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“In a way she is alive — but she represents everything I have grown to hate about this world. She is as high-tech a weapon as it is possible to have, and yet her own power can be used to send our planet back to the dark ages. A beautiful irony, don’t you think, Professor?”

“This weapon must never be used! Do you hear me? Never!”

Wade smiled. “Of course she will be used! Just like you and me — she was born to die, Viktor, and how she will die!” As he spoke, Mendoza returned to the room with Aurora at his side.

“We’re all set, señor,” he said.

“Great.”

“This is madness, Wade!”

“No!” Wade raised his voice, the dreamy complexion now gone from his face. “What we are doing to our world is madness. It is time for a new beginning. A new age! The Aztecs understood about the importance of new ages… about how a new sun would usher in a new age.”

“New Age?” Viktor stared at the Texan with incredulity. “What are you talking about?”

“For the Aztecs, we’re now living in the fifth and final age, Viktor. During the previous four ages, the sun was more of a god than anything else and now some believe the fifth and final sun must give up his life if humans are to progress to the next level of consciousness. Now, I shall deliver a new age to the world, and the people of this planet shall thank me for it when I liberate them from the shackles of our failed, burned-out era.”

Viktor shook his head and took a step back, but was kept in place by the barrel of Mendoza’s greasy revolver, which he jammed into the small of the scientist’s back.

Wade gave a knowing nod and smirk. “I know what you’re thinking, Viktor… you’re thinking what good can come of destruction on a scale like this? But the fear of death is just another feature of life in the modern West. The ancient peoples knew that death meant more life — this is why they burned the land to encourage new growth, and why they… sacrificed people.”

Viktor waited helplessly for Wade to continue, speechless with fear.

Wade continued in his sing-song Texan drawl. “Sacrifice was integral to ancient culture — they knew that without death there could be no rebirth. That is why they made live offerings to the gods.”

Viktor didn’t like where this talk of ‘live offerings’ was going, and now he saw that dreamy look back on Wade’s face once again. “What do you mean?”

“He doesn’t understand,” Mendoza said in Spanish.

“Yes, of course he understands,” Wade said sourly. “He knows what a live offering is — don’t you, Viktor?”

“Of course, but I don’t see the connection.”

“Then you must look harder.”

“If you think committing genocide with this cobalt bomb is the same thing as sacrificing a person on an altar then you really are crazy, Wade!”

“A single person on an altar? When the Aztecs opened a new temple dedicated to the mighty Huitzilopochtli they offered the gods over eighty thousand people as sacrifices, Viktor. Eighty… thousand… people. Now you just think about that for a minute boy! When I dedicate our new discovery to the true gods I will ensure they receive the greatest offering of all history.”

Viktor pulled himself together, straightening his shirt and tie and standing up to his full height. “All right them, where are you going to detonate it?”

“Hush, Viktor — and don’t ask impertinent questions. Let’s just say I chose a location where I’m going to get the maximum bang for my buck.”

Mendoza laughed, dropped the stub of his cigarette and crushed it out under his boot.

Viktor stared in horror at the Texan tech guru and wondered if any of this could be real. Maybe, he told himself, it was all nothing more than a nightmare and he would soon be woken by his wife with a cup of coffee — and the sun streaming in through the window of their Santa Fe home. Alena… where are you?

His thoughts were interrupted by the sound of the forklift truck starting up. He looked up and saw Jorge was now back in the warehouse and sitting at the wheel. Lurking behind him were the familiar figures of Aurora Soto, Delgado and Garza. The woman with the black eye was behind them all in the shadows, as quiet as a deer mouse.

“Not much time left, boss,” Mendoza said.

Wade beamed. “It’s time for you to go to work, Viktor. Don’t forget the part you’re playing in all this. Not even the Russians are crazy enough to let a complete nuke out in the world, which is why we needed you.” Wade ordered Aurora Soto to fetch the container Viktor had stolen from the lab at Los Alamos. “It would be a shame if your wife had to get hurt, wouldn’t it?”

Viktor nodded, the image of his wife locked away somewhere, frightened for her life, burned a hate-filled hole in his mind but he could do nothing to help her other than obey Wade’s insane instructions.

“Good job, Viktor. I want you to fit the trigger mechanism you stole to the Hummingbird, and connect a timing device to her. Now get to work — I want this thing airborne before the day’s done. Yes I do, boy.”

Viktor Sobotka did as he was told, carefully fitting the trigger into the device. A cobalt bomb was a regular fission bomb, but salted with cobalt in order to increase the lethality of the radioactive fallout. At the core of the weapon was a quantity of uranium-235, a fissile isotope capable of sustaining a chain reaction. This reaction was caused by firing a smaller quantity of uranium at the main load. That was where Viktor came in, and the trigger mechanism he stole from the lab in Los Alamos. Once fitted, he would rig up a digital timer designed to activate the trigger at any time Wade specified.

The hours passed, until eventually he wiped his hands and sighed heavily. “It’s done. You can set this timer to trigger the firing mechanism any time you like. Please… promise to leave me and my wife alone. I swear I won’t tell anyone what happened here today.”

Wade nodded in appreciation of the work. “I’m very satisfied with this, Viktor, but sadly I suffer from a fundamental lack of trust when it comes to scientists.” He turned to Mendoza, who was standing nearby with his pearl-handled Colt. “Kill him.”

Viktor’s eyes widened and he turned on his heel to flee the men, darting out of the grain store. Mendoza stepped casually through the double doors and raised the pistol, firing twice. Viktor fell forward and his knees smashed into the ground. The hot air rushed into the cavity made by the bullet and pushed down on his lungs, collapsing them. He struggled to breathe, but his lungs couldn’t expand against the weight of the external air, and now he felt the blood rushing into his lungs as well. A man of science, he knew this was called pneumohemothorax, and without immediate medical attention he would die.

He glanced over his shoulder as Silvio Mendoza nonchalantly strolled toward him, cocking back the revolver’s hammer with his thumb. The weapon’s front sight flashed in the sunshine. Something told him the Mexican wasn’t coming over to offer medical assistance. He knew he had only seconds left.

He heard Wade’s raspy drawl. “Finish him, and get this baby out to the airfield.”

Rubbing his forefinger over the bullet would, Viktor began to write the last thing he would ever write, drawing the letters in his own blood. He had to tell the world what was coming, but then the gun fired. A loud, vicious blast echoed off the jungle canopy on the far side of the hill and sent a flock of startled jacamars exploding into the hot, blue sky.

Viktor Sobotka rolled on top of his last will and testament, gone forever.

* * *

When the work was done, Jorge Mendoza and his men closed up the back doors of the Atego and casually secured the lock. Now, with the drive ahead of him, he remembered his work as a freight train driver when he used to smuggle drugs over the US border. He hid the cocaine packets under the driver’s seat beside the battery.