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Authors: James Douglas

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BOOK: The Doomsday Testament
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More clues and more riddles. And a tantalizing possibility. He read the last paragraph again. Another Humboldt? The only Humboldt he could think of was the German voyager and naturalist. So Brohm had been an explorer. And from there, the rest was simple. Jamie’s researches had uncovered the pre-war SS expeditions sent to seek out the origins of Aryan civilization. Those expeditions had travelled to Finland, the Middle East and Siberia. But to only one land of giants.

He reached into his wallet and pulled out a card, then dialled the number into his mobile phone. It was late, but he had a feeling the man he was calling wouldn’t mind.

XXIII

JAMIE HAD JUST
replaced the phone when he was interrupted by a knock. When he opened the door, Sarah was waiting, dark hair tied back, dressed all in black and carrying her own rucksack.

‘Ready?’ she asked.

‘Ready as I’ll ever be.’ He switched off the light and closed the door behind him.

Wewelsburg Castle by day intimidated, by night it had all the charm of a Transylvanian keep under a full moon. They parked beside the road circling the base of the hill and stood for a few moments in a tense, nerve-tingling silence. Sarah bowed her head and he wondered if she was praying. He remembered what she had said –
This is where it happened
– and he knew she was thinking about the men and women who had died here. This was the very ground where the pictures had shown the Russian prisoners, the homosexuals and the emaciated shells of Hitler’s political enemies toiling
to
make Heinrich Himmler’s crazed dream of an SS Disneyworld a reality.

Jamie had identified a track that wound across the tree-blanketed slope. It was less a path than an unofficial shortcut created by wandering deer and children on mountain bikes, and he cursed silently as unseen brambles clawed at him and nettles whipped his face. A few feet behind, he noted tetchily, Sarah moved easily, as if darkness was her natural element, a silent shadow that treated the fierce incline as if it didn’t exist. When they reached the top of the hill, he began moving to his left. She placed a hand on his arm.

‘Not by the museum, there’ll be some sort of security.’ She led him through an arch and into the shadows. ‘I told you I was good at research.’

‘If you’re so good at research what
is
the penalty in Germany for breaking into a national monument?’

‘You should have thought of that earlier, but I’m fairly certain you wouldn’t get away with anything less than being put up against a wall and shot.’

‘You’re right, I should have thought of it earlier. Where now?’

‘This way avoids the museum.’ The grounds of the castle were on two levels. She led them to where a narrow stair led up to the roadway and the main gate. ‘Just pray there aren’t security lights with motion sensors.’

For once, he found the intellectual high ground. ‘Rabbit burrows.’ He pointed to the dark shadows in the grass. ‘They’d never be off, think of the electricity bill. Bugger.’

Sarah stopped. ‘What is it?’

‘I’ve left my rucksack in the car.’

He heard a soft mutter that might have been ‘idiot’. ‘We can’t go back now. We’ll just have to get by with what’s in mine. Come on.’

They trotted to the gateway with Jamie in the lead. At one point the clouds parted and he felt as if he was the focus of a hundred eyes as moonlight reflected from the castle windows, but soon they were across the bridge and inside the internal courtyard.

At the far end of the triangle lay the wooden door to the north tower. It had been open earlier, but now it was locked and Sarah pulled the stolen keys from the voluminous pocket of her hooded jacket. Jamie used his own anorak as a shield and switched on his torch. She studied the lock and speculatively dangled the keys. They’d discussed the likeliest ones for each door, but now, faced with the choice, she was uncertain which to try.

‘OK, baby, which one are you?’ She chose one of four similar black keys designed for mortise locks, and tried the first. It slid easily into the lock but didn’t turn. She repeated the process with the second with a similar result.

Jamie fretted. She was taking too long. ‘Let me try?’

The darkness hid her face, but he guessed that the look she gave him would leave a permanent scar. Fortunately, she thrust the keys into his hand without argument.

He worked the next key into the lock, but it barely
fitted
. One last try. As he juggled the keys in his hand they rattled like a prisoner’s chains.

‘Jeez, next time I’m going to commit a burglary I’ll make sure my partner’s a rhinoceros. He’ll make a darn sight less noise. Try the first one again. I had the feeling it might just be stiff.’

‘Maybe we should have brought some oil?’ ‘Just try it,’ she snarled.

This time it turned easily and the door opened with a slight creak. ‘You just have to have the knack.’ He was glad she hadn’t brought a knife.

The barred door to the inner chamber was much simpler. Only a single key in the bunch, the big silver one Magda had brought out earlier, looked capable of fitting the ornate lock and the gate swung open without complaint when Sarah turned it. They slipped inside and stood in the darkness. Jamie knew the exact location of the Black Sun, but for some reason he found it difficult to move. It wasn’t fear, he told himself, just a sensible precaution. This was a chamber where only the initiated were meant to feel at home. He’d expected there to be at least a little light from the windows in the alcoved niches, but it seemed someone had closed the shutters. Still he could visualize the
Obergruppenführersaal
from their previous visit. Twelve large pillars circled the room, and twelve empty niches that had never been filled. He knew that the number twelve played a major role in Nazi mythology; just as the twelve apostles served Christ and twelve knights followed King Arthur, so an inner circle of twelve
Obergruppenführer
served Himmler. The
only
sound was Sarah’s steady breathing. He knew they were alone, but in the darkness of the chamber it was as if the ghosts of the past stalked them.

Forcing his feet to move, he walked slowly to the centre of the chamber and with a soft click his torch illuminated the marble symbol on the floor. The first surprise was that it wasn’t black, it was green, a mottled greyish green the colour of the
Wehrmacht
uniforms he’d seen in colour newsreels of the Russian Front. The second, that it was much bigger than it had looked.

‘The Black Sun,’ Sarah whispered.

‘But not our Black Sun. This is different.’ He felt a moment of confusion, uncertain whether to be disappointed or not. The symbol from his grandfather’s diary had nine arms, this had twelve, and there was no message or number.

By now Sarah had pulled a large piece of tracing paper from her bag and was hurriedly copying the design. As an afterthought she shaded in the centre of the sun with the pencil as if it were a brass rubbing. She had just finished and was in the act of replacing the paper when the beam of a powerful torch trapped them in its spotlight.

XXIV
Silicon Valley, California


THE ARTEFACT IS
of very ancient construction.’ Six men in white protective suits stood over the golden casket inside the ‘clean’ area of the laboratory complex, but only one spoke into the microphone. Speakers relayed his emotionless voice to the glass booth where the man who had initiated the raid on the Menshikov Palace now stood. He cut an incongruous figure in his T-shirt and jeans, with the thick-lensed rimless spectacles that reminded people of a short-sighted cartoon character and his long grey hair tied in a ponytail. He knew he was a throwback to another era, but he had never cared what anyone else thought about him. Money allowed you to make your own decisions and he’d long ago made more than enough money to tell the world to go screw itself. He listened intently as the scientist continued.

‘Tests conducted on the base of the object confirm it is manufactured of mahogany wood, probably imported
from
India, overlaid with a thin sheet of beaten gold which chemical analysis suggests is of similar origin. The gold is embossed with extensive symbols and patterns. Several letters are visible, but these are in a very obscure and venerable form of Sanskrit, possibly even pre-Sanskrit, and are indecipherable to me.’

He paused and looked up at the watchers. ‘I understand more expert eyes are already studying this aspect of the investigation.’

He turned his attention back to the casket. ‘The lock has a fairly complex twin-barrel mechanism, but we have been able to manufacture a key that should allow me to open it. Radiation levels are normal for an object that has spent many years in the mountains of Tibet, however our X-rays indicate the box may be lined with lead or some other similar material, so before I begin, please seal off the room.’

Metal screens rose up in front of the booth window and the man inside concentrated on the voice. ‘Check suit integrity. Yes? I will commence to open the box.’

The words were an inane catchphrase from some long-forgotten TV game show. Did the scientist have a sense of humour? It seemed unlikely. The pony-tailed man had known him for fifteen years and he could barely remember seeing him smile. Nerves, perhaps. That was more likely. Whatever was inside the casket, even if it only held a tiny trace of what they hoped, could change their lives. The scientist would hold the key to the last great secret of nuclear physics and the man in the booth would take a decisive step towards his goal of becoming
the
most powerful person on the planet. He held his breath and it seemed that the silence that preceded the metallic click of the lock’s engagement was the eternal silence of the grave.

‘I will now lift the lid of the casket . . . which contains a . . . a . . .’

The scientist’s words tailed away and the man ground his teeth in frustration.

‘A what, goddamit, Jensen? Lift these goddam screens.’ He did not normally use profanity in public, but many years earlier when he had been a packer in the loading bay of a television factory in Mesa, Arizona, he had been an inveterate cusser, and his choice of words reflected the tension of the moment.

The metal screen withdrew to expose the brightly lit scene below. He saw that the six white-suited men had all taken a step back from the casket and were staring in astonishment at whatever was inside. He craned his neck to get a better view, but he could still see nothing because of the ring of hooded figures.

‘For Christ’s sake.’ He hammered the reinforced glass and six pairs of eyes turned to him.

The men moved apart, like a white flower opening in the sun, and at last he saw it.

For a moment he couldn’t speak. He felt a hammer blow in his chest that might have been the prelude to a heart attack. The hammer blow of failure. All that time and effort and investment and the sacrifice of other men’s lives had achieved nothing but to uncover some sort of macabre joke. It had never been likely that the
casket
would contain the material itself, but he had hoped for some sort of residue, some hint of its nature or potential. The Sanskrit symbols might still provide a clue, but surely he deserved more than this?

‘The casket contains . . .’ Jensen resumed his commentary, but now his voice crackled with nervous energy, ‘. . . what appears to be a representation of a human skull . . .’ He held up the object in gloved hands and the over-bright artificial light of the laboratory caught it, so that the man in the booth was almost dazzled by the reflected brilliance. ‘It appears to be made of . . .’

‘Silver,’ the man in the booth said decisively. ‘After sixty years old Heini is still playing with us. Who would have thought the chicken farmer had a sense of humour? Don’t you recognize it, Jensen? Christ, your old man probably had one just like it.’ He studied the empty eye sockets and the mocking seven-toothed smile. ‘It’s a replica of the skull on an SS Death’s Head honour ring. Get me the file on the nineteen thirty-seven expedition to Tibet.’

Five minutes later he was leafing through the thin folder. Most of the documents were original and in German, but German had been his first language in the clapboard house in East Brunswick where he had been brought up. The original family name hadn’t been Vanderbilt, of course, but there had come a point after December 1941 when the old man decided it was more sensible to be Dutch than Deutsche. His German had come in useful when he was drafted, because it allowed
him
to spend the dangerous Vietnam years at a NATO headquarters near Hanover instead of crawling around some swamp in the DMZ getting shot at by Stone Age sub-humans. That was where he had learned to love electronics and had spotted the potential of the newfangled tape cassette players. When he returned to the States he’d bought a licence and mortgaged himself ten times over to create a manufacturing facility. Within a year he’d made the first of his many millions. Another opportunity had come with the rise of video tape technology in the early seventies, but he’d remembered how the eight-track player had once looked as though it would cost him everything, and foresaw that this new race would develop into a battle of formats. Instead, he decided to focus on the components that would be needed in
every
machine, whoever made it. By the time the boom in home computers took off he’d been perfectly placed to take advantage. And that was just the start. He’d made and lost fortunes along the way, married and lost wives, but there had always been one constant in his life. Membership of the Vril Society had come via his father and grandfather, influence in it had come with his growing fortune. Influence had inevitably led to the leadership, the first time the position had been held by a member outwith the Fatherland. Half of his life had been devoted to the search for the Vril, the race of ancient supermen who had survived the Great Inundation and sought refuge deep in the earth, where their powers still lay untapped. He had sponsored years of research, expeditions to the Arctic and the Gobi
Desert
under the guise of scientific fieldwork, and he had pinpointed sunken Atlantis to the Bay of Naples, in Italy, on the edge of the Phlegraean Plain. His fortune funded Frederick’s private army, which ensured that the potential advances made under Adolf Hitler would remain within the control of those pure enough to merit the rewards they promised. He had believed. But the Brohm papers had changed everything. Now he understood that the Vril would never be found within his lifetime. The strange thing was that it didn’t matter because he had discovered that the power of the Vril already lay within him. All he needed to tap into it was the Sun Stone. He snapped his fingers and an aide placed a mobile phone in his hand, the preset number already ringing.

BOOK: The Doomsday Testament
3.82Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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