Выбрать главу

Nina started shaking, her eyes welling with tears again. She placed her hands over her mouth in shock at the vision of Eickhart's spy. Sweating profusely with burning red skin, he sniffed constantly. In between his breaths, he coughed profusely.

"Where is the Spear of Destiny?" he sneered, through fits of coughing that shook his body.

Sam looked at Nina as calmly as he could, but they both knew that in their close vicinity stood a man infected with something that came from inside the platform. It dawned on them that the only bacteria here was kept from the Wolfenstein Ice Station.

"We don't have it, Tommy," Nina's quivering voice bent.

"Don't you fucking lie to me, Gould! I know you have been working on it."

"It's in the lab down below," Sam said quickly, to avert attention from Nina. "I can take you."

"No, you'll both take me, son. And you'll take me now," Tommy said and motioned with the barrel for them to get up. His eyes looked horrifying from the fever, coloring the whites a dark pink, which melted grotesquely into the light brown of his irises. It gave the impression that his eyes were entirely red and with his sweat-soaked hair it only added to the unnatural sight.

Sam took Nina by the arm and led her with him, holding her body tightly to his. It was a great comfort to her that he would not leave her even an iota behind him. Through the walkways they headed to the elevator. Nina prayed that Purdue would be down there and that someone could inoculate them against whatever Tommy had. Little did she know that Calisto, in her vindictive nature, had also taken the antidotes with her. After seeing the evil breeding of human beings according to a lunatic doctrine, she decided to leave them all to their fate. The keepers were as bad as the kept, and she wanted all to perish in her wake.

When they stepped out of the elevator, Nina went ahead to punch in her code. On the other side of the glass she saw the scientists locked in furious argument about something.

"What is going on?" she asked, as she rushed toward them.

"The Wolfenstein viral strains have been stolen!" said one woman.

"WHAT!" Nina shrieked, her stomach tying itself in a nightmarish knot at the prospects of their fate. "The antidotes?"

The woman shook her head gravely and Nina followed her gaze to the empty chests.

"Oh, my God, no!" Nina cried out, as she turned to Sam and Tommy. This was the opportune moment to get away from the gun-toting dead man walking. Suddenly she shouted, "Look! A carrier! He is infected!" Nina pointed to Tommy and stood back as the scientists with the protective clothing swarmed at him in panic to contain him. Sam was not taking any chances by grabbing the gun. There was no knowing what kind of strain infected him and human contact was too risky.

Tommy raised his Beretta and shot one of the scientists, provoking a full-fledged riot to apprehend him. Sam and Nina could hear him cussing and hissing about the Spear as they headed to her lab to get the relic.

"Nina, we have to get out of here before they take us too," Sam said, as Nina stopped in her tracks.

"Where is the Spear?" she gasped, breathing hard in oncoming hysterics. She turned to one of the assistants, a blond, blue eyed German woman. "Where the fuck is the relic I was working on?"

"Mr. Purdue came to take it this morning, doctor," the assistant replied snidely, "It belongs to him, after all," she smiled, and without another consideration she left the lab. Nina's jaw dropped.

"Something really bad is going down in this place, Sam. We have got to get the fuck out of here," she implored with her hands on his folded forearms. "Let's just get our shit and get away from here."

"How?" he asked. "How will we get out of here without a chopper?"

In her desperation she had neglected that fact.

"Let's go up and talk to Purdue. I want to know why he took the Spear from me before I was done," she bitched, her face distorted in a nasty scowl.

"Listen, let's just take it easy. Don't agitate things again," Sam warned her.

"Again?"

"Yes, your volatile temper always blows things out of proportion, Nina, and you know it. You can't always just go off on someone when they piss you off. You have to remember where we are," he pulled her closer by her upper arms and looked her seriously in the eye, "Pissing off Purdue while stranded on his island, is not a good idea. Let's go chat to him and see. Maybe he is just having a look at it himself. No big deal."

But Sam changed his tune quickly when they reached the platform. Finding the place crowded with helicopters, one arriving after the other, he knew something was going on that Purdue did not share with them. Eight or nine flying machines stood stationary, their rotors quiet as the last one circled the platform once and then descended slowly to set itself down.

From it stepped a middle-aged woman, well-groomed, wearing a fur coat. Her short hair was blond and she wore large sunglasses. Accompanied by a huge blond haired man she was shown to the same elevator as the previous guests.

"Dignitaries?" Nina frowned.

"On an oil rig? I think not," Sam replied. His journalistic instinct told him that this was not a friendly gathering with birthday cake and party games. Sam ran over to the man directing the visitors and over the noise of the last helicopter he shouted, "What is going on here? Where is Mr. Purdue?"

The man looked at Sam with contempt and simply said, "Please return to the laboratory with Dr. Gould and stay there. This is none of your concern, Mr. Cleave."

Sam hesitated and was going to insist, but the man casually put his hand on the butt of his gun to reiterate his order and Sam got the message.

They'd actually shoot us? What the hell is this? he thought as he returned to Nina, who stared at him in anticipation.

"Let's go to the community room," he said.

"What is going on?"

"I don't know, but we are not welcome. I'm going to talk to Liam. See if he can call out for an extraction for us," Sam huffed, his demeanor on borderline panic that worried Nina no end. He was the level-headed one, the logical one. If he was worried, she had reason to be.

* * *

Under the platform, concealed inside an undersea cavern, Purdue had a boardroom where his organization could meet. Only he and one maintenance manager knew about it, and this is where the members of the order congregated after his call for an urgent meeting. The massive chamber was impressive by old-world luxurious standards and in the middle stood an enormous table in black wood. Around it were twelve high-back chairs, pointed at the ends like horns. The floor was ground stone and on the floor, in a great size circling the table, the symbol of the Order of the Black Sun was inlaid with black marble — a circle with a center in gold, from where twelve lightning bolts met the outer circle. On the walls of the chamber hung flags of various nations and Himmler's SS, embroidered and fringed with rich cording.

Etched into the walls, expertly done, were the sigils of Aryan races from ancient history. Norse gods were represented — the Hammer of Thor, The Lightning of Zeus, swastikas and pagan wheel symbols. All over the ceiling geometric shapes in succession were etched, representing the order's claim that occult geometry along with the energy of the Black Sun could together bring forth unimaginable power from other dimensions. This energy was said to regenerate the Aryan race and was widely considered a replacement for the swastika. For the Tempelhofgesellschaft of bygone eras the Black Sun had a distinct relationship with alchemy. The sun above was a mere symbol of the invisible anti-sun, material things being mere representations of their spiritual counterparts, the shadows thereof.

These geometric measures and shapes resembled exactly those that Eickhart designed to be placed above the chamber he was having built behind his mansion. Unlike Purdue, he knew precisely what their purpose was and that the manner in which they were arranged was of pivotal importance — to summon the dormant abilities contained in the Spear and harness it for the ends of his nefarious greed.