, we'll find
a match."
Chloe only hoped the GC were as shorthanded as everyone else. Maybe it
would take long enough that Buck and George and the rest could bust her
out. Who am I kidding?
----------
Rayford had hoped for a day or two of rest before jetting back to San
Diego, but he had no choice but to leave Petra as soon as he could
refuel. He was stunned to find Mac McCullum waiting for him.
"Got the word from Buck," Mac said. "Thought Tsion and Chaim ought to
know so they could get the folks here praying. Albie's already got a
contact on the Al Hillah thing, so he doesn't need me. I'll be your
pilot."
"Mac, I can't ask you to-"
"You didn't. I volunteered. Now unless you're gonna be a mule and pull
rank on me, saddle up." Rayford was more grateful than he could
express. In the air Mac told him, "You can think, pray, sleep, or talk.
I've got this baby on a path to San Diego, and I'm looking forward to
seeing those people again and meeting some new ones. My prediction is
that Chloe will be there waiting for us."
"I was with you right up until that last," Rayford said. "I've got a
bad, bad feeling about this. If Buck and George don't find her soon, or
if they find out the GC has her, we've got to get those people out of
there."
"And take them where?"
"Petra is the only place I know anymore."
"Chloe ain't gonna give the GC a thing. Unless they saw her coming out
of the underground, what've they got?"
"She had to be in the area. Unless she can convince them she came from
somewhere else, she sure gives them a place to start looking."
Rayford buried his head in his hands and tried to sleep. No dice. All
he could do was pray. Chloe had been Daddy's girl from day one. She
loved school, was inquisitive, single-minded, stubborn. She was the
last person in the family to come to Christ, and Rayford had no
illusions that he was responsible for that. He had taught her to
believe only in what she could see and smell and touch.
----------
Chloe always wanted to be in the middle of the action, and if someone
wouldn't put her there, she'd put herself there. He wanted to resent
her for it, especially now, but he was overwhelmed with worry and fear.
All he wanted was to know she was safe and back with Buck and Kenny. He
knew that no matter what happened, they would be reunited someday, and
that it would be less than a year from now. But somehow that wasn't as
com-forting as he thought it might be.
They were destined to be with Christ when they died, and should they
survive, they would be with him on earth for a thousand years. But the
prospect of dying was still a fearful thing. It was likely that any of
the Tribulation Force who died during the next year would be martyrs to
the cause of Christ, but their loved ones would still mourn them, still
miss them. Worst of all, Rayford realized, he didn't want to think
about how his loved ones might die.
The suffering might be short-lived, but no one wants to think of his
beloved going through anything terrifying or torturous or agonizing.
"Father," Rayford said, "let this be a mission of relocation at worst.
I have no reason more valid than anyone else to deserve special
treatment, to have my daughter supernaturally protected. You don't need
her; you don't need any of us. But we have pledged ourselves to you and
trust you know what you're doing."
Jock turned out to be a tall, heavy man with a uniform that may once
have fit him but now encased him like a sausage. He had his underlings
bring Chloe from a small cell to a slightly larger room. He pointed to
a chair and she sat directly across from him at a metal table.
Jock dropped an accordion file on the table and took off his jacket,
draping it over the back of the chair. He sat wearily and let out a
loud sigh. "So, Phoebe Evangelista. Where'd you come up with that one?"
Chloe stared at him. She detected an Australian accent and noticed the
number 18 on his forehead. On the back of his right hand was a tattoo
of Nicolae Carpathia's face.
"Mind if I smoke?"
Chloe raised her eyebrows and nodded.
"Well, what do I care whether you mind or not? I've got a lot of work
to do today, young lady, and you're keeping me from it."
"Go do it," Chloe said.
"So, she talks," Jock said, pulling a small cigar from his pocket. "I
thought you were going to be one of those name-rank-and-serial-number
types, minus the last two. Well, you are my work, and you've been a bad
girl. You've been lying to my people, haven't you?"
"Yes."
"You want to fess up, or you want me to tell you what we found?"
Chloe shrugged.
"We're not getting a thing out of you, are we?"
"No."
"Took a while, but we got it. Besides being short of people, our
systems are crashing, and-"
"You're breaking my heart."
Jock reached for his file. "Yeah, well, from what we found, I can
imagine. I have good news and bad news this morning,
Mrs. Williams.
Which would you like?"
So, there it was. In a matter of hours, the prints or the eye reading
had given her away. "Nothing you can say will be good news."
"Don't be rash. We're reasonable people, much as you and yours would
like to think otherwise and persuade all the sheep
who follow that
kook Ben-Judah."
Tsion has more brains in his eyebrows than any ten GCs I've ever met.
"I have a proposition for you, ma'am."
"I don't want to hear it."
"Sure you do."
"Let me guess. My freedom for a few leads?"
"Well, you can play high-and-mighty all you want, Mom, but I'd think
you'd be open to hearing me out when the benefit to you deals with your
own child."
FIVE
ALBIE'S BLACK-MARKET world was a shadowy landscape of operators who
largely went by nicknames and initials. Albie himself had fashioned his
name from his home-town, Al Basrah. People who needed to know who he
was knew enough to reach him. Before he became a believer, Albie had
been one of the top three black marketers in the Middle East. His
conversion to Christ had left only two, and the death of one of them,
reputedly at the hands of the other in a deal gone bad, left one. And
that was who Albie needed to get ahold of.
He had never liked Double-M, or Mainyu Mazda, even when Albie was of
the same ilk and character. Killing was nothing new for Mainyu. It was
how he maintained his reputation and control. You wanted something,
anything, he was the man. But pity anyone who ever, ever tried to
swindle or even shortchange the man. Legend had it that he had
personally murdered a dozen people-one of them one of his own wives-who
had not lived up to their end of some bargain. None dared calculate how
many he may have hired others to eliminate.
Those who claimed to know said Mainyu celebrated each personal killing
by adding a tattooed double-M to his neck. He had begun twenty years
before when he had strangled a guard in a Kuwaiti prison. He applied
the first tattoo himself, the ink a concoction of rubber shavings from
the soles of his shoes, paint chips from the prison bars, and blood. A
sharpened paper clip heated by a cigarette lighter was his applicator.
He put that first double-M directly under his Adam's apple. He added
one on either side of the original for each subsequent murder, so
people could tell whether he was on an odd or even number by whether or
not his tattooed necklace was even on both sides.
The last time Albie had seen Mainyu, his necklace had one more double-M
on the left than on the right and his count stood at twelve. The more
recent tattoos were clearer and more professionally done, and
supposedly the one for his wife had a feminine flair.
Albie put the word on the street that he wanted an audience with
Mainyu, and within two hours a note was slipped under his door with an
address deep in the street markets on Abadan Island on the Shatt al
Arab River in southwestern Iran.
It was like MM to follow the money. Pipelines con-nected Abadan's huge
refinery to the oil fields of Iran.
Of course Mainyu did his black marketing in the city's underbelly.
Like anyone anywhere who didn't bear a mark of loy-alty to Carpathia,
Albie had become nocturnal. He and Mac shared a flat in a forsaken
corner of Al Basrah, where the landlord didn't know or care about one's
loyalty to the Global Community provided the rent enve-lope was full
and waiting the first of every month. Albie had taught Mac that the
best way to get around was on motor scooters small and light enough to
be stored indoors or hidden in the woods near where they hid their
small plane.
Albie would wait for the sun to disappear before ven-turing out to a
ferry that would get him and his scooter to the island, where he would
find the address some thirty miles from home.
----------
When big Jock said something about it probably being past Chloe's
breakfast time, her mouth watered. "But as you can understand, ma'am,
we don't feed uncooper-ative prisoners. Oh, at some point, you'll get
some sort of nutrition bar that'll keep you alive until your
execu-tion." He patted the big file. "I can't say for sure until I hear
from International, but this has all the makings of a spectacle.
Wouldn't you say?"
"That's not my call."
"But your baby-what's the name?"
Chloe leveled her eyes at Jock and pressed her lips together. How she
loved to say her baby's name. Kenneth Bruce Williams. Kenny Bruce.
Kenny B. But she would not tell this man. There was no official record
of Kenny's birth, and the GC didn't even know whether she'd had a boy
or a girl.
"Surely there's no harm in my knowing the name."
"Phoebe Evangelista
Jr."
Jock looked at the ceiling. "You know what? I am not the least bit
amused. I'm not surprised either, because I've dealt with enough of
your type. Some say there's something admirable about you people,
sticking with something this long even though in the end you're going
to lose, and you know it. But I would have thought a religious
person-and come on, that's what you are, isn't it?-I would have thought
you'd care a little more about the disposition of your child. Is it a
girl? How old is she now?"
"Look," Chloe said, "you know who I am and what I am and what I'm not,
which is a Carpathia loyalist. That's punishable by death, so why don't
you just-"
"Oh, now hold on, ma'am. These things are still negotiable. Don't be
jumping to concl-"
"I will not be providing you any information to reduce my sentence. I'm
not interested in life in prison. I would not take the mark even if you
promised freedom for my family. And everybody knows that even those who
take the mark now are executed anyway."
"Oh, where did you hear that? That's terrible. And a lie."
"Whatever you say."
Jock leaned back in his chair and called out, "Nigel?"
"Sir?"
"Could you open a window? It's stuffy in here."
The young guard entered and opened a window behind heavy bars. There
would be no escaping.
"It's only fair that I outline what I have to offer," Jock said. "You
see, we know more than your name. We know you dropped out of Stanford
University six years ago. We know you're the daughter of Potentate
Carpathia's first pilot. We know that you know that your father became
a subversive and may have either conspired or participated in the
assassination of the potentate.
"Your husband is also a former employee of His Excellency and now
publishes a contraband magazine. They're deeply connected with Tsion
Ben-Judah and the traitor assassin Rosenzweig. And you, Mrs. Williams,
are no retiring bride either. No. You run the Judah-ite black market,
keeping alive millions without the mark, who have no legal right to buy
or sell..
"No ma'am, you should be offered nothing, no plea bargain, no break,
nothing even for your child. Because more than that, you were involved
in an operation in Greece where you impersonated a Global Community
officer."
"How did you know that?" It was out before Chloe could think. Was there
a mole in their own operation? She couldn't have been recognized.
"I'll tell you if you'll tell me something."
"Never mind."
"It's the beauty of iris-scan technology. Normal secu-rity cameras,
like the ones in our headquarters in Ptole-maIs, can get a good enough
read on your iris to match it with the one recorded when you enrolled
at Stanford. It has four times as many points of reference as a
finger-print, and there has never been a recorded error. Lucky for the
one among your number who murdered one of our operatives in that very
building that we weren't able to trace you to him. But he's from right
here in town, isn't he? How far away can he be? How far from where you
were jogging?"
----------
Buck could barely believe what he was hearing. And from Sebastian, of
all people, who was sitting there because of the selfless, heroic
efforts of the Tribulation Force, Chloe in particular.
"It's not easy to say, Buck," George said. "But we have to weigh the
welfare of two hundred people against springing one person in the face
of almost impossible odds."
"First," Buck said, "you're assuming the GC has her. She could be
anywhere. But even if you're right, how is that any more impossible
than the situation you were in?"
"Buck, I know, okay? And there's no way I want to just do nothing. But
there's one big difference here too. The prisoner in that situation was
a very big and strong man, trained to kill. And, you'll recall, for all
Mac and Hannah and Chloe did on my behalf, it came down to me against
one of my captors. Even then the odds were bad, and it could have gone
either way. Let's say I'd failed and the three of them had been
compromised. We lose four people. We blast into local headquarters
here, we could wind up giving away everything."
"So, what, we let her rot while we move to Petra?"
----------
"Here's what I have in mind for your child, Mrs. Williams," Jock said,
"in the event you come to your senses and help us a little. I'm
guessing you would prefer your son or daughter to remain in the
tradition you and your husband have begun. Obviously, that would be
counter-productive to our aims. We would like to see all children
enrolled in Junior GC before they start school.
"But in your case, we're willing to treat your child as a nonentity
until he or she is twelve years old."
"And who would raise him?" Chloe said, wincing, realizing hunger was an
effective tactic after all.
"So we're talking about a boy, then. Fair enough. Want to give me a
name to make it less awkward to carry out negotiations?"
Chloe didn't answer. These weren't negotiations. All she had to do was
protect Kenny for one more year and the GC wouldn't have a chance at
him.
"Come now, Mrs. Williams. You're a bright woman. You have to see what a
prize you are to us. We have been inconvenienced and, I'll admit it,
embarrassed by the Judah-ites. There is little doubt you people are
some-how behind our little problem in New Babylon right now. You can
help us. I'm not naive enough to think you want to do that, but I'm
trying to give you a reason. You have some huge bargaining chips."
"May I stand?"
"You may, but I need to warn you that we are locked in. I'm three times
your size, but just for smiles, let's say you overpower me, get the
drop on me. You could break my neck and kill me, but you're not getting
out of here."
"I just want to move a little, sir."
"Feel free. And call me Jock."
Yeah, you're my best friend now.
"Hey, you want some breakfast?"
"Of course."
"Me too. What do you like?"
"I'm not fussy."
"I am. I go for the old artery-clogger special. Eggs, bacon, sausage,
toast, pancakes with lotsa syrup. Want some?"
He had to be kidding. Chloe stood with her arms folded and turned away.
"Come on! Can't get you to call me by my first name. Can't get you to
tell me what you want to eat. How 'bout it? Will you
join me? Will you
have what I'm having?"
"I told you, I'm not fussy."
"You also told me you were hungry. I'll order for us, eh, Chloe? You
mind if I call you Chloe?"
"Actually, I'd rather you not."
"Oh, well, then, by all means. It's all about you. Just let me know all
your desires and preferences. If the pillow in your cell is not soft
enough, give me a holler. Or call the front desk."
So the gloves were off. Chloe had convinced him she wasn't going to
cooperate, so he was done playing good cop.
Or was he? Jock moved past her and summoned Nigel again, and she
overheard him ordering the very breakfasts he had described. He turned
back to her.
"Food service here is about the same as at any jail, Chloe, but even a
hash stinger is hard-pressed to mess up breakfast. Now listen, while we
wait ... I can see you're no pushover. I didn't expect you to be and
wouldn't have respected you if you had been. Here's the deal. You know
nothing you give us is going to set you free. How would we look to the
public? But I can get your execution commuted to a life sentence, and I
can get that in a livable facility. You'd have my word on it. It'd be
maximum security, of course, but you would have full custody of your
son until he's twelve years old."
The fact was, Kenny was safe with Buck, and if she could maintain her
sanity, that might not have to change. If only she could get word to
Buck to get everyone out of there and to Petra.
Chloe felt light-headed and hunger gnawed. "And that deal is in
exchange for ... ?"
"Taking the mark of loyalty would be a given. No way we would have any
credibility otherwise. That gets you life instead of death. But what
gets you the nice facil-ity and custody of your son is information."
"You think I'm going to flip on my people."
"I do, and you know why? Because you're a loving mother. You think your
people wouldn't give you up in a second to keep their necks out from
under that blade? Give me a break."
----------
Albie shuddered, tooling through Abadan on his scooter, cap pulled low
over his eyes. Al Basrah was no better, but this had to be what Sodom
and Gomorrah had been like before God torched them. Every form of sin
and debauchery was displayed right on the street. What was once the
seedy side of town now was the town. Row after row of bars,
fortune-telling joints, bordellos, sex shops, and clubs pandering to
every persuasion and perversion teemed with drunk and high patrons.
Hashish permeated the air. Cocaine and heroin deals went down in plain
sight.
The GC Peacekeepers and Morale Monitors had once made a noisy bust or
two weekly to keep up appear-ances. But with their ranks shrunk, they
now concen-trated on crimes against the government. Skip one of your
thrice-daily bowings and scrapings before the image of Carpathia and
you could be hauled off to jail. Caught without the mark of loyalty?
Zero tolerance. They enjoyed playing with people's minds and telling
them they had one last chance. When a gratefully weep-ing soul eagerly
approached the mark application site, he or she was pushed or dragged
screaming to the guil-lotine as an example.
Bad as Abadan had become, there was a worse part of town, and it was
where Mainyu Mazda and his kind plied their trade. In the open-air
market, where loud haggling and swindling were the daytime sport, were
makeshift dens of clapboard squares, which consisted of just walls and
a locking door, no roof. A tarp in the corner could be hastily attached
to corner posts in the event of rain, but otherwise, black marketers
and their henchmen (one always standing guard outside) held court
inside, meeting with people who wanted some-thing, anything, and were
willing to pay a lot to get it.
Albie cut the engine but stayed aboard his scooter, straddling the seat
and pushing it along with his feet through the narrow alleyways. Amid
the sleeping drunks were also crazy men, women of ill repute, men and
women with all kinds of wares for sale. All beckoned to the
leather-clad, smallish man walking the quiet scooter.
Albie looked neither right nor left, catching no one's eye. He knew
where he was going and wanted it to appear so. He couldn't avoid a
modicum of pride that his business had never sunk this low. What he had
done for years was illegal, of course, and no circumstance jus-tified
it. But compared to this, he had had class. He had run an airstrip-that
was his front. And his clientele had been made up as much of wealthy
businessmen and pilots as it was lowlifes and crooks.
But he knew this world and its language. He needed a bad guy, someone
who knew someone. Someone who had an inside track at the palace and
knew where the meetings were to be held in Al Hillah. Someone who might
even know where the largest ever cache of nuclear warheads was stored.
Someone who, before Carpathia and his minions arrived, could get into
the meeting room and bug the place, transmitting everything to a
frequency accessed by only one person in the world. Only Albie and his
people knew that would be Chang in Petra.
Had he more than a day to get this done, Albie might have been able to
do it himself with his own contacts, people less risky, less volatile.
But there were times in a man's life when he had to weigh his options
and throw the dice. And while that analogy was foreign to his new life,
this was one of those times.
----------
"Please sit at the table while the door is opened briefly, Chloe," Jock
said. The smell of the breakfasts over-whelmed her, and she sat with
her back to the door.
"Right over here, Nigel, if you would."
Jock sat facing her. He tossed her a cloth napkin and made a show of
tucking his over his tie and spreading it to cover the expanse of his
chest and belly. Chloe opened her napkin and laid it in her lap as
Nigel set the heaping tray between them.
Nigel put a stack of pancakes in front of Jock. A pitcher of syrup. A
plate of toast with butter and jelly. A large coffee cup, into which he
poured steaming black coffee, and he left the pot there too. A massive
plate of scrambled eggs with bacon and sausage links. He set Jock's
silver on either side of his main plate, then put knife, fork, and
spoon in front of Chloe. And there she sat, only silver before her and
napkin in her lap. Nigel removed the tray and left, locking the door.
Jock rubbed his hands together, grinning. "Does this look great or
what? I hardly know where to begin." He pulled each plate a little
closer, then picked up his knife and fork and began manipulating the
eggs into a huge first bite.
"I'm sorry," he said. "Where are my manners? Did you want to say grace?
Ask a blessing? No? I will then. Thank you, Excellency, for what I am
about to enjoy."
Jock shoveled the bite of eggs into his mouth, stored it in his right
cheek, followed it with half a link of sausage, and spoke with his
mouth full. "Nigel must have forgot yours, eh, Chloe? Oh, that's right.
You haven't been a cooperative prisoner yet, have you? Well, that's
your call."
The big man sat there, knifing, forking, spooning, smacking his lips,
chugging coffee, and grinning. "Sure you don't want some? Huh? It's
good. I mean it. 'Sup to you. Otherwise, Nigel will keep an eye on you
and that energy bar will be delivered to your cell, oh, I'd say about
an hour, maybe two, after you've given up on it. And energy may not be
the right word. It's designed to keep you alive until we can put you to
death. There's nutrition, but not energy per se. You'll get to love it
though, look forward to it. I mean, come on, it's not bacon and eggs,
but it's going to be your only treat."
----------
Albie rolled up in front of a tiny structure that appeared to be a mass
of incongruously faded yellow boards wired and nailed together. The
padlock was conspicuous on the door, which was guarded by a tall, thin
rasp of a man Albie recognized from years before. In fact, if he wasn't
mistaken, the name was Sahib and he was Mainyu's for-mer
brother-in-law. Former because he was the brother of the wife Mainyu
had murdered. Talk about loyalty.
Albie stepped off the scooter and thrust out a hand. Sahib ignored it
and squinted at him in the darkness. "Looking to sell that bike? You
came to the right place."
"No. I want to see Mainyu, Sahib."
That provoked a double take. "Albie?"
And now the man shook his hand. He held up a fin-ger, unlocked the
door, and disappeared. Albie heard a low, intense conversation. A
stranger emerged, hard and cold eyes darting before he hurried off.
Sahib came out, shutting the door behind him. "Two minutes, Albie," he
said, and made a motion indicating Mainyu was on the phone. "Fifty
Nicks to guard your bike."
"Twenty."
"Twenty-five."
"Deal. And if it is not as I left it, I split your skull."
"I know, Albie. Pay in advance."
"Ten now, fifteen later."
"Fifteen now."
Albie peeled off the Nicks. The negotiation, even the threats, was
expected. A throat clearing from behind the door spurred Sahib to usher
Albie in, but as Albie fol-lowed, he saw a small woman striding their
way from a similar cubbyhole a hundred feet away. "Wait," he said.
"Sahib. Watch the bike."
"I said I would. Oh, this is just a guest who will be joining you."
The young woman, robed head to toe, big eyed and severe looking with a
42 on her forehead, carried a satchel. Sahib pulled her in as he slid
out, locking the door.
Mainyu, illuminated by a battery-powered lamp, sat behind a flimsy wood
desk, a mug of something before him, his smile exhibiting surprisingly
white teeth. "Albie, my friend, how are you?" he said, reaching with
both hands.
"I am well, Mainyu. But I must insist that my business with you is
private."
"As usual, of course. Please, sit."
Albie sat in a rusted metal folding chair while the woman went around
the desk and pulled a wood box from a corner and sat on it, opening her
satchel. Albie looked into Mainyu's eyes and cocked his head at the
woman.
"Her?" Mainyu said dismissively. "Tattoo artist. She has neither ears
nor tongue."
The woman smiled as she removed her instruments and reached in front of
Mainyu to direct the lamp more squarely toward him. He lifted his chin,
and she swabbed a small area on his neck where a tattoo would even the
number on both sides.
"You know what they say about my tattoos, do you not, old friend?"
Albie smiled. "Everybody knows what they say." "So, true or not, it is
effective, no?"
"Effective. Is it true, Mainyu?"
"Of course."
"Who was your latest victim?"
"You mean who will be?"
"Sorry?"
"Sometimes I get the tattoo in advance."
----------
In spite of himself, Rayford had been dozing. And as the Gulfstream
rocketed toward the States, he began digging through his bags.
"What's up, Ray?" Mac said.
"What time is it in New Babylon?"
"Coming up on ten o'clock in the evening."
"That makes it late morning in San Diego, and still no word. Buck
promised to call even if they just found out where she was. You
remember the main number at the palace?"
"Never knew it. Did you?"
"Once upon a time."
"Should be easy enough to get. But no one is still there, Ray. Need
someone at Petra?"
"No. Now do you remember what David or Chang said about making these
phones impossible to trace?"
"That I do remember." He told Rayford the combination of symbols and
numbers that made the satellite phones appear to be coming from
anywhere.
Rayford punched in the number for an international operator. "The
Global Community Palace in New Bab-ylon, please," he said.
"I'm ringing it for you," the operator said, "but they have no light
there just now, and you may encounter delays."
"Thank you."
"You have reached the Global Community Head-quarters Palace in New
Babylon. Please bear with us as technical difficulties may make it
impossible to answer your call immediately."
And there came "Hail Carpathia" by the big choir again.
"Agh!"
"Global Community, how may I direct your call?"
"Krystall, please."
"In the potentate's office?"
"Of course."
"Sir, it's after hours here. Those offices are closed."
"I know that. Her quarters, please."
"Who may I say is calling?"
"I'll tell her."
"I need to know, sir, or I won't ring someone at this time of the
night."
"If you have to know, it's her uncle Gregory."
"One moment."
Mac shot Rayford a look. "Uncle Gregory?"
"Long story."
"Long flight. I'll look forward to it."
"Uncle Gregory?" Krystall said, her voice thick from sleep.
"Is this line secure?" Rayford said.
"I think so. I don't know. This isn't my uncle, is it?"
"You know who it is."
"You never told me."
"You know I'm a friend."
"I'll know for sure if you can really help my uncle. I passed along
your message."
"You did? Is he following up?"
"I think he is."
"Believe me, if he makes contact, our people will get him everything he
needs."
"I'm grateful, but why are you call-"
"A favor."
"I knew it. I can't-"
"Hear me out. I had no idea I would need anything when I talked to you.
I just need information that only you can give me."
"I can't be giving you inf-"
"I'm not asking for much, but I don't want to get you in trouble."
"Oh, what's the difference?" she said. "Being in trouble is no worse
than being in his good graces around here."
"I need to know if there's been any talk of an impor-tant arrest in the
United North American States. It would be a young wom-"
"Yes! Yes! Late in the day, a couple of hours after quitting time-we
were still working because of the move tomorrow afternoon-Mr. Akbar
came in excited about some break in San Diego. Local GC there arrested
someone connected with the Judah-ites."
"Any idea whether they are planning to-"
"That's all I know. Really."
"I appreciate this more than I can say, Krystall. Is there anything I
can do for you?"
"What could you possibly do for me?"
"I just wish-"
"If you can't send me a pair of eyes, I can't think of a thing."
SIX
THE TATTOO artist snapped on her rubber gloves and asked Mainyu Mazda
in an Indian accent if he wanted anesthetic. He pulled back and looked
at her.
"You never do," she said. "Head back, chin up."
Albie did not expect a meeting with this man in this part of this town
to be other than bizarre, but neither did he dream he would have to
compete with a derma-tological procedure.
"Go ahead, my friend," Mainyu said, gesturing. "You come to me why?"
Albie leaned forward, forearms on the desk, and told MM of his urgent
need in Al Hillah. The woman's battery-powered applicator emitted a
loud, rapid clicking as she worked. Mainyu winced but managed to
encour-age Albie with "Uh-huhs" and "Hmms." Finally he said, "A moment,
Kashmir." The woman pulled away and busied herself with the needle in
the glow of the lamp.
"It is no secret that you are not a friend of the poten-tate," MM said.
Albie smiled. "I hope it is a secret in some places." "Why do you not
let me have Kashmir give you a loyalty mark? Any number you wish."
"You know I cannot do that, Mainyu."
"Oh yes. You are now a Judah-ite and believe in the evil spirits."
"The evil sp-?"
Mainyu waved with the back of his hand. "Don't you people believe that
anyone who takes the mark of Car-pathia goes to hell, something like
that?"
"More important is where our loyalty lies."
MM looked at Kashmir, then leaned back and grinned at Albie. He laughed
loudly. "You are not going to start in on me now, are you, old friend?
I wondered."
"No, you have made your choice. I am curious as to why you have a 72
and not a 216, though."
"You think I am a friend of the international regime?" "Well, I wond-"
"You think my mark is real? You know me better than that." He spat.
"But the penalty for a fake mark is worse than death," Albie said.
"Public torture, I know," Mainyu said. "But the GC is not interested in
me except in how I can benefit them. If I were to bear the mark of the
one to whom I am loyal, it would have to be the number 1. What is it
our Mexican friends say, Albie? `Look out for numeeo uno!' And if I was
not a benefit to the GC, I would be assigned to the Plain of Jezreel
like so many millions of others. What kind of business could I do
there?"
"How do you benefit the GC?"
Kashmir dabbed at a tiny stream of blood on Mainyu's neck.
"I am a businessman, Albie. I look for the biggest profit for the
smallest expense, and right now that is bounty money."
"You-"
"Deliver the disloyal to the Peacekeepers. Of course I do. Tell me,
what is the cost of doing that kind of busi-ness? Twenty thousand Nicks
a head, same price dead or alive. I find the dead more manageable. Once
the victim is still, there is no danger, no escape attempt, nothing
messy. With the right size plastic bag, even the car stays clean.
Follow?"
"So, you are a supplier-"
"To the GC, yes, of course. If low overhead and high profit is the
businessman's mantra, what better business is there than something for
nothing? They are willing to pay for something I can provide."
Albie wondered how many unmarked victims of Mainyu's were Judah-ites.
"My request, then," Albie said, "does it constitute a conflict of
interest for you?"
"Of course not, my friend! Not if you brought the money. I am not a
friend of the GC. I am merely a busi-ness associate. My interest is
profit."
"I wasn't sure what such services would cost."
"Oh yes, you were. You are not out of the business that long. And
surely you didn't expect me to commit to this without all the money up
front, not when it has to be done almost immediately."
"You have the people, the hardware, the-?"
"You know I have everything. It will be done. Pro-vided you have the
money."
"Such a job would have cost twenty thousand Nicks a few years ago,"
Albie said.
"So I assume you brought more, due to inflation and the urgent nature
of the request."
Albie hesitated.
"Sure you did, and you will not make the mistake of holding out on me,
because you know how easy it would be for me to find out how much you
have with you."
"Of course. I brought thirty thousand Nicks."
"Hmm."
"Surely that's enough. Fifty percent more than before has to cover
inflation and the rush."
"It's not enough," Mainyu said. "It's twenty thousand short."
Albie assumed the deal was about to go down. They were in the haggling
stage, and anything other than a vigorous argument from both sides
would show dis-respect. "Thirty thousand is all I brought, and all I am
willing to pay."
"Uh-huh. And is it all on your person or did you leave some on your
bike?"
"You know better than that, Mainyu. Who leaves cash in the alley here?"
Mainyu laughed. "Sahib!"
The tall man unlocked the door and entered.
"How much is our friend paying you to watch his bike?"
"Twenty-five."
"How much does he owe?"
"Ten."
Mainyu turned to Albie. "Do you have thirty thou-sand plus the ten you
owe Sahib?"
"Yes."
"Any more?"
"Spare change for the trip home."
"Let me see the thirty thousand."
Able reached inside his jacket and produced a brick of bills wrapped in
cellophane.
"Now the ten you owe Sahib." Albie slapped a ten on the table. "Now
your spare change."
From his left pocket Albie produced a wad of bills and coins. "Maybe
another fifteen-plus," he said.
Mainyu pressed his lips together and cocked his head, arching his
eyebrows at Albie. "We are still twenty thousand apart," he said.
"I said thirty thousand is all I'm willing to pay." "Then we have a
problem. What are we going to do about the other twenty?"
Albie fought a grin. Mainyu had always driven a hard bargain. "You're
serious," Albie said. "You won't do it for thirty? You want me to take
my business else-where?"
"Oh no! And pass up what's before me? No!"
"It'll be done, then?"
"It's already done, my friend. Something for nothing. Fifty thousand
and change for virtually no overhead."
"Fifty?"
"Kashmir, call the palace for me, will you? Get Mr. Akbar. Sahib?
Remember what I have been teaching you about the business? Creative
solutions for getting to where a deal makes sense?"
Sahib nodded. "Yes, Mr. Mazda."
"Your handgun, please."
Sahib produced a .44 revolver.
Mainyu Mazda hefted it and turned it over in his hands. "My old friend
and I are twenty thousand Nicks apart, and he is the solution. What is
the bounty on unmarked citizens again, Sahib?"
"Twenty thousand."
"That makes fifty. And we don't even have to do the job."
He pointed the barrel between Albie's eyes and pulled the trigger.
----------
Her cell, Chloe thought, was in a strange location. It con-sisted of a
cage in the corner of a larger room. A metal shelf protruded from the
wall. Her bed, she imagined. And a combination sink and toilet stood in
plain sight. It was what wasn't there that concerned her. Nothing was
mov-able or removable. There wasn't so much as a toilet seat, a
blanket, or a pillow. No reading material. Nothing.
Faint from hunger, Chloe crawled onto the shelf and lay on her side,
facing the door. She was supported by woven strips of metal about four
inches wide that might have given a bit if she weighed a hundred more
pounds. Not even the formerly ubiquitous Nigel was anywhere to be seen.
The outer room was bright enough, the sun streaming through the windows
and bars. But the room was otherwise drab, all tile and linoleum and
steel in institutional greens.
Chloe wanted to call out, to tell someone she was hun-gry, but her
pride overcame her discomfort. She sat up quickly when she heard the
door open, and a man in a custodial-type uniform hurried in. Cleaning
bottles hung from his belt next to his cell phone. He carried a rag and
had another in his back pocket.
"Oh, hi," he said. "Didn't know we had somebody in custody."
"You're not supposed to," she said, dying to be charming.
"Pardon?"
"I just wandered in here. Locked myself in like an idiot."
He laughed, a smile radiating. "And you had the bad fortune of wearing
a jumpsuit today that makes you look like an inmate too. Unlucky."
"Yeah, that's me," she said.
"Maybe they locked you up for your taste in clothes, huh?"
"Must have."
"Well, I'm just getting a bucket over here. Best of luck to ya."
"Thanks."
He grabbed a bucket from the corner under a sus-pended TV set and
headed back toward the door. Then he stopped and turned on his heel.
"They gave you your phone call, didn't they?"
"Oh, sure. I've been treated like a queen. I called Santa Claus."
He set the bucket down and moved to within a few feet of the cage. He
looked over his shoulder at the door, then turned back and lowered his
voice. "No, I'm serious. That's the one thing I don't like here. I
mean, people get what they deserve, not taking the mark and all, like
you. I'm not so naive as to think there'd still be a trial for that
after all these years, but what ever happened to one phone call? I
mean, this is still America, isn't it?"
"Not the one I remember."
"Me either. Hey, you wanna make a phone call?"
"What?"
"You gotta promise not to tell. I'd be in a lot of trouble."
"What, with your phone?"
"Sure. Here." He slid it from his belt and angled it so it would fit
between the wires of the cage. "But just one, and you gotta make it
quick. Then hide it. Or slide it across the floor like I dropped it or
something. I'll come back for it in a while.
"
"You're serious?"
"Sure. What's the harm? Go ahead. Knock yourself out. Pretty little
thing like you. I'll be back."
Chloe's hands shook as she went to a corner with her back to the door.
How dumb do they think I am? Thing probably doesn't even work, and if
it does, not from here. She didn't care. It was worth a try. She had to
talk with someone. She didn't dare risk calling the safe house,
assuming this was a setup and that any call would be traced.
Chloe dialed her dad's phone number. He had to be back in Petra by now.
----------
Rayford had awakened Krystall in the palace yet again. "I've been
thinking about your request," he said.
"My request?"
"For eyes."
"Don't play with me."
"No, it kept working on me, and I might just know of a pair you could
use. You remember, just before you and I spoke, someone opened the
door, then shut it again and ran off?"
"How could I forget? That's when you scared the life out of me."
"He's a believer too, and he can see in New Babylon."
"I'm listening."
"I might be able to talk him into coming back and helping you when
everyone else is gone. He can tell you where stuff is,
do all sorts of
things for you."
"What's in it for you?"
"There might be things in the files I'd like to know about."
"More than you know."
"See? He helps you for a few days, or for however long you want, and
you give him access to things that might help me. Deal?"
"What's in it for him?"
"I'll take care of that. In fact, I'll call him right now and see if I
can set it up. Well, I'll call him tomorrow. No sense waking him."
"No, why should I be the only one up at this hour?"
"Sorry." Rayford heard a tone that told him he had a call coming in.
"Hang on just a second, Krystall." He checked the caller ID. A San
Diego area code, but a num-ber he didn't recognize. "I'd better take
this. If I can get this deal arranged, I'll have the guy call you."
He punched his call button twice, ending one call and picking up the
other. "Steele here."
"Daddy, it's me."
"Chloe!"
"Please, just listen. You still have that record feature on your phone?"
"Yes, but-"
"Turn it on right now. Do it. Did you? Is it on?"
"Yes, but-"
"I know this call is being traced and your phone is going to be useless
after this, but I couldn't call anyone else. I'm in the San Diego GC
jail, and they're trying to bargain with me to get to the others. Tell
Buck and Kenny I love them with all my heart and that if I don't see
them again before heaven, I'll be waiting for them there. Dad, this was
all my fault, but I was jogging within thirty miles of our place and,
oh, listen, I just wanted to tell you that I'm all right for now. I've
just been sitting here reminiscing about that wonderful trip you and
Mom and I took to Colorado when I was five or six. Remember?"
"Vaguely. Chloe, listen-"
"Dad, I don't dare stay on long. It's important to me that you remember
that trip!"
"Honey, that had to be more than twenty years ago. I-"
"It was! But it was so special, and I wish everybody could go there
again. If I had one dream, it's that we could all go there right now,
as soon as possible."
"Chloe-"
"Dad, don't. You know they have to be listening. Just please give my
love to everybody and tell them to pray that I'll be strong to the end.
I will give nothing away. Nothing. And, Dad, think of the Colorado trip
so I know we'll both be thinking of the same thing at the same time. I
love you, Dad. Don't ever forget that."
"I love you too, honey. I-"
"Bye, Daddy."
And she was gone.
----------
"You're supposed to be the combat guy, George," Buck said. "And all you
want to talk about is packing."
"I just want you to know, Buck, that I'm not going to hold you
responsible for any mean thing you say to me until Chloe is back safe
and sound. Then I'm going to tell on you."
"Yeah, and she'll ground you," Priscilla said.
Buck owed George a smile, and it never ceased to amuse him when
Priscilla vainly tried to add to or improve on her husband's humor. It
was just that Buck's spirits could not be lifted. His father-in-law had
confirmed where Chloe was through his contact at the palace, and the
local GC headquarters simply was not a place vulnerable to a raid.
"The best thing we have going for us," Sebastian said, "is that as soon
as they determine who she is, she's most valuable to them alive."
Buck knew it was true, but talking about his beloved as a commodity of
war left a bad taste.
----------
Late in the afternoon Ming brought Beth Ann, Sebastian and Kenny into
the workout room. Ree leaped to his feet and uncharacteristically
embraced Ming. Buck knew the Chloe situation had sobered him. He
wondered if it had even given Ree second thoughts about marriage.
Beth Ann ran back and forth between her parents, showing off. Kenny,
frowning, trudged to Buck and climbed in his lap.
"He didn't nap," Ming said.
Buck nodded and held Kenny's cheek to his chest. "Sleepy, bud?" he said.
Kenny shook his head. "I want Mommy."
"She'll be back later."
The boy closed his eyes.
Buck looked at Priscilla, biting his lip and unable to stanch the
tears. "This is the part I'm going to hate," he mouthed, his chest
convulsing. Kenny roused, but Buck tucked the boy's head under his chin
and wrapped both arms around him, rocking. And weeping.
Priscilla pushed Beth Ann toward her dad and leaned close to Buck.
"Don't you dare give up, Buck. None of us are."
----------
Chloe wanted to call everybody she knew, but she had little question
she'd been set up. It had all been too easy. The global positioning
system in her father's phone would tell the GC right where he was. She
had assumed Petra, but from the ambient sounds, he was in the air. How
long had he and Abdullah been in New Babylon if he was just heading
back now? It didn't compute. Of course he would have been informed of
her disappear-ance. Maybe he was on his way home. She only hoped he
could get rid of the phone before getting close to California. The last
thing she wanted was to lead the GC right to the safe house.
Chloe reached as high as she could and pushed the phone through an
opening in the cage. It flew about eight feet before landing on the
floor and breaking into pieces. "Oops," she said. "And after that nice
man entrusted it to me."
Inside a minute Custodian returned, still dressed the same but this
time with no props. No bucket, no cleansers, no rags. No smile either.
He knelt to pick up the pieces.
"Thanks for the use of your phone. That was most thoughtful. Maybe you
could smuggle me in a cake with a file in it or get word to my people.
Sorry about the damage."
"That's all right, doll," he said, not looking at her. "We got what we
needed. Looks like Daddy's just off the East Coast. Gotta think he's
due to refuel by now. Should be able to alert the most likely airports.
You wanna do yourself a favor, work with Jock. He's a fair guy. No, he
really is. I'm not saying he's got your best interests at heart, but
he's a realist. You've got what he wants, and he knows that's going to
cost him."
"Well, then by all means, friend, tell Jock I'm ready to wheel and
deal. I'll give him everything he wants, now that I know he's fair. I
mean, I heard that from you, and I've known you long enough to trust
you completely."
"Be as much of a smart aleck as you want, kid. See where it gets ya.
Oh, by the way, Nigel's got your energy bar. Should I tell him you're
hungry?"
Chloe sat on the metal bed. She was famished but still more proud than
desperate. "Nah. I had a big breakfast. I couldn't eat another thing
just yet."
"Maybe some television then."
"Spare me. I've heard enough propaganda to last a lifetime."
"But it's time for the news."
"Oh yes, the eminently objective Global Community News Network. Hey,
okay, all right! That's plenty loud enough!"
He ignored her, leaving the volume up and heading for the door.
"Turn it down, please! Sir?"
"Can't hear you," he said. "TV's too loud."
Jock must have been choreographing everything. The five o'clock news
was just coming on, Anika Janssen anchoring live from Detroit.
"Good evening. Darkness continues to plague Global Community
International Headquarters in New Babylon at this hour. It is confined
to the borders of the city and is believed to be an act of aggression
on the part of dissi-dents against the New World Order.
"GC Chief of Security and Intelligence Suhail Akbar spoke with us by
phone earlier from the beleaguered capital. In spite of the turmoil
there, he reports good news, constituting our top story tonight."
"Yes, Anika," Akbar said, "following months of careful planning and
cooperation between the various law enforcement branches of the Global
Community, we are happy to report that a combined task force of crack
agents from both our Peacekeeping and Morale Monitor divisions has
succeeded in apprehending one of the top -echelon Judah-ite terrorists
in the world.
"The arrest was made before dawn today in San Diego after months of
planning. I'd rather not go into the details of the operation, but the
suspect was dis-armed and arrested without incident. Her name is Chloe
Steele Williams, twenty-six, a former campus radical at Stanford
University in Palo Alto, California, from which she was expelled six
years ago after making threats on the lives of the administration."
"Thank you, Chief Akbar. We have further learned that Mrs. Williams is
the daughter of Rayford Steele, who once served as pilot for Global
Community Supreme Potentate Nicolae Carpathia. He was fired some years
ago for insubordination and drinking while on duty, and GC intelligence
believes his resentment led to his current role as an international
terrorist. He was implicated in the conspiracy to assassinate Potentate
Carpathia and is a known associate of former Israeli statesman and now
leading Judah-ite Dr. Chaim Rosen-zweig. Both are known to serve on the
cabinet of Rabbi Tsion Ben-Judah, head of the Judah-ites, the last
hold-outs in opposition to the New World Order.
"Mrs. Williams is the wife of Cameron Williams, formerly a celebrated
American journalist who also worked directly for the potentate before
losing his job due to differences in management style. He edits a
subversive cyber and printed magazine with
a limited circulation.
"Williams, his wife, and her father are international fugitives in
exile, wanted for more than three dozen mur-ders around the world. Mrs.
Williams herself heads a black-market operation suspected of hijacking
billions of Nicks' worth of goods around the world and selling them for
obscene profits to others who cannot legally buy and sell due to their
refusal to pledge loyalty to the potentate.
"The Williamses, who have amassed a fortune on the black market, have
one child remaining after Mrs. Williams apparently aborted two fetuses
and an older daughter died under questionable circumstances. The son,
whom they have named Jesus Savior Williams, pictured here, is two years
old. Acquaintances report that the Williamses believe he is the
reincarnation of Jesus Christ, who will one day conquer Nicolae
Carpathia and return the globe to Christianity."
Chloe sat staring at a toddler, clearly not Kenny Bruce, who had a
Bible in his lap and wore a tiny T-shirt that read "Kill Carpathia!"
"Chief Akbar reports that his forces traced the leading cell of the
Judah-ites in the United North American States to San Diego, where Mrs.
Williams was appre-hended today. Local GC operatives there say she is
already, quote, `singing like a bird, offering all kinds of information
on her colleagues, including her own family, to avoid a death sentence.'
"Here's San Diego GCNN reporter Sue West with Colonel Jonathan `Jock'
Ashmore. Sue?"
"Thank you, Anika. Colonel Ashmore, how important would you say this
arrest is?"
"It's almost inestimable," Jock said, nervously tugging at his uniform
jacket, which came short of covering his middle. "And Mrs. Williams has
proved to be the typical terrorist who knows when it's time to bargain.
When the reality hit her that she had been positively identified and we
informed her of the overwhelming charges against her, it was only a
matter of minutes before she began offering various deals to save her
skin."
"Are you at liberty to say what some of those might be?"
"Not entirely, though she has already pledged to enroll her son in
junior GC as soon as possible. She did reveal the whereabouts of a
low-level Middle Eastern black marketer named Al Basrah, after the
Iranian city of the same name."
"I believe that's in Iraq, Colonel, but go ahead."
"What?"
"Al Basrah is in Iraq, sir."
"Whatever. Anyway, this character shot himself to death rather than be
arrested."
"We are about to show a picture of the dead Al Basrah," Sue West said,
"but we warn you that the picture is very graphic."
Chloe stood and stared as the photo was displayed. It showed Albie with
a black hole between lifeless eyes, a pool of blood behind his head. It
was clearly him. But was it real or doctored?
Chloe shouted, "Jock! Jock! Nigel! Get Jock!" Her screams became sobs,
and she demanded, "Is that true? I want to know
if that's true! Is
Albie dead? Tell me Albie's not dead!"
But no one came. No one responded. As the TV blared, Chloe slid to the
floor, wailing, "God, please! No!"
SEVEN
"GOT ME a friend in Florida," Mac said. "Jacksonville. Co-op guy. We
can refuel there and avoid the normal spots."
"And I can put this phone under one of the wheels before we take off,"
Rayford said. "If they find a mass of metal and plastic on the tarmac,
what're they going to do with it?"
"Wouldn't you rather drown it? Won't take but a minute to drop it in
the drink."
"What'm I going to do, Mac, roll down my window and toss it out?"
"Nah. There's a dandy little thing we used to do in the military when
we wanted to drop something from altitude. You stick it in the speed
brake well, which is, of course, closed on the ground. When we get back
in the air, I'll activate the speed brake-"
"Which will open the panel. Beautiful."
"Yes," Mac said. "You just take her up, throttle up, activate the
brake, and send that phone into the wild blue yonder."
"I don't want to lose any time fooling around." "Gimme that thing. I'll
do it. Won't take more'n sixty seconds."
"I've got to copy Chloe's message first. She's trying to tell me
something, that's for sure."
"It's about my turn for a break anyway, Ray. Once you get it ciphered,
switch seats with me and I'll study it."
----------
Chang had arrived at Petra in the middle of the afternoon, and Naomi
offered to give him his first look at the place. "I will leave word at
the computer center to let us know when they learn anything about
Chloe," she said, "but I don't want you to see that place until the
end, okay?"
He shrugged.
"Abdullah got someone to take your things to your new quarters, which
are not far from his. He will take you there so you can get settled,
and then I will come by to give you your first day's tour."
Chang had been determined not to let anyone immediately pair him off
with somebody. Especially not Naomi. She had to still be a teenager,
which was all right. He was just twenty himself. And while there was no
question about her intellect and technical brilliance, they were going
to have to work closely over the next year. Why complicate things?
And yet ... in person she was stunning. Olive skin and welcoming dark
eyes were set off by her long, black hair. Chang found it difficult not
to stare. She had a beautiful, shy smile, and she seemed so friendly
and self-less. He had never even had a girlfriend, only girls he had
been interested in in high school but whom he would never have dared
let know it.
On the way to Chang's prefabricated quarters, Abdul-lah seemed to know
everybody and wanted them to meet him. They treated Chang like royalty,
but he was so ashamed of bearing the mark of Carpathia that he kept his
baseball cap pulled low. His instinct was to remove it and bow each
time, but he could not.
"Our man inside the palace," Abdullah called him, and people embraced
him or shook his hand, and many blessed him.
To Chang it was a foretaste of heaven. "I wonder what the chances are
of meeting Dr. Ben-Judah and Dr. Rosenzweig," he said.
"Oh, I am so sorry," Abdullah said. "I was supposed to tell you. They
send their most abject apologies for not greeting you appropriately.
They have been meeting with the elders about the issue of Chloe's
disappearance, and they have a council meeting later. They request that
you join them over manna in the morning."
"Good, yes. Thank you, Mr. Smith. I have something I must consult with
Dr. Ben-Judah about."
"I believe Naomi's father would like to meet you too."
He could tell from Abdullah's inflection that he was trying to say
something, but Chang would not bite. "Well, I will look forward to
meeting him as well."
When they reached the dwellings, shipped in and assembled by a team led
by Lionel Whalum, Abdullah first showed Chang his own place. "You can
see that I like to live close to the ground. I sit outside near a fire
when I eat my manna. And inside, I sleep on the floor. If that is not
your custom, you need not do that. Your place is not much different in
size from what you had at the palace, but of course it is much plainer
and simpler."
"It's perfect," Chang said when they arrived. His lug-gage lay next to
his cot and his computers and file boxes sat by the door. "I will sleep
tonight a free man, worried about nothing but the welfare of our
comrades."
"I'll leave you to unpack. If you need anything, you can see my place
from here. Do you need anything at all?"
"Just one thing. I am a little nervous about the manna. Does everyone
care for it?"
"Yes, they do. I am confident you will enjoy it. Imag-ine, being fed by
the King. Yes, it is just sustenance, and yes, it appears to be merely
bread. But it comes from the kitchens of heaven. How can it be anything
but glorious? We are due a portion just before sundown, so you will
know before you join the doctors for breakfast whether you like it or
not."
Half an hour later, when Chang had his place situated just the way he
wanted it, he heard a knock. "Come in!" he said, but no one did. As he
approached the door, he said, "It's open!" Still nothing.
He opened the door to Naomi. "Come in, come in!" he said.
"Oh, I must not," she said. "In my culture it is improper."
"I'm sorry."
"You'll learn. Come, let me show you Petra."
"No word yet on Chloe?" he said as they ventured out.
She shook her head. "It's not going to come to a good end, you know."
"That's my fear," he said. "But we can hope and pray."
Naomi explained that the city was so spread out that it would take days
to see it all. "We'll get ATVs near the tech center. Then let me take
you to the Treasury first, then to a few of the nearby tombs-there are
many. Finally I'd like to take you to the high place where the missile
hit and the spring still bubbles, providing daily water for more than a
million people. If I have timed it right, it should then be close to
sundown, and we can enjoy our manna with water directly from the
source."
Chang was not used to this much walking and climbing, so he was glad
when they were finally aboard four-wheelers. He was stunned by Petra's
beautiful architecture and wondered how anyone could have carved such
structures out of solid rock.
When they finally reached the crest of the high place, where the spring
cascaded into cisterns and aqueducts to the entire area, Naomi cut her
engine and signaled Chang to do the same.
"Are you thirsty?" she said.
"Always. But mostly I'm trying to get used to not worrying who is
watching."
"I cannot imagine. Are you willing to drink from my hands?"
Chang, usually quick and flippant, only smiled. "Whatever is proper in
your culture."
She knelt and washed her hands in a brook, shaking them dry. Chang did
the same. She took him as close as they could get to the center of the
spring. "Ready?" she said.
He nodded, and she thrust her cupped hands into the water, bringing
them up to just under his chin. "Hurry," she said, laughing. "My hands
are not watertight."
He lowered his face into her hands and took a huge gulp. His throat had
been more parched than he knew, and though the water could have been
only a few degrees cooler than the air, it felt almost icy. He coughed
and laughed and said, "More."
He drank from her hands again, and she said, "My turn."
Chang made a bowl of his palms and let her drink. "Enough?" he said,
when his hands were empty. She nodded, and he cupped her face and wiped
the dust from under her shining eyes. He spread his fingers and
extended his hands, brushing through her hair.
Naomi closed her eyes and lifted her face to the setting sun, spreading
her arms and holding her hands palms up. "Here it comes, Chang. Receive
your daily bread from the God of heaven."
Chang stepped back, looked up, and extended his arms as the skies
seemed to snow bits of soft bread that covered the entire area. Below,
the million strong emerged from their quarters with jars and baskets,
and gathered what they needed for dinner.
"Just like in the Bible," Naomi said, "we are to take what we need but
not store any. It will spoil and we will have shown our lack of faith
in God to provide every day."
Chang sat beside her and scooped manna into his hand. "Do you ask God
to bless food that he has just personally delivered?" he said.
She laughed. "Would you like me to?"
"Please." He quickly removed his cap as she began.
"To the great God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and to the Father of
our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, we offer our humble thanks for
everything you provide."
Her young voice was so pure and sweet and her words so perfect, Chang
found his face contorting as tears welled.
"Thank you for safety for our mission today and for allowing us to
bring Chang here. May he find refreshing peace and rest in you. In the
name of Jesus we ask you to bless to our nourishment this gift you have
given. Amen."
With tears streaming, Chang turned away and tugged his cap back on. He
sat with the warm manna in his hand, unable to eat for crying. He felt
Naomi caressing his shoulder. "God bless you, Chang," she said. "Bless
you."
He gathered himself and wiped his face with his free hand. "Don't wait
for me," he managed. "Go ahead."
"I just might," she said lightly. "I never grow tired of this."
"What does it taste like?" he said.
"Oh no, that is not for me to tell you. I know only what it tastes like
to me."
Chang picked two of the small, white disks from his hand and laid them
on his tongue. "Well?" she said.
It was as if he had been struck dumb. "Oh," he said. "Oh."
"That's all you can say?"
He took several more at once. "Oh!"
"I'm guessing you approve."
"I taste honey. Honey for sure."
"Yes."
"Almost like cookies, those sweet wafer things. And they're so filling.
I want more and yet I've had enough."
"Imagine," Naomi said. "Everything we need for twenty-four hours comes
in three helpings of this."
"Miraculous."
"Exodus 16:31 says, `And the house of Israel called its name Manna. And
it was like white coriander seed, and the taste of it was like wafers
made with honey."'
"I'm impressed," he said. "What, you have the whole Old Testament
memorized?"
She laughed. "Hardly, but you know for all of my childhood, I didn't
call it the Old Testament. It was my Bible. I studied it every day. I
still do, but it's a whole different thing now, now that I really know
God."
"I memorize Scripture too," Chang said. "But I've never owned a Bible.
I was raised an atheist, so I have to memorize off the Internet."
"But you do memorize?"
"Doesn't everybody? I mean, Dr. Ben-Judah only reminds us to about five
times with every daily message."
"What are you memorizing?"
"New Testament. John. I'm up to chapter three. I'm slow."
"But you have it memorized up to there?" she said. "That's good."
"Well, yeah, I think. But don't test me. I mean, you could test me on
chapter three, because that's right where I am, but. .."
His voice trailed off. Chang could have sat there next to Naomi all
night, but she stood and took another drink from the spring. "Let me
show you something," she said, reaching for him. He offered his hand
and she pulled him up. "You see my garment?"
He shrugged and nodded. Did he see her garment? He had been stealing
glances all day. He wouldn't have known what to call it. It was more
robe than dress, like something he imagined women wearing in Bible
times.
"It is the only thing I have ever worn here. I had it on when we
arrived."
"It looks brand-new."
"I wash it out every night, and it is new every morning, like the
Lord's compassion."
"Another memorized passage?"
"Yes. Only that was one my father led me to after we survived the
bombs."
"You were here for that?"
"We were among the first."
"What was that like?"
"Like a dream, Chang. Sometimes I cannot imagine it really happened."
"What was the passage?"
"Lamentations 3:22-24: `Through the Lord's mercies we are not consumed,
because His compassions fail not. They are new every morning; great is
Your faithfulness. "The Lord is my portion," says my soul, "Therefore I
hope in Him!""'
"That's beautiful."
"Isn't it? Well, I promised my father we would be back at the tech
center at least by sundown. It's near the amphi-theater, so we'll have
to hurry."
"Am I going to get to hear your story?" he said.
"Of course. And I want to hear yours. Maybe after breakfast tomorrow."
Chang found the tech center much as he might have expected, except that
it was so incongruous to see the massive network of computers in a
building cut from rock. By that time, however, he was much more
impressed with Naomi than with hardware and soft-ware.
"Can you find your way to your quarters?" she said. "We retire early
here and rise with the sun."
"I can, but I'd rather not," he said. "I think I need a guide just one
more time, you know, being my first night here."
"I can find you one. Hold on."
"Naomi!" he said. "I'm kidding. Of course I can find it. I'd just
rather you walked me there."
"In my cul-"
"Inappropriate, of course. How about my walking you home?"
"That would be acceptable and even chivalrous. My father is waiting for
me, and it will be dark by the time I arrive. He will appreciate that I
had an escort."
Like Abdullah, Naomi's father tended a small fire out-side their place.
He was a tall, rotund man with a thick, curly beard. Chang approached
shyly, took off his cap in the darkness, and bowed. "Chang Wong," he
said.
Naomi's father grasped him by the shoulders and pressed his right cheek
to Chang's, then his left. "Eleazar Tiberias," he said with a great,
deep voice. "Perhaps you know my lake."
Chang scratched his head and looked at Naomi, which seemed to bring no
end of mirth to her and her father.
"I have heard so much about you, young man," the elder said. "I am
grateful to you for looking after my daughter, and I look forward with
great anticipation to getting to know you better."
Chang breathed deeply of the crisp night air on his way to his
quarters. Abdullah's fire was just smoldering now, and the smoke
permeated Chang's clothes. He felt so free, so happy, and so enamored
that he was sure he would not be able to sleep. He knelt by his bed,
hardly knowing what to pray. He tried to remember the verse Naomi
quoted, but all he could come up with was "Great is Your faithfulness,"
so he repeated that over and over as he climbed into the cot. Through
the open window he stared at skies so clear he felt as if he could see
every star in the universe. But after fewer than sixty seconds he saw
nothing but Naomi in his dreams.
----------
Mac studied Rayford's scribblings. "You copied every last word of this
conversation, didn't you?"
"I didn't know what else to do," Rayford said. "Clearly the clue is in
that Colorado business."
"What do you remember about it, Ray?"
"It was so long ago, Mac. Just one of those summer things you do when
the kids are little. Raymie wasn't even born yet. It was just the three
of us."
"Yeah, but after she tells you what to say to Buck and Kenny, she says
something about this being her fault. And then the jogging stuff, she's
not serious about that, is she?"
"Being thirty miles from home? Nah. Trying to mislead the GC, no
doubt, but they're not going to fall for that."
"She promises not to give anything away, and you know, I believe every
word of that."
"Me too. They won't get anything out of Chloe."
"So she says the trip was `so special and I wish every-body could go
there again.' But you say it was just the three of you."
"Right. So she, what, wants everybody in San Diego to go to Colorado?"
"Can't be," Mac said. "She says herself she knows the GC is listening
in. But she says her dream is that `we could all go there right now, as
soon as possible.' Where did you go in Colorado, Ray?"
Rayford shook his head. "I don't remember. Where do you go there?"
"Been there lots of times," Mac said. "What cities were you in?"
"Just the Springs and Denver, I think."
"You do the cog railway thing?"
"Pikes Peak, sure."
"The place with all those big rock formations?"
"Yeah, Garden of the Gods."
"That cowboy place, the ranch?"
"Flying W, of course. Wouldn't miss that."
"Air Force Academy?"
"Drove by it but didn't have time. We were going to a concert."
"Where?"
"Outside of Denver. And it was outside too. Seemed like we climbed
forever, and I had to carry Chloe. I was so out of breath at that
altitude."
"Red Rocks?"
"Yes! That was the place. Some country-music deal. Chloe loved it."
"You got it yet, Ray?"
"Got what?"
"What she's trying to tell you."
"No, but apparently you do, Mac. Spill it."
"Red Rocks."
"That's what I said."
"Um-hm. "
"Oh! Petra! The GC is on to the safe house, and we've got to get those
people out and to Petra."
----------
In the morning Abdullah ushered Chang toward an area near where the
elders' council met daily. Fresh manna covered the ground all along the
way, and many were out gathering their breakfasts. "I will not be
joining you today," Abdullah said, "as Miss Naomi has need of me in the
computer center. She requests that you come and help when you are free
as well."
"Is there a problem?"
"I'm afraid there is."
Chang stopped. Abdullah sounded so sad, so ominous. "What is it?"
"I'd rather not spoil your breakfast, Master Chang."
"It would spoil my breakfast? I am meeting with my heroes, and I am
here where I can go where I please and do what I want, and still there
is news that intrudes enough to ruin my day?"
"Please hurry. Let us not be late."
"I need to know, Mr. Smith. Tell me it's not Chloe Williams."
"She is alive for the moment, and except for the fact that the Global
Community News Network is spreading the most heinous lies about her,
everyone involved speculates that the GC will not execute her as long
as they think they can get information from her."
Chang shook his head as they continued walking.
"So she would be better off to pretend to be about to cave, to at least
be considering giving them something, than to make
plain from the
beginning that she will not."
"Have you met Mrs. Williams?"
"Of course not."
"But you have dealt with her by phone and via the Internet enough to
know-"
"Her personality. Yes. Not only will she not be betray-ing a thing, but
she will also enjoy telling them so."
"My fear," Abdullah said, "is that this will shorten her potential
benefit to the GC and thus shorten her life."
"Surely the San Diego Trib Force is planning a raid."
"I do not know. Knowing Cameron, it must be all he can do to keep from
trying to blast in there on his own. George Sebastian will want to lead
such an effort, and he's the man for it, but this is not like
surprising a band of amateurs in the woods, as they did in Greece. You
can imagine that the San Diego GC is alert to just such an effort."
"You're not telling me everything, are you, Mr. Smith?"
"I should save some for you to learn at the tech center, not that Naomi
is eager to tell you either."
Chang stopped again and put a hand on Abdullah's shoulder. "Forgive my
familiarity, but there is no point in withholding information. Please,
I must know. Don't make me go in there unprepared."
Abdullah appeared to study the ground. He stooped and scooped a handful
of manna but just held it. "The GCNN says Chloe gave up Albie and that
he committed suicide rather than be taken in."
"Come on, Mr. Smith. We know that's not true. She would never-"
Abdullah took Chang's elbow and urged him to keep moving. "No one
suspects Chloe of having anything to do with it, and anyone who knows
Albie does not believe he killed himself."
"Then what is the probl-?"
"There is evidence that Albie may be dead. He and Mr. McCullum had
grown close, as you know, and when word reached Mac, he tried several
different ways to get in touch with Albie."
"It could be coincidence. He may have been away from his phone. Maybe
he-"
"He is never away from his phone. Mac has always been able to reach
him."
"But Mac and Captain Steele should be in San Diego by now. Maybe the
satellite phone acts up at that distance and-"
Now it was Abdullah's turn to stop. "We are almost there. Around the
next bend, Drs. Ben-Judah and Rosenzweig await you. Mr. Tiberias will
make the intro-ductions and attend to the meal. Meals are short here
because we eat only one food and enjoy springwater with it."
"Thank you, Mr. Smith. I am going to go believing that Albie will still
call back."
"All right, if you insist on knowing.... Albie's phone was answered,
but not by Albie. As you may know, he was on a dangerous mission and
may have erred terribly by going alone. The man who answered the phone
told Mac that if he wanted to see his friend one more time, he should
watch the news. We have watched and recorded that newscast, Master
Chang. Naomi will show it to you after breakfast. Now go."
----------
At 9 P.M. in San Diego, Chloe lay whimpering on the steel bed in her
cell. With the setting of the sun the big room had faded to darkness,
and now the only light came from the blaring TV. No one had visited her
since the phony custodian had come back for what was left of his phone.
She had heard her segment of the news a dozen more times-only because
she had no choice-but she refused to watch again.
She didn't care about the lies. No Judah-ites would believe any of
that, and if they did, Buck could straighten them out in the next issue
of The Truth. But Albie, poor precious Albie. She hoped and prayed that
was a lie too, but how could they have so quickly concocted such a
vivid image of a dead man who looked so much like him?
Chloe had not eaten since seven o'clock the night before. She drew her
knees up to her chest and wrapped her arms around her shins. She
rocked, trying to ease the pain in her stomach. She tried to comfort
herself by imagining the operation George and Buck and her father had
to be planning that very minute.
Chloe tried to force from her mind thoughts of Kenny, because she so
longed for him that her arms ached. Would she ever see him again? How
would Buck answer their son's questions about her? Who would take care
of Kenny when Buck was away?
She wondered if sleep would ease the hunger pangs and whether it was
possible to sleep. She had learned enough about such things from George
to know that any attempt to free her would have to come when the GC
least expected it, so it could be days, maybe longer. She had to learn
to sleep. Somehow Chloe had to keep her sanity in spite of how she was
treated.
Any vestige of prisoners' rights had disappeared with the rise of
Nicolae Carpathia. Here we are, a year to go to the end of history, and
I could be shot in my cell for not bearing the mark.
Lonely, hungry, aching for her loved ones, grieving for Albie, Chloe
closed her eyes in the darkness, covered her ears, and hummed to drown
out the TV. That, she real-ized, was why she didn't hear the night
matron until she was standing at the cage. Chloe flinched and sat up
quickly, terrified of the stocky silhouette.
EIGHT
NAOMIS FATHER greeted Chang the same way he had the night before, cheek
to cheek, and while Chang bowed, he did not remove his cap in the light
of day. "A word to the wise," Elder Tiberias rumbled in his ear during
their embrace, "just about any culture considers it impolite not to
remove one's hat in the presence of one's elder."
"Forgive me, sir," Chang whispered, "but removing it would reveal a
disgrace."
Eleazar Tiberias shut his eyes and nodded knowingly, as if remembering
that he had been told of Chang's dual marks. "I understand."
The older man reached for a basket filled with manna. "Dr. Ben-Judah
will be a few moments, but let me intro-duce you to Dr. Rosenzweig.
Come, come."
Chang followed the big man into his quarters, where he was surprised to
see the diminutive Chaim Rosen-zweig, who looked more like Albert
Einstein than the famous Micah who had stood up to the potentate.
Rosenzweig had apparently been in Petra long enough for his hair to
grow back, his pigmentation to return to normal, and to look like his
old self.
Rosenzweig leaped to his feet, a bundle of energy for such an elderly
man. "So you are Chang Wong, the genius mole!"
"Well, I-"
"Do not feign modesty, my young friend. God has used you. Oh, he has
used you so mightily! Ah, the rewards that await you in heaven." He
took Chang's arm and pressed it against his own side. "Come, let us
wait outside for Dr. Ben-Judah. Eleazar, join us, please. Dr.
Ben-Judah, as you know, is the leader here, though he is my junior by
many years. Oh yes, at least twenty years. He was a student of mine
many, many years ago. It is true. Well, Mr. Wong, welcome, welcome,
welcome. It is unfortunate you join us on a day of sadness over the
loss of one of our members and the capture of another, but we are happy
that you are with us."
From a distance, Chang saw the commotion as Dr. Ben-Judah approached.
He was flanked by several of the other elders, and they were coming
from the direc-tion of the tech center.
Dr. Rosenzweig confided, "Those men will not be joining us, and they
are not bodyguards per se. None are needed here, of course. But Dr.
Ben-Judah is so popular and beloved, if he is not surrounded by the
elders, he would never get anywhere. Everyone wants a moment of his
time, but those moments add up. They just want to express their
appreciation and their love, but he has so much to do and such a heavy
schedule."
"I'm honored that he would take a little time with me," Chang said.
"Like everyone else, I want a moment of his time."
"Oh, trust me, young friend, I know him well, and he has been looking
forward to this."
The other elders peeled away as Dr. Ben-Judah arrived. "I am so sorry
to have postponed and then to be late on top of that," he said. "But it
could not be helped. Well, someone introduce me to our newest resident."
Eleazar Tiberias chuckled loudly as Dr. Rosenzweig said, "Oh, I believe
you know who this is. Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah, may I present Chang Wong."
Dr. Ben-Judah eschewed the customary Jewish greet-ing, first returning
Chang's bow, then stepping forward to embrace the boy tightly. "Sit,
sit," he said. "Sit right here between Dr. Rosenzweig and me. You know,
years ago he was my prof-"
"I have told him all about it, Tsion," Chaim said. "Let us pray and
eat."
Tsion leaned close and whispered, though loud enough for Chaim's
benefit too, "The elderly have no patience!"
Tsion held one of Chang's hands and reached across him to take one of
Chaim's too. "Eleazar, join us and take a hand, please."
As the four sat holding hands, Dr. Ben-Judah lifted his face and Chang
bowed his head. "Great Father, creator, master, and friend," he began,
"as we begin yet another day leading to the glorious appearing of our
Lord and Savior, we bless your name. We thank you for our daily bread.
And we are humbled as we think of where we were so few scant years ago.
Mr. Tiberias, a business-man and devout man of religion. Dr.
Rosenzweig, a statesman and scholar and agnostic. I, a student of the
Bible but blind to the truth. And Mr. Wong, a brilliant young atheist.
Who but a good God would give us all a second chance and redeem us by
the blood of your precious Son? We praise you in his name."
Tsion held out the basket of manna to Chang, who took a small handful.
The older men all took goodly portions, and Tsion said, "Allow me to
show you how I eat my daily provision. I am grateful that mealtime does
not consume the time it once did, though I confess there are days when
I miss everything that used to go with it. Often my meals here last but
five minutes."
He allowed the manna to settle in his right palm, wrapped his fingers
gently around it, and formed a circle with his thumb and forefinger.
"Like peanuts, no?" he said, smiling, and tapped his thumb knuckle on
his chin until the wafers popped into his mouth. "A handful," he said,
chewing, "and I am nourished."
Mr. Tiberias stood and gathered leftovers into the basket, then tossed
them to the wind, where they scat-tered on the ground.
"Tell me, Dr. Ben-Judah," Chang said, "is it true about Albie?"
"That he is dead? I am afraid so," Tsion said. "Self--inflicted, no,
none of us believes that."
After a few moments, Chaim said, "Tsion, we really must be going."
"Oh, sir," Chang said, "I hesitate to ask because I have been told by
everyone how busy you are and how everyone wants a
bit of your time...."
"Please, Chang. We feel so indebted to you. Ask any-thing of me, and if
I can comply, I will."
"I need just a moment alone, sir. No offense, Dr. Rosenzweig."
"None taken. Mr. Tiberias and I will prepare for our meeting."
Tsion took Chang behind an outcropping of rock. "What can I do for you?"
Chang took off his cap, exposing the 30 emblazoned on his forehead and
the thin, pink line where the Global Community biochip had been
inserted. He caught the pity in the older man's eyes.
"I confess it is strange, Mr. Wong, to see that when I also see the
mark of the believer on you."
"I can't stand to look in the mirror," Chang said.
"I don't dare take off my hat here. Yes, it may have kept me alive and
yes, I had access where no believer would have dreamed. But it mocks
me, curses me. I hate it."
"It was forced on you, son. It was not your choice or your fau-"
"I know all that, sir, but I want it gone. Is that possible?"
"I do not know."
"Sir, I study your teachings every day. You say that with God all
things are possible. Why would he not remove this now?"
"I do not know, Chang. I just do not want to promise that he will."
"But what if I believe he will? And if you believe?"
"We can agree in faith on this, Chang, but as much as we believe and
trust and study, no one can claim to know the mind of God. If you want
me to pray that God will remove it, I will. And I believe he can and
will do what he chooses. But I want you to pledge that you will accept
his decision either way."
"Of course."
"Do not say that glibly. I can see how much you want this, and if God
does not grant it, I do not want to see your faith threatened."
"I will be disappointed and I will wonder why, but I will accept it.
Will you pray for me?"
Dr. Ben-Judah seemed to study Chang's face. He pressed his lips
together, then looked away. Finally, he said, "I will. Come, sit over
here and wait. Much as you want to do this in private, I prefer having
men of God agree together in prayer. Do you mind?"
"Of course not. I just hate to have them see me with this-"
"There is no getting around that. It may be part of the price."
Chang nodded, and Tsion moved away to call for Eleazar and Chaim. They
came, looking somberly at Chang, who sat on a rock and had begun to
weep. Tsion briefed them and asked them to join him in the effort of
prayer. The three approached, Ben-Judah in the middle, Tiberias on his
left, and Rosenzweig on his right.
Tsion placed his left hand behind Chang's head and the heel of his
right hand on Chang's forehead. The other two each took one of Chang's
hands and put their free hands on his shoulders. Chang shuddered at the
gentle touch from these three men of God, and he felt loved by them and
by God. His body stiffened and then relaxed.
"Creator God," Tsion began, so softly Chang could barely hear him, "we
acknowledge that you made this young man. You have known him and loved
him since before the earth was formed. You, who are rich in mercy,
loved us even when we were dead in trespasses, made us alive together
with Christ and raised us up together, and made us sit together in the
heavenly places in Christ Jesus, that in the ages to come he might show
the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness toward us in Christ
Jesus. For by grace we have been saved through faith, and that not of
ourselves; it is the gift of God, not of works, lest anyone should
boast. For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus....
"Now, Chang Wong, knowing that you were not redeemed with corruptible
things like silver or gold but with the precious blood of Christ, as of
a lamb without blemish and without spot, believe in God. He raised
Christ from the dead and gave him glory so that your faith and hope are
in God. We now come together in faith, believing. We pray to the God
for whom anything is possible, the God who spared us like Shadrach,
Meshach, and Abednego of old from the fire of the enemy and made it so
that we were people on whose bodies the fire had no power; the hair of
our heads was not singed, nor were our garments affected, and the smell
of fire was not on us.
"God, according to your will, we ask that you remove from this boy any
sign of the evil one."
Chang went limp and felt as if his limbs weighed a hundred pounds
apiece. He perspired profusely from every pore and felt sweat run down
his face and arms and torso. The men's hands were wet, but they
remained still, unmoving in the silence.
Just when Chang felt that if the men let go he would slide off the
rock, Tsion said, "Thank you, gentlemen."
They squeezed Chang's hands and shoulders and stepped back. Now he was
supported only by Tsion, who still cupped the back of his head and had
his right hand over Chang's forehead. He pressed with that hand and let
it slide around to the right so that now he had both hands behind
Chang's head.
Chang opened his eyes, blinking against the sun and studying the face
of Dr. Ben-Judah as Tsion studied his. Tsion smiled.
"Gentlemen," he
said, "what do you see?" Tiberias leaned in from one side and
Rosenzweig from the other.
"Praise God!" Chaim said.
Eleazar lifted his head and roared with laughter in his deep bass
voice. "I see only the mark of the believer! I have a mirror in my
house. Come, see for yourself!"
----------
Rayford had never seen Mac so despondent. Or so resolute.
"If somebody's killed that old boy, I'm gonna have to do something
about it, Ray," Mac said. "Find me some-thing to do that puts me right
in the middle of it, and I'm not kidding."
"Albie and I go way back too," Rayford said.
"I know you do. And I feel like I've known him forever."
"What's your gut tell you, Mac? This just part of the GC's propaganda,
or is he gone?"
Mac sighed. "Well, no way he killed himself, but I feel like they got
him."
Rayford used Mac's phone to call Buck and tell him they would be
putting down at about 10 P.M., San Diego time.
"Buck's phone. Hey, Mac, this is George."
"Well, this is Mac's phone, but it's Rayford. How's it going there,
George?"
"Like you'd imagine. Buck's in pretty bad shape.
It's all we can do to keep him from heading to GC headquarters by
himself."
"Can you guys come get us at ten?"
"Ten? You made good time."
"Not bad. Only stopped once, then detoured a bit to drown my phone.
Make Buck come with you. Maybe we can all help keep him cool."
"You make him come with me. He's not listening to me, and he shouldn't
have to."
"Is he there?"
"He's down with Kenny. The little guy's having trouble getting to sleep
without his mom."
"Well, tell Buck I said it's a directive. The four of us need to talk
as soon as we hit the ground. Can somebody watch Kenny?"
"Sure. For right now we've got more baby-sitting volunteers than we can
use."
"Hey, you think it's too late to call Lionel Whalum in Illinois?"
"Nah. He's a night owl. 'Sup?"
"I figured out Chloe's message. She's convinced we've got to get
everybody out of San Diego and to Petra."
"I was afraid of that,"
Sebastian said.
"Lionel's the only guy I know with enough planes, enough contacts, and
enough experience to pull off something like that-and fast."
"This place was so perfect."
"Every safe house we've had has been perfect until it all of a sudden
wasn't safe, George."
"Can't argue with that."
"Call Lionel for me, would you? I need to try to get hold of Zeke. See
if he's ready to come out of mothballs and help us in Petra."
"What're you thinking, Captain?"
"Something for Buck to do so he doesn't go crazy, and something for Mac
and me to do so we feel like we're doing something for Albie."
"Hope I'm part of that."
"We wouldn't dream of trying anything without you, George."
----------
"Tired of that TV?" the night matron asked Chloe.
"Yeah. I hope I don't miss it though." Chloe had been watching the
congregating of armies from every country in the United Carpathian
States, excluding only the city of New Babylon, which was largely
ignored on the news. In the flickering light of the TV, Chloe could see
the woman was black.
"I'm Florence," she said, jangling to the TV and turning it off with
her nightstick. "I'll be the one feeding you tonight if you've been
good. You been good?"
"I'm officially hungry, if that's what you mean."
"That's not what I asked you, but I do have your daily energy bar in my
pocket if you want it."
"I want it."
"Didn't take long for your tune to change. I heard you was all uppity
and smart-alecky before, like nobody had nothin' you needed or wanted."
"I'd like to stay alive."
"For how long? You better be coming up with something Jock can use or
you won't make your first hosing down."
"And when is that?"
"Once a week. A week from now."
"I don't bathe for a week?"
"Bathe all you want in that sink. How's that water taste?"
"Not like water."
Florence cackled. "Ain't that the truth. You'll get to like it though.
You got to have it. That two hundred fifty calories a day will keep you
alive, but you won't be good for much else."
"What else is there in here?"
"Oh, you know, a guard or two might take a liking to you, want a date.
You know what I mean."
Chloe laughed. She couldn't help it.
"You think it's funny? What you going to do?"
"That would be worth dying for," Chloe said. "They'd have to kill me
first."
"You say that now. But you ain't going to kill me. Look at the size I
got on you."
"One of us wouldn't come out of here alive."
"Big talk. You'll be singing a different song when your body weight
drops and you be stinking and that jump-suit is falling off you."
"I'll warn you right now, while I'm lucid, you and anybody else around
here would regret trying anything with me."
"That so?"
"That's so, and that includes Jock."
"Jock don't do that kind of thing, but he knows when to look the other
way."
"Well, he'll look back to find somebody dead. One of his people or his
star prisoner."
"Why don't you just give a little, girl? Tell Jock something. He's not
asking for much. And you'd be getting breaks nobody else has got for
months. Come in here with no mark and still be alive? That should tell
you something. You're in a bargaining position."
"They might as well kill me now."
"Don't think I wouldn't like to."
"You? You don't even know me. I wouldn't want to kill you."
"You just said you would, missus. If I came in that cage."
"Well, yes, if you intended me any harm, I'd defend myself."
"I mean you all kinds of harm. You're either with us or against us now,
honey."
"Well, I'm against you," Chloe said.
"Tell me something I don't know."
"Tell me what form these two hundred fifty calories come in."
"You know. The energy bar."
"And that's all I get?"
"That's it. Once a day."
"A person can't live on that."
"You said it, not me. 'Course, the more you tell, maybe the more you
get."
"Maybe?"
"But not likely. Like since you didn't earn it today, I'm in charge of
it tonight. And you only get one every twenty-four hours. Way you been
sassing me, I might just pass it on to Nigel for tomorrow."
Chloe wanted to beg for it, but she would not. She would just fall
silent and hope Florence would get some fun out of being the one in
charge of the food each day.
"If you're still awake and don't tick me off anymore, I'll bring it by
about midnight. Now, in case you want to read or do your makeup, paint
your toes, whatever, I'll turn the lights on. And since the TV's off,
I'll pipe in a little music to help you sleep."
Oh, please, leave the lights and music off.
Florence waddled to the door, elbows resting on her leather equipment
belt, which had everything but a gun-nightstick, can of Mace, ring of
keys, empty hol-ster, and for whatever reason, a supply of bullets. She
flipped the lights on, all of them, and it seemed to Chloe it was
brighter than when the sun had shone through the windows.
She could deal with that. She would turn her face to the wall. And
despite her deep, private regret that she had cost herself a bit of
food for a few more hours, Chloe would handle that as well. She would
pray, think of her loved ones, rehearse her Bible memory verses, and
hope to drift off to sleep.
But then came the music, louder than it needed to be. Much too loud.
And of course it was "Hail Carpathia" on a loop that would no doubt
play all night.
Buck had taught her his alternate words. That might amuse her for a few
minutes. What were they again? She walked them through her mind, then
began to hum along, then softly sing:
Fail Carpathia, you fake and stupid thing;
Fail Carpathia, fool o f everything.
I'll hassle you until you die;
You're headed for a lake o f fire.
Fail Carpathia, you fake and stupid thing.
----------
Chang had raced from Eleazar Tiberias's mirror to the tech center,
where he leaped and shouted, exulting with Abdullah and Naomi.
Eventually, however, they showed him the tape of Albie, which sobered
him. And despite being fresh from the palace, even Chang was stunned at
the gall of the GC to air a so-called news story about Chloe that was
so patently invented. He wondered how even GC sym-pathizers could buy
such poppycock. But Naomi showed him samples of e-mails coming in from
Judah-ites around the world that showed many were going to need
reassurance and to be reminded that the devil is the father of lies.
"Our writers," Naomi told Chang, "here in this sec-tion, are composing
boilerplate responses, answers to the most common questions. These will
be transmitted to the keypunch people, who can pick and choose and
shoot them out immediately."
She asked a writer to print out his current list of responses, then
pulled it from the printer to show Chang.
The only thing the news seemed to get right was Chloe's name and age
and the fact that she is the daughter of Rayford and the wife of
Cameron "Buck" Williams. While it's true she attended Stan-ford
University, neither was she a campus radical nor was she expelled. She
dropped out after the Rapture but had a grade point average of 3.4 and
had been active in student affairs.
Rayford Steele did serve, while already a believer, as pilot on the
staff of Nicolae Carpathia, providing invaluable information to the
cause of Christ's fol-lowers everywhere. He was never fired and never
charged with insubordination or drinking while on duty. He left after
his second wife was killed in a plane crash.
The Judah-ites are anything but "the last holdouts in opposition to the
New World Order." Many Jewish and Muslim factions, as well as former
mili-tia groups primarily in the United North American States, still
have refused to accept the mark of loy-alty to the supreme potentate
and must live clandes-tinely in fear for their lives.
Cameron Williams was indeed formerly a cele-brated American journalist
who also worked directly for the potentate, but he quit rather than
"losing his job due to differences in management style." As for his
subversive cyber and printed mag-azine's "limited circulation," that,
of course, is a matter of opinion. The Truth is circulated to the same
audience that is ministered to daily by Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah, at last
count still more than a billion.
Rayford Steele, Cameron Williams, and Chloe Williams are not "wanted
for more than three dozen murders around the world." The Tribulation
Force acknowledges one kill for Cameron Williams and two for Rayford
Steele, both in self-defense.
The International Commodity Co-op, headed by Mrs. Williams, has never
hijacked any goods, nor does it sell for any kind of profit, but rather
trades for the benefit of its members.
The Williamses have amassed no fortune on the black market or
otherwise. In fact if not for the generosity of its members, no such
Co-op could exist.
Mrs. Williams has never had an abortion or lost a child, and has had
but one pregnancy, resulting in a son, now three-and-a-half years old.
The Williamses have never claimed deity or special powers for their
son, though they do believe Nicolae Carpathia is the Antichrist and
that Jesus Christ will one day conquer Carpathia and bring his own
kingdom to earth.
Limited contact with Mrs. Williams since her capture has confirmed that
she is committed to not bargaining with the GC, and that is the policy
of the Tribulation Force. Not only is she not offering anything to
avoid a death sentence, but she has also been on the record many times
in the past regard-ing her willingness to die for the cause of Christ.
There is no evidence that Mrs. Williams provided any information about
Tribulation Force activist Al Basrah, and neither is there evidence to
support that he committed suicide.
"Will this do any good?" Chang said.
"Among our people it will," Naomi said. "Even people who know better
want to be reassured. Everybody else is preoccupied with troop buildup
in the Jezreel Valley anyway."
"What's happening in San Diego?"
"Not much until Captain Steele and Mr. McCullum get there, which should
be any minute now. We are gear-ing up for at least two hundred new
arrivals over the next few days, so that should tell you something.
Have you talked with your sister lately?"
"No. But I've been meaning to, and now, of course, I have news for her."
"Well, she has news for you too."
"What?"
"Oh, I can't spoil it for her."
"Naomi!"
"Now, no. I can't wait to meet her, and I don't want to start off on
the wrong foot by breaking her confidence."
"She told you something she hasn't told me?"
"Not exactly. But my job makes me privy to information I might not
otherwise know."
"Such as . . ."
"Such as messages to the leadership. Rather than have them come and
read them off the computer, often we print them out and deliver them
ourselves."
"And so from one of those you learned something about my sister that
she would want to tell me herself."
Naomi nodded.
"Well, I can take care of that in short order," he said, pulling out
his phone. "And then when will you have a few minutes?"
"Right now," she said. "But only a few. It's going to be a hectic day."
"You owe me a story."
"My story, you mean? It's really my father's and my story, but it's not
a long one, so yes, I'll have time to tell it."
"I'll see you in ten minutes then," Chang said, punching his sister's
number.
"Hello, Chang," Ming said when she answered. "Forgive me for
whispering, but I am babysitting Kenny Bruce, and he is finally
asleep."
"Just wondering how you were and how things are going out there."
"I'm sure you know."
"Yes. I have news for you."
"Tell me, Brother."
"God has removed the mark of the beast from my forehead."
"Praise God! Tell me all about it! I can't wait to see you."
He told her what had happened.
"That's too wonderful for words, Chang. Too bad it had to happen on an
otherwise unhappy day."
"Yes, and you have news for me, no?"
"What are you talking about?"
"I have no idea. It's just a hunch."
"Oh, Chang. Ree has asked me to marry him, and I have asked Dr.
Ben-Judah to officiate when we arrive."
NINE
"LET ME SCOUT the area," Buck said, "make sure they're clear to land."
George, behind the wheel of the Hummer, shot Buck a sideward glance.
"Nobody was in the area when we left the compound, there's been no one
suspicious along the way, and no one followed us. We came the last half
mile in the dirt, using the lights only to make sure we were on track.
Buck, the airstrip is as secure as it's ever been."
Buck sighed and shook his head. "When did I become the cautious one?
You're the military guy."
"There's cautious and prepared, and there's para-noid," Sebastian said.
"I know they've got Chloe, but that wasn't because of some vast
stakeout. It was her fault. I'm sorry, but your father-in-law said she
admitted that herself. And she has a history of venturing out-"
"But why was she out? I saw guys. She must have seen 'em too. And they
got her."
"Routine reconnaissance. You said yourself they looked bored."
"Well, they're not bored now, are they?"
"No, Buck, they're not bored now. I'm parking at the end of the runway.
You want to go traipsing around in the woods till they get here, be my
guest."
"You're not coming?"
"You're the boss. If you tell me to come, I'll come. But you distinctly
said, `Let me scout the area.' Well, I'm letting you scout the area."
"Come with me."
"You're making me?"
"I'm asking you as a friend."
"That's not fair, Buck. Don't play that card."
"Come on. What if I find something? You'll never forgive yourself."
"You're incurable."
Buck knew Sebastian was right. The fact was, he was frazzled and needed
something to do. He was ready to head straight to San Diego GC
headquarters, guns blazing, and bust Chloe out. "You know Rayford will
be up for going after Chloe," Buck said as they tramped through the
woods in their fatigues, Uzis at their sides.
"C'mon, he and Mac will have just spent nearly sixteen hours in the
air, probably splitting the piloting duties. These guys are going to
need to sack out."
"You know Mac's heard about Albie. He'll be wired and ready to go."
"He'll be looking to get back to Al Basrah and find out what happened.
Anyway, Buck, even if we do plan a raid, when are we going to do it,
and who's going to get our people to Petra in the meantime?"
"I thought Rayford was getting Lionel on that."
"Lionel will organize and supply it, sure. But we've got to lead these
people and see the work gets done."
----------
Buck slapped a mosquito. "What're we doing? There's nothing out here.
Whose idea was this anyway? You hear a jet?"
"No. Now we're out here like you said, so let's do a job."
"Now you want to look for something?"
"I just don't want to waste time, that's all. Let's not get too far
from the landing strip."
Buck was suddenly swarmed by bugs. He let his Uzi dangle and smacked
his head and face with both hands. "Let's get out
into the open."
They emerged at about the midpoint of the strip.
"Now we're going to have to go all the way down to that end when they
get here," George said.
"Let's head that way now," Buck said. "You can occupy your time helping
me plan the attack."
"On GC headquarters?"
"Where else?"
"What do you know about the place?"
"What do you mean? We've been past there. You've seen it."
"Buck, neither of us has ever been inside. I know it's four floors plus
a basement, but I don't even know if they use the basement for
prisoners. Do you?"
"Nope, but I remember they have bars on the windows down there."
"Well, that's good. That's helpful. But the more you know, the more you
should realize you don't know."
"What kind of GI mumbo jumbo is that?"
The big man stopped. "All right," George said, "look. Here's my take on
San Diego GC headquarters. I know it's one of the biggest in North
America, but I have no idea how many personnel they have. Do you?"
"No."
"Of the four floors and the basement, I don't know which houses the
jail. Do you?"
"No."
"I'm guessing they segregate men and women prison-ers, but I don't know
for sure. Do you?"
"No."
"Well, if they do, are they all on the same floor or different floors?"
"Couldn't tell you."
"You see where we are, Buck? Nowhere. A military operation, especially
a surprise first strike, is a compli-cated, highly planned maneuver.
We'd have one objective and one only, and that is to get Chloe out
alive. To accomplish that, we'd have to have someone inside."
"We can't get someone inside!"
"Then how are we going to do this, Buck? Think, man. Think what we'd
have to know before we go charging in there. Do they keep high-profile
prisoners separate from the general population, and if they do, where?"
"All right. You've made your point."
"I haven't even started, Buck. You guys are all enam-ored with my
military training, but you don't know the half of it. Most of this is
just common sense. Besides knowing exactly where Chloe is, we'd have to
know the shortest distance in and out. We'd have to know what doors or
windows might be vulnerable. We'd have to know how much firepower we'd
need, and, Buck, you tell me what that means. What will determine our
muni-tions needs?"
"The size and strength of the doors and windows?"
"Well, that, yeah. But it's their personnel, buddy. How many of them
are we going to run into, and what will their resources be? If you
could tell me Chloe was in the northeast corner of the second floor and
how many GC I'd have to get through to get there, then how many are
guarding her and what kind of weapons they are toting, I might be able
to plan a mission for you. Otherwise, we're messing around, guessing,
and we're likely to get a strike mission force wiped out."
They reached the end of the runway and sat in the grass in the
darkness. "Then how does anybody ever pull off a raid like that?"
George cradled his weapon in his lap. "It's never easy, but there are
prerequisites, and in the good old days when people weren't identified
by a mark, you could usually get somebody into a place. Somebody has to
have a thorough working knowledge of the building, maybe even access to
the blueprint, the floor plan, the utility systems."
"I can't just do nothing, George. What're we going to do?"
Buck saw the landing lights before he heard the roar of the
Gulfstream's engines. He signaled with a powerful flashlight that the
area was clear, and within minutes the plane was down and hidden, and
Rayford and Mac were disembarking.
The four shook hands without a word; then Buck and Rayford embraced.
Neither was much for showing emotion, but they held each other tight
for longer than Buck could remember doing before. They loaded the
Hummer, but before they got in,
Mac said, "I feel twenty years older.
Do we have to sit in a cramped space again right away?"
"We're in no hurry," Rayford said. "Stretch your legs."
"I don't mind getting back a little late anyway," Buck said. "We've had
no GC activity today, but they'll be snooping around later for sure."
Rayford said, "You don't suppose Chloe got them started in a whole new
direction by claiming she was thirty miles from home?"
Buck chuckled. "Hardly, but you got to hand it to her for trying.
Actually, it'll be interesting to see where they are tonight. That
should give us an idea where they picked her up."
"Now you're thinking," George said. "It'll also give us an idea how
long it'll take them to discover the com-pound and how much time we've
got to get out of there."
----------
"I really mustn't be gone too long," Naomi said. Chang sat with her
beside a pillar that made up part of the portico in the courtyard of
the Urn Tomb. "Now if I had someone like you who could fill in for me,
I could be gone longer."
"But with who?" he said, and she laughed. "Seriously, though, I'm
curious about your background."
"I love remembering, Chang, though it is also a sad story. My father
was a businessman, a restauranteur. He owned several eateries in the
area around Teddy Kollek Stadium. Do you know Jerusalem?"
"No."
"He was honest and good and people liked him, respected him. That is
very important in my culture."
"Mine too."
"I suppose in all cultures a person's reputation is para-mount. But my
father took great pride in his many friends and his successful
businesses. He provided well for my mother and me. He was also a
devoutly religious man, and so our family was too. Synagogue every
Sabbath. We knew the Scriptures. We loved God. I believe my father was
proud of that, but not in a bad way-you know what I mean?"
Chang nodded.
"About eight years ago-this was when I was eleven- my mother fell ill.
Cancer. Cancer of the ... well, you'll forgive me if I am too shy to
mention it. We do not know each other well enough for me to be
comfortable about it."
"It's all right."
"She was very ill. My father was so good to her. He had the money to
hire help for her, full-time help. But he would not do that. He hired
part-time help, but he cut his workday in half and spent every
afternoon and all night with her. He was a wonderful example to me and
made me want to help even more. We loved my mother, and my father said
we should consider it a privilege to serve her the way she had served
us for so many years. He made her happy despite her pain."
"He seems like a wonderful man."
"Oh, he is, Chang. He always has been. Even before. Well, just after my
twelfth birthday, my mother, she took a turn for the worse and he had
to put her in the hospi-tal. The doctors told him there was no hope.
But my father did not believe in `no hope.' He believed in God. He told
the doctors and anyone who wanted to grieve my mother too early that we
would show them-he and his little girl would show them. And how were we
going to show them? We were going to pray, and God was going to work,
and my mother was going to be healed."
Chang heard the anguish in Naomi's voice, and then she fell silent.
"It's okay," he said. "You can finish another time."
"No," she said, wiping her eyes. "It's just that it does not seem so
long ago now. I can finish. I want to. One night my father came home
from the hospital late, and he was upset. I did not go with him on
school nights, only in the afternoons. I asked him, `Father, what is
it? Is Mother worse?' and he said, `No, but she might as well be.'
"That frightened me. He had never had a cross word with her, never said
a bad thing about her, at least not in front of me. But she told him
something that he said was only because of all the drugs she had been
prescribed. She wept and told him that wasn't true, that she really
believed it. I said, `What, Father, what?' But he burst into tears and
said he had raised his voice and told her that she should stop talking
nonsense.
"`I made her weep,' he told me, crying, crying his eyes out. `The woman
I love with all my soul, who is dying before my eyes,
I upset her.' And
I said, `But, Father, she upset you too. What did she say?' He said,
`She told me, "Jesus is Messiah." I demanded to know where she had
heard such heresy, but she would not tell me for fear I would get
someone in trouble, which I would have!'
"I did not know what to think. I gasped when he repeated what she had
said. He told me that he had told her that he would not allow me to see
her again if she kept up with such nonsense, but that only made me cry.
That very night we were called to the hospital, told that if we wanted
to see her alive, we must come now.
"All the way he wept and blamed himself for being cross with her. `I
caused this!' he said over and over. He pleaded with God to spare her,
made promises to him. I had never seen him so pitiful. We were with her
when she died. Her last words to us-and they were to us both, Chang,
because she looked directly into my eyes and spoke, and then she looked
at my father and said the same thing-her last words were, `I go to be
with God. Study the prophecies. Study the prophecies."'
"Wow!"
"I did not come to Jesus in the way you might think.
The tidy conclusion might be that my father and I went home and studied
the prophecies and came to believe the way my mother did. But it didn't
happen that way. My father was so heartbroken that he became angry with
God and quit studying the Scriptures at all. We stopped praying. We
stopped going to synagogue.
"He still loved me and took care of me, but he tried to lose himself in
his work. His friends only pitied him, because he was not the same man
he had been.
"I could not get my mother's last words out of my head, but my father
forbade me to study anything in the Bible, let alone the prophecies. I
was sad, so sad, because my life had changed radically with the loss of
my mother and, really, the loss of my father as I had known him.
Whenever I suggested that God could help us or the synagogue might
comfort us or we might find some answers in the Bible, he would not
hear of it.
"I was thirteen when the disappearances happened. That got everyone's
attention, even my father's. Scared to death, we turned back to God,
back to synagogue, back to the Scriptures. I began studying the
prophecies, and though I was young, I couldn't avoid seeing what Mother
had seen when someone pointed them out to her. My father wouldn't admit
it, but I think he started to see it too.
"When we heard that the renowned biblical scholar, Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah,
was going to speak on inter-national television about his conclusion
about Messiah from the Bible prophecies, we watched it together. The
next day everyone was talking about the trouble Dr. Ben-Judah had
gotten himself into by declaring that Messiah had already come, but my
dad and I were excited about more than that. He found a New Testament,
and we began reading it every night.
"When we got to the story of the Jewish man Saul, who became Paul, my
father was overwhelmed. We read faster and faster and more and more,
and we came to believe that Jesus was Messiah and that he could save us
from our sins. We memorized First Corinthians 15:1-4: `Brethren, I
declare to you the gospel which I preached to you, which also you
received and in which you stand, by which also you are saved, if you
hold fast that word which I preached to you-unless you believed in
vain. For I delivered to you first of all that which I also received:
that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, and that He
was buried, and that He rose again the third day according to the
Scriptures.'
"All my father and I wanted to do was what Paul had done. Receive.
Receive that truth by which Paul said we could be saved. We didn't know
what to say or do, so we just prayed and told God we believed it and
wanted to receive it. It was weeks before we read enough and knew
enough to understand what we had done and what it all meant. Father
finally found in the back of the New Testament a guide to salvation
that talked about accepting and believing and confessing. We studied
what it called the road to salvation-all those verses that tell that
all have sinned and come short of the glory of God, that the wages of
sin is death, but that the gift of God is eter-nal life through Jesus
Christ our Lord."
Chang sat looking at her. "It's always something dif-ferent," he said.
"I can't tell you how many stories I've heard about people becoming
believers, and each one is unique. I mean, they all get to the same
place, but for some it was the disappearances. For you, it was your
mother, really."
"We just can't wait to see her again, Chang. And it won't be long."
----------
Chloe couldn't tell whether she had actually been dozing or was just
zoned out when Florence made a loud entrance about midnight. She
unceremoniously poked the energy bar through the cage and let it drop.
Chloe wanted to leap on it, tear it open, and gobble it down, but her
pride was still working. She turned to look, but she didn't move.
"Dinner, honey," Florence said. "I recommend a white wine, like tap
water."
Chloe didn't move until she left. She ate half the bar, which was flat
and tasteless. But Chloe had always been told the greatest seasoning
was hunger. She wrapped the rest, determined to save it for breakfast.
But the few calories she had just ingested merely triggered her
appetite. She was able to hold out for about another half hour, then
ate the rest.
Though she was still hungry, the bar had taken enough of the edge off
that she was able to doze. She dreamed first of her family. Buck and
Kenny were close enough to smell, but she couldn't reach to hold them,
to touch or kiss them. Then images danced of their horrified faces,
repulsed by her. Did she have the mark? Was she hideously ugly? They
grimaced and turned away.
Chloe ran to a mirror and found herself headless. She fainted, and when
she hit the floor, she woke up. She sat on the cot, her face in her
hands, rocking. This was going to be harder than she had ever imagined.
She would not for an instant be fooled or even tortured into giving the
GC an iota of what they wanted. She just prayed that if she was not
going to be sprung somehow -and she couldn't imagine how anyone could
pull that off-her execution would be quick.
----------
"I've come to a hard decision, Buck," Rayford said. It was two o'clock
in the morning in the underground com-pound. Rayford sat with Buck in
Rayford's quarters, where Buck would spend the night. Ming was staying
at his and Chloe's place so Kenny could be in his own bed. Sebastian
and a young associate were on watch.
"I don't want to hear it, do I?" Buck said.
"Probably not. But for some reason God put me in this position, and
even though I'm biased and have almost as much vested interest as you
do, I need to take leadership on this one. Mac is asleep. When he is
fully rested, he's going to Wisconsin to pick up Zeke. He'll drop him
in Petra to start work on our next assignment."
Buck hung his head. "Our next assignment is not right here?"
"Hear me out. Mac is going to go on to clear out of Al Basrah and move
to Petra. On the way I'll have him call Otto Weser, the guy I told you
about. He'll be in the palace and should be able to dig up what's going
on in Al Hillah. Carpathia's assistant knows Nicolae's plan-ning a
meeting in Baghdad of the ten heads of state from around the world. We
believe that's when he'll add all the other regions' manpower to the
armies he's already marshaling in Israel."
"Dad, I'm sorry, but I don't really care about any-where but right here
at the moment. It looks like every-thing is coming together for all
kinds of activity over there, but meanwhile, we're hanging Chloe out to
dry."
"Buck, we've both been without sleep way too long. Believe me, I've
done as much crying and praying and worrying as you have, which is-"
"I doubt that."
"-exhausting. I need to rest, and so do you."
"Dad, I'm not going to be able to sleep."
"I didn't say anything about sleeping. Get your clothes off, stretch
out, put your feet up. Give your body a break even if you can't turn
your brain off. We need you sharp, Buck."
"You're telling me I'm not going out with George tonight."
"I'm not even letting George go, Buck. Talk about somebody we don't
want to burn out. He's got a good team that can track the GC if they
show tonight. All we want to know is where they're starting their
canvas-ing. I'm impressed that people have already started packing,
getting ready to go. Lionel's got planes and pilots lined up. We have
to be ready to go at a moment's notice."
Buck leaned forward and rested his elbows on his knees. "I trust you,
Dad, and I know you have Chloe's and my best interests at heart. But I
don't get this. When do we start scoping out headquarters, figuring how
to get in there or how to get next to somebody who would know something
about the place?"
"You and I can see how close we can get tomorrow night. If George is
available, we'll take him."
"But time's wasting."
Rayford sat back and sighed. "Job one with me is con-serving resources,
and that includes human ones. Our minds tell us we have energy because
we can think of nothing else, but running on adrenaline like that will
wear us down quicker, make us rash, ineffective. Trust me on this,
Buck. I want her out of there as much as you do, but she's not the only
person we're accountable for."
"But I want to know as soon as the reconnaissance party knows anything
about-"
"No, now I've left word that we are not to be dis-turbed until
midmorning except in an emergency."
"Dad!"
"Knowing something you can't act on right away anyway is no help. Now
no more talk. Let's get some rest."
----------
Like everyone else in Petra at high noon, Chang pre-ferred working
inside. He had discovered, through much trial and error, that he was
able to tap into every-thing in New Babylon from where he was. The
problem was, all the decision makers were gone to Al Hillah. When the
plan to beat them there and bug the place had fizzled, he had been
assigned to come up with a way that Otto Weser could feed him
information. That all depended on what hardware might have been left
that could be tapped from Petra.
Chang worried that he might have become too obvi-ous in his interest in
Naomi, wanting to spend every spare minute with her. He decided not to
assume any-thing and stayed at his computer over lunchtime. He was
hungry, but he could also wait for the evening manna.
Chang was thrilled when Naomi approached shyly with a basket. "Hey,
workaholic," she said. "Don't go starving on me."
"Hi," he said.
"Brought you some honey wafers."
----------
"Hail Carpathia" had become just part of the back-ground for Chloe by
now. She guessed it was about four o'clock in the morning. She had
tried to keep her ears covered as she dozed, but when she drifted off,
her hands fell away. That was why she heard the door and held her
breath.
From the heavy footsteps and the jangling keys, she could tell it was
Florence. What could she want? It sounded as if she was close to the
cage, and Chloe smelled food. A burger with all the trimmings. And the
sound of a straw, probably in a cold soft drink. Right then it all hit
Chloe as the nectar of the gods.
She slowly turned and in the low light saw Florence sit on the floor
and lean back against the cage. Chloe rested on one elbow and let out
her breath.
"You awake?" Florence said.
"'Fraid so."
"Want me to turn off that music?"
"Do you care what I want?"
"Don't be sassin' me again."
"If you really want to know what I want, yes, I want the music off."
"I'm not all bad, you know," Florence said.
She set next to the cage her half-eaten burger and soft drink and
another tall paper cup with a lid and moved to the door. The music
stopped.
When Florence returned, Chloe said, "Thank you."
"Mm-hm," she said, sliding to the floor again. "Just having a burger."
"So I gathered."
"Brought you something."
"You did not."
"See, why you wanna be that way all the time? Can't a person do
something nice for somebody?"
"I wish."
"Well, your wish has been granted, if you like chocolate."
"Who
doesn't?"
"How about a chocolate shake?"
"I'm still dreaming, right? No more music, and now a chocolate shake in
the middle of the night. What's gotten into you?"
"I told you. Ain't all bad. Nobody is."
I can think of someone. "If you're really going to give me a chocolate
shake, all I can say is I'm grateful."
"I'm a mama too, you know."
"That so?"
"Mm-hm. Brewster. Almost three."
"Have a picture?"
"I do! You wanna see it, really?"
"'Course I do."
"Jes' a minute. Can't get in trouble turning on the lights when it's
only just us." She finished her meal, leav-ing the chocolate shake on
the floor while throwing away the trash. Chloe wanted the shake so
badly she trembled. Was it possible she could get next to this woman
somehow, mother to mother?
Florence went out again and turned on the lights. When she returned and
shut the door, it clearly locked behind her, which Chloe had already
learned was proto-col. The shake was not going to fit through the mesh
of the cage, so if the cage door was going to be open, of course the
outer door could not be unlocked. But that also told Chloe that
Florence was lying about being there alone. Otherwise, how would she
get back out?
"Now if I unlock this cage, which is totally against the rules, you're
not going to pay back my kindness by try-ing something,
are you? I'm
bigger and stronger than you, but even if you-"
"Yeah, I know. Heard it from Jock. We're still both locked in."
"Exactly."
"So if I behave and take the shake and you lock me back in here, how
are you getting out?"
"I buzz 'em, and they let me out."
"So we're not really alone."
"Well, no, not after I buzz 'em."
"What if they see what you gave me?"
"Then I'm in trouble, so if you want it, you better take it now."
"I want it."
"Stay right where you are. Don't be standing up when this door opens or
I'll be shutting it again."
Florence unlocked the cage, handed Chloe the shake, then quickly locked
it again. It was the first time Chloe had noticed emotion in her.
Florence looked excited, maybe scared. Maybe flush with the feeling of
doing something nice when she wasn't supposed to.
Chloe sucked eagerly at the straw and was not disap-pointed. The shake
was still cold, thick, rich, and-if anything-too chocolaty. Which, as
she used to laugh about with her friends, was like saying something
tasted too rich.
Florence stood watching her. "Whoa, girl. 'Member you're doing that on
an empty stomach. Better pace yourself."
"I will. And I don't want brain freeze." Florence laughed.
"And don't forget to show me the picture of Brewster."
"Oh, I will. Soon as you're finished."
Why not now? Chloe wondered as she attacked the straw again. The sugar
and caffeine were going to keep her awake, but it wasn't like she had
anything to look forward to in the morning. Maybe jock would show up
and eat his breakfast in front of her again.
"Jock," she said, giggling.
"What?" Florence said.
"Eggs in front of me."
"What you going on about?"
"Jock. Jack. Jick. Jeck ..."
"Hm?"
Chloe was dizzy. The cup was slipping. She reached with her other hand
to steady it, but the shake fell to the floor and splashed. It hit her
as the greatest tragedy she could recall, and she began to weep.
Her eyes were trying to shut. She forced herself to keep them open and
deliberately lifted her chin so she could see Florence, who just stood
watching. Florence pressed her buzzer. The outer door opened, and both
Nigel and Jock entered, pushing a gurney.
"I'll get this cleaned up," Florence said, unlocking the cage.
"Great work, Flo," Jock said. "Loved the bit about you having a kid."
"Oh, honey, they easy when they hungry."
TEN
BUCK WAS awakened midmorning by soft but insistent knocking on
Rayford's door. He reached up from the foldout couch and opened it.
"I was kinda hoping I'd wake your father-in-law,"
Sebastian said.
Suddenly Buck was wide awake. "What time is it?"
"Almost 1000 hours."
"What's the deal? What'd your guys find?" "Buck, I got to go through
channels."
"What're you, kidding me? You can't tell me anything about my wife?"
"I report to Rayford, Buck. So do you."
"You beat all, George. You know that?" Buck rocked himself up off the
couch and banged on Rayford's door.
"Sebastian's here with a briefing, Dad. Let's go." Rayford emerged,
looking foggy. "Hey, guys," he said.
"How'd you sleep?"
"Same way you did," Buck said. "Now let's get to this."
Buck stuffed sheets and blankets between the mattress and the back of
the couch, closed it, and sat. Rayford joined him.
"I have my guy in the hall," Sebastian said. "Wanted to make sure you
two were presentable."
"Your call," Rayford said. "Here we sit in our Skivvies."
George opened the door. "Razor?" he said. "You're on."
Razor was Hispanic, early twenties, and very military. He saluted
everybody and Buck waved him off. "Come on, come on," he said. "It's
just us. What've you got?"
"Sirs, I was on watch, as you know, and noticed motion-detector
activity at approximately 0300 hours. One of my team of three is a
female, so I asked if she would check the periscope in the Williamses'
quarters, due to the fact that a female was in there alone-well, with a
baby, and I didn't want to breach protocol by-"
"We know why, Mr. Razor," Buck said. "Please."
"Yes, sir. She checked and reported enemy activity within two blocks of
the compound and secured permis-sion from Mrs. Toy for me to enter your
domicile."
Buck glanced at Rayford, shook his head, and stared at the floor. For
the love of all things sacred ...
"I personally observed similar activity and so mar-shaled my team. We
went out in fatigues and grease--painted faces, armed with lightweight,
high-powered automatic weapons. Our objective was to observe, get close
enough to listen, if possible, and-if necessary -either defend the
compound or somehow misdirect the enemy to a neutral area, thus giving
the occupants of said compound-"
"Time to evade," Buck said. "Yeah, what happened?"
"We observed two separate platoons of GC canvassing the area; however,
they appeared to have started about two blocks west of us and were
proceeding in a westerly direction."
"Meaning they were moving away from us rather than toward us?"
"Yes, sir, but that is not all entirely good news. Observing their
direction and relative speed, we were able to flank them, and the two
of my party on their south side had enough flora-and-fauna coverage to
get close enough to hear them. They came away with the distinct
impression that the objective for that particular mission was to begin
where they had recently left off -in my estimation, Mr. Williams, what
you and Mr. Sebastian had observed approximately twenty-four hours
before-and were to survey a wide area leading to where Mrs. Williams
was apprehended."
"I'm praying you followed them to that point," Buck said.
"We did, sir. We also overheard them saying that tomorrow night at the
same time, they would be back-tracking and going past where they
started, which obvi-ously would include our compound again. We expect
them to be quite thorough, and thus if at all possible, we should be
evacuated before 0200 hours tomorrow."
"You have informed the right people, and the move is on pace?"
"Yes, sir, but there's more. Near where they indicated Mrs. Williams
was apprehended, our people recovered her Uzi and ski mask."
"What's that tell you, Buck?" Sebastian said. "She ditched them."
"But we also-at least my people-heard two GC dis-ussing her
disposition."
It was all Buck could do to contain himself. "Please, Officer Razor,
tell me what you heard about the disposition of my wife."
"They seemed to indicate that she was to be moved, sir."
"When?"
"Within the hour, sir. Something about getting it done before Carpathia
starts calling for troops from this region."
"Back to the `within the hour' business, Razor," Buck said. "Within an
hour from now or then?"
"Then, sir."
"All right, quit with the `sir' stuff, please. I know you were in the
military, but I wasn't and it makes me crazy. You're telling me Chloe
was to be moved at about four this morning?"
"Yes, s-"
"To where?"
"The best my people could gather, s-Mr. Williams, was `somewhere back
east."'
"Somewhere back east." Buck stood and held his open palms to Rayford
and George. "They moved her some-where back east, which implies an
aircraft-" he looked at his watch-"going on six hours ago. Tell me,
Razor, did anyone think to get to GC headquarters and see if there was
a chance to abort this move?"
"No, sir."
"No one thought this might be an emergency worth waking Mr. Steele or
Sebastian or me?"
"By the time I got the report, sir, um, sorry, the move would have been
already in progress."
"You assume."
"Yes, that's an assumption."
"The one time they might be more vulnerable than another, taking a
woman out of a cell, out of a building, into the open air
to a vehicle
so they could get her on an airplane, and we all sleep through it."
"I apologize, sir, but in my judgment nothing effective could have been
accomplished, given when we overheard this and the,
ah, assumed timing
of the maneuver."
Buck could not stand still. He paced the apartment, looking expectantly
at the three others. "We sat on it," he said. "We had a window of
opportunity, and we were asleep."
"Buck, please," Rayford said, but Buck would not be appeased.
"Somewhere back east," Buck parroted. "That narrows it down, doesn't
it? Maybe if we all just start walk-ing east, we'll overtake them, huh?"
"Thank you, Razor," Sebastian said. "If there's nothing else, you may
go."
"Thank you, sirs," Razor said.
"Yeah, thanks for nothing," Buck said. "I apologize, sir, if-"
"Oh, just go," Buck said.
Rayford nodded at the young man, and he hurried out.
"Buck," George said, "he probably made the right decision. Racing down
there in the wee hours, hoping to get there in time to do something
without a plan-"
"Would have at least been an effort, wouldn't it?" Buck kicked a chair
that flew into the kitchen and banged off the table and a cabinet. "I
guess if I ever want to see my wife again, I'm going to have to be a
one-man com-mando unit."
"And get yourself killed," Rayford said. "Now you've vented. That's
enough."
"It'll never be enough until I have Chloe back."
----------
Chloe had fallen off the metal shelf and into the chocolate mess on the
floor. Since she was unable to break her fall, her head banged on the
tile. She lay there with one leg tucked awkwardly beneath her, her head
lolling, and fighting sleep. Whatever had been in the shake had
tran-quilized her so thoroughly that she wanted only to go with the
feeling and sleep the deep sleep of the drugged. It reminded her of how
she felt after giving birth to Kenny.
Florence unlocked the cage and knelt to clean up the spill. She rolled
Chloe onto her side and pulled her foot down so both legs were
straight. She held Chloe with one hand as she cleaned the floor, then
let go, and Chloe rolled onto her back.
Her eyes fell shut and her breathing became deep and regular, but she
prayed desperately. "God, let me stay conscious.
Let me hear. Help me
listen."
"That floor dry?" Jock said.
"Give it a second," Florence said.
"Put the sheet down there, Nigel, and take her ankles. "
Chloe felt Jock's hands under her armpits and Nigel's at her feet. "On
three," Jock said, and they lifted her off the floor and a few inches
over to the sheet. Then they lifted the sheet to the gurney, and Chloe
was glad her eyes were closed. She had lost equilibrium and felt as if
she could pitch off the cart any second.
"Out to the truck quickly now."
The gurney rolled across the big room, through the door, and stopped.
Chloe heard elevator doors open. She was rolled aboard, and the car
lifted one floor. Soon she was outside and could not open her eyes as
hard as she tried. Uncovered, she felt the cold air, but something
didn't allow her even to shiver. She wanted to press her legs together
and rub them and massage her arms with her hands, but she couldn't move.
"Lord, please. Keep me awake."
"A hearse?" Nigel said. "Whose idea was that?"
"Mine," Jock said, chuckling. "People don't want to look if they think
there's a stiff in here."
"You going with her?" Florence said.
"Yup," Jock said, and Chloe heard pride. "It's my deal right up to the
end."
"When's that going to be?" Florence said, and Chloe felt the vehicle
moving.
"Not sure. They're going to milk it. We may still get some information
out of her. Truth serum is next."
"That always works, doesn't it?"
"Usually."
Not this time. "God, don't let me say anything you don't want me to."
Chloe was immobile from her toes to her scalp, yet God seemed to grant
her wish of con-sciousness. She could hear and she could smell. Touch
and sight were a different matter, but she had certainly felt the chill
of the predawn air.
She guessed the mostly smooth ride at a little less than an hour. Then
the gurney was lifted out of the hearse, rolled maybe a hundred yards,
and carried by hand up some stairs and into what she assumed was a
plane. And when the engines began to whine, she knew she was right.
Chloe heard the congratulations and goodbyes from Nigel and Florence.
Then Jock and, she assumed, another man laid her out along several
seats with armrests raised. The men somehow belted her in at the torso
and the knees by using parts of seat belts from adjoining seats.
From their voices she could tell they sat in the row ahead of hers. She
had the impression it was just the three of them and the pilots on a
jumbo jet. She didn't know of another plane that had enough seats
together to allow her to stretch out.
"How long is this flight anyway?" a man with a Span-ish accent said.
"Four hours, I think, Jess," Jock said. "Then we've got about a
fifty-mile drive from the southwest. Whole Chicago area was nuked, you
know, so we'll be about as far north as we dare."
The conversation deteriorated into the mundane, and Chloe succumbed to
the drowsiness.
----------
Buck knew he was being a nuisance, but he couldn't help himself. While
everyone else in the compound was pre-paring for the big move, he
badgered people. Had any-one worked at GC headquarters before becoming
a believer? Did anyone know anybody who had or did now? Any
connections, any leads, any inside informa-tion? Somebody, anybody to
talk to who might know someone who could be bluffed into giving out
informa-tion about Chloe's whereabouts?
He tried calling headquarters himself from a secure phone, pretending
to be from GC International. Nobody was buying. He scripted a speech
for Ming to try while he played with Kenny. She struck out too.
Rayford finally tracked Buck down and told him, "Do what you have to
do, but be ready to go when everybody else is."
"I'll be traveling light anyway, boss," Buck said. "Don't suppose one
of Lionel's guys could just drop me back east somewhere?"
Rayford shook his head and moved on.
"Hey, Dad," Buck said, "your place unlocked?"
"Yep. And empty except for your stuff."
"I'll clear it out now."
On his way to Rayford's place, Buck passed Razor in the corridor.
"Sir," the young man said, saluting self-consciously.
"Hey, son, hold up. I owe you an apology."
"No, that's all right. I understand what you're going through."
"That's a reason, but it's not an excuse. I want you to forgive me. I
was way out of line."
"Of course, sir. Don't give it a second thought."
"Well, thank you. And can I ask you a question?"
"Anything."
"Where's the name come from?"
Razor flushed and looked down. "Snowmobile accident."
"Ouch. Do I want to hear it?"
"First time on. In Minnesota. Not exactly like Mexico, you know?
Didn't see the razor wire. Should have been killed. It caught my helmet
and luckily dug in rather than sliding down and slicing my head off. It
ripped that helmet off as I went underneath. People watching said the
wire somehow wrapped itself around the helmet. The wire never broke,
and after I had stretched it as far as it would go, it flew back and
came forward again like a slingshot and flung the helmet at me, hit me
in the back of the head, and knocked me out."
"But here you are. And no matter how I sounded earlier, I'm glad to
have you with us."
Of all things, that crazy story got Buck obsessing about decapitation.
Losing Chloe was his main concern, of course, and he worried about her
suffering. He couldn't stand to think of her being violated, abused,
tortured-he didn't want to even consider all the possibilities. It was
no consolation to know that even if she was martyred, he would see her
in less than a year. What would that mean to Kenny?
Worst of all, all he could think of was how Chloe would most likely
die. Death was death and it shouldn't make any difference, he knew. But
if it came to that, if the GC made a public spectacle of her, as they
certainly would, there was no way he could watch it. The idea of his
beloved dying such an ugly, grotesque death made him ill.
No question she would stay true to her faith to the end. He had heard
stories of others, even watched as his old friend Steve Plank thumbed
his nose at Carpathia and honored God before he died. Buck also knew
that if it came to that, Chloe's body would be new one day in heaven.
But still, he was repulsed by the idea that the person most precious to
him in the world might die in the worst possible way he could imagine.
If he couldn't push it from his mind's eye now, how would it be if it
actually happened? He sought out Rayford.
"I'm really busy," his father-in-law told him, "and you should be too.
I'm not saying it'd take your mind off Chloe; it sure hasn't mine. But
you'd be more productive."
"I know, but I need a minute."
He told Rayford of his tormenting daydreams. To his surprise, Rayford's
lip began to quiver. His voice was thick. "I've been going through the
same thing, Buck. I didn't want to tell you."
"Really? This whole idea?"
"Exactly. A father has a different take, you know. Imagine how you feel
about Kenny. I was there when Chloe was born. Seems like yesterday she
was a little red ball of squealing girl who could be comforted only by
being tightly wrapped in a blanket and put on her mother's chest. Then,
to us, she was the most beautiful creature we had ever seen. We would
have done anything for her, anything to protect her. That's never
changed. She's grown up to be a beautiful woman, and somehow, even with
all her injuries and disfigurements, I still see her that way."
"So do I."
"So, yes, Buck, I know what you're thinking. We just have to be strong
and try not to dwell on it. I don't know what else to do."
----------
Chang was walking Naomi to her quarters late at night. "I want to show
you something on my computer tomor-row," he said. "I discovered that
the GCNN production chief's solution to the plague of darkness was, I
guess, to feel his way into the control room and find the switch that
allows the international network feed to be remotely accessed by three
or four of the major affiliates."
"Ingenious," Naomi said. "Isn't it?"
"Oh, I was impressed. But I'm also excited. There is no block on my
accessing it too, and I can override the affiliates with the system
David Hassid had set up in New Babylon."
"I can't wait to see it."
"It has unlimited capabilities, Naomi. When Cameron Williams gets here,
we'll work together and counteract the lies that the GC broadcasts, and
we can do it immediately."
"Nothing they can do about it?"
"Not that I can think of, short of starting a whole new network. They
may think they have time to do that, but the end is closer than they
know."
----------
"So you drew the short straw, eh there, pardner?" Mac said.
"I am sorry, Mr. McCullum," Ree said, "but I do not understand that
expression."
"Well, without getting into specifics, it means you got grunt duty."
They had studied the area through the periscope an hour before and
determined they could get the Hummer out of the vehicle bay without
being detected.
"Driving you to the plane? No problem. I like to do it.
I only wish I was flying you to Wisconsin. I have flown a Gulfstream
only once before, and I liked it."
"If you've got so little experience, I'm glad you're not flying me,
know what I mean?"
A little more than three hours later, Mac touched down in Hudson,
Wisconsin, where he was met by the hulking Gustaf Zuckermandel Jr.,
better known as Zeke.
"I wish you could meet everybody in Avery," the twenty-five-year-old
said. "But even the guy who drove me has already headed back. Took us
an hour to drag my stuff into the underbrush."
Mac followed him to his cache of boxes and trunks. "You sure we want to
be lugging this stuff all the way to the plane in broad daylight, Zeke?"
"Unless you want to wait till dark, but there's no need. This is the
part of the country the GC forgot. I haven't seen a Peacekeeper since I
got here."
As they were loading, Mac said, "No second thoughts about leaving? You
must be close to these people."
"Lots of second thoughts, but I figure a guy's got to go where he's
called. I was called here, and now I'm being called there. Who woulda
thought a no-account like me would ever get called anywhere?"
"Well, you're the best document and appearance man I ever saw, and I
hear you really blossomed here."
"Oh, that's not true if you want to know the actual fact, Mr. McCullum.
Thing is, there wasn't anything for me to do here as far as disguises
and documents and such, because we flat didn't need 'em. So I got real
involved in the Bible studies, improved my reading and all that, and
pretty soon the leader took me under his wing. I never got to teaching
or preaching, but I helped out all I could. I liked it, like to stay
busy. They gave me that assistant pastor title sort of as a gift."
"Honorary, eh?"
"Yeah, like that."
"Well, I hope you were honored, because that really means something."
"I'm gonna miss everybody, but I got to tell you, I'm ready to get to
Petra and just see the place. And to hook up again with Dr. Ben-Judah
and Dr. Rosenzweig and you and all the others, well ..."
"And you've got a big job."
"You're supposed to tell me about it."
Chloe more than woke up after almost four hours in the air. The drugs
had worn off and she came to. And she was ravenous. An energy bar and
whatever portion of shake she ingested before the Mickey kicked in had
been all she'd eaten since seven the evening before she was abducted.
That made it easy to pretend she was still unconscious.
"What time is it here?" Jock's companion said as the plane landed.
"Coming up on noon, and I'm hungry," Jock said. "You?"
"Oh yeah."
"I'm going to feed the prisoner finally. Play a little good cop. Shoot
her a little truth juice. See if we can't get her to sing."
"She's been a tough bird, hasn't she?"
"Tell me about it, Jess. I'd have been doing the 'Hallelujah Chorus'
solo by now."
"What if she doesn't flip? How long do you give it?"
"If you can't get to 'em somehow in the first forty-eight hours, more
of the same isn't going to be any more effective."
"Starvation isn't a motivator?"
"Would be for me, but I guess they've proved it with prisoners of war.
The ones who can survive that first round of psychological and physical
torture aren't likely to ever break, no matter how long you keep it up."
As Chloe was being carried down the jetway, Jock said, "This facility
never had woman prisoners before we took it over.
We'll keep her in
solitary. That's the only real way to keep her separate from the rest
of the population."
Chloe was laid out across the backseat of a large SUV, which she
noticed had wire mesh on the windows and no locks or door handles on
the inside. Jock handcuffed her anyway. "She'll be coming to soon," he
explained. "Can't be too careful."
When they stopped along the way, Chloe racked her brain for any idea of
escape.
Jock said, "I'll get the food. You stay with her."
Chloe sat up. "I need to use the rest room."
Jock stared at her. "Seriously."
"I'd say."
"Well, I got no matron who can go with you. You'd have to use the
men's, and one of us would have to be in there with ya."
"Forget 'it."
"You want me to buy you one of those adult diapers?"
"How far are we
from where I can go?"
"Half an hour."
"I'll wait."
While jock was inside, she tried to strike up a conversation with the
man she had not gotten a look at until now. His mark was a 0, which
meant he was from the United South American States. He was strikingly
dark with perfect teeth. "You remind me of my husband," she said.
"That so?" he said.
"Yeah, except he's not ugly."
The man found that hilarious and turned to face her.
"You're funny," he said. "Why would you want to antagonize me?"
"You're one of the people who are going to wind up killing me. Doesn't
look like I'm going to get to fight back, do any physical damage, so
..."
"Makes sense."
"Jock calls you Jess."
"Yeah. Jesse," he said.
"Hmm. Named after Jesus. That your real name? Jesus?" Chloe pronounced
it in Spanish.
"Matter of fact, yes, and I have a sister Maria."
"Is she also a Carpathianist?"
"Of course."
"How disappointing that must be to your namesake."
Jock brought food and uncuffed her. The men tore into theirs, while
Chloe sat behind the cage that separated her from the
front seat. She
said aloud, "Lord, thank you for this food. I pray that you will help
me eat it slowly so it doesn't make me sick, and that you will override
any poisons Jock might have put in it. Give me strength to resist any
efforts on the part of Jock or Jesse to get me to say anything I
shouldn't. In Jesus' name I pray, amen."
ELEVEN
"I LIKED ALBIE a lot," Zeke said as Mac piloted them across the
Atlantic. "He was a good man."
"You got that right, Z," Mac said. "And for the life of me I can't
understand it, but I'm afraid he did something royally foolish to get
himself killed."
"Doesn't sound like him. You and Captain Steele and everybody used to
listen to his ideas all the time."
"But everybody's human. Let your guard down for a second, get
overconfident, who knows? He was determined to see this lowlife he
used to know, and even when he and I agreed I should go on to Petra and
fly Rayford back to the States, Albie still wanted to go through with
his little mission. It's just as much my fault. Both of us thought it
was something that had to get done-and fast. Now look where we are."
"Rayford said Tsion and Chaim are taking it hard."
"We all are. As much of this as we've gone through, it never gets
easier. They're planning a little service for Albie at Petra once
everybody gets there from San Diego."
"When will that be?"
"Oh, first wave ought to be arriving around three in the morning
tomorrow. You and I got about a thirteen-hour jump on 'em. Once I drop
you off, I got to get to Al Basrah and clear out Albie's and my
apartment, make sure we didn't leave any clues for anybody. I'll be
taking a bigger plane from Petra 'cause I got to bring back this Otto
Weser guy and his people."
"Captain Steele told me about him. So you're bringing them back to
Petra because of that Scripture about God's people getting out of
Babylon before God destroys it?"
"Exactly."
Z sat staring at the ocean seven and a half miles below. "What must
that have looked like when it was all blood?"
"You can't imagine."
"Hey, Mac, you think Rayford ought to be trusting Carpathia's
secretary?"
"The way he tells the story, I guess. You don't think so?"
"I don't trust anybody who isn't a believer. What if she has second
thoughts, sets a trap, gets you and this Otto ambushed?"
"A pleasant thought."
"You said yourself, you can't be too careful."
"Well," Mac said, "we've got to know what's happen-ing in Al Hillah,
and as much as possible what's coming after that, and we don't know how
else to do it."
An hour later, Zeke dug through one of his bags and brought out a book.
He looked self-conscious. "Some-thing I wouldn't even have been able to
read when you knew me in Chicago."
"I was gonna say-"
"But now that I'm reading better, I think I can do more things, you
know, scientifically."
"Such as?"
"Such as I'm guessing you guys are asking me to come up with new looks
and identities for a bunch of people."
"Right. All our old aliases and appearances have been compromised."
"Found this book in an abandoned library just across the Minnesota
border. There's all kinds of stuff in here I never even heard of
before. New ways to change skin and eye color and all that. Fake scars
and blemishes. How many people are we talking about?"
"I think just five," Mac said. "I think Ray wants get- ups for him and
Buck and Sebastian and Smitty and me."
"Really? That's it? I brought way too much stuff."
"What'd you bring?"
"Everything I had left over from Chicago. GC uni-forms at all levels,
IDs, documents, stuff for women and men. This is going
to be easy. I
mean, it'll take time, but I was afraid you'd need ten or twelve. The
hardest one is going to be Mr. Sebastian, but I've already got an idea
for him."
"Tell me."
Zeke put his book down, apparently so he could ges-ture with both
hands. "The problem with your big people is that no matter what you do
with them, you can't make 'em smaller. You can make a small person big
with padding and whatnot, but you can't take pounds off the big ones.
"But what I can do, see, is give George a whole new look, the look of
an older man. So his size doesn't look so threatening.
It looks like it
came on him from getting old, rather than from working out and military
training. Might even give him a cane, glasses. Make him look like one
of those old middle-aged guys who have gone to seed. Chop off that
blond hair, give him a
rim of white, put some lines in his face. All of
a sudden instead of being a guy in his late twenties in perfect shape
and huge, he's thirty years older, slowed down by food, maybe diabetes,
bad knees, bad feet, stooped a little. Add some padding around his
middle, front and back, so he waddles. He's not gonna threaten anybody."
"Brilliant. What do you do with me?"
"Biggest giveaway with you is your Southern accent. Can you fake
others? Can you be a Yank or a Brit?"
"A Brit easier than a Yankee, that's for sure."
"If you can be British, I can make you look that way. Tweeds and all."
----------
Chloe's guess about where she was headed was confirmed when Jock
radioed ahead and the SUV was met by a phalanx of GC motorcycles and
squad cars. They escorted the celebrated prisoner to the grounds of
what had once been known as Stateville Correctional Center in Joliet,
Illinois.
The place was a gothic house of horror that had been converted from a
state penitentiary to one of the GC's largest international prisons. It
had both male and female prisoners. In fact, the female population was
sec-ond largest only to the Belgium Facility for Female Rehabilitation
(Buffer).
The first thing to hit Chloe was the crowd of media trucks jamming the
entrance. Cameras pointed toward the SUV from every conceivable perch,
and once the vehicle had passed, she looked back to see the crews
scrambling for position in the vast courtyard.
The yard had become legendary at Stateville during the last two and a
half years. Prisoners were allowed there for only two reasons. They
were herded past a gigantic bronze statue of Carpathia three times a
day, where they were stopped in groups of thirty to fifty and allowed
to kneel and worship, or they were in the yard to be executed. The yard
had seven guillotines about thirty feet apart and positioned so that
the sun baked them from dawn to dusk.
Jock stopped the SUV just inside the yard. "Look at 'em there,
sweetie," he said. "Those blades get sharpened every night, but not a
one of 'em's ever been cleaned. No scraping, no washing, no rust
inhibitors.
"And you know those slots on each side, where the big blades slide
down? Back when we were more humane, those were lubricated every time
they were used. No more. Now the blades scrape along the sides,
sometimes get hung up, get crooked, slow down. I mean, they still weigh
enough that, even on a bad day, by the time they reach your neck,
they're gonna dig in at least three inches.
"In the old days, a blade didn't do its job, too bad for us. The
sentence was to stick your head in there until the blade dropped. If it
somehow didn't kill you, well, you had taken your punishment. And don't
think that didn't happen more than once. Lots of people walking around
with severe neck wounds.
"But now, blade doesn't kill ya, we just hoist 'er again and let 'er
go. Two, three times with a rusty, blood-caked blade that, like I say,
is sharpened every night-that'll do the trick."
About twenty feet before each guillotine stood a rickety wood table,
also gray and weathered by the sun and wind. Each had two incongruous
Bank of England chairs behind it, burnished redwood significantly less
wind worn.
"Processors and mark applicators get to sit," Jock said. "The condemned
stand in lines. Once their infor-mation is recorded and any personal
belongings have been confiscated, they're issued a plastic laundry
basket they hand to the executioner. He or she sets it on the other
side of where the blade comes down.
"Head drops in the basket, body stays where it knelt. Lifers without
parole do collection duty. Come on, I'll show you."
"Spare me."
"Oh, you'd like that, wouldn't you?"
Jock got out. "Cuff her, Jess," he said.
Jesse turned and opened the cage. "Hands," he said.
"Better dope me again," Chloe said.
"Say what?"
"You think I'm going to voluntarily be cuffed so you guys can take me
somewhere I don't want to go?"
Jock opened the back door.
"Hold on, Jock!" Jesse hollered. "She's not cuffed yet!"
"What the-?"
Jock, seeming to Chloe to show off for the cameras, leaped into the
backseat. Chloe sat with her fists balled under her thighs. "You like
to be difficult, don't you?" he said.
Jock grabbed her wrists and jerked her hands up and together where
Jesse could reach them. As soon as she was cuffed, Jock slid back out
of the car, pulling her by the cuffs and letting his body weight drag
her out. She came out hands first, head banging the door, knees
scraping the floor and then the ground. Jock pulled her to her feet.
Chloe hurt all over, but she was glad she had made them work. Someone
else could go gently into that good, good night of death. Not her. Jock
clamped a hand around her elbow and led her to the middle death
machine. "This is going to be yours tomorrow if you don't cooperate
today."
The stench overwhelmed her, and both men covered their mouths and noses
with handkerchiefs. Chloe, mercifully cuffed in front this time, bent
her elbows and held her nose closed with her fingers.
"As you can see," Jock said, "we don't wash the platforms or the
ground either. I mean, who would that benefit?"
The area around the middle machine, like the others along the
sixty-yard row, looked to Chloe like a slaughter-house. The ground
around it was black, caked with blood. "See that Dumpster back there?"
Directly behind the middle machine, maybe a hundred feet back, sat a
Dumpster that looked half the size of a boxcar. It had no lid. "One
collector takes the basket and dumps the head in there. Two collectors
drag the body to the same place. See those black trails from each
station to the Dumpster? You know what that is."
Chloe knew all right. She tried to hold her breath, but Jock kept
pulling her arm so her hands came away from her nose. She prayed he
would not take her out and make her look in the Dumpster. "It gets
emptied about once a week."
The GC held the media back, but they yelled questions. "What's that on
her jumpsuit? Did she soil herself?"
Chloe, mortified, hollered, "Chocolate!"
Jock whirled and batted her in the forehead with the back of his hand.
"You say nothing to anyone but us, understand?"
"They drugged me with a choco-!"
Jock slipped around behind her and clamped his hand over her mouth.
When she tried to bite him, he drove a knee into her lower back,
knocking the wind from her. "Give me the tape, Jess."
"It didn't have to come to this, ma'am," Jesse said, pulling a
three-inch roll of duct tape from his jacket pocket. "I was hoping we
wouldn't have to."
Jock reached to pull a length of tape off the roll, free-ing Chloe's
mouth. "Tell the truth for once! I was drugged! They-"
Jock pressed the tape under her nose so tight her upper lip bulged, and
when he pressed the sides against her cheeks, she couldn't move her
jaw, let alone speak.
"God," Chloe prayed silently, "help me be strong. I don't want to go
easy. I don't want to be beat or scared into submission. And if they
kill me, let me speak first. Remind me of all the verses I've
memorized. Please, God, let me speak your words."
Jock and Jesse took her back across the yard toward a steel door in the
wall of one of the cell blocks. The door was at ground level, but she
assumed stairs would lead below the ground to solitary confinement.
They stopped about ten yards from the door, and the media was about the
same distance away on the other side. "Has she spilled any more?" a
woman called out.
"Oh yes," Jock said. Chloe vigorously shook her head. "More all the
time," he continued. "Of course we had to tell her there would be no
trading leniency for, ah, physi-cal favors as it were. She can only
help herself by telling the truth. I'm confident we'll get there. We've
already gained more knowledge about the Judah-ite underground and the
illegal black-market co-op from her than from any other source we've
ever had. And as you know, she gave up Mr. Al Basrah, the leading
subversive in the Middle East, and he is already dead."
Chloe continued to shake her head, but she had no illusions that would
be shown on GCNN that evening.
"That's all for now, folks. We have a few more pre-requisites for Mrs.
Williams to qualify her for a life sentence rather than death, but our
daily executions here will be held tomorrow at ten A.M., regardless. We
do not foresee having the full house they did yesterday, with every
machine busy for nearly half an hour, but the latest count is
thirty-five on the docket, so five for each machine."
The press began to disperse, but still Jock and Jesse stood there with
Chloe. "I am going to finish my tour -guide speech, little lady, and
you're going to hear me out," Jock said. "Some of the best days of my
life have been spent in this yard, seeing people get what's coming to
them. Frankly, I was disappointed when I was trans-ferred to San Diego,
but the brass assured me a huge Judah-ite cell was suspected there.
They told me I could cart them back here if we rooted them out. Here's
hop-ing you're just the first."
----------
Mac was glad to have Zeke for company on the long flight. Though
uneducated, the young man was smart and inquisitive. He never ran out
of questions or things to talk about.
"Abdullah's kinda tough because he's already so ethnic. He's not good
with accents, so I've got to keep him Middle Eastern but obviously
something different than Jordanian. Rayford's pretty easy, 'cause I can
go any direction with him. Buck's the hardest, with all the facial
scars. But anyway, let's say I make you five guys into totally
different people. What're you gonna do?"
"I'm not totally sure myself, Z," Mac said. "Rumor has it Carpathia's
calling in the ten kings-'course, he calls 'em regional potentates, but
we know what's going down, don't we?"
"I do."
"If Otto succeeds in New Babylon, we find out where the big shindig is
gonna be before it happens, and we get in there and bug the place.
We're not going to try to stop prophesied events, of course, but it'll
be good to know exactly what's happening."
"What happens to Carpathia's secretary?"
"Krystall? If I had a vote, I'd say we convince her we know what's
going to happen to New Babylon and get her out of there."
"To Petra?"
Mac shook his head. "Much as we might like to do that, God has set that
city aside as a city of refuge for his people only. Sad as it is, she
made her decision, took her stand, and accepted the mark. Getting her
out of New Babylon just keeps her from dying in that mess when God
finally judges the city. She's going to die anyway, sometime between
then and the Glorious Appearing, and when she does, she's not going to
like what eternal life looks like. "That doesn't mean we can't befriend
her and be grateful for her help. Or that we can't feel sorry that she
waited too long to see the truth." "I still wonder if we can trust her
though," Zeke said.
----------
The San Diego evacuation deadline was moved up to midnight, partly
because preparations were ahead of schedule and partly to be safe. No
one knew for sure when the GC would begin their next round of canvasing.
Buck was in the vehicle bay on a walkie-talkie with Ming, who was in
his apartment watching Kenny and also manning the periscope. When she
said the coast was clear, Buck sent loaded vehicles to the airstrip,
where planes and pilots arranged by Lionel Whalum met them.
At 6 P.M. Ming radioed. "Buck, Chloe's on TV."
"Kenny watching?"
"I'll get him into his room."
Buck sprinted back, and by the time he got to his quarters, Rayford
had shown up too. The news showed Chloe trying to communicate to the
press and Jock backhanding her. Buck felt murderous, especially when
they taped her mouth shut. He
was used to the lies, but he couldn't
stand to see her mistreated.
"Where's that look like to you, Ray?" he said.
Rayford shook his head. "Studying it."
One of the woman reporters said, "Here in Louisiana prisons are
notoriously hard, and none harder than Angola. International terrorist
Chloe Williams will rue the day she pushed the Global Community to the
point where she was sent here. The guillotine will be sweet relief
compared to hard labor for the rest of her life."
"Angola, Louisiana!" Buck said. "That's where I'm going. I want to take
Sebastian and Razor, and you'll want to come, of course, Dad. Who else
do you think we should-?"
"Hold on, Buck," Rayford said. "We're not going to Louisiana."
"What? You send three of your top people to Greece to get George, and
you're going to let the GC do what they want with Chloe?"
"No way she's in Louisiana."
"You just heard it!"
"Think, Buck. They want us to believe she's in Louisiana. They moved
her from San Diego to keep away from a raid. They wouldn't be
announcing where they took her."
Buck knew Rayford was right. "She's at a prison though, isn't she?
They're not faking that."
"I wouldn't put anything past them."
"Ray, I can't fly to Petra and leave her here. If I stay somewhere
closer to back east, at least I'd have a chance to."
"But how are we going to find out where she is?"
"I'd never forgive myself if I jetted off to safety and left her to die
alone. I don't know how you could either." "I'm not about to, if you
must know."
"C'mon, Dad, we're in this thing together. Don't be holding out on me."
"I've got a call in to Krystall to see if she's heard anything. Problem
is, it's four in the morning over there, and she doesn't think anybody
has a clue anyway. The people who would know are in Al Hillah, and we
have no access to them. It's going to look pretty suspicious if
Krystall starts asking them about Chloe."
----------
It was the middle of the evening in Illinois, and Chloe was surprised
to have been left alone for hours. She had been right about solitary.
The stairs led below ground, and she had been ushered into a small cell
with no cot, no sink, no toilet, no chair, no bench, no nothing.
Including no light or window. The duct tape had been removed from her
mouth, and when the solid metal door was shut, she was in pitch
darkness.
A small square hole in the door opened and was filled with Jock's face.
"I'm going to let you get some rest," he said, "and I'm going to get
some too. Think about anything you can tell me that will benefit you,
because when I come back, we're going to see if we need to give you an
injection to help you open up. Your little she-nanigans today bought
you this. You're not going to like it in there if you're claustrophobic
or afraid of the dark."
Chloe was both, but she was not about to admit it. She feared she would
panic or go mad, but as she heard Jock's footsteps retreat, she was
overcome with a sense of peace. "Thank you, Lord," she said. "I need
you. I'm willing to die, but I don't want to shame you. I need you to
override the truth serum. Don't let me give away anything or anybody,
and keep me strong so I won't worry so much about myself. Help me keep
my mind, my focus, and my priorities. And be with Kenny and Buck and
Dad."
Just thinking about them brought a sob to her throat. Chloe pressed her
back against the wall and lowered herself to the cold floor. "God,
please, bring to mind Scriptures you want me to hear right now. Don't
let hunger or fatigue or fear keep me from remembering. You know who I
am and who I'm not. I just want to be what you want me to be. You know
better than I that you're working with imperfection here."
She lay on her side with no heart palpitations from the closed-in space
or the darkness. That alone was evidence that God was hearing her. She
began rehearsing in her mind her memory verses, starting as far back in
the Bible as she could remember. But when she stalled, she panicked.
"Lord, keep my mind fresh. Don't let me forget. I want to be quoting
you when I see you."
Her mind became a jumble. How will I remember? What if my mind goes
blank? "Lord, please."
And suddenly, light. Was she dreaming? She blinked. The rusted, filthy
chamber was bright enough to make her shield her eyes. A vision? A
dream? A hallucination?
Then a voice. Quoting her favorite verses. She repeated them, word for
word. "Is this your answer, God? You'll speak them and I'll repeat
them? Thank you! Thank you!"
Loud banging on the door. "Keep it down in there!"
"Yes, peace, be still." That voice came from the corner!
Chloe pulled her hands from her eyes and jumped at a figure, sitting, a
finger to his lips.
"Is it you, Lord?" she said, breathless.
"No one can see God and live," he whispered.
"Then who are you?"
"He sent me."
"Praise God."
"Yes, please."
"Can anyone else see you?"
"Tomorrow. Not until then."
"You'll remind me of what God has promised?"
"I will."
"You make me want to sing."
"Do so."
"Sing with me."
"I am not here to sing but to speak. You sing."
Chloe began singing.
"`When we walk with the Lord in the light of his word,
what a glory he sheds on our way!
While we do his good will, he abides with us still,
and with all who will trust and obey."'
"Shut up in there!"
Chloe sang louder. "`Trust and obey, for there's no other way to be
happy in Jesus, but to trust and obey."'
"If I have to open this door, you're going to wish I hadn't!"
"`Then in fellowship sweet we shall sit at his feet...."'
That brought knocking-it sounded like with a stick -and Chloe laughed
aloud. "They don't like my voice," she told her new friend.
"Or the words," he said, and she laughed all the more.
"You going crazy in there?"
"No! Do you have any requests?"
"Only that you knock it off!"
"Sorry!" And she began again.
"`Standing on the promises of Christ my King,
through eternal ages let his praises ring;
glory in the highest I will shout and sing,
standing on the promises of God."'
"All right!" The small door flew open. The room went dark again. "You
got a light in there?"
"Sure! The light of God."
"I'm serious! What've you got in there?"
"Just the light of his
presence."
"If Jock gets back and finds you with something in there, you'll regret
it."
"Regret the chance to surprise him? I don't think so. Do you know how
to sing harmony? Sing with me.
`Standing on the promises that cannot fail ..."'
The guard slammed the door.
TWELVE
RAYFORD HAD only an inkling of what Buck must be going through. It had
to be different for a husband than for a father. But he couldn't put
his finger on it.
"Here's what we'll do," he told his son-in-law. "I have arranged with
Lionel to leave us a two-seater. It's fast, but it holds only so much
fuel. We'll have to take on more en route, maybe in Cypress. We'll help
get everyone else out of here; then we can
sit at the airstrip for all
I care. Fly to the Midwest somewhere, the South. Wherever you think
we'd be closest to Chloe."
"And do what?"
"We can take that little satellite TV and keep in touch with Mac and
Otto and Krystall, see if we can get a clue," Rayford said.
"You just want to be on the same continent when she dies, is that what
you're telling me?"
"Well, uh, no-"
"Dad, think about it. I don't fly planes. You don't have a backup
pilot. Neither of us is military. You've got a two-seat plane for two
guys, so there's no thought of springing Chloe and bringing her along."
Rayford sat and held his head in his hands. "I don't know what else to
do, Buck. I'm not leaving the States with her still in custody. But
unless we find out where she is, I'm not putting a crew on it either."
"Where're we going to go?"
"How about Wisconsin, where Zeke was? He tells me the GC never nose
around. It's fairly central, so if we do get word, we can be on our way
quick."
----------
Jock led Chloe to a dimly lit room about a hundred paces from her cell.
"It's just you and me tonight, ma'am. No playing off the other cop, no
bright lights in your eyes, no pressure."
But when she saw where she was supposed to sit, a steel chair bolted to
the floor with leather straps on the legs and armrests, she said, "No,
it won't be just you and me, Jock."
"What do you mean?"
"You alone cannot strap me into that chair."
"I think I could, but you wouldn't like it."
"And I'd make you wish you hadn't done it alone.
I'm not getting strapped down for any reason unless I'm overpowered.
Uh-uh."
"How about we try this the easy way?" he said. "How about we just talk
awhile and see if you need restraining?"
"No truth serum?"
"Not if you cooperate."
"I can tell you right now I won't."
"I can't persuade you to rethink this, be nice, help yourself?"
"No sir. For one thing, I have to use the ladies' room, and I won't
even be sitting, let alone strapped in, until then." Jock sighed and
walked her farther down the hall. "As you can imagine," he said,
"there's no window in a prison john. The only way out is the way in,
and I'll be waiting."
----------
Mac was on the phone to Rayford from high over the Atlantic in the
middle of the night. "When is Weser going to be at the palace?"
"By eight A.M. their time."
"I'm guessing top priority is anything on Chloe."
"Right."
"And then Carpathia's plans." "Exactly."
"I'll try him a half hour after he's supposed to have gotten there.
I'll call you as soon as I know anything."
----------
Chloe emerged from the dingy Stateville bathroom to find Jock with
three guards, a woman and two men.
"So it's not just the two of us, Jock?"
"Could have been. When you're all strapped in and not happy, look in
the mirror. At least by telling me up front, you saved wasting my time
trying to talk you into anything and then having to rassle you into the
chair."
As Chloe walked down the hall, the woman grabbed her right hand and
twisted it up behind her, while one of the men did the same with her
left. She thought about protesting; she had made it clear to Jock she
wasn't going easy. As soon as they entered the small room, the third
guard bent and scooped her off the floor by her ankles. The wrenching
pressure on her shoulders made her cry out, but within seconds she was
strapped in the chair.
The guards left, leaving a hypodermic with Jock. He shut the door and
approached. "Last chance," he said. "You're not going to tell the truth
without this?"
Chloe's pulse sprinted until she noticed her friend from solitary
sitting in Jock's chair. "I'm not going to tell you the truth with it,"
she said.
"Oh, this has broken stronger subjects than you," Jock said.
He began by inserting a receptacle in a vein in her forearm. He did it
with such precision it was clear he had experience. Chloe felt no pain,
and he deftly taped it in place. Then he inserted a tube that ran to
his side of the desk.
Jock sat and Chloe's new friend stood behind him. She fought a grin,
peeking at him over Jock's head. "What are you looking at?" Jock said.
"Nobody you know," Chloe said. There was some truth, if he wanted it.
Jock inserted the hypodermic into the tube. "When I push the plunger,
it will inject 15 cc's of serum, half an ounce, into your veins. You
should feel little more than a relaxed mood. You probably know how this
stuff works. It counteracts a chemical in your brain that inhib-its
overfrankness. But, of course, that is precisely what I want from you."
"I can't wait to hear what I have to say."
"Say enough, and it's life rather than death for you."
"Oh, Jock, I think someone else here needs truth serum more than I do."
"You doubt me?"
"You know as well as I do that no matter what I say, I still die."
"Not necessarily."
"You're a liar. I know that, and that's the truth, and if I'm not
mistaken, you haven't even injected me yet."
"No, but enough of this. Here we go."
Chloe's visitor motioned from behind Jock like a music director, and
Chloe began to hum. Then she sang quietly. "
`There shall be showers of blessing;
this is the promise of love.
There shall be seasons refreshing,
sent from the Savior above."'
"The serum doesn't act that quickly, so don't assume you're singing the
truth."
"`Showers of blessing,
showers of blessing we need.
Mercy drops round us are falling,
but for the showers we plead."'
"Nice tune."
"Thanks. Nice lyrics too."
Within a few minutes, Chloe felt the effects of the serum. It was
strange. A sense of well-being, of trust, that she could feel free to
say anything, anything at all. If she didn't know better, she would
want to help this man by answering his questions. No harm would come to
her, and everything would be all right.
Except that she knew better. She looked past Jock.
"How long will you be with me?" she said.
"As long as necessary," the invisible man said.
"Hm?" Jock said. "As long as this takes. I got some rest. I can hang in
here as long as you can."
"Bet you can't."
"Try me."
Chloe smiled. "I think you'll find me very trying."
"How are you
feeling?"
"Mellow."
"Good. That's progress. What is your name?"
"Chloe Steele Williams, and
proud of it."
"What is your father's name?"
"Rayford Steele."
"And your husband?"
"Cameron Williams. I call him Buck."
"Do you have a child?"
"Yes."
"What is his name?"
"His name is very special to Buck and me, because he was named after
two dear, dear friends and compatriots who died."
"And what were their names?"
"If I answer that, you will know the name of my son."
"And why should I not know the name of your son?"
"The less you know about him, the harder it will befor you to gain
access to him."
"I have told you we mean your son no harm."
"That is a lie."
"Anyway, you mentioned his name to your father on the phone. Kenny."
Jock pushed the hypodermic plunger again, and maybe it was
psychological, but Chloe seemed to feel an immediate rush. Strange, but
the stuff did seem to be making her tell the truth, even if the answers
were not what Jock wanted.
He was more red-faced than usual. Was she making him mad? She hoped so.
"Are you a member of an underground group subversive to the Global
Community government and its supreme potentate, Nicolae Jetty
Carpathia?"
"Yes."
"Is it true that you do not believe the potentate is worthy to be
called a deity?"
"Yes, and beyond that, we believe he is the Antichrist of the Bible."
"Are you aware that that statement alone is punishable by death?"
"Yes, as well as I know that God desires truth, God's law is truth,
Jesus is the truth, and if you know the truth, it can set you free."
Where did that come from? Thank you, Lord.
"Are you a member of a Judah-ite faction with a large cell group
residing in San Diego, California?"
"Are you asking me who I am?"
"I am asking you are you a-"
"I am a follower of Christ, the Son of the living God. He is the one
who is mightier than I, whose sandal strap I am not worthy to stoop
down and loose."
"What?"
"Did you not hear me?"
"Did the Judah-ites or a faction of the Judah-ites called the
Tribulation Force have anything to do with the darkness that envelops
New Babylon?"
"That was the work of God himself."
"Do you or the group you represent seek to overthrow the government of
this world?"
"That has already been done. It has simply not been played out yet."
"The Global Community government has been overthrown?"
"It shall become known."
"Do you worship the image of Nicolae Carpathia at least three times a
day?"
"Never."
"Will you tell me the whereabouts of your compatriots or any
information leading to their capture? Primarily I am talking about your
father, your husband, Dr. Tsion Ben-Judah, and Dr. Chaim Rosenzweig."
"I would die first."
Jock pushed the rest of the serum through the apparatus and sat picking
at his fingernails for about five minutes. Chloe sang, "
`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."'
Jock stood and looked out the door, breathing heavily. Presently he
moved to Chloe's chair and removed the surgical tubing and receptacle.
He unstrapped her.
"We're finished?" she said.
"No, but you have ingested the maximum dose. I've never seen anything
like it. We can sit and chat for a few minutes, and if that last hit
kicks in and makes you come to your senses, you let me know."
"Let's talk about you, Jock. What got you so fired up about Carpathia?"
"Oh no, we're not going there. You can just leave me alone. You
obviously believe what you believe. That's impressive, I'll give you
that. Misguided, but impressive. That's the problem with religious
extremists."
"Oh, that's what we are?" she said.
"Of course."
"You'd like to lump us with people who kill in the name of their faith,
wouldn't you?"
"You're as extreme as they come, ma'am."
"We don't kill people who don't agree with us. We don't erect statues
of our God everywhere and require by law that everyone bow and scrape
before them three times a day. We offer the truth, show people the way,
call them to God. But we don't force them."
Jock sat heavily. "Do you realize you're going to die tomorrow?"
"I had an inkling."
"And that doesn't bother you?"
"Of course it does. I'm scared."
"And you're never going to see your husband, your baby, your loved ones
and friends again."
"If I thought that was true, that would be a different story."
"I get it. Pie in the sky by-and-by. You're all going to be floating
around on clouds someday, playing your harps and wearing white robes."
"I hope you're right about the pie but not the harps." Jock shook his
head. "You know we're going to televise this to the world."
"Spread some more lies about me first?"
"We say what we have to say to save face." "And you need to save face
with me because this operation was a colossal failure, wasn't it?"
"Could have gone better."
"Could have? It couldn't have gone worse! What'd you accomplish?"
"Well, when we find out where the rest of the cowards are hiding, we'll
have accomplished something."
"You calling them cowards because they're in hiding, or do you mean the
rest of the cowards like me? You find me cowardly?"
"Actually no."
"Do I get any last words tomorrow?"
"In your case we might not allow that. I can just hear you trying to
preach a sermon, going off on Carpathia, trying to get people saved."
"So, I get to say my last words only if they pass muster with the
Global Community."
"Something like that."
"We'll see about that."
"We? Who's we?"
Chloe stood and realized her friend was gone. She plunged on. "Jock, do
you realize that the day is coming-and much sooner than you think-when
everyone will have to acknowledge God and his Son?"
"Think so?"
"`It is written: "As I live, says the Lord, every knee shall bow to Me,
and every tongue shall confess to God.""'
"Well, honey, not me."
"Sorry, Jock. `Each of us shall give account of himself to God."'
"My god is Carpathia. That's good enough for me."
"What about when
Jesus wins?"
"He wins?"
"`Therefore God also has highly exalted Him and given Him the name
which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should
bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the
earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father."'
"I hope all that gives you some comfort when you're standing in the hot
sun tomorrow morning, smelling that smell, seeing heads roll, and
knowing yours will be next. Maybe I'm not the interrogator I thought I
was, and maybe you paid a lot of money to be trained and prepped for
truth serum. But there's nothing that brings clarity to the mind like
knowing you're next in the guillotine line.
"I'll be watching you in the morning, girl. My money says you'll be
shaking and wailing and pleading for one more chance to save yourself."
----------
At 8:30 A. M. Palace Time, Mac was still about seven hours from Petra.
He called the number Rayford had given him for Otto Weser and
identified himself.
"He is risen," the German said.
"Christ is risen indeed," Mac said. "What've you got for me?"
"I gotta tell you, Miss Krystall has been a gem.
I wish she was on our side. She let me listen in on a conversation from
a man named Suhail Akbar, head of Sec-"
"I know who he is, Mr. Weser. All due respect, cut to the chase."
"Carpathia has assigned him and his people to do two things. First, get
the government running in Al Hillah, and second, prepare for a real
Oktoberfest for all the leaders of the world in Baghdad six months from
now."
"So, not in October?"
"That was just an expression. It's going to be what you Yanks would
call a big blowout. All the pomp and circumstance, flags, banners,
light shows, bands, dancers, everything. If the lights come back on in
New Babylon, the government goes home. But even if they do, the big
deal still happens in Baghdad."
"Exactly where? Do we know?"
"It's a brand-new building, Mr. McCullum. On the site where the Iraq
Museum used to be, before the war. It's supposed to be
state-of-the-art, plush accommodations, room for the meetings and the
pageantry. I mean, there are only ten other heads of state, but
apparently besides the private meetings with his cabinet, Carpathia
wants some festivities open to the public.
"To his people he is referring to the meetings with the subpotentates,
however, as the final solution to the Jewish problem."
"To a German, that has to resonate with your history books, eh, Mr.
Weser?"
"Frankly, sir, our history books don't read the same as those of others
who write about us, but I know what you mean, yes. We've been down this
road before."
"Anything on Chloe Williams?"
"Krystall says she's at Angola Prison in Louisiana."
"She basing that on the same news we saw, or does she have inside
information?"
"Let me ask."
Otto came back on a few seconds later. "Both. She says she heard that
newscast but that she's also heard Security and Intelligence people
talking about Chloe being there. Latest word is that she is to be
executed at 1000 hours Central Time."
"We've got to go and take George and a few others with us, Rayford,"
Buck said.
"It still makes no sense," Rayford said. "Why would they broadcast
where she is?"
"Maybe to trap us."
"Then it's less likely she's there."
"You think they're on to Krystall?" Buck said.
"Giving her bogus info to test her?"
"Let's get Sebastian in on this."
----------
Since before dawn, Chang had been at his computer in the tech center.
When Naomi arrived, she stood behind him, hands resting lightly on his
shoulders.
"Troops, troops, and more troops," he said. "The ones from Greece could
overpower Israel, let alone those from all over the Carpathian States.
And this is just the beginning."
"What's the latest on Mr. Williams's wife?"
"Everything I'm getting from communications going into the palace from
Al Hillah puts Chloe in Louisiana and sentenced to death at six P.M.
our time."
"Oh no."
"That's not the worst of it, Naomi. They let that out over
international television, and they never tell the truth. If they want
to lure the Trib Force, they could have left her in San Diego. Rayford
and Buck are in the thick of the evac from San Diego, but they're not
going to know what to do now. I hope they can see through this. For all
we know, Chloe is an hour from San Diego. All the GC has to do is have
her somewhere where a GCNN affiliate can send a live feed."
Naomi pulled up a chair and sat next to Chang. "If ever there was a
newscast you'd want to interfere with, it has to be that one, doesn't
it?"
"No way I want the world to see it."
"But we would want them to see and hear what Chloe might say."
"Definitely. I'll just be ready to flip it when they've lost patience
with her."
----------
Rayford found that Sebastian agreed with him. "No way they're letting
out where she really is," he said. "It would be a major gaffe."
"Then where are we?" Buck said. "I'd rather know the worst than not
know anything."
"Let's see if Krystall's ready to take a chance," Rayford said. "I'll
call her."
When she came on the line, Rayford said, "I need to ask you to do
something bold for me."
"I could be executed for what I've given you people already."
"I'm going to trade information with you that will prolong your life."
"What are you talking about?"
"You're a visitor to Dr. Ben-Judah's Web site, right?"
"I told you I was."
"Then you know he has shown from the Bible, in advance, all these
plagues and judgments that have hit the earth."
"Yeah, it's spooky."
"It's spooky, but it's real, and we know the next thing that's going to
happen in New Babylon, only we don't know exactly when."
"And what is that?"
"God is going to destroy the entire city in the space of one hour."
"Oh my-"
"He will call his own people-like Otto and his friends-out of there so
they will be spared. You need to get out too."
"Where will I go?"
"Anywhere but New Babylon."
"And you're sure this is going to happen?"
"If it doesn't, it will be the first time one of these prophesied
events hasn't happened. Now, Krystall, I can't promise you'll be safe
just because you leave New Babylon. The rest of the world will suffer
as well, but maybe not as severely and quickly as New Babylon. Getting
out of there will be your only hope."
"Is Carpathia sending all these armies into Israel one of the
prophecies too?" Krystall said.
"Ever hear of Armageddon? This is it. But the end of New Babylon comes
first."
"And for that fair warning, you want me to do what?"
"Call someone. Someone who would know. And I want you somehow to work
Chloe Williams into the conversation. Tell him you saw it on the news
or whatever, but you're just curious. Is she really going to be
executed and where? Can you do that?"
"You don't believe it's going to be in Louisiana?" she said.
"Finding that hard to swallow."
"No promises, but I'll see what I can find out."
----------
"What're you doing tonight, Jock?" Chloe said as he walked her back to
solitary.
"Sleeping like a baby. Big day tomorrow. We tell the world you sang
like a canary, but that in the end you refused the mark and wouldn't
pledge allegiance to Carpathia. Our hand was forced."
"And you're the hero."
"Probably promoted. Shipped off to International."
"Which is where now?"
"What do you care? You can't tell anybody or do anything about it."
"Then what's the harm in telling me?"
He cocked his head at her. "Rumors say I'll be assigned to the Jezreel
Valley."
"Oh? What's going on there?"
"Not at liberty to say."
"But you know?"
"Well, yeah, 'course I do."
"Congratulations."
"Thank you."
"Sky's the limit, huh?"
"I guess," he said.
"Want a little inside information?"
"You're a little tardy with that, but I'm listening."
"New Babylon is never getting back to normal."
"And you know that for a fact."
"Sure as I'm standing here," Chloe said.
"Well, I doubt you're right, but you won't be around to find out. And I
will."
"I wouldn't be so sure of that either."
"See you in the morning, ma'am."
Chloe sat in the dark chamber and asked quietly,
"Are you still here with me?"
"Always," came the reply. "To the end of the age." Chloe prostrated
herself on the floor and prayed the rest of the time, unable to sleep.
She sang, she quoted Scripture, she praised God, and she listened.
Mostly she listened. As he comforted her heart.
THIRTEEN
"I'M NEVER going to let this happen again, Dad," Buck said. They stood
outside their two-seater jet in remote western Wisconsin at dawn,
monitoring a miniature TV and a radio and waiting for Krystall's call.
"We could find out Chloe was half an hour away in St. Paul, and there
wouldn't be a blessed thing we could do about it. No car, no disguises,
no IDs, nothing. Never again, Dad, and I mean it."
Rayford didn't appear to have anything to say, and Buck felt sorry for
him. "I don't know what else could have been done," Buck said. "But
anything more than sitting on our hands, waiting for something to
happen."
"I don't know why Krystall hasn't called," Rayford said. "She's had all
day." He looked at his watch. "It's the middle of the afternoon in New
Babylon."
"You'd better hope they're not on to her, haven't bugged her phone or
something. They'd know about Otto, know we know where the big confab is
going to be, everything."
"I don't know," Rayford said. "David and Chang have always said the GC
doesn't tap its own phones."
"So everybody in Al Hillah's been in meetings all day and there's no
one to tell Krystall the truth about where Chloe is? You should have
given her some kind of a time frame. Doesn't she assume we'd like to
know before the execution?"
"It's not like she works for us, Buck. She's been a god-send."
"Interesting thing to say about someone bearing the mark of the beast."
Mac dropped off Zeke in Petra at about two in the afternoon. Abdullah
had already readied the bigger plane for Mac and then took charge of
getting Zeke settled. "I plan to get in and get out of that apartment
as fast as I can," Mac said. "Then I'm picking up Weser and his clan
and getting back here. I'd like to get all that done before the GCNN
goes on the air with Chloe. I won't watch 'em kill her, but I want to
see what leads up to it anyway."
----------
In pervasive darkness, Chloe had no idea of the passage of time.
Occasionally she pressed her ear against the steel door to listen for
activity in the solitary unit. So far, nothing.
She thought waiting for one's execution would be like waiting to see
the principal or facing a punishment you knew was coming, only
multiplied on a mortal scale. And yet she found herself relatively
calm. Her heart broke for Buck, not so much for the prospect of his
missing her, but for how wrenching it would be to have to explain this
to Kenny.
He was too young, and there would be no explaining it, she knew. But
the daily questions, the need of a boy for his mother, the fact that no
surrogate could love him like she did ... all that worked on her.
Chloe felt the presence of God, though she didn't see the messenger she
had the night before. Her muscles ached from the positions she found
herself in for prayer and then just trying to get comfortable. Hunger
was a distraction she succeeded in pushing from her mind. Soon, she
told herself, she would be dining at the banquet table of the King of
kings.
Most gratifying was that she had fewer doubts and more assurance as the
hours passed. She had put all her eggs in this basket, she had always
liked to say. If she was wrong, she was wrong. If it was all a big
story, she had bought it in its entirety. But for her the days of
questioning and misgivings were gone. Chloe had seen too much,
experienced too much. She had been shown, like everyone else on the
planet, that God was real, he was in control, he was the archenemy of
Antichrist, and in the end God would win.
Early on in her spiritual walk, Chloe had entertained a smugness,
particularly when people berated or derided her for her beliefs. She
was too polite to gloat, but she couldn't deny some private
satisfaction in knowing that one day she would be proved right.
But that attitude too had mercifully been taken from her. The more she
learned and the more she knew and the more she saw examples of other
believers with true compassion for the predicaments of lost people, the
more Chloe matured in her faith. That was manifest in a sorrow over
people's souls, a desperation that they see the truth and turn to
Christ before it was too late.
She didn't even know what to do with her feelings of love and concern
and sympathy for people who had already taken Carpathia's mark and were
condemned for eternity. They were beyond help and hope, and yet still
she grieved for them. Flashes of humanity in Florence, in Nigel, in
Jesse, in Jock ... what did those mean? She couldn't expect unbelievers
to live like believers, and so she was left without the option to judge
them-only to love them. Yet it was hopeless now.
While Chloe couldn't understand how there could still be uncommitted
people in the world, she knew there were. Those were the ones she would
try to reach with whatever freedom God made the GC give her to make a
last comment. How someone could see all that had gone on during the
last six years and not realize that the only options were God or
Satan-or worse, could know the options and yet choose Satan-she could
not fathom.
But no doubt this was true. Ming had told her of Muslims who were
anti-Carpathia because they were so devout in their own faith. Some
practicing Jews who did not believe in Jesus as Messiah also rejected
Carpathia as god of this world. George knew of militia types who
refused to give allegiance to a dictator yet had not trusted Christ for
their salvation either.
Was it possible, after all this time, that there were still spiritually
uncommitted people who simply hadn't chosen yet? Chloe couldn't
imagine, but she knew it had to be true. Some simply chose to pursue
their own goals, their own lusts.
Chloe wondered about the others in Stateville who would die that
morning. Many would be bearers of Carpathia's mark, but surely many
would not. Would she, as the prize arrest, be last on the docket?
"Clarity, Lord," she said. "That's all I ask for. You have already
promised grace and strength. Just let my mind work better than it
should under the circumstances."
----------
Mac dug through his luggage and found his wino outfit. No one cared to
look for the mark of Carpathia under the stocking cap of a smelly man
down on his luck. It had become the only ensemble Mac dared go out in
during the day. He found his scooter where he had left it in the
underbrush near the airstrip and rode to the outskirts of Al Basrah,
chaining it securely before staggering into town.
Mac was greeted only by real drunks. He acted as if he was just
wandering, but he was on a clear route. And when he got to within a
block of his and Albie's place, he ducked into an alley and found
himself alone. He jogged the rest of the way and started up the stairs
when he heard voices. Mac stopped and sat on the landing at the top of
the stairs. Two men stood in front of his and Albie's dingy rooms.
"You can't be in here, old man!" one of them shouted. "Get out."
Mac mumbled and let his head fall back, snoring.
The men laughed. "Anyway," one said quietly, "I'm guessing he'll come
after dark. Double-M wants him alive."
Mac recognized the nickname.
"I got two guys who can watch the entrance starting about an hour
before sundown. You're sure he wouldn't come earlier?"
"He's got no mark, man! Who would risk that?"
When the men moved on and Mac was sure the way was clear, he sprang to
his feet and unlocked his door. The place was empty. Not a lick of
furniture. None of their stuff. Now it just sat as a trap for him to
return to.
Mac bounded down the stairs and ran back to his scooter, sped to the
airstrip, and headed for New Babylon. He had arranged with Otto that he
bring his people to the New Babylon airstrip. "Better to load up where
no one can see us," he said.
The thirty or so men and women in Otto's charge tried individually to
thank Mac, but he just smiled and kept moving them into the plane. He
wasn't going to feel at ease again until he was in Petra. Then, with a
new identity courtesy of Zeke, he'd be ready for any caper Rayford
could think of.
Otto was bouncing on the balls of his feet at the back of the crowd.
"Once you're on," Mac said, "we're off."
"Mac, we can't go yet."
"Why? What now?"
"She's dead."
"Who?"
"Krystall."
"What are you talking about?"
"Go see for yourself. After I was here this morning, I went back to our
underground place and helped get everybody ready to meet you. When we
got here, I told them to wait for you and that you would be the only
person who could see enough to land. I went to thank Krystall, and
that's when I found her."
"How do you know she's dead?"
"I'm not a doctor, sir, but there was a stench like someone had tossed
something in there. She was on the floor with the phone buzzing. I let
it lie. I checked her pulse. Come see for yourself."
"Mr. Weser, we don't have time. If she's dead, she's dead, and I'm
sorry. And Rayford getting her mixed up in all this may have caused it.
But there's nothing I can do for her, and we might jeopardize this
mission if you and I go running off with all your people waiting on the
plane."
"You think they were on to her? Sent somebody to kill her?"
"I don't know how they would do that if they couldn't see."
"I was thinking maybe they had someone who knew the palace come back
and feel his way up there, make sure she was there by talking to her,
and then toss poison gas or something in there."
"Could be. That explains why Rayford never heard from her. Did you let
him know?"
"I should have, shouldn't I? I didn't know what to do. I was so upset."
"Get aboard. I'll call Rayford."
----------
Buck looked on as Rayford took a call from Mac and covered his eyes
with a hand. "What is it?" Buck said.
Rayford held up a finger to tell Buck to wait, and his knees buckled.
"What? Is Chloe already gone?"
"No, Buck," Rayford said, on his knees in the grass. "But she might as
well be." He told him the news.
Buck sat and pulled his knees to his chest. "I can't believe I'm stuck
here in the middle of nowhere, waiting for my wife to die, not even
knowing where she is."
Rayford looked ashen. "We should get started for Petra."
"But what if someone-"
"No one who knows is going to tell us, Buck. It's time to give it up."
"Give up, you mean."
"Yes, Buck," Rayford said, standing, emotion in his voice. "I have
given up. She's in God's hands now. If he chooses to spare her somehow,
he's apparently decided to do it without our help."
As Rayford boarded, Buck stood and spread his palms on the fuselage of
the aircraft, his head hanging. "Chloe," he rasped, "wherever you are,
I love you."
After a long night of praying, Chloe actually drifted off. She was
awakened, she wasn't sure how long later, by the unmistakable
thwock-thwock-thwock of helicopter blades. More than one chopper. Maybe
as many as three. For an instant she allowed herself to wonder if her
deliverance had come.
Deep inside she knew her husband and her father, and perhaps many in
the Trib Force, would work to free her until the end. But she also knew
that without a miracle there was no way they could know where she was.
That had been the whole point of her transfer.
Had they somehow found out? She never ceased to be amazed at the
resources available to so many of her compatriots. Should she prepare
to flee in the event they did break in and look for her? Did they know
more than where she was? Did they know the architecture and lay-out of
the prison, where solitary was, somehow which cell she might be in? And
how many were there? Could they overpower the GC?
Her questions were answered in an instant when her friend reappeared
and the darkness of her cell was turned to noonday.
"May I know your name?" she said.
"You may call me Caleb."
"I am not to be rescued today, am I, Caleb?"
"You will be delivered, but not in the manner you mean."
"Delivered?"
"Today you will be with Christ in paradise."
That drove Chloe to her knees. "I can't wait," she said. "There are so
many here I will miss desperately, but not much else. How I long to be
with Jesus!"
Besides the choppers, Chloe heard only the loudest noises from outside
and none from inside. Vehicles. Metallic hammering. Shouts.
Construction of some sort. In spite of herself, she began to grow
nervous. "I want to be the picture of a child of God," she said, trying
to control her emotions.
"God will keep you in perfect peace if your mind is stayed on him."
"Thank you, Caleb. But suddenly I feel so fragile."
Finally Chloe heard sounds from inside solitary. A rap on the steel
door, the smaller door sliding open. Jock's face appeared.
"How we doing this morning, missy? Bathroom break."
"Give me a minute, please."
"Oh, tough girl."
She looked desperately to Caleb.
"`Peace I leave with you,' says your Lord Christ," he said. "`My peace
I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your
heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid."'
Chloe knocked on the steel door. "I'm ready," she said.
A guard opened the door. When Chloe emerged, she found Jock in his
dress blues, gold buttons, the whole bit. She also faced a woman
wearing a GCNN blazer and carrying a leather bag.
"My, my," the woman said. "That won't do. Let me know when I can join
you in the bathroom. And, Jock, get her a clean jumpsuit."
"Dressing me for the kill?" Chloe said.
"All pageantry, my dear," the woman said. "Justice will be served, but
it will be clear you were not mistreated."
"I see," Chloe said, as the woman followed her. "Snatched from my
family, starved, drugged, flown half-way across the country, injected
with truth serum, and held in solitary confinement overnight is your
idea of fair treatment?"
"Hey, I'm just the makeup artist. Call for me when you're ready."
"For what?"
"I'll fix your hair, make you up a little."
"Don't bother."
"Oh, I have to."
"You don't have a choice?" Chloe said.
"If you were presentable, maybe, but look at you."
"Surely I have a choice. I ought to be able to look however I want."
"You'd think. But no."
Chloe caught a glimpse of herself on the way past the mirror. She did
look awful. Her face was greasy and smudged. Her hair
a tangle.
Bizarre. When was the last time someone fixed me up? And here it was,
free, when her appearance was the last thing on her mind.
"Don't dawdle," the woman called out. "We're on a TV schedule, you
know."
Chloe shook her head. TV people. They expected even the condemned to
play team ball.
"I'm putting a fresh jumpsuit on the sink! Tell me when you've changed!"
Chloe changed but said nothing. When she came out, the woman said, "You
were going to tell me when you were ready."
"No, I wasn't."
"Let's go back in there so I can use the mirror."
"Feel free. I don't
need it."
"Come on! I have to get you ready."
"I'm ready."
"Wait, stop! Hold still."
Chloe looked the woman full in the face. "Do you not see the absurdity
of this? It's not bad enough that I'm to be put to death? You have to
make a spectacle of it?"
"I have a job and I'm going to do it."
"Then you're going to do it right here and right now."
The woman bent to set her bag on the floor and rose with a comb and
brush. She worked vigorously on Chloe's hair. Then she used a wetnap to
wash Chloe's face and dabbed rouge on her cheeks. When she produced
mascara, Chloe said, "No. Now that's it. No mascara, no lipstick. We're
done."
"You know, you're really quite an attractive girl."
Chloe arched an eyebrow. "Well, thank you so much. When I look back on
this, that's going to be the highlight of my morning." What a
comforting thought. I have a chance at having the best-looking head in
the Dumpster.
When Chloe was delivered back to Jock, he said, "Do I need to cuff you,
restrain you?"
"No."
"That's my girl."
She gave him a look.
"Nothing personal," he said. "I'm just doing what I have to do."
"Then make sure I get a few last words."
"If it was up to me-"
She spun and faced him. "It is up to you, Jock, and you know it.
Anybody who could tell you what to do is thousands of miles away. Take
responsibility once, would you? Make a decision here. Announce that I'm
going to speak and then let me. In the end I'm gone, and you're headed
for your promotion. What's the harm?"
Jock avoided her gaze. He led her up the stairs and into the morning
sun. She shielded her eyes. Not only was the Carpathia-run press out in
full force, but stands had been set up and apparently the public
invited. Chloe wondered what all
the noise was about until she realized
the crowd apparently recognized she was the main attraction and was
applauding and cheering.
The other prisoners, mostly men, were already in their respective rows,
waiting behind the tables. Some bounced nervously. Others seemed to
hyperventilate. Officials sat at each table, one with a mark
applicator. What was the point? At this stage, even the ones who took
the mark still endured the blade. Did they think the mark gave them
some sort of an advantage in whatever afterlife Carpathia offered?
Cross-legged on the ground around each guillotine sat prisoners in dark
denim. These, Chloe realized, were the lifers Jock described as
collectors. They would dispose of the remains. They looked excited,
smiling, joshing with each other.
Jock led her to the back of the line at the middle table. "Well, I
guess this is it," he said, and to Chloe he sounded apologetic.
"You
can still-"
"We should have made it a bet yesterday," she said.
"Ma'am?"
"You were sure I would be making last-minute pleas about now."
"You win that one," he said. "You're a strange woman."
Chloe was aware of lights on high poles, scaffolding that supported
cameras and cameramen, technicians wearing headphones running here and
there, people checking their watches. In line at the table to her
right, a middle-aged man bearing Carpathia's mark-which meant he had
been sentenced for some other capital crime-had fallen to his knees,
shuddering and sobbing. He grasped the pant legs of the man in front of
him, who laid a tentative hand on his shoulder and looked ill at ease.
An older woman, yet another line beyond, stood with her face buried in
her hands, swaying. Praying, Chloe assumed. In every line were Jews,
identified with stenciled Stars of David or wearing self-made
yarmulkes, some made of scraps of cloth, some of cardboard. The people
were wasted, scarred, having been starved, beaten, sun-burned.
Chloe knew enough from Buck's research and the inside stuff from David
Hassid and Chang to know that Carpathia wanted these to be tortured to
within an inch of their lives but not allowed to die before their
public beheadings.
Chloe had been as alarmed as anyone when television had gone from bad
to worse and from worse to unconscionable. The worst possible
perversions were available on certain channels twenty-four hours a day,
and literally nothing was limited. But when studies showed that by far
the most-watched television shows every day of the week were the public
executions, she knew there had been one more far corner for society to
turn after all, and it had turned.
The bloodlust was apparently insatiable. It had come to the point where
the most popular of the live-execution shows were those that lasted an
hour and included slow-motion replays of the most gruesome deaths. When
guillotines malfunctioned and blades stuck, victims were left mortally
wounded and screaming but not dead.... This was what the public wanted
to see, and the more the better.
Each execution was preceded by a rehearsal of the misdeeds of the
recalcitrant. The more sordid the past, the more satisfying the
justice, the logic went. Chloe knew what kinds of stories circulated
about her. She could only imagine what was said about the truly guilty.
Chloe watched Jock make his way back toward the stands and a single
microphone. What appeared to be a stage manager quieted the crowd,
waited for a cue, then signaled them to applaud while he read from a
script, introducing Jock Ashmore. He called him one of the Global
Community's crack lead investigators, single-handedly responsible for
the capture and arrest of Chloe Steele Williams, the highest level
anti-Carpathian terror-ist apprehended to date. The people cheered.
"Thank you," Jock began. "We have thirty-six execu-tions to carry out
for you today-twenty-one for murder, ten for refusing to take the mark
of loyalty, four for mis-cellaneous crimes against the state, and one
for all those charges and many, many more."
The crowd cheered and shouted and whooped and whistled.
"I am happy to say that though Chloe Steele Williams did not in the end
agree to accept the mark of loyalty to our supreme potentate, she did
provide us with enough detailed information on her counterparts
throughout the world to help us virtually eradicate the Judah-ites
outside of Petra and put an end to the black-market co-op."
The crowd went wild again.
"But more on her when she becomes today's thirty-sixth patient of Dr.
Guillotine."
When the crowd finally settled, Jock said, "We begin this morning in
line 7 with a man who murdered his wife and two infant sons."
Chloe caught a glimpse of a monitor where the mutilated bodies of the
boys were shown in ghastly detail. "God, give me strength," she said
silently. "Keep me focused on you."
A woman directly in front of her, pale and sickly and with no mark of
loyalty, turned suddenly. "Are you Williams?" she said.
Chloe nodded.
"I don't want to die, and I don't know what to do!" Thank you, Lord.
"If you know who I am," Chloe said, "you know what I stand for."
"Yes."
"Your only hope is to put your faith in Christ. Admit you're a sinner,
separated from God. You can't save yourself. Jesus died on the cross
for your sins, so if you believe that, tell God and ask him to save you
by the blood of Christ."
"I will still die?"
"You will die, but you will be with God."
The woman fell to her knees and folded her hands, crying out to God. A
guard pointed to a collector and then to the woman, and the man jumped
up and ran toward her. Just as it appeared he was about to bowl her
over, Chloe lowered her shoulder and sprang toward him.
Her elbow caught him flush in the mouth and snapped his head back. He
flopped in the dirt, screaming and spitting teeth and blood. The woman
continued to pray.
Finally she stood. The man made a move toward the woman again, but
Chloe merely pointed at him and he skulked away.
"I prayed," the woman said, "but I am still scared. How do I know it
worked?"
"Let me have a look at you," Chloe said, and she saw the mark of the
believer on her forehead. "What do you see on my forehead, ma'am?"
Chloe said.
"A mark, as if in 3-D." She reached to touch it.
"I see the same on you," Chloe said. "Only the children of God are
sealed with this mark. No matter what happens to you today, you belong
to God."
The crowed roared as collectors dragged the first man to the guillotine
by his hair. He dug in his heels; he kicked and screamed. He let his
legs go limp and had to be carried into position. The man squirmed and
fought so much that extra collectors were called in to hold him down.
When the executioner made sure everyone's extremities were clear, he
pulled the cord and the great blade fell.
The rusty thing, blackened by blood, flipped at an angle just before it
bit into the victim's neck. Chloe recoiled as it sliced only halfway
into the man, causing him to lurch and pull back, flailing at the
collectors who tried to hold him.
He somehow broke free and spun and staggered, fling-ing blood and gore.
The collectors ducked and laughed and made sport of him as the
executioner quickly banged at the blade, straightened it, and raised it
again.
Two collectors grabbed the man and pushed him head-long into position
again, whereupon the cord was pulled yet again and the job done right
this time. The reaction of the crowd showed they thought it was the
perfect way to start the day.
"Next," Jock said, "we begin with the first of ten in a row who refused
to take the mark, minus our guest of honor, of course,
as we save the
best till last."
But before he could say anything else, Caleb appeared in all his
brightness in the middle of the courtyard, between Chloe and Jock. He
appeared fifteen or sixteen feet tall in raiment so white that when
Chloe turned to see the crowd's reaction, it was clear it hurt people's
eyes.
They shrieked and froze. Chloe saw Jock turn to see what scared them
so. He fell, holding the microphone, and stared, seemingly unable to
move.
When Caleb spoke, the ground shook and a wind blew dust about. Chloe
was sure everyone wanted to flee, but they could not.
"I come in the name of the most high God," he began. "Hearken unto my
voice and hear my words. Ignore me at your peril. `Oh, that men would
give thanks to the Lord for His goodness, and for His wonderful works
to the children of men!'
"For He satisfies the longing soul and fills the hungry soul with
goodness. You who sit in darkness and in the shadow of death are bound
in affliction because you rebelled against the words of God and
despised the counsel of the Most High.
"Cry out to the Lord in your trouble, and he will save you out of your
distress. He will bring you out ofdarkness and the shadow of death and
break your chains in pieces.
"Thus says the Son of the most high God: `I am the resurrection and the
life. He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live. And
whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die.'
"But woe to you who do not heed my warning this day. Thus says the
Lord: `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."'
FOURTEEN
CHANG SAT deep in the bowels of the tech center at Petra, finally
understanding the Western expression about having one's eyes glued to
the TV screen. He was prepared to take over the broadcast, to yank it
off the air before anyone anywhere saw Chloe's execution.
Yet the appearance of this messenger of God, warning the undecided
against taking the mark, pleading with them to receive Christ-this was
something the globe needed to see and hear yet again.
For months reports had come from around the world that angels were
showing up at mark application and guillotine sites. Some accounts were
hard to believe, but Tsion Ben-Judah said they fit perfectly with the
loving-kindness he knew of God.
Chang glanced over to where the elders sat before a big screen, and
beyond them, hundreds of computer keyboarders awaited instructions. The
fading late-afternoon sun cast slanted rays through the door a hundred
feet from Chang, and he was moved nearly to tears by the gently falling
manna. Providing food for his chosen, protecting and thrilling Chang,
comforting Chloe, and sending messengers with the everlasting gospel
... God was the ultimate multitasker.
A phone rang and Naomi answered. Chang read her lips as she leaned
close to Tsion. "It's Buck for you."
"Cameron, my friend! How difficult this must be for you.... No, I am
sorry, son. I know of no instance where the bearer of the everlasting
gospel has intervened in the sentencing.... Yes, of course God could
miraculously deliver, but I caution you to be prepared for either
result...."
Rayford second-guessed his decision to be in the air during the
broadcast. He put the jet on autopilot and watched, but he dreaded the
moment that was surely to come and wondered when he would recover
enough to trust himself with the controls. Well, he decided, he had no
choice. Maybe this was the best therapy. Unless he was willing to see
Chloe and Buck and himself die the same day, he had to stay disciplined
regardless.
Poor Buck. On the phone with Tsion and apparently not hearing what he
hoped. Rayford wanted to comfort him, but Buck was not the type who
took soothing until well after a crisis was over. Right now he was
arguing his case. As the messenger of God stared down at the apoplectic
crowd and saw the nine remaining undecideds on their knees, weeping,
Buck pressed Tsion.
"But he has his man right there, Doctor! How hard would it be to
intervene? Why can't he just sweep her out of there and deliver her
back to us? You know he could! He could have arranged for us to get
word of where she was too. What have I done or not done that makes me
so unworthy of a little consideration?"
Chang turned back to the screen to be sure he didn't miss anything, but
he could still hear Tsion earnestly counseling Buck.
"Cameron," Tsion said, "that is your emotion talking. You know as well
as anyone that this whole period, the entire Tribulation, is not about
us individually. God has a master plan. It is the culmination of the
battle between good and evil that has spanned millennia. He is
reconciling his people to himself. We should be grateful we have been
included. He has a bigger picture in mind, but it is also evidence of
his eternal love for us. Trust him, my friend. Trust him no matter
what."
----------
Chloe felt as if she were already in heaven. Caleb's glow had blocked
from her vision the hideous death of the first victim. She watched Jock
struggle to his feet and dust himself off.
"Please, people, no one leave. We have had reports of these apparitions
at other sites, though this is the first visit we have had here. This
is a trick perpetrated by the spiritualists within the camp of the
rebellion. Perhaps we should ask permission of the intruder if we may
proceed with our program." He turned to look at Caleb, pretending to be
even more afraid than he was. Chloe could tell he had not persuaded the
crowd that this was other than real.
"Kind sir," Jock said, his voice dripping with sarcasm, "may we
continue?"
Caleb's voice, louder than ever, resounded off the prison walls. "You
have been tried and found guilty for your crimes against the most high
God. That you bear the mark of the evil one condemns you to death.
Nothing you do can improve your fate. Because you have worshiped the
beast and his image and received his mark, you shall drink of the wine
of the wrath of God. You shall be tormented with fire and brimstone in
the presence of the holy angels and in the presence of the Lamb. And
you shall have no rest day or night.
"That which the Lord God even thinks shall surely happen, and what he
decides shall never change, for as the Scripture says, `The Lord of
hosts has sworn, saying, "Surely, as I have thought, so it shall come
to pass, and as I have purposed, so it shall stand.""'
Jock stared up at Caleb with brows raised, then looked back at the
crowd with a shrug. "Ask a simple question" he said, and they
laughed nervously. "I'll take that as an indication that we may
proceed, because, hey, bottom line, if he's right and God's got us in
his sights, he can pull the trigger anytime he wants. But look who's
dying here today. Huh? Are you with me? Who's dying? Let me hear you!"
No one responded.
"The so-called people of God!" Jock said. "The ones who chose him
instead of the real god and our supreme potentate, Nicolae J.
Carpathia! Come on, people, don't be intimidated by big, shiny,
transparent ghosts. Yeah, he's scary. But all he's done is interrupt a
TV show and-get this-make it better! Is this great theater or what? The
enemy shows up to rattle his saber, but he hasn't changed a thing! You
came to see heads chopped off, and that's what you'll see. These people
can cry and pray and beg all they want, but they're still gonna die!"
Chloe was thrilled to see the formerly undecided nine rise and find
that six of them had the mark of the believer on their foreheads.
Something within them must have confirmed this, because they lifted
their hands and smiled despite their impending fate. The other three
looked miserable, and Chloe assumed they were among the hard-hearted
who may have been desperate to change their minds but had waited too
long.
Jock, for all his bluster, was either more intimidated by Caleb than he
let on or he still had the TV schedule in mind. "Let's shake things up
a little, shall we?" he said. "I want one of the ten without the mark
of Carpathia at each of the guillotines, all at the same time. Now!
Move! Collectors, see to it! We'll do them all at once and get back on
schedule. Any of you who still want the mark, say so now."
The woman ahead of Chloe and the six others she had seen with the mark
of the believer stayed where they were, while the other three scrambled
to the mark applicators.
The collectors grabbed the remaining seven without Carpathia's mark,
including the woman ahead of Chloe. She turned and they embraced. "Be
strong and trust God," Chloe said. They dragged the woman to the middle
machine.
Not one of the seven struggled or fought or had to be forced to kneel
and lay their necks in place. "We'll do it on three!" Jock shouted, and
the crowd, though still clearly wary of the huge, glowing stranger,
began to come alive with anticipation.
Chloe lowered her head and closed her eyes, determined not to be one
who watched the execution of children of God. But even with her eyes
shut, she noticed something and looked up to see that Caleb had filled
the entire courtyard with a light so bright that no one could see
anything. It wreaked havoc on the TV cameras, and cameramen and
technicians began hollering for help, pleading with Jock to wait.
"We will not be delayed by this trick of the enemy!" Jock said and
counted to three. The sickening sound of the heavy blades echoed, and
the people cheered, but because of the blinding light, no one saw the
deaths, there or on television anywhere in the world.
----------
Chang sat back and studied the screen. He signaled to Naomi to come
over. "Did you see that?" he said. "If the angel does that for Chloe as
well, we won't need to switch the feed. He'll accomplish the same thing
for us."
"But he's gone," Naomi said. "Look."
She was right. The prison courtyard looked normal again. The executions
proceeded on schedule for the next half hour, each death preceded by
the typical preliminaries-graphic depictions of the condemned's crimes.
With the absence of Caleb, the crowd had returned
full-throated-hissing, booing, cheering, applauding. The collectors
were filthy with splattered blood and dust, and they seemed drunk with
the thrill of their task.
Chloe had stood in the hot sun for more than an hour, mostly averting
her eyes from the ghastly panorama of horror. Weak from hunger, parched
with thirst, and dizzy from standing, she fought to maintain her
emotions. She prayed and prayed that God would grant her an opportunity
to speak for him, and that she would be able to articulate what was in
her mind.
Chloe missed Caleb. When he was there it seemed she basked in the glow
of glory and felt the presence of God. Now she knew God was with her,
but it took more faith. She tried to anticipate that she was just
moments from the presence of almighty God, and she thrilled to the idea
that she would soon fall at Jesus' feet.
But now she stood in the heat of the day, dust kicking up around her,
and noticed the sympathetic looks of the mark applicators and the other
officials at each desk who had processed the condemned. They had been
through this before, had seen the so-called guest of honor ridiculed
and humiliated, as if beheading weren't enough.
More than thirty minutes after Caleb had interrupted him, Jock was full
of himself. He had warmed to the task and, Chloe assumed, could taste
his promotion, could picture himself in the corridors of power in Al
Hillah with the potentate himself.
Still facing the crowd, Jock switched to a cordless microphone and
began moving toward Chloe. "And now the moment we have all been waiting
for," he announced, and the people began to clap.
As he reached Chloe, he touched her shoulder and turned her to face the
stands. He stood there with his arm around her, and though repulsed,
Chloe was struck by how gentle he was. His fingers were spread, palm
open, as he enveloped her shoulder. In her flesh she wanted to wrench
away and spit at him, but she was aware of the international television
audience and that this was her last opportunity to impact anyone for
Christ.
"It's often customary to give a celebrated case a few last words," Jock
said. "But I have been debating this. What do you think?"
Some screamed, "Get it over with! Kill her! Let's see that pretty
little head in a basket!"
Others clapped and yelled, "Let her speak!"
Jock looked at a stage manager, and Chloe saw the woman signal that he
had time to fill.
"I don't know," he said. "Should I or shouldn't I?" The crowd started
in again. "While we're thinking about that," Jock continued, "let's
watch this tape of the crimes we're avenging today."
The assembled hooted and hollered as monitors showed a lavishly
produced history attributing all sorts of evils to Chloe, the
Judah-ites, the Tribulation Force, and the International Commodity
Co-op. Chloe was surprised to see that many of the plagues and
judgments that had come from heaven the past six years were some-how
charged against her and her compatriots' accounts.
Finally, the phony charges against her father and her husband were
shown, along with the bogus picture of a two-year-old boy she had
supposedly named after Jesus and claimed was God reincarnate.
"Despite all this," Jock said, "this little lady did an almost complete
about-face when confronted with her own mortality. In order to take
some of the heat off her family, particularly her god-in-human-flesh
child, she sang like a canary behind closed doors. She gave us so much
information that we have to concede that Chloe Steele Williams has done
more than we ever could to help wipe out the last vestiges of the most
significant rebellion the New World Order has ever faced."
The people cheered.
"So, maybe she's said enough! Maybe she's said too much already! Maybe
we should just get on with this! What do you say?"
More applause, stomping, shouting.
"Mrs. Williams gave up her friends and relatives and coconspirators,
but in the end she still refused to pledge her loyalty to the real god
of this world, the resurrected Nicolae Carpathia."
Boos filled the courtyard.
"And so, Mrs. Williams," Jock said, turning toward her, "unless you're
ready to change your mind about that, I believe we're ready to proceed
with justice."
Chloe reached for the microphone, but Jock held it tight. "Ah, ah, ah!"
he said. "No speaking privileges for you unless you're ready to take
the mark of loyalty to the throne of the leader of the Global
Community."
But she continued to reach, and now both their hands were on the mike.
"Are we witnessing a historic moment here, folks?" Jock said. "You
understand, Mrs. Williams, that taking this microphone also means
taking the mark of Carpathia?"
She took the microphone, and Jock turned to the crowd with both arms
extended, then led them in a huge ovation.
"Sir, you told me if it were up to you, I would get to say a few words.
Is it up to you?"
Jock reached for the mike. "That is not the arrangement! You may speak
only if you surrender to the mark."
Caleb appeared behind Chloe again and merely raised a finger and
gestured no to Jock. Jock froze in place and toppled backward, his arm
outstretched, still reaching. In spite of themselves, the crowd laughed
while Jock reddened and perspired, rigid.
Chloe turned to the people and spoke softly. "A famous martyr once said
he regretted he had but one life to give. That is how I feel today. On
the cross, dying for the sins of the world, my own Savior, Jesus the
Christ, prayed, `Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they
do.'
"My personal preference? My choice? I wish I could stay with my family,
my loved ones, my friends, until the glorious appearing of Jesus, who
is coming yet again. But if this is my lot, I accept it. I want to
express my undying love to my husband and to my son. And eternal thanks
to my father, who led me to Christ.
"A famous missionary statesman, eventually martyred, once wrote, `He is
no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain what he cannot lose.' He
was talking about his life on earth versus eternal life with God. In my
flesh I do not look forward to a death the likes of which you have
already witnessed thirty-five times here today. But to tell you the
truth, in my spirit, I cannot wait. For to be absent from the body is
to be present with the Lord. And as Jesus himself said to his Father at
his own death, `Into Your hands I commit My spirit.'
"And now, `according to my earnest expectation and hope that in nothing
I shall be ashamed, but with all boldness, as always, so now also
Christ will be magnified in my body, whether by life or by death. For
to me, to live is Christ, and to die is gain.... For I am hard pressed
between the two, having a desire to depart and be with Christ, which is
far better.'
"And to my compatriots in the cause of God around the world, I say,
`Let this mind be in you which was also in Christ Jesus, who, being in
the form of God, did not consider it robbery to be equal with God, but
made Himself of no reputation, taking the form of a bondservant, and
coming in the likeness of men. And being found in appearance as a man,
He humbled Himself and became obedient to the point of death, even the
death of the cross.
"`Therefore God also has highly exalted Him and given Him the name
which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should
bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the
earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord,
to the glory of God the Father.
"`Now to Him who is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we
ask or think, according to the power that works in us ... and to
present us 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.'
"Buck and our precious little one, know that I love you and that I will
be waiting just inside the Eastern Gate."
Chloe bent and laid the microphone on Jock's unmoving chest and without
escort found her way to the base of the middle guillotine. As she knelt
and laid her head under the blade, Caleb's glow blinded the eyes of the
world. Chloe heard only the pull of the cord and the drop of the
sharpened edge of death that led to life eternal.
INTERLUDE
FIFTEEN HOURS later Buck staggered from Rayford's plane, jet-lagged and
bleary-eyed, but more than anything aching to hold his son. Abdullah
had driven to the airstrip just outside Petra, and Ming had ridden
along, holding the boy. Buck gathered him up and held him tight, his
tears streaming down Kenny's back.
As the five rode toward the Siq that led into Petra, Abdullah radioed
ahead their estimated time of arrival. "I hope you don't mind, Buck,"
he said, "but Dr. Ben-Judah would like to hold the memorial as soon as
you and Rayford get there."
Buck was overwhelmed at the turnout. Several hundred had gathered at
the high place, within the sound of rushing water from the stream.
Acquaintances had made way for Buck's and Chloe's closest friends to
gather in the front. Hard as it was with Kenny's arms still wrapped
tightly around his neck, Buck sat on a rock shelf and took in the scene.
Tsion and Chaim stood in the middle, waiting for people to settle. In
an inner half circle, facing Buck and Kenny and Rayford, were George
and Priscilla Sebastian and Beth Ann. Ree Woo and Ming Toy held hands
close by. And fresh in from Illinois were Lionel Whalum and his wife,
Felicia, along with Leah Rose and Hannah Palemoon.
Buck nodded to Zeke, who stood near Abdullah and Mac. Not far away
Chang sat on a rock with his new friend Naomi. They appeared very
comfortable with each other already, which Buck noticed seemed to catch
the eye of Naomi's father, Eleazar Tiberias, standing nearby.
Tsion raised a hand for silence. He began quietly, but Buck got the
impression everyone could hear him over the rushing water. "I brought
with me today my personal Bible. As you can understand, the elders and
particularly Dr. Rosenzweig and I are constantly studying the
Scriptures and commentaries and Bible dictionaries, trying to make
sense of what is happening in these last days.
"These are academic pursuits, and while they bear on everyday life
here, they can also be devotional exercises. Every day on every page we
see the fingerprints of God himself, working his will in our midst and
in this world.
"But today I bring the Word of God that is not just part of my
theological library but rather is the text I have studied since a few
years before the Rapture. As you know, my life changed when I
discovered that Jesus was the Messiah I had so long sought, and I
discovered that not only because of the Rapture, but also because I had
been commissioned to study the prophecies concerning Messiah.
"To do this, I had to purchase a copy of both the Old and New
Testaments, which was to me-at the time of the purchase-more than an
embarrassment. I worried I would be an anathema not just to my
colleagues but to my God as well.
"I was on to the truth before it was proved to me by the Rapture, and
soon after that I made the knowledge of the true Messiah my own faith.
And suddenly this book-" he held it aloft-"became my very life's bread.
It had gone from a necessary piece of textual research, which I bought
apologetic and red-faced, to my most prized possession.
"When my family was massacred, I clung desperately to it for life. It
became a physical symbol, a talisman if you will, of the Word of God
that signified to me Jesus, the Christ, the Messiah, the Son of the
living God, the Lamb who was slain to take away the sins of the world.
I once read of a great theologian whose personal Bible became so
precious to him that at times he found himself reaching out and patting
it, almost caressing it as he would a son or daughter or spouse. That
seemed strange to me, but I grew to understand it, to identify with it.
"I love this book! I love this Word! I love its author, and I love the
Lord it represents. Why do I speak of the Word of God today when we
have come with heavy, heavy hearts to remember two dear comrades and
loved ones?
"Because both Albie and Chloe were people of the Word. Oh, how they
loved God's love letter to them and to us! Albie would be the first to
tell you he was not a scholar, hardly a reader. He was a man of street
smarts, knowledgeable in the ways of the world, quick and shrewd and
sharp. But whenever the occasion arose when he could sit under the
teaching of the Bible, he took notes, he asked questions, he drank it
in. The Word of God was worked out in his life. It changed him. It
helped mold him into the man he was the day he died.
"And Chloe, our dear sister and one of the original members of the tiny
Tribulation Force that has grown so large today. Who could know her and
not love her spirit, her mind, her spunk? What a wife and mother she
was! Young yet brilliant, she grew the International Commodity Co-op
into an enterprise that literally kept alive millions around the globe
who refused the mark of Antichrist and lost their legal right to buy
and sell.
"In various safe-house locations over the past half-dozen years, I
lived in close proximity to Chloe and to her family. It was common to
find her reading her Bible, memorizing verses, trying them out on
people. Often she would hand me her Bible and ask me to check her to
see if she had a verse correct, word for word. And she always wanted to
know exactly what it meant. It was not enough to know the text; she
wanted it to come alive in her heart and mind and life.
"To those who will miss Chloe the most, the deepest, and the most
painfully until we see her again in glory, I give you the only counsel
that kept me sane when my own beloved were so cruelly taken from me.
Hold to God's unchanging hand. Cling to his Word. Fall in love with the
Word of God anew. Grasp his promises like a puppy sinks its teeth into
your pant legs, and never let go.
"Buck, Kenny, Rayford, we do not understand. We cannot. We are finite
beings. The Scripture says knowledge is so fleeting that one day it
will vanish. `For we know in part and we prophesy in part. But when
that which is perfect has come,' and oh, beloved, it is coming, `then
that which is in part will be done away.
"`When I was a child, I spoke as a child, I understood as a child, I
thought as a child; but when I became a man, I put away childish
things. For now we see in a mirror, dimly, but then face to face.'
"Did you hear that promise? `But then . . .' How we can rejoice in the
but thens of God's Word! The then is coming, dear ones! The then is
coming."
Tsion sat and opened his Bible in his lap. "Let me close with this, as
we mourn, not as the heathen, but as we mourn the loss of our beloved
brother and sister in Christ. The psalmist writes: `Precious in the
sight of the Lord is the death of His saints. 0 Lord, truly I am Your
servant; I am Your servant, the son of Your maid-servant; You have
loosed my bonds. I will offer to You the sacrifice of thanksgiving, and
will call upon the name of the Lord.
"`I will pay my vows to the Lord now in the presence of all His people,
in the courts of the Lord's house, in the midst of you, 0 Jerusalem.
Praise the Lord!
"`Praise the Lord ... laud Him, all you peoples!
"`For His merciful kindness is great toward us, and the truth of the
Lord endures forever. Praise the Lord!
"`Oh, give thanks to the Lord, for He is good! For His mercy endures
forever.
"`Let Israel now say, "His mercy endures forever.""'
FIFTEEN
Six
Years, Five and a Half Months, into the Tribulation
A FEW DAYS after the memorial service, Ree and Ming had been married in
a small ceremony officiated by Tsion. Chang
and Naomi's relationship
had blossomed, but they were counseled to delay their engagement until
after the Glorious Appearing.
Over several months, Rayford had reorganized the Tribulation Force.
Mac, Abdullah, and Ree became the principal pilots. Lionel Whalum,
after months of duty in the air, volunteered to take over the direction
of the Co-op with Ming assisting and Leah and Hannah joining the staff.
Chang had come up with a brilliant plan to bug the Baghdad site of the
international confab of GC heads of state. By checking the main
computer in New Babylon daily, he discovered that Leon Fortunato was
having someone remotely transmit records of the daily activity of the
government for duplication and dissemination. The big break came when
Chang learned the government was bidding out the job of wiring the
conference hall for sound for the big event.
He told Naomi of his scheme. "It's brilliant," she said, "and I think
Captain Steele will think so too. You'd better include him in your
thinking soon, don't you think?"
Late one night, Chang invited Rayford to the tech center. "Here's my
plan," he told him. "Ree Woo's identity has never been compromised, and
his name is not known to the GC. I have formulated a dossier on him
that tells his entire background in technological college and his small
sound-engineering firm in South Korea, Woo and Associates."
"Which I assume does not exist."
"Of course. As you can see, I have him registered as a loyalist in good
standing from Region 30, with a list of satisfied customers. If you
cross-check those customers, their endorsements are all in order. I
already know what all the other bids are on the sound job, so I can
easily underbid them and get Woo the job."
"Then what?"
"I put in a bunch of caveats about how he prefers to use a small crew
and work quickly at night when no other sounds would interfere with his
adjustments. Setting up the main room and working with GCNN will be
easy. I can teach Ree and you how to do that in a day or two. We tell
the GC the job will take about twice as long as it really will, giving
you access to the main con-ference room off the big hall, where we know
Carpathia and his cabinet plan to meet with the regional potentates.
Bugging that room is trickier, but I can also teach you that.
"I'd love to come and do it myself, but it would take too much for Zeke
to make me unrecognizable to people I worked with for so long. So I
propose teaching Buck and George how to do the bugging work, and while
you and Ree are doing the basic sound stuff in the big hall, they can
slip into the conference room and get that done."
"Ree's the only one who's going to look Korean, Chang. The rest of us
are too big."
"That's easy. The whole crew has to be approved in advance anyway, so
whatever looks and nationalities Zeke can come up with, I can plug them
in and have them cleared. I'll have Mr. Woo explain that he's using his
all-star international crew to do the best job possible."
"I like it, Chang. Let me make sure everybody's on board, especially
Zeke. He's going to have to make company uniforms and get everyone's
disguises and documents in order."
It went off without a hitch. Zeke was masterful in turning both George
and Rayford into much older men. Buck he made a ruddy-faced Aussie. All
were quick studies in electronics. Chang found Buck the easiest to
teach because, he believed, Buck so badly needed to immerse himself in
a new project.
It seemed a small break at the time, but in retrospect, Rayford
believed it was major. The only representative of the GC cabinet
responsible for letting Woo and Associates into the conference hall was
a woman who had not been in place when Rayford and Buck had worked for
Carpathia.
She was not suspicious anyway, but interacting with a stranger put them
both at ease. The rest of the government was still ensconced at Al
Hillah, but the woman let on that as soon as the hall was ready for the
big meetings in a few weeks, the government would move there and
prepare.
Rayford was impressed by Ree's ability to bluff about electronics. He
had learned enough from Chang to know the lingo, and he made sure to
keep it over the head of the woman with the keys. She rarely stayed
long, and since the Woo crew all had ID tags and company caps riding
low on their foreheads, they were never carefully checked, and the job
went smoothly.
Chang had worked closely with Lionel in bartering for parts, and the
men lugged in with them everything they needed to transmit from every
station around the big conference table, as well as put video
transmitters in half the light fixtures.
Ree Woo and his associates finished the job ahead of schedule, and to
their credit, the GC electronically deposited full payment via the
Internet. "We are now on Carpathia's payroll," Chang told Rayford.
----------
Nicolae's cabinet moved from Al Hillah to palatial quarters near the
conference hall in Baghdad, and in a matter of days, the heads of the
ten regions would join them. Rayford told Buck one night, "It's been
months since the world has heard directly from Carpathia. Now at least
we'll know what's in that mind of his."
Carpathia had lain low since the darkening of New Babylon. The
government was in chaos and many employees had died. The potentate
seemed to have done little but instigate the massive troop buildup in
Israel. Rayford speculated that Nicolae was actually embarrassed and
humiliated by his inability to counteract the latest plague.
"That's when he's most dangerous though, right?" Buck said. "When given
time to think and plot. You can bet he's cooking up something
spectacular."
Carpathia hinted at that "something" the first time Chang tapped into
the conference room when it was just Nicolae and his inner circle.
Chang recorded it for Rayford. "I have news," the potentate said. "And
it is so dynamic and delicious, I can hardly wait to share it. But I
must. I will make you wait until our colleagues from around the globe
are here. I have a trio I want to introduce to everyone, three who will
help us accomplish our goals."
"Where are they from, Excellency?" came the clear voice of Viv Ivins.
"That is also a secret for now."
"Oh, Lordship, why must you toy with us?" Leon said.
"Be glad I only toy with you, confrere. The rebel forces will rue the
day they ever dreamed of opposing me."
----------
Rayford was about to retire late one evening when he received word that
Tsion wanted to see him. "He's willing to come to your quarters,"
Rayford was told.
"Oh no, I'm happy to go to his."
When Rayford arrived, Tsion began, "Before I get to my request, I want
you to know that I am at your disposal. The elders and I are fully
aware that when you are in Petra, you are the head of the Tribulation
Force, and I am merely, how shall we say it, the chaplain of that."
"I'm glad you raised this, Tsion, because I had been meaning to talk to
you about your deference to me. It makes me uncomfortable. I do not see
Petra as the headquarters for the Tribulation Force. Yes, I feel God
has put the mantle of leadership on me in regard to them, but clearly
he has chosen you to lead the Remnant of his people, now a million
strong. You must not feel you answer to me. You have your elders and
your colleague Chaim, and however the Lord leads you through them is
fine with me. In fact I prefer it."
Tsion reached and squeezed Rayford's shoulder. "I very much appreciate
your confidence, Captain Steele. But you must not denigrate your own
leadership responsibilities. I was about to ask you about my next
internationally televised message."
Rayford was puzzled. "Your messages have been going out daily via the
Internet, haven't they?"
"Of course. But occasionally God lays on my heart a message that I
believe he wants addressed to believers and unbelievers alike. And
while I know the Web site is available to all and that many unbelievers
stumble across it, if we were again able to pirate the international
airwaves, I would be grateful for the opportunity. I believe God has
given me a message he wants even the god of this world and his minions
to hear. When people hear the truth of God preached on the
Carpathia-owned networks, well, it is like taking the gospel into the
very pit of hell."
"`And the gates of hell shall not prevail against it,"' Rayford quoted.
"Excellent. So, what do you think? Can we do this, and when?"
"First, Tsion, you don't need my permission."
"Consider it informing you then."
"Fair enough. Just know that we have the best techies in the world
here, and that means more than just Chang. He's tops, but Naomi is
right there, and they've developed a team that can do anything. They
work as much for you as they do for me, so anytime you want them to do
anything, just say so."
"You have such wonderful rapport with them, Rayford. And with me. I
would prefer to go through you."
"As you wish. All I'm saying, Tsion, is that no matter when we do this,
it is pirating. It is illegal."
"You have a problem with that?"
"None whatsoever. Not even a second thought. We are at war, and I am
prepared to use any means necessary to gain an advantage. All I'm
saying is that this does not have to be planned. Chang has built his
system in such a way that it's simply a matter of throwing a switch.
Then they're off and we're on. Say when and say the word."
"Well, I should think we would want to do this at a most opportune
time, when the most people are watching. Maybe during some official
pronouncement from Carpathia, or one of the most popular programs."
"You know what those are."
"Don't remind me. I suppose one time is as good as another. How about
tomorrow at noon, our time?" "Consider it done."
"I shall call a meeting of everyone, as I am energized by a live
audience."
"A million strong? I can't imagine why. We'll have the cameras set up
and Chang in position."
The next day Tsion found himself uncharacteristically nervous. Petra
had many newcomers, and he never knew what to expect from the crowd.
The elders had prayed for him and encouraged him, and Chaim had
introduced him. And sure enough, when he emerged to speak and Master
Chang gave the cue that he was on live international television, Petra
erupted into an ovation.
It was just what Tsion had feared, and though he called for quiet and
tried to transfer this outpouring of emotion to the Lord by pointing
up, the people would not be deterred until they got it out of their
system. Rayford must have noticed how uncomfortable and displeased
Tsion was, for he rushed to the rabbi and whispered, "They are just
loving you and thanking you, Tsion! They are so grateful for what you
have meant to them. Just acknowledge it and it will subside."
"But Captain Steele! In Isaiah 42:8 God is clear! He says, `I am the
Lord, that is My name; and My glory I will not give to another."'
"And I'm telling you these people are not trying to glorify you. They
are merely thanking you for pointing them to him."
But Tsion could not acknowledge the people, as much as he wanted to
believe Rayford was right. He'd rather the earth had swallowed him
right then. He merely hung his head and stared at the ground for
several minutes until the people apparently grew tired of cheering.
Chang had ducked back into the tech center once the transfer was made,
and he enjoyed listening in on the chaos in Baghdad. "What is going
on?" someone shouted. "How did this happen? It's impossible!"
Someone else ordered the control team to shut off all the affiliates.
"We can't," came the reply. "All our systems have been overridden."
And so it wasn't just the million strong at Petra who heard the message
of God through Tsion that day. It was billions around the world.
"God has laid on my heart a message that I believe he would have me
share with you," Tsion began. "I shall not whitewash or sugarcoat it,
as we are at the most perilous time in the history of mankind. We are
nearly into the last six months of life as we know it. The battle of
the ages that has raged since the beginning of time is about to reach
its climax.
"The evil ruler of this world, the Antichrist, is spewing his anger and
vengeance primarily on God's chosen people. All over the world innocent
men and women are being tortured, even as we speak. Their crime? They
are Jewish. Some are believers in Jesus as Messiah, and many are not.
Regardless, they refuse the mark of loyalty to Nicolae Carpathia, and
he makes them pay every day.
"You have seen the footage, and you know the glee with which the evil
one watches his plan carried out.
"Many years ago I began proving the truth of God's Word by telling you
in advance of the judgments and plagues to come, things clearly
prophesied hundreds, yea thousands of years ago. We saw the fruition of
the prophecy of a rider on a white horse, promising peace but bringing
a sword. The red horse, World War III, followed that. That brought the
black horse of famine, then the ashen horse of death. Next came the
martyrdom of many saints before the Wrath of the Lamb earthquake.
"Those six judgments had been foretold in Scripture, and the seventh
ushered in the next seven. Hail and fire rained on the earth. Then the
burning mountain fell into the sea. Wormwood poisoned the waters, and
then the sun, moon, and stars were dimmed by one-third. Demonic locusts
attacked those who were not sealed by God, and then we were plagued by
an army, two hundred million strong, of demonic horsemen who slew much
of the population. The fourteenth judgment ushered in the last seven,
five of which have already befallen us.
"Millions suffered from boils, and then the sea turned to blood, then
the rivers. The sun scorched people to death and burned a third of the
earth's greenery. The darkness that has fallen on New Babylon has been
defended, rationalized, and explained away. But no one can account for
the fact that it is so pervasive that it causes those caught in it to
gnaw their tongues from the pain.
"Many have speculated how long this will last. I tell you nothing in
Scripture indicates it will abate before the end. That is why the ruler
of this world has moved out of his own kingdom. He may think the day
will come when he and his people can move back in, but I proclaim he
never will. Two more judgments await before the glorious appearing of
our Lord and Savior, Jesus the Christ.
"Hear me! The Euphrates River will become as dry land! Scoff today but
be amazed when it happens, and remember it was foretold. The last
judgment will be an earthquake that levels the entire globe. This
judgment will bring hail so huge it will kill millions.
"I am asked every day, how can people see all these things and still
choose Antichrist over Christ? It is the puzzle of the ages. For many
of you, it is already too late to change your mind. You may now see
that you have chosen the wrong side in this war. But if you pledged
your allegiance to the enemy of God by taking his mark of loyalty, it
is too late for you.
"If you have not taken the mark yet, it may still be too late, because
you waited so long. You pushed the patience of God past the breaking
point.
"But there may be a chance for you. You will know only if you pray to
receive Christ, tell God you recognize that you are a sinner and
separated from him, and that you acknowledge that your only hope is in
the blood of Christ, shed on the cross for you.
"Remember this: If you do not turn to Christ and are not saved from the
coming judgment, this awful earth you endure right now is as good as
your life will ever get. If you do turn to Christ and your heart has
not already been hardened, this world is the worst you'll see for the
rest of eternity.
"For those of you who are already my brothers and sisters in Christ
around the world, I urge you to be faithful unto death, for Jesus
himself said, `Do not fear any of those things which you are about to
suffer. Indeed, the devil is about to throw some of you into prison,
that you may be tested.... Be faithful until death, and I will give you
the crown of life.'
"What a promise! Christ himself will give you the crown of life. It
shall be a thrill to see Jesus come yet again, but oh, what a privilege
to die for his sake.
"The good news is that I believe that the enemy, whether he admits it
or not, knows his time is limited. That too has been prophesied.
Revelation 12:12 says, `Therefore rejoice, 0 heavens, and you who dwell
in them! Woe to the inhabitants of the earth and the sea! For the devil
has come down to you, having great wrath, because he knows that he has
a short time.' Lest you doubt me, remember that everything this man has
done was foretold. Revelation 13:5-8 says, `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.'
"You can have your name written in the Book of Life! That is the good
news.
"Now I must tell you there is also bad news. The wrath of the evil one
will reach a fever pitch from now until the end. There will be
increasing demands for all people to worship him and take his mark. To
you who share my faith and are willing to be faithful unto death,
remember the promise in James 5:8 that `the coming of the Lord is at
hand.'
"Oh, believer, share your faith and live your life boldly in such a way
that others can receive Christ by faith and be saved. Think of it,
friend. You could pray to be led to those who have not yet heard the
truth. You may be the one who leads the very last soul to Christ.
"Second Peter 3:10-14 says that `the day of the Lord will come as a
thief in the night, in which the heavens will pass away with a great
noise, and the elements will melt with fervent heat; both the earth and
the works that are in it will be burned up.
"`Therefore, since all these things will be dissolved, what manner of
persons ought you to be in holy conduct and godliness, looking for and
hastening the com-ing of the day of God, because of which the heavens
will be dissolved, being on fire, and the elements will melt with
fervent heat? Nevertheless we, according to His promise, look for new
heavens and a new earth in which righteousness dwells.
"`Therefore, beloved, looking forward to these things, be diligent to
be found by Him in peace, without spot and blameless.'
"I urge you to imitate our Lord and Savior and say with him, `I must be
about My Father's business.'
"Some have legitimately questioned how a loving and merciful God could
shower the earth with such horrible plagues and judgments. Yet I ask
you, what else could he have done after so many millennia to shake men
and women from their false sense of security and get them to look to
him for mercy and forgiveness?
"Think of how merciful he has been. He removed his church before the
Tribulation began. He sent two supernatural witnessing preachers to
Jerusalem to communicate his love. He poured out his Holy Spirit in
power, as he promised through the prophet Joel, to convince mankind of
its need to receive Christ rather than serve Satan and his demons.
"He sealed 144,000 Jewish evangelists to fan out across the globe and
reach what the Bible calls `a great multitude which no one could
number' with the saving knowledge of the Son of God. He sent three
angels of mercy to help people make their decision for Christ. And he
has promised to supernaturally warn mankind before he destroys Babylon.
"Most of all, in his mercy, God still allows people to decide their own
eternal destiny, whether to choose Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior or
to believe Satan.
"The most wonderful news I can share with you today is that God has
prompted us to use the brilliant minds and technology we have been
blessed with here. Anyone who communicates with us via the Internet
will get a personal response with everything you need to know about how
to receive Christ.
"Yes, I know the ruler of this world has outlawed even visiting our
site, but we can assure you that it is secure and that your visit
cannot be traced. We have thousands of Internet counselors who can
answer any question and lead you to Christ.
"We also have teams of rescuers who can transport you here if you are
being persecuted for the sake of Christ. This is a dangerous time, and
many will be killed. Many of our own loved ones have lost their lives
in the pursuit of righteousness. But we will do what we can until the
end to keep fighting for what is right. For in the end, we win, and we
will be with Jesus."
Near the end of Tsion's message, Rayford picked his way through the
throng and made his way to the tech center. He stood behind Chang,
watching as the young man chuckled and kept track of the frustration in
Baghdad and at the affiliate stations around the world.
When he noticed Rayford, Chang said, "Here, listen to this." He clicked
on a session he had recorded in the conference room where Nicolae was
demanding to know whom to fire or kill because of the TV disaster.
----------
"Where is Figueroa?"
"He has not been seen since we left New Babylon, Excellency."
"What about his people? The Asian kid. The Scandinavian young man."
"The Asian is unaccounted for. The Scandinavian died from the heat,
remember?"
"I cannot keep track of everyone who dies from one of these plagues.
Who is running television now?"
"It has been farmed out to the affiliates. Things are impossible in New
Babylon."
"I know that, Leon! I want someone assigned who can put an end to this.
What will people think?"
Fortunato cleared his throat. "Begging your pardon, Highness, but they
will wonder what some on the cabinet are wondering. They are asking,
`What about the fact that so many of these things we have suffered
through were foretold? Is there some truth to all this? Who is
Carpathia anyway?"'
"They want to know who Carpathia is?" Nicolae said, his voice rising.
"My own cabinet?"
"Yes, sir."
"And what about you, Leon? Who do you say that I am?"
"I know who you are, sir, and I worship you."
"Are you implying there are those in my inner circle who do not?"
"I am telling you only what I hear, Majesty."
"Maybe it is time we tell them, Leon. Maybe it is time they know who I
am, if they truly do not know."
----------
Chang knew he would be unable to sleep. He and Naomi walked toward her
quarters, their pace slowing more and more the closer they got. "What
an incredible time to be alive," he said.
"Really?" she said. "If I could choose, I'd rather have known Jesus
earlier and gone to be with him at the Rapture."
"Well, sure, if we had that choice."
"We had it."
"Yeah."
"Actually, Chang, in my mind the greatest time to be alive will be
after the Glorious Appearing. Besides getting to be with Jesus in a
time of peace on earth, I'll get to live with you for a thousand years."
Chang was staggered by the thought. He stopped and took both her hands
in his. "I wonder what I'll look like when I'm a thousand and twenty
years old," he said. "A wrinkled-up little old Chinese man, I guess."
"You'll still be cute to me. I'll be an old Jewish lady with lots of
kids between the ages of five hundred and nine hundred-and-something
years old."
He cupped her face in the moonlight. "I am so grateful to have found
you."
----------
Buck lay on his cot, across the room from Kenny's, his arms aching from
holding his Bible up to read it. He was studying everything he could
find on the coming battle. Rayford had promised he would be assigned to
Jerusalem, and at first he was disappointed, thinking all the action
would be outside Petra or in the Jezreel Valley. But from what he could
tell, those were just staging areas for the armies of the world. Much
of the conflict would be in Jerusalem.
And there was no place he would rather be.
SIXTEEN
RAYFORD WAS astounded that things could get worse. Just when he thought
there was nothing Carpathia could do to top his evil exploits, reports
flooded into the computer center that made it clear Carpathia had
turned up the heat all over the world. More persecution, more torture,
more beheadings.
Tsion's appeal to people to contact the Internet counselors at Petra
had generated an overwhelming response. This necessitated that the
elders train more counselors and Naomi and Chang train more teachers to
get more people up to speed on the computers.
Tsion had been preaching for ages that the world was speeding headlong
toward Armageddon, but Rayford had never felt it so personally. He
began really looking forward to seeing his Savior face-to-face and to
reuniting with his loved ones and friends.
But there was much to do yet. Mac, Abdullah, and Ree recruited pilots
and planes from all over the world to continue the massive airlift to
Petra. There were days when Rayford wondered if they could even begin
to catch up to the demand. The only prerequisite for a free ride to
safety was the mark of the believer. It was assumed a person without
the mark of Carpathia would be persecuted or executed.
Most amazing to Rayford, as he studied the Scriptures every day, was
that the end of the strange prediction in Revelation 16:10-11 regarding
the plague in New Babylon proved true of Carpathia's followers all over
the world: "His kingdom became full of darkness; and they gnawed their
tongues because of the pain. They blasphemed the God of heaven because
of their pains and their sores, and did not repent of their deeds."
How could it be, Rayford wondered, that all these plagues and judgments
could fall and yet the vast majority of people would not change their
ways?
Chang had, of course, mercifully ceded control of international
television back to the Global Community. And it was clear from
Carpathia's public pronouncements that he was taking the credit for
"finally having this thing under control."
"The next time he says that," Chang told Rayford, "I'm going to
immediately switch to this commercial we devised last week."
The tape showed a particularly strong clip from Tsion's last broadcast
speech and closed with a voice-over: "Proclamations from your potentate
are allowed only by the goodwill of Tsion Ben-Judah and your friends at
Petra."
Chang had for several days been testing the bugging job Buck and George
had done in the private conference room in Baghdad. He got to where he
could coordinate the video with the audio, switch to whoever was
talking, and even follow Carpathia as he moved at the head of the
table. Two of the hidden video devices had the ability to follow a
person around the room.
The arrival of the ten regional potentates from around the world was
broadcast by GCNN, and Buck couldn't remember such pomp and
circumstance since Carpathia had mocked the Stations of the Cross in
Jerusalem. Parades, marching bands, light shows, dancing girls,
announcements, and pronouncements. Stands full of cheering supplicants
lined the routes, as representatives from each of the regions preceded
their potentate.
Finally the dignitaries and a few thousand sycophants lucky enough to
get tickets were ushered into the great room of the new conference
hall, where Carpathia was to hold forth on an exciting new chapter in
world history.
The Most High Reverend Father of Carpathianism, Leon Fortunato, was
tapped to make the royal introduction, of course. He was in full
regalia, which started at the top with a brimless fez of cardinal-red
felt with a flat top adorned by a tassel of alternating gold and silver
strings with mirrored bits that reflected the stage lights all over the
auditorium. He wore a new robe of purple and iridescent yellow with six
bars of brocade on each sleeve.
Fortunato was so obsequious and fawning in his introduction that anyone
but Antichrist himself would have been ill with embarrassment.
Carpathia stood in mock humility, clearly fighting a smile, and bathed
in the worship from his toadies.
"Thank you, thank you, thank you, one and all," Carpathia said, arms
outstretched. "You are too kind to this humble servant from modest
beginnings who has found himself thrust into a responsibility far
beyond what he ever dreamed, only to discover by a spark of the divine
that he was truly god-even to the point that he resurrected himself
from the dead.
"And yet you-yes, each and every one of you-have made my task easier,
in spite of crushing opposition and obstacles on every side. Every
region has been well served by dynamic sub-potentates who have pulled
together in times of crisis and helped make our fractious world a truly
global community."
Carpathia was interrupted countless times by tumultuous applause, and
each time he seemed to bask in the glow of it. "This," he said, "may be
the most momentous and historic occasion in the history of our world.
Despite the decimation of our citizenry-and our government-by
relentless plagues and what our enemies glibly refer to as `judgments
from heaven,' I have called the top leaders together from every corner
of the earth. Tomorrow, in a highly secure, private meeting, I will
outline my marvelous, truly inspired plan to once and for all lead us
to our goal of true global harmony.
"Our detractors have been given ample opportunity to see the error of
their ways and to join our international family. I truly believed for
too long that they were merely misunderstanding our aim and were
ignorant of the benefits of standing shoulder to shoulder with us.
Imagine what we could accomplish with everyone on board!
"Well, that day will soon come, my friends. We shall work together to
enlist our enemies as fellow laborers, or we will eradicate them from
our midst and be left with only loyalists ... loyalists who share a
common goal and purpose: true utopia, paradise on earth.
"No doubt all-even the opposition-have to agree that we have been fair.
We have been patient. We have tried. But the time for tolerance has
come to an end. Do you detect an end of patience? I freely admit it. It
is time to get on board or be eliminated. Within half a year, I pledge
to every loyal citizen of our Global Community, the opposition to peace
will be destroyed. You will be living in the peaceful wonderland of
your dreams."
Representatives of the sub-potentates from the ten regions, when
interviewed by TV reporters, all played a variation of the same tune:
"This is the privilege of a life-time. What I wouldn't give to be in
the private confer-ence that follows this."
When the ceremonies were over, so was the broadcast. But the best part
would come early the next morning at the meeting of potentates-which
everybody in the Global Community assumed, because it was a closed-door
session, was also private.
But it was as if selected members of the Trib Force were in the room.
Gathered around a big-screen TV deep in the caverns of Petra, Rayford's
hand-selected lineup of colleagues watched every moment through the
miracle of technology and Chang's expert manevering.
Chang sat in the back, manning the controls. Rayford sat with Buck on
one side and George on the other. Tsion and Chaim were also there. All
would fill in the other key members, who were busy with Co-op and
air-lift duties.
As the room in Baghdad was filling, Rayford asked Chang to pan the
room. "Let's get a look at who's there."
The big conference table had room for three at each end and six on each
side. Each spot had a microphone, and all but the three at the far end
also had a name card. Only two places were set at the head of the
table, one for Carpathia-who was not there yet-on the left and the
other for Fortunato-who was nervously tapping his gigantic ruby ring on
the first of two luxurious leather notebooks to his right.
To the left of Carpathia's spot and proceeding to the other end were
the potentates from the United African States, the United European
States, the United Great Britain States, the United South American
States, the United North American States, and Viv Ivins.
Each wore the epitome of a themed outfit from his or her respective
region, from the colorful dashiki of the African potentate to the wide
sombrero and gauchos of the South American and the ten-gallon hat and
embroidered cowboy suit of the North American.
Viv Ivins wore her customary powder-blue suit, which nearly matched her
hair color, but for the first time her outfit was completed by a
gigantic diamond brooch and a blouse so white it played havoc with the
video feed.
To Fortunato's right and extending to the other end of the table were
the potentates from the United Carpathian States, the United Russian
States, the United Indian States, the United Asian States, the United
Pacific States, and Suhail Akbar.
Again, these potentates were dressed in their finest regional garb, the
most dramatic of which was a jet-black-and-silver kimono worn by the
Asian leader. Suhail wore his most formal dress uniform of the Global
Community military Peacekeeping forces, topped by a navy cap with
gleaming gold braid.
The three chairs at the end of the table opposite Carpathia and
Fortunato were filled with three males who looked to Rayford like
triplet manikins. All wore plain black suits, buttoned up, with black
ties. No jewelry, no headwear, nothing else. They sat with their hands
clasped before them on the table, not moving and looking neither right
nor left.
"I don't recognize those three, Tsion," Rayford said. "You?"
The rabbi shook his head. "Oddly, they seem to be not even blinking.
Everyone else certainly seems to be stealing glances at them
frequently. Do you think they are real? Could they be cardboard
cutouts?"
"Chang," Rayford said, "focus on just them, could you?"
He did, and also reported, "They are real. I taped them sitting down.
You want to see it?"
"As long as we don't miss Carpathia's entrance."
"You won't."
Chang ran back the tape, showing the three taking their seats. They
seemed to be one, moving in unison. "Which door did they come in?"
Rayford said.
"I missed that part. They seemed to simply appear." "Okay, back to
live."
A short buzz made Fortunato jump and reach inside his robe, as if to
turn off a pager. He stood quickly and straightened his robe, removing
his fez. "Ladies and gentlemen," he said, "please rise for your supreme
potentate, His Highness, His Majesty, His Excellency, our lord and
risen king, Nicolae Carpathia, the first and last, world without end,
amen."
Except for the three mystery men, who still didn't budge, all stood,
removing headwear. A military man in dress blues opened the door and
Carpathia entered, whereupon Fortunato fell, rather loudly, to his
knees. Nicolae was dressed in a black, pin-striped suit with a white
shirt and a bright turquoise tie.
While Leon knelt, face buried in his hands on the floor and rear end
aloft, displaying more expanse of his robe than anyone might have
wished to see, Nicolae stopped a couple of feet behind his own chair
and allowed the assembled to approach him one by one.
Individually they bowed and shook his hand with both of their own. Many
kissed his hand or his ring, and more than one briefly knelt like Leon,
whispering expressions of devotion and deference. They returned to
stand behind their chairs.
When all had finished there was an awkward silence, as apparently Leon
was next on the docket and unaware of his cue. Finally Carpathia
cleared his throat, Leon looked up suddenly and clambered to his feet,
catching the hem of his robe under the toe of his shoe. A distinct rip
could be heard as he straightened up, stumbling and catching himself on
Carpathia's chair, which was on rollers and nearly pitched him into his
lord and risen king, first and last, world without end, amen.
Fortunato grabbed Nicolae's hand and pulled it toward his lips, almost
making Carpathia leave his feet. At the last instant, Leon realized he
had grabbed the wrong hand, dropped it, grabbed the other, and loudly
kissed the potentate's ring.
"Your Excellency, sir," he said, pulling Carpathia's chair out with one
hand and grandly gesturing toward it with the other.
"Thank you most kindly, Reverend," Carpathia said, sitting. "And,
ladies and gentlemen, you may be seated."
Leon had left him a foot from the table, so Carpathia grabbed the edge
and pulled himself forward. Fortunato, realizing his gaffe, quickly
reached behind to push, and now Carpathia's chest pressed against the
table. While Leon busily opened one of the leather notebooks and slid
it in front of His Highness, Carpathia backed away to a more
comfortable distance.
Nicolae thanked them all for coming, as if they had a choice, and said,
"Down to business. Let me begin by reminding you that this is not a
democracy. We are not here to vote, and neither are you here to give me
input. If there is something you believe I need to know, feel free to
say so. If you have a problem with my leadership or have any questions
about why I have done anything or about the plans I will reveal today,
I remind you of the disposition of three former potentates to the south
who have been replaced due to their untimely deaths.
"Questions? I thought not. Let us proceed.
"Ladies and gentlemen, the time has come for me to take you into my
confidence. We must all be on the same page in order to win the
ultimate battle. Look into my eyes and listen, because what you hear
today is truth and you will have no trouble believing every word of it.
I am eternal. I am from everlasting to everlasting. I was there at the
beginning, and I will remain through eternity future."
Nicolae stood and began to slowly circle the table as he spoke. No one
present followed him with their eyes. They just sat as if catatonic.
"Here is the problem," he said. "The one who calls himself God is not
God. I will concede that he preceded me. When I evolved out of the
primordial ooze and water, he was already there. But plainly, he had
come about in the same manner I did. Simply because he preceded me, he
wanted me to think he created me and all the other beings like him in
the vast heavens. I knew better. Many of us did.
"He tried to tell us we were created as ministering servants. We had a
job to do. He said he had created humans in his own image and that we
were to serve them. Had I been there first, I could have told him that
I had created him and that it was he who would serve me by ministering
to my other creations.
"But he did not create anything! We, all of us-you, me, the other
heavenly hosts, men and women-all came from that same primordial soup.
But no! Not according to him! He was there with another evolved being
like myself, and he claimed that one as his favored son. He was the
special one, the chosen one, the only begotten one.
"I knew from the beginning it was a lie and that I-all of us-was being
used. I was a bright and shining angel. I had ambition. I had ideas.
But that was threatening to the older one. He called himself the
creator God, the originator of life. He took the favored position. He
demanded that the whole earth worship and obey him. I had the audacity
to ask why. Why not me?
"Did I incite insurrection? You bet I did. And why not? What does
seniority have to do with anything when we all evolved from the same
source? There is plenty for everyone, but if preeminence is to be
gained, I shall have it! About a third of the other evolved beings
agreed with me and took my side, promised to remain loyal. The other
two-thirds were weaklings, easily swayed. They took the side of the
so-called father and his so-called son.
"Am I Antichrist? Well, if he is Christ, then yes! Yes! I am against
the Christ who was falsely crowned by the pretend creator. I will
ascend into heaven; I will exalt my throne above the stars of God. I
will ascend above the heights of the clouds; I will be like the Most
High.
"But because he got there first and I was the one with the audacity to
challenge him, I got cast out! Where is the justice in that? We have
been mortal enemies ever since, that father and that son and I. He even
persuaded the evolved humans that he created them! But that could not
be true, because if he had, they would not have free will. And if he
created me, I would not have been able to rebel. It only makes sense.
"Once I figured that out, I began enjoying my role as the outcast. I
found humans, the ones he liked to call his own, the easiest to sway.
The woman with the fruit! She did not want to obey. It took nothing,
mere suggestion, to get her to do what she really wanted. That happened
not far from right here, by the way.
"And the first human siblings-they were easy! The younger was devoted
to the one who called himself the only true God, but the other ... ah,
the other wanted only what I wanted. A little something for himself.
Before you know it, I am proving beyond doubt that these creatures are
not really products of the older angel's creativity. Within a few
generations I have them so confused, so selfish, so full of themselves
that the old man no longer wants to claim they were made in his image.
"They get drunk; they fight; they blaspheme. They are stubborn; they
are unfaithful. They kill each other. The only ones I cannot get
through to are Noah and his kin. Of course, the great creator decides
the rest of history depends on them and wipes out everyone else with a
flood. I eventually got to Noah, but he had already started
repopulating the earth.
"Yes, I will admit it. The father and the son have been my formidable
foes over the generations. They have their favorites-the Jews, of all
people. The Jews are the apples of the elder's eye, but therein lies
his weakness. He has such a soft spot for them that they will be his
undoing.
"My forces and I almost had them eradicated not so many generations
ago, but father and son intervened, gave them back their own land, and
foiled us again. Fate has toyed with us many times, my friends, but in
the end we shall prevail.
"Father and son thought they were doing the world a favor by putting
their intentions in writing. The whole plan is there, from sending the
son to die and resurrect-which I proved I could do as well-to
foretelling this entire period. Yes, many millions bought into this
great lie. Up to now I would have to acknowledge that the other side
has had the advantage.
"But two great truths will be their undoing. First, I know the truth.
They are not greater or better than I or anyone else. They came from
the same place we all did. And second, they must not have realized that
I can read. I read their book! I know what they are up to! I know what
happens next, and I even know where!
"Let them turn the lights off in the great city that I loved so much!
Ah, how beautiful it was when it was the center for commerce and
government, and the great ships and planes brought in goods from all
over the globe. So it is dark now. And so what if it is eventually
destroyed? I will build it back up, because I am more powerful than
father and son combined.
"Let them shake the earth until it is level and drop hundred-pound
chunks of ice from the skies. I will win in the end because I have read
their battle plan. The old man plans to send the son to set up the
kingdom he predicted more than three hundred times in his book, and he
even tells where the son will land! Ladies and gentlemen, we will have
a surprise waiting for him.
"The son and I have been battling for the souls of men and women from
the beginning. If you rulers and I join forces from all over the world
and act in unison from a single staging area, we can once and for all
rid ourselves of those forces that have hindered our total victory up
to now.
"The so-called Messiah loves the city of Jerusalem above all cities in
the world. He even calls it the Eternal City. Well, we shall see about
that. That is where he supposedly died and came back to life.
"This strange affection for the Jews resulted in what he tells them is
an eternal covenant of blessing. If we, the rulers of the earth,
combine all our resources and attack the Jews, the son has to come to
their defense. That is when we turn our sights on him and eliminate
him. That will give us total control of the earth, and we will be ready
to take on the father for mastery of the universe."
Nicolae had made two rounds of the table and returned to his chair,
looking spent. "It is in their Bible," he said. "And they claim never
to lie. We know right where he will be. Are you with me?"
"We are with you, Excellency," the South American said, "but where will
that be?"
"We rally everyone-all of our tanks and planes and weapons and
armies-in the Plain of Megiddo. This area in northern Israel, also
known as the Plain of Esdraelon or the Plain of Jezreel, is about
thirty kilometers southeast of Haifa and one hundred kilometers north
of Jerusalem. At the appointed time we will dispatch one-third of our
forces to overrun the stronghold at Petra, and I shall do it this time
without so much as one nuclear device. We shall overcome them with
sheer numbers, perhaps even on horseback.
"The rest of our forces will march on the so-called Eternal City and
blast through those infernal walls, destroying all the Jews. And that
is where we shall be, joined by our victorious forces from Petra, in
full force to surprise the son when he arrives."
Fortunato sat shaking his head as if overcome with the brilliance of
the strategy. "Questions for the potentate?" he said.
"Anyone?"
The potentate of the United Asian States timidly raised his hand. "I
don't know about the rest of you," he said, "but our army of hundreds
of millions is led by many independent generals who are not easy to
meld. Their staffs and their platoons have been devastated and greatly
reduced by plagues, boils, and many other unbelievable tortures. Over
half my population is dead or missing. How are we going to get these
armies and their leaders to follow us?"
Many heads nodded.
"That is a question I do not shrink from, my friends," Carpathia said.
"But before I tell you how together we shall accomplish that, let me
tell you what your military leaders' first order of business will be.
As you will remember, when I first came to power nearly seven years
ago, I collected from all the world governments 90 percent of their
weaponry. This was stored at a secret location I am now willing to
reveal. In massive armories in and around Al Hillah, just under one
hundred kilometers to the south of us, we have enough firepower to
destroy the planet.
"Needless to say, we do not want or need to destroy the planet. We
simply want your soldiers to have more than what they need to wipe out
the Jews and destroy the son I have so long opposed. So once I tell you
how we will get your military leaders on board, your next assignment
will be to get them to Al Hillah, where our Security and Intelligence
director, Mr. Suhail Akbar, will see that they are more than fully
equipped."
"How long will this take?" the Indian potentate asked.
"You have less than half a year, ladies and gentlemen, so begin today.
I have had Carpathian States troops pouring into Israel for months
already. And when our Global Community army is in place, I want the
armories of At Hillah empty. Is that understood?"
"Understood," the Russian potentate said, "but like my colleagues, I am
eager to hear how we are to persuade discouraged, sick, and injured
leaders and troops."
"Reverend Fortunato," Nicolae said, rising. Leon leaped to his feet,
his chair rolling back. "Ladies and gentlemen, the time has come to
introduce you to three of my most trusted aides. No doubt you have been
wondering about the three at the end of the table."
"Wondering why they seem not to have so much as blinked since we sat
down," the British potentate said.
Carpathia laughed. "These three are not of this world. They use these
shells only when necessary. Indeed, these are spirit beings who have
been with me from the beginning. They were among the first who believed
in me and saw the lie the father and son were trying to perpetrate in
heaven and on earth."
"Leon," Carpathia said, and they walked down either side of the table
to the other end. "Excuse me, Ms. Ivins," Nicolae said, and she stood
and pulled her chair out of his way.
"Excuse me, Director Akbar," Leon said, and Suhail did the same.
----------
Rayford jumped when Tsion snapped everyone to attention by calling out,
"Chang, get this! This is Revelation 16:13 and 14!"
The camera angle changed, and those assembled in Petra had a clear view
of both Nicolae and Leon from behind the three seemingly lifeless
bodies at the end of the table.
The Antichrist and the False Prophet leaned in from either side,
resting their elbows on the table and looking into the eyes of the
robotlike creatures. Leon and Nicolae exhaled hideous, slimy, froglike
beings-one from Leon and two from Nicolae-that leaped into the mouths
of the three.
The three suddenly became animated. Nicolae smiled.
"Let's see them from the front, Chang," Buck hollered, and Chang made
the adjustment.
The three now bore a striking resemblance to Carpathia. They sat back
casually, smiling, nodding to the potentates all around. The leaders
looked stunned and frightened at first, but soon warmed to the
personable strangers.
"Please meet Ashtaroth, Baal, and Cankerworm. They are the most
convincing and persuasive spirits it has ever been my pleasure to know.
I am going to ask now that we, all of us, gather round them and lay
hands on them, commissioning them for this momentous task."
The three backed up their chairs to make room for the potentates, Viv,
Suhail, Leon, and Nicolae to surround and touch them.
Nicolae said, "And now go, you three, to the ends of the earth to
gather them to the final conflict in Jerusalem, where we shall once and
for all destroy the father and his so-called Messiah. Persuade everyone
everywhere that the victory is ours, that we are right, and that
together we can destroy the son before he takes over this world. Once
he is gone, we will be the undisputed, unopposed leaders of the world.
"I confer upon you the power to perform signs and heal the sick and
raise the dead, if need be, to convince the world that victory is ours.
And now go in power. . . ."
Ashtaroth, Baal, and Cankerworm disappeared amid a huge bolt of
lightning that struck the middle of the con-ference table and
temporarily blacked out the TV monitor in Petra. As the picture
returned, a huge peal of thunder made Chang rip off his headphones.
Nicolae and Leon returned to stand behind their chairs, as did the rest
of the potentates and Viv and Suhail. As they stood there calmly,
Nicolae said, "Farewell, one and all. I will see you in six months in
the Plain of Megiddo on that great day when victory shall be in sight."
Buck sat stunned but quickly came to his senses. "Somebody read that
passage Tsion mentioned!"
"I've got it right here," Chaim said. "Revelation 16:13 and 14 say,
`And I saw three unclean spirits like frogs coming out of the mouth of
the dragon, out of the mouth of the beast, and out of the mouth of the
false prophet. For they are spirits of demons, performing signs, which
go out to the kings of the earth and of the whole world, to gather them
to the battle of that great day of God Almighty."'
"Read the next two verses too, Chaim," Tsion said.
"The first quotes Jesus himself," Chaim continued. ""`Behold, I am
coming as a thief. Blessed is he who watches, and keeps his garments,
lest he walk naked and they see his shame." And they gathered them
together to the place called in Hebrew, Armageddon."'
SEVENTEEN
RAYFORD TOLD Buck and George to scout out a new meeting room, somewhere
in Petra that would not draw curiosity seekers. "It needs to hold maybe
twenty, at most," he told them, though he knew it was unlikely to see
half that.
He met with Tsion in the tiny living room in Tsion's quarters. "I need
you to teach my top guys," he said. "They all know by now what went on
in Baghdad, and everybody has questions about what it all means and
what our roles should be. Nobody wants to just sit here in safety while
the rest of the world goes to hell."
"I can identify with that, Rayford, and I will gladly do it. I have
just this morning turned over all administrative and teaching duties of
the Remnant here to Chaim."
Rayford shot him a double take. "You did what?"
"I do not want to stay here either."
"What are you saying?"
"If I am to teach your top little military band, I want to be part of
it. I want to be taught to fight, to use a weapon, to defend myself, to
keep my comrades and my fellow Jews alive."
Rayford stood and walked to the unscreened window that looked out on
endless skies. "I'm dumbfounded," he said.
"Do not think I have not consulted the Lord on this."
"It's not enough you're a rabbi, a teacher, a preacher? Now you want to
be a soldier?"
"Rayford, listen to me. I identify with my Lord, my Messiah. I cannot
sit here when Antichrist and his world-wide forces are closing in on
Jerusalem. I will not stand by as innocent Jews are killed. The Bible
teaches that a third of the remaining Jews
will turn to Messiah before
the end. That means many, many more than there are now, and they need
to be reached. I want
to preach in Jerusalem, Rayford. That is what I
am trying to tell you."
"You'll get yourself killed."
"I would rather wake up in heaven a few days early and join the army
coming the other way with Messiah, knowing I died
with my boots on,
than sit here in Petra watching it on television."
"I don't know if I can allow it."
"If the Lord allows it, I do not see that you have a choice. Oh,
Rayford, sit down. I do not want to go foolishly, to go unprepared. I
am just into my fifties now, not an old man. Not young, I know, but I
am in shape. If Mac McCullum can do these kinds of things at his age,
surely I can too. I know my hands are soft like those of a scholar, but
how long can it take to develop calluses and learn to handle a weapon?"
"You're serious."
"I will not be dissuaded. I am more than willing to teach your team
what I know about what is going on. But my price is to also become a
student of your Mr. Sebastian."
Rayford sat and shook his head. "You may not be an old coot, but you're
stubborn."
"Is that not part of the makeup of the warrior?"
"Oh, you're a warrior now."
"I hope to be."
"Have you consulted the elders?"
"Did I inform them? Yes. Were they happy? No. Will they pray about it?
Yes. Do I care what they come back with? Only if it is a yes."
Buck couldn't believe it. "But I have to admire his spunk. I'll never
forget the night he and I first talked to the two witnesses at the
Wailing Wall. That was before I even knew Dr. Ben-Judah was a believer.
I was pretty new at this stuff myself, but I recognized John 3 and the
night-time conversation between Jesus and Nicodemus. It was moving."
"I'd never forgive myself if I let him go and something happened to
him," Rayford said.
"He's a tough guy. He stood up to Carpathia on international
television, telling what he thought about Jesus being the Messiah. And
after his family was massacred, I know he'd rather have been carrying
an Uzi than a Bible. He could be a valuable
addition to this team. And
the only one who can preach and teach. I'd vote for him."
"I'm not taking any vote."
"You just got one. Anybody voting against?"
"I might," Rayford said.
"You're more of a coward than he is."
Mac got a kick out of the whole thing. He was all for Tsion learning to
be a soldier and coming with them to Jerusalem. He sat under Tsion's
teaching in the private chamber every week for the next several months
and learned more about the very last days than he thought there was to
imagine. He saw the fire in the rabbi's eyes and knew, Rayford's
misgivings aside, that Tsion was going.
Tsion began one evening's lesson by reading Jude 1:14-15: "`Now Enoch,
the seventh from Adam, prophe-sied about these men also, saying,
"Behold, the Lord comes with ten thousands of His saints, to execute
judg-ment on all, to convict all who are ungodly among them of all
their ungodly deeds which they have committed in an ungodly way, and of
all the harsh things which ungodly sinners have spoken against Him."'
"Did you catch that, people? The word he repeats so many times? It
sinks in, doesn't it, when a prophet of God refers to the ungodly four
times in one sentence? These enemies of ours are the enemies of God.
They are out to steal and kill and destroy anything that is of God. But
Jesus himself says in John 10:10 and 11, `I have come that they may
have life, and that they may have it more abundantly. I am the good
shepherd. The good shepherd gives His life for the sheep.' Oh, to be a
shepherd called to give your life for your flock!
"Many of you have asked where I get the idea that one-third of God's
chosen people will turn to him before the end. Turn in your Bibles to
Zechariah 13. That is the second-to-last book in your Old Testament. In
verses 8 and 9 the prophet is talking about the Remnant of Israel:
"`And it shall come to pass in all the land," says the Lord, "that
two-thirds in it shall be cut off and die, but one-third shall be left
in it: I will bring the one-third through the fire, will refine them as
silver is refined, and test them as gold is tested. They will call on
My name, and I will answer them. I will say, `This is My people'; and
each one will say, `The Lord is my God.""
"Now as I have told you before, calling this final conflict the Battle
of Armageddon is really a misnomer, as this is just the staging area of
the world's armies. The actual conflicts will take place here at Petra,
or near here, as God has proved this city is impenetrable, and at
Jerusalem. To be precise, this should be called the War of the Great
Day of God the Almighty."
Buck raised his hand. "I've been hearing you teach this stuff for
years, and I still don't think I have the sequence down. What's going
to happen when?"
Tsion chuckled. "Scholars have debated that since time immemorial. I
found that the only way I could make sense of it was to have my Bible
and all my books and commentaries open at the same time and try to make
a list of the various stages of the events.
"In my opinion, eight events will take place sometime after the sixth
Bowl judgment, the drying up of the Euphrates River. That event, by the
way, makes it possible for the kings of the East to bring their
armaments of war directly into the plain of Megiddo on dry land, saving
them the time of shipping them all the way around the continents. There
is no biblical corroboration for this next assertion, but in my humble
opinion, this is a trap set by almighty God. He's luring these rulers
and their armies right to where he wants them.
"Regardless, once the Euphrates has dried up, we see the assembling of
the allies of the Antichrist. Next, I believe, comes the destruction of
Babylon. Isaiah 13:6-9 says, `Wail, for the day of the Lord is at hand!
It will come as destruction from the Almighty. Therefore all hands will
be limp, every man's heart will melt, and they will be afraid. Pangs
and sorrows will take hold of them; they will be in pain as a woman in
child-birth; they will be amazed at one another; their faces will be
like flames.
"`Behold, the day of the Lord comes, cruel, with both wrath and fierce
anger, to lay the land desolate; and He will destroy its sinners from
it."'
"Wow," Buck said. "I don't know if I want to be there to see that."
"You're going to be in Jerusalem by then, Buck," Rayford said.
"Me too," Tsion said. "Following the destruction of Babylon comes the
fall of Jerusalem. That will encourage the allied troops of Antichrist,
and they will surge to join their compatriots here at what the Bible
calls Bozrah. Immediately following that comes what I call the national
regeneration of Israel.
"In Romans 11:25-27 the apostle Paul writes, `For I do not desire,
brethren, that you should be ignorant of this mystery, lest you should
be wise in your own opinion, that blindness in part has happened to
Israel until the fullness of the Gentiles has come in. And so all
Israel will be saved, as it is written: "The Deliverer will come out of
Zion, and He will turn away ungodliness from Jacob; for this is My
covenant with them, when I take away their sins.""'
"Then comes the good stuff," George said. "At least the way I read it."
"Exactly," Tsion said. "The Glorious Appearing. Jesus Christ appears on
a white horse with ten thousand of his saintly army, and regardless of
what Antichrist thinks is going to happen, his end is near.
"Want to hear a bizarre word picture? When John talks about this in his
Revelation, he says in verses 19 and 20 of the fourteenth chapter: `So
the angel thrust his sickle into the earth and gathered the vine of the
earth, and threw it into the great winepress of the wrath of God. And
the winepress was trampled outside the city, and blood came out of the
winepress, up to the horses' bridles, for one thousand six hundred
furlongs.'
"Think of that! When Jesus and his holy army finally slay the world
allies of Antichrist, the slaughter will be so great that the
flow of
blood in Israel's central valley could be as high as a horse's bridle.
How high is that? Four feet or more."
"And how far is one thousand six hundred furlongs?"
"I am so glad you asked, George," Tsion said, "because I happen to have
studied it. It is about one hundred and eighty-four miles, the
approximate distance from Armageddon to Edom."
"But that's only six events," Buck said. "Are there really two more?"
"Yes. There is the end of the fighting in the Jehosha-phat Valley,
which is basically the area from here to just south of Jerusalem, west
of the Dead Sea. Because Petra is safe, all Antichrist's armies can do
is fight outside.
"Then, finally, comes Jesus' victory ascent up the Mount of Olives. I
want to be there for that."
"You may be there," Rayford said. "But whether you'll still be alive is
a different story."
EIGHTEEN
Six Years, Eleven Months, into the
Tribulation
WITH JUST WEEKS to go to the culmination of the final events, Rayford
had finally gotten used to the idea that Tsion was going to Jerusalem.
"That I'm acceding to this doesn't imply that I support it, does it,
Tsion?"
"I know you better than that. But I may also know you better than you
know yourself. After all this talk, you would be disappointed if I
pulled out now."
"Disappointed? Relieved. I somehow feel I'm going to have to answer to
God for what happens to you."
"Trust me. I will let you off the hook."
"Let me see those hands, old man."
"I told you," Tsion said, extending his hands. "I am not that old."
"Older than I am, so ancient in my book," Rayford said. "But those are
impressive calluses. And George and Razor tell me you're actually
starting to hit targets with that Uzi."
"I do not see how anyone can miss. It shoots so many bullets in so
short a time, to me it is like using a garden hose. If you miss your
mark, just swing it back and forth until you hit it."
"What do you plan to do, seriously, Doctor? Stand somewhere and preach
with a weapon hanging from your shoulder?"
"If I must. Rayford, we have known each other long enough that we
should be free to be frank. I feel such a compulsion to plead with my
fellow countrymen to give their lives to Messiah that I do not believe
it would be physically possible for me not to. I must get there, and I
must preach. I do not want a disguise. I cannot imagine the GC even
caring about me anymore."
"Are you serious? The leader of the international Judah-ites-"
"That is their term for us, not ours, and certainly not mine."
"But, Tsion, everybody knows you. If they thought my daughter was a
prime catch, imagine if they got hold of you."
Tsion shook his head. "But if God has laid this so heavily on my heart,
maybe he is telling me that I will be supernaturally protected."
"Well, is he or isn't he?"
"All I know is that I must go."
"I'm sending Buck with you. I promised him duty in Jerusalem. I can't
think of a role with more action than what you're going
to draw."
"I would be honored to have him as my bodyguard. Is he the military man
George is?"
"Who is? But George is otherwise engaged, you know."
"Defending the perimeter here, yes, he told me. My question is, why
don't we ignore the perimeter if our borders are impregnable?"
"Because people are seeking refuge here all the time, and they are not
safe until they get inside."
"And yet they are safe in the air. How do you figure that?"
"I've quit trying to figure out God, Tsion. I'm surprised you haven't."
"Oh, Rayford, you have just stepped into one of my traps. You know how
I love to quote the Word of God."
"Of course."
"Your mention of figuring out God reminds me of one of my favorite
passages. Ironically, it leads into a verse that justifies my going in
spite of the danger."
"I'm listening."
"Romans 11:33-36: `Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and
knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments and His ways past
finding out! "For who has known the mind of the Lord? Or who has become
His counselor? Or who has first given to Him and it shall be repaid to
him?" For of Him and through Him and to Him are all things, to whom be
glory forever. Amen."'
"Impressive."
"But, my friend, that leads into the first verse of the twelfth
chapter, which is my justification: `I beseech you therefore, brethren,
by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice,
holy, acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service."'
"Just hope it's a living sacrifice, Tsion."
----------
Chang had concluded that Carpathia believed the prophecy about the
drying up of the Euphrates, because he had sanctioned sensitive devices
in the river that recorded information that was fed into and evaluated
by the GC mainframe computer. Chang, of course, was monitoring that
from Petra. Nearly four weeks later, he knew when the event occurred
before the GC did.
"It's happened!" he shouted, standing at his computer. Everyone nearby
jumped and stared, and Naomi came running. "There was water in the
Euphrates a minute ago, and now it is as dry as a bone. You can bet
tomorrow it will be on the
news-someone standing in the dry, cracking
riverbed, showing that you can walk across without fear of mud or
quicksand."
"That is amazing," Naomi said. "I mean, I knew it was coming, but isn't
it just like God to do it all at once? And isn't that a
fifteen-hundred-mile river?"
"It used to be."
Mac's and Abdullah's reconnaissance flights over the area showed that
weaponry had been taken from the armories in Al Hillah until they had
to be empty. Within days, great columns of soldiers, tanks, trucks, and
armaments began rolling west from as far away as Japan and China and
India.
"And here," Chang told Naomi, "is the break Tsion has been looking for,
whether he knew it or not. Look at this." He printed out a directive
from Suhail Akbar himself, instructing Global Community Peacekeepers
and Morale Monitors to cease and desist with all current assignments
and consider themselves redeployed to the GC One World Unity Army.
"Your superiors have been similarly assigned, and you will report to
them in the staging area in twenty-four hours or face AWOL charges."
"What happens to the streets?" Naomi said.
"I can't imagine, love. The inmates will be running the asylum. But
that means people without Carpathia's mark can come out from hiding."
"If they dare. There's still a bounty on their heads. The loyalists
will kill them and stack their bodies, waiting for the end of the war
to cash in."
"Won't they be disappointed."
"I must go as soon as possible," Tsion told Rayford. "What is the
fastest way Cameron and I can get to Jerusalem?"
"Helicopter, I suppose, if I can find you a pilot."
"What are you doing right now?"
"Uh, well-I guess nothing. Anything else?"
Tsion laughed. "I cannot wait. I have packed food-stuffs and a change
of clothes, and if Cameron has done as I requested, he will have done
the same. Who would know if a chopper is available?"
"Meet me at the helipad in half an hour."
Priscilla Sebastian made a valiant effort to distract Kenny Bruce as
Buck tried to extract himself from the boy's embrace.
"I'll be back soon," Buck said. "Got to go with Uncle Tsion."
Kenny said nothing. He just hung on.
"Grandpa's going to come see you after he drops us off, okay? You're
going to stay with him while I'm gone."
Kenny lightened his grip and pulled back to look at Buck. "Grandpa?"
"That's right."
"Plane ride?"
"I bet so."
"When?"
"Soon. Soon as he gets back."
"I wanna go."
"Not enough room. Now you be a good boy and play with Beth Ann, and
Grandpa will be here soon. Okay?"
"Kay".
----------
Mac was working with Otto Weser and George on planning the evacuation
from New Babylon, as soon as the word came that believers were to move
out. No one, not even Tsion, seemed to know how that would be
super-naturally announced or even whether anyone outside New Babylon
would hear it.
"I know of a few other cells there," Otto said. "I have left
instructions with one of the leaders to call me once she gets the word.
I don't know what else we can do. I'll tell them to meet us at the
palace airstrip and hope we have a plane big enough to get them all out
of there."
"All we can do is all we can do," Mac said.
Naomi interrupted their meeting. "Want to say goodbye to Tsion?
Everyone is turning out for the farewell."
"He's going already?"
She told Mac why.
"Tsion never lets any grass grow on an idea, does he?"
He and George and Otto followed Naomi to a clearing near the helipad,
where it seemed hundreds of thousands had shown up. "Word travels quick
round here, doesn't it, Otto?"
"Mr. McCullum, many of these people are weeping. He's only going to
Jerusalem, isn't he? That can't be more'n a hundred miles, can it? And
surely he's coming back."
"That's what they're cryin' about, Otto. Most folks wonder if he will
be back."
Rayford waited on firing up the chopper so Tsion could be heard. The
rabbi pulled a white cloth from his pocket and waved it vigorously at
the people as Buck boarded behind him. "These people are going to want
your neck when you come back without him, Rayford," Buck said.
"Which, of course, I plan to do in an hour or less."
"I'd just better not come back without him," Buck said.
"People! People!" Tsion shouted. "I am overwhelmed at your kindness.
Pray for me, won't you, that I will be privileged to usher many more
into the kingdom. We are just days away now from the battle, and you
know what that means. Be waiting and watching. Be ready for the
Glorious Appearing! If I am not back before then, we will be reunited
soon thereafter.
"You will be in my thoughts and prayers, and I know I go with yours.
Thank you again! You are in good hands with Chaim 'Micah' Rosenzweig,
and so I bid you farewell!"
He continued waving as he boarded. Rayford noticed the rabbi's tears as
he buckled himself in.
----------
"Something's on your mind," Naomi said, as she and Chang walked hand in
hand. He had just finished transmitting to Rayford's helicopter a
schematic of Jerusalem with various potential put-down spots.
Chang shrugged. "Sometimes I'm glad I'm here and safe and can
sleep-unlike at the palace-but other times I feel I'm taking the easy
way out. Everyone else is gearing up for the battle."
"Oh, Chang. Don't say that. You put in your years of frontline work.
And anyway, you know full well you're much more valuable here in the
center than out there shooting or being shot at. I don't know what we'd
do without you."
"You were getting along fine before I got here."
She dropped his hand and put her hands on her hips, cocking her head at
him. "You have a short memory, Chang Wong. How can you forget that I
spent a good portion of every day on the computer with you, though we
were more than five hundred miles apart? I would have been nowhere
without your teaching me, which is the way I feel now."
"Everything's up and running here. I could be gone a few weeks."
"I wasn't talking technically, Chang. Call me selfish, but I'm glad
you're not venturing out. Father loves me, but not like you do."
"I should hope not."
She smiled. "And I enjoy spending time with him, which is something a
lot of women my age can't say about their fathers. But I would rather
be with you. Remember, we want to survive so we can be together for a
millennium. Let's not risk that for the sake of your conscience."
"You don't think I'd be good in combat."
"Actually I do, Chang. I know you're half the size of that Sebastian
character and much more rational than Buck Williams.
But I believe a
person's personality and character come out when the pressure is on,
and I've seen you under pressure. With
a little training, you could
hold your own."
----------
Rayford was studying Chang's transmissions and trying to discuss with
Buck the best place to land. Buck was busy digging through what he'd
brought and said, "It's your call, Ray. I can't imagine one spot is
going to be any less treacherous than another."
"Remember that all these GC are expected to be in Megiddo tomorrow,"
Rayford said. "Not today. They might still like a plum arrest."
"I disagree," Buck said. "Their directive told them to immediately
cease and desist and head toward where they had to be. I don't know a
guy in uniform who wouldn't take them up on that."
"Just take me to the Wailing Wall, Rayford," Tsion said. "I want to be
preaching when I get off this thing."
"Could you think of a more dangerous place?"
"Danger is not the issue now, Captain. Time is. The Day of the Lord is
at hand. Let us not be setting up camp when the enemy attacks."
"Easy for you to say," Rayford said.
"Not unless I am on the ground. Now, for once, do what I ask."
Rayford came within sight of the Temple Mount. It was crawling with
people. "Agh!"
"They will move," Tsion said. "Trust me. Put this thing down, and they
will get out of the way. Wouldn't you?"
NINETEEN
THE INSTANTANEOUS drying up of the Euphrates proved good news to only
the kings of the East, who transported their weapons directly into
Israel across dry land. The rest of the Fertile Crescent was no longer
fertile. Irrigation dried up, hydroelectric plants shut down, factories
closed. In short, everything that depended on the massive power of the
great river was immediately diagnosed as terminal.
Chang's prediction of GCNN's carrying accounts of reporters standing in
the middle of the dry riverbed proved accurate. But all the fancy
pronouncements and
isn't-it-something-that-I'm-standing-here-where-yesterday-I-would-have-been-a-hundred-feet-below-the-surface
did not amuse millions who depended upon the Euphrates for their very
existence.
----------
It didn't surprise Buck that Tsion proved to be right. When Rayford
lowered the chopper into a clearing at the Temple Mount, hundreds of
angry people scattered, raising their fists at him.
Buck grabbed his bag and tucked his Uzi behind his back and under his
jacket. He leaped from the chopper and scampered to safety in
underbrush near the Wall. He looked back to see Tsion doing the same
and was amazed at the agility of this newly trained guerilla.
They knelt, catching their breath and watching Rayford lift off. The
chopper whirling out of sight took the attention off them. Buck looked
around. "This is where I saw the two witnesses taken into heaven three
and a half years ago," he said.
That old curiosity was back. Rayford couldn't shake it. No way he could
be this close to Armageddon-he guessed less than seventy miles-and not
do a flyover. It was crazy, he knew. He might find himself in an air
traffic jam. But the possibility of seeing an aerial view of what he
had been hearing and reading and praying about drew him like an
undertow. And if the result was that he plunged into the abyss like a
rafter over the falls, it was worth the risk.
"Cameron, look," Tsion said. "Look at all the unmarked men! They
proudly parade around, beaming at each other, as if defying the GC."
Global Community Peacekeeping and Morale Monitor forces were nowhere to
be seen, of course. But war was in the air. For all the posturing of
the devout Jews at the Temple Mount, it was clear that terror pervaded
the place. These people knew where the GC were, and they knew they
would soon be Carpathia's targets.
"The old men are at the Wall," Tsion said, "praying fervently and
openly as they have not been able to do for so long. How my heart
breaks for them. The young men are talking, planning, looking for arms.
They are determined to defend this city, as I am."
"But the city is to fall, Tsion," Buck said. "You've said so yourself."
"Only temporarily, and the more of these people we can keep alive, the
more can come into the kingdom. That is all I care about."
----------
Mac was still not sure what to make of Otto Weser. He was a good man,
no doubt, but he was amateur in his thinking. He may have been a
successful timber business-man in Germany, but Mac would not want to
have served under him in combat.
"But don't you see, Mr. McCullum," Otto was saying, "if we are already
on the ground at the palace airstrip when the supernatural announcement
comes, we'll be that much more ready to quickly get people on board and
out of there."
"And what if we never hear that announcement, or people can't get to
the airstrip? There we sit with the city coming down around us."
"But will we not be protected as believers?"
"Think, man! If believers were protected, why would God be calling his
own people out of there before he levels the place?"
"I want to wait no longer, Cameron. I'm going to the Wall and I will
simply begin preaching." "But what if-"
"There is no more time to think things through," Tsion said. "We are
here for one purpose, and I am going to do it. Now are you going to
cover me? Go with me? What?"
"I'll go with you. No one will give me a second glance, once you open
your mouth."
Tsion pressed a yarmulke onto his head and handed one to Buck. "No
sense getting stoned for a technicality," Tsion said.
"We are going to
a holy place."
They stuffed their bags between a tree and a black wrought-iron fence.
Wearing loose-fitting, canvas-type clothing and jackets, Uzis at their
sides, they crawled out of the bushes and jogged toward the Wall.
"Hey, old man, two hundred Nicks for that gat!"
"I'll go three hundred!" someone else said.
"The weapon is not for sale!" Tsion hollered. "Come hear what I have to
offer!"
The area before the Wailing Wall was crowded with people in traditional
garb, eager to push their prayers into the cracks between the stones.
Many began praying even before they got close. The place would have
been deserted the day before.
And anyone caught in religious clothing,
even with the mark of Carpathia, would have been sent to a
concentration camp or executed.
As soon as Buck and Tsion began to shoulder their way toward the Wall,
men glared at them and grumbled. Tsion did not hesitate. He bellowed,
"Men of Israel, hear me! I am one of you! I come with news!"
It was clear people thought it was news of the impending attack, as
they immediately began gathering. Tsion climbed a short precipice,
where he could better be seen and heard.
"We will fight to the death!" someone shouted.
"I know you will, and so will I!" Tsion said. "You see me with my head
covered and no mark on my forehead or hand."
The men cheered.
"Many of us will die in this conflict," Tsion continued. "I am willing
to give my life for Jerusalem!"
"So are we!" many shouted in unison.
"We need arms!"
"We need information!"
"What you need," Tsion boomed, "is Messiah!"
The men cheered and many laughed. Others murmured. This was plainly not
what they expected to hear.
"Many of you know me! I am Tsion Ben-Judah. I became persona non grata
when I broadcast my findings after being commissioned to study the
prophecies concerning Messiah."
Many remembered and applauded. Although they obviously disagreed with
his conclusions or they would have been believers, they seemed to
admire him.
"My family was slaughtered. I was exiled. A bounty remains on my head."
"Then why are you here, man? Do you not know the Global Community
devils are coming back?"
"I do not fear them, because Messiah is coming too! Do not scoff! Do
not turn your backs on me!" Many did not. "Listen to our own
Scriptures. What do you think this means?" He read Zechariah 12:8-10:
"`In that day the Lord will defend the inhabitants of Jerusalem; the
one who is feeble among them in that day shall be like David, and the
house of David shall be like God, like the Angel of the Lord before
them. It shall be in that day that I will seek to destroy all the
nations that come against Jerusalem.
"`And I will pour on the house of David and on the inhabitants of
Jerusalem the Spirit of grace and supplication; then they will look on
Me whom they pierced.
Yes, they will mourn for Him as one mourns for his only son, and grieve
for Him as one grieves for a firstborn."'
"You tell us what it means!"
"God is saying he will make the weakest among us as strong as David.
And he will destroy the nations that come against us.
My dear friends,
that is all the other nations of the earth!"
"We know. Carpathia has made it no secret!"
"But God says we will finally look upon `Me whom they pierced,' and
that we will mourn him as we would mourn the loss of a firstborn son.
Messiah was pierced! And God refers to the pierced one as `Me'! Messiah
is also God.
"Beloved, my exhaustive study of the hundreds of prophecies concerning
Messiah brought me to the only logical conclusion. Messiah was born of
a virgin in Bethlehem. He lived without sin. He was falsely accused. He
was slain without cause. He died and was buried and was raised after
three days. Those prophecies alone point to Jesus of Nazareth as
Messiah. He is the one who is coming to fight for Israel. He will
avenge all the wrongs that have been perpetrated upon us over the
centuries.
"The time is short. The day of salvation is here. You may not have time
to study this for yourselves. Messiah is God's promise to us. Jesus is
the fulfillment of that promise. He is coming. Let him find you ready!"
----------
Rayford's was not the only craft over the Plain of Megiddo. It was all
he could do to pick his way through the traffic, but he also found it
difficult to avert his eyes from the ground. He climbed to where he
could see the 14-by-25-mile valley in its entirety, some 350 square
miles.
The dust seemed to rise a mile as tanks, trucks, personnel carriers,
missile launchers, cavalries, and ground troops moved into the area.
Rayford had never seen as large an assembly of people in one place. It
appeared as if an army of millions was marshaling in the vast staging
area. From there he could also see the bustling seaport at Haifa, where
great ships filled the harbor and fanned out in massive lines, waiting
to disgorge armaments and troops.
From every direction personnel and equipment flooded into the region.
Massive as it was, there seemed no way it could hold more. And yet the
armies kept coming.
----------
Buck feared at first that Tsion was only offending the devoutly Jewish
crowd. Many tried to shout him down and many walked away, but others
tried to hush the rest, and still others called more to come and hear
him. The crowd kept growing, despite the noise and confusion.
Tsion seemed energized. He began quoting Scripture and explaining it,
not waiting for the crowd's response. His message went from dialogue to
monologue, and yet people seemed riveted.
"Yes, the armies of the world are coming. Even as we speak, they are
rallying to the north. They aim to destroy Jerusalem and destroy us.
But I beg of you, `do not fear those who kill the body but cannot kill
the soul. But rather fear Him who is able to destroy both soul and body
in hell.' Yes, you know of whom I speak. Messiah is coming! Messiah
shall overcome! Be ready for his arrival!
"If you want to know how to be prepared for him, gather here to my left
and my associate will tell you. Please! Come now! Do not delay! Now is
the accepted time. Today is the day of salvation."
Buck was stunned. He had not been prepared for this, but as the Jews
gathered around him, looking expectant, he breathed a desperate silent
prayer, and God gave him the words.
"When Jewish people such as yourselves come to see that Jesus is your
long-sought Messiah," he said, "you are not converting from one
religion to another, no matter what anyone tells you. You have found
your Messiah, that is all. Some would say you have been completed,
fulfilled. Everything you have studied and been told all your life is
the foundation for your acceptance of Messiah and what he has done for
you."
Buck moved into the plan of salvation, telling these hungry and thirsty
men to tell God they acknowledged that Jesus was Messiah. "He comes not
only to avenge Jerusalem but to save your soul, to forgive your sins,
to grant you eternal life with God."
"Naomi!" Chang called out. "Come watch this."
She joined him to see Carpathia being interviewed by GCNN. It was clear
he was not at Armageddon yet, but he was on a colossal black stallion
and brandishing a sword so wide and long it appeared its weight alone
would have pulled a smaller man from the saddle. He wore thigh-high
boots and leathers, and he seemed unable to quit grinning.
"We have the absolute latest in technology and power at our
fingertips," he shouted as the reporter reached as high as she could
with her microphone. "My months of strategy are over, and we have a
foolproof plan. That frees me to encourage the troops, to be flown to
the battle sites, to mount up, to be a visual reminder that victory is
in sight and will soon be in hand.
"It will not be long, my brothers and sisters in the Global Community,
until we shall reign victorious. I shall return to rebuild my throne as
conquering king. The world shall finally be as one! It is not too early
to rejoice!"
----------
As word spread that Tsion Ben-Judah was at the Wailing Wall preaching
to the Jews, more and more streamed in.
"These Scriptures foretell what is going to happen soon!" he said.
"Listen again to the words of Peter: `The day of the Lord will come as
a thief in the night, in which the heavens will pass away with a great
noise, and the elements will melt with fervent heat; both the earth and
the works that are in it will be burned up. Therefore, since all these
things will be dissolved, what manner of persons ought you to be in
holy conduct and godliness, looking for and hastening the coming of the
day of God, because of which the heavens will be dissolved, being on
fire, and the elements will melt with fervent heat? Never-theless we,
according to His promise, look for new heavens and a new earth in
which righteousness dwells.'
"That is our promise, what we have been looking for! For how many
generations have we prayed for peace? Soon, after the conflict, eternal
peace!
"Messiah will return as King of kings. He promised to return, to
conquer Satan, and to set up his millennial kingdom, reestablishing
Israel and making Jerusalem the capital forever!
"With probably a billion of Messiah's followers already removed from
this earth, and with the disappearances of seven years ago that were
predicted more than two thou-sand years before, many Jews and Gentiles
have turned to Jesus Christ as the true Messiah.
"Our own prophet Joel foretold of these very days. Listen to the words
of Holy Scripture: `It shall come to pass afterward that I will pour
out My Spirit on all flesh; your sons and your daughters shall
prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see
visions. And also on My menservants and on My maid-servants I will pour
out My Spirit in those days.
"`And I will show wonders in the heavens and in the earth: blood and
fire and pillars of smoke. The sun shall be turned into darkness, and
the moon into blood, before the coming of the great and awesome day of
the Lord. And it shall come to pass that whoever calls on the name of
the Lord shall be saved. For in Mount Zion and in Jerusalem there shall
be deliverance, as the Lord has said, among the remnant whom the Lord
calls.'
"You are that remnant, people of Israel. Turn to Mes-siah today! Listen
further to the prophecy of Joel and see if it does not reflect these
very days! `For behold, in those days and at that time, when I bring
back the captives of Judah and Jerusalem, I will also gather all
nations, and bring them down to the Valley of Jehoshaphat; and I will
enter into judgment with them there on account of My people, My
heritage Israel.'
"This massive international force that the evil ruler of this world
calls the One World Unity Army will break up from its staging area and
pass through the very Valley of Jehoshaphat Joel writes of, and when
they find the city of refuge impossible to overthrow, the fighting will
spill back into that valley."
----------
Rayford had to head back. There was nothing he could do high above the
assembled hordes of Antichrist. He knew it was from this area that the
great mass would divide two-thirds and one-third, and that the latter
would begin its inexorable march toward Petra.
His best guess was that it would take almost a full day for the force
to cover that much ground and begin its offensive. In just a few hours,
however, the two-thirds assigned to Jerusalem might already be engaged
in battle.
----------
Buck was answering questions, praying with people, and all the while
trying to listen to Tsion, who seemed to have found a second wind.
"The Day of the Lord is upon us," he said. "And lest there be any among
you who still doubt, let me tell you what the prophecies say will
happen after the armies of the world have gathered at Armageddon-which,
as we all know, they are now doing. How many of you know Peacekeepers
and Morale Monitors who have been called there? See? Yes, many of you.
We have no illusions. They are rallying now, planning our destruction.
"And yet the Scriptures say that when they have gathered there, it will
be time for the seventh angel to pour out his bowl into the air. Do you
know what this refers to, men of Israel? The drying of the Euphrates
was the sixth Bowl Judgment of God on the earth, the twentieth of his
judgments since the Rapture.
"This seventh Bowl judgment shall be the last, and do you know what it
entails? When this bowl has been poured out, the Bible says `a loud
voice came out of the temple of heaven, from the throne, saying, "It is
done!"' How like the pronouncement of the spotless Lamb of God on the
cross when he cried out, `It is finished.'
"`And there were noises and thunderings and lightnings; and there was a
great earthquake, such a mighty and great earthquake as had not
occurred since men were on the earth.'
"Let me warn you, my countrymen. This earthquake will cover the entire
world. Think of it! The Bible says that `every island fled away, and
the mountains were not found.' The mountains were not found! The
elevation of the entire globe will be sea level! Who can survive such a
catastrophe?
"The prophecy goes on to say that `great hail from heaven fell upon
men, each hailstone about the weight of a talent.' Beloved, a talent
weighs between seventy-five and one hundred pounds! Who has ever heard
of such hailstones? They will crush men and women to death! And the
Scriptures say men will blaspheme God because of the plague of the hail
`since that plague was exceedingly great.' Well, I should say it will
be! Turn and repent now! Be counted among the army of God, not that of
his enemy.
"Do you know what will happen here, right here in Jerusalem? It will be
the only city in the world spared the devastating destruction of the
greatest earthquake ever known to man. The Bible says, `Now the great
city'-that's Jerusalem-'was divided into three parts, and the cities of
the nations fell.'
"That, my brothers, is good news. Jerusalem will be made more
beautiful, more efficient. It will be prepared for its role as the new
capital in Messiah's thousand-year kingdom."
By now the crowds at the Temple Mount had ballooned as word of Tsion's
preaching continued to spread. Hundreds and soon thousands wept aloud
and fell to their knees, repenting before God, acknowledging Jesus
Christ as Messiah, pledging themselves to the King of kings.
Buck was weary but kept ministering, amazed at so many, steeped in
their centuries-old religion, finally seeing that Jesus Christ
fulfilled all the Old Testament prophecies concerning the coming
Messiah.
Tsion thundered, "How will we know when this is about to come to pass?
It will be preceded by the destruction of Babylon. Yes, the destruction
of Babylon!
Listen: `And great Babylon was remembered before God, to give her the
cup of the wine of the fierceness of His wrath.'
"Awful! It will be horrible! The loving, merciful patience of God will
have been pushed beyond the brink by that wicked city, and he will not
hold back his anger. The plague of darkness has not been enough to
satisfy his wrath. He will allow her to be attacked and plundered,
destroyed in but one hour's time. So great will be the power of the
calamity that befalls it that its repercussions will be felt around the
entire globe as all nations mourn the death of what had become the
capital of the world."
----------
Knowing the time was short and what Buck had promised Kenny, Rayford
radioed ahead to Petra and had Abdullah bring the boy to the helipad.
He gave Kenny a quick ride, pretty much straight up and straight down,
which Kenny loved.
Rayford was grateful the boy didn't ask about the rag-tag platoons
George and Razor were amassing below at the perimeter of the rock city.
Compared to what Rayford had seen north of Jerusalem, it was plain that
the few thousand Petra troops would not have a chance without
supernatural intervention.
Rayford spent the next couple of hours with Kenny, then ventured out to
check on George and his fighting band.
"Mac, come quick," Otto said. "I've got a colleague on speakerphone,
but she's nearly speechless."
When Mac arrived at Otto's quarters, he heard the woman try to recount
what had happened. "I don't know how much time we have," she said, out
of breath, "but it's time to go."
"How do you know?" Mac said. "An angel," she said.
"You're sure?"
"Bright, white, shiny, big, very big. And it was a man, at least this
one was. He was so bright that the darkness in this city is gone. It is
as bright as noon here still."
"What did he say?"
"He spoke so loud that everyone here had to hear it, and I will never
forget one word of it. He said, `Babylon the great is fallen, is
fallen, and has become a dwelling place of demons, a prison for every
foul spirit, and a cage for every unclean and hated bird!
"`For all the nations have drunk of the wine of the wrath of her
fornication, the kings of the earth have committed fornication with
her, and the merchants of the earth have become rich through the
abundance of her luxury."'
"We're on our way, ma'am. Get everybody to the palace airstrip, and if
you hear from any more groups of believers, send them there too."
"That's not all, sir."
"Excuse me?"
"I heard another voice from heaven. It said, `Come out of her, my
people, lest you share in her sins, and lest you receive of her
plagues. For her sins have reached to heaven, and God has remembered
her iniquities."'
"I hardly have enough people to encircle this place," Sebastian said.
Rayford avoided George's eyes. "I don't know what to say. The way I
read it, we aren't expected to even hold our own."
"I don't want men and women to suffer, though, Captain. I'd rather we
just line up above and pick a few off."
"Look at it this way, George. This is where Jesus is supposed to come
first. We could be among the first to witness the Glorious Appearing."
"Tell that to a fighting force outnumbered a thousand to one. They may
be in heaven before Jesus leaves there."
Mac had no idea what to expect in New Babylon, so at the last minute he
enlisted Lionel to also bring in a large jet. Between the two of them
he figured he could evacuate up to two hundred people.
When they landed at the palace, he found it eerie. The place was no
longer dark, but the wounded souls within the boundaries didn't know
what to make of it. They had been in pain and darkness for so long they
were disoriented and still hadn't found their bearings. Most still
limped and staggered around.
But waiting for the planes of refuge were more than one hundred and
fifty believers, cheering their arrival. They carried their belongings
in sacks and boxes and were eager to get aboard, which made the whole
process quick and easy. Mac and Lionel had their planes loaded and
turned around and headed down the runways when two invading armies
attacked.
Before Mac was even out of New Babylon airspace, black smoke billowed
into the heavens. He circled the area for an hour, and Lionel followed,
as their charges watched the utter destruction of the once great city.
Within those sixty minutes every building was leveled, and Mac knew
that every resident was slaughtered. When the mysterious armies who had
invaded from the north and northwest pulled out, they left the entire
metropolis aflame. By the time Mac turned toward Petra, the only thing
left of New Babylon was ash and smoke.
----------
Chang watched, confused, as GCNN reports came in of fighting within the
ranks of the One World Unity Army. Carpathia's forces apparently had to
strike back at nations who became drunk with power and ambition when
armed with resources that had been stored at Al Hillah. The majority of
Nicolae's allies banded together to crush the resistance, and by the
time all were assembled at Armageddon, they had all been persuaded, by
the demons or by Carpathia or by the realities of war, to join together
against the people of God.
The sheer number of troops swelled well beyond the Valley of Megiddo
and spilled north and south and east and west, past Jerusalem and down
toward Edom. Some estimates included an almost unimaginable mounted
army alone of more than two hundred thousand. Aerial views shot by GCNN
aircraft could show only a million or so troops at a time, but dozens
and dozens of separate such pictures were broadcast.
Chang sensed panic on the part of the people at Petra. Those who saw
the news could not imagine standing against such an overwhelming force.
Those who didn't see the news heard it from others, and the word swept
the camp. Many ran to the high places and could make out the clouds of
dust and the dark masses of humanity, beasts, and weaponry slowly
making their way across the desert.
Chaim took the occasion to call the people together, just before the
evening manna was expected. "My dear people, brothers and sisters in
Messiah. Be of good cheer. Fear not. I am hearing wonderful reports out
of Jerusalem, where our brother Tsion preaches the gospel of Jesus
Christ with great boldness and, I am happy to report, great results as
well.
"I only ten minutes ago talked with a very exhausted and still very
busy Cameron Williams. He tells me thousands are repenting of their
sins and turning to Christ, acknowledging Jesus of Nazareth as Messiah.
Praise the Lord God Almighty, maker of heaven and earth!"
The people seemed encouraged and cheered and wept and raised their
hands.
"We are not ignorant," Chaim continued, "of what is to come. New
Babylon has fallen, utterly destroyed in one hour, fulfilling the
prophecies. That leaves only two events on the prophetic calendar, my
friends. The first is?"
And the people shouted, "The seventh Bowl Judgment!"
"And the second, oh, praise God?" "The Glorious Appearing!"
Chaim concluded, "We serve the great God of Abra-ham, Isaac, and Jacob,
the deliverer of Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego. We lived through the
fires of the Antichrist, and we have been delivered from the snare of
the fowler. Do not be afraid. Stand still, and see the salvation of the
Lord, which he will accomplish for you. For the enemy whom you see
today, you shall soon see no more forever. The Lord will fight for you,
and you shall hold your peace."
TWENTY
DARKNESS HAD fallen in Jerusalem, yet still the Temple Mount teemed
with people. Buck thought Tsion appeared weak and tired, so he broke
away and went to their stash to bring him some foodstuffs. But their
bags were gone. He ran back to where Tsion held forth, but now he
himself felt dizzy with hunger.
"I need something with which to feed the rabbi!" he called out.
"I am fine!" Tsion said and continued preaching.
"Someone, please. A morsel. Bread, fruit."
"Five loaves and two fishes?" someone suggested, and everyone laughed.
An elderly man tossed an apple to Buck. Others passed him a round of
bread, crusty and warm. Someone donated a block of cheese. Someone else
a couple of oranges.
"Help me persuade this stubborn teacher to take a break!" Buck said,
and many urged Tsion to at least sit. And so he did.
Talking now, teaching rather than preaching, Tsion took questions and
nibbled between answers. The crowd only grew. "I had no idea how hungry
I was," Tsion said. He looked at Buck. "I am grateful, my friend."
Someone passed him a container of water, and he drank deeply.
Suddenly someone held up both hands to shush the crowd, and everyone
fell silent. The rumble of a moving army was clear. Buck felt the
vibration throughout his body.
"We need to get the rabbi to shelter," someone said. "We can meet over
there."
Tsion appeared to start to protest, but the audience was leaving en
masse, so he and Buck followed. They were led into a massive stone
structure that could easily have accommodated a thousand people. About
half that many crowded near the front.
"What are we to do when the enemy arrives?" someone asked. "We are more
outnumbered than Gideon."
"We can do only what we can do," Tsion said. "If you have an inkling
what I am trying to do here today, it is to usher as many of my fellow
Jews into the kingdom of Messiah as possible before it is too late.
Because of that I feel a compulsion to keep as many candidates alive as
I can. If you agree with my mission, go out into the city proper and
invite anyone who wants to, to come and join us. The enemy will begin
to conquer Jerusalem and plunge people into captivity, but I believe
their main objective is the Old City. What better meat to his pride
than for Carpathia to think he can invade this holy place and set up
his headquarters here?
"If we are attacked before you can return, take what you have learned
here and tell everyone you know. They need not come back here to pray
the prayer of faith and become a member of Messiah's kingdom."
Someone shouted, "Better yet to have them come back already decided and
carrying a weapon!"
"Well," Tsion said. "Yes."
As was so often true when spending the night at Rayford's, Kenny was
nearly impossible to get to sleep unless he began by lying atop his
grandfather. Rayford lay gingerly on the small cot designated for the
boy and reached for him. Kenny climbed aboard and laid his cheek just
under Rayford's chin.
Rayford fought fatigue, not wanting to fall asleep with Kenny asking
questions, singing, praying.
"Mommy's in heaven," Kenny said.
"That's right. And we miss her, don't we?"
"I do."
"I do too."
"Gonna see her real soon."
"Very, very soon, Kenny." Rayford knew Buck had been showing him the
calendar.
"Tomorrow?"
"Maybe. Or the next day. Not too many days."
"Where's heaven, Grandpa?"
"With God."
"And God is with Mommy?"
"Yes."
"And Jesus?"
"And Jesus."
"I want them to come here."
"Soon."
----------
Rayford had arranged with Priscilla Sebastian that she would come by
for Kenny before dawn, when Rayford was expected to join the troops on
the perimeter.
Kenny soon stopped talking and moving, and his breathing became regular
and deep. Rayford prayed for him and waited a few more minutes before
delicately sliding out from under him.
A few minutes later Rayford lay on his own cot across the room and
studied the boy. How thrilled Irene would have been with her grandson.
Had Kenny grown up during any other period of history, he would be
starting school within the year. Rayford wondered what form education
would take in the millennial kingdom.
He also wondered how it worked. Would he and Buck and Kenny grow old
while Irene and Raymie and Chloe remained the age they were when they
went to heaven? And what about Amanda? He feared that reunion with his
wife might be awkward, but would those situations matter when everyone
was in the presence of Jesus?
Rayford had been so busy for so long that he had not allowed himself
the luxury of daydreaming about it. What would it be like to see the
Glorious Appearing and then to actually be with Christ? Rayford was
more emotional than he had been as a younger man, and often the mere
thought of the change Christ had made in him made him choke up.
To imagine the sinless Son of God caring enough about him to die for
his sins ... Rayford could still hardly fathom it. And to have the
opportunity to thank him, to worship him, face-to-face. For a thousand
years. And then for eternity. He hadn't even begun trying to imagine
what heaven would be like.
----------
In the wee hours of the morning in Jerusalem, Buck and Tsion found
themselves taken in by an elderly father named Shivte and his two sons
in their forties. They were all thick, beefy men, and soft-spoken.
As soon as Shivte's wife opened the door to her husband's coded knock,
she blanched and nearly fainted. "Praise God! Praise God!" she said.
"You are Tsion Ben-Judah! And you!" she added, looking first at her
husband and then at her sons. "You have the mark of God on you! Can you
finally see mine?"
They smiled and nodded, embracing her one by one.
"I cannot tell you how much we appreciate this," Tsion said. "Our
belongings have disappeared, and we made no provisions for lodging."
Shivte's wife told him, "We made no provisions for lodging either. But
we have blankets and some food."
"The Lord will reward you," Tsion said.
"He already has," she said. "To see you with my men when they came
through the door, that is enough for me. I am humbled to offer
hospitality to God's servants."
"Tell me how you came to Messiah, ma'am," Tsion said.
She sat heavily. "Micah," she said, and Tsion and Buck looked at each
other. "I had waited so long to take the mark of Carpathia. I did not
want to. My men were not going to. They were going to hide out here
during the day so as not to be detected by the GC. But I believed
someone had to take the mark in order to buy and sell and keep us
alive. I was willing, but the idea of worshiping that statue made me
want to vomit. Forgive me."
"Please, continue."
"I was at the Temple Mount, planning to go through with it, even though
in my heart I believed in the one true God. I did not know what else to
do. I worried about my eternal soul, but I believed I was laying down
my life for my family, and I could think of no nobler act. I did not
realize at that time that I would be selling my soul to the evil one.
Not even these men are worth that."
Her husband and sons smiled.
"I was in line that day, Rabbi, actually in line. I don't know how many
people were between me and the mark applicator. But I saw a commotion
and slipped out of line. I watched from the back of the crowd. I saw
the gunshots that did not kill the man of God. I escaped back to our
home, and my men will admit they ridiculed me. They had liked my plan
of one of us-me-having the mark so we could eat. Now what were we going
to do?
"I told them they could go out in the dark of night and find food, but
I was going to find out more about the man of God. One of my young
friends had a computer, and we found your Web site. That is how I came
to believe Jesus was Messiah. Now I was an outcast in my own home. My
men were devout enough Jews to resist Carpathia, but they were not
ready for Messiah.
"I tried and prayed and pleaded and begged, but finally we agreed to
quit talking about it. Enough, they said, and I had had enough of their
rejection and ridicule anyway. But still I could pray. And God answers
prayer. Here you are, and here they are, with the mark of God."
----------
Rayford had trouble sleeping and felt compelled to check in with Buck.
He tiptoed to the other room so as not to wake Kenny and placed the
call. After asking about Kenny, Buck brought him up to date.
"Amazing," Rayford said. "What's Tsion saying about timing now?"
"He expects a predawn attack. Maybe there as well."
"We're kind of on that schedule too, Buck, but the combat part of this
is so futile."
"Temporarily, you mean."
"Of course, but I just don't know that I see the value of risking
people's lives when they could stay inside here and-"
"-and wait for Jesus?"
"Exactly."
"Come on, Dad. Who wants to do that? I'd kinda like to have him find me
on the job. Wouldn't you?"
"I know, but you should see the crew we're going to have on the
perimeter. A couple of thousand I don't know at all. Then Otto and a
few of his people, none of them with any business manning a weapon.
Ree, Ming, Lionel, Hannah, Zeke. Not exactly soldiers. Mac, of course,
and Smitty. They can take care of themselves, and there's no question
about Razor and George. Unless George tries to be a hero. He's so
military, Buck, you should see him, trying to make the best of it. You
can just tell he thinks his street smarts ought to carry the day, but
then he realizes how few soldiers are under his command, and those eyes
go glassy."
"You've got directed energy weapons and fifty-calibers yet, right?"
"Yeah, but against nuclear power? Come on."
"Do some damage. Stall till the Calvary cavalry gets here."
"The what?"
"Thought of that the other day. Jesus is going to appear from heaven on
a horse. That's literal, according to Tsion. Ten
thousand saints with
him. The Calvary cavalry."
"Too much time on your hands."
"Hey, Rayford?"
"Yeah."
"We can hear the armies coming. Can you?"
"Not the way this city is laid out. Maybe when they get closer. They're
sure easy to spot from the high places, though. Pretty ominous. I'd be
looking for a way out of here if I didn't know better."
"Sort of like watching a delayed ball game where you already know the
final score, isn't it?"
"I guess," Rayford said. "That's the kind of thing only a mind like
yours would come up with."
"Thanks, I think."
----------
Unable to sleep, Chang made his way to the tech center and his computer
at about four in the morning. Idly checking the GCNN affiliate feed out
of Haifa, he heard a report of troop deployments.
"Supreme Potentate Nicolae Carpathia has made no secret of his
strategy," the reporter intoned. "In fact, it seems as if he would just
as soon enemy targets know what's coming. I spoke with him late last
night at his bunker, somewhere near the Sea of Galilee."
"You see," Carpathia said, "we have such an over-whelming advantage in
manpower, firepower, and technology, it really makes little difference
what we encounter. I have not hidden that we have two main objectives
aiming toward the same goal. We want to lay siege to the city of
Jerusalem, where the majority of the remaining Jews reside. And we want
to eliminate Petra once and for all, where what they like to call `the
Remnant' remains in hiding like scared children.
"They know we are coming, and they will see us coming, and there is
little they can do about it."
"You expect no casualties?"
"Oh, there are always casualties," Carpathia sniffed. "But my people
are honored to give their lives in service to me and the Global
Community. I will see that they are appropriately rewarded. Of course,
there is the possibility of no loss of life or limb on our part. That
is, if the enemy sees what is coming and realizes it has no hope. An
unconditional surrender would be the prudent course, and naturally I
would accept that with utmost face-saving respect for them."
"Seriously? What accommodations would you make in that case?"
Carpathia could not answer over his gales of laughter.
----------
Rayford was up, dressed, and armed before dawn. He opened the door
before Priscilla knocked.
"I'll stay here with him until he wakes up, Rayford, if that's okay."
"Perfect. Thanks, Priss. Make yourself at home."
"Uh, Ray? You're going to be sure my husband comes home tonight, aren't
you?"
"As much as it's up to me."
"That's not very reassuring."
"Well, I take it that was a serious question. A serious answer is that
there are no guarantees. I'm hoping he'll make sure I come back."
"He feels obligated to everybody," Priscilla said, sitting.
Rayford stood by the open door. "Price of leadership. He volunteered
for this command."
"Like there was another choice."
"There wasn't in my mind, Priscilla."
"Well, I'm just saying-"
"I know. Sometimes, though, seems a guy like me trying to keep an eye
on a guy who knows what he's doing can just get in the way. You know,
of course, that even "Don't say it, Rayford. Too many of the wives try
to comfort themselves with that stuff about how their man will only be
in heaven a day or two, maybe less, then he's coming back. That doesn't
help."
"It's true."
"I know. But it isn't the living without him that worries me right now.
It's his getting hurt, suffering, dying a hard way."
Buck and Tsion and their hosts drank the thickest, bitterest coffee
Buck had ever had. It was still pitch-black outside. Shivte's wife was
already sniffling and trying to hide it.
"Cameron," Tsion whispered, "I would like you to go with the old man,
Shivte, at first."
"Now, wait. I came here to be your bodyguard, no one else's."
"Do me this favor. I worry about him. Even his weapon is ancient. The
sons believe the invaders will come from the northwest and try to come
through the Damascus Gate."
"Based on what?"
"The Unity Army could probably easily overrun any of the gates, but the
Jaffa Gate and the Citadel are well fortified with many rebel troops."
"But beyond that," Buck said, "they could try to storm any of the
gates, and the most likely, in my opinion, would be the Golden Gate.
Their first priority has to be the Temple Mount, no?"
"I don't know, Cameron. Just do this for me, please. Take the old man
to the Citadel. Once he is settled there, then come and find me. I will
be with the other two near the Damascus Gate."
Buck would rather have followed his hunch and gone straight to the
Golden Gate, but he was here for Tsion, and he would do him this favor.
He didn't know why the brothers were even guessing. If two-thirds of
Car-pathia's troops were concentrating on Jerusalem, it wouldn't take
many of them to take over the tiny Old City.
As soon as he and Tsion and the other three men were out the door, they
heard gunfire. Tsion and the brothers jogged northwest, Buck and
Shivte, west. Rebels ran everywhere, shouting what they knew. The enemy
was on the Jaffa Road. Damascus Gate was under siege. The Yad Vashem
Historical Museum to the Holocaust victims had been destroyed. Hebrew
University, the Jewish National and University Library, and Israel
Museum were in flames. The Old City would be next.
Thousands were dead and many more captured and held. Buck knew, if the
rumors could be believed, that he and Shivte were in the worst possible
place. In essence, they had cornered themselves inside the walls of the
Old City.
----------
Rayford was impressed with Sebastian's strategy, though they both knew
tactics were out the window in the face of such odds. The third of
Carpathia's troops assigned to Petra carried every type of weapon in
the potentate's arsenal. At least two hundred thousand mounted troops
slowly moved into position, far outflanking Sebastian's forces and
virtually surrounding them and the city.
"I have so few DEWs," George told Rayford. "In retrospect, if I had
known they were going to start with this horse trick, I'd have had
Lionel find me more."
"What do horses have to do with it?"
"Horses are not armored, and the riders can't really hide. See how
lazily they're moving into position?"
Rayford took the field glasses and saw thousands of horsemen cantering
into place. They were a mile from Petra's massed troops. "They act like
they've got all day."
Suddenly, George seemed animated. "We're going to get in the first blow
in this thing, and we're going to have the advantage,
at least
temporarily."
"How?"
"Those horses are trained to not spook under artillery fire. We could
pop a few fifty-caliber rounds at 'em and get them stirred up a bit.
Maybe take out a few horses and a few riders. But I'll bet they haven't
dealt with DEWs yet. You ready for some action?"
"Sure."
"I've got only about a hundred DEWs, but at least I was smart enough to
assign them all positions inside on the rim. I need them pretty evenly
spaced, all around the top of the city. Can you handle that?"
"On it. Then what?"
"Tell them all to wait for my command. If we can hit anywhere close to
a hundred horses or riders with DEWs from this distance, we could cause
a stampede that would put all their horses out of commission for a
while."
"Brilliant."
"Only if it works. Thing is, we've got to do this before they really
know where we are. We could have them on the run right
off the bat and
see how they like being on their heels."
----------
Buck got Shivte settled well inside the crowded Citadel, where it
appeared many scared younger men had decided to hole up as well. While
Buck could hear activity on the Jaffa Road, the invaders had indeed
ignored the Jaffa Gate for the very reason Buck guessed. Why do more
work than you had to?
Buck guessed the Damascus Gate was a little over a quarter of a mile
away, but getting there through the crowd of petrified and wild-eyed
rebels made it seem farther. And of course, Tsion and the brothers were
nowhere in sight. "Lord, come quickly."
----------
Rayford scampered to a four-wheel-drive ATV and charged to the nearest
high place. It took nearly half an hour with the vehicle and his
walkie-talkie to get the hundred or so DEW operators spread out evenly
and coordinated.
At George's command, they would fire invisible beams of directed energy
at the enemy. In essence, they heated soft tissue past the tolerance
point in less than a second, and if the rider or horse didn't elude the
ray, their flesh would burn.
With Petra surrounded by a couple of brigades of mounted troops, the
result had the potential to be maddeningly confusing to the enemy. The
strategy was to try to hit horses only, making them bolt away and
causing the steeds around them to do the same. No question some riders,
especially their legs, would be hit in the pro-cess, hopefully causing
them to kick and achieve the same result. If the beam hit higher on a
rider's body, he would likely scream and yank the reins. George,
Rayford thought, was a genius.
----------
"Dung Gate is giving way!" someone shouted. "Let's kill us some One
World Army!"
Buck prayed it wasn't true. The Dung Gate was the southern gate closest
to the Western Wall. It was the long way around to get to the Temple
Mount, and that's why he had assumed the Golden Gate on the east side
would be the Unity Army's first choice. If they got through the Dung
Gate, they might try battering through the Wailing Wall to get to pay
dirt.
Unable to raise Tsion by phone or find him or either of the brothers at
the Damascus Gate, which seemed to be holding for the time being, Buck
ran toward the Dung Gate, a mile away. All along the route he heard
rumors and fears. If any of it was to be believed, it wouldn't be long
before half the greater city of Jerusalem was in captivity. His goal
was to stay alive until the good guys showed up.
----------
Rayford figured Petra was fewer than fifteen minutes from sunrise when
he let George know the directed energy weapons were in place and
awaiting his command. "I'd really like to make sure the targets are
where I want them before we commence," George said.
"Only one way to do that as fast as you need it done," Rayford said.
"ATV?"
"Too much ground to cover. You'd have to circle the whole perimeter up
top."
"Helicopter?"
"Bingo. If you want to risk it."
"They wouldn't believe it was us," George said. "Who'd be stupid enough
to make himself that kind of a target?"
"You would."
Buck had run almost half a mile and was sucking wind when he saw
Carpathia's Unity Army troops coming the other way. Now he was
desperate to find Tsion and get him out of the Old City.
Rebels, some shooting over their shoulders, ran past him for their
lives, but Buck noticed the GC were not firing. They were moving in a
colossal battering ram that looked as if it would make short work of
the Wailing Wall. Now that was a tragedy. After millennia of prayer,
could such a sacred site be wasted in just moments?
Suddenly, all those rebels who had flooded past Buck turned and came
back. Shouts resounded: "Not the Wailing Wall!" "Not the Wall!"
"Sacrifice yourselves!" "Fight to the death!"
The word spread throughout the Jewish Quarter and into the center of
the Old City, and instantly hundreds became thousands. Buck joined the
fray. They charged the GC, shooting, throwing rocks, fighting hand to
hand. The rebels overcame those on the battering ram and turned it back
toward the Dung Gate.
As more and more rebels joined, at least for that brief skirmish, the
Jews had the Unity Army on the run. They pushed the battering ram up to
the Dung Gate, chased out the army, and managed to shut the gate with
the ram inside. Great cheers rose, and so, it seemed, did the
rebellion's confidence. Someone assigned a large group to guard the
gate, while others were sent to the Golden and Lion's Gates on the east
side.
Buck's phone chirped. "Tsion! Where are you? I tried to call you!"
"My phone is dead. I am borrowing this one. Is it true the rebels
turned the army away from the Dung Gate?"
"Yes! I'm here now! Where shall we meet?"
"Do you know the Church of the Flagellation?"
"Near the Muslim Quarter?"
"Just west of there, yes!" Tsion said. "Hurry! I have lost the
brothers."
----------
"You know we've always been protected in the airspace around here,"
Rayford said as he lifted off.
"I'd rather not test that," Sebastian said. "Just straight up and give
me a three-sixty so I can see if the horses are where I want them. Then
straight back down."
"Oh no!" Rayford said. "Incoming!"
"What?"
A missile was streaking right at the chopper. Rayford tried to evade
it, knowing that was hopeless. A whirly-bird simply didn't have the
maneuverability or speed to dodge a missile.
"My idea and a bad one, George. Sorry."
"Just stay away from the city, Ray!"
Rayford had toyed with the idea of dropping onto a high place, but if
the missile tracked him, it could injure or kill more than just the two
of them.
He banked and let the chopper roll out past where Petra troops were
stationed, which only brought him face-to-face with the missile that
much faster.
"Sorry, Priscilla," Rayford muttered, shutting his eyes as the warhead
met the chopper.
----------
It didn't make sense to Buck that he should get to the rendezvous point
before Tsion, despite the difference in their ages. Buck figured Tsion
had started from at least twice as close. He searched the crowded
church, but once again, no Tsion. This was getting old.
"Herod's Gate!" someone shouted, and hundreds of rebels headed toward
the northernmost gate in the city. It was amazing to see the zeal in
their eyes when their ancient holy sites were threatened. That had to
be where Tsion went too. Buck couldn't think of another option.
It was just over an eighth of a mile from the church, but there was no
running this time. Buck found himself pressed on all sides,
wall-to-wall rebels. Maybe it was for the best. He was exhausted
already, and his pulse raced uncontrollably.
He couldn't call Tsion if the rabbi's phone was dead. All he could
think to do was bend his knees occasionally and leap high enough to see
over the crowd.
But when he spotted Tsion Ben-Judah, he didn't like where he found him.
TWENTY-ONE
THE CHOPPER shuddered and stayed on course. "Thought we were goners,"
Rayford said. "I never get used to that."
"Where'd that missile go?"
"Right through us, as usual."
"Nothing usual about that," Sebastian said. He scanned the horizon.
"Over there."
Rayford saw a plume of black smoke about a mile south of Petra.
"They may have hit their own people!" George said and got on his radio.
"Big Dog 1 to southern perimeter, over."
"Mac here, Dog. What was that?"
"Just missed us. What did it do?"
"Found one of their transports just beyond the equestrian line. Had to
have some casualties. They look pretty exercised."
"Wait till they find out it was friendly fire. Attention all DEW
operators, open fire immediately!" George ordered.
Within seconds, the black rim of horses and horsemen surrounding Petra
disintegrated, and steeds charged away in all directions.
"A masterpiece, George," Rayford said. "Well done."
"Some of that horse meat is probably well done. Hey, Ray, did I hear
you mention my wife's name when we were about to
buy it?"
"Guilty."
"What's that about?"
"I told her I'd look out for you as much as was possible."
"And that's your idea of looking out for me?"
"As much as was possible. What say we bounce back up and see if we can
get them to shoot at us again, maybe take out
some more of their
munitions on the other side?"
"Not funny, Rayford."
----------
Every time Buck leaped over the heads of the crowd, he caught sight of
Tsion being borne along on the shoulders of zealots. He wanted to
scream at them to put him down, but no one would be able to hear above
the din. What were they trying to do, get him killed? Maybe they saw
him as a hero. Maybe they thought by getting him to the head of the
pack he could inspire the troops. Regardless, it was insanity.
Buck lowered his shoulder and bulled his way through until he was
almost up to Tsion. "Hey!" he shouted. "Hey! Put him down!"
"He will lead us to victory!"
"He is our leader!"
"Well, he's my responsibility, and you're going to get him killed!"
Buck grabbed Tsion's ankle, which slowed the crowd, and as they lost
their grip, Tsion tumbled headfirst. Buck dived beneath him to break
his fall, and now both of them were being trampled. It was
providential, however, as Unity Army troops had scaled the wall above
Herod's Gate and opened fire. Rebels fell all around Tsion and Buck,
heads slamming the ground, blood spattering.
Buck wrapped his arms around Tsion's head and buried his own, waiting
out the fusillade. With the zing of bullets ricocheting and the
explosion of the pavement around him, he tensed for the killing round
that would hit his or Tsion's head or neck or spine.
But they were spared.
When the burst let up, Buck dragged Tsion to his feet and hustled him
toward the legendary healing pool of Bethesda. "I was not hit, Cameron!
No need for healing!"
Millimeters from death and the rabbi jokes.
----------
Rayford and George landed and were racing down to George's post via
ATV. "They've got to retaliate," Rayford said. "What form will that
take, and what do we do?"
"They've got mortar launchers in range. I want to see if the riders can
persuade their horses to return. If they can't, that's going to be
chaos. The key is keeping them out of the Siq. I don't want a one of
'em thinking he can infiltrate this place."
"You'd think Carpathia would have learned his lesson. Imagine how much
money he wasted trying to get at us here," Rayford said.
"Yeah, but every military commander thinks he's better than anybody
else, so whoever's in charge of this offensive is going to have to
learn for himself."
"The DEWs and his own missile should have taught him something."
"Should have," George said. "But you can bet he'll try everything in
his arsenal before he gives up."
"What would be the hardest to defend against?"
"Sheer numbers. When they start rolling this way, we're going to be
chased back inside."
"Where, so far, it's been safe."
"True. But retreating is not my idea of warfare. That missile was God's
protection, but wasn't it fun to attack with the directed energy
weapons?"
A young woman gestured frantically from a small cave-like structure
near the pools, and Buck hustled Tsion to her. "There is room for two
more," she said.
As they pushed their way in to safety, Buck realized about twenty
others were in the echoing chamber. "Is it the rabbi?" someone called
out.
"I am here," Tsion said.
"Praise God. When do you expect Messiah?"
"Actually, I expected him about five minutes ago. Or maybe I should say
he should have been expecting me."
"I want to believe he is coming to save the day and rescue us.
"He is if you are ready," Tsion said.
"I am ready. I just want to be alive when he gets here."
"So do I," Tsion said. "But we did not choose the best place to ensure
that, did we?"
"What is this talk of Messiah?" someone grumbled. "We have been waiting
for him to rescue us for generations."
Tsion ran through his teaching as fast as he could. Three of the
terrified men and the young woman prayed to accept Jesus as Messiah,
but the skeptic did not. "When he comes," he said, "I will believe."
"`Blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed,"' Tsion
said.
The gunfire suddenly ceased. Buck peered out past the woman. Was this
it? Had Messiah returned and saved the day?
Young men raced by, screaming. "We have won! We have won! They are
pulling back! The gates are secure!"
"Wait! It's a trap! Don't believe it! They are just regrouping!"
Buck and Tsion's bunker mates piled out and warily looked around,
weapons at the ready. "I don't like it," someone said.
"They have bombs
that could annihilate us. What are they doing?"
"Toying with us."
"We should go on the offensive! Open the gates and attack! Kill them
while they are retreating."
"They are not retreating. This is a trap. They want us to open the
gates. We should regroup while they are regrouping. Be ready for them."
There was a lull at Petra too, and Rayford took a call from Mac
McCullum. "Can you and Razor spare me a minute, George?" Rayford said.
"Mac wants me to come and see something."
It was half an hour's ride by all-terrain vehicle to get to Mac, and
when Rayford arrived, Mac was studying the enemy through powerful field
glasses. "You know they can see us plain as day by now, Ray, just like
we can see them. What are they waitin' on?"
He handed Rayford the binoculars. "Looks like they've got most of the
horses under control. That must have been a mess. And I know, Ray, that
our DEWs caused the stampede. But what's making them squirrelly now? I
don't get it."
Rayford studied the enemy in the distance. It didn't appear it was as
simple as horses being shy of where they had been burned. They weren't
even close to that. It was more like the riders could not get the
horses to do anything they wanted them to.
"It reminds me of a verse, Ray. Something Tsion taught us. What was it?"
"I don't recall. Want to ask him? I need to check in on him and Buck
anyway."
The silence was more than eerie. Buck and Tsion moved close to the wall
by Herod's Gate. Buck answered the phone and handed it to Tsion.
"Yes, here too," Tsion said. "I have the strange feeling it is the lull
before the storm. Horses? Yes. Zechariah 12:4: "`In that day," says the
Lord, "I will strike every horse with confusion, and its rider with
madness; I will open My eyes on the house of Judah, and will strike
every horse of the peoples with blindness."' You know, Mac, that may be
what has happened here too."
As soon as Tsion was off the phone, people around him wanted to know
what he was talking about. He told them.
"Let's check it out," one said. "The rabbi believes the Unity Army is
blind or mad."
"Could be," Tsion said. "That is the only explanation I can think of
for what is going on."
Some of the younger men boosted each other and began climbing. Two
reached the top of the wall. "I see nothing! They're hiding, maybe."
"Rabbi! Teach us some more."
Buck looked to Tsion, who shrugged. "That is why I came. If they want
to listen, I want to preach."
As soon as he began, curious crowds gathered again. And as Buck watched
and listened, he was overcome with the privilege of being where he was
and when it was. He sensed he could see Jesus at any time. And Chloe.
To hear God's man in God's place at God's time-what an unspeakable
privilege. Scared? Of course he was. Wondering if Jesus would really
come when he said he would? Not even a question. Buck couldn't wait. He
just couldn't wait.
----------
Back with George, Rayford was out of ideas. "Don't ask me," he said.
"If you want to fire the Fifties, fire them."
"I know we could kill horses and men from this distance and take out a
few of their vehicles," George said. "But I also know that would bring
return fire. I'm not concerned about inside the city. But I'm afraid
we're vulnerable out here at the perimeter."
"What would be the purpose of going on the offensive when you know you
can't win?"
"Exactly. But I just hate sitting here, waiting for stuff to happen. We
need to make something happen." "Fire a Fifty or two and plenty will
happen."
One of the young men on the wall interrupted Tsion, yelling, "They're
raising some kind of a giant bullhorn. Maybe they want
to negotiate."
"You don't want to negotiate with the devil," Tsion said, and the crowd
roared.
"Maybe he's offering a truce!"
"A truce," Tsion said, "is worth the character of the man on the other
side of the table."
"Attention, people of Jerusalem! This is your supreme potentate!"
"Boo! Boo! Our only potentate is the God of Israel!"
"Shut up! Hear him out!"
"Please listen, citizens. I come in peace."
"No! You come with weapons!"
"Come, let us reason together!"
"Listen. Shh! Listen to him!"
"I come to offer pardon. I am willing to compromise. I wish you no ill.
If you are willing to serve me and be obedient, you shall eat the good
of the land; but if you refuse and rebel, you shall be devoured by the
sword. I will rid myself of my adversaries and take vengeance on my
enemies. I will turn my hand against you and thoroughly purge you.
"But it does not have to be this way, citizens of the Global Community.
If you will lay down your arms and welcome me into your city, I will
guarantee your peace and safety.
"This will be your sign to me. If at the count of three I hear silence
for fifteen seconds, I will assume you are willing to accede to my
requests. A single gunshot into the air during that time will be your
signal that you would rather oppose me. But I warn you, half of
Jerusalem is in captivity already. The entire city could be overthrown
easily within an hour. The choice is yours at the count of three."
But before Carpathia could utter the first number, thousands of weapons
fired into the air, including Buck's and Tsion's.
----------
The enemy's attempt to control the horses and surround Petra was still
not working. Rayford stood on a precipice and watched through
binoculars as more Unity vehicles were deployed. The horizon was full
of dust and smoke, and the mass of munitions and hardware looked like a
black, roiling mass, filling his vision and oozing toward him like lava.
"I'm going to let them advance only so far," George said. "Then it's
DEWs again and fifty-calibers."
"Like trying to dam a tsunami with BBs," Rayford said.
When the shooting stopped in Jerusalem, the ghostly silence returned.
The One World Unity Army did not immediately attack, but Buck almost
wished they had. The quiet was disquieting. He feared the next sound
would be the proverbial freight train that tornado victims always
mentioned, only this twister would consist of an unending horde of
marauders who would stomp Jerusalem to dust.
But if that's what it took to usher in Jesus, well, bring it on.
Strangely, the crowd wanted to hear more from Tsion, and Buck was
impressed that the rabbi was ready. "It is not too late!" Tsion cried.
"Make your stand for Messiah now! Repent, choose, and be saved!" And
many did.
Now even Sebastian seemed alarmed. The massive flow of horses, men, and
weaponry advancing toward Petra was so enormous that as it spread and
separated and filled in again, it blocked out the horizon, the desert
sands, the rocks.
It was as if a cloud of locusts were blotting out the sun. No human
could have imagined the scope of the enemy. They had somehow rallied,
somehow overcome their madness and blindness, somehow broken out of
their lull. And here they came.
They fanned out and flanked Petra on all sides, slowly filling in as
far as the eye could see. And while their front lines were still
a mile
or so from the perimeter, there was no end to the swarm. The eye could
not reach the back of column after column after column of millions
strong that kept coming and coming and coming.
And when they were in place, they merely stopped and waited. For what
was anybody's guess. But even when they stopped, there was no gap, no
holes in their coverage, no end of their ranks.
"That, Rayford," Sebastian said, "is just a whole lot of army. If every
one of our weapons fired every one of its bullets and each one was a
flat-out kill, we wouldn't put a dent in that wave."
"What do you think about riding out there about a half mile and seeing
if you can smoke a peace pipe with somebody?"
"You watch too much TV, Captain."
"Seriously, how about another round of DEW rays? See if we can push 'em
back a bit."
"If I thought they'd react like dominoes I would. There really isn't
far for them to go, because they'll run into their own replacements.
Think we can get millions to stampede?"
Rayford shook his head. "I wouldn't mind seeing what that would do to
them. Maybe they wouldn't be so eager to get closer."
"But, Ray, there's so many of them."
----------
Tsion was still holding forth when a sound like a bomb shook the area,
and people scattered for cover. Within seconds came the report that a
second battering ram had penetrated the Old City. This time the Unity
Army had eschewed any gate and had broken through the north-eastern
wall of the Old City, about halfway between the Lion's Gate and the
northeast corner.
Hundreds of Jewish rebels raced toward the site, and to Buck's dismay
Tsion took off behind them, not even discussing options. Buck had no
choice but to follow, trying to catch Tsion in the melee. By the time
he caught up, the battle was in full swing, and amazingly, the Jews
seemed to have the upper hand again. They were pushing the army back,
and fierce hand-to-hand combat over the battering ram almost saw it
fall into rebel hands again.
Just as the rebellion was forcing the army back through the wall,
several on the Unity front line turned and opened fire with
high-powered automatic weapons, a grenade launcher, and what looked to
Buck like a bazooka. He joined in returning fire, and the invasion was
briefly squelched, but he was horrified to see more than a hundred dead
or wounded Israelis all around him. He wondered how close he had come
to deadly fire himself.
The hole in the wall seemed to be secure for the moment, so Buck turned
to grab Tsion and pull him back toward the Bethesda pool. But the rabbi
was on his knees, feet tucked awkwardly beneath him. His Uzi had
slipped off his shoulder, the strap near his elbow now, the weapon
dragging.
Buck grabbed the shoulder of his jacket to help him up, but when he
pulled, Tsion pivoted on one knee and flopped to the pavement. "Tsion!
Come on! Let's go!"
But he was a deadweight.
"Are you all right?" Buck demanded, turning Tsion's face toward him.
"I do not think so, friend."
"Are you hit?"
"I am afraid I am."
"Where?"
"I am not sure."
"Can you move?"
"No."
"Can I move you?"
"Please. You had better try."
Buck didn't have time to even think about being fancy. He grabbed
Tsion's weapon and strapped it on his left shoulder, then got around
behind the rabbi's head and thrust both hands under his arms. He bent
his knees and lifted, walking backward, dragging the older man through
the streets. He was grateful the shooting had stopped, if only
temporarily.
Buck was cramping, having pulled his friend about an eighth of a mile,
but he didn't want to stop until they were safe in the little chamber
he remembered at Bethesda. He kept looking behind him to make sure the
way was clear, but when he turned back he realized Tsion was also
leaving a thick trail of blood.
Buck stopped to rest and check Tsion. He hurried around and opened the
man's jacket. There he found the source of blood. Tsion could not have
been shot in the heart or he would be dead already. But he had lost a
lot of blood, which had flowed from near his sternum, down his belly,
under his jacket, over his crotch, and into the street.
Tsion was pale, and his eyes threatened to roll back in his head. Buck
leaned close to hear his shallow breathing.
"Stay with me, friend," he said.
"Let me go, Cameron. Find shelter. I could do worse than die in the
streets of my beloved city."
"You're not going to die, Tsion. You're going to hang on to see this
victory, all right?"
"I wish."
"Don't wish! Work with me!"
Buck whipped off his jacket and his shirt, rolled up his shirt, and
stuffed it into the wound. The hole was nearly the size of Buck's fist.
"I have to get you to shelter," he said. "You up for a few more feet?"
"I am feeling nothing anymore, Cameron. You go. Please."
"I will not leave you here."
"Come, come. I will not be here long. We both know that."
"I'm taking you to the shelter."
"Do not do it for my sake."
"Then for mine."
Buck knew he was doing Tsion no good. The shirt popped out, and a great
mass of blood gushed. Tsion moaned. Life seemed to be escaping him. His
eyes were watery and pale, his lips blue. He had begun to shake all
over.
Buck wrestled him into the shelter and tried stanching the blood flow
again, but Tsion reached for him with weak, fluttery hands. He finally
got hold of one of Buck's hands and pulled it toward him.
"Do not, friend. Please. It is too late."
"I don't want to lose you here, Tsion!"
"Come close," he whispered. "Listen to me." He was rasping now, taking
labored breaths between words.
"I can say ... with Paul, `I am already ... being poured out ... as a
drink offering, and the time of my departure is at hand.... I have
fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the
faith.... Finally, there is laid up for me ... the crown of
righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, will give to me on
that Day, and not to me only ... but also to all who have loved His
appearing."'
"Tsion, don't! Stay with me!"
"Cameron ... because of Jesus ... my wife and children ... forev-"
----------
Sebastian had ordered another round from the DEWs, and Rayford had to
admit it was something to watch as the front line of the pervasive mass
fell back in agony, and the ripple effect could be seen for miles.
Razor had the fifty-calibers ready in the event of a counterattack, but
none came. That just made things weirder. The city of refuge, a million
strong, sat like a pea in the middle of an ocean of enemies that seemed
waiting to squash it.
Rayford's phone chirped, and he saw on the readout it was Buck. "Talk
to me."
Buck's voice was thick. "He's gone." "Tsion?"
"Hit in the chest. Nothing I could do."
"You need to get back here, Buck. We'll send somebody."
"They'll never get in, and I can't leave him."
"Buck! Come on. He's gone. I hate it too, but like you said, there was
nothing you could do, and certainly nothing you can do now."
"Nobody could get in here, and I can't imagine getting out."
"You all right?"
"Didn't foresee this, frankly."
"Keep your phone handy. No sense doing anything foolish now. We've got
to be very close to the end."
Buck crossed Tsion's feet at the ankles. He closed his jacket over the
death wound and pulled Tsion's hands together, interlocking the fingers
at his waist. Buck smoothed Tsion's hair, closed his eyes, and took a
last look at his face. "You almost made it, friend," he said. He draped
his jacket over Tsion's torso and face.
Brandishing both Uzis now, he headed for Herod's Gate, where two young
rebels seemed to have a decent vantage point. It wasn't the safest
spot, and it sure didn't fit Rayford's advice of not doing anything
foolish. But Buck didn't know what else to do.
----------
Mac was on the phone from the other side of the perimeter. "Rayford,
if I was to ask Sebastian to lend you to us, you think that would be
doable?"
"He'd probably be glad to get rid of me. Let me ask."
"What's he need?" George said.
"Mac? Sebastian wants to know what for."
"Don't want to say."
"That's not going to cut it with him; you know that."
"I'm supposed to tell him the truth?"
"Never hurts."
Mac whispered, "I need somebody to talk to. Smitty's about two hundred
yards to the west, and Otto's drivin' me bats. Plus, for real, we could
use some manpower here. Like I could use an ATV to check on my troops,
east and west. You got as many Carpathia troops out your way as we do
back here?"
"There's no end to them, Mac."
"I'm countin' on Jesus real soon. But in the meantime, could you come?"
TWENTY-TWO
GETTING TO THE top of the wall of the Old City, particularly by Herod's
Gate, was no easy task. Buck didn't feel that old, but the two rebels
already there were at least fifteen years younger. They nodded to him
and pointed in the distance.
Unity Army troops were amassing on Jericho Road, on Suleiman Street,
and in the garden where the traditional site of Jesus' tomb lay. Foot
soldiers stretched as far as Buck could see-from the Rockefeller Museum
on his right to the Church of St. Stephen past the garden, even as far
as Hel Ha Handasa.
He and the two rebels were in plain sight, but the enemy seemed content
to let them stay there. Buck wondered if Christ would return only in
the middle of an active siege, or if he might appear any moment. He
hoped the Remnant at Petra would not even have to know about Tsion
until after the Glorious Appearing.
Buck worried about the troops behind the Rockefeller Museum. They
seemed quieter, more clandestine than the others. And they were harder
to see. He detected movement, but it was not hurried. He would have to
keep an eye on that area.
Buck watched the sky. At the coming of Jesus he expected a heavy cloud
cover to roll in, the sun to go dark, the earth to convulse. All that
could happen in an instant, he knew, and when he allowed himself to
dwell on it, the atmosphere seemed to crackle with tension.
----------
Sebastian told Rayford to "go ahead and hold Mac's hand. I swear,
sometimes he's like an old woman. But let him wait. Go see Chang on
your way. You can go up and in and then down and out and avoid the long
way around."
"What's Chang need?"
"Just buck him up. The way he was talking to me the last few days, it
was obvious he'd rather be out here than in the tech center. Tell him
how crucial he is to us, all that. 'Course it's true, you know."
The route Sebastian suggested was tougher than Rayford expected. He had
become fairly proficient on the machine, but the terrain was
treacherous. He used the brake and lower gears more than ever and a
couple of times found himself in rock formations that didn't allow him
through. He had to put the ATV in neutral, ease back down, and try an
other route.
By the time he got to the tech center, he was exhausted and glad to
have a break.
A lot of quiet talk and planning seemed to be going on inside the Old
City. Buck noticed several groups of particularly young rebels making
their way toward the walls. He liked his perch and what he could see,
but he wasn't so sure it was a good idea to put the front lines up top
all the way around. And the more he watched, the clearer it became that
that was precisely the decision someone had come to.
There was still a good strike force in the center of the city as well,
but it was made up of the older men and some women. The prime fighting
men, the teenagers and those in their early twenties, were taking their
places at the top of the wall. Something about it niggled at the back
of Buck's brain. There was a vulnerability about it, an all-or-nothing
quality. He liked the idea of having options, but that was just for
himself. He wasn't charged with defending the whole place.
Chang had resigned himself to his role, but still he appreciated
Rayford's comments and the fact that he had taken the time to stop in.
Naomi came by, and the three sat before Chang's screen.
"We all believe the Millennium starts soon," Rayford said. "No later
than tomorrow. That's why it's important the populace here not know
what's happened to Tsion."
"Tsion?"
"He was killed."
"No!"
Rayford told what he had heard from Buck. Naomi hid her face in her
hands, and while Chang wanted to comfort her, he too was overcome. "And
Buck is all right?"
"So far, but they were in a very precarious location, and Buck still
is."
"Can we get him out?"
"Wouldn't be worth the risk. He's pretty self-sufficient. Like
everybody else, he's trying to keep Jews alive and, of course, himself,
until the event the world has been anticipating for thousands of years."
Chang pointed to the screen, and they watched the latest GCNN newscast.
----------
"Global Community Supreme Potentate Nicolae J. Carpathia has assembled
the largest army in the history of mankind. As you can see in this
aerial view, the One World Unity Army consists of all the soldiers,
livestock, rolling stock, and munitions available anywhere. The
fighting force of untold millions covers the plains of Israel from the
Plain of Megiddo in the north to Bozrah in Edom in the south and
stretches east to west almost the entire breadth of what was once known
as the Holy Land.
"The ground forces are supported by air bases as far away as Cyprus and
by aircraft carriers in the Mediterranean Sea, and troop transport
ships in both the Gulf of Suez and the Gulf of Aqaba off the Red Sea.
"At this hour one-third of Carpathia's forces have surrounded Petra in
Edom to the southeast in Jordan, hide-out of the Judah-ite rebels.
Global Community Security and Intelligence Director Suhail Akbar says
Tsion Ben-Judah himself is ensconced at that location, and while the
goal of the Unity Army is annihilation, there may be value in taking
the leader alive.
"The other two-thirds of the Unity Army is poised to overtake the city
of Jerusalem. Potentate Carpathia himself reports that nearly half the
city has been occupied and that it is just a matter of time before the
Old City is overrun.
"Earlier today in a press conference held while on horseback, the
potentate was upbeat about the potential outcome."
Carpathia's face appeared on the monitor. "We are confident that these
are the last two rebel enclaves in the world," he said, "and that once
they have been thoroughly defeated and our enemies scattered, we will
realize what we have so long dreamed of: an entire world of peace and
harmony. There is no place in a true global community for rebellion. If
our government was anything but benevolent or did not have the attitude
of `citizen first,' there might be cause for dissention. But all we
have ever attempted to do was create a utopia for society.
"It is most unfortunate that it comes to this, that we have to resort
to bloodshed to achieve our goals. But we will do what we have to do."
Someone asked, "Doesn't the size of your global army seem like
overkill?"
"An excellent question," Carpathia cooed, his leathers squeaking as he
reset himself on his horse. "No effort in the cause of world peace is
wasted. The rebel factions have proved surprisingly formidable. We have
decided at the highest levels to be sure we leave nothing to chance
this time. We will use whatever we need, everything that is at our
disposal, to succeed."
"Is there any truth to the speculation that you are overarmed in
anticipation of running into surprising support for the opposition,
that perhaps their God might intervene on their behalf?"
Carpathia chuckled. "I do not worry about fairy tales, but even if they
did have supernatural help, they would be no match for our fighting
machine. By our numbers alone, even unarmed, we could win any war by
continuing to replenish our ranks. But we also happen to be fully
equipped with the best and latest technology."
"Why not win this war all at once? What's the delay?"
"I am a man of peace. I always believe first in diplomacy and
negotiation. The window of opportunity for settling this peacefully is
always open. I had hoped that the enemies of peace would be persuaded
by our size and would come to the bargaining table. But our patience is
running out. They seem markedly uninterested in any reasonable
solution, and we are prepared to use any means necessary. So it is just
a matter of time now."
----------
By midday, with the sun riding high, Buck was famished. He gingerly
made his way down from the wall when volunteers brought foodstuffs in
for the fighters. He gulped fruit and bread and cheese, and climbed up
again. The army seemed to be taking a lunch break too. Buck wished the
rebels had larger weapons. Maybe a surprise attack would do some
damage. On the other hand, a sleeping giant was a gentler giant, and
perhaps it made sense to leave things as they were.
He hated the idea of just waiting for the other side to attack, but
with the front lines atop the wall now, at least that wouldn't be a
surprise when it came.
Rayford started down the back side of Petra, finding it even more
harrowing than coming up. He had stayed with Chang and Naomi a little
longer than he had planned, so he assumed Mac would be looking for him
and that George thought he had already arrived.
From his vantage point he had a good view of the army a mile off. He
was reaching for his phone to reassure Mac when it became clear
something had happened. The front lines were recoiling again, so George
must have initiated another burst of the directed energy weapons.
This time, however, despite the ensuing chaos, the Unity Army didn't
take it sitting down. Rayford heard the booms of retaliatory fire, like
thunder from a storm head a hundred miles wide. He knew enough about
munitions to know that Carpathia's forces were a little far away to be
using the mortar cannons and shooting at high angles. He guessed the
shells would drop short of the Petra perimeter.
He was wrong. Maybe their cannons were bigger than the typical unrifled
short barrels. The shells flew past the perimeter and began dropping
all around him. When one exploded right in front of him, Rayford was
nearly pitched off the ATV. Grabbing for the handlebar with his free
hand, he saw his phone go flying, bouncing a hundred yards down the
rocky steep.
And now his vehicle was out of control. He bounced high off the seat
and realized he was soaring through the air with only his hands
attached to the ATV. He came down hard, and the contraption bounced and
rolled side-ways. To hang on or not was the only thing on his mind, and
quickly that option was gone too. The four-wheeler hit yet again,
ripping his grip away. As he bounced and rolled, he kept picking up the
sight of the vehicle disinte-grating as it smashed into rocks all the
way into a valley.
Rayford reminded himself not to try to break his own fall. He tucked
hands and arms in and tried to relax, fighting his natural instinct for
all he was worth. The grade was too steep and his speed too fast to
control himself. The best he could wish for was a soft landing place.
A shell deafened him from about ten feet to his right, knocking him
into a sideways roll. Rayford felt his temple smash into a sharp rock
and was aware of what sounded like rushing water as he rolled toward
thorny overgrowth. Scary as the thorns looked, they had to be softer
than what he had been hitting.
Rayford was able to shift his body weight as he slowed and backed into
the thorns. It was then he realized what the liquid sound was. With
each beat of his heart, galloping now, his life's blood spurted six
feet from the wound in his temple.
He pressed his palm hard against his head and felt the gush against his
hand. He pressed with all his might and felt he might be containing it
somewhat. But Rayford was in danger now-mortal danger. No one knew
exactly where he was. He was without communications or transportation.
He didn't even want to inventory his injuries, because regardless, they
were minor compared to the hole in his head. He had to get help-and
fast-or he would be dead in minutes.
Rayford's arms were gashed, and he felt sharp pains in both knees and
one ankle. He reached with his free hand to pull up his pant leg and
wished he hadn't. Not only had something sliced the flesh from his
ankle, but some-thing had taken part of the bone too.
Could he walk? Dare he try? He was too far from any-where to crawl. He
waited for his pulse to abate and for his equilibrium to return. He had
to be a mile from Mac and his people, and he could not see them. There
was no going back up. He rolled up onto his feet, squatting, one hand
desperately trying to keep himself from bleeding to death.
Rayford tried to stand. Only one leg worked, and it was the one with
the nearly totaled ankle. He may have broken a shinbone in the other.
He tried to hop, but the incline was so great, he found himself
pitching forward again. And now he was out of control one more time,
trying to hop to keep from falling but picking up speed with every
bounce. Whatever he did, he could not take his hand from his temple,
and he dared not land on one more hard thing. "Lord, now would be a
most appropriate time for you to come."
Chang sensed something was about to give. He had succeeded in
intercepting signals from geosynchronous satellites that supported
communications among the millions of troops. They were about to move,
and his key people needed to know.
He called George. "Expect an advance within sixty seconds," he said.
"We've already been shelled," George yelled.
"You mean more than that?"
"Yes, they will be coming."
"Rayford see you?"
"Left a little while ago. On his way to see Mac."
"Thanks. Call Mac, would you? I'll inform the others."
Chang called and told Mac the same.
"Hey," Mac said, "I can't raise Sebastian, and Ray is overdue."
"On his way," Chang said.
He called Buck. "Expect ad-"
But he was cut off. He redialed. Nothing.
"They're coming! They're coming!"
----------
Buck heard a young rebel shrieking just as his phone chirped and he saw
an incendiary device hurled over the Rockefeller Museum, right at his
position. He saw Unity Army troop movement from every side, and he
grabbed his phone and held it up to his ear just as the bomb hit the
wall right in front of him and clattered to the ground outside.
He recognized Chang's voice just before the bomb blew a hole in the
wall. Rock and shrapnel slammed his whole right side, killed his phone,
and made him drop one Uzi. He felt something give way in his hip and
his neck as his perch disintegrated.
One of the young boys near him had been blown into the air and
cartwheeled to the pavement. Buck was determined to ride the wall as it
fell. He reached for his neck and felt a torrent of blood. He was no
medical student, but he could tell something had sliced his carotid
artery-no small problem.
As the wall crumbled, he danced and high-stepped to stay upright, but
he had to keep a hand on his neck. The remaining Uzi slid down into his
left hand, but when he stabbed it into something to keep his balance,
it fell away. He was unarmed, falling, and mortally wounded.
And the enemy was coming.
----------
Rayford could break his fall only with his free hand, not daring to
take pressure off his temple. His chin took as much of the brunt as the
heel of his hand as he slid at what he guessed was a forty-five-degree
angle. There would be no walking. All he could do was crawl now and try
to stay alive.
Buck's feet caught in a crevasse of shifting rock, and his upper body
flopped forward. He was hanging upside down from the crumbling wall
over the Old City. His hip was torn and bleeding too, and blood rushed
to his head.
Even inside the tech center of a city made of rock, Chang felt the
vibration of the millions of soldiers advancing on Petra. He was
clicking here and there, flipping switches, and trying to make calls.
How far would God let this go before sending the conquering King?
Fighting unconsciousness, he tried gingerly edging along, one hand
ahead of him, the other occupied. Each inch made the angle seem
steeper, the way more unstable. With every beat of his heart, every
rush of blood, every stab of pain, he wondered what was the use. How
important was it to stay alive? For what? For whom? "Come, Lord Jesus."
Dizziness overwhelmed, pain stabbed. A lung had to be punctured. His
breath came in wheezes, agonizing, piercing. The first hint of the end
was the crazy rhythm of his heart. Racing, then skipping, then
fluttering. Too much blood loss. Not enough to the brain. Not enough
oxygen. Drowsiness overtook panic. Unconsciousness would be such a
relief.
And so he allowed it. The lung was ready to burst. The heart fluttered
and stopped. The pulsing blood became a pool.
He saw nothing through wide-open eyes. "Lord, please." He heard the
approach of the enemy. He felt it. But soon he felt nothing. With no
blood pumping, no air moving, he fell limp and died.
EPILOGUE
Immediately after the tribulation of
those days the sun will be
darkened, and the moon will not give its light; the stars will fall
from heaven, and the powers of the heavens will be shaken.
Then the sign of the Son of Man will
appear in heaven, and then all the
tribes of the earth will mourn, and they will see the Son of Man coming
on the clouds of heaven with power and great glory.
Matthew
24:29-30
END