Jade Sky (27 page)

Read Jade Sky Online

Authors: Patrick Freivald

BOOK: Jade Sky
13.59Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

"What's it say?" Janet asked.

Dawkins looked down to the manuscript and Matt turned so that Janet couldn't see his hands. He signed to Blossom:
Track his eyes. Make sure he's reading and not making stuff up.

He just caught her curt nod.

Dawkins sighed. "It's an excerpt from the Book of Enoch. Sort of. 'In defiance of YHW'

that'd be God, folks

'the seraph Semjaza led two hundred angels from paradise to Mount Hermon, where in their lust these egregoroi, the watchers, lay with human women and sired abominations, the Nephilim. Jealous that the egregoroi would take form and thus steal from Him His most precious creation, YHW cast them into the pit of eternal darkness, called Tartarus. By the time their angelic fathers had been cast down, the Nephilim had spread throughout the world, fearsome giants who sought to twist and corrupt His creation into kingdoms of their own.'"

He turned the page, revealing an illumination of what could only be Noah's Ark, complete with a pair of unicorns. The image had once been in color, but had faded and flaked away so much that it almost looked black-and-white. "'In His unjust, petty rage at these poor children, YHW brought forth great waters to destroy what He couldn't control, drowning the Nephilim and their human mothers alike, and countless other innocents. But the Nephilim were crafty, and many hid in the dark corners of the world, to emerge again as spirits and take their place as the rulers of man.'"

Matt interrupted him when he reached the bottom of the page. "That's not what I read. The Book of Jubilees says that God allowed a fraction of a fraction of the Nephilim to remain as incorporeal spirits, to lead man astray before the Final Judgment."

Dawkins shrugged. "I said, 'sort of.'" He turned the page. The faded illumination depicted a bunch of swirling curlicues which could have been clouds or smoke. "Huh," Dawkins said. "This is Hebrew, and it's a lot newer, maybe fourth or fifth century." Dawkins's voice dropped. "'Like their fathers the egregoroi, the Nephilim grew jealous of what was not theirs. In their quest for dominion of man, the surviving Nephilim conspired to destroy one another. Of sixty times two hundred, only one stayed true, only one stayed righteous, only one loved and sought to free her fathers.

"'Join us, righteous men, and serve the daughter of shadow, the triumphant sister, the dark mother, she who dares defy HaShem'

that means 'the Name,' so that's God again

'and free her holy fathers from the unending darkness. Join us, righteous men, and drink of the true blood, not of everlasting life but everlasting youth. Join us, righteous men, to free the angelic fathers and rule with them the all . . . .'" He licked his lips and sat back in frustration. "I'm not sure how to translate this next phrase. It's something like 'eternal lands taken by the mighty.' I don't know what it means. Earth, maybe?"

Matt shrugged. Janet sipped at her coffee. Blossom scowled out the window.

He turned the page, scanned it, then flipped through the next several. The pages looked newer, crisper, the text darker and more pronounced as he flipped through. "These are interesting. Each page shows a victory of this Nephilim over another. According to this cult, she's responsible for the destruction of everyone from Osiris and the pharaohs to the Cabal of Thirteen in ancient Babylon, the Medici dynasty, even Tezcatlipoca in the New World."

He stopped a third of his way through the book, on a page written in German with no embellishment but two symbols in black and white: Matt recognized the first as the double-lightning bolt of the Nazi SS, but not the second, a diamond with an SD in it. Blossom stepped around him to read it.

"It's a patient dossier for Edith Gerstner. Born 30 April 1879 in a Munich hospital, was arrested for violation of Jewish quarantine in 1942 and sent to the
Vernichtungslager

Death Camp

at Sobibor. It says she went with seventy-two other women into the petrol exhaust shower, and after all had succumbed to diesel fumes, she walked out, unharmed but docile.

"Healthy for her age, she agreed to every treatment and test and even cooperated in designing experiments to test the limits of her body. She made no attempt to escape with the others on 14 October 1943. You see here," she pointed at a box Matt couldn't read, "it’s an order of transfer to the
Sicherheitsdienst Reichsbunkersystem
at Dresden on 15 October 1943, signed by Phillip Lenard himself. They closed Sobibor just after."

She turned the page and frowned. "This is something different."

The next page, and the rest after it, had more similarity to the first few pages than to those that came later. Dawkins frowned in frustration at the faded, almost invisible runes.

Matt frowned with him. "Is that 'Uruk Proto-Cuneiform'?"

Dawkins raised an eyebrow. "How did you know that?"

"It looks like the tattoo from Flynn's body. And yours, for that matter. Care to explain them?"

Dawkins looked up from the book and out the window. "I don't have an explanation. I don't. I had a compulsion to create them, something I couldn't resist, but with a lot of meditation I avoided using other people’s blood, though I really wanted to." His smile held not the slightest trace of warmth. "The whispers didn't like that much, and oh how they shrieked when, after each, Janet would deface them with crosses."

"Are you a Christian?" Matt asked.

Dawkins shrugged. "I don't know what I am, but I know power when I feel it." He tapped the book. "Like this. You can almost feel it hum."

Matt touched the vellum. The parchment felt like parchment, the grooves cut to make the runes felt like cut grooves. "I don't feel anything."

Dawkins looked back down at the book.

"What's it say?" Matt asked.

Dawkins chuckled. "I have no idea."

"How do we find out?"

Blossom rolled her eyes. "This is a waste of time. So now we believe that this old woman is a child of angels? That she is an ancient killer of gods?"

Dawkins chuckled again, a tired rasp devoid of joy. "I don't care what you believe, Sakura Isuji. If it makes you feel better, there is no God, and when you were breaking me out those guys brought that body back to life through alien parthenogenesis or voodoo or unchecked stem-cell research or global fucking warming. I don't care where you believe she came from or what she is, but unlike that thing back there, Gerstner has fed and grown for thousands of years, and she is a thousand times more powerful."

Blossom grunted and looked out the window. "But removing her from this machine will stop the augs."

"Yes," Dawkins said.

"You're certain."

"Yes."

She glared at him. "And this will stop the madness? This will keep the survivors sane?"

He opened his mouth, closed it, then opened it again. "I think so."

She scowled. "I want to believe you."

"I'm telling the truth."

She shot an annoyed glance at Matt before turning back to Dawkins. "I believe that you believe you. I am less sure that what you believe is true."

Matt tapped the book and repeated his question. "So how do we find out?"

Dawkins looked at his sister.

Janet leaned back in her chair. "Don't look at me, D. I can't read that shit." Matt wondered if Dawkins had a first name. She wheeled over to her laptop and pulled up a browser. After a few minutes she clucked her tongue. "But something doesn't add up. The Uruk culture dates to 4000 BC, and they wrote on clay. Parchment scrolls, writing on rawhide, didn't exist for another fifteen hundred years. That we know of."

"Fair enough," Dawkins said. "Can you access the linguistics files they pulled up during Conor Flynn's autopsy? If you get us those files, we might be able to piece together what this says."

Matt raised an eyebrow. "You expect us to learn a language in an afternoon?"

He shook his head. "Not really. Grammar takes a lot longer than that, but we can learn the vocabulary and at least get a sense of what this says. Uruk is grammatically similar to Phoenician, Aramaic, and Hebrew, so I can help with that if you can help translate on a word for word basis."

Instead of replying, Matt looked at Janet. "So can you get them?"

She stopped mid-chew, gum trapped between her incisors, then sucked it back into her mouth. "Yeah, but not from here. I'll have to go to work."

"They won't get suspicious?" Matt asked.

She bobbed her head back and forth. "Um, I can't access the files without it getting flagged, and my own access doesn't send the flag to me. I'd need to generate a request from someone, and when they follow up it won't check out."

"Careful, sis," Dawkins said.

She held up a hand. "Maybe you don't get it. This ain't about careful. I don't do this right, it'll burn me. They've got their heads so far up their asses that it'll take them a week or three to get around to vetting the document request, but when they do, if it gets back to me, I'm done."

"I don't think it'll take near that long," Matt said. "When I poked around the servers, Jeff called me before I'd finished, asking me what I was up to. I guarantee he wasn't watching for me, so they must have some kind of spy program working in the background."

Janet walked over to her brother and rested a hand on his shoulder. "So how do we play this?"

Dawkins closed his eyes as she rubbed his temples. His face twitched, then his whole body shuddered. Blossom opened her mouth to speak and Janet stopped her with an upraised finger that returned to his temples as soon as Blossom had closed her mouth. After a few minutes, his eyes snapped open.

Janet stepped back. "Consequences?"

He cleared his throat. "We burn Tufts. He requests the file, then goes dark. It's the only way we get it without killing an asset."

Matt raised an eyebrow. "Avery Tufts is one of yours?" The fifty-something former Scotland Yard bureaucrat had the looks and personality of a herring. Matt knew nothing about him except that his name appeared on a lot of reports and that none of his coworkers paid him much attention.

Dawkins's smile didn't reach his eyes. "As far as Tufts knows, he's working for the CIA. Still a traitor, of course, but at least it's not Islamists."

Matt wanted to ask how many agents Dawkins had in ICAP, but knew he wouldn't get an answer. Instead he said, "So that's the plan?"

"Yes," Dawkins said. "He'll request the file along with a bunch of others, we'll intercept, and he'll retire in Aruba on a comfortable government payday to a Swiss bank account, blissfully unaware that he's living off of drug money." He smiled at Janet. "But first we need to get you to work."

He used a prepaid cell phone to report his red mustang stolen from the Hill Country Motel and Pool Spa, and gave Jeff's description to the policeman on the line. In that time, she'd rubbed under her eyes enough to create vicious bags, scrubbed off all her makeup, and completed a quick workout that gave her a flushed, sweaty glow. "Do I look sick enough?" she asked as he hung up.

"Sis, you look like absolute shit."

She'd thrown on a George Mason University sweatshirt and sweatpants, slipped on a pair of pink crocs, and left her purse by the door. Twenty minutes later Janet's phone rang. She let the phone ring a half-dozen times before picking it up with a groggy, "Hello?" She let out a deep sigh, muttered an okay, and hung up.

She kissed Dawkins on the cheek. "Back soon."

"I know."

She disappeared out the door.

An hour later, Dawkins pulled up the file. Forty thousand lines of text had been scanned from photographs of clay tablets, analyzed, and converted into an incomplete and all-too-short dictionary. Most of the words pertained to professions and money, construction, and religion. Matt found that to his surprise, Dawkins's trick of using the eidetic enhancers made learning the vocabulary a trivial exercise, and while it took a lot of time, they could for the most part read the parchment.

"It's an instruction manual," Matt said for Blossom's benefit. They read a while longer, and with each new revelation his dread grew. "It talks about the angelic fathers of the Nephilim, in the present tense. Names them and the women with whom they had children, and the order in which God cast them into the darkness."

"Instructions for what?" Blossom asked.

"Mass human sacrifice of possessed men," Matt said.

"How to free them," Dawkins added. "She's setting the egregoroi free to enslave mankind and take their vengeance on God's creation."

Blossom exhaled, an abrupt blast of air brimming with annoyance.

"Amazing," Matt said. "This mentions camps for killing

death camps

and bronze birds that kill from the sky. Look here," he said, running his finger under a sentence. "'Twin suns will destroy the, um, something, cities in the land of dawn.' It's talking about World War Two."

She froze. "I thought this part was thousands of years old."

"It is," Matt said.

"Then it's forgery."

"It isn't," Dawkins said. "The book is real, and the writing is that old."

Other books

Outcast (The Blue Dragon's Geas) by Matthynssens, Cheryl
Summer of Fire by Linda Jacobs
The Principal's Daughter by Zak Hardacre
A Hood Legend by Victor L. Martin
120 Mph by Jevenna Willow