The Mark: The Beast Rules The World (24 page)

Read The Mark: The Beast Rules The World Online

Authors: Tim Lahaye,Jerry B. Jenkins

Tags: #Adventure, #Fantasy, #Science Fiction, #Adult, #Thriller, #Contemporary, #Spiritual, #Religion

BOOK: The Mark: The Beast Rules The World
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“You’re the superior officer. You outrank everybody we’ll run into.”

“Then take advantage of that. I’ll be the one everybody sees but no one mentions. They will only salute. You speak with my authority. And you’re wearing that beautiful uniform, tailored at Chez Zeke.”

“I’ll try.”

“You’re hopeless.”

“I can do this.”

“You’re not giving me confidence.”

“Watch me.”

“That’s what I’m afraid of. I’ll be watching you get found out. Prove me wrong, Buck.”

“Outta my way, old man.”

“That’s the spirit.”

“You going to have them refuel us while we’re in Ptolemai’s?”

“No, Buck, you are.”

“C’mon. I don’t know all that plane stuff.”

“Just do it. From this point on, I am an angry, jet-lagged, ill-tempered deputy commander, and I don’t want to speak.”

“So it’s all on me?”

“Don’t ask me. I’m mute.”

“Are you serious?”

But Albie wouldn’t answer. The twinkle faded from his eyes and he set his jaw, scowling as they marched from the jet to the terminal, about twenty-five miles south of their destination. Buck accosted the first corporal he saw. “English?” he asked the young man.

“‘Course. ‘Sup?”

“I need you to hangar that aircraft and refuel it while my commanding officer and I are on assignment up the road.”

“Yeah? Well, I want you to shine my boots while I’m sleeping.”

“I’ll pretend I didn’t hear that, son.”

“Yeah, good. Me too.”

He started to leave and Buck swung him around with a grab of his shoulder. “Do it.”

“You think I know how to jockey a plane? I’m ground forces, pal. Get some other lackey to do it.”

“I’m telling you. Find someone who knows how to do it and have it done by the time we get back, or suffer the consequences.”

“You gotta be kiddin’ me!”

Albie had kept his back to the conversation, and Buck was convinced he was trying not to laugh aloud.

“You got that, son?” Buck said.

“I’m outta here. I’ll take my chances. You don’t even know my name.”

“Well, I do,” Albie said, spinning to face the boy, suddenly ashen. “And you’ll do what you’re told or you’ll be walking back to your hometown in civilian clothes.”

“Yes, sir,” the boy said, saluting. “Right away, sir.”

“Don’t let me down, boy,” Albie called after him.

Buck gave Albie a look. “Thought you were mute.”

“Somebody had to bail you out.”

“He was my own rank!”

“That’s why you refer to me! I’ve got the clout, but you’ve got to use it. Try again.”

“What now?”

“I told you. We need a vehicle.”

“Ach!”

Buck strode into the terminal, which was crawling with GC. With the crackdown on the underground churches, it would be a noisy area for a while. “Give me your papers,” he told Albie.

“What for?”

“Just do it! Hand ‘em over!”

“Now you’re talking.”

Buck stepped to the front of a line of GC Peacekeepers. “Hey!” the first in line shouted.

“Hey yourself,” Buck said. “You a deputy commander or are you escorting one? Because if you’re not, I’d appreciate your standing down.”

“Yes, sir.”

Buck raised an eyebrow at Albie, then spoke to the GC officer at a desk behind a window. “Corporal Jack Jensen on behalf of Deputy Commander Marcus Elbaz, here on assignment from the
USNA
. Need a vehicle for transport to Ptolemais.”

“Yeah, you and a thousand other guys,” the officer said, lazily looking over their IDs. “Seriously, you’re about two hundredth in line.”

“Seems to me we’re near the top, sir, begging your pardon.”

“How come your superior officer is USNA? He looks Middle Eastern.”

“I don’t do the assigning, pal. And I wouldn’t recommend getting into it with him. No, better yet, it would be fun. Tell him he looks Middle Eastern and that you’re questioning his base of operations. Go ahead. Really.”

The officer pursed his lips and slid the IDs back under the window. “Something basic do ya?”

“Anything. I could push for something fancy, but we just want to get in and get out. Anyway, tell you the truth, Elbaz has been so touchy today, I don’t think he deserves a nicer ride. We’ll take whatever you’ve got.”

The officer slid Buck a set of keys attached to a manila ticket. “Show this at the temporary motor pool behind the exit gate.”

As they headed that way, Albie mimicked Buck. “He’s been so touchy today, I don’t think he deserves a nicer ride. I oughta bust you down to Boy Scout.”

“You do and you’ll be walking home in civilian clothes.”

“Carpathia’s up to something,” Mac said, sitting next to

Abdullah in David’s office.

“I am going to be so glad to say good-bye to this

place,” Abdullah said.

David shifted in his chair. “Tell me about it.” “Well, don’t you want to get out of here too?” “I’m sorry, Smitty,” David said. “I was talking to

Mac.”

“Oh! A thousand pardons.”

“Watch him now,” Mac said. “He’ll be pout in a New

Babylon second.”

“I am not pout! Now stop teasing!”

Mac smacked Abdullah on the shoulder and the Jordanian smiled. “Anyway,” Mac said, turning back to David, “Carpathia calls me a little while ago and asks me do I know where his weapons are. ‘Course, I don’t, but I’d sure like to. Tell you somethin’, guys, people can talk all they want about the miraculous rebuilding Carpathia did all over the world. But nothin’, and I mean nothin’, compares to him getting all those countries to destroy 90 percent of their weapons and give him the other 10, and then him storin’ ‘em somewhere that nobody ever talks about.”

“Loose lips sink ships,” David repeated.

“You think people know but won’t say?”

“Obviously.”

“How does he keep a secret that big among so many people?”

“I think I just heard how,” David said, and he briefed Mac and Abdullah on it.

Abdullah sat shaking his head. “Nicolae Carpathia is a bad man.”

Mac looked at Abdullah and then at David. “Well, yeah! I mean, come on, Smitty. You just come to that conclusion, or have you known all along and just been keeping it from us?”

“I know you are teasing me,” Abdullah said. “Just wait until I know your language good.” “You’ll be dangerous; that’s a fact.”

David’s cell phone rang. He flipped it open and held up an apologetic finger. “It’s Ming,” he said.

“Should we go?” Mac said.

David shook his head.

“They were fighting over what you assumed they were fighting over,” she said. “My father wants Chang to take a job right away with the GC and be among the first to take the mark. Chang swears he will never take the mark.”

“Did he tell your father why?”

“No, and I am coming to see that he never can unless my father himself somehow becomes a believer. I have not lost faith and I keep praying, but until that happens, Chang cannot tell him. He would expose us.”

“Does your mother know?”

“No! She would eventually tell him. I’m afraid she is so intimidated that she would not be able to stand up to him in the end. David, you cannot let Chang get a job there, especially if new employees are the first to get the mark.”

“It appears that prisoners are going to be first, but yes, new employees soon. As they are hired, apparently. And even the rest of us within a couple of weeks.”

“What are you going to do, David? You and your friends?”

“We’re talking about that now. Obviously, we run or we die.”

“Can you take Chang with you?”

“Kidnap him?”

Ming was silent. Then, “Did you hear yourself, David? You want to leave him to take the mark or be beheaded for refusing so you won’t run the risk of kidnapping him? Please! Kidnap him! For one thing, he will go willingly.”

“I’m supposed to interview him for a job tomorrow.”

“Then either find a way to eliminate him, discredit him as a potential employee, or tell him where to meet you when you escape.”

“The latter is more likely. What could possibly disqualify him? He looks like a gold mine to any department, especially mine.”

“Make something up. Say he has
AIDS
.”

“And let your father kill him himself?”

“Well, how about a genetic defect?”

“Does he have one?”

“No! But work with me.”

“I’m not a doctor, Ming. It would just stall things.”

“That’s better than nothing.”

“Not if it makes me look suspicious. We’re hoping to get out of here without their suspecting we are subversives.

“Great idea. Tell them you want to take Chang with you to check him out before hiring. Then, whatever happens to you happens to him. He’s free and he can help you wherever you go.”

“Maybe.”

“It has to work, David. What choice is there?”

“What if they don’t go for it? What if they say no, just hire him, give him the mark, and then take him on assignment?”

“You have to try. He’s brilliant, but he’s a child. He can’t fend for himself. He can’t even defend himself against my father.”

“I’ll do the best I can, Ming.”

“That sounds like an excuse after everything fails.”

“I’m sorry, but I can’t do better than the best I can do.”

“David, he’s my brother! I know he’s not your flesh, but can you pretend? If it was Annie, would you do your best? Or would you do whatever you had to do to save her?”

David couldn’t speak.

“Oh, David! Forgive me! That was so wrong of me! Please! That was cruel.”

“No. I-”

“David, please blame that on my fear and my situation.”

“It’s all right, M-”

“Please tell me you forgive me. I didn’t mean that.”

“Ming, it’s all right. You’re right. I understand. You put it in perspective for me. Count on me. I will do whatever I have to do to protect Chang, all right?”

“David. Do you accept my apology?”

“Of course.”

“Thank you. I’ll be praying for you and loving you in the Lord.”

When David rang off, Mac said, “What in the world did she say, man? You looked more like me than like an Israeli there for a second.”

David told him.

“Tell you what,” Mac said, “and Smitty you speak for yourself on this, but if that boy’s a believer and he’s got the mark to prove it, he’s with us. And anybody else we can find before we get out of here. Right, Smitty?”

“Right, I think. If I understand. Other believers here all go with us, yes. Of course. Right?”

“That’s what we’re saying.”

“Mac, a question. Who else would speak for me?”

On the drive north, Buck used a secure phone to call Lukas (Laslos) Miklos. The man was distraught. “Thank you for coming, but there is nothing you can do. Surely you did not bring weapons.”

“No.”

“You would be so hopelessly outnumbered anyway that you would never get out alive. So why the trip? What can you do?”

“I wanted to see it firsthand, Laslos. Expose it to the world through The Truth.”

“Well, forgive me, Brother Williams. I love your magazine, and I read it almost as religiously as Dr. Ben-Judah’s messages. But you go to all the time and trouble and expense and danger to come all the way here, and it is for a magazine article? Did you know that the guillotines have arrived?”

“What?”

“It’s true. I would pass it off as a rumor myself if it weren’t for the brothers and sisters who told me. The GC is carting them through town in open trucks so the people can see the consequences of thinking for themselves. We are part of the United Carpathian States, a name I have to spit when I say. Nicolae is going to make an example of us. And you are here to write an article!”

“Brother Miklos, hear me. You knew there was nothing we could do. We would make matters only worse if we tried to free your wife and pastor and fellow believers. But I thought you’d want to know we were here so we can tell you-if we get in-what the conditions are, how their spirits are, whether they have any messages for you.”

Silence. Then Buck heard Laslos weeping.

“Are you all right, my friend?”

“Yes, brother. I understand. Forgive me. I am upset. It is all over the television that the guillotines will be set up first in the prisons, then at the mark sites. It is just a matter of days for us now. But it could be just hours for the prisoners. Please tell my wife I love her and am praying for her and long to see her again. And tell her that if I don’t see her again in this life, I will meet her in heaven. Tell her,” and he began to weep aloud, “that she was the best wife a man could have and that, that I love her with all my heart.”

“I will tell her, Laslos, and I will bring you any message she may have as well.”

“Thank you, my brother. I am grateful you have come.”

“Do you know where she and the others have been taken?”

“We have an idea, but we dare not go looking or we will all be rounded up. You know our church is made up of many, many small groups that are not so small anymore. When the GC raided the main one, they took my wife and Pastor D and about seventy others, but they missed more than ninety other groups.”

“Wow.”

“That is the good news. The worst of it is that apparently some in the original group have cracked under the strain. I can tell you without question it would not have been my wife or my pastor, but someone was tortured or scared or deceived into telling of the other groups. More raids have begun, and now they dare not meet at all. It is only a miracle I was not at the meeting with my wife, but if she becomes a martyr, I’ll wish I was there to die with her.”

“We came up with a question, besides a suggestion, David, and Smitty was very helpful on this, by the way,” Mac said. “We tease him about the language, but that’s a pretty shrewd brain in there. That’s a compliment, Abdullah.”

“Well, hey, cowpoke, I know that much right now!” “I guess if I can make fun of Jordan, he can make fun of Texas. Really burned me there, didn’t he? Anyway, the question is this: Do we want to play this out to the end, assumin’ you’re gonna have an inside track on exactly when employees have to take the mark? Or do we want some wiggle room?”

David thought about it. “It’s more than wiggle room, Mac. It’s part of the impression. If we wait till the last second and still try to make it look like we were killed, the timing alone is going to make it suspicious.”

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