“ ‘And it came to pass that the Lord did bring the children of Israel out of the land of Egypt …’ ”
Charlie flicked off the CD and punched the radio dial to a country-western station.
“I was listening to that,” Rebekah complained.
“You were sleeping,” he said, as Garth Brooks came on, mournfully wailing about lightning strikes and rolling thunder. “Listen to this instead.”
With his eyes fastened on the road, his hands clenching the wheel, and his heartbeat gradually returning to normal, he steered the van out into the darkness of the surrounding land—darkness that could be felt—and pondered the cross they had looted from a Russian grave.
Was the apparition he had just seen in the backseat its rightful owner?
A wolf—a big dark one—was momentarily caught in the headlights, loping along the side of the road, as if keeping pace with the van. But then, with a turn of its head and a silver flash of its eyes, it vanished into the night.
Chapter 30
By the time Slater had reached the bottom of the stone steps leading to the beach, he could hardly believe it.
It had been hard enough coming down them, in the light of day, but to think that Old Man Richter had managed to climb up them after being shipwrecked was almost beyond comprehension.
“That guy we found in the church must have been one tough old bird,” Rudy, the Coast Guard ensign, said.
“The toughest there ever was.”
In some places, the steps were no more than a few inches wide, and they zigged and zagged down the cliff face from the colony grounds high above them. Up top, Slater could hear the sounds of Sergeant Groves’s work crew preparing for the exhumations—buzz saws cutting a clear path to the cemetery, jackhammers loosening soil, hammers clanging on metal stanchions as the lighting poles and lab tents were erected. Even now, at high noon, the sun was struggling to make itself felt through the low-hanging clouds, and a hundred yards offshore the bracelet of mist that clung to St. Peter’s Island obscured the Bering Strait beyond.
“Just in case,” Rudy was saying as he walked a few yards down the rocky beach, “this RHI is going to be left right here.”
A bright yellow boat—called a Rigid Hull Inflatable—was sitting just above the high-tide line, tied to a boulder and raised on makeshift davits fashioned from driftwood. A black, waterproof tarp was stretched tight over its interior.
“Chances are,” Rudy said, “it will never be needed, but if air transport is unavailable or for some reason temporarily impractical, this will provide a means to get off the island and back to Port Orlov.”
“I take it you’ll be here to do the navigating,” Slater said.
“Yes, I’m staying when the Sikorsky goes, but the boat pretty much sails itself. Port Orlov’s just about three miles due east.”
The chopper was leaving that night, in less than two hours, carrying the rest of the Coast Guard personnel—along with a body bag containing the remains of Richter. Nika had contacted Geordie to take custody of the corpse and keep it under wraps in the community center’s garage until she could get back and arrange for a proper burial.
Slater looked forward to limiting the complement on the island. When dealing with an epidemiological event like this, the fewer people present, the smaller the risk of anything from misinformation to contagion escaping into the greater pool. As it was, there were far too many questions from the Coast Guardsmen, and even though they had been warned that anything they had seen or done on the island was considered highly classified, Slater knew from experience that no secret shared by more than three people ever stayed secret for long. He slapped a hand on the side of the boat, like patting a trusty steed, all the while hoping he would never need to take it out on the open sea. If everything went as planned, the exhumation and autopsy work would be done in roughly seventy-two hours, and the chopper would be back to retrieve Slater’s team and their core samples before the weather turned any worse than it already was.
Even for Alaska, there was a bone-chilling snap in the air, courtesy of a Siberian low that had been moving slowly, but inexorably, in the direction of St. Peter’s Island. Snowfall so far had been slight, just a couple of inches, but even that much precipitation meant time and effort would be expended to clear it away. The most important thing for Slater right now was to get into that cemetery and start the dig. He had spent several hours going over all the topographical data with Professor Kozak, and he had chosen the grave closest to the edge of the cliff to begin his work. Not only was it the one most in danger of falling victim to the same erosion that had released the first coffin, it was also the one that might have been exposed to the greatest variations in soil and air temperature, and from the frost heaval that they could cause.
As soon as he returned to the colony grounds, Slater made the equivalent of hospital rounds, inspecting the various labs and facilities, which had been erected in record time. Green neoprene tents, connected by hard rubber matting that provided pathways among them, glowed from within like lightbulbs. Ropes had been strung up alongside all the paths so that, in the event of a sudden whiteout, anyone caught outside could still hang on and grope his or her way to safety. In addition to the mess tent, there were several bivouacs now—one reserved for Dr. Lantos and Nika, who had definitely renounced her notion of sleeping in the old church—and over by the main gates a combination laboratory and autopsy tent. A metal ramp with rails on both sides had been erected to its entrance, where a big orange triangle announced that it was a Biohazard Level-3 Facility, open to authorized personnel only. The tent was shrouded in heavy-duty, double-plastic sheaths, stuck together with Velcro-type adhesive strips; in this climate, zippers tended to freeze and get stuck.
Parting the curtains, Slater stepped inside the laboratory area of the tent. Dr. Lantos was under a table, straightening out a tangle of cords that looked like a pile of snakes. For a second, Slater was taken back to the rice paddy in Afghanistan … and the viper lashing out at the little girl. Warm air was blowing in through the vents, but the ambient temperature was still no better than fifty-seven or fifty-eight degrees Fahrenheit.
Crawling back out, feetfirst, Dr. Lantos looked up and saw him. Pushing her glasses back onto the bridge of her nose and glancing at her wristwatch, she said, “Don’t tell me you’re ready to go.”
“Not until you say the lab is done.”
Sitting back on her heels, she said, “It may not look like much, but I do think it’s fully operational. Want the thirty-second tour?”
“Absolutely.”
The truth was, the relatively warm air was feeling really good, and he didn’t mind lingering a bit. The new antiviral regimen was playing havoc with his usual malarial meds, and more than once that morning he’d felt a sudden shiver descend his spine. If anyone else under his command had reported similar problems, Slater would have promptly removed that person from active duty and ordered rest and maybe even a medical evaluation. But if he took himself out of the picture, if he admitted what was going on to anyone else on the team, the whole mission would grind to an immediate halt. Even more to the point, if, God forbid, word of the delay got back to Dr. Levinson at the AFIP, he’d instantly be replaced, recalled … and relegated to a desk job in D.C. forever after.
And that was not a risk he was prepared to take.
“This is our living room,” Dr. Lantos joked, waving her arm around the long, narrow space, illuminated by a row of light fixtures attached to a single aluminum beam that ran the length of the room. Counters had been set up on either side, topped with electron microscopes, racks of test tubes, vials, flasks, beakers, rubber gloves, and antiseptic dispensers. Underneath them there were cabinets and bins with neatly labeled and color-coded drawers.
“You have all the power you need?” Slater asked, and Lantos nodded vigorously, which only served to call his attention to the pencil, and the pen, she had stuck in the frizzy mop of her gray hair. He had the fleeting impression that if he look
ed hard enough in there, he could find anything from grocery lists to ticket stubs. It was one of the things that had always endeared her to him.
At the rear of the tent, a second chamber—a chamber within a chamber, as it were—had been erected behind its own clear plastic curtains; parting them, he was met by a blast of much colder air. A freezer, about half the size of a normal refrigerator, squatted on the triple-insulated rubber mat that comprised the floor. Standing in the center of the space was a long, stainless-steel autopsy table, and beside it a wheeled cart that held an array of vessels and receptacles for the organs and tissue samples they would be removing from the corpses they exhumed. Slater expected to take samples from no less than three or four, drawn from all quarters of the cemetery, before he was done. After inspecting the air vents, which were serviced by a separate filtration unit outside, Slater was satisfied that the place was indeed ready to go.
“Grab your hat,” he said. “It’s showtime.”
With Dr. Lantos in tow, Slater rounded up Professor Kozak, who was buried in his geological studies, and told them to wait for him by the main gates. Then, with some reluctance, he went to fetch Nika. He wished it could be avoided, he did not want her anywhere near the site and exposed to any of the myriad dangers it might present, but he also knew she’d be livid if he tried to leave her out.
Not to mention the fact that as the duly appointed tribal representative and mayor of the closest town, she could shut him down if she really wanted to.
Poking his head into the flap of her tent, he found her typing furiously on her laptop. She was compiling field notes, he knew, for an anthropological report she hoped to write, and Slater had not yet found the heart to tell her that none of what was happening on St. Peter’s Island was likely to see the light of day, much less in some academic journal. The only official report that would ever be written would be his own, and if experience was any indication, it would be restricted to a very small cadre of AFIP scientists and directors to review.
“The digging is done?” she said expectantly.
“It should be by the time we get there and suit up.”
Twirling around on her camp stool, she grabbed a worn and faded leather jerkin that was lying on her cot and slipped it over her head. It had a long fringe that hung below her waist, and red and black stitches depicting bears and eagles and otters all over it.
“When I said suit up, I meant a hazmat suit.”
“That’s fine,” she said, winding her long black hair into a glossy ponytail and flipping it over the collar of the jerkin. “But as the tribal rep, I’ve got to wear the sacred garment.” Pulling on a parka over everything else, she added, “And I’ll need a minute to say some words over any grave you open.”
“But they’ll be Russian graves, not Inuit,” Slater said, and Nika just shrugged as she slipped past him and onto the rubber-matted pathway outside. Her boots squelched in the icy slush.
“It’s our land, our rules,” she said with a smile. “The home-field advantage.” Slater wasn’t sure what advantage it might confer, but he did know that from here on in the rules would be his own. At the colony gates, he and Nika hooked up with Lantos and the professor, and the four of them, bundled up in coats and hats and gloves against the chill ocean wind, trooped down the pathway toward the trees. Sergeant Groves and his crew had cleared a trail through the woods, but the brush had already begun to impinge again; snow-laden branches drooped down overhead and sharp twigs plucked at the puffy sleeves of his down-filled parka. It was a far cry from his usual postings, where the worst impediments were sunstroke and scorpion bites.
Even though it was technically early afternoon, the sun was so dim that the light stanchions, positioned every few yards along the pathway, were all switched on, providing an eerie glow. As Slater approached the cemetery gateposts, scrawled with their anonymous plea to “Forgive me,” he glanced over toward the promontory where he could see Groves and a Coast Guardsman, cloaked in their own hazmat suits, repositioning a jackhammer to loosen whatever frozen soil still remained at the parameters previously demarcated by Kozak. The strips of wet sod that had already been removed had been laid, according to Slater’s instructions, neatly to one side on top of a canvas ground cover. When the exhumation was finished, the grave was to be returned to a state as close to its previous condition as possible—and the canvas cover incinerated.
Meanwhile, the dressing tent had been set up just to the left of the entrance, and as Groves let loose with one more loud volley from the jackhammer, Slater guided his team into the chamber. The aluminum floor rumbled from the weight of their boots. A rack had been set up, and an assortment of white Tyvek hazmat coveralls and thermal jumpsuits were hanging from the hooks, with visored helmets on a shelf just above them and a row of white boot covers lined up below.
Although he knew that Lantos and Kozak would be familiar with the routine, he advised everyone to doff their overcoats, put on a jumpsuit over the rest, then zip themselves into one of the white coveralls.
As he expected, Kozak was already huffing and puffing to get himself into everything, and Lantos was helping Nika to get properly attired; the leather jerkin wasn’t making it any easier, especially as Slater pointed out that it had to go inside, rather than outside, the hazmat gear.
“Otherwise, it’ll have to be disposed of afterward,” he said.
“No way,” Nika said, struggling to get the zipper all the way up and over it. “This has been in my tribe for at least two hundred years.”
Once she was in, Lantos pulled on her own outfit, and Slater, similarly encased in his jumpsuit, made sure that the elastic bands at Nika’s wrist and ankles were tightly drawn. Then he helped her on with her white booties. Plucking at her sleeve, Nika said, “I think I prefer natural fabrics. What’s this made of, anyway?”
“High-density polyethylene,” Slater replied, “and it’s virtually indestructible. But it’ll protect you from any bloodborne pathogens, or dry particles as small as half a micron.”
“But aren’t we going to cook inside them?”
“Not as much as you would think,” Lantos interjected. “Even though they keep out water and other liquid molecules, they’ll still allow heat and sweat vapors to escape. Which isn’t to say,” she added, passing her the headgear that Nika studied skeptically, “you’re going to be comfortable out there.”
“Okay, helmets, too, now,” Slater said, and they all took one last breath of unimpeded air before putting on the visored hoods, the bottoms of which hung down onto their shoulders. With all four of them in the tent at once, and bundled up like sausages, it was getting hard to budge without bumping into each other. Lantos tucked a surgical kit under her arm, and with Slater holding the tent flaps, they exited with a certain amount of nervous laughter, looking like a bunch of beekeepers heading out to work in the apiary.
But the mood changed the moment they got outside and the first blast of wind rippled the jumpsuits. As they trudged through the cemetery in single file, with Kozak carefully leading the way along the path he had already marked with little flags and Slater bringing up the rear, the full import of what they were about to do was brought home. Sergeant Groves and the Coast Guardsman were waiting by the gravesite, standing next to a high-intensity lamp they had set up. Slater relieved them of their duty now that the exhumation work was about to begin. They’d been working for hours and deserved a break. Groves saluted by touching two fingers to the little plastic visor of his helmet, and, toting his jackhammer, headed back to the dressing shed.
The tombstone, adorned with two doors carved into its upper corners, had been laid to one side, incongruously enough next to a stretcher. And even though the name on the marker had long since been worn away, Slater could see that at its very bottom, where the frozen earth had afforded it some protection from the elements, something like a crescent had been carved.
“What’s that mean?” he said, pointing it out to the professor. “I’ve seen it on the posts to the cemetery
and on some of the other headstones.”
“Some people say it is the symbol of Islam, and it is always at the bottom to show the victory of Christ over the unbelievers.”
“It sounds like you don’t agree with them.”
“I don’t. I believe it is meant to be an anchor. In the Russian faith, that is the symbol of the hope for salvation. The hope that the church provides.” He scratched at the side of his helmet, as if it were his head. “The two doors, though, those are unusual.”
While salvation, Slater thought, might be uncertain, in this particular case, resurrection—at least in the corporeal sense—was painfully imminent. Looking into the open grave, he could see, beneath the thin scrim of dirt and gravel, the pale gleam of wood bleached white by its decades in the soil. He could even detect a couple of deep cracks in the lid of the coffin.
“Just as I predicted,” Kozak put in, “the frost heaval has done some damage to the casket.”
Lantos and Nika were standing on the other side of the grave, Lantos surveying the site with a professional eye, and Nika, her head tilted down, apparently reciting some native prayer or blessing. Although Slater wondered what she made of the grim spectacle on display, in deference to her work he nudged Kozak and they both kept silent for the next minute or two. All he could hear from under her helmet was a murmured chant, but he detected a slight rocking on her heels, as if she were moving to some ancient rhythm only she could discern. He became conscious of the bilikin that he was wearing under his shirt, and for some reason he wished that she knew he had it on.
When she had finished, Slater glanced over at Lantos, got a nod in return, then, like a diver going over the side, he slipped down into the grave itself. It would not have been easy under any circumstances, but the bulky clothing made him uncharacteristically clumsy. With an arm that wasn’t as steady as he would have liked—damn those drugs—he balanced himself on the rectangular coffin, then crouched to peek through the largest crack. His visor, though it was clean as a whistle, presented yet one more obstacle.
The Romanov Cross: A Novel Page 24