“The archive area was far underground. It might have survived intact.”
Duncan nodded. “All right. You go to Russia and see if you can get control of the talon from Lexina. Any other ideas on what the key is or where it might be if Yakov doesn’t succeed?”
“Obviously, the key would be an Airlia artifact,” Major Quinn said. “I’ll inquire throughout the intelligence community to see if anyone has found anything new regarding the Airlia or if someone has been holding artifacts in secret.”
“I’ll double-check the hard drives we recovered from Scorpion Base,” Kincaid said.
“Anyone else?”
“Maybe the guardian on Easter Island might have some information,” Quinn added.
Duncan nodded. “I’ve already thought of that. If the guardian is using Kelly Reynolds to send out information, maybe we can make a connection the other way. I’m going to Easter Island to see if I can contact Kelly. The Navy has a new plan to penetrate the shield around the island and find out what is going on. If they can get through, maybe I can make contact with her.”
The look on Turcotte’s face indicated what he thought of that plan of action. “The Navy already tried that once, and the Springfield is still sitting at the bottom of the ocean, trapped by foo fighters.”
“I think Easter Island is important,” Duncan said. “It’s the center for Aspasia’s faction here on the planet, just as Qian-Ling seems to the center for Artad’s faction. We can’t get close to Qian-Ling again due to the Chinese nuking it, but we can get close to Easter Island. As Yakov noted, maybe the enemy of our enemy can give us some information.
“Status of the Airlia base on Mars?” Duncan had already moved on to Kincaid.
“We’re watching it,” Kincaid said. “No visible activity. Communications between the Cydonia guardian and the one under Easter Island have continued on a pretty regular basis. The NSA still hasn’t been able to decipher the code.”
“Mike?” Duncan had made it around the table.
Turcotte shrugged. “I’m just the hired gun. Sitting around waiting for the next crisis. There’s nothing new with me.”
“Your Special Forces team just arrived.” Major Quinn was looking at the screen of his laptop, which was connected to the Cube operations center. “I’ll check them out,” Turcotte said.
Yakov stirred. “Until the next crisis arises, I would like Captain Turcotte to accompany me to Russia. I could use some—how do you say—backup? I do not think I will get much support from my government, given all that has happened.”
“Is that all right with you?” Duncan asked.
Turcotte nodded. “Sure.”
Duncan stood and leaned forward, putting her hands on the top of the conference table that the men of Majestic-12 had sat around for five decades. “Gentlemen, we’re it. The five of us. I told you the President is caught in a political quagmire. UNAOC is hamstrung by isolationist governments. The message from Easter Island with Kelly Reynolds’s byline will only make that worse. I’ll inform the President of the new threat from Lexina and The Ones Who Wait, but I honestly don’t think he can muster enough support to take decisive action before it’s too late. And after what happened to the shuttles, we always have to be worried that any support might well be compromised by the Watchers, The Mission, or STAAR.”
“In other words,” Yakov said, “we can trust no one outside of this room.”
Duncan nodded. “We keep what we know to ourselves. The President is trying to keep a lid on what happened to Atlantis, and I’m sure he’ll definitely want to keep the information about Stratzyda secret to prevent a panic.
“We have to find this key.” She pointed at Major Quinn. “How much time?”
“Forty-eight hours, twenty minutes until Stratzyda deployment.”
“Let’s get moving,” Duncan ordered.
As everyone headed for the door, Turcotte went to the end of the table, grabbed a chair, and sat down, watching as Duncan put her papers back in her briefcase.
“What?” Duncan finally asked, noting his stare.
“So how are you doing?” Turcotte asked. Duncan paused, hands on the top of the table. “You weren’t happy that I picked you to infiltrate Area 51, remember?”
Turcotte nodded.
“Well, I’m not thrilled that the President picked me to be his science adviser, then tossed me the hand grenade of dealing with Area 51, and now he’s backpedaling. Especially considering the ultimatum we just received.”
“He didn’t expect you to uncover what you did,” Turcotte noted. “It would have been better if we had just discovered the bodies of a couple of little green men at Area 51 instead of what we did. Do you think he will take action with this new information and the threat from Stratzyda?”
“He has to make a decision, Mike.” Duncan was exasperated. “Straddling the fence isn’t going to work. While the isolationists and the progressives argue, The Mission and The Ones Who Wait are moving forward with their plans. We’re caught in the middle, and the stakes are getting higher.”
“You sound like me a week ago,” Turcotte said. “What’s really wrong?”
“On the flight here I was wondering if we did the right thing.”
“It’s a little too late for that,” Turcotte said.
“I know that, but…” Duncan’s voice trailed off.
“The real problem is you’re tired,” Turcotte said. “When I was in Ranger school, part of the philosophy of the course was to make the students exhausted, to deny them food and sleep, then see how they made decisions, how they operated while under that stress. Sounds stupid, but given that they were preparing us for war, it actually made sense. I’ve seen people make tremendously stupid decisions when tired. You have to think everything through carefully.”
“You think going to Easter Island is a mistake?”
“No—more a waste of time—but I wasn’t talking about that. I was referring to the speech you made at the Lincoln Memorial. Don’t you think there were times that Lincoln doubted his course of action, even considered trying to make peace with the South to save the lives of his people?
“How do you think he felt when he received the casualty list from the Battle of Antietam, the bloodiest day in American history—September 17, 1862? Twenty-three thousand Americans killed or wounded in one day. Do you have any concept of the scope of that, especially given the weaponry of the time? That’s nine times the number of casualties we took on the Longest Day at Normandy during the Second World War.
“You think about things like the Gettysburg Address,” Turcotte continued, “while I think about the poor grunt on the ground. In the Bloody Lane at Antietam, a quarter-mile-long stretch of road, more men were killed or wounded in three hours than in all the years of the Revolutionary War. Blood ran like a stream in that lane. You think numbers like that didn’t make Lincoln sit down and ponder what the hell he was doing? If he’d made the right decisions, done the right things?”
Duncan nodded. “I’m sure he did. And he used that battle, which was a victory, although by the narrowest of margins, for the North, to be the impetus for issuing the Emancipation Proclamation, not to make peace with the South.”
Turcotte had hoped she would make that connection. “Which broadened the scope of the war to a moral issue and kept England and France from giving aid to the South, as they were contemplating. He used a terrible thing in a positive way.”
“And the Civil War lasted two long years after Antietam,” Duncan noted.
“Is the glass half full or half empty?” Turcotte asked. “Let’s try to be positive.”
Duncan finished putting her papers away. “So it was your turn to give the pep talk,” she said with a smile.
“Hey. I’m just one of the infantrymen,” Turcotte said. “I just want to make sure I’m on the same sheet of music as my boss.”
“‘Your boss,’” Duncan repeated, glancing at the door to make sure it was closed. She ran a hand through Turcotte’s close-
cropped hair. “Is that what I am?”
“Only during duty hours,” Turcotte said. “Off-duty we can flip for who wants to be boss.”
Duncan laughed, the lines of strain disappearing from her face for a moment. Turcotte wrapped her hand inside of his own. “Speaking of which—” He paused as her cell phone rang once more.
Duncan pulled it out of her pocket and flipped it open. “Duncan.”
She listened for a few seconds, then shut it, her face tight. “Duty calls,” she said to Turcotte. “The Secretary of Defense was just killed, apparently by a Guide.”
“Jesus,” Turcotte muttered. “Why?”
“The Mission killed the Secretary of Defense to keep the President from taking decisive action about Easter Island.”
“We’re getting it from both sides,” Turcotte said. “The Ones Who Wait and The Mission are trying to keep us from stopping them in their war.”
“I have to sit in on a conference call with the National Security Council, reference this new development and the Warfighter situation, and give them the good news about Stratzyda.”
“Always duty first.” Turcotte removed his hand from hers and stood.
She tucked her briefcase under her arm and was all business once more. “You better go check out those Special Forces guys before you head to Russia. Get Major Quinn to give them a SATPhone, disseminate the number among those who were in this room, and direct the team leader to respond to any requests for assistance he receives. Also have Quinn dedicate a bouncer to the team for their transportation.”
”Roger that,” Turcotte acknowledged. As she turned for the door, his voice stopped her. “Lisa—”
“Yes?”
“Be careful.”
“You too.”
Turcotte watched the door swing shut and took a moment to collect his thoughts, then exited the conference room. He took the elevator up to Hangar One. Of the nine bouncers, four were present. There was also a group of twelve soldiers in camouflage. Even from a hundred yards away, Turcotte knew they were Special Forces, even though they had black watch caps on instead of the traditional green beret. They gave off an air of confidence and competence that most Special Operations soldiers were cloaked in.
He walked up, and a man with the railroad tracks on his collar indicating he was a captain stepped forward. “Major Turcotte, I’m Billam. Colonel Mickell said I was to report to you and follow any orders you issued.”
Turcotte took the other man’s hand and shook it. Billam was a stocky man with thinning black hair. He looked old for a captain, somewhere in his late thirties. Turcotte assumed that meant he had been enlisted and gone through either ROTC or OCS to get his commission.
Billam quickly introduced his A-team.
“This is my executive officer, Chief Tabor; operations sergeant, Master Sergeant Boltz; weapons men, Sergeants Truskey and Dedie; commo, Sergeants Prevatil and Garza; medics, Sergeants Rooney and Askins; demolitions and other nefarious acts, Sergeants Metayer and Jones. Team 055 at your beck and call, sir.”
Turcotte picked up no trace of sarcasm in Billam’s voice, but he was sure they probably weren’t thrilled to death about getting such a vague assignment. He knew Mickall had probably picked a good team, but also a team selected somewhat randomly and secretly to prevent infiltration.
Turcotte relayed Duncan’s instructions and gave them directions to link up with Major Quinn and get their SATPhone and billeting information. He could see Yakov over by one of the bouncers, talking to the pilot, and he knew the Russian was anxious to go.
“Any special instructions,” Billam asked, “or just be ready for anything?”
Turcotte shrugged. “I wish I could be more specific, but you guys are basically our ‘if things go to crap’ option.” He could see the acknowledgment of that on the faces of the men. “If you get called by any of us, things are real bad, so be prepared to come in hot. Major Quinn will brief you on everything that’s happened so far. I’ll try to keep you updated so you can at least war-game some options for action, but we’re pretty much flying by the seat of our pants here.” Turcotte turned to head off toward Yakov when something occurred to him. “Captain, are any of your men trained on SADM?”
That brought Billam’s eyebrows arching up. “Sir, that mission has been phased out of Special Forces.”
“I know that,” Turcotte said, “but do you have anyone that was on a SADM team?” SADM stood for strategic atomic demolition mission—backpack nukes, which had been a Special Forces mission prior to the advent of cruise missiles, which could do as good a job placing a nuke deep behind enemy lines and with less cost in manpower. But Turcotte didn’t think they could count on getting a cruise missile strike when they needed it and where.
Billam nodded. “Sergeant Boltz served on a SADM team in 7th Group, and I served on one when I was enlisted in 10th Group. The rest of these guys are too young to have done that.”
Turcotte pointed toward the elevator. “When you meet Major Quinn, see if he can rustle you up a nuke or two.”
Billam blinked. “Are you authorized those weapons, sir?”
“We won’t know until you ask. Quinn got me some nukes when I needed them before,” Turcotte noted. “Like the Boy Scouts, I want to be prepared. Just in case.”
CHAPTER 8
Qian-Ling, China
D - 47 Hours, 25 Minutes
Qian-Ling was the largest tomb in the world, larger than even the stone pyramids of Egypt and the dirt mound pyramids in Central and South America. According to historians, the Emperor Gao-zong, Third Emperor of the Tang Dynasty, and his empress, the only empress ever to rule in China, were buried inside the massive man-made hill.
Qian-Ling was located west of Xian, the city that had been the first imperial capital in China and the eastern terminus of the Silk Road that had stretched in ancient times from western China across Central Asia to the Middle East and on to Rome. It was now on the border between the rebelling Muslim majority in the west of China and ruling powers to the east in Beijing.
Since the disclosure that Earth had been visited by aliens, the ethnic and religious unrest that had always simmered below the surface in China had reached a boiling point, and there were many parts of the country, particularly in the western half, that were in open rebellion. It was part of a growing pattern around the world where the upset of accepted history was leading to an upset of traditions and norms.
As an outgrowth of that unrest what had been one of China’s most revered monuments of antiquity had been seared by the thousand-degree heat from a low-altitude nuclear blast several days earlier. A CSS-5 cruise missile carrying a nuclear warhead had been fired from eighty miles away, traversed the distance in less than two minutes, and exploded two kilometers from its intended target.
The outside of the tomb was now desolate, many artifacts of antiquity destroyed. The stone statues of the sixty-one foreign ambassadors and rulers who had attended the funeral of Emperor Gao-zong that had lined the way to the tomb had been vaporized. The vegetation that had grown along the slopes of the three-thousand-foot-high man-made hill that was his grave had been burned away in a flash. The hill itself, though, was relatively undamaged, hidden behind a shimmering shield-wall of alien origin.
It was a sign of the desperation of the Chinese government that they’d not only detonated a nuclear weapon inside their own borders, but they’d aimed it at the grave of an emperor and empress. The Chinese revered their ancestors and thus their dead. Grave robbing was unknown and archaeological digging was considered practically the same thing: defiling the burial place of someone’s ancestors. A nuclear bomb definitely outranked both grave robbing and archaeological digs.
Qian-Ling, though, was now almost a shelter from the storm that waged around it. All around the mountain, the air shimmered from the strange alien shield that had been activated just prior to the nuclear weapon’s detonation. There was nothing alive on the surface of the earth within a ten-kilometer circle of the tomb, but unde
rneath, inside the protective mountain of earth and alien barrier, the bomb had had little effect.
Inside a large cavern filled with alien equipment, Professor Che Lu sat cross-legged on the floor, just outside the control room that led to the guardian computer. She was an old woman, her skin creased with age, but her mind was as sharp as it had ever been.
Che Lu had seen all of the history of modern China, often participating rather than just watching it go by. She had been one of the twenty-six women who had started the Long March with Mao sixty-four years before. Only six of those women had made it to the end alive. Only ten percent of the one hundred thousand men who had started the march had been alive when they arrived at Yanan in Shaanxi Province in December 1935 after walking over six thousand miles to escape Chiang Kai-shek’s forces.
She knew how significant it was that her government had tried to destroy Qian-Ling. It was more than just a blind fear of the aliens—it was also a desperate attempt by the leaders to keep the country in ignorance and remain in power.
Metal beams came up from the nearest wall and disappeared overhead, curving to follow the dome ceiling around to touch down on the far side. There were numerous large objects scattered about on the floor, the exact purpose of which was still unknown, except for one large cylinder that gave off a hum—that one had propagated the shield that had saved their lives. The black metal covering it had slid back at Elek’s command through the guardian. A drum had been revealed, about fifty meters long by ten in diameter. It was mounted on both ends in a cradle of black metal that attached at the center. The drum continued to rotate with streaks of color—red, orange, violet, purple—intermingled on its surface. The other, unopened containers, were in the form of black rectangles ranging from a few feet in size to one over a hundred meters long and sixty high.
Fifty feet away from where Che Lu sat there was a bright green light glowing out of the wall, brighter even than the one overhead. Inside was a control room, and beyond that, the chamber housing the golden pyramid that was the Qian-Ling guardian computer.
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