Chapter One Hundred Twenty-Six
The
Jakobys
Tuesday, August 31, 3:00
a.m.
Time Remaining on the
Extinction Clock: 33 hours, 0 minutes
E.S.T.
The spiral staircase that rose from the
Chamber of Myth to Hecate’s office was one of several bolt-holes
she’d built into the architecture. Paris knew about most of them
but not all. Paris had been unaware of this one and of one other
that took Hecate down to a pneumatic tube in which she could take a
capsule from the main building straight to the dock. There was a
seaplane and a twenty-eight-foot ZT-280 Checkmate speedboat with
496-horsepower engine and a top speed of 74 miles per hour. A final
private stairway led to a small lab she had ordered built during
one of Paris’s trips to the South of France. It was in that private
lab that Hecate had worked with panther and tiger genomes for some
personal gene therapy.
In lighter moods Hecate sometimes castigated
herself for wasting the time and resources on the bolt-holes and
for the paranoia that led her to create them. Now, as she followed
Otto and Cyrus up through the dark, she felt a flush of
vindication.
“I can’t see a damn thing,” growled Cyrus
from above her.
“You don’t need to see,” she snapped. “Just
climb.”
“Wait. the ladder stopped.. I can feel a
door.”
“That’s it. It opens into a closet in my
office.”
One by one they emerged from the spiral
staircase into a closet that was as dark as everything else. Hecate
felt her way past Otto and Cyrus to the door and let herself into
her office. The room felt alien now that there were no points of
reference, but she finally located her desk and from there oriented
herself to the whole room. A few brief diffused flashes of light
backlit the blinds, and Hecate moved to the window and peeked
out.
“God! Look at this.”
With the blind lifted even a bit, the
flashes of automatic gunfire and explosions gave them enough light
to cross the room to join her. They peered out. The lawn below was
a battlefield. On one side were at least sixty of the remaining
Russians. They had a very secure firing position among a tumble of
decorative boulders. Well to their left were the guards from the
Dragon Factory-normal humans and the genetically modified
Berserkers. Neither of these two forces was firing at the other.
Though there had been no opportunity for either Hecate or Cyrus to
tell their forces to stand down, that the conflict between the two
houses of Jakoby-the Deck and the Dragon Factory-was over, they had
somehow worked out a temporary alliance against a common threat.
The other side of the lawn was crammed with armed men. It was
impossible to pick out any details from that distance, but the
precision and tactics they observed told the tale. These were U.S.
Special Forces. A lot of them.
Between the two opposing sides lay the
burning wreckage of a Black Hawk helicopter. Whether it had been
shot down by their own men or had crashed because of systems
failure following the EMP was anyone’s guess. The lawn was littered
from end to end with bodies.
“This isn’t a fight we can win,” said
Hecate.
“Where is the rest of your staff?” Otto
asked.
“If they followed procedure then they’re
down in the caves below the maintenance level. They are instructed
to remain there until they get an all-clear signal.” In the dim
light she gave a rueful smile. “Of course, if they made it to the
caves and locked themselves in before the EMP, then that could be a
problem. The computers control all life support.”
Cyrus turned to his
daughter.
“Listen to me, Hecate.. I cannot express how
deeply your loyalty touches me. I would love to spend years and
years working with you, side by side, to help reshape this world as
the Extinction Wave cleanses it. But. ” He nodded to the battle
outside. “I can’t see how we can get away from
here.”
“I have a boat. And a
seaplane.”
“And we’ve had an EMP,” he reminded
her.
Hecate closed her eyes.
“Shit.”
“We’re not getting out of here,” said Cyrus.
“I think we can all agree on that.”
Otto opened his mouth to say something, then
sighed and nodded.
“We can try,” insisted Hecate. “We can’t
just roll over and let them win.”
“Win?” said Cyrus with a smile. “What makes
you think they can win? The most they can do is kill
us.”
“But. ”
He fished into his shirt and brought out the
trigger device.
“In war people die,” he said. “All that
matters is winning. Now, my pet, let’s get that laptop.”