Pantheocide tsw-2

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Pantheocide tsw-2 Page 72

by Stuart Slade


  “Don’t we need a beacon or something?” Jackson was intrigued by the idea.

  “We thought we would borrow one of those big Japanese flying boats. The Shin Meiwas. Fly it in through a portal, land on the lake with a sensitive on board. That can act as a beacon. Enterprise is fitted to generate her own portals. She can open the way up and take her battle group in to the city. Then the amphibs can follow through.”

  Petraeus shook his head. “That’s an occupation plan, not an invasion. If Heaven folds, we can consider it.” He looked more closely at the photographs that showed the area of Yahweh’s palace. “What’s going on here?”

  “The Ultimate Temple Sir?” The photo interpreter spoke a lot more carefully than he had done before. “That foxes us completely. We took these shots from a Global Hawk a few minutes ago. She’s still over the scene sir, and the anomaly is still there. It looks like there are two thunderstorms directly over Yahweh’s palace. Take a look at this.”

  He slid another photograph over. It was a close-up shot of an Angel’s face. Taken from more than 50,000 feet over the city and crystal clear in detail it showed one thing that was indisputable. The angel was terrified.

  Petraeus reached out and tapped the anomaly. “Just what is going on down there.”

  The Ultimate Temple, Heaven

  Yahweh had gone beyond raving anger. He was now possessed by a cold, deadly determination to destroy the opposition to him that had so suddenly and unexpectedly erupted. Opposition from a quarter he had never even begun to suspect. He was summoning his strength to wipe that opposition out. In the meantime, another part of his mind was trying to understand how his most trusted servant could have turned against him.

  “Michael-Lan-Yahweh, it is still not too late. Submit to my justice, cleanse yourself of the sin of pride and I may yet spare you from the full force of my wrath. Do not force this to its inevitable conclusion.”

  “It’s Michael-Lan-Michael now. I am your servant no longer. And it is already far too late. It was too late the day you betrayed the humans and closed the gates of Heaven in their face. It was too late the day you had the incredible stupidity to tell them that was what you had done. It was too late the day you condemned those who had made it here to being menial servants instead of living in the paradise you promised them. I will not submit to your justice for you have shown you do not understand the meaning of the word. How could you condemn humanity to everlasting torment and still speak of justice? You say you may spare me the full measure of your wrath? Be careful Yah-yah. The humans are coming and they will not spare you the full measure of theirs. Already their armies are encircling the Eternal City and starting to choke off its life-blood. Perhaps if you were to throw yourself on their mercy, they might hold their hands. Humans are oddly merciful to those they defeat. Usually. In your case though…” Michael-Lan-Michael shook his head.

  The music in his earpiece had changed to Mars, The Bringer of War. Whoever put this program together had done well. Michael thought. Let’s hope it’s enough.

  The sheet of multi-colored lightning that enveloped him came with almost no warning. The only slight hint Michael had was that Yahweh had reserved some of the power for his own defense and the sparkling globe that protected him had become visible a tiny fraction of a second before the onslaught started. Grimly, Michael realized that Yahweh’s appeal had simply been intended to lure him off guard. Had he fallen for it, he would have been caught completely unawares. As it was, his own protection, his own blast of lightning, was only just barely adequate to prevent him being crushed out of existence. He could feel it crushing under the strain, buckling under the relentless pressure of Yahweh’s power. Michael reached out, sensing the mental energy of those minds that were in step with his own, incorporating it with his own. Slowly, agonizingly slowly, the situation stabilized with Michael in the middle of the storm yet untouched by it.

  Yahweh’s scream of frustration shook the whole Temple and echoed around the Eternal City. Word was already spreading of the cataclysmic events taking place within the Ultimate Temple and, all over the city, angels of every rank stood and watched as the cloud of storms engulfed the Temple. Inside, Yahweh was reaching out for his allies, to add their power to his. By instinct, his first instinct was to call on Uriel.

  Michael-Lan-Michael felt the call go out and relaxed ever so slightly. Had the call been received, this confrontation would have been over. Uriel had been Yahweh’s sword and shield. His massive power had been beyond that even of Michael and his ability to bring death wholesale had made him an enemy of unshakeable power. Together, Yahweh and Uriel were utterly unbeatable. Only, Uriel was dead. Methodically blasted apart by humans. Michael remembered the days and weeks he had spent maneuvering Uriel into attacking one human fortress after another. Always trying to throw him into the teeth of the human defenses and staying awake nights when time after time, Uriel had escaped. Michael’s coup would have remained forever an abstract concept if Uriel had not died at the hands of humans for killing him had been far beyond Michael’s power.

  He felt Yahweh reaching for his sword and shield, his mind seeking to lock with that of Uriel. But, all it reached was a blank emptiness. Uriel was dead and the reality of that suddenly sank in on Yahweh’s rage-engulfed mind. He reached out further for his less-powerful allies, seeking for the tiny margin of power that would allow him to overwhelm the rebel who stood before him. He ran through the list, trying to bring in each of his allies. Each to be met by the grim silence of death,

  Colepatiron, killed by humans.

  Nesupeh, killed by humans

  Sacereor, killed in a terrorist bombing

  Neripon, killed by humans

  Erikehan, killed by humans

  Irnasodeor, accused of treason and died under interrogation

  Esetatuteh, killed in a terrorist bombing

  Tonolpalon, killed by humans

  Lesoteminiel, killed by humans

  Hisralraman, killed in a terrorist bombing

  Ritosehon, accused of treason and died under interrogation

  Zaslohael, killed in a terrorist bombing

  Umadipsah, killed by humans

  Pinaliel, killed by humans

  Michael-Lan-Michael sensed the lack of response from Yahweh’s greatest and most powerful supporters. He also felt the rejection of Yahweh’s touch by those who had forsaken him. All of the Chayot ha Kodesh that had survived refused to aid Yahweh and by implication threw their support to Michael. He sensed Yahweh’s growing desperation as the truth was slowly forced on him. Every one of his allies had been killed. Either thrown against the humans and died under their guns and missiles or blown up when the terrorist bombings in the Eternal City had struck their temples. It dawned on Yahweh at last that those terrorist bombings had been nothing of the sort. They had been carefully planned assassinations and Yahweh finally understood who had been behind them.

  Tahenael, killed by humans

  Arsasaum, assassinated by Michael

  Tcuadahiel, assassinated by Michael

  Zunael, killed by humans

  In desperation, Yahweh turned to the one ally he was sure he had left. Michael-Lan-Michael felt Yahweh reach out to his son, Elhmas, for the support he needed. For a tiny fragment of a second, Michael thought that Elhmas had answered the call and the chill of defeat started to sweep though him. But, Michael crushed it down even as the grim silence made the answer obvious. Elhmas was dead, destroyed so thoroughly by humans that not even a shadow of him was left.

  Michael felt the assault on his existence beginning to ease very slightly. He had survived another round but he knew that he was dangerously close to using all the power that he had available to him. He had called on his allies, he had taken every effort they had offered to him. He had destroyed Yahweh’s allies and forced him to fight this fight alone, unaided. For all that, he was barely a match for the immense power of Yahweh. In fact, it was an open question whether he was a match at all.

  As the pressure
on him slackened, Michael allowed his own energy output to decline. He needed to conserve strength and economize on that he was drawing from his allies. Slowly, his consciousness expanded away from the duel to take in his surroundings. The throne room, once resplendent in its brilliance was blackened and charred. The floor was covered with the precious stones from the walls, many cracked, blackened and charred from the energy discharges that had flooded the chamber. Poor stones. Michael thought. Looted from worlds beyond number and brought here to be baked. Too bad.

  He took a deep breath and looked through the shimmering arrays of lightning that still crackled and swirled around him. Then, he spoke once more, his voice loaded with scorn. “Is that the best you’ve got?”

  Chapter Seventy Five

  Angelic Treatment Ward, Bethesda Naval Hospital, Bethesda, MD

  “What do either of you know about cancer?” Doctor Zinder asked the two angels in the ward.

  Lemuel and Maion exchanged bewildered glances. “What’s cancer?” Lemuel answered for them both.

  Zinder frowned, it was a strange reminder of the fact that the two angels were from a different universe. “Strange growths on or in the body. They grow out of control and will kill the victim unless treated. And treatment can be very difficult indeed. You’ve never heard of things like that?”

  Both angels shook their heads. Again, it was Lemuel who answered. “Never. In all the millennia I have been in the Eternal City, I cannot recall anything like that. We are as we have always been, perfection.”

  “I doubt that very much.” Zinder tried to hide his annoyance at the unwitting arrogance of Lemuel’s reply. “The absence of cancers is remarkable. Your healing capability should make you more vulnerable to them. Obviously there is something about your physiology we don’t understand yet. No matter. We’ll sort it out. We’re not perfection, just smart.” Zinder took an unprofessional delight in the jab but to his disappointment it didn’t seem to register with either angel.

  “Why do you ask about this thing.” Maion was confused and slightly disappointed. Behind her, the stumps of her amputated wings were changing, slowly morphing into a new set, wings that were but miniature reproductions of her original pair but ones that enlarged every day. She had been hoping to show them off.

  “We took out one of your formations, some 50,000 angels and five times that many humans. The weapon we used killed most of them but many of the survivors have developed skin cancers. The victims are being covered in them. We’ve tried cutting them out, but they grow back even faster. We’ve tried every thing in our arsenal, chemotherapy, radiation, surgery, to beat the cancers and we’ve failed. Frankly, you two were our last hope. We thought you might know something that might help. Without a few new leads, we’re out of ideas and that means our patients won’t make it.”

  “The Incomparable Legion of Light? Gone?” Lemuel could hardly believe what he had just heard. He knew that was the unit ordered to attack the human invasion but that was all. Yahweh’s own personal guard gone? By a single weapon?

  “Was that what it was called? No matter. It’s gone.” Zinder was slightly irritated again. He wasn’t really interested in what had happened except in as much as it affected his patients. “I believe the Army nuked it. We think the sleet of radiation from the blast is the cause of the skin cancers. The oncologists believe it mutated the DNA in the victims so your rebuilding mechanisms have gone out of control.”

  Lemuel and Maion looked at each other again in confusion. That almost caused Zinder to grin openly. These angels might think they are perfection but they know less science than a human seven year old. Then he decided to try something. “Perhaps Michael-Lan might know more?”

  Lemuel answered very carefully. “Ah yes, Michael-Lan. There is much I wish to discuss with my old friend Michael.”

  Hill 331, Overlooking the Western Wall of the Eternal City. Heaven

  The ZBD-97 platoon was parked in the trees that covered the crest of the hill. The scouts had left them and moved forward so that they could overlook the massive city that lay below them. Captain Tao Gan had very specific orders from his command, orders that did not eventually trace back to H.E.A. supreme command. He had followed those orders exactly. His reconnaissance platoon had slipped through the countryside with all the stealth that four armored personnel carriers could muster. He had avoided contact with enemy forces, steered clear of population centers and done everything else to make sure that his presence on this hill was undetected. From this hill he could see as far into the Eternal City as was possible. The Chinese People’s Liberation Army didn’t have the wealth of equipment than the Americans did but they now had an asset in place that could substitute human eyes for remote-controlled aircraft.

  The Americans had promised that all the information they gathered would be shared out but the CPLA commanders had been suspicious. Perhaps that was the wrong word Tao Gan thought. Cautious might be better. With his unit here on the hill, they had a way of checking whether the information the Americans sent them was the truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth.

  “Sir, look at this.” The voice from his 3rd-Level NCO was barely a whisper. The staff sergeant had been operating a pair of tripod-mounted surveillance binoculars, a set far too large and heavy to be lifted by hand. Tao Gan slid over to his position and looked through the binoculars. A slight adjustment of the focus was necessary to bring the street scene into sharp relief. Once done, he could see the angels in the street. Most of them were standing still, staring in the direction of the far-off city center. They seemed strangely motionless, as if they were in some form of trance. Or so terrified by what they saw that they were incapable of motion. Tao Gan’s thought spurred his next decision. He needed to report back to Corps HQ.

  The Ultimate Temple, Heaven

  Michael-Lan felt the first beginnings of fear darken his mind. Even with the support of his network, he was only just barely surviving the barrage of electric bolts that enveloped him. Yahweh had given up talking to him or trying to persuade him to drop his guard. Now, he was relying on sheer brute force to batter down Michael’s defenses and crush him out of existence. The non-stop onslaught was wearing Michael down. He could feel his legs weakening and it was all he could do to stop himself staggering. He was actually using some of the power drawn from his allies to keep standing firm and erect. It was a vicious cycle and he knew it. The more power he used for that purpose, the less he could feed into his defensive shell. That meant more of Yahweh’s attacks reached him and weakened him still further. That meant he would have to use still more power to stand tall.

  Michael caught himself, his momentary inattention had caused him to slip slightly, to begin the twisting fall that would end with him helpless on the ground. He chanced a brief glance at Yahweh, seeing with relief that his brief lapse had gone unnoticed. Then, to his intense relief, the grinding assault slackened and faded. He, Michael-Lan, had survived another confrontation with Yahweh’s raw power. His senses reached out, feeling for the reserves of power that Yahweh still had in store and noting grimly how far they exceeded his own. He sucked the cold, ozone-tainted air into his starved lungs, feeling it rasp at the raw lining of his throat as he breathed in. His mind reached out, embracing all those of his network, all those whom he had lured into his net. His plan had worked, he had allies when Yahweh had none. He knew how to draw on their power with maximum efficiency while Yahweh did not. He understood economy of force while Yahweh was profligate with his power. And yet, for all that, Michael-Lan knew that he was slowly losing this fight. For a moment despair seized him. He felt it cloud his mind and the treacherous realization of just how easy it would be to give up and let go started to coil into his consciousness.

  Michael looked up and saw the vindictive half-smile on Yahweh’s face. That told him where those treacherous thoughts had come from. Yahweh hadn’t slackened his assault, he had simply changed one mode for another. For a brief second, Michael wished he had one of the hats that humans had ta
ken to wearing, the ones that protected them against the mind-deceptions of the daemons. It would do him no good of course. The hats only protected humans against daemonic mind-entering powers and incompletely at that. Those tinfoil hats were of no use against a being with Yahweh’s power. Now if I had one of their tanks…. The thought of him sitting in a human tank, suitably enlarged of course, made Michael snort with laughter. And that wiped the smile off his face.

  “What’s the matter Yah-yah? Getting weaker and feebler? You know, you should be grateful for me taking over. Gives you a chance to take a nice holiday. Why don’t you take a tour? I hear the other side of the Minos Gate is nice this time of year.” Michael stepped sideways suddenly. It was nothing to do with Yahweh’s response to his gibe, simply a large slab of marble had become detached from the ceiling and its fall was just a touch too close for comfort.

  “I will crush your very soul from existence for this treachery.” Yahweh’s voice could have been used to grind rocks such was the grating venom loaded into each syllable.

  “Now that’s a good question.” Michael tried to keep his voice light and goading despite the tiredness that consumed every muscle he had. “Can you actually do that? You couldn’t do it to The Morningstar and his resistance didn’t last this long. You know, old chap, I really don’t think you have it in you any more.”

  Michael actually missed Yahweh’s reply to that for the music in his earpiece had changed again. Now, it was Wagner’s Ride of the Valkyrie. As the massed bands poured the music out, the stirring score caused Michael to wonder if the old Norse gods were actually coming to his aid. Is that the message they are sending me? Reinforcements would be very welcome at this point. But the Aesir had retreated from Earth long ago, back to their own bubble world. Why should they help Michael who had commanded the armies that forced their abandonment of the Earth? Anyway, the human bandleaders didn’t know that little bit of history.

 

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