Read James Acton 01 - The Protocol Online
Authors: J. Robert Kennedy
Tags: #Suspense, #Action & Adventure, #Fiction
“Okay, what do we know?” he asked the room in general.
Immediately, Detective Inspector Chaney approached him. His slight yet athletic frame made him seem tiny compared to his supervisor. “His name is Serge Savard, French national, arrived on an Air France flight today at eleven-thirty a.m. Miss Barnaby here discovered the victim when she came to give him a scheduled massage at six p.m. TOD was several minutes after that.”
“After?”
“Yes, guv. He was apparently alive when she found him.”
Reading looked around the scene again. “Somebody survived this?”
“Not for long, guv. According to her, before he passed out he said a man named Acton did it.”
“Acton?” He looked at Miss Barnaby and approached her. He motioned for the WCI sitting with her to leave and sat down beside the distraught woman. “Miss, my name is Detective Chief Inspector Reading of Scotland Yard. I’m leading the investigation into Mr. Savard’s death. Can you please tell me again exactly what happened?”
She relayed the story to him, ending with her phone call to the police.
“And he said a man named Acton did it?” asked Reading.
“Yes.”
“Those were his exact words? ‘Acton did it.’?”
“Well, not exactly. I said something like ‘Who did this to you?’ and he said ‘Acton’. He said it twice to me before he died,” she replied confidently.
“That’s all he said? Acton. Just that one word?”
“Yes, sir. All he said was Acton, twice.”
“Thank you, Miss.” He patted her on the knee and got up, heading over to the bed where Chaney was examining the plastic ties that had bound the Frenchman.
What happened here?
“The coroner said that this went on for hours,” explained Chaney. “You can tell by the blood splatter. Some of it is dry, some of it just starting to congeal. The dry stuff is from the beginning of the torture, the fresh stuff toward the end. Whoever did this certainly knew what they were doing.”
“What do you mean?”
“Well, to keep somebody alive that long while torturing them with this much blood, they would have to be professionals wouldn’t they?” Chaney said. “I mean, one wrong cut and you hit an artery. Then he’s dead and of no use. This guy was still alive when he was found.”
Reading nodded.
Impressive.
“Did you notice anything else?”
“Such as, sir?”
“The blood splatter.”
Chaney looked around the room then back at his boss and shook his head.
“If no arteries were hit, why the splatter?”
Chaney’s jaw dropped. “I can’t believe I missed that. Could there be a second victim?”
“Possibly, however my guess is the splatter was part of the torture,” explained Reading. “Your victim needs to see blood, to think he’s going to die. Small, precise cuts, especially where the victim can’t see, don’t scare once the pain is gone. Cut the person, and whip your scalpel toward the wall, the blood splatter is there for him to look at the entire time. Keep doing that for hours and you get a scene like this.”
Chaney winced, clearly disturbed by the image. “Sir, how—”
“How do I know this?” asked Reading. “I wasn’t always a copper.” With that, he swung around and exited the room, Chaney scurrying after him. “We need to find this Acton person. He’s the key to this. Let’s trace the victim’s movements starting with how he got here. We need to figure out what happened between him getting off the aircraft and arriving here. Somewhere along the way he met this Acton person who either killed him, or knows who did.”
New Scotland Yard, London, England
Jasper and Lambert presented their credentials to the desk sergeant.
“You the yanks we’ve been expecting?”
Lambert nodded as the man called up to the Detectives’ Office. A few moments later he put the phone down.
“Sorry, sirs, but the Chief Inspector isn’t available at the moment. Would you care to wait?”
“Wasn’t he expecting us?” asked Jasper. “The State Department was supposed to arrange a meeting to discuss a very important matter.”
“Yes, sir,” replied the Desk Sergeant. “Your people called here earlier but the Chief was called away on urgent business. Don’t worry gents, shouldn’t be long. I’ll have a cuppa brought for you.”
“Coffee please,” replied Jasper. “And lots of it.”
The Sergeant frowned, his thoughts clear.
Coffee? Uncivilized!
Professor Palmer’s Office, University College London, Gordon Square, London
As Laura explained the little that was known about the skulls, the overcast sky had turned into a heavy downpour, and sheets of rain driven by gusts of wind rattled the windows. A lone desk lamp cast a gentle glow on the office.
“Most of the skulls we know about are fakes,” she said, “believed to have been made by European craftsmen in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, including the ones located here and at the Smithsonian.”
“The one here is a fake?” asked Acton.
“Yes. According to tests performed for a BBC documentary it’s one of those that was created in Europe within the past two centuries.”
“You sound doubtful.”
She sighed. “James, I studied that skull for years and I swear the things they said about it during the study just don’t match up with what I’ve seen.”
“Such as?”
“Well, they said that you could see the tool markings from polishing equipment that dated from the past two centuries,” explained Laura. “I’ve examined it for years and never found even the minutest trace of any markings. I also studied the one at the Smithsonian and found it to be the same.”
“So, how do you explain it?”
“Better equipment? Incompetence maybe?” she suggested. “I don’t know. Anyway, here’s what we do know. Most of the skulls that are considered genuine were found in Mexico, Central and South America. It is believed that they are some sort of ancient religious icons from the Mayan, Aztec, or Incan civilizations, or maybe even from more than one.”
“We were at Incan ruins, so that would fit.”
“Yes, it would,” she agreed. “The indigenous people of the area believe that the skulls have magical healing powers, but nobody really knows what they were used for. Some claim that if you bring them together and shine certain colors of light at them they give off energy patterns that match the human brain and can even affect time as we know it.”
“You’re kidding!”
“Remember those quacks you talked about?” Acton laughed as she continued. “The lore surrounding the skulls is varied and most of it unbelievable. Some believe there are twelve genuine skulls, others thirteen, and that bringing them together will mark the dawn of a new age. Others believe that bringing them together will destroy the world. Still others believe it will send a signal to aliens. The fact is, nobody knows what they do because nobody really knows where they came from.”
“But, I thought they came from the Aztecs, Mayans and Incans?”
“That’s where many of them have been found, but those cultures didn’t have the technology to create them.” Acton looked at her, puzzled. “In fact, even today we don’t have the technology to create the genuine ones.”
The British Museum, London
Rodney looked down at his friend Clive who lay motionless on the floor with a look of astonishment still on his face. He hated having to do this to him, Clive truly was a good friend, but he had no choice—it was his duty. He pulled him into a storage closet then picked up his chair and sat on it while examining the monitors. At the back gate a truck pulled up to the loading dock. He hit a few keys on the console and the large metal door of the loading dock rolled open. Seconds later, the truck drove in. He watched on the monitors as it followed the ramp down into the underground shipping and receiving area. It backed up to a platform and bumped the lip. The door to the back of the truck burst open and six men exited. The driver remained in the truck. Rodney closed the front gate. He watched on the monitors for the other guards patrolling and radioed the go ahead as each area was cleared.
The team rapidly made its way to one of the storage rooms and waited for Rodney to enter the code to open the door from the control room. The door buzzed open, then the men entered, closing the door behind them. Two headed directly to the third row of shelving, another two grabbed a wheeled ladder and followed them. The remaining two covered the door.
“There it is,” said the first man, pointing to the fourth shelf about twelve feet up. The team with the ladder locked it in place and two men rushed up the steps. The first to arrive grabbed the box and handed it to the other. He opened the top to make sure what they were looking for was in there. Underneath the velvet wrapping the grinning face of a skull stared up at him. He shivered. Wrapping it back up, they transferred the skull into a backpack, then replaced the original with the fake skull made for the BBC documentary. No one would ever know they had been there.
They descended the ladder and ran to the door, the second team placing the ladder back where they found it, then waited for the all-clear signal.
Rodney checked the halls and sent the signal. The team raced back to the loading dock, boarded their truck and exited the underground garage through the doors Rodney opened for them. When they were clear he closed the doors and breathed a sigh of relief.
Done!
Looking around to make sure there were no signs of what had just happened, he rose from his chair and walked to the closet. Pulling Clive out of the closet, he removed the tranquilizer dart from his friend’s chest, placed the chair on its side again, then hid his gun in his bag. He took out another gun and stuck it in his belt behind his back.
Kneeling down beside Clive, he slapped him gently on the face.
“Clive, wake up!”
Nothing.
He slapped him a little harder.
“Clive, wake up!”
This time Clive moaned.
“Wake up, mate, you fell out of your chair and hit your head!”
“Wh-what happened?” asked Clive groggily. His eyes started to focus and he saw Rodney looking down at him. “You shot me!” he cried as he grabbed at his chest, looking for the wound. He started to panic and scurry backward on the floor.
Rodney laughed. Pulling the gun out from his belt, he pointed it at him. He squeezed the trigger and a flag snapped out with Liverpool F.C. emblazoned on it. “I’m sorry mate. I guess I scared the shite out of you on that one. You fell right out of your chair and hit your head pretty bad. You’ve been out for almost fifteen minutes.”
“Really?” A bewildered Clive rubbed the back of his head and felt the lump that had formed. “I could have sworn….” He looked at his chest. He was definitely not shot, so he must have imagined it. “Help me up, you wanker.”
Rodney laughed again and pulled his friend to his feet.
Professor Palmer’s Office, University College London, Gordon Square, London
“What do you mean we don’t have the technology to make these?”
“I mean just that.” Laura got up from her desk and went to one of the bookcases. Turning on a switch that lit the beautiful oak shelves from end-to-end, she scanned several volumes, pulled out a binder, and returned to the desk. “In 1970, the most famous skull, the Mitchell-Hedges skull, was given to Hewlett-Packard to do some testing on it. Their labs in Santa Clara, California, were renowned for crystal research and leading experts were involved in the testing. What they found was astonishing.”
Acton leaned in. “What did they find?”
Laura smiled, seeing the eagerness in his eyes.
He’s hooked
. “As you may be aware, crystal has a natural axis. This axis is the natural orientation of the molecular symmetry of the crystal. When carving crystal, modern carvers will always determine the natural axis of the crystal and carve
with
it. If you carve against it, or against the grain if you will, the crystal will almost always break, especially a piece the size of one of these skulls. The genuine skulls are all made of a single piece of crystal, which in itself is quite amazing, but even more so, the genuine skulls were carved
against
the axis, which is unheard of. No one to this day has been able to duplicate this. Not even with the use of lasers.”
Acton let out a low whistle. “Amazing. How do they explain this?”
“They can’t,” replied Laura. “But that’s not all they found. They also determined that there were no markings whatsoever on the skull to indicate that any kind of tool had been used in the carving of the skull. They hypothesized that it could have been roughly carved with diamonds and then a solution of silicon sand and water used for the detail work. There’s only one problem with this explanation though.”
“What’s that?”
“It would have taken over three hundred years to complete.”
The Dorchester, Park Lane, London
Chaney stopped and gaped at the surroundings as Reading walked purposefully toward the front desk of the Dorchester. Savard’s plane tickets had been booked through an agency and a quick phone call had determined that he was originally scheduled for a stay at the Dorchester, not the Ritz where he was found. Chaney was about to comment to his boss when he noticed he was now standing alone. He rushed to catch up.
Reading was just flashing his warrant card to the concierge behind the desk. “DCI Reading, Scotland Yard. This is DI Chaney,” he said, glancing at his underling. “We were wondering if you’ve seen this man today.” He motioned to Chaney who pulled a blow up of the Frenchman’s passport photo out of a manila envelope and showed it to her.
She shook her head. “I’m sorry, sir, I haven’t. May I?” she asked, reaching for the photo.
“Of course,” said Chaney as he handed it to her. She took the photograph and walked away, showing it to several others. Another man nodded and returned with her.
“This is Michael. He says he saw him earlier,” she said, introducing the porter.
“DCI Reading, DI Chaney,” repeated Reading as he took back the photo and held it up. “You saw this man?”