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Bloodshift Page 25

by Garfield Reeves-Stevens


  “Is there a cure?”

  “It’s not a disease. It’s a biological incident that we have never faced before. That’s one of the things that enabled us to obscure the issue. Research facilities that didn’t know the truth just weren’t looking in the right directions. There were enough environmental pollutants floating around causing cellular damage similar to cancer to keep doctors and scientists busy looking for a cure when they should have realised they were just dealing with incidents of poisoning. None of the studies with human subjects is worth anything because by now, everyone in the world has contracted the virus and it’s incubating. Or like me, it’s already started to transmit its message. But you’ve got it, Granger. All my agents have it. Everyone has it. The primary incubation period is coming to an end. The first wave will be on us within a year. Two at the most.”

  “But they’re always saying the statistics show that the incidence of cancer is decreasing.”

  Weston raised his voice in anger. “For God’s sake, man. Where do you think those statistics come from? Who do you think draws them up? I do. They all come out of the same government systems that told you we’d have peace with honour, and a balanced budget, and an end to inflation. I’ve never been able to figure out why so many people would believe those statistics when everyone knows someone with cancer. I figure the only way Nevada has managed to last so long is because the people want to believe. They don’t dare consider the alternative.”

  “But surely other countries, other scientists…”

  “The countries we trust are in on it with us. Others, like France and Canada, stay in the dark. If one of their scientists appears to have stumbled upon anything, we offer them well-paying positions at a facility where they can work on anything but cancer research. Or they have an accident.”

  “You kill people for this?”

  “I faced that problem long ago, Granger. Believe me, better one or two people leave this earth a bit earlier than the others than have our entire economic and social structure collapse within a few days. Just think what we’d be like if the public knew. Business would collapse. Could you sit in an office next to people who might be breathing cancer viruses all over you? Even if you knew you had already got it, you would still hope there’d be a chance that you were the exception. Could you shop? Stay in the army? Do anything that required you to go outside your home? Farms would turn into armed camps within the two months it would take for the food supply chain to break down. There’d be anarchy. Civil conflicts. You’d risk that for the sake of one stubborn scientist?”

  “Is there an answer, then? Has it been worth it?”

  “There’s only one place left to look, Granger. The yber.”

  “Do they know what’s going on?”

  “We’re fairly certain that the Conclave know. St. Clair doesn’t.”

  “Well, they’d have to co-operate. They feed on human blood. What’s going to happen to them when there are no more people left?”

  “They aren’t rational, Granger. As far as we know they could believe that Satan is going to set up restaurants for them to celebrate his victory over God on earth. We’ve tried dealing with them before. We’ve captured two of them in the past ten years. The first one died in a botched experiment when we tried to determine their sensitivity to sunlight. The second one escaped and tore up a town in Texas. A reporter caught on to the story. He wouldn’t be bought off. His car exploded.”

  “Why did you have to capture them? Why couldn’t you negotiate with them?”

  “Adrienne St. Clair is the first yber we’ve ever heard of who doesn’t appear to be a devil-worshiper like the rest of them. All the yber we’ve had contact with are certifiably insane. What good would a vaccine prepared from their blood do us if, among the other changes it caused, it disrupted the normal function of the brain?”

  “You think a vaccine against cancer is possible?”

  Weston took a deep breath. He felt he was close to winning Helman over again. It had to happen soon if it was going to be of any value. The direction of the sun through the curtains was shifting. It was past noon. Less than half the day remained.

  “The yber are not subject to the m-virus. The m-virus that operates in cats is communicable only through contact with bodily fluids: blood, saliva, excrement. The m-virus operating in humans is transmittable through air. That’s what makes it so all-pervasive. But after the m-virus is properly accepted within the host body, some sort of biochemical shift takes place in the blood. It becomes incapable of accepting another m-virus through the lungs. But it can be passed on through the blood. That’s why they have to almost drain the blood from their victims before making them drink yber blood. With so little blood left in the body, the m-viruses concentrated in the yber blood can’t help but locate themselves in the proper receptor areas along the trachea and intestinal tract.”

  “I’m confused here,” Helman said. He seemed to have totally forgotten that not more than an hour ago he was ready to kill Weston. A new challenge had, at least temporarily, taken hold. “You want to get Adrienne’s help to use her blood to infect everyone in the world? If they’re all vampires, they’ll never get cancer?”

  “No, Granger, you’re oversimplifying. The yber mutation is very complex. It governs changes to the organs, brain, muscles, skin, digestive system, metabolism, almost every aspect of the human body. In most instances it improves them. Makes them more efficient. More resistant to disease and injury. In fact, since all our studies indicate that the yber are sterile and since evolution seems to be directed at only one thing, the survival of the genetic material, it would appear that a new evolutionary experiment is being tried. Instead of creating creatures that can pass the genetic material on from one generation to another for eternity, it looks as though a body has been created that, by itself, can carry the material throughout eternity. With the yber, immortality has been evolved. What we want to isolate in Adrienne’s blood is the particular bits of DNA that govern the biological bloodshift that prevents the acceptance of the cancer-causing m-virus.

  Through gene-splicing, we can replicate that one section over and over, creating a vaccine to grant immunity to cancer. After that, we’ll have time to isolate the other beneficial conditions. We won’t all have to be vampires. But we should be able to share some of their abilities.”

  “Has anyone ever bothered to tell Adrienne any of this?”

  “You don’t really believe it. Why should she? Chris Leung was going to arrange it so she would arrive at some of the conclusions herself. It would have been a lot easier if she had come halfway to us by herself. But now time has run out. We’ll have to risk taking her by force.”

  Helman sat in silence for long moments.

  “That won’t be necessary. I’ll be able to bring her in. She’ll believe me.”

  “You’re sure?” Weston dared not look too expectant. If Helman had the least suspicion that he had been manipulated into his decision, he would, by nature, refuse to take part in anything to aid the Nevada Project,

  “Will you guarantee protection for us?”

  “Everything the government can provide.”

  “Will you give me all the assistance I need to hunt down Diego?”

  “It will be next to impossible, Granger. I know from experience. But yes, anything we can provide to help you, you can have.”

  “It had better not be impossible, Major. One of you killed my sister and her children. If I can’t get Diego, I’ll get you.”

  “Understood. Now help me untie those two and get things in here back to normal. We’ve got a lot of preparation to do before we get Adrienne out of the Father’s estate, and I’ll have a lot of explaining to do about what’s happened in here, and why we can trust you. If we can trust you.”

  Helman nodded once. “For tonight, Major Weston. And depending on how it goes, we’ll talk about it again.”

  In Washington the last of the Nevada files were going through the shredder. Except for four plain manila env
elopes sitting in a lawyer’s office in London and a group of men and equipment waiting in Santa Barbara for the sun to set, nothing more remained of the project which had moulded the world’s perceptions for so long.

  And whether anything at all would be left by sunrise tomorrow was something that none of them dared contemplate.

  The final move was ready to be played and, for whatever it was worth, Helman was going into the endgame without knowing that he was still a pawn.

  Chapter Eleven

  THE AIR FORCE had never noticed the alterations which had been made to the hangar at the abandoned airfield. It had been constructed during the Vietnam conflict to handle the overflow traffic from Vandenberg. With the cessation of hostilities, it had become surplus. Occasionally, it was rented out to a movie crew to be transformed into a Hollywood version of an airfield of any world war, or of any country. But on that day, no one was on the field, and no one was within the totally light-tight main hangar. Except for the vampires.

  Twitchett Field, January 20

  They were the emissaries of the Western Meeting of the yber, assembled under Lord Diego. They were not like the business investors and financiers of the Eastern Meeting. They were feral and savage. Many had formed their bonding groups in Russia during the time of the pogroms. To the insane authorities of that time, one more dead Jew attracted no attention, even if the blood were completely drained and the throat horribly savaged. To the yber of the Western Meeting, humans were more than food, they were sport. And regrettably, in the modern world, the times for play were few.

  Diego stood before the twenty-two of them. He was dressed as they were: form-fitting black jumpsuits that would not impede their preternatural reflexes. The suits included a black hood that held a cloth mouthpiece to hide the fangs of the yber who wore it. The Western Meeting had felt a thrill of bloodlust when Diego had told them it would not be necessary to wear the masks. Those that the yber faced that night must know who it was who would destroy them.

  The yber sat and crouched like impatient animals on the crates that lined a wall of the hangar. Foam insulation had long ago been blown into every crack and wall separation that light threatened to sear through. Impatiently they waited for sunset and the massacre which would follow.

  “We shall arrive forty minutes after the night begins,” Diego said to them. “By that time the gates and the main entrances will have been breached by the Jesuits. The familiars of the Father are insipid and weak. His emissaries have renounced violence. They will offer no resistance. Those that survive the arrows of the Jesuits are yours to do with as you please.”

  The yber responded with unnatural snarls of anticipation.

  “The Jesuits are to be reduced to manageable numbers. After the Father has been given the Final Death, preferably by the Jesuits, the Jesuits may be entirely taken. Also, not one of the yber associated with the Father must be allowed to continue. If one escapes to take word back to the Conclave, we are all doomed to see the sunrise.”

  In the darkness of the hangar, the breathing of the yber was like that of a cave full of unimaginable creatures.

  “The woman is to be left to me. As is her human. He must be allowed to live long enough to see our surprise for him. So he knows what happens to those who dare betray us.

  The yber snorted approval. The surprise for Helman slept in the back of one of the three vans parked at the main door of the hangar. They had undergone Communion much too recently to resist the powerful urge to rest when the sun blazed.

  But when the sun set they would awaken from their dreamless sleep and once again be excited by Diego’s promise that they could finally see their uncle.

  Impatiently, saliva dripping from their expectant fangs, the yber of the Western Meeting waited.

  Chapter Twelve

  ALL EXCEPT THE scholastic who drove the U-Haul Adventure in Moving truck along the twisting road bowed their heads in prayer. It was a Holy War they were going to fight and Clement had instructed them to wear the symbols of their order. Unlike some of the more covert operations the older of the Jesuits had taken part in, this time their crossbows were not hidden.

  Nacimiento, January 20

  Clement sat among the scholastics and novitiates in the back of the closed truck. His soldiers of the Church would be well protected by their crucifixes and vials of Holy Water. The stakes and hammers that most carried in the cases at their sides would be weapons enough if they were able to arrive before the sun set. But Clement was still shaken by the way Diego had been unaffected by the Holy artifacts. For Diego, Clement carried something more secular, and far more powerful against one who did not believe in the power of the Lord. He carried a hand grenade a lay brother had obtained for him. Clement would offer himself up to Diego. And when the unholy fangs sank within Clement’s neck he would remove the pin, sending each of them to his fate. Clement, with the twisted logic that had always allowed desperate men to justify any means to an end, devoutly believed that both he and the Lord of the conclave would have different fêtes awaiting them.

  The truck slowed. The driver pounded his fist three times on the back of the cab. It was the signal. The estate was one bend in the road away.

  The back doors swung open and the Jesuits filed out like trained soldiers. Two of them carried the equipment which would blow open the gates to the estate. Before them went the marksmen who would eliminate the familiars who served as guards.

  The setting sun cast long shadows across the hills.

  The Jesuits swept silently through the brush, approaching the gates of the estate. The marksmen prayed to Cod to guide them in their murder of the familiars.

  But the familiars were not at the gates.

  And the gates were open.

  The Jesuits poured through the gates like a black tide.

  All was as the Father had dreamt.

  Chapter Thirteen

  HELMAN SEARCHED THE skies for the Nevada team, There was nothing but a few red-tinted clouds scattered through a purpling sky. The sun almost touched the ocean. He forced the screaming car faster.

  Near the final turn to the estate gates, a large rental moving truck blocked the road. He took the car off the road in a squealing attempt to miss the truck and it became bogged down in the soft grass.

  Helman jumped out of the car and ran the rest of the way. The gates were open. The courtyard was clear. But smoke billowed from the northern wing of the main building. Black figures scurried across, the shattered windows on the ground floors.

  The Jesuits had beaten him.

  Helman dodged over to the shelter of some ornamental trees. The courtyard was filled with brilliant red light from the sun which was now half hidden at the horizon. Adrienne was inside that building. Just now awakening. Helpless before the weapons of the priests.

  He charged toward the main entrance. The weapons harness he wore bounced jerkily against him, throwing him off balance. They were the weapons of the Nevada team, specially designed to be used against the creatures who could not die. The most awkward was the gyrojet, a handgun that served as a handheld rocket launcher for miniature, solid fuel rockets. They were far more devastating than any exploding bullet could be. They would detonate on impact even with the soft yielding flesh of the yber.

  Helman drew the smooth metal-clad weapon and held it at the ready as he ran. It was just a matter of time before the Jesuits spotted him.

  Then one was at the double doorway. Immediately he raised and fired his crossbow. Helman couldn’t twist in time. The bolt struck him squarely in the chest and spun off the impenetrable Kevlar armour he wore beneath the harness. It scraped by his unprotected face as it ricocheted, tearing at the flesh and leaving a trail of blood in its wake.

  Helman fired the gyrojet. There was a flash of the projectile’s exhaust venting through the side baffles of the launching tube. Almost simultaneously there was an explosion at the marble staircase in front of the doors where the Jesuit stood. Helman had expected a recoil from the rocket gun but i
t had launched clean and aim had been low. The Jesuit had been sprayed with hundreds of marble shards. He clawed at his blinded eyes and fell writhing to the pitted staircase.

  There were no others behind him. Helman ran and scooped the body to the side of the entrance way. The Jesuit screamed. Helman lashed out with the solid butt of the gyrojet. The Jesuit stopped. Adrienne was inside. Nothing was going to stop him from getting to her.

  He ripped at the Jesuit’s black cloak and pulled it over his own head. The disguise might buy him a few moments of surprise.

  The sun set. The red afterglow in the low-lying clouds near the horizon made the courtyard look as if it were being consumed by an enormous fire.

  Helman prepared to enter the building. The air vibrated strangely. He looked up. Three helicopters grew in the crimson sky. The Nevada team had arrived. But Helman could no more wait for them now than he could wait for them that afternoon after Weston had equipped him. He would have to go in alone.

  Screams filled the house of the Father. Helman nearly tripped over the bodies of two familiars, white kaftans stained red by the multiple arrows that pierced them.

  Both their heads had been savagely hacked at. Both were attached by only a thin flap of flesh. The Jesuits fought the battle of Armageddon. The demons of Hell could be shown no mercy.

  Most of the screams echoed up from a grand stairway at the side of the four-story entrance hall. Helman ran for it. Underground would be the best protected from the light of day.

 

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