The Mayan Resurrection (56 page)

Read The Mayan Resurrection Online

Authors: Steve Alten

BOOK: The Mayan Resurrection
2.23Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
 

Jacob grins. ‘There was a young lady named Bright, whose speed was far faster than light. She went out one day, in a relative way, and returned the previous night.’

 

‘What’s that supposed to mean?’

 

‘What your brother means is that if you can move faster than the speed of light, you could theoretically travel back in time, potentially causing all sorts of paradoxes.’

 

Immanuel turns to his twin. ‘As in … a time loop?’

 

‘Shh, don’t interrupt,’ Jacob says. ‘Okay, Doc, you’re stumbling along just fine, now see if you can tell me how this hyperdrive concept of yours works.’

 

Dr. Mohr points to the wasp’s nest of charred, afterburner-shaped housings, each orifice no less than thirty feet in diameter. ‘Once in orbit, those housings open, allowing a tachyon stream to pass through. The
Balam
’s computer regulates course and speed by widening or shunting off the openings in different combinations. The lower the tachyon stream’s energy, the faster the ship would travel.’ The scientist smiles. ‘So? Did I pass?’

 

Jacob’s communicator flashes on, interrupting them.

 

It’s Dominique. ‘Jacob, dinner’s ready. I want you and your brother home now, please. And tell Dr. Mohr that his wife called, and he’d better get his rear end in gear.’

 

Dave Mohr checks his watch. ‘Oops, abort, abort. I’ll see you boys tomorrow morning.’

 

Immanuel watches the wiry scientist hurry toward the exit.
‘He seems to know an awful lot about this spaceship.’

 

‘He should,’ says Jacob. ‘After all, he once piloted it.’

 

‘Huh?’

 

Jacob turns to face him, his piercing blue eyes suddenly dead serious. ‘The time loop, Manny. When the cataclysm strikes Earth, Dave Mohr will be one of the scientists selected for Mars Colony. Only he’ll never make it, his ship and several others caught within the gravitational forces of the wormhole.’

 

‘Dr. Mohr was on
Xibalba
?’

 

‘Yes. Fortunately, he and a few other members of the brotherhood managed to escape before the Abomination took over.’

 

‘Whoa, wait a minute … are you telling me Dr. Mohr was a … a Guardian?’

 

‘Was, and will be again, unless we return to
Xibalba
and succeed. He doesn’t remember it, but Dr. Mohr was once the great Mayan wise man, Kukulcán.’

 
South Beach, Florida
 

The setting sun has turned the Atlantic Ocean a deep magenta.

 

Lauren remains hidden in the shadows of an alleyway another five minutes before crossing A-1-A to the row of private beach garages. She quickly locates the facility belonging to the Peacock family and enters the access code.

 

The aluminum panel opens, revealing motorized water skis, lounge chairs, and a canary yellow three-wheeled dune buggy, its fiber-cast hull more boat than car.

 

Lauren climbs inside the two-passenger open cockpit of the Amphibian. Powering up the engine, she guides the vehicle
out of its garage, then bounds over the grass dunes and sand, straight into the ocean.

 

Waves lift the buoyant vessel away from the silt. Wheels retract. A forward ski moves into place beneath the pointed bow, a rotary-driven propeller dropping beneath its stern.

 

Lauren guns the engines. The wind howls in her ears as she races north, bouncing along the surface at fifty miles an hour, heading for Cape Canaveral.

 
Hangar 13, Kennedy Space Center,
Cape Canaveral, Florida
 

Roasted turkey. Stuffing. Sweet potatoes. Freshly baked rolls.

 

Immanuel is stuffed. He lays his head back against the violet cushion and belches.

 

‘That was nice.’

 

‘Sorry, Ma, but that was the best meal I’ve had in a long time. How long it take you to synthesize it?’

 

She shoots him a harsh look. ‘I cooked it. That was real turkey, not that synthetic soy crap laced with flavoring and chemicals. If you want to get your dailies, take them the old-fashioned way.’

 

Grand Master Chong enters, a look of concern on the old man’s face. ‘Jacob, come please. Your brother, too.’

 

Dominique feels the blood rush from her face. ‘What is it?’

 

The monk shakes his head. ‘We have guests.’

 
Atlantic Ocean
8:56 p.m.
 

Lauren eases back on the Amphibian’s throttle and turns toward shore, allowing the two-man boat to settle in the swells.

 

She stands in the open cockpit and stretches, her buttocks numb. She has been following the Florida coastline for three hours. Exhausted, cold, and sore, she has been questioning her own sanity for most of the trip.

 

Glancing down at the control panel, she quickly verifies her position on the LED computer screen.

 

The old Cape Canaveral lighthouse is a half mile north. Just ahead is the immense building she had seen from the NASA causeway only days earlier.

 

Days? Seems more like years. Okay, if you’re really going to do this, then do it…

 

She accelerates behind a cresting wave and rides it into the beach, activating the amphibious switch.

 

As the jet ski rolls forward onto the sand, three tires rotate into position beneath the chassis, instantly converting the seacraft back into a landrover.

 

Lauren parks the triwheeled dune buggy on dry sand, her eyes focused on the forty-foot-high perimeter fence which runs parallel to the shoreline.

 

WARNING
:
ELECTRIFIED FENCE
.
NO TRESPASSING BY ORDER OF THE UNITED STATES GOVERNMENT
.

 
 

She tosses a seashell fragment.

 

Zapp!

 

Okay, Einstein, now what?

 

A flash of headlights causes her to duck. She watches as a white stretch limousine parks in front of the main entrance.

 

Lauren sits back, rubbing her head, trying to fathom the sudden sensation of déjà vu.

 

Grand Master Chong, Dominique, Jacob, and Immanuel stand before the two-way observation panel, watching the occupants in the next room.

 

Seated at the head of a simulated oak conference table is President John Zwawa. On his left is Alyssa Popov, on his right, a Hispanic member of GOLDEN FLEECE.

 

‘Danny Diaz,’ Jacob mutters, ‘Dave Mohr’s right-hand man. Looks like the bastard sold us out.’

 

A disheveled Dr. Mohr enters the conference room, followed by the most stunning woman Immanuel Gabriel has ever seen. She is young, about his age, but carries herself in a more worldly way. Mocha tan skin. High cheekbones, accentuated by long, wavy ebony hair, which rolls down her taut, muscular back to her flawless waistline. Her lips are full and luscious, her dark, wrap around sunglasses adding an air of mystique. She saunters around the room in her own little world, her bone-colored silk pajama-style outfit threatening to fall away.

 

Manny watches her circle, his eyes wide. ‘Who is that?’

 

Jacob stares at the woman as if seeing a ghost. ‘Trouble.’

 

Dave Mohr’s voice emanates from speakers within their sound-proof office. ‘Mrs. Mabus, honestly, I’m not really sure
what you’re after. After all, we’ve been attempting to reverse engineer the starship for more than a decade now, and—’

 

‘Please, Dr. Mohr, let’s not begin our tenure together with lies.’ Her voice, so soothing, yet not one to be trifled with. ‘Daniel?’

 

Danny Diaz activates a recessed volumetric display, which rises to show the three-dimensional image of the Guardian’s starship rotating above the tabletop. ‘We’ve been able to access the
Balam
’s astrotopography program. We also located the source of the electromagnetic pulse weapon, which essentially prevented us from annihilating one another back in 2012.’

 

Lilith glides around the room, then abruptly stops and stares at her own reflection in the two-way mirror, inches from Jacob and Manny.

 

‘Who is she, Jacob?’ Dominique whispers.

 

Lilith suddenly smiles like an enchantress, then slowly lifts her silk top, exposing her tan, grapefruit-sized breasts at the two-way mirror.

 

Immanuel grins.

 

Jacob’s heart skips a beat.

 

And then the woman removes her wraparound sunglasses and reveals the sociopathic intensity of her azure-blue eyes.

 

Jacob grabs his twin by the arm and forcibly drags him from the room.

 

‘Jake, stop—’

 

‘No! You need to leave here, now!’

 

‘Jake, her eyes … was that—’

 

‘Yes. Now listen to me very carefully—’

 

They race down a corridor to a door marked
EQUIPMENT
. Jacob keys a code into a pad, then opens the door—

 

—revealing a stairwell that descends into darkness.

 

‘This will lead you outside to the beach. Give me two minutes, and I’ll cut power to the electrical fence. Your girlfriend’s outside.’

 

‘Lauren’s here? How do you know—’

 

‘Don’t talk, just listen. Head south. Stay out of the public eye. Find Frank Stansbury, he’s a friend of the family. Lives in Delray Beach, in the Western Estates.’

 

‘What about you?’

 

Jacob embraces his twin. ‘Don’t ask—just run! Remember, Frank Stansbury. And stay out of the nexus, or the Hunahpu will sense you. Now go!’

 

Immanuel hurries down the steps. Kicks open the rusted steel door and jogs out onto the beach, the wind gusting, the ocean spray blasting him in the face.

 

Searchlights activate behind and to his left. He dives forward, rolling to the base of the electrical barrier.

 

The searchlights’ motion detectors locate him. He tosses sand at the fence, which sizzles with static.
Come on, Jake, shut it down!

 

He takes a few breaths, looks around, then throws another fistful of sand.

 

This time, the charge is gone.

 

Leaping to his feet, he grabs hold of the fence, scaling the forty-foot-high steel barrier like a lizard. He leaps into the night, drops and lands on both feet—

 

—as a familiar figure runs away from him, heading for the ocean.

 

Lauren sprints down the beach, away from the sirens, away from the searchlights. The wind whistles in her ears as the world-class sprinter races for the Amphibian.

 

‘Lauren, wait!’

 

Sam?

 

Lauren stops running as her fiancé stumbles, barreling sideways into her.

 

‘Lauren?’ Sam stares at her in disbelief. ‘Oh, God, it is you!’

 

She leaps into his arms, sobbing. ‘Sam, I’m in so much trouble—’

 

‘You and me both.’ Looking back over her shoulder, he spots the armed security guards. ‘Come on, we gotta move.’

 

Hand in hand, they race down the beach.

 

‘No, this way!’ Lauren pulls him toward the water.

 

He spots the Amphibian, then looks back, as one of the security guards activates his taser.

 

No!
Ignoring his brother’s warning, he slips into the nexus—

 

—time slowing to an excruciating crawl.

 

Behind him, pushing through clear gelatin-like fourth-dimensional waves, is the taser’s sizzling violet circle of energy. Expanding rapidly across the beachhead, the paralyzing loop of lightning reaches for them—

 

—as Jacob grabs Lauren around her waist and leaps into the Amphibian’s cockpit.

 

I can taste you, cousin. Why do you run? What is it you fear?

 

Gunning the engine, he converts the jeep into a boat, then activates the craft’s autopilot, pressing the setting for Miami—

 

—as the wave of energy slams into them from behind, zapping them into unconsciousness.

 
34
 

25 NOVEMBER 2033: USS PENNSYLVANIA, ATLANTIC OCEAN, 297 NAUTICAL MILES EAST OF MIAMI

 
Friday Morning
 

Captain Robert Wilkins, Operational Commander of the Weather Net-Atlantic Force, stares at the real-time satellite image of Super-Cane Kenneth being projected on the control room’s large monitor. The Category-6 storm has become an absolute freak of nature, its clearly defined eye sixty nautical miles northeast of Eleuthera Island, its swirling vortex already engulfing the Bahamas, punishing the hastily abandoned islands with winds in excess of 195 miles an hour.

 

Wilkins is as frustrated as he is worried. The delivery of the MPK gas mix to the Port of Miami was not only late, it was light, with barely enough of the pressurized cryogenic nitrogen to fill half the fleet’s converted vertical silos. Category-6 super-canes mandate a minimum of eight fully loaded vessels. Wilkins has barely six, and Kenneth is no ordinary superstorm.

 

Executive Officer David Sutera approaches, handing him a printout. ‘Skipper, we just received this latest GMT.’

 

S
UPER
-C
ANE
K
ENNETH

Other books

Hero by Wrath James White, J. F. Gonzalez
The Hard Life by Flann O'Brien
The Dalai Lama's Cat by Michie, David
PRIME by Boyette, Samantha
The Mask by Dean Koontz
Sara's Song by Sandra Edwards
Club Scars by Mara McBain
From Kiss to Queen by Janet Chapman
Tales of the Out & the Gone by Imamu Amiri Baraka