by Steve Alten
She pauses, noticing that her transhuman companion has stopped.
The female’s eyes are looking up at the artificial sky, wide in terror—as if someone is scolding her telepathically.
How did you escape, Teresa? Did the other twin set you free?
Leave me be, witch!
Answer me, or I’ll feast upon your parents.
The transhuman smiles. Die in hell. The female kicks away from the edge, falling … falling—
‘Oh my God!’ Dominique screams as the woman’s body disappears into the shadows of the abyss.
An unearthly flash of white light blinks in the ravine, then disappears.
Dominique stares at the spot, hyperventilating into her mouthpiece. What was that? What just happened?
For a long moment she simply hangs on, her mind threatening to crash.
Then she remembers Jacob.
Okay, come on … gather your strength and finish this. Haul ass!
The fingertips of her right hand press into the rock, the muscles of her lower back and buttocks clenching, straining to shift her weight.
Right hand, left hand, right hand, left hand … eight feet … focus on the ledge … right hand, left hand, right hand, left hand … three feet … two feet—
In a burst of adrenaline and sheer will, Dominique forces her right boot onto the ledge above her head as she maintains her delicate balance … pushing the knee up, then her thigh—
—then her upper torso.
She rolls onto the flat expanse of rock, panting, crying, smiling, all the while, sucking air from her mouthpiece.
Just breathe …
In time she sits up. Regains her feet and follows the plateau to its steep incline—a two-hundred-foot-high ridge that loops around the entire expanse of summit, blocking her view.
Dominique is beyond exhaustion. Her joints ache, her hands and wrists are raw, and her leg and lower back muscles burn with each painful step.
Above her head, the pyroclastic ceiling percolates like lava.
Come on, stop thinking about it and climb.
Sucking great gulps of air, she drags herself up the gradient, crawling the last fifty feet on her belly until she finds herself peeking over the edge.
Dominique looks down.
She is perched on the lip of a volcano, its craterlike valley resting several hundred feet below.
Nestled in the mountainous basin like some Tibetan hideaway is a village.
The Village of the Nephilim.
41
It is urban pestilence, an architecture of chaos haphazardly erected in uneven rows of single-story, poorly constructed, dust-caked dwellings. It is a maze of gray, a neighborhood worse than the worst parts of the cardboard-and-aluminum shantytowns of Olongopo and Subic after the volcanic eruption in the Philippines.
Soot-covered abodes on soot-covered streets funnel to the far end of town and the shoreline of a vast lake, its surface enshrouded in thick mist.
Dominique stifles her breathing as the thick clouds part along the subterranean ceiling, revealing a monstrous object, erected on the near side of the lake. Carved from rock, immeasurably old, it stands as tall as a ten-story building, its upper half appearing polished, its details lost in the returning haze.
Somewhere in the distance a bell tolls, its baritone gongs echoing across the valley.
As if summoned, the shadowy gray figures of the multitudes bleed slowly out from their dwellings, making their way en masse to the lake’s shoreline.
With a trembling hand, Dominique removes the smart-binoculars from her belt pack. She switches the viewer from day to night vision, then zooms in, focusing on the villagers, all of whom are covered in the same gray dust.
Something’s happening. I’ve got to get down there …
The outskirts of the village is a swampy cesspool of silvery brown ooze, stagnant with humanlike feces, garbage, bones and the smoldering remains of ashen flesh. Twenty-inch scarab beetles feast upon the offering by the tens of thousands, their sharp mandibles creating a nerve-wracking crunching sound as they feed.
Sucking hard on her regulator, Dominique hurries through the knee-deep slime, making her way to more solid footing. The dusty soil beneath her feet is now a spongy surface saturated with the same brownish gray liquid of the swamp, ooze rising from the porous earth with each step.
She comes to the first quadrangle of claylike, windowless shanties. The rows of odd-shaped dwellings are listing in this unstable mire, their foundations sinking into stagnant sewage.
Dominique gags into her mouthpiece and readjusts her nose apparatus, the stench of her surroundings almost unbearable even through her breathing apparatus.
Composing herself, she makes her way to the end of a row, then peeks around a fractured wall.
The dust-choked streets appear deserted.
A fluttering sound causes her to look up. Perched on the roofs across the street are four owl-like creatures, each the size of a twelve-year-old human child. Their bulbous, featherless heads are caked in gray dust, their pupilless round eyes blinded by white cataracts. The folded wings, incapable of flight, are scaly, ending in sharp talons.
The mutant creatures are staring at her, gasping painful breaths through their deformed beaklike mouths.
What kind of evil creates such genetic mutations?
Dominique moves back into the shadows, contemplating. Her once-black environmental suit is already covered in gray dust. Grabbing handfuls of soil, she rubs more of the soot on her face and hair, camouflaging herself as best she can.
Satisfied, she moves down the grime-covered roadway, heading for a wider avenue that she prays will lead her to Jacob.
Dominique encounters the next villager as it hobbles out of the doorless entry of a one-room shanty. The miserable wretch had probably been a male. The scowling being is walking on its hands, its lower torso having been severed below the waist. Massive pustulating blue scabs bleed through the gray cover of dust that coats its skin.
Topping off its painful deformities is a bowling-ball-sized violet-glowing orb that has been surgically embedded in the life-form’s lower back.
The tortured being grunts as it straddle-walks on heavily callused knuckles, the ends of its tunic dragging along the dirt. A fine ebony mist snorts from its flared nostrils with each excruciating exhalation.
Fear and compassion fill Dominique’s mind as she watches the life-form struggle with its artificial weight. She waits another moment, then hurries past him to a central thoroughfare.
It is an avenue of the undead, a procession of grunting, moaning, mutilated transhumans, all victims of amputation. Some of the beings lack legs, others arms. A phagelike bacteria festers their skin, slowly, agonizingly eating away at their flesh and bone.
The Nephilim …
As if their existence is not torturous enough, each transhuman has been fitted with a prosthetic orb that radiates in a variety of spectral hues. Reds and yellows, greens, blues, and violets. If there is a code behind the specific colors, Dominique cannot discern it.
Maneuvering around these pitiful beings, she makes her way to the front of the rank, the sounds of the gong growing louder.
The avenue opens to a congested gathering place along the lake’s shoreline. Thousands of taller, more gangly bipeds push forward to join the mob. They are dressed in heavy soot-covered robes, their elongated skulls tucked inside hoods. Exposed flesh has long disappeared beneath adhering layers of mouse gray silicon, giving their faces a heavily pruned appearance. Neanderthal-like brows protect dark, deeply set eyes. Noses and surrounding cartilage are missing, leaving behind only open nasal passages. Lipless mouths remain slack-jawed, exposing teeth caked with atmospheric dust and film.
Like cattle, the Nephilim push and prod each other, inching their way closer to the lake, following its shoreline to some unknown destination.
Avoiding the throng, Dominique hides behind the collapsed remains of a rectangular dwelling. She looks around nervously, tak
ing in her surroundings, while the baritone gong continues to toll its bone-throbbing call.
The lake’s silvery surface sparkles crimson, reflecting the emberlike ceiling overhead. But it is the towering object situated across the lake that now occupies Dominique’s attention.
It is a statue … a statue of a monstrous humanoid. The face is demonic and frightening, highlighted by a wide, fanged mouth and aquiline nose. Huge goat horns, polished and ebony, are perched atop the being’s elongated, pointed skull. Batlike wings, enormous and clawed at the tips, fold in behind the naked upper torso like a shawl. The icon’s lower body is shaped like a goat’s hindquarters, the long tail ending in a spike.
Dominique stares at the statue, transfixed. It’s Lucifer. They’re worshiping the Devil.
The statue casts an ominous shadow across the lake, its satanic gaze reflecting scarlet flames from the Underworld ceiling, the glowing embers twisting the mouth into an evil grin.
The bells stop tolling.
Dominique hurries to another dwelling, seeking a better view.
And now she sees where the Nephilim procession has assembled.
Along the far shoreline is an immense calabash tree, as old as time, as large as an African baobab. Its knotted, twisted trunk and bare branches are alabaster white, its spongy bark secretes a saplike ivory mucus.
At the base of the redwood-sized trunk stands a figure.
Lilith.
The Hunahpu queen is wearing a vermilion monk’s robe, her hairless elongated skull and its bizarre jaguar tattoo concealed beneath the heavy hood.
As she speaks, her voice is amplified by the lake’s natural acoustics.
‘And it came to pass that our tyrant God, Yahweh, became so fearful and jealous of His own creations that He cast His most beautiful son, the archangel, Lucifer, into the depths of Hell. So selfish was our Creator that He banned His greatest creation, man, from the Garden of Eden. So egotistical was our Vengeful One that He sanctioned blood sacrifices among His most loyal followers. So unforgiving was He that He unleashed a great deluge and drowned His populace. So terrified of man’s intelligence was our paranoid deity that He destroyed the Tower of Babel and scattered the survivors to the four winds, forcing them to speak in different tongues to stifle our ascension as a species, assuring our eventual self-destruction.
‘“Thou Shall Not Kill,” commanded the Great Hypocrite, as He smote us like fish in a barrel and taught us to hate.
‘But even the Great Hypocrite Himself could not stifle the love from our real father, our beautiful Morning Star, who reached out from Hell to instruct us. It is Lucifer who taught us how to taste the fruit of the vine. It is he who replaced abstinence with indulgence, ignorance with curiosity. It was Lucifer who liberated our spirits, encouraging our biological, spiritual, and intellectual ascent, and directed us toward the hidden forces of nature. He is our salvation, and we are his, for the time has come to undo the wrongs of the past and release our father from his unholy bonds.’
The crowd stomps and grunts, their rants causing the porous soil to flood. Across the street, the four owls continue staring, gasping great wheezes of breath.
Dominique fingers the sword, her arms trembling.
Lilith waits until her legion quiets. ‘And now, Yahweh has sent another messenger of pain. But fear not, for the arrival of this Hunahpu shall not cause you more despair. Devlin, your true savior, shall use the Hunahpu’s powers to unseal the Gates of Hell, releasing our father, the archangel, Lucifer!’
Wild stomping and grunts, the crowd trampling one another as it tries to move closer.
Lilith motions for silence. ‘Patience. The blessed resurrection shall be upon you soon enough. Until then, you may take one revolution around Lucifer’s light before returning to your dwellings.’
Dominique watches, dumbfounded, as the procession of the tortured circle slowly around the glowing alabaster tree, their colorful orbs absorbing its energy, glowing brighter as if sucking in its warmth, feeding off the tree’s light.
And then the beings depart, grunting and shoving one another, the bipeds jostling the slower amputees as they return to the village.
Remaining hidden, Dominique uses the smart-binoculars to zoom in upon another object, this one anchored in close proximity to one of the tree’s dangling lower limbs.
It is a wooden cross, supporting a crucified figure.
The head is obscured in a crown of thorns, the blood bleeding blue.
Jacob …
42
Dominique waits until the streets are deserted, then waits ten minutes more.
Moving out from hiding, she hurries down the avenue to the lake, slipping and sliding in the gray mire.
She steals a quick glance to her left. The smooth, quicksilver surface of the lake sparkles crimson, reflecting the ceiling embers high overhead.
Must hurry … before the demon sentry in Jacob’s holographic program appears.
She jogs faster, adrenaline and fear distracting her brain from the physical pain, the double-edged sword gripped firmly in both hands.
Twenty years of existence, twenty years of nightmares. For six years she has watched her son prepare for war within this same hellish environment. But this is no holographic program, and she is not Jacob.
God, please let him still be alive.
She races past the alabaster tree, hurrying to the cross and its unconscious crucified victim.
‘Jake? Jacob, honey, it’s me!’ She reaches the wooden cross’s base, gazing up at its crucified figure—
—who slowly opens his iridescent eyes, a smile appearing on his angelic face.
Dominique’s jaw drops. ‘Devlin …’
The Seraph spreads its wings, then leaps off the cross, his feet pouncing on Dominique’s chest, his talonlike toenails puncturing her environmental suit.
And then his wings stop flapping, and he leans in closer, staring at her, his dark expression quizzical. ‘You’re not Immanuel?’ He straddles her chest and sniffs her neck, his nostrils inhaling her scent. ‘First-Mother! Where is your other son? Tell me now, or I’ll kill Jacob.’
‘I’ll tell you … but first … I want to see him!’
Devlin’s wings beat the air, lifting him off Dominique’s chest. Regaining his feet, he pulls her up by the hair, then drags her toward the calabash tree.
Jacob is on his back, his throat and limbs pinned beneath the tree’s thickly knotted alabaster roots.
‘Speak now, or he dies.’
‘Manny never made the voyage. I took his place.’
Devlin’s eyes blaze violet. ‘Impossible.’
‘It … it’s true.’
‘Arrgggghh!’ Devlin clubs her in the back of the head, sending her crumpling to the oily ground—unconscious.
The Seraph closes his eyes, allowing his mind to slip inside the nexus. Lilith is waiting for his consciousness within the dense white haze.
Immanuel is not here, Mother. The twins have altered the past!
It doesn’t matter, as long as the portal to Hell is unsealed and Lucifer is resurrected.
But it takes the presence of both Hunahpu twins to unseal it.
You forget, we still have One Hunaphu. His presence, combined with Jacob’s, will provide all the energy needed to open the gate.
Yes, but we cannot tap into his energy field while he remains within his protected domain.
This time he’ll leave. We’ll lure him out using his loved ones.
The pain jerks Dominique awake as Devlin drags her by the hair toward the luminescent white tree.
The Seraph stands before the immense trunk, flapping his wings. ‘Open your eyes, One Hunahpu. I want you to gaze upon the face of your beloved soul mate as I violate her before your God!’
The being punches Dominique across the back of her shoulder blades, the crushing blow dropping her to the ground.
She feels the Seraph’s talons shred the remains of her environmental suit down the back, then screams through h
er regulator as he pulls her pants down, exposing her bare buttocks.
She gags as powerful hands lift her hips to his naked groin.
‘Unseal the portal, One Hunahpu, or I swear to Lucifer, I’ll rape and torture her every minute of eternity!’
Two pinpoints of aqua blue appear in the gooey white sap, the outline of a face revealing itself just beneath the surface of the calabash bark.
Ripples appear on the lake, and the surface begins undulating, as if something large is disturbing the depths.