wasteland. It was only fitting then, that the ancient one lurked in the primordial ooze.
Hell was not a place separate from paradise, and the devil strived to turn paradise into hell. He knew this because he had seen the devil, pinned under glass, as he watched him carefully with own two eyes through a microscope.
Pieces of Satan were kept frozen, locked away deep in the cavernous levels of the CDC. Dr. Reischtal had filed a memo that these samples be destroyed, but the suggestion was quietly rebuked. The samples were vital, in case further vaccines needed to be developed.
He said nothing else. In his professional life, he was smart enough not to refer to Satan by name, or even suggest that they were all dealing with mankindâs oldest and deadliest foe. But he knew. He knew. And his job, his holy mission, was to maintain a vigil, watching and waiting for any signs of where Satan may be trying to force his way through a crack into this world.
The phone continued to ring. There was no answering machine, no voice mail. It would continue to ring until he answered.
Dr. Reischtalâs prayers faltered and stopped. He pushed himself to his feet, placating his discomfort at leaving the prayers unfinished with the promise that he would start over when he finished with the phone call.
âYes,â he said into the receiver. Only the knowledge that punishment would be severe for the voice on the other end of the line made him feel a little better. He listened for a moment, then said, âChicago. I would have thought New York.â He exhaled. âNo matter. Assemble the components. I want a plane ready within the hour. I will expect a car at my door in precisely thirty minutes.â He remembered his prayers. âNo. Make that sixty. Please remind the liaison in Chicago that they are to follow the strictest isolation procedures. AnyâI repeat, anyâdeviation from my written protocol will be dealt with in the harshest possible manner.â He replaced the receiver.
God did not tell him whether they were false alarms or if true battles were about to begin when the calls came in. So he made sure he was ready. âI pledge my allegiance, oh Lord, in this endless war. In this life and the next,â he said, then went back down the hall, knelt under the round window that looked out to the stars, and began to pray again.
C HAPTER 11
5:16 AM
December 28
Â
Lee was not happy. His head felt like it was going to crack open any moment, spilling his throbbing brain onto the slate tile of the suiteâs bathroom. The sun was creeping over the far edge of Lake Michigan, slicing through the air and boiling his eyes. He could handle the sun though; heâd find the damn switch that lowered the blinds later. Although he couldnât, for the life of him, understand what heâd been thinking last night when heâd demanded a view of the lake.
No, what Lee needed right fucking now was a goddamn drink of water.
Problem was, he couldnât figure out how to turn the faucet on.
There were no handles. Just curving horns of pure, smooth onyx that jutted boldly over two shallow black sinks. He tried waving his hands under what he thought might be the faucet, hoping for a motion sensor, but nothing happened. He squinted around the gleaming, ultra-modern bathroom. Everything was gray and black, with brilliant white starburst accents. Even the toilet and bidet, elevated on two steps like thrones, were jet black. He tried the second sink and got the same result. Behind him, across a space larger than most living rooms, waited both a tub big enough to fit four people and a shower that could easily fit another four, with a bewildering array of nozzles that sprayed you from every conceivable angle. Lee honestly couldnât remember if heâd even used them last night or not.
The morning sun still sizzled through the bare windows, ricocheting off the mirrors that covered every inch of wall space. Even
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