Read James Acton 01 - The Protocol Online
Authors: J. Robert Kennedy
Tags: #Suspense, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction
Table of Contents
From the Back Cover
For two thousand years the Triarii have protected us, influencing history from the crusades to the discovery of America. Descendent from the Roman Empire, they pervade every level of society, and are now in a race with our own government to retrieve an ancient artifact thought to have been lost forever.
Caught in the middle is archaeology professor James Acton, relentlessly hunted by the elite Delta Force, under orders to stop at nothing to possess what he has found, and the Triarii, equally determined to prevent the discovery from falling into the wrong hands.
With his students and friends dying around him, Acton flees to find the one person who might be able to help him, but little does he know he may actually be racing directly into the hands of an organization he knows nothing about…
Praise for J. Robert Kennedy
If you want fast and furious, if you can cope with a high body count, most of all if you like to be hugely entertained, then you can't do much better than J Robert Kennedy.
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THE
PROTOCOL
A James Acton Thriller
Book #1
by
J. Robert Kennedy
Published Internationally by J. Robert Kennedy, Ottawa, ON Canada
Second Edition Copyright © 2011 J. Robert Kennedy
Cover and Inside Artwork Copyright © 2011 J. Robert Kennedy
All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written consent of the publisher, J. Robert Kennedy, is an infringement of copyright law.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to any person or persons, living or dead, events or locales is entirely coincidental.
10 9 8 7
For Espie, Niskha, Mom and Dad
THE
PROTOCOL
A James Acton Thriller
Book #1
Table of Contents
PREFACE
The crystal skulls referred to herein are real and have been confirmed to be of unknown origin and unknown method of manufacture by top scientists at Hewlett-Packard.
“And he bearing his cross went forth into a place called the place of a skull, which is called in the Hebrew Golgotha: Where they crucified him, and two other with him, on either side one, and Jesus in the midst.”
John 19:17-18 King James Version
“All men dream: but not equally. Those who dream by night in the dusty recesses of their minds wake in the day to find that it was vanity: but the dreamers of the day are dangerous men, for they may act out their dream with open eyes, to make it possible.”
Seven Pillars of Wisdom
, Lawrence of Arabia
PROLOGUE
London, England, 1212 AD
“Papa! Help me, please help me!”
His daughter’s desperate cries tore through the night like a dagger, slicing through the tortured wailing surrounding him as fire engulfed home after home. With the smoke choking him, the heat searing his lungs, he held the sleeve of his tunic over his mouth and raced toward the pleas of his precious daughter. Tears streaked the soot on his face, his eyes irritated by the smoke, and the mental image of his daughter’s plight overwhelming him.
As he pushed through the carnage and destruction, he wondered what could possibly remain of his family home, a home paid for in blood six years earlier. Saving King John’s mistress from brigands had earned him the King’s thanks, and a Lordship over a small plot of land. As a member of the council he kept a home in London and with the taxes he now collected from his new territory, it afforded him the luxury of improving their lot, the result the modest home they now enjoyed.
He had been in the council chambers, meeting with the elders to discuss the latest discovery, when a terrific explosion had leveled the once mighty walls. He had been one of only a handful to survive. He was in the process of trying to rescue those still trapped in the chamber when word had reached him of what was happening outside. Then his only thought was to get home to his daughter and wife.
What he had found rendered him speechless. As far as the eye could see almost every structure had been flattened. Twisted bodies lay strewn about. Fires sprung up all around him and spread fast, lighting the thatched roofs of the houses left standing.
He rounded the smoldering embers of what was once a proud stand of trees to see flames devouring the last remaining section of his house not knocked over by the blast. His servants were desperately trying to douse the flames with water from the nearby well, but it was of no use. The house was a loss, the hellish flames consuming every surface, as if possessed by an unquenchable thirst.
His daughter’s screams reached him from inside.
“Lord Baxter!” yelled his valet. “Thank the Good Lord you are all right. I had feared the worst.”
“My daughter—”
“She is trapped inside, m’Lord, and we are unable to reach her. I’m afraid your wife was killed in the initial conflagration.”
Richard cautiously approached the roaring fire, trying to shield himself from the intense heat with his hand, but the flames licked the night air, as if searching for another taste of the blood it had already claimed.
“Papa!” The pain and desperation in her voice tore at his heart. He ran toward the entrance of the home, determined to save his daughter, but was grabbed by two of his servants.
“M’Lord, ’tis suicide to enter!” one cried. “You will surely die!”
Wresting himself free, he neared the door when the front wall collapsed inward, silencing the terrified voice. He fell to his knees and sobbed, his fists slamming into the ground. The two servants pulled him to safety, and to the body of his beloved wife. He looked upon her still form, her lower body charred from the flames, and wept as he pictured the agonizing death she must have endured. He gazed upon her face and noticed her neck, twisted and broken, and prayed it happened before the burning. This small comfort lessened his anguish only slightly as his chest heaved with sobs, his family wiped from existence with one swing of an unforgiving, and unknown, broadsword of evil. He raised his hands to the heavens and prayed for God to care for their souls, and to eventually reunite them all.
His valet cleared his throat behind him. Rising to his feet, he wiped the tears off his face before turning to his manservant. “Yes, what is it?”
“I am so sorry to intrude in your hour of grief, m’Lord,” he said quietly, his head bowed, “but the council page has said that your presence is required immediately. I told him that you were unavailable, but he was most insistent.”
Richard raised his hand, cutting him off. “Tell him I will be along in a moment.” He turned back to his wife, knelt down and placed one last tender kiss upon her forehead, then rose to fulfill his greater duty, a duty handed down for over a thousand years.
London, England, Present Day
Clive sat at the central security station with his black-Nike-shod feet crossed at the ankles on a corner of his desk and his chair tilted precariously back, his long ponytail suspended in the air. His bony hands were clasped behind his head, revealing the beginning of yellow sweat stains under the armpits of his almost threadbare shirt. His mother had told him to replace it, but he hadn’t seen the need. When he had his jacket on, which was all of the time when outside of this room, nobody could see his armpits anyway. He had told her to mind her own business then wondered why he’d ever agreed to move back into the old family house.
The room hummed with the fans of the computers, almost drowning out the annoying buzz of the overhead fluorescent lighting. Banks of monitors surrounded him, each alternating between different areas of the British Museum. Various entrances and exhibits flashed by, revealing security guards on patrol, empty corridors and lonely displays. Clive had worked here so long the priceless works of art and the artifacts of mostly forgotten ancient civilizations had lost their allure and fascination.
The only screen that interested him now was the one showing the Man-U football game.
So engrossed was he that he didn’t notice the car pull up to the Montague Place entrance or its lone occupant dash to the maintenance door, sheltered from the incessant English rain by the jacket pulled over his head. He rang the buzzer.
Clive nearly fell out of his seat. He killed the game and looked at the monitor demanding his attention. The jacket protected the hunkered over figure from both the rain and the camera. Clive punched the intercom button.
“The museum is closed, sir.”
“Clive, it’s me, Rodney! Let me in, I’m freezing my bollocks off!”
Clive laughed and tapped in the code to open the maintenance entrance. A buzzer sounded and he watched the door open as Rodney pushed against it. A moment later his friend appeared on the inner corridor camera, shaking the rain from his jacket and running his hands through his hair, the water puddling around his discount-store Oxfords. Rodney flashed a grin then mouthed something at the camera prompting Clive to punch up the audio.
“–E-R-P! Double O-L, Liverpool F.C.!”
Clive pressed the intercom button. “United’s goin’ to kick yer arses!”
Rodney flipped him the bird then continued toward the security station. Clive laughed and turned the game back on, propping his feet on the desk corner again. A few minutes later he heard a knock at the station door. He reached under the desk and pressed the entry buzzer. The door opened behind him.
“Hey, Rodney, United’s up by one!”
He kicked off the desk, spinning his chair to face the door, keeping his eyes on the game as long as he could. As his chair completed its spin he turned his head around to see the barrel of a gun pointed at his chest. The gun fired and a stinging pain radiated from the center of this chest as he was hit. He slid from the chair into a heap on the floor. The last thing he saw before the world blackened around him was his friend of five years standing over him.
On one of the monitors, Liverpool tied the game.
Andes Mountains, Peru, One Week Earlier
Garcia swung the pickaxe against the cave wall. The clumped dirt and rock sprayed back at him, mixing with the sweat glistening on his head and soaking through his shirt. “Este trabajo de Puta me lleva al Diablo,” he muttered under his breath.
I feel like a mule. I don’t see the Americanos getting dirty.
He swung again and another spray of dirt flew back from the wall. It was slow, hard work, but the professor had said there may be a secret room on the other side. Garcia respected the professor.
He gets dirty
. At first, he had only agreed to be a guide, his deeply ingrained superstitions being too strong to participate in disturbing the ancient home of the ancestors. But the professor had a way of making him feel at ease so he had agreed to help with the heavy labor. Now he was beginning to regret it. Another swing and this time the axe almost came out of his hands as he broke through.
Excited, he cleared away more dirt, exposing the other side. After a few minutes of digging with his hands he was able to stick his head through the hole he created. The pungent smell of centuries of rot and decay almost overwhelmed him. He couldn’t see anything. Then he remembered the flashlight on his belt. He fumbled for it, his fingers numb from swinging the axe, his heart pounding in excitement. Finally finding it, he shone the light through the hole as he stuck his head back in. At first, he saw only more dirt, then, as he played the light around, it struck something shiny. He focused the light and gasped – two disembodied eyes glared at him.
Garcia jumped back and tripped over his axe. As he hit the cave floor his flashlight flew out of his hand. “El Diablo!” he muttered as he stared at the hole in horror. He scrambled to his feet. “El Diablo!” he screamed as he ran down the narrow passage back to the surface. “El Diablo!”