The Lucifer Code

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The Lucifer Code Page 32

by Charles Brokaw


  Olympia frowned with distaste. Lourds knew she had hoped they’d seen the last of Cleena MacKenna when she’d left earlier.

  ‘Is that blood on your sleeve?’ Joachim pointed toward Cleena’s right sleeve.

  Lourds noticed the speckles Joachim pointed at. They were starting to turn to a crusty brown.

  ‘Nothing to worry about,’ Cleena shot back.

  ‘What have you done?’ Olympia demanded.

  ‘Nothing. If anything, I’ve bought us some time. But not much.’ Cleena stood her ground. Her hand wasn’t far from her pistol and Lourds knew she didn’t trust any of them too much. He couldn’t help wondering what had brought her back. ‘This isn’t even my problem. But I came back to help.’

  ‘Out of the goodness of your heart?’

  Cleena shot Olympia a hard look but didn’t respond. ‘You people don’t realize what we’re really up against. Or who.’

  ‘Lucifer,’ Joachim said without hesitation.

  Cleena cursed. ‘Save your devils and demons. For whatever reason, the United States has declared an interest in this scroll.’

  ‘What do you mean?’ Joachim said.

  ‘The men back at the university,’ Lourds said. ‘The ones who followed us down into the tunnels.’

  ‘Yes,’ Cleena said. ‘Elliott Webster sent another team of CIA agents into Istanbul. I’d be willing to wager he’s also the one behind the military team that’s been hot on our heels.’

  ‘Elliott Webster?’ Olympia said. ‘The vice-president of the United States?’

  ‘Unless you know another Elliott Webster that could give the CIA orders, yes. That’s the one.’

  ‘Vice-President Webster is there,’ one of the monks said.

  ‘Where?’ Lourds asked.

  The man nodded toward the television. ‘There. In Saudi Arabia. He went over on a peacekeeping mission. Although everyone knows it’s only to speak for the American and European business interests that have holdings there. At present, he’s more or less a hostage in that country.’

  23

  Central Business District

  King Abdullah Economic City, Saudi Arabia

  24 March 2010

  ‘My God,’ Vicky DeAngelo said as she stood at Webster’s side and watched a row of buildings out on Financial Island suddenly blossom into surging infernos. Light erupted out over the dark water in the harbour and reflected on the rolling waves. ‘They’ve gone insane.’

  Webster couldn’t help thinking that God had nothing to do with what was taking place in Saudi Arabia at the moment. In fact, Webster was positive of that. He almost laughed aloud at the thought.

  ‘You know, boss,’ Tristan Hamilton said with a trace of nervousness clogging his baritone, ‘it might be an idea to step away from those windows. Even if no one decides to shoot up here because they know you’re here, a blast might come too close. If those windows explode, flying glass could chop you up into hamburger.’

  ‘We’re going to be all right,’ Webster said. ‘This won’t touch us.’

  ‘I don’t know about you,’ Hamilton said, ‘but I’ve got compadres plenty worried about the way the rebels have been lighting up oil fields like Roman candles. You get nervous about people like that, something’s gotta give. The United States can’t run without oil. Our country will grind down to dust.’

  ‘That’s one of the reasons I’ve been pushing to develop my technology,’ Stephen Napier said.

  ‘Yeah, but you’ve been salting the mine, buddy,’ Hamilton said. ‘I know a lot of your heavy investors are oil people, and you’re holding a few blue-chip shares in corporations over here as well. If this cash cow dries up, you’re gonna be hurting too.’

  Another explosion, this one even larger, seared the night sky. This time the detonation rattled through Webster’s flesh a few seconds later.

  Hamilton cursed.

  Vicky’s phone rang. She answered it and stepped away, talking hurriedly.

  Retreating to the bar, Webster poured himself another drink.

  ‘If you don’t mind me saying,’ Napier told Webster when he joined him, ‘you seem to be awfully calm about this.’

  ‘I am,’ Webster said as he turned back toward the window. ‘The American Navy is sitting out there as we speak. All it will take is one word from me and Marines will be in here to get us out.’

  ‘That’s good to know.’

  ‘It is, isn’t it?’ Webster drained his glass and made another drink.

  ‘Why don’t you call them in now?’

  ‘Because the time isn’t right. You know about timing, Stephen. How close are you on that alternative fuel source?’

  Napier hesitated only a moment. ‘I don’t suppose it would be too much telling you that we’re closer than anyone knows.’

  ‘No, it wouldn’t.’

  ‘But the timing of the new energy source is going to be tricky.’

  ‘Because if you wait too long, you’re going to be playing catch-up in a deflated market that’s not going to be able to pay top dollar. And if you break it too fast and people refuse to change over, you’re going to be forced to sell it more cheaply than you otherwise could just so you can stay in business.’

  Napier nodded. ‘You understand.’

  ‘I do. When most of Japan’s heavy industry sites were destroyed in World War Two, they had to start over from scratch. As a result, they used better equipment and created a much better product than American industry. Just like that. Except they were outside the American economy. The US just pushed the import taxes up enough to help American car manufacturers stay in business. Until 1987 when the Japanese rescued the American dollar. After that, new arrangements were made to allow part of Japanese import manufacture to take place here, getting around the import tax.’

  ‘Then over the next twenty years, Japanese car sales started outstripping domestic products,’ Napier said. ‘And look at the state of the car industry today.’ He sipped his drink. ‘We can sell my product to America.’

  ‘But that’s not the only market you want.’

  ‘No.’

  ‘You want it all. The world market. Or it’s not worth having.’

  ‘Or at least as much of it as I can get.’

  ‘I can understand that.’ Webster glanced at the television where Vicky was watching with keen interest. ‘And I don’t blame you.’

  ‘It’ll be better for all of us if the alternative fuel is launched big,’ Napier said. ‘More profit means we can back up the changeover, create a cushion for the economy. As people get laid off from the petroleum industry, we should be able to absorb them. Most of them. But only if we capture a world share.’

  ‘I know.’

  ‘This situation, though, it’s going to change the dynamic of everything.’

  Webster nodded. He knew that too. He was counting on it.

  Passage of Omens

  Hagia Sophia Underground

  Istanbul, Turkey

  24 March 2010

  ‘There’s nothing here, Professor Lourds.’

  Ignoring the fierce vindication in Joachim’s voice, Lourds shone his light over the passageway. He ran his hand over the wall and felt only the cold solid stone. He took out his pocket knife and used it to tap against the wall.

  ‘You’re wasting our time,’ Joachim insisted.

  ‘Can you cut him some slack?’ Cleena asked.

  The young woman’s defence surprised Lourds. For a moment he forgot to tap. Evidently it had the same effect on Joachim because he just stared at her silently.

  ‘He’s trying to do something here,’ Cleena continued. ‘You’re expecting him to do in days what you people couldn’t do in eight hundred years. You might want to chill out a little and think about that.’

  Lourds smiled at that. Cleena joined him at the wall. She took out a knife and began tapping the stone surface as well.

  ‘You’re listening for hollow noises, right?’ Cleena asked.

  ‘I am,’ Lourds agreed. ‘When did
you become a believer?’

  ‘Me?’ Cleena shook her head. ‘I’m a lapsed Catholic. Way lapsed.’

  ‘Not in God.’ Lourds moved out a few inches and tapped again. The stone still sounded solid. ‘In me.’

  ‘I wouldn’t let it go to your head if I were you. It’s a choice between you and the sourpuss over there. I’d rather believe in you. Otherwise we’re going to be back at that hidey-hole they’ve carved out for themselves watching you read books. Personally, I’m up to my eyeballs with watching you read.’

  ‘I wasn’t just reading,’ Lourds said defensively.

  ‘I understand that, but you know what I mean.’ Cleena moved down a little bit and started tapping again.

  Olympia picked up a loose stone from the ground and used it to tap on the wall as well. ‘You’re sure it’s this side of the passageway?’

  ‘Yes. This is where it has to be according to the scroll I deciphered.’ Despite his own insistence, Lourds felt his confidence waning. He had measured the distance himself, then measured it twice more. According to everything he had worked out, the entrance to the Passage of Omens had to be within this general vicinity. He didn’t know how they could have missed it.

  Only solid stone met his efforts.

  ‘You’re sure about the distance?’ Cleena asked.

  ‘Yes.’

  ‘Did they use different measurements back in those days?’

  ‘Now why didn’t I think of that?’ Olympia asked sarcastically.

  ‘Careful,’ Cleena said. ‘You keep up with that ill-tempered attitude and somebody may just drop a house on you.’

  ‘Really?’ Olympia said. ‘You did not just say that. We’re here, following in the footsteps of a man who gave us the most intriguing and important book in the Bible, and you’re talking about The Wizard of Oz?’

  ‘Actually it wasn’t the wizard. That was an allusion to one of the wicked witches.’

  ‘I knew what the allusion was to. I just think maybe-’

  ‘Ladies,’ Lourds interrupted.

  They looked at him, faces lifted out of the darkness by the flashlights everyone carried.

  ‘I can’t hear the sound of tapping,’ Lourds pointed out. ‘If I can’t hear the tapping, I can’t hear the hollow sounds.’

  Both the women turned back to the search. In both directions down the hall, Joachim and the other monks were busy tapping as well.

  Lourds brushed the sweat from his forehead with his sleeve, then resumed his task. He was right about the translation. The door had to be here. Somewhere.

  Central Business District

  King Abdullah’s Economic City, Saudi Arabia

  24 March 2010

  ‘My God,’ Vicky whispered. Her eyes never left the television. She held a sat-phone to her ear. ‘Keep them in there. This footage is amazing.’

  Crossing the room, Webster joined her. The camera angle was sketchy at best, bouncing around crazily. On the screen, Saudi tanks rolled through the street. From the angle and the geography, Webster guessed the tanks were somewhere near the row of buildings that had just blown up. A wave of gunmen backed away from the approaching tanks. The men took cover behind buildings, but ultimately it did no good. The tank crews fired into them, blasting through stone walls with main guns and.50-cal machine guns. Dead men and broken buildings littered the street amid an ocean of blood. Like mechanical predators, the tanks rolled over the corpses and debris, grinding them into dust and organic pulp.

  The cameraman was shooting from only a few steps behind the wave of rebels in fear for his life, judging from the quick awkward movements he made as he dodged and scampered. Another man trailed him with a microphone clenched in his fist, mixing with the line of rebels. Tension knotted his face.

  ‘… can see that Prince Khalid’s shock troops aren’t holding any…’ the man with the microphone said.

  ‘Stay in line with that camera, Jernigan,’ Vicky ordered in a hard voice. ‘These shots are money. I’ll make sure your name is known in every household in the United States. Just calm down and stay with-’

  At that moment, a round from one of the heavy machine guns caught the reporter in the back of the head. Blood, bone and brain matter exploded in a liquid rush. Some of it caught the camera lens and put a scarlet film over the view.

  Vicky cursed. ‘Harrison! Listen to me! I know he’s dead. I saw it happen. Stay with the shot. This is the kind of footage that makes cameramen legends.’

  It’s also the kind of footage that will be played on YouTube for years, Webster knew. And he knew that Vicky DeAngelo was more interested in that aspect. All the footage would be watermarked with her media logo.

  The tanks advanced over the bodies that had fallen in the street. One of them belonged to the reporter.

  The camera wavered hard to the right. Webster knew from the angle the man was considering diving into the nearest shop.

  ‘Harrison,’ Vicky stated coolly, ‘stay on task. Stay on the tanks. We need-’

  The camera view suddenly swung away and up. It focused on the leaping flames overhead for a moment, then whirled to the ground in a kaleidoscope of spinning landscapes.

  Vicky swore and punched another button on her sat-phone. ‘Harrison, you’d better be dead or missing a body part!’

  Webster smiled as he listened to Vicky directing the news producer to move to the next hot spot in the city. As the view shifted, Webster’s sat-phone rang. The Caller ID confirmed it was coming from the White House. He thumbed the button and answered.

  ‘Hello?’ President Waggoner said. ‘Elliott? Elliott, is that you?’

  ‘Yes. I’m here, Jack.’ Crackles echoed along the connection.

  ‘Thank God,’ Waggoner said. ‘We’d lost touch with you.’

  Actually, Webster deliberately hadn’t answered the last call and he knew that the secret service agents’ effort to remain in contact with their primary handler had been blocked. Spider had seen to that. The man sat in the corner of the room and stayed hooked into his computer. Spider was in his element, weaving tactical forays through the domestic and international internet. He was also responsible for making certain Vicky DeAngelo’s broadcasts got out to the communications satellites. Spider was the man behind the curtain, the wizard who made the whole experience work round the globe.

  ‘We’re still here,’ Webster said.

  ‘Is there any way you can get clear of that place?’ Waggoner asked.

  ‘Not without considerable risk.’

  ‘You’re already in considerable risk. I just watched a reporter get killed on national television.’

  When Webster glanced at the television, he saw Vicky had already looped the action on the broadcast. It spun again and again in a screen-in-screen presentation. By tomorrow morning, that would be one of the images most remembered from tonight. As Webster watched, the reporter died again and the camera view turned red. Then it began once more.

  ‘I have Prince Khalid’s promise nothing will happen to us,’ Webster said.

  ‘Even if the king’s army doesn’t lay a finger on you, the rebels are gunning for you. The CIA has intercepted encrypted communications in that area between the Shia terrorists.’

  That was also courtesy of Spider. Of course, the idea for that had come from Webster. Humans thrived on drama. Nothing divided them more quickly and breaking television news had become the drug of choice. That was one of the weaknesses of giving humans free will. They had to be constantly stimulated in order to use it. When the stimulation didn’t occur naturally, they artificially created it.

  ‘That surprises me,’ Webster said, though it didn’t.

  ‘They think the United States is in league with the Sunnis and the king.’

  ‘We’ve always given that impression. We’ve had a long history of agreeing to terms with these people until our presence in Iraq to shore up the Shias.’

  ‘I know, but now there’s some rumours flying around that the United States plans to take advantage of all the co
nfusion going on to make a land grab.’

  ‘We both know that’s not true.’ But it was exactly what Webster had intended.

  ‘Not entirely,’ the president said.

  ‘What do you mean?’

  ‘I’ve heard rumours that some of the domestic corporations are planning to use mercenary units to protect their assets over there.’

  ‘You could hardly blame them.’ Webster watched as a large freighter blew up in the harbour. ‘Neither Prince Khalid nor his opponents care about collateral losses. Those corporations are going to lose millions by morning. Those losses won’t mean much to the Saudis. Their economy will still be stable. They have what everyone wants, and nearly all of that is safely underground. After the fires go out and the dust settles on this, the corporations will line up again to pay for rights to drill.’

  ‘Only for the moment,’ Waggoner said. ‘That will change as soon as we no longer need their oil.’

  ‘Things always change.’

  ‘But until that time, we need to salvage as much of this situation as we can.’

  A military helicopter flew uncomfortably close to the building. Hamilton and Napier drew back from the floor-to-ceiling glass. In the next moment, the helicopter fired a series of rockets that reduced the street in front of the hotel into piles of flaming rubble. The cannonade vibrated through the building under Webster’s feet. Smoke drifted up and momentarily obscured the battlefield outside the glass.

  Waggoner swore. ‘Is that your hotel?’

  Webster glanced at the television screen and saw that the view was indeed of the hotel. He wondered if Vicky DeAngelo’s people had followed a group of Shia there or if they’d returned in hopes of being granted asylum.

  In the next second, a wave of fire washed over the front of the building. The heat immediately killed the landscaped grounds in front of the hotel. Only a moment later the expensive façade scorched and carbon covered the glass for a short time before the windows cracked and fell apart.

  ‘Yes,’ Webster said. ‘That’s our hotel.’

  ‘Elliott, you can’t take chances like this. You need to get yourself and those people out of there now.’

 

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