Read The Julian Secret (Lang Reilly Thrillers) Online

Authors: Gregg Loomis

Tags: #Action & Adventure

The Julian Secret (Lang Reilly Thrillers) (19 page)

Without looking away, Lang said, “Julian. Roman emperor in the late fourth century. In Christian writing, he’s always referred to as ‘Julian the Apostate.’ He was the first non-Christian emperor since Constantine, the last pagan, reinstituted the persecution of the followers of Christ.”

Gurt looked closer, playing her own light along the lines. “This was here cut by a Roman emperor?”

Absorbed by the antiquity of what he was reading for the second time, Lang shook his head. “Most likely at his order.” He pointed to a word. “ ‘IUBIT,’ he commands. I doubt Julian ever came here after he took the throne. Before then, he was governor of this part of Gaul. He wasn’t emperor long. An inscription attributed to him is rare.”

“How do we know it wasn’t actually written here by the Cathars? Anyone could have, er, forged such writing. It could be a forgery. Then what?”

“Send it to Dan Rather.”

“Who?”

“Never mind.”

Lang frowned. Either he was misreading the Latin or something was wrong.

A light breeze hummed across the opening above while he ran his fingers along the words.

“What does it say?” Gurt asked.

“I’m not sure. I can’t tell, for instance, whether this word,
accusat
, is missing the ending. It’s chipped off. I can’t tell if someone is making an accusation, made an accusation, or of whom. Likewise, the word
regi
. It has something to do with a palace, a feminine, first-declension noun. But without the last two or three letters, I can only guess if whatever Julian’s talking about
belongs
to the palace, is
in
the palace, and so forth.”

Gurt understood that the endings of nouns denoted not only the gender of the thing in question but also case—nominative, genitive, dative, or accusative. Although frequently dropped in conversation, German still had endings that indicated whether the thing possessed was being subjected to or was simply mentioned. The few remaining equivalents in English were like the “ ‘s” added to denote possession—that is, the dog’s bone or the “s” or “es” to create the plural.

“Is Latin like German in that the whole sentence has to be read before you can put the words into the order that makes sense in English?” Gurt asked.

“No,” Lang responded, too occupied to engage in a discussion of linguistics.

In German sentences containing more than a single clause, the verbs were frequently stacked at the end so that the reader had to pair them up and determine what made the most sense. This, of course, in addition to infinitives that were not only split but permanently rent asunder. A German would to the railroad station quickly go, for example.

“There’s not enough light to read all of this in context,” Lang finally said, putting down his flashlight. “If
you’ll move your beam slowly, I’ll copy down the words and then we can photograph them.”

It took Lang about ten minutes to carefully transcribe the inscription, underlining letters that were too worn or chipped to positively identify. He then used the camera he had purchased the previous night to take two shots directly in front of the carving before moving to each side, letting the small flash attachment cast shadows that would make the words more legible.

He was stepping up to take close-ups when he and Gurt exchanged puzzled looks, unsure if the other heard the sound that seemed to be getting closer, the beating
whup-whup
of a small, non-turbine-powered helicopter. What, Lang wondered, would be so pressing in this rural community as to justify a chopper?

The answer came when the sound became stationary directly overhead. As one, both looked up to the jagged section of sky that showed through the now-open cave roof. Lang recognized the aircraft hovering like a huge insect as one of the smaller Sikorsky models available for personal transportation worldwide. From the angle at which Lang was looking, he could not see the identifying letters or numbers.

“Who . . . ?”

Lang’s question was cut short as a man, his face masked by goggles, leaned out of the open doorway of the ‘copter and dropped something. For only a millisecond, the object was silhouetted against the sky, but that was long enough.

Lang shoved Gurt into one of the natural niches in the wall, shallow but better than nothing. The second he heard an impact nearby, he sprung. He had less than five seconds, considerably less if the man in the aircraft above had enough experience to count off two or three so the weapon would explode on impact. Lang saw the
plastic cylinder perhaps eight or nine inches on the cave floor not a foot away. In a single motion, Lang scooped it up and underhanded it toward the opening of the cave mouth. He watched it describe a gentle parabola before he threw himself flat, ignoring the sharp edges of rock.

He never knew whether he hit the floor of the cave before the ground shook with an explosion that, even from outside the cave, sent rock fragments buzzing through the air like angry bees.

Instantly on his feet, he raced to where Gurt was shaking her head, attempting to clear her ears of the concussion. “What in . . . ?”

He propelled her toward the opening. “Later.”

No time to explain that he had instantly recognized the object launched from the overhead chopper as an “offensive” hand grenade as distinguishable from the more familiar fragmentation “pineapple” that was basically unchanged since World War Two. The grenade the unknown people overhead had chosen had the same “pin”-activated fuse with the same delay, but contained high explosives in a plastic wrapper rather than cast iron intended to shatter. The choice of such a weapon revealed a plan: to use the MkIIA1 offensive grenade’s content to collapse the cave, burying him and Gurt alive if they were not already dead from the shrapnel-like chips of rock. Either way, they would never be found.

Her hand in his, they sprinted across the courtyard. Behind them, a muffled explosion told them the men above had no intention of giving up.

The malignant shadow of the helicopter beat them to the shaft, its patient hovering an announcement that there was no escape. Lang glanced around. To try descending through the narrow hole would be suicidal. Even if a near miss failed to collapse the tunnel, its tight confines would make it impossible to avoid the rock
shards. Between their escape route and the cave was open ground littered with the evenly carved stones that had been the wall. There was not so much as a tree or bush to provide shelter.

The helicopter’s passenger leaned out again, lobbing another grenade, and Lang threw Gurt to the ground, partially covering her with his own body. The following explosion seemed to jar even his teeth, but he was thankful he was still alive. The cordite-tainted air was welcomed as he forced breath back into lungs the concussion had emptied.

Almost before the shower of dirt and rock splinters settled, Gurt pushed him aside and sprang to her feet, a sure target for the stone chips with which the next grenade would fill the air. Lang snatched at an ankle, missed, and stumbled to his feet in pursuit.

His legs refused to obey his commands, moving at a pace that seemed almost leisurely. But then, everything seemed sluggish, to take on the dreamlike quality of a film in slow motion.

As gracefully as any ballerina, Gurt spun as she drew the Glock from her belt, making it an extension of her outstretched arms to point upward. The man in the helicopter used both hands also, one to hold the grenade, the other to pull the pin. As he extended his arm to drop high explosives directly onto Gurt, two shots came, so close as to be indistinguishable.

The man leaning out of the chopper stood erect, his mouth forming a perfect O, as though he was astonished either at the two holes centered neatly above his eyes or the fact that the hand grenade was still in his hand. Then he disappeared from the doorway.

Lang screamed a warning, knowing what was about to happen.

For what seemed forever, nothing did.

Then the helicopter dissolved into a fiery orange ball that reached all the way to the ground. The force of the explosion knocked Lang onto his back. The last thing he remembered before everything went dark was the transformation of flame in the sky to a greasy, roiling black cloud.

Lang reckoned he had been unconscious only a few seconds. He sat up and looked around. The blast had knocked him flat and out of the hailstorm of flying debris. Unidentifiable pieces of metal, still smoking, surrounded him. Shakily, he got to his feet and realized that not all the wreckage was inorganic. Bile rose in his throat as he stepped over the charred remains of a human hand, wedding ring still attached.

“Gurt!”

There was no answer.

Trying to swallow both nausea and growing panic, he forced himself to make an orderly search of concentric circles. After a couple of minutes, hope flickered like a candle in a breeze. After twenty, it died.

Explosions can do weird things, he told himself. Stories of victims of World War II’s bombing of London were replete with women dashing into the streets after a direct hit, unharmed other than the fact that their clothing had been completely blown off, of men finding themselves buried under rubble blocks away from where they had been when the bomb had hit.

No doubt true, but there was no Gurt, bomb-denuded or otherwise.

Despair became fear—fear he would find her, or, worse, some grisly part of her. The thought finally overcame his resistance to the urge. He knelt and vomited his breakfast.

He staggered to his feet, swaying like a drunk as his empty stomach continued to cramp and convulse. His
view of the cave and of the surrounding white hills blurred with tears. He had never felt so alone as on this hilltop an ocean away from home. Not even when Dawn died. At least then he had had ample time to prepare. Gurt had been snatched away in an instant.

He lifted his chin, looking into a sky so innocently blue it was hard to believe that, just minutes before, it had been filled with death. He forced his mounting grief aside for the moment, thinking as he had been trained to do so many years ago.

Even as remote as this area was, someone had most likely heard the series of explosions, possibly seen the fireball of the helicopter. He must assume the authorities were on their way. With only fragments, it would take months to even establish the number of people who had perished here, if in fact it could be ascertained at all by time-consuming comparisons of DNA. Unless that DNA had been previously recorded, it would serve only to number the dead, not identify them.

Lang moved mechanically, straining to keep his mind concentrated on the tasks at hand. He stooped to retrieve the camera from where it had fallen when the blast had knocked him down. Surprisingly, it was unbroken. Using the rope still in place, he descended through the shaft. Unlocking the car’s trunk, he took out Gurt’s purse. His control momentarily slipped as a rogue memory of how he had teased her about its size interrupted the routine and tears wet his cheeks. Checking the bag’s contents to make certain it contained nothing of significance, he returned it to the trunk. Sliding into the front seat, he opened the glove box, pocketing only Gurt’s passport. No need to involve her now.

The rented car would be traced to Joel Couch. His passport and the few human remains on the mountain should make Lang Reilly officially dead at least until
DNA proved otherwise. That should keep the Frankfurt Police, if not all of Interpol, quiet for the time being.

Joel Couch would seek revenge.

He took a final look at the hilltop, from which smoke was still rising. Fists clenched, he spoke aloud through gritted teeth. “You bastards, you fucking bastards! No matter who you are, this world is too small for both of us, and I don’t plan on leaving.”

He took some small comfort from the fact that the threat was not idle. He had tracked the killers of his sister and nephew, and, if necessary, he would end his days in pursuit of whoever was responsible for Gurt.

His hand involuntarily went to the pocket where he had put the paper with the Latin phrases on it. He’d get them this time, too. At least now he had a starting point.

Pocketing the car keys, he turned his back on the Mercedes and began to trudge along the narrow country road.

He had gone less than a mile before a pair of police cars, sirens wailing, blurred past, headed in the direction from which he had come. Minutes later, he hitched a ride in a tractor-towed wagon dusty with remains of winter wheat. Turning his back to the machine’s driver, he released the tight grip on his emotions and sobbed.

C
HAPTER
E
IGHTEEN

Frankfurt am Main
141 Mosel Strasse
The next day

Reavers put both hands flat on the desk and stared at them. “Gurt dead? You sure?”

Lang nodded wearily. “There wasn’t enough left to ID anybody without DNA.”

Reavers glanced up without moving his head, a move that made his eyes look even more like those of a raptor. “But you searched anyway?”

Lang knew it wasn’t his fault, but he couldn’t shake the feeling there had been something he could have done. “Other than the cave, there wasn’t any place to hide. If she’d been there, I would have seen her.”

“And you’re going to continue to try to find the sum’bitches who killed Huff.” It was not a question. “God knows them cheap bastards in Washington aren’t going to give us the budget to do it. Just once, I’d like to
think the security of the United States and our agents is worth more than funding some turnip museum in Iowa.”

“Damn right I am. When I know that, I’ll know who’s responsible for Gurt.”

“Tell me again what I can do.”

Lang shrugged, the trivial nature of his requests overshadowed by Gurt’s death. “I’d like to keep the Couch identity, maybe acquire one other, preferably a citizen of an EU country. As for the credit cards, I can guarantee payment—”

The CIA chief of station made a dismissive gesture. “Forgit paying the credit cards, pard’nuh. Budget cutbacks or not, we don’ chintz when it comes to trackin’ down people who hurt our people, you remember?”

Lang remembered the Agency of the eighties probably destroying countless forests with the paperwork required to justify any remotely unusual expense in anticipation of periodic congressional inquiries. Apparently, there really had been a peace dividend after all.

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