Chapter One Hundred Twenty-Two
The
Chamber of Myth
Tuesday, August 31, 2:53
A.M.
Time Remaining on the
Extinction Clock: 33 hours, 7 minutes
E.S.T.
Grace moved away from the corpse of the
Berserker and retraced her steps to the path. Ahead of her in the
darkness she could hear the whispered conversation of Hecate and
her father. It was no longer stationary. Grace crouched and
listened, tracking the sound even though she couldn’t make out the
words. The sound moved from left to right in front of her. There
were no points of reference to guess distance, especially with
whispers, but it couldn’t have been more than twenty
yards.
What was to the right?
The sound told her. The soft hiss of the
waterfall. That’s where Hecate was going. She remembered that metal
panel in the back. A door or access panel. Grace was willing to bet
a lot on it being a door.
She adjusted her course, feeling ahead for
the terrain. She found a line of small rocks and recognized them as
stones that lined the path used by the groundskeeping staff.
Perfect.
“-give me a second-”
It was a snatch of a comment and Grace
froze. Whoever said it couldn’t have been more than a dozen feet in
front of her. She drew her pistol and listened.
“-here it is!” whispered Hecate. “There’s a
release right under the-”
Grace fired in the direction of the voice.
She knew that her first shot would probably miss, but the muzzle
flash would show her where to put the second shot.
After the absolute darkness the flash was
eye-hurtingly bright, but it froze a picture in her mind. The back
of the waterfall. Hecate reaching up under the overhang of moss,
her lithe body stretching. Cyrus behind her, his fist clutched
around something that hung from a lanyard around his neck. Otto
Wirths in the foreground, bent in the direction of the
panel.
A flash image. There and
gone.
Grace smiled and squeezed off five more
shots.
She heard a scream.
And then the wall five feet to her right
exploded, showering her with debris. A chunk of rock the size of a
fist struck her on the side of her shoulder, and her last shot was
high and wide.
Grace fell over and her gun vanished into
the darkness.
A moment later Hecate slammed into her,
snarling and spitting with insane rage, grabbing her arms with
insane strength.
“You fucking bitch!” snarled Hecate as she
drove Grace Courtland into the dirt. They rolled over and over
again through the darkness, tumbling sideways down the hill away
from the waterfall, colliding with rocks and smashing through
plants. Hecate snarled continuously and Grace could feel hot
spittle on her face and throat. The woman was enormously strong,
her fingers like iron bands crushing into Grace’s arms with enough
force to crush skin and muscle.
Grace jammed a forearm under Hecate’s chin
to keep those sharp white teeth away from her throat. With her
other hand she shoved back on the woman’s shoulder, trying to
create space. Grace twisted to bring her knee up between them,
using the long thighbone as a strut to separate
them.
What the hell was she fighting? Had this mad
bitch used her own genetic science on herself? Everything about
Hecate provoked an image of one of the big fighting cats. Hecate
even hissed like a panther.
Hecate suddenly let go of Grace’s arms and
grabbed her throat. It was like being crushed by a vise. All at
once Grace was unable to breathe.
Grace stopped pushing on Hecate’s shoulder
and immediately hit her in the face-once, twice, again, pounding on
the side of Hecate’s cheek and eye socket. The pressure eased by a
tiny fraction. Grace dragged in a spoonful of air, but then Hecate
tightened her grip, overlapping her thumbs to try to crush the
windpipe. Grace pressed her chin down on the thumbs, forcing them
against her sternum to slow the choke while continuing to hammer at
Hecate. She cupped her palm and slapped Hecate over the
ear.
Instantly Hecate howled in pain and toppled
sideways. Grace pivoted on the floor and kicked out with both feet,
catching Hecate on the hip and stomach, driving her farther away.
Grace didn’t want to escape; she needed to breathe and reorganize.
She spun around and came up into a crouch.
OTTO WIRTHS TORE away the decorative
vegetation and ran his hands over the panel. The moss had hidden
four wing nuts and Otto grabbed the first one and tried to twist
it. It resisted and he growled in fury and frustration-and then it
moved. He spun it around and around until it reached the end of the
thread and fell away.
“Hurry!” Cyrus urged. “They’re breaking
through the wall.”
“I am hurrying, damn it.” Otto attacked the
second one, which was stuck just as firmly as the first. “What
about Hecate?”
Cyrus was invisible beside him. He said,
“She’ll catch up.”
The second wing nut began to turn. “And if
she doesn’t?”
“We have a large family,
Otto.”
Otto dropped the second wing nut and began
turning the third. That one was looser and it yielded immediately.
The fourth was harder, but he threw all of his strength at it and
the nut turned.
“Otto.,” Cyrus hissed. “I hear something..
”
THERE WAS A second and much bigger explosion
and debris flew outward into the chamber. A jagged piece of stone
whistled through the air and struck Grace on the side of the head
and she spun and fell facedown on the grass and did not
move.