He ripped off the headset and stamped on it with his good leg.
Nancy rushed back to him. They held each other for a moment, but this wasn’t the time or the place for a long embrace.
“I can’t believe you’re here,” he said.
“I called Sue. I told her you were in trouble, that we couldn’t bring in outsiders.”
Sanchez had the postadrenaline shakes. She was trying to comfort Alf Kenyon and keep him from going into shock.
Will knelt and squeezed Kenyon’s hand. “You’re not going to die, Alf. Not for a good long time.”
Kenyon grimaced in pain and nodded.
Will turned to Sanchez. “Thank you.” That was all he needed to say.
Her jaw was quivering. “Nobody tries to kill my people. We protect our own. I scrambled a jet from Teterboro. We picked Nancy up in New Hampshire and flew all night. We just got here this second. Will, Mueller’s dead.”
“I’m sorry,” Will said. He truly was.
Then it hit him that if his bus hadn’t been delayed in LA, he would have gotten to the house too early to be saved. It was meant to be, he thought.
Nancy was standing over Frazier’s body. “Is this the man who killed my parents?”
“Yes.”
“Good.”
Will asked, “Where’s Philly?”
“Laura and Greg have him up at the lake. I need to call them.”
With Nancy’s help, Will dragged himself back onto the sofa. “All hell’s going to break loose here. Another wave of watchers is going to come. We’ve got to move fast.”
“What do you want me to do?” she asked.
Will squeezed Kenyon’s hand again. “Alf, where did Henry put the Cantwell papers?”
Weakly, “Lower desk drawer. Over there.”
Nancy ran over to the desk. The parchments were in a plain folder lying on top of the 1527 book. The letters from Felix, Calvin, Nostradamus, and that simple page with the scrawclass="underline" 9 February 2027. Finis Dierum.
“Does that printer scan?” Will asked her, pointing to the printer beside the desktop computer.
It did. It was a fast, expensive one, and the pages flew out of the feeder. He had Nancy scan the Vectis letter and the others to the memory stick they recovered from Frazier’s pocket.
Will opened his laptop computer, plugged in the memory stick, and clicked on HenryNet. There were sirens echoing off the hills. He needed the password. “Alf, what’s Henry’s network password?”
Sanchez shook the man. “He’s passed out.”
Will rubbed his eyes and thought for a moment.
Then he typed 2027.
He was in.
With the wail of sirens getting closer, Will banged out a quick e-mail, attached some files, and hit SEND.
Greg, old boy, your life’s never going to be the same, he thought. No one’s is.
Nancy helped him to his feet and got on her tiptoes to kiss him, the only way she could reach his mouth.
He told her, “Go get the book and the papers. I want to go to the hospital, and I want to go home with you. In that order.”
Chapter 38
The only thing moving slowly in Will’s life was the drip, drip, drip of the antibiotics flowing into his veins.
Lying in his bed at the New York Presbyterian Hospital on that Monday evening, he savored a rare period of solitude. From the moment the ambulances and police had arrived at Spence’s house in Henderson, he’d been inundated with doctors, nurses, cops, FBI agents, and an Air Ambulance crew of EMTs that talked his ear off all the way from Vegas to New York.
His hospital room had a killer view of the East River. If it were a condo, it would have been insanely pricey. But for the first time ever, he missed his one-bedroom shoebox because that was where his wife and son were.
This was a relative calm before the storm kicked up again. He’d had his sponge bath, administered by a tough little nurse at car-wash speed. He’d picked at his dinner tray and watched a few minutes of ESPN for normalcy. Nancy would be in shortly with a shirt and a sweater to put on for the TV cameras.
Outside his door, a cordon of FBI agents protected his room and secured access to his floor. Agents from the Department of Defense and the CIA were trying to get to him, and the Attorney General was engaged in internecine warfare with his angry counterparts at the Pentagon and Homeland Security. For the moment, the FBI wall was holding firm.
The world hadn’t been expecting the news that hit the streets, mailboxes, doorsteps and the Internet on a sleepy Sunday morning just before Halloween.
The headline in The Washington Post trumpeted a story that at first blush made people think the venerable newspaper was perpetrating a hoax:
US GOVERNMENT HAS VAST LIBRARY OF MEDIEVAL BOOKS WHICH PREDICT FUTURE BIRTHS AND DEATHS UP TO 2027; SECRET INSTALLATION AT AREA 51, NEVADA ESTABLISHED BY HARRY TRUMAN TO MINE DATA; SOURCE OF LIBRARY: A BRITISH MONASTERY; CONNECTIONS SEEN TO DOOMSDAY KILLER CASE.
by Greg Davis, Staff Reporter,
Washington Post Exclusive
The five-thousand-word story was not a hoax. It was rich in documentation and extensively quoted Will Piper, former FBI Special Agent in charge of the Doomsday case, who described the circumstances of one Mark Shackleton, computer scientist, Area 51 researcher, and the architect of a fictitious serial-killing spree in New York, and the violent government cover-up orchestrated to protect a secret desert installation hidden for six decades. The Post had in its possession a copy of the library database that covered the United States through the year 2027, and they had been able to successfully correlate database predictions for hundreds of individuals across the country against actual contemporaneous birth and death data.
They also had a group of letters from the fourteenth and sixteenth centuries that purported to explain the origin of the books and place them in some historical context. The article made reference to a mysterious order of monk savants on the Isle of Wight but stressed the lack of corroborating proof. Future Post articles would talk about the influence of the Library on famous historical figures such as John Calvin and Nostradamus.
Finally, there was the matter of 2027. In a fourteenth-century letter, there was a notation about some kind of apocalyptic end-of-days event, but the only certainty was that the books did not have entries beyond February 9, 2027.
Piper had been a target of violence that had claimed the lives of his in-laws, and he had been wounded in an action against covert government agents. His whereabouts were unknown, but his condition was reported to be stable.
On Sunday morning, the White House, the Pentagon, and the State Department all issued official no comments, but senior sources close to the administration, namely the White House Chief of Staff and the Vice President, without attribution, told the paper they had no idea what the Post reporter was talking about-and in retrospect they were, in fact, telling the truth. They hadn’t been in the Area 51 loop.
By Monday, the official Washington language was shifting by degrees from “no comment” to “stand by for an announcement from the White House,” to “the President will address the nation at 9:00 P.M. EST.”
The newspaper story sparked a fire that spread across the globe at the speed of electrons. The revelations hijacked nearly every conversation on the planet. By that first evening virtually all sentient adults in the world had heard about the Library and had an opinion. People were consumed by curiosity and gripped by apprehension.
All across America, constituents called their elected representatives, and congressmen and senators called the White House.
Across the globe, worshippers flocked to their priests, rabbis, imams, and ministers, who worriedly tried to match official dogma to the supposed reality.
Heads of state and ambassadors of virtually every nation barraged the State Department with demands for information.