by Alten-Steve
“How soon?”
“Our SLBMs will hit Moscow and Beijing two minutes after the coalition missiles strike.”
“You mean, two minutes after every major city on the east and west coasts of the United States is wiped off the face of the map.” Maller leans forward, his upper body trembling. “All our preparation, all our treaties, all our technology … what the fuck happened? Where did we go wrong?”
“Mark, we didn’t push the button, they did.”
“Chaney was right, this is madness!” Maller stands, his ulcer on fire. “God dammit, Borgia, where the fuck is Grozny?”
General Joseph Fecondo joins them, his tanned complexion now a sickly olive. “The commanders-in-chiefs report all sorties are airborne. You’ll excuse me, Mr President. I’m going to remain in the command center. My oldest boy is stationed at Elmendorf. They’re … they said they’d bring him to the video-comm.”
A female staff member pushes past Fecondo and hands a telefax to the president. “Sir, the British and French have agreed not to launch any of their missiles.”
Dick Przystas’s eyes widen. “The French! Maybe they’re more ambitious than we think. They secretly develop pure fusion, detonate the devices in Russia and China, then take over what’s left of the world after the big three annihilate one another.”
Borgia looks up at Maller. “It’s possible.”
“Sons of bitches!” Maller kicks his desk.
Another aide enters. “Mr President, the vice president’s on VC-4. He says it’s urgent.”
Maller powers on the video monitor. “Speak quickly, Ennis.”
“Mr President, the three fusion detonations—we can prove they originated within the alien vessel.”
“Christ, Ennis, I don’t have time for this—”
The image of Captain Loos appears on the communicator. “Mr President, it’s true. We’re downloading footage taken earlier from one of our Predators.”
The picture changes, revealing an image of a swirling, emerald green vortex. All personnel within the command center stop and stare as the three dark objects rise out from the whirlpool’s funnel.
“Good God,” Maller whispers in amazement. “It’s true.”
Borgia shouts out from his communication’s station. “Sir, VC-8, 9, and 10. I’ve got Grozny and General Xiliang, and the UN Secretary-General!”
President Maller looks at his secretary of defense. “They’ll never believe it. Christ, I don’t believe it.”
“Then make them believe it. Two billion people are going to die in less than seventeen minutes, and you and those two bastards are the only people on earth who can stop it.”
Beneath the Kukulcán Pyramid, Chichén Itzá
Mick examines the sides of the massive granite tub, dark now, save for a single row of scarlet dots and dashes.
“What are they?” Dominique asks.
“Numbers. Mayan numbers, from zero to ten.”
“Maybe it’s a combination lock of some sort. Are there any numerical codes carved into the ruins?”
Mick’s eyes light up. “Better still, there’s a numerical code built into the design of the Great Pyramid, Angkor Wat, and the city of Teotihuacán. The precession code—4320.”
Mick touches the four-dotted symbol.
The Mayan number four changes from incandescent red to a deep electric blue.
In succession, he touches the Mayan numbers three and two, then the eye-shaped symbol equating to zero. Each icon changes to a radiant, luminescent blue.
And then the interior of the tub ignites in a brilliant azure blue glow, and an object appears, situated within the confines of the tub.
The light darkens, allowing them to peer inside the open container.
Dominique stifles a scream.
Staring back up at them, covered in a tattered white tunic, is an enormous humanoid, an old man possessing the facial features of a centenarian. The exposed flesh is ghostly white, the long white hair and beard as fine as silk. The head, perfectly preserved, is elongated, the body nearly seven feet long. The open eyes, transfixed in death, radiate an unworldly ocean-blue gaze.
Before their eyes, the humanoid begins disintegrating. The pale skin singes brown, then gray, then decays to a fine, powdery dust. Dehydrated vital organs collapse inward beneath a powerful skeletal frame. The exposed bones char black, then decompose, the entire skeleton vaporizing into a shadow of ash.
Mick stares at the ash-covered white cloth, all that remains within the granite tub.
“God—damn, that was freaky,” Dominique whispers. “Was that One Hunahpu?”
“No, I—I think that was Kukulcán, I mean Guardian.” Mick leans forward, examining the interior of the open granite box.
“His skull—it was huge.”
“Elongated.” Mick climbs inside the tub.
“Mick, are you crazy? What the hell do you think you’re doing?”
“It’s okay—”
“It’s not okay. What if that glow reappears?”
“I expect it to.”
“God dammit, Mick, don’t do this, you’re freaking me out—” She grabs his arm, trying to drag him from the tub.
“Dom, stop.” He removes her hand from his wrist, then kisses it. “I’ll be okay—”
“You don’t know that—”
“Dom, One Hunahpu’s dead. If Guardian left us some means of saving ourselves, then I have to find it.”
“Okay, so we’ll look around this ship. Radiating yourself within that coffin isn’t going to resolve anything.”
“It’s not radiation. I know it sounds bizarre, but I think it’s a portal.”
“A portal? A portal to what?”
“I don’t know, but I have to find out. I love you—”
“Mick, get the fuck out of there now!”
He lies back. As his head touches bottom, a neon-blue light ignites from within, enveloping him in energy. Before Dominique can protest, an unseen magnetic force field jolts her backwards, away from the tomb.
She lands hard on her back. Regaining her feet, she looks inside the granite tub, shielding her eyes from the blazing, warm glow.
Mick’s body has disappeared within the light.
Raven Rock Underground Command Center, Maryland 2:19 a.m.
President Maller and his senior military advisors, fists clenched, stare at the image of Viktor Grozny, the pale Russian president wearing a black sweater, a large Victorian cross dangling from his neck.
On the screen to the left is General Xiliang, the older man looking quite pale. The UN Secretary-General is on the right.
“General, President Grozny, please hear me out,” Maller pleads. “The United States is not responsible for these fusion detonations. None of our nations are! Let us prove it to you before we destroy half the world!”
“Show us,” the Secretary-General says.
Viktor Grozny remains impassive.
Maller turns to Pryzstas. “Do it. Download the image.”
The secretary of defense transmits the Boone’s video.
On the other side of the command center, General Joseph Fecondo struggles to maintain his composure as he prays with his son, Adam, and the two base commanders at Elmendorf and Eielson Air Force Bases in Alaska.
The TIME TO IMPACT: ALASKA clock superimposed on each video-comm ticks down to the final five seconds.
Adam Przystas and the two Air Force colonels salute their commanding officer.
General Fecondo returns the salute, tears streaming down his face as the images of his son and the two COs disappear in a flash of brilliant white light.
Maller watches the main screens as the Russian and Chinese leaders’ faces replace the video of the alien maelstrom.
“What nonsense is this?” General Xiliang shouts, his face contorted in anger.
President Maller wipes the sweat from his eyes. “Our scientists discovered the alien vessel in the Gulf of Mexico two months ago. We’ve downloaded the precise coordinates. Use you
r infrared spy satellites to verify. Please understand, we only learned minutes ago that it was these objects rising from the remains of this alien vessel that have been causing the fusion detonations.”
A flurry of Chinese. “You expect us to accept this Hollywood special effect?”
“General, use your satellites! Verify the existence of the vessel—”
Grozny shakes his head in disgust. “Of course we believe you, Mr President. This is why twenty-five hundred of your nuclear missiles are racing toward our cities while we speak.”
“Viktor, we didn’t know, I swear it! Listen to me—we still have eight minutes to stop this insanity—”
The UN leader is sweating profusely. “Gentlemen, you have less than ten minutes. Destroy your missiles—now!”
“Go ahead, Mr President,” Grozny rasps. “Demonstrate your sincerity to the Russian and Chinese people by destroying your own missiles first.”
“No!” Fecondo bounds across the room. “Don’t believe that murdering son of a bitch—”
Maller turns, his eyes blazing. “You’re relieved, General—”
“Don’t do it! Don’t you—”
“Get him out of here!”
A bewildered MP pulls the overwrought general from the room.
Maller turns back to the monitor, the screen indicating nine minutes, thirty-three seconds to impact. “Less than an hour ago, a thermonuclear device was detonated in one of our underground command centers. Three hundred people died, including my wife and”—Maller’s voice cracks— “and my sons. To end this madness, Grozny, the first move will be mine. I’m giving the orders to stand down our bombers, but we must deactivate our ICBMs together.”
Grozny shakes his head, smiling grimly. “Do you take us for fools? Your pure-fusion weapons have murdered two million of our people, yet you expect us to believe that it wasn’t you, that it was what—an alien?”
The UN leader stares at Maller. “The United States must make the first move toward peace.”
Maller turns to his secretary of defense. “Secretary Przystas, order all bombers to return to base. Instruct all submarines and missile command centers to begin autodestruct sequence ALPHA-OMEGA-THREE. Destroy all airborne ICBMs and SLBMs at five minutes to impact.”
The president turns back to Grozny and General Xiliang. “The United States has taken the first step to ending this madness. The next move must be yours. Stand down. Destroy your missiles now. Give your people a chance to live.”
The room is electric with tension. Two dozen people stand behind President Maller, staring helplessly at the images of the Russian and Chinese leaders, waiting for them to respond.
Grozny looks up, his piercing blue eyes in sharp contrast to his angelic features. “Give our people a chance to live? Each day, a thousand more Russians starve to death in their homes—”
The screen flashes: SEVEN MINUTES TO IMPACT.
“Abort the attack, and we’ll sit down and talk about solutions—”
“Solutions?” Grozny pushes closer to the camera. “What good are economic solutions, when your country continues to engage itself in policies of war?”
“The United States has been supporting the Russian Federation for two decades,” Borgia yells back. “The reason your people are starving has more to do with the corruption in your own government than any policy—”
The president swallows the bile rising in his throat. This is getting us nowhere. He signals to one of the MPs on duty. “Your sidearm, Sergeant. Give it to me.”
Maller pushes Borgia aside, standing alone before the video-comm, his face chalky white.
“President Grozny. General Xiliang, listen to me. In less than one minute, our ICBMs and SLBMs will self-destruct. That will give you less than two minutes to follow suit. If you do not, then my secretary of state will order an allout nuclear strike on your two countries with every last ICBM and SLBM in our arsenal. We will wipe your nations from the map as surely as you will ours. Gentlemen, for the world’s sake, I beg of you, let us regain our senses in this moment of insanity. Just as I mourn the death of my own family, so do I mourn your own losses, but as I stated earlier, the United States is not responsible for those fusion detonations. Show the world you have the courage to stop this madness. Give us a chance to reveal the real enemy.”
The president takes a deep breath.
“I know what I’ve told you is hard to believe. So that you’ll know that I have no ulterior motives, I offer you this.”
President Mark Richard Maller raises the .45-caliber weapon to his own temple and fires.
Beneath the Kukulcán Pyramid, Chichén Itzá
Michael Gabriel’s consciousness is rising …
Rising directly above the square roof of the Kukulcán pyramid, jumping higher as the lush green Yucatán jungle kisses the blue waters of the Gulf …
A smooth leap into the stratosphere and the entire peninsula comes into view. Another leap—and the Western Hemisphere drops below, the sphere of the Earth appearing in his mind’s window.
The utter silence of space …
Moving away faster now, Earth becoming a blue marble as the moon slingshots by. A quantum leap, and Earth disappears, replaced by the brightness of a yellow star, the entire solar system coming into view.
Time and space surging by at an unfathomable speed, Mick glimpsing the nine planets racing around the Sun in staggered orbits …
Another quantum leap, and the Sun becomes a pinprick of light, a single star among an ocean of stars.
Light-speed—the stars soaring by, dropping away faster and faster now, as luminescent clouds of interstellar gas and dust appear in his mind’s eye.
A final leap and he slows, his consciousness staring at a spiral vortex of swirling stars so magnificent that its breathtaking brilliance, its scale, its omnipotence is almost too overwhelming to behold.
Mick feels his soul trembling as he gazes upon the Milky Way in its entirety, his mind drowning at the realization of his utter insignificance.
God … so beautiful …
Billions of stars, trillions of worlds, all part of a living cosmic organism—a churning island among the vast ocean of space.
Mick soaring above the galactic bulge, rising higher, until he is staring down upon the black heart of the Milky Way, a swirling vortex of unfathomable gravity, its orifice driving the galaxy as it inhales interstellar gas and dust into its monstrous mouth.
And then—in a blink of his mind’s eye—the galaxy is transformed, reappearing in a perspective totally alien to his species, a fourth dimension of time and space.
The black hole becomes a radiant emerald funnel, its mouth dropping beneath the galaxy, constricting, until finally breaking away into an expanding cobweb of gravitational strings—a latticework of fourth-dimensional highways that spread out over the Milky Way like a slowly revolving net, never touching the other heavenly bodies— yet somehow touching them.
The information becomes too overwhelming for his brain to comprehend.
Mick blacks out.
When he reopens his eyes, he is gazing down upon one of the arms of the spiraling galaxy, a pattern—a constellation materializing as he moves nearer. Another leap forward and three stars appear—three stars set at a familiar alignment.
Al Nitak, Al Nilam, Mintaka … the three belt stars of Orion. Soaring ahead, he finds himself staring at a planet of behemoth proportions, its surface colored in a tapestry of deep greens and azure blues.
Xibalba. It is as if the thought is whispered into his consciousness.
A solitary moon orbits the alien world. As his consciousness passes over the lunar surface, he sees a transport ship rising from a small outpost, heading toward the planet’s surface.
His mind hitches a ride.
The vessel dips below dense layers of atmospheric clouds, revealing a molten ocean of pure energy. The silvery, mirrorlike surface reflects the planet’s magnificent cardinal red sky. Looming ahead on the southern horizon is a trip
le sunset, the blue-white binary star of Al Nitak the first to drop, its disappearance causing the seascape to meld into brilliant shades of lavender and magenta.
An exhilarating sensation washes over him as the transport ship races along the purple sea. Then he sees it—a mammoth continent of incredible beauty—soothing beaches surrounded by a lush tropical jungle, peppered with magnificent waterfalls, mountains, streams …
Moving closer, he sees a megalithic crystalline habitat of dazzling beauty. Sparkling alabaster pyramid-shaped structures dot the landscape, interconnected by winding walkways that weave through a futuristic, alien skyline. Below, lush, tropical gardens that would put Eden to shame grow amidst twisting rivers and cascading waterfalls of molten silver energy.
There are no moving vehicles, no traffic, yet the city is teeming with life. Tens of thousands of people—Homo sapiens, but for their elongated skulls, move about the hive of alien humanity with an overriding sense of purpose and joy.
For a wondrous moment, Mick’s consciousness is bathed in love.
And then something monstrous happens.
As the distant fireball of Mintaka sets, the placid ocean begins churning. Ominous olive and blood-red clouds race across the darkening sky as the swirling vortex below builds to unfathomable proportions.
Mick watches as a lead-gray ooze seeps out of the center of the maelstrom, the contaminated elixir inundating the pristine coastline, the tide rising higher, higher, until it infiltrates the city of the Nephilim.
His consciousness registers a demonic presence.
Darkness descends upon the city, spreading like the shadow of a great serpent upon the Edenlike world. Terrified humanoids drop to the ground, clutching their throats, their eyes transforming into vacant, pupilless pools of black.
The images overwhelm him. Once more, his consciousness blacks out.
Mick reopens his eyes.
What was once a civilization of magnificent beauty has now been transformed into a monstrous alien shipyard. Nephilim zombies, their faces ashen and expressionless, their eyes, vacant black holes, hover motionless in midair as their enslaved minds manipulate titanic iridium plates with invisible hands onto the skeletal framework of an ungodly seven-mile-diameter spherical hull. At the core of the vessel is a central pod—a one-mile-diameter nerve center equipped with twenty-three tubular limbs.