Black Order (10 page)

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Authors: James Rollins

Tags: #Mystery, #Thriller, #Suspense, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adventure, #Adult, #Historical

BOOK: Black Order
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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
.
COPENHAGEN, DENMARK

 

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.

Logan finally spoke, a strain of tension in his voice. “Then it’s best if we scrub this mission until you have more resources on the ground.”

“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.

Logan spoke. “I don’t think that’s wise. The potential risk outweighs the potential gain. Especially as a solo op.”

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. Logan had plainly spent too much time as a paper pusher at Sigma. For a research mission, Logan was adequate as an ops leader—but this was no longer a fact-gathering assignment. It was turning into a full-blown Sigma Force op. And if that was the case, Gray wanted someone with real leadership backing him up.

“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 Logan, to go over his head, but sometimes you simply had to know when to step aside.

“I’m afraid that would be impossible at the moment, Commander Pierce.”

“Why?”

“Director Crowe is currently incommunicado in Nepal.”

Gray frowned. “In Nepal? What’s he doing in Nepal?”

“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 Leavenworth. Still, he had been leery. There had been a good reason he’d struck that officer. The man’s incompetence had resulted in needless deaths in Bosnia—deaths of children—but Gray’s anger had deeper roots. Tangled issues with authority, going back to his father. And while those hadn’t been completely resolved, it had taken a wise man to show Gray the path.

That man had been Ang Gelu.

“Are you saying Director Crowe is out in Nepal because of my friend the Buddhist monk?”

“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 Nepal, alongside his training for Sigma. In fact, it was through Ang Gelu that Gray had developed his own unique curriculum at Sigma. Gray had been fast-tracked to study biology and physics, a dual degree, but Ang Gelu elevated Gray’s studies, instructing him how to search for the balance between all things. The harmony of opposites. The Taoist yin and yang. The one and the zero.

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 Texas, a roughneck oilman disabled in midlife and having to assume the role of a housewife. As a result, his life became ruled by overcompensation and anger.

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 Nepal was too focused on the Maoist rebels. And Ang Gelu knew Gray was involved in a nebulous chain of command in covert ops. So he had appealed to Gray for help. But already assigned to this current mission, Gray had turned the matter over to Painter Crowe.

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—”

Logan cut him off. “It was slow here.”

Gray bit back a groan. He knew what Logan meant. The same lull in global threats had brought Gray to Denmark.

“So he went?”

“You know the director. Always wants to get his hands dirty.” Logan sighed in exasperation. “And now there’s a problem. A storm blanketed communication for a few days, but now that it’s cleared, we’ve still not heard an update from the director. Instead we’re hearing rumors through various channels. The same stories as reported by your friend. Sickness, plague, deaths, even possible rebel attacks in the region. Only it’s escalating.”

Gray now understood the strain he’d been hearing in Logan’s voice.

It seemed it was not only Gray’s mission that was going tits up.

When it rains, it pours.

“I can send you Monk,” Logan said. “He and Captain Bryant are on their way here. Monk can be on the ground there in ten hours. Stand down until then.”

“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 Logan had his hands full. All because of a favor to Gray. So he had little reason to object. “Very good, sir.”

“Report in after the auction,” Logan said.

“Yes, sir.”

The line clicked off.

Gray continued through the backstreets of Copenhagen, alert to all around him. But worry nagged him.

For Painter, for Ang Gelu…

What the hell was happening in Nepal?

11:18
A.M
.
HIMALAYAS

 

“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 U.S. military’s research and development division. I had a research grant with them once. What’s their interest out here?”

“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 Bell had been rung too loudly.

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.

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