Killer Thrillers Box Set: 3 Techno-Thriller, Action/Adventure Science Fiction Thrillers (33 page)

“Yeah, I — I think. I feel weak, or lightheaded. I don’t know.” He blinked and shook his head. “I’m okay. This writing — it took me a second, but I think I can read it.”

He squinted, frowning at the script.

“It’s their history. The Rapa Nui, I mean. They lived here! This was their city, at least for a while — I can’t understand the dates though.

“It says that they came here long ago, led by the first high chief from their
original homeland
— “
 

“Hiva,” Corinne said. “And their high chief was probably Hotu Matu’a, the first
ariki
. That’s what I remember, at least.”

“See this symbol here? It’s like a boat, or a canoe — this is how they got here. They came with descendants from nine original ‘clans’ or ‘families, I think.” Cole stepped closer to the wall, trying to decipher the timeline. He followed the symbols around the room, and the group followed at his heels. “Ok, so, this section is referencing their history. It’s saying that they experienced a long period of expansion and even Imperialism, though their main center of operations was their central city-state. Eventually, there was some kind of great catastrophe; something that caused them to seek a new home ‘at the ends of the earth,’” he continued.
 

“Imperialism,” Vilocek said. “That must be what we’ve seen at Giza and Petra, and I’ll bet there are underground chambers just like them at
 
all the other points on that great circle line we found beneath the pyramid. What about their original land? Where were they from?” Bryce couldn’t help but notice that for a man as bent on personal gain as Vilocek was, he was still caught up in the mystery as well.
 

“It doesn’t say, I don’t think. At least there’s no name for it here. But they built their new home ‘beneath the earth,’ to protect them from the world’s watchful eye.”

“That must be why they’re in a volcano,” Wayne said.
 

“No, wait, that’s backwards — “ Cole said, stopping short. “I think it actually says they built their home beneath the earth
to protect the world from their ‘watchful eye’ —
whatever that means,” he said.
 

He looked at Corinne, then at Bryce.
 

“It means they had something to hide; something they needed to protect the world from,” Bryce said. “Go on.”

“Ok, yeah — they built their new city here — that’s what this symbol is.“ Cole pointed to a small symbol on the wall made up of intersecting circles. “It’s a reminder of where they came from; this city is a copy of their original home.” As he pointed at the symbol that represented the word “city,” Corinne’s eyes widened.
 

“Of course!” she cried out. “That’s it — I
knew
it looked familiar! The city up there, if you remember, is a set of concentric circles, each getting larger the farther they get away from the central temple,” she said. She looked around at their blank expressions.
 

“Guys — this city is an
exact copy
of the city of Atlantis.”

CHAPTER 58

11:20 AM

COLE CONTINUED. “Ok, so, they lived here for many years, maybe centuries — again, I don’t completely understand the date system. They were able to grow crops here, underground, and there was a supply of fresh groundwater they used throughout the city. Looks like this was quite a civilization. They had nine distinct family lines, for the most part living in harmony with each other.

“Their government was essentially made up of the high priests of each family, and they met here in the temple. Seems almost democratic, actually. It looks like they were also sort of xenophobic — it doesn’t look like they took too kindly to outsiders.”

“Wait — here’s what we’re looking for!” Cole was getting excited. “The high priests used their ‘gift’ as a way to have superiority over the normal people. It keeps saying something about this ‘gift’ being an object — maybe the crystal we’re looking for?”

“Maybe,” Vilocek said. “What do you mean by superiority?”

“It says that they were considered the wisest of all the clans; that somehow they were capable of performing feats of physical strength and mental agility, and they lived much longer than the average people. As such, they guarded their secret of the ‘gift’ closely. It also says that their ‘gift’ was the reason they had to find a new land; the reason for the great catastrophe.

“I think this ‘gift’ is your crystal, Vilocek” Bryce interrupted, “and I think that by using the crystal’s powers for themselves, they inadvertently caused it to break down, like you were saying. Maybe by using it too much or — “

Vilocek held up a hand to stop Bryce. “Keep going, Cole, let’s finish this and find that ‘gift’ of theirs.”

Bryce frowned, but Cole kept reading. “Their leaders — the ruling group of elders — were the only Rapa Nui who could use the power source. Something about it being in their bloodline; it’s how they argued that they were ‘divinely chosen’ to lead.” As Cole read, he thought of his own strange abilities — his changing skin color in the presence of the crystal, and his ability to innately understand what these symbols meant. A quick look to Vilocek, revealed that the older man was contemplating the same things. He pushed the thoughts out of his mind to focus on the task at hand.

“They were divinely chosen — but their power eventually led to the destruction of their homeland,” he said, looking toward Bryce in confirmation, “and they wanted to make sure they wouldn’t repeat the same mistakes here. That’s why they lived here in secrecy — trying to prevent their world from colliding with the outside world, as it had so many years before.”

“That makes sense,” Wayne said. “Whatever catastrophe they’d suffered originally almost killed them off; most likely it impacted the rest of the world to some extent, too.”

“So then what happened?” Jeff asked.
 

“Well,” Cole continued, now reading from the last wall of symbols, “it seems like their story ends here — they eventually died off, even the high priests.”

“And since they didn’t want the world to find them, they probably had some sort of population controls in place — preventing reproduction or something,” Corinne said. “I know that Easter Island’s known history includes a period when a cannibalistic cult called the “Birdmen” ran the island. Maybe they were a remnant of these same people, emerging from this city after hundreds of years. Eventually, the island’s people depleted the resources they had and also suffered from disease brought by Western explorers.”

“And remember the way we came in?” Cole asked. “The Moai emitted that blue light, and the door opened itself after I touched it. Maybe the crystal has to be present to move in and out of the city — that’s how they could have kept people out for so long.”

“…And kept people
in
for so long,” Jeff said.
 

“It makes sense that no one else before us was able to find this place,” Cole said. “Nobody else had the crystal — or a human host, like me.”

“That doesn’t explain Jabari,” Vilocek said, wondering how the Egyptian had gotten into the city.
 

“So, this room,” Corinne said, “is it like a power plant? All of these light tubes seem to be connected to this main shaft.”

“Actually, I don’t think so,” Cole said. “See the two symbols above that doorway? And the same symbols above the doorway over by Beka? I can’t understand the first one, but the second symbol is pretty basic. One word in English pretty much sums it up.”

“Well? What is this place if it’s not a power plant?” Vilocek asked.
 

“It’s a library.”

CHAPTER 59

11:22 AM

THE OTHERS looked around the room in surprise.
 

“This?” Bryce asked. “There’s nothing here besides that tube in the center, and the rows of symbols on the walls. How can this be a library?”

“Remember, we’re dealing with an advanced race,” Corinne said, moving next to Cole. “A civilization that’s long been extinct. Who knows what ‘library’ means to them, or if there’s some technology they had that we can’t understand yet.”
 

Vilocek frowned as he looked around the chamber. Karn and Beka were focused on the doorways, half expecting Madu’s men to barge through, guns blazing.
 

“What are you thinking, Vilocek?” Bryce asked. “You look like you know something.”

He shook his head, then subtly flicked his eyes in the direction of his two guards. “Just a thought. I don’t suppose our friend Cole here would care to help us with a little experiment?”

Corinne’s mouth tightened in rage. She started toward Vilocek, her hand raised to strike him. Karn swiftly grabbed her wrist in mid-swing, wrapping his other arm around her body. “Let’s not get carried away,” he whispered into her ear. His voice was hollow and cold. Corinne struggled to get away, but he held fast.
 

“Stop it — leave her alone!” Bryce yelled, raising his weapon and aiming at Vilocek. Vilocek just smiled, as the Israeli soldier butt-stroked Bryce in the back with his rifle, dropping him to his knees. Beka lifted his pulse rifle — now the rigged version he’d used at Giza — and fired it at Wayne and Jeff, who were standing too close to one another. They immediately froze in place, helpless.

11:24 am

Bryce groaned in pain and looked up. Vilocek was standing against the opposite wall, close to the other door. He had a pistol against the side of Corinne’s head. Beka still had the Thompsons immobilized, and the Israeli had his rifle aimed at Bryce.
 

Bryce wanted to scream; to just lash out and finish this deadly game.
Who cares if we don’t make it?
He thought.
We won’t get out of this hell alive, anyway.
Then he thought yet again of his mother — and knew he had to see it through.

Karn had donned a pair of gloves and was moving toward Cole. He grabbed a fistful of Cole’s hair and yanked him toward the central shaft, forcing him to stand facing the bright light.
 

Corinne screamed at Vilocek, and Bryce cursed under his breath. Wayne and Jeff stared straight ahead, their faces still and expressionless.
 

Karn raised Cole’s left arm like a puppet. Cole was having a difficult time just maintaining his balance. As his arm came within inches of the shaft, it lit up in a brilliant shade of blue.

Karn paused, looking back at Vilocek. Vilocek nodded, and Karn immediately thrust Cole’s arm against the shaft.

The effect was instantaneous.
 

The entire room erupted in a blinding flash, forcing all of them to shield their eyes.

The light quickly faded, revealing Karn backing away from Cole, who was locked in place against the lighted tube.
 

After a few seconds, Cole’s body convulsed a bit, and his head lolled backward. The veins of his arms became vibrantly exposed, bluish-tinted ridges crawling over his exposed skin. Soon his entire body was completely blue, with darker-blue lines webbing outward over his skin. It was horrifying — even the Vilocorp men were shocked at the result.
 

Vilocek’s scientists had replicated this experiment in the lab — basically using a crystal-infused filament inside a high-wattage lightbulb. When the elements inside the subject’s bloodstream and skin cells came near to an external source of the crystal’s light, he became paralyzed. The physical effect of
touching
the crystal’s emitted light, though, not only caused the paralyzing effect but also an electrocuting transference of energy from the source, through the subject’s body, as if completing a closed circuit.
 

As with the subjects in the lab, Cole’s body remained stationary, silently and slowly pulsating as his palm stayed rooted to the tube. Vilocek winced, thinking back to the experiments they’d done with the small child, and others on chimpanzees, guinea pigs, and even an unlucky shark during a more peculiar underwater version.
 

In all of the experiments, the subjects had been injected with a serum that Dr. Enko Vilocek had developed thirty years ago. Tanning Vilocek had altered it slightly, optimizing it with a more precise replica of the crystal’s properties. It had taken over 130 batches, and
many
failed experiments to get to a point of consistent results, but they almost had it down.
 

The goal was to prolong the lifespan of the live specimens. They planned to eventually inject humans with the serum, increasing the brain’s speed and ability to heal and develop neural connections. The effect in isolated incidences had been staggeringly successful — for short periods. The chimpanzee had become able to read simple word problems, and draw the result on a chalkboard. The guinea pigs escaped their enclosures almost every time, working in tandem with one another like a team. And the shark, much to its keepers’ dismay, had to be put down swiftly with a bullet to the head, as it had become furiously ravenous and actually
jumped
from the water out onto the laboratory floor, taking a scientist’s arm with it.
 

Most of the experiments hadn’t ended well at all. Once they were able to successfully keep the animal subjects alive for longer than a week, they began the initial human testing of the serum. Some of the subjects had shown marked improvements in awareness, reflexes, and retention. But they all deteriorated rapidly after a few days to a week. They suffered extremely painful seizures before succumbing to massive failure of their internal organs.
 

The child hadn’t even made it as far as the increased brain activity before failing. They hadn’t even had time to test his reactions to the presence of the crystal sliver — much less bringing the crystal into actual contact with his skin — before he hyperventilated and his body temperature rose to over 120 degrees. He was dead within minutes — excruciatingly long minutes, Vilocek admitted — but he was a useful learning experience, and had served Vilocorp’s needs quite well: he was the last human experiment they’d run before they injected Cole Reed.
 

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