The Mayan Resurrection (36 page)

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Authors: Steve Alten

BOOK: The Mayan Resurrection
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Lauren follows Sam through the Art Deco security arch leading to the front entrance. He places his hand upon the SID pad.

 

A holograph appears—a well-endowed topless blonde wearing a G-string. The model’s computerized face has been replaced with Coach DeMaio’s, the voice with that of teen pop singer Lacy Wong. ‘Good evening, Samuel Agler, you hunka-hunka burning Hurricane love. Please enter me so I may please you.’

 

‘Uh, thanks … Coach.’

 

They pass through the weapon detector’s violet indicator beam. The double doors slide open, allowing them entry into a high-ceilinged hall engorged with loud technomusic, neon
holographic creatures, flashing lights, and mobs of mostly naked bodies.

 

Lauren leans over, yells, ‘It’s like the last days of Rome meets disco.’

 

K. C. Renner, who is wearing an aluminocloth shirt and boxer shorts, is the first to greet them. ‘My bonus baby, gimme some bone.’ Renner’s and Sam’s knuckles collide.

 

‘Good evening, Lauren.’ Renner’s voice turns sarcastically stuffy. ‘So glad you could join us.’ The quarterback shakes her hand, then licks it.

 

‘You’re disgusting.’

 

‘Thank you. Food’s everywhere, plenty of strange … oops, sorry.
M’casa es su casa
.’

 

The staccato pulse of the bass, originating from surround-sound speakers strategically placed beneath the porous floorboards, is literally sending music vibrating up through their bodies.

 

‘Isn’t it a bit loud?’ Lauren yells.

 

‘Yeah, great crowd. Hey, everyone’s out by the pool. Come on.’ Renner leads them through the packed hall. Groping blue-and-yellow-tinted hands reach out to touch them as they pass.

 

A set of soundproof Plexiglas doors part, allowing them to escape the noise into a home entertainment holograph suite. The doors
hiss
close behind them, shutting out the hallway acoustics.

 

The room is black, backlit by matching columns of ceiling-to-floor lava lamps and a 3-D holographic movie projecting in front of the far wall.

 

As Lauren’s eyes adjust to the dark, she notices movement
along the floor—couples, making out in sensory body bags.

 

K. C. directs them through a second set of soundproof doors. They pass the food prep room and exit into the courtyard.

 

Humidity and the heavy scent of the pool’s ozone filtration system hits them square in the face. The soothing calypso sounds of Cuban heartthrob, Elian, comes from palm tree speakers planted along the periphery.

 

Cheerleaders, groupies, and prostitutes, most of them naked, lounge in and around the football-shaped pool in clusters, a dozen of Sam’s teammates drifting from one group to the next. Lauren spots Jerry Tucker in the hot tub, the enormous lineman sandwiched between two bare-breasted Jamaican-dyed Asian girls. Another teammate is lying on the deck behind him, passed out in a puddle of vomit.

 

She shakes her head. ‘Miami’s gridiron warriors. Pillaging the village before their next conquest.’

 

Ken Hudak, the team’s heavily muscled, pine-green-dyed middle linebacker, struts toward them, dragging his date, a Haitian girl wearing only a bandanna around her waist. Lauren stares at the couple’s his-and-her hip tattoo, which creates the illusion of two bulldogs doing it doggy style when the pair are making love with the girl on top.

 

‘Mule—we gotta talk, man.’ Before Lauren can object, Hudak drapes his arm around her fiancé and leads him away.

 

K. C. shrugs. ‘Sam’s a popular guy.’

 

‘Too popular.’

 

The Haitian girl slides over to K. C., grinding her bare groin into his hip. ‘I’m tired of playing defensive ball. How ’bout teaching me a little offense?’

 

K. C. winks at Lauren. ‘Back in a minute.’

 

‘Yeah, go grind your brains out.’ She watches him lead the girl away.

 

Lauren’s eyes search for Sam. She spots him by the hot tub, surrounded by most of the team’s defensive starters, all of whom are dyed the same shade of Miami green.

 

The hell with this
… She heads back inside.

 

‘You’re accusing me of tanking it?’ Sam shakes his head in disbelief.

 

Hudak leans in, spewing his garlic breath. ‘We lost. No way we lose to the
fubishitting
Seminole-holes if you’re running the way you usually do.’

 

‘I had 104 yards on the ground, 54 more receiving. I scored a touchdown.’

 

‘Don’t diss us, Mule,’ says Keith Plourde, the Hurricanes’ cocaptain. ‘You haven’t run for less than two hundred yards since you were in grade school.’

 

‘I need that playoff bonus, Mule,’ Brian Mundt whines. ‘I’m
fuupdass
without it.’

 

‘Maybe you wouldn’t be so fucked-up-the-ass if you learned how to tackle,’ Sam says, pushing the defensive end out of his face.

 

‘I heard a ton of gamblers lost money on the point spread today,’ Keith Plourde states, accusingly. ‘Maybe you were in on the action, huh?’

 

Sam lunges for Plourde, pile-driving him backward against a palm tree.

 

Hudak and Mundt intercede before the first punch is thrown.

 

‘Knock it off!’ The veins in Hudak’s thick neck bulge like garter snakes. ‘We know Mule wouldn’t do that, K. P. What we don’t know is if our soul brother is turnin’ pro?’

 

‘Not this season.’

 

‘Yeah, but what about next year?’ asks Jeff ‘Bubba’ Larsen, Miami’s six-foot-three-inch, three-hundred-pound all-American strong-side linebacker.

 

‘I don’t know.’ Sam stares down Larsen, his heart pounding with adrenaline. ‘I haven’t decided.’

 

‘Fuck!’ Now it’s Larsen who is ready to strike. ‘You leave after this year, and we’re all
fuupdass
. Between stipes and bonuses, we’re talkin’ a buck forty large a piece.’

 

‘One forty-five,’ corrects Mundt.

 

‘Most of us don’t got two-hundred-million-dollar GFL contracts waiting out there,’ growls Matt Eterginio, the starting free safety.

 

‘None of us
have
,’ Sam corrects. ‘You’re supposed to be an English major, Matt. Of course, you’re also supposed to be a free safety, but that didn’t stop FSU from takin’ it to the house on you all afternoon.’

 

‘Okay, everybody just calm down,’ commands Hudak. ‘Look, Mule, we’re your teammates. Your brothers. Brothers stick together.’

 

Brothers stick together
… The words seem to echo in his brain.

 

‘Are you gonna be there for us, Mule?’

 

They crowd around, creating a pine-green wall of flesh.

 

*

 

Lauren surveys the banquet table of food and drugs in the dining hall. The sushi and Chinese ribs look tantalizing, but she passes. The last time she ate at one of K. C.’s parties, she ended up playing naked volleyball on the dean’s lawn.

 

She hears cheers. Bored, she follows the sound to the entertainment suite.

 

A dozen football players are lying on body cushions, drinking beer and watching a 3-D holographic replay of the Miami-FSU game. Lauren grabs a juice pouch off the cooler tree and takes a seat on the floor.

 

The projection is playing Miami’s opening drive. A hovering spherical-video end zone cam zooms in on K. C. Renner as he mouths incomprehensible signals, the action set at ultraslow motion. The quarterback takes the snap and pitches the ball to Sam, who heads to his right, where several Seminole players are waiting.

 

Wild cheers of ‘Mule … Mule … Mule’ as Sam executes an eye-popping pirouette, races back toward the line of scrimmage, then stiff-arms his way through a wall of defenders like a mad bull, opening up his own hole.

 

Lauren feels goose bumps. She allows herself a smile.
Maybe I won’t be tired tonight

 

The camera zooms in tight on Sam’s face.

 

She stops smiling.

 

Lauren Beckmeyer has known Samuel Agler since they were in ninth grade. In all that time, she has never seen anything like the expression now etched on her boyfriend’s face.

 

Fear.

 
23
 

NOVEMBER 20, 2033: MANALAPAN, FLORIDA

 
Sunday Afternoon
 

The palatial south Florida mansion of billionaire Lucien J. Mabus and his wife Lilith, stretches eight hundred feet along a private pristine coastline in Manalapan, a small island town just north of Boynton Beach. The thirty-one-room, three-storey home, originally built for $21.3 million back in 1997, features a seaside swimming pool complete with waterfall and swim-up bar, two tennis courts, a fitness center, a twelve-hundred-square-foot grand salon illuminated by a six-thousand-pound crystal chandelier imported from a nineteenth-century French chateau, an observatory dome, and an eight-car garage, its floors paved in Saturnia marble. Each of the six bedroom suites has its own balcony facing the Atlantic. All of the home’s windows are self-cleaning, made with a thin metal oxide coating electrified to help rainwater to wash away loose particles.

 

The mansion’s staff includes two housekeepers, a chef, a licensed pilot who doubles as a chauffeur, six heavily armed security guards, and a mechanic. Robotic mowers and trimmers perpetually manicure the lawns and shrubs to incessant perfection. Every computer and control station in the home is wired to a backup fuel-cell power station located on the northern side of the property. There are three satellite dishes on the roof.

 

All this—for only two adults and the occasional visiting business associate.

 

Twenty-six-year-old Lucien Mabus, son of the late Peter Mabus, opens his mouse brown, red-rimmed eyes and gazes at himself in the ceiling mirror. His face is ashen gray, his lips—alabaster white. His eyes are sunken, surrounded by dark circles.

 

‘It’s just the flu,’ his personal physician has assured him. ‘You’re far too young and rich to leave us now, Lucien.’

 

That was sixteen days and thirty pounds ago. His personal physician had wanted him to undergo tests in a hospital, but Lilith refused. ‘Those hospitals will kill you, darling. I’m sure it’s just a bad case of food poisoning. I keep warning you about eating so much shellfish. I’ve sent the cooks home. From now on, I’ll personally be bringing you your meals, at least until you feel better.’

 

Lucien glances to the nightstand on his right. Prescription medicines, tissues, and a plastic beach bucket, in case he has to vomit again. A half-eaten bowl of chicken soup sits on a tray. The sight of it makes him queasy.
Chicken soup … can’t she cook anything but chicken soup?

 

The billionaire rolls over, pulling the blanket over his shoulder.
What’s all the money in the world if I’m too sick to enjoy it?

 

Chills fade into a hot flash, bringing with it the dreaded queasiness.

 

Lucien grabs the bucket and retches.

 

His pulse throbs in his head. His throat burns, his stomach convulsing in spasms. Flopping onto the floor, he holds his head in his hands, praying for the pain to stop.

 

God … what is it you want from me? Charity work? Another wing at some third-world hospital? Just tell me and end this misery.

 

Gathering his strength, he drags himself to his feet, the vertigo causing the bedroom to spin. Staggering forward, he heads to the bathroom—then stops, staring at his bare feet.

 

His toes are numb.

 

‘Oh, God … what’s happening to me? Lilith? Lilith!’

 

He stumbles out of the master bedroom and into the hallway.

 

‘Lilith?’

 

No wife. No servants.
Where the hell is everyone?

 

He fumbles his way down the hall, the numbness spreading to his feet and ankles. He pauses at the open door to one of the guest suites, hearing voices. ‘Lilith? Lilith … you in here?’

 

Lucien staggers into the bedroom.

 

Stretched out across the king-size water bed, staring at her reflection in the ceiling mirror, is his young bride.

 

‘Lilith, help—’ Lucien falls to his knees, the sharp pain in his gut overwhelming. Numbness rises past his ankles to his hips. ‘Call Gill. Get me to a hospital, I think it’s my heart!’

 

‘No need to worry, sweetie, it’s not your heart.’

 

‘How … how do you know?’

 

‘Darling, it’s just the poison I’ve been feeding you.’

 

Lucien’s blood runs cold.

 

‘Now die like a good little rich boy, and don’t stain the carpet.’

 

Lucien collapses facefirst onto the plush beige rug, the numbness rising past his chest, the ringing in his ears insufficient to mute the cackle of laughter coming from his murderous wife’s voluptuous lips.

 
University of Miami
 

The Jerome Brown Memorial Athletic Center is located on the north side of the University of Miami campus, adjacent to the MTI basketball arena. In addition to its indoor track, pool, weight room, and conditioning equipment, the JBC is equipped with a press room and media center, complete with global uplink capabilities. At the heart of the facility is a circular broadcast chamber, its tinted smart-glass walls designed to conceal a myriad of cameras and lights, microphones, special effects boards, and technicians.

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