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Natalia closed the book.

John Rourke looked at his son. “They don’t know of this—the Ministers? They don’t know what is contained in the diary?”

“I think the old one does—he carries a key. It’s his badge of office. He told me he didn’t know—“ Natalia interrupted. “If this diary has been locked for nearly five centuries, and John opened it by prying the lock with his knife, then why are there fresh scratches near the keyhole?”

Rourke looked at her.

Michael whispered, “He did read it—the old one read it.” John Rourke closed his eyes. He spoke. “The old one you talked of—he revered the diary too much to destroy it. You told him of the aircraft and the pilot. You told him about us—the Retreat. All his life, he thought he’d been carrying out some preordained mission of murder based on some holy book. Now he finds it’s the diary of a murderer and that all he’s been doing is carrying out a tradition of killing the innocent.”

“His mind might—“

Rourke looked at his son. “That weapons vault is the only place they could be—all the people from here. I think I know what we’ll find once we locate it.” And John Rourke felt Natalia hold his right arm very tightly as he picked up the twin stainless Scoremasters from the conference table.

Chapter Fifty-Three

Paul Rubenstein stayed near the inside of the air lock, listening—but there was no sound from outside. Behind him, he heard Madison speak. “The woman with Michael’s father—she cannot be his mother. She is too young. Michael’s father seems too young—he looks almost not at all older than Michael.” Paul looked at her and smiled. “That’s a long story. Michael’s mother is at our place—our Retreat. And Natalia is John Rourke’s friend.” “But Michael’s father and the woman Natalia— they look at each other like Michael looks at me, like I look at Michael.”

Rubenstein shrugged. “I told you—it’s a long story. But you’re right—I know the look. There’s a girl—Michael’s sister. Her name is Annie. You’ll like her, Madison—and she looks at me that way.” and he smiled inside himself, feeling the smile as it crossed his lips. “That probably sounds real peculiar. Well, but—“ “I think that you are a good man. That is what she smiles at.”

Paul Rubenstein studied her face a moment. Then he replied, “Thank you—very much,” and he looked away rather than feel more embarrassed than he already felt. That no one came through the doors as yet somehow frightened him more than if dozens of the cannibals were attacking. And what had become^of the people who lived here?

He shivered, shaking his shoulders, flexing the muscles there to shake off the feeling.

The Schmeisser in his hands, he crouched beside the door. “Madison—remember, keep a lookout behind us.”

“I remember,” the girl answered.

Flexing his shoulder muscles had not gotten rid of the feeling.

Chapter Fifty-Four

John Rourke spoke as he ran, Natalia and Michael flanking him as they turned from one corridor into the next. “Think about it. Once they realized the ones they called Them were outside, when the Ministers and the rest of the uppercrust died, they wouldn’t consign their bodies to be eaten. Assuming that the air was at least mar-ginally breathable at least a century ago, that accounts for moving the arms from the vault. They’re using the original vault which would have been sealable as a burial chamber for the Families. If your husband or wife or child died, could you send their body through the air lock to be ripped to pieces?” “But where is it?”

Natalia asked, panting. Rourke’s own body, he realized, was tiring more rapidly because of the prolonged exposure to the thinner air—Natalia’s as well. But Michael, who had lived in the thinner atmosphere for fifteen years, in this heavier atmosphere inside the Place, more like the atmosphere that had once been upon the surface of the earth, seemed to thrive. They stopped at the mouth of a corridor they had not yet explored.

Rourke stared along its length—a massive gray steel door at the far end.

“The vault,” Natalia whispered.

Michael started—very slowly—walking around it, saying, “If they knew we had found our way inside and that the air lock’s integrity was broken and that the cannibals would—“ He let the sentence hang.

“A fear built for a century,” Natalia whispered.

“They’d look at it as a final decent act—the old one and the other Ministers,”

Rourke added. Rourke held the liberated M-16’s pistol grip in his right fist. He

looked at his son. “When the cannibals had Madison before you tried to get her

out, were they about to—“

** “No,” Michael answered quickly.

“Did Madison say why she wasn’t a breeder?”

“No, she—what the hell are you—“

“I don’t know yet—I’m thinking out loud. Forget about it,” and John Rourke walked ahead. If it were nothing with Madison—he suddenly remembered during the fighting. He had given one of the cannibals a knee smash and ie had had virtually no effect.

He stopped at the vaultdoor. His gloves were on but he wouldn’t risk it—he took the black chrome A.G. Russell Sting IA from inside his trouser band, gently tossing the knife toward the door. There was no sparking of electricity. He picked up the knife, re-sheathing it.

He touched the flash deflectored muzzle of the M-16 to the combination dial, then to the opening handle of the vault door, holding the M-16 by the synthetic buttstock only. There was no sparking of electricity either time. He looked to his right—double doors, the kind that swung inward and outward, but a chain looped through the door handles and drawn tight, a padlock on the chain. “Natalia—work on cracking the vault. Mi-chael—keep her covered. Call me when it’s open.”

“Where are you going?” his son called from behind him. “What are—“ “Do as I said,” Rourke answered softly.

Rourke stopped a good fifty feet from the in chained double doors. He shouldered the M*16, the selector set to semi. He sighted on the chain link rather than the lock, firing.