Immortal (48 page)

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Authors: Dean Crawford

BOOK: Immortal
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A single soldier was squatting amid boulders right in front of Ethan, fiddling with a pack of C4. Ethan aimed and fired a single shot, the round snapping the man’s head sideways as though
he’d been clubbed with a baseball bat. He saw Lopez fire a round at a man further up the slope, hitting him squarely in the chest and taking him clean off his feet to land with a thud on his
back.

Ethan split to the right of the cave entrance with Saffron and Cutler as Lillian and Zamora hurled themselves in the opposite direction.

Ethan shouted out as he crouched down with one arm across Saffron’s shoulders and Cutler shielding the pair of them with his body. ‘Get down, now!’

Ethan glimpsed dozens of mercenaries all aiming assault rifles at them, when the cave entrance exploded as Ellison Thorne’s dynamite ignited.

72

A superheated blast wave of shattered rocks and flame roared from the mouth of the cave, spitting a cloud of supersonic debris that radiated out across Misery Hole. The
mercenaries besieging the cave hurled themselves aside as they were hammered by the deadly shrapnel, shielding their faces as they hit the ground. The infernal blast rolled and echoed through the
cavern as a tumbling shower of dust, stone chips and shattered vegetation fell from around them. Ethan took his hands from over his head, wiping dust from his eyes as he looked back to see the
mouth of Lechuguilla Cave now obscured by a mountain of shattered rocks still tumbling down to thump onto the ground nearby.

Lopez and Lillian Cruz lifted their faces from the dust, but Saffron remained motionless. Ethan struggled across to her side and gently rolled her over. Her face was pale and her eyes rolled up
in their sockets, but she was conscious, groaning with the pain that was now beginning to seep like acid through her body as the contents of her stomach leaked into her bloodstream.

‘She needs a hospital, now,’ Cutler said, ‘or she won’t make it.’

Ethan was about to reply when some of the mercenaries began to recover themselves and leapt from cover, M-16s at the ready as they surrounded them, a tall man with pallid, pock-marked skin at
their head. His red hair glistened in the sunlight above his paunchy face as he looked down at them.

‘At last,’ he said, lifting his rifle to point at Ethan, ‘it’s time to bring this to a close.’

Zamora, on his knees and with a rifle pointing at him, shook his head.

‘Don’t do this.’

The man ignored him and aimed his assault rifle, the ugly black barrel pointing straight between Ethan’s eyes, and then a deafening gunshot burst the air around Ethan’s head. He
heard himself cry out and grab his face in shock, only to see the assault rifle aimed at him spin wildly away through the air. The pale-skinned man doubled over in shock as he stared at the ragged,
bloody hole torn through his hand.

A barrage of voices shouted out, laden with fearsome rage as they raced closer, and as Ethan looked up through the shimmering beams of light sweeping down through the clouds of dust and smoke,
he saw dozens of figures rappeling down toward him.

‘Put your weapons down!
Down down down
!’

Ethan, his eyes itching with grit, watched as United States Marines plunged into the cavern around them. Snipers enshrouded in bush camouflage popped up from the edge of the ridge a hundred feet
above, weapons pointed unwaveringly at Hoffman and his men. The sudden sound of distant thunder became a deafening, hammering chorus as a pair of Bell-Boeing V22 Osprey aircraft roared past against
the disc of blue sky above, escorted by two Apache Ah-64 gunships, the sound of their amassed rotors thundering down through the cavern like the footfalls of a charging army of giants.

‘That’ll be the cavalry,’ Lopez said as she lowered her pistol and spat dust from her mouth. She crawled to Ethan’s side and gently pressed her hand around the blade
lodged in his side, trying to stem the bleeding.

Ethan saw Hoffman being forced to his knees by a Marine, blubbering like a child as he was cuffed and forced flat onto his stomach. Other Marines thundered down to surround them as Lopez called
out.

‘Medic!’

Within moments a pair of medics were alongside them, dropping their Bergens and fishing out IV lines and saline bags with practiced efficiency. Ethan lay back, ignoring the line being inserted
into his arm and watching as the other medic worked on Saffron Oppenheimer nearby. The man turned his head, holding a small microphone attached to his helmet as he spoke into it.

‘Delta-Four, CASEVAC, repeat, casualty evacuation immediate, stand-by.’

Ethan heard a warbled response through the medic’s earpiece, and then the noise from the approaching Ospreys became overpowering.

Cutler and Zamora appeared beside him, concerned looks on their faces, and then were pushed aside by four marines who surrounded him.

He lay back and looked up past the towering rocky walls of Misery Hole, saw swathes of golden desert dust sweeping across the sky as the two huge aircraft landed somewhere nearby. The four
Marines lifted him onto a makeshift field stretcher, the medic carrying his saline bag as he was lofted upon their shoulders and attached to a winch lowered hastily by troops far above.

Ethan saw Lopez watching him with a furtive expression, her long black hair caked with dust, and then he was hoisted up and away from the floor of the cavern, spiraling slowly as he was pulled
all the way to the lip of Misery Hole and then lifted clear of the chasm.

One of the Ospreys had landed ‘hot’ on a plateau a hundred yards away, the huge pivoting engines directing their immense thrust downward for vertical landing. The blades were kicking
up a fearsome dust storm around the aircraft, but the medic carrying the saline bag shielded Ethan’s face with one hand as he was rushed aboard the aircraft. The Marines laid him down on a
canvas bed that had been folded down from one side of the fuselage wall.

Ethan lay back, watching as Saffron was lifted aboard moments later and carried with reverential care by the battle-hardened Marines to lie nearby on another fold-down bed. The Marines rushed
off the Osprey and moments later Ethan felt his stomach plunge as the aircraft’s engines roared even louder and it lifted off and accelerated into forward flight.

Medics fussed over Saffron’s inert form nearby, and Ethan watched with concern until a soldier carrying what looked like a laptop computer squatted beside him and rested the computer on
his chest. A flickering image of Doug Jarvis offered him a brief smile from beneath a hastily bandaged and bloodied forehead.

‘Good morning.’

Ethan closed his eyes briefly before replying.

‘I wouldn’t call it good,’ he said, glancing again at Saffron. ‘Saffron’s been hit bad.’

Jarvis nodded.

‘Don’t worry, she’s in good hands now and will be in the best of care once you get back to Holloman. I’ve alerted their best people to take care of her once you arrive. I
take it your meager flesh wounds won’t prevent you from attending a detailed debrief once we’re there?’

Ethan sighed.

‘Sure. What’s a few inches of Toledo steel between friends? Where the hell are you? And what happened to your face?’

Jarvis grimaced.

‘New York, and if you think I look bad, you should see Donald Wolfe. Get some down time, Ethan. I’ve already got the DIA on the case.’

‘How did you know where to find us?’ he asked.

‘Lopez sent me a text,’ Jarvis said. ‘An IP address for a GPS tracker. I’d only just got out of the UN building, but we managed to figure out what she’d done. I
dispatched the Marines right after.’

‘She lied to me, Doug,’ Ethan said with a sigh.

‘She got the job done,’ Jarvis countered. ‘Anyway, don’t worry about the details – my teams are already on their way to clear up, and by lunchtime none of this will
ever have happened.’

Ethan rested his head against his pillow, staring up at the ceiling of the Osprey.

‘I doubt that,’ he said quietly.

‘Why?’ Jarvis asked. ‘Jeb Oppenheimer suffered a tragic accident this morning and will be buried in a private ceremony – he didn’t have any friends to speak of so
no need for a public funeral. His mercenaries will be tried by military court and convicted of conspiracy to murder DIA agents. Donald Wolfe effectively confessed to conspiracy to murder Tyler
Willis and for the homicide of an unknown male in Alaska in front of the entire United Nations before he shot himself. I take it that Lillian Cruz has been liberated and will no doubt testify as
and when required regarding her abduction. And as for the soldiers you located out here . . .’

Ethan nodded slowly.

‘They’re all dead,’ he guessed. ‘Have been for decades.’

‘Longer,’ Jarvis said, and his voice became somber. ‘The Marines found one of them in the hands of Oppenheimer’s mercenaries. He wasn’t alive.’

‘Kip Wren,’ Ethan identified him. ‘A very brave man. They all were.’

Jarvis nodded.

‘Their remains will be allowed to decay as appears to be the norm and then be retrieved from the caves for further study. Butch Cutler and Lieutenant Zamora will be signing non-disclosure
forms within the hour. The chamber within Lechuguilla Cave will be sealed and its location removed from any public forum. Best that we keep whatever’s in there under lock and key, for obvious
reasons.’

‘What about Saffron?’ Ethan asked.

‘Tricky,’ Jarvis said. ‘For whatever reason, she developed a conscience and handed herself in to state police, told them everything. I’d have sent people in to retrieve
the incriminating evidence on her behalf, but the police are already there and apparently have recovered video tapes that implicate her in an unsolved homicide some four years ago.’

Ethan sighed heavily.

‘The circumstances were different to how they appear on the images, apparently,’ Ethan said. ‘After all this, they’ll use everything they can to send her down for life.
You need to do something to help her, Doug, she doesn’t deserve this.’

Jarvis shrugged on the screen.

‘What can I do? This case is resolved and everything the DIA needs is now in their hands, including Kip Wren’s body and the site itself. They’re not going to let me interfere
in a civil case.’

Ethan looked at him seriously.

‘They might have to,’ he said. ‘Because it’s not over.’

‘What do you mean?’ Jarvis asked. ‘There’s nobody left.’

‘Yes, there is,’ Ethan explained. ‘There were eight of them, not seven, because someone was holding the camera when that photograph was taken in 1862.’

Jarvis’s features creased as a realization dawned in his eyes.

‘The subject is still alive?’ he asked.

‘Very much so,’ Ethan said. ‘Protect Saffron and I’ll help figure out who it is. Let her go down, and the DIA can go to hell for its information.’

73
CHRISTUS ST VINCENT MEDICAL CENTER
SANTA FE

19 May, 3.47 p.m.

Ethan packed the handful of dust-covered clothes that he’d worn in Misery Hole, pausing to glance at the thick bloodstains on his shirt before stuffing it into a bag
and dropping it into the waste bin in his hospital room. The movement caused a painful twinge low on his flank where Oppenheimer’s blade had sunk into his flesh, the scar tissue only half
healed beneath the surgical dressing wrapped around his waist. He slipped into the fresh clothes sent to him by Doug Jarvis, and turned his back on the room, walking down the corridor outside to
where he knew Saffron Oppenheimer was staying, easily identifiable by the two state troopers guarding the door. Ethan introduced himself to them, and they stood aside to let him in.

The room was pleasantly spacious, and Saffron lay with her eyes closed at a comfortable angle on her bed with only a saline drip to show any evidence of her trauma. Ethan slipped quietly into
the room and closed the door behind him.

‘About time you showed up, tough guy,’ Saffron said, opening one eye to peer at him. ‘Last I heard you were at death’s door with a little splinter in your
side.’

Ethan grinned.

‘Go to hell,’ he said, crossing the room to her bedside. ‘The doctors have told me I’m not to exert myself for five days. It could lead to complications.’

‘Sure,’ Saffron said, but her eyes were dancing with humor.

‘How’re you doing?’ he asked.

‘I’ll be fine,’ she said, shifting her position slightly and propping herself more upright on her pillows, ‘now that I don’t have my breakfast running through my
bloodstream. Took a while for them to stitch me up but I’ll make it.’

‘You did good,’ Ethan said. ‘If you hadn’t walked into that police station, Lopez and I would have ended up beneath a few tons of New Mexico rubble and Jeb Oppenheimer
would have been planning who lived and who died in his new world order.’

Saffron smiled faintly.

‘Didn’t do me much good though,’ she said. ‘Guards at my hospital door and a lengthy prison sentence to look forward to. You should have left me in that cavern with
Jeb.’

Ethan sighed and sat on the edge of the bed.

‘I’m doing what I can,’ he said. ‘I’ve got the DIA over a barrel about what happened in Lechuguilla Cave, both last week and in 1862. They’re looking at
options for you.’

‘Why doesn’t that phrase fill me with confidence?’

‘It’s not easy,’ Ethan admitted. ‘You’ve become a high-profile victim of these events, but it’s still going to be hard to keep you out of jail.’

Saffron became melancholy, staring at her bed sheets.

‘I killed him,’ she said finally. ‘I killed my own grandfather.’

‘You defended yourself,’ Ethan replied. ‘He shot you first, remember?’

Saffron didn’t appear to hear his last words as she reached out and gripped his hand.

‘Promise me, you’ll call your parents,’ she said.

‘Why?’

‘Because you still can,’ Saffron replied. ‘Don’t leave it another day, okay? Just do it, before you wake up one morning and realize you no longer can.’

Ethan held her gaze for a long moment and saw the determination in Saffron’s eyes. He nodded and flipped her a mock salute.

‘Okay, I’ll do it. I promise. Scout’s honor. But you’ve got to do something for me.’

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