“So you ran.”
He looked at Jack. “What else could I do? I—”
“No criticism. You did the smart thing.”
“As far as I could see, it was the only thing. I realized then that Volkman was a fake and that someone—a bunch of someones—didn’t want me talking about what I’d seen at Ground Zero. If I showed my face, they’d only come after me again. I figured it would take a while to put out the fire and sift though all the ashes. Everyone would assume I was dead until they couldn’t find my body. So I hid until my bank opened. I withdrew all I could in cash and hopped a Greyhound.”
“Why L.A.?”
“It was as far as I could get from that thing at Ground Zero without buying a plane ticket. Plus I figured it would be easy to get lost in a big city like this. And it was . . . until you came along.”
“Tell your daughter to ditch her Wi-Fi or I might not be the last. How’d you convince her you had nothing to do with it?”
“She knows me, she believed me. She knew I could never hurt her mother.”
Jack couldn’t think of anything else to ask him.
“Well, I guess that’s it then. Let’s get back up to the parking area. You’ve got to get to work and I’ve got to get back and make my report.”
He figured that sounded pretty official.
“Who do you work for?” Goren said. “I’ve got to know.”
Jack shook his head. “You don’t want to know. If I told you, I’d have to kill you.”
Goren blanched and backed up a step.
“Only kidding.”
5
Ernst jumped as Hank Thompson slammed open the door and stormed into his office.
“Have you been downstairs yet?” he said through clenched teeth.
“You mean the subcellar? No. I just got here and—”
“Then you’d better get down there. Something’s happening.”
Of course something was happening. Hank’s little friend Darryl was undergoing a transformation. Ernst was curious to see what development had put Thompson into such a dither, but could not allow himself to appear too concerned or too curious. Must appear to be on top of the situation at all times.
“I have some calls to make, then—”
“Now!”
Well, well. Feeling assertive today, aren’t we?
He had a few decades on Thompson, but had no doubt he could subdue him if necessary. The man had gone soft since achieving bestsellerdom. But that hadn’t lessened the powder keg of violence within him, and Ernst saw no point in lighting a match. Causing a scene would be counterproductive at this point.
“Very well, since it appears to be of great importance to you, lead the way.”
As Thompson turned and stomped from the room, Ernst rose and followed, grabbing his cane on the way out the door. It had belonged to his father and he treasured it. And one never knew when one might need something with a heavy silver head . . .
When they arrived in the subcellar, the lights were already on. Thompson strode to the Orsa and stood beside it, pointing.
“Look!” he said, a tremor in his voice. “Look what it’s doing to him!”
Ernst stepped up beside him, but not too close, and stared.
He could understand why Thompson was so upset. Yesterday he’d discovered Darryl fully encased, feet and all, within the Orsa. How the Orsa had accomplished that, Ernst had had no idea. But now he had an inkling.
Darryl seemed to be in the grip of some sort of slow peristalsis. Yesterday the soles of his shoes had been just inside the end of the Orsa; now they lay perhaps eighteen inches from the end.
But something different . . .
Ernst stepped forward and suppressed a gasp when he saw what it was.
“Yeah, look at him,” Thompson said. “His fucking skin’s melting off. He’s not being cured, he’s being . . . digested!”
Ernst looked at the hands, the face, the scalp . . . all the exposed flesh seemed to be melting away, baring the muscle and fat and connective tissues beneath. The eyelids were gone, exposing the orbs. But oddly, the lanky hair remained.
No . . . it couldn’t be . . . this wasn’t supposed to . . .
He stepped closer for a better look. When he saw what was really happening, his knees softened with relief. He leaned on his cane and motioned Thompson forward.
“Not at all, Mister Thompson. Take a closer look.” He pointed to Darryl’s outstretched hand where the tendons were plainly visible. Oddly enough, the dirty fingernails appeared unaffected. “The skin is still there, it has simply become translucent.”
Thompson stared a moment, then seemed to sag as if tension were leaking out of him.
“Okay, yeah, I see it now.” He shook his head. “I walked in this morning and took one look and . . . man, it looked like he was dissolving. I just about lost it.”
“I understand,” Ernst said.
But he didn’t. The lore of the Septimus Order mentioned nothing of such a change in the skin. But then, the lore was incomplete—bits and pieces gathered over the millennia from ancient manuscripts like the Compendium of Srem and other forbidden tomes. If anyone besides the One had ever known the true nature of the Fhinntmanchca, that knowledge was lost. Perhaps no one else had ever known.
“But is this supposed to happen?”
“Yes, of course,” Ernst said quickly.
“You should have given me some warning.”
Ernst gave a sage nod. “Yes, I suppose that is true.”
“But why’s it doing that to him?”
“Well, it stands to reason,” he said, fabricating on the fly, “that if the Orsa is going to purge Darryl’s body of all disease, it must penetrate his cells. The transparency is simply part of the cleansing process.”
“Yeah? Makes sense I guess. I mean, as much as any of this makes sense.”
Ernst repressed a satisfied smile. A brilliant ad lib, if he said so himself.
Thompson shook his head. “It’s just that he looks so weird and dead with that bug-eyed stare.”
“But he’s obviously not dead.” Ernst pointed to Darryl’s wrist where his throbbing radial artery was clearly visible. “See? He’s got a pulse.”
“I guess that’s good.”
Good? Ernst thought. It’s wonderful.
6
Weezy shook her head. “It doesn’t make sense.”
Jack leaned back and rubbed his burning eyes. He’d taken the first flight he could out of LAX. It had brought him in late—five hours or so in the air but more than eight hours on the clock.
Eddie had offered him a Heineken, which Jack had gratefully accepted. Then, saying it had been a long day, he’d hit the hay.
Jack envied him. He felt unaccountably tired. He hadn’t done much of anything today but talk to Goren and Weezy and sit in a flying sardine can. Couldn’t be the time change because he hadn’t been out west long enough. Maybe it was the plane. Maybe the proximity to all those people had sucked the juice out of him.
He’d related his conversation with Goren as near to verbatim as he could, and Weezy had drunk in every word. She’d been perplexed and dubious about Jack’s conjecture that the Towers had been brought down so an Opus Omega pillar could be buried where they’d stood.
“If you knew Dormentalism like I know Dormentalism,” he said, “you’d think it made perfect sense. Someone has to die in each of those pillars before they bury it. Who knows how many victims Opus Omega claimed before nine/eleven? A few thousand more wouldn’t make any difference.”
“But they had forever before the Towers went up to bury that pillar. Don’t forget, Opus Omega was started millennia ago.”
“But Dormentalism wasn’t. And it didn’t get involved in Opus Omega until Luther Brady took over. And in 2001, Brady was in full command, with a cadre of fanatics willing to do his bidding.”
Weezy nodded. “That’s a point. The Septimus Order had been handling it alone before that. But my question is, why didn’t they bury
the pillar before the Trade Center went up?”
“Maybe they tried and couldn’t get to the spot. Or couldn’t get to it in time.”
Weezy bolted up stiff and straight in her chair.
He looked at her. “What?”
“What you said—couldn’t get to it in time.”
She bounded up and headed for another room.
Jack followed. “So?”
She stopped and faced him. “So, a lot of people didn’t want the Trade Center. A number of groups and committees were formed to stop it. They almost succeeded. I had stacks of old papers with articles about it back at the house.”
“I saw them—even the old Journal-Trib.”
She sighed. “Yeah. Gone, but not forgotten. I scanned a bunch of the articles over the years.”
“But aren’t they lost?”
She gave him an annoyed look. “You’re kidding, right? I always back up—the magnetic, optical, and online.”
“Online?”
“Of course. That way I can access it from anywhere.”
“But so can everybody else.”
“Not unless they know the password, and in my case, not unless they know the decryption key. I’ll download the stuff and we’ll go over it together.”
Be still, my heart.
As she headed for the room where he assumed she kept the computer, he said, “Great. I’m going to help myself to another Heinie. You want one?”
She shook her head. “Started myself on a low-carb diet. But I’ll take a diet anything.”
“You got it.”
With a fresh brew and a Diet Pepsi in hand, he found her hunched over a keyboard in a small extra room. Jack noticed the Compendium sitting next to the monitor. What looked like newspaper clippings were flipping across the screen. He pulled up a chair and tried to make sense of them, but they were moving too fast.
“Slow down. I haven’t seen these.”
“Neither have I,” she said, but slowed her progress.
Even then Jack had to struggle to keep up. How she could absorb anything at that speed was beyond him.
“Here,” she said, stopping the parade. “A familiar name.”
Jack stared at the screen. “Where?”
She moved the mouse pointer to the caption under a photo of a group of stern-looking men. Jack squinted to read the fine print.
“ ‘The Committee to Save the Hudson Terminal,’ ” he said, then scanned the names until he got to—“Holy shit!”
Among the committee members shown, the third man from the left was named Ernst Drexler.
Jack searched the photo and zeroed in on that third man. He wore a dark suit and a fedora. He appeared to be in his sixties and had a sharp-featured face that looked vaguely familiar.
“It’s not him . . . but it’s an awful lot like him.”
After a series of deaths at the Septimus Order’s Lodge in Jack’s hometown when he was a teen, a man named Ernst Drexler had arrived and stayed for a few months to get the local chapter back on track—“reorganize” was how he’d put it. Both Jack and Weezy had had contact with him back then.
“It can’t be him. How old do you think he was when we knew him?”
Jack shrugged. “Mid-thirties, I’d guess, if that. Certainly no older.”
“I agree. Now, that was back in eighty-three. This photo was taken in sixty-five. So, unless he was growing younger, this is probably his father.”
Ernst Drexler II flashed through Jack’s head.
“Not probably. Remember I showed you the card he gave me?”
She nodded. “ ‘Ernst Drexler Two.’ ”
“Which means his father had the same name.”
“I remember it said he was an ‘Actuator,’ whatever that is.”
“I got the impression he was some sort of troubleshooter for the Order. But what was his father doing with this committee? And what’s the Hudson Terminal?”
“The long-gone and forgotten terminus of the long-gone and forgotten Hudson and Manhattan Railroad, which was bought out by the Port Authority in the early sixties. It sat under the site where the PA eventually built the World Trade Center.”
Pieces were falling together.
“That subway tunnel Goren saw . . . it could have been left over from that railroad.”
“Except he said it was running in from the east. The Hudson and Manhattan lines came in from the west under the river. More than likely what he saw was an aborted or abandoned link to the Hudson Terminal.”
Jack pulled up a chair and sat next to her.
“All right . . . we’ve got the father of the Septimus Order’s ‘Actuator’ trying to stop the PA from digging up the terminal that sat near the spot where Opus Omega needed to plant a pillar. If Ernst Two is in the Order, I think it’s safe to assume that his father was too.”
Weezy nodded. “And maybe an ‘Actuator’ as well.” She turned back to the computer. “Let’s see if he appears anywhere else.”
She began running the scans across her screen. Jack didn’t protest this time. No point in slowing her down.
“Here he is again,” she said after a while. “Another ‘save’ committee.”
Jack saw the same man pictured with a group of five. In this photo he carried a black cane that Jack recognized. No doubt now about lineage—his son carried one just like it, maybe even the same.
“ ‘The Save Radio Row Committee.’ What’s Radio Row?”
“A cluster of stores that sold radio, hi-fi, and stereo equipment. Want to guess where they were located?”
“Right over the Hudson Terminal?”
She nodded. “Right. They were knocked down to dig the Trade Center’s foundation. I’ll bet if we keep looking we’ll find him on the committee to save some of the historic buildings in the thirteen square blocks that were razed along with Radio Row.”
Jack leaned back. “So . . . according to Veilleur, the Order was originally charged with completing Opus Omega. Since the Dormentalist Church didn’t exist in sixty-five, Ernst the First was sent in to keep the PA from interfering with their pillar placement.”
“But he failed. The PA broke ground on the project in sixty-six.” She swiveled to face Jack. “You can see why they were concerned. The plan was to dig down to bedrock, some seventy feet below. A huge hole. They removed a million cubic yards and dumped it in the Hudson. It pushed the river far enough back to create Battery Park City.”
Jack gave a low whistle. All this was news to him. He hadn’t moved to the city till the nineties, long after all this had happened.
“A thirteen-square-block hole, seventy feet down. A lot of dirt—and a lot of new real estate.”
Weezy smiled. “Can you imagine how frantic the Order must have been? They’d probably planned to buy one of the buildings in those blocks, one right over the spot where they planned to bury the pillar. But if the Trade Center was built, they’d be locked out.”
“But they got their way in the end, didn’t they.”
Weezy’s smile disappeared. “All that destruction, all that loss of life, just to bury one of their obscene pillars. It seems too . . . too evil, even for them.”
“But they’re working for the Otherness, which, I’ll bet, has another definition of evil.”
“But—”
“Too evil for the Order but not too evil for a bunch of crazy Arabs?” “
“ ‘Those who can make you believe absurdities can make you commit atrocities.’ ”
“Hey, I like that.”
“Not mine—thank Voltaire. But history’s proven that a religion can justify pretty much anything in the name of its god.”
“Well, think of the Otherness as the Order’s god. And since Opus Omega is crucial to bringing their god into this world, they consider themselves to be doing the lord’s work.”
She shook her head. “Al Qaeda was committing a terrorist act. Attacking the Towers was an end as much as a means. Their lord’s work or not, I think the Order could have found another
way to bury their pillar. During the excavation phase, or during the very early pouring of the foundation, they could have found a way to sneak in and get their job done.”
“A thirteen-foot concrete pillar weighing tons?” Jack shrugged. “Maybe they could have, maybe they tried. whatever, they didn’t succeed, so they had to find another way. Ernest Goren and his fellow workers had the misfortune of catching them in the act.”
Weezy kept shaking her head. “I don’t know.”
“One way to know is to learn all there is to know about Opus Omega.” He pointed to the Compendium lying on the desk. “How’s it going? Able to make sense out of those pages?”
She shrugged. “Some. The picture is piecing together, but it’s slow going.”
“Well, then, the other option is to identify bin Aswad. If we can connect him to the Order . . .” An idea struck like a punch, propelling him from his chair. “Drexler! Could Drexler—our Drexler—be bin Aswad?”
Weezy shook her head. “No. The nose is different. Plus he had blue eyes and bin Aswad’s are dark.”
“Ever hear of tinted contacts?”
She was still shaking her head. “From what we see above the beard, I say no. As for the rest of his face, who knows?”
“Is there a computer program that’ll remove a beard?”
She shrugged. “I don’t know. Computers were Kevin’s department.”
Jack thought of Russell Tuit.
“I know a guy who did time for hacking.”
Weezy smiled. “You know a criminal? What a surprise.”
“Some of my best friends . . . well, anyway, he’s a guru of sorts. Why don’t you print me out—”
“Printing’s no good. They’ll lose resolution, especially using Eddie’s inkjet, and your guy will sacrifice even more scanning them back in. I’ll crop and copy any photos I have onto a disk so he can put them directly into whatever software he finds.”
“Do it. And then I’m out of here. We both need some sleep.”
SATURDAY
Ground Zero rj-13 Page 28