Stones: Experiment (Stones #3) (68 page)

How many had died because he was too slow in stopping the slaughter?

I didn’t save them all.

The words roll in his mind like a pair of dice on an empty table.

Yarah nudges him.

“OK. Let’s go.” Matt moves his gaze up and begins to move through the layers of the computer interface.

The ship’s voice booms. “Hull integrity breached. Navigation systems no longer functional. Human occupants will terminate in ten seconds.”

Opening his eyes, Matt finds his body bent over in a fit of coughing. Acrid black smoke fills the interior of the transport. The entire tail section of the ship has been blown away. Jagged edges of twisted metal and frayed pieces of titanium wire hang from the ceiling of the transport.

A hand reaches up from the floor through the smoke and grabs his thigh. “Get us out of here.”

Gripping his Stone, Matt’s eyelids drop. His hand reaches out to the com in front, and the shape of the ship flashes before his eyes, becoming part of him. Just as he is about to pull it all into his mind, there’s a burst of vein-like light outside the cockpit, brighter than the sun. Tongues of lightning press against the glass next to his head.

It bulges inward.

Then the outside world vanishes, replaced by silence. Focusing his eyes, Matt sees the outlines of the looming skyscrapers of Vancouver through the front of the cockpit. He stands up from the seat and looks to the cargo area behind him. A fine mist floats away from the ceiling of the transport, extinguishing the flames and clearing the smoke.

Two women sit on the floor, back to back.

“Didn’t think we were going to make it.” Jessica reaches up, and Matt pulls her to her feet. Her face and arms are blackened from the smoke, but that doesn’t stop him from slipping his arms around her for a long kiss.

Alexa rolls onto her back and opens her eyes. “When you’re done, could somebody please help me up?” Turning on her side, she launches into a fit of coughing. “We need to get out of here before the self-destruct mechanism is triggered.”

“The ship said it was about to blow up, so I told it to stop.” Yarah smiles at Alexa and helps her to her feet.

With Jessica under one arm, and Alexa under the other, Matt emerges from the back of the transport and steps onto a familiar cobblestone roundabout in the center of Vancouver. Yarah darts out in front of him.

“I thought you were jumping us to the old freedom camp outside of town,” Matt says.

“Sorry.” Yarah scrambles to the top of the lapis cube in the middle of the intersection in the middle of downtown Vancouver. “This was the first place I thought of.”

As they stand outside the half destroyed transport in the early morning darkness, a crowd gathers, their stares focused on the smoking hulk, minus the entire tail section, occupying the intersection.

Matt turns to Jessica. “I cut the list of cities in half.”

And then it hits him again.

I didn’t save them all.

His eyes go to the pavement. Images of fire, burning concrete and the naked steel bones of buildings bring a bitter taste flooding over his tongue. Muscles go limp. He drops to his hands and knees as green liquid fills his mouth and flows out past his teeth. “Millions are dead because of me. I wasted too much time with Ryzaard.”

“You did what you could.” Jessica pulls Matt up. “You saved millions from death.”

Intense light bursts from a building across the street. The glass skin of its exterior glows like a massive bluescreen. Scenes of devastation flash across its surface and fade to nothing.

A solitary man dressed in the white attire of a Shinto priest fills the picture. He wears a long tunic with large, open sleeves and a tall black cap on his head. Shoulders and arms perfectly balanced, he kneels on a round
zabuton
cushion and stares straight ahead, hands stretched out on his knees, facial features relaxed and emotionless. The fingers of his right hand wrap the lower end of a flattened wooden stick that reminds Matt of a long shoehorn. Dark paneling on the wall behind him provides a rich contrast to the tatami floor beneath. He is middle-aged, perhaps forty years old.

Two elegant Japanese wall hangings, one of a tree with cherry blossoms in full bloom and the other of a white crane, frame his body between them. Japanese cursive script flows down the side of each wall hanging.

His lips part, and he speaks.

“Men and women of the world, my brothers and sisters.” He leans forward in a shallow bow, and slowly looks up.

“The unthinkable has happened.”

CHAPTER 122

A
hush ripples through the crowd.

Still holding Jessica’s hand, Matt leans back against the lapis cube and stares up at the image of the Shinto priest.

“So that’s Miyazawa,” he says.

Miyazawa appears on the side of every building around the intersection of Burrard and Georgia Streets in downtown Vancouver. Through the narrow canyons running between skyscrapers in the city, the night sky lights up with the same video stream. Color holos of the Shinto priest hang above the palms of anyone holding a jax or slate.

A few meters from Matt, a frustrated teenager stares at the holo and brushes his fingers repeatedly along the side of his cylindrical jax, trying to find a Mesh-point not streaming the same image. But the holo doesn’t change.

The face on the massive glass screen relaxes. The lips part and begin to speak.

“Two hours ago, madness and lunacy unleashed its fury on this planet that we share. Chaos broke through the thin veneer of peace. The high probability that it would result in the total annihilation of the natural and human world has forced me and my peace-loving associates to step forward and reveal ourselves and our power to the world. For now, we have broken the chain reaction of destruction. We cannot guarantee that our efforts will hold for long.” Miyazawa’s words are clear and understandable, with just a hint of an accent.

“I ask for less than three minutes and humbly request that each of you listen carefully. At the end of my words, you will have a choice to make, a choice for life or death.”

As he looks at the dozens of holo images floating in the crowd, Matt hears identical words in Japanese, Chinese and Arabic. A multitude of other languages are scattered at the fringes and out of earshot.

“It’s quite a feat for Miyazawa’s words to be delivered in the default language of so many devices.” Alexa whispers loud enough for Matt and Jessica to hear. “Ryzaard must think it’s important. He wrote the speech. Should be good.”

All eyes go up to the massive image playing on the side of every building.

“My name is Tomoyuki Miyazawa. I am a native of Japan. But that is not important.” The man’s bow is delicate, almost imperceptive. “For thousands of years, our movement has labored in obscurity out of a simple desire for fulfillment and oneness with nature. That movement is Shinto.”

Leaning to the side, Alexa plays the role of a commentator at a sports event. “There’s an embedded trance sequence in the broadcast background. Helps everyone concentrate. By the end, they’ll be eating out of his hand, begging for more of whatever he offers. Works on almost anyone, unless you know about it.”

As if in proof of her words, the faces of the crowd turn upward, mouths open with a look of wonder and expectation.

“Modern society is built on the individual search for gratification and pleasure. It is at the core of all we do. Our economies, laws, media and communication are all constructed on the same shaky foundation. The worldwide events of the last hour have exposed the fatal flaw in this way of life.”

Through the crowd, arms that were folded in a posture of defensiveness begin to drop, heads nodding.

“Unbridled pleasure leads to selfishness. Selfishness leads to conflict, and conflict inexorably results in war. In ancient times, the strong made slaves of the weak. But in our age, when all have access to weapons of annihilation, war simply means the meaningless destruction of lives and property on all sides. Nothing more or less. There can be no victory. Not anymore.” Miyazawa stops speaking for a few seconds, his eyes sweeping from left to right, as if he is standing above the whole of humanity, looking down upon them, like a god dispensing mercy and wisdom to his people.

“This day, in the space of a few minutes, we have tasted, in a small degree, the beginnings of such a war, one that could result in a conflagration of greed and fear that would wipe out all that we know and cherish. Nearly 100 cities have been hit with nuclear detonations. The dead already number close to ten million.”

Looks of horror float in the sea of faces. People drop to their knees, fingers clasped close to their chests as if in prayer. Others seek out neighbors and friends, holding hands. Tears flow. Cries and moans ring out.

Alexa turns to Matt. “You realize what you did?”

“Nothing.” Matt shakes his head. “Ten million dead.”

“They planned for at least twenty,” she says. “It’s bad, but it was supposed to be much worse. I’m sure Ryzaard is seething right now, wondering if enough damage was inflicted to provide the shock he wants.”

Jessica grips Matt’s hand.

“So many deaths are beyond comprehension.” Miyazawa pauses, allowing his large eyelids to drop for a long blink. “If we had not acted when we did, snuffing out the conflagration before its momentum reached the point of no return, it would have been a thousand times worse. Every city would have been a target. Forgive us for unilaterally exercising our power.” He bows again. “We had no choice.”

“Here it comes,” whispers Alexa. “The turning point in the human race Ryzaard has been working so hard for. Watch it unfold in real time.”

“We ask for only one thing in return. Open your doors to Shinto. Learn our ways. Allow us to share our gifts with you. Keep all the truth you have, whether you believe in one god, in many, or none at all. Add to it what we have discovered from thousands of years of searching. Join us, my brothers and sisters. Become one with us.”

“Now, the punch line.” Alexa grins.

“If you reject our offer, we will withdraw and allow humankind to destroy itself. If you accept, we will freely give of our peace and joy, without money and without price.” Miyazawa bows deeply, holds the bow, and then raises himself up. “My friends. The choice is yours.”

The image slowly fades to white.

End of Book Three

Keep reading for a preview of

STONES

(THEORY)

BOOK FOUR OF THE STONES SERIES

by

Jacob Whaler
CHAPTER 1

R
yzaard stares at Miyazawa on the white screen, mouth open, every word resonating like a drum in his chest.

He hasn’t taken a breath since Miyazawa started speaking. With conscious effort, Ryzaard’s lips part and fill his lungs with fresh air. Miyazawa’s speech is impressive. He changed a few words without permission, but even Ryzaard has to admit the effect is powerful.

And it’s working.

Like tectonic plates shifting below the surface of the ocean, the human race is changing. The nuclear holocaust has brought them to the edge of the precipice and given them a final glimpse of the old world. They hunger for something new.

Other books

The Ice Warriors by Brian Hayles
Summer (Four Seasons #2) by Frankie Rose
My Man Michael by Lori Foster
Fright Night by John Skipp
The Good Neighbor by William Kowalski
Report to Grego by Nikos Kazantzakis
Finally Home by Jana Leigh, Rose Colton
Private Lives by Tasmina Perry
Vita Nuova by Magdalen Nabb
Fault Lines by Brenda Ortega