The Lucifer Code

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The Lucifer Code Page 9

by Charles Brokaw


  ‘Come on!’ she yelled, then threw a hip into him and knocked him to one side.

  Lourds staggered and almost fell. He gagged as she kept hold of his shirt collar and guided him towards the door she’d seen on the other side of the room.

  ‘I can’t see,’ Lourds protested, and struggled to slow their headlong pace.

  ‘Neither can they. Keep moving.’

  ‘We’re going to hit a wall.’

  Qayin and his men opened fire behind them. Bullets ricocheted from the stone walls, trailing sparks in their wake.

  ‘Okay. I see your point.’ Lourds stepped up his pace so he was dragging her after him.

  Behind them, Qayin’s followers retrieved their lanterns. Streams of fluorescent lights bounced over the wall ahead of them in time for them to correct their direction before they smashed into stone. Cleena and Lourds sprinted into the next room and took advantage of the partial lighting from the lanterns of their pursuers.

  The gunshots echoed inside the chamber and the sound was enough to let Cleena know that the area was immense. Several stone pillars stood out in the darkness ahead of them and created a maze of obstacles. She pulled on Lourds’ collar to slow his breakneck pace.

  ‘To the left,’ she ordered.

  Immediately, Lourds veered to the left. He rounded a thick pillar and halted when she pulled him against it. She fell into hiding beside him and took time to reload her pistol with a fresh magazine. She only had one left after that. The odds weren’t in their favour.

  ‘What are you doing?’ Lourds asked. ‘Shouldn’t we be running?’

  Cleena peered round the pillar and took a two-handed grip on her pistol. ‘Running sounds fantastic to me. Do you know where to run?’

  ‘Haven’t you been here before?’

  ‘This is my first time.’

  ‘At least you were conscious when you were brought in.’

  ‘I was somewhat distracted getting to know all my new friends and trying to work out if they were going to double-cross me. Which they did.’

  ‘You obviously stink at measuring character…’

  Cleena lost the rest of what he was saying when one of Qayin’s followers exploded through the doorway. The swinging lantern he carried made him a perfect target. She aimed for the centre of the man’s body and squeezed the trigger three times in quick succession.

  At least two of the bullets caught him and pushed him backwards. He sat down hard and his lantern rolled away. Thankfully, the light played over the doorway so Cleena could see if anyone else approached. Just as she realized the light was going to play in her favour, Qayin or one of his followers realized the same thing. A burst of gunfire shattered the lantern. Cleena waited a moment and fired at where she remembered the doorway was just to keep their opponents on their toes. Almost immediately, a hailstorm of bullets struck the pillar they were hiding behind. Stone chips stung her face as she ducked to safety.

  ‘Well, that’s narrowed the odds to four to two,’ Lourds whispered. ‘Those odds are a lot better.’

  ‘Really?’ Cleena responded. ‘Which two did you want to take?’

  The professor sighed. ‘Okay, four to one.’

  ‘Now be quiet. I’ve got to listen. I’d suggest that you do the same before they creep up on us in the dark.’

  ‘They’re going to be just as hampered by the darkness as we are.’

  ‘Not if you keep talking. Shut up!’ Cleena turned slightly away from the direction of the door to better use her peripheral vision. She held the pistol ready in her hands and tried not to think of Brigid alone in the world.

  Beside her, Lourds suddenly started.

  Angry with him even though that noise was not enough to alert Qayin and his followers to their position, Cleena said, ‘Be still.’

  Before she could say anything else, someone clapped a rough, calloused hand over her mouth. She twisted and tried to bring the pistol up, but even as she did someone grabbed her wrists. Instinctively, she fired at the shadow that stood out in the darkness round her.

  Her body and the body of the man who held her trapped the muzzle flash between them. The hard white-yellow light illuminated the man who held her. A dark robe swaddled his body and his face was a pallid oval within a peaked cowl.

  8

  Catacombs

  Yesilkoy District

  Istanbul, Turkey

  17 March 2010

  ‘Please, Professor Lourds, don’t be afraid.’

  After what he had been through since arriving in Istanbul, Lourds couldn’t believe anyone would actually say that. The echo of Cleena’s shot still rang through the large chamber. Now his imagination was in overdrive as he confronted the cowled man.

  Many of the documents Lourds had translated over the years involved myths and legends of monsters in places like the catacombs under Istanbul. In fact, some of the work he had done involved stories of horrors during the Ottoman invasion and the fall of Constantinople.

  Lourds was prepared to fight for his life, but then something happened that he didn’t expect. The man holding him spoke the same plea – except this time he spoke in Ancient Greek. The dialect was a little off, but it was easy to distinguish the root.

  ‘What did you say?’ Lourds asked in that same language.

  ‘My friends and I are here to help you,’ the man said. ‘We have been looking for you since you disappeared this morning. I apologize that it has taken so long to locate you.’

  ‘Who are you?’

  ‘For now all that I can tell you is that we’re friends. We’re here to get you out of this place. Please instruct the woman to stop fighting.’

  Lourds was suddenly aware that Cleena was still battling against at least one and possibly two men. He turned to her but could not see her in the darkness.

  ‘Stop shooting,’ he said. ‘These are friends.’

  She stopped fighting and leaned into him. Tension tightened her body like a bow string.

  ‘How do you know they’re friends?’ she demanded.

  ‘One of them just told me so.’

  Derision dripped from her. ‘How have you managed to stay alive for so long?’

  ‘I happen to believe him,’ Lourds said defensively. ‘He spoke to me in Ancient Greek.’

  ‘Now there’s a reason to trust someone.’

  ‘He says he and his friends can get us out of here. Interested now?’

  ‘We’re doing fine on our own.’

  ‘Qayin has reinforcements coming,’ the man beside Lourds said.

  ‘You’re just saying that.’

  ‘Actually, we followed them in here.’

  ‘Then where are they? You could be making that up.’

  Lourds wasn’t inclined to be so sceptical, but before he could say anything to that effect, the noise of people trying to move quietly at the other end of the catacombs reached them. As he was about to ask if anyone else had heard the noise, someone from that end of the catacombs opened fire.

  Acting quickly, Lourds dropped to the ground. Cleena did the same. They were face to face in the darkness, their features intermittently lit by muzzle flashes as bullets crunched against the pillar overhead.

  ‘Convinced?’ Lourds asked dryly.

  She made no reply.

  ‘Professor Lourds?’ the robed man asked Lourds.

  ‘We’re coming, but they have us boxed at both ends.’

  ‘There is another way out. Follow me.’

  Running footsteps echoed through the catacombs. Cleena rose briefly to her knees, held her pistol, and fired. Lourds didn’t wait to see the results of her handiwork. He had seen how devastating she could be with her weapon. The mortal screams behind him let him know she had been just as accurate again.

  Rising to his feet, Lourds remained crouched as he followed the robed man through the darkness. Several of their opponents turned their lanterns in their direction. The bright lights spilled across Lourds just as he saw a narrow opening in the wall ahead of him.

 
He followed the man through the opening and into a tunnel. Cleena was on their heels, closely trailed by two more men in robes. Once they were inside, one of the men shoved a recessed section of the wall into place and sealed the opening. One of the men took out a flashlight and switched it on. The bright light hurt Lourds’ eyes and filled the narrow tunnel with illumination. He studied the faces of the five men in the tunnel but recognized none of them.

  ‘It’s safe in here, Professor Lourds,’ one of them said. He was young, no older than his late twenties surely. A carefully trimmed goatee framed his chin. His eyes were lost in the shadows of his cowl.

  Cleena reloaded her pistol. ‘Can they get through that door?’

  The man shook his head. ‘Not now. We’ve locked them out.’

  Satisfied with her weapon’s readiness, she studied them. ‘Who are you?’

  ‘As I have stated, we are friends.’ The young man spoke patiently.

  Lourds noticed that she had turned so her pistol hand was kept clear of the five men. She could quickly bring it into play. It seemed a habit as ingrained as breathing.

  ‘I know all my friends,’ she insisted.

  ‘Perhaps I should have said we are friends of the professor,’ the young man amended.

  ‘That true, Professor?’ she asked without taking her eyes off the strangers. ‘Do you know them?’

  ‘Not yet,’ Lourds said. ‘But I’m always open to meeting new friends.’ He looked at her. ‘Especially ones that don’t kidnap me when they first see me. That’s a first impression that’s hard to recover from.’

  She shot him a hard glance. ‘We can save the meet and greet for later. This tunnel has to go somewhere. Maybe Qayin and his little friends might not be able to get through this door, but they can come at us from the other end of this passageway.’

  ‘Actually, they don’t know all the secrets of these catacombs. We know more about them than they do,’ the young man assured her.

  ‘That’s terrific,’ she said sarcastically. ‘You win. But I’d still prefer to be elsewhere.’

  ‘Of course.’ The young man nodded to his companion with the flashlight who immediately headed down the dark throat of the tunnel. Lourds followed the light.

  Lourds guessed that several minutes passed as they made their way along the passage. He thought he detected an upward grade, but wasn’t sure. It was too dark to tell and he was more interested in listening for sounds of pursuit.

  ‘I see you’re carrying Qayin’s book,’ the young man said.

  ‘I had the impression that this book didn’t actually belong to Qayin,’ Lourds replied. ‘He couldn’t read it anyway.’

  ‘My bad,’ the man said, sounding for a moment like one of Lourds’ Harvard students. ‘I didn’t mean to infer that the book belonged to Qayin. It doesn’t.’

  Unable to control his curiosity, Lourds asked, ‘Whose book is it?’

  ‘I’m not at liberty to say at this moment.’

  ‘Well, isn’t that delightfully mysterious,’ Cleena said.

  ‘Were you so curious about the people who hired you to kidnap Professor Lourds?’ the man countered.

  She didn’t say anything, though Lourds couldn’t tell whether that was because of shame or anger.

  ‘What makes this book so special?’ Lourds asked.

  ‘Were you able to read it?’ the man asked.

  ‘I had barely started, but, yes, I believe I can read it. Given time.’

  Behind him, Cleena cursed softly. Lourds suddenly realized that the admission might endanger him with their newfound friends.

  ‘Watch your head here.’ The young man reached up to touch a low-hanging section of the passageway ceiling.

  Lourds ducked and followed the man through it. The passageway came to a T only a short distance farther on. They bore to the left.

  ‘What did you find out from reading the book?’ the young man asked.

  ‘Not enough,’ Lourds responded.

  ‘But you think you can decipher it?’

  Lourds hesitated only a moment. If I say I can, are you going to take me captive? Or if I say I can’t, are you going to kill me? Neither of those options appealed to him. He had a mystery on his hands, a true enigma of the sort that he loved to unravel. He wasn’t prepared to let this go without a fight.

  ‘Yes,’ he answered.

  ‘That’s good.’ The young man halted behind the man with a flashlight. He held the flashlight while the leader did something to the wall ahead of them.

  ‘Do you know what the book is about?’ Lourds asked.

  The young man looked at Lourds with deep sincerity. ‘Something has been lost, Professor Lourds. Something very valuable and very important. This thing must be found. Much depends on that.’

  ‘What has been lost?’

  Sadly, the young man shook his head. ‘That isn’t for me to say. I apologize. I know you’ve had a difficult day. But anything I may tell you could interfere with your translation. The impressions you form regarding the material you’ll find there must be your own. Many people over the years have tried to decipher the book. If you fail, it must be your own unique failure.’

  Up ahead, a section of the passageway wall opened up to reveal a small high space. Iron rungs were attached to one wall. The young man with the light shone the flashlight up into the vertical passageway.

  ‘All clear,’ he said.

  Lourds was third in line and grabbed one of the rusting iron rungs above his head. He settled his backpack, with the book inside, across his shoulders and hoisted himself up. The corroded metal bit into his palms and flaked off as he climbed. A brief glance revealed that the vertical passageway went up some distance. He couldn’t keep watching because rust flakes spilled into his eyes. As he climbed, he felt the steady burn of his abused muscles and longed for bed. And a meal of some kind.

  But the mystery of the book chafed at his mind as surely as the rotten iron dug into his hands.

  Just when Lourds was about to let the others know he couldn’t go any further, the lead man called a halt to the procession. Metal rasped overhead, then sunlight poured down into the shaft.

  Morning? Lourds couldn’t believe what he was seeing. But he had no frame of reference for how long he had been rendered unconscious by the drugs he had been given.

  The first man climbed slowly and peered around for a moment, then climbed out of the tunnel. The young man who had done all the talking followed him. Then in short order, Lourds and the girl followed, then the other three men. Lourds stood in a narrow alley that could have been a twin of the one where the helicopter had crashed.

  Cleena stood with her pistol in her fist. Somehow she’d made the long climb with the weapon in her hand. The five men watched her uneasily.

  ‘So how do we handle this?’ she asked.

  ‘We’re escorting Professor Lourds to his hotel,’ the young man with a goatee said.

  ‘What about me?’

  ‘You’re free to go.’

  She looked at the five men suspiciously and took a fresh grip on her weapon. ‘What? Just like that?’

  ‘Yes.’

  She smiled. ‘And if I preferred to take the professor with me?’

  ‘That wouldn’t be acceptable.’

  ‘I’ve always been told the person with the gun makes the rules.’

  Uneasily, Lourds shifted and took a step back from her.

  The young man spoke calmly. ‘I assure you, you’re not the only one with a weapon here. You were allowed to come with us because we don’t like to kill, nor would we allow Qayin and his followers to murder you. But our people have fought and died for centuries for the secrets contained within that book.’

  Lourds didn’t know if the robed men were armed. He could see no weapons, but the robes concealed a lot. He suddenly felt like a choice meat bone being growled over by two dogs. The thing that most captured his attention was the statement about how long people had been searching for the secret he presently had in his possession. H
e pulled the backpack’s straps a little tighter.

  Then he remembered the other men at the airport.

  ‘You didn’t try to contact me at the airport yesterday morning, did you?’

  ‘No, Professor,’ the young man answered.

  So there is a third party after me, Lourds realized.

  ‘Professor?’ Cleena asked. ‘The decision is yours. Do you want to stay with them?’

  ‘They’ve said that they’re taking me to my hotel room,’ Lourds replied.

  ‘And you trust them?’

  Lourds shrugged. ‘They haven’t kidnapped me.’

  An insouciant smile quirked her lips. ‘Yet.’ She paused. ‘I wish you well, professor. It’s been… interesting, but I hope you don’t take offence when I tell you I hope never to see you again.’

  ‘No offence taken. And I hope you don’t mind that the feeling is mutual.’

  Gun in hand, Cleena backed down the alley for one hundred paces. Then she turned and fled, rounding the corner at the end of the alley and disappearing.

  ‘Professor Lourds,’ the young man prompted, ‘are you ready to go to your hotel now?’

  ‘Of course. Give me just a second.’ Lourds rummaged in his backpack and took out the pen and paper he’d worked with earlier. He already knew the avenues he wanted to follow with the translation. As he made notes, his fascination grew.

  Returning to the hotel proved less clandestine than Lourds would have believed. The group doffed their robes and threw them into a rubbish bin, then escorted him to the other end of the alley and hailed a cab. Only the young man with the goatee accompanied Lourds on the journey. No longer dressed in the robe, he looked like anyone. Like a student, actually, Lourds thought. He wore khaki slacks, loafers and a soccer jersey. He would have been perfectly at home on the greens at Harvard.

  Around them, Istanbul had come to life. Pedestrians and tourists filled the streets: some window-shopped or sat at tables in outdoor cafés. Lourds had always loved the city. Istanbul, as Constantinople before it, had a long and exciting history.

  The initial settlement had been made in 6500 BC on the Anatolian side of the area. The Fikirtepe mound had revealed artefacts dating from 5500-3500 BC, during the Copper Age. One of the ports, Kadikoy, also known as Chalcedon, had been active during the time of the Phoenicians. The Bosphorus River held the record for the narrowest strait used for international travel. According to ancient Greek myth, the river had been named after Io, one of Zeus’s lovers after the god turned her into an ox to protect her from his jealous wife. Usually Lourds found himself soothed by the presence of so much history around him. Despite the modern additions to the area, it wasn’t hard to imagine the seaport city as it had been during its heyday. The salty sea air wouldn’t have had the taint of diesel, but otherwise it would have smelled much the same.

 

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