Carpathian: Event Book 08

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Carpathian: Event Book 08 Page 39

by David L. Golemon


  Carl watched as Marko held his ground as Stanus took a menacing step toward the Gypsy. The arms were outstretched and the long claws were working to get at something. Everett could see Marko’s dark eyes looking at the moving claws. Then the confrontation seemed to end as Stanus stood straight and then the long, powerful arms relaxed as it took two tentative steps back into the shadows of the barn. It took two more. The yellow eyes going from Marko to Everett and then back again until the only thing they could discern in the darkness of the barn were the yellow eyes and then in a flash of black-on-black movement, Stanus vanished up and into the rafters and then they heard the weight of the beast as it crunched onto the wood of the old roof as it scrambled onto the mountain to vanish.

  “Maybe a leash law would help,” Carl joked as he slowly picked himself up off the ground. He rubbed his neck and throat trying to ease the pain of having his larynx crushed.

  Marko looked from Everett to a very scared Charlie, who moved quickly to assist the captain. The dark eyes roamed over both men.

  “A leash, that’s very humorous. I think I would like to be the one to watch as you put that leash on Stanus, or any Golia you come across.” Marko turned and gestured for the front door.

  “My sister insists that you be allowed to join your friends who have arrived from down below.” He turned and looked at Everett. “The man and woman I invited are not among them. I suspect your dark-haired friend scares the Russian at the resort.”

  “And you know this because…?” Carl said as he went to a pail of water and splashed some of the stagnant liquid on his face.

  “Because I am a Gypsy, and I know your friends mean Dmitri Zallas harm. For right now I cannot allow that. In later months, yes, maybe you can take him, but for now he is needed. So after tonight, collect your friends and leave this mountain. You do not belong here.”

  “You’re not a very friendly fella, are you?” Carl said as he stepped up closer to the much smaller Gypsy. He swiped at the water still on his face.

  “After tonight my word will be law. My plans for the betterment of my people will begin as soon as the power is mine to direct our new course.”

  “And your sister, just what is her opinion on this new course for the Jeddah?”

  Carl could see that knowing the information on the Jeddah was a little unnerving to the Gypsy prince. He could tell that he wasn’t used to an outsider that had so much accurate information on a legend that had been hidden successfully for thirty-five hundred years.

  Marko made a face and smiled as if the question had been asked by a small child.

  “My sister, what does that have to with my plans? She is an outsider now, maybe not trusted by her own people any longer. She is the younger and could never be crowned queen as long as I am alive.”

  “Then all of these people are here to see you get your deserved reward?” Everett persisted as he noticed that Marko was losing a little of his cool demeanor when the subject of his sister came up.

  “You may join your friends, but make no move to go into the pass. I think we can drop that ridiculous pretense.” Marko looked into the taller captain’s eyes. “NATO, it never ceased to amaze me how easily the Russian sold the Romanian government a bill of goods by getting NATO to cooperate in getting the land grant settled. And you’re supposed to be the light of the shining world? I think I would rather do business with the Slav.” Marko turned and left and they noticed the barn door was open.

  “What a great guy,” Charlie said and then looked at the spot from where Stanus had vanished. Dirt was still falling from the damaged areas of the roof where the beast had walked. “It’s like that wolf and that young man have the same temper problem.”

  “Yeah, well, here’s one for the books Doc,” Everett said as he finally faced Ellenshaw. “When that wolf had me by the short and curlies I had the distinct impression it was trying to see if I was a part of something it didn’t like very well, and as these thoughts struck I kept picturing the man who just left here.”

  “So what are you saying?” Charlie asked as they started walking toward the barn door.

  “What I’m saying, Doc, is that I don’t know if Stanus is very trusting of his friend Marko. It was smelling me and trying to decide which side of the line I would fall on.” He smiled and laughed. “Hell, I don’t know, but that wolf and Marko are connected somehow and it’s not in a very friendly way. Marko has lost something with that animal and Stanus feels lost. That’s what I felt, Doc, now call me crazy.”

  “How can I do that, the name’s already been taken.”

  Both Carl and crazy Charlie Ellenshaw laughed and made their way out of the barn and into one of the largest celebrations in Jeddah history.

  PALMACHIM AIR FORCE BASE, TEL AVIV, ISRAEL

  The three Mercedes cars sped onto the old tarmac and vanished beyond the old hangar. Moments later the side doors opened and several black-clad security personnel entered the darkened structure. They saw the gray and white camouflaged men of the commando unit and studied each before they stepped aside. All eyes watched as the prime minister stepped over the threshold of the sliding door. He had his hands behind his back and his head was lowered in thought, just as every picture of the man ever taken seemed to show. He was dressed in a simple blue sweater that covered a white shirt. He had no tie and his gray hair was not covered in his customary black hat. The prime minister finally looked up from his thoughts. The eyes were sympathetic to the man as each soldier knew what a daunting task it had become to be the leader of a nation that had enemies on all sides. The commandos knew and respected the man even though he seemed to be far left of the political center—something the military of Israel had started to embrace.

  The prime minister of the state of Israel moved silently toward the communications area of the hangar as each commando watched him. He looked up and nodded his head as the door was opened for him.

  General Shamni moved in his sleep and then he opened his eyes when he felt the presence in the room. He looked over from the cot he was sleeping on and saw that the prime minister was sitting in a chair not three feet away. His glasses were perched on his forehead and he was leaning forward and smiling.

  “May I ask what is so humorous?” the general asked as he slowly placed his feet on the floor and sat up. He rubbed his burning eyes and then tried his best to focus on his old friend.

  “You sleep like a big child, do you know that?”

  “Anyone below the age of eighty is a child to you,” Shamni said as he tried again to focus. “Why are you here?”

  “I wanted to tell you myself.”

  “Oh, this is going to be good. If something were bad enough to take you away from your books to come all the way down here we must be at war or damn near it.”

  The PM reached out and slapped the general on his knee. “It is good to see you can still be funny.” He lost his own smile. “Not war, but trouble is brewing in Romania.”

  “You mean more trouble, don’t you?”

  “Yes, more trouble. Our radical friends in the Knesset have been in contact with your Colonel Ben-Nevin. As far as your people know and mine, the bastard separatists have directed Ben-Nevin to make inroads to the owner of that cursed resort. This is a development that needs to be attended to.”

  The general rubbed his hand over his face and then stood and walked over to the coffeepot. He slapped the radio operator on the shoulder and told him to excuse the PM and himself. The old man watched the commando leave and then watched as the general leaned over and turned up the volume on the long-range radio set that was being monitored.

  “Going deaf, I’m afraid,” Shamni said as he smiled in embarrassment and then went and poured himself a cup of cold coffee.

  “No word at all,” the PM asked as he turned in his chair to face Shamni.

  “No, but that is expected. We won’t be contacted until the very end, when need outweighs common sense.”

  “I am detecting quite a bit of animosity coming from you,
old friend.”

  “This should have been taken care of long before you and I took the seats we currently hold.” The general looked down at the cold coffee and made a face and then placed the cup on the desk he was sitting on. He looked at the silent radio and shook his head. He stood and walked to the window that looked into the hangar and the clean-looking lines of the Hercules C-130 as it sat waiting in alert status. “I don’t think the lives of one of those boys out there are worth one thing buried inside that damn mountain.”

  “I agree, old friend, but send them into harm’s way is just what we will do. We cannot allow this discovery to give our radical friends the ammunition for separation from our neighbors, this has to end. If they get ahold of what’s there we will be fighting for a thousand more years, or until someone delivers a little atomic package on our doorstep.”

  The general saw the worry in his friend’s face. The problems of the old world intruded on what they were trying to achieve in the region and they couldn’t have that. The beliefs of the tribes had mellowed over the years and now the extremists wanted the world to think that, indeed, they were the true chosen people. The PM and the general both knew that the old prejudices would begin anew if that mountain spilled out its secrets.

  “If we don’t receive word by midnight tomorrow, we move with or without a signal from Patinas.”

  The general nodded his head. “Will this never end?”

  14

  THE EDGE OF THE WORLD HOTEL AND RESORT CASINO

  Sarah watched as the huge helicopter that had seen far better days as it touched down roughly on the lawn outside of the large pool area. Her eyes lingered a moment by the window and then she smiled as she recognized the brash—and broke—Las Vegas entertainer Drake Andrews as he stepped off the helicopter. It looked as if he were very irritated at everyone around him. She shook her head and then turned away from the window.

  Sarah walked to the room’s dressing table and studied the experiment she had running. The tall glass of water sat motionless. Floating in the center of the glass was a golden aluminum candy wrapper shaped like a small cup. Attached to the floating foil was a small wire that Sarah had connected to her cell phone, which was open and broken into three distinct pieces on the table next to the glass. Next to the phone was what remained of the thermostat that controlled the temperature inside their room. The small vial of mercury sat in the bubble of the floating foil where Sarah had attached the leads from the cell phone. She concentrated on the digital readout on the screen. The application was for a musical tone graph used in many areas of downloading music for variance control and noise level.

  “Well, Mr. Wizard?” Jack asked as he stepped out of the bathroom drying his hands on a towel.

  Sarah held up her hand as she studied the makeshift seismograph she had constructed in place of her more expensive equipment accidentally absconded by the Romanian army. She shook her head as the numbers slowed down from their previous high.

  “The movement has increased by point one since four o’clock.”

  “I take it that’s bad?” he said as he tossed the towel onto a chair in the far corner. Jack then started putting on a button-down shirt as he stepped up to Sarah and watched her write down her current set of numbers.

  “No, bad is the fact that I just saw Drake Edwards arrive and that means he’s the entertainment tomorrow night.” She looked up and smiled—Jack didn’t. “Okay, the readings are bad, but with no previous record to compare it to I have no way of knowing just how bad. But we have earth movement here and it’s due to the natural hot springs. We may not have a severe volcanic situation happening here but we do have a pressure buildup of some kind. I just wish I had the seismic history of the pass before I make any conclusions. I need Europa.”

  “Well, you don’t have Europa or any more history than you already have, so I need a best guess from our resident geologist and I need it now. We have people up on that mountain and very little time to warn them if you think there’s trouble up there.”

  Sarah bit her lower lip and turned her back on Jack. He shook his head and then reached out and zipped up the back of Sarah’s evening dress. They had received an invitation for dinner from the general manager as a thank-you for Ryan and Pete’s assistance the night before. They were to be joined by Dmitri Zallas’s partner, Janos Vajic. Jack figured they could try and get as much information as he could before he declared Zallas too hostile for him and Sarah to remain at the resort. Once her dress was zipped she turned and wrote down her final set of numbers.

  “I just don’t know where this is headed, Jack. It could be just tremors we’re facing or it could be a disaster the size of Mount St. Helens. I really need to get into the Romanian Interior Ministry.”

  “Believe me, we would like to get inside and find out how much cooperation Zallas really received from their interior minister. We give it tonight and then I figure it’s time we left the resort and find our people. I don’t think Zallas would try anything out in the open even with such a seedy guest list. But that doesn’t mean he won’t either. More than likely he would wait until after his nightclub opening tomorrow night, so if you don’t mind, short stuff, I would prefer not to be here for those festivities.”

  Sarah slipped into a light satin shawl and then looked up at Jack, who was just sliding into a casual navy blue sport coat. His eyes found Sarah and he had to smile as he took her in. If this mission had taught Collins one thing it was the immutable fact that he loved the small woman standing in front of him like he had never loved anything in his life.

  “Well, rock hound, would you like to go and show ourselves to the seedier side of the underworld and try to blend in? Let’s do what we came to do to and see if we can make a provenance claim on any antiquities there may be on the property. That would make our job of proving theft a lot simpler when we give the proof to Interpol. We may as well act like crooks after dinner and break into the big man’s office.”

  Sarah laughed as she placed her arm around Collins.

  “The strange thing is you seem to slide right into the category of crook rather seamlessly.”

  “Yeah, I’m a regular Scarface.”

  “More than you think, Colonel Darling.”

  They were about to step out the door when Sarah froze and then her head perked up as she suddenly turned and ran for her notes on the table by the window. In her haste she bumped it and spilled the water that was still attached to her useless cell phone.

  “Hey, what’s wrong?” Jack asked as he took a quick look into the hallway and then eased the door closed.

  “Jack, I’ve been looking at this thing from the wrong angle. The figure I’m seeing on earth movement is a constant and that is an impossibility. The power of an eruption or any sort of seismic event has to build up over a period of time. That’s why we get tremors and then suddenly the big one. But this, Jack,” she said as she reached for her notes and started jotting down a new formula, “this is too damn steady. It’s more like I’m calculating for a mud slide or something similar. It’s earth movement all right, but on a smaller scale. This is too localized, if it wasn’t close by we would have picked up on it all over the world from monitoring stations.”

  “You have totally lost me.”

  “Jack, this is like it’s man-made. It’s a constant and there are no constants in seismology.” Sarah ripped her notes free of the pad and then scanned them. “You’re right, Jack, we have to get into the office of Dmitri Zallas and while you look for your artifact thief I’ve got to get into the geology report on this resort.” Sarah stepped to the window and pulled back the multicolored drapes and looked up at the swirling blue and purple colors of Castle Dracula. “If the foundation of this building is shaking like this I need to know what’s happening up there. How in the hell was that thing built? Look, Jack, it clings to the side of the mountain like it’s glued on. I need to know how they set their anchor studs.”

  “What are you saying? That the instability we’re feeling
could be brought on by a shoddy geology workup?”

  “The movement is less the further south we go on the property. It only stands to reason that the problem is north of our current location, and the only thing that has changed on this mountain in a few thousand years is—”

  “The castle.”

  “Right. We need to know if the construction up there has caused any environmental damage to the mountain it’s anchored to.”

  “Sometimes you professors scare me. All you needed was a broken cell phone, a glass of water, and a few sheets of paper and you come up with this?” Jack said as he turned for the door.

  “Yeah, now all I have to do is calculate how we find Carl and Charlie and warn everyone else about not to climb the mountain because it just may come tumbling down.”

  Collins was silent as they stepped out into the hallway.

  “What are you thinking?” Sarah asked as she linked her arm through Jack’s.

  “I’m thinking we may have to get out of here in one hell of a hurry if this thing goes south on us. And that will entail finding Captain Everett, Alice, Niles, and the others, and we need Pete and Ryan for that.”

  “Yeah, and just where in the hell are they?” Sarah asked as she nodded at a portly gentleman with a nineteen-year-old on his arm.

  “Knowing Ryan’s work habits he’s probably lying by the pool.”

  THE EDGE OF THE WORLD HOTEL AND RESORT CASINO, PATINAS, ROMANIA

  It seemed to Pete Golding that he had picked up every species of burr and sticker known to nature in the Romanian region. By the time they were allowed through the very much heightened security by having their IDs checked against their reservation and their invitations, Pete was about to die for a bottle of calamine lotion.

  As they walked up the long circular drive they were both grateful the sun had slipped beneath the mountains and their fruitless day of searching the lower elevations for Captain Everett and Charlie Ellenshaw had come to an end. The only thing they may have possibly confirmed was that they were more than likely up in Patinas where the colonel had suspected they would be.

 

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