Ancients: An Event Group Thriller

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Ancients: An Event Group Thriller Page 8

by David L. Golemon


  The president of the United States handled the Group personally. The person who occupied the Oval Office—that person alone was trusted with the secrets studied in the ancient cave system below the sands of the high-desert airbase.

  For every sitting president since the time of Woodrow Wilson, the first tour of the magical wonders of the Group, a subdepartment of the National Archives, always amazed and usually won over a new president.

  The current director of the Event Group was Professor Niles Compton, recruited from MIT. Compton had been chosen by his predecessor, Senator Garrison Lee, and groomed specially to become the head of the most secret agency in the world outside of the American NSA.

  He escorted the newly elected president past the third-vault level of the underground complex.

  “Apart from the fact that you have artifacts like the Roswell saucer, something that may or not be Noah’s Ark, and several items that include the bodies of historic figures, just where does it say you have achieved your mission, that you have been a deterrent to those who would harm our nation by studying past events?”

  Niles Compton studied the newly elected president. The commander in chief was at the very least studious. It was a well-known fact that he came from an intellectual family and his platform of budget restraints and checks and balances had gotten him elected. Niles had his work cut out for him.

  “Let us take the Ark as an example. Did it tell us anything about religion other than it fit the dimensions and design as stated in the Bible?” Niles shook his head. “Absolutely not. What it did lead us to is the now well-accepted science that the Middle East was most definitely flooded around thirteen to fifteen thousand years ago, which has led the scientific community to the conclusion that it was caused by a seismic event or a nonterrestrial occurrence like a meteor strike. Thus, we monitor the movement of the earth for patterns like they may have faced thousands of years ago. Our policy of tracking large bodies out in space is another example of what we have learned, just from this one Event.”

  Niles knew that the president needed this information to make a sound judgment when it came to budgeting hidden money for his department. Thus, he brought out the heavy guns on the initial tour.

  The last soldier to be nominated for a fifth star in the nation’s history, the new president didn’t look at all convinced as he stepped up to a small vault and waited for the director.

  “And that’s just one artifact from the world’s past,” Niles said as he waited for his assistant, the eighty-two-year-old Alice Hamilton, to enter her security clearance on the keypad beside the vault. Then he and the president watched as she placed her thumb on a clear glass plate that read the minute swirls and valleys of her print. The vault hissed open.

  “Okay, Dr. Compton, please explain the subject of this vault and its direct relationship to our nation’s security, if you please.”

  Niles nodded and Alice opened the eight-inch-thick door of the small vault, and a cool mist rolled out and formed at the feet of the president.

  “Very mysterious,” was the only comment he made.

  “This way, sir,” Compton said, gesturing to the open door.

  As they entered, the interior lights came to life. The two men stared at a small glass enclosure that had lines running into it, supplying nitrogen in its coldest state. Niles placed his thumb on a small plate just inside the door and allowed the center’s Cray computer system to explain the find.

  “The item you see before you, Event Group artifact and file # 4578-2019, was discovered in a Swiss bank vault by an undercover operative of Department 5656 in 1991.”

  The president looked closer at the acrylic enclosure and saw what looked like a small disk and disk player. Both items were worn and very old-looking. The disk itself was cracked and scratched and a third of it was missing.

  “The object has been identified as a portable video-recording device manufactured by the Sony Corporation. Market date for this item was discovered to be in 2019 AD. This information was formulated through the serial number located on the video player/recorder and according to company sources the serial number coincides with a future manufacturing date as indicated by the last four digits of the serial number.”

  The president looked from the enclosure to the face of Niles Compton. The look told the director that the man was skeptical at the very least.

  “Upon study by the Mechanical Forensics Department, the damaged disk, though incomplete, held a visual magnetic resonance of the Battle of Gettysburg, recorded on the evening of July 3, 1863. This has been verified by the alignment of stars recorded at the 1678 reference point of the disk’s recording. Department historians authenticating the images recorded of the battle indicated no evidence of staging. The material enclosed was found on August 26, 1961, by Park Ranger August Schliemann one hundred and ten yards from the area known as “Little Round Top.” This material was stolen from the National Parks Service and stored in The Bank of Switzerland, safe-deposit box number 120989-61. The item has been declared authentic by Group historians.”

  “What we have here is a device that was used to record the battle of Little Round Top in 1863. While we speculate that the damaged portion of the disk shows the actual battle as recorded at the time, we at Group have come to the realization that coupled with the manufacture time of the recording device, that battle was not only observed by someone from the future but recorded, for what reasons we can only speculate.”

  The president was speechless. He looked from the director to the acrylic enclosure. He turned and was about to ask a question when Alice, standing by the vault’s door, cleared her throat.

  “Director, the president has an urgent call from the White House.”

  “Thank you, Alice,” he said as he gestured for the president to take the phone, which was just outside the vault door. As he moved off, Alice stepped in and smiled at the director.

  “How’s it going?” she whispered.

  “I hate this stuff,” he said back in a hushed voice. “It could go either way.”

  She patted Niles on the shoulder. “Well, it may cost us some budget money, but he can’t close us down. Just keep that in mind.” She smiled and turned toward the president as he spoke in quiet tones on the phone. Then she looked at Niles. “You seem to be taking this rather calmly, Niles. Are you forgetting to tell me something about you and our new commander in chief?”

  Niles pushed his glasses back up to their proper resting place on his nose and then looked at Alice curiously.

  “Forgetting something? No, I don’t believe so.”

  The president hung up the phone and started to turn to them. Alice was looking at Niles with even more curiosity. She knew him well enough that she thought he wasn’t being totally honest with her.

  “Mr. Director, I’m afraid I have to cut this meeting short.” He looked at the enclosure and then half smiled. “Even though I must say you have indeed piqued my imagination, the real world is intruding on us. The North Koreans are still rattling their sabers and now we have a serious incident at the Iran-Iraq border. It seems an earthquake caused a lot of deaths.”

  “Sorry to hear that, sir. We can continue when you have more time.”

  A frown crossed the president’s face. “I can tell you’re not used to being challenged on budgetary matters, Doctor. I assure you I just don’t start axing programs and budgets without due consideration.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Ms. Hamilton, it’s been a rare pleasure to meet a lady of your … your—”

  “Years, Mr. President?” she finished for him while batting her lovely eyes.

  “Well, I was going to say quality. But if Dr. Compton has the smarts to keep someone like you way past mandatory retirement without anyone catching on, well, maybe you folks deserve the benefit of the doubt.” The president turned to Niles and held out his hand. “Until we have more time, Mr. Director.”

  Alice watched their eyes meet and became aware of a momentary softness there that
had not been evident before.

  Niles watched Alice lead the president to the secure elevator, where he would meet his Secret Service escort, and frowned. He wanted to tell Alice and a few of the others about the president and himself, but he didn’t know for sure what the man wanted everyone to know just yet. He decided that since the president hadn’t said anything, he would play it close to the vest for now.

  The presidential helicopter was waiting just inside the ancient-looking hangar. The staged dilapidation kept prying eyes from paying too much attention to gate number one of the Event Group complex. As the five-bladed rotor started to turn, the president frowned at the folder just given him by his chief of staff, Daniel Harding.

  “Do we know just how much armor loss we’re looking at?”

  “No, sir. With the earthquake damage it’s still a mess over there. The Iraqis are claiming to have lost forty percent of their ready divisions in the disaster. CIA reports that Iran has lost a like number. The quake hit at just the right area and the ayatollah is saying it’s a divine sign that the end is near and that disarmament is the only option, starting with Iraq of course.”

  “Well, I wouldn’t be crying over that, but how about unilaterally first,” the president said as the huge marine helicopter eased out of the mysterious hangar of the Event Group. “Might make the world a sight happier.”

  “Indeed,” the chief of staff said. “Now, that damn Kim Jong Il is a different story. He’s claiming he has evidence of offshore tampering by South Korea that caused this earthquake and tsunami against the People’s Army. He says it was underwater drilling that sparked the episode.”

  “Has he completely lost his mind? The South Koreans manipulated a seismic event by drilling for oil?”

  “He claims to have evidence that shows naval elements and aircraft in international waters doing the foul deed. Even the Chinese are looking at him like he just fell out of the idiot tree and hit every branch on the way down.”

  “Well, get UN Ambassador Williams on it and tell him to find out what he can through unofficial channels. I don’t want the State Department to officially give this story any credibility, understood?”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “Listen, also get Nathan Samuels to the White House. I want to know from my science adviser just how natural two quakes of this size almost half a world away can be separate natural events. I want an answer to tell the press when this idiot Kim Jong Il’s statements hit the newswires.”

  Alice rode with Niles Compton on the elevator up to level seven. At first, the director was content to stare at the numbers as they rose. Then without turning he said, “I want a detailed report on all the field teams that may or may not have been affected by these quakes. Any team, no matter who they’re attached to, gets removed if there’s the slightest danger. We don’t need anyone getting hurt while the president mulls over our value.”

  Alice was silent as she wrote his instructions in her small notepad. When she was done, she saw Niles remove his glasses and rub the bridge of his nose in worry.

  “Everyone is out and safe.”

  Niles half turned and replaced his glasses. “Excuse me?”

  “The Ethiopian field team—they’re safe and should be home in about twelve more hours. Our wandering vacationers are with them.”

  Alice saw the director relax. He nodded as the real reason for his inquiry into the field teams had been answered.

  “Are you angry with Jack?” Alice asked, looking at her notepad.

  The elevator stopped and Niles waited for Alice to exit before following. He walked straight to his large office, which had the Group’s motto above the door in gold letters: THOSE WHO CHOOSE TO FORGET THE PAST, ARE CONDEMNED TO RELIVE IT. He gestured for Alice to close the large double doors behind her.

  The office was spacious and dominated by thirty small-screen monitors that could be tuned to any science department or vault on any of the seventy-five sublevels of the complex. In the center of these monitors that were situated on the wall in the circular office was one large monitor that was currently tuned to the dilapidated hangar designated gate one. It was empty, meaning that the president had safely lifted off. He went to the credenza and poured himself a glass of water, then sat behind his large desk.

  “You asked if I was angry at Jack.”

  “Yes,” she said as she sat down in a chair beside the desk.

  “Not as much angry as I am worried.” He took a sip of his water and rifled through some papers on his desk. He found what he was looking for and pushed the paper to Alice. “I requested that Jack be here for the briefing of the new president; he instead requested leave for himself, Everett, and Ryan.”

  “You granted the leave.”

  “How could I say no after what Jack has done for this Group in the past two years?”

  “Then why are you worried?” Alice asked as she laid down the memo.

  “He takes too many chances sometimes.”

  Alice smiled and looked at her boss. She knew that Niles from time to time overthought a situation, and she was duty-bound to ease his mind. Jack Collins was the very best at what he did. His army record was unparalleled in achievement. The only mark against him was his battle with the Pentagon over policy, which had eventually led him to be transferred to the Group.

  Carl Everett was Jack’s equal in many ways, with the exception of his heart. Everett was the one to whom Jack turned for the harder things involved with his new command. Such as how to handle people.

  “Jack doesn’t have a death wish, Niles, if that’s what you’re thinking. What he does have is an overwhelming commitment to do what is right. He was restrained for so many years in his duties with the army. The inability to do the right thing instead of what policy dictated he do. You gave him the freedom he needed to act when you brought him here. Bad people were hurting us in the field and Jack stopped that after you gave him a free hand, and I must say it was the smartest order you could ever have given a man like Colonel Collins.”

  Niles placed the glass down and then looked at Alice and nodded. “Do I always overlook the obvious?”

  “Jack’s not growing bored. He wanted to be there to give Will Mendenhall his new second-lieutenant’s bar. He’s proud of Will, you know that. A fishing vacation was only an excuse.”

  “He goes fishing and thwarts an attack on innocent students. Taking chances is a bad habit I want him to break.”

  “If he breaks that habit, we go back to losing field personnel. It’s still an ugly world out there, Niles, and Jack just happens to know how to deal with it.”

  Eighteen hours later, Collins stood at semiattention before the desk of his director. He had not taken the seat offered by Niles, preferring to wait until the director got off his chest that which had to be said.

  “Bring back any fish, Colonel?” Niles asked as he looked at the debrief folder that Jack and the others had filed.

  “All we brought back was a hangover and an Ethiopian field team.”

  Niles flipped a page in the file and then looked at Collins. He tossed the filed report onto his desk and then gestured for the colonel to sit.

  “Take a seat, Jack … please.”

  Collins finally relented and sat. The silver bird on his collar sparkled in the soft light of the office.

  “You take too many chances, Jack,” Niles stated flatly as he looked straight at Collins.

  Collins was about to speak when Niles held his hand up.

  “Save it. For people like me who only see science and numbers, we can’t even begin to imagine what it’s like to have the ability you have. It is a hard thing for us to conceive of risking one’s life to save a stranger. Cannot fathom it. I just want you to think before you leap. You are too damn valuable to this Group. To me.” He mumbled the last words.

  Collins watched the director. While he and Niles had never become close, they had a mutual respect for each other that went far beyond the normal working relationship. He may not have expressed himse
lf to the director the way he should have, but Jack knew that the bookish director was the smartest man he had ever had the pleasure of meeting. In addition, the two worked well as a team, always thinking about the safety of their people.

  “You and many others sell yourselves too short around here, Niles. My abilities are no greater than any one of the five hundred people assigned to Group. In my time you’ve made choices I could never imagine making—life-or-death decisions for people out in the field—and I must say you have never come up short. All soldiers ever ask for is a superior to have his back. They all know that you do.”

  Niles Compton nodded, signaling an end to that discussion. He cleared his throat, undid his top button, and then slid the knot in his tie down. He picked up the file with the field report in it.

  “This Addis Abba archaeology team—their dig was similar to our own?”

  “As far as we know, it was an information-and-acquisition dig only. No one knew what would be found.”

  Niles turned in his chair and typed a command on his computer. The main ten-by-fourteen-foot monitor came alive, and he and Jack looked into the clean room on level forty-three of the artifact-sorting room.

  A straitlaced technician no older than thirty stepped up to the monitor. Professor Alan Franklin smiled and nodded at Niles.

  “Mr. Director, good morning.”

  “What have you got so far?” Niles asked.

  “Well, the team brought back some very rare finds. Artifacts, I may add, that had no business being in the area where they were unearthed. For instance,” he turned away and pulled up a shard of pottery, which he held very delicately in glove-encased fingers, “this little item: I can tell you, even before my assistant hands me the carbon-14 test results, that it predates anything we or anyone else in the world has on record. The pottery is almost porcelainlike in looks and made from a material civilizations have never used before in the making of pottery. Initial analysis says it’s made from crushed volcanic glass.”

 

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