NOTE FROM THE HISTORICAL RECORD
NOTE FROM THE SCIENTIFIC RECORD
AUTHOR'S NOTE: TRUTH OR FICTION
This
book was
copied right, in
the dark, by
Illuminati.
About The
e-Book:
TITLE: Black Order
AUTHOR: Rollins,
ABEB Version: 2.0
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Black
Order
TO DAVID,
for
all the adventures
Novel
writing, despite the time spent alone with the blank page, is a collaborative
process. There are scores of people whose fingerprints are all over this book.
First, let me especially acknowledge Penny Hill, for the long lunches, the
thoughtful commentary, but mostly for her friendship. And the same goes for
Carolyn McCray, who still kicks my butt to challenge me to stretch a little
further. Then, of course, I'm honored to acknowledge my friends who meet every
other week at
In
the last months of World War II, as
But the Germans did not give up their
technology easily. They also fought to secure their secrets in the hopes of a
rebirth of the Reich. Scientists were murdered, research labs destroyed, and
blueprints hidden in caves, sunk to the bottom of lakes, and buried in crypts.
All to keep them from the Allies.
The search became daunting. Nazi research
and weapons labs numbered in the hundreds, many underground, spread across
The Russian forces were the first to reach
the mine. It was deserted. All sixty-two scientists involved in the project had
been shot. As for the device itself
it had vanished to God knows where.
All that is known for sure: the
Life is stranger than any fiction. All the
discussions raised in this novel about quantum mechanics, intelligent design,
and evolution are based on facts.
The fact that evolution is the backbone
of biology, and biology is thus in the peculiar position of being a science founded
on an improved theory is it then a science or faith?
CHARLES DARWIN
Science without religion is lame,
religion without science is blind.
ALBERT EINSTEIN
Who says I am not under the special
protection of God?
ADOLF HITLER
MAY 4
6:22 A.M.
FORTRESS
The
body floated in the sludge that sluiced through the dank sewers. The corpse of
a boy, bloated and rat gnawed, had been stripped of boots, pants, and shirt.
Nothing went to waste in the besieged city.
SS
Obergruppenführer Jakob
Sporrenberg nudged past the corpse, stirring the filth. Offal and excrement.
Blood and bile. The wet scarf tied around his nose and mouth did little to ward
off the stench. This was what the great war had come to. The mighty reduced to
crawling through sewers to escape. But he had his orders.
Overhead the double crump-wump of Russian artillery pummeled
the city. Each explosion bruised his gut with its concussive shock. The
Russians had broken down the gates, bombed the airport, and even now, tanks
ground down the cobbled streets while transport carriers landed on Kaiserstrasse. The main thoroughfare had been converted
into a landing strip by parallel rows of flaming oil barrels, adding their
smoke to the already choked early morning skies, keeping dawn at bay. Fighting
waged in every street, in every home, from attic to basement.
Every
house a fortress.
That had been Gauleiter Hanke's
final command to the populace. The city had to hold out as long as possible.
The future of the Third Reich depended on it.
And on Jakob Sporrenberg.
"Mach
schnell," he urged the others behind him.
His unit of the Sicherheitsdienst designation
Special Evacuation Kommando
trailed him, knee-deep in filthy water. Fourteen men. All armed. All dressed
in black. All burdened with heavy packs. In the middle, four of the largest
men, former Nordsee
dockmen, bore poles on their shoulders, bearing aloft
massive crates.
There was a reason the Russians were
striking this lone city deep in the
Die
Riese
the Giant.
But word had still spread. Perhaps one of
the villagers outside the Wenceslas Mine had whispered of the illness, the
sudden malaise that had afflicted even those well outside the complex.
If only they'd had more time to complete
the research
Still, a part of Jakob Sporrenberg
balked. He didn't know all that was involved with the secret project, mostly
just the code name: Chronos. Still, he knew enough.
He had seen the bodies used in the experiments. He had heard the screams.
Abomination.
That was the one word that had come to
mind and iced his blood.
He'd had no trouble executing the scientists.
The sixty-two men and women had been taken outside and shot twice in the head.
No one must know what had transpired in the depths of the Wenceslas Mine
or
what was found. Only one researcher was allowed to live.
Doktor
Tola Hirszfeld.
Jakob heard her sloshing behind him, half
dragged by one of his men, wrists secured behind her back. She was tall for a
woman, late twenties, small breasted but of ample waist and shapely legs. Her
hair flowed smooth and black, her skin as pale as milk from the months spent
underground. She was to have been killed with the others, but her father, Oberarbeitsleiter Hugo Hirszfeld,
overseer of the project, had finally shown his corrupted blood, his half-Jewish
heritage. He had attempted to destroy his research files, but he had been shot
by one of the guards and killed before he could firebomb his subterranean
office. Fortunately for his daughter, someone with full knowledge of die Glocke had
to survive, to carry on the work. She, a genius like her father, knew his
research better than any of the other scientists.
But she would need coaxing from here.
Fire burned in her eyes whenever Jakob
glanced her way. He could feel her hatred like the heat of an open furnace. But
she would cooperate
like her father had before her. Jakob knew how to deal
with Juden,
especially those of mixed blood. Mischlinge.
They were the worst. Partial Jews. There were some hundred thousand Mischlinge in military service to the
Reich. Jewish soldiers. Rare exemptions to Nazi law had allowed such mixed
blood to still serve, sparing their lives. It required special dispensation.
Such Mischlinge usually proved to be
the fiercest soldiers, needing to show their loyalty to Reich over race.
Still, Jakob had never trusted them. Tola's father proved the validity of his suspicions. The
doctor's attempted sabotage had not surprised Jakob. Juden were never to be trusted,
only exterminated.
But Hugo Hirszfeld's exemption papers had
been signed by the führer himself, sparing not only
the father and daughter, but also a pair of elderly parents somewhere in the
middle of Germany. So while Jakob had no trust of the Mischlinge, he placed his full faith in his führer.
His orders had been letter specific: evacuate the mine of the necessary
resources to continue the work and destroy the rest.
That meant sparing the daughter.
And the baby.
The newborn boy was swaddled and bundled
into a pack, a Jewish infant, no more than a month old. The child had been
given a light sedative to keep him silent as they made their escape.
Within the child burned the heart of the
abomination, the true source of Jakob's revulsion.
All of the hopes for the Third Reich lay in his tiny hands the hands of a Jewish infant. Bile rose at such a
thought. Better to impale the child on a bayonet. But he had his orders.
He also saw how Tola watched the boy. Her
eyes glowed with a mix of fire and grief. Besides aiding in her father's
research, Tola had served as the boy's foster mother, rocking him asleep,
feeding him. The child was the only reason the woman was cooperating at all. It
had been a threat on the boy's life that had finally made Tola acquiesce to Jakob's demands. A mortar blast exploded overhead, dropping
all to their knees and deafening the world to a sonorous ring. Cement cracked,
and dust trickled into the foul water.
Jakob gained his feet, swearing under his
breath.
His second in command, Oskar Henricks, drew abreast of him and pointed forward to a side
branch of the sewer.
"We take that tunnel, Obergruppenführer. An old storm drain.
According to the municipal map, the main trunk empties into the river, not far
from
Jakob nodded. Hidden near the island, a
pair of camouflaged gunboats should be waiting, manned by another Kommando unit. It
was not much farther.
He led the way at a more hurried pace as
the Russian bombardment intensified overhead. The renewed assault plainly
heralded their final push into the city. The surrender of its citizenry was
inevitable.
As Jakob reached the side tunnel, he
climbed out of the sluicing filth and onto the cement apron of the branching
passageway. His boots squelched with each step. The gangrenous reek of bowel
and slime swelled momentarily worse, as if the sewer sought to chase him from
its depths.
The rest of his unit followed.
Jakob shone his hand-torch down the
cement drain. Did the air smell a touch fresher? He followed the beam with
renewed vigor. With escape so near, the mission was almost over. His unit would
be halfway across
With this satisfying thought, Jakob fled
toward the promise of fresh air. The cement tunnel descended in a gradual
slope. The team's pace increased, hastened by the sudden silence between
artillery bursts. The Russians were coming in full force.
It would be close. The river would only
remain open for so long. As if sensing the urgency, the infant began a soft
cry, a thready whine as the sedative wore off. Jakob
had warned the team's medic to keep the drugs light. They dared not risk the
child's life. Perhaps that had been a mistake
The timbre of the cries grew more
strident.
A single mortar shell blasted somewhere
to the north.
Cries became wails. The noise echoed down
the tunnel's stone throat.
"Quiet the child!" he ordered
the soldier who bore the baby.
The man, reed thin and ashen, bobbled the
pack from his shoulder, losing his black cap in the process. He struggled to
free the boy but only earned more distressed screeches.
"L-let me," Tola pleaded. She
fought the man holding her elbow. "He needs me."
The child bearer glanced to Jakob.
Silence had fallen over the world above. The screaming continued below.
Grimacing, Jakob nodded his head.
Tola's bonds were cut from her wrists. Rubbing
circulation into her fingers, she reached for the child. The soldier gladly
relinquished his burden. She cradled the baby in the crook of her arm,
supporting his head and rocking him gently. She leaned over him, drawing him
close. Soothing sounds, wordless and full of comfort, whispered through his
wails. Her whole being melted around the child.
Slowly the screeching ebbed to quieter
cries.
Satisfied, Jakob nodded to her guard. The
man raised his Luger and kept it pressed to Tola's back. In silence now, they continued their trek
through the subterranean warren beneath
In short order, the smell of smoke
overtook the reek of the sewers. His hand-torch illuminated a smoky pall that
marked the exit of the storm drain. The artillery guns remained quiet, but an
almost continuous pop and rattle of gunfire continued mostly to the east.
Closer at hand, the distinct lap of water could be heard. Jakob gestured to his
men to hold their position back in the tunnel and waved his radioman to the
exit. "Signal the boats."
The soldier nodded crisply and hurried
forward, disappearing into the smoky gloom. In moments, a few flashes of light
passed a coded message to the neighboring island. It would only take a minute
for the boats to cross the channel to their location.
Jakob turned to Tola. She still carried
the child. The boy had quieted again, his eyes closed.
Tola met Jakob's
gaze, unflinching. "You know my father was right," she said with
quiet certainty. Her gaze flicked to the sealed crates, then back to him.
"I can see it in your face. What we did
we went too far."
"Such decisions are not for either
of us to decide," Jakob answered.
"Then who?"
Jakob shook his head and began to turn
away. Heinrich Himmler had personally given him his orders. It was not his
place to question. Still, he felt the woman's attention on him.
"It defies God and nature," she
whispered.
A call saved him from responding.
"The boats come," the radioman announced, returning from the mouth of
the storm drain.
Jakob barked final orders and got his men
into position. He led them to the end of the tunnel, which opened onto the
steep bank of the River Oder. They were losing the cover of darkness.
But for how long?
Gunfire continued its oddly merry
chatter, firecrackers to celebrate the destruction of
Free of the sewer's stink, Jakob pulled
away his wet mask and took a deep clean breath. He searched the lead gray
waters. A pair of twenty-foot low boats knifed across the river, engines
burbling a steady drone. At each bow, barely concealed under green tarps, a
pair of MG-42 machine guns had been mounted.
Beyond the boats, a dark mass of island
was just visible.
Jakob's eyes were drawn upward as a piercing ray
of sunlight struck the tips of the two towering spires of the cathedral that
gave the former island its name. It was one of a half-dozen churches crowded on
the island.
Jakob's ears still rang with Tola Hirszfeld's
words.
It
defies God and nature.
The morning chill penetrated his sodden
clothes, leaving his skin prickling and cold. He would be glad when he was well
away from here, able to shut out all memory of these past days.
The first of the boats reached the
shoreline. Glad for the distraction, even happier to be moving, he hurried his
men to load the two boats.
Tola stood off to the side, babe in her
arms, flanked by the one guard. Her eyes had also discovered the glowing spires
in the smoky skies. Gunfire continued, moving closer now. Tanks could be heard
grinding in low gears. Cries and screams punctuated it all.
Where was this God she feared defying?
Certainly not here.
With the boats loaded, Jakob moved to Tola's side. "Get on the boat." He had meant to
be stern, but something in her face softened his words.
She obeyed, her attention still on the
cathedral, her thoughts even further skyward.
In that moment, Jakob saw the beauty she
could be
even though she was a Mischlinge.
But then the toe of her boot stubbed, she stumbled and caught herself, careful
of the babe. Her eyes returned to the gray waters and smoky pall. Her face
hardened again, gone stony. Even her eyes turned flinty as she cast about for a
seat for her and the baby.
She settled on a starboard bench, her
guard moving in step with her.
Jakob sat across from them and waved to
the boat's pilot to set out. "We must not be late." He searched down
the river. They were headed west, away from the eastern front, away from the
rising sun.
He checked his watch. By now, a German
Junker Ju 52 transport plane should be waiting for
them in an abandoned airfield ten kilometers away. It had been painted with a
German Red Cross, camouflaging it as a medical transport, an added bit of
insurance against assault.
The boats circled out into the deeper
channel, engines trebling up. The Russians could not stop them now. It was
over.
Motion drew his attention back to the far
side of the boat.
Tola leaned over the baby and delivered a
soft kiss atop the boy's wispy-haired pate. She lifted her face, meeting Jakob's gaze. He saw no defiance or anger. Only
determination.
Jakob knew what she was about to do.
"Don't"
Too late.
Shifting up, Tola leaned back over the
low rail behind her and kicked off with her feet. With the baby clutched to her
bosom, she flipped backward into the cold water.
Her guard, startled by the sudden action,
twisted and fired blindly into the water.
Jakob lunged to his side and knocked his
arm up. "You could hit the child."
Jakob leaned over the boat's edge and
searched the waters. The other men were on their feet. The boat rocked. All
Jakob saw in the leaden waters was his own reflection. He motioned for the
pilot to circle.
Nothing. He watched for any telltale
bubbles, but the laden boat's wake churned the waters to obscurity. He pounded
a fist on the rail.
Like father
like daughter
Only a Mischlinge would take such a drastic action. He had seen it before:
Jüdische
mothers smothering their own children to spare them greater suffering. He had
thought Tola was stronger than that. But in the end, perhaps she had no choice.
He circled long enough to make sure. His
men searched the banks on each side. She was gone. The whistling passage of a
mortar overhead discouraged tarrying any longer.
Jakob waved his men back into their
seats. He pointed west, toward the waiting plane. They still had the crates and
all the files. It was a setback, but one that could be overcome. Where there
was one child, there could be another.
"Go," he ordered.
The pair of boats set out again, engines
winding up to a full throttle. Within moments, they had vanished into the smoky
pall as
Tola heard the boats fade into the
distance.
She treaded water behind one of the thick
stone pylons that supported the ancient cast-iron
As was she.
The bullet had pierced the side of her neck.
Blood flowed thickly, staining the water crimson. Her vision narrowed. Still
she fought to hold the baby above the water.
Moments before, as she tumbled into the
river, she had intended to drown herself and the baby. But as the cold struck
her and her neck burned with fire, something tore through her resolve. She
remembered the light glowing on the steeples. It was not her religion, not her
heritage. But it was a reminder that there was light beyond the current
darkness. Somewhere men did not savage their brothers. Mothers did not drown
their babies.
She had kicked deeper into the channel,
allowing the current to push her toward the bridge. Underwater, she used her
own air to keep the child alive, pinching his nose and exhaling her breath
through his lips. Though she had planned for death, once the fight for life had
ignited, it grew more fierce, a fire in her chest.
The boy never had a name.
No one should die without a name.
She breathed into the child, shallow
breaths, in and out as she kicked with the current, blind in the water. Only
dumb luck brought her up against one of the stone pilings and offered a place
to shelter.
But now with the boats leaving, she could
wait no longer. Blood pumped from her. She sensed it was only the cold keeping
her alive. But the same cold was chilling the life from the frail child.
She kicked for shore, a frantic
thrashing, uncoordinated by weakness and numbness. She sank under the water,
dragging the infant down with her.
No.
She struggled up, but the water was
suddenly heavier, harder to fight.
She refused to succumb.
Then under her toes, slick rocks bumped
against her boots. She cried out, forgetting she was still underwater, and
gagged on the mouthful of river. She sank a bit more, then kicked one last time
off the muddy rocks. Her head breeched, and her body flung itself toward shore.
The bank rose steeply underfoot.
On hand and knee, she scrabbled out of
the water, clutching the baby to her throat. She reached the shoreline and fell
facedown onto the rocky bank. She had no strength to move another limb. Her own
blood bathed over the child. It took her last effort to focus on the baby.
He was not moving. Not breathing.
She closed her eyes and prayed as an
eternal blackness swallowed her.
Cry,
damn you, cry
Father Varick was the first to hear the
mewling.
He and his brothers were sheltered in the
wine cellar beneath Saints Peter and Paul Church. They had fled when the
bombing of
It was in such silent piety that the
plaintive cries echoed to the monks.
Father Varick stood, which took much
effort for his old legs.
"Where are you going?" Franz
asked.
"I hear my flock calling for
me," the father said. For the past two decades, he had fed scraps to the
river cats and the occasional cur that frequented the riverside church.
"Now is not the time," another
brother warned, fear ripe in his voice.
Father Varick had lived too long to fear
death with such youthful fervor. He crossed the cellar and bent to enter the
short passage that ended at the river door. Coal used to be carted up the same
passage and stored where now fine green bottles nestled in dust and oak.
He reached the old coal door, lifted the
bar, and undid the latch.
Using a shoulder, he creaked it open.
The sting of smoke struck him first
then the mewling drew his eyes down. "Mein
Gott im Himmel
"
A woman had collapsed steps from the door
in the buttress wall that supported the channel church. She was not moving. He
hurried to her side, dropping again to his knees, a new prayer on his lips.
He reached to her neck and checked for a
sign of life, but found only blood and ruin. She was soaked head to foot and as
cold as the stones.
Dead.
Then the cry again
coming from her far
side.
He shifted to find a babe, half-buried
under the woman, also bloody.
Though blue from the cold and just as
wet, the child still lived. He freed the infant from the body. His wet
swaddling shed from him with their waterlogged weight.
A boy.
He quickly ran his hands over the tiny
body and saw the blood was not the child's.Only his
mother's.
He glanced sadly down at the woman. So
much death. He searched the far side of the river. The city burned, roiling
smoke into the dawning sky. Gunfire continued. Had she swum across the channel?
All to save her child?
"Rest," he whispered to the
woman. "You have earned it."
Father Varick retreated to the coal door.
He wiped the blood and water from the baby. The child's hair was soft and thin,
but plainly snowy white. He could be no more than a month old.
With Varick's ministrations, the boy's
cries grew stronger, his face pinched with the effort, but he remained weak,
limp limbed, and cold.
"You cry, little one."
Responding to his voice, the boy opened
his swollen eyes. Blue eyes greeted Varick. Brilliant and pure. Then again,
most newborns had blue eyes. Still, Varick sensed that these eyes would keep
their sky blue richness.He drew the boy closer for
warmth. A bit of color caught his eye. Was
ist das? He turned the boy's foot. Upon the heel, someone had drawn a
symbol.
No, not drawn. He rubbed to be sure.
Tattooed in crimson ink.
He studied it. It looked like a crow's
foot.
But Father Varick had spent a good
portion of his youth in
He glanced at the mother with a frown.
No matter. The sins of the father were
not the son's to bear.
He wiped away the last of the blood from
the crown of the boy's head and snugged the boy into his warm robe.
"Poor Junge
such a hard welcome to this world."
PRESENT
DAY
MAY 16,
6:34 a.m.
EVEREST
BASE CAMP, 17,600 FEET
Death
rode the winds.
Taski, the lead Sherpa, pronounced this
verdict with all the solemnity and certainty of his profession. The squat man barely reached five feet, even with his
battered cowboy hat. But he carried himself as if he were taller than anyone on
the mountain. His eyes, buried within squinted lids, studied the flapping line
of prayer flags.
Dr. Lisa Cummings centered the man in the
frame of her Nikon D-100 and snapped a picture. While Taski
served as the group's guide, he was also Lisa's psychometric test subject. A
perfect candidate for her research.
She had come to
Then in 1978, two Tyrolean mountaineers
achieved the impossible and reached the summit, relying solely on their own
gasping lungs. In subsequent years, some sixty men and women followed in their
footsteps, heralding a new goal of the climbing elite.
She couldn't ask for a better stress test
for low-pressure atmospheres.
Prior to coming here, Dr. Lisa Cummings
had just completed a five-year grant on the effect of high-pressure systems on human physiological processes. To
accomplish this, she had studied deep-sea divers while aboard a research ship,
the Deep Fathom. Afterward,
circumstances required her to move on
both with her professional life and
personal. So she had accepted an NSF grant to perform antithetical research: to
study the physiologic effects of low-pressure
systems.
Hence, this trip to the Roof of the
World.
Lisa repositioned for another shot of Taski Sherpa. Like many of his people, Taski
had taken his ethnic group as his surname.
The man stepped away from the flapping
line of prayer flags, firmly nodded his head, and pointed a cigarette pinched
between two fingers at the towering peak. "Bad day. Death ride deese winds," he repeated, then replaced his cigarette
and turned away. The matter settled.
But not for the others in their group.
Sounds of disappointment flowed through
the climbing party. Faces stared at the cloudless blue skies overhead. The
ten-man climbing team had been waiting nine days for a weather window to open.
Before now, no one had argued against the good sense of not climbing during the
past week's storm. The weather had been stirred up by a cyclone spinning off
the
Then the morning had dawned as bright as
their hopes. Sunlight glinted off the Khumbu glacier
and icefall. Snowcapped Everest floated above them, surrounded by its serene
sister peaks, a wedding party in white.
Lisa had snapped a hundred shots,
catching the changing light in all its shifting beauty. She now understood the
local names for Everest: Chomolungma, or Goddess
Mother of the World, in Chinese, and Sagarmatha, the
Goddess of the Sky, in Nepalese.
Floating among the clouds, the mountain
was indeed a goddess of ice and cliff. And they had all come to worship her, to
prove themselves worthy to kiss the sky. And it hadn't come cheap. Sixty-five
thousand dollars a head. At least that included camping equipment, porters, Sherpas, and of course all the yaks you could want. The
lowing of a female yak echoed over the valley, one of the two dozen servicing
their climbing team. The blisters of their red and yellow tents decorated the
camp. Five other camps shared this rocky escarpment, all waiting for the storm
gods to turn their back.
But according to their lead Sherpa, that
would not be today.
"This is so much bull,"
declared the manager of a
He spoke under his breath, as though
trying to incite an uprising that he had no intention of leading himself.
Lisa had seen the type before. Type A personality
A as in asshole. Upon hindsight,
perhaps she shouldn't have slept with him. She cringed at the memory. The
rendezvous had been back in the States, after an organizational meeting at the
Hyatt in
She suspected this reason more than any
other for his continued belligerence.
She turned away, willing her younger
brother the strength to quell the unrest. Josh was a mountaineer with a decade
of experience and had coordinated her inclusion in one of his escorted Everest
ascents. He led mountaineering trips around the world at least twice a year.
Josh Cummings held up a hand. Blond and
lean like herself, he wore black jeans, tucked into the gaiters of his Millet
One Sport boots, and a gray expedition-weight thermal shirt.
He cleared his throat. "Taski has scaled Everest twelve times. He knows the
mountain and its moods. If he says the weather is too unpredictable to move
forward, then we spend another day acclimating and practicing skills. If anyone
would like, I can also have a pair of guides lead a day trip to the
rhododendron forest in the lower Khumbu valley."
A hand rose from the group. "What
about a day trip to the Everest View Hotel? We've been camping in these damn
tents for the past six days. I wouldn't mind a hot bath."
Murmurs of agreement met this request.
"I don't know if that's such a good
idea," Josh warned. "The hotel is a full day's trek away, and the
rooms at the hotel have oxygen pumped into them, to stave off altitude
sickness. It could weaken your current acclimation and delay any ascent."
"Like we're not delayed enough already!"
Boston Bob pressed.
Josh ignored him. Lisa knew her younger
brother would not be pressured to do something as stupid as risk an ascent
against inclement weather. Though the skies were blue, she knew that could
change in a matter of minutes. She had grown up on the sea, off the Catalina
coast. As had Josh. One learned to read signs beyond the lack of clouds. Josh
might not have developed a Sherpa's eye to read the weather up at these
heights, but he certainly knew to respect those who did.
Lisa stared up at the plume of snow
blowing off the tip of Everest's peak. It marked the jet stream, known to gust
over two hundred miles an hour across the summit. The plume stretched
impossibly long. Though the storm had blown itself out, the pressure pattern still
wreaked havoc above eight thousand meters. The jet stream could blow a storm
back over them at any moment.
"We could at least make for Camp
One," Boston Bob persisted. "Bivouac there and see what the weather
brings."
An irritating whine had entered the sports-store
manager's voice, trying to wheedle some concession. His face had reddened with
frustration.
Lisa could not fathom her prior
attraction to the man.
Before her brother could respond to the
lout, a new noise intruded. A thump-thump
like drums. All eyes swung to the east. Out of the glare of the rising sun, a
black helicopter appeared. A hornet-shaped B-2 Squirrel A-Star Ecuriel. The
rescue chopper had been designed to climb to these heights.
A silence settled over the group.
A week ago, just before the recent storm
broke, an expedition had gone up on the
Lisa shaded her eyes. Had something gone
wrong?
She had visited the Himalayan Rescue
Association's health clinic down in Pheriche. It was
the point of triage for all manner of illnesses that rolled down the
mountainside to their doorstep: broken bones, pulmonary and cerebral edema,
frostbite, heart conditions, dysentery, snow blindness, and all sorts of
infections, including STDs. It seemed even chlamydia
and gonorrhea were determined to summit Everest.
But what had gone wrong now? There had
been no Mayday on the radio's emergency band. A helicopter could only reach a
little above Base Camp due to the thin air up here. That meant rescues from air
often required trekking down from the most severe heights. Above twenty-five
thousand feet, the dead were simply left where they fell, turning the upper
slopes of Everest into an icy graveyard of abandoned gear, empty oxygen
containers, and frost-mummified corpses.
The beat of the rotors changed pitch.
"They're coming this way," Josh
said and waved everyone back to the nests of four-season storm tents, clearing
the flat expanse that served as the camp's helipad.
The black helicopter dropped over them.
Rotor wash swirled sand and bits of rock. A Snickers wrapper blew past Lisa's
nose. Prayer flags danced and twisted, and yaks scattered. After so many days
of quiet in the mountains, the noise was deafening.
The B-2 settled to its skids with a grace
that belied its size. Doors swung open. Two men stepped out. One wore a green
camouflage uniform and shouldered an automatic weapon, a soldier of the Royal
Nepalese Army. The other stood taller, in a red robe and cloak sashed at the waist, head shaved bald. A Buddhist monk.
The pair approached and spoke rapidly in
a Nepalese dialect to a pair of Sherpas. There was a
short bout of gesturing, then an arm pointed.
At Lisa.
The monk led the way to her, flanked by
the soldier. From the sun-crinkles at the corners of his eyes, the monk
appeared to be in his mid-forties, skin the color of latte, eyes caramel brown.
The soldier's skin was darker, his eyes
pinched closer together. His gaze was fixed below her neckline. She had left
her jacket unzipped, and the sports bra she was wearing beneath her fleece vest
seemed to have captured his attention. The Buddhist monk, on the other hand,
kept his eyes respectful, even bowing his head slightly. He spoke precise
English touched by a British accent. "Dr. Cummings, I apologize for the
intrusion, but there has been an emergency. I was informed by the HRA clinic
that you are a medical doctor."
Lisa frowned, her brow furrowing.
"Yes."
"A nearby monastery has been struck
by a mysterious ailment, affecting almost all the inhabitants. A sole
messenger, a man from a neighboring village, had been dispatched on foot,
traveling three days to reach the hospital in Khunde.
Once alerted, we'd hoped to ferry one of the HRA doctors up to the monastery,
but an avalanche has the clinic already shorthanded. Dr. Sorenson told us of
your presence here at Base Camp."
Lisa pictured the short Canadian doctor,
another woman. They had shared a six-pack of Carlsberg lager along with sweet
milk tea one evening. "How can I be of service?" she asked.
"Would you be willing to accompany
us up there? Though isolated, the monastery is serviceable by helicopter."
"How long
?" she asked and
glanced in Josh's direction. He had moved over to join them.
The monk shook his head, his eyes
concerned and slightly abashed at imposing upon her. "It is about a
three-hour ride. I don't know what we'll find." Another worried shake of
his head.
Josh spoke up. "We're held up here
for the day anyway." He touched her elbow and leaned closer. "But I
should go with you."
Lisa balked at this suggestion. She knew
how to take care of herself. But she had also been instructed on the tense
political climate in
She eyed the well-oiled automatic rifle
in the soldier's hands. When even a holy man needed an armed escort, perhaps
she had better reconsider her brother's offer.
"I
I have little more than a first
aid kit and some monitoring equipment," she said haltingly to the monk.
"I'm hardly suited for a major medical situation involving multiple
patients."
The monk nodded and waved to the idling
helicopter. Its rotors still spun. "Dr. Sorenson has stocked us with
everything we should need for the short term. We don't expect to impose upon
your services for more than a day. The pilot has a satellite phone to relay
your findings. Perhaps the matter has already been resolved, and we could
return here as soon as midday."
A shadow passed over his features with
this last statement. He didn't believe it. Worry threaded his words
that and
perhaps a trace of fear.
She took a deep breath of the thin air.
It barely filled her lungs. She had taken an oath. Besides, she had snapped
enough photographs. She wanted to get back to real work.
The monk must have noted something in her
face. "So you'll come."
"Yes."
"Lisa
," Josh warned.
"I'll be fine." She squeezed
his arm. "You have a team to keep from mutinying on you."
Josh glanced back to Boston Bob and
sighed.
"So hold the fort here until I get
back."
He faced her again, not swayed, but he
did not argue. His face remained tight. "Be careful out there."
"I have the very best of the Royal
Nepalese Army to watch my back."
Josh stared at the lone soldier's oiled
weapon. "That's what I'm worried about." He tried to lighten it with
a snort, but it came out more bitter.
Lisa knew that was the best she'd manage
out of him. She quickly gave him a hug, gathered her medical backpack from her
tent, and in moments, she was ducking under the razored threat of the spinning
rotors and climbing into the backseat of the rescue helicopter. The pilot did
not even acknowledge her. The soldier took the copilot seat. The monk, who
introduced himself as Ang Gelu, joined her in the backseat.
She donned a set of sound-dampening
headphones. Still, the engines roared as the blades spun faster. The craft
bobbled on its treads as the rotors tried to grip the thin air. A whine
ratcheted up into subsonic ranges. The craft finally lifted free of the rocky
helipad and rose rapidly.
Lisa felt her stomach sink below her
navel as the craft circled out over a neighboring gorge. She stared through the
side window and down to the clutter of tents and yaks below. She spotted her
brother. He had an arm lifted in farewell, or was it just raised against the
sun's glare? Next to him stood Taski Sherpa, easily
identifiable by his cowboy hat.
The Sherpa's earlier assessment followed
her into the sky, icing through her thoughts and worries.
Death
rides these winds.
Not a pleasant thought at the moment.
Beside her, the monk's lips moved in silent prayer. He remained tense
whether
from their mode of transport or in fear of what they might discover at the
monastery.
Lisa leaned back, the Sherpa's words
still echoing in her head.
A bad day indeed.
9:13 a.m.
ELEVATION:
22,230 FEET
He
moved along the chasm floor with easy strides, steel crampons gouging deep into
snow and ice. To either side rose cliffs of bare stone, pictographed
in brown lichen. The gorge angled upward.
Toward his goal.
He wore a one-piece goose-down suit,
camouflaged in shades of white and black. His head was covered by a
polar-fleece balaclava, his face hidden behind snow goggles. His climbing pack
weighed twenty-one kilos, including the ice ax strapped to one side and a coil
of poly rope on the other.
He also carried a Heckler & Koch
assault rifle, an extra twenty-round magazine, and a satchel holding nine
incendiary grenades.
He had no need for additional oxygen, not
even at this elevation. The mountains had been his home for the past forty-four
years. He was as well habituated to these highlands as any Sherpa, but he
didn't speak their language and a different heritage shone from his eyes: one
eye a glacial blue, the other a pure white. The disparity marked him as surely
as the tattoo on his shoulder. Even among the Sonnekönige, the Knights of the Sun.
The radio in his ear buzzed.
"Have you reached the
monastery?"
He touched his throat. "Fourteen
minutes."
"No word must escape of the
accident."
"It will be handled." He kept
his tone even, breathing through his nose. He heard as much fear as command in
the other's voice. Such weakness. It was one of the reasons he seldom visited
the Granitschloß, the
No one asked him to move any closer.
They only asked for his expertise when it
was most needed.
His earpiece crackled. "They will
reach the monastery soon."
He didn't bother to answer. He heard a
distant thump of rotors. He
calculated in his head. No need to hurry. The mountains taught patience.
He steadied his breathing and continued
down toward the cluster of stone buildings with red-tile roofs. Temp Och Monastery sat perched at the edge of a cliff,
approachable only by a single path from below. The monks and students seldom
had to worry about the rest of the world.
Until three days ago.
The accident.
It was his job to clean it up.
The bell-beat of the approaching
helicopter grew louder, rising from below. He kept his pace steady. Plenty of
time. It was important that those who approached enter the monastery.
It would be much easier to kill them all.
9:35 a.m.
From
the helicopter, the world below had frozen into a stark photographic negative. A
study in contrasts. Blacks and whites. Snow and rock. Mist-shrouded peaks and
shadowed gorges. The morning light reflected achingly off ice ridges and
glacial cliffs, threatening snow blindness from the aerial glare.
Lisa blinked away the brightness. Who
would live so far from everything? In such an unforgiving environment? Why did
mankind always find such inhospitable places to claim when much easier lives
were available to them?
Then again, her mother often posed the
same riddle to Lisa. Why such extremes? Five years at sea on a research vessel,
then another year training and conditioning for the rigors of mountain
climbing, and now here in
Lisa's answer had always been a simple
one: for the challenge of it. Hadn't
George Mallory, mountaineering legend, answered similarly when asked why he
climbed Everest? Because it was there.
Of course, the true story behind that famous line was that Mallory had issued
it in exasperation to a badgering journalist. Had Lisa's response to her
mother's inquiries been any less a knee-jerk reaction? What was she doing up here? Everyday life
offered enough challenges: making a living, saving for retirement, finding
someone to love, surviving loss, raising children.
Lisa balked at these thoughts,
recognizing a twinge of anxiety and realizing what it might imply. Could I be living a life on the edge to
avoid living a real one? Is that perhaps why so many men have passed through my
life without stopping?
And here she was. Thirty-three, alone, no
prospects, only her research for company, and a one-person sleeping bag for a
bed. Maybe she should just shave her head and move into one of these
mountaintop monasteries. The helicopter jittered, angling up.
Her attention focused back to the moment.
Oh, crap
Lisa held her breath as the helicopter
skimmed a sharp ridge. Its skids barely cleared the windswept lip of ice and
dove into the neighboring gorge.
She forced her fingers to unlock from the
seat's armrest. Suddenly a three-bedroom cottage with two-point-five kids
didn't sound so bad.
Beside her, Ang Gelu leaned forward and
pointed between pilot and soldier, motioning below. The roar of the rotors
swallowed his words.
Lisa leaned her cheek against the door's
window to peer outside. The curve of cold Plexiglas kissed her cheek. Below,
she spotted the first bit of color. A tumble of red-tile roofs. A small
collection of eight stone lodges perched on a plateau, framed by twenty-thousand-foot
peaks on three sides and a vertical cliff on the fourth.
Temp Och
Monastery.
The helicopter dropped precipitously
toward the buildings. Lisa noted a terraced potato field to one side. Some
corrals and barns sprawled on the other. No movement. No one came out to greet
the noisy newcomers.
More ominously, Lisa noted a collection
of goats and blue bharal sheep gathered in the penned
corrals. They weren't moving either. Rather than driven into a panic by the
descending helicopter, they were all sprawled on the ground, legs twisted,
necks bent, unnatural.
Ang Gelu noted the same and sank into the
seat. His eyes found hers. What had happened? Some argument was under way
between pilot and soldier in the front seat. Plainly the pilot didn't want to
land. The soldier won the argument by placing a palm on the butt of his rifle.
The pilot scowled and snugged his oxygen mask tighter over his nose and mouth.
Not because he needed the additional air, but in fear of contagion.
Still, the pilot obeyed the soldier's
orders. He strangled the controls and lowered the craft earthward. He aimed as
far from the corrals as possible, dropping toward the edge of the monastery's
potato fields. The fields rose in an amphitheater of tiers, lined by rows of
tiny green sprouts. High-altitude potato farming had been introduced by the
British in the early nineteenth century and potatoes had become one of the
subsistence crops of the area. With a jarring bump, the helicopter's skids
struck the rocky soil, crushing a row of plants. Neighboring sprouts whipped
and waved in the rotor wash.
Still no one acknowledged their arrival.
She pictured the dead livestock. Was there even anyone to rescue? What had
happened here? Various etiologies ran through her head, along with routes of
exposure: ingestion, inhalation, contact. Or was it contagious? She needed more
information.
"Perhaps you should stay here,"
Ang Gelu said to Lisa while unbuckling his seat straps. "Let us check out
the monastery."
Lisa grabbed her medical pack from the floor.
She shook her head. "I have no fear of the sick. And there may be
questions only I can answer."
Ang Gelu nodded, spoke hurriedly to the
soldier, and cracked open the rear hatch. He climbed out, turning to offer a
hand to Lisa. Cold winds swept into the heated interior, aided by the rush of
the rotors. Pulling up her parka's hood, Lisa found the frigid draft drained
whatever oxygen was still in the air at this altitude. Or maybe it was her
fear. Her earlier words were braver than she felt.
She took the monk's hand. Even through
her woolen mittens, she felt his strength and warmth. He did not bother
covering his shaved head, seemingly oblivious to the icy cold.
She clambered out but stayed ducked under
the sweep of the helicopter blades. The soldier left last. The pilot remained
inside the cabin. Though he might land the helicopter as ordered, he was taking
no chances in leaving its canopy.
Ang Gelu slammed the hatch closed and the
trio hurried across the potato field toward the jumble of stone buildings.
From the ground, the red-shingled lodges
were taller than they seemed from the air. The centermost structure looked to
be three stories tall, topped with a pagoda-style roof. All the buildings were
elaborately decorated. Rainbow-hued murals framed doors and windows. Gold leaf
brightened lintels, while carved stone dragons and mythic birds sneered and
leered from roof corners. Covered porticos linked the various buildings,
creating little courtyards and private spaces. Wooden prayer wheels, carved
with ancient lettering, were mounted on poles throughout the structures.
Multicolored prayer flags draped from rooflines, snapping in the intermittent
gusts.
While it had a fairy-tale appearance to
it, a mountaintop Shangri-La, Lisa still found her steps slowing. Nothing
moved. Most of the windows were shuttered. Silence weighed heavily.
Then there was the distinct taint to the
air. Though mostly a researcher, Lisa had experienced her share of death while
a medical resident. The fetid miasma of rot could not be so easily blown away.
She prayed it was coming only from the livestock on the far side of the
pavilion. But from the lack of response to their presence, she didn't hold out
much hope.
Ang Gelu led the way, flanked by the
soldier. Lisa was forced to hurry to keep up with them. They passed between two
buildings and headed toward the central towering structure.
In the main courtyard, farm implements
lay strewn haphazardly, as if abandoned in a hurry. A cart tethered to a yak
stood overturned on its side. The animal was dead, too, sprawled on its flank,
belly distended with bloat. Milky eyes stared at them. A distended tongue
protruded from black swollen lips.
Lisa noted the lack of flies or other
tiny opportunists. Were there flies at this altitude? She wasn't sure. She
searched the skies. No birds. No noise except the hushed wind.
"This way," Ang Gelu said.
The monk headed for a set of tall doors
that led into the central dwelling, clearly the main temple. He tested the
latch, found it unlocked, and pulled it open with a moan of hinges.
Beyond the threshold, the first sign of
life flickered. To either side of the doorway, barrel-size lamps glowed with a
dozen flaming wicks. Butter lamps, fueled by yak butter. The fetid odor was
worse inside. It did not bode well.
Even the soldier now held back from
crossing the threshold, shifting the automatic weapon from one shoulder to the
other, as if to reassure himself. The monk simply strode inside. He called out
a greeting. It echoed.
Lisa entered behind Ang Gelu. The soldier
kept a station at the doorstep.
A few more barrel lamps illuminated the
temple's interior. To either side, towering prayer wheels lined the walls,
while juniper-scented candles and incense sticks burned near an eight-foot-tall
teak statue of Buddha. Other gods of the pantheon were lined behind his
shoulders.
As Lisa's eyes adjusted to the gloomy
interior, she noted the numerous wall paintings and intricately carved wooden mandalas, depicting scenes that in the flickering light
seemed demonic. She glanced upward. Raftered tiers climbed two stories,
supporting a nest of hanging lamps, all dark and cold.
Ang Gelu called again.
Somewhere above their heads, something
creaked.
The sudden noise froze them all. The soldier
flicked on a flashlight and waved it above. Shadows jittered and jumped, but
nothing was there. Again the creak of planks sounded. Someone was moving on the
top floor. Despite the positive sign of life, Lisa's skin pebbled with goose
bumps.
Ang Gelu spoke. "A private
meditation room overlooks the temple. There are stairs in back. I will check.
You stay here."
Lisa wanted to obey, but she felt the
weight of both her medical backpack and her responsibility. It wasn't the hand
of man that had slain the livestock. That she was certain. If there was a
survivor, anyone to tell what happened here, she was best suited for this task.
She hefted her pack higher on the
shoulder. "I'm coming."
Despite her steady voice, she let Ang
Gelu go first.
He crossed around behind the Buddha
statue to an arched doorway near the back. He pushed through a drape of
gold-embroidered brocade. A small hallway led deeper into the structure.
Shuttered windows allowed a few slivers of light into the dusty gloom. They
illuminated a whitewashed wall. The splash of crimson and smear along one wall
did not require closer inspection. Blood.
A pair of slack naked legs stuck out of a
doorway halfway down the hall
resting in a black pool. Ang Gelu motioned her
back into the temple. She shook her head and moved past him. She didn't expect
to save whoever lay there. It was plain he must already be dead. But instinct
drew her forward. In five strides, she was at the body.
In a heartbeat, she took in the scene and
fell back.
Legs. That's all there was left of the
man. Only a pair of chopped limbs, cleaved midthigh.
She stared deeper into the room into the slaughterhouse. Arms and legs lay
stacked like cords of firewood in the center of the room.
And then there were the severed heads,
neatly aligned along one wall, staring inward, eyes wide with the horror of it
all.
Ang Gelu was at her side. He stiffened at
the sight and mumbled something that sounded like half prayer, half curse.
As if hearing him, something stirred in
the room. It rose from the far side of the pile of limbs. A naked figure,
shaven-headed, drenched in blood like a newborn. It was one of the temple's
monks.
A guttural hiss rose from the figure.
Madness shone damply. Eyes caught the meager light and reflected back, like a
wolf at night.
It lumbered toward them, dragging a
three-foot-long sickle across the planks. Lisa fled several steps down the
hall. Ang Gelu spoke softly, palms raised in supplication, plainly trying to
placate the ravening creature.
"Relu
Na," he said. "Relu Na."
Lisa realized Ang Gelu recognized the
madman, someone he knew from an earlier visit to the monastery. The simple act
of giving the man a name both humanized him and made the awfulness all that
more horrific.
With a grating cry, the monk leaped at
his fellow brother. Ang Gelu easily ducked the sickle. The figure's
coordination had deteriorated along with his mind. Ang Gelu bear-hugged the
other, grappling him, pinning him to one side of the doorframe. Lisa acted
quickly. She dropped her pack, tugged down a zipper, and removed a metal case.
She popped it open with her thumb.
Inside lay a row of plastic syringes,
secured and preloaded with various emergency drugs: morphine for pain,
epinephrine for anaphylaxis, Lasix for pulmonary
edema. Though each syringe was labeled, she had their positions memorized. In
an emergency, every second counted. She plucked out the last syringe.
Midazolam. Injectable
sedative. Mania and hallucinations were not uncommon at severe altitudes,
requiring chemical restraint at times.
Using her teeth, she uncapped the needle
and hurried forward.
Ang Gelu had the man still trapped, but
the monk thrashed and bucked in his grip. Ang Gelu's
lip was split. He had gouges along one side of his neck.
"Hold him still!" Lisa yelled.
Ang Gelu tried his best but at that
moment, perhaps sensing the doctor's intent, the madman lashed forward and bit
deep into Ang Gelu's cheek. The monk screamed as his
flesh was torn to bone.
But he still held tight.
Lisa rushed to his aid and jammed the
needle into the madman's neck. She slammed the plunger home. "Let him
go!"
Ang Gelu shoved the man hard against the
frame, cracking the monk's skull against the wood. They backed away.
"The sedative will hit him in less
than a minute." She would have preferred an intravenous stick, but there
was no way to manage that with the man's wild thrashings. The deep
intramuscular injection would have to suffice. Once quieted, she would be able
to finesse her care, perhaps glean some answers.
The naked monk groaned, pawing at his
neck. The sedative stung. He lurched again in their direction, reaching down
again for his abandoned sickle. He straightened.
Lisa tugged Ang Gelu back. "Just
wait"
crack
The rifle blast deafened in the narrow
hall. The monk's head exploded in a shower of blood and bone. His body fell
back with the impact, crumpling under him.
Lisa and Ang Gelu stared aghast at the
shooter.
The Nepalese soldier held his weapon on
his shoulder. He slowly lowered it. Ang Gelu began berating him in his native
tongue, all but taking the weapon from the soldier.
Lisa crossed to the body and checked for
a pulse. None. She stared at his body, trying to determine some answer. It
would take a morgue with modern forensic facilities to ascertain the cause for
the madness. From the messenger's story, whatever had occurred here hadn't
affected just the one man. Others must have been afflicted to varying degrees.
But by what? Had they been exposed to
some heavy metal in the water, a subterranean leak of poisonous gas, or some
toxic mold in old grain? Could it be something viral, like Ebola? Or even a new
form of mad cow disease? She tried to remember if yaks were susceptible. She
pictured the bloated carcass in the courtyard. She didn't know.
Ang Gelu returned to her side. His cheek
was a bloody ruin, but he seemed oblivious to his injury. All his pain was
focused on the body beside her.
"His name was Relu
Na Havarshi."
"You knew him."
A nod. "He was my sister's husband's
cousin. From a small rural village in Raise. He had fallen under the sway of
the Maoist rebels, but their escalating savagery was not in his nature. He
fled. For the rebels, it was a death sentence to do so. To hide him, I secured
him a position at the monastery
where his former comrades would never find
him. Here, he found a serene place to heal
or so I had prayed. Now he will
have to find his own path to that peace."
"I'm sorry."
Lisa stood. She pictured the pile of
limbs in the neighboring room. Had the madness triggered some post-traumatic
shock, causing him to act out what horrified him the most?
Overhead another popping creak sounded.
All eyes turned upward.
She had forgotten what had drawn them all
back here. Ang Gelu pointed to a steep narrow stair beside the draped doorway
to the temple. She had missed it. It was more a ladder than a stair.
"I will go," he said.
"We all stick together," she
argued. She crossed to her bag and preloaded another syringe of sedative. She
kept it in her hand. "Just make sure Quick Draw McGraw over there keeps
his finger off the trigger."
The soldier went up the ladder first. He
scouted the immediate vicinity and waved them up. Lisa climbed and discovered
an empty room. Stacks of thin pillows were piled in one corner. The room
smelled of resin and the waft of incense from the temple room below.
The soldier had his weapon trained on a
wooden door on the far side. Flickering light leaked under the jamb. Before
anyone could move closer, a shadow passed across the bar of light.
Someone was in there.
Ang Gelu stepped forward and knocked.
The creaking halted.
He called through the door. Lisa didn't
understand his words, but someone else did. A scrape of wood sounded. A latch
was lifted. The door teetered slightly open but no farther.
Ang Gelu put his palm on the door.
"Be careful," Lisa whispered,
tightening her grip on her syringe, her only weapon.
Beside her, the soldier did the same with
his rifle. Ang Gelu pushed the door the rest of the way open. The room beyond
was no larger than a walk-in closet. A soiled bed stood in the corner. A small
side table supported an oil lamp. The air was ripe with the fetid tang of urine
and feces from an open chamber pot at the foot of the bed. Whoever had holed up
here had not ventured out in days.
In a corner, an old man stood with his
back to them. He wore the same red robe as Ang Gelu, but his clothes were
ragged and stained. The owner had tied the lower folds around his upper thighs,
exposing his bare legs. He worked on a project, writing on the wall. Fingerpainting, in fact.
With his own blood.
More madness.
He carried a short dagger in his other
hand. His bared legs were striped with deep cuts, the source of his ink. He
continued to work, even as Ang Gelu entered.
"Lama Khemsar,"
Ang Gelu said, concern and wariness in his voice. Lisa entered behind him,
syringe ready in her fingers. She nodded to Ang Gelu when he looked back at
her. She also waved the soldier back. She didn't want a repeat of what had
happened below.
Lama Khemsar
turned. His face was slack, and his eyes appeared glassy and slightly milky,
but the candlelight reflected brightly, too brightly, fever-bright.
"Ang Gelu," the old monk
muttered, staring in a daze at the hundreds of lines of script painted across
all four walls. A bloody finger raised, ready to continue the work.
Ang Gelu stepped toward him, plainly
relieved. The man, master of the monastery, was not too far gone yet. Perhaps
answers could be obtained. Ang Gelu spoke in their native tongue.
Lama Khemsar
nodded, though he refused to be drawn from his opus in blood. Lisa studied the
wall as Ang Gelu coaxed the old monk. Though she was not familiar with the
script, she saw the work was merely the same grouping of symbols repeated over
and over again.
Sensing there must be some meaning here,
Lisa reached to her bag and freed her camera with one hand. She aimed it at the
wall from her hip and snapped a picture. She forgot about the flash.
The room burst with brilliance.
The old man cried out. He swung around,
dagger in hand. He swiped through the air. Ang Gelu, startled, fell back. But
Ang Gelu had not been the target. Lama Khemsar cried
out a smattering of words in abject fear and drew the blade's edge across his
own throat. A line of crimson became a pulsing downpour. The cut sliced deep
into the trachea. Blood bubbled with the old monk's last breaths.
Ang Gelu lunged and knocked aside the
blade. He caught Lama Khemsar and lowered him to the
floor, cradling him. Blood soaked the robe and across Ang Gelu's
arms and lap. Lisa dropped her camera and bag and hurried forward. Ang Gelu
tried to put pressure on the wound, but it was futile.
"Help me get him to the floor,"
Lisa said. "I have to secure an airway
"
Ang Gelu shook his head. He knew it was
hopeless. He simply rocked the old lama. The man's breathing, marked by the
bubbling from the slash, had already stopped. Age, blood loss, and dehydration
had already debilitated Lama Khemsar.
"I'm sorry," Lisa said. "I
thought
" She waved an arm at the walls. "I thought it might be important."
Ang Gelu shook his head. "It's
gibberish. A madman's scribblings."
Not knowing what else to do, Lisa freed
her stethoscope and slipped it under the edge of the man's robe. She sought to
mask her guilt with busywork. She listened in vain. No heartbeat. But she
discovered odd scabbing across the man's ribs. Gently she peeled back the
soaked front of his robe and bared the monk's chest. Ang Gelu stared down and
exhaled sharply.
It seemed the walls were not the only
medium upon which Lama Khemsar chose to work. A final
symbol had been carved into the monk's chest, sliced by the same dagger, by the
same hand most likely. Unlike the strange symbols on the walls, the twisted
cross could not be mistaken.
A swastika.
Before they could react, the first explosion
rocked the building.
9:55 a.m.
He
woke in a panic.
The rumble of thunder shook him out of a
feverish darkness. Not thunder. An explosion. Plaster dusted down from the low
ceiling. He sat up, disoriented, struggling to fix himself in time and place.
The room spun a bit around him. He searched down, throwing back a soiled woolen
blanket. He lay in a strange cot, wearing nothing but a linen breechclout. He
lifted an arm. It trembled. His mouth tasted of warm paste, and though the room
was shuttered against the light, his eyes ached. A paroxysmal bout of shivering
shook through him.
He had no idea where or even when he was.
Shifting his legs off the cot, he
attempted to stand. Bad idea. The world went black again. He slumped and would
have slipped into oblivion, but a spat of gunfire centered him. Automatic fire.
Close. The short burst died away.
He tried again, more determined. Memory
returned as he lurched toward the only door, struck it, held himself up by his
arms, and tried the knob.
Locked.
9:57 a.m.
It
was the helicopter," Ang Gelu said. "It's been destroyed."
Lisa stood to one side of the high
window. Moments before, as the explosive blast echoed away, they had freed the
window latches and shoved the shutters wide. The soldier had thought he'd seen
movement in the courtyard below and strafed wildly.
There was no return fire.
"Could it have been the pilot?"
Lisa asked. "Maybe there was a problem with the engine and he evacuated in
a panic."
The soldier kept his post by the window,
resting his stock on the sill, one eye to the scope, scanning and sweeping.
Ang Gelu pointed to the roil of oily
smoke rising from the potato fields. Exactly where the helicopter had been
parked. "I don't believe that was a mechanical accident."
"What do we do now?" Lisa
asked. Had another of the crazed monks blown up the chopper? If so, how many
other maniacs were loose in the monastery? She pictured the sickle-wielding
wild man, the self-mutilation of the monk
what the hell was happening here?
"We must leave," Ang Gelu said.
"And go where?"
"There are tiny villages and
occasional homesteads within a day's walk. Whatever has transpired here will
require more than three people to discern."
"What of the others here? Some may
not be as far gone as your brother-in-law's cousin. Should we not try to help
them?"
"My first concern must be for your
safety, Dr. Cummings. Additionally word must reach someone in authority."
"But what if whatever agent struck
here is contagious? We could spread it by traveling." The monk fingered
his wounded cheek. "With the helicopter destroyed, we have no means of
communication. If we stay here, we die, too
and no word reaches the outside
world."
He made a good point.
"We can minimize our exposure to
others until we know more," he continued. "Call out for help, but
maintain a safe distance."
"No physical contact," she
mumbled.
He nodded. "The information we bear
is worth the risk."
Lisa slowly nodded. She stared at the
column of black smoke against the blue sky. Possibly one of their party was
already dead. There was no telling the true number of afflicted here. The
explosion would surely have roused others. If they were to make their escape,
it would have to be quickly.
"Let's go," she said.
Ang Gelu spoke sharply to the soldier. He
straightened with a nod and retreated from his post at the window, his gun at
the ready.
Lisa gave the room and the monk one last
worried glance, considering the possibility of contagion. Were they already
infected? She found herself internally judging her status as she followed the
others out of the room and down the ladder. Her mouth was dry, her jaw muscles
ached, and her pulse beat heavily in her throat. But that was just the fear,
wasn't it? A typical flight-or-fight response to the situation, normal
autonomic responses. She touched her forehead. Damp, but not feverish. She took
a deep breath to steady herself, to recognize the foolishness. Even if the
agent was infectious, the incubation period would be longer than an hour.
They crossed through the main temple with
its teak Buddha and attendant gods. Daylight glared exceptionally bright
through the doorway.
Their armed escort checked the courtyard
for a full minute, then waved an all clear. Lisa and Ang Gelu followed.
As Lisa stepped into the courtyard, she
searched the dark corners for sudden movement. All seemed quiet again. But not
for long
With her back turned, a second detonation
tore through the building across the courtyard. The force blew her to her hands
and knees. She ducked, rolling on one shoulder to stare behind her.
Roof tiles sailed skyward amid flames. A
pair of fireballs blasted out of shattered windows, while the door to the lodge
exploded into a splintery ruin, belching out more smoke and fire. Heat washed over
her like the exhalation from a blast furnace.
The soldier, a few steps ahead, had been
knocked onto his backside by the blast. He'd kept his gun only by locking his
fingers on its leather strap. He scrambled up as a rain of broken tiles fell
from the sky.
Ang Gelu gained his own feet and offered
a hand to Lisa.
It was his undoing.
A sharper blast punctuated the clatter of
tiles and roar of flames. A gunshot. The upper half of the monk's face blew
away in a mist of blood. But this time it was not the handiwork of her armed
escort.
The soldier's rifle still hung from its
strap as the man fled the rain of stone tiles. He seemed deaf to the shot, but
his eyes widened as Ang Gelu toppled over. Reacting on pure reflex, he dodged
to the right, throwing himself into the shadow of the neighboring lodge. He
yelled at Lisa, unintelligible in his panic.
Lisa crab-crawled back toward the temple
doorway. Another shot sparked off the rocky courtyard. At her toes. She flung
herself across the threshold and into the dark interior.
Ducking around a corner, she watched the
soldier sidle along the wall, careful to keep clear of where he estimated the
sniper might be perched.
Lisa forgot how to breathe, eyes fixed
wide. She searched the rooflines, the windows. Who had shot Ang Gelu?
Then she saw him.
A shadow sprinted through the smoke
billowing out of the far building. She caught a reflection of flames off
gunmetal as the man ran. A weapon. The sniper had fled his original position
and was tacking for a new vantage.
Lisa moved back into the open, praying
the shadows hid her well. She called and waved to the soldier. He had his back
to the wall, sliding toward her location, toward the main temple. His gaze and
weapon focused on the roofline overhead. He had not seen the flight of the
sniper.
She yelled again. "Get out!"
She didn't speak the language, but her panic must've been plain. His eyes met
hers. She urged him over to her hiding place. She pointed, trying to illustrate
the path the sniper had fled. But where had he gone? Was he already in
position?
"Run!" she screamed.
The soldier took a step toward her. A
flash over the man's shoulder revealed Lisa's mistaken assumption. The sniper
hadn't been sprinting to gain a new vantage. Flames danced behind a window in
the neighboring building. Another bomb.
Oh, God
The detonation caught the soldier in midstep. The doorway behind him exploded outward with a
thousand fiery shards, piercing through the soldier at the same time the blast
lifted him off his feet and tossed him across the yard. He landed hard on his
face and slid.
Once stopped, he did not move, even as
flames ignited his clothing.
Lisa dodged into the depths of the main
temple, eyes searching the doorway. She retreated toward the rear exit, back
toward the narrow hall. She didn't have a plan. In fact, she barely had control
of her own thoughts.
She was certain of only one thing.
Whoever had murdered Ang Gelu and their escort had been no maddened monk. The
actions had been too calculated, the execution too planned.
And now she was alone.
She checked the narrow hallway, spotted
the bloody body of Relu Na. The rest of the hallway
appeared clear. If she could get the dead man's abandoned sickle
at least have
some weapon in hand
She stepped into the hall.
Before she could take a second step, a
form materialized behind her. A bare arm clamped tight around her neck. Hoarse
words barked at her ear. "Don't move."
Never one to obey, Lisa drove her elbow
into the gut of her attacker.
A satisfying oof and the arm fell away. The
attacker fell back through the embroidered brocade drapery across the doorway,
tearing it down with his weight. He landed on his backside.
Lisa spun, crouched and ready to run.
The man wore only a loincloth. His skin
was deeply tanned but roped here and there with old scars. Lank black hair,
disheveled, half-obscured his face. From his size, musculature, and broad
shoulders, he appeared more Native American than Tibetan monk.
Then again, it could just be the loincloth.
With a groan, he looked up at her. Ice
blue eyes reflected the lamplight.
"Who are you?" she asked.
"Painter," he said with a
groan. "Painter Crowe."
MAY 16
6:05 a.m.
What
was it with bookstores and cats?
Commander Grayson Pierce crunched another
chewable Claritin tablet as he left Hotel Nyhavn.
Yesterday's research among
He suffered for it now,
stifling a sneeze. Or maybe it was simply the beginning of a cold. Spring in
He wore a sweater he had purchased from
an overpriced boutique neighboring his hotel. The turtleneck was corded merino
wool, undyed and plain. And it itched. Still, it
warded off the early morning chill. Though dawn was an hour past, the cold sun
in a slate-gray sky offered no hope of a warmer day. Scratching at his collar,
he headed toward the central train station.
His hotel was located beside one of the
city's canals. Gaily painted row houses a mix of shops, hostelries, and
private homes lined both sides of the waterway, reminding Gray of Amsterdam.
Along the banks, a motley assortment of watercraft were moored tightly
together: faded low-slung sloops, bright excursion boats, stately wooden
schooners, gleaming white yachts. Gray passed one with a shake of his head. It
looked like a floating wedding cake. Already at this early hour, a few
camera-laden visitors wandered about or took up posts along the bridge rails,
snapping away.
Gray crossed the stone span and followed
the canal's bank for a half block, then stopped and leaned against the brick
parapet that overlooked the waterway. His reflection in the still water
appeared below, startling him a moment. Half-shadowed, his father's face stared
back up at him; coal black hair hung lankily over blue eyes, a crooked cleft
divided the chin, the planes of his face were all sharp angles defining a stony
Welsh heritage. He was definitely his father's son. A fact Gray had been
dwelling on a bit too much lately, and it was keeping him up at night.
What else had he inherited from his
father?
A pair of black swans glided past his
position, disturbing the waters, trembling apart the reflection. The swans
headed for the bridge, their long necks sashaying, eyes searching with a
nonchalant air.
Gray followed their example.
Straightening, he feigned interest in taking a photo of the line of boats while
actually studying the bridge he had just crossed. He watched for any stragglers,
any familiar faces, anyone suspicious. It was one advantage of residing near
the canal. The bridges were perfect squeeze points to observe anyone trailing
him. By crisscrossing the stone spans, he would force any tail into the open.
He watched for a full minute until satisfied, memorizing faces and gaits, then
continued on.
On such a minor assignment as this one,
the habit was more paranoid than necessary, but he carried a reminder around
his neck of the importance of diligence: a chain from which hung a small silver
dragon charm. It had been a gift from an operative playing on the other side of
the fence. He carried it as a reminder. To be wary.
As he set off again, a familiar vibration
stirred in his pocket. He retrieved his cell phone and flipped it open. Who was
calling him at this early hour?
"Pierce here," he answered.
"Gray. Good, I reached you."
The familiar silkiness of the voice
warmed through his morning chill. A smile softened his hard features.
"Rachel
?" His steps faltered with concern. "Is something
wrong?"
Rachel Verona was the primary reason Gray
had asked for this assignment, winging across the Atlantic to
It had been almost eight weeks since
they'd last been together.
Much too long.
Gray pictured their last rendezvous, at a
villa in
He prayed she remembered to pack that
black teddy.
"My flight's been delayed,"
Rachel said, interrupting his reverie with reality.
"What?" He straightened beside
the canal, unable to keep the disappointment from his voice.
"I've been rerouted on a KLM flight.
I now land at twenty-two hundred."
Ten
o'clock. He frowned.
That meant canceling their sunset dinner reservations at St. Gertruds Kloster, a candlelit
restaurant nestled inside the medieval monastery vault. He'd had to book it a
full week in advance.
"I'm sorry," Rachel said,
filling his silence.
"No
no worries. As long as you get
here. That's all that matters."
"I know. I miss you so much."
"Me, too."
Gray shook his head at his lame response.
He had so much more in his heart, but the words refused to come. Why was it
always like this? The first day of every rendezvous required overcoming a
certain formality between them, an awkward shyness. While it was easy to
romanticize that they would simply fall easily and immediately into each
other's arms, the reality was different. For the first hours, they were merely
strangers with a shared past. They would certainly hug, kiss, say the right
things, but the deeper intimacy required a span of time, hours necessary to
catch up on each other's lives on either side of the
And each time Gray feared they would not
find it.
"How is your father doing?"
Rachel asked, beginning the first steps of the dance.
He welcomed the diversion, while not
necessarily the subject matter. But at least he had good news. "He's
actually doing very well. His symptoms have pretty much stabilized as of late.
Only a few bouts of confusion. My mother is convinced the improvement is due to
curry."
"Curry? As in the spice?"
"Exactly. She read an article that curcumin, the yellow pigment in curry, acts as an antioxidant
and anti-inflammatory. Possibly it even helps break down the amyloid plaques attributable to Alzheimer's."
"That does sound promising."
"So now my mother puts curry into
everything. Even my father's scrambled eggs in the morning. The whole house smells
like an Indian restaurant."
Rachel's soft laughter brightened the
dreary morning. "At least she's cooking."
Gray's smile broadened on its own. His
mother, a tenured biology professor at
Before he could respond, his phone chimed
with another call. He checked the caller ID. Damn
"Rachel, I've got a call coming in
from central command. I'll need to take this. I'm sorry."
"Oh, then I'll let you go."
"Wait, Rachel. Your new flight
number."
"It's KLM flight four zero
three."
"Got it. I'll see you tonight."
"Tonight," she echoed back and
clicked off.
Gray pressed his flash button to activate
the other call. "Pierce here."
"Commander Pierce." The
speaker's clipped
"We've new chatter to report that
may relate to your search in
Gray had crossed another bridge. He
stopped again. Ten days ago, a database at the National Security Agency had
flagged a series of black market trades, all pertaining to historical documents
that once belonged to Victorian-era scientists. Someone was collecting
manuscripts, transcripts, legal documents, letters, and diaries from that era,
many with shady trails of ownership. And while normally this would be of little
interest to Sigma Force, which concentrated on global security issues, the NSA
database tied several of the sales to factions within terrorist organizations.
And such organizations' money trails were always scrutinized.
Still it made no sense. While certainly
such historical documents had proven to be a growing market for speculative
investment, it was not the bailiwick of most terrorist organizations. Then
again, times were changing.
Either way, Sigma Force had been tapped
to investigate the principals involved. Gray's assignment was to get as much
background on the by-invitation-only sale that was to occur later this
afternoon, which included researching items of particular interest, several
being put up by local collectors and shops in the area. Hence he had spent the
past two days visiting the dusty bookstores and antiquary establishments in the
narrow backstreets of
"What's stirred up the pot?"
Gray asked.
"A new line item. It's attracted the
attention of several of the principals we're investigating. An old Bible. Just
put up by a private party."
"And what's so exciting about
that?"
"According to the line item
description, the Bible originally belonged to
"As in Charles Darwin, the father of evolution?"
"Exactly."
Gray tapped a knuckle on the brick
parapet. Another Victorian-era scientist.
As he contemplated this, he studied the
neighboring bridge.
He found himself fixated on a teenage
girl in a dark blue zippered sweater-jacket with the hood pulled up. Seventeen
eighteen. Smooth-faced, her skin was the color of burnt caramel. Indian? Pakistani?
What he could see of her black hair was long, spilling out one side of the hood
in a single thick braid. She carried a green, battered pack over her left
shoulder, like many of the backpacking college students.
Except Gray had seen the young woman before
crossing the first bridge. Her eyes met his for a moment across the fifty
yards. She turned away too quickly. Sloppy.
She was following him.
Gray glanced to the address that appeared
on the screen, pinpointed on a city map. Eight blocks away, just off the Strųget, the main pedestrian plaza that ran through the
heart of
But first
From the corner of his eye, Gray
continued to monitor the reflection of the bridge in the canal's still waters
below. In the wavering mirror, he watched the girl hunch her shoulders, pulling
her backpack higher in a weak attempt to hide her features.
Did she know her cover had been blown?
"Commander Pierce?"
The girl reached the end of the bridge,
strode away, and vanished down a side street. He waited to see if she doubled
back.
"Commander Pierce, did you get that
address?"
"Yes. I'll check into it."
"Very good."
From the canal railing, Gray canvassed
his surroundings, watching for the girl's return or the appearance of any
accomplices. He regretted leaving his 9mm Glock in the hotel safe. But the
instructions from the auction house warned that all invited participants would
be searched upon entering, including passing through a metal detector. Gray's
only weapon was a carbonized plastic knife in a boot sheath. That was it.
Gray waited.
Foot traffic flowed around him as the
city woke. Behind him, a cadaverous shop owner was icing down a stack of
street-side crates and slapping out a selection of fresh fish:
The smell finally drove him from his post
by the canal. He headed out, extra attentive to his back trail.
Perhaps he was being too paranoid, but in
his profession, such a neurosis was healthy. He fingered the dragon pendant
around his neck and continued into the city.
After several blocks, he felt secure
enough to pull out a notepad. Written on the first page were items of
particular interest, set for auction that afternoon.
1. A copy of
Gregor Mendel's 1865 paper on genetics.
2. Max
Planck's books on physics: Thermodynamik from 1897 and Theorie der Wärmestrahlung from 1906, both
signed by the author.
3. Botanist
Hugo de Vries's 1901 diary on plant mutations.
Gray had annotated as much information as
he could about these items, from his research yesterday. He jotted down the
latest item of interest.
4. Charles
Darwin's family Bible.
Flipping the notebook closed, he wondered
for the hundredth time since flying here: What
was the connection?
Perhaps it was a puzzle best left to
someone else at Sigma. He thought about having
Until then, he'd leave the two lovebirds
alone.
9:32 P.M. EST
It is
true?"
Monk rested his palm on the bare belly of
the woman he loved. He knelt beside the bed in orange-and-black Nike
sweatpants. His shirt, wet after his evening jog, lay on the hardwood floor,
where he had dropped it. His eyebrows, the only hair on his shaved head, were
raised in hopeful expectation.
"Yes," Kat confirmed. She
gently removed his hand and rolled out the other side of the bed.
Monk's grin grew broader. He could not
help it. "Are you sure?"
Kat strode toward the bathroom, wearing
only a pair of white panties and an oversize Georgia Tech T-shirt. Her straight
auburn hair draped loose to her shoulders. "I was five days late,"
she answered sullenly. "I took an EPT test yesterday."
Monk stood up. "Yesterday? Why
didn't you tell me?"
Kat disappeared into the bathroom, half
closing the door.
"Kat?"
He heard the water turn on in the shower.
He circled the bed and crossed to the bathroom doorway. He wanted to know more.
She had dropped the bombshell when he returned from his jog to find her curled
in bed. Her eyes had been swollen, her face puffy. She had been crying. It had
taken some coaxing to discover what had been troubling her all day.
He rapped on the door. The noise was
louder and more demanding than he intended. He scowled at the offending hand.
The five-fingered prosthesis was state-of-the-art, chock full of the latest in
DARPA gadgetry. He had received the hand after losing his own on a mission. But
plastic and metal were not flesh. Rapping on the wood door had sounded like he
was trying to batter it down.
"Kat, talk to me," he said
gently.
"I'm just going to take a quick
shower."
Despite her sighed words, Monk heard the
strain. He peeked into the bathroom. Though they had been seeing each other for
almost a year now and he had his own drawer in her apartment here, there were
limits of propriety.
Kat sat atop the closed toilet, her head
resting in her hands.
"Kathryn
"
She glanced up, plainly startled at the
intrusion. "Monk!" She leaned to the door to push it the rest of the
way closed.
He blocked it with his foot. "It
wasn't like you were using the bathroom."
"I was waiting for the shower to
warm up."
Monk noted the steam-fogged mirror as he
entered. The chamber smelled of jasmine. A scent that evoked all manner of
stirrings inside him. He stepped and knelt again before her.
She leaned back.
He placed his hands, one flesh, one
synthetic, atop her knees.
She would not meet his eyes, head still
hanging.
He pushed apart her knees, leaned between
them, and slid his hands up along her outer thighs and cupped her buttocks. He
pulled her to him.
"I have to" she started.
"You have to come here." He
lifted her and lowered her to his lap, straddling him now. His face was a
breath from hers.
She finally met his eyes. "I
I'm
sorry."
He leaned closer. "For what?"
Their lips brushed each other's.
"I should've been more
careful."
"I don't remember complaining."
"But this sort of mistake"
"Never." He kissed her hard,
not in anger but in firm assurance. He whispered between their lips.
"Never call it that."
She melted into him, her arms entwining
behind his neck. Her hair smelled of jasmine. "What are we going to
do?"
"I may not know everything, but I do know that answer."
He rolled to the side and lowered her
down to the bathroom rug beneath him.
"Oh," she said.
7:55 a.m.
Gray
sat in the café opposite the small antiquarian shop. He studied the building
across the street.
SJĘLDEN BŲGER was stenciled on the
window. RARE BOOKS. The bookstore occupied the first floor of a two-story row
house topped by a red-tile roof. It appeared identical to its neighbors, lined
one after the other down the street. And like the others in this less affluent
section of town, it had fallen into disrepair. The upper windows were boarded
up. Even the first-floor shop was secured behind a steel drop-gate.
Closed for now.
As Gray waited for the shop to open, he
eyed the building more clinically, sipping what passed for hot chocolate here
in Denmark, so thick it tasted like a melted Hershey's bar. He searched beyond
the boarded windows. Though the building had faded, its
Gray contemplated ways of renovating the
house back to its original glory, rebuilding it in his head, a mental exercise
balancing engineering with aesthetics.
He could almost smell the sawdust.
This last thought suddenly soured the
daydream. Other memories intruded, unbidden and unwanted: his father's woodshop
in the garage, working alongside him after school. What usually started out as
a simple renovation project often ended up in shouting matches and words too
hard to take back. The warring had eventually driven Gray out of high school
and into the military. Only lately had son and father found new ways to
communicate, finding common ground, accepting differences.
Still, Gray was haunted by an offhand
remark of his mother's. How father and son were more alike than they were
different. Why had that been bothering him so much lately? Gray pushed the
thoughts away and shook his head.
With his concentration broken, he checked
his watch, anxious to get on with the day. He had already canvassed the auction
site and secured two cameras at the front and rear access points. All he had to
do was interview the shop owner here about the Bible and take some snapshots of
the principals involved then he was finished, opening up a long weekend to
spend with Rachel.
The thought of her smile eased the knot
that had developed between his shoulder blades.
Finally, across the street, a bell
chimed. The door to the shop opened and the security gate began to roll up.
Gray sat straighter, surprised by who
opened the shop. Black braided hair, mocha complexion, wide almond-shaped eyes.
She was the one who had followed him earlier this morning. She even wore the
same zippered sweater-jacket and green, battered pack.
Gray scooped out a bundle of bills and
left it on the café table, glad to get out of his head and back to the business
at hand.
He strode across the narrow street as the
girl finished securing the gate. She glanced over at him, unsurprised.
"Let me guess, mate," she said
in crisp English, flavored with a British accent, eyeing him up and down.
"American."
He frowned at her abrupt manner. He
hadn't said a word yet. But he kept his face mildly curious, offering no clue
that he knew she had been following him earlier. "How did you know?"
"The way you walk. Stick up your
bum. Gives all you away."
"Is that so?"
She locked the gate. He noted she wore
several pins on her jacket: a rainbow Greenpeace flag, a silver Celtic symbol,
a gold Egyptian ankh, and a colorful assortment of buttons with slogans in
Danish and one in English that read GO LEMMINGS GO. She also wore a white
rubber bracelet with the word HOPE stamped into it.
She waved him out of her way but bumped past
him when he didn't move quick enough. She walked backward across the street.
"Shop don't open for another hour. Sorry, mate."
Gray stood on the stoop, glancing between
the shop door and the girl. She crossed the street and headed to the café.
Passing the table he'd just vacated, she picked up one of the bills Gray had
left and went inside. Gray waited. Through the window, he watched her order two
large coffees and pay with the pilfered bill.
She returned, a tall Styrofoam cup in
each hand.
"Still here?" she asked.
"Don't have anywhere else to be at
the moment."
"Shame." The girl nodded to the
closed door and lifted both hands. "Well?"
"Oh." Gray turned and opened
the door for her.
She brushed inside. "Bertal!" she boomed then glanced back at him.
"Are you coming inside or not?"
"I thought you said"
"Bollocks." She rolled her
eyes. "Enough with the act. Like you didn't see me earlier."
Gray tensed. So it wasn't just
coincidence. The girl had been
following him.
She called into the shop. "Bertal! Get your tail over here!"
Confused and wary, Gray followed her into
the shop. He stayed by the door, ready to move if necessary.
The shop was as narrow as an alley. To
either side, rows of bookshelves rose from floor to ceiling, crammed with all
manner of book, volume, text, and pamphlet. A few steps inside, two glass
cabinets flanked the center aisle, plainly locked. Inside were crumbling
leather-bound books and what looked like scrolls bound in acid-free white
tubes.
Gray searched deeper.
Dust motes floated through the space in
the slanting morning sunlight. The air tasted old, moldering as much as the
shop's paper stock. It was like much of
Still, despite the decrepitude of the
building, the shop shone with a welcoming grace, from the stained-glass wall
sconces to the handful of ladders that leaned against bookshelves. There was
even an inviting pair of overstuffed chairs near the front window.
And best of all
Gray took a deep breath.
No cats.
And the reason why became apparent.
Around one of the shelves, a large shaggy
shape lumbered into view. It looked like a Saint Bernard cross, an elderly
fellow with baggy brown eyes. The dog sullenly shambled toward them, hobbling
on its left front limb. The paw on that side was a gnarled lump.
"There you are, Bertal."
The girl bent down and poured the contents of one of her Styrofoam cups into a
ceramic bowl on the floor. "The mangy sot's useless before his first
morning latte." This last was said with obvious affection.
The Saint Bernard reached their side and
began lapping the bowl eagerly.
"I don't think coffee's good for a
dog," Gray warned.
The girl straightened, tossing her braid
over her shoulder. "No worries. It's decaffeinated." She continued
into the shop.
"What happened to his paw?"
Gray asked, making small talk while he adjusted to the situation. He patted the
dog on the side as he passed, earning a thump of a tail.
"Frostbite. Mutti took him in a long
time ago."
"Mutti?"
"My grandmother. She's been waiting
for you."
A voice called from the rear of the shop.
"Er det ham der vil kųbe bųgerne, Fiona?"
"Ja,
Mutti! The American buyer. In English
please."
"Send
ham
"Mutti will see you in her
office." The girl, Fiona, led him toward the rear. The dog, finished with
his morning coffee, followed at Gray's heels.
In the middle of the shop, they passed a
small cash-register desk set up with a Sony computer and printer. It seemed the
modern age had found its foothold here.
"We have our own website,"
Fiona said, noting his attention.
They passed the register and entered a
back room through an open door. The space here was more parlor than office.
There was a sofa, a low table, and two chairs. Even the desk in the corner
seemed more in place to support the hot plate and teakettle than for any
clerical function. One wall, though, was lined by a row of black filing
cabinets. Above them, a barred window let in cheery morning light, illuminating
the office's sole occupant.
She stood and offered her hand. "Dr.
Sawyer," she said, using his assumed name for this mission. She had
clearly reviewed some background on him. "I am Grette Neal."
The woman's grip was firm. She was rail
thin, and though her skin was pale, the indomitable health of her countrymen
shone from her pores. She waved Gray to one of the chairs. Her whole manner was
casual, even her clothes: navy jeans, a turquoise blouse, and modest black
pumps. Her long silver hair was combed straight, accentuating a serious demeanor,
but her eyes sparkled with wry amusement.
"You have met my
granddaughter." Grette Neal's fluency in English was smooth, but the
Danish accent was evident. Unlike her granddaughter.
Gray glanced between the pale elderly
woman and the dark girl. There was no family resemblance, but Gray kept silent
on this matter. He had more important matters to clarify.
"Yes, we've met," Gray said.
"In fact, it seems I've met your granddaughter twice today."
"Ah, Fiona's curiosity will get her
in real trouble one of these days." Grette's chastisement was softened by
a smile. "Has she returned your wallet?"
Gray's brow wrinkled. He patted his back
pocket. Empty.
Fiona reached into a side pouch of her
pack and held out his brown leather wallet.
Gray snatched it back. He remembered her
bumping into him as she left to get the coffee. It had been more than impatient
rudeness.
"Please don't take offense,"
Grette assured him. "It's her way of saying hello."
"All his ID checked out," Fiona
said with a shrug.
"Then please return the young man's
passport, Fiona."
Gray checked his other pocket. Gone. For
the love of God!
Fiona tossed the small blue chapbook with
the
"Is that everything?" Gray
asked, patting himself down.
Fiona shrugged.
"Again, please excuse my
granddaughter's exuberance. She gets overly protective sometimes."
Gray stared at the two of them.
"Would either of you care to explain what's going on?"
"You've come to inquire about the
"The Bible," Fiona translated.
Grette nodded at her granddaughter. The
slip of tongue plainly revealed some anxiety about the object.
"I represent a buyer who might be
interested," Gray said.
"Yes. We know. And you spent all day
yesterday questioning others about additional items for bid at the Ergenschein Auction?"
Gray's brows rose in surprise.
"We are a small community of
bibliophiles here in
Gray frowned. He had thought he'd been
more discreet.
"It was your very inquiry that
helped me decide to submit my Darwin Bible to the auction. The entire community
is stirred up by the growing interest in Victorian-era scientific
treatises."
"Making it a good time to
sell," Fiona said a bit too firmly, as if this were the tail end of a
recent argument. "The flat lease is a month past"
Her words were waved away. "It was a
difficult decision. The Bible was purchased by my father in 1949. He treasured
the volume. There are handwritten names of the
Gray nodded. Plainly the woman was
attempting to intrigue him. Was all this a ploy to get him to pitch into the
auction? To get the best price? Either way, Gray could use that to his advantage.
"And the reason Fiona followed
me?" he asked.
Grette's demeanor grew tired. "My
apologies again for the intrusion. Like I mentioned before, there has been much
interest of late in Victorian-era memorabilia, and it is a small community. We
all know some of the transactions have been
shall we say
if not across the black market, then definitely the
gray."
"So I've heard rumors," he said
coyly, hoping to tease out more information.
"There have been some buyers who
have reneged on bid prices or paid with illicit proceeds, bounced checks, et
cetera. Fiona was only trying to protect my best interest. And sometimes she
goes too far, falling back on talents best left behind." The woman raised
a single scolding eyebrow at her granddaughter.
Fiona suddenly found the floorboards of
particular interest.
"There was one gentleman a year ago
who spent an entire month searching through my files of provenance, the
historical records of ownership." She nodded to the wall of file cabinets.
"Only to pay for the privilege with a stolen credit card. He showed
particular interest in the Darwin Bible."
"So we can't be too careful,"
Fiona said, emphasizing again.
"Do you know who this gentleman
was?" Gray asked.
"No, but I'd remember him if I saw
him again. A strange, pale fellow."
Fiona stirred. "But a fraud
investigation administered by the bank traced his trail through
Grette frowned. "Language, young
lady."
"Why such diligent investigation for
a bad debt?" he asked.
Fiona again found the floorboards
fascinating.
Grette stared hard at her granddaughter.
"He has the right to know."
"Mutti
" Fiona shook her head.
"Know what?"
Fiona glared at him, then away.
"He'll tell others, and we'll get half the price for it."
Gray held up a hand. "I can be
discreet."
Grette studied him, one eye narrowing.
"But can you be truthful
that I wonder, Dr. Sawyer."
Gray felt himself scrutinized by both
females. Was his cover as secure as he hoped? The weight of their combined
gazes made his back stiffen.
Grette finally spoke. "You should
know. Shortly after the pale gentleman absconded with the knowledge here, there
was a break-in at the shop. Nothing was stolen, but the display where we
normally showcased the Darwin Bible was picked and opened. Fortunately for us,
the Bible and our most valuable items are kept hidden in a floor vault at
night. Also, the police responded promptly to the alarm, chasing them off. The
burglary remained unsolved, but we knew who came after it."
"The sniveling prat
" Fiona
mumbled.
"Since that night, we've kept the
Bible in a safe-deposit box in a bank around the corner. Still, we've been
vandalized twice this past year. The culprit bypassed the alarm, and the place
was ransacked each time."
"Someone was searching for the
Bible," Gray said.
"So we supposed."
Gray began to understand. It wasn't just
monetary gain that was the deciding factor in unloading the Bible, but also to
relieve themselves of the burden. Someone wanted the Bible, and eventually the
pursuit might escalate into more violent means to gain possession of it. And
that threat might pass on to the new buyer.
From the corner of his eye, Gray studied
Fiona. All her actions were done to protect her grandmother, to protect their
financial security. He noted the fire in her eyes even now. The girl plainly
wished her grandmother had remained more reticent.
"The Bible might be safer in a
private collection in
Gray nodded, reading the sales pitch
behind the words.
"Did you ever find out what so
possessed the stranger to pursue the Bible?" he asked.
Now it was Grette's turn to search off
into the distance.
"Such information can only make the
Bible more valuable to my client," Gray pressed.
Grette's eyes flicked to him. Somehow she
knew the lie behind his words. She studied him again, weighing something more
than just the truth of his words, looking deeper.
At that moment, Bertal
shambled into the office, nosed longingly at a set of tea cakes beside the
kettle on the desk, then crossed to Gray's side and slumped to the floorboards
with a sigh. His muzzle came to rest atop Gray's boot, plainly comfortable with
this stranger to their shop.
As if this were enough, Grette sighed and
closed her eyes, and whatever hard edge softened. "I don't know for sure.
I only have some suppositions."
"I'll take what you can give."
"The stranger came here looking for
information regarding a library that was sold piecemeal after the war. In fact,
four such items are up for auction this afternoon. The de Vries
diary, a copy of Mendel's papers, and two texts by the physicist Max
Planck."
Gray was well aware of the same list on
his notepad. They were the very items that had sparked special attention among
the questionable entities. Who was buying them up and why?
"Can you tell me anything else about
this old library collection? Is there any provenance of significance?"
Grette stood and stepped toward her files.
"I have the original receipt from my father's purchase back in 1949. It
names a village and a small estate. Let me see if I can find it."
She moved into a shaft of sunlight below
the back window and pulled open a middle drawer. "I can't give you the original,
but I'd be happy to have Fiona photocopy it for you."
As the old woman rustled through her
files, Bertal raised his nose from Gray's right shoe,
trailing a rope of drool. A low growl burbled from the dog.
But it was not directed at Gray.
"Here it is." Grette turned and
held out a sheet of yellowed paper in a plastic protective sleeve.
Gray ignored her extended arm and
concentrated on her toes. A thin shadow shifted across the patch of sunlight
where Grette stood.
"Get down!"
Gray leaped toward the sofa, reaching for
the old woman.
Behind him, Bertal
barked sharply, almost masking the crack
of glass.
Gray, still reaching, was too late. All
he could do was catch Grette Neal's body as the front of her face dissolved in
a shower of blood and bone, shot from behind by a sniper outside the window.
Gray caught her body and pitched down to
the sofa.
Fiona screamed.
Through the shattered rear window, two
distinct pops sounded along with the shatter
of glass. Two black canisters jetted into the office, struck the far wall, and
clattered down, bouncing.
Gray leaped off the sofa, shouldering
into Fiona. He shoved her bodily out of the office and around the corner.
The dog scrambled after them.
Gray half carried Fiona behind a
sheltering bookcase as twin detonations ripped through the office, blasting
apart the wall in a fiery explosion of plaster and splintered wood.
The bookcase toppled over, crashing into
its neighbor and leaning precariously. Gray sheltered Fiona under him.
Overhead, texts burst into flame and
fiery ash rained down.
Gray spotted the old dog. He had moved
too slowly, hobbled by the bad paw. The concussion had slammed the poor dog
into the far wall. He did not move. His fur smoldered.
Gray shielded Fiona from the sight.
"We have to get clear."
He pulled her shocked form from under the
leaning bookcase. Flames and smoke already filled the back half of the shop.
Overhead sprinklers burst with tepid sprays. Too little, too late. Not with
this much tinder on hand.
"Out the front!" he urged.
He stumbled forward with her.
Too slowly.
Before them, the outer security gate
crashed down, sealing the front door and window. Gray noted shadows fading to
either side of the barred gate. More gunmen.
Gray glanced behind him. A churning wall
of flame and smoke filled the back of the shop.
They were trapped.
11:57 p.m.
Monk
drowsed in that happy place between bliss and sleep. He and Kat had moved from the
bathroom floor to the bed as passion dissolved to soft whispers and even softer
touches. The sheets and comforters were still knotted around their naked forms;
neither was ready to untie themselves, not physically, not in any way.
Monk's finger traced the curve of Kat's
breast, lazily, more in reassurance than arousal. The smooth arch of her foot
gently caressed his calf.
Perfection.
Nothing could ruin this
A piercing warble erupted in the room,
tensing them both.
It rose from the side of the bed, where
Monk had dropped his sweatpants
or rather had them yanked off him. The pager
was still clipped to the elastic waist. He knew he had switched the device to
vibration when he returned from his evening jog. Only one manner of call broke
through that mode.
Emergency.
On the other side of the bed, from the
nightstand, a second pager burst with a matching clarion call.
Kat's.
They both pushed up, eyes meeting with
worry.
"Central command," Kat said.
Monk reached down and grabbed his pager,
dragging his sweatpants up with it. He confirmed her assessment.
He rolled his feet to the floor and
reached for the phone. Kat sat up next to him, pulling the sheets to cover her
bare breasts, as if some manner of decency was necessary to call into central
command. He dialed the number for Sigma Force's direct line. It was picked up
immediately.
"Captain Bryant?" Logan Gregory
answered.
"No, sir. It's Monk Kokkalis. But
Kat
Captain Bryant is here with me."
"I need you both back at command
immediately."
Monk listened, nodding. "We're
leaving now," he finished and hung up.
Kat met his gaze, brows pinched together.
"What's wrong?"
"Trouble."
"With Gray?"
"No. I'm sure he's fine." Monk
climbed into his sweats. "Probably having a great time with Rachel."
"Then?"
"It's Director Crowe. Something's
happened in
"Has Director Crowe reported
in?"
"That's just it. His last report was
three days ago, but a storm had closed off communication. So there was not too
much concern. Then the storm broke today, and still no communication. And now
there're rumors of plague, death, and some uprising out there. Possibly a rebel
attack."
Kat's eyes widened.
"
Kat slid out of bed and reached for her
own clothes. "What could be going on out there?"
"Nothing good, that's for damn
sure."
9:22 a.m.
Is
there a way upstairs?" Gray asked.
Fiona stared at the closed gate, rooted
in place, eyes wide and unblinking. Gray read the signs of shock in the girl.
"Fiona
" Gray stepped around
and leaned close, nose to nose, filling her vision. "Fiona, we must get
away from the fire."
Behind her, the firestorm spread rapidly,
fueled by the stacks of dry books and broken pine shelving. Flames had climbed
and lapped to the ceiling. Smoke churned and rolled along the roof. Sprinklers
continued to leak tepidly into the conflagration, adding steam to the toxic pall.
The heat intensified with each breath.
Still, as Gray took Fiona's hands in his, she shivered, her whole body
trembling. But at least his touch finally focused her eyes on him.
"Is there a way upstairs? To another
level?"
Fiona glanced up. A pall of smoke
obscured the tin ceiling tiles. "Some old rooms. An attic
"
"Yes. Perfect. Can we get up
there?"
She shook her head at first slowly, then
more firmly, reviving to the danger. "No. The only stairs are
" She
waved feebly toward the fire. "At the back of the building."
"On the outside."
She nodded. Ash swirled in fiery eddies
around them as the wall of fire advanced.
Gray cursed silently. There must've once
been an interior staircase, before the building was split into a shop and upper
rooms. But no longer. He'd have to improvise.
"Do you have an ax?" he asked.
Fiona shook her head.
"How about a crowbar? Something to
open crates or boxes?"
Fiona stiffened and nodded. "By the
cash register."
"Stay here." Gray edged along the
left-hand wall. It offered the clearest path back toward the central desk. The
fire had not quite reached it.
Fiona followed.
"I told you to stay back."
"I know where the soddin' crowbar is," she snapped at him.
Gray recognized the terror behind her anger,
but it was an improvement over the limp-limbed shock from a moment ago. Plus it
matched his own fury. At himself. It was bad enough the girl had tailed him
earlier, but now he'd allowed himself to be trapped by unknown assassins. He'd
been too distracted by thoughts of Rachel, too dismissive of this mission and
its parameters, and now it wasn't only his life in jeopardy.
Fiona pushed ahead of him, red-eyed and
coughing from the smoke. "It's over here." She leaned across the
desk, reached behind it, and tugged free a long green steel bar.
"Let's go." He led the way back
toward the advancing flames. He pulled out of his wool sweater and traded it
for the crowbar.
"Wet the sweater down. Soak it good
in that sprinkler." He pointed with the crowbar. "And yourself, for
that matter."
"What are you going to?"
"Try to make our own
staircase."
Gray mounted one of the bookshelf ladders
and scrambled up. The smoke churned above his upraised face. The very air
burned. Gray poked the crowbar at one of the tin ceiling tiles. It was easily
dislodged and nudged aside. As he had hoped, the shop roof was a cantilevered
drop ceiling. It hid the rafter-and-plank floor of the story above.
Gray climbed to the top of the ladder and
scaled the last few shelves of the bookcase. He perched atop it. Using this
vantage, he jammed his crow-bar between two of the planks. It sank deep. He
shouldered and levered the crowbar. The steel bar ripped through the old wood.
Still, he barely managed to gouge out a mouse hole.
Eyes watering and burning, Gray leaned
down. A racking cough shook through him. Not good. It would be a race between
his crowbar and the smoke. Gray glanced back to the fire. It grew fiercer. The
smoke belched thicker.
He'd never make it at this rate.
Movement drew his gaze back down. Fiona
had scrambled up the ladder. She had found a kerchief, soaked it, and had it
wrapped around the lower half of her face like a bandit, a fitting disguise in
her case.
She held up his soggy wool sweater. She
had soaked herself, too, seeming to shrink in size like a wet puppy. Gray
realized she was younger than the seventeen he had guessed earlier. She could
be no more than fifteen. Her eyes were red-rimmed with panic but also shone
with hope, placing some blind faith in him.
Gray hated when people did that
because
it always worked.
Gray tied the arms of his sweater around
his neck and let the rest drape over his back. He tugged up a flap of sodden
wool to cover his mouth and nose, offering some insulation from the
ash-thickened air.
With water soaking through the back of
his shirt, Gray knelt up again, ready to attack the stubborn planks. He sensed
the presence of Fiona below. And the responsibility.
Gray searched the space between the drop
ceiling and the rafters for any other means of escape. All around, piping and
wiring crisscrossed in a haphazard pattern, plainly added piecemeal after the
two-story home had been sectioned into a lower shop and upper apartment. The
newer renovations appeared shoddy, the difference between
As he searched, Gray spotted a break in
the uniform run of planks and rafters. A boxed-off section, three feet square,
framed by thicker bracing. Gray recognized it immediately. He'd been right
earlier. The bracing marked the opening where a long-demolished interior
staircase had once passed through to the floor above.
But how securely had it been sealed up?
Only one way to find out.
Gray rose up on his heels, stood atop the
bookcase, and followed it like a balance beam in the direction of the framed
opening. It was only a few yards but it led deeper into the shop, toward the
fire.
"Where are you going?" Fiona
demanded from atop the ladder.
Gray didn't have the breath to explain. The
smoke choked thicker with every step. The heat grew to an open-furnace
intensity. He finally reached the section of bookshelf below the sealed
stairwell.
Glancing down, Gray saw that the
bookcase's lower shelves already smoldered. He'd reached the firestorm's
leading edge.
No time to waste.
Bracing himself, he slammed his crowbar
up.
The tip plunged easily through the
thinner wood planking. It was no more than pressed fiberboard and vinyl tiles.
Shoddy, as he'd hoped. Thank God for the lack of modern work ethic.
Gray hauled on his crowbar, cranking like
a machine as the air burned and the heat blistered. Soon he had created an
opening wide enough to climb through.
Gray tossed the crowbar through the
opening. It clattered above.
He turned to Fiona and waved her to him.
"Can you get on top of the
bookshelves and?"
"I saw how you got over there."
She scrambled up onto the bookcase.
A pop
drew Gray's attention below. The bookcase shuddered under him.
Uh-oh
His weight and the burning lower tiers
were rapidly weakening his perch. He reached to the hole and half pulled
himself up, shifting his weight off the shelf.
"Hurry," he urged the girl.
With her arms held out for balance, Fiona
edged along the top of the bookcase. About a yard away.
"Hurry," he repeated.
"I heard you the first"
With a resounding crack, the section of bookcase under Gray collapsed. He gripped the
edges of the hole tighter as the case toppled away, crashing into the fire. A
fresh wash of heat, ash, and flames swept high.
Fiona screamed as her section shook, but
held.
Hanging by his arms, Gray called to her.
"Leap over to me. Grab around my shoulders."
Fiona needed no further encouragement as
her case wobbled. She jumped and struck him hard, arms latching around his
neck, legs clinging around his waist. He was almost knocked from his perch. He
swung in place.
"Can you use my body to climb up
through the hole?" he asked with a strain.
"I
I think so."
She hung a moment longer, not moving.
The rough edges of the hole tore at his
fingers. "Fiona
"
She trembled against him, then worked her
way around to his back. Once moving, she climbed quickly, planting a toe into
his belt, then pushing off his shoulder. She was through the hole with all the
agility of a spider monkey.
Below, a bonfire of books and shelving
raged.
Gray gladly hauled himself up after her,
worming through the hole and beaching himself on the floor. He was in the
center of a hallway. Rooms spread out in either direction.
"Fire's up here, too," Fiona
whispered, as if afraid to attract the flames' attention.
Rolling to his feet, Gray saw the
flickering glow from the back half of the apartment. Smoke choked these halls,
even thicker than below.
"C'mon," he said. It was still
a race.
Gray hurried down the hall away from the
fire. He ended at one of the boarded upper windows. He peeked between two
slats. Sirens could be heard in the distance. People gathered in the street
below: onlookers and gawkers. And surely hidden among
them was a gunman or two.
Gray and the girl would be exposed if
they tried climbing out the window.
Fiona studied the crowd, too. "They
won't let us leave, will they?"
"Then we'll get out on our
own."
Gray backed away and searched up. He
pictured the attic dormer window he'd spotted earlier from the street. They
needed to reach the roof.
Fiona understood his intention.
"There's a pull-down ladder in the next room." She led the way.
"I would come up here to read sometimes when Mutti
" Fiona's voice
cracked, and her words died.
Gray knew the girl would be haunted by
the death of her grandmother for a long time. He put his arm around her
shoulder, but she shrugged out of it angrily and stepped away.
"Over here," she said and
entered what once must have been a sitting room. Now it held only a few crates
and a faded, ripped sofa.
Fiona pointed to a frayed rope hanging
from the ceiling, attached to a trapdoor in the roof.
Gray tugged it down, and a collapsible
wooden ladder slid to the floor. He climbed first, followed by Fiona.
The attic was unfinished: just
insulation, rafters, and rat droppings. The only light came from a pair of
dormer windows. One faced the front street, the other toward the back. Thin
smoke filled the space, but so far no flames.
Gray decided to try the rear window. It
faced west, leaving the roof in shadow this time of day. Also, that side of the
row house was on fire. Their attackers might be less attentive to it.
Gray hopped from rafter to rafter. He
could feel the heat from below. One section of insulation was already
smoldering, the fiberglass melting.
Reaching the window, Gray checked below.
The roof pitch was such that he could not see into the courtyard behind the
shop. And if he couldn't see them, they couldn't see him. Additionally, smoke
roiled up from the broken windows below, offering additional cover.
For once, the fire was to their
advantage.
Still, Gray stood well to the side as he
unhooked the window latch and pushed it open. He waited. No gunshots. Sirens
could now be heard converging on the street outside.
"Let me go first," Gray
whispered in Fiona's ear. "If all's clear"
A low roar erupted behind them.
They both turned. A tongue of flame shot
out of the heart of the burning insulation, licking high, cracking and smoking.
They were out of time.
"Follow me," Gray said.
He edged out the window, staying low. It
was wonderfully cool out on the roof, the air crisp after the perpetual stifle.
Buoyed by the escape, Gray tested the
roof tiles. The pitch was steep, but he had good grip with his boots. With
care, walking was manageable. He stepped away from the shelter of the window
and aimed for the roofline to the north. Ahead, the gap between the row houses
was less than three feet. They should be able to leap the distance.
Satisfied, he turned back to the window.
"Okay, Fiona
be careful."
The girl popped her head out, searched
around, then crept onto the roof. She stayed crouched, almost on all fours.
Gray waited for her. "You're doing
fine."
She glanced over to him. Distracted, she
failed to spot a cracked tile. Her toe shattered through it. It broke away,
causing her to lose her balance. She landed hard on her belly and began to
slide.
Her fingers and toes fought for purchase,
but to no avail.
Gray lunged for her. His fingers found
only empty air.
Her speed increased as she skated over
the tiles. More tiles broke away in her frantic attempt to halt her plummet.
Shards of pottery chattered and bounced ahead of her, becoming an avalanche of
roof tiles.
Gray lay splayed on his belly. There was
nothing he could do to help.
"The gutter!" he called after
her, forgoing caution. "Grab the gutter!"
She seemed deaf to his words, fingers
scrabbling, toes gouging out more tiles. She bumped over on her side and began
to roll. A fluttering scream escaped her.
The first few broken tiles rained over
the edge. Gray heard them shatter to the stone courtyard below with firecracker
pops.
Then Fiona followed, tumbling over the
roof edge, arms flailing.
And she was gone.
10:20 a.m.
HLUHLUWE-UMFOLOZI
GAME PRESERVE
Six
thousand miles and a world away from
The heat already sweltered, searing the
savanna and casting up shimmering mirages. In the rearview mirror, the plains baked
brilliantly under the sun, interrupted by thorny thickets and solitary stands
of red bush willow. Immediately ahead rose a low knoll, studded thickly with
knobby acacia and skeletal leadwood trees.
"Is that the place, Doctor?"
Khamisi Taylor asked, twisting the wheel to bounce his Jeep across a dry
creekbed, the dust rising in a rooster tail. He glanced at the woman beside
him.
Dr. Marcia Fairfield half stood in the
passenger seat, her hand clamped on the windshield's edge for balance. She pointed an arm. "Around to the west side. There's a
deep hollow."
Khamisi downshifted and skirted to the
right. As the current game warden on duty for the Hluhluwe-Umfolozi Game
Preserve, he had to follow protocol. Poaching was a serious offense but also
a reality. Especially in the lonelier sections of the park.
Even his own people, his fellow Zulu
tribesmen, sometimes followed the traditional way and practices. It required
even fining some of his grandfather's old friends. The elders had given him a nickname,
a word in Zulu that translated as "Fat Boy." It was said with little
outward derision, but Khamisi knew there was still an undercurrent of distaste.
They considered him less a man for taking a white man's job, living fat off of
others. He was still a bit of a stranger around here. His father had taken him
to
Living
fat off of others.
"Can't you go any faster?" his
passenger urged.
Dr. Marcia Fairfield was a graying
biologist out of
Or maybe it was her passion. Like now.
"If the cow died birthing, her calf
might still be alive. But for how long?" She pounded a fist against the
edge of the windshield. "We can't lose both."
As game warden, Khamisi understood. Since
1970, the population of black rhinos had decreased ninety-six percent in
Every black rhino was important.
"The only reason we found her was
the tracking implant," Dr. Fairfield continued. "Spotted her by
helicopter. But if she gave birth, there'll be no way to track her calf."
"Won't the baby stay close to its
mother?" Khamisi asked. He had witnessed the same himself. Two years ago,
a pair of lion cubs had been found huddling against the cold belly of their
dam, shot by a sport poacher.
"You know the fate of orphans.
Predators will be drawn by the carcass. If the calf is still around, bloody
from birth
"
Khamisi nodded. He punched the gas and
bounced the Jeep up the rocky slope. The rear end fishtailed in some loose scree but he kept going.
As they cleared the hill, the terrain
ahead broke apart into deep ravines, cut by trickling streams. Here the
vegetation thickened: sycamore figs,
Khamisi scanned the horizon as he inched
the Jeep down the far slope. A mile away, a stretch of game fencing broke
across the terrain. The ten-foot-high black fence divided the park from a
neighboring private preserve. Such reserves often shared a park's borders,
offering the more affluent traveler a more intimate experience.
But this was no ordinary private preserve.
The
But there were always rumors and stories
associated with the Waalenberg preserve. The park was only accessible by
helicopter or small plane. The roads that once led to it had long since
returned to the wild. The only visitors, occasional as they were, were major
dignitaries from around the world. It was said Teddy Roosevelt once hunted on
the reserve and even fashioned the
Khamisi would give his eyeteeth to spend
a day in there.
But that honor was limited only to the
head warden of Hluhluwe. A tour of the Waalenberg
estate was one of the perks upon acquiring that mantle, and even then it took a
signed affidavit of secrecy. Khamisi hoped one day to achieve that lofty goal.
But he held out little hope.
Not with his black skin.
His Zulu heritage and education might
have helped him get this job, but even after apartheid, there remained limits.
Traditional ways die hard for both black and white men. Still, his position
was an inroad. One of the sad legacies of apartheid was that an entire
generation of tribal children had been raised with little or no education,
suffering under the years of sanctions, segregation, and unrest. A lost
generation. So he did all he could do: opened what doors he could and held them
for those who would come after.
He would play the Fat Boy, if that's what
it took.
In the meantime
"There!" Dr. Fairfield shouted,
startling Khamisi back to the tortuous unmarked track. "Make a left at
that baobab at the bottom of the hill."
Khamisi spotted the prehistoric giant
tree. Large white flowers drooped mournfully from the ends of its branches. To
its left, the land dropped away, descending into a bowl-shaped depression.
Khamisi caught a sparkle of a tiny pool near the bottom.
Water hole.
Such springs dotted the park, some natural,
some man-made. They were the best places for a glimpse of wildlife and also
the most dangerous to traverse on foot.
Khamisi braked to a halt by the tree.
"We'll have to walk in from here."
Dr. Fairfield nodded. They both reached
for rifles. Though both were conservationists, they were also familiar with the
ever-present danger of the veldt.
As he climbed out, Khamisi shouldered his
large-bore double rifle, a .465 Nitro
They headed down the slope, prickling
with basket grass and shrubby sicklebush. Overhead,
the higher canopy shielded them from the sun but created deep shadows below. As
he marched, Khamisi noted the heavy silence. No birdsong. No chatter of
monkeys. Only the buzz and whirring of insects. The quiet set his teeth on
edge.
Beside him, Dr. Fairfield checked a
handheld GPS tracker.
She pointed an arm.
Khamisi followed her direction, skirting
the muddy pool. As he stalked through some reeds, he was rewarded by a growing
stench of rotting meat. It didn't take much longer to push into a deep-shadowed
copse and discover its source.
The black rhino cow must have weighed
three thousand pounds, give or take a stone. A monster-size specimen.
"Dear God," Dr. Fairfield
exclaimed through a handkerchief clutched over her mouth and nose. "When
Roberto pinpointed the remains by helicopter
"
"It's always worse on the
ground," Khamisi said.
He marched to the bloated carcass. It lay
on its left side. Flies rose in a black cloud at their approach. The belly had
been ripped open. Intestines bulged out, ballooned with gas. It seemed
impossible that all this had once fit inside the abdomen. Other organs were
draped across the dirt. A bloody smudge indicated where some choice tidbit had
been dragged into the surrounding dense foliage.
Flies settled again.
Khamisi stepped over a section of gnawed
red liver. The rear hind limb appeared to have been almost torn off at the hip.
The strength of the jaws to do that
Even a mature lion would've had a hard
time.
Khamisi circled until he reached the
head.
One of the rhino's stubby ears had been
bitten off, its throat savagely ripped open. Lifeless black eyes stared back at
Khamisi, too wide, appearing frozen in fright. Lips were also rippled back as
if in terror or agony. A wide tongue protruded, and blood pooled below. But
none of this was important.
He knew what he had to check.
Above the scum-flecked nostrils curved a
long horn, prominent and perfect.
"Definitely not a poacher,"
Khamisi said.
The horn would've been taken. It was the
main reason rhino populations were still in rapid decline. Powdered horn sold
in Asian markets as a so-called cure for erectile dysfunction, a homeopathic
Viagra. A single horn fetched a princely sum.
Khamisi straightened.
Dr. Fairfield crouched near the other end
of the body. She had donned plastic gloves, leaning her rifle against the body.
"It doesn't appear she's given birth."
"So no orphaned calf."
The biologist stepped around the carcass
to the belly again. She bent down and, without even a wince of squeamishness,
tugged a flap of torn belly up, and reached inside.
He turned away.
"Why hasn't the carcass been picked
clean by carrion feeders?" Dr. Fairfield asked as she worked.
"It's a lot of meat," he
mumbled. Khamisi circled back around. The quiet continued to press around him,
squeezing the heat atop them.
The woman continued her examination.
"I don't think that's it. The body's been here since last night, near a watering
hole. If nothing else, the abdomen would have been cleaned out by
jackals."
Khamisi surveyed the body again. He
stared at the ripped rear leg, the torn throat. Something large had brought the
rhino down. And fast.
A prickling rose along the back of his
neck.
Where were
the carrion feeders?
Before he could contemplate the mystery,
Dr. Fairfield spoke. "The calf's gone."
"What?" He turned back around.
"I thought you said she hadn't given birth."
Dr. Fairfield stood up, stripping off her
gloves and retrieving her gun. Rifle in hand, the biologist stalked away from
the carcass, gaze fixed to the ground.
Khamisi noted she was following the
bloody path, where something was dragged away from the belly, to be eaten in
private.
Oh, God
He followed after her.
At the edge of the copse, Dr. Fairfield
used the tip of her rifle to part some low-hanging branches, which revealed
what had been dragged from the belly.
The rhino calf.
The scrawny body had been shredded into
sections, as if fought over.
"I think the calf was still alive
when it was torn out," Dr. Fairfield said, pointing to a spray of blood.
"Poor thing
"
Khamisi stepped back, remembering the
biologist's earlier question. Why hadn't any other carrion feeders eviscerated
the remains? Vultures, jackals, hyenas, even lions. Dr. Fairfield was right.
This much meat would not have been left to flies and maggots.
It made no sense.
Not unless
Khamisi's heart thudded heavily.
Not unless the predator was still here.
Khamisi lifted his rifle. Deep in the
shadowed copse, he again noted the heavy silence. It was as if the very forest
were intimidated by whatever had killed the rhino.
He found himself testing the air,
listening, eyes straining, standing dead still. The shadows seemed to deepen
all around him.
Having spent his childhood in
But sometimes even myths came to life in
As Khamisi searched the jungle, he
recalled another monster of legend, one that was known across the breadth of
"Ukufa
," Khamisi mumbled.
"Did you say something?" Dr.
Fairfield asked. She was still bent down by the dead calf.
It was the Zulu name for the monster, one
that was whispered around campfires and kraal huts.
Ukufa.
Death.
He knew why such a beast came to mind
now. Five months ago, an old tribesman claimed to have seen an ukufa near here. Half beast, half ghost, with eyes of fire, the old man had railed
with dead certainty. Only those as old as the leathery elder took heed. The
others, like Khamisi, pretended to humor the tribesman.
But here in the dark shadows
"We should go," Khamisi said.
"But we don't know what killed
her."
"Not poachers." That's all
Khamisi needed or wanted to know. He waved his rifle toward the Jeep. He would
radio the head warden, get the matter signed off and settled. Predator kill. No
poaching. They'd leave the carcass to the carrion. The cycle of life.
Dr. Fairfield reluctantly rose.
Off to the right, a drawn-out call split
through the shadowy jungle hoo eeee OOOO punctuated by a high-pitched feral scream.
Khamisi trembled where he stood. He
recognized the cry, not so much with his head as with his bone marrow. It
echoed back to midnight campfires, to stories of terror and bloodshed, and even
further back, to something primeval, to a time before speech, where life was
instinct.
Ukufa.
Death.
As the scream faded away, silence again
fell heavily over them.
Khamisi mentally measured the distance
between them and the Jeep. They needed to retreat, but not in a panic. A
fearful flight would only whet a predator's bloodlust.
Out in the jungle, another scream
growled.
Then another.
And another.
All from different directions.
In the sudden quiet afterward, Khamisi
knew they had only one chance.
"Run."
9:31 a.m.
Gray
lay on his belly across the roof tiles, head down, sprawled where he'd missed
grabbing Fiona. The image of her tumbling over the smoky edge of the roof
seared into his mind's eye. His heart thudded in his chest.
Oh, God
what've I done
?
Over his shoulder, a fresh spat of flames
burst out the attic dormer, accompanied by a growled rush of heat and smoke.
Despite his distress, he had to move.
Gray willed himself up onto his elbows,
then hands, pushing up.
To the side, the fire took a momentary
breath, falling back. In the lull, he heard voices below, urgent, furtive. Also
closer to him
a low moan. Just beyond the roofline.
Fiona
?
Gray dropped back to his belly and
scooted in a controlled slide to the roof's edge. Smoke choked up from the
shattered windows directly below. He used the pall to cloak his approach.
Reaching the guttered edge, he glanced
down.
Directly under him stretched a wrought-iron
balcony
no, not a balcony. It was a landing to a staircase. The exterior
stairs that Fiona had mentioned.
Sprawled across the landing was the girl.
With a second groggy groan, Fiona rolled
over and began to haul herself up, using the railing posts.
Others noted her movement.
Out in the courtyard below, Gray spotted
two figures. One stood in the middle of the flagstones, a rifle raised to his
shoulder, searching for a clear shot. Black smoke belched out the broken
apartment door window, obscuring Fiona from view. The sniper waited for the
girl to get her head above the landing's railing.
"Stay down," he hissed at
Fiona.
She glanced up. Bright blood dribbled
across her brow.
The second gunman circled, a black pistol
clutched double-fisted. He aimed for the stairs, intent to block any escape.
Gray motioned Fiona to remain crouched,
then rolled along the roofline until he was above the second gunman. The
churning smoke continued to keep him hidden. Most of the assassins' attention
remained focused on the stairs. Once in position, Gray waited. He clutched a
heavy roof tile in his right hand, one of the stone tiles Fiona had loosened
during her tumble.
He would have only one shot.
Below, the man held his pistol at the
ready and placed one foot on the lowermost stair.
Gray leaned over the edge, arm raised.
He whistled sharply.
The gunman glanced up, swiveling his
weapon and dropping to a knee. Damned fast
But gravity was faster.
Gray chucked the tile. It spun through
the air like an ax and struck the gunman in his upraised face. Blood spurted
from the man's nose. He fell back hard. His head hit the flagstones, bounced,
then didn't move.
Gray rolled again back toward Fiona.
A shout rose from the rifleman.
Gray kept his gaze fixed on him. He had
hoped downing the man's partner would chase the other off. No such luck. The
rifleman fled to the opposite side, finding shelter near a trash bin but
leaving him a clear shot still. His sniping position was close to the burning
rear of the shop, taking advantage of the smoke billowing out a neighboring
window.
Gray reached Fiona again. He waved her to
stay low. It would be their deaths to attempt to haul Fiona up. Both would be
exposed too long.
That left only one choice.
Gripping the gutter with one hand, Gray lunged
and swung down. He dropped to the landing with a ring of steel, then ducked
low.
A brick above his head shattered.
Rifle shot.
Gray reached to his ankle sheath and
pulled his dagger free.
Fiona eyed it. "What are we?"
"You are going to stay here," he
ordered.
Gray reached a hand to the railing above.
All he had was the element of surprise. No body armor, no weapon except his
dagger.
"Run when I tell you," he said.
"Straight down the stairs and over your neighbor's fence. Find the first
policeman or firefighter. Can you do that?"
Fiona met his eyes. It looked as if she
were about to argue, but her lips tightened and she nodded.
Good girl.
Gray balanced the dagger in his hand. One
chance again. Taking a deep breath, Gray leaped up, pinioned off the railing,
and vaulted over it. As he fell toward the flagstones, he did two things at the
same time.
"Run!" he hollered and tossed
the dagger toward the sniper's hiding place. He didn't hope for a kill, just a
distraction long enough to close quarters with the man. A rifle was ungainly in
tight situations.
As he landed, he noted two things.
One good, one bad.
He heard Fiona's ringing footsteps down
the metal staircase.
She was fleeing.
Good.
At the same time, Gray watched his dagger
wing through the smoky air, bang the trash bin, and bounce off. His toss hadn't
even been close.
That was bad.
The sniper rose from his spot unfazed,
rifle ready, aimed straight at Gray's chest.
"No!" Fiona screamed as she
reached the bottom of the stairs.
The rifleman didn't even smile as he
pulled the trigger.
11:05 a.m.
HLUHLUWE-UMFOLOZI
GAME PRESERVE
Run!"
Khamisi repeated.
Dr. Fairfield needed no further prodding.
They fled in the direction of their waiting Jeep. Reaching the watering hole, Khamisi
waved Dr. Fairfield ahead of him. She shouldered through the tall reeds but
not before silently meeting his gaze. Horror shone in her eyes, mirroring his
own.
Whatever creatures had screamed in the
forest had sounded large, massive, and whetted from the recent kill. Khamisi
glanced back at the rhino's macerated carcass. Monsters or not, he needed no
other information about what might be hidden in the maze of heavy forest,
trickling streams, and shadowed gullies.
Twisting back around, Khamisi followed
the biologist. He checked over his shoulder frequently, ears straining for any
sound of pursuit. Something splashed into the neighboring pond. Khamisi ignored
it. It was a small splash. Too small. His brain teased out extraneous details,
sifting through the buzz of insects and crunch of reeds. He concentrated upon
real danger signals. Khamisi's father had taught him how to hunt when he was
only six years old, drilling into him the signs to watch when stalking prey.
Only now, he was the hunted.
The panicked whir of wings drew his ear
and eye.
A flick of movement.
Off to the left.
In the sky.
A single shrike took wing.
Something had frightened it.
Something on the move.
Khamisi closed the distance with Dr.
"Hurry," he whispered, senses
straining.
Dr. Fairfield craned her neck, her rifle
swiveling. She was breathing hard, face ashen. Khamisi followed her gaze. Their
Jeep stood at the ridgeline above, parked in the shade of the baobab tree at
the edge of the deep hollow. The slope seemed steeper and longer than it had
coming down.
"Keep moving," he urged.
Glancing back, Khamisi spotted a tawny
klipspringer doe leap from the forest edge and skip-hop its way up the far
slope, kicking up dirt.
Then it was gone.
They needed to heed its example.
Dr. Fairfield headed up the slope.
Khamisi followed, sidestepping, fixing his double-barreled rifle toward the
forest behind them.
"They didn't kill to eat," Dr.
Fairfield gasped ahead of him.
Khamisi studied the dark tangle of
forest. Why did he know she was right?
"Hunger hadn't goaded them,"
the biologist continued, as if struggling to qualm her panic with deliberation.
"Hardly anything was eaten. It was as if they had killed for pleasure.
Like a house cat hunting a mouse."
Khamisi had worked alongside many
predators. It wasn't the way of the natural world. Lions, after a meal, seldom
proved a threat, usually lounging about, even approachable, up to a distance. A
sated predator would not tear apart a rhino, rip its calf from its belly, just
for the sport of it.
Dr. Fairfield continued her litany, as if
the present danger were a puzzle to solve. "In the domesticated world, it
is the well-fed house cat that hunts more
often. It has the energy and the time for such play."
Play?
Khamisi shuddered.
"Just keep moving," he said,
not wanting to hear more.
Dr. Fairfield nodded, but the biologist's
words stayed with Khamisi. What sort of predator kills just for the sport of
it? Of course, there was one obvious answer.
Man.
But this was not the work of any human
hand.
Movement again captured Khamisi's gaze.
For just a moment, a pale shape shifted behind the fringe of dark forest,
caught out of the corner of the eye. It vanished like white smoke as he focused
on the spot.
He remembered the words of the wizened
Zulu tribesman.
Half
beast, half ghost
Despite the heat, his skin went cold. He
increased his pace, almost shouldering the older biologist up the slope. Loose
shale and sandy dirt shifted treacherously underfoot. But they were almost at
the top. The Jeep was only thirty meters away.
Then Dr. Fairfield slipped.
She went down on a knee and fell
backward, knocking into Khamisi.
He took a stumbled step back, missed his
footing, and went down hard on his rear. The angle of the slope and momentum
tumbled him ass over end. He rolled halfway down the hill before he finally
braked his fall using his heels and the butt of his rifle.
Dr. Fairfield still sat where she had
fallen, eyes wide with fear, staring back down.
Not at him.
At the forest.
Khamisi twisted around, gaining his
knees; his ankle screamed, sprained, maybe broken. He searched and saw nothing,
but he raised his rifle.
"Go!" he screamed. He had left
the keys in the ignition. "Go!"
He heard Dr. Fairfield scramble to her
feet with a crunch of shale.
From the forest edge, another ululating
cry arose, cackling and inhuman.
Khamisi aimed blindly and pulled the
trigger. The boom of his rifle
shattered through the hollow. Dr. Fairfield cried out behind him, startled.
Khamisi hoped the noise also startled off whatever lurked out there.
"Get to the Jeep!" he bellowed.
"Just go! Don't wait!"
He stood, leaning his weight off his bad
ankle. He kept his rifle poised. The forest had gone quiet again.
He heard Dr. Fairfield reach the top of
the slope. "Khamisi
," she called back.
"Take the Jeep!"
He risked a glance behind him, over his
shoulder.
Dr. Fairfield turned from the ridgeline
and stepped toward the Jeep. Above her, movement in the branches of the baobab drew
his eye. A few of the tree's droopy white flowers swayed gently.
There was no wind.
"Marcia!" he yelled.
"Don't!"
A savage cry erupted behind him, drowning
out the rest of his warning. Dr. Fairfield turned half a step in his direction.
No
It leaped down from the deep shadows of
the giant tree, a pale blur. It struck the biologist and knocked them both out
of sight. Khamisi heard a curdling scream from the woman, but it was ripped
away in half a breath.
Silence again settled.
Khamisi faced the forest edge again.
Death above and below.
He had only one chance.
Ignoring the pain in his ankle, Khamisi
ran.
Down the slope.
He simply let gravity take hold of him.
It wasn't so much a sprint as a freefall. He raced back to the bottom of the
hill, legs struggling to keep him upright. Reaching the bottom, he pointed his
gun toward the forest and squeezed out a second shot from his double barrel.
Boom.
He had no hope of scaring off the
hunters. He sought only to buy himself an extra fraction of life. The rebound of
the rifle also helped him keep his feet as the slope leveled out. He kept
running, ankle on fire, heart thundering.
He spotted or maybe merely sensed the
movement of something large just at the forest edge. A slightly paler shade of
shadow.
Half
beast, half ghost
Though unseen, he knew the truth.
Ukufa.
Death.
Not today
he prayed not today.
Khamisi crashed through the reeds
and dove headlong into the water hole.
9:32 a.m.
Fiona's
scream punctuated the sniper's rifle blast.
Gray twisted, hoping to escape mortal
injury. As he turned, a blur of something large crashed out through the remains
of the smoky shop window.
The gunman must have caught the same
movement a fraction before Gray, enough to throw his aim off by a hairbreadth.
Gray felt the sear of the bullet's
passage under his left arm.
He continued to spin farther out of
point-blank range.
From the window, the large shape bounded
atop the trash bin and bowled into the rifleman.
"Bertal!"
Fiona yelled.
The shaggy Saint Bernard, soaked to the
skin, clamped his jaws onto the rifleman's forearm. The sudden and unexpected
attack caught the man off guard. He fell back into the shadows behind the trash
bin. His rifle clattered to the flagstones.
Gray lunged for it.
A canine yelp sounded near at hand.
Before Gray could react, the assassin leaped out, high. He planted a boot heel
into Gray's shoulder, smashed him into the stones, and bolted over him.
Gray flipped to his side, aiming the
captured rifle. But the man moved like a gazelle. Flagging a black trench coat,
he vaulted over a garden stone fence and ducked away. Gray heard his footfalls
retreating down the alley.
"Bastard
"
Fiona ran up to Gray. She had a pistol in
hand. "The other man
" She pointed behind her. "I think he's dead."
Gray shouldered the rifle and took the
pistol from her hand. She didn't argue, too intent on another concern.
"Bertal
"
The dog came out, tottering, weak, one
side was severely scorched.
Gray glanced back to the burning shop.
How had the poor guy survived? Gray pictured where he had last seen the dog:
blasted by the initial firebombs into the back wall, knocked unconscious.
Fiona hugged the soaked brute.
The dog must have landed under a
sprinkler.
She lifted the Saint Bernard's face,
staring nose to muzzle. "Good dog."
Gray agreed. He owed Bertal.
"All the Starbucks you want, buddy," he promised under his breath.
Bertal's limbs trembled. He sank to his haunches,
then to the stones. Whatever adrenaline had sustained the poor brute was giving
out.
Off to the left, raised voices reached
them, calling out in Danish. A spray of jetted water sailed high. Firefighters
were headed around the far side of the shop.
Gray could stay no longer.
"I have to go."
Fiona stood up. She glanced between Gray
and the dog.
"Stay with Bertal,"
he said, backing a step. "Get him to a doctor."
Fiona's gaze hardened. "And you're
just going to leave
"
"I'm sorry." It was a lame
response to encompass the horrors: the murder of her grandmother, the burning
down of their shop, the hairbreadth escape. But he didn't know what else to
say, and he had no time to explain more.
He turned and headed toward the rear
garden wall.
"Yeah, go ahead, sod off!"
Fiona yelled after him.
Gray hopped the fence, face burning.
"Wait!"
He hurried down the alley. He hated
abandoning her but there was no choice. She was better off. Within the circle
of emergency personnel, she would be sheltered, protected. Where Gray had to go
next was no place for a fifteen-year-old. Still, his face continued to burn. Deeper
down, he could not deny a more selfish motivation: he was simply glad to be rid
of her, of the responsibility.
No matter
it was done.
He stalked quickly down the alley. He
tucked the pistol into the waistband of his pants and ejected all the shells from
the rifle. Once finished, he shoved the rifle behind a stack of lumber.
Carrying it would be too conspicuous. As he continued, he pulled his sweater
back on. He needed to abandon his hotel and change identities. The deaths here
would be investigated. It was time to let the persona of Dr. Sawyer die.
But before that, he had one more task to
complete.
He freed his cell phone from a back
pocket and hit speed dial for central command. After a few moments, he was
connected with Logan Gregory, his op mission leader.
"We have a problem out here,"
Gray said.
"What's wrong?"
"Whatever is going on is bigger than
we initially thought. Big enough to kill over." Gray debriefed his
morning. A long stretch of silence followed.
"If I wait for backup, it'll be too
late. The auction is in a few more hours."
"Your cover's blown, Commander
Pierce."
"I'm not sure it is. As far as the
principals know, I'm an American buyer who asks too many questions. They won't
try anything in the open. There'll be plenty of people in attendance at the
auction, and the house has tight security. I can still canvass the site and
perhaps ascertain some clues about who or what's really behind all this.
Afterward, I'll disappear, go low until I have more help."
Gray also wanted to get his hands on that
Bible, if only to inspect it.
Gray's response grew heated. "So the
bastards try to fry my ass
and now you want me to sit on it?"
"Commander."
Gray's fingers tightened on the phone.
"Maybe we should get Director Crowe
involved," Gray said.
Another long pause followed. Perhaps he
had said the wrong thing. He didn't mean to insult
"I'm afraid that would be impossible
at the moment, Commander Pierce."
"Why?"
"Director Crowe is currently
incommunicado in
Gray frowned. "In
"Commander, you sent him."
"What?"
Then it dawned on Gray.
The call had come in a week ago.
From an old friend.
Gray's mind slipped into the past, back
to his first days with Sigma Force. Like all other Sigma agents, Gray had a
background with Special Forces: joining the army at eighteen, the Rangers at
twenty-one. But after being court-martialed for striking a superior officer,
Gray had been recruited by Sigma Force, straight out of
That man had been Ang Gelu.
"Are you saying Director Crowe is
out in
"Painter knew how important the man
was to you."
Gray stopped walking and stepped into the
shadows.
He had spent four months studying with
the monk in
Such insight eventually helped Gray
confront demons of his past.
Growing up, he had always found himself
stuck between opposites. Though his mother had taught at a Catholic high
school, instilling a deep spirituality in Gray's life, she was also an
accomplished biologist, a devout disciple of evolution and reason. She placed
as much faith and trust in the scientific method as in her own religion.
And then there was his father: a Welshman
living in
Like father, like son.
Until Ang Gelu had shown Gray another
way.
A path between opposites. It was not a
short path. It extended as much into the past as the future. Gray was still
struggling with it.
But Ang Gelu had helped Gray take his
first steps. He owed the monk for that. So when the call for help reached Gray
a week ago, he had not wanted to ignore it. Ang Gelu reported strange
disappearances, odd maladies, all in a certain region near the Chinese border.
The monk had not known to whom to turn.
His own government in
Passing the buck
"I had only meant for Painter to
send a junior operative," Gray stumbled out, incredulous. "To check
it out. Certainly there were others who"
Gray bit back a groan. He knew what
"So he went?"
"You know the director. Always wants
to get his hands dirty."
When
it rains, it pours.
"I can send you Monk,"
"But the auction will be over"
"Commander Pierce, you have your
orders."
Gray spoke rapidly, his voice tightening
again. "Sir, I've already set up buttonhole cameras at entry and egress
points around the auction house. It would be a waste to ignore them."
"All right. Monitor the cameras from
a secure location. Record everything. But no more. Is that understood,
Commander?"
Gray bristled, but
"Report in after the auction,"
"Yes, sir."
The line clicked off.
Gray continued through the backstreets of
For Painter, for Ang Gelu
What the hell was happening in
11:18 a.m.
And
you're sure Ang Gelu was killed?" Painter asked, glancing back.
A nod answered him.
Lisa Cummings had finished her story,
having told how she'd been enlisted from an Everest climbing team to
investigate an illness at the monastery. She had quickly related the horrors
that followed: the madness, the explosions, the sniper.
Painter reviewed her story in his head as
the pair wound deeper into the monastery's subterranean root cellar. The narrow
stone maze was not meant for one his size. He had to keep tucked low. Still,
the top of his head brushed across some hanging bundles of drying juniper
branches. The aromatic sprays were used to make ceremonial smudge sticks for
the temple overhead, a temple that was now just one large smudge stick, burning
and smoking into the midday sky.
Weaponless, they had fled into the
cellars to escape the flames. Painter had stopped only long enough to grab a heavy
poncho and a pair of fur-lined boots from a cloakroom. In the current getup, he
almost looked the part of a Pequot Indian, even if he was only half-blooded. He
had no recollection of where his own clothes or packs
had been taken.
Three days had vanished from his life.
Along with ten pounds.
While donning the robe earlier, he noted
the prominence of his ribs. Even his shoulders seemed bonier. He had not fully
escaped the illness here. Still, at least his strength continued to improve.
It needed to.
Especially with an assassin still on the
loose.
Painter had heard the occasional spats of
gunfire as they fled below. A sniper was killing anyone who fled the burning
monastery. Dr. Cummings had described the attacker. Only one man. Surely there
were others. Were they Maoist rebels? It made no sense. What end did their
slaughter serve?
Bearing a penlight in hand, Painter led
the way.
Dr. Cummings followed closely.
Painter had learned she was an American
medical doctor and a member of an Everest climbing party. He studied her glancingly, evaluating her. She was long-legged with an
athletic physique, blond and ponytailed, her cheeks
rosy from windburn. She was also terrified. She kept close to him, jumping at
the occasional muffled pop of the firestorm overhead. Still, she didn't stop,
no tears, no complaints. It seemed she staved off any shock by sheer will.
But for how long?
Her fingers trembled as she moved aside a
drying bouquet of lemongrass from her face. They continued onward. As they
moved deeper into the root cellar, the air grew redolent from all the sprigs:
rosemary, artemisia, mountain rhododendron, khenpa. All ready to be prepared into various incense
sticks.
Lama Khemsar,
the head of the monastery, had taught Painter the purposes of the hundreds of
herbs: for purification, to foster divine energies, to dispel disruptive
thoughts, even to treat asthma and the common cold. But right now, all Painter
wanted to remember was how to reach the cellar's back door. The root cellar
connected all the monastery's buildings. Monks used the cellars during the
winter's heavy snowfall to pass underground from structure to structure.
Including reaching the barn at the
outskirts of the grounds. It stood well away from the flames and out of direct
sight.
If they could reach it
then escape to
the lower village
He needed to contact Sigma Command.
As his mind spun with possibilities, so
did the passageway.
Painter leaned a hand on the cellar wall,
steadying himself.
Dizzy.
"Are you all right?" the doctor
asked, stepping to his shoulder.
He took a few breaths before nodding.
Since he had awakened, bouts of disorientation continued to plague him. But
they were occurring less frequently or was that wishful thinking?
"What really happened up
there?" the doctor asked. She relieved him of his penlight it was
actually hers, from her medical kit and pointed it into his eyes.
"I don't
I'm not sure
But we
should keep moving."
Painter tried to push off the wall, but
she pressed a palm against his chest, still examining his eyes. "You're
showing a prominent nystagmus," she whispered
and lowered the penlight, brow crinkled.
"What?"
She passed him a canteen of cold water
and motioned for him to sit on a wrapped bale of hay. He didn't argue. The bale
was as hard as cement.
"Your eyes show signs of horizontal nystagmus, a twitch of the pupils. Did you take a blow to
the head?"
"I don't think so. Is it
serious?"
"Hard to say. It can be the result
of damage to the eye or brain. A stroke, multiple sclerosis, a blow to the head.
With the dizziness, I'd say you've had some insult to your vestibular
apparatus. Maybe in the inner ear. Maybe central nervous system. Most likely
it's not permanent." This last was mumbled in a most disconcerting voice.
"What do you mean by most likely, Dr. Cummings?"
"Call me Lisa," she said, as if
attempting to divert attention.
"Fine. Lisa. So this could be
permanent?"
She glanced away. "I'd need more
tests. More background," she said. "Maybe you could start by telling
me how all this happened."
He took a swig. He wished he could. An
ache settled behind his eyes as he tried to remember. The last days were a
blur.
"I was staying at one of the
outlying villages. In the middle of the night, strange lights appeared up in
the mountains. I didn't see the fireworks. By the time I'd woken, they'd
subsided. But by the morning, everyone in the village complained of headaches,
nausea. Including me. I asked one of the elders about the lights. He said they
would appear every now and then, going back generations. Ghost lights.
Attributed it to evil spirits of the deep mountains."
"Evil spirits?"
"He pointed to where the lights were
seen. Up in a remote region of the mountains, an area of deep gorges, ice
waterfalls, stretching all the way to the Chinese border. Difficult to
traverse. The monastery sits on a shoulder of mountain overlooking this
no-man's-land."
"So the monastery was closer to the
lights?"
Painter nodded. "All the sheep died
within twenty-four hours. Some dropped where they stood. Others bashed their
heads against boulders, over and over again. I arrived back the next day,
aching and vomiting. Lama Khemsar gave me some tea.
That's the last thing I remember." He took another sip from the canteen
and sighed. "That was three days ago. I woke up. Locked in a room. I had
to smash my way out."
"You were lucky," the woman
said, collecting back her canteen.
"How's that?"
She crossed her arms, tight, protective.
"Lucky to be away from the monastery. Proximity to the lights appears to
correlate to the severity of symptoms." She glanced up and away, as if
trying to see through the walls down here. "Maybe it was some form of
radiation. Didn't you say the Chinese border was not far? Maybe it was a
nuclear test of some sort."
Painter had wondered the exact same thing
days earlier.
"Why are you shaking your
head?" Lisa asked.
Painter hadn't realized he was. He raised
a palm to his forehead.
Lisa frowned. "You never did say
what you are doing way out here, Mr. Crowe."
"Call me Painter." He offered
her a crooked smile.
She wasn't impressed.
He debated how much more to say. Under
the circumstances, honesty seemed the most prudent. Or at least as honest as he
could be.
"I work for the government, a
division called DARPA. We"
She cut him off with a flip of her
fingers, arms still crossed. "I'm familiar with DARPA. The
"Well, it seems you were not the
only one Ang Gelu recruited. He contacted our organization a week ago. To
investigate rumors of strange illnesses up here. I was just getting the lay of
the land, determining what experts to bring into the area doctors,
geologists, military when the storms blew in. I hadn't planned on being cut
off for so long."
"Were you able to rule anything
out?"
"From initial interviews, I was
concerned that perhaps the Maoist rebels in the area had come into possession
of some nuclear waste, preparing a dirty bomb of some sort. Along the lines of
what you were conjecturing with the Chinese. So I tested for various forms of
radiation as I waited out the storms. Nothing unusual registered."
Lisa stared at him, as if studying a
strange beetle.
"If we could get you to a lab,"
she said clinically, "we might come up with some answers."
So she didn't consider him so much a
beetle as a guinea pig.
At least he was moving up the
evolutionary scale.
"First we have to survive,"
Painter said, recalling her to the reality here.
She glanced at the cellar's ceiling. It
had been a while since they heard any gunfire. "Maybe they'll think
everyone's dead. If we just stay down here"
Painter pushed off the bale and stood.
"From your description, the attack here was methodical. Planned in
advance. They'll know about these tunnels. They'll eventually search here. We
can only hope they'll wait for the fires to cool down."
Lisa nodded. "Then we keep
going."
"And get clear. We can do
this," he assured her. He placed a hand against the wall to steady
himself. "We can do this," he repeated, more to himself this time
than to her.
They set off.
After a few steps, Painter felt steadier.
Good.
The exit could not be much farther.
As if confirming this, a breeze whispered
down the corridor, stirring the hanging bundles of herbs with a dry clacking.
Painter felt the cold on his face. It froze him in place. A hunter's instinct
took hold half special ops training, half blood heritage. He reached behind
him and took hold of Lisa's elbow, silencing her.
He flicked off the penlight.
Ahead, something heavy struck the floor,
the sound echoing down the passage. Boots. A door slammed closed. The breeze
died.
They were no longer alone.
The assassin crouched in the root cellar.
He knew others were down here. How many? He shouldered his rifle and pulled out
a Heckler & Koch MK23 pistol. He had already stripped his hands to
fingerless wool under-gloves. He stood his post, listening.
The faintest scuffle and scrape.
Retreating.
At least two
maybe three.
Reaching up, he pulled shut the trapdoor
that led to the barn above. The cold breeze died with one last whispered rush
as darkness clamped over him. He pulled down a pair of night-vision goggles and
clicked on an ultraviolet lamp affixed to his shoulder. The passage ahead
glowed in shades of a silvery green.
Near at hand, a wall of shelves was
stacked with canned goods and rows of wax-sealed jars of amber honey. He
slipped past, moving slowly, silently. There was no need to hurry. The only
other exits led to fiery ruin. He had shot those monks with sense enough still
in their addled heads to flee the flames.
Mercy killings, all of them.
As he knew too well.
The
It had been an accident. One of many
lately.
For the past month, he had sensed the agitation
among the others at the Granitschloß.
Even before the accident. Something had stirred up the castle, felt as far as
the hinterlands where he made his solitary home. He had ignored it. Why should
it be his concern?
Then the accident
and it had become his
problem.
To clean up their mistake.
It was his duty as one of the last
surviving Sonnekönige. Such was the
decline of the Knights of the Sun both in numbers and in status, debilitated
and shunned, anachronistic and an embarrassment. Before long, the last of them
would be gone.
And just as well.
But at least this duty today was almost
finished. He could return to his hovel after he cleared out this root cellar.
The tragedy at the monastery would be blamed on Maoist rebels. Who else but the
godless Maoists would attack a strategically unimportant monastery?
To ensure this deception, even his
ammunition matched the rebels'.
Including his pistol.
With weapon ready, he edged by a row of
open oak barrels. Grain, rye, flour, even dried apples. He stepped carefully,
wary of any ambush. The monks might be damaged of mind, but even the mad could
display cunning when cornered.
Ahead, the passageway jagged to the left.
He hugged the right wall. He stopped to listen, ears pricked for any scuffle of
heel. He flipped up his night-vision goggles.
Pitch dark.
He lowered the scopes over his eyes, and
the passageway stretched ahead, limned in green. He would see any lurkers well
before they saw him. There was no escape. They would have to get past him to
reach the only safe way out.
He slid around the corner.
A low bale of hay sat crooked across the
passage, as if knocked aside in a hurry. He searched the stretch of cellar
ahead. More barrels. The roof was raftered with hanging bunches of drying
branches.
No movement. No sound.
He reached a leg over the blocking bale
and stepped to the far side.
Under his boot heel, a brittle juniper
branch cracked.
His eyes flicked down. The entire floor
was covered with a spread of branches.
Trap.
"Now!"
He glanced up as the world ahead burst
into a strobing brilliance. Amplified by the goggles'
sensitivity, the exploding supernovas seared the back of his skull, blinding
him.
Camera flashes.
He fired instinctively.
The explosions were deafening in the
tight cellar.
They must have lain in wait in the dark,
listening until he stepped on the crackling branch, giving away his proximity,
then ambushed him. He backed a step, half tripping on the bale of hay.
Falling back, his next shot fired high.
A mistake.
Taking advantage, someone barreled into
him. Low. Hitting him in the legs and knocking him over the bale. His back
slammed into the stone floor. Something stabbed into the meat of his thigh. He
kneed up, earning a grunt from the attacker atop him.
"Go!" the attacker yelled,
pinning down his pistol arm. "Get clear!"
His attacker spoke English. Not a monk.
A second figure leaped past their bodies,
appearing shadowy as his vision began to return. He heard the steps retreating
toward the barn trapdoor.
"Scheiße,"
he swore.
He heaved his body around, flinging the
man from him like a ragdoll. The Sonnekönige were not like other men. His attacker struck the wall,
rebounded, and tried to leap after the other escapee. But vision returned
rapidly, illuminated by the retreating light. Furious, he grabbed his
attacker's ankle and dragged him back.
The man kicked with his other foot,
catching him in the elbow.
Growling, he dug his thumb into a tender
nerve behind the Achilles tendon. The man cried out. He knew how painful that
pinch could be. Like having your ankle broken. He drew the man up by his leg.
As he straightened, the world turned in a
heady spin. All the strength suddenly sputtered out of him as if he were a
popped balloon. His upper thigh burned. Where he'd been stabbed. He stared
down. Not stabbed. A syringe still protruded from his thigh, jammed to the
hilt.
Drugged.
His attacker twisted and broke his
weakening grip, rolling and scrambling away.
He could not let the man escape.
He lifted his pistol as heavy as an
anvil now and fired after him. The shot ricocheted off the floor. Weakening
rapidly, he fired a second shot but the man was already out of sight.
He heard his attacker fleeing.
Limbs heavy, he sank to his knees. His
heart pounded in his chest. A heart twice the average size. But normal for a Sonnekönig.
He took several deep breaths as his
metabolism adjusted.
The Sonnekönige
were not like other men.
He slowly pushed to his feet.
He had a duty to finish.
It was why he had been born.
To serve.
Painter slammed the trapdoor closed.
"Help me with this," he said,
limping to the side. Pain prickled up his leg. He pointed to a stack of crates.
"Stack them on the trapdoor."
He dragged off the topmost crate. Too
heavy to carry, it crashed to the floor with a clang of rattling metal. He
dragged it toward the door. He didn't know what was inside the crates, only
that they were heavy, damn heavy.
He manhandled the box atop the trapdoor.
Lisa struggled with a second. He joined
her, grabbing a third.
Together they hauled the load to the
door.
"One more," Painter said.
Lisa stared at the pile of crates on the
door. "No one's getting through that."
"One more," Painter insisted,
panting and grimacing. "Trust me."
They dragged the last one together. It
took both of them to lift it atop the others already piled on the trapdoor.
"The drugs will keep him out cold
for hours," Lisa said.
A single gunshot answered her. A rifle
round pierced through the loaded trapdoor and drilled into one of the barn
rafters.
"I think I'm going to want a second
opinion," Painter said, pulling her away.
"Did you get all of the midazolam
the sedative into him?"
"Oh yeah."
"Then how?"
"I don't know. And right now, don't
care."
Painter led her toward the open barn
door. After searching for any other gunmen, they fled outside. To the left, the
world was a fiery, smoky ruin. Flaming embers swirled into a lowering sky.
Clouds the color of granite obscured the
summit overhead.
"Taski was
right," Lisa mumbled, pulling up the hood of her parka.
"Who?"
"A Sherpa guide. He warned that
another storm front would strike today."
Painter followed the flames twisting
toward the clouds. Heavy white snowflakes began to sift downward, mixing with a
black rain of glowing ash. Fire and ice. It was a fitting memorial to the dozen
monks who had shared this monastery.
As Painter remembered the gentle men who
made their home here, a dark anger stoked inside him. Who would slaughter the
monks with such mercilessness?
He had no answer to the who, but he did know the why.
The illness here.
Something had gone wrong and now
someone sought to cover it up.
An explosion cut off any further
contemplation. Flame and smoke belched out the barn door. One of the crate lids
sailed out into the yard.
Painter grabbed Lisa's arm.
"Did he just blow himself up?"
Lisa asked, staring aghast toward the barn.
"No. Just the trapdoor. C'mon. The
fires will only hold him off so long."
Painter led the way across the
ice-crusted ground, avoiding the frozen carcasses of the goats and sheep. They
picked their way out the pen gate.
Snow grew heavier. A mixed blessing.
Painter wore only a thick woolen robe and fur-lined boots. Not much insulation
against a blizzard. But the fresh snowfall would help hide their path and shave
visibility.
He led the way toward a path that ran
along a sheer cliff face and trailed down to the lower village, the village he
had visited a few days ago.
"Look!" Lisa said.
Below, a column of smoke churned into the
sky, a smaller version of the one at their back.
"The village
" Painter
tightened a fist.
So it wasn't just the monastery that was
being eradicated. The scatter of huts below had been firebombed, too. The
attackers were leaving no witnesses.
Painter pulled back from the cliff-side
trail. It was too exposed.
The path would surely be watched, and
others might still be below.
He retreated back toward the fiery ruins
of the monastery.
"Where are we going to go?"
Lisa asked.
Painter pointed beyond the flames.
"No-man's-land."
"But isn't that where?"
"Where the lights were last
seen," he confirmed. "But the broken land is also a place to lose
ourselves. To find shelter. To hole up and weather out the storm. We'll wait
for others to come investigate the fire and smoke."
Painter stared at the thick black column.
It should be visible for miles. A smoke signal, like his Native American
ancestors once used. But was there anyone to see it? His gaze shifted higher,
to the clouds. He tried to pierce the cover to the open skies beyond. He prayed
someone recognized the danger.
Until then
He had only one choice.
"Let's go."
1:25 a.m.
Monk
crossed the dark
"I'd prefer we wait," Kat said.
"It's too early. Anything might happen."
Monk could smell the hint of jasmine from
her. They had showered hurriedly together after the call from Logan Gregory,
caressing each other in the steam, entwined as they rinsed, a final intimacy.
But afterward, as they separately toweled and dressed, practicality began to
intrude with every tug of a zipper and securing of a button. Reality set in,
cooling their passion as much as the night's chill.
Monk glanced at her now.
Kat wore navy blue slacks, a white
blouse, and a windbreaker emblazoned with the U.S. Navy symbol. Professional as
always, as spit-and-polished as her black leather pumps. While Monk, in turn,
wore black Reeboks, dark jeans, and an oatmeal-colored turtleneck sweater,
topped by a Chicago Cubs baseball cap.
"Until I know for sure," Kat
continued, "I'd prefer we keep silent about the pregnancy."
"What do you mean by until I know
for sure? Until you know for sure you want the baby? Until you're sure about
us?"
They had argued all the way from Kat's
apartment at the edge of
"Monk
"
He stopped. He reached a hand out to her,
then lowered it. Still, she stopped, too.
He stared her square in the eye.
"Tell me, Kat."
"I want to make sure the pregnancy
I don't know
sticks. Until I'm
further along before telling anyone." Her eyes glistened in the moonlight,
near tears.
"Baby, that's why we should let
everyone know." He stepped closer. He placed a hand on her belly. "To
protect what's growing here."
She turned away, his hand now resting on
the small of her back. "And then maybe you were right. My career
maybe
this isn't the right time."
Monk sighed. "If all kids were born
only at the right time, the world would be a much emptier place."
"Monk, you're not being fair. It's
not your career."
"Like hell it's not. You don't think
a kid isn't going to alter my life, my choices from here? It changes
everything."
"Exactly. That's what scares me the
most." She leaned into his palm. He wrapped her in his arms.
"We'll get through this
together," he whispered. "I promise."
"I'd still rather keep quiet
at
least for a few more days. I haven't even been to a doctor yet. Maybe the
pregnancy test is wrong."
"How many tests did you take?"
She leaned against him.
"Well?"
"Five," she whispered.
"Five?" He failed to keep the
amusement from his voice.
She half punched him in the ribs. It
hurt. "Don't make fun of me." He heard the smile in her voice.
He wrapped his arms tighter around her.
"Fine. It'll be our secret for now."
She turned in his arms and kissed him,
not deeply, not passionately, just in thanks. They separated, but their fingers
remained entwined as they continued across the mall.
Ahead, brightly lit, was their
destination: the
Kat's fingers slipped from his as they
neared the castle grounds.
Monk studied her, a worry nagging him
still.
Despite their agreement, he sensed the
core of insecurity persisted behind her manner. Was it more than just the baby?
Until
I know for sure.
Sure of what?
The worry nagged Monk all the way down to
the subterranean offices of Sigma command. But once below, the debriefing with
Logan Gregory, Sigma's interim director, added a whole new batch of worries.
"Storm cover is still blanketing the
region, with electrical storms surging across the entire Bay of Bengal,"
Monk passed Kat a photo of one of the
satellite passes.
"Hopefully we'll hear some further
word before sunrise,"
Monk shared a glance with Kat. They had
been briefed on the director's investigation. Painter Crowe had been out of
communication for three days. From the haggard look of Logan Gregory, the man
had been awake the entire time. He wore his usual blue suit, but it was
slightly rumpled at elbow and knee, practically disheveled for the second in
command of Sigma. His straw blond hair and tanned physique always gave him a
youthful air, but this night, signs of his forty-plus years wore through: puffy
eyes, a wan pallor, and a pair of wrinkles between his eyes as deep as the
"What about Gray?" Kat asked.
"What?" Monk leaned forward, a
bit suddenly. "Then what's with all the weather reports?"
"Calm down. He's secure and awaiting
backup."
Monk had to give the man credit. He
didn't even check his watch.
"Captain Bryant,"
"Certainly, sir."
Monk was suddenly glad Kat had risen
through the ranks in the intelligence branch. She would be
He found Kat staring at him. There was an
angry set to her eyes, as if she could read his mind. He kept his face fixed
and immobile.
No sooner had the door closed behind them
than Kat grabbed his arm, above the elbow, hard. "You're heading over to
"Yeah, so?"
"What about
?" She tugged him
into the women's lavatory. It was empty at this late hour. "What about the
baby?"
"I don't understand. What
does?"
"What if something happens to
you?"
He blinked at her. "Nothing will
happen."
She lifted his other arm, exposing his
prosthetic hand. "You're not indestructible."
He lowered his arm, half hiding his hand
behind him. His face heated up. "It's a babysitting operation. I'll
support Gray as he finishes his work there. I mean, even Rachel's coming to
town. Most likely I'll be their bloody chaperone. Then we'll be on the first
flight back here."
"If it's so damn unimportant, let
someone else go. I can tell
"Like he'll believe that."
"Monk
"
"I'm going, Kat. You're the one who
wants to keep quiet about the pregnancy. I want to shout it out to the world.
Either way, we have our duties. You have yours. I have mine. And trust me, I
won't be reckless." He placed a hand on her belly. "I'll be protecting
my ass for all three of us."
She covered his hand with her own and
sighed. "Well, it is a pretty nice ass."
He smiled at her. She grinned back, but
he also saw the exhaustion and worry in her eyes. He only had one answer for
that.
He leaned in, lips touching, and
whispered between them. "I promise."
"Promise what?" she asked,
pulling back slightly.
"Everything," he answered and
kissed her deeply.
He meant it.
"You can tell Gray," she said
when they finally broke their embrace. "As long as you swear him to
secrecy."
"Really?" His eyes brightened,
then narrowed in suspicion. "Why?"
She stepped around him toward the mirror,
but not before swatting his backside. "I want him watching your ass,
too."
"All right. But I don't think he
swings that way."
She shook her head and checked her face
in the mirror. "What am I going to do with you?"
He stepped behind her and encircled her
waist. "Well, according to Mr. Gregory, I do have ninety-two
minutes."
12:15 p.m.
Lisa
scrambled after Painter.
With the skill of a mountain goat, he led
the way down a steep pitch, boulder-strewn and treacherous with frozen shale.
Snow fell thickly over them, a shifting, billowing cloud that lowered
visibility to a few feet, creating a strange, gray twilight. But at least they
were out of the worst of the icy gusts. The deep notch they had worked down ran
counter to the wind's direction.
Still, there was no escaping the frigid
cold as the temperature plummeted. Even in her storm parka and gloves, she
shivered. Though they had traveled less than a full hour, the heat of the
burning monastery was a distant memory. The inches of exposed skin on her face
felt windburned and abraded.
Painter had to be faring worse. He had
donned a pair of thick pants and woolen mittens, stripped off one of the dead
monks. But he had no insulating hood, only a scarf tied over the lower half of
his face. His breath puffed white into the frigid air.
They had to find shelter.
And soon.
Painter offered her a hand as she slid on
her butt down a particularly steep patch and gained his side. They had reached
the bottom of the notch. It angled away, framed by steep walls.
The fresh snow had already accumulated to
a foot's depth down here.
It would be hard trekking without
snowshoes.
As if reading her worry, Painter pointed
off to one side of the narrow cut. An overhang lipped out, offering protection
from the weather. They set out for it, trudging through the drifts.
Once they reached the overhang, it became
easier.
She glanced behind her. Already their
steps were filling up with new snow. In minutes, they would be gone. While this
certainly helped hide their path from any trackers, it still unnerved her. It
was as if their very existence were being erased.
She turned around. "Do you have any
idea where we're going?" she asked. She found herself whispering not so
much in fear of giving away their position but as the blanketing hush of the
storm intimidated.
"Barely," Painter said.
"These borderlands are uncharted territory. Much of it never trod by man."
He waved an arm. "When I first arrived here, I did study some satellite
survey shots. But they're not much practical use. The land's too broken. Makes
surveys difficult."
They continued in silence for a few more
steps.
Then Painter glanced back to her.
"Did you know that back in 1999 they discovered Shangri-La up here?"
Lisa studied him. She couldn't tell if he
was smiling behind his scarf, trying to ease her fear. "Shangri-La
as in Lost Horizon?" She remembered the
movie and the book. A lost Utopian paradise frozen in time in the
Turning back around, he trudged on and
explained. "Two National Geographic
explorers discovered a monstrously deep gorge in the
"Shangri-La?"
He shrugged. "Just shows you that
science and satellites don't always reveal what the world wants to hide."
By now his teeth were chattering. Even
the act of talking wasted breath and heat. They needed to find their own Shangri-La.
They continued in silence. The snow fell
thicker.
After another ten minutes, the notch cut
to one side in a tight switchback. Reaching the corner, the protective overhang
disappeared.
They stopped and stared, despairing.
The notch cut steeply down from here,
widening and opening. A veil of snow fell ahead of them, filling the world.
Through occasional gusts, fluttering glimpses of a deep valley appeared.
It was no Shangri-La.
Ahead stretched an icy, snow-swept series
of jagged cliffs, too steep to traverse without ropes. A stream tumbled down
through the precipitous landscape in a series of towering waterfalls the
course frozen to pure ice, locked in time.
Beyond, misted by snow and ice fog, lay a
deep gorge, appearing bottomless from here. The end of the world.
"We'll find a way down,"
Painter chattered.
He headed into the teeth of the storm
again. The snow quickly climbed above their ankles, then midcalf.
Painter plowed a path for her.
"Wait," she said. She knew he
couldn't last much longer. He had gotten her this far, but they were not
equipped to go any farther. "Over here."
She led him toward the cliff wall. The
leeward side was somewhat sheltered.
"Where?" he tried to ask, but
his teeth rattled away his words.
She just pointed to where the frozen
stream tumbled past the cliff overhead. Taski Sherpa
had taught them survival skills up here. One of his strictest lessons. Finding
shelter.
She knew by heart the five best places to
look.
Lisa crossed to where the waterfall of
ice reached their level. As instructed, she searched where the black rock met
the blue-white ice. According to their guide, summer snowmelt turned the
Himalayan waterfalls into churning torrents, capable of carving a deep pocket
out of the rock. And by summer's end, the water flow receded and froze, often
leaving an empty space behind it.
With relief, she saw this waterfall was
no exception.
She sent a prayer of thanks to Taski and all his ancestors.
Using her elbow, she shattered a crust of
rime and widened a black gap between ice and wall. A small cave opened beyond.
Painter joined her. "Let me make
sure it's safe."
Turning on his side, he squeezed through
and disappeared. A moment later, a small light bloomed, illuminating the
waterfall.
Lisa peered through the crack.
Painter stood a couple of steps away,
penlight in hand. He swept his beam around the small niche. "Looks safe.
We should be able to weather out the storm in here for some time."
Lisa pushed through to join him. Out of
the wind and snow, it already felt warmer.
Painter flicked off his penlight. A light
source wasn't really necessary. The ice wall seemed to collect whatever
daylight the storm let through and amplified it. The frozen waterfall
scintillated and glowed.
Painter turned to her, his eyes
exceptionally blue, a match to the glowing ice. She searched his face for signs
of frostbite. The wind's abrasion had turned his skin a deep ruddy hue. She
recognized his Native American heritage in the planes of his face. Striking
with his blue eyes.
"Thanks," Painter said.
"You may have just saved our lives."
She shrugged, glancing away. "I owed
you the favor."
Still, despite her dismissive words, a
part of her warmed at his appreciation more than she would have expected.
"How did you know how to
find?" Painter's last words were lost to a hard sneeze. "Ow."
Lisa shrugged out of her pack.
"Enough questions. We both need to warm up."
She opened her medical pack and tugged
out an MPI insulating blanket. Despite its deceptive thinness, the Astrolar fabric would retain ninety percent of radiated
body heat. And she wasn't counting on just body heat.
She pulled out a compact catalytic
heater, vital gear in mountaineering.
"Sit," she ordered Painter,
spreading the blanket over the cold rock.
Exhausted, he didn't offer any argument.
She joined him and swept it over them
both, forming a cocoon. Nestling inside, she pressed the electronic ignition
for her Coleman Sport-Cat heater. The flameless device operated on a small
butane cylinder that lasted fourteen hours. Using it sparingly and
intermittently, along with the space blanket, they should be able to last two
or three days.
Painter shivered next to her as the
heater warmed.
"Take off your gloves and
boots," she said, doing the same. "Warm your hands over the heater
and massage fingers, toes, nose, ears."
"Against f
frostbite
"
She nodded. "Pile as much clothing
between you and the rock to limit heat loss from conduction."
They stripped and feathered their nest
with goose down and wool.
Soon the space felt almost balmy.
"I have a few PowerBars,"
she said. "We can melt snow for water."
"A regular backwoods
survivalist," Painter said a bit more steadily, optimism returning as they
warmed.
"But none of this will stop a
bullet," she said. She stared over at him, almost nose to nose under the
blanket.
Painter sighed and nodded. They were out
of the cold, but not out of danger. The storm, a threat before, offered some
protection. But what then? They had no means of communication. No weapons.
"We'll stay hidden," Painter
said. "Whoever firebombed the monastery won't be able to track us.
Searchers will come looking when the storm clears. Hopefully with rescue
helicopters. We can signal them with that road flare I saw in your emergency
pack."
"And just hope the rescuers reach us
before the others."
He reached and squeezed her knee. She
appreciated the fact that he didn't offer any false words of encouragement. No
candy-coating their situation. Her hand found his and held tight. It was
encouragement enough.
They remained silent, lost in their own
thoughts.
"Who do you think they are?"
she finally asked softly.
"Don't know. But I heard the man
swear when I knocked into him. In German. Felt like hitting a tank."
"German? Are you sure?"
"I'm not sure of anything. Probably a
hired mercenary. He obviously had some military training."
"Wait," Lisa said. She wiggled
around to her pack. "My camera."
Painter sat straighter, shaking loose a
corner of the blanket. He tucked it under to close the gap. "You think you
might have a picture of him?"
"To operate the strobe flash, I set
the camera to continuous shooting. In that mode, the digital SLR takes five
frames per second. I have no idea what got captured." She twisted around,
thumbing on the camera.
Shoulder to shoulder, they stared at the
tiny LCD screen on the back of the camera body. She brought up the last shots.
Most were blurry, but as she flipped through the series, it was like watching a
slow-motion replay of their escape: the startled response of the assassin, his
raised arm as he instinctively tried to shield his eyes, his gunfire as she
ducked behind her barrel, Painter's crash into him.
A few shots had captured slices of the
man's face. Piecing the jigsaw together, they had a rough composite:
blond-white hair, brutish brow, prominent jaw. The last shot in the series must
have been taken as she leaped over Painter and the assassin. She captured a
great close-up of his eyes, his night-vision scopes knocked over one ear. Anger
blazed, a wildness accentuated by the red-eyed pupils in the camera flash.
Lisa flashed back to Relu
Na, the distant relation of Ang Gelu who had attacked them with a sickle. The
maddened monk's eyes had glowed similarly. A chill that had nothing to do with
the weather washed over her bare skin.
She also noted one other thing about the
eyes.
They were mismatched.
One eye shone a brilliant Arctic blue.
The other was a dead white.
Maybe it was just flash washout
Lisa hit the back arrow and recycled
through the photos to the beginning.
She overshot and brought up the last
picture stored in the camera before the series in the root cellar. It was a
picture of a wall, scrawled and scratched in blood. She had forgotten she had
taken it.
"What's that?" Painter asked.
She had already related the sad story of
the head of the monastery, Lama Khemsar. "That's
what the old monk had been writing on the wall. It looks like the same series
of marks. Over and over again."
Painter leaned closer. "Can you zoom
in?"
She did, though some crispness and
clarity pixilated away.
Painter's brow knit together. "It's
not Tibetan or Nepalese. Look at how angular the script is. Looks more like
Nordic runes or something."
"Do you think so?"
"Maybe." Painter leaned back
with a tired groan. "Either way, it makes you wonder if Lama Khemsar knew more than he let on."
Lisa remembered something she had failed
to tell Painter. "After the old monk cut his throat, we found a symbol
carved into his chest. I dismissed it as just raving and coincidence. But now
I'm not so sure."
"What did it look like? Can you draw
it?"
"No need to. It was a
swastika."
Painter's brows rose. "A
swastika?"
"I think so. Could he have been
flashing back to the past, acting out something that frightened him?"
Lisa related the story of Ang Gelu's relative. How Relu Na had
fled the Maoist rebels, traumatized by their growing brutality as they took
sickles to the limbs of innocent farmers. Then Relu
Na did the same when the illness sapped the man's sanity, acting out some
deep-seated trauma.
Painter frowned as she finished.
"Lama Khemsar was somewhere in his
mid-seventies. That would place him in his early to mid-teens during World War
II. So it's possible. The Nazis had sent research expeditions into the
"Here? Why?"
Painter shrugged. "The story goes
that Heinrich Himmler, the head of the SS, was fixated on the occult. He
studied ancient Vedic texts of
Lisa smiled at him. "Still, maybe
the old Lama had some run-in with one of those early expeditions. Hired as a
guide or something."
"Maybe. But we'll never know.
Whatever secrets there were died with him."
"Maybe not. Maybe that was what he
was trying to do up in his room. Letting go of something horrible. His
subconscious trying to absolve itself by revealing what he knew."
"That's a lot of maybes." Painter
rubbed his forehead, wincing. "And I have one more. Maybe it was just gibberish."
Lisa had no argument against that. She
sighed, tiring rapidly as the adrenaline of their flight wore off. "Are
you warm enough?"
"Yeah, thanks."
She switched off the heater. "Need
to conserve the butane."
He nodded, then failed to stop a
jaw-popping yawn.
"We should try to get some
sleep," she said. "Take shifts."
Hours later, Painter woke, startled awake
by someone shaking his shoulder. He sat up from where he had been leaning
against the wall. It was dark out.
The wall of ice before him was as
pitch-black as the rock.
At least the storm seemed to have died
down.
"What's wrong?" he asked.
Lisa had dropped a section of their
blanket.
She pointed an arm and whispered, "Wait."
He shifted closer, shedding any
sleepiness. He waited half a minute. Still nothing. The storm definitely seemed
to have subsided. The wind's howl was gone. Beyond their cave, a winter's
crystalline quiet had settled over the valley and cliffs. He strained to hear
anything suspicious.
Something had definitely spooked Lisa.
He sensed her raw fear. It practically
vibrated out of her tense body.
"Lisa, what's?"
Suddenly the wall of ice flickered
brilliantly, as if fireworks had ignited in the sky outside. There was no
noise. The scintillating radiance cascaded up along the falls and away. Then
the ice went dark again.
"The ghost lights
," Lisa
whispered and turned to him.
Painter flashed to three nights ago. When
this had all started. The illness in the
village, the madness in the monastery. He remembered Lisa's earlier
assessment. Proximity to the strange lights was directly related to the
severity of the symptoms.
And now they were in the heart of the
badlands.
Closer than ever.
As Painter watched, the frozen waterfall
flared again with a shining and deadly brilliance. The ghost lights had
returned.
6:12 p.m.
Does
nothing ever start on time in
Gray checked his wristwatch.
The auction had been slated to start at
five o'clock.
Trains and buses might be efficient
enough to set your clock by here, but when it came to scheduled events, it was
anyone's guess. It was already after six. The latest consensus was that the
auction's start would be closer to six-thirty, due to some late arrivals, as a
storm off the North Sea was delaying air traffic into
Bidders were still arriving below.
As the sun sank away, Gray had positioned
himself on a second-story balcony of the Scandic
Hotel Webers. It sat across the street from the home
of Ergenschein Auction House, a modern four-story
building that seemed more art gallery than auction establishment, with its
modern Danish minimalist style, all glass and bleached woods. The auction was
to take place in the house's basement.
And hopefully soon.
Gray yawned and stretched.
Earlier, he had stopped at his original
hotel near Nyhavn, quickly collected his surveillance
gear, and checked out. Under a new name with a new MasterCard, he had booked
into this hotel. It offered a panoramic view of
He had a laptop open with a half-eaten
hot dog from a street vendor resting beside it. His
only meal of the day. Despite rumors, the life of an operative was not all
The image on the laptop screen shivered
as the motion-sensitive camera snapped a rapid series of pictures. He had
already captured two dozen participants: stiff bankers, dismissive Eurotrash, a trio of bull-necked gentlemen in shiny suits
with mafioso stamped on their foreheads, a pudgy
woman in professorial attire, and a foursome of white-suited nouveau riche
wearing identical matching sailor caps. Of course, these last spoke American.
Loudly.
He shook his head.
There couldn't possibly be too many more
arrivals.
A long black limousine pulled up to the
auction house. Two figures stepped out. They were tall and lean, dressed in
matching black Armani suits. His and hers. He wore a robin's egg blue tie. She
wore a silk blouse of a matching hue. Both were young, mid-twenties at best.
But they carried themselves as if much older. Maybe it was the bleached white
hair, coiffed almost identically, short, pasted to the scalp, looking like a
pair of silent-movie stars from the Roaring Twenties. Their manner gave them an
ageless grace. No smiles, but not cold. Even in the snapshots, there was a
friendly amusement in their eyes.
The doorman held the door open for them.
They each nodded their thanks again not
overly warm, but acknowledging the man's gesture. They vanished inside. The
doorman stepped after them, turning a sign. Plainly this couple was the last,
and perhaps in fact the very reason the auction had been delayed until now.
Who were they?
He stowed his curiosity. He had his
orders from Logan Gregory.
He reviewed his pictures to ensure he had
clean images of each participant. Satisfied, he backed the file onto a
flash-disk and pocketed it. Now all he had to do was wait for the auction to
end.
Like why was he attacked? Why had Grette
Neal been killed?
Gray forced his fist to relax. It had
taken all afternoon, but in a calmer frame of mind, Gray had learned to accept
the restraints
Still, a large measure of guilt ached at
the base of his spine, making it difficult to sit still. He had spent most of
the afternoon pacing his hotel room. The past days had replayed in his mind
over and over again.
If he had been more careful to start
taken more precautions
Gray's cell phone vibrated in his pocket.
Taking it out, he checked the incoming number. Thank God. He snapped open the phone, stood, and stepped to the
balcony railing.
"Rachel
I'm glad you called
back."
"I got your message. Are you all
right?"
He heard both the personal concern and
the professional interest in a more thorough debriefing. He had left her only a
short note on her cell phone, warning that their rendezvous would have to be
cut short. He hadn't gone into the details. Despite their relationship, there
were security clearances involved.
"I'm fine. But Monk is flying in.
He'll be here a little after midnight."
"I've just arrived in
"Again. I'm sorry
"
"So I should head back?"
He feared involving her in any way.
"It would be best. We'll have to reschedule. Perhaps if things calm down
here, I can make a short side trip to
"I would like that."
He heard the disappointment in her voice.
"I'll make it up to you," he
said, hoping it was a promise he could keep.
She sighed not in irritation, but in
understanding. They were not naive about their long-distance relationship. Two
continents, two careers. But they were willing to work on it
to see where it
would lead.
"I'd hoped we would have a chance to
talk," Rachel said.
He knew what she meant, reading the
deeper meaning behind her words. They had been through much together, witnessed
both the good and the bad in each other, and still, despite the difficulty in a
long-distance romance, neither had been willing to throw in the towel. In fact,
both of them knew that it was time to discuss the next step.
Shortening that distance.
It was probably one of the reasons that
they'd been so long apart since the last rendezvous. Some unspoken
acknowledgment that they both needed time to think. Now it was time to lay the
cards on the table.
Move forward or not.
But did he even have an answer? He loved
Rachel. He was ready to make a life with her. They had even talked about kids.
Still
something unsettled him. Made him almost relieved their tryst here had
been delayed. It wasn't something as mundane as cold feet. So then what was it?
Maybe they had better talk.
"I'll get to
"I'm going to hold you to that. I'll
even keep some of Uncle Vigor's vermicelli
alia panna warming on the stove." He heard
the tension easing from her voice. "I miss you, Gray. We"
Her next words were cut off by the
strident beep of a car horn.
Gray glanced down to the street. Below, a
figure ran across two lanes, heedless of traffic. A woman in a cashmere jacket
and ankle-length dress, hair bundled up in a bun. Gray almost didn't recognize
her. Not until she flipped off the driver who had honked.
Fiona.
What the hell was the girl doing here?
"Gray?" Rachel said in his
ear.
He spoke in a rush. "I'm sorry,
Rachel
I have to run."
He hung up, pocketing his cell phone.
Below, Fiona rushed to the auction house
door and pushed inside. Gray darted back to his laptop. His camera captured the
girl's image through the glass entrance. She was arguing with the doorman.
Finally, the uniformed man checked a paper she shoved into his hands, scowled,
and waved her farther inside.
Fiona bulled past him and disappeared.
The camera went dark.
Gray glanced between laptop and street.
Damn
it
Still, what would Painter Crowe do?
Gray swung back inside and stripped out
of his street clothes. His suit jacket lay on the bed. Ready in case of
emergency.
Painter certainly would not sit calmly
and do nothing.
10:22 p.m.
We
have to remain calm," Painter said. "Sit tight."
Before them, the ghost lights continued
to flare and subside, wintry and silent, igniting the icy waterfall into a
shattering brilliance, then dying away. In the resulting darkness, the cave
seemed colder and blacker.
Lisa shifted closer to him. Her hand found
his, squeezing all the blood from his palm.
"No wonder they hadn't bothered
tracking us," she whispered, breathless with fear. "Why hunt through
this storm, when all they have to do is turn those damn lights back on and
irradiate us? We can't hide from that."
Painter realized she was right. Maddened,
they would be without defenses. In such a senseless state, the treacherous
landscape and frigid cold would kill them as surely as any sniper's bullet.
But he refused to give up hope.
The madness took hours to take hold. He
would not waste those hours. If they could reach help in time, perhaps there
was a way to reverse the effect.
"We'll get through this," he
said lamely.
This only irritated her.
"How?"
She turned to him as the lights flared
again, sparkling the cavern with a diamondlike sheen.
Lisa's eyes shone with less terror than he had imagined. She was fearful and
rightfully so but there remained a hard glint, also diamondlike.
"Don't talk down to me," Lisa
said, slipping her hand from his. "That's all I ask."
Painter nodded. "If they're trusting
the radiation or whatever to kill us, they may not be watching the mountains
that well. With the storm over, we can"
A spatter of gunfire erupted, splintering
the winter's quiet.
Painter met Lisa's gaze.
It sounded close.
Proving that, a spate of bullets cracked
into the wall of ice. Painter and Lisa scrambled back, shedding their space
blanket. They retreated to the rear of the small cave. There was no escape.
By now, Painter noted something else.
The ghost light had not faded as it had
before. The frozen waterfall remained aglow with its deadly brilliance. The
light held steady, pinning them down.
A bullhorn boomed. "Painter Crowe!
We know you and the woman are hiding there!"
The commanding voice had a feminine lilt.
Also accented.
"Come out! Hands high!"
Painter gripped Lisa's shoulder,
squeezing as much reassurance into her as he could. "Stay here."
He pointed to their discarded outerwear,
motioning Lisa to suit up. He shoved into his own boots, then edged to the
break in the ice. He poked his head out.
As was common in the highlands, the storm
had broken apart as quickly as it had struck. Stars shone across the black sky.
The Milky Way arched over the wintry valley, etched in snow and ice, patched
with mists of ice fog.
Closer at hand, a spotlight pierced the
night, its beam centered on the frozen waterfall. Fifty yards away on a lower
cliff, a shadowy figure straddled a snowmobile, operating the searchlight. It
was only an ordinary lamp, possibly xenon from its intensity and bluish tint.
It was no mysterious ghost light.
Painter felt a surge of relief. Had that
been the light all the time, marking the approach of the vehicles? Painter
counted five of them. He also counted the score of figures in white parkas,
spread across the lower tier and to either side. They all bore rifles.
With no other choice and damn curious
to boot Painter held up his arms and stepped free of the cave. The nearest
gunman, a hulk of a man, sidled closer, rifle leveled. A tiny beam of light
traced Painter's chest. A laser sight.
Weaponless, Painter could only stand his
ground. He weighed the odds of manhandling the rifle from the gunman.
Not good.
Painter met the eyes of the gunman.
One an icy blue, the other a frosted
white.
The assassin from the monastery.
He remembered the man's ungodly strength.
No, the odds were not good. And besides, with the number of men here, what
would he do if he succeeded?
From behind the man's shoulder, a figure
stepped into view. A woman. Perhaps the same who had used the bullhorn a moment
ago. She reached and used a single finger to push the assassin's rifle down.
Painter doubted any man would have the strength to do that.
As she stepped forward, Painter studied
her in the spotlight's glare. She had to be in her late thirties. Bobbed black
hair, green eyes. She wore a heavy white parka with a fur-lined hood. Her form
was shapeless beneath her outerwear, but she appeared svelte and moved with a
toned grace.
"Dr. Anna Sporrenberg," she
said and held out a hand.
Painter stared at her glove. If he pulled
her to him, got an arm around her throat, tried to use her as a hostage
Meeting the assassin's eyes over her
shoulder, Painter thought better. He reached out and shook the woman's hand.
Since they hadn't shot him yet, he could at least be polite. He would play this
game as long as it kept him alive. He had Lisa to consider, too.
"Director Crowe," she said.
"It seems there has been much chatter over the past few hours across the
international intelligence channels regarding your whereabouts."
Painter kept his face fixed. He saw no
reason to deny his identity. Perhaps he could even use it to his advantage.
"Then you know the extent to which those same resources will go to find
me."
"Natürlich," she nodded, slipping into German.
"But I would not count on their success. In the meantime, I must ask you
and the young woman to accompany me."
Painter took a warding step back.
"Dr. Cummings has nothing to do with any of this. She was only a health
care worker coming to the aid of the sick. She knows nothing."
"We'll know the truth of that soon
enough."
So there it was, plainly stated. They
were alive for the moment only because of their suspected knowledge. And that
knowledge would be extracted through blood and pain. Painter considered making
a move now. Getting it over with. A fast death over a slow agonizing one. He
had too much sensitive Intel in his head to risk torture.
But he was not alone out here. He
pictured Lisa, warming her hands with his. As long as they lived, there was
hope.
Other guards joined them. Lisa was forced
out of the cave at gunpoint. They were led to the snowmobiles.
Lisa met his eyes, fear shining bright.
He was determined to protect her to the
best of his ability.
Anna Sporrenberg joined them as they were
being bound. "Before we head out, let me speak plainly. We can't let you
go. I think you understand that. I won't give you that false hope. But I can
promise you a painless and peaceful end."
"Like with the monks," Lisa
said harshly. "We witnessed your mercy there."
Painter tried to catch Lisa's eye. Now
was not the time to antagonize their captors. The bastards obviously had no
compunction against killing out of hand. They both needed to play the
cooperative prisoner.
Too late.
Anna seemed to truly see Lisa for the
first time, turning to her. A bit of heat entered the woman's voice. "It was mercy, Dr. Cummings." Her eyes
flicked to the assassin who still kept guard. "You know nothing of the
illness that struck the monastery. Of what horrors awaited the monks. We do.
Their deaths were not murder, but euthanasia."
"And who gave you that right?"
Lisa asked.
Painter shifted closer. "Lisa,
maybe"
"No, Mr. Crowe." Anna stepped
closer to Lisa. "What right, you ask? Experience, Dr. Cummings. Experience.
Trust me when I tell you
the deaths up there were a kindness, not a
cruelty."
"And what about the men I came up
here with in the helicopter? Was that a kindness, too?"
Anna sighed, tiring of their words.
"Hard choices had to be made. Our work here is too important."
"And what about us?" Lisa
called as the woman turned away. "It's a painless needle if we cooperate.
But what if we don't feel like cooperating?"
Anna headed toward the lead snowmobile.
"There will be no thumbscrews, if that's what you mean. Drugs only. We are
not barbarians, Dr. Cummings."
"No, you're only Nazis!" Lisa
spat at her. "We saw the swastika!"
"Don't be foolish. We're not
Nazis." Anna glanced calmly back to them as she hiked her leg over the
seat to the snowmobile. "Not anymore."
6:38 p.m.
Gray
hurried across the street toward the auction house.
What
was Fiona thinking, barging in here after what happened?
Concern for her safety weighed heavily. But
Gray also had to admit that her intrusion offered him the excuse he needed. To
attend the auction in person. Whoever had firebombed the shop, murdered Grette
Neal, and tried to kill him
their trail led here.
Gray reached the sidewalk and slowed. The
slanting rays of the setting sun turned the door to the auction house into a
silvery mirror. He checked his clothes, having dressed in a frenzy of fine
tailoring. The suit, a navy Armani pinstripe, fit well, but the starched white
shirt was tight at the collar. He straightened the pale yellow tie.
Not exactly inconspicuous. But he had to
play the role of the buyer for an affluent American financier.
He pushed through the door to the auction
house. The lobby was pure Scandinavian design, meaning a total lack thereof:
bleached wood, glass partitions, and little else. The only furniture was a bony
sculptural chair positioned next to a side table the size of a postage stamp.
It held up a single potted orchid. Its reedlike stem
supported an anemic brown and pink blossom.
The doorman tapped his cigarette into the
plant's pot and stepped toward Gray with a sour expression.
Gray reached to a pocket and pulled out
his invitation. It had required wiring a quarter-million-dollar deposit into
the house's fund, a guarantee that the buyer had the wherewithal to attend such
an exclusive event.
The doorman checked his invitation,
nodded, and strode over to a velvet rope that closed off a wide set of stairs
that led to the lower level. He unhitched the rope and waved Gray through.
At the bottom of the stairs, a set of
swinging doors opened into the main bidding floor. A pair of guards flanked the
entrance. One held a metal-detecting wand. Gray allowed himself to be searched,
arms out. He noted the video cameras posted to either side of the threshold.
Security was snug. Once he was cleared, the other guard buzzed a button and
pulled open the door.
The murmur of voices flowed out to him.
He recognized Italian, Dutch, French, Arabic, and English. It seemed all the
world had shown up for the auction.
Gray entered. A few glances were made in
his direction, but most attention remained focused on the glass cases that
lined the walls. Employees of the auction house, dressed in identical black
attire, stood behind the counter, like at a jewelry store. They wore white
gloves and helped patrons view the objects up for bid.
A string quartet played softly in one
corner. A few servers circulated, offering tall glasses of champagne to the
guests.
Gray checked in at a neighboring desk and
was given a numbered paddle. He moved farther inside. A handful of patrons had
already taken their seats. Gray spotted the pair of latecomers who had held up
the auction, the pale young man and woman, the silent-movie stars. They sat in
the front row. A paddle rested on the woman's lap. The man leaned over and
whispered in his partner's ear. It was a strangely intimate gesture, perhaps
enhanced by the woman's arched neck, long and lithe, tilted as if awaiting a
kiss.
Her eyes flicked to Gray as he moved down
the center aisle. Her gaze flowed over him and away.
No recognition.
Gray continued his own search, reaching
the front of the room with its raised stage and podium. He turned in a slow
circle. He saw no outward threat to his presence.
He also saw no sign of Fiona.
Where was she?
He edged to one of the glass cases and
wandered down the far side. His ears were half tuned to the conversations
around him. He walked past an attendant lifting and gently resting a bulky
leather-bound book atop the display case for a portly gentleman. The interested
party leaned close, a pair of spectacles resting at the tip of his nose.
Gray noted the particular book.
A treatise on butterflies with hand-drawn
plates, circa 1884.
He continued down the aisle. Once near
the door again, he found himself confronted by the dowdy woman he had filmed
earlier. She was holding out a small white envelope. Gray accepted it, even
before he wondered what it could be. The woman seemed disinterested in anything
further and wandered away.
Gray smelled a hint of perfume on the
envelope.
Strange.
He used a thumbnail to break the seal and
pulled out a folded piece of stationery, expensive from its watermark. A short
note was neatly written.
EVEN THE GUILD KNOWS BETTER THAN TO STRAY
TOO NEAR THIS FLAME. WATCH YOUR BACK.
KISSES.
The note was unsigned. But at the bottom,
inked in crimson, was the symbol of a small curled dragon. Gray's other hand
wandered to his neck, where a matching dragon hung in silver, a gift from a
competitor.
Seichan.
She was an operative for the Guild, a
shady cartel of terrorist cells that had crossed paths with Sigma Force in the
past. Gray felt the hairs on his neck stand on end. He turned and searched the
room. The dowdy woman who had handed him the note had vanished.
He glanced again at the note.
A warning.
Better
late than never
But at least the Guild was taking a pass
here. That is, if Seichan could be believed
Actually Gray was willing to take her at
her word.
Honor among thieves and all that.
A commotion drew his attention toward the
rear of the room.
A tall gentleman swept onto the bidding
floor through a back door.
Resplendent in a tuxedo, he was the
esteemed Mr. Ergenschein himself, acting as
auctioneer. He palmed his oiled black hair into place clearly a dye job.
Across his cadaverous features, a smile was fixed on his face, as if pasted
from a book.
The reason for his clear discomfort
followed behind. Or rather was being led by a guard who had a hand clamped on
her upper arm.
Fiona.
Her face was flushed. Her lips set in a
line of dread, bled of color.
Furious.
Gray headed toward them.
Ergenschein strode off to the side. He carried an
object wrapped in a soft unbleached chamois. He stepped over to the main
display case near the front. It had been empty before. One of the staff
unlocked the cabinet. Ergenschein gently unwrapped
the object and settled it into the case.
Noting Gray's approach, the auctioneer
brushed his hands together and stepped over to meet him, allowing his palms to
come to rest as if in prayer. Behind him, the cabinet was locked by an
attendant.
Gray noted the addition to the case.
The
Fiona's eyes widened when she spotted
Gray.
He ignored her and confronted Ergenschein. "Is there a problem here?"
"Of course not, sir. The young
lady's being escorted out. She has no invitation to this auction."
Gray took out his own card. "I
believe I'm allowed a guest in attendance." He held out his other hand for
Fiona. "I'm glad to see she's already here. I was held up on a conference
call with my buyer. I approached the young Ms. Neal earlier today to inquire
about a private sale. One item in particular."
Gray nodded to the Darwin Bible.
Ergenschein's entire body sighed with feigned sadness.
"A tragedy. About the fire. But I'm afraid that Grette Neal signed her lot
to the auction house. Without a countermand from her estate's barrister, I'm
afraid the lot must be put up for auction. That is the law."
Fiona tugged on the guard's arm, murder
in her eyes.
Ergenschein seemed oblivious of her. "I'm
afraid you'll have to bid yourself, sir. My apologies, but my hands are
tied."
"Then in that case, you certainly
wouldn't mind that Ms. Neal remains at my side. To aid me if I wish to inspect
the lot?"
"As you wish." Ergenschein's smile wore into a brief frown. He made a
vague dismissive wave to the guard. "But she must stay with you at all
times. And as your guest, she is your responsibility."
Fiona was released. As Gray led her
toward the back, he noted the guard flanked them along the edge of the room. It
seemed they had gained their own personal bodyguard.
Gray herded Fiona into the last row. A
chime sounded, announcing that the auction would commence in another minute.
Seats began to fill, mostly near the front. Gray and Fiona had the back row to
themselves.
"What are you doing here?" he
whispered.
"Getting back my Bible," she
said with thick disdain. "Or at least trying
to."
She slumped back in her seat, arms
crossed over her leather purse.
Off to the front, Ergenschein
took the podium and made some formal introductions. The proceedings would be in
English. It was the most common language among the auction's international
clientele. Ergenschein elaborated on the rules of
bidding, the house's premium and fees, even proper etiquette. The most
important rule was that you were only allowed to bid up to ten times the amount
placed and secured on deposit.
Gray ignored most of it, continuing with
Fiona, earning a few disgruntled glances from those in the row ahead.
"You came back for the Bible?
Why?"
The girl only tightened her arms.
"Fiona
"
She turned to him, hard and angry.
"Because it was Mutti's!" Tears glistened.
"They killed her over it. I won't let them have it."
"Who?"
She waved an arm. "Whoever sodding murdered her. I'm going to get it and burn
it."
Gray sighed and leaned back. Fiona wanted
whatever revenge she could get. She wanted to hurt them. Gray didn't blame her
but her reckless actions were only likely to get her killed, too.
"The Bible's ours. I should be able
to take it back." Her voice cracked. She shook her head and swiped at her
nose.
Gray put an arm around her.
She winced but didn't pull away.
In front, the auction began. Paddles rose
and fell. Items came and went. The best would be held until last. Gray noted
who bought what. He especially noted who were the final bidders for the items
logged into his notebook, the three items of special interest: Mendel's
genetics papers, Planck's physics, and de Vries's
diary on mutations.
They all went to the pair of silent-movie
stars.
Their identities remained unknown. Gray
heard whispers among his fellow participants. No one knew who they were. Only
their ever-rising paddle number.
Number 002.
Gray leaned to Fiona. "Do you
recognize those buyers? Have you ever seen them before in your shop?"
Fiona straightened in her seat, stared
for a full minute, then slunk down. "No."
"How about anyone else?"
She shrugged.
"Fiona, are you sure?"
"Yes," she snapped. "I'm
bloody goddamn sure!"
This earned more exasperated glances in
their direction.
At last the auction wound down to the
final item. The Darwin Bible was unlocked from its case and carried like a
religious relic to an easel that stood under a special halogen spot. It was an
unimpressive tome: flaking black leather, tattered and stained, not even any
lettering. It could be any old journal.
Fiona sat straighter. Plainly this was
what had kept her in her seat this entire time. She grabbed Gray's wrist.
"Are you really going to bid on it?" she asked, hope dawning in her
bright eyes.
Gray frowned at her then realized it
wasn't a half-bad idea. If the others were willing to kill over it, maybe some
clue to the entire house of cards could be discerned from it. Besides, he was aching
to get a peek at it. And Sigma Force had poured 250,000 euros into the account
here at the auction house. That meant he could bid up to 2.5 million. That was
twice the maximum estimate for the Bible. If he won, he'd be able to inspect
his purchase.
Still, he remembered Logan Gregory's
admonishment. He had already disobeyed orders to follow Fiona here. He dared
not involve himself even more intimately.
He felt Fiona's eyes on him.
If he started bidding, it would put their
lives in danger, painting a bull's-eye on both of them. And what if he lost the
bid? The risk would be for nothing. Hadn't he been foolhardy enough today?
"Ladies and gentlemen, how much to
start the bidding on today's last lot?" Ergenschein
said grandly. "Shall we open with one hundred thousand? Ah, yes, we have
one hundred thousand
and from a new
bidder. How wonderful. Number 144."
Gray lowered his paddle, all eyes on him,
committed now.
Beside him, Fiona smiled widely.
"And we double the bid," Ergenschein said. "Two hundred thousand from number
002!"
The silent-movie stars.
Gray felt the room's focus shift back to
him, including the pair in front. Too late to back down. He raised his paddle
again.
The bidding continued for another ten
tense minutes. The auction room remained full. Everyone was staying behind to
see what the Darwin Bible would fetch. There was an undercurrent of support for
Gray. Too many others had been outpaddled by number
002. And as the figure crossed the two million mark, well above the maximum
estimate, murmurs of hushed excitement burbled around the room.
There was another flash of excitement
when a phone bidder jumped into the fray, but number 002 outbid him, and he
didn't counter.
Gray did. Two mill three. Gray's palms began to sweat.
"Two million four from number 002!
Gentlemen and ladies, please keep your seats."
Gray raised his paddle one more time.
"Two million five."
Gray knew he was sunk. He could do
nothing but watch as 002 rose again, unstoppable, relentless, merciless.
"Three million," the pale young
gentleman said, tiring of the game. He stood and glanced back at Gray, as if
daring him to challenge that.
Gray had reached his limit. Even if he
wanted, he couldn't bet more. His hand ground on his paddle. Gray shook his
head, admitting defeat.
The other bowed toward him, one adversary
to another. The man tipped an imaginary hat. Gray noted a blue blemish on the
fellow's right hand, at the webbing between thumb and forefinger. A tattoo. His
companion, who by now Gray realized must be the young man's sister, perhaps
even twin, bore the same mark on her left.
Gray fixed the tattoo in his mind's eye,
perhaps a clue to their identity.
His attention was interrupted by the
auctioneer.
"And it appears number 144 is
finished!" Ergenschein said. "Any more bids.
Once, twice, thrice." He raised the gavel, held it for a breathless
moment, then tapped it on the edge of the podium. "Done!"
Polite applause met the concluding bid.
Gray knew it would have been more
boisterous if he had won. Still, he was surprised to see who was clapping
beside him.
Fiona.
She grinned at him. "Let's get out
of here."
They joined the flow of people filing out
the door. Gray was offered sympathy and condolences from a few of the other
participants as he departed. Soon they reached the streets. They all went their
separate ways.
Fiona tugged him a few shops down and
directed him into a nearby patisserie, a French affair of chintz drapery and
wrought-iron café tables. The girl picked a spot near a display filled with
cream puffs, petits fours, chocolate éclairs, and smųrrebrųd, the
ubiquitous Danish open-face sandwich.
She ignored the treats, beaming with a
strange glee.
"Why are you so happy?" Gray
finally asked. "We lost the bid."
Gray sat facing the window. They would
have to watch their backs. Still, he hoped now, with the Bible sold, that
perhaps the danger would subside.
"We stuck it to them!" Fiona
said. "Drove it to three mill. Brilliant!"
"I don't think money means that much
to them."
Fiona pulled the pin on her bun and shook
her hair loose. She lost a decade of age in appearance. Amusement continued to
shine in her eyes, with an edge of malicious delight.
Gray suddenly felt a sick twist of his
stomach.
"Fiona, what have you done?"
She lifted her purse to the table, tilted
it toward Gray, and held it open. He leaned forward.
"Oh, God
Fiona
"
A battered leather-bound tome rested in
her purse.
A match to the Darwin Bible that had just
been sold.
"Is that the real one?" he asked.
"I nicked it right from under that
blind wanker in the back room."
"How?"
"A bit of the old bait and switch.
Took me all day to find a Bible the right size and shape. Course I had to
tinker with it a bit afterward. But then all it took was lots of tears and
shouting, a bit of fumbling
" She shrugged. "And Bob's your uncle, it
was done."
"If you already had the Bible, why
did you have me bid?" Realization struck Gray. "You played me."
"To make those bastards shell out
three mill for a two-pence fake!"
"They'll discover soon enough that
it's not the real book," Gray said, horror rising.
"Yeah, but I plan to be long gone by
then."
"Where?"
"Going with you." Fiona snapped
the bag closed.
"I don't think so."
"You remember when Mutti told you
about the disbanded library? Where the Darwin Bible came from?"
Gray knew what she was talking about.
Grette Neal had hinted that someone was reconstructing some old scientist's
library. She had been going to let him copy the original bill of sale, but then
they'd been attacked, and it was lost to the flames.
Fiona tapped her forehead. "I have
the address stored right here." She then held out a hand. "So?"
Frowning, he went to shake it.
She pulled her hand back in distaste.
"As if." Extending her arm again, she turned her palm up. "I
want to see your real passport, you wanker. You think I can't scope out a fake
one when I see it."
He met her gaze. She had stolen his
passport earlier. Her look now was uncompromising. Frowning, he finally reached
to a concealed pocket of his suit and took out his real passport.
Fiona read it. "Grayson
Pierce." She tossed it back on the table. "Nice to meet you
finally."
He retrieved his passport. "So the
Bible. Where did it come from?"
"I'll only tell if you take me with
you."
"Don't be ridiculous. You can't come
with me. You're only a child."
"A child with the Darwin
Bible."
Gray tired of her blackmail. He could
snatch the Bible whenever he wanted to, but the same couldn't be said for her
information. "Fiona, this isn't some goddamn game."
Her eyes hardened on him, aging before
him. "And you don't think I know that." Her words were deadly cold.
"Where were you when they took my Mutti out in bags? Bloody goddamn bags!"
Gray closed his eyes. She had struck a
nerve, but he refused to relent. "Fiona, I'm sorry," he said with a
strained voice. "But what you're asking is impossible. I can't take"
The explosion shook the patisserie like
an earthquake. The front glass rattled, dishes crashed. Fiona and Gray stood
and went to the window. Smoke billowed across the street, fuming and roiling
into the dusky sky. Flames danced and licked upward from the shattered side of
a building across the street.
Fiona glanced to Gray. "Let me
guess," she said.
"My hotel room," he admitted.
"So much for the head start."
11:47 p.m.
Captured
by the Germans, Painter rode behind Lisa on a sled pulled by one of the
snowmobiles. They had been traveling for almost an hour, cinched in place with
plastic straps and bound together. At least their sled was heated.
Still he kept hunched over Lisa,
sheltering her as best he could with his body. She leaned back into him. It was
all they could manage. Their wrists were bound to stanchions on either side.
Ahead, the assassin rode on the backseat
of the towing snowmobile. He faced to the rear, rifle pointing at them,
mismatched eyes never wavering. Anna Sporrenberg piloted the vehicle, the
leader of this group.
A group of former Nazis.
Or reformed
Nazis.
Or whoever the hell they were.
Painter shoved the question aside. He had
a more important puzzle to solve at the moment.
Staying alive.
En route, Painter had learned how easily
he and Lisa had been discovered hiding in their cave. Through infrared. Against
the frigid landscape, their heat signature had been easy to pick up, revealing
their hiding place.
The same would make flight across this
terrain almost impossible.
He continued his deliberation, mind
focused on one goal.
Escape.
For the past hour, the caravan of
snowmobiles had trundled through the wintry night. The vehicles were equipped
with electric motors, gliding with almost no noise. In silence, the five
snowmobiles traversed the maze with practiced ease, gliding along cliff edges,
diving down steep valleys, sweeping over bridges of ice.
He did his best to memorize their route.
But exhaustion and the complexity of their path confounded him. It didn't help
that his skull had begun to pound again. The headaches had returned as had
the disorientation and vertigo. He had to admit that his symptoms were not
subsiding. He also had to admit that he was thoroughly lost.
Craning, he stared at the night sky.
Overhead, stars shone coldly.
Perhaps he could fix his position.
As he stared, the pinpoints of light spun
in the sky. He tore his gaze away, a stabbing ache behind his eyes.
"Are you all right?" Lisa
whispered back at him.
Painter grumbled under his breath, too
nauseated to trust speaking.
"The nystagmus
again?" she surmised on her own.
A harsh grunt from the assassin silenced
any further communication. Painter was grateful. He closed his eyes and took
deep breaths, waiting for the moment to pass.
Eventually it did.
He opened his eyes as the caravan edged
up to a crest of rock and slowed to a stop. Painter searched around. Nothing
was here. An icy cliff cracked the crest on the right. Snow began to fall
again.
Why had they stopped?
Ahead, the assassin climbed from his
seat.
Anna joined him. Turning a shoulder, the
hulking man spoke to the woman in German.
Painter strained to hear and caught the
assassin's last words.
"should just kill them."
It was not said with any vehemence, only
dread practicality.
Anna frowned. "We need to find out
more, Gunther." The woman glanced in Painter's direction. "You know
the problems we've been having lately. If he was sent here
if he knows
something that can stop it."
Painter was clueless as to what they were
talking about, but he allowed them this misconception. Especially if it kept
him alive.
The assassin just shook his head.
"He's trouble. I can smell it on him." He began to turn away,
dismissive, done with the matter.
Anna stopped him with a touch to the
man's cheek, tender, grateful
and maybe something more. "Danke, Gunther."
He turned away, but not before Painter
noted the flash of pain in the man's eyes. The assassin trudged to the broken
cliff face and disappeared through a crack in the wall. A moment later, a cloud
of steam puffed out along with a bit of fiery light then cut off.
A door opening and closing.
Behind him, one of the guards made a
derisive noise, grumbling one word under his breath, an insult, heard by only
those closest to him.
Leprakönige.
Leper King.
Painter noted the guard had waited until
the hulking man named Gunther was out of earshot. He had not dared say it to
the man's face. But from the hunch of the assassin's shoulders and gruff
manner, Painter suspected he'd heard it before.
Anna mounted the snowmobile. A new armed
guard took the assassin's seat, weapon pointing. They headed out again.
The path switchbacked
around a spur of rock and down into an even steeper notch in the mountain. The
way ahead was a sea of ice fog, obscuring what lay below. A heavy crest of the
mountain overhung the misty sea, cupped low like a pair of warming hands.
They descended into the vast fog bank,
lights spearing ahead.
In moments, visibility lowered to feet.
Stars vanished.
Then suddenly the darkness deepened as
they trundled under the shadow of the overhang. But rather than growing colder,
the air grew notably warmer. As they descended farther, rocky outcroppings
appeared out of the snow. Meltwater trickled around
the boulders.
Painter realized there must be a
localized pocket of geothermal activity here.
As the snow thinned, the caravan was
forced to abandon the snowmobiles. Once parked, Painter and Lisa were cut free
from their sled, hauled to their feet, and bound at the wrists. He kept close
to Lisa. She met his eyes, mirroring his worry.
Where
the hell were they?
Encircled by white parkas and rifles,
they were led down the rest of the way. Snow turned to wet rock under their
boots. Stairs appeared underfoot, cut into the rock, trickling with snowmelt.
Ahead, the perpetual fog thinned and shredded.
Within a few steps, a cliff face appeared
out of the gloom, sheltered by the shoulder of the mountain. A natural deep
grotto. But it was no paradise only craggy black granite, dripping and
sweating.
More hell than Shangri-La.
Lisa stumbled beside him. Painter caught
her as best he could with his wrists bound. But he understood her faltering
step.
Ahead, out of the mists, appeared a
castle.
Or rather half a castle.
As they neared, Painter recognized the
shape as a faēade, cut crudely into the back of the grotto. Two giant
crenellated towers flanked a massive central keep. Lights burned behind thick,
glazed windows.
"Granitschloß," Anna announced and led them toward an
arched entrance, twice his height, flanked by giant granite knights.
A heavy oak door, studded and strapped in
black iron, sealed the entryway. But as the group approached, the door winched
up, rising like a portcullis.
Anna strode forward. "Come. It has
been a long night, ja?"
Painter and Lisa were led at gunpoint
toward the entrance. He studied the faēade of battlements, parapets, and arched
windows. Across the entire surface, the black granite sweated and trickled, wept
and dripped. The water appeared like a run of black oil, as if the castle were
dissolving before their eyes, melting back into the rock face.
The fiery illumination from a few of the
windows made the castle's surface shine with a hellish glow, reminding him of a
Hieronymus Bosch painting. The fifteenth-century artist had specialized in
twisted depictions of hell. If ever Bosch had sculpted the gates to the
Underworld, this castle would be it.
With no choice, Painter followed Anna and
passed under the arched entrance of the castle. He looked up, searching for the
words Dante had said were supposedly carved upon the gates to the Underworld.
All
hope abandon, ye who enter here.
The words weren't here but they might
as well have been.
All
hope abandon
That about summed it up.
8:15 p.m.
As
the hotel explosion echoed away, Gray grabbed Fiona by the arm and rushed her
out a side door of the French bakery. He aimed for a neighboring alley, pushing
through the patrons gathered on the sidewalk patio.
Sirens erupted in the distance.
It seemed
Gray reached the corner of the alley,
away from the smoke and chaos, Fiona in tow. A brick cracked near his ear,
followed by a ricocheted ping. A
gunshot. Spinning, he whipped Fiona into the alleyway and ducked low. He
searched the street for the shooter.
And found her.
Close.
A half block back, across the street.
It was the white-blond woman from the
auction. Only now she wore a black, tight-fitting running suit. She had also
gained a new fashion accessory. A pistol with a silencer. She held it low by
her knee, striding quickly toward his location. She touched her ear, lips
moving.
Radio.
As the woman stepped under a streetlamp,
Gray realized his mistake. It wasn't the same woman from the auction. Her hair
was longer. Her face more gaunt.
An older sibling to the pair.
Gray swung away.
He expected Fiona to be halfway down the
alley. She was only five yards back, straddling a rust-scarred lime green Vespa scooter.
"What are you?"
"Getting us a ride." She had
her purse open and dropped a screwdriver back into it.
Gray hurried to her side. "There's
no time to hot-wire it."
Fiona glanced over a shoulder at him,
while her fingers blindly fiddled with a nest of ignition wires. She twisted
two, and the engine coughed, whined, and caught.
Damn
She was good but there were limits to
trust.
Gray waved her back. "I'll
drive."
Fiona shrugged and slid onto the
backseat. Gray mounted the bike, rolled it off its kickstand, and gunned the
engine. Keeping the headlamp off, he took off down the dark alley. Or rather
puttered.
"C'mon," he urged.
"Pop it into second," Fiona
said. "Skip past third. You have to goose the crap out of these old
ones."
"I don't need a backseat
driver."
Still, Gray obeyed, popping the clutch
and shifting. The scooter jumped like a startled filly. They sped faster down
the alley, zigzagging around stacks of trashcans.
Sirens screamed behind them. Gray glanced
back. A fire engine roared past the entrance to the alley, lights blazing,
responding to the explosion. Before Gray turned back around, a dark figure
strode into view, limned against the brighter streetlights.
The shooter.
He eked out a bit more power, swerving
around a tall construction bin, putting it between him and the woman. If he
stuck to the wall, he had a straight shot out of the alley from here.
At the other end, the far street glowed
like a beacon.
It was their only chance.
Focused forward, he watched a second dark
figure step into view and stop. A passing car's headlights turned his blond
hair silver. Yet another sibling. The man wore a long black duster. He parted
the trench coat and raised a shotgun.
The woman must have radioed him, setting
up this ambush.
"Hold tight!" Gray called.
As the man lifted the gun one-armed, Gray
noted the sling around his other arm, bandaged from wrist to elbow. Though his
face was in shadows, Gray knew who blocked their escape.
It was the man who had murdered Grette
Neal.
He still bore Bertal's
bite wounds, bandaged now.
The shotgun pointed at Gray.
No time.
Gray twisted the scooter's handles and
sent the bike into a smoking skid, tilted sideways, aiming for the man.
The shotgun exploded with a muffled blast,
accompanied by a splintering crash as a fist of pellets struck a neighboring
doorway.
Fiona yelped in fright.
But that was the man's only shot. He dove
out of the way of the sliding bike. Once clear of the dark alley, Gray swung
the bike out of its skid with a kick of the throttle and a scream of rubber on
cement. He manhandled the scooter up and into traffic, earning a savage blast
of a horn from a disgruntled Audi driver.
Gray headed away.
Fiona loosened her grip.
Gray maneuvered around the slower cars,
gaining speed as the road sloped steeply downward. At the bottom, the avenue
dead-ended into a tree-lined cross street. Gray braked for the sharp turn. The
bike refused to obey. He glanced down. A cable bounced alongside the scooter's
back tire.
The brake cable.
His skid-out must have dislodged it.
"Slow down!" Fiona yelled in
his ear.
"Brake's out!" he called back.
"Hang on!"
Gray choked out the engine, then fought
to lose the bike's momentum by swerving and skidding, like a downhill skier. He
dragged the rear tire alongside one curb, rubber smoking.
They reached the corner, going too fast.
Gray slewed the scooter on its side,
metal scraping up fiery sparks. The bike slid across the intersection, passing
in front of a flat-paneled truck. Horns blared. Brakes squealed.
Then they hit the far curb.
The bike flipped. Gray and Fiona flew.
A hedgerow broke the worst of their
collision, but they still ended up rolling across the sidewalk and landing at
the foot of a brick wall. Gaining his feet, Gray moved to Fiona's side.
"Are you all right?"
She stood up, more angry than hurt.
"I paid two hundred euros for this skirt." Her dress had a long rip
up one side. She clutched it closed with one hand and bent down to retrieve her
purse.
Gray's Armani suit fared even worse. One
knee was ripped out, and the right side of his jacket looked like it had been
scoured with a wire brush. But besides a few scrapes and abrasions, they were
unharmed.
Traffic flowed past the site of their
accident.
Fiona headed away. "Vespas crash around here all the time. And they're stolen
just as often. Ownership of a scooter in
But somebody did.
A fresh squeal of tires drew their
attention. A black sedan swung into the street two blocks back. It sped in
their direction. It was too dark to identify the driver or passengers.
Headlights speared toward them.
Gray hurried Fiona along the tree-lined
sidewalk, seeking the deeper shadows. A tall brick wall framed this side of the
street. No buildings, no alleys. Just a stretch of high wall. From beyond rose
a merry twinkle of flutes and strings.
Behind them, the sedan slowed beside the
crashed Vespa, searching.
No question their escape by scooter had
been reported.
"Over here," Fiona said.
Hooking her purse over a shoulder, she
led him to a shadowy park bench and climbed on it then using the seat back as
a boost, she leaped up and grabbed one of the tree limbs overhead. She kicked
up, hooking her legs over the branch.
"What are you doing?"
"Street kids do this all the time.
Free admission."
"What?"
"C'mon."
Hand over hand, she followed the thick
branch as it angled over the brick wall. She dropped on the far side and
vanished.
Damn it.
The sedan began to drift up the street
again.
With no choice, Gray followed Fiona's
example. He mounted the bench and jumped up. Music wafted over the wall,
scintillating and magical in the dark night. Once hanging upside down, he craned
over the wall.
Beyond lay a wonderland of glowing
lanterns, miniature palaces, and twirling amusements.
The turn-of-the-century amusement park
lay nestled in the heart of
Gray scuttled along the limb toward the
park, passing over the wall.
On the far side, Fiona waited below and
waved to him. She stood at the back of a utility or gardening shed.
Gray dropped his legs and dangled by his
arms.
A chunk of bark exploded by his right
hand. Shocked, he let go and fell, his arms cartwheeling
for balance. He landed hard in a flower bed, jamming a knee, but the soft loam
cushioned his fall. Beyond the wall, an engine growled, and a door slammed.
They'd been spotted.
Grimacing, Gray joined Fiona. Her eyes
were wide. She had heard the shot. Without a word, they fled together toward
the heart of
1:22 a.m.
Well
past midnight, Lisa soaked in a steaming bath of naturally heated mineral
waters. She could close her eyes and imagine herself in some expensive European
spa. The room's accoutrements were certainly plush enough: thick Egyptian
cotton towels and robes, a massive four-poster bed piled high with a nest of
blankets on a foot-thick goose-down featherbed. Medieval tapestries hung on the
walls, and underfoot, Turkish rugs covered the stone floors.
Painter was in the outer room, stoking
their tiny fireplace.
They shared this pleasant little prison
cell.
Painter had told Anna Sporrenberg that
they were companions back in the States. A ruse intended to keep them from
being separated.
Lisa hadn't argued against it.
She had not wanted to be alone here.
Though the water's temperature was only a
few degrees lower than parboil, Lisa shivered. As a doctor, she recognized her
own signs of shock as the adrenaline that had been sustaining her up to this
point wore off. She remembered how earlier she had lashed out against the German
woman, almost attacked her. What had she been thinking? She could've gotten
them both shot.
And all that time, Painter had been so
calm. Even now, she drew strength hearing Painter roll another log onto the
fire, simple bits of caretaking and comfort. He must be exhausted. The man had
already soaked in the massive tub, not so much for hygiene as a prescription
against frostbite. Lisa had noted the white patches on the tips of his ears and
insisted he go first.
More warmly dressed, she had fared
better.
Still, she immersed herself fully into
the tub, dunking her head under, her hair willowing out. The heat suffused through her, warming all her tissues. Her senses
stretched. All she had to do was inhale, allow herself to drown. A moment of
panic, and it would be over. All the fear, all the tension. She would be in
control of her own fate taking back what her captors held hostage.
Just a breath
"Are you almost finished with your
bath?" The muffled words reached her through the water, sounding far away.
"They've brought us a late-night snack."
Lisa shifted, surfacing out of the steam,
water sluicing from her hair and face. "I
I'll be out in another
minute."
"Take your time," Painter
called from the main room.
She heard him roll another log onto the
fire.
How could he still be moving? Bedridden
for three days, the fight in the root cellar, the frozen trek here
yet he
still kept forging on. It gave her hope. Maybe it was just desperation, but she
sensed a well of strength in him that went beyond the physical.
As she thought about him, her trembling
finally slowed.
She climbed out of the bath, skin
steaming, and toweled off. A thick robe hung from a hook. She left it hanging
for a moment more. A floor-length mirror stood beside an antique washbasin. Its
surface was misty, but her naked form was visible. She turned her leg, not in
some narcissistic admiration, but to study the map of bruises down her limb.
The deep ache in her calves reminded her of something essential.
She
was still alive.
She glanced to the tub.
She would not give them the satisfaction.
She would see it through.
She climbed into her robe. After snugging it tight around her waist, she lifted the heavy
iron latch to the bathroom and opened the door. It was warmer in the next room.
A steam register had kept the chamber livable, but the new fire in the hearth
had stoked the room to a welcoming warmth. The tiny blaze snapped and crackled
merrily, casting the room in a rich, flickering glow. A grouping of candles
beside the bed added to the homey ambience, the only other illumination.
There was no electricity in the room.
While imprisoning them here, Anna
Sporrenberg had explained proudly how most of their power was geothermally generated, based on a hundred-year-old design
of Rudolf Diesel, the French-born German engineer who would go on to invent the
diesel engine. Even still, electricity was not to be wasted and had been
limited to select areas of the castle.
Not here.
Painter turned to her as she entered. She
noted how disheveled his hair had dried, giving him a rakish, boyish
appearance. Barefooted and in a matching robe, he filled a pair of stone mugs
with a steaming brew.
"Jasmine tea," he said and
waved her to a small sofa in front of the fire.
A platter rested on a low table: hard
cheeses, a loaf of dark bread, piled slices of roast beef, mustard, and a bowl
of blackberries with a tiny decanter of cream.
"Our last meal?" Lisa asked,
trying to sound flippant, but she couldn't carry it off. They were to be interrogated
first thing in the morning.
Painter patted the seat next to him as he
sat down.
She joined him.
As he sliced the bread, she picked up a
sliver of sharp cheddar. She sniffed and set it down. No appetite.
"You should eat," Painter said.
"Why? So I'll be stronger when they
drug us?"
Painter rolled a piece of beef and popped
it into his mouth. He chewed as he spoke. "Nothing's certain. If I've
learned nothing in life, I've at least learned that."
Unconvinced, she shook her head. "So
what are you saying? Just hope for the best?"
"I personally prefer a plan."
She eyed him. "And you have
one?"
"A simple one. Not exactly
guns-blazing, grenades-exploding."
"Then what?"
He swallowed his roast beef and turned to
her. "Something that I find works a surprising amount of the time."
She waited for an answer.
"Well?"
"Honesty."
She slunk back, shoulders slumping.
"Great."
Painter picked up a slice of bread,
slathered it with some coarse mustard, added a slice of beef, and topped it
with a piece of cheddar. He held it out toward her. "Eat."
Sighing, she took his creation in hand,
only to appease him.
Painter made a second one for himself.
"For instance, I'm the director for a division of DARPA named Sigma. We
specialize in investigating threats to the
Lisa nibbled at the edge of the
sandwich's crust, catching a tangy bit of fresh mustard. "Can we expect
some rescue by these soldiers?"
"Doubtful. Not in the time frame we have.
It will take them days to discover that my body's not among the ruins of the
monastery."
"Then I don't see"
Painter held up a hand, munched a
mouthful of sandwich, and mumbled around it. "It's about honesty. Putting
it out there, plainly and openly. Seeing what happens. Something drew Sigma's
attention out here. Reports of strange illnesses. After operating so covertly
for so many years, why all these slips in the past months? I'm not one to place
much stock in coincidence. I overheard Anna speaking to the soldier-assassin.
She hinted at some problem here. Something that has them baffled. I think our
two goals might not be at such cross-purposes. There may be room for
cooperation."
"And they'd let us live?" she
asked, half scoffing, but a part of her hoped. She bit into the sandwich to
hide her foolishness.
"I don't know," he said,
staying honest. "As long as we prove useful. But if we can gain a few
days
it widens our chances for a rescue or maybe a change of
circumstance."
Lisa chewed her food, contemplating.
Before she knew it, her fingers were empty. And she was still hungry. They
shared the bowl of blackberries, pouring cream over them.
She eyed Painter with a fresh
perspective. He was more than stubborn strength. There was a brilliance behind
those blue eyes and a wealth of common sense. As if sensing her scrutiny, he
glanced at her. She quickly returned to studying the platter of food.
In silence, they finished their meal,
sipping the tea. With food in their bellies, exhaustion weighed on them both,
making even talk a burden. Also she enjoyed the quiet, sitting next to him. She
heard him breathing. She could smell his freshly scrubbed skin.
As she finished the last of her honeyed
tea, she noted Painter rubbing at his right temple, one eye squinted. His
headache was flaring up. She didn't want to play doctor, go clinical and worry
him, but she studied him askance. The fingers of his other hand trembled. She
noted the slight vibration in his pupils as he stared at the dying fire.
Painter had mentioned honesty, but did he
want the truth about his condition? The attacks seemed to be coming on more
frequently. And a part of her was selfish enough to fear not for his health,
but for the thin hope of survival he had instilled in her. She needed him.
Lisa stood. "We should get some
sleep. Dawn cannot be far off."
Painter groaned but nodded. He stood. She
had to grab his elbow as he teetered a bit.
"I'm fine," he said.
So much for honesty.
She guided him toward the bed and pulled
back the blankets.
"I can sleep on the sofa," he
said, resisting.
"Don't be ridiculous. Get in. Now's
not the time to be concerned with any impropriety. We're in a Nazi
stronghold."
"Former Nazi."
"Yeah, big comfort there."
Still, he climbed into the bed with a
sigh, robe and all. Walking around the bed, she did the same, blowing out the
bedside candles. The shadows thickened, but the dying firelight kept the room
pleasantly aglow. Lisa didn't know if she could handle the total darkness.
She settled under the blankets, pulling
them up to her chin. She kept a space between the two of them, back to Painter.
He must have sensed her fear and rolled to face her.
"If we die," Painter mumbled,
"we'll die together."
She swallowed. Those were not the
reassuring words she had expected to hear, but at the same time she was oddly
comforted. Something in his tone, the honesty, the promise behind the words,
succeeded where weak assertions of their safety would have failed.
She believed him.
Snuggling closer, her hand found his,
fingers entwined, nothing sexual, just two people needing to touch. She pulled
his arm around her.
He squeezed her hand, reassuring and
strong.
She pulled deeper against him, and he
rolled to hold her more snugly.
Lisa closed her eyes, not expecting to
sleep.
But in his arms, she eventually did.
10:39 p.m.
Gray
checked his watch.
They'd been hiding for over two hours. He
and Fiona had holed themselves up inside a service shaft for a ride called the Minen, or Mine. It
was an old-fashioned animatronic amusement where cars
rolled past cartoonish molelike
animals in mining gear, working some whimsical subterranean quarry. The same
musical refrain kept playing over and over again, an aural form of the Chinese
water torture.
Shortly after disappearing into the
crowds of
Or so he hoped.
The jaunty refrain in Dutch continued for
the thousandth time. Maybe it wasn't as bad as the It's-a-Small-World ride at
In the cramped quarters, Gray had the
Darwin Bible open in his lap. He had been perusing the pages with a penlight,
searching for any clue to its importance, page by page. His head throbbed in
tune to the music.
"Do you have a gun?" Fiona
asked, crunched in a corner, arms crossed. "If you do, shoot me now."
Gray sighed. "We only have another
hour."
"I'll never make it."
The plan was to wait for the park to
close. The park only had one official exit, but Gray was sure all exits were
under surveillance by now. Their only chance was to try to escape during the
park's mass exodus at midnight. He had tried to confirm Monk's arrival at the
"Have you learned anything from the
Bible?" she asked.
Gray shook his head. It was fascinating
to see the house lineage graphed inside the front cover, the
Gray glanced at his notebook. He had
jotted down the symbols as they appeared, written in the margins of the Bible
whether by the hand of Charles Darwin or a later owner, he didn't know.
He nudged his notebook toward Fiona.
"Anything look familiar?"
Fiona sighed and leaned forward,
uncrossing her arms. She squinted at the symbols.
"Bird scratches," she said.
"Nothing worth murdering over."
Gray rolled his eyes, but he held his
tongue. Fiona's mood had darkened. He preferred her vengeful amusement and
manic anger. With their incarceration here, she seemed to have drawn inward.
Gray suspected she had driven all her grief and energy into the ruse to obtain
the Bible, her small act of revenge against her grandmother's murder. And now,
in the dark, the reality was setting in.
What could he do?
Picking up pen and paper, he sought some
means to keep her focused on the present. He drew another symbol, the small
tattoo on the back of the male bidder's hand.
He slid it over. "How about this
one?"
With an even louder, more dramatic sigh,
she again leaned forward to stare. She shook her head. "A four-leaf
clover. I don't know. What's that supposed to
wait
" She took the
notebook and looked closer. Her eyes widened. "I've seen this
before!"
"Where?"
"On a business card," Fiona
said. "Only it wasn't like this, more of an outline." She took up his
pen and began to work.
"Whose business card?"
"The prat who came months ago and
searched through our records. The guy who stiffed us with the fake credit
card." Fiona continued to work. "Where did you see it?"
"It was drawn on the back of the
man's hand, the one who bought the Bible."
Fiona practically growled. "I knew
it! So it's been the same bastard behind this all along. First he tries to
steal it. Then he tries to cover his tracks by killing Mutti and burning down
the shop."
"Do you remember the name on the
business card?" Gray asked.
She shook her head. "Only the
symbol. Because I recognized it."
She slid her drawing over to him. It was
a more detailed line-drawing of the solid tattoo, revealing more of a tangled
nature to the symbol.
Gray tapped the page. "You
recognized this?"
Fiona nodded. "I collect pins.
Course I couldn't wear them with these naff
clothes."
Gray remembered her hooded jacket, the
one he had first spotted her wearing, festooned with buttons of every shape and
size.
"I went through a Celtic
phase," Fiona said. "It was the only music I'd listen to, and most of
my pins had Celtic designs."
"And the symbol here?"
"Called an
Gray concentrated but found no
significance to the clue.
"It's why I told Mutti to trust
him," Fiona said. She had sunk back. Her voice lowered to a whisper, as if
afraid to talk. "She didn't like the man. On first sight. But when I saw
that on his card, I thought he must be an okay bloke."
"You couldn't have known."
"Mutti did," she said sharply.
"And now she's dead. Because of me." Guilt and anguish rang through
her words.
"Nonsense." Gray moved closer
and put his arm around her. "Whoever these people are, they were damned
determined from the start. You know that. They would have found a way to get
that information from your shop. They wouldn't have taken no for an answer. If
you hadn't convinced your grandmother to let them look through the records,
they might have killed you both on the spot."
Fiona leaned against him.
"Your grandmother"
"She wasn't my grandmother,"
she interrupted hollowly.
Gray had figured as much, but he stayed
silent, letting Fiona speak.
"She caught me when I tried to nick
some stuff from her store. Two years ago. But she didn't call the police.
Instead she made me soup. Chicken barley."
Gray didn't need to see in the dark to
know Fiona had smiled slightly.
"That was the way she was. Always
helping street kids. Always taking in strays."
"Like Bertal."
"And me." She stayed silent for
a long moment. "My parents died in a car accident. They were Pakistani
immigrants. Punjabis. We had a small house in
"I'm sorry, Fiona."
"My aunt and uncle took me in
they
had just arrived from the
Gray closed his eyes. Dear God
"So I ran
I lived on the streets of
"And Grette took you in."
"And now she's dead, too."
Again that ring of guilt. "Maybe I'm just bad luck."
Gray pulled Fiona tighter. "I saw
the way she looked at you. You coming into her life was not bad luck. She loved you."
"I
I know." Fiona turned her
face away. Her shoulders shook as she quietly sobbed.
Gray just held her. She eventually turned
and buried her face in his shoulder. Now it was Gray's turn to fight twinges of
guilt. Grette had been such a generous woman, nurturing and instinctive, kind
and empathetic. Now she was dead. He had his own culpability to balance here.
If he had proceeded with more caution
been less reckless with this
investigation
And the cost for his neglect.
Fiona's sobbing continued.
Even if the murder and arson had been
planned regardless of his own blundering inquiries, Gray judged his actions
afterward. He had fled, abandoning Fiona to the chaos, leaving her to her
grief. He remembered her calling out to him at first angered, then pleading.
He hadn't stopped.
"I have no one now," Fiona
cried softly into his suit.
"You have me."
She pulled back, teary-eyed. "But
you're leaving, too."
"And you're coming with me."
"But you said"
"Never mind what I said." Gray
knew the girl was no longer safe here. She would be eliminated, if not to gain
the Bible, then to shut her up. She knew too much. Like
"You mentioned
you knew the address from the Bible's bill of sale."
Fiona stared at him with open suspicion.
Her sobbing had stopped. She pulled back and eyed him, judging if his sympathy
was a ruse to get her to cough up what she knew. He understood her wariness
now, born of the streets.
Gray knew better than to push it. "I
have a friend flying in on a private jet. He should be touching down at
midnight. We can connect with him and fly anywhere. You can tell me where we
have to go once we're on board." Gray held out a hand, prepared to seal
the deal.
With one eye squinted in suspicion, Fiona
took his hand.
"Deal," she said.
It was a small patch on Gray's mistakes
of the past day, but it was a start. She had to be removed from harm's way, and
she should be safe once on board the plane. She could stay aboard, under guard,
while he and Monk investigated further.
Fiona pushed his notebook back toward him
with all the doodled symbols. "Just so you know
we need to go to
Gray took her concession as a tiny
measure of trust. "Good enough."
She nodded.
The deal clinched.
"Now if only you could get this gormless music to stop," she added with a tired moan.
As if on cue, the incessant chant died.
The constant low machinery hum and clacking of the cars over tracks also
ceased. In the sudden quiet, footsteps sounded outside the narrow door.
Gray gained his feet. "Stay behind
me," he hissed.
Fiona gathered up the Bible and tucked it
into her purse. Gray grabbed a length of rebar he had found earlier.
The door opened and a bright light shone
in their eyes.
The man barked sharply, startled. He
spoke in Danish. "What are you two doing in here?"
Gray straightened and lowered the bar. He
had almost speared the man in the maintenance uniform.
"Ride is closed," the man said,
stepping aside. "Get out of here before I call security."
Gray obeyed. The man scowled at him as he
passed. He knew how it must look. An older man with a teenaged girl holed up in
a cubby of an amusement park.
"You all right, miss?" the
worker asked. He must have noticed her puffy eyes, ripped clothes.
"We're fine." She hooked her
arm into Gray's and sashayed her hips a bit. "He paid extra for this ride."
The man frowned in distaste. "Back
door is over there." He pointed to a neon exit sign. "Don't let me
catch you in here again. It's dangerous to be traipsing around back here."
Not as dangerous as outside. Gray led
them to the door and pushed through. He checked his watch. It was only a bit
after eleven. The park wouldn't close for another hour. Maybe they needed to
try for an exit now.
As they cleared the corner of the ride's
building, it looked like this section of the park was deserted. No wonder the
ride had closed up early.
Gray heard music and merriment coming
from the direction of the park's lake.
"Everyone's gathering for the
electrical parade," Fiona said. "It closes up the park, along with
fireworks."
Gray prayed tonight's fireworks didn't
end up with people bleeding and screaming. He searched the immediate park
grounds. Lanterns lit up the night. Tulips filled beds to overflowing. The
concrete paths and aprons here were sparsely populated. They were too exposed.
Gray spotted a pair of park security
guards, a man and a woman, striding a bit too purposefully in their direction.
Had the maintenance worker gone ahead and alerted security after all?
"Time to get lost again," Gray
said and tugged Fiona in the opposite direction of the approaching guards. He
headed toward where the crowds gathered. They walked quickly, staying in
shadows under trees. Just two visitors anxious to watch the parade.
They cleared the garden paths and entered
the central plaza with its wide lake, aglow from all the lights and lanterns of
the encircling pavilions and palaces. Across the way, a cheer arose as the
first of the parade floats drifted into the plaza. It stood three stories,
depicting a mermaid on a rock, emblazoned with emerald and azure blue lights.
An arm waved in welcome. Other floats swept behind it, aglow with animated
puppets, five meters tall. Flutes piped merrily, drums sounded.
"The Hans Christian Andersen
parade," Fiona said. "Celebrating the writer's two hundredth
anniversary. He's the patron saint of the city."
Gray marched with her toward the crowd
lining the parade route around the center lake. Reflected in the still waters,
a giant fiery bloom burst in the sky, accompanied by a sonorous whump. Fanciful cascades
of sparkling streamers whistled and spiraled out across the night sky.
Nearing the edge of the surging parade
crowd, Gray kept a constant vigil around him. He searched for any pale figure
in black. But this was
Gray's heart thumped in beat to the
drums. A short volley of fireworks pummeled his chest and eardrums with their
concussions. But they finally reached the crowds.
Directly overhead, another flaming
flower, drizzling with fire, crackled and burst.
Fiona stumbled.
Gray caught her, his ears ringing.
As the explosion echoed away, Fiona
stared up at him, shocked. She lifted a hand from her side. She held it out
toward him as he pulled her into the crowd.
Her palm was covered in blood.
4:02 a.m.
Painter
woke into darkness, the fire cold. How long had he been asleep? Without
windows, it was timeless. But he sensed not much time had passed.
Something had roused him.
He pushed up on an elbow.
On the other side of the bed, Lisa was
also awake, glancing toward the door. "Did you feel?"
The room shuddered with a violent shake.
A distant boom reached them, felt in the gut.
Painter threw back the blankets.
"Trouble."
He pointed to the pile of fresh clothes
supplied by their hosts. They quickly dressed: long underwear, heavy worn
jeans, and bulky sweaters.
Across the room, Lisa lit the bedside
candles. She shoved her feet into a pair of sturdy leather boots meant more for
men. They waited in silence for a span of time
maybe twenty minutes, listening
to the commotion slowly die down.
Both sank back to the bed.
"What do you think happened?"
Lisa whispered.
Barked shouts echoed.
"Don't know
but I think we're about
to find out."
Boots pounded down the stone passage
beyond the thick oak door. Painter stood, craning an ear.
"Coming this way," he said.
Confirming this, a hard knock rattled the
door. Holding up an arm, Painter held Lisa back, but he also took a step back
himself. A heavy scrape sounded next, releasing the iron bar that sealed them
inside.
The door was tugged open. Four men
streamed into the room, rifles pointing at them. A fifth entered. He looked a
lot like the assassin named Gunther. A giant bull of a man, thick necked, a
stubble field for hair, silver or light gray. He wore baggy brown pants tucked
into midthigh black boots and a matching brown shirt.
Except for the missing black armband and
swastika, he looked the part of a Nazi storm trooper.
Or rather former Nazi storm trooper.
He also had the same pale face as
Gunther, only something seemed wrong. The left side of his face drooped like a
stroke victim. His left arm trembled with a palsy as he pointed toward the
door.
"Kommen mit mir!" he snapped.
They were being ordered out. The massive
leader turned and strode away, as if any thought of disobeying was simply
unfathomable. Then again, the rifles at their back certainly reinforced that
assumption.
Painter nodded to Lisa. She joined him as
they exited, trailed by the cadre of guards. The hallway was narrow, hewn from
the rock, barely wide enough for two people. The only illumination came from
flashlights secured to the guards' rifles, jittering shadows ahead of them. It
was distinctly colder in the hallway than their room, but far from frigid.
They were not led far. Painter estimated
that they were headed toward the front faēade of the castle. He was right. He
even heard a distant whistle of wind. The storm must have kicked up again
outside.
Ahead, the massive guardsman knocked on a
carved wooden door. A muffled response encouraged him to open the door. Warm
light flowed out into the hall, along with a breath of heat.
The guard stepped through and held the
door.
Painter led Lisa into the room and
searched around him. It appeared to be a rustic study and library. It climbed
two stories, all four walls covered in open bookshelves. The upper level was
circled by an iron balcony, heavy and undecorated. The only way up was via a
steep ladder.
The source of the room's heat was a large
stone hearth, aglow with a small bonfire. An oil painting of a man in a German
uniform glared down at them.
"My grandfather," Anna
Sporrenberg said, noting Painter's attention. She rose from behind a carved
monstrosity of a desk. She wore dark jeans and a sweater, too. Apparently it
was the dress code for the castle. "He took over the castle after the
war."
She motioned them to a circle of wingback
chairs that fronted the fireplace. Painter noted the circles under her eyes. It
looked like she hadn't slept at all. He also smelled smoke on her, an odor not
unlike cordite.
Interesting.
Painter met her eyes as she approached
the heavy chairs. The small hairs on the back of his neck prickled. Despite her
exhaustion, her eyes were bright and sharp. Painter recognized a cunning,
predatory, and calculating gleam. Here was someone to watch closely. She seemed
to be appraising him just as intently, sizing him up.
What was going on?
"Setzen Sie, bitte," she said, nodding to the chairs.
Painter and Lisa took neighboring chairs.
Anna chose one opposite them. The guard kept a post by the closed door, arms
crossed. Painter knew the cadre of other guards still waited outside. He
surveyed the room for escape routes. The only other exit was a deep-set glazed
window, frosted to obscurity, crisscrossed with iron bars.
No escape that way.
Painter returned his attention to Anna.
Maybe there was another way out. Anna's manner was cautious, but they had been
called here for a reason. He needed as much information as possible, but he
would have to handle this deftly. He noted Anna's family resemblance to the man
in the oil painting. A place to start.
"You said your grandfather took over the castle," Painter
said, prying for answers, sticking to safe ground. "Who held it before
him?"
Anna leaned back into the seat, obviously
relieved to sit in front of the fire for a quiet moment. Still, her manner was
focused, hands folded on her lap, eyes passing over Lisa, then back to him. "Granitschloß has a long and dark
history, Mr. Crowe. Are you familiar with Heinrich Himmler?"
"Hitler's second in command?"
"Ja. The head of the SS. Also a butcher and
madman."
Painter was surprised to hear this
characterization. Was this a trick? He sensed a game afoot. Only he didn't know
the steps
at least not yet.
Anna continued, "Himmler believed
himself to be the reincarnation of King Heinrich, a tenth-century German king
of the Saxons. Even thought he received psychic messages from him."
Painter nodded. "I've heard he was
interested in the occult."
"Obsessed actually." Anna
shrugged. "It was a passion of many in
"The proverbial master race,"
Painter said.
"Precisely. A century later, Guido
von List mixed her beliefs with German mythology, refining a Nordic origin to
this mythic Aryan race."
"And the German people bought the
story hook, line, and sinker," Painter said, baiting her a bit.
"And why not? After our defeat in
World War I, such an idea was a flattering conceit. It was taken up in a flourish
of occult lodges in
"And as I recall, Himmler himself
belonged to the Thule Society."
"Yes, the Reichsführer believed fully in
this mythology. Even in the magic of the Nordic runes. It was why he chose the
double sig
runes, twin lightning bolts, to represent his own order of warrior-priests, the
Schutzstaffel, the SS. He became
convinced, from studying Madame Blavatsky's work, that it was in the
Lisa spoke for the first time. "So
Himmler did send expeditions out into the
We're
not Nazis. Not anymore.
He encouraged the woman to talk while she
remained gregarious. He sensed a setup, but he had no idea where it was
leading. He hated being in the dark, but he refused to show it.
"So what was Himmler searching for
out here?" he asked. "Some lost tribe of Aryans? A
white-supremacist's Shangri-La?"
"Not exactly. Under the guise of
anthropological and zoological research, Himmler sent members of his SS to
search for evidence of a long-lost
master race. He became convinced that he would find traces of the old race
here. And though he found nothing, he grew more determined, driven further into
madness. When he started constructing an SS stronghold in
"But why build here?" Lisa
asked.
Painter could guess. "He believed
that the Aryan race would again rise from these mountains. He was building
their first citadel."
Anna nodded, as if conceding a point in a
match. "He also believed the hidden masters who once taught Madame
Blavatsky were still alive. He was building them a stronghold, a central place
to bring all such knowledge and experience together."
"Did these hidden masters ever show
up?" Painter asked mockingly.
"No. But my grandfather did at the
end of the war. And he brought with him something miraculous, something that
could make Himmler's dream a reality."
"And what was that?" Painter
asked.
Anna shook her head. "Before we talk
further, I must ask you a question. And I would appreciate a truthful
answer."
Painter frowned at the sudden change of
tack. "You know I can't promise that."
Anna smiled for the first time. "I
appreciate even that much honesty, Mr. Crowe."
"So what's your question?" he
asked, curious. Here must be the heart of the matter.
Anna stared at him. "Are you ill?
I'm having a hard time telling. You seem very clear-headed."
Painter's eyes widened. He had not
expected that question.
Before he could respond, Lisa answered,
"Yes."
"Lisa
," Painter warned.
"She'll know anyway. It doesn't take
a medical degree to tell." Lisa turned to Anna. "He's showing
vestibular signs, nystagmus, and
disorientation."
"How about migraines with visual
flashes?"
Lisa nodded.
"I thought as much." She leaned
back. The information seemed to reassure the woman.
Painter frowned. Why?
Lisa pressed. "What is affecting
him? I think we
he has a right to know."
"That will take some further
discussion, but I can give you his prognosis."
"And that is?"
"He will die in another three days.
Most horribly."
Painter forced himself not to react.
Lisa remained equally unfazed, her tone
clinical. "Is there a cure?"
Anna glanced to Painter, then back to
Lisa.
"No."
11:18 p.m.
He had
to get the girl to safety, to a doctor. Gray felt the blood seeping from
Fiona's gunshot wound, soaking through her shirt as he supported her, an arm
under her.
Around them, the crowds pressed. Cameras
flashed, keeping Gray edgy. Music and song echoed off the lake as the
electrical parade floated past. Giant animated puppets loomed high, nodding and
lolling over the heads of the crowd.
Fireworks continued to boom and burst
over the lake.
Gray ignored it all. He kept low, still
searching for the sniper who shot Fiona.
He had glanced briefly at her wound. Only
a graze, skin burned, weeping blood, but she needed medical care. Pain blanched
her face.
The shot had come from behind. That meant
that the sniper had to be positioned among the trees and bushes. They had been
lucky to reach the crowds. Still, with them spotted, the hunters were probably
already converging. Surely there were some among the crowd already.
He checked his watch. Forty-five minutes
until the park closed.
Gray needed a plan
a new plan. They
could no longer wait until midnight to make their escape with the exiting
crowd. They would be discovered before then. They needed to leave now.
But the stretch of park between the
parade grounds and the exit was nearly deserted as all the visitors gathered
around the lake. If they attempted a mad dash for the exit, they would be
exposed again, caught out in the open. And surely the park gate was under
watch, too.
Next to him, Fiona kept a hand clutched
to her wounded side. Blood oozed between her fingers. Her eyes met his,
panicked.
She whispered to him, "What are we
going to do?"
Gray kept them moving through the crowd.
He only had one idea. It was dangerous, but caution was not going to get them
out of the park. He turned Fiona toward him.
"I need to bloody my hands."
"What?"
He motioned to her shirt.
Frowning, she lifted the edge of her
blouse. "Be careful
"
He gently wiped the blood dribbling from
the raw wound. She winced and let out a small gasp.
"Sorry," he said.
"Your fingers are freezing,"
she mumbled.
"Are you okay?"
"I'll live."
That was the goal.
"I'm going to have to carry you in a
second," Gray said, standing up.
"What are you?"
"Just be ready to scream when I tell
you."
She wrinkled her nose in confusion, but
nodded.
He waited for the right moment. Flutes
and drums started in the distance. Gray edged Fiona in the direction of the
main gates. Past the heads of a group of schoolchildren, Gray spotted a
familiar figure in a trench coat, arm in a sling, Grette's murderer. He waded
through the pocket of youngsters, eyes searching.
Gray retreated into a mob of Germans
singing a ballad in tune with the flutes and drums. As the song ended, a burst
of fireworks concluded in a tympani of crackling explosions.
"Here we go," Gray said,
leaning down. He smeared his face with blood and picked Fiona up in his arms.
Lifting her, he raised his voice and yelled in Danish. "Bomb!"
Crackling explosions punctuated his
booming bellow.
"Scream," he whispered in
Fiona's ear.
He lifted his face again, smeared in
blood. On cue, Fiona wailed and shrieked in agony in his arms.
"Bomb!" Gray yelled again.
Faces turned in his direction. Fireworks
boomed. The fresh blood glistened on his cheeks. At first no one moved. Then
like a turning tide, one person backed away, bumping against another. Confused
cries and calls rose. More people began to retreat.
Gray kept after those retreating, staying
among the most panicked.
Fiona cried and thrashed. She waved an
arm, fingers dripping with blood.
Confusion spread like wildfire. Gray's
bellow caught on the dry tinder, whetted by attacks in
Like a spooked herd of cattle, the crowd
bristled and bumped against one another. Claustrophobia accentuated the
anxiety. Fireworks died overhead, but by now, frightened cries erupted across
the parade route. As one person fled, two more took flight, reflexive, growing
exponentially. Feet pounded on pavement, retreating, aiming for the exit.
A trickle became a surge.
The stampede toward the exit began.
Gray allowed himself to be carried with
it, Fiona in his arms. He prayed no one was trampled. But so far the retreat
was not in full panic. With the boom of the fireworks ended, confusion reigned
more than horror. Still, the flow of the crowd hastened toward the main gate.
Gray set Fiona down, freeing his arms. He
wiped his face clean with the sleeve of his Armani jacket. Fiona stayed at his
side, one hand clutching his belt to keep anchored to him amid the throng.
The gate appeared ahead.
Gray nodded toward it. "If anything
happens
run. Keep going."
"I don't know if I can make it. Side
hurts like a bitch."
Gray saw that she was limping now,
scrunched over slightly.
Up ahead, Gray saw security guards trying
to control the crowd through the gates, keeping the press of bodies from
crushing anyone. As he watched, Gray spotted a pair of guards standing off to
the side, conspicuously not helping with crowd control. A young man and woman.
Both snowy blond. The bidders from the auction house. In disguise, they guarded
the gates. Both had holstered pistols, palms resting on them.
For just a moment, the woman's eyes met
his in the crowd.
But they shifted away.
Then snapped back again.
Recognition.
Gray backpedaled through the crowd,
fighting the current.
"What?" Fiona asked, pushed
behind him.
"Go back. We need to find another
way."
"How?"
Gray edged off to the side, swimming
against the riptide. It was too hard to retreat straight back. A moment later,
he broke free. Only a handful of people still bustled around him, a small eddy
in the greater current.
They needed better coverage.
Gray saw that they had reached the edge
of the deserted parade route. The floats had ground to a stop, lights still
blinking, but no music. It seemed the panic had spread to the float operators.
They had abandoned their chariots and fled. Even the security guards had moved
to the gates.
Gray spotted the open door to a cab of
one of the floats.
"This way," he said.
He half carried Fiona away from the crowd
and ran for the float. Over the cab towered a giant illuminated puppet of a
gangly duck with an oversize head. Gray recognized the figure. From the Hans
Christian Andersen fairy tale "The Ugly Duckling."
They dashed under one of its upraised
wings aglow with twinkling yellow lights, plainly meant to flap. Gray helped
Fiona into the cab, expecting to be shot in the back at any moment. He climbed
in after her and closed the door, snapping it shut as quietly as he could.
As he glanced out the windshield, he
appreciated his caution.
A figure appeared ahead, stepping out of
the crowd, dressed in black. Grette's killer. He did not bother hiding his
shotgun. All attention had diverted to the front of the park. He circled the
edge of the retreating crowd, staring out toward the lake and parade circuit.
Gray ducked with Fiona.
The man passed within yards and continued
down the line of abandoned floats.
"That was close," Fiona
whispered. "We should"
"Shh."
Gray pressed a finger to her lips. His elbow nudged a lever. Something clicked
in the dashboard.
Oh crap
Speakers buried in the puppet overhead
erupted.
QUACK, QUACK, QUACK
QUACK, QUACK,
QUACK
The Ugly Duckling had awakened.
And everyone knew it.
Gray straightened. Thirty yards away, the
gunman swung around.
There was no hiding now.
Suddenly the cab's engine growled.
Glancing over, he saw Fiona sitting up, popping the clutch.
"Found the key in the
ignition," she said and shifted into gear. The float lurched forward, swinging
out of line.
"Fiona, let me"
"You drove last time. And look where
that got us." She aimed straight for the gunman with the shotgun.
"Besides, I owe this bastard."
So she had recognized him, too. The man
who murdered her grandmother. She had shifted into second by the time he raised
his shotgun. She barreled toward him, careless of the threat.
Gray sought some way to help, searching
the cab.
So many levers
The assassin fired.
Gray winced, but Fiona had already
twisted the wheel, anticipating. A corner of the windshield spiderwebbed,
the shot wide. Fiona yanked the wheel back around, trying to run the man over.
With the sudden turn, the float,
top-heavy, tipped over on two wheels.
"Hold on!" Fiona yelled.
The float crashed back down on four
tires, but it bought the man an extra moment to sprint to the left. He was damn
fast, already readying his shotgun, planning to shoot point-blank through the
side window as the float passed.
They had no time to maneuver out of the
way.
Returning his attention to the row of
levers, Gray grabbed the left-most one. It only made sense. He yanked it down.
Gears ground. The Duckling's left wing, raised a moment ago, flapped low. It
struck the gunman in the neck, clotheslining him from
the side, shattering vertebrae. The man was lifted off his feet and tossed
aside.
"Go for the gates!" Gray urged.
The Ugly Duckling had its first taste of
blood.
QUACK, QUACK, QUACK
QUACK, QUACK,
QUACK
The siren call of the float cleared a
path. People scattered to the sides. The security guards were crushed back by
the crowd. Even those in disguise. The service gate next to the main entrance,
thrown wide earlier to ease the crush of fleeing people, stood open.
Fiona aimed for it.
The duck shattered through it, tearing
off its deadly left wing. The cab shuddered, and they were on the streets.
Fiona headed away.
"Take the first corner," Gray
said, pointing.
She obeyed, downshifting into the turn
like a pro. The Duckling flew around the corner. After two more turns, Gray
urged her to slow down.
"We can't keep driving this
thing," he said. "It's too conspicuous."
"You think?" Fiona glanced to
him and shook her head in exasperation.
Gray found a long wrench in a tool kit.
He had them stop at the top of a hill and waved Fiona out. Shifting over, Gray
popped the clutch, jammed the wrench on the accelerator, and jumped to the
curb.
The Ugly Duckling took off, lights
blazing, clipping parked cars as it fled downhill. Wherever it finally came to
roost, the crash site would divert the attention of any trackers.
Gray headed in the opposite direction.
They should be safe for a few hours. He checked his watch. Plenty of time to
reach the airport. And Monk. He would be touching down shortly.
Fiona limped beside him, eyes glancing
back. Behind them, the Duckling trumpeted into the night.
QUACK, QUACK, QUACK
QUACK, QUACK,
QUACK
"I'm going to miss him," Fiona
said.
"Me, too."
4:35 a.m.
Painter
stood by the hearth. He had risen from his chair upon the pronouncement of his
death sentence.
The massive guard had come forward three
steps when Painter rose to his feet, but Anna had held the man back with a
raised hand. "Nein, Klaus. Alles ist ganz recht."
Painter waited for the guard, Klaus, to
return to his post by the door.
"There's no cure?"
Anna nodded. "I spoke truly."
"Then why isn't Painter showing the
same madness as the monks?" Lisa asked.
Anna glanced to Painter. "You were
away from the monastery, Ja? At the
outlying village. Your exposure was less. Rather than the rapid neurological degeneration,
you're experiencing a slower, more generalized bodily deterioration. Still, it is a death sentence."
Anna must have read something in his
face.
"While there is no cure, there is a
hope of slowing the deterioration. Over the years, experimenting with animals,
we have devised some models that show promise. We can prolong your life. Or at
least we could have."
"What do you mean?" Lisa asked.
Anna stood. "It is why I called you
down here. To show you." She nodded to the guard, Klaus, who opened the
door. "Follow me. And perhaps we'll find a way to help each other."
Painter offered Lisa a hand as Anna
stepped away. He burned with curiosity. He sensed both a trap and a measure of
hope.
What better bait?
Lisa leaned toward him as she stood.
"What is going on?" she whispered in his ear.
"I'm not sure." He glanced to
Anna as she spoke with Klaus.
Perhaps
we'll find a way to help each other.
Painter had planned to propose the same
to Anna, even discussed it with Lisa earlier, to bargain for their lives, to
buy time. Had they been eavesdropped upon? Bugged? Or had matters simply grown
so much worse here that their cooperation was truly needed?
Now he was worried.
"It must have something to do with
that explosion we heard," Lisa said.
Painter nodded. He definitely needed more
information. For now, he tabled any concern about his own health
though it was
difficult, as another migraine built behind his eyes, aching in his back
molars, reminding him of his illness with every throb.
Anna motioned them over. Klaus stepped
back. He did not look happy. Then again, Painter had yet to see the man happy.
And for some reason, he hoped never to. What made this man happy had to involve
screaming and bloodshed.
"If you'll come with me," Anna
said with cold politeness.
She headed out the door, flanked by two
of the outer guardsmen. Klaus followed Lisa and Painter, trailed by another two
armed men.
They headed in a direction different from
their plush prison cell. After a few turns a straight tunnel, wider than any of
the others, stretched into the heart of the mountain. It was also lit by a row
of electric bulbs, lined up in wire cages along one wall. It was the first sign
of any modern amenities.
They walked along the corridor.
Painter noted the smoky reek to the air.
It grew stronger as they progressed. He returned his attention to Anna.
"So you know what made me
sick," he said.
"It was the accident, as I said
before."
"An accident involving what?" he pressed.
"The answer is not easy. It
stretches far back into history."
"Back to when you were Nazis?"
Anna glanced to him. "Back to the
origin of life on this planet."
"Really?" Painter said.
"So how long is this story? Remember, I only have three days left."
She smiled at him again and shook her
head. "In that case, I'll jump forward to when my grandfather first came
to the Granitschloß. At the end of
the war. Are you familiar with the turmoil at that time? The chaos in Europe as
"Everything up for grabs."
"And not just German land and resources,
but also our research. Allied forces sent competing parties, scientists and
soldiers, scouring the German countryside, pillaging for secret technology. It
was a free-for-all." Anna frowned at them. "Is that the right
word?"
Painter and Lisa both nodded.
"
Painter shook his head. He could not help
comparing his own Sigma Force to the earlier British World War II teams.
Tech-plunderers. He would love to discuss the same with Sigma's founder, Sean
McKnight. If he lived that long.
"Who was their leader?" Lisa
asked.
"A gentleman named Commander Ian
Fleming."
Lisa made a dismissive snort. "The
writer who created
"The same. It was said he patterned
his character on some of the men on his team. That gives you some idea of the
roughshod and cavalier exuberance of these plunderers."
"To the victor go the spoils of
war," Painter quoted with a shrug.
"Perhaps. But it was my
grandfather's duty to protect as much of that technology as possible. He was an
officer in the Sicherheitsdienst."
She glanced at Painter, testing him.
So the game was not over. He was up for
the challenge. "The Sicherheitsdienst
was the group of SS commandos involved in evacuation of German treasures: art,
gold, antiquities, and technology."
She nodded at him. "In the final
days of the war, as
"And his orders?" Painter
asked.
"To remove, safeguard, and destroy
all evidence of a project code-named Chronos. At the
heart of the project was a device simply called die Glocke. Or the
"So he escaped with the
"Two plans were laid in place. One
flight to the north through
"The
"Exactly. It offered something many
scientists at the time had been seeking through other means."
"And what was that?"
Anna sighed and glanced back to Klaus.
"Perfection." She remained silent for a few moments, lost in some
private sadness.
Ahead the passage finally ended. A pair
of giant ironwood doors stood open at the end. Beyond the threshold, a crude
staircase spiraled down into the mountain. It was cut from the rock, but the
staircase circled around a center pillar of steel as thick as a tree's trunk.
They wound down around it.
Painter stared up. The pillar pierced the
top of the roof and continued higher
possibly all the way out the shoulder of
the mountain. Lightning rod, he thought. He also smelled a hint of ozone in the
air, stronger now than the smoke.
Anna noted his attention. "We use
the shaft to vent excess energies out of the mountain." She pointed up.
Painter craned. He pictured the ghost
lights reported in the area. Was this their source? Both of the lights and
perhaps the illness?
Biting back his anger, Painter
concentrated on the stairs. As his head pounded, the winding aggravated a
growing vertigo. Seeking distraction, he continued their dialogue. "Back
to the story of the
Anna broke out of her reverie. "At
first no one knew. It came out of research into a new energy source. Some
thought it might even be a crude time machine. That was why it was code-named Chronos."
"Time travel?" Painter said.
"You have to remember," Anna
said, "the Nazis were light-years ahead of other nations in certain
technologies. That was why there was such fervent scientific piracy after the
war. But let me backtrack. During the early part of the century, two
theoretical systems were in competition: the theory of relativity and quantum
theory. And while they didn't necessarily contradict each other, even Einstein,
the father of relativity, spoke of the two theories as incompatible. The
theories split the scientific community into two camps. And we know very well
on which side most of the Western world concentrated."
"Einstein's relativity."
Anna nodded. "Which led to splitting
the atom, bombs, and nuclear energy. The entire world became the Manhattan
Project. All based on Einstein's work. The Nazis went a different route, but
with no less fervor. They had their own equivalent of the Manhattan Project,
but one based on the other
theoretical camp. Quantum theory."
"Why go that route?" Lisa
asked.
"For a simple reason." Anna
turned to her. "Because Einstein was a Jew."
"What?"
"Remember the context of the time.
Einstein was a Jew. In the Nazis' eyes, that assigned lesser value to his
discoveries. Instead, the Nazis took to heart the physical discoveries of pure
German scientists, considering their works more valid and important. The Nazis
based their Manhattan Project on the work of scientists like Werner Heisenberg
and Erwin Schrödinger, and most importantly Max Planck, the father of quantum
theory. All had solid roots in the Fatherland. So the Nazis proceeded on a
course of practical applications based on quantum mechanics, work that even
today is considered groundbreaking. The Nazi scientists believed a power source
could be tapped based on experiments with quantum models. Something that is
only being realized today. Modern science calls this power zero point
energy."
"Zero point?" Lisa glanced to
Painter.
He nodded, well familiar with the
scientific concept. "When something is chilled to absolute zero almost
three hundred degrees below zero Centigrade all atomic motion stops. A
complete standstill. The zero point of nature. Yet even then, energy persists.
A background radiation that shouldn't be there. The energy's presence could not
be adequately explained by traditional theories."
"But quantum theory does," Anna
said firmly. "It allows for movement even when matter is frozen to an
absolute standstill."
"How is that possible?" Lisa
asked.
"At absolute zero, particles might
not move up, down, right, or left, but according to quantum mechanics, they could
flash into and out of existence, producing energy. What is called zero point
energy."
"Into and out of existence?"
Lisa seemed little convinced.
Painter took the reins. "Quantum
physics gets a bit weird. But while the concept seems crazy, the energy is
real. Recorded in labs. Around the world, scientists are seeking ways to tap
into this energy at the core of all existence. It offers a source of infinite,
limitless power."
Anna nodded. "And the Nazis were
experimenting with this energy with all the fervor of your Manhattan
Project."
Lisa's eyes grew wide. "An unlimited
source of power. If they had discovered it, it would have changed the course of
the war."
Anna lifted one hand, correcting her.
"Who is to say they didn't
discover it? It is documented that in the last months of the war, the Nazis had
achieved remarkable breakthroughs. Projects with the name Feuerball and Kugelblitz. Details of which can
be found among the unclassified records of the British T-Force. But the
discoveries came too late. Facilities were bombed, scientists killed, research
stolen. Whatever was left disappeared into the deep black projects of various
nations."
"But not the
"Not the
"Black Sun," Painter
translated.
"Sehr
gut."
"But what about this
"It was what made you sick,"
Anna said. "Damaged you at the quantum level, where no pill or remedy can
reach."
Painter almost tripped a step. He needed
a moment to digest the information. Damaged
at the quantum level. What did that mean?
The last stairs appeared ahead, blocked
by a cordon of crossed wood beams, guarded by another pair of men with rifles.
Though stunned, Painter noted the scorched rock along the roof of the last turn
of the spiral.
Beyond opened a cavernous vault. Painter
could not see far into it, but he could still feel the heat. Every surface was
blackened. A row of humped shapes lay under tarps. Dead bodies.
Here was the blast zone from the explosions
they had heard earlier.
Out of the ruin, a figure appeared,
blackened with ash, but his features were still recognizable. It was Gunther,
the massive guardsman who had burned down the monastery. It seemed those here
had reaped what they had sown.
Fire for fire.
Gunther crossed to the cordon. Anna and
Klaus joined him. With Klaus and Gunther side by side, Painter recognized a
similarity between the two giants not physical features, but in some hardness
and foreignness that was hard to pin down.
Gunther nodded to Klaus.
The other barely noted his presence.
Anna bowed her head with Gunther,
speaking rapidly in German. All Painter could make out was a single word. It
was the same in German and English.
Sabotage.
So all was not right in the
Gunther's eyes fell upon Painter. His
lips moved, but Painter could not discern what he said. Anna shook her head,
disagreeing. Gunther's eyes narrowed, but he nodded.
Painter knew he should be relieved.
With a final pinched stare, Gunther
turned and strode back into the blackened ruins.
Anna returned. "This is what I
wanted to show you." She waved an arm at the destruction.
"The Bell," Painter said.
"It was destroyed. An act of
sabotage."
Lisa stared at the ruin. "And it was
this Bell that made Painter sick."
"And held the only chance for a
cure."
Painter studied the devastation.
"Do you have a duplicate Bell?"
Lisa asked. "Or can you fabricate another?"
Anna slowly shook her head. "One of
the key components can't be duplicated.
Xerum 525. Even after sixty years, we've
not been able to reformulate it."
"So no Bell, no cure," Painter
said.
"But there might be a chance
if we
help each other." Anna held out her hand. "If we cooperate
I give
you my word."
Painter reached woodenly over and grasped
her hand. Still, he hesitated. He sensed a level of subterfuge here. Something
Anna had left unspoken. All her talk
all the explanations. They were all meant
to misdirect. Why were they even offering him this deal?
Then it dawned on him.
He knew.
"The accident
," he said.
He felt Anna's fingers twitch in his.
"It wasn't an accident, was it?" He remembered the word he had overheard.
"It was sabotage, too."
Anna nodded. "At first, we thought
it was an accident. We've had occasional problems with surges. Triggering
spikes in the Bell's output. Nothing major. Venting the energies triggered a
few illnesses locally. The occasional death."
Painter had to restrain himself from
shaking his head. Nothing major, Anna
had said. The illnesses and deaths were major
enough to warrant Ang Gelu sending out an international call for help, drawing
Painter here.
Anna continued, "But a few nights
back, someone jinked with the settings during a
routine test of the Bell. Exponentially increasing the output."
"And zapping the monastery and the
village."
"That's right."
Painter tightened his grip on Anna's
hand. It looked like she wanted to pull away. He wasn't about to let her. She
was still hedging from full disclosure. But Painter knew the truth as surely as
the headache that pressed now. It explained the offer of cooperation.
"But it wasn't just the monks and
the village that were affected," Painter said. "Everyone here was, too. You're all sick like me. Not the rapid
neurological degeneration seen at the monastery, but the slower bodily
deterioration I'm experiencing."
Anna's eyes narrowed, studying him,
weighing how much to tell then she finally nodded. "We were partially
shielded here, somewhat protected. We vented the worst of the Bell's radiation
upward and out."
Painter remembered the ghost lights seen
dancing in the mountaintops. To spare themselves, the Germans had blasted the immediate
area with radiation, including the neighboring monastery. But the scientists
here had failed to escape totally unscathed.
Anna met his gaze, unflinching,
unapologetic. "We're now all under the same death sentence."
Painter considered his options. He had
none. Though neither side trusted the other, they were all in the same boat, so
they might as well get closer. Gripping her hand, he shook it, sealing the
pact.
Sigma and the Nazis together.
5:45 a.m.
HLUHLUWE-UMFOLOZI
PRESERVE
Khamisi
Taylor stood in front of the head warden's desk. Stiff-backed, he waited while
Warden Gerald Kellogg finished reading his preliminary report on the past day's
tragedy.
The only sound was the creak of an
overhead fan, slowly churning.
Khamisi wore a borrowed set of clothes,
the pants too long, the shirt too tight. But they were dry. After spending all
day and night in the tepid water hole, shoulder deep in the muddy pan, arms
aching while he held the rifle at the ready, he appreciated the warm clothes
and solid footing.
He also appreciated the daylight. Through
the back office window, dawn painted the sky a dusty rose. The world reappeared
out of the shadows.
He had survived. He was alive.
But he had yet to fully accept that.
In his skull, the calls of the ukufa still echoed.
Closer at hand, the head warden, Gerald
Kellogg, rubbed absently at his bushy auburn mustache as he continued to read.
The morning sunlight gleamed off his bald pate, giving it an oily pink sheen.
He finally looked up, staring over a pair of half-moon reading glasses perched
on his nose.
"And is this the report you intend
for me to file, Mr. Taylor?" Warden Kellogg ran a finger along one line on
the yellow paper. " 'An unknown apex predator.'
Is that all you can say about what killed and dragged off Dr. Fairfield?"
"Sir, I didn't get a clear look at
the animal. It was something large and white-furred. As I reported."
"A lioness perhaps," Kellogg
said.
"No, sir
it was no lion."
"How can you be sure? Didn't you
just say you didn't see it?"
"Yes, sir
what I meant, sir
was
that what I saw did not match any known predators of the lowveld."
"Then what was it?"
Khamisi remained silent. He knew better
than to mention the ukufa. In the brightness
of an ordinary day, whispers of monsters would only provoke derision. The
superstitious tribesman.
"So some creature attacked and
dragged off Dr. Fairfield, something
you never saw clearly enough to identify
"
Khamisi nodded slowly.
"
yet still you ran and hid in the
water hole?" Gerald Kellogg crumpled up the report. "How do you think
that reflects on our service here? One of our own wardens allows a
sixty-year-old woman to be killed while he ran and hid. Tucked tail without
even knowing what was out there."
"Sir. That's not a fair"
"Fair?" The warden's voice
boomed, loud enough to be heard in the outer room, where the entire staff had
been called in due to the emergency. "How fair is it that I have to contact Dr. Fairfield's next of kin and
tell them their mother or grandmother was attacked and eaten while one of my
wardens one of my armed wardens
ran and hid?"
"There was nothing I could do."
"Except save your own
skin."
Khamisi heard the unspoken word
purposefully left out.
Save your black skin.
Gerald Kellogg had not been thrilled to
hire Khamisi. The warden's family had ties to the old Afrikaner government, and
he had risen through the ranks because of his connections and ties. He still
belonged to the Oldavi country club, exclusively white,
where even after the fall of apartheid much economic power was still brokered.
Though new laws had been passed, barriers broken in government, unions formed,
business was still business in South Africa. The De Beerses still owned their
diamond mines. The Waalenbergs still owned most everything else.
Change would be slow.
Khamisi's position was a small step, one
he meant to keep open for the next generation. So he kept his voice calm.
"I'm sure once investigators canvass the site, they'll support my course
of action."
"Will they, now, Mr. Taylor? I sent
a dozen men out there, an hour after the search-and-rescue helicopter found you
after midnight wallowing in the muddy water. They reported in fifteen minutes
ago. They found the rhino carcass, almost stripped by jackals and hyenas. No
sign of the calf that you reported. And more importantly, no sign of Dr.
Fairfield."
Khamisi shook his head, searching for a
way past these accusations. He flashed back to his long vigil in the water
hole. The day seemed never ending, but the night had been worse. With the loss
of the sun, Khamisi had waited to be attacked. Instead, he had heard the
yip-yip-yip of hyenas and the bark of jackals descend into the valley,
accompanied by the furious growls and cries of scuffling scavengers.
The presence of the scavengers had made
Khamisi almost believe it was safe to attempt a run for the Jeep. If the usual
jackals and hyenas had returned, then perhaps the ukufa had left.
Still, he hadn't moved.
Fresh in his mind had been the ambush
that had waylaid Dr. Fairfield.
"Surely there were other
tracks," he said.
"There were."
Khamisi brightened. If he had proof
"They were lion tracks," Warden
Kellogg said. "Two adult females. Just like I said earlier."
"Lions?"
"Yes. I believe we have a few
pictures of these strange creatures around here somewhere. Maybe you'd better
study them so you can identify them in the future. What with all the free time
you'll have."
"Sir?"
"You're suspended, Mr. Taylor."
Khamisi could not keep the shock from his
face. He knew if it had been any other warden
any other white warden
that there would be more leniency, more trust. But
not when he was wearing a tribesman's skin. He knew better than to argue. It
would only make matters worse.
"Without pay, Mr. Taylor. Until a
full inquiry is completed."
A full inquiry. Khamisi knew how that
would end.
"And I've been told by the local
constabulary to inform you that you are not to leave the immediate area. There
is also the matter of criminal negligence to rule out."
Khamisi closed his eyes.
Despite the rising sun, the nightmare
refused to end.
Ten minutes later, Gerald Kellogg still
sat at his desk, his office now empty. He ran a sweating palm over the top of
his head, like shining an apple. The sour set to his lips refused to relax. The
night had been interminable, so many fires to put out. And there were still a
thousand details to attend to: dealing with the media, attending to the
biologist's family, including Dr. Fairfield's partner.
Kellogg shook his head at this last
problem. Dr. Paula Kane would prove the biggest thorn in the coming day. He
knew the term "partnership" between the two older women went beyond
research. It was Dr. Paula Kane who had pressed for the search-and-rescue
helicopter last night after Dr. Fairfield hadn't returned home from the day
trip into the bush.
Woken in the middle of the night, Gerald
had urged caution. It was not uncommon for researchers to bivouac overnight.
What got him out of bed was when he learned where
Dr. Fairfield had been headed with one of his wardens. To the park's
northwestern border. Not far from the Waalenbergs' private estate and preserve.
A search near there required his
immediate supervision.
It had been a hectic night, necessitating
fast footwork and coordination, but everything was almost over, the genie
returned to its proverbial bottle.
Except for one last item to attend to.
There was no reason to put it off any
longer.
He picked up the phone and dialed the
private number. He waited for the line to pick up, tapping a pen on a notepad.
"Report," came a terse response
as the connection was made.
"I just finished my interview with
him."
"And?"
"He saw nothing
nothing
clearly."
"What does that mean?"
"Claims to have caught glimpses. Nothing
he could identify."
A long stretch of silence followed.
Gerald grew nervous. "His report
will be edited. Lions. That will be the conclusion. We'll shoot a few for good
measure and end the matter in another day or so. The man, meanwhile, has been
suspended."
"Very good. You know what you must
do."
Kellogg argued against it. "He's
been suspended. He won't dare rock the boat. I've scared him good. I don't
think"
"Exactly. Don't think. You have your
orders. Make it look like an accident."
The line clicked off.
Kellogg settled the phone receiver in its
cradle. The room stifled despite the chug of the air-conditioning and the
slowly turning fan. Nothing could truly withstand the blistering savanna heat
as the day warmed up.
But it wasn't the temperature that rolled
a bead of sweat down his forehead.
You
have your orders.
And he knew well enough not to disobey.
He glanced down to the notepad on his
desk. He had absently doodled as he spoke on the phone, a reflection of how
uneasy the man on the other end of the line made him feel.
Gerald hurriedly scribbled over it, tore
the sheet off, and ripped the page into tiny strips. No evidence. Ever. That
was the rule. And he had his orders.
Make
it look like an accident.
4:50 a.m.
37,000
FEET ABOVE
We'll
be landing in another hour," Monk said. "Maybe you should try taking
another nap."
Gray stretched. The low hum of the
Challenger 600 jet had lulled him, but his mind still ticked through the past day's
events, trying to piece the puzzle together. He had the Darwin Bible open in
front of him.
"How's Fiona?" he asked.
Monk nodded back to the sofa near the
rear of the plane. Fiona was sprawled out under a blanket. "Crashed
finally. Knocked her down with some pain meds. Kid doesn't shut up."
She had been talking nonstop since the
pair arrived at the Copenhagen airport. Gray had alerted Monk by telephone, and
he had arranged a private car to whisk them safely to the waiting jet, already
refueling. Logan smoothed out all diplomatic and visa issues.
Still, Gray had not breathed easily until
the Challenger was wheels up and into the air.
"Her bullet wound?"
Monk shrugged and collapsed into a
neighboring chair. "Scratch really. Okay, a really deep nasty scratch.
Will hurt like hell the next few days. But some antiseptic, liquid skin
sealant, and a bandage wrap, and she'll be right as rain in a couple more days.
Ready to rip more people off."
Monk patted his jacket, making sure his
wallet was still there.
"She only stole it as a way to say
hello," Gray said. He hid a tired smile. Grette Neal had explained the
same to him yesterday. God, was it only yesterday?
While Monk had ministered to Fiona, Gray
had reported to Logan. The temporary director was not happy to hear about his
escapades following the auction
an auction Gray had been forbidden to attend.
Still, the damage was done. Luckily he still had the flash drive containing all
the participants' pictures, including the ice-blond pair. He had forwarded it
all to Logan, along with faxed copies of some of the pages from the Bible and
his notes. He had even sent his drawing of the cloverleaf tattoo he had spotted
on the night's assailants. Some unknown blond assassin squad.
Logan and Kat would work at their end to
ascertain who was behind all this.
Logan had already made inquiries with the
Copenhagen authorities. They reported no deaths at the park. It seemed the body
of the assassin they had clotheslined had
disappeared. So the aftermath of their flight from Tivoli Gardens proved no
worse than bruises and scrapes among the jostled visitors. No serious injuries
except to a parade float.
He watched Monk check the pocket of his
jeans.
"Ring still there?" Gray asked,
needling his friend.
"She didn't have to steal that,
too."
Gray had to give Fiona credit. Fast
fingers.
"So you going to tell me about that
ring box?" Gray asked, closing the Darwin Bible.
"I wanted to surprise you with
it
"
"Monk, I didn't know you cared that
much."
"Oh, shut up. I meant I wanted to
tell you about it in my own time, not
not because Ms. Copperfield over there
pulled it out of a hat."
Gray leaned back, facing Monk, arms
crossed. "So you're going to pop the question. I don't know
Mrs. Kat Kokkalis. She'll never go for
it."
"I didn't think so either. I bought
the damn thing two months ago. Haven't found the moment to ask her."
"More like, you hadn't found the courage."
"Well, maybe that, too."
Gray reached over and patted Monk on the
knee. "She loves you, Monk. Quit worrying."
Monk grinned like a schoolboy at him. Not
a good look for him. Still, Gray recognized the depth of feeling in his eyes.
Along with a shimmer of genuine fear. Monk rubbed at the joint where his
prosthetic hand met the stump of his wrist. Despite his bravado, the man had been
shaken by last year's mutilation. Kat's attention had gone a long way toward
healing him, more than any of the doctors. Still, a deep vein of insecurity
remained.
Monk opened the small black velvet box
and stared at the three-carat engagement ring. "Maybe I should have gotten
a bigger diamond
especially now."
"What do you mean?"
Monk glanced over at him. The new
expression shone from his face
a trembling hope was the best way to describe
it. "Kat's pregnant."
Gray sat up, surprised. "What?
How?"
"I think you know how," Monk said.
"Christ
congratulations," he
blurted out, still recovering. The last came out somewhat as a question.
"I mean
you are keeping the baby."
Monk raised one eyebrow.
"Of course," Gray said, shaking
his head at his stupidity.
"It's still early," Monk said.
"Kat doesn't want anyone to know
she said it was okay to tell you."
Gray nodded, taking time to assimilate
the news. He tried to picture Monk as a father and was surprised how easy that
was to imagine.
"My God, that's just great."
Monk snapped the ring box closed.
"So what about you?"
Gray frowned. "What about me?"
"You and Rachel. What did she say
when you called her about your escapades in Tivoli Gardens?"
Gray's brow crinkled.
Monk's eyes widened. "Gray
"
"What?"
"You didn't call her, did you?"
"I didn't think"
"She's with the carabinieri.
So you know she heard about any possible terrorist attack in Copenhagen.
Especially some nut job yelling 'Bomb!' in a crowded park and joyriding in a
parade float. She has to know you were
involved."
Monk was right. He should have called her
right away.
"Grayson Pierce, what am I going to
do with you?" Monk shook his head sadly. "When are you going to cut
that girl free?"
"What are you talking about?"
"C'mon. I'm happy you and Rachel
have hit it off, but where's it really going?"
Gray bristled. "Not that it's any of
your business, but that's what we were planning on discussing here, before all
hell broke loose."
"Lucky break for you."
"You know, just because you have a
two-month-old engagement ring in your pocket does not make you a relationship
expert."
Monk held up both palms. "All right
backing off
I was just saying
"
Gray was not letting him off the hook
that easily. "What?"
"You don't really want a
relationship."
He blinked at the frontal assault.
"What are you talking about? Rachel and I have been bending over backward
to make this work. I love Rachel. You know that."
"I know you do. I never said
otherwise. You just don't want a real relationship with her." Monk ticked
off three items on his fingers. "That means wife, a mortgage, and kids."
Gray just shook his head.
"All you're doing with Rachel is
enjoying a prolonged first date."
Gray sought some retort, but Monk was
hitting too close to home. He remembered how it took overcoming a certain
awkwardness each time he and Rachel met, a buffer that had to be crossed before
a deeper intimacy could be reestablished. Like a first date.
"How long have I known you?"
Monk asked.
Gray waved the question away.
"And during that time how many
serious girlfriends have you had?" Monk formed his fist into a big zero.
"And look who you pick for your first serious relationship."
"Rachel's wonderful."
"She is. And I think it's great that
you're finally opening up more. But man, talk about setting up impossible
barriers."
"What barriers?"
"How about the goddamn Atlantic for
one. Standing between you and a full relationship." Monk waggled three
fingers at him.
Wife,
mortgage, kids.
"You're not ready," Monk said.
"I mean, I mention Kat's pregnant and you should've seen your face. Scared
the crap out of you. And it's my
kid."
Gray's heart beat heavily in his throat.
He found himself breathing harder. Punched in the gut.
Monk sighed. "You have issues, my
man. Maybe something you need to work through with your pops. I don't
know."
Gray was saved from responding by a chime
over the jet's intercom.
The pilot
reported, "We're approximately
thirty minutes out. We'll be
beginning our descent soon."
Gray glanced out the window. The sun rose
to the east.
"Maybe I'll try to catch a little
downtime," Gray muttered to the window. "Until we land."
"Sounds good."
Gray turned to Monk. He opened his mouth
to respond in some way to Monk's words, but he resorted to the truth instead.
"I do love Rachel."
Monk reclined his seat and rolled over to
his side with a grunt. "I know. That's what makes it so hard."
7:05 a.m.
HLUHLUWE-UMFOLOZI
PRESERVE
Khamisi
Taylor sipped the tea in the small parlor. Though it was steeped well and sweetened
with honey, he tasted none of it.
"And there's no chance Marcia could
be alive?" Paula Kane asked.
Khamisi shook his head. He did not shrink
from the reality. That was not why he had come here after his dressing-down by
the head warden. He had wanted to retreat to his one-bedroom home at the edge
of the preserve, where a row of squat houses were leased to the wardens on
duty. Khamisi wondered how long he would be able to remain at the house if his
suspension turned into a full dismissal.
Still, he had not returned directly home.
Instead he had driven halfway across the park to another settlement of
transient housing, a small enclave where park researchers resided for as long
as their grant money lasted.
Khamisi had been to this particular
whitewashed two-story Colonial home many times, with its giant shady acacia
trees, tiny garden, and small courtyard where a smattering of chickens roamed.
The two residents here never seemed to run out of grants. In fact, the last
time Khamisi had been here was to celebrate the women's tenth anniversary here
at the park. Among the scientific community, they had become as much of a
fixture at Hluhluwe-Umfolozi as the big five trophy animals.
But now they were one.
Dr. Paula Kane sat on a tiny divan across
the low table from Khamisi. Tears filled her eyes, but her cheeks remained dry.
"It's all right," she said. Her
eyes wandered to a wall of photos, a panorama of a happy life. He knew the pair
had been together since graduate school at Oxford so many years ago. "I
hadn't held out much hope."
She was a small woman, slight of figure,
with salt-and-pepper dark hair, cut square to her shoulder. Though he knew she
was somewhere in her late fifties, she appeared a decade younger. She had
always retained a certain hard beauty, exuding a confidence that surpassed any
camouflaging makeup. But this morning, she appeared faded, a ghost of herself,
something vital gone. It looked like she'd slept in her khaki pants and loose
white blouse.
Khamisi had no words to ease the pain
etched in every line of her body, only his sympathy. "I'm sorry."
Paula's eyes returned to him. "I
know you did everything you could. I've heard the rumblings out there. A white
woman dies, but a black man lives. It will not sit well with certain types out
here."
Khamisi knew she was referring to the
head warden. Paula and Marcia had butted heads with the man many times. She
knew the warden's ties and memberships as well as any other. While apartheid
might have been crushed in the cities and townships, out in the bush, the myth
of the Great White Hunter still reigned supreme.
"Her death was not your fault,"
Paula said, reading something in his face.
He turned away. He appreciated her
understanding, but at the same time, the warden's accusations had stoked his
own guilt. Rationally, he knew he had done all he could to protect Dr.
Fairfield. But he had come out of the bush. She had not. Those were the facts.
Khamisi stood. He didn't want to intrude
any longer. He had come to pay his respects and to tell Dr. Kane in person what
had transpired. He had done that.
"I should be going," he said.
Paula stood and accompanied him to the
screen door. She stopped him with a touch before he left. "What do you
think it was?" she asked.
He turned to her.
"What killed her?" Paula asked.
Khamisi stared out at the morning
sunlight, too bright to speak of monsters. He had also been forbidden to
discuss it. His job was on the line.
He glanced down to Paula and told her the
truth.
"It was no lion."
"Then what?"
"I'm going to find out."
He pushed through the screen door and
climbed down the steps. His small rusted pickup sat baking in the sun. He
crossed to it, climbed into its stifling interior, and headed back home.
For the hundredth time that morning, the
prior day's terror unfolded. He barely heard the rumble of his engine over the
echo of the ukufa's
hunting screams. Not a lion. He would never believe that.
He reached the line of stilted houses,
makeshift and without air-conditioning. The homes comprised staff housing here at
the park. He braked with a cloud of red dust beside his front yard gate.
Exhausted, he would rest for a few hours.
Then he would seek the truth.
He already knew where he wanted to begin his investigation.
But that would have to wait.
As he approached his front yard fence,
Khamisi noted that the gate hung ajar. He always made sure he latched it before
leaving for the day. Then again, when the disappearances had been reported last
night, someone might have come here to check if he was at home.
Still, the edge to Khamisi's senses had
never dulled
not since the moment he heard that first cry in the jungle. In
fact, he doubted his senses would ever relax.
He slipped through the gate. He noted his
front door seemed secure. He spotted mail sprouting from his mailbox,
untouched. He mounted the steps, one at a time.
He climbed, wishing he had at least a
sidearm.
Floorboards creaked. The sound had come
not from under his own feet but from inside his house.
All of Khamisi's senses urged him to run.
Not again. Not this time.
He reached the porch, stood to the side,
and tested the door latch.
Unlocked.
He unhitched the latch and pushed the
door open. Near the back of the house, another floorboard rubbed.
"Who's there?" he called out.
8:52 a.m.
Come
see this."
Painter startled awake, instantly alert.
A dagger of a headache stabbed between his eyes. He rolled off the bed, fully
clothed. He had not realized he had fallen asleep. He and Lisa had returned to their
room a couple of hours ago, under guard. Anna had needed to attend to matters
and arrange for some items Painter had requested.
"How long have I been out?" he
asked, the headache slowly fading.
"Sorry. I didn't know you were
asleep." Lisa sat cross-legged by the table before the fireplace. She had
sheets of paper scattered on the top. "Couldn't have been more than
fifteen
twenty minutes. I wanted you to see this."
Painter stood. The room bobbled for a
breath, then settled back into place. Not good. He crossed over to Lisa and
sank beside her.
He noted her camera resting on some of
the papers. Lisa had requested the Nikon be returned as the first act of
cooperation from their captors.
She slid a sheet of paper over to him.
"Look."
Lisa had drawn a line of symbols across
the paper. Painter recognized them as the runes that Lama Khemsar
had scrawled on his wall. She must have copied it from the digital photo.
Painter saw that each symbol had a corresponding letter under it.
"It was a simple replacement code.
Each rune representing a letter of the alphabet. Took some trial and
error."
"Schwarze
Sonne,"
he read aloud.
"Black Sun. The name of the project
here."
"So Lama Khemsar
knew about all this." Painter shook his head. "The old Buddhist did
have ties here."
"And plainly it traumatized
him." Lisa took the paper from him. "The madness must have awakened
old wounds. Brought them back to life."
"Or maybe the Lama was cooperating
all along, maintaining the monastery as some guard post of the castle
here."
"If so, look what that cooperation
gained him," Lisa said pointedly. "Is that an example of the reward
we'll get for our cooperation?"
"We have no choice. It's the only
way to stay alive. To stay necessary."
"And after that? When we're no
longer necessary?"
Painter offered no delusions.
"They'll kill us. Our cooperation is only buying us some time."
Painter noted she didn't flinch from the
truth but seemed to take strength from it. A resolve stiffened her shoulders.
"So what do we do first?" she
asked.
"Acknowledge the first step in any
conflict."
"And that is?"
"Know thy enemy."
"I think I know too much about Anna and her crew as it is."
"No. I meant discovering who was
behind the bombing here. The saboteur
and whoever employed him. Something larger
is going on here. Those first few acts of sabotage messing with the safety
controls of the Bell, the first illnesses they were meant to draw us. Raise
some smoke. Lure us here with the rumors of strange illnesses."
"But why would they do that?"
"To make sure Anna's group was
discovered and shut down. Don't you find it strange that the Bell, the heart of
the technology, was only destroyed after we arrived here? What might that
suggest?"
"While they wanted Anna's project
shut down, they also didn't want the heart of the technology falling into
anyone else's hands."
Painter nodded. "And maybe something
even more dire. All this might be misdirection. A bit of sleight of hand. Look
over here, while the real trick is pulled off out of sight. But who is the
mysterious magician in the wings? What is his purpose, his intent? That's what
we must find out."
"And the electronic equipment you
requisitioned from Anna?"
"Perhaps a way to help us sniff out
the mole here. If we can trap this saboteur, we might have some of our answers,
find out who is really pulling all the strings out here."
A knock on the door startled them both.
Painter stood up as the bar was removed
and the door swung open.
Anna strode in with Gunther at her side.
The guard had cleaned up since the last time Painter had seen him. It was a
sign of the man's menace that no other guards followed them inside. He did not
even have a gun.
"I thought you might like to join us
for breakfast," Anna said. "By the time we're finished, the equipment
you requested should be here."
"All of it? How? From where?"
"Kathmandu. We have a sheltered
helipad on the other side of the mountain."
"Really? And you've never been
discovered?"
Anna shrugged. "It's simply a matter
of folding our flights in with the dozens of daily sightseeing tours and
mountaineering teams. The pilot should be back within the hour."
Painter nodded. He planned on putting
that hour to the best of uses.
Gathering Intel.
Every problem had its solution. At least
he hoped so.
They set out from their room. The
hallways beyond were unusually crowded. Word had spread. Everyone seemed busy
or angry or casting hard glances at them
as if Painter and Lisa were somehow
to blame for the sabotage here. But no one approached too closely. Gunther's
heavy tread cleared a path. Their captor had become their protector.
They finally reached Anna's study.
A long table had been set up before the
fire, heaping platters upon it. Sausages, dark breads, steaming stews,
porridges, aged cheeses, an assortment of blackberries, plums, and melons.
"Is there an army coming to join
us?" Painter asked.
"Constant fuel is most important in
cold climates, both for the home and the heart," Anna said, ever the good
German.
They took their seats. Food was passed.
Just one big happy family.
"If there's any hope for a
cure," Lisa said, "we'll have to know more about this Bell of yours.
Its history
how it works
"
Anna, sullen after the walk, brightened.
What researcher didn't enjoy discussing their discoveries?
"It started out as an experiment as
an energy generator," she began. "A new engine. The Bell got its name
from its bell-shaped outer containment jar, a ceramic vessel the size of a
hundred-gallon drum, lined by lead. Inside were two metal cylinders, one inside
the other, that would be spun in opposite directions."
Anna pantomimed with her hands.
"Lubricating it all and filling the
Bell was a mercurylike liquid metal. What was called
Xerum 525."
Painter recalled the name. "That's
the substance you said you couldn't duplicate."
Anna nodded. "We've tried for
decades, trying to reverse engineer the liquid metal. Aspects of its
composition defy testing. We know it contains thorium and beryllium peroxides,
but that's about it. All we know for sure is that Xerum 525 was a by-product of
Nazi research into zero point energy. It was produced at another lab, one
destroyed just after the war."
"And you've not found a way to
manufacture more?" Painter asked.
Anna shook her head.
"But what did the Bell actually
do?" Lisa asked.
"As I said before, it was purely an
experiment. Most likely another attempt to tap into the infinite power of zero
point. Though once the Nazi researchers turned it on, strange effects were
noted. The Bell emitted a pale glow. Electrical equipment in a huge radius
short-circuited. Deaths were reported. During a series of follow-up
experiments, they refined the device and built shielding. Experiments were done
deep within an abandoned mine. No further deaths occurred, but villagers a
kilometer away from the mine reported insomnia, vertigo, and muscle spasms.
Something was being radiated by the Bell. Interest grew."
"As a potential weapon?"
Painter guessed.
"I can't say. Many of the records
were destroyed by the head researcher. But we do know the original team exposed
all sorts of biologies to the Bell: ferns, molds,
eggs, meat, milk. And an entire spectrum of animal life. Invertebrates and
vertebrates. Cockroaches, snails, chameleons, toads, and of course mice and
rats."
"And what about the top of the food
chain?" Painter asked. "Humans."
Anna nodded. "I'm afraid so.
Morality is often the first casualty to progress."
"So what happened during these
experiments?" Lisa asked. She had lost all interest in her plate of food.
Not in distaste for the subject matter but wide-eyed interest.
Anna seemed to sense a commonality here
and turned her attention to Lisa. "Again the effects were inexplicable.
The chlorophyll in plants disappeared, turning the plants white. Within hours
they would decompose into a greasy sludge. In animals, blood would gel in
veins. A crystalline substance would form within tissues, destroying cells from
the inside out."
"Let me guess," Painter said.
"Only the cockroaches were unaffected."
Lisa frowned at him, then returned to
Anna. "Do you have any idea what caused those effects?"
"We can only conjecture. Even now.
We believe the Bell, as it spins, creates a strong electromagnetic vortex. The
presence of Xerum 525, a byproduct of earlier zero point research, when exposed
to this vortex, generates an aura of strange quantum energies."
Painter put it together in his head.
"So the Xerum 525 is the fuel
source, and the
Anna nodded.
"Turning the Bell into a Mix
master," a new voice grumbled.
All eyes turned to Gunther. He had a
mouthful of sausage. It was the first time he had shown any interest in the
conversation.
"A crude but accurate
description," Anna concurred. "Imagine the nature of zero point as a
bowl of cake batter. The spinning Bell is like a beater that dips into it and
sucks quantum energy outward, into our existence, splattering with all manner
of strange subatomic particles. The earliest experiments were attempts to
manipulate the speed of this mixer and so control the splatter."
"To make less of a mess."
"And along with it, to lessen the
degenerative side effects. And they succeeded. Adverse effects waned, and
something remarkable took their place."
Painter knew they were coming to the
heart of the matter.
Anna leaned forward. "Rather than degeneration of biologic tissues, the
Nazi scientists began noting enhancements.
Accelerated growth in molds. Gigantism in ferns. Faster reflexes in mice, and
higher intelligence in rats. The consistency of the results could not be
attributed to random mutations alone. And it appeared that the higher the order
of animal, the more benefit was derived from exposure."
"So human test subjects went
next," Painter said.
"Keep a historical perspective, Mr.
Crowe. The Nazis were convinced that they would give rise to the next superrace. And here was a tool to do it in a generation.
Morality held no benefit. There was a larger imperative."
"To create a master race. To rule
the world."
"So the Nazis believed. To that end,
they invested much effort in advancing research into the Bell. But before it
could be completed, they ran out of time. Germany fell. The Bell was evacuated
so the research could be continued in secret. It was the last great hope for
the Third Reich. A chance for the Aryan race to be born anew. To arise and rule
the world."
"And Himmler chose this place,"
Painter said. "Deep in the Himalayas. What madness." He shook his
head.
"Oftentimes, it is madness more than genius that moves the world forward. Who else but the mad would
reach so far, stretching for the impossible? And in so doing, prove the
impossible possible."
"And sometimes it merely invents the
most efficient means of genocide."
Anna sighed.
Lisa brought the discussion back in line.
"What became of the human studies?" She kept her tone clinical.
Anna recognized a more collegial dining
partner. "In adults, the effects were still detrimental. Especially at
higher settings. But the research did not stop there. When a fetus was exposed in utero, one in six
children born of such exposure showed remarkable improvements. Alterations in
the gene for myostatin produced children with more well-developed muscles.
Other enhancements arose, too. Keener eyesight, improved hand-eye coordination,
and amazing IQ scores."
"Superchildren,"
Painter said.
"But sadly such children seldom
lived past the age of two," Anna said. "Eventually they would begin
to degenerate, going pale. Crystals formed in tissues. Fingers and toes necrosed and fell away."
"Interesting," Lisa said.
"Sounds like the same side effects as the first series of tests."
Painter glanced at her. Did she just say interesting? Lisa's gaze was fixed on
Anna with fascination. How could she remain so clinical? Then he noted Lisa's
left knee bobbing up and down under the table. He touched her knee and calmed
it. She trembled under his touch. Outwardly, her face continued to remain
passive. Painter realized all of Lisa's interest
was feigned. She was bottling up her anger and horror, allowing him to play
good cop, bad cop. Her cooperative attitude allowed him to pepper their
interrogation with a few harder questions, all the better to gain the answers
he needed.
Painter squeezed her knee, acknowledging
her effort.
Lisa continued her act. "You
mentioned one out of six babies showed these short-lived improvements. What
about the other five?"
Anna nodded. "Stillborn. Fatal
mutations. Deaths of the mothers. Mortality was high."
"And who were all these
mothers?" Painter asked, voicing the outrage for both of them. "Not
volunteers, I'm assuming."
"Don't judge too harshly, Mr. Crowe.
Do you know the level of infant mortality in your own country? It is worse than
some third world countries. What benefit do those deaths gain?"
Oh, dear God, she can't be serious. It
was a ludicrous comparison.
"The Nazis had their
imperative," Anna said. "They were at least consistent."
Painter sought some words to blast her,
but anger trapped his tongue.
Lisa spoke up instead. Her hand found his
atop her knee and clutched tightly. "I'm assuming that these scientists
sought some ways to further fine-tune the Bell, to eradicate these side
effects."
"Of course. But by the end of the
war, not much more progress was made. There is only one anecdotal report of a
full success. A supposedly perfect child. Prior to this, all the children born
under the Bell bore slight imperfections. Patches of pigment loss, organ
asymmetry, different colored eyes." Anna glanced to Gunther, then back
again. "But this child appeared unblemished. Even crude genetic analysis
of the boy's genome tested flawless. But the technique employed to achieve this
result remained unknown. The head researcher performed this last experiment in
secret. When my grandfather came to evacuate the Bell, the head researcher
objected and destroyed all of his personal lab notes. The child died shortly thereafter."
"From side effects?"
"No, the head researcher's daughter
drowned herself and the baby."
"Why?"
Anna shook her head. "My grandfather
refused to talk about it. As I said, the story was anecdotal."
"What was this researcher's
name?" Painter asked.
"I don't recall. I can look it up,
if you'd like."
Painter shrugged. If only he had access
to Sigma's computers. He sensed there was more to her grandfather's story.
"And after the evacuation?"
Lisa asked. "The research continued here?"
"Yes. Though isolated, we continued
to keep a finger on the scientific community at large. After the war, Nazi
scientists had spread to the winds, many into deep black projects around the
world. Europe. Soviet Union. South America. The United States. They were our
ears and eyes abroad, filtering data to us. Some still believed in the cause.
Others were blackmailed with their pasts."
"So you kept current."
A nod. "Over the next two decades,
great leaps were made. Superchildren were born who
lived longer. They were raised like princes here. Given the title Ritter des Sonnekönig. Knights of the
Sun King. To note their births from the Black Sun project."
"How very Wagnerian," Painter
scoffed.
"Perhaps. My grandfather liked
tradition. But I'll have you know all experimental subjects here at Granitschloß were volunteers."
"But was this a moral choice? Or was
it because you didn't have any Jews handy in the Himalayas?"
Anna frowned, not even dignifying his
remark with a comment. She continued, "While the progress was solid,
decrepitude continued to plague the Sonnekönige.
The onset of symptoms still generally occurred at about two years, but the
symptoms were milder. What was an acute degeneration became a chronic one. And
with the increased longevity, a new symptom arose: mental deterioration. Acute
paranoia, schizophrenia, psychosis."
Lisa spoke up. "These last symptoms
they sound like what happened to the monks at the monastery."
Anna nodded. "It's all a matter of
degree and age of exposure. Children exposed in utero to a controlled level of
the Bell's quantum radiation showed enhancements, followed by a lifelong
chronic degeneration. While adults, like Painter and me, exposed to moderate amounts of uncontrolled
radiation were struck by a more acute form of the same degeneration, a more
rapid decline. But the monks, exposed to a high
level of the radiation, progressed immediately into the mental degenerative
state."
"And the Sonnekönige?" Painter said.
"Like us, there was no cure for
their disease. In fact, while the
"So when they went mad
?"
Painter pictured rampaging supermen throughout the castle.
"Such a condition threatened our
security. The human tests were eventually halted."
Painter could not hide his surprise.
"You abandoned the research?"
"Not exactly. Human testing was
already an inefficient means of experimentation. It took too long to judge
results. New models were employed. Modified strains of mice, fetal tissue grown
in vitro, stem cells. With the human genome mapped, DNA testing became a faster
method with which to judge progress. Our pace accelerated. I suspect if we
restarted the Sonnekönige project,
we'd see much better results today."
"So then why haven't you tried
again?"
Anna shrugged. "We're still seeing
dementia in our mice. That's worrisome. But mostly, we've declined human
studies because our interests over the last decade have turned more clinical.
We don't see ourselves as harbingers of a new master race. We are indeed no
longer Nazis. We believe our work can benefit mankind as a whole, once
perfected."
"So why not come out now?" Lisa
asked.
"And be bound by the laws of nations
and the ignorant? Science is not a democratic process. Such arbitrary
restraints of morality would only slow our progress tenfold. That is not
acceptable."
Painter forced himself not to snort. It
seemed some Nazi philosophies still
flourished here.
"What became of the Sonnekönige?" Lisa asked.
"Most tragic. While many died of
degenerative conditions, many more had to be euthanized when their minds
deteriorated. Still, a handful have survived. Like Klaus, who you've met."
Painter pictured the giant guardsman from
earlier. He remembered the man's palsied limb and stricken face, signs of
degeneration. Painter's attention drifted over to Gunther. The man met his
gaze, face unreadable. One blue eye, one dead white. Another of the Sonnekönige.
"Gunther was the last to be born
here."
Anna pointed to her shoulder and signaled
to the large man.
Frown lines deepened, but Gunther reached
and rolled the loose edge of his sleeve to expose his upper arm. He revealed a
black tattoo.
"The symbol of the Sonnekönige" Anna said. "A
mark of pride, duty, and accomplishment."
Gunther pulled down his sleeve, hiding it
away.
Painter flashed back to the sled ride
last night, to the snide comment directed at Gunther by one of the guards. What
was the word again? Leprakönige.
Leper King. Plainly there remained little respect for the former Knights of the
Sun King. Gunther was the last of his kind, slowly degenerating into oblivion.
Who would mourn him?
Anna's eyes lingered on Gunther before
focusing back on them.
Maybe there would be one mourner.
Lisa spoke up. She still held Painter's
hand. "One thing you've yet to make clear. The Bell. How is it bringing
about these changes? You said they were too consistent to be mutations
generated by random chance."
Anna nodded. "Indeed. Our research
has not been limited to the effects
of the
"Have you made much progress?"
Painter asked.
"Of course. In fact, we are certain
we understand the basic tenets of its functioning."
Painter blinked his surprise.
"Really?"
Anna's brow crinkled. "I thought it
was obvious." She glanced between Painter and Lisa. "The Bell
controls evolution."
7:35 a.m.
HLUHLUWE-UMFOLOZI
PRESERVE
Who's
there?" Khamisi repeated, standing at the threshold to his house. Someone
lurked inside, back in the rear bedroom.
Or maybe it was some animal.
Monkeys were always breaking into homes,
sometimes larger animals did.
Still, he refused to enter. He strained
to see, but all the curtains had been drawn. After the ride here in the
blinding sun, the gloom of his home was as dark as any jungle.
Standing on the porch, Khamisi reached
through the door for the light switch. His fingers fumbled. He found and
flicked the switch. A single lamp ignited, illuminating the sparsely furnished
front room and a galley kitchen. But the light did nothing to show who or what
waited in the back bedroom.
He heard a scuffle of something back
there.
"Who?"
A sharp sting to the side of his neck cut
off his words. Startled, he fell forward into the room. His hand slapped
at the bite. His fingers found something feathered imbedded there.
He pulled it out and stared at it,
uncomprehending for a breath.
A dart.
He used the same to tranquilize large
animals.
But this one was different.
It fell from his fingers.
The moment of incomprehension was all it
took for the toxin to reach his brain. The world tipped on its side. Khamisi
fought for balance and failed.
The plank floor rushed toward his face.
He managed to catch himself slightly, but
still he struck hard, cracking his head. Pinpoints of light shattered out into
a closing darkness. His head lolled. From his angle, he spotted a stretch of
rope on the planks. He focused harder. Not
rope.
Snake. Ten feet long.
He recognized it on sight.
Black mamba.
It was dead, cut in half. A machete lay
nearby. His machete.
Coldness numbed his limbs as the hard
truth struck him.
The poisoned dart.
It hadn't been like those he employed in
the field. This dart had two needles.
Like fangs.
His eyes glazed upon the dead snake.
Staged.
Death by snakebite.
From the back bedroom, floorboards
creaked. He had just enough strength left to turn his head. A dark figure stood
in the doorway now, illuminated by the lamplight, studying him, expressionless.
No.
It made no sense.
Why?
He would have no answer.
Darkness folded over him, taking him
away.
6:54 a.m.
You're
staying here," Gray said. He stood in the center of the Challenger's main cabin,
fists on his hips, not budging.
"Bollocks," Fiona retorted. A
step away, she made her stand.
To the side, Monk leaned against the open
jet doorway, arms crossed, much too amused.
"I still haven't told you the
address," Fiona argued. "You can spend the next month searching door
to door throughout the city, or I can go with you and take you to the place.
Your choice, mate."
Gray's face heated. Why hadn't he teased
the address from the girl when she was still weak and vulnerable? He shook his
head. Weak and vulnerable never described Fiona.
"So what's it going to be?"
"Looks like we have a
tagalong," Monk said.
Gray refused to relent. Maybe if he
scared her, reminded her of her close call in Tivoli Gardens. "What about
your gunshot wound?"
Fiona's nose flared. "What about it?
Good as new. That liquid bandage. Patched me right
up."
"She can even swim with it,"
Monk said. "Waterproof."
Gray glared at his partner. "That's
not the point."
"Then what is the point?" Fiona
pressed.
Gray focused back at her. He didn't want
to be responsible for the girl any longer. And he certainly didn't have time to
be babysitting her.
"He's afraid you'll get hurt
again," Monk said with a shrug.
Gray sighed. "Fiona, just tell us
the address."
"Once we're in the car," she
said. "Then I'll tell you. I'm not staying cooped up in here."
"Day's wasting," Monk said.
"And it looks like we might get wet."
The sky was blue and morning bright, but
dark clouds stacked to the north. A storm was rolling in.
"Fine." Gray waved his partner
out the door. He could at least keep an eye on Fiona.
The trio climbed down the jet steps. They
had already cleared customs, and a rented BMW waited for them. Monk carried a
black backpack over one shoulder, Gray a matching one. He glanced over to
Fiona. She had one, too. Where?
"There was an extra one," Monk
explained. "Don't worry. There're no guns or flash grenades in hers. At
least, I don't think so."
Gray shook his head and continued across
the tarmac toward the parking garage. Besides the backpack, they were all
similarly dressed: black jeans, sneakers, sweaters. Tourist haute couture. At
least Fiona had customized her clothes with a few buttons. One caught his eye.
It read: STRANGERS HAVE THE BEST CANDY.
As Gray entered the parking garage, he
surreptitiously checked his weapons one last time. He patted the 9mm Glock
holstered under his sweater and fingered the hilt of a carbonized dagger
sheathed at his left wrist. He had additional armaments in the backpack: flash
grenades, packets of C4 explosive, extra clips.
He was not going anywhere unprepared this
time.
They finally reached their ride. A
midnight blue BMW 525i.
Fiona strode toward the driver's door.
Gray cut her off. "Funny."
Monk strode around the far side of the
car and called, "Shotgun!"
Fiona ducked, searching around.
Gray steadied her and guided her toward
the rear door. "He was only claiming the front seat."
Fiona scowled across the car at Monk.
"Wanker."
"Sorry. Don't be so jumpy,
kid."
They all climbed into the sedan. Gray
started the engine and glanced back to Fiona. "Well? Where to?"
Monk already had a map pulled out.
Fiona leaned forward and reached over
Monk's shoulder. She traced a finger along the map.
"Out of town. Twenty kilometers
southwest. We have to go to the
"What's the address there?"
Fiona leaned back. "Funny," she
said, repeating his own word from a moment ago.
He met her gaze in the rearview mirror.
She wore a disgusted look at his last lame attempt to coerce the information
from her.
Couldn't blame a guy for trying.
She waved for him to head out.
With no choice, he obeyed.
On the far side of the parking garage,
two figures sat in a white Mercedes roadster. The man lowered the binoculars
and donned a pair of Italian sunglasses. He nodded to his twin sister beside
him. She spoke into the satellite phone, whispering in Dutch.
Her other hand held his. He massaged his
thumb across her tattoo.
She squeezed his fingers.
Glancing down, he noted where she had
chewed one of her fingernails to a ragged nub. The imperfection was as glaring
as a broken nose.
She noted his attention and tried to hide
her nail, embarrassed.
There was no reason for shame. He
understood the consternation and heartache that resulted in the chewed nail.
They had lost Hans, one of their older brothers, last night.
Killed by the driver of the car that had
just left.
Fury narrowed his vision as he watched
the BMW slide out of the parking garage. The GPS transponder they'd planted would
track the vehicle.
"Understood," his sister said
into the phone. "As expected, they've followed the book's trail here.
Undoubtedly, they will be headed to the Hirszfeld estate in Büren.
We'll leave the jet under surveillance. All is prepared."
As she listened, she caught her twin
brother's eye.
"Yes," she said both to the
phone and her brother, "we will not fail. The Darwin Bible will be
ours."
He nodded, agreeing. He slipped his hand
from hers, twisted the key, and started the ignition.
"Good-bye, Grandfather," his
sister said.
Lowering the phone, she reached over and
shifted a single lock of his blond hair that had fallen out of place. She
combed it in place with her fingers, then smoothed it out.
Perfect.
Always perfect.
He kissed the tips of her fingers as she
pulled back.
Love and a promise.
They would have their revenge.
Mourning would come later.
He drifted their polar white Mercedes out
of its parking place to begin the hunt.
11:08 a.m.
The soldering
gun's tip flared fiery crimson. Painter steadied the tool. His hand shook, but
it was not fear that trembled his fingers. The headache continued to pound
behind his right eye. He had taken a fistful of Tylenol, along with two tabs of
phenobarbital, an anticonvulsant. None of the drugs would stave off the
eventual debilitation and madness, but according to Anna, they would buy him
more functional hours.
How long did he have?
Less than three days, maybe even shorter
before he was incapacitated.
He fought to block out this concern.
Worry and despair could debilitate him just as quickly as the disease. As his
grandfather said in that sage Pequot Indian manner of his, Wringin' your hands only stops you from rollin' up your sleeves.
Taking this to heart, Painter
concentrated on soldering the cable connection to an exposed ground wire. The
wiring ran throughout the entire subterranean castle and out to its various
antennas. Including the satellite uplink dish hidden somewhere near the top of
the mountain.
Once done, Painter leaned back and waited
for the new solder to cool. He sat at a bench with an array of tools and parts
neatly aligned, like a surgeon. His workspace was flanked by two open laptops.
Both supplied by Gunther. The man who had
slaughtered the monks. Murdered Ang Gelu. Painter still felt a well of fury
whenever near the man.
Like now.
The large guard stood at his shoulder,
watching his every move. They were alone in a maintenance room. Painter
considered putting the soldering gun through the man's eye. But what then? They
were miles from civilization, and a death sentence hung over his head.
Cooperation was their only means of survival. To that end, Lisa remained with
Anna in her study, continuing her own line of investigation into a cure.
Painter and Gunther pursued another
angle.
Hunting down the saboteur.
According to Gunther, the bomb that had
destroyed the Bell had been set by hand. And since no one had left the grounds
since the explosion, the saboteur was likely still in the castle.
If they could apprehend the subject,
perhaps more could be learned.
So a bit of bait had been distributed
through word of mouth.
All that was left was to set the trap to
go along with it.
One laptop was plugged into the castle's
networked communications systems. Painter had already piggybacked into the
system, using passwords supplied by Gunther. He had sent out a series of
compressed code packets intended to monitor the system for all outgoing
communication. If the saboteur tried to communicate to the outside world, he
would be discovered, his location pinned down.
But Painter did not expect the saboteur
to be so ham-fisted. He or she had survived and operated in secret for a long
time. That implied cunning and a means of communication independent of the
castle's main communication network.
So Painter had built something new.
The saboteur must have obtained a private
portable satellite phone, one employed in secret to communicate with his
superiors. But such a phone needed a clear line-of-sight path between the
unit's antenna and the geosynchronous orbiting satellite. Unfortunately there
were too many niches, windows, and service hatches where the saboteur could
accomplish this, too many to guard without raising suspicions.
So an alternative was needed.
Painter checked the signal amplifier he
had attached to the ground wire. It was a device he had engineered himself back
at Sigma. His expertise as a Sigma operative, before assuming the directorship,
had been on surveillance and microengineering. This was his arena.
The amplifier linked the ground wire to
the second laptop.
"Should be ready," Painter
said, his headache finally waning a bit.
"Turn it on."
Painter switched on the battery power source,
set the amplitude of signal, and adjusted the pulse rate. The laptop would do
the rest. It would monitor for any pickups. It was crude at best, not capable
of eavesdropping. It could only gain a general signal-location of an illicit
transmission, accurate to within a thirty-yard radius. It should be enough.
Painter fine-tuned his equipment.
"All set. Now all we have to do is wait for the bastard to call out."
Gunther nodded.
"That is if the saboteur takes the
bait," Painter added.
A half hour ago, they had spread a rumor
that a cache of Xerum 525 had survived the explosion, locked in a lead-lined
secret vault. It gave the entire castle's populace hope. If there was some of
the irreplaceable fuel, then maybe a new Bell could be fabricated. Anna even had
researchers assembling another Bell out of spare parts. If not a cure for the
progressive disease, the Bell offered the chance to buy more time. For all of
them.
But hope was not the purpose of the ruse.
Word had to reach the saboteur. He needed
to be convinced his plan had failed. That the Bell could be rebuilt after all.
To seek guidance from his superiors, he would have to place a call out.
And when that happened, Painter would be
ready.
In the meantime, Painter turned to
Gunther. "What's it like to be a superman?" he asked. "A Knight
of the Black Sun."
Gunther shrugged. The extent of his
communication seemed to be grunts, frowns, and a few monosyllabic responses.
"I mean, do you feel superior?
Stronger, faster, able to leap buildings in a single bound."
Gunther just stared at him.
Painter sighed, trying a new tack to get
the guy talking, strike up some sort of rapport. "What does Leprakönige mean? I heard people using
that word when you're around."
Painter damn well knew what it meant, but
it got the response he needed. Gunther glanced away, but Painter noted the fire
in his eyes. Silence stretched. He wasn't sure the man was going to speak.
"Leper King," Gunther finally
growled.
Now it was Painter's turn to remain
silent. He let the weight hang in the small room. Gunther finally folded.
"When perfection is sought, none
wish to look upon failure. If the madness does not claim us, the disease is
horrible to witness. Better to be shut away. Out of sight."
"Exiled. Like lepers."
Painter tried to imagine what it would be
like to be raised as the last of the Sonnekönige, knowing your doomed fate at
a young age. Once a revered line of princes, now a shunned and shambling line
of lepers.
"Yet you still help here,"
Painter said. "Still serve."
"It was what I was born for. I know
my duty."
Painter wondered if that had been drilled
into them or somehow genetically wired. He studied the man. Somehow he knew it
went beyond that. But what?
"Why do you even care what happens
to us all?" Painter asked.
"I believe in the work here. What I
suffer will one day help spare others from the same fate."
"And the search for the cure now? It
doesn't have anything to do with prolonging your own life."
Gunther's eyes flashed. "Ich bin nicht krank."
"What do you mean you're not
sick?"
"The Sonnekönige were born under the
Understanding struck Painter. He
remembered Anna's description of the castle's supermen, how they were resistant
to any further manipulation by the Bell. For better or worse.
"You're immune," he said.
Gunther turned away.
Painter let the implication sink in. So
it wasn't self-preservation that drove Gunther to help.
Then what?
Painter suddenly remembered the way Anna
had looked across the table at Gunther earlier. With warm affection. The man
had not discouraged it. Plainly he had another reason for continuing to
cooperate despite the lack of respect from the others.
"You love Anna," Painter
mumbled aloud.
"Of course I do," Gunther
snapped back. "She's my sister."
Holed up in Anna's study, Lisa stood by
the wall where a light box hung. Normally such boxes illuminated a patient's
X-ray films, but presently Lisa had snugged two acetate sheets in place,
striped with black lines. They were archived chromosome maps from research into
the Bell's mutational effects, before shots and after shots of fetal DNA,
collected by amniocentesis. The after shots had circles where the Bell had
transformed certain chromosomes. Notations in German were written beside them.
Anna had translated them and had gone off
to fetch more books.
At the light box, Lisa ran a finger down
the mutational changes, searching for any pattern. She had reviewed several of
the case studies. There seemed no rhyme or reason to the mutations.
With no answers, Lisa returned to the
dining table, now piled high with books and bound reams of scientific data, a
trail of human experimentation going back decades.
The hearth fire crackled behind her. She
had to restrain an urge to chuck the research into the flames. Still, even if
Anna hadn't been present, Lisa probably wouldn't have. She had come to Nepal to
study physiologic effects at high altitudes. Though a medical doctor, she was a
researcher at heart.
Like Anna.
No
not exactly like Anna.
Lisa nudged aside a research monograph
resting on the table. Teratogenesis
in the Embryonic Blastoderm. The document related to aborted
monstrosities that resulted from exposure to the Bell's irradiation. What the
black stripes on acetate had delineated with clinical detachment, the
photographs in the book revealed with horrifying detail: limbless embryos,
Cyclopean fetuses, hydrocephalic stillborn children.
No, she was definitely not Anna.
Anger built again in Lisa's chest.
Anna clattered down the iron ladder that
led to the second tier of her research library, another load of books tucked
under one arm. The Germans certainly were not holding back. And why would they?
It was in all their best interest to discover a cure to the quantum disease.
Anna believed it to be a futile effort, confident that all possibilities had
been explored over the past decades, but it hadn't taken much persuasion to get
her to cooperate.
Lisa had noted how the woman's hands
shook with a barely detectable palsy. Anna kept rubbing her palms, trying to
hide it. The remainder of the castle suffered more openly. The tension in the
air all morning had been palpable. Lisa had witnessed a few yelling matches and
one fistfight. She had also heard of two suicides in the castle over the past
several hours. With the Bell gone and little hope of a cure, the place was
coming apart at the seams. What if the madness set in before she and Painter
could figure out a solution?
She pushed that thought aside. She would
not give up. Whatever the reason for the current cooperation, Lisa intended to
use it to her best advantage.
Lisa nodded to Anna as she approached.
"Okay, I think I have a layman's grasp on the larger picture here. But you
raised something earlier that's been nagging at me."
Dropping the books to the table, Anna
settled into a seat. "What is that?"
"You mentioned that you believed the
Bell controlled evolution." Lisa waved her hand across the breadth of
books and manuscripts on the table. "But what I see here is just some
mutagenic radiation that you've tied to a eugenics program. Building a better
human being through genetic manipulation. Were you just being grandiose when
you used the word evolution?"
Anna shook her head, taking no offense.
"How do you define evolution,
Dr. Cummings?"
"The usual Darwinian way, I
suppose."
"And that is?"
Lisa frowned. "A
gradual process of biological change
where a single-celled organism spread and
diversified into the present-day range of living organisms."
"And God has no hand in this at
all?"
Lisa was taken aback by her question.
"Like in creationism?"
Anna shrugged, eyes fixed on her.
"Or intelligent design."
"You can't be serious? Next you'll
be telling me how evolution is just a theory."
"Don't be silly. I'm not a layman
who associates theory with a 'hunch'
or 'guess.' Nothing in science reaches the level of theory without a vast pool
of facts and tested hypotheses behind it."
"So then you accept Darwin's theory
of evolution?"
"Certainly. Without a doubt. It's
supported across all disciplines of science."
"Then why were you talking
about"
"One does not necessarily rule the
other out."
Lisa cocked up one eyebrow. "Intelligent design and
evolution?"
Anna nodded. "But let's back up so
I'm not misunderstood. Let's first dismiss the ravings of the Flat Earth
Creationists who doubt the world is even a globe, or even the strict biblical
literalists who believe the planet is at best ten thousand years old. Let's
jump ahead to the main arguments of those who advocate intelligent
design."
Lisa shook her head. An ex-Nazi stumping
for pseudoscience. What was going on?
Anna cleared her throat.
"Admittedly, I will contend that most arguments for intelligent design are
fallacious. Misinterpreting the Second Law of Thermodynamics, building
statistical models that don't withstand review, misrepresenting radiometric dating
of rocks. The list goes on and on. None of it valid, but it does throw up lots
of misleading smoke."
Lisa nodded. It was one of the main
reasons she had concern for the current drive to have pseudoscience presented
alongside evolution in high school biology classes. It was a multidisciplinary
quagmire that your average Ph.D. would have difficulty sorting through, let
alone a high school student.
Anna, though, was not done with her side
of the argument. "That all said, there is one concern proposed by the
intelligent design camp that bears consideration."
"And what is that?"
"The randomness of mutations. Pure
chance could not produce so many beneficial mutations over time. How many birth
defects do you know that have produced beneficial changes?"
Lisa had heard that argument before. Life evolved too fast to be pure chance.
She was not falling for it.
"Evolution is not pure chance,"
Lisa countered. "Natural selection, or environmental pressure, weeds out
detrimental changes and only allows better-suited organisms to pass on their
genes."
"Survival of the fittest?"
"Or fit enough. Changes don't have to be perfect. Just good enough to have
an advantage. And over the vast scope of hundreds of millions of years, these small
advantages or changes accumulate into the variety we see today."
"Over hundreds of millions of years?
Granted, that is indeed a vast gulf of time, but does it still allow enough
room for the full scope of evolutionary change? And what about those occasional
spurts of evolution, where vast changes occurred rapidly?"
"I presume you're referring to the
Cambrian explosion?" Lisa asked. It was one of the mainstays of
intelligent design. The Cambrian Period encompassed a relatively short period
of time. Fifteen million years. But during that time a vast explosion of new
life appeared: sponges, snails, jellyfish, and trilobites. Seemingly out of the
blue. Too fast a pace for antievolutionists.
"Nein. The fossil record has plenty of evidence
that this 'sudden appearance' of invertebrates was not so sudden. There were
abundant Precambrian sponges and wormlike metazoans. Even the diversity of
shapes during this time could be justified by the appearance in the genetic
code of Hox genes."
"Hox genes?"
"A set of four to six control genes
appeared in the genetic code just prior to the Cambrian Period. They proved to
be control switches for embryonic development, defining up and down, right and
left, top and bottom, basic bodily form. Fruit flies, frogs, humans, all have
the exact same Hox genes. You can snip a Hox gene from a fly, replace it into a
frog's DNA, and it functions just fine. And as these genes are the fundamental
master switches for embryonic development, it only takes minuscule changes in
any of them to create massively new body shapes."
Though unsure where this was all leading,
the depth of the woman's knowledge on the subject surprised Lisa. It rivaled
her own. If Anna were a colleague at a conference, Lisa thought she might
actually enjoy the debate. In fact, she kept having to remind herself to whom
she was talking.
"So the rise of Hox genes just prior
to the Cambrian Period might explain that dramatic explosion of forms.
But," Anna countered, "Hox genes do not explain other moments of rapid almost purposeful evolution."
"Like what?" The discussion was
becoming more interesting by the moment.
"Like the peppered moths. Are you
familiar with the story?"
Lisa nodded. Now Anna was bringing up one
of the mainstays on the other side of the camp. Peppered moths lived on birches
and were speckled white, to blend in with the bark and avoid being eaten by
birds. But when a coal plant opened in the Manchester region and blackened the
trees with soot, the white moths found themselves exposed and easy targets for the
birds. But in just a few generations, the population changed its predominant
color to a solid black, to camouflage against the soot-covered trees.
"If mutations were random,"
Anna argued, "it seems amazingly lucky black
showed up when it did. If it was purely a random event, then where were the red
moths, the green moths, the purple ones? Or even the two-headed ones?"
Lisa had to force herself not to roll her
eyes. "I could say the other colored moths were eaten, too. And the
two-headed ones died off. But you're misunderstanding the example. The change
in color of these moths was not from
mutation. The species already had a black gene. A few black moths were born
each generation, but they were mostly eaten, maintaining the general population
as white. But once the trees blackened, then the few black moths had an
advantage and filled the population as the white moths were consumed. That was
the point of the example. Environments can
influence a population. But it wasn't a mutational event. The black gene was
already present."
Anna was smiling at her.
Lisa realized the woman had been testing
her knowledge. She sat straighter, both angry and conversely more intrigued.
"Very good," Anna said.
"Then let me bring up a more recent event. One that occurred in a controlled
laboratory setting. A researcher produced a strain of E. coli bacteria that
could not digest lactose. Then he spread a thriving population onto a growth
plate where the only food source was lactose. What would science say should
happen?"
Lisa shrugged. "Unable to digest the
lactose, the bacteria would starve and die."
"And that's exactly what happened to
ninety-eight percent of the bacteria. But two percent continued to thrive just
fine. They had spontaneously mutated a gene to digest lactose. In one
generation. I find that astonishing, ja? That goes
against all probability of randomness. Of all the genes in an E. coli's DNA and
the rarity of mutation, why did two percent of the population all mutate the
one gene necessary to survive? It defies
randomness."
Lisa had to contend that it was strange.
"Maybe there was laboratory contamination."
"The experiment has been repeated.
With similar results."
Lisa remained unconvinced.
"I see the doubt in your eyes. So
let's look elsewhere for another example of the impossibility of randomness in
gene mutation."
"Where's that?"
"Back to the beginning of life. Back
to the primordial soup. Where the engine of evolution first switched on."
Lisa recalled Anna making some mention
before about the story of the Bell stretching back to the origin of life. Was
this where Anna was leading now? Lisa pricked her ears a bit more, ready to
hear where this might lead.
"Let's turn the clock back,"
Anna said. "Back before the first cell. Remember Darwin's tenet: what
exists had to arise from a simpler, less complex form. So before the single
cell, what was there? How far can we reduce life and still call it life? Is DNA
alive? Is a chromosome? How about a protein or an enzyme? Where is the line
between chemistry and life?"
"Okay, that is an intriguing question," Lisa conceded.
"Then I'll ask another. How did life
make the leap from a chemical primordial soup to the first cell?"
Lisa knew that answer. "Earth's
early atmosphere was full of hydrogen, methane, and water. Add a few jolts of
energy, say from a lightning strike, and these gases can form simple organic
compounds. These then cooked up in the proverbial primordial soup and
eventually formed a molecule that could replicate."
"Which was proven in the lab,"
Anna agreed, nodding. "A bottle full of primordial gases produced a slurry
of amino acids, the building blocks of proteins."
"And life started."
"Ah, you are so eager to jump
ahead," Anna teased. "We've only formed amino acids. Building blocks. How do we go from a few amino acids
to that first fully replicating protein?"
"Mix enough amino acids together and
eventually they'll chain up into the right combination."
"By random chance?"
A nod.
"That's where we come to the root of
the problem, Dr. Cummings. I might concede with you that
"No."
"A minimum of thirty-two amino
acids. That's the smallest protein that holds the capacity to replicate. The
odds of this protein forming by random chance are astronomically thin. Ten to
the power of forty-one."
Lisa shrugged at this number. Despite her
feelings for the woman, a grudging respect began to grow.
"Let's put these odds in
perspective," Anna said. "If you took all the protein found in all
the rain forests of the world and dissolved it all down into an amino acid soup, it would still remain vastly
improbable for a thirty-two-amino-acid chain to form. In fact, it would take five thousand times that amount to form
one of these chains. Five thousand rain forests. So again, how do we go from a
slurry of amino acids to that first replicator, the first bit of life?"
Lisa shook her head.
Anna crossed her arms, satisfied.
"That's an evolutionary gap even Darwin has a hard time leaping."
"Still," Lisa countered,
refusing to concede, "to fill this gap with the Hand of God is not
science. Because we don't have an answer yet to fill this gap, it doesn't mean
it has a supernatural cause."
"I'm not saying it's supernatural.
And who says I don't have an answer to fill this gap?"
Lisa gaped at her. "What
answer?"
"Something we discovered decades ago
through our study of the Bell. Something that today's researchers are only
beginning to explore in earnest."
"What's that?" Lisa found
herself sitting straighter, forgoing any attempt to hide her interest in
anything associated with the Bell.
"We call it quantum evolution."
Lisa recalled the history of the Bell and
the Nazi research into the strange and fuzzy world of subatomic particles and
quantum physics. "What does any of this have to do with evolution?"
"Not only does this new field of
quantum evolution offer the strongest support for intelligent design,"
Anna said, "but it also answers the fundamental question of who the designer is."
"You're kidding. Who? God?"
"Nein." Anna stared her in the eye. "Us."
Before Anna could explain further, an old
radio wired to the wall sputtered with static and a familiar voice rasped
through. It was Gunther.
"We have a trace on the saboteur.
We're ready to move."
7:37 a.m.
Gray
steered the BMW around an old farm truck, its bed piled high with hay. He
slipped into fifth gear and raced through the last hairpin turn. Cresting the
hill, he had a panoramic view of the valley ahead.
"Alme Valley," Monk said beside
him. He clutched tight to a handhold above the door.
Gray slowed, downshifting.
Monk glared at him. "I see Rachel
has been giving you Italian driving lessons."
"When in Rome
"
"We're not in Rome."
Plainly they were not. As they crested
the ridge, a wide river valley stretched ahead, a green swath of meadows,
forests, and tilled fields. Across the valley, a picture-postcard German hamlet
huddled in the lowlands, a township of peaked red-tile roofs and stone houses
set amid narrow, twisted streets.
But all eyes fixed upon the massive
castle perched on the far ridge, nestled in the forest, overlooking the town.
Towers jutted high, topped by fluttering flags. While hulking and massive, like
many of the fortified structures along the larger Rhine River, the castle also
had a fairy-tale quality to it, a place of enchanted princesses and knights on
white stallions.
"If Dracula had been gay," Monk
said, "that would so be his castle."
Gray knew what he meant. There was
something vaguely sinister about the place, but it might just be the lowering
sky to the north. They'd be lucky to reach the lowland village before the storm
struck.
"Where to now?" Gray asked.
A crumpling sound rose from the backseat
as Fiona checked the map. She had confiscated it from Monk and assumed the role
of navigator, since she still withheld their destination.
She leaned forward and pointed to the river.
"You have to cross that bridge."
"Are you sure?"
"Yes, I'm sure. I know how to read a
map."
Gray headed down into the valley,
avoiding a long line of bicyclists outfitted in a motley display of racing
jerseys. He sped the BMW along the winding road to the valley floor and entered
the outskirts of the village.
It appeared to be from another century. A
German Brigadoon. Everywhere tulips filled window boxes, and each peaked roof
supported high gables. Off to the sides, cobbled streets stretched out from the
main thoroughfare. They passed a square lined by outdoor cafés, beer gardens,
and a central bandstand, where Gray was sure a polka band played every night.
Then they were trundling across the
bridge and soon found themselves back in the meadows and small farmsteads.
"Take the next left!" Fiona
yelled.
Gray had to brake sharply and twist the
BMW around a sharp turn. "A little warning next time."
The road grew narrower, lined by tall
hedgerows. Asphalt turned to cobbles. The BMW shuddered over the uneven surface.
Soon weeds were sprouting among the cobbles. Iron gates appeared ahead,
spanning the narrow road, waiting open.
Gray slowed. "Where are we?"
"This is the place," Fiona
said. "Where the Darwin Bible came from. The Hirszfeld estate."
Gray edged the BMW through the gates.
Rain began pelting down from the darkening skies. At first
lightly
then more forcefully.
"Just in time," Monk said.
Beyond the gates, a wide courtyard
opened, framed on two sides by the wings of a small country cottage estate. The
main house, directly ahead, stood only two stories high, but its slate-tiled
roof rose in steep pitches, giving the home a bit of majesty.
A shatter of lightning crackled overhead,
drawing the eye.
The castle they'd noted earlier rose
directly atop the wooded ridge behind the estate. It seemed to loom over the
cottage.
"Oy!"
a call snapped out.
Gray's attention flicked back.
A bicyclist who had been trotting his
bike out of the rain had almost got himself run over. The youth, dressed in a
yellow soccer jersey and biker's shorts, slapped the BMW's hood with the palm
of his hand.
"Watch where you're going,
mate!" He flipped Gray off.
Fiona already had the back window rolled
down, head sticking out. "Sod off, you prat! Why don't you watch where
you're running around in those poncey shorts of yours!"
Monk shook his head. "Looks like
Fiona's got a date for later."
Gray pulled the car into a slot near the
main house. There was only one other car, but Gray noted a line of mountain and
racing bikes chained up in racks. A cluster of bedraggled young men and women
stood under one awning, backpacks resting on the ground. He heard them speaking
as he cut the engine. Spanish. The place had to be a youth hostel. Or at least
it was now. He could practically smell the patchouli and hemp.
Was this the right place?
Even if it was, Gray doubted he'd find
anything of value here. But they had come this far. "Wait here," he
said. "Monk, stay with"
The back door popped open, and Fiona
climbed out.
"Next time," Monk said,
reaching for his door, "choose the model with child locks for the
back."
"C'mon." Gray headed out after
her.
Backpack over her shoulder, Fiona strode
toward the front door of the main house.
He caught up with her at the porch steps
and grabbed her elbow. "We stick together. No running off."
She faced him, equally angry.
"Exactly. We stick together. No running off. That means no leaving me in
airplanes or cars." She twisted out of his grip and pulled open the door.
A chime announced their arrival.
A clerk glanced up from a mahogany
reception desk just inside the door. An early morning fire glowed in the
hearth, chasing away the chill. The entrance hall was box-beamed and tiled in
slate. Muted murals that looked centuries old decorated the walls. But the
place showed signs of disrepair: crumbling plaster, dust in the rafters, frayed
and faded rugs on the floor. The place had seen better days.
The clerk nodded to them, a hale young
man in a rugby shirt and green slacks. In his late teens or early twenties, he
looked like some blond collegiate freshman from an Abercrombie & Fitch
advertisement.
"Guten
morgen," the clerk said, greeting Gray as he stepped to the counter.
Monk scanned the hall as thunder rumbled
down the valley. "Nothing guten
about this morning," he mumbled.
"Ah, Americans," the clerk
said, hearing Monk's gripe. There was a slight chill to his tone.
Gray cleared his throat. "We were
wondering if this is the old Hirszfeld estate?"
The clerk's eyes widened slightly. "Ja, aber
it's been the Burgschloß
Hostel for going on two decades. When my father, Johann Hirszfeld, inherited
the place."
So they were at the right place. He
glanced at Fiona, who lifted her eyebrows at him as if asking What? She was busy searching through her
backpack. He prayed Monk was correct: that there were no flash grenades in
there.
Gray turned his attention back to the
clerk. "I was wondering if I might speak to your father."
"Concerning
?" The chill was
back, along with a certain wariness.
Fiona bumped him aside. "Concerning
this." She slapped a familiar book on the reception counter. It was the
Darwin Bible.
Oh, God
he had left the book under guard
on the jet.
Apparently not well enough.
"Fiona," Gray said in a warning
tone.
"It's mine," she said out of
the side of her mouth.
The clerk picked up the book and flipped
through it. There was no sign of recognition. "A Bible? We don't allow
proselytizing here at the hostel." He closed the book and slid it back
toward Fiona. "Besides, my father is Jewish."
With the cat out of the bag, Gray proceeded
more directly. "The Bible belonged to Charles Darwin. We believe it was
once a part of your family's library. We were wondering if we could ask your
father more about it."
The clerk eyed the Bible with less
derision. "The library was sold off before my father took over this
place," he said slowly. "I never did get to see it. I've heard from
neighbors that it had been in the family going back centuries."
The clerk stepped around the reception
desk and led the way past the hearth to an arched opening into a small
neighboring hall. One wall was lined by tall thin windows, giving the room a
cloistered feel. The opposite wall held a cold hearth large enough to walk into
upright. The room was filled with rows of tables and benches, but it was empty,
except for an older woman in a smock who swept the floor.
"This was the old family library and
study. Now it's the hostel's dining hall. My father refused to sell the estate,
but there were back taxes. I suppose that was why the library was sold half a
century ago. My father had to auction off most of the original furnishings.
Each generation, a bit of history vanishes."
"A shame," Gray said.
The clerk nodded and turned away.
"Let me call my father. See if he's willing to talk to you."
A few moments later, the clerk waved to
them and guided them to wide-set double doors. He unlocked the way and held the
door. It led to the private section of the estate.
The clerk introduced himself as Ryan
Hirszfeld as he marched them to the back of the house and out into a glass-and-bronze
conservatory. Potted ferns and colorful bromeliads lined the walls. Stepped
shelves climbed one windowed side, crowded with a mix of specimen plants, some
looking like weeds. At the back, a lone palm tree rose, its crown brushing
against the glass roof, some fronds yellowing in neglect. There was an old,
overgrown feel to the place, unkempt and untended. The feeling was enhanced by
the drizzle of water leaking through a cracked pane, trailing into a bucket.
The sunroom was far from sunny.
In the center of the conservatory, a
frail man sat in a wheelchair, a blanket over his lap, staring out toward the
back of the property. Rainwater sluiced across all the surfaces, making the
world beyond appear insubstantial and unreal.
Ryan went to him, almost shyly. "Vater. Hier sind die
Leute mit der Bibel."
"Auf
Englisch, Ryan
auf Englisch." The man hauled on
one wheel and the chair turned to face them. His skin looked paper thin. His
voice wheezed. Suffering from emphysema, Gray guessed.
Ryan, the son, wore a pained expression.
Gray wondered if he was even aware of it.
"I am Johann Hirszfeld," the
old man said. "So you've come to inquire about the old library. Certainly
has been a lot of interest lately. Not a word for decades. Now twice in one
year."
Gray remembered Fiona's story of the
mysterious elderly gentleman who had visited Grette's bookshop and searched
through their files. He must have seen the bill of lading and followed the same
path here.
"Ryan says you have one of the
books."
"The Darwin Bible," Gray said.
The old man held out his hands. Fiona
stepped forward and placed it in his palms. He settled it to his lap.
"Haven't seen this since I was a boy," he wheezed. He glanced up at
his son. "Danke, Ryan. You
should see to the front desk."
Ryan nodded, stepping back reluctantly,
then turned and left.
Johann waited for his son to shut the
conservatory door, then sighed, his eyes returning to the Bible. He opened the
front cover, checking the Darwin family tree inside. "This was one of my
family's most cherished possessions. The Bible was a gift to my
great-grandfather in 1901 from the British Royal Society. He had been a
distinguished botanist at the turn of the century."
Gray heard the melancholy in the man's
voice.
"Our family has a long tradition of
scientific study and accomplishments. Nothing along the lines of Herr Darwin,
but we've made a few footnotes." His eyes drifted back to the rain and
watery property. "That's long over. Now I guess we'll have to be known as
hoteliers."
"About the Bible," Gray said.
"Can you tell me anything else about it? Was the library always kept
here?"
"Natürlich. Some books were taken out into the field
when one or another of my relatives went abroad for research. But this book
only left the household once. I only know that because I was here when it was
returned. Mailed back by my grandfather. Caused a stir here."
"Why's that?"
"I thought you might ask. That's why
I sent Ryan out. Best he not know."
"Ask about what?"
"My grandfather Hugo worked for the
Nazis. As did his daughter, my aunt Tola. The two of them were inseparable. I
learned later, whispered scandalously among the relatives, that they were
involved in some secret research project. Both were noted and distinguished
biologists."
"What sort of research?" Monk
asked.
"No one ever knew. Both my
grandfather and Aunt Tola died at the end of the war. But a month before that,
a crate arrived from my grandfather. It contained the part of the library he
had taken with him. Maybe he knew he was doomed and wanted to preserve the
books. Five books actually." The man tapped the Bible. "This was one
of them. Though what he might want with the Bible as a research tool, no one
could tell me."
"Maybe a piece of home," Fiona
said, softly.
Johann seemed finally to see the young
girl. He slowly nodded. "Maybe. Perhaps some connection to his own father.
Some symbolic stamp of approval for what he was doing." The old man shook
his head. "Working for the Nazis. Horrible business."
Gray remembered something Ryan had said.
"Wait. But you're Jewish, aren't you?"
"Yes. But you have to understand, my
great-grandmother, Hugo's mother, was German, with deep local family roots.
Which included connections within the Nazi party. Even when Hitler's pogrom
began, our family was spared. We were classified as Mischlinge, mixed blood. Enough German to avoid a death sentence.
But to prove that loyalty, my grandfather and aunt found themselves recruited
by the Nazis. They were gathering scientists like squirrels after nuts."
"So they were forced," Gray
said.
Johann stared out into the storm.
"It was complicated times. My grandfather held some strange beliefs."
"Like what?"
Johann seemed not to hear the question.
He opened the Bible and flipped through the pages. Gray noted the hand-inked
marks. He stepped forward and pointed to a few of the hand-drawn hash marks.
"We were wondering what those
were," Gray said.
"Are you familiar with the Thule
Society?" the old man asked, seeming not to hear his question.
Gray shook his head.
"They were an extreme German
nationalistic group. My grandfather was a member, initiated when he was
twenty-two. His mother's family had ties with the founding members. They
believed deeply in the Übermensch
philosophy."
"Übermensch. Supermen."
"Correct. The society was named
after a mythical
Monk made a dismissive noise.
"As I said," Johann wheezed,
"my grandfather held a few strange beliefs. But he was not in the minority
at the time. Especially here locally. It was in these
forests that the ancient Germanic Teuton tribes held
off the Roman legions, defining the boundary between
Gray understood the appeal of the myth.
If these ancient German warriors were supermen, then their descendants modern
Germans still carried the genetic heritage. "It was the beginning of the
Aryan philosophy."
"Their beliefs were also mixed up
with much mysticism and occult trappings. I never understood it all. But
according to my family, my grandfather was unusually inquisitive. Always searching up strange things, investigating historical
mysteries. In his spare time, he was ever keen about sharpening his
mind. Memorization tricks, jigsaw puzzles. Always with the jigsaw puzzles. Then he discovered some of
the occult stories and sought the truth behind them. It became an
obsession."
As he spoke, the old man's attention had
returned to the Bible. He riffled through the pages. He finally reached the end
and searched the inside back cover. "Das ist merkwürdig."
Merkwürdig.
Strange.
Gray stepped closer, looking over the
man's shoulder.
"What?"
The old man ran a bony
finger down the inside cover. He flipped to the front, then back again. "The
Johann held up the book. "The family
tree at the back is gone."
"Let me see." Gray took the
book. He examined the inside of the end cover more closely. Fiona and Monk
flanked him.
He ran a finger along the binding, then
examined the back cover closely.
"Look here," he said. "It
looks like someone sliced free the back flyleaf page of the Bible and glued it
over the inside of the back cover. Over the original pastedown." Gray glanced to Fiona.
"Would Grette have done that?"
"Not a chance. She would rather rip
apart the Mona Lisa."
If not Grette
Gray glanced to Johann.
"I'm sure no one in my family
would've done that. The library was sold only a few years after the war. After
it was mailed back here, I doubt anyone touched the Bible."
That left only Hugo Hirszfeld.
"Knife," Gray said and crossed
to a garden table.
Monk reached to his pack and unhooked a
Swiss Army knife. He opened it and passed it to Gray. Using the tip, Gray
razored the edges of the back sheet, then teased a corner up. The thick flyleaf
lifted easily. Only the edges had been glued.
Johann wheeled his chair to join them. He
had to push up with his arms to see over the table's edge. Gray did not hide
what he was doing. He might need the man's cooperation for whatever was
exposed.
He removed the flyleaf and revealed the
original pasteboard of the cover. Neatly written upon it was the other half of
the Darwin family tree. Johann had been correct. But that was not all that was
there now.
"Horrible," Johann said.
"Why would Grandfather do that? Deface the Bible so?"
Superimposed over the family tree, inked
across the entire page in black, dug deep into the background of the Bible, was
a strange symbol.
In the same ink, a single line in German
had been penned below it.
Gott, verzeihen mir.
Gray translated.
God,
forgive me.
Monk pointed to the symbol. "What is
that?"
"A rune," Johann said, scowling
and dropping back into his seat. "More of my grandfather's madness."
Gray turned to him.
Johann explained. "The Thule Society
believed in rune magic. Ancient power and rites associated with the Nordic
symbols. As the Nazis took to heart the Thule's philosophy of supermen, they
also absorbed the mysticism about runes."
Gray was familiar with the Nazi symbology
and its ties to runes, but what did it mean here?
"Do you know the significance of this
particular symbol?" Gray asked.
"No. It's not a subject a German Jew
would find of interest. Not after the war." Johann turned his wheelchair
and stared out at the storm. Thunder rumbled, sounding far away and close at
the same time. "But I know who might be able to help you. A curator at the
museum up there."
Gray closed the Bible and joined Johann.
"What museum?"
A crackle of lightning lit the
conservatory. Johann pointed upward. Gray craned. In the fading light, veiled
in rain, rose the massive castle.
"Historisches Museum des Hochstifts
Paderborn," Johann said. "It is open today. Inside the castle."
The old man scowled at his neighbor. "They'll certainly know what the
symbol means."
"Why's that?" Gray asked.
Johann stared at him as though he were a
simpleton. "Who better? That is Wewelsburg Castle." When Gray didn't
respond, the old man continued with a sigh. "Himmler's Black Camelot. The
stronghold of the Nazi SS."
"So it was Dracula's castle," Monk mumbled.
Johann continued, "Back in the
seventeenth century, witch trials were held up there, thousands of women
tortured and executed. Himmler only added to its blood debt. Twelve hundred
Jews from the Niederhagen concentration camp died during Himmler's
reconstruction of the castle. A cursed place. Should be torn down."
"But the museum there," Gray
asked, directing Johann away from his growing anger. The man's wheezing had
worsened. "They would know about the rune?"
A nod. "Heinrich Himmler was a
member of the Thule Society, steeped in rune lore. In fact, it was how my
grandfather was brought to his attention. They shared an obsession with
runes."
Gray sensed a convergence of ties and
events, all centered on this occult Thule Society. But what? He needed more
information. A trip to the castle museum was doubly warranted.
Johann wheeled himself away from Gray,
dismissing him. "It was because of such common interests with my
grandfather that Himmler granted our family, a family of Mischlinge, the pardon. We were spared the camps."
Because of Himmler.
Gray understood the root of the man's
anger
and why he had asked his son to leave the room. It was a family burden
best left undiscovered. Johann stared out into the storm.
Gray collected the Bible and waved
everyone out. "Danke," he
called back to the old man.
Johann did not acknowledge him, lost in
the past.
Gray and the others were soon out on the
front porch again. The rain continued to pour out of low skies. The courtyard
was deserted. There would be no biking or hiking today.
"Let's go," Gray said and
headed into the rain.
"Perfect day to storm a
castle," Monk said sarcastically.
As they hurried across the courtyard,
Gray noted a new car parked next to theirs. Empty. Engine steaming in the cold
rain. Must have just arrived.
An ice-white Mercedes.
12:32 p.m.
Where
is the signal coming from?" Anna asked.
The woman had rushed into the maintenance
room, responding immediately to Gunther's call. She had arrived alone, claiming
Lisa had wanted to remain behind in the library to follow up on some research.
Painter thought it more likely that Anna still wanted to keep them apart.
Just as well that Lisa was out of harm's
way.
Especially if they were truly on the
track of the saboteur.
Leaning closer to the laptop screen,
Painter massaged the tips of his fingers. A persistent tingling itched behind
his nails. He stopped rubbing long enough to point at the three-dimensional
schematic of the castle.
"Best estimate is this region,"
Painter said, tapping the screen. He had been surprised to see how extensively
the castle spread into the mountain. It hollowed right through the peak. The
signal came from the far side. "But it's not a pinpoint. The saboteur
would need a clear line of sight to use his satellite phone."
Anna straightened. "The helipad is
there."
Gunther nodded with a grunt.
On the screen, the overlay of pulsing
lines suddenly collapsed. "He's ended the call," Painter said.
"We'll have to move fast."
Anna turned to Gunther. "Contact
Klaus. Have his men close off the helipad. Now."
Gunther swung to a phone receiver on the
wall and started the lockdown. The plan had been to search everyone in the
signal vicinity, discover who had an illicit sat-phone in their possession.
Anna returned to Painter. "Thank you
for your help. We'll search from here."
"I may be of further help."
Painter had been busy typing on the laptop. He memorized the number that
appeared on the screen, then detached his hand-built signal amplifier from the
castle's ground wire. He straightened. "But I'll need one of your portable
satellite phones."
"I can't leave you here with a
phone," Anna said, knuckling her temple and wincing. Headache.
"You don't have to leave me. I'm
going with you to the helipad."
Gunther stepped forward, his usual frown
deepening.
Anna waved him back. "We don't have
time to argue." But something silent passed between the large man and his
sister. A warning for the big man to keep an eye on Painter.
Anna led the way out.
Painter followed, still rubbing his
fingers. The nails had begun to burn. He studied them for the first time,
expecting the nail beds to be inflamed, but instead, his fingernails were oddly
blanched, bled of color.
Frostbite?
Gunther passed him one of the castle's
phones, noted Painter's attention, and shook his head. He held out a hand.
Painter didn't understand then noted the man was missing the fingernails on
his last three fingers.
Gunther lowered his arm and marched after
Anna.
Painter clenched and unclenched his
hands. So the tingling burn wasn't frostbite. The quantum disease was
advancing. He recalled Anna's list of debilitations in the Bell's test
subjects: loss of fingers, ears, toes. Not unlike leprosy.
As they headed toward the far side of the
mountain, Painter studied Gunther. The man had lived his whole life with a
sword hanging over his head. Chronic and progressive wasting, followed by
madness. Painter was headed for the Reader's
Digest version of the same condition. He could not deny it terrified him
not so much the debilitation as the loss of his mind.
How long did he have?
Gunther must have sensed his reverie.
"I will not let this happen to Anna," he growled under his breath to
Painter. "I will do anything to stop it."
Painter was again reminded that the pair
were brother and sister. Only after learning this did Painter see subtle
similarities of feature: curve of lip, sculpt of chin, identical frown lines.
Family. But the similarities ended there. Anna's dark hair, emerald rich eyes
contrasted sharply with her brother's washed-out appearance. Only Gunther had
been born under the
As they crossed hallways and descended
stairs, Painter worked the back cover off the portable phone. He pocketed it,
loosened the battery, and jury-rigged his amplifier to the antenna wire behind
the battery. The broadcast would only be a single burst, seconds long, but it
should do the job.
"What is that?" Gunther asked.
"A GPS sniffer. The amplifier
recorded the chip-specs from the saboteur's phone during the call. I may be
able to use it to hunt him down if he's close."
Gunther grunted, buying the lie.
So far so good.
The stairs emptied into a wide
passageway, large enough to trundle a tank through. Old steel tracks ran along
the floor and headed straight through the heart of the mountain. The helipad
was located at the other end, remote from the main castle. They mounted a
flatbed car. Gunther released the hand brake and engaged the electric motor
with the press of a floor pedal. There were no seats, only rails. Painter held
on as they zipped down the passage, lit intermittently by overhead lamps.
"So you have your own subway
system," Painter said.
"For moving goods," Anna
replied, wincing, her brows furrowed tight in pain. She had taken two pills on
the way here. Pain relievers?
They passed a series of storage rooms
piled high with barrels, boxes, and crates, apparently flown in and warehoused.
In another minute, they reached the terminal end of the passageway. The air had
grown more heated, steamy, smelling vaguely sulfurous. A deep sonorous thrum
vibrated through the stone and up Painter's legs as he climbed off the train
cart. He knew from his peek at the castle schematics that the geothermal plant
was located in the nether regions of this area.
But they were headed up, not down.
A ramp continued from here, wide enough
to accommodate a Humvee. They climbed up into a cavernous space. Light streamed
through an open set of steel doors in the roof. It looked like the warehouse of
a commercial airfield: cranes, forklifts, heavy equipment. And in the center
rested a pair of A-Star Ecuriel helicopters, one black, one white, both shaped
like angry hornets, made for high-altitude flying.
Klaus, the hulking Sonnekönige guard, noted their entrance and marched up to them,
favoring his weak side. He ignored everyone except Anna. "All is
secure," he said in crisp German.
He nodded to a line of men and women off
to the side. A good dozen stood under the watchful eyes of a phalanx of armed
guards.
"No one slipped past you?" Anna
asked.
"Nein. We were ready."
Anna had positioned four Sonnekönige in each main quadrant of the
castle, ready to lock down whichever region Painter pinpointed with his device.
But what if he had made a mistake? The commotion here would surely alert the
saboteur. He or she would go even deeper into hiding. This was their one
chance.
Anna knew it, too. She moved stiffly as
she crossed the space. "Have you found?"
She stumbled a step, weaving a bit.
Gunther caught her arm, steadying her, his face worried.
"I'm fine," she whispered to
him and continued on her own.
"We've searched everyone,"
Klaus said, doing his best to ignore her misstep. "We've found no phone or
device. We were about to start searching the helipad."
Anna's frown deepened. It was what they
had feared. Rather than carrying the phone, the saboteur might easily have
stashed it somewhere after the call.
Or then again, Painter might have
miscalculated.
In which case, he would have to redeem
himself.
Painter stepped to Anna's side. He lifted
his makeshift device. "I might be able to accelerate the search for the
phone."
She eyed him suspiciously, but their
choices were few. She nodded.
Gunther kept to his shoulder.
Painter lifted the satellite phone,
turned it on, and punched in the number he had memorized. Nine digits. Nothing
happened. Eyes were fixed on him.
He scrunched in concentration and punched
them in again.
Still nothing.
Had he got the number wrong?
"Was
ist los?" Anna
asked.
Painter stared at the line of digits on
the phone's small screen. He read through them again and saw his error. "I
mixed up the last two numbers. Transposed them."
He shook his head and typed them in
again, concentrating hard, going slow. He finally entered the right sequence.
Anna met his eyes when he glanced up. His error was more than stress. She knew
it, too. Keypad punching was often used as a test of mental acuity.
And this had only been a simple telephone
number.
But an important one.
Painter's signal net had acquired the
saboteur's sat-phone number. He pressed the transmit button and glanced up.
After a millisecond, a phone rang in the
chamber, trilling loudly.
All eyes turned.
To Klaus.
The Sonnekönig
backed up a step.
"Your saboteur
," Painter said.
Klaus opened his mouth, ready to deny
but instead he yanked out his handgun, his face going hard.
Gunther reacted a second faster, his MK23
pistol already in hand.
A blast of muzzle fire.
Klaus's weapon flew from his fingertips
with a ricocheted spark.
Gunther lunged forward, pressing his
pistol's smoking barrel against Klaus's cheek. Cold flesh sizzled, branded by
the hot muzzle. Klaus didn't even wince. They needed the saboteur alive, to
answer questions. Gunther asked the foremost one.
"Warum?"
he growled. Why?
Klaus glared out of his one good eye. The
other's lid drooped along with his half-paralyzed face, turning his sneer into
something more dreadful. He spat on the ground. "To put
an end to the humiliating reign of the Leprakönige."
A long-suppressed hatred shone from his
twisted face. Painter could only imagine the years of anger smoldering in the
man's bones, years of ridicule while his body deteriorated. Once a prince, now
a leper. But Painter sensed it was more than mere revenge. Someone had turned
the man into a mole.
But who?
"Brother," Klaus said to
Gunther, "it doesn't have to be this way. A life of the living dead. There
is a cure." A keening edge of hope and pleading entered the man's voice.
"We can be kings among men again."
So there was the man's forty pieces of
silver.
Promise of a cure.
Gunther was not swayed. "I am not
your brother," he answered from deep in his chest. "And I was never a king."
Painter sensed the true difference
between these two Sonnekönige. Klaus
was a decade older. As such, he had grown up as a prince here, only to have it
all taken away. Gunther, on the other hand, had been born at the end of the
test run, when the reality of the debilitation and madness had become known. He
had always been a leper, knowing no other life.
And there was another critical difference
between them.
"You sentenced Anna to death with
your betrayal," Gunther said. "I will make you and anyone who
supported you suffer for it."
Klaus did not retreat but became more
earnest. "She can be cured, too. It can be arranged."
Gunther's eyes narrowed.
Klaus sensed the hesitation, the hope in
his adversary. Not for himself, but his sister. "She doesn't have to
die."
Painter remembered Gunther's words
earlier. I will not let this
happen to Anna. I will do anything to stop it. Did that include betraying
everyone else? Even defying his sister's wishes?
"Who promised you this cure?"
Anna asked in a hard voice.
Klaus laughed gutturally. "Men far
greater than the sniveling things you have become here. It is only right that
you should be cast aside. You have served your purpose. But no longer."
A loud pop exploded in Painter's hands. The satellite phone he'd used to
expose the saboteur shattered as the battery detonated, short-circuited by his
amplifier. Fingers stinging, he dropped the smoking remains of the sat-phone
and glanced skyward, toward the helipad bay doors. He prayed the amplifier had
lasted long enough.
He was not the only one distracted. All
eyes had swung toward him when the phone blew up. Including Gunther's.
Using the momentary inattention, Klaus
freed a hunting knife and leaped at the other Sonnekönig. Gunther fired, catching his attacker in the gut with
the large slug. Still, Klaus's blade grazed through the meat of Gunther's shoulder
as he fell.
Gasping, Gunther twisted and threw Klaus
to the floor.
The man crashed hard, sprawled out.
Still, he managed to roll up on his side, his good arm clutching his belly.
Blood poured heavily out of the stomach wound. Klaus coughed. More blood.
Bright red. Arterial. Gunther's wild shot had struck something vital.
Anna hurried to Gunther's side to check
his wound. He brushed her back, keeping his pistol trained on Klaus. Blood
soaked through Gunther's sleeve and dripped to the stone.
Klaus merely laughed, a grating of rocks.
"You will all die! Strangled when the knot tightens!"
He coughed again, convulsive. Blood
spread in a pool. With a final trembling sneer, he slumped to the floor
facedown. Gunther lowered his gun. Klaus needed no further guarding. One last
breath and the large man lay still.
Dead.
Gunther allowed Anna to use an oily scrap
of rag from a pile nearby to tie off his wound until it could be better tended.
Painter circled Klaus's body, nagged by
something. Others in the room had gathered around, talking among themselves in
voices both fearful and hopeful. They had all heard the mention of a cure.
Anna joined him. "I'll have one of
our technicians examine his satellite phone. Maybe it can lead us to whoever
orchestrated the sabotage."
"Not enough time," Painter
mumbled, tuning everything else out. He concentrated on what bothered him. It
was like grasping at threads just out of reach.
As he paced, he ran through what clues
Klaus had offered.
we
can be kings among men again.
you
have served your purpose. But no longer.
A headache flared as Painter attempted to
piece things together.
Klaus must have been recruited as a
double agent
in a game of industrial espionage. For someone carrying on
parallel research. And now the work at the castle here had become superfluous,
and steps had been put into motion to eliminate the competition.
"Could he have spoken
truthfully?" Gunther asked.
Painter remembered the large man's
hesitation a moment before, baited by an offer of a cure, for himself and his
sister. It had all died with Klaus.
But they weren't giving up.
Anna had dropped to a knee. She removed a
small phone from Klaus's pocket. "We'll have to work quickly."
"Can you help?" Gunther asked
Painter, nodding to the phone.
Their only hope lay in finding out who
had picked up the other line.
"If you could trace the call
,"
Anna said, standing up.
Painter shook his head, not in denial. He
pressed the heels of his hands against his eyes. His head pounded, rounding up
to a full migraine. But even that wasn't what had him shaking his head.
Close
whatever nagged him was so close
Anna stepped near to him, touched his
elbow. "It is to all our best interest to"
"I know," he snapped. "Now
shut up! Let me think."
Anna's hand dropped from his arm.
His outburst silenced the room. He fought
to drag up what his mind kept hidden. It was like transposing the numbers on
the sat-phone. The sharp edge to his mental acuity was dulling.
"The sat-phone
something about the
sat-phone
" he whispered, pressing back the migraine by sheer will. "But what?"
Anna spoke softly. "What do you
mean?"
Then it struck him. How could he have
been so blind?
Painter lowered his arms and opened his
eyes. "Klaus knew the castle was under electronic surveillance. So why did
he make the call at all? Expose himself? Why take that risk?"
Cold terror washed over him. He swung to
Anna. "The rumor. The one about having a cache of Xerum 525 still left.
Were we the only ones who knew the rumor was false? That there really isn't any
more of the liquid metal?"
The others in the room gasped at his
revelation. A few voices rose in anger. Much hope had been seeded by the rumor,
inflaming some optimism that a second Bell could be built. Now it was dashed.
But certainly someone else had believed
the rumor, too.
"Only Gunther knew the truth,"
Anna said, confirming his worst fear.
Painter stared out across the helipad. He
pictured the castle schematic in his head. He now knew why Klaus had made the call
and why he made it from here. The bastard thought he could hide in
plain sight afterward, so confident he hadn't even disposed of the phone. He
had chosen this spot specifically.
"Anna, when you spread the rumor,
where did you say you had the Xerum 525 locked up? How had it avoided being
destroyed in the explosion?"
"I claimed it was locked up in a
vault."
"What vault?"
"Away from the explosion site. The
one in my study. Why?"
All the way on the other side of the
castle.
"We've been played," Painter
said. "Klaus called from here, knowing the castle was being monitored. He meant to lure us here. To pull our
attention away from your study, from the secret vault, from the supposed last
cache of Xerum 525."
Anna shook her head, not understanding.
"Klaus's call was a decoy. The real goal all along was the
fabled last batch of Xerum 525."
Anna's eyes grew wide.
Gunther understood now, too. "There
must be a second saboteur."
"While we're distracted here, he's
going after the Xerum 525."
"My study," Anna said, turning to
Painter.
It finally struck him, what had been
nagging him the most, making him heartsick and nauseated. It burst forth with a
white-hot stab of blinding pain. Someone stood in the direct path of the
saboteur.
Lisa searched the upper story of the
library. She had climbed the wrought-iron ladder to the rickety iron balcony
and now circled the room. She kept one hand on the balcony railing.
She had spent the past hour gathering
books and papers on quantum mechanics. She even found the original treatise of
Max Planck, the father of quantum theory, a theory that defined a bewildering
world of elemental particles, a world where energy could be broken down into
small packets, called quanta, and where elemental matter behaved like both
particles and waves.
It all made her head ache.
What did any of this have to do with
evolution?
She sensed any cure lay in discovering
that answer.
Reaching out, she tilted a book from the
shelf, studying the binding. She squinted at the faded lettering.
Was this the right volume?
A commotion at the door drew her
attention around. She knew the exit was guarded. What now? Was Anna returning
already? Had they found the saboteur? Lisa turned back toward the ladder. She
hoped Painter was with Anna. She didn't like being apart from him. And maybe he
could make heads or tails of these strange theories of matter and energy.
She reached the ladder and turned to step
down on the first rung.
A sharp scream, quickly silenced, froze
her in place.
It came from right outside the door.
Reacting on instinct, Lisa lunged back up
and spread herself flat on the wrought-iron balcony. The open floor grating
offered little cover. She slid close to the stacks, into the shadows, away from
the wall sconces on this level.
As she lay still, the door across the
room opened and closed. A figure slipped into the room. A woman. In a
snow-white parka. But it wasn't Anna. The woman tossed back her hood and pulled
down a scarf. She had long white hair and was as pale as a ghost.
Friend or foe?
Lisa kept hidden until she knew more.
There was something too confident about
the woman. The way her eyes searched the room. She half turned. A spray of
blood marred the side of her jacket. In her other hand, she held a curved
katana, a short Japanese saber. Blood dripped from the blade.
The woman danced into the room, turning
in a slow circle.
Hunting.
Lisa dared not breathe. She prayed the
shadows kept her hidden up here. The library's few lamps lit the lower level,
as did the hearth fire. It crackled and shone with a few flames. But the upper
balcony remained gloomy.
Would it be enough to hide her?
Lisa watched the intruder make another
circle, standing in the middle of the room, bloodied katana held at the ready.
Seemingly satisfied, the ice-blond woman
strode quickly toward Anna's desk. She ignored the clutter on top and stepped
behind the wide table. Reaching to a tapestry on the wall, she pulled it back
and exposed a large black cast-iron wall safe.
Hooking the tapestry aside, she knelt and
inspected the combination lock, the handle, the edges of the door.
With the woman's concentration so
focused, Lisa allowed herself to breathe. Whatever thievery was afoot, so be
it. Let the woman abscond with whatever she came for and be gone. If the
burglar had slain the guards, maybe Lisa could turn it to her advantage. If she
could reach a phone
the intrusion might actually turn out for the best.
A loud clatter startled her.
A few yards away, a heavy book had fallen
from its shelf and landed splayed open on the wrought-iron balcony. Pages still
fluttered from the impact. Lisa recognized the book she had half pulled out a
moment ago. Forgotten until now, gravity had done the rest, slowly tugging the
book free.
Below, the woman retreated to the center
of the room.
A pistol had appeared in her other hand,
as if out of thin air, pointed up.
Lisa had nowhere to hide.
9:18 a.m.
Gray
pulled open the door to the team's BMW. He began to duck inside when a shout
rose behind him. He turned toward the entrance to the hostel. Ryan Hirszfeld
hurried toward them, hunched under an umbrella. Thunder echoed, and rain lashed
across the parking lot of the cottage estate.
"Get inside," Gray ordered Monk
and Fiona, waving to the sedan.
He faced Ryan as the young man reached
his side.
"Are you heading to the castle
to
Wewelsburg?" he asked, lifting the umbrella to shelter them both.
"Yes, we are. Why?"
"Might I hop a ride with you?"
"I don't think"
Ryan cut him off. "You were asking
about my great-grandfather
Hugo. I may have more information for you. It'll
only cost you a ride up the hill."
Gray hesitated. The young man must have
eavesdropped on their earlier conversation with Johann, his father. What could
Ryan know that his father didn't? Still, the man stared at him with earnest
eyes.
Turning, Gray popped the back door and
held it open.
"Danke." Ryan folded the umbrella and ducked into the back with
Fiona.
Gray climbed behind the wheel. In
moments, they were bumping down the driveway out of the estate.
"Shouldn't you be home watching the
store?" Monk asked, half turned in the passenger seat to address Ryan.
"Alicia will cover the front desk
for me," Ryan said. "The storm will keep everyone close to the
fire."
Gray studied the young man in the
rearview mirror. He looked suddenly uncomfortable under Monk's and Fiona's
scrutiny.
"What did you want to tell us?"
Gray asked.
Ryan's eyes met his in the mirror. He
swallowed and nodded. "My father thinks I know nothing about my
great-grandfather Hugo. Thinks it best be buried in the past, ja? But it's still whispered about. Same
with Aunt Tola."
Gray understood. Family secrets had a way
of surfacing, no matter how deeply you tried to bury them. Curiosity had plainly
been instilled in Ryan about his ancestors and their role during the war. It
practically shone from the man's eyes.
"You've been doing your own
investigation into the past?" Gray said.
Ryan nodded. "For three years now.
But the trail goes back further. To when the Berlin Wall came down. When the
Soviet Union dissolved."
"I don't understand," Gray
said.
"Do you remember when Russia
declassified the older Soviet files?"
"I suppose. But what about
them?"
"Well, back when Wewelsburg was
reconstructed"
"Wait a sec." Fiona stirred.
She'd been sitting with her arms crossed, as if disgruntled by the intrusion of
the stranger. But Gray had caught the few sidelong glances she gave the man,
sizing him up. He wondered if the man still had his wallet. "Reconstructed?
They rebuilt that ugly place?" she asked.
Ryan nodded as the castle came into view
on the ridgeline. Gray signaled and turned onto Burgstrasse, the road that
headed up toward the castle. "Himmler had it blown up near the end of the
war. Only the North Tower was untouched. After the war, it was rebuilt. Part
museum, part youth hostel. Still bothers my father."
Gray could understand why.
"It was finished in 1979," Ryan
continued. "The museum directors over the years have petitioned former
Allied governments for documents and such related to the castle."
"Including Russia," Monk said.
"Natürlich. Once records were decommissioned, the
current director sent archivists over to Russia. Three years ago, they returned
with truckloads of declassified documents related to the Russian campaign in
the area. The archivists had also left here with a long list of names to search
for in the Russian files. Including my great-grandfather, Hugo Hirszfeld."
"Why him?"
"He was intimately involved in the
Thule Society rituals at the castle. He was well known locally for his
knowledge of runes, which decorate the castle. He even corresponded with Karl
Wiligut, Himmler's personal astrologer."
Gray pictured the three-pronged mark in
the Bible but remained silent.
"The archivists returned with
several boxes specifically about my great-grandfather. My father was informed
but refused to participate in any way."
"But you snuck up there?" Monk
said.
"I wanted to know more about
him," Ryan said. "Figure out why
what happened
" He shook his
head.
The past had a way of grabbing hold and
not letting go.
"And what did you learn?" Gray
asked.
"Not much. One box contained papers
from the Nazi research lab where my great-grandfather worked. He was given the
rank of Oberarbeitsleiter. Head of the
project." This last was said with a tone both shamed and defiant.
"But whatever they were working on must not have been declassified. Most
of the papers were personal correspondence. With friends, with family."
"And you read through them
all?"
A slow nod. "Enough to get the
feeling my great-grandfather had begun to have doubts about his work. Yet he
couldn't leave."
"Or he would've been shot,"
Fiona said.
Ryan shook his head, a forlorn expression
waxing for a breath. "I think it was more the project itself
he couldn't
let it go. Not completely. It was like he was repulsed but drawn at the same
time."
Gray sensed Ryan's personal pursuit into
the past was tinged with the same tidal push and pull.
Monk tilted his head and cracked his neck
with a loud pop. "What does any of this have to do with the Darwin
Bible?" he asked, bringing the subject back around to the beginning.
"I found one note," Ryan
answered. "Addressed to my great-aunt Tola. It mentions the crate of books
my great-grandfather sent back to the estate. I remember it because of his
rather strange remarks about it."
"What did he say?"
"The letter is up at the museum. I
thought you might like to have a copy of it
to go along with the Bible."
"You don't remember what it
said?"
Ryan scrunched his brow. "Only a
couple lines. 'Perfection can be found hidden in my books,
dear Tola. The truth is too beautiful to let die and too monstrous to set
free.' "
Silence settled in the car.
"He died two months later."
Gray contemplated the words. Hidden in my books.
The five books Hugo had mailed back home before he died. Had he done it to keep
some secret safe? To preserve what was too
beautiful to let die and too monstrous to set free?
Gray fixed Ryan with a stare in the
rearview mirror. "Did you tell anyone else about what you found?"
"No, but the old
gentleman and his niece and nephew
the ones who came earlier this year to
speak to my father about the books.
They had already been here, searching through my great-grandfather's papers in
the archives. I think they must have read the same note and come to inquire
further with my father."
"These folks
the
niece and nephew.
What did they look like?"
"White hair. Tall. Athletic. Good
stock, as my grandfather would say."
Gray shared a glance with Monk.
Fiona cleared her throat. She pointed to
the back of her hand. "Did they have a mark
a tattoo here?"
Ryan slowly nodded. "I think so.
Shortly after they arrived, my father sent me away. Like with you today.
Mustn't speak in front of the children." Ryan tried to smile, but he
plainly sensed the tension in the car. His eyes darted around. "Do you
know them?"
"Fellow competitors," Gray
said. "Collectors like us."
Ryan's expression remained guarded,
disbelieving, but he didn't inquire further.
Gray again pictured the hand-drawn rune
hidden in the Bible. Did the other four books contain similar cryptic symbols?
Did it tie back to Hugo's research with the Nazis? Was that what this was all
about? It seemed unlikely these assassins would just show up here and start
sifting through records
not unless they were searching for something specific.
But what?
Monk still faced backward. But he swung
around and settled into his seat. He spoke low, under his breath. "You
know we're being followed, right?"
Gray only nodded.
A quarter mile back, slowly climbing the
switchbacks behind them, a car followed in the rain. The same one he had
spotted earlier parked back at the hostel. A pearl white Mercedes roadster.
Maybe they were just fellow tourists, out on a sightseeing excursion to the
castle.
Right.
"Perhaps you shouldn't follow so
close, Isaak."
"They've already spotted us,
Ischke." He nodded past the rainswept windshield to the BMW a quarter mile
ahead. "Note how his turns are more restrained, less enthusiastically
sharp and tight. He knows."
"Is that something we want? To alert
them?"
Isaak tilted his head toward his sister.
"The hunt is always the best when the prey is spooked."
"I don't think Hans would
agree." Her manner darkened with grief.
He reached a finger and touched the back
of her hand, sharing her sadness and apologizing. He knew how sensitive she
could be.
"There is no other road down from
the ridge," he assured her. "Except for the one we are on. All is
ready at the castle. All we have to do is flush them into the trap. If they are
looking over their shoulder at us, they are less likely to see what's in front
of them."
She inhaled her agreement and
understanding.
"It's time we cleared up all these
tattered loose ends. Then we can go home."
"Home," she echoed with a
contented sigh.
"We're almost done. We must always
remember the goal, Ischke. Hans's sacrifice will not be in vain, his spilt
blood will herald a new dawn, a better world."
"So Grandfather says."
"And you know it's true."
He tilted his head toward her. Her lips
thinned into a weary smile.
"Careful of the blood, sweet
Ischke."
His sister glanced down to the long steel
blade of the dagger. She had been absently wiping it clean with a white
chamois. A crimson drop had almost fallen onto the knee of her white pants. One
loose end severed. A few more to go.
"Thank you, Isaak."
1:22 p.m.
Lisa
stared at the raised pistol.
"Wer ist dort? Zeigen Sie sich!" the blond woman called up to her.
Though Lisa didn't speak German, she
understood the gist. She rose into view slowly. Hands up. "I don't speak
German," she called down.
The woman eyed her, so focused in intent
that Lisa swore she could feel it like a laser across her body.
"You're one of the Americans,"
the woman said in crisp English. "Come down. Slowly."
The pistol didn't waver.
With no cover on the open balcony
grating, Lisa had no choice. She stepped to the ladder, turned her back, and
climbed down. With every rung, she expected to hear a blast of a pistol. Her
shoulders tensed. But she reached the ground safely.
Lisa turned, arms still held a bit out to
the side.
The woman stepped toward her. Lisa
stepped back. She sensed a good portion of the woman's restraint in not
immediately shooting her was due to the noise it might generate. Except for the
single short cry, she had dispatched the outer guards with barely a sound,
employing the sword.
The assassin still held the bloody katana
in her other hand.
Maybe Lisa would've been safer staying
atop the balcony, making the woman fire at her like a duck in a shooting
gallery. Maybe the gunfire would have drawn others in time. She had been
foolish to put herself within sword reach of the intruder. But panic had
clouded Lisa's judgment. It was hard to refuse someone when they had a gun
pointed at your face.
"The Xerum 525," the woman
said. "Is it in the safe?"
Lisa weighed her answer for a heartbeat.
Truth or lie? There seemed little choice. "Anna took it," she
answered. She waved vaguely toward the door.
"Where?"
She remembered Painter's earlier lesson
after they had been captured. Be necessary. Be useful. "I don't know the
castle well enough to describe it. But I know how to get there. I
can take
you." Lisa's voice faltered. She needed to be more convincing. And how
better than to barter as though her lie had value? "I'll take you only if you promise to help me get out
of here."
The
enemy of my enemy is my friend.
Would the woman fall for it? She was
stunningly beautiful: svelte, unblemished skin, generous lips, but her glacial
blue eyes glinted with cold calculation and intelligence.
She scared Lisa witless.
There was something unearthly about her.
"Then you will show me," the
woman said and holstered her pistol. She kept the katana in hand.
Lisa would've preferred it the other way
around.
The sword pointed at the door.
Lisa was to go first. She circled toward
the door, keeping some distance. Perhaps she could make a break for it out in
the halls. It would be her only hope. She would have to watch for a moment,
some distraction, a hesitation, and then just run like hell.
A brush of air, the flicker of flame in
the hearth, was her only warning.
Lisa turned and the woman was already
there, a step away, having glided swiftly and silently from behind. Impossibly
fast. Their eyes met. Lisa knew in the heartbeat before the sword fell that the
woman had not believed her for a moment.
It had all been a trap to drop Lisa's
guard.
It would be her last mistake.
The world froze
caught in a flash of
fine Japanese silver as it plunged toward Lisa's heart.
9:30 a.m.
Gray
slid the BMW into a parking place beside a blue Wolters tour bus. The large
German vehicle hid the sedan from direct view of the street. The arched
entryway to the castle courtyard stood directly ahead.
"Stay in the car," he ordered
the others. He twisted around. "That means you, young lady."
Fiona made an obscene gesture, but she
stayed buckled.
"Monk, get behind the wheel. Keep
the engine running."
"Got it."
Ryan stared at him wide-eyed. "Was ist los?"
"Nothing's los" Monk answered. "But keep your head down just in
case."
Gray opened the door. A gust of rain
slapped against him, sounding like machine-gun fire as it struck the flank of
the neighboring bus. Thunder rumbled in the distance.
"Ryan, may I borrow your
umbrella?"
The young man nodded and passed it
forward.
Gray climbed out. He shook out the
umbrella and hurried to the far side of the bus. He took up a post near the
rear door, sheltering against the rain. He hoped to appear like just another
tour employee. He kept himself shielded by the umbrella while he watched the
road.
Headlights appeared out of the gloom,
climbing the last switchback.
The white two-seater roadster appeared a
moment later. It slid up to the parking lot and, without slowing, passed it. He
watched the taillights recede into the rain, heading toward the tiny hamlet of
Wewelsburg that nestled against the flank of the castle. The car disappeared
around a corner.
Gray waited a full five minutes, circling
behind the bus and signaling the all clear to Monk. Monk cut the engine.
Finally satisfied that the Mercedes was not returning, Gray waved the others
out.
"Paranoid much?" Fiona asked as
she passed and headed to the arch.
"It's not paranoia if they're really
out to get you," Monk called after her. He turned to Gray. "Are they
really out to get us?"
Gray stared into the storm. He didn't
like coincidences, but he couldn't stop moving forward just because he was
spooked. "Stick with Fiona and Ryan. Let's talk to this director, get a
copy of old Hugo's letter to his daughter, and get the hell out of here."
Monk eyed the hulking mass of tower and
turret. Rain poured over the gray stone and sluiced from green gutters. Only a
few of the windows on the lower floors shone with signs of life. The vast bulk
was dark and oppressive.
"Just so we're clear," he
grumbled, "if I see one friggin' black bat, I'm out of here."
1:31 p.m.
Lisa
watched the sword plunge toward her chest. It all happened between heartbeats.
Time thickened and slowed. This was how she was going to die.
Then a tinkle of glass shattered the
stillness
followed by the soft crack of a gunshot, sounding impossibly far
away. Near at hand, the assassin's throat blossomed with a fountain of blood
and bone, head thrown back.
But even then, the assassin's death
stroke completed its arc.
The sword struck Lisa in the chest,
pierced skin, and collided into her sternum. But there was no weight behind it.
Limp fingers released the katana's hilt. The heel of a dying hand knocked it
down before further damage could be inflicted.
Lisa stumbled back, released from the
spell.
The length of Japanese steel pirouetted
and struck the floor with the sound of a perfectly tuned bell. The body of the
assassin followed next, thudding heavily beside it.
Lisa retreated, disbelieving, numb,
senseless.
More tinkling of glass.
Words reached her as if from underwater.
"Are you okay? Lisa
"
She stared up. Across the library. The
single library window. Frosted and glazed before, its pane shattered away under
the butt of a rifle. A face appeared in the opening, framed by shards of broken
glass.
Painter.
Beyond his shoulder, a storm blew,
swirling snow and icemelt. Something large, heavy, and dark descended out of
the sky. A helicopter. A rope and harness dangled below it.
Lisa trembled and sank to her knees.
"We'll be right there," he
promised.
Five minutes later, Painter stood over
the body of the assassin. The second saboteur. Anna was on one knee, searching
the woman. Off to the side, Lisa sat in a chair by the hearth, her sweater off,
her shirt open, exposing her bra and a bloody cut below it. Assisted by
Gunther, Lisa had already cleaned the wound and now applied a series of
butterfly bandages to seal the inch-long slice. She had been lucky. Her bra's underwire had helped block the blade from penetrating
deeper, saving her life. Talk about offering additional support.
"No papers, no identification,"
Anna said, turning to him. Her gaze fell heavily onto Painter. "We needed
the saboteur alive."
He had no excuse. "I aimed for her
shoulder."
He shook his head in frustration. A
debilitating bout of vertigo had paralyzed him after his descent in the rope
harness. But they had no time to spare, barely making it here from the far side
of the mountain. They would've never made it on foot through the castle. The
helicopter had been their only chance, hopping over the shoulder of the
mountain and dropping someone down on a harness.
Anna was no good with a gun, and Gunther
was piloting the helo.
That left only Painter.
So despite the vertigo and double vision,
Painter had crawled to the castle and aimed as best he could through the
window. He'd had to act fast as he saw the woman rush Lisa, sword poised.
So he had taken his shot.
And though it may have cost them
everything even the knowledge of the true puppetmaster who manipulated these
saboteurs Painter did not regret his choice. He had seen the horror on Lisa's
face. Vertigo be damned, he had fired. His head still pounded now. A new fear
rose.
What if he had struck Lisa
? How long
until he was more of a liability than an asset? He shoved this thought aside.
Quit
wringing your hands and roll up your sleeves.
"What about any
distinguishing marks?"
Painter asked, getting back into the game.
"Only this." Anna turned over
the woman's wrist and exposed the back of the assassin's hand. "Do you
recognize it?"
A black tattoo marred her perfect white
skin. Four entwined loops.
"Looks Celtic, but it means nothing
to me."
"Nor me." Anna sat back,
dropping the corpse's hand.
Painter noted something else and knelt
down closer. He turned the hand over again, still warm. The woman's pinkie
fingernail was missing, the bed scarred. A tiny blemish, but a significant one.
Anna took the hand from him. She rubbed
the nail bed. "Dry
" A deep furrow formed between her brows. Her eyes
met his.
"Does that mean what I think it
means?" he asked.
Anna's gaze shifted to the woman's face.
"But I'd have to do a retinal scan for sure. Look for petechia around the
optic nerve."
Painter didn't need any further evidence.
He had seen how fast the assassin had moved across the room, preternaturally
agile. "She's one of the Sonnekönige."
Lisa and Gunther joined them.
"Not one of ours," Anna said.
"She's way too young. Too perfect. Whoever created her employed our latest
techniques, those that we finessed over the past decades from our in vitro
studies. They've advanced them into human subjects."
"Could someone have created them
here, behind your back
after hours?"
Anna shook her head. "It takes an
enormous amount of energy to activate the Bell. We would know."
"Then that only means one
thing."
"She was created somewhere
else." Anna rose to her feet. "Someone else has an operable
Bell."
Painter remained where he was, examining
the nail and tattoo. "And that someone means to shut you down now,"
he mumbled.
Silence settled over the room.
In the quiet, Painter heard a tiny chime,
barely audible. It came from the woman. He realized he had heard it a few
times, but there had been so much commotion, so much speculation, it had not
fully registered.
He pulled up her parka sleeve.
A digital watch with a thick leather
band, a full two inches in width, was secured to her wrist. Painter studied its
red face. A holographic hand swept fully around, marking off the seconds. A
digital readout glowed.
01:32
Seconds subtracted with every sweep.
Just over a minute.
Painter unstrapped the watch and checked
the inside of the band. Two silver contact points were wired in place.
Heartbeat monitor. And somewhere inside the watch must be a microtransmitter.
"What are you doing?" Anna
asked.
"Did you search her for any
explosives?"
"She's clean," Anna said.
"Why?"
Painter stood and spoke rapidly.
"She's wired with a monitor. When her heartbeat stopped, a transmission
must've been sent out." He glanced to the watch in his hand. "This is
just a timer."
He held it out toward them.
01:05
"Klaus and this woman had full
access to your facilities for who knows how long. Plenty of time to jury-rig a
failsafe." Painter held up the watch. "Something tells me we don't
want to be here when this reaches zero."
The second hand swept around, and a small
chime sounded as the count dropped below a minute.
00:59
"We must get out of here. Now!"
9:32 a.m.
The
SS started out as the personal bodyguard for Hitler," the docent said in
French, leading a group of sodden tourists through the heart of the Wewelsburg
museum. "In fact, the term SS is derived from the German word Schutzstaffel, which means 'guard
detachment.' Only later did they become Himmler's Black Order."
Gray stepped aside as the tour group
passed. While waiting for the museum director, he had eavesdropped on enough of
the tour to gain the gist of the castle's history. How Himmler had leased the
castle for only one Reichsmark, then spent a quarter billion rebuilding the
castle into his personal Camelot, a small price compared to the cost in human
blood and suffering.
Gray stood beside a display case with a
striped prison uniform from the Niederhagen concentration camp.
Thunder rumbled from beyond the walls,
rattling the old windows.
As the tour group drifted away, the
docent's voice faded into the babble of the few other visitors, all seeking
shelter against the storm.
Monk stood with Fiona. Ryan had gone to
fetch the director. Monk leaned down to examine one of the infamous Toten Kopf rings on display, a silver
band granted to SS officers. It was engraved with runes, along with a skull and
crossbones. A gruesome piece of art, ripe with symbolism and power.
Other exhibits stretched across the small
hall: miniature models, photographs of daily life, SS paraphernalia, even a
strange little teapot that once belonged to Himmler. A sun-shaped rune
decorated the pot.
"Here comes the director," Monk
said, stepping closer. He nodded to a squat gentleman who strode out a private
door. Ryan accompanied him.
The museum director appeared to be in his
late fifties, salt-and-pepper hair, rumpled black suit. As he approached, he
removed a pair of eyeglasses and held out his other hand toward Gray.
"Dr. Dieter Ulmstrom," the man
said. "Director of the Historisches Museum des Hochstifts Paderborn. Wilkommen."
The man's harried look belied his
welcome.
He continued, "Young Ryan here has
explained how you've come to investigate some runes found in an old book. How
intriguing."
Again the man appeared more hassled than intrigued.
"We won't keep you long," Gray
said. "We were wondering if you could help us identify a particular rune
and its significance."
"Certainly. If there is one thing a
museum director at Wewelsburg must be fluent with, it is rune lore."
Gray waved to Fiona for the Darwin Bible.
She already had it out.
Flipping open the back cover, Gray held
the book out.
Lips pursing, Dr. Ulmstrom replaced his
glasses and looked closer. He studied the rune scoured in ink by Hugo Hirszfeld
on the back pasteboard.
"May I examine the book, bitte?"
After a moment's hesitation, Gray relented.
The director flipped through the pages,
pausing at some of the chicken-scratched marks inside. "A Bible
how
strange
"
"The symbol at the back," Gray
pressed.
"Of course. It is the Mensch rune."
"Mensch," Gray said. "As in
the German word for 'man.' "
"Ja.
Note the form. Like a decapitated stick figure." The director drifted back
to the earlier pages. "Ryan's great-grandfather seemed very fixated on
symbols associated with the All-Father."
"What do you mean?" Gray asked.
Ulmstrom pointed to one of the scratches
on the inner pages of the Bible.
"This is the rune for k" the director said, "also
called cen
in Anglo-Saxon. It's an earlier rune for 'man,' only two upraised arms, a
cruder portrayal. And on this other page is the rune's
mirror image." He flipped a few pages and pointed to another.
"The two symbols are sort of like
two sides of the same coin. Yin and yang. Male and female. Light and
dark."
Gray nodded. It reminded him of his
discussions with Ang Gelu when he had studied with the Buddhist monk, how all
societies seemed to be transfixed by this duality. This reverie tweaked his
concern about Painter Crowe. There'd been no word yet from Nepal.
Monk redirected the talk. "These
runes? What do they all have to do with this All-Father guy?"
"All three are related.
Symbolically. The big rune, the Mensch
rune, is often considered to represent the Norse god Thor, a bringer of life, a
higher state of being. What we all strive to become."
Gray's mind puzzled through to the
answer, picturing it in his head. "And these two earlier runes, the k runes, they form the two halves of the
Mensch rune."
"Huh?" Monk grunted.
"Like this," Fiona said,
understanding. Using her finger, she drew in the dust atop a display case.
"You push the two-armed runes together to form the Mensch rune. Like a jigsaw."
"Sehr
gut," the director
said. He tapped the first two runes. "These represent the common man in
all his duality joining together to form the All-Father, a supreme
being." Ulmstrom handed the Bible back to Gray and shook his head.
"These runes certainly seemed to obsess Ryan's great-grandfather."
Gray stared at the symbol on the back
cover. "Ryan, Hugo was a biologist, correct?"
Ryan stirred. He seemed dismayed by all
this. "Ja.
As was my great-aunt Tola."
Gray nodded slowly. The Nazis were always
interested in the myth of the superman, the All-Father from which the Aryan
race supposedly descended. All these scribblings, were they just Hugo's
declaration of his belief in this Nazi dogma? Gray didn't think so. He
remembered Ryan's description of his great-grandfather's notes, the scientist's
growing disillusionment and then the cryptic note to his daughter, a hint of
a secret, one too beautiful to let die
and too monstrous to set free.
From one biologist to another.
He sensed it was all tied together:
runes, the All-Father, some long-abandoned research. Whatever the secret was,
it seemed it was worth killing over.
Ulmstrom continued, "The Mensch rune was also of particular
interest to the Nazis. They even renamed it the leben-rune."
"The life rune?" Gray asked,
focusing his attention back.
"Ja. They used it to represent the Lebensborn program."
"What's that?" Monk asked.
Gray answered. "A Nazi breeding
program. Farms to produce more blond, blue-eyed children."
The director nodded. "But like the
duality of the k rune, the leben-rune also has its mirror
image." He motioned for Gray to turn the Bible upside down, upending the
symbol. "Reversed, the leben-rune
becomes its opposite. The toten-rune."
Monk frowned at Gray.
He translated. "The rune of
death."
1:37 p.m.
Death
ticked down.
0:55
Painter stood with the dead assassin's
wrist timer in his hand. "No time to make it out on foot. Never get clear
of the blast zone."
"Then what?" Anna asked.
"The helicopter," Painter said
and pointed toward the window. The A-Star helicopter they'd used to hop here
still sat outside the castle, engine warm.
"The others." Anna headed to
the phone, ready to raise the alarm.
"Keine
Zeit," Gunther
barked, stopping her.
The man unhitched his assault rifle, a
Russian A-91 Bullpup. With his other hand, he yanked
out a grenade cartridge from his waistband and jammed it into the rifle's 40mm
launcher.
"Hier!" He strode in large steps to Anna's massive desk. "Schnell!"
He pointed the rifle at arm's length
toward the room's barred window.
Painter grabbed Lisa's hand and ran for
shelter, Anna on their heels. Gunther waited until they were close enough and
fired. A jet of gas blasted from the rock-steady weapon.
They all leaped behind the desk.
Gunther grabbed his sister around the
waist and bodily rolled her under him. The grenade exploded deafeningly.
Painter felt his ears pop. Lisa clamped her hands over her ears. The concussion
shoved the desk a full foot. Bits of rock and glass pelted the front of the
desk. Rock dust and smoke choked over them.
Gunther hauled Anna to her feet. They
wasted no words. Across the library, a ragged hole had been blasted through to
the outside. Books shredded and aflame dotted the floor and had been blown
out into the courtyard.
They ran for the exit.
The helicopter sat beyond the mountain
overhang. A good forty yards. Bounding through the jumbled blast zone, they
sprinted for the helicopter.
Painter still clutched the wrist timer.
He didn't check it until they were at the helicopter. Gunther had reached the
chopper first and ripped open the rear door. Painter helped Anna and Lisa
inside, then dove in after them.
Gunther was already in the pilot's seat.
Belts snapped into place. Painter glanced at the timer. Not that it would do
any good. Either they'd get clear or they wouldn't.
He stared at the number. His head
pounded, stabbing his eyes with pain. He could barely make out the digital
readout.
00:09
No time left.
Gunther had the engine roaring. Painter
glanced up. The rotors had begun to spin
slowly, too slowly. He glanced out a
side window. The helo perched at the top of a steep snowy slope, freshly
corniced from last night's storm. The sky beyond was shredded with clouds, and
icy mists clung to cliffs and valleys.
From the front seat, Gunther swore under
his breath. The bird refused to climb into the thin air, not without top rotor
speed.
00:03
They'd never make it.
Painter reached for Lisa's hand.
He gripped it tightly then suddenly the
world lifted and crashed back down. A distant hollow boom sounded. They all
held their breath, ready to be blasted off the mountain. But nothing else
happened. Maybe it wouldn't be so bad after all.
Then the cornice upon which they were
perched broke away. The A-Star tilted down nose first. Rotors churned uselessly
overhead. The entire snowy slope slipped in one sheet, sliding away, as if
shrugged off the mountain, taking the helicopter with it.
They were headed for the cliff's edge.
Snow tumbled over it in a churning torrent.
The ground bumped again
another
explosion
The helo bucked but refused to get
airborne.
Gunther wrestled with the controls,
choking the throttle.
The cliff rushed toward them. The snow
could be heard beyond the roar of the helicopter, growling like Class V rapids.
Lisa pressed against Painter's side, her
hand white-knuckled around his fingers. On her other side, Anna sat ramrod
straight, face blank, eyes fixed forward.
In front, Gunther went deathly silent as
they were carried over the cliff.
Shoved off the edge, they tipped
sideways, snow falling away under them, behind them. Dropping fast, the craft
jittered, yawing back and forth. Cliffs of rock rose in all directions.
No one made a sound. The rotors screamed
for all of them.
Then just like that, the craft found air.
With no more jolt than an elevator coming to a stop, the A-star steadied.
Gunther grunted at the controls
slowly, slowly, spiraling
the craft upward.
Ahead, the last of the avalanche tumbled
over the cliff face.
The helo climbed enough to survey the
damage to the castle. Smoke choked out all the faēade's windows. The front
doors had been blown off. Over the shoulder of the mountain, a thick black
column rose into the sky, coming from the helipad on the far side.
Anna sagged, palms on the side window.
"Almost a hundred and fifty men and women."
"Maybe some got out," Lisa said
dully, unblinking.
They spotted no movement.
Only smoke.
Anna pointed toward the castle. "Wir sollten suchen"
But there would be no search, no rescue.
Ever.
A blinding white flash, like a crack of
lightning, blazed from all the windows. Beyond the shoulder, a sodium-arc
sunrise. No noise. Like heat lightning. It burned into the retina, shutting off
all sight.
Blinded, Painter felt the helo lurch up
as Gunther yanked on the collective. A noise intruded, a vast grating rumble of
rock. Impossibly loud. Not just an avalanche. It sounded tectonic, a grinding
of continental plates.
The helo trembled in the air, a fly in a
paint shaker.
Sight returned painfully.
Painter pressed against the window and
stared below.
"My God
," he uttered in awe.
Rock dust obscured most of the view, but
it could not hide the scope of the destruction. The entire side of the mountain
had buckled in on itself. The shoulder of granite that had overhung the castle
had collapsed, as if all beneath it the castle and a good section of mountain
had simply vanished.
"Unmöglich," Anna mumbled, stunned.
"What?"
"Such annihilation
it had to be a
ZPE bomb." Her eyes had gone glassy.
Painter waited for her to explain.
She did after another shuddering breath.
"ZPE. Zero point energy. Einstein's formulas led to the first nuclear
bomb, tapping into the energies of a few uranium atoms. But that's nothing compared
to the potential power hidden within Planck's quantum theories. Such bombs
would tap into the very energies birthed during the big bang."
Silence settled throughout the cabin.
Anna shook her head. "Experiments
with the fuel source for the Bell the Xerum 525 hinted at the possible use
of zero point energy as a weapon. But we never pursued that avenue with any
real intent."
"But somebody else did,"
Painter said. He pictured the dead, ice blond assassin.
Anna turned to Painter, her face etched
with horror and utter violation. "We have to stop them."
"But who? Who are they?"
Lisa stirred. "I think we may find
out." She pointed out the starboard side.
Over the edge of a neighboring peak, a
trio of helicopters appeared, camouflaged in white against the glaciered peaks.
They spread out and swept toward the lone A-Star.
Painter knew enough of aerial combat to
recognize the pattern.
Attack formation.
9:32 a.m.
The
The museum director led Gray, Monk, and
Fiona out the back of the main hall. Ryan had left a moment earlier with a slim
woman dressed in tweed, a museum archivist. They were off to make copies of
Hugo Hirszfeld's letter and anything else pertaining to his great-grandfather's
research. Gray sensed he was close to discerning some answers, but he needed
more information.
To that end, he had agreed to the
director's personal tour of Himmler's castle. It was here where Hugo had begun
his connection with the Nazis. Gray sensed that to move forward he would need
as much background as possible and who better to supply that information than
the museum curator?
"To truly understand the
Nazis," Ulmstrom said, leading the way, "you have to stop considering
them as a political party. They called themselves Nationalsozialistische Deutsche Arbeiterpartei the National
Socialist German Workers' Party but in reality, they were really a
cult."
"A cult?" Gray asked.
"They bore all the trappings, ja? A spiritual leader who could not be
questioned, disciples who wore matching clothes, rituals and blood oaths
performed in secret, and most important of all, the creation of a potent totem
to worship. The Hakenkreuz.
The Broken Cross, also called the swastika. A symbol to supplant the crucifix
and the Star of David."
"Hari krishnas on steroids,"
Monk mumbled.
"Do not joke. The Nazis understood
the inherent power of ideas. A power greater than any gun or rocket. They used
it to subjugate and brainwash an entire nation."
Lightning cracked, brightening the hall
behind them. Thunder followed on its heels, booming, felt in the gut. The
lights flickered.
They all stopped in the hall.
"One squeaking bat," Monk
whispered. "Even a small one
"
The lights flared brighter, then
steadied. They continued onward. The short hall ended at a barred glass door. A
larger room lay beyond.
"The Obergruppenführersaal." Ulmstrom pulled out a weighty set of
keys and unlocked the door. "The inner sanctum to the castle. This is
restricted from regular visitors, but I think you might appreciate it."
He held the door for them to enter.
They trailed inside. Rain pelted against
the ring of windows that surrounded the circular chamber.
"Himmler built this room to mirror
King Arthur's in Camelot. He even had a massive oaken round table placed in the
middle of the room and gathered his twelve leading officers of his Black Order
for meetings and rituals here."
"What's this Black Order?" Monk
asked.
"It was another name for Himmler's
SS. But more accurately, the Schwarze
Auftrag the Black Order was a name given to Himmler's inner circle, a
secret cabal that traced its roots back to the occult Thule Society."
Gray's attention focused. The Thule
Society again. Himmler was a member of the group, so was Ryan's great-grandfather.
He pondered the connection. An inner cabal of occultists and scientists who
believed that a master race once ruled the world and would again.
The director continued his tour.
"Himmler believed this room and its tower to be the spiritual and geographic
center of the new Aryan world."
"Why here?" Gray asked.
Ulmstrom shrugged and walked to the
middle of the room. "This region is where the Teutons
defeated the Romans, a pivotal battle in Germanic history."
Gray had heard a similar story from
Ryan's father.
"But the reasons may be multiple.
Legends are ripe here. Nearby stands an old Stonehenge-like set of prehistoric
monoliths, called Externsteine. Some claim the roots of the Norse World Tree,
Yggdrasil, lie below it. And then, of course, there were the witches."
"The ones killed here," Gray
said.
"Himmler believed, and perhaps
rightly so, that the women were slain because they were pagans, practicing
Nordic rites and rituals. In his eyes, the fact that their blood was spilt at
this castle only succeeded in consecrating these grounds."
"So then it's like the real estate
agents say," Monk mumbled. "It's all about location, location,
location."
Ulmstrom frowned but continued.
"Whatever the reason, here is the ultimate purpose of Wewelsburg." He
pointed down to the floor.
In the gloom, a pattern had been done in
dark green tiles against a white background. It looked like a sun, radiating
twelve lightning bolts.
"The Schwarze Sonne. The Black Sun." Ulmstrom stalked
around its circumference. "This symbol also has roots in many myths. But
to the Nazis it represented the land from which the All-Father descended. A
land that went by many names. Thule, Hyperborea, Agartha. Ultimately the symbol represents the sun under
which the Aryan race would be reborn."
"Returning again to the
All-Father," Gray said, picturing the Mensch
rune.
"That was the ultimate goal of the
Nazis
or at least for Himmler and his Black Order. To advance the German
people back to their godlike status. It was why Himmler chose this symbol to
represent his Black Order."
Gray began to sense what research Hugo
might have been involved with. A biologist with roots at Wewelsburg. Could he
have been involved with a twisted form of the Lebensborn project, some type of eugenics program? But why would
people kill over such a program today? What had Hugo discovered that he felt
needed to be kept so secret, burying it in code in his family's books?
Gray remembered Ryan's recitation of his
great-grandfather's letter to his daughter, shortly before his death. He hinted
at a secret that was too beautiful to let
die and too monstrous to set free. What had he discovered? What had he
wanted kept secret from his Nazi superiors?
Lightning crackled again, shining through
all the windows. The symbol of the Black Sun shone brilliantly. Electric lights
trembled as the thunder reverberated throughout the hilltop castle. Not the
best place to be in an electrical storm.
Confirming this, the lights flared again
then went dark.
Blackout.
Still, enough murky illumination came
through the windows to see.
Voices shouted in the distance.
A loud clang rang out closer at hand.
All eyes turned.
The door to the chamber had slammed
closed. Gray reached for the butt of his gun, holstered under his sweater.
"Security lockdown," Ulmstrom
assured them. "Nothing to fear. Backup generators should"
Lights flickered, then ignited again.
Ulmstrom nodded. "Ah, there we go. Es tut mir leid," he apologized.
"This way."
He led them back through the security
door, but rather than heading toward the main hall, he aimed for a set of
stairs to the side. Apparently the tour was not over.
"I think you might find this next
chamber of particular interest as you'll see the Mensch rune from the Bible depicted there."
Footsteps approached down the hall, coming
fast.
Gray turned, realizing his hand still
rested on his gun. But there was no need to unholster it. Ryan hurried toward
them, a stuffed manila envelope clutched in his hand.
He joined them, slightly out of breath.
His eyes darted a bit, plainly spooked by the brief blackout. "Ich glaube
" He cleared his
throat. "I have all the paperwork, including the letter to my great-aunt
Tola."
Monk took the envelope. "Now we can
get our butts out of here."
Maybe they should. Gray glanced to Dr.
Ulmstrom. He stood at the head of stairs leading down.
The curator stepped toward them. "If
you're in a hurry
"
"No, bitte. What were you saying about the Mensch rune?" It would be foolish
to leave without exploring this fully.
Ulmstrom lifted an arm and motioned toward
the stairs. "Below lies the only chamber in the
entire castle where the Mensch rune
can be found. Of course, the rune's presence only makes sense
considering
"
"Considering what?"
Ulmstrom sighed, checked his watch.
"Come. I'll have to make this quick anyway." He turned and strode to
the staircase and headed down.
Gray waved Fiona and Ryan to follow. Monk
rolled his eyes at Gray as he passed. "Spooky castle
time to go
"
Gray understood Monk's itchiness to
leave. He felt it, too. First the false alarm with the Mercedes, then the
blackout. But nothing untoward had happened. And Gray hated to pass up a chance
to learn more about the Bible's rune and its history here.
Ulmstrom's voice carried up to Gray. The
others had reached the landing below. "This chamber lies immediately below
the Obergruppenführersaal."
Gray joined them while the curator
unlocked a matching door to the one above, also barred and sealed with thick
glass. He held it open for them, then stepped in after them.
Beyond lay another circular chamber. This
one windowless, lit gloomily by a few wall sconces. Twelve granite columns
circled the space, holding up a domed roof. In the center of the ceiling, a
twisted swastika symbol had been painted.
"This is the castle's crypt,"
Ulmstrom said. "Note the well in the center of the room. It is where the
coat of arms of fallen SS officers would be burned ceremonially."
Gray had already spotted the stone well,
directly below the swastika in the ceiling.
"If you stand near the well, and
look at the walls, you'll see the Mensch runes depicted here."
Gray stepped closer and followed his
directions. At the cardinal points, the runes had been engraved in the stone
walls. Now Gray understood Ulmstrom's remark. The rune's presence only makes sense considering
The Mensch
runes were all upside down.
Toten-runes.
Death runes.
A loud clang, a match to the one a moment
ago, resounded across the chamber. Only this time there had been no blackout.
Gray swung around, realizing his mistake. Curiosity had lessened his guard. Dr.
Ulmstrom had never moved far from the door.
The curator now stood outside it,
clicking the lock.
He called through the thick glass,
doubtless bulletproof. "Now you'll understand the true meaning of the toten-rune."
A loud pop sounded next. All the lamps
went dark. With no windows, the chamber sank into complete darkness.
In the shocked silence, a new sound
intruded: a fierce hissing.
But it came from no snake or serpent.
Gray tasted it on the back of his tongue.
Gas.
1:49 p.m.
The trio
of helicopters fanned out for an attack run.
Painter studied the approach of the
choppers through a set of binoculars. He had unbelted and crawled into the
copilot seat. He recognized the enemy crafts: Eurocopter Tigers, medium-weight,
outfitted with air-to-air gun pods and missiles.
"Do you have any weapons equipped on
the helo?" Painter asked Gunther.
He shook his head. "Nein."
Gunther worked the rudder pedals to bring
them around, swinging away from their adversaries. Pitching the helo forward,
he accelerated away. It was their only real countermeasure: speed.
The A-Star, lighter and unburdened of
armaments, was quicker and more maneuverable. But even that advantage had its
limitations.
Painter knew the direction in which
Gunther was headed now, forced by the others. Painter had thoroughly studied
the region's terrain maps. The Chinese border lay only thirty miles away.
If the attack choppers didn't eliminate
them, invading Chinese airspace would. And with the current tensions between
the Nepalese government and the Maoist rebels, the border was closely watched.
They were literally between a rock and a hard place.
Anna yelled from the backseat, head
craned to watch their rear. "Missile launch!"
Even before her warning ended, a
screaming streak of smoke and fire shot past their port side, missing by mere
yards. The missile slammed into the ice-encrusted ridgeline ahead. Fire and
rock shot high. A large chunk of cliff broke off and slid away, like a glacier
calving.
Gunther tipped their helo on its side and
sped clear of the rain of debris.
He darted their craft down and raced
between two ridges of rock. They were temporarily out of the direct line of
fire.
"If we put down," Anna said.
"Fast. Flee on foot."
Painter shook his head, shouting to be
heard above the engine. "I know these Tigers. They have infrared. Our heat
signatures would just give us away. Then there'd be no escaping their guns or
rockets."
"Then what do we do?"
Painter's head still spasmed with
white-hot bursts. His vision had constricted to a laser focus.
Lisa answered, leaning forward from the
backseat, her eyes on the compass. "Everest," she said.
"What?"
She nodded to the compass. "We're
heading right toward Everest. What if we landed over there, got lost in the
mass of climbers."
Painter considered her plan. To hide in plain sight.
"The storm's backlogged the
mountain," she continued loudly. "Some two hundred people were
waiting to ascend when I left. Including some Nepalese soldiers. Might even be
more after the monastery burned down."
Lisa glanced over to Anna. Painter read
her expression. They were fighting for their lives alongside the very enemy who
had burned down that monastery. But a greater adversary threatened all. While
Anna had made brutal, unforgivable choices, this other faction had triggered
the necessity for her actions, setting in motion the chain of events that led
them all here.
And Painter knew it wouldn't stop here.
This was just the beginning, a feint meant to misdirect. Something monstrous
was afoot. Anna's words echoed in his pounding head.
We
must stop them.
Lisa finished, "With so many
satellite phones and video feeds broadcasting from Base Camp, they'd dare not
attack."
"Or so we hope," Painter said.
"If they don't back off, we'd be jeopardizing many lives."
Lisa leaned back, digesting his words.
Painter knew her brother was among those at Base Camp. She met his eyes.
"It's too important," she said,
coming to the same conclusion he had a moment ago. "We have to risk it.
Word must get out!"
Painter glanced around the cabin.
Anna said, "It will be shorter to go
over the shoulder of Everest to get
to the other side, rather than taking the longer route around." She pointed to the wall of mountain ahead of them.
"So we head for the Base Camp?"
Painter said.
They were all in agreement.
Others were not.
A helicopter roared over the ridgeline,
its skids passing directly over their rotors. The intruder seemed startled to
come across them. The Tiger twisted and climbed in a surprised pirouette.
But they'd been found.
Painter prayed the others were spread out
in a wide search pattern then again, one Tiger was enough.
Their unarmed A-Star shot out of the
trough into a wider couloir, a bowl-shaped gully full of snow and ice. No
cover. The Tiger's pilot responded quickly, plunging toward them.
Gunther throttled up the engine speed and
increased the blade pitch, attempting a full-out sprint. They might outrun the
heavier Tiger, but not its missiles.
To punctuate this, the diving Tiger
opened fire with its gun pods, spitting flames, and chewing through the snow.
"Forget outrunning the
bastard!" Painter yelled and jerked his thumb straight up. "Take the
race that way."
Gunther glanced at him, heavy brows knit
tight.
"He's heavier," Painter
explained, motioning with his hands. "We can climb to a higher elevation.
Where he can't follow."
Gunther nodded and pulled back on the
collective, turning forward motion into vertical. Like riding an express
elevator, the helo shot upward.
The Tiger was taken aback by the sudden
change of direction and took an extra moment to follow, spiraling up after
them.
Painter watched the altimeter. The world
record for elevation reached by a helicopter had been set by a stripped-down
A-Star. It had landed on the summit of Everest. They didn't need to climb that
far. The armament-heavy Tiger was already petering out as they went above the
twenty-two-thousand-foot mark, its rotors churning uselessly in the rarefied
air, making it difficult to maintain yaw and roll, confounding an attack pitch
in which to employ its missiles.
For now, their craft continued to sail
upward into safety.
But they could not stay up here forever.
What went up eventually had to come down.
And like a circling shark, the attack
helicopter waited below. All it had to do was track them. Painter spotted the
two other Tigers winging in their direction, called into the hunt, a pack
closing in on its wounded prey.
"Get above the chopper,"
Painter said, pantomiming with one palm over the other.
Gunther's frown never wavered, but he
obeyed.
Painter twisted around to Anna and Lisa.
"Both of you, look out your side windows. Let me know when that Tiger is
directly below us."
Nods answered him.
Painter turned his attention to the lever
in front of him.
"Just about there!" Lisa called
from her side.
"Now!" Anna responded a second
later.
Painter yanked on the lever. It
controlled the winch assembly on the undercarriage of the chopper. The rope and
harness had lowered Painter earlier when he'd been pursuing the assassin. But
he wasn't lowering the harness now. The emergency lever he gripped was used to
jettison the assembly if it should be jammed. He cranked it fully back and felt
the pop of the release.
Painter pressed his face to the window.
Gunther banked them around, pitching for
a better view.
The winch assembly tumbled end over end,
unreeling its harness in a wide tangled mess.
It struck the Tiger below, smashing into
its rotors. The effect was as destructive as any depth charge. The blades tore
apart, flying in all directions. The chopper itself twisted like a spun top,
flipping sideways and falling away.
With no time to spare, Painter pointed
toward their only neighbor at this elevation. The white summit of Everest rose
ahead, shrouded in clouds.
They had to reach Base Camp on its lower
slopes but below, the skies were not safe.
Two more helicopters, angry as hornets,
raced toward them.
And Painter was out of winches.
Lisa watched the other helicopters swoop
toward them, growing from gnats to hawks. It was now a race.
Pitching the chopper steeply, Gunther
dove out of the rarefied ether. He aimed for the gap between Mount Everest and
its sister peak, Mount Lhotse. A shouldered ridgeline the famous south col
connected Lhotse to Everest. They needed to get over its edge and put the
mountain between them and the others. On the far side, Base Camp lay at the
foot of the col.
If they could reach it
She pictured her brother, his goofy
smile, the cowlick at the back of his head that he was perpetually trying to
smooth down. What were they thinking, bringing this war to Base Camp, to her
brother?
In front of her, Painter was bent with
Gunther. The engine's roar ate their words. She had to place her trust in
Painter. He would not jeopardize anyone's life needlessly.
The col rose toward them. The world
expanded outward as they dove toward the mountain pass. Everest filled the
starboard side, a plume of snow blowing from its tip. Lhotse, the fourth highest
peak in the world, was a wall to the left.
Gunther steepened their angle. Lisa
clutched her seat harness. She felt like she might tumble out the front
windshield. The world ahead became a sheet of ice and snow.
A whistling scream cut through the roar.
"Missile!" Anna screamed.
Gunther yanked on the stick. The nose of
the chopper shot up and yawed to the right. The missile sailed under their
skids and streaked into the eastern ridge of the col. Fire blasted upward.
Gunther banked them clear of the eruption, dipping the nose down again.
Pressing her cheek against the side
window, Lisa glanced to the rear. The two choppers had closed the distance,
angling toward them. Then a wall of ice cut off the view.
"We're over the ridge!" Painter
yelled. "Hang tight!"
Lisa swung back around. The helicopter
plunged down the vertiginous slope of the south col. Snow and ice raced under
them. Ahead, a darker scar appeared. Base Camp.
They aimed for it, as if intending to
crash headlong into the tent city.
The camp swelled below them, growing with
each second, prayer flags flapping, individual tents discernable now.
"We're going to land hard!"
Painter yelled.
Gunther didn't slow.
Lisa found a prayer rising to her lips or
maybe a mantra. "Oh God
oh God
oh God
"
At the last moment, Gunther pulled up,
fighting the controls. Winds fought him. The helicopter continued falling,
rotors now shrieking.
The world beyond was a Tilt-A-Whirl.
Thrown about, Lisa clenched the armrests.
Then the skids slammed hard to the
ground, slightly nose down, throwing Lisa forward. The seat harness held her.
Rotor wash churned up snow in a flurried burst, but the chopper rocked back
onto its skids, level and even.
"Everybody out!" Painter yelled
as Gunther throttled down.
Hatches popped, and they tumbled out.
Painter appeared at Lisa's side, taking
her arm in his. Anna and Gunther followed. A mass of people converged toward
them. Lisa glanced up to the ridge. Smoke rose behind the col from the missile
attack. Everyone at camp must have heard it, emptying tents.
Voices in a slur of languages assaulted
them.
Lisa, half-deafened by the helicopter,
felt distant from it all.
Then one voice reached her.
"Lisa!"
She turned. A familiar shape in black
snowpants and a gray thermal shirt shoved through the crowd, elbowing and
pushing.
"Josh!"
Painter allowed her to divert the group
in his direction. Then Lisa was in her brother's arms, hugging tight. He
smelled vaguely of yaks. She had never smelled anything better.
Gunther grunted behind them. "Pass auf!"
A warning.
Cries arose around them. Attention
shifted in a spreading tide. Arms pointed.
Lisa freed herself from her brother.
A pair of attack helicopters hovered at
the top of the col, stirring the smoke from the missile impact. They hung in
place, predatory, lethal.
Go
away, Lisa prayed,
willing it with all her strength. Just go
away.
"Who are they?" a new voice
grated.
Lisa didn't need to turn to recognize
Boston Bob, a mistake from her past. His accent and perpetual whining
undercurrent identified him plainly enough. Always intrusive, he must have
followed Josh. She ignored him.
But Josh must have felt her tense when
the helicopters appeared. "Lisa
?"
She shook her head, eyes fixed to the
skies. She needed her full concentration to will them away.
But to no avail.
In unison, both helicopters tipped out of
their hovers and dove down the slope toward them. Spats of fire lit their
noses. Snow and ice blasted up in parallel lines of death, chewing down the
slope, aiming straight for Base Camp.
"No
," Lisa moaned.
Boston Bob yelled, backing away,
"What the hell did you do?"
The crowd, stunned and frozen for a
breath, suddenly erupted in screams and shouts, breaking apart and fleeing in
all directions.
Painter grabbed Lisa's other arm. He
tugged her away, hauling Josh, too. They retreated, but there was nowhere to
hide.
"A radio!" Painter yelled at
Josh. "Where's a radio?"
Her brother stared mutely at the sky.
Lisa shook her brother's arm, drawing his
eyes down. "Josh, we need to find a radio." She understood Painter's
focus. If nothing else, word of what had happened must reach the outside world.
Her brother coughed, collected himself,
and pointed. "This way
they set up an emergency communication net after
the rebel attack at the monastery." He hurried out toward a large red
tent.
Lisa noted Boston Bob kept up with them,
checking over his shoulder, sensing the authority radiating from Painter and
Gunther. Or maybe it was the assault rifle Gunther carried. The German had slammed
another grenade into the weapon's launcher. He was ready to make a last stand,
guard them while they attempted to radio out.
But before they could reach the tent,
Painter yelled, "Get down!"
He yanked Lisa to the ground. Everyone
followed his example, though Josh had to pull Boston Bob off his legs.
A strange new scream suddenly echoed off
the mountains.
Painter's gaze searched the skies.
"What?" Lisa asked.
"Wait," Painter said with a
confused frown.
Then over the shoulder of Mount Lhotse, a
pair of military jets shot into view, streaking on twin contrails. Fire flared
from under their wings.
Missiles.
Oh, no!
But the base wasn't the target. The jets
shot overhead, streaking away, booming as they passed and sailing straight up
into the ether.
The pair of attack helicopters, already
three-quarters of the way down the slope, exploded as the jets' heat-seeking
missiles crashed into them. Fiery ruins slammed into the slope, blasting snow
and flames. Debris rained, but none of it reached the camp.
Painter gained his feet, then helped Lisa
up.
The others followed.
Boston Bob shoved forward, bullying up to
Lisa. "What the hell was all that? What shit did you bring down on our
heads?"
Lisa turned away. Whatever had possessed
her back in Seattle to sleep with him? It was as if that had been a different
woman.
"Don't turn your back on me, you
bitch!"
Lisa swung around, fingers clenched but
there was no need. Painter was already there. His arm pistoned and smashed into
the man's face. Lisa had heard the term "coldcocked" but never had
witnessed it. Boston Bob fell back, stiff as a board, and crashed to the
ground. He did not get up, splayed out, nose broken, out cold.
Painter shook his hand, wincing.
Josh gaped, then grinned. "Oh, man,
I've been wanting to do that for a solid week."
Before more could be said, a sandy-haired
man stepped out of the red communication tent. He wore a military uniform. A United States military uniform. He
stepped to their group, his eyes settling on Painter.
"Director Crowe?" the man asked
in a Georgian drawl, his arm out.
Painter accepted the handshake, grimacing
at the pressure on his bruised knuckles.
"Logan Gregory sends his best
wishes, sir." The man nodded to the blasted ruins smoking on the slope.
"Better late than never,"
Painter said.
"We have him on the horn for you. If you'll follow me."
Painter accompanied the Air Force
officer, Major Brooks, into the communication tent. Lisa tried to follow with
Anna and Gunther. Major Brooks held up an arm, blocking them.
"I'll be right back," Painter
assured them. "Hold fast."
Ducking, he entered the tent. Inside
stood an array of equipment. A communication officer stepped back from a
satellite telecommunication station. Painter took his place, picking up the
receiver.
"Logan?"
The voice came through clear.
"Director Crowe, it's wonderful to hear you're okay."
"I think I have you to thank for
that."
"We got your SOS."
Painter nodded. So his message had gotten
out, sent by burst transmission from his jury-rigged amplifier back at the
castle. Luckily the GPS signal had broadcast before the overloaded amplifier
had exploded. Apparently it had been enough to track.
"It took some fast footwork to get
surveillance up and coordinate with the Royal Nepalese military," Logan
explained. "Still, it was close, too close."
Logan must have been monitoring the
entire situation via satellite, possibly from the time they'd fled the castle.
But details could wait. Painter had more important concerns.
"Logan, before I fully debrief, I
need you to get started on a search. I'm going to fax you a symbol, a
tattoo." Painter mimed writing on a pad to Major Brooks. Supplies were
brought to him. He quickly drew the symbol he had seen on the assassin's hand.
It was all they had to go on.
"Get started immediately,"
Painter continued. "See if you can find out if any terrorist organization,
political party, drug cartel, even Boy Scout troop, might be associated with
this symbol."
"I'll get right on it."
Finishing a rough approximation of the
cloverleaf tattoo, Painter passed it to the communication officer, who stepped
to a fax machine and fed the sheet into it.
While the transmission was sent, Painter
gave a thumbnail version of what happened. He was grateful Logan didn't
interrupt with too many questions.
"Did the fax arrive there yet?"
Painter asked after a few minutes.
"Just in my hands now."
"Perfect. The search
give it top priority."
A long pause followed. Dead air. Painter
thought maybe they'd lost their signal, then Logan spoke, tentative, confused.
"Sir
"
"What is it?"
"I know this symbol. Grayson Pierce
sent it to me eight hours ago."
"What?"
Logan explained about the events in
Copenhagen. Painter struggled to wrap his mind around it. With the adrenaline
from the chase dissipating, the pounding in his head confounded his attention
and focus. He fought against it, putting pieces together. The same assassins
were after Gray, Sonnekönige born
under a foreign
Painter closed his eyes. It only made his
headache worse. The attacks in Europe only further confirmed his fear that
something global was afoot. Something major was stirring, about to come to
fruition.
But what?
There was only one place to start, a
single clue. "The symbol has to be significant. We must find out who it
belongs to."
Logan spoke crisply. "I may have
that answer."
"What? Already?"
"I've had eight hours, sir."
Right. Of course. Painter shook his head. He glanced down to the pen in his
hand, then noted something odd. He turned his hand. The nail on his fourth
finger was gone, ripped away, possibly when he'd punched the asshole a moment
ago. There was no blood, just pale, dry flesh, numb and cold.
Painter understood the significance.
Time was running out.
Logan explained what he had learned.
Painter interrupted him. "Have you passed this Intel to Gray?"
"Not yet, sir. We're having trouble
reaching him at the moment."
Painter frowned, dismissing his own
health concerns. "Get word to him," he said firmly. "However you
can. Gray has no idea what he's up against."
9:50 a.m.
Light
flared in the crypt as Monk clicked on a flashlight.
Gray found his own flashlight and pulled
it free of his pack. He turned it on, pointing it up. Tiny vents ran along the
edges of the dome. A greenish gas poured forth, heavier than air, spilling in
smoky waterfalls from all the vents.
They were too high and too many to plug.
Fiona drifted closer to him. Ryan stood
on the other side of the well, arms clutched around himself, disbelieving his
eyes.
Movement drew Gray's attention back to
Monk.
He had pulled out his 9mm Glock and aimed
it at the glass door.
"No!" Gray called out.
Too late. Monk fired.
The pistol blast echoed, accompanied by a
sharp ping as the bullet ricocheted off the glass and struck one of the steel
vents with a fiery spark.
At least the gas didn't appear to be
flammable. The spark could have killed them all.
Monk seemed to realize the same.
"Bulletproof," he said sourly.
The curator affirmed this. "We had
to install extra security. Too many neo-Nazis trying to break in." The
reflection of their lights off the glass hid his position.
"Bastard," Monk mumbled.
The gas began to fill the lower spaces.
It smelled sweetly musty but tasted acrid. Not cyanide, at least. That had a
bitter almond scent.
"Keep standing," Gray said.
"Heads high. Get in the center of the room, away from the vents."
They gathered around the ceremonial pit.
Fiona's hand found his. She clasped it tightly. She lifted her other hand.
"I nicked his wallet, if that makes any difference."
Monk saw what she held. "Great. You
couldn't steal his keys?"
Ryan called out in German. "My
my
father knows we're up here! He'll call the Politzei!"
Gray had to give the young man credit. He
was trying his best.
A new voice responded, faceless behind
the reflective glass. "I'm afraid your father will not be calling anyone
ever again." The words were not spoken in threat, merely a statement.
Ryan fell back a step, as if physically
struck. His eyes flicked to Gray, then back to the door.
Gray recognized the voice. As did Fiona.
Her fingers had clenched hard in his grip. It was the tattooed buyer from the
auction house.
"There will be none of your tricks
this time," the man said. "No escape."
Gray's head began to feel woozy. His body
grew lighter, growing weightless. He shook his head to clear the cobwebs. The
man was correct. There would be no escape. But that didn't mean they were
defenseless.
Knowledge was power.
Gray turned to Monk. "Get your
lighter out of your pack," he ordered.
As Monk obeyed, Gray dropped his own
backpack and yanked out his notebook. He threw it into the pit.
"Monk, toss in Ryan's copies."
Gray held out his hand. "Fiona, the Bible, please."
They both obeyed.
"Light the pit," Gray said.
Monk flicked his lighter and ignited one
of Ryan's recently copied sheets. He dropped it into the pit. In seconds, a
smattering of flame and smoke rose, consuming all. The rising smoke even seemed
to drive back the poison momentarily
or so Gray hoped. His head swam
drunkenly.
Beyond the doors, voices murmured, too
low to make out.
Gray held up the Darwin Bible. "Only
we know what secret is hidden in this Bible!" he called out.
The white-blond assassin, still faceless
behind the glass, answered, vaguely amused. "Dr. Ulmstrom discerned all we
needed to know. The Mensch
rune. The Bible is worthless to us now."
"Is it?" Gray held the book up,
shining his light on it. "We only showed Ulmstrom what Hugo Hirszfeld
wrote on the back pasteboard of the
Bible. But not what was scrawled on the front!"
A moment of silence, then voices again
drew back into furtive murmurs. Gray thought he heard a woman's voice, perhaps
the blond man's pale twin.
A clear nein arose in Ulmstrom's voice, defensive.
Fiona stumbled next to him, her knees
giving way. Monk caught her, holding her head above the rising pool of
poisonous gas. But even he wobbled on his feet.
Gray could wait no longer.
He clicked off his flashlight for
dramatic effect and dropped the Bible into the fire pit. He was still Roman
Catholic enough to feel a twinge of misgiving, burning a Bible. The old pages
took to flame immediately, flaring up to their knees. A fresh curl of smoke
plumed upward.
Gray took a deep breath, putting as much
conviction as possible in his voice, needing to sell it. "If we die, so
does the secret of the Darwin Bible!"
He waited, praying his ruse would work.
One second
two
The gas rose under them. Each breath
gagged now.
Ryan suddenly collapsed, as if someone
had cut the strings holding him up. Monk reached for his arm but went down on a
knee, burdened by Fiona. He never rose again. He slumped, cradling Fiona with
him.
Gray stared toward the black door.
Monk's flashlight rolled from his limp fingers, spinning. Was anyone even out
there? Had anyone believed him?
He would never know.
As the world drowned from sight, Gray
fell back into darkness.
5:50 p.m.
HLUHLUWE-UMFOLOZI
PRESERVE
Thousands
of miles away, another man woke.
The world returned in a miasma of pain
and color. His eyes flickered open to something fluttering over his face, the
wings of a bird. His ears filled with a chanting.
"He wakes," another said in
Zulu.
"Khamisi
" This time a woman's
voice.
It took a moment for the waking man to
reconnect the name to himself. It fit uneasily. A groan reached his ears. In
his own voice.
"Help him sit up," the woman
said. She also spoke Zulu, but her accent was British, familiar.
Khamisi felt himself tugged up into a
weak slouch, propped by pillows. His sight stabilized. The room, a mud brick
hut, was dark, but painful lances of light pierced around shaded windows and
the edges of a rug shielding the hut's door. The roof was decorated with
colorful gourds, twists of hides, and strings of feathers. The odor of the room
cloyed with strange scents. Something was snapped under his nose. It reeked of
ammonia and shoved his head back.
He flailed out a bit. He saw his right
arm trailed an IV line, attached to a hanging bag of yellowish fluid. His arms
were caught.
On one side, the bare-chested shaman
wearing a crown of feathers held his shoulder steady. He had been the one
chanting and waving a desiccated vulture wing over his face, to ward away
death's scavengers.
On the other, Dr. Paula Kane held his
arm, placing it back down on the blanket. He was naked beneath it. Sweat had
soaked the cloth to his skin.
"Where
what
?" his voice
croaked.
"Water," Paula ordered.
The third person in the room obeyed, a
crooked-backed elder of the Zulu. He passed a dented canteen.
"Can you hold it?" Paula asked.
Khamisi nodded, strength feebly
returning. He took the canteen and sipped the tepid water, loosening his pasty
tongue and his memories. The elder who brought the canteen
he had been in
Khamisi's house.
His heart suddenly beat faster. His other
hand, trailing the IV line, rose to his neck. A bandage lay there. He
remembered it all. The fanged dart. The black mamba. The staged snake attack.
"What happened?"
The old man filled in the blank spaces.
Khamisi recognized him as the elder who had first reported seeing an ukufa in the park five months ago. Back
then, his claims had been dismissed, even by Khamisi.
"I heard what happened to Missus
Doctor." He nodded to Paula in sympathy and sorrow. "And I heard what
you say you saw. People talk. I come by your home, to speak to you. But you not
home. So I wait. Others come, so I hide. They chop a snake. Mamba. Bad magic. I
stay hiding."
Khamisi closed his eyes, remembering. He
had then come home, been darted, left for dead. But his attackers hadn't known
about the man hiding in the back.
"I come out," the elder
continued. "I call others. In secret, we take you away."
Paula Kane finished the story. "We
brought you here," she said. "The poison almost killed you, but
medicine both modern and ancient saved you. It was a close call."
Khamisi glanced from the IV bottle to the
shaman.
"Thank you."
"Do you feel strong enough to
walk?" Paula asked. "You should get your limbs moving. The poison
hits the circulatory system like a load of bricks."
Assisted by the shaman, Khamisi stood up,
modestly keeping his soaked blanket around his waist. He was walked to the
door. While taking his first steps he felt as weak as a babe, but a frail
strength quickly suffused his limbs.
The rug over the door was pulled back.
Light and the day's heat flowed inside,
blinding and blistering.
Midafternoon, he guessed. The sun sank in
the west.
Shielding his eyes, he stepped out.
He recognized the tiny Zulu village. It
stood at the edge of the Hluhluwe-Umfolozi reserve. Not far from where they'd
found the rhino, where Dr. Fairfield had been attacked.
Khamisi glanced at Paula Kane. She stood
with her arms crossed, her face exhausted.
"It was the head warden,"
Khamisi said. He had no doubts. "He wanted to silence me."
"About how Marcia died. What you
saw."
He nodded.
"What did you?"
Her words were cut off as a twin-engine
helicopter sped past overhead, low and loud. Rotor wash thrashed bushes and
tree limbs. Rugs flapped from doorways, as if trying to wave away the
interloper.
The heavy aircraft raced away, passing
low over the savanna.
Khamisi watched it. It was no tourist
junket.
Beside him, Paula had raised a pair of
Bushnell binoculars, following the aircraft. It drifted farther away, then
settled for a landing. Khamisi stepped out farther to watch.
Paula passed him the binoculars.
"There've been flights in and out of there all day."
Khamisi lifted the glasses. The world
magnified and zoomed. He saw the twin-engine drop behind a barrier of
ten-foot-high black fencing. It marked the boundary of the Waalenberg private
estate. The helicopter vanished behind it.
"Something has them all stirred
up," Paula said.
The tiny hairs on the back of Khamisi's
neck quivered.
He twisted the focus, fixing more sharply
on the fencing. The old main gates, rarely used, stood closed. He recognized
the old family crest, done in silver filigree across the gates. The Waalenberg Crown and Cross.
12:33 a.m.
AIRBORNE
OVER THE
Captain
Bryant and I will do our best to investigate the Waalenbergs here in
Painter wore an earpiece that dangled a
microphone. He needed his hands free as he sifted through the mountain of
paperwork that Logan had faxed to their staging area in Kathmandu. It contained
everything about the Waalenbergs: family history, financial reports,
international ties, even gossip and innuendo.
On top of the pile rested a grainy
photograph: a man and a woman climbing out of a limousine. Gray Pierce had
taken the picture from a hotel suite across the street, prior to the start of
an auction. The digital surveillance had confirmed Logan's assessment. The
tattoo was tied to the Waalenberg clan. The two in the photo were Isaak and
Ischke Waalenberg, twins, the youngest heirs to the family fortune, a fortune
that rivaled most countries' gross national product.
But more importantly, Painter recognized
the wan complexions and white hair. The pair were more than heirs. They were Sonnekönige. Like Gunther, like the
assassin back at the mountain castle.
Painter glanced to the front of the
Gulfstream's cabin.
Gunther slept, sprawled across a sofa,
legs dangling over the end. His sister, Anna, sat in a nearby chair, facing a
pile of research as daunting as Painter's. The two were guarded over by Major
Brooks and a pair of armed U.S. Rangers. Roles were now reversed. The captors
had become the prisoners. But despite the shift in power, nothing had really
changed between them. Anna needed Painter's connections and logistical support;
Painter needed Anna's knowledge of the Bell and the science behind it. As Anna
had stated earlier, "Once this is over, then we'll settle matters of
legality and responsibility."
Logan cut into his reverie. "Kat and
I have an appointment set for the morning with the South African embassy. We'll
see if they can't help shed some light on this reclusive family."
And reclusive
was putting it mildly. The Waalenbergs were the Kennedys
of South Africa: rich, ruthless, with their own estate the size of
Painter picked up the grainy digital
photo.
A family of Sonnekönige.
As time ran short, there could be only one
place a second Bell could be hidden. Somewhere on that estate.
"A British operative will meet you
when you touch down in Johannesburg. MI5 has had their eye on the Waalenbergs
for years tracking unusual transactions but they've been unable to penetrate
their wall of privacy and secrecy."
Not surprising, since the Waalenbergs
practically own the country, Painter thought.
"They'll offer ground support and
local expertise," Logan finished. "I'll have more details by the time
you touch down in three hours."
"Very good." Painter stared at
the picture. "And what about Gray and Monk?"
"They've dropped off the map. We
found their car parked at the airport in Frankfurt."
Frankfurt? That made no sense. The city
was a major international airline hub, but Gray already had access to a
government jet, faster than any commercial airline. "And no word at
all?"
"No, sir. We're listening on all
channels."
The news was definitely disconcerting.
Rubbing at a needling headache that even
codeine couldn't touch, Painter concentrated on the drone of the plane as it
sailed through the dark skies. What had happened to Gray? The options were few:
he'd gone into hiding, been captured, or killed. Where was he?
"Turn over every stone, Logan."
"It's under way. Hopefully by the
time you reach Johannesburg, I'll have more news on that matter, too."
"Do you ever sleep, Logan?"
"There's a Starbucks on the corner,
sir. Make that every corner." A
tired amusement flavored his words. "But what about you, sir?"
He had taken a power nap back in
Kathmandu while all the preparations had been made and fires put out
literally and politically in Nepal. They had been delayed too long in
Kathmandu.
"I'm holding up fine, Logan. No
worries."
Right.
As Painter signed off, his thumb rubbed
absently over the pale pebbly flesh that was the nail bed to his fourth finger.
All his other fingers tingled and now his toes. Logan had attempted to
convince him to fly back to Washington, have tests run at
But first they needed another Bell.
And more information.
A voice behind his shoulder startled him.
"I think we should talk to Anna," Lisa said, as if reading his mind.
Painter turned. He thought Lisa had been
asleep in back. She had cleaned up, showered, and now leaned against his seat
back, dressed in khaki slacks and a cream-colored blouse.
Her eyes searched his face, clinical,
judging. "You look like crap," she said.
"Such a good bedside manner,"
he said, standing and stretching.
The plane tilted and darkened. Lisa
grabbed his elbow, steadying him. The world brightened and stabilized. It hadn't
been the plane, just his head.
"Promise me you'll get some more
sleep before we land," she said, squeezing his elbow in a demanding pinch.
"If there's time
owww!"
She had a grip like iron.
"Okay, I promise," he relented.
Her grip relaxed. She nodded to Anna. The
woman was hunched over a stack of invoices, going over bills of lading for the
Waalenberg estate. She was looking for any telltale signs that the Waalenbergs
had been bringing in supplies consistent with the operation of a functioning
Bell.
"I want to know more about how that
Bell works," Lisa said. "The fundamental theories behind it. If the
disease causes quantum damage, we must understand how and why. She and Gunther
are the only survivors from Granitschloß.
I doubt Gunther has been instructed on the finer points of the
Painter nodded. "More guard dog than
scientist."
As if confirming this, a loud snore
rumbled from the man.
"All the remaining knowledge of the
Bell is in Anna's head. If her mind should go
"
They'd
lose it all.
"We need to secure the information
before that happens," Painter agreed.
Lisa's eyes met his. She did not hide her
thoughts. They were plain on her face. He remembered her climbing on board the
plane in Kathmandu. Exhausted, frayed to a ragged edge, she had not hesitated
to come along. She understood. Like now.
It wasn't just Anna's mind and memory
that were at risk.
Painter was also in danger.
Only one person had been following this
trail from the beginning, one person with the medical and scientific mind to
follow it all, a mind free of impending dementia. Back at the castle, Lisa and
Anna had shared long conversations alone. Also on her own, Lisa had explored
the depths of Anna's research library. Who knew what tiny fact might prove to
be the critical one, the difference between success and failure?
Lisa had understood.
It had taken no discussion in Kathmandu.
She had simply climbed on board.
Lisa's hand slipped from his elbow and
slid to his hand. She gave his fingers a squeeze and nodded to Anna. "Let's
go pick her brain."
"To understand how the
Lisa studied the German woman. Her pupils
were dilated from the codeine. She was taking too much. Anna's fingers shook
with fine tremors. She clutched her reading glasses in both hands, as if they
were an anchor. They had retreated to the back of the jet. Gunther still slept
under guard in the front.
"I don't think we have time for the
full Ph.D. program," Painter said.
"Naturlich. Only three principles need to be understood." Anna let
go of her glasses long enough to hold up one finger. "First, we must
understand that once matter is broken down to the subatomic level the world
of electrons, protons, and neutrons then the classical laws of the universe
begin to erode. Max Planck discovered that electrons, protons, and neutrons act
as both particles and waves. Which seems strange and contradictory. Particles
have distinct orbits and paths, while waves are more diffuse, less distinct,
lacking any specific coordinates."
"And these subatomic particles act
like both?" Lisa asked.
"They have the potential to be either a wave or a particle," Anna said.
"Which brings us to our next point. The Heisenberg Uncertainty
Principle."
Lisa was already familiar with it and had
read further about it back in Anna's laboratory. "Heisenberg basically
states that nothing is certain until it is observed," she said. "But
I don't understand what that has to do with electrons, protons, and neutrons."
"The best example of Heisenberg's
principle is Schrödinger's cat," Anna responded. "Put a cat in a
sealed box hooked to a device that may or may not poison the cat at any moment.
Purely random odds. Dead or alive. Heisenberg tells us that in that situation,
with the box closed, that the cat is potentially
both dead and alive. Only once
someone opens the box and looks inside does reality choose one state or the
other. Dead or
alive."
"Sounds more philosophical than
scientific," Lisa said.
"Perhaps when you're talking about a
cat. But it has been proven true at the subatomic level."
"Proven? How?" Painter asked.
He had sat quietly up until now, letting Lisa direct the questioning. She
sensed he knew much of this already but wanted Lisa to get all the information
she needed.
"In the classic double-slit
test," Anna said. "Which brings us to point number
three." She picked up two pieces of paper and drew two slits on one
and held them up on end, one behind the other.
"What I'm about to tell you is going to seem strange and against common sense
Suppose
this piece of paper were a concrete wall and the slits were two windows. If you
took a gun and sprayed bullets at both slits, you'd get a certain pattern on
the wall on the far side. Like this."
She took the second piece of paper and
punched dots on it.
"Call this Diffraction Pattern A.
The way bullets or particles would pass through these slits."
Lisa nodded. "Okay."
"Next, instead of bullets, let's
shine a big spotlight on the wall, with light passing through both slits.
Because light travels in waves, we would get a different pattern on the far
wall."
She shaded a pattern of light and dark
bands across a new piece of paper.
"This patterning is caused by the
light waves passing through the right and left windows interfering with each
other. So let's call this Interference Pattern B
what is caused by
waves."
"Got it," Lisa said, not sure
where this was going.
Anna held up the two patterns. "Now
take an electron gun and shoot a single line of electrons at the double slits.
What pattern would you get?"
"Since you're shooting electrons
like bullets, I'd guess Diffraction Pattern A." Lisa pointed to the first
picture.
"Actually, in laboratory tests you
get the second. Interference Pattern B."
Lisa thought about this. "The wave
pattern. So then the electrons must be shooting out of the gun not like
bullets but like light out of a
flashlight, traveling in waves and creating Pattern B."
"Correct."
"So electrons move like waves."
"Yes. But only when no one actually witnesses the electrons passing
through the slits."
"I don't understand."
"In another experiment, scientists
placed a little clicker at one of the slits. It beeped whenever it sensed an
electron passing through the slit, measuring or observing the passage of an
electron past the detector. What was the pattern on the other side when the
device was turned on?"
"It shouldn't change, should
it?"
"In the larger world, you're
correct. But not at
the subatomic world. Once the device was switched on, it immediately changed
into Diffraction Pattern A."
"So the simple act of measuring
changed the pattern?"
"Just as Heisenberg predicted.
Though it may seem impossible, it's true. Verified over and over again.
Electrons exist in a constant state of both wave and particle until something
measures the electron. That very act of measuring the electron forces it to collapse into one reality
or the other."
Lisa tried to picture a subatomic world
where everything was held in a constant state of potential. It made no sense.
"If subatomic particles make up
atoms," Lisa asked, "and atoms make up the world we know, touch, and
feel, where is the line between the phantom world of quantum mechanics and our
world of real objects?"
"Again, the only way to collapse potential is to have something
measure it. Such measuring tools are constantly present in the environment. It
can be one particle bumping into another, a photon of light hitting something.
Constantly the environment is measuring
the subatomic world, collapsing potential into hard reality. Look at your
hands, for example. At the quantum level, the subatomic particles that make up
your atoms operate according to fuzzy quantum rules, but expand outward, into
the world of billions of atoms that make up your fingernail. Those atoms are bumping,
jostling, and interacting measuring one another forcing potential into one
fixed reality."
"Okay
"
Anna must have heard the skepticism in
her voice.
"I know it's bizarre, but I've
barely scratched the surface of the fuzzy world of quantum theory. I'm skipping
over such concepts as nonlocality, time tunneling, and multiple
universes."
Painter nodded. "Gets pretty weird
out there."
"But all you need to understand are
those three points," Anna said, ticking them off on her fingers.
"Subatomic particles exist in a quantum state of potential. It takes a
measuring tool to collapse that potential. And it is the environment that
constantly performs those measurements to fix our reality."
Lisa lifted her hand, acquiescing for the
moment. "But what does that have to do with the
"Exactly," Anna said.
"What is DNA? Nothing but a protein machine, ja? Producing all the basic building blocks of cells, of
bodies."
"At its simplest."
"Then go even simpler. Is DNA not
merely genetic codes locked in chemical bonds? And what breaks these bonds,
turning genes on and off?"
Lisa switched back to basic chemistry. "The movement of electrons and protons."
"And these subatomic particles obey
which rules: the classical or the quantum?"
"The quantum."
"So if a proton could be in two
places A or B turning a gene on or off which place would it be
found?"
Lisa squinted. "If it has the
potential to be in both places, then it is
in both places. The gene is both on and
off. Until something measures it."
"And what measures it?"
"The environment."
"And the environment of a gene
is
?"
Lisa's eyes slowly widened. "The DNA
molecule itself."
A nod and a smile. "At its most
fundamental level, the living cell acts as its own quantum-measuring device.
And it is this constant cellular measurement that is the true engine of
evolution. It explains how mutations are not
random. Why evolution occurs at a pace faster than attributable by random chance."
"Wait," Lisa said. "You'll
have to back that one up."
"Consider an example, then. Remember
those bacteria that could not digest lactose how when they were starved,
offered only lactose, they mutated at a miraculous pace to develop an enzyme
that could digest lactose. Against astronomical odds." Anna lifted an
eyebrow. "Can you explain it now? Using the three quantum principles?
Especially if I tell you that the beneficial mutation required only a single
proton to move from one place to another."
Lisa was willing to try. "Okay, if
the proton could be in both places, then quantum theory says the proton was in both places. So the gene was both
mutated and not mutated. Held in the
potential between both."
Anna nodded. "Go on."
"Then the cell, acting as a
quantum-measuring tool, would force the DNA to collapse on one side of the
fence or the other. To mutate or not to mutate. And because the cell is living
and influenced by its environment, it tilted the scale, defying randomness to
produce the beneficial mutation."
"What scientists now call adaptive
mutation. The environment influenced the cell, the cell influenced the DNA, and
the mutation occurred that benefited the cell. All driven by the mechanics of
the quantum world."
Lisa began to conceive an inkling of
where this was heading. Anna had used the term "intelligent design"
in their previous discussion. The woman had even answered the question of who
she thought was behind that intelligence.
Us.
Lisa now understood. It is our own cells that are directing evolution,
responding to the environment and collapsing potential in DNA to better fit
that environment. Darwinian natural selection then kicked in to preserve these
modifications.
"But even more importantly,"
Anna said, her voice beginning to catch and rasp a
bit, "quantum mechanics explains how life's first spark started. Remember the improbability of that first
replicating protein forming out of the primordial soup? In the quantum world,
randomness is taken out of the equation. The first replicating protein formed
because it was order out of chaos. Its ability to measure and collapse quantum
potential superseded the randomness of merely bumping and jostling that had
been going on in the primordial soup. Life started because it was a better quantum-measuring tool."
"And God had nothing to do with
it?" Lisa said, repeating a question Anna had first asked her
what seemed
like decades ago.
Anna lifted a palm to her forehead,
fingers shaking. Her eyes tweaked. She stared out the window with a pained
expression. Her voice was almost too soft to hear. "I didn't say that
either
you're looking at it the wrong way, in the wrong direction."
Lisa let that drop. She recognized that
Anna was growing too exhausted to continue. They all needed more sleep. But
there was one question that had to be asked.
"The Bell?" Lisa asked.
"What does it do?"
Anna lowered her hand and stared first at
Painter, then at Lisa. "The
Lisa held her breath, considering what
Anna was saying.
Something fiery shone through Anna's
exhaustion. It was difficult to read: pride, justification, faith
but also a
fair amount of fear.
"The
"And what about us?" Painter
said, stirring. From his expression, he was plainly unmoved by her ardor.
"You and me? How is what is happening to us perfection?"
The fire died in Anna's eyes, quenched by
exhaustion and defeat. "Because as much as the Bell holds the potential to
evolve, the reverse also lurks within its quantum waves."
"The reverse?"
"The disease that's inflicted our
cells." Anna glanced away. "It's not just degeneration
it's devolution."
Painter stared at her, stunned.
Her words dropped to a hoarse whisper.
"Our bodies are heading back to the primordial ooze from which we
came."
5:05 a.m.
The
monkeys woke him.
Monkeys?
The strangeness shocked him, snapping him
from a groggy somnolence to an instant alertness. Gray
shoved up. Memory crackled up next as he tried to comprehend his surroundings.
He was alive.
In a cell.
He remembered the flow of gas, the
Wewelsburg museum, the lie. He had burned the Darwin Bible, claiming it contained
a secret only his group knew about. He had hoped caution would outweigh
revenge. Apparently it had. He was alive. But where were the others? Monk,
Fiona, and Ryan?
Gray searched his cell. It was
utilitarian. A cot, a toilet, an open shower stall. No windows. The door was
inch-thick bars. It opened into a hallway lit by overhead fluorescent lighting.
Gray took a moment to inspect himself. Someone had stripped him naked, but a
neat pile of clothes had been folded atop a chair bolted to the foot of the bed.
He tossed aside the blanket and stood up.
The world tilted, but a few breaths steadied it. An edge of nausea continued.
His lungs felt coarse and heavy. The after-effects of the
poisoning.
Gray also noted a deep ache in his thigh.
He fingered a fist-size bruise on his flank. He felt some scabbed needle
pricks. There was also a Band-Aid stuck to the back of his left hand. From an
IV? Apparently someone had treated him, saving his life.
Distantly he heard another spat of howls
and screamed calls.
Wild monkeys.
It wasn't a caged sound.
More like the natural world awakening.
But what world? The air smelled drier,
warmer, scented muskier. He was in a much more temperate climate. Maybe
somewhere in Africa. How long had he been out? They had left him no wristwatch
to check the time of day, let alone which
day it was. But he sensed no more than a day had passed. The thickening of
stubble on his chin belied any long nap.
He stepped to the doorway and reached for
the piled clothes.
His motion drew someone's attention.
Directly across the hall, Monk stepped to
the barred door on the far cell. Gray felt a surge of relief at finding his
partner alive. "Thank God
," he whispered.
"You okay?"
"Groggy
wearing
off though."
Monk was already dressed, wearing the
same white jumpsuit that had been left for him. Gray climbed into his.
Monk lifted up his left arm, baring his
stumped wrist and the titanium bio-contact implants that normally linked Monk's
prosthesis to his arm. "Bastards even took my goddamn hand."
Monk's missing prosthesis was the least
of their worries. In fact, it might be to their advantage. But first things
first
"Fiona and Ryan?"
"No clue. They may be in another
cell here
or somewhere else entirely."
Or
dead, Gray added
silently.
"What now, boss?" Monk asked.
"Not much choice. We wait for our
captors to make the first move. They want the information we have. We'll see
what we can buy with that knowledge."
Monk nodded. He knew Gray had been
bluffing back at the castle, but the ruse had to be maintained. The cellblock
was likely under surveillance.
Proving this, a door clanged open at the
end of the hall.
Many footsteps approached. A group.
They came into view: a troop of guards
dressed in green and black camouflage uniforms, led by the tall, pale blond man,
the buyer from the auction. He was dapperly fashioned as usual: in black twill
pants and pressed linen shirt, with white leather loafers and a white cashmere
cardigan. He looked like he was dressed for a garden party.
Ten guards accompanied him. They split
into two groups, crossing to each cell. Gray and Monk were marched out,
barefoot, with their arms secured in plastic ties behind their backs.
The leader stepped in front of them.
His blue eyes were ice upon Gray.
"Good morning," he said stiffly
and a bit staged, as if he were sensitive to the cameras in the halls, knew he
was being watched. "My grandfather requests an audience with you."
Despite the civility, a black anger
etched each word, an unspoken promise of pain. The man had been denied his kill
before and now merely bided his time. Still, what was the real source of his
fury? His brother's death
or the fact that Gray had outfoxed
him at the castle? Either way, behind all the cultured dress and
mannerisms lurked something feral.
"This way," he said and turned
away.
He again led the group down the hall,
Gray and Monk in tow. As they proceeded, Gray searched the cells to either
side. Empty. No sign of Fiona or Ryan. Were they still alive?
The hall ended at three steps that led up
to a massive steel exterior door.
It stood open, guarded.
Gray stepped out of the sterile cellblock
and into a dark and verdant wonderland. A jungle canopy climbed high all
around, trailing thorny vines and flowering orchids. The dense leafy foliage
hid the sky. Still Gray knew it must be very early in the morning, well before
sunrise. Ahead, black Victorian-era iron lampposts marked paths that trailed
off into a wild jungle. Birds twittered and squawked. Insects droned. Farther
up in the canopy, a single hidden monkey announced them with a staccato,
coughing call. His outburst woke a flame-feathered bird and set it to wing
through the lower branches.
"Africa," Monk mumbled under
his breath. "Sub-Saharan at least. Maybe equatorial."
Gray agreed. He estimated that it must be
the morning of the next day. He'd lost eighteen to twenty hours. That could put
them anywhere in Africa.
But where?
The guards escorted them along a gravel
pathway. Gray heard the soft measured step of something large pushing through
the undergrowth a few yards off the trail. But even so close, its shape could
not be discerned. The forest offered plenty of cover if they could make a run
for it.
But the chance never arose. The path
ended after only fifty yards. A few more steps and the jungle fell away around
them.
The forest opened into a stretch of
manicured and lamplit greensward, a garden of dancing
waters and flowing springs. Ponds and creeks trickled. Waterfalls burbled. A
long-horned antelope lifted its head at their appearance, froze for a
heartbeat, then took flight, bounding away into the forest cover.
The sky, clear above, twinkled with
stars, but to the east, a pale rosy glow hinted at the approach of morning,
maybe an hour off.
Closer at hand, another sight drew Gray's
eye and fully captured his attention.
Across the gardens rose a six-story
mansion of stacked fieldstone and exposed exotic woods. It reminded him of The
Ahwahnee lodge in Yosemite, but this was much more massive, Wagnerian in scope.
A woodland Versailles. It had to cover ten acres, rising in gables and tiers,
balconies and balustrades. To the left, a glass-enclosed conservatory
protruded, lit from within, blazing in the predawn darkness like a rising sun.
The wealth here was staggering.
They headed toward the manor house,
across a stone path that split the water garden and arched over a few of the
ponds and creeks. A two-meter-long snake slithered across one of the stone
bridges. It was not identifiable until it reared up and fanned open its hood.
King cobra.
The snake guarded the bridge until the
white-blond man broke off a long reed from a creekbed and shooed it away like
an unruly cat. The snake hissed, fangs bared, but it backed down and sashayed
off the planks and slid into the dark waters.
They continued on, unfazed. Gray's neck
slowly craned as they approached the manor house.
He spotted another eccentricity about the
construction. Spreading outward from the upper stories were forest-top pathways
wood-slatted suspended bridges allowing household guests to step out of the
upper-story levels and into the very jungle canopy itself. These paths were
also strung with lamps. They cast a constellation through the dark jungle. Gray
turned in a circle as he walked. They glowed all around.
"Heads up," Monk mumbled, nodding
to the left.
Up on the canopy trail, a guard marched
slowly into view, limned against one of the lamps, rifle on his shoulder. Gray
glanced to Monk. Where there was one, there must be more. An entire army could
be hidden up in the canopy. Escape seemed less and less likely.
At last they reached a set of steps that
led up to a wide porch of polished zebra wood. A woman waited, a twin to their
escort and as nattily attired. The man stepped forward and kissed each of her
cheeks.
He spoke to her in Dutch. While not
fluent with the language, Gray was familiar enough to catch the gist.
"Are the others prepared,
Ischke?" he asked.
"We just wait word from grootvader." She nodded to the
illuminated conservatory at the far end of the porch. "Then the hunt can
begin."
Gray struggled for any clue to their
meaning, but he was too much in the dark.
With a heavy sigh, the blond man turned
back to them, fingering a stray lock of hair back in place. "My
grandfather will see you in the solarium," their guide said, biting off
each word. He headed down the length of the porch toward it. "You will
speak to him civilly and with respect, or I will personally see you suffer for
every word of disrespect."
"Isaak
," the woman called to
him.
He stopped and turned. "Ja, Ischke?"
She spoke in Dutch again. "De jongen
en het meisje? Should we bring them out
now?"
A nod answered her, followed by a final
order in Dutch.
As Gray translated this last bit, he had
to be tugged to move. He glanced over a shoulder at the woman. She vanished
inside the house.
De jongen en het
meisje.
The boy and the girl.
It had to be Ryan and Fiona.
The two were still alive. Gray took some
consolation in the revelation but Isaak's last words chilled and terrified
him.
Bloody them up first.
5:18 a.m.
AIRBORNE
OVER
Painter
sat with a pen in hand. The only noise in the plane was the occasional snore
from Gunther. The man seemed oblivious to the danger into which they were
flying. Then again, Gunther did not have the same time constraints as Anna and
Painter. Though all three were headed toward the same place devolution Anna and Painter were in
the fast lane.
Unable to sleep, Painter had used the
time to review the history of the Waalenberg clan, gaining as much Intel on the
family as possible.
To know your enemy.
The Waalenbergs had first reached Africa
by way of Algiers in 1617. They proudly traced their family history back to the
infamous Barbary pirates along the North African coast. The first Waalenberg
was a quartermaster for the famous pirate Sleyman Reis De Veenboer, who
operated an entire Dutch fleet of corsairs and galleys out of Algiers.
Eventually, rich upon spoils from the
slave trade, the Waalenbergs had moved south, settling into the large Dutch
colony at the Cape of Good Hope. But their piracy didn't end there. It just
went aground. They gained a powerful stranglehold on the immigrant Dutch
population, so that when gold was discovered in the lands they settled, the
Waalenbergs profited the most. And the gold found was not a small amount. The
Witwatersrand Reef, a low mountain range near Johannesburg, was the source of
forty percent of all the world's gold. Though not as ostentatious as the famous
diamond mines of the De Beerses, the gold of the "Reef" was still one
of the world's most valuable storehouses of wealth.
It was upon such wealth that the family
set up a dynasty that transcended the First and Second Boer Wars, and all the
political machinations that became South Africa today. They were one of the
richest families on the planet though for the past generations, the
Waalenbergs had grown ever more reclusive, especially under the auspices of
their current patriarch, Sir Baldric Waalenberg. And as they disappeared from
the public's eye, rumors grew around the family: of atrocities, perversions,
drug addictions, inbreeding. Yet still the Waalenbergs grew richer, with stakes
in diamonds, oil, petrochemicals, pharmaceuticals. They put the multi in multinational.
Could this family truly be behind the
events at Granitschloß?
They were certainly powerful enough and
had ample resources. And the tattoo Painter had found on the blond assassin
definitely bore a resemblance to the "Cross" of the Waalenberg crest.
And then there were the twins, Isaak and Ischke Waalenberg. What was their
purpose in Europe?
So many unanswered questions.
Painter flipped a page and tapped his pen
on the Waalenberg crest.
Something about the symbol
As with the history of the Waalenbergs,
Emblematic of the sun, the symbol was
often found emblazoned on Celtic shields, earning it the name of shield knot.
Painter's hand paused.
Shield
knot.
Words filled his head, spoken by Klaus as
he died, a curse cast at them.
You
will all die! Strangled when the knot tightens!
Painter had thought Klaus had been making
a reference to a tightening noose. But what if he had been referring instead to
the symbol?
When
the knot tightens
Painter turned over a fax sheet. He sketched
while staring at the Waalenberg crest. He drew the symbol as if someone had
cinched the knot more tightly, drawing the loops together, like tying a
shoelace.
"What are you doing?" Lisa
materialized at his shoulder.
Startled again, he scooted his pen across
the paper, almost tearing it.
"Good God, woman, will you please
stop sneaking up on me like that!"
Yawning, she settled on the arm of his
chair, perching there. She patted him on the shoulder. "Such a delicate
disposition." Her hand remained there as she leaned closer. "Really.
What were you drawing?"
Painter suddenly was too conscious of her
right breast next to his cheek.
He cleared his throat and returned to his
sketch. "Just playing with the symbol we found on the assassin. Another of
my operatives saw it on a pair of Sonnekönige
in
"Or maybe the old bastard just likes
branding his offspring, like cattle. They're certainly breeding them as
such."
Painter nodded. "Then there was
something Klaus said. Something about tightening a knot. Like an unspoken
secret."
He finished the sketch with a few more
careful strokes, cinching it down. He put one beside the other. The original and the tightened.
Painter studied both drawings and
realized the implication.
Lisa must have noted the slight intake
in his breath. "What?" she asked, leaning even closer.
He pointed his pen at the second sketch.
"No wonder Klaus was swayed to their side. And possibly why the
Waalenbergs had become so reclusive these past few generations."
"I don't understand."
"We're not dealing with a new enemy
here. We're dealing with the same
one." Painter shaded the center of the cinched-down shield knot, revealing
its secret heart.
Lisa gasped. "A swastika."
Painter glanced to the slumbering giant
and his sister.
He sighed. "More Nazis."
6:04 a.m.
The
glass conservatory had to be as old as the original house. Its paned windows
were leaded and swirled, as if melted under the African sun and set into a
black iron framework that reminded Gray of a spiderweb. Condensation on the
inside of the glass blurred the view to the dark jungle outside.
After first stepping inside, Gray was
struck by the moisture. The humidity in the chamber had to be pressing the 100
percent mark. His thin cotton jumpsuit sagged against him.
But the solarium was not for his comfort.
It sheltered a wild profusion of greenery, potted and shelved, climbing in
tiers, hanging from baskets held by black chains. The air was perfumed by
hundreds of blossoms. A small fountain of bamboo and stone tinkled quietly in
the center of the room. It was a handsome garden, but Gray wondered who needed
a hothouse when you already lived in Africa.
The answer appeared ahead.
A white-haired gentleman stood on a
second tier with a tiny pair of snip scissors in one hand and tweezing forceps
in the other. With the skill of a surgeon, he leaned over a small bonsai tree
a flowering plum and clipped a tiny branch. He straightened with a satisfied
sigh.
The tree appeared ancient, twisted, and
was bound in copper wire. It hung heavy with blossoms, each one perfectly
symmetrical, balanced and in harmony.
"She is two hundred and twenty-two
years old," the old man said, admiring his handiwork. His accent was
thick, Heidi's grandfather in a waistcoat. "She was already old when given
to me by Emperor Hirohito himself in 1941."
He set down his tools and turned. He wore
a white apron over a navy suit with a red tie. He held out a hand toward his
grandson. "Isaak, te'vreden
"
The young man hurried forward and helped
the elder down from the second tier. This earned him a fatherly pat on the
shoulder. The old man shed his apron, retrieved a black cane, and leaned
heavily upon it. Gray noted the prominent crest upon the cane's silver crown. A
filigreed capital W surmounted the familiar cloverleaf symbol, the same icon
tattooed on the twins, Ischke and Isaak.
"I am Sir Baldric Waalenberg,"
the patriarch said softly, eyeing Gray and Monk. "If you'll please join me
in the salon, we have much to talk about."
Swinging around, he tapped his way toward
the back of the solarium.
The old man had to be in his late
eighties, but besides the need for a cane, he showed little debilitation. He
still had a thick mane of silver-white hair, parted in the middle, and cut a
bit rakishly to the shoulder. A pair of eyeglasses hung from a silver chain
around his neck, one lens of which was outfitted with what looked like a jeweler's
magnifying loupe.
As they crossed the slate floor, Gray
noted that the conservatory's flora consisted of organized sections: bonsai
trees and shrubs, a fern garden, and last, a section that was dense with
orchids.
The patriarch noted his attention.
"I've been breeding Phalaenopsis
for the past six decades." He paused by a tall stalk bearing midnight
purple blossoms, the hue of a ripe bruise.
"Pretty," Monk said, but his
sarcasm was plain.
Isaak glared at Monk.
The old man seemed oblivious. "Yet
still, the black orchid escapes me.
The Holy Grail of orchid breeding. I've come so very close. But under
magnification, there is either banding or more purpling than a solid
ebony."
He absently fingered the jeweler's loupe.
Gray now understood the difference between
the jungle outside and the hothouse. Nature wasn't enjoyed here. It was
something to master. Under the dome of the conservatory, nature was snipped,
strangled, and bred, its growth stunted with copper bonsai wire, its very
pollination orchestrated by hand.
At the back of the solarium, they passed
through a stained-glass door and reached a seating area of rattan and mahogany
woods, a small salon dug into the side of the main house. On the far side, a
double set of swinging doors, muffled with insulating strips, led into the
interior of the mansion.
Baldric Waalenberg settled into a
wingback chair.
Isaak crossed to a desk, complete with an
HP computer and wall-mounted LCD monitor. A blackboard stood next to it.
Prominently chalked across its surface
was a line of symbols. All of them runes, Gray saw, noting the last was the Mensch rune from the Darwin Bible.
Gray counted and memorized them
discreetly. Five symbols. Five books. Here was the complete set of Hugo
Hirszfeld's runes. But what did they mean? What secret was too beautiful to let die and too monstrous to set free?
The old man folded his hands in his lap
and nodded to Isaak.
He tapped a key, and a high-definition
image filled the LCD monitor.
A tall cage hung suspended above the
jungle floor. It was sectioned into two halves. A small figure huddled within
each side.
Gray took a step forward, but a guard
restrained him at rifle point. On the screen, one of the figures looked up,
face bright, illuminated by an overhead spotlight.
Fiona.
And in the other half of the cage, Ryan.
Fiona had her left hand bandaged, rolled
up in the hem of her shirt. The cloth was stained dark. Ryan held his right
hand tucked under his armpit, putting on pressure. Bloody them up first. The bitch
must have cut their hands. Gray prayed that was all it was. A dark fury
hollowed out his chest. His vision sharpened as his heart hammered.
"Now we will talk, ja?" the old man said with a warm
grin. "Like gentlemen."
Gray faced him, but he kept one eye on
the screen. So much for gentility. "What do you want to know?" he
asked coldly.
"The Bible. What else did you find
within its pages?"
"And you'll let them free?"
"And I want my goddamn hand
back!" Monk blurted out.
Gray glanced from Monk to the old man.
Baldric nodded to Isaak, who in turn
waved to one of the guards and barked an order in Dutch. The guard turned on a
heel and shoved through the double doors, entering the manor house's interior.
"There is no need for further
nastiness. If you cooperate, you have my word you will all be kept well."
Gray saw no advantage in holding out,
especially as he held nothing of value except lies. He shifted sideways and
displayed his bound wrists. "I'll have to show you what we found. I can't
accurately describe it. It's another symbol, like these others."
Another nod, and in a moment, Gray was
free. He rubbed his wrists and approached the blackboard. Several rifles were
dead-leveled upon him.
He had to draw something that would be
convincing, but he was not all that familiar with runes. Gray remembered
Himmler's teapot, the one back at the museum. A runic symbol had decorated the
pottery. It should be cryptic enough, convincing enough. And by throwing a
proverbial wrench in the works, it might also delay these folks from solving
the mystery here.
He picked up a piece of chalk and
sketched the symbol on the pot.
Baldric leaned forward, eyes pinched.
"A sun wheel, interesting."
Gray stood by the board, chalk in hand,
like a student awaiting a teacher's verdict on a math problem.
"And this is all you found in the
Darwin Bible?" Baldric asked.
From the corner of his eye, Gray noted a
slight smirk on Isaak's face.
Something was wrong.
Baldric waited for Gray to answer.
"Let them go first," Gray
demanded, nodding to the monitor.
The old man locked gazes with Gray.
Despite his dissembling attitude, Gray recognized a savage intelligence and a
hint of hard cruelty. The old man enjoyed all this immensely.
But finally Baldric broke their standoff,
glancing over to his grandson and nodding again.
"Wie eerst?" Isaak asked. Who first?
Gray tensed. Something was definitely
wrong.
Baldric answered in English, his eyes
again fixed on Gray, wanting to fully enjoy the entertainment. "The boy, I
think. We'll save the girl for later."
Isaak tabbed a command on the keyboard.
On the screen, the bottom of the trapdoor
fell open underneath Ryan. He silently screamed, flailing as he fell. He
crashed hard into the tall grasses below. He stood quickly, searching around,
terrified. The boy was plainly aware of a danger to which Gray was blind,
perhaps something drawn by their dripping blood.
Ischke's earlier words replayed in Gray's
head.
We
just wait word from
grootvader
Then the hunt can begin.
What hunt?
Baldric motioned to Isaak, miming turning
a knob.
Isaak tapped a key, and sound rose from
speakers. Screams and shouts echoed out.
Fiona's voice rang clear. "Run,
Ryan! Get up in a tree!"
The boy danced once more in a circle,
then ran, limping, out of the frame. Worse still, Gray heard laughter. From
guards out of camera view.
Then a new scream stretched out from the
speakers.
Feral and full of bloodlust.
The cry shivered the hairs all over
Gray's body, standing them on end.
Baldric made a slashing motion across his
neck and the audio was muted.
"It is not only orchids we breed
here, Commander Pierce," Baldric said, dropping all pretense of civility.
"You gave us your word," Gray
said.
"If you cooperated!" Baldric
stood, rising smoothly. He waved an arm dismissively to the blackboard.
"Do you think us fools? We knew all along that there was nothing else in
the Darwin Bible. We have what we need already. This was all a test, a
demonstration. We brought you here for other reasons. Other questions that need
answering."
Gray reeled from what he was hearing,
realization dawning. "The gas
"
"Only meant to incapacitate. Never
kill. Your little sham was amusing though, I'll grant you that. Now it is time
to move on."
Baldric stepped closer to the mounted
screen. "You are protective of this little one, are you not? This fiery
little slip of a girl. Zeer
goed. I will show you what awaits her in the forest."
A nod, a tapped key, and an image filled
a side window on the monitor.
Gray's eyes widened in horror.
Baldric spoke. "We wish to know more
about a certain accomplice of yours. But I wanted to be sure we are done with
games now, ja? Or do you need another
demonstration?"
Gray continued to stare at the image on
the screen, defeated. "Who? Who do you want to know about?"
Baldric stepped closer. "Your boss.
Painter Crowe."
6:19 a.m.
Lisa
watched Painter's legs tremble as they climbed the steps to the local office of
British Telecom International. They had come here to meet a UK operative who would
aid in logistical and ground support for any assault on the Waalenberg estate.
The firm was only a short taxi ride from the airport at Richards Bay, a major
port along the southern coast of South Africa. It lay only an hour's drive from
the estate.
Painter clutched the handrail, leaving a
moist handprint. She caught his elbow and assisted him up the last step.
"I've got it," he said with a
bit of a snap.
She didn't respond to his anger, knowing
it bubbled up from an internalized anxiety. He was also in a lot of pain. He'd
been popping codeine like M&M's. He limped toward the door to the telecom
firm.
Lisa had hoped the downtime on the plane
would have helped him regain some strength, but if anything, the half day spent
in the air had only advanced his debilitation
his devolution, if Anna was to be believed.
The German woman and Gunther remained at
the airport, under guard. Not that any sentry was necessary. Anna had spent the
last hour of the trip vomiting in the jet's bathroom. When they had left, Gunther
had been cradling Anna on the couch, a damp washcloth over her brow. Her left
eye had turned bloodshot and seemed painfully bruised. Lisa had given her an
antiemetic for the nausea and a shot of morphine.
Though Lisa hadn't voiced it aloud, she
estimated Anna and Painter had at best another day before they were too far
gone for any hope of a treatment.
Major Brooks, their only escort, opened
the door ahead for them. His eyes scanned the streets below, ever vigilant, but
few people were about at this early morning hour.
Painter walked stiff-limbed through the
door, struggling to hide his limp.
Lisa followed. In a few minutes, they
were ushered past the reception area, through a large gray maze of cubicles and
offices, and into a conference room.
It was empty. Its wall of windows at the
back overlooked the lagoon of Richards Bay. To the north stretched an
industrial port of cranes and container ships. To the south, divided by a
seawall, spread a section of the original lagoon, now a conservation area and
park, home to crocodiles, sharks, hippos, pelicans, cormorants, and the
ever-present flamingos.
The rising sun turned the waters below
into a fiery mirror.
As they waited, tea and scones were
brought into the room and spread out on the table. Painter had already settled
into a seat. Lisa joined him. Major Brooks remained standing, not far from the
door.
Though she didn't ask, Painter read
something in her expression. "I'm fine."
"No, you're not," she countered
softly. The empty room intimidated her for some reason.
He smiled at her, his eyes sparkling.
Despite his outward degeneration, the man himself remained sharp. She had noted
a very slight slurring to his speech, but it could just be the drugs. Would his
mind be the last to go?
Beneath the table, her hand reached for
his, a reflexive gesture.
He took it.
She didn't want him to go. The strength
of her emotion overwhelmed her, surprising her. She had barely gotten to know
him. She wanted to know more. His favorite food, what made him belly laugh, how
he danced, what he would whisper when he said good night. She didn't want it
all to go away.
Her fingers squeezed, as if her will
alone could hold him here.
At that moment, the door to the room
opened again. The UK operative had finally arrived.
Lisa turned, surprised at who walked in.
She had been picturing some
"I'm Dr. Paula Kane," she said,
nodding to Major Brooks as she entered, then stepping over to join them.
"We don't have much time to coordinate."
Painter stood over the table. An array of
satellite photos was spread out over the table. "How old are these
shots?" he asked.
"Taken at dusk last night,"
Paula Kane said.
The woman had already explained her role
here. After graduating with a Ph.D. in biology, she had been recruited by
British intelligence and posted in South Africa. She and a partner ran a series
of research projects while secretly monitoring and watching the Waalenberg
estate. They had been spying upon the family for close to a decade, until a
tragedy less than two days ago. Her partner had been killed under strange
circumstances. Lion attack was the
official explanation. But the woman had looked little convinced as she offered
this explanation.
"We did an infrared pass after
midnight," Paula continued, "but there was a glitch. We lost the
image."
Painter stared at the layout of the
massive estate, over a hundred thousand acres. A small landing strip was
visible, cut through a swath of jungle. Outbuildings dotted a landscape of
forested highlands, vast grassy savannas, and dense jungle. In the center of
the densest section of forest squatted a castle of stone and wood. The
Waalenberg main residence.
"And we can't get a better view of
the lay of the land around the mansion?"
Paula Kane shook her head. "The
jungle in the area is Afromontane forest, ancient
woodlands. Only a few such forests remain in South Africa. The Waalenbergs
picked this location for their estate both because of its remoteness and to
capture this gigantic forest for themselves. The bones of this forest are trees
forty meters high, layered into distinct strata and canopies. The biodiversity
within its bower is denser than any rain forest or Congo jungle."
"And it offers a perfect insulating
cover," Painter said.
"What goes on beneath that canopy is
known only to the Waalenbergs. But we do know the engineering of the manor
house is only the tip of an iceberg. A vast underground complex lies beneath
the estate."
"How deep?" Painter asked,
eyeing Lisa. If they were experimenting with the Bell here, they would want it
buried away.
"We don't know. Not for sure. But
the Waalenbergs made their fortune in gold mining."
"At the Witwatersrand Reef."
Paula glanced up at him. "Correct. I
see you've been doing your homework." She turned her attention back to the
satellite photos. "The same expertise at mine engineering was used to
construct a subterranean complex beneath their mansion. We know the mining
engineer, Bertrand Culbert, was consulted in the construction of the manor's foundations, but he died shortly
thereafter."
"Let me guess. Under mysterious
circumstances."
"Trampled by a water buffalo. But
his death was not the first, nor the last associated with the
Waalenbergs." Her eyes flared with pain, plainly reminded of her partner.
"Rumors abound of people vanishing in the area."
"Yet no one has served a search
warrant on the estate."
"You have to understand the
volatility of South African politics. Regimes may change, but gold has always
ruled here. The Waalenbergs are untouchable. Gold protects them better than any
moat or personal army."
"And what about you?" Painter
asked. "What's MI5's interest here?"
"Our interest goes back a
considerable way, I'm afraid. British intelligence has had their eye on the
Waalenbergs since the end of World War II."
Painter settled back down into his chair,
tiring. One of his eyes was having trouble focusing. He rubbed at it. Too
conscious of Lisa studying him, he turned his attention to Paula. He had not
voiced his discovery of the Nazi symbol buried within the center of the
Waalenberg crest, but apparently MI5 was already aware of the connection.
"We knew the Waalenbergs were major
financial backers of the Ahnenerbe Forschungs und Lehrgemeinshaft, the Nazis'
Ancestral Heritage and Teaching Society. Are you familiar with the group?"
He shook his head, triggering a spasm.
His headaches of late had spread to his neck and shot pain down his spine. He
rode the agony, teeth clenched.
"The Ancestral Heritage Society was
a research group, under Heinrich Himmler. They were conducting projects seeking
out the roots of the Aryan race. They were also responsible for some of the
most heinous atrocities committed in concentration camps and other secret
facilities. Basically they were mad scientists with guns."
Painter held back a wince but this time
it was more psychic than physical. He
had heard Sigma described in similar terms. Scientists with guns. Was that
their true enemy here? A Nazi version of Sigma?
Lisa stirred. "What was the
Waalenbergs' interest in this line of research?"
"We're not entirely sure. But there
were many Nazi sympathizers in South Africa during the war. We know the current
patriarch, Sir Baldric Waalenberg, also had interests in eugenics, and he
participated in scientific conferences in Germany and Austria before
hostilities broke out. But after the war, he disappeared into seclusion, taking
his entire family with him."
"Licking his wounds?" Painter
asked.
"We don't believe so. After the war,
Allied forces scoured the German countryside, searching for secret Nazi
technology." Paula shrugged. "Including our own British forces."
Painter nodded. He had already heard
about that pillaging and looting from Anna.
"But the Nazis were good at
spiriting away much of their technology, employing a scorched-earth policy.
Executing scientists, bombing facilities. Our forces came upon one such site in
Bavaria minutes late. We discovered a scientist, shot in the head in a ditch,
yet still alive. Before he died, he revealed some clues as to what had been
going on. Research into a new energy source, one discovered through quantum
experimentation. They'd had some breakthrough. A fuel source of extraordinary
power."
Painter shared a glance with Lisa,
remembering Anna's discussion about zero point energy.
"Whatever was discovered, the secret
was smuggled out, escaped through rat runs set up by the Nazis. Little is known
except the name of the substance and where
the trail ended."
"At the Waalenberg estate?"
Lisa guessed.
Paula nodded.
"And the name of the
substance?" Painter asked, though he already knew the answer, putting it
together in his head. "Was it called Xerum 525?"
Paula glanced to him sharply,
straightening with a frown. "How did you know?"
"The Bell's fuel source," Lisa
mumbled to him.
But to Painter, it only made sense. It
was time to come clean with Dr. Paula Kane. Painter stood.
"There's someone you need to
meet."
Anna's reaction was no less intense.
"So the secret to manufacturing Xerum 525 wasn't destroyed? Unglaublich!"
They were all gathered back at the
Lisa ran an inventory check through a
medical kit while overseeing the discussion between Painter, Anna, and Paula.
Gunther stood at Lisa's side. His brow was deeply furrowed with worry as he
watched his sister. Anna seemed steadier after the medicine Lisa had given her.
But for how long?
"While the Bell had been evacuated
to the north with your grandfather," Painter explained to Anna, "the
secrets of Xerum 525 must have been shipped south. Dividing two parts of one
experiment. At some point, word must have reached the Waalenbergs of the Bell's
survival. Baldric Waalenberg as a financial backer for the Ancestral Heritage
Society must have known about Granitschloß."
Paula agreed. "The society was the
group that backed Himmler's expeditions into the Himalayas."
"And once discovered, it would have been easy for Baldric to infiltrate spies
into Granitschloß."
Anna's face had grown paler and not
from illness. "The bastard has been using us! All along!"
Painter nodded. He had already explained
the gist of it to Lisa and Paula on the ride back to the hangar. Baldric
Waalenberg had been orchestrating everything, pulling strings from afar. Not
one to waste talent or reinvent the wheel, he had allowed the Granitschloß scientists, experts in the
Bell, to continue their research, while all the time, his spies siphoned the
information back out to Africa.
"Afterward, Baldric must have built
his own
"Which he did," Anna spat out.
"But why?" Paula asked.
"If this secret orchestration was working so well?"
Painter shrugged. "Maybe it was
because Anna's group was drifting further and further away from the Nazi ideal
of Aryan supremacy."
Anna pressed a palm against her forehead,
as if that would ward against what she was learning. "And there were
rumblings
among some of the scientists
of going mainstream,
of joining the scientific community and sharing our research."
"But I don't think it was just
that," Painter said. "Something more is afoot. Something larger. Something that suddenly made Granitschloß
obsolete."
"I believe you might be
correct," Paula said. "For the past four months, there has been a
sudden increase in activity at the estate. Something stirred them up."
"They must have come to some
breakthrough on their own," Anna said with a worried expression.
Gunther finally spoke up, gruff, a
grinding of boulders. "Genug!" He'd had enough and struggled with
English in his frustration. "The bastard has
Lisa found herself heartily agreeing,
siding with the giant. "We must find a way inside." And soon, she
added to herself.
"It would take an army to storm the
place." Painter turned to Paula. "Can we expect any help from the
South African government?"
She shook her head. "Not a chance.
The Waalenbergs have greased too many palms. We're going to have to find a more
covert infiltration."
"The satellite photos didn't help
much," Painter said.
"So we go low tech," Paula said
and led them toward the waiting Isuzu Troopers. "I have a man already on
the ground out there."
6:28 a.m.
Khamisi
lay flat on his belly. Though dawn had come, the first rays of the sun only
cast deeper shadows along the floor of the jungle. He wore camouflage fatigues
and had his large double-bore rifle, his .465 Nitro Holland & Holland
Royal, strapped to his back. In his hand, he carried a traditional Zulu short
spear, an assegai.
Behind him lay two other Zulu scouts:
Tau, the grandson of the elder who had rescued Khamisi from the attack, and his
best friend, Njongo. They also carried firearms, along with short and long
spears. They were more traditionally attired in pelts, skin daubed with paint,
and otter-skin headbands.
The trio had spent the night mapping the
forest around the mansion, discerning an approach that avoided the elevated
walkways and the guards that patrolled them. They had used game trails that
burrowed through the underbrush and skirted along with a small herd of impala,
keeping hidden in the shadows. Khamisi had stopped at several points to rig
ropes, linking walkway to ground, camouflaged as vines, along with a few other
surprises.
With his duty done, he and the scouts had
been heading out to where a stream flowed under the wildlife fencing that
circled the estate.
Then a moment ago, he had heard the feral
scream.
Hoo eeee OOOO.
It ended with a screeched yowl.
Khamisi froze. His very bones remembered
the call.
Ukufa.
Paula Kane had been right. She had
believed the creatures came from the Waalenberg estate. Whether escaped or
purposefully planted to ambush Khamisi and Marcia, she didn't know. Either way,
they were loose now, hunting.
But who?
The call had come a distance to the left.
It wasn't hunting them. The creatures
were too skilled hunters. They would not give away their presence so soon.
Something else had drawn them, stirred up their bloodlust.
Then he heard a voice shout out in
German, a sobbed cry for help.
It was closer.
His bones still vibrating from the call,
Khamisi wanted to run, to flee far and fast. It was a primal reaction.
Tau mumbled in Zulu behind him, urging
the same.
Khamisi instead turned in the direction
of the pleading cry. He had lost Marcia to the creatures. He remembered his own
terror, neck deep in the water hole, waiting for dawn. He could not ignore this
other.
Rolling to Tau, Khamisi passed on the
maps he had drawn. "Get back to camp. Get these to Dr. Kane."
"Khamisi
brother
no, come
away." Tau's eyes were huge with his own fear. His
grandfather must have told him stories of the ukufa, the myths come to life. Khamisi had to give the man and his
friend credit. No one else had volunteered to enter the estate. Superstitions
ran high.
But now faced with the reality, Tau had
no intention of remaining.
And Khamisi couldn't blame him. He
remembered his own terror when he'd been with Marcia. Instead of holding his
ground, he had fled, run, allowed the doctor to be killed.
"Go," Khamisi ordered. He
nodded toward the distant fence line. The maps had to get out.
Tau and Njongo hesitated for a breath.
Then Tau nodded, and the pair rose up in a low crouch and vanished into the
jungle. Khamisi couldn't even hear their footfalls.
The jungle had fallen into a dread
silence, heavy and as dense as the forest itself. Khamisi set out in the
direction of the cries both man and creature.
After another full minute, another yowl
burst out of the jungle like a flight of startled birds. It ended in a series
of yipping cackles. Khamisi paused, struck by something familiar in this last
eerie bit.
Before he could consider it further, a
soft sobbing drew his attention.
It came from directly ahead.
Khamisi used the muzzle of his
double-bore rifle to part some leaves. A small glade opened in the jungle
ahead, where a tree had fallen recently and cleared a part of the forest. The
hole in the canopy allowed a shaft of morning sunlight to pierce to the floor.
It made the surrounding jungle even darker with shadows.
Across the glade, movement drew his eye.
A young man no more than a boy low in a tree, struggled to reach another
branch, to climb higher. He couldn't reach. He couldn't get a grip with his
right hand. Even from here, Khamisi saw the trail of blood soaked down the
boy's sleeve as he vainly struggled.
Then the boy suddenly sank to his knees,
hugging the bole, attempting to hide.
And the reason for the boy's sudden
terror stepped into view.
Khamisi froze as the creature stalked
into the glade, under the tree. It was massive, belying its silent tread out of
the forest. It was larger than a full-grown male lion, but it was no lion. Its
shaggy fur was albino white, its eyes a hyperreflective red. Its back sloped
from thickset high shoulders to a lower rear end. Its muscled neck supported a
large, muzzled head topped by a pair of wide batlike belled ears. These
swiveled, focused on the tree.
Lifting its head, it sniffed upward,
drawn by the blood.
Lips rippled back from a maw of ripping
teeth.
It howled again, ending again in a
hair-raising series of cackling whoops.
Then it began to climb.
Khamisi knew what he faced.
Ukufa.
Death.
But as monstrous as it appeared, Khamisi
knew its true name.
6:30 a.m.
Species
Crocuta crocuta,"
Baldric Waalenberg said, stepping to the LCD monitor. He had noted Gray's
continued focus upon the creature on the screen, overlaying the video feed of
Fiona in the cage.
Gray studied the massive bearlike
creature, frozen, facing the camera, growling, mouth wide, baring white gums
and yellowed fangs. It had to weigh three hundred pounds. It guarded the
macerated remains of some antelope.
"The spotted hyena," Baldric
continued. "The species is the second-largest carnivore in Africa, capable
of dropping a bull wildebeest all by itself."
Gray frowned. The creature on the monitor
was no ordinary hyena. It massed three to four times the normal size. And the
pale fur. Some combination of gigantism and albinism. A mutated monstrosity.
"What did you do to it?" he
asked, unable to keep the disgust from his voice. He also wanted to keep the
man talking, buying time. He matched gazes with Monk, then returned his
attention to the old man.
"We made the creature better,
stronger." Baldric glanced to his grandson. Isaak continued to watch the
play dispassionately. "Did we not, Isaak?"
"Ja, grootvader."
"Prehistoric cave pictures in
Gray had read of similar experiments done
with mice. At Stanford, scientists had produced mice whose brains were one
percent human. What the hell was going on here?
Baldric stepped to the blackboard with
the five runic symbols. He tapped the board with the cane. "We have a
series of Cray XT3 supercomputers working on Hugo's code. Once solved, this
will allow us to do the same with mankind. To bring about the next evolution of
man. Out of Africa again, man will rise anew, putting an end to the mud races
and racial mixing, a purity will supersede all. It only waits to be unlocked
from our corrupted genetic code and purified."
Gray heard echoes of the Nazis' Übermensch philosophy, the superman
myth. The old man was mad. He had to be. But Gray noted the lucidity of his
gaze. And on the screen lay proof of some monstrous success toward that end.
Gray's attention shifted to Isaak as he
tapped a key and the mutated hyena vanished. Insight flashed through him. The
albinism in the hyena. Isaak and his twin sister. The other white-blond
assassins. Children all. Baldric hadn't been experimenting only with orchids
and hyenas.
"Now let us return to the matter of
Painter Crowe," the old man said. He waved a hand toward the screen.
"Now that you understand what awaits the young meisje in the cage if you don't answer our questions truthfully. No
more games."
Gray studied the screen, the girl in the
cage. He could not let anything happen to Fiona. If nothing else, he needed to
buy her time. The girl had been pulled into all of this because of his own
clumsy inquiries in Copenhagen. She was his responsibility. And more than that,
he liked the girl, respected her, even when she was being a pain in the ass.
Gray knew what he had to do.
He faced Baldric.
"What do you want to know?"
"Unlike you, Painter Crowe has
proven more of an adversary than we had anticipated. He has vanished after
escaping our ambush. You're going to help us find out where he's gone."
"How?"
"By contacting Sigma command. We
have a scrambled, untraceable line. You're going to break communication silence
and find out what Sigma knows about the Black Sun project and where Painter
Crowe has gone into hiding. And any hint of treachery
" Baldric nodded to
the monitor.
Gray now understood the strident lesson
here. They wanted Gray to understand fully, strangling any hope of deception.
Save Fiona and betray Sigma?
The decision was momentarily postponed as
one of the guards returned with another of Gray's demands.
"My hand!" Monk called out,
noting the prosthesis carried by the guard. He struggled, his elbows still
bound behind his back.
Baldric waved the guard forward.
"Give the prosthesis to Isaak."
Isaak spoke up, speaking Dutch. "Did
the lab clear it of any hidden weapons?"
The man nodded. "Ja, sir. All clear."
Still Isaak inspected the prosthetic
hand. It was a marvel of DARPA engineering, incorporating direct peripheral
nerve control through the titanium wrist contact points. It also was engineered
with advanced mechanics and actuators that allowed precise movements and
sensory input.
Monk stared at Gray.
Gray noted Monk's left fingers had
finished tapping a code on the contact points of his right wrist's stump.
Gray nodded, stepping closer to Monk.
There was one other feature of DARPA's
electronic prosthesis.
It was wireless.
A radioed signal passed between Monk and
his prosthetic hand.
In response, the disembodied prosthetic
clenched in Isaak's grip.
Fingers formed a fist.
Except for a raised middle finger.
"Screw you," Monk mumbled.
Gray grabbed Monk's elbow and yanked him
toward the double doors that led into the main house.
The explosion was not large no more
than an extra loud and brilliant flash grenade. The charge had been blended
directly into the plastic sleeve of the outer hand, impossible to detect. And
while it wasn't much, it proved enough of a distraction. Cries of surprise and
pain erupted from the guards. Gray and Monk slammed through the double doors,
fled down the hall, and took the first turn. Out of direct sight, they pounded
across polished hardwood floors.
Alarms immediately erupted, clanging and
urgent.
They needed an escape route ASAP.
Gray noted wide stairs leading up. He
guided Monk to them.
"Where we going?" Monk asked.
"Up, up, up
" Gray said as they
fled, taking two steps at a time. Security would expect them to make a break
for the nearest door or window. He knew another way out. In his head, a
schematic of the manor house revolved. He had studied the estate closely as
they were marched over here. Gray concentrated, trusting his sense of direction
and position in space.
"This way." He hauled Monk off
a landing and down another corridor. They were on the sixth floor. Alarms
continued.
"Where?" Monk began again.
"High ground," Gray answered
and pointed toward the end of the corridor where a door awaited. "To the
walkway in the canopy."
But it wouldn't be that easy.
As if someone had overheard their plan,
an inner metal shutter began lowering over the exit door. An automated
lockdown.
"Hurry!" Gray yelled.
The shutter trundled quickly, already
three-quarters closed.
Gray sped faster, leaving Monk behind. He
grabbed a hall chair as he ran past it and flung it ahead. It landed on the
hardwood floor and skittered across the polished surface. Gray chased after it.
The chair struck the closed outer door as the inner metal shutter clamped down
atop it. Gears ground. A red light flared above the doorway. Malfunction. Gray
was sure some warning bulb was already flaring in the mansion's main security
nest.
As he reached the door, the wooden chair
legs splintered and cracked, crushed beneath the grinding shutter.
Monk ran up, out of breath, arms still
clamped behind his back.
Gray ducked under the chair and reached
for the knob on the exit door. It was a strain with the shutter blocking the
way.
His fingers clamped on the knob and
twisted.
Locked.
"Goddamn it!" he swore.
More of the chair cracked. Behind them,
the tromp of boots echoed, coming fast up the stairs. Voices barked orders.
Gray twisted around. "Brace
me!" he said to Monk. He would have to kick the far door open.
On his back, legs pistoned up and ready,
Gray leaned against Monk's shoulder for leverage.
Then the exit door simply popped open
ahead of him, revealing a pair of legs in camouflaged khakis. One of the
walkway patrols must have noted the malfunction and come to investigate.
Gray aimed for the man's shins and kicked
out.
Caught by surprise, the man's legs went
out from under him. He hit his head with a clang against the shutter and landed
hard on the planks. Gray dove out and clocked the man again with his heel. His
body went slack.
Monk followed, rolling to Gray, but not
before kicking the trapped chair free of the shutter. The metal security gate
continued its descent and slammed closed.
Gray relieved the guard of his weapons.
He used a knife to slice away Monk's bindings and passed him the man's sidearm,
an HK Mark 23 semiautomatic pistol. Gray confiscated the rifle.
Weapons in hand, they fled down the
canopy bridge to the first crossroads. It divided just as the bridge reached
the jungle. They checked both directions. So far it was all clear.
"We're going to have to split
up," Gray said. "Better our chances. You have to get help, get to a
phone, contact Logan."
"What about you?"
Gray didn't answer. He didn't have to.
"Gray
she may already be
dead."
"We don't know that."
Monk searched his face. He had seen the
monster on the computer screen. He knew Gray had no choice.
Monk nodded.
Without another word, they fled in
opposite directions.
6:34 a.m.
Khamisi
reached the canopy walkway, scaling up a tree on the opposite side of the
glade. He moved swiftly and silently.
Below, the ukufa still circled the tree, guarding its trapped prey. The loud
bang a moment ago had startled the ukufa.
It had dropped from the tree, wary and cautious. It stalked around the tree
again, ears high. Alarms and klaxons echoed out from the manor house.
The commotion also concerned Khamisi.
Had Tau and Njongo been discovered?
Or maybe their camouflaged base camp
outside the estate grounds had been found? Their rallying point was disguised
as a Zulu hunting campsite, one of the many such nomadic camps. Had someone
realized it was more than that?
Whatever the cause of the alarm, the
noise at least had made the giant hyena monster the ukufa more guarded. Khamisi used its distraction to reach one of
the overhead bridges. He rolled onto the planks, freeing his rifle. Anxiety
kept his senses sharp. Terror, however, had shed from him. Khamisi had noted
the creature's ambling gait, the soft rattling growl, a few sharp nervous
cackles escalating into whoops.
Normal hyena behavior.
Though monstrous in size, it was not
something mythic or supernatural.
Khamisi took strength in its flesh.
On the bridge, he hurried along the
planks to where it crossed near the boy's tree. He unhooked a coil of rope from
his pack.
Bending over the walkway's steel cabling,
he spotted the boy. He whistled sharply, a bird call. The boy's attention had
remained focused below. The sudden noise above his head made him flinch. But he
glanced up and spotted Khamisi.
"I'm going to get you out of
there," he called out in low tones, using English, hoping the boy
understood.
Below, something else heard Khamisi, too.
The ukufa
stared up at the bridge. Red eyes locked onto Khamisi's. Lids lowered as it
studied the man on the bridge. Teeth bared. Khamisi read a calculating
attention in its focus.
Was this the creature that had ambushed
Marcia?
Khamisi would have liked nothing better
than to unload both barrels into its smiling face, but the noise of the
large-bore rifle would draw too much attention. The estate was already on full
alert. So instead, he placed the rifle at his feet. He would need both arms and
shoulders.
"Boy!" Khamisi said. "I'm
going to toss you a rope. Snug it around your waist." He mimed what to do.
"I'll pull you up."
The boy nodded, eyes wide, face swollen
from crying and fear.
Leaning over the edge, Khamisi swung the
coil of rope and tossed it toward the boy. The rope unfurled, crashing through
the leaves. It failed to reach the boy, nesting up in the branches above.
"You'll have to climb to it!"
The boy needed no goading. With a chance
to escape, his effort at climbing grew more determined. He scrambled and kicked
and got himself up to the next branch. He tied the rope around his waist,
shaking it loose from the branches. He showed some skill with the rope. Good.
Khamisi pulled in the slack, bracing it
around one of the steel cable posts supporting the bridge. "I'm going to
start pulling you up! You're going to swing out."
"Hurry!" the boy called out,
too sharply and too loudly.
Khamisi pivoted on a hip and saw the ukufa had noted the boy's renewed
movement. It drew the monster like a cat after a mouse. It had mounted the tree
and was climbing up, digging in its claws.
With no time to waste, Khamisi began
wheeling the rope up, arm over arm. He felt the boy's weight burden the rope as
he was lifted free of his perch. Bending to check, he spotted the boy swinging
back and forth like a pendulum.
The ukufa
did, too, eyes tracking the arc. It continued its climb. Khamisi read its
intent. It was planning to leap and snag the boy, like bait on a line.
Khamisi hauled faster. The boy continued
to swing.
"Wie
zijn u?" a voice
suddenly barked behind him.
Startled, he almost let go of the rope.
He craned over a shoulder.
A tall, lithe woman stood on the walkway,
dressed in black, feral-eyed. Her hair was blond but shaved close to the scalp.
One of the senior Waalenberg children. She must have just stepped onto this
section and discovered him. She had a knife already in one hand. Khamisi dared
not let go of the rope.
Not good.
Below, the boy cried out.
Khamisi and the woman glanced down.
The ukufa
had reached the boy's former perch and bunched up for its leap. Behind Khamisi,
the woman laughed, a match to the cackle of the creature below. The planks
creaked as she stepped toward his back, knife in hand.
They were both trapped.
6:38 a.m.
Gray
knelt at the crossroads. The elevated walkway split into three paths. The left
led back to the manor house. The center walkway skirted the forest's edge and
overlooked the central gardens. The path to the right simply headed straight
off into the heart of the jungle.
Which way?
Crouched, Gray studied the slant of
shadows, comparing it to the pattern he had studied on the LCD monitor. The length
and direction of the shadows had offered a general clue to the position of the
rising sun in respect to the location of Fiona's imprisonment. But that still
left a large swath of estate to cover.
Feet pounded on the walkway, shaking it
slightly.
More guards.
He had encountered two groups already.
Gray shouldered his rifle, rolled to the
edge of the walkway, and dropped off its edge. He hung by his arms to the
cabling and worked hand over hand to the leafy shelter of a tree branch. A
moment later, a trio of guards clattered by overhead, bouncing the walkway.
Gray clung tightly, jiggled about.
Once they were past, he used the tree
branch to scoot back onto the path. Hooking and swinging his leg over, he
noticed a rhythmic vibration in the cable in his hand. More guards?
Flat on his belly on the planks, he
leaned an ear against the cable, listening like an Indian tracker on a trail.
There was a distinct rhythm to the vibration, audible, like a plucked string of
a steel guitar. Three fast twangs, three slow, three fast again. And it
repeated.
Morse code.
S.O.S.
Someone was knocking out a signal on the
cable.
Gray crouched and sidled back to the
branching of the walkway. He felt the other support cables. Only one vibrated.
It led off along the path to the right, the one headed into the depths of the
jungle.
Could it be
?
With no better clue, Gray set off down
the right path. He kept pace near the walkway's edge, attempting to keep his
tread silent and the bridge from swaying. The path continued to diverge. Gray
paused at each crossing to find the cable vibrating in code and followed its
trail.
Gray was so focused on the path, that
when he ducked under the heavy frond of a palm leaf he suddenly found himself
staring at a guard only four yards away. Brown-haired, midtwenties, typical Hitler youth. The guard leaned
on the cable handrail, facing Gray's direction. His gun was already rising, as
he'd been alerted by the shuffle of the palm tree.
Gray didn't have time to get his rifle
up. Instead, still moving, he slammed his weight to the side not in an
attempt to dodge the coming slug. The guard couldn't miss at this range.
Gray struck the cabled handrail, jarring
it.
The guard, braced against it, bobbled.
The muzzle of his rifle jittered too high. Gray closed the gap in two steps,
getting under the rifleman's guard, the pilfered dagger already in his hand.
Gray used the man's imbalance to silence
his scream, planting the dagger through the man's wind box, severing his
larynx. A twist and the carotid spurted. He'd be dead in seconds. Gray caught
his body and heaved it over the rail. He felt no remorse, remembering the
guards laughing as Ryan had dropped into the monster's den. How many others had
died that way? The body fell in a shushing whisper of leaves, then crashed into
the grassy underbrush.
Crouched low, Gray listened. Had anyone
heard the guard's fall?
Off to the left, surprisingly near, a
woman shouted in accented English. "Stop kicking the bars! Or we'll drop
you now!"
Gray recognized the voice. Ischke. Isaak's
twin sister.
A more familiar voice responded to the
woman. "Sod off, you bony-assed prat!"
Fiona.
She was alive.
Despite the danger, Gray grinned both
in relief and respect.
Staying low, he snuck down to the end of
the walkway. It dead-ended at a circular path that edged an open glade. The one
from the video. The cage was suspended from the elevated walkway.
Fiona kicked the cage's bars. Three fast,
three slow, three fast. Her face was a mask of determination. Gray felt the
vibration under his feet now, transmitted along the cage's support cables.
Good girl.
She must have heard the alarms from the
manor house. Perhaps guessed it might be Gray and sought to signal him. Either
that
or she was just damned pissed. And the pattern was just an annoying
coincidence.
Gray spotted three guards at the two-,
three-, and nine-o'clock positions. Ischke, still dazzling in her black and
white outfit, stood on the far side at twelve o'clock both hands on the
inside rail, staring down at Fiona.
"A bullet through your knee might
quiet you down," she called to the girl, placing a palm on a holstered
pistol.
Fiona paused in midkick, mumbled
something under her breath, then lowered her foot.
Gray calculated the odds. He had one
rifle against three guards, all armed, and Ischke with her pistol. Not good.
A spat of static sounded from across the
glade. Garbled words followed.
Ischke unhooked her radio and lifted it
to her lips. "Ja?"
She listened for half a minute, asked
another question that Gray couldn't make out, then signed off. Lowering the
radio, she spoke to the guards.
"New orders!" she barked to the
others in Dutch. "We kill the girl now."
6:40 a.m.
The ukufa let out a trebling series of yips,
ready to leap at the dangling boy. Khamisi sensed the approach of the woman at
his back. Hands on the rope, he couldn't go for any of his weapons.
"Who are you?" the woman asked
again, knife threatening.
Khamisi did the only thing he could.
Bending his knees, he threw himself over
the cabled railing. He clenched hard to the rope as he tumbled. Overhead, the
line whistled around the steel support post. As Khamisi fell earthward, he
caught a glimpse of the boy being dragged skyward, flailing with a long scream
of surprise.
The ukufa
leaped at its fleeing prey, but Khamisi's falling weight zipped the boy
straight up to the walkway, banging him hard against it.
The sudden stop ripped the rope from
Khamisi's grip.
He fell, landing on his back in the
grass. Overhead, the boy clung to the underside of the walkway. The woman
stared down at Khamisi, eyes wide.
Something large crashed to the ground a
few meters from him.
Khamisi sat up.
The ukufa
bounded to its feet, throwing ropes of saliva, furious, growling.
Its red gaze fell heavily upon the only
prey in sight.
Khamisi.
His hands were empty. His rifle still
rested on the planks above.
The creature yowled in bloodlust and
anger. It leaped at him, intending to tear out his throat.
Khamisi fell to his back, lifting his
only weapon. The Zulu assegai. The short spear was still strapped to his thigh.
As the ukufa dropped onto him,
Khamisi shoved the blade up. His father had once taught him how to use the
weapon. Like all Zulu boys. Before they left for Australia. With an instinct
that crossed deep into the past of his ancestors, Khamisi slipped the blade
under the creature's ribs one of flesh, not myth and drove it deep as the
hyena's weight fell atop him.
The ukufa
screamed. Pain and momentum carried it over Khamisi and yanked the spear's
handle from his fingers. Khamisi rolled clear, weaponless now. The ukufa thrashed in the grass,
corkscrewing the impaled blade inside it. It screamed one last time, jerking
hard, then went limp.
Dead.
An angry cry above drew his eye.
The woman on the bridge had found
Khamisi's rifle and had it pointed at him. The blast sounded like a grenade. A
bush exploded at his heels, gouting up soil. Khamisi shoved back. Overhead, the
woman shifted the rifle, fixing him more surely in its sights.
The second blast sounded oddly sharper.
Khamisi twisted away but found himself
unscathed.
He glanced up in time to see the woman
topple over the cable, her chest a bloody ruin.
A new figure stepped into view on the
walkway.
A muscular man with a shaved head. He had
a pistol held out, steadied on the stump of a wrist. He leaned over the cable
and spotted the boy, still dangling by his hands.
"Ryan
"
The boy sobbed with relief. "Get me
out of here."
"That's the plan
" His gaze
found Khamisi. "That is, if that guy down there knows the way out of here.
I'm so friggin' lost."
6:44 a.m.
The
pair of gunshots echoed through the forest.
A small flock of green parrots took wing
from canopy roosts, squawking in protest, flapping across the glade.
Gray crouched.
Had Monk been found?
Ischke must have thought the same, her
head craned in the direction of the gunfire. She waved to the guards.
"Check it out!"
She raised her radio again.
The guards, rifles in hand, pounded
around the circular elevated walk, all coming in Gray's direction. Caught off
guard, Gray dropped and rolled, hugging his rifle to his chest. He flung
himself off the planks. The closest guard would be in view in mere seconds.
Like before, he snatched the planks' support cable, but in his haste, off
balance, he barely caught a purchase with one hand. His body swung. The rifle
slipped from his shoulder, dropping away.
Twisting and reaching, he snagged the
leather strap with one finger. He silently sighed in relief.
Guards suddenly battered past overhead,
boots hammering, jigging and bouncing his perch.
The rifle's leather strap popped off
Gray's finger. Gravity disarmed him. The weapon fell, spearing into the
underbrush. Gray grabbed another handhold and hung there. At least the rifle
hadn't gone off when it hit the ground.
The guards' footfalls echoed away.
He heard Ischke talking on her radio.
Now what?
He had a knife against her pistol. He
didn't question her compunction to use it or her marksmanship.
The only real advantage he had was surprise.
And that was severely overrated.
Hand over hand, Gray traversed the
underside of the walkway and reached the circular concourse. He continued along
the underside, keeping to the outer edge, out of direct view of the Waalenberg
woman. He had to move slowly or his swaying weight would alert Ischke. He timed
his movements to the occasional breeze that ruffled the canopy.
But his appearance did not go unnoticed.
Fiona crouched in her cage, putting as
many bars as she could between her and Ischke. Plainly she had understood
Ischke's earlier words in Dutch. We kill
the girl now. Though the gunfire had momentarily distracted the blond twin,
eventually her attention would return to Fiona.
From her low vantage, Fiona spotted Gray,
a white-jumpsuited gorilla scaling the underside of the walkway, half-hidden by
the foliage. She jerked in surprise, almost standing, then forced herself to
stay low. Her eyes tracked him, their gazes met.
Despite her noisy bravado, Gray read the
terror in her face. The girl looked so much smaller in the cage. She hugged her
arms around her chest, attempting to hold herself together. Hardened as she was
by the streets, he sensed her only defense against a complete panicked
breakdown was her prickly blustering. It sustained her barely.
Blocking with her body, she signaled him.
She pointed down and slightly shook her head, eyes wide in fear, alerting him.
It wasn't safe below.
He searched the thick grasses and bushes
of the glade. Shadows lay thick. He saw nothing, but he trusted Fiona's
warning.
Don't fall.
Gray estimated how far he'd come. He was
about at the eight o'clock position along the circular walkway. Ischke stood at
the twelve o'clock. He still had a distance to traverse, and his arms were
tiring, his fingers aching. He had to move faster. Stopping and starting were
killing him. But he feared going any faster would draw Ischke's attention.
Fiona must have realized the same. She
stood and began kicking the bars again, rattling her cage, swaying it with her
weight. The motion allowed Gray to increase his pace.
Unfortunately her effort also drew
Ischke's wrath.
The woman lowered her radio and yelled at
Fiona. "Enough of your foolishness, child!"
Fiona still clutched the bars and kicked.
Gray hurried past the nine o'clock
position.
Ischke stepped to the inner rail, half in
view. Luckily her focus was fully on Fiona. The woman pulled a device out of
the pocket of her sweater. She used her teeth to extend the antenna. She
pointed it at Fiona. "It is time you met Skuld, named after the Norse
goddess of fate."
A button was pressed.
Almost directly under Gray's toes,
something howled in anger and pain. It thrashed out of the shadowed eaves of
the jungle and stalked into the grassy clearing. One of the mutated hyenas. Its
hulked mass had to tip three hundred pounds, all muscle and teeth. It growled
low, hackles high on its sloped back. Lips snarled back as it barked and
snapped at the empty air, sniffing up at the cage.
Gray realized the monster must have been stalking
him all along from below. He suspected what was coming.
He hurried, swinging past the ten-o'clock
spot.
Ischke called to Fiona, enjoying the
terror, prolonging the cruelty. "A chip in Skuld's brain allows us to
stimulate its bloodlust, its appetite." She tweaked the button again. The
hyena howled, leaped at the cage, flinging ropes of drool, driven into a
ravening bloodlust.
So that was how the Waalenbergs
controlled their monsters.
Radio implants.
Subverting nature again to their will.
"It's time we sated poor Skuld's
hunger," Ischke said.
Gray would never make it in time. Still,
he rushed.
Eleven o'clock.
So close.
But too late.
Ischke pressed another button. Gray heard
a distinct clink as the trapdoor in
Fiona's cage unlatched.
Oh, no.
Gray paused in midswing. He watched the
trapdoor fall open beneath Fiona. She fell toward the slathering beast below.
Gray prepared to drop after her, to
protect her.
But Fiona had learned from Ryan's demise.
She was prepared. As she fell, she caught the lower bars of her cage and hung
there. The creature, Skuld, leaped for her legs. She tucked up and hauled with
her arms.
The beast missed and crashed back to the
underbrush with a yowl of frustration.
Climbing up, Fiona now clung to the
outside of the cage like a spider monkey.
Ischke laughed with dark delight. "Zeer goed, meisje.
Such resourcefulness! Grootvader
might have even considered your genes for his stock. But alas you'll have to
satisfy Skuld instead."
From below, Gray watched Ischke raise her
pistol again.
He swung beneath her, staring up between
the planks.
"Now to end this," Ischke
muttered in Dutch.
Indeed.
Gray pulled with his arms, kicked back
his legs then swung forward and over, like a gymnast on a high bar. His heels
struck Ischke in the belly as she leaned on the rail, steadying her aim at
Fiona.
As his heels connected, her pistol
blasted.
Gray heard the ring of slug on iron.
Missed.
Ischke was knocked back as Gray followed
through and crashed to the planks. He rolled up, knife in hand. Ischke was down
on one knee. Her pistol lay between them.
They both lunged for it.
Ischke, even with the wind kicked out of
her, proved incredibly fast, like a striking snake. Her fingers reached the
pistol first, snatching it up.
Gray had a knife.
He jammed his blade through her wrist and
into the planks. She screamed in surprise, dropping the pistol. Gray tried to
grab it, but the hilt bounced off the planks as Ischke thrashed. It flew past
the walkway's edge.
The momentary distraction was long enough
for Ischke to yank her wrist free from the planks. She pivoted off her other
wrist and kicked out at Gray's head.
He lunged back, but her shin struck his
shoulder as hard as the bumper of a speeding car. Gray rolled with it, bruised
to the bone. Damn, she was strong.
Before he could get up, she leaped at
him, swinging her arm at his face, trying to use the tip of the blade impaled
through her wrist to blind him. He barely caught her elbow, twisted it, and
carried them both to the walkway's edge.
He didn't stop.
Locked together, their bodies fell off
the walkway.
But Gray hooked his left knee around one
of the walkway's support posts. His body jerked to a stop, swinging by his leg,
wrenching his knee. Ischke peeled off of him and dropped away.
Upside down, he watched the woman snap
through some branches and crash hard into the grassy sward.
Gray hauled himself back up to the
walkway, sprawling flat.
With disbelief, he saw Ischke climb to
her feet below. She limped a step to steady herself, ankle painfully twisted.
A clatter to Gray's side startled him.
Fiona landed on the planks, swinging over
from one of the cage's suspension wires.
During the fight, the girl must have
crabbed her way atop the cage, then used the wires to reach the walkway. She
hurried to him, shaking her left hand and wincing. Fresh blood flowed from
where Ischke had cut her.
Gray searched again below.
The woman stared up at him. Murder in her
eyes.
But she wasn't alone in the clearing.
Behind her, Skuld raced toward the woman,
the hyena's muzzle low to the ground, a shark in the grass, scenting blood.
How fitting, Gray thought.
But the woman merely raised her uninjured
arm toward the beast. The massive hyena ground to a stop, lifted its nose,
dripping drool, and rubbed against her palm like a savage pit bull greeting its
abusive master. It mewled and lowered to its belly.
Ischke never broke eye contact with Gray.
She limped forward.
Gray stared below.
Steps from the woman, Ischke's pistol
rested in plain view.
Gray climbed up, gaining his feet. He grabbed
Fiona's shoulder and shoved her forward. "Run!"
She needed no further goading. They raced
around the arc of the walkway. The girl flew on fear and adrenaline. They
reached the exit.
Fiona made the corner, hanging on to one
of the support posts to keep her footing. Gray followed her example. As he
swung clear, a ringing spark off the support post accompanied a pistol blast.
Ischke had found her gun.
Spurred on, they ran faster along the
straight path, putting distance between them and the limping shooter. In a
minute, approaching a crisscross of paths, Gray suspected they might be safe.
Caution overcame panic.
He slowed Fiona by the same crossroads he
had stopped at before. Paths led in all directions. Which way? By now, there
was a good chance Ischke had raised an alarm unless the fall had broken her
radio, but he couldn't count on that. He had to assume guards were already
congregating between here and the outside world.
And what about Monk? What did the gunplay
that drew off Ischke's guards portend? Was he alive, dead, recaptured? There
were too many unknown variables. Gray needed a place to hole up and hide, to
let his trail cool.
But where?
He eyed the one path that bridged back to
the manor house.
No one would expect to look for them over
there. Plus the place had phones. If he could get to an outside line
maybe
even find out more about whatever the hell was really going on there
But it was a pipe dream. The place was
locked up tight, a fortress.
Fiona noted his attention.
She tugged on his arm and pulled
something from her pocket. It looked like a couple of playing cards on a chain.
She held them up.
Not playing cards.
Key
cards.
"I nicked them from that ice
bitch," Fiona said, half spitting. "Teach her to slice me."
Gray took the cards and examined them. He
remembered Monk scolding Fiona for not stealing the museum director's keys when
they were trapped in Himmler's crypt. It seemed the girl had taken Monk's
lesson to heart.
With narrowed eyes, Gray again studied
the manor house.
Thanks to his little pickpocket, he now
held the keys to the castle.
But what to do?
10:34 a.m.
HLUHLUWE-UMFOLOZI
PRESERVE
Painter
sat in the mud-stone and woven-grass hut, cross-legged around a series of maps
and schematics. The air smelled of dung and dust. But the small Zulu encampment
served as the perfect staging spot, only ten minutes from the Waalenberg
estate.
Periodically, security helicopters buzzed
the camp, rising from the estate, wary and watchful of their borders, but Paula
Kane had the site well orchestrated. From the air, none could tell that the
small sandy village was anything but a way station for the nomadic tribes of
Zulu that eked out a living in the area. Nobody would suspect the council under
way in one of the ramshackle huts.
The group had gathered to strategize and
pool resources.
Across from Painter, Anna and Gunther sat
together. Lisa kept near Painter's elbow as she had since arriving in Africa,
her face stoic but her eyes worried. Near the back, Major Brooks stood in the
shadows, ever vigilant, palm resting on his holstered pistol.
They were all attentive on the final
debriefing from Khamisi, a former game warden here. At his side, leaning
forward, head to head, was the most surprising addition to the gathering.
Monk Kokkalis.
To Painter's shock, Monk had wandered
into the encampment with an exhausted and shell-shocked young man, both led by
Khamisi. The young man was recuperating in another hut, kept safely out of
harm's way, but Monk had spent the last hour relating his story, answering
questions, and filling in blanks.
Anna stared at the set of runes Monk had
finished drawing. Her eyes were bloodshot. She reached out a trembling hand
toward the paper. "These are all the runes found in the books of Hugo
Hirszfeld?"
Monk nodded. "And that old fart was
convinced they were damn important, critical to some next stage in his
plan."
Anna's gaze rose to Painter. "Dr.
Hugo Hirszfeld was the overseer for the original Black Sun project. Do you
remember how I told you he was convinced he had solved the riddle of the Bell?
Performed one last experiment, one done in secret, attended only by himself. A
private experiment that supposedly produced a perfect child, one uncorrupted of
taint or devolution. A perfect Knight of the Sun. But his method
how he did
it
no one knew."
"And the letter he wrote his
daughter," Painter said, "whatever he discovered frightened him. A truth
too beautiful to let
die and too monstrous to set free. To that end, he hid the secret in this runic code."
Anna sighed wearily. "And Baldric
Waalenberg was confident enough that he could solve the code, gain the lost
knowledge for himself, that he destroyed the Granitschloß."
"I think it was more than just that
you were no longer needed," Painter said. "I think you were right
before. Your group was a growing threat with talk of coming out of hiding,
going mainstream. And with perfection so close, the culmination of the Aryan
dream, he could not risk your continuing presence."
Anna shifted the paper with Monk's
sketched runes toward her. "If Hugo was right, deciphering his code could
prove critical to treating our own condition. The
Lisa inserted a bit of reality into the
discussion. "But before any of that can happen, we must gain access to the
Waalenberg Bell. Then we can worry about cures."
"And what about Gray?" Monk
asked. "And the girl?"
Painter kept his face tight. "There
is no telling where he is. Hiding, captured, dead. For the moment, Commander
Pierce is on his own."
Monk's face soured. "I can sneak
back in. Use the map Khamisi has of the grounds."
"No. Now is not the time to divide
forces." Painter rubbed at a needling headache behind his right ear.
Noises echoed. Nausea welled.
Monk stared at him.
He waved away the man's concern. But
something in Monk's focus suggested that it wasn't just his boss's physical failings that worried him. Was
Painter making the right choices? How was his mental status? The doubt touched
a chord in himself. How clear was his
thinking?
Lisa's hand drifted to his knee, as if
sensing his consternation.
"I'm fine," he mumbled as
much to himself as to her.
Further inquiry was interrupted by the
room's rug door being shoved open. Sunlight and heat wafted inside. Paula Kane
ducked into the dark interior. A Zulu elder followed her in full ceremonial
regalia: plumes, feathers, leopard skin decorated with colorful beadwork.
Though in his midsixties, his face was unlined, seemingly carved of stone, his
head shaved. He carried a wooden staff topped with feathers, but he also bore
an antique firearm, looking more ceremonial than functional.
Painter recognized the weapon as he stood
up. An old smoothbore English "Brown Bess," a flintlock from the
Napoleonic Wars.
Paula Kane introduced the visitor.
"Mosi D'Gana. Zulu chief."
The elder spoke in crisp English.
"All is ready."
"Thank you for your
assistance," Painter said formally.
Mosi nodded his head slightly,
acknowledging the words. "But it is not for you we lend our spears. We owe
the Voortrekkers for Blood River."
Painter frowned, but Paula Kane filled in
the details. "When the English drove the Dutch Boers out of Cape Town, they
began a major trek into the interior. Friction escalated between the arriving
immigrants and the native tribes. The Xhosa, the Pondo, the Swazi, and the
Zulus. In 1838, along a tributary of the Buffalo River, the Zulus were
betrayed, thousands killed, their homelands lost. It was a slaughter. The river
became known as Blood River. The Voortrekker conspirator of that murderous
assault was Piet Waalenberg."
Mosi lifted his old weapon and held it
out to Painter. "We do not forget."
Painter did not doubt that this very gun
had been involved in that infamous battle. He accepted the weapon, knowing a
pact had been forged with the passing of the flintlock.
Mosi settled to the ground, dropping
smoothly into a cross-legged position. "We have much to plan."
Paula nodded to Khamisi and held open the rug flap. "Khamisi, your truck is
ready. Tau and Njongo are already waiting." She checked her watch.
"You'll have to hurry."
The former game warden stood. Each had
their own duty to perform before nightfall.
Painter met Monk's gaze. He again read
the worry in the man's eyes. But not for Painter for Gray. Sundown was eight
hours away. But there was nothing they could do until then.
Gray was on his own.
12:05 p.m.
Keep
your head down," Gray whispered to Fiona.
They strode toward the guard at the end
of the hall. Gray wore one of the camouflage uniforms, from jackboots to black
cap, the brim pulled low over his eyes. The guard who had lent Gray the outfit
was unconscious, gagged, and hog-tied in a closet of one of the upper bedrooms.
He had also borrowed the guard's radio,
clipped to his belt and trailing an earpiece. The chatter on the line was all
in Dutch, making it hard to discern, but it kept them abreast of events.
Walking in Gray's shadow, Fiona wore a
maid's outfit, borrowed from the same closet. It was a bit large, but it was
better to hide her shape and age. Most of the house staff were natives in
various shades of dark skin, typical of an Afrikaner household. Fiona's
mocha-brown complexion, her Pakistani heritage, fit well enough. She also hid
her straight hair under a bonnet. She could pass as native if no one looked too closely. To complete the act, she
walked in tiny submissive steps, shoulders slumped, head down.
So far, their disguises had not even been
tested.
Word had spread that Gray and Fiona had
been spotted in the jungle. With the manor house shuttered down, only a
skeleton patrol kept post inside the mansion. Most of the security forces were
searching the forests, outbuildings, and borders.
Unfortunately, security was not so thin
here as to leave an outside phone line open. Shortly after using Ischke's key
card to gain entry back inside the mansion, Gray had tested a few house phones.
Access required passing through a coded security net. Any attempt to gain an
outside line would only expose them.
So their options were few.
They could hide. But to what end? Who
knew when or if Monk would make it to civilization? So a more proactive role
was needed. The plan was to first gain a schematic of the mansion. That meant
penetrating the security nest on the main floor. Their only weapons were a
sidearm carried by Gray and a hand Taser in Fiona's pocket.
Ahead, at the end of the hall, a sentry
manned the upper balcony, guarding over the main entryway with an automatic
rifle. Gray strode up to the man.
He was tall, stocky, and his heavy-lidded
eyes made him look piggish and mean. Gray nodded and continued toward the
stairs. Fiona followed at his heels.
All went well.
Then the man said something in Dutch. The
words were beyond Gray, but they had a lurid ring to them, ending in a guttural
low laugh.
Half turning, Gray saw the guard reach to
Fiona's bottom and give it a firm pinch. Another hand went for her elbow.
Wrong thing to do.
Fiona swung to the man. "Piss off,
you wanker."
Her skirt brushed the man's knee. A blue
spark burned through her pocket and zapped the man's thigh. His body arched
back, a strangled noise gargled forth.
Gray caught him as he fell back, still
convulsing in his arms. Gray dragged him off the landing and into a side room.
He dropped him to the floor, pistol-whipped him unconscious, and began gagging
him and tying him up.
"Why did you do that?" Gray
asked.
Fiona stepped behind Gray and pinched his
butt, hard and sharp.
"Hey!" He stood and swung
around.
"How do you like it?" Fiona
fumed.
Point taken. Still he cautioned, "I
can't keep tying up these bastards."
Fiona stood with her arms crossed. Her
eyes, though angry, were also scared. He couldn't blame her for her jumpiness.
He wiped some cold sweat from his brow. Maybe they had better just hide and
hope for the best.
Gray's radio crackled. He listened hard.
Had their attack by the staircase been noted? He translated through the garble,
"
ge'vangene
bringing in the main door
"
More followed, but Gray barely heard much
past the word ge'vangene.
Prisoner.
That could only mean one thing.
"They caught Monk
," he
whispered, going cold.
Fiona uncrossed her arms, face concerned.
"C'mon," he said and headed
toward the door. He had relieved the downed guard of his Taser and shouldered
the man's rifle.
Gray led the way back to the stairs. He
whispered his plan to Fiona as they hurried down the stairs to the main
entrance hall. The lower floor was empty, as was the foyer ahead.
They crossed the polished floor decorated
with woven rugs in African motifs. Their footsteps echoed. To either side,
stuffed trophies mounted the walls: the head of an endangered black rhino, a
massive lion with a moth-eaten mane, a row of antelopes with various racks of
horns.
Gray crossed toward the foyer. Fiona
pulled a feather duster from an apron pocket, a part of her disguise. She
crossed to one side of the door. Gray took a post, rifle in hand, on the other.
They didn't have long to wait, barely
getting into position in time.
How many guards would be accompanying
Monk?
At least he was alive.
The metal shutter over the main entrance
began to rise, clattering upward. Gray leaned down to count legs. He held up
two fingers toward Fiona. Two guards were accompanying a prisoner in a white
jumpsuit.
Gray stepped into view as the gate
trundled fully up.
The guards saw nothing but one of their
own, a sentry with a rifle manning the door. They entered with the prisoner in
tow. Neither noticed Gray palming a Taser or Fiona coming up from the other
side.
The attack was over in moments.
Two guards convulsed on the rug, heels
drumming. Gray kicked each in the side of the head, probably harder than he
should have. But anger fueled through him.
The prisoner was not Monk.
"Who are you?" he asked the
startled captive as he quickly dragged the first guard toward a neighboring
supply closet.
The gray-haired woman used her free arm
to help Fiona with the second man. She was stronger than she appeared. Her left
arm was bandaged and secured across her chest in a tight sling. The left side
of her face was savaged with jagged scratches, sutured and raw. Something had
attacked and mauled her. Despite her recent injuries, her eyes met Gray's,
fiery and determined.
"My name is Dr. Marcia Fairfield."
12:25 p.m.
The
Jeep trundled down the empty lane.
Behind the wheel, Warden Gerald Kellogg
mopped his sweating brow. He had a bottle of Birkenhead Premium Lager propped
between his legs.
Despite the hectic morning, Kellogg
refused to break routine. There was nothing else he could do anyway. Security
at the Waalenberg estate had passed on the sketchy details. An escape. Kellogg
had already alerted the park rangers and posted men at all the gates. He passed
on pictures, faxed over from the Waalenberg estate. Poachers was the cover.
Armed and dangerous.
Until word of a sighting reached
Kellogg's office, he had nothing to keep him from his usual two-hour lunch at
home. Tuesday meant roasted game hen and sweet potatoes. He drove his Jeep across
the cattle guard and into the main drive, lined by short hedges. Ahead, a
two-story beadboard Colonial sat on a full acre of manicured property, a perk
of his position. It had a staff of ten to maintain the grounds and household,
which included only himself. He was in no hurry to marry.
Why buy the cow and all that
Plus his tastes leaned toward unripened
fruit.
He had a new girl in the house, little
Aina, eleven years old, from Nigeria, black as pitch, just like he liked them,
better to hide the bruising. Not that there was anyone to question him. He had
a manservant, Mxali, a Swazi brute, recruited from prison, who ran his
household with discipline and terror. Any problems were dealt with swiftly,
both at home and when needed elsewhere. And the Waalenbergs were only too happy
to help any troublemakers disappear. What became of them once they were dropped
off by helicopter at the Waalenberg estate, Gerald would prefer not to know.
But he had heard rumors.
Despite the midday heat, he shivered.
Best not to ask too many questions.
He parked his car in the shade under a
leafy acacia tree, climbed out, and strode down the gravel path to the side
door that led to the kitchen. A pair of gardeners hoed the flower bed. They
kept their eyes down as Gerald passed, as they were taught.
The smell of roasting hens and garlic
whetted his appetite. His nose and stomach drew him up the three wooden steps
to the open screen door. He entered the kitchen, belly growling.
To the left, the stove door was open. The
cook knelt on the planks, head in the oven. Kellogg frowned at the odd tableau.
It took him a moment to realize it wasn't the cook.
"Mxali
?"
Kellogg finally noted the underlying
smell of seared flesh behind the garlic. Something protruded from the man's
arm. A feathered dart. Mxali's weapon of choice. Usually poisoned.
Something was dreadfully wrong.
Kellogg backed away, turning to the door.
The two gardeners had dropped their hoes
and had rifles pointed at his wide belly. It was not uncommon for small
marauding bands, filth from the black townships, to raid farms and outlying
homes. Kellogg held up his arms, skin going cold with terror.
A creak of a board drew him around, half
ducking.
A dark figure stepped out of the shadows
of the next room.
Kellogg gasped as he recognized the
intruder and the hatred in his eyes.
Not marauders. Even worse.
A ghost.
"Khamisi
"
12:30 p.m.
So
what exactly is wrong with him?" Monk asked, thumbing where Painter had
disappeared into one of the neighboring huts with Dr. Paula Kane's satellite
phone. The director was coordinating with Logan Gregory.
Under the shadowy eaves of another hut,
he shared a log with Dr. Lisa Cummings. The medical doctor was quite the
looker, even when covered with dust and a bit haunted around the eyes.
She turned her attention to Monk.
"His cells are denaturing, dissolving from the inside out. That's
according to Anna Sporrenberg. She's studied the deleterious effects of the
Bell's radiation extensively in the past. It causes multisystem organ failure.
Her brother, Gunther, suffers from a chronic version of it, too. But his rate
of decline is slowed by his enhanced healing and immunity. Anna and Painter,
exposed as adults to an overdose of the radiation, have no such innate
protection."
She went into more details, knowing Monk
shared a background in medicine: low platelet counts, rising bilirubin levels,
edema, muscle tenderness with bouts of rigidity around the neck and shoulders,
bone infarctions, hepatosplenomegaly, audible murmurs in the heartbeat, and
strange calcification of distal extremities and vitreous humor of the eyes.
But ultimately it all came down to one
question.
"How long do they have?" Monk
asked.
Lisa sighed and stared back toward the
hut into which Painter had vanished. "No more than a day. Even if a cure
could be found today, I fear there might still be permanent and sustained
damage."
"Did you note his slurring
how he
dropped words? Is that all the drugs
or
or
?"
Lisa glanced back to him, her eyes more
sharply pained. "It's more than the drugs."
Monk sensed this was the first time she
admitted this to herself. It was stated with dread and hopelessness. He also
saw how much she suffered for it. Her reaction was more than just a concerned
doctor or a worried friend. She cared for Painter and plainly struggled to hold
her emotions in check, to guard her heart.
Painter appeared in the doorway. He waved
Monk over. "I have Kat on the horn."
Monk rose quickly, checked the sky for
choppers, and crossed to Painter. He accepted the satellite phone, covered the
mouthpiece, and nodded to Dr. Cummings. "Boss, I think the woman could use
some company."
Painter rolled his eyes. They were
bloodshot, splotchy with hemorrhages in the sclera. He shaded his sore eyes and
crossed toward the woman.
Monk watched from the doorway and lifted
the phone. "Hey, babe."
"Don't babe me. What the hell are you doing in Africa?"
Monk smiled. Kat's scolding was as
welcome as lemonade in the desert. Besides, her question was rhetorical. She
had surely been debriefed.
"I thought this was supposed to be a
babysitting assignment?" she continued.
Monk merely waited, letting her vent.
"When you get home, I'm locking
you
"
She continued for another long, scrambled
minute.
Finally, Monk got a word in edgewise.
"I miss you, too."
A blustering sound subsided into a sigh.
"I heard Gray is still missing."
"He'll be fine," he assured
her, while hoping the same.
"Find him, Monk. Do whatever it
takes."
Monk appreciated her understanding. He
intended to do just that. She asked for no promise of caution. She knew him too
well. Still, he heard the tears in her next words.
"I love you."
That was caution enough for any man.
"I love you, too." He lowered
his voice and slightly turned away. "Both of you."
"Come home."
"Try to stop me."
Kat sighed again. "Logan is paging
me. I must sign off. We've a meeting scheduled for zero seven hundred with an
attaché at the South African embassy. We'll do what we can to put pressure on
from here."
"Give 'em hell, babe."
"We will. Bye, Monk."
"Kat, I" But the line had
disconnected. Damn.
Monk lowered the phone and stared at Lisa
and Painter. The two leaned together, talking, but Monk sensed it was more the
need to be close than any real communication. He stared down at the phone. At
least Kat was safe and sound.
12:37 p.m.
They
were taking me to an internment cell down below," Dr. Marcia Fairfield
said. "For further questioning. Something must be worrying them."
The three of them were back up in the
room on the first-floor landing. The guard who had manhandled Fiona still lay
unconscious on the floor, blood dribbling from his nostrils.
Dr. Fairfield had quickly related her
story, how she was ambushed in the field, attacked by the Waalenbergs'
pets, dragged away. The Waalenbergs had learned through channels about a
possible role she had with UK intelligence. So they staged her kidnapping as a
fatal lion attack. Her wounds certainly still looked swollen and raw. "I
was able to convince them that my companion, a game warden, had been killed. It
was all I could do. Hope he made it back to civilization."
"But what are the Waalenbergs
hiding?" Gray asked. "What are they doing?"
The woman shook her head. "Some
macabre version of a genetic Manhattan Project. That's as much as I can tell.
But I think there is some other scheme in the works. A sideline project. Maybe
even an attack. I overheard one of my guards talking. Something about a serum
of some sort. Serum 525, I heard them say. I also heard Washington, D.C.,
mentioned in the same context."
Gray frowned. "Did you hear of any
timetable?"
"Not exactly. But from their
laughter I got the impression whatever was going to happen would be soon. Very
soon."
Gray paced a few steps, knuckling his
chin. This serum
maybe it's a biowarfare
agent
a pathogen, a virus
He shook his head. He needed more information
and quickly.
"We have to get into those basement
labs," he mumbled. "Find out what's going on."
"They were taking me to that
internment area," Dr. Fairfield said.
He nodded, understanding. "If I pose
as one of your guards, that might be our ticket down there."
"We'd have to hurry," Marcia
said. "As it is, they must be wondering what's keeping me."
Gray turned to Fiona, ready for an
argument. It would be safest if she stayed hidden in the room, out of sight. It
would be hard to justify her presence alongside a prisoner and a guard. It
would only arouse suspicion and attention.
"I know! No place for a maid,"
Fiona said, surprising him yet again. She nudged the guard on the floor with
her toe. "I'll keep Casanova here company until you get back."
Despite her brave words, her eyes shone
with fear.
"We won't be gone long," he
promised.
"You'd better not be."
With the matter settled, Gray grabbed his
rifle, waved Dr. Fairfield toward the door, and said, "Let's go."
In short order, Gray marched Marcia at
gunpoint into the central elevator. No one accosted them. A card reader
restricted access to the subterranean levels. He swiped Ischke's second key
card. The lighted buttons for the sublevels changed from red to green.
"Any idea where to start?" Gray
asked.
Marcia reached out. "The greater the
treasure, the deeper it's buried." She pressed the bottommost number.
Seven levels down. The elevator began to descend.
As Gray watched the floors count down,
Marcia's words nagged.
An attack. Possibly
in
But what type of attack?
6:41 a.m. EST
Embassy
Row was only two miles from the National Mall. Their driver turned onto
Massachusetts Avenue and headed toward the South African embassy. Kat rode with
Logan in the backseat, comparing final notes. The sun had just risen, and the
embassy appeared ahead.
Its four stories of Indiana limestone
shone brilliantly in the morning sunlight, highlighting its gables and dormers
typical of the Cape Dutch style. The driver pulled up to the residence wing of
the embassy. The ambassador had agreed to meet them in his private study at
this early hour. It seemed any issues concerning the Waalenbergs were best
dealt with out of the public's eye.
Which was fine with Kat.
She had a pistol in an ankle holster.
Kat climbed out and waited for Logan.
Four fluted pilasters supported a carved parapet with the South African coat of
arms. Beneath it, a doorman noted their arrival and opened the glazed front
door.
As second in command, Logan led the way.
Kat kept a step or two behind, watching the street, wary. With as much money as
the Waalenbergs wielded, she did not trust who might be in their private
employ
and that included the ambassador,
The entrance hall opened wide around
them. A secretary in a neat navy business suit ushered them across the hall.
"Ambassador Hourigan will be down momentarily. I'm to take you to his
study. Can I bring you any tea or coffee?"
Logan and Kat declined.
They were soon ensconced in a richly
paneled room. The furniture desks, bookcases, occasional tables was constructed
of the same wood. Stinkwood, native to South Africa, so rare it was no longer
available for commercial export.
Logan took a seat by the desk. Kat
remained standing.
They didn't have long to wait.
The doors opened again, and a tall, thin
man with sandy-blond hair entered. He wore a navy suit but carried his jacket
over one arm. Kat suspected the casual approach was pure artifice, meant to
make his manner appear more amiable and cooperative. Like meeting here in his
private residence.
She wasn't buying it.
As Logan made introductions, Kat surveyed
the room. With a background in the intelligence services, she imagined the
conversation here would be taped. She studied the room, guessing where the
surveillance equipment was hidden.
Ambassador Hourigan finally settled to
his seat. "You've come to inquire about the Waalenberg estate
or so I was
informed. How may I be of service?"
"We believe someone in their employ
may have been involved in a kidnapping in Germany."
His eyes widened too perfectly. "I'm
shocked to hear such allegations. But I've heard nothing about this from the
German BKA, Interpol, or Europol."
"Our sources are concrete,"
Logan insisted. "All we ask is cooperation with your Scorpions to follow
up locally."
Kat watched the man feign an intensely
pensive expression. The Scorpions were the South African equivalent of the FBI.
Cooperation seemed unlikely. The best Logan sought here was to keep such
organizations out of Sigma's way. While they could not negotiate cooperation
against such a political powerhouse as the Waalenbergs, they might place enough
pressure to keep any policing authorities from helping them. A small
concession, but a meaningful one.
Kat continued standing, watching the slow
dance these two men performed, each trying to gain the best advantage.
"I assure you that the Waalenbergs
hold the international community and governing bodies in the utmost respect.
The family has supported relief efforts, multinational charity organizations,
and nonprofit trusts throughout the world. In fact in their latest act of
generosity, they've endowed all South African embassies and chanceries around
the globe with a golden centennial bell, marking the hundred-year anniversary
of the first gold coin minted in South Africa."
"That is all well and good, but it
doesn't"
Kat cut Logan off, speaking for the first
time. "Did you say gold bell?"
Hourigan's eyes met hers. "Yes, gifts from Sir
Baldric Waalenberg himself. One hundred gold-plated centennial bells bearing
the South African coat of arms. Ours is being installed in the residence hall
on the fourth floor."
Logan met Kat's eyes.
Kat spoke. "Would it be possible to
see it?"
The strange tack of the conversation
unsettled the ambassador, but he failed to come up with a good reason to deny
it, and Kat imagined he hoped it would be a way to even gain an upper hand in
the quiet war of diplomacy going on here.
"I would be delighted to show
you." He stood up and checked his watch. "I'm afraid we'll have to
move smartly. I do have a breakfast meeting I must not be late to."
As Kat had imagined, Hourigan was using
the tour as an excuse to end the conversation early, to wheedle out of any firm
commitment. Logan stared hard at her. She hoped she was right.
They were led to an elevator and taken to
the top floor of the building. They passed hallways decorated in artwork and
South African native crafts. Then, a large hall opened; it appeared more museum
than living space. There were display cabinets, long tables, and massive chests
with hand-beaten brass fixtures. A wall of windows overlooked the rear yard and
gardens. But in a corner hung a giant gold bell. It looked as if it had
recently been uncrated, as bits of the straw stuffing were still scattered on
the floor. The bell itself stood a full meter tall and half again as wide at
the mouth. The coat of arms had been stamped on it.
Kat stepped closer. A thick power cable
ran from its top and coiled to the floor.
The ambassador noted her attention.
"It's automated to ring at set times of the day. Quite a marvel of
engineering. If you look up inside the bell, it's a marvel of gears, like a
fine Rolex."
Kat turned to Logan. He had paled. Like
Kat, he had studied the sketches Anna Sporrenberg had made of the original
Bell. This was an exact duplicate done in gold. Both had also read of the
detrimental effects that could be radiated from the device. Madness and death.
Kat stared out the upper-story window. From this height, she could just make
out the white dome of the Capitol.
The ambassador's earlier words now horrified.
A hundred golden bells
endowed around the globe.
"It took a special technician to
install it," the ambassador continued, though now a slightly bored lilt
entered his voice, winding the meeting toward its end. "I believe he's
around here somewhere."
The room's door closed behind them,
slamming slightly.
All three turned.
"Ah, here he is," Hourigan said
upon turning. His voice died when he spotted the submachine gun held by the
newcomer. His hair was white-blond. Even from across the room, Kat spotted a
dark tattoo on the hand supporting the gun.
Kat dove for her ankle holster.
Without a word, the assassin opened fire,
spraying bullets.
Glass shattered, and wood splintered.
Behind her, beaten by ricocheting rounds,
the golden bell rang and rang.
12:44 p.m.
The
elevator doors opened on the seventh sublevel. Gray stepped out, rifle in hand.
He searched both directions along a gray hallway. Unlike the rich woods and
fine craftsmanship used in the main manor house, this sublevel was lit by fluorescents
and maintained a rigid sterility in its decor: bleached linoleum floors, gray
walls, low roof. Smooth steel doors with glowing electronic locks lined one
side of the hall. The other doors appeared more ordinary.
Gray placed his palm against one.
The panel vibrated. He heard a rhythmic
hum.
Power plant? Must be massive.
Marcia stepped to his side. "I think
we've come down too far," she whispered. "This feels more storage and
utility."
Gray agreed. Still
He crossed to one of the locked steel doors.
"Begs the question, what're they storing?"
The sign on the door read: EMBRYONAAL.
"Embryonic lab," Marcia
translated.
She crossed to join him, eyes guarded,
wincing slightly as she moved her bandaged and splinted arm.
Gray raised Ischke's card again and
swiped it. The indicator glowed green and a magnetic lock released. Gray pushed
the door. He had shouldered his rifle and now had his pistol out.
The overhead fluorescents flickered then
came on steady.
The room was a long hall, a good forty
meters. Gray noted how chilly the air was in here, crisper, filtered. A flush
line of floor-to-ceiling stainless-steel freezers covered one side. Compressors
hummed. On the other side were steel carts, tanks of liquid nitrogen, and a
large microscope table wired to a micro-dissection table.
It appeared to be some form of a cryonics
lab.
At a central workstation, a
Hewlett-Packard computer idled. The Screensaver spun on the LCD monitor. A
silver symbol rotated against a black background. A familiar symbol. Gray had seen
it depicted on the floor of Wewelsburg castle.
"The Black Sun," Gray mumbled.
Marcia glanced at him.
Gray pointed to the spinning sun.
"The symbol represents Himmler's Black Order, a cabal of Thule Society
occultists and scientists obsessed with the superman philosophy. Baldric
must've been a member, too."
Gray sensed they had come full circle.
From Ryan's great-grandfather to here. He nodded to the computer. "Look
for a main directory. See what you can find out."
While Marcia aimed for the workstation,
Gray crossed to one of the freezers. He pulled it open. Frigid air welled out.
Inside were drawers, indexed and numbered. Behind him, he heard Marcia tapping
at the computer. Gray edged one drawer open. Neatly arranged in clips were a
score of tiny glass straws filled with a yellow liquid.
"Frozen embryos," Marcia said
behind him.
He closed the drawer and looked down the
length of the hall at the number of giant freezers. If Marcia was correct,
there had to be thousands of embryos stored here.
She spoke, drawing him over. "The
computer is a database, logging genomes and genealogy." She glanced over
to him. "Both human and animal. Mammalian species. Look at this." Strange notations
filled the screen.
NUCLEOTIDE VERANDERING (DNA)
[CROCUTA
CROCUTA]
Thu Nov 6 14:56:25 GMT
Schema V.1.16
VERANDERING CODE RANGSCHIKKEN
Loci A.0 Transversie
A.0.2 Diprimidine to Dithymidine (c[CT]>TT)
ATGGTTACGCGCTCATG
GAATTCTCGCTCATGGA
ATTCTCGCTCGTCAACT
Loci A.3. Gedeeltelijk
A.3.3.4. Dinucleotide (transcriptie)
CTAGAAATTACGCTCTTA
CGCTTCTCGCTTGTTAC
GCGCTCA
Loci B.5.
B.5.1.3 Cryptische plaatsactivering
GTTACGCGCTCGCGCTCA
TGGAATTCTCGCTCATG
Loci B.7.
B.7.5.1. Pentanucleotide (g[TACAGATTC]
vermindere stabiliteit)
ATGGTTACGCGCTUCGC
TGGAATTCTCGCTCATG
GAATTCTCGCTC
"They appear to be a list of
mutational changes," Marcia said. "Defined down to the level of
polynucleotides."
Gray tapped the name near the top. "Crocuta crocuta,"
he read. "The spotted hyena. I've seen the end result of that research.
Baldric Waalenberg mentioned how he was perfecting the species, even
incorporating human stem cells in their brains."
Marcia brightened and tapped back to a
main directory. "That explains the name of the entire database. Hersenschim. Which translates to 'chimera.' A biologic term for an
organism with genetic material from more than one species, whether from
grafting like in plants or insertion of foreign cells into an embryo." She
tapped one-handed at the computer, focused. "But to what end?"
Straightening, Gray glanced down the
length of the embryonic lab. Was all this any different from Baldric's
manipulation of orchids and bonsai trees? Just another way to control nature,
to manipulate and design it according to his own definition of perfection.
"Hmm
," Marcia mumbled. "Strange."
Gray turned back to her.
"What?"
"As I said, there are human embryos
here." She glanced over a shoulder to Gray. "According to the
cross-referenced genealogy, all of these embryos are genetically tied to the
Waalenbergs."
No surprise there. Gray had noted the
similarities in the Waalenberg offspring. Their patriarch had been tweaking the
family lineage for generations.
But apparently that wasn't the strange
part.
Marcia continued, "Each of the
Waalenberg embryos in turn is referenced to stem cell lines that are then
tracked to Crocuta crocuta."
"The hyenas?"
Marcia nodded.
Understanding and horror grew. "Are
you saying he's been planting his own
children's stem cells into those monsters?" Gray could not hide his shock.
Did the man's atrocities, his conceit,
never end?
"That's not all," Marcia said.
Gray felt a sickening jolt in his gut,
knowing what she was going to say next.
Marcia pointed to a complicated chart on
the screen. "According to this, stem cells from the hyenas are
cross-referenced back to the next generation of human embryos."
"Dear God
"
Gray pictured Ischke holding out her hand
and stopping the charging hyena. It was more than just master and dog. It was
family. Baldric had been implanting cells from his mutated hyenas back into his
children, cross-pollinating like his orchids.
"But even that's not the worst
," Marcia began, pale and disturbed to
her core. "The Waalenbergs have been"
Gray cut her off. He had heard enough.
They had more to search. "We should keep moving."
Marcia glanced to the computer with
reluctance, but she nodded and stood. They left the monster lab and continued
down the hall. The next door was marked FOETUSSEN. A fetal lab. Gray continued
down the hall without stopping. He had no desire to see what horrors lay inside
there.
"How are they achieving these
results?" Marcia asked. "The mutations, the successful chimeras
?
They must have some way of controlling their genetic manipulations."
"Possibly," he mumbled.
"But it's not perfected not yet."
Gray remembered Hugo Hirszfeld's work,
the code he hid in runes. He now understood Baldric's obsession with it. A
promise of perfection. Too
beautiful to let die and too monstrous to set free.
And certainly the concerns of the
monstrous didn't scare Baldric. In fact, he bred the monstrous into his own
family. And now that he had Hugo's code, what was Baldric's next step? Especially with Sigma breathing down his neck. No wonder
Baldric wanted so desperately to know about Painter Crowe.
They reached another door. The room
beyond must be huge, as it was spaced a distance from the fetal lab. Gray noted
the name on the door.
XERUM 525.
He matched gazes with Marcia.
"Not serum," Gray said.
"Xerum," Marcia read, shaking
her head in a lack of understanding.
Gray used his stolen card. The green
light flashed, the lock released, and he pushed inside. The room's lights
flickered on. The air here smelled vaguely corrosive with a hint of ozone. The
floor and walls were dark.
"Lead," Marcia said, touching
the walls.
Gray didn't like the sound of that, but
he had to know more. The cavernous space looked like a storage facility for
hazardous wastes. Shelves stretched deep into the room. Stacked on them were
yellow ten-gallon drums with the number 525 stamped on them.
Gray remembered his concern about a
biowarfare agent. Or did the drums hold some type of fissionable material,
nuclear waste? Was that the reason the room was lead-lined?
Marcia showed little concern. She crossed
to the shelves. Each shelf spot bore a label, marking each drum.
"Albania," she read, then stepped to the next one.
"Argentina."
Other countries were named, in
alphabetical order.
Gray stared across the shelves. There had
to be a hundred drums at least.
Marcia glanced to him. He understood the
sudden concern in her eyes.
Oh,
no
Gray hurried into the room, searching the
shelves, stopping periodically to read a label:
He ran on.
At last he reached the spot he was
looking for.
UNITED STATES.
He recalled what Marcia had overheard,
something about Washington, D.C. A possible attack. Gray stared down the rows
of drums. From all the countries named here, it wasn't just Washington under
threat. At least not yet. Gray remembered Baldric's concern about Painter,
about Sigma. They were his most immediate threat.
To compensate, Baldric must have moved up
his timetable.
Above the label marked UNITED STATES, the
shelf was empty.
The corresponding drum of Xerum 525 was
gone.
7:45 a.m. EST
ETA
on MedSTAR?" the radio dispatcher asked. He sat
before the hospital's touch-screen program, wireless headset in place.
The helicopter crackled back, "En
route. Two minutes out."
"The ER is asking for an
update." Everyone had heard about the shootout on Embassy Row. Homeland
Security protocols were in effect. Calls and alarms were being raised
throughout the city. Confusion reigned at the moment.
"Embassy medical personnel
pronounced two on the spot. Two of their own. South African nationals,
including the ambassador. But two Americans are also down."
"Status?"
"One dead
one
critical."
1:55 p.m.
Fiona
listened at the doorway, Taser in hand. Voices approached the first-floor
landing. Terror strangled her. Whatever reserve of adrenaline had been
sustaining her for the past twenty-four hours was reaching its end. Her hands
shook, her breathing remained shallow and rapid.
The gagged and bound guard, the one who'd
grabbed her, lay sprawled behind her. She'd had to shock him again when the
bloke had begun to moan.
The voices approached her hiding spot.
Fiona tensed.
Where was Gray? He had been gone almost
an hour.
Two people approached her door. She
recognized one of their voices. It was the blond bitch who had sliced her palm.
Ischke Waalenberg. She and her companion spoke Dutch, but Fiona was fluent in
the language.
"
key cards," Ischke said
angrily. "I must have lost mine when I fell."
"Well, dear zuster, you are home and safe
now."
Zuster. Sister. So her companion was her
brother.
"We'll change the codes as a
precaution," he added.
"And no one has found the two
Americans or the girl?"
"We have all the borders of the
estate under double guard. We're confident that they're still on the grounds.
We'll find them. And grootvader has a
surprise."
"What sort of surprise?"
"Insurance that no one leaves the
estate alive. Remember he did take DNA samples from them when they first
arrived."
Ischke laughed, chilling Fiona's blood.
The voices wandered away.
"Come." The brother's voice
faded down the stairs as they descended toward the main floor. "Grootvader wants us all
downstairs."
Their voices trailed to a stop near the
bottom of the staircase. With her ear pressed to the door, Fiona could make out
no other words, but it sounded like an argument over some matter. But she had
heard enough.
No
one leaves the estate alive.
What were they planning? Ischke's icy
laugh still rang in her head, mirthless and satisfied. Whatever was being
plotted, they seemed certain of its outcome. But what did their DNA samples
have to do with it?
Fiona knew there was only one way to find
out. She had no idea when Gray would return and feared time was running out for
all of them. They would need to know what the danger was
if they were to avoid
it.
That meant only one thing.
She pocketed her Taser and took out her
feather duster. She twisted the dead bolt and unlocked the door. For this hunt,
she needed all the skills from the street. She pulled open the door and slipped
out of the room. Pausing, her back to the door, she pushed it closed with her
rear end. She had never felt so alone, so purely frightened. Reconsidering, she
rested her hand on the doorknob. She closed her eyes and steadied herself,
offering up a prayer, not to God, but to someone who had taught her how courage
came in many forms, including sacrifice.
"Mutti
," she prayed.
She missed her foster mother, Grette
Neal. Old secrets from the past had killed the woman, and now new secrets
threatened Fiona and the others. For any hope of survival, she needed to be as
brave and selfless as Mutti.
The voices below drifted away down the
staircase.
Fiona sidled closer, feather duster
raised in defense. She peered over the first-landing balcony, just enough to
spot the white-blond heads of the twins. Their words reached her again.
"Don't keep grootvader waiting," the brother said.
"I'll be right down. I just want to
check on Skuld. Make sure she is back in her kennel. She was quite aroused, and
I fear she might harm herself in her frustration."
"The same might be said of you, my
sweet zuster."
Fiona took a step closer. The brother
touched his sister's cheek, creepily intimate.
Ischke leaned into his touch, then pulled
away. "I won't be long."
Her brother nodded and stepped toward the
central lift. "I will let grootvader
know." He pressed a button and the doors opened.
Ischke headed off in a different
direction, toward the back of the manor.
Fiona hurried to follow. She clutched the
Taser in her pocket. If she could get the bitch alone, make her talk
Flying down the steps, Fiona slowed near
the bottom, resuming a more subdued pace. Ischke was headed down a central hall
that seemed to run straight through the heart of the manor house.
Fiona followed from a distance, head
lowered, feather duster folded in her arms like a nun with a Bible. She took
tiny steps, a nondescript mouse of a servant. Ischke descended a set of five
stairs, passing a pair of sentries, and followed along another hallway to the
left.
Fiona approached the pair of guards. She
increased her pace, appearing like a servant late to some obscure duty. Still,
she stayed deeply bowed, half-buried in her oversize maid outfit.
She reached the short stairs.
The guards ignored her, plainly on their
best behavior after the mistress of the house had just passed them. Fiona
skipped down the five steps. Once in the lower hall, Fiona found it empty.
She stopped.
Ischke was gone.
A mix of relief and terror suffused
through her in equal parts.
Should
I return to the room? Hope for the best?
She remembered Ischke's cold laughter
then the woman's voice barked sharply, close, coming from a double set of
decorative iron-and-glass doors to the right.
Something had pissed Ischke off.
Fiona hurried forward. She listened at
the door.
"The meat must be bloody!
Fresh!" Ischke hollered. "Or I'll put you in there with her."
Mumbled apologies. Footsteps ran away.
Fiona leaned closer, her ear to the
glass.
A mistake.
The door shoved open, striking her in the
side of the head. Ischke stormed through, running straight into Fiona.
Ischke swore, elbowing her aside.
Fiona reacted instinctively, relying on
old skills. She untangled herself and bunched into a ball, dropping to a knee,
cowering it didn't take much acting.
"Watch where you're going!"
Ischke fumed.
"Ja,
maitresse," she
fawned, bowing deeper.
"Get out of my way!"
Fiona panicked. Where was she supposed to
go? Finding Fiona at the door, Ischke would wonder what she had been doing
crouched there. The woman's body still held the door open. Fiona scraped her
way, bowing through the open doorway, out of Ischke's way.
Fiona's hand went to her hidden Taser,
but it took her a moment to drop what she had just stolen from Ischke's sweater
pocket. She had not meant to steal it, just reflexes. Stupid. Now the delay
cost her everything. Before she could free her Taser, Ischke swore and strode
away. The heavy iron-and-glass door swung shut with a clang between them.
Fiona cringed, cursing herself. What now?
She would have to wait a few moments before leaving. Suspicions would be too
aroused if she were spotted on Ischke's trail again. Besides, she knew where
Ischke was headed. Back to the lift. Unfortunately, Fiona didn't know the house
well enough to take an alternate route to the main hall, to attempt an ambush.
Tears threatened, a mix of fear and
frustration.
She had bollixed the whole deal.
Despairing, she finally took note of the
chamber ahead. It was brightly lit, with natural sunlight streaming through a
geodesic glass roof. It was some type of inner circular courtyard. Giant palms
rose from the central floor and crowned toward the glass roof. All around,
massive colonnades supported the high roof and set off deep cloisters around
the room. Three lofty halls, arched and as high as the central courtyard,
branched off like chapels off a church's nave, forming a cross.
But this hall was no place of worship.
The smell struck her first. Musky, fetid,
the reek of a charnel house. Cries and ululating moans echoed across the
cavernous space. Curiosity drew her a step forward. Three stairs led down to
the main floor, empty of staff. The man whom she had heard run off after being
scolded by Ischke was nowhere in sight.
From her post, she searched the room.
Fitted into each of the sunken cloisters
around the edges of the giant courtyard were massive cages, sealed in front by
iron-and-glass grates, like the entry door. Behind the bars, she spotted
hulking shapes, some curled in slumber, others pacing, one hunkered over a knob
of leg bone, gnawing. The hyena creatures.
But that wasn't all.
In other cages, she spotted additional
monstrosities. A gorilla sat sullen near the front of one cage, staring
straight at Fiona with an unnerving intelligence. Worse yet, some mutation had
stripped the beast of its fur. Wrinkled elephantine skin hung from its body.
In another, a lion paced back and forth.
It was furred, but it grew out bleached and patchy and was presently fouled
with feces and gore. It panted, eyes red-rimmed. Fangs protruded, saber-toothed
and sickled.
All around were twisted forms: a striped
antelope with corkscrewing horns, a pair of skeletally tall jackals, an albino
warthog plated like an armadillo. Gruesome and sad at the same time. The
jackals caged together wailed and yipped, moving woodenly, crippled.
Still, pity did little to hold back the
terror of seeing the giant hyenas. Her eyes fixed on the one gnawing a thigh
bone of some massive animal. Water buffalo or wildebeest. A bit of meat and
black fur still waited to be worried from the bone. Fiona could not help
imagining that it could have been her. If Gray hadn't rescued her
She shivered.
Tensing its massive jaws, the giant hyena
cracked the leg bone, snapping it like a gunshot.
Fiona jumped, awakened again.
She retreated to the door. She had waited
long enough. With her mission a failure, she would sneak back to her hiding
place with her tail tucked between her legs.
She grabbed the door and yanked on it.
Locked.
2:30 p.m.
Gray
stared at the row of heavy steel levers, heart pounding in his throat. It had
taken him too long to find the master circuit switches for the electrical
board. He could sense the power flowing through the giant cabling in the room,
an electromagnetic force felt at the base of the neck.
He had already wasted too much time.
After discovering one of the drums of
Xerum 525 was missing, one intended for the United States, urgency weighed
heavily upon Gray. He had abandoned any attempt to reconnoiter the remainder of
the subbasement. Right now, it was more important to get a warning off to
Washington.
Marcia had reported seeing an emergency
shortwave radio in the security block when she had been taken from her cell.
She knew whom to call, a partner of hers, Dr. Paula Kane, who could pass on the
warning. Still, they both knew that to go for the radio was probably a suicide
mission. But what choice did they have?
At least Fiona was safely ensconced away.
"What are you waiting for?"
Marcia asked. She had cut free her sling and changed into a laboratory smock
from one of the storage lockers. In the dark, she might pass for one of the
lab's researchers.
Marcia stood at his back, clutching an
emergency flashlight.
Gray raised a hand to the first lever.
They had already located the fire stairs
for the subbasement. The stairs should lead back to the main house. But to get
outside and reach the security block, they needed an additional means of
distraction, extra insurance.
The answer had come a few moments ago.
Gray had been leaning against one of the hallway doors. He noted the vibration
and hum of the level's power plant. If they could fry the main board create
more chaos, possibly blind their captors for a spell they'd have a better
chance of making it to that radio.
"Ready?" Gray asked.
Marcia flicked on her flashlight. She met
his gaze, took a deep breath, and nodded. "Let's do it."
"Lights out," Gray said and
yanked the first lever.
Then the next and the next.
2:35 p.m.
Fiona
watched the lamps around the courtyard flicker and die.
Oh, God
Fiona stood in the center of the courtyard,
near a small fountain. Moments ago, she had slipped from her post by the locked
main door and had crept halfway across the central courtyard. She had gone in
search of another exit. Surely there had to be one.
She froze now.
A momentary silence spread across the
room, as if the animals sensed some primary change, a loss of the perpetual
subsonic hum of power. Or maybe it was merely a sense of power shifting to them.
A door creaked open behind her.
Fiona slowly turned.
One of the iron-and-glass cages nudged
open, nosed by one of the hyena monsters. The blackout had demagnetized the
locks. The beast crept out of its cage. Blood dripped from its muzzle. It had
been the one gnawing the thigh bone. A low growl flowed from it.
Somewhere behind her, Fiona heard a
cackling yip as some silent communication passed through the menagerie's
predators. Other doors creaked on iron hinges.
Fiona remained fixed by the fountain.
Even the water pump had died, silencing the waters, as if fearful of drawing
attention to itself.
Somewhere down one of the arched side
chapels, a bright scream echoed forth. Human. Fiona imagined it was the
zookeeper whom Ischke had scolded. It seemed his charges would get their bloody
meal after all. Footsteps ran in her direction. Then a new scream erupted,
pained and garbled amid a yowl of yips and cries.
Fiona shut her ears against the last cry,
followed by the sound of feeding.
Her full attention remained on the first
escapee.
The bloody-muzzled hyena approached.
Fiona recognized the creature from the shadow of spotting on its flank, barely
discernible, white on white. It was the same beast from the jungle.
Ischke's pet.
Skuld.
It had been denied its caged treat
before.
But no longer.
2:40 p.m.
Help
us
bitte!" Gunther rushed into
the hut, followed by Major Brooks.
Lisa stood up, lowering her stethoscope
from Painter's chest. She had been monitoring a systolic murmur. In just the
past half day, it had changed from an early-peaking murmur to a late one,
suggesting a rapidly progressing stenosis of the man's aortic valve. Mild
angina had worsened to bouts of syncope, swooning faints if Painter
overexerted. She had never seen such a rapid degeneration. She suspected
calcification around his heart valve. Such odd mineralized deposits had begun
appearing throughout Painter's body, even in the fluids of his eye.
Lying flat on his back, Painter pushed to
his elbows with a wince. "What's wrong?" he asked Gunther.
Major Brooks answered with a worried
southern drawl. "It's his sister, sir. She's having some type of fit
a
seizure."
Lisa grabbed the med kit. Painter tried
to stand but had to be assisted by Lisa on his second attempt. "Just stay
here," she warned.
"I can manage," he answered,
showing his irritation.
Lisa didn't have time to argue. She let
go of his arm. He teetered. She hurried to Gunther. "Let's go."
Brooks waited, unsure whether to follow
or lend an arm to Painter.
The major was waved off.
Painter hobbled after them.
Lisa ran out of the hut and crossed to
the neighboring one. The day's heat struck her like stepping into an oven. The
air hung motionless, burning, impossible to breathe. The sun blinded. But in a
moment, Lisa was ducking into the cooler darkness of the next room.
Anna lay on a grass mat, half on her
side, body arched, muscles contracted. Lisa hurried to her. She had already
established an intravenous catheter in her forearm. Painter had the same. It
was easier to administer drugs and fluids.
Lisa quickly dropped to a knee and
grabbed up a syringe premeasured with diazepam. She gave the entire dose in one
bolus IV. In seconds, Anna relaxed, dropping back to the floor. Her eyes
fluttered open and consciousness returned, groggy but attentive.
Painter arrived. Monk appeared in tow
with him.
"How is she?" Painter asked.
"How do you think?" Lisa asked,
exasperated.
Gunther helped his sister sit up. Her
face was ashen, covered in a sheen of sweat. Painter was destined for the same
in the next hour. Though both were exposed, Painter's larger bulk seemed to be
sustaining him a bit more heartily. But their survival was down to hours.
Lisa stared up at the shaft of sunlight
spearing into the room from a slit window. Twilight was too far off.
Monk spoke into the worried silence.
"I spoke to Khamisi. He reports that every light in the damn mansion just
went out." He wore a tentative grin, as if unsure any good news was
welcome. "I'm guessing it's Gray's handiwork."
Painter frowned. It was his only
expression lately. "We don't know that."
"And we don't know it isn't."
Monk wiped a hand across the top of his shaved head. "Sir, I think we need
to consider moving up the timetable. Khamisi says"
"Khamisi is not running this
op," Painter said, coughing harshly.
Monk met Lisa's eyes. The two of them had
held a private discussion twenty minutes ago. It was one of the reasons Monk
had made the call to Khamisi. Certain expediencies had to be verified. Monk
nodded to her.
She slipped a second syringe from her
pocket, stepped to Painter's side.
"Let me flush your catheter,"
Lisa said. "There's blood in it."
Painter held up his arm. It trembled.
Lisa supported his wrist and injected her
dose. Monk stepped beside Painter and caught him as his legs went out from
under him.
"What?" Painter's head lolled
back.
Monk shouldered him under one arm.
"It's for your own good, sir."
Painter frowned at Lisa. His other arm
swung at her whether to hit her or express some shock at her betrayal, Lisa
doubted he even knew. The sedative swooned him away.
Major Brooks watched, his mouth hanging
open.
Monk shrugged at the Air Force man.
"Never seen a mutiny before?"
Brooks collected himself. "All I can
say, sir
about bloody time."
Monk nodded. "Khamisi is on his way
in with the package. ETA three minutes. He and Dr.
Kane will take over ground support here."
Lisa turned to Gunther. "Can you
carry your sister?"
As proof, he scooped her up and stood.
"What are you all doing?" Anna
asked weakly.
"You two are not going to last until
nightfall," Lisa said. "We're going to make a run for the Bell."
"How
?"
"Don't worry that pretty little head
of yours," Monk said and hobbled out with Painter, supported by Major
Brooks. "We've got it covered."
Monk again met Lisa's eyes. She read his
expression.
It may be too late already.
2:41 p.m.
Gray
led the way up the stairs, pistol in hand. He and Marcia moved as silently as
possible. She kept a palm over her flashlight's lamp, keeping any illumination
to a minimum. Just enough to see where they were going. With the elevators incapacitated,
he feared running into a stray guard on the stairs.
Though he was disguised as a guard, one
leading a researcher out of the darkened basement, he'd still rather avoid any
unnecessary encounters.
They crossed past the sixth sublevel,
dark like the one below.
Gray continued, increasing his pace,
balancing caution against the fear secondary generators would kick in at some
point. Climbing around the next landing, a glow appeared ahead.
Holding up a hand, he stopped Marcia
behind him.
The light didn't move. It remained
stationary.
Not a wandering guard. Probably an
emergency lamp.
Still
"Stay here," he whispered to
Marcia.
She nodded.
Gray continued ahead, pistol raised and
ready. He climbed the steps. At the next landing, light seeped through a half-open
doorway. As Gray approached, he heard voices. Farther up the stairs, it
remained dark. So why was there light and power here? This level must be on a
separate circuit.
Voices echoed down the corridor.
Familiar voices. Isaak and Baldric.
They were out of direct sight, hidden
deeper in the room. He glanced below and saw Marcia's face limned in the light
washing down the stairs. He waved her up to his landing.
She had heard the voices, too.
Isaak and Baldric seemed unconcerned
about the loss of electricity. With power here, did they even know the rest of
the manor was blacked out? Gray held his curiosity in check. He had to warn
Washington.
Words reached him. "The Bell will
kill all of them," Baldric said.
Gray paused. Were they talking about
Washington? If so, what were their plans? If he knew more
Gray held up two fingers to Marcia. Two
minutes. If he wasn't back, she was to head up on her own. He had left her his
second pistol. If he could see this
He held up the two fingers again.
Marcia nodded. It would be up to her if
Gray was caught.
He squeezed into the opening, not budging
the door, afraid a squeak of hinges would alert the two inside. The same gray
fluorescent-lit hall stretched ahead. But it ended a short distance away at a
double set of steel doors, opposite where the darkened elevator opened on this
floor.
One of the double doors stood open.
Gray moved quickly, staying on the balls
of his feet. He reached the doors and hugged the wall. He dropped to a knee and
peered past the edge of the door.
The chamber beyond was low-roofed but
cavernous, encompassing this entire sublevel. Here was the heart of the
laboratory. Banks of computers lined one wall. Monitors glowed with scrolling
numbers and code. The computers probably warranted the separate circuit, their
own power supply.
The room's occupants, so focused on the
task at hand, hadn't noted the loss of power elsewhere. But surely they would
be alerted any minute.
Baldric and Isaak, grandfather and
grandson, were bent over a station. A thirty-inch flat-screen monitor on the
wall flashed rapidly through a series of runes, one after the other. It was the
five from Hugo's books.
"The code remains unbroken,"
Isaak said. "Is it wise to move the Bell program global while we still
have this riddle unsolved?"
"It will be solved!" Baldric
slammed a fist on the table. "It is only a matter of time. Besides, we are
close enough to perfection. Like with you and your sister. You will live long.
Fifty years. The deterioration will not weaken you until your last decade. It
is time for us to move forward."
Isaak looked little convinced.
Baldric straightened. He lifted an arm
and waved it toward the ceiling. "See what delays have wrought. Our attempt
to distract international attention to the Himalayas has backfired."
"Because we underestimated Anna
Sporrenberg."
"And Sigma," Baldric added.
"But no matter. Governments now breathe down our necks. Gold will buy us
only so much protection. We must act now. First Washington, then the world. And
in that chaos, there will be plenty of time to break the code. Perfection will
be ours."
"And out of Africa, a new world will
arise," Isaak said in rote, as if it were a prayer drilled into him at a
young age, cemented in his genetic code.
"Pure and cleansed of
corruption," Baldric added, ending the litany. But his words were equally
dispassionate. It was as if all this were no more than another step in his
breeding program, a scientific exercise.
Baldric teetered straighter on his cane.
Gray noted how enfeebled the man really appeared, with no audience but his
grandson. Gray wondered if the accelerated timetable wasn't fueled more by
Baldric's own impending mortality than by any true necessity. Were they all unwitting
pawns in Baldric's desire to move forward in his plan? Had Baldric orchestrated
this scenario on purpose consciously or unconsciously to justify acting
now, during his lifetime?
Isaak spoke again. He had shifted over to
another workstation. "We've green lights across the board. The Bell is
powered up and ready for activation. We'll now be able to cleanse the estate of
the escaped prisoners."
Gray stiffened. What was this all about?
Baldric turned his back on the flashing runic
code and focused toward the room's center. "Prepare for activation."
Gray shifted to see farther into the
room.
In its center rested a massive shell,
composed of some type of ceramic or metallic compound. It was shaped like an
upended bell and stood as tall as Gray. He doubted he could hug his arms
halfway around its circumference.
Motors sounded, chugging and echoing, and
an inner metal sleeve lowered from the ceiling, encased in a clockwork of
gears. It dropped into the larger outer shell. At the same time, a neighboring
yellow tank opened a gasket and a stream of purplish metallic liquid flowed
into the heart of the Bell.
Lubricant? Fuel source?
Gray had no idea, but he noted the
numbers stamped on the side of the tank: 525. It was the mysterious Xerum.
"Raise the blast shield,"
Baldric ordered. He had to yell to be heard above the clanking gears of the
motor assembly. He motioned to the floor with his cane.
The level here was covered by the same
gray tile, except for a dull black circular section, thirty yards across,
surrounding the Bell. A raised border edged it, a foot thick, like the ring in
a circus. The ceiling above was a mirror of the floor, except the roof had an
indented border.
It was all lead.
Gray realized the outer floor ring must
rise on pistons and insert into the ceiling, forming an entire cylinder locked
around the Bell.
"What's wrong?" Baldric yelled
again, turning to Isaak at his station.
Isaak toggled a switch back and forth.
"We're getting no power to the blast shield motors!"
Gray glanced to his toes. The motors must
be on the level below. The darkened level. A phone rang inside the room, chiming
stridently, competing with the motors. Gray could guess who was calling.
Security had finally discovered where the masters of the house were hidden.
Time to go.
Gray straightened and turned.
A pipe swung down and struck his wrist,
knocking the pistol from his hand. The wielder swung at his head. Gray barely
ducked in time.
Ischke stalked toward him. Behind her,
the doors to the darkened elevator stood open, pried apart. The woman must have
been trapped in the elevator when the power went out, then climbed down here.
Masked by the noise from the Bell's motors, Gray had not heard the doors being
pried open behind him.
Ischke raised her pipe, plainly skilled
in the art of staff fighting.
Gray fixed his eyes on her and retreated
into the Bell's chamber. He refused to glance toward the fire stairs. He prayed
Marcia had already left, was en route to reach the shortwave radio and raise
the alarm in Washington.
Ischke, her clothes stained with oil, her
face smudged, followed Gray inside the Bell chamber.
Baldric spoke behind Gray. "Wat is dit? It seems little Ischke has
trapped the mouse who has chewed through the wiring."
Gray turned.
Unarmed. Out of options.
"Generators are coming back
online," Isaak said, his manner bored, unimpressed by the intrusion.
A grind of motors rumbled under Gray's
feet. The blast shield began to rise from the floor.
"Now to exterminate the other
rats," Baldric said.
2:45 p.m.
Monk
yelled to be heard over the helicopter's rotors. Sand and dust swirled around
them in the rotor wash's whirlwind. "You know how to fly this bird?"
Gunther nodded, grabbing the chopper's
stick.
Monk clapped the large man on the
shoulder. He would have to trust the Nazi. Monk could not fly the bird himself,
not one-handed. Still, with the giant's allegiance now centered on his sister's
survival, Monk thought it was a safe bet.
Anna sat in the back with Lisa. Painter
slumped between them, head hanging. He had only been lightly sedated. Painter
mumbled occasionally, nonsensically, warning about some impending sandstorm,
lost in past fears.
Ducking his head under the blades, Monk
circled around the helicopter. On the far side, Khamisi stood beside Mosi
D'Gana, the Zulu chieftain. They clasped each other's forearms.
Mosi had shed his ceremonial gear and now
wore khaki fatigues, cap, and an automatic rifle over one shoulder. A holstered
pistol hung from a black belt. But he had not totally abandoned his heritage. A
short spear with a wicked blade was strapped to his back.
"You have the command," Mosi
said formally to Khamisi as Monk approached.
"My honor, sir."
Mosi nodded and let go of Khamisi's arm.
"I've heard good things about you, Fat Boy."
Monk joined them. Fat Boy?
Khamisi's eyes widened, a mix of shame
and honor shining in them. He nodded back and stepped away. Mosi climbed into
the helicopter. He would be joining the first-wave assault. Monk had no choice.
He owed the chieftain.
Khamisi crossed to Paula Kane. The pair
would be coordinating the ground assault.
Monk searched beyond the swirling plume
of sand and dust. The forces had gathered quickly, coming in on foot, on
horseback, on rusted motorcycles and beat-up trucks. Mosi had spread the word.
And like his great ancestor Shaka Zulu, he gathered an army. Men and women. In
traditional pelts, in worn fatigues, in Levi's. And more were still coming.
It would be up to them to keep the
Waalenberg army occupied, to secure the estate if possible. How would the Zulus
fare against the superiorly armed and experienced security forces of the
estate? Would it be Bloody River all over again?
There was only one way to find out.
Monk pulled himself into the crowded rear
compartment. Mosi settled into a seat next to Major Brooks. They sat on the
bench facing Anna, Lisa, and Painter. One other newcomer, a half-naked Zulu
warrior named Tau, was also strapped in the back. He half twisted to keep a
short spear thrust at the throat of the chopper's copilot.
Head Warden Gerald Kellogg sat next to
Gunther, bound and gagged. One eye was swollen and purpling.
Monk tapped Gunther on the shoulder, and
waved a finger to get the bird in the air. With a nod of acknowledgment,
Gunther pulled on the collective, and the chopper leaped into the air with a
roar of the engines.
The ground dropped away. The estate
stretched out ahead of them. Monk had been informed that the estate was
equipped with surface-to-air missiles. Weaponless, the slow-moving commercial
chopper would be a flying bull's-eye.
That would not be good.
Monk leaned forward.
"Time to earn your keep,
warden."
Monk grinned wickedly. He knew it was not
a pretty sight, but it came in handy now.
Kellogg blanched.
Satisfied, Monk reached forward and
lifted the radio's mouthpiece to the warden's lips. "Connect us to the
security band."
Khamisi had already obtained the codes.
Hence Kellogg's black eye.
"Stick to the script," Monk
warned, still grinning.
Kellogg leaned a bit farther away.
Was his smile really that awful?
To reinforce the threat, Tau pressed the
point of his spear into the soft flesh of the man's neck.
Static squelched from the radio, and
Kellogg passed on the message as instructed. "We've recaptured one of your
prisoners," the warden told base security. "Monk Kokkalis. We're
flying him over to the rooftop helipad."
Gunther monitored security's response
over his headphones.
"Roger that. Over and out,"
Kellogg said.
Gunther yelled a bit. "We've been
given the all clear. Here we go."
He nosed the helicopter forward and sped
toward the estate. Ahead, the mansion came into view. It looked even more
massive from the air.
Swinging around and settling into his
seat, Monk faced Lisa. Beside her, Anna leaned against the window, eyes
squeezed closed in pain. Painter hung in his straps and groaned. The sedative
was wearing thin.
Lisa helped settle him back.
Monk noted that she held Painter's hand
and had all along.
Her face found Monk's.
Fear shone bright in her eyes.
But not for herself.
2:56 p.m.
Is
the broadcast rod raised?" Baldric asked.
Isaak nodded at his console.
"Ready the Bell for
activation."
Baldric turned to Gray. "We've fed
your companions' DNA codes into the Bell. It will modify its output to denature
and selectively destroy any matching DNA while remaining harmless to all
others. Our version of a final solution."
Gray pictured Fiona hidden up in her
room. And Monk was being flown in right now.
"There's no need to kill them,"
Gray said. "You've recaptured my partner. Leave the others alone."
"If I've learned nothing in these
past days, I've learned it's best to leave no loose strings." Baldric
nodded to Isaak. "Activate the Bell."
"Wait!" Gray yelled, stepping
forward.
Ischke had retrieved his pistol and
warned him away with it.
Baldric glanced back, bored and
impatient.
Gray had only one card to play. "I
know how to break Hugo's code."
Surprise softened Baldric's stern
demeanor. He lifted a delaying hand toward Isaak. "You do? You can succeed
where a series of Cray computers has so far failed?"
Doubt rang in the man's voice.
Gray knew he had to offer Baldric
something, anything to stop him from switching the Bell on and irradiating his
friends. He pointed to the monitor, repetitively cycling through the runes. The
computer shuffled and sought a combination that offered some mnemonic cipher.
"You'll fail on your own," Gray
promised.
"And why's that?"
Gray licked his dry lips, scared, but he
had to stay focused. He knew with certainty that the computer would fail
because he had already solved the riddle of the runes. He didn't understand the
answer, but he knew he was right, especially considering Hugo Hirszfeld's
Jewish heritage.
Still, how much could he give away? He
had to bargain to the best of his ability, balancing between the truth and the
answer.
"You have the wrong rune from the
Darwin Bible," Gray said truthfully. "And there are six, not just five, runes."
Baldric sighed. Disbelief deepened the
lines around his mouth. "Like the sun wheel you drew before, I
suppose?" He turned back toward Isaak.
"No!" Gray called out firmly.
"Let me show you!"
He searched around and spotted a marker
on one of the computer stations. He pointed and waved for it. "Pass me
that."
Brows pinched, Baldric nodded to Isaak.
The marker was tossed at him.
Gray caught it and knelt on the floor. He
drew on the gray linoleum tiles with the black marker. "The rune from the
Darwin Bible."
He drew it.
"The Mensch rune," Baldric said.
Gray tapped it. "It represents man's
higher state, the godlike plane hidden in all of us, our perfected
selves."
"So?"
"This was Hugo's goal. The end
result sought. Yes?"
Baldric slowly nodded.
"Hugo would not have incorporated
the result into his code. His code leads to this." He tapped the rune
harder. "This doesn't belong in the code."
Slowly understanding dawned
as did the
old man's belief. "The other runes in the Darwin Bible
"
Gray drew on the floor, illustrating his
point.
"These two runes make up the
third." He circled the two double-pronged runes. "These represent
mankind at his most basic, what leads to the higher state. As such, it is these
two runes that must be incorporated into the code."
Gray wrote the original series of runes.
"This is the wrong sequence."
He crossed them out and inscribed the
correct set, splitting the last rune.
Baldric stepped closer. "And this is
the correct series? What must be deciphered?"
Gray answered truthfully.
"Yes."
Baldric nodded, eyes squinting as he
considered this revelation. "I believe you are right, Commander
Pierce."
Gray stood.
"Dank
u," Baldric said
and turned back to Isaak. "Activate the Bell. Kill his friends."
3:07 p.m.
Lisa
helped lift Painter out of the helicopter as the rotors wound down. The Zulu
warrior Tau shouldered his other side. The sedative she had given Painter was
short-acting. It would wear off in another few minutes.
Gunther supported Anna, her eyes glazed.
The woman had dosed herself with another numbing injection of morphine. But she
had begun coughing up bloody sputum.
Ahead of them, Monk and Mosi D'Gana stood
over the dead bodies of a trio of helipad sentries. Security had been caught
off guard, expecting to be accepting a prisoner. It had only taken a short spat
from a pair of pistols equipped with silencers to commandeer the helipad.
Monk switched places with Tau. "Stay
here. Guard the chopper. Keep an eye on the prisoner."
Warden Kellogg had been pulled from the
helicopter and dumped on the roof. He was gagged, his hands cuffed behind his back,
his ankles tied. He wasn't going anywhere.
Monk waved Major Brooks and Mosi D'Gana
to take the lead. They had all reviewed the house schematics from Paula Kane
and calculated the best route to the subbasement level. It was a ways to go.
The helipad was situated near the back of the mansion.
Brooks and Mosi led them toward the
rooftop door to the manor house, assault rifles held at shoulders. The pair
moved as if they'd worked together before, synchronized, efficient. Gunther
also carried a pistol in his fist and a stubby-nosed assault rifle across his
back. Bristling with armament, they reached the door.
Brooks dashed forward. Key cards stolen
from the dead guards unlocked the way below. Brooks and Mosi disappeared
inside, scouting ahead. The others hung back.
Monk checked his watch. Timing was
everything.
A short whistling rose from below.
"Down we go," Monk said.
They hurried through the door and found a
short stairwell leading to the sixth floor. Brooks stood at the landing.
Another guard sprawled on the stairs, his neck sliced open, his life's blood
pumping away. Mosi crouched at the next landing, bloodied knife in hand.
They continued down, around and around
the stairs. They encountered no other guards. As they'd hoped, most of the
estate's forces were directed outward. The massing of Zulu tribesmen had to be
drawing a majority of their attention.
Monk checked his watch again.
Reaching the second floor, they exited
the stairs and aimed down a long corridor of polished wood. It was shadowy and
dark. The wall sconces flickered, as if the electrical system was still
fritzing after the blackout
or something was drawing off a lot of power.
Lisa also noted a rankness to the air.
The corridor dead-ended into a cross
passage. Brooks scouted to the right, the direction they needed to go. He came
slamming back around, flattening against the wall.
"Go back
back
"
A fierce and challenging growl erupted
around the corner. A series of cackles followed
and excited yips. A single
screeched scream drowned it all away.
"Ukufa," Mosi said, waving them back.
"Run!" Brooks said. "We'll
try to scare them off, then catch up."
Monk tugged Lisa and Painter away.
"What are
?" Lisa asked, words
strangling.
"Someone's loosed the dogs on
us," Monk said.
Gunther stumbled along with Anna. The
giant carried his sister, her feet uselessly scuffling
the floor.
A burst of gunfire erupted behind them.
Yips and ululations changed into cries of
pain and anger.
They ran faster.
More blasts echoed, sounding almost
frantic.
"Damn it!" Brooks swore loudly.
Lisa glanced over a shoulder.
Brooks and Mosi abandoned their post and
pounded down the corridor, arms pointing back, firing.
"Go, go, go
," Brooks yelled.
"Too goddamn many!"
Three massive white-furred creatures
ripped around the corner behind the men, heads low to the ground, jaws
slathering, hackles bristling. Claws dug into the wood floors as they raced in
a serpentine pattern, almost anticipating the bullets, avoiding kill shots. All
three bled from wounds but seemed more goaded than weakened from their
injuries.
Lisa turned back around in time to see a
pair of the same beasts stalk out of rooms to either side at the end of the
corridor, cutting off escape.
An ambush.
Gunther's massive pistol went off like a
cannon, deafening. His shot missed the lead creature as it shifted out of
position like a flicker of shadow.
Monk raised his own gun, pulling to a
stop.
Lisa's momentum carried her forward. She
went down on a knee, pulling Painter's limp form with her. He crashed, waking
slightly with the impact.
"Where?" he asked groggily.
Lisa pulled him lower as the hall filled
with gunfire.
A sharp scream arose behind her.
She jerked around. A heavily muscled form
lunged out of a neighboring doorway and slammed Major Brooks into the wall.
Lisa scrabbled away with a cry.
Mosi dove to the man's aid, a spear above
his head, a howl on his lips.
Lisa hugged Painter.
The creatures were everywhere.
Movement caught Lisa's eye. Another beast
rose from behind a door to the left, creaking the hinges. Its muzzle was bloody
with fresh gore. Crimson eyes glowed in the dark room. She flashed back to the
madness of the first Buddhist monk she had seen, ravening, wild, but still
operating with cunning and intelligence.
It was the same here.
As the monster stalked toward her, its
lips snarled back with a growl of triumph.
3:10 p.m.
Khamisi
lay in a gully covered by a camouflaged tarp.
"Three minutes," Dr. Paula Kane
said next to him, also on her belly.
The two studied the black fence line
through binoculars.
Khamisi had his forces spread out along
the border of the park. Some Zulu tribesmen wandered in plain sight, switching
cows along old paths. A group of elders in traditional beads, plumes, and
feathers stood wrapped in shoulder blankets. Back at the village, drums and
singing had begun, loud and bright. The gathering at the way station had been
staged as a wedding ceremony.
Motorcycles, ATV bikes, and trucks had
been parked haphazardly around the area. Some of the younger warriors, even
women, skulked around the vehicles, a few couples clasped in amorous embraces, others lifted carved wooden cups, shouting in
feigned inebriation. A group of bare-chested men, painted for the celebration,
bounced in a traditional dance done with clubs.
And except for the clubs, not a weapon
was in sight.
Khamisi adjusted the focus on his
binoculars. He shifted and lifted his field of view above the tall game fencing
topped by barbed curls of concertina wire. He could make out movement in the
jungle canopy beyond. Waalenberg forces had gathered along the elevated
walkways, spying over the fence, guarding the borders.
"One minute," Paula intoned.
She had a sniping rifle on a tripod under their tented tarp, hidden in the shade
of a stinkwood tree. He was surprised to learn she had won gold medals in
Olympic marksmanship.
Khamisi lowered his binoculars. The
traditional Zulu attack strategy was termed "the Buffalo." The
largest body, named the "chest," would lead a full frontal assault,
while from either side, the "horns of the bull" would strike out at
the flanks, cutting off any retreat, encircling the enemy. But Khamisi had made
a slight modification, compensating for modern armaments. It was the reason he
had scouted the grounds all night, planting his surprises.
"Ten seconds," Paula warned and
began counting down quietly. She settled her cheek to the side of her rifle.
Khamisi lifted his transmitter, twisted
the key, and held his thumb over the row of buttons.
"Zero," Paula finished.
Khamisi pressed the first button.
Beyond the fence, the charges he had
planted throughout the night ignited in fiery detonations, shattering through
the canopy, igniting sequentially for maximum chaos. Sections of flaming planks
and branches sailed high while an entire forest of birds took wing in fright,
an explosion of rainbow confetti.
Khamisi had planted C4 packets, supplied
through British channels, at key junctures and supports for the elevated
walkway. Explosions spread, encircling the mansion, crashing the canopy
bridges, stripping the Waalenberg forces of the high ground, and inciting panic
and confusion.
Ahead, Zulu warriors dropped blankets to
reveal rifles or knelt down and tugged free buried tarps that hid weapons
caches, becoming the chest of the Buffalo. To either side, engines revved all
around Khamisi as warriors mounted their vehicles, turning cycles and trucks
into the horns of the bull.
"Now," Paula said.
Khamisi pressed the next buttons, one
after the other.
The fence line for a full half mile
exploded with a fiery twist of metal and barbed wire. Sections dropped flat to
the ground, exposing the belly of the enemy.
Khamisi shed his tarp and stood. A
motorcycle sped up from behind, kicking sand and dirt as it skidded to a stop
next to him. Njongo waved him to mount. But Khamisi had one last duty. He
lifted a siren horn over his head and squeezed the trigger. Its trumpet blast
echoed across the homeland of the Zulus, sounding once again the charge of the
Buffalo.
3:13 p.m.
The
explosions echoed down from above, flickering lights across the
Not Gray's eyes.
His gaze remained focused on the power
meter on the console. Its indicators slowly rose toward a full pulse. Deaf to
Gray's pleading, Baldric had activated the Bell. A rising hum penetrated the
lead cylinder encased around the device. On a video monitor, the outer shell of
the Bell glowed a pale blue.
Once the power meter reached its peak, a
pulse would erupt and broadcast outward for five miles, killing Monk, Fiona,
and Ryan wherever they hid. Only Gray was safe in the chamber, under the
shield.
"Find out what's happening,"
Baldric finally ordered his grandson as the explosions died away.
Isaak was already reaching for the red
phone.
The pistol blast startled all of them,
coming on the heels of the muffled explosion, loud and intimate.
Gray spun around as blood splattered
across the tiled floor.
Ischke's left shoulder bloomed crimson as
she spun with the impact, shot from behind. Unfortunately, her pistol was
clutched in her right hand. Knocked around, Ischke took aim at the shooter by
the door.
Dr. Marcia Fairfield knelt in a shooter's
stance, but with her right arm incapacitated, she had shot with her left,
missing her kill shot.
Ischke was not so compromised. Even
caught by surprise, her aim was rock solid.
Until Gray dove into her side.
Two pistols went off, deafening in the
chamber Ischke's and Marcia's.
Both missed their target.
Gray bear-hugged Ischke from behind,
twisting her away from Marcia, but the woman was strong and fought like a
wildcat. Gray managed to get his hand around Ischke's fist that held the gun.
Her brother ran toward them, a long
German-steel dagger in his hand, held low.
Marcia fired from her stance, but she had
no clean bead on Isaak either as Gray's and Ischke's tussling bodies blocked
her shot.
Gray drove his chin into Ischke's bloody
shoulder. Hard. She gasped, weakened slightly. Gray got her arm up and squeezed
her fingers. Her pistol blasted. He felt the recoil in his own shoulder. But
the shot was too low, striking the floor at Isaak's toes. Still, the ricochet
grazed the man's calf, stumbling him a step.
Ischke, seeing her twin injured, savagely
freed her arm and slammed her elbow into Gray's ribs. The air was knocked from
him and pain danced across his eyes. Ischke broke free.
Beyond her, Isaak caught his footing,
murder in his eyes, dagger glinting.
Gray did not wait. Lunging forward, he
shoulder-checked Ischke from behind. The woman, still slightly off balance from
breaking Gray's hold, flew forward into her brother.
Onto his dagger.
The serrated blade plunged into her
chest.
A scream of surprise and pain burst from
her lips. It echoed out of her brother. The pistol dropped from Ischke's
fingers as she clutched her twin in disbelief.
Gray dove and caught her falling pistol
before it struck the ground.
Skidding on his back, he aimed toward
Isaak.
The man could have moved, should have
moved, but he just held his sister in his arms, his face a mask of agony.
Gray fired from the side, a clean head
shot, putting Isaak out of his misery.
The twins collapsed together to the
floor, limbs entwined, blood pooling together.
Gray stood up.
Marcia ran into the room, pistol aimed
toward Baldric. The old man stared at his dead grandchildren. But there was no
grief in his eyes as he leaned on his cane, only a clinical detachment,
dismayed by disappointing lab results.
The fight had
taken less than a minute.
Gray saw the power meter for the Bell was
in the red zone. He had maybe two minutes until the pulse. Gray placed the hot
muzzle of the pistol against the old man's cheek. "Turn it off."
Baldric met his eyes. "No."
3:13 p.m.
As
the explosions echoed away, the frozen tableau in the upper hallway of the
Waalenberg mansion thawed. The hyena creatures had flattened to the floor as
the booming erupted. A few had turned tail, but the remainder stayed near their
trapped prey. All around, muscled bulks rose back to their feet.
"Don't fire!" Monk whispered
urgently. "Everyone into that room!"
He waved toward a side door, where they
could make a better stand, limit their exposure. Gunther hauled Anna. Mosi
D'Gana stepped away from the beast he had impaled with a spear. He helped Major
Brooks to his feet. Blood flowed thickly from a deep bite to the man's thigh.
Before they could move farther, a savage
growl of warning arose from Monk's other flank.
His name was whispered. "Monk
"
Lisa crouched over Painter's limp form on
the floor, near another doorway. A massive creature, the largest by far, rose
behind the pair, sheltered in the door, shielded by Lisa and Painter.
It shouldered up, stance wide, guarding
its prey. Its entire muzzle rippled back from razor teeth, growling, blood and
saliva dripping. It eyes glinted crimson, warning them back.
Monk sensed if any of them raised even a
weapon it would rip into the pair on the floor. He had to take the chance, but
before he could move, a shout barked down the hall, full of command.
"Skuld! No!"
Monk turned.
Fiona stepped into view at the end of the
hall. She stalked right past two of the creatures, ignoring them as they
dropped, mewling, falling on their sides. A Taser crackled with blue sparks in
one hand. She held another device in the other. The antenna pointed at the
beast hovering over Lisa and Painter.
"Bad dog!" Fiona said.
To Monk's amazement, the creature backed
off, growls fading, hackles lowering. As if under a spell, it lolled a bit in
the doorway. Fire died in its eyes as it sank to the plank floors. A soft
lowing moaned from it, half-ecstatic.
Fiona reached their side.
Monk stared up and down the hall. The
other monsters fell under the same spell.
"Waalenbergs planted chips in the
bastards," Fiona explained and hefted the device in her hand. "Had them wired for pain and pleasure."
A contented mewl rose from the massive
monster in the doorway.
Monk frowned at the transmitter.
"How did you get?"
Fiona stared up at him and waved the
device for them to follow her.
"You stole it," Monk said.
She shrugged and headed down the hall.
"Let's say I bumped into an old chum, and somehow it ended up
in my pocket. She wasn't using it."
Ischke, Monk thought as he gathered the
others to follow.
Monk helped Lisa with Painter. Gunther
carried Anna under one arm. Mosi and Brooks leaned on each other. They made a
sorry assault team.
But they now had backup.
Behind them, the pack trailed, a dozen
strong, more joining, lured by the aura of pleasure emanating from the girl,
their own little Pied Piper of monsters.
"I can't get rid of them,"
Fiona said, babbling a bit. Monk noted how her hands trembled. She was
terrified.
"Once I found the right
button," she said, "they followed me from their cages. I hid back in
the room where Gray told me to wait
but they must have remained in the halls
and rooms around here."
Great, Monk thought, and we run right
smack into them, the perfect postcoital snack.
"Then I heard your yells, then the
explosions, and"
"Fine." Monk finally cut her
off. "But what about Gray? Where is he?"
"He took the elevator downstairs.
That was over an hour ago." She pointed ahead, where the corridor ended at
a balcony overlooking a larger hall. "I'll show you."
She hurried. They stumbled along to keep
up, checking periodically behind them to watch the pack. Fiona led them down a
set of stairs to the main entry hall. Closed elevator doors were opposite the
massive carved front doors of the mansion.
Major Brooks limped toward the electronic
lock, flipping through a set of key cards. He swiped several before he found
one that turned the red light to green. A trundle of motors sounded. The cage
rose from somewhere below.
As they waited, the hyena pack slunk down
the stairs, lounging, basking in the pleasurable glow from Fiona's device. A
few padded the hall floor, including the one called Skuld.
No one spoke, eyeing the monsters.
Distantly, muffled by the door, screams
and gunshots reached them. Khamisi was in the thick of his own war. How long
would it take for him to get here?
As if reading Monk's mind, the double
doors to the mansion slammed open. Distant gunfire shattered brightly, popping
and blasting. Screams grew richer. Men poured in. Waalenberg forces in retreat.
Among them, Monk spotted the black-suited figures of the elite, ice-blond
siblings, a dozen strong, looking little fazed, as if they'd come in after a
refreshing day on the tennis courts.
As war waged outside, the two forces eyed
each other in the hall.
Not good.
Monk's team pressed back, pinned against
the wall, outnumbered five to one.
3:15 p.m.
Gray
stepped away from Baldric Waalenberg.
"Watch him," he ordered Marcia.
Gray slid to Isaak's former workstation,
one eye on the Bell's power meter. He reached to a toggle he had seen Isaak
flip before. It controlled the blast shield around the activated device.
"What're you doing?" Baldric
asked, voice sharp with sudden concern.
So there was something that scared the
old man worse than a bullet. Good to know. Gray snapped the toggle back. Motors
rumbled underfoot and the shield began to lower. A sharp blue light pierced its
top edge, blazing forth as the lead wall dropped from the roof.
"Don't! You'll kill us all!"
Gray faced the old man. "Then turn
the goddamn thing off."
Baldric stared between the lowering
shield and the console. "I can't turn it off, you ezel! The
Gray shrugged. "Then we'll all watch
it happen."
The ring of blue light thickened.
Baldric swore and turned to the console.
"But I can erase the kill solution. Neutralize it. It won't harm your
friends."
"Do it."
Baldric typed rapidly, his knobby fingers
moving swiftly. "Just raise the shield!"
"After you're done." Gray
watched over the old man's shoulder. He saw all their names appear on the
screen along with an alphanumeric code marked GENETISCH PROFIEL. The man hit
the delete key four times and the genetic profiles were erased.
"Done!" Baldric said, turning
to Gray. "Close the blast shield!"
Gray reached to the toggle and switched
it back with a pop.
A groan sounded underfoot then
something cracked with a ground-shuddering jolt. The lead shield froze in
place, partly lowered.
Beyond the edge, a blue sun glowed in the
heart of the blast chamber. The air rippled around the Bell as its outer shell
spun in one direction and the inner in the other.
"Do something!" Baldric begged.
"The hydraulics are jammed,"
Gray mumbled.
Baldric backed away, eyes widening with
every step. "You've doomed us all! Once fully powered, the
Gray was afraid to ask what could be
worse.
3:16 p.m.
Monk
watched the rifles rise toward them.
Outnumbered.
The elevator cage hadn't reached this
floor yet, and even if it had, it would take too long to get aboard and close
the doors. There was no way to avoid a firefight.
Unless
Monk leaned to Fiona. "How about a
little pain
"
He nodded to where the hyenas had
retreated to the stairs.
Fiona understood and shifted her finger
on her device, switching from pleasure to pain. She pressed the button.
The effect was instantaneous. It was as
if someone lit the hyenas' tails on fire. A mighty scream yowled from a score
of throats. Creatures fell from balcony perches overhead, crashing to the
floor. Others rolled down the stairs into the men. Claws and teeth lashed at
anything that moved in a blind rage of fury. Men screamed. Rifles fired.
Behind Monk, the elevator doors finally
chimed open.
Monk fell back, drawing Fiona with him,
guiding Lisa and Painter.
Gunfire peppered at them, but most of the
Waalenberg forces focused on the hyenas. Mosi and Brooks offered return fire as
they retreated into the cage.
Still, it would be close. And what then?
Alerted, the forces would simply chase after them.
Monk stabbed blindly at the subbasement
buttons.
Time enough to worry about that later.
But one of their party was not one to
procrastinate.
Gunther shoved Anna into Monk's arms.
"Take her! I hold them off."
Anna reached for him as the doors closed.
Gunther gently pushed her arm down and stepped back. He turned away, pistol in
one fist, rifle in the other but not before staring hard into Monk's eyes,
sealing their silent pledge.
Protect
Anna.
Then the doors closed.
3:16 p.m.
Khamisi
raced through the jungle, hunched low over the motorcycle. Paula Kane rode behind
him, rifle on her shoulder. Zulu warrior and British agent. Strange bedfellows.
Some of the bloodiest history of the land had taken place during the Anglo-Zulu
wars of the nineteenth century.
No longer.
Now they were a fine-tuned team.
"Left!" Paula yelled.
Khamisi twisted the wheel. Paula's rifle
muzzle swung to his other side. She fired. A Waalenberg sentry fell back with a
scream.
To either side, gunfire and explosions
echoed throughout the jungle.
The estate's forces were in full rout.
Suddenly, with no warning, their cycle
jetted out of the jungle and into a ten-acre manicured garden. Khamisi braked
to a stop, skidding into cover under the branches of a willow.
The mansion filled the world ahead.
Khamisi lifted his binoculars from around
his neck and searched the roofline. He spotted where the park helicopter had
landed at the helipad. Movement drew his eye. He adjusted the binoculars, and a
familiar shape focused into view. Tau. His Zulu friend stood at the roof's edge
and studied the war below.
Then from the left, a shape entered the
field of view, behind Tau, a pipe gripped above his head. Warden Gerald
Kellogg.
"Don't move," Paula said behind
Khamisi.
Her rifle's stock settled atop Khamisi's
head as she aimed through her sniper's scope.
"I see him," she said.
Khamisi cringed but held still, staring
through his binoculars.
Paula squeezed her trigger. The rifle
blasted, ringing his ears.
Warden Kellogg's head snapped back. Tau
almost fell off the roof in fright, but he dropped flat, unaware his life had
just been saved.
Khamisi caught some of Tau's fear, a
tremble of foreboding after the close call. How were the others doing in there?
3:17 p.m.
You've
doomed us!" Baldric repeated.
Gray refused to give up. "Can you
slow the Bell from discharging? Buy me time to get below. To fix the
shield."
The old man stared at the frozen blast
shield, crowned by blue light. Fear reflected in his face. "There may be a
way, but
but
"
"But what?"
"Someone has to go inside
there." He pointed his trembling cane at the blast chamber and shook his
head, plainly refusing to volunteer.
A voice called as the door pushed open.
"I'll do it."
Gray and Marcia spun, lifting their
pistols.
An amazing sight hobbled into the room.
Monk came first, supporting the dark-haired woman who had just called to them.
Most of the others were strangers. An older black man limped in with a
clean-shaven youth in a military buzz cut. They were followed by Fiona and a
tall athletic blond woman who looked like she had just run a marathon. The two
supported an older man, limp, barely standing. Momentum seemed to be all that
kept him on his feet. As soon as the women stopped, he sagged. His face,
hanging down until now, raised, met Gray's gaze with familiar blue eyes.
"Gray
," he mumbled numbly.
A shock of recognition passed through
him. "Director Crowe?"
Gray hurried to his side.
"No time," the dark-haired
woman warned, still supported by Monk. She looked little better than Painter.
Her eyes studied the shield and Bell with a look of familiarity. "I'll
need help getting inside the chamber. And he's coming with me."
She lifted a trembling arm at Baldric
Waalenberg.
The old man moaned. "No
"
The woman glared. "We'll need two
sets of hands on the polarity conduits. And you know the machine."
Monk motioned to the black man.
"Mosi, help get Anna inside there. We'll need a ladder." He then
faced Gray and clasped him in a brief handshake, leaning forward to touch
shoulders in a more familial gesture.
"We don't have much time," Gray
said in Monk's ear, surprised at how relieved he was at Monk's arrival. Renewed
hope surged through him.
"Tell me about it." Monk
unhooked a radio and passed it to Gray. "Get that contraption movin'. I'll
get things going here."
Gray grabbed the radio and headed out. He
had a thousand questions, but they would have to wait. He kept the radio
channel open. He heard noises and voices, arguments and a few shouts. Footsteps
followed him, running. He glanced back. It was Fiona.
"I'm coming with you!" she
shouted and closed the distance by the time he reached the fire stairs.
He clambered down.
She lifted a transmitter with an extended
antenna. "In case you run into any of those monsters."
"Just keep up," he said.
"Oh, shut up."
They ran the rest of the way, reaching
the lower-level hallway and utility room.
Monk came on the radio. "Anna and
the old bastard are inside the chamber. Course he's none too happy about it. A
shame. And we were getting to be such good friends."
"Monk
," Gray warned, focusing
his man back on task.
"I'm going to pass the radio to
Anna. She'll coordinate with you. Oh, by the way, you've got less than a
minute. Ciao."
Gray shook his head and yanked on the
utility door.
Locked.
Fiona saw him tug on the door a second
time and sighed. "No key?"
Gray frowned, pulled out his pistol from
his waistband, and aimed at the lock. He fired. The blast echoed in the hall,
leaving a smoking hole where the lock used to be. He shoved the door open.
Fiona followed. "I guess that works,
too."
Ahead, he spotted the motor assembly and
pistons for raising and lowering the blast shield.
A strange rhythmic static flowed over the
radio, ebbing and flowing like waves on a beach. Gray realized it must be
interference from the Bell. Monk must have passed Anna the radio.
Confirming this, he heard the woman's
voice arguing through the static. It was a jumble of technical debate, an angry
mix of German and Dutch. Gray tuned most of it out as he circled the motor
assembly. Then the woman's voice spoke more clearly in English.
"Commander Pierce?"
He cleared his throat. "Go
ahead."
Her voice rasped with exhaustion.
"We have our fingers in the proverbial dike up here, but it won't
hold."
"Hang tight."
Gray spotted the problem. A fuse smoked
by one of the pistons. Using the edge of his shirt, he yanked it out. He turned
to Fiona. "We need another one. Must be a spare around here
somewhere."
"Hurry, Commander."
Static grew ominously louder, but not
enough to cover Baldric's words, whispered to Anna urgently, "
join us. We
could use another expert with the Bell."
Even frightened, Baldric was playing all
the angles.
Gray listened more closely. Would she
betray them? He motioned to Fiona. "Toss me that transmitter."
She underhanded it to him. He caught it
and snapped off the metal antenna. He didn't have time to find a spare fuse. He
would have to jump it. He jammed the antenna between the contacts and crossed
to a control board with a massive manual wrench-lever. The operation was
self-explanatory.
At the top was marked OP and below it
ONDER'AAN.
Up and down.
Not exactly rocket science.
Gray spoke into the radio. "Anna.
You and Baldric can get out of there."
"We can't, Commander. One of us has
to keep their finger in the dike. If both of us let go, the Bell will blow
instantly."
Gray closed his eyes. They dared not
trust Baldric's cooperation.
Static had grown to a dull roar in his
ear.
"You know what you must do,
Commander."
He did.
He shoved the lever.
Distantly her last words reached him.
"Tell my brother
I love him."
But as she lowered the radio, one final
statement rasped out whether to answer Baldric's offer, or to make a last
declaration to the world, or simply to satisfy herself.
"I'm not a Nazi."
3:19 p.m.
Lisa
knelt on the floor, cradling Painter. Then she felt the rumble of massive
machinery below her knees. Ahead, the giant lead shield rose toward the
ceiling, pinching off the blaze of blue light.
She rose half up. Anna was still in
there. Even Monk took a step toward the closing blast shield.
A terrified scream erupted from inside.
It was the old man. Lisa spotted his
fingers scrabbling above the edge, frantic, trying to catch a grip. Too late.
It rose above his reach and smoothly clamped into the ceiling's O-ring.
His screams could still be heard,
muffled, frantic.
Then Lisa felt it. In the gut. A whomp of power.
It had no description. A quake that rattled without movement. Then nothing.
Complete silence, the world holding its breath.
Painter moaned, as if the effect were
painful for him.
His head lay in her lap. She examined
him. His eyes had rolled back in his head. His breathing grated with fluid. She
shook him gently. No response. Semicomatose. They were losing him.
"Monk
!"
3:23 p.m.
Hurry,
Gray!" Monk called into the radio.
Gray pounded back up the steps, followed
by Fiona. Below, he had delayed only long enough to find a replacement fuse and
repair the shield. He didn't understand all that Monk had relayed, but he
filled in the blanks with what he knew. Painter had some form of radiation
poisoning, and the Bell held the only cure.
As he neared the fifth-floor landing, he
heard a heavy booted tread stumbling down toward them. Gray pulled out his
pistol. Now what?
A massive figure, heavy-browed and pale
white, appeared above, half falling down the stairs toward him. His shirt was
soaked in blood. A ragged scrape raked the side of his face from crown to
throat. He held a broken wrist to his belly.
Gray raised his weapon.
Fiona pushed past him. "No. He's
with us." And in a lower voice to Gray, she added with a nod, "Anna's
brother."
The giant stumbled to them, recognizing
Fiona, too. Eyes narrowed at Gray with tired suspicion. But he waved his rifle
back up the stairs. "Blockiert,"
he grunted.
Blockaded.
So the giant bought them time with his
own blood.
They hurried down the hall toward the
Bell chamber. But Gray knew he had to prepare Gunther. After Anna's sacrifice,
he owed her brother at least that. He touched the man's elbow.
"About Anna
," he began.
Gunther turned to him, tensing, eyes going
pained, as if he expected the worst.
Gray faced that fear and explained in
terse words, sparing nothing, ending with the final truth. "Her efforts
saved everyone else."
The large man's feet had slowed with the
telling. What his wounds couldn't bring low, grief finally did. He slumped
slowly to his knees in the hall.
Gray paused. "Her last words
were
for you, passing her love."
The man covered his face and curled to
the floor.
"I'm sorry
," Gray offered.
Monk appeared in the doorway. "Gray,
what the hell are you?" Then he spotted Gunther in a posture of
pure grief. His voice died.
Gray strode toward Monk.
It was not over for any of them.
3:24 p.m.
Lower
the shield!"
Lisa glanced to see Commander Pierce
stride into the chamber with Monk, both leaning their heads together. She stood
over the Bell's control suite. She had spent the past few minutes familiarizing
herself with the device. On the trek here, Anna had gone over in detail how the
Bell functioned. The woman had feared she might be too debilitated to oversee
its use. Another had needed to know. That onus fell upon Lisa.
"The shield!" Gray called to
her again from Monk's side.
She nodded dully and flipped the toggle.
Motors clattered below. She turned to
watch the blast shield drop. With the Bell quiescent, light no longer blazed
out from inside. A step away, Painter lay on a tarp on the floor, attended for
the moment by Dr. Fairfield. To the right, Mosi and Brooks dragged another tarp
over the bodies of the twins.
What about the pair's grandfather?
The blast shield continued to lower,
waist-high now. The Bell sat quietly in the center, waiting to be activated
again. Lisa remembered Anna's description of the bell-shaped device. The
ultimate quantum-measuring tool. It scared the hell out of her.
To the left, yelling a bit to be heard
over the motor, Monk related the radioed message from Khamisi. The Zulu forces
had secured the estate, driving any surviving Waalenberg forces into the
mansion, where a siege was under way. A continuing firefight ensued above.
"Gunther blocked the fire
stairs," Gray said. "And the elevator doors are jammed open. It
should buy us some time." He waved to Brooks and Mosi. "Keep a watch
on the outer hall!"
They lifted their weapons and headed out.
As they left, Gunther stumbled inside.
From the expression on his face, Lisa knew he had been told about Anna. He had
shed all his weapons. Each step was leaden as he headed toward the lowering
shield. He had to witness the end. A final absolution for all the blood on his
hands.
The shield settled to a stop. The motors
went silent.
Lisa feared viewing the damage herself,
but she had a duty here.
She crossed toward the Bell.
Anna lay on her side in the shadow of the
device, curled like a baby. Her skin was ash white, her dark hair turned snowy,
as if she had become a marble statue. Gunther stepped over the lip of the
shield and knelt beside his sister. Without a word, expressionless, he bent and
scooped her in his arms. She lolled limply in death, her head coming to rest on
her brother's shoulder.
Gunther stood, turned his back on the
Bell, and headed away.
No one tried to stop him.
He vanished out the door.
Lisa's gaze fell upon the other figure
still sprawled atop the blast chamber's lead floor. Baldric Waalenberg. Like
Anna, his skin had gone an unnatural white, almost translucent. But the
radiation had burned away all his hair, too, leaving him bald, not even
eyebrows or lashes. His flesh had also collapsed to his bones, giving him a
mummified appearance. And something about his underlying osseous structure was
was wrong.
Lisa froze, horrified to step any closer.
With the hair gone, flesh sunken, the
skull was plainly misshapen, as if partially melted, then hardened again. His
hands were twisted, fingers oddly elongated, apelike. The word devolution filled her head.
"Get him out of there," Gray
said with disgust, then faced Lisa. "I'll help you get Painter
inside."
Lisa slowly shook her head, stepping
back. "We can't
" She could not take her eyes off the twisted horror
that was the former Waalenberg patriarch. She couldn't let that happen to
Painter.
Gray came up to her. "What do you
mean?"
She swallowed, still staring as Monk
grabbed the monstrosity by the sleeve of his shirt, plainly afraid to touch his
flesh. "Painter is too far gone. The Bell only held the hope of staving
off or slowing the debilitation, not reversing it. Do you want to suspend your
director in his current state?"
"If there's life, there's
hope."
His words were spoken softly, gently.
They almost succeeded in drawing her attention away as Monk hauled the old
man's devolved form out of the device, bumping over the lip.
Lisa opened her mouth to argue against
false hope.
Then Baldric Waalenberg's eyes snapped
wide, milky and blind, looking more like stone than flesh. His mouth stretched
in a silent and prolonged scream. His vocal chords were gone. He had no tongue.
Nothing was inside him but horror and pain.
Lisa gave voice to the man, crying out,
backing away until she bumped into the console. Monk recognized the true horror
here, too. He lunged away, dropping Baldric on the tiles outside the blast
chamber.
The mutated form collapsed. The limbs
remained toneless, muscleless. But the mouth opened and closed, a fish out of
water. Eyes stared blindly.
Then Gray stepped between Lisa and the
horror. He gripped her shoulders. "Dr. Cummings." Her gaze,
fluttering in panic, settled to his. "Director Crowe needs you."
"There
there's nothing I can
do."
"Yes, there is. We can use the
Bell."
"I can't do that to Painter."
Her voice rose in pitch. "Not that!"
"It won't happen. Monk told me how
Anna instructed you. You know how to set the
Lisa covered her face with her hands,
trying to block everything out. "But what are we trying to reap?" she
moaned. "Painter is at death's door. Why make him suffer any longer?"
Gray pulled her hands down. He leaned to
catch her gaze with his own. "I know Director Crowe. And I think you do,
too. He would fight until the end."
As a medical doctor, she had heard such arguments
before, but she was also a realist. When there was no hope, all a caregiver
could provide was a measure of peace and dignity.
"If there was a chance to
cure," she said with a shake of her head, her voice steadying, "even
a small one, I'd take it. If we knew what Hugo Hirszfeld had been trying to
communicate to his daughter. His perfected code." She shook her head
again.
Gray caught her chin in his fingers. She
tried to break free, flaring with irritation. But his grip was sure and hard on
her.
"I know what Hugo hid in those
books," he said.
She frowned at him, but she read the
truth in his eyes.
"I have the answer," he said.
3:25 P.M.
It's
not a code," Gray said. "It was never
a code."
He knelt on the floor, a marker in hand.
He circled the set of runes he had drawn for Baldric Waalenberg.
The others had gathered around him, but
he kept his attention fixed on Lisa Cummings. The answer Gray had discerned
made no sense, but he sensed it was the lock,
and this woman, who knew more about the device than anyone else in the room,
might hold the key. They would have
to work together.
"Runes again," Lisa said.
Gray frowned at her for an explanation.
She nodded to the floor. "I saw
another set of runes, a different set, drawn in blood. They spelled out Schwarze Sonne."
"Black Sun," Gray translated.
"It was the name for Anna's project
in Nepal."
Gray pondered the significance. He
pictured the Black Sun symbol on the workstation below. Himmler's original
cabal must have been split after the war. Anna's group to the north. Baldric's
to the south. Once separated, the two groups diverged further and further apart
until allies became adversaries.
Lisa tapped the runes on the floor,
drawing back his focus. "The runes I decoded were a simple
transposition of letters for symbols. Is this the same?"
Gray shook his head. "Baldric made
the same assumption. It was why he was having so much trouble deciphering the
runes. But Hugo would not bury his secret so shallowly."
"If it's not a code," Monk
asked, "then what is it?"
"It's a jigsaw puzzle," Gray
said.
"What?"
"Remember back when we talked to
Ryan's father?"
Monk nodded.
Gray pictured that meeting with Johann
Hirszfeld, the man crippled with emphysema, lost in the past, the family estate
forever shadowed by Wewelsburg Castle and the family's dirty little Nazi
secret.
"He described how inquisitive his
grandfather Hugo had been. Always searching up strange things, investigating
historical mysteries."
"It's what drew him to the
Nazis," Fiona said.
"And in his spare time, Hugo was all
about sharpening his mind."
Johann's words echoed through Gray: Memorization tricks,
jigsaw puzzles. Always with the jigsaw puzzles.
Gray tapped the set of runes. "This
was just one more mental brainteaser. But not a code
a
jigsaw. The runes were shapes to be manipulated, rearranged, returning
order out of chaos."
Gray had worked the puzzle out in his
head over the past day, letting the runes twist and turn in his mind's eye
until one shape formed. He knew it was the answer. Especially knowing the angst
at the end of Hugo's life, his expressed regret for his collaboration with the
Nazis. But what did it mean? His eyes fell upon Lisa.
He redrew the six runes on the floor, one
after the other, reassembling them in their proper sequence. He completed the
jigsaw on the floor, inscribing the last rune and completing the spell.
Order out of chaos.
Absolution out of collaboration.
Holy out of unholy.
From the pagan runes, Hugo showed his
true heritage.
"It's a star," Monk said.
Lisa lifted her eyes. "Not any star
it's the Star of David."
Gray nodded.
Fiona asked the most important question.
"But what does it mean?"
Gray sighed. "I don't know. I have
no idea what it has to do with the Bell, with perfecting the device. Maybe it
was merely a final declaration of who he was, a secret message to his
family."
Gray recalled Anna's last words.
I
am not a Nazi.
Was Hugo's runic code just another way to
say the same?
"No," Lisa said sharply, her certainty
resounding across the room. "If we're going to solve this, we must act as
if this is the answer."
Gray saw something fill her eyes,
something missing a moment ago.
Hope.
"According to Anna," she
continued, "Hugo went into the Bell chamber alone with a baby. Without any
special tools. It was just him and the boy. And once the experiment was over,
tests showed that he had succeeded, produced the first true and pure Knight of
the Sun."
"What did he do in there?"
Fiona asked.
Lisa tapped the Star of David. "This
is somehow tied to it. But I don't know the significance of the symbol."
Gray did. He had studied multiple
religions and fields of spiritual study during his youth and while polishing
his Sigma training. "The star's meaning is diverse. It's a symbol of
prayer and faith. And maybe more. Note how the six-pointed star also is really
two triangles one atop the other. One pointing down, one up. In Jewish
Kabbalah, the two triangles are the equivalent of yin and yang, the light and
the dark, the body and the soul. One triangle represents matter and the body.
The other our soul, our spiritual being, our conscious mind."
"And joined together, they're both" Lisa said. "Not just a
particle or a wave but both."
Gray saw some edge of understanding,
enlightenment. "What?"
Lisa stared toward the blast chamber.
"Anna said the Bell was basically a quantum-measuring device that
manipulated evolution. Quantum
evolution. It's all about quantum mechanics. That's got to be the
key."
Gray frowned. "What do you mean?"
Lisa explained what Anna had taught her.
Gray, having studied biology and physics in depth for Sigma, needed little
elaboration.
Closing his eyes, he sat back, trying to
find a balance between the Star of David and quantum mechanics. Was there an
answer between them?
"You said Hugo went into the chamber
with just the baby?" Gray asked.
"Yes," Lisa said softly, as if
sensing she needed to let him run with his thoughts.
Gray concentrated. Hugo had given him the
lock. Lisa had given him the key. Now it was up to him. Letting go of
time's pressure, he allowed his mind to twist and turn the clues and pieces,
testing, rejecting.
Like another of Hugo's jigsaw puzzles.
As with the Star of David, the right
combination finally formed in his head. So clean, so perfect. He should have
thought of it sooner.
Gray opened his eyes.
Lisa must have noted something in his
face. "What?"
Gray stood. "Get the Bell powering
up," he said, crossing to the console. "Now!"
Lisa followed him and began running
through the procedure. "It will take four minutes to reach a palliative
pulse." She glanced to Gray as she worked, eyes inquisitive. "What
are we doing?"
Gray turned toward the Bell. "Hugo
didn't go into the chamber without any tools."
"But that's what Anna"
"No." Gray cut Lisa off.
"He went in with the Star of David. He went in with prayer and faith. But
mostly he went in with his own quantum computer."
"What?"
Gray spoke rapidly, knowing he was right.
"Consciousness has baffled scientists for centuries
going all the way
back to
He pointed to the symbol.
"Current research says its there. We
are both. We are wave and particle.
Body and soul. Life itself is a quantum
phenomenon."
"Okay, now you're babbling,"
Monk said, joining him, drawing Fiona.
Gray took a deep breath, excited.
"Modern scientists reject spirituality, defining the brain only as a complex
computer. Consciousness arises merely as the by-product of the firing of a
complex interconnectivity of neurons, basically a neural-net computer,
operating at the quantum level."
"A quantum computer," Lisa
said. "You mentioned that already. But what the hell is it?"
"You've seen computer code broken
down to its most basic level. Pages of zeroes and ones. That is how the modern
computer thinks. Turning a switch on or off. The zero or the one. The
theoretical quantum computer, if it could be built, offers a third choice. The old zero or one but also a third choice. Zero and one."
Lisa squinted. "Like electrons in
the quantum world. They can be waves or particles or both at the same
time."
"A third choice," Gray said
with a nod. "It doesn't sound like much, but by adding this possibility
into a computer's arsenal, it allows such a device to perform multiple
algorithmic tasks simultaneously."
"Walk and chew gum," Monk
mumbled.
"Tasks that would take modern
computers years to perform could be done in fractions of a second."
"And our
brains do this?" Lisa said. "Act like quantum computers."
"That is the newest consensus. Our
brain propagates a measurable electromagnetic field, generated by our complex
interconnectivity of neurons. Some scientists conjecture that it is this field
where consciousness resides, bridging the matter of the brain with the quantum
world."
"And the Bell is hypersensitive to
quantum phenomena," Lisa said. "So by Hugo joining the baby inside
the Bell chamber, he influenced the result."
"What is observed is changed by the
act of observing. But I think it was more
than that." Gray nodded to the Star of David. "Why this? A symbol of
prayer?"
Lisa shook her head.
"What is prayer but a focus of the
mind, a focus of consciousness
and if consciousness is a quantum phenomenon,
then prayer is a quantum
phenomenon."
Lisa understood. "And like all
quantum phenomena, it will and must measure and influence the result."
"In other words
" Gray waited.
Lisa stood. "Prayer works."
"That's what Hugo discovered, that's
what he hid in his books. Something frighteningly disturbing but too beautiful
to let die."
Monk leaned on the console next to Lisa.
"Are you saying he willed that baby to be perfect?"
Gray nodded. "When Hugo entered the
chamber with the baby, he prayed for perfection, a concentrated and focused
thought, selfless and pure. Human consciousness, in the form of prayer, acts as
a perfect quantum-measuring tool. Under the
Lisa turned. "Then perhaps we can do
the same to reverse the quantum damage in Painter. To save him before it's too
late."
A new voice intruded, coming from Marcia,
who still nursed Painter on the floor. "You'd better hurry."
3:32 p.m.
Monk
and Gray rushed Painter into the blast chamber, slung in a tarp.
"Put him close to the Bell,"
Lisa directed.
As they obeyed, she called out final
instructions to the others. The Bell was already spinning, its two shells
revolving in opposite directions. She remembered Gunther's description of it. A Mixmaster. That
pretty much described it. A soft glow also shone from its outer ceramic shell.
She sank to her knees next to Painter,
checking vitals, the few that remained.
"I can stay with you," Gray
said at her shoulder.
"No. I think more than one quantum
computer might interfere with the results."
"Too many cooks in the
kitchen," Monk agreed.
"Then let me stay," Gray said.
Lisa shook her head. "We'll only get
one shot at this. If it takes focus and will to heal Painter, it might be best
if the mind directing that focus was a medical doctor."
Gray sighed, little convinced.
"You did your job, Gray. Gave us an
answer. Gave us hope." She stared up at him. "Let me do mine."
He nodded and stepped away.
Monk leaned down to her. "Just be
careful what you wish for," he said, his words fraught with levels of
meaning. He was not so much the dumb oaf he pretended. He pecked her on the
cheek.
The pair left.
Marcia called from the console.
"Pulse in one minute."
She twisted around. "Raise the blast
shield."
As the gears ground below her, Lisa
leaned over Painter. His skin had a bluish hue then again maybe it was just
the Bell's glow. Either way, he was moments from expiration. His lips were
cracked, his breathing much too shallow, his heartbeat sounded more murmur than
beat. Even his hair. The roots had gone snow-white. He was failing at an
exponential rate.
The blast shield rose around her, closing
them off from the rest of the group. Voices beyond, hushed already, grew
muffled then ended as the shield locked into the roof.
Alone, with no one looking, Lisa leaned
over Painter, resting her forehead against his chest. She didn't need to focus
her will in some meditative verve. It was said there were no atheists in a
foxhole. It was certainly the case here. But she didn't know what God to ask
for succor at this moment.
Lisa remembered Anna's discussion of
evolution and intelligent design. The woman had insisted it was quantum
measurements that ultimately collapsed potential into reality. Amino acids
formed the first replicating protein because life was the better
quantum-measuring device. And if you extrapolated that further, consciousness, which was an even greater
quantum-measuring device than life alone, evolved for the same reason. One more
link in the evolutionary chain. She pictured it.
AMINO ACIDS »»» FIRST PROTEIN »»» FIRST LIFE »»»
CONSCIOUSNESS
But what lay beyond consciousness? If the
future dictated the past through quantum measurements, what desired
consciousness to form? What better quantum-measuring tool lay further in the
future, dictating the present? How far into the future did this chain go? And
what lay at its end?
AMINO ACIDS »»» FIRST PROTEIN »»» FIRST LIFE
»»»CONSCIOUSNESS»»»???
Lisa remembered one other cryptic
statement from Anna, when Lisa had confronted her about God's role in all this.
While quantum evolution seemed to remove the hand of God from sudden beneficial
mutations, Anna's last words on the matter had been you're looking at it the wrong way, in the wrong direction. Lisa
had attributed the cryptic statement to the woman's exhaustion. But maybe Anna
had pondered the same question. What did lie at the end of evolution? Was it
merely some perfect and incorruptible quantum-measuring device?
And if so, was that God?
She had no answer as she leaned over
Painter. All she knew was that she wanted him to live. She might hide from the
others exactly how deeply she felt for him maybe even from herself but she
could hide it no longer.
She opened her heart, allowed her
vulnerability to shine.
As the Bell hummed and its glow swelled,
she let go.
Maybe that's what had been missing in her
life all along, why men seemed to fade from her, why she ran. So no one would
see what could be harmed so easily. She hid her vulnerability behind an armor
of professionalism and casual dalliance. She hid her heart. No wonder she was
alone on a mountaintop when Painter stumbled into her life.
No longer.
She lifted her head, shifted over, and
kissed Painter softly on his lips, putting into action what she had sought to
hide.
She closed her eyes as the last seconds
counted down. She opened her heart, willing the man a future, wishing him to be
healthy, hale, and whole, and mostly praying for more time with him.
Was that the ultimate function of the
Bell? To open a quantum conduit to that great quantum-measuring tool that lay
at the end of evolution, a personal connection to that final designer.
Lisa knew what she had to do. She let go
of the scientist inside, let go of her own self. Her goal was beyond
consciousness, beyond prayer.
It was simply belief.
In the purity of that moment, the Bell
burst with a blinding light, joining them together, turning reality into pure
potential.
3:36 p.m.
Gray
flipped the toggle, and the shield began to lower. They all held their breath.
What would they find? The motors grumbled. Everyone gathered around the shield
wall.
Monk glanced to him, his eyes worried.
In the silence, a small chime sounded,
coming from the left.
The blast chamber slowly cleared into
view. The Bell, quiet and dark, rested inertly in the center then Lisa
appeared, crouched over Painter, her back to them.
No one spoke.
Lisa slowly turned, rising. Tears, held
suspended by lashes, poured down her cheeks. She clutched Painter under her arm
as she stood. He looked no better. Pale, weak, debilitated. But he lifted his
head on his own and spotted Gray.
His eyes shone sharp and focused.
Relief spread through Gray.
Then the small chime sounded again.
Painter's eyes flicked in its direction
then back to Gray. Painter's lips moved. No words came out. Gray stepped closer
to hear.
Painter's eyes narrowed hard on him. He
tried again. The word was faint and made no sense. Gray worried about the man's
mental status.
"Bomb
," Painter repeated
hoarsely.
Lisa heard him, too. She glanced in the
same direction as Painter. To the body of Baldric Waalenberg. She then shoved
Painter toward Monk.
"Take him."
She headed to the man's twisted form. At
some point, unseen, unmourned, Baldric had finally expired.
Gray joined her.
Lisa knelt down and shoved up the man's
sleeve. He wore a large wristwatch. She turned it over. A second hand swept
over a digital readout.
"We've seen this before," Lisa
said. "A heartbeat monitor tied to a microtransmitter. After his heart
stopped, it began a countdown."
Lisa twisted the man's arm so Gray could
read the number.
02:01
As he watched, the second hand swept over
the number twice more. It sounded the familiar chime as it dropped below 02:00.
"We have less than two minutes to
get the hell out of here," Lisa said.
Gray took her at her word and
straightened. "Everybody out! Monk, radio Khamisi! Tell him to clear all
his men as far away from the mansion as possible."
His partner obeyed.
"We have a helicopter on the
roof," Lisa said.
In seconds, they were all running. Gray
took Painter from Monk. Mosi helped Brooks. Lisa, Fiona, and Marcia followed.
"Where's Gunther?" Fiona asked.
Brooks answered. "He left with his
sister. He didn't want anyone to follow him."
There was no time to search for him. Gray
pointed to the elevator. Monk's group had jammed the doors open with a hall
chair, to keep anyone from using it to come after them. Mosi yanked it out
one-handed and threw it down the hall.
They piled inside.
Lisa hit the top button. Sixth floor. The
elevator slowly began to rise.
Monk spoke. "I radioed our man up
top. He doesn't fly, but he knows how to turn a key. He'll get the engines
warmed up."
"The bomb," Gray said, turning
to Lisa. "What do we have to expect?"
"If it's the same as back in the
Himalayas, it'll be big. They've developed some quantum bomb using that Xerum
525 material."
Gray pictured the tanks stored at the
deepest level.
Crap
The elevator continued to climb, passing
the main floor, which was deathly silent. And upward they went.
Painter stirred, still unable to hold his
own weight. But he caught Gray's eyes. "Next time
," he
whispered hoarsely "
you go to
Gray smiled. Oh yeah, Painter was back.
But for how long?
The elevator reached the sixth level and
opened.
"One minute," Marcia said. She
had had the presence of mind to note and monitor the time.
They raced up the roof stairs and found
the helicopter waiting, blades spinning. They ran for it, supporting one
another. Once under the rotors, Gray passed Painter to Monk.
"Get everybody aboard."
Gray ran to the other side and climbed
into the pilot's seat.
"Fifteen seconds!" Marcia
called.
Gray cranked the engine speed. Blades
screamed. He yanked on the collective, and the bird lifted its skids off the
roof. Gray was never so happy to leave a place. The helicopter took to air,
rotoring up. How much clearance would they need?
He adjusted his blade pitch and fed more
power.
As they swept upward, he yawed the bird a
bit. He searched the grounds around the estate. He saw Jeeps and motorcycles
racing in all directions away from the mansion.
Marcia started a countdown. "Five,
four"
Her precision was slightly off.
A blinding light suddenly blazed beneath
them, as if they were lifting off the sun. But the most disturbing effect was
the total and absolute silence. Unable to see, Gray fought to hold the bird in
the air. But it was as if the air had vanished beneath him. He sensed the
helicopter plunging earthward.
Then the light fell away around them with
a loud clap, shedding like a wash of water.
The rotors suddenly found air again,
bobbling in the sky for a long moment.
Gray stabilized the craft and banked
away, frightened to his core. He stared back to where the mansion used to be. A
massive, smooth-walled crater lay below, cut cleanly through rock and soil. It
was as if some mighty Titan had taken a giant ice-cream scoop to the mansion
along with most of the surrounding gardens.
Everything was gone. No debris. Just
emptiness.
Pools and creeks, cut in half, poured
over the lip in trickling waterfalls.
Farther from the edge, Gray spotted
vehicles stopping and people glancing back, some walking closer to check.
Khamisi's army. Safe. The Zulu people gathered along the borders, claiming back
what they had lost so long ago.
Gray flew the chopper over them, banking
to circle the crater. He remembered the missing drum of Xerum 525, the one
marked for the United States. He toggled the radio and began passing a long
chain of security codes to reach Sigma Command.
He was surprised to hear someone other
than Logan pick up the line. It was Sean McKnight, the former director of
Sigma. Fear iced through Gray. What was he doing there? Something was wrong.
McKnight quickly briefed him on what had happened. The last came as a blow to
the gut.
He finally signed off, numb and shocked.
Monk had leaned forward, noting his
growing consternation.
"What's wrong?" he asked.
He turned. He had to face his partner
when he said it.
"Monk
it's about Kat."
5:47 p.m. EST
Three
days had passed. Three long
days settling matters in
Finally, their plane had landed at Dulles
International after a direct flight from Johannesburg. Monk had ditched Gray
and the others at the terminal. He had hailed a taxicab and taken off. Then the
taxi hit congestion near the park. Monk had to force himself not to yank open
the door and run on foot, but eventually the bottleneck broke up, and they were
moving again.
Monk leaned forward. "Fifty bucks if
you get me there in under five minutes."
Acceleration threw Monk back into the
seat. That was more like it.
In two minutes, the jumble of brown brick
buildings appeared. They flashed past a sign that read
Monk threw a fistful of bills at the
driver and leaped out.
He squeezed sideways through the
automatic door, impatient when it opened too slowly. He ran headlong down the
hall, dodging patients and orderlies. He knew which room in ICU.
He ran past a nursing station, ignoring a
yell to slow down.
Not
today, honey.
Monk winged around the corner and spotted
the bed. He ran, fell to his knees in the last steps, and slid in his
sweatpants up to the side of the bed. He hit the lowered side rail rather hard.
Kat stared at him, a spoonful of jiggling
lime green Jell-O halfway to her mouth. "Monk
?"
"I came here as soon as I
could," he said, panting, winded.
"But I just talked to you ninety
minutes ago on the satellite phone."
"That's just talking."
He shoved up, leaned over the bed, and
kissed her square on the mouth. The bandages were wrapped around her left
shoulder and upper torso, half hidden by a blue hospital gown. Three gunshots,
two units of blood lost, collapsed lung, shattered collarbone, and lacerated
spleen.
But she was alive.
And damn lucky.
Logan Gregory's funeral was set for three
days from now.
Still, the pair had saved Washington from
a terrorist attack, gunning down the Waalenberg assassin and stopping the plot
before it could come to fruition. The ceremonial gold Bell was now buried deep
in Sigma's research labs. The shipment of Xerum 525 intended for the Bell had
been found at a shipping yard in New Jersey. But by the time the U.S.
intelligence agencies had tracked the shipment encumbered by the vast web of
Waalenberg-owned corporations, shells, and subsidiaries the one last sample
of Xerum was found degraded, left too long out in the sun, gone inert due to
improper refrigeration. And without the fuel source, the Bells, even those
recovered from other embassies, would never ring again.
Good riddance.
Monk preferred evolution the
old-fashioned way.
His hand drifted to her belly. He was
afraid to ask.
He didn't have to. Kat's hand covered
his. "The baby's fine. Doctors say there should be no complications."
Monk sagged again to his knees, resting
the side of his head on her stomach, relieved. He closed his eyes. He snaked an
arm around her waist, gently, careful of her injuries, and pulled tight to her.
"Thank God."
Kat touched his cheek.
Still on his knees, Monk reached to his
pocket and lifted out the black ring box. He held it out, eyes still closed, a
prayer on his lips.
"Marry me."
"Okay."
Monk opened his eyes, staring up into the
face of the woman he loved. "What?"
"I said okay."
Monk lifted his head. "Are you
sure?"
"Are you trying to talk me out of
it?"
"Well, you are on drugs. Maybe I'd
better ask you"
"Just give me the ring." She
took the box and opened it. She stared silently for a moment. "It's
empty."
Monk took the box and stared inside. The
ring was gone.
He shook his head.
"What happened?" Kat asked.
Monk growled. "Fiona."
10:32 a.m.
The
next morning, Painter lay on his back in another wing of
A nurse opened the door.
Lisa followed her inside.
Painter sat up. It was chilly in the
room. Then again, he was wearing nothing but a threadbare hospital gown. He
sought some manner of dignity, tucking and snugging,
but finally conceded defeat.
Lisa sat down next to him. She nodded
back to the monitoring room. A clutch of researchers from
"Looks good," Lisa said.
"All signs of internal calcification are receding. Your lab values are all
returning to normal. You may retain some minor residual scarring to your aortic
valve, but possibly not even that. The rate of recovery is remarkable
dare I
say, miraculous."
"You may," Painter said.
"But what about this?"
He ran his fingers through the white
streak of hair over one ear.
She reached up and followed his fingers
with her own. "I like it. And you're going to be fine."
He believed her. For the first time, deep
down, he knew he would be okay. A shuddering sigh flowed from him. He would
live. There was still a life ahead of him.
Painter caught Lisa's hand, kissed her
palm, then lowered it.
She blushed, glanced to the monitoring
window but she didn't pull her hand from his as she discussed some technical
matter with the nurse.
Painter studied her. He had gone to Nepal
both to investigate the illnesses reported by Ang Gelu and as a personal
odyssey, a time for private reflection. He had expected incense, meditation,
chants, and prayers, but instead it had turned into a hellish and brutal
journey around half the globe. Still, in the end, maybe the result was the
same.
His fingers tightened on her hand.
He had found her.
And though they had been through so much
together in these past days, they still barely knew each other. Who was she
really? What was her favorite food, what made her let out a belly laugh, what
would it be like to dance with her, what would she whisper when she said good
night?
Painter knew only one thing for certain
as he sat in his gown, all but naked next to her, exposed down to the level of
his DNA.
He wanted to know everything.
2:22 p.m.
Two
days later, rifles fired their last shot into the blue sky, cracking
brilliantly across the green slopes of
Gray stood off to the side as the funeral
ended. In the distance, overlooking the clutch of black-suited mourners, rose
the Tomb of the Unknowns, eighty tons of Yule marble quarried from Colorado. It
represented loss without a name, a life laid down in service to the country.
Logan Gregory was now one of them.
Another unknown. Few would know of his heroism, the blood shed to protect all
of us.
But some did.
Gray watched the vice president pass a
folded flag to Logan's mother, draped in black, supported by his father. Logan
had no wife, no kids. Sigma had been his life
and his death.
Slowly, after some milling, amid
condolences and good-byes, the service broke up. Everyone wandered toward black
limousines and Town Cars.
Gray nodded to Painter. He limped with a
cane, recovering from his debilitation, stronger every day. At his side, Dr.
Lisa Cummings had an arm hooked around his elbow, not supporting him, just
being near him.
Monk trailed as they headed together
toward the waiting line of cars.
Kat was still in the hospital. The
funeral would have been too much for her anyway. Too soon.
Upon reaching the parked cars, Gray
stepped up to Painter. They had some matters to settle.
Lisa kissed the director on the cheek.
"I'll see you there." She stepped back with Monk. They would be
taking another vehicle to the Gregorys' home, where a small gathering would
take place.
Gray had been surprised to learn that
Logan's parents lived only blocks from his own parents in Takoma Park. It just
showed how little he really knew about the man.
Painter crossed to a Lincoln Town Car and
opened the door. They climbed into the backseat. The driver lifted the privacy
screen as he pulled from the curb.
"Gray, I read your report,"
Painter finally said. "It's an interesting angle. Go ahead and follow up
on it. But it would mean another trip to Europe."
"I've some personal matters to
settle there anyway. It's what I came to discuss, to ask for a few extra
days."
Painter lifted one eyebrow in tired
levity. "I don't know if the world is ready for another one of your
working vacations."
Gray had to concede that might be true.
Painter shifted, plainly still suffering
some aches. "And what about the report from Dr. Marcia Fairfield? Do you
think
believe that the Waalenberg lineage
?" Painter shook his head.
Gray had read the report, too. He
remembered when he and the British doctor had been skulking about the embryonic
lab at the deepest levels of the subbasement. Dr. Fairfield had once claimed
that the greater the treasure, the deeper it was buried. The same could be said
for secrets, especially those kept by the Waalenbergs. Like their experiments
with chimera, mixing human and animal stem cells in the brain.
But even that was not the worst.
"We checked the corporate medical
records from the early 1950s," Gray said. "It's been confirmed.
Baldric Waalenberg was sterile."
Painter shook his head. "No wonder
the bastard had been so obsessed with breeding and genetics, continually
battling to bend nature to his will. He was the last of the Waalenbergs. But
his new children
the ones he used in the experiments? Is it true?"
Gray shrugged. "Baldric was involved
intimately with the Nazi Lebensborn
program. Their Aryan breeding program. Along with other eugenics projects and
early attempts to store eggs and sperm. At the war's end, it seems the Xerum
525 program was not the only secret project that ended up in Baldric's lap. One
other did. One frozen inside glass straws. And once thawed, Baldric used the
samples to inseminate his young wife."
"And you're sure of this?"
Gray nodded. Down in the subterranean
lab, Dr. Fairfield had viewed the real family tree of the new-and-improved
Waalenberg clan. She saw the name typed next to Baldric's wife. Heinrich
Himmler, the head of the Black Order. The Nazi bastard might have killed
himself after the war, but he had a plan to live on, to birth the new Aryan
supermen, a new line of German kings, out of his own corrupted seed.
"And with the Waalenberg clan
eradicated," Gray said, "that monster is finally laid to rest,
too."
"At least we hope so."
Gray nodded. "I'm in contact with
Khamisi. He's keeping us informed on the cleanup at the estate. So far they've
rounded up several of the guards. He fears some of the estate's menagerie may
have escaped into the deeper forest, but most were likely destroyed during the blast.
But the search continues."
Khamisi had been named interim head
warden for the Hluhluwe-Umfolozi reserve. He had also been given emergency
policing authority by the South African government, helping coordinate local
tribal support with Chief Mosi D'Gana. Drs. Paula Kane and Marcia Fairfield
were providing him with technical support in handling the international
intelligence communities' response to the attack on the mansion and bombing.
The two women had settled back into their
home on the reserve, happy to discover each other alive and well, but they had
also opened their house to Fiona. The two spies had even helped Fiona get into
an early-acceptance program at Oxford.
Gray stared out at the flashing scenery.
He hoped Oxford had everything nailed down very securely. He suspected the
petty crime rate around the university was about to have a sudden and
significant uptick.
Thinking about Fiona, Gray was reminded
that he needed to check on Ryan. With the murder of Ryan's father, the young
man had put his family estate on the auction block, determined at long last to
escape the shadow of Wewelsburg.
Just as well.
"And what about Monk and Kat?"
Painter asked, drawing back his attention. His voice was brighter, shedding
some of the sorrow over the loss of his friend, or at least setting it aside.
"I heard they got engaged yesterday."
Gray found himself smiling for the first
time today. "They did."
"Heaven help us."
Again Gray had to agree with the man.
They shared this small bit of happiness. Life rolled on. They went over a
handful of other details, and eventually the driver wound their Town Car
through the tree-lined streets of Takoma Park, settling to a stop before a
small green-shingled Victorian.
Painter climbed out.
Lisa was already there.
"Are we done here?" Painter
asked Gray.
"Yes, sir."
"Let me know what you find in
Europe. And take those extra days."
"Thank you, sir."
Painter held out an arm. Lisa slipped
into it. The pair headed toward the house together.
As Gray climbed out, Monk joined him and
nodded to the woman and the director. "Any bets?"
Gray watched them climb the porch stairs.
The two had been almost inseparable since leaving the Waalenberg estate. With
Anna dead and Gunther vanished, Lisa was now the only living source for
information on the Bell's operation. She had been spending many hours at Sigma,
being questioned. Yet Gray suspected the debriefings were also an excuse for
Painter and Lisa to spend more time together.
It seemed the Bell had done more than
just heal the flesh.
Gray stared a moment at their joined
hands as they reached the porch. He pondered Monk's question. Any bets? At this point, maybe it was
too early to tell. If life and consciousness were a quantum phenomenon, then
maybe love was, too.
To love or not to love.
The wave or the particle.
Maybe for Painter and Lisa, it was still
both, a suspended potential that only time would settle.
"I don't know," Gray mumbled,
answering Monk's inquiry.
He headed toward the house, thinking
about his own future.
Like everyone else, he had his own
reality to measure.
6:45 p.m.
He
was late.
As the sun sank toward the horizon, Gray
marched across the green cast-iron bridge. The baroque span forded the River
Oder, a flat green expanse polished to a mirror's sheen by the setting sun.
Gray checked his watch. Rachel should be
landing right about now. They were set to meet at the coffeehouse across the
street from their hotel in the old historic district. But first he had one last
thread to tie up, one last interview.
Gray continued across the pedestrian
bridge. Below, a pair of black swans sliced across the waters. A few gulls
swept across the sky, reflected in the river. The air smelled of the sea and
the lilacs growing along the edges of the waterway. He had started this journey
at a bridge in Copenhagen, and now it ended at another.
He lifted his gaze to the ancient city of
black spires, copper-roofed turrets, and renaissance clock towers. The city of
Wroclaw was once named Breslau, a fortified township on the border between
Germany and Poland. Large sections of the city had been flattened during World
War II as the German Wehrmacht fought the Russian Red Army.
The aftermath of that attack had also
drawn Gray here
some sixty years later.
Ahead rose Cathedral Island. The twin
gothic towers of the island's namesake, the Cathedral of
His boots crossed from iron grate to
stone street.
The
Had a certain child once played along
there?
A perfect child.
Gray knew from recently unsealed Russian
records that the motherless boy had been raised at the orphanage once run by
the Church of Saints Peter and Paul. There were many such abandoned children
after the war, but Gray had narrowed the possibilities by age, sex, and hair
color.
The last of these parameters was most
certainly white-blond.
Gray also found records of the Russian Red
Army's search of the city, of their scouring of the mountains for the Nazis'
subterranean weapons labs, of their discovery at Wenceslas Mine. They had come
close to capturing SS-Obergruppenführer
Jakob Sporrenberg, Anna and Gunther's grandfather, as he evacuated the
But had she?
It was this one possibility that had Gray
and a handful of Sigma research experts delving into old records, following a
trail long gone cold, pieced from bits and shreds. Then the discovery
a
priest's diary, the one who ran the orphanage here, telling of a baby boy, cold
and alone, found with his dead mother. She was buried in a cemetery near here,
nameless until now.
But the boy had lived, grown up here,
entering the seminary under the tutelage of the same priest who rescued him,
gaining the name Father Piotr.
Gray crossed to the rectory door. He had
called in advance to interview the sixty-year-old priest, posing as a reporter
researching wartime orphans for a book. Gray lifted and tapped the iron knocker
on the nondescript plank door.
He could hear singing rising from the
church itself, a service under way.
After a few moments, the door opened.
Gray knew instantly who greeted him,
recognizing from old photos the lineless old face and bushy white hair parted
down the middle. Father Piotr was casually dressed in jeans, black shirt, white
Roman collar of his profession, and a light, buttoned sweater.
He spoke English with a thick Polish
accent.
"You must be Nathan Sawyer."
Gray wasn't but he nodded, suddenly
uncomfortable lying to a priest. But such subterfuge was necessary, as much for
the old priest's sake as his own.
He cleared his throat. "Thank you
for granting me this interview."
"Certainly. Please come in. Be
welcome."
Father Piotr led Gray through the rectory
hall to a small room with a warm coal stove in the corner. He had a pot of tea
brewing atop it. Gray was motioned to a chair. Once seated, Gray took out a pad
containing a handful of questions.
Piotr poured two cups and settled to a
worn wingback, the cushions long contoured to the man's body. A Bible rested on
a table beside a glass-shaded lamp, along with a few tattered mystery novels.
"You've come to inquire about Father
Varick," the man asked with a soft and genuine smile. "A great
man."
Gray nodded. "And about your life
here at the orphanage."
Piotr sipped his tea and waved fingers at
Gray to continue.
The questions were not that important,
mostly filling in blanks. Gray already knew almost everything about the man's
life. Rachel's uncle Vigor, as head of the Vatican's intelligence branch, had
supplied Sigma with a complete and detailed dossier on the Catholic father.
Including medical records.
Father Piotr had lived an unassuming life
within the church. There was nothing especially noteworthy about his
accomplishments beyond steadfast devotion to his flock. His health, though,
remained exceptionally good. Little to no medical history. A broken bone when
he was a teenager, falling off a rock. But other than that, routine physicals
showed a perfectly fit individual. He wasn't massive like Gunther or wickedly
agile like the Waalenbergs. Just stolidly healthy.
The interview turned up nothing new.
Gray eventually closed his notebook and
thanked the father for his time. Just to be thorough, he would obtain blood and
DNA samples when the priest went for his next physical, again coordinated
through Rachel's uncle. But Gray didn't expect anything much to come of it.
Hugo's perfected child turned out to be
simply a decent and thoughtful man with resoundingly good health. Maybe that
was perfection enough.
As Gray was leaving, he spotted an
unfinished jigsaw puzzle spread on a table in the room's corner. He nodded to
it. "So you like puzzles?"
Father Piotr smiled guiltily,
disarmingly. "Just a hobby. Keeps the mind sharp."
Gray nodded and headed out. He thought of
Hugo Hirszfeld's interest in the same. Had some insubstantial essence of the
Jewish researcher been passed to the boy, imparted through the Bell? As Gray
left the church and headed back over the river, he pondered such connections.
Fathers and sons. Was it just genetics? Or was there something more? Something at the quantum level?
The question was not a new one for Gray.
He and his father had never had a good relationship; only lately had bridges
started to build. And then there were other issues, worrisome concerns. Like
Piotr's jigsaw puzzle, what had Gray inherited from his father? He certainly
could not deny his fear of Alzheimer's, a real genetic possibility, but it went
deeper than that, back to their hardscrabble relationship.
What type of father would he be?
Despite being late, the question stopped
Gray cold on the iron bridge.
In that one question, reality shifted for
him. He remembered Monk challenging him on the plane ride to Germany, about
Rachel, about their relationship. His words returned to Gray on the bridge.
I mention Kat's
pregnant and you should've seen your face. Scared the crap
out of you. And it's my kid.
Here was the root of his panic.
What type of father would he be?
Would he be his father all over again?
Gray found his answer in the most
unlikely place. A girl strode past him on the bridge, tucked into a hooded
sweater against the river's breeze. He flashed upon Fiona. He remembered the
days of terror, her hand gripping his, needing him, but forever fighting him.
He recalled how that felt.
He gripped the rails of the bridge, hard.
It had felt wonderful.
And he wanted more.
A short laugh escaped him at the
realization, just a madman on a bridge. He didn't have to be his father. While
the potential was there to follow in his father's footsteps, he also had free
will, a consciousness that could collapse potential in either direction.
Freed at last, he headed again across the
bridge, slowly allowing this one reality to collapse other potentials, falling
like a chain of dominoes, one after the other, leading to one last teetering
unresolved potential.
Rachel.
He stepped off the bridge and headed
toward their rendezvous.
When he reached the coffeehouse, she was
already waiting on the patio. She must have just arrived herself. She had not
spotted him. He paused, shocked at how beautiful she was. It hit him anew every
time. Tall, long-limbed, an inviting curve of hip, bosom, and neck. She turned,
finding him staring. A smile bloomed. Her eyes, caramel
colored, glimmered warmly. She combed a hand through her ebony hair, almost
shyly.
Who wouldn't want to spend the rest of
their life with her?
He crossed, closing the gap, reaching a
hand out for her fingers.
In that moment, Monk's challenge again
returned to him. It seemed so long ago. A challenge about where Gray and Rachel
were headed. A challenge raised on three fingers.
Wife, mortgage, kids.
In other words, reality.
A relationship couldn't be suspended
forever as pure potential. Both
loving and not loving. Evolution
would not stand for it. Reality must eventually measure it.
And so it did now for Gray.
Wife, mortgage, kids.
Gray had his answer. He was ready for the
challenge of all three. And with this realization, that last domino toppled
inside his heart.
To love or not.
The wave or particle.
Gray took Rachel's fingers. He saw it
with clarity, yet the result still surprised him. He pulled her toward the
small table, noting that a plate of scones rested atop it, along with two dark
steaming mugs of caffe latte, already waiting for them.
Rachel's usual thoughtfulness.
He drew her down to one seat. He took the
other.
He stared into her eyes. He could not
keep the sorrow and apology out of his voice, but he allowed his firm
resolution to ring forth, too.
"Rachel, we need to talk."
Gray then saw it in her eyes, too.
Reality. Two careers, two continents, two people with separate paths from here.
She squeezed his fingers. "I
know."
Father Piotr had watched the young man
cross the bridge. He stood at the open coal door that led back into the
rectory's wine cellar. He had waited for his recent visitor to vanish down the
far street, then sighed.
A nice young man, but shadows cloaked
him.
Poor boy had much grief ahead of him.
But such is life's journey.
A soft mewling drew his attention back
down. A scrawny tabby brushed against his ankles, tail high, eyes looking up at
him expectant. One of Father Varick's strays. Now his charges. Piotr knelt down
and balanced a tiny plate of scraps on a rock. The river cat gave him one last
rub, then minced at the food.
Father Piotr crouched and stared out at
the river, ablaze with the last rays of the sun. He noted a bit of feathered
fluff near his heel. A brown sparrow, its neck broken. One of the many gifts
his orphans left on his doorstep.
He shook his head, collected the limp
bird between his palms, and raised it to his lips. He blew upon its feathers,
dancing them up, raising a wing, which caught air with a surprised flutter.
From his palm, the sparrow took flight, darting and dancing back up into the
sky.
Piotr watched it for a breath, trying to
read something in the winged path scribed through the air. Then he brushed his
hands and stood with a stretch.
Life forever remained a wondrous mystery.
Even for him.
Thanks
for accompanying me on this latest journey. As usual, I thought I'd take this
last moment of your time to deconstruct the novel, to reveal where research
ended and imagination continued.
First on the minor side:
DARPA has indeed developed prosthetic
limbs using revolutionary technology (though I don't think they have
incorporated flash charges into their plastic composites).
Similar to the book's ukufa,
A German boy was born in 2004 with a
mutation in the gene for myostatin, which resulted in a condition called
double-muscling, resulting in increased strength and muscular tone. Is this the
first natural-born Sonnekönig?
Shangri-La was discovered deep in the
Himalayas in 1998, a lost oasis of free-flowing water and lush vegetation in
the middle of the frozen peaks. What else might be hidden up there?
Moving on to the larger concepts:
As mentioned at the beginning of the
book, the Bell itself is indeed real, proving truth is often stranger than
fiction. The Nazis had constructed a strange device, fueled by an unknown
compound named Xerum 525. Little is known about its true functioning, only that
when it was powered up, a strange illness afflicted the scientists involved,
reaching as far as neighboring villages. At the end of the war, the Bell
vanished, the scientists involved were executed, and to this day, what became
of the device remains a mystery. If you'd like to learn more about this strange
bit of history, about the postwar race among Allied forces for Nazi technology,
and about the Germans' fascination with quantum research, I refer you to one of
the research bibles for this novel: The
Hunt for Zero Point by Nick Cook.
In this novel, I also spent considerable
time describing Heinrich Himmler's fascination with runes, the occult, and his
search for the Aryan birthplace in the Himalayas. All of it is based on fact,
including the set piece of Himmler's Black Camelot of Wewelsburg. For more
information on these topics, I suggest Christopher Hale's Himmler's Crusade and Peter Levenda's Unholy Alliance.
Lastly, one book was instrumental in
stimulating the core of this novel: Quantum
Evolution by
Which brings up the final tenet of the
book: the question of intelligent design versus evolution. I hope this novel
raises as many questions as it provides answers. But ultimately, I firmly
believe much of the current debate is misguided. Rather than focusing so
intently on where we have come from, a larger question deserves even more
fervent attention: Where are we headed?
To answer that, to follow that path, is
mystery and adventure enough for anybody.