The
Chamber of Myth
Tuesday, August 31, 2:21
A.M.
Time Remaining on the
Extinction Clock: 33 hours, 39 minutes
Hecate and Paris stared in shock and horror
as their father tossed the dead sea serpent aside and got to his
feet.
“What. what are you talking about?” Hecate
said.
Paris sputtered, unable to
talk.
Cyrus mocked his son’s startled stutter,
“I-i-i-’m sorry, Paris, did I speak too quickly? Use too many big
words? Or are you simply as stupid as I’ve feared all these
years?”
If Paris had been on the verge of saying
something, those words struck him completely dumb.
Cyrus turned to Hecate. “And you, you feral
bitch. I’d held you in higher regard until now. Did you actually
think you had me fooled. ‘Daddy’?” He spit the distasteful word out
of his mouth. “The day I become a fawning dotard I hope to God Otto
puts a bullet in my brain.”
Otto smiled and bowed, and then he and Cyrus
laughed.
Hecate looked back and forth between them.
“What. what’s going on here?”
“I believe the Americans call it ‘payback.’
”
“For what?” Paris blurted, finally finding
his voice.
“How much time do you have?” sneered Cyrus.
“For all those years when you two thought you had me imprisoned at
the Deck. For treating me like a vapid old fool. For the disrespect
you show me in every action, even when you are faking respect. For
trying to steal Heinrich Haeckel’s cache of records. For trying to
control me by staffing the Deck with your
toadies.”
Otto laughed.
“Wait-you sent the Russian team to Gilpin’s
apartment? And to Deep Iron?”
“Of course. Those records were supposed to
come to me. It was an incident of mischance that Heinrich died
before he could pass along the information about where the records
were stored. Even his own family didn’t know what he had stored or
where it was stored. For years we thought that all of that
wonderful research was lost. Then in one of those moments of good
fortune that reinforce the reality of a just and loving God, Burt
Gilpin approached one of Otto’s agents with information about a
cache of early genetics research. And what do we discover? That
Gilpin used to work for the Jakoby Twins, that he was a computer
consultant for them. Our Russian friends encouraged him to talk and
he told us about how he helped the legendary Jakoby Twins install a
revolutionary computer system called Pangaea. Did you know that he
built himself a clone of Pangaea? That he used it to steal medical
research in exactly the way you two were stealing it? Only he made
the mistake of trying to sell the bulk research. and he tried to
sell it to Otto.”
Cyrus shook his head slowly. “Stealing the
schematics for Pangaea from me was very naughty. though I do admire
you for that much, at least. But you had to take a smart move and
plow it under with a stupid one by getting into bed with that
parasite Sunderland to try and steal the MindReader
system.”
“How-?”
“How do I know?” Cyrus cut in. “Because most
of the people you trust work for me. I knew about the foolish plan
to try and use the National Security Agency against the Department
of Military Sciences. Were you on drugs when you conceived that
idea? Did you think you could stop Deacon when the entire Cabal
could not?”
Hecate and Paris looked
confused.
“You don’t even know what I’m talking about,
do you? You don’t know who the Deacon is, do you? You don’t even
know about the Cabal-about the thing that should have been your
legacy. You’re so goddamned stupid that you truly disappoint me. Do
you think that I was ever your prisoner? Ever? I’ve owned every
single person you set to watch me. From the outset. You think you
are so clever-my young gods-but I’m here to tell you that you are
playing children’s games with adults.”
“We never-,” Paris began but Cyrus walked
quickly to him and slapped him so hard across the face that Paris
was knocked halfway around. He would have fallen had Tonton not
stepped up and caught him.
“Don’t ever make excuses to me, boy. That’s
all you’ve ever done. You were a disappointment as a child, and as
a man you’re a joke. At least your sister has enough personal
integrity to say nothing when she has nothing useful to
say.”
As Tonton moved, Conrad Veder used the
opportunity to shift his position. He had a plastic four-shot
pistol in a holster inside his pants. The bullets were caseless
ceramic shells that would explode a human skull. He could draw and
fire in less than a second.
Hecate said, “What did you mean that you
were going to kill our clients?”
Cyrus smiled. “You see, Paris? When she
speaks she asks an intelligent question.” He clasped his hands
behind his back. “I’m sure you’ve wondered about the water. About
whether there was something in it.” When Hecate nodded, he said,
“Did you test it?”
“Of course. We found no trace of poisons or
pathogens.”
“Naturally not. There are no pathogens in
the water.”
Hecate nodded. “Genes,” she said. “You’ve
figured out how to do gene therapy with purified
water.”
Cyrus looked pleased. “You were always my
favorite, Hecate. Not nearly the total disappointment your brother
has become. Did you do DNA testing?”
“We started to,” she said. “We haven’t
finished.”
“What did you think I put in the
water?”
“One of the genes that encourage addiction.
A1 allele of the dopa-mine receptor gene DRD2, or something like
that.”
“If I was a street nigger who wanted to sell
crack cocaine maybe,” Cyrus said harshly. “Have more
respect.”
She shook her head rather than give the
wrong answer.
“Otto and I-and a few very talented
friends-have spent decades weaponizing ethnic-specific diseases.
Ten years ago we cracked the science of turning inherited diseases
like Tay-Sachs and sickle-cell anemia into communicable pathogens.
Anyone with a genetic predisposition to those diseases would go
into full-blown outbreak after even minimal exposure to the
pathogen.”
“But there were no pathogens in the water!”
Paris said.
“No. The pathogens are being released into
lakes, streams, and reservoirs worldwide. The bottled water
contains the gene for the disease. Drink a bottle of water. even
brew a cup of tea with it. and specific ethnic groups and subgroups
will develop the genetic disorder. Within a few weeks they will be
vulnerable to infection from the pathogens in the regular drinking
water. Or from exposure to anyone who has become infected. No one
would think to look in the bottled water for the genes because no
one can do gene therapy with bottled water.”
“No one except us,” said Otto. “Funny thing
is. it wasn’t as hard as we thought.”
“But why?” demanded Hecate. “This is
monstrous!”
“It’s God’s will,” said Cyrus. “It’s the
beginning of a New Order that will purify the world by removing the
polluted races. Blacks and Jews and Gypsies and-”
“Are you fucking crazy?” demanded Paris.
“What kind of Nazi bullshit is this?”
Cyrus’s smile grew and grew. “Nazi. Now. the
moron shows a spark of intelligence by choosing exactly the right
word.”
Hecate looked confused. “Wait. you’re a
Nazi? Since when?”
“Since always, my pet. Since the very
beginning.”
“Since the beginning of
what?”
“Since the beginning of
Nationalsozialismus,” Cyrus said, letting his German accent seep
through. “Since the beginning of National Socialism in Germany. For
me personally, I first embraced the ideals while working in the
reserve medical corps of the Fifth SS Panzergrenadier Division
Wiking. But it wasn’t until I met Otto at Auschwitz that I
discovered the full potential of the party
ideals.”
“What the hell are you talking about?”
snapped Paris. “That’s World War Two crap. You weren’t even born
then.. ”
Otto and Cyrus laughed out loud. “Idiot
boy,” said Cyrus, “I was older than you when I came to work at
Auschwitz. I was older than you when I made a name for myself that
the world will never forget.”
Paris shook his head, unable to grasp any of
this.
“Father. you’re rambling,” said Hecate. “You
were born in 1946.”
“No,” he said, wagging his finger back and
forth, “Cyrus Jakoby was born in 1946. As were a dozen other cover
names in six countries. But I was born in 1911.”
“That’s impossible!” said
Paris.
Cyrus looked around. “We stand here in the
midst of unicorns and flying dragons and you tell me antiaging gene
therapy is impossible? Otto and I have been tampering with those
genes for years. Granted there are.,” he gestured vaguely to his
head, “. the occasional psychological side effects, but we’re
managing those.”
“But. but.,” Hecate began. “If Cyrus Jakoby
is an alias. then who are you?”
Otto said, “He’s a man you should be on your
knees worshiping. Your father is the boldest, most innovative
medical researcher of this or any generation.”
The Twins stared at him, and even Veder’s
eyes flickered with genuine interest.
Cyrus touched his face. “Under all of this
reconstructive surgery, beneath the changes I’ve made with gene
therapy to change my hair color and eye color. beyond the façade,”
he said, “I am the former Chief Medical Officer of the infirmary at
Auschwitz-Birkenau. I am der weisse Engel-the ‘white angel’ that
the Jews came to fear more than God or the Devil.”
He smiled a demon’s smile.
“I am Josef Mengele.”