Books are the glass of council to dress ourselves by.

Bulstrode Whitlock

 
 
 
 
 
Tác giả: James Rollins
Thể loại: Trinh Thám
Biên tập: Bach Ly Bang
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Cập nhật: 2015-10-01 09:07:57 +0700
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Chapter 21
EPTEMBER 7, 1:03 P.M.
SOUTHERN URAL MOUNTAINS
Pyotr led the man by his shirtsleeve. They ran through chaos. Soldiers screamed, glass shattered, rifles blasted, flames writhed, and smoke choked. But it wasn’t chaos to Pyotr.
He tugged Monk into a sheltering dark doorway as a soldier rounded a corner ahead, searched, then moved on. Pyotr hurried the man down a hall, up some stairs, out a window, and over a pile of rubble to the next building.
“Pyotr, where are we going?”
He didn’t answer, couldn’t answer.
Reaching another hall, Pyotr stopped. In his head, he stretched outward along a thousand possibilities. Hearts glowed like small pyres, flickering with fear, anger, panic, cowardice, malice. He understood how each would move even before they did. It was his talent, only so much more now.
For he had a secret.
Over the past years, as he woke screaming from his nightmare, waking other children with visions of bodies on fire, there was a reason his other classmates performed so poorly on their tests afterward. The teachers believed it was just because Pyotr had scared them, but they were wrong. Pyotr’s talent was to read hearts. They called it empathy. But he had a secret, something he only talked to Marta about.
Something he knew from his dreams.
He could do more than read hearts—he could also steal them. It wasn’t fear that made the other children perform poorly; they had something drawn from them. For just a few minutes after waking, Pyotr could do anything. He could multiply big numbers, like Konstantin; he could tell a person was lying by listening to how they talked, like Elena; he could see to hidden places, like his sister; and so much more. It filled him until he burned.
He pictured the stars falling into him, screaming, feeding the emptiness inside him. In his dreams, he had always woken before he consumed them fully. Not today. Pyotr walked through a dream from which he could never wake. He knew he had crossed a line, but he also knew he had no choice. He was always meant to burn.
Pyotr stared out at the chaos with a fiery gaze that was not his alone. Through a hundred eyes, he teased a pattern out of the chaos. Though he could not see the future—or at least no more than a few seconds—his ears took in every noise, his eyes interpreted every flicker of flame or shift of shadow, his heart read deep into what drove a man to choose to step here or there, to take that corner or not, to shoot or run. And with a shadow of his sister’s ability, his senses extended a few yards beyond even that.
And out of that chaos, a path took form.
One he could follow.
Pyotr crossed out into the hallway, guiding Monk behind him.
He pointed to the left—and Monk shot the soldier who stepped into view a second later. The man was learning to trust Pyotr’s instinct. To move with him, to fire upon command, growing into an extension of Pyotr.
Together, they crossed through the pattern.
Moving through pure instinct.
And that’s what Pyotr was now: instinct fired by a hundred talents.
He understood fully. Instinct was merely the brain’s unconscious interpretation of millions of subtle changes in the environment, both at the moment and leading up to it. The brain took all that chaotic information, saw a pattern, and the body reacted to it. It seemed magical, but it was only biological.
Pyotr did the same now—only a hundredfold more powerfully.
He extended his senses, reading hearts, motivations, trajectories, distances, noises, voices, directions, cadences, smoke, heat…and on and on. The million details filled him and sifted through the hundred minds he shared. From out of that chaos, patterns opened, and he knew each step to take.
“Where are we going?” Monk asked again.
Where you need to be, Pyotr answered silently.
Pyotr led him down the stairs again, then pulled the man to the floor as a shot fired overhead. From there, they crawled under a row of steel desks as soldiers searched, then down another set of stairs to a long basement hall with branches into a maze of rooms and other passageways.
Pyotr hurried.
While he saw a pattern, he could not truly see the future. He danced faster along the threads of pure instinct, sensing the pressure of ages upon him. They were running out of time.
The man grew more distressed, perhaps sensing the same.
“Where are you—?”
A new voice intruded, coming from the end of the hall, pitched full of surprise. Pyotr read the pound in the newcomer’s heart. A name was called out with a ring of disbelief.
“Monk!”
o O o
Gray almost shot him. Rounding into the hall, Gray had found two figures running straight at him, one with a weapon pointed ahead. If not for the presence of the boy, Gray would have shot on instinct.
Instead, he momentarily froze between recognition and shock.
His friend did not. The pistol fired. Gray felt a kick to his shoulder, throwing him back. Pain lanced outward.
Kowalski caught him as he fell and barked as loud as the crack of the pistol shot. “Monk, you ass! What are you doing?”
Monk halted, tugged to a stop by the boy. His face collapsed into a wary mask of confusion. “Who…who are you people?”
Kowalski still fumed. “Who are we? We’re your goddamn friends!”
Gray gained his feet, his left shoulder blazing with fire. “Monk, don’t you recognize us?”
Monk fingered a red and swollen line of sutures behind his ears. “No…actually I don’t.”
Gray stumbled over to him, his mind dizzy with questions, with the impossibility of it all. Was it amnesia or had they done something to him? How could Monk be here? Gray didn’t care. He gave his friend a bear hug, earning a fiery complaint from his shoulder. Just a graze, but he would’ve taken a gut shot to have this man back in his life. He clutched even tighter.
“I knew it…I knew it…,” Gray whispered fiercely. Tears welled and rolled. “God, you’re alive.”
Kowalski grumbled, “He won’t be alive much longer if we don’t get moving.”
The man was right. Gray let Monk go, but he kept one hand on his friend’s elbow, to make sure he didn’t disappear again.
Monk looked across the lot of them. “Listen,” he said and pointed outward. “I could use your help. There’s something I have to stop.”
“Operation Saturn,” Gray said.
Monk did a double take in Gray’s direction, then nodded. “That’s right. This boy can—”
Monk suddenly twirled around. “Where’s Pyotr?”
Gray understood his confusion.
The boy had vanished during the chaos.
o O o
1:15 P.M.
Elizabeth studied the image on the computer screen. It displayed the wall mosaic from the temple in India. Five figures sat on tripod chairs surrounding the central omphalos. From the hole in the stone, smoke swirled upward like a steaming volcano. A fiery boy rose above it, half buried in a column of the smoke.
But it wasn’t just the smoke that lifted him.
At her elbow, Elizabeth had papers covered with scribbled lines of Harappan, Sanskrit, and Greek. She had images of the inscriptions on the wall and omphalos. She was not entirely certain of her translation.
The world will burn…
She studied the mosaic closer. Five women slouched in their chairs, as if in a trance, but each held one arm raised toward the smoky boy. Her first thought was that it represented a conjuring of the boy or summoning of him. But now she knew better. They weren’t conjuring him, they were supporting him.
She glanced to the line she had freshly translated in full.
The world will burn…unless the many become one.
It was a warning. The mosaic foretold what must come to pass or the world would be destroyed in some great fire. Elizabeth remembered Gray’s concern that whatever operation was at work in these mountains would kill millions and most likely involved a nuclear or radiological event.
She pictured a mushroom cloud, burning and smoking with hellfire.
It was not unlike the billowing smoke from the mosaic.
…unless the many become one.
She scrolled down to the bottom of the image, below the newly translated warning. She touched a finger to what lay there.
image
A chakra wheel.
Her fingertip traced a petal to the center. The chakra wheel represented the same warning. The numerous petals all led to one center.
The many become one.
She stared again at the five women, lifting a boy high.
Certainty grew in her—not only about the accuracy of her translation, but also about its importance. Elizabeth’s body trembled with dread. She had to get word out to someone. She crossed to the satellite phone Gray had left her. He had instructed her to call Director Crowe if there were any problems.
Still, she hesitated. What if she was wrong? What if she caused more of a mess? She considered keeping silent. But she remembered her father, and all his secrets. Of Masterson and his. She was done with secrets and half-truths, of words not spoken.
No more.
She would not be her father.
Knowing her discovery was important, she raised the handset and tapped in the number Gray had left.
KYSHTYM, RUSSIA
o O o
3:18 A.M.
WASHINGTON, D.C.
Painter watched as the child was prepped for the operation. He stood with Kat Bryant in a neighboring observation room off Sigma’s small surgical suite. Sterile-wrapped equipment waited to be employed for the delicate operation: ultrasonic aspirators, laser scalpels, stereotactic localizers. Trays of steel tools and drills with various burrs lined tables. Inside the room, Lisa, Malcolm, and a neurosurgical team from George Washington University Hospital continued the final preparations.
In the middle, Sasha lay under a thin surgical drape. All that was visible was the side of her head, shaved, coated in orange antiseptic, and trapped in a rigid frame attached to a scanning device. In the center of the surgical field, her steel implant reflected the lights.
Kat, pale and worried, stood with one hand on the window.
Over the course of the past hour, a series of EEG results and CT scans had shown progressive brain damage in the child. Whatever was happening to Sasha, it was slowly burning out her brain. It was decided, while the child was still strong, to remove the implant. It seemed to be the focus around which the storm of neurological hyperactivity centered.
Lisa had used the term “lightning rod.”
The only way to save her was to remove it. The neurosurgeon had studied all the scans and X-rays. He believed the device could be removed safely. It would be a delicate procedure, but not beyond his abilities.
That had been the first good news all night.
Painter’s phone jangled in his pocket. He considered not answering it, but he tugged it out and checked the I.D. From Kyshtym, Russia. He turned his back on the window, flipped open the phone, and answered it.
“Painter Crowe here.”
“Director,” a woman spoke, sounding greatly relieved. It was Elizabeth Polk. “Gray left this number.”
He heard the anxiety in her rushed voice. “What’s wrong, Elizabeth?”
“I’m not sure. Something I discovered, translated…anyway…”
Painter listened as she stated her case, her fears, what she believed was the message buried in an ancient mosaic.
“The oracles were all slumped in their chairs, unconscious, drugged, drained. Their sole reason for existing was to support the one who could save the world from destruction. I know this sounds crazy, but I think it’s connected to what’s going on today.”
As she talked, Painter had swung back to the window overlooking the surgical suite. Her words resonated through him. Slumped, unconscious, drugged…
Like Sasha’s collapse.
He remembered Kat reporting the girl called out her brother’s name just before she collapsed.!!!Their sole reason for existing was to support the one who could save the world from destruction.
Painter saw the surgeon lift his scalpel, ready to begin the operation.
No.
He bolted for the door.
Kat called to him. “What’s wrong?”
Painter had no time. He burst through the sterile prep area and into the operating room. “Stop! No one move!”
o O o
1:14 P.M.
SOUTHERN URAL MOUNTAINS
“General-Major, you should head downstairs to the bunker,” the soldier warned. He stood a head taller than her, thick with muscle. “We shall make a stand here.”
Another soldier dragged Dr. Petrov’s screaming form into the room from the hallway. His leg had been blown off at the knee. Blood poured. Other soldiers ran in with the children carried over their shoulders. The group had been chased back to the apartment by the collapse of the Russian forces, retreating before the guerrilla assault.
The large soldier pointed a beefy arm toward the stairwell. “Please, General-Major. We will hold off as long as we can.”
“The children…” Savina said, knowing her plan was crumbling around her. She could not let anyone else steal what she had started. “Shoot them all.”
The man’s eyes grew large, but he was a soldier.
He nodded.
Savina retreated down the stairs. She could not watch. Her legs stumbled under her as she reached the bottom of the stairs. The door to the room was four-inch steel. Barricaded inside, she would wait out the war above. Ahead, she noted the flicker of the screens beyond the doorway. In the center screen, water flooded poison into the earth. As she holed up here, she would take solace as she watched.
Gunfire erupted overhead.
The children…
Cringing, she headed for the room.
But a shape stepped into view in the open doorway, blocking her.
A boy.
Pyotr.
o O o
Pyotr stood in the doorway and stared up at the woman. She was darkness and shadow in the gloom of the stairwell. He did not truly see her, but he knew her. He focused on the flame of her heart, aglow at the foot of the stairs.
“Pyotr,” she called to him, with a shining note of hope in her voice.
As she stepped toward him, he lifted his arms and reached out—not with flesh but with his fiery spirit. He cupped the flame of her heart between his open palms, holding it like a frightened bird. Then he gently squeezed, smothering her flame.
The woman dropped to her knees with a cry, a fist clutched to her heart. “Pyotr, what are you—?”
Hope turned to terror as she screamed.
He was not done.
There was another facet to Pyotr’s talent of empathy. He could certainly sense others’ emotions, but with the force of a hundred behind him, he could do more.
As a hundred eyes stared out of his, he drew from the other children: all the agony of the scalpel, the ache of loneliness, the coldness of neglect, the pain of secret abuse at night. He reached farther back, to a blue-eyed child in a dark church, watching a woman and a man approach. He stole all that fear out of the past and thrust it like a dagger into her heart.
The woman shrieked, arched back, racked and locked in a pain without end.
Yet, likewise, as the dark emotions ran through Pyotr, the same fire grazed him. Hot tears flowed for all the lost innocence, including his own.
He barely registered the pistol as it lifted toward him.
The woman sought to blindly kill what tortured her.
While he did the same to her.
The pistol blast shattered the silence.
Pyotr fell back when the woman’s flame suddenly snuffed out between his palms. As he stumbled back, she fell to the floor, half her face gone. He stared up and saw Monk rushing down the stairs from above, his pistol smoking.
The man leaped over the woman and scooped him in his arms.
“Pyotr!”
o O o
Monk lifted the stiff boy. He ran his hand over his small frame. He seemed uninjured, though his skin burned to the touch. He hugged Pyotr to his chest.
The others ran down the stairs behind him.
A brief firefight had eliminated the defenders above. It had looked like the Russians had been about to fire upon a group of unconscious children.
If they’d been a half minute later…
The Gypsies remained above to secure the area and watch over the children. They were safe here for the moment.
“Is this the place?” Gray asked.
With the boy in his arms, Monk crossed with the others into the bunker. The control board smoked from deep gashes into the smoldering circuitry. Keyboards lay cracked. Glass crunched underfoot. Everything was shattered, except for a row of wall monitors.
Monk pointed to the center screen, recognizing the room. It was the heart of Operation Saturn. Only now, black water poured like a river out of a hole in the roof and swirled down a shaft in the floor.
“It’s already under way,” he said hollowly. “We’re too late.”
On a neighboring screen, Monk spotted the mining chamber where he’d left Konstantin and the others. The kids were sprawled in tangled piles. The view was too grainy to tell if they were still alive. Had the radiation somehow reached them?
A well of despair swept through him.
As Gray fished out a sat-phone, Monk stared at the others: Kowalski and Rosauro. Monk sought any glimmer of recognition. There was none. Who were these people? If they were friends, shouldn’t they jar some reaction from him?
As he studied the others, Pyotr reached a hand toward the center screen and placed his palm on it.
“What’s he doing?” Gray asked with the phone at his ear.
Monk turned his attention. “Pyotr?”
The boy stared deeply at the image on the screen.
Kowalski spoke to the left. “Hey! The train’s moving over here!”
Monk glanced over. The train slowly shifted down the tracks, sparking with electricity. The tunnel must still have power, not that they had any control over it.
“Is the kid doing that?” Kowalski asked. “Moving it with his mind?”
Monk held his breath, then let it out slowly. “No,” he said and stared at the receding train, suddenly remembering. “There’s someone else out there.”
“Who?” Gray asked.
o O o
As Pyotr’s hand touched the screen, he cast his senses out into the tunnel, stretching to his limits. Fired by stolen talents, steel and concrete could not stop his reach. As voices faded behind him, he dove into the dark tunnel and swept toward the one flaming star that remained inside, a great heart, one he had loved all his young life.
Pyotr found her cowering in the train, rocking. She had hid out of sight of the cameras because he had asked it of her. She was part of the pattern. But for the moment, nothing mattered. He hurt, deeper than he’d ever been hurt. He simply needed her. Reaching her old heart, he cupped the flame gently and sent her all his love and his need.
She knew he was there and hooted gently, reaching to the empty air. In the dark tunnel, they wrapped around each other, sharing emotions at a level deeper than anyone else.
It was one of their secrets.
He had known the truth the moment they’d first touched hands. Pyotr knew the reason so many children loved Marta, came to her for comfort, to cry in her arms or to simply be held.
She had a talent, unknown to her keepers, a strong gift of empathy, like Pyotr. Two kindred spirits. So he kept her secret, and she kept his.
But it wasn’t their only secret.
There was a darker one, wrapped in terror, revealed in a way neither understood but both knew to be true. From the moment they first saw each other, they knew they would die together.
Gray watched the train accelerate down the tunnel toward the site of Operation Saturn. Monk had given him a thumbnail version of the purpose.
“But who’s in the train?” he asked. “Can we communicate with them?”
Monk held the boy as his small fingers were splayed on the screen. “I think Pyotr is already there. The boy knows how to operate the train.”
“But who’s on the train?”
“A friend.”
On the screen displaying the heart of Operation Saturn, the train pulled into view at the edge and braked. A dark shape hopped out of the front car and loped into the chamber.
“Is that a monkey?” Kowalski asked, stepping back.
“Ape,” Rosauro corrected with a sigh, as if she was tired of correcting the man. “A chimpanzee.”
“It’s Marta,” Monk said.
Gray heard the pain in his voice. A storm of radiation had to be surging through there. The figure moved slowly, slipping, knuckling awkwardly, already sick.
“What’s she trying to do?” Gray asked.
“Trying to save us all,” Monk answered.
o O o
Pyotr stayed with Marta. He pulled her flame close to his, not enough to be consumed, but so he could feed her his strength, let her know what she had to do, that she wasn’t alone. Likewise, he caught glimpses through her eyes, through her sharper senses.
He saw the column of roaring water. He felt a heat weakening and burning Marta. The air smelled like rotting fish and frightened both of them, a flow of dark water, from their shared nightmares.
Deadlier than any river.
But they faced it together.
Marta skirted around the gaping hole that swallowed the water so thirstily. It had to be stopped.
There was only one way.
Pyotr knew and told Marta. Konstantin had explained in detail how all the equipment worked: about the explosive charges, about the radio transmitters, about the giant silo doors.
He had also told Pyotr about the lever.
Marta needed no help. She spotted the rod of steel behind a piece of equipment. It could close the silo doors and stop the flow into the heart of the world. Pyotr felt the soft hoots of fear coming from her. He felt them under his own ribs.
You can do it, Marta…
She struggled, her skin burned, her fur fell like pine needles, her knuckles blistered in contact with the spray of water on the rock.
Pyotr held her flame and willed her strength.
She reached the lever. It was tilted close to the floor. It needed to be raised straight up. She hunched a shoulder under it, gripped the length with both hands, and heaved with her legs.
The steel would not move.
As death flowed behind her in a burning current, Pyotr felt the strain in her back, in her legs, in her heart.
Her flame flickered in his hands.
Marta…
But the lever would not move.
o O o
Monk watched Marta struggle with the lever. She was too weak. It would not budge. Pyotr began breathing hard, sharing the old chimpanzee’s fear and pain.
“Why won’t it move?” Gray asked.
“C’mon, you damn monkey!” Kowalski yelled.
Monk leaned closer, placing his own palm on the screen. He tried to remember the brief glimpse into the room as he had hurried past. As he strained, a sharp jab of electric pain shot through his head. Images from another time and place flashed.
…a man covered in coal soot…a plunging ride in an ore car…a white grin against dusty skin…that’s a boy!…just like, Daddy…
Then it was gone.
Monk struggled to retain something, but like a dream upon waking, memory began to dissolve through his fingers. Why did that particular memory dredge up? Buried in it must be something important.
As the memory faded, he caught a glimpse of that coal-dust-covered man slowing the ore car by squeezing the—
“Hand brake!” he gasped out.
He flashed back to the brief peek into the mine site before. He pictured the lever. It’d had a handgrip at its end.
Monk turned to Pyotr. He leaned and whispered in his feverish ear. “Marta must reach to the end of the lever. She must squeeze the handle. Then it will move for her.”
Pyotr continued to stare, as if deaf to his words, and maybe the boy truly could not hear. Monk had to get him to listen.
Seeming to understand his frustration, the woman Rosauro stepped next to him. “How are they communicating? Telepathically?”
“No. I think empathically. Sharing emotions. I’ve seen him do it with her before. Just not at such a distance.”
“Then you’ll have to reach him the same way.”
Monk glanced at her, as if she were a madwoman.
Gray spoke. “Rosauro’s specialty is neurology. Listen to her.”
The woman spoke slowly. “Empathy is all about sensation and tactility. You might be able to reach them the same way. Offer something that comforts him. It may open a path.”
Monk pictured Pyotr and Marta. They had been always touching, rubbing, grazing against each other, but Monk remembered what brought the boy the greatest sense of security and comfort.
Shifting, he wrapped his arms around Pyotr as he had seen Marta do so often. He felt the boy’s heart race like a hummingbird’s. Rocking the boy very gently, Monk huffed in his ear and whispered what must be done.
He willed it with all his heart.
Squeeze the hand brake…
o O o
Pyotr stayed with Marta as she struggled with the lever—then felt a familiar warmth coming from behind him. He glanced over his shoulder and found a strong heart there, casting a fierce flame. He stared into that fire and sensed what must be done as much as he heard it.
He turned back to Marta and clasped to her, letting her know, too.
But his friend trembled and burned, growing so weak.
Please…
She hooted, scared, but one of her large hands slid up the lever and found the grip there. Long fingers wrapped around it and squeezed. Then she heaved again, shouldering the lever and pushing with her legs.
The lever moved, but it was still heavy. With shaking limbs, she fought it straight up and shoved it back. Something snapped loudly.
A great grind of gears sounded.
Exhausted and spent, Marta slumped to the ground.
o O o
“She did it!” Gray said.
On the screen, the hole in the floor began closing, snipping off the stream with a steel iris. The river of water, no longer able to drain below, flooded into the mining chamber.
The chimpanzee was flushed out of the room and into the tunnel, but more and more water followed. Though clearly exhausted and burned, she gained her feet and swung atop the train car. As black water rose around her, she loped back and forth across the roof, scribing a path of panic and distress.
Gray’s heart went out to the poor creature.
“Get that damned monkey out of there, for Christ’s sake!” Kowalski bellowed. He slammed a fist on the broken control board.
But there was nothing they could do. The doors were jammed, and water was swiftly filling the tunnel, which was sealed at both ends. Even if they could open the doors, the radiation level would kill them all. And ultimately, the chimpanzee had already been exposed to many times the lethal dosage.
Rosauro turned her back and stepped away, covering her mouth with concern.
Finally, the old chimpanzee settled to her haunches, hugging her knees. She began to rock. She knew what was coming.
Monk clutched the boy, a single tear running down his cheek.
In his arms, the boy rocked, too, in exact synch with his friend in the tunnel.
o O o
Pyotr stayed with Marta as the waters rose. Her heart flashed and swirled in fear. She’d always known the dark water would kill her. He held her now, as she had done with him so many times in the past. He wrapped his warm arms around her and pulled her tight. They rocked together one last time, two hearts sharing one flame.
Marta knew his secret, too.
She hooted softly and leaned her cheek against him.
Pyotr…
I love you, Marta…
As the waters rose to consume his friend, Pyotr looked into the dark sea that filled him, shining with seventy-seven bright lights, swirling around a brighter fire that was his own heart. One of his teachers had told him how planets circled suns, trapped in their orbits.
He understood.
He knew by consuming those stars he could never let them go. This was no nightmare where he stole only a little of their skill. He had crossed a line of no return. As he stared, he saw those stolen lights grow infinitesimally dimmer. He was burning them up, consuming his friends, his sister.
There was only one way to let them go.
It was the other reason he came to Marta.
He needed her.
Pyotr…no…
You must…
He felt her hands reach tentatively to that bright light inside his dark sea. Her long warm fingers wrapped around his own heart.
Pyotr…
But she knew. For the others to live, there was only one path. The others were trapped in his orbit, and if left unchecked, he would burn through them all. The only way to free them was to take away the sun that held them. Then the stars could fly back and return to where they belonged.
So Marta squeezed and squeezed as dark waters rose around her. Focused on him, she was no longer scared. As they rocked, she closed her fingers tenderly, but it still hurt.
Then just before Pyotr’s light fully died, he reached to a single star in that dark sea, slightly brighter still than the rest.
Sasha, he whispered and told his sister a secret.
o O o
The boy suddenly slumped in his arms. His small hand fell away from the screen. He saw Marta’s body get washed from the top of the train and swirl off into the darkness of the tunnel.
Monk lowered the boy to the floor. “Pyotr?
The boy stared blindly toward the ceiling, pupils dilated. Monk checked for a pulse. He found one but barely. The boy’s chest rose and fell.
Overhead, small cries and screams echoed down. The other children. They were waking, rising to find a room full of dead bodies.
Gray pointed. “Rosauro, Kowalski, go up and help them!”
Monk glanced to the grainy image from the other end of the tunnel. He watched kids stirring, others already standing. He saw Konstantin help Kiska sit up.
They were okay.
“What about the boy?” Gray asked.
Monk sat on the floor and cradled his thin body. Pyotr breathed, his blood pumped, but Monk stared into his blank eyes and knew the boy was gone.
Pyotr…why?
Gray joined him and placed a hand on his shoulder. “Maybe it’s shock. Maybe with time…”
Monk appreciated the offer of hope, but he knew the truth. As he had held the boy, he had felt the child let go. Monk’s gaze returned to the screen full of stirring children. Monk knew. Pyotr had sacrificed his life for them, for all his brothers and sisters.
Gray settled to his haunches next to him, keeping vigil with him.
The stranger seemed like a good man, and in this quiet moment alone, Monk felt a certain comfort around the guy. Not a memory, just a sensation that he could drop his guard without fear.
So Monk felt no shame as tears rolled heavily and he rocked Pyotr one last time, now just an empty shell of a boy.
The Last Oracle The Last Oracle - James Rollins The Last Oracle