The Deathless Quadrilogy

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The Deathless Quadrilogy Page 21

by Chris Fox


  Blair returned the smile, though privately he still had his doubts. He trailed after Liz as she strode boldly to the concierge. He was a short, wiry man with slicked-back hair and a neatly trimmed goatee. His clothing was in sharp contrast to the tourists’, a white dress shirt with the first two buttons undone and a pair of tight-fitting black slacks. He leaned forward on the marble countertop, ready to serve as they approached.

  “Good evening, Ms. Gregg,” he said with the grace of one well trained to serve. He gestured toward the elevators on the far side of the lobby. “I’ve taken the liberty of preparing your room. Take those elevators to the seventeenth floor and turn right. You’re in 1706. Is there anything else I might provide to make your stay more enjoyable?”

  “Is there a place we can pick up some clothes? I know it’s late,” Liz asked, gesturing at her travel-stained blouse.

  “Of course, Ms. Gregg. The hotel gift shop is open until eleven p.m. You’ll find suitable attire there. Toiletries are available in the room, and if you need anything further, please don’t hesitate to call the front desk. We’re happy to provide you with whatever you require,” he said, clearly admiring Liz’s figure. Not that Blair could blame the man.

  They walked to the center of the marble floor, traffic flowing around them as they got their bearings.

  “There it is. I’d kill to get out of these clothes. Let’s see what we can find,” Liz said, heading in the direction of a large shop with wide windows. Through the glass, he could see an array of t-shirts, stuffed bears, and all the other crap one would expect of a tourist trap.

  Fifteen minutes later they boarded the elevator with an armload of bags. Blair had selected a black shirt with palm trees and the word Acapulco emblazoned across the chest. A pair of sandals and comfortable swim trunks completed his purchases. All the other bags belonged to Liz, who’d bought two full changes of clothing and a green bikini that he hoped she would have a chance to wear. The elevator dinged, and the doors slid closed. It rose smoothly, numbers ticking by until it stopped on the seventeenth floor. They exited onto a plush green carpet that could have been installed the day before.

  Blair picked out a sign that indicated their block of rooms lay to the right. They wound up the hallway, too exhausted to speak as they passed the last fifty feet to relative safety. He could scarcely believe it when they reached the matte-black door with a bronze placard that read 1706. Liz slid in the white keycard, and a green light above the lock flared. She pushed the door open, revealing a spacious room with two queen-sized beds. Blair tossed his packages on the floor near the closest bed, flopping onto the floral comforter and relaxing against the pillows. Liz sat heavily on her bed, massaging her neck as the door clicked shut behind them.

  “I can’t believe we made it,” Blair said, rising restlessly to his feet. They were here; why couldn’t he enjoy it? He crossed the room and pulled open a white curtain to reveal a narrow balcony with two patio chairs and a small glass-topped table. The city blazed beneath them, thousands of tourists completely unaware that a pair of werewolves had just arrived in their midst. “So, your brother is going to meet us in Tijuana, right? Have you told him about our…situation?”

  “Sure, I told him we’re werewolves,” Liz said, rolling her eyes. She removed her hand from her neck and rose to join him at the balcony. He slid the door open, and they stepped into the balmy night. The city flowed below them, and they took in the noise of car horns and laughter. Neon lights and people flirting. “How would you react if someone told you that? Trevor is the consummate scientist. He’s even more of a skeptic than you are. He’ll believe it if I can show him proof, but if I told him now, he’d just assume it was the ayahuasca.”

  “He knew why you went to Peru?” Blair asked. The way she’d described her brother, Blair expected him to be straight laced and anti-drug. Most of the academics Blair knew were like that, at least the ones involved in the hard sciences and higher math. A few were okay with marijuana, but they wouldn’t be caught dead near anything more exotic.

  “Yeah, and he isn’t much surprised. Trevor is no saint either. Besides, in this case he knows it wasn’t for recreational use. I came down to get my head on straight,” she said, trailing off. Her eyes narrowed, back straightening as she turned to face the door to the hallway.

  Blair cocked his head, listening. What had she heard? There it was, footsteps approaching. It was possible the passerby was just some hotel guest finding the right room, but they’d both seen too much to assume that to be the case. Besides, whomever it was moved with near silence, breathing and heartbeat measured. Controlled. The footsteps stopped outside their door. Liz and Blair both jumped when three sharp raps sounded.

  “Should we run?” Liz mouthed. She pointed over the balcony, clearly contemplating the impossible. Seventeen stories. Their healing was miraculous, but could they recover from something like that?

  “No one knows we’re here except your brother, right?” he whispered. She nodded her agreement.

  Another series of raps. Blair steeled himself and crossed the room to the door. He stared through the peephole, intrigued by the figure on the other side of the door. It was a tall man in his late fifties with long silver hair and weathered features. His eyes were a sharp, clear grey and held the weight of ages. He’d seen those eyes before, but he couldn’t recall where.

  “Please open the door. I know you’re standing there,” the man said, words precisely clipped as if they weren’t in his native tongue. Blair couldn’t place the accent.

  He rested his hand on the knob, hesitating before turning it. The door clicked open, and he stepped back to get a better view of the man. There was something infuriatingly familiar about him, but Blair just couldn’t place it.

  “May I enter?” he asked, sketching an odd little bow.

  “Who are you?” Blair demanded, tensing and readying to shift if need be. He doubted the man worked for Mohn, but trust was a precious commodity. He was aware of Liz behind him. Her heart beat swiftly as she moved closer to the door.

  “My name is Ahiga,” he said, delivering another shallow bow. “I am a champion, like you. What you know as a werewolf.”

  36

  More Questions

  Blair shifted his gaze to Liz, arching an eyebrow. She gave a tight nod, standing on the balls of her feet as if prepared for a fight. He turned back to Ahiga, opening the door wide and gesturing for the old man to enter. The old man moved with the grace of a predator, stalking a path to the plush chair in the corner.

  Atop the chair, the old man drew his legs underneath him as Blair and Liz each sat on their respective beds. He took several moments to compose himself, avoiding eye contact until he’d finished. Then those piercing grey eyes flashed up, hard as ice.

  “How did you find us?” Blair asked, seizing the initiative. The old man’s gaze tightened as he discarded whatever he’d been about to say.

  “With great difficulty,” he admitted, a frown creasing his weathered face. “I have spent nearly an entire lunar cycle chasing you. This is a delay we can ill afford. Events spiral out of control. We must wake the Mother so preparations can begin.”

  “Yeah, you said pretty much exactly the same thing back in Peru. When you got inside my head,” Blair shot back, spearing the old man with his gaze. He crossed his arms, leaning back into the pillows. “We’ll get to that. First, answer my question. How did you know how to find us here?”

  “I plucked the destination from your mind,” the old man explained. His expression softened, just for an instant. “What I have done brings me great shame, yet I had no other choice. I had to find you, Blair Smith. Through happenstance, or perhaps fate, you have become the locus of events. The arbiter of the future, to either usher in an age of darkness or be the last guttering candle sheltering mankind from its black embrace. Melodramatic, I realize, but true nevertheless.”

  “You’ve been here about two minutes, and I’ve already had enough of this Yoda crap," Liz interrupted, snatch
ing her purse from the bed as she stalked to the balcony. She withdrew a pack of cigarettes she’d bought in the gift shop, tapping one into her hand. It was the first time Blair had seen her smoke. A nervous habit? “I’ll accept that you're from the past, some immortal werewolf or something. What I don’t buy is that you have some benevolent purpose. You've turned us into killing machines. We slaughter relentlessly. Without mercy. Why? What could they possibly have done to make you want to kill them so indiscriminately?”

  “I understand that it is difficult to understand. Your culture clearly places a high value on life, something that I would normally say is laudable,” the man said, crossing his arms as he stared dispassionately at Liz. Blair got the sense that he was annoyed, though he seemed like he was struggling to contain it. “You cannot possibly understand what is coming, why our kind were created, or what we shield the world from. I will answer all your questions, but all you need understand right now is that every moment is precious. We must return to the land you call Peru. We must go now.”

  Blair leaned forward, catching the old man’s gaze. “If waking this Mother is so important, then convincing me to help you is critical, right? You want my help? Then you’d better become a whole lot more talkative. Answer our questions; help us understand what we’ve become. How to control the thing inside us. Then maybe, just maybe, talk about helping you. Right now we don’t know you, and we certainly don’t trust you. You could be lying to get us to wake this woman so she can end the world. Hell, it seems like we’re already off to a good start, and we haven’t even woken her up yet.”

  “You are right,” the old man replied, heaving a sigh. He wore the weariness of a man assigned an impossible task with an unrealistic deadline. “I have gone about this badly, but I was woefully unprepared for such a turn of events. When the Ark opened, I was to wake the Mother from her slumber. It was my purpose, the reason I was left as guardian. I spent countless centuries meditating, drawing upon the Ark’s latent energy to fuel my body. Even still, time has ravaged me. My survival was a near thing.

  “When the Ark finally initiated itself, I made the gravest of errors,” he said, expression portraying self-inflicted agony now. “I crept to the surface to have a look at this new world. I wanted to see what remained. I told myself I’d wake the Mother upon my return. Yet when I reached the surface, the soldiers of Mohn were already there, waiting. Somehow they knew of the Ark’s return before it happened. I wished to stay and fight, to drive them from the Ark, but my body bears the terrible weight of years. I fled, ceding control to them.”

  “So you were locked in the pyramid from the very beginning? That must have been thousands of years,” Blair asked once the man paused. He leaned back into the bed, relaxing slightly. He didn’t trust the old man. The story sounded plausible, but it did nothing to explain why they’d been transformed into werewolves or why they were compelled to slaughter everyone around them.

  “Yes, thirteen thousand by your calendar. Half of the longest count,” he said, running bony fingers through his hair. “It was a terrible price to pay, but someone had to be there to wake the Mother. The Ark was damaged, you see. It no longer possessed the capacity to steward the Mother. It needed a living caretaker, one who could activate her rejuvenator at the proper moment.”

  “Great, so you don’t need us,” Liz said, leaning back against the balcony. She took a long drag from her cigarette, blowing the smoke over her shoulder. “Just head back and do your job. Wake this Mother and let her do whatever it is that you feel is so important.”

  “I cannot,” he growled, eyes smoldering as a glimmer of life returned. “When this whelp grasped the Mother’s Hand he bonded with the Ark. That link overrode my own, and I am too weak to forge another. Only he can deactivate her rejuvenator.”

  “Okay, so that explains how you found us and what you want from us,” Blair said, back stiffening at the bite of the man’s words. What right did he have to be angry? He wasn’t the one who’d been turned into a killing machine against his will. “Now let’s talk about what we want from you. We need to understand what we’ve become. What happened to me when I touched the statue? Obviously it changed me, but how? Into what?”

  “We lack the time for me to relieve you of your ignorance. Suffice it to say that you were given a great gift which allows you to draw on the light of the moon,” Ahiga explained. “This energy fuels your shaping, to suffuse your body with the strength of the wolf. In the case of males, it also allows us to shape our surroundings. You have probably already experienced this at least once. If you haven’t, you soon will.”

  “What you’re describing sounds like a virus,” Liz interjected, tamping her cigarette out on the railing. “It infects the host and modifies our DNA somehow.”

  “I do not understand this word, ‘virus,’” Ahiga said with a shrug, clearly irritated by the idea of not knowing something. “The Mother created the gift. She understands much that I do not. You speak as she does. She, too, is a healer, a learned one.”

  “What about the voice in our heads?” Blair asked. “It’s taken control of me at least once. Will that keep happening?”

  “We call it the beast,” the old man explained. He rose smoothly to join Liz at the balcony. “It is imparted by the gift. The Mother imbued it with what she called racial memory, though I do not fully understand what she meant by that. The beast is a part of you, both servant and protector. It may seize control in the beginning, but as your will grows, it will yield. Its knowledge can help protect you, if you are wise enough to listen.”

  “Wise enough to listen?” Blair snapped, surging to his feet and taking a step toward the old man. “It used me to slaughter an entire village. Dozens of people. That’s what you think we should listen to?”

  “Their deaths are insignificant if they birth the champions we need to protect us.” The old man rose smoothly to his feet, now just a step away from Blair. His acrid breath stank of decay. Of age.

  “So that’s what this is about,” Blair said, finally understanding. His eyes narrowed. “You want us to make more werewolves. A certain percentage of people killed come back. But most don’t, right? What is it, one in ten that survives? The rest just die. That’s it, right?”

  “More like one in twenty. Less for those killed by weaker bloodlines,” Ahiga confirmed. Something unnatural smoldered in his eyes, something Blair could feel. “It is a price we pay gladly, for the alternative is unthinkable. If we do not cull them, the enemy will subvert them, increasing their own strength. Of course, you cannot know these things. You have no understanding of the horrors to come. You speak from rationality, wrapped in ignorance of the world’s true nature. Make no mistake, whelp. The ancient enemy is coming, and its will is terrifying.

  “Already, you can feel its touch on your world,” he continued, shifting his attention to Liz. “You are a healer. Tell me, do you know of a disease that attacks the body’s ability to defend itself? It would have appeared within the last two or three generations, probably on the continent across the eastern ocean—the birthplace of the ancestors.”

  “HIV,” she answered without hesitation, straightening from the balcony. “You’re talking about HIV. The first case was discovered in the late nineteen-sixties. It came from South Africa, and the vast majority of the world’s outbreaks are on that continent.”

  “This disease, this HIV. Let me tell you about it,” he growled, taking a step away from Blair to face Liz. “Before I do, I raise a question. How could I possibly know so much about this disease having so recently wakened? Ask yourselves that as I tell you of this disease. It is transmitted through blood or semen or saliva. It weakens the victim so that they are more susceptible to other sickness. Then, after months or even years, the victim finally dies. Does this sound like your HIV?”

  Liz gave Blair a worried look; then she turned back to the old man. “It does. It sounds exactly like HIV, right down to the place of origin. So how do you know so much about it if you’ve been asleep?�


  “Because the disease is older than your entire civilization,” he answered, raising his arms for emphasis. “It is older even than I. The Mother knows of its creation, though she seldom speaks of it. Ask yourselves, if this disease is so ancient, why did it only just now appear? What is now different about the world?”

  “There are a lot of differences,” Blair countered angrily. “Whatever you’re getting at, just tell us. We don’t need this cryptic bullshit. Why has the virus suddenly come back?”

  “Plants require the sun for nourishment. Your science tells you this, does it not?” the old man asked, infuriatingly calm as he settled back into the chair.

  “You’re talking about photosynthesis,” Liz interjected from the balcony as she tamped her cigarette out on the railing. “Yes, we’re familiar with it.”

  “This disease is much the same. It requires the sun to survive. It absorbs energy, using it to fuel the destruction of the host. The stronger the energy, the faster the death,” Ahiga explained. The old man glanced out the window, in the direction Blair knew to be the moon. “Imagine if the energy from the sun, the lifeblood of this virus, were to suddenly and dramatically increase. What might happen if the disease accelerated? What if it could kill every last host in a single day?”

  “That’s horrible,” Liz said, her concerned glance sweeping the pair of them. “If that’s the case, every HIV patient in the world could die. We’re talking millions of people.”

  “You do not yet grasp the full horror, girl. What if the afflicted became a tool of the ancient enemy? They are called deathless for a reason, for after the death of their host they will continue on. A vast army of undead corpses intent on wiping out all life. I can tell you with certainty this will happen, though I know not when,” the old man said with a deeply troubled sigh. “The day must be near, or the Ark would not have initiated itself. We will see a gradual shift for a lunar cycle. Perhaps two. Then there will be a sudden explosion of light from the sun. The disease will flourish. This is why we must awaken the Mother. The champions must be there to oppose the enemy, and she must be here to lead us.”

 

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