Joiner looked at the shimmering image of his A.I. assistant and nodded.
A moment later a green answer button materialised on his tabletop screen and he tapped it with a finger.
‘Director,’ said a voice, its tone disguised deep, ‘you have seen what we see and now it is time to earn your keep.’
‘I wondered when I’d hear from you again.’ Joiner checked his watch. ‘Your timing couldn’t be better. What is it you want?’
‘The woman, we know you have her.’
‘Do you?’ he said, his tone scathing.
The voice hesitated. ‘You have already given her to the Committee?’
‘Did I say that?’
‘Do not play games with us, Director, you have already taken the life of one of our people, we will not tolerate anymore defiance.’
Joiner’s eyes narrowed. ‘Your fanatic took his own life and if you wanted to take mine you already would have. Do what you must.’ He hung up and sat back in his seat. He was done playing games. He’d never shied away from making big calls and he wasn’t about to now, it was time to call their bluff.
He waited for the caller to ring again, but no transmission arrived and Joiner was left wondering if he’d made a mistake.
Someone knocked on the office door and Agent Myers entered at Joiner’s behest.
‘Your transport has arrived,’ Myer said, ‘you’ll be in New York within the hour.’
‘Do you have it?’
Myers nodded and placed a small device on the desk. ‘It should block any signal from activating the kill switch, but without testing it I can’t be a hundred per cent certain.’
‘Then how certain can you be?’
‘Ninety-nine point nine per cent.’
‘Good enough,’ Joiner said.
‘It’s already active; you just have to keep it within ten feet at all times.’
‘And no one else knows but you?’
‘No one,’ Myers said.
Joiner picked up the jammer, examined it and then slipped it into his pocket. It was always a good idea to have a back up and now he had someone he could trust, the Committee would be none the wiser – until that was, they made an attempt on his life.
Joiner turned to his A.I. assistant. ‘Activate protocol Overwatch.’
‘Activating …’ the computer said.
The office door locked and the wallscreen filled with the live images from Sanctuary’s secret laboratories.
‘Locate Dagmar Sørensen,’ Joiner said.
‘Locating …’ said the computer.
A red rectangle moved across the video grid in search of the specified parameters before stopping and switching to green.
‘Sørensen, Dagmar,’ the A.I. assistant said, ‘located.’
A single image moved to the centre of the wall and Joiner saw the familiar figure of the R&D director, dressed in a white lab coat, waiting at an elevator.
‘Shouldn’t we be heading to the roof?’ Myers said. ‘If you want to get to the summit by noon …’
‘In a moment.’ Joiner watched as a scientist approached the R&D director. ‘Computer, activate audio sync.’
‘Lip reading conversion, processing,’ said the computer, ‘estimated accuracy … ninety-six per cent.’
Joiner waited for the conversation to start. What are you up to Dagmar? Joiner thought. What secrets are you hiding from me?
♦
Two thousand miles away, deep beneath the mountains of Mexico, Dagmar Sørensen, the GMRC’s R&D director, stood before the elevator doors in anticipation of his guests. An unusual thrill of excitement flooded his pain-riddled body. Soon he would be able to begin the first stage of what he’d worked for so many years to achieve and Project Ares would finally soar to the heights he’d always envisaged.
He turned as one of his scientists approached. ‘I said no interruptions.’
‘Yes,’ – the man gave a nervous smile – ‘forgive me, Director, but we believe we’ve located the source of the data anomaly.’
‘And?’
‘It’s a signal, and its signature is virtually identical to readings we’ve taken from functioning Anakim technology.’ The scientist passed his superior a sheet of printed paper before continuing. ‘We were able to use satellite replacement relays to extrapolate and verify the global positioning and narrow the time of the event to a twenty-four hour window.’
‘Which was?’
‘Two months ago, at roughly the same time when the energy wave activated Sanctuary’s ceiling.’
‘And the location?’
‘It’s as we thought, the event occurred on the surface, approximately a thousand miles south east of what we believe to be Sanctuary Proper’s southernmost border.’
Dagmar wiped a handkerchief over his sweating brow. ‘And the instrumentation is functioning within parameters?’
‘We ran a full diagnostic, there can be no mistake.’
Dagmar considered the news. Functioning Anakim tech on the surface? It’s unprecedented. Well, he thought, almost unprecedented. ‘Do we know what lies a thousand miles south east?’
The scientist nodded. ‘We do, it appears to be a disused settlement, ancient by human standards. It’s a well-documented site of Mayan creation; they call it the ruins of Copán.’
‘Send a team …’ – Dagmar inhaled a rattling breath – ‘to the surface to investigate.’
‘You might want to make that three,’ the scientist said, ‘we have yet to confirm, but it looks like two more distinct signals occurred at the same time as the first.’
Dagmar grasped the scientist’s arm. ‘Two more? You’re sure?’
The man winced as his director’s fingernails bit into his flesh. ‘Quite sure. One looks to have originated in the Amazon rainforest, while another was in central China.’
A bleep from the elevator indicated someone was descending from a level above, and Dagmar released his hold. ‘Update me when our guests have left.’
The scientist bobbed his head to acknowledge the request and scuttled away just as the elevator pinged and the doors slid open.
Selene Dubois and two other, equally tall, Committee members, a man and a woman, emerged into the brightly lit, white corridor. Behind them, four S.I.L.V.E.R. assassins shadowed their masters’ movements, their chrome armour and formidable weaponry glittering under the lights.
Dagmar mustered an expected subservient bow. ‘Your bodyguards are not necessary,’ he said, indicating the four warriors. ‘This facility is entirely safe, I can assure you.’
‘Dagmar,’ Selene said in greeting as she and her two companions surveyed their new environment. ‘Considering what it is you have down here,’ – her gaze settled on him – ‘I doubt anyone of us is safe.’
‘Of course, as you wish.’ Dagmar gestured at two Special Forces commandos who guarded a nearby entrance. ‘But rest assured we have a hundred such soldiers on standby in the event of a … situation.’ He gestured down the hallway. ‘Shall we proceed with the tour?’
♦
Malcolm Joiner watched from his distant vantage point on the surface as Dagmar led Selene and her delegation down the corridor of the laboratory complex. So, he thought, it’s as Morgan said, she escaped Sanctuary using some kind of Anakim device, which also answers the question of how she broke into Sanctuary in the first place. He pondered what he’d just learnt before the group disappeared from view as they passed into another area of the facility.
‘Sir,’ Myers said, stepping closer, ‘we have to go – the summit …’
‘The summit can wait, this is too important.’ Joiner searched the other camera streams to see if he could find where Dagmar had taken them. ‘Computer,’ he said, ‘expand grid frame K five.’
The image expanded to the centre of the wall to show the delegation stopping to inspect the skeletal remains of an Anakim man.
‘Computer, re-create audio,’ Joiner said, ‘and track and record Dagmar Sørensen and his group from camera to camer
a, I want to see and hear everything.’
‘Certainly, Director,’ said the A.I. assistant, ‘actioning.’
♦
Dagmar waited for Selene and her associates to finish discussing the Anakim skeleton before leading them through another doorway and into an adjoining laboratory.
‘What news of the space station?’ Selene said, ‘you mentioned an issue.’
‘We lost contact for a few days,’ – Dagmar paused to cough – ‘but everything is fine now, communications have been fully restored.’
‘Have any new predictions been made?’
Dagmar saw the other two Committee members listening with interest. ‘Not as yet. The technology is complex and the images provided are jumbled and nonsensical, to our minds, anyway.’ He paused for breath. ‘When we find something new – as always – the Committee will be the first to know.’
‘And the … God Device, it continues to function as expected?’ Selene said. ‘If I remember rightly you were concerned about its long term exposure to a micro-gravity environment.’
‘Space seems to optimise its power output,’ – Dagmar guided them into another hallway – ‘the source of which we are yet to determine. The quantum realm continues to surprise in its complexity.’
♦
Back in Washington D.C., Agent Myers looked to his director. ‘I thought all the space stations were destroyed?’
‘So did I.’ Joiner grimaced. ‘Their operation is even bigger than we thought.’ He returned his attention to the wallscreen.
‘—seems to be a success,’ Selene was saying, ‘he continues — as you envisaged.’
Dagmar smiled. ‘The implant and retraining — powerful — Joiner — continue to — compliant.’
‘Computer, switch to another camera,’ Joiner said, ‘now!’
‘I’m sorry, Director, no other view is available; audio creation requires line of sight, lip-reading conversion is fifty per cent and falling … thirty per cent – ten – five – two. Conversion lost.’
Joiner swore in frustration as Dagmar and Selene moved away from the camera.
♦
‘When will you tell him about the implant?’ Dagmar said.
‘There is a strong possibility he already knows.’ Selene paused as the R&D director unlocked a set of doors. ‘Malcolm Joiner is nobody’s fool. However, whether he knows or not will not reduce our hold over him, it may even strengthen it.’
‘And the abduction?’ Dagmar said. ‘You still haven’t found out who may have compromised him?’
Selene frowned. ‘No, but we will. There has been another incident since, at a baseball stadium. We will wait for them to overreach themselves, or until Malcolm hunts them down, and then we will erase them from existence – together.’
‘Joiner will obey your commands to a point,’ Dagmar said, ‘but he is not without autonomy; he may learn to resist in other ways. There might come a time when you have to flick the switch and activate the implant.’
‘Malcolm is one of us now, whether he likes it or not,’ Selene said, ‘and he has a part to play in what is to come, of that we know. How long that part will last remains to be seen.’
Dagmar nodded and refrained from further comment. He knew a rebuttal when he heard one.
They reached a massive pair of blast doors and a contingent of ten Terra Force soldiers standing guard before it. Dagmar approached a panel on a nearby wall and swiped his card across a reader, tapped in a code, and inserted his hand into a biometric scanner which analysed his fingerprint, heart rhythm and DNA. Overhead, a red light turned to green and a siren sounded before the blast doors inched apart.
♦
The delegation entered a new area and Joiner’s computer switched to the next available camera. A few seconds after that, the audio creation resumed.
‘What have you learned?’ Selene said to Dagmar.
‘So far? Unfortunately not a great deal, it seems to be able to avoid our attempts at investigation.’
‘It’s caged, is it not? What is the difficulty?’
‘There is a well known and bizarre process in quantum mechanics whereby a particle can pass through solid barriers. It’s called quantum tunnelling and while—’
‘Spare me the physics lesson, Director,’ Selene told him.
Dagmar nodded. ‘The upshot is that the creature has the ability to phase through our reality. For something of its complexity and size it should be an impossibility, and yet—’
‘It can,’ Selene said.
‘It appears so; there is still so much we have to learn.’
‘And that is why we are here, not to see this,’ – she made a gesture at something off camera – ‘but the next evolution of your work.’
Joiner leaned forward. Next evolution? What are they there to see, if not the Pharos? ‘Computer,’ he said, ‘expand and centre all streams within one hundred feet of Dagmar Sørensen’s current location.’
Five more images moved to the wallscreen’s centre. Only one showed anything of interest and that was the massive, reinforced enclosure designed to keep the mysterious creature contained. Joiner gazed at the dark interior, searching for the beast that lurked within.
Selene Dubois approached a railing to look down into the manmade prison. ‘Are you sure it’s in there?’
‘It’s there,’ Dagmar said, ‘it’s just shy. Come,’ – he beckoned them forward – ‘we’re almost there.’
The R&D director ushered the three Committee members ahead of him while the four chrome-clad assassins followed behind, their weapons now firmly in their hands.
The party of eight approached another set of blast doors and Dagmar went through the same entry procedure as before. Joiner saw another red light switch to green and the huge mechanism crept open to reveal a safety barrier and the large, empty blackness of an elevator shaft beyond.
‘I thought this was the tour,’ Joiner said, transfixed, ‘but it’s just the route in.’
Myers glanced at him. ‘In to where?’
Joiner didn’t reply as the A.I. assistant centred on a new camera and the audio conversion resumed.
♦
‘It allowed us to observe how the energy is transferred,’ Dagmar said, his breathing laboured, ‘it was a fortuitous event to happen now, just when we were about to begin.’
‘The ceiling’s activation is more than a scientific discovery,’ Selene said, ‘much more, and whatever you may think it was not by the fluke of chance that Sanctuary has awoken.’
Dagmar’s expression was dubious. ‘You believe it was by design?’
‘That you doubt it,’ Selene said, ‘shows how wedded you are to the material world. I’m surprised you haven’t realised by now, Director, working with your quantum mechanics, that the world beyond our senses,’ – she laid a hand on his shoulder – ‘is there for us to control.’
Dagmar stared into her mismatched eyes and then gave a shake of his head. ‘The occult is not science. And whatever you may think, the ceiling is not some kind of sign.’
‘But that is exactly what it is.’ She released her hold. ‘Sanctuary’s vast vaults have reactivated now, of all times throughout history, when the skies rain fire and the world and every living thing is faced with annihilation. These are momentous days, foretold before your God Device was even found.’
‘Prophecy and hearsay are no substitute for observational experimentation and hard data,’ Dagmar said, his temper rising, ‘but the fact remains, something turned the ceiling on, and something else will turn it off.’
‘Says the uninitiated man.’ Selene looked down on him with something akin to pity. ‘But you are quite right, it is simple cause and effect. And if – when – you decide to suspend your belief and embrace ours, you will come to see that the human mind, if harnessed, is more powerful than you could ever have imagined.’
The high-pitched whine of an electric turbine drew their attention and a large platform arrived beyond the barrier, which automatically began t
o rise.
Dagmar led the delegation forward and held his hand over a large, red button as he waited for everyone to board. He looked at Selene who gave him a nod.
‘Take us down, Director,’ she said.
Dagmar Sørensen depressed the button and they descended into the depths.
♦
Joiner scanned the images and waited for Dagmar and the Committee members to reappear, but seconds came and went and the wallscreen remained unchanged.
‘Computer,’ Joiner said, ‘get them back! Re-locate Dagmar Sørensen.’
‘Re-locating,’ the A.I. said.
Joiner walked along the wall, searching for any sign of the R&D director, the Committee members or the four chrome-clad assassins, but seconds turned to minutes and there was still no sign of them.
‘Where are they?’ Joiner said, agitated.
Myers peered at the screen, waiting. ‘Perhaps they’ve gone beyond the network.’
‘Computer,’ Joiner said, ‘where is Dagmar Sørensen?’
‘Re-locating …’
Joiner stalked back across the office, his eyes boring into the screen as he continued to seek the missing delegation. ‘Where are they?!’
‘There is a ninety-eight point nine per cent probability,’ the computer said, ‘that Dagmar Sørensen is no longer inside the facility. Shall I search for his companions?’
‘Do it!’ Joiner slammed his hand down on the desk. ‘FIND THEM!’
Chapter Eighty-Nine
Dagmar Sørensen emerged from the elevator ten levels below the main laboratory complex and entered a large, oval chamber made from dark, grey concrete. Selene Dubois and her entourage followed him out and peered round at the sealed room in which they now found themselves.
Ancient Origins: Books 4 - 6 (Ancient Origins Boxset Book 2) Page 42